<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3135" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3135?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T20:17:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13047">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/047aa05f9ab8fd901520bb02990274c9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2648aa386d6a71115d7da837bc565a54</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11399">
                  <text>Hayman family
holds reunion,
page A4

High school
golf action, A8

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 139

Accident reported
RUTLAND — A motor
vehicle accident was
reported Wednesday afternoon on Beech Grove
Road outside of Rutland.
One patient was flown
from the scene by air medical helicopter to a local
trauma center. The Ohio
State Highway Patrol is
completing the accident
report which will be
reported when available.

Buyer’s
name correction
POMEROY – At the
Meigs County 4-H livestock sale the market rabbit
owed by Emily Myers was
purchased by Oiler’s Trash
Service and Oiler’s
Livestock not Burke Farms
as was earlier submitted to
the newspaper.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Charges pending in accidents
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

GALLIPOLIS — A
dangerous day on the
roads of Meigs County
which resulted in two accidents Tuesday afternoon
has also resulted in pending charges, according to
press releases from the
Ohio State Highway
Patrol’s Athens and
Gallipolis Posts.
According
to
the

Gallipolis Post, undisclosed charges are pending
against Julie A. Mullins,
38, Vinton, who was driving a 1988 Harley
Davidson
motorcycle
which ended up underneath a tractor trailer at the
intersection of Ohio 325
and Ohio 124 in Salem
Township. According to
the post, Mullins who had
passenger William E.
Mullins, 47, Vinton on the
back of the bike, stopped

on Ohio 325 at the intersection of Ohio 124. A
tractor trailer driven by
Daniel E. Cook, 47, South
Webster, was westbound
on Ohio 124 when it came
to a stop on Ohio 124. The
post then states Julie
turned right, crossed the
centerline and slid under
the tractor trailer.
Both Julie and William
Mullins sustained incapacitating injuries and
were transported by air

medical helicopter to St.
Mary’s Medical Center in
Huntington, W.Va. A
spokesperson with St.
Mary’s said the two were
in stable condition on
Wednesday afternoon.
Cook did not sustain any
injuries. The post estimates the speed of both
the tractor trailer and
motorcycle was five mph
at the time of the accident. The roadway was
closed for just over an

New Farmers Bank site work under way
Completion set for spring 2012

Pomeroy youth
at Boys State

REEDSVILLE —
Neighborhood Day will
be held at 1 p.m., Sept. 11
at the Belleville Locks and
Dam. The program will
honor veterans. George
Hall will provide musical
entertainment.

OBITUARIES
Page A2
• Audrey Haley
• Mildred Long

WEATHER

(Submitted image)

An architectural rendering of the new Farmers Bank to be constructed on East Main Street in Pomeroy demonstrates the style of the planned structure.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — Site
work is under way in
preparation for a new
Farmers Bank building to
be constructed on East
Main Street in Pomeroy.
Karr Contracting will
build the brick and stone
10,000 square foot structure which will house the
Pomeroy retail branch of
Farmers Bank and provide
a multi-purpose meeting

room for bank and community
functions.
Completion is set for spiring 2012.
“The new Pomeroy
office will offer great service to all customers with
enhanced drive-thru and
more
accommodating
offices,” said Paul Reed,
president and CEO of
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company in making the
announcement.
“Then once construction of the new office is

complete, we will do a
complete renovation of our
current building which will
be used for administrative
purposes with limited service available for ‘walking
distance’ customers.”
Reed said the decision
to build a new bank building came after three years
of deliberation and consideration by the Board of
Directors. “Rates are such
that there is little return on
our investments in the market, our local economy is

in need of a boost and our
spirits are frazzled from
national media coverage of
recession and unemployment with a dismal outlook,” he commented.
“Now, more than ever,
Farmers Bank can make a
statement to our customers
and community that we are
strong and we’re not going
anywhere.”
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company moved

See Bank, A2

Influenza vaccines arrive
Health department schedules 17 clinics
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — After a
few years of waiting, and
waiting, on influenza vaccines to arrive early, the
Meigs County Health
Department has switched
providers to ensure a timely delivery and expanded
service to the public - service which will include a
record 17 outreach clinics
which will stop in every
township.
Another big change
this year is the health

department accepting not
only Medicaid and
Medicare insurance plans
for payment but payment
from private insurers like
Aetna, Anthem BCBS,
Caresource,
Cigna,
Humana, Medical Mutual of
Ohio, Molina Healthcare,
Ohio
Health
Choice,
SummaCare, The Health
Plan, UMWA, United
Health Care. For all those
without health insurance
or high deductibles, the
charge is $15 for the vaccines.
VaxCare, which is sup-

plying the vaccines, will
be doing the billing to private insurance carriers,
according to MCHD
Director of Nursing
Sherry Wilcox. In addition
to VaxCare taking care of
private billing, being able
to order the vaccines as
needed from VaxCare
instead of fronting thousands of dollars for a huge
shipment, all of which
may not be used before it
expires (particularly if the
shipment is delayed) is
one of the benefits of
changing
vaccines

providers this year.
In addition, knowing the
vaccines will be available
when needed has allowed
the MCHD to schedule flu
shot clinics in every township this fall, kicking off
next week at Racine’s
Party in the Park. The
MCHD will also host its
annual flu shot clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-6 p.m. at
its offices on Memorial
Drive on Friday, Sept. 16.
Below is a listing of all
MCHD flu shot clinics

See Vaccines, A2

Speaker to address Marcellus, Utica shale gas drilling
SENTINEL STAFF
High: 91
Low: 67

MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
1 SECTION — 8 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Sports

A5-6
A3
A7-8

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bid opening
on $7 million
sewer project
Friday
BY BRIAN J. REED

Benefit sing

Neighborhood Day

See Accidents, A2

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY –Austin
King who attended
Buckeye Boys State under
sponsorship of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, is the son of Brian
and Lee Ann King,
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy.
In an earlier story about
Boys State his parents
were not identified.

REEDSVILLE —
Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
will host a benefit sing for
the Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing, 6 p.m., Sept. 10.
Cross Creek, Ron
Shambin, David Bown and
Shelia, Brian &amp; Family
Connections and Jerry
Frederick are among the
singers.

hour and a half.
The crash involving the
motorcycle and tractor
trailer occurred around
5:10 p.m. on Tuesday
while crashes involving
two motorcycles took
place a couple hours
before at 3:20 p.m. on
School Lot Rd. (CR 1) in
Columbia Township.
According to OSP’s
Athens Post, Benjamin A.

POMEROY – Tom
Tugend, deputy chief of
the Ohio Department of
Natural
Resources'
Division of Mineral
Resources Management,
will be the speaker at this
year's Meigs SWCD annual meeting and banquet, 7
p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 27 in
the high school cafeteria.
Tugend will be discussing a subject closely
followed by property owners in our region: drilling
for Marcellus Shale and
Utica Shale natural gas.
A veteran ODNR
employee with nearly 30

years of service, Tugend is
responsible for overseeing
the state's oil and gas program as it relates to the
division's
regulatory
authority.
An experienced public
policy
administrator,
Tugend has spent the
majority of his career managing a variety of aspects
related to Ohio's oil and
gas program including
drafting rules and regulations, managing the permitting of oil and natural
gas wells and developing
environmental compliance
programs.
In addition, Tugend has
held similar roles over the
regulatory functions of

coal and industrial mineral
extraction as well as abandoned mined lands reclamation.
During his years with
the ODNR, Tugend has
become a leading expert
on Ohio's oil and gas
industry and regulatory
programs. He regularly
works with industry trade
associations; state and
local officials; and other
state and federal agencies
to ensure the strength of
Ohio's regulatory framework.
A resident of Franklin
County, Tugend holds a
master's degree in public
administration and a bachelor's degree in natural

resources from Ohio State
University.
Tickets for the meeting
and banquet are $13 each
and are available at the
Meigs SWCD Office at
33101 Hiland Road or
from Meigs SWCD
employees and supervisors.
At the annual meeting,
voting for the election of
Meigs SWCD Supervisors
will begin at 6 p.m.
Eligible voters will select
two of three candidates for
the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors at the
Meigs SWCD annual

See Drilling, A2

MIDDLEPORT
—
Bids will be opened
Friday on Middleport’s
multimillion-dollar
sewer improvement project, and a bid is expected to be awarded at
council’s Sept. 12 meeting.
The project, designed
to eliminate most outflows into the Ohio
River, and separate the
village’s sanitary and
storm sewer systems, is
expected to cost nearly
$7 million, but will not
cost village residents
anything.
The village met earlier
this month with prospective bidders on the longawaited project.
State funding agents
granted total loan forgiveness for the project, which will address
a mandate from the
Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency to
reduce dry weather overflows into the river,
eliminating water pollution and bringing the
system into compliance
with current EPA standards.
In addition to providing a separation of the
village’s sanitary and
storm sewer system, the
funding will allow the
village to purchase a
vacuum truck to periodically clean the system,
and a building in which
to store it. The improved
sewer system can also
remove a million gallons
of mine runoff a day,
which must be treated by
the village’s system.
That capability will
also allow the village to
comply with EPA mandates.
The sewer project is
one of three major infrastructure improvement projects underwa y i n M i d d l e p o r t .
Construction has begun
on the interior of the
Middleport Elementary
School building, which
will house a new village
hall and jail when it
opens in early 2012. The
village also received
word recently that it has
received financing for a
waterline extension on
Powell Street, which
will provide much-anticipated water service to
residents in the Hobson
community.
Federal stimulus funding allowed for completion of a massive waterline replacement and a
new water well. That
project was completed
earlier this year.

