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LIVING

The virtue of volunteering:
The satisfaction of serving, Cl

Canadian coaStal community
te~ming in book titles, 01

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Pomeroy • Middlcpm1 • Gnllipolis • September •:J, 2009

$1.50 • Vol. 43, No. :J4

Ohio Vnlll\Y l&gt;tthlishing Co.

Emancipation to celebrate 146th gathering

SPORTS
.• High school football
:action. Sec Page Bl

STAFF REPORT
MOn:=wSOMYDA .YIRIBUNE: COM

Elizabeth RigeVphoto

The Galha County Commission and Gallipolis City Commission jomtly proclaimed Sept. 19-20 as the 2009 annual Emancipation Celebration Weekend
in Gall a County and Gallipolis. From left, Justin Fallon, president of the Gallia
County Commission, Andy Gilmore, president of the Emancipation
Proclamation Celebration Committee, Joe Foster, vice president of the Gallia
County Commission, Glenn Miller, vice president Emancipation Proclamation
Celebration Committee, Jim Cozza, president of the Gallipolis City
Commission, and Lois Snyder, Gallia County CommiSSion.

OBITUARIES

GALLIPOLIS
"The change is
here"' b thts year's theme for the
146th annual Emanctpation Day
Celebrcttion slated Sept. J9-20 at
the Galltn County I·airground~.
The Gallia Count)' CommJ!\SIOn
and G,tlllpolis Cit)' Commission
tssucJ jomt proclamation' on
Thursday. according to which the
Emancipation Proclamation has
been celebrated ,md honored in
Gallia Count) 'imce 1863, beginning
on Sept. 22. 1863, the first nnrm.cr~ary of Prc~adent Abraham Lmcoln \
proclamation on sinvery, and ha~
continued cono;;ecutivel) to pay tribute to this h1storic document.
The e\ ent begmo;; at 10:30 n.m
Saturda) and 10 a.m. Sunday and
include&lt;. .1 number of re enactors
taking on roles as Ch il War !'.Ol
diers. President Abraham Lincoln,
Frederick Douglas. and Harriet
be performed
Tubman. Music
b) the Burlington Male Chorus ot
the First Bapt1&lt;&gt;t Church and
Brotha's m Spirit of Columbus.
Re\. Dr. J .W. Smith of Athens will
deliver the Sunday sermon and
Steven A. Davis. CEO of Bob

'''II

Evam." T·anns has
been c,cJccted as
ke)note
the
speaker.
Da' is currentlv
senec, as chairman of the board
and chief executive officer of
Bob E\ ans Farms
Inc • a pubhcly
Steven A. Davis held restaurant
and food products company based
in Columbu~.
Before joining the company in
2006, Davis \\Orked at Yum!
Brand-, Inc .• where he had been
president of Long John Silver's and
All American
food
A&amp; W
Restaurant~ 'iince 2002.
Pre'" IOU~Iy, Da' is sen ed in a
variet) of operations management
and other executive position&lt;; in
Yum! Brands" Pian Hut di' ision.
mcluding senior 'ice preo;ident of
concept de\ elopment \\here hi
team introduced the Wing Street
concept.
Before joining Ptzza Hut in 1993.
he was with Kraft General Foods for
nine year!&gt;. Hi'i last position "ith
Kraft wa., as dtrcctor of marketing
Please see Gathering. Al

mstorieal soeiety honors veterans
with Patriot Day eomme1noration

.Page AS
:. Linnie Bell Aleshire, 86
• Joseph E. Bowers, 70
• Rosa M. Greene, 82
• Maxine Wpite. 86

BY HOPE ROUSH
HRO\JSH MYDA .YREGIS...E:R COM

GALLIPOLIS -- It was a
d,ty to remember the n arl)
3.000 people that lo~t their
• Girl won't give other
lh e'&gt; in one of the grcate!\l
AmcncJn
tragedico;.
political views a
Frida). Sept. 11. aJc;o
hearing Sec Page A3
referred to as Patriot Da).
• $1OOM-plus broadband Wu'&gt; commemorated acros~
the nation with vanous cer:map runs into cost
emonies.
questions. Sec Page AS
Gallia
Locall). .. the
•• Dangerous staph
County H1storical and
Genealogical Society llost·germs found at
cd a Patriot's Day program
West Coast beaches.
and open house. which
SeePage AS
focused on local veterans.
Keith Jeffers. VFW Dept. of
• Local Briefs.
Ohio State Surgon and
See l'ageA6
Gallia Countv Veterans
.• Ohio's farmers
Service
Office
and
offer 'free groceries
Executhe Director. served
1
as master of ceremony for
:for a year.' Sec Page A6
the event.
.• Ohio Farm Bureau
The program began b)
:Foundation offers ag
recognizing the local veter
Hope Roushlphoto
nns m attendance. and
:grants. Sec Page A6
Galha
County
Veterans
proudly
stand
1n
front
of
the
Wall
of
Honor,
wh1ch
features
local vetemphasized the importance
~· Ohio high court: No
erans,
following
the
Galha
County
Historical
and
Genealogical
Society's
Patriot
Day proof rememberin!.! 'eteran" us
gram.
The
event
recognized
Sept
11
vtetims
as
well
as
paid
tribute·to
local
veterans.
heanng for death row
\\ell as the Sept. II victims.
"Toda) is Patnot Day and
. mate. Sec Page A6
the)·, e allowed other coun- ~ee that anymore and o;;ome is a da) to remember those
I think 1t is awfully nice of
that lo-.t the1r lo\ cs and
(the
historical
and tries to ha\e - some have people don't even reah1e lo\cd ones as well as the
we are at \\ar. If \\ e don't
C\
en
made
the
ultimate
c;acgenealogical society) to
many Ia\\ enforcement offi-.
host this event for local vet- rifice b) g1ving their li\es." remember Sept. II no one cer&lt;&gt; '' ho helped during the
WEATHER
Jeffers also emphasized wtll," he satd. addme that
eran.,, and it is ec;pectall)
tragedy.
nice to do it on Sept II," the importuner of patrio- Amcncan flags should he
"We appreciate the historall
year
to
display
displayed
Jeffers said. "It is important tism.
ical
society for all of their
"If you recall when (Sept patrlott5m.
to recogni/e our ,·etcrans
efforts
with the memorial
Gallia County Sheriff Joe
for all or the sacrifice~ 11 l occurred our nntion was
service," he added.
they've made and the free- flooded With flags, and then Bro'' ning alc;o was in attenPlease see Veterans. Al
dom and opp01tunitics that a few years later you don't dance. and said that Sept. II

E

.

BY BETH SERGENT

INDEX

BSE~ENTCMYDAILYSE'NTINEL

4 SI::CIIOl'.S- 24 PAm:s

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

02-4

llll ·

05

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

~'\leather

A6

{i; 20090hio\allc) J&gt;ublishingCo.

ll

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED '

BREED MYDA .YSEI'&lt;TINc.L COM

POMEROY
A
Portland man has been
charged \\ ith the theft of a
motoc)'clc
from
the
Rock5pnngs Fairground5
during the Metgs County
Fair, while a car also stolen
from the fairgrounds has
been found. burned.· in
Fairfield County.
Sheriff Robert Beegle
said Michael Engle. 18.
Portland. is charged \\ ith
receiving :-;tolen property
in the theft of a 2000
Honda motorcycle stolen
from the fairgrounds.
Engle alleged!) had the
cycle in his possession at
the time of his drrest. He
appeared. in Meigs County
Court on the charge and ws
released on bond.
Beegle ~aid hi!'. office and
the State f·1re M,trshal are
im·estigating the theft and
burning of a 2002 Hyundai
XG350. also stolen from the
fairground. on the Frida)
night of the fair. Beegle said
the 'chicle v. as stolen
bctv.een 8 and II :30 p.m.
on Aug. 21. and found later
by the Ohio State Highway
Patrol on a rural road in
Fairfield County, where it
had bccn"burned.
Please see Vehicles, Al

parkmg lot. It will be followed b\ the traditional
parade o( fire equipment POMEROY
.. Rally b) engmes. tankers. re cue
the Rher" i., the theme of units. ladder trucks and
the
2009
Stern\\ hce~ boats, not only toda) ·~mod
RI\Crfe5t to be held on the em c,t) le, but ) esterda) 's
b.mks of the Oh10 River at fa, oritcs • .-..omc rcc;tored.
Pomero) startmg 6 p.m. others not.
Thor~da) .1nd contmumg
Again this )ear Howard
until midmght on S,tturday. ~1ullen 1s ch,lirmnn of the
The scene will be one of parade \\ htch \\ ill line up on
numerous o;ternwhec lcrs ncar the Pomero) rootbnll
do~.:kcd nt the levee, enterfield at 6 p.m. and mm c out
taking
the and into dO\\ ntm\ n at 6:30
tainers
,unphithenter st,lge to &lt;&gt;hare p m. As in previous year'\,
their talent \\ ith festival- all fire departmellls in the
~ocrs. a parade do\\ n Main
area are 1m itcd to particiStreet. conte'ih galore. pate and no ad\ ,uH:e regisCllli&lt;&gt;e&lt;&gt; and n'ore.
tmtion is required
fhe fe.,ti\ al k1cks ot1. on
The first public cmise on
1 hur.,Jn} With openmg cer- The Ruble, sponsored b) the
emomec, b\ Dre\\ Webster Ladies of the ;\lcig~ Count)
Post 39. American LegiOn.
on the do\\ ntO\\ n Pomero)
Please see Riverfest. Al
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.

Sheriff,
deputies
locate three
stolen vehicles

Saddle up for St. Jude Hospital Sternwheel Riverfest
Trail ride to
offers
fun
for
everyone
celebrate 14th year

