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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

Fruth Pharmacy
donates to Marshall
scholarship .... Page 2

Mostly cloudy.
High 68. Low 40.
........ Page 2

Wahama wins state
title .... Page 6

OBITUARIES
Harry L. Bailey, 95
Dale W. Baker Jr., 61
Marvin R. Blake, 78
Steve Carpenter, 80
Harry J. Cunningham, 65
John S. Dillard, 86
Margaret L. Kennedy, 86

Loretta Layman, 73
Sharon A. Miller, 69
Edna Price, 97
Kathleen A. Roslinski
Betty I. Ross, 80
Louise Swain, 90
Mabel Tawney, 94
Stephanie R. Thacker, 36
Maxine Burleson Tolbert, 81

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 221

CCA awarded funds for emergency program
Staff Report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

CHESHIRE — The GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency has been chosen to receive
$12,956 in Gallia County and
$11,946 in Meigs County to supplement targeted emergency programs for residents of the two
counties, beginning this winter.
According to a release submitted by the Agency, the funding
will be made available as soon as

the grants are approved.
The selection was made by the
National Board made up of affiliates of national voluntary organizations and chaired by the Emergency Food and Shelter Program
(EFSP). United Way of America
will provide the administrative
staff and function as the fiscal
agent. The Board was charged
to distribute funds appropriated
by Congress to help expand the
capacity of food and shelter programs in high-need around the
country.

A local board made up of Gallia and Meigs County citizens
will determine how the funds
awarded to the counties are to be
distributed among the emergency food and shelter programs run
by local service organizations in
the area. The local board will be
responsible for recommending
agencies to receive the funds and
any additional funds available
under this phase of the program.
Under the terms of the grant
from the National Board, local

governmental or private voluntary organizations chosen to receive funds must: be non-profit;
have an accounting system and
conduct an annual audit; practice
non-discrimination; have demonstrated the capability to deliver
emergency food and/or shelter
programs; and if they are a private voluntary organization, they
should have a voluntary board.
Gallia and Meigs Counties
have distributed Emergency
Food and Shelter funds previous-

ly with the Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency and the
Gallia County Council on Aging
participating. These agencies
were responsible for providing
numerous meals, in addition to
housing and utility assistance.
Further information on the
program may be obtained by
contacting Sandra Edwards,
Emergency Services Division Director, Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency at 367-7341 or
992-6629.

Farmers Bank hosting
holiday fund raisers
for disadvantaged
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — This holiday season, the Farmers
Bank and Savings Company is lending a hand to a
Gallia County organization
which helps that county’s
underprivileged families
put presents under the
Christmas tree and shoes
on the feet of their children.
Farmers has teamed up
with the Gallia County
Community
Christmas
Project (GCCCP) to assist
in collecting new or gently
worn shoes. They will also
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Kids lined up to sit on Santa’s lap at the Riverbend Arts Council following the parade on Saturday.

Countdown to Christmas
MIDDLEPORT
—
People of all ages lined
the streets of Middleport
on Saturday for the annual Christmas parade
and festivities.
The Middleport Community Association —
who organizes the annual event — hosted a
Christmas market, tree
lighting, carriage rides,
parade and a visit from
Santa on Saturday.
The Christmas Market, now in its second
year, saw an increase in
vendors and shoppers
during the day on Saturday.
Following the parade
kids of all ages lined up
to visit Santa at the Riverbend Arts Council.

Eastern Local Board
approves agenda items
Sarah Hawley

shawley@heartlandpublications.com

Santa arrived in Middleport by horse and carriage during Saturday’s annual Christmas parade.

be hosting a Jingle Bell 5k
Walk/Run Race fundraiser
at the Riverside Golf Club
in Mason, W.Va. on Saturday, Dec. 8.
For those who cannot
make it to the Jingle Bell
race to take the shoes they
have collected, they can be
dropped off at any of the
Farmers Bank locations
prior to the walk/run.
Registration for the
race will begin at noon
with the kickoff at 2 p.m.
Prizes will be awarded for
overall winners as well as
age group winners. There
See BANK ‌| 2

TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Eastern Local Board
of Education approved several agenda items during a
recent board meeting.
Supplemental contracts
were approved with Josh
Fogle, winter weight room
coordinator; John Ryan
Hill, assistant varsity basketball coach; Susan Parsons, elementary musical
director.
Substitute teachers approved for the 2012-13
school year were Cayla
Adkins, Helen Andrews,
Martin D. Carter, Rebecca
Castelino, Susan Cochran,
Beth Anne Connolly, Emily Hill, Julie D. Hollen and
Noel Cassaundra.
Substitute aides approved were Clarissa M.
Dougherty, Bethany Lee,

Heather Rollins and Christina Schreckengost.
Student teachers approved from Ohio University were Keri Christerson, Dane Puterbaugh and
Dwayne Wadley.
Classified substitutes approved were (bus driver)
Dave Burt, Patricia Nutter,
(cook) Connie Osborne.
The resignation of Carolyn Crowner as the high
school Spanish teacher,
effective Jan. 11 was accepted.
Bylaws, policies, administrative guidelines, and
forms provided by NEOLA
were approved as recommended.
Open enrollment was denied to one student.
The eighth grade trip
to New York City was approved for May 20-22.
A purchase order for the
See AGENDA ‌| 2

One For The Ages!

Photos by Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

There’s a first time for everything. Mason County has its first-ever state football champion after Wahama captured a thrilling 43-42 overtime victory over Madonna Saturday night in the Class
A state championship game at Wheeling Island Stadium in Wheeling, W.Va. The White Falcons finished off a program-best 14th victory in style Saturday night, as Wahama — trailing 42-41
in OT — went for two and succesfully converted after quarterback Trenton Gibbs scampered into the end zone untouched. Pictured above are the 2012 Class A state football champions, the
Wahama White Falcons. Pictured at the side is 18th-year Wahama head coach Ed Cromley lifting the 2012 Class A championship trophy. Complete details of Wahama’s state title game are
available on A6 in the sports section of Tuesday’s The Daily Sentinel.

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Community Calendar Meigs County Local Briefs
Tuesday, Dec. 4
POMEROY — Decorate your very own Gingerbread
House at the Pomeroy Library. The event will begin at 6
p.m. Supplies will be furnished. Sponsored by the Meigs
County District Public Library and the Friends of the
Meigs County Library.

MEIGS SWCD office move
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District will
have limited phone service for a time
due to an impending office move into
new quarters. Until further notice
call 992-4282.

Wednesday, Dec. 5
Free Community Dinner
HARRISONVILLE — Scipio Township monthly meetRACINE — The Racine Methodist
ing will be held at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire DepartChurch will host a free community
ment.
dinner at the church on Saturday,
Dec. 8. Service will begin at noon
Thursday, Dec. 6
POMEROY — Meigs County Retired Teachers will and continue as long as the food
meet at noon at Trinity Congregational Church. Presen- lasts.
tation on the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center
Food for Fines
and a musical program. Members asked to take school
POMEROY — The Meigs County
supplies and/or books for children and young people.
Call 992-3214 for luncheon reservations by Wednesday. District Public Libraries will be accepting non-perishable food items
Guests welcome.
in lieu of fines during the month of
December. These items will be disFriday, Dec. 7
POMEROY — Meigs County P.E.R.I. Chapter 74 will tributed to area food banks. For more
hold their meeting at noon at the Mulberry Community information please contact (740)
Center. This will be our Christmas potluck lunch. Drinks 992-5813.
and paper items will be supplied. Bring covered dish(s).
C-8 town hall meeting
Also a gift for the gift exchange.
POMEROY — Town hall meetings
on C-8 contamination will be held
Saturday, Dec. 8
POMEROY — Breakfast and pictures with Santa will at the Mulberry Community Center
take place from 9-11 a.m. at the Meigs County District in Pomeroy at 7 p.m. on Thursday,
Public Library in Pomeroy. Pictures will be provided free Dec. 6. Information will be given on
of charge. Sponsored by The Meigs County District Pub- a planned class action legal suit for
lic Library and The Friends of the Meigs County Library. those who have been physically damPOMEROY — The Meigs County District Public Li- aged as a result of C-8 contaminabrary will host a Family Movie Matinee at 2 p.m. at the tion.
Pomeroy Library. The film will be Arthur Christmas
Dinner and Variety Show
(PG). Refreshments will be provided.
RACINE — Southern High
School’s reconnecting youth class is
Monday, Dec. 10
hosting a dinner and variety show on
POMEROY — The Meigs County Veterans Service December 8, 2012 at 6:00. Tickets are
Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at the office, located at on sale at the high school for $10.00,
117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 3 in Pomeroy.
which includes a chicken noodle dinner. A toy drive will also be held that
Tuesday, Dec. 11
evening, students are asking that you
SYRACUSE — “A Carleton Christmas” will be held at
6:30 p.m. in the Carleton School Gymnasium. Refreshments will be served. For more information call (740)
992-6681.
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer Board 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.
SALISBURY TWP. — The Salisbury Township Trustees will meet at 5 p.m. at the home of Manning Roush.

bring a new, unwrapped toy to the
dinner. Proceeds from the evening
will support the Reconnecting Youth
Program. Any questions, contact
Amy Roush at Southern High School
949-2611.
Potential Boil Advisory
POMEROY — The hydrant replacement project in the Village of
Pomeroy will begin on Dec. 3. Water
customers within the village may
experience a boil advisory or temporary water shut off for repair and connection of water lines. Anyone with
questions is asked to contact Village
Administrator Paul Hellman.
St. Nicholas Day Celebration
POMEROY — Grace Episcopal
Church invites children (K-4th grade)
to join us for a day of fun with games
and activities, pizza, holiday movie
and popcorn from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
on Saturday, December 8. Please call
the church office at 992–3968 for reservations.
Look Good, Feel Better workshop
POMEROY — Look Good, Feel
Better, a free program for women in
cancer treatment will be held from
1-3 p.m. on Dec. 10 at the Pomeroy
Public Library. Each participant will
receive a make up kit worth $300,
along with receiving tips on care
of skin and hair during treatment.
Registration is required at 1-800-2272345.
Meth Lab Awareness Training
RACINE — Methamphetamine
Lab Awareness training will be held
from 6-8 p.m., Dec. 4, in the Southern
Elementary Cafeteria. The instructor
will be Dennis Lowe from Ohio BCI.

