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                  <text>•

•
TP-C district receives $50

SPORTS
·• High school football
previews. See Page BJ

B v BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS

PLAI~S

-

I• The
Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District has received
I

a half-million dollars to
expand its system into an
area with E. Coli and other
contaminants in the water
table. The funding will be
combined with an additional $ 1 million in grant and
Joan funds for a 71-customer expansion.
TP-CWD will receive a

$500,000 grant to install
approximately 54,860 linear
feet of \\'atcrline. booster
station. and a generator to
address E.coli bacteria in
several area wells.
The Ohio Department of
Development awarded nearly $2 million in Community
Development Block Grant ·
water and sewer grants to
Coshocton, Mcig..; and Ross
County
systems
for
improvements.
Grants totaling $1 .7 million from the fedemlly-fund-

ed Water and Sanitary Sewer

Program. administered by the
Department's Community
Development Division, will
benefit 285 households in
those three counties. 71 in the
TP-C district.
"Addressing unsanitary
conditions such as untreated
waste, faulty septic systems.
and E.coli bacteria is essential to the health and safl'ty
of our residents,'' said PuttMcDaniel. "The Water and
Sanitary Sewer Program
grants will help improve hv-

•

or ex
mg conditions for Ohioan&lt;&gt;.''
The grant will be combined with other grunt
money and loan funds
secured by the district to
add customers on Peachfork
Road. Wolf Pen Road, Ball
Run Road. Amold Road,
and Bunker Hill Road in
Bedford Township, Riebel
Road in Chc:.tcr Towno;;hip.
Tanners Run Road nl'ar
Racine, and Troy Township
Road I 19 in Athens County.
District Manger Don
Poole told Meigo; County

IOn
Commissioners earlir this
year the district could not
proceed ·\\ ithout the CDBG
funding. because the rate
-;tructure for customers
would be cost prohibitive.
Poole &lt;:.aid the district has
a policy of requiring only
cu~tomer;; in an e.xpan!-.ion
area to pa) the costs of that
expansion. Poole said testing of well water in the
expansion area revealed that
75 percent were contaminated with coliform. and 37
percent\\ ith E coli.

B

m

led
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT Ci 'AYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES

Tl.'PPERS PLAI ~S - A
fire whrch heavily damaged
B &amp; D Market in Tuppers
Plains last month has been
mled arson b\ the Division
of State I Jrc Mar-;hal.
''It \vas intentionally set,"
%ane Curtmill, spokesper&lt;;on
of the DivisiOn of State Fire
Marshal contirmed yesterday.
Cartmill said though no
rev.. ard is hemg offered as of
) et. hi" office h seeking
information on the arson.
Tho'&gt;e \vlth &lt;111\ information
::..hoLld call 1-SOO 589-2728.
In aJdttion to cauo;ing significant darnJge to the structur...... th~:re '' e~t! t\\ o employees -;till in the store when the
fire \\ds di&lt;;covcred by those
emplo) ees which Cartmill
))aid could've made the '&gt;itu&lt;~tiol' even more dangerous.
Though he couldn't release
,my spec fics of the investigation, Cartmill said investigators ha\c conducted many
in ten iC\\ ~. incluclmg with
first responder.., and employees.
Cartmill also said the
im e'tigator., complimented
the firefighters on the scene
f0r pfE'o;erving as much of the
C\ idencetscene as possible.
After the fire occurred.
Jeff \fe,.\\ ell, tire chief of the
lupper~
Plains
Fire
Department. said sh011ly
before the fire started. there

Page AS
• Richard H. McKee, 75
• Judith Gail Musser, 70
• Mary B. Russell, 88

INSIDE
.

mall business
workshop offered.
See Page A2
• Frontier movie
to be filmed in
Point Pleasant.
See Page A3

Brian J Reed/photo

Eastern High School seniors Andrea Buckley, Breea Buckley, Knnberly M·near and Whitney Putman are ca'ltlidates
for Homecoming Queen. Crowning of the queen wil be the highlight of the half-time program at Eastern Friday
evening, along with recognition of the underclass attendants and other fT!embers of the homecoming court

• Final preparations in
high gear at Bob Evans
Farm. See Page A6

I

District remains in 'continuous improvement'
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.(A'EArnER

HOEFLICHCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
POMEROY
The
Meigs Local School District
received a "continuous
improvement" rating in latest round of report cards
released by the Ohio
Department of Education
(ODofE) .
As for the ratings of the
district's three schools.
Meigs High School was
listed as "effective," while
the Intermediate School
and Middle School carried
·'continuous improvement''
ratings.

Details on Page A3

I NDEX
Classifieds

Comics

A3
B3-4
Bs

Obituaries

As

ito rials
Sports

B Section

Weather
@ 2 009 Ohio Vnlley l'uhllshlng Co.

a

sis of all data. determining
weak and ::.trong areas, and
implementing a di:-,trict
improvement plan
Buckley said that in the
case of l\leigs Local the
analysis proved a weakness
in reading and math. "This
year we are getting started
with math and reading
coaches," ~aid the superintendcnt. "Those coaches
will train other teachers to
help them improve techniques of teaching math
and reading."
Buckley explained that
kids are being tested on a
regular ba::.b so that reme-

I Plans combine elementary, high school with addition
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTCMYDAJLYSENTJNELCOM

..

.

The district has been in
the ''continuous improvement'' category for the past
s1x years and arc CUITently
in the third vear of an Ohio
Department" of Education
program. geared toward
bringing the district out of
that category.
According to District
Superintendent
William
Buckley. the Meigs Local
School District was one of
the tin.. t in 16 state areas to
be selected to go through a
prescribed program directed
toward achieving a higher
report card rating .. The
process has included anal&gt;-

diation can be made and
noted that after-school
intenention o;e&lt;;-;ions are
offered. all geared to bringing up scores.
As for improvement the
superintendent smd "there
are results but the 'itandard
just keeps going up ever)
year which makes it hard to
show improvement. He said
that ODofE has set 20 I 4 as
the year when "every kid b
to he up to ~tandan.l. It\ the
'no child left behind theary.' said Buckley.
As for the challenge-., hi.!
said it is main!) in the areas
f
.
0 spcc.a 1 education and the

Please see Meigs, AS

Southern LocaI accept s st ate f und•lng numbers

2SECfiONS.:_ l2 PAGI~
d
Calen ars

Meigs Local's state report card u changed

liJ!IJI,I !1!1.!1!11

.
.

RACINE
The
Southern Local Board of
Education
recently
approved the Ohio School
Facilities
Commission's
cost ~o:!'&gt;timate of the state
and local share for repairing
deticient work on Southern
Elementary and constructI in~ an addition onto the
extsting K-8 building which
wJII/could become the new
Southern High School.
lfthe $9.8 million project
contmues to proceed forward, according to the

OSFC, the state share will
be $7.4 million with a local
share of $2.4 million.
Back in July, Southern
voted to proceed with participation in the OSFC's
Classroom Facilities program and has one year trorn
that July meeting to secure
the local share or $2.4 milI ion. Yesterday, Southern
Local Superintendent Tony
Deem said the most recent
vote by the board of education was basicall) a~reeing
with the funding formula
ma~d ecdo.sts the OSFC deter-

111

Deem also smd .school

pmreoegrtasmc,'·e·rSaolutchruemCI.

··Jhaddeatd~

officials are "exploring all lines such ~Ls \Oting to partieoptions" on just how to !pate and voting to approve
come up with that local the state funding fonnula.
share. Deem did say the . Sch?ol otfic.ials are workschool board has "no intcn- tng w1th arciHtecl!:'&gt; SHP of
tion" of running any type Cnlumbu-;, which mo!·c.
of issue on the ballot thi::. . n:ccntly. complctccl v. nrk 111
year. Back in .July Deem tlevcloplllg a new school
~&lt;lid placing a levy on the facility in Gallia County.
ballot would be a "last case SliP has developed a master
scenario."'
plan to build an ,tdJJtion
Deem al~o stressed the onto Southern Elementa1')
project remains in 1ts early School
v. hich
,, \1U)d
~tages and if funding cannot become the ne\\ ~outhern
be ~ecured the district ~,;un High School. 1 h~ plan , ]&lt;.o
al\\ays move away from the mcludes correcting dehprojectandcontinuebusiness ctcncie~ and omis'&gt;•ons trom
ac; usual. However. in order
to even be considered for the
Please see Southern, AS
u

Please see Arson, AS

I

____ _

Middleport
associations
join in hosting
Pumpkinport
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSE'JT :"-li:L COM
MIDDLEPORT _ The
Middleport
Mmisterial
Association \\ill join the
l\11ddlcport
Community
A'&gt;sociation in hosting thiS
year\ Pumpkmport event.
Communit) As ociation
President Debbie Gerlach
said the fall festi\ al will
be held from I -4 p.m. on
Oct. 17. The event is being
held earlier this year .
Gerlach s:ud, because the
l emphas 1s is being shifted
1 from a Halloween party to
a tall familv fe~tival. It
\\ill be held in Dave Diles
Park, and e\ erything will
he free.
Gerlach
said
the
Mmi&lt;.terial Association v. ill
spor.-.01 one of l\\·O bounce
how,~., to be -;et up in the
dO\\ ntown park, and the
Communit'Associ,nion
J

Please see Festival, AS

�CCAJL o

The Daily Sentinel

TAJTJE

Small business workshop offered
: SENTINEL STAFF
' MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS - The Small
Business
Development
Center in association with
the Appalachian Regional
, Entrepreneurship
Group
~ (AREG) of Southeast Ohio
will be sponsoring a free
-.'·Basis of a Successful
::stare workshop from 6-9
-....

p.m .. the first Monday of
the month in Suite 237 of
Building 20 at The Ridges
in Athens.
The next workshop is
scheduled for Nov. 3.
The
workshops
are
designed to answer ba~;ic
start-up questions and make
starting a business a little
easier. Some of the topics
that will be covered include:

Accessing your goals and
strengths. registering your
business name, licensing,
types of ownership. planning your business. sources
of financing and business
resources.
To register call 593-1797.
Registration is required in
advance and can be done
on-line at entrepreneurohio.org by selecting local

training I upcoming workshops I Athens.
The AREG provides free
business assistance to new
imd existing businesses in
Athens. Hocking. Meigs
and Pen·y counties. It is partially funding by the US
Small
Business
Administration and the
Ohio
Department
of
Reve lopment.

f;Chemistry degree now offered at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
has added another bachelor's degree program in
order to better meet the
needs of its students and
people throughout the
region.
Rio Grande is now offering a bachelor's of science
in chemistry degree. and
this innovative new program will focus on research
projects and integrated
learning.
The institution previously
offered a bachelor's of science
degree
in
chemistry/physics, but it
was decided to create this
new chemistry program in
; order to help better students
as they enter the job market
or continue their educations
in graduate schools or medical schools.
Several students have been
interested in earning a bachelor's degree in chemistry at

Rio Grande in recent years. small class sizes and indiand this new program will vidual learning opportunicreate new opportunities for - ties. and the ne\\ chemistry
the students, explained John program will fit in well with
Means. assistant professor of the educational environment on campus.
chemistry.
"It allows them the freeMeans explained that the
dom to entertain a variety of first two years of the procareer choices." Means gram will teach the basics
explained.
of chemistry to the students,
Graduates with chemistry but in classroom settings
degrees are able to move that allow the students to
right into jobs in industry, receive one-on-one attenfor example. working in tion from faculty members.
In the third year of the
research laboratories and
quality control fields.
program. students will be
Graduates are also able to able to work in integrated
enter into master's degree chemistry laboratories.
programs and continue their
''This will give the stueducations at colleges and dents the opportunity to use
universities around the what they learned in the
country.
classroom.'' Means said.
For the students who want The students will be able to
to enroll in medical schools apply the knowledge that
or
other
professional they are learning in their
schools. the chemistry classes, just as they likely
degrees will also help them will do if they are working
as they are applying.
in laboratories in industry
Rio Grande focuses on after they graduate. This

application will help them
better learn the material.
and will give them valuable
experience.
During the fourth year of
the program, the students
will all work on research
projects. The projects will
vary from year to year and
student to student. and will
involve several different
areas of chemistry.
Thi:. research work will
also prepare them for work'ing in industry. as well as
prepare them for the type of
research work they may be
doing in master's or doctoral degree programs.
The program will offer
great learning opportunities
and practical experience for
the students. and Means is
proud that Rio Grande is
offering this new bachelor's
degree program for its students and for the region.
(On
the
Web:
Hww.rio:edu)

Mr. Bowen
(right) is
shown presenting the
AEDto
Mason
County
School Nurse
Samantha
Hoffman (left)
and Wahama
Vice Principal
Melissa
Vanmeter
(center).
Submitted
photo

Wahama High School receives AED
MASON,
W.Va.
: Wahama High School
: recently received a dona. tion
of
an
AED
· (Automated external defibrillator) from Todd Bowen

~

of WV Jobs Foundation
Bingo.
This AED will be placed
in the school gymnasium
and will be on hand at
school as well as available

for after school events.
Wahama is also in the
process of purchasing
another AED, through a
grant and donations, to be
placed in the main office.

An AED is a portable
electronic device that automatically
diagnoses
a
patient who has suffered a
heart attack and administers
a shock if needed.

•

Accuser testifies in Ohio doctor's sex-crime trial

HAMILTON (AP) - A
man who claims a southwest
Ohio pediatrician molested
him as a teenager testified
: Wednesday that the doctor
gave him prescription drugs
and payments of up to
$15 ,000 in exchange for
keeping the sex abuse quiet.
The now 24-year-old man
said he was 13 when he was
first sexually assaulted by 53year-old
Dr.
Mark
Blankenburg. one of two twin
· brother pediatricians accused
of sex crimes involving
. minors in Hamilton, about 30
miles north of Cincinnati.
The
accuser
said
Blankenburg performed a
sex act on him and gave him
$200 when he first went to
see the doctor in 1998 after
being hit in the knee with a
baseball. He said similar
incidents happened three
more times by the time he
was 16, and caused him to
end up in drug treatment.
attempt suicide and be
admitted to psychiatric care.
The slight man. wearing
jeans and a golf shirt, kept
his head down and appeared
solemn, rubbing his eyes
when he mentioned two
additional sexual encounters with Blankenburg as an
adult.
The defense maintains
there is no evidence linking
Blankenburg to the alleged
crimes and that he was a
victim of extortion, paying
-the accuser about $250,000
over several years.

On
Wednesday.
the
alleged victim testified he
had lost his job in .May 2004
and visited the doctor. asked
him if he remembered what
he had done ana asked him.
for
money.
He
said
Blankenburg gave him
$3,000. He said he returned
to Blankenburg for money
several times, receiving prescriptions and payments
ranging from $500 to
s; 15,000. that were used to
pay bills and buy the drugs.
The witness said he called
the doctor's office using a

fake name to request money
and was eventually given
Blankenburg's cell phone
number. He said money was
sometimes left for him in
the doctor's car and once in
a bush.
•
He
testified
that
Blankenburg had him write
a note in 2004 saying a
$I 5.000 payment settled all
personal and professional
claims and Blankenburg
had not engaged in any illegal or improper conduct.
The man acknowledged
that he was interviewed by a

.a
O'lleVeJii~

•~"""+

·

·q

r;r

detective in October 2007
and said nothing, but said he
told investigators about the
abuse in a subsequent interview after he was asked if
his infant son \Vas a patient
of Blankenburg and replied.
"He will never go there."
The
witness
also
explained that he told a
grand jury he was molested
only three times as a minor
because he was 16 during
the fourth incident and was
embarrassed to discuss it
because he felt he might
have let it happen .

