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---- ~·-"'"!'"'
· -----111""'"--------~~

WWII vets mark
Japan's surrender
aboard battleship, A2

Relocated, As

Printed on JOIJ&lt;fi
Nc\\sprint

Rcc~clcd

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS
• Me1gs downs Eastern
in four. See J&gt;age Bl

Middlepon 11oman dead in cvcle crash
MDSNEWSOMYOA.~YSENTlNEL COM

GALLIPOLIS
A
Middleport woman died
l'ue~da) afternoon from
injuries she sustained in a
motorcycle accident on
Ohio 7 in Gallia County.

Rachel Kristin Smith, 27,
Middleport. died at Holzer
Medical Center. The accident is the first fatal colli'ion in Gallia County this
year. according to Lt.
Richard Grau, post commander of the Gallia-Meigs
post of the Ohio State

Highway Patrol.
According to the highway
patrol's accident report.
Srnith was traveling south
on 7 on a 2009 HarleyDavidson motorcycle when
she drove off the right side
of the road and lost control.
She was ejected from the

motorcycle.
This is the first rural traffic fatality in GaJiia County
in 2009, and the foUith
fatality in the Gallia-Mcigs
post's coverage area. Seven
people ha\e died in accidents in the two counties so
far this year.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dale Ellis, 75
• Richard E. Jones, 77
• Rachel 'Kristin' Smith, 27

INSIDE

a.NASA analyzing junk

~t could threaten

astronauts. See Page A2
• Feds didn't clear
brush in wildfire area.
See Page A2
• Hayes, Young and
Holiday School reunion
held. See l'age A3
• Flying Wild
education program
offered. See Page A3
• Vinton County
air show set for
Sept. 20. See Page A3
• Alumni group
set to run Ohio's
Antioch College.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS

Students in Julie Spaun's
kindergarten class at Eastern
Elementary (pictured) are finishing up their first week of elementary school ever. The students are learning everything
from where to hang their backpacks to how to spell their
names using Play Doh. When
the students were asked to list
their favorite things about being
in kindergarten, popular answers
included "recess" and "the bus."

. .

'Motlnnan' Recognizing life s accomplishments
fibn to debut
in Point
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

STAFF REPORT

INDEX
2

MOSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Su:uoss- 12 PA&lt;:ES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B3-4

·Ask Dr. Brothers

Comics
.

Bs

itorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Spmts

B Section

Weather

As

2009 Ohio

\'alley Publishing Co.

~ J!l~,l !1!1.!1!11 .

Man shot sues
Middleport,
officer
for injurjes
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY - A former
Middleport police officer,
the village, and its police
department are named as
co-defendants in a lawsuit
filed b'y a New Haven,
W.Va. man. who wa" shot in
the face by the officer and
later sent to prison.
James Gray IV filed a
civil action Wednesday in
Meigs County Common
Plea.; Court, alleging that
Steven Koebel. Gallipolis,
assaulted him and was negligent in his duties as a
police officer.
Koebel fired two shots at
Gra). one of '' hich struck
Gray in the mouth. after
pursuing Gra) for running a
stop sign on Ohio 7 on April
15. Gra) was hospitalized
for hb injuries, and claims
he has been permanently
disfigured.
Gray is now in prison,
serving time for fleejng a
police officer. He was also
indicted on a charge of
operating a motor vehicle
· while under the infiuence,
but that chari!:e "• as dismissed.
Koebel was placed on
desl&lt; duty Immediately following the incident. and
later resigned. An in\e tigation into the incident \\as
referred to Athens County
Pro~ecuting Attorney David
Warren. but no criminal
charges have been filed
against the fonner officer.
~.. The defendant in an
attempt to arrest the plaintiff
and in fru:.tration at not
being able to stop and arrest
the plaintiff, shot him in the

Please see Gray, AS

Beth Sergent/photos

Details on Page AS

D.,.

~

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Sightings of Mothman arc expected to be on the rise \\hen "Dark
Wings: The Mothman Chromcle"
premieres at 8 p.m: on Sept. 17 at
the Historic State Theatre on Main
Street in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
According .
to
Charlie
~t.c.C~acken, dtr.ector of !he _film;
th1s wncept has bee~ fmmul&lt;~trng
~or some t1me and will represent a
JO.mt ventur~ between the B!ack
~~ .. vcr Medw and R_lack Rtver
~·thns, the to~·n of Pomt Pleasant,
&lt;~nd the htstonc Iron Gate
R:~t.a~~a!lt.
.
.
Thts JS sometl~mg we ate very
pleased to. do with, and for, the
town of Pom~ Pleasant. The~ have
b~~n so grac1ous and \\arm m our
VISits to the ~own ~", we have
labored on this proJect that we
Please see Film, AS

POMEROY - Richard ''Rich" E.
Jones, who was named Meigs County\
Man of the Year in 1986 in recognition
of his public service accomplishments,
died Monday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Jones, active in community affairs and
development projects over the years,
served several terms on Pomeroy
Village Council, was on both the
Pomeroy Village School Board and the
Meigs Local Board of Education where
he served as first president, and completcd four terms as Meigs County
Commissioner.
1 While actively working to improve
the county and its facilities as a public
official, he moved into the banking field
at the Farmers Bank &amp; Saving Co.
where he ultimately became executive
vice president, a position he also held
later at the Pomeroy National Bank.
During his time as president of the
.Meigs Local Board of Education, Meigs
High School was constructed. In his 16
years as a commissioner, he was
involved in facilitating the construction
of the Rocksprings Nursing Horne. the

Carleton School and
Meigs Industries for
the mentall) challenged.
and
The
Maples. housing for
the elderly and handicapped.
In tribute to his 24
years as president of
the Meigs County
Richard "Rich" Elderly
Housing
E. Jones
Corporation, a large
room for resident
activities was named the "Richard E.
Jones Community Room."
Jones is also attributed to bringing
about the formation of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services
and the construction of the countv's
heliport.
•
Over the year he lobbied state and federal officials to rcmemhcr what he
referred to as "Ohio's forgotten area.''
He has been described as ''an outspoken
critic when the needs of Appalachians
were ignored. and a catalyst for change
and improvement in the .1rea." He
played an instrumental role in the development and completion of many projects in Meigs County.

(See obituary Page A5)

'Party in
Park' parade,
activities. set
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYOAILVSENTJNELCOM

RACINE
Racine's
'·Party in the Park'' committee has announced an updated schedule as well as an
update on the parade which
no\\ has spon,ors and cash
priz~s for all categories to
reward participants and
encourage as many entries
as po~sible.
The parade begins at 10
a.m. on Sept. 12 though the
line-up begins at 9:30 a.m.
at Southern High School.
Participation in the parade
is free. Also, the Racine
American Legion Post 602
will present a flag raising at
9:55 a.m. short!) before the
parade begins.
Sponsors. the amount of
prize money and categories
for the parade arc as follows:
The
Racine
Area
Community Organization
\\ill sponsor a first place in
floats with a $100 award:
second and third place floats
\\ill be awarded $75 and
$50, respectively, b) Star
.Mill Park Board members.
Dr. btel Weese and Dr.
Doug and Tonja Hunter will
sponsor bicycle awards of
$25, $15 and $10 for first,
second and third places.
Forest Run Rend) Mix
\\ill sponsor antique tractor
a'' ards for the first three
places "ith awards ot $50,
$30. and $20.
Sham Custom Sign wjl)
sponsor first, second and
third place a\\ards in the

Please see Party, AS

..

�....

------~

.-~----~.--·---------~~------------------------------------------------~--------~----~--~~~--------------~

PageA2

:The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Septe mber 3 ,

2009

NASA analyzing junk that
could threaten astronauts
B Y MARCIA D UNN
AP AEROSPACE WRITER

CAPE CANAVERAL.• Fla. -A massive piece of space
junk drifted toward the shuttle-station compl~x and. its 13
astronauts Wednesday. though ~ASA officials said the
threat would not delay an upcommg spacewalk.
Mission Control kept close tabs on the piece of European
, rocket because there was a chance. however unlikely, it
could come too close or even hit the linked space shuttle
Discovery and international space station if their path is not
altered.
As of Wednesday night. the debris was expected to pass
within two miles of the outpost Friday. said John ,
~tcCullough. chief of NASA's flight director office.
That's five miles closer than earlier projections, but it's
still ''looking very positive" that the shuttle and station will
not have to dodge the junk. That's because with e\·ery passing hour, there's more accuracy on the precise location of
the spacecraft and debris, McCullough said.
Experts will continue to track the debris - part of a 3year-old Ariane 5 rocket - to make sure it stays at a safe
distance. Pieces of uncontrolled space junk sometimes
stray from their orbit, however, and that is the concern . The
· object's oval-shaped orbit -stretching as far out as 20.000
miles - made it especially difficult to monitor.
Experts estimate that the piece of junk - part of a booster that was used to deploy a satellite - has about 200
square feet of surface area. Its exact dimensions are
unknown.
The late-breaking news did not affect the work of the two
crews aboard the complex. They moved more cargo into
AP photo
the space station and even installed some of the new bigThe U.S. Pacific Fleet Band, below, and Marine Corps rifle detail, above, are seen on board the Battleship Missouri Memorial
ticket items, including a sleeping compartment.
Shuttle astronaut Jose Hernandez. a Mexican-American in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on Wednesday during a ceremony marking the 64th anniversary of the end of World War II.
who grew up in a migrant worker family. also took time out
·for several TV intcr\'icws and discussed his Catholic faith.
: When a ... ked in Spanish if being surrounded by all that
space technolog) diminished his faith. Hernandez replied
that on the contrary, seeing all the stars confirms his belief
that all this cannot possibly be by chance and that there is
a greater plan with a supernatural power.
Hernandez said he always cmTies with him, even now, his
:-.capular and crucifix. which eceived the blessing of his BY AUDREY MCAVOY
For
months.
sailors lives in the conflict.
Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,
parish priest.
ASSOCIA'l'ED PRESS WRITER
..Thev're the ones that are
1941 , an event that drew the focused on aggressively proIf .\'l i\sion Control determines the shuttle-station comU.S. into the war.
tectin~ their ship and other on my 'mind today - those
plex needs to dodge the orbiting debris. that move into a
PEARL
HARBOR.
"I can think of nothing ships 111 the U.S. fleet. At one bovs that arc in the Pacific.''
higher orbit would not happen until early Friday. just after Hawaii - The famous bat- more valuable of this com- pomt, the Missomi came Walling said after the cerefhursday night's spacewalk. The joined spacecraft current- tleship where Japanese offi- plex here ... to enable gener- under the attack of 95 mony. ''They're the ones
!) arc !lying about 220 miles above the planet.
cials signed the surrender ations to come to reflect and Japanese planes. Lassen said. that made your lifestyle the
A final decision was not expected until late Thursday.
documents that officially understand,''
A
said
kamika.1.e
pilot way it is today. They gave
The astronauts perfonned the first of three planned ended World War II played Abercrombie. D-Hawuii.
slammed into the Missouri's their life."
. spacewalks Tuesday, removing an old ammonia tank from host on Wednesday to about
U.S. Assistant Secretary
The memorial welcomes hull in April 1945, though
the space station. On Thursday, two spacewalkers will 20 aging U.S. veterans and more than 40.000 tounsts the plane's bomb failed to of
Defense
Wal lace
install a new, fully loaded tank to replenish the cooling sys- dozens of observers as they each month to exhibits that detonate and only the pilot Gregson spoke Wednesday
tem of the outpost.
marked the 64th annitcr- highlight the Missouri's role was killed.
of how much has changed
Discovery will remain at the space station until Tuesday. sary of the war's end.
in Japan's SU!Tendcr.
"The mood at the time of in 64 years.
The USS Missouri, which
''While there have been
Walter Lassen, a 27-year- the ceremony was the culwas anchored in Tokyo Bay old first gunner's mate mination of all this amount other wars since I 945, the
on Sept. 2, 1945 for the sur- aboard the Missouri when of fighting we had been scale and the scope of those
render ceremonies. has the war ended. told The doing and all this shooting conflicts has faded as the
since been decommissioned Associated Press 111 an inter- that had been going on:· Asia-Pacific region has
• and moored in Pearl Harbor. view last week his fellow satd Lassen.
become a model of peace.
U.S.
Rep.
Neil sailors had ''little love of the
But "ith the surrender, stability and cooperatio-n "
Abercrombie told those enemy'' when Japanese offi
sailors began to feel that their Grel!son said.
BY MICHAEL A. B LOOD
gathered it's ffiting that the cials came aboard to sign country "as finally safe. he
.l\ext month. the Mis u
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
battleship - now kno\\ n as the' documents.
said. Lassen. 91. had planned \\ ill be taken to a drv dock
The Mi~souri, one of the to attend Wednesday's cere- at Pearl Harbor's shipyard
LOS A. GELES - Federal authorities failed to follow I the B~ttlesh_ip Mi~s~uri
15
most
powerful U.S. \\ar- mony, but had a last minute for three months of sanding
through on plans earlier this year to burn away highly flam- 1 Memonal docked JUSt
and painting to remove rust
mabie brush in a forest on the edge of Los Angeles to avoid a few hun~red yards from ships at the time, fought in change of plans.
that's built up on the ship's
the
battles
of
lwo
Jima
and
Pearl
Harbor
sun
h
or
the very kind of\\ ildfire now raging there, The Associated the memonal for the USS
hull over the years. It's tenOkinawa
as
American
Delton
E.
Walling.
88.
Press has learned .
Anzona.
thought back to the U.S. tativel) set to reopen for
The
Arizona
sank
when
forces
neared
the
Japanese
~10nths before the huge blaze erupted. the U.S. Forest
servicemen who lost their visitors in January.
Service obtained pcm1its to burn away the undergrowth and Jupane:-.e planes attacked main islands.
brush on more than I .700 acres of the Angeles National
·Forest. But just 193 acres had been cleared by the time the fire
broke out. Forest Service resource officer Steve Bear said.
The agency defended its efforts, saying weather. wind
and environmental rules tightly limit how often these "prescribed burns'' can be conducted.
Bear said crews using machinery and hand tools managed to trim 5.000 acres in the forest this year before the
money ran out. Ideally, "at least a couple thousand more
acres'' would have been cleared.
Could more have been done to clear tinder-dry hillsides
and canyons?
.. We don't necessarily disagree with that.'' Bear said. "We
weren't able to complete what we wanted to do.''
Some critics suggested that protests from environmentalbt&lt;- over prescribed burns contributed to the disaster, which
came after the brush was allowed to build up for as much
as 40 years.
"This brush was read) to explode.'' said· Los Angeles
* Ads must be paid for in advance.
Count) Sup~rvisor Mike Antonovich, whose district overlaps the forest. ''The environmentalists have gone to the
extreme to pre\ent controlled burns, and as a result we
have this catastrophe today."
Prescribed burns ar~ intended to protect homes and Jives
by eliminating fuel that can cause explosive wildfires. The
wildfire that has blackened 140.000 acres - or nearly 219
;--~~-----------Thanks
'
square miles - in the forest over the past week has been
fed by the kind of tinder-dry vegetation that prescribed
burns are designed to safely devour.
The blaze has destroyed more than five dozen homes,
$24.45
killed two firefighters and forced thousands of people to
1
nee Firelighters reported modest progress Wednesday as
investigators said the blaze was human-caused. though it
was not clear cxactlv how the fire started or whether it was
accidental or arson:
Sunday
Figures from the California's South Coast Air Quality
Management District suggested even less was protectively
burned.
The agency said it granted six permits sought by the
Forest Service to conduct prescribed burns on 1.748 acres
jn the forest this year. The agency reviews such requests to
ensure air quality in the often-smoggy Los Angeles area
will not be worsened by smoke from Intentional fires.
But records show only 12.8 acres burned.
Four of the permits. totaling 1,257 acres, were granted in
areas involved in the wildfire. according to the air quality
agency.
But the Forest Service disputed those figures. Bear said
I 93 acres were cleared by intentionally set fires.
· Government firefighters set thousands of blazes each year
to reduce the wildfire risk in overgrown forests and grasslands around the nation. Prescribed burns can also be used to
improve overall forest health and increase forage for wildlife.
Obtaining the necessary permits is a complicated process.
and such eff011~ often draw protests from environmentalists.
Biologist Ileene Ander~on with the Center for Biological
pi,ersity. an environmental organization. said burn permits
should be difficult to get because of the potential damage to
air quality. Clearing chaparral by hand or machine must be
closely scrutini?.ed because it can hurt native species.
··our air quality, for a variety of factors, doesn't need to
be further reduced by these controlled burns,'' she said.

