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II rsingaround: 4-H, FFA
Fun Show results, A2

Printed on 100%
Recycled ~ewsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomerov searching tor new administrator

SPORTS
· • Reds win in extra
· innings. See Page Bl

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
Village of Pomeroy is
searching for a new village
administrator after current
village administrator John
Anderson turned in his written resignation. effective
Sept. 15.
The resignation was read
by Mayor John Musser at

this ~eek 's council meetThe
letter said
ing
Anderson. who has been in
his position with the village
for 21 years, was resigning
due to health reasons.
Anderson is Pomeroy's
only certified water operator. Musser said he is working with an engineering firm
to find someone to replace
Anderson on a temporary
basis until a permanent

replacement can be found.
Musser said he hoped by the
next council meeting on
Sept. 14, a temporary fix
would be in place. with the
village possibly contracting
some of the work through
local entities. Musser called
Anderson an asset to the village and members of council
commended him on his
years of service.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick

Blaettnar also told council it
may have to consider revising the contracts the village
has with Bedford and
Salisbury Townships in
terms of the costs of fire protection provided by the
Pomeroy Fire Department.
Currently. Bedford pays
$150 per run while Salisbury
pays an annual, flat fee of
$1,200. Musser agreed the
contracts may need to be

Di11ing for Women
CIUljJter jou11ded

STAFF REPORT

BY BETH SERGENT

Page AS
• Robert Nutter, 87
• John P. Roderus, 60

INSIDE
• Bartrum receives
scholarship.
Page A2
announces
of summer
program. See Page A3
• Mystery farm
contest winners
. announced.
;See Page AS

WEATHER

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs County
Chapter of Dining for Women has been
founded and is described as a "giving circle dedicated to empowering women living in the developing world to become
healthy and economically self-sufficient.''
The Meigs chapter meets at 6 p.m .. the .
ftrst Tuesday of the month at the
Middleport Church of Christ. At 5:30p.m.
tomorrow at the Depot in Middleport. the
chapter will have a bead pmty to benefit
the women in Uganda who made the beads.
Women in Uganda have received money
from Dining for Women to purchase recycled paper that they then roll into beaded
necklaces. The necklaces are their only
source of income for thciJ.": families in a
country that has seen many people killed
by civil war.
At the bead party tomorrow. those
interested can learn about the Ugandan
women who are trying to lift themselves
out of poverty with their beads; purchase
the handmade jewelry; and learn how to
make a difference by finding out information about the local Dining for
Women chapter and other projects it
undertakes under the leadership of the
national organization.
Dining for Women is an all volunteer
organization which gets its money from
members who donate what they would
normally spend on a night out at dinner to
the cause. That money is in turn invested
in community projects that help people
work their way out of poverty. As for the
bead party, the ones that sell become
income, food. medicine, school fees and
hope to the women who create them.

Please see Beads, AS
Details on Page AS

~EX

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs County Fair Board
has posted sales results,
including exhibitor. purchase price, and buyer. from
Saturday's Meigs County
Junior Fair Livestock Sale.
Dan Smith. Racine. was
auctioneer for the sale. held
in the show arena.

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Weather

Dairy market steers
Benjamin Ayres, g.c.,
I .300, Annie's Place of
Tuppers Plains; Audrionna
Pullins. I ,500. Auditor
Mary Byer-Hill; Kayla
Tripp. 1.325. Farmers Bank.

Market Commercial
Beef

Beth Sergent/photo

Pictured are Brenda Merritt (left) and Jenny Smith, members of the Meigs
County Chapter of Dining for Women, an organization that empowers
women living in extreme poverty around the world. The Meigs chapter is having a "bead party" at 5:30p.m. tomorrow at the Middleport Depot. The beads
(pictured) were made by women in Uganda out of recycled paper.

Funds
Learning about fire safety
available for
cleanup of
tire dumps
HOEFLICH@ MYDA,LYSENTINEL.COM

Annie's Mailbox

Sports

Market steers
Craig Jones. g.c .. $3.600,
Parker
Corp./RC
Construction: Jacob Dunn.
r.c., 2.000. Tuppers Plains
Dairyette; Ashley Putnam,
2.500. G&amp;M Fuel: Jacob
3,000. Arnold
Parker.
• Insurance; Jordan Wood,
2.200,
Holzer
Clinic;
Ashley Life. 2.550. DV.
Weber Construction Co.;
I Jordan Parker. 3.500.
Diamond Stone.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

12 PAGES

B Section

As

© 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

liJ!IJI,I !I!1.!I!II .

GALLIPOLIS - State
funding is available to help
property owners clean up tire
dumps. and the GalliaJackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid
Waste District is working
with local health departments
to address the problem.
Tire dumps harbor insects
and other pests, and create a
public health hazard. Harry
Small.
Management
Analyst Supervisor for the

POMEROY - Residents
at The Maples. an elderly
housing complex on Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy. were
given a lesson in fire safety
recently by tv.'O members of
the Pomeroy Fire Department.
Jeff Shank and his son.
Jordan. talked about safety
and demonstrated how to
use equipment including
fire extinguishers placed in
the facility.
In conjunction with their
talk,
the
Silverheels
Property Management provided escape route maps and
fire and safety handbooks to
each of the residents to
study in preparation for The
Maples emergency drills.

Please see Cleanup, AS

Please see Safety, AS

STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

G)

-Lii.NOE.A

Please see Pomeroy, AS

MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

revised at the end of the year
for financial reasons.
David Hamm of New Era
Broadband also spoke to
council about possibly
entering into an agreement
between his company and
the village to lease space
near a village water tower to
provide broadband internet
and digital phone service.

Livestock
sale results
posted

Bea is for life

2 SECTIONS -

D.,

~

Submitted photo

Jordan Shank, left, and Jeff Shank, Pomeroy Fire
Department members, present a fire safety program to residents of The Maples, a senior residence facility.

3rd Street
Racine, Ohio

State Route 124
Syracuse, Ohio

740-949-2210

740-992-6333

Jonathan Barrett. g.c.,
2.100,
J&amp;S
Feed
Supplement; Dylan Milam,
2,000.
County
r.c..
Commissioner
Mike
Bartrum/Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Jenna Burdette.
1 DOO. R&amp;L Preowned
Autos; Hannah Hawley.
I .800. Farmers Bank; Ross
Keller. I .700. River Rose
OB/GYN;
Mallory
Nicodemus, 1.100. Farmers
Bank; Charles Bret Cleland,
I 1.200. Home National
Bank; Elizabeth Collins.
1.700. Baum True Value
Lumber; Samuel Collins,
I .400. Diamond Stone;
Victoria Goble, 1.200.
WeKare Lawn Care.
Morgan Windon. 1.200,
Mark
Porter
GM
Supercenter/Reed &amp; Bauer
Insurance Co.: Katie Keller.
1.900.
River
Rose
OB/GYN: Amanda Gilkey.
2.300, Bill R. Hall; Breanna
Hayman. 1.200. Farmers
Bank: Comtney Bauerbach.
1.400. Parker Corp.: Jesse
Woodyard. 1.300. Pleasant
Valley Hospital: Timothy
Warner. I .500. Farmers
Bank: Samuel Evans. l .300.
Home National Bank; Justin
1.200. West
Cotterill.
Virginia Custom Cuts.

Please see Livestock, A&amp;

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August 26, 2009

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

Submitted photos

Even though the horses couldn't come out to play due to rain, this little boy got a ride
around the horse barn from a 4-H'er at the Junior Fair Horse Fun Show.

··Horsing
~around

4-H, FFAFun
Show results
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Despite the rainy weather
v.hich kept the horses in the
barn. 4-H and FFA members
,along with advisors made
the best of it and carried on
\\lith the Junior Fair Horse
Fun Show.
Organizers said "when a
challenge arises, a person
must adapt." As such, the
barrel racing became bucket racing. The "horse" was
a little green (literally) and
did buck one person off,
but old "Grundy" as he was
called had some great
times. Pictured below is
·Jennifer Fife bringing
Grundy home.
The winners of the fun
show were as follows: Baby
l;&gt;ottle race. first place.
Jennifer Fife and Maggie
Cummins, second place,
fv1arrisa Keesee and Shelby

Despite the rain (and mud) which kept the horses in the
barn, 4-H and FFA members made the best of it, turning
barrel racing into bucket racing at the Junior Fair Horse Fun
Show. The "horse" was a little green and is pictured here
being brought home by Jennifer Fife.

Pickens: egg and spoon.
first
place,
Maggie
Cummins, second place,
Jerrika Keesee: egg toss.
first place, Je1Tika Keesee
and Haley Sigman, second
place, Maggie Cummins
and Jennifer Fife; water and
sponge race, senior division, first place. Shannon
Brown. second
place,
Shelby Pickens, junior division, first place, Sarah

TEST US FOR 30DAY$, SA'J'ISfAC'l'JON lS GVARANTEED.
lf \\itbin 30 day!&gt; ~ou aren't romplctely satisfied, you ('an get out of l~ur contract.

Schenkleberg, second place,
Jerrika Keesee; bucket barrel races, senior division,
first place. Shannon Brown,
place,
Shelby
second
Pickens; junior division,
place,
Sarah
first
Schenkleberg, second place,
Jerrika Keesee; stall decoration contest, first place, Erin
Dunn, second place, Shelbi
Dailey.
third
place,
LeDeanna Sinclair.

Ingels Electronics
106 N. 2nd Ave. • Middleport, OH 740-992-2825
'41&amp;1 ~ o Aogul&gt;tory Coot Roc&lt;&gt;&lt;ll) Cll11gt d up to $L25 to ~&gt;tip dofay cottJ "'"""" 01 comp~ Willi d&gt;llgatiOOJ ond cllo'l!H ...,...., by Stato lnd Ftdt&lt;ll
ttlocom r~r, Stato and Ftdflll Unl&gt;tr.,l Str'A&lt;• chargn; 1114 _.l(h¥gts lot 9M"""'"t- oo All!. Th.., lotS'" nc1 t&amp;l(tt or 9&lt;MinmtnHoquotd
&lt;hi '!Its.

&lt;W&lt;nnq '"" ""1¥1*1 IO"l'1""'fll r~tAns;t'lor..tter up to Slli Solro?J~_;-•f1'01'!aod'1 I~ Uf11i1Nttdvoa 14Metrlt.i!d i&lt;O(tM$11tpr,-.~j l')kt1 tor ~~•diJ~

.
Vinton County Air Show set for Sept. 20

·McARTHUR
Members of the Vinton
County Pilots and Boosters
Association are currently
finalizing plans for the 2009
Yinton County Air Show to
be held at the Vinton
County Airport Sunday,
Sept. 20.
:: In addition to the airport's
barbecued chicken dinners,
several well known aerobatic pilots will make their airplanes do things it seems
airplanes should not be able
fD do. As usual there will be
~kydivers and much more.

It is anticipated that the
first chicken dinners will be
available between 11 a.m.
and noon and the air show
will begin at 1 p.m. with
opening music being provided by the Vinton County
High School Band.
For more information as it
becomes available contact
Booster President Nick
Rupert at 740-375-0268 or
Booster Secretary Steve
Keller at 740-418-2612.
The
Vinton
County
Airport is located about 6
miles north of McArthur

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just off St. Rt. 93 on Airport
Road. Flyins are welcome.
Pilots fly to 221.

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of AT&amp;T lor.llectuot Property and/ot ~1&amp;1 aflllalOd
canr..,.., Ail w... """'""''- ~.....,,.. 11M propony alrts• MfA!CIM&gt; .......

11&gt;_...

Meigs County Fair "Thank You"
Show Appreciation To Your Fair Buyer
with A "Thank You" Ad In The ...

Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy,OH
or call (740) 992-2155 for details

Bartmm receives scholarship

* Ads must be paid for in advance.

I

Sincere thanks
.--- -- ------- - -- ~

I

Thanks

I

l- 1 Col. x 2" -

1 Col. x 3" $24.45

2 Col. x 5"
$67.50

$16.30

STS

Sunday

$111.00

2 Col. x 4"
$54.00
STS

$88.80

$22.20

2 Col. x 2"
$27.00
.
~rent

Brian J. Reed/photo

STS

Patterson, Director of the Rio Grande Meigs Center,
and Paul Reed, Trustee of Rio Grande Community College,
:presented a $500 RGCC scholarship to Cody Bartrum at
Saturday's Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale.
Bartrum's name was chosen from a drawing of Junior Fair
exhibitors.

$44.40

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�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August 2 6, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Make dO-less dad nwre responsible
with. anyo!le in the family,
tr.¥ dtscussmg your concerns
With the sc~ool counselor,
your be~t fncnd, a trusted
adult. ~etghbor or the parent
of a fnend. It will help.
Dear Annie: How do you
.handle. family mct!lbet:s
wh~ thmk every relative 1s
the1r personal ATM'? These
P.eople are not in serious
fmancial . trouble. They
spend their own money the
~a} they want, but every
time the¥ h~ve a perso~al
need, whtch IS almost datly,
they phon~ ever.y member
of the famtly unttl someone
finally gives in just to halt
the c~ntim!ous calls.
Thts d~tves me up the
wall, as. tt seems to be a
ne-.er-en~ing prob~em with
no solut1on m sight. No
~atter how much you help,
~~ s ne-.er enough. There are
times when they are truly in
need, but it's gotte_n totally
out of hand. If I gtve them
$100 today, they'll ask for
$300 tomorrow.
They are driving everyone nuts and pushing the
entire . family . away. I'd
~ppreciate any tdeas. When
1t mvolves your own family
members, the solution is
hard to see. - Hit Up Too
Often
. D~ar Hit Up: The solut10n ts to cl~se the bank. This
means havmg the backbone
not to give in. no matter how
many irritating, pleading
phone ca~s you rece!ve. If
these relat1ves are askmg for
money on a daily basis, they
~ave n~t learned to live withm t~e1r means. Instead of
openmg your wallet. open
the phone book and suggest
they contact someone who

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My parents
manied but separated.
father isn't financially
e. For some reason, he
can't seem to keep a job.
, Currently, he's unemployed
and has no car. Annie. my
father is a freeloader. All he
does is lie around the house
. and do nothing. My mother
. is a hardworking woman.
· and I respect and adore her.
She does everything for my
brother and me.
I'm 16 and have learned
· to cope with the fact that
.' their marriage is over,
although no one else in the
family knows they are separated. My mother wants a
divorce , but my father
won ' t sign the papers. I
know she's miserable and
hurt, but she doesn't show
it. Frankly, I don't think
Dad can live on his own. He
ce1tainly can't support our
family, and I don't think he
sees us as his first priority.
I feel trapped and there's
one I can talk to about
IS.
I know he's still my
•
father, but I can't stand him.
Any
advice?
· Anonymous Daughter
. Dear Anonymous: You
are in a tough position. It's
admirable that you are
standing by your mother, but
your father may have problems of which you are
unaware. Please know it is
not your responsibility to fix
your parents' relationship,
make your father more
responsible or break the
news of the separation to
your relatives. If you cannot
talk about your situation

will help consolidate any
debt and put them on a budget. We recommend the
National Foundation for
Credit Counseling (nfcc.org)
at 1-800-388-2227.
Dear Annie: Th.is is in
response to "Desperate in
Pennsylvania," who hears a
clicking noise every time
she swallows.
I had the same problem
and was scared because I
also had other symptoms
like chronic fatigue and
pain. I scheduled an
appomtment with my family doctor, who discovered
that I have an underactive
thyroid. I also found out that
I have a growth hormone
deficiency, which explains a
lot about my health prob!ems. Our hormones really
do affect us in many ways.
I'm a young 43-year-old
who feels a lot better now
!hat. I'm on the proper medtcat10n. Hope this helps. Patty in Ohio
Dear Patty: Thanks for
sharing your diagnosis.
We' II print others down the
ro~d and hope one of them
w11l prove helpful to
"Desperate."