·

~ ~YJJ'Dth Annual Oktoberfest

r
•

r

'UJe

I

Saturday, October 10,2009
11 am - 2 p11l

~ tA- ,

~ ~ ~·

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

Free to the public as a thank you
for your support in making Overbrook your
Leading Healthcare Facility in Nursing Care
For more information or to reserve booth space,.
Contact Michelle Kennedy: (740) 992-6472

PageA2.
Thursday, October 8,

2009

Talking with kids
about the recession
The past year has been
rough financially for many
folks. You probably know
people who have lost their
jobs, seen their retirement
savings evaporate or experienced home foreclosure you may even be in a tough
spot yourself.
lt's difficult enough to
remain optimistic yourself.
but if you've got children,
the task is doubly hard: You
want to be honest about
why your family can't
afford the same things right
now, but you clon 't want to
telegraph your anxieties and
overwhelm them with dire
news they may not understand and over which they
have no control.
Rather than conveying
panic, look for v.ays to reassure your kids that you are
working hard to make
things better and that the
whole family can chip in to
help.
My wife and I are using
the cunent economic. situation as an educational jumping-off point for our two
children.• ages 5 and 9. Here
are a few of the strategies
you might want to try: ~
Put prices into perspective. When your kids clamor
for a new toy or treat and
you'd rather not spend the
money. don't simply say
you can't afford it. Put the
cost into perspective by noting how long they would
have to save their allowance
or how many additional
chores it would take to pay
for it.
This exercise helps kids
better
understand
the
process adults use to decide
whether a purchase is
worth making or not. (It
works better v. ith older
kids, who more easily
grasp the passage of time
and the concept of delayed
gratification.)
Involve
children
in
everyday spending decisions. You probably bring
your kids along when grocery shopping and like
most of us, you've probably endured pleading for
sugary snacks and cheap
toys. Instead of racing
through the store hoping to
avoid conflict. use shopping as an opportunity to

•

Jason
Aldennan

teach your kids the value
of money.
Make them part of the
decision-making process,
starting with helping to create the shopping list (the
best wny to avoid impulse
purchases) and clipping
coupons. Share your shopping budget for the trip an~
explain the consequences of
exceeding it. Then, once
you're at the store. enlist
their help in making price
compari:-.ons and give them
a voice when choosing one
item over another - that
way, you won't arbitrarily
be the ''no" voice.
Get kids' suggestions for
ways to curtailing spendi.
Mavbe it means check
out·a DVD from the libra
rather than going to the
movies. holding a garage
s3le or selling unwanted
toys or clothes on eBay, or
babysitting the neighbor's
kids to replace a temporarily reduced allowance. In
short. make them part of the
solution.
Share stories from your
own childhood ..Maybe one
of your parents lost their
job or your family had to
move in with a relative
temporari 1y. Share how
that made you feel (frightened. sad. embarrassed),
but let them know that by
working together as a family
things
eventually
worked out.
Get involved with charities. If they're old enough,
volunteer with your kids at
a soup kitchen or homeless
shelter. Nothing will make
them appreciate their o~
situation like witness·
others who aren't as fo1
nate.
(Jason Alderman directs
Visa:~ jlnancia/ education
programs. Sign up for his
free momhly e-Ne11·s/etter at
11'1\ w.practicalmoneyskiI Is .c
om/nell'sletter.)

Airplane rides
offered at McArthur
McARTHUR
The
final scheduled event for
2009 at the Vinton County
Airport, McArthur, will
offer those who take airplane rides an opportunity
to see the changing leaves
from the air.
Pilots from the Vinton
County Pilots and Boosters
Association will fly patrons
over much of Vinton
County in this annual event
which will be held Sundav,
Oct. 18.
•
The second part of the
event will be for youngsters.
ages 8 to l 7, who will be
able to take one free airplane ride during the day. Jn
addition to airplane rides,

food will be available starting at noon.
For more information on
the event call Booster
President Nick Rupert at
(740) 357-0268 or Steve
Keller during the day at
(740) 418-2612. A donation
will be requested at the gate.
but there will be no additional charge to enter airport
prope1ty.
The
Vinton
Coun
~
Airport is located abou
miles north of McArthur
Airport Road. Pilots, fly t
221. This event. and others
during the year. raise funds
which allow the Boosters to
keep the airport open for
public use.

�Page~'}

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 8,

2009

Frontier movie to be filmed in Point Pleasant
Virginia and is set to begin
Sunday. Oct. 18 at Coonc,kin
Park in Charleston.
POINT
PLI::.ASANT,
The film concentrate~ on
W.Va. - A 1110\ ic cre\\ \\ill the
adventures
of
':-.oon be in the area to film Frontiersman Jesse Hughes
scene.., for an upcoming from 1762 through 1829 in
movie.
wc~tern
northern · and
The film is an indepen- Virginia (pre~ent day West
·nt. feature length mot ion Virginia). In more than 100
•
picture entitled Into the documented
encounters.
Wildcmc.\s. The Ut&lt;· o( Hughes led volunteers from
Jesse llughn. Filmin'g \\iii forts along the frontier to
take place across West repulse the Shawnee on
SENTINEL STAFF

MDSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

murder raids and personally
the lives of se,eral
thousand settlers with early
warnings of Shawnee incursions from Ohio'.
The largest battle will be
the ambush of 50 Shawnee
along Brushy Fork Run b)
Hughes. his brother, Elias,
und 30 volunteers from
West's Fort and fort
Buckhunnon.
On Sunday. 0&lt;..'1. 25, the
Battle of Point Pleasant w\11

~aved

be filmed in the morning
along Crooked Creek Run
in Point Pleasant, which is
part of the actual battlefield
from Oct. 10. 1774. Filming
will continue that afternoon
on a private farm in Putnam
County.
For more detail.\· on the
11/0l'ie

such

as

dates and

filming

location.'i,
calf
£dward Clevenger at (863)
651-2145 or e-mail je.\sehughesfilm@yalwo .com.

ASK D l~ . l3 I~ &lt;J T H E R. S

Family keeps ki(js confined to their own yard
accustomed to sheltering
their children and keeping a
close watch on them. I
know it is frustrating and a
bit puzzling to you. but they
may just be waiting for
someone to come over and
assure them that it is safe for
them to let their kids join
the others playing in the
cul-de-sac!
See if vou can find out
from the ·real estate people
or the previous owner of the
lwusc a little about the new
neighbors so that you can
put your mind at ease about
approac-hing them. Call on
them with a bowl of fruit or
ome information about
or
lawn-care
people
babysitters that you might
like to share: find out what
they're thinking. If you
have a street party or a
school function. be sure to
include them. Once they sec
that the) are really living in
a safe place, and their kids
start feelin£! more at home.
)OU probabl) will find that
this cautious period will
come to an end. At best. you
will end up with some new
friend"&gt; on the adult side, as
well.

BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers: We
were so thnlled when a
new famtl) with a couple
of kids our children's age
moved into our subdivision
fe\\
monthc;
ago
a
Unfortunate!), \\e haven't
been able to make friends
because the couple insist
that the children do not
leave th~ir yard - which is
fenc~d in so that no one can
really s~e into the back
yard. I haven't felt comrtable sending my kjds
'Cr there. Frankly, I am
wary of introducing my-;elf
arc the)
• to this family
paranoid'? - V.C.
Dear V.C.: I suppose the
famil\ could be a bunch of
crazy" recluses who \\Ould
meet your friendl) neigh
borly ~rcetings with a
loaded nfle at the door. But
I ~incerely doubt it! If you
\\ill do a bit of nonintrusi\e
investigating, l1maginc you
will find a famil) that may
ha,·e lived in a \\hole different I) pe of neighborhood in
the recent past. If they ar~
moving up. as mo-;t of us
aspire to do, they could
have left a dang~rous situation in \vhich they were

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: 1 am

very concerned about our
liule boy. He b 6 years old
and in kindergarten. Even
at this age, it is clear that he
probably is not going to be
on the high-school basketball team! He's a smart
ho). but he's not physically
gifted - he tends to be
clumsy and rather uncoordinated. Should I just let
him be, or try to change it'?
He IS complaining about
not having friends on the
playground. My husband
and I knmv what he means
... we were not athletic
types either. - A.K.
Dear A.K.: Since you
J...now what he mean .• you
may also have suffered
from teasing. being picked
last for the team or feeling
left out when others were
doing after-school sports.
Or perhaps you didn't
care. and immersed yourself m other nonathletic
endeavors. Whatever the
case. you owe it to your
child to try to help him
improve his physical coordination, enjoyment of
sports and games, and the
fun that comes with plnying actively with friends.
Thnt being said, it isn't a
mandate to put him on

Kayla Lanae Henry

Henry birth

some strict regimen that
he will hate and find it difficult to master. The idea
is to work on his fine and
Kylie and Kebey Henry would like to announce the
gross motor skills so that recent birth of their siMer, Kay Ia Lanae .·They are the chUhe can participate in play- dren of Dr. Kelsey M and Tes~ie Henry of Gallipolis
1!round {!ames with the Ferry. W.Va.
other kils. not force him
Kayla weighed six pounds and 8.6 ounces and v.as Wl'l
to train like an Olympic corned home by her aunts and uncles. great grandma
athlete.
Wanda llemy and great grandma !'-:ola Bradshav..
Since you two arcn 't
The proud grandparents arc Kelsey L. and Leota Hcmy
sports-minded, you may of Gallipolis Ferry. W.Va .• Vicki and Jun A'&gt;hton bf
have neglected to throw a Middleport, Ullll Art and Callie Bradshaw, abo of
ball around or play tag or Middleport.
other little active games
with your son. It's not too
,
late to start -:just get him
used to havmg fun and ,
On June 25. 2009. at 4:30
using his body. Find out if
he would like to try an p.m.. Cliff and Kalena
individual sport that he Wheeler of North Canton,
welcomed
the1r
could practice and become Ohio,
s.k illed at. Perhaps he· d daughter. ~1akenzie Grace
hke golf rather than bas- Wheeler, into the world.
Makenzie \\eighed six
ketball. Or baseball rather
than h?cke)~· It can be a pounds and 11 ounces and
good ttme tor all of you. was 18 and a half inches
and a great chance for your long. She was born at
son to. get ·some c~ntrol Aultman
Hospltal
in
o~·er his body. Don t l~t Canton. Ohio.
htm ~eg out - even .at hts
Makenzie's
maternal
Makenzie Grace Wheeler
age. 11 may be temptmg to grandparent:. are Kelsey L.
turn to the computer or
d Le
H
fG 11 r
television to pass h1:. time. ar~
ota enry 0 . •1 1 ~ rs Wheeler of Gallipolis and
Turn it off, go outside and F~.:ny: W.V~. Her great e0 1•111d- her great grandparents are
have some fun.
":'a . 1s . \\anda Henry of Donald and Sarah Isreal of
Bidwell.
.
(c) 2009 bv KinR Features (,aJhpohs Ferry, W.Va.
She was welcomed home
Syndicate ·
Her paternal grandparents are Tom and Dianne by her aunts and uncles.

Wheeler bJrth

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Tuesday, Oct. 13
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
town hall.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., town hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 14
MARIETTA -District 18
Executive Committee, 10
a.m .. Holiday Inn. Review of
projects for Round 24
SCIP/LTIP only. No points
assigned.

Homecoming at Ash Street
Church. Jeff Smith will
speak at 10:30 a.m. serv1ce.
Dinner Will follow. Earthen
Vessells to sing following
dmner.
Pastors
Mark
Morrow and Rod Walker
invite former pastors and
attendees.

Birthdays
Monday, Oct. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS
Dorothy Warner will be 93
on Oct. '12. Cards may. be
sent to her at P.O. Box 142,
Tuppers Plains, 45783.

Church events
Sunday, Oct. 11
POMEROY - Carleton
Church, celebrating 100
years, homecoming service
at 1:30 p.m., dinner at noon.
TUPPERS PLAINS Harvest gathering, "Festival
on the Grounds," 1 p.m., St.
Paul United Methodist
hurch.
Music
by
elivered" Chili and soup
eans, hot dogs, games.
MIDDLEPORT

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 8
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m., refreshments served afterwards.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. meeting, meal
at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, 11:30 a.m., New

Cheesebrew birth
Beginnings United Methodist
Church. Carol
Adams,
Donna Byer,
Margaret
Stewart are hostesses.
CHESTER
Shade
River lodge 453, 7:30 p.m.
at the hall. 50-year pins to
be presented. Dinner at
6:30p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 10
POMEROY - Christian
Motorcycle
Associatron
"Delivered" Chapter, regular
meettng, 5 p.m., Common
Grounds.
Monday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club, regular
meeting,
7:30
p.m.,
Mulberry
Community
Center.
Tuesday, Oct. 13
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Order of
Eastern Star 255, 7:30 p.m.
Open
in
long
form.
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Merchants
Association,
8:30 a.m.. Peoples Bank
conference room. 992for
information.
6677
Meetings open to all interested.
POMEROY
Meigs

County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, Mick
Howell of People Bank
speaking on "Qualifications
for a Business Loan," luncheon catered by Bun's
Party Barn, RSVP at 9925005.
Thursday, Oct. 15
POMEROY
Meigs
County Retired Teachers,
luncheon, noon, Wild Horse
Cafe, speaker from Ohio
Consumers' Council, dis·
cussion on saving on energy costs, River Blend
Quartet performing.

Joseph Wyatt Cheesebrew.
son of Joseph D. and Karh
Cheesebrew
of
Point
Pleasant. W.Va .. \\as bom
June 20. 2009. at Holzer
Medical Center.
He weighed nine pound.
and six ounces and measured 21 and three-forths
inches long.
Welcoming him into the
family was his big sister.
Kindra Checsebre\li.
Wyatt's maternal grandparents are Marion F.
Kemper Jr. and Janet
Kempcroi'Glenwood. W.Va.
Paternal grandparents are

Other events
Friday, Oct. 9
LONG
BOTTOM
Benefit gospel sing for Fall
Harvest Gospel Sing, 7
p.m.. Faith Full Gospel
Church. Singers include 2
for
Jesus,
Gloryland
Believers. Brian &amp; Family
Connections,
Angela
Gibson, The Dollys and
Bricle, and Jerry and Diana
Frederick.

Local Weather
Thursday .•• Mostly
sunny. l lighs in the upper
wind~
60s.
Southcn!\t
around 5 mph.
Thursday night •••Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Not as
cool with low&lt;; in the upper
50s.
Frida) ...Showers \\ lth a
:.light chance of thunderstorms. Breez) and more
humid with high&lt;; in the mid
70s. SouJhwest windc; 15 to

20 mph with gusts up to 35
mph. Chance of rain neur
I 00 percent.
Friday night.••Showers
with a slight chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 50s. West winds 10 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25
mph. Chance of rain near
100 percent.
Saturda~ ...Mostly cloudy
in
the
morning ...Then
becoming partly sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s.

-9.65
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.91
• Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.10
City Holding (NASDAQ) 29.92
Collins (NYSE) - 49.90
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.78
US Bank (NYSE)- 22.18
Gannett (NYSE) - 13.00

Keeping Meigs
County informed

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

Saturday nil?ht through
Sunday
mght ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40~. Highs around 60.
Columbus day and
Monday
night.:.~1ostly
cloudy. A 30 percent chance
of showers. Highs in the
upper 50s. Lows in the
upper 30s.
Tuesday
through
Wcdnesday...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s. Lows
in the upper 30s.

Getthe ~ofbotl! ~orlds
a11d hok fear! qoanaerl
HOLZER
CLINIC
DEPARTMENT OF

PLASTIC SURGERY
General Electric (NYSE) 16.16
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 22.52
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 45.70
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.56
Limited Brands (NYSE) 17.83
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 44.41
•
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 26.15
BBT (NYSE) - 26.92
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 12.40
Pepsico (NYSE)- 61.17
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.87
Rockwell (NYSE) - 41.26

Glenna Chccsebrew and the
late John "Red" Che~sehrcw
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Botox &amp; Evolence TOGETIIER

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.72
(NASDAQ) - 62.60
Inc. (NYSE) - 40.51
lg Lots (NYSE) - 26.39
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.88
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 29.20
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

Joseph Wyatt
Cheesebrew

Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 6.22
Royal Dutch Shell - 56.83
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

67.27
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 49.49
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.n
WesBonco (NYSE)- 15.88
Worthington (NYSE) - 15.87
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Oct. 5, 2009,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
In Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
ond Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Botox- Wrtnkle correction at eltner the Glabena (betwe~n eyeb ows),
craw's Feet {oute; corners or eves) or Forehead
EvOience De•maJ !1 er - Wr'lnide co:rectlor at eth€• tile
NasOlabial Fo:as (lines frOm side of nose to comer o~ mouth}. oral
Com11iSsure{comers Of mouth) or MariOnette Unes (·nes rrom
COMerS or mouth toward C!lln)

'Cinoot be comblna!" th Ill) olhcr diSCCUllls.
• • MI:SI be del-m:d 8 cml.'dl!t b) I Holzer Clime Plastic SwgCI) Pro\ !del

Call 740-446-5225 for
more information or to
schedule a consultationu

Reg. Price S''25

'

�-~------

----- -

-

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

---~

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Panel cffers plan for Gitmo detainees

The Daily Sentinel

ASSOC ATEO PRf'""

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

In a partial victol) for Pre&lt;&gt;Jdent
1 Obama's troubled hid to close the U.S.
prison in Guant.mamo Ba). Cuba. key
congre!)sional negotiator-. .1dopted a
plan Wednesday to permit tCITOr su-.pccts held there to l'Ontmue to be
transferred into the llmtecl States to
f~11:e trial.
The House-Senate compromtsc \His
reached by Democratic negotiators on
n Cl;42.8 billion homeland &lt;;ecurity
appropriations bill It mostly tracks
current restrictions put tn place in June
and is similar to a ver&lt;&gt;ion backed by
Repubhcans earlier 111 the year that
allowed detainees to be tran-.ferred to
U S. soil for trial.
No\\, Rcpubhc.ms are prec;sing for
an absolute ban on transfers of
Guantanamo detainees into the lJ.S.
The mo\ c "iCts up a cla~h '' 1th
Republicans and. potentially. a difticult vote for do1ens of House
Democrats. who only last week voted
m fa"or of a GOP plan to block any
detainee tmnsfcrs into the U.S. That
· 1·111~ mot1on.
·
vote cam;;: on a non lllllt
but Wednesday's compronm.e would
carry the rorcc of law for the budget
, b .
,
1
)c.u t1.lt,
cg.m 0 ct. 1· •
Obama s order to clo~c CJuantanamo
' by mid-Janu.try has vexed his
Democrauc allt.:s on ( pitol Hill, who
complain that it was dropped on thdm
\\- ithout a plan to call) it out.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Managerc News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress slzal/ make 110 law respectiflJ! au
establislrment of religion, or prolzibitittg tlze
free exercise thereof; or abric{{litrg the freedom
of speech, or of tire press; or tlze right of the
, people peaceably to assemble, arrd to petition
: the Government for a redress of.._{lrievarrces.
I
I

' - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN
I

ANDREW TAYLOR

BY

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

HISTOl~Y

Today is Thursday, Oct. 8, the 281st day of 2009. There
are 84 d,·\)'S· left in the )'ear.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 8. 1871. the Great Chicago Fire erupted; fires
also brokc out in Peshtigo, Wis., and in several communities in Michigan.
On thic; date:
In 1869, the J4th president of the United States. Franklin
Pierce. died in Concord. N.H.
In 1918. Sgt. Alvin C:York almost single-handedly killed
25 German soldiers and helped capture 132 in the Argonne
Forest in France.
In 1934. Bruno Hauptmann was indicted by a grand jUI)'
in New Jersey for murder in the death of the son of Charles
A. Lindbergh.
In 1945, President Harry S. Truman announced that the
secret of the atomic bomb would be shared only with
Britain and Canada.
In 1956. Don Lar:-.en pitched the only penect game in a
World Series to date as the i':ew York Yankees beat the
Brooklyn Dodgers in Game 5, 2-0.
In 1957, the Brooklyn Baseball Club announced it was
accepting an offer to move the Dodgers from i\'ew York to ,
Los Angeles.
ln 1959. tht~ Los Angeles Dodgers won the World Series,
defeating the Chicago White Sox 9-3 in Game 6 at
Comiskey Park.
In 1970. Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn wa,s
named winner of the Nobel Pnze for literature.
Jn 198 I, at the Wh1tc House, President Ronald Reagan
greeted former Presidents J1mm) Carter, Gerald Ford and
Richard Nixon, who were preparing to travel to Egypt for
the funeral of Anwar Sadat
In I 982, all labor organization.; in Poland. mcluding
Solidarity, were banned.
.
Ten years ago: A damage award to State Farm auto insurance customers swelled to nearl~ $1.2 billion after a judge
in Illinois ruled that the nation's largest auto insurer had I
committed fraud by using generic auto-body repair pans.
(However. the Illinois Supreme Court ovenurned the judgment in 2005).
1
Five years ago: In a testy debate rematch. President
George W. Bush and Sen. John Kerry quarreled over the
war in Iraq. jobs, education, health care, abonion. the environment, cheaper drugs and tort reform at a town hall session in St. Louis.
One year ago: After a day of bouncing higher and lower,
Wall Street plunged again. The Dow Jones industrial average lost another 189 points to close at 9.258 - the sixth
straight day of losses for the Dow.
Today's Birthdays: Entertainment reporter Rona Barrett
is 73. Actor Paul Hogan is 70. Civil rights activist, the
Rev. Jesse Jackson, is 68. Comedian Chevy Chase is 66.
Author R.L. Stine is 66. Actress Sigourney Weaver is 60.
Actress Stephanie Zimbalist is 53. Actor-screenwriter
Matt Damon is 39. Actress Kristanna Loken is 30.
Thought for Today: "History is the propaganda of the ~
victors." - Ernst Toller, German poet and dramattst l
1

, ,,

•

Republicans are
pressing for an
absolute ban on
transfers of
Guantanamo
detainees
into the U.S.

the 1ssue on the defense measure and
other appropriations bills
if
Democrats can succeed in passing it.
Houc;e Democrats, though. were
openly exploring the option of a leg- .
io;;Jative 1\vo-step on the underlymg
homeland security spending bill that
would block Republicans from ann.
cr vote on the dctention ccnter.
Supporters of clos111g Guantunamo
say the facility and the detention of
suspects who may ha\'C been held
indefinitely w1thout trial have hurt the
United States' reputation across the
globe. And. they smd, fears of bringing the detainees to the U.S. are exag·
gerated - exi,ting federal pm.ons are
more than adequate to safel.&gt; hold
them
Republicans
counter
that
Guantanamo i:-. an ideal place to hold
and prosecute the 223 detainees that
remain there. Dozens of those have
been approved for release. but U.S.
officmls fear they will be mistreated or
k11led if sent to their native countries.
and they have yet to be accepted by
other countries.
"I see no reason "hy these terrorists
cannot be brought to justice right
where they are," -;aid Rep. Harold
Rogers, R-Ky.
.
Administration officiab say that the
deadline for closing Guantanamo mi·t
slip anyway because of difficulties
completing the lengthy review o
detainee files and resolving other
tough question:-..
1

Republicans have been enthu&lt;.JU!&gt;tic
in the1r opposition to the plan and
clear!) feel that public opm10n and the
politics ofGuantanmno arc working m
their fa\ or. Ho'' ever. prominent members of the pan). including last fall's
presidential nominee, Sen. John
McCain of Arizona. "ant to sec the
fac1lity closed as well. At a House
Appropnnt1ons Committe.., session in
June. the panel'" top Republican. Jerry
Lewis of Californid, -.ought to ensure
that detainees could be brought to the
t.:.S. for prosecutiOn.
But amid tl11.· uproar over
Guantanamo, Dcmocrats have been on
the Jcfenshc. Just lucsday.thc Senate
passed a $62() billion 1\:ntagon budget
bill that would ban outright any transfer of accused enemv combatant'&gt; from
Guantanamo to U.S. soil. The plan
unveiled Wednesday could c;erve as a
template. ho\\ e\'er, for. dealing ,., ith

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( 1893-1939).

Too many kids exposed to violence

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

BY

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correction Policy
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be accurate If you know of an error
in a Slory, call the newsroom at {740)
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il

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DEVLIN

BARREn

ASSOCIATED PR~S:i

Justice Depanment offi
cials said Wednesday that
most children m the United
States arc expo~ed to v10_
len~.:e 111 their daily 1ive-;
but a leading criminologist
warned the govcrnmcntsponsored survey may be
I !tlll~ping scrious and mmor
lmc•dento; together.
\1ore than 60 per~.:cnt of
Children !&gt;li~Ve) ed ~\e~c
expo!&gt;ed to VIOlence Wtthtn
the past year, either directly
or indirectly. according to
d
") d b
h~
Uta COlllpl e
y t C
department. The surve) ·c;
authors defined exposure to
violence ao;; being a \ ictim.
or ha\ ing witnessed \ iolence. or learning about' iolenLC against a rcl,ltl\e,
friend. or heanng about a
threat to the1r school or
home.

I

Most children are exposed to violence
More than 60 percent of children Ill the Um!Od Stntes were exposed to
VIolence 10 the past year, wh o neruly 15 percent w1tnessed someone
being I11Jur0d and/or assaulted with a weapon

Past-year exposure to violence for children, ago 17 and younger
AsstJult

Witnessing

Any

Assault

w1th no

weapon
or lnJU~
307

V.1lh
cornmunty weapon
eS-'3UUit
and/or
19.2
1n1urv

1

14.9
Child

Witness-

maltreat· 1ng tallllly

nl(!r4

10.2

assault

9.8_j

Sexualloi&lt;:tmizatiOI' 6.1

I

Datrog viO!ence 1.4.

e 10 Voence

between January and May
of 2008. For children ages~
and younger. a parent
!Wardian anS\\ ered ttl~.:
question~. The .1\:ational
Survey
of
Children's
Exposure to Violence was
sponsored by thc Justic~.:
Department"~
Office ot
Jll\enile
Justice
and
Delinquency Prevention.
with help from the Ccntcrs
for Disease Control. It wa ·
coriducted b) universit)
researcher-..
The attorney general and
Education Secretar; Arne
Duncan were in Chicago
Wednesday to meet with
local officials. parents. and
student'&gt; to discuss the
vicious beating of a 16year-old Mgh school student
\\hose killing last month
was captured on a cell
phone video.
Derrion Albert, an honor
roll student at Chri:.tian
Fenger Academy High
School. was attacked when
he got caught up in a mob ~
teens about six block:- fro.
'
·school. Video :-.how~ him
curled up on the sidewalk us
fellow teens kick him and
hit him with splintered railroad ties. So far. four teens
have been charged in his
death.
(On the Net: Office oj
Jm·emle
Justice
&amp;:
Delinquency Protection:
http://www.ojjdp.ncjn .go I'!)

AP

be included."'
llMt robs our ) outh of their
Nearly half of all children ch1ldhood and perpetuates a
surveyed were m•saulted .u cycle in which toda) 's vicleast once in the past )Car, tuns become tomorrow's
and about 6 pe cent "t:re l:riminals.'' Holder ~aid.
victimiz.ed sexualh , the -.urAmong the c;uney's other
vey found.
·
findings:
One m the of those
• :'\learl) one in ten chilThut · approach rflio;;cd between the ages of 14 nnd dren said they -.aw one famqucstwns for some.
''\\'hat concerns me \\hen 17 reported they had seen a ily member assault another
in the past year.
you hcur numhets like this shooting.
"Those numlwrs arl!
• ~lore than one-half of
is thul in their attempt Ill he astonishing, and they urc the childn..:n, about 57 pt'tinclu~ivc, which is corn· unacct:ptablc,"'
Attorney ccnt, repo11cd ha\'ing been
mendable. the definition of General Eric Holder smd in nsstllllled ut some point in
violence becomes so broad Chicago, where he was thc1r life.
that the re..,ults lack real mcetmg with loca1 officials
• Thirteen percent reportmeamn!!.'' sa1d Jamc' Al.m to dts&lt;. uss the disturbllli! ed ha' mg been ph) s1cally
T·ox. cnmuMI JUsttcc prol'c-. beatmg death ot a ht£h bullied in the l.1st year.
sor
at
Nonhe,t..,tem school student l') other
The rc-.ults were based on
lJmversity. "If you broaden teen&lt;;.
telephone interviews of
the definition Of \IOlencC sQ
"\\'e -.imply cannot stand 4549 kids and adolescents
much, then most people" 1!1 for nn epidemic of violence aged 17 and younger

�Th ursday, October 8, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Judith Gail Musser
Judith Gail ~1usser. 70. of
formerly of
l\1as?n County, passed away
on 1uesday. Oct. 6. 2009. at
the
CA~lC
General
Hospital.
he was born on Julv 31,
• i9. and was a daughter of
the late Kenneth and Phyllis
Holder Lyons. Judy was also
prc&lt;:e&lt;.lcd in tkath by her
husband. Charles Mus~er.
Judy was a n:tircd Post
~listn!~s in .Mason County.
She wa~ a 1957 graduate of
DuPont High School, was a
member of the Malden
Judith Gail Musser
Magnolia Red Hat Society
and enjoyed spending time at her camp on the Greenbrier
River in Pocahontas County.
She is ~urvived by a step-son, Michael K. (.Mary)
Musser of Jackson, Ohio: step-daughters. Cindy K.
(Todd) Kimes of Pomeroy, Ohio. and Teresa L. (.left)
Patterson, also of Pomeroy. Ohio: sisters. Sally (Gary)
Chestnut of Belle. and ~anc) (J.D.) Waggoner of ~1alden:
10 grandchildren: 18 great-grandchildren: and several
nieces and nephews.
The funeral service will be II p.m. on Friday. Oct. 9.
2009 at Stevens &amp; Grass Funeral Home. Malden.
The committal service will be held at 1:30 p.m. in
Sunrise Memorial Park. Letart, Mason County.
Her family and friends will gather for the visitation on
Friday from 10 a.m. until time of service at the funeral
home.
In lieu of !lowers, the family suggests donations to the
lerican Cancer Society. 30 I RHL Boulevard,
• arleston. West Virginia 25309.
The online guest book for Mrs. Musser may be accessed
at v. ww.ste\ ensandgrass.com
Charle~ton.

'

Mary B. Russell (McKnight)
Mary
B.
Russell
(McKnight) of Urbana.
Ohio. passed away peacefully. surrounded by her
family. on Oct. 5. 2009. at
2:30 p.m., at her home.
''The Shire."
She was bom June 30.
1921 in Langsville, Ohio.
the oaughter of the late
Robison and Elsie (Miller)
McKnight. Mary graduated
from Rutland High School
(where she \Vas the 1939
May Queen) and Columbus
Business College.
In 1942 she marned Mary Russell (McKnight)
Samuel Michael Russell.
Mary moved with "Samm)'" to Aorida directly after their
wedding where he served as a flight instructor in wwn.
Mary and Sam came to Urbana in 1945.
Mary is survived by children, Sharon Davidson.
red artist, of Urbana; Robert Michael Russell
resa), retired chemistry teacher at Urbana High
ehool; Dr. Shelley M Russell (Steve), Marquette,
Mich.; and Dr. T1mothy McKnight Russell,
Grahams\ ille, New York.
She is also sun ived b) her SISter Janet Yost (Kim), her
grandchildren, Dr. Derek Davidson (Karen). New
Philadelphia, Ohio; Warrant Officer Kyle Davidson. helicopter pilot, currently serving in Iraq; Chad Russell,
Restauranl Manager in Edwards, Colorado; Samuel
Rus~ell. Potsdam University; Glory Russell-Parks, senior
at Marquette li.S.: her great-granddaughter. Mary
Davidson; and all Mary's loving cousins, nieces,' and
nephews.
Mary is also survived by her childhood sweetheart, the
love of her life and her husband of sixty-seven years, Sam
Russell. Wh~::n their youngest son asked Sam to decide on
Mary's final resting place, he said that the family could
decide where to take the ashes, "but if we're talking about
her spirit, I'll hold it m my two hands."
Mary was a Cub Scout Den Mother, a Girl Scout Leader.
a member of the Buck Creek Women's Club and the
Urbana ~tethodist Church. She enjoyed cooking, flower
gardening. and most of all, the beauties of the natural world
around her. Mary was famous for her black raspberry pies.
but they could not compare with their creator's sweetness.
Her loving heart nnd her kind and gentle nature enriched all
those whose lives she touched.
The family would like to thank Marilee Rankin. Nicki
er.s. and Barbara Daniels with Cornerstone Hospice for
r excellent care. In lieu of tlowers. the family asks that
o ations be sent to Alzheimer's Disease Research, 22512
Gatewav Center Drive, PO Box 1950. Clarksburg, MD
20871-l950. Following Mary'c; wishes. her body will be
' cremated. A gathering of family and friends will be held
from 3-4 p.m. on Friday. Oct. 9. 2009 at VERNON
FUNERAL HOME. Urbana. A memorial service will follow at 4 p.m. Condolences may be expressed to the family
at www.vernon1h.com.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Gallipolis Career College honors 2009 graduates
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipoh~ Career
College held graduation ceremonies on
Saturday, Sept. 26.2009. for all students
who completed their course of study
duling the 2008-2009 school years.
The ceremony took place at the
Faith Baptist Church located on
Jack-ion Pike in Rodney.
John Danicki, Dircctorofl:ducation at
the college, opened the ceremony with
the Invocation after which. William
Plants. American Histmy ln~tructor, led
the audience in the Pledge of Allegiance.
School President Robert L. Shirey
welcomed the graduates.
"We all want to congratulate you on
your achievement,'' said GCC
President Kobc11 L. Shirey. "It takes
more than just you; it takes many peaple to help you accomplish your goals.
We also want to thank the church for
allowing us to use their nice facility.
Thankc; to Jenny Shirey for all her hard
work in putting this together.''
State Sen. John Carey was the featured
speaker for the ~mduation ceremony.
"Congratulations on your graduation." Carey said. "It's a great privilege
for me to be able to support your
efforts. On the way here today. I was
thinking about the story about football
player Rudy Ruettiger. He stretched
- he took a risk. You have taken the
risk of pursuing your degree. Rudy
Ruettigcr had a dream and he pursued
it. You are doing the same thing.
"Because of your dream and your
determination, you have achieved
: your goal," Carey added. "You have
I b~~ome a better person. Y~u ha~ a
VISIOn and you ha,·e accomplished tt. I
believe Ohio has a great future and
you are part of it. You are our biggest
asset to Ohio. Congratulations!"
1
After Sen. Carey's address, John
Danick introduced and acknowledged
staff and instructors. commenting that
each one plays a great part in the
process. He then ,presented the diplomas and degrees to the graduates.
The graduating class included the
following indi\ iduak Christina
Beaver, administrative assistant diploma; Paul Carpenter, associate degree in
business administration; Tabitha
Chapman, associate degree in medical
oftice administration: Jaime Davidson.
assocwte degree in business administration: Nichole Dickenson, associate
degreec; in ~omputer applications technology and technical support special-

ist; Amber Doss, associate degree in
medical oftice administration; Robin
Eblin, associate degree in business
administration: Amanda Gillispie.
associate degree in medical office
administration: Miracle Goodman.
associate degrel' in medical office
administration: Robert Harris. associate degrees in computer applications
technology and technical support l&gt;pecialist; Pam Hutchison, associate
degree in medical office administration: Deborah Hysell, administrative
assistant diploma; Kim Jackson. associate degree in computer applications
technology and technical support specialist: Brandy Lane, associate degrees
in business administration and
accounting. Lora Langdon. associate
degree in medical office administration; Paula Livingston. medical administrative assistant diploma: Donita
:VfcCiintic, associate degrees in execu
tive oftice administmtion and medical
office
administration;
Jeanette
Newsome. associate degree in business
administration and a diploma in junior
accounting; Dawn Perry. associate
degree in medical office administration

and a diploma in software applications:
Amy Ragland, associate degree in
Medical Office Administration and an
administrative assistant diploma;
Anginette Rippey. associate degn.•es in
accounting, executive office adminis- '
!ration and technical support l&gt;peciahst;
Karen Scarberry, associate degree in
medical oftice administration and an
administrative assistant diploma; Lacie
Skeen. associate degree in medical
office administration': Joyce Turner.
associate degree in medical office
administration: r-.:ancy Vanderberg,
associate degree in executive office
administration: Michelle Walker. associate degree in medical office administration: ~Dennis Williamson. as~ociate
degree in accounting: Jes:-.ica Wisecup,
associate degree in medical office
administration and an administrative.
assistant diploma: Jennifer Wolford,
associate degrees in business administration, accounting, and medical office
administration. ~
After the Benediction, given by
John Danicki, there was a cuteretl ~
reception for all graduates anti their
invited guests.