•

WWII vets mark Japan's
su•Tender aboard battleship

Feds didn't clear
brush in wildfrre area

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

Sincere thanks
Col. x 2" $16.30

2 Col. x 5"
$67.50

STS

1 Col. x 3" -

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�The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

··' 1fiHlJE

Thursday, Septemb_er 3,

2009

Community Calendar

AsK n R. B R.o THE R. s

Democratic group taken
over by bossy leader

Public meetings
Thursday; Sept. 3
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, regular
meeting. 7 p.m., village
hall.

BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

A oear Or. Brothers: I am writing on behalf of a group of
~ople who are very disgruntled right now and want :-.orne

Saturday, Sept. 5

' advice on how to talk to one of our members. We are part
: of &lt;l volunte~r group trying to plan a huge yard ~ale to raise
money for town beautification projects. We were all coopcrating well, but one of us has decided to take over and be
the boss He is ilTitating us and docsn 't have very good
' ideas. What should we say to him to get him to back off.
without hurting his feelings? - E.K.
Dear E.K.: Sometimes our goals are mutually exclusive:
you can't always get your message across while sparing the
feelings of someone who has given not a moment's thou~ht
to yours! But in this case. since it is imponant to you to not
alienate this person. I'm :-;ure you'll find a way to succeed
-even though you'd probably be justified in telling him all
ahout himself and letting the chips fall where they may. I
understand that because it is a volunteer organization and
your \\'Ork is for the good of the community. you are com, mittcd to working together for the common good and don't
, wish to introduce~a sour note. So let's see how that might be
· done.
: I don't think ganging up on this fellow would be a good
: idea. Why not pick your most tactful and friendly member
: - or perhaps one of his friends. if he has any - to speak
. to him privately about his role? If it is possible to divert
some of his energy to a ''special" part of the project- publicity. for example - you can free up the rest
you to do
your own thing. This type may respond to public praise for
his leadership, leaving you free to quietly get things done
1ile he is distracted with his new important duties. Or. let
•
m knmv you need to break up into small committees. He
can head one of them. Then next time, pick a volunteer
eff011 he's not interested in and use what you have learned
about human nature to make it a succ.css.

SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees. 10 a.m.
at the tire station.

Monday, Sept. 7
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees.
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
office building.

Tuesday. Sept. 8

Township Trustee~. 7 p.m ..
town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Sept. 3
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies
Auxiliary. 7 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 4
SALEM CENTER
Meigs County Pomona
Grange. 7:30 p.m. at the
Star Grange Hall located on
County Road I, 3 miles
Notth of Salem Center. All
contest items to be judged.

RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees. special
Saturday. Sept. 5
se:-;sion, 5 p.m. Rutland Fire
SALEM CENTER
State to conduct regular
. Star Grange #778 and Star
September business.
Grange
#878.
POMEROY - Salisbury Junior
Township Trustees, regular potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
meeting. 6:30 p.m .• town followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. Final plans for the
hall.
.
POMEROY Meigs chicken BBQ on October 4.
Monday, Sept. 7
County Board of Elections.
POMEROY
Tillis
8:30a.m.
. SYRACUSE - Syracuse reunion Labor Day, noon. at
Board of Public Affairs, 7 the Amos Tillis residence,
p.m. at village halL Date 32581 Hysell Run Road,
change·due to holiday.
Pomeroy, For more inforPOMEROY - Bedford mation call 992-0309.

of

1\tesday, Sept. 8
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S # 255
7:30p.m.; potluck 6:30p.m.
Work to be clone, wear
chapter dress, bring school
supplies.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community Center Board
of Directors. 7 p.m. at the
Center.

Church events
Friday, Sept. 4
SYRACUSE - Denver
McCa1ty to conduct revival
services at the Syracuse
Community Church, 7 p.m.
through Sept. 5. Special
singing every evening Monday. Claudette Harbin:
Tuesday. Delores Long:
Wednesday, Voices of Faith:
Thursday, Joe McCloud:
Friday. Joe and Naomi
Gwinn: and Saturday, Two
for Jesus. Need a ride. call
992-3893. van with wheel
chair lift. Pastor Joe Gwinn.
Saturday, Sept. 5
POMEROY Gospel
blue grass music at the
Mulberry
Community

Center, 6:30p.m.
RACINE Southern
Charge United Methodist
Men ·s Prayer Breakfast. 8
a.m .. Bethany UMC.
•

Sunday, Sept. 6
SYRACUSE- Syracuse
Community Church's Third
Annual Homecoming, 10
a.m. Sunday school foJlowed by a potluck dinner at
noon:
at
I :45
p.m.
Atonement from Marysville
will be singing; Norman
Taylor delivering the message.

Reunions
Saturday. Sept. 5
LOGAN - Staneart family reunion. descendants of
Joel and Lydia Staneart.
noon at the Kachelmacher
Park on- Route 93 in Lo!!an.
Take picnic lunch. lawn
chairs and photographs to
share. For more information
call 992-5502. ,

Sunday, Sept. 6
CHESHIRE - Ross-Fife
reunion. with dinner ~t
noon.
Kyger
Creek
Clubhouse.

Hayes, Young and Holiday School reunion held
POMEROY - The 85th
Hayes, Young &amp; Holiday
School reunion was held
Aug. 9 with 62 in attendance. A potluck lunch was
held.
Theresa Shaffer gave an
update on her daughter,
Tracey Escalanti (missionary nurse) and her family
who live in San Salvador. El
Salvador. It was noted that
Steve. Cheri Smith and family are back in the states and
Canada for a few months
doing missionary work.
Susan Metts gave a report
on the Haning family genealogy and her new findings.
Winners of the melon
drawings
were
Mabel
McClanahan.
Colleen
Brickles, Steve Smith.
Steve Smith II. Mason

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: I've tried to quit smoking more
times than I can remember, but l always end up sliding
back into it and then feeling t~1Tible about myself. I know
it's bad fo.r me. and I really want to quit. T don't even feel
like I'm addicted. until all of a sudden a craving hits and I
give in. Some people seem to just be able to quit cold
turkey. Why is it so hard for me to quit? Is there anything
· that will help?- P.R.
, Dear P.R.: There are two types of addiction: physical
and psychological. Different drugs - and the nicotine in
cigarettes is certainly a drug - work in different ways to
cause addiction. While many experts believe smoking is
only about 10 percent physical addiction. that doesn't make
it any ea.... ier to kick as a habit. Yout body may recover from
nicotine Withdrawal within a few days. but your psychological dependency will persist.
The good news. though, is that there are a lot of tips and
tricks that can help you quit. Tell your family and friends
that you're quitting. and lean on them for support. If you
decide to use a program of some kind, really utilize all the
resources it provides. Go to meetings, call the telephone
help line, visit the Web site -do it all. The more support
vou have, the more successful you will be. You want to stay
sy. and should spend time in places that don't allow
1oking and be around people who don't smoke. If you
•
slip up and smoke a cigarette or two. it's not a lost cause.
Certainly, smoking one cigarette is less bad than smoking a
whole pack. but that doesn't mean you can safely smoke
only occasionally. Don't be too hard on yourself if you
have a cigarette or two. but don't totally give up, either.
Learn from what made you smoke this time, and try to
avoid that trigger next time. ·
(c) 2009 by King F emu res Svndicate

Metts, Lynette Jones, Ellen
Rife and Patty Arnold.
Gifts were given to the
oldest woJnan, Virginia
Gibson: oldest man. Garold
Gilkey; youngest baby.
seven month old Ryland
Moss Brooks Dougan;
youngest girl. Jaycie Jordan;
youngest boy. Sam Arnold
and the ones who traveled
the farthest. Steve and Cheri
Smith and children, Alexia,
Steve II and Cameron of
Guyana. South America.
Tami Dougan sang "One
Day at a Time'' and ''Blue
Eyes Crying in the Rain'':
Craig and Tami Dougan
sang '·God Bless America":
Colleen Brickles
sang
"Where Could I Go But to·
the Lord" and "Sunshine in
the Shadow"; Garoldene

Stephens sang ·'Trumpets
Will Sound": Mitchell
Metts played "Ode to Joy"
by Beethoven on the keyboard; Charlie and Ellen
Rife ~ang "Help is on the
Way" and "My Home" and
Charlie Rife sang ··The
Long Black Train.''
Those attending were
Steve. Cheri. Alexia. Steven
II and Cameron Smith of
Guyana. South· America;
Dale and Patty Arnold,
Tami Dougan, Craig. Kathy
and Ryland Moss Brooks
Dougan, Mary K. Hayes,
Jason. Natasha and Brooke
Hayes. Jeremy. Angie and
Mikayla Hayes, Roger and
Dea Hayes, Susan. Mason
and Mitchell Metts, Mabel
McClanahan of Albany:
Garold and Gladys Gilkey

of Athens: Nathan. Marv.
Jessica, Ben and Sam
Arnold of Coolville. OH;
Linda O'Nail of Chauncey:
Chuck and Flora Karns and
Margaret Wolfe of Logan:
Charlie and Ellen Rife of
Middleport;
Paul
and
Lynette Jones of New
Marshfield:
There~a
Shaffer. Dale Colburn.
Virginia
Gibson
of
Pomeroy: Brent, Camille.
Clay and Can1eron Bolin of
Rutland: Colleen Brickles.
Jackie Jordan. Jacob Jordan.
Jaycie Jordan. Jenna Jordan.
Dave and Barbara Smith.
John
and
Garoldene
Stephens. Ned. Sharon.
Jacob and Coalton Swindell
and Mary Young of Shade.:
Leroy and LaVona Sauters
of Ravenswood. W.Va.

Vinton County air show set for Sept. 20 :

Correction

Calaway, owner of Annie's Place in Tuppers Plains,
purchased the reserve champion market steer from Jacob
Dunn at the Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale, tor
$2,000. Calaway is pictured with Dunn and the Meigs
County Junior Fair court of royalty. Calaway also purchased
Benjamin Ayres' grand champion market dairy steer for
$1,300. A photo ·is not available of that purchase.

McARTHUR
Members of the Vinton
County Pilots and Boosters
Association are finalizing
plans for the 2009 Vinton
County Air Show to be held
at the Vinton County
Airp011 Sunday, Sept. 20.
In addition to the airpott's
legendary barbecued chicken dinners. several well
known acrobatic pilots will
perf01m death-defying routines that are sure to please.
As usual. the Screaming
Chicken Skydiving Team
will pe1form and mid-way
through tlle show. there will
be a candy drop for the kids.
The first chicken dinners.
barbecued on the airport's
large open pit. will be available between 11 a.m. and
noon and the air show will
begin at l p.m. with opening
mustc being provided by the
Vinton County High School
Band. one of the many tradi-

tions at the Air Show.
The gates to the airport
will open at 8 a.m. and a
donation for parking will be
requested.
The Performers
According to Association
President and Air Show
Coordinator. Nick Rupert.
the afternoon will be filled
with a great variety of acts.
Air
Show · regular
Emerson Steward III. will
perform 2 acts m his
Citabra. one done with the
engine turned off once he
reaches altitude.
His
father.
Emerson
''Red" Stewart, will petform
this year in a Stearman.
John Black will put his high
performance Pitts through
its paces and will keep the
audience on the edges of
their seats. Black was taught
to fly aerobatics by t\VO former regular performers at
the air show. Harold

Alumni group
set to run Ohio's
Antioch College

Proud to be a
part of your life.

YELLOW
SPRINGS
(AP)
Officials at
Antioch University say
they will tum over the campus of Antioch College in
Ohio to an alumni group on
Friday. the first step in a
plan to create a new, independent school.
Antioch
University,
which oversees the college
in Yellow Springs, temporarily closed the school a
year ago because of financial problems caused by
declining enrollment. a
heavy
dependence
on
tuition and a small endowment.
The university announced
in June that it planned to
transfer the campus to the
alumni group. which says
reopening the school is at
least two years away.
'The alumni group has
agreed to pay the university
$6 million for the campus,
which will host Friday's
signing ceremony.
Antioch College is known
for its pioneering academic
programs that produce students with a passion for
· social activism .

FIVinu Wild educauon program onered
NELSONVl LLE - Registration is under way at the
National Forest for educators that may be interested in the new Flying WILD Education program.
A workshop covering this unique program will be held on
~aturday, Sept. 26 from 9 a.m. until 12:15 p.m. at the
Wayne National Forest headquarters located off US Hwy
33 between Nelsonville and Athens.
The workshop is free and thanks to a grant from the Ohio
Em iron mental Education Fund. teachers will be paid a $50
• educator stipend to attend. The grant is also paying for edu: cators to receive a workshop manual.
Developed by the national oftice of the award winning
Project WILD environmental education program. Flying
WILD introduces students to bird conservation through
classroom activities and school bird festivals. It also supp011s
educators by providing interdisciplinary. standards-based
portunities to engage students in real-world learning.
Flying WILD activities are correlated to the National
•
ience Standards. Middle school age students are the
focus of Flying WILD. but activities can easily be adapted
to higher or lower grades.
The training will introduce educators to the new Flying
WILD materials and activities. At the workshop, teachers
• will receive a copy of the program guide, Flying WILD: An
:Educator's Guide to Celebrating Birds. as well as an intro• duction to resources that will .help educators make their
Flying WILD program a success.
To register, send an email to Regina Martin at
rkma1tin@fs.fed.us or call her ar (740) 753-0549. Space is
limited.
!·or more information on tlze Flying WILD Program, l'isit
their web site at www:flyingwild.org.
Wa~ ne

.
'

Sub~cribe

Johnson
and
Harold
Montgomery. Those men
often attend the air show,
but both are now retired.
The team of Steve Morrey
and Ryan Patterson will perform in their military
Chinese/Russian Yaks.
Ha!Ty
Sowers,
flight
instructor at the Vinton
County Airport, will perform
a sk.it dressed as an escaped
convict who steals an airplane and attempts to fly tt
only to ultimately be arrested
by law enforcement officials.
but not until after he puts his
Cessna through its paces.
There will also be some
radio controlled aircraft

thrown into the mix as 4
time world champion performer Mark Radcliff will
fly his 49 percent sized Pitts
Special. Roger Barns will
fly his radio controlled Toro
Lawnmower
which
is
always a crowd pleaser.
For more information as it
becomes available contatt
Booster President Nick
Rupert at 740-375-0268 or
Booster Secretary Ste\'e
Keller at 740-418-2612.
The
Vinton
Count\
Airport is located about 6
miles north of McArthur
just off St. Rt. 93 on Airp011
Road. Flyins are welcome.
Pilots t1y to 221.

