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

INSIDE STORY

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Henry Elton Bahr, 88
Roy Jenkins, 68
Ivan E. Roush, 96
50 cents daily

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 180

Smith enters guilty plea to role in Chafin homicide
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — One of the two
females charged in connection
with the homicide of Wallace R.
Chafin on May 9, 2013, entered
a guilty plea to her role in the
crime on Thursday morning.
Ariel R. Smith, 23, of Racine,
entered a guilty plea to the
amended charge of complicity
to aggravated assault, a felony
of the fourth degree, and tampering with evidence, a felony
of the third degree. Smith was
originally indicted on complicity
to felonious assault, a felony of
the second degree and tampering with evidence.
Judge I. Carson Crow accept-

ed the guilty pleas and preceded
to sentencing.
Crow sentenced Smith to the
maximum on each charge to run
consecutively. Smith will serve
a total of 54 months, 36 months
for tampering with evidence and
18 months for complicity to aggravated assault.
She was also given credit for
time served since her arrest on
May 9 and time awaiting transport.
Smith apologized to her family
and to the Chafin’s family prior
to hearing her sentence.
Smith was indicted for her role
in the crime along with Ryan A.
Cozart and Sara J. Craig in May.
Cozart was indicted on
charges of aggravated murder,
tampering with evidence and

aggravated robbery. Aggravated
murder is a special felony and
carries a sentence ranging from
15 years to life. Tampering with
evidence is a felony of the third
degree and aggravated robbery
is a felony of the first degree.
Cozart was also in court on
Tuesday on a probation violation
from a 2008 case.
Following a hearing with testimony by probation officer Larry
Tucker and Meigs County Sheriff’s Office Major Scott Trussell,
Crow found probable cause that
Cozart violated his probation by
associating with Craig who was
on a GPS ankle monitor at the
time of the alleged crime.
Cozart was sentenced to the
balance of the sentence original-

ly imposed in the case. The original charge of aggravated robbery
carried a 10 year sentence with
the time suspended originally.
Cozart will now serve that time,
with credit for time served since
his arrest in May.
Craig entered a guilty plea in
September to the charges of tampering with evidence, receiving
stolen property and obstructing official business. She was
sentenced to 36 months on the
charge of tampering with evidence, 12 months on obstructing
official business and 12 months
on receiving stolen property.
Craig is serving a total of eight
years in prison with the sentence
from that case and two other cases.
Indictments of all three de-

fendants are in connection with
the stabbing death of Wallace
“Randy” Chafin at the Meigs
Motel on May 9.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood, officials
with the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office, Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation,
and the Meigs County Coroner
responded to the Meigs Motel
soon after midnight on Thursday, May 9.
Upon responding, officers
found evidence of an altercation
and a homicide.
The victim was identified as
Chafin, 57, of Meigs County.
According to the complaint
filed in Meigs County Court,
Chafin was stabbed.

Veterans Day
observance set
for Monday
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Volunteers Hilda Weaver shelves canned food, while Janet Cleland fills sacks in preparation for delivery.
While the contributions have decreased over the past several months, the need increases as the weather
changes and the holiday season approaches.

Signup time for Christmas toys and food boxes
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — For many years
the Meigs Cooperative Parish has
given out special holiday food
boxes to disadvantaged Meigs
County families. In addition, the
Parish has provided toys to assure
that no child wakes up on Christmas morning to find there are no
gifts under the tree.
Churches, community organizations and many individuals have
contributed generously to both
the food and the gifts for children
programs over the years. However, as jobs have disappeared and
money has become tight for many
families, the contributions have decreased just as the need increased.
Recognizing the plight of many
community residents, the Meigs
County bikers which had earlier
carried out a program of providing gifts for children, joined the
Parish in its toys for kids of parents who qualified to participate
in other programs offered at the
Meigs Community Center.
The bikers began making special runs to raise funds for purchasing toys for children in families served by the Parish. This
year efforts were made to increase

Pomeroy looking
into house demolition
Meigs County bikers, in cooperation with the Meigs Cooperative Parish, raise
money and buy toys to be given away at Christmas. Here from the left, bikers
Ron Clampit, Steve Crabtree, Rusty Starcher and Brenda Davis display some
of the gifts given away last year.

their contributions and to become
more involved in the actual purchase and distribution of the toys
which will be given out to the parents a few days before Christmas.
Registration for getting toys
from the Parish program is required and the last day to sign up
at the Meigs Cooperative Parish

to participate is Friday, Nov. 15, 9
a.m . to 1 p.m. Nancy Thoene of
the Parish staff emphasized that ”
no sign-ups for toys will be taken
after Friday.”
To receive the holiday dinner
food boxes, qualified Meigs residents have until Nov. 29 to register at the Parish.

Medicare Check-Up Day coming to Meigs
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — “With
intense media coverage
on the implementation of
the Affordable Care Act
(ACA), there is a possibility that some Meigs County seniors may become
confused with their Medicare healthcare coverage,”
said Rick Hindman, assistant executive director for
the Area Agency on Ag-

POMEROY — The annual observance of Veterans
Day by Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, will
be held at 11 a.m. in front
of the Meigs County Courthouse, on Monday, Nov. 11.
Speaker for the event
will be Master Sergeant
Jeff Russell of the West
Virginia Army National
Guard. He is a 30-year active member with the West
Virginia National Guard,
and currently holds the job
title of Senior Inspector for
the 3664th Maintenance
Company. MSGT. Russell
was one of the first West
Virginia soldiers to be deployed to Iraq in the early
stages of that conflict.
The prayer to open the
service will be given by
Pastor Russ Moore of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
There will be special music by the Southern High
School marching band under the direction of Chad
Dodson. Everyone is invited to attend the special
observance honoring veterans of all wars.
John Hood, Drew Webster
Post 39 commander, calls on
the public to remember the
significance of Veterans Day

which is always observed on
the 11th hour of the 11th
day of the 11th month.
While World War I officially ended when the Treaty of Versailles was signed
on June 28, 1919, in Versailles, France, the fighting
had ceased seven months
earlier when an armistice,
or temporary cessation in
hostilities between the Allied nationals and Germany, went into effect on the
eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh
month. For that reason,
Nov. 11, 1918 is generally
regarded as the end of what
was described as “the war
to end all wars.”
In November 1919, President Wilson proclaimed
November 11 as the first
commemoration of Armistice Day with the following
words: “To us in America,
the reflections of Armistice
Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism
of those who died in the
country’s service and with
gratitude for the victory,
both because of the thing
from which it has freed us
and because of the opportunity it has given America
to show her sympathy with
peace and justice in the
councils of the nation.”

ing, District 8.
With that said he announced that free assistance is available for
seniors to review their
options, including Medicare and the Ohio Senior
Health Insurance Information Program (OSHIIP) which will be hosting
a ” Medicare Check-Up
Day” at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center
on Tuesday, Nov. 12,

beginning at 8:30 a.m.
Seniors with questions
about their health care
coverage can make an appointment for assistance
by calling the local senior
center, 740-992-2161.
Seniors who want to
learn more about the
prescription drug plans
that are available in our
area, can also check out
the Medicare Plan Finder
at Medicare.gov/find-a-

plan. They can also call
the Area Agency on Aging 8 at 1-800-331-2644
or call Medicare directly
at 1-800-MEDICARE (1800-633-4227) with their
questions.
“The Affordable Care
Act health insurance marketplace is designed to
help people who don’t have
any health insurance. SeSee CHECK-UP | A3

Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Village of Pomeroy is moving closer to
the demolition of condemned properties within the village.
During Monday’s council meeting, members of council
approved spending $5,000 per property to demolish five
houses — pending approval of funds by the finance committee next week.
Pomeroy Mayor Jackie Welker said these houses are
just a few of the ones the village is looking into removing.
The plan is to hopefully have the five houses removed
by the end of the year.
In addition, during Monday’s finance committee meeting, the committee will be looking for approximately
$6,000 in the budget to conduct title searches on approximately 20 other properties in the village.
In other business, Village Solicitor Chris Tenoglia
briefed council in open session on the civil action filed
by David and Jamie Deem against the village and others.
The village was scheduled to meeting with insurance this
week to discuss the situation.
Council approved pay applications for the current projects taking place in the village as presented by Mitch Altier of ME Companies.
Council approved the recommendations of the water
board as presented.
Brenda Neutzling spoke with council about a piece of
an old stop sign near the intersection of Spring Avenue
and Main Street which she recently tripped over. The
piece has since been removed according to Welker.
Christmas bonuses were approved for village employees as recommended by the finance committee.
Parks committee expressed their appreciation for all
those who helped to make Treat Street a success.
Council will meet on Monday, Nov. 11, with a finance committee meeting at 6 p.m. and regular council meeting at 7 p.m.

�Page A2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 8, 2013

Meigs County Community Calendar
Friday, Nov. 8
LONG BOTTOM — Faithful
Gospel Church Sing, 7 p.m. Friday with singers, Pathway.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District will have their regular
meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD
office.
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township Trustees will hold

their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the town hall.
RACINE — The Southern
Local Board of Education will
hold a special meeting to discuss/hire personnel. The meeting is scheduled for 2 p.m. at
the Hyatt Regency in Columbus, Ohio, during Capital Conference.
CHESTER —The Chester
Township Trustees will meet at
7 p.m. at the town hall.

Thursday, Nov. 14
POMEROY — The Meigs
County American Cancer Society
Relay for Life Planning Committee will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department. Anyone interested in helping with the
2014 event, which will take place
on June 13-14 at the fairgrounds,
is welcome to attend. For more
information, contact Courtney
Midkiff at 740-992-6626 Ext. 24.
CHESTER — Shade River

Meigs County Church Calendar
Church Sale
RACINE — The Mount Moriah Church
of God on Mile Hill Road will have a white
elephant sale beginning at 5:30 p.m. on
Saturday. There will be free food.
Community Dinner
POMEROY — A free community dinner of soup and sandwiches will be held
Thursday, November 14, with serving
from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy. The public is invited.
Thanksgiving Community
and Youth Outreach
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove
Christian Church will host a free Thanksgiving dinner following the morning service on Sunday, Nov. 17. Church service
will start at 10 a.m. and will be lead by the
youth. The service will include a puppet
show, singing, and special speaker Andrya

Lodge 453 will hold its monthly
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments will be served following the meeting.
Friday, Nov. 15
POMEROY — The Pomeroy
High School Class of 1959 will
be having their 3rd Friday lunch
at noon at Fox Pizza.
Monday, Nov. 18
POMEROY — There will be a
free Look Good Feel Better ses-

Woodmen’s Thanksgiving dinner
POMEROY — The annual carry-in
Thanksgiving dinner of the Modern Woodmen will be held Saturday at the Woodmen
Meigs Co-operative Parish
Hall, Darwin Road, Pomeroy. The chapter
events/service projects
POMEROY — The Meigs Co-operative will provide turkey, green beans, roills and
Parish hosts a variety of events and ser- drinks. Families are welcome.
vice projects available throughout the
1964 MHS Class reunion
week at the Mulberry Community Center.
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport
Some of those are as follows,
High School Class of 1964 will gave its
Meals at the Mulberry Community Center 50th reunion gathering at Millies, 2 p.m.
— 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday. Sunday. Graduates are encouraged to atParish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday- tend.
Friday and 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Saturday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon, Wednesday.
Veterans Day Celebration Assembly
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m., TuesdayRACINE — Southern High School
Friday.
will hold a Veteran’s Day Celebration
Celebrate Recovery — 7-9 p.m., Monday. and assembly at the new Southern High
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m., School beginning at 9:30 a.m., Monday,
November 11. All veterans, members of
Tuesday and Thursday.
the armed forces, and there families are
Zumba — 6:30 p.m., Tuesday.
invited to attend and to honor those who
fought for our freedom.
McDonald, Christian Education Director
at Ripley Marantha Church.

ans, Adam Smith, Mony
Wood, Tara Rose, Paul
Will, Chris Lambert, Melissa Scyoc, Jacob Parker
and Karen Werry.
Those elected to a
three-year term were Tom
Pullin, Wes Karr, Dave
Burt, Brent Rose and Sam

Office Closed
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Evans, all incumbents, Health Department will be closed on Mon.
and Adam Smith.
Nov. 11 in observance of Veterans’ Day.
The term of office begins
Dec. 1, 2013.
Thanksgiving Dinner
The next meeting of the
TUPPERS
PLAINS — The Ladies AuxMeigs County Agricultural
Society will be held Mon- iliary of the Tuppers Plains VFW Post
day, November 25 at 7 p.m. 9053 will have a Thanksgiving dinner
fundraiser Sunday, with serving from 11
at the fairgrounds.
a.m. to 2 p.m. Carry out dinners will be
available.

National report: Ohio reading scores stagnant
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — State
education leaders point to Ohio’s performance in a national report as evidence
that a tough new reading requirement for
third-graders is justified.
The National Assessment of Educational Progress shows Ohio fourth-graders’
average reading scores were unchanged
from 2011 to 2013. Eighth-graders improved by one point.
State Superintendent Richard Ross says

that shows the importance of Ohio’s Third
Grade Reading Guarantee. It requires
holding back third-graders who don’t
meet certain reading goals.
The “Nation’s Report Card” assessment is given every two years to a
sample of fourth- and eighth-graders.
Compared with 2011, this year’s report
showed average incremental gains in
math and reading for both grades of one
or two points on a 500-point scale.

Birthdays
LONG BOTTOM — Ernest
Griffin will observe his 96th
birthday on Nov. 15. Cards may
be sent to him at 36606 P. O.
Road, Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

Meigs County Local Briefs

Fair Board members elected for 3-year terms
POMEROY — New
members were elected to
the Meigs County Agricultural Society Board of Directors at a recent meeting.
Seeking a position on
the Board were Tom Pullins, Wes Karr, Dave Burt,
Brent Rose, Sam Ev-

sion from 1-3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Ladies currently undergoing cancer treatment can register by calling the American Cancer Society at 1-800-227-2345.

Senior Citizens Auction
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Council on Aging, Inc. will have a Christmas auction at 5 p.m. Saturday at the Senior Citizens Center. Jim Taylor with Old
Glory Auction Service will be the auctioneer. Among the items to be sold are plush
blankets, sheet sets, toys, dolls, colognes,
clocks, tool sets, hats and gloves, kitchen
items, lanterns, candy, hat lights, and gift
sets. In conjunction with the auction, dinner will be available beginning at 4 p.m.
Proceeds from the sale will go into pro-

grams for senior citizens.
Meigs FFA hosting Veterans Day
POMEROY — The Meigs Local FFA
Chapter will be honoring veterans on
Monday, Nov. 11. All veteran’s and their
guests are invited to attend. The program
will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the high school
gymnasium. Questions can be directed to
Tim Simpson, FFA Advisor at 992-2158.
Delinquent Tax list
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County
Treasurer Peggy Yost advises that the
delinquent list for mobile homes and real
estate will be published in The Daily Sentinel on Nov. 15 and Nov. 22. The last day
to make a payment to avoid publication on
this list is 2 p.m. on Nov. 8. For more information contact the treasurer’s office at
(740) 992-2004.
Fall Carnival
RACINE — Southern Elementary will
hold its fall carnival from 5-9 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 8 at the school. Admission is
free and activities will include inflatables,
games, bingo, dance, auction and kids
prizes. Concessions will also be available.
Immunization/Flu Shot Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct a childhood/adolescent immunization clinic and
flu shot clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
on Tuesday at the health department.
High dose flu vaccines are also available
for those age 65 and older. Please bring
children’s shot records. Also, bring medical cards/insurance for flu and pneumonia
vaccines otherwise there will be a fee associated.
The health department cannot accept
Ohio Medicaid or Managed Medicaid
companies Molina or United Healthcare
Community Plan for Flu Shots for those
aged 19-64 years. The company supplying
us the vaccine, VaxCare, cannot bill Medicaid. The Ohio Department of Health is
not providing flu shots for this age group
during the 2013-2014 flu season.

