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-

-~

S\l.JiSHER
,&amp;. LOHSE

a: 30,000 ore
·oops to Mghrutistan
by summer, A2

'

www

112 East Main St. Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2955

• • •••••
•. CHRISTMAS .

1/23~·
l'rintcdon IOOS(l
R&lt;'l.'~cled ~e~sprinl

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

D"

~

Robberies
Firm doubles .service as part of 'county broadband plan'
1
continue in
or the Tuppcr5 Plains- rentlv unsened homes in
completed Us latest access htgh-speed interne!
Chester \\ ater to\\ er on Meigs Count). This plan
Hannum also Cited
r.omt on the Mult1·Agency
port from Connect Ohio and Mile Hill Road stand a good has been submitted to be
R&lt;1dic.'&gt;
Gallia, Mason RACINE A locally· S)stem
to\\er on McKentie 1ts state and local staff. opportunit) of being served considered for funding as
acces~ .

SENTINEL STAFF

~up­

MDSNEWSO MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Commumcc~tiono;

owned broadband internet Ridge Road , Managmg Connect Ohio J&lt;; Gov. bv New Era Broadband.
·The Village of Racine and
accco;s compan) has dou- Partner Da\ td HaQnum of Strickland's public-pm &lt;1tc
bled its :-.en'ice to Meigs Long Bottom said.
organization to further TP-C Water have al o
GALLIPOLIS - Shortly County's rural communities
Several c~gencies. mclud- broadband in Ohio's rural allowed access to their
after reporting the aiTcst of \\ ith the placement of ing the Emcrgcnc) Medical areas.
water towers. providing sera suspect in Frida)·~ armed ' another access point on Services and Lmcrgcncy
Resident~ living within
VIce 111 Racine, Letart Falls
robbery of Long John McKenzie Ridge Road.
approximate Iy five miles of and Don:us communitie~.
~lanagemcnt Agency, counSilver~.
the Gallipolis
New Era Broadhand. ty comm issioncrs. the state. the MARCS tower on Hannum said.
Police Department respond- which is no\v seeking f~der­ and Home National bank, ~cKenzie Ridge. and withNew Era Broadband has
ed to a knilcpoint robbery at al stimulus funds to serve Racine. teamed together. in three miles of the Vtllagc created a $2.9 million plan
Mattress Warehouse. also more rural communities in allowmg the company to of Racine water to\\er on to prov1de broadband interlocated in the Silver Bridge the county. New Era has "erve 200 more homes wtth Greenwood Cemetery Road net accesc; to over 3.300 curPlaza.
This makes the eighth
cd robbery m Gallia
nty since Nov. 14.
.
. , .. ... .• ;....' .
..
•
PD
Chief · Clint
Patterson said his agency
made an arrest Tuesda)
evening in the Friday robbery, during \\ hich a female
su. . pect thought to be in her
earl) 20s reportedly entered
the restaurant, told an
emplo) ce she had a gun,
and demanded the contents
o f the ca~h register before
fleeing with an undisclosed
amount of money.
Although a female suspect ha~ been arrested in
connection with that robbery, her name \\as not
released prior to pre. . s time
due to the GPD\ respon~e
and subsequent investigation mto the Mattress
Warehouse holdup that
occurred around 7:40 p.m.
Tuesday evening.
Reports to Gallia Count)
911 indicated that a male
wieldmg a knite. wearing a
robbed the ~tore and
through a back door.
tiona) details \\ere
not a\ ailable before press
time .
A robbery also occurred
at the Chevron station along
Submitted photo
We:-t Virgmia 2 around 9
Pictured
are
the
Home
National
Bank
Board
of
Directors
on
the
site
of
the
new
bank
1n
Racine.
The
new
bank w111 cost
p.m. Tuesday mght. Two
gunmen were reportedly $2 million and should be completed thts summer. Standing in front of the bank's new vault are, from left, Ray Karr, Tom
involved ..This i!&gt; the second Wolfe, Dave Fox. Jennifer Sheets, Bill Nease, Marvin Htll and Tim Baum.
armed robbery to occur in
Mason County in the last
two weeks.

part of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment
Act Broadband Stimulus
Pro!!ram, and has been
adopted by Yleigs County
and Connect Ohio as the
official Broadband Plan for
the county.
If approved. grant and
loan funding would allow
the company to operate 26
access points in two years.

BY EUZABETH RIGEL

ERIGELOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

.

Show, bank must go on

BY BETH SERGENT

INSIDE

BSERGE~TO MYDAILYSENTINE'L. COM

• Woman experiences
work-related anxiety.
See Page A3
• Coin flip decides
mayors race in Ohio.
See Page AS

WEATHER

RACINE- "The sho" must go on''
is an applicable saying in both shm"&gt;
busine&amp;,s and banking and for Home
National Bank, there "as no wa) the
show wasn't going to go on in regards
to the bank's ne\\ home current!)
under cono;truction, despite American
Munictpal Power's announcement last
week that it was pulling the plug on
it's coal-fired power plant.
Bill Nease. president of .HNB, wanted to stress the construction of the
hank and the construction of the
power plant were not intertwined.
Nease said constructing a new home
for HNB hus been in development f'or
around three years now.
"We're not going to stop im esting
in Racine and in Meigs County,"
Nease said of the new bank's construction.
Of the proposed power plant \\hich
\\OUid've sat just a few miles from his
home branch. Nease ~aid. "We're dtsappointed, we thought they'd cro sed all

Sheriff
reports
newest
mail scam

-

the hurdles but our positton as a bank 1 .
\\e're going to continue to be here.''
Nea e said the bank plans to continue to do its own part in the economic
de\ elopment of the region b) con&lt;;tructing it $2 million new home in
Racine's new commercial development district alongside the Dollar
General store.
"Hopefully other busines~es ,.. ill
join us now that the road extension io;
done and the vtllage has done a great
job making impro.. ements to the site."
Nease added.
Nease and the HNB Board of
Directors recent I) \ isited the ~1te after
the hank's vault had been placed. 'I11c
bank will actually be built around the
vttult. Nease said in about I0 days. the
steel c;hould amve tn frame the building
and depending on the weather. the
bc&lt;1ms should ~tart to be erected. The
bank i&lt;&gt; tentati\el) scheduled to open in
the summer, possibly in July or August.
"This is absolutely not a risk--y im estment." Nease stressed. sa) ing the bank
has sa.. ed capital O\ cr the )Cars for this
move. "We need to have modem facil-

itie"· that's wh) \\e'rc doing thb.
We're going ahead "ith our original
plans and it doesn't have a thing to do
with a power plant coming or going."
Once completed the ne\\ Home
National Bank will be 8.500-scjuare
feet (the current bank ts around 6,000squarc feet) and there will be 652
square feet available for lease. The
ne"W bank. \\ hich \\ill be out of the
flood pl. in. will have three dri\e three
l,mes mcludin~ an ATM machine. The
buildmg 1-. bemg designed by architects Panich and Noel of Athens which
designed the bank's Syracuse Branch.
The new bank's concrete slab has
b~cn poured and ho\\ much construelion can be done in the coming month..,
depends on the weather, but regardle5i~, the ~tcel cnn ~till be put up and in
place Ho\\C\Cr, c;ome stone on the
front of the building requires warmer
"eat her for placement.
As for what will become of the current HNB downto\\n, !\lease said he
"asn 't ~ure but the hope is it can be
sold or lear.ed. The cun·ent bank also
has apartments on the second floor.

BY BRIAN

Please see Scam, AS

Commissioners
seek $300K for
HVAC upgrades
BY BRIAN

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

lm'cs

ito rials

Sports

Bs
A4

B Section

2009 Ohio\ alley Publishing a;,,

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY ~leig!&gt;
County
Commissioners
have agreed to seck
$300,000 in state grant
fund~ to impro\ e energy
efficiency and reduce heating and coolin~ costs at the
courthouse annex and multipurpose center, both on
Mulberry Heights.
The t\\ o county-owned