Thank You
Racine Home
National Bank

for purcliasing my

2Qg9 Markst Hog.

today • 992-2155

~

As

BIG THANK YOU
to the Volunteer Fire ~epartments of
.Mason, New Haven &amp; Point Pleasant, WV,
Pomeroy, Middleport, OH, and the
911 Service for the Quick Response
to the Fire at
Dr. Danny Westmoreland's Business on
August 29,2009.
We are grateful that there were no injuries
and for the Excellent job done at lhe scene.
Dr. Danny and Kim Westmoreland

Wolfe

�•

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 3,

2009

The Daily Sentinel BvBig speech: Obama wants control qf health debate
CHARLES BABINGTON

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.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 Thursday. Sept. 3, the 246th clay of 2009. There
are 119 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 3, 1939, Britain,
France, Australia and New Zealand declared war on
Germany, two days after the Nazi invasion of Poland. A
German U-boat torpedoed and sank the Montreal-bound
British liner SS Athenia some 250 miles off the Irish coast,
killing more than 100 people. including 28 Americans, out
of the 1 ,400 or so on board. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt delivered a radio address in which he said the
U.S. was preparing a proclamation of neutrality in the
European conflict.
On this date: In A.D. 590, Pope St. Gregory I was consecrated as the successor to Pope Pelagius II.
, In 1 189, England's King Richard I (the Lion-Hearted)
was crowned in Westminster Abbey.
In 1609, English explorer Henry Hudson and his crew
aboard the Half Moon entered present-day New York Harbor
and began sailing up the river that now bears his name.
(They reached present-day Albany before turning back.)
In 1658, Oliver Cromwell, the Lord Protector of
England. died in London.
In 1783. representatives of the United States and Great
Britain signed the Treaty of Paris, which officially ended
tpe Revolutionary War.
In 1943, the British Eighth Army invaded Italy during
World War II, the same day Italy signed a secret armistice
with the Allies.
In 1967, Nguyen Van Thieu was elected president of
South Vietnam under a .new constitution. Motorists in
Sweden began driving on the right-hand side of the road
instead of the left.
, In 1976, America's Viking 2 lander touched down on
Mars to take the first close-up, color photographs of the
planet's surface.
Ten years ago: A French judge closed a two-year inquiry
into the car crash that killed Princess Diana, dismissing all
charges a8ainst nine photographers and a press motorcyclist, and concluding the accident was caused by an inebriited driver. NASA temporarily grounded its space shuttle
tleet after inspections had uncovered damaged wires that
oould endanger a mission.
Five years ago: The three-day hostage siege at a school in
Beslan, Russia, ended in bloody chaos after Chechen militants set off bombs as Russian commandos ~tormed the
b,uilding; more than 330 people. mostly children, were
killed. Former President Bill Clinton was hospitalized in
New York with chest pains and shortness of breath; he
ended up undergoing heart bypass surgery.
:One year ago: Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, John McCain's
C'hoice for running mate, roused delegates at the
Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., as she
belittled Democrat Barack Obama and praised her new
boss. Baseball's firc;t use of instant replay backed an onfield
call of a home run for Alex Rodriguez during the ninth
iiming of a New York Yankees game against the Tampa I:3ay
Rays. (The Yankees won the game, 8-4.)
: Thought for Today: "It is impossible to persuade a man
who does not disagree. but smiles." - Muriel Spark,
~cottish author (1918-2006).

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama
will deliver a major primetime health care address to
Congress next week, opening an urgent autumn push
to gain control of the debate
that has been slipping from
his grasp under withering
Republican-led attacks.
Scheduling of the speech
next Wednesday night. just
a day after lawmakers
return from their August
recess. underscores the
determination of the White
House to confront critics of
Obama 's overhaul proposals and to buck up supporters who have been thrown
on the defensive. Allies
have been urging the president to be · more specific
about his plans and to take a
greater role in the debate,
and aides have signaled he
will do that in the address to
a joint session of Congress
in the House chamber.
The speech's timing also
suggests that top Democrats
have all but given up hope
for a bipartisan breakthrough by Senate Finance
Committee negotiators. The
White House had given
those six lawmakers until
Sept. 15 to draft a plan, but
next week's speech comes
well ahead of that deadline.
It follows an August
recess in which critics of
Obama 's health proposals
dominated many public
forums. Approval ratings
for Obama. and for his
health care proposals.
dropped during the month.
White House
senior
adviser David Axelrod told
reporters Wednesday, ''We
believe this is the best way
to kick off the final discussions, the final debate, and
bring this thing to a close in
a way that is meaningful.'"
Listeners to Obama 's
speech will have "a clear
sense of what he proposes
and what health care reforn1
is not," Axelrod said. He
declined to offer details of
what the president might
discuss.

was essential to a final bill.
Several lawmakers say
Obama must convincingly
show that he can reduce the
cost of pending health care
plans. Nonpartisan budget
officials have said Obama 's
proposals could increase the
federal deficit by about $1
trillion over the next
decade.
Ncas said billions of dollars can be saved by changing health payment practices to discourage unnecessary procedures. He also
said insurance and pharmaceutical companies should
be required to offer more
savings to the nation's
health care system beca·use
they will benefit from mil~
lions of new customers if
greater
coverage
of
Americans is mandated.
Such demands could be
awkward for Obama. He
has praised those industries
for the cost reductions worth tens of billions of
dollars over the next decade
they already have
pledged to make.
Before Obama's speech to
Congress was announced,
the Republicans' top negotiator on health care indicated Wednesday that bipartisan talks would continue
despite White House suggestions that he and another
GOP bargainer have not
acted in good faith.
Jill Kozeny. a spokeswoman for Sen. Charles
Grassley of Iowa, said the
accusations were unjustified. She said Grassley and
the five other Senate
Finance Committee members - half Republicans,
half Democrats - will hold
their scheduled conference
call Friday to try again to
reach common ground on a
health care bill that could
win broad supp01t in the full
Senate.
Axelrod on Tuesday suggested that Grassley and
Sen. Mike Enzi. R-Wyo ..
have not acted in good faith
because they sharply criticized Democratic plans during the August rece::.s.
Kozeny said Wednesday:
"Attacks by political opera-

Axelrod said earlier that
all the key ideas for revising
health care are "on the
table,'' s·uggesting that
Obama will not offer major
new proposals.
But he may talk more
specifically about his top
priorities, and perhaps add
details to pending plans, to
save a high-profile initiative
whose defeat would deliver
a huge blow to his young
presidency.
Many
advocates
of
sweeping
health
care
changes - which would
include health coverage for
virtually every American,
greater competition among
insurers and incentives to
increase the quality of care
instead of the number of
medical procedures performed - welcomed the
president's more direct role.
Obama and congressional
Democrats clearly lost
momentum during the
August recess. they say, and
the president's high profile.
and still-considerable personal popularity are needed
to change the dynamic.
"He's got to get into the
nitty-gritty and embrace
very concrete proposals,"
said Ralph Neas, head of the
National · Coalition on
Health Care.
Richard Kirsch, national
campaign manager for the
Liberal advocacy group
Health Care for America
Now. said, "It's really clear
they understand they have
to provide more presidential
leadership. more presidential direction."
· Kirsch said Obama doesn't have to provide legislative language, but he must
detail "the contours of the
reform he needs.''
It's far from clear that
Obama's speech will satisfy
grumbling liberals. For
instance. he consistently has
refused to. insist on a government-run program to
compete with private health
insurers. a top goal of liberals, even though he says he
prefers such an option.
Axelrod called the public
option
important,
but
stopped short of saying it

tives in the White House
undermine biparti::.an efforts
and drive senator~ away
from the table.''
EnLi spokeswoman Elly
P1ckett said of her bo~
...
"Repeating that you do
agree with plans put toget
er solely by one side doesn't
mean you aren't willing to
work together on a different
plan. He is."
Axelrod had kind words
for the third GOP Senate
negotiator, Olympia Snowe·
of Maine. Many lawmakers
see her as the likeliest possible Republican senator to
suppo11 a major health care
package if a true bipartisan
accord can't be reached.
Obama "has a high regard
for her." Axelrod said.
''She's made a good faith
effort to try and find common ground."
In ·one ·measure of the
intense opposition Obama
and his allies faced this summer. opponents of the
Democratic effort outspent
supporters on television
commercials in August for
the first time this year.
according to a firm that monitors political advertising . •
Foes of the Democra
drive spent $12.1 million
last month. compared with
$9.1 million for backers of
the effort, according to Evan
Tracey. president of the
Campaign Media Analysis....
Group in Arllngton, Va. The
U.S. Chamber of~ommerce
and several conservative
groups were the biggest
advertisers against the
health care overhaul, while.
the drug industry, labor and'
AARP spent the most on the
effort's behalf.
Republicans ,iind groups
opposed to Democratic
health care proposals have·
vowed to keep up the fightA few hours before the president's
speech
on
Wednesday, acth ists will
present lawmakers with
stacks of petitions opposing
''government-run
health
care." The event is sponsored by the conservative
National Center for Pol.
Analysis and Salem Ra
Network.

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
imsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept~d for publication.

Geithner says global economy still needs stimulus
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

~~ The Daily Sentinel
" Reader Services
Correction Policy
.Our main concern in all stories is to
;be accurate. If you know of an error
•in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
;gg2-2156.

(usPs 213-9so)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

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

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WASHINGTON
Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner said Wednesday
that efforts by the United
States and other nations to
fight a worldwide economic
crisis have been able to pull
the global economy "back
from the abyss."
But countries must continue to provide sizable
amounts of support until
there are clearer signs of
recovery to avoid a classic
mistake countries have made
in past recessions, he said.
Geithner said he would
stress that point in meetings
of financial ministers in
London that start Ftiday.
Those discussions will allow
officials to assess the state of
the global economy for
growth and decide what steps
are needed to prevent a recurrence of last year's crisi:-..
"We have come a long
way. but we have got a long
way to go." Geithner said at
a briefing for reporters to
preview the meetings of
finance ministers from the
Group of 20 nations. ··we

need to make sure we are
confident we have a strong
recovery in place."
A proposed global framework to bolster requirements for the amount of
capital reserves that banks
need to )1old to guard
against losses also will be
among Geithner's talking
points.
Many
experts
believe last year's crisis
occurred because current
bank regulations do not
impose
strict
enough
on
the
requirements
reserves a bank has to cover
its losses on loans.
The administration is
hoping to get broad agreement among major countries on raising capital standards so that financial institutions in the U.S. would
not be put at a disadvantage
if capital standards here are
raised to higher levels tlran
their competitors face in
other nations.
Specific numbers won't
be discussed at the weekend
meeting but a broad framework and timetable for
implementing new standards would be reviewed,
Geithner said.

The G-20 includes the
world's wealthiest nations
and big developing countries such as China. Brazil
and India. Finance ministers
are meeting to prepare the
agenda for a Sept. 24-25
summit in Pittsburgh that
will
be attended by
President Barack Obama
and other -.yorld leaders.
Those discussions will be
a follow-up to a leader's
summit in early April in
London and an initial G-20
summit in Washington last
November when die financial crisis was still gaining
force.
Gcithner said the U.S.
will he stressing the need to
move quickly to implement
financial sector reforms.
The adminis~ration has put
forward a sweeping overhaul package but Congress
has yet to act on it.
German
Chancellor
Angela Merkel said this
week that ··no bank must be
allowed to. get so hi~ th~l it
can get mto a sttuutton
where it could blackmail
governments,
while
French President Nicolas
Sarkozy urged tough rules

'.

restrictinc executive compensatiorl.
Geithner wants to hear the
views of other officials at
the meetings. and he sought
to play down differences.
saying there was a broad
agreement on the types of
financial reforms that are
needed.
In terms of repairing the
global economy, Geithner
said that the U.S. would
continue to make the point
that the world needs more
balanced growth going forward.
As U.S. consumers boost
their savings rates. other'
countries will need to look.
to domestic demand to pup
growth rather than expo
.
led expansion. Geithner an
other officials have made
this point in their discussions with China in hopes of
c:etting the Chinese governn1ent ~to boost domestic
demand, a move that C.S.:
officials hope would lower•,
America's hu!!e trade deticit
with China. ~
The G-20 finance discussions are expected to wrap
up on Saturday \\ ith a joint
statement.

�,

aa

a

we a

¢

Thursday, September 3,

a

-

2009

•

4

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Relocated

Richard ..Rich' E. Jones
POMEROY - Richard "Rich" E. Jones. 77. Pomeroy,
passed away on Sept. 1. 2009, at Pleasant Va11ey Hospital
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
He was born on May 12. 1932. in Minersville, son of the
late Roy and Grace (Powell) Jones. He was a lifetime member of the Pomeroy Gun Club, served on the Executive
ard of The Maples from the time it was built, was forrly employed by The Farmers Bank, and Meigs County
and Family Services. He was also a Meigs County
Commissioner for a number of years. He was a member of
St. Pauls Lutheran Church.
ln addition to his parents, he was preceded by a sister,
Dorothy Schwab; brothers, Roy Jones, Jr., William Harold
"Peck" Jones.
He is survived by wife, Donna W. Jones; children,
Kimberly (Kevin) Quinn, Simsbury, Conn.; Brett (Betsy)
Jones. Racine; Susan (John) Block, Pittsburgh, Pa.; grandchildren, Ryan and Sean Quinn. Craig Jones. Emily Acree,
Caroline Block: sisters, Margaret (Victor) Stewart. Lera
Jones, both of Syracuse and Eunice Jones of Pomeroy: several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, Sept. 4, 2009.
at ·Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Officiating will be Phillip J~y Harris. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may call from 4-8 p.m.
·
today at the funeral horne.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.andersonmcdaniel.com

t

There is a traffic light
once again at the
intersection of North
Second Avenue and
Race Street, at
Peoples Bank and
Beth's Place in
Middleport. It has
taken months, but
the light was moved
late last week from
General Hartinger
Parkway and Pearl
· Street, due to safety
concerns at the busy
downtown intersection. Motorists should
once again be prepared to stop.
Brian J. Reed/photo

Dale Ellis
RUTLAND - Dale Ellis. 75, Rutland. passed away
Tuesday, Sept. l, 2009, at Riverside Methodist Hospital,
Columbus.
He was born Jan. 14, 1934, to the late Sidney Ellis and
Ana Ellis Bellar. Dale was a business owner for 30 years
-the corner of Hartinger and Beech Street. Middleport.
First it was Sohio station, then a BP station until he retired
in 1998. Earlier years he also ran several gas stations in
Arizona. He was also a trustee of Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire and was affiliated with Rutland Church of God.
He is survived by his second wife, Margie Ellis, Rutland:
sons: Sidney ''Gene" (Jane) Ellis, Ocala. Fla., Oren "Bob"
(Peggy) Ellis, Middleport, and Dale Ellis, Jr., Rutland;
granchildren: Tracy (Danny) Hall, Robert (Barbie) Ellis
and Barbie's kids, Richard Ellis: great grandchildren:
Gracie, Colton, and McKenzie Hall, Ariel, Willis and
Dakota Ellis; a sister, Betty Kirby of Vienna, W.Va.; brother. Louis Ellis, Middleport; sister-in-law. Clara Ellis,
Rutland; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his first
wife, Grace Darst Ellis, a brother, Roy Ellis, and a brotherin-law, Harold Kirby.
Service will be at 4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009. at
Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland. A private burial will
be conducted later at Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Family will receive friends from 2 p.m. until the time of
service at the funeral home.
'

Gray fromPageAl
face,'' the complaint, filed by
Attorney Trenton Cleland,
alleges. "The injuries were
wrongful and the force used
was excessive."
Gray also alleges that
Koebel held him at gun-

Deaths

.
Rachel ..Kristin' Smith

For the Record

Divorce

Dissolution
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Brandon
M. Detty, Londonderry, and Joanna R. Detty, Rutland.

