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                  <text>Proposal to open
.at.Sinos lea Ohio
ballot issues, A2

14th Annual Saddle
Up Trail Ride
has record year, As

••

•
SPORTS
• High school football
previews. See Page Bl

Men appear on jail escape charges
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Two men
have made imtial appearances to answer charges
they escaped from sheriff's
custody last month.
Ernest
Roach
was
anaigned before Judge Fred
W. Crow III on charges contained in a secret indictment
filed Sept. 11. It charges
that he escaped from the
Middleport Jail on Aug. 17,
and that he failed to comply
with police orders by flee-

•
ing on July 8 and 13.
Roach, 31, of Ohio 681,
Rt.-edsville, was a sheriffs
department inmate incarcerated in the Middleport Jail at
the time he allegedly picked
the lock off an exterior door
and climbng a fence. He was
captured on Sept. l when
deputies witnessed him tiding in a vehicle on Ohio 7
near Five Points.
Roach was in jail on
charges of aggravated menacing, having a weapon
under disability, reckless
operation. and fleeing, and

he was anaigned on those
charges. as well.
Roach was released on a
$1.000 personal recognizance bond. His trial was
set for Nov. 24.
Also
appearing
was
Timothy Wickersham, who
escaped on Aug. 23, by
using a mop handle to
remove keys from an open
key box, unlocking a cell
door, and walking out
undected through a fire exit.
James Lee Games and
Buford W. Smallwood. Jr.,
also escaped custody that

day. Neither has appeared on
any escape charges. Games _is
in the county jail on a charge
of receiving stolen property
stolen in the Doris Jackson
murder case. Smallwood has
been transported to prison on
unrelated charges.
Wickersham was captured
in Jackson County, W.Va ..
after leaming his girlfriend
had been hiding him at her
home in Ripley, W.Va.
Wickersham's bond was
set at $1 ,000 personal recognizance bond, $50.000
surety. and $1,000 appear-

ance bond. with 10 percent
cash pem1itted.
A third man. Harley
McDonald.
was
also
anaigned. on charges of burglary, breaking and entering,
two counts of receiving stolen
property
and
escape.
McDonald is accused of cutting an electronic house a1Test
ankle bracelet and leaving his
residence. He wa&lt;&gt; apprehended lm;t week in Durham. N.C.
His bond was set at
$ J .000 personal recognizance, $50.000 surety and
$20.000 appearance.

$75~on

awarded
to repair

Ohio 124 slip
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Harlan A Ballard, 89
• Ancil H. Burbridge, 97
• Raymond Miller, 81
• Loretta Jean Sayre, 82
• Ellen Jane Young, 90

•

SIDE

• Study: Flu shot
' better than nasal
spray in adults.
See Page A2
• Alumni floats
sought for parade.
See Page A3
• O'Bieness to
offer free health
screenings Jor women.
See Page A3
• For the Record ..
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• White House
seeks comments
on education law.
See Page A6

• Submitted photo

Flowers are provided to Don and Leila Young each week by the Pomeroy Flower Shop to be made into bouquets and
delivered to Holzer Hospice patients.

Providing smiles for Hospice patients
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - When Don and Leila
Young deliver a bouquet of flowers to
a Hospice patient they're always
rewarded with a smile knowing it
comes from someone who needs it the
very most.
"They're real happy to get the flowers, and we're so grateful to the
Pomeroy Flower Shop for providing
them,'' said Young. The program is
sponsored by Holzer Hospice and the
Youngs handle it in Meigs County as a
part of their volunteer work through
the RSVP program of the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
While the couple occasionally visits
a Hospice patient in their home, most
of the weekly flower deliveries are

made to either Overbrook ·center or
tl;le Rocksprings Nursing Home.
Young said the flower shop provides
a bucket full of all kinds of colorful
flowers. The couple gathers up vases
from Goodwill, God's NET. individuals and wherever and then ananges
flowers in the containers to deliver
them to specifi&lt;.; Hospic~ patients.
Each one goes with a card showing the
patient's name and noting the flowers
came from Holzer Hospice and the
Pomeroy Flower Shop.
"Hospice was so wonderful with my
father," said Rosemary Eskew. owner
of Pomeroy Flower Shop. "Donating
these flowers is a way for me to say
'thank you' for what Hospice provides
for our communities."·
Holzer Hospice provides in-home
services and also contracts with nurs-

PASSPORT and Assisted
Living open for new enrollees
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Being
provided services in their
own homes through PASSDetails on Page AS
. PORT or in an assisted living setting means many
elderly Meigs Countians
can continue to live in the
community instead of going
into a nursing home.
2 SEcriONS- 12 PAGES
Meigs County which has
a
high percentage of older
Ask Dr. Brothers A3 residents.
is one of seven
Southeastern
Ohio counties
Calendars
A3 provided PASSPORT
services
through
the
Buckeye
Classifieds
B3-4
Hills Area Agency on
Bs Aging 8 with offices in
Comics
Marietta.
That agency is cun·ently
itorials
A4 enrolling
older adults into
Obituaries
As both PASSPORT and
Assisted Living on a "first
B Section come, first served basis.''
Sports
The other counties receiving services through the
Weather
Area 8 office are Athens,
Hocking. Mohroe, Morgan.
rg 2009 Ohio Valley fublishing Co.
Noble,
Perry
and
Washington Counties.
The cost of providing services through PASSPORT
or in an assisted living set-

INDEX

.

Ill.I!IJI,I !I!1. !I!II

ting has been determined to
be less expensive to taxpayers than nursing home
placement.
Enrollment,
however, has been limited
to about 80 percent of previous levels.
According
to
Rick
Hindman, AAA8 Director
with offices in Marietta, all
Area Agencie:&gt; on Aging
processing referrals are
working with the State of
Ohio to make that status
only temporary.
"Even though State budget concerns have resulted
in limiting openings for new
enrollees, we still have
capacity to add quite a few
old~.- adults to our PASSPORT and Assisted Living
rosters'' said Hindman.
.. All of the Ohio Area
Agencies on Aging are
working with State officials
and legislators to lift the
limit on enrollments as a
substantial cost-saving measure for Ohio. as well as a
meaningful and much preferred choice for older
Ohioans."

Please see Services, AS

ing home agencies to provide services
to patient's with life limiting illnesses
along with their families. The program
provides medical symptom management by the patient's attending physician in conjunction with an interdisciplinary team of skilled practitioners
and volunteers. The agency provides
services to patients in Gallia. Jackson,
Meigs. Athens and portions of other
surrounding counties.
Services are provided for patients at
their home. in the hospital. nursing
homes, assisted living facilities, group
homes or other facilities. The services
covered
under
Medicare.
are
Medicaid, most private insurance
plans. HMOs and other managed-care
organizations.
For more information about Hol::.er
Hospice, call toll free 800-500-4850.

LONG BOTTOM
Since a 2005 flood. nUtnerous road slips and landslides have plagued a nearly
three-mile section of Ohio
124 in Long Bottom but
work has begun to repair the
damage.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation has awarded
a $7.5 million bid to George
Igel &amp; Co. to literally relo1 cate 2.7 miles of Ohio 124 .
1 The project \Vas awarO.ed on
July 9 and will be completed in October 2010 .
David Rose, communications director for ODOT
District 10. said the project
calls for transforming the
already existing Swan
Road into the new section
of Ohio 124. Rose added
the existing section o( Ohio
124 will eventually be
ripped up and sown with
grass seed.
~ ODOT recently held a
public meeting on the
blasting that will take place
to facilitate the creation of
the new road. Rose said the
blasting should begin
sometime in mid-October
and be done at the edge of
Swan Road and Rainbow
Ridge Road. Blasting may
occur up to twice a day.
Each time blasting occurs,
existing Ohio 124 will be
closed for a brief period of
time until the ·'all clear" is
given.

· Please see Repair, AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Since
Sunday, several people in
Pomeroy have been looking
for a miracle in the form of
a blind dog named Miracle.
The blind dog went missing from its pen behind a
home on Mulbeny Avenue
sometime early Sunday,
according to Pomeroy res~­
dent Alan Ervin who savs
he was going to adopt the
dog Sunday afternoon. The
dog is about a year old and a
husky-shepherd mix.
"If she is not hurt because
of a fall or has drowned
because she could not see.
she may just be so confused
and desperate she simply
gives up,'' Ervin said.
Ervin said he realizes
people lose pets everyday
but in this situation.
Miracle has a disadvantage
because she may look normal but is not. He said she
understood the \\'orld of her
pen but 'not beyond it.
Unlike a lost, blind human.
the dog cannot articulate
her disability.

Some residents in
Pomeroy are
searching for
Miracle, a
blind, huskyshepherd mix
that went
missing from
her pen on
Sunday.
Submitted photo

Ervin said without human
intervention and someone
who rccogniLes the dog's
special needs. hope for tinding the dog diminishes daily.
Ervin and volunteers have
been looking in the downtown area for the dog,
including
around
t11e
Pomeroy Fire Department
where it was last st?en. hoping it didn · t go far but perhaps is just scared and "hold
up" in a place it can't navi-

gate out of because of its
disability.
Ervin has been checking
daily with the Meigs
County Dog Shelter and has
po~ted nier~ in downtown
Pomeroy hoping to tind the
dog. He is abo offering a
rl!ward for the dog's return.
Call 740-541-153.2 to report
any information.
"At this point. it will be a
miracle if she ·s found."
Ervin said.

�TATE

!he Daily Sentinel

Study: Flu
shot better
than nasal
spray in adults
'By

ALICIA CHANG

AP SCIENCE WRITER

LOS ANGELES - Hate
to get flu shots? A new comparison of flu vaccines
·gi\'es adults a good reason
-to roll up their sleeves and
get a jab in the arm instead
of a squirt in the nose.
· In a study of nearly 2,000
healthy adults during a
recent flu season. standard
.shots were twice as effective against regular winter
flu as the newer nasal spray.
researchers found.
That may not be true, however, for swine flu vaccines,
whlch may be available first
in a spray. Expe11s say both
.kinds might be ~qually effective against the swine flu in
children and adults.
Flu shots are made of killed
flu viruses that are usually
injected into the arm. FluMist,
the
only
governmentapproved flu nasal spray,
delivers a live but weakened
strain to the nostrils.
FluMist is mainly targeted
for use in children. and
studies have suggested that
it works better than shots in
children. But adults are
Increasingly opting for the
:Spray version as well.
· The latest shot vs. spray
study echoes previous
research that found shots to
be superior in adults.
It's not clear why the
spray is less effective
'against seasonal flu in
adults. but the same may not
hold true for swine flu vaccines, said Dr. Jay Butler.
swine flu vaccine chief with
the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
• The swine· flu virus is so
novel that the immune sys.tem should still mount a
strong response, he said.
Federal health officials
bave said they expected the
first shipments of swine flu
·vaccines next month to be
the nasal spray version. The
spray is approved only for
healthy people ages 2 to 49:
So should adults wait
until they can get a shot that
may offer more protection?
"I wouldn't recommend
,that.'' Butler said. ''Even if
it's less, it's not zero."
; University · of Michigan
epidemiologist Dr. Arnold
Monto, who led the latest
flu study, agreed. If there
was a difference in effec:tiveness between the swine
:flu shot and spray, Monto
said, it probably would not
be as dramatic since the
pandemic strain .:._ 2009
HINl -is so new.
~ The study compared regular flu vaccines during the
. 2007-2008
flu
season.
Healthy volunteers. ages 18 to
49, were given either a flu
shot made by Sanofi Pasteur
of France, a dummy injection,
· FluMist made by Maryland:based Medlmmune LLC. or a
:fake nasal spray.
: Since the 1,952 partiCipants were randomly divided into four groups, exposure to the flu in each group
was similar, Manto said.
The flu shot was 68 per:cent successful at prevent:ina the flu compared with
· th~ nasal spray. which was
36 percent effective. the
researchers reported.
The 2007-2008 flu season
. was severe, partly because
the yaccines did not work
\Veil against the circulating
viruses , the CDC has said.
Results were published in
Thursday's New England
Journal of Medicine. The
study was funded by Sanofi.
Monto ant1 several other
:researchers have reported
;receiving grants from the
drugmaker.
Dr. Chris Ambrose, senior
director of medical affairs at
Medlmmune, said the jury
is still out on the issue. He
cited studies that have
:shown FluMist to work just
•as well as the flu shot in
adults.
Mcdimmune has completed studies on its new swine
flu nasal spray in children
and adults and have submit:ted results to the Food and
!Drug
Administration.
·oetails have not, been
released. Ambrose srud early
results indicate the new
nasal spray vaccine is safe
and effective.
II

G

NAT!O AIL

. PageA2
Thursday, September 24,

2009

Proposal to open Casinos leads Ohio ballot issues
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PF.lESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - For the
fifth time in 20 years. voters will be asked whether
they want to expand gambling in Ohio. and the campaign again centers on· the
economy.
Voters defeated a proposal
last November to put a casino in southwest Ohio.
rejecting arguments that it
would give a boost to an
economically downtrodden
state. In 1990, voters
quashed a proposal to build
a casino resort.
This year, at a time of
even higher unemployment
at 10.8 percent, Penn
National Gaming promises
34.000 jobs and $651 million in tax revenue from
putting
casinos
in
Cleveland,
Columbus.
Cincinnati and Toledo .
Backers are going directly
to voters instead of trying to
persuade lawmakers to
approve their plan, and want
the casinos written into the
state Constitution, which
restricts gambling.
It is the most high-profile
state ballot issue among the
three going before voters on
Nov. 3. Another would set
up a bipartisan board to
oversee the care of livestock. while a third would
enable the state to issue
bonds to award bonuses to
veterans of the Iraq,
Afghanistan and Persian
Gulf wars.
"First and foremost is the
economic situation:· said
Bob'
Tenenbaum.
spokesman for the Ohio
Jobs
and
Growth
Committee.
He cited job creation. the
location of the casinos in
the downtown areas of
major cities and 'revenue
devoted to local governments as factors that would
give the gambling issue a
different outcome.
The proposal has ignited
an almost daily back-andforth between proponents
and an organization called

AP photo

Ohio voters will decide once again whether or not to expand gambling in the Buckeye State. Penn National Gaming is
promising to bring 34,000 jobs and $651 million in tax revenue by building casinos in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus
and Toledo.

TruthPAC, which describes
itself as bipartisan, including a former campaign treasurer for Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland and a GOP
pollster.
"Issue 3 is a sweetherut
deal that would hand private
casino interests a very lucrative monopoly for a very low
price,'' TruthPAC spokeswoman Sandy Theis said.
Theis said the $50 million
casino license under the
Ohio plan pales in comparison to the $400 million that
an 1llinois casino recently
agreed to pay thatstate.
''If Ohio is going to sell its
Constitution to out-of-state
casino interests. it should at
least get a fair price for it.''
she said.
The organization also
questions whether Penn
would build the casinos it
promises and says the ballot
issue is written in a way to
shield bets made with cash
from state taxes.

But the Jobs and Growth
Committee says casinos
don't use cash bets anymore. but use chips, vouchers and other items that represent cash. TruthPAC
retorts the ballot language
would enable Penn National
Gaming to use cash bets in
Ohio if it chose to do so.
Casino supporters have
charged that TruthPAC is
funded with money from outof-state gambling interests
who don't want competition.
A casino ·proponent filed a
complaint with the state
Elections Commission, alleging that TruthPAC knowingly
made a false statement when
it ran radio and television
advertisements saying the
casino jobs would go to outof-state workers.
Indiana.
Michigan,
Pennsylvania, and West
Virginia have casino g~m­
hling.
The casino plan may no
longer get competition this

year from Strickland's proposal to put slot machines at
Ohio racetracks. The governor's plan, which the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled is subject to referendum, may be
put in front of voters in
November
2010.
Or
Strickland may decide to
continue the slots plan solely with an executive order.
The governor opposes the
casino issue.
A
recent
poll
by
Quinnipiac University found
that 58 percent of Ohio voters support the casino plan
and 37 percent are against it.
But opponents caution that
polling a few months out on
last year's gambling issue
also showed strong support
for the measure.
The Fraternal Order of
Police has gotten behind the
casino issue this year, citing
the funds that would go to
local governmen,ts and,
specifically. for police
training.

A second ballot issue
would establish a bipartisan·
board to set standards
the care of livestock. JW
measure got bipartisan support in the Legislature, but
the
Humane
Society
believes the board would
give too much power to
agribusiness and is an
attempt to counteract any
effort to establish confinement standards for sows
and hens.
The organization has said
a successful ballot issue
could force its hand to push
its own ballot measure in
20 I0 to establish confinement practices.
The other ballot issue
\Vould provide bonuses to
veterans of the Iraq,
Afghanistan and Persian
Gulf wars by issuing state
bonds. The state would
borrow $200 million to pay
$100 for every month of
service to the veterans up
to $1.000.