Details on Page AS

Classifieds
·cs

JOn~~ ~

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

ll411811711,1lloll,l l11111181 1

1

HOEFL CH MYDAILYSENTINEL COM
COM

RL'TLAND - Over the
last 14 )Cars over $85,000
has been raised for St. Jude
Children's
Research
Hospital and its all happencd in a hayfield in
Ruthmd Township during
the annual St. Jude Saddle
Up Trail Rides.
This year's trail ndc, abo
kno'' n as Fun Day at the
Dill Farm, takes place on
Saturday, Sept. 19 at the
home of Michael and lo;abcl
Dill on Beech Grove Road
outside of Rutland R1ders
need to be re!.!istered, c,ad-

~~~n ·~~e:~~~n~ocl::~e ~~
Please see Ride. Al

Beth SergenVphoto

The 14th Annual Saddle Up for St. Jude Trail R1de IS·set for
noon on Saturday, Sept. 19 at the Dill Farm on Beech
Grove Road in Rutland Township. Over the last 14 years
the popular event has raised $85,000 for St Jude
Children's Research Hospital. Participation 1n the nde ts
free though donat1ons are welcome. Pictured are (from left)
Paige Dill with Sugar, Martha McDaniel, Isabel and Michael
Dill with Triton, Darlene and Denms Hoschar

�--

--~--~----------.--

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------ - --

_____________

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·pageA2
Sunday, September 13, 2009

Veterans

Gathering from Page At

from PageAl
During the· ceremony
speeches were given regard. ing the meaning of the gold
star and purple hearts. In
addition. a moment of
silence was held to remember the country's many
POW's and MIA's.
"On this day and every
day we need to honor those
who wear the (military) uniform ... We are gladly obliged to our Gallia County veterans.'' Leah Wion of the
historical and genealogical
society said.
The program· concluded
with an emotional rendition of TAPS. which left a
large percentage of the
crowd in tears.
Mary Lee Marchi of the
historical and genealogical
society described the event
as a wonderful display of
patriotism.
·•1 just want to thank our
veterans. It means a lot to us
that they gave everything to
us .. .1 think the old time veterans who were so patriotic
are dying and leaving. Our
new veterans need to be
encouraged to know that we
appreciate what they do. We
just can't thank our veterans
enough,'' she said.
Marchi added that the
event also was a reminder
: of how much Sept. 11
impacted the country, and
she urged people to band
together with patriotism
despite ' their
political
beliefs.
, "Who can forget (Sept.
• 11). Everyone remembers
where they were and what
they were doing and the
impact it had ...Our free.doms are too fragile and
. (S~pt. 11) proved how frag. ile they are," she said.
The event also featured a
"Wall of Honor." which
includes more than 320 pictures of veterans who were
born, died or lived in Gallia
County at one time along
with a military museum

.
Gall~a

.

Hope Roush/photos

County Veterans gather with Keith Jeffers, VFW Dept. of Ohio State Surgon and
Galha County Veterans Service Office and Executive Director, who served as master of
ceremony forth~ Gallia County Historical and Genealogical Society's Patriot Day program.
The event took trme to recognize veterans as well as the victims of the Sept.11 tragedy.
dating back to the War of
1812. Some of those showcased on the wall include
large families, such as the
Valentine family. who had
five sons join various military branches during World
War II and the "fightin'
McMillans." six brothers
who fought during the
Civil War.
.
Included among the featured local veterans are two
generals. Maj. Gen. James
Aleshire and Major Gen.
George Bush. who was
very involved in the historical society prior to his
death. Individuals that may
not have been as prestigious in rank, but served in
unique circumstances that
deserve to be recounted
also are featured.
According to Marchi, the
\vall will be open 'forever.'
However, it- wHI be temporarily taken down while
the society's bui !ding
undergoes .remodeling. In
addition, Marchi said that
the society intends to
expand the wall to eventu-

ment at 3 p.m., and the men's
sexy leg contest at 7 p.m.
There will be plenty of
activities for the kids including a sidewalk chalk drawing contest to be held from
11 a.m. to noon Saturday.
Several inflatables will be in
place including a bounce
house and a slide. Use of the
inflatables will be free on
Thursday night and Saturday
morning but the rest of the
time there will be a charge.
Entertainment
on
Saturday will be provided
by Insured' Sound at 8 p.m.
and Paul Doeffinger at
10:30 p.m. There will be
two cruises one a 4 p.m. and
a second at 5:30 p.m. along
with a fireworks cruise at 8
p.m. The fireworks will take
place at 9 p.m.
·
The duck derby spon-

Beegle said a 2002 ·vehicle was in drive. H
Cadilac stolen last month appeared the car had beeJ)
from the Morning Star Road pushed into the water by
residence of Ruth Smith has another vehicle. Beegle said·..
been located. Beegle said it
All three cases are u.
was found submerged in investigation. and Bee
water at the gravel pit at asked anyone with informa"
Letart Falls. The windows tion about the matters to
had been broken out. the contact his office at 992~
keys were 'missing, and the 3371.

Leah Wion of the Gallia County Historical and Genealogical
Society discusses the importance of remembering veterans
and displaying patriotism during the organization's Patriot
Day Program, which was held Friday.
ally line the entire build·•we want to get as many
ing. She encouraged others veterans 1as we can on the
to submit eligible candi- ' wall,'' she said. "If we don't
dates for the wall, which then who will remember
include someone born in them'?"'
For more information· on
Gallia County or those
\Vho have lived. died or the Wall of Honor or the
ha\'e a direct connection Ga!lic1 Count\' Historical
with someone in Gallia and Genealogical Society,
County.
ca/1446-7200.

who do everything from
clean the trails to cook the
food. The ·ours neighbors
also open up their property
to allow the trail ride to
criss-cross the hillsides of
Rutland Township. The
event takes a lot of planning
and hard work but Isabel
says it's worth it.
''It's enjoyable to be able
to raise that kind of money
to help these kids and it's a
way to get all the family and
friends together for one
event,'' Isabel said. "We all
enjoy it. We want to do it for
the kids."
Once again. ribbons and
prizes will be presented to

Getvour

News
online
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailytribune.com

Everybody's talkmg about tt. Bur bow do you really use it'? Ca:l ;, ~..m..r.t ~·~""""'fiR'' ~.r""'''"'""'"?
whtre do you ev~n start?
No11 you c1n lind out with Sodal-..elworklng for Profe5Slonals, ptHented by the Gallia Count}
ChambenfCommertt.
6:00p.m. Bob £uns Farm Ifall, Unlmuily ofRio Grande
Toesdty, Stprember !Sib (Room l04) and Thursday, September 17tb (Room 205}
Jn~Slunylloor,aC«11j)81lyp!UV1dingentryle\'tl$0clalmedialrJ.ining.thc('~al!iaCoonty

Ch:lmbcr ii offering two illlrodlK;IOI)' le\-d social netwodting ~~~These are three hour cia.~ and
limited to the fii'Stlhirty rtgisttants The wcrlshops m hands-on. and rue non-users ofsocial networking
mtoprofes.!l011ll use ofsocial media. Yoo'll diS(()I'ef bow tobtgjn growing and promotmg your bu.siness,
exp.lllding your netwodcand promoting)'Oini!lf.

File photo

Come Riverfest weekend sternwheelers like these will fill
the boat docks near the riverfront amphitheater. About 15
sternwheelers, and dbzens of pleasure boats are expected
to make their way to Pomeroy to join in the festivities.
sored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association will
begin at 4 p.m. as will a program on alcohol and drugs
geared to kids sponsored by

Health
Recovery
the
Services From 7 to 10 there
will be a teen dance on the
lower parking lot with D .J.
Rookin' Reggie.

Ride from Page Al
.participate in the ride
·though donations to St. Jude
are welcome. The event has
become a yearly tourist
attraction in Meigs County.
. The actual ride begins at
noon and travels for I 0
'miles
through · scenic
Rutland Township. Isabel
said this year riders will be
on at least four miles of new
trails. Halfway through the
ride organi.r.ers provide an
' intermission and refreshments. Last year had a
record 251 registered riders
and raised $19,040 for the
children's hospital.
After the traif ride, orgamzers offer a free hog roast
and bean dinner. Also following the ride, winners of
prize
di·awings
are
announced. Those who wish
to buy prize tickets should
do so before the ride. Dill
said this year pri~:es up for
grabs include cash, a saddle.
bridle, t.addle bags. saddle
stand. bicycle, etc.
When Isabel and husband
Michael decided to start the
trail ride 14 years ago, it
raised a little over $2,000
and has continued to steadi·
ly grow without any offiCial
help from any formal group
or sponsor. fnstead, helping
the Dills are about 30 volunteers who are aJJ neighbors. family and friends

speed Internet, wireless and
entertainment services.
He served as chairman of
the board of Summerbridge
Louisville
educational
assistance program form
2003 to 2006 and was a
board member of Turner.
an organization that 1
vides assistance to low rincome children to attend
college, in Dallas from 2000
to 2003. Black Enterprise
Magazine 2005 named
Davis as one of the 75 Most · .
Powerful Black Men in '
American Busines~.
·
Davis holds a Master of
Business Administration in
marketing and finance frorrl
the University of Chicago
and Bachelor of Science in
business
administration
from the University of
Wisconsin at Milwaukee·.
Davis and his wife, Lynnda:,
have three children and
reside in Columbus.

Vehicles from Page AI

Riverfest from Page At
Republican Party, will be
:held from 7 to 9 p.m. and
there will be entertainment
in the amphitheater by "Still
• Standing" from 7 to 10 p.m.
• On Friday, the craft and
: food vendors on the parking
lot will be open for business
from 10 a.m. to 10 p,.m.
Kicking off the afternoon
will be music by the Meigs
Marauder Band at 2 p.m.
: Other entertainment in the
amphitheater
will
be
"Southern Accent,"' "Simba"
and "One Knight Stand."
There will four afternoon
and evening cruises.
Featured on Saturday will
: be a variety of activities,
entertainment and contests.
The chili cookoff will begin
.at 8 a.m., the line throwing
:contest will be held at 11
a.in .. the com hole touma-

for All American Gourmet.
Earlier in his career. he held
a series of brand management positions in Kraft's
cheese business where he
launched several successful
new products and marketing
campaigns.
Davis ~erve~ as a board
member of the Athur G.
James Cancer Hospital and
Richard J. Solove Research
In~titute Foundation. He is a
member of the Columbus
Partnership and Compete
Columbus; two organizations focused on economic
development strategy for
the region. He served as
2007 chair for Operation
Feed. which provides food
for needy families in central
Ohio. Davis is also a board
member of the National
Restaurant Association and
the EMBARQ Corp., w·hich
provides local and long distance voice. data. high

the top three money collectors for St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital which
has a mission to find cures
for children with cancer and
other catAstrophic diseases
through research and treatment. St. Jude has treated
children from all 50 states
and from around the world.
St. Jude is the only pediatric cancer research center
where families never pay
for treatment not covered
by insurance. No child is
ever denied
treatment
because of the family's
inability to pay.
As for the trail ride, water
will be provided. if needed.

for the horses. Restroom
facilities will also be on
site. Camping for the event
is permitted at the farm.
Call 742-2849 for more
information.

find out
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To regiSttl' foreitherorbothofthese worli.)bopscall740446-0596 an;i we wiil w.!d you areght'aum
fonn. Thetreadiin¢ ro register IS September lith. Ano:t·refundab!e regtstrnrion teeoll ~lU.'IJIIffiiNbe!lal
\~bell }'OU Slgll up.

is pleased to welcome
]ody Gerome, D.O
to our area.

Dr. Jody Gerome will be replacing Jane
Broecker, M.D, who has been practicing in
Meigs over the last few years. Dr. Broecker
has enjoyed working with the women of
Meigs County and wilJ still be available for
appointments in the Athens office.

~.1'

O'BLENESS

~t'

.Jody Gerome, D.O.

HEAtH! \nlEM

Starting September 15th., appoint ments can
be maae with Or. Gerome by calling
740~992-9158 (Meigs) or
740-594-8819 (Athens).
'

I

�PageA3

: iunbap 'azimes -ientinel

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Meigs County calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Sept. 14
POMEROY
Meigs
~ ounty
Agricultural
'ciety, '?:30 p.m. at the
.~ .ock Springs Fairgrounds.
. POMEROY
Meigs
· County Cancer Initiative,
: ~ regular mccttng. noon, con; ference
room,
Meigs
. : County Health Depat1ment.
'
Thcsday, Sept. 15
CHESTER - Chester
:Council 323. Daughters of
: America.
7:30
p.m.
: Refreshment~.
Thursday, Sept. 17
POMEROY
Meigs
; County American Cancer
:Society Advisory Board.
· rpouJar meeting. noon. ban-

ASK DR. BROTHERS

quet room Wild Ho~c Cafe, 'Belleville Locks and Dam.
call 992-6626 ext. 24 for Music by George Hall.
infonnation or to RSVP.
RACINE
Annual
Harvest Festival, II a.m.,
St. John Lutheran Church,
33441 Pine Grove Road.
guest
speaker
Linea
Sunday, Sept. 13
Warmke.
potluck
and
social
RACINE - KerwoodHill Reun1on, I p.m .. Star at noon.
Thcsday, Sept. 15
Mill Park. bring covered
POMEROY - Free exerdish.
cise class to increase mobilSaturday, Sept. 19
REEDSVILLE - Lawson ity. balance, flexibility, l
Reunion. potluck at noon, p.m .. MulbeiTY Community
Center.
Forked Run State Park.

Reunions

Birthdays

Sunday, Sept. 13
REEDSVILLE
Reedsville
and
Long
Bottom:area churches wiU
co-ho~t the sixth annual
Neighborhood Da~, I p.m ..

Sunday, Sept. 13
LOTTRIDGE - Orange
Christian Church, Lottridge,
annual homecoming with
Sunday school. 9:30 a.m.:
church service, 10:30 a.m.

Sunday, Sept. 13
ALBANY - Freda Smith
celebrates her 85th birthday
today. cards can be sent to
42919 School Lot Road,
Albany. 45710.
'

care!.!ivers from around the
region
are
invited.
Information about prescnption medicine. exercise and
fitness. nutrition and diet,
prostht:tics. insurance and
livim! wills will be made
avail~1blc. The American
Cancer Society. Holzer .
!'vtedical Center Community
Wellness
Health
and
Department. Gallia County
Health Department and
Holzer Hospice will also
participate in the fair. For
mformauon, contact Sandra
Cassell-Carbin at 740-4413557 or by e-mail at
scorbin@holzerclinic .com.
.Monday,Sept.28
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Chapter #283
Order of the Eastern Star pot
luck dinner. 6:30p.m., on the
third floor of the Mao;onic
Temple (Ariel Theater).
Honoring past matrons and
past patrons of the chapter.
Meeting to follow at 7:30
p.m .. 50 year and 25 year
pins will be presented.

[

o

Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Church events

;Gallia County calendar

Dear Dr. Brothers~ I am
extremcly fru~trated by one
of my friends. She is someone who hasn't had a lot of
exposure to politics, and she
is .JUSt following along with
the views of' her parents who are narrow-minded.
hateful people, from what I
can tell. 1 have been asking
her to go to political meetings, or at least check out
some of the Web sites and
blogs I go to for infonnation, and she refuses! How
can l get her to be more
open-minded instead of just
a sheep? - G.K.
Dear G.K.: I think the
first thmg you need to do is
back off a bit and examine
your own behavior and attitudes. The fact that you consider this young WoJ!lan ·s
parents ns natTow-mmded
and hateful means that you
arc likely to say hurtful
things to your friend. So
naturally, she feels she has
to stick up for her folks,
including the political
belief:. they have passed on
to her. And by thinking of
her as a sheep. you may just
want her to follow a new
shepherd - you - rather
than really thinking for herself. I know you are trying
to educate her by showing
her opposing information
on the Web sites, and it must
be disappointino to be
turned down. But back off a
bit, and try to understand
where she is coming from.
It may help to know the
results of a new study.
recently published by the
American Psychological
Association. In a survey of
more than 90 studies
involving 8,000 people.
those \Vho were given a
choice about seeing data
opposed to their point of
vrew declined about twothirds of the time and chose
to see material they agreed
with. And people with Jess
confidence in their own
beliefll were less likely to
want to expose themselves
to opposinf? views. That
may explarn why your
friend is so stubborn since she has adopted the
ideas of her parents without
thinking about thin!!s on her
own, she may feel less
sel:ure about them. So, give
her a little bit of a break.

o

to keep it secret until she's
ready to tell her parent&lt;;.
When I ask her when that
might be, she gets very
angry and tells me to stop
pressuring her. What's up
with that? - BJ.
Dear B.J .: Your emotions seem to have gotten
the best of you. You're not
alone - it happens to the
best of us, no matter what
our age. When yQu're in
the middle of a relationship. with all your feelings
running at a fever pitch,
sometimes it's qUite difficult to get a good view of
what's really going on.
You begin to ignore any
negative gut instinct'
because vou want the relationship 'to play out exactly as you visualize. Any
thought that is contrary to
the
picture-perfect
romance you ~et up in your
mind is ignored or justified for whatever reason.
But in asking why your
girlfriend wants to keep
your future engagement a
secret. you don't seem to be
in complete denial, thinking
that everything is A-OK.
There's obviously something wrong. Be brutally
. honest with yourself. You
say your girlfriend "finally''
said she 'II get engaged to
you - just how many times
did you ask her? Is there a
chance you pressured her
into making a decision
she's not ready for and that
she said yes just to get you
to stop asking? Though she
said yes, her actions indicate that she probably will
back out of the deal. And
that's OK. You may need to
cool your jets a bit - 19 is
a pretty young age to ~leci&lt;k~
you want to commtt that
seriously to someone. and
your girlfriend most likely
is not at that point. If you're
truly upfront with yourself,
you may find that you're
not. either.
(c) 2009 by King Features
Syndicate

POINT
PLEASANT.
GALLIPOLIS - French
W.Va. - "Let Go and Let City Chorus/Treblemakers
God" Nar-Anon Family Chorus practice. 7:30 p.m.
Group meeting, ev6ry every Tuesday at Grace
Monday at 7 p.m .. Krodel United Methodist Church.
Park recreational building. Guests welcome.
The group helps families
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
and friends of drug addicts County Board of Mental
or users to attain serenity, Retardation/Developmental ·
regardless of whether Disabilities meets the third '
he/she has stopped using. Tuesday of each month,
The group respects all 4:30 p.m .. at thw adminismembers· anonymity.
trative offices, 77 Mill
VINTON
Vinton Creek Road.
Baptist Church wilt operate
CADMUS
Walnut
a food pantry every Monday Township Crime Watch
from 5 to 6:30 p.m. For meets the second Monday
inforn1ation, call 388-8454. of each month at 7 p.m. at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia the old Cadmus schoolMS (Multiple Sclerosis) house.
Support Group meets the
second t\1onday of each
month at Holzer Medical
Center. For information.
GALLiPOLIS - Hattie
contact Amber Barnes at
B. Gothard will celebrate
(740) 339-0291.
GALLIPOLIS - NAMl her 92nd birthday on Sept.
(National Alliance on 12. Cards can be sent to her
Mental lllness) meetings at 242 Magnolia Drive.
will take place the first Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
GALLIPOLIS
Thursday of each month at
6 p.m. at the Galliu County Vivienne Trowlridge will
Semor Resource Center, celebrate her 84th birthday
with a general membership on Sept. 17. Cards can be
meeting at 6:30 p.m. For sent to her at 922 State
GALLIPOLIS
Route 588. Gallipolis, Ohio
Grieving Parents Support mformation, contact Jill 45
g~lLLIPOLIS
Group meets 7 p.m. second Simpkins at (740) 339Monday of each month at 0603. Everyone is welcome. Marlene Belville will celeGALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Holzer· Medical Center.
County
Stroke Support brate her 83rd birthday on
People attending should
Group.
frrst
Tuesday of Sept. 20. Cards can be sent
meet in the general lobby.
to . her at 300 Briar:wo?d
For information, call Jackie every month, I p.m., at the Dnve, Apt. 140, Galhpohs.
Bossard
Memorial
Library
.
Keatley at 446-2700 or
Ohio 45631.
GALLIPOLIS
Nancy Childs at 446-5446.
~~TRIO~
Eve~yn '
Anonymous
Overeaten;
ATHENS- - Survival of
Wtlhams w.dl be celebratmg
5:30
meets
every
Sunday,
Smcide support group meets
St.
Peter's her 90th buthday on Sept.
7 p.m .. fourth Thursday of p.m., at
ooo
20. Cards can be sent to her
• rn!Ut7 TKn.o:.~l8rpwi
each month at Athens Episcopal Church.
at 9545 State Route 775.
• hllifilf&lt;~r~-~~ iilljiat
Dear Dr. Brothers: My
Church of Christ, 785 W.
• l ( i - umqooo:-VHI&gt;rolJI
Patriot, Ohio 45658.
first real girlfriend (I'm 19)
• ~xmhlFt~·re~ gJtw51f«cl
Union St.. Athens. For inforPATRIOT - Richard and has finally 'iaid she'll get
mation. call593-7414.
~------...
Joyce Neal will celebrate engaged to me this winter. I
( Surf up to 6X ltlsterl )
GALLIPOLIS - Look
GALLIPOLIS - Practice their 50th wedding anniver- was completely psyched
-----~ •u..- .,_
Good F.eel Better cancer for the French Colony sary on Sept. 20. Cards can when she said yes, but then
program, third Monday of Chorus, a four-part harmo- be sent to them at 1997 Mt. she said something that
the month at 6 p.m .. Holzer· ny style women's group, 7 Zion Road. Patriot. Ohio made me feel weird. She
p.m. each Tuesday at the 45658.
Center for Cancer Care.
said that she'll get engaged
Central Christian Church.
GALUPOLIS
E-mail community calen- to me only if we both decide
Garfield
Ave., dar
Alcoholics
Anonymous 109
items
to
Wednesday book study at 7 Gallipolis. Enter the side mdtnews@mydailytribune.c
p.m. and Thursday open center door. For more infor- om. Fax announcements to
meetin!! at noon at St. mation, contact Suzy Parker 446-3008. Mail items to 825
Peter's ~Episcopal Church, at (740) 992-5555 or Bev Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
541 Second Ave. Tuesday Alberchinski at 446-2476.
45631.
Announcemellts
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia may also be dropped off at
closed meeting is at 8 p.m.
Commissioners the Tribune office.
at St. Peter's Episcopal County
meet eYery Thursday, 9
Church.
a.m.,
Gallia
County
GALLIPOLIS
'
Narcotics
Anonymous Courthouse.
Thanks
for
shopping at ·
GALLIPOLIS
Miracles in Recovery meets
every
Monday
and Gallipolis TOPS ('ntke Off
Saturday, 7:30 p.m .. at St. Pounds Sensibly) meets
P~ter's Eptscopal Church.
each Monday at 6 p.m. at
POINT
PLEASANT, the First Baptist Church.
f. You kept dollars in our economy
W.Va.
Narcotics .1100 Fourth Ave .. with
For every $100 you spend at one of our lo..:al husincsses, $68 will stay in the community, What happens 11 hl'll
Anonymous Living Free \veigh-in starting at 5:30
you spend that same $100 at a national chain'/ Only $~3 ~tays In the community.
Group
meets
every p.m.
2. You embraced what makes us unique
GALLIPOLIS
Wednesday and Friday at 7
You wouldn't want your house to look like cvCl)'•Jnc cbc's In the l.!.S, So wh) would you want your
Gallipollis Rotary Club
p.m. at 305 Main St.
community
to look that way?
VINTON - Celebrate meets 7 a.m. each Tuesday
Recovery at Vinton Baptist at Holzer Clinic doctor's
3. You created local jobs
Local businesses are better at creating htgher-paymg Jobs for our neighbor~.
Church. Small groups look- dining room.
ing for freedom from addicGALLIPOLIS - Choose
4. You helped the environment
tions, hurts. habits and to Lose Diet Club meets 9
Buying from a local business'conscne:. energy and resources m the fonn of less fuel for tnmsponauon.le~s
hangup:, every Wednesday a.m .. each Tuesday at Grace
p:~ckagmg, and products that you know life sate and well made. because we stand behind them.
at 7 p.m. For inforn1ation. United Methodist Church.
S. You nurtured community
Use Cedar Street entrance.
call 388-8454.

Sunday, Sept. 13
PATRIOT - Lyla Waugh
mily reunion at 0.0.
clntyre Park Shelter
•
Cardinal #6.
PATRIOT - Montgomery
reunion at 0.0. Mcintyre
Park Shelter Wild Thrkey #I .
Bring a covered dish: meal
• sened at 12:30 p.m.
RJO
GRANDE
~E\ ans/ Pennyfare
~ Supennarket reunion at Bob
; E\ ans Fann Shelterhouse #2.
• Canoe Live!)' Road. Covered
: dish dinner served at I p.m.
: GALLIPOLIS - Harry
:and Murlie Drummond
~reunion. dinner at I p.m., at
: First Church of God shelter: house, 1723 Ohio 141.
: Bring u covered dish; family
·and friends invited. Games.
:horseshoes, corn hole, and
:fishing available. For infor: mntion, call 446-2811.
Thesday, Sept. 15
RIO GRANDE - The
: Gallia-Vinton Educational
:Service Center (ESC)
overning Board regular
lnthly meeting. 5 p.m., at
.:! ESC office, Room 131,
,. ood Hall. University of
.. Rio Grande campus.
;
Thursday, Sept. 17
: VINTON - Huntington
: and Morgah Township Crime
.,. Watch meeting, 6 p.m .. at the
: Vinton VIllage Hall .
:
Saturday. Sept. 19
: GALUPOLIS -The Old
-Gallipolis
Clinic
and
:Medial Center Hospital
:employees annual reunion.
~ 6-8 p.m . at Golden Corral
.. Restaurant on Upper River
: Road. All former employees
: are welcome.
VINTON
Vinton
: Volunteer fire Department
: first annual dance in the park.
: noon. at
the
Vinton
Park.
• Communitv
: Firefighters water battle at I
·: p.m. with registration at noon.
: Free music. raffles, door
• prizes. and concessions make
: fun for the entire family.
;
Sunday, Sept. 20
PATRIOT - Pete and
•
argie Parsons reunion at
: 0.0. Mcintyre Park Shelter
: #2. 10 a.m. to dark.
"
1Uesday, Sept. 22
• EWINGTON
:American Legion Post 161
:monthly meeting. 7:30p.m ..
~in the academy. All mem' . bers encouraged to attend;
• happy hour at 6:30p.m.
~
Saturday,Sept.26
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Center for Cancer Care and
Partners of Hope Cancer
Coalition of Gallia County
· are sponsonng the LiveLove-Heal Cancer Survivor
Fair, 10 a.rn. to 4 p.m., at
Gallia
County
the
Faugrounds. 189 Jackson
Pike. Cancer survivors and

Card shower

.

Support groups

l

Internet

Regular meetings

.

![rencli City .9lntique &amp; Craft Ma[[

We know )OU, and you know us. Studtes ha,•e ~hoY.n that local
more than twice the rate of chams.

~

Arcadia Nursing Center

vooR

o

Other events

------·

Comntunity
events

Girl won't give other
I lot
po l lCQ VleWS a hearzng

and dinner at noon.
Afternoon message by
Pastor Malsolm J. Grueser.
More information obtained
by calling 6696-1319, 6673431, or 662-2633.
Thesday, Sept. 15
POMEROY - Revival
services at the Cal vary
Pilgrim ChapeL State Route
143, Pomeroy, Sept. 15-20.
Rev. Richard McKenzie
evangelist; special singing.
Rev. Charles McKenzie,
pastor.

OPEN HOUSE
September 19, 2009
11 am- 2 pm

u

~

PRIZES

FRtf

KIDS GAMES

LIVE MUSIC

FOOV

COTTON CANDY
!Ct CRtAM

Everyone Welcotne

~

busines~c'

donate to community causes ut

6. You consened your tax dollar:.
Shopping In a Joc;l business distnct means less mfrnstructure,le~&gt; maintenance, and more money mailable to
beautify our community. Abo, spending locally ln&gt;tead of online ensure~ that your s:~les w.e:; are rein'westcd
where they belong· right here in your communit)!
7. You created more, choke
.
We pick the Items and pwducts \\l' ~ell based on what 1\e know you like and want Loc;tl businc~~..-s ..-.:rn ,,
wider array of unique product:. bccuusc we buy for our 01\ n lndividu.,l market.

8. You took advantage of our CXJWrtbe
You are our friends ;md neighbor:;, and we have a ve-sted uHercst in knowing how 10 "ervo you We'n.·
passionate about what we do. Why not take advantage ot it?
9, You invested in entrepreneurship
Creativity and entrepreneurship nrc what !he Amenc:~n economy Is founded upon Nurtunng local bu~mc~s
ensures a ~trong community.
10. You made us a destination
The more interesting and unique we nrc as a community, the more v.e \\ill attract ney. neighbors,' t~itor; and
guests, This benefits everyone!

31 A Ohio River Plaza ·Gallipolis • (740) 446-9020

�PageA4

0
i&gt;unba!' ~imes -i&gt;enttnel

Analysis: c}:'Ou lief' further erodes discourse
BY LIZ SIDOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Diane Hill
Controller

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Co11grcss shall make no lau' respecting an
establislrment 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
tire Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday. Sept. 13, the 256th day of2009. There
are 109 day:. left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History; On Sept. 13, 1959, the
Soviet space probe Luna 2 became the fin.t manmade
object to reach the moon as it crashed onto the lunar surface. (Because of the time difference, it was already Sept.
14 in Moscow when lunar impact took place.)
On this date: In 1759, during the final French and Indian
War. the British defeated the French on the Plains of
Abraham overlooking Quebec City.
In 1788. the Congres~ of the Confederation authorized
the first national election, and declared New York City the
temporary national capital.
ln 1948, Republican Margaret Chao;e Smith of Maine was
elected to the U.S Senate, becoming the first woman to
~erve in both houses of Congress.
In 1959. Elvis Presley first met his future wife, 14-year-old
Priscilla Beaulieu, while stationed in West Germany with the
U.S. Am1y. (fhey manied in 1967, but divorced in 1973 .)
In 1971, a four-dav inmates' rebellion at the Attica
Correctional Facility in upstate New York ended as police
.and guards stormed the prison; the ordeal and final assault
claimed 43 lives.
In 1989, Fay Vincent was elected commissioner of Major
League Baseball, succeeding the late A. Bartlett Giarnatti.
In I993, at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin and PI.O chairman Yasser Arafat shook hands after
signing an accord granting limited Palestinian autonomy.
Ten years ago: Israelis and Palestinians opened talks on a
final peace accord. A bomb blamed by authorities on
Chechen rebels devastated un eight-story apartment building in Moscow, killing at least 124 people.
Five years ago: U.S. warplanes in Iraq unleashed devastating airstrikes on a suspected hideout for operatives from
an ai-Qaida-linked group; a video posted on a Web site in
the name of the militants purportedly showed the beheading
of a kidnapped Turkish truck driver. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
agreed to a nearly $3 billion acquisition by a Sony-led consortium. Oakland posted a 7-6, 10-inning win over the
Rangers in a game that was delayed in the ninth inning after
Texas reliever Frank Francisco hurled a chair and hit two
fans at the Oakland Coliseum; the chair hit a man in the
head and broke a woman's nose. (Francisco ended up pleading no contest to misdemeanor assault and was sentenced to
20 days in a work program and anger management classes.)
One year ago: Rescue crews ventured out to pluck people
from their homes in an all-out search for thousands of
Texans who had stubbornly stayed behind overnight to face
Hurricane Ike. After wild conjecture over who would play
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin on "Saturday Night Live," writerperformer Tina Fey returned to her old show for an opening s~etch featuring her and Fey's former "Weekend
Update'' co·host Amy Poehler as Sen. Hillary Clinton.
Thought for Today: "Better to be without logic than without feeling.'' - Charlotte Bronte, English author (18161855).

WASHINGTON
Screams of "Socialism!"
Conservative talk show
hosts peddling debunked
"death panel~.'' Placards
likening Barack Obama to
Hitler. And now, to the pn:sident's face: "You lie!" A
breach
of
civility?
Absolutely. A strategic
political mistake? Maybe.
Republican Rep. Joe
Wilson's personal attack on
Obama and :jeering from
other GOP lawmakers as the
president spoke to Congress
escalated the opposition's
outrage machine that over
the summer framed the
health care debate and
knocked the White House
back on its heels.
The rare lack of decorum
on the House floor a:-.
Obama addressed lawmakers could provide him with
a much-needed opening to
retake control of the national conversation over a
health care overhaul by
turning off Americans to his
critics' acerbic claims.
Or. people could dismiss
derisive laughter and headshaking from Republicans
and embrace the opposition's broader argument that
Obama 's prescription for
the ailing health care system
would expand the govemment's reach into people's
lives .
At the verv least,
Wedl'lesday night marked
the further erosion of long
detetiorating discourse in a
country where political
opponents increasingly try

I

~unbap ~imes -~entinel
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story, please call one of our newsrooms.

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dent had finished.
But it was Wil. on's boorish outburst that froze
Republicans in their scats.
"You lie!" the South
Carolina
congressman
shouted and jabbed. a finger
in the air when Obama said
that Democratic pi ans do
not cover Illegal immigrants.
Taking advantage or the
extraordinary accusation,
Obamn calmly replied.
"That's not true," and went
on with his speech.
Will personal attack:. on a
president who people generall) like - even if they di-;ngrec with his policies ultimately pro-.e to have
gone too far?
Certainly. 111 tlie shortterm. the chorus of cnticism
pa\nted an unflattering many Repubhcans say
embatTas::.ing - picture of
the GOP. Wil-;on apologized
shortly after the speech.
which some sa) may have
limited the fallout.
But the outbursts abo
gave Obama an opportunity
that he seized. pleading for
civil discourse and bipartisan solution-making. And
added
fuel
to
they
Democratic arguments that
Republicans simply belong
to "The Party of No."
The Democratic-aligned
Americans
United for
Change quickly rolJed out a
Web video. snying: ''It's
Official - The Patty of NO
Hm, Become the Partv of
No Shame.''
What's more: the behavior
highlighted personal volleys
coming from the GOP's far
right v. ing just as party lead-

er'j in Congress arc trymg to
po:.llton themselves as centrists debating policy. The
Repubhcan ba e and right
flank may be energized by
what they ~aw and heard but
independents and moderates
may have cringed.
•
That could spell trou
for Republicans looking
ahead to next year's
midterm elections.
While midtenns typically
are base elections and vitriol will get hard-core party
loyalists to turn out
Republicans also don't wanl
to look too extreme as the9
try to pick up seats in
Congre:-.s.
Several
Republicans
called the outbursts unhelpful - particular!) Wilson's.
"It combined two things
that just arcn 't the same:
legitimate outrage people
feel over government-run
health care and manufactured vitriol that I think.
most people dismi~:.." vet- .
eran Republican communications strategist Todd
Harris said. That. he said,
plays into the Democrats'
hands.
But Republicans also arc'
betting that there's no
term damage to the GO
strategy
bccau-,\;
Republicans have tapped
into fear among Amencans
about the government
intrudin!! into thetr lives.
..lnten1perate and clearly
a mistake.'' Phil ~1usser. the
former executive director of
the Republican Governor's
of
Assoctation.
said
Wilson's remark. But. he
added: ..lt didn't shift the
debate.''

101.

MO. SECNJ5E
~ou Mtt..t&gt;e.
lT SOU~t&gt;

L\KE A. SN:&gt;

T\\\t-«;,!

Meltdown 101: HotJsitzg l1elp lags l1igl1 expectatiotzs
BY ALAN ZIBEL

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing,
must he signed, ami include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not persmwlities. Letters of tlumks to organizations and individual.\· will not be accepted for publication.

to out-yell each other, vocal
extremes of each polittcal
party shape the debate and a
24/7 medta focused on ratings amplifies the tit for tat
while latching onto phra~es
that fan the flames.
"What we've :.~en all
summer was the worst of
debate," said Kathleen l Ia II
Jamieson. director of the
Annenberg Public Policy
Center at the Unjversity of
Pennsylvania and an expert
on political commumcation.
"It does su2:gest a decline."
That's notlost 6n voters.
"We are becoming more
adversarial and more shnll,"
says Jeffrey Howell of
Cincinnati, 43. "We don't
have discourse anymore."
It's become ~o bad that
Donna Schwinghammer of
Washington, P~a., 54. has
~topped listening - to both
sides. ''I'm tired of all of it.
There"s so much fingerpointing:· she says.
The latest low point in the
nation's political dialogue
came Wednesday when the
vitriol of the summer's townhall style events spilled into
the Capitol as Obama
addressed a joint ses~ion of
Congress. saying: ''The time
for bickering is over ... Now
is the season for action.''
Some
Republicans
applauded and gave ~tand­
ing ovations through the
speech. But, at times. GOP
critics also shouted .. not
true·· and ..shame." There
were boos. hisses and g[\lm·
bles. One Republican. Rep.
John Shimkus of Illinois,
left the chamber, his
spokesman says in frustration. even before the prcsi-

-------------------------~-------------------------

AP REAL ESTA'l'E WRITER

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Sunday, September 13, 2009

WASHINGTON - The
government set expectations sky-high earlier thi~
year when President Barack
Obama launched an effort to
help up 7 to 9 million homeowners avoid foreclosure.
1"ow. reality is setting in.
The effort, dubbed Making
Home Affordable, appears
on pace to make a far smaller impact on the foreclosure
crisis than officials had
hoped.
Mark Zandi, chief economist
with
Moody's
Economy.corn, expects the
program to help around 2
million to 3 million borrowers through modified and
refinanced loans. "It's just
barely enough to quell the
crisis and allo~v us to muddle through," he said.
Homeowners are upset
that they can't get a:.sistance
more quickly - or at all even as lenders insist they
are doing their best to handle an unprecedented :-.urge
in calls for help.
Meanwhile, foreclo:-.ures
remain extremely high.
More than 358,000 foreclosure-related filings were
recorded
in
August,
RealtyTrac Inc. reported
Thursday. That number was
up 18 percent from a year
ago and Oat from a month
earlier.
Here are some questions
and answers about the status
of the foreclosure-relief
plan.

Q: How many borrowers
have been helped by the
government programs so
far?
A: As of last month. more
than 360.000 borro\\ ers
were enrolled in threemonth tnal loan modifications. out of about 570.000
who received offers. Only
about 85.000 homeowners
have had their loans refinanced under the Obama
plan.
Q: What's the differcnl'L"
between a refinanced loan
and a modification?
A: When )OU refinance
your horne loan, you sign a
new contract with your
lender. A loan modification
involves changes to the
existing contract such as
lowering the interest rate or
extending the term from 30
years to 40.
Q: Wh) has progress on
loan modifications been so
sluggish?
A: The program requtres
big changes for the mortgage industry. Modifying
thousands of loans is much
more complicated than collecting payments from borrowers who pay their bills
on time. It means hiring and
training thousands of workers' to handle calls. and
reworking computer systems. Plus, the ~ovcrnment
has changed and expanded
the program several times.
..There·s a lot of hard,
behind-the·scenes, nittYgritty work that needs to be
done," said Mike Larson, a
real estate analyst with

Q: Is the Obama adminisWeiss Research. "It':- fru:-.trating to consumer-.. and I tra:ion planning any big_
think that's understand- chan2:es?
A:~ It's not clear. But
able."
Some lender:. acknowl- industry executives say th'
edge that it hasn't been want to work on a possil
easy. Over the past -.ix extension of the program
months, ..some customers unemplo) ed homeowners.
have been challenged with One wav to do so would be
getting cle.ar, timely com- to give· those borrowers 'l
munication from lt:-. as the temporary break 'on loan
guidelines and the require- payments while they look
ments for the various pro- for a new job.
Also being discussed is·
grams have continued to
change," Mary Coffin, how to help borrowers with
executive vice president of ··pick-a-payment" or option
Wells Fargo's mortgage-ser- ARM loans. which gave
vicing husine~s. told House borrowers the ahi I it v to
lawmakers at a hearing defer some of their interest
Wedne~dav.
~ payments and add them to
Q: Why haven't lenders the principal.
Q: What should I do if
refinanced more loans'?
A: Initially, the adminis- I'm having trouble getting
tration's refioancmg pro- help with my mortgage?
A: If you can't r~sohe
gram was limited to borrowers with loans backed your problems or you tnink.
b) mortgage finance com- your mortgage servicer is
panics Fannie Mae and 'iolatin!! ) our right-.. conFredd e Mac who owe up to tact a ~nonprofit housing
5 percent more than their counselor or -.eek legal help.
home·~
current market Housing counselors will
help negotiate a loan modi-.aluc.
That excluded many peo- fication for free. Be Wrtf) of
ple in areas like Las Vegas loan modification cons.t
and Southern California, tants that offer to re·neg&lt;
where pnces have declined ate your mortgage
by as mul'll a:. 50 percent. exchange for an up front ft:r..•.
So the government decided
If you want to know
to expand it to more bor- whether you qualif) for a
loan modification. check'
rower-;.
Fannie f\lae is no'' out the govemment's Web
a&lt;:cepting borrowers who site: http://'' ww.makingO\\C up to 25 percent more
homeaffordable.go'.
To
than their home·~ value. find a housing coun~elor,
NcighborWorks
Freddie Mac Will do so next trv
~ :-.ite
at
month. These changes may A"merica 's
mcrcase the number of refi- http://\\"'' .findaforeclo·
nanced loans .
surecounselor.org.

�.-------------------....--,- ------Sunday, September 13,2009

Obituaries
Linnie Bell Aleshire
Linnie Bell Aleshire, 86, died Friday. Sept. 11, 2009 at
7:40 p.m. at Rocksprings Rehab in Pomeroy.
She was born July 31, 1923 in Chapmanville, W.Va. She
was a housewife.
She was preceded in death by her father, Roy Albert Bias:
mother. Sallie Lunsford: husband. Emel Aleshire: daughter.
irley Wolfe: brothers. Roy Jr., Clifford and Robert, ~is
s, Betty McKnight and Jean Thomas: and one grandson.
•
· She is· survived by her daughter, Peggy Vining of
' Westerfield: son. Jerry (Donna) Aleshire of Syracuse: sister. Wanda Faulk of Hartford, W.Va.; brother. Wayne
Thomas of Middleport: five grandchildren; and one great