Meigs from Page AI
economically
disadvantaged.
According
to
Buckley, the stimulus
money recently received by
the dic;trict is being targeted
I to a great degree to the Title
I and special education proI grams, the two group
showing the greatest deficiencies.
I The report card for the
Meigs Local School District
shows that the district met
11 out of the 30 indicators
with a p~rfonnance index of
85.9 out of 120 points. It
also lists the district as "not
having met adequate yearly
progress.''
The report reflects that
grades 5. 7 and 8 were
below expected growth over
the past year in reading, but
in mathematics grades 5, 6
and 7 were above expected

growth with only grade 8
being below expected
growth. Grade 4 met
expected growth in both
reading and mathematics.
While the Meigs Middle
School. Mei!!s Intermediate
School and the district overall were rated ''continuous
improvement." ~1eigs High
School achieved an "effective" rating, meeting six of
the 12 state indicators with
a performance index of 94.3
on an index which goes up
to 120 points.
At Meigs High School,
the I Oth grade scored above
the state requirement in
reading, mathematics and
writing. but below the state
requirement in science and
social studies; and the 11th
grade scored above the state
requirement in reading and

writing but belo\\ in mathematics. science and social
studies.
The graduation rate for
the 2007-08 vcar was 84.4
percent about 5ix points
below the state requirement of 90 percent. The
report shows that the attendance rate of 94.2 percent
for all grades exceeded the
state requirement of 93
percent.
The Meiss Intermediate
School, whrch met five of
the I 0 indicators had a perfonnance index of 84.6 (out
of I 20 points), and met the
school improvement category for the year.
The reading scores of
third graders was above the
state level as were math
scores. Howe\er, in both the
fourth and fifth grades read-

Jn!! scores were below the
state le\el as \\ere math in
the fourth grade. and math.
science and social studies in
the fifth grade.
The sixth, seYenth and
eigh~h grade scores in both
readmg and math were ,
below the state average
although the sixth grade ·
did meet the state requirement.
The Meil!s Middle School
showed
perforJllance
index for the year of 82.3.
out of 120 points, and did .
not meet adequate yearly .
progress, according to the
report card. Only in the
sixth grade was the state
requtrement met in reading~
In math sixth, seventh. and
eighth
grades
missed,
achieving the proficient
state level.

a

Arson from Page At
were two employees at the
market who had just checked
.out their la'it customer and
were getting ready to dose.
'Jbe employees then noticed
the fire around the cooler
area. Employees attempted
to put the fire out with watt:r.
Newell said B &amp; D Market
owner Kenny Spencer also

tried to put out the fire with a
garden hose before the
departments arrived.
As for damage, Newell
said it was substantial from
the heat and smoke, adding
the grocery section of the
store seemed to suffer the
heaviest damage with perishable products being

ruined. Glass was also busted out of the coolers from
the heat. There was abo
damage done to the roof.
Firefighters from Tuppers
Plains were joined by firefighters from the Chester
and
Reedsville
Fire
Departments along with
p~:rsonnel from Squad 90.

Prc-Arrangemenl Pl11nnlng

;,.

Middleport
992-514)

Pomrrt'J}
992-5444

-~.and=anirl.com

Southern from Page A t

Deaths

----~----------------•

Richard H. McKee
Richard H. ~1cKee. 75, of Portland, passed away on Oct.

7. 2009. at the VA Hospital in Huntington. W.Va.

A sen ice will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday. Oct. 10,

2009. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Visitation will be held from 5-8 p.m. on Friday,
Oct. 9, 2009, and one hour prior to the funeral service at the
funeral home. An online registry IS available by logging
onto www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Briefs

e~.--~-m~mtinization clinic
POMEROY - 'I'hc Meigs Count) Health Department is
holding a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday.

Soup dinner
POMEROY- Me1gs County Republican Party will hold
a free soup dinner nt 6 p.m. on Oct. 22, at the .l\fulbeiT)
Communit) Center. Women of the party are to bring
desserts. Men are to bring beverages.

the elementary school project built in 200 I. and the
demolition of the. existing
Southern High School.
Southern had the option to
pursue renovating Southern
High School with OSPC but
Deem said the cost
would've resulted in an
even greater local match.
, Deem abo said "it's
important to the Board and
to me that everyone in the
communitv be involved'' in
terms of receiving feedback
as to how to proceed.
In other Southern ncws. 6

the district recently received
a $50k school wellness initiative grant from the
0:-;teopathic
Heritage
Foundation. Thi:- is phase
two of the foundation's initiative and Deem said the
district is using it to purchase equipment for the
Communitv Fitne5s Genter.
Deem said-the funds will be
used to purchase toning
equipment. special equipment for senior citizens, a
tread mill, additional elliptical equipment. stretch bands
and weights for women, etc.

. Festival from Page Al
will sponsor another and an
Gerlach said the event
inflatable slide.
will be paid for with proThe local Retired Senior ceeds from thb week's Bear
Volunteers Program will Basket Games. a semialso participate.
annual fundraiser supportPlans also call for a mag1c ing community events.
show by Trix the Clown,
The Ja,t Lunch Along 'the
and free refreshments for River fundraiser will be held
families.
Oct. 30 in Dave Diles Park .

.

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�The Daily Sentinel

F

PageA6

EST

Thursday, October 8,

2009

ar .F
Final preparations in high
gear at Bob Evans Farm
stay closer to home, which would help us.
Some of the other festivals around are seeing that as well."
.
RIO GRANDE - Bob Evans Farm staff
McKinniss said some new entcrtamment
members and volunteers as well as a host at this year's festival will also help to draw
of vendors and crafters are putting the a few more people to Rio Gr..mde . The
final pieces into place before an army of Ohio Top Hands Rodeo Drill Team and
tourhts descends on the Gallia County award-winning bluegrass band Dailey and
landmark this weekend.
Vincent will each make their festival debut
The festival is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . this weekend.
daily Friday through Sunday.
"(Top Hands) is a new ~how for us in the
A few handfub of visitors had already set arena." he said. "They've won some nationup shop in the camping area on Wednesday. al awards and we think to have them with
However, the usual ocean of recreational us wilJ be the start of a great tradition. And
vehicles is expected to be in place later we're really glad to have Dailey and
Vincent with us."
today ahead of Friday's opening day.
Like the rest of the staff, Bob Evans Farm
McKinniss said roughly I 00 crafters will
Manager Ray McKinniss was hustling participate in this year's festival.
around the spread on Wednesday. He said
"We get a lot of people calling who want
preparations for the 2009 festival are right to be here." he said in regard to the number
on track.
of crafters who ask to be a part of the festi"Today we're where we're supposed to val each year.
be," McKinniss said. "We're not quite
McKinniss said the farm festival's sucready yet, but we're not behind. We're right cess is due in large part to the partnership
on schedule.''
between the community and the farm staff.
Despite the tough economic situation,
"Our staff here is so dedicated and that's
McKinniss said he expects a good turnout, what makes it work," he said. "We're real
especially in the campground.
pleased with the support the county gives
,. "It looks to me right now that our camp- us. We have a lot of local people who come
ground numbers are up , so that's a good and work for the festival. We understand
fuing," he said.
our role in Gallia Countv and we're work·McKinniss said he'd like to equal last ing on some programs that will allow us to
vear's attendance of32,793. a record for the be a better tourism partner."
three-day festival, but understands that
Admission to the Bob Evans Farm
could be a tall order.
Festival b $5.00 for adults and $3.00 for
"We'd have to hit a pretty high water children age 6 to 18. There is no charge for
J1)nrk to beat that,'' he laughed. "We think kids age 5 and younger.
that because of the economy people will
(On the Web: bobevans.com)
BY ANDREW CARTER

MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bob Evans
Farm Manager
Ray McKinniss
and his staff
have been
busy since
Labor Day
preparing for
the 2009 Farm
Festival. Gallia
County's signature tourism
event kicks off
Friday and runs
through
Sunday in Rio
Grande, Ohio.
The festival is
open from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
daily. Tickets
are $5.00 for
adults and
$3.00 for kids
ages·6 to 18.
There is no
charge for kids
age 5 and
younger.

Above: Ellie and
Bob Kosch from
Brooksville, Fla.,
will bring
Mountain View
Kettle Korn back
to the Farm
Festival for the
13th consecutive
year.
•
Left: Campers
trickled into the
festival campground on
Wednesday. The
usual ocean of
RVs is expected.

Andrew
Carter/Photo

ON'T MISS OUT!

Save $100's on 100's of items!
. Bidding begins

f

T9

D

'0 'ER 19TH AT 9 P.M

GET YOUR OFFICIAL GUIDE
IN THE
Above: Bob Evans Farm staff and visiting
vendors were still doing a lot of heavy lifting on Wednesday in preparation for the
2009 event, which opens on Friday in Rio
Grande, Ohio.
Right: Fred Burdell, on ladder, and Scott
Gray from Ohio Hill Country Honey in
Gallia County were as busy as bees on
Wednesday, getting their booth ready for
the 39th Annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival. Burdell's company is one of
about 100 vendors participating in this
year's Farm Festival.

'

..

�------------------------·

-·~
----

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Prep Golf, l,agc R2
OHSAA Football Poll, l,agc B2

Thursday, October 8, 2009

-

•

I

I RhP

Southern goes for five in a row, travels to Miller

OOTBAI I GAMES

BY SARAH HAWLEY

FRIDAY'S GAMES

MDSSPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Fed Hock at Eastern
Southern at Miller
Vinton County at Meigs
South Gallia at Green
A1ver Valley at Fairland
Chillicothe at Gallipolis
Point Pleasant at Poca
Wirt Co. at Wahama
Hannan at Gilmer Co.

CORNING
The
Southern Tomadoes (4-2. 10 TVC Hocking) look for
their fifth straiuht win Fridav
evening as thev face off
against the ~mier Falcons
( 1-5, 0-1 TVC Hocking) in a
TVC Hocking matchup.
Southem is coming off a
three overtime victory in
their TVC Hocking OPener
last week against Federal
Hocking (0-5). This was the
lirst victory O\ er Federal
Hocking and the first win in
a league o~ner this decade
for the purple and gold.
Southern's offense was led
by strong running pe~or­
manccs by Greg Jenkms.
Scan Coppick. and Michael
Manuel in the win. Jenkins

All games start at 7:30p.m.

Undefeated
Wahama
hosts Wirt
CoUnty
•

1

had two Tornado ~oul:h- Beallsville (2-4) ... iV~i.ll~r ag:unst Md~:r datrng .b.al:k ~o
d()Wns and 149 )'ards tor the losses have comt: ag,unst
Ltst
('&gt; 4) thl: 2006
s Sl:ason.
I
I c l&gt;C.td

game,
while
'1ppick.
Manuel, and Qu ..utcrback
Dustin Salser ~ach &lt;~d.ded
rushmg_
fD.
another
Southern abo had brg ~efcnsive games from. 1aylor
Lemley and Copp1ck who
had double digit tackles. and
Eric Buzzard and Jesse ~ope
who each pulled in an rnterccptton.
Southern has won four in a
row against South Gallia (24) Hannan (0-5) Green (2 ·
' 1 rc
~ dera 1 r~J ock'·mg(04) , an&lt;.
6): after losses in the tin.t
two games of the year. The
Tornado losses \\Cre against
Symmes Valley (5-I) and
Wahama (5-0).
· .. ·
M1'll,cr ·IS· 1--s on t hc~ s~.tson
and has not seen a VICtory
sml:e week one of the season
when
they
defeated

Millersp~rt
_ --. ,
Crooksvrlle (4-_2), ht?ntrcr
(5-1), Grov~ City Chnsttan
(6~0). and \\aterford &lt;3-3
On th.e seaso~, Southem IS
out~conng the1r oppon~nts
by JUst less than tw~ pomts
per game. Southern JS averaging 2~-~ points per ga!l1e.
while g1vmo up 22.3. pomts
pe~ game. _Sou.thern 1s aver~gmg .31.7::&gt; P&lt;?mts per g~~le
111 the!r fourl VIC'tones, "' 1e
allowmg on Y 16 pomts per
gnmc
in tho...,c
'
~ contc . . ts ·
Mille~ i~ being out....cored
11.8 pomts per game to 30.6
points per game.
The
Falcons have put only. 36
points on the bo~rd sm~c
their week one vrctory 111
h' ·h h
d 35
w lc t ey score · ·
The Tornadoes have won
the last three matchups

&gt;·.

son, • out 1ern ( e.eate
t-.tillcr b) a score of 33-20 at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial
Field in Racine. The 2007
matchup at Miller ,,as won
_ bv Southern. Miller's
14 6 :- . , . h -;erie~
last '1cto1) Ill .t e
c~tme m 2005. With a home
v1ctory by the .,core of 14-6.
With a "in on Firday.
Southern .,.. ould tie their
start from the 2006 season
h
when they were 5-2 t11roug
~
h
~even \\-eeks. before hms mg the :-.cason 6-4. The
Tornadoes would also be 2-0
in the TVC Hocking for the
first time this de&lt;.:udc.
•
•
•
Kickoff 1s set for 7:30p.m.
..· . .
r-,
•
,1
l rrd,t) at
It 11 er 11 1g 1
School.