__a

AP source: Census worker hanged with 'fed' on bod
BY DEVLIN BARRETT
AND JEFFREY McMuRRAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHI~GTON
A
U.S. Census worker found
hanged from a tree near a
Kentucky ~emetery had the
word "fed" scrawled on his
chest, a law enforcement
official said Wednesday,
and the FBI is investigating
whether he was a victim of
anti-government sentiment.
The law enforcement official, who was not authorized to discuss the case and
requested anonymity, did
not say what type of instrument was used to write the
word on the chest of Bill
Sparkman, a 51 -year-old
part-time Census field
worker and teacher. He was
found Sept. 12 in a remote
patch of the Daniel BooiJe
National Forest in rural
southeast Kentucky.
The Census has suspended door-to-door interviews
in rural Clay County, where
the body was found, pending the outcome of the
investigation. An autopsy
report is pending.
Investigators have said little about the case. FBI
spokesman David Beyer said
the bureau is assisting state
police and declined to con-

firm or discuss any details
about the crime scene.
"Our job is to determine if
there was foul play involved
- and that's part of the
investigation - and if there
was foul play involved,
whether that is related to his
employment as a Census
worker.'' said Beyer.
Attackmg a federal worker
during or because of his federal job is a federal crime.
Sparkman's
mother,
Henrie
Sparkman
of
Inverness. Fla .. told The
Associated Press her son
was an Eagle scout who
moved to the area to be a
local director for the Boy
Scouts of America. She said
he later became a substitute
teacher in Laurel County
and supplemented that
income as a Census worker.
She . said investigators
have given her few details
about her son's death they told her the body was
decomposed - and haven't
yet released his body for
burial. "I was told it would
be better for him to be cremated," she said.
Henrie Sparkman said her
son's death is a mystery to
her.
''l have my own ideas. but
I can't say them out loud.
Not at this point;· she said.

SE II LE IRS TAXES

"Right no\\'. what I'm
doing. T'm just waiting on
the FBI to come to some
conclusion.''
Lucindia Scurry-Johnson.
assistant director of the
Census Bureau's southern
office in Charlotte, N.C.,
said law enforcement officers have told the agency
the matter is "an apparent
homicide" but nothing else.
Census employees were
told Sparkman's truck was
found nearby, and a computer he was using for work
was found inside it, she
said. He worked part-time
for the Census, usually conducting interviews once or
twice a month.
Sparkman has worked for
the Census since 2003,
spanning five counties in the
surrounding area. Much of
his recent work had been in
Clay County. officials said.
Door-to-door operations
have been suspended in
Clay County pending a res:
olution of the investigation,
Scurry-Johnson said.
The U.S. Census Bureau

is
ove-rseen
by
the
Commerce Department.
''We are deeply saddened
by the loss of our co-worker:· Commerce Secretary
Gary Locke said in a statement. "Our thoi1ghts and
prayers are with William
Sparkman's son, other family and friends."
Locke called him ··a shining example of the hardworking men and women
employed by the Census
Bureau."
The most deadly attack on
federal workers came in
1995 when the federal
building in Oklahoma City
was devastated by a ttuck
bomb, killing 168 and injuring more than 680. Timothy
McVeigh, who was executed for the bombing. can·ied
literature by modern, ultrarigh.t-wing anti-government
authors.
A private group called
PEER. Public Employees
for
Environmental
Responsibility, tracks violence against employees
who enforce environmental

regulations. but the group's
executive director. Jeff
Ruch. said it's hard to know
about all of the cases
because some agencies
don't
share
data
on
instances
of
violence
against employees. ·
From l 996 to 2006.
according to the group's
most recent data. violent
incidents against federal
Bureau
of
Land
Management and Forest
Service workers soared
from 55 to 290.
Ruch said that after the
1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma
City, "we kept getting
reports from employees that
attacks and intimidation
against federal employees
had not diminished. and
that's why we've be.
trackin!! them.''
"Even as illustrated 1
town hall meetings today,
there is a distinct hostility in
a large segment of the population toward people who
work for their government,"
Ruch said.
~

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

For a fraction of what you owe
It you qualifr we u1n ·

./ S.l2J2 wage g.Mntshnwnts
./ Rt'lllQ\'1: bank il•vtPs, tax levies,
propertY Sf!llUrt"~
./ fu:tl)l! ~tate and busines~ payroll t.1x
probll'ms

-----

./ Eliminate l)('nalties, interest &lt; harg&lt;-s ,md
tax liens

·-AMERICAN
=TAX RELIEF
If you owe over $15,000 in back taxes
CALL NOW

FREE CONSULTATION

Dr. Jody Gerome will be replacing Jane
Broecker, M.D, who has been practicing in
Meigs over the last few years. Dr. Broecker
ha3 en,ioyed workiqg with the women of
Meigs County and will still be available for
appointments in the Athens office.

~~,,

OiBLENESS ~~
u r" t nr

~

y s rEM

Jody Gerome, D.O.

·

· Starting Seviember 15th., appointments can
be made with Dr. Gerome by
740·991-9158 (Meigs)
740·594·8819

I

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I

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�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 24,

2009

Violent death pressing public concern

Elizabeth Pitcairn

Violent death is a pressing
public health concern in
Ohio and the United States.
In fact. some 50,000
Americans die violently
each year, acwrding to the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC), and
Ohio reported 2,007 violent
deaths in 2007. the most
recent year for which data
arc available.
The vast majority of violent deaths in Ohio were
either suicides (63 percent)
or homicides (.32 percent):
other categories accounted
for about 5 percent of violent deaths.
In an effort to better
understand - and ultimately prevent - violent deaths.
CDC in 2002 established
the National Violent Death
Reporting
System
(NVDRS). And now, thanks
to a four-year grant from
: CDC. the great State of
Ohio is poised to become
NVDRS' 18th participant.
joining Alaska, California,
Colorado.
Georgia.

OVDRS, like NVDRS, Incident-based Reporting
will consider violent deaths System (law enforcement
to be homicides. legal inter- crime reports).
.
ventions. suicides, uninten• Ohio's 88 county core!
tional firearms deaths, ter- ners.
rorism-related deaths and
• ODH's Child Fatality
Alvin D.
deaths of undetermined Review of violent deaths to
Jackson
intent. While ODH and Ohioans younger than 18.
some of its sister agencies
• Local law enforcement
collect violent death and/or (when needed).
crime data, none of them
These data will eventually
maintain
a
single
repository
allow
local and state partKentucky,
Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Jersey. or all variables of interest. ners to develop and evaluate
New
Mexico.
North With the help of these feder- violence-prevention strateCarolina.
Oklahoma. al funds, ODH will be able gies and increase the pubOregon. Rhode Island . to capture data from multi- lic 's awareness of violence
South · Carolina. Utah, ple sources and analyze as a major public health
Virginia and Wisconsin in extenuating circumstances problem. Counties with the
surrounding violent deaths highest numbers of violent
this important partnership
deaths will be phased in
Beginning Sept. J , the in Ohio.
To stn:amline these data first, with the goal of all 88
Ohio Department of Health
(ODH) will receive about and make them more useful Oh10 counties participating
$274.000 from CDC annu- to partner~. ODH will col- by the end of th1s four-year
ally and will use the funds lect and link information project.
The OVDRS will be
to develop. administer and from the followi ng sources:
•
Death
certificates.
housed
joiutly in ODH's
implement the Ohio Violent
• The Bureau of Criminal Violence
and
lnjury
Death Reporting System
and Prevention Program and
(OVDRS) . ODH will con- . Identification
Crime .Data Center.
vene an OVDRS advisory Investigation
(Dr. Alvin D. Jackson i.,
board comprised of stake- Laboratory.
• The Office of Criminal Director of the Ohio
holders and data owners to
Justice Services' Ohio Department of Health.)
help with this process.

Violin virtuoso opens Community Calendar
·ro~R!?.~Yv~~!:':~!!aberh _P_u_b_h._c_m_e_e_t_in_g_s__L_i_~_;a_r_/_t_T_h~-~-~-wP-io-m_b_;_o.&gt;-~-~-ae-,~e_it_a_ei-~1-se-r~-i~-~-ao-f-~-l-~Y-f~-~~--~-~a-g~-~-;-re_d_e-ric_k_,-an_d_c_h_u-rc-h
Pitcaim playing a 1720 "Red Mendelssohn'' Stradivarius,
will open the concert season for the Ohio Valley
Symphony, 8 p.m. Saturday in the Lillian and Paul Wedge
Audlton. urn.
The concert will be under the direction of .Maestro Ray
Fowler.
Tickets for the opening night performance are $ 22 for
adult, $20 for seniors, and $10 for students.
A reception will be held from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. on Friday
mght at the Gallery, 409 Main Street. Also featured at that
time will be a special showcase of Philippe Smit paintings
and other &lt;\rtwork on Joan to Gallery 409 by the estate of
Ms. Pitcairn's grandfather, Theodore Pitcairn. Tickets to
the reception and showing are $20 and may be purchased at
the gallery and at all Point Pleasant banks.
Tickt:!ts to both events may be purchased by calling 740446-ARTS or by visiting www.ohiovalleysymphony.org.

ASK J)lt. BltOTHERS

She thinks little
~ ~~~!~::is a toy
Dear Dr. Brothers: Our little 4-year-old was thrilled to
ha\e a bab) brother. She -wears a little T-shirt that says ''I'm
the Big Sister." and lo"es to play Mommy's helper with
diapers, powdenng and picking out his outfits. But now
that the baby has been around for a few months, I notice she
takes every opportunity to give him little "love taps" when
my back is turned. Her little pats are turning into slaps and
pinches, which makes him cry. She says she "loves'' him.
Help!- S.S.
Dear S.S.: There's no doubt that your 4-year-old does
really love her new baby brother - but she may be
expressing some other feelings that need to be addressed.
When the newborn entered her life, she probably was
caught up in all the expectation and subsequent excitement
of the arrival of your son. It's easy for a small child to get
caught up in the excitement of her parents. especially
when a little one is on his way. But now that things have
settled down. she realizes her world has changed. i':o
longer does her world consist of just Mommy. Da~ddy and
her - there's now a little brother. too, and it doesn't look
like he's leaving!
Her love taps very well may be an early expression of
resentment Where she once looked at her new babv
brother as a new. fun toy, she now sees him as competi.on. That's why it"s important for you to start to focus her
tention on being a protector rather than a provoker. Let
r know that she may not hurt her brother. and help her
practice soft touches. Make her feel important by letting
her know it's her special job of being a big sister. and that
' it's OK to sometimes be upset about things. When she
sees her little brother as someone who needs her. she'll
most likely lay off the love taps and go back to being
Mommy's little helper.
•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: .My little boy has always liked to
draw. He was drawn ro the comic strips as soon as he could
hold a newspaper. and he buys comic books so he can imitate the pictures. He's now going into fourth grade and has
told everyone in sight that he is going to be an artist. The
thing is, I hate to say this, but he still can barely get beyond
stick figures. and doesn't seem to have any artistic talent at
all! Will he ever get better, or should I try to point him in
anothcr direction? - L.B.
Dear 1...8.: While it's difficult to render a final verdict on
your child'-; artistic prospects at such an early age, having
the encouragement of a supportive parent early on can do
wonders. Succesc;ful artists of all stripes share reminiscences of how they became what they are by having strong
backing from their mom and dad. It's not hard to see why
- a child who receives a smile and some positive feedback
about his artwork ic; much more likely to continue than one
who is met with indifference.
Even if your child never develops the chops of
Michelaneelo. there sttll may be hope for a career. In the
Lst .few years. comics ha~·c become more respected by
1bhshers
and readers altke, and are now commonly
•
referred to as ..graphic novels.'' The ··oiary of a Wimpy
Kid'' series of graphic novels - which features characters
rendered as little more than stick figures - has made the
New York Times best-seller list several times. Realize that
each person's art is as unique as a finge rprint. and that
everyone expresses him- or herself in a different way. The
important thing for you !O relay to. your child is tha,t his
viewpoint and style arc JUSt as valid as anyone else s. A
child who has someone to believe in him can accomplish
great things. even if the¥ l.ook like just. scribbles to you
now. There are lots of arttsttc styles for hm1 to explore.

(c) 2009 by King Features Syndicate

Monday, Sept. 28
POMEROY - Veterans
SefVIce Commission meets
.
at I p.m .. 117 Memopal Dr.
RACINE Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting. 8 p.m ., high school
media room.

Clubs and
organizationS
Thursdav, Sept. 24
J

SYRACUSE Meigs
County Republican Women.
6:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. Food provided.
Questions. call 985-3537 or
696-1042.
POMEROY- Alpha Iota
Masters. II :30 a.m. at
Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Thesday, Sept. 29
POMEROY - Oh-Kan
Coin Club will meet at 6:30

11

1

meeting and an auction of at 2 p.m. in the Meigs High
coins.
School cafeteria. Purpose of
Saturday, Oct. 3
the meeting is to provide
CHESTER
Shade information on the MLEF
R"
L d
453
· 1
d
&amp;Jver o ge
. specta an the alumni JOtball game
meeting to confer the set for Oct. 10.
Fellowcraft de2ree on one
candidate. Breakfast, 8 a.m.,

Sunday, Sept. 27
PORTLAND
The
Hazel Church homecoming
will be held Sept. 27.
p 1 k d.
ot uc. mner at noon,
singing at l p.m. by the
Builders Quartet. Church
located between Portland

degree work at 9 a.m. All
Fellowcraft and t\1aster
Maons invited.

and Long Bottom.
PO~EROY
Weiner
t
d
fi
·
6
roas an camp Ire !&gt;mg,
p.m.. Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church.
RACIJ\JE
Homecoming at
Eagle
Ridge Community Church,
with carry-in dinner at
noon, singers at I p.m.: Joe
McCloud. Everet Grant.
Brian
&amp;
Family
Connections. Jerry and
Diana Frederick.
POMEROY
Redeemed in concert, 6:30
p.m .. ~it. Union Baptbt
Church. 39091 Carpenter
Hill Rd .. Pomeroy.

Other events
Friday, Sept. 25
POMEROY- Free community dinner, 5 p.m..
Middleport Church
of
Christ Family Life Center.
Barbecue pork sandwiches,
cole slaw. potato salad.
dessert. ·Doors open at 4:30
p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 4
POMEROY
The
Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation (MLEF) has

Reunions

sunday, sept. 27.

RACINE _ Thomas and
babel
Stobart
family
reunion, I p.m. Star Mill
Park in Racine. Take covercd dish.

Church event
Saturday, Sept. 26
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Benefit gospel
sing for Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing, 7 p.m., Church of
Christ in Christian Union.
Eternity, Brian &amp; Family
Connections, Jerry and

Alumni floats sought for parade
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY School
groups and alumni are invited to participate in the
Meigs
Local
Alumni
Parade. planned as part of
the Meigs High School
homecoming celebration.
The parade will step off at
I p.m. on Oct. 10 at the
Pomeroy baseball fields.
PriLes will be awarded to the
best entry in the following
categories: elementary unit,
middle school unit, high
school unit and alumni unit.
Organizers say last year's

O'Bleness to
offer free
. health
screenings
for women
ATHENS
The
O'Bieness Health System
will sponsor For Women
Only. a free clinic by
appointment only. to assist
area women without health
insurance, Medicare or
Medicaid, who have not had
a cervical examination in
two ye~r~.
.
Q~ahf1~d wom~n Will
1 re7e.1ve tree cef\'lcal .and
chmcal breast exammations. University ~ledical
Associates Pathology
will p~ovide free specimen
analys1s. . .
The chmc will be held
Friday, Oct. 16. beginning
at l p.m. at the Castrop
Center, Suite 260. in the
O'Bieness Medical Park .
Women over the age of 17
are eligible for the free service.
He.al.thcare profe~sio~als
provtdmg the exammatlons
are associated with System
affiliates.
O'Bieness
Mcmoriul Hospital. Athens
Obstetrics and Gynecology
and River Rose Obstetrics
and Gynecology.
To make an .appointn~ent
or for more mfom1at1on,
call the O'Bleness commu~ ity relations dc1~artment.
:&gt;66-4814. Appomtments
are limited.

parade floats were a big hit.
This year, the committee
hopes more groups. including alumni classes, will build
"floats of the good old days."
"The parade has become
one of the best parades in
Pomeroy in recent years,''
said Erin Roush, secretary
of the alumni association.
Those who are interested in
participating in the parade
may conta~t Melissa Colwell
at 992-0565.. or melissa_ramsburg@hotmail.com.

Smile! Now you can own the plct..tre ot that unforgettable
moment capiUred In the newspaper. Photos become bme!ess
wl'en framed or prit'led on a mug or mouse pad

Vrsit

www. mydallysentlnel.com and clicl&lt; the blue bunon.

Cancer Survivor ,Fair
Saturday, Sept. 26 • 10 a.m.-4 p.m. • Gallia Co. Fairgrounds
Free admission • Public is welcome
Sponsors: Holzer Center for Cancer Care &amp; Partners of Hope Cancer Coalition

li"'e

heal

Activities and participating agencies
• Free Health Screenings sponsored by Holzer Medical Center
Health &amp; Wellness Department
• Free PSA Screenings sponsored by Holzer Clinic
• Free hot dogs &amp; hamburgers from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. provided by
Life Ambulance Service
• American Cancer Society
• Gallia County Health Department
• Holzer Hospice
• Lance Armstrong Foundation
• Free information about prevention &amp; early detection of cancer,
living wi lis and cancer symptom management
• Free entertainment: Forgiven 4, River Bend Cloggers, Calvary
Christian Center Singers, Everett Grant and more
For information, call Sandra Casse/1-Corbin at (740) 441-3557.
or e-mail scorbin@holzerclinic.com

�PageA4

The· Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

.

Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make .tro law respecti11g au
establishment of religion, or J1Yolribititrg the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tire press; or the J'ight of tire
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiou
tire Gor,errrmeut for a redress of grier,auces.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

l~EAI)El~'S

VIEW

Checklist
for parents
Dear Editor,
Starting school, moving to a new ..,chool or grade creates
anxiety for children. Parents are encouraged to talk to their
children about their worries. This checklist will help parents to remember that conven;ations with their child about
peer pressure, alcohol and other drug prevention and good
decision making is important.
Talk. Be clear that using alcohol, tobacco or other drugs
is not acceptable. Let your child know that you would be
very disappointed if he/she chose to usc. !\take sure to discuss your child'::; feelings about starting school and ta1k
over any concerns that may be the source of anxiety.
Listen. Provide oppmtunities for your child to talk about
changes happening in their world. Ask open-ended que-;
tions like, "How arc you feeling about the new school
vear?"
· Help Build Conlidence. Teach your child how to ''break
the ice" with nC\\ people by asking things like, "What were
you up to this summer?"
Encourage Open Dialogue. Remind your teen they can
alway~ come to you with concerns without judgment If
they don't feel that they can confide in you, they may turn
to someone else who does not share your family values.
Ask Questions. Ask probing questions about who they
are hanging out with, where they are going during evening
hours or whose house they are going to be at. Check in to
let )OUr teen know that you are concerned and that )Oll
care.
Be a Role ~odel. Set a good example by being a con'Si"tent. positi\e presence in your child's life. Being imolved
in your child's life and participating in shared acth ities \\ 1U
benefit you and your child.
Brenda Curfman
Meigs County Mobili1.ing for Change on Alcohol

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today 1s Thursday, Sept. 24, tht: 267th day of 2009.
There arc 9R days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 24. 1969. the trial
of the "Chicago Eight'' (later seven) began. (Five of the
defendants were later convicted of crossing state lines to
incite riots at the 1968 Democratic national conventiOn. but
the conviction~ were ultimatelv overturned.)
Thought for Today: ''History is mostly guessing. the rest
is prejudice." - Will (1885-1981) and Ariel Durant( 1898198 I), American historians.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
them 300 words. All tellers are subjecT to editing, must b(;
signed, and include addn'sS and telephone number. 1\~o
un.\i~ned letter.\ will he puhlished. Letter~ .should be 111
good taste, addressing is.wes, nor persom!llfles. Lt•llers (l
thanks to organizations and indi\•iduals \\'ell not be accept-

ed for publimrion.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to Pubhshed every mornmg Monday
be accurate 11 you know of an error through Friday. 111 Cburt Street.
In a sto~ call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy. OhiO. Second-class postage
•
paid at
992·2156.
Member: The Assoctated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Assoaalion
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send add•oss correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Da iy ~tmel PO Box
Department extensions are:
729, Pomeroy OMo 45769

Pomem

News
Editor: Charlene Hoefltch Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Aced, Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising
Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell

740-446·2342, Ext. t7
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16
ClasslCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
Circulation Manager: David Lucas.

740·446-2342. Ext 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
E-mail:
md~nowsOmyda

lysonlinol com

Web:
www.mydallysent1ncl com

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Thursday, September 24,

2009

Meltdou;n 10 1: How exten.ded J~obless be11cjits u;ork
Bv CHRISTOPHER
RUGABER
AP

ECONO~tCS

S.

WR!TfR

WASillNGTON
Congress io; moving to
extend unemployment ben
efits as about 1.3 mi Ilion of
the Jobless ure at ri~k of runnmg out by the end of this
)'Par But the extra coverage
won't initially be available
in every state.
Und~.:r
legislation
upproved by the House on
Tuesday. benefits will be
extended by 13 weeks in 27
states with unemployment
rates above 8.5 percent.
Re~idento; in other &lt;;tates
I could become eligible if
their Jobless rates reach that
c1 'lUUJI.
1hc extension would be
the fourth since the recession began and is an
ackno\\ ledgment that joblessness remains stubbornly
h1gh, despite signs of life in
the economy.
Here are some questions
and answers about hnw the
extension of benefits\\ orks.
Q: Why is Congress
extending unemployment
insurunce'!
A The labor market i::, the
worst it has been in decades,
with about SIX unemployed
workers, on a\eragc, competing for e-.ery job opening, according to government d~1tc1. That's up from
1.7 per open job in
December 2007. when the
recessiOn began.
Long-ternt unemployment
hal) gotten part1cularly bad:
About one-third of the jobless. or almost 5 million peo-

lie\

ple. have been unemployed
for 6 months or longer just slightly less than the
re~ord percentage unemployed that long in July.
As a result, more than
400,000 people are expected to run out of unemployment insurance by the end
of this month. according to
estimates by the National
Employment Law Project,
an advocacy group. ~lore
than 1.3 million will do so
by the end of the year.
The House bill, !)ponsored
h) Rep. Jim McDermott. D
Wash .. will provide 13 e:&gt;~.tra
weeks of benefits to about a
million of those who would
otherwise exhaust their CO\
emge.
Most analysts expect the
Cl:Onomy "111 gro\\ at .1
healthy clip m the Jul) -to
September quarter. technically ending the recession.
But
Federal
Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernankc
said earlier this month that
growth isn't expected to be
strong enough to reduce the
jobless rate.anytUllC soon.
The unemployment rate is
at a 26-year high of 9.7 percent, and most economists
expect it to get '' orse. top
ping 10 percent by early
next year.
Q: I'm about to run out
of unemplo) ment benefits
- when "ill the extra 13
weeks kick in? And in
what states?
A: The Senate has to
Upprove the legislat10n first,
and it could make changes.
Senate Majorit) Leader
H.arry Reid. D-Ne\ .• "aid
Tuesday the chamber Will

move quickly, but it isn't
clear when.
Under the House bill.
recipients 111 27 states would
immediately
benefit:
Alabama,
Arizona,
Cahfornia, Horida, Georgia,
Idaho, Illinois. lndmna,
Kentucky. l\1a!)sachusctts,
Mmne.
Michigan,
Ml,sis~;ippi,
Mio;souri,
Nevada, New Jersey, No11h
Cnrohna. New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania,
Oregon,
Rhode
!!)land.
South
Carolina,
Tennessee,
Washington. Wi ...consin and
West Virginia.
Re~idenl'&gt; in Washington,
D.C., and Puerto Rico
would also be eligible for
the extra 13 weeks.
Q: Aren't people running out of benefits in
other states too? Whv is it
•
done this \\a)?
A: Mo't exten.-.ions genernll) t.lrget high-unemployment states. the idea bein~
th.tt it 1s harder to find work
in. for example. the 14
state:, with jobless rates
above 10 percent. than in
North or South Dakota,
which arc still below 5 percent.
Ho\\ ever. more states
may tJUUIIfy as their jobless
rates climb. Alaska is at S.3
percent. for ex,unple, while
Delaw are and Connecticut
are at 8.1 percent. States
must average 8.5 percent for
three months before the
extra benefits would kick m.
In addition. congrcs~ional
staff point out that other
benefit extensions kick in at
lower unemplo) ment rates
States get an additional 13

weeks \\hen their jobless
rates top 6.5 percent. and
another 7 weeks when
unemployment hits 8 per·
cent.
Still. the trigger has
spurred some complaints.
Rep. Charlie Melancon, a.
Louisiana Democrat,
against the bill because
s~tte wouldn't he cligi
· neighboring
while
Mississippi would.
Q: OK, so ho\\ long can•
people recehe uncmploy-:
ment insurance?
A: The s-tates pay for up tQ
26 weeks under the standard
benefit program. The feder-.
al government is paying fol"
a variety of extensions that
have added between 20 and,
53 weeks of coverage,
depending on each state's
unemployment rate.
Q: How much will this
exten!&gt;ion cost?
A: About $1 .4 billion,
accordmg
to
the
Congressional
Budget
Office: Under McDermott's
proposal it would be funded
by extending a tax on
employers equal to about
$14 per employee.
Q: How long will all
these extensions be avail·
able?
'
A: Most of the extensic.
are scheduled to lap..,e at
end of the year. Recipients
already receiving extm ben·
efit~ will be able to continue
doing so until they run ou~,
but tho~c who exhaust the1r
re!!ular 26 weeks of state
benefib won't be eligible
for anv federal extensions
afterJan. 1, 2010, unless the
law... are changed.

I

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

Stimulus watch: Teens lack jobs despite job dfort

Bv GARANCE BURKE
ASSOCIAT[.O PRESS WRITER

J-&lt;1{ESNO. Calif. - '!'he
Obamn
administration's
economic stimulus program
ln lind jobs for thousands of
teenagers this summer
couldn't overcome one of
the bleakest job markets in
more than 60 year.., that had
desperate adults competing
for the same work.
Almost one-quarter of the
:!79,169 youths in the $1.2
billion jobs program didn't
gel JObs. as more adults
sought the same low-wage
positions at hamburger
stands and communitv
pools. according to an
Associated Press rc' iew of
government
data
and
reports from state!).
Congressional auditors
warned Wednesday that the
government's plans to measure the success of the fedem! program arc so haphazanl that they "may rcn~al
little about what the program achieved." The new
report from the Government
Accountability Office said
many government ofticials,
employers and participants
believe the program was
successful.
Vice President Joe B1den
described the Workforce
Investment Act summer program as a wa) to keep teens
out of trouble and off the
streets while reinvigorating
the country's summer youth
employment
program.
which had gone donnant for
a decade. But the program
didn't prevent youth unemployment rates f~on1 soaring
to 18 5 percent m July. the
highel&gt;t rate measured
among 16- to 24-year-olds
in that month since 1948.
"The summer progrum
. wns basically half-disa:stcr.''
said Andrew Sum. director
I of the Center for Labor
at
Market
Studies
Northeastern Universit} m
Boston. ''It ,.,.as too little.
too lute and too poor!) constructed to have any la~ting
effect on our youngest

workl!rs."
Cameron Hinojo~a. 16.
\\Cnt through a two-day
stimulu~-funded workshop
on how to write a resume.
But he didn't end up with a
job because the su•nmer
program 111 Fresno Count),
111 the heart of recessionbattered central Califomiu.
had already ended.
"When I went in J was
hoping l \\ould get a JOb and
wa~ looking forward to getting that extra money." said
Hinojosa, \\ho had planned
to ..,hare his erunmgs with
his mother to pa) bills for
their household of eight.
"'{ou g:et some adults that
got laid off from their JObs.
so vou -,till have to work
against them "
In lllinob, the GAO sa1d.
some local of1icials didn't
follow eligibility rules.
Paperwork was mtssmg
from
some
files
in
California. Some youths
who got jobs through the
program had trouble collecting their p&lt;lychecks,
waiting in hnes up to four
hours in the rain, and sometimes police were called to
help with crowd control, the
GAO said.
In Pennsylvania and
Connecticut. bureaucratic
holdups kept some ) oung
\\Orkers from entering tram
ing programs until July. cut
ting into summer job oppor
tunitie:,, tht: AP's rl!\ Jew
found. In California. "•h1ch
received about 16 percent of
all funds natiom\ ide. less
than half the participants
reported getting jobs b) the
end of Jul). the mo~t recent
month for \\ hich state and
national ) outh emplo) mcnt
ligures are a' ailablc.
"Things urc still totally
chaotic with this pro~mm,''
said Rachel Gragg, federal
policy director for The
Workforce Alliance, a
Washington-based group
that advocates for more
national job trammg funds.
"In many commumties thl.!)
will tell you that they arc
still struggling to under-

stand where the money b
and "'here it is coming
trom."
The Lllhor Department
acknowledges 1t's still
working out the kinks, and
says 1.!\ l:ll i r lllll all participants got jobs. the program
has helped youth build valuable professional skills that
will serve them and the
national economy.
"\Ve don"t think C\'Cr)bod) is perfect. but we think
there i'&gt; a lot of good new~
coming out of this program.'' said Jane Oates. the
department's assistant secretary for emplo) mcnt and
training. "If there were mistakes made \\ e 're happ) to
correct them, becau:-.e we
\\ant to make sure that this
program sticks around."
To qualif) for the onetllne program under the
American Recovery and
Rein\'cstment Act. job-seekers had to be 14 to 24 years
old &lt;UHI from families living
at or IK•low the poverty line.
or meet other income critena. State!) were encouraged
to usc the federal money to
create ... ummer jobs, but also
could use it in year-round
programs for youth.
Ne\\ York, which has nm
Jts own summer emplO)ment program for year....
\\as read) to channel those
funds to placement specialist-; from Manhattan to the
('.tt:-.kllb, and by August,
had hired 24,000 youth. job
traimng officials reported.
Ma~sachusetts officials
:.uid they had trouble placmg job-seekers with private
employers, many of "hom
pas~ed over teen~ to hire
experienced older workers
or ) otmg college graduates.
Labor {)t'ficials in other
:.tales said sud1 problems
were common.
"It's kind of hard to c.:onvincc companies to h1re
teens for summer jobs when
they're Jaymg off their adult
\\ orkcrs,'' M.m• Sarris. \\ ho
heads th'e North Shore
lnvc~tment
Workforce
Board 111 Salem, Mass.

"This is the worst summer·
we· ve C\ er seen."
ln i'\ovember, California
auditors cited a litany of
financial problems at the
Los
Angeles
County
Department of Community
and Senior Sen·ices. including overpayments to its
director and $1.27 million
in questionable costs that
the agency still hasn't fully'
accounted for.
The agency received
nearly $15 million in stimulus funds for )Outh jobs
training
this
summer.
Officials said the director's
salar. had been adjusted,
other accounting problems
corrected and about 5.400
participants found jobs. •
"There are so rna
pas..,through.., before this program actually turns mto
money that helps the population it's intended to help that
it's almost criminal," said
Laura Chick. who was
appointed inspector general
by
Gov.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger to watch
o,·er California's stimulus
fund..,, ·•Jf the local board
isn't watching what they're
doing. even Jess money io;
getting to \\here it's supposed to go. e. pecially if it is
being siphoned off to pay for
administrative expen e .''
Once the summer program ends this month. states
won't have to show that
teens actually got jobs. The
Department of Labor's onl)
re4uirement is that gmduates be more "workforce
readv,'' a term all states can
mea~ure for themselve~.
Ashley Maydon, who was
among the ncar!)
youth the Prcsno Cout
board placed with emplo)· ·
ers. said she was sorry her~
$8-pcr-hour summer job
\\Ould fini&lt;;h at the end of
the month.
"1 wish it could last
longer. because it's a good
experience and it's my fin;t
job.'' said Maydon. "It's'
reall) hard to get a job right
now, especially if ) ou 're
young:·

2,6,

�'I

Thursday, September 24, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Hey Jude!

Raymond Milton Miller
REEDSVILLE - Raymond Milton Miller, 81, of
Reedsville, passed away Monday, September 21.2009 at Mcd
Central Hospital in Mansfield. He was born July 22. 1928 in
Meigs County. the son of the late Ralph and Vera Miller.
He served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War and
was a member of Bethel United Methodist Church in
Reedsville. Raymond was known for his work ethic and the
d example he set for his children. He was a person of
d faith and was well-loved by both family and friends.
•
grandkids refen·ed to him as ''Hug-Tight Grandpa".
' He was preceded in death by his wife, Naomi Miller in
1978; step-son, Fred Spencer; sister. Phyllis; and brothers,
l!loyd and Donald; and the mother of his children, Marietta
Pauline Morris.
He is survived by his children, Raymond (Jane) Miller of
Myrtle Beach. Rodney (Terri) Miller of Mansfield and
Pamela (Bo) Barker of Grove City: step-children, Howard
and Larry Spencer and Tonda Aspen; grandchildren, Becky.
Tracy. Jody, Danielle, Lynnea. Christina, Denise, Jerry and
Candy: 12 great-grandchildren; special friend, Faye
Watson and her son, James and grandson, J .0 .; and sisterin-law. Leola Miller of Grove City.
Funeral service will be held at I p.m. Saturday, September.
26, 2009 at SCHOEDINGER NORRIS CHAPEL, 3920
Broadway. Grove City, with Pastor Linda Damewood officiating. Burial will be in Obetz. Cemetery. Friends may call
on Saturday from II a.m. until the time of the service. Visit
www.schoedinger.com to send condolences.

Ellen Jane Beaver Young
COLUMBUS -·Ellen Jane Beaver Young of Pinellas
Park, Fla., formerly of Columbus. Ohio went to be with her
Savior Sept 6. 2009.
_Ellen Jane was born in Middleport, Ohio on June 24.
) 919, the daughter of Bertha L. (Denney) and John Martin
att. She is preceded in death by her husbands William
dal "Shorty'' Beaver and Roy C. Young.
•
Ellen Jane is survived by her children Linda (Larry)
Cottrell. Ronald (Kristi) Beaver, and Christine (Kim
Eugene) Bishop; her grandchildren Bruce Cottrell, Megan
Weaver, Jason. Thad and Judson Beaver, Claudine Kelly,
and John Rees; and II great grandchildren.
The funeral service will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday,
Sept. 26, 2009 at Schoedinger Worthington Chapel, 6699
N. High St., Worthington. Ohio. Interment will follow at
Walnut Grove Cemetery.

Harlan A. Ballard
LONG BOTTOM - Harlan A. Ballard, 89, of Long
Bottom. passed away Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2009 at Pataskala
.
Oaks Nursing Center, Pataskala.
He was born March I, 1920 in Westerville, son of the late
Albert and Grace Ballard. He was an Arn1y veteran of
World War II.
He is survived by a son, Frederick H. Ballard of
Pataskala: a daughter, Londa K. Wertman of Pataskala; four
grandchildren; two nephews, Dennis Frederick and Dale
Frederick: and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by his
wife, Alta Frederick Ballard; two sisters, Louise Ballard
and Alice Goodwin; four brothers. Russell Ballard. Merle
- lard, Orville Ballard and Kenneth Ballard.
funeral service will be held II a.m., Friday, Sept. 25,
9 at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home. Coolville, with
. John Rozcwicz officiating. Burial will be in the
Catmci-Sutton Cemetery, where gravside military services
will be conducted. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-8 p.m. today. You can sign the online guestbook at
www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to CarmelSutton United Methodist Church, 48045 Tornado Road,
Racine, 45771.

Deaths
Andl H. Burbridge
ALBANY - Ancil H. Burbridge, 97, of Albany, died
Wednesday Sept. 23. 2009. in Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. Arrangements will be announced by BigonyJprdan Funeral Home.