Anyone interested in helping to stop
the drug problem is welcome to attend.
Upcoming Blood Drives
MEIGS COUNTY — Two upcoming blood drives have been scheduled in Meigs County. The first will
be from 1-6 p.m. on Dec. 26 at the
Mulberry Community Center. The
second is scheduled from 9 a.m.-2
p.m. on Dec. 31 at the Middleport
Church of Christ
Immunization clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct a
Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
p.m. on Tuesday at the Meigs County
Health Department. Please bring shot
record and medical card or commercial
insurance if applicable. Children must
be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian. A donation is appreciated,
but not required. Flu and pneumonia
shots will also be available for a fee. For
more information contact the Health
Department at 992-6626.
Natural Resources Assistance
Council Meeting Notice
MARIETTA — There will be a
meeting of the Natural Resources
Assistance Council at Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development District, 1400 Pike Street,
Marietta, Ohio, on Wednesday, December 5, at 10 a.m. to rate and rank
Round 7 grant applications for funding. Questions regarding this meeting should be directed to Michelle
Hyer at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District at
(740) 376-1025 or mhyer@buckeyehills.org.

Agenda
From Page 1
elementary yearbook was
approved in the amount of
$5,409.25.
The board approved the
minutes of the previous
meeting, financial reports,
and an amendment to permanent appropriations.
The board entered into
executive session for the
consideration of the appointment, employment,
dismissal, discipline, promotion, demotion, or com-

pensation of a public employee, official or student.
Present at the meeting were board members
Adam Will, Floyd Ridenour, Mark Hall and john
Rice, Superintendent Scot
Gheen, and Chief Financial
Officer Lisa Ritchie.
The next meeting of the
Eastern Local Board of Education will be held at 6:30
p.m. on Wednesday, Dec.
19 in the Eastern Elementary Library Conference
Room.
Submitted photo

Bank

Dr. Kevin Yingling, dean of the School of Pharmacy, seated, accepting a donation from Lynne Fruth, president and chairman of
the board with Fruth Pharmacy. Also pictured are, left, Craig Kimble, Pharm. D., Director of Pharmacy and Clinical Services for
Fruth, and, right, Robert Stanton, M.B.A., Pharm.D., Director of Experiential Learning, Marshall School of Pharmacy.

From Page 1
will also be a prize awarded for best costume.
Refreshments and homemade hot soup will be waiting
for the runners at the finish line. Applications for participation are available at any Farmers Bank location or on
facebook.com/myfarmersbank, or from Brian Howard at
brian.howard@fbsc.com.
Heather Crum, Farmers marketing manager, said that
applications for assistance through the GCCCP were
distributed through the school system in Gallia County
and given to senior citizens through the Gallia County
Council on Aging/Senior Resource Center. In 2011, the
GCCCP donated to over 1,050 children and 200 seniors
in the Gallia County region. The expectation is that even
more people will receive Christmas help this year.
She said that more information on the program can be
obtained by contacting the Body of Christ Outreach Ministry at 740-388-8050 or e-mail them at bocom4gallia@
ymail.com.
For more information about the shoe collection drive
or the Jingle Bell 5k, contact Farmers Bank in Pomeroy at
740-992-4121 or e-mail brian.howard@fbsc.com.

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Fruth Pharmacy donates to Marshall scholarship
Register Staff
mdrnews@mydailyregister.com

HUNTINGTON — Marshall University’s School
of Pharmacy recently announced it has received a
$10,000 gift for student
scholarships from West Virginia-based Fruth Pharmacy.
According to a release
from Marshall University,
Lynne Fruth, president and
chairman of the board with
Fruth Pharmacy, recently
met with Dr. Kevin Yingling,
dean of the School of Phar-

macy, to present to donation
to the scholarship fund.
Yingling discussed the
School of Pharmacy’s relationship with Fruth Pharmacy, saying it is fundamental to the growth of
the school.
“We are grateful for the
unwavering support from
the Fruth Pharmacy family,” Yingling said. “Lynne
Fruth and her team understand the importance of
educating the pharmacists
of tomorrow and they have
become valued advisors to

all of us at the Marshall
School of Pharmacy.”
Fruth, also discussed the
company’s history of providing financial help to many
students.
“Fruth Pharmacy has long
partnered with Marshall
to provide scholarships for
Fruth employees and other
deserving students,” Fruth
said. “Specifically helping
the Marshall School of Pharmacy is a natural partnership for us. Fruth Pharmacy
is committed to assisting in
the development of the next

generation of pharmacists
that will be serving the rural
communities of West Virginia and Ohio.”
It was reported that recipients of the Fruth Pharmacy
Scholarship for the School of
Pharmacy will be from Mason, Cabell, Kanawha, Putnam, Wayne, Roane, Jackson
and Wood counties in West
Virginia or Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Lawrence, Athens,
Washington and Pike counties in Ohio and have an
interest in community pharmacy.

Meigs Church Calendar
St. Nicholas Day
Celebration
POMEROY — Grace

Episcopal Church invites
children (K-4th grade) to
join us for a day of fun with

Ohio Valley Forecast
Tuesday: Showers likely, mainly after 4 p.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near 68. Light south wind becoming
southwest 8 to 13 mph in the morning. Winds could gust
as high as 24 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter
of an inch possible.
Tuesday Night: Showers, mainly before midnight.
Low around 40. Northwest wind around 8 mph. Chance
of precipitation is 80 percent. New precipitation amounts
between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 48. Northwest
wind 8 to 13 mph.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 25.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 50.
Thursday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 41.
Friday: A chance of showers. Cloudy, with a high near
57. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Friday Night: Showers likely. Cloudy, with a low
around 39. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Saturday: A chance of showers. Cloudy, with a high
near 49. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.

games and activities, pizza,
holiday movie and popcorn
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on

Saturday, Dec. 8. Please call
the church office at 992–
3968 for reservations.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 42.28
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.39
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 70.46
Big Lots (NYSE) — 28.04
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 37.32
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 66.30
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 7.79
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.249
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 33.60
Collins (NYSE) — 56.04
DuPont (NYSE) — 42.39
US Bank (NYSE) — 32.05
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 20.82
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) —
46.00
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 40.81
Kroger (NYSE) — 26.78
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 51.55
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 69.43
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.50
BBT (NYSE) — 27.91

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.39
Pepsico (NYSE) — 69.87
Premier (NASDAQ) — 10.64
Rockwell (NYSE) — 78.35
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —
13.32
Royal Dutch Shell — 66.69
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) —
42.11
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 71.34
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.61
WesBanco (NYSE) — 21.64
Worthington (NYSE) — 22.93
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions for December 3, 2012, 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.

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

11th annual Keep Your Fork race held
POMEROY — The 11th annual “Keep Your Fork” 5k run/walk
was held on Saturday, Nov. 24.
The walk is held each year in
memory of Brandi Thomas, who
died in 2002 as a result of injuries sustained in an automobile
accident. Brandi was a member
of the Meigs cross country and
track and field teams. The fund is
used to provide academic scholarships for Meigs High School
graduates who participated in
high school cross country and/or
track and field.
Funds raised from the event
benefit the Brandi Thomas Memorial Scholarship Fund.
A total of 242 people participated in this year’s event, up
from 201 last year.

2012 Results
Overall Winners: (Male) Michael Owen — 18:16, Cody Hanning — 19:29, Jacob Swindell —
20:05; (Female) Taylor Varnadoe
— 21:57, Lara Perrin — 24:07,
Nicole Burt — 24:22.
Age 6-13: (Male) Dillon Mahr
— 20:35, Zach Bartrum —
21:44, Conner Wolfe — 21:51,
Cole Betzing — 22:23, Jared
Kennedy — 23:40; (Female)
Baylee Wolfe — 32:03, Mallory
Hawley — 45:04, Ashley Burns
— 48:01, Meredith Cremeans —
48:58.
Age 14-17: (Male) Brett
Radenbaugh — 20:17, Jonathan
Hayman — 20:33, Brett Jones
— 21:04, Mitchell Howard —
21:15, Jaxon Meadows — 21:34;

(Female) Larissa Hayman —
26:03, Kelsey Hudson — 27:34,
Haley Kennedy — 27:35, Gracie
Hayman — 29:09, Josie Hayman
— 30:00.
Age 18-22: (Male) Joseph
Morgan — 22:43, Bryan DeLong — 23:07, Steven Sauters
— 25:23, Andrew O’Bryant
— 27:28, Matthew Kirk —
29:18; (Female) Alexis Swisher — 26:29, Chelsea Freeman
— 28:22, Melissa Johnson —
29:45, Maddie Smith — 30:55,
Jordan Anderson — 31:46.
Age 23-29: (Male) Ross Well
— 23:55, Steven McDaniel —
24:55, Marc Barr — 28:26,
Zach Swisher — 30:07, Justin
Workman — 34:08; (Female)
Bobbi Owen — 29:07, Beth

Hysell — 29:23, Katie Jeffers
— 34:56, Samantha Brabham
— 35:01, Erica Poole — 37:03.
Age 30-39: (Male) Brandon Newton — 23:50, Adam
Thomas — 24:45, Steve Beha
II — 27:33, Daniel Otto —
29:02, Brian Allen — 31:01;
(Female) Holly DeLong —
25:04, Lauren Hanson —
27:25, Molly Miller — 28:24,
Autumn Thomas — 35:12,
Kelly Vernon — 41:18.
Age 40-49: (Male) Charles
Angell — 21:52, Ross Swisher — 23:31, Jim Freeman —
25:09, Brent Miller — 25:52,
Miles Layton — 26:28; (Female) Brenda Scott — 26:27,
Monica Turner — 31:22, Diane Knowlton — 33:22, Tera

Newton — 34:49, Mary Freeman — 38:31.
Age 50-59: (Male) Alan
Horwitz — 21:12, Jimmer
Soulsby — 21:37, Bill Gardner
— 22:34, Rick Haft — 23:13,
David Freeman — 23:35;
(Female) Stephanie Snow —
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Ask Dr. Brothers