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS cORRE.SPONDENT

Marauders attempt to conquer v·ki gs

MASON - A significant
gridiron confrontation will
be a hul$e part of homecomBY DAVE HARRIS
ing activities in the Bend
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
Area when unbeaten and
third ranked Wahama wei- 1
comes the high powered
POMEROY
Two
offensive show of 12th rated teams still trying to get
and once beaten Wirt their first conference win
will clash when the Vinton
County at 7:30 pm Friday.
After captu_rin~ its ~r...,t County Vikings play the
the contests Ill nnpressJvc Meigs Marauders. It \Viii
fashion
Coach
Ed be Homecoming/Alumni
Cromley's White Falcons weekend in Pomeroy. as
return to action following the game will kickoff a
an off week in the local weekend of Alumni activigridders 2009 fall football ties.
card. Wahama disposed of
Buckeye Trail (48-29),
The Vikings are 0-6
Southern
(42-14), overall and 0-3 in the conWaterford (30-0). South fcrence. Coach Nolan
Gallia (18-0) and Eastern Yates IS in his fourth year
(26-14) in successive weeks at the helm of the Viking
before taking a week hiatus ship.
r~ jumping back into
The Vikings have had
Juck
of
the
playoff
r~ce
·
trouble
scoring this sea~on.
•.
1rt County has had s1m- They have scored only 54
tlar success on t~e current I
ts on the season (9
season w1th the T1gers lone po~n
.
.,
loss being a heartbreaking .pomts a game). while gnsetback to St Maf)s (27- ing up 2.1 ~ (36.5).
The Vtkmgs have rushed
33) during the second ga~e
of the year. In that loss Wrrt for 730 yards on 251 carCounty was inside the Blue ric~. but they have no own
Devils 10 yard line. in the in the top I 0 in the Ohio
final minute but fatled to Dtvision in rushing.
The Vikings passing
record .!he go-ahead score.
The l1gers have beaten game is last in the division
V&lt;:tllcy ~ayctte &lt;39 -8), with 407 yards, Adam
Gtlmer County (75-14). W· d
6-foot-1
175
,u
a
.·
Doddridge County (33-12)
and 20th rated Pocahontas pound quarterback lS 33 of
County (42-8).
6~ in ~he ~ir for 369 yards
Wirt County will be look- With SIX p1~ks on the seain" to make another bold son. Two-t1me all-conferst;tement in the Class A encc selection Andy Grillo
rankings when the Tige~s has 20 receptions for 263
visit Waham_a later th1s yards and three scores.
Wrrt
Coun_ty
The Marauders are comweek .
jumJ?ed five place~ from 1ts ing off a heartbreaking 27pre~IOu~ 17th ~o~ttlo~ fol- 26 defeat to the undefeated
Jowmg 1ts one-stded VIctory Warren Warriors in double
O\ cr Pocahontas
County
.
k M ·o
and will likely make anoth- ?Vertlme 1ast wee · · eJI?s
zeable leap should they 1s ':.5 over~ll and_ O_-~ m
off the upset ov~r the !h~ I VC 0~10. ~elgs IS a•
White Falcon~. Desp1te an 2 m the T\ C Oh1o for the
open date last week
Wahama rl.!maincd in the
third position in the latest
WVSSAC rankinss.
Cromley and h1s staff arc
vigorously engaged in trying to find a way to groUJ.ld
BY SARAH HAWLEY
an extremely potent Wtrt
MDSSPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
County
aerial
attack.
Senior quarterback Jake
FRANKLIN FURNACE
Hutchinson (5-9 165) broke _ The South Gallia• Rebels
!he schools' season record (2-4) are looking for win
for touchdown passes ( 15) number three on their seala!&gt;t week with three first son. and win number three
half scoring tosses and 256 for Gallia County. as they
yards through the air in the remain the only football
wm
over
Pocahontas team in the county to
County. Hutchinson has achieve a victory in 2009.
thr?wn. three t~uchdo:-vn
South Gallia will face a
aenals m each T1ger out1~g Green football team that is
this year to help ~1rt 1 also 2-4. but has not won
County to an ~stound1ng since week three against
o~ens1ve productton of 43.2 Hannan (0-5).
por nts per contest. The 1
i In last week's victory, the
WCHS defense a! l_ows Rebels ran for 139 yards and
15.9 ppg to the oppo~rtt~n:
three touchdowns, one each
ach_ .Jason. ~ICki!Jan s Is from A. ustin Phillips, Dalton
•
.c mtdst ol h•s. tht r~ ;~~·~~ M atncy.
and
~ogan
son ,tt the ~elm of_ the l rget Wamsley. South Gallta also
program af!cr po~tu~~ a 9-1 1 scored on a 54 yard touchrecord 9unng Ius_ fi rst t"-;o down strike from Cory
camp~11gns.. 1-l 1ckmai~ s Haner to Josh Cooper to
2009 squad 1s loaded wrth give the Rebels the 29-6 vicsenior talent w.hich has !he tot)'.
Wirt County. fmthful talkmg
Special teams play was
playoffs th1s year. . The also a key to v1ctory with
Tiger&lt;&gt; last appearance m the two fumble recoveries on
post-season was way back kickoffs and a new place
m 1994.
kicker for the team.
Please see Wahama, Bl . Swedish exchange student,

I

Eagles
look for
first TVC
Hocking
victory

Bryan Walters/file photo
The Meigs Maraduers football team huddles up with Coach Mik~ Chancey giving instructions to the team during Friday's double overtrme loss to Nelsonville-York. The Marauders
host Vinton County th1s Fnday in a Homecoming night contest between the TVC Oh1o
teams.
first time since 2006.
Caleb Davis has caught 15 six TVC Ohw game:-. tn
The Marauders have lost for 292 yards and three route to a 1-9 season.
four of their five contests scores.
The weekend will h.rckby a total of 19 poinb. The
Meigs has won two of off on Friday with ~ tail
Marauders have ,1 h1gh the la~t se\ en meetings uate party on the site of the
powered offense rushing between the two schools. ~ld Pomeroy Junior H1gh
for l ,212 yards in 207 ~1eigs defeated Vinton School near the front gate
tries. Meigs is led by County last season by a at 5:30. At 6:30. the homeJeremy Smith with 897 score of 41-7. and in 2005 coming and alumni festi\ iyards in 127 carries. Cody by a score of 24-14. tics will begin with the
Laudermilt and Jeffrey Vinton Countv"s last wm game set to k1ckoff at 7:30
Roush has also been doing came in 2007 by a score of p.m. at Bob Robert'i Field.
their share on the ground . 23-14.
On Saturday, actiVIties
Jacob Well leads the
Vinton. County has lost will begin at noon on
Ohio Division in passing nme straight TVC Ohio Court Street \Vith the
hitting 54 of 126 for 813 games dating back to last parade at I :00 p.m. in
yards and seven :scores . season when they lo:st all Pomcro).

.

BY SARAH HAWLEY
MDSSPORTSO\IYDA LYS:NTINEL COM

Tl!PPERS PLAlNS
The Eastern Eagles football
ream goe~ for their lirst win
m the TVC Hockmg this
season. as they face the
Federal Hocking Lancers in
a Homecoming contest at
East Shade River Stadium.
Eastern lost their TVC
Hocking opener at Trimble
last week by a 28-7 score.
The loss was the second in a
rO\\ for the Eagles after a
three game winning streak.
Ea..,tern 's only &lt;&gt;core in
last week'&lt;; game came on a
three vard touchdown pass
Bra,den Pratt to Mike
Johnson.
Federal Hocking (0-6) is
looking for their first win of
the season after a 34-28
three O\ ertime loss last
week against Southern.
Hocking's
Federal
ground game l_ed the way,
scorin" all tour touchdowns~ Chad Hatfield had
two of the touchdowns.
while Brenden Torrence and
Dewayne Clark added one
each.
On the season. Eastern is
scoring 2 I .5 points per
game, ~while allowing 19.8
points per game. Eastem
hal:&gt; scored 21 pomt over
the prevwu' two \\ eeks and
have allo"'ed 54 points .
Fedetal Hockmg is a\eragmg 15.6 points per game.
and aliO\\ ing 38.2 points per
game. Federal Hockmg ha~
&lt;;cored 17.5 point~ per game
in the last t\\O games, while
alloY. ing 43 per game.
Federal Hocking has won
~he pre\ i?us fo~Ir matchu~s
111 the senes • .,.. 1th Eastern s
last' ictor) coming 111 200-f.
In their previous four victories ag[tinsl Eastern. the
Lancers hav~ scored at least
40 points in each contl!st.
E,t~tem ·s 2004 \ ictOI") was
bv a 27-18 score.
be at 7:30
·Kickoff
p.m Frida) night at Eastern
High
School.
with
Homecoming
festivities
also taking place at halftime.

I

''ill

Blue Devils
host Cavs on
Homecoming
Bv BRYAN WALTERS

South Gallia goes for win number three. ~t;:;;(~;~;;~:,.,;,:,~i~~i

;

Rasmm. Carlson. has .il?ined
the Rebels for the rcmamccler of the season and has
taken over kickoffs. field
goals, and extra points.
Green lost last week to
Symmes Valley (5-I) by a
score of 26-0. Symmes
Valley is South Gallia 's
week 10 opponent. Both
South GaiJin and Green have
faced Southem this season,
.,.. ith South Gallia falling 286, and Green falling 25:'16.
South Gallm's wins have
been against Portsmouth
Notre Dame (2-4) and
Fairfield Christian Academy
( 1-5) over the past two
weeks. In the tvoo victories,
South Gallia has outscor~d
its opponents I R.5 points per
uame to 6 points per game.
c Green's two victories on
the season have come
agsinst Manchester (0 6)
and Hannan (0-5).
For the season. South
Galli a is avemg111g 9.2
Bryan Waltersffllc photo
points per game, \\ hile South Gallia's Logan Wamsley carries the ball dur ng
allowing I 7.6 points per Fnday's game agamst Fairfield Christian, while teammate
game. Green IS averaging Dalton Matney (45) provides a block The Rebels travel to
face Green Frtday evening.
Please see Rebels, Bl

..

I team
will once ~ga_in take its
best shot at bnngmg home

the fir::.t win of this sea~on
Frida) night when visiting
Chillicothe. comes
to
~lemonal held for a Week
7
Southeastern
Ohio
Athlet.Jc League matchup m
the Old French City.
The Blue Devils (0-6, 0-3
SEOAL)
\\ho arc 3-4 alltime against the Cavaliers
- are looking to end an
eight-game regular &lt;;eas(~n
lo~mg treak dunng thts
'' eekend 's Homecoming
contest. Ironically. that
eight-game ...,Jidc started
du~·ing
last
sen.;on "s
Homecoming
contest
again-.t Zatwsville. a 12-0
loss at :\1emnrial Field.
GAHS has abo dropped
its last two Homecoming
contest!&gt;, losing to Ironton in
2006 b) a 34 27 count. The
last Homecoming \\in at
:\lemorial
Field came
again"t Jach.sm~ (34-27} in
lOOt The Dcvtls have also
o...,t three o:;tJ ..Iight to CHS.
all in SEOAL competition
Please see Devils,' Bl

�·----------~·-~----

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

·Point finishes fifth,
Greene ties for 21st
BY SARAH HAWLEY

In

The Dragons (4-2, 1-0) the other hand - have had
little trouble scoring points
th1s year. putting up at least
14 poinh offensively in each
of their siX contests. PllS which is known over tht.:
vears for its abilitv to score
jJoints - has also clevclopcd
into quite a defensh c unit
this season. allowing over
15 points in just two of its
six contests.
The Green and White arc
averaging 28.3 points otTcnsively while allmving just
19.3 point!' defensively.
FHS - which Is currently
13tb in the Division IV,
Region 15 standings - has
al-,o allowed just 13 points
in its last eight quarters of
play.
Fairland has ''on the last
six contests in this series.
River Valley last defeated
Fairland in its inaugural
OVC s~ason of 2002 by a
19-0 margin .
Kickoff is :-.cheduled for
7:30p.m.

'Cats travel to Gilmer Co.

I

Devils

Valley Wetzel (46-0).
The Wildcats arc averaging 11.2 points offen:-.ively
and allow 38.2 points as a
defense.
Gilmer Count} (1-5) on the other hand - enters
Friday fresh off a 26-12
home victory over winless
Tygarts Valley. The Titans
had dropped five consecutive games before that by a
combined margin of 30880.
GCHS has scored at least
12 points in e\ ery contest
this season.\\ ith the ~eason·
high coming last Frida)
against TVHS The Titans
are averaging 17.7 points
offens1vely and are allowing 53.3 points as a defense
K1ckoff is scheduled for
7:30p.m.
Hamilton Township. CHS
has c;ince dropped decissons
to Big Walnut (33-1 0),
Wilmington
(4,2-20),
Zanesville
(14-7).
Portsmouth (34-21) and
Ironton (56-17).
Chillicothe is a\ eraging
15.3 points offensively and
allowing 31.3 points as a
defense. CHS has also been
outscored 90-38 in two
SEOAL losses. The Cavs
arc also 0-2 in road games
this fall.
Neither of these teams are
likely headed to postseason
play. The Cavs are the lmvcst ranked team in the
Division llL Region 12
bracket - just ahead of
GAHS and two other \\inless teams.
Kickoff of Friday night's
contest at Memorial Field j,.,
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. The
Homecoming ceremomcs
will '&gt;tart around 7 p.m.

AP Ohio High School Football Poll
COLUMBUS Oh1.:1 (APl • How a
state panel o• sports wuters and
broadcasters rates Oh1o 111g"1 school
footbal teams 1n the fourlh weekly
Assoc ted Press poll ol 2009. by
OHSAA dtvlslons w1th won-lost recoro
and tota pJ nts (flrst·P ce votes r
parentheses)
DIVISION I
1 Cle St Ignatius (29) 6-0
2 C1n. Moeller (2) &amp;-0
3 Cm St Xav,cr (3) 5·1
4 Dublin Coffman 6·0
5 Solon (1) 6·0
5. Cin. Elder 5·1
7 Cle. Gl!lnville 5·1
8. Hilliard Davidson 6·0
9 MasSillon Washmgton 5·1
1 0. Tot Whitmer '5·1

344
269
241
• 228
151
151
139
11 0
lOt
43

Others rece1v1ng 12 or more pomts. 11.
Middletown 32 12 Wadswortr 28 13
Cm Anderson 1e •
DIV~S,ON

II

1 lOUISVIIe (25) 6.()
2. C1n. Turp1n (2) 6-0
3,Logan(2)S..O
4 To! St Francis (3) 6.()
5, N Carlisle Tecu:nsch {1) 6.()
6. Warren Howland (1) 6-0
7, Mentor Lake Cath 5·1
e. New PhUadc!p11ta 6-0
9 Chester! :~d W Geauga 6·0
10. C1n w.nton Woods (1) 4·2

325
264
245
231
202
153
116
109
81
42

Others receiVIng 12 or l"'lore points. 11,
Maple Hts. 2e 12. Zanesville 19. 13.
Can11eld 17 14 (tiO). Tol Cent. Calh., Tor
Rogers 16. 16. Sunbury Big Walnut 13.
DIVISION Ill

DIV'SION IV
1. Ketter ng Arter (27) 6-0

334

2 A:nanda-C earcrecK (2) 6-0 296
3 Chagr n Fa ... 13) 6-0
273
4 Genoa Ar
12! 6-0
204
5 Gr&lt;:.'1l11) 6·0
~76
Ei Clarksvll e Cllr&gt;tO!!·Massle 6·0 136
1 Gc: on 6-0
76
8, Clll N Co cge H1ll &amp;-0
55
9, KeriOn 5-1
44
10 Day ''lurgood Marshall 3·3 43
Otrers r!lce1v1ng 12 O! more polrts:
Bellville Clear Fork 36. 12 CarUsle
13, Marlins Ferry 29 14 Cols. Harlley
28. 15 Otlawa·Giandorl 22
16,
Coshocton 20. 17, Zanesv1lle w,
MuskingufT! 15. 18 Heath 14. 19, M1lar
Ed1sor 13. 20, lrontor 12
DIVISIONV
1. Coldwate• (31) &amp;-0
334
2, Ha., er Patnek Henry 6-0
203
3 Cols Reaay ~
189
4, C;yahoga Hts (1) 6-0
184
5. Anna 5·1
155
6. Co11..ntr.ana Crestview (1) 6·0154
7, St Henry 5-1
127
e. W Lafayette R dgewood 6·0 95
9. cldepender&gt;ce G-o
80
10, Jeromesville H llsda.Je 6-0 50

Otners receiV ng 12 or more points 11,
C Palestine 44 12 Yo~,;ngs U ;;,.~ 1no (1)

33 13 l'"rede~ICI&lt;tOWn (1) 31 '4,
Rtel'wood N Un on :29 15. Bait more
t..berty UnJon 27. 16, rna Cer&gt;t Cath.
25. 1 7. Gates M1IIS Hawken 23. 18 (Ue),
Nelsonville-York. Oak H1ll 14 19. W
Llberty·SaleiT 14 2 1 (he) Woodsfield
Monroe Cent Mmeral R1dge 13
DIVISION VI

1. Youngs. Mooney (29) &amp;-0
2, Steubenville (5) 6·0
3. Poland Seminary 6·0
4, Cin. Wyom1rg 6.()
5 Cots. Watterson (1) 5·1
6, Akr. SVSM 5-1
7, S-ndusky Perkms 6.()
8 B- lefonta1ne 6.()
9 Napoleon 5·1
10 Dover 5-1

337
301
245

176
171
155
91
89
74

45

Others receiVmg 12 or rl'Ore pornts 11.
Cots DeSares 41 12 (t e) Carrollton,
Day Cham•nade-Ju anne 30. 14.
Jackson 22 15 (Ue). Mogadore Freid.
C~rclev 'e Logan Elm 21 17. AI ranee
Mar lngton 15.

1 Delphos St. JOh!fS (33) 6·0334
2, Lockland 6·0
235
21.1
3, Norwalk St Paul 6.()
4, A::la 6.()
20
5. BJcyrus Wyn 1ord 6-Q
16
6, Carey 6·0
149
7, McDonalo (2) 6-0
142
8, Mogadore 5·1
124
9, Malverr 6.()
80
10, Bascom Hopewe -l..oudon 5·1 57
Others receiV'I"'Q 12 or more points. 11.
Dalton 40 12 Bert n Cer&gt;ter Western
Reserve 27 1!";, Anson a 26 14, Ft.
Loram1e 16 15 Ct e), W1llow Wood
Sprres Vc:.ley Tuscarawas Cent Ceth.
12

;J

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last four matchups against
Green, winning last year by
a score of 12-8. Green's
l~tst victory in the series
came in 2004 by a 20-7
margin.
Kickoff is set for 7:30
p.m. Friday night at Green
High School in Franklin
Furnace.