grandchild.
·. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Tuesday. Sept. I 5 at Ewing
:Funeral Home. Funeral service will be I p.m. Wednesday.
Sept. 16 at Ewing Funeral Home . Burial will be in the
·Meigs ;\'lemory Garden.

Joseph Bowers
Joseph E. Bowers, 70. of Reedsville passed away Friday.
Sept. 11, 2009 at Camden-Clark Memori&lt;ll Hospital in
Parkersburg. W.Va.
He was born Sept. 19, 1938 in Pomeroy. son of the late
Ernest Max and Adrie Eichinger Bowers. He was a Navy
Veteran of the Vietnam War and a Diesel Mechanic for AEP.
· He is ~urvived by his wife of 50 years. Mary Frances
' McCutcheon !3owers; two daughters. Tamela and Max
Eichinger and Pamela Stewart; two sons. Joseph and Reba
·Bowers and Brian and Roxan Bowers; four grandchildren.
Angela (Jason) Parker, Joseph (Lisa) Marcinko, Katy
(Kyle) Longworth and Joshua (Lacey) Marcinko; two
great-grandchildren. Tiffany and Chad Parker; four sisters,
Kay and Joe Profitt. Donna Bowers, Karen Haynes and
Nedra Bowers: and several nieces and nephews .
n addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by
•
ec brothers. Ernest, Kenneth and Elwood: and four sisters, Joyce Sauters. Sandra Baer, Carol Wolfe and Ada
RO\ve: and a nephew, Steve Hill.
Services \viii be I p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 16 .at WhiteSchwariel Funeral Home in Coolville with Morris Wolfe
officiating. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens in
Pomeroy. where graveside millitary services will be conducted.
•
Friends may call at the funeral home 5-8 p.m. Tuesday.
The online guestbook can be signed at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome .corn.

Deaths
Rosa M. Greene
Rosa M. Greene. 82, of Hartford. W.Va. died Friday.
Sept. II, 2009. at Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center.
Visitation will be held Sunday. 6 to 9 p.m .. at the Foglesong
Tucker Funeral Home. Funeral services will be on Monday I
p.m. at the funeml home with the Rev. David McManus officiating. Burial will be in Sunrise .Memorial Gardens.

&amp;

• Wh•
Maxtne
ite

axme White, 86, of Scottown passed away Thursday,
Sept. 10, 2009 in St. Mary's Medical Center.
Visitation will be held J0-11 a.m. Monday, Sept. 14 at
Hall Funeral Home in Proctorville. Funeral service will be
ll a.m. Monday, Sept. 14 at Hall Funeral Home by Brother
Eddie Salmons and Brother Charles Turley. Burial v.·ill follow in Parkins Ridge Cemetery. Condolences may be
expressed to the family at www.umeformemory.com/hall.

Thousands march to U.S.
:Capitol to protest spending
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tens of thousands of people
.marched to the U.S. Capitol on Saturday, carrying signs
with slogans such as "Obamacare makes me sick" as they
protested the president's health care plan and what they say
ts out-of-control spending.
The line of protesters spread across Pennsylvania Avenue
.for blocks, all the way to the capitol, according to th~ D.C.
Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency.
People · were chanting "enough, enough" and "We the
People.'' Others yelled "You lie, you lie!'' and ''Pelosi has to
go.'' referring to California congresswoman Kaney Pelosi.
Demonstrators waved {J .S. flags and held signs reading
"Go Green Recycle Congress'' and "I'm Not Your ATM.''
n wore colonial costumes as they listened to speakers
o warned of "judgment day'' - Election Day 2010.
•
Richard Briglc: 57, a .Vietnam War veteran and former
'Teamster. carne from Paw Paw, Mich. He said. health care
needs to be reformed - but not according to President
Barack Obama's plan.
,
"My grandkids arc going to be paying for this. It's going to
cost too much money that we don't have," he said while
·marching. bracing himself with a wooden cane as he walked.
' FrcedomWorks Foundation, a conservative organization
led by fonner House Majority Leader Dick Armey, organized several groups from across the country for what they
billed as a "March on Washington.''
Organizers say they built on momentum from the April
"tea party'' demonstrations held nationwide to protest tax
policies. along with growing resentment over the economIC stimulus packages anti bank bailouts.
Many protesters said they paid their own way to the event
- an ethic they believe should be applied to the government. They say unchecked spending on things like a government-run health insurance option could increase infla•tion and lead to economic ruin.
Terri Hall. 45, of Starke, Fla .. said she felt compelled to
become political for the fir-.t time this year because she was
up-.et by government spending.
··our govemment has lost sight of the powers they were granted.'' she said. She added that the deticit spending \\'ali out of
control, and !-.aid she thought it was putting the country at risk.
Lawmaker~&gt; also supported the rally. Rep. Mike Pence,
aairman of the House Republican Conference. said
~ericans want health care reform but they don't want a
•
government takeover.
"Republicans, Democrats and independents are stepping
up and demanding.wc put our fiscal house in order," Pence,
of Indiana, told The Associated Press.
"I think the overriding message after years of bon·owing.
spending and bailouts is enough is enough."
Norman Kennedy. 64, of Charleston, S.C., said he wants
to send a mes~age to federal lawmakers that "America is
"deeply in debt." He said though he'd like everyone to have
free health care. he said there's no money to pay for it.
"We want change and we're going to get change.''
Kennedy said. "I want to sec fiscal responsibility and if that
means changing Congress that will be a means to that end.''

"

.

.'

~-,...---

, ..

ii&gt;unbap t!::imc£) -f&amp;rntinrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

$tooM-plus.broadband
•
•
map runs mto cost questions
•

BY PETER SVENSSON
AND JOELLE TESSLER
AP TECHNOLOGY WRITERS

WASHINGTON - The
national stimulus package
passed by Congress in
February may have been too
enthusiastic about spending
money on one particular
project: figuring out where
broadband Internet access is
available and how fast it is.
The $787 billion :.timulus
bill championed by the
Obama administration set
aside up to $350 million to
create a national broadband
map that could guide policies aimed at expanding
high-speed Internet access.
That $350 million tag struck
some people in the telecommunications industry as
exccssi vc. compared with
e~isting, smaller efforts.
The map \VOn 't even be
done in time to help decide
where to spend much of the
$7.2 billion in stimulus
m'oney
earmarked
for
broadband programs.
Now it appears the final
cost won't be as high as
$350 million - though just
how mud1 it will be is
unclear.
To ensure the mapping
AP photo
money is used ''in a fi:-.cally
In
this
Aug.
25,
2006
file
photo,
Joe
Keppner,
a
cable
splicer
prudent
manner.''
the
for
Canby
Telcom,
coils
up
fiber
optic
cables
that
carry
teleNational
Telecommunications and phone, high-speed Internet and IPTV to homes in a housing
Information Administration development in Canby, Ore. The stimulus package champisignaled Wednesda)
it oned by the Obama administration set aside up to $350 miiwould initiaJly spend more IJon to create i national broadband map. That struck some
than $100 million. and then people in the telecommunications industry as excessive.
reassess the program.
About two-thirds of t.: .S.
The agency, which is part a '"ridiculous" amount of
of
the
Commerce money to spend on a nation- homes alreadY. have broadband. It's avmlnble to manv
Department. said it has al broadband map.
Even $100 million might more, perhaps 90 percent
received requests for $107
million in funding for pro- be high. The firm could cre- homes. but the figure is
jects that would map broad- ate a national broadband uncertain because of the
band in individual states map for $3.5 million, and luck of authoritative nationover the first two years. The "would gladly do it for $35 wide studies. The cable
industry alone says it covstates want another $26 mil- million," Altman said.
Dave Burstein. editor of ers 92 percent of U.S.
lion for various purposes
over five years, including the DSL Prime broadband households.
When the Pew Internet
newsletter.
steps to encourage broad- industrv
band demand. On top of believes a reasonable cost and American Life Project
that, the .NTIA will have to for the map would be less surveyed people who didn't
have broadband in 2007 and
spend more money to col- lhan $30 million.
The map should reveal 2008:it found that most of
l late the statewide maps into
what most individuals them aren't interested in it,
I a national one.
But while the map should already know: whether their find the Internet too hard to
run much less than the $350 homes can get broadband, use. or don't have computmillion cap set by Con~ress, and how fa~t it is. Officiall), ers. Lack of available
the total still looks hke it the goal for the map 1~ to broadband was the th1rd
will be far higher than esti- help shape broadband poli- most common reason.
Still, there is concern
mates based on the costs of cy arrd determine where
smaller mapping programs best to invest government that the U.S. is falling
funds. It may also help con- behind other countries in
·in individual states.
shopping
for the reach and speed of its
In North Carolina, for sumers
Internet connections. and
instance, state broadband Internet service.
that this might hinder ecoHowe~er. the map won't
authority e-NC spends at
most $275,000 per year on be ready in time to influ- nomic growth. Advocates
ence the first round of of expanding broadband
maintainin~ a map of broadband availability in the broadband grants and loans also worry that some ruJal
state. detailed enough to list funded by the stimulus areas might never get highindividual
addresses, package. That money will speed Internet because seraccording to executive start going out this fall. And vice providers don't see ~
director
Jane
Smith the map likely won't be fin- ~~ayoff in extending their
ished before Februaty's hnes there.
Patterson.
Identifying those areas
Rory Altman, director at scheduled release of a
telecommunications con- natwnal broadband plan will be a major thru:-.t of the
sulting
firm
Altman being developed by the mapping project. The maps
Vilandrie &amp; Co., which has Federal Communications will show broadband availhelped clients map 4road- Commission. which ic; also ability, type (phone or
band a' ailabiJity in some mandated bv the stimulus cable, for example) and
.
speeds for each smaiJ clusareas, said $350 million was bill.

of

ter of homes. roughly
equivalent to a cit) block in
urban areas.
Each state':s grant for
mapping will go to either a
nonprofit or a government
agency. Internet service
providers have already
committed to handing over
data about where they have
broadband coverage. so the
main job will be to colle~o:t
and translate that infonnation into a map.
Mark Seifert, who is overseeing the broadband grant
and mapping program at
the ~TIA. offers several
reasons why the federal
government may spend proportionally more on mapping than some states. For
one thing. he said. most
efforts that have been done
in states have focused on
so-called "last-mile" connections that link homes
and businesses with the
broader infrastructure of the
Internet. The NTIA also
wants extensive data on that
behind-the-scenes Internet
infrastructure.
What's more, since much
of the mapping data will
come from phone and cable
companies. the f'..'TIA wants
the information to be independently verified - which
could involve knocking on
doors to confirm where
broadband is and is not
available and conductmg
other on-the-ground checks.
"You can spend less
money on a map ... but you
get what you pay for," he
:-.aid. '·Data costs money."
Although the map will not
be done in time to guide this
round of broadband funding
in the stimulus package, it
could prove useful for later
broadband deployment programs. And it could help set
priorities in the years ahead
for huge federal programs
such as the Universal
Service Fund and the Rural
Utilities Service. which
spend billions of dollar-.
annually to subsidize tele·
com services.
In addition to the !'ITIA's
mapping project, there ·s a
parallel push at the FCC to
gather more detailed data on
broadband
subscribers.
Both efforts are designed to
aid the 'Obama administra·
tion's goal of "data-driven
decision making'' in setting
telecom policy. said Colin
Crowell. a senior counselor
to FCC Chairman Julius
Genachowski.
"There is a voracious
appetite for all kinds of
broadband data,"
said
Crowell, who helped write
~he ~roadband mapping leg~
tslatwn as a staffer on a
House subcommittee overseeing telecommunications.
'·Policvmakers have been
wringfng their hands for
several ) ears that we don't
have accurate data on
broadband deployment and
adoption.''

Dangerous staph germs found at West Coast beaches
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Dangerous staph bacteria
have been found rn sand anti
water for the first time at
five public beaches along
the coast of Washington.
and scientists think the state
is not the only one with this
problem.
The germ is MRSA, or
met hi l' iII in- rc sis tan t
Staphylococcu~ aurcus - a
hard-to-treat bug once rarely
seen outside of hospitals but
that increasingly is spreading in ortlinar) community
settings such as schools.
locker rooms and gyms.
The germ cau~es nasty skin
infections as well as pneumonia and other life-threatening
problems. It spreads most!)
through human con!Hct. Little
is known about environmental sources that also mav harbor the germ.
•
Finding it at the heach sug-

gests one place that people
may be picking it up. said
I\farilvn Roberts, a microbiologist at the University of
Washington in Seattle.
"We don't know the risk'"
for any individual going to a
beach. she said. "But the
fact that we found these
organisms suggest:. that the
level is much higher than
we had thought."
She presented re"ults
Saturday at an Amencan
Society for .Microbiology
conference in California.
Last year. her team reported
finding a different type of
bacteria. enterococci. at fi\e
\\'est Coast beaches. And
earlier this year, University
of
Miami
researcher&lt;;
reported finding Maph bacteria in four out of JO ocean
water ~ampks collected by
hundreds of bather~ at a
South Florida beach.

Many communities also
commonly restrict bathing
at beaches becau~e of contammmion with fecal bacteria.
In
the
new
studv,
researchers tested I 0 beaches 111 Washington along the
West Coa-.t and in Pugct
Sound from Februarv to
Septe1nber 200R. Stuph.bactcria were found at nine of
them, including five with
~1RSA. The strains resembled the highl) re:.istant
ones usually seen in hospitals, rather than the milder
&lt;;trains acquired m community settings, Roberts said.
No staph wa~ found in
samples from t\"0 beaches

c-TAe

in southern California.
People should not avoid
beaches or be afraid to
enjoy them, scientists say.
"It's probably prudent to
shower when \OU come out''
to lower the.risk of bacteria
staying on the skin. said Dr.
Lance Peterson. a microhiologist
at
NorthShore
University Health System in
Evanston. lll.
"Make sure you get all the
sand off." and cover an~·
open cuts or scrapes before
pia) ing in the sand, Roberts
added. Digging in the sand
or bcin!! buried in it seems
to ratse the risk of infection.
she said.

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·~-.....-___..,__

. . . . . ----- . .- -----.. . ---·-p---.-- . ,. ------------------PageA6
Sunday, September 13, 2009

Ohio's farmers offer
Ohio high court: No
'free groceries for a year' hearing for death row inmate
IS

~OLU~B US
. Who
satd there ts n? such thm~ '!s
a free lunch? Not Oh10 s
farmers!
.
In fact, thanks m part to
the Ohio Soybean Council
(OSC) and . th~ soybean
chec~off, OhiO 1arn:crs arc
offenn~ the cha!JC~ lor co~sumers st~t~wtdc.: ~o ~tn
free grocene~ for bn::ak~ast,
lun~h. and dmner - f01 an
entire year!
"It's wonderful to be able
to come together as an
industry and offer consumers this opportunity."
said Allen Armstrong. a
Clark County soybean
farmer and OSC board member who is the featured soybean
farmer
on
FarmersFeedUS.org. "This
program allows us to show
Ohio consumers that we
share the Si\me values, which
is taking care of our families.
taking care of our land, crops
and animals and giving back
to our communities."
A
t
www.FarmersFecdUS .org.
Ohio residents arc able to

re~ister for three_ grand

pnzes of_ free grocenes for a
year. whtch has been valued
a~ $5,000. Upon vis~ting the
stte. consumers Will have
the. opportunity to meet
Ohto farmers and learn ho:-v
t~ey produce safe, nutnt10us:. and affordable fo~d.
The Site features beef, datry,
pork. Iamb. soybean, egg,
and turkey farmers from
across the state - each
sha_ring informati?n about
thetr farm and famtly.
"The website is highly
interactive. and gives people
the opportunity to learn fun
facts about Ohio agriculture.
including soybeans. while
registering to win the grand
prize," said Armstrong.
"Additionally, visitors to the
site can learn more about the
farn1ers by taking a brief
tour of each featured farm to
learn more about the farmer
and his family. This is a
great way to put a real face
on Ohio agriculture."
The Free Groceries for a
Year sweepstakes is open to ·
legal residents of Ohio who

are

years of age or older.

T~ree grand prize winners

wtll be selected in a random
drawing at the conclusion of
the promotion which ends
on October · 18, 2009.
Winners will be notified on
or about Oct. 25 via the email address or phone number provided during registration. Consumer~&gt; can register one time per day for
each of the s •v
f
.
featured on the s~~ armers
p . . . e ~I~•
arttclpatJ,n~ OhiO agncultur.~ group; mclude OSC.
OhiO . Farm.
. Bureau
Fe~e~~tlon, Oh1o_ L1vestock
Coahtt_on,
O~JO
Beef
Counc1l,
OhiO.
Po~k
Producers Counctl, Ohto
Sheep. .
Improvement
Assoc!at.lOn, Oh1o Po~hry
As~octation .. ~nd Am~ncan
Dauy Assoc1atton- M1deast.

COLUMBUS (AP) The Ohio Supreme Court
has rejected a death row
inmate's request to present
more evidence he says
could have changed the outcome of his trial.
Fifty-three- year-o I d
Romell Broom is scheduled
to die by lethal injection
Sept. 15 for the rape and

stabbing death of 14-)earold Trvna Middleton in
Clevelaitd in 1984.
The high court rejected on
Friday a lower coui1 's ruling that would have allowed
a hearing to consider
whether
investigators
shielded records. A~mong
the evidence Broom says
the state failed to disclose is

that Middleton and two witnesses used illegal drugs
and had a habit of lying.
Prosecutors say a fedet.
judge has already ruled t~
the evidence would not hav
made a difference at trhil.
A message left with
Broom's attorney was not
immediately returned on
Friday.

Ohio deputies injured in struggle with jail inmate
CINCINNATI (AP) Four Cincinnati-area sheriff's deputies were taken to
the hospital after struggling
with an inmate at the jail.
Hamilton County sheriff's spokesman Steve
Barnett says 18-year-old
inmate Brandon Jackson
became irate Friday after
talking with a jail visitor

and ripped three phones off
the wall.
Barnett says the four
deputies tried to take
Jackson to his. cell, but he
fought with them so violently that they had to place him
in a restraint chair.
One of the deputies suffered a broken hand. and
another had a deep bone

bruise on hts knee. Another
deputy suffered overexertion. and the fourth was
checked because he was spit
on in his face.

Subscribe today
446-2342 or 992-2155

Ohio Farm Bureau
Foundation offers ag grants
COLUMBUS
The
Ohio
Farm
Bureau
Foundation (Foundation)
invites community service
groups in rural. suburban
and/or urban settings, as
well as independent producers and agribusinesses to
apply for a series of grants
to fund programs highlighting agriculture and its
impact on the community.
The competitively awarded $1 ,000 to $3 ,000
Agricultural Action and
Awareness
Grants
are
designed to support programs and projects focusing
on agricultural education,
ecological and/or economic
development.
Since its creation in fall
2005. the program has
awarded more than $60.000
to community action organizations , schools, producer
organizations, non-profit
service
organizations.
neighborhood groups and
individuals.
"Agricultural Action and
Awareness Grants focus on
funding needs for smaller,
community-based groups
that often find the largerscale public and private
grant solicitation process
daunting,"
Foundation
President Jack Fisher said.

Grant application forms
and proposal instructions
may be downloaded at the
Ohio
Farm
Bureau
Foundation
Web
site.
www.OFBFoundation .org.
All completed forms and
proposals must be received
by Nov. 16. Participants
will be selected and awards
given in January 2010.
Small groups wanting to
gain better insight and experience in the grant planning
and solicitation process can
participate
in
the
Foundation's Community
Grantsmanship program.
The program helps local
or~amzations form Jeadershtp teams, complete a community needs assessment.
write a proposal, budget
resources and initiate the
planning required to fulfill
grant acceptance agreement
obligations.
"We have a great combination here." Fisher said.
"We have a source of funding available for small
groups, plus a process to
help get further involved in
grant solicitatic.:.1. funding
and program management."
Information on these pro- .
grams and more can be
fuund
~
www .OFBFoundation .org.

Local Briefs
Fire meeting
changed
CHESTER
Meigs
County Fire Association
meeting will be held at 7:30
p.m.• on Wednesday at the
Chester fire station. The
location has been changed.
The Rutland department will
host the October meeting.

Inspections set
POMEROY
Gallia/Meigs Community
Action
Agency
will
inspect child passenger
seats and booster seats
from I l a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Friday
at
Powell's
Foodfair. The car seat
inspections are offered at
no cost.

Local Weather
Sunday...Sunr.y. Highs in
the lower 80s. North winds
5 to 10 mph.
Sunday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Monday and Monday
night ...Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 80s. Lows in
the upper 50s .
Tuesday
through
Wednesday...Partly cloudy.

Highs in the lower 80s.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Wednesday
night ...Mostly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Thursday and Thursday
night ...Mostly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
70s. Lows in the upper 50s.
Friday.. .Partly sunny with
a 30 percent chance of showers. Highs in the upper 70s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.68
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 58.20
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 40.19
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.93
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.64
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 33.83
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) -

10.60
Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.09
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

5.47
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.81
Collins (NYSE) - 48
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.09
US Bank (NYSE)- 21.72
Gannett (NYSE) - 8.48
General Electric (NYSE)- 14.80
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 25.25
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.02
Kroger (NYSE) - 22
Umlted Brands (NYSE)- 15.71
Norlolk Southam (NYSE) - 49.23

1.866.MO JLITY

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Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

-26.22
BBT (NYSE) - 26.99
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 15.17
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.86
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.01
Rockwell (NYSE)- 43.15
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 4.79
Royal Dutch Shell - 58.60
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 63.84
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 51.03
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.03
WesBanco (NYSE)- 15.09
Worthington (NYSE)- 14.67
Dally stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for Sept. 1 0, 2009, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

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ccrromes A' Cl"er marks COOtained ~&lt;eren ~e h p-~e-ty of t!ler •espect';; OV.~!n

•

�Bl

Inside
The Scoreboard. Page H2
llRG Roundup, Page B3

PORTS

Jeter sets Yankees' hit record, Page B4
GAHS Athletic HOF inductee , Page US

Sunday, Septen,1ber 13, 2009

e The OVP Eastern rallies past
~coreboard
.

,Tartans for win, 20-18

Members of
the Eastern
football
team ring
the VICtOr'y
bell at East
Shade
River
S tadium on
Fnday mght
after the
Eagles' 2018 victory
over visiting
Sclotoville
East 1n a
Week3
football
contest at
Tuppers
Plains .

FRIDAY'S PREP
FOOTBALL S CORES

BY BRYAN WALTERS
take an 18 14 el gc with
BWA..TEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE,COM 4:49 Jeft in regulattOil.
The Green and White raiMeigs 39, River Valley 7
TUPPERS PLAINS - lied "' ath a one-) ard score
Southern 28, S. Gallia 6
Out~ade of the ~tars and with 2:28 remaining to take
!&gt;tripes
on the flag. is any a 20-18 lead, an ad\ antage
· ~astern 20, East 18
thing more patriotic in the the hosts would never
Ironton 39, Gallipolis 6
United States of America relin&lt;;tui'ih
than
the s\mbolism of the
The ''in was significant
~ahama 30, Watertord 0
eagle?
for Eastern for a handful of
Green 27, Hannan 14
With Patnot Day happen- reac;ons. First off. it as the
ing on Friday nignt at Eac:;t first two-game \\inning
Shade Ri' er Stadium. it streak. for the 'Eagles since
wac:; onl) fitting that the the 2004 campaign
Eastern football program when they went 7-3 and
pulled off one of its biggest finished that scasoh with
\\in-; this decade after rally- four o;traight victories.
ing for a 20-18 'ictory over
Eastern
Secondly.
vil'iitlllg Scioto' ille East hecame on ly the second
dunng a Week 3 non-c:on- team in the last 26 regular
:' BY ANDREW CARTER
fcrcncc gridiron matchup. season gam~:s to defeat the
SPORTS CORRE'SPONDE:NT
Bryan Walters
The Eagles (2-1) jumped Tartans - snapping their
/photo
ad'
anlage
at
out
to
a
14-7
nine-g,une
regular
seu&lt;&gt;on
• GALLIPOLIS - Ironton
Ironton on Fnda)' night the ~intermission. then sur- win ning streak in the
rendered II straight points process.
•
lemonal Field.
: And in l) pic{d Ironton in the fourth quarter to
Please see Eastern, 83
ff\shion. the Fighting 1igers allow the Tartans ( 2-1 ) to
P.iled up 487 ) ards of total
offense fnday Ill a 39-6 \\ m
over Gallia Academ\.
Keith Wct1cl paeed the
Ironton nt&lt;.,hing attack
,\•hich netted 440 ) ardc,
with 182 yards on 13 car
ries. He scored t\\ icc. on
runs of 12 yards and four
BY SARAH HAWLEY
) arcls in the second quarter.
MOSSPORTSOMYDAILVSE~TINEL.COM
· J.P. Taylor finished with
~2 )ards nt'&gt;hing and three
MERCERVILLE - With
scores. He returned a punt
a 28-6 win on Friday night
37 yards for Ironton's first
at Rebel Field the Southern
seore and had touchdo\\ n
Torn adoes ( 1-2) earned
rj.tns of eight yards and 21
their first victory of the
Y.ards in the third quarter &lt;ts
2009 season beating the
the Tigers pulled &lt;1\\ ay.
South Gallaa Rebels (0-3).
• Tres Wilk., ntshed for 9)
Southern now leads the all~ards on II &lt;.:atTics to round
time series by seven to six.
out Ironton's three-headed
Southern storn1ed out to a
running attack.
14-0 halftime lead and
Gallia Acadcm\ netted
never looked back. After a
169 totc11 yards. Ethan
scoreless first quarter.
:&gt;re wa~ 8-of-17 for 92
Southern capitalited off an
. He Sl:orcd the De' als'
interception in South Gallia
_
touchdO\\ n on a 1-yard
territor) scarring l\\ o pia) s
ntn. Jared Gravely led the
later on an eight yard touchI)e\ ils '' ith 45 yards ru'ihdown run up the right side
ing on 14 came&lt;.,.
b) Greg Jenkins. The failed
Jronton (3-0. 1.0 Sl·OAL)
two
point
con' er'sion
grabbed the lead at the 5 28
attempt left the \ isitors with
mark of the" first qum1er
a 6-0 lead.
when Ta) lor returned a punt
The en ... uing South Gallia
Bryan Walters/photo
37 ) ards to put the Tigers on
posse.,ion was ended by a
top 7-0. Gallia Academ) 's Wahama runningback Ryan Lee (15) outruns a pa1r of Waterford defenders during a third quarter touchdown run in Friday fumble recovered by Cody
Ethan Moore carne under mght's Week 3 gridiron contest against vis1tmg Waterford at Bachtel Field in Mason.
1 Counts of the Tornadoes.
heavy pressure as he
Takin~ over at the South
attempted a tugby-st) lc
Gal li&lt;\ 3H yard line,
punt that ended up being a
Southern took ti11·e~t plays to
llncdrivc to Taylor, who
score, capping off the dri vc
seemed surprised to find the
BY GARY CLARK
nes. The junior running Wahama defense that proved (c;aac Lee. i\ licatah Branch with a 44 yard touchdO\\ n
SPORTS coRRESPONDENT
back scored on runs of 24 to be the game breaker. The and Clay VanMeter picking pas~ from Dustm Salser to
ball in his hands.
- and five ) ardc:; \\ 1th Micaiah White Falcons defen~ivc off Waterford passe~.
The Tigeb. boosted their
Michael Manuel with I:17
Offensi\ ely penalties left in the first half. The t\\ O
MASON - Rvan Lee ran Branch adding a trio of shot1 unit dominated to ltmit
lead to 19 0 wrth a pair of
imprec:;si\ e dnves m the sec- for 93 yards and-two touch TD bursts ot one. one and Waterford to ju~t three first plagued the host team "ith point COil\ ersion attempt
ond quarter. Wetzel capped downs Ill the second half and three yards. Branch finished downc;. a mere 17 ) ards on the numerous WHS mas- \\as g6od on the run by
off an 89-y ard dnve \\ith a the Wahama White falcon the mght \\ ith 64 yards in 16 the ground and just 34 yards takes destro)' mg se\ erctl Sean
Coppick
g1ving
12-yard run at the I0:49 defensh e unit pitched a tries \\ hile sophomore Isaac through the air for a meager Falcon s.:orim~ opportuni- Southern the 14-0 lead
ties. WahanM~ \\as !lagged going mto the half.
mark. With had ntns of 45 shutout while yielding just Lee also ran for 64 yards in 51 )ard&lt;., of total offense.
I0 times on the mght for a
and
Micaiah
Branch
and 14 , ards. respectively, 51 ) ards of total offense only mne carries.
The third quarter ''as
to fuel -the long scoring Fnday night as Coach Ed
The gridiron 'ictory kept Colton McKinne) led the total of 90 yard with a num- marked by several penalties
march.
Cromley's Bend Area foot- the Wh1te Falcons 2009 win- locals defensl\ e charge with ber of those penalties trash- on both sidec:; of the ball.
Back to back fi, e ) ard
etzel broke off a 71- ball
eleven remained ning string intact at 3-0 on se\ en indivadual tackle&lt;; ing potential game-break
penalties left South Gnllia
. run on Ironton·s next unbeaten on the s~ason fol the year while the \i~iting apiece "ith Elij&lt;~h Honaker ing drhes.
Folio\\ mg ,1 "&gt;corele'\s fi r~t \\ ith a tirst and t\\&lt;enJy on
collecting five stops in addidnve, a 6-play. 92-yard lowing a 30-0 shutout \\in \\: ildcats dropped to 1-2.
The outing wuo; a hard-htt- uon to Robert Peyton and period the Whale Falcons got their own 26 )ard li ne.
•rharch that ended w1th over 'isiting Waterford.
Wctzcl scoring from four
Lee sparked a stumbling ting. physical experience on haac Lee w1th four each. on the board when Branch After faihng to convert a
yards out wath I :32 to pia) WHS offensive effort by fin- the part of both teams but in The Bend Area deten&lt;.,c also capped .1 short 27 ) ard, eight fir~t 9own. the punt from
in the first half.
ishing with a game high 115 the end it was a powerful intercepted three Wildcat
Please see Storm, 83
by
the aerials 1 the night '' ath Please see Wahama, 84
Gallia Academy (0-3, 0-1 yard mshing night on 12 car- pcrt'onnance
SEOA L&gt; took advantage of 1
------. the time remaining to quick
•
•
~ep.its way down the licld
for tis only touchdown of
the gnme. Austin Wilson got 1
the dlive rolhng with a 29BY DAVE HARRIS
Smatters' 43 yard punt
)!anl kickoff return that
SPORTS CORAESPONDE"lT
roll~d dead at the Meigs I0.
allowed the Blue De" ils to
-- -Smuh took the hand-off
~t up shop at their own 44.
POMEROY - Jerem) from Well, went around h1s
: Moore connected 011 3-ot- Smith rushed for 251 yards left en~ and ~ut back agamst
9. passes for 33 y.trds to pace in just 14 carries and three the gram g?!ng 9.0 yards for
tfle dri\e. He scrambled for touchdowns to lead the the score. r he kack ,vas no
seven yards to keep the Meigs Marauders to their good but the Marauder"
.t
first win of the 2009 season. ,. e"e on top 13 0
arive
alive at thef&lt; Ironton 10
'
.mcreased
- · the lead
•
• ,.
d
39-7 over the River Valley ' Mctgs
9
n~d hlt \\ tlson ~~.a -~ ar
Raiders. Smith scored on to 19-0 with 6:00 to go in
ptckup to the r tg~r&lt;&gt; 1· runs on four, 90 and 54 to the half. when Well hook.ed
~1oorc then bulled hts wa) power the maroon and gold up wath Culeh Dm is \\ ho
tpto the end zone hehm~ '~
Meigs threatened in their made a beauuful C&lt;~tch comt;ood push by the De\ tis first posse~&lt;.ion driving to pleting a 42 yard scoring
&lt;;!ffensive li_n7 '' ith 25.9 sec- the Raider ei~ht. but Smith pass
s remammg Ill the first fighting for extra yards fumThe Rmdcrs dro\e to the
to cut the Ironton lc~td bled and Harrv Smathers Meigs three ) arc! line with
• • Y-6.
'
recovered for River Valley time run nmg out in the half.
GA ll S
had
liiHHhcr at thctr own three. The a fourth and go&lt;t l pass from
opportunity to score c&lt;trlier Raiders drove to the 30 and Jacob Bro\\ n to Chad Smith
in the second quarter ''hen gambled for it on fourt h and was broken up by Z.1ch
defen1&gt;ive
lineman one. But the Marauder were Su)re in the end zone .111d
Nathaniel Gordon recov- ublc to holct. fi,e plays later the Marauders \\Cnt into the
ered a fumble by Wilks at Smath scored from four locker room at the half'' ith
the Ironton 37. GA HS drove yard., out. Jacob Well added .1 19 0 lead.
the ball down to the Ironton the extra points nnd the
Mctgs took the ball at the
W before the l·ighting Marauders went on top 7-0 46 ) .~rd line \\hen Colton
Bryan Walters/photo
Tigers' defense stiffened with I: 17 left in th,e period. Stewart fielded the Raiders
Meigs
runningback
Jeremy
Smith
(3)
eludes
a
R1ver
Valley
tackler
during
a second quarRher Valley punted to
Please
see
Meigs,
83
ter
run
1n
Fnday
mght's
Week
3
football
contest
at
Bob
Roberts
Field
in
Pomeroy.
Please see Devils, 84
start the second period and

.

Ironton claws
past Blue
~ Devils, 39-6
.

Tornadoes
storm past
Rebels, 28-6

Wahama stays .unbeaten, tames Wildcats, 30-0

Meigs rolls past Raiders

•

•

�------------------~·~~-,-.,.:nt

--· - - - -- -

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 13,

2009

The OVP Scoreboard
Smlth kick) 4'18

PREP FOOTBALL
Friday's Boxscores
~

Eastern 20,
Sciotoville East 18

• Sc1otovllle E
: Eastern

0
6

7 0 11 8. 0 6 -

18
20

Scoring summary
First Quarter
E-Kiint Connery 26 run (k•ck
•failed) 9·16
Second Quarter
SE-David Blair 9 run (John
: Garrett kick) 7;36
• E-Mike Johnson 65 pass from
: Brayden Pratt (run good) 6:05
Fourth Quarter
SE-Cody Belussi 5 pass from
Garrett (Garrott run) 11:14
SE-Garrett22 FG 4:49
E-Connery 1 run (pass failed)
2:28
: F•rst Downs
Rus.hes-yards
Passmg yards
Total yards
Comp-att-lnt
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

SE
nla
118
85
203
8·13-1
0·0

nla

E
nla
32-81
172
253
6-9-0
3-3
nla

•
Individual Statistics
.. Rushing: SE-Dav•d Bla1r 10-38.
E-Kllnt Connery 12·55, Kelly
Winebrenner 6-12, Ryan Shook 38. Brayden Pratt 11·6.
Passing: SE-John Garrell 8·13·1
85.
E-Brayden Pratt 6·9·0 172.
Receiving: SE-Ryan Bradford 2·
40,
' W-Mike Johnson 4·132, Kyle
Connery 1·35, Tyler Hendrix 1·5.

Wahama 30,Waterford 0
Waterford
Wahama

0 0
0 12

0 0 6 12 -

0
30

Scoring summary
Second Quarter
Wah-Mca1ah Branch 1 run (kick
failed) 11:14
Wah-Branch 1 run (pass fa1led)
2'49
Third Quarter
Wah-Ryan Lee 24 run (pass
failed) 4 20
Fourth Quarter
Wah-Branch 3 run (kick blocked)
11:17
Wah-Lee 5 run (kick felled) 8:16
Wat
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passmg yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles· lost
Penalties·yards

3
25·17
34
51
5·13-3
2·0
5-45

Wah
13
58-301
49
350
2·7-0
1·0
10·90

F1rst Downs
Rushes-yards
Passmg yards
Total yards
Comp-att-mt
Fumbles-lost
Penalt•es-ya•ds

RV
12
•
55-169
100
269
10-22-0
2-0
10-83

Brookville 42 Camden Preble Kent Roosevelt 28, Barberton 7
Mt. Gilead 25, Gal1on Northmor 7
Shelby 43, Ontano 14
Shawnee 18
Kenton 28, Lima Shawnee 19
Mt Orab Western Brown 34, SheiWOOd Fa•rv•ew 47 Archbold 37
Brunsw1ck 37, Massl'lon Perry 21
Kettenng Alter 27, St John's, D.C. Blanchester 16
S1dney Lehman 28, Lewistown
Bryan 43, Delta 14
12
Mt Vernon 41, Mansfield Madison lnd an Lake 0
Bucyrus Wynford 46 Howard E Kirtland 28, Pa1nesville Harvey 6
12
Simon Kenton Ky 56, Cm Shrader
Lafayette Allen E. 33 Spencerv•lle N. Can. Hoover 41, Lexington 20
21
Knox 10
Caldwell 20, Barnesv•lle 16
21
N. Olmsted 14, Lakewood 13
Solon 21, Mentor 17
Campbell Memonal 14, Youngs LaGrange Keystone 40, Oberun N. R•dgevtlle 28, Lodl Cloverleaf 21 Southeastern 39, Manchester 16
L1berty 6
Firelands 26
N. Royalton 27, Med1na Highland 24 Spong. Cath. Cent. 20, Spring NW
Can Cent. Cath. 35, Warrensville Lancaster 48, Cols Independence Napoleon 35, Bowl1ng Gmen 0
0
,
33
Hts. 0
Nelsonville-York 21, Sugar Grove Spring. Shawnee 26, Urbana 20,
Can. GlonOak 23, Green 0
Lancaster Fairfield Union 43, Berne Un1on 20
20T
Can. McK•nley 24, Umontown Lake Wtlllehaii-Yeartmg 0
New Carlisle Tecumseh 62, Springboro 41, P1qua 6
•
7
Lees Creek E. Clinton 21, Washington C.H Mram• Trace 0
Springfield 34, Vandalia Butler
New Matamoras Frontier 28, Lore St. Henry 42, New Bremen 0
Can. South 28, Ravenna 19
• Jamestown Greeneview 3
Leetonia 46, Vienna Mathews 6
Canfield 22, Dover 21 , 20T
St. Marys Memorla124, L1ma Bath 7
City Buckeye Trail14
Card•ngton·L.incoln 50, Morral LeipSic 28, Pandora·Gilboa 16
New Middletown Spring. 31, St. Paris Graham 48, Spring.
R•dgedalo 20
Lewis Center Olentangy 17, Lowellville 12
Kenton Ridge 7
Carey 31, Willard 0
Sunbury Big Walnut 0
Steubenville 39, E. Liverpool 22
New Phrladelphia 58, Marietta 7
Carlisle 54. Day. Oakwood 17
Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 24, New Washmgton Buckeye Cent. 52, Streetsboro 35, Mantua Crestwood
Plymouth 7
14
Carrollton 41, Ullnchsvllle Claymont Bellville Clear Fork 21
49,
0 •
Uberty Center 21, Metamora Newark Cath. 61, Lancaster Fisher Sugarcreek
Garaway
Gnadenhutten lnd1an Valley 14
Casstown M1am1 E 35, Unron City Evergreen 20
Cath. 0
Newark Lrck•ng Valley 6, Cambridge Sycamore Mohawk 26, Upper
MISSISSinewa Valley 13
Uma Cent. Cath. 55, Paulding 0
Chesapeake 39, WI ow Wood Lockland 55, New Lebanon Dixie 18 0
Sandusky 3
Symmes Valley 33, 30T
Logan 49, Cols. Hamilton Twp. 7
Newcomerstown 13, New London 6 Sylvania Southvtew 33. Tol. Start 2)
Chesterland W Geauga 57, London 39, Spring. NE 34
Newton Falls 35, W1ndham 6
Thomas Worthmgton 32, H1lhard
Eastlake N. 20
Lorain Clearview 21, Falrv~ew 13
N1les McKinley 14, Akr. Coventry 12 Bradley 0
Thornville Shendan 45, Now
Onk Hill 42, Ironton Rock Hill 8
Chillicothe 42, W1lm•ngton 20
Lou•sv•lle 12, Akr. Hoban 3
C•rclev1lle 41, Williamsport Westfall Louisville Aqu1nas 28, Smithville 14 Oberlin 46, Akr. Kenmore 10
Concord John Glenn 14
Tiff n Calvert 37, Elmore Woodmon:~
34
Loveland 24. Cin. McNicholas 8
Orange 24, W1ckhffe 21
C1rclev•lle Logan Elm 35, Chi 1cothe Lyndhurst Brush 48, Tol. Scott 0
Orrv~lle 32, Copley 13
20
Zane Trace 21
Magnolia Sandy Valley 34, R1ttman Orwell Grand Valley 23, N. Jackson T1pp City Tippecanoe 21. MJitonClarksville Clinton-Mass•e 10, Pla1n 22
Unron 7
JaCkSon·MIIton 8
C1ty Jonathan Alder 9
Malvern 35, E. Can. 28
Ottawa-Glandorf 21, Defiance 14
Trenton Edgewood 55
Da¥
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 38, Mansf•eld Sr. 31, Manon Hardrng 15 Parma 29, Berea 7
Meadowdale 12
Lucasv1lle Valley 26
Maple Hts. 46, Parma Hts. Valley Parma Normandy 37, Brecksville- Tro~ood-Madtson 42 Lebanon 35
Coldwater 25, Versailles 14
Forge 0
Broadvtew Hts. 8
Tuscarawas Cent. Cath 62, Marion
Cols. Afncentrtc 54, Portsmouth Manon Elgfn 49 Caledoma River Parma Padua 23, Strongsville 17
Cath. 18
Notre Dame 12
Valley 20
Pataskala L•cking Hts. 41, Ashvllle Twinsburg 21, Aurora 14
Cols.
Crusaders
41,
Cols Martins Ferry 28, Cadiz Harrison Teays Valley 0
' Van Wert 21, Elrda 17
Centenn 1at o
Cent. 7
Pataskala Watkins Memonal 54, Vincent Warren 31, Parkersburg
Cols. DeSales 13, New Albany 6
Massillon Tuslaw 40, Doylestown Medway, Ontario 20
South, W.Va. 28
.
·
Cols. East 28,. Cols. Briggs 15
Chippewa 16
Philo 36, New Lexington 16
W. Lafayette R1dgewood 49,
Cols.
Eastmoor
54,
Canal Massillon Washington 31. Stow- Pickerington Cent. 28, Westerville Warsaw River View 6
Winchester Harvest Prep 0
Munroe Falls 14
N. 0
W. Unity Hilltop 33, Holgate 2
Cols. Hartley 42, Cols. Bexley 14
Maumee 48, Tol. Bowsher 12
Wadsworth 22, Medina 9
Pickerington N. 43, Cols. Mifflin 0
Cois. Linden McKinley 42, Cols. Mayfield 31, Olmsted Falls 6
Piketon 19, McDermott Sc1oto NW 7 Wahama, W.Va. 30, Waterford 0
South 26
McComb 45, Van Buren 6
Poland Seminary 41, St. Thomas Wapakoneta 21, Celina 20
Cols. Marion-Franklin 34, Cols McDonald 21, Mineral Ridge 8
Moore, Ontano 7
Warren Champion 12. Connea.
Northland 14
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 48, Pomeroy Meigs 39, Bidwell River Warren Howland 58, St. Jea
Defiance Tinora 0
Cols. Ready 24, w Jefferson 21
Valley 7
Brebeuf Secondary, Ontario 0
Cots. St Charles 15, Cols. 1 Mechanicsburg 49, Bellefontaine Portsmouth 68, Wheelersburg 14
Washmgton C.H. 40, Frankfort
Beechcroft 13
Benjam•n Logan 13
Adena 14
Portsmouth W. 34 S. Point 14
Cols Watt&amp;rson 16, Reynoldsburg Mentor Lake Cath 35, Youngs Powell Olentangy Liberty 31, Wauseon 38, Swanton 21
14
Ursuline 21
Delaware Hayes 0
Waverly 26 Wellston 21
Co!s. West 42, Fatrport Harbor Middleburg Hts. Midpark 20, Lora1n Proctorville Fa•rland 52, Tols1a, Wellsville 44, Ltsbon Dav1d
Hard1ng 6 •
Southview 7
WVa 14
Anderson 7
Columbia Stat1on Columbia 47,, M•ddlef1eld Cardinal 41, Thompson Racme Southern 28, Crown City S. Westery;lle Cent. 17, Canal
Newbury 6
Ledgemont 21
Galha 6
Winchester 13
Columbiana 37, Struthers o
M•ddletown 61, Uma Sr 7
.. Rayland Buckeye 64, Bellaire 33
Westerville
S.
17
Claytoo
Northmont 7
Columbiana Crestv•ew 16, Zoarvl'le Middletown Fenwick 63, Oxford Read1ng 27, Cm. Purcell Manan 7
Tuscarawas Valley 14
Talawanda 28
ReedsVIlle Eastern 20 Portsmouth Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 64,
Cortrand Lakev~ew 28, Geneva 7
Middletown Madison· 26, Cm Sctotovtlle 18
Tontogany Otsego 7
Cory-Rawson 20, Dolo Hardin Finneytown 10
R•chfleld Revere 14, Alliance 12
Williamsburg 21
Cin
Clark
Northern 13