Duchess of Cambridge Co-worker’s death
expecting a baby
stuns officemate
LONDON (AP) — The most
widely anticipated pregnancy
since Princess Diana’s in 1981
is official: Prince William’s wife,
Kate, is pregnant.
St. James’s Palace announced
the pregnancy Monday, saying
that the Duchess of Cambridge —
formerly known as Kate Middleton — has a severe form of morning sickness and is currently in a
London hospital. William is at his
wife’s side.
News of the pregnancy drew
congratulations from across the
world, with the hashtag “royalbaby” trending globally on Twitter.
The couple’s first child will be
third in line to take the throne
— leapfrogging the gregarious
Prince Harry and possibly setting up the first scenario in which
a U.K. female heir could benefit
from new gender rules about succession.
The palace would not say how
far along the 30-year-old duchess is, only that she has not yet
reached the 12-week mark. Palace
officials said the duchess was hospitalized with hyperemesis gravidarum, a potentially dangerous
type of morning sickness where
vomiting is so severe no food or
liquid can be kept down. They
said she was expected to remain
hospitalized for several days and
would require a period of rest afterward.
“It’s not unusual for pregnant
women to get morning sickness,
but when it gets to the point
where you’re dehydrated, losing
weight or vomiting so much you
begin to build up (toxic) products
in your blood, that’s a concern,”
said Dr. Kecia Gaither, director of
maternal fetal medicine at Brookdale University and Medical Center in New York.
The condition is thought to
affect about one in 50 pregnant
women but Gaither said less than
one percent of women with the
condition need to be hospitalized.
The news came just days after
the duchess, on a royal appearance, played field hockey with
children at her former school.
Not only are the attractive
young couple popular — with
William’s easy common touch reminding many of his mother, the
late Diana — but their child is expected to play an important role
in British national life for decades
to come.
William is second in line to the
throne after his father, Prince
Charles, so the couple’s first child
would normally become a monarch — eventually.
The confirmation of Kate’s
pregnancy caps a jam-packed year
of highs and lows for the young
royals, who were married in a lavish ceremony at Westminster Abbey last year.
They have traveled the world
extensively as part of Queen
Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilee
celebrations and weathered the
embarrassment of a nude photos
scandal, after a tabloid published
topless images of the duchess.
Joe Little, managing editor of
Majesty magazine, said the news
bookended a year that saw the
royal family riding high in popular esteem after celebrations of
Queen Elizabeth II’s 60 years on
the throne.
“We’re riding on a royal high at
the moment at the end of the Diamond Jubilee year,” he said. “People enjoyed the royal romance last
year and now there’s this. It’s just
a good news story amid all the
doom and gloom.”

Speculation about when the
couple would start a family has
been rife since their wedding.
Diana got pregnant just four
months after her wedding to
Prince Charles in 1981. She also
reportedly suffered from morning sickness for months and complained of constant media attention.
“The whole world is watching
my stomach,” Diana once said.
She gave birth to William in
1982 after 16 hours of labor. At
his birth, William was given a
baby tag marked ‘Baby Wales’ and
a 41-gun salute was fired in Hyde
Park and the Tower of London.
In September 1983, roughly a
year after the birth of William,
Buckingham Palace announced
that Diana was pregnant for a
second time. However, within a
week, Diana suffered a miscarriage when on holiday at Balmoral, Scotland.
In 1984, she became pregnant
again and gave birth to Harry.
American tabloid speculation of
Kate’s pregnancy has been rampant for months. One newspaper
even cited anonymous sources
talking about Kate’s hormone levels. Others have focused on the
first signs of the royal bump.
The palace said the royal family
was “delighted” by the news. British Prime Minister David Cameron admitted he got a heads-up
about the pregnancy, saying he
found the news “quite difficult” to
keep to himself and expressing his
confidence the duo will make “absolutely brilliant parents.”
The leaders of Britain and the
15 former colonies that have the
monarch as their head of state
agreed in 2011 to new rules which
give females equal status with
males in the order of succession.
Although none of the nations
had legislated the change as of
September, the British Cabinet
Office confirmed that this is now
the de-facto rule.
Those changes make Kate’s
pregnancy all the more significant
for the royal family, according to
Ingrid Seward, editor-in-chief of
Majesty magazine.
“This is the first child who will
be an heir to the throne whatever
sex they are,” she said. “It’s a new
beginning.”
Graham Smith of anti-monarchy
group Republic called Kate’s pregnancy a “private, personal matter” for her and William, saying
the flood of media coverage was
disproportionate.
“We’ve heard today that our future head of state is on the way.
It’s a pretty bizarre way of choosing someone for public office,” he
said.
On the couple’s tour of Malaysia, Singapore, the Solomon Islands and Tuvalu in September,
William reportedly said he hoped
he and Kate would have two children.
In the chilly night air at London’s Camden market, concert
goers and shoppers seemed surprised by the news — though all
agreed that it had been widely anticipated.
“It feels a lot like a Christmas
present for the nation!” said Ravian Van Den Hil, 26, a student from
Rotterdam in the Netherlands. “It
makes me feel quite happy.”
Others wondered why Britain
continues to spend so much supporting the royal family. “I don’t
think it’s a good thing,” said Stephen Jowitt, 63, as he strolled
down Camden High Street. “It
reinforces a class system.”

take a step
Dear Dr.
toward keepBrothers: I
ing her name
work in an
alive, and may
office where
be the kind of
everyone
is
catharsis you
pretty close.
need. Don’t
We were all
be afraid to
shocked when
talk
about
one of our colher with colleagues died
leagues
—
in a car accithey may just
dent. It’s been
be waiting for
more than a
someone to
month now,
and work is Dr. Joyce Brothers do that.
***
beginning
Syndicated
Dear
Dr.
to return to
Columnist
Brothers: I
normal, but
will be workI can’t seem
to get into the swing of ing at a new place in a few
things. I keep thinking weeks, and I made a deciabout her and what she sion when I took the job
would be doing at the not to be an open book
next cubicle, and so forth. anymore. I have some
How can I get past this things in my personal life
and do my job? Everyone that I’d prefer not to share
else seems to be OK ex- with co-workers, as I have
cept me. No one is talk- in the past. I donwant to
ing about her anymore. seem standoffish, but I
don’t want to be gossiped
— S.L.
Dear S.L.: When a about or have my privacy
loved one who is a mem- invaded. Is there a way
ber of the family dies, to seem friendly without
there’s a lot of support answering too many perthat comes from other sonal questions? I really
family members, from don’t know how to handle
the community, church this. — C.E.
Dear C.E.: Since you’re
or synagogue, and from
friends. The bereaved in a new job and haven’t
often take a long time to yet revealed much about
heal and to regroup. In yourself, you’re in a good
a business setting, the position to take the reins
mourning process often is on your personal life this
short-circuited. Whatever time and stay in control.
the co-worker’s position Your co-workers and the
in the company, there’s management are bound
an institutional need to
get back to work, back
to normal and carry on
as dispassionately as possible. The setting often
just is not conducive to
comforting one another
and ruminating about the
suddenly missing associate. This kind of setting
probably is contributing
to your difficulty in moving past the death of your
co-worker.
Others may feel the loss
keenly as well but feel
the need to put on their
game face at work. Perhaps it would help if you
took it upon yourself to
organize a special memorial of some sort for your
friend — plant a tree on
the grounds, or purchase
an office bench or even a
piece of art — that will remind you of your co-worker and honor her memory.
It would empower you to

Local residents
become
Tastefully Simple
consultants
COOLVILLE — Judy
Avis and Teresa Calaway
of Coolville are new consultants with Tastefully Simple, a national direct sales
company featuring easy-toprepare foods.
As consultants they offer food samples at home
taste-testing
parties,
along with easy ideas for
everyday meals, recipes,
serving suggestions and
fun. For more information
about Tastefully Simple,
visit tastefullysimple.com.

to be curious about the
new person, so it is essential that you decide in advance just what facts you
want them to know when
those first questions start
to arise. Take care not to
overdo it; there is nothing
like a colleague who appears overly secretive to
make others determined
to dig into his or her
background. If you don’t
want to invite personal
questions, keep your desk
items neutral. A picture
of your husband, boyfriend or kids is best kept
at home.
You’ll need a little time
to identify the gossipy individuals in your office;
when you do, stay away
from the water cooler or
break room when they
gather there. Make sure
you don’t invite overly
friendly conversation by
being curious about others. Leaving your personal life at home and
keeping your guard up at
work can be a lonely and
stressful business. Work
on solving any personal
issues you are trying to
hide from at work so that
you eventually can feel
free to confide in a trusted co-worker if you feel
the need to have a friend.
(c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 4

Scenes from the Middleport Christmas Parade

Several people enjoyed carriage rides through Middleport prior to Saturday’s parade.
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Shoppers browsed through items of the nearly 20 vendors on Saturday at the Middleport
Christmas Market held at the Riverbend Arts Council.

The Boy Scouts took part in the annual parade.

Members of the community band provided music in the park before the tree lighting and the
parade.

Fire trucks from Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland participated in the parade.

Several people enjoyed cookies and hot chocolate prior to the parade.

Members of the Meigs Marching Band flag corp march in the parade on Saturday.

American Legion Post 128 carried the American Flag in the parade.

The Meigs Marching Band played Christmas songs as they traveled the parade route through
town.
Several Girl Scouts participated in the Middleport Christmas parade.

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Betty Irene Ross

Betty Irene (Fortney)
Ross, 80, Middleport,
passed away on Saturday,
December 1, 2012, at her
residence. She was born
on December 25, 1931, in
Macfarlan, West Virginia,
to the late William Joseph
and Delphia Mae (Roberts)
Fortney. Mrs. Ross retired
from the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
She is survived by her
husband whom she married on March 10, 1951,
David Linton Ross; daughter, Betty Mae (Joe) Edwards
of Cheshire, Ohio; sons, David Edward Eddie (Tiffany)
Ross of Bidwell and William Emerson “Bill” Ross of Burbank, California; nine grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; brothers, Bob (Jean) Fortney and Willard Fortney;
sister, Christine Lyons; and several nieces and nephews
She is preceded in death by her parents; sister and
brother-in-law, Evajean and Billy L. “Mike” McKnight;
sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Emerson and Elizabeth
Well; sister-in-law, Garnet Fortney; and brother-in-law,
Wayne Lyons
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday,
December 6, 2012, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow in the Cherry Ridge
Cemetery. Visitation will be held for family and friends
from 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday, December 5, 2012, at the
funeral home.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Harry Lee Bailey

Harry Lee Bailey, 95, of Pomeroy, Ohio, went to be
with the Lord on December 2, 2012, at Overbrook Rehabilitation Center in Middleport, Ohio. He was born on
July 25, 1917, in Chester, Ohio, son of the late Joseph
and Chloe Wood Bailey. He was an electrician and retired
from Foote Mineral. He was a World War II Army Veteran and a lifetime member of the Isaac Walton League
and American Legion, Drew Webster Post 39.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by
his wife, Anna Margaret Bailey; and a son, Billy Bailey.
He is survived by his three children, Brenda Hysell of
Pomeroy, Ohio, Debi (Wes) Withrow of Clinton, Ohio,
and Keith (Peggy) Bailey of Pomeroy, Ohio. He is also
survived by his four grandsons and two great-grandchildren.
A memorial service will be announced at a later date.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in memory of
Harry Bailey at the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy,
Ohio. Arrangements were handled by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
An online registry is available by logging onto www.
andersonmcdaniel.com.

