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

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE

WEATHER

SPORTS

Envy Ink breathes new
life into historic ‘Happy
Corner’... Page C1

Mostly sunny. High
near 68. Low around
49 ... Page A3

Local football
action... Page B1

OBITUARIES
Bernice M. Bailey, 84
Evelyn Brandeberry, 91
Alice Marie Barr, 93

$2.00

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2013

Vol. 47, No. 37

Stephen R. Benson, 41
Robert L. Sellers, 57
Anita Sims, 81
Brylee Stutes, infant

Plea hearing set in 2013 bank robbery case
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The West Virginia man alleged to have robbed
the Farmers Bank branch in
Tuppers Plains earlier this year
is scheduled for a change of plea
hearing on Monday.
Chad R. Rennicker, 25, of Ripley, W.Va., has plead not guilty
to charges related to the crime
since his initial court appearance
three months ago.
The hearing is scheduled for

3:15 p.m. on Monday with Judge
I. Carson Crow presiding. A jury
trial in the case was scheduled
for Sept. 25, but has been canceled according to the clerk of
courts website.
It is not clear at this time if
Rennicker will plead guilty to all
seven charges against him.
Rennicker is currently charged
with six counts of kidnapping and
one count of aggravated robbery.
According to the indictment
filed in June, Rennicker did or
attempted to commit a theft
offense while having a deadly

weapon on or about his person or
under his control and either displayed the weapon, brandished
it or indicated the possession of
use of it during the offense.
The six kidnapping counts are
one count for each individual
working at the bank at the time
of the alleged offense. The indictment alleges that Rennicker
did commit the crime of kidnapping at Farmers Bank in Tuppers
Plains, by force, threat or deception, knowingly remove another
from the place where the person
was found or restrain the liberty

of the other person, to facilitate
the commission of any felony or
flight thereafter.
Rennicker was also wanted by
the Belmont County Ohio Sheriff’s Office and the Perry Township Police Department in Stark
County Ohio. In May, Rennicker
was sentenced on armed robbery
charges in Belmont County and
has failed to turn himself into
authorities to serve his sentence.
He along with Michaela
Fritz were arrested on June 1
in Ripley, W.Va. Fritz has not
been charged with any crime

in Meigs County.
The arrest of both suspects at
an apartment in Ripley began
with the surveillance of a white
van that the suspects were driving. Rennicker and Fritz went to
an apartment complex in Ripley
and were followed by officers
at that time. In response to the
presence of law enforcement,
the pair then attempted to hide
in the attic, but Rennicker fell
through the ceiling into the bedroom of an adjacent apartment.
He was captured and taken into
custody without incident.

The Bob’s Market &amp; Greenhouses fall tour is set for 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 5 at the production headquarters in Mason, The
tour begins at 2 p.m. with drinks, snacks and a presentation
about fall gardening.

Photos by Amber Gillenwater | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ordinary People, under the leadership of Christian Scott, filled the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre with music
on Friday night at the kick off event for the 150th Annual Gallia County Emancipation Celebration. Friday’s concert was the
just the first event in a weekend that organizers have planned to be filled with not only music, but also history, fellowship and
celebration. The Emancipation Celebration continues on Saturday and Sunday at the Bob Evans Farm in Rio Grande.

Standing on the shoulders of those who came before …
Emancipation Celebration fills Gallipolis with song
Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

ABOVE, following
Friday’s Emancipation homecoming banquet and
concert at the
Ariel Theatre,
a candlelight
walk was held
to the Ohio
River in honor
of those slaves
who crossed over
the river and
into freedom.
AT RIGHT, Philip
Armstrong hums
the “unknown”
melody of “Amazing Grace” during
Friday’s Emancipation concert at
the Ariel Theatre
in downtown
Gallipolis.
Armstrong, who
resides in Tulsa,
Oklahoma, took
the stage following a rousing
performance by
Crystal Wagner
of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania.
Both soloists
are native Gallia
Countians who
returned home
for the 150th Annual Emancipation Celebration.

GALLIPOLIS — “Amazing
grace! How sweet the sound …”
The sound was never so sweet as
on Friday evening at the Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre in downtown Gallipolis where
the faithful gathered for a homecoming reception and concert in
honor of the 150th Annual Emancipation Celebration in Gallia County,
a celebration that has been ongoing
in the county since 1863.
Friday night’s program filled the
halls of the historic and beautiful
Ariel Theatre in downtown Gallipolis with music and history as the
local gospel group Ordinary People
took the stage, followed by Gallia
County natives and soloists Crystal Wagner and Philip Armstrong.
Just prior to the concert, Emancipation Celebration Committee
member Elaine Armstrong spoke
of the special celebration organizers have planned this year in recognition of Gallia County and its
ongoing celebration of the Emancipation Proclamation.
“This is certainly a special time
for Gallia County and with the
Emancipation. It is reported to be
the longest continuing celebrating
of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation in the United States — 150
years. That’s a long time,” Armstrong commented. “We have come
150 years all the way from cotton
fields to the White House, and, so,
we are honored to still remember
those who have gone before us. We
stand on their shoulders — those
that could not be here, both black
and white, that did so much for
freedom, right here on the Ohio
River where there were so many
slaves that crossed from, at that
time, the State of Virginia, into
Ohio and into the land of freedom.”
Ordinary People under the direction of Christian Scott, a group
that was first formed 20 years ago
at the Gallia County Emancipation
Celebration, were the first to take
the stage and performed several
musical selections, including the
spiritual “Done Made My Vow”
and a rousing rendition of “I Don’t
Feel No Ways Tired.”
Wagner was the next to perform,
See SHOULDERS | A3

Bob’s fall color
tour set for October
Staff report
PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

MASON — Fall pansies and mums will fill the Bob’s
Market greenhouses with color this October, said John
Morgan, just in time for its fall tour.
Morgan, who is a technologist for Bob’s Market and
Greenhouses, Inc., said that he’d like to see people come out
for the tour and encourages them to bring their cameras.
“Last year we set up a bench and fall decorations in front
of one of the bays of pansies for fall photos,” said Morgan.
Morgan added that he’d like people to be aware that the
tour is a guided one.
“The tour itself is a guided tour due to OSHA regulations, since our production facility is normally off limits
to the public. We’ve had visitors think it was an open
See COLOR | A3

Charlene Hoeflich | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Looking over the new sign erected in the Hobson area at the
lower end of Middleport are from the left, Middleport Mayor
Mike Gerlach, Councilman Craig Wehrung who took on the
project of creating the new signs, and Mike Hendrickson, who
handled the project of erecting them.

Signs return
in remembrance
Lest we forget

Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — Many
years ago, signs in tribute
to a native son, General
James V. Hartinger, who
rose in the ranks of the U.
S. Air Force to the Commander in Chief, North
American Aerospace Defense Command, were
erected at the entrances to
Middleport Village.
Over the years, the signs
had deteriorated so badly
that they could not be repaired. In a discussion at a
Middleport Village Council meeting one night, the

General James V. Hartinger

condition of the signs came
up and Councilman Craig
Wehrung volunteered to
take on the project of replacing them.
Using the originals as
See SIGNS | A3

�Page A2 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday, September 22, 2013

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Chauntelle Williams

Kim Fife

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Chauntelle Williams has been hired by Holzer Health
Systems as a telephone communications operator. Williams graduated from Gallipolis Career College with an
associate’s degree in Medical Office Administration. She
resides in Rio Grande with her son Davon.
Kimberly Fife has been promoted to site manager at
Hopewell Health Centers in Pomeroy, Ohio. Fife is a graduate of Gallipolis Career College where she earned her
medical administrative assistant diploma. She currently
resides in Pomeroy with her husband Eddie, son Eddie
Jr., and daughter Jennifer.
For information on classes and programs at Gallipolis
Career College, call 740-446-4367, 1-800-214-0452, or on
the web at www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu.

Chicago shooting shows
gap in stepped-up policing
CHICAGO (AP) — A
shooting that injured a
3-year-old boy and 12 others in Chicago occurred
just outside a section of the
city that police have flooded with officers, reigniting
outrage over the toll of the
community’s gun violence
and the inability of steppedup police action to stop it.
Residents had gathered
in a neighborhood park
Thursday to watch a latenight basketball game
when assailants armed
with an assault rifle indiscriminately sprayed the
crowd with bullets.
On Friday, residents decried the perpetrators’ dis-

regard for those caught in
the crossfire, the invasion of
drugs into their communities and a lack of local leaders to stand up for them.
A prominent rap artist,
meanwhile, said more must
be done to understand the
city’s youth, and a frustrated police chief again called
for tougher gun laws.
“We can do a lot of really
good policing. … We can
reduce crime, like we’re doing, but we’re not going to
have success occur as long
as these guns keep flowing
into our community,” police Superintendent Garry
McCarthy said during a
news conference.

The Past Exalted Rulers Association of Gallipolis Elks Lodge #107
is pleased to announce
that the following high
school graduates have
been awarded $1,000
each toward furthering
their education at the
college of their choice.
Micha Jividen-Clevenger of Gallipolis, a graduate of South Gallia High
School, will be attending
Shawnee State University
with a major in Radiology.
Ashley Morgan of
Bidwell, a graduate of
River Valley High School,
will be attending the Uni-

Micha Jividen-Clevenger

Ashley Morgan

Deeanna Sayre

versity of Rio Grande
with a major in Early
Childhood Education.

Deeanna Sayre of Mason, W.Va., a graduate of
Wahama High School,

will be attending Marshall
University with a major in
Elementary Education.

Allegiant delays, cancels flights to check MD-80s
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
Allegiant Air officials said
Friday that delays and cancelations could continue
for several days as more
than half of the airline’s
MD-80s remain grounded
for overhauls of emergency slides like the ones
deployed in an evacuation
this week.
The inflatable chutes
worked properly Monday
when smoke was reported
in the cabin of an Allegiant
MD-80 at McCarran International Airport in Las
Vegas, company officials
said. An incident review,
however, found that fleetwide maintenance hadn’t
complied with the slide
manufacturer’s recommendations.
Taking the company’s
MD-80 aircraft out of service for inspections led
to delays on at least 20 of
Allegiant’s 121 scheduled
Friday flights, spokesman
Brian Davis told reporters.
Sixteen flights were rescheduled for Saturday and

two Friday flights between
Oakland, Calif., and Reno
were canceled outright.
Allegiant returned 18
aircraft to service, leaving most of its 52 MD-80s
grounded, the company
said in a statement Friday
afternoon.
Davis said the airline
expected that passengers
delayed Friday would
reach their destinations
by Saturday, a normally
slow travel day. But travel on traditionally busy
Sunday and Monday
flights would be “operationally challenging.”
Allegiant expected to
increase the number of
MD-80 aircraft in service
to 22 on Saturday, but
that’s still less than half
its fleet. It also had six
Boeing 757s and two Airbus A320s aircraft in the
air, and chartered seven
other aircraft to fill some
scheduled routes.
Disruptions could continue through the end of
the month, Davis said.
Davis didn’t provide a
tally of how many passengers were affected but said
most would be compensated with discounts on future
travel. Allegiant would also
make hotel arrangements
for travelers stranded overnight, he said.
“We want our customers
to know we take disruption of their travel plans
very seriously,” said Davis,
spokesman for the airline

and its parent company,
Allegiant Travel Co. But he
said safety of passengers
and crew members was the
company’s top priority.
No injuries were reported among the 144 passengers and six crew members
on the MD-80 that was
evacuated Monday before
takeoff for Peoria, Ill.
The Federal Aviation
Administration learned
about the maintenance
issue while investigating
the evacuation of Flight
436 and directed Allegiant to immediately inspect slides on its entire
MD-80 fleet, FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said.
Gregor said the FAA
doesn’t comment on pending investigations and he
couldn’t discuss possible
sanctions against the airline.
Davis said the airline
decided to reinspect all
of its MD-80 aircraft after
officials found it wasn’t
complying with a 2007
recommendation by the
manufacturer of the slides,
Zodiac Aerospace, to overhaul all four inflatable
chutes annually on aircraft
older than 15 years.
Allegiant had been maintaining the MD-80 slides
according to an original
three-year maintenance interval, the spokesman said.
Davis said passengers
affected by delays and
cancellations would be
compensated on a sliding
scale ranging from a $100

voucher for future travel
for a two-hour delay, to a
ticket refund and a $200
credit for future travel if a
flight was canceled.
He promised updates
on the company website,
http://www.allegiantair.
com, and a telephone information line, 702-505-8888.
Allegiant has carved a
profitable low-cost, nofrills niche in the airline
industry with service to
about 100 mostly small
cities and vacation destinations including Florida,
Las Vegas, Hawaii and the
Phoenix area. It carried
nearly 2.3 passengers in
and out of McCarran airport in 2012.
Base fares average less
than $200, but additional
fees for customer service,
baggage handling and
ticketing can add another
30 percent to the cost of
travel. Allegiant reaps additional revenues from
commissions on hotel
rooms, rental cars, tours
and theme park tickets.
Davis on Friday denied
any link between the failure to maintain aircraft
evacuation slides and company cost-control efforts.
“There was a disconnect
between our maintenance
program and the manufacturer requirement,” he
said. “Our program was
not updated in 2007.”
The company’s shares
fell $5.08 to close Friday
at $97.91.

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BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — With snow
already dusting Colorado’s highest peaks,
the state is racing to replace key mountain
highways washed away by flooding, in
some cases laying down crude, one-lane
gravel roads just to throw a lifeline to isolated towns before winter descends.
More than 200 miles of state highways
and at least 50 bridges were damaged or
destroyed across this rugged region, plus
many more county roads. Fully rebuilding
all of them is sure to take years. But for
now, the work has to be fast, even if that
means cutting corners.
“Our priority is to reconnect these communities as quickly as we can, recognizing
that we’re in a very tight timeframe,” said
Amy Ford, a spokeswoman for the state
Department of Transportation.
In many other parts of the country, road
crews would be able to work through the
fall and much of the winter. But in the
Rockies, the cold weather comes earlier,
stays longer and brings with it countless
dangers. The first storms could hit as
soon as next month.
That urgency was underlined this week
when Trail Ridge Road, the high-elevation
path through Rocky Mountain National
Park and one of the few supply routes into
the town of Estes Park, was temporarily
closed because of snow. It normally stays
open until October.
Colorado is looking East for advice,
specifically to Vermont, where Tropical Storm Irene dumped up to 11 inches
of rain in August 2011, sweeping away
homes, roads, bridges and farm fields and
killing six people.
After the mountains flooded, Colorado
Gov. John Hickenlooper quickly flew in
experts from Vermont, which also faced a
winter deadline two years ago.
“The big picture is that you’re going to
get through this, and you’re going to recover stronger, but it is a long haul,” said Sue
Minter, deputy secretary of the Vermont
Agency of Transportation, who has been
assessing Colorado damage. “Two years
later, we’re still recovering from Irene.”
Scott Rogers, Vermont’s director of
transportation, said the immediate challenge is putting in place road material that
can be maintained through winter.
“We had to put pavement down before

it snowed so that roads could be plowed,”
said Rogers. “And in many cases, it was
just a temporary pavement. We knew we
would have to come back and do it better.”
Expediting repairs before winter is crucial, especially in the Front Range’s mountainous corridors, which receive heavy
snowfall. Rerouting some washed-out
roads may be all but impossible because
many of them follow streamside trails
used by settlers chasing gold and silver
in the mid-1800s. The steep Rocky Mountain foothills offer no other access.
Canyon hamlets such as Jamestown,
Lyons and Pinewood Springs lost roads
when as much as 20 inches of rain fell last
week, transforming ravines into lethal funnels of rushing water powerful enough to
fling boulders and large trees and generate
20-foot waves.
Crews have laid down a rough one-lane
gravel road to a Lyons neighborhood isolated by the floods. The improvised road cuts
through secondary farm roads and across a
football field and a bike path. The commute
to a state highway, which normally runs
just a minute, now takes nearly a half-hour.
But it’s better — and safer — than nothing.
That lane isn’t fully open yet, and access
will be severely restricted, complete with
roadblocks, so that crews using heavy
equipment can collect and remove tons of
storm debris and begin fixing Lyons’ shattered water and sewer systems.
State transportation officials are considering using military-style folding
bridges to get through the winter. To
speed up repairs, they’re taking bids for
emergency contracts without completing full damage assessments.
Residents of some isolated towns that
can’t be reconnected face the choice
of toughing it out or abandoning their
homes. Searchers from the Federal Emergency Management Agency are going
door to door in those communities to
plead with residents to leave — not only
because winter is approaching but because
an airlift that dropped food and water into
those communities has ended.
Some have yet to budge.
“This is our home and you know, I’ve
got friends who need help,” said one
Lyons holdout, Molly Morton. “We’re
not going anywhere.”

�Sunday, September 22, 2013

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Card showers
If you would like to send
a get well card or to visit
Mr. Joseph Morgan, he
now is residing at Abbyshire Place, 311 Buckridge
Road, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.

City Day, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.,
Raccoon Creek County Park,
O.O. McIntyre Park District,
518 Dan Jones Road.

Monday, Sept. 23
HARRISONVILLE — The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet at 11
a.m. at the Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church. Blood pressure checks will be
at 11 a.m., followed by a pot luck.
RACINE — The Southern Local
Board of Education will meet in regular session at 6:30 p.m. in the high
school media center.
POMEROY — The regular meeting
of the Meigs County Library Board
will be held at 3:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

new EOC/911 Communications Center
will be discussed. Lunch will be available.

Thursday, Sept. 26
SYRACUSE —The Ladies of the
Meigs County Republican Party will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Carleton
School. Refreshments will be served.
All women welcome.

sory Council for the Area Agency on
Aging will meet at 10 a.m. in the Buckeye Hills-HVRDD Area Agency on Aging office in Marietta.
Wednesday, Oct. 9
MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the Natural Resources Assistance
Council at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District, 1400
Pike Street, Marietta, Ohio, on Wednesday, October 9, 2013, at 10:00 a.m. The
purpose of the meeting is to review the
scoring methodology for Round 8 of the
Clean Ohio Conservation Fund for District 18. Questions regarding this meeting should be directed to Michelle Hyer
mhyer@buckeyehills.org at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District or call (740) 376-1025.

Tuesday, Oct. 1
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Holzer Clinic
Friday, Sept. 27
Events
and Holzer Medical CenMIDDLEPORT — Health Recovery
Tuesday, Sept. 24
ter retirees will meet for
Services will be hosting an open house
GALLIPOLIS — Meet- lunch at 12 p.m. at the
in honor of National Recovery Month.
ing for the paid up mem- Iron Gate Bar and Grille,
The open house will take place from 10
bers of the Gallia County Point Pleasant.
Tuesday, Sept. 24
a.m. to 2 p.m. with door prizes, food
Veterans Association, 3:30
POMEROY —The Meigs County and fun. Health Recovery Services is
GALLIPOLIS — Public
p.m., Gallia County VeterPlanning
Committee located at 138 North Second Avenue
meeting on the changing Emergency
ans Service Center.
of Court Street to one-way (LEPC) will meet at 11:30 a.m. the Se- in Middleport.
MARIETTA — The Regional Advitraffic from Second Ave- nior Citizens Center. Final stages of the
Thursday, Sept. 26
nue
to
Third
Avenue
with
GALLIPOLIS — French
500 Free Clinic, 1-4 p.m., 258 angle parking, 6 p.m., GalPinecrest Drive. The clinic lipolis Municipal Building,
serves the uninsured resi- 333 Third Avenue, Galdents of Gallia County be- lipolis. Comments can be
tween the ages of 18 and 65. mailed to P.O. Box 339,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
Tea Party
land youth co-ed softball ing for Dec. 2-6 to Pigeon
emailed to citymanager@
Saturday, Sept. 28
Meeting Change
tournament will be held Forge remain open, but
PERRY TWP. — Farm gallipoliscity.com.
POMEROY — The Meigs Sept. 28 at the Rutland ball- the final day to make resCounty Tea Party will not field. Contact Rodney Butch- ervations and the required
be meeting on Sept. 24. er at 742-2525 for more in- down payment is Sept. 25.
Instead, members will be formation.
The trip which includes
traveling to Athens to view
seven shows, eight meals,
the movie “Unstoppable” by
O’Kan Coin
transportation and hotel
Kirk Cameron. This movie
Club Show
expenses is $445.
answers the question, “Why
GALLIPOLIS — The
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 68. North does God allow bad things to O’Kan Coin Club’s annual
Free clogging classes
wind 5 to 7 mph.
happen to good people?” For fall show will be held from
MIDDLEPORT — BeginSunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 49.
any questions, call 992-1121. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Oct. 6 at ning clogging classes will
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 74.
The next meeting of the Tea the Quality Inn in Gallipolis. start at 6 p.m. Thursday,
Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 52.
Party will be held Oct. 8 at
Oct. 3, in the auditorium
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 76.
the Meigs. Co. Senior CitiTrip to Pigeon Forge
of Middleport Village Hall.
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 55.
zens Building at 7:30.
POMEROY — Six seats There is no charge to attend
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 79.
on the motor coach trip the classes which will be held
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 55.
Softball Tournament
planned by the Meigs on Thursdays each week. For
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 80.
RUTLAND — The Rut- County Council on Ag- additional information call

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Vivian May, 992-7853.
Benefit dinner
POMEROY —The Rocksprings United Methodist
Church will hold a spaghetti
dinner on Sunday, Sept. 22,
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
church. It will be a benefit to
aid the Jim Richmond family
with their medical expenses.
The menu includes spaghetti
casserole, garden salad,
bread and drink with desserts available for purchase.
Cost is $7 for adults, $4 children 10 and under. Eat in or
take out. For more informaSee BRIEFS | A5