M1lan Ed1son 44, Wellington 6
Richwood N. Union 30, Sparta Montessori 6
Cos~octon 41, Millersburg W. M•lford 27, Batavia Amelia 14
H•ghland 14
Wintersville lnd1an Creek 32, Oak
Holroes 17
Milford Center Fairbanks 28, N Rocky River 23 Westlake 17, 20T
Glen. W.Va. 6
Crestline 14, GreenWICh S Cent 0
Lewisburg Triad 10
S Charleston SE 31 London Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 54,
Madison Plains 24
Hannibal River 7
Creston Norwayne 17, Colhns Millbury Lake 21, Rossford 6
Western Reserve 13
Minerva 28, Navarre Fairless 7
Salem 28, Beloit W. Branch 26
Wooster 42, Akr. Eifel 26
Crooksville 32. Corning M•ller 0
Minford 57, Chillicothe Huntington 6 Salineville Southern 28, Toronto 0
Worthington Kilbourne 9, Dublm
Cuyahoga
Falls
CVCA
6, Mogadore Field 28. Canal Fulton Sandusky Perkins 35, Norwalk 3
Scioto 7
·
Leavittsburg LaBrae 2
Northwest 7
Sandusky St. Mary 43. Ashland Xenia 23, Bellbrook 20
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 42, Monroe 41, Germantown Valley Mapleton 27
Zanesville 28, Wheeling Park. W.Va,
Bedford 14
View 26
Sarahsville
Shenandoah
27, 0
CuyahogaHts.49, BurtonBerksh1re! Monroeville 32. Attica Seneca E Byesville Meadowbrook 12
Zanesville
Maysville
14,
0
26, OT
Shadyside '14, Lmsly, W.Va. 12
McConnelsville Morgan 7
Dalton 44, Can. Timken o
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 42, Sheffield Brooks•de 36, Tol Zanesville
Rosecrans
25,
Day Cham~nade.Jut•enne 47, Day. j R•dgeway Ridgemont 7
Strasburg-Franklin 7
Woodward 0
Pomtz Tech 6
Day Dunb"ar 21, Cots Wnetstone 20
Day Thurgood Marsha! 62, Day.
Jefferson 14
Defiance Ayersvlile 21 Lima Perry
Sternwheel Riverfest

M
10
28-339
68
407
5-6-0
2-2
5-49

Individual Statistics
Rushing: RV- Tyler Sm1th 28-144,
Austm Davies 4·17, Cody McAvena
5·17, Jacob Hefner 3-0, Jacob
Brown 15·(·9)
M- Jeremy Smith 14·251, Cody
Laudermilt 5-67, Taylor Gilkey 4·9,
Dillon Boyer 1·6, Billy Duvall 1·5,
Just1n Ellis 1·3, Chris Jones 1-(·1),
Jacob Well1·(-1 ).
Passing: RV-Jacob Brown 10·220 100 yards.
M- Jacob Well 5-6-0 68 yards.
Receiving: RV- Trey Noble 3·56,
Chad Smith 3·34, Cody MeAvena 110, Jacob Hefner 1-0.
M- Caleb Dav1s 1-42, Cameron
Bolin 1-7, Jeremy Sm1th 1-6, Cody
Lauderm•lt 1-(·6).

Prep ~cores
WEST VIRGINIA

I

Bluef•eld 40, Greenbner East 0
Braxton County 21, Philip Barbour
14
Bndgeport 42, Lewis County 7
Cabell Midland 28, Winfield 14
Calhoun County 29, Doddridge
County 6
Cap1tal 42, Princeton 10
Clay-Battelle 47, Paden City 16
East Hardy 31, Clear Spring, Md. 17
Elkins 27, Preston 26
Fairmont Sen1or 31, Morgantown 14
Fort Hill, Md. 29, Keyser 8
Frankfort 42, Grafton 7
Franklin Furnace Green, Ohio 27,
Hannan 14
George Washington 42, N1tro 7
Greenbrier West 27. Independence
6
Grundy, Va. 49, Matewan 12
Hampshire 33, Berkeley Spnngs 25
Hurley, Va. 34, Burch 0
Iaeger 16, Mount Hope 14
.James Monroe 55, Oak Hill 0
James Wood, Va. 35, Musselman
14
Jefferson 40. Broad Run, Va 7
Uberty Raletgh 20, PikeV1ew 19
Ltncoln 29, Tucker County 26
Uncoln County 13, Sissonville 12
Magnolia 84, Tyler Consolidated 0
Man 20, Wests1de 14
Martinsburg 20 Thomas Johnson,
Md 15
Meadow Bridge 42, Midland Trat 12
Moorefield 31, Oakland Southern,
Md. 18
Mount View 26, Big Creek 0
Mountain
Ridge,
Md.
30,
Hedgesville 7
Nicholas County 11, East F81rmont

I
j

Individual Statistics
Rushing: Wat-Dean Miller 6-19
Levi McCutcheon 8-7, Jacob Kelly o
1·2, Matt West 7·0, Trevor Lang·3-(· Notre Dame 51, Cameron 0
11).
Parkersburg Catholic 35, St. Marys
Wah-Ryan Lee 12·115, Isaac Lee o
9·64, M1ca1ah Branch 16·64, Clay Pendleton County 32, Pocahontas
VanMeter 1·18, Trenton Gibbs 1-12, 1 County 7
lack Warth 4·10. Zack Wamsley 3· P1ke Co. Central, Ky. 67, Tug Valley
9, Anthony Grimm 3·8 Elijah 0
o
•
Honaker 2·7, W1lham Zuspan 6·(·6). Poca 56, Buffalo 16
Passing: y.tat-nevor Lang 5-13·3 Proctorville Fa.rland, Oh1o 52, Tols a Delaware Buckeye Val ey 23,
34.
14
Manon Pleasant 14
Wah-W1Iham Zuspan 2·6·0 49, 1 Ravenswood 61, Roane County 14 Delphos St Johns 48, M1nster 6
R1Chmond Edison Oh1o 20, We1r 13 Dresden Tn-Valley 35 Zanesvtlle W.
Trenton G1bbs 0-1-0 0.
• Receiving: Wai-Chns Townsend Richwood 48, Fayetteville 34
Musk1ngum 19
Dub',
Coffman
33
Cols
• 1-14 Dean M1ller 2·10, Lev1 R play 34 St Albans 7
Brook.,aven 0
• McCutcheon 1·6, Colton Brown 1-4. R•tch1e County 22 Clay County 13
• Wah-Ehjah Honaker 1-37, Cohn Robert C Byrd 28. North Manon 21 Edgerton 20 Ore~Jon Stntcn 10
P1erce 1·12
Scott 32 ChapmarlVI e 8
Euchd 48 W•toughby S 45
Shady Spnng 2.1 Summers County Fa1rborn 20. Troy 6
Ironton 39,
13
'
Fmdlay 24, Cols. Upper Arlington 7
1 F•ndlay L1berty-Benton 24, Arlington
Gallia Academy 6
Shadys1de, Oh1o 14 Llnsly 12
Ironton
7 12 13 7 - 39 Sherando, Va. 41, Washington 0
7
: Galha
0 6 0 0 6 South Charleston 45. Parkersburg Franklin Furnace Green 27,
24
Hannan, W.Va. 14
Scoring summary
South Harrison 32, Tygarts Valley Fredencktown 42, N. Robinson Col.
First Quarter
11
Crawford 13
't-J.P. Taylor 37 punt return (Keith
Spring Valley 31, Hurricane 7
Fremont Ross 49, Tiffin Columbian
Wetzel kick) 5:28
University 35, Buckhannon-Upshur 35
•
Second Quarter
7
Gahanna Cols. Academy 61. '
I- Keith Wetzel 12 run (k1ck failed)
Centerburg 15
Valley Fayette 30, Van 0
• 10:49
Valley Wetzel 40, Hundred 6
Gahanna Ltncoln 14, Mason 3
I- Keith Wetze14 run (run failed)
Oh•o
31, Galion 37, Bucyrus 29
V1ncent
Warren,
• 1:32
Garf1eld His 28, Parma Hts Holy
Parkersburg South 28
G-Ethan Moore 1 run (kick failed)
Wahama 30, Waterford, Ohio 0
Name 14
•.25
I Garfrerd H1s. Tnnity 21, Akr. East 0
Wayne 49, Herbert Hoover 20
Third Quarter
Webster County 54, L•berty I Garrettsville Garf1eld 37, Andover
1-J.P Taylor 8 run (Ketth Wetzel
Hamson 26
Pymatuning Valley 0
•kick) 7 42
Williamson 42, Twin Valley, Va. 7
Genoa Area 62, Port Clinton 7
1-J.P Taylor 21 run (k1ck blocked)
Wintersville Indian Creek. Ohio 32, 1 Girard 28, Warren JFK 6
3"03
Oak Glen 6
1 Glouster Tromble 52, Be pre 25
Fourth Quarter
W1rt County 75, Gilmer County 14
Goshen 36 Batav•a Clermont NE 7
1-Enn Edens 3 run (Ketth Wetzel
Woodrow Wilson 17, Riverside 6
Grafton M1dV1ew 21
Medrna
: kick) 11 •30
Zanesv1lle, Ohio 28, Wheeling Park Buckeye 14, 30T
'
0
Granv•lle 48, Cols Grandview Hts. 7
G
I
Greenfield McCia•n 26, Bainbndge
Ftrst Downs
19
8
OHIO
Pa1nt Valley 20
51-440 31·77
Rushes-yards
Grove City Chnsllan 24, Danville 14
47
92
Passmg yards
Ada 56, Columbus Grove 28
Groveport-Mad son 35, Dublin
169
487
Total yards
Albany Alexander 55, Chillicothe Jerome 20
8-19-0
• Comp-att-int
2·2-0
Hamrlton 31, Cin Taft 27
Umoto 15
r Fumbles-lost
1·1
4·3
Alliance Marlington 54, N. Lima S. 1 Hamilton Badtn 14, Hamilton Ross
'6-25
5·50
• Penalties-yards
Range 7
7
2·35 5 8-27.5
:Punts
Amanda-Ciearcreek 16, Baltimore Hamler
Patrick
Henry
48,
Montpelier 6
Liberty Union 10
Individual Statistics
Amherst Steele 42, Vermilion 14
Harrison 49, Kings Mills Kings 28
·Rushing: I-Ke1th Wetzel13·182·2, Anna 56, Ft. Recovery 28
Hav1land Wayne Trace 14, Convoy
'rres Wilks 11·93, J P. Taylor 9·62-2, Ansonia 44, New Paris National Crestview 12
• Brian Warner 5·31, Erin Edens 5· Trail 0
Heath 41, Utica 27
• 20-1 . Ethan Preston 1·20, Laron Antwerp 34, Tol. Ottawa Hills 20
Hicksville 49, Edon 8
: Beach 3·12, Coday Jones 1·3, Tyler Arcadia 27, Vanlue 20
Highlands, Ky. 21 C1n. Withrow 0
• Hager 2·14, Michael Lawless 1·3.
Ashland 45, Tallmadge 7
Hilliard Darby 33. Newark 0
• G-Jared Gravely 14-45,, Austrn Ashland Crestview 49, Lucas 7
H11lsboro 31, Rtvers•de Stebbins 14
• W1lson 4·14, Nate Allison 5·13, Athens 41, Bloom-Carroll ,14
Hubba•d 43, Ravenna SE 7
Ethan Moore 4·3·1, Brandn Taylor Avon 21, Lorain Adm1ral Kmg 14
Hudson 20, Massillon Jackson 10
2·1, Joel Johnston 1·0, Zach Tackett Avon Lake 48, Elyna 15
Hunting Valley University 31,
1-1
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 41, Chardon NDCL 3
Passing: 1-Ethan Preston 1·1-0· Northwood 22
Independence 48, Rocky R1ver
• 17-0, Tommy Wagmger 1·1·0·30-0. Batav1a 35, Ham1lton New M1am1 13 Lutheran W 6
r G-Ethan Moore 8·17-0·92·0, Tyler
Ironton 39, Gallipolis Galha 6
Bay V1Uage Bay 34, Tol. Ubbey 8
: Eastman 0-2·0-0·0.
Beavercreek 28, Sidney 13
Jackson 42, McArthur V.nton
• Receiving; 1-J P Taylor 1·17, Bellefontaine 21, Marysville 19
County 16
Trav•s Elliott 1·30.
Bellevue 25, Clyde 17
Jefferson Area 20 Brookfield 14
G-Kyle Dmgess 3·33 Jared Belmont Umon Local 19, St Jeromesvtlle
H•llsdale
35
Gravely 2·26, Austin Wilson 2·21, Clairsville 16
Loudonville 13
_
Tyler Eastman 1·12
Berlin Center Western Reserve 28 Johnstown
Northndge
24
Southington Chalker 0
M•llersport 7
Meigs 39, River Valley 7
Beverly Ft. Frye 20 Stewart Federal Johnstown-Monroe 42, Hebron
• R Valley
o 0 0 7 - 7 Hocktng 18
Lakewood 6
~ MeigS
7 12 20 0 - 39 Bloomdale Elmwood 14, N Kansas , Lakota 38
Castalia
Baltimore 6
Margaretta 28
Scoring summary
First Quarter
R&amp;R's
M-Jeremy Smith 4 yard run,
(Jacob Well kick) 1:17
Second Quarter
M-Smlth 90 yard run (kick failed)
10:58
• M-Ca!eb Davis 42 yard pass from
• Well (pass failed) 6'00
•
Third Quarter
M-Smlth 54 yard run (pass failed)
11:48
M-Juslln Ellis 3 yard run (Well
kick) 2'49
M-Cody Lauderm1lt 22 yard run
• (Well kick) 1.23
:
Fourth Quarter
: RV-Tyler Smith 3 yard run (Ty er

" Rally by the River''
Sd1edule of Events
St.•ptcmhcr 17, 18, 19,2009
l)omcro) , OH Amphitheater

I

I

•

Thursday, September 17, 2009
6.00 p m Opening Ceremony Drev. \\ebster Post, American Lcg10n
6· 30 p m Ftre Truck Parade
7.00 p.m. Pubhc Crntse- Spon~ored by: Lad1c~ nf the :vfeigs Count) Republican Part)
7•0() p m. Entertatnment • Sull Stanctmg

Friday. September 18,2009
10:00 AM -10·00 P\1 Craft &amp; Food Vendor~ Open
l :00 P..\1. ~leigs High School Band
'
3.00 P~\1.- 4:00 P_\1. Public Cruise
5.00 P.i\1.- 6:00 P..\1. Entertamment We'\e Got Talent (Qu.;liftcallon mund)
6·00 P \I -8:00P.M Entertamment ·Southern Accent
6·30 P.M.- 8: mP..\1 Pubhc Cru1se • Spon,ored b.&gt; Metgs County Chamber of Commerce
8.00 P.M.· 10:00 P.~l I:.nterta•rnnent SIMBA
S:30 P.M.· 9:30P.M. Pubhc Crutse
10:00 PM .• 12:00A \1 EntencunnlC'nt ·One Knight Stand
10:00 P~\1.- 11.00 PM

P~obhc Crnt

. ~~
-\

~

COME AND
ZENJOY THE FUN.

c ••

~~'-'

Saturday. September 19,2009
8:00A~\t

- 2:00P..M.Chth Cook oft (\\loners v.•ll be announced at 12:45 P.\!1
9·00 am -9:00 P~l. Crall &amp; Food \endor; Open
10:00 .r.. M... 2 OKids Boun\.e Acti\ ities (rrce ~\ent-Ail Kids Welcome)
11:00 A_\1.- 12.00 ~oon- Chalk Dr.l\\ ing Conte't sponsored b~ Bob E'an' Re,taurant, .\1a~on (K1d' 12 &amp;
Under meet ut the upper 'rage area.)
11·00 A ...\ I. Line Throwing Contest (Meet m front of the upper ~tage area)
1.00 P.,\1.- 3:00 P..\1.Entenamm.:nt- Firemen\ R1\er Res~ue
3:00 P \1. ('om Hole Tourn.1m.:nt (S1gn up nt the Htg Tent unttl 2:30 P..\1.)
3:30PM. 4:30 P.~l. cnte11:unmen1 IQualilication) "We've Gnt !alent"
4:00 PST. Public Cruise ••
4:00 P.\1 ·4:45P.M. Ducky Derby Race· Sponson:d by the Pomeroy Retail Merchants
4:00 P..\t .. 6:00 P..\1. "'Bad Idea" Alct)hol, 'lbbacco &amp; Other Dntgs ·Sponsored b) Health Reco\'er)
Sen·ices Kids' Education, Games &amp; Activities (!.ower parkmg lot· free all kids welcome.)
4:00 P..\1 - 6:00 P..\1. bmenaiumem
5:30 p_\1 -6:30 P.M."Emertainment "We''e Got T••Jent"' $$(Final- roundJ
5.30 P.\1 -6:30P.M. Publtc Crntse ••
7:00 P.\1 -8:00P.M. Men's SeX) Leg's Contest SSS (Cash Prizes &amp; Trophies)
7.00 PM - 10:00 P.M Teen Dance DJ. Rockm' Regg1e on the lo\\er Parkmg Lot
8:00PM.· 10:30 PM Entenamment-lnsured Sound
8:00PM • 10:00 P.M Fireworks Crutse
9:00PM Fireworks
10.30 P.~ I. - 1'2:30 A~1. hntcnamment Paul Doeflmger
•• TicketS a\ailable tor all crnl~es Jtthc Stemwheel Rt\erfcst tent.
$6 00 per per on ( 13 &amp; over) $4.00 per cluld ( 12 &amp; under)

~
~

l

DON7 FORGfT TO
ADOPT YOUR DUCK
FOR THf
•
DUCK DfRBY RACf

~AT4PM

Fire\\Orh crui,e $10.00 per person
Times .tnd Events arc subjeCt to change

Lunch wtll be scr\cd :u tlu: l'nmt) Church 1'1111rsda), l·rida) and Saturday.

•

•

�Sunday, September 13,

.

Rio Grande Roundup

.RedStoriD women gain first win
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
• RedStorm women's soccer
team came away with their
rst victory of the 2009 sean on Thursday evening at
. van Davis Field against
visiting
Ohio
Valley
'University. The RedStonn
, attacked the offensive end
: early and often and scored a
· 4-0 win in the home opener.
· Rio Grande ( 1-2) was able
. to get on the board early in
the game when sophomore
· forward Jessica Preston
(Jackson. OH) beat OVU
. goaltender Ahbi Menear to
give the RedStom1 a 1-0
• lead in the 7th minute.
. Freshman
mid-fielder
Candace Chapman (Jackson.
: OH) was credited with an
• assist on the play. This
: would be the only goal Rio
: would need on the night , but
; were not finished scoring.
· • Rio pushed the lead to 2-0
: in the 23rd minute when
: Chapman notched her first
collegiate goal.
Senior
defender Sarah Rice (Enon,
OH )
assisted.
The
edStorm took the 2-0 lead
halftime.
•
Rio had two other golden
: scoring coonce!i turned away
by Mcnear in the first half.
The RedStonn put the
game on ice with markers in
the second half. Freshman
. Erica Feeman (Bremen. OH)
scored her first collegiate
· goal in the 63rd minute.
, Fellow freshman Mandi
Thoma
(Ontario.
OH)
• gained
an
assist
on
Feeman 's goal.
' Rio closed out the scoring
with an unassisted goal from
freshman defender Jordan
Rutan (Galloway. OH) in the
• 68th minute.
The Rio coaching staff
· was able to play all three
goalkeepers in the game
with starter Kaitlyn Schultz
I

I

I

squad had a tough night on
the
road.
Wednesday
evening losing two matches
to Mid-South Conference
favorite and NAIA No. 6
Georgetown College. Both
matches lasted only three
games and the Tigers won
bv scores of 7-25, 10-25 and
20-25 in the first match and
22-25. 7~25 and 16-25 in the
second match.
Rio Grande (4-4, 2-2
MSC) was led by freshman
outside hitter Whitney Smith
(Albany, OH) with four kills
in first match. Junior Iibera
Jacquie Whittle (Chillicothe,
OH) led the defense with
eight digs. Junior setter
Ashley Bloom (Columbus,
OH) handed out 10 assists
and junior middle blocker
Rachel Walker (Ironton,
OH) had two solo blocks.
Georgetown (9-0, 4-0
MSC) was led by Erica
Janszen with 14 kills and ll
digs while Amanda Philpot
registered a, match-high, 32
assists.
In the second match.
things weren't much better
the
RedStorm.
for
Freshman Erin Sherman
(South Webster. OH) led the
way with eight kills while
Bloom posted eight assists
and Smith topped the defensive effort with eight digs
followed by sophomore
Kristen Cassady (Logan.
OH) with six digs.
The Tigers were led by
Cassie Moore with nine kills
and Elizabeth Goodin distributed 31 assists.
ReoSTORM WOMEN DROP
Rio will return home for
MSC TWINBILL
MSC
match next
an
Wednesday, September 16
versus West Virginia Tech.
GEORGETOWN. Ky.
The University of Rio The match will start at 6
Grande RedStom1 volleyball p.m.

(Plain City. OH) recording
two saves and sophomore
Bobbie
Fitzpatrick
(Cincinnati. OH) had one
save.
Freshman Hannah
Riffel (Circleville. OH) did
not face a shot attempt in 31
minutes .
Menear posted l J saves
for Ohio Valley University
(0-6).
"We've been working
very hard on getting the girls
to shoot more. I believe we
had 24 shots today. so we're
pretty pleased with that."
said Rio Grande head coach
Amber Olivet:. "It also gave
us an opportunity to see a
couple of different girls up
top that haven't had the
chance so far this season."
"We were very pleased
with the girls. very pleased
with the win,'' Oliver added.
"Everyone had a good -game,
they all played well and we
were able to work on things
that we needed to address."
Oliver thinks this will give
her team some confidence
heading into the Bluefield
College contest next week.
'·Definitely. we are glad to
get this win after losing our
first conference game last
Saturday:· she said. "It's
great to get this. get the
girls· confidence up as we
head into the rest of the season."
Rio and Bluefield will tangle at Bluefield College,
September 16. Kick-off is
set for 5 p .m.

Ohio high school football players
1uspended over offensive poster
UPPER
ARLINGTON
(AP) An Ohio high
school says nine football
players are seen making
offensive hand gestures on
a team poster, so they've
been suspeuded for o ne
game.
The poster of the Upper
Arlington football squad

was displayed by businesses in the Columbus suburb.
Store owner Tom Capuano
says· he noticed passersby
pointing at the picture. but
he assumed they knew
members of the team.
Upper Arlington High
School
Principal
Kip
Greenhill says the nine

players will sit out Friday
night's home game against
Findlay High School, from
northwest Ohio.
Greenhill calls the punished teammates "really
good kids who made a bad
decision." He says they didn't realize how offensive
their action could become.

Eastern

successful two-point conversion and a 15-14 lead.
Eastern fumbled on its
ensuing possession , which
allowed the Tartans to take
over possession inside the
Eagles I 0-yard line : East
added to its lead with 4:49
left in the regulation when
Garrett connected on a 22yard field goal for an 18-14
edge.
Eastern . however. took its
next possession and went 66
yards for the winning score
- which came at 2:28 of
the fourth on a fourth-andgoal at the one as Connery
plunged in from a yard out.
giving the Eagles the 20-18
decision.
East's final drive wa~
thwarted
when
Tyler
Hendrix picked off a pass by
Garrett, allowing the hosts
to simply run the clock out.
Eastern accumulated 253
yards of total offense. 50
more than East's total of

203. The Eagles had 81
rushing yards on 32 carries
and also had 172 passing
yards. The Trutans mustered
only 85 passing yards and
118 rushing yards.
Connery led the rushing
attack with 55 yards on 12
carries. followed by Kelly
Winebrenner with a dozen
yards on six totes. Blair
paced the Sciotoville East
ground game with 10 carries
for 38 yards.
Pratt was 6-of-9 passing
for I 72 yards in the win,
while Garrett finished the
night 8-of-13 for 85 yards
and
one
interception.
Johnson led the Eagle wideouts with four catches for
I 32 yards, while Ryan
Bradford had two catches
for 40 yards for the guests.
Eastern returns to action
Friday when it travels to
Cheshire for a Week 4 nonconference matchup with
River Valley. at 7:30p.m.

from Page Bl
Finally. and most importantly. the young Eagles
were able to overcome a
minus-two in the turnover
column and still come away
with the big triumph · something that the home
owd was definitely getting
hind as the night proessed.
· Eastern started the scoring
. with 9:16 showing in the
: first quarter, as Klint
Connery gave the hosts a 60 lead on a 26-yard run to
: paydirt.
: The score stayed that way
· .. until the second quarter.
· when David Blair gave the
' Tartans their first lead of the
night at 7:36 on a nine-yard
score for a 7-6 edge.
Eastern quickly countered
on their next possession as
Mike Johnson hauled in a
65!yard scoring pass from
Brayden Pratt to make it a
· 14-7 contest with 6:05 left
. in the first half. EHS which had both first-half
· turnovers
took that
: seven-point advantage into
the half.
The third quarter was
scoreless, but the Tartans
broke the second-half scor. · g drought in the fourth
en Cody Bclussi hauled
•
a 5-yard TO pass from
John Garrett at the I I: 14
mark - cutting the deficit
to 14-13.
A botched hold on the
extra point turned into a big
break for the guests. as the
snap went through the hands
of the holder and eventually
' into the arms of Garrett : who managed to hit the
pylon just before b~ing
forced out of bounds for a

4

I

;

I

~Unba!' ~inms-&amp;entintl•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2009

SportsMedicine GRANT
&amp; ORTHOPAEDIC ASSOCIATES

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
Joint Replacement Surgeon
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement. we offer office hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, WV

Next clinic date is Friday, Sept. 18
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1·800-371·4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement

Page 83

Meigs
from Page Bl
pooch kick. On the tirst
play Smith again did the
honors, scoring his third
touchdown of the night this
time from 54 yards out to
increase the Meigs lead to
25-0.
The Raiders drove to the
Marauder 40. but a fourth
down pass from Brown to
Trey Noble was broken up
by a big hit by Blake Crow.
Five plays later big Justin
Ellis a 6-foot-2. 270 pound
tackle blasted over from the
fullback spot from three
yards out. Well added the
extra points for a 32-0 Meigs
lead with 2:49 left.
Meigs scored their last
touchdown when Cody
Laudermilt scored from 22
yards out, once again Well
was true with the kick. The
score was set up when River
Valley punter Smathers was
tackled for a three yard loss
after a bad snap.
River Valley scored their
first points in 11 periods
when Chad Smith scored
from three yards out. Tyler
Smith set the score up with a
57 yard nm from the Raider
16 to the Marauder 27.
Smith led all rushers with
his 251 yards in 14 tries, an
average of 17.9 yards a
carry. Cody Laudermilt
added 67 in just five carries.
Well was five of six in the air
for 68 yards and a score.
Caleb Davis caught the
touchdown for 42 yards.
Tyler Smith led the
Raiders with 144 yards in 28
carries, Austin Davies had
17 yards in four carries. and

Storm
fromPageBl
South Gallia was fielded by
Eric Buzzard of the
Tornadoes who returned it
66 yards for the Southern
touchdown. The two point
conversion was once again
good for Sean Coppick.
The Southern kickoff was
returned 50 yards by Bryce
Clary of the Rebels to the
Southern 27. With a fourth
and seventeen facing the
Rebels, Cory Haner throw a

Bryan Walters/photo

River Valley quarterback Jacob Brown releases a pass as
he is hit from behind by a Meigs defender during Friday
night's contest in Pomeroy.
Cody McAvena added 17 in TVC Ohio Division play
five tries. Brown was 10 of next week when they travel
22 in the air for 100 yards. to The Plain:s to play the
Noble caught three for 56 Athens Bulldogs.
"They are a really good
yards and Chad Smith three
team." Raider coach Jared
for 33 yards.
"I thought both teams McClelland said of the
played hard," Marauder Marauders. ''We missed
coach Mike Chancey said some assignments early. and
after the contest. ·'It was a Smith hurt us with his speed ,
good win for us, we need to He is a good running back."
The Raiders will host
enjoy it and get back to work
on Monday and get ready to another Meigs County team
play a real good Athens next week when the Eastern
team.''
Eagles
invade
Gallia
Meigs (2- 1) will open County.

33 yard touchdown to
Danny Matney to begin the
fourth quarter of play.
Following the failed two
point conversion attempt,
South Gallia trailed 22-6.
Southern took advantage
of good field position with
Jess than nine minutes
remaining to score on an
eight yard touchdown run
by Greg Jenkins. The two
point attempt was no good

leading to a 28-6 Southern
lead. ~
Southern's offense was •
led by a strong rushing
effort by Greg Jenkins and a
good defensive effort on the
part of Sean Coppick.
Next week. Southern
plays host to Hannan, while
South Gallia will host
Wahama. Both games kickoff at 7:30 p.m. on Friday
evening.

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�Sunday, September 13,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2009

Jeter tops Gehrig, sets Yankees hit record in 10-4loss to 6altimore
NEW YORK (AP) Puddles soaked the warning
track and ponchos dotted the
stands when Derek Jeter
stepped to the plate in the
third inmng, hoping to ~ive
the soggy Yankee Stadmm
crowd a reason for showing
up in all this rain.
With one of his classic,
inside-out swmgs, Jeter sent
a sharp grounder skimming
through the infield. And
there it was, the record-setting hit that pushed him past
Lou Gehrig.
Jeter broke the New York
Yankees' hit record held by
Gehrig for more than seven
decades on Friday night with
an opposite-field single
against Baltimore. It gave
Jeter 2,722 hits. one more
than Gehrig, whose Hall of
Fame career was cut short
by illness in 1939.
'"The whole experience
has been overwhelming,"
Jeter said. ''This is more than
1 could've imagined.''
The captain kept right on
going, too, with an RBI single in the fourth that put
New· York up 4-1. He left the
game after a 67-minute rain
delay in the top of the sev
enth when manager Joe
Girardi pulled most of his
starters with the Yankees
trailing 10-4.
"I didn't expect that many
people to be out there after
the rain delay considering
how hard it was raining

when we started the game,''
Jeter said. "But the fans
were incredible. It says a lot
about how they feel about
their team and more importantly how they feel about
the history of their team. I
appreciate each and every
one that was there.''
Jeter's record-breaking hit
was remarkably similar to
the one that tied Gehrig on
Wednesday night, a wellstruck grounder inside the
first-base line. After this
one, Yankees players poured
out of the dugout and
engulfed Jeter at first base
with hugs and pats on the
back.
"I didn't know that they
were going to do that, so that
sort of caught me offguard," Jeter said. '"It's s
special moment for me, it's a
SJ?Ccial moment for the orgamzation. To be able to enjoy
it with my teammates was a
lot of fun."
Jeter spread his arms wide
after rounding first base on
his record-breaking hit and
gave an emphatic clap as he
headed back to the bag.
Rain-drenched fans, many
wearing bright ponchos,
roared during an ovation that
lasted about 3 minutes. Jeter
twice waved his helmet to
the crowd of 46,771 - just
as he did after tying the
record. Fans chanted his
name and the ball was taken
out of play as a souvenir.

''For those who say
today's game can't produce
legendary players, I have
two words: Derek Jeter.
Game in and game out he
just produces," Yankees
owner George Steinbrenner
said in a statement. "As historic and significant as
becoming the Ynnkees' alltime hit leader is, the accomplishment is all · the more
tmpressive because Derek is
one of the finest young men
playing the game today.
"That combination of
character and athletic ability
is something he shares with
the previous record holder,
Lou Gehrig," the statement
said.
When his grounder got
past diving first baseman
Luke Scott. Jeter's parents
raised their arms in excitement. Joining them in an
upstairs box filled with family and friends were his sister and steady girlfriend.
actress Minka Kelly.
Jeter tied Gehrig's mark
)Vednesday night, snapping
an 0-for-12 slumr. with three
hits against the fampa Bay
Rays. The Yankees were off
Thursday, and Jeter resumed
his pursuit Friday at soggy
Yankee Stadium.
''I'm happy I was able to
do it quickly," he said.
The start was delaved 87
minutes by heavy rain that
had tapered off by the third
inning. Jeter struck out

New York
Yankees'
Derek Jeter
tips his helmet
to the fans
after hitting a
single to pass
Lou Gehrig as
Yankees alltime hit lead.
during the
third inning of
a baseball
game against
the Baltimore
Orioles Friday
at Yankee
Stadium in
New York.
· AP photo
s~·in~ing against Tillman in
his 1Jrst at-bat, but came
through his next time up.
Gehrig's final hit came on
April 29. 1939, a single
against the Washington
Senators. The Iron Horse
had held the club record
since Sept. 6. 1937, when he
passed Babe Ruth.
Gehrig's career ended suddenly in 1939. Two years
later, he died at 37 from the
disease that would later bear
his name.
Jeter got his first hit on
May 30, 1995. at Seattle and
set the Yankees mark \\ ith
14 seasons of splendid consistency. His two singles

Toledo hands Colorado another loss
, TOLEDO
(AP)
Colorado looked helpless
trying to stop Aaron Opelt
and Toledo.
Now the Buffaloes have to
find a way to keep their season from flying apart after
'starting off coach Dan
Hawkins' fourth season with
two discouraging losses in
less than a week.
Colorado (0-2) gave up big
play after big play against
Toledo (1 - 1) wh1ch averaged
nearly 10 yards per play and
amassed 624 yards in
Toledo's 54-38 win over the
Buffaloes on Friday night.
The tired-looking Buffs
were pushed around by
archrival Colorado State just
five days earlier in a 23-17
loss on Sundav that was
capped by the indignity of
Rams fans stonning FolsoiD
Field.
Hawkins exhaled deeply
afterward wlien asked about
what was wrong with his
defense.
. "Too many big plays for
sure," he said.
Opelt threw a 70-yard
touchdown pass in the first
quarter and scampered 61
yards early in the fourth to
thwart a late Colorado rally
and put the Rockets up by
20.
'
"I didn't know I could still
run like that.'' Opelt said. ''I

Wahama
from Page 81
:play drive with a one yard
·plunge. An 18 yard punt
return by Ryan Lee and a 15
yard personal foul penalty
on the runback gave WHS
·excellent field position at
:the Wildcat 27.
: Branch got the call five
·times in the series before giving the Bend Area team a 6-0
lead with II: 14 remaining in
the half. The PAT try was
.unsuccessful as was the
:attempts following all five
:WHS touchdowns.
· The hosts extended its edge
to 12-0 before the half concluded when again a nice
return following a Watelford
punt set the stage for the scor:mg opportuni~. Isaac Lee
:returned the \\ ddcat punt 19
yards to the Waterford 31
where the Falcons took six
plays before reaching the end
wne. Again it was a one
yard Branch 1un that capped
the series and gave Wahama a
:12-0 halftime advantage.
: The second half proved to

Ifi¥ii~N~I~ouilj
•1
Keeto~
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: Excavating ~~
1)~ for buying my t~
~:

2009 Market
L amb .

•K
·~~

~·

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Carter ~i
Parsons ..

I:IIIIIIllitj

Frida) night ga\ e him I ,363
hits at home and 1.360 on
the road.
Now. No. 2 in Yank~s
pino;tripe~ is number one in
the record book for basebaiJ's nwst storied franchise.
The 35-ycar-old Jeter also
moved past Gehrig for 53n.l
place on the game ·s career
hit list. Roberto Alomar is
52nd at 2,724.
It was Jeter's 268th hit
against Baltimore, his most
against any opponent.
Jeter linished 2 for 4 and
grounded into an inningending double play in the
sixth.

It was a special night at
Yankee StadiUm in several
wavs. Both teams and the
unipires wore red caps with
stars and stripes inside the
logos to commemorate the ·
eighth anniversary of 9-11.
Pregame ceremonies included
moment of silence to :.
remember those who died in .
the attacks.
.
Dorine Gordon. president
and CEO of The ALS '
Association Greater New ·
York Chapter, nlso congratu- •
Jated Jeter in a statement t.
was passed out in the pn.:
box at Yank~e Stadium.
,
ALS. of course, is the discase that afflicted Gehrig.

a

Devils
from Page Bl

~ot

out in the open field and a helmet-to-helmet collision
1t shocked me a little bit:'
at the goal line·. The quarterOpelt
took
apart back's condition wasn't
Colorado's defense through available after the game.
the air and on the ground,
Toledo recovered the
throwing four touchdown onside kick and knelt the ball
passes and running for two to end the game just before I
more. He rolled up 428 yards a.m.
of offense, nearly outgaining
Rockets running back
the Buffaloes (451 yards) on DaJuane Collins ran for 162
his own.
yards and a touchdown on 20
Hawkins, who had to carries.
answer critics earlier in the
Opelt finished with 319
week about his decision to yards passing a week after
start his son, Cody, at quar- throwing for 423 yards in a
terback, is sure to hear more loss at Purdue. He completed
15 of 23 and ran for 109
questions now.
H~ 's 13-2~ in his fourth yards.
se,as~~
With Colorado. , His 27-yard run with 36
\\eeks after the Buffal~s ·econds left in the fir·t half
•
s
fell to Nebraska to m1ss s
becomino bowl eligible in put the Rockets up 23-3, and
the fin~le last season. h~ opened the second half
Hawkins predicted "10 wins With a ~6-yard TD pass to
Kenny Stafford.
and no excuses" for 2009.
About the onlv bright spot
The Ro~kets are ~-0 at
for the Buffaloes was sopho- hofT!e agamst the Big 1~.
more tailback Darrell Scott. havmg beaten Ka~sa~ m
After carrying the ball onlv 2006 and low~ State m 07:
once in the opener for 1 yard,
Toledo, whteh plays Oh!o
he ran for 85 yards on I 2 State
next
week . m
rushes - all in the first half. Cleveland, has seven vJctoCody Hawkins completed ries over te&lt;~ms from B~S
30 of 64 passes for 356 yards conferen~es m. the last nm,e
and four touchdowns - but seasons, mcludmg last years
also threw three intercep- win at Michigan.
tions.
It's the first time the
Hawkins was shaken up Buffaloes have lost to a Midafter diving in for a mean- American
Conference
ingless late TD, when he and school. They beat Kent State
Toledo's Archie Donald had in 1977 and Miami in 2007.

and forced the Devils to
turn the ball over on downs.
The second half opened
with the Blue Devils making a solid defensive stand
on Ironton's first possession
of the third quarter. Gallia
Academy forced Ironton to
go three-and-out, but gave
the ball right back to the
Tigers when the en~uing
punt was fumbled away at
the GAHS 25.
Five plays later Ironton
was in the end :zone agam
with Taylor scoring on an 8yard swe~p with 7:42 left to
play in fhe third period.
upping the Tiger~· advantage to 26-6.
Ironton extended its lettd
to 32-6 following a 6-pl.t\
71-yard drive that ended
when Taylor scored on a 21vard run with 3:30 remain Tony Shotsky/submltted photo
ing in the third quarter.
Running back Erin Edens. Galha Academy runningback Austin Wilson runs with the
capped off the Tigers' final football during Friday night's SEOAL opener agamst Ironton
scoring drive with a 3-yard at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
touchdown run at the II :30 the kids proved to them- the GAHS Athletic Hall ol
mark of the fourth quarter.
tonight. they can get Fame -will be honored prior
The
Blue
Devils' st.;:lves
heat around and knocked to kickoff.
postgame huddle was an around and they can stand
emotional scene and head up and fight for four quarcoach Mike Eddy had noth- ten; against anybody. 1 was
ing but praise for his foot- extremely proud of their
ball team.
"We've been talking smce effort.''
Gallia Academy play:I got this job, how are we
host
to 5-time defending
be a steady dose of Lee, both the final quarter to put the going to play against SEOAL champion Logan at
Ryan and Isaac, which ulti- contest out of reach. Branch Ironton?" said Blue Devils 7:30 p.m. Friday at
for buying my 2009
mately proved to be too much scored his third touchdown of head coach Mike Eddy. Memorial
Field.
The
Market Steer.
for the Wildcats to endure. the evening with 1I: 17 to pla)'; "When we get punched in Chieftains (3-0) dominated
Issac (Lee) intercepted a on a three yard burst before the mouth. what are we Columbus
Courtney
Hamilton
Waterford pass at the Falcon Ryan Lee capped the Falcons going to do about it? We Township 49-7 last Friday.
30 to thwart a Wildcat threat scoring with a five yard jaunt know irs going to happen,
The 2009 inductees into
while at the same time giving with 8: 16 remaining to make what's your answer? I think
WHS another impending the final count 30-0.
~'zz;!"ZZUZZZZ.'ZLI.'zz;2Zoi~'L77LZZZ/ZTL7.7IZ7..r./IZZZr.LL7Z7ZZZZZ7707UU07ZZZZT.LLZ7Z~'
The White Falcons will
scoring opportunity. Ryan
5th ANNUAL LIONS "RUN FOR SIGHT"
Lee concluded the 70 yard, take to the road for its next
six play drive with a nifty 24 two football challenges when
Sponsored by Point Pleasant Lions Club
yard scamper with 4:20 left in the Bend Area team travels to
the third period to extend the South Gallia and f.-astern on
9:00A.M. Saturday, OCtober 3, 2009 ~~'\
Mason County teams edge to successive Friday nights.
"Registration 7:00 am.- 8:45 am"
Waterford returns home to
18-0.
Course: 5K (3.1 miles) OR 1OK (6.2 MILES) Fun Run is flat with one slight down grade,
Wahama would go on to meet Fort Ftye for its next
on city streets through scenic Point Pleasant, WV
add two more touchdowns in encounter.
Entry Fee: $15.00 prior to September 15. 2009 ........ $20.00 day of race
Awards: Both 5K &amp; 1OK Runs ... T·Shirts to the first 200 entrants:
1st , 2nd &amp; 3rd overall for Male &amp; Female:
1st &amp;2nd Place finishers both Male &amp; Female age groups:
~
Middle of Pack Runners Award
~
Results: Will be posted after the race
~
Facilities: Restrooms are available; No shower or dressing fac11ities
~
Aid Stations: Water stations &amp; medical a1d will be available.
...
AGE DIVISION
~
Both Men &amp; Women 19 &amp; under, 20-24,25-29, 30·34, 35-39,40-44, 45·49,
The Gallia County Health
~
50-54,55-59,60.64,65 &amp; above (ENTER ONE CATEGORY ONLY)

•

A

FREE

SCRAP TIRE COllECT/ON DAY

Department is holding a
Free Scrap Tire Collection Day
on
Saturday, September 19, 2009.
Collection will take place BEHIND the Gallia
County Health Department at 49.9 Jackson
Pike, from 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm. Space is
limited, no commercial tires, no tires on
rims, no muddy tires ple9se.
NO TIRES WILl BE ACCEPTED BEFORE
1:00 PM and no tires will be accepted
after the trailers are full.

For more information call441-2018.

I~

~RETURN WITH CHECK:
~

~

POINT PLEASANT LIONS CLUB
P.O. Box 241
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
DETACH AND MAIL - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
5K or 10K (Please Circle)
T·Shirt sizes: S M L XL (circle one)
Name
Age---First
Mtddle
Last
(on 10/7/09)

r-------------·

Address....,.----~----.....,.--------.,...-----------Street &amp; Number
City
State
Zip

Telephone
SEX: M F
In consideration of the acceptance of this entry, I hereby, for myself, my heirs. my executors &amp;
assignees, waive &amp; release any &amp;all nghts &amp; claims for damages I may have against The Lions
Club. Battle Days representatives, Retatl Merchants Assn., &amp; the City of Point Pleasant for all
claim of damages, demands, actions whatsoever in any &amp; all injuries arising out of my participa·
lion in said event. I attest that I am physically fit &amp; have trained sufficiently for this event.

~

~

~

SIGNATURE-----------------------------------------Parents signature if under 18 yca!'l

~ ~-------------------------------------~

r,tunnzunnun77LZZULLLO'.zzzzzZDZZTnzz:rLZzn.2T.rJZ1Zl.~~mm7Zrzz122~~~.

�r---,-------------..----------·-·------,--~---~------~~---·-----.,F---------"!'""""-------.,-•

- l.

Sunday, September 13,

2009

fbunbnv 'Orint£5-~rntinel • Page Bs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

SeVen new members tO be enshrined in
Gallia Academy Athletic HOF this weekend
BY HOBART WILSON, JR.
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallia
Academy
High
hool Athletic Hall of
•
me will enshrine seven
new members during cere, monies planned for the
. weekend of Sept. 18- 19.
The 2009 honorees arc:
: Allen Romaine, Class of
. 1949; Cliff Wilson. teacher
and coach, 1963-70; Larry
Fraley. Class of 1964: Ron
Janey. Class of 1966: Chuck
· Wood, Class of 1972: Renee
Halley Barnes. Class of
1984; and Chris Ellcessor.
Class of 1984. This is the
ei!!hth class to be added to
. the GAHS Athletic Hall of
Fame.
The new llall of Fame
· members will be honored
Friday. Sept. 18 pnor to the
. Gallia
Academy· Logan
.football game. scheduled for
: 7:30 p.m. at Memorial
Field. A banquet in their
honor is scheduled for 7
e.m. on Saturday. Sept. 19 at
the new Gallia Academy
High School in Centenary.
urs of the new facility
ll be-. offered beginning at
•
;5:45p.m.

When Vinton was consolidated into North Gallia High
School in 1957-58, Wilson
coached the Pirates football,
basketball and baseball
teams until 1963 when he
accepted the head baseball
job at Gallia Academy High
School. His basketball
coaching record at North
Gallia was 89 wins. 38 losses. two SVAC championships. and two county
crowns. His baseball teams
won 50 and lost 23 at
1\GHS.
During his seven years at
GAHS. Wilson's baseball
teams won 61 games, lost
33 and tied' one. The Blue
Devils captured three South
Division crowns and two
undisputed SEO~L crowns
under Wilson in 1967 and
'69. The 1965 Blue Devils
were
South
Division
champs. losing the league
championship game to
Logan. 7-5.
Wilson also coached
freshmen and reserve basketball teams while at
GAHS.
After leaving GAHS.
Wilson returned to North

Gallia as principal, a position he held for seven years.
In 1977, Wilson 'faS named
transportation and building
ALLEN ROMAINE
and grounds director. a posiCLASS OF 1949
tion he held until his retirement in 1985.
·
Allen Romaine. is the l&gt;eVWilson and his wifct Jean
enth "Golden Era" football reside in Gallipolis.
player to be named to the
GAHS Athletic Hall of
LARRY FRALEY
Fame.
CLASS OF 1964
' Romaine, as a 145-pound
pulling guard on Coach Jim
Halderman's single-wing
Larry Fraley was a fouroffense. helped lead Gallia year starting tackle on the
Academy to I 9 straight wins GAHS
varsity,
Fraley
in 1947 and 1948 and two played in 38 of 39 games
undisputed
Southeastern while a member of the Blue
Ohio Athletic League foot- Devils. He was a key player
. ball titles.
while playing on two Blue
Romaine also played vari- Devil championship teams
ous positions on defense. in 1960 and 1962. During
his senior year, GAHS batespecially defensive end .
An All-SEOAL per- tled Logan for the SEOAL
former.
Romaine
was grid title in the final game of
named the Blue Devils' best the
season.
but
the
"""'•·"'r and tackler his Chieftains snapped Gallia ·s
ior year and awarded the unbeaten league record with
veted
Dixon-Beckett a 56-6 victOI)'.
phy for that honor.
While attending GAHS.
Romaine was active in Fraley received the follownumerous school and com- ing honors: Honorable
Mention AH-SEOAL in
munity activitie~.
After
graduatio n. 1960, Honorable Mention
Romaine was employed, by All-SEOAL in l96l. First
Ohio Bell Telephone Co .. in Team All-SEOAL in 1963
1950, and as a member of and First Team All-Ohio
the
then
Downtown Tackle in 1963.
Fraley was also co-captain
Coaches Club (now GAHS
Athletic Boosters Club) of the Blue Devils in 1963,
Romaine used his electronic Most Valuable Player and
knowledge to take over care Best Defensive Lineman.
and maintenance of the
During his four-year
school's communications career, GAHS won 28
equipment at Memorial games, lost seven and tied
Field. He continued to care four. In the SEOAL.
for the field communica- Gallipolis won 22, lost four
tions system until he trans- and tied two.
ferred to ~1arietta in 1954.
After graduation from
. Romaine spent 36 years high school. Fraley played
with the firm, holding sever- four years of college ball at
al key positions over the Kent State University where
years. Finally. he was an he was a starting tackle for
instructor in Ohio Bell's the Golden Flashes in 1965.
Management
Training '66 and ' 67.
Fraley and his wife re~ide
Center, traming all Bell
lployces in its main in Mayhill. N.M.
•.
•itching offices through:out central and southern
RoN JANEY
Ohio.
CLASS OF 1966
· Romaine was instrumen. tal in the founding of Faith