�Thursday, September 1, 2011

Obituaries

www.mydailysentinel.com

Accidents

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Meigs County Forecast

From Page A1

Mildred Long
Mildred Pauline Long, 94, Middleport, died Aug.
31, 2011, at Holzer Senior Care Center, Gallipolis.
She was born March 6, 1917, in Middleport, daughter of the late Perry and Mary Jane Graves. Mildred
was a graduate of Middleport High School. She was a
homemaker most of her life and devoted herself to her
husband and children. She retired as a cook at the
Pomeroy Elementary School. She was a member of
the Middleport Church of Christ.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, Harold "Tag" Long; grandson,
Parker Long; and sister, Bessie Graves Fultz.
She is survived by children: Roger (Delores) Long
of Middleport, Roy Long of Pomeroy, Richard
(Delores) Long of Mason, W.Va., Mary (Mike)
O'Brien of Gallipolis; grandchildren: Beckie Long of
Cambridge City, Ind.; Megan (Lee) Swain of
Reedsville, Mindy (Terry) Loetscher of Woodstock,
Ga., Mary Beth (Jon) Petrie of Dover, Fla., Richard
Long of Syracuse, Larissa Horner of Bidwell, Rick
(Maura) Cline of Long Island, N.Y., Jim (Jennifer)
O'Brien of Mansfield, John (Sarah) O'Brien of
Gallipolis; 18 great grandchildren; three great-great
grandchildren; nieces and nephews.
There will be no calling hours. Private graveside
service will be held on Saturday, Sept. 3, at Gravel
Hill Cemetery.
The family requests donations be made in Mildred's
memory to the Parker Long Memorial Scholarship
Fund, by contacting Roger or Delores Long at 9927415.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Audrey Haley
Audrey B. Haley, 88, Rutland, passed away on Aug.
30, 2011, at Mount Carmel East Hospital in
Columbus.
She was born on Sept. 14, 1922, daughter of the late
Edger C. Wolfe and Blanche E. McElhinney Wolfe.
She was a homemaker and was a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, James A. Haley; sister, Juanita
Pierce; brothers: Joseph and Eugene Wolfe; and sonin-law, Lloyd Nelson.
She is survived by her daughter, Connie Lou Nelson
of Whitehall; son, James E. (Becky) Haley of
Whitehall; grandchildren, Marty G. Nelson and Alex
Austin Haley; sister, Lena Martin of Bremen, Ind.
Funeral will be at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 3,
2011, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Middleport. Officiating will be Al Hartson.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, at the
funeral home.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Drilling
From Page A1
meeting and banquet Sept. 27.
The candidates are Ed Gibbs and Tonja Hunter,
Racine, and Adam Woirol, Langsville.
Gibbs is a self-described jack of all trades and master
of none, and takes great pride in the knowledge that he
has acquired in his lifetime in regard to farming. He has
years of experience in planting and harvesting crops, testing of soils and application of appropriate levels of fertilizer and lime has provided him with significant yields.
Gibbs was born in Meigs County and is a 1975 graduate of Eastern High School. Since then he has farmed
and spent over 20 years in the trucking industry. He currently operates 391 acres in the Bashan area and has beef
cattle and horses, hay and pasture. He is also a bus
mechanic for Southern Local Schools. In addition to
farming, he enjoys equipment repair and recreational
horseback riding.
Hunter was raised in Meigs County around the Racine
area and has been associated with farming all her life. She
is a 1983 graduate of Southern High School, and is the
daughter of Ronald and Janice Salser of Racine and married to Dr. Douglas Hunter. They and their four children
reside on a 180-acre hay farm on Bashan Road. She has
participated in the Conservation Reserve Program and
the Forestry Environmental Quality Incentives
Program.
As a teenager Hunter worked on the Wayne Roush
Farm and developed a love for farming and the outdoors. She is hardworking, honest, and dedicated to her
family. She is a member of the Racine Area Community
Organization, serves as the minority advisor on the FSA
County Committee, and helps with the teenage youth
group and Sunday school classes at Racine First Baptist.
In addition to farming she enjoys sports, gardening,
hunting, and spending time with her busy family.
Woirol is the owner/operator of Dexter Run Farms in
Salem Township and was one of two Meigs SWCD
2008 Outstanding Cooperators of the Year.
In recent years he installed 8,400 feet of fence, a
heavy use pad, a 400-gallon round stock tank, a 100gallon bank tank and four automatic waterers.
He also installed a rock stream crossing, access road,
more than 1,328 feet of water line and a pump, completed under the Appalachian Special Project. Woirol
also had a WHIP (Wildlife Habitat Incentive Program)
contract which included a 5-acre tree planting.
Residents or landowners, firms, and corporations that
own land or occupy land in Meigs County and are 18
years of age or older may vote for supervisor. A non-resident landowner, firm, or corporation must provide an
affidavit of eligibility, which includes designation of a
voting representative, prior to casting a ballot.
There are three ways an eligible voter can cast a ballot: at the annual meeting, at the SWCD office until 3
p.m. on Sept. 27 or via absentee ballot by requesting an
absentee ballot from the
SWCD office at 33101
CHESTER, OHIO
Hiland Road, Pomeroy
OH 45769. Absentee ballots can be requested after
Sept. 6 by calling the
office at 740-992-4282 or
Chester Volunteer
stopping in the office.
Supervisors serve stagFire Dept.
gered three-year terms.
Monday, Sept. 5, 2011
The winners will be
at 11:30 AM
announced the evening of
Sept. 27 at the annual
Homemade Ice Cream
Pie Donations Accepted
meeting and banquet.

Chicken &amp;
Ribs BBQ

Phelps, 51, Marion, was cited for failure to control when
a 2006 Harley Davidson motorcycle he was riding overturned, slid off the right side of the roadway and struck a
ditch. The post estimates Phelps’ speed at the time of the
accident was 50 mph. Phelps suffered non-incapacitating injuries and was transported to O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens. A call to O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital about Phelps’ status was not immediately
returned.
At the same time, and on the same stretch of road,
James A. Phelps, 51, Marion, was driving his 2005
Harley Davidson motorcycle when the Post states he
drove off the right side of the roadway, struck a ditch,
overturned and was ejected. James suffered non-incapcitating injuries and was transported to St. Mary’s
Medical Center by air medical helicopter where he was
discharged later the same day, according to a spokesperson from the hospital. The news release from the Post
says charges are pending in this accident though the
charge was not specified.
CR 1 was not closed as a result of these crashes.
In all crashes, none of the motorcycle riders were
wearing helmets.

Thursday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
94. Calm wind becoming west between 5 and
8 mph.
Thursday Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 66. Light south
wind.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 94.
Calm wind becoming
southwest around 5 mph.
Friday Night: A
slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms
before 10pm. Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 68. Chance of
precipitation is 20 percent.
Saturday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
93.

Bank

Local Stocks

From Page A1
into its current location on West Second Street in 1969
when the bank had $9 million in assets and one office.
Since that time the bank has grown to a $260 million
bank with 89 employees at five locations in Ohio and
West Virginia.
“The management team and the Board of Directors
have known for sometime that limited space and outdated facilities would someday become a hindrance to
our ability to effectively conduct business. That day has
arrived,” said Reed.
“The building design, created Jerry Goff Architecture,
embodies the vision of the Board of Directors to build a
flagship office that enhances the surrounding natural
beauty of the area while communicating that Farmers
Bank is strong and committed to continuing the tradition
of Farmers Bank in our communities,” he concluded.

Vaccines
From Page A1
being held this fall:
• 5-8 p.m., Sept. 8-10, Racine Party in Park at Star
Mill Park
• 9-11 a.m., 1-6 p.m., Sept. 16, Meigs County Health
Department
• 5-7 p.m., Sept. 20, Reedsville Fire Department
• 5-7 p.m., Sept. 22, Tuppers Plains Cool Spot
• 5-7 p.m., Sept. 26, Chester Fire Department
• 4-5 p.m., Sept. 28, Meigs County Highway
Department
• 9-11 a.m., Sept. 30,
Meigs County Court
House, Pomeroy
• 5-7 p.m., Oct. 3, Hot
Spot on US 33 near
Portland
• 8-10 a.m., Oct. 5,
Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services,
Middleport
• 5-7 p.m., Oct. 11,
Salem Center Fire
Department
• 9-11 a.m., Oct. 12,
Courthouse Annex,
Pomeroy
• 5-7 p.m., Oct. 13,
Rutland Fire Department
• 5-7 p.m., Oct. 17,
Columbia Fire
Department
• 5-7 p.m., Oct. 18,
Scipio Fire Department
• 5-7 p.m., Oct. 24,
Darwin General
Mercantile
• 3-6 p.m., Nov. 4,
Powell’s Food Fair
(There are also plans to
host a clinic from 5-7
p.m., Oct. 4 at the
Syracuse Fire Department
though that date has not
yet been confirmed.)
The clinics are for
Meigs County residents
and vaccines will be available for those without an
ability to pay, as needed.
Wilcox said the health
department will also have
the 65-plus high dose
influenza vaccines available for $45.
In addition, the public
can call the health department at 992-6626 or visit
www.meigscountyhealth.com or the health
department’s Facebook
page for more information.

AEP (NYSE) — 38.63
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 50.91
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 53.01
Big Lots (NYSE) — 33.90
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 31.76
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 71.39
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 12.17
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.39
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 3.17
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 30.37
Collins (NYSE) — 50.46
DuPont (NYSE) — 48.27
US Bank (NYSE) — 23.21
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 16.31
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 38.66
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 37.56
Kroger (NYSE) — 23.56
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 37.74
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 67.68
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.38

Saturday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 67.
Sunday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 85.
Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
Sunday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 61. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Labor Day: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
76.
Monday Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 55.
Tuesday: Sunny, with
a high near 77.

BBT (NYSE) — 22.29
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 10.67
Pepsico (NYSE) — 64.43
Premier (NASDAQ) — 6.05
Rockwell (NYSE) — 64.13
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.54
Royal Dutch Shell — 67.05
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 59.89
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 53.19
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.87
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.38
Worthington (NYSE) — 16.25
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
August 31, 2011, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Visit us online at
mydailysentinel.com

Your online source for news

�Thursday, September 1, 2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

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 Thursday,
Sept. 1, 2011:
This year, you often weigh the
pros and cons of a situation. At times
you are forthright and direct. Don’t be
surprised if some people deal with
you in an unusual manner. You see
new ways to approach your daily life.
If you are single, you meet people
with ease. Often, others will see you
as sultry. Enjoy the dating game to
the max. If you are attached, the
more you share, the closer you
become. SCORPIO understands you
almost too well!
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
++++ You cannot change
someone’s need to be on center
stage. Review your objectives. The
intensity of relating in this situation
could cause some discomfort. If you
need to say no to this arrangement,
do. Tonight: Talk over dinner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++ Rethink a personal matter.
You don’t need everyone to agree.
A conversation yields a positive
benefit, especially when had with
lightness and caring. An imaginative
suggestion might be fun to work with.
Tonight: Go with someone else’s
choice.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ You might want to rethink
a personal matter more carefully.
Understanding evolves if you are
open to a co-worker’s or friend’s suggestion. Refuse to take it personally
that you are not the lead player. Use
the break. Tonight: Put your feet up.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++++ You could be slow to
move into action, but once you do,
your creativity flourishes. Listening
to someone might be difficult, as
your mind has many flights of fancy.
Try to stay present in the moment.
Someone at a distance demonstrates
a more fine-tuned idea. Tonight: Put
on a great piece of music.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++++ Conversations move
with ease in the morning, yet by the
afternoon, different concerns arise.
Getting feedback dulls in the evening, when you want to reflect on the
issue. Children and/or your domestic
life might be involved. Tonight: Head
home.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++ Handle a financial mat-

ter. Many of you will find yourselves
heading to or on the phone with the
bank. Communicate your intentions
in the afternoon, when others seem
to be more adaptable and easygoing.
You might be juggling some dayto-day concerns. Tonight: Talk up a
storm.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
++++ Investigate an offer in the
morning. You also will have the most
influence over others and situations
during this time. Focus on a creative
response in the afternoon. A risk
might be very tempting. Tonight: Let
your hair down.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
+++ You have been in a period
of deep thought where you wonder
about the possibilities. Express
your thoughts in the afternoon. You
cannot instrument changes unless
you are open and speak your mind.
Listen to what someone shares.
Tonight: Make it easy. How about
pizza?
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
++++ Focus on important goals
or situations that you feel must go
your way. A meeting could play into
the situation as well. You know your
limits. Listen to feedback from a family member. He or she has important
information. Tonight: Take some
much-needed time off.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ Take charge, and others
will follow you. Do nothing, and you
might not like what happens. You
are better off anyway when you are
proactive. Listen to news with a grain
of salt. Know what is happening with
friends. Tonight: Where your friends
are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ Make it a point to get
more facts. Talk to people in the
know. More information can only
help. If you want something done
your way, you will have to do it yourself. No one has the exact same
vision. Tonight: Could be a late one.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
++++ Deal with a partner
directly. Quite clearly, you don’t need
to push this associate or partner, as
he or she works well with you. Later
in the day, finally make that plan to
travel, or perhaps sign up for a workshop. Your mind can always grow
more. Tonight: Be spontaneous.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Page A4
Thursday, September 1, 2011

Community Calendar

Hayman family holds reunion

Public meetings

RACINE — The 53rd
annual reunion of the
family of George R. and
Vira Mae Crawford
Hayman
was
held
recently at Star Mill

Monday, Sept. 5
SYRACUSE – Sutton
Township trustees, 7
p.m. at the Syracuse
Village Hall.
Monday, Sept. 12
POMEROY – The
next regular meeting of
the Meigs County
Agricultural Society has
been postponed from
Sept. 5 to September
12, 7:30 p.m. at the
Coon Hunters Building
on the Rocksprings fairgrounds.
Tuesday, Sept. 13
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer Board,
regular meeting, 7 p.m.,
TPRSD office.

Community
meetings
Tuesday, Sept. 6
MIDDLEPORT –
Middleport Masonic
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshment at 6:30
p.m.

Reunions
Saturday, Sept. 3
CHESTER – Mary

Will Bahr reunion, 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Chester school. Noon
meal.
Sunday, Sept. 4
CHESHIRE – Ross
Fife reunion, noon luncheon, Kyger Creek
Club House.
Saturday, Sept. 10
CHESHIRE – Samuel
Allan Eblin family
reunion, 2 to 6 p.m. at
the Cheshire Park. Main
course provided, take
side or dessert, and gift
for auction.