Rebels
from Page Bl
12.7 points per game, while
giving up 24.7 points per
game.
South Gallia has won the

IDENTITY THEFT
HITS 5-YEAR HIGH
Lsder
D lreft Protect m
6atk v- th
Stnk~&gt;-

Fr~

Protection Offer fw A

--

PROCTORVILLE - The

I

~he_&lt;;!ass A ~?urnament. road doe~n't get an} easier

I

Joining Hutchinson in the
WCHS backfield ''ill be
senior running backs Levi
Kerby (5-8 170), Devin Dye
(5-7 180) and Kris Holbert
(5-7 160). Hutchinson's
main targets include senior
Zach Cheuvront (6-4 190)
and sophomore Dalton
Brindo (6-l 190). The
Tiger line is expected to be
comprised of seniors Joe
Frame (5-7 200), Josh
Toney (5-7 190), Sun
Dorsey (5-11 240) and
. Keith Hickman (6-1 285)
--along with junior R) an
- Litton (5-9 190).
As a team Wirt County
averages 226 yards per
game on the ground und
another 169 yards per game
through the air for an
incredible average of nearly
400 yards of total offense
every 'time the Tigers take
the field. Levi Kerby is the
teams leading ground gainer with O\ er 300 yards
\Vhile Hutchinson
has
passed for over HOO yards
while running for over 200
-more. Cheuvront has over
300 yards in pass receptions
with BrinJo close behind
the senior leader.
Wahama will undoubtedly ha,·e its defensive secondary put to the test
throughout the homecoming contest come Friday.
The White Falcons were
challenged in its last outing
by an Eastem aerial attack
11nd despite giving up 170
yards passing were able to
escape with a 26-14 triumph. However the Bend
.Area defense will have to
have an even better effort if
the Mason County team is

-

1

I\\

from Page Bl

- --

BWM.TERS MYDAILYTRIBUN[ CoM

2!

Wahama

-

BY BRYAN WALTERS

her. Greene shot rounds of continues ito; search lor the
94 and 91 for a two. Jay t?tul first wm of the year against
(~f U~.5. Greene fi~1shed 111 a host 1-:urland in an Ohio
~~~ "to.r
st WI~~ Aaron Valley Confcl~cncc matchup
l1ccm,m ot Moon.:f1eld.
. in Lawrence Count).
Jacob
Hensler
ol
The Raiders (0-6, 0-1
Parkersburg Catholic won OVCJ enjoved their llrst
the Cluss A title, shooting a and only· · lead or the seatv,:o day total of 148. Justen .,0 n last I riday. taking a 7·6
Holstein of Charleston advantt~~e against South
Catholic finishes second Point at1cr one lJlHI11er of
'"ith a two da) total of 165. play. RVHS. however. failed
The Class A team title was ·to score the rest of the night
won b) Charleston Catholic
hile the Pointers ran off 28
with a two day total of 512. strasght points to claim the
while Madonna took second 34-7 dec1sion.
place with a team total of
The Silver and Black are
517.
averaging a mere 4.3 points
Class AAA team title was offensively and allowing
won by Hurricane '' ith a 36.7 points defensively.
team total of 454. with sec- RVHS has scored in each of
ond place going to Wheeling its. last four contests after
Park with a total of 47~
bemg shut out the first two
The Class AAA individual \Vccks of the fall.
title came down to a playoff
between Brian Anania and
Aaaron Barna both of
Hu1Ticanc who each shot a
two day total of 147. Brian
Anania won the playoff to
BY BRYAN WALTERS
take the title.
BWALTERSOMYDAILYTAIBUNE COM
The
tournament was
played on Oglebay Park's
GLENVILLE
One
par-71 Speidel Golf Course.
team is coming off its first
win of the season. The other
I is sti II searching for 1ts first
to emerge with a home- ' triumph.
coming victory.
The Hannan football team
WHS is averaging 32.8
will once agam aim for its
points per game offensively
first win of the season
while the Bend Area
defense is giving up 1J .4 Frida) mght when it tra,els
points per conte~t to the to Gilmer Count) for a
oppositiOn.
Senior Week 7 gridiron matchup
against the Titans.
~1icaiah Branch has scored
The Wildcats (0-5) are
l 0 touchdO\\'TlS on the year
coming
off a 44-16 loss to
while junior Ryan Lee has
Williamson.
a game in
reached the end zone on
nine occasions. The run· which the 'Cats posted their
ning back duo are both highest offensive output of
coming off 100 yard perfor- the season. HHS has ~;cored
mances at Eastelll v.•ith the at least 12 points in its last
White Falcon interior line tour outmg&lt;; after being
shutout m the opener by
de5.erving much of the cred
it for an outstanding effort
against the Eagles. Jamm
Branch. Ethan McGrew.
Kevin Klingensmith, Ryan
Anderson, Jordan Decker.
Colton McKinney and
from Page Bl
Jeremy Cundiff have toiled
in the trenches for the local
ele\en this season.
The Blue Devils are being
The Wh1te Falcons as a outscored 214-83 this seateam are gaining an average son. including thre~ losses
of 352 yards of total offense of 21 points or more. GAHS
with the Bend Area team has been more respectible in
collecting 275 yards per its last t\\O outing. losing b)
game on the ground and 77 12 points to Jackson t28-16)
yards through the airways. and 13 point" to Pot1smouth
~et:ensively the locals are 1 (34-21 ).
gtvmg up 11 l yards per
On the season. the Devil::;.
game on the ground and ' are ::;conng an average of
anot~er 57 yards .throu_gh 13.8 point.:; offensively nnd
the atr to the co'!lbmed toe_ allowing 35.7 points dcfcnthroughout the f1rst l~alf ol s 1vcly. The Devils ha\c also
the
sea so~·
Mtcawh been outscored I 01-43 in
Branch contmues . to pac.c three SEOAL -;ctbaeh.
t~.e Wl:f.? defen:-.!ve 0 ~ 11
The Cavs &lt; 1-5, 0-2) are
v.1th EliJah Honaker, Man also on a bit of a down cycle
Dallgerf!eld~ Robert. Peyton right nov.. losing five conand C~lm P1erce also mak- secuti\ e games after openmg the1r p~esence kno\\ ·
mg the 2009 season w11h a
The \\ hlte Falcon:- h~ve 17-9 \ ictory O\er winless
captured II consecuuve
wins
against
its 2009
homecoming opponent after
Wirt Countv claimed the
first four decisions· of the
series. Kickoff time at the
Bend Area campus is scheduled for 7:30 pm.

: WHEELING -The Point
Pleasant High School golf
teum ended their season
placin~ filth at thl.! Wl!st
Virgima
State
Golf
Tournament. Point Pleasant
:had a combined team totul
rof 538. 27 strokes behind
·first place team Grafton for
the Class AA title.
After an opening day 261
in the two day event, Pomt
.'&gt;hot a 277 total on day two.
:Ritchie Count) took home
:Second in the tournament
~vith a total of 512.
Erik Allbright and Opie
Lucas took home 13th and
14th place finishes with two
day totals of 175 and 176
:respectively.
Justin
•Cavender shot a two day
total of 203, \\ith a 107 and
96 in the rounds. Alex
.Potter shot a first round 91
and Tra\'is Grimm shot a
second round 99 for Point .
• Evan
Muscari
of
:wyomi ng East took home
"the Class AA individual title
with a total of 152. and
Grafton's Adam Ware took
home second place with a
total of 158.

Ill

Raiders travel to Fairland

\~ahama ? D~v 1d Grecn.e for the Rher Valley football
~as the ":hool s onl~ quail- 1 team this Friday nigl~t as it

MDSSPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Titursday,October 8, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

-

II OW TO Gf T FREE JOWTIIY THCFT PROHCTJON

l

�-----------------~-~----~----~--------·-

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!Cribune - Sentinel - ~egister
CLASSIFIED

In One Week With Us
rndtclassified~~~~!il)1rib\m~.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

PLUS ¥_OUR AD NOW ONLINE

Meigs County, OH

Websites;
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallysentlnel.com
•www.mydallyreglster.com

l\ell"lSter
To Place
\!Cributte
Sentinel
U
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... Or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or' Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
Wor.dAds

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Oeatl4iruoisp.lav

Dally In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-column: 9:00a.m.
Frlday For Sundays Paper

• All

HOW TO WRIT.E AN AD
Sucxessful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

• st•rt Your Ads With A Keyword

• Include Complete
Oescuptlon • Indude A Price • Avoid Abbtevi•tktn•
• lnc:lude Phone Humber And Address Wh1:11 Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 oa~

JUST SAY

CHARGE IT!

DE

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
_{~
Borders $3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prfor To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1100 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Papar

ads must be prepaid"

POkiCIE8: Ohio ~tiO'f Publlllhlng re•vee U. right to ldll. reject. or a.ncel 1ny ld ot an~ Ume. Error. must be reported oo tho first d:tY ot pi.CIIk:allon and
Tl1b~r11nti-Rtgllter will be raeponslbfe tor no more thin tho cost ot the apaco occuplod b~ lhO error and only thO flrii1Mer110n We a hall nOI bo
any 10• or expenw that r-Ita from the plJI)IIcatiOo or omiKIOn o11n advar111tment Correction wfll be mldo In tile first 81tlllabfe edlllcn. • Box n...
um"'b91'""'"'"'1"
are ahwyl oon!ldllltllll • Cu-r1n1 rate card appiiM. • All ,.., es!alt ldvertloemtnll ero eubJact to the Fe&lt;Mrlll Fair Houalng Ac:t ol 1~ • This
ae&lt;:eptl 0111y htlp wanled ada me«lng EOE lllndtrdll. We Will not knOWingly ·~ any adv.rtfG!ng In viOIIIIlon o! the~- Will nol be rHPOnllblo for
crr01111n an eel liken ovwthl phone.

.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Security

Other Services

Ml.I

DIREC.I'I.

Free Home Seeu·
rlty System
S850 Value
W1th purchase of
a arm monttor•ngservlces from
ADT Secunty Serv1ces.
Coll1-888·274-3888

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

Tax/ Accounting

.D~..H

~MERlCA!Y..

TAX BELiEF
Settle IRS Taxes
For a fract1on of
wt·at you owe If you
owe ove· $15.000 tn
back t xes cat now
for r
c r .J ta·
t f" 1-877·258·5142
Finandal

f;BEJ21.T .c.ABD.
RELIEF
Burled In Credtt
Card Debit?
Ca I Cred :Card Ae~·for yo~,;·

free consultat Ol'
1-877·264-8031

D.EJ1I
s.E.ITL.EMEN[_

1J.SA
We solve debt
problems!
If you have over
$12,000m debt
CALL NOW!
1·877·266·0261

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

Computers

GJIAIMf:lrE.EQ.
C.QtJ.S.UMEB
Own a computer
for as little as
S2e.99 per wee.k!
No credit check'
GuaranteQd
Consumer Fundtng
1-888-282-3595
Other Services

LIFE.I..QC.K
Are You Protecte&lt;;t?
An tdentlty tS stolen
every 3 seconds
Call Lifelock now to
protect your family
free for 30-days!
1·877-481-4882
Promocode:
FREEMONTH

200

lost &amp; Found

tot-il ~. I~ /)Sf BaNq
"flt-.IIC.~'f If I Jlhl ATe ~~TrtJ~
yc;J MAt€ fi&gt;R Y~ WAlcH~
J30\ Yov ~ 'T ~l\b\.U THifT
l A"\~ IT Ycl-

Fo~&gt;nd

Gorman
Shepherd mixed P~&gt;PPY on
Peachfork
Rd.
740-992·2326
Found dog Wed. in t'le
area.
call and
TNT
dertfy 304-675.()()61 or
304·675-0517
Found M1n- P1n on Lincoln Ave. 304·674-5458
Found a dog on Lincoln
Avo. Sunday flight call to
tderoufy
304·675-5324
leave message

0

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO
reconmends that you do
business Witl'l people you
know. and NOT to send
money through tho mat!
until you have nvestlgat·
lng tho offenng.
Show ChiiiCOthe,
Oct 17 9·5 &amp; Oct. 18
9-3 St R1 35 or 23 to St
Rt 104 Ross Co Fatr·
Adm S4
6
grounds
TBLS
$35.
740-667·0412
MASON CO. FAIR
HAS STORAGE SPACE
AVAI:.ABLE OCT· MAY
FOR MORE INFO CALL
304·675-5463
Stop worrytng. get debt
relief today from a com·
pany you can fast. Need
cash fast, call toll free
1·800·360·6291
24 hr.
toll free.

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1 035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classlc/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorlcs ..................................2025
Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ..........................................3005
Comme¥cial................................................ 3010
Condominiums .......................................... 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
Commercial ................................................351 0
Condominlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots............................................................4005
Movers........................................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ........~........................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property......................................... sooo
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financial ................................6002
Administrative1Profcssionar .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Oelivery ..................................... 6014
Education ................................................... G016
Electrical Plumbing ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Services............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Joba .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Malntenance/Oomeatlc ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs ..................................................6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time-Temporarles ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

.

2000

Automotive:

Mo lohan Carpet
Fan sate, Blue plush car·
Autos
pet ,.. stock $16.95/yd
rnstalled Vinyl start ng at =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=•
S5.951yd. 740446-7444.
19n Ford P nto Body
Excel ent. No motor or
trarsmlssron G eat p o
Wont To Buy
ect c: Cal 441..()109
$600
Buywg Paw Paws &amp;
black
walnuts, 1993 Geo Metro, 4 D
740-698·6060
Looks good &amp; n..ns grc..
so..
rrpg
$1250
Absolute Top Dollc:r • s f. 740..248·9439
ver/gold
coms,
any 2000
Pontiac
Sunf~ro
10K/14K/18K gold JeW· $1600,
2005
Caval1or
olry. dental gold, pre $4700, 2005 Chevy Co
1935
US
cur•ency. bait $5700 2004 Ct':rys·
proof/mint
sets.
dia· lor Sobreng $4000. 2007
moods, MTS Coin Shop. Coball
$7000.
Pleas1:1
151 2nd Avenue. GCIIII· call740-256·6169
polis. 446·2842
Crcvy
Impala
2008
23,000
mt
S~2 000
Stone·Brtck-CoJ'ICreteCiean D1rt-1or 1=111. 5630 740-256-660/
St fit 7 Sout.'1 Galfipolis
~eares~e~
3000
OH 740-446·3442

·

.

Sales •

Yard Sale

Gun

CLASSIFIED INDEX
logals ........................................................... 100
Announcemcnts ..........~ .............................. 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ...................................................21 0
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ....................................................... 225
Personals ...................................~................ 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Matorlals ....................................... 306
Business .............................................. 308
Calerlng ........................................................ 310
Child/Elderly Care....................................... 312
mputors ................................................... 314
ntractors ..................................................316
Domestlcs/Jonltorlal ...................................318
Elcctrical ...................................................... 320
Flnancla1 .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
lawn Sorvice ............................................... 334
Muslc/Oancc!Drama .................................... 336
Other Servtces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Servicos ........................,........ 342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travoi/Entortalnmont ..................................352
Financial ...................................................... 400
Financial Services......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to L.end .............................................415
Educatlon .....................................................!IOO
Business &amp; Trade School .......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal ..................... •: ............................... 520
Animats ........................................................600
Animal Supplies ............._..........................605
Horses ......................................................610
Uvestock ...................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment........................................ 705
Garden &amp; Produco.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Graln ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy ................................................. 725
.....................~ ....................... 900
Antiques ......................................................905
Appllance .....................................................910
Auctions ......................................................915
Bargain Boscment.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers .................................................. 930
Equlpment/Supplles....................................935
Flea Markets ................~ .......................... 940
Fuel 011 Coai/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ..................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ...................................955
Kid's Corner................................................960
Misccllancous........ u . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yord Sole ....................... ..........................975

Miscellaneous

Announcements

www.comlcs.com

Notices

Professional Services

Pets

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

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win'
1-1388·582-3345

Free r1ale Black kitten,
very tame 304-675-3598
1st trailer on Greer Rd

Vent Free 3·Piaque Gas
Heater (Manual Control )
513999
Vent Free 3-Piaquo Gas
Heater,
(wfT-Stat)
5189.99.
We also have other
Natural and LP Gas
Heaters, Kerosene and
ElectriC Heaters In stock.
5 gal. Gas Cans S9 99, 5
Gal.
Kerosene
Cans
$1099.
Hardy .Fall Bulbs
for
yoor Spring Flowers 2
pks. ss.oo
PAINT
PLUS
HARD·
WARE
304·675-4084.
Wanted
Oust
Bunny
Ridders
Cleaning Servtce. will do
general
house·cleaning
111 the Mason. New Haven &amp; Pomeroy OH.
area. for more Info. call
304·773·6152 to sched·
ulo your next cleaning ..

~00

•

Servtces

Child I Elderly Core
Will take care of the
elderly in the r home
call304-675-3264

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondtllonal !lfettme
guarantee Local refer·
ences fum1shed. Established 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740-446-0870, Rogers
Basemen! Waterproofing.
Super'or
Home
Care,
Plumbing, Carpentry, 20
yrs. exp Big or small.
Call74()..33g.3442.
Other Services
Pot
Cremations.
74()..446-3745

Call

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallta
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
80o-537·9528
4 00

Financial

Golden Ret. p~&gt;pples 7
wks old 4 (FJ. 3 (M) •st
srots
&amp;
wormed
304·67 4·6948,
-------Squirrel dog #1 . One
Jack Russell S1x montt•s
old
All
shots
740·388·8965.

2 tam ry yard sale 2126
Houses For Sale
Bu aVJio
Pk·d"shwasher
ab tounger, earth stove &amp; 2 bed 1 bath S300/mo
much more 10/8·HJI11
446-3570
H~D
Sa'e Fn-Sal Oct. 9 &amp; '
Bed 2
Ba1h
n·~
10. . 10.()()..4 00
32577 hollieS On!) 199
r It
d"'D · ~ H S .U {\
Rose H l Rd. Pomeroy 800-6.20-49-lt&gt;ex f-16!
sol rog
RE
everylhmg .;..;.;...;.;;.;....;...;..;.;..;...;.;._ _
must go attic to base- MadiSon Ave Pt P cas·
'Tient, outbu ld'ng, fumt- ant frc:me I'Ol se on 2
turo. co lectibles Chnst- Jots. oxce lent loca!ior rpr
'llas
deocorauons, 2 future rentals, $10.000.
diShes, s &amp; p shakers. 740.645·0938
w1ndup viCtrola. etc
- - - - - - - - - - 4 bed 2.5 bath S6001mo
Three famtly yard sale possible owner hnanca
OCt. 9 &amp; 10, 174 Salem .4.46_·_
33_84
_ _ _ _ __
St., Rutland, Bob Eads. For sale House &amp; 14
Chnstmas 1tems. much acres 304·895·3584.

York1es. females , chaf'l· •m•o-re_______
Land (Acreage)
plof'
bloodlines.
Call Jewelry estate sale af'd ==;;::;:;;;;;;=;~~=;;:;;
740..441·9510.
yard sale Somet'llng for ;;;;
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
everyone 1640 Graham
Contact the OhiO OiVJ.
Agriculture· School Rd. Fn thru Sun.
s10n ol Financtal lnstitu· 700 ·
tions OffiCe of Consumer
Rodney CofT'IT' Center
Affatrs BEFORE yo~o rell·
Thurs. Fr Sat. 9 to 5.
Equipment
Farm
nance your h&lt;&gt;:ne or obAni!QUOS, tools COllect!·
tain a loan BEWARE of EBY,
INTEGRITY, b cs, front doo· With Side
requests for any largo
KIEFER BUILT,
panels,
lumi!Ure,
lap
advance
payments
of
Reai 1Estate
VALLEY
HORSEILIVE· steel
gurtar.
Gibson 3500
fees or 1nsurance. Cell
10
Rentali_l
STOCK
TRAILERS,
~b
...
_n_
~~~-~...the OffiCe of Consumer
LOAO
MAX
EOUIP·
Thurs.
Fn.
Sat.
4409
Butoll
free
at
Affiars
TRAILERS, iavtllo Ptke 8 00 ti ? .
H366·278.Q003 to leafl' MENT
Apartments/
EXPRESS &amp; Tools, socke!S, chatns.
if tho mortgage broker or CARGO
Townhouses
brders
t7
n. !Ires,
HOMESTEADER
lender IS properly
musrroom Items. queen
censed. (ThiS IS a public CARGO CONCESSION
and 2 bedroo11 apts
B..W SIZO
bodd ng
l=enton, lur~·shed
SOIVlce
announcement TRAILERS
and
unrvr
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
Avon
Longaberge
Prefrom the OhiO Valley
ntshed. and houses n
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· CIOUS Moments, cook· Pomeroy ard ,Middleport,
Publtsh1ng Company)
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· booKS. comic books, Hal· security deposit required
Joweon
&amp;
Chnstmas ro pets. 74()-992-2218
TORYAT
500
Education WWW CARMICHAEL·
ttems. lots of mtsc.
TRAILERS. COM
1 br 'urn apt In Pt
Very Large Yard Sale, Pleasant.
740·446·3825
turn
.very
Oct 9th·10th. Buckeye clean &amp; nlco. off street
Bu•ineu &amp; Trode
Have you pnced a John Hills Rd. Extt Rt. 35. parktng, • no pets call
School
Deere lately? You'll be Centerville Elut, lots ot 304·675-1386.
Gallipolis Career
Fur·ut.,·e-Giasssurpr.sedl Chock oul our ~ISC
College
Clothtng-Kitchen 1&amp;2 BR Apt Across •rom
used
Inventory
al ware,
(Careers Close To Home) www.CAREO.com.
Tools·Somethmg City park. UtJI ties nc
Car- IteMs,
Call Today' 740-446-4367 miChJOI
EQUij)MOnt 'or Everyone Don't miSs On-srte laundry lac 11y
HIOCl-214-0452
No pets 446-4652 btw
thiS sale Ratn Caf\CO!s
740-446-2412
ga pollsca•een:olleg&amp; edu
1·5
Accredi ed Member AccredJI·
STIHL Sates &amp; Sorv1ce Yard Sale on Green Val- . .......- - . . . . - - - - ng Council tor lndeperoert
Now Avatlab e at Carmi· ley Or. off Kerr &amp; EverColleges and Sc:ho01111274B
Equ pml!f't green 1019 &amp; 10110
chae
74()..446-2412
More New Items
600
Animals
2br 1 112 ba S630 00 a
Yard Sale
WedJThur mon. all ut
rc
1m
900
Merchand•se
LteV1ng Rd brand nz:ne rent 304·674-6988
clothes &amp; rnore • fo low ~~....-~-------P.
Uvestock
sgns."
CONVE'NIENT~V
LOCATE'D
&amp;
AFFORD·
Red Angus Bull. Good =-=M-=isce;;;;:ll;;a;;ne;;o;;u;;s:;;;:=
Y&amp;:rd Sale. F., &amp; Sat 1st ABLE' Tow.-:
opa(l
51300
Gonetrcs
Jet Aeration Motors
House
on
GOOlQes rnents
and.o
Sf".S
44 489 44 3669
repaired, now &amp; rebuilt
1-1
or 6Creek off Rt 7
'louses lor •ef't
C~
In stock. Coli Ron
74()..441-111' for appl
Peh
Recreational
Evans 1·800·537-9528
catron &amp; tnfol'fl'ation
•
1000
Vehicles
Mastiff pups AKC, vet ~-------­
Free Rent Special lit
checked, shots up to Slrgcr sowing mach•ne ~~~~~~~~
2&amp;3BR apts $395 end
date, fawo, apncot, M!F, 1n table cahtnot
S75,
.tP, Central Air
WID
Campers/ RVs &amp;
S700; Boxer pups AKC, 740·992·5115
!lOoKup
tenan:
pays
Trailers
all shots done black
Call botwe~n
wlwhite markings, $350, 8 Foot Slato Pool Tabla ·~-=-=-=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-=­ electric
,
wtth drop pockets All ac- For sale 2005 Pt.::"la the IJours ol SA b
740·696·1 085
EHO
cossorles rc. $600. Call Camper 25 1-Siide Out
Ellm View Apts.
$9500/make
offer
Angora female cat, very 740·~41·0109
(304)882-3017
lovable, playful, spade, "'
o.,e--.""
c·
as·t-C~a·rs·.-M
or-e 740..256-9042.
declawed,
had
shots. lllan 220. stzes lroiT' M. _R_V_ _ _ _ _ _ __ Tw1n Rivers Tow r 1s
740..367·7328.
croMach nes
to
1 18
cept ng ap~ ;;.It ons tpr
Servtce at CarMtehael
wa t ng st '
HUO sub·
many VW Models Some
Trc lers
StdiZOO 1 BR
;&gt;ar1m$t
eke
minture
plnsct'er from 60's
70s, 80s
74()..441).3825
fo· the old "Y !Stsab oo,
3mos old pupptes &amp; Most
m nt and/or pack·
adults. shots wormed tall ages
Pd more than "'R""v-S~eN-ICO--at_Ca...,..~-,. ca 615-6679
docked
$150 $1000
SSOO chael
Tra ers
740-388-8788
740..248·9439
74()..446-3825
Money To lend