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Gallia Veterans
Association meeting
GALLIPOLIS — There will
be a meeting for the paid up
members of the Gallia County
Veterans Association at 3:30
p.m. on Tuesday, September
24 at the Gallia County Veterans Service Center, 323 Upper

River Road, Suite B, Gallipolis.
For more information, call (740)
446-2005.
Free clinic slated
GALLIPOLIS — The French
500 Free Clinic will be held this
month from 1-4 p.m. on Thursday, September 26. The clinic is

located at 258 Pinecrest Drive
off of Jackson Pike. It was established to serve the uninsured
residents of Gallia County between the ages of 18 and 65.
Farm City Day
PERRY TWP. — Farm City
Cay 2013 will be held from 10

a.m.-2 p.m. on Saturday, September 28 on the upper level of
Raccoon Creek County Park. A
free lunch will be held between
12-1 p.m. A petting zoo, games,
bulb exchange, crafts, kids’ activities, stories, soil pit demonstrations will be available. In
addition, ATV safety for kids

Shoulders
From Page A1
singing two a cappella songs, “Brown
Baby” and “Soon I Will Be Done.”
Philip Armstrong was the last
to perform, singing “Amazing
Grace,” while also providing the
history behind the lyrics of the
most famous hymn, which, along
with its “unknown” melody, has
become arguably the most recognizable song in the world.
“Everyone knows [this song] all
over the world, whether you are a
person of faith and believe in God,
or whether you are a person who
just believes in serendipity, anybody
can know this song, and it is believed by theologians and musicologists that the melody of this song
can be traced back to a west African
sorrow chant,” he said.
Armstrong spoke of the poem
“Amazing Grace” written by John
Newton, who before becoming a
Christian, was a captain of a slave
ship. According to Armstrong, many
people believe that the melody that
became associated with Newton’s
poem is what the slave trader had
heard the slaves humming and singing in the belly of his slave ship.
“When you sing this, or when you
are in church and you hear this, or
you hear someone play it, I don’t
want you to ever sing it the same
way again. I don’t want you to sing
lackadaisically, or sing it just because

they just called it out as the hymn
on Sunday morning, or that’s what
they are playing a funeral,” Armstrong said. “Every time you hear
this song, and every time you sing
it, from this night forward, you have
a responsibility to remember what
was the sound that [Newton] heard
that would cause him to write these
words, ‘amazing grace.’”
At the closing of the concert,
Elaine Armstrong invited those in
attendance, as well as the wider community, both black and white, to attend the weekend’s festivities at Bob
Evans Farm in Rio Grande.
“This is only the tip of the iceberg
of what we have planned for you, Gallia County, and we want you to come,
black and white. This isn’t a black
thing. We are all in this thing together and we want you to come on
Saturday and Sunday and enjoy more
of what you’ve heard this evening. It
only gets better,” she said while also,
on behalf of the Emancipation Celebration Committee, thanking those
who attended Friday’s program.
At conclusion of the concert, those
gathered at the theatre made their
way to the banks of the Ohio River
where a candlelight vigil was held
in honor of slaves who had crossed
from slavery and into freedom and
into the State of Ohio.
Emancipation Committee Vicepresident Glenn Miller offered remarks at the Ohio River and spoke

of the underground railroad and
the historical significance of the
river that became the symbol of
freedom for so many.
“This very place where we stand
tonight and trample the grass under
our feet of good ole Gallia County
and the State of Ohio, and look back
across from which we have come,
and for those old soldiers and saints
who stopped, and for those who
stayed, and for those who chose to
put down roots, raise families, lived
and died, let it be known that this
river on whose banks we now stand,
that this was their Statue of Liberty,
this was their New York,” Miller
said. “And for those who thought
it an honor and privilege to carry
on the tradition that we now hold
so dear, and that tradition to celebrate the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, we have not only
tried, but we hope we have successfully carried on the tradition. And
this year, September the twentieth,
through the twenty-second, in the
year of our Lord 2013, marks the
one hundred and fiftieth year, and
let it be known, and still is, the longest running, continuously held, documented celebration in the nation.”
For a full list of the weekend’s
activities, or for more information
on the Gallia County Emancipation Celebration, visit www.emancipation-day.com.

Signs
From Page A1
a template, he created a
similar motif which he sent
to Brian Deems of A.G.E.
Graphics, Long Bottom,
who enhanced the layout and
screened it onto two 4x8 foot
sheets of white Masonite.
When the printed sheets
were ready, Wehrung said
he picked them up and began the process of gluing
the sheets onto weather
resistant plywood. He then
fitted aluminum channel
around the perimeter of
each with silicone caulk
to protect the signs from
inclement weather.
Once completed, the new
signs were installed by village workers at the entrances to the village, one near
the Pomeroy/Middleport
Corporation line, one just
off Ohio 7 at the south end

of the village, and the third
in a new location near the
top of Middleport Hill.
Hartinger’s career in the
military began in July 1943
when he graduated from
Middleport High School
and was drafted into the
United States Army. Following World War II he
entered the U.S. Air Force
Academy and upon graduation in 1949 was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force.
After completing his pilot training at Randolph
Air Force Base in Texas
and Williams Air Force
Base in Arizona, he was
assigned as a jet fighter
pilot with the 36th FighterBomber Wing in Germany.
His first combat commission was in Korea. His
training continued year
after year, and when the

Vietnam War broke out,
he was assigned to a base
there. He completed more
than 100 aerial combat
missions while assigned to
the Republic of Vietnam.
He was awarded numerous
military decorations during his military career.
Over the years, General
Hartinger — Jim as his
many friends called him

— returned periodically
to his hometown which responded with appropriate
recognition for his many
accomplishments.
The
original tribute signs were
erected prior to one of his
last visits to Middleport.
The new signs continue
the memory of his dedication in the defense of
America … lest we forget.

FEEL THE
DIFFERENCE
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
BEGINS
OCT 7TH
60445503

740-446-4367
Get Started Today!
Accredited Member: Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools 1274B

will be held at 11 a.m. and 1
p.m. and farm tours will be held
every 15 minutes as needed. A
“fish shocking” tour will also be
held at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. only.
For more information on Farm
City Day, call the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District at
(740) 446-6173.

"@42=î)E@4&lt;D
AEP (NYSE) — 43.73
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.32
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 91.57
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.27
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 56.43
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 100.86
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.34
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.20
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.28
Collins (NYSE) — 70.00
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.42
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.85
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.01
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 64.27
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.80
Kroger (NYSE) — 40.76
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 59.99
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 77.72
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.99
BBT (NYSE) — 35.05

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.09
Pepsico (NYSE) — 81.74
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.79
Rockwell (NYSE) — 107.40
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.49
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.89
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 58.47
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.83
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.41
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.32
Worthington (NYSE) — 34.12
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for September 20, 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.

Color
From Page A1
house in the past, show up late, and miss the tour.”
Morgan said that he will set up an area in the greenhouse to act as an autumnal background for photographs.
The production headquarters are located in Mason,
close to the Mason retail store.
“We will be meeting inside our production headquarters, at ‘The big red building,’ as we like to call it,” Morgan said. “When driving from the market in Mason it is
located on the right side of the road and has a quilt square
and sign on it.”
The tour, which will cover the 20-acre facility, will
begin at 2 p.m. with drinks, snacks, and a presentation
about fall gardening.
“People can come and learn how to care for fall pansies
and mums, and get some great tips for getting their gardens
ready for winter,” Morgan said. “Then we’ll take a walking
tour of the facility as we learn about the process that plants
go through to grow from seed to finished product.”
Those interested in the tour may visit the www.bobsmarketblog.com/2013/09/event-2013-fall colortour or call
Morgan at (800)447-3760, ext.144.

28th Annual Holiday
Craft Show

Saturday, November 9th, 2013 - 10 AM to 4 PM
National Guard Armory - Point Pleasant, WV

Handmade Holiday Treasures
SPONSORED BY:
The Mason County
Community Educational Outreach
Service
Call Lorrie: 304-675-0888 or
mason.ext.wvu.edu/
60451110

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

OPINION

Pollution rule hurts
coal, helps other sources
Jonathan Fahey
� ��8/&lt;1C�'&lt;3&gt;/&lt;

NEW YORK (AP) —
Tough new limits on the
amount of heat-trapping
emissions new power
plants can emit will likely
accelerate a shift away
from coal-fired power and
toward electricity generated with natural gas, wind,
and sunshine.
Power prices for homes,
businesses and factories
may eventually rise, and
nuclear power could return to fashion.
The rule proposed by the
Obama administration Friday will have little effect on
the mix of power sources
and electricity prices anytime soon because it only
applies to new power plants
and is likely to be challenged in court. Even so,
market forces are already
reshaping power markets
in the same way the rule
will. A boom in natural gas
production in the U.S. has
dramatically increased supplies, sent prices plummeting and prompted a shift
away from coal.
The rule requires new
coal plants to be built with
extremely expensive equipment to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. That will
make coal look prohibitively expensive to regulators
and utilities planning for
the future. By comparison,
natural gas-fired plants,
which emit half as much
carbon dioxide as coal
plants, along with wind
turbines and solar panels,
will look like a bargain.
Jason Bordoff, Director
of Columbia University’s
Center on Global Energy
Policy, called the rule “consistent with already evolving market trends toward
the use of natural gas instead of coal” and described
it as “cost-effective.”
Nonetheless, it creates
financial winners and losers. Here’s how the landscape could change for
companies and customers.
Winners
— Natural gas. Most
new natural gas-fired power plants will stay within
the rule’s emissions lim-

The rule requires new coal plants to
be built with extremely expensive
equipment to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions. That will make coal look
prohibitively expensive to regulators
and utilities planning for the future.
its without requiring new
equipment. That means
natural-gas fired plants —
already by far the cheapest power plant to build
and operate — will likely
remain the top choice for
utilities.
As utilities rely more
on natural gas to generate
electricity, demand for the
fuel will increase and prices could rise. That would
mean more revenue for
domestic natural gas drillers such as ExxonMobil
and Chesapeake Energy,
drilling services companies such as Halliburton
and Baker Hughes, and
pipeline companies such as
Spectra Energy and Kinder
Morgan. It will also help
makers of natural-gas fired
turbines such as General
Electric and Siemens.
— Renewable energy.
Wind and solar developers,
such as NextEra Energy
and FirstSolar, may see increased demand for large
projects, especially if power prices rise. That would
also help rooftop solar installers such as Solar City
attract more interest from
homes and businesses.
— Nuclear power. Nuclear, like coal, has suffered
from the low power prices
brought on by cheap natural gas. Utilities have abandoned ambitious plans to
build new nuclear plants
and they’ve shut down
aging plants that have
become too expensive to
run. If prices rise, nuclear
operators such as Exelon
and Entergy will benefit.
And because the new rule
makes new coal plants so
expensive, utilities afraid
of relying too heavily on
natural gas for future power production may turn instead to nuclear.
— Power generators. If

Sunday Times-Sentinel
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electricity prices rise as coal
use declines, companies that
sell wholesale electric power, such NRG Energy and
Calpine, may benefit.
Losers
— Coal miners. The U.S.
coal industry is already
struggling because coal
supplies piled up and prices dropped as natural gas
gained favor. U.S. production is expected to fall to a
20-year low this year, and
151 mines that employed
2,658 workers were idled
in the first half of this year,
according to SNL Energy.
While coal will continue
to be an important fuel for
electricity generation in the
U.S. for decades, it appears
to be facing a long, slow
decline. The country will
get less and less coal from
the comparatively high-cost
Appalachian region, and
more from cheaper-to-access coal deposits in the Illinois Basin and in Wyoming.
Companies with large Appalachian operations, such
as James River Coal and Alpha Natural Resources, will
likely continue to suffer.
— Electric customers.
Natural gas prices generally dictate the price of all
electricity in the U.S. If demand for natural gas rises
faster than drillers supply
it, the price will rise and
drag power prices up too,
possibly boosting electric
bills for homes and businesses. In the past, natural
gas prices have been extraordinarily volatile.
Industrial companies, who
have used low power prices
in the U.S. as a competitive
advantage, are concerned.
The National Association
of Manufacturers said in a
statement Friday that the
rule will “hurt competitiveness and job creation.”

Page A4
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2013

Letters to The Editor
Reader speaks out
against gun legislation
Dear Editor,
The National Rifle Association (NRA)
is the only group of citizens who have
come together to let their government officials be aware of what they want.
As for the NRA (a group of citizens) being stronger than the presidency, no!!! It is
the legislative representatives doing what
most of their electorates want them to do.
The presidency has to have checks and
balances, that is why our founding fathers
set up the democracy this way. Otherwise,
you would just have a dictatorship which
our forefathers were more aware of than
us.
I keep hearing about 90 percent of the
people and leaders in Washington wanting gun controls. This is absurd. Wake up,
people. If this were so, it would be a done
deal. All the legislators would automatically pass it because they know if they don’t,
the people would vote them out. Then
they would not have their cushy well paid
jobs with power and prestige.
The “gun control bill” that failed in the
Senate is a good example of people reaching out to their representatives.
Carl Saunders,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Reader outlines role
of Grange in Meigs fairs
Dear Editor,
I have certainly enjoyed the Meigs

County Fair—especially all the junior fair
booths giving a brief history of the 150
years of the fair. I’m sure these groups
were all furnished with the same sketch of
the fair’s history, so this letter in no way is
a criticism of all these fine groups.
The Meigs County Fair has obviously
overlooked a very important item in its history. In the early 1900’s, the Meigs County
Pomona Grange held a fair at Carpenter.
There are still a few Grange fairs running
in Ohio today. The Grange fair in Meigs
County was so successful that it was killing the Meigs County Fair. I have no idea
why there were two fairs at the time. In
any case, the Meigs County Fair asked the
Meigs County Grange to combine its fair
with theirs. For whatever reason, this was
agreed to.
Were it not for this magnanimous action of the Grange, the county fair would
not likely exist today. In recent years,
there has been some unfair treatment of
the Grange, so I felt that it was important
to make this fact known. The grange is
still in support of the Meigs County Fair
and wishes it many more years of success.
This is proven by the fact that it costs
each local grange much more than each
receives in premium money for its display
booths. We want our fair to be the best
possible and continue to be supported by
local granges.
Sincerely
Keith D. Ashley
Pomeroy

Avicii fuses electronic music, country on debut
Mesfin Fekadu
� ��?=3-�'&lt;3&gt;/&lt;

NEW YORK — When
Avicii debuted his electronic-country fusion at the Ultra Music Festival in March,
he was met with criticism.
Months later, he said the
controversy helped him.
“People’s expectations
were just lowered so much.
Country and house? This
has got to be a joke,” the DJproducer said in a recent
interview. “Once you get
over the fact that it’s country and house, just listen to
it as music, a lot of people
realized it’s pretty good.”
“Wake Me Up” is Avicii’s proof. The upbeat folk
tune has topped the charts
around the world. It has
peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the
United States, where the
song is platinum.
Avicii, born Tim Bergling

Congress shall make no law
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

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
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in Sweden, fuses many
genres on his debut album,
“True,” released this week.
The 24-year-old prefers the
term folk over country, and
believes folk and electronic
music aren’t so different.
“(Folk is) really stripped
down and it’s not as complicated as a lot of other things,
so to put a 4/4 beat under it
and play around and add
synths, it really wasn’t
hard,” he said. “I never felt
like I was forcing anything
at all, it just felt completely
natural, otherwise, I never
would have done it.”
His next single, “You Make
Me,” is following in the footsteps of the ultra-successful
“Wake Me Up,” which was
co-written with Incubus
guitarist Mike Einziger and
Aloe Blacc, who sings on the
monster tune.
The back-to-back hits
come as no surprise: Avicii
has been one of the world’s

top DJs since his song
“Le7els” took off internationally in 2011. He’s constantly booked to headline
festivals around the world,
and he’s had success releasing singles like “I Could Be
the One” and “Silhouettes”
in various territories.
Because of his worldwide acclaim, Avicii said
he’s finally ready to release
his first full-length album.
“I’ve always wanted to have
an album, but there hasn’t
been time for me to not tour
and actually sit down and finish an album the way I want
my album to sound,” he said
of “True,” which he recorded
in three months.
“Now (there) is no pressure really for me to make
an album,” he added. “I’ve
been able to play these bigger venues and still advance
and make my brand bigger without even thinking
about making an album.”

Sunday Times Sentinel

Ohio Valley
Newspapers
200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Phone (304) 675-1333
Fax (304) 675-5234
www.mydailytribune.com
or www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Sunday, September 22, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

%3:EF2C:6D
Brylee Nicole Stutes

Brylee Nicole Stutes,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, infant
daughter of Bretton Michael Stutes and Kelsey
Dawn Blackburn Stutes
was born an angel and
went home to be with Jesus on September 19, 2013,
in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, Ohio. She
weighed six pounds and
was nineteen inches long.
In addition to her parents, she is survived by
her paternal grandparents,
Michael and Alicia Stutes and Mark and Chrissy Burris, Gallipolis, Ohio; maternal grandparents, Ben Blackburn and Misty Blackburn Grant, Vinton, Ohio; paternal
great-grandparents, Jim and Bonnie Stutes, Paul and
Toshi Burris of Gallipolis and Nancy Caldwell, Crown
City, Ohio; maternal great-grandparents, Bill and Scilvie
Blackburn, Dale and Debbie Grant, Vinton, Ohio; paternal great-great-grandparents, Hiram and Maxine Stutes
and Hud and Opal Saunders of Gallipolis; and maternal
great-great grandparent, Robert Grant of Vinton, Ohio.
Also surviving are special aunts, Hailey Burris and
Kendra Blackburn; and several aunts, uncles, cousins and
other family members.
Grave side services will be held at 1 p.m., Sunday, in
the Vinton Memorial Park with Pastor Chester Hess officiating. Burial will follow.

Bernice Marie Bailey

Bernice Marie Bailey, 84, of Long Bottom, Ohio,
passed away on September 19, 2013. She was born on
November 12, 1928, at Pine Grove in Meigs County,
daughter of the late Edward and Katie (Fell) Young.
Bernice, also known as “Ginny” and “Aunt Bea,” was
a homemaker. She married Robert O. Bailey on August
27, 1947. She enjoyed cooking and taking care of her
great-grandchildren. She was noted for her homemade
noodles and fresh peach pie. She was active in church in
her earlier years and she was a member of the Chester
United Methodist Church and the Eagle Ridge Community Church.
She is survived by her son, Robertand and Darlene Bailey, Long Bottom; grandson, Michael and Melody Bailey;
great-grandchildren, Benjamin, Cassidy and Tori Bailey
and Kristen McKay; sisters, Elva and Lewis Hudson and
Jean and Harry Roush, Racine, Ohio; brothers-in-law
and sisters-in-law, Russell and Erlinda Bailey, Phillipines,
James Bailey, Bashan, Ohio, Maxie Walters, Florida, Audrey and Chuck Spore, Mansfield, Ohio, Betty Master,
Pomeroy; and many nieces, nephews and friends.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her husband, Robert O. Bailey; brothers, Otho and
Howard Young; sisters, Betty McGuire, Edith Manuell,
and infant sister, Ada.

Barr

Evelyn Brandeberry

Evelyn Brandeberry, 91, Gallipolis, Ohio, passed away
peacefully in her home Friday, September 20, 2013, surrounded by her family and loved ones. Born May 6, 1922,
she was the daughter of Tom and Vera (Matheson) Werner. Evelyn received her Registered Nursing Degree from
the Mt. Sinai School of Nursing in 1943 and a Surgical
Nurse Certification in 1946 from the University Hospital
in Cleveland, Ohio. She served in the Operating Room
of Christ Hospital in Cincinnati and as a volunteer nurse
in Holzer Hospital Emergency Room from 1953 to 1986.
She served as a Red Cross Volunteer beginning in 1953
assisting with starting the first Gallia County Bloodmobile that same year. She was recognized by WSAZ News
as a “Hometown Hero” for her extensive work with
the bloodmobile. She served as a past president of the
Washington Elementary PTA and was a member of The
Pembroke Club of Gallipolis. She was also member of the
First Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis, where she served
as an Elder. Evelyn married Dr. Keith R. Brandeberry
March 10, 1945, in Cleveland, Ohio, and he preceded her
in death August 6, 2006.
Evelyn leaves behind her children: April (Jim) Magnussen, Gallipolis; Thomas (Bonnie) Brandeberry, St.
Simon’s Island, Georgia; Roger (Susan) Brandeberry,
Gallipolis; grandchildren: Bob (Laura) Magnussen, Columbus, Ohio; Dan (Vicki) Magnussen, Columbus, Ohio;
Jeff Brandeberry, St. Simon’s Island, Georgia; John “Jake”
Brandeberry, Richmond, Virginia; Jenny (Erik) Gloster,
Asheboro, North Carolina; Sarah (Stan) Gibson, Virginia
Beach, Virginia; Kristin (Ryan) Harper, Pensacola, Florida, and Adam Brandeberry, Columbus, Ohio; seven greatgrandchildren, two great-great-grandchildren and sisterin-law, Dorothy (Richard) Wharton, Columbus, Ohio.
In addition to her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by two brothers, John and Bob Werner.
Funeral services will be conducted 11 a.m. Monday,
September 23, 2013, at the First Presbyterian Church,
51 State Street, Gallipolis, with Pastor Timothy Luoma
officiating. Burial will follow in Mound Hill Cemetery,
Gallipolis. Friends and family may call from 3-6 p.m. Sunday, September 22, 2013, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, 420 First Avenue, Gallipolis.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial donations in honor of Evelyn be sent to: The American Red
Cross, Gallia County, 417 Second Avenue #C, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631, or Holzer Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Condolences may be sent to www.mccoymoore.com.