Harry James Cunningham

Harry James Cunningham, 65, of Pomeroy went to be
with the Lord on Thursday, November 29, 2012. He was

born on May 1, 1947, son of Imogene Ruth Young Cunningham and the late James Henry Cunningham.
Harry was a United States Army veteran and a member of the American Legion Post #39. He retired after
many years of service to G&amp;J Auto Parts and Pomeroy
Auto Parts.
He is survived by his mother, Imogene Cunningham;
his wife of forty-four years, Brenda Thomas Cunningham;
daughter, Paula (Terry) Brown; son, Gregory (Lisa) Cunningham; three grandchildren, Samantha Brown, Larissa
Cunningham and Zachary Cunningham; two great-grandchildren, Kasey and Khloe; brother, Michael Cunningham; five sisters, Virginia (Larry) Lee, Frances (John)
Foster, Sue (Robert) Smith, Peggy (Wendell) Ervin and
Mary (David) Shuler; sisters-in-law, Anna Cozart and
Donna Thomas; several nieces, nephews, cousins, aunts,
uncles and numerous friends.
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by a
brother, Johnny and an infant grandson, Matthew Brown.
Graveside memorial services with military funeral honors will be held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, December 5,
2012, at Gilmore Cemetery.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Margaret L. Kennedy

Margaret L. Kennedy, 86, of Rutland, Ohio, passed
away Saturday, December 1, 2012, at Mt. Carmel East
Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.
She was born February 21, 1926, at Rutland, Ohio to
the late Burt and Hazel Brown Davis. Margaret was a
homemaker.
She is survived by a daughter, Pat Beretich; grandchildren, Burt and Jake Kennedy, Maggie Williams, Drake,
Brian and Grant Archer; five great-grandchildren; nephew, Jerry Davis; niece, Joyce Cochran; loving companion,
dog Zoie; and special friend/neighbor, Donna Dassylva.
Besides her parents preceded by husband, Windy Kennedy; son, Perry Kennedy; brothers, Marvin and Max
Davis.
As to Margaret’s wishes there is to be no calling, and
a private graveside service will be held at the family’s
choosing. Arrangement by Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, Ohio.
Online condolences at birchfieldfuneralhome.com.

Edna Whetstone Price

Beloved mother and grandmother Edna Whetstone
Price, 97, passed away at her home in Portland, Thursday, November 29. Born in East Liverpool, Ohio, she
came to live with her Aunt Edna and Uncle Emory Carleton of Syracuse after the death of her parents.
She spent most of her life caring for her family, and
tirelessly gave her time to those around her. An avid needleworker and superb cook, she instilled her love of song,
dance and reading to those around her. After retirement,
she and husband Gayle traveled extensively throughout
the United States making many friends as they went. She
was an accomplished genealogist of the Price, McKinnon, and Whetstone families and was a long time member of the LGAR.
Graduating from Ohio University, she taught school for
thirty-five years, most of which was at Racine Elementary. She immensely enjoyed her third graders and spoke
often of them.

She was preceded in death by her husband of 69 years,
Gayle, and is survived by son James (Joann), and daughter Suzanne (Ron) Cammarata; grandchildren Laura,
Sherrie, Brenda, and Sara; three great-grandchildren;
and two great-great-grand children. A niece, Bev Price
Brougher, nephews, Sam Price and Larry Price, and several cousins also survive her.
She believed that we all reach a place in this wonderful
land when the time comes for the Lord to call us home
to perform more tasks for Him. Now, she is gone to that
place and is joined by her loved ones that she often spoke
of, Gayle and her parents, but is missed greatly here by
those who loved her.
Services will be handled by Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy and will be held at a later date.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to
the Meigs County Humane Society, P. O. Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Kathleen Ann ‘Kathy’ Roslinski

Kathleen Ann “Kathy” Roslinski of Mason, West Virginia, passed away at her residence on November 30,
2012. She was born in Bradford, Pennsylvania to the late
Theodore and Kathleen (Lyons) Hane.
Mrs. Roslinski worked for most of her life at Steve
Story law offices in Pomeroy and a member of the Beta
Sigma Pi sorority.
She is survived by her daughters, Lynn Roslinski and
Barb Roslinski; grandchildren, Ashlee (Rocky) Fraizer
and Michael McWhorter; sister, Mary Drago; brothers,
Dave and Dan Hane; and several nieces and nephews
She is preceded in death by her parents.
A celebration of Mrs. Roslinski’s life will be held at 11
a.m. on Wednesday, December 5, 2012, at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visitation for family and friends will be held one hour prior to the service.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Dale W. Baker, Jr.

Dale W. Baker, Jr., 61, of Belpre, Ohio, died Sunday,
December 2, 2012, at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Thursday, December 6,
2012, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, Ohio.
Burial will be in the Coolville Cemetery. Friends may call
from 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday at the funeral home.

Steve Carpenter

Steve Carpenter, 80, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday, December 1, 2012, at St. Mary’s Medical Center
in Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday,
December 8, 2012, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Marshall Bonecutter officiating. Burial will be at the convenience of the family. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, at the funeral home.

GOP issues
Death Notices
new ‘fiscal cliff’
Marvin Richard Blake
Marvin Richard Blake, 78, of Proctorville, Ohio, died at
offer to Obama home
on Sunday, December 2, 2012.

WASHINGTON
(AP)
— House Republicans on
Monday proposed a new 10year, $2.2 trillion blueprint
to President Barack Obama
that calls for increasing the
eligibility age for Medicare
and lowering cost-of-living
hikes for Social Security
benefits.
The proposal from House
Speaker John Boehner, ROhio, and other Republicans comes in response to
Obama’s offer last week to
hike taxes by $1.6 trillion
over the coming decade but
largely exempt Medicare
and Social Security from
budget cuts.
The GOP plan also proposes to raise $800 billion in
higher tax revenue over the
decade but it would keep
the Bush-era tax cuts — including those for wealthier
earners targeted by Obama
— in place for now.
Boehner said the GOP
proposal is a “credible plan”
for Obama and that he
hopes the administration
would “respond in a timely
and responsible way.” The
offer comes after the administration urged Republicans
to detail their proposal to
cut popular benefits programs like Medicare, Social
Security and Medicaid.
“After the election I offered to speed this up by
putting revenue on the table
and unfortunately the White
House responded with their
la-la land offer that couldn’t
pass the House, couldn’t
pass the Senate and it was
basically the president’s
budget from last February,”
Boehner told reporters.
The Boehner proposal
revives a host of ideas from
failed talks with Obama in
the summer of 2011. Then,
Obama was willing to discuss politically controversial ideas like raising the
eligibility age for Medicare,
implementing a new inflation adjustment for Social
Security cost-of-living adjustments and requiring
wealthier Medicare recipients to pay more for their
benefits.

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A graveside service will be conducted 2 p.m., Wednesday, December 5, 2012, at White Chapel Memorial Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va., by Bethel Wall. Visitation will
be held 6-8 p.m., Tuesday, December 4, 2012, at Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville.

John Simpson Dillard

John Simpson Dillard, 86, of Gallipolis, died Monday,
December 3, 2012, at King’s Daughters Medical Center,
Ashland, Kentucky.
Arrangements will be announced later by the Willis Funeral Home.

Loretta ‘Sis’ Maynard Layman

Loretta “Sis” Maynard Layman, 73, of Proctorville,
Ohio, died Sunday, December 2, 2012, at the Emogene
Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington, W.Va.
A graveside service will be conducted at 1 p.m.,
Wednesday, December 5, 2012, at Highland Memorial
Gardens, South Point, Ohio, by Pastor Ronnie Tyree. In
lieu of flowers the family requests donations be made to
Hospice House of Huntington. Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.

Sharon Miller

Stephanie Renee Thacker

Stephanie Renee Thacker, 36, of Gallipolis, died Sunday, December 2, 2012, at Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be announced by Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home.

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Sharon Ann Nibert Miller, 69, formerly of Gallipolis,
Ohio, died in Groesbeck, Texas, on Friday, November 30,
2012.
The family will be holding a private memorial service
on Saturday, December 8, 2012.
Groesbeck Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

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Louise Estes Swain

Louise Estes Swain, 90, of Bethel, Ohio, formerly of
Crown City, died on Monday, December 3, 2012, at Anderson Mercy Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, December 8,
2012, at Willis Funeral Home. Friends may call from 11
a.m.-1 p.m. prior to the service on Saturday at the funeral
home.

Mabel McBride Tawney

Mabel McBride Tawney, 94, Gallipolis, Ohio, passed
away Wednesday November 28, 2012 at Holzer Senior
Care, Gallipolis, Ohio.
A memorial service will be conducted at noon on
Wednesday, December 5, 2012, in the Grace United Methodist Church, Gallipolis, Ohio, with Revs. Alfred Holley and Bill Thomas, officiating. The family will receive
friends one hour prior to the service. The McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis is honored
to handle the arrangements for the Tawney Family.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations made
to the Grace United Methodist Memorial Fund, 600 2nd
Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.

Maxine Burleson Tolbert

Maxine Burleson Tolbert, 81, of the Evergreen Hills
community, Cottageville, W.Va., died November 30, 2012,
at Hubbard Hospice House West, South Charleston, W.Va.
Service will be 2 p.m., Tuesday, December 4, 2012, at
the Ripley Church of Christ, 112 Jackson Avenue, Ripley, W.Va., with ministers, Clifton McLawhorn and Brent
Dewees officiating. Burial will follow in Blaine Memorial Cemetery, Cottageville, W.Va. Visitation was from 6-8
p.m., Monday, December 3, at Casto Funeral Home, 157
Evans Road, Evans, W.Va.