Health department begins H1 N1 school clinics

~~~1~~~g~~er;t~~~~e~~-~o;i~

and Pre\Cntion recommends the two doses of
H 1N 1
b
d
vaccme c separate
children younger than 10
should receive two do e of by 28 da)s to be efl~ctivc.
of children
HI N I flu vaccine in order CaregJver
to achteve optimal protec ) ounger thru1 I0 arc encourtion against pnndemic llu. aged to keep . the . dat~s
In a statement. ODH between dos~s m 1~11nd 111
stressed Ohioans I0 and Qrdcr tl_&gt; pr?v1de then: loved
older need only one dose to one" \\Ith lull protcctwn.
I ast week. ODH ordered
be protected but research
an
additional 259,8,00 dose~;
has shown that t\\ o doses of
of
HI N I flu \ accme_ from
'accme are required to provide irnmunit) for children the CDC. \\ tlcox said the
six months to nine yc,m•. MCHD received 400 of
Children are particular!) at these doses on Monda).
fiSk for HI N1 because of · Wilcox added the health
ltmited prev1ous exposure department still .:;en ices
\\alk-m traffic m regards to
to the virus. Ho" e\ er. the
Centers for Dtsease Control
Please see Clinics, AS

Claws Heating Services,
Inc .. Athens. offered at no
cost.
Heating
system
upgrades have been recommended for the courthouse
annex. bu1lt in the late
1 1950's as the county in firmary. and at the health
. department headquarters in
, the multipurpose building.
built in the early 1980's.
i The studv also recommended replacing air conditioners. cleaning and in ulating
piping and installation of a
chilleJ unit on the health
department roof.
Combined co~t sa\ ings as
the result of the work has
been placed at $7.000 per

Chl'ldren under 10 recommended 'two doses

2 SI-:C'I10NS- 12 PAGES

REED

PO~l EROY ~ Another
mail scam has been reported
to the Meigs County
Sheriff's
Department.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
Tuesday.
A local resident reported
receipt of a Jetter. wtth no
address and a Canadian
postage
stamp.
from
American
Family
Sweepstakes Commissions,
Ne\\ York. N.Y. The letter
informed the resident he
was the "lucky winner" of
unclaimed prize money of
$146,000.
A check from a Texas
business. for $3380, was to
be used for processing fees,
but the check could not be
depo~ited until after talking
with the claims agent. A
claim number was provided,
but Beegle said the recipient
was advised to keep personal information confidential
1 until a prize claim is
processed and funds have
been received.
"I contacted the Texas
business and learned this
scam has been ongoing for
over a year," Beegle said.
"They have had everal
calls. however, in the last
fe\\ day ....."

Details on Page A3

INDEX

J.

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGEfllTO MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

RUTLAND- The Meigs
County llcalth Department
will begin its school vaccination clinics against the H IN I
virus today starting at ~lcigs
Intermediate School. according to Sherry Wilcox. director of nuro;mg of .MCHD.
Wilcox said MCHD staff
will be vaccinating around
136 students in thtrd-fifth
grades today and students in
kindergarten through econd grades on Friday at
Meigs Primary School.

Next week. the statf will
vaccinate students in these
same g1 ades in the Eastern
and Southern l .o~nl School
Districts. Wilcox "aid this
"ill be followed by upcoming school vac~inations for
student~ in all three school
districts who arc 111 six
through t\\elfth grades.
The 'uccinauons are vol
untdl") and parents mu.,t
c;ign a pcrmis IOn slip
allowing the immuni7.lltlon.
\\ ilcox ,ilso recommend-.
parents attend if poss1ble.
The Ohio Department of
Health is recommending

I
1

Please see Upgrades, AS

�r
Page.A2

:The Daily Sentinel

W ednesday, December

Ohio man
accused of
living with
bodies
indicted

• BY STEVEN R. H URST
·AND DARLENE S UPERVILLE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama
~nnounced Tuesday he was
dispatching 30.000 more
troops
to Afghanbtan.
accelerating a risky and
expensi\'e war buildup.
even as he as!)ured the
nation that U.S. forces will
_begin coming home in July
2011 . The first new Marines
.will join the fight by
Christmas.
The escalation - to be
completed by next summer
- is designed to reverse
'significant
Taliban
'advances since Obama took
office I 0 months ago and to
fast-track the training of
Afghan soldiers and poli$::e
'toward the goal of hastening
an eYentual U.S. pullout.
The stze and speed of the
troop increase will put a
heavy strain on the military,
which sttll maintains a force
of more than 100.000 in
Iraq and already has 68.000
in Afghanistan.
"The 30,000 additional
troops that I am announcing
tonight will deploy in the
'first part of 201 0 the fastest
pace possible so that they
can target the insurge~cy
and secure key population
centers:· Obama was to say
in his Tuesday night primetime speech. The White
Hou:-.t: released excerpts in
.advance.
The increased troops.
Obama said, "will increase
our ability to train competent Afghan security forces,
~.md to partner with them so
that more Afghans can get
into the fight. And they will
help create the conditions
for the United States to
transfer responsibility to the
.Afghans.''
•: Looking to America's
~xperience in Iraq. Obama
!J'.ut said a U.S. withdrawal
rwould be executed "respon~&lt;tbly. taking into account
~onditions on the ground."
"We will continue to
ad\ ise
and
assist
Afghanistan's
security
force!) to ensure that they
can succeed over the long
haul. But it \\ill be clear to
the Afghan government
and. more importantly. to
the Afghan people that they
will ultimately be responsible for their own country,"
Obama said.
Obama also leaned heavily on NATO allies and other
countries to join in escalatin!! the fig:ht.
-;.We must come together
to end this war successfully," the president said. ''For
what's at stake is not simply a test of NATO's credibility. What's at stake is
the security of our allies.
and the common security
of the world,"
Obama \
Tuesday
evening speech to cadets at
the U.S. Military Academy
at West Point. N.Y.. to be
broadcast nationally. ends
three months of exacting
deliberations that won

B Y T HOMAS

J . SHEER A~

ASSOCIATED PRESS

,..

CLEVELAND - A registered sex offender attacked
14 women and killed 11 of
them. leaving their remains
111 and around his home, a
prosecutor said Tuesday in
announcing a grand jury
indictment against the suspected senal killer.
Anthony Sowell, 50, is
indicted on murder charges
in the deaths of 11 women.
plus dozens of other counts,
including kidnapping. abuse
of a corpse. attempted murder. assault and rape.
"The Cuyahoga County
grand jury has returned an
indictment against this monster for brutalizing three
women, two of whom were
raped. and murdering 11
more.''
said
County
Bill Mason,
AP photo Prosecutor
President Barack Obama speaks about his Afghanistan policy before cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, speaking at courthouse news
conference. He expects to
N.Y. on Tuesday.
seek the death penalty.
Sowell's attorney in a
"The way that you win dent spent an hour on a
praise from supporters and political gamble that may
criticism from opponents. weigh heavily on his wars is to break the enemy's video conference call with case incorporated in
Former Vice President Dick chances for a second White will, not to announce dates Karzai. The White House· indictment, Brian McGraw.
Cheney said Obama was House term. It rep1:esents that you are leaving." said said Obama told the Afghan did not immediately return a
left
by The
"dithering," too inexperi- the beginning of a sales job Sen. John McCain of leader "that U.S. and inter- message
Associated
Press
on
Tuesday.
efforts
in
enced to make a decision on to restore support for the Arizona. the top Republican national
Sowell.
jailed
in
a
segregathe troop buildup requested \.Var effort among an on the Senate Armed Afghanistan are not opention
cell.
has
turned
away
American
public
grown
Services
Committee
and
ended
and
must
be
evaluatin September by commandfamily
and
media
requests
to
pessimistic Obama's campaign rival in ed toward measurable and
ing
Gen.
Stanley increasingly
visit.
Sheriff
Bob
Reid
said.
McChrystal.
about success - and among last year's presidential race. achievable goals within the
The Associated Press wrote
If the timeline for the next 18 to 24 months."
Senior officials
said some fellow Democrats in
On Tuesday Obama con- to him last month asking for
Obama also would under- Congress wary of or even troop increase 1'10lds. it will
score his commitment to opposed to spending bil- require a costly logistical tacted Pakistan President a jailhouse interview but
stabilizing Afghanistan and lions more dollars and scramble to send in so many Asif Ali Zardari to tell him there was no response.
Mason said Sowell lured
scouring corruption out of putting tens of thousands people and so much equip- the United States wanted to
vulnerable
women to his
the government of President more U.S. soldiers and ment almost entirely by air. open a long-term commerhome
and
that.
"once inside,
It will also prob&lt;}bly require cial and security relationHamid Karzai. Obama has Marines in hann 's way.
he
tormented
them.
threatA
new
survey
by
the
breaking
at
least
an
implicit
ship.
Obama
also
had
vowed
to
prevent
ened
them
and
assaulted
Afghanistan from again 6allup
organiLation. promise to some soldiers planned to speak of a need
becoming a safe haven for released Tuesday, showed who had thought they to help Pakistan stabilize them. He murdered 11 of
al-Qaida boss Osama bin only
35
percent
of would have more than 12 itself from the threats it them."
Autho1ities have said the
Laden and his tenorist orga- Americans now approve of months at home before their faces not only from al:
victims
were homeless or
Qaida but Taliban forces
nization.
Obama 's handling of the next deployment.
living
alone
and had drug or
At the same time. NATO that are increasingly behind
Most of the new forces war: 55 percent disapprove.
will be combat troops.
Even before the president diplomats said Obama wai terrorist bombings in that alcohol addictions.
Mason said the charges
Military officials said the spoke, hb pla-n was met asking alliance partners in country. officials said.
include
allegations that
The United States went to
Anny brigades most likely with
skepticism
in Europe to add 5 .000 to
attacked
three
to be sent will come from Congress. where Sen. Russ 10,000 troops to the sepa- war in Afghanistan shortly Sowell
Fort Drum in New York and Feingold. 0-Wis .. and liber- rate international force in after the Sept. 11. 200 I , ai- women who survived:
l
lndications Qaida terrorist attacks on year-old woman who s
Fort Campbell in Kentucky. al House Democrats threat- Afghanistan
she
was
assaulted
on
Dec.
·
were
the
allies
would
agree
the
United
States.
Marines, who will be the ened to try to block funding
to a number somewhere in
Bin Laden and key mem- 2008; a 36-year-old who
vanguard. will most likely for the troop increase.
come primarily from Camp
Sen. Carl Le.vin. the that ran!!e. The war has bers of the terrorist organi- says she was attacked Sept.
Lejeune in North Carolina.
Michigan Democrat who even less~ suppot1 in Europe zation were headquartered 22 and whose complaint
There will be about 5.000 chairs a military oversight than in the United States. in Afghanistan at the time, prompted the search of
dedicated trainers in the panel. said he didn't think and the NATO allies and taking ad\·antage of sanctu- Sowell's home: and a 5130,000. showing the empha- Democrats would yank other countries currently ary afforded by the Taliban year-old woman who said
sis on preparing Afghans to funding for the troops or have about 40.000 troops on government that ran the she was assaulted Oct. 20.
Mason called the alleged
mountainous and isolated
take over their own secmity. try to force Obama's hand the ground.
attacks
"eerily similar'" and
And the president is making to pull them out faster. But
The main mission of the country.
Taliban
forces
were said investi!!ators were still
clear to his generals that all Democrats will be looking new troops will be to
troops, even if designated as for ways to pay for the reverse Taliban gains and quickly driven from power, trying to detern1ine whether
combat, must consider additional troops. he said, secure population centers in while bin Laden and his top Sowell was connected to
themselves trainers.
including a tax increase on the country's volatile south deputies were believed to unsolved slayings in nearby
Announcing a start to a the wealthy although that and east. The addition of have fled through towering East Cleveland and elseU.S. withdrawal by July hike is already being eyed some Marines before year's mountams into neighboring where, including some cities
20 11 does not tie the to pay for health care end would provide badly Pakistan. While the al- where he was stationed when
United States to an '"end costs. Another possibility needed reinforcements to Qaida leadership appears to he served in the U.S. Marine
date" for the war, officials is imposing a small gaso- those
fighting
against be bottled up in Pakistan ·s Corps from 1978 to 1985.
So\\ ell was charged with
said. They all spoke on line tax that would be Taliban gains in southern largely ungoverned tribal
two
separate aggravated
condition of anonymity phased out if gas prices go Helmand province.
regions. the U.S. military
murder
counts in each of the
because the speech had not up, he said.
Obama briefed dozens of strategy of targeted missile
been delivered.
Meanwhile, Republican~ key lawmakers Tuesday attacks from unmanned 11 deaths: for each victim
The
address
could said that setting a timetable afternoon, before setting off drone aircraft has yet to he· was charged with prebecome a defining moment for
withdrawal
would for West Point.
flush bin Laden and his meditated murder and with
murder while committing
of the Obama presidency, a demonstrate weakness.
Late Monday. the presi- cohorts from hiding.
the felony of kidnapping. A
jury convicting him cot
choose one or the other.
not both. Each murder cou
carries the possibility of the
death penalty.
earmarked for such products percent below the peak it NBC's stature when GE ity for GE in a fluny of new
Mason said the ll homias medical equipment and had hit in 2000. GE is still took 1t over in 1986 as part products, including cheaper cide victims. in general.
wmd turbines. This new GE trying to work through big of its acquisition of RCA medical equipment. such as were strangled with items
will likely look a lot like GE losses at its GE Capital lend- Corp. for about $6 billion.
a
handheld
ultrasound like cords or rope. by hands
did before it acquired NBC ing unit, once the source of
The move was part of machine. GE has identified or by an unknown method.
in 1986.
half the conglomerate's prof- then-CEO Jack Welch's clean energy as another
Mason would not discuss
"When you are running a its. in areas like commercial shake-up of GE. which growth area. with "smart what evidence might conincluded selling major busi- grid'' technologies that are nect Sowell to the II homicompany like GE. your real estate and credit cards.
roots are ultimately in manG E earned $8 .I bill ion ness divisions and growing meant to make electricitv cides beyond the discovery
ufacturing," said Nicholas over the frrst nine months of the
financial
division. consumption more efficient. of the bodies.
Heymann, an analyst with this year on revenue of $115 Buying NBC, the eventual
As it refocuses. GE has
Assistant
Cuyahoga
Sterne Agee who once billion - but that marked a home to such hit shows as shed units such as its fire County Prosecutor Richard
worked forGE as an auditor. 43 percent drop in profit and • ·'The Cosby Show" and detection and electronic Bombik said Sowell had "a
GE ha~ reached a tentative a 15 percent revenue dec! inc. "Seinfeld"
and
the security business. which it specific scheme of doing
agreement to buy out the 20
NBC Universal has been Olympics, was Welch's way sold this fall to United things ... a distinct pattern."
percent stake in NBC one headache. The unit of genei;ating a reliable Technologies Corp. for
"The three people that surUniversal that is held by includes Universal Pictures source of cash to counter- $1.82 billion. In the past viYed in this case will be
French media company movie studios. the NBC net- balance the challenges GE's several years. it has spun off probably the most important
Vivendi SA. according to a work. the Universal Studios manufacturing businesses its insurance division and its eYidence in the case because
person with knowledge of chain of theme parks, and faced from overseas com- U.S .-based home mortgage it 'viii show a pattern," he
the deal. GE and Comcast such cable channels as petitors. Heymann said.
unit. The company put its , said. "The guy does have
are then expected to turn USA. Bravo and Syfy. The
Merging NBC into GE's consumer
unit.
which this thing for choking peoNBC Universal into a joint anit has suffered from the straight-laced corporate cul- make!) dishwashers, refrig- ple .... It's the same pattem
venture. with Comcast hold- recession. Vl'ith a drop in ture proved a challenge, said erators and other appl i- except three of them lived to
ing a 51 percent stake. GE broadcast adve11ising, and Noel Tichy. a Vniversity of ances, up for sale last )ear, escape and talk about it.''
would likely fully leave the some Oops at the box office. Michigan prOfessor who led but is holding on to it now
He said the testimony a.
pattnership in a few years.
such as "Land of the Lost." GE's leadership training that it couldn't find a buver. would be u~eful becau.
The financial crisis and · Operating profit fell 27 per- program at the time. Tichy
The Comcast deal· is decomposition of the slayrecession
the past year cent in the tirst three quatters said NBC executives chafed expecteJ to bring in some ing .victims limited forensic
have been difficult for GE. of this year. The NBC net- at letting GE take O\er man- needed cash. GE is expected test mg.
which is based in Fairfield, work ranks fourth in ratinf!s agement of the network.
to net $5 billion to $7 bil.. A lot of them were nude
Conn., and has 323.000 and is cutting down on script"They thought we were a l ion from Comcast by form- from the waist Jown. even
employees. The company- ed shows to save money bunch of metal benders ing the partnership for NBC ''hen he buried them," he
was forced to slash its divi- retlecte(l in its heavily ·pro- coming to pillage the NBC Universal. GE would also said.
dend by 68 percent. It lost its moted move of comedian Jay peacock," he said .
bl! able to transfer about $8
So\\ell previously had
coveted top bond rating and Lcno tn the 10 p.m. slot.
These days CEO Jeffrey billion to S I 0 billion in debt been charged \\ ith tl\'e ot
its stock fell as much as 90
That's a contrast to Immelt hopes to find stabil- to the joint venture.
the murdc~..;.

•

r.

a'

GE returns to roots as it looks to spin off NBC
WASHINGTON (AP) For General Electric Co .. the
NBC entertainment division
was always an odd fit.
One of the nation's iconic
industrial businesses, GE
has spent 23 years making
sitcoms and blockbuster
movies along with jet
engines. dishwashers and
light bulbs. The pairing of
glitty entertainment and
gritty manufacturing has
often confounded investors
and even has been ruthlessly satirized by NBC's own
show "30 Rock," in which a
fictional network executive
also heads a division that
programs microwave ovens.
It'::. a marriage that will
likely soon end. As GE prepares for an expected $30 billion deal that will give control
of NBC to cable TV operator
Comcast Corp .. the conglomerate is shifting its focus back
to its industrial divisions.
GE is shrinking its finance
arm that has been severely
buffeted by the financial crisis. lt has sold some businesses and shopped others
around. And it is chasing
nearly $200 billion in stimulus money from worldwide
governments, much of it

2, 2 0 09

or

'

I

I

J

�END

The Daily Sentinel
ASK DR.. BR.OTHERS

Woman experiences
work-related anxiety
BY DR. JoYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers: 1' m
ly 22. and I feel anxiou~ all
e time. I have a job, but it's
not a great job and I don't
like it. I constantly wony that
I'm on the verge of losing
my job. though. On top of
that. I'm not making great
money. so money is always a
cause of anxiety for me.
Everyone says your 20s 1s
the best time. but I'm just
stressed and unhappy. I don't
think anyone else I know
feels this way. so it's really
hard to talk to anyone about
it. What can I do?- C.Y.
Dear C.Y.: Actually. your
wonies are more common
than you may think. Lots of
young people have anxiety
about various aspects of
their lives. although monev
and joo worries are the most
common. Especially in the
current economic climate.
·employment is 'scarce, anc;i
this can drive young people
to take and hold on to jobs
that they don't like and that
n't fulfilling. It sounds
•
e. ideally. you'd want to
find a different job. bu
you're worried that you
won't be able to find a nev.•
job. If you're also worried
about money on top of this,
it can be really hard to convince yourself that it's
wo11hwhile to take the risk
of looking for a new job.
It sounds like you're also
having trouble expressing
your anxiety and getting
things off your chest. You
should realize that you are
not the only one with these
worries. and should share
your feelings with your
friends. You can try some
coping strategies as welL
from talking to people who
can help you sort through
your problems to challenging your negative thoughts.
Separate the real risk - for
instance. what exactly
makes you think you might
n danger of losing your
? - from those probs your imagination is
making worse. Calm yourself physically and relax
your muscles when you're
feeling particularly frustrated or anxious. Most importantly. talk to other people.
and don't be afraid to open
up about your worries.

•
Page~

•••

Wednesday, December 2,

Ohio backup execution plan allows at least 3 trieS
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. COLUMBUS - Ohio\
new backup plan for executing inmates by injection
allows at least three
attempts to administer drugs
through muscles in the arms
or legs. with the strength
increasing if a third attempt
is needed.
The backup would be
used if administering a single powerful anesthetic
throueh a vein doesn't

check again after five minutes and administer a much
larger dose of just one drug
if the inmate continues to
breathe. The plan says any
doses after the third try
must also involve the larger
amount.
The state adopted the
new procedures in tim~ for
the Dec. 8 execution of
Kenneth Biros. He would
be the first person in the
country put to death by
just one drug. presuming
the backup plan isn't
needed.
The state had two goals in
switching to a new, singledrug injection procedure
last month: ending a longrunning court challenge to
the old. three-drug method,
and avoiding the type of
botched execution that happened in September, when
an execution was stopped
because a usable vein
couldn't be found for con-

demned inmate Romell
Broom.
The
new
procedure
involves administering into
a vein a single, large dose of
the anesthetic thiopental
sodium.
The state says that that
method avoids the argument
that inmates could suffer
severe pain under the threedrug system. Some inmates
challenging the three-drug
method have also pushed
for the single-drug system
instead.
If a usable vein can't be
found, under the new plan.
two drugs can be injected
directly into an inmate's
muscles.
That would address what
Broom underwent on Sept.
15. when executioners tried
unsuccessfully for two
hours to find a usable vein.
sticking him as many as 18
times.
Broom will argue in fed-

eral court next week that the
state shouldn't be allowed
to try a second time to put
him to death.
Biros, 5 I. wants his execution delayed, saying that
proceeding with the new
system without further
study would amount to
human
experimentation.
But his attorneys also have
argued in the past that the
one-dmg method was "an
available and easily implemented alternative" to the
three-drug procedure.
Biros killed and dismembered 22-year-old Tami
Engstrom near Warren in
199 I after he offered to
drive her home from a bar. ·
A three-judge panel of the
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals refused to delay the
execution. Biros appealed to
the full appeals court and
the state on Tuesday askeC;I
the .court to again reject hi~
request.

Dear Or. Brothers: I· m a
huge perfectionist at work.
I'm not into perfectionism
in any other part of my life.
just at work. so l didn't realize that 1t was a probkm for
a long time. But recently
I've been realizing more
and more that it makes me
really inefficient at work
and I seem to not be able to work.~
get anything done anymore.
The plan described in
What can I do to combat
federal court documents
this perfectionist tendency,
filed Monday requires exeespecially in a professional
cutioners to check the
setting? - A.G.
Dear A.G.: There are a inmate five minutes after
lot of small things you can the two backup drugs are
do to start to train your administered and inject a
brain out of the perfection- ~econd dose of the two
ism you've been dealing drugs if the inmate is still
with. Because this doesn't breathing.
would
seem to be a problem in . Executioners
other aspects of your life, it 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - --......;.
won· t be so hard for you to
begin
to
change. ,
Perfectiomsm comes from I
letting your mind become - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -- o~·erly critical. so t~e strat~- ,
Christmas program and Chester
Courthouse. Afternoon,
p.m.,
2-4
g1es for overcoming t_h1s
U
potluck, 1 p.m., Mulberry Eastern Bell Cboir, Beth Chester
Courthouse.
problem C&lt;?me from qUJetCommunity Center, meat, Stivers and her singing clar- Christmas story, crafts and
mg.Your mmd.
.
drink, cake provided, $5 gift inet,
to
perform. refreshments.
'rou can try. us.~ng the
Wednesday, Dec. 2
exchange, group singing Refreshments.
''I 0-year quest JOn. When
POMEROY Gospel
you're stuck in a perfccHARRISONVILLE
also.
and
bluegrass
concert,
5
6:30
Saturday,
Dec.
tionist loop. ask yourself Scipio Township Trustees,
SALEM
CENTER
S_tar
p.m.,
God's
NET,
with
whether
you'll
even regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
Saturday, Dec. 5
remember this. much less Harrisonville
.Fire Grange #778 and Star Johnny Staats and Idle
SYRACUSE - An open
Junior Grange #878 potluck Times.
care about the outcome. 10 Department.
reception will be held to
Thursday, Dec. 10
years from now. Most likePOMEROY Meigs supper at 6:30 p.m., and
honor
Edith Wolfe Grimm on
POMEROY
ly. the answer will be no. County Board of Health. meeting at 7:30.
her
90th