Robert L. Sellers

Robert Lesley Sellers, 57, of Portland, Ohio, passed

away September 19, 2013, at HOlzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis, Ohio, surrounded by his family.
He was born July 15, 1956, in Meigs County, Ohio, son
of Edwin James Sellers and Mary Alveris Ward Seller. He
was a self-employed mechanic.
He was a member of the Racine Gun Club, and life
member of North American Hunt Club. He was a former
Lebanon Township Trustee. He liked to hunt, race and
work on his cars, and loved and enjoyed being with his
grandchildren.
Surviving are his wife of 35 years, Tris Anne Sellers of
Portland, Ohio; children, Robert Lesley Sellers and wife,
Winter of Portland, Ohio, Billie Jo Cremeans and husband, Steven of Portland, Ohio, Aaron James Sellers and
wife, Kristiina of Portland, Ohio, Corbin J. Sellersof the
home, and Ronald Allen Keyes Jr. of Ravenswood, W.Va.;
grandchildren, Alex, Tristyn, Taylor, Hailey, Dalton and
Ryder; brothers and sisters, John Baker of Lisbon, Ohio,
Mabel Sheets of Racine, Ohio, Paul Sellers of Shade,
Ohio, Joseph Sellers of Florida, James Sellers of Portland,
Ohio, and Rick Sellers of Portland, Ohio; several nieces
and nephews; and special friend, Bernard LaValley.
He was preceded in death by his parents; brother, Gilbert Ray Sellers; niece, Jennifer Rose Sellers; and nephew, Ricky Sellers.
Services will be held at 8 p.m. on Monday, September
23, 2013, at Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
with Reverend Bill Justice officiting. Friends may visit
the family from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. on Monday, September
23, at Roush Funeral Home.
Condolences may be expressed to the family by email
at roush94@yahoo.com, or on our website at www.roushfuneralhome.com.

Anita (Burkhammer) Sims

Anita (Burkhammer) Sims, age 81, of Gallipolis,
passed away on Thursday, September 19, 2013, at her
home after a long battle with cancer.
She was born January 11, 1932, and lived in Jane Lew,
W.Va., until 1967 when the family moved to Gallipolis.
Anita was the fifth daughter of the late Grant and Mamie Burkhammer. She is preceded in death by her only
daughter Cathy Wray. Anita is survived by three sons;
Rick and Barry Sims of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Brian
(Doc) Sims of Gallipolis, along with five grandchildren
and several great grandchildren.
Anita was a 1950 graduate of Jane Lew High School,
after moving to Gallipolis Anita began working at the
now Rockwell Automotive plant and did so until she retired.
Family and friends will be received at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant on Sunday, September 22
with visitation from 5-7 p.m., funeral service will be at
the funeral home Monday, September 23 at 1 p.m. with
Pastor Robert Patterson officiating, burial will follow at
Forest Hills Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
Anita’s care has been entrusted to Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
Friends may register online at: crowhussellfh.com.

JP Morgan admits fault, pays $920M in trading loss

�62E9î$@E:46D
Alice Marie Barr, 93, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
Thursday, September 19,
2013 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, surrounded by
her family.
A memorial service will
be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, September 28, 2013,
at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with Bishop Mark
Lattime officiating. Burial
will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. In lieu of
flowers the family suggest
memorial contributions
be made in memory of
Alice Marie Barr to the
Pleasant Valley Hospi-

Funeral services will be held Tuesday, September 24,
2013, at 11 a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy, Ohio. Burial will follow at Chester Cemetery.
Visiting hours are on Monday from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

tal Health Foundation at
2520 Valley Drive, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.

Benson

Stephen R. Benson, age
41, of Henderson, W.Va.,
died Thursday, September
19, 2013, at his home.
Funeral services for
Stephen will be held at
1 p.m., Saturday, September 21, 2013, at the
Crow-Hussell
Funeral
Home, with Pastor Roger
Bonecutter
officiating.
Burial will follow in Rogers Cemetery. Visitation
will be held at the funeral
home on Saturday, one
hour prior to the service.

Briefs
From Page A3
tion call Mary Gilmore at 740-444-1595.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The financial penalty is staggering. JPMorgan Chase &amp; Co. will pay $920 million for trading losses that shook the
financial world last year.
But the bigger price may be a few
words rarely uttered in settlements
with U.S. regulators: The nation’s largest bank is also admitting wrongdoing.
JPMorgan’s acknowledged failure
of oversight in the $6 billion trading
loss is a first for a major company
since the Securities and Exchange
Commission reversed its longstanding practice of allowing firms to pay
fines without accepting fault.
The admission, made Thursday as
part of a broad settlement with U.S.
and U.K. regulators, could leave the
bank vulnerable to millions of dollars
in lawsuits. The legal burden of proof
in such private litigation is lower than
in cases brought by the government.
“The floodgates are opening,” said
Anthony Sabino, an attorney and business professor at St. John’s University
in New York. “This is the kind of thing
plaintiffs’ lawyers salivate over.”
Regulators said JPMorgan’s weak
oversight allowed traders in its London office to assign inflated values

to transactions and cover up huge
losses as they ballooned. Two of the
traders are facing criminal charges of
falsifying records to hide the losses.
Combined, the bank will pay one of
the largest fines ever levied against a
financial institution: $200 million to
the SEC, $200 million to the U.S.
Federal Reserve, $300 million to the
U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, and $220 million to the
U.K. Financial Conduct Authority.
As part of the SEC settlement,
JPMorgan acknowledged that it violated securities laws in failing to keep
watch over traders.
The U.S. Justice Department is still
investigating the bank for possible
criminal violations. And there could
be more action to come from the SEC.
George Canellos, co-director of the
SEC’s enforcement division, said the
agency continues to investigate individuals at the firm. The agency noted
that senior executives knew that the
trading operation was assigning values to transactions that failed to convey the extent of the losses.
“JPMorgan’s senior management
broke a cardinal rule of corporate governance: inform your board of direc-

tors of matters that call into question
the truth of what the company is disclosing to investors,” said Canellos.
New York-based JPMorgan called
the settlements “a major step” in its
efforts to put its legal problems behind it. The bank said it cooperated
fully with all of the agencies’ investigations and continues to cooperate with
the Justice Department in its criminal
prosecution of the two former traders.
“We have accepted responsibility and
acknowledged our mistakes from the
start, and we have learned from them
and worked to fix them,” JPMorgan
CEO Jamie Dimon said in a statement.
By requiring the bank to accept
some blame, regulators hope it will
warn other companies to think twice
before taking extreme risks that
threaten the broader financial system.
The SEC had faced sharp criticism for taking too soft an approach
with its enforcement after the 2008
financial crisis. Banks accused of
misleading investors about risky investments ahead of the crisis, including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and
Citigroup, were allowed to pay fines
without admitting or denying fault
— a long-standing policy at the SEC.

Antique Machinery Show
ALBANY — The Athens County Antique Machinery
Show will be held Sept. 28 and 29 at the Lake Snowden
Park at 4900 U.S. Highway 50, Albany. The show will
feature antique and classic tractor old farm and oil field
engines. There will be crafts and flea markets, working
steam engines, antique trucks and cars, stone ground
corn meal, a saw mill, and tractor brands starting with
the letters, J. K. and L. Camping is available. For more
information call Mike Hartley 59405665; Dave Arnold
591-2947 or Steve Sewell 707-6675. Site www.athenscountyantiquemachineryclub.com.
Tournament Set
RUTLAND — The Rutland Youth co-ed softball tournament will be held on Sept. 28 at the Rutland ballfield. Call
Rodney Butcher for more information 740-742-2525.
Riverbend Art Show
MIDDLEPORT —The Riverbend Arts Council is sponsoring its 7th annual “Art in the Village” on Oct. 5th. Applications for those wanting to exhibit art work can be picked up at
Farmers Bank in Pomeroy or King Ace Hardware in Middleport. Deadline is Sept. 22.
Scholarship fund raiser
RACINE — Racine Area Community Organization
(RACO) will be holding their fall yard sale to benefit the scholarship fund for Southern High School seniors on September
17, from 9 to 6; September 18, from 9 to 4 and September 19,
from 9 to 2 at Star Mill park in Racine. All three shelter houses
will be used for this event. For information, contact Kathryn
Hart at 949-2656.
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.

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1-855-4-HOLZER
60439219

�Page A6 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday, September 22, 2013

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CLAYCOMO, Mo. (AP)
— President Barack Obama
furiously responded Friday
to congressional budget
battles that could threaten
a partial government shutdown, accusing Republicans
voting against his health
care law of focusing on politics and “holding the whole
country hostage.”
Locked in a stalemate
with lawmakers over spending and borrowing with
less than two weeks until
the start of the new budget year, the president returned to a fiery campaign
mode to take his critics to
task. He said Republicans
must stop focusing on defunding his health care law,

pass a budget and raise the
nation’s borrowing limit to
head off a first-ever default
on the nation’s debt.
“We’re not some banana
republic. This isn’t some
deadbeat nation,” Obama
said before workers on
a sprawling auto plant
floor in Missouri. “We
don’t run out on our tab.
We’re the world’s bedrock
investment. The entire
world looks to us to make
sure the world economy
is stable. We can’t just
not pay our bills. And
even threating something
like that is the height of
irresponsibility.”
Congress faces two financial deadlines in the

coming weeks. Funding for
the government is set to
run out at the end of September, and the government will reach the limits
of its borrowing authority
a few weeks later.
The
Republican-led
House passed a bill Friday to keep the government running while gutting funding for Obama’s
health care law.
The health care provision is sure to die in the
Democratic- controlled
Senate, and Obama said
he would veto it if it didn’t,
setting up a showdown
that could lead to a partial
government shutdown.
“Our message to the Unit-

ed State Senate is real simple,” House Speaker John
Boehner declared after the
vote. “The American people
don’t want the government
shut down, and they don’t
want Obamacare.”
Obama returned the
combative tone soon after,
accusing Republicans of
threatening to “blow the
whole thing up” because
they couldn’t get their way
on health care. He ridiculed
them for the more than 40
votes they’ve taken to repeal
his health care proposal as a
waste of time and energy.
“Now they’ve gone beyond just holding Congress
hostage. They’re holding
the whole country hos-

tage,” with the key deadlines looming, Obama said.
Obama was speaking at a Ford Motor Co.
stamping plant near Kansas City, and he told the
workers that the shutdown will hurt Americans
like them. He laid out a
menacing list of consequences if Congress fails
to act: Delayed paychecks
for military workers,
hundreds of thousands
of Americans prevented
from going to work, small
businesses whose loans
won’t go through.
“Somebody wanting to
buy an F-150 will have to
pay much higher interest
rates eventually, which

means you will sell less
cars,” he said. “That’s just
one example of how profoundly destructive this
could be. This is not some
abstract thing.”
He continued with the
automotive metaphor to
explain the impact of the
failure to raise the debt
limit, comparing it to a
driver who gets a new
F-150 on a payment plan.
“I can’t just say, you
know, I’m not going to
make my car payment this
month. That’s what Congress is threatening to do,
just saying, ‘I’m not going
to pay the bills.’ There are
consequences to that,”
Obama said.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — An
Ohio police chief who invited his
nearly 85,000 Facebook followers
to his small town’s community festival this weekend expects at least
1,000 from near and far to show up.
Brimfield Township Chief
David Oliver started the department’s Facebook page more than
three years ago in the hopes of
reaching a few hundred people
in his northeast Ohio community. But his posts mixing humor, blunt opinion, community
engagement and rants against
“mopes” — criminals and other
ne’er-do-wells — draw an audience much larger than the approximately 10,000 residents the
department serves.
The department’s Facebook fans
surpassed that of the Philadelphia

police page this summer and trail
only the much larger Boston and
New York departments.
Oliver said more than 1,000
signed up to visit this weekend.
They hail from all over, Arkansas
and Arizona to Maryland and
Mississippi.
Andy Marek, who is making the
seven-hour drive from Interlochen,
Mich., said Oliver’s character and
outsize following convinced him
“there’s something to that town,”
and he’s eager to see it.
“You can’t have a police chief
like him unless you’ve got some
other quality people,” the 41-yearold sales associate said. “I’m curious to see what the town’s like,
and to meet Chief Oliver.”
Overall, local officials expect
several thousand more people

than usual to come to the annual Brimfest. The only folks
not welcome are the mopes, and
any who risk a visit may get acquainted with several other law
enforcement agencies on hand
patrolling for trouble.
The event started Thursday
and includes fireworks, fair
foods, competitive line-dancing
and a Saturday parade that Oliver has transformed this year
into a tribute for veterans. More
than 400 will participate, including some World War II veterans
and two busloads of patients
from the Louis Stokes Cleveland
VA Medical Center.
“I think that people are coming out because of the idea and
because of, you know, it’s kind
of an all-American thing,” Oliver

told The Associated Press.
Another draw will be the big,
beefy chief himself and the launch
of his book, “No Mopes Allowed.”
The book proceeds go to a nonprofit foundation he and his wife
created to benefit local programs
and sexually abused children. It’s
the latest community betterment
project by the chief and his officers, who also have pitched “no
mopes” gear made by a local shop
to raise more than $10,000 for
school security improvements.
Kelly Whelan is driving for a
little over five hours from Ashburn, Va., to attend Brimfest —
and get a signed copy of Oliver’s
book. Whelan, 45, made hotel
reservations in April after reading Oliver’s invitation.
Whelan will attend the fes-

tival in a group of six. She and
a friend bought Virginia police
badges and are hoping to swap
them for one from Brimfield.
Not everyone is a fan of Oliver’s approach, and commenters
occasionally gripe that he uses
work time inappropriately for
Facebook or shouldn’t be discussing suspects in a public forum. But Oliver isn’t fazed by
criticism or Facebook fame.
“If you’re going to start social media, you have to be consistent,” he said. “And that’s all
I want to do. … I want to keep
being me, keep being us here
at the police department, keep
our efforts very clear and our
mission very clear on doing the
right thing and helping as many
people as possible.”

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NEW ORLEANS (AP)
— While officials try to pin
down the source of a deadly amoeba found in the
water supply of a suburban
New Orleans community,
bottled water sales in St.
Bernard Parish have skyrocketed and some people
worry about washing their
faces in the shower.
That’s despite experts
who say the only danger is
to people who manage to
get the microscopic organism way up their noses. Its
only entry to the brain is
through minute openings
in a bone about level with
the top of the eyeball, said
Dr. Raoult Ratard, Louisiana’s state epidemiologist.
But belief comes hard
to many people. “As
far as taking a bath or
shower, you got no other
choice,” said Debbie Sciortino. “But I ain’t drinking it, I ain’t giving it to
the dogs and I ain’t cooking with it either.”
The state Department
of Health and Hospitals
on Thursday tried to

dispel common “myths
and rumors” about the
amoeba Naegleria fowleri
(nuh-GLEE-ree-uh FOWler-eye) — starting with
the notion that the parish
water isn’t safe to drink.
Meanwhile, the parish held
a public meeting about its
water Thursday night.
The worries began Sept.
12, when the state health
department reported that
parish water in Violet and
Arabi tested positive for
the amoeba that had killed
a 4-year-old Mississippi
boy in August after he visited St. Bernard Parish
Jonathan Yoder, an epidemiologist in the Center for Disease Control
and Prevention’s waterborne disease prevention
branch, said Naegleria has
never before been found
in water treated by a U.S.
water system.
There have been 132
documented
infections
from the amoeba since
1962, almost all of them
fatal, health officials say.
Both of Louisiana’s

2011 infections were
of people who used tap
water to flush out their
sinuses. However, each
of the earlier cases, Yoder said the amoeba was
found in the house’s hot
water system but not in
either municipal water
or water coming from the
home’s cold water tap.
But still people worry.
“Nobody’s washing their
faces in the showers anymore. Nobody’s drinking
the water,” Angela Miller
of Violet said during a
break Thursday outside
the Chalmette hair salon
where she works. “My
neighbor has a pool that
they have emptied. And
they have no water in there
now until this matter is
cleared up.”
That’s not necessary, experts say. Stomach acids,
boiling and chlorine all will
kill the amoeba.
Many people think water should test free of the
amoeba before they use
it, DHH said, but testing
tap water for the amoeba

is not as important as
making sure that it holds
enough chlorine to kill
the creature.
Last Friday — the latest available report —
there was no detectable
free chlorine in water
mains and other testing
stations along nearly twothirds the length of the
long, narrow parish.
To get the recommended level of one-half part
chlorine per million at the
system’s outer reaches,
the parish has been putting about eight times that
amount into the water at
its treatment plant, said
Jake Causey, chief engineer for the state Office of
Public Health’s engineering services section.
Investigators may never
know just how Naegleria
got into the pipes.
It usually lives just
above the bottom of fresh
water, feeding on bacteria. It spreads farthest in
warm water. Minnesota
reported two infections in
the past few years, but the
vast majority have been in
15 Southern states, with
more than half the total in
Florida and Texas.

It might have entered
and survived in the water system in many ways,
including Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and population loss since then,
Causey said.
The parish had to repair more than 1,000
broken pipes after floodwaters receded, he said.
“When it was brought
back online, the water
was chlorinated, flushed
and sampled. But water
mains can build up biofilms over time, and can
get microorganisms in
there that stay behind
the biofilm.”
Meanwhile, the population fell from 67,000 before Katrina to 35,000 afterward and is now about
44,000, Causey said. With
fewer people, water moved
more slowly through the
pipes. A couple of years
ago, he said, the parish installed 50 automatic flushing stations to dump water
out of the mains periodically, and keep it moving.
Louisiana’s cases are
unusual. Nearly all of the
cases reported nationwide each year are from
swimming or playing

in warm fresh water —
the source of this year’s
three other infections, in
Florida, Texas and Arkansas, Yoder said.
Twelve-year-old
Kali
(KAY-lee) Hardig, whose
parents released her name
and who spoke at a news
conference when she was
released from a Little Rock
hospital Sept. 11, is only
the second known, welldocumented survivor in
the U.S., said Yoder.
Doctors were able to
use a drug that is used
against another parasite
and kills Naegleria in lab
tests, Yoder said.
Kali’s doctors “caught
it early, they treated it
aggressively. … She did
survive. We’re very encouraged by that development,” he said.
And some people who
had been avoiding the parish water apparently are
drinking it again.
At B &amp; G Fresh Market
in Chalmette, owner Brian
Gab said he was probably
ordering four or five times
as much water as usual last
week. Now, “I would say
it’s probably triple.”

60451087

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H2JDî5C2Hî\C6î@?î8F?D

Accreditation Statement
The Holzer Health System is accredited by the Ohio State Medical Association
to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
Designation Statement:
The Holzer Health System designates this educational activity for a maximum 5 AMA PRA Category I Credits. ™
Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

NEW YORK (AP) — Starbucks has
always set itself apart by taking strong
positions on progressive political issues.
Now that reputation has landed the company in the middle of the heated national debate over gun laws.
On Thursday, the Seattle-based company will run full-page ads in major newspapers, telling customers that guns are no
longer welcome in its cafes. But Starbucks
is stopping short of an outright ban, exposing the fine line it needs to walk on a
highly divisive issue.
“We are not pro-gun or anti-gun,” CEO
Howard Schultz said in an interview, noting that customers will still be served if
they choose to a carry gun.
The move comes as the company finds
itself at the center of a fight it didn’t
start. In recent months, gun control advocates have been pressuring Starbucks
to ban firearms, while supporters of gun
rights have celebrated the company’s
decision to defer to local laws. About a
month ago, Starbucks shut down a store
in Newtown, Conn., early to avoid a
demonstration by gun rights advocates.
They had planned to stage a “Starbucks
Appreciation Day,” bringing their firearms and turning the company into an
unwitting supporter of gun rights.
Support for guns runs counter to the
Starbucks image. The warm feeling Starbucks customers get when they’re sipping
lattes doesn’t always come from the coffee.
For some, part of the brand’s attraction is

the company’s liberal-leaning support of
issues such as gay marriage and environmental preservation.
But with more than $13 billion in annual
revenue and about 7,000 company-owned
stores across the country —in red states
and blue — Starbucks is being forced to
tread carefully with its special blend of
politics and commerce.
Many states allow people to carry
licensed guns in some way, but some
businesses exercise their right to ban
firearms. They can do so because their
locations are considered private property. Starbucks isn’t the only company
that doesn’t ban guns, but it has become
a target for gun control advocates, in part
because of its corporate image.
“This is a coffee company that has championed progressive issues,” said Shannon
Watts, founder of the gun reform group
Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in
America. “They’ve positioned themselves
about being about the human spirit —
that was so at odds with this policy that
allowed guns inside their stores.”
Starbucks’ mission statement is to
“inspire and nurture the human spirit”
and over the years, it has taken strong
positions on a number of thorny issues.
Earlier this year, the company banned
smoking within 25 feet of its stores,
wherever its leases allowed. The idea
was to extend its no-smoking policy to
the outdoor seating areas, regardless of
state laws on the matter.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY,
SEPTEMBER 22, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

INSIDE

SPORTS

Blue Angels
take revenge
... Page B2

Gallia Academy tames Tigers, 45-16
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Dominant … in all three
phases of the game.
The offense, defense
and special teams all contributed to an early 38-0
fourth quarter advantage,
and Gallia Academy eventually rolled to a 45-16 victory over visiting Marietta
in a Week 4 non-conference
matchup Friday night at
Memorial Field in the Old
French City.
The Blue Devils (3-1)
completed a season-opening four-game home stand
in style after limiting the
Tigers (1-3) to minus-14
yards of total offense in
the first half. GAHS recorded four sacks, forced
one fumble and returned a

punt for a score before the
intermission, allowing the
hosts to secure a 28-0 edge
at halftime.
A defensive touchdown
and a field goal gave Gallia
Academy a whopping 38-0
advantage with 11:02 remaining in the second half,
and both teams let their
reserves finish out the contest — which wrapped up
the 29-point triumph.
The Blue Devils —
winners of three straight
— picked up their fifth
straight decision over
Marietta, which has now
dropped three in a row.
GAHS also outgained the
guests by a 29-191 overall
margin in total offense and
finished the night plus-3 in
Bryan Walters | Sunday Times-Sentinel
turnover differential.
Gallia Academy defenders Wes Jarrell (2) and Payton Holley (20)
bring down Marietta running back Chance Wright (21) during the

See TAME | B2 first quarter of Friday night’s Week 4 football contest in Gallipolis.

Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs senior Damon Jones (12) jukes in between Trimble’s
Konner Standley (4) and Terry Simmerly (1) during the Marauders 16-0 loss to Trimble in Rocksprings, Friday night.

Trimble Tomcats
shutdown Meigs
Marauders, 16-0
Dave Harris
Special to OVP

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— The Trimble Tomcats
scored a pair of touchdowns in the first half, and
their defense made it stand
as Trimble defeated Meigs
16-0 in non-conference
football action Friday night
at Holzer Field/Framers
Banks Stadium. The Tomcats came into the contest
as the states 6th ranked in
Division VII, but the Marauders fought them tooth
and nail the entire contest.
Meigs was unable to get
any offense going against
a strong Tomcat defense.
Trimble now has nine shutouts in their last 14 regular
season games.
The Tomcats (4-0) took
advantage of a Marauder
(2-2) miscue for the first
score when Jacob Altier
recovered a Michael Davis fumble at their own 28
yard line. Three plays later, Austin Downs caught
behind the Marauder secondary and pulled in a 71
yard pass from Konner
Standley for the score. Jon
Stevens added the extra
points and Trimble was
on top 7-0 with 1:02 left in
the first period.
The Tomcats made it
a14-0 contest with 3:32
left in the half when Jacob
Koons scored from four
yards out; Steven added
the extra points for a 14-0
Tomcat lead.
Twice in the first half
Meigs was able to get the
ball into Tomcat territory,
but both times the THS
defense was able to make
the big play.
Trimble closed out the

scoring with 9:22 left in
the third period, Tristan
Conway’s 31 yard punt
pinned the Marauders
deep in their own territory
and on first down Andrew
Burt was tackled in the end
zone for a safety.
The Marauders were
able to get into Tomcat
territory two more times
in the fourth period, but
the offense was unable to
put points on the board
against the stout Trimble
defense. Michael Davis
led the Marauders with
27 yards in nine carries;
Jordan Hutton added 24
in nine tries. The Tomcat
defense held Meigs to only
81 yards rushing in 38 carries. Sheets was eight of
21 in the air for 86 yards
and two interceptions. Ty
Phelps had three receptions for 56 yards Damon
Jones added three for 30.
The Marauder defense
played well despite giving
up 340 yards. Meigs held
the potent Tomcat ground
game to 119 yards in 28
carries for 3.1 yards, well
below their average for the
season. Koons led Trimble
with 36 yards in nine tries,
Bryce Smathers added 27
yards in six carries and
Justice Jenkins added 26 in
seven tries. Standley was
11-of-29 in the air with an
interception for 221 yards,
only 44 of those yards came
in the second half.
Trimble will put their undefeated record on the line
next Friday night when the
host Miller. Meigs will play
a rare Saturday night game
next week when they travel
to Warren Local. Meigs
leads the all-time series
with Trimble 7-6.

OVP Sports Schedule
Monday, Sept. 23
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at River Valley, 5:30
Eastern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.
Sherman, Crosslanes Christian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Girls Golf
Sectional at Upper Lansdowne, 9 a.m.

Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern senior Zack Scowden (13) runs through the line during the Eagles 28-0 victory over Waterford, Friday night
at East Shade River Stadium.

Eagles wallop Waterford, 28-0
J.P. Davis

Special to OVP

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
The Eastern defense held Waterford to 46 yards of total offense to
en route to a 28-0 win Friday night
at East Shade River Stadium. EHS
scored its points in the second and
fourth quarters, respectively.
In the start of the first quarter,
Eastern’s quarterback Chase Cook
fumbled the handoff and Waterford
(1-3, 1-2 TVC Hocking) quickly
recovered the ball at the EHS 26yard line. However, Waterford’s
turned the ball over on downs on
its next offensive possession.
Eastern (2-2, 2-1), on the other
hand, failed on a fourth down
conversion. By the end of the first
quarter, the score of the game was
a scoreless tie.
At the 11:49 mark into the second quarter, Zack Scowden had
a 36-yard touchdown run and a
successful PAT kick by Christian
Speelman, making the score was
7-0 in favor of the Eagles.
Waterford turned the ball back
over to EHS from failing to convert another fourth down. Eastern regained the possession of the
ball and marched the ball down
the field. With 5:35 left in the
second quarter, Chase Cook connected on a 27-yard touchdown
pass to Zack Scowden and a successful two-point conversion by
Scowden, giving the Eagles a 15-0
lead going into halftime.
In the third quarter, Eastern

had tree offensive possessions
and two turnovers. Waterford
had four offensive possessions
and one turnover.
The Wildcats’ turnover in the
second half was an interception
pass from Joe Pugh into the hands
of Cook at the 3:28 mark left in
the third quarter. After each team
turned the ball over at least once
in the third quarter, the Eagles still
controlled the game with a 15-0 lead.
Within two minutes into the
fourth quarter, each team punted
the ball to each other. Another
costly turnover by Waterford’s Joe
Pugh interception pass with 6:11
left in the game, giving Eastern an
opportunity to increase its lead.
At the 4:27 mark in the fourth
quarter, Dylan Bresciani had a fouryard touchdown run and a successful PAT kick by Speelman, the Eagles were ahead of the Wildcats 22-0.
With 45 seconds left in the
game, Bresciani connected a 66yard touchdown pass to Scowden
and an unsuccessful two-point
conversion gave the Eagles the
final score of 28-0.
Dylan Bresciani led the Eagles
with 2-of-5 with 70 passing yards
and one touchdown, followed by
Chase Cook with 2-of-11 with
35 passing yards and one touchdown. Zack Scowden led the team
in rushing with 16 carries for 81
yards and one touchdown.
Chase Cook had eight carries
for 35 yards. Dylan Bresciani had
four carries for 25 yards and one
touchdown. Zach Browning had

four carries for 23 yards.
Tyler Barber had four carries
for five yards and Tristen Goodnite had one carry for negative
three yards. Zack Scowden led the
Eagles with two receptions for 93
yards and two touchdowns. Tyler
Barber had one reception for eight
yards and Cameron Richmond had
one reception for 4 yards.
EHS had a total of 11 first
downs. EHS had 156 rushing yards
and 105 passing yards, and a total
of 261 yards of offense. A total of
five penalties for 65 yards. A total
of one fumble and one for a lost.
Joe Pugh led the Wildcats with
5-of-13 with 12 passing yards and
two interceptions. Austin Lang
led the team with 12 carries for
31 rushing yards. Jaret McCucheon had 10 carries for 17 yards.
Dalton Ball had one carry for four
yards. Isaac Huffman had seven
carries for negative four yards.
Tyler McCutcheon had two carries for negative five yards. Joe Pugh
had two carries for negative nine
yards. Jaret McCutcheon led WHS
wih two receptions for eight yards.
Tyler McCutcheon had two receptions for four yards. Brendon Daily
had one reception for zero yards.
The Wildcats had a total of seven
first downs. WHS had 34 rushing
yards and 12 passing yards, and a
total of 46 yards of offense. A total
of three penalties for 30 yards. One
fumble and one for a lost.
The Eastern Eagles will travel to
South Gallia next Friday for a Week
5 TVC Hocking matchup at 7:30 p.m.

Tornadoes topple Fed Hock, 48-12

Bryan Walters
Tuesday, Sept. 24
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
Volleyball
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5:30
STEWART, Ohio — The
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 5:30
Southern football team
Waterford at Southern, 6 p.m.
broke away from a slim
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
third quarter lead by scorSouth Gallia at Miller, 6 p.m.
ing 34 unanswered points
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30
Friday night en route to
Boys Soccer
a 48-12 victory over host
Gallia Academy at South Point, 5:30
Federal Hocking in a Week
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
4 Tri-Valley Conference
Girls Soccer
Hocking Division matchup
Hoover at Point Pleasant, 6:30
in Athens County.
Golf
The visiting Tornadoes
Meigs at Chillicothe Jaycees Sectional, 9 a.m.
Gallia Academy, River Valley at Shawnee State Park (4-0, 3-0 TVC Hocking)
never trailed in the conSectional, 9 a.m.

test, but points were at a
premium in the first half.
Neither team scored in the
first quarter and SHS mustered a small 7-6 edge at
the intermission.
Both teams traded
scores on their opening
possessions of the second
half, giving Southern a
small 14-12 lead with 5:59
remaining in the third
quarter. The Tornadoes
followed with two more
touchdowns in the third
canto for a 28-12 cushion,
then closed regulation

three more scores to wrap
up the 36-point triumph.
Both squads ran 55 offensive plays from scrimmage, with Southern
claiming a sizable 501-238
advantage in total yards
of offense. SHS accumulated 354 rushing yards on
43 carries, while the host
Lancers (2,2, 1-1) mustered 183 rushing yards on
42 attempts.
Southern — which
gained a 16-10 edge in first
downs — picked off four
FHHS passes on the night

and did not have giveaway,
which allowed the guests
to finish plus-four in the
turnover column. SHS also
punted only twice in the
contest, compared to four
punts for the Lancers.
Hunter Johnson started
the scoring after hauling
in a 16-yard pass from Tristen Wolfe, giving SHS a 7-0
lead with 10:18 remaining
in the first half. Delbert
Crum answered with a
two-yard scoring run with
See TORNADOES | B2

�Page B2 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday, September 22, 2013

"25Jî�28=6Dî72==î:?î\G6î2Eî-2E6C7@C5
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

WATERFORD, Ohio — The
more consistent team wasn’t the
one that was previously unbeaten
over the last two-plus years.
The Eastern volleyball team
had its league winning streak
snapped at 39 matches Thursday night following a 24-26, 2517, 24-26, 25-11, 15-8 setback
to host Waterford in a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division

at the Harry Cooper Annex in
Washington County.
The visiting Lady Eagles (122, 7-1 TVC Hocking) suffered
their first league setback since
October 5, 2010, when EHS
dropped a 19-25, 25-21, 25-20,
25-16 outcome at Waterford.
Eastern — which had won the
last six meetings, including a
pair of district tournament contests — was outscored by a total
of 25 points over five games.
The Lady Wildcats (10-2, 8-0)

trailed 1-0 and 2-1 early on in the
match, but rallied with consecutive wins in the final two games
by an impressive margin of 4019. Both WHS losses were also
by the two-point minimum.
The Lady Eagles finished the
night with a combined 41 kills,
34 service points, 13 blocks and
only one ace, and the guests also
did not score a single service
point in the decisive fifth game.
Maddie Rigsby and Kelsey
Johnson led the EHS service at-

tack with eight points apiece, followed by Jordan Parker with six
points and Lindsay Wolfe with
five points. Erin Swatzel and
Katie Keller also had four and
three points, respectively, for
the guests. Johnson recorded the
Lady Eagles’ lone ace.
Parker led the net attack with
15 kills and five blocks, followed
by Rigsby and Swatzel with eight
kills apiece. Johnson added six
kills and Keller had four kills as
well in the setback. Rigsby con-

tributed three blocks, while Keller
and Swatzel each had two blocks.
Rigsby had 47 digs to lead
the defense, followed by Paige
Cline with 46 digs and Parker
with 40 digs. Wolfe led the
passing game with 36 assists.
Madison Sury led WHS with
16 service points, followed by
Laura Hill and Dani Drayer with
11 points apiece. Taylor Hilverding added 10 points and gamehighs of 17 kills and nine blocks
for the victors.

�F4&lt;6J6DîC@4&lt;î
(:G6Cî,2==6J
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — It was all one-sided Friday
night, and it wasn’t in River Valley’s favor.
The Nelsonville-York football team thoroughly dominated the every aspect of the contest en route to a 36-0
victory on Boston Field.
It took less than two minutes for the for the Buckeyes (22) to get on the board, as Alex Mount rumbled in from 39
yards out. Colton Adams connected with Cannon Kilbarger for the two point conversion to put NYHS up 8-0.
Less than two-minutes into the second period Mount
found the endzone again, this time from one yard out.
The Raiders (0-4) blocked the point after attempt and
trailed 14-0. RVHS held Nelsonville-York out of the endzone for the rest of the half but the Buckeyes led 14-0.
At the 9:39 mark of the third period NYHS freshman
Noah Andrews ran 27 yards for the touchdown. Jeremy
Warren added the two-point conversion and the Buckeyes
held a 22-0 advantage. Andrews got in on the action again
at the 3:13 mark of the third, finding paydirt from the three
yard line. The two-point conversion pass fell incomplete
and NYHS held the 28-0 lead going into the fourth quarter.
Just over a minute into the final canto Warren scored
his first TD of the game, with a four yard run, followed by
a Jakob Talbert two-point run. NYHS led 36-0 and that’s
where it remained for the duration.
Austin Bradley led the Raiders ground attack with 29
yards on 20 carries, followed by Tyler Twyman with two
yards on two carries. Mark Wray ran four times for two
yards, while Josh Campbell had one yard on three attempts.
Tre Craycraft carried the ball twice for no gain, while
George Williams was pushed back 20 yards on five carries.
Twyman was 1-of-3 passing for 10 yards, while throwing two interceptions. Kirk Morrow had one catch for 10
yards for the Silver and Black.
The Buckeyes were led by Mount with 76 yards and
two scores on 12 carries, while Andrews had 53 yards
and two scores on eight attempts. Walker Elliott carried
the ball three times for 35 yards, Warrer had 30 yards and
a TD on five carries, followed by Andrew McDonald with
19 yards on two rushes and Garret O’Nail with 11 yards
on two carries. Talbert rushed for nine yards on two attepts, Adams had one rush for six yards, while Billy Seel
rounded out the NYHS total with one rush for four yards.
Adams was 8-of-20 through the air for the Orange and
Brown, tallying 129 yards with an interception. Warren
was Nelsonville-York’s top receiver with 82 yards on five
receptions, followed byAndrews with one catch for 20
yards, Kilbarger with one catch for 18 yards and Dakota
Mays with one grab for 10 yards.
The Buckeyes held an 18-to-3 advantage in first downs,
a 65-42 edge in plays from scrimmage, and a 372-to-24
advantage in total yards. River Valley fumbled four times
and lost possession on three of them, while NelsonvilleYork lost possession on both of its fumbles.
The Buckeyes were penalized 11 times for 95 yards,
while RVHS was setback nine times for 70 yards.
RVHS punted seven times in the game, while NYHS
booted it away twice.
River Valley will host Alexander next week in Bidwell,
while NYHS hosts Logan.

Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallia Academy junior Micah Curfman (5) spikes the ball past Warren’s Victoria Buzzard (12) during the Blue Angels
victory over the Lady Warriors, Thursday night in Centenary.

Blue Angels take revenge over Warren
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio — Alone
in first.
The Gallia Academy volleyball team is now in control of
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League by a half game, following
a four set victory over Warren
Thursday night in Gallia County.
The Blue Angels (8-5, 4-1 SEOAL) took the opening set 25-12
and the second set by a narrow
25-23 margin. Warren (7-6, 3-2)
rallied to take the third set 25-19
but Gallia Academy closed the
book with a 25-18 fourth set win.
The GAHS serving was led by libero Jenna Meadows with 21 points.

Haleigh Caldwell added 12 points,
nine of which came in the first set,
while Kassie Shriver marked eight
points. Chelsy Slone finished with
five points, followed by Maggie
Westfall and Hannah Roach with two
apiece and Micah Curfman with one.
The Blue Angels net attack was led
by Westfall with 21 kills and Caldwell
with nine. Maggie Clagg added eight
kills, Curfman had five, followed by
Slone with four and Shirver with
three. Shriver led GAHS with over
40 assists in the win.
Warren was led by Lindsay Joy
and Natalie Knowlton with eight
service points apiece, followed by
Hailey Murdock with six points.
Taylor Foy and Sarah Proctor
each had five points, while Dani-

elle Lambert rounded out the
GAHS total with three points.
The net attack of the Lady Warriors was led by Foy with 15 kills
and Victoria Buzzard with 11.
Knowlton had four kills, Lambert and Kaitlyn Coffman each
had two, while Proctor and Kaylee Higgins each marked one kill.
Knowlton led the guests with 27
assists in the game.
This victory avenges the Blue
Angels’ five set loss in Vincent on
August 29th. This is Gallia Academy’s second straight win and its
fourth straight league win.
The Blue Angels are in control
of the SEOAL at 4-1 followed by
Logan at 3-1, Warren at 3-2, Jackson at 2-3 and Portsmouth at 0-5.

Tame
From Page B1
All in all, it wasn’t a bad way
to end a home stand before venturing out for your road game, or
at least GAHS coach Wade Bartholomew thought so afterwards.
“I really felt like the kids came
out and executed a lot of the
game plan, all the way through
in all three phases of the game,”
Bartholomew said. “There were
some things that we didn’t do
great, but we did a lot of the little things well tonight and I was
proud of the effort they gave.
“It was a great job in finishing
up the home stand and now we
need to get ready for something
new against a pretty good Vinton
County team next week. We need
to be ready, because it’s going to
be a physical football game and
they will be well-prepared for us.”
Things didn’t start out too well
for the hosts, as Marietta recovered its own opening kickoff at
the GAHS 23-yard line just seven
seconds into regulation. The
Blue Devils, however, allowed no
yards and came up with a sack
on fourth down, which gave the

hosts possession at their own 32.
The Devils’ drive would stall
and led to a punt, but MHS fumbled on the very next play — and
Josh Johnson recovered the ball
on the Marietta 34. Three plays
and 34 yards later, Gallia Academy claimed a 7-0 lead after Reid
Eastman hauled in a 25-yard scoring pass from Wade Jarrell with
7:59 left in the opening period.
The score stayed that way
until the second quarter, as Ty
Warnimont gave GAHS a 14-0
edge after pulling in a 12-yard
pass from Jarrell with 10:56 left
before halftime.
Both teams traded punts on
its next possessions and the Tigers followed with another punt,
which Eastman took 35 yards to
the house for a 21-0 lead with
5:43 remaining. Wes Jarrell added a 35-yard scoring catch from
Wade Jarrell with 1:18 left before
halftime to give the Blue Devils a
sizable 28-0 cushion at the break.
GAHS accumulated 196 yards
of total offense in the first half,
85 of which came on the ground.
Marietta, conversely, had 19
rushes for negative 19 yards be-

fore halftime. Both teams also
committed one turnover apiece
in the opening 24 minutes.
Both teams traded punts to
start the second half, then MHS
put together a nine-play drive
that ultimately ended in disaster
after lineman Anthony Sipple
picked off an Anthony Kimbrough pass and returned it 46
yards to paydirt. Sipple’s picksix gave the hosts a 35-0 cushion
with 3:04 left in the third.
Johnson came away with his
second fumble recovery two
plays later, and GAHS followed
with a successful 39-yard field
goal from Dylan Saunders — giving the hosts a 38-0 edge.
The Tigers finally cracked the
scoreboard on its ensuing possession, as the guests capped
a five-play, 62-yard drive at the
8:55 mark when Connor Beavers
rumbled in from 14 yards out for
a 38-8 contest.
Gallia Academy answered with
a seven-play, 60-yard drive that
resulted in a 45-8 lead after Eric
Ward plunged in from four yards
out with 5:21 remaining in the
game. Aaron Elliott concluded

the scoring just 13 seconds later
after taking a handoff 65 yards to
the endzone, making it a 45-16
game with 5:08 left.
The Blue Devils finished the
night with 121 passing yards
and 175 rushing yards on 39 attempts. MHS, conversely, tallied
five passing yards and 186 rushing yards on 37 totes. GAHS also
claimed a slim 14-11 overall edge
in first downs.
Wes Jarrell led the Blue Devils
with 121 yards on 11-of-16 passing, throwing three touchdowns
and zero interceptions. The senior also added 18 rushing yards
on eight tries.
Kole Carter led the GAHS
ground game with 53 yards on
six carries, followed by Eric
Ward with 33 yards on six
tries. Logan Allison and Ty
Warnimont added 29 and 27
yards on four and eight totes,
respectively.
Reid Eastman led the Devil
wideouts with three catches for
47 yards, while Wes Jarrell hauled
in four passes for 45 yards.
Elliott led the Tigers with
65 rushing yards on one carry,

while Beavers chipped in 37
yards on five attempts. Anthony
Kimbrough finishes the night
1-for-10 passing for five yards,
throwing one interception. Quinton Coffield had the lone MHS
reception for five yards.
GAHS was penalized nine
times for 65 yards, while Marietta was flagged five times for
25 yards. The hosts punted three
times for an average of 32.3
yards, while the Tigers averaged
25.6 yards on six punts.
Tyler Ebert recovered a fumble late in the fourth quarter to
join Johnson in that category.
Johnson also had 2.5 sacks for
the hosts, while Brian Williams
added one sack and Jon Byus
had half of a sack.
With his field goal early in the
fourth, Saunders — who was a
perfect 6-for-6 on PAT kicks —
became the program’s alltime
leader in successful field goals
for a career as a junior.
Gallia Academy returns to
action now Friday when it
travels to McArthur for a Week
5 matchup with Vinton County
at 7:30 p.m.