Church Events
Saturday, Sept. 3
RACINE — Southern
Charge UMC menʼs
breakfast, 8 a.m.,
Carmel-Sutton Church.
Sunday, Sept. 4
SYRACUSE –
Homecoming, Syracuse
Community church, 2480
Second St., service 10
a.m., potluck dinner
noon, followed by
singing by “Two for
Jesus.” For more information call 992-3893.
RACINE — Southern
Charge UMC Sunday
night service, 7 p.m.,

Consumer confidence
lowest in two years
NEW YORK (AP) — Consumers’ confidence in
August dropped almost 15 points to the lowest level
since April 2009 as worries about the economy fueled
the wildest stock market swings since the financial
meltdown in 2008.
At a time when Americans are increasingly worried
about a weak job market, higher costs for food and
clothing and recent stock market turmoil, the falling
confidence numbers raise new concerns about their
willingness to spend and jumpstart the economy.
That’s particularly important since consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of U.S. economic activity.
“Consumer confidence deteriorated sharply in
August, as consumers grew significantly more pessimistic about the short-term outlook,” said Lynn
Franco, director of The Conference Board Consumer
Research Center in a statement.
The Conference Board said Tuesday that its
Consumer Confidence Index fell to 44.5, down from
a revised 59.2 in July. The number was the lowest
level since April 2009 when the reading was 40.8. It
also is far below the 53.3 that analysts had expected.
A reading above 90 indicates the economy is on solid
footing; above 100 signals strong growth.
A number of factors contributed to the index’s
decline. The index, which is based on a random survey of consumers sent to 5,000 households from Aug.
1 to Aug. 18, captured the wildest week on Wall Street
since the financial crisis in 2008.
Four days into the survey period, on Aug. 5, S&amp;P
downgraded the U.S. federal debt and concern revived
about the health of European banks. Following that,
The Dow Jones industrial average had four consecutive days of 400-point swings for the first time in its
115-year history during the week that ended Aug. 12.
Besides debt talks and market fluctuations,
Americans are still plagued by old economic worries.
The nation’s unemployment rate is stuck at 9 percent.
Home values remain weak. And shoppers are facing
rising costs for everything from food to clothing as
retailers try to offset their higher costs for labor and
materials.
As a result, one gauge of the index that measures
how shoppers feel about the economy dropped to 33.3
from 35.7. Another measure that assesses shoppers’
outlook over the next six months fell to 51.9, down
from 74.9 last month.
Consumers’ views on jobs, in particular, have
become more pessimistic. Those claiming that jobs
are “hard to get” increased to 49.1 percent from 44.8
percent, while those stating jobs are “plentiful”
declined to 4.7 percent from 5.1 percent.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Subscription Rates

By carrier or motor route
4 weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$11.30
Advertising
52 weeks . . . . . . . . .$128.85
Advertising Director: Pam Daily . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50¢
Caldwell, 740-446-2342, Ext. 17
Subscribers should remit in advance
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
direct to The Daily Sentinel. No subRetail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
scription by mail permitted in areas
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10 where home carrier service is avail-

Circulation
Circulation Manager: 740-4462342, Ext. 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

Park, Racine.
DVD’s of reunions
from 1978, 1982, 1983
were enjoyed. Attending
were: Lil Hart, Don and
Donna Hayman, George

and Linda Carson,
Virgil and Delorse Ours,
Bill
and
Ginny
Huffman, Sid, Carol and
Ryan Hayman, Rhonda
and Nautica Wolfe,

Curtis Irby, Jr., Jean
Carpenter, Bryce, Dan
and Donna Sayre, Don
and Faith Hayman and
April, Erin and Mallory
Roach.

No casinos for alleged Ohio pill mill operators
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — A judge pulled
the plug Wednesday on
casino trips by an Ohio
couple accused of hiding
income while facing federal charges of illegally
distributing prescription
pain pills in southern
Ohio.
U.S. District Judge
Sandra Beckwith in
Cincinnati also prohibited Nancy and Lester
Sadler from working in
any kind of medical clinic while free on bond.
Beckwith scheduled a
hearing next month on
the government's arguments that the husband
and wife, currently free
on their own recognizance, should have

their bond revoked.
Messages were left
Wednesday for the couple's attorneys. Richard
Goldberg, attorney for
Lester Sadler, has said
previously the Sadlers
did everything they could
to ensure proper medical
care was given to patients
at their clinic in Waverly,
which has since closed.
A 2010 indictment
against the Sadlers allege
they illegally distributed
painkillers at the Waverly
clinic, which is located in
a region that the U.S.
Drug
Enforcement
Administration
has
called one of the worst in
the country for prescription painkiller abuse.
The government says

that since the original
indictment, the couple
has continued to operate
Ohio Medical West, a
clinic in Columbus, with
Lester Sadler as owner
and Nancy Sadler as an
employee.
The government says
that the Columbus clinic
takes in hundreds of
thousands of dollars a
year and that after
expenses the couple is
spending thousands of
dollars on gambling
trips and on purchases
for an embroidery business, including $650 at
"Lid'l Dolly's Dresses"
in Pigeon Forge, Tenn.
The government says
this year alone, Nancy
Sadler gambled with

$58,533
at
the
Hollywood Casino in
Indiana, while Lester
Sadler gambled with
$21,368.
Beckwith's order bans
the Sadlers from traveling to Indiana without
permission and prohibits them from entering a casino or other
gambling
establishment.
It also requires them
to hold jobs but bans
them from working at
any medical clinic or
medical facility.
The judge is allowing
the couple to attend the
wedding of their son in
Florida as long as they
provide a full itinerary
and contact information.

Certified Public
Accountants last year recommended that the state
look into centralizing local
tax collections, possibly by
piggybacking them on state
tax returns.
But the Ohio Municipal
League opposes the concept of centralized local
taxation. League legislative
representative Kent Scarrett
says communities are concerned that they'd wind up
losing revenue.

seal to include a tribute to
the Wright brothers.
Legislation introduced
Tuesday by Dayton area
state Rep. James Butler
would add the airplane
from the Wrights' pioneering flight in 1903. It
would go above and to the
left of the sun on the current seal.
The Wrights were from
Dayton. Butler tells The
Dayton Daily News that
putting the plane on the
seal would be good for
bringing business to the
region and for promoting
the state as a center of
innovation.
The Republican former
Navy aviator notes that
the seal has been changed
several times before, most
recently in 1996.
A spokesman for House
Speaker William
Batchelder says Butler's
proposal is drawing wide
interest.

Association that using the
money for anything other
than highway safety and
construction violated the
Ohio Constitution.
Spokeswoman Lindsey
Bohrer with the Ohio
Department of Public
Safety says the agency is
disappointed with the
appeals court decision
and is reviewing its
options.

State Briefs
Books-A-Million
to assume Ohio
Borders store lease
NEW YORK (AP) — A
handful of Borders bookstores are getting a new
lease on life, including one
Ohio location.
A judge has cleared
Books-A-Million Inc. to
take over 14 Borders
Group Inc. stores that were
slated for closure. The list
includes a Borders in
Canton in northeast Ohio.
Ann Arbor, Mich.-based
Borders Group filed for
bankruptcy protection in
February, brought down by
tough competition and an
inability to adapt to consumers' increasing appetite
for e-books.
Books-A-Million will
take over the leases beginning September 20, under
an agreement a judge
approved yesterday.
Borders received court
approval to liquidate its
399 stores in July.
At that time,
Birmingham, Ala.-based
Books-A-Million was in
last-minute talks to acquire
30 leases, but no agreement
materialized right away.

Ohio studies
centralizing local
tax collections
COLUMBUS (AP) —
Ohio cities and towns are
resisting something being
studied by the Kasich
administration, to have the
state collect local taxes.
Ohio Tax Commissioner
Joseph Testa tells The
Columbus Dispatch it's an
idea that has his department "in the investigating
stage." He says the state's
current web of municipal
taxes is too complex and
bad for business.
The Ohio Society of

Ohio court upholds
death sentence for
killer of two
COLUMBUS (AP) —
The Ohio Supreme Court
has upheld the death sentence given a Canton man
convicted of gunning down
two men in a 2006 drugrelated killing.
A jury sentenced Edward
Lang to death for the
killing of Jaron Burditte
and sentenced him to life
without the possibility of
parole for the killing of
Burditte's friend, Marnell
Cheek.
Court records say Lang
and an accomplice had
contacted Burditte, a local
drug dealer, with plans to
rob him.
The court's Wednesday
decision overruled objections by Lang that the original indictment did not
properly spell out the elements of the death penalty
case against him.
The court set a 2013 execution date for Lang but
that will likely be delayed
by years of federal appeals.

Lawmaker wants to
add Wrights' plane
to Ohio seal
DAYTON (AP) — An
Ohio lawmaker wants to
change the official state

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press;
or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Court rules against
hiking Ohio driver
records fee
COLUMBUS (AP) —
An Ohio appeals court has
ruled against a move to
increase the state's fee for
obtaining a person's driving records.
The Bureau of Motor
Vehicles hiked the charge
from $2 to $5 to raise
about $10.6 million a
year for state public safety programs, including
Homeland Security. But
the Franklin County
Court of Appeals in
Columbus said Tuesday
that revenue from the fee
must be used for highways.
The Columbus Dispatch
reports the court upheld
last year's ruling from a
judge who agreed with
the Ohio Trucking

New search engine
for Ohio public
worker pay
COLUMBUS (AP) —
The state salaries of two
political aides to Ohio
Treasurer Josh Mandel
are not listed in a new
online database built by
his office for looking up
the salaries of Ohio public employees.
Visitors to ohiotreasurer.gov can plug in a first
and last name to see what
a state employee is making this year, or what
mayors, teachers and
other local government
employees were paid as
recently as 2011.
Figures for Scott
Guthrie and Joel Riter are
among about 70 treasury
employees whose salary
data isn't listed. Both
worked for Mandel's
2010 campaign for treasurer, then for his state
office, before returning to
Mandel's political team.
A spokesman says the
missing salary data is due
to a programming glitch
that is being fixed.
The Plain Dealer newspaper of Cleveland first
reported on the searchable salary database
Wednesday.
Mandel says taxpayers
work hard for their
money and have a right to
know where it's going.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Letters to the Editor

able.