Meigs County local schools release honor rolls
POMEROY — Honor Rolls for the first nine weeks
grading period of the 2013-14 school year have been
released by Rusty Bookman, superintendent of the
Meigs Local School District.
They are as follows:
Meigs High School
Freshman — James Acree, Grant Adams, Tyler
Bachtel, Cody Bartrum, Sky Brown, Breanna Colburn, Amanda Cole, Skyla Coleman, Dakota Connolly, Kayla Cooper, Sarah Curl, Dannett Davis, Kylie Dillon, Jade Dudding, Madison Dyer, Abby Eads,
Jessie Engle, Earl Fields, Rainey Fitchpatrick, Nicole
Folmer, Alishia Foster, Adrianna Goheen, Divinity
Goheen, Stephanie Grady, Larissa Haggy, Allison
Hatfield, Emily Henry, Gracie Hoffman, Nathaniel
Hoover, Keaton Huffman, Stephen Hysell, Courtney
Jones, Jerrika Keesee, Jared Kennedy, Alexis King,
Kylie King, Makayla Lawson, Morgan Lodwick, Dillon Mahr, Stacy Michael, Makya Milhoan, Angela
Morris, Luke Musser, Karlee Norton, Brendan, Nuscis, Dillyn Ohlinger, Devyn Oliver, Brandon Peterson, Brandee Powell, Alliyah Pullins, Tehya Ramage,
Raeline, Reeves, Faith Reitmire, Kendra Robie, Jana
Robinette, Brock Roush, Jake Roush, Jordan Roush,
Keynath Rowe, Mason Runyon, Savannah Smith, KJ
Tracy, Abbygale Watson, Dylan Weaver, Kaylee Werry, Tyler Williams, Hanna Young
Sophomore — Andrew Adkins, Halley Barnes,
Brennan Bell, Lauren Booth
Miranda Braley, Kenna Burns, James Bush, David
Doerfer, Haiden English, Tyler Fields, Lillian Gibbs,
Kaitlyn Gilkey, Miranda Gillilan, Alexandra Houdashelt, Ailiana Large, Colton Lilly, Jaxon, Meadows,
Adriahna Patterson, Lara Perrin, Brittany Powell,
Kelsie Powell, Shana Roush, Chase Scarberry, Cory
Scarberry, Kaileb Sheets,
Junior — Brook Andrus, Sariah Brinker, Alexis
Coleman, Amanda Crane, Hannah Cremeans, Amber
Davidson, John Davis, Michael Davis, K’Tayona Garnes, Shania Gilmore, Marissa Hall, Rheanna Harmon,
Megan Hicks, Katelyn Hill, Jordan Holman, Mitchell Howard, Kelsey Hudson, Breanna Johnson, Haley
Kennedy, Jared Long, Keely Mankin, Kelton McCloud, Kerri Moon, Forrest Nagy, Lindsay Patterson,
Ty Phelps, Paige Phillips, Jason, Robinson, Morgan
Tackett, Kacie Welsh, Collen Young
Senior — Shelby Atkinson, Morgan Barton, Shandi
Beaver, Morgan Bell, Breanne Bonnett, Ryan Brothers, Megan Cleland, Olivia Cremeans, Trevor Cundiff, Kimberly Cunningham, Alyson Dettwiller, Devan Dugan, Brittany Durst, Jarret Durst, Paul Gibbs,
Kristin Harrison, Bradley Helton, Derik Hill, Taylor
Hood, Abigail Houser, Jordan Hutton, Rikey Jones,
Sara Klein, Brandon Mahr, Miranda Manley, Blaine
Perry, Trenton Prater, Selena Reynolds, Cassidy
Rose, Taylor Rowe, Morgan Russell, Alexis Schwab,
Nicholis Shamblin, Briana Smith, Megan Snodgrass,
Samantha Spires, Carly Taylor, Brianna Teaford, Dennis Teaford, Brandon Thompson, Breahna Thompson, Anthony Vance, Gabrielle Walker, Tara Walzer-

Kuharic, Morgan Wayland, Cody White, Darrin Will
Meigs Middle School
Sixth Grade — Landon Acree, Cole Arnott, Andrew Barton, Taylor Bass, Adam Billingsley, Ashley Billingsley, Shannan Brewer, Karington Brinker,
Corbyn Broderick, Cameron Burnem, Kassandra
Coleman, Tyler Collins, Mark Combs, Bradley Corriveau, Rebecca Council, Billi Doczi, Matthew Dowell, Nicholas Durst, Brayden Ervin, Taheara Garnes,
Matthew Gilkey, Brittany Gilmore, Maci Hood, Ally
Hubbard, Aleya Huffman, Damion Hysell, Deven
James, Autumn Jones, Jacob Jordan, Michael Kesterson, Madison Klein, Benjamin Kuhn, Curtis Lambert,
Elijah Leigh, Austin Mahr, Dawson McClure, Annie
McGrath, Kristi McKnight, Violet Moore, Emily Myers, Alyssa Parsons, Daniel Paugh, Alexandria Pierce,
Kalyn Qualls, Josephine Ryder, Kira Schuler, Haley
Smith, Tucker Smith, Bailey Swatzel, Steven Vance,
Ethan Watson, Zachary Williams, Danielle Wilson,
Jonathon Wilson, Jacob Wolfe, Michael Wolfe, Tyler
Wolfe, Savannah Zeigler, and Breanna Zirkle.
Seventh Grade — Cole Adams, Noah Anderson,
Nicholas Andrew, Zachary Bartrum, Johnathon Betzing, Kassidy Betzing, Ezra Briles, Emmah Buck, Deidra Cleland, Joseph Cotterill, Madison Cremeans,
Allison Cunningham, Dylan Davidson, Brody Dellavalle, Josie Donohue, Cole Durst, Lydia Edwards,
Maxwell Edwards, Madison Fields, Isaiah Fish, Hannah Fortner, Jacynda Glover, Allison Hanstine, Gavin
Harder, Ethan Hart, Evan Hennington, Gabriel Heskett, Gracie Hill, Madelyn Hill, Brandon Holley, Drew
Humphreys, Matthew Jackson, Billy Joseph, Alysha
King, Alyssa King, Austin King, Makayla King, Hayley Lathey, Nicholas Lilly, Harley McDonald, Alex
McWilliams, Shalynn Mitchell, Wyatt Nicholson, Marissa Noble, Travis Painter, Skylar Petrie, Alexander
Priddy, Wayland Ramage, Hunter Randolph, Brody
Reynolds, Graci Riffle, Hayden Roach, Kori Robie,
Caroline Roush, Jacob Roush, Alyssa Rowe, Brittany
Rowley, Elaina Scarberry, Mikayla Schwendeman, Joseph Sizemore, Carter Smith, Wesley Smith, William
Smith, Taylor Swartz, Shawn Thomas, Aaliyah Tobin, Alexis Tobin, Ashton Vance, Rileigh Ward, Alexsia Whittekind, Sara Williams, Brady Young, Kevin
Young, and Sydney Zirkle.
Eighth Grade —Donna Atkinson, Alex Booth, Levi
Chapman, Olivia Davis, Paige Denney, Savannah
Diehl, Paige Dill, Carmen Donerty, Trenton Durst,
Keegan Gilbert, Mariah Haley, Zachary Helton, Madison Hendricks, Cole Hoffman, Devin Humphreys,
Peyton Humphreys, Jenna Jordan, Marissa Keesee,
Sydney Kennedy, Rachel Kesterson, Makayla Kimes,
Amanda Landaker, Kyle Lawson, Raymond Lawson,
Cailie Lee, Bradley Logan, Isabella McDaniel, Theodore McElroy, Bryanna McGuire, Shayla Molden,
Thelma Morgan, Trevor Neal, Riley Ogdin, Mckenzie
Ohlinger, Mariah Pennington, Chelsea Pierce, Kayley Pierce, Cheyanne Priddy, Gregory Sheets, Ariann
Sizemore, Brady Smith, Trevor Smith, Wesley Snodgrass, Lauren Stewart, Bryce Swatzel, Destiny Vin-

ing, David Watson, Stanley Watson, Courtnee Williams, Cierra Wolfe, Madison Wood, Bretten Young
and December Zeigler.
Meigs Intermediate School
Third Grade — Savanna Baker, Brittany Bass, Jacob
Bolin, Haylie Boring, Jack Braley, Blade Brinker, Jace
Bullington, Kaylee Carpenter, Cayden Casey, Austin
Chapell, Seth Collins, Brady Collins, Presleigh Colwell, Chase Connolly, Caitlin Darst, Emily Davidson,
Morgan Denney, Robert Dixon, Corey Dotson, Chase
Dunham, Conner Ervin, Logan Eskew, Allison Gilkey,
Danielle Hacker, Faith Hajivandi, Abbygayle Hamilton, Hannah Hart, Ryleigh Hartley, Skylin Haye, Joseph Hoffman, Gage Hoffman, Bradley Hubbard, Audrey Hysell, Charlotte Hysell, Nathan Hysell, Conner
Imboden, Hailey Jackson, Selena Johnson, Jaycie Jordan, Ashlyn Lambert, Riley Lanham, Jason Laudermilt, Melinda Lawson, Tyler Lee, Khloee Lee, Kailey
Leib, Christopher Maines, Walker Mayer, Owen McClure, D.J. McNally, Kymber Mitch, Danny Morgan,
Morgan Myers, Brayden O’Brien, Caleb Ogdin, Malia
Payne, Gunnar Peavley, Emily Pennington, Kaylee
Phillips, Nathan Pierce, Dalton Pierce, Kyra Powell,
Mason Rathburn, Kaylie Reitmire, Edena Reynolds,
Mickey Reynolds, Madison Rife, Monte Riffle, Kaden
Robinson, Katelynn Rose, Makayla Runyon, Chloe
Sellers, Rece Sigman, Wyatt Smith, Austin Smith,
Ethan Stewart, Aleigha Tillis, Payton VanInwagen,
Emily Watson, Brendan Whitehair, Robert Writesel,
Joseph Young.
Fourth Grade — Allison Albin, Ty Bartrum, Caleb
Burnem, Steven Chapell, Coulter Cleland, Shelbe Cochran, Emilee Davis, Reece Dearth, Davey Denney,
Andrew Dodson, Bostic Eason, Kyan Edwards, Mycah
Farley, Logan Fink, Jasmine Goss, Samantha Haggy,
Mara Hall, Tia Harris, Jayda Hawkins, Nathaniel Hysell, Tucker Ingels, Logan McGee, Chloerena McKinney, Alexis O’Brien, Adam Pierce, Morgan Roberts,
Benjamin Robinette-Sawyer, Aaliyah Robinson, Lisa
Rose, Brianna Rowley, Alexandria Shuler, Layne
Stanley, Kylan Stone, Cadence Vance, Trey Vaughan,
Josie Ward, Matthew Will, Jessica Workman.
Fifth Grade — Marissa Allen, Payton Brown, Bethany Burden, Dominique Butcher, Logan Caldwell,
Marjorie Chapman, Shayna Connolly, Caitlin Cotterill, Dylan Cremeans, Valerie Darnell, Hannah Durst,
Kaitlyn Eakins, Alex Eblin, Hailey Edwards, Hannah
Erwin, Devon Erwin, Emmy Gard, Jonathan George,
Olivia Goble, Olivia Haggy, Brody Hawley, Wyatt
Hoover, Jade Jewell, Bailey Jones, Noah Kimes, Sylvia Klein, Alyssa Leib, Breanna Lilly, Connor Logan,
Annika McKinney, Noah Metzger, Kylee Mitch, Abby
Patterson, Alex Pierce, Blake Pitchford, Emma Powell, Destiny Racer, Emily Reynolds, Nicholas Roberts,
Kylee Robinson, MacKenzie Runyon, Alexa Russell,
Will Sargent, Zachary Searles, Madeline Shope, Brycen Smith, Jerrica Smith, Katlyn Smith, Tresiliana
Smith, Chonslyn Spaun, Kaleb Thompson, Audrey
Tracy, Baylee Tracy, Layla Walter, Shelby Whaley, Jasina Will, Hunter Wood.

�Friday, November 8, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Local Stocks

HENRY ELTON BAHR
COOLVILLE
— Henry Elton
Bahr, 88, entered
his
heavenly
home on November 6, 2013.
Henry was born
in Meigs County,
Ohio on March
13, 1925, to Ernest Bahr and
Bertha Bell Betzing Bahr.
He shared 69 ½ years
of beautiful married life
with Eileen Pigott Bahr
before she passed away on
February 12, 2013. Henry
was a member of South
Bethel Community Church
where he enjoyed teaching
the adult Sunday School
class. He devoted his life to
making southeast Ohio a
beautiful place through the
reclamation of strip mines
as an employee of Ohio
Reclamation Association
and co-owner of Green-Up
Reclamation. His life statement was “I planted more
than I cut.”
Henry enjoyed numerous hunting trips to Utah
and Colorado, where he
introduced several generations of Meigs County residents to the bounty of the
West. His other interests
included gardening and
fishing with Eileen, his beloved wife.
Henry is survived by his
ten children, Kaye (Richard) Fick, Roger (Mary)
Bahr, Jackie (Ken) Hartung, Pat Bahr, Howard
(Kim) Bahr, Jeanne (Dave)
Baker, Tammi (Rob) Barber, Terri Bahr, Jim Bahr
and Randy (Chris) Bahr;
his sisters, Evelyn (Gene)

ROY JENKINS

Well and Lila (Harold) Winters; his
sisters-in-law, Nancy
Bahr, Lori Wolf, Lucille Wilson and Bettie Bush Pigott; and
his brother-in-law,
Rex Summerfield.
He will be missed
by his 16 grandchildren, 26
great grandchildren, one
great, great-granddaughter
and many nieces, nephews
and friends.
In addition to his parents and wife, Henry was
preceded in death by his
siblings and their spouses,
Clayton (Virgene), Kyle
(Elsie), Mildred (Victor)
Lipsey, Norman (Daylene),
Victor (Wilma), and Vernon; and also by his brothers and sisters-in-law: Royal Wilson, Harold Winters,
Gene Well, Willard Pigott,
Annie Pigott Summerfield,
Rex and Sina May Pigott
Bailey, Donald Pigott; and
his grandson, Kevin Fick.
Calling hours will be
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m., Friday, and his Celebration of
Life service will be at 11
a.m., Saturday, November
9, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville.
Graveside services will follow at South Bethel Community Church on Silver
Ridge. Please join the family for a meal in the church
annex following the service.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to
the Kevin Fick Memorial
Scholarship Fund in care
of Pat Bahr, 2 Circle Drive,
The Plains, OH 45780.

RACINE — Roy Jenkins, 68, of Racine, Ohio,
passed away November 6,
2013. He was born May 30,
1945, in Parkersburg, West
Virginia, the son of the late
Carl and Garnetta Jenkins.
He served in the United
States Navy and was retired
from Southern Ohio Coal
Company. He was a member
of Ash Street Baptist Church.
He thoroughly enjoyed singing, church activities, prison
ministry, and any activities
involving grandchildren.
He was preceded in death
by his wife of twenty nine
years, RoseAnn Lisle Jenkins.
He is survived by two
daughters and their husbands, Kimberly and Keith
Jones of Pomeroy and Rochelle and Terry Lamm of
Pomeroy; two grandsons,
Dimitrious and Dristan
Lamm; three step-granddaughters, Autumn, Andrea, and Kyla Jones; and
an unborn granddaughter,
Madeline. He is also survived by his siblings and

their spouses, brother,
Richard and Betty Carpenter of Vienna, W.Va.; three
sisters, Glenedi and Bill
Tice of Bradenton, Fla.,
Carol and Bruce Modesitt
of Longs, S.C., and Janet
Haught of Marietta, Ohio.
Also surviving are a special brother-in-law and sisters-in-law, Keith and Karen
Lisle of Warrior, Ala., and
Janice Lisle of Syracuse,
Ohio; mother-in-law, Mary
Lisle of Hanceville, Ala.; a
special friend, Kathi Nagy
of Gallipolis, Ohio; his beloved pet, Coal; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at noon on Sunday at
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, Ohio,
with Pastor Mark Morrow
officiating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery. Visiting hours will be
from 5-7 p.m. on Saturday
evening and on from 11
a.m.-noon on Sunday.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Death Notice
ROUSH
GALLIPOLIS — Ivan
E. Roush, 96, of Gallipolis, died on Wednesday,
November 6, 2013, at his
residence.
Services will be 2 p.m.,
Sunday, November 10,
2013, at the Willis Funeral

Home with Bob Powell officiating. Entombment will
be at 10:30 a.m., Monday,
November 11, 2013, at
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens, Chapel of Hope Mausoleum. Friends may call at
the funeral from 1-2 p.m.
prior to the service.

AEP (NYSE) — 46.25
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.09
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 88.03
Big Lots (NYSE) — 35.64
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 53.32
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 101.08
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.54
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.48
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.06
Collins (NYSE) — 70.00
DuPont (NYSE) — 60.85
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.47
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.60
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 63.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 51.65
Kroger (NYSE) — 41.65
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 61.81
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 85.48
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.23
BBT (NYSE) — 32.88

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.86
Pepsico (NYSE) — 85.30
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.80
Rockwell (NYSE) — 111.56
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 16.52
Royal Dutch Shell — 66.04
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 56.38
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.51
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.05
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.71
Worthington (NYSE) — 39.53
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
November 7, 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.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 51. Calm wind becoming west 5 to 7 mph in the morning.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 29.
Calm wind.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 61. Light and variable wind becoming southwest 9 to 14 mph in the morning.
Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 38.
Southwest wind 7 to 11 mph.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 56.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 34.
Veterans Day: Sunny, with a high near 58.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 37.
Tuesday: A chance of rain and snow showers. Cloudy,
with a high near 42. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Tuesday Night: A chance of rain and snow showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 31. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Wednesday: A chance of snow showers. Partly sunny,
with a high near 41. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around
30.
Thursday: Partly sunny, with a high near 43.

Check-Up
niors have health insurance through
Medicare. The marketplace will not
have any effect on their Medicare
coverage,” said Hindman.
He reminded that Medicare

open enrollment for 2014 runs
through Saturday, December 7.
Open enrollment allows seniors the opportunity to review
and update their current Medicare plan, including their Part D
prescription drug coverage. New

healthcare plans become available each year that may offer better coverage or save money, so
it’s important for seniors to take
the time to carefully review their
options.
It was noted that with more

than 30 prescription drug plans
to choose from in Ohio, Medicare Part D has a plan that should
fit every seniors’ needs. The Part
D program has increased access
to medicines for millions and
has led to an improvement in

the health of many seniors. Plus,
average monthly premiums are
approximately $30, an amount
that has remained virtually unchanged for the past three years.
Part D also has Extra Help for
those of limited means.
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�The Daily Sentinel

FAITH AND FAMILY

Meigs County
Church Calendar
Church Sale
RACINE — The Mount Moriah Church of God on Mile
Hill Road will have a white elephant sale beginning at
5:30 p.m. on Saturday. There will be free food.
Community Dinner
POMEROY — A free community dinner of soup and
sandwiches will be held Thursday, November 14, with
serving from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
Thanksgiving Community and Youth Outreach
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian
Church will host a free Thanksgiving dinner following the
morning service on Sunday, Nov. 17. Church service will
start at 10 a.m. and will be lead by the youth. The service
will include a puppet show, singing, and special speaker
Andrya McDonald, Christian Education Director at Ripley Marantha Church.
Meigs Co-operative Parish
events/service projects
POMEROY — The Meigs Co-operative Parish hosts a
variety of events and service projects available throughout the week at the Mulberry Community Center. Some
of those are as follows,
Meals at the Mulberry Community Center — 11:30
a.m.-1 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday-Friday and 9
a.m.-1 p.m., Saturday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon, Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m., Tuesday-Friday.
Celebrate Recovery — 7-9 p.m., Monday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m., Tuesday and
Thursday.
Zumba — 6:30 p.m., Tuesday.