~

�---~------ -~·--~---

-- - ---·~----------~----------------~--------~------------------

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmenb/
Townhouses

Apartmenb/
Townhouses

3 room and bath down· EFACIENCY APT. FOR
ostans f1rst months rent &amp; RENT
deposn. references re· No stairs-No Pets, 1624
qurred, No Pets and Chatham
Ave
(Rear)
clean. 740-441.()245
(740)446-4234
or
(740)208·7861.
MOVE IN READY Com·
pletety fumlslled 2BR, all ·Fo
_r_ R
"'"cr
- t, - 2.....,B""'R. ....
D-up_le_x
appl~ances,
TV, stereo 1n
town,
S4751mo.
•
r
t
sys, I1nens o compe o Dcl)tref. No pets. QUiet
kitchen ware $7001!'00 + place. 446·1271
elec SSOO/dep. 446·9585
Gracious Living 1 and 2
New Haven, 1 bodroom Bedroom Apts. at v 111age
apartMent has washer &amp; Mano1
end
Riverside
dryer, depoSit &amp; refer· Apts In Middleport, from
no
pets, $327
to
$592.
ences,
740·992·0165
740·992·5064.
Equal
1 &amp; 2 Br. furnished apt., Housing Opportunity.
start S450 &amp; up plus
dep., No pets, Racine,Oh
740-591·5174
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 bed·
room unfurnished &amp; fur·
nlslled apartment, dopos t &amp; rcterencas. no
pets, 740..992.0165
Apartment ava1fable now
RIVerbend
Apts.
New
Haven WV. Now aocept·
ing
applications
for
HUD-subsid,zed,
one
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
included. Based on 30%
or adjusted lnoome. Call
avaJtable
304·882·3121,
tor SeniOr and Disabled
people.
Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son E1 t at es. 52 West•
wood Dr., I rom $365 Io
$560.
740-446-2568.
1 H
·
opportu·
E
qua
ouslng
nity. This inst1tutron is an
Equal Opponumty Pro·
vider and Employer
DOWNTOWN
4TH ST.
PT. PLEASANT
1 br. apt.wt kltch 91'1, no
sfTIOking.
no
dogs
304·675-3788 dep. req.
Modem
4
7

40-4

1BR

apt Call

6-039°

In Memory

In lm•ing
memory of

SamuelA.
Gibbs Ill,
who passed
away on
Oct. 2nd, 2008.
You are sadly
missed but not
forgotten.
Lo••e your wife
Gloria Gibbs

Houses For Rent

Sales

Very Nice 3BR &amp; 2 Battl,
LR, &amp; Dining Room,
Famtly Room. No pets. 2
m1 rrorri Holzer Dcp +
Ref.
$650.00
mo
446·3292.
-------WISeman Real Estato-4
rentals
ava1 able-call
446-3644 for MOre Info.
All
in-town-vanous

Country livL1g· 3·5BR
2 3 BA on property
Many floor plans Easy
Fmanc1ng' We owr the
bank
Call
todayl
866·215·5n 4

priCes·references &amp;
depos1ts required

Education

CO!T'putor 10needed
to·
Th;.~:-sday rro'T\ ngs r om
October 8-0ecember 17
Emal •e::.J:ne and cover
letler to
ClamcklCgarh·-~~-...~--- poise: cercolegeedu
7
or fill&lt; to 74().44£ 4124
area ===~~==~
mu 51
move,
740.698 •1815,
n • .,
74u-o 1u- 1103

S54 00,

===~===~ -~-~-=----

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

1981 14x70 Mob le homo
With AC 2 bedroom, gas
heat,
good
conditiOn,
would maKo good rental
un1!, Must Move l•om
Site,
:$4,000,
740·949·2660
2001 r=ortuno, 2 br, 2
bath, lg llltchen, 16x72,
lor
rrore
rio
call
()..
74 9854252

Remodeled olde· 'Tlobde
home 'or small family on

1.4 acres on l&lt;:nd con·
tract $35,000, S13.000
down paym:1t S:150 pc1
month no 7ltorest on
Valley
Grcoo 2 BR All electric Mob le SR 143, Pomeroy Oh
Spring
Apartments 1 BR tor Home 0.1 niCe lot $375 740.992 5313
rent.
$395
Month. mo +sec. dep 441·5150 ---0--H-IO_'_S_ __
740-446-1599.
or 379-~23.
...;...;.;.;....;.;.;;.;;~-BEST BUVs
Tara
Townhouse 2 BR Mobile Home, No
2010 3BR DoubleWide
Apartments • 2BR 1.5 pets. Water, sewer, trash
Sl ,
9 977
bath, back patiO, pool, included. At Johnson's
HUGE
br! ba
2010 4 2
playground, {trash, sew· Mobile
Home
Park
FHA
mo
5349
ago, water pd.)No pets 740-645-0506.
allowed.
$450/rent, -~-----2010 3brJ2ba Single
2 BR, 1 Bath, Mobile
from $199 mo
S450/sec
dep.
Call
Home tor rent. All Elect.
MIDWESTHOMES
74 645 599
0.
-8
(AEP), No pets. $450 per
mymtdwosthomes.com
Houses For Rent
month, (Water &amp; Gar·
bage Inc. 740•446. 4234 ---74
..0_._82_8_._2_75_0_ _
St&lt;Wontol 4 bed, l bath. or 740·208·7861.
llunk Rcpo' (S&lt;Jf clo\\n, 1~ - - - - - - - The BIG Sale
,e3 .,., ~% AI'Rl lor li'lings 2
BR.
Rio
Grande
used Homes &amp; Cwner
800-620-4946 ex R027
$325/mth.
$325
Dep.
F1nancing • New 2010
- - - - - - - - Water/lr(\Sh
pa1d.
Doublewldc $37,989
2 BR H
$395
245·56711645·5429.
Ask about $8,000 Re·
OIJSe,
per ........-...-;.;.;....;....;..;.;...__
mo. S400 dep. no pets, + 2BA, Ideal lor 1 or 2 peo·
bates
Utilities.
Call pie 5300.
...
Re
myrnldwesthome.com
'
mon"'·
•
74 0 828 27
.,17_40.;,;1-.25;.;6_-6..,.6.;.61_
. _ _ _ femces. No Pets, NO
•
• 50
3 BR, 1 5 Bath, 1 car ga· CALLS
alter
7pm - -1'he
---Proctorvnre
Herencc·
rage,
WID
Hookup. 740.441·::&gt;181
0
Fenced back yard, newly -Fu
-m
- ,-shed
--a-U-el_cc_tnc
-1 and 8 deed 1S a you
2
5700
remodeled.
mo. bedroom tailer, Portland, need to own your dream
Dep. + Ref. 44 6-2966 or Oh area, No pets, No
hone Ct I Now'
446-0073.
Hud. call740-843-5515
Freedom Homes

s

The Racme United Meth· DOUBLE

WIDE

HOME

S60Qimonth,
1622
Chatham Ave. Available
Nov. 1. (740)446-4234 or
(740)208-7861.
Trailer ' tor rent in Porter
area. 14x70·3 BA, 1 1/2
Bath, new heat pump,
new flooring, newly remodeled, front porch with
roof. nice area, $450 per
month + S450 deposit.
For
more
orlo
call
(740)446-4514. No pets

your home. Foster parents can be
single or married. Requirements
over 21- pass a criminal checkcomplete training that begins at
Albany, Oct. 24.
Call Oasis for more information
toll free 1-877-325-1558.
Help Wanted

Care GIVe !S needed
This .s a f'iJL TIME po·
s 11011, Mean ng you w111
be 1V'rg here as 11 t
\\ere your hOf'le .,.'lis IS
1\0T
a
daytime
or
night me ony position
seep ~re at n1ghl and
do 'lormal hooserold du
t gs t'lru the day. Person
Help Wanted -General
needng assistance
s
SS Need to fill 50 FT po- mob1le and can funct1on
sltlons SS
on ~r owr FREE RENT
$8.80/hr
In th1s tro:.~b:ed eco:1omy,
Ills roassvnng to !(now
that lnfoCis.cn can offer
YOU a si ':lie c.::;.eer
AND steaay paychecK al·
1ow1ng you to provide for
your family!
After Nine years In the
area, we have proven
that wo are committed
to Gallipolis, and are
currently seeking dependable employees to
help fulfill client needs.
You will take Incoming
and make Outgoing
calls for well known organizations.
Stop By and Complete
Your Application:
lnfoCISIOn Management
Corpomllon
242 Th1rd Avenue
Gal pollS, Oho
Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview:
1-888·1MC·PAYU ext.
1911
tlttpJ/jobs.lnfocision.o
om

-------S15/hr
Quality Control
evaluate
rotall
stores.
traimng provided please
call877·712·0008.
Qual1ty Control, earn up
to $15 ar hour, evaluate
retail stores, tra,mng provldod,
call
1·800·901·2694
-------RN Case
Manager
needed at 392 S1lver
Bndge
Plaza.
740-446-3S08

2006-16x80 Giles Mob1le
Home. Vmy!·slding, sh1n·
gled roo!, 3 BR, 2 BA, A.l
electriC appliances Big
walk·IO Closet. Call for
deta1 s
more
74()..379-9166.

&amp; FRee UTILITIES Plus
sMall
sauy.
740-367-7129
QIJALIT) CONTROl ca111
up to SI~ 00 •n hr evalu~te
retail

"torcs. trauung
\ldeu S77 7t&gt;r&gt;·9&lt;,l.t/

pro ..

Service Advisor
Apply In Person to
J.D Story SOrYICO
Manager
Smith
Chevrolet-Buick
1900 Eastern Avo
Gallipolis, Ohio
Vlanted car washers ap·
py at R6ckm Robs ~ 1'1
'/land Stree1 Pt Poeasant

.