Ron Janey played football
Baptist Church in Rodney, four years at GAHS, earning
: and served as a deacon for three varsity letters. He was
· 15 years. He is currently a Honorable Mention All. Sunday school teacher at the SEOAL and All-District his
:church.
senior year.
· Romaine and his wife of
Janey was named Best
60 years reside in the Defensive Lineman his
Gallipolis area.
senior year. leading GAHS
in tackles with 147 and
CLIFF WILSON
spearheading the
Blue
CoACH, 1963-70
Devils 22-20 upset win over
the defending league chamCliff Wil~on was head pion Chieftains at Logan.
Janey also played baseball
baseball coach at Gallia
Academy High School from four years. earning three
1963 until 1970. and varsity letters. He hurled
to
the
1965
,Gallipolis Cit)· summer GAHS
' plavground director from Southeastern Ohio League
championship game against
1961 until 1974.
· Wilson graduated from Logan before losing a 7-5
to
LHS
on
Byesville High School in decision
.1943 where he was a mem- Memorial Field after pitchof the school's basket- ing GAHS to the South
Division title the previous
!
team for four years.
•
Following a stint in the U. day.
After graduation from colS. Navy during World War
II. Wilson enrolled at Rio lege, Janey returned to
Grande College in 1946 and Gallipolis where he coached
the freshmen football team
graduated in 1950.
His first coaching job was to a 17-4 record and varsity
at Cadmus High School. tennis sguad, leading GAHS
After a stint at Cadmus, he to its f1rst SEOAL tennis
left the education field for title in 1980.
Janey was named North
five years to enter the insur·ance business. Wilson was Gallia baseball coach in the
then named head coach of early 1980s where his teams
the Vinton Tigers in 1955. won 33 games and lost six,

winning the school's only
SVAC titles.
Janey then moved 011 to
Logan where he served as
an assistant football coach
for 16 years. He wa~ head
baseball coach for 25 years
and became Logan's athletic
director in 1990 ·
Janey's baseball teams
compiled an overall record
of 402 wins against 193
defeats over 25 years, 23 at
Logan and two at North
G II' Lf'
· h
a Ia. I IS teams won elg t
league titles, six at Logan
and two at North Gallia, five
sectional titles and three district titles.
Janey was Division I
Coach of the Year nine
times and SEOAL Coach of
the Year nine times. He was
a coach on the All-Ohio
.
team tWICe C1983 and 2,009)
and coached Team Oh10 .111
the 2003 Oklahoma Class1c.
He was elected to the
Baseb~ll Coach~s Hall of
Fame m 2004, h1s final season as head coach of the
Chieftains. Janey was a
member of the State
Baseball
Coaches
Association
Board
of
Control in 1983, 1989 and
1996.
The 2009 Gallia honoree
was named to the Logan
Athletic Hall of Fame in
199'5 and to the Ohio
Athletic Directors llall of
Fame in 2002. He was
named the Central Ohio
Officials
Association'&lt;&gt;
Outstanding
Athletic
Director in 1996, and served
on the State Athletic
Directors Board of Control
in 2003.
Janey
is
decorated
Vietnam War veteran ( 196970). He and his wife reside
in the Logan area.
CHUCK Wooo
CLASS OF 1972

Chuck Wood earned six
varsity awards in two sports
played
on
two
and
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League championship teams
in track (spring 1970) and
football (fall 1970).
Wood played football for
four years. earning three letters. He was named Best
Offensive Lineman both hb
junior and senior years. He
was a two-way starter during his final three years as a
Blue Devil. He was team
captain his senior year and a
two-way tackle his junior

and senior years. and a
defensive middle guard during his freshman and sophomore years. He wa.... a
Golden Helmet Award winner his senior year.
Wood played in the 1972
Ohio All-Star Game. Wood
was All-SEOAL both his
junior and senior years. and
All-District First Team tw·o
years in a row. He was also
Honorable Mention AllState his junior year and
First Team All-State on the
Associated Press defense hi&lt;;
senior vear and First Team
All-State on the United
Press International offense
his senior year.
Wood participated in track
four years and lettered three
years. He threw the discus
and shot put for GAHS. He
placed in the SEOAL shot
put meet three years in a
ro\'.' and twice in the discus
event. He was second in the
district shot put event and
fourth in the discus. During
that time in history, no
regional meets were held
and only first place winners
moved on to the stat~: meet.
When GAHS won the
1970 track and field meet at
Memorial Field under first
year coaches Bob Wagner
and Jim Osborne. it was the
Blue Devils first ever championship in track and field.
Following
graduation.
Wood attended Ashland
College. a Division II
school in Ashland, Ohio. He
threw the shot put and discus in college. He played on
one Ashland. football team
that finished the vear 11-0
and placed fourth in the
1~ation.' Wood injured his
back in the weight room his
sophomore year in spring
training was unable to play
football after that.
A longtime 200 Club
member~ and
GAHS
Booster. Wood has been
active in numerous communitv activitie~ during the
pa~t few years. His ;;on Burt
Wood \\on three state championships in track for
GAHS. first Blue De\il to
earn that honor.
RENEE HALLEY BARNES
CLASS OF 1984

Renee Halley Barnes
earned eight varsity awards
during her four-year career
at Gallia Academy High
School. She earned four varsity letters in softball and
four in basketball.
Barnes
was
All Southeastern Ohio League
in basketball in 1982 and
1983. She was Honorable
Mention All-Ohio . She
helped lead GAHS to the
regional finals m Dayton her
freshman year before losing
to eventcal state finalist
Cincinnati Readin£?: bv one
point.
~
·
In 1984. Barnes
Gallia Academy's

Sports Briefs
Harvest 50 race
dedicated to Big
Fooze Wolfe

Valuable
Player,
the
S£..,QAL's MVP and district
co-player of the year. She
wao; Third 'I earn All-Ohio
(AAA) her ~enior year, and
carnt:d the coveted GAHS
Womc'n's Athletic Key her
senior year.
While a Blue Angle.
Barnes scored I JJ90 points
and her teams won 75
games and lost 13 with two
shared SEOAL basketball
title&lt;; in her freshman and
~enior vears. In softbalL
Barnes 'was a member of
Gallia Acadern) 's first
SEOAL championship team
as the Angels shared the
1984 crO\\ n with Ironton.
Both teams finished 7-1 in
league play that year.
After graduation. Barnes
pla)ed four years of bao,kctball at the t:niversity of Rio
Grande. and was all-league
her senior year for the
Red women.
Following college. Barnes
guided the GAHS Blue
Angel basketball team to
110 wins against 26 losses
from 1992 until 1997.
Gi\HS won four sectional
titles two district crowns
and were regional runnersup twice.
Following the 1997 season. Barnes put her coaching career on hold to devote
time to ~aising her family.
She has smce returned as the
head coach of the Blue
Angels, begmning with the
2008-09 season.

STEWART Skyline
Speedway will host the 26tn
annual Harvest 50 Saturday
and Sunday, September 19
and 20. This year's event
has been dedicated to former Racine, Ohio driver
Hilton "Big Fooze'' Wolfe,
Jr. by track owner Billy
Jarrell.
"Mr. Wolfe was a staple
of our racing community,''
Jarrell said. "He was here
every week for the past 40
years ~ither as a driver.
owner. or race fan. We
wanted to do something
special in his honor."
The race features a possible $11,000 to win for Late
Models and $3,000 to win
for outlaw sprints. There
will be no racing th1s week
at Skvline in order to prepare ·for this prestigious
event.

.Bengals, Cards
avoid blackout

ALAMEDA. Calif. (AP)
- The Cincinnati Bengals
and Arizona Cardinals
announced Friday that
their season openers have
been sold out in time to
avoid a local blackout
while the Oakland Raider~
I received a 24-hour extension from the NFL.
Teams normally need to
sell out £?:ame&lt;&gt; 72 hours
before kickoff to avoid a
local blackout. The BengaiS
CHRIS ELLCESSOR
and Cardinals received an
extension Thursda\ because
CLASS OF 1984
of the Labor Day holiday.
The Bengals distributed
Chris Ellccssor starred in
ba&lt;;kctball for four vears at more than I ,000 tickets to
Gallia Acadei)1)', ·earning local military members and
two varsitv letters. He also charities, and the local CBS
played football one year and affiliate and Kroger superran cross country one year. · market also bought tickets to
Ellcessor guided GAHS to ensure the sellout against
the 1983-84 Southeastern Denver. The last time
Ohio Athletic League bas- Cincinnati failed to sell out a
ketball title with a 6-2 con- game was November 2003.
ference mark. He played in
The defendin!! NFC chamthe SEOALAII-Star game in pion Cardinal; had about
1984. He was the SEOAL's 1.700 tickets available
Most Valuable Player. First Thursdav and managed to
Team All-SEOAL, First ,sell them in time to a-.:Oid the
Team All-District, Special blackout. The Cardinals have
Mention All-State
and now sold out all 35 games
earned the coveted GAHS played at University of
Athletic Key his senior year. Phoenix Stadium. which
After
graduation. opened in 2006. But last
Ellcessor
attended JanuarY. the team needed two
Newberry College \\here he extensfons from the lca!!ue to
set the three-point field goal sell out its first home playoff
record in one game with six. game in Arizona.
He \\a&amp; named to the allBecause of the weak
tournament
Team
at economy. the NPL is antici"'
Harding Uni-.crsity.
pating more local blackouts
Ellccssor has earned this season as teams have
numerous
po~t-season trouble selling tickets. Only
awards over the years. He nine out of 256 regular-seahas served as an assistant son games were blacked out
GAHS Blue Angels coach. all o~f last ~eason and more
and cm11.:hed GAHS and than 95 percent of games
River Valley boys reserves have been tcle\'ised locally
team'-. Last year. he was every year since 2005.
head coach of the Federal Before 1999. more than 20
Hocking bo)·s basketball 1 percent of games had been
team.
blacke? _out each year since
Ellccssor resides in Point 1 the f' FL allowed local
Pleasant. W.Va.
broadcasts. of sold-out
games startmg m 1973.

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�Page B6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, September 13, 2009

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�I
~unbap

Cl

mimes -~enttnel

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Workmg in God's NET is Alice Wamsley's way of making a
difference in the community

Melva Stobart, left, and Selma Call, new volunteers, have
found their niche In food distribution.

Billy Jo Spe11cer, rrght, was the 2008 Volunteer of the Year. With him is Arland King, voll!lnteer director of the Pansh .

.

T
$TORY AND PHOTOS BY
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINE'L COM

POMEROY
They
build, they paint, they sort,
they serve. They do whatever needs to be done, all willi;ngly and without being
a
da penny.
~ey ~ay the satisfaction
of helping others continue
ro be able to a~sist the community's disadvantaged, is
·:pay enough."
: They are the volunteers
making a difference through
the Meig~ Cooperative
Parish and God's NET programs being carried out at
t'j1e Mulberry Community
€enter. As volunteers they
strengthen the communities
in which they live through
the service they pro\ ide.
: Volunteering, while benefiting others, io; also ''doing
good for one's body and
~oul," says Rex Huston,
~ctive at the Center since
moving to Meigs County
~st year.
It is only w1th the help of
''olunteers and donations
from churches. organizations, busine&lt;;ses and individuals that the Parish pro!'rrams continue to operate
flourish.
ith a paid stal'f ol only
three, and nearly 200 volunteers 111 the various programs under the Meigs
Cooperative Parish, the
building is maintained.
ramps arc built for disabled seniors. food is dist'l'ibuted along with cloth,:ng an~ household items.
health
information
is
given, and special programs are offered for
adults and children.

Allen Dowme views volunteer work at the Mulberry
Community Center as an extension of hrs Chnstian faith.

Betty Reibel began volunteering in the Parish Shop some 20 years ago. She still there sorting clothing and assisting customers.

E ·SA TIS·FACT ON
Arland
King,
Meigs
Cooperative Parish director,
praise:s the volunteers for
their dcdicatior to the
cau:se, for giving of their
time and talent. Alva Clark,
a longtime faith!'ul volunteer, i:s the building manager, and contributes his skill
not only in the hours he
works but m the or!!anization of projects for others.
The volunteers have a
variety of skills which they
usc in keeping the building
in good condition. Some
even work with their own
tools, or use their own vehicles to transport food donated to the Center.
Providing food for families is a big pa11 of the
Pansh's programs, and with
the economy as it :s in Meigs
County (over 15 percent
unemployment) the needs
are growing and the requests
for food are increasing. The
Parish has three regular food
distribution days each year.
but now are havm!! more and
more people coming in at
other times asking for food
Through the work of the
volunteers, and the contributions from a concerned
community, sacks of grocerie" are available for
those in emergency situations and those who find
their monthly allowance of
food stamps depleted before
the end of the month.
In addition God's NET
serves prepared food on a
regular basis to young people. Ron Vance is the dtrector of that part of the
Center's program with Dee
Rader as coordinator. She
reports that about 15,000
meals are served annually to
young people.

Currently there are four
school buses making stops
at the Center to let student:s
off so they can ha' e a hot
meal, get tutoring or other
assistance as needed, or just.
enjoy a variety of games in
a supervised and safe environment.
Rader credits the 20 or so
volunteers working in
God's NET with ''making a
real difference'' in the live~
of these young people.
''We couldn't operate \Vithout our volun tcer~ ... she
says, adding that God'~
NET records about 4.000

vouth visits a vear.
• Another facet of the
operation i:s the Parish
Shop
where
clothing,
~hoes. and household items
are available at a small
pncc or free to tho:se who
can't pay. The shop was
one of the first operations
of the :\1eigs Cooperative
Parish started about 20
year:s ago. Betty Reibel and
Mary Bowles came on as
volunteers when the shop
fiN opened and still volunteer on a regular basis.
Other long-time volunteers who have shared their

talents many years in the
Alice Wamsley, who
Mcig... Coopcrati"e Parish faithfully spend'i a few
progran~s include Jm1 Fry
hours a day in God" NET.
and Bill) Jo Spencer. who serving food. cleaning up.
\\as the 2008 Volunteer of or mcntormg young peothe Year. fry b noted for ple. views her volunteerbemg, able to repatr about ing as an "extension of
anything v. hile Spencer church work.'' .
says his contnbution i.s
E\·er) v.here
at
the
"just doing v. hatever needs Mulberr~
Communit)
to be done."
Center vou can '&gt;Ce volunFor Allen Dowme volun- teers g'oing about doing
teering at the Center ts hts what they do best, donating
way of gi' ing back. ··t want their time, sharing their talto do \\hat I can to help out , ent, contributing to the betthe community and at the terment of the community,
same time serve God. so 1 and achieving the goal of •
give my time."
making a difference.

O'Bleness Memorial H'osptial

Saturday, October 10

9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

FREE screenings, information about cancer, heart, nutrition, exercise and healthy 1i festyle
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Call (740) 566-4814 for more infotmation or to schedule an appointment
for a free peripheral arterial disease screening.

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-- -~~-~~~~~-------,--,------:----:---------:---··--··---·--·---...· - . , . · - - -. . . . . . . . ,....'1111
1

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Snnday, September 13, 2009

Happy Birthday:

j

1

;Ohio Valley Symphony opening night slated Sept. 26
G,\LLIPOLIS
The
Ohio Valley Symphony has
one message for its audience: Let 'em eat cake!
: Both audible and edible
·confections will be on the
menu as the orchestra kicks
·off its 20th anniversarv sea:;on at 8 p.m. on Sept: 26 at
Point Pleasant Junior/Senior
High School in Point
-PI;asant. W.Va. The OVS.
· under Music Director Ray
~ Fowler. ~·ekomes violinist
· Elizabeth Pitcairn. owner of
the Red Stradivarius violin
:- the inspiration for the
book and 1998 movie "The
: Red Violin·· for the
: event.
• Pitcairn brings the Red
:Stradivarius to Gallipolis
: for three showpieces. the
"Introduction and Rondo
t:apriccioso"
and
.. Havanaise" bv Camille
_Saint-Saens and Pablo de
: Sarasate 's
"Carmen
:Fantasy:· based on the
:melodies of Bizet's,beloved
opera.
Two decades after playing
its first concert on bon-owed
folding chairs in an unheat. ed auditorium. the OVS has
become an integral part of
·the cultural fabric of south.east Ohio and neighboring
West Virginia. In the intervening years. the group has
never wavered from its
guiding principles: to bring
live. professional, orchestral
mu~ic to the region; to provide its performers with a
positive atmosphere; and to
instill a love of music in
children through education
and exposure to great
music.
• Also thanks to the OVS.
; the Ariel Theatre. once a
· forgotten gem, has been
treated to a large, community-based resto;ation. Today
the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre is
~ the keystone to cultural life
· in Gallipolis and the perma. nent home of the OVS.
The Sept. 26 concert will
be held at the Lillian and
Paul Wedge Auditorium at
Point Pleasant Junior/Senior
· High School in Point

Elizabeth Pitcairn

Pleasant. W.Va. The OVS
helped celebrate the hall's
opening with a successful
concert in October.
''It's a wonderful facility."
said Lora Lynn Snow. the
orchestra's founder and
executive director. "and
we're really excited to come
back to see our neighbors
across the river."
All the concerts of the
2009- 10 festival season will
feature
birthday-themed
music. For September's
opener. Fowler will lead the
orchestra in Slonimsky's
"My
Toy
Balloon,''
Bernstein's "Divertimento
for
Orchestra''
and
Gershwin's "Let ·Em Eat
Cake" · overture.
The
"Divertimento" was written
a~ Bernstein's lOOth birthday present to the Boston
Symphony Orchestra. After
the concert, concert-goers
will be treated to birthday
cake in the lobby.
The performance also will
be accompanied by an
exhibit at The Gallery at
409 in Point Pleasant. The
art works are being lent by
the Lords New Church of
Bryn Athyn. Pa.. which

.

Pitcairn's grandfather, the
Rev. Theodore Pitcairn.
started
and
endowed.
Theodoi·e Pitcairn was the
son of PPG Industries cofounder John Pitcairn Jr.
This concert is sponsored
by Ohio Valley Bank .
investing in our community
one neighbor at a time.
Further funding for the
Ohio Valley Symphony 1s
provided by the Ann Carson
Dater Endowment.
A brief timeline of major
Ohio Valley Symphony
events is as follows:
• April 1. 1989 - After
volunteers remove truckloads of debris and accumulated bird droppings from
the Ariel Theater, Ray
Fowler conducts · first OhioValley Symphony concert.
The hall has no heat, bathrooms or water.
• June 9. 1990 - Grand
Re-Opening Concert. Ariel
is semi-restored. with work
frantically being done right
up until show time. The
audience waited in the
lobby as the seats were bolted in place.
• December 1998 - Ann
Carson Dater sets up an

URG welcomes new f~culty
RIO GRA~DE - The
· University of Rio Grande is
; welcoming several new fac. ulty members to campus
· this fall. and students will
enjoy learning from these
. excellent teachers.
.
: Clay Price, for example,
· will teach music and direct
:.the Grande Chorale and the
: Masterworks
Chorale.
Price.
who
lives
in
Gallipolis. takes over the
directing duties from David
: Lawrence. who was recent; Jy named Dean of the
· College of Professional
:Studies at Rio Grande.
Lawrence said that Price
is an excellent choice to
lead both chorale groups.
. and said that the members
and area residents will
. appreciate the work that he,
; does.
• "He's got the musical
chops to do the job,"
Lawrence said.
· Price earned his bachelor's
'in music education from
Belmont University and his
master's of music. conduct. ing from the University of
· North
·Carolina
at
,Greensboro. He IS cun·ently
working on his doctoral
degree in music arts. con'd ucting. from the University
of South Carolina.
At the University of
:.south Carolina. he taught
':and directed s~veral choruses. He also taught and
'directed choruses at other
·college. high schools and
middle schools. He is very
,.happy now to be teaching
--and directing at Rio Grande.
: "I'm excited about work-ing in a small school envi_ronment." Price said. Rio
'Grande has small class
:sizes. which allows the pro;fessors to work one-on-one
..with the students. Price
· said the learning environ. mcnt is excellent on cam]JUs. and he is excited about
-working with the students
•. and the 'members of the
Grande
Chorale
and
Masterworks Chorale.
• Another new faculty
member is Robett Hopkins,
who will teach biology.

Hopkins, who lives near
Jackson. earned his bachelor's degree, with honors. in
environmental sdence from
Morehead State University.
eamed his master's degree
in biology ' from Morehead
State University and his
Ph .lJ. in Zoology from
Southern Illinois University
- Carbondale. He also has a
broad range of teaching
experience and he is pleased
to bring his knowledge and
experience to Rio Grande.
"My wife and I wanted to
move back to Appalachia.''
Hopkins said. He enjoys the
rural environment. and is
pleased to be teaching on
the small campus.
New faculty member
Alan Cook will teach business technology at ~io
Grande. Cook has l 0 years
of teaching experience and
eight years of business/technology experience. For the
past eight years. he worked
for Horiz.on Telcom. Inc. in
Chillicothe in areas such as
software development. corporate training and public
training.
Cook. who lives in
Chillicothe. earned his
bachelor's of science degree
from Ohio State University
and his master\ of teaching
·degree from Mary grove
College. He is also involved
in postgraduate studies with
the University of Phoenix
Online.

··1 enjoy teaching." Cook
said. ·'It's a great fit here for
me.'' Cook loves being able
to pass information onto
students. and watch them
take that knowledge and
use it in their careers and
their lives.
Rose Isgrigg; who lives in
Albany, will also teach biology at Rio Grande and is
honored to join the faculty.
Isgrigg earned her associate's
degree
in
science/agronomy
from
Elizabethtown Community
College, her bachelor's
degree in agronomy from
the University of Kentucky.
her master's of art in teaching biology from the
University of Louisville and
her Ph.D. in environmental
biology from the University
of Louisville. She has a
wide range of teaching
experience, including time
teaching at the Rio Grande
Meigs Center.
"1 fell in love with it,"
Isgrigg said about teaching
at the Rio Grande Meigs
Center. "I enjoyed the people." She likes the oppottunity to teach both traditional
and non-traditional students
at Rio Grande. and said that
the different personalities
and characters in each class
keep things interesting.
For more information on
the 11e1v j(lculty members at
Rio Grande. call each of
them at 1-800-282-7201.

Celebrating special
days with you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today • 446-2342 or 992-2155

Submit celebrations online at
www.mydailysentinel.com or
www.mydailytribune.com

endowment fund. financially
securing the OVS's future.
• July 2005 - Dater purchases the Ariel to be the
permanent home of the
OVS. Her support funds a
face lift. new windows, new
marquee, painting walls and
refinishing floors in secondfloor ballroom, banquet
room and parlors. A new
music-inspired sculpture is
installed in banquet room.
• April 22,2006- Grand
Re-Dedication of the ArielAnn
Carson
Dater
Performing Arts Centre as a
permanent home for OVS.
Commercial CD. titled
"Celebrate the Gift." is
made of the performance.
• Oct. 4, 2008 - As part
of a weekend of arts events
that culminate with a dedication ceremony, the OVS
pe1forms in the new Lillian
and Paul Wedge Auditorium
at the new Point Pleasant
Junior/Senior High School.
• July 4. 2009 - Summer
Elizabeth Concert. The
OVS offers its first outdoor
show, a free concert on the
Ohio River attended by
thousands capping the
annual River Recreation
Festival in Gallipolis.
Tickets to the Ohio Vallev
Symphony's Sept. 26 seasoiz
opener and subscriptions to
the entire 20th anniversary
season are on sale now.
Visit the OVS Web site at
www.ohiovalleysymphony.o
rg for more information.

I
Submitted photo
From left, India Cullen, president of the Friends of Bossard
Library makes a donation to the local service clubs' book
drive· on behalf of the Friends to Shawn Siders, book drive_
treasurer.
·

I

1

j

Local 'Service clubs' book drive
. continues through Sept. 30
GALLIPOLIS - The .Gallipolis Rotar), Emblem, and
Lions Clubs are jointly sponsoring a monetary book driv~
for the libraries of the new high schools in Gallia County
- Gallia Academy. River Valley, and South Gallia.
The three service clubs are asking other organizations,
businesses. individuals. and alumni to join them in thi~
worthy project. The three high school librarians will be
selecting library materials for their respective schools . •
If you would like to participate in this book drive. wh
continues through Sept. 30. monetary donations can be
made in the form of a check or money order to the
Gallipolis Rotary Club Book Drive. P.O. Box 214
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631. Please designate to which
school(s) that you wish to make your contribution.
This book drive is a unique opportunity to provide our
new high school libraries with attractive. up-to-date materials including popular materials and classics.
For more information, co1ttact Becky Carroll or Debbie
Saunders at 740-446-7323.

Local Business Update
Prepared By County News, Inc. ©2009 All Rights Reserved
(800) 580-0485 • www.countynewsinc.com

L &amp; L Scrap Metals Recycling, Inc
Prot.:cl the crwironmcnt \\hile increasing )Our bank halancc! UnwanteJ steel, tin. appliance~ and junk car.; can
quickly be conn:rted to cash at L &amp; L Scrap Metals Recytling, Inc.. located in Gallipolis. Ohio on Texas Road.
phone (740) 446-7300. They pa) top price~ ba"&lt;:d on current market for your tcrrou~ and non-ferrous metals. A
leader in the indus!!). lh4')' pruce.~~ a :.rcmcndovs amount of scrap each. year. lh&lt;:ir high-tech equipment allo\\ ~ ,
them to quickly and efficiently handle and pay you for your metal. Do :-our part to insure the fmurc hea11h of the
em ironment by re~:) cling "ith L &amp; L Scrap Metals Recycling, Inc. f'hcy purchase batteries, radiators. copper. •
bras,; and aluminum among ot~r items. Exchanging aluminum cans tl1r Ca&lt;'h is a great wa) to teach ;vour-you.
children the. value of earning and saving money! Roll-otT container&gt; and tmilcrs ure available to husincs:s 1
inJuslrial a~wunts with a high volume of sl:rap metals. The; offer quick pick up and time!~. professional truck:
services tailored to save you time and monc~. Recycled produl:ts arc shipped directly to mills and smelters for use •
in manufacturing. Landfill~ will C\enluall~ reach maximum capacity. and with no ,way to decompose the articles :
dumped there. \\ill be an e-.;tr&lt;.:me hlll..ard to the environment. Rc~ycle with a caring company_that works hard to.
preserve our ncJtural re:&gt;Ourccs. keep &lt;w environment and count) a cleaner and healthier place lor ll\ all to live. • '
The authors ofthis 2009 Fall Local Business Update urge )OU to chetk your home and business for "aluable ·
scrap metal and take it to L &amp; L Scrnp Metals Recycling, Inc. today! Help keep America beautiful! Let's ' ·
do our part!
•

Walmart Super Center
Save Money. Live Better
Danny Meadows, Store Manager

Imagine aplace that can meet all of your shopping needs in just one ~:asy and comenient t:ip. At Walmart the~ can
oO'er you ju~'\ that. Th1.1y offer everything )OU could ever want or need in the 'onvenience of just one store.
From food to feed your family and tO)!\ to entertain Utem to the latest l'tyles in clothing, Wal:nart offers the
most affordable: price~ that always beat those of their competitors. They pride themselves on being your one-stop
shopping facility. Walmart has stood behind reliable customer sen ice and qualit) merchan~lise tor )ears.
•
Open 24 hours, they can meet all of your needs at any given time of day or night If you are shopping lor appliances
or furniture. Walmart oflers )'OU the kind of quality you deserve.
Choosing Walmart is a smart choice. offering you fully stocked shelves from tools to auto accessories. along 1\ith •
knowledgeable and help!ul employee~.
.
Wh~ther you need to cash your check or pick up a prescription. Wal:nart make~ it allordable and cornenient.
Don't waste precious time driYing from store to store when you'll find e\Cl) tliing on )'llUr list at Walmart.
The authors of this 2009 Fall Local Business Vpdate suggest that you stop by Walmnrt today at 320 Mallard
Lane in Ma~on, phone (304) 773-9125 and enjoy the convenience of one-stop shopping.

SFS Truck Sales, Inc.
Keep on truckin' 11 ith the help ofSFS Truck Sales' ::ompktc maintenance 1md repair !'en icc for all of your truck
needs. Professional ASE certiticd auto technician5 arc on site for eve!) thing from brake or clutlh repair to ma_-·o
owrhaub on all ki11ds of trucks. They speciali-ze i11the nwllufacturing of dump bodies,ftat bet!.~ u11d agricu/tu
dump trai/lm.
The~ utiliu- the latest technological advances in equipment to quickly and ctlicicntl) diagnose truck related ·
pcrfonnancc problems. allowing lor timely and economical repairs. !'heir c'.pcd.:nccd pcrsonnd ha1c the tools ·
and li.no\1 ·how required to prop.:rly sen icc all components including motor or transmission repair and rcplm:e:ncnt. :
~xhaust :;crviccs. fluid or oil changt!s, electrical work. wnc ups and scheduled :naintcnam:t' programs.
,
J'hcir honest mechanics pm\'ide exceptional service at afiordable price~. All \\OTk is fully \\a:-ranted 11ith a ,
workmanship guarantee! Irust Sf'S Truck Sales'to ke.:p your truck running satel; :nits be~t! SFS True!. Strh'!.
also offer.; afull line oflight to heavy-tluty true!. parts, inclutli11g chrome acce.\:wrie.s, tools U/1(1 ttmllx&gt;.wi.
,
The authors ofthis 2009 Fall Loc:tl Business l'pdate suggest that )OU contact SFS Truck Sales, loc. today at
(740) 446-0351 or toll-free (800} 280-6J)88 for your free estimate! They are located at 21 SO Eastern A\enue :
in Gallipolis. Their hours arc 7am-6pm :\1onday-Friday or call the pam department on S:tturda~ -open '
7a:n-noon. Thl') thank you for ~our patronage!

Foreman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp; Cooling
Established 1953
If you arc looking for experienced. prolcssional h~aung and ~oling senic~s. \\here the cquipmc~t is top~qualit)
and the customer comes fir:&gt;t. call Foreman &amp; Abbott Heat:ng &amp; Cool:ng toda; . 1 he) pro\ldc :;en :cc anti
installation of cooling. heating, ventilation and Gcothcmml units for your home or otlice.
Foreman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp; Cooling, located at391 ~orth 2"d Avenue in Middleport, phone (740) 992-5893
or (800) 359-4303 understands the importam;.: of ,:,electing and dcsigning a sy~tem 11hkh will make) ou and: our
fa mil) feel comfortable. Listening to the needs mld concerns of customer&gt; b their top priorit~. Foreman &amp; ,\ bbott •
Heating &amp; Cooling is the compan) you l':lll trust to :&gt;crviec the top brands and modeb of home comfort equipment.
!'hey repair. 11aintain. sell &lt;md install reliable, recognized home comfort products. guaranteeing all \Hlrk.
!'went) -lour hour c:ncrgcnc) ~cn·ic~ is available. as well as regular contracts.
The authors of this 2009 Fall local Business l pdate suggest that )OU call foreman &amp; Abbott Hellting &amp;
Cooling toda) at (740) 992-5893 or toll-free (800) 359-4303 ror a free quote! Their hours are 8:tm-4:30p:n
\tondav-Friday.

· · Scenic Hills Nursing Center
l'inding the right care facilit) tnk~s time. It is important to ~earch for a ~uitaNc hom.: \\ell inad1 ance vf st&gt;ckin.
:1dmi~sion_ tot~e l'a~·ilil)., Planning ahead also_ rnakcl. the t_ran~itio_n o~moving into a care- t1tcilit~ J1\U(h ea~icr.
Scemc Htlls l'iursmg Center at 311 Buckrtdge Road :n Gall:pol:s, phone (740) 446-7150, otTers c:uc to the
p.:opt..: who c;mnot be l:arcd for at home. fhey provide cxcdknt )killed nursing. care. rehabilitation o;crl icc~. meals.
activities. hc:p with dail) living. anJ supen i~ion. as ''ell as ~hort term prugmmming. fhc) en.:ourugc res1Jcnts to.
sta} active and to partic:pate in a varict) llf community ~CJ'\ :ces and social acti\ itics. 'I hl!y olli:r ~4-hour guidan.:e .
b~ a qual: lied, compassionate :-tat[ I hdr Mull' O\crscc~ the adminbtmtion of mc:dh:atil.ln .u1d insure~ the health
and safi:tv of the n.'Sidcnts. Safct\ concerns arc :tbo addressed with up·to-date fire and ~moke alarm~. as well as .m •
cmc~en~y CJII S) 'tc:m. Thc sal~[) of indi' iduab living with Al;hcimcr's b abo a priority at Scenir Hills. The;
have a ~4-b~:d ~cured A l1hc:imer's Dementia unit th:tt takes :nto consid.:ration the ne.:ds oC pct&gt;pk li\ ing "ith
d~mentia. This umt provides a higher stalling ratio and tmined ~tall' to c&lt;:re for these indiyiduab and their spl!c:al
nl'Cds.
th ;·ou and ;our thmily a'sess your needs. it's important to acknowledge tinancmg option~- Pa~ ment for care can
~mad~ through Medical\:, r-.kdicaid. Pri\atc lnsunmcc anti Pri\,ttc pay.
We, the editon of this 2009 l'all Local Business Update, gh·e our unconditional recommendation to S&lt;'enir
Hills 1\ursing Center for pro,iding comr&gt;assion!lte care in a home like setting. They in\ ite you to stop b) their
fine facility for more information or a tou r:
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~unbap ~imes -ientinel

(C(Q)MMUNITY

PageC3
Sunday, September 13, 2009

·Romans Highway perfonns Sept. 19

•

Submitted photo

. Romans Highway is scheduled to perform at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 19 at Ri~er of Life, located four-tenths of a mile
• out Addison Pike off of Ohio 7 in Addison. Chaos will also be featured as a specral guest.

BHCC announces lunch program
RIO GRANDE - The
Gal I ia-J ackson- Vinton
JVSD recently announced
its 2009-10 school year pol: icy for free/reduced-price
meals for students unable to
pay the full price of meals
served under the National
School Lunch Program.
. Children from households
· with income at or below the
: levels shown may be digi. ble for free or reduced-price
: meals. Application forms
: are being distributed to all
students duriflg the first
· week of school. To apply
: for free or reduced-price
nefits. households should
I out the application and
turn it to the school.
• Additional copies are a\'ail, ; able in the Student Services
' : Office. A complete applica, tion b reyuired . Households
' which current!) receh·e the
Food Assistance Program
(SNAP) or OWF funds for a
· child must provide the
· child's name. the Food
Program
Assistance
; (SNAP) or OWF case number and signature of an adult
: household member on the
application. ALL other
' households must pro\'ide
: names of ALL household
' members, the social !.ecurity
' number of the adult signing
. · the application or state
·. ''NONE'' if the adult does
not ha\ e a number. the
amount and source of
: income received by each
: household member (state
' the monthly income), and
· the signature of an adult
, ousehold member. If any
· this information is miss•
g. the school cannot
process the application.
free health care: Families
: wtth children eligible for
school meals may qe eligible for FREE health care
coverage through Ohio's
Healthy Start &amp; Healthy
Families programs. These
proarams
include
eo
. •
• coverage
.
· for doctor vtstts. tmmuntLations, physicals. prescriptions, dentaL vision, mental
health, substance abuse. and
· more. Please call 1-800. 324-8680 for more information or to request an applica. tion. rnfonnation can also be
. found on the web at
wwwstate.oh.us/odjfs/ohp/

Local school offi~ials have adopted
the following income eligibility
scale for free/reduced-price meals:
Household Size
Income/Free Meals
1
$14.079
$18,941
2
$23,803
3
4
$28,665
$33.527
5
6
$38,389
7
$43,251
$48,113
8
For each additional fan.ily member add:
$4,862

bcps / hshf/index.stm.
Anvone who has an Ohio
Medicaid card is already
receiving these services.
The information provided
on the application is confidential and will be used
only for the purpose of
determining eligibility and
may be verified at any time
during the school year by
school or other program
officials. To discourage the
possibility of misrepresentation, the application fonns
contain a statement above
the space for a signature
certifying that all information furnished is true and
correct.. Applications are
being made in connection
with~ the teceipt of federal
funds.. Schools or other officials may check the information on the application at
any time during the school
) ear. Deliberate misrepresentation of information
may subject the applicant to
prosecution under applicable state and federal laws.
Households will be notified of the approval or
denial of benefits.
ln certain cases foster
children are also eligible for
these benefits regar:-dless of
the household's income. If a
family member has foster
children living with them
and wishes to apply for such
meals for them, the school
should be contacted for
more information.
Under the provisions of the
policy, F.E. Ellsesser, CareerTechnical Supervisor, will
review applications and
determine eligibility. If a parent or guardian disagrees
with the decision on the
application or the results of

Income/Reduced Meals
$20,036
$26,955
$33,874
$40,793
$47,712
$54,631
$61,550
$68.469

$6,919

verification, the decision
may be discussed with the
determining official on an
informal basis. If a formal
appeal is desired, the household has the right to a fair
hearing. A fair hearing can be
requested either orally or in
writing from: Mr. D. Kent
Lewis.
Superintendent
(740/245-5334), Buckeye
Hills Career Center, PO Box
157, Rio Grande OH 45674.
The policy contains an
outline of the'hearing procedure.
.
Households may apply
for benefits anytime during
the school year. If a household is not currently eligible
or if the household size
or
income
increases
decreases because of unemployment or other reasons.
the family should contact
the school to file a new
application. Such changes
may make the children of
the famih elis:!ible for free
or reduce-d-price benefits if
the family income falls at or
below the levels shown.
Non-discrimination
Statement: This explains
what to do if you believe
you have been treated
unfairly. In accordance with
Federal Law and U.S.
Department of Agriculture
policy, this institution is
prohibited from discrimination on the basis of race,
color. national origin, sex,
age, or disability. To file a
complaint of discrimination, write to USDA,
Director, Office of Civil
Rights, Room 326-W,
Whitten Building, 1400
Independence Avenue SW,
Washington DC 202509410 or call 202/720-5964

(voice and TDD). USDA is
a
equal
opportunity
provider and employer.
A copy of the completed
policy is available to anyone wishing to review it in
the director's office.
It is the policy of the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School District
that educational programs
and other activities be conducted in adherence to Title
VI of the Civil Rights Act of
1964. the Title IX of the
Educational Amendments
of 1972, and the Section
504 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973 in assuring
non-discnmination
with
regard to race, color, national origin, sex and disability.
The District does not permit
discriminatory practices and
viev.·s harassment as a forn1
of discrimination.
Complamts regarding discrimination or harassment
should be brought to th~
attention of the vocational
director who serves as the
Title VI and Section 504
Coordinator.
A complaint may be filed
with the U.S. Department of
Education at an)' time. It is
not necessary for a person
to go through the district's
grievance procedures before
filing with the U.S.
Department of Education.
Complaints may be sent to:
U.S.
Department
of
Education,. Team Leader,
Office. of Civil Rights, 600
Superior Avenue East, Suite
750 Bank One Centre .
Cleveland, OH 44104.

Janie Gilbert

admits students ba!-.ed on
their academic achievement. communitv service.
leadership poter1tial, and

financial need.
Widely known for the
quality of its academic program. Berea was the south's
first intE:rracial college and
coeducational
college.
Berea charges no tuition,
admitting only academically promising students. primarily form Appalachia.
who have limited economic
resources.
For anv interested in
learning nlore about Berea
College. please contact the
admissions office at 1·800326-5948 or www.berea .edu.

Ariel's old days weekend
features melodramas
GALLIPOLIS The
Ariel Players are preparing
to transport guests to the
"good old days" with an
Old Days Weekend event
Sept. 19 and 20.
The weekend will feature
a performance of an oldfashio ned,.style melodrama, The Cornfield of
Dreams, or The Villain Was
A Laughing Stalk.
A cast of nearly 20 area
actors, adults and youth,
will tell the story the residents of Cornville attempt
to save their beloved Corn
Cafe from the clutches of
the evil villain. Ira Fuse and
his dimwitted sidekick
Rhoda Hoarse. The overthe-top silliness is designed
to entertain audiences
young and old alike. Word
puns, sight gags, and slapstick comedy are all incorporated in the melodrama.
The performance will also
feature
special guests
River's Blend Barbershop
Quartet. dulcimer music by
Linda Sigismondi. and a
feature skill performance by
Kegan Parks.
Showtimes for the performances are 3 and 8 p.m. on
Saturday, Sept. 19, and 3
p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 20.
'Tickets for this, and all
other Ariel Players and
Ariel Junior Theatre productions through May 20 lO
are only $5 per person, as
part of the Ariel's Economic
Stimulus Package.
The Old Days event will
also feature a craft and vendor mercantile on the
Ariel's second floor, as
well as an ice cream social,

which are included in the
$5 ticket. Planned merchandise and crafts from
local vendors and crafter::.
include, jewelry, aroma
lamps, hand-painted item~.
hand-made
bows,
Pampered Chef. Usborne
Books, and many others. A
large collection of newly
released youth books will
also be available.
Doors will open for the
Craft
and
Vendor