Bethel to honor
military and first
responders Sunday
TUPPERS PLAINS —
In recognition of their
ongoing selfless and sacrificial assistance to the
public, Bethel Worship
Center will hold a special
ceremony during its regular worship service, followed by a free luncheon,
to honor all Mid-Ohio
River Valley military and
first responders service
personnel and their families at 10 a.m., Sunday,
November 10.
Noting the community’s gratitude for all their
hard work, sacrifice and
personal endangerment
as they put themselves
in harm’s way, Pastor
Rob Barber invited all
area military, firefighters,
emergency medical and
drug task force personnel,
police and law enforcement officers, and other
service personnel and
first responders, along
with their families and
friends, to join the Bethel

congregation’s tribute to
these special public servants.
“Their sacrifices are
so much appreciated; we
just want to thank them
for all they do to keep our
communities safe, and
let them know how much
we value them, especially
with so many regular tragic events occurring in our
world,” Barber observed.
There will be a free special home-cooked meal,
provided by Bethel and
its member families, for
the service personnel and
their families after the
church service, Barber
noted. He asked that personnel interested in staying for the luncheon to
please RSVP the church
with the number in their
party, at bethelwc@windstream.net or (740) 6676793.
For more information
visit www.bethelwc.org,
or call the church.

His word, His will
In John 17:17 Jesus said:
“Sanctify them through thy
truth: thy word is truth.”
In this prayer, Jesus prayed
twice that the Father would
keep His disciples from evil.
Then He reveals the way that
God will accomplish this —
through His Word.
Anyone who desires to live
for God, reject the devil, and
reject the world’s system, live
triumphantly in Christ, must
know God’s Word. Without
knowing — really knowing
Alex Colon
God’s Word, the world’s system will become appealing and
Pastor
received as normal.
It is vitally important that
we study the scriptures, for they reveal the will of God
for our lives. To be filled with the knowledge of God’s
will, we must be filled with God’s Word. God’s Word is
His will! Those who are ignorant of God’s Word will be
ignorant of God’s will.
Knowledge of God’s will is foundational in developing Christian conduct and character. There is no way
we can fulfill God’s will if we don’t know what it is.
The starting point for any Christian is understanding
God’s will for his life. How can a person obtain such
knowledge? Jeremiah 29:13 says, “And ye shall seek
me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all
your heart.”
Obviously, just reading the bible is not enough. But
it is the type of reading that searches the mysteries
of God’s will and God’s ways through the studying of
God’s Word.
The Holy Spirit is the dispenser of God’s wisdom.
It is through Him that we know the things God has revealed to us. One of the primary ministries of the Holy
Spirit is to reveal God’s will to us.
Those who ask for God’s will for their lives is often
because they desire to produce good lasting fruit - be
blessed as well as a blessing. The truth is, we can’t be
fruitful without the knowledge of His will. God has provided all that we need to be successful and victorious
in this life and His Word will show us the revelation of
that truth.
Make it a Great Day!

Page A4
Friday November 8, 2013

His grace in Jesus Christ makes it possible
Although my mother
wasn’t much of a singer,
Mom sure did like music.
She liked it so much, in fact,
she was inspired to think my
brother and I should learn to
play the piano, and so provide her with some in-home
entertainment.
Accordingly, for seven
long and interminable
years, from third grade
into tenth, in compliance
with my mother’s will and
father’s “encouragement,”
I spent one hour every
week with my piano teacher. In hindsight, and having since had two such procedures, neither root-canal
was anywhere near as insufferable as were those
weekly piano lessons.
Or the “homework,” the
nightly practice sessions of at
least one-half hour in length.
What Mom enjoyed I
detested, but the only sure
way to get out of either
the lessons or practice
sessions was sickness or
death. Unfortunately, I
went through twelve years
of school rarely missing a
day due to sickness, so few
indeed were the lessons
and practices I avoided.
Allow me to back up and
tell you my parents bought
their first house about the
time I was starting kindergarten, and the school I
would attend was only half
a block away. That was doable; what wasn’t was the
monstrous upright piano

sitting in the
guitar, an elecfront room of
tric keyboard,
that house.
a trumpet—
Ever have
anything but a
a relative you
piano!
didn’t necesMy suffersarily
like?
ing and torI did: my fament
while
ther’s
aunt,
practicing was
who
never
not eased one
married and,
iota knowing
until she died
several female
when I was a
classmates
teenager, nevwere outside
er called me
yelling what
Tom; always Thomas Johnson they imagined
“ To m m y. ”
were
words
Pastor
Words
canof encouragenot describe
ment. Mom
how much I resented being thought they were being
called that. Meanwhile, my nice; I remember thinkDad’s father and his brother ing otherwise, but havalways called me by a cer- ing enough sense to bite
tain cousin’s name which my tongue and keep my
frustrated me still more, thoughts to myself.
further gutted my self-esOne of Mom’s favorite
teem, and resulted in my songs came into being not
liking that cousin even less! long after I did, and it was
When Dad’s aunt first laid one she liked to hear and
eyes on that old beast of an wanted me to learn to play.
upright and decided it had Titled, “It Is No Secret,” this
to go, I was totally ready to song was written by a fellow
put her up for sainthood! named Stuart Hamblen.
Then, within a nano-second
As the story goes, Mr.
of delivering her “out-with- Hamblen was a well-known
the-old” speech, she de- radio personality, with a
clared her intention to buy reputation for drinking,
us a brand new piano.
womanizing, partying; you
It wasn’t all that big of a name it, Hamblen seems to
secret among the various have done it! Then came the
relatives that this lady had day he interviewed a young
more money than she knew preacher who was holding a
what to do with, but nei- series of tent revivals, and
ther did she think to con- then later actually attended
sult with me. I would have one of those meeting.
preferred a set of drums, a
The preacher was Billy

Graham, and the encounter
marked a significant turning point for Stuart Hamblen—one that changed
the course of his life, and
cost him his friends and
his job. When another
friend encountered him
and asked what had happened and if the changes
all were worth it, Hamblen
replied in the affirmative.
As Hamblen went on
to say, there was nothing
secretive about the process, that “all things are
possible with God.” That
friend happened to be John
Wayne, “The Duke,” who
liked what Hamblen had
said, and suggested Hamblen put it all together in a
song … and so he did.
Needless to say, none of
us are in any way obligated
to learn this song. Neither
would it be to your advantage to have known my
mother or any of my other
relatives, any more than my
knowing you or yours would
necessarily be to mine.
Should we forget one another, we will still. Yet, let
us live knowing those born
once will die twice, whereas
those born again die only
once. This is God’s promise;
His grace in Jesus Christ
makes it possible, and His
Word confirms it! To not believe this, and to not receive
Jesus as one’s Savior is the
most fatal of all mistakes.
Friends don’t let friends
make this mistake!

Search the Scriptures
When the Holy Spirit sent the
apostle Peter to preach to Cornelius (cf. Acts 10), He sent Peter a
sign and a command. The sign was
a vision of a great sheet, filled with
all manner of animals which Peter
was told to kill and eat. Peter, a
devout Jew, wanted no part of it
and said so; to which God replied,
“What God has cleansed you must
not call common.” (Acts 10:15).
God repeated this vision three
times. A few minutes after, while
Peter was still trying to figure out
the ramifications of the vision, the
Spirit commanded Him saying,
“Behold, three men are seeking
you. Arise therefore, go down and
go with them, doubting nothing;
for I have sent them.” (Acts 10:1920) The men were from Cornelius,
who had been commanded by an
angel, in a vision, to send for Peter
and heed Peter’s words.
The purpose of Peter’s vision
was manifold. It told Peter, and
the church, that the Old Testament
and its dietary restrictions, along
with the rest of the Old Law, had
been replaced by a new system. All
foods were now acceptable for all
men, including Jews and Jewish
Christians, to eat (cf. 1 Timothy
4:4). But a more immediate purpose of the vision was to impress

upon Peter a single fact: God
wanted Jewish Christians to begin
preaching to gentiles, beginning
with the household of Cornelius.
Cornelius was a good man, devout, and God-fearing. But he was
not a Jew; he was a Roman centurion. The Jews had long considered
gentiles unclean and refused to associate with them. However, that practice had to end in the church if the
Gospel was to be preached to every
nation as God intended and Christ
had commanded. Thus the vision,
the command, and the vision sent to
Cornelius. God was making a point.
Peter understood the point.
When he arrived at Cornelius’
house and began to speak, he
opened with these words: “God
has shown me that I should not
call any man common or unclean.
Therefore I came without objection as soon as I was sent for.”
(Acts 10:28-29) Peter went on to
say, “In truth I perceive that God
shows no partiality. But in every
nation whoever fears Him and
works righteousness is accepted
by Him.” (Acts 10:34-35)
This statement, “God shows no
partiality,” is a tremendous testimony concerning the nature of
God and His dealings with men.
As one great document put it, “All

men are created equal.” We all
begin with equal standing before
God. He does not judge us based
on where we were born, who we
were born to, or what features we
were born with. He does not judge
us based on our income, nationality, or gender. God does not look
upon such things when He judges.
We should understand, however
that God does pass judgment. He
is the great Judge and all men
must give an account to Him. Peter points this out by saying that
there are some men whom God
does accept; implying that there
are likewise men whom God does
not accept. It is with this understanding then that Peter identifies
the criteria, broadly, by which God
accepts or rejects men: they must
fear him and they must work righteousness. The standards that God
uses to judge are moral in nature,
not racial, national, or ethnic.
Cornelius, though a gentile, was
a god-fearing man who wanted to
be righteous. God was pleased with
his attitude, and though Cornelius
was a gentile, God wanted to fully
accept Cornelius as one of His children; thus God wanted Peter to
preach the gospel to Cornelius so
that Cornelius and his household
might be saved. Which Peter did

You can have hope
We must consider the
term “hope” from the Scripture’s perspective. The reason is that there is a general
misunderstanding about
what “hope” is. All too often our slant on the term
involves wishful thinking.
The only problem is that
hope regarded simply as
wishful thinking breeds a
lot of disappointments.
Scripturally,
however,
hope refers to “assured
expectation” based on
the sure promises of God.
Hope is one of the three
major graces that God gives
His people. According to I
Corinthians 13:13, the two
other major graces from
God are faith and love.
Many people associated with the Church have
problems with hope. They
have no hope for the present. They have no hope for
the future. Such a situation
in the lives of people also
breeds disappointment as it
involves failure in living the
abundant life about which
Jesus Christ talked. It also
leads to a perspective of
constant defeat. We must,
however, remember that
God has not called the people of the Church to be a defeated people, but a victorious people. If it is true that
hope is assured expectation

based on the
But, what are
sure
promthe benefits of
ises of God,
having hope?
then you will
The writer of
want to be in
the Book of
possession of
Hebrews says
and enjoy the
that hope is a
grace of hope.
“strong consoBut, what is
lation.”
the purpose of
The story is
having hope?
told of a young
It is hope
boy near death
that gives us
after being sethe assured
verely burned.
expect ation
In due course, a
that because
tutor was sent
Ron Branch
of God’s love
to his home to
Pastor
for us that
help him with
there
may
the
grammar
be a resoluof nouns and
tion to those pesky prob- verbs. Whereas the boy had
lems with which we are not been thriving in recovery
confronted. It is hope that previously, he started makgives us the assured expec- ing remarkable progress.
tation that because of God’s When he eventually returned
providence our particular to school, the teacher asked
needs may be met. It is him what helped him recover
hope that gives us the as- so well. He said, “I had given
sured expectation that be- up hope for my life until the
cause of the salvation God tutor arrived. But, it caused
has provided through the me to realize something—
sacrifice of His Son, Jesus -you would send someone
Christ, we may have hope to work on nouns and verbs
for eternity in Heaven. You with a dying boy, would you?
see, hope gives an assured It helped me to keep going.”
perspective that mitigates Likewise, hope for us.
the bitter disappointments
The Writer of the Book
that life often imposes on of Hebrews also describes
us through Satanic oppres- hope as “an anchor for the
sion and the pressures of soul.” Hope gives our lives
this present world system.
stability. Maybe you enjoy

(as some people do, from
my perspective) the sense
of continual upset and instability. But, I don’t. I am
grateful for the peace that
hope instills. Hope stabilizes my soul.
Another benefit of hope
as described by the Writer
is “refuge.” Hope gives us
a sanctuary in which we
hide from the pressures of
life. The Scripture tells us
that David wanted to go
someplace and hide. Jeremiah wanted the same.
Elijah did hide, but, in his
hiding on Horeb, found refuge in God and fresh hope
from God. Hope provides
the benefit of safety in this
dangerous world.
But, how is it that we can
know we can have hope?
Simply, because God says
so. It is God who not only
gives hope, but God who
says He wants us to have
hope. Remember — hope is
assured expectation based
on the sure promises of God.
Someone
has
said,
“Where there is no hope for
the future, there is no power
for the present.” God has
given a sure hope for the
future onto which we can
hold for hopeful life in the
present.

�Friday, November 8, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel s Page A5

Meigs County Church Directory

Fellowship Apostolic
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
Van Zandt and Ward Road.
Pastor: James Miller. Sunday
school, 10:30 a.m.; evening,
7:30 p.m.
River Valley Apostolic
Worship Center
873 South Third Ave.,
Middleport. Pastor: Rev.
Michael Bradford.
Sunday, 10:30 a.m.; Tuesday,
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.

Emmanuel Apostolic
Tabernacle, Inc.
Loop Road off New Lima Road,
Rutland. Pastor: Marty R.
Hutton. Sunday services, 10 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m.; Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
***
Baptist
Pageville Freewill Baptist Church
Pastor: Floyd Ross. Sunday
school, 9:30-10:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30-11 a.m.;
Wednesday preaching, 6 p.m.
Carpenter Independent
Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
preaching service, 10:30 a.m.;
evening service, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor: Jon Mollohan. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; contemporary service,
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 6:30 p.m.
Call: 740-367-7801.
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grant Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Gary Ellis. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main Street, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Jon Brocket. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike.
Pastor: David Brainard. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
9:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church
Sixth and Palmer Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Billy
Zuspan. Sunday school,
9:15 a.m.; worship, 10:15 a.m.
and 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:40 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening,
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday s
ervices, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; evening,
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will
Baptist Church
28601 Ohio 7, Middleport.
Sunday service, 10 a.m.; Tuesday
and Saturday services, 6 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
Ohio 143 just off of Ohio 7.
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday unified service. Worship,
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Victory Baptist Independent
525 North Second Street,
Middleport. Pastor: James E.
Keesee. Worship, 10 a.m. and
7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.

Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood, W.Va. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.

First Baptist Church
of Mason, W.Va.
W.Va. Route 652 and Anderson
Street. Pastor: Robert Grady.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; morning
church, 11 a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
***
Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Pastor: Rev. Tim Kozak. (740)
992-5898. Saturday confessional
4:45-5:15 p.m.; mass, 5:30 p.m.;
Sunday confessional, 8:45-9:15
a.m.; Sunday mass, 9:30 a.m.;
daily mass, 8:30 a.m.
***
Church of Christ
Westside Church of Christ
Pomeroy. (740) 992-3847.
Sunday service, 10 a.m.; Bible
study following worship; evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.

Danville Holiness Church
31057 Ohio 325, Langsville.
Pastor: Brian Bailey. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer service, 7 p.m.

Hemlock Grove
Christian Church
Pastor Diana Carsey Kinder.
Church school (all ages), 9:15
a.m.; church service, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road.
Pastor: Charles McKenzie.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 West Main Street. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Road, Rutland.
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday worship, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth and Main Street.
Pastor: David Hopkins,
Doug Shamblin. Teen Director:
Dodger Vaughan. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 8:15 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Pastor: Jeffrey Wallace. First and
Third Sunday. Worship, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge
Church of Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Harrisonville Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Worship service, 9 a.m.; c
ommunion, 10 a.m.; Sunday
school, 10:15 a.m.; youth,
5:50 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
39558 Bradbury Road,
Middleport. Minister: Justin
Roush. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Minister: David Wiseman.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship and communion,
10:30 a.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Ohio 124 and Bradbury Road.
Minister: Russ Moore. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 8 a.m.
and 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday adult
Bible study and youth meeting,
6:30 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Tuppers Plains. Pastor: Mike
Moore. Bible class, 9 a.m.;
Sunday worship, 10 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible class, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colgrove. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship
service, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 6:30 p.m.

Mount Moriah Baptist
Fourth and Main Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Rev. Michael
A. Thompson, Sr. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.

Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ
in Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va. Pastor: Mike
Puckett. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
***
Church of God
Mount Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Road, Racine.
Pastor: James Satterfield.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 6 p.m.

Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Larry Shreffler. Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.

Rutland Freewill Baptist
Salem Street, Rutland. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Youth meeting,
Sunday, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.

Syracuse First Church of God
Apple and Second Streets.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell. Sunday school and worship, 10 a.m.;
evening services, 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad Street, Mason.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pomeroy. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 11:30 a.m.

Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Road off Ohio 160.
Pastor: P.J. Chapman.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
***
Congregational
Trinity Church
Second and Lynn Streets, Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev. Tom Johnson.
Worship, 10:25 a.m.
***
Episcopal
Grace Episcopal Church
326 East Main Street, Pomeroy.
Father Thomas J. Fehr.
Holy Eucharist, 11 a.m.
***
Holiness Community Church
Main Street, Rutland.
Pastor: Steve Tomek.
Sunday worship, 10 a.m.;
Sunday services, 7 p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness
Church
One half mile off of Ohio 325.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Doug Cox. Sunday:
worship service, 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
***
Latter-Day Saints
Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints
Ohio 160. (740) 446-6247
or (740) 446-7486. Sunday
school, 10:20-11 a.m.; relief
society/priesthood, 11:05 a.m.12 p.m.; sacrament service,
9-10-15 a.m.; homecoming
meeting first Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
Lutheran
Saint John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Worship, 9 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Our Savior Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Streets,
Ravenswood, W.Va. Pastor: David Russell. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Corner Syracuse and Second
Street, Pomeroy. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
***
United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Pastor: Richard Nease.
Worship, 11 a.m.
Bechtel United Methodist
New Haven. Pastor: Richard
Nease. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Tuesday prayer meeting and
Bible study, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Olive United Methodist
Off of 124 behind Wilkesville.
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Thursday services, 7 p.m.
Alfred
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Worship,
9 a.m.; Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school,
10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Reedsville
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school,
10:30 a.m.; first Sunday
of the month, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Saint Paul
Pastor: Jenni Dunham.
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship,
10:15 a.m.; Bible study,
Tuesday 10 a.m.
Asbury Syracuse
Pastor: Wesley Thoene.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday
services, 7:30 p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Angel Crowell.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11:15 a.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thoene.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 9 a.m.

Heath
339 S. 3rd Ave., Middleport.
Pastor: Steve Martin.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 10 a.m.
New Beginnings
Pomeroy. Pastor: Brian
Dunham. Worship, 10 a.m.;
Sunday school, 11:15 a.m. Alive
at Five worship, 5 p.m.; book
studies, 6:30 p.m.; youth group,
Tuesday 6-7:30 p.m.
Rocksprings
Pastor: Angel Crowell.
Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 8 and 10 a.m.
Rutland
Pastor: Mark Brookins.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.; Thursday
services, 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: John Chapman.
Sunday school, 10:15 a.m.; worship, 9:15 a.m.; Bible study,
Monday 7 p.m.
Snowville
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Arland King.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 9 a.m.; Wednesday
services, 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel and Bashan Roads,
Racine. Pastor: Arland King.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, noon and 7 p.m.
Morning Star
Pastor: Arland King.
Sunday school, 11 a.m.;
worship, 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.;
First Sunday evening service, 7
p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Rev. William Marshall.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.; Tuesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodist
Church
Main and Fifth Street.
Pastor: Helen Kline. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.;
Tuesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Road 468C.
Pastor: Phillip Bell.
Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Torch Church
County Road 63. Sunday school,
9:30 am.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
Free Methodist
Laurel Cliff
Sunday worship, 10:30; evening
worship, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible Study, 7 p.m.
***
Nazarene
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene
Route 689, Albany.
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd Grimm.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship
service, 11 a.m.; evening service,
6 p.m.; Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: Daniel Fulton.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Pastor: Russell Carson.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene
Pastor: Shannon Hutchison.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
worship, 10:30 a.m. and life
groups 6 p.m.; Wednesday
prayer caravan and youth, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6 p.m.
Chester Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Warren Lukens.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 6 p.m.

Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Ann Forbes.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 6 p.m.
***
Non-Denominational
Common Ground Missions
Pastor: Dennis Moore and Rick
Little. Sunday, 10 a.m.
Team Jesus Ministries
333 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Eddie Baer. Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m.
New Hope Church
Old American Legion Hall,
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
Sunday, 5 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church
2480 Second Street, Syracuse.
Pastor: Joe Gwinn. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 6:30 p.m.
A New Beginning
(Full Gospel Church).
Harrisonville.
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall.
Thursday, 7 p.m.
Amazing Grace Community
Church
Ohio 681, Tuppers Plains.
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denominational
fellowship).
Meeting in the Meigs Middle
School cafeteria.
Pastor: Chris Stewart.
Sunday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Road.
Pastor: Jim Proffitt.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 Ohio 7 (two miles south
of Tuppers Plains).
Pastor: Rob Barber; praise and
worship led by Otis and Ivy
Crockron; Youth Pastor: Kris
Butcher. (740) 667-6793.
Sunday, 10 a.m.; teen ministry,
6:30 Wednesday. Affiliated with
SOMA Family of Ministries,
Chillicothe. Bethelwc.org.
Ash Street Church
398 Ash Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Mark Morrow.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
morning worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday service, 6:30 p.m.; youth
service, 6:30 p.m.
Agape Life Center
(Full Gospel church).
603 Second Ave., Mason.
Pastors: John and Patty Wade.
(304) 773-5017. Sunday,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Abundant Grace
923 South Third Street, Middleport. Pastor: Teresa Davis.
Sunday service, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Friday
fellowship service, 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community
Church
Pastor: Theron Durham.
Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Sam Anderson.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7:30 p.m.
Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor:
Rev. Emmett Rawson.
Sunday evening, 7 p.m.;
Thursday service, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman Street,
Syracuse.
Pastor: Rev. Roy Thompson.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
evening, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Dyesville Community Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Worship, 5 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roy Hunter. Sunday
school, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday evening, 7:30 p.m.
South Bethel Community
Church
Silver Ridge. Pastor: Linda
Damewood. Sunday school,
9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m. Second
and fourth Sundays; Bible study,
Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Carleton Interdenominational
Church
Kingsbury. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship service,
10:30 a.m.; evening service,
6 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob on County Road 31.
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va., Route 1.
Pastor: Brian May. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens.
Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev. B
lackwood. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7:30 p.m.
Stiversville Community Church
Pastor: Bryan and Missy Dailey.
Sunday school, 11 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500 North Second Ave.,
Middleport. Pastor: Mike
Foreman. Pastor Emeritus:
Lawrence Foreman.
Worship, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Church of
the Living Savior
Route 338, Antiquity.
Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Saturday, 2 p.m.
Salem Community Church
Lieving Road, West Columbia,
W.Va. (304) 675-2288. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens.
Pastor: Lonnie Coats.
Sunday worship, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
House of Healing Ministries
(Full Gospel) Ohio 124,
Langsville. Pastors: Robert and
Roberta Musser. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Hysell Run Community Church
33099 Hysell Run Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Pastors: Larry and Cheryl
Lemley. Sunday School
9:30 a.m.; morning worship
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m.; Sunday night
youth service, 7 p.m. ages 10
through high school;
Thursday Bible study, 7 p.m.;
fourth Sunday night is singing
and communion.
Endtime House of Prayer
Ohio 681, Snowville; Pastor
Robert Vance. Sunday School
10 a.m., Worship 11 a.m.; Bible
Study, Thursday 6 p.m.
***
Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
Tornado Road, Racine. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner.
Sunday worship 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Jim Snyder. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship service,
11 a.m. Pastor Jim Snyder.
(740) 645-5034.
***
United Brethren
Eden United Brethren in Christ
Ohio 124, between Reedsville
and Hockingport.
Pastor Peter
Martindale. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Mouth Hermon United Brethren
in Christ Church
36411 Wickham Road.
Pastor: Ricky Hull.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
***
Wesleyan
Coolville Road.
Pastor: Rev. Charles Martindale.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

60461814

�Page A6 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 8, 2013

For the Record

Republican Party donates
to Meals on Wheels

Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Members of the Meigs County Republican party recently made a donation to the Meigs County Council on Aging Meals
on Wheels program. Money donated from the party and its members were used to purchase a hog at the Meigs County
Fair. The animal was resold with the proceeds going to benefit the program. In the resale, the hog was purchased by
Hupp Landscaping. The party donated the money not used for the purchase of the hog to the program also.

Sen. Gentile votes
‘no’ on bill restricting
absentee ballots
COLUMBUS — State Senator Lou Gentile (D-Steubenville) released the following statement after the Ohio
Senate passed Senate Bill 205 despite Democratic and Republican opposition.
The legislation significantly curtails local control of
early absentee voting and limits the proactive mailing of
absentee ballot applications by Ohio’s Secretary of State
to just general elections and only if the General Assembly provides funds for that purpose. SB 205 also requires
boards of elections to reject any absentee ballot when the
statement accompanying the ballot is incomplete or insufficient in any way.
“The Ohio legislature should be more focused on finding ways to encourage and promote voter participation. Instead, there seems to be a pattern of advancing legislation
that restricts voters ability to have to access to the ballot.
“We shouldn’t be putting more burdens on voters, but
that’s what this bill does. And I worry about the impact
this legislation will have on senior citizens and college
students who often vote by absentee ballot. If this legislation becomes law it’s likely that more voters will have
their ballot disqualified for technical reasons and that is
unfair and may violate federal law.”
Senator Gentile represents Carroll, Jefferson, Harrison,
Belmont, Monroe, Noble, Washington, Meigs, and parts
of Athens and Vinton counties.

911
Oct. 31
8:57 a.m., Ohio 124, difficulty breathing; 9:06 a.m.,Ohio
124, dizziness; 10:42 a.m., North Third Street, chest pain;
11:53 a.m., Pearl Street, altered mental status; 1:33 p.m.,
East Main Street, unknown; 7:40 p.m., East Memorial
Drive, abdominal pain; 10:02 p.m., Main Street, seizure/
convulsions.
Nov. 1
12:11 a.m., Flatwoods Road, hemorrhage; 2:22 a.m.,
Rocksprings Road, rapid heart rate; 6:13 a.m., Bucktown
Road, difficulty breathing; 11:40 a.m., unknown, psychiatric emergency; 11:43 a.m., East Memorial Drive, difficulty breathing; 11:44 a.m., Vine Street, nausea/vomiting;
5:48 p.m., Bradbury Road, laceration; 6:40 p.m., Starcher
Road, unknown; 7:21 p.m., East Memorial Drive, chest
pain; 11:53 p.m., Resort Road, difficulty breathing.
Nov. 2
3:58 a.m., Mill Street, seizure/convulsions; 11:25 a.m.,
Hysell Run Road, structure fire; 2:32 p.m., Ohio 124, dizziness; 2:53 p.m., Apple Grove Road, fractured body part;
4:06 p.m., Oak Grove Road, dizziness.
Nov. 3
1:26 a.m., Ohio 684, motor vehicle collision; 1:53 a.m.,
Great Bend Road, fall; 9:53 a.m., Mulberry Avenue, lifting
assistance; 1:06 p.m., Minersville Road, high temperature; 2:19 p.m., Brownell Avenue, chest pain.
Nov. 4
11:24 a.m., County Road 7A, motor vehicle collision;
12:16 p.m., East Memorial Drive, head injury; 1:52 p.m.,
West Main Street, chest pain; 4:44 p.m., Bald Knob-Stiversville Road, motor vehicle collision; 6:48 p.m., Broderick Hollow Road, chest pain; 8:16 p.m., Dunbar Road, unknown; 10:28 p.m., Water Street, psychiatric emergency;
11:57 p.m., Pearl Street, chest pain.
Nov. 5
10:22 a.m., Mulberry Avenue, diabetic emergency;
10:30 a.m., Ohio 124, pain general; 11:17 a.m., Mine No.
2 Road, fall; 11:57 a.m., Railroad Street, seizure/convulsions; 4:12 p.m., Bowmans Run Road, pain general; 4:18
p.m., Elm Street, assault/fight; 9:45 p.m., Walnut Street,
allergic reaction.
Nov. 6
10:22 a.m., Spring Avenue, unknown; 12:00 p.m., South
Third Avenue, chest pain; 1:09 p.m., New Lima Road,
difficulty breathing; 1:54 p.m., Ohio 124, altered mental
status; 2:05 p.m., Ohio 7, motor vehicle collision; 4:02
p.m., Ohio 681, motor vehicle collision; 4:47 p.m., Nye
Avenue, motor vehicle collision; 7:15 p.m., Pearl Street,
chest pain; 8:25 p.m., Pearl Street, chest pain.

Benefit planned

A benefit concert for Emily Adamson to help pay her medical expenses for cancer treatments will be held Saturday
at 6:30 p.m. at the New Beginnings Baptist Church on Sand Hill Road near Point Pleasant. Performing groups will be
New Song Gospel Bluegrass, Proclaim and Truly Saved.

Test: W.Va. students’ reading, math skills improve
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
— The math and reading skills of
West Virginia fourth- and eighthgraders are improving, but they
lag behind their public school
peers across the nation.
The 2013 National Assessment
of Educational Progress, released
Thursday, shows that 35 percent
of West Virginia fourth-graders
and 24 percent of eighth-graders
scored at or above the proficient
level in math. In 2011, 31 percent
of fourth-graders and 21 percent
of eighth-graders in the state met
or exceeded the standard.

Twenty-five percent of West
Virginia eighth-graders scored at
or above the reading proficient
level, up from 24 percent in 2011.
Twenty-seven percent of fourthgraders met or exceeded the standard, the same as in 2011.
Nationwide, 42 percent of
fourth-graders and 35 percent of
eighth-graders scored at or above
the math proficient level. In reading, 35 percent of fourth-graders
and 36 percent of eighth-graders
hit that mark.
West Virginia fourth-graders
scored an average 237 in math,

compared with the national average of 241. Their average score
in reading also was below the
national average score, 215 compared with 221.
Eighth-graders’ average score
in math was 274, 10 points below the national average score
of 284. In reading, West Virginia eighth-graders scored an
average 257, while the national
average was 266.
Liza Cordeiro, spokeswoman
for the West Virginia Department of Education, said fourthgrade math scores improved 2

points, and there were gains of at
least one point in all other areas.
“The improvements in fourthgrade math are encouraging
and provide evidence that our
student performance is improving,” state schools Superintendent Jim Phares said in an email.
“Nonetheless, much work is left
to be done. I am confident that
through targeted, quality professional development for teachers
and a renewed commitment to
student engagement that our students will be prepared for their
future success.”

West Virginia students eligible
for free or reduced price school
lunches, which the NAEP said is
an indicator of low family income,
fared worse on the assessment tests
than those who were not eligible.
The average reading score of
both fourth-graders and eighthgraders eligible for free or reduced price school lunches was
17 points lower than the score of
students who were not eligible.
The performance gap in average
math scores was 20 points for
eight-graders and 15 points for
fourth-graders.

Senate OKs gay rights bill banning discrimination
WASHINGTON (AP) —
The Senate approved legislation outlawing workplace
discrimination against gay,
bisexual and transgender
Americans, demonstrating
the nation’s quickly evolving attitude toward gay
rights nearly two decades
after Congress rejected
same-sex marriage.
Fifty-four members of the
Democratic majority and 10
Republicans voted Thursday for the first major gay
rights bill since Congress
repealed the ban on gays in
the military three years ago.
The vote in favor of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act was 64-32.
Two opponents of a similar measure 17 years ago,

Arizona Republican Sen.
John McCain, the presidential nominee in 2008,
and Republican Sen. Orrin
Hatch of Utah, backed the
measure this time.
“We are about to make
history in this chamber,”
Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine and a chief sponsor
of the bill, said shortly before the vote.
The enthusiasm of the
bill’s supporters was tempered by the reality that
the Republican-led House,
where conservatives have
a firm grip on the agenda,
is unlikely to even vote on
the legislation. Speaker
John Boehner, R-Ohio,
maintains his longstanding
opposition to the measure,

arguing that it is unnecessary and certain to create
costly, frivolous lawsuits
for businesses.
Outside
conservative
groups have cast the bill as
anti-family.
President Barack Obama
welcomed the vote and
urged the House to act.
“One party in one house
of Congress should not
stand in the way of millions of Americans who
want to go to work each
day and simply be judged
by the job they do,” Obama
said in a statement. “Now
is the time to end this kind
of discrimination in the
workplace, not enable it.”
Gay rights advocates
hailed Senate passage as

a major victory in a momentous year for the issue. The Supreme Court
in June granted federal
benefits to legally married same-sex couples,
though it avoided a
sweeping ruling that
would have paved the
way for same-sex unions
nationwide. Illinois is on
the verge of becoming
the 15th state to legalize
gay marriage along with
the District of Columbia.
Supporters called the
bill the final step in a long
congressional tradition of
trying to stop discrimination, coming nearly 50
years after enactment of
the Civil Rights Act and 23
years after the Americans

with Disabilities Act.
“Now we’ve finished the
trilogy,” Sen. Tom Harkin,
D-Iowa, a chief sponsor of the
disabilities law, said at a Capitol Hill news conference.
The first openly gay senator, Democrat Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, called
the vote a “tremendous
milestone” that she will always remember throughout
her time in the Senate.
Democrats
echoed
Obama in pushing for the
House to act, with Sen.
Dick Durbin of Illinois reminding the GOP leader of
the history of his party.
“The Republican Party
in the United States of
America came into being in the 1980s over the

issue of slavery, and the
man who embodied the
ideals of that Republican
Party was none other
than Abraham Lincoln,
who gave his life for his
country to end discrimination,” Durbin said.
“Keep that proud Republican tradition alive.”
In the Senate, opponents
of the legislation remained
mute through three days
of debate, with no lawmaker speaking out. That
changed on Thursday, as
Republican Sen. Dan Coats
of Indiana said the legislation would force employers
to violate their religious
beliefs, a direct counter
to rights embodied in the
Constitution.