Tornadoes
From Page B1
5:35 left, allowing Fed
Hock to pull to within 7-6
at the intermission.
Tyler Barton capped
Southern’s opening drive
of the second half with a
24-yard scoring run with
9:29 left in the third, giving SHS a 14-6 edge. Crum
countered with a 10-yard

scoring run at the 5:59
mark, allowing the hosts to
pull back to within 14-12
midway through the third.
From that point on, the
night simply belonged to
the Tornadoes.
Johnson hauled in a 59yard pass from Wolfe at the
4:58 mark for a 21-12 lead,
then Wolfe added a twoyard scamper with 1:22 left

in the third for a comfortable 28-12 cushion headed
into the finale.
Barton added his second
rushing TD with 10:43
showing in the fourth following a 32-yard scamper,
giving the guests a 35-12
advantage. Ryan Billingsley
added a three-yard scoring
run with 7:47 left and Jaylen Blanks chipped in a sev-

en-yard scoring run to wrap
up the 48-12 outcome.
Barton led the Tornadoes
with 280 rushing yards on
22 carries, followed by Billingsley with 30 yards on
three totes. Wolfe was 7-of12 passing for 147 yards
and two touchdowns, while
Johnson hauled in four
passes for 111 yards and
two scores.

Crum led the Lancers
with 92 rushing yards
on 21 carries, followed
by Peyton Seel with 58
yards on eight attempts.
Philip Hoffman was 3-of13 passing for 55 yards
with four interceptions,
while Alfie Nichols led
the wideouts with two
grabs for 52 yards.
Southern was penalized

three times for 32 yards
while FHHS was flagged
eight times for 70 yards. Zac
Beegle also came up with
three of the Tornadoes’ four
interceptions in the triumph.
Southern will return to
action Friday when it hosts
Symmes Valley in a Week 5
non-conference matchup at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field at 7:30 p.m.

�Sunday, September 22, 2013

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TRACTOR, TRAILER &amp; TOOLS: Wheel Horse (Toro) 314, 14hp motor, 8 speed transmission &amp; 42” mower deck; Load Hog yard trailer; Hahn
Rotor tiller; Craftsman push mower; Snapper 3100psi power washer; Stihl chainsaw; Craftsman tool box; Extension &amp; step ladders; Pull behind yard aerator;
Wheel barrow, Push plow; Long handled tools; Gas cans; Live trap; Craftsman-floor jacks, buffer, shop vac; Table &amp; c-clamps; Coleman heater; Ext. cords;
Hardware; B &amp; D electrical tools; Tree pruners; Tire chains; Socket sets; Wrenches; Pipe cutters &amp; tools; Cabinets &amp; work benches; Com-a-long; saws; grinders;
Electric plainer; Belt/Disk sander; Sm. Handled tools; B &amp; D workmate; Tap &amp; dies;
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTORS ITEMS: Dazey metal churn; Primitive milk stool; Milk cans; stoneware; Shoe lasp; Regal coffee grinder; Cast iron
skillets; JFK Inaugural record; Elvis &amp; other records; Shoe stretchers; Shoe cobbler forms; Draw knives; Old &amp; primitive hand tools; Reloading molds; Old spice
mugs; Elgin pocket watch; Depression; Rogers service/8; Belt buckle collection; Costume Jewelry; Dr. Scholls shoe sizer-1915; Cain bottom chairs; Lg. Gesso
hall mirror; Ptd cupboard base; Graniteware; Dutch-oven; Lumber rule; Books; Boot stretching pliers; Walnut oval stand; Oval gesso mirror; Walnut Victorian
tear drop table; Few pcs. Pottery; Shaving stand &amp; mirror; Anchor Hocking service/8; Advertising items; glassware; apple butter stirrer &amp; other collectables;
MODERN, HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.: Bicycles; Stationary exercise bike; Sears De-humidifier; Vector portable refrigerator; Honeywell heater;
Kitchen appliances; Golf Clubs; Fishing poles; Kenmore window air conditioner; Wooden porch glider; Childs swing; Maytag wringer washer; Bakeware;
Sharp TV; Oak entertainment center w/stain glass; parlor chair; Stained glass &amp; raw glass; Electric stove; Christmas decorations; Stained glass lamp; Other
household &amp; décor items;

BAR/RESTAURANT SALES

HARNESS &amp; SHOE LEATHER WORKING TOOLS: Lacing pony; Singer 29k71 patching machine; C.S. Osborne &amp; Co. bench top hand
crank leather splitter; Leather stretcher; Primitive splitter; hammers; saddlers punches &amp; pinchers; Half round knives; Seam turners; Cutting nippers; Joint
compasses; Hand wheel pricking frames; creasers; Knives; Scrappers; gages; backing hammers; unlite molding stamps; pegging irons; Draw gage knives;
Large selection of Leather working tools; Leather &amp; belts;

60450840

60450250

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Need Extra Cash???

60450842

Early Morning Newspaper Delivery
Routes Available in
Mason County, WV
Gallia County, OH,
&amp; Meigs County, OH

CARPET SALE!
12 WIDE AND 15 WIDE
New Shipment
DIRECT MILL PRICING

MUST HAVE RELIABLE
TRANSPORTATION

MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 State Route 7 North
740-446-7444

60450848

Call Us Today
For More Info!

740-446-2342
JESSICA CHASON
EXT: 12
Auctions

Excavating

Reese

Excavating

60446896

Backhoe–Trenching–Trucking
Septic Systems–Basements
Land Clearing–Site Prep
Dozer – and More!
Large or Small Jobs
Since 1963
Free Estimates
(740) 245-9921
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost &amp; Found
Red Tick Coon Hound found in
the vincinity of Laurel Cliff
Road Call 444-5167
Reward: Sm/black Schnauzer,
w/pink collar, Teens Run
/Providences Sch Rd. 740256-1060 or 740-612-2099
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

Relocating after a lifetime in Meigs County, must sell the following:
GUNS &amp; KNIVES: Dan Wesson 357 mag. W/6” barrel; Marlin 30-30 mod. 336w lever action (never fired); Model 37 Ithica feather weight 20ga pump;
Remington mod. 552, 22 rifle; H&amp;R 223 single shot w/9x32 scope; P-25 Raven stainless 25 auto(never fired); Jennings J-22 auto; 70+ Buck Knives, Uncle
Henry, Schrade, German, Old Timers, pocket and sheathed knives;

Fast cooling 3-door bottle cooler...
80”x27”x31.5” $700
Duel -direct beer tab...
69”x27.5”x37.5” $800
2-4 plus key cash registers $25 each
CALL 740-446-3362 ASK FOR JOSH

MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 State Route 7 North
740-446-7444

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

47704 Morning Star Rd., Racine, OH 45771
St. Rt. 33 (Ravenswood exit to Co. Rd. 30), Morning Star Rd., CR 28 to CR 30.
Easy to Locate. Signs Posted.

CARPET SALE!

12 WIDE AND 15 WIDE
New Shipment
DIRECT MILL PRICING

Apartments/Townhouses

Food Services

Carpeting

CARPET SALE!

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

PUBLIC AUCTION

Will care for the elderly in their
home.
304-812-6989

MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 State Route 7 North
740-446-7444

One-Level Home in Striversville near Portland. 1 acre lot.
Living Rm, Family/Dining Rm,
3BR, 1BA, Kitchen, Laundry
Rm. Sorry NO Rentals or Land
Contracts . Please leave message with name &amp; phone number at 740-992-2472

WANT TO BUY ripe Pawpaw's
- $1.00 lb -Black walnuts starting Oct 1st. 740-698-6060

SAT. SEPT 28, 2013 @ 10:00 A.M. SHARP!

Child/Elderly Care

12 WIDE AND 15 WIDE
New Shipment
DIRECT MILL PRICING

Ohio Riverfront Getaway
$73,000
Almost 1 acre, 152 ft. of River
frontage. Good well &amp; septic,
1800 qt. ft. Nicely Furnished &amp;
Insulated residence, with heat
pump, K,DR,LR, 2 Bdrm, 1bath,W/D, 2 screen porches,
located at 50619 SR 124 Apple
Grove, OH. 740-247-2002 info.
&amp; appointment.

Want To Buy

Auctions

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)

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General

Houses For Sale

Auction Alert: Large Household Auction of the Late Tim
Evans and his Widow Dennie Evans. The “Chalet” in Rodney
has just got too big for Mrs. Evans and she is needing to
downsize.
Auction Held Saturday September 28th 10:30 AM 366 Greer
Road Bidwell, Ohio 45631”Chalet on the Hill” Auction held
Rain or Shine! Bring a lawn chair.
Furniture; Drexel Dinning room suite with 8 padded chairs
and large hutch, Asian handmade wine and liquor cabinet
with “Mother of Pearl “on the front, Asian handmade buffet,
Drexel large corner dresser (3 Pieces) with cedar corner,
Victorian Cherry bookcase secretary with fitted interior with
shell carving, Large oak handmade entertainment center,
large round oak table with 4 chairs, large office desk,
antique secretary, very well kept oak table with 8 oak chairs
&amp; coordinating buffet with marble top, leather white lounge
chair &amp; ottoman, leopard print ottoman, sofa, lots of quality end
tables, coffee table, large couch, wing back chair, quilt stand,
numerous style lamps in good condition,
Other Items of Interest; Chinese barrel style stool, Sally
Mosser signed 111/1200 Bob Evans scene painting, Modern
Howard Miller Clock, Washer and Dryer, Vintage Trunk with
barrel top, Gallipolis/Pt. Pleasant Picture, China, Vases,
numerous quality paintings &amp; picture frames, and much more!!!
Call Josh Bodimer with any questions or more info
740-645-6665. Check www.auctionzip.com auctioneer
ID# 27081 auction conducted rain or shine bring a lawn
chair!
60451429

AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Note start time; Be on time; Clean quality Auction; Bring a chair; Plan to spend the day in beautiful Meigs Co. Real-estate
for sale through Wiseman Real-estate Inc.-Cheryl Lemley-Realtor. TERMS; Cash or Good Check w/proper ID, Day of Sale; Restrooms; Food available; Not
responsible for loss or accidents; Sale day announcements take precedence over published material. For photos, go to auctionzip.com #10250

OWNERS: RAYMOND &amp; CAROL S. OLIVER
AUCTIONEER: DEAN L. BLACKBURN
1500 S. St. Rt. 377, Stockport, Ohio 43787
60450124

Auctions

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, September 28 – 10:00 a.m.
2881 Pleasant Hill Road, Athens, OH
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 50/32 west of Athens, exit on Rt. 33 south follow for 2 miles, exit west on
Pleasant Hill
Road for 2.8 miles to barn on right, watch for signs.
VEHICLES: 1994 Buick Century w/134,000 miles in good condition, 1987 Cutlas Sierra
w/105,000 miles (needs repair but all parts to fix are with it), Yamaha Silver Fox Dune Buggy,
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Oak Grandfather Clock made in Germany, large oak wardrobe
cabinet
(made in Birmingham, England), Victrola w/records, Dining table w/6 chairs, matching server &amp;
buffet, 2-antique
dressers, gateleg table (painted), assorted glassware, Jewel Tea teapot, Bradford Exchange &amp;
Danbury Mint collector plates, crock, wooden desk, scythe, hay fork, lanterns, nautical items, Native
American décor, Gone With The Wind wall hanging, wildlife statues, chainsaw carved eagle &amp;
mushroom, 2-full sets of McDonald’s 101 Dalmations, Hot Wheels, Star Wars items, 100+ record
albums &amp; 45s, 200+ CDs &amp; cassette tapes, 3-tubs full of stamp collection, Nintendo &amp; PlayStation
game systems, Erector set, 200,000+ baseball cards &amp; baseball/football memorabilia, 1982 signed
St. Louis baseball, Tim Couch Cleveland Browns football, Official NFL Super Bowl Patch Collection,
Sextant Aircraft Periscopic Instrument in wood case, 700+ knives &amp; swords, Zippo Lighters, some
old books: 1940 Babar, 1970s True West. Playboy &amp; Hustler, tub full of postcards including: 1929
Happy Sunny South postcard folder of the Black South-32 pictures &amp; other Black memorabilia type
postcards, 3-leather postcards, WWI postcard book Battle of Somme in France, German soldier
photo w/some damage but swastika visible on coat, postcard folders of assorted states &amp; countries,
150+ Ohio including Marietta, Logan, Columbus, West Liberty &amp; Zanesville, 100+ Michigan (lots of
Detroit &amp; Machinac), 300+ U.S. postcards, 400+ International mostly England, France &amp; India, 80+
greeting and comic postcards, 140+ vintage Christmas cards in album, 1928 Hoover for President
stick, 1944 Athens National Bank Calendar, 1951 Athens Fair Book,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; Miscellaneous: oak dining table w/Windsor style chairs,
matching china buffet, 2-sets of sofa &amp; matching loveseat, loveseat rocker/recliner, oak entertainment
unit, TV, stands for TVs, stereo &amp; speakers, 2-oak bookshelf units, oak w/glass top coffee table, end
tables, lamps, assorted chairs, gun cabinet, china hutch, corner cabinet, wall chime clock, wall mirror,
refrigerator, kitchen dishes, pots/pans, small kitchen appliances, hot dog machine, serving buffet,
dressers, bedroom set, queen size bed frame, Futon frame, wicker porch set, 2-sets of washers
&amp; dryers (1-gas dryer), Singer portable sewing machine, Rainbow &amp; Kirby sweepers for parts &amp;
Hoover sweeper, humidifier, games, holiday decorations, mono soundboard system, portable folding
guitar chair, desk chairs, filing cabinet, Canon copier, flatscreen monitor, old computer, 2-Kenwood
speakers, keyboard, alarm system, 4-counter top pieces, old exterior doors, popup canopy, porch
swing, and other miscellaneous items.
EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS: SMassey Ferguson brush hog, Oliver rake, Central Machine wood lathe,
Sears large rolling tool cabinet with assorted tools, DeWalt table saw, sander, Stihl weed eater,
cordless screw gun, 10 ft. garage door, more items to be unpacked.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive ID. Checks over $1000 must have
bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyers premium on all sales with a 4% discound for cash/
check payment. All sales are final. Food will be available.

OWNER: Marcus &amp; Diana Kinder, Lindy Deem, Daveena Conant

SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK
AUCTION SERVICE, LLC

WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com • PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

60451129

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page B4 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

Apartments/Townhouses
Middleport Area 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm
Apartments some with paid
utilities NO PETS Deposit &amp;
References Call 1-740-9920165
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Apartments/Townhouses
Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

Apartments/Townhouses
New Haven Area 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm
Apartments, NO PETS Deposit &amp; References Call 740-9920165
Upstairs Apt. @ 46 Olive St.
Utilities Pd, Stove &amp; Refrigerator, NO SMOKING, NO PETS,
$500/mo + Security deposit
446-3945
Houses For Rent

Help Wanted General

Fiscal Manager for multi-county mental health care
facility based in Gallipolis to oversee payroll, accounts
receivable, and accounts payable, as well as prepare
general ledger analysis reports, income statements,
balance sheet reports, and expense reports. This person
will also monitor billing and receiving productivity. Tempto-direct, $15-20/hour + perm benefits.
Human Resource Manager for employer in Gallipolis
to oversee interviewing, customer service management,
screening, and relationship building. Direct, f/t,
competitive pay + some perm benefits.

2 Bedroom - 438 Burkhart Ln.,
Gallipolis
$575/month No Pets 740-8531101
FOR RENT
3BR Mobile home. All elec, Appliances, W/D hookup. 304812-0708
HOUSE FOR RENT: 2BR,
Very clean. Conveniently located, Non-smoker, Ref, dep,
no pets. 304-675-5162
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
2BR House for Rent:
5th St, Point. Frnt &amp; Bk porch,
Nice yard, New kitchen flooring, W/D hookup. $450mo,
$450dep plus utilities.
If interested call
304-812-4350

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Pets

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

ANNUITY.COM
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Retirement
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CALL for FREE copy of our
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CANADA DRUG:
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will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call
1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off
your prescription and free
shipping.

Land (Acreage)

www.careerconnections.info

POST OFFICE
PROPERTY
ONLINE AUCTION

60450965

Help Wanted General

Call

3 Free Kittens - 2 Black &amp; 1
Tabby Call 441-7644

For details on these jobs and lots more, and for information
about us and how to apply, visit:
Locally owned and operated.
No fees. EOE.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Sales/Marketing Representative
Applicant must be energetic and enthusiastic. This
position requires an individual that possesses both
Internet Marketing Skills and face-to-face sales skills.
The successful applicant will be self-motivated with
a desire to make things happen.
Apply in person at:
Smith Chevrolet Buick
1911 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
60450351

Miscellaneous

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!
1-800-734-5524
MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.
FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping.
Nationwide Service.
$29.95/Month CALL Medical
Guardian Today
855-850-9105
MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE
Burgers - The Family Value
Combo - Only $39.99.
ORDER Today
1-888-721-9573,
use code 48643XMD - or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9
READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
SAVE on Cable TV-InternetDigital Phone-Satellite. You've
Got A Chance! Options from
ALL major service providers.
Call us to learn more!
CALL Today.
888-929-9254
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
DONATE YOUR CAR - FAST
FREE TOWING
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION
Providing Free Mammograms
&amp; Breast Cancer Info
888-928-2362

Want To Buy
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

Help Wanted General

&gt; Counselor for large provider of behavioral healthcare services to
complete a variety of clinical work. Temp-to-direct, f/t, competitive
wage + perm benefits.

POINT PLEASANT

Career Opportunity

Miscellaneous

&gt; Case Manager for large provider of behavioral healthcare services
to complete a variety of clinical work. Temp-to-direct, f/t (some
evening/weekend hours), competitive wage + perm benefits.

LAND
STATE ROUTE 62

&gt; Medical Transcriptionist for healthcare facility to transcribe
notes that include psychiatric terminology. Temp (may become perm),
p/t (24 hours/week, flexible schedule), $8.50/hour.

CLOSING DATE
10/04

&gt; Maintenance Technician for housing complex near Bidwell to
perform general repairs and maintenance, including some plumbing
and electrical work, carpentry, painting, and maintenance of
mechanical equipment. Temp, f/t, competitive wage.

INSPECTIONS UPON REQUEST

LOUIS MANCUSO
404-331-9451

&gt; Manufacturing Assistant for facility in Bidwell to assist in the
cabinet production process. Temp, f/t, competitive wage.

louis.mancuso@gsa.gov
https://realestatesales.gov

For details on these jobs and lots more, and for information about us
and how to apply, visit:

www.careerconnections.info

GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION (GSA)

Locally owned and operated.
No fees.
EOE.

60449960

60450795

Entertainment

MONDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

NBC

!"#$%

ABC

!&amp;'"%

(3.1)
(8.1)

FOX

!(#'% (11.1)

CBS

!)!*% (13.1)

NBC

!+#,% (15.1)

PBS

!)-.% (20.1)
CABLE

A&amp;E
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SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TVL
USA
VH1
WGN
PREMIUM

HBO
MAX
SHOW

7 PM

7:30

SEPTEMBER 23, 2013
8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Voice "The Blind Auditions Premiere" (SP) 1/2 cont'd
Sept 24 (N) TVPG
EntertainDancing With the Stars The competition heats up with
ment Tonight celebrity performances. (N) TVPG
Modern
The Big Bang Bones "The Cheat in the
Sleepy Hollow "Blood Moon"
Family "Pilot" Theory
Retreat" (N) TV14
(N) TV14
13 News at
Inside Edition Mother "The
Met Your
2 Broke Girls Mom "Pilot"
7:00 p.m.
Locket" (N)
Mother (N)
(N)
(P) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
The Voice "The Blind Auditions Premiere" (SP) 1/2 cont'd
Fortune
Sept 24 (N) TVPG
PBS NewsHour TVG
Antiques Roadshow "Grand
Genealogy Roadshow
Rapids (Hour Three)" TVG
"Nashville" (N) TVG
Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

Jeopardy!

7 PM
Storage Wars

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars
The Shawshank Redemption (‘94, Dra) Tim Robbins. TVM

(6:30) ! !!!!