Arraigned
POMEROY- Arraigned on indictments returned by the
igs County Grand Jury and filed in Common Pleas Court:
Samara Stone, burglary, released on $1,000 personal
ognizance bond. Trial set for Nov. 10.
• Wesley McClure, two counts non-support of dependents,
$1,000 personal recognizance bond. Trial set for Nov. 10.

f

suffering. economic damage and loss of wages, mental distress and punitive
damages.
According to the complaint. Koebel and the village are guilty of assault.

battery and attempted murder. The village and the·
police department are
named as co-defendants in.
their capacities as the hiring
agency and supervisors of
village employees.

.Film from Page Al

wanted a unique way of
saying 'thank you.' And
what better way than to
highlight the town and its
residents on a national
level by premiering our
film where the events actually
transpired,''
McCracken said.
The timing of the premiere is no coincidence. It
occurs the Thursday night
before the Eighth Annual
-IDDLEPORT - Rachel "Kristin" Smith, 27, of Mothman Festival com!viiddleport, died on Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2009 as the result of mences.
injuries suffered in a motorcycle accident. Arrangements are
"Travis Shortt. VP of
Business Development for
being handled by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home.
Online condolences may be sent by logging onto Black River and along with
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
Matthew Fleming is one of
the producers on this documentary, has been a featured
speaker at the Mothrnan
Festival since 2006. It

POMEROY- An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Floyd McClellan,
Middleport, against Tammy McClellan, Oak Harbor.

point in a pool of standing
water, as he lay bleeding,
failing to render any aid to
Gray after the shooting. The
lawsuit demands judgment
for medical costs, permanent disability, pain and

seemed only fitting to premiere the film during this
celebration of Mothrnan and
his impact on Point
Pleasant," McCracken said.
The premiere also serves
as a way to pay tribute to
the man who brought the
town of Point Pleasant to
national acclaim after the
Silver Bridge tragedy,
author John Keel.
"Many people are aware
by now that Keel passed
away in July of this year.
With his passing the world
of Fortean research and
paranormal investigation
has lost one of its giants and
pioneers and an integral
component of the Mothman
gone,"
rnythos
is
McCracken said.

According to Charles
Humphreys, director of economic development and
spokesperson for the town
of Point Pleasant, the
evening's events will begin
with the arrival of Black
River representatives, local
dignitaries, and original
eyewitnesses around 6 p.m .
The screening of the film
will begin at 8 p.m. and ba
followed by a reception and
cocktail party at the historic
Iron Gate Restaurant.
"The Iron Gate stands
within several feet of the
original site of the Silver
Bridge that collapsed on
December 15, 1967 and
added a tragic dimension to
the
Mothman
story.
Therefore, it seemed very fit-

Party from Page Al
antique car division with
awards of $50,$30 and $20.
The Sonshine Circle of
Bethany United Methodist
Church will sponsor three
places in the walking units
with awards of $50, $30.
and $20.
Trophies will be awarded
for horse entries in the categories of both individual
and units. These trophies
will be awarded by Beegle
Beef Farm for the individual entries and Wooly Acres
Fann will sponsor the trophies for the unit entries.
Following the parade.

ting to include this wonderful'
establishment in the celebration," Humphreys said.
•
The reception will serve
as a chance for the news and.
media representatives to,
interview the film makers
and original eyewitnesses ..
The event will also serve as:
the official platform for two
other major announcements
by Black River and the
·
town of Point Pleasant.
For more information on:
the film, visit Wl4'w.blackriver.films.com.
'

Adam McDaniel
Jam~s Anderson

&amp;

DIRECTORS

i~!\!!

I

Pet Cremation /svalklbk

, Middleport Pomeroy
which will end at the new about the event can be direct992-5141 992-5444
Racine Boat Ramp. the ed to the village at 949-2296.
Racine Fire Department will The event is free.
have a chicken barbeque at
the fire house. All other activities will start at noon at Star
Taking Applications
Mill Park with the announce-,
ment of the pageant queen,
T~e
parade winners, and unveilHUD Subsidized
ing of Gatling Ohio, LLC.
Efficiency/1 Bedroom
logos of images of Racine
~ 50yrs or qualifying disability
and mascots of the Southern,
1{.
Eastern and Meigs Local
,,
All
Low income priority
School Districts. Activities
...: lJitUlltS t_
7 40-992-7022
will continue throughout th~
1
~
,&amp;.Rt
1&gt;A
~
Silverheels
day with Joe Diffie performing on stage at 6:30 p.m. at .~/~'~ A Realty Company-EHO
Star Mill Park. Any question

Maples

Local Weather
Thursday...Areas
of
dense fog in the morning.
Sunny. Highs in the lower
80s. Light and variable
winds ...Becoming nOttheast
around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Thursday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows around 50.
Northeast winds around 5
mph
in
the

evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
Friday...Sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Friday
night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s.
Saturday
through
Tuesday...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Lows in the upper 50s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.79
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 54.92
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 35.30
Big Lots (NYSE) - 24.57
Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.56
gWarner (NYSE) - 29.33
•
tury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.05
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.92
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.64
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.43
Collins (NYSE) - 45.46
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.06
US Bank (NYSE) - 20.66
Gannett (NYSE)- 7.95
General Electric (NYSE) - 13.20
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 22.67
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 40.86
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.56
Limited Brands (NYSE)- 14.72
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 44.49

.

'

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 27.18
BBT (NYSE) - 26.12
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 15.22
Pepsico (NYSE) - 56.35
Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.13
Rockwell (NYSE) - 40.93
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.82
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.18
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 61.19
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 50.92 ,
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.01
WesBanco (NYSE)- 14.43
Worthington (NYSE)- 12.83
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
actions for Sept. 2, 2009, provid·
ed 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.

Regular Hours Saturday, Sunday, &amp; Monday

Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson Facility
Athens Facility

HOLZER
CLINIC

1pm-9pm
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Remember Oktoberfest
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- c.

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Prep Golf Roundup, ]&gt;age 82
~p

CC Roundup. Page 82

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Meigs d.owns Lady Eagles in four

Week20VP
otball Games

BY BRYAN WALTERS

FRIDAY'S GAMES

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTI=IIBUNE.COM

Eastern at South Gallta
Wahama at Southern
Gallia Academy at Hillsboro
Me1gs at Fairland
Pomt Pleasant at Sissonville
Oak Hill at River Valley
Van at Hannan

ROCKSPRINGS
Eastern won a battle, but
the Meigs volleyball team
ultimately won the intercounty war Wednesday
night during a hard-fought
22-25, 25-10. 25-20, 25-20
victory in a non-conference
\'Olleyball matchup at Larry
R. Morrison Gvmnasium.
The Lady Marauders (20) rallied from a one-gameto-none deficit to take three
consecutive decisions from
the 'isiting Lady Eagles (II) - which resulted in
Eastern':- first loss of the
season. The triumph also
marked the first victory for
MHS at home this fall.
Eastern was able to
negate
the
Lady
Marauders' tall frontline in
Game I, stormmg out to an
early lead before claiming

All games at 7:30p.m.

Marauders
looking for
rebound at
Fairland
BY DAVE HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

the decision by three
points. But arter that. MilS
and its frontline took over
control of the contest amassing team totals of 42
k ilis. 35 assist!&gt; and 13
hlocks to go along with a
93-of-96 service effort.
Emalec Glass - behind a
perfect 35-of-35 serving
effort - led MHS with 28
points and three aces,
including 14 straight points
in the cJinching Game 4.
Shellie Bailey was next
with II points and '" o
aces. while Tricia Smith
and Chandra Stanley both
added five points to the
winning cause.
Bailey led the winning
net attack with 22 kills, followed hy eight from
Morgan Howard and six
from Stanlc~. Howard also
had 10 blocks and Glass
added a team-high 19
assists. Smith abo had 15

.
ROCTORVILLE
Two teams that dropped
tough games to open the
2009 season will clash
Friday as the Meigs
Marauders
travel
to
Point
Fairland to play the
Pleasant
Dragons. The Dragons
runningback
dropped their opening
Chris
2ame to Portsmouth West
Blankenship
by a 15-14 score. while the (35) avoids a
Marauders dropped a 44Tug Valley
42 contest at Coal Grove.
defender
Long time assistant during a first
coach Dave Carroll takes
quarter run
over a team that finished 4- last Friday at
5 last season. one of those
Point
a 26-23 loss to the maroon
Pleasant.
and gold at Bob Roberts
The Big
Field in Pomeroy. In that
Blacks, who
contest, the Dragons held a
christened ~::;!!~==!!
23-7 lead at the half. hut
their new
the Marauders came out in
stadium
with
the second half and shut
a
57-0
victothem out. Meigs scored the
ry, travel to
winning points wnh just
over five minutes remain- I Sissonville
this Friday.
when Jacob Well
from 51 yards out
a quarterback keeper. Bryan
Welters
/photo
Fairland however bounced
back from four stra1ght 1
losses to start the season to
fimsh 4-1 in the conference
and tie Coal Gro"e and
South Point for the OVC
title.
In last weeks loss the
Dragons took a J4-0 lead
BY RICK SIMPKINS
on paper. The Big Blacks
into~thc locker room at the
SPORTS coRRESPONDENT
won l~L'it year's contest rather
half. Quarterback Chad
handily. but the Indians
SISSONVILLE
turned things around in the
Fisher from the spread
offense threw a 25 yard Following a lopsided 57-0 second half of the season to
scoring pass to Kyle win over an out-manned Tug finish at 5-5. Then last week.
Taubenheim, and then a 78 Valley squad a week ago, the they opened the 2009 season
yard
toss
to
Mike Point Pleasant Big Black~ hit at Chapmanville and came
Bloomfield. But the second the road 'for the first time this home on the short end of a
half was all Senators. as season when they travel to 34-19
score.
But,
they out gained the Cardinal Conference foe Chapmanville fini hed 8-2 a
Dragons 152-2 in the sec- Sissonville Friday night..
year ago and are strong again
ond half, Portsmouth West
Not onlv is this the initial this year.
Coach Dave Darst, head
scoring the winning points road trip of the sea..,on for the
with 3:49 left in the con- Bi!! Blacks. but it will also man for the Big Blacks, satd
test.
provide them with their first his team needs to be ready
Fairland had 39 yards real test of the 2009 cam- for this week ...Sissonville is
rushmg in the contest, led paign. 9n pa~r this doesn't a good football team," said
Fisher "ith 24 tries in seem hke a big test, but as Darst. ''They're 0-1. but they
attempts. Fisher was they say, games aren't played lost to Chapmanville last
ht of 13m the air for
139 yards.
~
For the ~1arauders the
tOr
WID
~econd period was their
·
allowed 22
downfall. Coal Grove
BY BRYAN WALTERS
consecutive
OUtscored Meigs 22-7 in BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM
points
the period to take a 30-21
MERCERVILLETwo
b
e f o r e
lead in the lockeroom ut
f i na I Iy
intermission. After falling teams that performed better
c racki ng
behind
3X-21.
the in the second half last week
to
continue
that
Eastern
Eagles
the scorewill
look
Marauders tried to come
board with
back. Twice the maroon momentum into thi:s Friday
VERSCS
45 seconds
and gold cut the Hornet night when Eastern travels
~
left in regulead two, the last time with to Rebel Field for a Week 2
lation.
a l :33 left in the contest. non-conference matchup
·1
Eastern
But Coal Grove recovered against South Gallia.
Both the Eagles and
produced a
the on side kick and ran the
Rebels enter this weekef\d
pair of tOOclock out.
yard rushSenior speedster Jeremy with matchin2 0-1 marks
last
Smith led the Marauders after sufferino-Week I set- ~.-s_a_a_ha_R_cbe_t_s_. ers
week
in
pn the ground with 160 backs. EHS f~ll behind 28yards in 27 carries. includ- 0 at halftime to Alexander Kelly Winebrenner and
Connery.
mg four touchdowns. Cody before finishing its Week 1 Klint
Laudermilt added 69 yards home contest with a 35-21 Winebrenner rushed for
in three carries and sopho- setback, while SGHS 112yardson 13carriesand
more Jeffery Rosuh added scored in the final minute had two scores, while
of its game at Waterford Connery Jed the way with
28 in seven.
cob Well wus 14 of 33 last weekend durin~ a 22-6 122 yards and a score on
~
nine totes.
1 the air for 165 yurds, loss.
•
Ell S. overall. had 267
The Eagles amassed 345
and a touchdown. Cameron
Bolin pulled down six total yards of offense in rushing yards on 29 carries,
pas:-es for 86 yMds includ- that setback last weekend. an avernge of 9.2 yards per
ing a I0 yard scoring pass. but our...cored their. oppo- carry.
The Eagles also had 78
Caleb Davis caught three nents by a 21-7 clip in the
yards
from
for 35, Lauderrnilt two for second half. It was also the passing
15, Jeffery Roush two for first game for EHS under Brayden Pratt, who finJ2 and Colton Stewart one first-year mentor Dick ished the night I0-of-22
Tipton.
with zero interceptions.
for 3.
The Rebels. on the other Mike Johnson led the
It should be another good
contest. Kickoff at Fairland hand, mustered onlv 101
Please see First. 86
Stadium IS 7:30.
yards of total offense and

•
assists in the victory.
Eastern was led offensively by Brenna Holter
with nine points. followed
by Britney Morrison with
eight. Lauren Cummings,
Karissa Connolly and
Whitnev Putman each had
four se;vice points as well.
Ka~ey Turley led the net
attack ,with 13 kills, followed by a dozen from
Jamie Swatzel and nine
from Holter. Swatzel also
had a team-best five blocks
in the setback.
Meigs made it an evening
sweep with a 25-15. 25-22
victory in the junior varsity
contest.
Meigs returns to action
Tuesday when it hosts
Wellston in a TVC Ohio
matchup at 6 p.m. Eastern
travels to Hemlock tonight
to play Miller in the Lady
Eagles' TVC Hocking
opener at 6 p.m.

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs senior Tricia Smith (9) blocks a spike attempt by
Eastern's Jamie Swatzel (2) during Wednesday night's nonconference volleyball contest in Rocksprings. Meigs
Chandra Stanley (1 0) also leaps for the block attempt.