Photo courtesy of Brandy Stevens

The 14th Annual Saddle Up Trail Ride for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital had a record 263 registered participants
this weekend. The annual fundraising event in Rutland is well on its way to breaking last year's fundraising record with
nearly $19,000 collected at this point. Organizer Isabel Dill said more money continues to come in from those participating in the ride. Riders with money still to turn in or those wishing to donate to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital should
contact Dill at 742-2849.

Local Briefs
Museum having
spaghetti dinner

Funds raised will go into
supporting the Museum and
its various programs.

POMEROY
The
Meigs County Historical
Society and Museum will
have a baked spaghetti dinper Wednesday in the
Museum annex.
Servig wiii be from 11 a.m
to I p.m. and dinners can be
eaten in, carried out, or
delivered
in
Pomeroy.
Orders for carryout or deliv~ry are to be placed by
Tuesday at 992-3810.

Business course
offered
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce has announced a
course being offered to help
strengthen businesses.
.
Mick Howell of Peoplel.
Barll&lt;, assistant vice president of commercial lending,
will conduct the program,

I

Local Weather
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the upper 70s. West winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday night •..Mostly
cloudy. ·Lows around 60.
North winds around 5 mph.
Friday•..Partly
sunny.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph.

Friday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers with a slight
chance of thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 50s. East
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday...Showers with
a chance of thunderstorms.
Highs around 70. Chance of
rain 80 percent.

Horse fun
show set
PORTLAND -The Ohio
River Producer's will once
again sponsor a Horse Fun
Shov.· on Saturday in the
show ring behind the
Portland
Community
Center. Warm-ups begin at

Foreclosure
POMEROY - An action
for foreclosure was filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Branch
Banking and Trust Co.,
Greenville, S.C., against
ShaneR. Lauer. Sistersville,
W.Va., and others.
A foreclosure was granted
to Farmers Bank and
Savings Co .. against Rocky

J. Hupp, and others.

Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce
was granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court to Jeanette Crane
from William Crane.

Dissolution
POMEROY - A dissolu-

tion was granted in Meigs
County' Common Pleas
Court to Trenton J. Cleland
and Megan E. Cleland.

Marriages
POMEROY - Maniage
licenses issued in Meigs
County Probate Court: Ryan
Keith Williams. 22. and
Stacey Ann Weisend. 31.
Pomeroy: Joshua Bryan

PASSPORT and Assisted
Living waiver programs are
funded through Medicaid
under nursing home eligibility rules, as are many of
the nursing home placements in Ohio. These two
programs allow about
28,000 older Ohioans to
remain at home for one-fifth
to one-half the cost of a
nursing home placement.
"If a qualifying older
person is in a nursing

home now and ready for
community living instead,
the Home First option
allows all of them to transttton
home
through
PASSPORT or Assisted
Living programs immediately. with no limits,"
Hindman added.
"Jf older people are
forced to go into a nursing
home for lack of alternatives like PASSPORT. it
drives Medicaid spending

higher and higher. costing
the State and each taxpayer
more with each new nursing home resident who
could be at home.
·'We will come out to a
person's home or nursing
home to do a Long-Term
Care Consultation, which
can be helpful in planning
on professional. family or
self-care until we can get

1·

l

POMEROY - In a story
on Southern and Eastern's
pa11icipation in cross country races at Logan. the name
of the ninth place winner on
the Southern team was
incorrectly listed. The correct name is Jennifer
McCoy.

Yost. 23. and Natasha
Nicole Ginther, 20, Rutland:
Joseph Brendan Schultheis.
25. and Chelsie Marie
Arrowood. 21. Shade: Eric
Michael McClain. 29, and
Kimberly Kaye Roush. 39,
Racine;
Ryan
Jacob
Wachter. 24. ·Grove City.
and Cari Renee Steger. 21,
Pomeroy: James Eli Fink.
32, and Velessa Dawnene
Hunnell, 35. Rutland.

Rose said except for
times when blasting occurs,
there will be no road
restnct1ons on existing
Ohio I 24 which will remain
open to traffic until the new
section is relocated.

"This is a very big project with lots of earth
work. lots of heavy equipment," Rose said about the
7.5 million investment in
2.7 miles of roadway in
Meigs County.

Auditions
for
The Broadway Dinner
Theatre Revue

''The All Night Strut"

Pnw1ding a world of choice m 1nsurance.
•
•
•
•
•

Home
Autn
Business

A River City Players Production

• Employee Bcnet1Ls
• Commcrcml
• Life
• Dcntuli\' ision

Renter~

Boat

• Moton:,clo
• Group &amp;

Sunday, September 27th 2-5 pm
99 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio

• H.S.A. Plans

Jndividunl Health

(RCP Building)
For additional Information
call 992-5328 or 992-6759

LET OUR FAMILY HELP INSURE YOUR FAMILY
Ashlce Enslen- Donald VaughiUI Sr. • DonaJc) Vaughan Jr.

CALL TODAY FOR A FRE! QUOT! OR BEN!FIT ANALYSIS

¢[

l~mail: donald@thc,•aughanagcnc} .com

~ 740·992-9784

il

them on one of the programs.'' Hindman emphasized.
Anyone interested in
learning more about an mhome consultation, PASSPORT or Assil.ted Living
options st10uld call AAA8 at
1-800-331-2644 or visit '
www .areaagency8 .org.
There is no cost for the call
or the consultation.

ANNOUNCING!

Repair from Page At

1"'be Vaughan Agency
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 25.91
BBT (NYSE) - 28.34
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 14.45
Pepsico (NYSE) - 58.47
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.90
Rockwell (NYSE) - 44.06
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 5.85
Royal Dutch Shell - 58.65
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 66.24
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 50.40
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.21
WesBanco (NYSE)- 15.64
Worthington (NYSE)- 15.54
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Sept. 23, 2009, provided by Edward Jones flnan·
clal advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Correction

Services from Page At

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31.36
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 61.74
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 43.51
ots (NYSE) - 24.46
Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.28
Warner (NYSE) - 30.48
ury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.33
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.98
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.10
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.27
Collins (NYSE) - 50.38
DuPont (NYSE) - 33.13
US Bank (NYSE) - 22.07
Gannett (NYSE) - 9.92
General Electric (NVSE) - 17
Harley·Davidson (NYSE) - 24.28
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 45.06
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.55
Limited Brands (NVSE)- 17.39
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 45.76

10 a.m., the show starts at
II a.m. For more details all
Bruce McKelvey at 5909936 or 843-5216.

For the Record

Loretta Jean Sayre
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -Loretta Jean Sayre. 82. of New
Haven, W.Va. passed away on Sept. 22. 2009 at Holzer
Hospital. She is survived by her husband of 60 years, Ralph
re of New Haven.
private funeral service is under the direction of Anderson
neral Home in New Haven with Pastor Charles Hargraves
officiating. Burial will be at the Sunrise Memorial Cemetery.
A. registry is available on-line at www.andersonfh.com.

"Qualifications
for
a
Business Loan'' Thursday, 9
to 11 a.m at the Pomeroy
Library. A light breakfast
will be served.

(This production does not include
children's roles)

or 877-992-9784

505 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. OH -lS769

..

�The Daily Sentinel
•

ACROSS THE NATION

--

BY LARRY MARGASAK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

WASHINGTON - The
Obama administration, for a
second straight day, frustrated Democratic lawmakers
Wednesday by ·declining to
say whether it qacks their
demands for more civil liberties safeguards in anti-terrorism surveillance and property
seizures. ·
Democrats on the Senate
Judiciary Committee kept
pressing Assistant Attorney
General David Kris to go
beyond previous administration statements that it supports continuing provisions ·
of the USA Patriot Act that
will expire at year's end.
"We don't have an official
administration position" on
any proposed legislation,
Kris said.
Chairman Patrick Leahy,
D-Vt. had asked whether the
administration would back
his proposal to continue the
expiring sections for four
years with revisions anCl·
increase audits of the government's actions.
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill.,
sought a commitment to protect libraries from unreasonable requests for information
on people using the facilities.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, DCalif., chairman of the
Intelligence
Committee,
asked, "Is there anything (in
Leahy's bill) that would
impede or affect" a current
terrorism investigation in
New York and Colorado?
"The cards are rather
stacked" in favor of the government, Leahy said.
Kris responded, "We're
willing to look to see if these
tools can be sharpened."
Sen. Jeff Sessions of
Alabama,
the
only
Republican at the hearing,
said he doesn't believe "there
have been any abuses to date"
of the Patriot Act. He said the
law, originally enacted after
the Sept. 11 attacks, gave the
government the same powers
in terrorism cases that it has
to pursue drug dealers and
mobsters.
Several Democrats in both
chambers said they not only
want to revise the expiring

PageA6
Thursday, September 24,

White House
seeks comments on
education law
BY liBBY QUAID
AP EDUCATION WRITER

AP photo

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy, D·Vt., left, talks with Justice
Department Inspector General Glenn Fine, center, and Attorney General David Kris, on
Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, before the start of the committee's hearing on the
reauthorization of the Patriot Act.

provisions but review the the bill would require that the
entire Patriot Act, to prevent records sought be relevant to
what they contend were civil an investigation. At a miniliberties and privacy abuses mum, the records must be
by the Bush administration.
linked to a suspected agent of
"This time around, we have a foreign power.
The bill also would modithe oRportunity to get this
right,
said Sen. Russ fy the current standard for a
Feingold, D-Wis.
national security letter. It
On
Tuesday,
another would require a statement
Justice Department official of facts showing reasonable
gave similar non-responses to ~rounds to believe the
House
Judiciary mformation sought is retethe
Committee. Liberal lawmak- vant to an authorized invesers dominating that panel tigation.
Democrats accused the
expressed their dissattsfaction more sharply, with Bush administration of using
Chairman John Conyers, D- , these letters to skirt the speMich., saying he saw little cial foreign surveillance
difference so far between the court. All three of the expirObama and Bush administra- ing sections require approval
on
protecting of the special court.
tions
The expiring Patriot Act
Americans' rights under the
Patriot Act.
provisions provide:
-Roving, court-approved
Leahy's legislation would
authorize the expiring provi- wiretaps that allow surveilsions through Dec. 31, 2013. lance on multiple phones.
It also would set the same Law enforcement is not
expiration date for national required to ascertain that a
security letters, which are suspected foreign terrorist is
FBI demands for obtaining actually using the phones
tangible items without court being tapped.
-That businesses rroduce
warrants.
In
making
standards "any tangible things' at the
tougher for the government in FBI's request.
-Authority to conduct sursecret requests to a special
foreign surveillance court, veillance against a so-called

"lone wolf," a non-U.S. citizen engaged in terrorism who
may not be part of a recognized terrorist group.
The legislation attempts to
increase accountability to
Americans about counterterrorism operations. It would
the
Justice
require
Department's inspector general to conduct audit reports
on the government's use of
national security letters as
well as document requests to
the foreign intelligence surveillance court.
The inspector general previously reported on a 2006
case, when the FBI twice
asked the court for an order
seeking "tangible things" in a
counterterrorism case. After
the court denied the request
both times, citing the danger
to First Amendment rights,
the FBI continued the investigation using three national
security letters.
The Bush administration
separately had the National
Security Agency - without
warrants - eavesdrop on
Americans and others inside
the United States to search
for terrorist activity. That
controversial program ended
before Bush left office.

WASHINGTON - The Obama administra
lion is committed to the testing and school
accountability at the heart of the No Child Left
Behind law championed by former President
George W. Bush, Education Secretary Arne
Duncan said.
In a speech prepared for delivery Thursday,
Duncan gave the law credit for shining a spotlight on kids who need the most help. No Child
Left Behind _pushes schools to boost the perfor:.
mance of mmority and poor children, who lag
behind their white peers on standardized tests.
Duncan said there is plenty he wants to change
about the law. He agreed with critics that standardized tests are not ideal measures of student
achievement. Yet "they are the best we have at
the moment," Duncan said.
"Until states develop better assessments," he
said, "we must rely on standardized tests to monitor progress."
Duncan noted the administration is giving
stat~ money through the economic stimulus law
to come up with better assessments.
He planned to make the speech in a meeting
with leaders of more than 160 different groups at
the Education Department. Thursday's was the
first in a series of meetings with the groups. In
the speech, he said the administration wants their
•
input before making a fom1al proposal.
Whatever the administration decides to do, i
needs the approval of Congress, which passed
the law with broad bipartisan support in 200 I but
deadlocked over a rewrite in 2007. Lawmakers
plan to try again in 2010.
Duncan said kids can't afford more delays.
After nearly half a century of direct federal
involvement in schools, he said, ''we are still
waiting for the day when every child in America
bas a high quality education that prepares him or
her for the future.
..we·re still waiting, and we can't wait any
longer," he said.
While the law has helped improve the academic performance of many minority kids, Englishlanguage learners and kids with disabilities, crit. ics say the law is too punitive: More than a third
of schools failed to meet yearly progress goals
last year, ac~ording'to the Education Week newspaper.
That means millions of children are a long way
from reaching the law's ambitious goals. The
law pushes schools to improve test scores each
year, so that every student can read and do math
on grade level by the year 2014.
Opponents insist the law's annual reading and
math tests have squeezed subjects like music and
art out of the classroom and that schools wert
promised billions of dollars they never received

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�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Lnd) Knights tic Dots, Page H2
Reds .send Pirates to loss, Page U6

Thursday, September 24, 2009

~~
FRIDAY'S GAMES

Unbeaten White Falcons travel to Eastern for Week 5 clash
B Y GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Wahama at Eastern
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Gallipolis at Jackson
Southern at Green
River Valley at Waterford
SATURDAY'S G AMES

S. Gallia at Ports. NO
Pt. Pleasant at Warren
All games start at 7:30p.m.

Winless Blue
Devils travel to
unbeaten J ackson
B Y BRYAN W ALTERS

The football game of the area will
take place at 7:30pm Friday night at
Ea~t Shade River Stadium on the
campus of Ea.'&gt;tern High School
when the Wahama White Falcons
lay it:, sixth place ranking and an
unbeaten 4-0 record on the line
against a once beaten, 3-1, Eastern
Eagle ele\en.
Coach Ed Cromley's White
Falcons have strung together four
consecutive victorie~ against four
opponents from the Buckeye State
to open the 2009 grid sea~on. The
White Falcons have defeated
Buckeye Trail (48-29), Southern
(42-14). Waterford (30-0) and South
Gallia ( 18-0) in succession but the
outing with Eastern looms as the
brggcst challenge thus far for the
Bend Area team. WHS is s&lt;.:oring

Wahama (4-0) at Eastern (3-1)
34.5 points per game with the
Falcons defense giving up just 10.7
points after pitching a pair of
shutout&lt;; the past two weeks.
First year Eagle head coach Dick
Tipton's high flying Eastern squad
has bounced back from a season
opening setback to unbeaten
Alexander (21-35) to capture three
in a row with wins over South Gallia
(26-6), Sciotovillc (20-18) and
River Valley (41-6). Eastern averages 27.0 points per game with its
high powered. well balanced offense

while the Eagle defensive eleven rs
giving up 16.2 points per contest
against some pretty potent opponents.
At tirst glance the contest appears
to pit tne. White Falcons runni ng
game against the aerial attack of the
Eagles. Senior Micai&lt;~h Branch
(333 yards). jumor Ryan Lee (331
yd ) and sophomore lsaHc Lee (185
yd ) are the Falcons top ground
gainers while JUnior Brayden Pratt
(600 yds passing) and receivers
Mike Johnson (300 yds) and Kyle
Connery (150 yds) pace the hast
teams pa sinh success.
However neither team is one
dimensiOnal as c;enior quarterback
William Zuspan has thrown for 239
vards and four touchdowns for
Waharna with Jssac Lee. Tyler
Kitchen and Colin Pierce being the
Bend Area teams leading pas~ catchers. Eastern also sports a talented

run ning attack wi th senior Kl int
Connery (300 yds) and junior Kelly
Winebrenner (200 yds) the l'vteigs
County team-; rushing leaders.
Eastern will enjoy an edge in site
and experience along the offensive
line \\ ith four starters returning.
The Eagles' :,enior dominated front
wall is expected to find o;eniors Jeff
Malhoan (210), Ca ey McKmght
(200), Tyler Sanders (240) and
junior Lonnie Westfall (240).
Wahama is expected to send seniors
Ethan McGrC\\ (180). Kevin
Klingensmith (310). Jordan Decker
(215) and Matt Dangerfield (160)
along with junior Ryan Anderson
(240) and &lt;;Ophomores Jamm Branch
(230) and Colton McKmney (150)
to counter the «tXperienced Engle
interior line.
Eastern will be beginning a diffi-