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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

TUESDAY,
DECEMBER 4, 2012

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Bryan Walters

bwalters@heartlandpublications.com

To the victors go the
spoils.
The Ohio Valley Publishing area had a total of
22 people — 21 players
and one coach — selected
to the 2012 All-Tri-Valley
Conference football teams
in both the Ohio and Hocking divisions, as voted
on by the coaches within
those respective leagues.
The OVP area had 18
choices in the TVC Hocking Division between Wahama, Eastern, Southern
and South Gallia, while
Meigs had four selections
within the TVC Ohio Division. The White Falcons
joined TVC Ohio-champion Athens with a leaguebest eight honorees.
Wahama — the newlycrowned Class A state
champions — had seven
players nominated for All-

TVC Hocking honors, as
well as Ed Cromley being
named the TVC Hocking
coach of the year for a
third consecutive season.
Cromley and the White
Falcons are a perfect 24-0
in Hocking Division play
since joining the TVC back
in the fall of 2010.
Chosen to the All-TVC
Hocking team for Wahama
were seniors Zach WamsPhotos by Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel
ley, Wes Harrison, Crandal
Neal and Trenton Gibbs, Wahama senior quarterback Trenton Gibbs (11) runs into the end zone for the game winning two-point conversion in overtime
while juniors Kane Roush, of the White Falcons’ 43-42 state championship victory Saturday night in Wheeling, W.Va.
Colton Neal and Zach Killingsworth were also named
to the squad.
Wamsley joined Jacob
Koons of Trimble as the
co-defensive players of the
year, while Konner Standley of Trimble was named
the offensive player of the
year in the TVC Hocking.
Eastern had five players selected to the TVC
Hocking squad — which
See TEAMS ‌| 8

Wahama senior running back Zach Wamsley falls into the end zone for one of his three scores during Saturday night’s WHS
state championship triumph at Wheeling Island Stadium.

Wahama goes for 2 in OT,
claims 43-42 win over Madonna
for 1st Class A football title
Gary Clark

Special to OVP

Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Wahama head football coach Ed Cromley receives the Class
A Winning Coach award following the conclusion of Saturday
night’s state championship triumph over Madonna at Wheeling Island Stadium in Wheeling, W.Va. Cromley was named the
TVC Hocking Division coach of the year for 2012 — his third
straight since Wahama joined the TVC back in the fall of 2010.

WHEELING, W.Va. — White Falcons win! White
Falcons win! White Falcons win!
In an emotionally-draining contest for both sides,
coach Ed Cromley’s Wahama White Falcon football
team brought a first-ever Class A state football championship home to the Bend Area following a thrilling
43-42 triumph over fourth-rated Madonna Saturday
Night at Wheeling Island Stadium.
Cromley rolled the dice after Zack Wamsley’s oneyard touchdown run in the extra period and elected
to go for the win on the point-after attempt. Veteran
quarterback Trenton Gibbs made the most of a broken
play and bullied his way into the end zone with the
winning two-point conversion.
“The decision wasn’t really that difficult,” Cromley
said following the determination to go for the win inSee TITLE ‌| 8

OVP Sports Schedule South Gallia fends off Defenders in OT, 46-41
Bryan Walters

Tuesday, Dec. 4

Boys Basketball
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 6 p.m. (ppd.)
Alexander at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Winfield at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Sherman at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Nitro at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Jackson, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Dec. 5

Girls Basketball
Wahama at Chas. Catholic, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at Warren, 6 p.m

bwalters@heartlandpublications.com

RIO GRANDE — An 11-6 run
in overtime allowed the South
Gallia boys basketball program
to begin the Larry Howell era on
good note Friday night following
a 46-41 victory over Ohio Valley
Christian in a non-conference
matchup at Newt Oliver Arena on
the campus of the University of
Rio Grande.
The Rebels (1-0) led 12-7, 2013 and 25-19 after each of the
first three quarters of play, but
the Defenders (3-1) rallied with a
16-10 surge in the fourth to pull

the game even at 35-all through
the end of regulation.
South Gallia had four different players contribute to the
scoring column in the extra session — compared to just two
OVCS players in overtime —
which ultimately allowed SGHS
to pull away for the five-point
decision.
Brayden Greer paced the Rebels
with 17 points, followed by Kody
Lambert and Ethan Swain with seven markers apiece. Michael Wheeler was next with six points, while
Clifford Stapleton and C.J. Johnston each chipped in four markers.
Trevor Slone rounded out the win-

ning score with one point.
T.G. Miller led the Defenders
with a game-high 23 points before
fouling out late in the contest.
Chance Burleson was next with
10 points, followed by Richard
Bowman with four markers. Marshall Hood and Phil Hollingshead
also added two points apiece to
the losing effort.
The Rebels were 11-of-19 at the
free throw line for 58 percent,
while Ohio Valley Christian went
7-of-18 at the charity stripe for 39
percent. South Gallia made one
more field goal than OVCS (1514), but SGHS also had a 5-0 edge
from three-point territory.

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

ANNOUNCEMENTS
SERVICES
Business

• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available
Gary Stanley

740-591-8044

60353251

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

Please leave a message

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

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25 years
Experience

CALL

Marcum
Construction
Commercial &amp;
Residential

General
Remodeling
Room Additions
Rooﬁng
Garages
Pole Barns

Mike W. Marcum, Owner

1-740-985-4141 or 1-740-416-1834
Not afﬁliated with Marcum Rooﬁng &amp; Remodeling

Legals

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the Rutland Civic Center Electrical
and Plumbing Project, Meigs
County Ohio As per specifications in bid packet will be received by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their office
at the Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 P.M.,
December 20, 2012 and then
at 1:15 P.M. at said office
opened and read aloud for the
following: Rutland Civic Center Electrical and Plumbing Upgrade, Rutland Village, Meigs
County.
Specifications, and bid forms
may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Grants Office,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone
# 740-992-7908 . A deposit of
0 dollars will be required for
each set of plans and specifications check made payable to . The full amount will be returned within thirty (30) days
after receipt of bids.
Contractors must be certified
to bid on the project.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an
amount of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs
County Commissioners
or by
Legals
certified check, cashiers check,
or letter of credit upon a
solvent bank in the amount of
not less than 10% of the bid
amount in favor of the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners . Bid Bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or agent
signing the bond. The Engineer’s Estimate for the electrical upgrade is $40,000. The Engineer’s estimate for the
plumbing upgrade is $6,700.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid for the Rutland
Civic Center Electrical and
Plumbing Upgrade Project and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders is called to
all of the requirements contained in this bid packet, particularly to the Federal Labor
Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon Wages, various insurance requirements, various
equal opportunity provisions,
and the requirement for a payment bond and performance
bond for 100% of the contract
price.
No bidder may withdraw his
bid within thirty (30) days after
the actual date of the opening
thereof. The Meigs County
Commissioners reserve the
right to reject any or all bids.
Tom Anderson, President
Meigs County Commissioners
11/29 12/4 12/11

Notices

Pets

Ruths' Christmas Trees- By
Boyd Ruth 10am-6pm
cut Blue/Norway spruces,
Douglas/Frasier/Canaan firs,
white pines, dug trees,
wreaths, grave blankets, 412ft. $12 - up, exit St. Rt. 681
at Darwin take Old 33 North to
Shade then follow signs
740-591-1937, 740-592-1958
SERVICES
Child / Elderly Care
Caregiver needed on Sat-Sun
in New Haven area. Experience/References required.
Contact 304-674-0937.
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

J &amp; C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience, insured
No job too big or small.
304-675-2213
304-377-8547

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
FINANCIAL
Sealed proposals for the Rutland Civic Center Electrical
and Plumbing Project, Meigs
Money To Lend
County Ohio As per specificaNOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
tions in bid packet will be rethe Ohio Division of Financial Inceived by the Meigs County
stitutions Office of Consumer AfCommissioners at their office
fairs BEFORE you refinance your
at the Courthouse, Pomeroy,
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 P.M.,
of requests for any large advance
December 20, 2012 and then
payments of fees or insurance.
at 1:15 P.M. at said office
Call the Office of Consumer AffiANNOUNCEMENTS
opened and read aloud for the
ars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
following: Rutland Civic Cenlender is properly licensed. (This
ter Electrical and Plumbing UpNotices
is a public service announcement
grade, Rutland Village, Meigs
from
the Ohio Valley Publishing
County.
Grave Blankets $5-$30; live
Company)
Specifications, and bid forms
Wreaths $10 &amp; up; Sue's
may be secured at the office of 47310 Morningstar Rd., RaEDUCATION
Meigs County Grants Office,
cine, Oh 740-949-2115
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone
Business &amp; Trade School
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
# 740-992-7908 . A deposit of
PUBLISHING CO.
0 dollars will be required for
Gallipolis Career
College
Recommends that you do
each set of plans and specific(Careers Close To Home)
Business with People you
ations check made payable to Call Today! 740-446-4367
know, and NOT to send Money
. The full amount will be re1-800-214-0452
through the Mail until you have
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
turned within thirty (30) days
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
Investigated the Offering.
after receipt of bids.
for Independent Colleges and Schools
Contractors must be certified
1274B
Pictures that have been
to bid on the project.
ANIMALS
Each bid must be accompanplaced in ads at the
ied by either a bid bond in an
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
amount of 100% of the bid
must be picked within
Pets
amount with a surety satisfact30 days. Any pictures
ory to the aforesaid Meigs
AKC
Siberian
Husky puppies
that are not picked up
County Commissioners or by
shots, wormed, vet ck'd, $350,
will
be
discarded.
certified check, cashiers check,
(740) 534-2974 or 643-2731
or letter of credit upon a
Help
WantedGeneral
solvent bank in the amount of
not less than 10% of the bid
amount in favor of the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners . Bid Bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or agent
signing the bond. The Engineer’s Estimate for the electricJOIN OUR TEAM
al upgrade is $40,000. The Engineer’s estimate for the
O’BLENESS HEALTH SYSTEMS
plumbing upgrade is $6,700.
Bids shall be O’Bleness
sealed and Memorial Hospital has the following openings in Nursing:
marked as Bid for the Rutland
Civic Center Electrical and
CLINICAL
Plumbing Upgrade Project
and COORDINATOR-EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
JOB QUALIFICATIONS:
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs
Countyfrom
Commissioners
Graduate
an approved school of nursing. Current Registered Nurse licensure in State of
Courthouse
Ohio. BSN preferred. Certiﬁcation preferred in Emergency Nursing. Minimum of two years hospital
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
experience
as Emergency
nurse required. Management experience preferred. ACLS
Attention
of bidders
is called Department
to
and PALS required. BTLS preferred. Current in CPR.
all of the requirements contained in this bid packet, particularly to the Federal Labor
JOB SUMMARY:
Standards
Provisions
and is
DavThe Clinical
Coordinator
responsible for coordinating patient care activities within their department.
is-Bacon
Wages,
various insurOversees
the operation
of the unit in the absence of the nurse manager to provide quality patient
ance requirements, various
care.
Promotes
the spirit of O’Bleness Memorial Hospital by displaying caring, courteous behavior in
equal opportunity provisions,
with patients
their families, coworkers, physicians, and guests of the hospital. Promotes
anddealing
the requirement
forand
a payment
performance
thebond
spirit and
of O’Bleness
Memorial Hospital by displaying caring, courteous behavior in dealing with
bond for 100%
of the contract
patients
and their families, coworkers, physicians, and guests of the hospital.
price.
No bidder may withdraw his
NURSES PAIN MANAGEMENT--PART-TIME
bid within thirty (30)REGISTERED
days after
JOB QUALIFICATIONS:
the actual date of the opening
Graduate
anCounty
approved school of nursing. Must have a current Ohio license. 6-12 months
thereof.
The from
Meigs
Commissioners
reserve
the required. ACLS required (must obtain within 3-6 months of hire). BLS
registered nurse
experience
right to reject any or all bids.required (must obtain within 3 months of hire).
Tom Anderson, President
JOB SUMMARY:
Meigs County Commissioners
The 12/4
Registered
11/29
12/11Nurse coordinates and directs activities of an assigned unit with the guidelines of
Nursing Policies and Procedures. Promotes the spirit of O’Bleness Memorial Hospital by displaying
caring, courteous, behavior in dealing with patients and their families, coworkers, physicians, and
guests of the hospital.
O’Bleness Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Dr.
Athens, OH 45701
740 592 9227
740 592 9444 (fax)
www.obleness.org
EOE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