birthday from 1 to 3
Tuesday, Dec. a
"Connecting
with
and even in the rare cases regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
p.m.
at
the Syracuse
HARRISONVILLE
Communities"
session,
when the answer is yes. conference room, Meigs
Community
Center. For
vou'IJ still benefit from the County
Health Harrisionville Order of open office hours for con- those who cannot attend,
Eastern Star # 255 meets stituents, with staff of U.S.
rnindfulnes~ of asking the Department.
with potluck at 6:30 p.m., Senator George Voinovich. cards may be sent to her at
question . You abo should
Thursday, Dec. 3
P.O. Box 741, Syracuse,
take a timeout to do thin~s
SYRACUSE - Syracuse meeting at 7:30. Bring A-Ohio, 1-2 p.m., Meigs Ohio 45779.
you wouldn:t normally Village Council, 7 p.m., vii- canned goods for food County Courthouse. No
pantry.
appointment
necessary.
give yourself time to do in lage hall.
753-1562
for
information.
your life when you're feelFriday, Dec. 4
ing overwhelmed . You
MIDDLEPORT- Special
should take the time to meeting of Meigs County
compare yourself with oth- Family and Children First
Saturday, Dec. 5
ers at work as well. 1'\o one Council,
11
a.m.,
CHESTER Holiday
Sunday, Dec. 6
in your office is perfect, Department of Job and open house, 2-4 p.m.,
CHESTER - Kids' Fun
and they are doing just Family Services.
fine. It's good for you to
Monday, Dec. 7
remind yourself of how
POMEROY - Veterans
others cope from time to Service Commission meets
time. It's likely you're at 9 a.m., 117 Memorial
overcommitted, so try to Drive.
get out of obligations that
RUTLAND Rutland
you don't want but feel you Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
"should'' do. Lastly. if Rutland fire station.
you're overwhelmed by the
Tuesday, Dec. 8
idea of tackling a whole
SHADE
Bedford
project. pick a small task Township Trustees regular
and jusr do it.
monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
(c) 2009 by King Features town hall.
Syndicate
Thursday, Dec. 10
POMEROY
Meigs
County Trustees and Clerks
Association meets at 6 p.m ..
Meigs Senior Center.

CommUDI•ty Calendar
p bi.IC
meetings

Birthdays

Other events

Youth events

8ay Merry Christmas
to 8omeone 8pecial with a
&amp;ntinel Christmas Af18el

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday...Rain. Highs
in the mid 50s. East winds
around 5 mph ... Increasing
to southeast I 0 to 15 mph
.with gusts up to 25 mph in
the afternoon . Charice of
·rain near 100 percent.
Wednesday night...Rain.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Southeast winds 5 to J0
mph ...Becoming southv.est
.10 to 15 mph after mid. · ht. Gusts up to 30 mph.
ance of rain 90 percent.
hursday...Cloudy with a
20 percent chance of showers. Cooler with highs in the
mid 40s. Southwest winds

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 33.04
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 65.67
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 36.62
Big Lots (NYSE) - 23.46
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.14
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 30.73
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.17
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.82
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.80
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32
Collins (NYSE) - 54.43
DuPont (NYSE)- 35.10
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.34
Gannett (NYSE) - 10.01
General Electric (NYSE) 16.17
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 28.92
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 42.49
ger (NYSE) - 22.89
ited Brands (NYSE) 55
orfolk Southern (NYSE) 52.35
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 22.35
BBT (NYSE) - 25.60
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.27
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.87
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.12
Rockwell (NYSE) - 44.06
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 7.64
Royal Dutch Shell - 61.03
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 72.95
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.75

•

2009

10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 30 mph.
Thursday night.. .Mostly
cloudy. Colder with lows in
the upper 20s. West winds 5
to 10 mph.
Fridav
through
Saturday night. .. :\1ostly
cloudy. Highs iri the mid
30s. Lows in the mid 20s.
Sunday and Sunday
night.••Partly cloudy. Highs
around 40. Lows in the mid
20s.
Monday
through
Tuesday•.•Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows
in the upper 20s.

,
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.20
WesBanco (NYSE) - 12.91
Worthington (NYSE) - 11.84
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Dec. 1, 2009,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills. in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, Dec. 2
POMEROY - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library. Connie
Gilkey will review "The Art of
Mending,'' by Elizabeth
Berg. Charlene Rutherford
hostess.
Thursday, Dec. 3
POMEROY
Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association
luncheon.
noon, Trinity Church. David
Gynn, ORTA vice president,
to speak. Eastern High
School bell choir will present program. Take gift
books for children for the
service project.
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m., Chester
Courthouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies
Auxiliary, 6 p.m. Pizza and
Christmas gift exchange.
Friday, Dec. 4
POMEROY
Meigs
County
PERl
#74,

~ONLY~

$-J500
Per Picture

Prepaid

Gryphon Thomas
"Merry Christmas"
Nana &amp;.. Papal

* Actual Size 1x3
* Runs 1hursday, December 24th
* Deadline for entry December 19th at 5:00
Mail or drop off at :

·T he Daily Sentinel
lll .Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
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�•

Page'A4.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cottgress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tire free
exercise tltereofi or abridging tlu freedom of speeclr,
or of tlte press; or the right of the people peaceably .
to assemble, atrd to petition the Govermneut
for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 2, the 336th day of 2009.
There are 29 days left in the year.
Today's Highlights in History:
On Dec. 2, 1859, militant abolitionist John Brown was
hanged for his raid on Harpers Ferry the previous
October. Artist Georges-Pierre Seurat was born in Paris.
•
On this date:
In 1804, Napoleon crowned himself Emperor of the
French.
In 1823, President James Monroe outlined his doctrine
opposing European expansion in the Western
Hemisphere.
In 1927, Ford Motor Co. formally unveiled its second
Model A automobile, the successor to its Model T.
In 1939, New York Municipal Airport-LaGuardia Field
(later LaGuardia Airport) went into operation as an airliner from Chicago landed at one minute past midnight.
In 1942, an artificially created, self-sustaining nuclear
chain reaction was demonstrated for the first time. at the
University of Chicago. •
In 1954, the Senate voted to condemn Wisconsin
Republican Joseph R. McCarthy for conduct that "tends
to bring the Senate into disrepute."
In 1969, the Boeing 747 jumbo jet got its first public
preview as 191 people, most of them reporters and photographers, flew from Seattle to New York City.
In 1970, the Environmental Protection Agency began
operating under director William Ruckelshaus.
In 1980, four American churchwomen were raped and
murdered outside San Salvador. (Five national guardsmen were convicted in the killings.)
In 1989, Prestdent George H.W. Bush and Soviet
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev held the first talks of
the1r wind-tossed Malta summit aboard the Soviet cruise
ship Maxim Gorky.
Ten years ago· Relative calm was restored in Seattle,
where a meeting of the World Trade Organization was
greeted earlier with sometimes violent demonstrations.
All six Republican presidential hopefuls, including Texas
Gov. George W. Bush, debateq in Manchester, N.H. In
Northern Ireland, a power-sharing cabinet of Protestants
and Catholics sat down together for the first time.
Five years ago: President George W Bush chose former New York police commissioner Bernard Kerik to run
the Department of Homeland Security. (Kerik withdrew
his name days later, citing immigration problems with a
former nanny; he later pleaded guilty to eight felonies,
including lying to the White House.) Bush announced
that Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns was his-choice as the
next agriculture secretary, replacing Ann Veneman. U.N.
ambassador John Danforth resigned after five months
representing the U.S. at the world body. Dame Alicia
Markova, one of the 20th century's greatest ballerinas,
died in Bath, England, a day after turning 94. Pulitzerwinning poet Moria Van Duyn, the nation's first female
poet laureate, died in University City, Mo., at age 83.
One year ago: Republican Saxby Chambliss won a
Georgia runoff, denying Democrats a 60-seat, filibusterproof majority in the Senate (until AI Franken's belated
victory over Norm Colemar) in Minnesota).
Thought for Toc;!ay: "Misery loves company, but
company does not reciprocate."- Addison Mizner,
American architect (1872-1933).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters are
subject to editing, must be signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters
will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel ·
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

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

Advertising ·
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740-446·2342, Ext. 17
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

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Circulation Manager: David J. Lucas,
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General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich Ext. 12
~

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(usPs 213-9so)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every morning, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
lions to The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box
729, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

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~--------._------------------------------~.
(•

Wednesday, December 2,

2009

Some meds may not be covere4 in 2010
I

BUSINESS WIRE

Seniors may find that many common prescript ion drugs that Medicare
Part 0 has covered for yem:s may suddenly be denied due to a new policy
being implemented by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS).
· To minimize disruption on patients
and pharmacies, the American
Pharmacists Association (APhA),
Food Marketing Institute. (FMI),
Healthcare Distribution Management
Association (HDMA), National
Association of Chain Drug Stores
(NACDS), and National Community
Pharmacists Association (NCPA)
have written a letter to CMS Acting
Administrator Charlene Frizzera. outlining ·concerns and potential remedies. and urging the agency to continue its outreach to stakeholders.
St~rting Jan. 1, CMS is scheduled
to begin enforcing its non-matched
National Drug Code (NDC) list policy. At that time any medication not
appropriate] y registered with the
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) will no longer be covered
under Part D.
With this deadline fast approaching, thousands of products are currently included on the non-matched
NDC list and. thus, scheduled to be
denied by Medicare Part D plans in a

few weeks.
These include many common prescription products seniors rely on.
such as antidepressants. antibiotics.
pain relievers. and hlood pressure and
diabetes medicines. (Many drugs
have multiple NDCs to renect the
varying strength s , quantities and
packaging by which they are sold.
However, some drugs may still be
covered. but only for the NDCs listed.)
"We strongly encourage you to
continue outreach to manufacturers
whose products are on the nonmatched list as well as Part D plans,''
the groups wrote. "We also strongly
urge CMS to consider holding an
open door fomm as soon as possible
in order to capture concerns of all
interested stakeholders. Although we
have communicated with our respective supply chain partners, ultimately,
the manufacturer bears the responsibility to register their products appropriately with the FDA and with Part D
plans to ensure their formularies and
edits reflect CMS policies in a timely
fashion."
The groups' other concerns include:
• Patient Disruption - Patients
may be denied medication they have
obtained under Part D for years. The
coalition recommends a standard
CMS fact sheet or similar document,
available online. to help phannacists
answer beneficiaries' questions.

• Supply Chain Concerns Denying access to one generic drug
will likely increase demand for .
equivalent generics, of which suffi~.
cient supply may not be readily avail-.
able. Such supply chain issues further;
endanger beneficiary access.
• Inconsistent Implementation ~
Part D Plans - Some Part D pl
may employ point-of-sale (PO
edits at the pharmacy level to block
dispensing of unlisted drugs, but others may not, frustrating patients and
pharmacists alike. To promote cons is- .
tency in implementation, the coalition recommends that CMS either update'
the CMS non-matched NDC list on a
more frequent basis or require plans
to utilize the FDA's NDC list to keep:
'
POS edits current.
• Retroactive Reversal of Claims The coalition urges CMS to prohibit
retroactive reversal of approve.d
claims for NDCs that appear on the
non-matched list. These claim rever~
sals would be unfair to pharmacies
that dispensed the medications pur:.
suant to plans' approval of claims at
the point of sale.
The groups have also urged brand
and generic drug manufacturers to'
step up their efforts to ensure their
products' NDCs are registered with
the.FDA. as evidenced by a Nov. 17
letter from NCPA to their trade assoelations.

•

Tell me
a~sin

howllotow

him?...

Economic growth modest) bu_t steady
BY TALl ARBEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The economy seems on track for
slow but steady gains, after reports
Tuesday showed growth in manufacturing activity. construction spending
and contracts to buy homes.
A private measure of manufacturing activity grew for the fourth
straight month in November, though
more slowly than in October. The
Institute for Supply Management, a
trade group of purchasing executives,
said its index read 53.6. down from
55.7 in October. A reading above 50
indicates growth.
Economists were encouraged that
new orders - a gauge of future production -jumped to 60.3 from 58.5
in October.
A report on construction spending
also signaled growth with the first
increase in six months, largely on the
strength of home building. The
increase was slight - just 0.04 percent. And in pmt it reflected a rush by
builders to begin work before the
expiration of a tax credit for first-time
homebuyers. The credit was extended
last month and expanded to some
existing homeowners.
Still, the increase appeared to signal that the construction sector is stabilizing and providing support for the
fledgling economic recovery.
A third positive repo11 said the
number of homebuyers who signed
contracts to buy previously occupied
homes rose for the ninth straight
month. This increase, too, came~ as
buyers rushed to take advantage of
the homebuyer tax creuit.
Every region in the report by the
National Association of Realtors saw
year-over-year gains in pending sales.
Typically. there's a one- to twomonth lag between a contract and a

do~e deal. so the index tends to anticipate future sales.
On Wall Street. major stock indicators rose I percent. including the
Dow Jones industrial average. which
added about 130 points in midday
trading.
In the ISM report on manufacturing. analysts were impressed that new
orders. a signal of future production.
jumped over 60 for the third time in
the past four months. The last such
streak was in 2005. Economists
downplayed the dt'op in the index
from October to November.
"We are not overly concerned with
the monthly drop. as there has been a
lot of positive momentum.'' said TD
Securities economics strategist Ian
Pollick. "The manufacturing sector is
trying to catch its breath rather than
what runners like to call 'hitting the
wall.'"
And with stockpiles so lean, once
companies gain more confidence in
the recovery, .further expansion in
production is likely as they restock.
said Ryan Wang of HSBC Securities.
The index's employment measure
also grew for the second consecutive
month after 14 straight declines. The
pace slowed. though. And the
employment figure docsn 't necessarily signal that companies are prepared
to ramp up hiring. According to members' comments. jobs would most
likely be filled by temporary workers.
not pcnnancnt positions.
The Commerce Department report
on construction spending said a surge
in home building offset weak nonresidential work. Construction spending
rose 0.04 percent in October, or $40 I
million. pushing the seasonally
adjusted annual rate to $910.8 billion.
That was better than the 0.5 percent
decline economists expected. But it
followed five straight drops. includ-

ing a l .6 percent fall in September
that was the largest since January.
The Realtors' seasonally adjusted
index of sales agreements rose 3.7
percent from September to 114.1. lt
was the highest reading since M ayA
2006. And it was nearly 32 percabove a year ago - a record-high.
annual increase.
.
ISM's manufacturing survey said
new orders for wood products and
furniture makers - two sectors relat ...
ed to the housing market - fell in
November, however. New orders for·
transportation equipment and mineral.
products also dropped.
But the overall ISM index. \vhich
also mcludes inventOJies and prices
first showed growth in August after
18 months of contraction. It is based
on a survey of the Tempe. A ri 7..-hased
group's members.
"The recovery in manufacturing is
continuing, but many are still struggling based on their comments." said
Norbert Ore, chair of the survey committee.
Twelve of the 18 industries surveyed grew in November.
In another hopeful sign for a global
recover). measures of m&lt;y1ufacturing
in the U.K., the eurozone and China
also grew in November.
Still. some analysts caution that the
pace of growth could falter next y.
The U.S. economy expanded at a
percent pace in the third quarter, and
Capital Economics' Paul Dales
expects it will grO\V at an even
stronger pace in the current quarter
and first half of next year.
But the economy could suffer later
in 2010, Dales said. as "the initial,
rebounds in in\'entories and 'inYestmcllt fade." He sees GOP growth
slowing to 2.2 percent in the third
quarter and at a tepid I .8 percent pace
to finish out next year.

�r·
Wedn~sday,

December 2,

Good job news for Meigs, Gallia.

Local Briefs
Application available

Une1nployment tlrops in Meigs Co., Gallia Co. jobless rate unchanged

CHESHIRE - The Community Services Block Grant application for 201 0-11 . prepared by the G~lia-Meigs Community
Action Agency Inc. is available for rev1ew through Dec. 10.
A copy of the application can be reviewe? at the G-MCAA
office in Cheshire. G-MCAA should recetve comments on
the application no later than Dec. 10. The.comments on the
application will be forwarded to. the 0~10 Department of
Development. Office of Community Serv1ces.
G-MCAA administers the block grant for Gallia and
counties. The grant provides funding for numerous
to low-income residents.

Soup, bake sale
MIDDLEPORT - Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
will hold a soup sale and bake sale from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Friday. Infonnation is available at 949-2017.

For the Record .

BY ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS - Meigs
and Gallia counties received
a little good news out of
Columbus following the
release of the latest state
unemployment figures.
According
to
the
Department of Job and
Family Services (DJFS).
Meigs County's unemployment rate . dropped from
15 .I percent in September
to 14.5 percent in October.
Gallia County's jobless rate
remained unchanged in
October
from
the
September figure, standing

pat at 9.6 percent.
However, Ohio's unemployment rate continued to
dimb, inching up from 10.1
percent in September to
10.5 percent in October.
DJFS reported that 618.000
Ohioans
are
currently
unemployed.
.
The U.S. jobless rate also
increased in October. hitting
l0.2 percent.
Meigs was one of seven
Ohio counties \Vith a jobless
figure of 14 percent or higher. Highland County still
has the highest unemployment rate in Ohio at 15.9
percent.
Elsewhere in southern

Ohio, Athens County saw its increase from 11.2 percent
jobless rate increase from . in September to 1 I .7 percent
8.3 percent in September 8.5 in Ocober. Ross County's
percent in Oct9bcr. Jackson jobless rate jumped from
County's
unemployment I I .5 percent in September to
rate was also up from 10.5 I I .9 percent last month.
percent in September to 10.7 Scioto County's rate moved
percent in October. Hocking upward as well. from 12.1
County's figure moved up pen..:cnt in September to ·12.4
from
10.4 percent in percent in October.
September to l0.7 percent in
WashingtoH
County
October.
joined Meigs in seeing
Pike County also saw an some improvement, with
increase in joblessness, from the unemployment rate
14.8 percent in September to dropping slightly from 9.4
15.1 perceht in October. percent in September to 9.3
recording the second highest percent in October.
figure in~Ohio.
~
Lawrence County's job~Vinton County abo saw less
rate
remained
its unemployment rate unchanged at 8.5 percent.

Most states have not adopted sex offender rules

Civil actions
POMEROY - Actions for foreclosure were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Morequity, Inc.,
Evansville. Ind .. against Leonard Hill, Pomeroy. and others. and by GMAC Mortgage. Horsham. Pa. , against Daniel
H. James. Middleport. and others.
· Judgment suits were filed by Citibank. Sioux Falls, S.D.,
aaainst Kathleen J. Morris. Long Bottom. and Mt. Cannel
New Albany Surgical Hospital. New Albany, againt Ernest
M. Mitchell. Pomeroy.

Dissolution
MEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage was
in Meigs County Common Pleas Colllt by Tonya J.
ggess, Long Bottom. and James P. Boggess, Athens.

4f,

Coin flip decides
mayor's race in Ohio
KENT (AP) -Nearly a month after the Nov. 3 election,
a coin toss has settled an Ohio mayor's race that remained
tied after a recount.
Jerry Fiala ·will be S\\lOrn in as the new mayor of Kent,
though he and opponent Rick Hawksley still had 2,502
votes each at the end of a three-hour recount Monday.
Fiala had won a coin flip on Nov. 20. the day the Portage
County elections chief had to ce11ify the results and declare
a winner. So, Fiala's choice of ''heads" now makes his win
final, because the automatic recount didn't break the tie in
the city about 30 miles southeast of Cleveland.
Hawksley says he won't challenge the other man's victoi).
Fiala says he doesn't know if he considers himself lucky,
but he jokes he's had half a dozen offers to go to Las Vegas.

Scam from Page At
•

The Daily Sentinel • Page~

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

eegle also reported:

.

Jackie Welker. Pomeroy, reported that sometJme
Sunday the catalytic converter had been removed from the
200q Jeep he had parked at the Park and Ride on Ohio 7.
• Ivan PowelL Bashan Road, reported that sometime within
the last week, someone entered his house. He advised he has
Oeen moving in. and several boxes had been gone. through.
The only thing missing was a half-carton of Mountam Dew.
• Ernie Roach, Brandon Roush. Anthony King and Zach
English were transported to Orient Reception Center to
begin terms imposed in Common Pleas Court.
• Joseph T. Billingsley was transported to Noble
Correctional Institution after appearing. for additional sentencing on a charge of theft.
• Jonathan Preast was transpo11ed to the Southeastern
Probationary Treatment Alternative, Nelsonville. on a
c.harge of breaking and entering.

Upgrades from Page At
year, per building. The upgrades would cost $300.000 to
complete.
Commissioners authorized Grants Administrator Jean
Trussell to seek funding through the Ohio Department of
Development, Ohio Energy Office, and committed $78.000
in local funds.
A was deemed the county courthouse. which has a new boil.....ould benefit from window replacements, but that would
likely be cost prohi~i~ve due to the historical si~ificanc~ of
the building. Comrruss10ners and other elected officials are I? a
preliminary process of exploring possible means of addmg
office space at the courthouse or othetwise reconfiguring space
to accomodate present-day seculity issues and records storage.
Commissioners approved a resolution transferring ownership of County Road 671. Charles &lt;;hanc~y Drive, to the
county highway system. The one-third m1le of roadway
affected begins at Rocksprings Road and ends at the
entrance to the Fultz Center. It will be called C.R. 25A.
Commissioners also approved transfer of C.R. 1001. a
tenth of a mile from Salisbury Township Road 376 to T.R.
189, to the township, and C.R. 75, a tenth of a mile, to
Salisbury Township.

Commissioners also:
• Appointed President Mick Davenport to the executive
council of Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation and
Development and Commissioner Tom Anderson alternate.
• Recessed until 10 a.m. Tuesday for payment of bills.
Also present were Commissioner Michael Bartrum and
Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Clinics from Page At

II

high-risk individuals in need of a vaccination against
1. Those individuals include health care workers and
S workers who provide direct patient care; pregnant
women; people who live with or care for children less than
6 months; all people six months to 24 years; and people 25
to 64 years with chronic medical conditions.
ODH has previously ordered 2.039.400 doses of H 1N I
vaccine, bringing Ohio's total to 2,299.200 doses thus far.
This represents Ohio's total allotment' at this time of HI N I
influenza vaccine. More vaccine is expected to be available
in the coming weeks.
H-INI vaccines given to students during the school clinics in Meigs County are free of charge.

.-....-~---

BY GREG BLUSTEIN ,
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA - More than
three years after Congress
ordered stepped-up monitoring of sex offenders, only
one state has adopted the
government's strict new
requirements, and some others are weighing whether to
ignore the law and just pay a
penalty.
So far, Ohio is the lone
state to meet the new federal standards. Elsewhere,