Piease see Clash, 86

BWI\lTEASO MYDAILVTAIBUNE.COM

~

Pre p Vo lleyball

CKSON

- They say
n it comes to a rivalry.
can go ahead and throw 1
I
r-------. the
two
teams'
records out 1
1
the window
..
and
get
ready for a
good
ol'
B Y S ARAH H AWLEY
fashioned
MDSSPOATSOMVOALVSENTINELCOM
&lt;&gt;Jobberknocker.
CENTENARY The
And
in
Galli a Academy (12-3) 'olthe case of
leyball team defeated River
the Gallia
Valley (5-7) in a cross counAcademyt) matchup Wednesday
Jackson
evening in four games.
:,cries over
Gallia Acadcmv won
"---------' their previgames one, three. !tnd four1
ous 79 regular season
while River Valley won
matchups, they have been
F-ame number two. S&lt;.:oting
- for the most part - corm the games was 25-13. 23·
rect in that analogy.
25,25-11. and 25-16.
With that said, two foundGallia Academy was Jed
ing
fathers
of
the
on the night by good defenSoutheastern Oh10 Athletic
sive efforts by Maddie
League will meet again on
Sw1sher w1th 40 di~s and
gridiron this Friday
Caroline Baxter With 21
t when winless Gallia
digs.
demy travels to Alumni '
Sarah
photo
Leaders
for
Gallia
dium for a Week 5 con- The Southern football team huddles up dunng the first quarter of Friday night's victory agamst Hannan at Roger Lee Academy were Hannah
Cunnin!!ham
with
34
frontation with unbeaten Adams Memorial Field.
Jackson during the Apple
a~sbts,~ 10 points, three
Bowl.
kills. and No blocks.
The sigmficnnce of th1s
Mor!!an Leshe with 14
game is huge for both
points, four ace,, and eight
The non-league contest kills . .Moll\ Blake with 12
60 I 1 I in thear four contests against Waterford who ha
teams. although neither
BY SARAH HAWLEY
MDSSPOATSOMVDAILVSENTINELCOM
th1s season. Green has had not won since their opener will kickoff Fridav evenin!! points , six· kills, and three
team has had much more in
at 7:30 p.m. at Waterford blocks. and Amv Noe with
victories against f\lnnchcster against South Gallia (0-4).
common this season.
The Jronmen (4-0. 1-0
FRANKLIN FURNACE (0-4) and Hannan (0-4),
Both teams have been High School.
10 points. three aces, a nd
SEOAL) arc coming off 'a - The Southern Tornadoes while losing to Fort frye (4- outscored by their opponents
13kills.
R EBELS TRAVEL TO FACE
thrilling 27-26 victory over football team travels to 0) and Grove City Christian on the season. River Valley
Additional pluyers for
PORTSMOUTH NOTRE
Portsmouth at the new Franklin Furnace on Friday (4-0).
Gallia
Academy
were
has been outscored 13-160.
Trojan Coliseum. Ryan to face the Green Bobcat:;; in
In the previous three Waterford
has
been DAME, SEEK FIRST VICTORY Taylor foster with eight
Mullins kicked a 31-van.J a mntchup of 2-2 teams.
points. four aces. and 19
games between the two outscored 35-90, and has
The non-confere.nce gat~le schools. Green holds the only put up 13 points since
field goal with 15 seconds
PORTSMOUTH - The digs. Morgan Daniels with
left in regulation. allowing . h~s So';lthern !ookmg for 1ts advantage
South Gall ia Rebels take five points, 12 kills, and
2-1,
with week one.
JHS to become the first 1 thrrd ~tctory m a ro~ after Southern winning the most
Last week. Waterford put their quest for a 'ictory on seven blocks. Haley Rosier
team to win an SEOALcon- dcfeatmg South Gallaa (0-4) recent contest, in 2008. by a up six points in the first the road thi \\eek with a with five points. and
test in the new PHS facihty. and .Hannan (0-4) over the score of31-14.
quarter on a short touch- game against Portsmouth Amanda McGhee with six
Jackson - which is cur- pre\1ous two week~.
kills and one block.
Kickoff is set for 7:30p.m. down run by Levi Porter and Notre Dame (l-3).
rently rated second in the
. Southern. sco~ed a season at Green High School in
Ri,er Valley v.ac; led on
The Rebels. \\ ho have not
was held scoreless the
Division III. Region 12 h1gh 40 P?mts 111 last wee.ks
the
evening by Kelsey
played on the road since
Frankhn Furnace.
remainder of the 2ame.
playoff standings - also game agamst Hannan, whale
Sands
with seven points.
week
one,
are
going
for
their
River Valley's lone score
eight
h'as victories over Wellston Green \\as shutout last "Week
R AIDERS SEEK FIRST WIN,
as~ist....
and one kill.
in la~t week's contest was on first victory of the season are
Jacqueline
Jacobs added
(21-7), Waverlv (33-25) and againf&gt;t
Grove
City
TRAVEL TO W ATERFORD
a second quarter run by going up against a Notre six points. ei!?ht kills, and
..ton County (42-16) this Christian.
Dame squad v. ho have not
Tyler Smith.
On the season. Southern
two ace.... Kattl) n Roberts
River
Valley
and won since week one.
hose
four
lronmen has allowed 90 points while
WATERFORD The
•
tallied six points and eight
The Rebels were held ' kills. Ciara Bosttc added
opponents, however, are a only scoring 86 points. River Valley Raiders foot- Waterford have faced off the
combined 5-11 this year. Southern's loses have come ball team (0-4) will travel to past two seasons. splitting scoreless in last week's three points. one ace, and
Jackson has outscored its at the hands of Symmes Waterford to face the the games . Rh·er Valley game against Wahama, after eight assbt5., Aubrie Rice
won in 2008. 27-7. ~ hile putting up ~&gt;iX points in each
opponents by u 123-74 mar- Valley (3-1) and Wahama (4- Wildcats ( 1-3 ).
Waterford
won in 2007, 39·n
0)
River
Valky
looks
for
gI .
1
•
Please see Volleyball, 81
Please see Preview, 86
Gallia Academy (0-4. 0-1 1 Green has been outscored their firlit win of the season 14.
_
SEOAL), on the other hand.l
has been run through the
•
gau~ltl~t
so rar this se~tson
-; tacrng a schedule wrth a
~
combined record of 14-2 so
Devils have fallen to
Hillsboro (35-34) and
BY DAVE H ARRIS
tv.o of the best tailbacks in
Ironton (39-6). as well as to
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
Southeastern Ohio in the
unbeaten. Athens (21-0).
Buckeyes Derek Arnold and
GAHS is also coming off a
POMEROY -Two teams the
Marauders Jeremy
57-61oss to unbeaten Logan with explosive offensi\ es Smith.
Arnold a 5-foot-9. 200
last week.
will clash this Friday night
Gallia Academy, which when the Nelsom ille-York pound senior has rushed for
has been outscored 152-46 Buckeyes
invade
Bob 614 ) ards in 92 carries and
th is fall, will be making Roberts Field in Pomeroy to se\en touchdowns. He leads
only its second road trip of play the Mei~s M. arauders.
the Buckeye ground game
the season - althou~h its
The Buckeye ... come into that has rushed for n1 yards
best showing so far thrs fall the contest wrth a 4-0 mark. in 143 tries. Arnold had two
carne in that one-point ' while the Marauders arc 1-3 kickoff returns for scores
in Highland • on
the
season.
The last year at Buchtel against
Buckeyes won their first Meigs. to l~ad the Buckeyes
that note, Jack~on i~ TVC game over Wellston to a come from behind JOreturning home after com- Iust Fridav 38-7. while 2&amp; win.
pleting a two-game road Meigs lost to an impressive
Nathan Dean an 5-foot-9,
swing. GAllS begins its Athens team by a score of 170 pound sophomore will
first of two strajght road 58-18 in The Plains.
call the signals for the
trips this Friday.
Both teams have shown Buckeyes. Dean is 29 of 43
'f11e Blue Devils are look- that they can move the ball in the air for 31 1 yards, four
in~ to get their . ancr_nic and score with anyone. rnterceptions and a pair of
offense - averagmg JUSt while the Buckeyes feature scores.
11.5 points per game - on the of top defenses in the
On defense the Buckeyes
going this weekend after area, and Meigs has had ha\e given up 852 yards and
Bryan Walterslf1lc photo
being outscored 96-12 111 problems at time on defense.
Meigs defender Colby Hayes, right, makes a tackle on River Valley runntngback Tyler Smith
The contest will feature
Please see Meigs. 86
during a Week 3 non-conference football contest at Bob floberts Field in Pomeroy.
Please see Rivalry, 86

Blue Angels
defeat Lady
..,._,_,_,,~~~
Raiders

I

Southern looks to extend win streak, travels to face Green

fa~e

-----.~

Reeling Marauders
h NJ
•11
k
ost e SODVI e- or

f

�-

-~ --- --

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

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

---

--

-

-·

-

......- .......'-:"'-------,._------------------....

-~~~~--~--c----

---

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Lady Knights, After 2 games, Brady's no mighty Quinn
:Lady Dots battle to
scoreless tie
STAFF REPORT

•• MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
, POCA
The Point
Pleasant girls soccer team
battled hard with host Poca
_for 80 minutes on Tuesday.
,but ultimately neither team
•Was able to pull away as the
·contest ended in a scoreless
tie during a Cardinal
Conference contest at D. 0.
White Stadium in Putnam
County.
The Lady Knights (4-5-2) ·
-and Lady Dots (8-3-1) went
~hrough a defensive struggle. but the hosts had the
first scoring chance of the
evening when they were
awarded a penalty kick. On
the PK. however, the shot
;;ailed wide-right - leaving

the game scoreless.
PPHS had its best scoring
opportunity of the evening
when Aron Hatt launched a
30-yard ,shot that caromed
off the upper right comer of
the goal. The ball bounced
into the box, but Point"s
rebound shot sailed wide of
the net.
PPHS keeper Ashley
~urns had six sa~es in the
tte, and the defenstve effort~
of Hart .. Meghann Bowles
and Mu.anda Thomps~:m
were
vttal
for
Pomt
Pleasant.
.
The Lady Kmghts return
to action Saturday wh~n
they host Herbert Hoover m
a Cardinal Conference
matchup at 10 a .m.

: Steelers' Ward says he'd
=hit Bengals' Rivers again
. CINCINNATI (AP) Diven a chance to level
~Bengals linebacker Keith
Rivers with another rattling
hit, Steelers receiver Hines
Ward would do it again.
Penaltv? So what?
Ward delivered one of the
most memorable hits of last
·season when he decked
·Rivers w1th a high, straightup block during Pittsburgh's
38-10 victory last October.
Rivers. then a rookie starting his seventh NFL game.
·never saw it coming. The hit
broke his jaw. ended his sea.son and prompted a rules
change outlawing high,
blind-side hits.
The change, commonly
known as the Hines Ward
.Rule, includes a IS-yard
penalty for offenders. And
the receiver satd he's willing
to break it on Sunday when
the Steelers play the Bengals
at Paul Brown Stadium, figuring it's better to hit 'em
high rather than to go after
somebody's knees with a
block.
"I'll still hit him." Ward
said
Wednesday
in
Pittsburgh. 'Til just get
fined . There's. nothing I can
•do about it. It's either that or
try to hurt somebody. So are
you going to fine me, or do
you want me to end someone·s career? I'd rather take
a fine than try to end somebody's career. so I'm not
going to change."
· It'll be the first time that
. Ward and Rivers go at it
since the injury. When the
former Southern California
linebacker returned to the
stadium after getting his jaw
· wired shut, he said Ward's
hit was clean, but he also
' said he was looking forward
to the next time they got on
the field together.
"You know. you reap what
you sow," Rivers said. 10
days after the play. 'That's
. what happens. What goes
around, comes around.
We'll see what happens.''
Sitting in a meeting room
at Georgetown College during training camp, Rivers
and the rest of the Bengals
were shown an NFL video
that highlights the new rules
for 2009. Four minutes and
26 seconds in. Rivers got to
relive his awful moment.
The video showed the play,
with both players singled
out by yellow circles to rivet
7the viewers' attention.
Rivers has seen it a Jot.

"It is what it is." he said
Wednesday. ''It's over. and
now it's time to play them
again and have a good season.''
The hit was legal last season - there was no flag.
and even upset Bengals
players acknowledged it
was a gritty, within-the-rules
play. Although the rules
change would theoretically
protect Rivers in th,e same
situation. the linebacker
doesn't know if that's what
will happen in practice.
"We '11 see how it all plays
out, and we'll see how the
rule works out." Rivers said.
"Hopefully it works out and
people don't miss half a
year. I'm just looking forward to playing. I really
don't have much to say
about it."
"The unfortunate thing is
me being labeled that.. and
then the rule change came
out, so it's kind of like me
being singled out as the dirty
guy that's in the league, a
dirty offensive player,"
Ward said. ''A wide receiver
being dirty - I take that as
a compliment."
\\'ard 's hit added to the
hard feelings in Cincinnati .
where the) still stew over
the wav Steelers lineman
Kimo von Oelhoffen hit
Carson Palmer :ow on his
first pass during their 2005
playoff game, shredding the
quarterback's left knee.
Ward sees a difference
between a hit delivered to
try to harm and one delivered to make a play.
''It's football," Ward said.
"When Kimo went at
Carson. it was just a hustle
play, he didn't try to hurt
him. You could tell by his
expression after he hit him.
He felt bad. Any player's not
trying to go out there and
hurt somebody and trying to
end someone's career."
Bengals rookie linebacker
Rey Maualuga. who played
with Rivers at USC. remembers seeing the play with
teammates when he was in
college.
''I'm pretty sure everybody
was like. 'Oh!"' Maualuga
said. "Our first thought was,
'Welcome to the NFL. It's
more physical."'
Maualuga has an idea what
will happen when Rivers and
Ward go head to head.
"If he has a clean hit.
Keith is going to be Keith."
Maualuga said.

-Volleyball

20-25. and 25- II for the
four game match.
The Lady Marauders
were lead by Chandra
Stanley with II points, and
two kills, Shellie Bailey
with I 3 kills, six points, and
one block, and Tricia Smith
with 14 assists, two points.
and one kill.
Emalee Glass added eight
points and II assists, Meri
VanMeter tallied four points
and two assists, Morl!an
Howard and Alison Brown
added eight kills each,
Valerie Conde had two
points. and Alaine Arnold
had one block.
Statistics for Meigs on the
evening included a 78 for
83 serving night, 22 kills,
27 assists. and five blocks.
Meigs
host
Vinton
County tonight in a TVCOhio matchup at 6:00p.m.

fromPageBl
-had five points, Kelcie
·carter added one kilL and
Katelyn Birchfield had
three kills.
· River Valley travels to
Fairland tonight, while
Gallia Academy
hosts
_Portsmouth at 5:15p.m.
lADY MARAUDERS FALL TO
TRIMBLE

• ROCKSPRJNGS - The
Meigs volleyball team (8-3)
lost to Trimble in four
• games Wednesday evening
at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
The Lady Tomcats won
by scores of 25-22, 25-23,

BEREA. Ohio (AP) Brady Quinn's taking hits
from all sides.
His mom has been as
rough as a blitzing linebacker on her son. Dad hasn't been any easier. Uncles.
close friends and even his
former coach, Notre Dame's
Charlie Weis. all have piled
on Cleveland's starting quarterback. who has struggled
during two lopsided losses.
If Quinn was looking for a
hug. he approached the
wrong group.
"They're always pretty
blunt and pretty honest,'' he
said Wednesday. ''They'll
always be tough about
things, but that's just them.
The people who are closest
to you want the best for you
and they're going to try to
push you."
If it'll help the Browns,
perhaps Quinn needs a
shove.
Through two games.
Quinn has been Jess than
impressive while leading a
Cleveland offense that has
managed just one offensive
touchdown - a meaningless
one in garbage time against
Minnesota in Week 1 over the past eight games.
He has looked nervous,
unsteady and generally
inept.
Quinn·s 66.9 quarterback
rating ranks him 28th among
the league's 32 starters. He
has thrown one TO pass, two
interceptions and been
sacked nine times. Some of
those have been breakdowns
by the offensive line. but
Quinn admitted he has held
the ball too long at times.

Mighty Quinn? Just a
catchy old tune.
Clearly, the rebuildingonce-again Browns (0-2)
have many more problems
than Quinn. who was chosen
by coach Eric Mangini over
Derek Anderson as his
starter following &lt;r drawnout summer competition.
But the third-year QB has
yet to justify Mangini's pick
or reward the faith of his
many fans who have been
waiting for Quinn to ride
into Cleve.land on a mythical
white horse and rescue a
wretched franchise.
To this point. he's an
imperfect (No.) 10.
Quinn. who has only made
five career NFL starts, feels
he is making progress albeit slow progress. While
everyone has been pointing
out his failings, Quinn was
asked what he's done well in
hisfirsttwogamesof2009.
·'The overall operation of
the huddle,'' he said. 'Tm
getting guys in and out. I'm
getting them in the right
position. The checks have
been pretty solid for us so
far, and sometimes making a
play when we have to or
making a smart decision,
making a more conservative
play at times as wel1.'"
Conservative.
radical,
whatever. The Browns need
someone to make any type
play for an offense that has
been an embarrassment.
Cleveland is averaging just
234 total yards per game,
dead last in the league. and
exactly half as much as the
No. 1 ranked New Orleans
Saints are piling up each

week.
The Browns' passing
game is grounded. The running game is spinning its
wheels.
Against Baltimore, it
might shift into reverse. The
Ravens are giving up a
league-low 41 mshing yards
per game.
Quinn needs to get in a
groove.
In Sunday's 27-6 loss at
Denver. several of his passes
sailed high over the'intended
receivers. It looked as if
Quinn was trying to throw
the ball harder than usuaL
perhaps thinking he needed
to fire it downfield to make
the
Denver
secondary
respect his ann.
Quinn was asked if he was
trying to do too much.
"Maybe at times," he said.
''There were a couple of
times where I think I just
didn't get my feet set in
order to make a more accurate throw. I might have
been pressing during those
particular throws. Outside of
that. though. I don't feel like
I'm pressing so much. I'm
just trying to take what the
defense gives us and not
force bad~decisions."
Presumably.
one
of
Mangini's main ohjectives
in his first season with
Cleveland is to find a quarterback for the future. On
Monday. Mangini said he
had no immediate plans to
change quarterbacks.
· Evaluating any young
quarterback is difficult and
Mangini has no set amount
· of starts before he can accurately judge Quinn.