�Friday, November 8, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Company restocking lifted US economic growth in Q3
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
U.S. economy expanded at a
2.8 percent annual rate from
July through September, a surprising acceleration ahead of
the 16-day partial government
shutdown. But much of the
strength came from a buildup
in company stockpiling.
Home construction also rose,
and state and local governments
spent at their fastest pace in four
years. But businesses spent less on
equipment, federal spending fell
and consumers spent at a slower
pace. All are cautionary signs for
the final three months of the year.
Overall, growth increased in
the third quarter from a 2.5 per-

cent annual rate in the April-June
period to the fastest pace in a
year, the Commerce Department
said Thursday.
The third-quarter growth was
nearly a full percentage point
stronger than most economists
had predicted. Analysts noted
that much of the unforeseen
strength came from a buildup in
company inventories. That suggests that businesses overestimated consumer demand.
Restocking contributed 0.8
percentage point to growth —
double its contribution in the
second quarter.
Sal Guatieri, an economist at
BMO Capital Markets, predicts

By contrast, consumer spending on goods surged at a 4.3
percent annual rate, the fastest
in a year and a half. The gain
was led by 7.8 percent annual
growth in spending on autos
and other long-lasting manufactured goods.
Spending by consumers is critical to growth because it drives
roughly 70 percent of economic
activity. Higher taxes this year
and slow wage growth have
weighed on consumers since the
start of the year.
Exports rose at a 4.5 percent
rate in the third quarter, helped by
stronger economies overseas. Still,
businesses cut back on investment

that companies will cut back on
restocking in the October-December quarter. He thinks less
stockpiling, along with the effects of the shutdown, will slow
growth to an annual rate below 2
percent this quarter.
Consumer spending weakened
to a 1.5 percent annual growth
rate from a 1.8 percent rate in
the previous quarter. It was
slowed by flat spending on services. This category includes everything outside manufacturing
and makes up about two-thirds
of all purchases. One reason was
a steep drop in utility spending,
possibly because of an unseasonably cool summer.

!

Teen’s rape galvanizes support in Kenya
TINGOLO, Kenya (AP) —
A wave of outrage has grown
in Kenya since word has spread
that a 16-year-old girl was gang
raped and thrown into a pit latrine in this western Kenyan
town, with the alleged attackers told to cut grass at a police
post, and then let go.
Nearly 1.4 million people
have signed an online petition
put up by the activist group
Avaaz calling for prosecution
of the young men and an investigation of the police who freed
the suspects.
Kenya’s political heavyweights are also speaking up.
Supreme Court Chief Justice
Willy Mutunga last weekend
said he had forwarded the matter to the National Council for
Administration of Justice for
“immediate action.” Foreign
Minister Amina Mohamed said
that “as a woman and a mother
I am outraged and angered by
this inhumane, traumatizing
and inexcusable violation.”
The teen is currently confined to a wheelchair because
of the physical trauma from the
attack. She has undergone two

surgeries — one for a fistula
and another for spinal surgery,
said Lydia Muthiani, the deputy executive director of the
Coalition on Violence Against
Women, a group that has taken
up the case.
“She is doing very well.
They are hopeful she will walk
again,” said Muthiani, who
noted that the victim is still
dealing with the psychological
trauma of the rape and from
time to time will shut down
emotionally.
The attack happened in June
but didn’t get wider attention
until Nairobi’s Daily Nation
newspaper wrote about it in
early October.
Her mother spoke through
tears at her home in Busia
County. She told The Associated Press that the police at first
said only that her daughter
should be taken to a pharmacy
and be prescribed pain killers.
Even if her physical and psychological trauma continues
to heal, her life will forever be
upended. Cultural traditions in
this area mandate that a rape
victim leave her home and

move to another town where,
in theory, people will not know
that she has been raped.
Muthiani labeled rape an
“invisible crime” in Kenya because it is underreported and
rarely acted on judicially.
“We wouldn’t know how big a
problem rape is in essence just
because we do not have all the
numbers of reported cases, but
from the number of cases that
we do receive, it is a very, very
high number,” said Muthiani,
who said studies have shown
that one in six Kenyan women
will experience some sort of
sexual assault in their lifetime.
Muthiani said that one aid
group that studied sexual violence during Kenya’s 2007-08
election violence found that at
least 3,000 women were raped
during the months of violence.
Muthiani said there have been
only 11 convictions related to
those 3,000 cases.
“When you have a statistic
that low, what are you inspiring the public to do? The institutions that are supposed
to protect and serve us, for
instance police and prosecu-

W.Va. woman accused of
plotting husband’s murder
VIENNA, W.Va. (AP) — Parkersburg
police say a woman has been charged with
trying to arrange the killing of her husband.
Media outlets reports 40-year-old Amy
Yvonne Mayhugh of Vienna was arrested
Wednesday night on a charge of solicitation to commit murder.
Parkersburg police Sgt. Greg Collins
says a preliminary investigation showed
Mayhugh wanted to have her husband
killed in order to collect life insurance proceeds of up to $400,000.

in equipment by the most in a year.
Overall government activity
grew at a slight 0.2 percent rate,
reflecting a 1.5 percent rise
in state and local government
spending — the best showing since the spring of 2009.
Federal government spending
dropped again, falling at a 1.7
percent annual rate.
Analysts say the shutdown
could cut more than half a
percentage point from annual
growth in the October-December
quarter. The shutdown cost the
U.S. economy an estimated $24
billion, according to Beth Ann
Bovino, an economist at Standard &amp; Poor’s.

Collins says police were alerted by
someone whom Mayhugh gave an expensive watch as partial payment for carrying
out the plan.
Collins says Mayhugh’s husband, Keith
Mayhugh, was distraught after being told
about the charge.
Amy Mayhugh was held Thursday on
$300,000 bond at the North Central Regional Jail. Jail records didn’t indicate
whether she has an attorney.

tors, have to start doing a better job. We have to put it out
there that there is going to be
punishment for people who
sexually violate other people,”
she said.
Kenya’s inspector general
of police, David Kimaiyo, has
tweeted in support of the victim from his personal Twitter
account. Kimaiyo said the investigation into the attack is
complete and that the file has
been forwarded to prosecutors
to be acted on.
Alfred Ouma, the chairman
of a local council of elders in
Busia County, said he wants
“severe action” taken against
the officers who initially received the rape complaint and
“mishandled it.”
The victim’s grandmother
told AP from her small grass
hut home that the attackers
must be found.
“I want those policemen that
released the boys that they had
in custody to arrest the parents of the boys who raped my
granddaughter so that they can
say where the boys are hiding,”
the grandmother said.

Revenues
rise at 3 of
4 casinos

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Regulators say three of
Ohio’s four casinos saw revenue increases last month.
Data released Thursday
by the Ohio Casino Control
Commission shows the Columbus casino saw the biggest increase, from $15.7 million in September to $17.7
million last month. That’s a
nearly 13 percent increase.
Cleveland’s revenues increased by about 4 percent
to $19.5 million. Toledo
saw a much more moderate increase of 1 percent, to
$14.7 million.
Cincinnati’s
revenues
declined by 8 percent to
$18.2 million.
Statewide, casino revenues totaled $70 million
in October, up from $68.9
million in September. The
monthly high this year
was $84 million in March,
boosted by the Cincinnati
casino’s opening.
The casinos have drawn
nearly $688 million so far
this year.

REHABILITATION CENTER

We would like to thank the following
businesses/groups/individuals for their support
of our 2013 Annual Fall Festival
held on October 22, 2013.
New Haven Haunted Fields

Powell’s Food Fair , Meigs County Fish and Game,

Dr. James Toothman, PVH Home Medical Equipment,

PVH Outreach Lab, PVH Marketing Dept., Fox’s Pizza,

Pomeroy Liquor Store, Main Street Meat Market, Taz’s Marathon,
Twin Oaks Gas Station, Chester Volunteer Fire Department, AVI,
Heiner’s Bakery, Wendy’s of Pomeroy, Family Healthcare,
River Valley Health &amp; Wellness (Ravenswood),

Jackson General Hospital (Ripley, WV) McDonalds of Pomeroy,

Meets County 4-H Fashion Board and Parents, Bob Evans (Mason),
Locker 219, Dominoes Pizza, Silver Run Thrift Store, Linda Rapp,

Call us at:

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

Sharon Dean, Butch Dean, Larissa Koon, Cheryl Holland,

Misty Hill, Katie Hysell, Kim Fisher, Chrissie Galley, Laurie Young,
Melissa Schulz, Denise Gerlach, Brent Larck, Phillip Bate,

Justin Arnold, Mark Thompson, Becky Knight, Linda Schell,
Barb Roush, Violet Hayman, Morgan Hunnel, Rhonda Moon,
Heather Moore, Alex Saunders, Shirley Lantz, Tina Goode,
Brian Bailey, Paula Fisher, Edna Hensley, April Roberts,
Angel Welsh, Cathy Truluck, AND the many staff, families and
friends who donated candy and helped during trick or treat. Erika
Reitmire and members of Soul Harvest Church for donating cakes.
Sincerely,

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center

740.992.6606
36759 Rocksprings Road • Pomeroy, OH 45769

www.rockspringsskillednursing.com

60463606

Do we have your attention now?
Advertise your business in
this space, or bigger

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Friday, November 8, 2013

*price include ALL rebate to dealer, taxes and titling fees extra. SALE Prices good UNTIL 11/18/13. Not responsible for typographical errors. Pictures for Illustration purposes only.

�The Daily Sentinel

FRIDAY,
NOVEMBER 8, 2013
mdssports@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS

INSIDE
OSU may be
unbeaten, but
still needs help
...Page B2

URG hosting Saunders Insurance Tipoff Classic
Randy Payton
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande will
ring in the 2013-2014 men’s basketball season this weekend as
they play host to the Saunders
Insurance Tipoff Classic at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
Action will get underway on Friday afternoon when the Rio junior
varsity squad squares off against
Fork Union Military Academy in
the opening game at 4 p.m.

The RedStorm JV (1-3) enter the matchup on a threegame losing skid after falling at
Cincinnati-Clermont, 83-68, on
Wednesday night.
The second game of the day
will feature Shawnee State and
Indiana
University-Kokomo,
with tipoff slated for 6 p.m.
Shawnee State (0-1), like Rio
Grande a member of the Mid-South
Conference, suffered a 71-70 opening season loss at home to Talladega College on Monday night.
Indiana-Kokomo (0-2), a mem-

ber of the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, is
fresh off a 70-52 loss at home to
Purdue University-Calumet on
Wednesday night.
In the final part of Friday’s tripleheader, the Rio Grande men’s
varsity team will get their season
underway when they entertain
Miami-Hamilton.
Tipoff is set for 8 p.m.
Head coach Ken French returns just four players from last
year’s squad, which finished the
season with an 11-19 record.

The quartet of returnees for
the RedStorm include reigning
Mid-South Conference Freshman of the Year D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH), senior Jermaine
Warmack (Orange, NJ) and juniors Travis Elliot (Ironton, OH)
and Evan Legg (Piketon, OH).
All four are guards.
Miami-Hamilton (0-1) will look
to bounce back from a 129-81 setback at the hands of NAIA Division
I defending national champion and preseason No. 1 - Georgetown
College on October 29.

Saturday’s slate also features three
games, with Shawnee State and
Miami-Hamilton taking to the hardwood at 1 p.m. to start things off.
The RedStorm men will follow
that contest and face IndianaKokomo, with tipoff scheduled
for 3 p.m., before the Rio Grande
women’s basketball team caps
off the weekend festivities when
they face the ThunderHawks of
Miami-Middletown in the final
game of the day.
Tipoff for the women’s game is
set for 5 p.m.

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Fourth-year Southern football coach Kyle Wickline, standing in back, talks with his team following a 19-0 victory over
Belpre in a Week 3 football contest at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field in Racine, Ohio.

Crusaders await Southern in first-ever playoff game
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com
Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Christian senior T.G. Miller (4) fights for a loose
ball during a Sept. 24 soccer match against Calvary Baptist
Academy in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Miller helps White
Team win district
soccer all-star game
Bryan Walters

STEUBENVILLE, Ohio — A
storm is headed toward the eastern part of the Buckeye State this
weekend, the kind that has never
been seen before in Ohio.
It’s history in the making for the
Southern football team Saturday
night when the Tornadoes travel
to Steubenville Catholic Central
for the program’s first-ever playoff
contest in a Division VII, Region
25 quarterfinal at Harding Stadium in Jefferson County.
The fifth-seeded Tornadoes
(8-2) will be making their postseason gridiron debut after putting together an historic regular
season, which included five shutouts and a school record for wins.
The 2013 campaign — which
saw SHS finish third in the TVC
Hocking at 6-2 — was also just
the second winning season for the
Purple and Gold since the turn of
the millennium, bettering the 6-4
squad from 2006.
Unlike all of the other teams
that came before them, this group
of Tornadoes have found ways to
consistently get it done on the
gridiron. SHS has outscored opponents by 301-94 clip through
10 weeks, thanks in large part to
a power running game and a defense that is plus-15 in turnover
differential this fall.
And, like the rest of this season, the Tornadoes are once again
preparing for another 48-minute
battle — one against an opponent
that is a little more familiar with
these postseason surroundings.
“All of the coaches are going
over every little detail, trying to

verbial nail in the coffin
in the 78th minute after
scoring an unassisted goal
JACKSON, Ohio — — giving the White Team
Score one for the little guys. a two-goal edge and evenOhio Valley Chirtsian tually a 3-1 victory.
T.G. Miller was the
senior T.G. Miller scored
a goal and added an as- only player in the game
sist, helping the White from a team not directly
Team score a 3-1 victory involved in the OHSAA
oiver the Dark Team Satur- tournament. He and the
day afternoon at the 2013 other Miller were the
Southeast District Coaches only two players to conAssociation All-Star Game tribute to more than one
held at Alumni Stadium in goal in the contest.
Miller and Winston
Jackson County.
Miller — the Defend- Wade of Gallia Academy
ers’ leading scorer this fall were the lone Ohio Valley
— made a major contribu- Publishing area players
tion in his final prep soccer to participate in the anmatch. His pass to Alex nual event.
The White Team also
Miller of Warren in the
ninth minute resulted in a defeated the Dark Team in
goal, and a 1-0 lead for the the girls all-star game, this
one by a 4-0 count. Jenny
White Team.
Mitchell Clark of Logan Campbell of Unioto had
evened the game up at 1-all two first-half goals, while
in the 28th minute after Kaylee McKinney of Logan
scoring on an unassisted and Krissy Eads of Logan
goal — which made it a tie added one goal apiece.
Raelyn Gardner of Warren
game at the intermission.
Alex Miller of Warren also assisted on Eads’ secscored his second goal of ond half goal.
The district soccer
the game in the 76th minINDIANAPOLIS (AP)
ute, netting a pass from awards will be announced — No. 4 Ohio State is
Jackson’s Evan Crabtree in the weekend sports
chasing perfection and a
edition of the Sunday
for a 2-1 advantage.
chance play for a national
T.G. Miller put the pro- Times-Sentinel.
championship. No. 18
Michigan State has the inside track to the Big Ten
championship game.
Four other conference
teams are bowl-eligible and
Iowa could join that list
with a win this weekend.
Friday, Nov. 8
But with only four weeks
Football
left
in the regular season,
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
the
Big Ten is looking at
Men’s College Basketball
the possibility of coming
Saunders Insurance Tipoff Classic at URG, 6 p.m.
up short in postseason
play again — even before
Saturday, Nov. 9
the bowl lineups are anFootball
nounced. With eight bowl
Lewis County at Point Pleasant, 1:30
tie-ins, six qualifiers and
Hundred at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Iowa on the cusp, the last
Southern at Steubenville Catholic Central, 7 p.m.
available spot will have to
Men’s College Basketball
be filled by one of three
Saunders Insurance Tipoff Classic at URG, 1 p.m.
teams that are a combined
Women’s College Basketball
Miami-Middletown at URG, 5 p.m.
1-12 in league play: Illinois,
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Southern senior running back Tyler Barton picks up positive yardage during
this second half carry against Eastern in a 34-0 Week 10 victory at Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field in Racine, Ohio.

dot every I and cross every T.
We’ve seen three films on them
and we also saw them in person,”
fourth-year SHS coach Kyle Wickline said. “We’re all working really
hard here, and the kids are con-

tinuing to buy in to what we are
doing for our weekly game plan
— which is pretty much what
they’ve done all year.
See PLAYOFF | B2

Big Ten struggling to fill eight reserved bowl slots

OVP Sports Schedule

Indiana or Northwestern.
“I think it’s pretty evident to our guys that our
backs are against the wall,”
Wildcats coach Pat Fitzgerald said Tuesday. “We’ve
had every opportunity to
win four out of our last five
games and unfortunately
we haven’t coached our
guys well enough or our
guys haven’t executed well
enough in games, especially in the fourth quarter, to
win. It’s disappointing but
with games left ahead of
us, we have opportunities
and really we just have to
coach our guys to play better and if we do that, we’ll
be all right.”
For the Big Ten, this is
not an unusual predicament.
The league failed to produce enough bowl-eligible
teams to fill its allotment four

times in the last five years
and it could happen again.
The lone exception during
that five-year span came in
2011 when conference officials had to find a bowl
game to take the Fighting Illini because there were more
bowl-eligible teams from the
league available than actual
game commitments.
A league spokesman
wrote in an email to The
Associated Press that
Commissioner Jim Delany
was not available for comment Tuesday because
of meeting and his travel
schedule. But clearly, this
is not how the conference
envisioned the final month
playing out.
“We’re all trying to do
that (win six), and we’re
all trying to do better than
that,” Iowa coach Kirk Fe-

rentz said. “I think we really just try to get our guys
focused on the week at
hand. I think most coaches
do that. That’s what it’s all
about, so if you want to be
somewhere good at the end
of the season, then you have
to handle each step along
the way. If you do that, the
more apt you are to be in a
good place at the end.”
Most analysts expect
the unbeaten Buckeyes
and surging Spartans, the
league’s two division leaders, to meet in Indianapolis on Dec. 7. The winner
would become the first team
other than No. 21 Wisconsin to win the Big Ten title
game, ending the Badgers’
streak of three consecutive
Rose Bowl appearances.
See SLOTS | B2

�Page B2 s The Daily Sentinel

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Friday, November 8, 2013

OVP Sports Brief
GAHS basketball season tickets
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia Academy basketball season tickets go on sale starting Monday, Nov. 11. Superboosters may buy tickets on November 11, while Boosters and staff can purchase season tickets on November
12. The public may purchase season tickets for home
games on November 13. Tickets may be purchased at the
high school office. Cost is $66 apiece.