Mail Subscription
Inside
12 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Meigs County
. . . . . . . . . .$35.26
. . . . . . . . . .$70.70
. . . . . . . . .$140.11

Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$56.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . .$113.60
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . .$227.21

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

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

�Thursday, September 1, 2011

Legals
�#�������"���
��"����� -6� ,)5)&amp;&lt;� +-9)2� 7,%7
32� !%785(%&lt;� !)47)1&amp;)5� �
� � %7� ����� %�1��� %� 48&amp;0-'
6%0)� :-00� &amp;)� ,)0(� %7�
� $�
!)'32(� �� �31)53&lt;�� �,-3�� ",)
�%51)56� �%2/� %2(� !%9-2+6
�314%2&lt;�-6�6)00-2+�*35�'%6,�-2
,%2(�35�')57-*-)(�',)'/�7,)�*30�
03:-2+�'300%7)5%0�
�� �
� $�

�,)9&lt;�
� �
�

�14%0%

�� � �3(+)� !75%786�
� �� � � �� �

�"

",)� �%51)56� �%2/� %2(� !%9�
-2+6� �314%2&lt;�� �31)53&lt;�
�,-3�� 5)6)59)6� 7,)� 5-+,7� 73� &amp;-(
%7� 7,-6� 6%0)�� %2(� 73� :-7,(5%:
7,)� %&amp;39)� '300%7)5%0� 45-35� 73
6%0)��� �857,)5�� ",)� �%51)56
�%2/� %2(� !%9-2+6� �314%2&lt;
5)6)59)6�7,)�5-+,7�73�5).)'7�%2&lt;
35�%00�&amp;-(6�68&amp;1-77)(�
",)�%&amp;39)�()6'5-&amp;)(�'300%7)5%0
:-00� &amp;)� 630(� =%6� -6�:,)5)� -6&gt;�
:-7,� 23� );45)66)(� 35� -140-)(
:%55%27&lt;�+-9)2�
�35� *857,)5� -2*351%7-32�� 35� *35
%2�%443-271)27�73�-264)'7�'30�
0%7)5%0�� 45-35� 73� 6%0)� (%7)� '32�
7%'7��
�&lt;2(-)� 35� �)2� %7
�� �
���� ���� ���
�� ���� �
�
� �����������
���������)2�(%1%"8�')5%.�3(!3
/.� �1)$!8� �%03%-"%1� �� ���
!3�������!�-���!�04",)#�2!,%�6),,
"%� (%,$� !3� ��� � �!-0!)'.
�$��� �)$6%,,�� �()/�� �(%� �!1-�
%12� �!.+� !.$� �!5).'2� �/-�
0!.8�)2�2%,,).'�&amp;/1�#!2(�).�(!.$
/1�#%13)&amp;)%$�#(%#+�3(%�&amp;/,,/6).'
#/,,!3%1!,�
��� � �,!83/.� �/4$%.� �/"),%
�/-%������ � ��
� �(%� �!1-%12� �!.+� !.$� �!5�
).'2� �/-0!.8�� �/-%1/8�
�()/�� 1%2%15%2� 3(%� 1)'(3� 3/� ")$
!3� 3()2� 2!,%�� !.$� 3/� 6)3($1!6
3(%� !"/5%� #/,,!3%1!,� 01)/1� 3/
2!,%��� �413(%1�� �(%� �!1-%12
�!.+� !.$� �!5).'2� �/-0!.8
1%2%15%2�3(%�1)'(3�3/�1%*%#3�!.8
/1�!,,�")$2�24"-)33%$�
� �(%� !"/5%� $%2#1)"%$� #/,,!3�
%1!,� 6),,� "%� 2/,$� 9!2� )2�6(%1%

Legals

)2:�� 6)3(� ./� %701%22%$� /1� )-�
0,)%$�6!11!.38�')5%.�

�$7(6�
+(� !,//$*(� 2)� �&lt;5$&amp;86(� 5(�
6(59(6� 7+(� 5,*+7� 72� :$,9(� $1&lt;
,55(*8/$5,7,(6� $1'� 72� 5(-(&amp;7� $1&lt;
25�$//�%,'6�
������������������������
�5,&amp;�����81�
1,1*+$0���$&lt;25
���� #��������������������
!,//$*(� 2)
�&lt;5$&amp;86(
����� ���������� ���

�/1� &amp;413(%1� ).&amp;/1-!3)/.�� /1� &amp;/1
!.�!00/).3-%.3�3/�).20%#3�#/,�
,!3%1!,�� 01)/1� 3/� 2!,%� $!3%� #/.�
3!#3��
�8.$)%� /1� �%.� !3
�� � � �� ���� ��� ��� ���� ��
���
���� �($/('�352326$/6�:,//�%(�5(�
&amp;(,9('� $7� 7+(� 2)),&amp;(� 2)� 7+(
�&lt;5$&amp;86(� �+,()� �,1$1&amp;,$/� �)),�
&amp;(5��
��� +,5'� �7��� �&lt;5$&amp;86(�
�+,2�
���� 817,/� ���� 3�0�� /2�
&amp;$/�7,0(�21��(37��� �� �����)25
)851,6+,1*� $//� /$%25�� 0$7(5,$/6
$1'� (48,30(17� 1(&amp;(66$5&lt;� 72
&amp;203/(7(�7+(�352-(&amp;7�.12:1�$6
�&lt;5$&amp;86(� �8/9(57� �(3/$&amp;(�
0(17��52-(&amp;7�
���� �2175$&amp;7� '2&amp;80(176�� %,'
6+((76�� 3/$16� $1'� 63(&amp;,),&amp;$�
7,216� &amp;$1� %(� 2%7$,1('� $7� 6$,'
2)),&amp;(� �21'$&lt;� 7+528*+� �5,'$&lt;
)520��� ��$�0��72� � ��3�0�
���� �$&amp;+� %,''(5� ,6� 5(48,5('� 72
)851,6+�:,7+�,76�352326$/��$��,'
�8$5$17&lt;� $1'� �2175$&amp;7� �21'
,1� $&amp;&amp;25'$1&amp;(� :,7+� �(&amp;7,21
� � � 2)� 7+(� �+,2� �(9,6('
�2'(���,'�6(&amp;85,7&lt;�)851,6+('�,1
�21'� )250�� 6+$//� %(� ,668('� %&lt;
$��85(7&lt;��203$1&lt;�25��25325$�
7,21� /,&amp;(16('� ,1� 7+(� �7$7(� 2)
�+,2�72�3529,'(�6$,'�685(7&lt;�
�$&amp;+� �52326$/� 0867� &amp;217$,1
7+(� )8//� 1$0(� 2)� 7+(� 3$57&lt;� 25
3$57,(6�68%0,77,1*�7+(�352326$/
$1'� $//� 3(56216� ,17(5(67('
7+(5(,1���$&amp;+�%,''(5�0867�68%�
0,7�(9,'(1&amp;(�2)�,76�(;3(5,(1&amp;(6
21� 352-(&amp;76� 2)� 6,0,/$5� 6,=(� $1'
&amp;203/(;,7&lt;�
�//� &amp;2175$&amp;7256� $1'� 68%&amp;21�
75$&amp;7256� ,192/9('� :,7+� 7+(� 352�
-(&amp;7�:,//��72�7+(�(;7(17�35$&amp;7,&amp;$�
%/(�86(��+,2�352'8&amp;76��0$7(5,�
$/6�� 6(59,&amp;(6�� $1'� /$%25� ,1� 7+(
,03/(0(17$7,21�2)�7+(,5�352-(&amp;7�
�'',7,21$//&lt;��&amp;2175$&amp;725�&amp;203/,�
$1&amp;(� :,7+� 7+(� (48$/� (03/2&lt;�
0(17�23325781,7&lt;�5(48,5(0(176
2)� �+,2� �'0,1,675$7,9(� �2'(
�+$37(5� � �� 7+(� �29(5125�6
�;(&amp;87,9(� �5'(5� 2)� ��� �� $1'
�29(5125�6� �;(&amp;87,9(� �5'(5
� ���6+$//�%(�5(48,5('�
�,''(56� 0867� &amp;203/&lt;� :,7+� 7+(
35(9$,/,1*�:$*(� 5$7(6� 21� �8%�
/,&amp;� �03529(0(176� ,1� �(,*6
�2817&lt;� $1'� 7+(� !,//$*(� 2)
�&lt;5$&amp;86(���+,2�$6�'(7(50,1('
%&lt;�7+(��+,2��85($8�2)��03/2&lt;�
0(17� �(59,&amp;(6�� "$*(� $1'
�285��,9,6,21��� � ��
�
��
$1'� 0867� $/62� &amp;203/&lt;� :,7+
�('(5$/� �5(9$,/,1*� "$*(
Other Services

������ ��������������������
����� �� ��
���� ��� �������!
�� � ��� �

�� �'����� ������%������&amp;&amp;
")�%��������!!��&amp;��"%�"!�*
�� � �#�%� "!'����"��$(�#�
�!'�'"��(*�����"��'�%'��#
�"&amp;'&amp;��������"��*
��
�
��

�������

Notices

����� �#���� $�"�� � ���
��%���������#�!��%������# !�
��%��
������� �!�!!���

�� �������� ��� ��� ���
�� � ���� �� �����
� ���������� ���� �� ���
����� ���� �� �������
��� ������������� �����
�� �� ��������� �� ���
����� ������� �� � � �

� �

�"�!� �����&amp;� �
�
�����"����"����$�"�� ������#�
"��!�%� ���!����
���
� ���#�� ������
��� �� ����������
�������������!�����#����
������"���!�����&amp;��� ��������
� ����
���������������������
��
�
����

� �

�"�!� �����&amp;� �
�
�����"����"����$�"�� ������#�
"��!�%� ���!����
���
� ���#�� ������
��� �� ����������
�������������!�����#����
������"���!�����&amp;��� ��������
� ����
���������������������
��
�
����

Other Services
��
� � �������
�������� ��

�� ����

�� ����

SERVICES

��

�� ����
����� ����� !�� !�"�� ��� �����
������� #���� ����� � ���� ����� ����
��!������ �!#� ! �������������� ��
��������� ��������� ���� �

�������
�� �'����� ������%������&amp;&amp;
")�%��������!!��&amp;��"%�"!�*
�� � �#�%� "!'����"��$(�#�
�!'�'"��(*�����"��'�%'��#
�"&amp;'&amp;��������"��*
��
�
��

�������
�� �'����� ������%������&amp;&amp;
")�%��������!!��&amp;��"%�"!�*
�� � �#�%� "!'����"��$(�#�
�!'�'"��(*�����"��'�%'��#
�"&amp;'&amp;��������"��*
��
�
��

Fuel / Oil / Coal / Wood / Gas

Legals

ANNOUNCEMENTS

�� ��� � �� ��
��� ����
�
� ���� $��"
�!�%� &amp;��&amp;
*"'� �"� �'%�!�%%� )�&amp;�� #�"#��� *"'
�!")�� �!�� ��� &amp;"� %�!�� "!�*
&amp;�$"'���&amp;��� ����'!&amp;���*"'���(���!�
(�%&amp;���&amp;�!��&amp;���"���$�!��

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

� �

�"�!� �����&amp;� �
�
�����"����"����$�"�� ������#�
"��!�%� ���!����
���
� ���#�� ������
��� �� ����������
�������������!�����#����
������"���!�����&amp;��� ��������
� ����
���������������������
��
�
����

������
� ����%���� �$"��$��
� �� ���$���$��
�"�����$�&amp;�$� ��
���'�!�'�� ����� �$��� "
� ���!� ���#�"&amp;���� "�$��
��"#$� �� �$�#��$����!�'� ��'
� ����� �$��
�����$ ��'�� ������� � � �

Other Services

������
� ����%���� �$"��$��
� �� ���$���$��
�"�����$�&amp;�$� ��
���'�!�'�� ����� �$��� "
� ���!� ���#�"&amp;���� "�$��
��"#$� �� �$�#��$����!�'� ��'
� ����� �$��
�����$ ��'�� ������� � � �

������
� ����%���� �$"��$��
� �� ���$���$��
�"�����$�&amp;�$� ��
���'�!�'�� ����� �$��� "
� ���!� ���#�"&amp;���� "�$��
��"#$� �� �$�#��$����!�'� ��'
� ����� �$��
�����$ ��'�� ������� � � �
Professional Services
� �� � ���� � ��� ������� ���
�� ���������
����� ����
�� ��
������
���������
�
�������� ���

���
���� �������������������
������������� �� ����� � �����
� � �� � � �������������
� ��� �� ��������� �����
� ��� �
������
��� �� ��

���
���� �������������������
������������� �� ����� � �����
� � �� � � �������������
� ��� �� ��������� �����
� ��� �
������
��� �� ��

���
���� �������������������
������������� �� ����� � �����
� � �� � � �������������
� ��� �� ��������� �����
� ��� �
������
��� �� ��
FINANCIAL
Money To Lend
������� �),,)1� �'�,.�� �)(.��.
.# � �#$)� �$0$-$)(� )!� �$(�(�$�&amp;� �(�
-.$./.$)(-� �!!$� � )!� �)(-/' ,� !�
!�$,-��������2)/�, !$(�(� �2)/,
#)' � ),� )�.�$(� �� &amp;)�(�� ��� ��
)!�, +/ -.-�!),��(2�&amp;�," ���0�(�
*�2' (.-� )!� ! -� ),� $(-/,�(� �
��&amp;&amp;� .# � �!!$� � )!� �)(-/' ,� !!$�
�,-� .)&amp;&amp;� !, � �.� ��
�� ���� � .)
&amp; �,(� $!� .# � '),."�" � �,)% ,� ),
&amp; (� ,� $-� *,)* ,&amp;2� &amp;$� (- ��� ��#$$-���*/�&amp;$��- ,0$� ��(()/(� ' (.
!,)'� .# � �#$)� ��&amp;&amp; 2� �/�&amp;$-#$("
�)'*�(2�

300

SERVICES

���

Yard Sale
��

Miscellaneous
��!�����!������!��
������������$������"��!���� !����
����������#�� ��� ���
� �

Want To Buy
��'$!)(���$%��$!!�&amp;��'�!*�&amp;��$!�
�$�#'� �#,� ����� ��� �� �$!�
�+�&amp;!,����� ��#(�!� �$!��� %&amp;�
�� � ��� �)&amp;&amp;�#�,�� %&amp;$$��"�#(
'�('�� ���"$#�'�� ���� �$�#
��$%�� � �� �#�� �*�#)��� ��!!��
%$!�'��
�� �
��� ��� ���
������������

����

����

��

��(%"*)�� �%&amp;� �%""�'� �� ( "+�'��%"�
�% $(���$-������ ��� ���%"��!�,�
�"'-����$)�"��%"���&amp;'���� �����*'�
'�$�-�� &amp;'%%��# $)� (�)(�� � �#%$�(�
�����% $���%&amp;��� ���$���+�$*��
��"" &amp;%" (��
�� �

Yard Sale
����
��

��

����

��� ��� ��� ��

��

� !���� �#!������ �"��������
�
� � � � ����#� ���!� ��
� �� ���� �!���!� �!������ ���
!������
�� �
��
����
� �� � ����������

��� �� ��

����� � ������ �� � ����
������� � ����� �����
� � �� ������ ��� �����
���������
�

��� ����
� �� �

����!� (���%���� �� ��� ����
"�#"�
�%��
��(
#'��&amp;��#(&amp;��'��� ��"� �
�#!�"�
#'��&amp;���
�!�&amp;
�'�!&amp;��� �%&amp;�� �!�'#��$!
� � ��� � � ���� � � ��� � ���
����� �� ���� �� ���� ����� �����
�� ��� �� �� �� �� �� �� �� �����
����� ���� ��
� ������ ����
������ ����������
� �� ��(� ��$�� ����� ��#&amp;�� ���
� �&amp;� �&amp;�
�� ��$"%%� �$"
��$$(�%� ��!�$(�� �&amp;�$&amp;�!�� �&amp;
��� �� �""�%�� ���%� ��"&amp;��%�
�" #'&amp;�$��&amp;'������'$!�&amp;'$��
� � ��� �� ������ ������ ��
��������������������� ������
�%&amp;�&amp;�� �� ��$�� �����
� ��
��(�%��� ���&amp;�����%� &amp;�������
!'&amp;� �� ������ ���� � ��&amp;�� ��"&amp;
���
&amp;�#'�%�� �!!�(�$���'$ ��
&amp;'$���!&amp;%� !�� ��%��%�� ��� &amp;!
"�
�-.�."� ��#���,!� ��'"� �� � �
�� � ��
� � �%) *')� �%&amp;"
��*,.$/+��/-.�+�-.��,%!#"���"�
+,"--%*)� �'�--�� �/,)%./,"�
�*%)-���!!'"��,%!'"��'**,%)#�
�*!!'",��'*.$"-��(%- ���(��
������ ����� ����� ������ �����
������� ���������� ������� ���
������� ��������� ������ ��
������������ �����
��)�� �%�� ��%�� �� �� ��'�� ��$'
%��
� � � ���*##�� �%�� ��
!� �� #��� �'�'�� �'�� �� �$# �&amp;�
�!� $!��
� ��%#&amp;�"�
���'�%&amp;����&amp;� &amp;'�"��� '�� �� �
����%&amp;���"��!(���!#%��
��� ��� �� ��!� ����� � �� ���
����� �"!� ��������� ��� ��� ���!�
�!� �"���� ����� ��!��!������!
�!��� !��� �� ���� ��� ��� �!�� �
�����!�� �����#� "���� ����!
������!� !"��

Business &amp; Trade School
�����
�� ��� �� �������� �����
���&amp;��&amp;'��!$'���$��$"��
��!!��$��*��� ��
�
�
������ � ��
��!! %$! '��&amp;��&amp;�$!!������)
���&amp;�� (�����"��&amp;����&amp;�� ( #���$)#� !
�$&amp;��#��%�#��#(��$!!���'��#�����$$!'
� � �

��� ��� �� ���� ���� �������
���������������� �������������!
����������������������� ���� ��
� � � � � � � �� ��� "�� ���
� � �� ����� ��� ���"� �������
�"�� �"��#�� # ��"# ��� ���!!�
$� ��� �����"����!����!��

ANIMALS
Pets
���� ����� ����!�#��� ����
������ # $���!�������#�"�!�
�������
#
��!�
��
� ���� ���
���� ���!"� �������������� ��#��
���!�� ������ �� "��� �������� �� ��
�������"��
����!��
�����
�� � � ���

�
�
������������

����� ������ ����
������������

��

�

������������ �����������������
���������� ������ �
��������� �
Want To Buy
� ����������������� ��
&amp;#' +�%,�� )+(�.�#'!� (+� ���'�
�(' ��(#%���!�,�0 %%,��� �, ,�
�,,#!'&amp; '-,�(+�(/ ++#�#'!�+(1�
�%-1�#'- + ,-���#%%�)�1���,"��'�
�%(, � *.#�$%1�� �% �, � �('-���.''#'!"�&amp;�
�' +!1
�� �� ����
�
(+
�� �� ���� �
AGRICULTURE
MERCHANDISE

������ ����� �� ����� ���
������ �����
� ��� ������
��������������������������
�
�� � �
� ���� ���
���������������� ����������
��#���� ����� ��
� %�� �'�
��"%� �� ��� �� �!)$��!&amp;$��!��
�%��$���!%��$�'�#�!&amp;$� $�*�$� � �
��&amp;�� �� �����#� $�� ��$� �!��$�
(��! � %�#�$� �� �&amp;����#
���� "�
��'���� ��"�(� ��&amp;)� ���
�
��''� ��� �� ���� �!$�� �!""
������$� &amp;*'�� �"��)'!�� ���)�'�
��$�� �� �%+�'� �%%"(�� ����
(&amp;'���(����'�&amp;�(��� �$��"�!'�
�'!""��(�)��!( �(��%*(� %"���&amp;�
&amp;"!�$��(�&amp;�&amp;�'� ( '����'�� �!'�
&amp;'%%�� (����� �*��"�� (&amp;��
($�&amp;�%$�)%%"��%,�� �#�)%�
�� ���������� ����������
��
������� �������� �� �������
�
� &amp;���� ����� ���$ � !��
�� ����"�����!���������!$��
�� ���
'#� �� $����� �����$� $
� �$�#�� ���"���"�$ "�� �"��(�"�
$ '#��������������#
�� $������%"��$%"�����%���� "�

!����������$�������� � �����
"���� ��!��� ���� ��������
���������� �����$� ������ �����
���� ��� �"�������#����������$�
��!���� �$��� �!� ������ ����
��������� ����� ��������� �����
�� ��� ���$� ���� #���#� �� �
������ �!����� ����� ���$� !��
#����������$���� ����������� ��
����������������� ������ �
��� �
� � �� �� ������ �
������������ �� ������
�%��� ��"�� �����
� � � �#$
�&amp;��������! ��#���%"#��'���!$�
�� �� �"���'� ��!$� �� ��# � ��$%"�
��'���!$����� '#���� $������%"�
��$%"��$ �#�����!�"������ $#� �
��#������� %#� �$��#�� ��� $
!�
�� ��� �������%� �� �� �����
�� ������
�$�� ���"� �� �� ��
��%��"��!���# ��"# �����#!��
������"��!�� ���"������
��%����"������ ���� ����� ����
#� $�"�� ���&amp;� �$!��� ���"�� ���&amp;�
��$"��� �$#���!� �$!���
�
��!!&amp;�"��$������ � �����"��!��
�#�
����� ���������������������
������ ��������� �������
������������������������
������������� ���&amp;)�����
� ��� !)������%���� ����""!�
&amp;%"!(�
�"%) !$���*'$!)*'������!( �(��"
�((+�'����%#��!$��$���'%+(��
����� ����� ���
���
���
�����������
� �
���� ���
�������� �������� �� ���������
������������
�

���� ������� �����
������

�������

��!$�� ��� �� �� �� �� �� � ����� %$
�$ "'�#��%����������$�� �� ��
# ��� �� "�!�� ����� $"���� ��"��
!������ ��� &amp;���� ���$�"�� � $#
�$��#
����� ����� ����
� �� ��
������� ����� ��������������
����������� ������
���������� ��������� ���
�������� �������������������
����� ���� � ����� � � ����
�� ������������ ���! ��� !��
����� ����� ������� ����
����� ����� ��� �
� ���!�� ��
��������� ���"���������������
��� ��� ��� ��� ���"� ����� �
�����
����� ����� &amp;%� �(��%� ��##��(�� &amp;���
�� �� ��((�� �&amp;##&amp;,
�" %)�� �+(%"*+(���#&amp;*!�)��
�&amp;(��� �� ���$� *&amp;� �'$
�� ���$�*&amp;� '$
��!���������#���� #���������
�� ��������� $�� ���#�� �
���� ���� ��� "���"��"�"���
����
�� !�""���
���""�����"�������#����"�������#"
�����"��
��+�� ��&amp; � � *-� �� � ��
��'� *'����)0 +��-� ���%.,*�,-��.(�-$)(� � ���.,-�, �-)
� &amp;$ / �����." � � &amp; �-$)(� )!
�&amp;�,,1���)' (�,���' ��+�(�
�&amp;)-#$("�� �#$&amp;�+ (�,� �&amp;)-#$("�
�(������+$ -1�)!��$,� &amp;&amp;�( ).,
$- ',�
����� ����� ����� ��
� ����
������ �������� ������� ������
���������������������� ����
��������������
��"�� ����� ��!$� ������� ��#��
������ ����"� $���
�"$" '
"����� ��� �� �"")� �$"��$�
��'�� %"��$%"��� "����� �&amp; ��
� $��#�� ($"��������$��#�
��
� '�����#��$�"$#�����$ ���
����� ������ ��� � ������ ���
������������� ��������������
��� ����
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
Motorcycles
��� � ��!��&amp;� � �!#"#�!�� ����
����"�� ����� �$"#��� ��!���
��������������������"����!�
��&amp;� ����!�"#�� %���"������� ��!�
%�!��
���#!��"�
� ��
� � � ������
�!
� �
� ��
AUTOMOTIVE
Vans
��� ��!"���� �#$�"�������� �
� �� !% �"� �������� ����#�
��"&amp;����� ��#�� ��� � �������
��
�� �
Want To Buy
������� ��!����� �!� � "���
� ��� ����� !�������� ��� !�� ��
���
������
��
��
��
���
�� � ���"
������
REAL ESTATE SALES

������ ���� ������ ��� '#+)
��(�)�� ��)&amp;%� �&amp;�� �(!��#�� ���
�� �(� &amp;+)��� &amp;+*� �#��)� &amp;%� �#"
*&amp;'�(���%+*�*(��)���(��"���(!##��
,�##�� �� )�'*!�� )-)*�$)�
� �� ���� � � �� �
��!"� ���#������
� �����%
���� � �� ����� ������ �����
�� ������"�����$�����"������� �
��"�� ��� � ���� � ��� "%� � �!
�� � � �����
600

ANIMALS

� !�$���#��%������!�"���������
��!"��������!�������!������ ����
����� ��
���

Lots
� ��&amp;�� �%(� �%&amp;� ��#�� ��%%����
�%��(��� %$� �)�"�*�� �!##'� ���
�#%'�� (%� �(� �(� ���� �'"!$�
� �� ���� ��� �� �����

Apartments/Townhouses
�� �� �� �������� � �������� �
��������
��
�����
��� �����
�������������������
���������
����� ����� ��� ������ �������
������ �� �� ��
������������������� �����������
������� �������� ��� ����
�#��� �"���� ��#��� ��� ����� ���
������� ����� ���� #�� ���� ��� � ���
� ��!�����%���� �� ����� ���
���� ��� ������$����������� ����
�������

�&amp;�� %*(� (��%$��)� '�� �"%%'� �&amp;)
%+�'"%%! $�� )��� ��"" &amp;%" (� � )��'!� �$�� � +�'�� ���� ��$�� ��
� )���$�� $ $�� �'��� , )�� �""� $�,
�&amp;&amp;" �$��(� �� �*&amp;�%�'�(�� � ���
��)�(�� ��*$�'-� �'���� ����� &amp;�'
#%$)��� ��""�
�
� %'
�
�

Apartments/Townhouses
��� ���� ������
��
������������#�� �����'#�
���������""��'#��&amp;�!�
�!&amp;�#�(%�� ��&amp;$�������
���� ���� ����
��������������������� �����
��!����%���$"��� #��������
���� ����� �#���� ����� ��&amp;�
�!�$�����
�
�� �#�
��
� ��
���� ��� � �� ���� �� �
"�$���#!�� ��� "���"!�� ��!�
��"���� �� �� �� ��#!�!�� ���
�������
�%�')"�#)� �$'� '�#)� #� �-'��
�*(��� ),$� ���'$$"� �%�')"�#)
�+� !��!�� #� �-'��*(��� �� �
��%$( )��� ���"$#)��'�#)����#)
#�!*��(� ,�)�'�� (�,�'� �#�
)'�(�����##�#)�, !!����'�(%$#�
( �!�� �$'� �!��)' ��� ��(�� ���!��
%�$#��� ��� ������ �*�� � �#)
#�$"��#������)$�&amp;*�! �-����!!
�� �� ���
������������ �� ������!���������
!��!�������� ��������"�! ��� ���
������ ��� �� ���� ���� �� ����
���� ���

�������������������������� ���
��������� ��� ������
���
��� ��� �
��� ��������������������������
������ ��� ������ � �
�
�
��� �� �����
� ���� �� ����� � �� ������ ����
����� ������� ���� ������ ����
�� � ��� �

������� ������ ��������� ���
����� ������������� ��� �
Lease
�����"������" ��!��$� ����
�"�)�$�� ���#�$� "��(�(�&amp;�$��
�$�%�� #����'#� �!��'���� ����
� ��
�
��"$� ��� �

Rentals

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Help Wanted- General

Medical

����������&amp;���"������" ��"!
�'���(����� ������ � ��� ��!&amp;
� ���
��#"%�&amp;�
���
��� �� �� "$� � � � �
��%"� ��(�� �� � �"���� )
�����

�! � �% � ��'+!��(� �$��� !(� �*'�
'�$)#,�#%%"!$ ��%'��#�((� ����
�'!+�'(�� �� �� ��� ��$"�'� �
�������&amp;#*(��!��!$)�'�()����%$�
)��)�������)� � �
��

�!�-!/�-4�%)1!./%#�/*-� +*.%/%*)
�1�%'��'!�"*-��!/!-�).��!-1%�!
�""%�!�� �*(!-*4�� �$�� �++'%�
��)/.�(0./��!���$*)*-��'4�1!/�
!-�)�� $�1!� �*(+0/!-� .&amp;%''.� %)�
�'0 %)#�&amp;)*2'! #!�*"��%�-*.*"/
�3�!'� �) � �*- �� �!� ��'!� /*
/-�1!'�� �!� �� �!%#.� �*0)/4
�!.% !)/�� $�1!� �� $%#$� .�$**'
%+'*(�� *-� !,0%1�'!)/�� $�1!� �
-%1!-�.� '%�!).!�� �!� ��'!� /*
2*-&amp;�2%/$���2% !�-�)#!�*"�+!*�
+'!�� �) � $�) '!� %""%�0'/� .%/0��
/%*).�� ��4!�-.�*"�*""%�!�!3+!-%�
!)�!� +-!"!--! ��� �$!� +*.%/%*)
%.� � $*0-.� �� 2!!&amp;�� ��'�-4� %.
)!#*/%��'!�� �!0(!.� (�4� �!
-*++! � *""� �/� /$!� �!/!-�).
�!-1%�!� �""%�!��
� ��� �!(*�
-%�'� �-%1!�� *-� "�3! � /*
���� � ���� �$!� !� '%)!
"*-�.0�(%..%*).�%.� ����+(�*)
�!+/!(�!-���

�����������������������������
��������� ������������ ������� �
��#�� �� !����� �"� ��� ��� ��
��� ��� ���� ��� ������ � �
����� ���������

���� �� ��� ���� ����� � ��
����� �
�� ���� ����
�� ������
������������������� ������� �
���� ������� ��� ��!� �"�� � ��
���� � ��� ������ � ����
��� � ����

Food Services

Sales

�"��������������������� ��!�
���� ������� ����
������
�� � ���� �� ������ ������� ���
���"�������#������������ � ��
���!���� #���� ��� ������

��� � ���� # �������������$ ���
� ��� ��� ��� � ������ �!� � ��
��"��� ����
����
�� ��

Help Wanted- General

������
���������
����� ��� �

���

����� �"� � �������� ��#� �"����
����� ��� ���!��� !���� ������
���� #����� �!���� ��� �
����� �� �

RESORT PROPERTY

Drivers &amp; Delivery
���)!-�)*�%�������$$��!�+�#0���
$!##.&amp;&amp;���%��� �����&amp;��)+*�,)���
��##�0�� �)&amp;&amp;"��&amp;%�)�+���� ��(,!)��
$�%+*��� ����� �/'�)!�%���� ')��
��))���� ��'�%���#���� .!##!%�� +&amp;
.&amp;)"� ���0*���.��"���� �/+)��*"!##*
*,� �� �*�.�#�!%����,!#�!%��� �+����
'#,*��� ��%��!+*� ��+�)�� .�!+!%�� '��
)!&amp;����� �� � �� � � �&amp;)�� !%+�)�
-!�.*� �&amp;%+��+� �*� *&amp;&amp;%� �*� '&amp;**!�
�#��

������������
�� ���

����

�##"#"� $,.� #/0� )'/&amp;#"� /0##)
$� .'!�0',+� /&amp;,-��� �1/0� &amp;�2#
(+,3)#"%#�,$�/0##)
*'))� -.,"1!0/�� '+2#+0,.5� /5/�
0#*/�� !,*-10#.� /�225�� %,,"
!,**1+'!�0',+�/('))/�
� )#� 0,� '+0#.�!0� 3'0&amp;� ,0&amp;#./
�+"� 0,� $,)),3� "'.#!0',+/��#+"
.#/1*#� 0,� ��))'-,)'/� ��')5
�.' 1+#� ��� ,4� � � ��))'-,�
)'/���&amp;',�� ������������

�&amp;$%!��#� ��#'���� ��"�� �&amp;$%
�'�� !!�� �!�"&amp;%�#� �����$�
�"����
���$�� �&amp;� %�)�� �!� �!�
("�#�� ��� $����������� ��)!&amp;#
# � $ &amp; � � �
% !
�������� �� �����

SAYLOR
WOOD YARD
%&amp;New! �&amp; ���
��&amp;���
�
&amp; ��
�
�&amp;��
&amp;�
���
�
�
�&amp;
�
�
&amp;�
�
�
�
�
&amp;���
��
&amp;�
&amp;�
�
"�
�
�#
�
�
�
&amp; ���
�
�
�
�
!�
&amp;�
�
�&amp; �
�&amp; ���

Shingle - Metal - Rubber Rooﬁng
Drywall - Pole Barns - Siding
Gutters - Spouting &amp; More
References available
Insured - Bonded
Free estimates
740-887-3422

�
�&amp; !$�&amp; !��#
����&amp;������#
���&amp;�
&amp;������&amp;�������

AL’S SAW SHOP

60237854

—WOOD WORKING TOOLS—
10” - 12” Carbide
Saw Blade
19cts. per tooth

Planer &amp; Jointer
Knives
39 cts. per inch
$

Receptionist
Needed
Full Time Receptionist needed for
physicians office.
Previous Urology and
Coding/ Billing Experience
Must be able to multi-task.
Competitive Benefits
Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:

P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

60239290

Chain Saw Chain up to 16” (off bar) 2.
��� ��� ���� s ALTROMM HOTMAIL�COM
32 �� � #2 �� 0OMEROY /H� Limited time offer

and General Contracting

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

��Commercial &amp; Residential � General Remodeling

�� ����� ������
�� �� ���
��� � � �
����� ������� �� ���
������ �����
����� � � ���
��� ��������� �������� ��
Fully Insured - Free Estimates
��������� ���������

Baum Lumber

MANTIS TILLERS - TROY BILT TILLERS - HITACHI TRIMMERS SAWS - BLOWERS - TANAKA - WINCH CABLES - CHOKERS
SERVICING ALL BRANDS
PICK UP &amp; DELIVERY

J. Clifford Construction
General Contracting

Hoe - Dozer Work - Septic Systems - Sewer - Water
Roofing/All Types - Concrete Work
Dura-Last Flat Roofs
Springs - Ponds - Roads
Home &amp; Business Remodeling

Phone 740-416-1436
740-992-7943
740-949-2921

740-992-5500

PRACTIC MANAGER NEEDED
Full Time Experienced Practice
Manager needed for physician’s office.

CMA or LPN
Needed

Qualifications: Associate Degree in Medical
Assisting or Business Management preferred.
Five or more years of supervisory experience in
a related medical field. Responsibilities:
Coding/Billing experience, Credentialing,
setting up a physician practice, and experience
with Athena Collector/Clinical a plus.

Dettwiller True Value Lumber

00

Marcum Construction

740-985-3302

We Now Have Continuous Gutters 5” and 6”
White in Stock – 10 Special Order Colors

SHARPENING SERVICE

����!� �"���#� ���� �����%�� � !�
�#�� ��������%�"!������ �� !���� ��
�"���� �� ����!���� ��#�������!�
" !� �� � ��% ����� !��������� ���
�"������!����%�� �� �������$�����
������ ���� ������ � ���� �
��������

� �������� ���������
���
�) *)!&amp;.&amp;*)�'��&amp;#".&amp;("��/�,�
�).""
�* �'�,"#",") "-�#/,)&amp;-%"!��)!
"-.��'&amp;-%"!�&amp;)�� �
��''����%,-� ����� �� �
�*$",-���-"(").���.",+,**#�
&amp;)$

POWER EQUIPMENT SALES &amp; SERVICE

740-591-8044
����$�����'����$$���

Amish Roofers &amp; Builders

Miscellaneous

Medical

Located on S. Rt. 7 in Chester at the Intersection of Pomeroy Pike

*��#!�"%�� ���&amp;���%)��!#�
*����$! �������%�$�*�� $&amp;#���*� ("�#�� ���
����#� ��$� '��������
������#)��%� ��)
����

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Count on it.

Stanley Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

Troyer
Rooﬁng, LLC
New Roofs - Reroofs

Technical Trades
�������� ���� � �*��'� �0.%)!..
.!!&amp;%)#� ���� ��� �!�$� 2%/$� �
./-*)#� ���&amp;� #-*0) � %)� �!"-%#!-��
/%*)�� �*�� !.�-%+/%*)� �!+�%-%)#�
�!./�0-�)/�!,0%+(!)/��(%)%�(�-/.
�) � �!'%�.� !3+!-%!)�! � +!-.*)
)!! �*)'4��++'4�
�!) � -!.0(!� /* � �!-1%�!� �!�$
������*3�� ���''%+*'%.��$%*�
��

Not Affiliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

Two Locations:

������ � �������������� ���������

���������� ������������!����� ��
�� ����� ����� ��������� ���
��
�
����� ������ � �

Restaurants
� ���� �������������� ��� ����
������� �� ������� � ��������
������� ����� ��� �� �� ���

60231173

Houses For Sale
���� ��� �� � ���� �!���#� ��� �"��
�
������������������� ����!��
�������
�� ��

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

60235886

Thursday, September 1, 2011

��� ��������������������

Full Time CMA or LPN needed for
physicians office. Previous Urology and
EMR Experience preferred
Competitive Benefits
Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:
P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

Offering a competitive salary
and benefit package
Please send resume by September 16, 2011 to:
P.O. Box 220
Athens, OH 45701

Thursday’s TV Listings

�Thursday, September 1, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Blue Angels soar past Fairland in 3
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CENTENARY, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy volleyball team picked up its
second home victory in as
many nights Tuesday following a 25-12, 25-18,
25-9
decision
over
Fairland in a non-conference matchup in Gallia
County.