''I cion :t know if there's
one specific number.'' he
said. "What J' m always
lookmg for is progress.
Whatever that number is.
I' rn going to continue to
look for progress each
week."
Is he ~atisfied wijh
Qumn's progress?
•
"'I'm not satisfied with·
of our progress." he said.
·'The consistency needs to
improve. We're all responsible for that and we all have
to fix that. You can't play a
half of football. You can't
play three quarters of football. You can't do it. It has to
be the same throughout the
course of the game."
Cntil things improve for
Quinn. he'll continue to get
the heat from fans - and
family.
Quinn laughed when he
was asked whom he trusts to
giv~ him a fair assessment of
his overall game. He checks
in with Weis. who fits time
into his schedule to offer
advice.
And then there\ mom.
"She doesn "t know football that well. but she knows
the. difference between winning and losing and she&amp;
always let me know that:··
said.
Surely. though. she must
have been mad that he \Vas
sacked four times in Denver.
·'No." he said. "She
alwa)s knows I'm going to
he OK. She's always more
upset about the overall outcome."

Tigers send:lnd_ians to lOth straight loss, 11-3
CLEVELAND (AP) Carlos Guillen hit two of
Detroit's three home runs to
help Rick Porcello and the
Tigers defeat Cleveland 11-3
on Wednesday night, the
Indians' season-high lOth
straight loss.
Porcello (14-9) allowed
one run and six hits over fi\'e
innings as the Tigers won
their third straight. Detroit
remained 2 1/2 games ahead
of Minnesota in the AL
Central. The Twins, who
beat the White Sox, open a
four-game series in Detroit
on Monday.
Guillen tied a season high
with four RBls. He hit a
two-run homer in the third
off right-hander Justin
Masterson (4-9) and connected on the second pitch
left-hander Mike
from
Gosling to make it 9-1 in the
fifth. It was the fourth time
in his career the switch-hitter went deep from both
sides and his seventh multihomer game overall.
Miguel Cabrera had a tworun homer. a 440-foot shot
into the bleachers in leftcenter in the fourth, for
Detroit.

Porcello walked three and
struck out one to go to 3-0
with a 1.80 ERA in four
starts against Cleveland. The
20-year-old is the youngest
pitcher to go 3-0 in a season
against the Indians since
Milt Pappas of Baltimore in
1958, also at age 20.
The Tigers got four
straight hits and took advantage of a throwing error by
first baseman Andy Marte to
take a 4-0 lead in the first.
Cabrera drove in one run
with a single and Aubrey
Huff's RBI double made it
2-0 with one out. Guillen
then ~rrounded to Marte,
who threw wildly trying to
get Cabrera scoring from
third. Brandon Inge made It
4-0 with a groundout.
The Indians loaded the
bases in the first two
innings. but scored only one
run, on Travis Hafner's
fielder's choice grounder in
the first. Hafner had an RBI
groundout in the seventh
against Ryan Perry, and Luis
Valbuena added an RBI double to make it ll-3.
Masterson dropped to 0-5
in six starts since beating the
Los Angeles Angels on Aug.

.

AP photo

Cleveland Indians first baseman Andy Marte fields a single
hit by Detroit Tigers' Curtis Granderson in the fourth inning
of a baseball game Wednesday in CIEweland.
20. The dght-hander gave up less relief on Aug. 1 in his
seven hits and six eamed Cleveland debut after being
runs over four innings. In his acquired from Boston in the
previous appearance against multiplayer trade that sent
Detroit, he struck out six All-Star catcher Victor
over 3 2-3 innings of score- Martinez to the Red Sox.

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�Thursday, September 24, 2009
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money lhrough the mall
urtol you have uwestigatlng the offenng.

STEEL ARCH
BUILD·
INGS huge doscounts on
cancelled orders, 25x40,
ASAP
delivery.
30x34
Build before Fall! Dosplay
discounts. Save thtousands!!.

We solve debt
problems!
If you have over
S12.000m debt
CALL NOW!
1-Bn-266-0261

1J~A

1

Ne&gt; \ WASN 1 CAJ.-}...Jr.J4
You&gt;10 \)\?.GA KfAS"{ J

WAS J~!-5~~6.

call today I
866-352-Q469.
Child

I

Elderly Care

Will take care of the eld·
erly
in
my
home
304-675-2080.

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences furnoshad. Estatr
fished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740·446-0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.
Other Services

Own a computer for
as little as
529.99 per weeki
No credit check!
Guaranteed
Consumer Funding

CBEDITCARD
BELIEF

Burled in Credit Card
Debit?
Call Credit Card Relief
for your
free consultation.
1-8n-264·8031

Pet
Crematiors.
7 4Q-446-3745

Call

DIRECTV
For the best TV
experience, upgrade
from cable to Directv
today I
Packages start
at $29.99
1-866-541-()834

DISH NEIW.OBK
Save up to 40% off
your cable biiiiCall
Dish Network today!
1-8n-274-2411

CLASSIFIED INDEX

J

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper!RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ...................: ................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utillty .............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................301 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ........................................ ,3025
land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal................................................3510
Condomlniums ..........................................3515
Houses for Rent.. ...................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ........................................................... 4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment.. .............................................6000
Accounting/Financlal ................................6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professional .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ...................................'" ................. 6010
Construction ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumbing ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestlc ............................. 6032
ManagemenVSupervlsory ........................ 6034
Mechanics.................................................. 6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time·Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Recreali_onal
Veh1cles

Real Estate

RentalS

1

Apartments/
Townhouses

and 2 bedroom apts.
furnished
and
unfUrnished, and houses m
RV Service at Carmi- Pomeroy and Mtddleport
chael
Trailers security deposit required,
740·446·3825
no pets. 740·992·2218

Computers

GUARANT.E..ED_
CONSUMER

1000

3500

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

Home Improvements

pany you can fast Need ""'!'!!!!!!!!!1·!'!!!8!'!!!88!'!!!·!'!!!2!'!!!82!'!!!·!'!!!35!'!!!9!'!!!5!!!!!!~
cas!' fast. ca toll free =
Financial
1-6()().360-6291
24 hr
to free

Wanted to do general
rot.se·cleamrg In
Ma·
son, New Haven, Hart·
ford area 304·773·6152.

POUCIES: 01'4o \IIIIey Publlllhlng reeerv•ltlt right to edit. reject. Of c:eneelany tel at any time Errcn mu.. be rej)Oited on the finn dey of pulli~IOQ and the
Trtbune-Sertlnii-AI!IIIIter will be r•po118lble tor no more then the eos1 ofthl apace occupied by thl.,ror and only tile tlr.t lnaertlOn. We atwll ncl be liable for
any 1oea or expenee thll nliiiUlle from the puJ)IIcetton or omt•Jon of on a~wertt•mwrt. Cort'fctlon Will be made In thl tlrstl\'tllabta t&lt;Jition. • Box numbot ada
are ah~raye ool!fldentlaL • C11rent rate cerci eppijee. • An t'fll 111ato odYertlllGlllontl are tubject to 1tlt Fedtrll Fair Ho!MIIng Act ot 11168. • Thla newapeper
lleellptl only help w.IUd adt mttetng EOE llandvde We will not ••IO'i¥1ngly 1cc:ept •nt ll&lt;lwertlllng In -IOlatlon of the law. Will nc1 be rQilOI18lb~ lar 811'/
erro1111n an eel IIkin over the phone.

Financial

Building Materials

Wanted

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
300

Notices

Stop worrymg, get debt
reftel today t·om a com·

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classifted ads
_( ~
Borders$3.00/perad
I!1
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid"

J2EBI.
SSIILEMENT

1ctures at
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

D &amp;

GET YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD HOTJCED

DispJay_Ads

Dally In-Columns thOO a.m.
Monday-Friday for ln-rtlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In ..Columns 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper .

JUST SAY

CHARGE II!

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

01Hlt1Air"'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Jnctude Complete
Description • Include A Prtce • Awld Abbteviatlont
• Include Phone Number And Addras When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dayt

..

Legals ........................................................... 100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Annlversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Persanals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlco ...................... ~ ............... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Catering........................................................31 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
&lt;:nrnnrrnAr.:, .................................................. 314
~n••tr&lt;ot't.nrc ..................................................316
Domcstics/Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financial ....................................................... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Oance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services ............................................. 338
Plumbing/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Professional Services ................................. 342
Repairs ........................................................ 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352
Financial....................................................... 400
Financial Services....................................... 405
Insurance ................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education .....................................................soo
Business &amp; Trade School........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trolnlng .................................510
Lessons........................................................ 515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Suppltcs .......................................... 605
Harses ..........................................................610
livestock......................................................615
Pets............................................................... 620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
ng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy .................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
EquipmenVSupplies ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Misccllaneous ..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

,
l\ egtstet

~ribune
Sentinel
(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Word.. Ads

HOW TO WRIT.E AN AD

W.ellsltes:
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·

or Fax To (740) 44G-3ooa

:;i ''

7.

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
mdtcla~~ified~r~)ef!itytri~me.com REACH 0 VER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Your Ad,
Call T day...

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,~

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To Place

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~"

~.

Other Services

500

Education

L/FELOCK
Are You Protected?
An Identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds. Call
lifelock now to protect
your family free for
30·days!
1-8n-481-4882
Promocode:
FREEMONTH

Business

&amp; Trade

School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800·214·0452
gallopoliscareercollege.edu
Accredrted Member Accredrting Council for tndependenl
Colleges and Schools 12748

Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
CO.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. Roo
Evans
Jackson.
OH
800..537·9528

Security

MH
Free Home Security
System
$850 Value
with purchase of alarm
monttoringservices
from ADT Security
Services.
Call 1-888·274-3888

.

Tax/ Accounting

AMERICAN TAX
RELIEF
Settle IRS Taxes
For a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 in back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1-sn-258·5142

600

Animals

Livestock
All natural, grain fed, an·
gus freezer beef for sale.
(740)441·5705
or
256-9250.
Past wmners. geneticaHy
proven, fatr steers. rea·
sonably
priced.
(740)441·5705
or
256-9250.
Yearling
Angus
Bulls.
Top Bloodline &amp; Perform·
ance $1200, Bred Angus
Cows
$1000
Call
74Q-286-5395
or
Cell
.740-418-0633
Pets
3 Female Kittens, 5 mos.
old. friendly, has had 1st
shots. 740-388·1570.
Free. Siamese mix male
kitten; also mom male
Schnauzer
puppy,(740)444-5007
Adorable yorkie puppies,
2 F, 1 M. S550 ea. OBO
740-645-4155.

Btk &amp; Tan,
German
Shepherd, M·Neutered &amp;
has
shots.
Fnendly.
740-367·7328.
Free Gret Arriencan Pup·
Mothe beagle hke
400
Ftnanciai
pies,
r
fathers.
very
Van·ous
layful
7'"
2'"'
1399
P
...,. ""'
Free klttens. 2 (m) Gray,
Money To Lend
2 ( f) blklwhte, 1 (m)
grayfwhte
304-675·5850
NOTICE Borrow Smart. before 7pm.
Contact the Ohio Dtvi·
sion of Financial lnstitu· 700
Agriculture
tlons Office of Consumer
Affaors BEFORE you refi·
nance y~'ur home or ob·
Farm Equipment
tain a Joan. BEWARE of
requests for any large STIHL Sales &amp; Service
ndvanco payments
of Now Avatlable at Carmi·
foes or msurance. Call chael
Equipll'ent
the OffiCe of Consumer 740-446-2412
Affiars
toll
free
at
1·866-278·0003 to leam Have you priced a John
If tho mortgage broker or Deere lately? You'll bo
lender IS properly It· surprised! Check out our
censed. (Thls IS a pubhc used
mventory
at
serviCe
announcement www.CAREO.com.
Gar·
from the OhiO Valley michael
Equipment
Pubhshlng Company)
740-446-2412

RV
1 br. fum. apt. in Pt.
Service at Carmichael Pleasant,
turn.
,very
Trailers
clean &amp; nice, off street
740·446·3825
parklng, no pets call
304-675·1386.
Motorcycles
2 bedroom, living room.
03 Extreme Montana 250 kitchen, bath Apartnent
Street Bike. 3910 m•. Have Central Air, lur·
with
couch
Ready to nde. $1500 niSiled
chairs,
washer,
dryer.
OBO. 256-1545.
stove, microwave, beds,
Harley DaVIdson, 1200 dining table and Chatrs.
Btg Boy Kit. loaded, for S400 deposit. $400 a
Call
Sale or Trade 56.500 Month.
304·882·2523
Lea11e
7 40-446-7278
Message and Number If
Farm Equipment
not at Home.
Automotive
EBY,
INTEGRITY, 2000
2
BR Aparli!lent
No
KIEFER BUILT,
pets. $530 a month.
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
(740)441·1124
Autos
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· ;;;;;;;;o;;:--.;===~~ 2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
TRAILERS· 2003 Mustang GT,
MENT
zer Hospttal on SR 160
EXPRESS &amp; speed, Leather int,A Ex· CIA. (740) 441-0194
CARGO
.cellent condition. $1:1200. - - - - - - - - HOMESTEADER
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CARGO/CONCESSION
• &lt;7401446 "6783 •
BtW (740)446·4112,
TRAILERS.
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
2480
740
645
GOOSENECK FLATBF.D (
1 ·
·
ABLE! Townhouse apart·
ments,
and/or
small
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER JNVEN· 2008 Pontlac G6 8,450 houses for rent. Call
miles
$14,500 740·441-1111 fnr appll·
TORY AT
cation &amp; informatoon.
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
304·812-0095
TRAILERS COM
Free Rent Special Ill
Small cars, trucks, vans,
740-446·3825
SUV, priced to sell some 2&amp;3BR apts $395 ard
$500
down
&amp;
up up, Central A1r. WID
hookup,
tenant
pays
900
Merchandise 740446-7278
electnc.
can betwoel'
the hours of 8A·8P.
Trucks
EHO
Equipment/ SuppUes 2003 Dodge 3500 1 ton
Eflm View Apts.
dually desiel. auto. 4x4,
(304)882-3017
Vinyl
Sale,
Regular full power. ale, gooseTwin
Rivers
T0\\1lr IS BC·
14.95. on sa1o at 7.95. oock httch, electnc brake
01'
&lt;:&lt;::-pet controller. good body &amp;. cepting app ~cations tor
~al~so~.i!:f7:40~)=44=6=·7=4=44==~ mechanical
condition, waottng list tor HUD sub115 000
moles
asking sidrzed, 1·BR llpartrrent
Miscellaneous
for the elderly/disabteo
$17,500
or
OBO,
call 675·6679
30 Ga bag of mce name 740-247-2019,
brand Jeans &amp; Khakt .;.7.-40-.·-.24,.7.o·2;;;2;;;;2.-9....,,.......,.........
pants size 34. Medium &amp;
Real Estate
large tops. $100. Call 3000
Sales 3 room and bath down·
446·7375.
staJrs first months rent &amp;
deposit. references reJet Aeration Motors
quired, No Pets and
For Sale By Owner
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
clean 740·441·0245
in stock. Call Ron
for sale Portland
Farm
Evana1·800-537-9528 Ohio.
57 acres woth MOVE IN READY Com·
house. 18 acres wood· pletely furnished 2BR, all
Hospttal bed &amp; other
TV,sterao
land. older house on appliances,
medical
equipment property,
very
nice, sys, linens &amp; complel£1
(740)992-7315,
S175,000.00
appraised kotchen ware S700 mo +
value; 5 acres (cornrner· elec $500/dep. 446-9585
Wantlo Buy
ctal). 2 mlles from Ra- New Haven, 1 bedroom
Buying Paw
WV apartment has washer &amp;
Paws &amp; venswood,
black
dryer, deposit &amp; refer
walnuts, $45000.00.
740-698-6060
304-482·3361
ences,
no
pets
740·992·0165
Houses For Sale
Absolute Top Dollar - sll·
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 bedver/gold
co1ns,
any 2 bed 1 bath $300/='no.
room unfurniShed &amp; fur·
10K/14K/18K gold jew· 446-3570
niShed apartment. deetry. dental gold, pre
post! &amp; reterances. no
1935
US
currency -3-.,.Bed-J--B-a-th--H,.~"""o pets, 74Q-992.0165
proo~int
sets,
d•a·
homes'Onl) 199.!amon '5'if
moods. MTS C01n Shop. dwn 15 vrs at 11"&lt; {or bt Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
151 2nd AVOI'Ue. Galli· 800.620-4~6
'
son Estates. 52 West.·
n T461
pohs. 446-2842
wood Dr., troll' $365 to
MadiSon Ave. Pt. Pleas- $560.
74().446·2568
Yard Sale
ant. frame l'toLtse on 2 EqJa: Housmg Opportu·
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=o;
lots, excellent location for ntty. ThtS inStliUIIOn IS an
1/2 pnce Yard Sale
2 future rentals, $10,000. Equal Opportunoty Pro·
Sat. 09/26, rain or
vider and Employer
740·645·0938
shine.
Clean
1 br. tum. apart·
3br,2ba.Lr,den. Dr,kit. w/
Charleston Rd 3rd
ment, dep. Ref req. no
brkfast
nook,
laundry
rm
house above the Y
on 1/2 ac. lot Sandhill smoking,call
(
price
reduced 304·675·2970. after 4pm
Frt.
&amp;
Sat.,
36160 Ad

5

G)

Rocksprings
Rd. )304·675·1762.
Pomeroy. baby clothes.
holiday
Items,
llouse 4 bed 2.5 bath S600'mo
possible owner f1nance
plants, food &amp; mora
446·3384
Garage
Sale.
Sept
24·25. Utt!e Kyget Rd. Sallor Rd. Vinton. 5 BR,
Cheshire Jeans. Name
2 Bath, on 32 acres of
brand clothes, recliner, land. 2 barns. 2 outbu!ldbouncers,
baby N•kes .ngs.
5120,000
9·6 Rain/Shine
(740)856-7012.

-----------!""