-YOUNG'S
Carpe~ter.Servicc

·Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garagos
• Electrical &amp; Plumb1ng
· Roofing &amp; Guttera
• Vinyl Sid1ng &amp; Painting
·Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
'30 Yeors Local Expcrl~ce
F LLY INSURED

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTIWCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

VN
Medical
~led cal

C.oordlnatortHome
pe~sor

Responsible tor coord
nation of I'T'ediCC.. appointments for 35 Adu!ts
Wilt MRIDD n a Reso-

All T~pcs Of
Concr&lt;.'tc \\ork
29 Yt'ar' E"'pcricm·c

David Len is
740-992-6971
lmured

Free csUmltC~

r~ '

.Ill

li
l~[ ~ i

:ill

I~

}U

Rootmg. Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Service I Bu~.

9000

Dlrect~ry

:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~

Concrete

Ali

types Masonry, b• ck.
block
stone, concrete,
Free
Es!lmate,
304 59
21
' 3-64
304 773 9550
'
'

• Employment

7 40-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00am-8 :00pm

7 40-367-0536

MICHAEL'S
S ERVIC E CE:\'TER

1555 NYE.\H·.

l'omcro\', Oil
• Oil &amp; filter char.!!e
• Tune Up~ -

• Brake Sen ice
• AC Recharge

• Minor e.xhaus!
repair • Tire kcpair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; Ruid Change
• General Mechanic
\\Ork
(7-tO) 992·0910

• Garages
• Complete
Remodehng

Hai'dua~d ~ametf'y And FurnittJ?e
www.timbercree'kcabmetry.com

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

~0~
ATIOI,UC
Racine, Ohio

nf )'Our 0\\ n an

•Eil~trical

~.:onlpen'i..,~

• l'lumhing

li&lt;&gt;n plnn wh l'h ,,,n y1cld
g~l fmancml rev.
11 en
please .o01acc Kcll&gt; M &lt;I
al JO.I 8 tl 000

Pomeroy Eagles
Welcomes

"Thunder"

=======;;:
P&amp;~·tcme
nr.tructors

Saturday, October 10
8:30- 12:30
All members - Guests
&amp; Alumni Welcome

'leaded durng t'le day
m:
mathematiCS,
economiCS, and acro~.ntmg
MathematiCS and economic lnstrJCtors must
have a mastefs degree
tn the diSCipline If inter·
ested please cma a resume and cover 1c• ~ :o
1damcld@gal pollsca
roercol ege cdu

• l'olc

Barn~

Owners:
Jon Van Meter

Cell: 740-416-5047

&amp;

Paul Rowe

l&gt;cd• CIC
I or lmr Couruour

uUIU'IS

s~n1u, l'rr~ Es/lmarct &amp;

A,[Jordablr Prius, Call...

Dennis

Ho~d

740.992·2029

Bu) ing scrap iron·
tin-metals
M-Sat. 8am-4pm

SR 124 l'omcro), OH

Dump Truck
Service
We ll;.ul Gravel.
Limestone. Coal,
Compost. '1\)p Soil

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-3726
(Cctn

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutlers
Roofing, S1ding, Gu:ters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

Classifleds

Commercial •

Residential

Now Selling·

Building. Remodeling
General reprur

• Ford &amp; Motorcraft

\\"" .ba nk.'ICcl h .com

Part~

• Engine~.
fransfer ~es &amp;
Transmi"ion'
• Aftennarl;et
Repla~ment Sheet

with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule

'N~fV

Metal &amp; Componenb
lw All

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

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

tl
tl
tl
tl
RN

1fty

SB.L IT
NOW

U·SBl IT

SUPm
SAVBl

SMART BUY DEALS ON YARD SALE
rer pr~va~e party WtlfH.Z rur PI'IWta ,.-ty

fGl' private
for prtvm IIII'IY
party
For private party mtrciiWis&amp;. 1 Carl, Trucb, SlnUlllllld multiRur.s 30 da\~ ..-c~~~n~~~e, 1 marcllanllilc, 1 mot'tllan!ll;e, 1 llelll ,., eel RVs, 4-Wtltltlrs, talllii.Y aatas
Plu- Ph(&gt;t''""~ Item per 111 less 118111 JM11' ad leaa
Item Pll'
$1001 $5000 Etc. 11tonuer ad 41lnes, 3 d3Yt
st 11()
lltlnStOO
than S10081i00 $501·$1.000
4illlcs 1411af8 4111la1,4llllays
tfy$
Sllne$,8 d3YI 41lnea,7 dan 4 ~nes, 10 d3YI

Ol

·

~lake' of \elude'

Ra.:ine. Ohio

A Do-it-yourself classified ads

email

For confidcntial interview, please send
resume and co\'Cr letter to
4}alhpolui Dmlp t!:rtbunc,
Attn: Pam Caldwell
P.O. 8ox469
Gallipolis, OU 45631

co.
Pom('roy. Ohio

Custom Home BUIIdJng
Steel! rame BcJdmgs

is a must
Send a cover letter and resume to:

The Gallipolis l&gt;aily Tribune is
accepting resume.'&gt; for an outside sales
reprcsentath·e to join our sales team
and manage an established account list
'"hile calling on new accounts.
This Is a full time position offering
salaQ plus commission, full benefits,
mileage, and potential career gron1h.
The successful candidate will he a
disciplined, sclf-moth·ated team player
that understands the importance of
developing strong, mutually beneticial
business
relationships
with
our
accounts, and have sales experience.

BA~KS
CO~STRt:CTIO:"'

• Free E~1imntes
(7-lfl) 992-5009

write great headlines. Experience with
layout.. knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop is a must. Full time position

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

Roofin • ~ldmg r m n

front pages, paginate inside pages, and

Help Wanted

740-247~2019

• ()ccks • Additions

editing ThiS person will need to design

Help Wanted

742·2332

S&amp;L
Trucking

We are looking for someone skilled and
experienced m both page design and copy

or

• Vinyl Sfdlng
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II

·New Homes

nnd Shingle Rours

Copy Editor/Page Designer

pcaldwell@heartlandpubllcatlons.com

J&amp;L
Construction

CONSTRUCTION

• Siding • \'in) I
\\ indons • Metal

&lt;JI.eartland Publications

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell

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

ROBERT
BISSEll

Cnll Walt or Sandy

825 Third Avenue

740·949-2217

dential
Sc\llng
lntor· • . - - - - - - - ested applicants may ap·
rAY
onl1ne
ot
ResCare.com, click on
careers. Soulhom Ohio
Management

Help Wanted

~.llltpohlll3.lth• 'Q:n bunt

29625 Bashan Road
Rac1ne, OH 45771

Local Contractor

Replacement
Windo"s and
\ inyl Siding
Specialists, I:m
(740) 742-2563

==~~~===

Sales

For rent 1 BR Fum1shed .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
House Call tor more de- l4x7~
\\mdsor
mobtic
tails. 446·1759.
home v.l lois of exu-a.'
52500.00 '$1) be s«n t
S60 Cbarlescoo Rd PI Plea
b) 4 pp. &gt;Q.Wis2-3S02
Help Wanted

Become a Foster Parent- $30-$48
a day for caring for a child 0-18 in

Part·ll1'1e
strLctor

888·565·0167

odis1 Church Is currently FOR RENT; 3 BR. 2
taking appbcatJons tor Bath; Large deck. Xt"a 6 000
the rental of the parson- Nice.
No
Pets

(740)446-4116

Help Wanted

sec.

.,.....;;;;L;;;;a;;;;
·nd;;;;;i;;(A;;;;cr;;;;e;;;;a;;iig;;;;ie)i;;;;;;;;;;;
~
F armhouse,
Garage,
Bam, 165 Acres, Lease
lor deer hunters, Joins
Wayne Nat'l Forest. Near
Island View Motel has Waterloo. 740·643_ 2644
$35.00/Night. ~
vacancies
Le-ase-10
_2_A_c-te
_s_o
_n
740·446·0406
White Oak Rd. Great tor
Nice 1 BR apt. by Wal· tarm1ng
&amp;
11vestock.
mart $550/mo. Uti~ 1nc1. (407)247·8329.
Ref o:eq. 740·245·5555
Manufactured
or 44t·5105.
4000
Housing
N~ee
1 BR wash·dry.
Stove &amp; Fridge. All Utili· ~
tios. Call 740-446·9585.
Rentals
S600/mo.·S500 dep.

age, call 740..949-1329
or 740..949·2457 tor appliCation
3BR 1 bath home n Le·
Granae Blvd $650 rent
$650 dep. renter pays
utihties. NO PETS. Call
446·3644 for applicaton.
For Rent Nice 3 BA
Btlck-1
Ba. Basement,
Carpon. No Pets, No
Smoking, Security Dep.
&amp;
Aent
S625.00.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

O
1 52.99

5

14.99 S2Q.99

5

29,99 S45.99 ' 534.99

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

7-l0-9-l9-1956

Free

• Bactdloe.
• Brush Hogging

• Portaflle Bandmlll
Tree Jl'lmmlng • Setting
Poles &amp; rrusses

Call740-992·9572

(3aa Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinyl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd .• Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740- 416-1834
Fully insured &amp; honding :t,·nilnhlc
Free estima tes · 25+ ye:1rs Upt'riCnCl'
1:\0I IIffilial&lt;-d "ilh

I

\lik~ \lan"Um Nroofin~,..;: R~moddin~:l l

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
•Insured
*E\pcrienced
Rd'cr.:m.:c' Available!
C.all Gary Stanlc) @
740-591-RO.W

Plca\C len' c me~sage

SUNSI:.I
(ONSTRUffiON
Remodeling ,
Roofs , Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Drywall, Additi
and New
Insured- Free
Estimates

740-742-3411

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Add11ton\, Remodeling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roof~. ~e" Home~. Siding. Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licen~cd &amp; Insured
Rick Price - 17 ) rs. E~perienee
WV1040954 Cell740-416-2960 740..992..()730

�-------------------- ·------ www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BLONDIE
By T HOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Body1 Racket
butlder's
5 Olympics
pride
symbol
5 Currency
10 Corker
replaced
11 Wading
by
birds
the
12 Wading
euro
6 Chuckle
bird
13 Frequents 7 Wnter
Beattie
14 Coordina8 Got
20 Summer 33 Vacation
ted
together
spot for
spot
16 Closing,
9 Twisty
some
34 Resume
in a way
turn
21 Vicinity
head1ng
20 Crime
11 Vouchers 22 Cream
35 "Where
outings
15 Fabled
buy
America's
23 Tic-tacrace
25 Brittle
Day
toe win
loser
metal
Begins"
2 4 Happen
26 Braimac 36 He r. at
25 Prisoner's 17 Skye of
"Say
28 "The
times
place
Anything"
same''
37 Clumsy
27 Fellows
18 Approvals 30 Face
fellow
28 Take in
19 Blame
parts
38 Drops on
29 FIXIng·
recip1ent 31 Rash
the lawn
jeans,
perhaps
N EW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (checkfm.o.) to
Toomas Joscpn Book 2 P.O Box 5364 75 Orlando. f"L 32853-64 75
32 Nest
activity
36 Cruel
fellow
39Jacob's
twin
40 Willing to
consider
41 -mater
42 Full of
info
43 Consider

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

DOWN
1 Narrow
2 San Juan
Hill
setiing
3 Stepped
down

William Hoest ·

THELOCKHORNS
Brian and Greg Walker

HI &amp; LOIS

I'l-L. t;;WAP iOIJ

LE'T'G PO OL&gt;R
f'\OMISWORK

MY Gf'Rt:Ac:&gt;GP.ee,-t;;

PAl?.

CAR~.

fOR'{oi)R FLA-5!-'.

1'oc.en1eR,

I

1(, ~

!

1\ossl ~

1

'"'i?£1..JE'i::..

" I 00 EXERCI&lt;SE, l.ORETTA . . . I W Al.K TO THE
BATHROOM ANO BACK FIVE TIME-5 A NIGHT."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

·

5

8 -6

2

I

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~

2

3

8

J 7_

5

6

l",.,

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6·- . 9

.8

~

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:2"

7

6

.
Difhcult) Le\el
"

1

2

1

4

" Know what ? In four thousand, two
hundred and six day s I c a n g et
my driver's license ."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

3
1 8

1i

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II

;:

5

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h

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2

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7

4 1~
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J0,'08

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£ B ~
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY forThur:.-da}~ Oct 8, 2009
This year, you make a differem~ where\ er ) ou go.
You have an upbeat mind .md are full oi m.tny innov,,tive ideas. t:se these g1ft~ \\ell, .md you will •suUEed
wherever you focus. Your hghtness ,md fun idee\~
draw many different people from many different
lifestyles. Travel and education will only increase your
ability to grasp ISsues that many cannot. If you are sin·
gle, you \\ill have many admirers to choose frow. The
real issue remainc; if you are ready to settle m. 1f you
are attdchro, remember your sweetie ,md give more of
your time and attention to his or her needs .md interest'&gt;. GEMIN'T always likes to draw you into .m unron\'entional conversation.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day YOu'll Hem:: 5Dynamic; 4-Positire; J-Avem,~e; 2-Scrso; 1-DiffiCIIlt
ARIES (?v1arch 2l·Aprill9)
***"*Serious dream time points to new pos:sibJJities. Do you know how to proceed with a ~eemingly
wild idea? Solutions appear as long &lt;IS you Me willing
lo allow o!hers to share more of their perspective ,md
thoughts. Tonight Where the crowds .He.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20-)
*"**Indulge others ,md li~ten to their suggestions
You bring many as~ts to the table, but :;;o do others,
and they can be WI)' different. Combining the best of
what everyone offers can mix into ,, gre&lt;~t ide&lt;~, pruject
or situation. Tonight Could be late.
GEMINI (Mav 2l·June 20)
**
You beam, and others respond. Don't dismunt someone who is at a pistanre. This person can
make a coru,iderable difference in{our life. Ihink pos·
Hively without restricting yourse.l , for now You can
wonder how practical an idea IS later. Tonight: Break
pa~t patterns.
CANCER Qune 21-Julv 22)
*** Take your time \,'ith a friend or lo\'ed one
who often preys on your weaknesses. Ask yourse1f
why you allow this. A partner has more than enough
feedb&lt;1ck. i':ot only does this per~n mean well. but he
also has wisdom to share. Tonight: Listen to the

** *

echoes! •
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
Zero in on what is import,mt wtth an eye
lo change and growth. How vou deal with somt'l.me
and the choices vou make wi'll reflect on the n.1ture ol
this bond. Don't take someone for granlt'd, or yuu

*****

could be \el)' sorry. Tonight: Where the g.Jng l~.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
**"**Take a stand and comprehend \\hat is
going on cummd you. Your under-,tanding &amp;JUW'&gt; if
\OU ,,re willing to assume respon.;ibilitv.ln tact, )OU
\\ill learn so much more if } ou simply walk in .mother ·
peoon's shre;. Tonight: A mu~t appearance.
:
LIBRA (~L 2:UXt.. 22)
***"** Keep re.!Chmg out for ne'' tdeas. A senous t.uk or tdea rolor:; your monung. Later on. }Ou'll
relax and see life hom a rene\H'd peiSpecti\'e. Your
spmt turns toward ad\'t'Ilture and m&amp;hief Tonight
Let your rrund relax and vour imagination take O\t!f,
SCOIU'IO (Oct. 23-r-\ov. 21)
***** Working directlv with a key person m
•
)OUr life could tum the tid~. A~riouc; talk or rom•er- ~
sation rould color your thinking. You ,,re roming from :
a :;ecure pos1tion, but allow your mind to work mer
time. An~wers will come forward. fonight Dinner for
two.
SAGITIARIUS (1\'o\: 22-Dec. 21)
* **"** K~p commumc&lt;~tion h.1ppening .md
OJ'll'n. You m1ght not like everything you hec~r. but in
the long run. \OU will see yet .mother perspectJn?.
Sl.\y opt&gt;.n w1th others, ewn if you feeT unmmfort&lt;1ble.
lonight Decide what is gomg on below the sur!ace.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-J.m. 19)
**"**Your evenne.o;s dr.1ws unusual responses.
Are you ready to deal with someone who causec; you
a lot of aggravation? Even a talk trymg to tdentify
Mth this person doesn't prO\ e to be easy. Let go of
wh.1t you cannot change. Tonight: Squee-Le in some
exercise.
:AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
*****You have the imagination to find the nght
an5\\ er, e'en when a partner l:iilo; a dead end Your
aeath ity seems to bubble forth t:se that extra energy
to make what you ''ant happen. Torught Let go and
relax.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mai'C'h 20)
*** If you can work from home, plea-;e do. You
rould be .unazed by what you can acromplish if }OU
just slow the busy pace and .:.-urround yourself with
'iOme quiet lhinkiDg time. Your instincts sen·e) ou
well. Tonight. Order in.
Jacque/me Br~ is vn tlze brttrnet
at http!/,'rcwm;ac•JIIelllrt'!•rg&lt;:uom.

------------------'~

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