Mercantile and Ice Cream
Social both Saturday and
Sunday at 1 p.m. The
Mercantile wiJl remain open
on Saturday until 8 p.m.,
and Sunday until intermission of the 3 p.m. show.
For more information
regarding the Ariel's Old
Days Weekend events, or to
register as a crafter/vendor,
please contact the Ariel Box
Office
at
740-446ARTS(2787).

~~Gt~~~,

Performances
&amp;More
$S Tickets

Jody Gerome, DO
Obstetrician and Gynecologist
Obstetrician and gynecologiSt Jody M. Gerome,
DO, has recently joined the O'Bieness Health
System. She received her medical degree from the
Ohio University College of OSteopathic Medicine, and
completed a residency in obstetrics and gynecology at
Doctors Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.

,.
BEREA. Ky. - Janie
. Gilbert of Thunnan, a 2009
' graduate of River Valley
. oh School has been
1~1itted to Berea College
•
for the Fall 2009 term.
Gilbert is the daughter
of Diana Gilbert and the
late Scott Gilbert and has
one brother. Michael
Gilbert.
; As an enrolled student 111
Berea College, Gilber1 has
· been awarded a four-year
.' tuition scholarship currently
valued at more than
; $100poo. Berea College

From left, cast members from Cornfield of Dreams Aaron
Stover and Halley Alberts. The Ariel Players are hosting an
Old Days Weekend event Sept. 19 and 20.

•

Gerorne has joined the multi-physician practice
-- River Rose Obstetrics and Gynecology--which is affiliated with the O'Bieness
Health System through. Athens Medical
Associates, Inc. River Rose is located in ~
the Castrop Center Suite 260 in the
O'Bieness Medical Park. To schedule an
appointment. call (740) 594-8819.

. ,- . . ,ESS.
SYSTEM

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

·

Gallia Meigs Performing Arts Wins Platinum

MYRTLE BEACH. S.C.
_. Gallia Meigs Performing
Arts competed against
dozens of dance studios
from aro~nd the country for
prestigious top honors at
Showstopper
National
Finals. the largest dance
competition in the country.
The Myrtle Beach competion was held June 28
through July 4.
Receiving Platinum First
Place in Samll Group
Recreational Jazz age 14
and sixth place Overall Tenn
Groups were Stacy Stump,
Jennifer Blevins, Kayla
Purdum, Jessica Northup,
Samantha Denbow, Jorden
Evans, Claudia Skinner, and
Kelsey Purdum. These
dancers received gold ratings for their individual
solos and won second place
in both Small Group
Recreational Lyrical Jazz
and Tap age 13. Bethany
Purdum also received a go,ld
fating for Solo Recreational
Jazz age 9.
'
Gallia Meigs Performing
Arts offers classes in ballet,
pointe, tap. jazz, and baton
under the direction of Patty
Fellure principal choregra-

~001)

Aja Blackwell and Arron Davis

BLACKWELLDAVIS WEDDING
POMEROY - Steve and Shati Blackwell announce the
approaching marri-age of their daughter. Aja Lynae. (o Arron
Arthur Davis. son of Ramona Davis and the late Gary Davis.
The bride-elect is a 2004 -graduate of Meigs High School,
and is employed with Health Recovery Services. Her fiance '
IS a 1997 graduate of Alexander High School,
The wedding will be held at the Pomeroy Nazarene
Church at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday. Sept. 19. Friends and
family of the couple are invited to attend. A reception will ·
follow at the VFW halLin Albany.

Submitted photo

Front row, Kelsey Purdum, second row, Kayla Purdum, Jennifer Bleveins, Samantha
Denbow, back row, Claudia Sknner, Jorden Evans, and Jessica Northup.
pher, Beth Fellure, assistant
choregrapher, and Sarah
Woodyard,
assistant

teacher. The school has studios at 27 Locust St. in
Gallipolis and 290 North

Second Ave. in Middleport.
For i1!{ormation. call740245-9880 or 740-645,-3836.

TRADITIONS
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Commissioners proclaimed the week of Sept.
13 through Sept. 19 as
National Assisted Living
"' Week® in Gallia County
during a recent meeting.
This year's theme is
"Traditions of the Heart."
According to the proclamation, the number of elderly and .disabled Americans is
dramatically increasing and
assisted living is a long term
care service that fosters
choice, dignity, independence and autonomy in our
elderly nationwide.
· Whereas, the National
Center for Assisted Living
proudly created National
Assisted Living Week® and
the theme, "Traditions of
the Heart" highlights the
opportunity to bestow a
multitude of events and
activities on our residents to
Show them · how much we
care for and love them.
All citizens are urged to
visit friends and loved ones
who reside at these facilities and also 'to learn more
about assisted living services and how they benefit
our communities.

BOGGESS
ANNIVERSARY

I

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Troy and Hazel (O'dell) :
Boggess celebrated their 50th anniversary on Sept. 11 , 1959.
Celebrating with them were daughters. Kathy (John)
Barry, Kayleen (Bobby) Hayslip. Kandi (Steve) Marcum; .
son. Keith (Patti) Boggess: grandchildren. Shannon, Troy.:
A:-hley. Bradley, Brittney. Shawna. ~eith, Chasity;
Cheyenne. Logan. Charly (Leann), Wayne (Ashley), \'fist).
Megan. and Gan·et: and great grandchildren. Devin. Destiny..
Zoey. Rayna, MacKenlle. M1chael, Noah. Damien, Wyatt,:
Madelyn. Evan. Cody, Kristin. and Addison (expecting) . •
Mr. and Mrs. Boggess were married in Scarbro, W.Va.
Sept. 11. 1959.
..

The week of Sept. 13 through Sept. 19 was recently proclaimed National Assisted Livmg
Week® in Gallia County, From left. Ken Tomlinson , Kate Stone, Holzer Assisted Livmg ,
activity coordinator, Joe Foster, vice president of the Gallia County Commiss1on, Peggy
Williams, RN. Holzer Assisted Living, Justin Fallon, president of the Gallia County
Commission, Louise Dennis, and Loi,s Snyder, Gallia County Commission.

Pirates! Miley! pisney
dishes on new films at D23 .

Elizabeth RigeVphoto

WIC program to gain flexibility
GALLIPOLIS The
WIC food packages provide
supplemental
foods
designed to meet the special
nutritional needs of income
eligible pregnant, breastfeeding, non-breastfeeding
postpartum women, infants
and children up to five years
of age who are at nutritional
risk. WIC food packages and
nutrition education are the
chief means by which WIC
affects the dietary quality
and habits of participants.
On Dec. 6. 2007, an interim rule revising the WIC
food packages was published
in the Federal Register. The
new food packages align with
the 2005 Dietary Guidelines
for Americans and infant
feeding practice guidelines of
the American Academy of
Pediatrics. The food packages better promote and support the establishment of successful, longterm breastfeeding, provide WIC participants
with a wider variety of foods
including fruits and vegetables and whole grains, and
provide WIC State agencies
greater flexibility in prescrib-

...

amounts of foods. including just had a baby; infants up
a higher dollar value for to one year old and children
fruits and vegetables. Fully to age five.
·
breastfeeding infants receive
HOW TO APPLY FOR
baby food meats in addition WIC? Applicants must meet
to greater amounts of baby income eligibility guidelines .
food fruits and vegetables. For example: a family size of
Less infant formulas provid- two, monthly income cannot
ed to partially breastfeeding exceed $2247: family size of
infants so that they may four - $3 ,400; family size
receive the benefits of breast five - $3.976; family size
milk. A minimai amount of six - $4,553. Please note
infant formula is provided to that a pregnant woman
partially
breastfeeding counts as more than one faminfants in the first month ily member. A person who
after birth in order to help currently receives Medicaid.
mothers build and maintain CareSource, Unison or
Molina health coverage;
their milk production.
In conclusion. we are excit- Food Stamps, or Ohio Works
ed here at the WIC office First (OWF) automatically
about the new food packages meets the income eligibility
and the variety of new foods crite1ia for WIC.
Pleas!! call ,the Gallia
they offer. Please feel free to
call or stop by to find out County WJC Office at 740more and if you may be eligi- 441-2977 for further information or to schedule em
ble for the WIC program.
Evening
WHO CAN APPLY FOR appointment.
WJC? Women who are appointmellts are awrilable
pregnant, breastfeeding. or upon request.

ing food packages to accommodate the cultural food preferences ofWIC participants.
WTC State agencies must
implement the new changes
by Oct. l, 2009. An interim
rule allows the Food and
Nutrition Service to obtain
feedback on the revisions
while allowing implementation to move forward. The
interim rule comment period ends on Feb. I, 2010.
USDA will issue a final rule
after review and analysis of
public comments.
The food packages provide
participant choice and variety.
Foods such as tortillas. brown
rice, canned salmon, and a
wide choice of fruits and vegetables provide State agencies
flexibility in prescribing culturally appropriate fpod packages. The choices of canned
or dried beans are also being
added to the packages.
The food packages for
breastfeeding infant-mother
pairs provide incentives for
continued breastfeeding. For
example, the food package
for fully breastfeeding
women provides greater

A~AHEIM, Calif. (AP)- Johnny Depp. Miley Cyrus:··
John Tra\'' Olta. Tim Burton, Nicolas Cage and the :
Muppets are all set to appear in upcommg Disney films.
and they came to the Anaheim Convention Center to tell
fans in person,
, ·
They joined Walt Disney Studios Chairman Dick Cook.
on Friday at the D23 Expo. Disney's answer to Comic-Con.·,
for a presentation on the studio's forthcoming film slate. .
Depp was welcomed with raucous applause as he sailed
onstage in a pirate ship dressed as Capt. Jack Sparrow. He '
staggered about and embraced Cook. who announced that,: ·
"Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides'' would be ·.
released in the summer of·20 II. Depp will also play Tonto ·
in a big-screen adaptation of''The Lone Ranger.'' Cook said.
Cyrus performed her hit "The Climb" and discussed her
role !n "The Last Song·· - a part Cook said was written ·
just for her.
Travolta. along with wife Kelly Preston and daughter.
Ella Blue, presented their forthcoming flick. "Old Dogs,''
set for release in November. All three appear in the fih.
which also stars Robin Williams.
Burton showed footage from his 3-D take on "Alice L
Wonderland,'' which stars Depp as the Mad Hatter and
Helena Bonham Carter as the Red Queen.
. Coo~ announced another Burton-Disney project: The stu-:
d10 will release a feature-length ver~on of Burton's ani- .
mated short film. "Frankenweenie."

Gallia Co. Senior Citizen Center

VOTE YES
For The
Senior Center Levy

GALLIA COUN1Y
DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND
FAMILY SERVICES
Due to State Budget cuts the hours of operation
for the Gallia County Department of Job &amp;
Family Services, work opportunity Center and
the Child Support Enforcement Agef!CY will be
changing effective September 14,2009.
The Agency will now 1&gt;e open Monday through
Thursday during the hours of 7:00 am to 5:00
pm and will be closed on Fridays.

Please support our seniors of
Gallia County by passing the levy
this fall! The services that
we provide are available to
Gallia Co. Seniors

"Without Your Support These Services :!reIn )eopardl'

848 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(7 40) 446-3222
800-371-5987

J)

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i&gt;unbav ~ime~ -ientinel
.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

~

'Blame' is story of atonement for crime undone

Edsel- tells of search
for art looted in WWII

Bv M.L. J OHNSON
'ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"Blame'' (Sarah Cnchton
Books. 291 pages. $25), by
Michelle Huncvcn: Anyone
\\ ho has been on a bender
I read the first chapters
"Blame" with thankod-it-wa~n't-me relief and
the· anxiety of knowing it
could have been.
' His tory professor Patsy
MacLemoore has a new
doctorate. blond good looks
and a problem with alcohol.
She awakes from a blackout
in jail and asks her lawyer
and the police. jokingl).
"Did I kill someone?"
Two Jehovah's \Vitnesses,
a mother and daughter. died
'in her driveway, struck by
her car. Patsy pleads guilty.
dries out in prison and
begins looking for ways to
atone. When she'~ released,
she
,·olunteers
with
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
·marries and sends money to
help her victim's \Vidower
ra1se the couple's surviving
son. She tries to he a selfless
teacher. wife and friend.
Nearly two decades later.
.she gets a kick in the teeth
en an acquaintance
ngs the news: Patsy did•
-o 't do it. Someone else was
driving and left her to take
the blame.
Michelle Hune\en 's third
novel is a smart study in
redemption and small cruelties. Overcome by gUJlt.
Patsy\\ ill do nearly anything
to try to make up for the Jiv~
she belie' es she has taken.

I Bv CARL HARTMAN
1

AP photo

In this book publ city image released by Sarah Crichton Books, Michelle Huneven, author
of "Blame;• is shown.

Unlike many of the people
she meets in jail. Patsy didn "t
mean to hurt anyone. Her
image of herself as fundamentally good and goodnatured
are shattered.
Huneven 's book has power
because· Patsy is an everywoman - her story could be
that of anyone who has ever
had too much to drink.
Huncven also shows
insight in the petty punishments
Patsy's
former
friends and lovers dispense
with little. if any. thought.
Patsy comes out of jail to
find her best friend has
'replaced her with a col-

league they once di~dained.
A lover treats her dismi~­
sively. believing a convict
can't expect to have a committed relationship.
But perhaps the worst
betrayal comes at the end,
when Patsy's husband refuses to celebrate her innocence
because much of his selfe,teem is based on having
helped her redeem hcn,elf.
"Blame'' IS noteworth\
for its sharply drawn characters, most of whom are
neither good nor bad but
struggling in between. But
its true power is in the questions it raises about blame.

responsibility and consequence. Implicitly. it asks
the reader, what would you
do in Patsy's place and
could you accept the consequences?
By the novel's end. Patsy
and the reader are left wondering what her life would
have been like if the real
driver had accepted -responsibility. Would she have gotten sober? Married? Been
such a devoted teacher and
fnend? Does the good life
Patsv made balance the
injustice of her conviction?
They are unanswerable and
haunting questions.

•
,G
h S . '.
.
R ev1ew: ate at t e tarrs ISMoore m top form
B Y PATRICK C ONDON

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
. "A Gate at the Stairs''
'(Knopf, 336 pages, $25), by
Lorrie Moore: The author of
'acclaimed shol't-story collections "Birds of America''
and "Like Life," Lorrie
Moore has a well-deserved
·'reputation as a master of
that form. with powers of
en ation and a sense of
imsy that lend themves to ob'ien•ing life in
miniature.
· But Moore also writes
:novels. and \'&gt;ith "A Gate at
the Stair;" - her first in 15
years - she may have
penned her masterpiece. A
sharp, sad year-in-the-life
saga of a Midwestern college student, this is the kind
of book that sneaks up on
.you: Moore charms with her
humor and knack for the
'small but telling detail, slowly builds a sense of investment in her frustratingly passive
protagonist, then
unleashes an unexpected
'emotional wallop at the end.
· !vloore isn't the kind of
author you read to be put
through the paces of an
exciting plot. Some readers
might grow weary, for
instance, at Moore's numer&lt;&gt;us, lengthy tangents into
exhaustive description of
"dwestern plant life. Her
ging of major develop- ·
ents can seem a bit clumsy. and a few pop-culture
references feel off.
But if anything, this
digressive, sometimes fractured approach lends even
more authenticity to the
world view of Moore's protagonist. Tassic Keltj\n. A
20-year-old student at a
thinly veiled version of the
University of WisconsinMadison (where Moore has
taught for' 25 years), Tassic
often seems only loosely m
touch with the world around
·her. simultaneously selfQbsessed and detached from
'her real self in a way that
will seem familiar to anyone
who knows college ~tudents.

·

I

f.

[nter Tile
nciting Career of

1-IVAC

The novel folio~ s Tassie
for a year starting shortly
after the 9111 terrorist
attacks. A smart but naive
farm girl from a tiny
Midwestern town, Tassie is
just starting to get glimpses
of a Joife beyond her provincial background, a \vorld of
''Chaucer, Sylvia Plath.
Simone de Beauvoir.'' She
acknowledges that she'd
never eaten Chinese food
before college and to never
having seen a rran dressed
in a tie and blue jeans until
the day a professor shO\\ed
up for class in such garb.
Much of the book
revolves around Tassie 's
new job working as a nanny
for the adopted biracial
daughter of a wealthy,
slightly mysterious middleaged couple. Tassie is both
fascinated and a little frightened by Sarah Brink and
Edward Thornwood, but she
quickly bonds with their
child.
''A Gate at the Stairs" also
follows Tassie through her
first serious relationship,
and on a fe,,· visits home to
her odd but loving parents
and aimless teenage brother.
Moore maintains her light

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called 'Grandma Jell-0,' but the Greatest Treasure Hunt
'prime rib with au jus.' a pre- in History" with vivid
cise knowled~e of French accounts of the war's
or English or~even food col- progrc~s. But statements
oring - not being the that recall films "based on a
restaurant's strong point."
true story" may put some
That kind of satire could . readers off. An author's
verge on snobbery, but note says he created diaMoore lampoons with equal Iogue for continuity but not
precision the liberal pieties 1 on substance, and always
and prejudices of Sarah, 1 With documentation .
Edward and their friends.
''I have t1t all times tried
trapped in their college-town not only to understand and
cocoon. ·'J could hear communicate the facts."
Edward's voice. Proximity Edsel adds, "but also the
to science and scientists and personalities and perspecacademics had caused him to tive&lt;; of the people imolved.
speak in a kind ot m1micl) as well as their perception
of profes:-ors. He would use of events at the very instant
the phrase if~ ou will. A lot." they occurred."

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"The ~ t onuments Men:
Allied
Heroes,
Nazi
Thieves. and the Greatest
Treasure Hunt in History"
(Center Street. 473 pages.
$26.99). hy Robert M.
Edsel with Bret Witter:
When Hitler invaded
Poland and started World
War II . special units went
along to seize works of art,
says author Robert M .
Edsel.
Other Europeans hid masterpieces with limited succe&lt;.s. The Germans' bootv
began what Edsel calls "the
greatest treasure hunt in history" - still going on 70
years later.
An
American-Israeli
organir.ation estimates the
Germans mav have stolen
as many as" I .5 million
objects, with 100,000 of
!nuseUJ:l quality still missmg.
Leonardo da Vinci's
"Lady With an Ermine"
turned up in the house of
llans Frank, who ran
Poland for the Nazis. and
today'&lt;; treasure hunters
still wonder what happeQed
to Raphael's "Portrait of a
Young Man." once held by
Frank. Both paintings were
treasures of the Czartoryski
Museum
in
Krakow.
Poland's art capital.
The hunters' exploits
make a fascinating read.
Edsel carefully and colorfully backgrounds "The

Thafs a tricky undertaking. more than half a century later.
Strictly speaking "monuments men" were a small
group - 17 to start - in a
British-American undertaking: the Monuments. Fine
Arts
and
Archives
Subcommission. It was
formed just before D-Day,
ncar! y five years after the
assault on Poland. In the
interval. Gennany and its
allies occupied pretty much
all of western Europe and a
good chunk of North Africa.
So the Western allies could
do little to protect important
artistic and historic buildings - the group's first
objective.
in practice, the "monuments men·· were from
manv countries, even
Gennany. Count Franz von
Wolf-.Metternich. a profes•
sor from Bonn University,
headed the official German
Kunstschutz "Art Protection
Service." He discreetly sabotaged efforts to ship art
from France out of the
country.
He cooperated with Rose
Valland. a heroine of the
French resistance. She
started as a volunteer at the
Jeu de Paume, a small
museum near the Louvre iri
Paris but a major German
collecting point for artistic
loot. Throughout the war
she risked her Jife keeping
kept track of the art gathered there and their destinations.

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touch throughout. weaving
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without turning the book
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Indeed, more than anything, Mo~re is a deeply
funny wnter. She pokes
some fun at the rural
.Midwest, whether it's expostog verbal tics like the distinction in meaning between
"sounds good'' and ''good to
go,'" or describing the menu
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�PageC6
Sunday, September 13, 2009 ·

Review: '9' is breathtakingly original
BY

CHRISTY LEMIRE

AP MOVIE CRITIC

LOS
ANGELES
Despite their roughhewn
appearance, the resourceful
rag dolls in "9" obviously
were crafted with great love
and care. both by the scientist. who made them in the
film and the mastermind
behind them in real life,
director Shane Acker.
If only as much complex
thought had gone into the
:Script.
The animation is so
breathtaking in its originality. so weird and wondrous
in its detail, you wish there
were more meat to the
screenplay from Pamela
Pettier, who previously
wrote "Monster House."
· Based on Acker's animated short of the same name.
which was nominated for an
Oscar in 2006. "9'' follows a .
group of creatures who represent the last vestige of
humanity in a post-apocalyptic world . It's set in the
future after a war between

mankind and machines but
eerily resembles Europe
after World War II. with its
sepia tones blanketing the
decimated surroundings in
danger and fear. (Parents,
don't be fooled: It may look
like a cute and clever cartoon, but "9" is genuinely
frightening.)
9 (voicoo by Elijah
Wood) awakens to find no
people are left, but there are
a few others like him: tiny,
·fabric dolls stitched together coarsely but sturdily.
with lenses for eyes. (As in
"WALL-E." the eyes con- ·
vey a lot more emotion than
you might imagine.) It's
easy to see why Tim Burton
was drawn to "9" and wanted to help get it made as a
producer,
along
with
"Wanted" director Timur
Bekmambetov: the mixture
of darkness and whimsy,
the childlike and the fantastic. is remimscent of
Burton's signature aesthetic. And yet, Acker has a
vision all his own.
The dolls have numbers .

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on their backs signifying 6. There are abo 3 and -L
who they are and the order mute twins who are experts
in which the) were created. on history. and the brutish 8
They include I (Christopher (Fred Tatasciore), who
Plummer), the pric~tly. 1 igid Iouks like the Michelin Man
leader: 2 (Martin Landau). and setves as I 's enforcer.
an aging but feisty inventor;
From there. "9" follows
5 (John C . Reilly). who's · an episodic. almost video
loyal but afraid of every- game-like format. The curithing; and 7 (Jennifer ous 9 picks up an ornate
Connelly). a brave and butt- piece of metal, sticks it in a
kicking
\Varrior. corresponding hole and
Appropriately.
Crispin inadvertently jump-staJ1s a
Glover provides the voice villainous contraption comof the group ·s misfit at1ist. posed of a giant red eye at

the center and myriad metal
tentacle.;, He and the other
dolls must then scurry for
their I ives - even thou!.!h
they don't yt.:t kmm tht.:
whole s:ory of their purpose
on this planet - as a series
of equally menacing monsters tries to pick them off,
one by one.
.
About halfway in, you
realize hovv' thin this
expanded story really b,
even though it's always dazzling to watch. It's intensc

and nearly relentless. except
for a brief respite in which
"9"' pays a lovely homage to
""The Wit.ard ol Oz.''
Acker isn't taking u~ over .
the rainbow, but he h~
brought us someplace dari
and new. and he makes yo .
anxious to sec what other
destinations he has in mind.
··9 ," a Focus Feature;;
release, is rated PG-13 for
violence and scary images.
Running time: 79 minutes.
Three stars out of four.

Welcoming patients of all ages
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Do" n on the Farm. Page D6

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~IVING

•

Dl

'lEi me£) -~.entlnel
I

Sunday, September 13, 2009

I

Travel.

Destinatio

AP photos

This photo taken Dec. 11, 2008 shows that it sometimes requires neck craning to find the title you want when
searching the 12 bookstores in this town of 11,000. These books sit atop shelves in Beacon Books, which
seems to have a mix of everything including comic books hanging above the bookshelf.

Canadian coastal
community teeming
in book titles
Bv STEVE QuiNN

lfYou Go ...

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SIDNEY. Briush Columbm
e. in thas coastal Western
adian town. it's all about the
•
ks - thouo;;ands of them scattered throughout 12 stores.
New books and rare books.
Paperbacks
and
hardbacks.
&lt;;:'hildren 's books. classics and
lpYSteries. Cookbooks. gardening
booh, even com1c books.
. For two d&lt;t)S, i was m ltterature
~liss, not knowmg where to sta11,
losing track of time. and eventually being ac;;ked to leave one
store be&lt;.:ausc it was closing time
:- almost like a bartender cutting
me off.
· Within seven blocks, I could
find just about everything from
r,he latest best-selling mystery by
· wrjter Michael Connelly to rare
finds by 18th century writer Sir
Walter Scott.
These books quick I) engage the
~enses and don't let go: Feel the
raised letters of a copy of ..The
Adventures of Huckleberry
finn.'' Smell the old paper from
the pages of ''A History of
Egyptian Mummies" from 1834.
.en to the bookstore owners
about their collections. Watch
•
a new title unexpectedly catch
·
someone 's eye.
: Literary mania is a year-round
J5rcoccupation in this seaside tmvn
of 11.000 people. who live about
20 miles from British Columbia's .
capital Victoria. Wherever you

SIDNEY BOOKTOWN: http://www.sJdneybooktown.ca/. Located
in Sidney, British . Columbia in coastal Western Canada, on
Vancouver Island's Saamct) Peninsula. 20 miles from the provincial
capital of Victoria.
GETTING THERE: Ferry service to Sidney includes BC Ferries
from Vancouyer, http://www.bcferries bc.ca and the Coho Ferry from
Victoria and Port Angeles, Wash., http:l/www.cohoferry.com. The
nearest airport is in V1ctona.
are. there ·s a More on the next
block. There's one next door.
There's another a few doors do\\ n.
And there's one around the corner.
There's even one underground.
· Sidney is billed as" Canada\
only booktown. a place that
emerged from the blueprint of
Britain's Hay-On-Wye booktown
on the English Welsh border with
1500 people and 30 bookstores.
The books sit on tables. in bookshelves. and behind glass to pre.scrve pages and bindin~s that sur' ived a century long JOurney to
this particular shelf.
Some books get stacked along
side bookcases already teeming
with so man) titles there is no
room even for a thin paperback.
The overflo\\ reaches the top of
:.helves. putting some books
slightly out of reach unles::; you
find a stepladder.
Some books still sit in boxc~
waiting to be unpacked and sorted. Sometimes store clerks arc
too slow for impatient customers.
so it's not unusual to find a
booklover
begins
wading

through a new batch before it's
on the shelves.
P01tions of the bookstores look
more like a person's office. where
books accumulate and await someone to come in and start reading.
And somewhere behind every
stack is someone eager to talk
books.
StaJt with Clive Tanner, who has'
a stake in five stores and staJted
Sidney's booktown in 1994 after
vi~iting Hay-On-Wye. He can be
found roaming from Paperback
Writer to Country Life Books to
Time Enough for Books to
Beacon Books. Tanner wants to
know as much about readers "here they are from. hO\\ they got
here and \\hen the\ are coning
back - as they do about his tO\\ n~.
Or go visit Odean Long. who
owns The Haunted Bookshop.
One tableau underscore::; her love
for British literature: a painting of
Sir Walter Scott, famous for
"Ivanhoe" and ''Rob Ro) :· Long
refuses to stock books found on
wire racks in local pharmacies.
But she will have anything from a

'

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King's Daughters Medical Center is pleased to welcome David Glassman, M.D.,
who is joining Kentucky Heart &amp; Vascular Physicians. He specializes in electrophysiology,
which focuses on diagnosing and treating heart rhythm abnormalities.
Dr. Glassman earned his medical degree in 2002 from Indiana University School of
Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind. He completed his internship (2003} and residency (2005)
in Internal Medicine at the University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa; and his fellowship in
Cardiology/Cardiac Electrophysiology at Brown University, Providence, R.I. (2009).
Dr. Glassman is board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine.
Kentucky Heart &amp; Vascular Physicians
Medical Plaza B
613 23rd Street, Suite 230
Ashland, Ky. 411 01

606.324.4 7 45

'

This p~oto taken Dec. 11, 2008 shows Sidney, British Columbia, which
is all about the books scattered throughout 12 bookstores. This sculpture in front of Tann~r's Books reflects the town ·s love for books and the
visitors attracted to the community's literary charm,
But it isn't alwa) s the book
paperback of classic literature for
a few bucks to a first edition of you're looking for. Rather. it's the
''The House at Pooh Corner,'' one next to it or the one on the
shelf below that catches your eye,
which can fetch up to $1,000.
From there. walk fc\\ doors aiiO\\ ing you to discover new
down into Galleon Books &amp; titles in ways that searching the
Antiques where Rod Lauric and Internet would not.
And because the books are used.
Brian MacLean own a shop with
second-hand books .shelved amid you can't help but be curious
the decor of a genteel private about their pasts. I'II look at a
study, surrounded by art, antiques cop) of ~lark Twain's "Roughing
and table centerpieces. The two It'' and wonder: Who was this
men stock mosth nonfiction book's first O\\ ner? An adult? A
replete with titles on.First ~ation'i. child'? A teacher? A '' riter? How
Canadian h1story. anti4ucs and art. manv owners ha\ e there been
Or sit down \\ ith Fred Gordon, a altoeethcr? Where was this book
Scobman who co-o'' ns Tne Book fir:·£ sold? HO\\ did it get to this
Cellar. an undergrouud book-;tore store? Why \\Ould the owner give
with maps and more than 5.000 up this copy?
titles depicting the world'-; mih"Rom!hin!! It" is a fa,oritc of
tary history. Gordon opened the mine, a~1d 1-;-m always looking for
store with Tanner and sits ready to different editions. This time. as I
perused the shelves of a ~tore in
discus~ h1s collectiOn of Winston
Sidney. another title emerged;
Churchill's '' orks.
If you're not browsing, bu) ing "Selected Shorter Writings of
or sitting along the coast getting Mark Twain." a collection publost in your latest dtsCo\ cry. lished in 1962.
It cost $5, I wouldn't sell it
chances arc you're thinl-:ing about
what's missi1.1g from your shelves. ,for $500.

�- - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _"!""""_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ """":l'"

Page 02 • 6unbap utt~ ·6tntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Sunday, September 13, 2009

\!Cribttne - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
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Trtblne-llontlntl~llter wlllla r•poneiblt tor no mort thin the cott ot trw epact occupied by the error and only the llrtt lnMrtiOn. We ahell nol be liable tor
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aecep\1 only hllp WI!Ud Ide me«lng EOE l!lndarelll. We w111 not ltnowfngly loctpl any IKIVOrtlalng In VIOlation Ollila lew. Will not be raponllblt lor
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

*POLICIES*
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Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
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he first Insertion. WE
shall not be liable tor
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hat results from the
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ot
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200

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PubliC. They W1 be he d
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740·446·0870. RoiJers
Basement Waterprcoling.

Unlimited local
and long distance calling for
only $24.99 per
month.

Other Services
Pot
Cremations.
740-446-3745

Call

• Personals
I need your frnancJal t.elp
desparately J~t St o·
S2 would help. To. 605
Sit&gt; Ave. Ga hpohs, OH.

300

Services

'

PIBECIV
For the best TV
experience, upgrade
from cable to Directv
today!
Packages start
at $29.99
1-866·541·0834

Get reliable phone
service from Vonage.
Call Today!
1·866·949-n18

Will take care of lhe
elderly tn their home
call 304·675·3264.

I

Legals ...........................................................! 00 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1 000
Announcements~·······-·· .............................. 200
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205 Bicycles......................................................! 010
Happy Ads ....................................................21 0 Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Lost &amp; Found .............................................. 215 Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Memory/Thank You .................................... 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Notices ...................... ~ ................................ 225 Other ..........................................................1030
Personals .................................................... 230 Want to buy ...............................................1035
Wanted ....................................................... 235 Automotive ................................................ 2000
Servlccs ...................................................... 300 Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
Appliance Servlce ...................................... 302 Autos .......................................................... 2010
Automotive .................................................. 304 Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Building Materials ...................................... 306 CommerciaVlndustrial .............................. 2020
Business ..................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accessories .................................. 2025
Caterlng ........................................................ 310 Sports Utility.............................................. 2030
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 312 Trucks .........................................................2035
Computers .................................................. 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Contractors.................................................. 316 Vans ............................................................ 2045
Domestics/Janitorla1 .................................. 318 Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Electrical ..................................................... 320 Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Financial.......................................................322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Health ..............:............................................ 326 Commercial ................................................3010
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328 Condominiums .......................................... 3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
lnsurance ..................................................... 332 Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Lawn Service ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
Other Services .............................................338 Want to buy ................................................3040
Plumbing/Eiectrlcal .....................................340 Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Professional Servlces ................................. 342 Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Repalrs ...1 .................................................... 344 . Commercial ................................................3510
Roofing .........................................................346 Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Security ....................................................... 348 Houses for Rent ......................................... 3520
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352 Storage.......................................................3535
Financlal .......................................................400 Want to Rent ..••••••••••••.•••••:......................... 3540
Financial Services ......... ~···· ..••••••••••••··••..····405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots .............................................................4005
Money to Lend .............................................415 Movers ........................................................4010
Education .....................................................500 Rentais ....................................- ................. 4015
Business &amp; Trade School ...........................505 Sales ..........................................................4020
Instruction &amp; Trainlng ................................ 510 Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Lessons ........................................................515 Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Personal ......................................................520 Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Anlmals ........................................................600 Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Animal Supplles .........................................605 Resort Property for rent. .......................... 5CSO
Horses .........................................................610 Employment...............................................6000
Llvestock ......................................................615 Accountlng!Financial .............., ................. 6002
Pets ..-...........................................................620 Administrative/Professlonal .....................6004
Want to buy.................................................. 625 Cashler/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Agrlculture .................................................. 700 Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Farm Equipment .......................................... 70S Cierlcal ....................................................... 6010
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710 Construction .............................................. 6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Want to buy ..................................................725 Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Merchandise ................................................ 900 Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Antlques .......................................................905 Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Appllance ..................................................... 910 Food Servlces ............................................6024
Auctlons ..................... ,.................................915 Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Bargain Basement.......................................920 Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Collectlbles ................................................. 925 Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Computers ................................................... 930 Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Equlpment/Supplles....................................935 Management/Supervisory ........................ 8034
Flea Markets ................................................ 940 Mechanlcs .................................................. 8036
Fuel 011 Coai/Wood/Gss ............................. 945 Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Furnlturo ...................................................... 950 Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport,................................... 955 Part-Time-Temporarles ............................. 6042
Kid's Corner................................................. 960 Restaurants ............................................... 8044
Mlscellaneous..............................................965 Sales...........................................................6048
want to buy.................................................. 970 Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975 Textlles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Business &amp; Trade
School
GaUlpolls Career
College
(Careers Close To Horre}
Call Todayl740·446-4367
1·800·214-0452
ga r!pOI-scareercollege.edu
Accredrted Member Accredrt•
ng Couool for Independent
Colleges and Schools 12748

600

Animals

0

Livestock
For sale 6 Angus cows
&amp; 18 mon. old Black
Ltmous1r bull.
call
304·675·1311
or
304-675·4611

TURNE:O DOWN ON

Peb

SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No F-ee Urless We W1n!
1-888·582·3345

10 beautiful Lab pt~pples
to giVe away to good
home. (740)256·9323.

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Galll8
Co.
OH and
MJson Co VN. Ron
Evans
Jackson.
OH
8()().537-9528

DISH NETWQBK
Save up to 40% off
your cable biii!Call
Dish Network today!
1·877·274·2471

Education

7)

D

C&gt;

Professional Services

Security

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

u.s.A

500

A..PI
Free Home Security
System
$850 Value
with purchase of alarm
monitoringservices
from ADT Security
Services.
Call1·888-274·3888
Tax I Accounting

AMERICAN TAX
RELIEF
Settle IRS Taxes
For a fract1on of what
you owe. II you owe
over $15,000 1n back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1-8n-258·5142
400

2

Free

Pe~S~&lt;::rVHi:'"!ala·

yar one male one Fema·e 1 year old (74C
245·5678
Free krnens. 2 F tiger

sm~s.
.

www.comics.com

Farm Equipment

~~ John
~~~~=----Deer 2840 tractor;