Steelers defense
searching for answers
PITTSBURGH
(AP)
— Ryan Clark is familiar
with the drill.
Every time the Pittsburgh Steelers don’t look
like the best defense in
football, a rarity for a unit
that has finished No. 1
in the NFL five times in
the last decade, the whispers the NFL has passed
by 76-year-old defensive
coordinator Dick LeBeau
morph into throaty roars.
The din only grew louder last weekend, when
Pittsburgh surrendered a
franchise-record 55 points
and 610 yards in a loss to

New England. Suddenly,
a slow start in which the
Steelers struggled to do the
things that have been their
trademark under LeBeau
— namely stopping the run
and limiting big plays — began to look like something
far more troubling.
Clark’s message? Save
it. It was one game. A bad
one, to be sure. But just
one. And while there are
plenty of issues to address
as Pittsburgh (2-6) tries
to snap out of an overall
funk that dates nearly a
year, LeBeau’s ability is
not among them.

Slots

Kyle Robertson | Columbus Dispatch | MCT photo

Ohio State Buckeyes head coach Urban Meyer and Ohio State quarterback Braxton Miller (5) celebrate a 17-16 win over Michigan State Spartans, while singing Carmen Ohio, at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan, Saturday, Sept. 29, 2012.

Ohio State may be unbeaten, but still needs help

From Page B1
The Badgers, perennial powers Michigan and Nebraska
and surprising Minnesota all have at least six wins, enough
to fill out the New Year’s Day allotment with one team left
over for a non-New Year’s Day game — the Buffalo Wild
Wings Bowl, the Texas Bowl or the Little Caesar’s Pizza
Bowl. Iowa’s best chance to join the club comes this weekend when it travels to reeling Purdue (5-4, 2-3).
But things could get tricky if the Boilermakers end a sixgame losing streak. Iowa (5-4, 2-3) would then have to beat either Michigan at home or Nebraska on the road just to qualify.
Then there are other three:
— Northwestern (4-5, 0-5), once ranked in the top 20,
is trying to get healthy during this week’s bye. It needs to
win two its last three with home games against Michigan
and Michigan State and a trip to Illinois.
— The Illini (3-5, 0-4) have lost 18 straight conference
games, yet somehow still have a shot. How? If Illinois
wins three of its last four — at Indiana, home against
Ohio State, at Purdue and at Northwestern — it’s in.
— Indiana’s best chance may have evaporated with a
fumbled lateral in the final 30 seconds last weekend. That
mistake dropped the Hoosiers to 3-5 (1-3), forcing them
to win three of their last four — home against Illinois,
trips to Wisconsin and Ohio State, and the home finale
against Purdue — to reach the six-win mark.
There could be a way out, though it’s a longshot. Last
year, the NCAA opened the possibility of putting 5-7 teams
in the postseason but only if there weren’t enough qualifiers to fill every bowl slot and then only if a school ranks in
the top five of football’s Academic Progress Rate rankings.
The Big Ten can’t count on that, putting pressure on
virtually every team in the league to keep winning — from
division leaders trying to protect their leads to the Big
Ten title game hopefuls needing help to the bowl-game
hopefuls and even for a team such as Purdue, which is
playing spoiler as it tries to avoid its first winless conference season in two decades.
“I think that’s part of football, part of life, there’s always
pressure on you to succeed,” Illini coach Tim Beckman
said. “We came darn close this last week (at Penn State)
to having that first success, I want these players to feel
those successes. So yeah there’s pressure on you each and
every football game to be better, but in my opinion that’s
how the programs that are being built get better is being
able to succeed in those pressure moments.”

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Heading into their final three
games of the season, the fourthranked Ohio State Buckeyes go into
an off week with almost all of their
highest goals still within reach.
The thing is, they also need some help.
No wonder coach Urban Meyer
will be watching TV closely.
“I’ve been there before a couple of
times where some things had to happen right,” Meyer said after Wednesday’s rain-soaked practice. “For us to
waste energy on that, that’s not fair
to the players we coach. But we’ll certainly be watching.”
Meyer plans to watch Thursday
night’s games with his son, Nathan.
He’ll have plenty to watch, that night
and Saturday.
Thursday’s games include unbeaten No. 5 Baylor hosting No. 12 Oklahoma for the Big 12 lead, and then
No. 2 Oregon at No. 6 Stanford in a
Pac-12 showdown.
Baylor is breathing down the
Buckeyes’ neck in the Bowl Championship Series rankings, while
Oregon is one of the three teams
ahead of the Buckeyes.
“I’ll watch them both. Obviously I’ve
got a lot of interest,” Meyer said during
the Big Ten coaches’ call this week. “Oregon, the style of play that they have —
we try to use some of their stuff, as much
as we can, because I just think they’re really good. But I’m going to watch Baylor;
they’ve got an exciting program too.”
Even though Ohio State (9-0, 5-0
Big Ten) is rolling through its schedule, the Buckeyes cannot play for
the national championship if the status quo holds. At No. 4 in the BCS
rankings, they need two of the three
teams ahead of them to lose or drop

behind them in order to be among
the top two teams when the national
championship pairings are determined in early December.
On Saturday, another game with
huge ramifications for Ohio State
takes place when No. 10 LSU plays
at top-ranked Alabama.
Meyer said he will be measuring
his own team by what he sees on the
flat screen.
“That’s natural. I probably will,” he
said. “I’ve done that with our staff.
Is so-and-so a better coach than we
are? Does so-and-so have better players than we do? Why? This is Ohio
State, our expectations are the best
in the country.
“Obviously we’re not there yet or
we’d be the best in the country. So
we’re fighting that right now.”
It’s a good time for Ohio State to take
a break. The Buckeyes are a little bruised
and battered and need to take a breather
before embarking on their stretch run.
When they return to action on
Nov. 16 at Illinois, they’ll be in the
driver’s seat of the Leaders Division.
They close out the regular season by
hosting Indiana on Nov. 23 and then
playing at rival Michigan at The Big
House on Nov. 30.
If things work out, they’ll clinch
the Leaders Division crown along
the way — they’re up by a game on
Wisconsin and also own the tiebreaker thanks to their 31-24 win Sept. 28.
They would then take on Michigan
State — the Legends Division frontrunner — in the Big Ten championship
game at Lucas Oil Stadium on Dec. 7.
Defensive tackle Michael Bennett
isn’t losing much sleep over the BCS.
“All we can control is how we beat the
teams we’re playing. First it’s Illinois,

then so on,” he said. “I don’t stress over
the things we don’t control.”
The Buckeyes need to fine-tune
some things and heal their bodies.
Starting tackle Taylor Decker
sprained the medial-collateral ligament in his left knee in the 56-0
victory at Purdue last Saturday. He
is not practicing this week but it is
hoped the week off will allow him
to return to the field next week for
preparations for Illinois (3-5, 0-4).
Center Corey Linsley said on
Wednesday night that Decker may be
resting but definitely will be able to
play next week.
“He wasn’t practicing today; he’s
healing up,” Linsley said. “It’s nothing
serious. He’s going to be fine. They’re
just taking every precaution.”
In addition, the Buckeyes are
without backup tailback Jordan
Hall. He has what Meyer calls a
“chronic knee problem” and could
not play against Purdue. He, too, is
hopeful of getting back on the field
for the big games at the finish.
The Buckeyes are riding a 21-game
winning streak. The school mark is
22 straight, from 1967 to the last
game of the 1969 season, encompassing a national championship in 1968.
Clearly, there’s a lot of goals yet to
be achieved in the dwindling weeks.
Meyer, who stepped aside twice
at Florida due to health issues,
said he’s going to enjoy this week
off, and hopes his team comes
back rejuvenated.
“The chase is on, man. It’s real,” he
said. “For the coaches, it’s the same
thing. It’s good for your soul, good for
your mind to come back refreshed.
You can’t just (work all the time). I’ve
tried that. It doesn’t work.”

Playoff
From Page B1
“This is a good time to be a head
coach, that’s for sure. Everybody is
motivated because it is the biggest
football game of our lives. We want
to make sure that we are prepared
to play a really good game against
a really good team in Steubenville
Catholic Central.”
The fourth-seeded and host
Crusaders (8-2) will be making
their 11th playoff appearance in
program history, as well as their
second straight postseason run
for the first time since the 200405 campaigns. SCCHS won the
1993 Division V championship
and also had Final Four appearances in 1991 and 2005.
Steubenville Catholic Central —
which has an alltime record of 11-9
in the postseason — is coached by
Steve Daley, who is 17-14 overall
and 0-1 in playoff games in three
seasons at the helm.
The Crusaders have outscored
opponents by a 425-132 overall
margin, pitching two shutouts and
allowing 10 points or less in half
of those regular season matchups.
SCCHS has twice scored a seasonhigh 62 points this fall, but also
enters the postseason with a twogame losing skid after winning its
first eight games.
But don’t let those two losses
fool you. The Crusaders dropped
a 22-17 decision at Class A topranked Madonna in Week 9 and
suffered a 24-0 setback at home
to Magnolia last weekend. Madonna and Magnolia were both
eliminated by eventual state
champion Wahama last year in
the Class A Final Four.
Steubenville Catholic Central

started the year with 21 returning letterwinners, 15 seniors
and 12 starters back on a roster that goes 42 players deep.
And although a majority of what
SCCHS does centers around
four-year starting quarterback
Brenton Colabella, the Crusaders are far from a one-trick pony.
“They throw the ball a bunch
and they have some athletic playmakers to go along with a power
running game. They are pretty
quick and use a lot of different
formations to get people open, so
we have to make tackles in space.
They are here for a reason, just
like us,” Wickline said. “We really have to focus on what we do
and what got us here. We have to
run the ball and move the chains
offensively. We need to react and
make plays on defense, and we
need to execute on special teams.
Just like the previous 10 weeks.”
Colabella (6-3, 190) entered the
2013 campaign with 5,551 career
passing yards and has shown no
signs of slowing down in his final
year with the Blue and Gold, as
the senior has completed 116-of179 pass attempts for 1,883 yards
— including 26 touchdowns and
nine interceptions.
Khalil Jones (5-9, 155) is the
team’s leading rusher, as the senior is averaging over 11 yards
per carry after producing 628
yards and 13 touchdowns on 55
attempts. Senior Ryan Fletcher
(6-0, 180) has 40 totes for 355
yards and five TDs, while junior
Stone Romano (5-11, 205) has
chipped in 289 yards and eight
TDs on 29 attempts.
Fletcher leads the Crusader
wideouts with 26 catches for 540

yards and 12 touchdowns, followed by senior Aleks Porreca
(5-10, 170) with 20 grabs for 412
yards and two scores. Sophomore Seth Potenzini (5-9, 150)
also has 15 catches for 156 yards
and a TD.
Senior John Paul McNamara
(5-9, 145) has also converted 43
of the Crusaders’ 54 extra-point
kicks, with Romano converting
the other 11. In all, SCCHS has
five different players — excluding Colabella — that have scored
36 or more points this season.
Steubenville Catholic Central has surrendered just 2,259
yards defensively this fall, including 1,512 rushing yards
and 747 yards through the air.
Conversely, the Crusaders have
produced 3,716 yards of total offense — with 1,816 coming on
the ground and 1,900 coming
through the air.
SCCHS possesses a 1-2 overall
record against winning teams
this year, while the Tornadoes
are slightly better with a 2-2
mark. Three of Southern’s five
shutouts also came in road contests, while the Crusaders had
one shutout at home and another
on the road.
Southern enters Week 11
with 2,403 rushing yards and 32
touchdowns on 416 carries, an
average of 5.8 yards per attempt.
SHS has outgained opponents by
a 3,175-1,895 overall margin in
total yards and has allowed just
1,349 rushing yards and 10 TDs
on 354 totes as a defense — an
average of 3.8 yards per try.
Senior Tyler Barton guides
the Tornado ground game with
1,342 rushing yards and 17

touchdowns on 182 carries. Paul
Ramthun is next for the backs
with 229 yards and three scores
on 36 carries, while Ryan Billingsley has 191 yards and three
scores on 39 rushes.
Quarterback Tristen Wolfe has
accounted for over 1,000 yards
of offense this season. The junior
has rushed for 267 yards and six
TDs on 67 carries and is also
52-of-110 for 762 passing yards,
including 11 touchdowns and six
interceptions.
Hunter Johnson leads the
wideouts with 18 catches for 303
yards and three touchdowns,
followed by Trenton Deem with
nine grabs for 107 yards. In all,
five different SHS receivers have
caught a TD pass this year.
The Tornadoes are 31-of-45
overall on PAT conversions, with
Deem leading the way with 30-of39 PAT kicks converted. SHS has
one defensive TD and one special
teams touchdown this year and is
also 0-for-1 on its only two-point
conversion attempt this fall.
Southern has outscored its opponents in all four quarters this
season, including a large 94-19
discrepancy in the opening 12
minutes. SHS also owns edges of
97-34, 49-20 and 61-21 through
the final three frames, respectively.
Southern is well known for
supporting its high school teams,
and with this being the football
team’s first trip to the playoffs
— there should be a large Meigs
County following in the stands
Saturday night.
“I sense that the community is
pretty fired up about this weekend, and I think a lot of people
are going to be there wearing

purple,” Wickline said. “This
is something that doesn’t come
around every year. I’m certainly
hoping that they are there, and
the kids need them there for
some support — hopefully on
the way to a victory.”
Wickline — who is 16-24
overall in four years as Southern
football coach — has watched
his win total double from 2-8
to 4-6 to 8-2 over the last two
seasons. He’s also given up assistant positions with baseball
and basketball over the past few
years to primarily focus on making this football dream a reality
at his alma mater.
The Tornadoes are one of the
top 10 winningest basketball
programs in Ohio history and
the baseball team has been to the
last seven regional tournaments.
And now, the football program is
getting in on the act.
“As a player, as an assistant
and now as a head coach, after
all of these years at Southern —
it sure is nice to experience this
after so many seasons of 1-9 and
2-8. I was fortunate, I played on a
pair of 5-5 teams in high school,”
Wickline said. “When these kids
go into the school and look up
into the rafters, they will see the
one thing that’s been missing
from all of those other postseason banners.
“I think we’re all proud to be
part of making history, rather it
be the players, the coaches, the
fans or the community. It’s something that will always be with us.”
Kickoff of the historic Southern-Steubenville Catholic Central contest will happen Saturday
night at 7 p.m.

