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·---- ---·-

Knights of Columbus
Food Drive, A3

•

Printed on lOO'k
Rcc~·rlrd Nc~~&gt;print

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

a
D.,

Suspect arrested in Gallia Co. slaying

SPORTS
• Smith named
Second Team All-Ohio.
.See Page 81

B y ELIZABETH RIGEL
ERIGELOMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

I

THURMA::-.1
A suspect
has been arrested and will
1 be charged with murder fol, lowing a shooting that took
the life of one individual
and injured two others at a
6rcenfield Twp. residence
Tuesday night.
According
to
Gallia

County
Sheriff
Joe
Browning. Dustin Lennex,
22, wa!) pronounced dead at
the scene by Gallia Count)
Coroner Dr. Daniel Whiteley,
and Roben S. Comer. 18. was
taken into custody by sheriff's deputies for questioning.
Browning said Comer is now
facing a charge of murder.
Sh~riff's deputies were
dispat&lt;:hed to a residence at

1531 Shaffer Road after a
shooting was reponed at that
location. When deputies
arrived on scene. they
reportedly discovered that
three men had been shot.
The incident was said to
have stemmed from a dispute between neighbors.
apparently beginning with
an
argument
between
Comer and Lennex 's broth-

er over a female that led to a
physical altercation and
eventually escalated to gun
play. Lennex was reportedly
!\hot with a 20 gauge shotgun on the porch of the
Shaffer Road residence.
The two other shooting
victims suffered minor
injuries. Their names have
not been released.
Officers from the Jackson

Countv Sheriff's Office,
Oak H-ill Police Department
and Rio Grande Police
Department also responded
Tuesday. Sheriff's detectives and agents with the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal
• and
Identification
Investigation worked to
process the crime scene and
conduct witness interviews
through Wednesday.

•

Mattress
Warehouse robbery
attempt thwarted
Two suspects arrested,
named in spree
BY ELIZABETH RIGEL
ERIGELCMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Thomas Stone, 55
• Franklin G. Triplett, 79
• Earnest Williamson, 62

~~=01:

Submitted photo

Pomeroy Dollar General employees Brandl Stevens and Ruth1e Shuler along w1th God'§ NET volunteer Rebecca Rader (center) are pictured collecting toys to be distributed through God's NET
ministries during the annual toy g1veaway. A toy box rs located 1n front of the store for patrons to
leave donations of new toys until Dec. 11.

Understanding holiday
shopping data.
-See Page A2
• Wildwood Garden
Club holds meeting.
See Page A3
• Riverview
Garden Club enjoys
Thanksgiving program.
See Page A3
• Small class size
benefits elementary
students. See Page A3
• • For the Record.
See Page AS
• Construction
contracts hinder
Ohio budget talks.
See Page AS

eo
for

•

cati
•

Other you,th eve11ts planned at Mulhe1TJ' Cen-ter
clothe!&gt; and money to help fill
the needs of those 550 applicants. The toy gi\caway io,; set
POMEROY - Tim, year the for9a .m. noon.Dec . II - 12at.
annual Christmas toy g1\ e- MulbcJTY Communit) Center.
away orchestrated by God'.,
Rader aid at first she wus
NET has a record number of told to expect around 900
applicants at 550, up from applicants but conceded 550 ts
around 300 last year.
stJII .t defmlte mcrease from
Rev. Dee Rader. coordinator last year Rader gue5sed that
of ministries for God's 1'\ET, number could go as high as
said the organization is no 600 b) the time all the applilonger taking applications but catiOns are finished and filled.
is accepting donations of toyc;,
Those ow io;hing to drop off
B v B ETH S ERGENT

BSERGE!IITOMYOAILYSENT NELCOM

WEATHER

nev. gift items for chJidren
age~ blfth
I 7 for the
Christmas gi\ eawa) can do so
at the Pomeroy Dollar Genera)
and at God's ~ET. Rader smd
monetar) donation!&gt; can be
dropped off at God's NET or
mailed to God's !\TET, PO Box
I 71. Pomeroy. The check
should specify you -want the
money to go to the Christmas
gheav.ay for children.
Please see Giveaway, AS

Middleport parade set for Saturday
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page AS

==========I

INDEX
•

2

~ics
Editorials
Sports

A31 Southern school board approves personnel
83-4

1

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Bs
A

4

B Section

©2009 Ohio valley Publishing eo.

I

Poochie Brewer is the parudc
chairman. Lineup begins at 4.
Saturda) is also the first opportunity to register for the annual giveaway sponsored by the Middleport
Community Association. Prizes.
donated by and purchased from
local merchants, include a 22-inch
television from Inge)!)' Radio
Shack. tools from King's Ace
Hardware. gift cards and gas cards,
and other gifts. The drawing will be
held Dec. 21.

I --- -----------------------------~------

Sr£rwss- 12 PAGI!S

Calendars
Classifieds

MIDDLEPORT
The
Chnstmas season becomes otTicial
in downtown Middleport Saturday.
as The Ctpistmas Village hosts its
annual holiday parade.
In addition to the parade itself. the
MiddleportCommunityAssociation
has planned an afternoon filled with
fesllvities.
beginning
with
Olristmas caroling at 3:15p.m., fol-

lowed by the Middleport Mjnisterial
Christmas tree lighting, rmd a perfonnance by the Big
Bend Community Band. All these
events will be held m the Frumers
Bank park ncar the 'T.''
Santa Claus w1ll conclude the
parade, which begins at 4:30p.m.
at Dairy Queen. Following the
parade, Santa will visit children
ot Peoples Bank, and pose for
photographs. Parade entries are
not required to pre-register.
Association~s

Ill .1!1~.1 !1!1.11!11

RACINE - The Southern
Local Board of Education
approved personnel matters at its
most recent meeting regarding
certified, classified and supplemental staff.
The
Board
unanimously
approved a resolution to enter
into a retirement agreement for
Michaela Kucsma which was prescnted by Superintendent Tony
Deem. No other details about the

a~re~mcnt -:verc_contained in the
ol fie tal mot lOll listed Ill the meetinP:S m~nutes:
._
,
I he lollowmg cerut.1ed substlt~.tes_w~rc appmve&lt;.!:.Ntck Ada•"!ls.
\ 1ckt Hill , M•chaei.I royer. J~ss1ca
Marcum. Ch~rlcs (.an:en. R1chard
Newell, Kelhe Oa\\ k!ns. Ladona
S~~phcns, Alexandna Immel\\ 1Jcoxen. Joy • Ben!le.). Jill
Johnson. Matthew WJIIHI!ll&lt;&gt;On,
Joseph
McCall,
Mtchael
Hammons. Patricia Struble. David
Graff. Rachel Stolzfus, Lorraine
Kombudo. Braden Doudna,

Nichola~ Michael. Willinm
Coopemder, Christa Rice, Mary
Hill, Hanna Trapp. Valarie Arnold
was approved as a substitute aide.
Nikki lhle Whobrey was hired
on a supplemental contract as
seventh and eighth grade cheerleading ad\lsor for the 2009-10
basketball season for ,1 contract of
$700 (half the season) in accordance \\ ith the Southern Local
Ed
A
· ·
·
ag~~~~~t ssoetnllon negotiated
c

1

•

Please see Southern, A5

•

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Police
Department reported that an attempted
robbery Tuesday evening at the Mattress
Warehouse Tuesday was unsuccessful and
a suspect has been arrested in connection
with Friday's robbery of Long John
Silvers has been identified: In addition.
the Gallia County Sheriff's Office has
announced the arrest of a ~uspcct in the
Sunday robbery of Pizza Plus.
According to the GPO, at approximately 7:36 p.m. Tuesday, a white male in his
late 20s, with medium build, a light complexion and wearing a gray hoodie entered
the Mattress Warehouse in the Silver
Bridge Plaza. He reportedly wall.:ed to the
counter in the rear of the store, pulled a
knife and demanded money.
Police said the clerk on duty picked up a
laptop computer off of the counter and
threw it at the suspect before fleeing
through the front door. She then went to a
nearby store and called the police.
The GPO reported that no money was
' taken in the incident.
Earlier Tuesday. Jaccy Mahan, 24,
Gallipolis. was arrested in connection with
the Friday robbery of the Long John Silvers
restaurant, the result of a joint investigation
conducted bv the GPO. the :sheriff's office
and the Gallipolis Municipal CoUJ1
Probation Department. Mahan is accused of
entering the restaurant on Friday, Nov. 27.
Please see Arrests, AS

Volunteer patrols
now watching
Syracuse streets
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSO MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Street captains have been appointed and
volunteers have begun walking through
Syracuse and the surrounding community.
as the crime watch program there continue~ to develop.
Tom Weaver, leader of the group,
infonned volunteers at a meeting Monday
that the street captains will register volun.
teers on their blocks. He displayed sarhple
crime watch magnetized signs that could
be attached to a vehicle while patrolling
the area and discussed the sign-up process.
The group decided to ask for donations
of evervone re!!istered so that funds could
be raised to purchase crime watch signs
for Syracuse and the surrounding areas.
Syracuse residents and the sutToundmg
areas can expect a visit from their block
captains soon, he said.
Practice patrols have already been out to
monitor the area. according to Weaver.
They have been working two hour shifts
during times that crimes have been previously reported . The goal. he emphasized,
is .to get enough volunteers to patrol in
pam; to cover the area on a regular basis.
Weaver suggested that volunteers cany
a good fla!ihlight. binoculars, a digital
camera, cell phone. phone numbers of the
local police and the sheriff's office, legal
pads, and ink pens.
Keep a record of anything suspicious but
do not get personally involved that you see
on your watch. Don't get personally
imolved by getting out of your vehicle.
though, he warned. Call the sheriff's office
Please see Syracuse, AS

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

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Bank of America to
repay TARP, ·raise cash

AP photo

In this Friday, Nov. 27 photo, shoppers look at Tom Tom GPS devices d~ring "Bia~k Friday" at a Target s~ore in Mayfield
.Heights, Ohio. The Thanksgiving weekend, particularly th_e early mo~nmg shoppmg _frenzy on Bla?k Fnday, has many
experts trying to assess the traditional start of the holiday shoppmg season. Thrs. year, pundrts were even more
'obsessed with parsing !he data as they look for clues to how strongly the economy wrll rebound from the worst recession since the 1930s.

-Economy 101 : Understanding holiday shopping data
Bv

ANNE

0'

INNOCENZIO

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Experts
on retail sales are obsessed
with Thanksgiving weekend
- particularly the Black
Friday shopping frent.y.
That's especially true this
year. as analysts look to the
traditional start of the holipay shopping season for
clues about how strongly
ihe economy will rebound
from the worst recession
since the 1930s.
Most pundits generally
agree that the start of the
s'eason was just ho-hum.
But if you examine the
detai Is. you' 11 come across
all sorts of disagreement
over exactly how things
have gone.
Why is it so hard to judge
how many shoppers turned
out, and how much they
spent?
Here are some questions
and answers.

..

: Q: How important is
Thanksgiving weekend as
predictor of the holiday
shopping season?
The
day
after
: A:
Thanksgiving is the traditional start of the season,
and many stores have
expanded the number of
early morning specials and
hours to get shoppers
revved up.
: In recent years. Black
Friday has been the busiest
shopping day of the year.
But it's not considered a
predictor of the rest of the
holiday season, since it
accounts for about I 0 percent of total holiday sales.
: Still. pundits study the
weekend's receipts to decipher shoppers' mindsets.
A.nd if stores have a weak
start to the season. chances
are slim that they will be
able to make up for lost
sales.

a

: Q: What makes this season's kickoff particularly
hard to assess?
A: One major factor is
that stores have increasingly
been hawking deals and
offering expanded hours
throl;lghout Novernber in
hopes of getting shoppers to
do their holiday buying earlier. That has likely diluted
sales for the holiday weekend.
Parsing the data got even
trickier as many stores
blurred their Web and landbased businesses in an effort
to generate more sales on
Black Friday. For the first
time. major merchants
including J .C. Penney Co.
and Scars Holdings Corp.

offered ~arly morning Black
Friday specials on their Web
sites at the same time as in
their stores, as they aimed to
compete with pure online
retailers.
ntat helped boost online
sa~es on Thursday and Friday.
which rose 11 percent, compared wi.th the same period a
year ago. accordmg to
comScore Inc., an Internet
research company.
Also. more stores, like
Old Navy. were open on
Thanksgiving.
"Black Friday was definitely expanded. It wasn't
as concentrated," said Bill
Lewis. executive vice president
of
Karabus
Management. a retail advisory firm. He noted that
heavy online buying this
past
weekend
likely
depressed store traffic.
Such heavy online buying
will not be reflected in sales
·at stores opened at least a•
year - numbers that are
being reported by major
retailers on Thursday. Most
figures exclude online sales.
Even
as
analysts
acknowledge those factors.
they still can't get a handle
on their impact on the holi~
day weekend's performance.

Q: What type of data
has been out there in
recent days? Any contradictions?
A: The National Retail
Federation, the world's
leading retail trade group.
released data on spending
and traffic late Sunday,
based on an online poll of
almost 5,000 shoppers. conducted by BIOresearch. a
market research firm. The
group extrapolated that total
spending reached $41.2 billion for the Thursday-toSunday weekend. up 0.5
percent from a year ago; it
reported 195 million people
were visiting stores and
Web sites, compared with
172 million a year ago. It

also noted that discount
stores took a back seat to
department stores.
Meanwhile, research firm
ShopperTrak released data
that showed that customer
counts actually declined 1.1
percent for the Friday
through Sunday weekend.
but showed that sales were
up a more robust I .6 percent
compared with a year ago.
ShopperTrak derives its
estimates from crowdcounting sensors in more
than 50.000 stores. comhined with data from the
retailers themsehes on
spending and how it relates
to customer traffic. ·
MasterCard Advisors'
SpendingPulse data. which
released November spending figures - including
some details on Black
Friday
showed that
apparel sellers struggled
throughout the month. This
assessment was much less
optimistic than what NRF
said about apparel sales.

Q: Have there ljeen any
really sharp contradictions in assessing holiday
season figures in past
years?
A: The biggest gaffe
occurred in 2005 when the
National Retail Federation
estimated that spending
soared 21 .9 percent for the
holiday weekend. compared
with the previous year. That
estimate, based on NRF's
consumer survey conducted
by BIOresearch, sharply
contrasted with reports from
ShoppcrTrak that spending
was actually eaker than
the previous year.
ShopperTrak's preliminary findings turned out to
be accurate.
Q: When will we get a
full picture of the start of
this year's holiday season?
A: Major retailers· individual sales reports should
offer some sense of what
shoppers bought, even

'River

though most figures exclude
online business. Still. those
numbers need to be looked
at carefully since the figures
compare to a steep 7.7 percent drop a year ago, when
sales went into freefall.
Furthermore, the
data
excludes figures from the
world's largest retailer. WalMart Stores Inc., which
stopped reporting sales on a
monthly
basis
after
announcing April figures.
Karabus's Lewis noted
that the best gauge for season's kickoff and for the
overall holiday season will
be from stores· quarterly
earnings reports. which will
be released in February.

NEW YORK (AP) - Bank of America Corp. said
Wednesday it plans to repay its $45 billion in g~wernrpent
bailout funds in the next few days. a move that wlll help the
troubled bank recruit a new CEO.
The bank said in a statement it would use available cash
and raise $18.8 billion in capital to repay the money. which
it received during the height of the credit crisis_ last ~ear a.
·after its purchase of Men·ill Lynch &amp; Co. earher th1s ye
Bank of America has been searching for a successor to
CEO Ken ·Lewis since the bank announced in late
September that he planned to retire on Dec. 31. But the
bank, burdened with government restrictions and cl~se
oversight after accepting the Troubled. Asset Rel~ef
Program funds, has so far been unable t~ s1gn a new ch1ef
executive.
"It removes the stigma that we've had as a company,''
spokesman Bob Stickler said of the planned repayment.
"We become more attractive to a CEO candidate. Whether
that means we get somebody external is impossible to say."
The bank has said it was considering candidates from
inside and outside the company. Stickler said a decision is
expected "in the near future."
Investors were relieved by the news, and sent Bank of
America stock up 3.3 percent in after-hours trading.
"It's great news,'' said Alan Villalon, senior research analyst at Minneapolis-based First American Funds. '"It
removes some overhang so hopefully a CEO can come in
with a clean slate."
Villalon said the effort to repay TARP might be a signal
that the bank is focused on furing an external candidate .
Banking analyst Bert Ely agreed that the restrictions
put forth by federal pay czar Kenneth Feinberg have likely been an obstacle to findmg the best possible CEO candidate.
"There could be someone saying, T m not going to take
this job unless you pay back the money and,get out fr.
·
under the pay czar,'' Ely •said.
The Treasury Department said in a statement it was
pleased that Bank of America planned to repay the
TARP funds.
The bank said it has paid $2.54 billion to the g~v~~ment
so far in dividends on the TARP money. BofA sa1d It IS not
yet exercising its right to repurchase warrants that the government received in return for the bailo.ut money. Warrants
are financial instruments that allow the holder to buy stock
in the future at a fixed price.
,
Treasury said that the $45 billion repayment will release
the bank from pay restrictions even though Treasury still
holds Bank of America warrants.
Treasury has spent about $450 billi&lt;?n. under the TJ\RP
program, including around $290 btlhon poured mto
banks. As of Oct. 31, nearly 50 financial companies have
returned a total of $72.3 billion in bailout money. Other
big banks. including Goldman Sachs Group Inc.,
JPMorgan Chase &amp; Co. and ~organ Sta_nl~y. repaid their
bailout funds after they were given permissiOn to do so by
·
the government in June.
Treasury· also mlde $6.79 billion in dividends from the
TARP money and $2.90 billion.selling warrants.

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:
you wish, select one of the follo"ing FREE lerses belo" to
1acc:om1&gt;any your tribute.

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

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.
2. \1ay God cradle you in Hi~ anns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never forgotten. \1ay God hold you In the palm of
Hi~ hand.
4.Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together. .\ly prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were ~weet.llong to .;e~ you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy and laughter
7. Though out of sight, you·ll forever be in my heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, bur the time~ we ~bared will ah,ays remain.
9. May lhe light of peace shine on your face for eternity.
10. May God·s angels guide you ani! protect you throughout time.
II. You were a light in our life that bums forever in our heart5.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all time.
13. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to night and from
yearto year. •
14. We send thb message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces and wann,IO\ing heart.

TO RE~IEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $10.00 PER LISTING • $15 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to:

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769 .

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18TH

r-------------------------------------,I
Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Thursday, December :!.fth.