740 949. 3408

Collie pups. AKC reg•s·
tered. $200 m, $250 f,
vet checked. ready to go
740·992·2822

l'ltemational 584 tractor;
3000
Fordi!T'al"'ure
spreader,(740)286-6522
~----~~~

Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
female
dog.
Found.
Black, Tan, White. Has surprised! Check out our
d
I e tory
at
on
hip. ~:V.CAREnQvcnom.
Car·
scar
(740)245·9583.
mtchael
Equipment
Free puppies 6 wks old 2 740·446·2412
(f). mother is full blooded
BosIon lierr. • fathe r •s STIHL Sales &amp; Serv,ce
Terr. mix 304·593-0393
Now Available at Carm1·
chael
EqUipment
Free puppies m1x border 74().446•2412
collie/australian
shepherd to a good home
(740)256·1233.

Prur of mattng African
Read your
Grey's·S1600, 57 Chevy newspaper and learn
Hard
Top-S9500. ·~...-_so_m_et_h_in..::g_t_od_a...:y_l--l
(740)446-3442
700

Agriculture

._._._._._._._
Gorden &amp; Produce

P1ck your own camtng
tomatoes and peppers.
bell. sweet banana and
hot. red yellow &amp; green.
S4 bucket. bring your
own containers or buy
our boxes for S1 each.
Troye~s
produce
171
L k
R
G II r
a in
oad,
a ipo •s.
Oh 45631. 9 miles west
of Gallipolis off ST AT
141 watch for canning tomatoes
signs
closed
Sunday.

900

Merchandise

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Announcements

Announcements

SOCTHEAST OHIO BIS DISTRICT
INTRODUCES NEW DISPATCH
TRAINING PROGRA:\1
Program is an in depth 9 week ~tudy that
includes national certification in APCO Tclr:
Cornmunkator I and E~tD (Emergency,
~1edical Dispatcher) training.
·
Students \\ill be taught how to affect1vely
d1spatch for all public safet} venue.-;. with a
conccntrution Ill pre-arrival instruction. and
CPR ct:rtilication.
'
Classes will be held Tuesday and Thur&lt;;day
evenings from 5 pm • 9 pm at SEOE:\.IS
headquarters located on SR 160 in Gallipolis.
Ohio begmning September 22nd, 2009. For
information regardmg registration and
enrollment please contact SEOE~1S
Commumcations center at 446-7206.

Vinyl
Sale,
Regular
14.95. on sa1e at 7.95.
On
carpet
lso (740)446 7444

!!!a~.~~~·!!!!!!!!!!~·!!!!!!!!!!~
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800-537-9528

Unven!ed
gas hea.
Pro-com, paid S180
year will take St
740-992·5275
or
416·3857
Beaut1ful 'HAND MADE',
Outlts, reasonable priced
tor app. to see can •
304·675-4624.
•

Farm Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
53999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER !NVEN·
TORY AT
WWWCARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740-446-3825

dryer
S300
OBO.
(740)446-8832
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Equipment I Supplies 1

Student
ochestra
bellsiXylophone
With
case. st&lt;:nds &amp; boo!&lt;, ex·
For Sate. apt. SIZed Ken- cellent cond,tol", St20,
or
more washer &amp; dryer. 740·992-5:275
416·3857
(740)446-7911.

Money To lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Oiv1·
s,on of Ftnancial lnstitu·
tlons Off1ce ot Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
tatn a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or 1nsurance. Call
tho Olf1ce of Consumer
Aff1ars
toll
free
at
1·866·278..()()()3 to team
1f the rrortgage broker or
lender IS properly li·
censed. (Thts IS a publiC
serviCe
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publish1ng Company)

Appliances

----~------~
Used Kenmore washer &amp;

Appliances

F•ee puppies, 8 wks old
(740)256-1832

Financial

@ 2009 by NEA, Inc

HLISJNESS UNIT CONTROLLER
GAl .LIPOLIS, 011
Put your experience to u~e \\ ith
ElectroCraft. n global leader in motor Md
motion control solutions. We are 'ed.ing a
team·oricnted and expenenced Busine's Unit
Controller. Pnmal) responsibilities will
include pro\'iding both tinancial n!)d advis~
service' to the General manager. the CFO and
to corporate management. In addition, the
indtviduul \\'ill prepare monthly balan:e
sheeh. profit and loss statement,, and otter
financ1al repons as reque~ted. Re,pon~tbdmes
also include anal)zing trends. cosb, revenue~.
financial commitment~. and obligation:.
1ncurred to predict future reH~nues and
expen c~ Thi~ person mu,t ha'l'e a
profession."ll attitude end self motivation
A bal·hclor\ degree in accouming with a
minimum of 3-5 ye.u~ of experience 1s
desm:d. Familianty with Lean business toob.
conceph. practices. and procedures are a plus.
This person is expected to be open minded.
fun, exercise th&lt;!ir own judgment and
experience to plan and u.:complish goals. A
certain degree of creativity and latitude is
required.
For tmmediate consideration, please mail ycur
resume and cover letter to:
ElectroCraft-Humnn Resource~·Attn:
Business Unit Controller Recruiter. 250
~lcCormlck Rd •• Gallipolis, OH 45631
or fax to 7-'0-441·6305.
An Equal Opportunity Employer Supponir.g
Diversit} in the Workplace.

For
Salo . Rainbow
sweeper $1000.00 new,
asking
$375.00
304·675-3862.
Want To Buy
NEED CASH
Barg1n Tools SR 5S4
Buymg all kinds of tools
bUS.· 388-8917. horre388·1515 ce!l· 794·1188.
Buy ng

Paw

black

Paws &amp;
walnuts.

74().698-6060
Absolute Top Dollar • sll·
ver gold
CO:llS
any
10K/14K 18K gold (ew·
elry. dental gold, pra
1935
IJS • currency.
proot 'TIU't
sets.
dta·
!T!onds. MTS Co1n Shop.
151 2nd Avenue. Galli·
polis 446·2842
YardSale

..

Yard Sale on Green
ley Dr. off Evergreen &amp;
Kerr. Misc. items, Fri.
9!4 Sat. 9112. Sun. 9/13.
1000

Recreahonal
Vehrcles

Boats I Accessori••
Camper. 2005, Sports·
men by K2 32 112 It 1
pu IOut.Queen bed·never
used
$18,900.
(740)388..()189
or
(740)208-8333.

�Sunday, September 13, 2009

6unba!J fti~ -6mtintl • Page 03

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

[n~Jmr ~entinel l\r~JDtrr

ClASSimo .MARKETPlACE
Campen/ RVa &amp;
Trol!era

Trucks

Apartments/
Townhlluses

RV SoMCe at C :mi·
ch- '
Trntlers t,.l F••rd 10 ' " n ~ 00 Cl ;:
74Q.446 3825
"'
2l)(J(
.~~~~===~ 9 l'&gt;"l L.t rc
1~1.000
Motorcycles
n:'s ~ 1000 1().1 ss' 17~l

6

CONVENIENTLY
LO· t----4.--.,.,.7
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
A8~E'' Towrrouse apart· 1-----r.-:~ments.
andlor
s;nall
houses for rent
Call
740·441-1'11 •or appll·
catior &amp; mtormatton.

Real Estate
sale 2007 Honda ' 3000
Sales ,
CRF 100 dtrt btko, like
new
cond. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
304·593·1425.
·~
Free Rent Special !II
Hou~es For Sole
2&amp;38R apts $395 and
up, Cen~,-al Air. W.D
2000
Automotive 2 bod 1 bath S300tmo hookup,
lerar&gt;t
pays
446- ,570
electriC.
Call between
- - - - - - - - lhe !'ours of 8A-8P.
Autos
Ill D
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
01 Neon AutorraliC&lt;Atr.
(304)882-3017
~2000 080
03 N~r
Automatte~r.
$2800
~Will Rtvers Tower IS ac·
OBO 05 Neon Autocepting app: cat ons for
$3200
matlc·A r
walllng lSI for HUD SoJb·
080 (740)25&amp; 1233
...,..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ sdzed, 1·8R apartmenl