Beth SergenVphoto

Pictured are the champions of the Meigs County Fair's Kiddie Tractor Pull. Front row (from
le~) Daniel Card, first place, Auston Colburn, second place, Bradley Vance, third place,
~1chael Kesterson, fourth place in lightweight division; second row (from left) Kyle Bailey,
f1rst place, Andrew Brooks, second place, Rhett Beegle, third place, Tysen Pullins, fourth
place in heavyweight division. Also pictured are various sponsors and organizers of the
pull, including Hu.ck and Sherry Wagner, Sharon, Jessica, Josh and Ed Hupp, Jayne Fitc~,
Brent Rose, Maxtne Rose, Dan and Donna Jean Smith.

CAA announces end .of summer program
CHESJ:IIRE . -

Gallia Meigs
is continuing to
assist residents With the 2009 Emergency
Summer Coolmg Program which began
July 1st.
H~wever? ~~ndra. Edwards, Emergency
Servtces DlVISI~n Dtrector, announces that
the program wtll end Aug. 31 or until the
funds ar~ deple!~d. She r~minded that there
are ':0 atr con~tt.tOners th1s year, and noted
that tpcome eltgtble persons. must make an
appomtment to apply for asststance.
The~e are two types of households that may
~ asststed, she sa_td. They are an income elig1ble hou~eh~ld with~ member ~ho has a c.urr~nt quahfy.mg medJCal. c.ondtttonlbreathing
disorder ven~ed by phy~ICian documentation
from a medical professiOnal. They may be
qualified to receive one payment for a current
electric bill or PIPP w~ichever is mo~e. but not
toexceed$175.NodJsconnectreqmred.
An inc~me eligible ho~seh.ol.d with a me.mber who ts 60 or olde~ IS .ehgtble to recetve
o~e payment for ~lectnc ~Ill up to the current
btll or PIPP, whichever IS more, but not to

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox
and read features by othe;
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

.Community Calendar
Public meetings

Delmar of Liberty, Texas to
preach at Faith Harvest
Church, Coolville, 7 p.m.
Saturday; 10 a.m. and 7
p.m. Sunday.
REEDSVILLE- Benefit
sing for Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing, 6 p.m., Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene.
Featured singers: Brian &amp;
Family
Connections.
Angela Gibson, Chuck and
Claudett Harbin and Jerry
and Diane Frederick.
COOLVILLE
Gracemen Quartet will perform at 1 p.m. at the
Carthage Gap Campground
located off US 50 on
Township Road 56. the concert is free and sponsored
by the First Southern
Baptist Church.
Sunday, Aug. 30
HEMLOCK GROVE Fifth Sunday Hymn Sing, 7
p.m. , Hemlock · Grove
Christian Church, refreshments following.
POMEROY
Benefit

Thursday, Aug. 27
POMEROY Meigs
and
Water
District Board
Supervisors, 11:30 a.m.
at the district office. 33101
Hiland Road.
Monday, Aug. 31
POMEROY - Veterans
Sen ice Commission, 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy.

Clubs and
organizations

Thursday, Aug. 27
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters Sorority, 11:30 a.m.
at the Wild Horse.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053. 7 p.m at the
. hall.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Senior
Citizens, regular meeting,
11 a.m., blood pressure
checks taken, potluck to follow.
Friday, Aug. 28
A _POMEROY - Class of
~59 luncheon at Wild
.. Horse, I p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 1
MIDDLEPORT
Middlepo1t Masonic Lodge
363. regular meeting, 7:30
p.m .. at the lodge, refreshments at 6:30p.m.
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America,
7:30
p.m. 1
Members bring items for 1
silent auction to follow 1
meeting.

Church events
Wednesday, Aug. 26
POMEROY
Adult
Bible School, 7 p.m.,
tonight-Friday, Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church,
keynote speakers each
night.
:
Saturday, Aug. 29
COOLVILLE Rev.
'

sing for Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing. 6 p.m., Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Featured singers: Brian &amp;
Family
Connections.
Randall Johns, The Dollys.
Angela Gibson, Frank and
Ida Martin, Brenda Haggy,
Lawrence Eblin, Becky
Eblin and Jerry and Diane
Frederick. Refreshments
follow.
POMEROY - Dayspring
in concert, 6:30 p.m., Mt.
Union Baptist Church,
39091 Carpenter Hill Road.

exceed $175, with no disconnect required
and no physician documentation required. •
Priority will be given to elderly client~.
Appointments can be made by calling the
CAA Cheshire Office. To make an appointment, call 367-7341 for Gallia County and
992-6629 for Meigs County.
Eligible clients must take, proof of
income (income at or below 175 percent of
the federal poverty guidelines;) name~,
birthdates and Social Security numbers of
all household members, electric bills in the
name of the applicant or spouse: medical
documentation if under 60 years of age.
Docu~entation is required or consideration
for assistance cannot be provided.
Annual income eligibility for 1 person in the
household is $18,952.50, 2 persons
$25,497.50, 3 persons $32,042.50. 4 persons
$38,587.50, 5 persons $45,132.50 and 6 persons $51.677.50. For households with more
than six (6) members, add $6,545 per member.
Edwards advises that applications will be
processed in the Cheshire Office only now
throu~h Monday, Aug. 31.

SUMMER
ClEARANCE
SAlE

Birthdays
Tuesday, Sept. 1
SYRACUSE - Alberta
Hubbard will celebrate her
88th birthday today, cards
may be sent to PO Box 62,
Syracuse, 45779.
RACINE
Clara
Sargent will celebrate her
90th birthday today, cards
may be sent to PO Box 236,
Racine, 45771.

Sola Sale
Reg. $2069 Sofa &amp; Chair I Blue ................................. $1499
Reg. $1979 Sofa &amp; Chair I Burgundy .................. :······ $1479
Reg. $2989- Sectional I Brown or Green .................... $1799
Reg. $2099 Sofa &amp; Loveseat I Brown &amp; Gold Tweed $1499
Reg. $869 - Sofa I Green Microfiber ............................. $599

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FINANCING SPECIAL ,
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Prescriptions ·

First 100 people to
Transfer your
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30%0FF

$25 Swisher
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reSTf&gt;mc·.·Mattress Sale

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aPeople in business

Sleep. Better And Feel Better With A New Mattress!

OPEN: Monday thru Friday ·8:00am· 8:00 pm; Saturday 8 am. 5 pm

'Yt!Bennett-Roach
ATHENS
-

Dawn
recently
.accepted the position of food
:service
supervisor
for
0 ' Bleness
Memorial
Hospital. She was previously a cook at Health Recovery
\ Services of Athens working
~ in
the Rural Women's
\ Recovery Program. Bennett~ Roach
graduated from
Hocking
College
in
Nelsonville with an associate degree in applied business in culinary arts.

The

COJ;nmun~ty Actio~ Agency

ALL MODELS ARE ON SALE
Free removal of old bedding

Store Hours:

9:30 -5:00
Ed Zatta, R. Ph.
Kenneth McCullough,R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R.Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East MalnStreet, Pomeory, Ohio

Mon- Fri

-

~I

Open Weeknights

Til8
Friendly Service

9:30 • 1:00 Sat.

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PageA4:

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

VVednesday,August26,2009:

Cash for

Clun~ers

a jolt for car sales, not afix

BY STEPHEN MANNING
AND KEN THOMAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 26, the 238th day of 2009.
There are 127 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Aug. 26, 1920. the 19th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing
American women the right to vote, was certified in effect
by Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby.
On this date: In 55 B.C., Roman forces under Julius
Caesar invaded Britain, but achieved limited success.
In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa began cataclysmic
eruptions, leading to a massive explosion the following day.
ln 1939, the first televised major league baseball games
were shown on experimental station W2XBS: a doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and the Brooklyn
Dodgers at Ebbets Field. (The Reds won the first game, 52, the Dodgers the second, 6-1.)
In 1958, Alaskans went to the polls to overwhelmingly
vote in favor of statehood.
In 1961, the original Hockey Hall of Fame was opened in
Toronto.
In 1972, the summer Olympics games opened in Munich,
West Germany.
In 1978, Cardinal Albino Luciani lof Venice was elected
the 264th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church following
the death of Paul VI. The new pontiff took the name Pope
John Paul I.
In 1986, in the so-called "preppie murder case," 18-yearold Jennifer Levin was found strangled in New York's
Central Park; Robert Chambers later pleaded guilty to
manslaughter and served 15 years in prison.
Ten years ago: Attorney General Janet Reno pledged that
a new investigation of the 1993 Waco, Texas, siege would
"get to the bottom" of how the FBI used potentially flammable tear gas grenades against her wishes and then took
six years to admit it. (Special Counsel John Danforth later
concluded a junior FBI lawyer had failed to tell superiors
about the use of pyrotechnic tear gas canisters, and said he
was certain federal agents did not start the fire that
destroyed the Branch Davidian compound.)
Five years ago: The nation's supply of vaccine for the
impending flu season took a big hit when Chiron Corp.
announced it had found tainted doses in its factory, and
would hold up shipment of about 50 million shots. At the
Athens Olympics, the U.S. women's soccer team won the
gold medal by beating Brazil, 2-1, in overtime; Shawn
Crawford led a U.S. sweep of the 200 meters. Pop singer
Laura Branigan died in East Quogue, N.Y., at age 47.
One year ago: Former First Lady Hillary Rodham
Clinton closed the book on her 2008 presidential bid by
telling the Democratic National Convention in Denver the
election wasn't about her and declaring herself a "proud
supporter of Barack Obama." Russia recognized the independence claims of two Georgian breakaway regions,
Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Hurricane Gustav struck
Haiti, causing widespread flooding and landslides. The
storm goes on to kill at least 78 people in the Caribbean.
Major League Baseball announced umpires would be
allowed to check video on home run "boundary calls" starting Aug. 27.
Thought for Today: "Suffering belongs to no language.''
-Adelia Prado, Brazilian poet.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 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. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

our main concern in all stories is to Published every morning, Monday
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
992-2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, P.O. Box
Department extensions are:
729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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

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WASHINGTON - Now
comes the hard part for the
auto industry - luring customers without big Cash for
Clunkers discounts.
The popular government
. rebates gave auto sales a
jolt, but it was only temporary. Now car makers and
dealerships are forced once
again to confront the worst
market in a quarter-century.
While Cash for Clunkers
may have proved there are
still car buyers out there. it
is unlikely the heavy
demand will last. In fact, the
big rush to car lots this
month may have had the
unintended effect of stealing sales from this fall and
next year.
"I am really worried about
this winter," said J.P. Bishop,
president of a dealership
chain in central Maryland.
"If you didn't buy now, the
only reason you are going to
buy over the next three or·
four months is because your
car died.''
Cash for Clunkers, which
offered drivers as much as
$4.500 off the price of a
new. more fuel-efficient car,
proved far more popular
than anyone imagined.
Through Monday. dealers
reported selling 625.000
vehicles in just a month
with the rebates.
The program was set to
come to an end Monday
night. The government had
set the deadline on estimates that most of the $3
billion set aside for rebates
would be used up by then.
Analysts initially figured
the cash would last as long
as November.
Cash for Clunkers had its
complications: Congress had
to race to approve $2 billion
more for the program after
the first $1 billion quickly
ran out. Dealers complained
the government was slow to
reimburse them for deals
they made on new sales.
Hours before the Monday
night deadline for Cash for
Clunkers sales. the government gave dealers an extension, until noon Tuesday, to
file the paperwork to get
repaid. The deadline for
sales was not affected.
The
Transportation
Department granted the
extension after the Web site

.

AP photo•

Vehicles traded in for the government's Cash for Clunkers program are seen through and
reflected ir a car window at a lot owned by Ira Toyota in Danvers, Mass. Monday. It was a
race to the finish for dealers and customers alike as the Cash for Clunkers program head·.
ed into its final lap on Monday. Over the weekend, car dealers across the country watched
their lots grow empty as crowds rushed to trade in gas guzzlers after the government said·
that the $3 billion rebate program would end at 8 p.m. EDT Monday, two weeks earlier than!
expected.

set up to handle the claims
was temporarily shut down
from overload.
For the auto industry,
coming off the program
could be like a letdown after
a sugar high.
Automakers and dealers
got a reprieve from a dismal
year of plummeting sales,
big layoffs and the bankruptcies of General Motors
and Chrysler. GM actually
added shifts at some plants
to meet higher demand.
Cars. trucks and SUVs
sold in July at an annual rate
of 11.2 million vehicles, the
first time this year the figure
has crept above 10 million.
That's still far below the 16
million vehicles sold just
two years ago.
While Cash for Clunkers
has helped the auto industry
stabilize, it will probably
take a full economic recovery to give car and truck
sales a lasting rebound.
"There's still a sizable
amount of pent-up demand
that's going to be felt," said
Erich Merkle. president of
auto industry Web site autoconomy.com. He said the
"baton
of Cash
for
Clunkers'' could eventually
be passed to a "fundamentally stronger economy"
Sure signs of that, of
course, are a ways off.
Unemployment is still high
and the housing market still
weak, enough to keep peo-

pie shy about making bigticket
purchases,
said
Rebecca Lindland, a Global
Insight analyst.
·'While this Cash for
Clunkers program provided
a respite for an ailing industry, we are not out of the
woods yet and we still have
a long road to recovery."
she said.
There also simply isn't
much left for drivers to shop
for - especially when it
comes to the most popular
Cash for Clunkers vehicles.
such as the Ford Focus, the
Toyota Corolla and some
hybrids.
GM. Hyundai. Toyot~ and
Ford have ramped up production of their more efficient models because of
inventory shortfalls, but
those vehicles won't reach
dealers for a while.
Automakers
are
approaching the next few
months cautiously. They are
moving to replenish dealer
showrooms. but are wary
about building too many
cars if demand fizzles.
Ford. for example. has
said it will boost production
by 33 percent from a year
ago during the fourth quarter. But Ford executives say
that could change depending on customer demand.
GM spokesman John
McDonald said Cash for
Clunkers hao; been "very successful" for GM. He said the

company estimates 30 percent of its sales increase during the period came from
customers who didn't quali ~
for the government rebatW
but bought cars anyway.
But McDonald said that
no one expects sales to keep .
going at that rate. and the
automaker doesn't see the ·
need to boost them throue:h •
sales incentives.
~ ~
''We think it's a good
stimulus for the economy
and a good way to get peo- ·
ple interested in buying:
cars:· he said. "But the idea:
to increase incentives to
make up for this just don't ·
make sense."
There are also signs that
Cash for Clunkers may have
sapped the market for the
near future. with buyers taking advantage of the rebates
and buying now rather than
sticking to plans to replace
their cars next year.
Last week, the automotive
research company J.D.,
Power and Associates pre-.
dieted Cash for Clunkers ·
will flatten the auto ind
try's recovery by lower
sales next year. J.D.
reduced its 2010 sales forecast to l I .5 million from
11.6 million.
"Because this was hot and heavy for such a shot1 period of time. we are going to.
have a payback," said Jeff_
Schuster. executive director
of forecasting at J.D. Power.