I

Name ofdeceased.--------~----------------1

Visit us

Number of selected verse .:. .·- - - - - - - - - - - - -

I

Date of b i r t h - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date ofpassin'~&gt;--------1

onlin~at

I

Print your name here - - - - - . : . . . . . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

www.mydailysentlnel.com

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

-----

PageA3

The Daily Se11tinel

Wildwood Garden Club holds meeting
• Janet Bolin. an accredited
judge \\ ith the Ohio
Association of Garden
Clubs, was the featured presenter at Wildwood Garden
Club's re~ent meeting.
Bolin demonstrated how
create a traditional
•
ammgcment ~uitahlc for the
dining tublc. the spatial
thrust design and a panel
design. To create a table
arrangement, • C\'Cral types
pf greenery can be used in
the design. which should be
finished all the way around.
Depth is created b)
adding tlo\\ers to the back
of the arrangement, Bolin
explained. Never usc flow.ers or fillers thnt would shed
into the food on the table.
she warned, such as some of
the grasses. Take into con
sideration the basic elements of design: proportion,
background. texture, balance. movement, and color.
Good proportion means
that the SiLC of the container. plant material. and possibly the hast• and acc:cssories
arc all in scale. The background for the table

arrangement would be a
dining table, so create a IO\\
arrangement that can be
seen over.
Use plant material with
different textures to avoid
monotony in your design.
Place large flowers near the
base of a design for a feeling or good balance.
To crl.!ate movement,
have an irregular line of
various-size blooms, use
foliage of various sizes and
contrasting shapes, usc
flowers at various stages of
development. usc some
curved stems (such as tingling), hide all or part of
tall, straight stems, and
place flowers in and out in
the arrangement. Fresh
plant material cannot be
colored. although dried
plant material can be, she
reminded. Following these
principles. you will create
a beautiful arrangement.
she concluded.
The :-;patial thrust is a new
design that uses minimal
flowers: the emphasis is on
the line matenal that must
be placed in a parallel posi-

· ---------~----------------~--~

tion in the container. Plant
material should not be
placed between the parallel
lines. Bolin demonstrated
by placing two tall bamboo
~terns into her container.
The parallel lines can be
vertical, hori;ontal. or
placed at an angle.
Bolin placed New Zealand
llax, boxwood, and roses in
her design. Plant material
does not need to be on both
side.s of the pamllcl lines.
she infonned. The container
used should be a creative
one, such as the metal containers made by 'Ibm
Cordray, she concluded.
For her panel design.
Bolin used a metal panel
created by Tom Cordrny.
She placed gourds, bird of
paradise and juniper in her
design. She also crented a
star panel, adtling carnation,
juniper, and holly to it. Any
greenery you usc in your
design or for horticulture
displays needs to be
groomed, she advisetl.
Plunge greenery into cool
water to clean dirt and bugs
from it.

Sara Roush read devotions titled '"Fall Blessings."
Members voted to send a
$25 donation to the Meigs
County
Garden
Club
Association in memory of
Betty Dean.
President Shirley Hamm
announced that Meigs
County would be hosting
the
Regional
Spring
Meeting at the Southern
Baptist Church in April,
with the theme to be "A
Splash of Spring."
Hamm also announced
that she and Wildwood
Garden Club members Joy
Bentley, Patty Tarr, Lola
Hubbard had decorated the
Pomeroy Library outside in
preparation
for
the
Christmas flower show
there. The Syracuse Village
Hall was decorated by
Diana Ash. Shirley Hamm,
Peggy Moore, and Joy
Bentley. Hostess Barbara
Koker served refreshments
to Dorothy Bentz, Carla
Hopton, Linda Blosser,
Gladys Cummings, Janet
Bolin, Judy Rigsby, and
those previously mentioned.

Thursday, December 3,

2009

Food· D rive

.."..

~iverview Garden Club enjoys Thanksgivi'ng program
Riverview Garden Club
member'&gt;
enjoyed
a
Thanksgiving reading, collected food for the food
pantry and discussed plans
for the upcommg tree lighting ceremony in Reedsville
during their recent meeting.
held at the Reedsville
Church of Christ.
Marilyn Hannum gave
devotions, reading an article, "TI1anks~iving at the
Prater Fann,' rcmmiscing

over Thanksgiving as it
was in 1943, during World
War II. Kila Young and
Maxine
Whitehead
received prizes. Maxine
Whitehead led the group in
singing. •·over the River
and Throul!:h the Woods."
During ~roll call, each
member donated canned
goods for the food pantry
and paid tlues. Minutes were
read and approved. Margaret
Cauthorn gave the trca-;ur-

er's repot. Patty Grossnickle
collected flower funds.
Members discussed and
planned the tree lighting
ceremony. to be held at
BelleviJJe Locks and Dam
in conjunction with the
Oli\e Township fire department. Whitehead will lead
the program. Eastern band
students under direction of
Cris Kuhn will play music
for the event.
club's
The
annual

Christmas party will be held
Dec. 17 at the Whitehead
home.
Sylvia Webb held the
annual auction following
the meeting.
Delores Spencer asked the
blessing before the buffet
meal. Also attending were
Frances Reed, Debbie
Gilmore, Marlene Putman,
Mary Ann Harris, Ruth Anne
Balderson, Nancy Wachter
and Margaret Grossnickle.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Father Jessing Council 1664, Knights of Columbus, will
donate more than 500 non-perishable food items to the
Meigs Cooperative Parish food bank following a successful
drive at Sacred Heart Catholic Church last month. Knights
Mark Rhonemus, Pete Brooker and Don Frymyer are pictured with some of the donated items, which were to be
delivered Thursday for holiday season distribution.

NOTICE

.J.D. DRILLING COMPANY
There will be no hunting on property belonging
to Linda Diddle, James Diddle or Maxme
Sellers without written permission from James
Diddle. If permission Is granted the place of
desired hunting specifically and when must be
designated and adhered to for your permit to
be valid. If you have permission to hunt In one
place and you are found in another area your
permission will be withdrawn forever. People
without written permission will be prosecuted
.JAMES E. DIDDLE

PROUD TO BEA
LIFE.
Small class size benefits elementary students PARTTheOFDailyYOUR
Sentinel
ASK l)R.. BROTHERS

Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

The effect is likely due to
better te~chcr attitudes and
ability to help students in
small classes. When a teacher
isn't overburdened with huge
classes. he or she can foster a
more positive cla&lt;.;sroom climate and be more enthusiastic. Vnfortunately. there is little that you as a parent can do
about clac;s size. besides voting for educational reform at
the 2:ovcmment level or
enroliTng vour son in a different school with smaller classes. One technique to make
students feel like school is
personalized is for teachers or
the principal to greet students
individually at the beginning
of the day. so you might suggest this as a temporary
improvement for your son's
school.

Dear Dr. Brothers: Class
sizes in my son's elemen. ' school are enormous.
me of the classes have
nost 50 kids, with just
•
one teacher. I've read that
cla::.ses that big. especially
in elementary school, are
detrimental to kids' education. anti could mean that
my son isn't doing as well
in school as he should be. I
wonder if this i&lt;; true. or just
a myth. If it i~ true. is there
anything that I, as a eun:nt.
car~ tlo to help? - B.K.
Dear B.K.: It is wellestablished that smaller class
size in early elementary
school can boost student
achievement in those gmdes.
It also can encourage students to be more engaged in
•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: I found
learning than they are in
larger clas!&gt;es. And now. out from my daughter's
recent research published in school that she was caught
the Journal of Educational smoking. She's only in eighth
Psychology suggests that grnde. She claims she only
there are lon&amp;-term effects of tried it once, and whether or
small class s1zes. This study not that's true. I really don't
showed that spending four or want her to become a smoker
re years in small elcmcn- for life. I know it's hypocritiy-school classes o;i~nifi­ cal of me, ao,; I've smoked
ntly increased the likeli- sJnce I was a teenager and
hood that students \Vould tried to quit multiple times.
graduate from high school. but I dbn 't want that fate for
particularly for students her. What can I do to make
from low-income homes. It sure she doesn't become
seems that three or four addicted like I am?- T.D.
Dear T.D.: lt's great that
years of small classes are
necessary to sustain long- you' rc taking an active interterm achievement and actu- est in whether your daughter
falls victim to cigarette
ally affect graduation rates.

«

addiction. Parents certainly
play a key role - with either
positive or negative influence - in whether their
teenager who has experimented with tobacco continues smoking. A recent study
in the journal Pediatrics confirmed that parents can
decrease their kids' risk of
becoming habitual smokers
by communicatini? .and
establishing clear gu1delines
in the family about smoking.
Another important conclusion ti·om this study was that
if parents smoke. their
teenage children have more
access to cigarettes and are
more likely to model their
smoking behavior on their
parents. Regardless of your
personal rules about smokmg, your teenager will Jearn
from you that smokin!! is an
acceptable behavior. and the
old "do as I say, not as I do''
mantra rarely works. So a
major way to decrea-.e your
daughter's
chances
of
becoming a smoker is by
qumtng yourself. I know this
can be a nearly insunnountable challenge. but that may
only increase the significance
of your quitting in your
daughter's eyes. ·n~ens who
smoke are more likely to be
involved in other problem
behaviors. so that should give
yciu even mor\! motivation to
change your own behavior in
order to influence hers.
(c) 2009 by King Features
Syndicate

Public
meetings
Thursday, Dec. 3
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, 7 p.m., VIllage hall.
Friday, Dec. 4
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meetrng of Meigs County
mily and Children First
unci!, 11 a.m., Department
•
Job and Family Services.

Other events
Saturday, Dec. 5
CHESTER
Holiday
open house. 2-4 p.m.,
Chester Courthouse. Eastern
Bell Choir, Beth Stivers and
her singing clarinet, to perform. Refreshments.
Meigs
POMEROY
County Humane Society
straw g~veaway for pet

boxes, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
Pomeroy parking lot.
POMEROY - Gospel and
bluegrass concert, 6:30 p.m.,
God'? NET, with Johnny
Staats and Idle Times.

Clubs and
organizations

Subscribe today • 992-2155
wwwmydailyseminel.com

8ay Merry Christmas
to 8omeone 8pecial with a
&amp;ntinel Christmas Af18el
Example: Actual Size

~ONLY~

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fer Picture
Prepaid

Gryphon Thomas
"Merry Christmas"
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Community Calendar
Friday, Dec. 4
POMEROY
Meigs
County PEAl #74, Christmas
program and potluck, 1 p.m.,
Mulberry Community Center,
meat, drink, cake provided,
$5 gift exchange, group
singing also.
Saturday, Dec. 5
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m., and
meeting at 7:30.

Thursday, Dec. 3
POMEROY
Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association luncheon, noon,
Trinity Church. David Gynn,
ORTA vice president, to
speak. Eastern High School
Saturday, Dec. 5
bell choir will present proSYRACUSE - An open
gram. Take gift books for chilreception will be held to
dren for the service project.
CHESTER - Chester- honor Edith Wolfe Grimm on
Shade Histoncal Association, her 90th birthday from 1 to 3
7 p.m., Chester Courthouse. p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. For those
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies who cannot attend. cards
Auxiliary, 6 p.m. Pizza and may be sent to her at P.O. Box
Christmas gift exchange.
"741, Syracuse, Ohio 45n9.

Birthdays

'

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* Deadline for entry December 19th at 5:00
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�PageA4
The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 3, 2009

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. .

A

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress slrall make tto law respectittg an
estabUslmwrt of religion, or prohibiting the free
C;\:ercise tlrereof; or abridging tire freedom of speech,
or of tire press; or tire r(f!lrt of tire people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition tire Go11erument
for a redress of grieflatrces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Y() UR ()PIN I 0 N

Wake up, Meigs County!
After four years of protests by Yellow Springs
Liberals and their cohorts. the AMP plant has finally
been canceled. (By the way, what are they doing clear
ove1 here anyway?)
The NRDC, the OEC and the Sierra Club delayed the
process enough to cau~e a 37 percent increase through
mflationai') cost. (Has anyone figured out how much
money that \\Ould be'? That's over $1 million folh!)
1 find it interesting our "state" politicians were very
lJUlet throughout the process but now since it is a done
deal. jumped on the "support'' wagon. The only "state"
politician that has been heard throughout in a supporti'.e way was our State Senator Jimmy Stewart. The others have been talking "advanced energy technology."
No'&gt;' that AI Gore's ''global warming" has been
debunked and it has been shown windmills don't generate enough electricity to be functional you'd think
coal-fired electricity is still the best there is especially
since Wa~hington won't open up drilling and pemHt
new atomic plants. Debbie Phillips says: "Now we can
move forward with advanced and renewable energy
technology" as if she's excited about the closing and
''use this area's abundant natural resources.''
Doesn't ''abundant natural resources" mean coal for
this area? We can't even get ~ood cell phone coverage
in the county! And just what IS renewable energy technology anyway? Nobody seems to know yet!
I think e\eryone should go back and read Beth
Sergent's articlec; (all three) carefully, and see just what
this plant cancellation has caused the economy of this
county! We have 15 percent unemployment: job growth
at minus four percent: 20 percent of our population is
bela\~ the poverty level: none of this mentions how
many in the county arc on government handouts; and
\\rl! are one of the pooreM counties in the state. But I
guess we can be proud that we can NOW move on with
"renewable energy technology.''
r think it's about time that the people of Meigs
County wake up and start dem&lt;mding representation.
"We the people" cloesn 't seem to work down here on
the river!
You all need to tlood Columbus and Washington with
letters, phone calls and emails. You all know what a
flood is, don't yoLJ?
Da~·itl Wamer
Rutland
Cllairmim, Meigs County Republican Party

TC)J)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Dec. 3, the 337th day of 2009.
There are 28 days left in the year.
Today's H1ghlight in History:
On Dec. 3, 1984, thousands of people died after a cloud
of methyl isocyanate gas escaped from a pesticide plant
operated by a Union Carbide subsidiary in Bhopal, India.

Thought for Today: "It is right noble to fight with
• wickedness and wrong; the mistake Is in supposing
that spiritual evil can be overcome by physical means."
- Lydia Marla Child, American author (1802-1880).

Finally, an honest Con game
BY DR. MARVIN FOLKERTSMA
CENTER FOR VISION AND VALUES

"This is not funny, this is serious
stuff'!" intones a flock of furr0wbrowed politicos about that welldressed couple who conned their way
into a White House shindig. Yes and
no. in that order, because some of us
think this incident is more than a little
funny and really not all that serious.
"They could have smuggled a toxic
substance in the guise of a perfume,
or even an explosive!" someone
exclaimed on MSN-Please-Take-MeSeriously-BC. Well, okay. I suppose
so; that might have happened in an
"NCIS" episode; or was it "Loaded
Weapon" or ''The Naked Gun?" Can ·t
remember. At all events. my guess is
that most Americans are more
amused than upset.
The reason for this is that the romp
of Mr. and Mrs. Coiffed-to-Perfection
is the most amusing ~tory to pop out
of the ideological fever swamp of
D.C. since Jimmy Carter confessed to
lust in his heart, complained about
killer rabbits. and deferred to his
daughter's profound reflections on
nuclear war. Perhaps what shocks
those in the political class is that
White House intruders committed a
genuinely honest con. as opposed to
the heaps of dishonest ones they have
inflicted on the American people over
the decades.
One doe:s not have to be a Mensa
member to grasp the difference
between an honest and dishonest con.
or to appreciate the former's subtle
humor. An honest con is carried out
by those who know they are conning
people. and who also know that the
con needs to last only long enough to
achieve one's goal, which in this case
was to gain entry to the White House .
Without question, the most brilliant
exposition of honest conning is
Herman Melville's, "The Confidence

.Man.'' Melville, along with Mark
Twain, were America·s most insightful writers, in that they could smell a
con game a continent away. To '
Melville, the great con was religion
or religious-type quests; to Twain. it
was the grand kaleidoscope of human
affairs. but for a particularly well
known example, read "The Notorious
Jumping Frog of Calaveras County."
For both, gullible Americans suckered into believing the con's oily
ruses may be victims. but they are
also pathetic.
Melville and Twain were especially
repulsed by a dishonest con - which
is committed by those who lie to
themselves as well as to others - in
that the con arti'\ts refuse to acknowledge that what i, being perpetrated is
in fact a con game. American politics
offers so many examples that it is
sometimes hard to determine when a
con is NOT being played. Still, several really big ones are going on ril!ht
now, and their perpetrators are hoprng
that by the time Americans :-.make out
details of the swindles, it will be too
late for anyone to repair the damage;
the cons would have succeeded.
At least one. however, has finally
been brought to light - the theory of
man-made global warming. For
instance, any quick check on C02
emission~ turns up an cmbamtssing
fact about its role in the Great
Greenhouse Gas Crisis, which is that
man-made carbon dioxide is a trivial
contributor to the total amount of this
gas generated by the planet: that is.
some 97 r;rcent of such emissions is
"natural.' Which means that ghastly
EPA scenarios of humanity carbondioxidinl! itself to le\·els of Darth
Vader ni"sping - ''Luke! Sounding
like me is our destiny!" ~ are a bit
overdrawn. Still. well-funded apocalyptomaniacs will likely continue
their feverish diatribes: facing facts is
never pleasant. particularly when

your livelihood depends on a massive
con.
An even greater swindle center:- on
healthcare reform. whose managers
have been trying to manipulate a
number of cons simultaneously. First.
that a new one to two trillion dollar
entitlement is ''deficit-neutral.'' and
second. that Medicare can achieve
"savings" of some half trillion dollars
over the next decade - and third.
that all of this can be predicted about
as well, as. say. Enviro-Cons can predict the weather a half century or ~o
into the future. This massive con
depends further on a number of ''sub·
cons.'' so to speak. such as the insistence that Americans will not have to
relinquish their present insurance
plans, that everyone's insurance
magically will go down, and that i
gal aliens will not be covered.
The upshot of all this is that not all
cons are equal. and the larger the con.
the greater the commitment of its perpetrators to keep it going: massive
cons are literally "too big to fail.''
This suggests a profound moral difference, as well. The "Oceans
Eleven·· con of White House crashers
is trivial and entertaining. with few
significant consequences beyond its
discovery. Political cons belong to a
different moral category altogether. in
that they build huge constituencies to
keep them going. even after they have
been exposed. Which is as much to
say that. in politics, it is possible to
con most people most of the time, and
that's all our political con artists think
they have to do.
(Dr. Man·in F o/kensma is a profes·
sor of political science and Fe/loa
for American Studies with The CenteT
for Vision &amp; Values at Grove Cit)
College. The author of several books,
lzis latest release is a high-energ)
nm·el titled "The Thirteenth
Commandmem." J
•

C&lt;'.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to tho ed1tor should be limited to 300 words. All letters are
: subject to editing, must be s1gned and include address and telephone
number No uns1gned letters will QO published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. ''Thank You· letters
w.11 rcot be pccepted for publication

OK, SOI

COMMUTE'D ~E

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our mam concern 1n all stones 1s to
be aCC\lrato 11 you know of an error
1n 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: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

(usPs 213-9so&gt;
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througt&gt; Fnday, 111 Court Street.
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pa1d at Pomeroy.
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Postmaster: Send address correc·
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729, Pon&gt;eroy. Ohio 45769.