efforts have been hampered
by high costs and legal challenges from the nation's
686.000 registered sex
offenders. Advocates worry
that the delays are putting
public safety at risk.
''This means more of the
same - that we're losing
sex offenders when they
cross state lines and disappear," said Erin Runnion.
who lobbied for the law
after her 5-year-old daughter. Samantha, ~as kidnapped and killed in 2002.
''It's incredibly frustrating. How many children do
we have to lose to repeat sex
offenders before we start
taking these guys serious-

ly?"
The initial deadline for
states to comply was in July.
Then the deadline was
extended to July 2010 .
although several states have
signaled they may still be
unable to meet it. States that
do not adopt the mandates
risk losing millions of dollars in federal grants.
The law was designed to
keep closer tabs on sex
offenders, including an estimated 100,000 who are not
living where they are supposed to be. It would create
a national sex offender registry and toughen penalties
for those who fail to register.
The president of the
National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children said
states need more money to
adopt the law, and he called
on Congress to laelp.
"We understand that there
are challenges in becoming
compliant, but the greatest
challenge is that states are
overwhelmed. And they're
going to need resolfrces to
address this," Ernie Allen
said.
Last year, a federal judge
in Nevada declared the law
unconstitutional because it
would subject offenders to
additional penalties after
they have served their time.
The Ohio Supreme Court
heard similar arguments last
month from more than
26,000 sex offenders who
were convicted before the
law was signed.
Critics have also complained that juvenile offenders would appear on registries in some states. And
because the law requires
offenders to register in person, it could unfairly burden
people in rural areas who
would have far to travel.
In addition to the legal
challenges, states are also
struggling with the cost.
which could climb into the
millions of dollars.
''We have states being
very laid back. and states
where legislators are pulling
out their hair trying to comply." said Alisa Klein of the
Association
for
the
Treatment
of
Sexual
Abusers. "And there's lots
of states waiting for another
state to bust a move and say,
'We· re not going to comply.'''
In California, the state's
Sex Offender Management

___ ___

,_......._...

.......,........

AP photo

In this undated photo provided by Gary Reece, Reece speaks at a regional group meeting
tor financial officers at Ohio National Financial Services in Cincinnati. Reece is a convicted sex offender turned motivational speaker who is challenging Ohio's efforts to comply
• with the federal law requiring states to keep closer tabs on sex offenders. Mor~ than three
years after Congress ordered stepped-up monitoring of sex offenders, 49 states have yet
to adopt the government's strict new requirements. and some are weighing whether it's
cheaper to comply or just pay a penalty.

Board estimated last year
that adopting the requirements would cost at least
$38 million.
Congress tried to encourage states to adopt the measure by threatening to take
10 percent of their federal
crime-prevention grants if
they do not comply. The
grants have swelled with
stimulus funding but typically range from several
hundred thousand dollars to
more than $1 million each
year, depending on the size
of the state.
California stands to lose a
few millions dollars a year
if it does not comply, state
officials said.
"Obviously this funding
loss pales in comparison
with the cost of complying
with the act," said Dana
Simas, spokeswoman for
the California Department
of Justice.
So lawmakers are locked
in a dilemma: They must
spend millions of dollars to
adopt the system or back off
a program that is designed
to protect the public from
some of society's most dangerous criminals.
"There's a number of
issues we're trying to work
out." said Vermont state
Sen. Richard Sears, who
leads his state's Senate
Judiciary·
Committee.
"We're not necessarily
against the law. but ~e·d
like .some money to go
along with it to help us
implement it."
Congressional
leaders
may suppoi1 change... to ~he
law. U.S. Sen. Patm:k
Leahy. a Vermont Democrat
who chairs the Senate
Judiciary Committee in
Washington, says he has
been working on ways to
help states comply.
"This legislation makes

___________

.._

vital progress tO\Vard keeping our children safe. but it
only works if states can and
do comply with it," Leahy
said in a statement. "Rather
than punish states that are
actively trying to comply
with this irnponant federal
law. we must work together
to address obstacles facing
state law enforcement
agencies.''
~Advocacy groups say
roughly t\vo dozen states
have submitted reports on
their compliance for the
Justice
Department
to
review. although the government would not confirm
that number.
Scott Matson, a senior
policy adviser with the
Justice Department office
that monitors sex offenders.
said he has seen a recent
uptick in applications.
although he did not say
whether more states are getting close to compliance.
The Justice Department
declared in September that
Ohio had ''substantially
implemented" the law's
requirements. leading to a
fresh round of complaints.
The state's public defender
office said court appeals
alone could cost $10 million.
Gary Reece is a 50-yearold convicted sex offender
who is challenging Ohio's

efforts to comply with the
federal law.
Reece said he was previously allowed to register
once a year and that his
name would have been
remo\'ed after 10 years
without a serious conviction. The state's ne\\' measure. he said. would put his
name on the registry for life
and require him to register
in person four times a )Car.
"Jt•s a tremendous burden. no doubt about it,"
Reece said. '·Every 90 days
you have to take off work
and go register- and if you
miss once. you· re 'going
back to jail."

Internet
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NOTICE

..J.D. DRILLING COMPANY
There will be no huntang on property belongrng
to Lrnda Orddle, James Dtddle or Maxtne
Sellers wrtllout wntten permrssron from James
Dtddle. If permission Is granted the place of
des1red hunt1ng specifically and when must be
designated and adhered to for your permrt to
be valid. If you have permiSSIOn to hunt In one
place and you are found in another area your
perm1ssion will be withdrawn forever. People
Without written permiSSIOn wrll b~ prosecuted
JAMES E. DIDDLE

._.~~-

-- ......... -.-- _

_.

--- - ------ ---· - - ·- ·--- ------

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 2 ,

New $1 oo bi.llion safety
net for jobless in works
WASHINGTON (APl As unemployment spikes,
the cost of compas:-ion is
going up too.
Bv as much as $100 billion.
That's the potential price
of a push by Democrats in
Congress to continue providii1g extra help to the jobless beyond the core 26week unemployment insurance package provided
under permanent law.
:the jaw-dropping numbers
combine the approximately
$85 billion cost of conrinuin!!
emergency benefits through
2010 for the long-te1m unemployed - jobless more than
six months - plus an estimated $15 billion to continue
subsidies to help pay health
insurance premiums.
Even before the last new
round of extended benefits
in November. the cost of
unemployment compensation.twas estimated by the
Wh1te House to exceed
$140 billion for fiscal 2010.
. which began in October.
Just two years ago - when
the unemployment rate was
4.8 percent in contrast to the
curcrent t 0.2 percent - the
cost of unemployment benefits was only $43 billion.
Extending unemployment
benefits again is an obvious
solution
t6
Democrats
preaching compassion for
the long-te1m jobless, as well
as to economists who say
cutting off the flow of money
could harm the economy.
"This is the most effective
way to get money into the
economy. It's given to pea-·
pie who are simply out of
money." said Rep. Jim
McDennott. D-Wash., a key
supporter. 'They're spending it. They're not socking it
away in a mattress somewhere."
Several temporary benefit
extensions dating from mid2008 are set to expire Dec.
31. In January alone, an
estimated I million people
will lose benefits as their
extended coverage runs out.
By March, 3 million people
will have lost benefits averaging about $315 a week.
Also expiring is a program
!)ubs1dizing 65 percent of
insurance premiums for
unemployed people who
sign up for a continuation of
health benefits formerly provided by their employer
under the so-called COBRA
program. The nine months of
COBRA subsidies and the
additional weeks of unemeloyment benefits were both
core pieces of February's
economic stimulus plan.
The COBRA health insurance subsidies expire Dec. l
for those who signed onto
the program when it first
started last winter, though
people who get fired before
Jan. I are eligible for the
full nine-month subsidy.
People on unemployment
would be able to finish out
their present "tier'' of benefits but would be ineligible
for any of the recently
passed additional coverage.
The benefits extension is
under discussion among top
Democratic leaders. While
there's no agreement on a
specific plan. there'_s a lot of
sentiment behind a full-year
extension, congressional
aides say. The staggering
cost, however, could preclude passing it.
With the budget deficit spiraling out of control. deficit
hawks are certain to balk at
the measure's price tag. And
the White House, which is
signaling that it is going to
focus next year on trying to
rein in the deficit, is not
endorsing a full-year extension of benefits. Budget
office spokesman Tom Gavin
would only say the administration supports some extension beyond Dec. 31._
"We're past · the point
where anything can be
deficit financed without
some plan to pay for it," said
Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a
Responsible Federal Budget.
"It has to come with offsets."
· Many economists say
increasing or extending
unemployment payments is
among the most efficient
ways to jump-start the economy. It's easy to do and the
people getting the benefits
typically spend the money
quickly. With the economy in
a fragile recovery. cutting off
benefits could be harmful.

2 0 09

Seattle police kill suspect in officer slaying·s
s~s~Ec~;E~~~~~~N

"It would significantly
SEATI'LE - A lone offiraise the risk of t~llling back
into recession next year," said cer on patrol in the middle
Mark Zandi, chief economist of the night Tuesday spotted
a stolen car. its hood up and
at Moody's Economy.com.
Not all economists agree. engine running, and pulled
however. especially if the over to check it out. As the
benefits are financed by patrolman 'sat in his cruiser.
adding to the nation's $12 a burly man with a large
trillion debt. There's also mole on his cheek came up
evidence that unemployment from behind.
The
officer
turned,
insurance actually raises the
jobless rate slightly because stepped out~ide and recogsome people don't look for nized the most wanted man
work as diligently as they do in the Pacific Northwest the ex-con accused of gunwhen they're on it.
"The longer you el(tend ning down four cops at a
unemployment benefits. the coffee shop.
Vloments later, Maurice
longer you extend average job
searches." said Ken Mayland, Clemmons. 37. lay dead in
president of ClearView the street, shot by the patrolEconomics. "It makes it more man after Clemmons made
comf01tablc for people to be a move for a gun he had
taken from one of the slain
unemployed.''
While most Republicans officers, police said.
Clemmons' death brought
supported a recent bill
adding I 4 to 20 weeks of to an end two days of fear
extra benefits for those who across the Seattle-Tacoma
had exhausted payments last- area and one of the biggest
ing as long as a year and a manhunts the region has
half. many are likely to resist ever seen. Dozens of police
officers milled around at the
the upcoming measure.
"Calling more government scene afterward, some
spending and more debt a solemnly shaking hands and
'jobs package' is laughable, patting each other on the
and the Democrats' frantic back.
"Good thing he wasn't
push for more of the same is
yet another acknowledgment able to get the gun out here
that their trillion-dollar stim- or we might have had a difulus isn't working," said ferent ending to this whole
Minority
Leader
John thing,'' Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer
Boehner. R-Ohio.
The startling price tag of said. "The officer in Seattle
extending the benefits is did a good job of making
due to two factors: the sharp sure he went home safe
spike in the jobless numbers tonight.''
Clemmons eluded capture
and several layers of additional weeks of benefits that thanks to family and friends
have been approved by who provided him with
shelter. cell phones, cash
Congress since June 2008.
The core benefit is 26 and first aid for the severe
weeks. with up to 20 addition- belly wound he suffered
al weeks in states with high when one of the dying offiunemployment. States collec- cers in Sunday's coffeetively are already projected to shop rampage got off a shot.
nm a $57 billion deficit in the police said. Six to seven of
core program in 20 lO. The those associates were being
federal government is already anested Tuesday.
Among them, police said.
obligated. to lend them the
money to cover that gap.
was Darcus D. Allen, a conAdditional tters of benefits victed murderer who served
were added m 2008. in prison with Clemmons in
February's stimulus measure . Arkansas. and allegedly
not only renewed those ben- drove the getaway truck
efits but added $25 a week to after the coffee shop ramevery unemployment check. page: tv.·o men who later

AP photo

Police and fire officials salute as the bodies of four slain Lakewood Police officers arrive in a
procession at the Mountain View Funeral Home Tuesday in Lakewood, Wash. The tour
Lakewood Police officers were killed Sunday as they sat in a coffee shop in Parkland, Wash .

traveled with Clemmons as
he eluded police; and
Clemmons' sister, who bandaged him up and gave him
a lift part way to Seattle.
It wasn't immediately
known if she or Allen had
attorneys; the other two
have pleaded not guilty.
"Some are ftiends. some
are acquaintances, some are
partners in crime, some are
relatives. Now they're all
partners in crime." Troyer
said.
Troyer said paramedics
were
stunned
that
Clemmons lived as long as
he did with the bullet
wound. It had been packed
with gauze and patched
with duct tape.
It was not clear exactly
where Clemmons was while
on the run. Police rushed
from place to place, following tips that often came up
empty · or yielded only
accomplices. They searched
homes and apartments
around the city and cordoned off a park after a
report of blood 111 a
restroom.

On Sunday, Clemmons
briefly took refuge at a
house in the city's well-todo Leschi neighborhood,
slipping away before police
sunoundcd the home in an
all-night siege that --ended
when
SWAT
officers
stormed the place and realized he wasn't there.
Clemmons has a violent.
erratic past. and authorities
in Washington state and
Arkansas - where thenGov. Mike Huckabee in
2000 commuted his 108year prison sentence for
armed robbery and other
offenses - are facing tough
questions about why an
apparently violent and
deranged man was out on
the ~treet .
On Sunday. six days after
posting bail in Washington
on charge~ of raping a child,
Clemmons walked into the
coffee shop in suburban
Tacoma and killed four uniformed Lakewood police
officers as they caught up
on paperwork on their laptops. police said.
"The only motive that we

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have 1s he decided he was
going to go kill police officers,"
Troyer
said.
Investigators also reported
that Clemmons told others
the night before the sho.
ing that he was going to )(
police and they should
watch the news. but they
wrote it off as "crazy-talk."
In a statement posted on
the
conservative
Ne·wsmax .com Web site,
Huckabee said: "I take full
responsibility
for
my
actions of nine years ago. I
acted on the facts presented
to me in 2000. If I could
have possibly known what
Clemmons would do nine
years later. I obviously
would have made a different decision. But if the
same file was presented to
me today, I would have
likely made the same decision."
The Seattle patrol officer
who killed Clemmons,
Benjamin L. Kelly. 39. a
seven-year law enforcement
veteran. will be placed on
leave. which is standard
procedure after a shootin.
.

I

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Bo"den to retire. Page 82

KeU} brushes ofT

mrumors, Page B6

\Vednesday, December 2, 2009
LocAL

Sen

Lady Tornado s pick up
first win over CS, 65-47

DUJ

POMEROY- A IIGhodulo ot .Jpcomtng htglt

school varsity sporllng ovents Involving
trom Metgs nnd Gallla counwas

Thuraday.J:lecember 3
Girls Basketball
at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Walterfo,rd at Southern. 6 p.m.

B Y BRYAN WALTERS

.December !I
Boys Basketball
Waterford at Eastern, 6·30 p m
Southern at M ller 5 p.m
Meigs at Warren. 5 p m.
South Gallla at Cross Lenos Chnsttan,
f.rl~

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS The
Southern girls basketball
team picked up its first victory of the 2009-10 season
on Tuesday night after a
convincing 65-47 triumph
over host Ohio Valle)
Christian during a non-c~m­
ference matchup at the F1rst
Baptist Church Activities
Building in the Old French
City.
The Lady Tornadoes ( 1-1)
stormed out to a 13-0
advantage early in the lirst
quarter and never looked
back in the wire-to-wire
decision, establishing a lead
of 15-2 after e1ght minutes
of play.
The Lady Defenders &lt;0-2)
found their rhythm after that
slow start in the opener,
being outscored by the
guests by only five points
the rest of the way.
However. the hosts were
never able to cut their
deficit down to single-digits
before ultimately dropping
their home opener.
Southern took a 29-15
edge into the intermission
and Jed 46-29 after three
periods of play. The Lady
'Docs finished the night 29of-73 shooting fro~n the
field for 40 percet1t. including 1-of-2 from three-point

730pm.
OVCS Tournament TBA
Girls Basketball
South Gallla at Cross Lanes Chnstlan, 6

pro.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
Wrestling
Hu7lt ngton at Po nt Pleasant, TBA

Sll1u.a1lly•.Dtccmber.5
Boys Basketball
Eastern at Soutfl Galha. 6.30 p m
Rock Htll at Galha Academy, 6 p '11
Mergs at RIVer Valley. 5 p m
OVCS Tournament TBA
Girls Basketball
Galha Academy at Manetta. 6 p.m.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at Metgs lnvtte, TBA

Monday. December.I
Girls Basketball
Eastern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Southern at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
Fairland at OVCS. 6 p.m.

Iue.s.day, December 8

t

Boys Basketball
er Vaney at Gallla Academy 5 p m
th Gallra at Southern, 5 p m
Girls Basketball
venswood at Point Pleasant. 5 45

p.m.

Hannan at Buffalo. 6 p.I'T'
Wirt County at Wahama 6 p m

OVCS falls
to Elk Valley
in opener
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEYOMYOAILYTAIBUNE COM

ELKV1EW, W.Va.- The
Ohio
Valley
Christian
School Lady Defenders
opened their season on
Monday evening with a six
point loss to Elk Valle).
The Lady Defenders and
Elk Valley were tied .at the
end of the first quarter with
the score 13-13.
VCS outscored Elk
ley in the second quarter
a one point halftime
lead 21-20. Elk Valley
outscored
the
Lady
Defenders 29 to 22 in the
second half to win by six
with a final score of 49-43.
aves was led in scoring
by Lindsey Miller with 13
points and Madison Crank
with 12 points. Elk Valley
was led by Chcl-.;ca Burdette
with 19 points and Paige
t-ayton with II poinh.
As a team. the Lady
Defenders had 16 turnovers.
36 rebounds. 11 assists,
eight steals. and four
blocked shots.
Hali

Please see Southern. 86

AP file photo

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern's Cheyene Dunn shoots the ball over two OVCS
defenders during Tuesday night's contest.

1

Please see ovcs. Bl
of the River Valley lady Raiders basketball team celebrate their one point victoBlue Angels fall Members
ry over county rival Gallia Academy on Tuesday evening.
to South Point RiVer Valley stays unbeaten, outlasts Blue Angels
BY SARAH HAWLEY
.

HAWLEYOMYDAILYTAIBUNF. COM

BY BRYAN WALTERS
OWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

SOUTH POINT - The
Gallia Academy Blue
Angels ( 1-1) lost their first
game or the season on
Monday night, suffering a
55-28 defeat at the hands
of South Point.
After beating Athens in
the season opener, the
Blue Angels were down
early to the Lady Pointers
and were never able to
recover.
South Point jumped out
to a 23-2 lend in the first
quarter, and led 35-11 at
the half. Gnllin Academy
could not recover from the
24 point halftime deficit.
and lo:-.t b) 27 points.
Gatlin Academy was
plauged by turnovers in
the loss. The Blue Angels
had 47 rebounds, 12
steals, six assists, and one
eked shot in the conrgan Daniel s led the
team in scoring with nine
points and Amy Noe
tidded five.
Daniels and Noe led the
way in rebounding with 10
each. Allie Troester added
eight, and H aley Rosier
Cl

Please see Angels. Bl

-,--

HlDWELL - Coaches
usually look to seniors for
leadership. but sometimes
they also look for them to
step up in big games.
River
Valley's
lone
senior. Jenna Ward. more
than did her part in that role
Tuesday night. scoring a
game-high 14 pomts which included sinking the
game-winning free throw
\\ ith 23 seconds left in regulation - to help the Lady
Raiders claim a thrilling 3837 decisiOn over VIsiting
Gallia Academy in
nonconference
matchup
between Gallia County
rivals.
The Lad) Raiders (2-0)
remained perfect at their
new gymnasium with n :-.econd. straight home win
again a major rival after
claimino a 56-47 win over
Meigs in the opener on
Saturdav. But unlike that
season ·opening decision,
the Blue Angels (J -2) were
able to overcome an earl)
RVHS surge to make the
contest a real nail-biter.
The
Lady
Raider&lt;;
l&gt;tormcd out to a 14-6
advantage after eight mmutes of play and then used a

a

small I0-9 second quarter
run to take a comfortable
24-15 edge into the intt•rmission.
The Angels
playing in
their third consccutjve road
game over the lust four days
- made their btg charge
early in the third quarter.
goin~ on .111 8-0 run over the
opemng 2:15 of the second
half to pull within a single
point at 24-23
The hosts napped their
dry spell at 5: 15. with a basket for a 26-23 edge, but
GAHS countered with five
straight pomt., to take its
first lead of the night (2826) with 4:23 remaining in
the third canto.
River Valley closed the
quarter wuh a small 4-2
nm, making 1t a 30-dll L'Ontcst at the end of three quar
tcrs.
Points were hard to come
by down the stretch. but the
guests -.,truck first with a
basket at 6:34 to take a 32
30 edge. It would also sene
as Gallia Academy's tina!
lead of the evening.
Ten sccondo; Iuter. RVHS
recaptured the lead \\hen
Ward nailed a trifecta for a
slim 33-32 cushion. Both
teams ended up tied at 33,
35 and again at 37 ,., ith 42
second remaining, cttmg

up the dramatic conclusion.
Ward. who was shooting
two at the line w 1th 23 seconds remaining. calmly
sank the second of her two
. ,·
th h
attempts - gl\ 1.11 g e . os~~
a 38-37 cushiOn. G.tliJa
Academ) managed to get a
decent shot down the
stretc~. but ulumately the
ball dtd not go through the
net.
Ward also helped lead the
charge in that opening quarter. scoring eight of her
game-high 14 points during
that ::.tretch.
Brooke Marcum added
eicht points to the \\tnmng
cause. follo\\ed by Kelsey
Sands with se\ en markers
and Tracy Roberh with four
points. Cady Gilmore :Jnd
A11i 'eville rounded out the
..
·h h
. 1
'&gt;CC!nng '"It t. ree .tnc two
P&lt;~mts. rc:.pcctlvcly.
fhc Blue An~eb \\er~ led
b&gt;' Amy_ No~ with II pou~ts,
e1ght at \Vht.ch came dunng
that key th1rd-quartcr n!n.
Hale) Ros1er \\a:, next \\ tlh
10 markers,. follo\~Cd by
Morgan Dan1els wtth s1x
and Allie Troester\\ ith fi\ c.
Brea Close and Tara Young
rounded out the scoring
with three and t\\O pomts,
respecti\ely.

Please see RV. Bl

In this Nov. 22, 2009 photo, Pittsburgh Stealers wide receiver Hines Ward (86) sits on the sidelines during the second
half of an NFL football game against the Kansas City
Chiefs in Kansas Crty, Mo. Ward apologized Tuesday for
openly questioning Ben Roethlisberger's toughness, saying
he spoke emotionally without knowing a team doctor recommended the quarterback not play Sunday because of a
concussion.

Ward sorry for questioning
Big Ben's toughness
PITTSBURGH (AP) Steelers \\ide receiver Hines
Ward apologized Tuesday for
openly que tioning Ben
Roethlio;;bcrger's toughness.
sa) ing he spoke emotionall)
\\ tthout knowing a team doctor recommended the quarterback not pia) Sunday
because of a concussion.
Ward talked Monday with
Roethlisberger and coach
Mike Tomlin in separate con\Crsations, expresc;ing re{!Tet
for saying .durins a pregame
NBC-TV rntcrv1ew that the
locker room was -.;plit 50-50
whether the cluarterback
-;hould play in Ha timore.
''I have apoJooized to
Ben," Ward wrote fn a posting on his Facebook page.
''Ben and I are cool and
always will be. We will not
let this come between us. our
talk was VCI) productive."
Ward chose to make hb
comments public because he
doesn't plan to speak further
about the subject
"I v.ould llC\'er yuestion a
man's toughness playing in a
STEELER unif(orrn).'. Ward
1 v.'rote. "I didn't mean to
cause such a stir. M) frustratian v.:as ha-;ed ~n the ract
that th1s was a brg game for
1
us to stay i1~ the pla)off pic' ture and havmg Ben out the~e
gave us ~lur best opp(ortuntty} .to. ~v1n: -~ ~a~ tm~tr&lt;~t~d
~~c.msc th~tc \\as .no mdJcaIron of Ben not bemg able to
play because he practiced a
normal routine."
Ward and his teammates
didn't Ic.1m until Saturda~·
that Roethlisberger wouldn t
pia) .. Because Rocthlisberger
1 practiced as the starter all
week, No. 3 quarterback
Dennis Dixon was forced to
make his fir~t NFL stat1 v.ith
little preparation during the
20-17 O\ertime loss.
''Now as a veteran guy on
this team. you can see ho\v
upse! th~t made a lot of_ us
cons1d~nng \\c. were g01~g
dO\\ }1 mto t~e hons dens m
1 Bnlttmore .•~1th~ut our... fearless .leadel. Ward wrott;.
D1xon thruv. for a touchJov. nand ran for another, but
was only 4 of 16 for 5R ymds
after ha)ftime. and his rnterception led to Baltimore's
winning field goal.
During the inten iew, Ward
' said some pin) crs masked
concus ions to play, and he
estimated half of the Steeler.ha\C had at least one concussion. Hov.ever. he didn't
know that R~thlisberge~ ~a-;
unhapp) \\,lth the &lt;fec1 ton
benc~mg h1m - made b)
Tomhn upon the recommendation of neurologist Joseph
1 Maroon
or that the quar-

terback lobbied the coach to