Unbeaten White
Falcons travel
to Southern
B Y G ARY C LARK

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

a I 00 yard n1sher last week at
Chapmanville.
"Sissonville is a big. strong
football tet~m and they will
run right at us," said Darst.
"Thev like to line up in a
double tight end formation
and they will nm the trap. We
have to be disciplined and we
have to be physical. A ~ear
ago, we faced a similar situation against South Point.
They did things to us that
nobody else had tried to do.
l11ev were pretty successful
a~alnst us and Sissonville
\\Ill be also if we aren't readv
for them."'
•

RACINE - Despite contrasting results in last weeks
season opening high school
football
contests
the
Southern Tornadoes and
Wahama White Falcons arc
set to clash in week two of
the gridiron prep season.
The two neighboring programs are slated to get
together for the 29th time
over the past 40 'ears in a
7:30 pm non-league affair at
Southern High School's
Ro&amp;er Lee Adams field on
Frioav.
Wahama will bring a 1-0
record into the gridiron clash
after coastine to a some\\ hat
easy 48-29- trlumph over
Buckeve Trail in the White
Falcons . eason opener.
Senior MicaJah Branch ran
for 194 yards and three
scores while junior R) an Lee
added 83 vards and two
more touch-do\\ ns to pace
the Falcons in its opening
game win. Senior quarterback William Zuspan nlso
threw for I 05 yards and a
score as Wahama secured
336 vards of total offense on
the evening.
Southern dropped a heartbreakin~ 26-6 decision to
visitin{! -Symmes Valle\ during itsseason opening outing
in a came that was much
clo~er- than the final tally
might
indicate. The
Tornadoes trailed by a mere
I 3-6 marein deep into the
final quarter despite committine fi, e turnovers but a couple-of interceptions late in the

Please see Point. 86

Please see Southern. 86

r:

Big Blacks open Cardinal play at Sissonville

t

I
I

\\leek on the road and
Chapmanville is strong again
this year. We will have to
play well if we want to come
back with a win." addt.!d
Darst.
Offensively, the Indians are
led by senior quarterback
Scottie Derrick. a 5·10. 190
pounder. Derrick is a strong
runner and throws the ball
well. The biooest weakness
for Sbsonvillee is thev don't
have a lot of experience at
receiver. after losing some
players at those positions
from la'it years' squad. But.
they won't always need that
because they are a strong
running team. They did have

-------------------------..-------------------

RebeIs, E agIes battIe

1st .

Prep Footb all Round up

RV hosts Oaks, GA heads to Hillsboro
count at Davis Stadium in
Oak Hill. Kickoff is scheddeficit with 25 consecutive uled for 7:30 p.m. on
Friday.
points.
Runningback
Weston
Hale 'accumu Ia ted 168 rush- GALLIA ACADEMY TRAVELS
TO H ILLSBORO
ing yards and t" o scores on
21 carries, while Joev
HILLSBORO - Ga!Ha
Mavnard followed with 73
tra\ cis
to
yards rushing and two Academv
Higtiland
County
this
scores on se),•en totes. In all.
the Oaks amassed 279 rush- Friday night for a Week 2
ing yards on 38 tries - an non-conference matchup
Hillsboro.
average of 7.3 yards per acainst
-It will be the first road
carry.
contest for the Blue De' ils
Quarterback Jesse Slone (0-1)
after opening the sea- a dual threat - went 14- :.on at :Memorial Held last
of-24 passing for I S6 yards weekend with a 21-0 loss to
and two scores, and also Athens. The Indians ( 1-0)
added 25 rushing yards on defeated Western Brown
seven tries. Maynard was last Friday b) a· 41-32 marthe main target for Slone. gin.
amassing 92 receiving
HHS won its first game
yurds on five grabs - two under new com:h Brian
of which were tnuchdo" n Spicer last week. while new
catches.
GAHS coach Mike Eddy is
The Raiders - who had sulllooking for h1s first 'icIX turnovers last week torv as the Blue and White
accumulated only 168 ) ard:- head coach.
of total offense and surrenThe De" ils on!) produced
dered 403 )ards defensive- 178 total ) ard of offense
ly.
and had four tuntO\ ers last
Oak Hill \\On last year·s
Week 2 matchup by a 33-0 Please see Roundup. 86

Hannan seeks.first w in versus Van
STAFF REPORT
MOSSPOATSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESHIRE - The River
Valley football team didn't
have much luck against the
Southern Ohio Conference
last week. as the Raiders
allowed 42 first-half points
en route to a 42-0 setback to
visiting Minford in Week 1
at Raid~ Field.
However, the Raiders w1ll
get another try at the SOC
this \\'eekend when Oak
Hill comes to Raider Field
for a Week 2 non-conference matchup.
The Oaks ( 1-0) throttled
host Chesapeake last week
during a 37-14 victory in
Lawrence County. OHHS
racked up 465 total yards of
offense a week ago and
pitched a shutout durmg the
final three quarters of regulation, allowing only 135
total yards defensively.
Oak Hill abo forced three
turnovers and did not cornmit a single one. rallying
from a 14-12 first quarter

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

_

Prep .Golf Roundup

golf
picks up pair of wins
BY BRYAN WALTERS

: BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - The
:friendly
confines
of
~liffside Golf Club were
:indeed , friendly to the
-Gallia Academy golf pro·
~ram earlier this week. a~
ihe Devi Is pu lied off a 1);troke victory over Ironton
•and River Valley on
-..\ llonday and then posted a
:39-shot triumph in a quad
:against RVHS. Wahama
:and Fairland on Tuesday.
' The Blue Devils fired a
team score of 170 on
jvfonday. besting Ironton
•.( 17 I) by one shot and fin::ishing well ahead of the
~aiders with 219.
:- All six Devils shot
~ounds of 50 or under,
including a medalist round
of
39 · from
Corey
:Hamilton. Nick Saunders
:was next with a 40. fol:lowed by Boeing Smith
:and Rob Canady with
tespective efforts of 44 and
47.
: Jordan Cornwell shot a
:48 and Corey Arthur had a
·50 for the victors.
: The Tigers had all six
participants fire rounds of
49 or under, but still couldn't manage to overcome
the Devils' equally strong
performance. Josh Mullins
-and Andy Holzapfel both
·paced IHS with matching
41 s. followed by Jon
Williams
and
Mason
We1sgarber with respective
efforts of 44 and 45.
• Josh Zornes and Josh
Cooke also had a 48 and
,49 ,
respectively.
for
Ironton.
• Kyle Bryant led the
Raiders with a 49, followed by Chris Goodrich
with 52. The duo of Matt
Ball and Zack Polcyn fin·ished the team score with
matching ro.unds of 59.
Dan Goodrich and Jacob
Leach also had efforts of
64 and 71.
On Tuesday. the Devils
fired a team tally of 157
· and had all .s ix golfers fire
round s of 4 7 or better.
· Fairland was second with a
J 96. fo llowed by Wahama
\Vith 199 and River Valley

with 208.
Nick
Saunders
led
GAHS with a !-under par
round of 35 for medalist
honors, followed by Jordan
Cornwell with 37 and
Corey Hamilton with 42.
Boeing Smith and Daniel
Rees were next with
IJlatching 43s and Rob
Canady had a 47 .
Brandon Johnson led
WHS with a 46 and Samuel
Gordon added a 49. Dakota
Sisk followed with a 51,
v.hile both Matt Arnold
and Zack Whitlatch had
matching 53s.
Kyle Bryant Jed RVHS
with a 49. followed by
Derek Gibson with 51 and
Cody Smith with 53. Both
Matt Ball and Zack Polcyn
had matchi'ng 55s and
Chris Goodrich added a 57.
Dalton Froehlich paced
FHS with a 44, followed
by Kyle Riley with 45 and
Jared Boster with 51. Ryan
Wooten rounded out the
Dragons' scoring with a
56. Alex Earl and Patrick
McCoy had respective
efforts of 60 and 62.
SOUTHERN GOLF KNOCKS
OFF TRIMBLE

WOODVILLE - The
Southern golf team came
up with a big road win on
Monday in Athens County,
knocking off host Trimble
by 10 strokes during a
TVC Hocking matchup at
Hidden Hills Golf Club.
The· Tornadoes posted a
team tally of 175. bettering
the Tomcats· final tally of
185 by double digits ..
Andrew Roseberry Jed
the Tornadoes with a 39 for
medalist honors. followed
by Taylor Deem and Cyle
Rees with matching efforts
of 43. Nathan Roush
rounded out the scoring
with a 50. Kris Kleski and
Colby Roseberry
had
respective efforts of 54 and
68.
Kyle Russell and Tyler
Davis Jed the Tomcats with
matching 44s, followed by
Joel Dixon with 47 and
Dan Nieberline with 50.
Austin Moore also fired a
57 for THS. ·