Remember me? Wall Street repackages .toxic debt:
owned them knew there
were still some good mortgages. so they didn't want
WASHINGTON - Wall to sell everything at fireStreet may have discovered sale prices. But buyers
a way out from under the knew there were many
bad debt and risky mort- worthless loans, too, so they
¥ages that have clogged the didn't want to pay full price
rinancial markets. The for the remnants of a real
would-be solution probably estate bubble.
sounds familiar: It's a lot
In recent months, banks
like what got banks in trou- have tiptoed toward a possible in the first place.
ble solution. one in which
In recent months invest- the really good bonds get
ment banks have been bundled with some notrepackaging old mortgage quite-so-good bonds. Banks
securities and offering to sweeten the deal for
sell them as new products. a investors and, voila. the
plan that's nearly identical newly rcpar..:kageu bonds
to the complicated invest- receive AAA ratings. a
ment packages at the heart stamp
f approval that
of the market's collapse.
means they're the safest
"There is a little bit of investment you can buy.
deja vu in this." said
''You've now taken what
Arizona State University was an A-rated security and
economtcs
professor made it eligible for AAA
Herbert Kaufman.
treatment,'' said Richard
But Kaufman said the Reilly. a partner with White
strategy could help solve &amp; Case in New York.
one of the lingering probAs for the bottom-of-thelems of the financial melt- barrel bonds that are left
down: What to do about over, those are getting sold
hundreds of billions of dol- off for pennies on the dollar
lars in mortgages that are to investors and hedge
still choking the sy!&gt;tem and funds willing to take big
making bankers reluctant to risk for the chance of a big
reward.
make ne\o\ loans.
Kaufman said he's optiThese are holdovers from
the housing bubble, when mistic about the recent
home prices soared. banks string of deals because.
bought risky mortgages. unlike during the real estate
bundled the:n with solid boom. investors in these
mmtgages and sold them all new bonds know what
as top-rated bonds. With they're buying.
investors eager to buy these
"We "re back to financial
bonds. lenders came up with engineering. absolutely." he
increasingly risky mort- said. "But I think it's being
gages. sometit'lles for people done at least differently than
who could not afford them. it was before the meltlt didn"t matter because. in down."
the end, the bonds would all
The sweetener at the heart
of the deal is a guarantee:
get AAA ratings.
When the housing market Investors who buy into the
tanked. figuring out how really risky pool agree to
· much those bonds were also take some of the risk
worth
became
nearly away from those who buy
impossible. The banks and into the safer pool. The safe
insurance companies that investors get paid first. The

Bv

MATT APUZZO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

risk-taking investors lose
money first.
That's how the safe stack
of bonds gets it AAA rating.
which is crucial to the deal.
That rating lets banks sell to
pension funds, insurance
companies
and
other
investors that are required
to hold only top-rated
investments.
"'There's no voodoo going
on here. It's just math.'' said
Sue Allon. chief executive
of Allonhill. which helps
investors analyze such hardto-price investments.
Financial gurus call it a
"resecuritization of real
estate mortgage investment
conduits." On Wall Street, it
goes by the acronym ReRemic (it rhymes with epidemic).
"It actually makes a lot of
fundamental sense,'' said
Brian Bowes. the head of
mortgage
trading
at
Hexagon Securities in New
York. "It's taking a bond
that doesn't necessarily
have a natural buyer and
creating two bonds that
might have a natural buyer
for each."
The risk is, if the housing
market slips even more.
even the AAA-rated investments may not prove safe.
The deal also rei ies on the
rating agencies. which nliSread the risk at the heart of
the subprime mortgage crisis. to get it right.
And then there's the
uncertainty about the value
of the. underlying investments, which FBR Capital
Markets analyst Gabe Poggi
called
"totally
com
bustible." Poggi likes the
deals because they appear to
have breathed some life into
the market. but he said it
only works if everyone
knows e\.actly what they're
buying.
The Obama administra-

tion is also working on a
plan to get banks buying
and selling risky bonds. But
the public-private partner- ,
ship announced this spring
is still in the works and has
yet to help investors figure
out what those bonds are
worth. By creating ReRemics. banks can help start
the process themselves.
The concept has been
around for years. but it h.
become increasingly pop
lar lately as a way for banks.
to sell off bonds backed by
commercial properties such
as malls and office buildings. Analysts say they've
seen a few dozen deals ·
aimed at repackaging de~t
held over from the mortgage boom. Investment,
banks have also dabbled in:
turning collateraliLed debt·
obligations. or COOs. into.
Re-Remics.
That's where Allon gets
nervous.
'
"I think that's trouble.".
she said.
,
COOs are already compli-.
cated. Repackaging them·
makes it harder to figure out
what the investment is.
worth. The more obscure
the concept. she said. the
more likely the deal has got-·
ten too creative.
Wall Street has a tendency·
to push the boundaries of·
good ideas. Bowes said. Bu '
he said banks are still
ing from the market
sion and are unlikely to
into new. risky Yentures.
.
··~lot of the market inno-...
vat10ns. they all started out
with this fundamentally
good concept and they often ·
tend to deteriorate over;
time. or just e\ olve into·
more and more risky ver-.
sions of the same concept:·.~
Bowes, said. "This ttme;
around, the likelihood is. it·
will take a lot longer for that .
to happen.''

�'Vednesday,August26,2009

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

BREC Ineinbers hear about cfunate change bill.

RIO
GRANDE
Because of the critical issues
facing electric cooperative
consumers
and
rural
G~LLIPOLIS - John P. "Jack" Roderus. 60. of Americans.
the
recent
Gallipolis died unexpectedly Monday. Aug. 24, 2009 at the Buckeye Rural Electric
Cabell Huntington Hospital.
Coop's 2009 annual meeting
Jack was born Sept. 11. 1948 in Braddock. Pa. to the late set a record for attendance.
William A. and Dorothy E. Sheehan Roderus. He was marHeld at Lyne Center of the
to Julia Shawver Roderus and she preceded him in University of Rio Grande ,
on Feb. 19.2006. He was a salesman, member of the the
business
session
Presbyterian Church where he was an elder, The focused on the threat to
Fraternal Order of the ARCHON. where he was the alumni affordable and reliable elecof the year in 2008. an Eagle Scout and a volunteer for tricity posed by efforts to
GABS football team for several years.
pass a far-reaching climate
Surviving is his son and daughter-in-Jaw Joe and Amber change bill in this session of
Roderus of Syracuse., daughter and son-in-law, Jill and Congress.
Sha~n Kilbourn of Clawson. Mich.. grandchildren.
"Government needs to
Ga~nel. Jacob. Cassidy. Zoe and Fletcher; sister and brothstrike a balance between
er-m-law: Carol and Bob Adamek of Monroeville, Pa.; keeping
electric
rates
brother-in-law and sister-in-Jaw, Kent and Lou Ann affordable and doing what's
Shawver of Gallipolis. and several nieces and nephews.
right for the environment,"
Jack was preceded in death by his parents Bill and Dorothy said Tonda
Meadows.
Roderus. hb wife Julia and brother William 0. Roderus.
BREC's executive vice
~e~ices will be II a.m. Friday, Aug. 28, 2009 at the
president and general man\Yil!Is Funer~l Home with the Rev Timothy J. Luoma ofti- ager
in describing the possictatmg. Bunal will follow at the Centenary Cemetery. ble effects of a cap-andFriends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, Aug. 27. trade greenhouse gas reduc2009 from 6 until 8 p.m.
tion program on the cost of
Pallbearers will Shawn Kilbourn, Bob Adamek., Tom
generating power with coal.
Adamek. John Rodems. Zach Shawver and Sam Shawver.
She said BREC has
In lieu of flowers the family requests that donations be
implemented many cost
ma~e in Jack's memory to the GABS Athletic Complex c/o
control and efficiency meaLon Young P.O. Box I 058, Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or the First
sures at the local level in
Presbyterian Church, 51 State Street, Gallipolis. Oh 45631
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail response to the economic
recession, but what happens
condolences.
in Congress can only be
influenced by the voices of
co-op members.
Meadows appealed to
BREC members to use the
Our Energy, Our Future
(www .ourenergy .coop)
campaign as a platform for
COOLVILLE - Robert George "Bob'' Nutter, 87, of dialogue with Ohio senators
Coolville, Ohio, died Monday. Aug. 24, 2009 at St. and representatives.
Joseph's Hospital.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Ellen Nutter.
Services will be held ll a.m .. Thursday, Aug. 27,2009 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home. Coolville, with Missy
Dailey officiating. Burial will be in the Stewart Cemetery,
POMEROY Meigs
Hockingport.
Soil and Water Conservation
Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday from 5
District has announced winto 8 p.m.
ners of our Mystery Farm
Family and friends may sign the online guestbook at
Contest
held during the
www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
Meigs County Fair.
The daily winners along
with the farm they identified
are, as follows: Monday,
Mark Pierce Farm. Chelsea
Smith winner; Tuesday. Tim
Ihle Farm. Jason Pierce win-

John P. ·Jack' Roderus

I

Robert George ·aob' Nutter

In her financial report,
Meadows said the co-op
took steps to reduce operating
expenditures
by
$800.000 in 2008 but still
completed projects important to improving service
reliability, including clearing rights of way along 164
miles of distribution lines
and spraying 600 miles.
"We must continue our
vegetation
management
program to ensure improved
service, especially during
periods of severe weather,"
she explained. New standards for conductors also
make the lines better able to
withstand ice buildup during winter storms.
Meadows pointed to the
completion of Pine Ridge
substation as an example of
the BREC Board of
Trustees' commitment to
power quality and service.
"The Pine Ridge substation was energized in May
of 2008 and reduced load on
the Beaver substation by
half," she said.
Ken Keylor. vice president of statewide services
for Ohio Rural Electric
Cooperatives. Inc. (OREC),
reviewed the economic and
political challenges faced
by electric cooperatives.
''Everybody in America,
everybody in this room. has
been changed" by the troubled economy in the past
year, Keylor said. ''It is now
in vogue to be thrifty," he
added.

Electric co-ops. including
BREC. are responding by
examining their expenses.
re-testing budget plans. and
seeking new operating efficiencies.
"Still, rates are inching up
due
to
a continuing
onslaught of environmental
regulations anti higher costs
for fuel," he said.
Even in a period of cost
containment, the opportunity to ensure additional base
load generation capacity
must be acted on to keep
rates stable in the long run.
This is what happened when
Buckeye Power. Inc., the
generation-and-transmission
(G&amp;T) cooperative supplying BREC and the state's 24
other member-owned coops. completed the purchase
of 200 megawatts of additional base load capacity
from Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation (OVEC).
"What this means is that
while the rest of the country
will be scrambling for base
load electric supply in the
next few years, we will have
already secured our requirements,'' said Keylor.
He warned that the "900lb. gorilla'' for all electric
cooperatives and their members is climate change legislation. The
1,200-page
Waxman-Markey bill that
narrowly passed the U.S.
House "takes direct aim at
coal,'' which fuels 90 percent
of electiicity generation in
Ohio. according to Keylor.

"Early estimnte::- show the
annual cost of electricity''
under a bill such as
Waxman-Markey to be
$300-$500 more for Ohio
cooperative members. he
added.
"Ohio's electric cooperatives have lobbied that
whatever energy and envi
ronmental policy our gov..
ernment settles on. it must
be fair. affordable, and
achievable," Keylor said.
"and it must have a safety
valve feature so consumers don't get hammered with unanticipated
price spikes."
Rural America must stand
up for itself as the Senatetakes up climate change legislation this fall.
''Demand
that
Washington ensures that
secure and affordable energy is a central theme in our
nation's policy," Keylor
urged.
No BREC trustee elections \\&lt;ere held this year.
The business meeting was
followed by drawings for
door prizes. including freezers filled with pork. electric
appliances. gift certificates·~
and merchandise donated·
by local businesses and vendors with whom the co-op
does business.
·
The registration gift fo•'
members was a cast-iron
skillet with the BREC logo.
Children received backpacks filled with school'
supplies.
I

Mystery farm contest winners announced~

)

Local Briefs

Adult Bible School

POMEROY - Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church will
host an Adult Bible School at 7 p.m. tonight through
Friday. Speakers include Whitt Akers tonight, Gary Ellis on
hn•·cr1&lt;"' and Peter Martindale on Friday.

Coin exhibition
POMEROY - OhKan Coin Club will have a coin exhibition at the Peoples Bank from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday.

For the Record
Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure was granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Bank of New York Mellon
against Rick E. Lunsford. and others.

Grand jury
POMEROY on Sept. 4.

Meigs County Grand Jury will convene

Divorce

.

OMEROY - An action for dissolution of maniage was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Ronald
Spaun and Jennifer Spaun. Pomeroy.

Ohio EPA's Division of
Solid and Infectious Waste
Management. told members
of the district's board the
money is still available to
clean up small tire dumps.
with 100 to 2.000 tires.
Since October of 2005,
155 such tire sites have
been identified, with 25 percent of those in the GJMV
SWMD. An additional 15
sites have been identified
for cleanup later this year
and the EPA is looking for
more sites.
Smail said township
trustees often find new sites
as do hunters who spend
time in the woods.
Since 1995, when Ohio's
Scrap Tire Program began.
about II million tires have

\

available from the EPA.
Ninety percent of the tires
removed from sites are recycled and if a person illegally
dumps one tire ''it attracts so
many more," Small said.
To be eligible for state
assistance in removing
tires, six conditions must be
met: Tires must have been
placed before or after property was inherited, the
property owner did not
have knowledge of or took
actions to prevent tires from
being dumped, the property
owner did not participate in
or give consent to placing
tires on the property, the
property owner received no
financial benefit from having tire placed on the property, the property title was

Hamm proposed the company pay $1 per foot per
month (this would amount
to around $90) plus any
electrical expenses. Council

agreed to work with New
Era which currently provides broadband internet
service in the Racine area
using transmitters on water

towers. The internet service
New Era provides would be
voluntary for residents and
an alternative to other internet providers.

Beads from Page A1

sunny. Highs in the mid 80s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Thursday night .••Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 60s.
Friday through Saturday
night...Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower
80s. Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31.26
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.75
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 36.54
9 Lots (NYSE) - 25.60
b Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.98
. .rgWarner (NYSE) - 30.33
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 11.29
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.71
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.43
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.51
Collins (NYSE) - 45.06
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.40
US Bank (NYSE) - 21.92
Gannett (NYSE) - 8.35
General Electric (NYSE) - 14.30
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 22.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.58
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.29
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 15.45
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 46.87

been removed from 183 documented tire dump sites on
private and local government lands. The state-funded
removal of another 40.6 million tires and another
322.313 sites with under
2,000 tires have been cleared
without cost recovery.
"The big sites are finished.'' Smail told the
board. "Now we are focusing on small sites and we
are trying to spend state, not
local. money.''
He added. "This is not the
tire amnesty program of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources. That is not an
EPA program."
Small said there might be
funds ava1lable from that
program as well as those

Pomeroy from Page At

Local Weather
Wednesday .•.Areas
of
dense fog in the moming.
Mostly sunny. Highs in the
upper 80s. North winds
around 5 mph ...Becoming
west in the afternoon.
Wednesday
night •..
Partly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 60s. North winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ...Becoming light
and variable.
Thursday ... Mostly

Winners of the hay show
co-sponsored by the Meigs
SWCD and Meigs County
Fair Board were: Class I. 75
percent or more alfalfa. Roy
Holter, first place, Patricia
Holter. second place, Class
2. all grasses, Blair Windon.
first place. Diane Windon.
second place and Patricia
Holter, third place; Class 3.
49 percent or less legumes.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 29.29
BBT (NYSE) - 27.49
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 17
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.29
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.70
Rockwell (NYSE) - 40.91
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.89
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.43
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 65.45
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.67
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.28
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.15
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.28
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Aug. 25, 2009, pro·
vided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Roy Holter. first place.,
Patricia Holter. second
place, and Blair Windon.
third place.
Winners received cash
awards and ribbons from
the fair board; and first
place winners will receive·
plaques from the Meigs
SWCD at the annual meeting and banquet on Sept. 22
at Meigs High School.

Cleanup from Page A1

POMEROY -A divorce was granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to James Robert Grueser. Jr., from
Amanda K. Grueser.

Dissolution

ner; Wednesday. Ed Gibbs
Farm, Rachel Hupp winner;
Thursday. Rodney Keller
Farm, Alice Hawthrone.
winner; Fiiday. Terry Sheets
Fann, Amy Ritchie, winner;
Saturday, Ray Parson Farm.
Brenda Johnson, winner.
Winners of the Mystery
Farm contest received $10
each. There were 86 entries
throughout the week.