change his mind.
··1 know Ben wanted· to
pla) thi-; game but the docs
told him he\ down, and with
that we trust our docs with
their decisions." Ward wrote.
··we would never jeopardize
anyone's health for a game of
football. Life is way to(o)
precious. One thing about
Ben. he is a WfNNER. We
just wanted this game so
badly."
Tomlin didn't order Ward
to talk to Roethlisbergcr, saying ...I trusted both of those
men would be professionals
and quell whatever potential
problems and issues that may
have occurred .... He (Ward)
assured me this football team
will be ready to prepare for
and ultimately play Oakland
(on Sunday).'
Despite the stir caused by
V/ard·s comments or the
Steelers · three-same Joe; in~
streak. Tomlm
doesn t
believe he hn. a divided
team.
·'J'm not overly concerned
about discontent m the locker
room:· Tomlin said Tue~day.
·'Any time you get 53 guy~ m
a locker room. there are
going to be disagreements,
ffiisunder~tandings~ and miscommunication.
··J think it's highlighted by
losing. It becomes a story at
times in the midst of losing . I
tend to focus on the real root
of our evi Is, and that's searching for and ultimately finding
a winning fomlllla. playing
winning fm)tball. A win
would ~olve a lot of issues."
While the Steelers (6-5) are
slumping. Tomlin p~miscd
after the game that h1s team
would ·:Unleash hell" in
December - a remark he
blamed on being fired up by
watching
the
movie
··Gladiator" before the game.
The Steelers play two
games in five dn) s starting
'Sunday against a pair of the
NFL's worst teams. the
Raiders (3-8) and BrO\\ ns ( 1JO), and three of their final
five opponents own losing
records.
'The big thing for us is that
we don't carrv the baggage of
recent weeks." Tomlin said.
"'We have to be a mentally
tough group, shake off some
recent 'iailures and ultimately
play winning football. We've
oot a veteran group that has
faced a lot of adversity, indi\ idua1ly and collectively. nnd
1 would expect the\ nre capable of domg that: .. That's
\\ hy I spoke with the optimism that I spoke with after
the game."

�---------~---,~------------~.-

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

;FSU coach Bobby Bowden
. to retire, after bowl game

: TALLAHASSEE,
Fla.
(·AP) ...... Florida State coach
nobbv Bo\\den will end his
44-ye.ar coaching career after
t~e Seminole~ play in a bowl
uame.
~: Bowden will retire as the
~cond \\inn ingest coach in
major-college
football
oehind Penn State's Joe
Paterno. The 80-year-old
-gowden has won 388 games
ih his career at Samford.
West Virginia and Florida
State, where he spent the last
34 seasons.
"We've got one more game
and I look forward to enjoying these next fe\v weeks as
the head football coach,"
Bowden said Tuesday in a
~tatcment released by the
school.
Florida State's bowl game
lias not been determined~ The
are bowl eligible with a 6-6
record.
Bowden woo two national
titles with Florida State, in
1993 and 1999. Among his

ovcs
from PageBl
Burleson led the team in
rebounds with II' followed
by Beth Martin and
Samantha Westfall with
etght each, Miller had six,
and Allie Hamilton with
three points. Martin had
five assists to lead the team.
Crank and Miller each had
two. and Burleson and
Westfall each added one.
€rank had four steals.
Miller added t\vo, and Sarah
Schoonover and Martin

Angels
from Page Bl
added seven. Noe also led
the team in assists with
three. while Brea Close
had the only blocked shot
for the Blue Angels.
Troester led the team in
steals with three.
For South Point. Kayla
Fletcher led the wav with
l4 points, followed by
Jaylynn Bradburn \Vith 13.

top achievements was a
string of 14 straight seasons
ending in 2000 when the
Seminoles won at kast 10
games and finished ranked in
the top five of the AP poll.
Rorida State was 152-19-1 ,
an :864 winning percentage.
dunng that span.
'·He set records of achievement on the field that will
probably never be equaled,"
university president T.K.
Wetherell said. "Bobby
Bowden in many ways
becam~ the fa~e of Florida
State. It wa" his sterling personalitv and character that
personified this university."
Bowden is a football lifer,
who modeled his career after
his idol Paul "Bear" Bryant,
the legendary Alabama
coach who died shmtly after
he retired in 1982.
"After vou retire, there's
only one· big event left,"
Bowden has said over the
years. "And I ain't ready for
that."

RV

road trip to

Exhibit A· Description
Ryan C. Foster Property
Lot 1 of the Anthony
Land Company Purchase, described as:
Being part of the
Southeast Quarter of
Section 8, Town 7N,
Range 14W, Scipio
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio, of the
. Ohio Company Pur. chase, to-wit:
Beginning at the Squtheast Corner of Section
8, Scipio Township,
Meigs County, Ohio at a
4' White Oak found at
the comer of the Section from Which an iron
pin set this survey on
the south line of Sec·tion 8 bears N 89' 45'
12" W • 5.00 feet and
another Iron Pin set
this survey on the east
line of Section 8 bears
N 01' 34' 58":f • 5.00
feet. Thence with the
south line of Section 8,
N 89' 45' 12" W •
1984.75 feet to an Iron
Pin set this survey and
corner with H. Graham
at Volume 243 at Page
781, thence with Graham N 00· 08' 35" E •
422.54 feet to an Iron
Pin set this survey.
This Pin being the Prln·
clpal Place of Beginning for this survey,
Thence continuing with
Graham Volume 243 at

the season

from Page Bl
Another key clement to
the final oljtcome of the
contest came at the free
throw line. River Valley
was 7-of-1 0 at the charity
stripe, while the guests finished the night 5-of-17 at
the foul line.
Gallia Academy did salvage a split on the evening
with a 35-6 victory in the
junior varsity contest.
Abby Wiseman led Gallia
Academy and all :-.corers
with a game-high I 0
point:;. Olivia Glassburn.
Ashle.y
Morgan
and
Mercedes Combs each had
two points for the hosts.
Gallia Academy will
make its fourth straight

to Marietta for the SE0AL
opener at 6 p.m. River
Valley will host its third
consecutive contest on
Monday when Eastern
~omes to town for a nonconference matchup at 6
p.m.
RIVER VALLEY 38,
GALLIA ACADEMY 37
Gallipolis
R Valley

6

9

15 7 -

14 10 6

8

37

-- 38

GALLIA ACADEMY (1·2): Brea Close 1
1-2 3. Claudia Farney 0 0·0 o. Haley
Ros1er 5 0-2 10 Kara Jackson 0 0-0 0,
C1ara Jackson o 0-2 o, Amy Noe 4 1·2
11, Tara Young 1 0·0 2, Mattie Lanham
o 0-0 0, Allie Troester 1 3-6 5 , Morgan
Daniels 3 0-3 6. TOTALS: 15 5·17 37.
Three·point goals: 2 (Noe 2).
RIVER VALLEY (2·0): Jessi Hager 0 0·
0 0, Cady Gilmore 1 0-Q 3, Kelsey
Sands 2 3·5 7. Alii Neville 1 0·0 2, Beth
M1sner 0 0·0 0, Jenna Ward 5 2·3 14,
Tracy Roberts 2 0·0 4, Brooke Marcum
3 2-2 8. TOTALS: 14 7·10 38. Three·
point goals: 3 (Ward 2, Gilmore).

James documentary
lands nomination
CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James is up f r
another award.
The film ..More Than A
Game." which follows the
NBA superstar and four high
school friends on their journey to a national champi.onship
while
James
becomes a celebrity. has
been nominated as best documentary . for the Spirit
Awards. which honor inde~
pendent films.
James. the reigning league
MVP, spent part of last summer on a worldwide promotional tour for the film,
which was nominated along
with '"Anvil! The Story of
Anvil'.
"Food,
Inc.,··

"October Country" and
''Which Way Home'' in the
documentary category.
The Spirit Awards honor
movies that cost less than
$20 I1)illion to make.
The winner will be
announced March 5. James
will be busy that day as the
Cavaliers host the Detroit
Pistons.
~~

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Subscribe todav.
992-2155 .

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each added one. Westfall
led the team with three
blocks and Burleson added
one
ELK VALLEY 49, OHIO VALLEY
CHRISTIAN 43
ovcs
13 8 7 15 - 43
Elk Valley
13 7 10 19 - 49
ELK VALLEY (1-0): Courtney Hunter 2
1·4 8, Pa1ge Lay1on 5 1-2 11 L1z
Chandler o o-o 0. McKenzie Young 1 o0 2. Chelsea Burdette 7 5-10 19,
Hannah Williams 1 0·1 2, Katie
Burdette 2 0·0 7 TOTALS. 18 7-17 49_
Three-point goals. 2 (Hunter 1 Katie
Burdette 1).
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (0-1}: Beth
Martin 1 o-o 5, Mad1son Crank 6 0·0 12.
Sarah Schoonover 0 0·0 0, Hali
Burleson 3 3·4 9, Allie Hamilton 0 0..0 0,
Lindsey Miller 4 22·2 13. TOTALS: 16 5·
6 43. Three-point goals: 2 (Martin 1,
Miller 1).

SOUTH POINT 55,
GALLIA ACADEMY 28
G Academy 2 9 11 6 - 28
S Point
23 12 13 7 - 55
GALLIA ACADEMY (1-1): Brea Close 2
0-0 4, Samantha Barnes 0 0-0 0,
Claudia Farney 0 2-2 2. Haley Rosier 0
0-0 o. Kara Jackson 0 0-0 0, Ciara
Jackson 0 0·0 0. Amy Noe 0 2·2 5, Tara
Young 0 0·0 o. Mallie Lanham 1 2·3 4,
Allie Troester 2 0·0 4, Morgan Daniels 3
3-4 9. TOTALS: 8 9-11 28. Three-point
goals: 1 (Noe 1).
SOUTH POINT (1·0): Allison Mitchell 1
3·5 5, Erin Dillow 0 2-4 2. Angelica
Stewart 1 o-o 2. Undsay Henderson 0 00 0, Kyra Carter 0 0-0 0. Kayle Fletcher
7 0·0 14. Ashley Goodall 5 0-0 10.
Kadesha Fox 0 0-0 0, Jaylynn Bradourn
6 1·2 13, Tinesha Taylor 4 1 4 !l
TOTALS: 24 7-15 55. Three-point goals
None

~.. ._'IL.a•-

·Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09CV024
Union Trades Federal
·credit Union
Plaintiff
vs
Ryan &amp; Rhonda Foster
et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
,Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me directed from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
.the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, December 18, 2009 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following
described
real estate:

~tart

on Saturday when it travels

Page 781, N oo· OB' 35"
E 724.38 feet to a point
in the centerline of
Kingsbury Road (C.R.
18) and passing a 3/8
Inch Iron pin found with
a cap stamped Eason
7033 at 687.51 feet
Thence the following 9
courses with the cen·
terline of Kingsbury
Road (C.R. 18)
N 63' 25' 03" E - 43.46
feet to a point
N 71' 56' 02" E • 243.56
feet to a point
N 80' 02' 58" E • 55.40
feet to a point
S 82' 26' 41" E • 47.58
feet to a point
S 65' 38' 36" E • 66.56
feet to a point
S 58' 03' 22" E • 70.88
feet to a point
S 53' 00' 16" E • 87.07
feet to a point
S 45' 35' 00" E • 139.25
feet to a point
S 51 40' 17" E • 78.86
feet to a point
Tnence leaving Kingsbury Road (C.R. 18) and
with a dirt lane the fol·
lowing four courses:
S15' 42' 17"E ·147.58
feet to an Iron Pin set
this survey and passIng a survey at 30.00
feet;
s 44° 33' 52" w. 73.18
feet to an Iron Pin set
this survey
s 54° 11'10" w-147.19
feet to an Iron Pin set
this survey
s 61° 34' 57" w. 585.49
feet to an Iron Pin set
this survey and passIng the end of the dirt
lane at 497.49 feet, said
pin being the principal
place of beginning for
this survey.
The survey contains
9.009 acres, more or
less.
In addition, granting a
30.00 foot wide easement for Ingress and
egress for Lot 1 and
Lot 2 with the dirt lane
between Lots 1 and 2
and having the followIng centerline description.
Beginning at the northeast corner of this tract
in the centerline of
Kingsbury Road (C.R.
18) and the common
line between Lot 1 and

Lot 2, thence S 15• 42'
17" W- 147.58 feet to
an Iron Pin set this survey.
Thence S 44• 33' 52" W
- 73.18 feet to an Iron
Pin set this survey.
Thence S 54• 1110" W147.19 feet to an Iron in
set this survey
Thence S 61 • 34' 57" W
- 497.49 feet to !I point
and the terminus of
said easement, said
point being N 61° 34'
57" E • 88.00 feet from
an Iron Pin set this survey at the Southwest
comer of Lot 1.
All Iron Pins set this
survey are 3/8 Inch x 30
inch rebar and have a
plastic cap on them
stamped Dale Exline
PS 6722.
All courses are rotated
to match North as per a
Survey by Robert Easton PS 7033 on
6/14/1999 of this Farm.
Subject to all legal
easements and rights
of ways not listed
above.
Survey on September
23, 2002 - October 1,
2002 by Appalachian
Professional Associ·
ates.
The premises are sub·
ject
to
protective
covenants for Horner
Hill as set forth In a
Deed
from
Roger
Spaun, married, to
Ryan C. Foster and
Rhonda L. Foster,
dated June 14, 2007,
filed June 18, 2007, in
Volume 255, Page 257,
Official Records of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Tax Parcel No. 17·
00328.001
Record Title Owners:
Ryan C. Foster and
Rhonda L. Foster, husband and wife, by
virtue of the General
Warranty
Deed
recorded In Volume
255, Page 257, Official
Records
of Meigs
County, Ohio.
The street address of
the above-described
Is 36745
property
Kingsberry
Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769_
Current Owner: Ryan
C. &amp; Rhonda L. Foster

Property at: 36745
Kingsbury
Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh
PP# 17-00328.001
Prior Deed References:
Volume 255, Page 257
Appraised at S20,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or ~r­
tlfied check, balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did include an interior examination of the house.
Beegle,
Robert E.
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Theisen Brock
424 Second St.
Marietta, Oh
740-373-5455
(11) 25, (12) 2, 9
-------Public Notice
-------Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09CV041
HSBC Mortgage Service Inc.
Plaintiff
vs
Herbert L &amp; Helen R.
Grate et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas
Meigs County, Ohio •
In pursu.ance of an
order of sale to me directed from said court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on t11e front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, December 18, 2009 at
10:00 a.m., of said day,
the following described
real estate:
EXHIBIT A
Situated In the Township of Orange, County
of Meigs and State of
Ohio, and being In Section 4, Town 4, Range
12 of the Ohio Company's Purchase and
further described as
follows:
Commencing for reference at the southwest
corner of !':aid Section
4; thence east 207 rods
and 22 links along the

.a--c..ag..... -t:

south line of said Section to a point in the
center line of intersection of old Tuppers
Plains-Kane Road with
the south line of said
Section, which point is
also the southeast corner of a six acre tract of
land described In Deed
Volume 251, Page 3 of
the Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio;
thence north along
center line of said Tuppers Plains-Keno Road
to its intersection with
the old Pomeroy-Marl·
etta Road, which point
is the northeast corner
of a fifteen acre tract of
land described In Deed
Volume 225, Page 81 of
the Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio,
and which point is also
the northeast corner of
the said six acre tract
of land and which point
is the true place of beginning of the parcel
herein
conveyed;
thence southeasterly
along the west line of
said six acre tract of
land 200 feet to a point;
thence east 205 feet
passing two iron pins
which are fifteen feet
south from the corner
of a garage situated on
the parcel conveyed, to
the center line of the
said Tuppers PlainsKeno Road {the east
line of the said six acre
tract of land); thence
north following the
center line of said Tuppers Plains-Keno Road
(the east line of said six
acre tract of land) to the
place of beginning,
containing 0.47 acre,
more or less.
There is also conveyed
herein an easement as
means of ingress and
egress, being the right
to use the existing
driveway from present
State
Route
No.7
across that portion of
the six ac·re tract of
land not hereby conveyed to the tract of
land hereby conveyed,
which use Is not exclusive_
See Judgment Entry
recorded In Official

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Record Book 156, Page Love Seat, • Roaster,
793 of Meigs County Kids toys, Kids toys,
Records for the toea- printer/Copy Scan
tlon of the boundary Bay #1
line between the real· Name: Beverly Ward
estate described above Address: 32119 Brewer
as recorded In Volume Road
305, Page 473 of Meigs City: Portland, OH
County Records and 45770
the land now owned or Terms of the sale will
formerly owned by be cash or certified
Robart Tripp, which is fund ONI.Y.
more fully described in Hill's Self Storage
the deed recorded In 29625 Bashan Rd.
Volume 295, Page 269 Racine, OH 45771
of
Meigs
County (12) 2, 4, 9
Records.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
40044 State Route 7,
Public Notice
Reedsville, Ohio 45772
Parcel No. 1000443000 PUBLIC SALE
•
Current Owner: Herbert Notice is hereby given
L. &amp; Helen R. Grate Et that on December 12,
AI
2009 at 10:00 a.m., a
Prior Deed References: public sale will be held
Volume 282. Page 115 for the purpose of satAppraised at S1 00,000 isfying a landlord's lien
Terms of Sale: Cannot on the contents of selfbe sold for less than service storage room.
213rds of the appraised The goods to be sold
value. 10% down on are described generally
day of sale, cash or cer- as miscellaneous pertified check, balance sonal &amp; household. The
due on confirmation of room will be opened for
sale.
viewing immediately
The appraisal did not prior to solicitation of
Include an interior ex- bids.
amination of the house. Description of property
E. Beegle, as follows:
Robert
Meigs County Sheriff
Dining room table, 8
Attorney for the Plain- chairs, 2 bed frames,
tiff
child's chair, baseball
Keith D. Weiner &amp; helmets, family photos
Assoc.
Bay#5
Name: Bob Crow
75 Pike St. 4th floor
Cleveland, Ohio
Address: PO Box 289
216-771-6500
City: Syracuse, OH
(11) 25, (12) 2, 9
45779
Terms of the sale will
- - - - - - - - be cash or certified
Public Notice
fund ONLY.
- - - - - - - - Hill's Self Storage
PUBLIC SALE
29625 Bashan Rd.
Notice Is hereby given Racine, OH 45771
that on December 12, (12) 2, 4, 9
2009 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be held
for the purpose of sat·
Public Notice
isfylng a landlord's Hen
on the contents of self· PUBLIC SALE
service storage room. Notice Is hereby given
The goods to be sold that on December 12,
are described generally 2009 at 10:00 a.m., a
as miscellaneous per- public sale will be held
sonal &amp; household. The for the purpose of satroom will be opened for Isfying a landlord's lien
viewing Immediately on the contents of selfprior to solicitation of service storage room.
bids.
The goods to be sold
Description of property are described generally
as follows:
as miscellaneous per-

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t&lt;&gt;

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sonal &amp; household. The
room will be opened for
viewing in1mf!diately
prior to solicitation of
bids.
Description of property
as follows:
Love Seat, outdoor
Sink, Pop Cooler, Antique Gas Stove
Bay#62
Name: Chad Diddle
Address: PO Box 891
City: Racine, OH 45771
Terms of the sale will
be cash or certified
fund ONLY.
Hill's Self Storage
29625 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH 45771
{12) 2, 4, 9
Public Notice
PUBLIC SALE
Notice Is hereby given
that on December 12,
2009 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be held
for the purpose of satisfying a landlord's lien
on the contents of self·
service storage room.
The goods to be sold
are described generally
as miscellaneous personal &amp; household. The
room will be opened for
viewing Immediately
prior to solicitation of
bids.
Description of property •
as follows:
Mailbox. Gas Cans,
Golf Clubs. Tools, 2
gun Cabinets, Pans
Bay #2
Name: Greg Petroski
Address: 32361 Oewltts
Run Road
City: Long Bottom, OH
45743
Terms of the sale will
be cash or certified
fund ONLY.
Hill's Self Storage
29625 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH 45771
(12) 2. 4, 9

•-&gt;c&gt;-c"&gt;.--

on the contents of selfservice storage room.
The goods to be sold
are described generally
as miscellaneous personal &amp; household. The
room will be opened for
viewing Immediately
prior to solicitation of
bids.
Description of property
as follows:
Kitchen Table, Household Items, Pans, Safe,
Outside Decorations
Bay #35
Name: Teena Rose
Address: PO Box 24
City: Racine, OH 45771
Terms of the sale will
be cash or certified
fundONLY.
Hill's Self Stora
29625 Bashan R .
Racine, OH 45771
(12) 2. 4. 9

... THE
NEWSPAPfR
HAS
SOMfTHI
FOR YOU!!

Public Notice
PUBLIC SALE
Notice Is hereby given
that on December 12,
2009 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be held
for the purpose of satisfying a landlord's lien

•

I

�Wednesday, December 2, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83'
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J_usr SAY

CHARGE II!
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Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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GET YOUR CLASSIFJ.ED llNE AD NOTICED

M onday th ru Friday
8:00 ·a.m. t o 5:00 p . m .
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Suc:cessful Ads
Shoulct Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

«POLICIES«
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must 8
eported on the hrs
ay of publlcatlo
nd
the
Trlbun
ntinei-Registcr wll
e responsible for n
ore than tho cost o
e space occupio
y the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expons
hat results from th
ubllcatlon
of
mlsalon
dvertisemont.
orrectlons will b
ade
In the firs
vallable edition.

968.

ncwspape
ccepts only hoi
anted ads mectln
EOE standards
will
no
nowingly accept an
dvertisement
lolatlon of the law.

D isplay Ads

Dolly In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Pa pet·
Sunday In-Col umn • 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundnys Pnper

All D i spl ay: 12 N oon 2
B u sine- Days Prior To
Publlcat to n
Sunday Dl$ play: 1:00 p .m .
Th u rsday tor s undays Paper

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

POUCIE8: Olio Valley PubU81'11f111 ntetr~G8 the rlgnt to edit. reject,« cancalany lid 11 any time. Err«• mUll~ reponed on the II rill day of pUblication and tho
l'llbU19-Sontii'IIII·Fiegltltr wm be .-..ponalble for no more than the coat ot trw epaee occupt.d by the error and only trw nr.t u.rtlon. We t hen 1101 be llablo for
any lOci or tl&lt;Jit08t that rt:SU!s from the putlllcatton or om1111on olan 11&lt;1vert1~ Come!lon wiD be maclaln the lll'IIIYI!Iablt~IOn. · Box numbtr eda
are lhl11ys contlden!lsL • C~rent rate card applies. • All raleetatt lldvertllen)entl tro albjta to tt. fedlfll Falr Houalng Act of 1liG8. • TtU ,_-.paper
acctpta only help -.anted ads 1'!11«11'11 £OE SW'Clards. we •"' not knoJIIIngly •=-111 any ldvenlslf111ln vlolatlon ol thll iaw wm 1101 bl ~bll I« any
lfrora~n an ad taken 0'1« the phOne.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE '
200

·Announ~~nts

Notices

GUN
SHOW
Logan/Rockbrdge
Dec
Lost &amp; found
5 9·5 &amp; Dec 6, 9·3.
Hock~ng H1ls Mar1&lt;et 7 5
Lost lcrrale Gray·ha~red mr west of Logan on St.
Yor1&lt;1e
Wahama
t-1 S Rt 33. Dally AdmiSSion
area
Sat.
Nov.
21 S4 00 Per Person. 6'
304 -675..()3()8.
Tbls $35. 74().667..()412.
Lost·
BlackM'hrte
Sh•h·Tzu tost on At 62
near the Y on 11·22,
F-amily
Pet
'Reward
304·675·1917
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
bus,ness wrltt people you
know and NOT to send
money thro;.~gh ltte 'llad
until you nave invest1gat·
lng the offenng

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

Child / Elderly Care

12 Unit Apt. Complex.

Basomont
Waterproofing
Uncond1honallilet•me
guarantee. Local refer·
encas furnished Estab·
hshad 1975. Cat124 Hrs.
740·446·0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

" -H&amp; k&gt;'-lr:b lo
~Af f?.A W fi 7\1.

-5~ocJt.D we r?u.HIM W~ /.AJ'Je

1o t=A'f 'f?..A'N
lt(rf(6'r.J?

Other Services
Pet
Cremalions.
740-446-3745

Call

0
0

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1·888·582.J345

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY
DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...................."'"'"""""""""'"1 035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Anliques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ................................•............................ 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................301 0
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale......................................... 3025
land (Ac reage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial................................................3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses ,tor Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale........................... 5025
Resort Property for rcnt ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accounting/Financial ................................ 6002
Administrative!Professlonal .....................6004
Cash ier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Education .........................: ......................... 6016
Electrical Plumbing................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Services ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General ..................................6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
MaintenancciDomeslic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics ..................................................6036
Medical .......................................................6038
Musical .......................................................6040
Part·Time·Temporaries .............................6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ..............- ..........................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

1 and 2 bedroom apts.
furnished
and
unfur·
niShe&lt;1, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required,
no pets. 740.992·2218

0

Profeuional Services

1'1.•2-

~

www.comics.com

400

Financial

Money To

Lend

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contacl the Ohio Divi·
sion of Financial lnstitu·
tions Office of Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you refi·
r&lt;1nce your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests tor any large
advance
payments
of
tees or nsurance. Call
the OffiCe of Consumer
Affl&lt;ts
toll
tree
at
1-866·278.()()()3 to learn
If tho mortgage broker or
lender IS properly fi·
censed. (This IS a public
seMce
announcement
from the OhiO Valley
Pubhsnmg Company)
500

Education

Busineu &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367
1·800·214·0452
gallipohscarcorcolloga ed~
Acete&lt;l~ed Merrber Accre(fil·
il'g Counc1 for Independent
Collages ard SchOols 12748

600

Animals

C 2009 by N EA, Inc

100

Agriculture

www.CAREO.com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740.446·2412
STIHL Sales &amp; SeiVice
Now Ava1lable at Carm1·
chael
Equ1pment
740-446·2412

Bicycles

Equip ment / Supplies
I.Jke new salon equip-ment, heavy duty mas·
sage table, $150; 3 stylmg chairs, $75 each;
manicure table &amp; oharr
wtsupphes
S150;
Su:~ Seeker Club Cals, 740-992·2200
~~~~~
Halter B:-oke, Lots of
Fuel / Oil / Cool /
Ha11, Reasonable Pnce
W ood /Gas
740·256-9250
or
740·441·5705.
Free t-ees to be cut lor
firewood
call
304·n3·9&amp;66.
Pets