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Mail Subscription
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FROM ONE MIKE TOANQT~ER,
(

�Thursday, December 3,

2009

Deaths

Construction contracts hinder Ohio budget talks

Eamest Williamson
Eamest Williamson, 62, Vienna. W.Va .. died Tue~day,
Dec. I. 2009 nt Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
He is survived by his wife, Norma Cubbison Williamson.
Service will be at I p.m .. Friday. Dec. 4, 2009, at WhiteSchwarzcl Funeral Home, Coolville, \Vith John Koerner
officiating.
'
Burial will be in the Eden Cemetery, Reedsville.
riends may call at the funeral home Thursday. from 6
•
R p.m.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuncralhomc.com.

Tbomas Stone
Thomas Stone, 55, Scottsburg, Ind., formerly of Leon,
W.Va., died Wednesday. Dec. 2. 2009. at Meadow View
Health and Rehabilitation Center in Scottsburg.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by Crow'!l'lbA..tr . Hus~ell Funeral Home. Point Pleasant. W.Va. An online
-;,-1':!'/·registry is found at www.crowhusselltb.com.

Franklin TripleH
Franklin G. "Pop" Triplett, 79. Raven. Va .. fonnerly of
Middleport, died Sunday, Nov. 29. 2009. at his home.
Funeral service was held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 2,
2009, at Singleton Funeral Service Chapel, Bluff. Va ., with
burial in Greenhills Memory Gardens Mausoleum.
Claypool Hill, Vn.
Memorial contributions to American Cancer Society.
1808. Jefferson St.. Rlueficld. W.Va. 2470 I. Online condolences to www.SingletonFuncraiServicc.com.

eocru Briefs
Applications available
RENO
District 18 Natural Resources Assistance
Council applications and guidelines are available for
Meigs. Athens, Belmont. Hockin~ , Monroe. Morgan,
Mu~kingum, Noble, Penv and Washm£!ton counties.
Eligible project are p"urchase of open space and costs
associated with making them accessible to the public, protection of stream conidors. providing wildlife habitat and
reducing erosion:
Local govcmments, park and joint recreation districts.
conservancy districts, soil and water conservation districts
and non-profit organizations are t!ligible to apply.
Applications und guidelines are a\'ailable from Michelle
Hyer. 374-9436.

For the Record

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
proposal to overhaul the way
Ohio conducts contracting
for slate construcuon projects became the major sticking point on Wednesday in
ongoing negotiations over
tilling the state budget gap.
Republicans who control the
Ohio Senate have otlered u
St.&gt;cond proJX)Sal to Democrats
with the ho(~s of' not only filling an immediate $H50 million
budget gap, but also addressing some of the '&gt;tute's longertcnn budget challenge..-.. Their
initial propo)jal offered two
weeks ago was rcje&lt;.~ed by
Democrats as ''irresponsible:'
This
time,
Senate
Republicans are offering

POMEROY - A two-car accident on West Main Street
• front of Dominos Piu.a was reported yesterday eveninf?.
tility pole ended up in the street as a result of the accit which snarled traffic for awhile. The Pomeroy Police
partment is processing the scene and no further details
were available at press time.

High~ay

Patrol

POMEROY - Injuries were reported following a twovehicle accident that occurred rn Salisbury Township
Tuesday at approximately 3:25 p.m., though no treatment
was sought at the scene.
According to troopers. Emma E. Ashley. 57, Pomeroy, was
driving a 2006 Chryo,;ler Town and C:::ountry minivan eastbound on Ohio 124. while Joann M. Kaminski, 20. Rutland.
was driving a 1998 Dodge Neon northbound on Bradbury
Road. Kaminski reportedly failed to yield to Ashley at the
intersection of Oh1o 124 and Bradbury Road. and Ashley's
vehicle struck Kammski's vehicle on the driver's side.
Ashley reported non-incapacitating injuries and her
vehicle sustained non-functional damages: Kaminski
reported possible injuries and her vehicle sustained dis• abling damages.
Kaminski was cited with failure to yield the right of way.

Meigs County Forecast
•

hursday...Cloudy. A
_ht chance of showers in
the mornin~ ...Then a chance
of drizzle 111 the afternoon.
Highs in the lower 40s.
West winds I0 to 15 mph
with gusts up to 25 mph.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday night ...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of drizzle
In the evening. Cooler with
lows around 30. West winds
5 to 10 mph.
Frida~ ...Partly
sunny.
Highs in the upper 30s.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday
night ...Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows in

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 33.94
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 66.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 38.19
Big Lots (NYSE) - 23.91
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.38
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 31.07
tury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
0.86
•
mplon (NASDAQ) - 1.82
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.84
Ctty Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.31
Collins (NYSE) - 54.92
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.38
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.43
Gannett (NYSE) - 9.87
General Electric (NYSE)- 16.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 29.58
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 41.93
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.70
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 17.77
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) 52.22

enough votes to get all of Ohio is one of only a few
Gov. Ted Strickland's sug- states where so-called multigested delay of the final 42 ple-prime contracting. which
percent in planned income many cormder to be costly
tax cuts through the Senate. and inefficient. is prominent.
In return, they want changes
"It's all about jobs.'' said
in prison sentencing to reduce state Sen. Tom :-.liehaus, a
the number of inmates. m. New Richmond Republican.
well as changes in constntc- ''It's about saving money;
tion contracting that backer-s it's ahout being able to
say will save hundreds of deliver services in the most
millions of dollars in capital efficient and effective way
costs. particularly at places for Ohio taxpayers.''
like Ohio State Uni\,ersity.
But some Democrats said
The changes, the main they don't belong in the budcomponent of which is an get fix bill because they
opportunity for the state to haven't been properly vetted
centralize building projects in the committee process. and
through a single contractor. the Ohio Legislative Black
were recommended by a task Caucus said it has concems
force set up ·by Strickland. that some of the change.." rna)

shut out minority construction
interests. Republicans we re
attempting to hold a meeting
\\~th Democrats. members of
the Black Caucus and repre.sentatives from Ohio State to
hammer out an agreement on
the constructioo changes.
Opposition from Oh iu 's
black senators could sink the
entire package because
majorit) Republicans plan to
offer the minimum five votes
necessary to get it through
the Senate with the help of all
Senate Democrats. The
majority of 'Republicans
won't suppor1 anything that
contains Strickland's tax
plan, which they consider to
be a tax increase.

- -- ----

Giveaway from Page AI
''Anything you want to
give will be taken and given
to someone that can use it,"
Rader said.
Rader said older children.
ages 13 and up, are the
hardest to buy for but she
added, •tthey'rc still kids
and they still would like
something for Christmas." ·
Rader also pointed out the
Pomeroy Dollar General

will be taking toy and clothing donations for the giveawn) up until Dec. 11.
Rader said she appreciates Dollar General's efforts
in not only this project but
others throughout the year.
"It's nice when companies
within our own communities are willing to reach out
to make a difference in their
areas.'' she added .

Churches and individuals
from Upper Sandusky are
arriving on Saturday with
to'.'s for the Dec. II -12
giveaway and are bringing
Santa along for the ride.
Santa will be greeting boys
nnd girls starting at 5:30
p.m. (weather permitting)
on Saturday at God's NET.
Pictures will be taken with
Santa and the children will

be given cand). Again , the
toys will not be distributed
on this day but are for the
mam giveaway on Dec. I 111.
Also. the Pansh Shop
ministry will sponsor a
"Cookies with Santa'' event
from 9 a.m. - II a.m . on
Dec. 19 inside the gymnasi um at
the Mulberry
Community Center.

Arrests from Page AJ
telling an employee she had a chargl!s are pendin~ against
gun and demanding the con- a possible accomplice.
tents of the cash register
Eight armed robberies
before fleeing with an undis- have been committed n
cJosed amount of money.'
Gallia County since Nov.
She is currently incarcer- 14; all except the Long John
ated in the Gallia County Silvers hold-up invoh ed
Jail and is facing a charge of suspects using a knife.
robbery.
Two armed robberies
On Wednesday. Gallia have also taken place in
County
Sheriff
Joe Mason &lt;::ountv, W.Va., durBrowning announced that ing the same tirneframe.
William J . Denny, II, 24. The Chevron station on
Gallipolis, has been arTested W.Va. 2 in Gallipolis Ferry
in connection with the rob- was robbed Tuesday night.
bery of Pizza Plus in Spring reportedly by two su~pects
. Valley. He is facing an armed with handguns.
; aggravated robbery charge.
According to a report
Browning added that further from the Mason County

Accident reported

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sheriff's office. one of the
subject was wearing a gray
long sleeve sweatshirt with
red lettering. He a1so had
the hood up and was wearing a toboggan with a mask
thnt covered his face. The
other suspect, whose face
was covered by a bandana,
was wearing a black £ip-up
hooded sweatshirt with
baggy blue jeans.
The Point Pleasant Food'
Mart at the Exxon station on
Jackson Ave. was held up
on Saturday. Nov. 21. Point
Pleasant Police said the suspect in the Exxon robbery
reportedly brandished a

knife. He \\as v.earing a
gray hooded sweatshirt and
concealed his face with a
white cloth.
Investigations into these
robberies are still in progress.

Citizens with injomwtion
are encouraged to comact the
Gallipolis Police Departmem
at446-1313 or the Gallia Co.
Sheriff'&lt;; anonymous tipline
at 446-6555.
Anyone with information
conceming the robberie.'! in
Mason Coumy cm1 comact
the Point Pleasant Police
Departmelll at 304-675-1104.
or the Mawn Co. SherijJ:r;
Office at 304-675-3838.

Syracuse from Page AI
and the Jocal police depart- He is trying to get a web site
ment if you see anything set up for our group through
that should be reported .
Suddenlink.
Leslie
Edwards, the
Gordon Fi.&lt;-her, trea~urer
Syracuse Patrol Officer. re- of the group. demonstrated
emphasized that crime an inexpensi\·e security
watch patrol members device that attaches to the
should stay in their vehicles doors of the home. It was
and not approach suspicious battery-operated, cost only
individuals. She said to S5 for four alarms and
write down the tag numbers could b!! purchased at
of any suspicious vehicles Harbor Freight or Menards.
It makes a lot of noise
and report them to her.
"You may want to carry when the door is opened
and will alert you if an
1 mace for your own protecintruder is present.
1 tion,'' she suggested. ''This
Bob Byer also suggested
neighborhood watch group
' is not just a crime watch that everyone keep their car
I organization. It should also keys by the bedside. If you
be a group that \\ atches out hear a strange noise during
for neighbors, heing aware tht; night, push the alam1
of the special needs of button on the key pad. It will
older citizens. and helping produce a lot of noise and
perhaps scare off a criminal.
each other.''
He reported that he had Byer also suggested that the
spoken to a resident of group get copies of the
Millfield where there is an Syracu.;e street maps and
active crime watch group. write down the names of citThe crime watch group has Izens where they reside.
made a big difference then~ These can then be duplicatin the reduction of crime,
he said.
Weaver also said that he
had registered the group
with the National Crime
Watch Association on their
web site and was awaiting
materials from that group.

ed and given to evef)or\e on
the block. he recommended.
Mayor Eric Cunningham
said he would try to iocate
the~e maps for the group. A
final suggestion that was
made was to light up the
hoinc'~ exterior during the

night time. Criminals like to
work in the dark, and light.s
will help tleter their acti\ ity,
Weaver concluded.
The next meeting will be
held at 7 p.m. on Dec. 16 at
the Svracuse Communnv
Center.
•

Th
Gift
Certificates

rom Mark Hasseman,
LMT, MMP
'
4'

the mid 20s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Saturday...Partly sunny in
the moming ...Then becoming
mostly cloudy. A chance of
flurric:.. Highs in the mid 30s.
Saturday night through
Sunday
night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
20s. Highs around 40.
I --------Monday and Monday l
night ...Mostly
cloudy. 1
Highs in the lower 40s.
Lows in the upper 20s.
from Page AI
Tuesday...Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain. Highs
Craig Randolph was hired
in the lower 40s. Chance of on a supplemental contract
rain 30 percent.
as seventh grade boys basketball coach for the 200910 season with a contract of
$1,400. The resignation of
Beck)' Amberger as a per•
sonal care aide at Carleton
School
was
accepted;
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 22.13
Katrina Spurlock was then
BBT (NYSE)- 26.19
hired as a personal care aide
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.59
at
Carleton School on a purPepsico (NYSE) - 63.65
chased service contract. the
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6,20
rate of pay is $9 per hour.
Rockwell (NVSE) - 44.15
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.76
The Board also approved
Royal Dutch Shell - 60.93
a
sealed bid list for three
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) school buses it wishes to
73.61
sell. including a 1991
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - 54.57
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.19
International with 167 .~91
WesBanco (NYSE) - 12.60
miles: a 1995 International
Worthington (NYSE)- 12.09
with 147.630 miles: a 1995
Dally stock reports are the 4
International with 174,961
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Dec. 2, 2009, provld·
miles.
ed by Edward Jones financial
Present at the meeting
advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
members
were
Board
at (740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Dennie Hill, Don Smith,
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.
Peggy Gibbs, Denny Evans.

Southern

BllY aChristmas Card or
Box of Russell Stover
Candies ~ redeve afree
Bottle of Cologne While

supplies last.
.,

�Thursday, December 3, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

--

J

J

_j

Visit us
Online at
www.rcplayers.net

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
~

~).)'011 !l!!iOJI.tOI~yJ,Y~Ht ~

~~- ~s:.nO~_$·
Uha!Js~twe--.at ~ Sao~~
"'ltfl~(!li:Qlll' ~raer 'tiW llld!W'

•

)

Call [
Tod y
1o Schedule
· A Tout

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
AP All-Ohio Football List. Page B2
Browns place Lewis on IR, Page 86

Thursday, December 3, 2009
LocALSCHF..DULE
GALUPOUS - A IChedulo of upoomlng high
Yalil1y ~inO 1!\'(!nts lnvoMng lenms
Galli&amp;, Mason lllld Mclg:l oounUoa
•

Jh1mulay, December 3
Glrla Basketball

Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p.m.
ErJ~

Boys Bas~etball

Waterford at Eastern, 6:30 p.m.
Southern at M1ller, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Warren. 5 p m.
South Gall a at C!'OSS lanes ChriStian,
7:30p.m
OVCS Tournament, 8 p m
Glrla Baaketball

South Gallla at Cross lanes Christian, 6
p.m.
OVCS Tournament, 6.30 p.m.
Wrestling

Huntington at Point Pleasant. TBA
satumay.~em.tmt.5

Boya Basketball
Eastern at South Gall a, 6:30 p.m
Rock H11l at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m
Meigs at Rwer Valley. 5 p.m.
OVCS Tournament, TBA
Girls Basketball
Gallia Academy at Manetta, 6 p m.
OVCS Tournament, TBA
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at Meigs 1nv1te, TBA

NO job may be
more appealing
~ is time around

Prep Football -All-Ohio teams

Ohio Valley Publishing area lands
10 on All-Ohio gr· iron teams
Meigs Jeremy Smith named to second team in D-4
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTERSOMVDAilYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS. Ohio For the second consecutive
football season. the Ohio
Valley Publsihing area has
produced I 0 honorees for
the divisions l-6 All-Ohio
football teams as selected
by the Associated Press.
However, for the first
time since the 2006 campaign. the region has produced an All-Ohio :;elec~
tion above the special men.tion category as Meigs
senior Jeremy Smith was
honored with second-team

accolades in Di\ ision IV.
Smith. a two-time AllOhio runningbnck who also
won the offensive player of
the year award in the TriValley Conference Ohio
DivisiOn, produced I. 575
yards and 25 touchdowns
on 219 carries - an average of 7.2 yards per carry.
Smith also accounted for
174, or roughly 57 percent,
of the Marauders' 305 total
points thi~ season after a 55 campaign. Smith - who
also rushed for I .500 yards
as a jumor for the playoffhound Maroon and Gold is the first player from

etther Meigs or Gallia
counties to be nominated
above special mention
since Jayme Haggerty of
Gallia Academy.
Three
other
locals,
besides Smith, earned their
second consecutive selection to the All-Ohio squad.
Gallia Academy senior
Jared Gravely earned his
second straight defensive
selection in D-3 after postmg 51 tackles. eight tackles
for loss and four sacks for
the 2•8 Blue Devils.
The Southern senior duo

Bryan Walters/file photo

Meigs senior runningback Jeremy Smith runs for positive
yardage during this Friday, Oct. 2, file photo against Warren
at Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
•

Please see Ohio, 86

Defense on the spot
for unbeaten Cincinnati

W oUTH BEND.Ind. (AP)
-

The biggest challenge

Notre Dame athletic director
Jack Swarbrick faces as he.
searches for a replacement
for Charlie Weis is finding
somebody who believes the
job is as good as Fighting
Jrish fans do.·
It's been a problem for the
lrish in recent couching
searches. During the last
search after the 2004 season
they couldn't interest Urban
Meyer even though he
called it hb "dream job.''
The last time Notre Dame
got its first choice of coach·
es was in 1985, when Lou
Holtz was hired a day after
Gerry Faust resigned.
Things 'could be different
this time around.
College football observers
say many obstacles that
might have caused some
coachec; to think twice
considering the Notre
job in the past have
removed.
As recently as the 2004,
Notre Dame had antiquated
football facilities. Players
dressed at Notre Dame
Stadium and either walked
or rode bikes to the practice
fields on the other side of
the Joyce Center. Team
meetings were held in a
cramped auditorium.
Now the r.Jayers have a
spacious factlity just across
the street from three practice
fields, two of which have
artificial tu'rf.
Weis had three consensus
top-10 recruiting cla~ses in
his five years as head coach
and mt~ht have posted a
fourth tf he hadn't been
fired. The Irish schedule,
once among the nation's
toughest. has been softened.
Notre Dame, which once
wouldn't allow its football
coach to be paid more than
· op administrators, now
both its head coach and
assistant coaches at a
competitive level.
• The school even allows
early high school seniors to
enroll in January. once considered unthinkable.
"They have everything
that a head coach is looking
for," said Tom Lemming,
CBS
Colle~e
Sports
~etwork recrurting analyst.
~You have great facilities,
ireat academics, ~reat TV
!xposure, a beautiful campus
and
tradition.
Everything they're looking
tor is there, and there is talent on the team."
Allen Wallace, publisher
of SuperPrep magazine and
national recruiting editor for
Scout.com, agreed. saying
there ts no reason Notre
Dame shouldn't be able to
compete for national championships consistently. . .
"They eventually w1ll tf
he bring in the right guy.
question is: Who's
~g to be the guy that can
take that challenge on?" he
said.
q_uestion
That's
the
Swarbrick is trymg to
answer. So far, .ilhere arc far
more names being tossed
out as candidates by the
media and fans than people
Swarbrick has identified ac;

i

Please see Irish, 86

I

AP photo

In this Oct. 23 photo, North Canton's Erick Howard leaps past Canton GlenOak's Spyro
Spondyl, right, in a high school football game in Canton, Ohio. Howard was won the AP
Mr. Football award for 2009. Howard became only the second Ohio prep star ever to win
the Associated Press Mr. Football award twice.