�Friday, November 8, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

WVU RB Sims ready to take on home-state Longhorns
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — West Virginia running back Charles Sims
needs no more motivation
to help get the Mountaineers a step closer to
becoming bowl eligible
than what’s in front of him
— a night game in front
of a raucous home crowd
against his home-state
Texas Longhorns.
The senior has been a
steady influence in a season
of ups and downs for West
Virginia’s offense, a consistent ball carrier who’s just
as deft at turning a short
pass into a solid gain.
The Houston native
leads the Mountaineers
(4-5, 2-4 Big 12) with
754 yards rushing and is
a close second in team
receptions heading into
Saturday night’s matchup
against Texas (6-2, 5-0).
“Oh I’ve always wanted
to play Texas, man,” Sims
said. “Growing up as a kid,
that’s all you heard about
was Texas, so I always
wanted to play them guys.”
Sims graduated from the

University of Houston in
May with a health degree
and was available to transfer
and play immediately. Texas
coach Mack Brown said he
didn’t talk to Sims about
coming to Austin because
the Longhorns already had
several running backs and
he knew Sims would want a
significant role.
The easy choice was
West Virginia — coach
Dana Holgorsen was Houston’s offensive coordinator
and quarterbacks coach in
2008 and 2009.
Sims certainly had the
chance to be the focal point
of the Mountaineers’ offense. The prospects for
the season looked grim
after the graduations of
quarterback Geno Smith
and record-setting wide receivers Stedman Bailey and
Tavon Austin. They got
bleaker when running back
Andrew Buie, who led West
Virginia with 851 yards
rushing in 2012, withdrew
from school just days before
the season opener.
Sims quieted some of

Players divided regarding
Dolphins’ Jonathan Martin
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) — In a culture that fosters conflict,
Jonathan Martin sought to avoid it.
Upset by treatment he considered abusive, the Miami Dolphins tackle let the situation fester for months
before leaving the team last week. Martin’s agent then
complained to the Dolphins, who suspended guard
Richie Incognito.
The NFL is investigating whether Incognito harassed
or bullied Martin, and whether their teammates and the
organization mishandled the matter.
Some say Martin, a Stanford graduate who went about
his business quietly, handled the situation well. But pro
football is a macho world, and some players believe Martin should have responded more firmly.
“Is Incognito wrong? Absolutely. He’s 100 percent
wrong,” New York Giants safety Antrel Rolle said. “No
individual should have to go through that, especially in
their workplace.
“But at the same time, Jonathan Martin is a 6-4,
320-pound man. I mean, at some point and time you need
to stand your ground as an individual. Am I saying go attack, go fight him? No. I think we all understand we can
stand our ground without anything being physical.”
Dolphins players have robustly defended Incognito,
long considered among the NFL’s dirtiest players. He’s
now a notorious national villain, but teammates praise his
leadership and loyalty.
They’ve been less passionate in their support of Martin,
saying he and Incognito behaved like best friends.
“They did a lot of stuff together,” tackle Tyson Clabo
said. “So if he had a problem with the way he was treating
him, he had a funny way of showing it.”
Martin is with his family in California to undergo counseling for emotional issues.
A senior partner in a New York law firm was appointed by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to investigate
possible misconduct and prepare a report. DeMaurice
Smith, executive director of the NFL Players Association, said Thursday that he continues to be in touch
with those involved.
“The NFLPA has taken steps to ensure that every one
of our affected members is represented,” Smith said in a
statement. “It is our duty as a union to learn the full facts,
protect the interests of players involved and hold management accountable to the highest standards of fairness and
transparency.”
The alleged bullying saga engulfing the Dolphins has
shed a light on how damaging perceptions can be in the
violent world of the NFL.
A Pittsburgh native, Martin is the son of Harvard graduates and his great grandfather also graduated from the
school in 1924. At Stanford he protected Andrew Luck’s
blind side, and also majored in the classics.

Max Faulkner | Fort Worth Star-Telegram | MCT photo

West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen talks with reporters at the Big
12 media day at the Omni Hotel in Dallas, Texas, Tuesday, July 23.

those concerns with two
100-yard rushing efforts in
his first three games and he
hasn’t slowed down. He ran
for a season-high 154 yards
last week in a 30-27 overtime win at TCU, including
a 31-yard touchdown run
and a 13-yard scoring catch

from Clint Trickett.
Sims has the chance to
become West Virginia’s
first 1,000-yard rusher
since Noel Devine in 2009.
His career best was 851
yards last season.
But what’s caught everyone’s attention are his

receiving skills.
Sims has three games
with at least seven receptions. His 36 receptions
are one behind wide receiver Daikiel Shorts for
the team lead. Sims could
become the first running
back to lead the Mountaineers in receptions since
Tom Gray had 26 in 1985.
It’s something Sims has
been doing since his freshman season at Houston in
2009, when he caught 70
passes for 759 yards, both
career bests.
“He is fast,” Brown said.
“He is a power runner, but
he is also good out of the
backfield. We think he is a
very good pro prospect at
running back.”
Texas is well aware of
West Virginia’s ability to
run the ball. Buie rushed
for 207 yards in West Virginia’s 48-45 win over the
Longhorns last year, and
the 213-pound Sims said in
order to run well this year
against Texas, it will come
down to brute strength.
“You want to be more

physical than the other
team,” he said. “It’s going to
be a great atmosphere, night
game. It’s my first night
game. Got a great team
coming in to Morgantown.
Should be a good game.”
The media-shy Sims isn’t
the most talkative player
with anyone — Holgorsen
said Sims is “petrified”
whenever he has to give a
presentation in class.
It’s Sims’ work ethic that
has others talking. For
instance, Holgorsen said
freshman running back
Wendell Smallwood “does
everything Charles does.”
“His attitude is so good,”
Holgorsen said of Sims.
“The way he approaches every day in the weight room,
in the film room and the
practice field. Just playing
with as much effort as he
possibly can. Yes, that is rubbing off on a lot of the guys
on our entire team. You see
defensive guys pointing it
out. He is a special player,
a special kid. I’m glad he’s
here. It’s worked out for everybody involved.”

Hazing, Hernandez among
NFL’s issues so far in ‘13
Howard Fendrich
The Associated Press

Passing yardage and points
are going up, up, up in the NFL,
as are TV ratings and, of course,
revenues. So all must be well with
America’s most popular sport,
right? Not so fast.
About halfway between the start
of exhibition games and the Super
Bowl, there have been plenty of
unwanted story lines. Bullying in
the locker room, coaches collapsing, serious injuries to marquee
players, the D.C. Council’s call on
Washington’s pro football team to
change its name — examples from
the past week alone.
There’s been much more in
2013: Patriots tight end Aaron
Hernandez’s murder charge;
Broncos linebacker Von Miller’s
attempt to manipulate the NFL
drug-testing system; the lack of
tests for human growth hormone
2½ seasons after owners and players paved the way for it; the suicide of a 29-year-old former player
for the Chargers; the MRSA infection diagnoses of three Buccaneers, one of whom needed surgery; the continuing problem of
concussions and their effects.
Makes one wonder what the next
three months might have in store
for a league that said Thursday its
games account for the 18 mostwatched TV shows since the regular season began in September.
“You have star quarterbacks
down. You’ve got coaches with
health issues. You’ve got the
Richie Incognito situation in Miami,” said Joe Theismann, who
led Washington to the 1983 Super
Bowl title. “When you really think
about it, so much of what’s gotten

C.W. Griffin | Miami Herald | MCT photo

New England Patriots’ Aaron Hernandez is pushed out of bounds just short
of the goal line by Miami Dolphins’ Chris Clemons in the fourth quarter at
Sun Life Stadium on Sunday, Dec. 2, 2012, in Miami Gardens, Fla.

attention through the first half of
this season has to do with what’s
gone on off the field.”
Some of what’s happened on the
field has not been pleasant, either.
Green Bay Packers quarterback
Aaron Rodgers, the 2011 MVP, was
the latest big-name player to go out,
sidelined for who knows how long

by a broken collarbone after being
sacked during his team’s first possession Monday night. The Packers’ opponent in that game, the
Chicago Bears, already were without their preferred starting quarterback, Jay Cutler, whose groin
was injured when he was sacked a
couple of weeks earlier.

NFL preps its biggest game for the biggest stage
Jim Litke

AP Sports Writer

Fans in the stands at Super
Bowls past only think they’ve
seen it all.
They’ve been sun-burned in
Los Angeles, soaked in Miami
and buffeted by winds at stops
in between. Deafened during
flyovers. Titillated at halftime,
blacked out mid-game and even
moved to tears by tributes to
servicemen, veterans and the
victims of 9/11.
Even so, Super Bowl XLVIII
promises those in attendance
something different: The chance
to freeze their rear ends off.
On Feb. 2, 2014 — the date
could still be changed if a
Nor’easter rolls in off the Jersey
Shore — every one of the 82,000
or so ticketholders entering
MetLife Stadium will receive a
gift bag. Inside are a seat cushion, muffler, ski gaiters, three
pairs of hand- and foot-warmers,
lip balm and a package of tissues,
plastered with enough logos to
make a NASCAR driver jealous.
The Super Bowl has been
played in northern cities four
times before — inside climatecontrolled domes — but never
outdoors. The average daily low
for East Rutherford, N.J., in early February is 22 degrees, with

temperatures typically falling
throughout the night, when the
game will be played. Snow, wind
and rain, or all three at once, is
not out of the question. Exactly
how much protection all that swag
provides against Mother Nature’s
wrath remains to be seen.
“We can’t provide them with
coats,” said Frank Supovitz, the
NFL’s vice president in charge of
preparations for the game. “But
we will be strongly encouraging
them to stay in their seats.”
Which begs the question: If the
game is for the fans, why stage it
outdoors in the New Jersey-New
York metro area precisely when
the trusty Farmer’s Almanac,
hardly alone among forecasters,
is predicting a blizzard?
Money.
NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell and his owners are taking advantage of a lull in the tourism calendar to turn a swath of
Manhattan into a playground and
make cash registers sing. A 180
foot-tall toboggan slide will be
plopped down in Times Square,
and a stretch of Broadway from
34th Street to 48th will be closed
to traffic, renamed “Super Bowl
Boulevard,” and converted into
a rollicking theme park, merchandise shop and concert venue
called the “NFL Experience.”
For a week, kids will punt,

pass and kick while their parents shop for replica jerseys in
locales where bankers and account executives usually gobble
down lunch. It won’t be the only
place on an already crowded
spit of land where jaded New
Yorkers trade elbows with their
guests. As many as 200,000 outof-towners will be cast in the role
of Jack Lemmon in the movie of
the same name, dazzled by the
goings-on and trying not to get
fleeced by savvy hoteliers and
street vendors.
Already, reports are circulating
about prices being tripled, with
modest hotel rooms in Midtown
jacked to $1,000 a night, and
even more modest accommodations across the Hudson River in
New Jersey, close to MetLife Stadium, offered at the princely sum
of $600. That’s on top of what’s
already the highest ticket prices
ever — ranging from $500 to
$2,600 — a hike the NFL candidly acknowledged was intended to
make life tough on scalpers.
But hustlers won’t be the only
folks forced to improvise.
Plans for the event have been
three years in the making, but
depending on weather, they
might not be finalized until the
last minute. Moving fans across
the region, even aided by the
nation’s most extensive public

transportation network, presents
a logistical nightmare — even
before security considerations
are factored in.
“You’ve got two states, separated by a river, and people from the
five boroughs and eight or nine
counties in New Jersey all heading for the same place in a matter of hours,” said Al Kelly, who
heads up the host Super Bowl
committee. “What we have is a
series of contingency plans where
priorities shift according to the
day and in some cases hour by
hour. … If a storm hits one day,
we’ll shift resources to clearing
certain roads and bridges; if it
lands somewhere else at a different time, we could be forced to
change the entire blueprint.
“The one thing we better be,”
Kelly said finally, “is nimble.”
But it’s not just the region’s
reputation on the line.
By waiving the normal Super
Bowl specifications to grease New
York’s winning bid in 2010 — previously, bid cities were required to
average 50-degree temperatures
during game week — Goodell and
his owners are out to prove the
proposition Frank Sinatra laid out
in “New York, New York.” Namely,
that if you can make it there, you
can make it anywhere.
Since taking over as commissioner in 2006, Goodell has made

securing new stadiums or renovating existing ones for his already
wealthy owners — almost always
with some level of taxpayer-financing — every bit as much a signature issue as player safety. It’s no
coincidence that all five of the stadiums that have, or will, come online during his tenure have already
been awarded the big game.
Nor is Goodell above dangling the carrot of a future Super
Bowl as a reward to cities and
states willing to throw tax dollars into stadium pots. With 19
of the league’s 32 teams situated
within winter’s reach — six already have domed stadiums — a
successful Super Bowl outdoors
could put the entire U.S. map in
play for his pitch.
New York might seem like a
tough place to set a precedent.
It’s already a nexus for many of
the world’s financial, entertainment and media empires, and
chaotic on its quietest day. Just
rising above that clutter is no
small feat. And even if the NFL
does a bang-up job, it won’t turn
around and ask the region’s taxpayers for help anytime soon.
MetLife Stadium opened for
business in April, 2010, with the
$1.6 billion construction cost
covered jointly by the co-tenants,
New York’s Giants and Jets, using private funds.

�Page B4 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 8, 2013

Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home

Best of Luck, Southern Tornadoes! We are Proud of You!

Pomeroy, Ohio
740•992•5444

Middleport, Ohio
740•992•5141

Racine, Ohio
740-949-2300

Adam McDaniel &amp; James Anderson
DIRECTORS

www.andersonmcdaniel.com

60463265

Tradition – Ser vice – Value

#5 Southern Tornadoes

vs
#4 Stubenville Catholic Central Crusaders
Division VII – Region 25

Saturday, November 9th at 7 pm
at
Harding Stadium

60463260

�Friday, November 8, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

BEST OF LUCK

TO THE SOUTHERN
TORNADOES!

Star Supply Hardware
&amp;
Southern Oil Field Supply
Racine, Ohio
740-949-2525

GO TOR

NADOES

!!!

Hours: Mon-Fri 7:30am - 4:30pm

60463147

60462923

R ACINE
S ERVICE C ENTER
racineservicecenter@yahoo.com

Good Luck!!

Complete Auto Repair
Mechanic on Duty
Way to Go Southern Tornadoes!

Casey #54
w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m

Trey #77

RACINE
740-949-2210
60463274

60458220

AB &amp; T
AB &amp; T
&amp;
AUTO
FLORAL &amp; GIFTS

CONGRATS SOUTHERN

on a great season!

Congratulates the
Southern Tornadoes!
304 3rd Street
Racine, Ohio
740-949-2882

Chris Wolfe Farms

60463153

60463169

Oil and Gas Wells
Drilling and Operation

#

Congratulations
Southern Tornadoes!
53160 New Beginnings Rd.
Portland, Ohio
740-843-5484

James E. Diddle
President

Way to Go Tornadoes! We Are Proud of You!

Congrats
Hunter!

D&amp;M Pizza

We Love you,
Mom &amp; Aaron
Your Brothers &amp; Morgan

HILL’S SELF STORAGE
740-949-2217
5x10 up to 10x20
1 Mile North of SR 124
29625 Bashan Rd. Racine, OH
60463186

SR 124 Syracuse, Ohio 740-992-7287

60463159

You have
made us Proud

Your family is
very proud
of the Man
you have become!

Congrats
and

60463261

60463268

Good Luck!

BBYFL

Colten Walters #32

60462936

60463190

Love you and very proud
of the young man you’re
becoming. Best wishes!
Love Uncle Roger
Aunt Margie

Racine Optometric Clinic
Go Tornadoes
Beat the Crusaders!
109 N. 3rd Street
Racine, Ohio
740-949-2078

60463164

Every Life Celebrated with
a Century of Service

Funeral Home
Since 1913
740-992-2121
Kevin Schwarzel Mike Putman
Owners

60463161

Monthly &amp; Annual Leases • Lighted &amp; Secure

60463258

60463197

60463192

Tractor
Trailer
Access

Justin, Amanda, Mawmaw
Connor &amp; Rylan
60463244

The Hotspot

P.O. Box 369 Racine, OH 45771
740-949-2512
Spencer R. Carpenter
Vice President

Congratulations Wyatt!

We Are So Proud of You!

J.D. Drilling Company

Love you always!
Grandma Ada

60462929

Best of
Luck!

Best of Luck in the playoffs!

Colten Walters 32
I'm very proud of
you and what you
have accomplished.