Brenda
Merritt
who
belongs to the local Meigs
chapter, said she chose to
become involved because
unlike here in America, there
are limited relief agencies in
third world countries. Merritt
and member Jenny Smith
also said they like how the
program doesn't just give
money to the women, it goes
towards programs and outlets to assist them. For example. recently. Dining for
Women purchased an acre of
land and donated it to a fam

Safety
fromPageA1
Resident apartment floor
captains were named at the
meeting to aide in evacuation procedures during a fire
drill or an actual emergency.
Breness Phillips, vice president of the Residents
Council, presented the fire·
men with a donation for the
Pomeroy Fire Department on
behalf of residents of The
Maples. The fire safety meeting was coordinated by Jean
Triplett, project manager.

ily in a third world country
for them to farm.
The mission of Dining for
Women is "to empower
women living in extreme
povetty by finding worldwide programs fostering
physical, emotional and

not transfened to evade lia·
bilit). and the party that
placed tires on the property
was not acting as an agent·
for the property owner.
;
If those conditions are~
met, the prope11y owner can
go to the EPA website for·
paperwork or contact the
EPA or the county health
department or the solid
waste management distiict. ·
Smail said the EPA cur-:
rently has about $5 million~
to spend on small-site
cleanup. He said there is a ·
$1 fee on ever) new tire
sold at the wholesale level.
and that fee goes into the
cleanup fund. Wilson said\
the health departments,
were the key in the four-:
count) district.

Internet
ERYJRGlP'OMlRO~
l.Mh!Il~d HIM~.

No Contracts!

• F!I.IEE~IfTtc:hlml&amp;tJ•I&lt;I'I

........ t.'uw;tq-~ ttu ...~ Qt
• l Q - .nn-~ttt ~C'I'~

economic self sufficiency
and to cultivate educational
dinner circles inspiring individuals to make a profound
change through the power
of collective giving."

• Cistrnrr...tflgo.,_ ~fl&gt;£8rrm!

(~~6X~'!:!!f!J
_ , Up 01\llnt! ....J.D.c.l~Ntt 001!1

For more information go
to www.beadforlife .org.

Over6roo(.9?.g.fia6ifitation Center's
13th Annual Oktoberfest
Saturday, October 10,2009-11 am- 2 pm

• MUSIC • GAMES • CRAFT SHOW
• HOME DECOR VENDORS • HOG ROAST

Hope 10 se
You '''ere/

Free to the public as a thank you for your support in making
Overvbrook your Leading Healthcare Facility in Nursing Care
For More Information Or To Reserve Booth Space,
Contact Michelle Kennedy: (740) 992·6472

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
333 Page Street Middleport, Ohio

www.overbrookrehabilitntionccnter.c&lt;lm

'

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August26,2009

Livestock rrom Page At
Clinton Lambert , I ,300.
Wal-.Mart of .M ason, W.Va.;
Austin
Life,
1.400.
AEP/Mountnincer Plant;
Austin Ross. 1.300, Green
Valle] Co Op; Wyatt
Hysell. 1,400, Facemyer
Lumber Co .IS .E. Scott;
Clinton Kennedy, 1,200, Dr.
Kristina Kennedy; Wade
Collins, 1,200, Mark Porter
GM Super Center; Nathan
Cook, 1,100, Tobacco King;
Cassidy Cleland, 1.100,
Parker
Corp.;
Nicole
Moodispaugh. 1,200. Home
National Bank; Miranda
Grueser. 1,600, Max S.
Grueser; Raymond Lawson,
2.100. Holzer Clinic.

Market Dairy Feeder
Brenna
Holter. g.c.,
1.300. Farmers
Bank;
Clayton Ritchie. r.c .. 950,
Reed &amp; Bauer Insurance
Co.: Kirk Pullins, 525. Reed
&amp; Bauer Insurance Co.;
Taylor Parker, 675. Parker
A.l.; Laura Pullins. 550,
Home National Bank.

Market Poultry
Andrew Bissell, g.c., 650,
McDonald's; Julie Tillis,
r.c., 460, Ridenour Gas
Service; M. Austin Pierce,
150, Birchfield Funeral
Home/Rutland Department
Store; Morgan Tucker, 160,
Farmers Bank; Tiffany Will,
125, Home National Bank;
Jordan Koblentz, 310,
Gatling Ohio; Dominick
Rhodes. 125 . Mark Porter
GM
Super
Center:
Cheyenne Doczi. 200,
Farmers Bank; Benjamin
Tillis. 210 "'lorris-Northup
Dodge.
Brady Bissell. 200. Home
l\ational
Bank;
Kyle
Hoover. 120, Bob Ball: Ty
Bissell, 200. Facemyer
Lumber Co.; Mattison
Finlaw. 330, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital; Shelby
Bing. 340. Ohio Valley
Bank; Shawna Murphy,
190, Hendrix Heating and
Cooling;
Christian
Speelman, 210, Ridenour
Gas
Service;
Keri
Lawrence, 200. Meigs
County Republican Party;
Justin Morris, 200, King's
Hardware.
Dakota Rice. 200, RC
Construction Co.; Jesse
Morris. 320. Cross and Sons
Farm Equipment; Michael
Satterfield. 400. TNT Coffee
Shop. Mao;on, W.Va.; Amber
Moodispaugh,
280,
Moodispaugh Auctioneering;
Haley Bissell, 270. Home
National Bank; Chase Payne,
190, Farmers Bank; Kayla
Conlin, 220, Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drug; Jack Goode,
210, Dr. Douglas Hunter;
Matthew Brown, 300, Scott
A. Williams.

Market rabbits

and
Angie
Edwards;
Alexandra Houdashelt, 210.
McDonald's: Katlyn Barber,
230, Cross and Sons Farm
Equipment; Jessica Ellis,
150, Rutland Service Center.

Market goats

Derreck Queen, g.c., 600,
Bob's
Market
and
Greenhouses;
Trenton
DuVall, r.c., 1,000, J&amp;L
Construction
Co.;
Jett
Facemyer, 700, Scott A.
Williams; Alison Deem,
375, Home National Bank;
Heidi Willis, 350, Parker
Corp.; Scout Facemyer, 750,
County Commissioner Mike
Bartrum; Alex Amos, 375,
AEP/Mounlaineer
Plant;
Brent
Johnson,
500,
Facemyer Lumber CoJWalMart of Mason, W.Va.; Cara
Amos, 400, TAITM's Feed
&amp; Seed; Shandi Beaver, 700,
Twin River Hardwoods.
Owen
Arix,
1,000.
Exterran; William DuVall,
500, AEP/Phillip Sporn
Plant; Daschle Facemyer,
850,
Twin
River
Hardwoods; Kelsey Burton,
400, Ohio Valley bank;
Robert Lute, 400, Farmers
Bank; Makya Milhoan, 400,
Home National Bank;
Breanna
Smith,
800,
Facemyer Forest Products;
Clayton Wood, 600, The
Cutting Crew; Melissa
Snowden, 400, Farmers
Bank; Katelyn Chevalier,
400, Hendrix Heating and
Cooling; Sarah Turner, 375,
Mark Porter GM Super
Center; Megan Dyer, 500,
Peoples Insurance Agency;
Taiton Sarver, 600, Lura
Counts; Tyler Barber, 650,
Home National Bank.

Market lambs
Cody Bartrum, g.c., 900,
Scott A. Williams; Kyle
Young, r.c., 950, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital; Abbie
Hawley,
450,
Norris
Northup Dodge; Carolann
Stewart,
675, Peoples
Insurance Agency; Ryan
Amos, 525, Douglas Horse
Logging; Tina Drake, 550,
Ohio Valley Bank; Carrie
White, 400, Depoy's Ag
Parts; LeDeana Sinclair,
400, Farmers Bank; Action
Facemyer, 600, Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drug Store; Ryan
Beegle.
450,
Home
National Bank; Morgan
Burt, 500, Farmers Bank;
Paige Buckley, 400, Brown
Agency
Nationwide
Insurance Russen Beegle,
525, Norris Northup Dodge;
Lacey Hupp, 500, Home
National Bank; Trenton
Cook, 500, AEP, Philip
Sporn; Hannah Williams,
425, Peoples Insurance
Agency; Dustin Smeck,
375, Mark Porter GM
Supercenter; Chris Holter,
425, Ridenour Gas Service;
AJ Roush, 400, Home
National
Bank;
Dawn
Bissell, 550, Ohio Valley
Bank; Caitlyn Holter, 425,
AEP Mountaineer Plant;
Jessica Cook, 450, Farmers
Bank; Earley Hill, 400,
Depoy's Ag Parts.

Brian J. Reed/photos

Meigs County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill purchased the grand
champion dairy steer shown by Audrionna Pullins.

J&amp;S Feed Supplements, Jackson, represented by Jack
Fulton, purchased Jonathan Barrett's grand champion
commercial feeder.

Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center; Eugene Patterson.
625, G&amp;M Fuel; Weston
Kelley, 650, Wild Horse
Cafe; Justin Lee, 475,
Brown Agency Nationwide
Insurance; Zachary Manuel,
550.
Farmers
Bank;
Kimberly Hawthorne. 525.
Jackson Kelly PLLC: Adam
Lavender, 400. Downing
Childs Mullen Musser
Insurance Agency; Katie
Durst, 550. Baum True
Value Lumber Company;
Mitchell Howard, 550,
Holzer
Clinic;
Kayla
Hawthorne, 575. Parker
Corporation;
Brittney
Mather, 500, Reed &amp; Baur
Insurance; Morgan Howard,
675, Facemyer Forest
Products; Cole Graham,
575,
Farmers
Bank;
Matthew Keesee, 550.
Dettwiller
Lumber;
Savannah Hawley, 625,
Forked Run Sportsman
Club; Doug Jenkins, 450.
Home National Bank:
Zachary Legg. 400. Meigs
County Republican Party:
Morgan
RusselL
500.
Butcher Logging: Brent
Welch, 575, Annie's Place:
Dylan Smith. 500. AEP
Philip Sporn Plant; Emily
Manuel, 525. AEP Gavin
Plant; Lindsay Teaford. 650,
Dr. Mel Weese; Chase
Graham, 675, Chris Wolfe
Farms; Daniel Jenkins, 525,
Tobacco King #5; Caitlyn
Cowdery, 575, American
Car Crushing; Andrew
O'Bryant, 575, I-77 Ford;
Levi Ashburn, 475, Parker
Corporation; Garrett Wolfe,
500, Holzer Clinic; Angela
Keesee,
475,
Keller's
Excavating:
Zachary
Stobart,
500,
Home
National Bank.
Kayla
Wyatt,
400.
Yauger's Farm Supply; Miya
Gilmore, 450. David Burt;
Brandon King. 500. Farmers
Bank; Derick Powell. 625.
Thomas Rental Center;
Kelsey Myers, 550, Bob's
Market; Terrence Conlin.
425, AEP Mountaineer Plant;
Miranda
Holter,
600.
Citizens Bank of Athens;
Charles Fitchpatrick, 500,
Bill
Buckley
Farms;
Shawnella Patterson. 575,
Marguerite Eskew; Kayla
Russell, 550, Farmers Bank:
Destinee Blackwell, 525,
Family Oxygen and Medical
Equipment;
Rebecca
Chadwell, 550, Hendrix
Heating and Cooling; Dierra
Jenkins,
500.
R&amp;L
Preowned; Chelsea Holter.
500, A B &amp; T Auto:
Dameson Jenkins. 500. DV
Weber Construction; Adam

Dakota O'Brien, g.c., 600,
Ridenour Gas Service;
Baylee Colhns, 500, Wal,Mart,
Mason,
W.Va.;
Madison Russell, 375, Scott
A. Williams ; Tyler Davis,
200, Ridenour Gas Service;
Sabra Bailey, 375. Rankin
Cleaning
and
Refuse
Market hogs
Trailer: Morgan Docli, 250,
Jackie
Jordan, g.c., 1 ,500,
Farmers
Bank; Jordan
Russell.
425 .
Turley Rose's Excavating; Matt
Mattress
Sales;
Jacob Durst. r.c., 1,700, TATTM's
Wilson. 300, Home National Feed &amp; Seed; Timothy
Bank; Halley Sigman, 200, Elam, 1,025, Dettwiller
Lumber,
Middleport
Home National Bank.
Pomeroy
Rotary;
Kyle
Courtney Burnem, 225,
Mark Porter GM Super Russell, 625, McDonalds;
.Center; Kourtney Lawrence, Alyson Dettwiller, 900,
250, Home National Bank; Athens Insurance Agency;
Haley Musser, 200, Farmers Health Dettwiller, 1,050,
Bank; Dakota Collins, 200, Athens Insurance Agency;
Ridenour Gas Service; Chelsea Kelly, 700, Mark
Jacob Weddle, 225, Home Porter GM Supercenter;
National Bank; Brittany Shanda Welch, 550, SaveA-Lot; Brook Andrus, 650,
Powell. 200, Ridenour Gas
Peopls Insurance Agency;
Service: Kayte Lawrence,
Jake Andrus, 425, Ridenour
200,
Farmers
Bank;
Gas Service; Courtney
Elizabeth Teaford, 200,
Fitzgerald, 500, Home
Home
National
Bank;
National Bank; Breanna
Kelsey Kimes, 200. WalColburn, 500, Farmers
Mart of Mason , W.Va.;
Bank; Jenna Jordan, 425,
Charles Harrison , 100, Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug
Howard Ervin .
Store; Nicole Andrus, 400,
Whitley Leach, 130,
Michael's Service Center;
Joshua Parker, 210. Kountry
Resort
Campground;
Kelsey
Johnson , 200,
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.; Morgan Lodwick, 200.
Steve's
Trailer
Sales;
Brittany Leach, 170, Parker
Corp.; Sierra Cleland, 410,
at Legion Park on Mill Street
Hank
Cleland;
Shana
Sunday, August 30 at 6:00p.m.
Roush, 110, Birchfield
Funeral
Home/Rutland
Sponsored by the
Dept. Store; Randal Davis,
190, Parker Corp.; Justin
Riverbend Arts Council
Eblin, 210, State Rep.
Debbie Phillips.
.... Refreshments will he available.
Nicholas Wamsley. 200,
In case ofrain, concertnw••es to
Norns-Northup
Dodge;
Arts Cou11cil 011 Seco11d A ••e~we
Mickayla Eblin , 100, Mark
Unn:: \III/I ltt·•·n chair
Porter GM Super Center;
~~ , nf•" Jlu, ( fll/11 1111 1111\ '1'('11/
Sarah Lawrence, 200, Dan
-------

Pape. 575, Hot Spot; Julia
Lantz,
625,
Buckeye
Sealing; Michael Manuel,
600, Home ~ational Bank;
Ashlyn Wolfe. 575. Home
National Bank; Jennifer
Casto. 575. AEP Gavin
Plant; Shania Gilmore. 500.
Butcher Logging. We~t
Virginia
Resources;
Michaela
Holter.
600.
Citizens Bank of Athens;
Alexis
King.
475.
McDonalds; Dennis Teaford,
450. Chris Wolfe Farms:
Bethany Lee, 475. Diamond
Stone; Dylan Lavender. 500,
Summerfield's Restaurant;
Jennifer Fife, 575, Valley
Lumber &amp; Supply Company;
Kayla King, 525, Farmers
Bank; Faith Teaford, 525.
Holzer Medical Center:
Travis Kimes, 500, DV
Weber Construction; Dru

Trenton DuVall sold his reserve champion market goat to
J&amp;L Construction Co.

County Commissioner Michael Bartrum, representing
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va., purchased
Dylan Milam's reserve champion commercial feeder steer.

•

Cody
Bartrum
sold his
grand
champion
market
lamb to
Scott A.
Williams.

Jenkins, 475, AEP Gavin
Plant; Larissa Riddle. 575.
Parker Corporation; Meghan
Lambert. 675. Ray's Hunting
Supplies , Rutland Township;

II

I

Cheyenne Beaver, 575.
Facemyer
Lumber
Company; Charles Noland.
525. Downing Childs Mullen
Musser Insurance.

n

'There am so many messages about mortgage
financ:ing that it oan n!J bo a bit confu:sing. At

Peoples Bank you can cCKJnt on us to trulkc sense

of rt all. A. loan YJith Peoples Bank comes \with peace
of mind. The comfort ii1nd G&lt;Jti:;fnc1ion of knowing

vou•te working with e bank that Is sere. secure and
over a hundred years old.