Howard again Ohio Mr. Football
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
- Every game, it seemed, an
opponent would say :..ornething to Erick Howard about
his 2008 Mr. Football award.
And they weren't congratulating him.
When he moves on to college next season, he'll hear
that double.
Howard became the second Ohio pre{&gt; star to twice
win the Associated Press Mr.
Football award Wednesday
night when he captured the
state's top individual honor
for high school players.
So. Erick. did opposing
players notice the big award
you won a year ago?
"Oh. yeah. All the time.
Someone would ha\'e a pretty good hit on me and say.
'You're not Mr. Football
today;·· he said. "They talked
a lot of trash and that kind of
motivates me even more to
play that much harder."
Howard, a 5-foot-11. 205pound senior at North
Canton Hoover, once again
had staggering regular-season stats: 299 carrie::. for
I ,957 yards and 26 touchdowns as a running back:
102 tackles. five tackles for a
loss. three sacks, four fum·
blcs caused and an intercep·
tion as a middle linebacker.
Including a playoff game,
he rushed for more than
2,000 yards for the c;econd
year in a row, pushing his
career total to more than
6.000 yards to go with 79
touchdowns and 478 points
-all Stark County records.
Howard joins Euclid's
Robert Smtth (1988-89).
who went on to fame at Ohio
State and in the NFL. as the

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

-•

only two-time winner of the
prestigious award. The "inner is determined by a vote of
a statewide media panel.
Hoover coach Don Hertler
Jr. said Howard was better as
a senior than he was a year
ago.

..Gosh, he earned over 300
tunes. He probabl) played
over 500 snaps each of the
last two years." he said. ''To
me, he's a Chri-; Spielmantype high school plnycr as far
as b\!ing an every-down 1\ind
of a player, offense and
defense. and can oominme
either side of the ball. During
the regular season evef) nine
times he touched the ball he
scored a touchdown. With
the bull's eye on his back,
everyone played their best
game against us by far. he
withstood a lot of pounding
and a lot of pressure to carry
us."
Howard's college choices
have been narrowed to
Cincinnati. Michigan State,
Pittsburgh and Ohio .State.
No one questions his ability
or hi~ commitment. He has
some classwork to do to raise
his grade-point average to
ready himo;;elf for the next
le-vel.
Howurd can run inside and
punish a defense or can skirt
the edge and outnm it. He has
terrific acceleration and
incredible durability - he
started every ~amc the final
three years, mtssing only the
second half of two games due
to the beating he took on all
those carrieo;;.
What's more, Howard has
proven to be a responsible
kid who has persevered
despite some difficult times.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
board on the wall in·
Cincinnati·s football meeting room lists six defensive
go~ls for each game. In the
last three weeks. only two
of the goals were met including winning the
game.
That's a bad sign.
The fifth-ranked Bearcats
need a stout game from
their struggling defense on
Saturday at No.
14
Pittsburgh. where the Big
East championship will be
decided. It shapes up as the
defense's biggest test yet.
In the Jac;t three games.
the defense has slid from
one of the nation's best to
one just trymg to keep up
with the Bearcats' qutckstrike offense. Cincinnati
(I J -0. 6-0) has given up 45.
21 and 36 points in the last
three, having a particularly
tough time stopping the
run.
lfs too late in the season
to make any drastic
changes.
"They nrc who they arc.''
coach Brian Kelly said.
"They battle. We've got a
lot of inexperienced players.''
Up next: Pittsburgh\
Dion Lewis. who ranks
fourth nationally in rushing
witb 131 yards per game.
How well the Bearcats hold
up will be a major factor in
what amounts to a championship game. If Pittsburgh
wins. the Panthers (9-2, 5I) would share the title
with Cincinnati and get the
league's automatic BCS
berth based on their headto-head win.
The
outcome
could
depend on Cincinnatt's
defense, which has de,·eJoped a reputation as the
weak link in the last few
weeks.
"By now. we're pretty
used to it," linebacker J.K.
Schaffer ~aid. "We don't
Iike it. But that gtves us a
little chip on our shoulder
every week coming in.
knowing we need to prove
ourselve~ to the countrv
every week. We're confi"-

dent in ourselves on
defense, but our offense is
awesome."
And that's part of the
problem.
Knowing he had a highpowered passing offem.e
with senior quarterback
Tony Pike and a deep corps
of receivers. Kelly decided
to go with a conservative
defensive scheme that
would allow yards but not
many big plays. Only one
defensive starter returned
from last year's team.
which also \vas a factor 1n
the decision.
A problem developed as
the season went along. The
offense was scoring so fast
that the defense wns on the
field a lot and tended to
wear down in the second
half. allowing opponents to
make comebacks. As a
result. the Bearcats rank
near the bottom of the
country in time of possession.
Rather than running the
ball more to give the
defense a rest, Kelly has
decided to stay with the
formula that has led to an
11-0 start.
"We don't help our
defense very much on
offense. we really don't,"
Kelly said. "If I wanted to
put lipstick on it. I could
make it look a little bit better. But we want to win.
We ·ve got an offense - let
them go.
"I just want to win. and it
doesn't necessarily paint a
great picture for our
defense when we try to win
that way.''
The offense's penchant
for scoring quickly has
become a topic in the locker room.
"Our defense doesn't like
us too much because we
score too fast sometimes."
tight end Ben Guidugli
said. "We're fine with
that:'
Linebacker Andre Revels
declined to get into the
topic of Cincinnati':-. lop:
sided time of possession.

His father died in an industrial accident a decade ago.
leaving behind Howard's
mother and seven kids.
Howard is the youngest.
"My father died about four
days after my eighth birthday. so that was kind of hard.
It doesn't bother me any
more, but it used to," Howard
said. ''My mom is real good
to me. She helps me out a lot.
She helps me get to work and
stuff. And my one brother's
kind of like a mentor for me.
He's graduated and lived in
the real world a couple of
years. so he's trying to help
me with the (NCAA) clearinghouse for football and
things along those lines.''
Howard is the only sibling
left at home. He and his
brother help support their
Please see 8earcats, 86
mother. Erick works at a
Canton-area Indoor sports
playground featuring batting
cages. volleyball and basketbali courts. He loves playing
with and supervising the kids
who visit.
After he won the Mr.
Football award a year ago, he
worked on himself. too. Not
content with his strength and
durability, he toiled particularly hard in the summer to
get in shape. The results
speak for themselves.
Now he wants to impro\'e
even more.
"I've got good acceleration. I ju:-.t need to get it to
where I'm, like. gone.'' he
said. '·Instead of ~iving a
defense a chance. I JUSt want
to be gone:·
AP photo
Hertler said that C\en in Illinois running back Jason Ford (21) runs against
phys ed class,•Howard pla)S Cincinnati defensive lineman Walter Stewart (54) In the first

Please see Football. 86

•

quarter of an NCAA college football game Friday, Nov. 27,
In Cincinnati.

�----------------""'!":""'-----------~~-~~-----

y

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

f

Thursday, December 3,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

2009 Associated Press All-Ohio Football teams - divisions 2-6
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ..,.. The 2008 Associated Press Divisron II All-Ohio high
school football team, based on the recommendations ol a state media panel:
DIVISION

Ill

FIRST TEAM
; OFFENSE: Ends-Harry Ma1sner Cincinnati Wyoming. 6-foot-0. 190 pounds,
6emor; Ben Eisel, Salem, 5-10, 155, sr. Unemen-Jamey DeVaul. Steubenville, 6-3,
220. sr: Alex Vance, Cots. DeSales, 6-4, 235, sr., Chuck Murphy, GoShen, 6·3. 255.
sr , Zach Larson Youngs. Mooney. 6·3, 285, sr.; Nico Capom. Sandusky Perkrns. 6-3.
;!55. sr. Quarterbacks-Dwrght Macon, Steubenville. 6-0, 200, sr, Marcus Mamarella.
bover, 5-10. 210, sr., Kyle Seyfried, Cln. Wyoming, 6-1. 185, Jr.; Johnnie Brown.
Circleville LogAn Elm, 5·9. 170, sr; Curt Watson, Bellevue, 6·5, 220, sr.; Danny Frate.
Hunting Val. Umv School, 6-2. 225, sr. Backs-Dan Penmngton, Pataskala Licking
)-Its .. 5-10, 190, sr, Ben Patmor, Cadiz Harrison Cent, 6·1, 210, sr.; Aaron Swanson.
Defiance, 5-9. 170, sr. Brayton Heard, Youngs. Mooney, 5·10: 170, sr Kicker-Zac
Eckert. Monroe, 6·3, 160, sr,
• DEFENS!O: Linemen-Travis Jackson, Cols. DeSales, 6-5. 265, sr, Jibreel Black
Cin Wyoming, 6-2 260, sr.; Draw Carpenter, Thornville Sheridan, 6·1, 240, sr:
1\nthony Stryffoler, Parma Padua Franciscan. 6-4. 220. sr Lrnebackers-Cody Bloom.
Napoleon, 6-1, 225, sr.; Shaq Petteway. Steubenville, 6·1. 200 )r., Mark Branden stern,
lr'oungs Mooney, 5·11, 215, sr.; Kurtis Drummond. Hubbard, 6·3. 195, sr. BacksBobby Spence, Rayland Buckeye Local, 6·0, 180, sr, Jell Lonchor, Hunting Val. Un111.
l:;chool, 5-11 170, sr; Luke Wollet. Poland Semrnary. 6-1, 195, sr . Ray V•nopal,
:r'oungs. Mooney 6·1, 170. sr. Punter-Derek Robeck, Waverly, 6·3, 220. sr.
OffensiVe players of the year· Kyle Seyfried, C1n. Wyoming; Braylon Heard, Youngs.
Mooney.
:Defensive player ol the year· Travis Jackson, Cols. DaSales; Jibreel Black, Cin.
Wyommg.
Coaches of the year Travis Cooper, Bryan; Mike Kopachy, Salem
_
SECOND TEAM
,
• OFFENSE: Ends-Colton Zahner. Dover, 6-2. 180. jr.; Evan Aleshire. Cin, Wyomrng,
.6·3. 190, sr.; Adam Blake, Circleville Logan Elm, 6-0. 160, sr., Doran Grant, Akron
SVSM. 5·10, 175, jr. Linemen-Grant Georgrc, Delaware Buckeye Val .. 6·2, 265. sr;
Logan Pence, Monroe. 6-2. 250. sr. Kolton Keller, Medrna Buckeye, 6·3, 230. sr.,
Adam Ferbeck, Sandusky Perkins. 6·5, 302, sr. Quarterback-Bryan Jones, Can~l
Fulton Northwest. 6-1, 190, sr. Backs-Tyler Link, Granvtlle, 6-0. 195. sr.. Nick
VanHoose, St. Parls Graham. 6·1, 160.)r, Brandon Hummer, Napoleon, 5·10, 197,
~r.; Mark Smtih. Beloit W Branch, 5·11, 205, sr Kicker-Drew Basil, Chtllicothe, 6·1.
~91, sr.
• DEFENSE: Llnemen-Chns Rock. Cols. DeSales. 6·5, 245. Jr.; Solomon Tentman
St. Bernard Roger Bacon. 6·2, 225, sr,; Zac Rosenbauar, Lrma Shawnee, 6-3, 250.
sr.. Greg McMullen. Akron Hoban. 6·5, 260. soph. Unebackers-iyler Hardesty.
Cambndge. 5·11. 205. sr.: Austen Harrison. Granville, 6-3,205, sr.• G,asey Crable, St.
Paris Graham. 6-1. 215, sr, Billy Harmon, Akron SVSM, 6-0, 240. sr. Backs--Domtnic
Clegg, Cots. Watterson. 5-11, 185. sr.: Cody Combs. Sprrng. Shawnee, 5-11. 160. sr,
f'lonaldTanner, Cots. Eastmoor Acad. 6-1, 190.Jr.Jake Krupko. Alliance Marlington.
6·1, 170, sr. Punter-Kyle Pignatiello, Tipp City Tippecanoe, 5·9. 182, Jr.
THIRD TEAM
OFFENSE: Ends-Derek Kneeskern. T1ffln Columbian, 6-3, 202, sr.; Evan Bach.
Canal Fulton NW, 5-10. 180. sr.: Danus Patton, Poland Seminary. 5-10. 170. jr
lrnemen-John Bruce. Tipp City Tippecanoe, 6-2, 233, sr . Andrew Buening, Cols
Watterson, 6·3. 228. sr.; David Weisz. Clyde, 6-5; 270. sr. Quarterback-Matt
Shelton, Hubbard, 6·3 180. sr. Backs-DeVante Sherwood, Cots. South, 5-6. 165.
sr.; Jeremy Scott, Norwood, 5·10, 210. sr.; Dalton Caudill, Eaton. 5-10, 175, sr.;Aiden
Hill. Alliance Marhngton, 6-2. 205, soph. Kicker-Zach Christensen, Akron Hoban, 5·
~0. 150,sr
.
DEFENSE: Linemen-Jake Mallernee, Cadiz Hamson Cent. 5-11, 215. sr.. Joel
Spurgeon. Napoleon, 6-2.210. sr.: Cody Krupp, Tifhn Columbian, 6-0, 195, sr.; La Troy
lewis, Akron Hoban, 6-4. 230, soph. Unebac~ers-Trey Runneals. Lima Shawnee, 5·
10, 160, soph.; Edwtn Kamara. Pataskala, Licking Hts.. 6·1. 210, sr.; Matt Redfield
Cots. Watterson, 6-0, 210, Jr.: Eric Htli'lanbriJnd. Franklin, 6-0, 185, sr.; Brent Hurd,
Vermilion. 5-11, 185, sr. Backs-Adam Gnlfin, Cols. DeSales, 5-9. 185. sr.; Ntck
Kaszel, Parma Padua Franciscan, 5·11, 175. sr.: Steven Joslin, Conneaut. 6-0. 185,
sr Mark Murphy, Akron SVSM, 6·1, 195. jr. Punter-Kody Fulkerson. Zanesv1lla
Maysville, 6-2, 175, sr.

Zoarville Tusc. Val.; Justin Moore Zanosv111e W. Muskingum; Don Chck, Zanesvrlle W.
Muskmgum; Zak Stiles, St. Clairsville: Jordan Burress. Martins Ferry; Corey Fisher,
Magnolia Sandy Valley; Josti Riggans. Byesville Meadowbrook; Justrn Rentsch,
Gnadentiutten Indian Val.; Devon Parson. Martins Ferry; Will Lenhart, Zanesville W.
Muskingum; Seth Callarik, St. Clarrsvtlle; Zack Monte. Magnolia Sandy Val.;
•
Tyler Krait. Amanda-Clearcreek: Joey Moore, Cols. Hartley; Brandon Purdum. Plarn.
Crty Jonathan Alder, Matt Schramm, London: Noah Key. Cofs. Hartley; Jordan Doone,
Amanda-Ciearcreek, Evan Jackson. Cols. Hartley; Wesley Henderson, London
Madison Platns; Corey McSweeney, Cols."Hartley: Derek Posey, Uhca; Max Corcoran,
Amanda·Clearcreek; Aaron Dunlap, Plain Ctty Jonathan Alder; Justyn Eckard, Heathj
Chris Snyder. Manon Pleasant: Ethan Zuber, Sparta Hrghland;
Dameon Garrett, Crn. N. College Hill; Donovan Clark. Frnneytown; Beau Fedders,
Mtddletown Fenwick; Kyle Wallace, Milton-Union; Caleb Keeton. Waynesvrlle: Jordan
Jacobs. Carlisle; Charles Harpen, Clarksville Clinton-Massre; Ty Ftsher, Carlisle;
Mrtcholl Davenport Ironton Rock H11l: Jake Cantrell. Wrlltamsport Westfall. Jeff
Matteson. Wellston; Caleb Southworth, Piketon; Robbie Webb, Ironton; Kyle Btgham,
Lancaster Fairfreld Un•on, Bryan Bowling, Willramspor1 Westfall; Brennan Howard,
Portsmouth. Jerry Dixon. Albany Alexander. Kirk Maxwell. Chillicothe Zane Trace;
.fosh Myers, Portsmouth, Tres Wilks. Ironton; Tyler Turner, Lancaster Farrf1eld Unton:
Trevon Pendleton. Portsmouth West; Jake Hedrick Albany Alexander; Matt
Bloomfteld, Proctorville Farrland: NiCk Hamsnond W•lliamsport Westfall: Nick Gan~s,
Chillicothe Zane Trace: Josiah Yazdani. Albany Alexande~; Greg Taylor, South Potnt;
Pat Seesholtz, Lancaster Fairfield Unron; Jarred Collins. Chillicothe Zane Trace; Caleb
Davrs. Pomeroy Meigs. Casey Sanders. Portsmouth: Tyson Brown. McDermott NW;
Mark Murphy, Portsmouth West; Enn Edens. Ironton; Ben Jones. Chillicothe Zane
Trace. Steve Vanderpool, Chillicothe Unioto: Tre Underwood, Portsmouth; Chad
Fisher, Proctorville Fairland; Dallas Cochenour, Chillicothe Zane Trace: Jordan Miller,
Piketon: Alex Thompson, Portsmouth West; Cody Lawson, Albany Alexander;
Chad Mossing, Metamora Evergreen: Allen Tigner. Port Clinton; Seth Hollman,
Pembervrlle Eastwood; Josh Gebelle, Milan Edison; Dylan Howard, Mtlan Edtson;
Weston Brunworth, Kenton; Kyle Cory, Mrlan Edison; Kyle Matula, Milan Edison: Ryan
Tiura. Milan Edison:
Ben Perko, Perry; Andrej Sess•ons, Brooklyn; Anthony Kukwa. Perry: Tony Williams,
Lorain Clearview; Mike Stewart. Brooklyn; Sam Bernstern, Beachwood; Rich Zalanka .
Perry; Danny Reaser. Elyria Cath.; Braden Ferrell, Perry; Scott Campbell, Chagrin
Falls; Davtd Wallie, Perry; Chad West. Perry; David Powers, C~agrln Falls; Nrck
Marshall, Andover Pymatuning Val.; Austin Tackett. Shell1ald Brooksrde; Matt Sabroll,
Beachwood; N1ck Ksenich, Elyria Cath.; Zach Rogers'. Elyria Cath: Enk Petracca.
Perry· Zach Anderson, Lorain Clearvtew;
Brandyn Peters, Panrnsula Wood!ldge: Eric Myers, Wooster Triway; Cra1g Frankford,
Girard; Stephen Page. Newton Falls: Tom Ross. Akron Manchester; Damo B1vens.
Campbell Memorial; Tre Simpson, Orrville; Tyler Alban. Massillon Tuslaw; Nick
Szwedko. Cortland Lakevrew; Dennis Raber, Orrvrlle: Justin Schafrath, D9Yiestown
Chippewa; Xavier Douglall, CVCA; Zak Knettel. CVCA: Brandon Butcher. Wooster
Triway; Brit Hunter, Akron Manchester: John Sikora, Campbell Memorial; Brent
Marshall, Garrattsville Garfield; MitCh Czerniak, Newton Falls; Cody Dillon, Newton
Falls.