60375932

Miscellaneous

Cocker Spanial Puppies for
sale Full Blooded, 740-3880401.
FOUND - Border Collie type
dog (Blond) female. Bladen
Road area Call (740)256-1399
FREE: loveable kittens, blk/wh
&amp; grey/wh, approx 8 wks, each
will be spayed or neutered
free. 740-416-0799
AGRICULTURE
MERCHANDISE
Collectibles
Former PPHS paperweight
w/stand. "Gone but Not Forgotten". $12 while they last.
Judy Corbin 304-675-5416
Fuel / Oil / Coal / Wood / Gas

$60.00/truck load. Delivered
within 15 Miles. Seasoned
Hard Wood. 304-882-2721 or
304-882-2537. Raymond
Zuspan &amp; Son
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

AAG
Ever Consider a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years old?
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cash flow! Safe &amp; Effective!
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ACCELLER CLASSIFIED
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Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller
today to learn more!
CALL 1-866-636-5984
Bowflex Climber Tread 5000
with remote Heart module list
for $3,999 asking $1,800 New
Condition Has to be picked up
Call 740-446-4988
CREDIT CARD DEBT
Buried in Credit Card Debt?
Over $10,000? We can get you
out of debt quickly and save
you thousands of dollars! Call
CREDIT CARD RELIEF for
your free consultation
1-888-838-6679
HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK
OR BOAT TO HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day
Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free
Towing, All Paperwork Taken
Care Of. 888-740-6292
HIGH SPEED INTERNET
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MEDICAL GUARDIAN
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Service $29.95/Month CALL
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877-356-1913

Houses For Rent

MY COMPUTER WORKS
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections-FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help.
1-877-617-7822
MyION DIABETICS
ATTENTION DIABETICS with
Medicare. Get a FREE talking
meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE
home delivery! Best of all, this
meter eliminates painful finger
pricking! Call 877-310-5568
PARK AVENUE
Buy Gold &amp; Silver Coins - 1
percent over dealer cost For a
limited time, Park Avenue Numismatics is selling Silver and
Gold American Eagle Coins at
1 percent over dealer cost.
1-888-284-9780
Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Autos
2010 Chrysler Sebring Touring, 46,000 miles, $9,000
OBO &amp; 2009 Dodge Avenger
Red, 72,000 miles $8,000
OBO. 740-446-7665
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2BR, $575mo - Downtown,
clean, renovated, newer appl,
lam floor, water sewer &amp; trash
incl. No pets. Application req.
727-237-6942

2BR, upstairs Apt. 133 Third,
$375 monthly 740-339-3639 or
740-339-2494

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$385 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Middleport, 2 BR furnished apt,
no pets, dep &amp; ref, 740-9920165
Nice 2BR Apartment - water &amp;
trash included - $600mo plus
$600 deposit - 446-9585

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Houses For Rent
2 BR house in Pt. Pleasant.
Very clean. No pets. Nonsmoker. Phone 1-304-6751386

Help Wanted- General

3 homes available for rent - applications available @ Wiseman Real Estate 446-3644
4 BR, NO PETS, Syracuse,
OH. $575/mo 304-675-5332 or
740-591-0265
5 Bedroom Farmhouse, 10mi
S. on Rt. 2. Bottled gas heat.
$550/mo, $550 deposit. Call
614-491-4850
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Accounting / Financial
Home Loan Specialist
Peoples Bancorp Inc. seeks
qualified Home Loan Officer to
originate mortgage loan business through traditional and
non-traditional means.
Responsible for meeting the
standards and objectives
defined by management for
mortgage loan sales and cross
-selling objectives. Can utilize
FNMA conforming, FHA, portfolio, service release, state
Housing Agencies, Rural
Housing and/or Equiline
products to achieve the assigned goals. Assumes overall
responsibility for the residential mortgage loan from application to closing.
Experience with FNMA (Fannie Mae) and /or FHLMC
(Freddie Mac) underwriting
guidelines, policies and procedures from prospecting
sales to loan application to
successful closing preferred.
Must have excellent verbal and
written communication skills.
Demonstrated sales experience is required. Competitive
compensation package includes health, life, disability
and 401k. Please apply on-line
by visiting www.pebo.com, selecting the Career Opportunities link and completing the
electronic application.
EOE
Local bank seeks experienced
loan officer, 3-5 yrs of consumer lending experience plus
background in customer service. Excellent benefit package. Salary commensurate
with experience. Submit resume to: The Daily Sentinel,
P. O. Box 729-1127, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
Construction
FOX Engineering &amp; FOX Construction is seeking an energetic individual to fill an Assistant Project Manager's position.
College degree is not required.
Must be proficient in Microsoft
Office (Excel and Word). Must
have experience in the construction industry.
Mail Resumes to:
Att: HR
FOX Engineering – FOX Construction
101 North Court Street
Ripley, WV 25271
Drivers &amp; Delivery
R &amp; J Trucking in Marietta, OH
is hiring Semi-Dump &amp; Bulk
Tank Drivers for new routesl .
Applicants must be at least 23
yrs have min of 2 yr of commercial driving exp. Clean
MVR, Haz-mat Cert.with CDLA Excellent health &amp; dental insurance, 401(K), Vacation, Bonus pays and safety awards.
Contact Kenton at 1-800-4629365 E.O.E.
Manufactured Homes

Par Mar Stores
are seeking applicants for

Customer Service Associates and
Sandwich Artists (in locations with Subway)
located at
15289 Huntington Road, Gallipolis Ferry, WV
56 Vine Street Gallipolis, OH
2943 State Route 141 Gallipolis, OH
Apply in person at any location or on
line at parmarstores.com

2 BR House with car Garage
at 945 Roush Lane Cheshire
$500mo plus utilities Call 740645-2698

For Rent 3 BR &amp; 1 1/2 bath
Mobile home, Nice, NO PETS,
$475 mo. plus deposit 4467275
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

60375949

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sports Briefs
EHS Holiday Biddy
Basketball Tourney

TUPPERS
PLAINS
— The boys and girls
basketball teams at East-

ern High School will be
hosting a Biddy Basketball Tournament for both
boys and girls teams in
grades 4-6 at the EHS

gymnasium. The fundraiser event will start on
Saturday, Dec. 22, and
run through Sunday, Dec.
30. The deadline to enter

a team is Monday, Dec.
17. There is an entry fee
and each team is guaranteed three games —which
includes two pool-play

games and a tournament
contest. For more information, contact EHS
boys coach Corey Britton at (419) 934-5891 or

by email at brittonc2@
gmail.com. You may also
contact EHS girls coach
John Burdette at (740)
541-7132.

Teams
From Page 6
included seniors Joey Scowden,
Alex Amos, Tim Minear and
Max Carnahan, as well as junior
Wyatt Westfall.
Southern was represented by
a trio of juniors in Tyler Barton, Casey Pickens and Trenton
Deem, while South Gallia had
two choices in juniors Ethan
Spurlock and Jacob White.
The four selections for Meigs
in the TVC Ohio were seniors
Dillon Boyer and Chris Jones,
as well as junior Ty Phelps and
sophomore Devon Cundiff.
Joey Burrow of Athens was
the offensive player of the year in
the TVC Ohio, while teammate
Tanner Wood won the defensive
player of the year award. Athens frontman Ryan Adams was
named the TVC Ohio coach of
the year.
2012 All-TVC Hocking
Football
Zach Wamsley Sr. LB Wahama
Kane Roush Jr. HB Wahama
Wes Harrison Sr. DE Wahama
Crandal Neal Sr. LB Wahama

Trenton Gibbs Sr. QB Wahama
Colton Neal Jr. LB Wahama
Zach Killingsworth Jr. C Wahama
Joey Scowden Sr. QB Eastern
Alex Amos Sr. WR/DB Eastern
Tim Minear Sr. C Eastern
Max Carnahan Sr. WR/DB
Eastern
Wyatt Westfall Jr. OL/DL Eastern
Tyler Barton Jr. TB/LB Southern
Casey Pickens Jr. DE/OG
Southern
Trenton Deem Jr. RB/LB
Southern
Ethan Spurlock Jr. FB South
Gallia
Jacob White Jr. DE South Gallia
Konner Standley Jr. QB/LB
Trimble
Jacob Koons Jr. FB/LB Trimble
Casey Degarmore Sr. DT Trimble
Brett Downs Sr. T Trimble
Jon Stevens Jr. G/DT Trimble
Wyatt Deak Sr. WR/DB Trimble

Delbert Crum Jr. FB/DE Federal Hocking
Peyton Seel Jr. LB/RB Federal
Hocking
Kyle Jackson Sr. QB/DE Federal Hocking
Terrance Mayle Sr. DE/FB
Federal Hocking
Andrew Smith Sr. RB/NT Federal Hocking
Manney Tullius So. RB/S Belpre
Tyler Martin Sr. TE/DT Belpre
Nate Teeters Sr. FB/LB Belpre
Garrett Sinift Jr. QB/DB Miller
Stephen McGrath Jr. OL/DL
Miller
Hunter Munjas Sr. RB/LB Waterford
Jacob Stewart Sr. OL/DL Waterford
Offensive Player of the Year —
Konner Standley, Trimble
Defensive Players of the Year
— Zach Wamsley (Wahama) and
Jacob Koons (Trimble)
Coach of the Year — Ed Cromley, Wahama
Final TVC Hocking Standings
Wahama 8-0; Trimble 7-1;
Eastern 5-3; Federal Hocking