Whether )'CJU want to purchase a new home or

.~ow~
lfQ'nt li\.'PS..~

•ot '-4-41{11~

refinance, we ha-w the knowledge and expefionce

74&gt;.."1.1*1~ &lt;:tot

lo tttk~ e.."WG of il tho dOt&lt; ·

NVt~~ JO.:Wolo:

nnd ltdp you gl)t tho

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�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Southern Football Schedule, Page B6

~

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~

I

Wednesday, August 26,2009

GAHS burns Pointers in season opener
BY ANDREW CARTER
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

DAYS
BRIEFS

Meet the Team
night at Wahama

Andrew Carter/photo

Gallia Academy's Lawrence Wedemeyer (30) controls the
ball during a fast break down the field in Tuesday night's
season opener against South Point at Centenary.

CENTENARY - August
has certainly been a month
of celebration for Gallia
Academy High School.
The Blue Devils' soccer
squad kept the party going
Tuesday with what could
only be described as a "goalhammering
a-bration."
South Point High School 110 in a record-setting 2009
season opener at the G AHS
Soccer Complex.
The 11 goals in a single
match set a GAHS record as
did the ll goal margin of
victory. The Blue Devils
also fired away at the South
Point goal a record 65 times.
"It was a nice way to start
the season for a change,"
said GAHS Head Coach
Mike Dyer. "The players
played well. They did what
we worked on in the preseason. They stepped up. We
had some first-game jitters.
but we got those out of the

BEREA (AP) - Brian
Robiskie still has to carry
other players' equipment off
the Browns practice field,
onl) now the pay is much
better.
Robiskie is back with the
Cleveland
Browns.
Sometimes it feels like he
never left. Drafted in the
second round with the 36th
overall pick in April's draft,
he grew up cheering for the
Browns as the son of an
assistant coach.
Terry Robiskie worked on
the Browns' staff from
2001-06, even serving as
interim head coach for the
final five games of the 2004
season following Butch
Davis' resignation. While
his father was on staff. Brian
Robiskie sometimes served
as the team ballboy - while
also setting records at

ROCKSPRINGS
Meigs will host Eastern in a
volleyball preview Saturday
evening at Larry
R.
Gymnasium. The
will begin at 6 p.m.
the seventh grade
game, eighth grade will follow and the junior varsity
and varsity.
Each team will have two
games to 15. Price is $4 for
adults and $3 varsity.

R o y a I

====winds
Farm in Ona. Coach Bille
- Rae Graham says undergraduate students of all levels of
experience are eligible.
To prepare for competition, team riders are required
to take one weekly lesson
with Graham and pay membership fees and team dues.
the team competes in horse
shows against other colleges
from Indiana, Kentucky and
phio.

STAFF REPORT

• HUNTINGTON - The
Wahama White Falcons var
sity golf team came away
with a hard earned victory
Monday afternoon against
Huntington St. Joseph at the
Silos Golf Course m
County. When the
mal scores were counted,
Wahama came out on top
with 189 strokes compared
to the 191 from St. Joe in
the 9 hole, play 6, count 4
format.
The back nine at the Twin
Silos course played tough as
the scores from both teams
showed. Thomas Dransfeld
from St. Joe earned medalist
honors shooting a 42 for the

•

Chagrin Falls High School
and then Ohio State.
'·It was strange walking
into the building and not
being a coach's son, not
being a ballboy. not being an
assistant equipment guy:·
Robiskie said. "Being a
player was definitely a different feeling. But that's
been over for a while. I've
gotten pretty used to what
I'm doing now."
Robiskie hasn't given up
all his old duties. since by
tradition rookies carry veterans' shoulder pads and helmets off the field. Robiskie
doesn't mind. He's focused
on more important duties.
such as battling fellow rookreceiver
Mohamed
ie
Massaquoi. selected 14
picks after him in the second

Please see Browns, Bl

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey Votto, left, and second baseman Brandon Phillips can't
come up with a ball hit by Milwaukee Brewers' Ryan Braun during the sixth inning of a
baseball game Tuesday in Milwaukee.

Reds outlast Brewers in 13 innings
MILWAUKEE (AP) Joey Votto and Laynce Nix
hit solo home runs in the top
of the 13th inning to give
Cincinnati an 8-6 victory
over
the
Milwaukee
Brewers on Tuesday night.
despite the Reds blowing a
five-run lead in the ninth.
Votto led off by hitting a
3-1 pitch from Todd Coffey
(4-3) just over the left-field
wall for his 19th home run.
With two outs. Nix hit his
second homer of the game,
and 12th of the year. off
Coffey, to center.
Daniel Ray Herrera (2-4)
pitched the final two innings
for the win.
Milwaukee scored five
runs with one out in the bottom of the ninth to tie the
game
at 6-6, giving

Cincinnati closer Francisco
Cordero his second blown
save in 28 chances.
Left
fielder
Darnell
McDonald, recalled by the
Reds
from
Triple-A
Louisville earlier Tuesday.
threw out Ryan Braun at the
plate to end the ninth inning.
Cincinnati starter Bronson
Arroyo scattered six hits and
one walk while striking out
four in seven innings. The
right-hander has a 2.19 ERA
in his last nine starts dating
to July 10. but only has a 34 record in that span as the
Reds have struggled with a
slew of injuries.
Milwaukee starter Jeff
Suppan struggled in his
return from the disabled list,
giving up four runs, nine hits
and five walks with one

Wahama golf edges Huntington St. Joe
MDSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Please see Bum, Bl

in nicely with Browns

Meigs volleyball
preview against
· Eastern on Sat.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Marshall University
is holding tryouts for its club
equestrian
team.
The tryouts for the
2009-10
season are
scheduled
to be held
OTEBOOK Aug. 29 at

Maher's flick-on header
gave the Blue Devils a 5-0
cushion. Classmate Josh
Jackson swung a perfect
cross into the penalty area
from the left wing and
Maher's flick found a home
in the upper left corner of
the net.
Eberhard closed out the
first-half scoring with 11:08
to play on a well-taken unas.:
sisted play that left GAHS
with a 6-0 advantage.
Maher and Robinson
teamed up to keep the party
going in the second half.
Jackson played a comer kick
from the right side that
Robinson nodded down and
Maher redirected into the
net to push the Blue Devils'
lead to 7-0 with 33:20 to
play.
Eberhard tallied an assist
on Lawrence Wedemyer's
goal five minutes later. The
pair worked a give-and-go at
the top of the South Point

Young wideouts fitting

MASON
Wahama
High School will host Meet
the Team night on Thursday
;;tt 6 p.m. at the high school.
Donations would be
appreciated and will be
accepted at the gate. Please
do not bring soap as in years
past.

Marshall seeks
riders for club
equestrian team

way and started working on
what we needed to do."
It took the Blue Devils
less than three minutes to
shake off those jitters.
Sophomore Jerod Lester
recorded the first goal of
2009 in the third minute of
play.
The goal-a-bration hit a
fever pitch during a fiveminute span that saw the
Blue Devils find the net four
times. Senior Jeremy Ward
got the party started with
28:40 remaining in the first
half. pouncing on a loose
ball and driving a left-footed
blast into the lower right
corner of the net to give
GAHS a 2-0 lead.
Less than a minute later,
senior Corey Eberhard
recorded the first of his two
goals on the afternoon to pad
the lead at 3-0. Forty-seven
seconds later, junior Cody
Robinson made it 4-0 in
favor ofGAHS.
After a three-minute scoring drought. senior Zeke

afternoon. Wahama's Dave
Greene finished one shot
back with a 43.
In addition to Dave's
score, Matt Amold continues to swing better and his
scores are coming down as
he shot 44 for the day.
Brandon Johnson struggl~d
on 3 holes, but still managed
a 48. The 4th score to count
for the White Falcons was a
54 from Freshman Dakota
Sisk. Freshman Samuel
Gordon
and
Caroline
Thompson also played for
the winners, but their scores
were not included in the
final tally.
James Harper was the second leading scorer today for
St. Joe as he shot a 48. Paul
Dransfeld came in with a 50

and Nick Giompalo added a
51 to account for the final
total shot by St. Joe Luke
Brownmg's scar~ was not
part of the final :;core.
RVHS GOLF FALLS TO
CHESAPEAKE

BARBOURSVILLE It was a rough day for the
River Valley golf team on
Monday at Esquire Golf
Club, as the visiting
Raiders suffered a 54-shot
setback
to
host
Chesapeake in a nonleague dual match.
RVHS was missing three
regular starters going into
the day. which left a lot of
new players on the course

Please see Roundup, Bl

strikeout in 4 l-3 innings.
Out since July 27 with a left
oblique strain, Suppan
allowed the leadoff hitter to
reach base in each of the
first four innings, and gave
up single runs in the second
through fifth innings.
The Brewers scored three
times in the bottom of the
ninth to send the game into
extra innings.
NOTES: The Brewers
optioned
INF
Hernan
Iribarran
to
Triple-A
Nashville. ... Suppan was
reinstated off the DL despite
posting an II .57 ERA in two
minor-league rehab starts ....
The roof was closed at
Miller Park but water leaked
through in the stands behind
home plate during heavy
rains.

AP photo

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Lance Leggett, right,
jumps for a pass as defensive back Brandon McDonald
defends at the Cleveland Browns NFL football training
camp Sunday in Berea.

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�Page 82 • The O(lily Sentinel

Browns
from Page BI
round.
Based on practice snaps,
Ma~saquo1 seems to hold a
slight edge over Rohiskie,
although both rookies arc
Qehind veteran:. Bra) !on
Edwards, Josh Cribbs and
Mike Furrcy.
l\1assaquoi started at
n.'I.'Ciwr against the Detroit
Lions on Saturday in
Cleveland's second preseason game. hut was buck
\VOrkJng With the sel'Ond
team during practict: on
)fuesdav. Rohiskic and
Massaqtlot each had a 24yard reception against the
Lions.
With Donte' Stallworth
~u-;pcnded for the season

Burn
from Page BJ
penalty

area
with
taking the return
ball and slotting it home to
give GAHS an 8-0 lead.
Robinson found the net
for a second time to push
the lead to 9-0 with 21: II
remaining as he Wt:aved his
..vay through the box and
battled past two South Point
oefenders to slip the ball
into the net.
- Lester gave the De\ ils a
double digit cushion less
than two minutes later. and
seniors Terry Smith and
Da\ id Stout combined for
goal number 11 with Smith
doing the honors at the 7: 15
~edcmyer

www.mydailysentinel.com

by the NFL. Cleveland is
searching for a receiver to
sta11 opposite Edwards. So
far. ne1thcr rookie has been
able to ~upplant Cribbs. a
special teams stdr who i:getting his first real shot on
otTcnse thi.., ~ummer.
Browns
coach
Eric
i\1angini
concedes
Robiskie may have hit a
wall during training camp.
similar to how most rookies deal with their first tour
of the NFL.
"I think with rookies.
they don't hit the wall. the
wall hits them.'' Mangini
said. "It's a tough transition."
Mangini recalled his first
year as a quality control
coach with the New York
Jets in 1997, when he was
in charge of film breakdov. ns and complaining to
his wife. Julie. that nothing
mark.
GAHS kept the Pointers
leashed in their own end of
the field for the vast majority of the 80 minutes. Blue
Devils goalkeeper Allie
Troester faced just one shot
and was credited with a
save on the play.
While excited about getting that first win of the season under his belt. Dyer
emphasized the need to stay
focused on the ta!)k at hand.
"We've got a tough season ahead and hopefully
this is a step in the right
direction." he said.
Gallia Academy faces
cro::.stown rival Ohio Vallev
Christian at 5:45 p.m. on
Thursday on the Defenders'
home field. That will be the
season opener for OVCS.

was making sense.
"It's a gigantic playbook
and you're s.tudying every
ni~ht," Mangini said. "You
thmk you're relative!~
intelligent until you can t
pick it up as quickly a~ you
hoped you would. I remember tall\ing to Julie at night
sometimes going. 'I must
he slow. I can't pick this up
as quickly as I thought I
would.' Then the clouds
start to lllO\ e av.·ay. the sun
comes out and things make
sense."
Intelligence is a strength
for both of the Browns'
rookie re&lt;.:eivcrs. Robiskic
was a two-time Academic
All-American at Ohio State
and a finali-.t for the
Draddy Trophy, otherwise
known as the academic
Heisman. Massaguoi was
an Academic All-SEC
member at Georgia.

VVednesday, August26, 2009

Roundup
from Page BJ

45.
Roger Hoback and Seth
Ransbottom also had
respective round~ of 47
and 5 I for the host::;.

during
the
varsity
matchup. The Raiders
ended the day with a team
score of 226, finishing
well behind the Panthers'
tally of 172.
Jacob Leach led the
Raiders with a round of
47. followed by Matt Ball
with 55 and Zack Polcyn
with 59. Derek Gibson
rounded out the team scoring with a 65. while
Stephen Ball also added a
round of 74 for the guests.
Nick Duffield led CHS
with a medalist round of
41, followed by Gunner
Hill with 42 and Seth
Waggoner with 44. Nathan
Copley rounded out the
Chesapeake scoring with a

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"c .. •a.Sheriff Sales
Case Number OBCV013
Farmers Bank &amp; Sav·
ings Co. Plaintiff VS
Raymond &amp; Megan Andrews et al Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
'rected from said court
fn the above entitled
action, I will expose to
.sale at Public Auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Sept.
•4th, 2009 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
'The following real estate situated in the VII·
lage of Middleport,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and
bounded
and
de·
scribed as follows:
Being known as Lot
No. 56 in Palmers Add I·
tion to said village of
Middleport, Ohio, late
the VIllage of Sheffield
and for further descrip·
tlon of said lot, reference Is to be had to the
1ecorded plat of said
Village. Lot is 96 feet on
Lincoln Street and 66
feet on alley.
Reference Deed: Vol·
ume 54, Page 903,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditor's Parcel No.:
15-01709.000
Property known as: 240
Lincoln Street, Middleport, OH 45760
AHorney for Plaintiff:
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner,
211·213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, Oh
45769, Telephone: (740)
992-6689
Current Owner: Raymond &amp; Megan An·
drews et al
Property at: 240 Lin·
coin St.
Middleport, Oh 45760
PP#15-01709.000
Prior Deed Preferences: Volume 54,
Page 903
Appraised at $40,000
terms of sale: cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or cer·
tified check, balance
'due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did not
include an Interior ex·

ami nation of the house.
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
LiHie Sheets &amp; Warner
211·213 E. 2nd St.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
740-992·6689
(8) 12, 19, 26
-------Public Notice
-------Sheriff Sales
Case Number OBCV132
The Bank of New York
Plaintiff VS
Arnie Hart et al datendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me di·
rected from said court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at Public Auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Sept.
4, 2009 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Exhibit A
Situated in the Township of Rutland, County
of Meigs, and State of
Ohio, and bounded and
described as follows:
Being in Section No. 1,
Township No. 6, and
Range No. 14 of the
Ohio Company's purchase,
in Rutland
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio, beginnlng 76 rods South of
the Northeast corner of
said Section No. 1;
Thence North 87 deg.
West 459 feet; Thence
South 27 3/4 deg. East
53 feet; Thence South
41 314 deg. East 72 feet;
Thence South 60 deg.
East 40 feet; Thence
North 88 112 deg. East
44 feet; Thence South
49 314 deg. East 85 feet;
Thence South 38 1/2
deg. East 45 feet;
Thence South 63 1/4
deg. East 74 feet;
Thence South 69 1/2
deg. East 60 feet;
Thence East 81 1/2 feet
to the section line;
Thence North 244 feet
to the center of the
public road, the place
of beginning, containlng 1. 75 acres, more or
less, and being the
same property con·

veyed to Emerson Russell by W. L. Hysell and
Ida Hysell, his wife, by
deed dated March 29,
1898, and recorded in
Book 83, Page 282 of
the Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio
and by William L. Hy·
sell by deed dated December 5, 1905, and
recorded in Book 94,
Page 394 of said deed
records. except and
subject to a perpetual
easement and right-ofway for public highway
and road purposes In,
upon and over said
premises. being a strip
of land not In excess of
30 feet In width and
containing 0.40 acres,
more or less, conveyed
by Lucy Russell and
Emerson Russell, her
husband, to the State
of Ohio by instrument
dated December 6,
1933, and recorded in
Volume 1, at Page 479
of the Easement for
Highway
purposes
Deed Records of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Also the following Real
Estate situated in the
Township of Rutland,
of
Meigs
County
County. Ohio, and
debounded
and
scribed as follows:
Being in Section No. 1,
Township No. 6 and
Range 14 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase
In Rutland Township,
Meigs County, Ohio,
beginning at a point 75
rods South of the
Northeast corner of
said Section No. 1;
Thence West 479 feet
to center of the Hysell
Run Creek: Thence
North 32.5 deg. West 31
feet to a point in the
center of said creek;
Thence North 69 deg.
West 43 feet to a point
in the center of said
creek; Thence North 23
feet to the right-of-way
of the Pomeroy-Rut·
land Road; Thence
along the South side of
said right-of-way 530
feet; Thellce South 7
feet to the place of beginning, containing 62
square foot move or
less and being the
same property con·
veyed
by
Emma
Gloeckner et al to
Emerson Russell, by