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

The Blacklist "Pilot" (P) (N)
TVG
Castle "Valkyrie" (SP) (N)
TVPG
Eyewitness News TVG

WSAZ News
Tonight
Eyewitness
News 11
Modern Fam
"Dude Ranch"
Hostages "Pilot" (P) (N) TV14 13 News

11:30

Tonight
Show (N)
(:35) Jimmy
Kimmel (N)
The Arsenio
Hall Show (N)
(:35) David
Letterman (N)
The Blacklist "Pilot" (P) (N)
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
TVG
Eleven
Show (N)
POV "Best Kept Secret" (N) TVPG
Inside E
Street

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

(:35)

11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars
! !!! Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (‘02, Fant) Elijah Wood. TV14

Inside Me "A Monster's
Monsters Inside Me "My
Inside Me "My Child Will Only Inside Me "Something's
Monsters Inside Me "My
Taking My Baby" TV14
Face-Eating Parasite" TV14
Eat Cat Food" TV14
Eating My Dreams" TV14
Face-Eating Parasite" TV14
(6:) 106&amp;Park ! ! The Wash (‘01, Com) Doctor Dre. TVMA
! !! Higher Learning (‘95, Dra) Laurence Fishburne. TVM
(6:45) Wives NJ (:45) I Dream of Nene: The
(:45) Nene
The Real Housewives of
The Real Housewives of
Watch What
Wives NJ "Hair
Wedding "Remix of Love"
"First Look"
Miami "La La Land" (N) TV14 Miami "La La Land" TV14
Happens (N)
We Go Again"
Reba
Reba
! !!! Good Will Hunting (‘97, Dra) Matt Damon. TV14
Cops: Reload
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
AC360 Later
OutFront
(:25) The Daily (:55) South Park "Goobacks"
(:25) South
(:55) SouthPk
(:25) South
Brickleberry
South Park
The Daily
The Colbert
Show
TVM
Park
"Funnybot"
Park
"Woody's Girl" "1%"
Show
Report
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Turn and Burn "Drag-On" (N) Fast N' Loud
A.N.T. Farm
Austin and
! !!! Enchanted (‘07, Adv) Amy Adams, Julie Andrews.
Austin and
Shake Up "Oh Austin and
Good Luck
Ally
Ally
Brother It Up" Ally
Charlie
A fairytale princess ends up in modern-day New York. TVPG
E! News The day's breaking entertainment news. TVG
Fashion Police (N)
Fashion Police
C. Lately (N)
E! News
(6:30) Monday Night Countdown (L) TVG
(:25) NFL Football Oakland Raiders vs. Denver Broncos (L) TVPG
SportsCenter
E:60
SportsNation
Baseball Tonight (L)
WNBA Basketball Playoffs Pho./L.A. (L) TVG
(6:00) ! !! Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
! !! The Sorcerer's Apprentice (‘10, Act) Nicolas Cage. A The 700 Club TVPG
(‘11, Act) Johnny Depp. TV14
sorcerer enlists a man to help him protect the world. TVPG
Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, DriveIns and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives
(6:00) ! ! Marmaduke (‘10,
! !! Rio (‘11, Ani) Jesse Eisenberg. When a domesticated parrot meets
! !! Rio (‘11, Ani) Jesse Eisenberg. TVG
Fam) Owen Wilson. TVG
the bird of his dreams, they take off to Rio de Janeiro. TVG
Love It or List It "Battle for
Love It or List It "House of
Love It or List It "Safely At
House
House
Love It or List It "Safety
Bedrooms" TVPG
Walls" TVPG
Home" (N) TVPG
Hunters (N)
Hunters (N)
Concerned Spouse" TVPG
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
PawnSt. "Over Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
PawnSt. "Time
"Chummobile" "Air Mail"
the Moon"
"Bossy Pants" "Jet Setters"
Machines"
Devious Maids "Totally
Diva "Guinea
Wife Swap "Lawrence and
! !! Meet the Browns (‘08, Com/Dra) D. Mann. A struggling single
mother hopes to reconnect with her family at her father's funeral. TV14
Clean" TVPG
Pig-Skin"
Caddel" TVPG
Friendzone
Friendzone
Teen Mom 2
Teen Mom 2
Teen Mom 2 "Taking Sides" TVPG
Teen Mom 2
Sam &amp; Cat
Drake &amp; Josh Awesome (N) Full House
Full House
Full House
The Nanny
The Nanny
Friends
(:35) Friends
(6:30) ! !!! Kick-Ass (‘10, Act) Aaron Johnson. A high
! ! Piranha (‘10, Hor) Richard Dreyfuss, Elisabeth Shue.
! !!! The Punisher (‘04,
school student decides to be a super-hero. TVMA
An underwater tremor sets man-eating fish free. TVMA
Act) Thomas Jane. TVMA
(6:30) ! !! Ghost Rider (‘07, Act) Eva Mendes, Nicolas
! !! G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (‘09, Act) Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje.
! Star Trek:
Cage. A stuntman makes a deal with Mephistopheles. TV14
An elite military unit known as G.I. Joe battle an evil organization. TVPG
Generations
Family Guy
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan TV14
Theory
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(6:00) ! !!! The Barretts
! !!!! Love Me Tonight (‘32, Mus) Maurice Chevalier,
(:15) ! !!!! The Public
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of Wimpole Street TVG
Jeanette MacDonald. A commoner falls for a bored princess.
Enemy (‘31, Cri) TVPG
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(:10) Breaking Amish: LA (N)
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Funniest Home Videos
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Parks/Rec
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WGN News at Nine
Met Mother
Rules of Eng

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

(6:45) ! !!!

We Bought a Zoo (‘11, Com/Dra) Matt
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! !!!! The Campaign (‘12, Com) Will
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TV14
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(5:00) ! !!! Gangs of New Dexter "Remember the
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Entertainment

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

NBC

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ABC

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(3.1)
(8.1)

FOX

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7 PM

7:30

Football Night in America (L)
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7 PM

7:30

SEPTEMBER 22, 2013
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10:30

11 PM

NFL Football Chicago Bears vs. Pittsburgh Steelers Site: Heinz Field -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L) TVPG

11:30

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News Tonight
Once Upon a Time "And
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Ring of Honor Wrestling
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The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards (L) TVPG
13 News
CSI: Miami
Weekend
(:20) NFL Football Chicago Bears vs. Pittsburgh Steelers Site: Heinz Field -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L) TVPG
WTAP News at
Eleven
Last Tango in Halifax (N)
Masterpiece Mystery! "Foyle's War: The
The Bletchley Circle TV14
Austin City
TV14
Cage" (N) TVPG
Limits
(:20)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

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11 PM

(:35)

11:30

Duck Dynasty

Duck Dynasty
Shooter ('06,
Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
Call of the Wildman "Viva
Live Action!" TVPG
5: ! Why Did I Get Married?
New Jersey Social (N)

Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Bad Ink
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Breaking Bad "Granite State" (:15) Low Winter Sun "There
(:15) Talking
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(N) TV14
Was a Girl" (N) TV14
Bad (N)
Bad
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Call of the
Call of the
Gator Boys TVPG
Call of the
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Bayou Beast"
Wildman
Wildman
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Wildman
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! ! For Colored Girls ('10, Dra) Loretta Devine. TV14
Real Husband Reunion
Housewives/NewJersey "Hair Housewives/NewJersey "Hair I Dream of Nene: The
Watch What
Wives NJ "Hair
We Go Again" (N) TV14
We Go Again" TV14
Wedding "Remix of Love"
Happens (N)
We Go Again"
Movie
Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Cops: Reload Fat Cops
Dog &amp; Beth: On the Hunt
CNN Newsroom
Anthony Bourdain
Anthony Bourdain
Inside Man
Anthony Bourdain
(6:55) South
(:25) South
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South Park
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(:05) SouthPk
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(:40) Brickleb
Park
Park
Park
"Smug Alert!"
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"Pandemic"
Park
"Woody's Girl"
Amish "Sacrificial Lamb"
Steel Men "Dead in Water"
Steel Men "First Response"
Steel Men "Fire and Ice"
Steel Men "First Response"
Good Luck ... Good Luck
Liv and
Austin and
Wander Over
Jessie
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Austin and
Dog With a
Jessie
"Bug Prom"
Charlie
Maddie
Ally
Yonder
Charlie
Ally
Blog
(6:00) Red Carpet
! !!! American Pie ('99, Com) Chris Klein. TV14
True Story "Cee Lo Green"
E! After Party: Emmy (L)
SportsCenter
MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers Site: Miller Park (L) TVG
SportsCenter
Baseball Tonight (L)
SportsCenter NHRA Drag Racing AAA Texas Fall Nationals Site: Texas Motorplex -- Dallas, Texas TVG
NASCAR Now
(6:30) ! !!!! The Incredibles ('04, Ani) Craig T. Nelson.
! !! Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides ('11, Act) Johnny Depp. Jack Sparrow
A family of superheroes fights to save the world. TVPG
learns both he and Blackbeard are looking for the fountain of youth. TV14
Rachael vs. Guy: Kids Cook- Kids Cook-Off "Cloudy With a FoodTruck "A Food Truck Kind Cutthroat Kitchen "Tiny
Iron Chef America "Symon
Off "Brunch Time" TVG
Chance of Mashups" (N) TVG of Town, Chicago Is" (N) TVG
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vs. Izard" TVPG
(5:00) ! !!! X-Men: First
! !!! Moneyball (2011, Biography) Robin Wright, Jonah Hill, Brad Pitt. Billy Beane's
! !!! X-Men: First Class
Class ('11, Act) TVPG
attempt to put together a baseball team using computer generated analysis. TVPG
('11, Act) TVPG
House
House
Extreme Homes "Cartoon,
Love It or List It, Too "The
House Hunters Renovation
House
House
Hunters
Hunters Int'l
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(N) TVPG
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Hunters Int'l
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
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Mountain Men TVPG
American Pickers "Full
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iBrothers
iBrothers
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Devious Maids "Cleaning Out Devious Maids "Getting Out
Devious Maids "Totally
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the Blood" TVPG
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Ridiculous
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Ridiculous
Ridiculous
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Concert (N)
See Dad Run
WendVinn (N) ! !! The Karate Kid Part III ('89, Act) Ralph Macchio. TVPG
(:35) Friends
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Bar Rescue "Tears for Beers" Bar Rescue "Play. Some.
Bar Rescue "Two Flew Over
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Water"
Janet. Jackson!"
the Handlebars"
! Drive Angry ('11, Act) Amber Heard, Nicolas Cage. A
! !! Ghost Rider ('07, Act) Eva Mendes, Nicolas Cage. A stuntman
! !!! Sin
father hunts down the man who killed his daughter. TVMA
makes a deal with a devil and becomes an indestructible anti-hero. TV14
City ('05, Cri)
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang ! !! You, Me and Dupree
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
('06, Com) TVPG
(5:45) ! !! Torn Curtain
! !!!! The 39 Steps ('35, Myst)
! !!! Sabotage ('36, Pol) Oscar
Alfred Hitchcock
('66, Dra) TVPG
Madeleine Carroll. TVPG
Homolka. TVPG
Sister Wives
Sister Wives (N)
Sister Wives (N)
Break. Amish "Cast Off" (N)
Sister Wives
(6:00) ! !! Swordfish
! !!! Lethal Weapon 4 ('98, Act) Mel Gibson. TV14
! !! Rules of Engagement TVMA
(6:00) ! !!! Cloudy With a DreamWorks
Teen Titans
AmerD "Live
Clevela. "The
Family Guy
Bob's Burgers Family Guy
China, IL (N)
Dragons
Go!
and Let Fry"
Hurricane"
Chance of Meatballs TVPG
Paradise "Bacon Paradise"
Mud People
Fandem (N)
Fandem (N)
Making Monsters
Making Monsters
Golden Girls
G. Girls "The
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
(:35) Golden
(:10) Golden
(:50) G. Girls
(:25) Golden Girls "The
Housekeeper"
Girls
Girls
"The Audit"
Housekeeper" TVPG
(5:30) ! !!! Bridesmaids
Modern
Modern "The
Modern
Modern Fam
Modern Fam
Modern "Run
! !!! Bridesmaids ('11,
Family
"The Incident" "Coal Digger"
for Your Wife"
('11, Com) Kristen Wiig. TVMA Family "Pilot" Bicycle Thief"
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(6:30) ! !! Poetic Justice ('93, Dra) Janet Jackson. TVM
Hollywood Exes (N)
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Met Mother
Met Mother
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(:40) Replay
! !! Analyze This
(5:00) ! !!!

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

! Behind the Candelabra ('13, Bio) Michael Douglas, Matt

9 PM

9:30

Boardwalk Empire "Acres of
Diamonds" (N) TVMA
Damon. Examine the extravagant lifestyle of Liberace. TVMA
(6:30) ! !! Varsity Blues
(:15) ! !!! Tower Heist ('11, Act) Eddie Murphy. A group
('99, Spt) TVMA
of men plan to rob a business man's home. TVPG
Dexter "Monkey in a Box"
Ray Donovan "Bucky F**kn'
Dexter "Remember the
TVMA
Dent" TVMA
Monsters?" (N) TVMA

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

Boardwalk Empire "Acres of
Boardwalk Empire "Acres of
Diamonds" TVMA
Diamonds" TVMA
! !! Battleship ('12, Sci-Fi) Taylor Kitsch. A lone Naval
Fleet battles an alien armada for Earth. TVPG
Ray Donovan "Same Exactly" Ray Donovan "Same Exactly"
(N) TVMA
TVMA

�Sunday, September 22, 2013

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

��î8@=76CDî\?:D9îE9:C5î:?î)�%�"
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — There’s
a first time for everything.
Even when it’s the seventh
time around.
The Logan golf team captured
the program’s seventh Southeastern Ohio Athletic League title
— and first-ever as an unbeaten
— Thursday night following a
three-shot victory over the field
at Franklin Valley Golf Course in
the Apple City.
The Chieftains became just the
fourth SEOAL program to go undefeated in regular season league

play, joining Athens (1979, 1980
and 1981), Jackson (2003) and
Gallia Academy (2011) as the
only other programs to accomplish the feat since golf switched
from spring to the fall season
back in 1975.
Just 16 strokes separated the
field in the season finale, with
Logan posting a winning tally
of 154. Host Jackson was next
with a 157, while Gallia Academy placed third overall with a
159. Warren (162) and Portsmouth (170) rounded out the
five-team field.
The order of finish Thursday
also proved to be the same in

the final season standings. Logan went a perfect 20-0 this season, followed by the runner-up
Ironmen at 11-9 and third-place
Blue Devils at 9-11. Warren was
fourth with a 6-14 league mark,
while the Trojans took the final
spot with a 4-16 record.
LHS junior Logan Holbrook
earned medalist honors with
a 1-under par round of 33 over
nine holes, while Jackson’s Cole
Massie was the overall runner-up
with a 35. Holbrook also secured
the lowest average score in SEOAL play again this fall, allowing
him to win the SEOAL Player of
the Year award for a second con-

secutive season.
Dares Hamid led the Blue Devils with a 38, followed by Bruce
Moreaux with a 39 and Marcus
Moore with a 40. Miles Cornwell
rounded out the score with a 42,
while Zach Graham and Casey
Walker respectively added noncounting tallies of 43 and 56.
Reece Patton of Warren and
Brandon Jones of PHS each
led his respective squad with
efforts of 37.
The seven players with the
lowest scoring average earn AllSEOAL honors, and each competitor must have played in four
of the five matches league match-

"25Jî�28=6DîH:?îBF25î2Eî#���
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY, Ohio —
Four scores is all it takes.
The Eastern girls golf
team had just four competitors in Thursday’s
quad-match at the Meigs
County Golf Course, but
it was enough to claim the

five stroke victory.
The Lady Eagles fired a
214, followed by Wellston
with a 219, Meigs with a
224 and Athens with a 225.
Eastern was led by match
medalist Hannah Hawley
with a 47, while Grace Edwards posted a 49. Allie
Grueser marked a 56, while
Katelyn Edwards rounded

out the EHS total with a 62.
Meigs was led by Kylie
Dillon with a 51 and Kendra
Robie 55. Torie Walker fired
a 56, and Dannett Davis had
a 62 to round out the MHS
total. Sarah Curl fired a 70
in a non-contributing effort.
Lauren Riepenhoff led the
Lady Golden Rockets with
a 48, followed by Taylor

Scraggs with a 55, Amber
Gilliland with a 57 and Abby
Scott with a 59. Destiny
Clemons played but did not
post a score for Wellston.
Athens was paced by Vanessa Carey with a 50, and
Hannah DeBruin with a 55.
Mikala Perry had a 59 for
the Lady Bulldogs, followed
by Stevie Putnam with a 61.

(:G6Cî,2==6JîDH66ADî"25Jî&amp;2?E96CD
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — Get out the
brooms.
The River Valley volleyball team
defeated Ohio Valley Conference
guest Chesapeake in straight set
Thursday night to complete the season sweep of the Lady Panthers.
The Lady Raiders (8-6, 6-2 OVC)
had an 83.3 sideout percentage in
the opening set, which led to a 25-12
triumph. CHS closed the gap in the

next two sets but RVHS held off the
Lady Panthers 25-20 and 25-23 respectively to take the match victory.
Sophomore Leia Moore led the Silver and Black with 12 points, followed
by Rachael Smith with nine and Kaci
Bryant with six. Courtney Smith had
five points, Chelsea Copley added four,
while Alex Truance and Jacey Walter
each had two. Jessica Sanders rounded
out the RVHS scoring with one point
in the game. Copley finished with four
aces, Courtney Smith had three, Rachael Smith had two, while Truance,

Sanders and Moore each had one ace.
Moore’s 11 kills paced River Valley, while Bryant had six and Rachael
Smith had five. Walter and Courtney
Smith each had two kills, followed by
Truance with one. Courtney Smith
and Copley shared the majority of the
RVHS assists. Rachael Smith had the
only two RVHS blocks, while Truance
had two digs and Copley had one.
River Valley also defeated the Lady
Panthers in three sets on August
27th in Chesapeake. RVHS has now
won three straight OVC games.

Lady Tornadoes storm past Belpre in straight sets
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE, Ohio — The
friendly confines of home.
The Southern volleyball
team improved to 2-0 at
home Thursday night, with
a straight set victory over
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division visitor Belpre.
The Lady Tornadoes
(5-7, 5-3 TVC Hocking)
stormed out of the gates
to take the first set 25-8.
Southern took game two by
a count of 25-14 and earned
the match sweep with a 2517 victory in the third set.
Southern sophomore libero Ali Deem led the Purple and Gold service attack
with 15 points, followed
by Celestia Hendrix with
10 and Madison Maynard
with eight. Hannah Hill had
seven points, Katie Jenkins
added six, while Marlee
Maynard rounded out the
SHS total with two points.
Hendrix led the net attack for the victors with
13 kills, followed by Jansen

Wolfe with seven and Madison Maynard with three.
Jordan Huddleston, Baylee
Hupp and Marlee Maynard
each had two kills, while
Deem and Darien Diddle
each marked one in the win.
Jenkins led the SHS setting
with 11 assists, while Marlee Maynard had seven.

The net defense was
led by Diddle, Wolfe and
Madison Maynard with
two blocks apiece, while
Hendrix and Hupp each
had one. Deem had a teamhigh 24 digs in the match.
Kaitlyn Hughes had four
points for the Lady Golden
Eagles, followed by Brian-

na Owen with three. Loren
Elliott and Kaity Hager
each marked two points,
while Olivia Pratt and
Cheyenne Henderson each
had one point in the loss.
Southern will look to sweep
the Lady Golden Eagles on
October 10th, when the Purple and Gold invade Belpre.

es. If a player participated in all
five matches, the worst score
was thrown out and the remaining efforts were utilized.
Joining Holbrook (34.25)
this year on the 2013 AllSEOAL golf team are Logan’s
Jacob Barstow (36.75), as
well as Evan Massie (38.0)
and Cole Massie (39.25) of
Jackson and Brandon Jones
(39.5) of Portsmouth. GAHS
landed a pair of spots as well
with Dares Hamid (38.5) and
Bruce Moreaux (39.25).
Logan previously won SEOAL
golf titles in 1963, 1981, 1984,
1992, 2000 and 2001.

RV golfers
fourth at OVC
championship
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

FRIENDSHIP, Ohio — The Chesapeake golf
team captured its fifth straight league title
Thursday night after beating the six-team field
by 11 shots in the 2013 Ohio Valley Conference championship held at Shawnee State Golf
Course in Scioto County.
The Panthers posted a winning team tally of
343 in the 18-hole event, followed by runner-up
Coal Grove (354) and third-place Fairland (367).
River Valley finished fourth in its final OVC competition with a 398, while South Point (407) and
Rock Hill (499) were respectively fifth and sixth.
Brent Morgan of Coal Grove won medalist honors for the second straight year, posting a 2-under
par effort of 70. Morgan was joined by teammate
Luke McGraw (85), Chesapeake’s Drew Oxley (76),
Derek Lemley (82) and Shane Stevens (84), South
Point’s Madison Riley (82) and Zach Morris of
River Valley as members of the 2013 All-OVC team.
Morris led the Raiders with an 87, followed by
Logan Sheets with a 97 and Jordan Howell with
an even 100. Brandon Gilmore rounded out the
RVHS scoring with a 114, while Rondal Cornell
and Grant Gilmore respectively fired non-counting rounds of 117 and 129.
Tyler Blake led Fairland with an 88, while Logan Barcus posted a 116 to pace Rock Hill.