5-3; Southern 4-4; Belpre 4-4;
South Gallia 1-7; Miller 1-7; Waterford 1-7
2012 All-TVC Ohio Football
Dillon Boyer Sr. TB/QB Meigs
Chris Jones Sr. OL/DL Meigs
Ty Phelps So. TE/LB Meigs
Devon Cundiff Jr. TB/DB
Meigs
Joey Burrow So. QB Athens
Tanner Wood Sr. LB Athens
John Keifer Sr. OT/DT Athens
Skylar Schwarzel Sr. WR/LB
Athens
Tyler McIntosh Sr. WR/DB
Athens
Trae Williams So. RB/DB Athens
Dakotah Thompson Sr. DE/
OG Athens
Austin McCulloch Sr. DL/OG
Nelsonville-York
Clint Handa Sr. TB Nelsonville-York
Joey Young Sr. QB NelsonvilleYork
Isaac Andrews Sr. T/T Nelsonville-York
Zach Mays Sr. FB/TB Nelsonville-York

Gage Miller Sr. QB/FS Alexander
Chris Grant Sr. RB/LB Alexander
Tyler Smith Sr. RB/LB Alexander
Nathan Stover Sr. SE/C Alexander
Noah Massie Sr. RB/DB
Wellston
Marcus Mullens Sr. FB/TE
Wellston
Dakota Brown Sr. WR/DB
Wellston
Austin Wheatley Sr. OL/LB
Wellston
Dylan Bartoe Jr. C Vinton
County
Tim Ousley Fr. LB Vinton
County
Offensive Player of the Year —
Joey Burrow, Athens
Defensive Player of the Year
— Tanner Wood, Athens
Coach of the Year — Ryan Adams, Athens
Final TVC Ohio Standings
Athens 5-0; Nelsonville-York
4-1; Meigs 2-3; Alexander 2-3;
Wellston 2-3; Vinton County 0-5

Title
From Page 6
stead of the tie in overtime. “Neither team could
get a defensive stop and I
didn’t want the game to
become a battle of extra
points. Too many things,
such as the high snap after our first touchdown,
can go wrong so we decided to go for the twopoint conversion and we
were fortunate enough to
put the ball into the end
zone and come away with
the win. Madonna is a
great football team.”
The contest was a
roller-coaster ride for a
multitude of Wahama
followers who made the
nearly three-hour trek to
the northern Panhandle.
The exciting, nail-biting
contest
materialized
into undoubtedly the
greatest sporting event
in WHS history to the
delight of the huge Falcon assembly. The Bend
Area gridders concluded
the 2012 season with a
record-setting 14-0 slate
and definitely earned the
White Falcons and the
TVC Hocking Division
Conference the respect
it so richly deserves. Madonna finished the year
with a 12-2 mark.
Kane Roush and Zack
Wamsley paced the White
Falcons throughout the
evening with three touch-

downs and a successful
two-point
conversion
apiece. Roush was voted
as the Bend Area team’s
Player of the Game following his outstanding
performance. The junior
speedster ran for 170
yards in 23 carries while
also catching all five of
the White Falcons’ pass
completions for an additional 78 yards.
Wamsley’s play both offensively and defensively
also warranted Player of
the Game considerations
with the prominent senior leader gaining 112
yards on the ground in
21 carries. Wamsley also
added a point-after touchdown kick and emerged
with a team-high 10 tackles on the night.
Senior
quarterback
Trenton Gibbs connected
on 5-of-8 passes in the
contest for 78 yards and
picked up another 56
yards in eight carries for
the White Falcons. Gibbs
threw a successful twopoint conversion pass as
well as scoring the gamewinning points with his
conversion run in overtime.
Although
Roush,
Wamsley
and
Gibbs
grabbed the spotlight for
their accomplishments in
the victory, once again it
was the Bend Area offensive line that shared the

limelight with the trio.
The play of Zac Killingsworth, Wesley Harrison, Tyler Nutter, Lane
Sparks, Josh Haddox,
Clayton Sines and Jesse
Hesson controlled the
line of scrimmage and enabled Wahama to rush for
338 yards and 416 yards
of total offense.
As was feared going
into the championship
tilt, Wahama saw entirely too much of Madonna’s
extraordinary
junior quarterback Ross
Comis. Comis ran for
five touchdowns, threw
for another, picked up
145 yards on the ground
in 27 carries and passed
for an additional 131
yards which isn’t bad for
a night’s work. He also
led the Blue Dons defensively with a game high
11 tackles and not surprisingly was selected as
the Player of the Game
for Madonna.
The game see-sawed
back-and-forth throughout the entire evening
but ultimately came
down to a trio of key
factors which proved
to be the difference in
the game. The first two
components were fiveyard penalties assessed
the Blue Dons at critical
times with the third factor being the Falcons’
good fortune of winning

the coin toss in overtime.
Madonna committed a
running into the kicker
penalty on fourth down
during the White Falcons
first drive of the third period. The infraction gave
Wahama a first down by
inches and the Bend Area
team went on to score
what became a crucial goahead touchdown.
The second Madonna
mistake occurred following the Blue Dons final
score in regulation in the
game’s final minute. The
Hancock County team
pulled to within a point
and called time out to
consider their options on
the point after try.
Madonna regulated its
kicker to the sideline and
was going for the win
with a two-point conversion attempt but failed to
get the play off in time
and was assessed a penalty which necessitated
a successful kick attempt
to knot the score at 35-35
and send the contest into
an extra period.
In overtime, Wahama
won the coin toss and
elected to play defense
first. Madonna scored on
its initial overtime possession and booted the
point after for a 42-35
lead. During the Falcons
overtime
opportunity,
Gibbs connected with
Roush on an 18-yard gain

Miscellaneous

to the one before Wamsley carried it in for the
score to set up what became the winning decision on the point after
attempt.
To recap the scoring in
the opening period, Comis put Madonna in front
with a 17-yard run followed by the first of six
straight successful pointafter kicks by Matthew
Greene. Wamsley closed
the gap with a nine-yard
run on the final play of
the quarter but the PAT
snap was high giving the
Blue Dons a 7-6 edge after one quarter.
Comis added a twoyard run in the second at
the 11:19 mark before a
Wamsley one-yard burst
with 8:09 left in the half.
The WHS point after
pass fell incomplete and
the score stood at 14-12
at the intermission break.
WHS gained its first
lead of the game in the
third period when Roush
broke loose on a 17-yard
run. Wamsley made a
one-handed catch of
Gibbs’ PAT pass to push
Wahama in front by a 2014 margin.
Comis came back with
a 12-yard run just over a
minute later as the Blue
Dons regained the lead
at 21-20. The White Falcons battled back again
at the 2:27 juncture when

Roush scored from four
yards away with the junior also running the
two-point conversion to
make it a 28-21 contest
after three quarters.
Comis opened the
fourth period with a sixyard scoring run to make
it a 28-28 affair before
Roush again put the Falcons in front with a 41yard run. Wamsley’s kick
with 6:45 left in regulation made it a 35-28
WHS edge before a 21yard touchdown pass at
the :48 mark from Comis
to Marcello Biondello
evened the count at 3535 to set up the unforgettable overtime events.
For nine Falcon seniors
their incredible careers
are finalized with a Class
A state championship
crown. Brandon Rickard,
Benny Youkers, Louis
Menendez, Zack Wamsley, Austin Jordan, Justin Tillis, Crandal Neal,
Trenton Gibbs and Austin Cole played a huge
role in achieving an astounding 39-2 record on
the gridiron since their
respective
sophomore
seasons.
Wahama has 31 straight
regular season victories
and is also a perfect 24-0
in TVC Hocking Division
play during their three
years in the conference.

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, december 4, 2012

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 Tuesday,
Dec. 4, 2012:
Extremes mark your year.
Sometimes you go way overboard
enjoying yourself. You also become
very demonstrative and expressive.
If you are single, hold back a little, as
a new person might not understand
where you are coming from. If you
are attached, your loved one could
be taken aback by this change. This
person initially might be oversensitive,
but after he or she makes an adjustment, a great time will be had by all.
Excessive communication seems to be
happening all around you. Try to avoid
misunderstandings by confirming what
you hear and also by clarifying anything
that does not make sense. LEO is as
expressive as you are.
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)
HHHHH Express more of your feelings. Someone could respond with total
confusion. You might not understand
what eludes this person. Consider that
it might just be that this person does
not know how to take you. Tonight: Let
the fun begin.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH You could come across as
being irritable or tenacious when you
are teasing several friends. Be careful! Someone else might not read
this behavior as it is intended. Your
actions could be the source of a misunderstanding. Laugh and lighten up.
Tonight: Play it low-key, please.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You have the ability to
express yourself clearly. You can’t
seem to get past a hassle or a problem,
which is a result of others not understanding you. Invite those who seem
confused into a conversation in order
to figure out where the mix-up lies.
Tonight: Catch up on a friend’s news.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH You will buy a loved one a gift
or a token of affection, which could be
separate from this person’s Christmas
present. Your thoughtfulness makes a
big difference, yet there is an element
of confusion surrounding this gift. Listen
and share openly. Tonight: So what if
you overindulge?
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH You experience clarity with
your feelings, and it opens you up to
new possibilities and exciting changes.
Nevertheless, in a discussion about a
particular topic today, you might feel as
if you are wading in quicksand and that
someone is not getting your message.