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
Rlversll!il
Ap:S. II' Middleport. from
S327
to
S592
740·992-5064.
Equal
Hous.ng Opporu.mty.
·- - - - - - - - lslan&lt;l View Motel has
vacandes
S35 OOIN1ght
740-446-0406

�_ ____

,.....,._.

_..

..

~~---- - ,----·-..-~~---~

.

---

Apartmenh/
Townhouses

Thursday, September 24, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Houses For Rent

=====::o;;;;;;;;;;;=
Renovated, spaCious 2
BR Apt overlooking ctty
park $625 per mo. Wa·
tar, sewer, trash In·
eluded. (140)709·1690.

-------Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1 5
bath, back patio, pool
playground, (trash. sow·
ago, water pd )No pets
allowed
$450/rent,
$450/soc.
dcp.
Call
74().645-8599

For Rert Nice 3 BR
Br1ck·1 Ba
Basemeot
Carport No Pets No
Smoking, Sccunty Dep
&amp;
Rent
$625 00
(140)446-4116.
WISeman Real Estate-4
rentals
ava lab!e&lt;all
446-3644 tor more Into
All
n-town-varlous
prlces·rctcrenccs &amp; soc.
deposits requtred.
~~~=~~~~

• Room illddltlon1 &amp;

Remodeling
• Now Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing

Lond (Acreage)
lease 102 Acres on
Wh1te Oal&lt; Rd Great tor

Commercial

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

Classlfleds

· Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Patio and Porch Docks

Commerc1al space (retail farming
&amp;
livestock.
4 07 24 7 8329
or office) for rent. Prime ~~~~l~~·~,;;,;ioiio~
· ~~-Downtown
locat1on
Manufactured
4000
highly v1siblo • busy cor·
Housing
nor 1400·2000 sq. It +
storage. $700 Mo. Call
740·709·1960.
Rentals
Houses For Rent

2 BR Mobtlo Homo. No
pats. Water sewer, trash
4
2
Sl9'1 mol
bed,
bath Included
At Johnson's
B.mk Repo' (S'k dm•n. IS Mobl o
Home
Park.
)
. S APR) lor h•tmgs 740.S45..()506 .
800-620-4946 u R02l

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

-------2 BR House, $395 per
mo. $400 dep. no pots, +
ut 11Jes
Call

2 SA R:o G•ande Area
$375 00 rrth
$375.00
Ocp
Wator!Trash pd
245-5671/645-5429.

_f7-40-)-25_6-666
__1_. - - 2 BR. noar SChools. A/C
$450.00 + Util + Dep No
pets.
Carport
740-446-3461.

2BR Ideal for 1 or 2
pie, S300tmonth,
temccs, No Pets,
CALLS
after
740-441..()181

peaReNO
7pm

wv 036725

fJ~rJ

A Do-it-yourself classified ads

3 br. house wl basement
1n New Haven WV, all
cloc.
heat·pump,
no
pets, dep $425 00, rent
$425 00 304-882·3652.

$325 dep yrs. lease, No
Pots, No calls after 9pm,
740·992·5097
~Fo-r-re_n_t~
3~
br~.2~
baat-5~1~7

Burdette St. Pt . Pleas·
Mt ref &amp; dep. req
304·675·5402 no petsl
Mobile home tor rent
Hud accept. c~ul before
9pm 304·675-3423.

SB.1.1T
NOW

2.99

1

Used Homes &amp; Owner
F~nanc1ng ·New 2010
Doublowlde $37,989

cBalltpohll DntiP U::nbunr
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpubllcatlons.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Sportswriter
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune

lS seeking a
motivated, people-oriented individual to
fill a vacanc} m the neY. s department as a
sports"Writer. The succes~ful candidate will
cover h1gh school athletics in the nrea for
the daily edition of the newspaper, a~ well
as assist with the production of sport.;,
pages. Excellent writing and English
skills, photography skills and know ledge
of desk-top publishmg arc sought. The
position is full-time, with benefib.
Interested partie' can send reMunes to:

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,

825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or rndtncws@ mydailytribunt•.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
I&gt;ail.)

Tribune

is

accepting resumes for an outside sales
representath e

to join our saJec; team

and manage an established account list
while calling on

new nccounts.

This is n full time position offering
o;alary plus commission. full benefits.
mileage, and potential career gnm1h.

The succe~~ful

l'lmdidate

will

he

a

disciplined, selt'-moth·:ttcd team pla)cr
that

understnnd~ the importance of

developing strong, mutuall) bendicial
business

relationship'&gt;

with

our

account-., and ha,·c sales ~xpericm·e.
For confidential int~n ien, please send

rc ume and co,·er letter to
ft}alltpolu~ :Oa1lv

lrnllnnt,

Attn: Pam Caldnell
P.O. nox

469
45631

Gallipolb, OH

new
doors,
w1ndows,
window air, new s1dirg
lots extras, on SR • 43,
Pomeroy Oh, $30 000.
740-~32·5313

1s a must
Send a cover letter and resume to:

LEWIS

!\IICII.\ EL'S

CO~l'KETE

SER\ H.'F ( '1-."\TER

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
\111)pcs Of
( oncr~tc \\ ork

29 Years Experience

Ferpm&amp;~aJII'IY
6iaJIIe a..,_

20.99 S29.99

OIS
1.... ,.. .. ..IDIJ
.._,a ltlJI

5

S45.99 ' 34~99

·New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

BEST BUYS
2010 3BR DoubiOWJde
$39,977
HUGE 2010 4brl2ba
f'HAS349mo
2010 3br/2ba Single
1101'1 $199 mo
MIDWESTHOMES
myrmdwestho:nes com
740.828.2750
"The Proctorvh a
... florence•
S1 and a deed IS au you
need to owo your dream
home. Call Nowt
Freedom HOIT'es
888-565-0167

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Help Wanted· General

Quality Control, earn up
'"":!:~~===== to $15 an hour, evaluate
retail stores, tra1ntng proEducation
v1dod.
call
1·800·901·2694
Part-lime
1nstructo1s
roeedod dunng the day
n
ath":naiiCS.
eco· Accepting Applications
roorT'ICS, and accounting
No experience re·
Matt Ell!'atlcs and eco·
qulredl
norriC mstructors must
No Credit Card Sales!
No Collec11onsl
have a master's degrcc
•n tho d sc•plino II Inter·
You choose the type of
ested please e-na • a re·
ca Is you want to tal&lt;e
sumo and cover Iotter to
Recru t volunteers tor
1dan1C~ Ogalhpo ISC8·
non-profot organ zat or&gt;s
reercol ege.edu
OrRatse ft..nds and renew 1'1 -bersheps tor the
Program
substitutes
NRAt
'1Eied d to worJo at Ca e·
Scllool &amp; M :gs
FiJ nd Pan·trle POSIdustr
w th ctlldren
tJOnv'
1ld ad\! 1s wit'l develop- Day and Even ng Shlftsl
mental d sab ues. M•nl· ProfessiOnal Wo:1&lt; Envimum qua ftcations In·
ronment
C\ude a H1gh School DeMed1C81, Dental, EAP,
plana or GED ancl valid
401KI
OhiO Drtvers License.
Weekly Pay + Bont..s In·
Submrt qppticatlon or re·
centivesl
sumo to:
Meigs County Board of
CaiiTOOAYI
Developmental
OISBblli
Interview TOMOR·
llo$
1310
Carleton
ROW II
Street PO. Box 307,
Work NEXT WEEK!!!
Syracuse, Oh 45779,
1·888·1MC-PAYU, Ext
2457
Help Wanted· General
Apply online:
http11Jobs.lnloclsion.c

om

-------Cere a ve• IS needed
Thrs IS a FULL TIME per
s 11011, meantng you v.'!ll
be ltv ng here as 11 rl
were yolfl home. ThiS 1s
NOT a
dayttme
01'
n ght me only position.
Sleep here at mgnt and
11li:\Utill~
do normm household dLo
l:ttt: ldlll
Dtilmd li;IID IIIII 1m
~os thru tro day Person
neecllng aSSistaroce 1s
mobile and can function
on her own FREE RENT
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ohio 45769
&amp; FREE UTILITIES plus
NOTICE: Is hereby Country Parks, Inc vs
salary.
given that on Saturday,
Jeanette Pierce &amp; Sl'lall
740·367·7129
September 26, 2009 at Robert Willis

-~~~~­
PUBLIC

NOTICES

10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
W.
Second
St..
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and Sav·
ings Company Is sell·
ing for cash In hand or
certified check the lollowing collateral:
1995 Chevy Caprice
1G1 BL52P7SR1 09022
1990
Chevy
1500
1GCDK14K8LZ171303
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at tnis sale, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"as is-where is", with
no expressed or lm·
plied warranty given. t
For further Information,
or for an appointment
to Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date con·
tact Cyndie or Ken at
992·2136.
(9) 23, 24, 25

u...

Jeanette Pierce, whose
last residence was
5713 Canep Run Rd.
Georgetown.
Ohio
45121
and
Robert
Willis, whose last resl·
dence was, 46275 St Rt
124 Racine. Ohio 45n1
by and through any un·
known. estate; hereby
notified that, pursuant
to R.C. 1920 and 3733,
upon a filed complaint
with tho Meigs County
Court seeking restltutlon of the premlses
upon which Pierce has
abandoned her/his mo·
bile home and therefore
Is
still
In
possession of tho
property. Therefore,
Plaintiff demands restl·
tutlon of the premises
In Its complaint.
No answer has been
filed to the complaint.
The matter will be set
for hearing upon com·
pletlon of the publica·
tlon service before a
magistrate In · Meigs
County Courtroom lo·
cated at 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Bonnita Heston Ac·
counting
Manager,
Country Parks, Inc
.
- - - - - - - - 30921 Lake Logo:~n Rd
~ublic Notice
Logan, Ohio 43138
- - - - - - - 740.385·2434.
FORCIBLE ENTRY
(8) 27, (9) 3, 10, 17, 24,
Meigs County Court (10) 1
2nd Street Pomeroy,

1555 "f-.

\\C.

l'nmcrm. O il
• 011 &amp; filter cbange
• Tune Vp:;
• Brake Senice
• AC Recha""ge
• Mmor exhaust
repa1r •Tire R..!patr
• Tmnsmtss1on Filter
&amp; Hu1d C'han2e
• Gcnerul Met '1anic

Hours
7:00am-8:00pm

J&amp;L
Construction
·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

work

(7-l0l992-09JO

14a?d 1D~~ C~im1fy And FUlnitUle
www.timhu~ea~.Q)Zll

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Kcplaccrnent
WindO\\S and
\'in) I Siding
Specialists,

- - --H-.-8- - 0 10

We are looking for someone sktlled and
expenenced in both page des1gn and copy
edtttng. This person will need to design
front pages, pagmate mstde pages, and
write great .headlines. Experience with
layout, knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop IS a must. Full t1me pos1t1on
wtth benefits. Flextbility With work schedule

Gallipolis

14.99

740-367-0536

740-949-221
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

CONSTRUCTION

www.mydailysentinel.com

Older mobOa home reAsk ~bout $8,000 Ro·
modeled. for. small tam11y
batefl
on 1.4 acres, '1ew diSh
mymldwer.thome.com
washer. electnc stove,
740-a28·2750
Frigadaire. new electnc
- - - - - - - - water heater gas fur·
Help Wanted
,rtance. a11 new carpet,

Copy Editor/Page Designer

Free Estimates

7 40-367-0544

29625 Bashan
Ractne, OH

ROBERT
BISSEll

YARD SALE

11\'1,~
Ell:.
4 .... 14 U11 4 lila, 4li an

n.pw 811
,,.,115000

5

Soles

«JJeartland Publications

Pomeroy, Oh1o
30 Years Local Expertence
FULLY INSURED

I rcc l:.sumates

l:rn

(740) 742-2563

1 103

;::=======--=======::;

The

5

SMART BUY DEALS ON
Fwjii'Mb(lll'tJ
wtm.Z
•
1 • • 1 cars.. li'Ckl.

•-o-4~The
6-~-~BIG~---~~~~=~= =
~~~~~~"""""" :;!!!!!=====~
Sale
=
::
74

Additions
Local Contractor

ln~urcd

The Daily Sentinel

-3B..R_ 1_ba
_ tl&gt;
_ h_o_
m_
o _n_ le- eect:ic
Alb:lny
area,
must
move
$5400,
Grande Blvd $650 rent 740..()98·1815
$650 dep renter pays

Help Wanted

Farprtme

n.,.. .. 1111

Sales
bedroom house lor
rent, pets welcome, $400 Country living· 3-5BR.
rronth
phone
11
740-992-4012
2·3 BA on property.
- - - - - - - - Mllny lloor plans• Easy
3 bd 1 b. tun basement Financing' We own the
house, 2 car garage. bank.
Call
todayt
Raetne,
$700
mo., 866-21 5- 5774
614-873-9974
1987, 14x70 3 br., all

3br,
$500Jmonlh
in
Syracuse. Deposit, HUO
approved.
No
Pets
304·675·5332 weekends
740·591·0265

SUPIB
SAVIft

fw Jll1nll Pll'tr
(lll't)'
r... pmm .-rtJ
..-1
, I ..-clllndlle, 1 ~ 1
111m IIIII' a Ills
n.,..
111M StOO
IIIII 11110 11600 SilO I $1,1100
8._,88ya 411Ma,7dll)'t 4-..tDIIIJI

2

i.ltllities NO PETS. Call
446-3644 lor applicaton.

U-SEU. IT

Drywall,

992-6215
740·591.0195

740-992-6971

Do-it-yourself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online options
7 great packages to choose from

Electnc, Plumbing,
Remodeling, Room

David Lewis

tl
tl
tl
tl
tl

Roofmg, Sidmg,
Sofftt, Decks,
Doors, Wmdows,

V.C. YOUNG Ill

CONSTK UCTIO!'i

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user:friendly steps
to place your ad.

-~------- 2 bedroom mob1lo home
10 Rac1ne, $325 a month,

3 BR 1 Bath on Le·
Grande Blvd. $650 rent,
$650 dep. Renters pays
utilities. Pets negotiable.
Call 446-3644 lor appll·
calion. •

I

CORNERSTONE
CONSTRUCTION

=~~="=~==
Help Wanted· General

Looking for rard work1ng,
'lonest
people
Eem
S200 to $1000 per
month.
740.645·0!&gt;09.
Tasha Sloan@hotmat;.c
om

• Siding • \in) I
\\ indows • l\le1al
nnd Shingle Ruul'~
• l&gt;eck~ • Additions
• Jo.1{'('1 riral
• Plumbing
• l'nlt· Harn~

cr,\\

~0-t

IOUI

'I'AfJCX.~

~

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

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

Ql ..I.IT'i

up

10

'&gt;I~ 00

"" hr

Want to remove 275
fuel oa tanks on slal'l;l
1'111 pay. 740·2$-1399
Medico!

The

Mgs
'iea ~~ :X rtmer•
loolc.ng ':&gt; cc-

regJS'ered
or
ties re!atJng to H N1
~'uenza
respo so
R
sponslb1 ties w
ude
b:Jt not necessar'ly
.!ed to coord nattong c;:: o
cl1n1CS. plann ng &amp; out·
reach. 1'1anagtng medical
stocks &amp; enlcnng data
into Impact SI!S. Re·
qwrements Include OhtiO
AN license, driver's II·
cense
&amp;
background
check. ability to work
w1th little superv1S10r &amp;
good Interpersonal com·
munlcauons.
Hourly
wage dependant on ex·
perence &amp; quallhcat ons
Th s •s a g:ant.furdcd
contract &amp; Wll rod du rg
August 2010 Sefid resume 10 Heatt.'l Comm1s
5 on • t1.o.; E Memona
Dr Ste. A. Poneroy Oh
45769 befo·e 9.00/09

9000

Bu~ing ~rap iron-

tin·mrtals
M· at. 8am-4pm
SR 124 Pomero), 011

S&amp;L
Trucking
Dump Truck
s~n icc
w~ Haul Gravel,
Lintcslolll', Coal,
Compost, Top Soil
Call Walt ot Sandy

740-992-3220

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Service I Bus.

li"~~~~~~:;;

types Masonry 6n&amp;
block store concrete
Free
l'St1mate,
304·593-6421,
304·773·9550

H&amp;H

BA~KS

Guttering

CO:'\STRUCTIO~

co.

Seai'J'IIess Gutters
Roofing, Stding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740.653·9657

Pomero), Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Frre Estimates

(740) 992-5009
• £«,.-?~ ' " 11«4.
:-.lo\\ Sellin!!:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft

Cu tom Home Bu1ldmg
Steel Frome Bu1ldmg~
Butldmg. RemodeLng

Generul rcparr
" " 11 .bankscclb..com

Pans • En!!me..,,

Directory

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Concrete

Ail

RIDERS SAL\'AGE
740-992-5468

Insured
bpcnen~cd

Releren&lt;.e' A\ aliablc!
C'ull Gal) 'itnnle) @

740-591-8044
Please

lea' c mes,a~c

Advertise your
business on this page
for as low as

~~35.00
per month!

Trnn~fcr ci,e~ &amp;

Transmt"ion~
• A fterm:uiet
Replacement Sheet
:\letal &amp; Components
l"r All \lake, of \'eh1cles

Racme, Ohio

7-J0-949-1956

Free Estmltn ror
• Backlloe • TI'8IICI*III
• Brush llolllnl
• Pol'tallle Balldmll

Tree Trinmitl •1ettlnl
POles &amp; Tr111181

CaY 740·992·9572

(3a1.t Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • \ im I &amp; wood siding

~•

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

47239 Riebel Rd.. Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Full~

insun-d &amp; hmtdi nl! 011 ail ahll·

Free estimates · 25+ ~ L·ar' l'\l)l·ril'tll'l'
f ' ot a ffili:Ued \\ ilh \lil-.t" \!.anum Rnulinc ,\ N:tmnddll11!1

Sunset Home
Construction
"Buyiug Local(v- Building l.ncally"
:\C\\ Homes, Additions, Gurag~.
Pole Buildings, Kemodeling, Koof-..
Siding. D~l·k~.