Prep Cross Country

Rou~dup

Angels 8th, Devils 18th at
Pickerington CC Classic
BY BRYAN WALTERS
~

BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

PICKERINGTON
Jhe Gallia Academy cross
country squads started
~.'their 2009 campaign last
: Saturday
at
the
:.Pickerington CC Classic
·with mixed results, as the
Blue Angels placed eighth
and the Blue Devils finished last at the four-divi__sion competition held at
Pickerington North High
School.
The Blue Angels who competed in the
upper-level
Panther
Division - scored a team
tally of 164, finishing
-ahead of only Hilliard
• Darby (213) and Morgan
· (3 J 0) in the 10-team
field. There were also a
total of 275 competitors
1n the Panther race, and
GAHS had three girls
-:place m the top 25 spots.
- Peyton Adkins led the
·· Blue and White with a
third-pla-ce finish and an
overall time of 20:24.07.
Jessica Hoover (19:54) of
Hilliard Davidson won
-the individual title and
• Kristen
Eisenhauer
(20:15.30)
of
Pickerington North was
the runner-up.
Samanth~ Barnes was
the second GAHS runner
to cross the finish line,
placing 21st overall in her
_first varsity competition
with a time of 22:12.76.
McKenna Warner was
~ight behin~ Barnes. placmg 23rd wlth a mark of
22
..
was 68th
· overall with a time of
23:48.21 and Katlin Ruby

~~~-~:·Baker

2009

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

~Gallia Academy

"~

Thursday, September 3,

www.mydailysentinel.com

rounded out the scoring
by placing 84th with a
time of 24:23.96. Katie
Dunlap (26:07 .67) and
Kara Jackson (26:41.75)
also had respective placements of 137th and !50th.
Dublin Coffman won
the girls team event with
a score of 73. Hilliard
Davidson
(78)
and
Thomas Worthington (89)
rounded out the top-three.
On the boys side. the
Blue Devils particiJ.1ated
in the Tiger Division and
18th out of 18 teams with
a score of 5 25. There
were also 241 individual
competitors in the Tiger
race, which was won by
Micah
Armburst
(17:29.52) of Big Walnut.
Tho01as Worthington won
the team event with a
score of 71 .
'
Seth Amos led the Blue
and White by finishing
125th overall with a time
of
22:39.03,
while
Morgan McKinniss followed with a mai·k of
23:13.02 for !46th. Kyle
Bays placed 163rd overall
with a time of 23:56.57.
Casey
Lawrence
(28: 10.25) and D.J. Faro
~28: 18.99) rounded out
the team tally with
respective finishes of
223rd and 226th.
Complete results of the
2009 Pickerington CC
Classic are available on
the
web
at
www .baumspage .com

MORE LOCAL NEWS •
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2155

Heartland Publications
Newspapers in • Ohio,
• West Virginia, and
• Kentucky have joined
~IJe ~aUipoli~ ~ailp -o::ribu
~IJe ~oint tilleasant l\egi

The Daily Sentinel

in presenting the
largest online auction
in the Tri-State area.
Your. auction item o~ items will be adver.tised for

HERE'S THE BES1" PAR1":
.

'

We will exchange :Fourth Quarter Advertising space that
is equivarent to the full retail value of the item being auctioned.

·Example:

.

1. You decide to auction a Power I...awn Mowl•r that you sell for $590 in your store
2. We put that item into the auction and place your item ad into the Auction guide
at no charge. This guide then will be distributed locally as well as in the Tri State

Area.
3. We include you•· item and your business in free advertising in the we{•ks leading
up to the Auction. This advertising will run in the The Gallipolis Daily 'fribune,
Point Pleasant Register and The Daily Sentinel.
4. Regardless of what the item sells for at Auction, your business receives $590 in
advertising credit to he used before the end of the year.

~n

For more information call the advertising depart1uents at
(740) 446-2342
(304) 675-1.333
(740) 992-2155
· olis 7!\a m:ribttne
oint
~nnt l.\
The
Sentinel

-------------------------------------------------------------

- -

�Thursday, September 3, 2009

.

'

- ·'
'

.,,~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ributte-

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In One Week With Us
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Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oet~.tllire~

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LIN£ AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Wor.d Ads

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

•

Meigs County, OH

Da lly I n -Column• 8:00 a.m.
Mondev•Ftlday t or Insertion
In Next Day'a P nper
Sunday In-column: ~hOO a.m.
Fr iday Fo r Sun d ays Pa p er

A ll D isplay: 1 2 Noon 2
B usiness Day s P r i or T o
Publicati on
S u n d a y D ispl ey: 1:0 0 p .m.
Thursday for S und a y s Paper

• All ade must be prepaid*

• St art Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oescrtptlon • Include A Prke • Awld Abbreviations
• I nclude Pllone Nurnbfl And .wdresa When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day.

POLICIES: Olio

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
.{ ~
Borders $3.00/ per ad
E!1
Graphics SOt for small
$1.00 for large

~l!cy Publlslllng

rt-vea the right to edll. reJect, or cancel any Delat lillY ume. Errore mUG! be reponed on the llrlll dey of pUilllcatlon and lho
wtlt be reeponlllblo lOr no moro man tl'e coa otlhe cpact occupied by ttw error 8ncl only tht fiTII llwonlon. We at.II not be hab:O lor
tny Ioiii or expense tllllt rilSioltaltom t1w pub!leatlon or omiGIIIon olan a11vertl""*lt Corracllon wtll be rnacs. In the fttat avall8ble edition. • Box num'-t Ida
ere etwaya conlldentlaL • Cwrent rate cara oppnoc. ·All r.ol est:tte IIC!Yenleemema are ~ to tne fecltral Fair Ho!J5lng Act ot 1968 • TniS llftlo-.p:!Pif
eocepta od:y help warced a&lt;tt meatlt11 EOE G!arxla~da Wt wtll1101 knctlll~ly occepc lilY ldvanldng In VIolation of the ' " WlU 1101 oo rtcpOillfble tor IllY
errore In an Del taken~ the pllone.
Trtb~nllnoi&gt;Aeglst«

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
.2 00

Announcements

Lost &amp;found

$500 reward lor nfoM!a11011 cad ng to the safe
return of 'Spot' wtlo Is
m1ssmg f om Debbie Dr
Call
740.709-9719
or
740-446-4682
Please
we love and m1ss him.

Noticea

"'P'1Cfurestnar
have been
placed In ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Wonted
Free puppies m1)( border
collle/aus!.al!an
shep
Nice
Family
of 4 lookmg
herd to a good ~'lome
for a rental home or mo(740)256-1233
b le home. Please Call
740-709-0181

Notices

Small ho:ne repair. rernode!tng,
panting
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY decks, . fm.sh work, and
PUBLISH NG CO
rec winter brush CUlling 20
certified
ommends that you do yrs
exp.
_6-;..3682,;.;.;..;;..._ __
bus ness ..ylth people you :.;17_4.;;0);..44
know and NOT to send
money througl' tie mail
300
Service'&gt;
untl you have lnvestigatg the offcrrg
Computers

GUARANTEED
CONSUMER
LADIES aot your concealed carry p :-~lllt Gallipolis, OH Sept 12,
2009 Go to www.con·
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or
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Recreational Vehicles--......._ ..___ 1000

··-·---·200 ATV........-.......·-·····-··-·-··---1005
Bicycles.....................................................1010

SoaWAccessones----·---·1015
CamperJRVs &amp;Trailers
.1020
Motorcycles .....- .......... ____ ,_,___ ..1025

Notlces.....--.-·-----·---..--.--225 Other -·---·--·--..·----1030

Perso;mls._ ... - - - - · 2 3 0
Wanted---------- 235
Services - - - · -..·••••..···-·-···300
Appl'~a~~ce Service.-...............- .........-302
Automotive. --..
~und ng Materials.•_
306
Business .•___........- ...........--308
Caterlng..........-------.......- ..-310
ChilcVEiderly Care--------312
l".llfTlf\lrll&gt;rll - - - - · · · · - - - · - - -..-·314

---·-·-----304

Domestle&amp;'Janltorlal--····--·..·-..·-·-..318
Electrical .....--..---··--··---320
Financial.._ ..............................................322

Heatth ........................................................326

Wanttobuy
-1035
Aut01110tive
-2000
Auto Rentalllease ..---··-·---2005
Autos.____ ......--·---·-...........- ... 2010
Classic/Antiques
-2015
Commercla~ustrial2020
Parts &amp; AccessorieS---..··---...- ..... 2025
Sports Utlfity•. -------·-·--·-·-2030
Trucks-2035
Utility Trailers .........- ....--·----- 2Q.W
Vans ......................................................2045
Want to buy ..--····------···---2050
Real Estate Sales ........------3000
Cemetery Plots.......................................... 3005
Commerclal...............................................3010
Condominlums.-·-·-·····-··--·--...... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage).....................................-.3030

Heating &amp;Coollng .................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce............................................. 334
Music/Dani»''roma................................. 336 Loll ·-·--·..--.................- ..·-···--.... 3035
Other Services.........................................338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
PlumblnWEiectrlcal.................................340 Real Estate Rentals ......................- ..........3500
Professional Servlccs...- ...-------·342 Apartmenwrownhouses---3505
Repalrs.___....,_..._____........-.344
Commercial ......- ..-·-----..................3510
Roofing ......- .....................................346 Condominiums..........._ .._ ..................-351 5
Security··-············--···-..·-----348 Houses for Rent----·----3520
Tex/Accounting _ _ _ _ _,....... 3SO Land (Acreage).___.._______..,_.3525
Travei/Entertalnment ............- .............352 Storage..............- ...................................3535
3540
Financial ...... ·-··--···-·--...........400 Want to Rent-Fmanclal Services.------405 ~tanufactured Housing --·------·4000
Insurance ·---·-·-····--···..······-· 410 lots .......- -.......................................4005
Money to
415 Llovers.--------4010
Rentals ....--····----·-----4015
EdUCI!ionBusiness &amp; Trade School........- .......... 505 Sales............----·----........- ...........4020
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng .........- •.•.-.510 Supplies
4025
Lessons
_ - -.•515 Wan1to Buy-------·------·4030
Personal......_ - - -..-··-··-·--·-··520 Resort Property...- ....·-·--·-·--···5000
5025
An mats ..- - - - · - - ------600 Resort Property for sale
An'maiSuppl!eS.--··-..·----....... 605 Resort Property for rent ......- ................ 5050
Horses .._ ...............- ....--..- - -..610 Employmenl.------6000
Livestock- - · - - - - - - -...615 Accoun1ln¢'inancial ....---··-·-··.. 6002
Admlnlstretive1Professional .....................6004
to buy.........................................-625 Cashier/Cterk ....--.--..··-··--6006
Agriculture ........- ..............................-700 Child/Elderly Care.....................................6008
Farm Equ1pment ......................................105 Clerical ......................................................6010
Garden &amp; Produce............................- ...710 Construction....................-·-·--···6012
Feed, Seed, Grain .............................. 715 Drivers &amp; Oelivery .....................................6014
&amp; land .......................................... 720 Educatlon...................................................6016
Want to buy................................................725 Electrical Plumbing.......- .......................6018
Merchandise ...............................................900 Employment Agencies ..............................6020
Antiques ...................._,__.....................905 Entertalnment _____........-------6022
Appliantll.. . ...... ... ....... .•.- .....__........9t 0 Food Services.....................- ................6024
Auctlons ...........................- ................915 Government &amp; Federal Jobs ....- ..........6026
Bargain Basement·-···-··"""·-·· ••-920 Help anted- Genersl--··--6028
CoUectlblcs. _ .............. ···-· .......... 925 Law Enforcement........- .........................6030
6032
Computers.-----·....· - - 9 3 0 Maintenance/Domestic__
Equlpment/SupplieS---··-··..-·.......935 Management/Supervisory -----·-6034

lend·-···--·····-·--......- ..

--·-----500

Aea Llartets

• •••

-··- --....940 Mechanlcs....._._, ___..._ ..............6036
MediCal
6038

Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas.
• 945
Fum turn---·-·-·-·--· ....._950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport --·-······............955
Kld'sCorner-- --- - ·
_ ...960
f.liscel aneous ---·-·-··--..............965
Want lo buy.•.••• - ·
._970
Yard Sale.
•.........-.975

Muslcal_,___,_,__.,,____,___ .. _,6040

Part·Time-Temporarlts-------6042
Restaurants.
·--6044

Sales...................- .........- ..................6048
Tecllnlcal Trades------6050
Tex1llesifllclory ----·--·-..·---6052

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Yard Sole

MoVIng sale Fl". &amp; Sat.,
9·5
01&lt;1
Crew
Rd.,
Po;'TIOroy. travel ~K~der
overpass
away
from
Me!QS
High
School,
Computers
Longaberger

Yard Sale. Sept 4th &amp;
5th, 9-5. Aruques, Col·
1ect bles.
Furniture
Glassware
m1sc
7169
St At 7S J~nction 7S &amp;
Lovers Lane

Baskets pottery. hunting
wear, pool lable. furniture, teen clothes, mower
snovlblade,
more
to
come Sat. 740-591-7607

-------Yard Sale Ttlurs &amp; Pri
Sept 3&amp;4 9-5 1 r~le o~.&lt;t
Homewood Dr. Bidwell.
Lots of men &amp; women's
clothing, home Interior
Sept. 1-4. 5 Points be- C&lt;Jrtalns, Xbox games,
tween
•ntersect1ons of too many thmgs to hst
W1pple Rd. &amp; Eagle Come check t 01..1•
Ridge on County Rd. 34
Yard Sale, Townhouse,
Garage sale, Sept 4&amp;5 Lovers Lane. Sept. t 2,
9:00 AM. 2 mi from C1ty 3 hrs. 8-4.
Park on 588 at Winter- - - - - - - -....place Dr Brown Garage. Yard Sale. Fnday Sept.
4 famll1es. Lots of good 4th, 9-5. Home Interior,
stuffll
Clothes. MISC., Shoes.
Etc 6309 St Rt 588
Garage
Sale,
Sept ;;,;;;;..;;;;;;;.;..;;.;,;,.;.;.;;..;;.;;;;...._
Recreational
5-6-7. G~ Shop/Estate 1000
VehiCles
Nurse
Scrubs.
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals.............................- · - - · -... 100
Announcements-......-·-··..
Birthday/Anmversary.............................205
Happy Ads.·-····--··--·-·-·.210
Lost &amp; Found----·-·-·---215
L!emory!Th3nk YOU-···-·..- -.....- ....220

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NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio o1vis1on of F1nancial lnstitulions Office of Consumer
Affa~rs BEFORE you reftnancc your home or obta1n a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any farge
advance
payments
of
fees or Insurance. Call
the Office ol Coosumer
Af&lt;'ars
toll
free
at
1-866-278.()()()3 to leam
the mortgage broker or
lender ts properly 11censed (This Is a public
saiVICO
announcement
from tha OhiO Val ey
Publishing Company)
500

Education

Business &amp; Trode
SChool
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College
(Careers Close To Hort'e)
can Today! 740·446-4367
1·800-214·0452
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lrg Council for Independent
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1-Bn-258-5142

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Yard Sole

Garage sale-Sept . 4 &amp;
5, 9·3. golfers welcome.
1st house below Skylme
Lanes. trash compactOr,
100 amp breaker 00)(,
gas hot water tank.

STIHL Sales &amp; SeMCe 1 rrile below oam, Rt 7 Huge Garage Sale-Rain
or
Sh1ne-Sept
4&amp;5
McCully
Now Avallabla at Carmi· S. HoMe lntenor. tools, Sam-?
271
chael
Equipment fumlture, w1nter &amp; fall Road. Gallipolis. Baby
740-446-2412
clothing Sept1&amp;t•5th.
lien's, household items,
1st t1me yard sale multi· clothing.
furniture
&amp;
ram11y, Sept 4 &amp; 5. much n1ore.
8am·3pm
Junction of ·l a
- r-ge_ y_a_rd_ s_a_le....,F,.
ri-. -&amp;
AT 2 &amp; 87 1/4 mile out Sat
LeGrand
Blvd.
Auction•
M1ll Creek Ad 1st bncK wo~ens. misses. mens
house on nght.
&amp;
childrens
clotnes,
Woodyard·s Mlm Mall 3 Family Ga111ge Sale rousehold Items, toys.
We sell merchandise for Sept 3,4,5 50478 St At Longaberger
Auctiors and Flea Mar· 124 Apple Grove Ohio -----....,-~
k
by the
AI
•
·
• Large Yard sale, 90
ets
pa11ets
so G~v!oy
refrlg,
tires, Scarlet Dr Rodney Area,
we slarte&lt;l se'hng ll8me clothes,
&amp; vartes woodbrand cloth ng In Ule crafts. &amp; much more
St At 850, Sept 3, 4 5
store. 1740)44 6-7327
-....-----.....-...-- Ftreplace tnsert, reel n~~~~~~~~ 3 Farrlly Yard &amp; Garage ers.
collector
plates,
furniture
Sa o Sept 4&amp;5. 8-5 27 socks. fur 1acket, trendy
Net1 Ave. Gat. poliS
clothes. (740)245-9880
Fu:niture for Sale, couch 3 fan' 1y yard sale 1st Large yard sale, Friday
S150,
matct11rg
char 11me th s season. 64 &amp; Saturday. LeGrande
SSO, recliner $50, stor· Sycamore St Gal polls, Blvd.
Womens.
age
table
S20. Oh. Wed and Thurs ,misses, mens &amp; chll·
(740)446-9361
drens clothes. House88 •5p
hold Items, toys LongaM iseellaneoua
3 Fam ly yard sale, Fn. berger.
and Sat. g.?, some1h1ng
1990 Kimball Piano. the great lor all ages• Lots ol ·- - - - - - - - . Designer Collection, very destgner clothes,
B1d· Large yard sale. Misc.
good condition, $1000 won, less than 1 nem 1tems-some