SYRACUSE
740-992-6333

60463167

104 5th Street 2 4
HR
24 HR
Racine Ohio
T
o
g
w
n
i
i
ng
To w
740-949-2700
Mike Hill, Owner

60463259

60462795

�IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Peggy S. Yost
Meigs Countywww.mydailysentinel.com
Treasurer,
Plaintiff,
vs.
The Executors, Administrators,
Heirs at Law, Next of Kin, Devisees and Assigns of PEGGY
LEWIS and/or ROBERT
LEWIS, deceased, et al.
Defendants, Case No. 13 DL
001
JUDGE CROW
LEGAL NOTICE
The Heirs, Executors, Devisees, Administrators, Personal Representatives or Assigns
of peggy Lewis and/or Robert
Lewis, if any, their names and
residences being unknown and
which cannot with reasonable
diligence be ascertained, will
take notice that on October 10,
2013 the Plaintiffs Peggy S.
Yost, Meigs County Treasurer
filed an Amended Complaint
against The Executors, Administrators, Heirs at Law, Next of
Kin, Devisees and Assigns or
Peggy Lewis and/or Robert
Lewis et. al., as Defendants in
the Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio, being
Case No. 13 DL 001 in said
Court, demanding that the
Court issue a foreclosure order for unpaid taxes on the following described real estate,
and for other proper legal and
equitable relief. The real estate is described as follows:
Situated in the Village of
Middleport, in the County of
Meigs, and the State of Ohio.
Being the South half of Lots
numbered thirty-three(33) and
forty-seven(47) of the Village
of Sheffield now incorporated
into and made a part of the Village of Middlepoort, Meigs
County, Ohio. Being the same
Real Estate conveyed to
Jessie M. Sisson be two affidavits of transfer one dated
January 25, 1950, and recorded in Volume 165, at Page
383 and theLEGALS
second dated OcANNOUNCEMENTS
tober 31, 1950 and recorded in
Volume 168, at Page 447 of
the records of Deeds of Meigs
County, Ohio. Reference
Notices
Deed: Volume 36, Page 261,
Meigs County Official Records.
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
Auditor's Parcel Numbers: 15PUBLISHING CO.
00090.000 and 15-00089.00.
Recommends that you do
Subject to all easements,
Business with People you
leases and right of ways of reknow, and NOT to send Money
cord. You are required to anthrough the Mail until you have
swer the Complaint on or beInvestigated the Offering.
fore November 22, 2013. You
Pictures that have been
are also required to serve a
copy of your Answer upon C.
placed in ads at the
David Warren, Special Meigs
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
County Prosecutor, 117 W.
must be picked within
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
30 days. Any pictures
45769.
that are not picked up
Diane Lynch
will be
discarded.
Clerk of Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio.
10/18,10/25,11/1,11/8,
AUCTION / ESTATE /
11/15,11/22
YARD SALE

Page B6 s The Daily Sentinel

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Peggy S. Yost
Meigs County Treasurer,
Plaintiff,
vs.
The Executors, Administrators,
Heirs at Law, Next of Kin, Devisees and Assigns of PEGGY
LEWIS and/or ROBERT
LEWIS, deceased, et al.
Defendants, Case No. 13 DL
001
JUDGE CROW
LEGAL NOTICE
The Heirs, Executors, Devisees, Administrators, Personal Representatives or Assigns
of peggy Lewis and/or Robert
Lewis, if any, their names and
residences being unknown and
which cannot with reasonable
diligence be ascertained, will
take notice that on October 10,
2013 the Plaintiffs Peggy S.
Yost, Meigs County Treasurer
filed an Amended Complaint
against TheLEGALS
Executors, AdminLEGALS
istrators, Heirs at Law, Next of
IN THE COURT OF COMKin, Devisees and Assigns or
MON PLEAS MEIGS
Peggy Lewis and/or Robert
COUNTY, OHIO
Lewis et. al., as Defendants in
Peggy S. Yost
the Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County Treasurer,
Meigs County, Ohio, being
Plaintiff,
Case No. 13 DL 001 in said
vs.
Court, demanding that the
The Executors, Administrators, Court issue a foreclosure orHeirs at Law, Next of Kin, Deder for unpaid taxes on the folvisees and Assigns of PEGGY lowing described real estate,
LEWIS and/or ROBERT
and for other proper legal and
LEWIS, deceased, et al.
equitable relief. The real esDefendants, Case No. 13 DL
tate is described as follows:
001
Situated in the Village of
JUDGE CROW
Middleport, in the County of
LEGAL NOTICE
Meigs, and the State of Ohio.
The Heirs, Executors, DeBeing the South half of Lots
visees, Administrators, Person- numbered thirty-three(33) and
al Representatives or Assigns
forty-seven(47) of the Village
of peggy Lewis and/or Robert
of Sheffield now incorporated
Lewis, if any, their names and
into and made a part of the Vilresidences being unknown and lage of Middlepoort, Meigs
which cannot with reasonable
County, Ohio. Being the same
diligence be ascertained, will
Real Estate conveyed to
take notice that on October 10, Jessie M. Sisson be two affi2013 the Plaintiffs Peggy S.
davits of transfer one dated
Yost, Meigs County Treasurer
January 25, 1950, and recorfiled an Amended Complaint
ded in Volume 165, at Page
against The Executors, Admin- 383 and the second dated Ocistrators, Heirs at Law, Next of
tober 31, 1950 and recorded in
Kin, Devisees and Assigns or
Volume 168, at Page 447 of
Miscellaneous
Peggy Lewis and/or Robert
the records
of Deeds of Meigs
Lewis et. al., as Defendants in
County, Ohio. Reference
the Court of Common Pleas of
Deed: Volume 36, Page 261,
Meigs County, Ohio, being
Meigs County Official Records.
Case No. 13 DL 001 in said
Auditor's Parcel Numbers: 15Court, demanding that the
00090.000 and 15-00089.00.
Court issue a foreclosure orSubject to all easements,
der for unpaid taxes on the fol- leases and right of ways of relowing described real estate,
cord. You are required to anand for other proper legal and
swer the Complaint on or beequitable relief. The real esfore November 22, 2013. You
tate is described as follows:
are also required to serve a
Situated in the Village of
copy of your Answer upon C.
Middleport, in the County of
David Warren, Special Meigs
Meigs, and the State of Ohio.
County Prosecutor, 117 W.
Being the South half of Lots
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Are
You
Still
Paying
Too
Much
numbered thirty-three(33) and
45769.
Make the Switch to Dish
For
Your
Medications?
forty-seven(47)
of the
Village
Diane Lynch
can incorporated
save up to 90% whenClerk
you fillof
your
of SheffieldYou
now
Court of Common Today and Save up to 50%
at our
andof Meigs County, Ohio.
into and madeprescriptions
a part of the
Vil-Canadian
Pleas
International
Pharmacy Service.
lage of Middlepoort,
Meigs
10/18,10/25,11/1,11/8,
e
c
ri
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ur
County, OOhio.
Being theGet
same
11/15,11/22
An Extra
$10 Off
Promotiona
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ded in Volume
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x 100 at Page
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383 and the second dated
Oc-Offer is valid for prescription
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compared
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tober 31, 1950 and recorded
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of Now! 1-800-341-2398
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Call Now and Ask How!
Please note
that we
do not carry
controlled substances and a valid
Deed: Volume
36,
Page
261,
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.
Meigs County Official Records.
Call
Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Auditor's Parcel
Numbers:
15Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
Use of
these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
00090.000 and
15-00089.00.
*Offer subject to change based on premium channel availablity
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
Subject to all easements,
leases and right of ways of record. You are required to answer the Complaint on or before November 22, 2013. You
are also required to serve a
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David Warren, Special Meigs
County Prosecutor, 117 W.
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Help Wanted General

Houses For Rent

TEACHING POSITION
Carleton School is currently
looking for an Intervention
Specialist. Must have current
valid Ohio Department of Education licensure and have or
be eligible to obtain Intervention Specialist validation.
Benefits include life, health,
vision and dental insurance
and a great working environment.
Send resume and a copy of
teacher license by November
15th to:

3-Bdrm - 2 Full baths - Close
to Hospital - NO PETS-Central
AC must have references
$1,000 deposit &amp; $1,000 rent
call 446-3481

Carleton School
1310 Carleton Street
P.O. Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES

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

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General
Gallia County Economic Development is currently accepting
applications for the position of
Job Developer. Under direction, the Job Developer will establish and maintain activities
to develop, locate, and secure
job openings for clients. The
Full time position will range
from $16.00-$18.00 per hour
dependent upon experience,
benefits are available. Complete job description and employment applications are
available at www.gallianet.net,
or by contacting Gallia County
Economic Development at
740-446-4612 ext. 271 or
mclark@gallianet.net.

Gallia County Economic Development is currently accepting
applications for the positions of
Asst. Project Manager and
Project Monitor. The positions
are for the oversight and management of TANF (Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families)
and FAET (Food Assistance)
Work Activities Work Sites.
Other responsibilities include
the general supervision of the
TANF and FAET participants
ensure their completion of required work hours. Complete
job description and employment applications are available at www.gallianet.net, or
by contacting Gallia County
Economic Development at
740-446-4612 ext. 271 or
mclark@gallianet.net.
Interested applicants should
submit a completed Gallia
County Employment Application by November 13, 2013 to
Gallia County Economic Development at 18 Locust Street,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 or email
mclark@gallianet.net

FOR RENT
3BR House, Exc Cond, Ref
Required, NO PETS, $575.
Sandhill Rd. 304-675-3834
Nice 3 Bdrm home, 8mi from
town &amp; hospital - Taking Applications 740)441-5150
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

Business &amp; Trade School

Rentals

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

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

5 Bdrm - 3 1/2 bath Ranch Close to Hospital - Central AC,
Pool, Large Garage, $1,000
sec. deposit $1,000 Rent - NO
PETS - Must have references
Call 740-446-3481

EDUCATION

REAL ESTATE SALES

Interested applicants should
submit a completed Gallia
County Employment Application, Resume, and Employment References by November 13, 2013 to Gallia County
Economic Development at 18
Locust Street, Gallipolis, OH
45631 or email mclark@gallianet.net

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

Friday, November 8, 2013

Houses For Sale
3BR, 1BA, 1 car Garage,
corner 1st &amp; Center, Mason,
WV 740-992-7609 or 740-9927154

2 Bdrm - 2 bath Mobile Home
Quail Creek $350 deposit $500
/mo. Water, sewer and Lot fee
paid, No Smokers &amp; NO PETS
740-645-0715
2 Bdrm Mobile Home, $500/mo
&amp; $500 deposit, NO PETS,
740)245-5087
2 BR 1BA Mobile Home in Gallipolis City School District. 2
people Maximum. Ref &amp; Stove
Inc. No Pets. $350.00 Plus
Utilities. 740-446-3888
2BR Mobile Home in Racine.
$325/mo+$325 dep. 1 yr lease.
No Pets. No calls after 9PM.
740-992-5097.

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

3 Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo - $500 deposit 740367-0641

Apartments/Townhouses

Beautiful Country Setting Very
Spacious 1 Bdrm cottage surrounded by 30 acres of woods
newly built, new
appliances,Hard wood
floors,Central Heat &amp; air,
Double shower for two, Must
see to appreciate $500/mo.
Call 740-645-5953 or 614-5957773

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1 - 2 Bdrm apartments in the
Middleport area. some with
utilities paid, NO PETS - Deposit and References 740)9920165
1 Bdrm Apartment for Rent in
the New Haven Area, NO
PETS, deposit &amp; references
call 740)992-0165
1 Bedroom Apartment 740446-0390
1BR Apt. Very clean, Some
Furniture, W/D. NON-Smoker.
NO PETS 304-675-1386
2 - Rm efficiency Apartment in
the country - 7 miles from Gallipolis on Rt 7 south. 2 car garage, All electric, Utilties not included. $300 /mo, Deposit &amp;
1st mo. rent &amp; References Call
740-446-4514
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Special: 1st month FREE
plus FREE Gift.
Jordan Landing Apts 1, 2, 3,
4BR avail. You pay electric.
Ask about our FREE TV
Giveaway.
No pets
Ph: 304-674-0023, 304-444-4268

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

ANIMALS

Livestock
Black Angus Bulls for Sale ages 1yr to 18mths, Call after
5pm 740-288-1460
AGRICULTURE

AUTOMOTIVE

Autos for Sale
FOR SALE: 2010 Chevy Impala LT 16,300mi. Bose Stereo. Orig owner $16,200 OBO.
304-675-4893, 304-593-3707
Miscellaneous
Honda All-Terrain Vehicle, 300
Foreman Four Wheel Drive
$3,100 Local Call 740-7099944
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Recently updated - 2 Bdrm &amp; 1
1/2 bath Townhouse located at
Tara Apt. $480/mo and $480
deposit, 1 year lease, background check &amp; $40 application fee. Water, Garbage, sewer pd. 304-419-7368
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2Br House, 110 Vinton Court.
$550/month 740-709-1490

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

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�Friday, November 8, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

McGuff ’s first Buckeyes women’s team in a transition
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— After losing shooting star
Tayler Hill’s 21 points a game
and running-mate Amber
Stokes who averaged 10, it
figures that new Ohio State
coach Kevin McGuff will need
to rely on the Buckeyes to

shut down other teams.
“One of our biggest strengths
is going to need to be our defense,” said McGuff, a former
Xavier coach who was hired
away from the University of
Washington to replace fired
11-year coach Jim Foster last

spring. “We have some size
around the basket and enough
athleticism on the perimeter to
kind of put together a team that
can really, really defend.
“Especially early on as we try
to find our way on offense.”
Anything short of being a

great defensive team and the
Buckeyes likely will scuffle in
a year of transition.
They return three starters
from an 18-13 team — guards
Raven Ferguson and Ameryst
Alston and center Ashley Adams — but are sorely in need of

someone to take the tough shots.
Those three combined for just 22
points a game. Only one other
player on the roster averaged as
many as 4 points a game.
Ferguson was suspended on
Thursday for the first three games
for a violation of team rules.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

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Real Time With Bill Maher
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NOVEMBER 9, 2013
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Miss Universe Pageant The most beautiful women in the
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11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Flip Vegas "Frat House" (N)
Flipping Vegas "Cat House"
(6:00) ! !! Jurassic Park III ! !!! X-Men ('00, Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman. A man leads a group of mutant ! !! Catwoman ('04, Act) Halle Berry.
('01, Sci-Fi) Sam Neill. TV14
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(5:30) ! !!! Eve's Bayou
Black Girls Rock! "2013" TVPG
! !! Cadillac Records ('08, Dra) TVMA
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Buddies make it their mission to help their 40-year-old friend lose his virginity. TVMA
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Inside Man "Immigration"
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! !!! Grandma's Boy ('06, Com) Linda Cardellini. A 35! !! Scott Pilgrim vs. the World ('10, Act) Michael Cera.
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Naked Castaway "Stranded" Castaway "Give Me Shelter"
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Kickin' It
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NCAA Football Houston vs. Central Florida (L) TVPG
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(6:30) ! !!! Dirty Dancing ('87, Dan) Jennifer Grey,
! !! Grease ('78, Mus) John Travolta. A leather-jacketed boy and a
! !! Grease
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Food Network's 20th
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Restaurant Divided
Ins and Dives Ins and Dives TVG
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Blessing ('05, Dra) TVG
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! !! Step Up 2: The Streets ('08, Dra) TV14
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Sam &amp; Cat
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Untold "When It Rains"
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(6:30) ! !! Firehouse Dog ('07, Com) Josh Hutcherson. A
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Family Guy
The Cleveland Boon "Bitches
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"Career Day"
"My Hero"
Family
TV14
Crazy Sexy Cool: The TLC Story TVMA
! !! Diary of a Mad Black Woman ('05, Dra) Kimberly Elise. TV14
Bones
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother
Rules of Eng

7 PM
(6:00) ! !!

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

I, Robot ('04,
! Taken 2 ('12, Act) Liam Neeson. TV14
Boxing HBO After Dark TVMA
Sci-Fi) Will Smith. TV14
! !! Ocean's Twelve ('04, Act) George Clooney. Danny
(:10) Strike Back Origins
! !! Life of Pi ('12, Fant) Irrfan Khan, Adil Hussain, Suraj
TVMA
Ocean and his crew pull off a heist in Europe. TVPG
Sharma. A man begins an epic journey with a tiger. TVPG
Homeland "Still Positive"
! On the Road (2013, Adventure) Garrett Hedlund, Kristen
(:05) Masters of Sex "Thank
Masters of Sex "Catherine"
TVMA
Stewart, Sam Riley. TVMA
You for Coming" TVMA
TVMA

�Page B8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 8, 2013

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 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 Friday,
Nov. 8, 2013:
This year you will be more optimistic and expressive than you have
been for quite a while. If you are
single, you might feel bowled over
by your popularity. Before you know
it, you could be acting like a kid in a
candy store. Date as much as you
want. You will know when you connect with someone significant. If you
are attached, the two of you could
have your share of misunderstandings, but you’ll learn to see them as
quick passages. You will relate on an
intense level. AQUARIUS is a loyal
friend.
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 could be dealing with
someone who thinks he or she is in
charge. You might prefer to not take
this person on. Anger builds and
comes out in a meeting. Choose your
words with care; you won’t be able to
take them back later. Tonight: Let the
fun begin.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Keep reaching out to someone at a distance. This person might
be resistant at first, but you will be
able to help him or her see your
logic. A discussion about your feelings with a child or loved one needs
to happen soon, because the other
party is on edge. Tonight: Chat over
dinner.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You have an opportunity to
reach out to someone you really care
about. It is time for a one-on-one
conversation. Make a point of having
this chat as soon as possible; otherwise, you might be unduly concerned
or uptight. Tonight: Have a discussion over dinner.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You have a great sense of
when is and when is not a good time
to bend for someone else. A friend
or loved one could have pushed you
very hard. You might decide to go
along with this person one more time
only to be sorry that you did later.
Tonight: Curb your anger.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Get as much done as
possible. You’ll want to free up time
earlier than on most Fridays. You will
enter a very social period this weekend. You might network some, but
you also will become a party animal
soon enough. Tonight: Sort through
your many invitations and requests.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Focus on the lighter side
of what is happening. Detach, and
you won’t get triggered. Tempers will
flare otherwise, and you easily could
lose your temper. Be aware that tension might build all day long. Tonight:
Make plans that will allow you to work
through some of the stress.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
You might have difficulty
getting going. So much so, you might
decide to cancel plans and assume
the role of couch potato. Everyone
needs to take some much-needed
down time sooner or later. That time
is now for you. Tonight: You might
get a last-minute urge to go out.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You are all smiles and seeing life from a Friday point of view.
How you deal with a very assertive
friend might surprise him or her. You
rarely lose your temper when dealing with this person, so he or she will
need to be ready to accept this side
of you. Tonight: Mosey on home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21)
Deal with a money matter
as quickly as possible. You could be
pondering an important decision. If
you can take the weekend to mull
over this issue, do. Try not to get into
a tiff with a difficult associate. Return
calls later in the afternoon. Tonight:
Go with the most fun option.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You might have been toying with the idea that you would like
to do something silly. Your sense
of humor and the time you spend to
involve someone else demonstrates
your caring far more than you realize.
Tonight: Be clear about your plans in
order to avoid a misunderstanding.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You might want to
be a couch potato just for a day.
Everyone, including you, needs time
off to do what he or she wants —
even if that is doing nothing. You put
yourself out for others so often that
you do not make enough time for
you. Tonight: Catch a second wind.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Use the daylight hours to the
max, when success seems to travel
with you. Your unusual creativity and
charisma draw many people toward
you. Complete as much as you can
today, while the Force is with you.
Tonight: Vanish. Let others wonder
where you are.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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