The Blue Angels (2-0)
needed just the minimum
three games in the bestof-five contest, cruising to
13, 7 and 16-point decisions against the Lady
Dragons (1-2). GAHS
defeated Minford the
night before in straight
games as well.
The Angels had 44 kills
and seven blocks as a
team, as well as 12 ser-

vice aces and 27 assists.
Haley Rosier and
Kassie Shriver both led
the service attack with 12
points apiece, followed
by Heather Ward and
Kanessa Snyder with nine
points each. Riley Nibert,
Maggie Westfall and
Kendra Barnes also added
four, four and two points,
respectively.
Shriver and Ward both

led GAHS with four service aces, followed by
Nibert with two aces.
Snyder and Barnes also
had an ace each.
Rosier led the net attack
with 10 kills, with Rachel
Morris right behind with
nine kills. Westfall and
Molly Smith both added
six kills each, while
Nibert chipped in five
kills. Ward and Breanna

Blue Devils win quad at
Cliffside, stay unbeaten
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy golf
team continued its perfect
run through the 2011 season on Tuesday night, as
the Blue Devils posted a
23-stroke victory during a
non-conference
quad
match at Cliffside Golf
Club in Gallia County.
The Blue Devils posted
a winning team total of
151, which allowed
GAHS to improve to 49-0
in a dozen matches this
fall — including just the
third at Cliffside. Jackson

was the runner-up in the
team standings with a 174,
followed by Wellston with
198 and River Valley with
244.
Gallia Academy also
recorded its 11th medalist
effort in those 12 matches,
as senior Boeing Smith
fired a 2-under par 37 for
the low round of the day.
The senior fired three
birdies, a bogey and five
pars over nine holes.
Nick Saunders was next
with an even par round of
37, followed by Rob
Canady with a 38. Corey
Arthur rounded out the
winning tally with a 41.

Brady Curry and
Derrick Gilmore
also had respective
efforts of 43 and 45
for the Blue Devils,
who had four of the
top six individual
efforts overall.
Smith
Alec Ray led the
runner-up Ironmen
with a 39, followed by
Tyler Williams and Evan
Massie with 41 and 42,
respectively. Cole Massie
rounded out the scoring
with a 52, while Logan
Simpson
and
Katie
Dobbins added respective
rounds of 53 and 56.
Blake Downard paced

the Rockets with a
45, followed by
Lane Bunnell with
46 and Hunter
Riepenhoff with 51.
Thomas
Scaggs
ended the WHS
tally with a 56,
while Coy Hanson
added an effort
of 67.
Dan Goodrich led the
Raiders with a 44, followed by Jordan Howell
with a 51. Taylor
Woolridge and Zach
Morris completed the
RVHS scoring with
respective efforts of 72
and 77.

South Gallia Rebels win at Miller
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER, Ohio —
Four scores below fifty
gave the South Gallia
golf team a 21 stroke win
on Monday evening at
Forest Hills Golf Course.

The Rebels defeated
Miller by a total of 175196.
South Gallia’s Ethan
Swain earned medalist
honors with a round of
40. David Michael shot a
41, while Gus Slone and
Casin Roush shot match-

ing rounds of 47 to
round out the scoring for
South Gallia. Seth Jarrell
and Andy Welch also
played for the Rebels,
with their scores not
included in the team
score.
Dakota McGill led the

Falcons with a score of
44. McGill was followed
by Brandon Davis with a
47, Chris Gamble with a
51, and Shawn Hayes
with a 54. Also playing
for Miller were Andy
Jeffers
and
Justin
Henkle.

Smith also had four
kills apiece in the
triumph.
Westfall had a
team-best
four
blocks at the net,
while Rosier added
two stuffs. Morris Rosier
and Nibert also had
a block each.
Ward paced GAHS
with 17 digs, while
Barnes had 10 and Morris

added five. Shriver
led the hosts with
20 assists and
Snyder added seven
assists.
Gallia Academy
opens Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic
League
play
Thursday when it travels
to a Warren for a tripleheader contest with
Warren at 5:15 p.m.

Point soccer shuts
out Sissonville
the Ryan Bonecutter
assist. The goal came
after a free kick from
S I S S O N V I L L E , 22 yards out which led
W.Va. — The Point to a well executed play.
Pleasant
boys
The ball was
soccer team held
chipped over a
Sissonville
to
wall of defenders
just four shots on
by
Hristian
goal
during
Lenkov
and
Tuesday’s game
headed toward
at
Sissonville
the center of the
High School.
goal
by
The Big Blacks Roedell
Bonecutter.
(2-3-0) scored
Porter headed the
for the first time at the ball into the upper cor4:56 mark on a ner of the goal for the
Gustavo Roedell goal score.
that went into the back
Point Pleasant’s Josh
side of the net. Steve Parsons had four saves
Porter assisted on the as goalkeeper, includgoal.
ing a diving stop on a
P o i n t P l e a s a n t ’s penalty kick.
Roedell scored again at
The Big Blacks took
the 60 minute mark, 17 shots to just four
with the assist coming shot attempts for
from Nathan Hannum. Sissonville. Point had
Hannum moved the ball four corner kicks in the
behind the defense to set game,
while
up the goal, which Sissonville had one.
Roedell socred from
The varsity soccer
near the post.
team will return to the
The final goal came field
on
Tuesday
at the 70 minute mark, against Ohio Valley
with Porter scoring on Christian.
BY SARAH HAWLEY

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Holgorsen calm
Bauserman likely Ohio State starting QB entering debut
at No. 24 WVU

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Dressed in a white oxford shirt
with an Ohio State logo on the
chest — no tie, no sweater vest —
Luke Fickell made the first big call
of his head coaching career.
Fickell, an assistant elevated to
replace Jim Tressel who was forced
out in the midst of an NCAA investigation, said that fifth-year senior
Joe Bauserman would most likely
be the starting quarterback when
the 18th-ranked Buckeyes open
their season on Saturday at home
against Akron.
Bauserman and true freshman
Braxton Miller had battled for the
starting job in recent weeks in
camp. They were listed with an ‘or’
separating them on Ohio State’s
two-deep roster this week.
“Joe would probably take the
first snap,” Fickell said at his first
weekly news conference. “Just
talking with those guys, talking
with the offensive staff, we know
we’re going to need them both. The
whole idea is we want to make sure
that we can put them out there in
front of 106,000 and see how guys
respond.”
He said Bauserman got the edge
because he’s seen more game
action — although he has seldom
played with a game on the line
because he was behind departed
three-year starter Terrelle Pryor.
“It’s leadership,” he said when
asked what separated Bauserman, a
former minor-league pitcher for
three years in the Pittsburgh Pirates
farm system. “It’s also what this
team, where we were at the time.
He’s done a really good job
through camp. I’ve been impressed
with the things we’ve asked him to
do and what he’s done.”
Fickell, formerly the linebackers
coach, stressed the job wasn’t permanently Bauserman’s.

“It doesn’t mean I haven’t been
impressed with Braxton as well,”
he said. “That’s why we’ve been
impressed with him enough to list
him in the ‘or’ category. But, again,
the whole idea is we want to continue to create competition and to
make sure that those guys understand that by saying ‘or’ that we
need both.”
Offensive tackle J.B. Shugarts
said the 25-year-old Bauserman
was more knowledgeable about the
playbook.
“Joe’s an older guy, he’s been
around. He knows the system a little bit,” he said. “Joe’s a little more
of a pocket passer, but he’s a lot
more athletic than people give him
credit for when he gets out of the
pocket. We all know Braxton can
make some plays on his feet if he
has to scramble or step up.”
Center Mike Brewster will be
counted on to make things as easy
as possible for whomever is taking
the snaps.
“I can’t do too much for them,
but the thing I can do is make sure
that they’re protected, make sure
that I have the line all on the same
page, make sure that I am picking
up the blitzes with different calls
and putting them in a position to be
successful,” he said.
Pryor took almost every snap the
past two seasons. He led the
Buckeyes to a Rose Bowl win two
years ago and to a 12-1 mark last
year, including a victory over
Arkansas in the Sugar Bowl.
But he left Ohio State this summer, giving up his senior season,
while caught up in the middle of
the NCAA investigation into
improper benefits to players.
Tressel was forced out on May 30
after 10 years as the Buckeyes head
coach, admitting he knew some of
his players broke NCAA rules but

didn’t tell anyone for more than
nine months.
Fickell said the quarterbacks, like
everyone else, would be graded on
their performance against the Zips.
“Everything’s a test, we tell
them,” he said.
Fickell also said that third-year
sophomore Jaamal Berry has a
hamstring injury and will probably
not play in the opener. In his stead,
the tailback rotation will be Jordan
Hall, Carlos Hyde and Rod Smith.
Linebacker Etienne Sabino, who
broke a bone in his hand 10 days
ago, had surgery last week and is
expected to play with a cast on his
hand.
The two-deep roster that was
unveiled featured seven new
starters on offense and seven on
defense, taking into account that
the Buckeyes will be without three
frontline players (wide receiver
DeVier Posey, top tailback Dan
Herron and offensive lineman Mike
Adams) who are suspended for the
first five games for taking cash and
free tattoos.
Maybe because those top players
will not be with the team for the
start of the season (in addition
backup
defensive
lineman
Solomon Thomas is also sitting out
the first five games, and backup
linebacker Jordan Whiting will
miss just the Akron game), Ohio
State will go with game captains
instead of seasonlong captains.
Nominated for the Akron contest
are Shugarts, Brewster and defensive lineman John Simon.
The 38-year-old Fickell said he
was anxious to be a head coach
after spending the last nine seasons
on the Ohio State staff.
Tressel was known for his conservative game plan — repeatedly
saying that the punt was the most
important play in football.

CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (AP) — Dana
Holgorsen is taking a
laid-back yet serious
approach toward his first
game as a college head
coach.
Holgorsen shrugged
and shook his head
Tuesday when asked
about the subject, declining to talk about his own
emotions. Instead, he
wanted to make sure No.
24 West Virginia’s practice schedule and game
plan were in place for
Sunday’s season opener
at
home
against
Marshall.
“I get asked that quite
a bit and I don’t have any
answer
for
you,”
Holgorsen said. “I wish I
had some good material
for you that you could
print. But it’s really more
about just routine and
staying on task and getting to the game and
focusing at the task at
hand.”
Since taking over
when Bill Stewart was
forced out in June,
Holgorsen has handled
himself in the same manner, appearing relaxed
and focused.
The offensive coordinator,
who
helped

CARPET

SALE

No sweater vest for Ohio Stateʼs Fickell
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — What’s brewing
with the 2011 Ohio State
Buckeyes ...
BUCKEYES BUZZ:
So at least we know this
latest Ohio State coach
won’t favor sweater
vests, white shirts and
ties.
Interim head coach
Luke Fickell, the new
man
replacing
the
deposed Jim Tressel, had
his first weekly news
conference on Tuesday.
INJURY REPORT:
TB Jaamal Berry is still
nursing a hamstring

Asked about it, Fickell the Toledo game a week
injury and may not be
ready to play. Taking his said he wouldn’t be avail- later.
He did not go into
spot will be Jordan Hall, able for the opener and
Carlos Hyde and Rod might not be around for detail.
Smith.
In addition, LB Etienne
Sabino is expected to
““A
AP
Place
lace t
to
o
play after surgery last
week to repair a broken
Call
l Home”
Home”
bone in his hand. He’ll
Foster Parents
Foster
Parents Needed
Needed IInn Y
Your
our C
County!!!
ountyy!!!
wear a cast during the
game.
$25 - $45 a day for the care of
o a child in your
CURIOUS: It was a bit
home. Can be single, married or “empty nest.”
of a shock when OL
Call Oasis to help a child ﬁne a place to call home.
Corey Linsley, a promisTTraining
raining in progress.
ing 6-foot-2, 310-pounder
Come join us.
from Youngstown, didn’t
Call 1-877-325-1558 for moree information or to
register for training
appear on the two-deep
chart.