fum1ture.
740.446-6565
froM the Komer Store on Sat.
&amp;
Sun.
554.
8:00AM-3:00PM,
365
2 crypts stdo by s1de. 3rd ;.:;.;.;...
__
__
_~
_ r_ _ _ _ _ _
3 ram11y
yard
sale
Sat _A_nn_ D
row from floor. Chapel ol 51h 9am- 2pm. Mon. ?th Sat. Sept. 5, 9-7, 30 VinHope. Ohio Valley Mem· 9am·2pm, Just off Rt 7 ton
St.
3
families.
ory
Garden between Chester &amp; Tup· Womens men &amp; g1rls
(740)446·1969.
pes Pla1ns on Locust clothes. Kitchen lien's,
r
-Jet_A_e_r_a-tio_n_M_o-to_r_
s_ G-~o_v_
e _R_
d _ _ _ _ _ ,~ho_m_e~c:fe
~cor_&amp;_t_
oy;.s_.- -

Small ladle5 dresses &amp;
3 Free Puppies. Pan
casual
clothes-$2 ea
Australian Shepherd. 8
sm ladies coats
lugwks old Can be seen.
gage 5pc 520 sm c:or:l·
(740)256-1832
puter desk S25, edger
S15, call (740)446-4333
700
Agriculture
Wh1rlpool dorm-siZed refrldgarator and GC 1
Farm Equipment
room Wllldow AIC• Both
,;:;;;;===;;;::;;;:::;:;;:::::;;;;;; Ike
new,
S50
ea
EBY,
INTEGRITY. (740)248·9439,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVEWont To Buy
STOCK
TRAILERS, ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:::;;==
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPNEED CASH
MENT
TRAILERS, Barg1n Tools SA 554
EXPRESS &amp; Buy1ng all kinds of tools
CARG O
HOMESTEADER
bus.- 388-8917
rome·
CARGO/CONCESSION
388-1515 cell- 794·1188
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED Absolute Top Dollar sll·
$3999 VIEW OUR EN· ver/gold
coins.
any
TIRE TRAILER INVEN- 10KI14KI18K gold jow·

Tax I A ccounting
TORY AT
----;;=;;;;===;;;;;;;;= WWW CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
AMERICAN TAX 74().446-3825
Settle IRS Taxes
For a fract1on of what

Form Equipment

I

elry, dental golo, pre ;,
2·;,;;:3..;;
-4~9;.·.;.?_____
1935
US
currency First t mo. 3 lam ry yard
prool!l'"lmt
sets.
d a sale. 34285 Flatwoods
monds, MTS Catr Shop Rd Sept 4 &amp; 5 • 9 •5 on
151 2fld Avert
Ga '" Fnday 9·3 on Sat
poliS. 446-2842
Lg=~
;.
2~
fa~m;;;.ly;.;;;y;,;.a_rd_sa
_l_
o
- - - - - - - - Thurs &amp; Fn, 913·9 4 a•
Wtl the person who Is
trying lo se a savage 356 70 SR 7 • 9a·5a. lots
111 R fle w/ amrT'O at the ;;.
OI;.;m
;.;;;;;;;.
sc _ _ _ _ _ _
gun show at Holiday Inn Yard sale 490 Grant St
on Saturday pleaso caU Md&lt;lleport Frl &amp; Sat
Elmerat(740)896-3282
Sept 4&amp; 5111

~~C~~=I
~RV~~&amp;~
ompers
•

Trailers
;;;;;;;;;:;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
RV SeMCe at Carmtchael
Trailers
-4 •
740 46 3825
RV
Service at Carmichael
Trailers
740-446-3825
Motorcycles
;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===
1997
1100
Honda
Shadow,
W1ndsl1181d
Luggage
Rack.
S ssy
Bar.
Asking
S3 200.
(740)388-8283
Automottve

2000

AutoJ
No Clunkc~-2002 Toyota
Camry XLE 95 OQO.new
t1res1S6.100 (740)4489555 or 1740)339.0315
Truclu
;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;=

1997
lsuzu
Ho:nbre
(sarT'e as Chevy S·10)
109.000 rt'l. 'lewor t1res,
bedhner, cap, auto. ale,
runs
great.
$2,500
(740)248·9439.
2008
diesel

Dodge Co;nmtns
1 ton H.D
6

speed 4 dr long bed,
red, loss than 2000 m1.
1ke
new.
$25.000

Yard sate 3rd &amp; 4th, on Sept 3-5
St.
Rt
124
on 9 oo-3
Pomeroy/Rutland
Rd 70 Cedar St
end 3rd house on nght
5 lam ly garage sale, Fri·
day. Saturday Septem·
ber 4,5, Taylors Dr. M1d·
dleport, oil SR 7 bypaSS.
acsoss
froM
Lead ng
Creek Rd top of h D fol·
low signs large select1on
of terns nclud ng baseba
cards,
Vldeo'SIOVDs.
men slworr~en s
clothes
(vanoos SIZes) fum ture,
Boyds
Bears,
Longa·
borger baskets. seasonal
crafts, mtsc Items
;;.;;..;.;.....;....;....;.;...__
5 fam1ly, Sept. 5,6.7 behind Mason1c lodge 1n
R
nc,ne, a duIt• bOys, 91r1 s
clottllng, ovo·s house·
llold Much m1sc
Carport sale 1 mile out
county Rd 10 Dexter Rd.
L.::ngsv I o,
Oh
Sept

Camper, 2005
Sports·
men by 1&lt;2 23 1f2 It 1
pu lout.Quean bed-never
used.
$18,900
(740)388.()189
or
(740)208-8333

The Church of God of
Prophecy on 380 Wh te
Rd wm be havlng a yard
sale Sept 4th and 5th at
9 to 4-111!n or sh:ne
Plenty of good 1tems
•
cloth ng
fum ture, e..'ld
lass
g
wear
-...;......;,.-----~
Yard Sale Fri Sat 8-4,
216 N Park Dr PI Plea

~740=9~9~2~
-2~4~
78====
--=U;;;ti;;;lity=T;;;ra;;;ne;;;rs==
fifth whee two car
2005
trailer. nside
OO)(
45

long
wh to
e)(CC 1 nt
cood liOn. With three side
doors, e ect'ic wench
Prico 59 500 call tor
tnOre
rfoM\atJOO
,.'u_m_I""J""
FYW_e_ry
~
. -.....-.....-~ :.;
l7:.;;4;::,
0l:,::94
;;;9;.·:;;;.;
221.;.
7 ____..,.
Yard Sale Sept 5, 6. 7
Real Estate
Knick Knacks. clothes, 3000
Sales
bedspreads. 199 Hemlock Road off of Ever· ~
graen.
Houses For Sole
---~-~-~~ -;;;;;;:;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;==
Yard Sale Sept 4 &amp;5, 2 bed 1 bath $300/mo.
Sam·? first house on
_
446 3570
lett on Sandhill Ad 1n

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

letart WV Antiques.
glassware &amp; furniture.
mise clothes &amp;·houseware Good cheap
baby clothes

&amp;other

baby 1tems, maternity
clothes,&amp; truck t1res

lled,.'!

Bath

Hl

[l

home• 10nl) 19'/lam\m I&lt;
d"n 1&lt; vrs ut 8

f&lt;&gt; .,,,

S00-61()c4...U. n r4C&gt;I
l Br"ll~ Hl D ho~ On
2.18'amun ~ "" ~
u-o.&lt;~tS

800-61(~4946

ex

ROI9

Yard Sale, 15 Ani' Dr Mad1son Ave PI Pleas·
Gal po s.
OH.
Sapt Bl't fr81'1e hO\.se on 2
.4-·5-_7_ s_a_-5p
_ _ _ __
lots e)(cellent location 'or
Yard Sale, 39 Ned Ave 2 future renta s $10,000
Sept 4·5. daylight to 74().645-0938
darl&lt;. Antique furr1ture 4 bed 2 5 bat'l $6()().mo
and
ga~e.
free possbe owner •rarce
coats. collectibles.
446-3384

�-

~-

~-

·--

---·----·----_...___,.._.. , ,

"!

......

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 3, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

·'

Apartments/

Land (Acreage)
1,15acre beautiful bid.
site, close to Roosevelt
s{;hool, no mObtle homos
$25.000 304·675-7934
3500
:

Real Eslate
Rentals

Apartments/
Townhouses
1• and 2' bedroom apts ,
furnished
and
unfur·
nlshed, and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Middleport.
secunty deposit required,
no pets. 740·992·22 t8

'

2, bdrm apt. lor rent In
Centenary $375.00; wa·
hlr &amp; trash pd; call
256·1135.
;:.;.,;_,_..-.;_____
2BR APTCiose to Hoi·
zer Hospttal on SR 160
•0 9
CIA. (740) 44o·
t 4
CONVENIENT -.Y • LO·
OATEO
&amp;
AFFORDABL.Et Townhouse apart·
I
antJJor
smaII
mens,
houses lor rent. Call
740-441-1111 lor appllcation &amp; inforMation
F
R
S
I I I
ree ent pee a II
R
a
ts
$395
nd
2&amp;3B
P
a
up, Central Air
WID
hookup,
tenant
pays
efectrlc.
Call between
the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3o17

Houses For Rent

Townhouns
~~=-=-=-~~;;;;;;;;;;;
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 bed·
room unfurniShed &amp; fur·
niShed apartment, doposit &amp; references, no
pets, 740.992.0165
--------Nice 2 bed/1 bath apt.
Mason. WV. All WOOd
floors &amp; new wtndows.
Inc. water, sewer, &amp;
trash. S425+ deposit &amp;
references.
740·416·6622/740·4t6·
3264

3br,
SSOOJmonth
In
Syracuse. DepoSJt. HUD
approved.
No
Pets
304-675-5332 weekends
740-591-0265
....- - - - - - - For rent 2 br. house &amp; 2
br. apt. $375.00 a mon.
each on Sth St. Pt Pleasant 304.8 t 2-4350.
-------For Rent Nice 3 BR
Brick·t Ba. Basement.
Carport. No Pets, No
Smoking, Secunty Dep.
&amp;
Rent
$625.00.
5 rms. &amp; bath, W/0 hook· 1740)446•411 6.
ups. up stairs Apt. off st.
parking. $400 mo + de· For Rent: house 2 Bed·
posit &amp; utilittes. rg. &amp; ref. room,
t
Bath, W&amp;D
freezer (740) 44t·0596.
hookup,
olltce
space,

Beautiful Apts. at JackEstates. 52 west·
son
wood Or.. from $365 to
S560.
.
• •
740... 46 2568
Equal Houstng Opportu·
nity. ThiS tnsututiOn IS an
Equal Opportunity Provtder and Employer.
~--~~.....,--

Clean 1 br. rum. apartmen• dep. Ref req. no
smoklng,call
304·675-2970. after 4pm

Groclous Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
RIVerside
Apts. in Mtddleport, from
$327
to
S592.
740-992·5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Island View Motel has
vacancies
$35.00/Night.
Twtn Rivers Tower IS ac- 740·446·0406
cepting applications lor
waiting list for HUD sub· Jordan's Landing Apart·
sidized, 1·BR apartment mont. under new manfor the elderlyidtsabled, agamont. 2, 3, &amp; 4 BR
call675-667 9
umts avatlable. 2 wks off
~
1st months rent. Please
~
call (304) 674-0023 or
(304) 610-ons.
3. rOOM and bath down· one BR Apt close to
sta1rs first months rent &amp; hospttal. Free cable. WID
~kpos,t. references re- hookups. (740)339-9492.
quired, No Pets and
clean. 740-441.0245
Tara
Townhouse

.;.
Bea
.;.;..Uti
_'l-ui..;..1_B_R.;.;.
apa
..;..rt_m_o_nt
tn the country freshly
painted very clean WID
hOOk up mea country set·
ting only 10 mtns. from
town. Must sec to appreelate.
$350/mo
614·595-m3
or
740-645·5953

·

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

Rentals
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;

2 BA, Like New, No
Pets. Johnson's Mobile
Home
Park.
(740)645-0506.

,_!""""_ _ _ _ __
2 bedroom mobile ttome
1n Racme, $325 a month,
$325 dep. yrs. lease, No
after 9pm,

playground. (trash, sewage, water pd.)No pets
allowed.
$450/rent,
$450/sec.
dep.
Call
74o-64 s-8599

Big 2 bed/1 bath mObtle
home New Haven, WV
Newer carpet. all apph·
ances. washer &amp; dryer.
!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~
R20 $428 per mo. for 3
Commercial
years or rent $375 per
mo. Deposit &amp; refer·
Bedroom
Mobtle
2·3
MOVE IN READY Com· H
ences
740) 740-416·66221740·416·
omes
lor
Rent.
(
pletely furniShed 2BR, all
446·1279.
3284
appliances,
TV,stereo
sys, linens &amp; complete
Houses For Rent
R20 nice older 2 bed/1
kitchen ware $700/mo +
bath mobile home. New
elec $500Jdep. 446-9585
~199/iUO! 4 lx:d, 2 bath.
carpet,
countertops,
Two, second floor, tBR. Bank R~ro' (5% down, 15 fridge, electric, plumbing
unfurniShed
apartments )·e~. 8'* APR) for li"tngs &amp; electric heat. $428 per
for lease, corner of Sec- 800·6~04'146 ex R027
mo. for 1 year or sale for
ond &amp; pme in Galhpohs.
Very mce t BR home in $3500. On rented lot in
Central air. No Pets. Ref·
Pomeroy, great neigh- New Haven, WV. De·
erences reqwed .. Water
&amp;
references.
borhood,
large
yard, posit
Included. S325 and $290
!deal for 1 or 2 people. 740-416-6622/740-416·
per Month. Security donew appliances, No In· 3284
posit. Call 446-4425 or
door pets, Non smoking,
446-3936.
740·992-9784
or Mobile home for rent,
Call
New Haven 1 bedroom 740.992·5094 and reave Hud accept. call before
9pm 304-675-3423.
apartment has washer &amp; a message
dryer depoStt &amp; refer- """"'..,......;_ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - ences
no
pets, 3BR 1 bath home n Le- MObfle Homes for rent.
740.992.0165
Grande Blvel $650 rent All
electnc
$650 dep. renter pays (740)4.i04234
Modem 1BR apt. Call utlhtlos. NO PETS. Call ,;,
17~4~
0)~
208
~-7
!!!8~
6 1 ~~~~
740-446-0390
446-3644 lor applicaton.
Sales
Country living- 3-5BR,
2·3 BA on property.
Many floor plans' Easy
Ftnancing' We own the
bank.
Call
today!
866·215·5774

BULLETIN BOARD
'13:" column l!lch weekdays

'2Z· column nch Sunday
2010 3BR Doublewide
S39,9n
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
FHA $349 mo •
2010 3brl2ba Single
from $199 mo

O'DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER
Open Sunday
10 am- 4 pm
Labor Day (Mon)
Sam - 4 pm
61 Vine St 446·1276

MIDWESTHOMES
mymtdwesthomes.com

740.828.2750
Sm. mobile home lor
sale 14x60 wl central a1r,
all app. tncluded, good
cond.
best
offer
304-458-1727.

Help Wanted

The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Financing· New 2010
Doublewide $37,989
Ask about $8.000 Rebates
mymtdwesthome.com
740-828-2750

LEAD PHLEBOTOMIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full -time Lead
Phlebotomist. Must be a licensed
phlebotomist by ASCP or equivalent. Two
years
expereince
as
an
Office
Manager/ Supervisor in a clinical laboratory
environment preferred. Must have a valid
driver's license.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675-4340 Or fax: 304·675·6975,
or apply on-line at www.pval~ I
AA EOE

.
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Sportswriter
The Gallipol is ))aily Tribune is seeking a
motivated. people-ori ented individual to
fill a vacancy in the news department as a
sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover high school athletics ip the area for
the newspaper, as well
the daily edition
as assbt with the production of sports
pages. Excellent wnting and English
s k ill~. photography skills and knowledge
of desk -top publishi ng are ~ought. The
position is full-ti me, with benefit&lt;&gt;.
Interested parties can send resumes to:

or

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
825 Third A\C., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or mdtnews@mydailytrlbune.com

Child/Eiderfy Care
-====;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

CHILDCARE
Fundralslng D~rector Na·
tlonW1de co. Call D11cc·
tors and owners to help
them ratse money Avg
S15-S20llu.
We
train.

8~
~
13~-3~5~5~
-388
~9~==~
Clerical

~==~=-:::::=::;:;::~
ONLINE
BOOKEPPER
NEEDED TO WORK ON

open positions

$$

$8.80/hr
In this troubled economy,
11 is reassunng to know
that lnfoCision can offer
YOU a stable career
AND steady paycheck al·
lowmg you to provide lor
yourfamllyl
Alter N1now years 1n tho
aarea, we have proven
that we are commlltcd to
GaUipolis, and are cur·
rently seeking depend·
able employees to help
fulfill client needs.
You will take lncomtng
and make Outgoing calls
for well known organizations.
Stop By and Complete
Your Application:
lnfoCiston Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohto
Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview·

Help Wonted ·General

Medical

Care GIVer Is needed.
This IS a FULL TIME poSitton, meanmg you w.:J
be IMng here as If rt
were your home. ThiS IS
NOT a
daytime
or
nlght1me only poslt1on.
Sleep here at night and
do normal household du·
ties thru the day. Person
needtng assistance ts
mobile and can functiOn
on her owr FREE RENT
&amp; FREE UTILITIES plus
small
salary.
740·367·7 t 29

Are You Tired of tho Cor·
porate
Headachjls
:n
Homecare? Como
Jo1n
a Famtly Owned Homo
Health Agency Prov1d1ng
Flexible Hours and a
Great Working EnVIron·
ment
Now
Accepting
ApplicatiOns
lor
Part
li:ne AN's and LPN's
Call
us
at
1·866·368-t t 00.
-------Overbrook Center Is cur·
rently accepting appllca·
lions for State Tested
Nursing Assistants. Full
lime and Part Time posi·
Inter·
lions
allailable.
ested applicants can ptck
up an application or con·
tact Lucy Goff, BSN, RN
Stall Development Coor·
dinator @ 740-992·6472
M-F 9a·5p at 333 Page
St. . Middleport, Oh. EOE
a partiCipant of the
Drug-Free
Workplace
Program.

House keeper wanted for
elderly woman 1n Mason
Area, 12·t5 hrs a week,
must
have
ref.
304-674·t685.

l..ocal Of1tce 1n search of
15 eventng shift employees. 5:3().11 00 pm +
weeKenil day. 4 day
work week. Qualified applicants would be able to
exhtbit courteous phone
manner and basic keyboarding
skills.
High
School graduate or GED
preferfed. Call Toll Free
for 1nterv1ewing informa·
tion
1·8n463-6247
x1921

Ohio Air Medical based
and MICU program is
seektng qualified AN and
ParamediC stall for up·
coming w1nter openings.
The air bases will be
opentng throughout the
Ohio area.
We offer
competitive
wages.
healthcaro benefits, vacation and 401 K packages Our ideal candidate
is state certified and has
experience w1th treating
cntical care patients All
Interested
candidates
please email resumes to
resumelorconsideration12@yahoo.com
or
mail to P.O. Box 301,
Portsmouth OH 45662.

Part Time Dayshlft
Fixed Schedule
8:00·1 :30 +weekend
day Qualified applicants
would be able to exhibit
courteous phone manner
and bas1c keyboarding
skills. High School
graduate or GED preferred.
1-8n-463-6247 x2301 ,

a

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodollng
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttert
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Pallo and Porch Oecka
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740· 591 -0195
Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Ycara Local Experience
LLYINSURED

Roofing, SidiRg,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall.
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

~IICIIAEL'S

~
[!]

... THE
'NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

7:00am-8:00pm

Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinvl &amp; \\OOd siding

• AC Recharge
• Mtnor exhaust
repau • Tire Repatr
• Transmission Filter
&amp; f·luid Change

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
"740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Full)· insured &amp; hondinJ.: availahlt·
Free estimates· 25+ )cars I.'Xpt·ricm·l·

• General ~tel·han ic
(740) 992-0910

Hours

Free Estimates

(3aft Marcum Construction

• Tunc Ups
• Brake Servtcc

work

7 40-367-0544
7 40-367-0536

SERVICE C'El':TEH
15.55 l':YE A\c.
J&gt;orncnl\·. 011
• Oil &amp; fi lter change

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR
STYLE. ..

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

(\nl .tllilialtd 11ilh

\tik~

\Ianum l!nnfin1: &amp;

M t•m tHidw ~l

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

(UITOM ~NETRY