DIVISION VI
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE Ends-Dan Tracht, Norwalk St. Paul, 6-loot-0, 185 pounds, senror; Brice
Bowman, Grove C1ty Chrrstian. 6-0. 160, sr. Lrnemen-Teven Eatmon, Bucyrus
Wynford, 6-7, 290, sr.; Alex Simon, Norwalk St. Paul, 6-2. 225, sr.; Alex Recker,
Delphos St. John's, 6-2, '235, jr.. Josh Hendershot, Newark Cath., 6-4. 260, sr
Quarterbacks-Heath Jackson. Ada, 6·1, 180, sr.; Tyler Brause. Bucyrus Wynlord, 64, 225. sr. Backs-Danny LaRosa, Thompson Ledgemont. 5·10. 170. soph.: Jess
Barns. Grove City Christian. 5-9, 170, sr.; Tyler. Dyla, ·Glouster Tnmble, 5-8, 165, Jr.:
Jordan Lerninger, Delphos St. John's. 6-2, 208. jr: Brian Grtfftn, Norwalk St. Paul, 62. 185. sr Kicker--JC Miller, Tol. Christ1an. 5-8. 180, sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen-Nate Maleski, Bridgeport, 6·2. 275. sr.: Kyle Bowen. Willow
Wood Symmes Val., 5·9, 215, sr.; Trent Clay, McDonald, 6-3. 220, sr. LrnebackersZach Bollinger, Morral Ridgedale. 6·2. 215. sr; Chns Pohlman, Delphos St. John's, 62, 240,jr; Brad Fnlling, Fl Loramie, 6·1, 202. sr.. Isaac Bowling, Fremont St. Joseph.
6·0, 205. jr.; Aaron Weyer, Ada, 6·1, 200. Jr. Backs-David Spearman, Srdney
Lehman, 6-0. 175. sr.; Connor Lucas. Grove City Christian, 5-5. 140, soph., Tyler
Bergfeld, Delphos St.John's, 6-2, 190. Jr.: Justin Wilde, Norwalk St. Paul 5-7. 14 , sr.
Punter-Nathan Miller, Cols. Crusaders. 6-2, 190,jr
Ollensrve players ol the year: Heath Jackson, Ada. Tyler Brause. Bucyrus Wynford
Defensive player of the year: Chns Pohlman. Delphos St. John's.
Coaches of the year· John Livengood, Norwalk St. ~aul; Bob Ramsay, Dalton.

SPECIAL MENTION
Cory Wilson, Zanesvrlle Maysville; Brandon Bartrug. Rayland Buckeye Local; Zac
WoJCiechowski. Cambridge; Rylan Pychiak. Rayland BuCkeye Local: John Eckroth,
,
SECOND TEAM
Cadiz Harrrson Cent.: Dan Jeanpervin, Dover. A J. Dalton. Carrollton: Trey Wiggins.
OFFENSE Ends-Jake Aldndge. Spring Cath. Cent, 6-2, 185, soph.; Chris Brown.
Steubenvrlle; Alex Brooks, Cadiz Harrison Cent.. Zach Rafter. Dover; Joe Rine.
Rayland Buckeye Local: Bnan Harp, Mmerva; Brandyn Murtaugh, Dover; Laine Bucyrus Wynford, 6-2, 195, sr.; Konnor Baker. Ada, 6-2. 180, soph. Linemen-Adam
Crawford, New Concord John Glenn; Cody Kaiser, Cadiz Harrison Cent.: Andrew Hall. Ansonia, 5-7, 240, sr.; James Tripp, Lockland, 6-3. 240, jr.; Ryan Jacob. Sidney
Bache, Dover; Niko Otto, Wtntersville Indian Creak; Jan Drapcho. Dover: Jordan lehman. 6-0. 230, sr Mike McMaster, Columbiana, 6·2. 255. sr. Quarterbacks-Joe
Lawless. New Phila Tusc. Cent. Cat11., 6·2. 180. sr.; Reed Florence. S. Charleston
Meyer, Steubenville; Mrchaal Wayt. Wintersville Indian Creek;
Ron Keaton. Cols. South; Josh McKenzie. Granville; Matt Schweitzer. Cols. So(Jtheastern, 6-3, 185. sr., Shane Ewing. Berlm Ctr. Western Reserve, 6·3. 192, sr
Watterson; Jaban Howard. Cols. Eastmoor Acad :Dylan Osborn, Newark Llckmg Val.; Backs-Maurice Johnson Malvern, 5-9. 150, sr.; Max Dietz, Crn Country Day. 5-10,
David Hettler. Granville; Kevin Carr, Pataskala LiCking Hts.; Hunter Lover, Delaware 175, sr .. Spencer Rohr. New Bremen, 6-0, 1.85, sr.; Jordan Munn, Newbury, 6-0, 160.
Buckeye Val.; Shawn Jackson, Cols. Eastmoor Acad . Evan Killilea, Cots. DeSales; sr Kickers-Brandon Liette, Ansonia, 6-0. 1.1!0. jr.; Tanner Wright, Hannibal River, 62, 170, sr.
Nick Umatta, Cols. Watterson; Davrd Harper, Cols. DeSales;
DEFENSE: Lrnemen-Zach Brawrngton, Bucyrus Wynford. 6-3: 195, sr., Tanner
Brad Fain, Spring. Shawnee: Andy Jomantas. Day. Chaminade-Julienne; Ben Leahy,
Monroe: Spencer Matthews. Franklin: Ethan Smith, Belletontaine: Joe Everhart, Tipp Craig. Ada, 6-0, 200, jr.: Derek Klaus, Delphos St. John's, 6-1. 215,)r.; Joel Boose.
Crty Tippecanoe; Ryan Haynes. Cin. McNicholas: Jake Budding, Trpp City Norwalk St. Paul, 6·1, 185. sr. Linebackers-Nrck Von Allman, New Phila. Tusc. Cent.
Cath., 5-10, 145, sr, Wyatt Tiffany, Cin Country Day, 6-0, 180. jr.; Hudson Smith,
·
Tippecanoe; Austin Fudge, Eaton:
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon. 6-0. 210. sr, Andrew Beun, Dalton, 5·8. 175. sr. BacksKip Winchester, Jackson; Andy Gnllo. McArthur Vinton County; Reily Kiser
Circleville: Adam Fondale, New Lexington; Chester Akers, Hrllsboro; Logan R~nkin, Trevor Phoenix, Carey. 5-9. 145, sr. Jeremy Carter, Wellsvrlle. 6·2, 190. sr.. Jordan
Washington CH; Logan Hauserman. Circleville Logan Elm; Taylor Golden. Thornville Neidig New Phila. Tusc. Cent Cath., 6-1, 170, sr.; Austin Crarg, Zanesville
Sheridan; Krurze Wandling, JaCkson: Anc Carroll. Hillsboro: Kyle Pfeller, Thornville Rosecrans. 6-0. 160, soph. Punter-Trent Hertkamp, Union City M1ssissinawa Val., 6·
Sheridan, Arne Steagall. Hillsboro; Ban Parks. Washington CH; Ryan Mullins, 0, 185, sr
Jackson; Jared Gravely, Gallrpolis Gallia Aced.: Ryan Klingaman, Jackson; Zane
THIRD TEAM
Yankie, Hillsboro; Chns Eversole. Circleville Logan Elm; Chris Spurlock. Circleville
Logan Elm; Shay Netter. Chillicothe: Raushaun Conley. Waverly; Jullian Wyatt,
OFFENSE Tyler Granlee. Marion Cath .. 6·3. 190, sr.; Nate Adams, Newark Cath.,
Wash1ngton CH: Travis Mcintosh, Washrngton CH Miami Trace: Colt Ward, 6-4, 220. sr.. Clayton Hull, Bertin Ctr. Western Reserve, 6-2, 185, sr Linemen-Isaac
Washington CH Miam1 Trace: Clint Cannon, New Lexington: Luke Thompson, Knnke, Leipsrc. 6-5, 265. sr.; Jared Case. Carey. 6·1, 250, sr.. Dylan Vogt, Columbus
Circlevtlle Logan Elm: Zach Matracia, Greenfield McClain; Tyler Cremeans, Thornville Grove. 6-5. 23G. sr.: Ben Chnstian, Covington. 6-0, 237, sr Quarterbacks-Dylan
Shendan; Caleb Horsley, Thornville Sheridan; Kort Wolfe. Crrcleville;
Potts, Hann&lt;bal River. 6-1,200. sr.; Kevin Cox, Newark Cath .• 6-4. 185. sr. BacksAlex Nessman, Bryan, Clint Detmer, Napoleon; Jacob Rubio, Defiance; Skyler Davis, Chris Smelley. Bridgeport. 6·0, 215, jr.; Garrett Clark, Covington. 5·10, 170. sr.; Kalab
Napoleon; Nrck Truesdale. Lima Shawnee; Levi Fisher, Bryan; Jordan Colson. Clyde; Goins. Srdney Lehman. 5-10, 190, jr.; Nick Cupan, McDonald, 5·10, 185. sr.; Jimmy
Jake Suman, Defiance; Trey Tyree. Tiffin Columbian; Nathan Mawhirter, Sandusky Rasey, Southington Chalker. 5·7, 170, jr.: Jake McAvinew. Mogadore, 5·9. 195. jr.
Perkrns; Nick Rettig, Napoleon; Alex Nofziger. Defiance; Kyle Finn. Sandusky Perkins;
DEFENSE: Llnemen-Tre Lopez. Leipsic, 6-0, 180. jr· Aaron Kapelka. Bascom
Dillon Risser. Lima Shawnee: Austin Etzler. Elida;
Hopewell-Loudon, 5·9. 195, sr.; Evan Wiggall, Grove City Christian. 6·3, 260, sr.
Devon Anderson. Ashtabula Edgewood; Mark Spehar, Parma Padua Franciscan; Llnebackers-Bo Timmons. S. Charleston Southeastern. 6·1. 175, sr.; Aaron
Josh Schuette, Chardon NDCL: Nick Derchler, Oberlin Frrelands; Sean Martrn, Sanders. Ansonia. 6·10, 175, rr.. Kodey Chance, Mogadore, 5·11, 175, jr.: Matt
Chardon NDCL; John McKelvey, Hunting Val. Unrv. School; T1m Kendig, Cleve. Torgler, Dalton, 5·11, 168, sr. Backs-Jared Prenger, Marie Stein Marion Local, 5·10,
Benedictine: Ryan Walczak. Chardon NDCL; Josh Bilbie, Ashtabula Edgewood: 165, sr.; Garrett Walker, Fremont Sl Joseph, 5·11, 165, sr Derek Mangas. Leipsic.
€than Colby, Ashtabula Edgewood; Adam Patterson. Clave. Benedictine; Joe 5-8. 155, Jr. Punter-Jim Roth, Norwalk St. Paul. 6-0, 185, sr.
Nawalanrec, Cleve. Benedictine; Jake Sosrnskr, Oberlin Firelands; Mark Odabashian,
Parma Padua Franciscan; Justin Bonchek, Cleve. Benedictine; James Flowers.
SPECIAL MENTION
Parma Padua Francrscan; Mitchell Black, Huntrng Val. Un1v. School. Kyle Hass,
Dylan Kimble. Shadyside: Mrckey Bednar, Steubenville Cath. Cent.; Hunter
Jefferson Area; Ryan Waldmann. Oberlin Frrelands; Jake Niece, Oberlin Firelands; Schneiter. Strasburg-Franklin; Ryan Haessly, New Matamoras Frontier; Mrchael Reef.
Josh Rogers, Orange; Frank Viancourt. Parma Hts. Holy Name: Anthony Muraco, Zanesvrlle Rosecrans; Chase Richards. Malvern; Colby Emery, Shadysrde; Dillon
Huntrng Val. Univ School; Kyle Smrth, Oberlin Flrelands;
Upperman. Bridgeport: Brendan Murphy. New Matamoras Frontier; Sam Fondriest,
Jrm Cercek, Mogadore Freid; Eric Franklin, Youngs. Mooney; Dav1d Sutter, Akron New Phila. Tusc. Cent. Cath.; Tyler Sunderlin. New Philo Tusc. Cent. Cath.; Nrck
Hoban: Trent Toothman. Salem: Dillon Matthews, Akron Springfield; Jesse Calcei, Schue!.£. Shadyside; Brandon Hudson. Beallsville; Taylor Brown, Shadyside: Mike
Canal Fulton NW; Chris Evans, Akron Springfreld; Mike Day. Poland Seminary; Bobby Dalto, Bridgeport: Matt Dowell. Zanesville Rosecrans; Tyler Crawford, Malvern; Curt
Sch111lng, Canal Fulton NW; Mike Boosrnger, Mogadore Field; John Coleman, Akron Smelley, Bridgeport: N1ck Palleschi, Malvern: Doug Wood. Malvern:
Buchtel; A.J Fox. Youngs. Mooney
Austrn Gates. Marion Cath.: Clay Harris, Newark Cath., Nick Hovis. Grove City
Christian; Jeramie Stump, Grove Crty Christian; Heath Buckingham, Danvrlle; Nrck
Orlando. Lancaster Ftsher Cath., Zach Shane. Newark Cath.; Phil Taylor, Newark
DIVISION IV
Cath .. Brandon Brookes. Morral Ridgedale; Quinton Farenbaugh. Danville; Jordan
Herdman. Marion Cath.: Zach Brewer. Danville; Mrchael Freeman. Cols. Crusaders;
FIRST TEAM
,
·OFFENSE: Ends-landon Smith, Grrard, 6-loot-1, 183 pounds, JUnior, Josh Russ. Jake Nelson, l)lewark Cath.:
Austrn Mercer S. Charleston Southeastern: Jared Holycross, DeGrall Riverside:
Elyna Cath., 6-5, 225. sr; Sam Miller, Orrville, 6·0, 175. sr linemen-Layton Graves.
Coshocton, 6-0, 210, sr.; Ryan Cronin, Kettering Aller, 6-2, 240. sr.; Brent Sager Tyler Noffsrnger, Covington; Josh Boehringer, Covington; Rodney Huston. Sidney
Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-4, 250. sr. Sam Cramblit, Ironton, 6-0, 265, sr. QuarterbacksVInnie Williamson, Williamsport Westfall, 5-10, 210, sr.• Maty Mauk, Kenton, 6-1, 185,
soph.: Chris Trinettl. Chagrin Falls. 5-11, 185, sr. Backs-Marcus Johnston,
Coshocton, 6·1, 210. sr.: Cede McCullough. Zanesville W. Muskingum, 5-9. 170, sr,
Charles Gresham, Heath, 5-10, 167, sr.; Tavion Wright, Day. Thurgood Marshall, 5·10,
185, sr. Greg Hlftebrand, Genoa Area. 5·10. 210. sr.; Chns Gorman. Chagrin Falls,
6-0, 202. •sr.; Anthony Hitchens, Lorain Claarview. 6-1, 200, sr., Anthony Kelly,
Peninsula Woodridge, 6-0, 184, sr. Kicker-Tyler Pickard. Genoa Area, 5-10, 180,
soph.
DEFENSE· Linemen-Jon Monnig. Ironton. 6·1. 175, sr., Brad Harrah, Manon
Pleasant, 6-7, 240, sr.; Josh Davis, Plain City Jonathan Alder, 6-6. 285, sr., Thomas
Armstrong, Kettering Alter, 5-11, 190. sr. linebackers-Tyler Genders, Amand\1·
Clearcreek, 6-4 220. sr.; Bobby Winkelman. Chagnn Falls, 6-1 210. sr.; Chase
Hoobler, Orrville, 6-3, 220, sr.; Zack Shaw, Coshocton, 6-4, 220. Jr.; Jell Siefker.
Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-0, 180, Jr Backs-Marco Ricchettl, Martins Ferry. 6-2. 165, sr.:
Cody Byers. Kettering Alter, 6-3. 210, sr.; Brian Laubenthal. Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-0.
~60. sr., Connor Wendt, Genoa Area, 5-11, 80, sr. Punter-Lucas Pennington,
Metamora Evergreen, 6·4, 215, jr
• Offensive player of the year· Tavion Wright, Day. Thurgood Marshall.
Defensive players of the year. Bobby Wmkelman, Chagrin Fells: Zack Shaw.
Coshocton; Cody Byers. Kettering Alter.
Coaches of the year: Bob Lutz, Ironton; Sean Arne, Albany Alexander.

..