Spartans
blank Blue
Devils, 2-0
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ALBANY, Ohio — Spartans survive the early storm
and earn their first league win.
The Alexander soccer team earned its first
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League victory Thursday
night over visiting Gallia
Academy by a count of 2-0.
Even though the Blue
Devils (3-5, 1-5 SEOAL) had
10 shots in the opening 20
minutes of the match but it
was Alexander (2-8, 1-5) that
struck first with a goal from
Chris Wingett in the 15th
minute. Alexander scored
again in the 37th minute off
the foot of Howard Tribe.
Alex Green had three
saves in the game for the
Blue and White, while
Caden Wilt had one. Aric
Russell saved six shots
for the Spartans.
Gallia Academy falls into
a tie for fifth in the SEOAL
with Alexander. Athens
and Warren still lead the
league with identical 4-1-1
records followed by Logan
at 3-1-2 and Jackson at 3-3.
GAHS defeated Alexander
in Centenary on Aug. 29th.

60449206

�Page B6 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

Lady Buckeyes
blast Meigs
in straight sets
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — So much for gracious hosts.
The Meigs volleyball team traveled to Tri-Valley Conference rival Nelsonville-York Thursday
night, where the Lady Buckeyes defeated the
Maroon and Gold in straight sets.
Nelsonville-York took the opening game 25-22,
the second game 25-16 and the third game 25-21.
Olivia Cremeans led the Lady Marauders (59, 1-4 TVC Ohio) in kills with 10, followed by
Brook Andrus with six and Hannah Cremeans
with one. Devyn Oliver led the way with 11 assists, while Ariel Ellis and Lindsay Patterson
with three apiece.
Kelsey Hudson had the lone MHS dig, while
Hannah Cremeans had two blocks apiece. Alyson Dettwiller, Olivia Cremeans and Ellis each
had one block in the game.
Meigs will look to avenge this loss on October
10th when they host the Lady Buckeyes in Rocksprings. Meigs has now lost back-to-back matches.

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday, September 22, 2013

"25Jî�28=6DîH:?î 24&lt;D@?î��î�?G:E6
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — The Eastern
girls and Meigs boys came away as
the top finishers from the Ohio Valley
Publishing area Thursday night at the
2013 Jackson Cross Country Invitational held at JHS in the Apple City.
The Lady Eagles posted a winning
score of 32 in the nine-team girls division, while the Marauders (90) finished just one point behind Chillicothe
(89) for the boys team title. There
were a total of 13 teams in the boys
competition.
In the girls division, Allyson Malone
of Alexander beat out 95 other runners
for the individual crown with a winning time of 20:14.1. Taylor Palmer
of EHS was the overall runner-up and
top finisher from the OVP area with a
mark of 20:35.1.
Hannah Watts led the second place
Gallia Academy Blue Angels (64
points) with a fourth place time of
21:34.1, while Haley Kennedy paced
Meigs — which did not have enough
runners for a team score — with an
11th place effort of 22:28.0. Leanne
Hively led River Valley — which
placed sixth with 148 points — with a
17th place time of 23:42.6.
On the boys side of things, Seth Miller of Rock Hill won the 110-competitor
event with a time of 17:36.1. Donavan
Lowe of Chillicothe was the overall
runner-up with a mark of 17:48.7.
Michael Edelmann led Gallia Academy and all OVP area runners with a

third place effort of 18:19.3, while Jacob Kemper paced the Raiders with a
sixth place time of 18:43.9. Jacob Swindell led Meigs with a ninth place mark
of 18:56.1, and Tyson Long led Eastern
with a 23rd place time of 20:01.2.
River Valley placed third in the boys
standings with 102 points, while GAHS
was sixth overall with 125 points. The
Eagles did not have enough runners to
compete as a team.
Complete results of the 2013 Jackson CC Invitational are available on the
web at baumspage.com.
2013 Jackson CC
Invitational Results

GIRLS
Team Scores: 1. Eastern 32, 2. Gallia Academy 64, 3. Alexander 69, 4.
Logan 91, 5. Waverly 104, 6. River Valley 148, 7. Chillicothe 189, 8. Vinton
County 212, 9. Oak Hill 236.
Eastern: 2. Taylor Palmer 20:35.1,
3. Asia Michael 20:59.0, 8. Keri Lawrence 22:23.0, 9. Laura Pullins 22:23.6,
21. Kourtney Lawrence 23:56.3.
Gallia Academy: 4. Hannah Watts
21:34.1, 5. Madison Holley 21:55.5,
25. Elizabeth Holley 24:17.9, 43. Hayley Petrie 25:37.3, 45. Aliza Warner
25:42.5, 52. Jenna Bays 26:46.8, 53.
Akeisha Saunders 26:51.8, 54. Kendra Barnes 26:55.2, 56. Sydney Rose
26:55.4, 58. Brittany Angel 27:11.8,
73. Taylor Queen 29:02.7, 92. Rachel
Rote 35:20.4.
River Valley: 17. Leanne Hively
23:42.6, 41. Kasey Eblin 25:26.4, 44.
Lily Shawaregh 25:41.1, 50. Ramsey

Warren 26:37.6, 65. Kayla Browning
27:38.1, 82. Morgan Greenlee 30:07.6.
Meigs: 11. Haley Kennedy 22:28.0,
13. Lara Perrin 22:42.8, 16. Gracie
Hoffman 23:36.2, 67. Tara Walzer-Kuharic 27:43.9.
BOYS
Team Scores: 1. Chillicothe 89, 2.
Meigs 90, 3. River Valley 102, 4. Waverly 105, 5. Logan 122, 6. Gallia Academy 125, 7. Rock Hill 136, 8. Western
219, 9. Zane Trace 233, 10. Alexander
247, 11. Vinton County 250, 12. Pike
Eastern 317, 13. Nelsonville-York 320.
Meigs: 9. Jacob Swindell 18:56.1, 11.
Dillon Mahr 19:05.2, 17. Mitchell Howard 19:37.0, 19. Isaiah English 19:41.9,
37. Brandon Mahr 20:40.1, 69. Jared
Kennedy 22:58.6, 90. Aaron Dunham
24:43.1, 93. Colton Atkinson 24:58.7.
River Valley: 6. Jacob Kemper 18:43.9,
7. Ethan Hersman 18:45.3, 15. Kyle
Randolph 19:33.1, 39. James Jackson
20:56.8, 41. Austin Hamilton 21:08.2,
61. Garrett Young 22:18.6, 71. John
Oehler 23:01.9, 94. Ben Moody 25:34.1.
Gallia Academy: 3. Michael Edelmann 18:19.3, 27. Cole Tawney
20:19.3, 29. Devon Barnes 20:22.8, 33.
Quenton McKinniss 20:34.8, 45. Cade
Mason 21:15.7, Kaleb Crisenberry
22:05.9, 59. Mitchell Bolin 22:15.7,
65. Griffon McKinniss 22:40.8, 66.
Kirkland Saunders 22:49.2, 67. Griffin Stanley 22:56.2, 80. Atticus Davies
23:44.8, 81. Ryan Vallee 23:45.7, 92.
Jordan Johnson 24:53.4, 98. Jared Stevens 26:44.8, 99. Mark Brown 26:47.6.
Eastern: 23. Tyson Long 20:01.2, 26.
Brock Smith 20:19.2.

-292&gt;2î-9:E6î�2=4@?Dî3=2DEî�6=AC6î�@=56?î�28=6D�î� ��
Gary Clark

Special to OVP

BELPRE, Ohio — For the
second straight week senior running back, Kane Roush, scored
five touchdowns while rushing
for over 100 yards in leading the
visiting Wahama White Falcons
to an easy 60-8 football win over
the host Belpre Golden Eagles.
The talented speedster scored
a pair of six pointers rushing
while adding two more receiving
and yet another on a punt return.
Colton Neal also topped the 100
yard rushing plateau while adding
a pair of scoring runs with Timmy Gibbs and Hunter Bradley
tallying a touchdown apiece. Billy
Joe McDermitt booted six of nine
extra point kicks to cap the White
Falcons huge offensive encounter.
The victory was the Falcons
(3-1, 2-1 TVC Hocking)second
in a row since dropping its first
league contest against Trimble

two weeks ago since joining the
Tri-Valley Conference’s Hocking Division in 2010. Wahama
improved to 3-1 overall and 2-1
inside league competition as the
2013 high school grid football
season nears its halfway juncture. Belpre (1-3, 0-2) lost its
third consecutive decision since
opening the year with a 54-0 win
over Zanesville Rosecrans. The
Eagles are now 1-3 overall and
1-2 in conference play.
WHS had little trouble with
the injury plagued Golden Eagles
in racing to an early 27-0 lead
after the first 12 minutes before
extending its edge to 41-0 at the
midway point of the contest. The
Bend Area team scored two more
times in the third period and another in the fourth to increase its
advantage to 60-0 before allowing
Belpre to avoid the shutout with
a Tavian Miller 39 yard run with
four minutes left in the outing.
Roush scored three times in

the opening quarter
on a 66 yard run,
a 55 yard pass
reception from
Bradley and a
79 yard punt
return before
Neal tacked
on a 16 yard
run to complete
the
first period
scoring. Roush
went eight yards
to activate the second
stanza scoring and caught another 33 yard pass from Bradley to
help stake Wahama to a convincing 41-0 lead at the half.
Neal began the second half scoring with a 40 yard run followed by
a 93 yard interception return for
six points by Bradley. Gibbs completed the Falcons offensive success with a seven yard run to stake
Wahama to a 60-0 advantage with
over 11 minutes left to play.

Belpre
received
somewhat of a
fragment of success
against
the Bend Area
teams reserve
unit with 130
of its 204 total yards on the
night
coming
late in the contest.
Throughout the first
three periods senior
linebacker, Josh Haddox
and defensive end, Colton Neal,
led a Falcon defense that allowed
just 74 yards of total offense during the first three quarters. Neal
recorded nine individual tackles
with Haddox credited with seven
stops to pace Wahama defensively. Timmy Gibbs and Demetrius
Serevicz enjoyed outstanding
defensive efforts for Coach Ed
Cromley’s gridders.
Roush led all ground gainers
with 124 yards in only six car-

ries with Neal adding 107 yards
in 10 tries. Bradley connected on
four of five aerials for 119 yards
and two touchdowns with Roush
grabbing two receptions for 88
yards and two scores and Wyatt
Zuspan two catches for 31 yards.
Belpre was led on the ground
by Tavian Miller with 52 yards
in 16 carries with D.J. Leftwich
adding 21 yards in four attempts
and Dejon Bedgood 20 yards in
20 tries. Miller completed 11 of
20 aerials for 99 yards and an interception with Trent McCoy on
the receiving end of three passes
for 40 yards and Dejon Bedgood
five receptions for 36 yards.
Following a two game road
swing Wahama will return to
Bachtel Stadium next week
when the Falcons host visiting
Waterford for a TVC Hocking
Valley engagement. Belpre will
attempt to break its three game
losing skid with a visit to league
foe Federal Hocking.

Free mammograms are available if:
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You MUST make an appointment and
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Space is limited, call today!

Located at:
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60445685

�Sunday Times-Sentinel
SUNDAY,
SEPTEMBER 22, 2013

ALONG THE RIVER

C1

Color photos by Stephanie Filson | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Joshua LaBello, current owner of Envy Ink, stands by the front
door of his tattoo business, which is located in what was once
Historic photos courtesy Jim Blevins and Envy Ink Tattoo
the Happy Corner, located on the corner of Second Ave. and Pictured, from left, are Albert “Bill” Gabrielli, Argentina Gabrielli, an unknown customer and Alfred Gabrielli during the early
Olive Street in downtown Gallipolis.
years of the Happy Corner.

Cornerstone carried on
Envy Ink injects
new life into
historic Happy
Corner building
Stephanie Filson

sfilson@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Some
area residents may have
spent plenty of time at the
counter back in the day.
Some may not have wanted to be caught anywhere
near the place. Still, few
Gallipolis natives can deny
that for the past 75 years,
the Happy Corner — as a
longtime business, as well
as a physical building —
has been a cornerstone of
the downtown community. Even after the tavern
closed its doors for the last
time in 2003, the historic
building continued to boast
the cheerful insignia on the
corner of Olive Street and
Second Avenue like a photograph out of time.
That is until a local artist decided the charming
building with the great location in downtown Gallipolis was a great recipe for
his fledgling tattoo business — Envy Ink. Joshua

LaBello is pictured inside the historic building that now houses his tattoo business/art gallery/performance venue.

LaBello opened the business at a rented Second
Ave. location in early 2012,
but moved to his current
location at 862 Second
Ave. late last year.
The old Happy Corner
building has quite a history.
LaBello said that he
bought the property from
Ron Blevins, who lives in
Texas, but the acting local
manager of the property is
Jim Blevins, Ron’s brother, who lives in Bidwell.
Jim provided some local

history of the once general store, turned tavern,
turned tattoo shop.
“The history is that my
grandparents,
Augustas
(Gus) and Argintina (Argie) Gabrielli, immigrated
from Bagni di Lucca, Italy
in 1913 to Cleveland and
then to Portsmouth. They
had seven children; the oldest two were born in Italy.
In Portsmouth, they owned
a cigar/confectionery store
called the Palace of Sweets
that they lost during the

Depression,” said Jim
Blevins. “They came to Gallipolis in about 1935 where Alfred Gabrielli behind the bar circa 1960.
their oldest daughter Nell
lived who was married to
Vince Parrotti and operated 740 2nd Avenue. Gus died born in the upstairs apart‘Vince’s’ on Court Street. in 1949, and Argie turned ment in 1939.
LaBello said there are
They bought the building the business over to her
and opened a tavern/food sons, Bill and Al Gabrielli. common threads between
service that they named Bill and Al operated it un- he and the Gabriellis, both
til about 1970.
in heritage and drive.
‘Happy Corner’.”
He said ownership of the
“The owners were very
According
to
Jim
Blevins, the Gabriellis building stayed in the fam- tickled that the new owner is
lived in the upstairs apart- ily, most recently owned by also Italian,” said LaBello, of
ment for a few years until his brother, Ron Blevins, a
See INK | C2
they bought a house at grandson who was actually

AT LEFT, Argentina Gabrielli circa 1935. AT RIGHT, The Envy Ink procedure room is maintained as a completely sanitary space and is stocked and ready for new customers.

AT LEFT, pictured is the exterior of the ‘Happy Corner’ building circa 1935. Prior to 1938, the building housed a general store. In 1938, during The Great Depression, the business became a
tavern. AT RIGHT, pictured is the interior of the business with Gus Gabrielli, an unknown helper behind the bar and an unknown seated customer circa 1935.

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page C2 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 22, 2013

�@&gt;&gt;F?:EJî�@C?6C
Sometimes being kind just
doesn’t pay off.
Seems a couple of people came
to the door of an elderly man
who lives alone in his country
home just outside Pomeroy.
They acted as if they knew him,
and he thought maybe he knew
them, although he couldn’t remember their names.
Once inside, they all sat down
for a visit. In the conversation,
one of them talked about his need
for some money and asked for
some help. Being a compassionate soul, the resident got up, went
into another room, and came back
with some money to give him.
Once the money was handed
over, the visitors seemed ready
to leave, but one wanted to use
the bathroom first. It was located
in the same direction the man
had taken when he got the money to give to his visitors. They
apparently had watched where
he kept the money because after
they had left, he discovered that
all of his money had been taken.
This isn’t the first case of
someone swindling money from
some trusting elderly resident.
Knowing who you let in your
home is really important. Remember, if you give them money one
time, they’ll probably be back, and

sometimes it can get
Williamson of Pomereally nasty and peoroy and the nephew
ple get hurt. Be very
of Dude and Sarah
careful who you let
Gibbs who were longinto your house.
time operators of the
***
license bureau and a
You may rememgrocery store on Mulber that Meigs
berry Avenue.
County’s
Karen
On Aug. 3, KramGriffith was the first
er, 63, was in a sprint
woman to march
car race accident at
in The Ohio State
the Lincoln SpeedUniversity Marching
way in Abbottstown,
Band.
Pa. He was taken to
That was 40 years
York Hospital for
ago after women’s Charlene Hoeflich treatment and the
rights came into play,
choeflich@civitasme- next day died as a result of his injuries in
and the rules of pardia.com
the racing accident.
ticipation changed.
Kramer was a
A couple of Satsprint car builder
urdays ago, at the
OSU game when the alumni and driver who earned many
band performed, special recogni- awards over the years. In 2008,
he was inducted into the Nation was given to Karen and the
tional Sprint Car Hall of Fame
other four women accepted later and also the URC Hall of Fame.
that year into the marching band. Then in 1994, he was inducted
Karen played in both the con- into The York County Racing
cert and marching bands all Hall of Fame, and in 2011 into
through college, and every year the Lebanon County Sports Hall
since has returned to participate of Fame. He received numerous
other awards over the years.
in the Alumni Day activities.
According to a local race car
***
Many from here will remember enthusiast, Kramer took 144 wins
Kramer Earl Williamson who was against the best in the business,
the son of George and Alfreda including the World of Outlaws.

":G6DE@4&lt;î(6A@CE

7,200 trees to be removed
from Ohio wildlife area

ON THE

SALE

From Page C1

ESTATE FURNITURE
SPECIALS

RICEʼS FURNITURE
854 2nd Ave, Gallipolis OH

Monday - Saturday 10am - 5pm

60451327

740-446-9523

ricesfurniture@yahoo.com

door which –
Number One.
as it turns out
No, really, I
– was close
have
caught
enough
for
mice in traps
me to hear it
and
placed
rattle once a
them still wrigmouse had degling in front of
cided he liked
this cat only to
cat food well
have the sulky
enough to exgrimalkin look
plore the muat me with the
rine pleasures
same
bored
of its interior
contempt
a
realm. What’s
high priestess
wrong with
might bestow
that
stupid
Don Dudding
on a bad sacmouse? The
rifice.
“Eat
bag says “Cat
the mouse,” I
Food.” Does it want a meal would tell it. Silently, using
or does it want to become the powerfully telepathy reone with the universe? I served exclusively for aging
don’t know, but it has tak- felines, my cat would look
en me twenty minutes to at me and say, “If it’s so
catch the little rodent in a tasty, why don’t you eat it?
nearly empty peanut butter Be gone with your stinky
jar (peanut butter jars are rodent.” That my primary
never entirely empty, by the reason for allowing the cat
way); tomorrow, I will re- to live on my back porch in
lease Mickey’s cousin into the first place was to help
the wilds a few miles from control the mice population
home, because I’m afraid if is Number Two on the list
I kill it, it’ll haunt my sleep of things of which this cat is
and give me nightmares. utterly indifferent.
For the rest of the night,
Let me back up, once
the cat food bag is on the upon a time, a few years
dresser where I hope it is ago, I did try to keep the cat
out of reach of all but the food on the back porch, but
most ambitious of the little its magical allure enchantmouse’s circle of friends.
ed ne’er-do-well raccoons
Okay, so this is where the who deemed the interior of
dilemma of relocating the the cat food bag their own
cat food bag enters into the private Xanadu. Raccoons
region of madness worthy can decimate a cat food bag
of a Poe character. Why do I with the gleeful zealotry of
have a bag of cat food in the a pagan necromancer getfirst place? Obviously – to ting at sheep entrails. The
feed a cat. Why own a cat? last time I had raccoons
I once foolishly believed it visiting my back porch, I
was to catch mice, but now had to fill a super-soaker
I know it’s to provide jobs squirt gun with Louisiana
to people who manufacture hot sauce and shoot one of
cat food. So why not put them in the face with it in
the cat food bag on the back order to persuade them not
porch with the cat and let it to come back. “It burns! It
deal with the mouse? Be- burns!” cried a raccoon.
cause this cat has decided “You smell like dipping
he is too old to catch mice, sauce,” exclaimed a comand on the long, long list of panion who suddenly felt
things to which my cat has powerful, mixed emotions
grown entirely indifferent, about his desire to cannicatching mice comes in at balize his compadre.

Okay, so when the raccoons first destroyed a bag
of cat food, I shelled out for
a heavy plastic bin with a
lid to keep them out of it.
When the raccoons figured
out how to pry open the lid
to get at their precious cat
food ambrosia, I put a concrete block on top of the bin.
That still didn’t stop them;
they brought in a crew to
drag the entire bin well out
into the yard and destroy it
with the determination of
the A-Team. So I moved the
cat food inside and prepared
for a home invasion. Fortunately, the hot sauce worked
well enough to send them
looking for easier targets
down the road, and they
never came back.
Now, I could put the cat
food in the laundry room,
but that would mean it
would be out of my typical line of sight, and every
time I left the house in the
morning, I would encounter an aged disgruntled
feline who would use its
remaining life-force to
loudly remind me that I
had forgotten to feed it.
I know myself too well: I
would take the time to feed
the cat, and then I would
be disgruntled about being perpetually five minutes late. If I can see the
cat food, it’s on my list of
things to do before leaving
the house; if I can’t see the
can’t food, I’m going to be
five minutes late after unlocking the door to go back
in the house to retrieve
the kibble. I wish I could
say which I dislike more
– being five minutes late
or letting an old cat grow
hungry. Don’t even get me
started on how I feel when
the cat impulsively decides
it’s grown phlegmatic
about the brand of cat food
I’m buying, and it decides
to try to wait me out to see
if I’ll switch up the flavor
with a different package.

Ink

photo for illustration
purpose only.