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deed dated June 7, ship of Salisbury, Vii·
1920 and recorded in lage of Middleport,
Book 120, Page 524 of County of Meigs and
the deed records of State of Ohio: 64 acre
Meigs County, Ohio Lot 313, Town 1 North,
and being the same Range 13 West, as
property conveyed by recorded in Volume 2,
Emerson Russell to Page 8, Meigs County
Lucy F. Russell by deed Plat Records, Meigs
dated September 16, County, Ohio. The East
1932 and recorded in one-half of Lot 58 in I.H.
Book 139 at Page 38 of Behan's Third Addition
the Deed Records of to what is known as the
incorporated Village of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Parcel
Number: Middleport,
Meigs
1100320000
&amp; County, Ohio, situated
1100321000
on the southeast corProperty
Address: ner of Third and Locust
37893 State Route 124 Street.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Also, the following deCurrent Owner: Arnie scribed real estate situHart
ated
in
Salisbury
Property at: 37893 St. Township, Village of
Rt. 124
Middleport, 64 acre Lot
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
313, Town 1 North,
PP#11-00320
Range 13 West, as
11-00321
recorded In Volume 2,
Prior deed preferences: Page 8, Meigs County
Volume 138, Page 38
Plat Records, Meigs
Appraised at $32,500 County, Ohio. The West
terms of sale: can not one-half of Lot No. 58 In
be sold for less than I.H. Behan's Third Add I·
213rds of the appraised tlon to what is known
value. 10% down on as the Incorporated Vii·
day of sale, cash or cer- lage of Middleport,
tified check, balance Meigs County, Ohio,
due on confirmation of situated on the south·
sale.
east corner of Third
The appraisal did not and Locust Street,
No.
Include an Interior ex· Parcel
15ami nation of the house. 004009.000
Robert
E.
Beegle, More commonly known
Meigs County Sheriff
as: 812 S. Third AvAttorney for the Plain· enue, Middleport, Ohio
tiff
45760
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Current owner: Melinda
McCallister
600 S. Peart St.
Property at: 812 S.
Columbus, Oh 43206
614·221·1662
Third Avenue
(8)12,19,26
Middleport, Ohio 45760
PP# 15-004009.000
- - - - - - - - Prior deed references:
Volume 2, Page 8
Public Notice
Appraised at $32,500
Sheriff Sales
terms of sale: cannot
Case Number OBCV149 be sold for less than
Countrywide
Home 213rds of the appraised
Loans Inc. Plaintiff VS value. 10% down on
Melinda McCallister et day of sale, cash or certified check, balance
al Defendants
Court of Common due on confirmation of
Pleas, Meigs County, sale.
Ohio.
The appraisal did not
In pursuance of an include an interior exorder of sale to me di· amination of the house.
rected from said court Robert
E.
Beegle,
In the above entitled Meigs County Sheriff
action, I will expose to Attorney for the Plainsale at public auction tiff
on the front steps of Laurlto &amp; Laurito
the Meigs County Court 35 Commercial Way
House on Friday, Sept. Springboro, Oh 45066
4th. 2009 at 10 a.m., of 913-743·4878
said day, the following (8) 12, 19, 26
described real estate:
Situated In the Town·

....:'"'."'""~

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09CV018
Deutsche Bank Na·
tional Trust Plaintiff VS
Don F. Pooler et al De·
fend ants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at Public Auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Sept.
4th, 2009 at 10 a.m., of
said day. the following
described real estate:
Legal Description
Parcel One:
Situated in Section 24,
Town 3, Kango 12,
being a part of a tract of
land laid out in lots and
sold to G.W. McCie·
nathan, guardian of
minor heirs of Lyma
Stedman, deceased,
and designated on the
plot of said lots, as Lot
No. 3 and transferred
from John P. Kimes and
wife to Milo Ridenour,
January 3, 1895.
Beginning at the south·
west corner of Susie
Foster's lot 150 feet
from the old ChesterKeno Road; Thence
South 80 feet along
Emma Reibel's lot to a
corner; Therace East
110 to a stone: Thence
North 80 feet to a
stone; Thence West
along Susie Foster's
line to the place of be·
ginning.
The following
de·
scribed real estate, towit; Situated In the
County of Meigs, in the
State of Ohio, and In
the
Township
of
Chester, and in the
Ohio Company's Purchase and further
de·
bounded
and
scribed as follows:
Being In Section 24,
Town 3, Range 12,
being In a part of a tract
of land lid out In lots
and sold by G.W. McClenathan, Guardian of
minor heirs of Lyman
Steadman, deceased,
and designated on the
plot of said lots as Lot
No. 3, and transferred

from John P. Kimes and
wife to Milo Ridenour,
Jan. 3, 1895. Beginning
at the northwest corner
of Emma Reibel's lot
and the Chester and
Long Bottom Road to
follow the road In a
northerly direction for
24 feet; Thence in a
northeast direction 130
feet to a stake 16 feet
from the corner of the
Foster house; Thence
in a southerly direction
80 feet to a stone;
Thence In a westerly direction 110 feet to the
Emma
Reibel
lot;
Thence In a northerly
direction 150 feet to the
place of beginning.
Being the same real es·
tate conveyed by Fred
W. Crow, Jr., Commis·
sioner of James L.
Wickham, deceased, to
Elizabeth Wickham by
deed recorded In Deed
Book 191, Page 293 of
the Meigs County Deed
Records.
Reference Deed: Vol·
ume 312, Page 339,
Meigs County Deed
Records.
The above described
real estate has been
corrected by the new
survey more accurately
described as follows:
The following real estate situated in Chester
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio,
Section 24, Township 3,
Range 12 of the Ohio
Company Purchase:
being the Ruth Samatowltz property (Volume 312, Page 339,
Meigs County Deed
Records) bounded and
described as follows:
Beginning at a stone
found at the southeast
corner of said Sarna·
towitz property thence
North 84 degrees 8' 0"
West 107.77 ft. to a
stone found on the east
line of the Henry &amp;/or
Nara Harman property
(Volume 313, Page 797,
Meigs County Deed
Records,
fromerly
Emma Reibel's lot):
Thence North 1 degree
46' 22" east 237.19 feet
along the east line of
said Hartman property
to an iron ptn found on
the south side of New
Hope Road at a west·
ern corner of the Lewis
E. &amp; Barbara A. Pulver

property (Volume 275,
Page
331,
Meigs
County Deed Records):
Thence South 45 de·
grees 37' 48" East
128.59 feet along the
southerly side of the
existing driveway to an
Iron pin set 16 feet from
the old easterly corner
of the former Susie
Foster
residence:
thence South 2 degrees
52' 39" East 158.37 feet
along the east line of
two parcels conveyed
to Susie Foster in Volume 146, Page 173 and
Volume 146, Page 562
to the point of beginning containing 0.451
acre. Subject to all
legal easements.
The above description
was prepared in accordance with an actual
survey conducted by
Eugene Triplett RS
6766 on March 12,1991.
Bearing are assumed
and are Intended to denote angles only.
A copy of a plate is at·
tached hereto and
made apart hereof.
The old description referred to above is also
subject to terms of a
Boundary Line Agreement, recorded in Vol·
ume 323, Page 687 of
the Meigs County Deed
Records, which Boundary Line Agreement In
effect establishes the
northeasterly line of
.451 acre survey description above.
The above described
real estate has been assigned Auditor's Parcel
Numbers: 03-01116.
The Grantor further
states that Frank Samatowitz, the grantor in a
deed dated October 19,
1988, and recorded In
Volume 312, Page 339
of the Meigs County
Deed Records, at the
time of the signing of
that deed was single.
Parcel TWo:
Also a 15-foot right of
way casement for
ingress and egress to
New Hope Road (T-91)
more fully described in
instrument recorded in
Volume 323, Page 689
of the Meigs County
Deed Records. which Is
Incorporated and made
a part hereof as if fully
rewriHen herein.
36384 New Hope Road

Long
Bottom,
OH
45743
Permanent Parcel No.:
03-01116.000
Current Owner: Don F.
Pooler
Property at: 36384 New
Hope Rd
Long BoHom, Oh 45743
PP# 03-01116
Prior Deed Reference:
Volume 238, Page 69
Appraised at $65,000
terms of sale: cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale. cash or certified check, balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did in·
elude an Interior exa.
Ination of the house.
E.
Beegl
Robert
Meigs County Sheriff
AHorney for the Plain·
tiff
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480
Cincinnati, Oh 452015480
513·241·31 00
(B) 12, 19, 26

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�VVednesda~August26,2009
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Annoull(ements

lost&amp; Found
Found· brown Prt Bull
mix on Mommgstar Rd.,
74().949·2188
or
740-416-7274
• Lost· female Corg1, tan &amp;
whilo answers to Con.
Reward, (740)591-3427
Found Aug. 15 on Crab
Creek Rd sm • grey short
hatred ( I) dog w/ long
ears 740·367·0938.
Notices

Wanted
Ntee Famdy of 4 looking
for a rental home or mobile home Please Call
740·709-0181

Now you can have borders and graphics
,.._'!~
added to your classified ads
j" ~
rn
Borders$3.00/perad
I!1
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

POUCIE6: Ohio V.ll~ Publlahlng re-•• the right to tdll. reJect, or concel any od et any time. Error• must be reported on the flrlll day ot ~llellion and
Tt1b~enllnei-Regllttr will be reeponalble tor no more than the CIOit of the cpaco occ:upled by I he error end only the linlt lneertlon. We aha II noc be
any lo• or txptf~M lhlt r..wts from the publication or omtstlon of an odweniMment Correction wtn be made In 1110 fll"'l awallablt tdltlon. • Box number
are atwt~ conftdentlll • Cu-rent me Clrd appllea. • All real CSI:IIo DdYertlcemen1o ere aub~ lo tre Fedaret Fair HoU81ng Act of t9e8. ·This .-.paper
acotptt only llttp MIU&lt;I adt me«lng EOE atandar&lt;l$ we will not knowingly ae&gt;eep~ any odvertlslng In ¥1olalton of the ltw. Wlh llCII bt reeponelblt tor lillY
wroreln en ld taken over the phone.
•

Money To Lend

Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wir!
1-888-582·3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gall18
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

500

-

'1&gt;·-u..

Business &amp; Trade

~

School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Homo)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
• 1-800-214.()452

www.comics.com

600

Animals

~ 2009 by NEA, Inc

Form Equipment

1000

g3!(polilcar~fCO!Iege edu
Acctedlled Momber Accred~·

ong CouncR for lndepol'ldeol
CoGeges al'd Schools 12748

Recreational
Veh1cles

Campers I RVa &amp;
Trailers
RV ServJCo at Carm1chael
Tra11ers
Leave message rf no an·
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 740·446 •3825
s=w=e=r.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=
Garden &amp; Produce
-RV________

Personals

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles ...................................................... 1010
Boats/Accessories.................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ................-........... 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
Autos ..........................................................2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories .................................. 2025
Sports Utllity ..............................................2030
Trucks ......................................................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................3010
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condominiums,......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3S40
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
"l.ots .............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ........................- ................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property.........................................5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment............................................... 6000
Accounting/Financlal ................................ 6002
Administrative/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumbing ...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
law Enlorcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................, 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs.................................................. 6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Tlmo-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

5 room house Wlth 2 car
garage brick front. 3 bed·
rooms. 1.5 bath. House
&amp; tot S98.500 or Wlll sell
house &amp; lot plus 20
Acres $119.500. Located
at 15302 SA 7S Crown
City, Ohio 45623 1•2 mr.,
Robert c. Byrd
below
Lock &amp; Dam. Phone
740..256-1142
Madison Ave. Pt. Pleas·
ant, frame house on 2
lots, excellent location lor
2 future rentals. $10.000.
740·645·0938

Education

SWM 47 wants to meet
fun lovtng SWF, N·S,
N-D
tor
relationship.
Wnte to PO Box 624,
Kerr, OH 45643 '

Legals........................................................... tOO
Announcements .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
lost &amp; Found ..................................,............ 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................31 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestlcs/Janltorial ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnancial ....................................................... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng: ...................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumbing/Electrical ..................................... 340
Professional Services ................................. 342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnancla1 .......................................................400
FinAncial Scrvices .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to lend .............................................415
Educatlon .....................................................soo
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................ 515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses ..........................................................610
llvestock ......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
Agrlculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment .......................................... 705
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance .....................................................910
Auctlons .......................................................915
Bargain Baaement....................................... 920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Suppliea ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furnrture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport.................................... 955
Kid's Corner........................................~........ 960
Miscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Houses For Sale

Fmancial

NOTICE Borrow Sman.
Contact the Ohio D1v1·
300
Services son of Financial tnst1tu·
t10ns Offtee of Consi.lmer
Affarrs BEFORE you ref1·
Home lmprovemenh
nance your homo or oblatn a loan. BEWARE of
Basement
requests for any large
Waterproofing
advance
payments of
Uncond,tionalliletime
tees or Insurance. Call
guarantee. Local refer·
the Office of Consumer
ences furnished. Estab·
Alfiars
toll
free
at
lished 1975. Call24 Hrs.
1·866·278-0003 to learn
740·446·0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing. if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly II·
censed. (This is a public
Other Services
servtee
announcement
Pet
Cremations.
Call l~om the Ohio Valley
PubliShing Company)
740-446·3745

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·
ommends that you do
bus1ness w1th people you
KllOW, and NOT to send
roofinglsh1ngles
money through the mall Modem
and
repair.
untJI you have tnvest1gat· metal
740-645-1876
1ng tho offenng.

cures at
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that ar~ not
picked up will be
discarded.

400

.E

Or Fox To (304) 676-6234

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

ct~SJG~Afri

(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 •
Word Ads

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To Help Get Response...