Let"lman: ZAc Ranly, Ft. Loram1e; Sebastian Monntn, Spnnglield Cath. Cent.. Tyler
Cooper, S. Charleston Southeastern;
Mike Johnson, Reedsville Eastern; Domintque Stringer, Sclotoville E.; Andrew
Mclaughlin, Glouster Trimble; Brock Hannah, Portsmouth Notre Dame; Brayden·
Pratt, ReedSVllle Eastern, Evan Herrell, Wrllow Wood Symmes Val ; Jake Reynolds.
Corn1ng M11ier; Klint Connery, Reedsville Eastern: Sean Copprck, Racme Southern;
Nathan Bradford, Sciotovllle E.; Kiefer Standley, Glouster Tnmble; Taylor Lemley.
Racme Southern; Hunter Boggs. Willow Wood Symmes Val., Levi Porter, Waterford;
Jeff Emnett, Portsmouth Notre Dame; Johnny Stobart, Glouster Trimble; Jeffrey
Milhoan, Reedsville Eastern, Justin Payne. Willow Wood Symmes Val.; 'TYler
Eastham. Willow Wood Symmes Val., Brandon Hamson, Crown City S. Gallia;
Jesse Cramer, McComb; Jay Maag. Leipstc; Zach Grbson, Ada; Enc Schwreterman,
Norwalk St. Paul; John Anderson , Gory-Rawson: Zak Bowman, Fremont St. Joseph;
Cy Strahm, Carey; John Rtndahl, Antwerp; David Hector, Gory-Rawson;
Shane Rttts, Thompson Ledgemont; J.C. Grlltn, Fairport Harbor Harding: LevSI't Cox,
Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E.; Marques Coleman, Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E.; lngo Schlaf,
Newbury; Dantel Ross, Fairport Harbor Hardrng; Ryan Hall, Farrport Harbor Hardr •
Brian Burdtne, Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E , Adam Ktrsch, Newbury, Vincent Hugh
Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E.; Zak Hites, Fairport Harbor Hardrng: Nate Blarr. Falrp
Harbor Harding; Greg Banks. Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E.; Mtchael Hogya, Fairport Harbor
Hardrng; Cory Whrtt, Farrport Harbor Harding; Courtney Kidd, Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E:
VICtor Shaw, Youngs. Chnstran; Matt Traugh, Mogadore, Domrnlc Barbera, Dalton;
Kevin PolloCk, Mogadore; Sam Claybourne. McDonald Matt Douglas. Columbiana.
Gavrn Hackett, Dalton; Anthony Angelo. Warren JFK; Brandon Bauman, Rrttman;
Dav1d Duncan, Berlin Ctr. Western Reserve; Jake Martrn, Ashland Mapleton: Bryan
Schiraldi, Lowellville; Devan Miller, Leetonia: Ryan McCollum, Warren JFK; Bubba
Dowlrng, Wellsville: Grant Crtder, Columbiana; Davin Bansberg, McDonald; Travis
Lint. Dalton; Pat Minnie, Lowellville.

DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE: Ends-Lance Fanthorp. Morrow Little Miami. 5-foot·11, 175 pounds.
sen,or; Zach Cvelbar, Mentor Lake Cath .. 6-3. 190. sr.:Thaddeus lngol. Barberton, 61, 195. sr.; Dan Schneider, Avon Lake, 6-4, 235, sr. Llnemetl-Aaron Shelton. Cols.
Marron-Franklin, 6-5, 320, sr, Derrick Stark, Trotwood·Madtson. 6-1, 330, sr. Kyle
Cameron, Tol. Cent Cath.. 6·2 112, 285. jr.; Chase Hounshell, Mentor Lake Cath., 6·
5, 245, jr. Quarterbacks-Dominique Brown, Cin. Winton Woods. 6-3. 215. sr.. Patrick
Angle. Logan, 6-1, 210. sr., Clay Cameron. Dresden Tri-Valley, 6-0,205. sr.; Marcus
Fuller. Ashland, 6-0. 195. jr.; Verlon Reed. Cols Marion-Franklin, 6-3, 205, sr.; Jerrod
Ronyak. Mentor Lake Cath.. 6-3. 210, sr. Backs-Davin Clodlelter, Cols.
Independence. 5·9, 185. sr.; Antwan Gtlbert, Trotwood-Madison. 5-11, 185, Jr.; Mike
Mansnerus. Avon Lake, 6-t, 185, sr.; Aaron Maslowksr, Medina Highland, 5-10, 180,
sr.; Jeremiah Goins. Cin. Winton Woods. 5-10, 230, sr Kicker-Kyle Burkhardt, Tol.
Cent. Cath., 6·0, 165, sr.
DEFENSE: UnaRlen-Vinnre R1dar, Athens, 6-3. 245, sr: Hamson Scott, New
Albany, 15-3, 260, sr.; Dernck Bryant. Cots Brookhaven, 6-4, 235, sr.; Joel Heath. Cin.
Mt. Healthy, 6-6. 240,jr. Ltnebackers-Zack Hitchens, Canal Wrnchester, 6-2, 230, sr.;
Kyle Sanning. New Carlisle Tecumseh, 6-0, 205, sr.; Joe Ribrero, Mentor Lake Cath ..
6·0, 190,jr.; Pat Behm, Chagrin Falls Kenston. 6·3. 190, sr.: Hunter Potts. Louisville,
6·2. 225. sr.; Matt Chambers. Warren Howland. 5-9, 185. sr.; Ray Bush, Tol. Rogers,
6-3, 215, sr Backs-Braity Blair, Zanesville, 5·10, 190, Jr, Avery Cunnrngham, Cm.
Wrnton Woods, 5-10, 180, sr.; Ryland Ward, Cols Brookhaven, 5·11, 190, sr.: B.J.
Lowery, Cin. Hughes Ctr, 5·10, 180. sr., Courtney Avery, Lexington, 5·11, 185. sr.
Punter-Pal Dyer, Tol. St. Francis, 6-2. 175, sr.
QHensive players of the year: Domrnique Brown. Cin. Winton Woods; Patrick Angle,
Logan; Devin Clodfelter, Cols. Independence.
•
Defens1ve players of the year· Joe Ribrero. Mentor lake Cath.; Pat Behm, Cha
Falls Kenston.
Coaches of the year· Drck Cromwell, Tol. St. Francis Brian Cross, Lew1s Ctr
Olentangy Orange.

'

SECOND TEAM
OFFENSE Ends-Scott Loy, Tol. St. Francis, 6·3, 182. sr: Mason Mays. Logan. 60, 175, sr. Ltnemen-Justtn Stumph. Cols. St. Charles, 6-4, 260, sr, Christian Pace,
Avon Lake. 6·3, 270. sr.; Alex Lovasz. N. Ridgeville, 6·2, 240, sr.; Joe Neff. Louisville,
6-3, 265, sr. Quarterback-E.J. Tucker, Tol. Rogers. 6·3. 207. sr. Backs-Marcus
Penn, Cols. Whetstone, 6-1, 195, sr.; Patnck Porter. Chagrin Falls Kenston, 5-11. 195,
jr.: Parnell Taylor, Ravenna, 5·10, 183, sr. Kicker-Billy Fisher. Canfield, 6-0, 185. sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen-Paul Baker, Aspland. 5-11. 205, sr: Joe Poyser, Loursvrlle, 6·
1, 210. sr, Cody Reeseman. Warren Howland. 6-0, 280. jr.; Dominici&lt; Flewellyn,
Maple Hts., 6·2, 270, sr. Linebackers-Preston Brown. Cin. Northwest, 6-3, 230, sr.;
R.J. Rios. Tol, St. FranciS. 6·1, 212, sr.; Cameron Ontko. Cuy. Falls Walsh JesuH, 6·0,
218, sr.; Adam Cepik. Lodi Cloverleaf, 6·1. 210. sr. Backs-Tervon Moore, Dublin
Scioto. 6·0, 160, jr.; Larez Harper, Cots. Beechcroft, 5-11, 200, sr.: Cameron Trefny,
Olmsted Falls. 5-10, 165, sr.; Kyle Vaclav, Canfield. 5-11, 175, sr.; Mike Mangiarelli,
Warren Howland, 6·0. 180, sr, Punter-Ryan Christiansen. Unrontown Lake. 6·2. 193,
sr.

DIVISIONV
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE Ends-Adam Rammel, Coldwater. 5-foot-10, 159 pounds, senior; Akise
Teague, Youngs. Ursuline, 5-8, 175. Jr.; TT Thompson, Centerburg, 5·8. 155, sr.
Linemen-Troy Jones. W. Lafayette Ridgewood, 6-0, 190. sr.; Brad Yarnell, Hamler
Patrtck Henry, 6·0. 260, sr., Zach Conlan. Youngs. Ursuline. 6-0. 298, Jr.; Eric Leleld,
Coldwater, 6-7, 235, sr.: Logan Awwiller, Fredericktown, 6-0, 235, Jr.; Alex Hohlbein,
Anna, 6-0, 225. sr. Quarterbacks-D.J. Mendenhall, W Jefferson, 6·5. 195, sr.; Derek
Langenkamp, Versailles, 6-0. 150, sr.; Jesse Slone, Oa&lt; Hill, 6-4, 195, Jr.; Ke1th
Wenning, Coldwater, 6-4, 222, sr Backs-Jake Conrad, W. Lafayette Ridgewood. 510, 185, sr.: Justin Buenger, Hamler Patrick Henry, 5·11, 180, sr. Derek Arnold,
Nelsonville-York. 5·9, 200, sr.; Joe Mancino. Independence, 5·8. 165, jr.: Ronnel
Spates, Cleve. VASJ. 4·9. 180, sr.; Allen Jones. Youngs. Ursuline. 5-10, 205, sr.
Kicker~kylor McQuiston, W. Lafayette Ridgewood, 5-10. 160, sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen-Ryan Brewer, Jeromesville Hillsdale, 6-2. 230, sr., Keith
Uhlenhake, Coldwater, 6·6, 210, sr.~ Xavier Dye. Hamler Patrick Henry, 5·9. 170.
Dawalyn Harper, Youngs. Ursuline. 6·1, 200, sr. Linebackers-Seth Todd, Caldwe
0, 210. sr.. Warren Shields. Richwood N Union. 6-1, 195, jr.;TylerGaines, Mtnfor
9. 190, soph.; Brett Pasche, Findlay liberty-Benton. 6·2. 210. sr; Alan Sharp. l1b
Clr., 6-1, 218, sr. Backs-Derek Billing. Anna. 6-3. 180. sr.; Zach D'Orazio. Cleve.
Cuyahoga Hts., 6-5,200, sr.; Lyndon Benecke. Defiance Ttnora. 5·10, 165, sr.; Dalton
Smith, Barnesville. 6·3. 170, sr.; Joe Webb. Mechanicsburg, 6-2, 185. sr. PunterJohn Lloyd, Cin. Hills Christian Acad .. 6-3, 230, sr.
Offensive players of the year: Keith Wenning. Coldwater: Jake Conrad, W Lafayette
Ridgewood; Justin Buenger. Hamler Patrick Henry; Allen Jones, Youngs. Ursuline.
Defensive pla)llrs of the year; Warren Shields, Rrchwood N. Unron; Brett Pasche,
Findlay Liberty-Benton; Alan Sharp. Uberty C1r.
Coaches of the year: Jesse Mrller. Richwood N. Union; Bob Olwin, Versailles; Greg
Phillips, Oak Hill
SECOND TEAM
.
OFFENSE Ends-ian Smith, Cin. Hills Christian Aced .. 6·1. 190, sr.; Anthony
Rltossa. Kirtland, 6-4, 225, sr.; Dave Meacham, Cardington-Lincoln, 5-11, 160, sr.
Linemen-Abe Thompson, Ashland Crestview, 6-5, 230, sr. · Aaron Boussard,
Columbiana Crestview. 6-1,232, sr.;Aiex Purnell, Defrance Trnora, 6·3, 215, sr.; M1ke
Roehrenbeck, Cols. Acad,, 6-0, 206, sr. Quarterback-Pat Guhde. Kirtland. 6-2, 205,
jr. Backs-Tyler Smith, Milford Ctr. Fairbanks. 5-10, 185, sr.. Logan Battershell,
Hicksville, 5·11, 180, sr. Kicker-Kurt Schaefer, W. Salem Northwestern, 6·1, 195, Jr.
DEFENSE: Linemen-Curtis Hansford, Defiance Tinora. 6·4, 210, sr.: Uno DaSapr~
Kirtland. 6-1. 205. sr,; Cody Morris, Caldwell. 6·3. 21 o. jr.: Nick Stacey, Fredericktown,
6·2, 250. jr.: Nrck Seither, Hamilton Badrn. 6-3, 215,Jr. Linebackers-Matt Hochstetler,
Sugarcreek Garaway, 6-0, 175, sr.; Austin Hoeflich, Fredericktown. 5·11, 180, jr.;
Collin Link, W. Uberty-Salem, 6·2, 190. sr; Frank Delawder, Coal Grove DawsonBryant., 6·1, 230. sr. Baeks-Gody Culbertson, Cols. Ready, 5-10. 165, sr.; Devin
Jones, Castalia Margaretta, 6-3, 190, Jr.; Jordan Lance, Loudonville. 5-11, 190, sr.,
Kyle Phillips. Apple Creek Waynedale. 6·0. 155, jr. Punter-Tyler O'Connor, Lima
Cent Cath .. 6-2, 190. soph.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

SECOND TEAM
'OFFENSE Ends-Darby Waller, Belmont Union Local, 6-0. 160, sr, Max Morrison,
kenton, 6-1. 155, jr; Scott Cline, Utica, 6-0, 165, Jr. Lrnemen-Dylan Wethey. Heath,
6·2, 270, sr.. Mrchael Stenger, Clarksville Clinton· Massie, 6·3, 300, jr.. Ryan Scribner,
Galion. 6-0, 280, sr.; Jared Schuster, Elyria Cath., 6-3, 310. sr. Quarterbacks-Jason
Hoar, Utrca, 5-9, 165, Jr.; Dakota Dartis, Cin. N. College Hill, 6·2, 190, jr. BeeksGarren Dilley, Amanda·Ciearcreek, 5-10, 240, sr.: Seth Millar, Waynesvrlle. 5-8, 170,
sr.: Jeremy Smith, Pomeroy Me1gs, 5·9. 180, sr.; Cartel Brooks, Galion, 5·10, 175, sr.:
Corry Sprouse, LaGrange Keystone, 6-2. 170. sr. Klcker-Galeb Carpenter, Amanda·
Clearcreek, 5·7, 144. sr.
DEFENSE: Lmemen-Ghris Bockrath. Kettering Alter, 6·2, 210, sr: Connor Clegg,
Chagrin Falls, 6·5, 225, sr.; Adolphus Washington, Cln. Taft, 6-5, 240, soph.
Lrnebackers-Tyler Aragon!. Belmont Union Local, 5-9, 168, sr.; Gunner Calhoun,
Clarksville Cllnton-Massle, 6-1, 200. Jr.. Rich Ulmer, Gallon, 6-0. 195, sr.. John Sas,
Sullrvan Black R1ver, 6-3. 210. jr.: Mike Stacchiotti, Grrard, 6·1, 223, sr BacksAntwan Wallace, Galion, 5-11, 175, sr.: Colby Bussen, Doylestown Chippewa. 5·8,
160, sr.; Mrtchell Hokavar, Perry, 6-3, 185,Jr.: Stephen Yarbrough, Beachwood, 6-3,
195, sr. Punter-Ben Gertz, Reading, 6-6, 200 sr
THIRD TEAM
OFFENSE: Ends-Geoffrey Whiteside, Cots. Hartley, 5·10, 175, sr, Adam Reichert,
Lewistown Indian Lake. 6·5, 180, Jr.; Cole Drake, Wooster TriWay, 5-10. 165, sr
Lineman-Dalton Leach, Martrns Ferry, 5·10, 215, sr.: Andrew Bennett, AmanoaCiearcreek, 6·3, 300, Jr, Jake Schreuder, Genoa Area 6-0, 230, sr.; Kyle Kelly Akron
Manchester. 6·2. 235, sr. Quarterbacks-Anthony Westren, Peninsula Woodndge. 6·
2, 183, sr.; Derek Carmichael, Wooster Trlway, 5-9, 160, Jr Adam Charles, Girard. 6·
2. 205, sr. Backs-Justin Staton, Sparta Highland, 6-0, 172, sr.; Jordan Scanlon,
.Ciarksvrlle Clinton-Massie, 5·10. 200. jr., Jordan McCune, Bellville Clear Fork. 5-9,
195, }r., Alex Alicea, Elyria Cath .. 5-7, 170. sr.: Te Elias, Corlland Lakeview. 5·9, 185.
sr., Cratg Dougherty. Akron Manchester, 5-10, 170, sr. Kicker-Logan Cook, St.
Clairsville. 6·1, 175, sr
DEFENSE: Lmemetl-Patrick Hudepohl, Mrddletown Fenwrck. 6·3, 230, sr.: Archard
Wonnell, Genoa Area, 6·9, 250, sr.: Aaron Renner. Galion. 6-0, 180, sr. LinebackersJake Langdon, CarliSle, 5-10,205, sr.: Lucien Kidd. Cin N. College Hrll 5-11, 190, sr.;
Mark Fackler. Kenton. 6-4, 235, sr.: David Charles, Peninsula Woodridge, 6-0. 176,
sr., Alex Utley, CVCA, 5-9, 185,jr Backs-Tallen Birmingham. Girard, 5·8. 185, sr.;
Matt Hefner, Lima Bath, 5-7. 140, sr.• Chad Phtllips, Spring Northwestel'l, 5·11, 165,
sr Punter-Gam Turner, Chagrin Falls, 5·11, '180, sr.
SPECIAL MENTION
Cody Welker. Mag'lOiia Sandy Valley; Nick Barr. Zoarville Tusc. Val.; Kyle Copeland,
Belmont Union Local; Palrrek Allen, Martms Ferry: Tavrn Stevenson, St. Clairsvrllo:
Marcus Farley, Zanesville w. Musklngum; Garrett Patterson, Zoarvtlle Tusc. Val.:
Trenton Soukup, St Clairsvllle; Bernie Thompson. Belmont Union Locai;Tyier Dozier,

..f

1

�Thursday, December 3, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

\!Cribune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
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POUCIES: ONo ,_II'Y Publlthlng reeerv•lhe ~ 10 ecllt. rejed, or ~l•nv eel at lillY time. Erront ml.llt be repoltecl on the lll'llt di!Y ol ~lca!lon and the
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1ny 10• or lllqleMe thlt reeutte 11om the publlcttlon or omltelon of 111 adYtniMment comacuon WIQ be meclalo lilt ""' IYIHab'- edition. • 8olf numtiW eels
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IIOCIPII only hllp warcect ads lll4Mllfll EOE IIAindarelll We will not -nowlngty accept any eclnrtitlng In vlollltlon ol the law. WIU not bt nteponlibllt for any
11r10n1ln an eel tektn Olltr the phor..