Tonight: All smiles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH You might feel as if you are
playing a game of “Who’s on first,
What’s on second” with someone. You
just can’t seem to get clarity, as nearly
every question leads to more questions.
Say little, and become the observer in
order to get more answers. Tonight: Do
a vanishing act.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH You might want to approach
a situation in a different way. You’ll
deal with others better and will succeed
more often if you work within groups.
The confusion that mounts will be shortlived. Perhaps someone involved just
needs to relax. Tonight: Where your
friends are.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH Take a look at the amount of
work or errands you need to complete
before making other commitments, as
enticing as they might be. A long lunch
with a loved one could make you very
happy. A touch of chaos adds to the
day’s intrigue. Relax. Tonight: Could
be late.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You are right in your element
and are willing to gain a better sense of
what is needed. A partner or an associate might be vested in adding confusion, which makes it necessary and
wise to postpone your decision. Look at
the big picture. Tonight: Read between
the lines.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Work through and deal
with a problem involving a partner.
Expressing compassion could be difficult amid all the confusion. You might
want to rethink a decision that seems
like a good idea. Give yourself time to
come up with an adequate conclusion.
Tonight: Chat over dinner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Defer to someone else, and
remain sure of yourself. You want to
understand where he or she is coming
from. Let this person follow the natural
course that is determined by his or
her thinking, and both of you will be
pleased with the end results. Tonight:
Just do not be alone.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Pace yourself, and know what
your expectations are. A loved one
might try to determine exactly what it
is that you want. His or her questions
make little sense to you. Follow through
on what you know to be best, yet be
kind to this person. Tonight: Try a relaxing activity.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

www.mydailysentinel.com

OHSAA State Football
Championship Roundup
Div. I: Cincinnati Moeller 20, Toledo
Whitmer 12
CANTON (AP) — Spencer Iacavone’s
efficient passing and a stout defense
helped Cincinnati Moeller defeat Toledo
Whitmer for the Ohio Division I championship 20-12 Saturday night at Fawcett
Stadium.
The Crusaders (12-3) won their seventh
title — first since 1985. They lost title
games in 1989, 1991 and 1997.
Iacovone went 15 of 19 for 161 yards
and a 7-yard touchdown to Keith Watkins
for Moeller, which used a high-powered offense to get to its 12th title game overall
— then won with defense. Moeller opponents averaged 25.3 points in 14 games.
Whitmer’s total was the lowest against the
Crusaders this year.
The Panthers (14-1), in their first title
game, got 288 total yards from quarterback Nick Holley, who passed for 196 and
two TDs.
Div. II: Toledo CC 16,
Trotwood-Madison 12
MASSILLON (AP) — Amir Edwards
has rushed for 185 yards and two touchdowns to help Toledo Central Catholic
win its second Ohio state Division II football championship by beating defending
champion Trotwood-Madison 16-12.
The 14-1 Fighting Irish held TrotwoodMadison running back Isreal Green to 56
yards on 14 carries Friday night. A year
ago, Green had 326 yards and six touchdowns when the Rams won the title.
Trotwood-Madison is 12-3. It got a pair
of touchdown passes from Messiah Deweaver in the fourth quarter. He hit Ryon
Lucas from 13 yards with 9:20 to play and
connected with Demarcus Wilson from 24
yards with 2:38 left.
Toledo Central Catholic also won the
title in 2005.
Div. III: Akron SVSM 42, Bellevue 21
CANTON (AP) — Newman Williams’
spectacular 41-yard touchdown run helped
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary beat Bellevue
42-21 Saturday for the Division III state
football championship.
The Fighting Irish (13-2) won their fifth
title, and their first since 1988.
Williams’ run, on a fake punt, was the
highlight. The 215-pound junior rumbled

20 yards around the left end, broke three
tackles and carried a defender the final 5
yards to score.
Seconds later, Williams intercepted
a pass at his own 47. Five plays later, he
scored from 5 yards to make it 35-14.
Perris Campbell ran for 165 yards and
three TD’s for the Irish.
Jalen Santoro had TD passes of 27, 13
and 27 yards for Bellevue (13-2), in its
first title game.
Clinton-Massie beats
St. Clairsville in Div. IV
CANTON (AP) — Bayle Wolf ran for
220 yards and scored five touchdowns to
lead Clinton-Massie to its first state football championship, 46-36 over St. Clairsville in Division IV on Friday.
Wolf scored on a 9-yard run and 36-yard
pass from Tyler Uetrecht in the first three
minutes for the Falcons (15-0). They totaled 822 points this year, a state record
for any level.
St. Clairsville (14-1) rallied from a 19-0
deficit in its first title game. The Red
Devils got within 39-36 as Matt Kinnick
passed for 437 yards. The senior quarterback had scoring throws of 7, 76, 9 yards
and 46 yards to Jerrid Marhefka.
Marhefka had nine receptions and a
title-game record 272 yards.
Wolf intercepted a pass with 1:30 left to
help preserve the win.
Div. V: Coldwater 10, Kirtland 9
MASSILLON (AP) — Austin Bruns
passed for 233 yards and one touchdown
as Coldwater took the Division V state
football championship away from Kirtland
10-9 Saturday in a rematch of the 2011
title game.
The Cavaliers (15-0), ranked No. 1 in
the final Associated Press poll, earned
their third title, and first since 2007.
Kent Sanborn | submitted photo
Bruns, who ran for 97 yards, passed 7
yards to Mitch Schoenherr for a 7-0 lead. Gallia Academy senior Jimmy Clagg (54) dribbles past a Rock Hill defender during Friday
The Hornets (14-1) tied it on a 4-yard pass night’s boys basketball contest in Pedro, Ohio.
from Scott Eilerman to Matthew Finkler.
Kyle Bergman’s 28-yard field on the first
half’s final play put Coldwater up 10-7.
Kirtland got within 10-9 when Sam
Skiljan tackled Brody Hoying in the end
zone for a safety in the fourth.
Hoying intercepted a pass with 1:05 left
to preserve the win.

Blue Devils roll past Rock
Hill in opener, 56-40
Bryan Walters

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followed by Cody Call and
Jimmy Clagg with nine
marker each. Nick Clagg
added seven points to the
winning cause, followed
by Justin Bailey with six
points and Aaron Jackson
with five markers.
Seth Atkins and Wes
Jarrell rounded out the
scoring with four and two
points, respectively. Bailey
and Clagg both hauled in
five rebounds apiece in the
victory.
Austin Collins paced
Rock Hill with a doubledouble effort of 10 points
and 10 rebounds, followed
by Layden Delawder with
nine points and Joey Stidham with seven markers.

Clinton leads Martinsburg to AAA threepeat
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) — Justin
“Cookie” Clinton threw for two touchdowns and ran for another Saturday to
lead No. 2 Martinsburg to a 38-14 win
over top-seeded Cabell Midland for the
Bulldogs’ third straight Class AAA championship.
Clinton passed for 127 yards and threw
for 93 more at Wheeling Island Stadium.
Teammate Trey Boyd rushed for 193 yards
and two touchdowns.
Boyd set a Class AAA championship
game record for the longest run from
scrimmage with an 83-yard scoring dash
in the second quarter. Morgantown’s
Thomas Porchia held the previous mark
with an 80-yard run against Nitro in 1998.
Cedric Brown had TD catches of 7 and
30 yards for Martinsburg, which had 416
total yards of total offense.
The Bulldogs (13-1) led 28-7 at halftime and became the second team to win
three straight Class AAA championships.
Charleston High accomplished the feat
from 1968-70. Martinsburg has won 41 of
last 42 games over the past three seasons.
David Gaydosz rushed for 133 yards
and two scores to lead Cabell Midland
(13-1). Lowell Farley also topped the cen-

tury mark for the Knights, rushing for 120
yards.
It was the first trip to the championship game ever for Cabell Midland. The
Knights had made the semifinals in 2000,
‘03 and ‘05.
Clinton finished the year with 1,542
rushing yards and 24 TDs on the ground
to go along with 1,726 passing yards and
18 scores through the air.
Martinsburg’s defense, which yielded
just three touchdowns in its first three
playoff games, was stout again Saturday
against a Cabell Midland offense averaging 36 points. Martinsburg’s Dean DeSana had a game-high 7.5 tackles, including
a sack.
Gaydosz scored on a 1-yard run in the
third quarter to cut Cabell Midland’s deficit to 35-14 and the Knights were driving
again to start the fourth quarter following
Martinsburg’s first punt. But Cabell Midland failed to convert on fourth-and-long
on consecutive possessions.
Cabell Midland was a combined 5 for 19
on third and fourth downs.
Martinsburg’s Tyler DeHaven capped
the scoring with a 48-yard field goal.

ULM-Ohio matchup set for Independence Bowl

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PEDRO — A good start
led to better finish for
the Gallia Academy boys
basketball team Saturday
night during a 56-40 season-opening victory over
Rock Hill in a non-conference matchup in Lawrence
County.
The visiting Blue Devils
(1-0) shot 48 percent from
the field while jumping out
to leads of 15-7 and 33-17
through two periods of
play. The Redmen (0-1)
never came within single
digits the rest of the way,
as both teams netted 23
points apiece in the second

half — allowing GAHS to
secure the 16-point triumph.
Gallia Academy —
which led 43-29 through
three quarter of play —
connected on 21-of-44 field
goal attempts and were
also 11-of-20 at the free
throw line for 55 percent.
RHHS outrebounded the
guests by a 32-29 overall
margin and also went 13of-47 from the floor for 28
percent. The hosts were
also 11-of-16 at the charity
stripe for 69 percent and
committed 19 turnovers,
compared to just 15 for
GAHS.
Reid Eastman led Gallia
Academy with 12 points,

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expires 12/31/2012.

60374256

SHREVEPORT,
La.
(AP) — Louisiana-Monroe, playing in its first bowl
game, will meet Ohio in
the Independence Bowl.
The
Independence
Bowl selected Ohio (8-4,
4-4 Mid-American Conference) after being told
Louisiana Tech was not
yet ready to accept an invitation the Dec. 28 contest that could have been
a matchup of two north
Louisiana schools.
The Warhawks (8-4,
6-2 Sun Belt Conference)
announced Saturday that
they had accepted an invitation to play in Shreveport, which is a drive of
less than two hours from
Monroe.
The Warhawks played

in two overtime games
against Southeastern Conference opponents this
season, defeating Arkansas
and losing to Auburn. ULM
now heads into the postseason having won seven
of its last nine games.
“To have a historic season culminate in a bowl
such as the Independence
Bowl and the great city
of Shreveport is extra
special,” said LouisianaMonroe coach Todd Berry.
“This team continues to
work very hard. The ULM
faithful can be very proud
of this team both on and off
the field and can know that
we will give a maximum
effort toward bringing the
Independence Bowl trophy
home with us.”

The Bobcats, whose
selection was announced
Sunday night, opened the
2012 season 7-0, including a victory at Penn State.
Ohio was ranked as high
as No. 25 in the AP poll,
but lost four of its last five
games.
Ohio will be playing in
its fourth straight bowl and
second in Louisiana since
2010, when the Bobcats
fell to Troy in the New Orleans Bowl.
Ohio and ULM will be
meeting for the first time.
It will be the first appearance for Ohio in the Independence Bowl, but the
second for coach Frank Solich, coached Nebraska in a
27-23 loss against Ole Miss
in 2002.

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>kennedy</name>
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    <tag tagId="3609">
      <name>roslinski</name>
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    <tag tagId="1858">
      <name>swain</name>
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    <tag tagId="2933">
      <name>tawney</name>
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    <tag tagId="255">
      <name>thacker</name>
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    <tag tagId="199">
      <name>tolbert</name>
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