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....;.,

Peh
;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;:_.
Boston Terrier mom, dad
7 4 puppies all are AKC
Reg. Puppies 1st shots &amp;
wormed sell due to
health
$100
each.
388-8743

;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;; Service at Carmtchael
Canning
tomatoes al· Trailers
ready
picked.
Rowe 740·446·3825
Farm, 749·247·4292

Fall Mums 3 for $10.00,
6 varieties, 5 colors.
Daylight hours closed
Sun.
Yoder's
Greon·
CKC Mtn P1nscher ptrps house, 10321 SR 141
tails
docked,
shots. 11 miles wesl of Gall powormed
$225
each. lis on SR 141 or 8 m1.
74().388-8788
south of Rio Grande.
Mtnt
Dachshunds
b!ack/lan 1 male 1 fe- 900
Merchandise
malo $250 446-9357
2 cute black &amp; whHe k1t·
tens need a good home, Hobby I Hunt &amp; Sport
(740)696-1290
t5UN SHOW &amp; SALE •
Free kittens, 6wks old to GALLIPOLIS. OH Holt·
good
home day Inn Sat 9"5 &amp; Sun
9-3 Aug 29 &amp; 30. State
304·675-6778.
Route 7 Daily Adm.
Free: 4 beauttlul mtxed $4.00 Dealer Tables S25
breed pups, 3 boys &amp; 1 740·667·0412
girl. (740)245·5221.
• Miscellaneous
FREE: 5 puppies. part
Australian Shephard, 4F. 1990 Kimball Piano, the
1M 740·256·1832
Designer Collection, very
good condition, S1000
740-446-4423
Agnculture
700

Form Equipment
6 ft. 3pt King Kutter diSc
$450 060, 6 It Massie
Ferguson
Heavy duty
3pt. dtsc ha's leavers to
adjust angel cut S650
OBO. 3pt lime flash fertilzer spreader $250 060.
Cali740.36Nl596
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EOUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS COM
740-446·3825

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
• In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-80Q-537·9528

oak Ent. Centc•
ex.
cond. &amp; 2003 Ford Tarus
SES, ex. cond. call
740·256-6880
Want To Buy
Up right Schubert P1aoo
Beautiful satin cherry ItoISh nJCe touch to keys
good
sound
a~ays
stored in controlled onvl·
ronment. Wonderful pi·
ano for a beginner.
$1200. 740..710·2528

Motorcycles

Automotive

Auloa

~
000
06~~PT~::;C=ru=lse;:;;:r;;;;;;;39;;;;,~

mdos. power door locks,
wmcto... s.
suroot, A/C.
SSSOO
OBO
_ •
740 256 5745

Two. second floor, tBA,
unfurnished
apartments
for lease, comer of Sec·
ond &amp; ptne In Gallipolis.
Central air. No Pets. Ref·
erences reqUired.. Wator
tncluded. S325 and $290
per month. Securrty doposit Cal 446-4425 or
446·3936.
2
bedroom ap.:::1ment
avrulable tn Syracus~.
$200 deposit, S375 per
month rent, rert includes
water. sewer &amp; trash. No
Pets, SuffiCient Income
needed
to
quahly
740·378·6111
Beautiful Apts. at Jock·
son Estates. 52 Wesl·
~----~.---wood Dr, from $365 to
7rrn. 3·4 br.,k1t., wash·
_
0.. 674 44 2568
room.
bath,
din. 5560
rm ,deck. total renova· Equal Houstng Opportu!ton. 42 K. will look at all ntty. Thts mst11ut10I' IS 11'1
E 1 o ort n ty p "'
offers-zoned A-1 com. Pt qua
PP u I
r.,..
. Pl. 304·675·4532.
vider and Employer
Gracious Living 1 and e
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Land (Acreage)
and
Riverside
Manor
1.15acre beautiful bid. Apts. m Mtddleport, from
site, close to Roosevelt $327
to
$592.
school, no mobile homes 740·992·5064.
Equa
$25.000 304·675·7934.
Housing Opportunity

Aportmenhl
Townhouses
and 2 bedroom apts..
furniShed
and
unfur·
ntshed, and houses In
Pomeroy and Mrddleport,
security depostt required.
no pets 740-99::&gt;-2218

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Avatlablo at Carm1·
chaol
Equrpment
740.446-2412

'J

Island View Motel has
vacanc1es
S35.00/N grt
740·446-0406
One BR Apt close ~
hosp1tal. Free cablo WiD
hookups. (740)339-9492.
Pleasant Valley Apart
ments IS now taking ap,
pbcations tor 2. 3, &amp; 4
Bedroom
HlJ=&gt;
SubsidiZed Apart"'lents Applr
catJons are takefl MOll•
day through Fnday 9 00
am·1 00 pm Offtce 1s located at 1151 Evergreco
Drive.
Po1nt Pleasant,
wv. (304)675·5806.

G:t

1br. located at 2123 1/2
1997 Chevy Blazer silver Ltncoln Ave. no pets. ref
2 door 4x4 $2500 OBo. &amp; dep. $300.00 a mon. Tara
Townhouse
740·645·4127
304-675-2749.
Apartments
2BA, 1:5
bath, back patio. pool,
2001 Neon air, aulo· 2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
playground, (trast- sew·
matlc. 4 door $2000 zer Hospital on SR 160
age, water pd.)No pets
OBO 1999 Dodge lruck, CIA. (740) 441-0194
allowed.
$450/ront
V6, standard, 1/2 ton CONVENIENTLY
LO· S4501sec.
dep
Ca I
$25000
OBO
2003 GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· 740·645-8599
Neon 77 000 IT'i
atr, ABLE! Townhouse apart·
automatic $3000 OBO ments,
and/or
small
Commercial
2005 Neon 66,000 m1 ar~. houses tor rent. Call
automatic, 4 door S3500 740441-1111 for appli·
Oflic&amp;'
OBO
256-1652
Warehouse/Storage
or calion &amp; mformation.
256·1233
Great Location 749 nord
Free Rent Special Ill
Ave .• Gallipolis'
Utility Trailers
2&amp;3BA apts S395 and
S399 IT'ontn for 1800
up, Central Atr, WID sqft. Bu ld-out negotiable
2005 f11th w+leel two car hookup,
tenant
pays
CalWayno
tra11er,1nslde
box
45 etectnc
Call bei'Neen
404-456-3802
lorg,
white,
exce lent the hours of 8A..SP.
cord111on, With tt-ree side
EHO
Hous•s For Rent
doors, eleclnc wench.
Ellm VIew Apts.
Price $9 500 call tor
c304)882•3017
~i'19 mo' .1 bed. ~ rot
more
Information ....,.....,,...._....,.___ Ban!. Repo' t5 do". t ~
(740)949·2217
Twin Rivers Tower 1s ac· y.m, R"' AI'R) lor lmm,:&lt;
--.-...~;;;;..;..;....._ _ _ cephng applications for S00.6~0-49.t6n R027
Real Estale warttng list for HUD sub3000
Sales Sidized. 1·BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
Cllll 675·6679
Houaes For Sale

~

16 112 horse Kabota. diesol belly mower, back
blade,
$7,000,
740·742·2498 anytlme

MOVE IN READY CorQ·
pletely lurrtrshed 2BR, all
appliances,
TV,sloroo
sys. l1nens &amp; complete
kitchen waro $700.mo +
alec $500/dep. 446·9585

LeGrande
Blvd.
3BR
bnck, hardwood floors.
FA. 2 full baths, central
air, 10X14 metal build·
lng, 5 mms from town.
$89.000. 740·709·1858
4 bedrooms. 3 baths. 2
car
garage
attached,
covered
front
porcl1,
basement, attic, adjacent
lot Included, good na.gh·
borhood, dead end street
in POI"leroy, S120.000.
740..992·2475,
~407
-9_9_2·694
_9_....,.__
3br,2ba.Lr,den, Dr.kit. w/
brkfast nook. laundry rm
on 1/2 ac. lot Sandt'rll
Rd
304·675·1280
I
304·675·1762.

GREAT BUY 06 HD str.
Bob 3.000 mi. 2 seats, 25+
Prospect
acres
motor ltgt&gt;ts, rd. pegs Church
Ad
Bidwell
$10 500. 441·1508 .
$50000.
Call
740446·9357
1982
Kawasaki
550.
looks good, runs good,
Real Estate
lull lalnng, extra back 3500
Rentals
llre. S800 740..742·2422
2000

Apartmenhl
Townhouses
;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:
Beautiful 1BR apartment
1n the country freshly
painted very clean WID
hook up n ce country set·
trng only 10 mms. from
town. Must see to approc1ate.
S350/mo
614·595-7773
or
740·645·5953

�-~-------~-~- - -- --

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Education

Classlfleds

l;.2

Place a ni!W$papor o.d

N&amp;~V

PI

a en

on In

d

,

A Do-it-yourself classified ads
Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

V
V
V
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7 great packages to choose from
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The Daily Sentinel
Houses For Rent

Rentals

Sales

Education

3br,
$500Jmonth
in
Syracuse. Deposit, HUD
approved.
No
Pets
304-675-5332 weekends
740-591-0265

Double wide for rent
3BR, 2 bath, Porter area
$600 rent + deposit.
740-367-0654
or
740-645-3592

The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Financing· New 2010
Doublewide $37,989
Ask about $8,000 Re·
bates
mymidwesthome.com
740-828-2750

and oxperrenco. Submrt
let1er of 1nterest, resume
and references to John
D. Costanzo. Superrnten·
dent, Athens·Meigs ESC,
507 Richland Avenue,
Ste. # 108, Athens, Oh
45701 . Application Dead·
line: September 3, 2009,
4:30pm. The AMESC is
an
Equal
Opportunrty
Employer/Provider.

For rent 2 br. house &amp; 2
br apt. $375.00 a mon.
each on 5th St. PI Pleasant 304-812-4350.

Why rent when you can
own. New Gov't finance
loans. 0% down as low
as 1% interest. Low to
For Rent: 3 Bedroom, moderate income. D&amp;W
stove
&amp;
ref.
Dep. Homes. 877-288-9995 or
800-788-5474
(740)379-2540, Patriot.

"The Proctorville
Difference"
$1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167

For Rent: house 2 Bed·
room, 1 Bath, W&amp;D
hookup,
off.ce
space,
large yard. Total electric,
$400 a Month plus Deposit, also for Sale 14x70

2 bedroom mobile home
in Racine, $325 a month,
$325 dep. yrs. lease, No
Pets, No calls alter 9pm,
6000
740-992-5097

Windsor
house
1980
Trarler
older
Model.
Needs some TLC $3500
OBO.
Call
(740)446-2667 if no an·
swer leave message.

-------10

Gall. Fmy wv

Employment

r

low1ng you to provide tor
your family!
After Ntnew years in the
aarea, we have proven
that we are committed to
Gallipolis, and are cuttently seeking dependable employees to help
fulfill client needs.
You wrll take lneoming
and make Outgoing calls
for well known organizatlOils .

x2321

Medical
Are You Tired of the Cor·
porate
Headaches
rn
1-bmecare? Come
Join
a Family Owned Home
Health Agency Providing
F exible Hours and a
Great Working Environ·
rrent.
Now Accepting
Appi1cations
for
Part
T:me AN's and LPN's
Call
us
at
1·866-368·1100.

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview·
1-888-IMC-PAYU
ext. 2457
ht1p://jobs.infocision.com

AVON' All Areas! To Buy
or Sail Shirley Spears
304·675-1429

· Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garagea
· Electrical &amp; Plumbing
· Roofing &amp; Gutters
· Vlnyi'Sidlng &amp; Painting
· Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740·591·0195
Pomeroy, Oh1o
30 Years Local Experrence
FULLY INSURED

l\IICIIAEL'S
SEIH' ICE ( 'E'OTER
ISS:' :\H: ,\,c.
l•oml' rtl\. 0 II
• Oil &amp; filter change

• Thnc Up'
• Rrake Service
• 1\C Recharge

• Minor exhaust
repair • 'lite Repair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; Pluid C'hanl!e
• Gcm~ral :-..1echanic

\\ork
(740) 992-0910

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Rooting, Siding,
Soffit, Decks.
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

29625 Bashan
Racine. OH 45771
740-949·2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00am - 8:00 pm

740-367-0536

(3ait Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential

.Em::. • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • \ 'invl &amp; \\OOd siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Full) insured &amp; bonding a\ailahlc

Fn·c estimates · 25+ ) cars l"l.pcril'lll'c
t:"ul.lllili.tl&lt;•d \lith \li~,. \Ianum Kuulin~ &amp; K&lt;·niiNII'Im~l

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Hardwood Cabineirt Ant1 Fu?nlture
-.~binetry.com

740.446.920
1A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

LEWIS
CO:\CRETE
CO:\STRUCTIO:\

:\II Types Of
Conrrcte Work
29 Years Experience

Quality Control, eam up
to $15 an hour, evaluate
retail stores, training pro·
vided,
call
1·800·901 ·2694

Quality Control S15/hr
evaluate
retail
stores.
training provided pleas
cal 877-712-oooa

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Shop the
Classifieds!

Child/Elderly Core

S-100.00 a mon . +S400.00
dcp
304-67.5-4100 or CHILOCARE
7 913 999
Fundraising Director Na·
40- -8
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ tionwide co. Call Dirac·
tors and owners to help
New 4br..3 112 ba. down·
Sales
them raise money. Avg
stairs &amp; garage leave ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
$15-$20/hr
We
train.
message
for
appt.
813-355-3889
304·882-1151.
Country Irving· 3-SBR,
2·3 BA on property.
Nice
clean
2br.base· Many floor plansl Easy Childcare offered Flat·
menVgarage
central Financing! we own the woods Rd. area, 15
FINDINGS AND ORDER
air/heat ref. &amp; dep. no bank.
Call
today!
years experience, more OF REVOCATION
pets 304·675·5162.
866 •215•5774
info call740·992·1821
The Superintendent of
Manufactu~ed
Insurance Issued a No4000
Houstng
Home health aide for eld· tice of, opportunity for
OHIO'S
erly couple in Harrison· Hearing to ea$h of the
BEST BUYs
listed
ville, Meigs Co., experr· Individuals
Rentals
2010 3BR Doublewide
anced w/Aizheimers pre· below. The Notice was
$39,977
!erred, must have refer· served on each lndivld·
2br.,1ba. M.H. $400.00
HUGE 2010 4brl2ba
ences, will do back· ual pursuant to section
dep.+_ref.
mnth.+$300.
FHA$349 mo
ground &amp; drug checks. 119.07 of the Revised
304·675·4567,304·67 4·
2010 3brl2ba Single
call Code. More than thirty
for
applicatron
5862,304-674·5863.
from $199 mo
(30) days have elapsed
740-742·2377
from the date of service
MIDWESTHOMES
3Br mobtie home in the
or from the last date of
Oerical
mymtdweslhomes.com
country.
publication and each of
740.828.2750
740-256-6574
ONLINE
BOOKEPPER the Individuals listed
·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NEEDED TO WORK ON below has not re·
BEHALF OF OUR COM- quested a hearing.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
PANY.
ACCOUNTING After reviewing the
EXPERIENCE
NOT records In these cases,
SuperintendeQt
NEEDED . ANY JOB EX· the
PERIENCE NEEDED • finds that:
~he Gallipolis Daily Tribune is seeking a YOU WILL EARN UP 1. Each of the lndivldu·
als listed below Is II·
motivated. people-oriented individual to T0$3000 MONTHLY
CONTACT US AT ( cris· censed in this state as
fill a vacancy in the news department as a ben204@gmail.com
) an Insurance agent.
spurt~wJilt::J. The:: l&gt;Ut:t:cssful ~:andidate will FOR
MOREINI-OHMA· 2. Each or the lndlvldu·
als listed below failed
cover high school athletics in the area for TION.'
to comply with the con·
the daily edition of the newspaper, as well
tlnulng education reDrivers &amp; Delivery
as assist with the production of sports Dedicated To Your quirements of section
3905.481 of the Re·
pages. Excellent writing and English Success!
vised Code for the
200612007 compliance
skills. photography skills and knowledge
DRIVERS period.
COMPANY
of desk-top publishing are sought. The WANTED
IT IS THEREFORE OR·
position ts full-time. with benefits. Great home time
DERED that pursuant
Super Package
to section 3905.482 of
Interested parties can send resumes to:
Safety Bonus Program
the Revised Code, the
Kevin Kelly, :\-lanaging Editor,
Ohio Insurance license
1Yr. Verifiable Exp.
of
each
Individual
CALL 304·937-2700.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
listed below be and
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Education
hereby Is revoked. The
revocation shall be efor mdtnews@mydailJtribune.com
Part-time
tnstructors fective
September
needed dunng the day 24.2009rn:
mathematics, eco- BROCK.
MELVIN
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
nomics, and accounting THEODORE
DOB:
Mathematics and eco· 02/17/1964 2101 w
nomic instructors must COLLEGE RD PO BOX
have a mi!ster's degree 292 SYRACUSE, OH
in the diSCipline. If 1nter· ~779
ested please email a re· CALL,
ELIZABETH
sume and cover let1er to ANN DOB: 08/25/1980
REGISTERED NURSES
jdanicki@gallipolisca126 PLEASANT RIDGE
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently reercollege.edu
POMEROY, OH 45769
accepting resumes for full-time, part-time
HARSH, JERRY ALLEN
and per diem OB/PEDS and ICCU The Athens-Meigs Edu· DOB: 06/27/1982 142
MULBERRY
AVE.
Registered Nurses. Applicants must have a cational Service Center POMEROY, OH 45769
current West Virginia license. Previous OB is seeking a Full Trme HOWELL, .:IEFFREY D
Educational Aide for the DOB: 10/06/195140657
experience and previous ICCU experience.
Athens County ED (Emo· LAUREL CLIFF RD
Send resumes to:
tionally Disturbed) Ele· POMEROY, OH 45769
mentary Unit. This is a HUPP, EMILY ELIZAPleasant Valley Hospital
position
wrth BETH
9-month
cjo Human Resources
DOB:
Board approved benefrts. 12/251198049295
2520 Valley Drive
Applicants must pass a MCKENZIE
RIDGE
pt Pleasant. WV 25550
criminal
background ROAD RACINE, OH
check,
and
meet
all
re·
Or fax: 304-675-4340, fax to {304) 675~771
6975
or
apply
on-line
at qwements needed to METHENE~ HEATHER
serve as an Educational MICHELLE
DOB:
~..pv!ille,y&amp;.r.&amp;
Aide. Salary wrll be 08/05/1982
33580
AA/EOE
based on quafrfications BEECH GROVE RUT-