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

. Announcements

Lost&amp; Found
Lost female Gray-haired
Yorkie
Wahama . H.S
area
Sat.
Nov.
21
304-675·0308.
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
business w1th people you

Notices

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

know. and NOT to send - - - - - - - - money through the mail
'
until you have investigat· 300
~rvices
tng the offering.
Grave Blankets $5·$30;
live wreaths $10 &amp; up; ;;;;;;;;;B;;;ui;;;ld;;;in;;ig~M;;;a;;;le;;;n;;;·a;;;ls;;;;;;;;;;
Sue's 47310 Morningstar
Steel Arch Buildings
Rd.
Racine,
Oh 3
Repo'd
Buildings
740-949-2115
20x30, 30X30 must sell
First Holzer Apts. Annual before going to auction
Craft &amp; Bake Sale. Dec. will
sell
for
balance
3,4, 5-9 to 4.
owed. Display discounts
available
GUN SHOW. Chillicothe, _ _ _
_
1 866 352 0469
Sat Dec 12, 9·5 &amp; Sun
Dec 13. 9·3. St. Rl 35 to ~~~~~~~~
St. Rt. 104. Ross Co
Child/ Elderly Care
Fatrgrounos. Adm $4 6'
- - - - - - -...
Tbls $35. 740·667·0412
Will take care of the
GUN
SHOW
elderly in their home
Dec call304-675·3264 . ,
Logan!Rockbndge,
5, 9·5 &amp; Dec 6. 9-3.
Hocking Hills Market 7.5 ~~~~~~~~~
mi west of Logan on St.
Home Improvements
At. 33. Daily Admisston
$4.00 Per Person. 6'
Basement
Tbls $35. 740·667·0412.
Waterproofing
Robie's
Mini
Storage
Unconditional lifetime
8571 St. Rt 160, Bidwell,
guarantee. Local referOH 45614 will auction off
ences fiKmshed. Estab·
Storage Unit #119 Kalhy
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
Delahoussaye on Dec.
740-446·0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.
5th at 9:00.

Other Services
Pet
Cremations.
740-446-37 45

For Sale By Owner
Call

Beautiful
home
and
For Beautiful Apts. at Jackhunter's
dream.
more
details.
go
to son Estates. 52 West·
www.orvb.com
or
call wood Dr., from $365 to
740-794-1132.
$560.
74(}446-2568.
Equal Housing Opportu·
Real Estate nily. Thts institution is an
3500
Rentals Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.

Professional Services

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

Apartments/
Townhou...

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson.
OH
800-537-9528

400

and 2 bedroom apts.•
furnished
and
unfurnished, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required,
no pets. 740-992·2218

Financ1al

"'!!!~~~~~~~~

"'
-;;;;;;;;;;M;;;o;;;n;;;e;;i;y;;;T;;;o;;;La;;;;;;;n;;;d;;;;;;;;;;;
•

\

'

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohto Division of Financial lnstltu·
lions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
lain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or insurance. Call
the Offtce of Consumer
toll
free
at
Affiars
1-866-278·0003 to learn
tf the mortgage broker or
lender is properly li·
censed. (This is a public
service
announcement

\
)

_________________- l

t..:~~...;;;.;:....;.:.;:;_:.:...:,:.:.:.;,

~

- - - - - - - - ~~~~~~~=:! ~~~~~~~!!!!!
Farm Equipment
Yard Sale

- ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
Busineu &amp; Trade
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;S;;;cho;;;;;;;o;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; STOCK
TRAILERS,
•
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
Gallipolis Career
MENT
TRAILERS,
College
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
(CareersCioseToHome) HOMESTEADER
Call Today! 740·446·4387 CARGO/CONCESSION
1•800-21 4-0452
TRAILERS.
B+W
gallopoliscareercollege.edu
GOOSENECK FLATBED
from the Ohio Valley
Accredited Member Aocredrt·
$3999 · VIEW OUR EN ing Councollor Independent
Publishing Comp1111y)
Colleges and Schools 12748
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW.CARMICHAEL600
Animals
TRAILERS. COM
Recreational Vehlcfes •....•..................•...... 1000
ATV ..............•........•...........•......................... 1005
740-446·3825
Blcycfes......................................................1010
Uvestock
Boats/Accessorles.................................... 1015 .
Generic Round·Up, 41%
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ...............•...•...•..... 1020
2 Baby Donkeys, 1F, 1M, Glyphosate. 2 112 gal
Motorcycles •...........•...........•...........•...••..•.. 1025&gt;
Other ...........................................................1030
Also older donkies. Good $40.
Umited
supply.
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Chnstmas Pets. Phone: 74(}256-6038
Automotive ......................•......................... 2000
74(}446·1158
Auto RentaVLease •.......•...••..•.......••......•...•2005
Have you priced a John
Autos ..•...............•..•....•...•...........•..•...•........ 2010
All natural. grain fed, an- Deere lately? You'll be
Cfassfc/Antlques •............................•........• 2015
gus freezer beef for sale. surprised! Check out our
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
at
inventory
Parts &amp; Acceasorles ..................................2025
(740)441·5705
or used
Sports. Utility ..........,...................................2030
www.CAREQ.com.
Car256-9250.
Trucks ........................................ : ...........•..••2035
michael
Equipment
Utility Trailers ..•...•...••..•..•••..••......•..••........• 2040
Sun Seeker Club Gals, 74(}446·2412
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Halter Broke, Lots of
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Hair, Reasonable Price. 900
Merchandise
Real Estate Safes ...................................... 3000
740-256·9250
or
Cemetery Pfots .......................................... 3005
74(}441·5705.
Commerclal................................................301 0
Condomlnfums ............................ ~ •..••.••••.• 3015
Fuel Oil / Coal /
Pets
For Safe by Owner •...........•...•..........••.......•3020
Wood/Gas
Houses for Sale .•...........•..................•...•.... 3025
CKC
Cocker
Spaniel
Land (Acreage) ••............••...•.••....•..••...•...••. 3030
Lots ..............••...••.•....•................................3035
puppies. black, buff &amp; Free trees to be cut for
call
Want to buy...•.................•......••.................•3040
partf, vet checked. shots, firewood
Real Estate Rentafs ...•...............••..........•... 3500
tails docked &amp; dewclaws 304·773-9566.
Apartments/Townhouses ................•........ 3505
removed, asking $250,
Commercla1..•............•................................351 0
call
304·882-2440
or Seasoned Firewood Del.
Condomlnlums .......................•...•.......•...•.. 3515
304-674-5966
call 304-675-3508
Houses for Rent ..•..•••..••..••......••.......•.......• 3520
!!