60239164
602
239164

Oklahoma State and
Houston thrive, was
hired to build the
Mountaineers into a
national power.
Holgorsen is starting
out cautiously, and his
biggest task for now is
figuring out which of his
seven available running
backs, including three
freshmen, deserve to get
the ball.
It
won’t
be
Holgorsen’s first time
facing the Thundering
Herd. He was with
Houston when the
Cougars played in
Huntington in 2008.
Before this week he
had barely paid attention
to Marshall, trying to
work out the challenges
of fitting players into his
system as he’s always
done.
That all changed
Tuesday.
“Obviously, we all
understand that we’re in
game week, which is
exciting both for all of
our coaches and all of our
players,” Holgorsen said.
“I feel like we’ve had a
good almost four weeks
of work. Hopefully we
will throughout the week
get better at attacking
those specific things.”

All Styles Included

12
Months

Same As Cash*

FREE 7/16” Pad w/purchase of carpet
FREE No Obligation Quotes
FREE Removal of Old Carpet
FREE Furniture Moving

*see store for details

�Inside
Blue Angels soar past Fairland in 3, Page A7
Blue Devils win quad at Cliffside, Page A7
Point soccer shuts out Sissonville, Page A7

LOCAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY — A schedule of upcoming
high school varsity sporting events
involving teams from Meigs and Gallia
counties.

Thursday, Sept. 1
Volleyball
Warren at Gallia
Academy, 5:15 p.m.
River Valley at Rock
Hill, 5:30 p.m.
Eastern at Southern,
6 p.m.
Sherman, Grace
Christian at Hannan,
6 p.m.
Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian
at Parkersburg Catholic,
5:30 p.m.
Golf
SEOAL at Gallia
Academy, 4:30 p.m.
Miller at Eastern,
4:30 p.m.
Southern at Belpre,
4:30 p.m.
Athens at Meigs,
4:30 p.m.
Meigs (girls) vs
Eastern (girls), 4 p.m.
Wahama, Point
Pleasant at Buffalo,
4:30 p.m.

SPORTS

A8
Thursday, September 1, 2011

Wahama golfers edge Eagles by 1 shot
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY, Ohio —
Tuesday afternoon was
another beautiful day for
golf for local high schools,
which produced an exciting and close match
between
two
TVC
Hocking Division members.
The play 6, count 4
match between Eastern and
Wahama was played at the
Kountry Hills Golf Course
in Meigs County. Wahama
came out on top by the
slimmest of margins, one
stroke.
The match could have
gone either way. After the
number 3 and 4 golfers
completed their rounds, the
score for each team was 85
strokes each. The number 1
and number 2 golfers were
next to finish and the com-

bined score at that time was
166 for Eastern compared
to 169 for Wahama.
At that time, it looked as
though Eastern would win
the match. However, the
number 5 and number 6
golfers for each team had
not yet finished their
rounds.
And, when they finished,
the match changed direction and Wahama’s number
5, Michael MacKnight,
who, by the way, has
played well of late, posted
a score of 40 for the 9
holes.
This allowed Wahama to
replace a 44 score giving
the White Falcons a one
shot advantage for the contest.
This was a match that
one almost wished neither
team would win or lose.
The medalist for the day
was Easter’s Christian

Amsbury who shot a fine
score of 37.
Wahama’s 4 scores that
counted were, of course,
MacKnight’s 40 along with
another 40 by Kevin Back.
Morgan Nottingham added
a 42 and Dakota Sisk shot a
43.
The 44 shot by Samuel
Gordan and the 48 by
Austin Ohlinger were not
included in the final team
score.
Eastern’s Kyle Young
was close behind the
medalist score shooting an
excellent 38 for the match.
It was Young’s best score
of his career. Chris Bissell
contributed a 44 for
Eastern’s 3rd best score
followed by a 47 from
David Warner to account
for the team total.
Jack Kuhn and Dustin
Frost also played for the
host school, but their totals

Sarah Hawley/photo

Easternʼs Jack Kuhn chips the ball onto the green during Tuesdayʼs TVC Hocking golf match against
Wahama at Kountry Hills Golf Course in Meigs County,
Ohio.

were not not part of the
final team tally.
Wahama takes a day off
on Wednesday before traveling to Winfield to face
Buffalo and Point Pleasant

Point
wins
quad at
Riverside

Sports Briefs
MLEF co-ed
softball
tourney
RUTLAND — The
Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation will hold
its
Second Annual
Co-Ed Benefit Softball
Tournament Sept. 10-11
at the Rutland Ball Fields
behind the Rutland Civic
Center. There’s an entry
fee of $150 per team. Hit
your own 44 core max or
less softballs. Contact
Randy Butcher at 4443645, 742-2302 or Mike
Bartrum at 416-5443.

Parking
passes
available
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant
High School football
parking passes are on
sale at Ohio Valley Bank.
Parking is available near
the main entrance for all
home football games.

RedStorm
baseball to
hold academy
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
—
Coach
Brad
Warnimont and the
RedStorm baseball program have expanded their
Fall Baseball Academy to
include instruction for
ages 6-18 in the areas of
hitting, defense, and
pitching. Starting Sept.
10, and running every
Saturday until Oct. 8 at
Bob Evans Field on the
campus of the University
of Rio Grande, an hour of
instruction is offered.
Sessions will run from
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Multiple sessions are
encouraged.
Daily schedule will be:
Hitting Instruction –
10-11 a.m.
Defense Instruction –
11 a.m.-noon
Pitching Instruction –
noon-1 p.m.
Payment is due at the
beginning of each session. Checks can be
made payable to Rio
Grande Baseball Fund.
A waiver form will be
required to be filled out
before participation. It
can
be
found
at
www.rioredstorm.com
under “baseball” or they
will be available at Bob
Evans Field each day.
Each player must provide their own equipment: a glove, helmet,
bat, spikes, and athletic
shoes.
For more information,
contact (740) 245-7486

at the Meadowlands Golf
Course. Eastern’s next
match is a TVC contest as
they go on the road to play
the Miller High School
team.

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Sarah Hawley/photo

Southernʼs Adam Pape putts the ball during Tuesdayʼs TVC Hocking golf match against South Gallia at
Kountry Hills Golf Course in Meigs County, Ohio.

Tornadoes topple South Gallia
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY, Ohio — The
Southern golf team earned a
ten stroke victory over visiting
South Gallia on Tuesday
evening at Kountry Hills Golf
Course in Meigs County, Ohio.
The Tornadoes shot a team

score of 172, while South
Gallia shot a team total of 182.
Southern’s Adam Pape took
medalist honors for the TVC
Hocking match. Pape was followed by Cole Graham with a
42, Jacob Hoback with a 45
and Ryan Schenkelberg with a
49. Also playing for the
Tornadoes were Trenton Cook

(50) and Bradley McCoy (62).
For the Rebels, David
Michael shot a 39, Gus Slone
had a 43, Casin Roush shot a
49 and Seth Jarrell shot a 51.
Ethan Swain (55) also played
for South Gallia.
The loss drops the Rebels to
8-8 overall and 4-5 in TVC
Hocking play.

Defenders top Gallia Academy, 4-0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Ohio Valley Christian soccer team
produced three second half goals,
allowing the host Defenders to turn
a slim 1-0 halftime edge into a comfortable 4-0 victory over Gallia
Academy on Tuesday night during
a non-conference matchup in the
Old French City.
The Defenders (2-0-1) remained
unbeaten this season and posted
their first shutout win, while the visiting Blue Devils (0-1-0) managed
just one first half shot in their season opening match. OVCS —
which outshot the guests by a 12-7
overall margin — had a 7-1 shots
on goal advantage after one half of
play.
The discrepancy in first half
attempts, however, didn’t play as
big a role in the final outcome as
you might expect — as the hosts
needed most of the opening half to
break into the scoring column.
In the 30th minute, Paul Miller
netted a wide open shot in front of
the net — allowing OVCS to take
the early 1-0 edge with 10:28 left
before intermission.
GAHS also dodged a couple of
bullets in the first half, as at least
four Defender scoring opportunities
sailed either wide or high of the net
— which made it a 1-0 contest at
the break.
Richard Bowman gave the hosts
a two-goal advantage in the 47th
minute, as Bowman lobbed a loose
ball from atop the box to the left

Bryan Walters/photo

Ohio Valley Christian senior Paul Miller (13) controls a loose ball while
being pursued by Gallia Academy defenders Caleb Curry (5) and
Winston Wade (8) during the second half of Tuesday nightʼs non-conference soccer contest in Gallipolis.

side of the net — over the outstretched arms of GAHS keeper
Nathan Wiseman. Bowman’s first
goal came with 33:08 left in regulation.
T.G. Miller made it a 3-nil contest
in the 64th minute on a rebound of
his own shot. Miller attempted a
point-blank shot on goal from the
right side, which caromed off the
goal post before bouncing back to
hit him in the knee. The ricochet
bounced into the back of the net
with 16:23 remaining, making it a
3-0 contest.
Josh Blevins added the final goal
in the 76th minute, as his shot in
front of the goal bounced off the leg
of a Gallia Academy defender —

which deflected the ball in different
direction than originally intended.
With the GAHS keeper headed the
other way, the deflected shot went
in the net with 4:42 left — concluding the scoring at 4-0.
Gallia Academy out-shot the
hosts 6-5 in the second half and also
owned a 5-4 edge in corner kicks on
the night. Wiseman made eight
saves for the Blue Devils, while
Peter Carman made seven stops in
posting a shutout.
OVCS returns to action Thursday
when it travels to Parkersburg
Catholic for a non-conference
matchup at 5:30 p.m. Gallia
Academy’s next game is at Warren
on Thursday, Sept. 8, at 6:30 p.m.

MASON, W.Va. — The
Point Pleasant Big Blacks
varsity golf team had a bit
of an off day Monday afternoon, but still played well
enough to win a quad
match against Wahama,
Southern and River Valley.
The match was played on a
beautiful day at the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va.
Point was led once again
by Opie Lucas who was
medalist for the day shooting a three over par 38. Eric
Allbright followed with a
41. Denver Thomas shot a
46 while Kelsey Allbright
added a 47 to give Point
their winning total 172.
Adam Thomas shot a 51 for
the winners, but his score
was not part of the final
total.
The Wahama White
Falcons were a close second to the Big Blacks.
Their total of 175 was three
stokes short. Samuel
Gordon was Wahama’s best
for the day in the play six,
count four format firing a
personal season best of 41.
A pair of 44’s shot by
Kevin Back and Morgan
Nottingham
supported
Samuel’s score. Both
Dakota Sisk and Michael
MacKnight shot 46 for the
day with only one of those
scores included in the total
team
score.
Michael
Hendricks added a noncounting 47.
Southern’s final total of
211 placed them in the third
position in the quad match.
Adam Pape shot a 44 to
pace his team. Freshman
Jacob Hoback’s score of 48
contributed to the final
count. Cole Graham added
a 59, while Trenton Cook’s
60 gave Southern their team
total. Ryan Schenkelberg
and Bradley McCoy also
played with their scores not
part of the final tally.
River Valley’s total score
for the match was 223. Dan
Goodrich shot a 45 for the
teams best score. Taylor
Woolridge added a 56
while Jordan shot 60 and
Zack Morris added a 62 to
account for the team total.
The match between
Wahama and River Valley
was a TVC Hocking
Division contest. The victory for Wahama was their
fourth in five conference
matches.
On Thursday, both
Wahama and Point travel to
the Meadowlands Golf
Course near Winfield to
face their counterparts from
Buffalo High School.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="586">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <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>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10040">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="11401">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <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>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11400">
              <text>September 1, 2011</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2876">
      <name>graves</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1358">
      <name>haley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="660">
      <name>long</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