A:l natural, grain 'ed. angus freezer beef !or sale.
or
(740)441·5705
256·9250'

Seasoned Firewood Dei
call 304-675·3508
Seasoned firewood.
All Hardwood.
740·853·2439
740-446·9204.

or

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; reb uilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800.537·9528

AKC m101ature Schnau·
zors Parti &amp; Chocolates.
Parents
on
premiSes.
740-441-1657

2 ltke new match1ng
mushroom-olive
colOred
Lane
reel ners,
S1oo'
each; heavy duty Wtltrlpool washer &amp; dryer
F•eo male &amp; female must tal&lt;e both $500, 52'
ll'IX·breed pups
good Toshiba
b.g
screen,
l&gt;omo 304-812·5064
740.992·2200

to

ssooi
l

Downtown Pt. Pleas·
ant
4th St.
modem 1 b{.,
kitchen central a11. elec.
no pets, no smoking
.dep rea 304-675·3788.
For Rent, 2 BR Duplex
1n
town
$475/MO
DeP+ref No pets Ou1et
olace. 446-1271.
Free Rent Speetal lfl
2&amp;3 br Apl $395.00 8
mon. and up, central a1r
W!O hookup, tenant pays
elec. ca.l between tile
hours of 8.::·n·8prl' EHO •
Elm
View
ARt.
304·882·3017
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Beoroom Apts. at Vtllage
Manor
and
Rlvers.do
Apts. •n Middleport, troll'
S327
to
$592.
740·992·5064.
Equal
HoLSing Opportumty
Island V1ew Motel has
vacancies
$35.00/Night.
740.446-&lt;&gt;406
Modem
BR
44 6-3736·
~-~~-~
Modern
1BR apt. Call
740-446-0390

Newty ~enovated
1Bfl
apt dowrtown Galhpolts.
large LA,
BR, ntce
kitchen &amp; bath. S400/mo
+ dep., UIIIIIOS not Included.
Contact (740)
339·2113.
Nice 1 BR wash-dry.
Stove &amp; Fridge All Ut1ll·
ties. Call 740.446-9585.
$600/mo.-$500 dep.

Nice clean eff1ciency apt.
conveniently located ret.
Twin Rivers Tower is ac· &amp; dep. roq. no pets
cepting applicat•ons for 304·675·5162
ATVs
wailing list for HUD sub· Sm. eff1ciency
tn
PI
2007
149cc
Lonco1n SldiZOd, 1·BR apartment Pleasant stove, ret. all
Crossrunner
4·wheeler. for lhe elderly/dtsabled, ut1l. pd. 5385.00 a mon.
Call
446·4664
or call 675·6679
dep req. 304·675·7783.
740-645-65n
Spring
Valley
Groen

MerchandiSe

Uvestock

Pre Chnstmas sale· Toy
Poodle
pupp1es
CKC,
lails docked, doclaws re·
moved. shots, wo1med &amp;
wellness
checked
all
done by our local vet, we
have black, appncot &amp;
chocolate leMales $250,
Males $200. also one
black
"'file
rr1nlture
s2oo, ean 740.992·7007

M lacellaneous

1 BR Upstairs apt. 720
Second Ave. Gallipolis
New carpet &amp; patnt. AIC.
Water. sewer &amp; trash pd.
WID Inc. No pets/no
smoking. S375 depJS375
mo.
Ref.
Day:
740-645·2192. After 6:
74().446.{11 01.

2 br. downstairs kll
Hot tub outlot. Top qual· app.,aic &amp; furnace. WID
ity/warrantles. Free dehv· hookup $350.00 a mon.
Farm Equipment
ery,
wholesale
New +
$200.00
dep.
Truckload.
304·675·6375.
EBY,
INTEGRITY, 606-929·5655.
238 1st Ave. Lg. Upstairs
KIEFER BUILT,
overlooking
river.
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· ~======= apt.
Fum. kitchen 2 persons.
STOCK
TRAILERS,
WantTo Buy
S425+uttl. Dep. req. Rei.
MAX
EQUIP·
LOAD
MENT
TRAILERS, Absolule Top Dollar • sil· Call446-4926
co1ns,
any
EXPRESS
&amp; ver/gold
CARGO
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
10K/14K/18K gold )OW·
HOMESTEADER
zer Hospital on SR 160
elry,
dental
gold.
pre
Cf.RGOICONCESSION
CIA. (7401441-0194
1935
US
currency,
TRAILERS.
B+W
LOsets.
dta· CONVENIENTLY
GOOSENECK FLATBED proof/mint
&amp;
AFFORD·
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· monds. MTS Coin Shop. CATEO
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· 151 2nd A11onue. Galli- ABLE! Townhouse apart·
ments,
and/or
small
POliS. 446-2842
TORY AT
houses lor rent. Call
WWW CARMICHAEL·
Yard Sole
740-441-1111 for appr..
TRAILERS.COM
cauon &amp; Information.
740-446·3825
W•nter basement sale,
Free Rent Special II!
Sat. 12/5, 8·2,
Roger
Generic Round·Up, 41°o Kc·r
residence
near 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Gtyphosate. 2 1/2 gal Chezter
follow
signs, up, Central Air, WID
540.
Uml!ed
supply.
tenant
pays
k1ds things, freezer hand hookup,
740·256-6038
Call between
painted table, cloth1ng, electriC.
the hours of BA·8P.
Have you priced a John strollers. toys, etc
EHO
Deere lately? You'll be
Recreali.onal
Ellm View Apts.
surpnsed! Check out our 1000
Vehtcles
(304)882-3017
1nventory
at
used

9 00

Apartments/
To wnhouses

446-0390.
Beautiful 2 BR apt. for
hig~ly quatifled person or
House 4 sale by owner couple. WID hookup &amp;
1093 2nd St Mason WV. dlshwashe~ Inc. water,
25260 (304)812-4635
sewage &amp; trash. Central
Beautiful
home
and heatrng &amp; a1r. No pets.
Kelly
hunter's
dream.
For $560/mo
more
details,
to 740.645·6378.
go
www.oiVb.com
or
call
Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
740·794·1132
son Estates. 52 West·
Real Estate wood Dr from S365 to
3500
740·446·2568.
Rentals $560.
Equal Housing Opportu·
nity. This IOSbtutiOI' tS an
Equal Opportumty Pro·
Apartments/
vider and Employer.
Townhouses

tl~ ~YS

Home Improvements

Roble's
Mim
Storage
8571 Sl Rt. 160, Bidwell,
OH 45614 wo auctlon off
Slorage Ur. t t119 Kathy SEPTIC
PUMPING
Oelalloussaye on Dec
OH
and
GallS Co
questJons, 5tl' at9:00
Mason Co. WV
Ron
Evans
Jacl&lt;son,
OH
8()().537-9528
G"ave B ankots S5-S30;
Services I
hve Wrealhs S10 &amp; up; 300
Sues 47310 Morn ngstar
Rd.,
Raano,
Oh
740.949·2115
Building Materials
F~rst Holzer Apts. Arnual
Crc'1 &amp; Bake Sale. Dec.
Steel Arch Buildings
3,4, 5·9 to 4.
3
Repo'd
Bulldtr&gt;gs
GUN SHOW. Ch1111cothe, 20x30, 30x30 must sell
Sal Dec 12 9·5 &amp; Sun before going to auction
sell
for balance
Oec 13, 9·3. St. Rt. 35 to will
St. Rl. 104. Ross Co owed. Display discounts
Fa~rgrounds. Adm $4 6' available
1-866-352·0469.
Tbls S:i£5 740.667-0412

Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements ...............................-......... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals ....."""""'"'"""""'""""'"'""""'"230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Matcrinls ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Caterlng ........................................................ 310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
~ nr'm'"'"''""'"·'anllorlal ................................... 318
cal ...................................................... 320
Flnancial ....................................................... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ..................................... A . . . . . . . . 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services ............................................. 338
Piumbing/Eiectrlcnl ..................................... 340
Professional Services .................................342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Rooflng .........................................................346
Securlty ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Financial.......................................................400
Financial Servlccs .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tr81nlng ................................. 510
Lossons........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock...................................................... 615
Pets............................................................... 620
Want to buy.................................................. 625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment. ......................................... 705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Graln ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy..................................................725
IIIArr.h•anrtl , ...............................................900
lli"!ILI65,..,.,,.,,,,.,,,.,,,..,,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,..,,.,,,,,.,,,., 905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auclions .......................................................915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Colleclibles ..................................................925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Suppllos....................................935
Flea Market s ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coa11Wood/Gns ............................. 945
Furniture ...............................................Jt..... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Cornor.................................................960
Miscollaneous ..............................-..............965
Want to buy......... ~.......................................970
Yard Sale .....................................................975

For Sale By Owner

W1ll tako care of the
elderty In their home
can 304·675·3264

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

Now you can have bOrders and oraphlcs
added to your classified ads
_{ ~
Borders$3.00/ perad
E!1
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Ia r9e

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prko • Avoid Abbrevl1tlons
• Include Phone: Number And Addrest When Needed

$200 Reward· womens
XL Harley jacket soft
black eathc· rose &amp; Zipred ner,

Real
Estat
dvertisements
a
ubrect to the Federo
olr Housing Act o

Wor:d Ads

His &amp; Hers 26' Scwlnn
Cru1ser bicyCles, ex. con,
StOO
each,
740.992-1121
Campen / RVs &amp;
Trailers
~=~===;;;;;:=•
RV SeiVice at Carmi·
chael
Tr&amp;llers
740-446-3825
RV
Se!Vice at
Trailers
740-446-3825

t:;J

3 room and bath down·
stairs first months rent &amp;
deposit. references 'El·
qulred, No Pets and
clean. 740-441-0245
2BR Apts Clean reno·
vated dwntwn,
new
appl.. lant lloonng water
sewer
&amp;
trash
1nct.
S475/mo. 2BR S57S.mo.
74(). 709·1690

Apartments 1 BR at
S395+2 BR at $470
Month. 740-«6-1599.
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
bath, back patio, pool,
playground, (trash, sew·
age. water pd )No pets
atloYied.
S450/rcnt,
S4501sec.
dep.
Call
740-645-8599

Comrt~erdal

1 &amp; 2 Br. lumisl1ed apt.,
sta!'t $450 &amp; up pi~ 3000 sq. ft. build '" Por·
Cannlcnael dep., No pets, RllCIIle.Oh ter.
$500/mo
740.591-5174
740-339-3224

Middlepon Beech St., 2
br.. furniShed aptS. utllll2000
Automo••ve tiOS paid, dep. &amp; ret No
Pets (740)992.()165
MIDDLPORT,
1 BED·
ROOM
APARTMENT,
Trucks
APPLIANCES
FUR·
NISHED,
NO
PETS.
For
Sale,
Toyola NON SMOKING. NICE
·1986·toolbox bed, 4x4. 740.856-8863
R.N. 446·0974
Apartment available now
Rlverbend
Apts.
New
Real Estate Haven
Now accept·
3000
apphcauons
lor
Sales lng
HUD·subsldized,
one
Bedroom Apts. UtiUties
Commercial
Included Based on 30%
ot adjusted income. eau
304-882-3121,
available
Comll'. Spaco 4 lease for Sernor and Disabled
(Rota I or olflco),
Prir'(le people.

wv

-=======•

HouSH For Rent

~
S~
l9'1
~mli:o~
' =,~b.:
=·~
d ==!l~b=
ath•
&amp;nk Repo' 15"' dol'n, t.S
years. S'if APR! for bsllnlj5
800-62(}.;19-16 ex R0:!7
For renl 3 br. 1 ba. brlc;k
ranch
on Rl2 N.
304·895-3129.
1 BR Full'lshed Houso
Converient
ocaUon '"
town
No
Pets
Pll
446-1162
3 BR, 2 112 SA Stove &amp;
Refrig Fum. Gas Heat,
Central
AJC
WID
Hookup,
Carport
No
Smoking, No Pets S600
per MO., S600 Dep. 75
Locust, Galhpohs. Catl
446-3667

busy. highly
dwntwn comer Studao Apl 729 2nd Ave. Mason 2 br.w C!rport,
1400.2000
sq
It $350/mo. All u11111es pd. kit fum. $385.00 8 mon
S700/mo. 740.709·1960
446-8017.
dep. req.304-675-n83.
locatiOn,

vis ble,

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

-

-

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Houses For Rent

Rentals

Sales-

3BR 1 bath hoi.le n Le·
Grande Blvd $650 rent
$650 dep. renter pays
r.!t tros NO PETS. Cal
446-3644 for applicaton

Tra lor rn town Racrne, 2
br , 1 bath. all e ectrlc.
carport, large front porch.
aoso to school, I brary &amp;
park, $425 deposit, S425
pe· month water &amp; gar·
bage Included, NO Pots.
740.949-2217

AAANew2010
4BR DoubleWJde

House for rm1 or sale on
land rommcr I k6 N Pill'l Dr

6000 .

On~Ymrn

2010 SrngleWJde
lncwllble Sl9,995
Handyman Special
3Jledroom $5.919
ONLY at MIDWEST
mym1dwesthome.com
740 _828.2750

104-675 5~0 - - - - - - - Tra1lor 2 br, furnished,
wid, cable TV construe·
Quality 2 BR, G~rago. lion workers welcome,
OHIO'S
Storage Bldg. One yr. $400 month, $200 secu·
BEST BUY
S
loase,
No
Pets, rfty doposrt, two Mrnutes
'rorn
brl'dge,
2010 3BR Doublewide
$550+dep+rof
S39,9n
446·1079.
740 •992.3362,
614·218-2166
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
FHA
$349 mo
Sm. 4-Rm house, 1 Bath,
2010 3 br/2ba Single
Stove &amp; Refrig Furn., Double Wide, 3BR, 2BA.
$575 rent, $575 dep.
!rom $199 mo
WID hookup, No Smok·
HUD-ok
1722B
ing, No Pets. $350 per
Chath~ Ave. 645·1646 ... MIDWESTHOMES
mo.. $350 Dep. 258
, .ymrd wes th om es.com
SISto St. 740·446·3667.
FOR RENT
740.828.2750
2 'BR Mobrlo Hoflle, Btd· - - - - - - - Tak1ng applicattons lor we11740·339.()()34
·-he Proctorville
N0
1 S400/r:t -.-~~--....._-....3BR•
pe ·
o. Nrce 3BR, 2 Bath. 16x80.
Difference"
51
$400
dep.
Country
Sett1ng.
and
a deed Is all you
(7401446' 3617
367.0266 or 339·3366.
need to own your dream
h)llle Call Now'
WISeman Real Es18to-4 Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
Freedom Homes
_ 65-0 167
rentals
available-call w/1 acre 5% down. 5525
388 5
446-3644 for more mfo. mo WAC. Near Holzer - - - - - - - All
ln·town·vanous 740446-3570.
Trade rn your old s111g apnces·referenccs &amp; sec
wide !:lr a new home. 0
deposrts requtred.
Soles
money down. 446-3570.
PI
Pleas
ka\e mess

4000
:

Employment

Help Wanted- General

A viable coal company rn
SE Ohro Is looloog for a
ChUd/Eiderly Care
coc lease person, rndlVlduals can submrt re·
Posrtton open at Darst sume to: The Dally SentiAdult Group Homo, call nel, PO Box 729-44,
lor
Interview Pomeroy. Oh 45769
740·992-5023
~eed older lady 111 hve·rnl Oual1ty Control, earn up , . . . - - - - - - ,
help '" cool:rn• &amp; house to $15 an hour, evaluate
"'"'k .~ Ne"' llavcn.c . af rotail stores. tra1nrng pro·
rcr6pm~04 882·~~~2
v•dod,
call
1·800·901·2694
'Vinyl Siding
Education
• Rep Iacemen t
;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;===- Bookkeeper/
Tax
Pre·
Windows
parer for local accounting
• Roofing
office send resume to
Part·tuno
Instructors PO Box 805 Gallipolis • Decks
needed during the day Oh1o 45631 or fax to ·Garages
,n
mathematics,
eco- 304·273·1130.
·Pole Buildings
nomtcs, a11 d accou11tlng.
• Room Additions
1.1athemaucs
and eco·
nom1c Instructors mt.:ll
Owner:
Do you enjoy helprng
James Keesee II
have a Masters degree people? If so. 1 Will grve
n the dtsctpfine If Inter· you FREE RENT AND
742·2332

Construction

ested please email a re· FREE UTILITIES plus an
SUMO and cover letter to
1
tncome just or mov1ng on
ldaniCk:@galltpotsca·
and helptng my 87 year
roercollege.edu
old mother You WJII tVe
here as tf it were your
=======~ own home. m1nus the exHelp Wonted· General penses. 740416-3130.

for
sale
93 AVON! All Areas' To Buy
3 RR 1981 Governor Tra1ler
Traucr, Lg. Uv1ng Room &amp;:nun.z 30r., ~oa. on or Sell Sr1rley Spears
&amp; Kttchen, 14x70, Good rented lot in Gathpohs 304·675·t429
Ferry 304·812-0803
Condrt1on,
S4 500.00.
379·9382

Manufactured
Housing

Rentals

~~====
2 BR Mobile Homo No
pets. Water, sewer, trash
included. At Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740-645-0506

Get Your Message Across W1th ADa11y Sentinel

Country livrng· 3-5BR,
2·3 BA on
property.
Many lloor plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
bank.
Call
today!
B66·215·5n4

BULLETIN BOARD
13 column rnch weeKday~
'22 column rnch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·?.155

2
Trarlor
Lots
Rent-Addison
Prko·S150/mo
+
dep.
Water
446·3644.

lor AA·Tired of paying rent?
We can get you 11110 a
sec. new manufactured home
pel for as low as 5"/o down.
Call to be pre-qualrfied
866-838·3201
2BR, Ideal lor 1 or 2 pco- ·- -.............- - P e, $300/mortn
Re·
The BIG Sale
fernces, No Pets, N0
Used Homes &amp; Owne~
CALLS
after
7pm
F n~~AC~ng • New 2010
DoubleWJde S37 989
740441-()181
Ask about $8,000 Rebates
3 Bedroom,
2 Bath.
mym1dwestnome com
740446-1279
74()-828·2750

Help Wanted

FOR SPECIAL
NEEDS
CHILDREN ONLY
Santa &amp; Mrs. Claus

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley
Well ness
Center

:Jii!artland Publications
Copy Editor/Page Designer
We are looking for someone skrlled and
expenenced in both page design and copy
editing. This person will need to design
front pages, paginate inside pages. and
write great headlines. Experience with
layout, knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop rs a must. Full time position
with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
is a must.
Send a cover letter and resume to:
~alhpoh!i Dar tv t!:nbunr
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com

Thursday,
December 3, 2009
5 p.f11. to 7:30 p.m.
BY

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

APPOINTMENT ONLY

Increase Your Earning
Potential!
Up to S25,000+1yearl
Ct'oose to work wrth the
world's largest nonprofits
such as the American
Heart Association and St
Jude Children's Research Hospital.
Excellent Benefits
Weekly pay + bonus potential
All MaJor Holidays OFF
WITHPAYI
Medical. Dental, EAP
401K1
No Experience Neces·
sary
Paid On-site Training

Call NOW to learn how
you can start earning
your potential!
14188-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
1941
Apply online:
http://jobs.infocislon.c
om

Part Time Employees
Needed
Make tundraising calls
for conservative organi·
zations such as the NRA!
Weekly pay and bonuses!
Fixed 28 hr. week schedule
Conducting Interviews
Now

304-675-8639

·Room Additions &amp;
Remcdellng
·New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Pallo and Porch Decka
WV 036725

Roormg,
,.
S'd'
r mg,
S ff D
0 If, ecks,
Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

7 40 367 0544
•

•

Free Estimates

740-367-0536

I.=;;;;;;;;;;;;;: ..-----------------------Help Wanted- General
Mrba Sinter USA, LLC Is
pleased to announce ac·
live recru t1ng for the new
powder me181 operations
1r McCOI'neiSVJHe
OH.
The McConnellsvdle Fa·
crlrty tS !he newest s1te n
the Mrba Sintered Dlv1
sron.
To
learn more
about Miba
or what
promrses to be one of
the most techmcally ad·
vanced, state of the art
powder metal facilities 1n
North America, please
visit www.miba com
Resumes are currently
being accepted for the
Press Technrcian pOSI·
lion. The ideal cand1date
will have expenence 1n
Dorst, SMS, or Osterwat·
der CNC closed loop
presses.
Candidates
without CNC experience
wil be consldered, but
experience n multi·level
Die Setttng IS requ1red.

Erie

Insurance~

HOMETOWN INSURANCE
CENTER

Tcr,:.:;n Thnckcr

Auto • Home • Business • Life
695 Second St. Mason, WV

304..773-1111

www.hometowninsurancecenter.com

SAVE UP TO 50°/o. CAll US TODAY!

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
I

Hafdi7o~ abin~ An~ Furnftu?e
VJWW,~biftetry.com

740•992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Interested persons may
subm1t resumes wrth sal·
ary requirements to:
Morgaf' County JFS
155 east Marn Street
Room009
McConnelsvrlle, OH
43756
c/o Miba Sinter USA Resume
or via email to
hr.reply@miba-~.

RE: Sinter Pos1tron
Medical

Overbrook Rehabrlitation
Center 1S currently seek·
mg someone with a Tratn
the Tra1ner Certrfrcatron
to teach CNA classes All
For appointments please
nterested
appt cants
st&gt;ould piCk up
app •
call
cation
at 333 Page
Qualny Control
Street. Midd aport, On
I".AR"' up ro Sl &lt;.00 an hr. Overbrook IS an EOE
~ifl1mm:iiffimm:iiffiiffiiiiimm:iiffiffl:tffi~ e\aluate reratl &lt;tore,. ~­ and a PartiCipant 1n the
tu.t~JWIJU.t.u.I.Ul~J.UUUI.Ul~JU-"'-UU!mW~Uu.r. mg provided 877 /66-9507
Drug
Free
Workplace
Program.

Light refreshments
will be served

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

1·888·1MC·PAYU ext.
2301
Apply Online:
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
om

Help
Wanted
Rapidy
gropWJng home health
Agency seeking AN's lor
PT position with potential
of be1ng FT Also takrng
for
PRN.
applications
RN's &amp; Home Health
Aids. Please contact Ab·
bot Home Care @ (740)
682-{)2222. EOE

Replacement
Windows and
Vin):l Siding
Specialists, LTD

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • .\Ictal
and Shingle Roofs
• Deck~ • Additions
•Eiedrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
We can help!
Call out Toll Free

866-564·8679

LUV HOMES

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
l&gt;urnp Truck

Senicc
We do drhc\\a)S

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

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

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING (O.
Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks. Shingles.
Siding, Windows, Pole Barns, Garages,
Insurance Work, Residential &amp; Commercial
740·245-0437
Licensed &amp; Bonded
30 Years
Free Estimates
Experience

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addition~. Remodeling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. Kew Home~, S1ding. Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; ln~ured
Rick Price · 17) rs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell 740·416-2960 740-992-0730

l.imestone • Grawl
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

v

*Prompt

Classifieds

and Quality

Work

*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Expenenced
References A\ailable'
Call Gary Stanle) @
'140-59 1-8044

Ple:be leave mes&gt;age

H&amp;H
Guttering

BA:SKS
CO:\STRt..:CTIO:S

co.

Seamless Gutters
Roof!!lg, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740.653-965 7

Pomcro). Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimate~
(740) 992-5009
Custom Home BUildmg
Steel Frame Bu!ldrngs
Butlding. Remodeling

-&amp;-,~ ,-·?!Mi·

General reprur

~ov. Selling:
• Ford &amp; .\1otorcraft
Parts • Engines.

'"' ".bank,cdb.com

Transfer Cases &amp;
Tnmsmissions
• Aftennarket

f\JtrJ

Frea
• BackhOe • Tretnch!lna1
• Brush Hogging

Replacement Sheet

• Portable Bandld
Tree Trimming • S8ttlng
POles &amp; Trunes

Metal &amp; Components

A Do-it-your·s elf classified ads

For All \lake' of Velticles

Racine, Ohio

Call740-992·8572

740·949-1956

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

v

Do-it-yours.e lf convenience
y Easy to use
v Upload photos and graphics
v Print and Online options
II' 7 great packages to choose from

ONLINE
ONLY
Runs

~U

SELL IT
NOW

U·SRL IT
For private
party

SUPER
SAVER

SMART BUY DEALS ON
For private party
WHEB.l

for private party mercbandlae, 1
Cars, Trutka,
ltam par ad
RVI, 4·WIIaeltrs,
IIIOI'cflandlse, 1
S1001 S5000 Etc. 1 Item per lid
Item per
than 8100
man SlOO $500 8501-$1,000 411nes, 14 day$ 4 lines, 46 days
8 lines, 8 118~1 41lles, 7 days 41ine$, 10 dayl

For llt'fvate paMJ

da)s merchandlle, 1 merchalllllse, 1
Item per ad leas Item pet' ad lass
Plu~ Photo ld
).()()

onl) $10

$2.99

$14.99

$20.99 $29.99

$45.99 ' $34.99

The Daily Sentinel
.

www.mydailysentinel.cqm

eat£ Marcum Construction

Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vim! &amp; wood siding
MICHAEL'S
SER\'I('E CE~TER
1555 :\\'1-: ..\\e,
l'omenl\. Oil
• Oil &amp; filter change

• Tune l'ps
• Brake Sen ice
• AC Recharge
• Minor exhaust
re1x1ir • Tire Repair
• Tr,msmtsston Filter
8: Huid Change
• G~nc:r,1l

Mc~hanic

v. od
(740) 992-091()

LEWIS
CO:'IICRETE
CO\STIHICTIO~

Concrete Removal'
and Replacement

AII 'f) pes Of

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740·416-1814
Full) in,urcd &amp; bondin)! a\ailahll•
Free estimates - 25+) l'llrs t'\lll'ril·nn·
1'ol &lt;~ffiliat&lt;-d "ilh \li~•· \luu·um RtNolin~ ,\ Rt'IIIIKMin~ I

\'ew Construction and

~co:;;;;;~·:,;;~;;:;;~,

II · II

&amp; MANUFACTURING, llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

\\c Sp!!ciali~e In Replact'lllt'/11 \\'indmrs

=

Fur Older Home&gt; &amp; Trailers
No extra charge to replace mera{ fnune "mdow,

&amp;Rkhard Smith

740·667-0306
1-"nx: 740-667-0329
Co-Owner \ 1ce Pres1denr ....011 ""--c·. 877 _428 •11 196
Cooh1lk.OH

Concrete \\ork
29 Years E:l&lt;Jlerienre

David Lewis
740-992-6971

r......... b&lt;2d&gt; oa
$10 per lb ca,h on!)
Pnt 11 required m ad•'31KC

t.af~&lt;,nt•tr

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Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

. BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY
DYEING VOUR 8AI.D
SPOT SLOND WON'T

ME 1.001&lt; VOUNGER

LOOK YOUNGER

I THINK COL.ORIN6

FU NKY WINKERBEAN

By THOMAS
ACROSS
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type
5 Overlook
9
up
(hid out)
11 Sh1p of
1492
12 Moscow
money
13As a
follower
1 4 Purpose
15 Contrary
to good
manners
17 Hamburger's
home
19 Slugger
Williams
20 Hackneyed
2 1 Tacit
approval
22Pal
2 4 Even
score
26Some
exams
29 Charter
30 Language
in which
"lion" is
"s1mba"
32Depressed
3 4 Naughty
351998
Disney
film
36 Upper
crust
38Wall unit
39 Factions

Tom Batiuk

'ff.I£5E AR£ 11-tE:
D6CORA'ffONS 114A'f
11-181' l)S~D 'fO Ptrr UP
I~ 1HE -rowt...l 5QvARE ...