::::;;;;====;;::;;;;;==

~~~-~:--:---

Oua •ty cars

r·

Trucks &amp;
WI
warranty
SUV's
20-25 vehiCles r stOCk
Over 14 yrs r bu ess
• Cook molors 328 Jack·
son P ko 741&gt;-446..()103
-------For Sale 2006 Toyota
SCio
X8 Wo I n n·
tatned. 92,000 nles, ex·
cellont
cond•Uon
Call
or
(740)44'·8299
(740)44'·5472

Ave PI Peas· lor the elderty dtsabled,
trarre 'louse on 2 cah 675-6679

~

lots exce ont locatton for
2 futur rrntals S10 000
740 5

-64

1.:J

.()938

Dr kit wl
sta :'5 first r.-ontl's rent &amp;
b:-k'ast 'lOOk laundry rn
on 112 ac lot Sandhtll deposit. ·efererces re·
Rd
304·615·1.280
I qu red, ~o PelS ard
clec;n 740·441·0245
304·675·'762
3br 2ba Lr den

4 bed 2 5 bath $600/mo MOVE IN READY Com·
possible owner finance p1e1e1y tumlshed 28R all
:=44=6~·3=384====== appliances,
TV stereo
-------lots
sys. linens &amp; complete
Help Wanted
~itchen ware $700/mo +
e1ec $500/dep 446-9585
1 acre land on Morrtng
&amp;tar ~d
Raci.lo Oh , -New
_ Ha
_ v-en- - be
_ d_roo
_ l"l
RTorG\tO
1
efccl Is tn place No mo· apartment has washer &amp;
!'Iceded
btlo hol"les, $16,000· cat! dryer, deposit &amp; refer·
PART TIME: RT 740·508-8048
e'lCes,
no
pets
or Gl\10 needed
74()-992..()165

.3500

for orthopcdtcs
ph) &lt;;icians' oft tee.
Pre,tous
experience
preferred. Must be
licensed "tlh
Stale of Ohio
Please Send
Resume to:
PO Box 2~0
A1hcns. 011 4570 I
Deadline. Tuesday,
September

MONDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Rentals

2
bedroom
aparlr'lent
ava laDle m Syracuse,
$200 deposrt, $375 per
Apartments/
month rent rer.• Includes
Townhouses
water sewer &amp; trash. No
Pets
Sufficient
1 and 2 bedroom apiS.
to
needed
tum1shed
and
urfur·
74().378-6111
niShcd ard houses an
Pomeroy nd M ddlepo1, ·M-dd
-epo
_rt_1_&amp;_
2_ bed
_·

MONDAY PRIMETIME

secur ty depostt &lt;eqwed. roorr unft;•n!Shed &amp; fur·
no pets 740·992·2218
msl'ed apartr'lert,
do·
:.'8R APT Close 10 Hoi· pos•t &amp; references. no
zer Hospital or SR 16o pets 740-992..()165
CIA (740) 441-0194
-------Boau1iful Apts. at Jack·
Me&lt;lorn 1BA apt. Call son Estates. 52 West·
140.446·0390
wood Dr., lrom $365 to
$560.
740·446-2568
Equal Houstng Opportu·
Help Wanted
ntty. This insbtution IS 8'1
Equal Opportumty Pro·
vtder and Employer

23, 2009

Help Wanted

Real Estale

•

HELP \\'ANTED

Ohio \aile) Uank '" acc~.:ptmg .tpph~:Jtll•ns
for 11 f·ull·Ttme ~ltcrosoft Wmdtm' Spcctalist
m our Gallipolis OH Mai'l Office
Qualified npphcanl mu~l ~a\e pa,~ed , ot the
6 MCSE exams along '' Hh Complw A+
tf1ca1Lon .:md the \i1crosoft Off1cc l ser
une Cenifkauon

\\c ofter ,1 generou ,aJary anJ b~nefu~
p.tckage, includmg 401 K Rwrement o~nd
career ad\ ncemcnt opportunities
Prc·cmplo}n'ent Jru testm 1s T&lt;'QUITCd
Interested pcr~ons rna) obtam J JOb
application 111 any Oluo \alley Bank loc~uon or
I rum OUT\~ ebsllc \\\\\\ .m be.com
ALL AI'PLICA1'1&lt;)/IIS MUS I IH. \I AILED
TO llll\1.\N I{ESOl RCES,
01110 \ALLK\' BANK , I'O BOX 240.
GALLIPOLIS 011 45631
EOE

MIF

Help Wanted

For Rent· UpS1arrs Apt.,
2 Bedroom ocated 10
GatltpO is next to KFC,
S400 rro not
1 t;Jt.Ainty
1/ rtres
Reference ~o­
QLt red. (740)709·9312
Gracious Living 1 and 2
BedrOOI"' ApiS at Vi age
Mar or
ar&gt;d
R verside
ApiS n M dd eport. from
$327
to
$592
741&gt;-992·5064
Eq
Hooslng Opponunrty
~land
Vrew Motel has
vac:.'lCies
$35.00/N gN
740-446-0406

ON

Jordan's ..andtng Apart·
Ment, under new man·
agement, 2. 3, &amp; 4 BR
.mlts available. 2 wks off
1st monlhs rent Please
call (304) 674·0023 or
(304) 610·0776.

Help Wanted

Ore 8R Apt close to
hOSpital. F-ree cable WID
hOOKups. (740)339·9492
Tara

Commercial Banker
\\e&lt;.Banco Bunk h s

a

career opportunll)

moll\ o~t..:d Commerc1.1l
Bankmg Off1cer for &lt;)outhe,lstcm Ohto.
Successful
candtdat.:
should
ho~ve
Bachelor\
degree
m
busme'~
arJmimstratwn. ftnance or rcl.tlcd field and
rmmmum of 5 )Car' commcrcwl lend ng
;mel or rct;ul b.mkmg cxpcrtcncc. Supcrio•
busincs~
dc\clopmcnt,
e"ccllcnl
communkauon, and crcd•t anal)''s -;kills
•requtred Outqandmg oppurtunll) lor un
cxpcncnccd proless1on.ll. E"ccllcnt salary
und benefits, mcluding Jnccnll\Cs, heallh
and
life
msurancc.
and
profitsharing/401 (k). Pre emplo) fill' lit drug
tc-.ting rcquuccl.
Interested candJdalcs nHt) submit
application for thi~ poS~Iion online
' ' W\\. \\ csb.mco com or send rc-.umc to

for a

ht~hl)

Attn: Humun Resource
\\csnanco
P.O. Box 688 .Jackson, OH 45640.
I OI.Mf !)'\

Help Wanted

~"tments

•

Townhouse
28R, 1 5

bath back patiO pool,
playgrOt.l'd (trasn, sew·
age, v;ater pd.)No pets
a lowed
$450/rent
$450/sec
dep
Call
741&gt;-645·8599
Real Estate

THE
CLASSIFIEDS
aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.

Help Wanted

Sports\\ riter
The Gallipolis Dml} Tnbunc ts 'SCekmg a

mothaled. pcople-oncnted indi\tdual to
fill a 'a~anc) 111 lhc news dcpartrncnl as a
sportswriter fhe successful candidate \\ill
cover high sehoul athletics in the arc" for
the dailv edilJon ol 1he ne\\ ~paper, ns well
ns ussi~t \\ ilh I he production of sports
pitgcs. bxcell.:IJI "nting and l:nghsh
skills, photography sktll~ and knowledge
of desk-lop publishing arc sough!. The
posit1on ts full-lime. Wllh henefitc;.
Interested p.u11~s can send resumes to:
Ohio Valle) l,ublishing Co.,
825 Third A\C., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

For more informa·
tion, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

Farmtlfty

SUMMIT-HoMES

BUIL.T ON YOUR l.OT

Announcinc K. Hovnan~'s'" Built On Your Lot

POUNCE
BEFORE THE
BOUNCE
......... ....

H-S.laUpJ~&gt;

MAKE

ill
I
---

'SOMfONf'S

......................

DAY!

TIME IS RUNNING
OUT ON YOUR CHANCE TO GET
UNBELIEVABLY
• LOW FIXED INT.ItEST UTIS
• LOW PRICES
• INCENTIVES

..
.....
.........
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NEW CUSTOM HOMES tUILT ON YOlM lOll

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(7 40) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

khov.com/pounce
SOUTHEAST COLUMBUS NEW HOME GALURY
Off US 33 at the HIII/Oilty Ads. tXIt on Basil Western Rd.. aaass from Kin&amp;YS Piw
866.547.0)75 Mon·Sit 10·6. Sun U·5 or by appointment

tnt.....tllleft.,.. ....,

(740) 992-2155

Hntork Low&gt; ~ ... ltloilot

i~
- ...

fJirnsnnt llcgistcr

(304) 675-1333

I

or mdlne\\s&lt;!• mydail) trihunc.com

•

Real Estate

THE NUMBERS ARE ADDING UP•.•

ltoc.-~n&amp;

~9oint

Real Estate

Real Estate

)

---

Introductory prices from the Mid SSO's
to the upper SlOO's..on your~ot!
For 50 Years.
"The Fim Name in Lasting \'0/ue.''"'
l't. Ulfld QIM r.ta:tiBct ID ~ Prices Vll)'lly mt;on.

�Page 04 • &amp;unbap QU~ -&amp;entinel
Commercial

3BR 1 bath home n LeGrande Blvd $650 rent
;$650 dep. renter pays
•utilities. NO PETS. Call
:446-3644 for applicaton.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Rentals

Trailer for rent in Porter
area. 14x70-3 BR, 1 1/2
Bath, new heat pump,
new floonng, newly remodeled, front porch with
roof, nice area, $450 per
Houses For Rent
month + $450 deposit.
For
more. info
call
Sl99/mo! of bed. 2 bath. (740)446-4514. No pets.
Bank Rcpo! (5% down, 15
years, 8% APR) for li'ling'
Sales
800·620-4946 e' R027

For Rent: Office Building
located in Gallipolis nexl
:to KFC. $600/mo not 1n.cludtng
utilities.
:(740)709-9312.

:3 br.
house w/ base·ment,
all
• elec.
:heat-pump, no pets, dep
·$425.00, rent $425.00
304-882·3652.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Attention Business Owners

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on

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304·675-5332 weekends
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740·591-0265
2000 Clayton 16x80,
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wal~in closet, dish·
' Carport. No Pets, No
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For Rent- 'Looking for
2010 3BR Doublewide
to set-up vour
someone to stay awhile'.
539,977
4 Bedroom, kitchen, LA.
HUGE 2010.4br/2ba
DR, FR. 1 1/2 bath,
FHA $349 mo
Barn, Approx. 2 1/2
201 o 3br/2ba Single
acres, away from town,
from $199 mo
~~t
[~r ~omt ~~asant
20 minutes from GallipoMIOWESTHOMES
825 Third Avenue
111 Court Street
200 Matn Street
lis or Rio Grande, County mymidwesthomes.com
Galhpohs, Ohio 45631
Pomeroy, Oh10 45679
Po1nl Pleasant. WI/ 25550
Schools, St At 775,
740.828.2750
740-446-2342
740-992-2155
304-675-1333
$600/mo plus depoist. - -......~~~-Utilities
not
included.
The BIG Sale
References
Required.
Used Homes &amp; Owner
(740)709-9312.
Financing· New 2010
Doublewide $37,989
Drivers &amp; Delivery
Help Wonted- General Help Wanted- General
Maintenance /
House for rent nice 3 br.,
Ask about $8,000 Re2 bath Pt Pleasant area
bates
Domestic
LOCAL &amp; REGIONAL People wanted to buy Southeast Ohio
EMS
$450.00
a
mon.
mymidwesthome.com
DRIVERS
tickets for our Republi- District
seeks
a
304-593-3866.
740-828-2750
R&amp;J Trucking Company can Ladies 2nd annual Training/Marketing CoorRent to Own. New 2 BR
in
Marietta
OH.
is boat ride on Thurs. Sept. dinator This position ad- LOOKING FOR
Home, 1 Bath, Bidwell, 6000
Employment searching for qualified 17, $20 a ticket, fun. ministers EMT and Para- part time maintance perOH.
Total
Electric
applican:s, must be at food, &amp; music, board at medic programs: plans, son , must have ref. call
(740)339-3224.
least 21 yrs. have mini- 6:30, everyone welcome,
or
schedules and teaches 304-610-0776
mum of 1yr driving exp. call Karen York for tickChild/Elderly
Core
Taking applications tor 3
specialty courses and 740-352-1197
in a truck, Hazmat certi- ets.
740·696-1042, station training courses: ~~~~~~~~
BR.
No
pets, CHILDCARE
fiication clean MVR and 42335
Covert
Rd.,
$400/month. $400 Dep.
ensures compliance for
Medical
Fundraising Director Na- good job stability. We of- Shade, Oh 45776
Phone: (740)446-3617.
required staff licenses ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
tionwide co. Call Direc- fer competitive benefits
and certifications; moni- Overbrook Center is curtors and owners to help plus 4011&lt; and vacation ·A-VO_N_!_A•• -A-re-as_!_T&lt;_o_B_u_y
rently accepting applicaManufactu~ed
11
4000
tors, assesses and im- lions for State Tested
Housmg them raise money. Avg b:tact
Dennis
or
Sell
Sh1rley
Spears
$15·$20/hr.
We
train.
1
proves care delivery sys- Nursing Assistants. Full
1-800-462-9365 to app~y 304 ' 675. 1429
813-355-3889
tem; writes and submits Time and Part Time posioversees
and lions
available.
Interor
go
to - - - - - - - - grants;
Lots
Help Wanted- exp. care- www.rjtrucking.com
Care Giver is needed. maintains
compliance ested applicants can pick
giver needed for elderly E.O.E
This is a FULL TIME po- with the OSHA infection up an application or con2 BR, 1 Bath. Big yard in
man, must have refer- ~~~~~~~~ sition, meaning you will Control Plan. Must be tact Lucy Goff BSN. AN
the country. No inside
Education
be living here as if it Nationally
pets. Rent $300/mo. plus ences 304-675-3204.
registered Staff Development Coorwere your home. This is
utilities.
· Call
EMT with ACLS, BCLS, dinator @ 740·992-6472
NOT
a
daytime
or
Part-time
tnstructors
(740)256-6202.
PALS and State Para- M-F 9a·5P at 333 Page
needed during the day nightime only position.
medic Instructor Cer1ifi· St.. Middleport, Oh. EOE
Sleep
here
at
night
and
in:
mathematics,
ecoRentals
cations. Special consid- &amp; a participant of the
nomics, and accounting. do normal household dueration given to Ohio Drug-Free
Workplace
ties
thru
the
day.
Person
Mathematics
and
eco2 BR/all electric, at Rod·
'
Registered
Nurse
iiProgram.
needing
assistance
is
nomic instructors must
ney. $400 plus utilities.
have a master's degree mobile and can function cense. Full public em- Pediatric office 1n need of
(740)446-2692.
in the discipline. If inter- on her own. FREE RENT ployee benefil package a full time medical assisested please email a re- &amp; FREE UTILITIES plus available. Send resume tant M-F 8:30-5pm. Exp.
2 bedroom mobile home
salary. to Human Resources Di- in WV state immuntzasume and cover letter to small
in Racine. $325 a month,
740-367-7129
jdanicki@gallipoliscarector, P.O. Box 527, tion program &amp; EPSDT
$325 dep. yrs. lease, No
reercollege.edu
Kerr, OH 45643 by Sep· program would be helpPets, No calls alter 9pm,
18,
2009. lui. Please fax •esume to
lnfoCision is currently tember
740-992-5097
Help Wonted· General
SEOEMS District 1s an 304-675-4233 or matl to
seeking long-term full
3br CIA &amp; heat, shingled
Equal Opportunity Em- 2801 Jackson Ave. Pt
and part time employQuality Control $15/hr
rf.
Rt2 Mason/Jackson
Pleasant WV 25550 • no
ees to help fulfill client ployer.
evaluate retail stores,
county-line $425.00 a
phone calls please.
needs. You will take
training provided pleas
mon
304·372-3685
Incoming and make
cal877-712-0008
/304-372-5200.
Outgoing calls for well
known organizations.
3br. all appliances inTake advafltage of our
Quality Control $15/hr
cluded,
big
lawn
company's comprehenevaluate retail stores,
304-812-7214.
,.., ___ :C--1-1
sive benefits package,
tratn1ng provided pleas
pertormance bonuses,
cal877-712-0008
Auction
Auction
professional working environment, advancement
Direct :are &amp; Profesopportunities and much
sional positions available
more!
working with individuals Stop By and Complete
with developmental dis·
Your Application:
abilities.
Go
to
lnfoCision Management
www.paiswv.com or call
Corporaiion242 Third
(304 373-1011 to apply.
AvenueGallipolis, Ohio
Or Call and Schedule
Quality Control, eam up
Your lniervlew:
Friday. September 18th
to $15 an hour, evaluate
1·888-IMC·PAYU ext.
6:00pm
retail stores, training pro2456
call http:/fjobs..lnfoclslon.c
Amvets Building, Gallipolis~ Ohio vided,
1-800-9C1-2694
om

FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

®alllpolis iailp tribune

The Daily Sentinel

i\rgistrr

r--------......,
Get A Jump
on

SAVINGS

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
THE ADO,PTION OF:
GRAYCIE LYNN LAMB
CASE NO. 20095008
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON PETITION FOR
ADOPTION
To: Norman Dwayne Vletts, whose last known
address is unknown
and cannot be ascertained with reasonable
diligence.
You are hereby notified
that on the 24TH day of
AUGUST, 2009, Brian
Lee Lamb filed in this
Court a Petition For
Adoption of Graycie
Lynn Smith, a minor,
whose date of birth is
September 1, 2005 and
for a change of the
name of the minor to
Graycie Lynn Lamb.
This Court, located at
Meigs County Courthouse, 100 East 2nd
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, will hear the petition on the 5th day of
NOVEMBER, 2009 at 1:
30P. M.
It Is alleged in the peti·
tion that pursuant to
R.C. 3107.07, that your
consent is not required
due to the following: 1.)
You·have failed without
justifiable cause to
communicate with the
minor, Graycle Lynn
Smith, for a period of at
least one year Immediately preceding the fil·
ing of the adoption
petition or the placement of the minor in
the home of the Peti·
tioner, Brian Lee Lamb,
and 2.) you have failed
without
justifiable
cause to provide for
the maintenance and
support of the minor as
required by law or judicial decree for a period of at least one year
Immediately preceding
the filing of the adoption petition or the
placement ofthe minor
in the home of the petitioner.
At the hearing on the
Petition For Adoption
flied by Brian Lee Lamb
to be held at the Meigs
County Courthouse,
100
East
Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, on the 5th day
of November, 2009, the
Court will also determine If your consent to
the Petition is required
or not. You should at·
tend the hearing.
Probate
Judge JS Powell
By: Judith R. Sisson
Deputy Clerk
(8) 30, (9) 6, 13, 20, 27,
(10) 4

resurfacing of various No bidder may withCounty roads with as- draw his bid within
phalt concrete will be thirty (30) days after
received by the Gallla. the actual date of the
County Commission- opening thereof. Gallla
ers at their office, 18 County reserves the
Locust Street, Room right to waive any In·
1292, Gallipolis, Ohio. formalities or reject
until 11:00 AM Thurs- any or all bids,
day, September 24, Gallla County adheres
2009, and then at 11:00 to all state policies p.
AM at said office taining to Handicapp
opened and read aloud. Accessibility and Equ
Plans, Specifications, Employment OpportuBid/Contract nltles.
and
Forms may be secured September 13, 2009
at the office of the Galli a County Engineer,
1167 State Route 160,
Public Notice
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
All bidders must fur- • The VIllage of Rutland
nish as a part of their will
be
accepting
bid, all materials, tools, sealed bids on the torlabor, and equipment. lowing. 1997 Ford
This bid notice shall be Crown VIctoria with
published In a newspa- 95023 miles options in·
per of general,clrcula- elude ale, tilt, power
tion In Gallla County windows, power locks,
once on September 11, and cruise. Bids will be
2009 and will also be accepted from 9/8/09
located on the Gall Ia thru 10/9/2009. Vehicle
County website (gal- is located at 337 Main
lianet.net) from Sep- St. Civic Center In Ruttember 11, 2009 thru land. To place a bid
please drop off sealed
September 24, 2009.
Each bid must be ac- bid at Village Office or
companied by either a place in drop box lo·
bid bond in an amount cated In front of Village
of 100% of the bid Office. For any quesamount with a surety tions regarding this
satisfactory to the please call Rutland Viiaforesaid Gallia County lage Office at (740) 742·
or by certified check, 2121.
cashiers check or letter (9) 13, 20, 27
of credit upon a solvent
bank in an amount of
not less than 10% of
Public Notice •
the bid amount in favor
of the aforesaid Gallia PUBLIC INSPECTIO
County. Bid Bonds NOTICE
shall be accompanied The estimated alternaby Proof of Authority of tive tax budget for 2010
the official or agent for Gallia County will
signing the bond.
be open for public in·
"DOMESTIC
STEEL spection in the Gallia
USE REQUIREMENTS County Courthouse,
AS SPECIFIED IN SEC- Auditor's Office, GalliON 153.011 OF THE llpolis, Ohio 45631, be·
REVISED CODE APPLY ginning
Thursday,
TO THIS PROJECT. October 1, 2009. CourtCOPIES OF SECTION house hours are 7:30
153.011 OF THE RE· AM to 4:30PM.
VISED CODE CAN BE Gallia County Commis·
OBTAINED FROM ANY sioners
OF THE OFFICES OF Sept. 13, 2009
THE DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES."
Public Notice
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as "BID PUBLIC HEARING NOFOR COUNTY ISSUE I TICE
PAVING" and mailed or The Gallia County
will
delivered to: Galli/ Commissioners
County Commission- have a public hearing
ers Office, 18 Locust on Thursday, October
Street, Room 1292, Gal- 8, 2009 at 10:30 AM for
llpolls, Ohio 45631.
the purpose of disAttention of bidders is cussing the 2010 altercalled to all of the re- nate tax budget. The
quirements contained hearing will be held In
In the bid packet, varl- the Commissioner's
ous insurance require- Office on the first flo.
· ments,
federal of the Galli a Coun
prevailing wage re- Courthouse. All int
quirements,
various ested parties are e
equal opportunity pro- couraged to attend.
visions, and the re- Gallla County Commisquirement
for
a sioners.
Public Notice
payment bond and per- Sept. 13, 2009
formance bond
of
NOTICE TO BIDDERS 100~. of the contract
Sealed proposals for price.

'

,
,
•

•

'

'
•

Antique·
Auction

20+ pieces of Shawnee Corn pattern, 3
pes. nesting bowl set, platter, cookie jar,
console bowl, small teapot, 4 creamers,
sugar bowl, 3 sets small salt &amp; peppers,
3 sets lg. salt &amp; peppers, milk pitcher,
butter dish, 15+ Loogaberger baskets, 1
oak basket tree, 2 metal basket hangers,
40+ pieces of copper decor, rose plate,
Carnival bowl, crystal ware, wooden
Bentwood Baby bed, metal baby bed,
picture frames, pictures, teapots,
kitchenware,
copper
utensils,
graniteware, old medicine bottles, cross
hardware thermometer, child's dishes,
cane bottom stool (old), large wooden
basket, coal miners wick lamp, wooden
pitchfork, miniature double buckets,
Marx Train 'funnel, Salesman's clothes
box, silverware set, "G" scale train cars,
Lionel train catalogs, cigarette tip cards,
sled, CI waffle iron, sad irons, costume
jewelry, pin-up cards, copper heater,
crosscut saw, Marx shooting gallery,
candle holders, irons, small wooden ice
cream freeze, Masonic hat in box, baby
wind-up toy, wooden advertising box,
Farah Fawcett Movie poster, old check
writer, PRR Long Spout oil can, train
transformers, cast iron train engine,
State of Ohio Lantern, Victorian photo
album, wooden scooter, license plates,
CI tobacco cutter, U.S. Stamp year sets,
postcard album (Full) Hotel Oregon
Service Plate, Royal Ukulele, quilt,
kerosene cooker, popular mechanics
from SO's &amp; 60's, chalk carnival figures
(prizes), CI teapot, Masonic belt with
buckle (old). Horse clock, 1890's
autograph book, Hallmark kiddie car
ornaments in box.
.Sale Conducted By:

BROKEN SPOKE AUCTION
SERVICES

(740)3{}7-0123 .
John W. Leach- Auctioneer

~ULLETI~ ~OARD
Auction

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

Auction

zAUCTION~
Day Estate~-'.~·'
Located at 1820 Jefferson Blvd.. Point
Pleasant. WV. Estate of Nedra W. Jones &amp;
Bartow Jones. This home was built between
1840 &amp; 1850 and has been in the family
ever since. Mr. Jones wa~ WV State Senator
from 1946-1958.

FURNlTURE; 1820 Chefl}· Grandfather

clock, Viet. Poster Bed. Early Sec .• Viet.
MT. Fumiture. Early chests Cherry &amp; Tiger
maple. carved &amp; oakwood china cabinetSofa &amp; chair &amp; much more. GLASSWARE:
Flow Blue. John Haddock. Quinper, Imari
charger, Bowl; Fenton &amp; more. Sterling
Silver &amp; Silver Plate 83 pc. set Reed &amp;
Barto:1 Francis I Pattern &amp; more. Loads of
beautiful silver plate clean not tarnish. castor
sets, Stoncwar..: Hamilton Jone~. Reppert &amp;
more. COLLECTIBLES: B&amp;H Banquet
lamp. wood..:n bowl, Great clocks. Brass
candy kettles, pewter. fireplace. feeders.
crocks. lanterns &amp; much more. 12 Oriental
rugs. Visit our website for complete li-.ting
and p:ctures &amp; terms . www.auctionzip.eom

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO #66
304 113 5447 or 304 173 5785

St. Martin's ~utheran
Church
German Ridge Road
Annual Homecoming
Potluck
12:30 pm Memorial for
Clara Bingham
Sunday, Sept. 20

A Private Viewing of
the Red Violin
1720 Stradivarius Violin
Friday, September 25, 2009
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Gallery at 409
409 Main Street, Point Pleasant
$20/ticket for VIP entry
lntludes meeting the
world·reknown violinist,

Topes Furniture Galleries

Elizabeth Pitcairn

151 2nd Ave.
CLEARANCE SALE
50·75% off
Many items to·choose from!

Wine &amp; horsdoeuvres
Tickets can be purchased at
OVB, Peoples Bank or
City National Bank
For more information please
call, (304) 674-5803
LIMITED TICKETS!

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446~6752 or
1·800-942-9577
Monday -Sat
9040 SR 7 S. Gallipolis

Everything from clothing to
stuffed animals.
Something for everyone!

..•

�Sunday, September 13, 2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Glow1ng
1 Not w1ld
embers
5 State
40 Dollar
positively
division
9 Change
41 Blunders
from a
sawbuck DOWN
10 Obama's 1 Move
running
stealthily
mate
2 Disin12 Sung
clined
3 Deserve 15 Hawaiian 27 Worthy
drama
4 Historic
volcano
aims
13 Picante
t1mes
19 Rainbow 28 Sounds of
141n peril
5 Crunch
maker
surprise
16 Golf
targets
20 Permit
29 Fiber
peg
22 Shipping
source
6 B1gw1g,
17 Largest
briefly
stop
30 Madrid
amount
18 Direction- 7 Copy fixer 23 Sandy
mister
8 Class
color
33 Purplish
. seeker's
break
24 Wry
brown
admiSSIOn
9 Latl"'ers
25 "Forget it!" 35 Kayo
21 Glimpse
22Tool kit
11 Russian
26 Freight·
count
denial
train part 36 Louvre fill
tool
23 Breakfast NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! send $4.75 (cl!e:;klm o) lo
Thomas Joseph Flook 1 P.O Box 536475, Orlando. Fl 328?1-647r.
bread
24 Lacking
variety
26Whopping
29 "Wuthering
Heights"
author
30 Fizzy
drink
31 Scepter
32 High
points
34 Singer
Baker
370pen, as
a bottle
38 More
pleasant

Mort Walker

1
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1

J
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~~--~~~~~~~~ ~
FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

.AGAR THE HORRIBLE
(7 HAGAI&lt; TH~
riORR16L.E IG AT
TH~ 6ATejGIR

W#AT Oo&amp;6

1/E VW/T '?

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Chris Browne
[7 HE \VANT6 YoW&lt;

!'Lt. GO
·A!&gt;K' HIM,
GIIZ '

C.MTL.~ ANCI AL.I.
THE: FIJR/JI'Tl.lt&lt;~

1NIT,61f&lt;.

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THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
IV~ GOIA BRit.LIA'-J"f toeA/
8/ Oc&gt;GGRAPASL.E: CL01'f-/tf'oiG
MAC&gt;e FROM Pl..ANf'N\ ..D&lt;'&lt;&lt;'I.&lt;ll

WI'Tl-1 ~IX P~OPt.E IN 1'HE:

1-\00Ge, rf GEE~ t.lf&lt;'€
A~WAY6 I/OING
l....tlvNC?RY/

'J.'t/\

,.THE WORl-D IS PAS~ING MV HUSBAND BV
AND HE WON'T EVEN WAVE."'

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

. THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

by Dave Green

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''When the cold weather gets here,
this will be one of the
good ol' days."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

.:l

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L B £ 6~

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ONCE: 11-\IS '/~AR l II

WI:. ALIZE"A'P'I 1-\A'D rr

B G 9 6 L

6 L 9 £ G

BG

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monda), Sept 14. 2009:
Thi,., ye&lt;~r, rou open up to a new source ot inspimtion. Your fcxus on friend'i and clS.&lt;;OOa!e&lt;; UllenSlfies.
l\:etwork bob profes_.:;ionally and personall). ,\nd )'Ou11
expand ) our immediate circle. l.Jffen, ) ou also will
become recJu..i, e and \\ithdra''· 1ltis year, you will
attract many ditlerent expenen(\$. In 2010. ) ou could
ex-perienre more sua:ess than in the past arid just feel
happter. H) ru are single, check out someont' w1th care,
or any person who seems alluring. Someone rrught be
una\ailable emotionally. If you are attached, the t\\O of
you benefit fro:n tune awm fro:n your Jh es, JUSt the
1\' o of \'Ou. Stoke the frres of romance LEO makes d
great dOctor or healer.
"Jilc Stars Slwu• the Kind of Dav ){ml/ Hm~· 5-Dynmmr.
4-Podtwe; 3· h'C!t!ge; 2-So-;o; 1·6ifftndt
ARlf.S (Warch 21-ApnllY)
Opporttmilie.~ de\ elop if you n!m.lin grmmd·
ed and open. You are in the unique posihon of seemg
\\ith an X-r,ly len~, understandin~ nthers' moti\'I:S. A
c;reatiw yet ~ccepting altitude mobilize&lt;&gt; yow ;]SS('l&lt;;.
'lbnight: Don't.Jct like il\ l\lond&lt;1y. Ali like there is l&gt;nly

*'**

110W.

TAURUS (April 20-MJy 20)

*'**

rt 6

•

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

I

•

~

~

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v6 9 £ 9

Kee? communication fk)WITl!l· Listen l&lt;l news
,!hal hedds in your din.'Ction. ,md weigh the pms ,md
cons of\\ hat someone shares. You are willing to break
pdst p.1Uems that ha\'e been comfort.Jble,. es~..,..ci,Uiy as
someone gives you a lot of ~pporJ. fomghl. Head on
home.
GE.\tL~lt~lay21-June20)

·

*'** Evauate the expt?nSE"S befure committing to

any new proj?cts or ideas. At the smne bme, e\ alu.\te
your per:;onallime dl'ld whether you want to gh e more
of yourself. A surpn-;e resolution might be m the wm&amp;'i·
Hold off if ycu need to. Communication c1ctivates as
you -;hare more of) ourseU. Torught: H.mg out with
fa, orite people
CA:'\CER Qune 21July 22)
*****Continue to put) our best foot fom.:ud.
You nught not be -.-ure of what you t.'ln? he.1ring. A
strange n"'t?S~'l;e or coinddenre cncourag~ you to look
be) ond the o:,,iou.,_ Let go of any remnants of rigid
thinking. You might be surpri.~ by a ne" \ision.
Tonight: Gather your bills.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
*** Optlo lie b,lcl-.. research ~nd listen. You will be
.1ble lo make a mo,·e or dedde wh.1tlo dul.1ter. A p.1rl

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Ill

&amp;unbap ~f~ -6tntfntl • Page 05

ner or ,h&lt;;(Xiatt&gt; could ~rprise you

with new-.. How
you handle a restriction demonstr.1tes your flex.
1onight: F~ling renewed. upda~e your plans.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22)
**** L'se the daytime hours to the max Y01.1
could be wondering ex,1ctl} what i~ ~oing on Y.ith a
friend. Don't naturally make a negati\ e ~~mption.
Gi\·e yourself several da) s to digest this situation.
Tonight: Make it an early night
UBRA (Sept. 2.3-CA.t 22)
**'** Re-.ponsibiliti~ keep you mO\ mg. You feel
you ha\ e little lime for yourself. A -.udden change or
piece of new~ floors you. L'nder;!and what is happen·
mg behind the scenes with as'"-xiates. You might net.&gt;d
to L.1ke a harder look. Tonight Relax. and then decide.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-l':o\'. 21)
*'*** 'lou might want to take another look nt a
ch,mging .;ilualion.lf you detach, you ('OtJ]d "l!J'fnise
your.;elfwith what a new per!&gt;-pecti\·e brings forth. Do
needed reseilrch before committing to a drosion, especi,\lly ,1[ work. Tonight: Expect lo be up l.1le.
SAGITIARIUS (l'\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
****A p.lrlner steps up lo the plalt&gt; and lels you
know wh,\l he or she L'&gt; going lo do. You might wonder
what y~1u ,,re going to do. What i.., un,wmd,mle is your
responsibilities hen!. Stretch to see a mon! complete
v~ew. "Jbnight E&lt;;cape into your thought-;.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19}
****Others c1S.&lt;;Uffie ronlrol. You might have a
knee-jerk re&lt;tction and want to a~ume control. Let it go
.md watch rather than react. A financially vague busi
ness deal 11(-eds to be in\ estigaled. Listen to feedback.
Tonight: Catch U{' on a pal's new-..
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18)
**'**You c.m aCt"'mpJL.;h a lot if you forus. Others
rould be testy, e.pecially a partner. You c.m in..;pire others more than vou think. Take a co:nplete look ala situatiOn. Others Jominate the scene, wlille you remam
focu._.;OO, Tonight: Accept., ::.uggestion from a pal.
PJSCLS (Feb. 19-:-.fim:h 20)
*** * An as&gt;oeiate could be overly ~~ith e and
toudt) )bur creati\ity emerges when you hit,, Jogj.un.
Realil.e and understand ''halL' happening behind the
scenes. Someone sh,,res, but ~mellow you know that
more is left un..;aid. Tonight: Take some per"«.:ll1al time.
J:uquelme Brgar rs mt tlll' lnlt&gt;nret
at l!#p:lhcwlo.)'Uquelineb~~ar.rom.

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PC;lge D6

~unbav.. trchnes -ientinel

Sunday, September 13, 2009

EXTENSION (ORNER

Ouch! What bit me?
Bv

HAL KNEEN

Se\ era! homeownl!rs have been bitten by yellow jackets
as they have been euttmg the lawn, walking through the
yard or attempting to destroy a nest.
• Yellow ja~.:kets have lance-like stingers that can be
repeatedly used to sting intruders, unlike honey bees whose
stingers arc barbed and can be used only once before it dies.
Unfo11unatcly. as it stings. it releases a pheromone (chemical odor) to signal to her l"isters that an attacker is near by
and please help her defend the nest. Soon we are stung by
several other) cliO\\ jackets.
'" The nest may be underground, in a wall/tree cavity or in
a protected spot above ground. Each nest reaches its highest number of occupants (one thousand to five thousand
adults) in late summer and early fall as food is plentiful.
Adults feed on plant nectar. fruit, and tree sap. larvae waste
products and e'en soft drinks. Immature larvae are fed protein (insects. meats. fish etc) regurgitated by foraging adult
yellow jackets .
• Avoidance and remaining calm is the best measure to
prevent being 1&gt;tung. Clean up garbage, fallen fruit. and pop
cans around outdoor playing and eating areas. Avoid wearing insect attractants such as heavy perfumes. scented
soaps, and hair sprays.
Watch wearing bright colors when yellow jackets are
known to be in the area. If you are sensitive to venom make
sure you carry a ·•.rvtedic Alert" wrist band or necklace.
Carry an emergency kit. Remain calm if a yellow jacket
finds its way into a moving car. They will tend to fly to a
window to escape. Pull over the car and roll down the window to release it.
If a nest ts in a well traveled area of the yard they may be
controlled chemically using a dust of carbaryl (Sevin). bendiocarb (Ficam) or pyrethrin (Drione). Apply the dust in ti)e
entrance of the nest during the cool temperatures of the
early morning hours or late evening. Avoid the heat of the
day when they are most aggressive. For more information
obtain OSU's factshect. HYG 2075, "Yellow Jackef' from
our office or on the internet, www.ohioline.osu.edu .

Submitted photos

Zach Mollohan received Outstanding of the Day in the area
of You &amp; Your Dog Junior, he placed 14th in the Junior
Poster Contest and 1Oth in the Dog. Skillathon. Zach was
also chosen State Fair Champion.

Ben Mollohan received the Bronze Medal in the area of
Dog Agility, Outstanding of the Day in the area of You &amp; You~
Dog Intermediate. and the Gold Medal in the area of Dog
Rally. He also placed fourth in the Dog Poster Contest and
was chosen State Fair Champion of the Day.

•••
Gardeners. mark your calendars for the Fall Plant
Exchange on October 13 at I :30 p.m. and again at 5:30
p.m. at the Meig:-. County Senior Citizen Center located at
Memorial Drive. Pomeroy near Holzer Clinic.
This event continues to grow as local gardeners share
their excess plants, seeds and bulbs with the community.
OSU Master Gardeners , Ohio State University Extension
and Meigs Senior Citizen Center have sponsored this free
event since its inccption.lf you are not able to bring plants
to exchange you are still welcome to participate as there are'
ample plants for all. We ask that plants be free of diseases
and bugs. lf possible label each plant with its name.
However if you need it identified, bring it in anyways we Jennifer Loscar received the Pig Suede Award from Ohio
will attempt to identify it.
Pork Schop f0r her outstanding use of pork products in her Olivia Rees was Division V Champion &amp; Reserve in the
• : House~lants have been ,a gre?t ad~iti~n to our exchange garment in the area of Fashion Revue at the 2009 Ohio Crossbred Breedtng Class in the Junior Division Swine
m the past couple. of years as \\ell as heirloom Pl.ant seeds. State Fair. She also received Outstanding of the Day.
Breeding Show at the Ohio State Fair.
Karen Werry, Me1gs County .Master Gardener Will present 1
. a short talk on "Planting Spring Bulbs - Indoors and
Outdoor~.. followed by a general horticulture question and 1
answer ume .
COLUMBUS - Many Outstanding of the Day. he Ben received an a\\ard Olivia Rees was Dhi 10n.
. Actual exchange will be at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. The public
ts welcome!
·
Gallia County youth were place 14th 111 the Junior called Versatility \\here Champion &amp; Reserve in t
given the opportuntt) to Poster Contest he place lOth exhibitors must place in the Cro~-.bred Breeding Class
.
.
. •••
Farm Sc1~n~e Rev1ew Will be held ~eptember 22-24 at I showcase their 4-H pro.JeCb in the Dog Sktllathon .•.md top fi, e. receive a gold after placing first in her
L:&lt;&gt;ndo!l Oh10 JU~t west of Columbus. Th1~ IS the largest ?J?Cn at the 2009 OhiO State Fair. Zach was ..:hosen State fomr medal, or Outstanding in at classes. Kaitl) n Roberts
rur agncultural d15-pla) of '&lt;endors; educat10~al op~ortumties, • In the area of Non- ChampiOn. Ben Mollohan 1\.'ast three different classes received third place in the
researc~1, and ~arv~t techmques m th~ Oh10 regiOn: Check Ltvestock, the followmg in the area of Dog Agilit)
to qualify. Krista Martin Junior Di' i~ion Duroc Gih ·
out the1r webs1te ~t W~\\.fsr.osu.~du. T1ckets ru::e ava1lable at • members participated in the received the Bronze Medal. recet'&lt;ed a Bronze Medal class and with her Chester
the Ohio State Umvers1ty E~tens1on offices whtle they last at State Fatr Competitions: in the area of You &amp; Your with her dog in the Dog Whtte Gilt she placed first
five dollars each. they arc e1ght dollars at the gate.
Clothing Area - Jennifer Dog
Intermediate
he Agility class.
in her class.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs Coullty Agriculture &amp; Natural Loscar. Communications - received Outstanding of the
Gallia County wa&lt;; also
A hardy Congratulations.
Resources Educator, 0/zio State University Extension.)
Courtney Woodyard Junior day. In the area of Dog well represented in the area to all these dedicated und.
Division
and
Chase Rally he received the Gold of Swine. Exhibitors receiv- hard working Gailia County.
Simpson Junior Division, Medal. he also placed fourth ing awards and honors 111' 4-H Members. These outL:
Child
Development
in the Dog Poster Contest the Junior Divi..,ion Sv.:ine standing young people repJennifer Loscar. Food &amp; and Ben was chosen State Breeding Show at the Ohio resented Gallia County very
Nutrition - Amy Ours. and Fair Chan:pion of the Day. State Fair were as followc;; well at the state level'
McKenzie
Case.
Photography
Sierra
GALLIPOLIS
The C.H. MacKenzie Agricultural Bowman. Fishin I - Grace
Center Board of Directors is pleased to be taking applica- ~a11in, Fishing II - Jennifer
tion for the Graduate Scholarship. Applications are open to Loscar, Natural Resources anyone involved in agriculture in Gallia County and pursu- Chase Swain in Ohio Bird~.
ing a graduate degree. The deadline is Oct. 2 at 4:30 p.m.
Brianna McGuire in Let's
For an ap~lication visit www.gallia.osu.edu or call 740- Explore the Outdoors I.
446-7007 wtth questions.
Aerospace-Estes Rockets Lindsey Johnson.
and
Rockets
Away-Bottle
Rockets- Daniel Reed,
Veterinar) Science Sierra
Bowman, Adventures in
Home Living· Jennifer
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. livestock
Loscar. Self DeterminedJacob Winters, Creative
report of sales from Sept. 9, 2009.
Arts Junior Division-BreeEilen
Cremeans
and
Welding-Stanley Bowman.
Receiving honors and
275·415 pounds, Stcers, $75-$ I 17. Heifers, $70-$1 07;
awards
at the State Fair
425-525 pounds, Steers. $75-$1 10. Heifers, $70-$95;
1
Non-Livestock
Area arc as
550-625 pounds, Steers, $75-$100. Heifers. $70-$90;
follows:
In
the
area
of
Self
650-725 pounds, Steers, $75-$95. Heifers, $70-$89;
frlplt It
Determined Junior Jacob
750-850 pounds, Steers, $75-$90. Heifers. $70-$80.
610
., ••• , ,
Winters
receh ed
600 ••••• ,,,
Outstanding of the Day
Award, In the area of
Fa~hion 'Revue Jennifer
Choice. Steers. $76-$82. Heifers, $74-$78: Select,
Loscar received the Pig
Steers $73-$75. Heifers. $72-$75.
Suede Award from Ohio
Pork Schop for her outstanding use of pork products in her garment. i'\atural
Resource area Brianna
Well
Muscled/Fleshed.
$42-$49;
:Medium/Lean,
$35f,li 1 II • I ,,,
. 1"$41; Thin/Light. $20-$35: Bulls, $48-$60 .
~1cGuire
received
Jf/1210 ..... "''
Outstanding of the Day,
Home Decorating Area
Jennifer Loscar received
Outstanding of Day.
Cow-Calf Pmrs. $750-$900; Bred Cows. $400-$640;
Awards and honors in the
Baby Calves, $75-$160; Goats. $14-$110: Lambs.
area of Dogs were awarded
1·$100-$113; llogs,$39.
to the following Exhibitors:
Andrew Sager placed dghth
Manure to give mvay. Will load for you.
in Graduate Novice B Dog
Obedience. he received a
Silver Award in the Area of
Rally Beginner B, a Bronze
Medal in beginner Agility.
Ohio approved feeder sale. Wednesday, Sept. 16, 10 a.m.
He also placed eighth in the
I· 40 precond. heifers open, 25 steers heifers.
Dog
Skillathon,
and
Wednesday. Sept. 16.
Andrew received State Fair
Direct sales and free on-farn1 visits. Contact Dewayne
Champion for hio; &lt;,econd
at (740) 339-0241. StaC) at (304) 634-0224, or Mark at
(740) 645-5708, or visit the website at www.uproducyear in a row. Zach
Mollohan in the area of You
1.ers.com.
&amp; Your Dog Junior received

Ga II.13 4• H members advance to state

. Ag board taking

scholarship applications

LIVESTOCK REPORT
Feeder Cattle-Steady

'91.99

,,....

92,99

••••••,
......

'JIJ,OO

Fed Cattle

Cows-Steady/Lower

.

'"" ,.,. .,.,

Back to Farm

Upcoming specials

v

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