H~Pd;;~~ ~bJnetrv And furniture
'

www.timbucreekeablnetry.com

LEWIS
COI"CUETE

I

CO~S'J'UlJCTIO~

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concrete Work
29 Years Experience

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

David Lewis
740-992-6971
ln~urcd

Free

Esttmate~

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

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

1-888-IMC-PAYU

ext. 2457

ROBERT
BISSEll

http:ltJObs infoelsion.com

CONSTRUCTION

Quality Control S15hlr
evaluato
reta1. stores,
tretnlng provided pleas
caJ8n·712-ooo8

• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

CosmetologiSt·
Independent contractor or
booth rert 60o/o commis·
s1on, choose your own
tlours, free tanning tralntng &amp; certtficatton, guaranteed sales, excellent
1ocat1on,
free
parking,
call740·992·2200

OHIO'S
BEST BUYs

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 002·2155

Help Wanted

Employment

BEHALF OF OUR COM·
PANY
ACCOUNTING
EXPERI ENCE
NOT
NEEDED . ANY JOB EX·
f&gt;E RIENCE NEEDED
YOU WILL EARN UP
large yard Total electnc, T0$3000 MONTHLY
$400 a Month plus DeCONTACT us AT ( crts·
posit, also for Sale 14x70
1980
W1ndsor
house bon204@gman com
)
T 1
FOR
MOREINFORMA·
ra ler
older
Model. TION .
Needs some TLC $3500
OBO.
Call
Education
(740) 446·2667 I no an·
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Part t1me
t t
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!louse in Vinton 12 mo tn:
mathematiCS,
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contract.
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Moone Home for Rent In the discipline. If tnterNice Mobile home SR ested please email a re160, 5 mi north 01 Holzer. sume and cover letter to
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Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OUTSIDE SALES .
REPRESENTATIVE
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is
accepting r~umes for an outside :-.ales
•
representatin• to join our sales team
and manage an established account list
while calling on new accounts.
This is a full time position offering
salary plus commission, full benefits,
mileage, and potential career growth.
The successful candidate will be a
disciplined, self-motivated team player
that understands the importance of
developing strong, mutually beneficial
business
relationship!&gt;
with
our
accounts, and ha\e sale,, experience.
For confidential intl'nit•w, please send
resume and coHr letter to
~alhpoh~ l3nth• {!:nbunc,
Attn: Pam Caldwell
P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 45631

PUBLIC NOTICE
Willis, whose last resiSouthern Ohio Coal dence was, 46275 St Rt
Company has submit· 124 Racine, Ohio 45n1
ted an Application to by and through any unRevlse a Coal Mining known. estate; hereby
Permit (ARP) #R-354-64 notified that, pursuant
to the Ohio Department to R.C. 1920 and 3733,
of Natural Resources, upon a flied complaint
Division of Mineral Re- with the Meigs County
sources Management. Court seeking restltuThe ARP areaJo be re- tion of the premises
vised Is loeated in upon which Pierce has
Fractional Seotlon 2, abandoned her/his moTownship 8N, Range 15 bile horne and thereW, Salem Township, fore
Is
still
In
Meigs County, Ohio. possession
of the
This
ARP
encom· property.
Therefore,
passes 2.95 acres and Plaintiff demands restils located on the Rut- tutlon of the premises
land 7 1/2 Minute In its complaint.
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle No answer has been
Map, approximately 1.8 filed to the complaint.
miles Northeast of · The matter will be set
Salem Center, Ohio for hearing upon comand approximately 1.5 pletion of the publicamiles Northwest of the tion service before a
intersection of Ohio magistrate In Meigs
State Routes 124 and County Courtroom lo325.
cated at 2nd Street
The application pro- Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
poses
the
under- Bonnita Heston Ac·
ground injection of counting
Manager,
treated
acid
mine Country Parks, Inc
drainage sludge from 30921 Lake Logan Rd
Southern Ohio Coal Logan, Ohio 43138
Company's Mine No. 31 740·385-2434.
Hydrated Lime Water (8) 27, (9) 3, 10, 17, 24,
Treatment Facility. The (10) 1
Injection activity will
occur within the abandoned
underground
Public Notice
mine
workings
of
Southern Ohio Coal PUBLIC NOTICE
Company's Mine No. NOTICE: is hereby
given that on Saturday
31.
The application Is on September 5, 2009 at
file for public viewing 10:00 a.m., a public
at the Meigs County sale will be held at'211
Recorder 's
Office, W
Second
St.,
Meigs County Court- Pomeroy, Ohio. The
house, 100 E. Second Farmers Bank and SavStreet, Pomeroy, Ohio Ings Company Is sell·
45769 and shall remain lng for cash In hand or
so for at least 30 days certified check the fol·
following the last date lowing collateral:
of publication of this 1995 Dodge Ram 1500
notice. Written com- IB7HC16X9SS292744
ments or requests for 2002 Mercury Cougar
an Informal conference
2
may be flied with the IZVVFT61L325604816
Division of Mineral Re- The Farmers Bank and
sources Management, Savings
Company,
2045 Morse Road, Pomeroy, Ohio, reBuilding H-3, Colum- serves the right to bid
bus, Ohio 43229·6693 at this sale, and to
within 30 days after the withdraw the above
last date of publication collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
of this notice.
(8) 20, 27 (9) 3, 10
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reJect any or all
Public Notice
bids submitted.
The above described
FORCIBLE ENTRY
collateral will be sold
Meigs County Court "as Is-where Is", with
2nd Street Pomeroy, no expressed or im·
Ohio 45769
plied warranty given.
Country Parks. Inc vs
For further information,
Jeanette Pierce &amp; or for an appointment
to inspect collateral,
Robert Willis
Jeanette Pierce, whose prior to sale date conlast residence was tact Cyndle or Ken at
5713 Canep Run Rd, 992·2136.
Georgetown,
Ohio (9) 2, 3, 4
45121
and Robert

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Thursday, September 3, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

B.LONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 lmpudence
5 2002
animated
film
11 "Yeah,
right!"
12 Broadway
worker
13 Sean
Astin
mov1e
14 Chooses
from the
menu
15 Spur
17 60 sees.
18 "Great!"
22 Horse
24 Sung
story
25 Take the
title
26 Really
enjoy
27 Foreword
30 First sign
of spring
32 Nebula
makeup
33 "Losing
My
Religion"
band
34 Rafter's
protection
38 African
expanse
41 Wild
about ·
42 Steamy
43 Hearty
dish

Tom Batiuk

JOSEPH
44 Swear
(to)
45 "SportsCenter"
carrier
DOWN
1 Letter
start
2 Neighbor
3 River
deposits
4 Thwart
5 Fan's
favorite
6 Opera
legend
7 Finishes
8 Dogfight
pro
9 Berlin
lang.
10 Hosp.
sections

II

••

16 "Sturm- 29 Brother of
Orang"
19 Portico
toppers
20 Pennsylvania port
21 Hobo
attire
22 B1g gulp
23 Turner of
song
28 Feel sympat~etic

Isis
30 "Right
you-!"
31 Ed1t
35 Almanac
bit
36 Plan part
37 Map dot
38 Vast
expanse
39 Skill

40 Steam~ng _

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 .75 (check/rn.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2. P.O Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475
9

10

11

13
15

9-3

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest :

Brian and Greg Walker

I

~

9-~

~

\'oJSS\ ~

~

MUTTS

"IT WAS BETTER BEFORE INTERNET BANKING, WHEN
I COULO SAY. 'THE CHECK fS IN THE MAIL."'

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

by Dave Green
'

2

5

6

8 2

4

ll

8 1 5

,.,

.c

9 6

3

"Are ALL cats good at takin' naps?"

9

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

T~URUS (April20-May 20).

7

6

9

***

Difficulty Level

3
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4--Positive; 3-Avcrage; 2-;Xrso; 1-Diffimlt
ARIES (March 21-April19)
***The sensitive R,un will feel a difference midday. You generally feel empowered, but for ~orne reason, you decide to be an observer. You might have a lot
to gain by following this path for at lea&lt;;t a day or so.
Tonight Early to bed.

,5

2

HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Thursday, Sept. 3, 2009:
year, witness the power of determination. Once
you decide to act, the energy will appear. Plan a lol of
time for networking and forging a clear path in a new
direction. i\etworking will add many people in your
life on multiple levels. If you are single, you move into
a new realm where you are more opm to different
types of people. A friendo;hip c.."OUid be the beginning of
a solid bond. If you are attached, the two of you bond
while working on a common cause. PISCES reads you
cold.
'17ze Slars Slum• the Kind cif Day }ou 'II Hm~e: 5-Dynamic;

nus

7

4
9

1

"ARe YOU WHAT "THEY CALL A ~FUU..-FIGURE:D'

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman :

CONCEPTTS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

•

l&lt;~wJ~

~

v

-+-

6

-

B L ....... G
8 G £ g 9

*****You accept challenses well yet question
why you are involved. Let go ot an agenda and enjoy
yourself. Your high energy proves to be irre~istible to
many, allowing for a greater give-and-take. A meeting
could be more important than you thought. lonight
Go for what you wanl.
GEMINI (Ivfay 21-June 20)
~Once vou have determined what information you need, you can step forward and take a stand.
Others will respect how you approach a situation and
leam from your thoroughness. You simply need to ask
in order to rect'ive. 1bnight: A muo;t appearance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You will want to take action and stay on
top of your work. A change of plans might be in order
if an offer comes in that encourages this diversion. Go
down another path, but be aware of what i-; going on
around you. [x,lmine an offer that comes in from out of
left field. Tcnight: Opt for something different.
LEO (Julv 23-Aug. 22)
**** Apartner makes it clear that he or she work.&lt;;
bt:tter on an imlividu.U level. C&gt;etlogether ford Ui.'iLU~
sion with lhi..; person. C,et to the bottom line. This person won't stand for anything Jess. You'll see the power
of direct communication. Tonight Dinner for two?
VIRGO (Aug. 21-Sept. 22)
****Others will make it close to impossible to get

***•*

into your routine. A boss or supervisor notices that you
are a dislTaction, possibly dumping more work on you. .
You have the energy to deal with nearly anything.
'
Tonight: Listen to offers.
;
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
r
Focus on what you need to do, not what •
you think you should do. Oeativity plays a slTOng role ·
in the morning, but by the afternoon, you decide to
clear out your must-dos. Enthusia&lt;;m and energy punc- ·
tuate your actions. Tonight To the wee hours.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-f\ov. 21) '
~
Once you get going, it could be close to
impossible to stop you. It is important to understand
your limits, what you can embrace and accept. Others :
respond to you wholeheartedly, especially in your inner •
circle. Tonight A force to be dealt ·with.
'

*****

*****

SAGITTARIUS {f\o\~ 22-Dec 21)
***If you want to call it an early day, please do. :
You might have started out a bundle of enthusiasm but •
would like to head home early. Finances could be key :

to a decision. Be willing to deal with an opportunity to
lTavel or open a door. You will feel happier. Tonight:
Juggling opportunities.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Gelling an answer to your inquiry could •
be a difficult experience. You discover quite possibly
there is not one set answer, but multiple perspectives.
Keep communication f!O\·ving as you seel&lt;. answers.
Sarcasm has no place in an earnest discl:lssion. Tonight:
Chat over dinner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
****Finances can S\\ing a decision, and there is
nothing ~1'0ng with that. \o\'hat could be a problem is •
not acknowledging the role money plays. Your instincts :
lead you do~n a certain path. Your fiery style keeps
'
your energy high, punctuating an ability to accomplish :
what is needed. Tonight Take a hard look at your budget.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
****You blend into situations with ease this afternoon, yet you might prefer to take a stand. Your creativity i~ ,tiJnulc~led by facing difficult or "trange situation.5. :
Count on your ability to move pa"t a problem and find •
the perfect path out of the maze. 1onight: Whatever
'
makes you smile.

*** **

Jacquelme Bigar t&lt; em the ]lll&lt;'l'nd

at /zfiJ':/IMcqnjatquelim:bigl'tr.antL

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Southern

18 record at Southern and
has high expectations from a
2009 team that is loaded
with
returning
talent.
from Page Bl
Senior All-District selections Taylor Lemley, Brad
game led to a pair of late Coppick and Mike Manuel
scores to thwart any headline the I ist of returning
Southern come-from-behind starters in addition to senior
thoughts.
All-League, TVC pick; Sean
Senior Greg Jenkins Coppick. Joining the four
paced the Tomadoes offen- as returning regulars will be
sively with 54 yards on the seniors
Greg Jenkins.
ground while senior Dustin Jordan Taylor and Dustin
Salser caught two passes for Salser to give Southern
)2 yards. Sean Coppick seven returning senior
was held to five yards on the starters ..
night while quarterback
In his 15th season at
Jordan Taylor completed Wahama coach Ed Cromley
two of 11 passes for 52 has compiled a 103-54
yards. The Southern had a record at the Mason County
punt blocked and recovered school which includes a perm the end zone for a touch- fect 9-0 record against the
down while losing three Tornadoes. The veteran
coach
features
fumbles and having four WHS
passes picked off by the returning senior starters
William Zuspan, Micaiah
Symmes Valley secondary.
Southern is coached by Branch, Colin Pierce, Kevin
Dennis Teaford who is in his Klingensmith and Matt
fourth season at the helm of Dangerfield.
Kickoff time at Southern
!tle Tornadoe football program. Teaford owns a 13- High School is 7:30p.m.

MORELOCAL NEWS.
MORELOCAL FOLKS.

Point
fromPageBl
Defensively, the Indians
also will present some probterns. They return .seven
players on that side of the
football and are particularly
strong up front and at the
linebacker positions. Their
defensive line av~rages

fromPageBl
week against the Bulldogs.
and also have both Ironton
and Logan waiting on the
home schedule after this
weekend.
Kickoff is scheduled for
7:30p.m. on Friday.
WILDCATS HOST UNBEATEN
VAN

~

If

of Brock McClung. And.
the locals even scored on
special teams when Robert::;
took a Tug Valley kickoff
60 yards tor a score. The
coaches probably couldn't
have asked for a better start
to the season. and the community couldn't have asked
for a better way to christen
the new PPHS football stadium.
Kickoff is set for 7:30 at
Sissonville.

from Page Bl

.

receivers with 52 yards on
five grabs.Tyler Hendrix
and Connery combined for
the other five catches and
25 receiving yards.
The Rebels churned out
93 rushing yards total on 32
totes. an average of 2.9
yards per carry. Logan
Wamsley - who had the
lone SGHS scoring run in
the fourth quarter - finished the night with 14 car-

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Rebels quarterbacks combined to go 1-for-11 passing
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led the Rebel wideouts with
one catch for eight yards.
Eastern ended a 15-game
losing streak a year ago
when these same two teams
met in Week 2. posting a
35-8 victory at East Shade
River Stadium. EHS leads
the alltime series by a 7-3
margin.
Kickoff is scheduled for
7:30p.m. on Friday night.

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struggled last Saturday
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Barr's debut as head
coach .
The Bulldogs - who at
one point this summer canceled· their season before
reinstating the program
shortly afterwards - won
their Week 1 home opener
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Van rushed for 404 yards
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Kickoff is scheduled for
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For the Big Blacks, the
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any better. The offense
rushed for over 300 yards.
including a very impressive
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week,"
said
Darst.
"Sissonville is bigger and
stronger and more experienced than Tug Valley was.
We will have to execute
offensively and that is the
bottom line. And, they had
some big expectations coming into this season and they

----------------------~·
First
Roundup

ASHTON
The
Hannan football team will
look for better results this
Friday night when visiting
Van comes to town for a
Week 2 non-conference
matchup in Mason County.
The Wildcats
(0-1)

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....._

Thursday, September 3, 2009

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12631">
              <text>September 3, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="84">
      <name>ellis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