*ALL SALES FINAL - AS IS - CASH &amp; CARRY*

been credited with taking the
district from “fiscal emergency
to a fairly fiscally sound” financial position. She has been in
that position since 2001. In a presentation ceremony, Cindy was
also commended for her active
involvement with the OASBO
for testimony at the Statehouse
earlier this year during the budget hearings. She is also credited
with being responsible for a recent change in how some health
issues are billed which results in
reduced costs to school districts.
As some will remember, Cindy
was treasurer for the Meigs Local School District for several
years, a position now held by her
husband, Mark.
The couple live in Minersville.
***
Our belated congratulations to
John Bailey who, on Aug. 31, celebrated his 101st birthday.
John, a graduate of Chester
High School in 1931, carries
the title of “Meigs County’s Finest” bestowed on him at Chester
Shade Days. He still lives in the
farm house on Flatwoods Road
where he was born, but this year
instead of working in the garden, he just sits back and enjoys
watching things grow.

%?H2C5î2?5î�H&lt;H2C5

GALLIPOLIS — United Producers, Inc., livestock reSo it’s four o’clock in the
morning; I would rather
port of sales from September 18, 2013.
be sleeping, but I’m wide
awake because I’m ponFeeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $100-$203, Heifers, $100-$170; dering one of the most
425-525 pounds, Steers, $100-$185, Heifers, $100-$150; profound mysteries of the
550-625 pounds, Steers, $95-$150, Heifers, $90-$145; universe: Where in the
650-725 pounds, Steers, $90-$145, Heifers, $100-$135; heck am I supposed to put
750-850 pounds, Steers, $90-$132, Heifers, $85-$125. the cat food bag? Now if
that doesn’t strike you as
a profound mystery, it’s
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $70-$81; Medium/Lean, $60-$69; either because you are way
more intelligent than I am
Thin/Light, $40.50-$59; Bulls, $80.50-$102.50.
when it comes to knowing
where to put a cat food
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $1,060-$1,135; Bred Cows, $625- bag or because your brain
would rather sleep at night
$1,035; Baby Calves, $150; Goats, $28-$130.
than ponder the existential
ramifications of deciding
Upcoming Specials
where to keep the cat food
9/25/13 — next sale, 10 a.m.
bag. Allow me to explain.
10/2/13 — ODA meeting after sale, 6:30 p.m.
Later today, I’m going
to feel as though my psychic gas tank is running
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy at (304) 634- on fumes because I didn’t
0224, Luke at (740) 645-3697, or Mark at (740) 645-5708, or get enough sleep, and I’m
going to rely upon a hefty
visit the website at www.uproducers.com.
dose of caffeine to get me
through the afternoon.
That particular hot tub
sized, diet soda will most
likely cradle the germination of my next kidney
stone, but when the fatigue
hits, my need to knuckle
CINCINNATI (AP) — pest, and we must con- through the afternoon’s
Thousands of trees will be tinue to act decisively to weariness will out-prioriremoved from a southwest- keep it from spreading to tize my need to avoid anern Ohio wildlife area in a other parts of Ohio,” Da- other calcium invader to
joint federal and state effort vid Daniels, director of the my ureter. By this point, I
to protect a neighboring Ohio Department of Agri- will have forgotten why it
was so important to waste
state park from the spread culture has said.
of a tree-killing beetle.
The
bullet-shaped, precious hours in Slumberland calculating where
About 7,200 trees in the white-spotted black beetles
I should keep the cat food
wildlife area near East Fork tunnel into trees in the bag. However, just before
State Park are expected to larval stage, eventually getting back into bed tobe removed, according to cutting off water and nutri- night, there it will be, the
the U.S. Department of Ag- ents. They’re especially at- cat food bag, sitting on
riculture and state agricul- tracted to maple trees, but top of a bedroom dresser
ture officials. Trees in the 12 other types can be hosts where of all the places it
park, about 20 miles east for the bugs, creating a se- might belong, it most cerof Cincinnati, are consid- rious threat to forests and tainly does not.
ered to be at high risk for the timber industry
Why is the cat food bag,
infestation by the Asian
Nearly 19,000 infest- at least for now, on top of a
longhorned beetle, and ed or high-risk trees in dresser where we can both
the trees to be destroyed southwest Ohio have agree it doesn’t belong?
are within a quarter-mile been removed since the Because it has to sit someof infested trees.
beetles were discovered where, doesn’t it? When I
“The Asian longhorned in Clermont County went to bed, the cat food
bag was next to the back
beetle is a very dangerous about two years ago.

Living Rooms...
Dining Rooms...
Bedrooms...
Entertainment Units...
Many More Misc
Items...

***
He’s coming back!
Bruce Wolfe and the Midnight
Cloggers will again this year take
the stage at the Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Performing Arts Centre in
Gallipolis for a Christmas show.
It has been scheduled for Nov.
30 with showtime at 6:30 p.m.
The program is titled “A Merry
Country Christmas”, and there
will be a special appearance of
Santa and Mrs. Claus along with
Sammie the Snowman. Tickets
are now on sale at the theatre.
From his high school days at
Southern High School, Bruce
has been a song and dance man.
He organized the cloggers many
years ago and last year did a
show at the Ariel. Some time after high school, Bruce got a job
at Disney World and is still employed there. He flies back and
forth to practice with the locals
in preparation for performances.
***
Our congratulations to Cindy
Rhonemus who was recently
presented the Regional District
Service Award from the Ohio Association of School Business Officials, a professional association
and advocacy group.
Cindy is the treasurer of the
Trimble Local Schools and has

himself. “Not sure if that is relevant, but they
were very excited about my vision for the place
and seem very happy with my success here.
“My paternal grandmother, Grandma
‘Bella as we called her, was the youngest
of seven siblings and the only one to be
born in America,” explained LaBello of his
own Italian heritage.
He said he was born in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, and moved to Ohio when he
was in the middle of third grade.
He also said there was a certain likeness between the building owners in ambition and vision.
“I think there is similarity in the personality of how I run things to the stories
Jim told me about how his family ran the
Happy Corner… He told me a great story
when, during The Great Depression, a
family desperately traveling and looking
for work stopped in. There was no work
for them, but the Gabriellis fed the man
and his family, and gave them enough
gas to get them to the next town to look
for work there,” relayed LaBello. “I think
there is a parallel there with my philosophy on treating clients and every one who
walks through the door.”
So approximately ten years after the
Happy Corner closed for the last time in
2003, the building is again open, this time,

as Envy Ink Tattoo and Gallery, under LaBello’s direction.
Yes, you read that correctly — gallery;
as in, art gallery.
Envy Ink has, from its very beginning,
served as a cornerstone of the local arts
scene, as well, featuring local and regional
artists, poets, performers and musicians in
the monthly Envy Ink Art Salon, held at 8
p.m. on the last Saturday of every month.
The Salon, started by LaBello at his previous downtown location, recently celebrated
the one-year anniversary of its local and regional talent and art showcases.
“I make a living with art, and that’s really
fun, but it’s sometimes hard to meet other
people who do art, because it’s often a solitary pursuit,” said LaBello. “Really, it started selfishly, I guess. I wanted to bring people in, show them my art and make them
listen to my music,” LaBello said laughing.
“It’s grown quite a bit, but we are always
looking for new members, though. I want
it to be community-wide … because we all
want a place where we can [have this].”
For more information about Envy Ink
and the Art Salon, visit Envy Ink’s web
site at www.EnvyInkTattoo.com or the
Envy Ink Facebook page at www.facebook.com/EnvyInkTattoo.

�Sunday, September 22, 2013

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 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 Monday,
Sept. 23, 2013:
This year you often are emotional
yet direct. You will make sure others
get your message. You will demand
responses as well, but you won’t
always receive the answers you want
or need. Others view you as an intimidating presence. If you are single, you
are quite desirable. You know how
to draw someone in and make this
person feel safe. If you are attached,
the two of you might become more
argumentative than you have been in
the past. On the other hand, you will
kiss and make up behind closed doors.
CANCER’s moods could drive you
crazy.
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)
You will be at the start of an
adventure and not even be aware of
it. Sometimes, when you get angry,
you experience a revitalization of
sorts. Others might not be as a clear
as you are about what is happening.
Understand that your efforts could distance others. Tonight: Your treat.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Taking action and even yelling a bit will be healthier than holding
in your feelings. You might be more
expressive and content in the long run
as a result. The people around you
could be jolted at first, but they will like
the new, more expressive you. Tonight:
Let the party begin.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Listen to news, and be willing
to accept some good luck. You might
need to spend a little to make a little.
Understand what is happening with a
close relative you care a lot about. Try
to avoid a bothersome topic. Tonight:
Get some extra R and R — you will
need it for tomorrow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Listen to someone’s positive
feedback. Your ability to touch base
with others and bring people together
will emerge. Your optimism abounds.
Keep a strong sense of direction in a
meeting. Help keep your peers centered. Tonight: Join several friends,
and catch up on news.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Understand what is happening
with a friend or relative. Tempers could
flare with ease, and that might include
you, too! Opportunities come out of the
blue and push you to decide just how
involved you want to be in other matters. Tonight: Your irritability could be
close to the surface.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You might want to defer to
someone who appears to have a bigger scope of the future than you do.
You’ll feel as if you need to control
your temper and avoid getting into any
problems. You see the benefits, but do
you see the liabilities? Tonight: Relax
to a favorite pastime.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Deal with a key person in
your life directly. You often might try
to avoid having a discussion with this
person. You could be worried about
some anger emerging, but you will
be a lot better off in the long run if
you have this conversation. Tonight:
Togetherness is the theme.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Others will say whatever
they want, and as a result, you could
be taken aback by what you hear.
Understand that there is much more
going on here than meets the eye!
News from a distance could force you
to make yet another decision. Tonight:
Read between the lines.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You easily could become
irritated by news that points to a need
for change. You also might be frustrated — that is, until a close associate
or loved one makes a caring gesture.
Know that you can count on this person. Tonight: Put on a great piece of
music and let your mind drift.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
There is a distinction between
someone sounding off because they
can rather than someone being angry
and out of control. Observe what is
happening with a partner. You need to
be aware. Several people make very
caring gestures toward you. Tonight:
Defer to a loved one.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Pressure builds on the homefront, mainly because you don’t let
others know your true self. You might
feel off-kilter, but you will choose not to
share that with anyone. Make an effort
to complete a project, or at least give it
a head start. Tonight: Ever playful, letting off steam.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Your imagination will
resolve a fight, but you might forget to
tell the other party. Make sure everyone you deal with is on the same page.
Use your ingenuity to take off a lot of
pressure. Touch base with a child in
your life. Tonight: It is Monday, but kick
up your heels anyway.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page C4 LîîSunday Times Sentinel

Birth

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Anniversary

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Anniversary

Hill—Wolfe
announce birth
ST. ALBANS. W.Va. — Ty Hill and Jennifer
Wolfe of St. Albans, W.Va. announce the birth of
Avery Jane Hill, born Aug. 10, 2013, weighing 7
pounds, one ounce.
Grandparents are Dwight and Lorna Hill of
Racine, Ohio; Amy Wolfe of Ravenswood, W.
Va.; and Scott and Holly Wolfe of Racine. Greatgrandparents are Marvin and Kathryn White of
Coolville, Ohio; Linda Grindley of Racine; Dan
and Shirley Littlefield of Racine; and Marilyn
Wolfe of Racine.

Anniversary

Robert and Regina Heugel

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Robert
(Elwood)
Heugel and Regina
Heugel will celebrate
their 71st wedding
anniversary on September 22. The family requests cards with
goodwill wishes and
tidbits about yourself,
your family and about
Gallipolis. If you remember the couple or
any of their children:
Harold Heugel, (Roberta) Anne Cornell,

Nina Brumfield or
their grandchildren:
Brad Smith, Kristie
(Smith) McLean, Alisa
(Smith) Vos, Gregg
Smith, Cathy (Heugel)
Bryant, Natalie (Brumfield) Rose and Narissa
(Brumfield) Trigilio,
the family would love
to hear from you.
The couple’s address is: 7681 Knightwing Circle Fort Myers, FL 33912.

Jonathan and Beverly Louden recently celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary along with their children. Pictured are, front row, from left: Jonathan Louden, Beverly Louden and Carol Louden; back row, from
left: Amy Louden, Will Louden and Jennifer Louden.

Loudens celebrate 50th
wedding anniversary
Celebrating 50 years
of marriage on Sunday,
September 8, 2013,
were Jonathan and Beverly Louden of Thurman, Ohio. With the
help of their children,
they hosted an open
house for their friends.
Jon and Bev were
married in Napoleon,
Ohio, at St. Paul United Methodist Church

by the Reverend Howard Spitnale on September 8, 1963. They
have four children,
Amy Louden of Shady
Side, Maryland, William and (Patty) Louden of Mentor, Ohio,
Jennifer and (Norman) Wilder of Independence, California,
and Carol Louden of
Patriot, Ohio.

What a trip: Timothy Leary’s files go public in NY

Bob and Ruth Copley

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Bob and Ruth Copley will be celebrating their
55th wedding anniversary on October 10, 2013,
along with their son, Scott, who resides in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

NEW YORK (AP) — A trove of
Timothy Leary files, much of it previously unpublished, could shed new
light on the LSD guru, his controversial research into psychedelic drugs
and the emergence of the 1960s
counterculture.
The New York Public Library,
which acquired the vast archive for
an undisclosed sum from the Leary
estate in 2011, is making the material available for the first time Wednesday to scholars and the public.
The archive “is the missing link in
every attempt to piece together an account of research into Timothy Leary
and the emergence of scientific research into psychedelic drugs and popular drug counterculture,” said Denis
Berry, a trustee for the Leary estate.
Leary, who coined the phrase
“turn on, tune in, drop out,” was
one of the most polarizing figures
of the counterculture. He advocated
the therapeutic use of psychedelic
drugs including LSD and psychedelic
mushrooms. Allen Ginsberg, Abbie
Hoffman, Jack Kerouac, Aldous Huxley and other noted figures frequently visited Millbrook Estate in upstate
New York where Leary continued to

conduct his psychedelic experiments
after being fired as a psychology lecturer at Harvard University.
He spent several years in prison
and lived in exile for several years in
the 1970s. He died in 1996.
The files, filled with never-published correspondence and manuscripts from leading scientific, artistic, literary and cultural figures of the
day, “will force a reworking of the
current narratives on Leary, his role
in LSD research” and the counterculture, Berry said.
The archive contains drug session reports, completed questionnaires and letters relating to the
various organizations Leary formed
to continue his drug research after
Harvard, including the International Federation for Internal Freedom, Castalia Foundation and the
League for Spiritual Discovery.
Among the highlights is a neatly
typed description from 1966 of the
psychedelic training courses Leary conducted at Millbrook and a 1975 letter he
wrote from prison to “One Flew Over
the Cuckoo’s Nest” author Ken Kesey
in which he says, “I think the time has
come for me to go public about what

I’ve been doing and learning.”
These and the many unpublished
manuscripts and letters from prison
provide a rich source for research,
said William Stingone, the library’s
curator of manuscript and archives.
John McWhinnie, a rare-book dealer who appraised the archive for the
Leary estate, said in his report that
the archive “details a program into
psychedelic research that was akin
to (Alfred) Kinsey’s research into human sexuality.”
The archive embraces the lives and
thoughts of all the players associated
with the scientific and popular movement of LSD and drug counterculture,
said McWhinnie, who died last year.
McWhinnie was an associate of
bookseller Glenn Horowitz, who
eventually brokered the sale of the
archive to the Public Library.
Among the collection’s many photographs is one of Leary standing at a
chalkboard in the 1950s giving a lecture on his first book, “Interpersonal
Diagnosis of Personality.” The book
marked his reputation in the field of
clinical psychology before he went to
Harvard to begin his research with
psychedelic drugs.

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NEW YORK (AP) — In the
decade Sarah Tetley has worked
with college students, she’s seen
a change in care packages sent
from home.
The box of homemade goodies
“is something of a lost art,” says
Tetley, director of the First Year
Experience program at Webster
University in St. Louis. “And
it’s sad, because there’s nothing
like seeing a student get excited
about a package from home.”
The change is partly because
parents are more in touch with
kids, thanks to cell phones, than
they used to be: “They don’t
send as many care packages because they just talked to them,”
Tetley said.
But it’s also due to a rise in
commercially prepared options
— not just generic gift baskets,
but care packages designed
specifically for college kids.
And those parents who do pack
their own care packages are apt
to skip homemade brownies in
favor of laundry pods, and get
their “ty” via text.
The Premade
Care Package
GourmetGiftB askets.com
“started to see a trend emerge
a few years ago” with more orders sent to campus addresses,
according to spokesman Chuck
Casto. So the New Hampshirebased company introduced
products like the “Exam Cram
Care Package,” which includes
microwave
popcorn,
cookies, candy, chips and pretzels.
They’ve sold thousands of them,
with sales up 75 percent this
year over last.
Many colleges also offer inhouse care package programs.
At Connecticut College, par-

ents can order the $35 “Birthday Bash,” with a cake or cupcakes, or “Health Nut,” with
fresh fruit, rice cakes and yogurt smoothies, $25. The packages are made in a dining hall
for same-day pickup.
Minimus.biz also offers a
“College Student Care Package of the Month,” with
themed packages like the
Dorm Laundry Kit and the
Dorm Medicine Chest.
Andy Fortson, 27, co-founded
CoedSupply.com after looking
online for something to send
to a brother in the Marines and
a cousin at Penn State. “I was
pretty appalled by the options,”
he said. “They were overpriced
and full of junk food.”
So he and a friend launched a
hipper alternative last year with
a monthly mix of health-food
snacks, personal care items (like
Old Spice or a new fragrance
from Rihanna) and entertainment (such as CDs), ranging
in price from $16.50 to $35 a
month. “The response has been
overwhelming,” Fortson said.
“We’re already shipping to colleges in 45 states.”
Kelley Garland, a sophomore
at Providence College in Rhode
Island, saw a post about CoedSupply.com on her school’s Facebook page, asked her mom to
sign her up, and says she loves
“having that little surprise at the
beginning of every month.”
From Home, With
Love: Clippings,
Cookies And Condoms
Parents who do send care
packages say socks, laundry
pods (premeasured detergent
packs) and cookies are staples.
But they also say it’s not so

much about sending necessities as it is a message of love,
from home.
“There’s no way I can send
him a copy of ‘I’ll Love You Forever,’ even though that is what
I feel like reading right now,”
joked Jill Troderman of Soquel,
Calif., referring to the classic
children’s book about parental
devotion.
But she did send her son at the
University of Washington socks,
a flannel throw and homemade
chocolate-chip cookies. She figured he could share the cookies
with friends since he’s a “bit of
a health nut … he doesn’t want
to gain the freshman 15.” (For
the record, researchers say it’s a
myth that college students gain
15 pounds their first year — it’s
more like three or five pounds.)
Laura Kessler tries to send
monthly care packages to her
two sons, but she “can’t bake to
save her soul,” so instead sends
things like Nutella and trinkets.
Asked to name a favorite item
from one of mom’s packages,
son Brian Kessler, a sophomore
at the University of Dayton,
posted on Facebook, “Gonna
have to go with Silly String.”
Dori Wile’s daughter was
raised in Texas but is now getting a master’s degree at Chatham University in Pittsburgh,
so she wants “anything unique
to Texas.” Wile sends condiments from the regional Whataburger chain, Mexican spices,
and pictures: “The kids today
don’t print out photographs.
This way they have something
to put on their fridge.”
Twentieth-century college
kids often received envelopes
stuffed with newspaper clippings from home, but today’s

“You really don’t see the homemade care
packages that much anymore because it’s so
easy to get on the Internet and ship something.”
— Kate Sutherland
Student at the University of Tennessee-Martin
parents email links to articles
of interest. Still, one mom
snail-mails the local police
blotter to her son if a kid they
know gets arrested, writing
on the clipping, “Don’t let this
happen to you!”
And Inez Caspi of Bellevue,
Wash., sends to her son at Claremont McKenna College in
California “articles on safety or
drinking or use of cell phones,”
along with columns about playing bridge, one of his favorite
pastimes, and “an occasional
comic strip, usually mocking
moms.”
Some moms send condoms.
Mary Kay Russell of the Chicago
area has sent her three collegeage sons “a Costco-sized box of
prophylactics.”
Parents of kids at Baylor
University, a Christian school
in Texas, have different priorities: They hold parent meetings
around the country to assemble
care packages together, and they
tuck Scripture verses in with the
toothbrushes and snacks.
Saying Thanks By
Text, Post Or Vine
When it comes to saying thankyou for the effort, acknowledgements are often by text (“Thx”
or “ty”) or pictures posted online. “I’ve even seen a student
taking a Vine using all the things
inside the care package, saying

‘Look what my mom bought
me!’” said Tetley, referring to the
app for six-second videos.
Jackie Parker sent her daughter, a freshman at the University
of Missouri at Columbia, a Starbucks gift card two weeks ago and
was happy to get back, via text,
“a picture of her drink and cake.”
Julie Davis sends her son Sam
black-and-white cookies — a
New York City specialty — from
a Manhattan bakery because it’s
something he can’t get at the
University of Colorado in Boulder. “The kids are so independent these days, they have access to everything, and it makes
it harder to find something to
send them,” she said. She knows
he’s received the package when
she gets his one-word text:
“Amazing.”
Kate Sutherland posted a picture on Instagram and Facebook
when her mom sent a “makeyour-own party kit with princess stuff and decorations” for
her 22nd birthday last spring
— one of many care packages
she received as a student at the
University of Tennessee-Martin.
“My friends thought it was really neat — I think everyone got
a little jealous,” Sutherland said.
“You really don’t see the homemade care packages that much
anymore because it’s so easy
to get on the Internet and ship
something.”

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