I&gt;ryn :til .

740-742-3411

The Daily Sentinel

992-2155

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addtuon~. Remodelmg. \1etal &amp;
Shmgle Roof-.. ~ey, Homes, Sid mg. Decks,
Bathroom Remodehng. Licensed &amp; In ured
Rick Price - 17 ) rs. E..\periencc
WV#040954 Cell 740.416-2960 740-992·0730

�Thursday, September 24, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By.THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Plane part
6 MUSIC
holders
11 Journalist
Alexander
12 Customary
13 Tie type
14 One of the
Bradys
15 Special
sk1lls
17 AWOL
chasers
19 Put down
20 Tnumph
23 Nanny's
kin
25 Visitor to
Oz
26 Sc1-f1 films
28 D1plomat's
asset
29Wind
chimes
sound
30 Spot
31 Snap
32 Method:
Abbr.
33 Zany
35 Ignore the

;m
'Ii
t

;;;

J

g
~

~------------------~j~~~~------------~
FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Tom Batiuk

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Reb's org.
2 Contented
sounds
3 Keyboard
key
4 Privy to
5 Merchant
Qf mus c
6 Delightful
7 Horned
goddess
8 Weathermap icon
9 Scoundrel
10 Crafty
16 Neck
artery
17 Sh1p
staffs
18 Cocoon
dwellers

20 Kitchen
area
21 Bologna
setting
22 Snouts
24 Drania
division
25 Fmger
count
27 Flute's
cousin
31 Miss1on
head

33 Unassuming
34 "Walk
Like
35 Masseur's
place
36 Fido's
foot
37 Hurler's
stat
39 Brood
watcher
40 Total

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (checJ(fm o.) to
ThOmas Joseph Book 2, PO Box 53647'1 01an!l~. FL 32853-647'1
11
II

limit

-AGAR THE HORRIBLE

38 Cornhusker
city
41 Kitchen
gadget
42 Like
corsets
43 Not
napping
44 Without
break

Chris' Browne

WHEN l Gf1' HoMe F/lOM
A R,AJf?, J LoV6 7t? HEAR Ht:L..6A

&amp;AY lt/06£ RO/MNTIC
u-rt4J&lt;c~ 1-11'1~ Wof&lt;o6''

9-24

THELOCKH&lt;;)RNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
GI-\OGIG t.IIIE IN 01.-P
V'IC'l"ORIAN€0 ... NOI
k\OPeRN RANO\GG.

Patrick McDonnell

'"SEE, LORETTA, IT'S 100% FAT FREE."

ZITS

e

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman·

/

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
'
.by Dave Green

i3 7

s;s

l6

7

!1
4

lg
I

1 9 3 2

2 9 8 3
~-2..~

o.&amp;..,.l.,..__ .,....
•~:o~et~._.,..

'INIW 'a&lt;11~ut com

"And one more- FLU season."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

7
6
9 -- 8
3 5 1 8
Difficulty Level ***

6 L v G+- 9
£. G 9 s ~
8 ~ s v£
g 9 . ~ --L v
Lv8 6 G
G£ 6 ~ 8
v6 £ 8 L
~ 8 G 9 9
+

~

~

9 9 L £ J6

2

....8_ ~

6- L
L 6
£ 8
9 s
9 v
G9

v
~

t-

s

£

v8
-

G9
6 .G
£

~

9 L
~ 9
£ L 6
G8 v

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday, St'pl24, 2tX}:}
This year, you seem to smile, and the world snules
\\ith you. )bur personality encour.1gl"i other; to shart'
and open up, and share they do. Be dis~."Timinalmg wuh
those you decide to confide in. If you .m~ single, ) ou11
lllt'el mill'ly people this year, mill'l) ot whom w.mt to be
your sweetie Ha\'e fun detemlining who, when d!ld
where. If you are attached, }ou expenenre a new begm
ning. Open up and share your vulnerabililie&lt;;., A fellow
UBRA read-. yoo cold.
me Stars Shou.• the Kind OJ DrJy You ll Hat~ ~-Vynmwc;
4-POS!twc; 3-APr:rase; 2-So-,:o; 1-Diffiat/1
ARIES {tv!ardi 2l-April19)
~**Reach out for unusu.1l ideas and solullons.
Meetings continue to he instrumental. Don't read more
mto a mendship than exist«. You need to detJch dOd
gi\'e a situ,ltion space. News is more L-nport.mt than
you realize ,md opens a door th.1t you did not .mlid·
pate, making you que;tion your mental outlook.
Tonight: Notice what isn't being ,,lid.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
*** OnE'-&lt;&gt;n-one relating opens door clfter door.
Wherever you are, relax and let things h&lt;l'ppen. !Aon'l
hesilc1te to change ge,\rs and appro.1ch your daily lite in
,, more open and upbe,1t m,11mt~r. 1~1ke ,, stand with Ihe
help of a partner. You kmw this pel!iOI'l come; up with
great idea'&gt;. BE' willing to risk, within reason. Tonight A
must dppearance.
GEMIJI.:l (May 21-]tule 20)
Others seem to p.1ss by like a caroUSt' in
your life. Count on many repe.1t vLc;its. (.etling dll)
thing accomplished takl'S talent .md e.xtrdOrdinru')
organization Detach if il ~ituation appe.:us non..eJNcd1
Yoo'D find out a lot more if vou aren't invol\-ed
Consider what might be at the b.1se of the l$UC
Torught Follow the music.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22,
* * You accomplish b lion's share of work. You
nught want to rethink a decision that 1mpucts .1 partner
ill'ld hb or her decisioos. Your humor and upbe.1t
approach ha\ e .1 lot of implimtiollS. Li"&gt;ten to nt•ws
m\ oh•ing a l&lt;t&gt;) financial or profe:x;iooal Ul\'Oh emenl.
Don't mt~ke any decisiOns rij;ht nol'.. lbnight Squee7.e

* ****

***

m SOllll' e&gt;.erase.

L£:0 (July 23-Aug. 22)
*** You might wonllo think before n&gt;u le11p. Re
evaluate wh.1t someone IS wally offering. Crealh It}'

t1ourishe&lt;&gt; and dllows more options th,m you thought
01 It} ou Jre smgle, }OU could meet c;o:meone qu1te
o;pectacu!CU' out of the blue. Torughl· Rerruin open.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22)
****You dre coming from a bilSlc pomt of \iew
and undeNt:md what needs to happen You ha\e the
energy d!ld \\here\\ithal to handle more on ycr.1r plate
dl the moment. Tonight Skip on home.
UBRA
23-0ct 22)
~ Ket:!p conn~rsation-; movmg, and st.\} on
top1c. 'tau can acromphsh a lot il) oo don't indulge m
flights of fil!'lcy and go off on a tangent, a!' tempting as
he or she or 1t nught be! Slay optimLqjc and upbrot
lbrught. Let your imagination
out.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-'\'o\. 21
**'*'* Juggle differmt concerns, and understand
) our options. Con-.idt&gt;J' a fundamental cldjustment that
could imp.1ct your pe[';&lt;.mallife. In the long run, you
might feel far more joyous and upbec1l ao; cl result.
Sometimes riskin~ P•') s"Off. "lonii;ht. Your tre.1t.
SAGITIJ\RllJS (1\:ov. 22-Dec. 21)
****"*You ,,re all smiles, looking ft,r only what
vnu \\ .1nt. Rem.1in positive ,md upl'lt'.lt. Keep asking
t]Ue5lions lhal otherwbe might not be c1llSWt'red. Listen
lo the Answers and rome b,Kk with more questiono,;, if
nt•t.'l.i be. Tonight Ju,-t don't be ,llone
CAPRICOR.\: (Ot?c. 22-J,m. 19)
*~Your instincts flow .md poin~you toward the
winning path. Your frnances are critical in disCI.J\ enng
what needs to be done. You will m&lt;lke a deci~1011 that
work&gt; for you, though be aware that you might need to
spend money in order to make moner Tonight: Do

&lt;¥

flay

oruy for } ourself

AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
*'***'* 'Z~ro in on a key goal ill'ld you nught hke
the end .results. 'What is happerung is cbsconcertmg.
l i'itcn to news that heads in vour d.irectioo, and allow
more flu1chi} and underst.ln(ung. fonighl' Aim for
exactly \\hal you wanl
PISCFS (f-eb. 19-Man:h 20)
*"***Your in~ts gu1de you in il new direction
professionally You ha\ e a W&lt;l) of conung tluough at
!he right time. Think posith el) when dt'aling Ytith ,m
authonty figure, ::.ut know that tlus pen;on ron flip--flop.
To1ught: A must appear.1n(~.
faaptrlme Bigar is o'l tile llllerrrt

al/rtt7'J/t• ,m,jarqu~lmclngm (&lt;'Ill

-------- ---

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Page 86 •

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· -.. · - - - ----- ..._,.,_..._--!"'1~-

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tighter security for
Michigan, Pirates games

Votto's 4 hits help Reds send Pirates to loss

PITTSBURGH (AP) Votto went 4 for 5 and
Joey
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Charlie Noffsinger said
scored
three runs, Homer
- Michigan is banning purs- Michigan hasn't received
es and all other bags from information on any specific Bailey allowed two runs in
innings
and
the
Michigan Stadium for securi- threats but acted after consult- six
Cincinnati
Reds
continued
ty reasons, and the Pittsburgh ing with federal officials.
Pirates are planning additional
In Pittsburgh, the Pirates are the Pittsburgh Pirates' losing
tightening security because of ways with a 12-2 win
screening measures, too.
The University of Michigan the recent warnings and the G- Wednesday night.
Brandon Phillips, Scott
said Wednesday it will require 20 summit Thursday and
written permission from a Friday at the downtown David Rolen, Jay Bruce, Laynce
medical professional before L. Lawrence Convention Nix and Corky Miller each
allowing any bags into the Center, across the Allegheny had two RBis for the Reds,
football
stadium
for River from PNC Parle
who have won seven of nine.
"Even though we do not
Saturday's game against
The Pirates are 3-22 in
expect any issues .during the their past 25, having lost five
Indiana.
Recent arrests in Colorado G-20 summit, we have boost- in a row. They have allowed
and New Yorlc related to a ter- ed the number of security per- 33 runs the past three games.
rorism probe touched off a sonnel in and around the ballPittsburgh's
Andrew
fluny of national security bul- park," Pirates s~kesman Jim McCutchen had two hits and
letins. Michigan said in a "rrdinich said. ' We will have scored a run.
statement that "adjusting additional screening with
Since beating the Pirates
security measures is the pru- metal detecting wands at the
at
PNC Park Aug. 23,
dent thing to do."
gates for precautionary reaBailey (6-5) is 4-1 with a
School safety Deputy Chief sons." •
I .99 ERA - three of those
victories coming against
with 11 catches for 202 Pittsburgh. He allowed four
yards and three scores. But hits and three walks
Bolin suffered a fractured Wednesday, meaning he
leg on the games third play has allowed only 12
fromPageBl
at Athens last week and is baserunners and two runs in
expected to miss the rest 'Of
only 39 points (9.75) for the the season. Caleb Davis has 13 innings.
Votto had two doubles
year, while scoring 2'1 caught eight passes for 210
and
two singles and is 7 for
points a contest.
yards and two scores.
9
during
the series. He is
Meigs on offense has
The game Friday evening
scorea 126 .Points (31.5). will be the first time the
but are givmg up 35.25 Buckeyes have made the
points a contest. The trip down State Route 33 to
Marauder defense has Pomeroy in three seasons.
played better the last couple Because of a scheduling
of weeks against the run, problem when Athens went
but last week the speed and mto the Ohio Division, the
quickness of the Bulldogs Marauders have had to play
enabled Athens to break the at Nelsonville-York the last
big play against Meigs.
two seasons.
Smith lead the Marauder
The Buckeyes are 17 and
ground game with 701 12 all time against the
yards in 81 tries. averaging Marauders, with the last
8.7 yards a contest. Marauder win coming in
Wingback Cody Laudermilt 1999 a 34-14 win over the
has chipped in · with 175 Buckeyes.
So
the
yards in 13 tries .
Marauders will be looking
Senior signal caller Jacob to end a nine game losing
Well is 28 of 81 for 542 streak to their Athens
yards and five scores.
Well's favorite receiver has County neighbors. Kickoff
been junior Cameron Bolin is 7:30 PM from Bob
Roberts Field in Pomeroy.

Meigs

Rivalry
fromPageBl
their last eight quarters.
Defensively, GAHS is
allowing 38 points per contest.
Jackson, however, has
had little trouble finding
points offensively - averaging 30.8 points per COQ·
test while limiting opponents to an average of 18.5
points.
Klay Arthur is the leading
rusher this year for JHS,
churning out 278 yards on
55 attempts - an average
of just over five yards per
carry. Arthur also has three
rushing touchdowns.
Drew Ervin has 30 carries
for 190 yards (6.3 ypc) and
five rushing touchdowns,
while Derrick Meredith also
has 36 totes for 162 rushing
yards (4.5 ypc) .
Senior Kruize Wandling
- a former Blue Devil signal caller - has had a good
start in his new surroundings, completing 60 percent
of his passes this fall.
Wandling is 27-of-45
overall with 473 yards and
has thrown four TDs. Kip
Winchester is the top wideout with 11 catches for 127
yards.
The history ·of this great
series - both alltime and
more recently - favors the
Blue Devils, who own a 41-

Clash
fromPageBl
cult three game stretch
which could define the
Eagles fortunes during the
2009
football
season.
Following this weeks date
with Wahama the Eagles
enter TVC play by traveling
to Trimble and hosting
Federal Hocking.
Wahama will conclude

34-5 edge in the previous 80
contests since 1925.
GAHS has also won 10 of
the last 11 games dating
back to 1999, when the
Devils defeated Jackson 357 in their lone non-SEOAL
matchup during a Week 11
playoff game.
The Ironmen were also 40 a year ago when they
came to Memorial Field,
which resulted in a 36-24
setback to GAHS - which
was .500 heading into that
match up.
JHS, howevt"r, won its
only contest since 1999 two
years ago at Alumni Field,
when the lronmen ended a
nine-year losing streak with
a 14-3 victory.
In the previous 80 contests, Gallia Academy has
outscored Jackson overall
by a total of 18 points,
1100-1082. In the previous
79 SEOAL games, Jackson
holds a 10-point edge,
1075-1065.
GAHS was also the first
team to win an SEOAL
football game at Jackson's
Alumni Stadium, which
occurred in the 14-13 victory of 2004.
Kickoff is scheduled for
7:30p.m.

fromPageBl

hitting .458 in his past 13
games.
Paul Janish scored on a
Phillips groundout in the
first, and the Reds'. three
runs in the third came courtesy a Votto RBI groundrule double, Phillips runscoring single and a Rolen
·
sacrifice fly.
Pittsburgh's Garrett Jones
scored on a Brandon Moss
sacrifice fly in the fourth.
The Pirates got another run
via sacrifice fly the following inning, this time with
Jones
driving
in
McCutchen.
The Reds scored four in
the fifth off of Kevin Hart
on an RBI single by Rolen,
a Bruce two-run single and a
Nix RBI groundout.
Hart (4-8) was charged
with eight runs on eight hits
and three walks in 4 1-3
innings with two strikeouts.
The Pirates are 1-8 when he
starts, having lost the past
six. Hart is 1-7 with a 6.93
ERA
since
JOmmg
Pittsburgh in a July 30 trade
with the Chicago Cubs.
The Reds added one in the
seventh and three in the

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Joey Votto singles in the seventh inning
against the Pittsburgh Pirates during a baseball game in
Pittsburgh Wednesday. The Reds won 12-2.

ninth off of Virgil Vasquez.
NOTES: Nix is 0 for 15
since coming off the disabled list Sept. 15 and
remains hitless in his past 20
at bats overall. ... Phillips
has hit safely in 12 of his
past
13
games.

McCutchen has a 10-game
hitting streak, going 15 fot
41 (.366) in that time ....
Jones has reached base safely in 32 of his past 34 contests. .. . Pirates starters had
pitched at least six innings in
10 of the previous 11 games.

Heartland Publications
Newspapers in Ohio,
• West Virginia, and
• Kentucky have joined
~IJe

®allipoli11 D atlp &lt;trt
I t
ly

in presenting the
largest online auction
in the Tri-State area.

Note: Please remember
that the Apple Festival is
currently under way in
Jackson if you are planning
on making the trip.

the first half portion of its
2009 gridiron schedule
against Eastern ~n Friday
before encountenng a second half card that sports
three teams with just two
losses between them. W1rt
County and Williamstown
currently sport a 3-1 record
with Athens still unbeaten
on the year in four decisions.
Kickoff time at Eastern
High School on Friday is
scheduled for 7:30pm.
, A t' "

Preview

Thursday, September 24, 2009

• •

l. You decide to auction a Power Lawn Mower that you sell for $590 in your store
2. We put that.item into the auction and place your item ad into the Auction guide
at no charge. This guide then will be distributed locally as well as in the Tri State
Area.
3. We include your ~m and your business in fn.'C advertising in the weeks leading
up to the Auction. This advertising will run in the The (iallipolis Daily Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register and The Daily Sentinel.
4. Rt-gardless of what the item sells ·ror at Auction, your bu~in~s rt'CCives $590 in
advertising crt'Ciit to be used before the end of the year.

r
.

c

..ert·
3 i
~

departments at
(740) 992-2155
eD
Sentinel

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