Chris Browne

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD

Mort Walker

M Y HAIR WILL. MAKE

·-··

---------- ~

JOSEPH
40 Splinter
group
41 Liner stop
DOWN
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protector 37 Gloss
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target
N EW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 75 tcheck!m o) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1, P 0. Box 53647'\, Orlando, R 32853-64 75

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THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

MUTTS

,.L-ORETTA AND I SPL-IT CHRISTMAS CHORES 50/SO . ..
SHE S IGNS THE CARD S AND I. SIGN THE CHECKS."

Patrick McDonnell

Z ITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman.

WELL ...

/

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

'
HAPPY BIRTIIDAY
for \\ednesda); Dec. 2. 2009:
Thic; year. you open up to new ide~s and different

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DENNIS THE MEN ACE
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styles. v\'hefher you simply allow yourself to drop
some of the filters to your thinking or events force your
hand, you will transform your mental process. Often
you find that your feelings take new Lwisl'&gt; and tum.;.
Your emotions will change if you don't lock in You
have an opportunity to travel or perhaps to go to
schooL Some of you might lake seminars and workshops Lo increase your knowledge or expertise. Tf you
are !&gt;ingle, many people muld enter your life. 1he art
will be choosing who. Someone very different could
play a significant role in your life. If you Me attached,
the lwo of you often ,tre on opposite sides of a que.iion.
Learn to respect your differences. GEMTl'\I often plays
devil's advccatt.

11Je Stars Slu.nP the Kind of Day )(Ju'/1 Have: 'i-Dynmmc;
4-Posili7Je; 3-Arocmge; 2·So-sa; 1-Diffimlt
ARIES (March 21-April19)
Calls, knock..-; on your door and seemingly
endless e-mail seem to define vour morning. By the
afternoon, you declare "enough" and need &lt;;Qme spare
to breathe and think. Gear your head quickly through
a walk or scme yoga. Tonight: Insights aren't alw,,y:;
comfortable.
TAURUS (April20-J..fay 20)
**\\'hat you believe to be your ~Lrong '&gt;uit- making finuncial ded&lt;.ions that \Vork- could be tested.
ResL&lt;;t los"ir.g the baby out with the hath water, even
though you could beCome increasingly fru~lrated.
Tonight: Co:'!Sider nixing a friend's suggestion.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
*****The run Moon draws opportunities as you
rarely have ;een, Tf you would like another approach or
to do something differenlly. the Lime i~ now

****

L"nderst.md that others find you unu;.ually &lt;1sserlive

Tonight: Remain calm.
CANCER (june 21·July 22)
.
**Mum is going on, and feeling.&lt;&gt; muld run the
sho\\, at least with the Moon Child. What ap~ar.; as a
stunning conreptcould be extremely costly. Stop and
a.~s, knowing you don't need lo 'i&lt;l) y~ inunedi,1tely.
lonight: Pu.l your&lt;;eli out of the scxial whirlwind.
LEO (july 23-Aug. 22)
****You see that being more slr;ughtforward ha.~
its benefilo.;. You zero in on whdt b important, c1nd now
others can~ your priorities. Ihe m.1jorily t;~f those
around you agree; it i-; that one person who could gi,·

you tlak. fonight. RecogniZe the value in di:&lt;agret'menl
VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22)
.
*** Yotl often wonder what others would do. as
you hequently pick up their slack. The only difference
right now is that you have a lot on your plate, and thi"
~tablished pattern of shouldering others' burden-; ea.,ily could lead to some anqer ,md disagreeable feelings.
Tonight: Pr,Ktke saying the word "no."
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*****Detach, .md understanding t\ill e\·oh·e to
a new le\ el. You might l\&lt;lnt lo take the high road in
disagreemenl-; or understand more deeply where
~omeone io; coming from. ]i.mighl: How &lt;1bout ,, stress
buster?
SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-t'.'O\. 21)
**Deal ,.,·ith others directly m onier to obtain po~i­
!i\'e resu]L&lt;;. Oearly, a boss or "'meone vou look up to
has very strong idea&lt;&gt;. This person's dem,mding altitude could lake you aback. Use care in di~"Ussing
mone) matters nght now. Tonight: A\·o1d risks.
SAGlTIARlUS (t\o,, 22·Dec. 21)
****You wanllo ch,mge gears and handle a rn&lt;llter, but cle,1fl) ,, partner or c1SS&lt;.Xiale wanb to continue
on ,, chosen p.1th. Pull back and let lime be your all)
You will like the end results. Tomght: Cndersl&lt;mding
grow.;.
CAPRICOR..'-' (Dec 22-].m. 19)
***Often labeled as the workhorse oJ th(' zodiJc,
once more you prove to others how right-on this nick
name 1s. A IJ&lt;lliner or ""soci.ale muld become irritated,
\\'hy? This person simp!\' feels he or ~he doesn't h,we
enough time \\ith you! lonight: Relax at home. Change
your plan'i if need be
AQUARIUS Q.m. 20·f-eb. 18)
**** Im esligate possibilities that "urround a
mild. l&lt;w~i one or cre,tlin' enterpnst&gt; )our
ol
handling,, problem muld lrigoer someone dose, nol to
say that you are wrong. Ride t~e wa\ e of disagreement
ior now. li.might: Avoid dealing \dth n)t)ne).
PISCES (roeb. 19-M.wh 20}
***You mo\ e tl' ,1 new depth nf underst.mding
and re.1li.zation within a personal relation'ihip. Ughlffi
up about whatf·ou dre thinking ilnd try to be le~-; rear
lh e- th,1t i-;, i \ ou "ould likt&gt; to .::t&lt;Jbuize a situclUon.
Tonight: Movi.ni vll\\'clfd,

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The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, December 2,

2009

Cincy's Kelly brushes
aside Notre Dame rumors
CINCINNATI (AP) With the Big East title at
stake. Cincinnati coach
Brian Kelly is doing everything he can to keep his
unbeaten Bearcats away
from distractions this week.
Media availability is limited.
Practices are closed.
The Notre Dame rumors?
Not so easy to keep at arm's
length.
Kelly brushed aside speculation Tuesday that he could
be a candidate to replace
Charlie Weis, who was fired
b; the Irish a day earlier. At
h1s weekly luncheon - the
media's only access for the
week - he took five questions about the speculation
and didn't say much. other
than that in-season coaching
changes put others in an
awkward position.
"I really don't know that
there's an answer," Kelly
said. "It's not comfortable
for me. It's not comfortable
for those that are involved in
it. but it's the reality of it.
The only thing I can control
is the message every day,
and the message to our football players is about how ·we
can become champions and
how we can win football
games."
The fifth-ranked Bearcats
(11-0, 6-0) would win their
second straight outright Big
East championship \vith a
victory at No. 14 Pittsburgh
(9-2, 5-1) on Saturda .
Who~ver wins the game gets
the conference's automatic
BCS bowl berth because of
the head-to-head tiebreaker.
Rumors about potential
replacements at Notre Dame
were swirling before Weis
was fired. Florida's Urban
Meyer and Oklahoma's Bob
Stoops - both mentioned in
the media as possible candidates - tried to dampen the
speculation by saying they
plan to stay at their schools.
Kelly is taking a different
approach this week. trying to
keep
the
focus
on
Cincinnati'&amp; biggest game of
the season. He was ener-

gized when he walked to the
podium for his media session on Tuesday. talking
exciteJJy.about the chance to
win a second straight conference title.
"It's championship wct:k."
he said. his eyes widening.
"As a coach. it doesn't get
any better than this, ~hen
you're playing for a championship. There's nothing that
gets you more excited than
being in this kind of environment, with a championship
this week.''
After one perfunctory
question about Pitt. the talk
tumed to Notre Dame. and
Kelly's demeanor changed.
Asked if he would talk to
anybody from Notre Dame
this week, Kelly said, "No.
We're focused on Pittsburgh
I 00 percent."
After a couple more questions about whether the job
speculation could become a
distraction. Kelly became
animated.
''I'm telling you what:
Last week? That was a distraction,'' Kelly said. yelling
as he recalled preparations
for Cincinnati's senior day
win over Illinois. "You
ought to be around here
when 16 seniors are trying to
buy tickets when the NCAA
only gives you four tickets,
trying to get those tickets for
everybody. It's a nightmare.
That's a distraction. I'm
sending them home for
Thanksgiving and hoping
they get back on campus.
That's a distraction.
"They don't care about
this stuff, I'm tell ing you."
Some of them do. Tight
end Ben Guidugli said Kelly
hadn't talked about the
Notre Dame rumors with the
players.
"He hasn't addressed it at
all," Guidugli said. "I guess
we would have liked to have
seen him address it - like
he says, keep everything in
the family - but he hasn't
addressed it. so I don't
know.''

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern's Lindsay Teaford shoots the ball during Tuesday
night's victory against OVCS.

Southern
from Page Bl
territory for 50 percent.
Cheyenne Dunn Jed the
guests with a double-double
effort of 22 points and 10
rebounds, followed by
Lindsay Teaford with 20
points
and
Courtney
Thomas with 13 markers.
Dunn just missed a tripledouble with a team-best
seven steals. while Thomas
added a team-high six
assists to the winning cause.
Morgan McMillan added
six points for SHS, while
Lynzee Tucker and Kelly
Humphrey rounded out the
scoring with four and two
points. respectively.
OVCS was led by
Lindsey Miller with a
game-high 23 points. followed
by
Samantha
Westfall with eight markers

and Beth Martin with seven.
Hali Burleson and Madison
Crank rounded up the hosts'
scoring with five and four
markers, respectively.
Southern will make its
home opener this Thursday
when it hosts defending
TVC Hocking champion
Waterford at 9 p.m. Ohio
• Valley Christian retums to
action Friday when they
play in the OVCS tournament at 6:30p.m .
SOUTHERN 65, OVCS 47
Southern

ovcs

15 14 17 19 2 13 14 18 -

65
47

SOUTHERN (H): Cheyenne Dunn 9 4·
9 22, Lindsay Teaford 9 2·2 20.
Courtney Thomas 5 2-2 13, Emily Ash 0
0·0 0, Morgan McMillan 3 0·1 6, Kelly
Humphrey 1 0-2 2. JesSica Rittle 0 0·0
0, Maggie Cummins 0 0·0 0. Lynzee
Tucker 2 0·0 4, Angie Eynon 0 0·0 0.
TOTALS: 29 8·16 65. Three·point goals:
1 (Thomas).
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (0-2): Beth
Martin 1 5·9 7, Madison Crank 2 0.1 4.
Sarah Schoonover 0 0-1 0, Samantha
Westfall 3 1·2 8, Hali Burteson·2 1·6 5.
Allie Hamilton 0 0-0 0. Lindsey Miller 9
5·7 23. TOTALS: 17 12·26 47 Three·
point goals: 1 (Westfall).

•

•

AP photo

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer, right, is dragged down by Cleveland Browns defensive tackle Shaun
Rogers duf!ng the first half of an NFL football game in Cincinnati.

Cleveland Browns lose ROgers for season
BEREA (AP) -The generous gap in Cleveland's
defense has grown to
canyon-like proportions.
Already missing their two
starting inside linebackers.
the
bad-as-they've-everbeen Browns lost Pro Bowl
nose tackle Shaun Rogers to
a season-ending lower leg
injury. another blow to a
struggling unit that gave up
210 rushing yards on
Sunday in Cincinnati.
Rogers was injured in the
final minutes of the 16-7
loss to the Bengals. He was
accidentally struck on the
side of the leg by teammate
C.J. Mosley, bending the 6foot-4,
350-plus-pound
Rogers awkwardly over a
pile of players. He had to be
carted off the field.
Browns
coach
Eric
Mangini,
who
rarely
addresses injuries, opened
his Monday news conference with an update that
Rogers' season was over.
"In terms of Big Baby.
he's going to be going on IR
(injured reserve)." Mangini
said. using Rogers' nickname. "So, not very good
news there."
Mangini said Rogers will
need surgery. The Browns
previously lost linebackers
D'Qwell Jackson and Eric
Barton. who also sustained
season-ending injuries and
were placed on IR.
Cleveland's injury woes
don't end there.
Browns starting safety
Brodney Pool sustained a
concussion - at least the
fourth of his career - while
defensive end Kenyon
Coleman and linebacker
Kamerion Wimbley suffered
knee injuries.
"It's tough, but the game
still has to be played," said
linebacker David Bowens.
who has had to shift from
outside to inside linebacker
in Cleveland's 3-4 system.
"What guys need to understand is what we're doing
schematically on defense
and how they fit in and our
goal each week, When we
have injuries, guys need to
understand that you can't
really get down on it. You
have to move forward.
"Sad as it is to lose those
guys, the game has to be
played on Sunday."
Rogers. who made the Pro
Bowl last year in his first
season with Cleveland, has
been one of the club's fev,·
dependable defensive players. Mainly responsible for
clogging the middle and
forcing teams to run outside.
Rogers
has
performed
admirably for the Browns.
who are 1-10 for the tirst
time in team history.
Rogers may be the only
irreplaceable player on
Cleveland's ro'.&gt;ter. He's definitely one of the few that
opponents had to account for
on every snap.
"He's big. He's disruptive," Mangini said. "They
have to deal with him from a
game-plan perspective. It's
difficult from that perspective."
Defensive tackle Corey
Williams said the Browns
will be incomplete without
Rogers - for a lot of rcasons.
:.You miss a dominant
player." Williams said.
"He's a guy that's going to
take a double-team just
about every play. He's a

hard-playing guy, a fun guy,
a funny guy. Just all of the
above. it's him."
Ahtyba Rubin will likely
move into Rogers' spot in
the starting lineup. A sixthround pick in 2008. Rubin
has shown flashes of being a
solid interior run stopper.
"It's a great opportunity:'
Rubin said. ''It's unfortunate
it happened to a great person
like Big Baby and I just look
forward to getting out there
on Sundays and proving
myself. It's big shoes to fill."
Pool's · injury may have
broader implications.
Because the 25-year-old
has sustained previous concussions. there's a possibility he may have to consider
retirement. That could
depend on the severity of his
most recent head injury. But
given the NFL's heightened
sensitivity and awareness on
concussions. Pool's career
could be at a crossroad.

Mangini said the Browns
have been proactive in. protecting their players.
"You do everything you
can to make sure that you're
not putting the player at any
greater risk and that you
have the best information
available when you're making those decisions," he said.
"It's important to us organizationally. Jfs something we
take very seriously."
Browns
safety
Mike
Adams is concerned about
Pool.
"Me and Brodney are
great friends." he said. "He's
a great player and an even
better person. It worries me.
I wish him all the best and
hopefully he makes the right
decision ori'him and evaluating himself.''
Like many past and present players, Adams said the
risk of getting hurt doesn't
keep them off the field. He
noted that Hall of Farner

Ronnie Lott once had part of
a finger amputated so he
could keep playing. If he had
sustained four concussions,
Adams isn't sure if he'd go
on.
"We love this game," he
said. "1 can't put myself i.
his
(Pool's)
situatiot
because that's him going
through it and I don't really
· know how it feels because I
only had one (concussion) in
my career - that I know of.
That I remember."
Adams said trainers have
noticeably stepped up precautions with players who
suff~r head injuries.
'They start hiding helmets
on the sideline.'' he said. "As
competitors. I don't care if
you've had 20 concussions.
As a competitor. you 'II
always say. 'Oh, I'm good,
I'm good.' I think the trainers do a good job of making
sure everything is OK before
they Jet you back in.''

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Thursday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
If ~ou \\ish, select one of th.e follm\ing FREE Hrses belo\\ to
accompany your tribute.
I. We hold you in our thought\ and memorie; forever.
2. ~lay God cradle you in His anJl\, nO\\ and forem
.1. Forever missed. ne\er forgotten. ~lay God hold you 111 111&lt;: palm of

David C. Andrews
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews
and family

Hi~ ~and.

4. Thank you for the wonderful day~ \IC shared together. \fy prayers
w11l be 1\ith you until \le meet again.
5. The days we shared were s\\eet. I long to ~ee you again in God\

heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memo!) ot your
~m1le

filb us \1 ith joy and laughter
Though out of s1ght. you 'II forever be in my he an and mmd.
8 The days may come and go. but the times we shared will al11ays remain.
9 ~1ay the light of peace shine on your face for eternity.
10. ~lay God·~ angeb guide you and protect you throughoutt1me.
II. Y,1u were a light in our life that bums fore\er in our hearts.
12. Ma) God\ graces shine om you for all ume.
13. You are in our thoughh and prayer~ irom morning to night and from
year lo year.
14. \\'e send 1hi' message \lith a lovmg kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15. ;..lay the Lordbbs)OU 111th Hbgraces and warm.lmingheart
~

TO RE~IE~IBER YOUR LOVED O~E I~ THIS SPECIAL WAY.
SE~D $10.00 PER LISTii\'G • 815 IF PICT(RE li\'CLCDED
Fill out the form helow and drop off to:

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
111 Court St., Pomeroy~ OH 45769
DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECE)IBER 18TH

r-------------------------------------,
Please pubhsh my tnhute m the ,pegal i\lemory Page on lhursda).

De~ember

24th.

~a me of deceased

I
I
I
I

~umber of selected vcr~c - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Date of birth _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Date of passin.e-"- - - - - -

Print your name h e r e : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Address------- - - - - - - - - - - Phone number'---- - - -

C i t y · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State'----- Zi1o--- -

Make Check Pa~·ablc to THE DAILY SE~TINEL

1

L-------------------------------------~

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