Sportswriter

Help Wanted· General

The Athens·Metgs Edu·
23 hrs/wk - Part
catiOnal SeMCe Center
Time Evening
has an open ng for a
Teacher at the Athens
Shift
Alternative School for the
4 day work week
2009·2010 School Year.
5:30-11 00 prr. +week·
Apprrcants must be certiend day
fledllrconsed as an Inter· Local Offrce rn search ol
ventron
Specialist 15 evenmg shift employ·
M1ld!Moderate (K-12) or ees. Qia!rfled applrcants
be elrgrble to get a Sup- would be able to exhrbrt
plemental Lrcense. This :ourteous phone manner
and basic keyboarding
is a 9·month position
wrth
Board
approved
skills. High School
benefits. Salary based
graduate or GED pre·
on experience and certifi·
terred.
cation according to the
1-877-463-624
salary schedule. Submit
let1er of interest, resume
X1921
and references to John - - - - - - - D. Costanzo Superinten· Looking for a condent, Athens·Meigs ESC
venient work
507 Richland Avenue.
schedule while
Suite #108, Athens. Oh
45701 Application Dead·
your child is in
lne: September 3, 2009,
school?
4:30pm. The MAESC rs
an
Equal
Opportunrty
Part Time DayEmployer/Provider.
shift- 28 hrs/wk
8:00-1 :30 + weekend
day
Help Wanted· General
Local Office In search of
15 dayshift employees.
SS Need to fill 50
Qualified applrcants
would be able to exhibit
open positions SS
couneous pnone manner
and basic keyboardrng
In thrs troubled economy,
skills. High School
it .s reassunng to know
graduate or
that lnfoCision can offer
GED preferred.
YOU a stable career
1-877-463-624 7
AND steady paycheck al·

Stop By and Complete
Your Applicatron
lnfoCisron Management
Corporation
242 Thrrd Avenue
Gallrpolis, Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tr.uler

VVednesda~August26,2009 -

www.mydailysentinel.com

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp;Compare
Pubtic :\otices in ~e11spapm.
Your Right to Know, Dttilel'ed Right to Your Door.

LAND, OH 45775
A copy of this Order
may be obtained from
Stephen C. Hombach,
Ohio Department of In·
surance, 50 West Town
Street, 3rd Floor, Suite
300, Columbus. OR
43215.
As set forth in O.R.C.
119.12, an appeal of
this Order may be
taken by filing a notice
of appeal with the De·
partment of Insurance.
A copy of the notice of
appeal shall also be
filed with the appropriate court of common
pleas. Such notices of
appeal shall be flied
within fifteen (15) days
of the third date of publication of this notice
and Order. Each indi·
vidual listed above may
appeal to the court of
common pleas of the
county In which his or
her business is located
or the county In which
he or she Is a resident.
If he or she Is not a resIdent of and has no
place of business in
Ohio,, he or she may
appeal to the Court of
Common
Pleas
of
Franklin County. The
notice of appeal shall
set forth the order ap·
pealed from and the
grounds of the appeal.
This Order Is hereby
entered in the Journal
of the Ohio Department
of Insurance.
MARY JO HUDSON Su·
perintendent of Insurance
(8) 26, (9) 2, 9
------------

Public Notice
-----------PUBLIC NOTICE
Oxford 011 Company,
P.O.
Box
910,
Zanesville, Ohio 43702,
740) 452-4503 Is applyIng to permit a well for
the Injection of brine
water produced In association with oil and
natural gas. The loca·
tlon of the proposed Injection well Is Rex
Cheadle #1, Permit
#3590 380'SL &amp; 1540'
WL of SE Otr, Section
16 Columbia Township,
Meigs County, Ohio.
The proposed well will
Inject Into the BereaOhio Shale Formation

at a depth of 1272 feet
to (2614 feet. The average Injection Is estimated to be 100 barrels
per day. The maximum
injection pressure Is
estimated to be 375 psi.
Further
Information
can be obtained by
contacting Oxford 011
Company or the Dlvl·
sion of Mineral Resources Management.
Tne address of the Dl·
vision is: Ohio Depart·
rrent
of
Natural
Resources, Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management,
2045
Morse Road, Building
H-3, Columbus, Ohio
43229-6693, (614) 2656633. For full consider·
ation, all comments
and objections must be
received by the Dlvl·
sion, in writing, within
fifteen calendar days of
the date of this pub·
lished legal notice.
(8) 26

Public Notice

~eplacemcnt

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windo,,s • ~Ictal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Eiectrkal
• PlumbinJ(
• Pole Barns

Insured &amp; Bonded

7 40-653-9657

Metal &amp; Components
For All.\lake, ot \'chicle'

Please leave message

Racine. Ohio

S&amp;L
Trucking

Residential

(740) 992-5009

740-591-8044

Jerry &amp; l.r'a Coppkk
Cilri,, Kevm,l:lrad &amp; Scan
74().1J92-3tW6
c..-n 740·50s.OQ75
Cell 740-5UR.()()6Q

Commercial •

Custom Home Bu·ldmg
Steel Frame Bmld :1gs

*Prompt 1md Quahty
\\'ork
*Reasonable Rate~
*Insured
*F.xpcricnccd
Rdercnce' Available!
Call Gary Stanley @:

Coppick &amp; Son's
LandscapinJ(

co.
Pomcro), Ohio

• Free Estimate'

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

(Home &amp; Busine")
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given that on Saturday,
August 29, 2009 at
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
W.
Second
St.•
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Fanners Bank and Sav·
ings Company is selling for cash In hand or
certified check the fol·
lowing collateral:
2006 Suzuki LT F·250
A
T
V
JSAAJ51A362109162
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to with·
draw the above collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"as Is-where Is", with
no expPessed or im·
plied warranty given.
For further information.
or for an appointment
to i nspect collateral,
prior to sale date con·
tact Cyndle or Ken at
992-2136.
(8) 26, 27, 28

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Srding, Gut1ers

BA:\KS
CO:\STRUCTIO:-.i

:\ow Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
Parts • Engines.
'fran, fer C:bes &amp;

Building. Remodeling
Geneml n:p:ur
""" .bank..n·lh.l'Oill

Transmbsions
• Aftermarket

Replacement Sheet

Fresh, Home Grown Vegetables
Cabbage, peppers, tomatoes,
sweet corn, green beans

SAYRE PRODUCE
47985 Adams Road
Racine, Ohio

Dump Truck

(740) 667-6729

Service

We Accept WIC and Senior Coupons!

We Haul Gravel.
Limestone. Coal,
Compost. ' l(lp Soil
Call Walt or Sand~

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-J 726
(Cclll

Advertise
in this
space
for

$70
per
month

Sunset Home
Construction
"Buying Locally- Building l.ocally"
New Homes, \dditions, Garages,
Pole Buildings, Remodeling. Roofs,
Siding, Decks. Drpmll.

740-742-3411
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions. Remodeling. ~fetal &amp;
Shtng~ Roofs. :"\e\\ Home~. Stding, Decks,

Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; ln~ured
Rick Price - 17) rs. E\peril•ncc
WV#040954 Cell 740-416·2960 740-992.0730

�VVednesda~August26, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN
~DID~WA~

A BIG BI.DW001'
BIRTHD4'1 FAR7ZI ~

NO, AC1UIHJ...Q, li!J/!6

f~lt-~KIIIl&amp; "'HAf 1'D
~!..IKE

fO Sl&gt;Et-}0

11' !.01'111 SOMEO~£
SPECIAl...

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Toward
the stern
6Card
collection
10 Solitary
sort
11 Mason's
partner
12With
fervor
13 Foreword
14 "Yeah,
right'"
15 Dr. Phil's
last name
16 Gangster's gun
17 Solid
wood
18Green
and Gore
19 Sports
contests
22Go
across
231nning
count
26 Expeditions
29 Yank's foe
32Chiding
sound
33 Gallery fill
34 Kuwait
setting
36 Vivacity
37Column
style
38 Navajo
home
39 Find cute

Tom Batiuk
OH ... lAJ£1..'-., ~E ...
1. DI00'1' EV61V
K~ ~U WERE
SERIOI..JS AB:)I.rf

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

1.'M ~Of ... HERB ,
lJJOOL.D 4'00 1-.IK€.
ro BORRCXA.J 11-l£
ff.IINKI~ CAP~

A~€..

JOSEPH
41 Tear
42 Buttes'
cousins
DOWN
1 "King of
the
Trumpet"
2 Blunders
3 Started a
pot
4 Fedora
material
5 Essay
6Bell
sound
7 Superflu·
ous
8 Pink
shade
9 Understands
11 "Bewitched"
co-star

15 West of
films
17 Formally
warned
20 Rule in
India
21 Weathermap icon
24 R1ot
queller
252005
George
Clooney
movie

27Can.
neighbor
28 Rocks
29Airport
aid
30 Eat
away
31 Tycoon
35 Rail or
qua1l
36 Dog's
treat
38 That
fellow

as a

button
40 Laughable
8-26

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
rr MuG'fee

! CAN'1
WAL.K OR ,-At...K,
61),- 1. CAN
CI-IP&gt;NGE ~~e!E

IN~lNCf'!
INI-\~~ri~D Fl&lt;OM

f&gt;..N

9AWY'-G Glt'6 OF
il-l~

FAI-AIL."f.

,.1 DON'T NEED FENG. SHOI TO KNOW THIS
SHOOL.D BE MOVED TO THE BA'SEMENT."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
JK;M. FAC~ 15 fi::fZ
~tAL- ~~lNG.

W£ ~lVf;: IN 114~
~~G.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave

....

Gr~~n

7 5

8
6

•

1,9
9 6

4 3

1

4

8 3 4

91

a:

2

.IOOI . . ow- N

D« "' .................

_,...~001'0

"Mommy, which of these is my flip
and which Is my flop?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

I

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HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Wedne.-;d&lt;ly, Aug. 26, 2009:
This year, open up to ~..,..ift ch,mges, which often
come from others' exaggerated reactions. By .1dopting ,,
quteter attitude, you'll draw the types of re;uiLo;; you
desire. Maintain an element of oontrol, if not owr others, then over yourself. Often you might WCflder about
what is going on behind the S{.'eT\eS, .mtidpating
changes. Others will tend to hold back in your pen;ornl
life. Often you take their actions personally. If you are
!-ingle, you could ~ the wrong r,erson. or the emotionally unavailable ~rson. You can l get to know
someooe well enough before dhing into a relatiCI'\Ship
or deciding this person is il SCORPIO alwcl)'S adds
another perspective.
Tize Stars Shaw tlze Kind ofDay You71 Han:: 5-Dyrumuc;
4-Po:'itn~ 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-D!ffimlt
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
****Pressure builds. You ha\·e decisions to mel~.
But make sure vou are informed. 1'\ol everyone h.1s to
agree with you: L'nexpect~ new~ comes in from out of
left field. Tonight Dinner for two.
TAURUS (ApriJ 20-May 20)
Defer to others with the knowledge that
you must grow and evolve to,, new level. W,1lk ,\W,\)'
from a power play; don't indulge in cl contest of wills. If
not handled properly, an .mgry moment could l"l&gt;st you
more th.m you realize. Tonight: Dinner for two.
GEMINI (tv[ay 21-June 20)
***Stay on top of your work. 'lou often wa-;te
time runrung around nen·ous. hying to handle everything. Eventually; something slips between the cracks.
C:.et as much completed as you l&lt;m, cmd \\ atch yourself
jump through one hoop after another. Tonight Defer.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
*****Your creativity bubbles forth, cmd suddenly you are dealing \\;th a brand-new ide.:1 for an old situation. If someone i-; challenging, you might be more
reactive than normal. Stop and think aboUt your rea&lt;'tion. Are you holding distorted feelings? Tonight: Vt&lt;iit
with a friend.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
**"* Investigate what is going on with ) ou. ,,s well
&lt;!!&gt; "1th a ro-worker. At pre;enL you see thts peN.m ,\s
difficult On the other h.md, you note,\ lot of feeling.-;
popping up from out of nowhere.lomght: H.1ppy ,,!
home.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)

***•*

***** Keep communication flourishing. Your
perspedive changes radically gh·en more information
and people's behavior. You might be learung in one
direction. but you could head in the opposite dim:tion
l&lt;1ter. Tonight Catch up on a friend's news.
lffiRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**"** Sometimes your need to disclose a matter or
revtew 1\ith ~meone el~ &lt;Ulld lead you in a new
dire..iion Im·estigate options r.1ther ttian shut them
down. Extreme; .md an ability to identify with others
mme forth. Tonight Tune i-, your all):
SCORPIO (Oct 23-1'\o\. 21)
****"*While many people c.m nm rings around •
other;, you are not to be toyed 1\ith. How you let some- •
one know that enough is enough might be '!'f)
:
un&lt;."'mfortable for him or het; but extremely necessan •
'lne fur might t1y, and it needs to happen. Stay on tup of •
your game. Tonight Earl); if po.-sible.
SAGmARIUS (1\:o,·. 22-Dec. 21)
*** l'\o one can blame you ior dr,\gging your
heels. You could be overwhelmed. You often h,we ,,
way oi enlightening your life through periods of with •
dr,\wal. 'lake your lime tossing yourself bark into the
t1ow of life again. Tonight: '\ap and then dedde
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You might want to ~ a situation in a ne\\
li~t if you ilre frustrated b~· the present indic.ttionc;.
Lighten up some .md detach. A&lt;;k youN:!lf some ques·
tion..; about the role of this is~e in your life. How could
you byp&lt;l&lt;;s it? Don't Jet anger get to ) ou. "!\might
·
Where people are.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18)
****All eyes tum to yoo. Your perspective
•
manges radically when yo.J ~what looks like a \'t'l)
defiant indi\'idual who could impact your work or
d.uly life. Know when to p.1t )'OUr.-el( on auL-;e control
and lea\'e a situation. A lru5ted friend or loved one
rem,tins re.spanst\ e. Tonight: A mll"t appearan~'e.
PISCES (feb. 19-.MarCh 20)
*****Look to other.c- to help you gain a new perspecth e or metYiew. X'ot t:\erythlrig 1s e:\actly as it
seems or \\ill be. In some manne~;. you are pre\"enting :
your.;elf from "':'eing the whole siluc~tion. Det;ldl, .md
you might gain more in~ight. Listen to another person'!&gt;
~uggestiol\'.. Tonight: 1ake in a movie.

*****

Jaaprdw Bigar IS (Ill tire l11tmz&lt;'f
at htq•J/ir'&lt;C'lC'.)'11:CfU&lt;'lillehgarrom.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,August26,2009

2009 Southern - .~ -~

varsiiV Football Schedule ,

8/28 Symmes Valley at SHS _ __
9/4

Wahama at SHS

9/11 SHS at South Gallia
9/18 Hannan at SHS
9/25 SHS at Green
10/2 SHS at Fed. Hocking
10/9 SHS at Miller
10/16 Waterford at SHS
10/23 SHS at Trimble
10/31 Eastern at SHS

,.he

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