CLASSIFIED INDEX

...
t.
'•
:·

Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .............•...•...•...............•.... 200
Blrthday/Anniversary ............•...............•..... 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services •...........•...•.......•...•...............•.......... 300
Appliance Servlce ...•...•.....................•.. ,...... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materfals ....................................... 306
ness ...................................................... 308
...................................................310
Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestlcs/Janltorla1 .. " ............................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclat •......•....•...••.••..........••.......•...•...•...•..322
Health ...•...•....•..•.••............•........................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng .......................................328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance •....•...•...•......•••.•.•..........•..•.•..•...•... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectricaf .•.....•...•.•.....•................. 340
Professional Servlces................................. 342
Repatrs ......................................................... 344
1

~~~~ r7:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:

Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnancla1 .......................................................400
Financial Servlces .....................•...........•..... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School .•.•••••..•...•............ 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lassons ........................................................515
Persona1 ....................................................... 520
Anlmafs ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equfpment..........................................705
&amp; Produce .......................................710
Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy.................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Suppfles....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 CoaVWood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Mlscellaneous ..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

I

Land (Acreage) ...............•.......•.................• 3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent •..........•...••..•...•.....•.••..••...•..••. 3540
Manufactured Housing .......................•..... 4000
Lots ............................................................. 4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Safes..••...•...•...•.......•............................•...•..4020
Supplles ..............................•...•.......•.•..•..... 4025
Want to Buy ........••..•.•.••.•.••...•..••...•.•.•....•..• 4030
Resort Property •.•...•...•...................•..........5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ..........................• 5050
Employment..........•...••..••..••..•••.•....•.......•...6000
Accountlng/Financfa1 .........•.................••...6002
Adminlstratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk .............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ................................. :..................... 601 0
Construction ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ...•...........••..••..••......•...•••..•..•....•..6016
Electrical Plumblng ......•.....•..••....•.............6018
Employment Agencfes ..............................6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces...•..•.•..•••..............•...•...........6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- Genenil .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory .......•................ 6034
Mechanfcs ..................................................6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Musfcaf ••..••..............•....•...............•............. 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries •..•..•••..••...•...••.•..... 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales .......•....................•.....•...........•............6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 8050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Apartments/
Townhouses

Pre Christmas sale· Toy
Poodle
pupptes
CKC,
tails docked. declaws re·
moved, shots, wormed &amp;
all
wellness
checked
done by our local vet, we
have black. apprlcot &amp;
chocolate. females $250,
males $200, also one
black
male
miniture
$200, Call740-992·7007

Seasoned firewood.
All Hardwood.
74(}853-2439
740-446·9204.

AKC miniature Schnauzers. Parti &amp; Chocolates.
Parents
on
premises.
740-441·1657.

Hot tub outlet. Top qual·
llylwarranties. Free delivery,
wholesale.
New
Truckload.
606·929-5655.

or

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors ·
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In atock. Call Ron
Evans H!00.537·9528

For sale full blooded ~~~~~~~=:!
Beagle pups
$100.00
WantTo Buy
each call 740·446-4505
;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;
Absolute Top Dollar - silcoins.
any
Free male &amp; female ver/gold
mix-breed pups to good 10KI14KI18K gold Jew·
elry, denial gold. pre
home 304·812-5064.
1935
US
currency,
proof/mint
sets,
dia700
Agricullure monds, MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Farm Equipment
Yard Sale
STiHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Available at Carmi· Indoor Moving Sele 1n
chael
Equipment LeGrande Blvd., 1113109
&amp; 11104109 from 8. 4PM.
740-446·2412

J

Winter basement sale,
Sat. 12/5, 8·2,
Roger
Karr
residence
near
Chester
follow
signs,
kids things, freezer, hand
painted table, clothing,
strollers, toys, etc

ATVa
2007
149cc
Loncoln
Crossrunner
4-wheeler.
Call
446-4664
or
74(} 645-6577

Free Rent Special Ill
2&amp;3 br. Apt $395.00 a
mon. and up. central air,
WID hookup, tenant pays
elec. call between the
hours of 8am-8pm EHO
1 BR • Upstairs apt 720
Elm
View
• Apt
Second Ave. Gallipolis.
304-882·3017.
New carpet &amp; paint IVC.
Water, sewer &amp; trash pd. Gracious L.lvfng 1 and 2
WID inc. No pets/no Bedroom Apts. at Village
and
Riverside
smoking. $375 dep./$375 Manor
Day· Apts. in Middleport, from
mo.
Ref.
to
$592.
740-645-2192. After 6: $327
740·992-5064.
Equal
74(}446-01 01.
Housing Opportunity.
238 1st Ave. Lg. Upstairs
apt.
overlooking
river: Island VIew Motel has
Fum. kitchen. 2 persons. vacancies
S35.001Night.
$425+utit". Dep. req. Ref. 740-446-0406
Call446·4926
Modem
BR
apt.
--------2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi- 446-3736.
zer Hospital on SR 160 •M•o·d-er_n_l_B,.R-·ap·t. -C-all
CIA. (740) 441·0194
74 0-44 6•0390
CONVENIENTLY
LO· - - - - - - - - GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· Newly renovated
1BR
ABLE! Townhouse apart· apt. downtown Gallipolis.
ments,
and/or
small Large
LR,
BR,
nice
houses tor rent. Call kitchen &amp; bath. $400/mo
740_441-1 111 for appli· + dep., utilities not in·
cation &amp; information.
eluded.
Contact
(740)
339-2113.
Free Rent Special I! I
Nice 1 BR wash-dry.
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Stove &amp; Fridge. All Utili·
up, Central Air, WID ties. Call 740·446·958~.
hookup,
tenant
pays $6001mo.·$500 dep.
electric.
Call between
Nice clean efficiency apl
the hours of 8A-8P.
convemently located ref
EHO
&amp; dep. req. no pets
Ellm View Apts.
304·675·5162.
(304)882-3017

Bicycl..

Twin River.s Tower is accepting applications for
His &amp; Hers 26' Sewinn waiting list for HUD subCruiser bicycles, ex. con, sidized. 1-BR apartment
$100
each, for the elder1yldlsabled,
740-992·1121
call 675-6679
Campers/ RVs
Trailers
RV
Service at
Trailers
74(}446·3825

&amp;

For Rent. 2 BR, Duplex
in
town,
$475/mo.
Dep+rel. No pets. Quiet
place. 446·1271.

1ir

Sm.
efftciency in Pt
Pleasant stove, ref. a)r
util. pd. $385.00 a mon.
dep req. 304·675-n83.
Spring
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 74(}446-1599.

3 room and bath down· Studio Apt. 729 2nd Ave .
stairs first months rent &amp; $350/mo. All utilities pd.
Carmichael deposit. references re- 446-8017.
•

qulred, No Pets and Tara
Townhouse
clean. 740-441.0245
Apartments
2BR, 1.5
2BR Apts. Clean reno- bath, back patio. pooi.
new playground, (trash, sew.
RV Service at Carmi- vated dwntwn,
Trailers appl., lam. flooring, water age, water pd.)No pets
chael
sewer
&amp;
trash
incl. allowed.
$450/rent,
74(}446·3825
$4751mo. 2BR $5751mo. $450/sec.
dep.
Call
740·709·1690
740-645·8599
2000
Automot1ve
1 &amp; 2 Br. furnished apt..
Commercial
start $450 &amp; up plus ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:
dep., No pets, Racine.Oh 3000 sq. ft. build. in Por·
Autos
740-591·5174
ter.
ssoo1ma.
1970
Chevy
Chevelle MIDDLPORT,
1 BED· _74~(}~33~9-3~2~2~4·~~~~
454 True SS car. Re· ROOM
APARTMENT, ~
duced (740) 446-0057 or APPLIANCES
FURHou... For Rent
(740) 645-5505.
NISHED,
NO
PETS, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
NON SMOKING, NICE, For rent 3 br. 1 ba. brtck
740-856-8863
ranch
on
Rt2
N.
304-895·3129.
'
1997
Grand
Marquee
92,000 miles, good cond. Middleport Beech St., 2 - - - - - - - br., furnished apts., utili!- t BR Furnished House.
$3000.00 304-895·3929.
tn
ties paid, dep. &amp; ref., No Convenient location
Pets (740)992.0165
town.
No
Pets.
Ph.
Trucks
Apartment available now ~4-46;.·.;.11;.;6;;;2_ _ _ _ __
For
Sale,
Toyota Riverbend
Apts.
New 3 BR, 2 112 BA, Stove &amp;
·1986-toolbox bed, 4x4. Haven WV. Now accept· Refrig Fum. Gas Heat,
R.N . 446-0974
1ng
applications
for central
IVC,
WID
HUD·subsldized.
one Hookup,
Garport.
No
.
Rep I ~s tate
Bedroom Apts. Utilities Smoking, No Pets. S600
1000
included. Based on 30% per mo., $600 Dep. 75
Gallipolis
Call
!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~ ol adjusted Income. Call Locust.
available 446-3867.
304-882·3121,
Commercial
for Senior and Disabled
3BR 1 bath home n Lepeople.
Comm. Space 4 lease
Grande Blvd $650 rent
(Retail-or office),
Prime
.
$650 dep. renter pays
busy,
highly Beautiful 2 BR apt. for utilities. NO PETS. Call
location,
highly
qualified
person
or
.44S-3G44
for applicaton
visible, c!wntwn comer.
·
1400·2000
sq
ft couple. WID hookup &amp;
dishwasher. Inc. water. House for rent L&gt;r sale ott
$700/mo. 740-709-1960
sewage &amp; trash. Central land concracc I R6 ~ f'ark Dr
heating &amp; air. No pets. Pt
Plea,..
304-6"M·S&amp;IO
For Sale By Owner
$560/mo.
Kelly -'~.av.e.;.m.oe.oss•. _ _ _ __
:-, 1 14~

12 Unit Apt. Complex. 74(}645·6378.
446-0390.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant
4th St.
modem 1 br.,
House 4 sale by owner kitchen.central a1r, elec.
1093 2nd St Mason WV. no pets. no smoking
25260 (304)812·4835
,dep. req. 304·675·3788. •

lA

Mason 2 brwl carport,
kit. fum. $385.00 a mon.
dep. 'req.304-675-n83.
Nice 3BRI1 BA In Gallipolis. App. Fum. No pets/
smoking.
$450/mo+dep.
740-709-9294

�..

--~ ·-----=,---:-----~- - ~----

Houses For Rent

Houses For Rent

Rentals

Sales

Sales

Quality 2 BR, Garage,
Storage Bldg. One yr.
lease,
No
Pels,
S550+dep+ref.
446-1079.

Wiseman Real Estate·4
rentals
available-call
446-3644 for more info.
All
ln·town·various
prices-references &amp; sec.
deposits required

2 BR Mobile Home, No
pets. Water, sewer. trash'
included. AI Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740·645·0506.

Country living· 3·58R,
2·3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
bank.
Call
today!
866-215·5774

"The Proctorville
Difference"
$1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Nowl
Freedom Homes
888·565·0167

Sm. 4·Rm house. 1 Bath,
Stove &amp; Raing Fum.,
Manufactu~ed
WID hooKup, No Smok- 4000
Ing, No Pets. $350 par
Housmg
mo., $350 Dep. 258 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===
State St. 74Q-446·3667.
Rentals
Taking applications for
GBR. No pet. $400/mo.
$400
dep. 3 Bedroom, 2
74Q-446-1279.
(740)446-3617 .

Help Wanted

2
Trailer
Lots
Rent· Addison
Pike-$150/mo
+
dep.
Water

for

AA·Tlred of pay1ng rent?
We can get lyou into a
new manufactured home
pd.
for as low as 5% down.
441&gt;-3644
call to oo pre·qualllied
....----~-- 866-838-3201
2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2 peopte, $300/month,
Re·
AAA New 2010
Bath. fernces, No Pets, NO
4BR Doublewide
CALLS
alter
7pm
Only $47,651
74Q-441·0181
2010 Singlewide

Help Wanted

:JIMrtland Publications
Copy Editor/Page Designer
We are looking for someone skilled and
experienced 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 is a must. Full time position
with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
is a must.
Send a cover letter and resume to:

sec.

.Lnc.r~.$.1.9.995

Trailer, 2 br, furnished,
wid, cable TV, construction workers welcome,
$400 month, $200 security deposit, two minutes
from
bridge,
740-992·3362,
614-218·2166

Handyman Special
;i.Be.clroom $5,979
ONLY at MIDWEST
mymidwesthome.com
740.828.2750

OHIO'S
BEST BUYs
2010 3BR Doublewide
$39,977
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
FHA$349 mo
2010 3brl2ba Single
from $199 mo

Trailer i1 town Racine, 2
br., 1 bath, ail electric,
carport. large front porch,
close to school, library &amp;
park. $425 deposit, $425
per month water &amp; garMIDWESTHOMES
bage 1ncluded. NO Pets, mymidwesthomes.com
740-949·2217

740.828.2750

O:::rtbunr

Nice 3BR, 2 Bath, 16x80,
Country
Setting,
367·0265 or 339·3366.

825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com

Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w/1 acre. 5% down. $525
mo. WAC. Near Holzer.
740·446·3570.

18\alllpoll!l Datil'

The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Financing· New 2010
Doublewide $37,989
Ask about $8,000 Re·
bates
mymidwesthome.com
740·828-2750

Get Your Message Across With ADa11y Sent1nal

BULLETIN BOARD
'13" column 100h weekdays
22"' column inch Sunday

CAll OUR OFFICE AT 992&lt;2155

Christmas
Bazaar
Fri. - Sat. - Sun.
Dec.4,5,6
French 500
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome
Racine American Legion
Public Sirloin Tip/
Chicken Dinner
December 6th 11-1
$6.00

PERFECT GIFT FOR
CHRISTMAS!
Virginia Beach Getaway

June 3, 2010
to June 6, 2010
PEAK SEASON
Chartered Coach
OCEANFRONT rooms at the
Marriott Fairfield Inn &amp; Suites
$415/person (quad)
$445/person (triple)
$51 0/person (double)
$775/person (single)
Limited seats!
No refunds
If purchasing for a Christmas
gift, we can provide
a certificate for presentation
Cash, check, credit cards and
money orders accepted
Passengers of all ages
welcome
To make reservations please
call PVH Community
Relations
{304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

Classifleds

b~ Place an enline ad

Plaoo a 11 wspapa ad

JOBS

f'!

~:~~

Thursday, December 3, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~r~~

'fJbfV

· A Do-it-yourself .classified ads
Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

tl Do-it-yourself convenience
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------~­
Trade in your old singlewide for a new home. 0 --~----..,
moneydown.446·3570.

J&amp;l

Trailer
for
sale
93
Schultz 3br., 2ba. on
rented lot in Gallipolis
Ferry 304·812·0803

Construction
• Vinyl Siding '
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
·Decks

• Garages

lldl
• Pole Bu
ngs
·Room Additions
Position open at Darst
Owner:
Adult Group Home, call
James Keesee II
for
interview
742-2332
740-992-5023
...__ _ _ _ _ _..
Child/Elderly Care

CHILD &amp; FAMILY SPE·
CIALIST
in
Mason County min.
HS or GED, must obtain
CDA credential
within
year of hire. Responsible
for dally operation of
EHS center under Supervisor &amp; Lakin staff.
RFT/w/ benefits
must
have valid drivers li·
cense.
Respond
by
12111/09 with resume &amp;
3 letters of reference to :
SCAC Inc. 540 5th Ave
Huntington WV 25701
EOE.

Medical
Internal Medicine Practice in Pt Pleasant IS
seeking a full time receptionist. EMR exp. desirable, competitive salary
&amp; benefits fax resume to
304·586-9312.

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
· Room Additions &amp;
Remcxlellng
New Garages
, · Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is currently seeking someone with a Train
the Trainer Certification
to teach CNA classes. All
interested
applicants
should pick up an appli·
cation at 333 PageStreet, Middleport, Oh.
Overbrook is an EOE
and a Participant in the
Drug
Free
Workplace
Program.
Help
Wanted
Rapidy
gropwing home health
Agency seeking AN's for
PT position with potential
of being FT. Also taking
applications
for
PRN,
RN's &amp; Home Health
Aids. Please contact Ab·
bot Home Care @ (740)
682·02222. EOE
Internal Medicine Practice 1n Pt. Pleasant is
seeking
a full
time
RN/LPN
EMR
experience desirable. Compeli·
live salary &amp; benefits Fax
resume to 304-586·9312.

Teresa Thacker

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

304-773-1111

www.hometowninsurancecenter.com

SAVE UP TO 50°/o. CAll US TODAY!

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Ha~dw~od CabJnetry And Fmiture
'I'V'WW.tlmlteJ'creekea'bmetry.eom

0

140·992-1611
... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Bookkeeper/ Tax PrePublic Notice
parer for local accounting
oftice send resume to
COMMON
PO Box 805 Gallipolis IN THE
Ohio 45631 or fax to PLEAS COURT, PROBATE DIVISION MEIGS
304-273·1130.
COUNTY, OHIO
Do you enjoy helping IN THE MATTER OF
people? If so, I will give SETTLEMENT OF ACyou FREE RENT AND COUNTS, PROBATE
MEIGS
FREE UTILITIES plus an COURT
income just for moving in COUNTY, OHIO
and helping my 87 year Accounts and vouch·
old mother. You will live ers of the following
here as if it were your named fiduciary has
own home, minus the ex- been filed in the Probate Court, Meigs
penses. 740.416-3130.
County, Ohio for apIncrease Your Earning
proval and settlement.
PotentiaII
ESTATENO. 20052019·
Up to $25,000+/yearl
4th account of Angela
Watson, guardian of
Choose to work with the
the personand estate
world's largest nonprofits of Gifford Jennings
such as the American
Reynolds, Sr..
Unless exceptions are
Heart Association and St
filed thereto, said acJude Children's Re·
count will be set for
search Hospital.
hearing before said
Court on the 4th day of
Excellent Benefits
January,
2010,
at
Weekly pay + bonus powhich time said actential
count will be consld·
All Major Holidays OFF
ered and continued
WITH PAY!
from day to day until fl·
Medical, Dental, EAP,
naily disposed of.
401K!
Any person Interested
No Experience Necesmay file written excepsary
tion to said account or
Paid On-site Training
to matters pertaining
to the execution of the
Call NOW to learn how
trust, not less than five
you can start earning
days prior to the date
your potential!
set for hearing.
1·888-IMC·PAYU, Ext.
J. S. Powell
1941
Judge
Apply online:
Common Pleas Court,
http://jobs.lnfoclslon.c
Probate Division
om
Meigs County, Ohio
(12) 3
.
Part Tlme Employees
Needed
Public Notice
Make fundraising calls
for conservative organiIN
THE
COMMON
zations such as the NRA!
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
Weekly pay and boBATE DIVISION MEIGS
nuses!
COUNTY, OHIO
Fixed 28 hr. week sched- IN THE MATTER OF
ule
SETTLEMENT OF AC·
Conducting Interviews
COUNTS, PROBATE
Now
COURT
MEIGS

Medical

Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

HOMETOWN INSURANCE
CENTER

CONSTRUCTION

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

7 40-367-0544

~Insurance

Education

A viable coal company in
SE Ohio is looking for a
coal lease person, indi·
viduals can submit resume to: The Daily Senti·
nel, PO Box 729·44,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Local Contractor

BErie

ROBERT
BISSEll

Help Wanted· General

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

992-6215
740-591·0195
Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Years local Expenence
FULLY INSURED

Need older lady to live-in/
help w/ cooking &amp; hou•ework m New Haven,call after 6pm 304-882-3552

Part-time
instructors
needed during the day
mathematics,
ecoin:
nomics, and accounting.
Mathematics and economic instructors must
have a master'G degree
in the diSCipline. If interested please email a resume and cover letter to
jdanicki@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of the following
named fiduciary has
been filed in the probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio for approval and settlement.
ESTATENO&gt;
21815·
29th account of Lisa J.
Lynch. Trust Officer of
the Huntington Na·
tlonal Bank, Trustee of
the Anderson B. Kibble
Trust.
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, said account will be set for
hearing before said
Court on the 4th day of
January,
2010,
at
which time said account wilt be consld·
ered and continued
from day to day until fl·
naily disposed of.
Any person Interested
may file written excep·
tlon to said account or
to matters pertaining
to the execution of the
trust, not less than five
days prior to the date
set for hearing.
J. 5. Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(12) 3

Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
•Plumbing
• Pole Barns
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
We can help!

Call out Toll Free
866-564-8679

LUV HOMES

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
, DumpTruck
Service
We do driveways
Limestone • Gravel
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

Owners:

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; RJ::MODELING Co.
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
Experient

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. New Homes, Siding. Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
Rick Price - 17 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740-416-2960 740-992·0730

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming·
&amp; Removal
'·Prompt and Quality

Work
•Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044
Please leave message

H&amp;H
Guttering

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

-~~11««·

No.,.. Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
Parts • Engines.
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions

• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet
Metal &amp; Components
For All Makes of Vehicle'

Racine. Ohio
740-949-1956

co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009
Cmtom Home Building
Steel Frame Building~
Building. Remodeling

General repair

Free Eslinatas for
• Bacldi08 • Trenching
• JlriiSII Hogging
• Portable Bandmll
Tree Tl'lmmln9 • SetUng
Poles I Trusses

Cal740-992·9572

(3ait Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential

For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinyl &amp; wood siding
MICHAEL'S
SEJH'iCE CE:\TEI{

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740..416-1834

1555 :\YE ,\\c.

1•omcrm. OH
• Oil &amp; filter change
•Tune Ups ,
• Brake Service
• AC Recharge
• Minor exhaust
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; Fluid Change
• General Mechanic
work
(740) 992-0910

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTIU 'CTION
Conc·ete Removal
and Replacement

Full~ insurrd &amp; hunding a\ ailahlc
Frcl' l'slimall'S • 25+ ~ l'an. t'\lll'ricm·l·
1\ut.Jniliall·ll \\ilh \likt:

m.II
I~

\l,ln.·uml{uulin~

and
CON;~:;;;e;;;;:indows
&amp; MANUFACTURING, llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

1\e Specia/i~e In Replactmenr Windmrs

For Older Homt'I &amp; Trailer.
No exrra charge ro replace IIU'/alfi'ame windows

m: •

Richard Smith
Co-Ov. neriVice Prc&gt;id~nt

29 Years Experience

740-992·6971
Insured
Free Estimates

Rt.·muddin~•

New Construction

All Types Of
Concrete Work

David Lewis

""

Large, nnrr frozen. head\ on

$10 p.:r lb ca,h only
Pm1 is required tn advance

Shipments anive every
other Friday

740-667-0306
Fax: 740-667-0329
Toll :Free: 877-428-8196

Advertise in
this space for
$35.00 per
month

�......

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, December 3, 2009 •
I

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

I'VE. NOTICED A LO';' o;: TE.Xi1NG
AND 'I'WSETING GOING ON OURING
MY PRESENiAiiONS

By THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Sports
1 Dune
figure
makeup
2 Woody
5 Keep
Guthrie's
away from
son
10 Deuce
3 Shiptopper
shape
11 Tiptoe, in
ballet
4 Real
go-getters
12 Country
5 Heart
singer
Jackson
outlet
13 "Gun6 LP
smoke"
material
star
7 United
8 " - been
14 Wholereal"
ness
9 - Plaines
16 Ethics
11 Skating
20 Nosy
category
ones
15 Easy gait
23 Weed
whacker 17 "If- a
Hammer"
24 Slight
18 Muscle
error
qualify
25 Goddess
of the
hunt
27 Pindar
poem
28 Roofer's
'need
29 Triteness
32 Neighborhood
36 Debt
medium
39 Collected
stories
40 Conjures
up
41 "Putmy tab"
42 Piper of
rhyme
43 "Memo-,
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Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

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Chris Browne

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19 Calendar
span
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33 Tiny

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amount
22 Store sign 34 Easy
gait
25 Almanac
35 Urges
fill
36 Agent, for
26 Charmshort
ingly
37 Holiday
simple
lead-in
28 Jazz
38 Period
phrases
person

21 Zip

William Hoest

THELOCKHORNS
Brian and Greg Walker

HI &amp; LOIS

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MUTTS

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PART OF M':J

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

STtMULUS
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday, Dec. 3, 2009:
This year, you might often step back and think:
What should I do? You feel unusual and sometimes
conflicting crosscurrents. Intrinsic to making good
decisions is knowing your ultimate goals while
remaining open to new types of processing. Your ability to move confidently yet openly through problems
while seeking solutions will be the determining factor
in your success this year. If you are single, no one can
deny your desirability. It is for you to choose who and
when. If you are attached, perhaps you open up a new
dynamic in y01\r interactions by losing r,revious judgments, triggering a new closeness. CAJ'\CER likes to
work closely with you.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day Yau'll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (tvrarch 21-April 19)
*** What an odd path you have experienced in
recent days. First you forge straight ahead, only to get
caught and nearly lost in the bran1bles of life. Pressure
builds with bosses, and your concem&lt;; surround home
and family. Do you feel a-; if you are in a pressure
cooker? You are. Tonight: Singing a new tune.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
**You could be upset about a personal matter and
are trying to calm down. Discussions open up in the
afternoon, allowing greater publicity and possibilities.
Agreement might not be a possibility right now.
Tonight Hanging out might be fun.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
***Though you might feel like you stumbled out
of bed, once you pull yourself together, nearly anything can happen. If you relax and curb a need to be
possessive, a lot opens up. Tonight: Know what you
want.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

** You move from slow gear to full speed ahead
by the afternoon. Be careful, you could step on some- •
one's feet inadvertently. You might want to fix a problem or move in a new direction. Tonight: Think positively. The world is your oyster.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
*** Cse the a.m. for anything you deem important and necessary. How you proceed and what happens could be interesting, to say the least Realize you
have had enough of hac;sles with a key friend, but deal
with it ctiplomatically. Tonight Say "yes."

· VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
****You might not be on top of your game and
are going nowhere fast. Instead of spinning your
wheels, stop. A child or loved one'~ power play might
feel all-€11compassing, until vou di&lt;;&lt;.-over the only way
to win is not to play: lonight: Find your friends.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-Qct. 22)
*** ln the morning, you grasp someone's logic,
but by the afternoon, there is little that you can do. You
could be so fed up with the process that y01.1 barely
know which way to tum. Tonight: Just do what you
must.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1'\ov. 21)
****A key associate or partner gives you direction. You know what is needed to make a situation
more workable. Your belief !;ystem could open milny
doors and allow greater flexibilit); if you could wipe
away judgment! Tonight: Put on some holiday music.
SAGIITARlUS (r\o\: 22-Dec. 21)
***Others con~ue to wilnt to have things happen as they like. You have the ability to mo\·e forward
and handle a changeable matter. But you might be better off just letting events happen and Jetting others see
the re;ults of their actions. Tonight: Dinner with a
loved one or friend.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***You meet someone who really pu~hes vour
buttons. Resist boxing thLs person in, knowing tull well
what could happen. If you relax and understand rather
than im~ your will, the end re~.ults actually might
be better. Tonight: lio;ten to ~omeone else's suggestions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
*** Your humor and creali\'ity could save the da)j
if others are in the mood to recei\'e your message.
Focus on getting done what you mll&lt;;l in the afternoon.
Someone not w1derst,\nding could trip you up.
Tonight: Do only what you consider relaxing.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
****Your fire and energy easily could be mbfocused. You might wonder what) ou are doing .1nd
why. Lbten to news with an eye to greater possibilitie.,
and opportunities. Dance to someone else's tune, JUst
for now. Tonight: Get into the Christmao.; spint .. do
some elf work.
.
facqlltlme Brgar i.,: orr the brlcnr~t
otllrtfJr:/ln'ln&lt;•.jacqu~/irleiJrg2T.ctJIII.

�Football
fromPageBl
to win. While other kids go
through the motions to get
through the hour, Howard
can't tum off being competitive.
''He plays everything to
win. That's what separates
him a little bit,'' Hertler said.
The coach looks at the
person his star player. who
lived with him for a year,
has become and is both
impressed and moved.
"He's matured a lot," he

Ohio
fromPageBl
of Sean Coppick and Taylor
Lemley were also repeaters
in Division VI, as Coppick
posted 472 rushing yards,
had 108 receiving yards and
accounted for five offensive
touchdowns while also
recording 89 tackles and
seven sacks. Lemley set a
school-record this fall with
11 sacks and also made 86
tackles, including 19 for
loss for the 5-5 Tornadoes.
Of the six first time selections, four are seniors and
two are juniors.
The seniors honored were
Caleb Davis of Meigs in D4, while the others came in
D-6 with Mike Johnson and
Milhoan
from
Jeffrey
Eastern
and
Brando
Harrison from South Gallia.
Eastern jun.iors Brayden
Pratt and Klint Connery
were the other first-time
selections.

Irish
from Page Bl .
candidates.
"My sense is every name
in America has been thrown
out there," Swarbrick said in
an interview at his office
Wednesday afternoon. "The
interesting thing for me is
it's all completely inaccurate."
Several coaches whose
names have been identified
in media reports as possible
on
candidates
spoke
Wednesday. Iowa coach
Kirk Ferentz dismissed
speculation he might be a
candidate, saying he's content
where
he
is.
Connecticut athletic department spokesman Mike
Enright would not comment
on whether coach Randy
Edsall has been contacted
by Notre Dame. TCU coach
Gary Patterson agreed to a
new contract.
Swarbrick would not disclose how many people he
has contacted about the job.
He began reaching out to
candidates Tuesday, and
said he is consulting with a
search firm.
He also said he's contacted people who know the
candidates he has identified.
He has talked with former
coaches and a former athletic director of "national
prominence" about the
search.
Swarbrick spent part of
Wednesday meeting with
assistant coaches to hear
their ambitions and try to
help them. He also met with
some players to get their
perspective on what the
school should be looking for
in a coach and whether the
team should go to a bowl.
Swarbrick hopes to have a
decision Friday on whether
Notre Dame (6-6) will go to
a bowl. He wouldn't say
when he might have a
coach,
The last search, under
then-athletic director Kevin
White, took 12 days from
the day Tyrone Willingham
was fired until Weis arrived
on campus. The school used
former Notre Dame athletic
director Gene Corrigan
(1981-87) as a search consultant. Five people were
interviewed.
Corrigan said the biggest
challenge is finding someone who really wants the
job. He had one search for a
football coach during his
tenure at Notre Dame and
hired Holtz in one day. Faust
was in the last year of his
five-year contract when he
resigned and Corrigan knew
he was going to need a
replacement.
"I had known Lou for 20-

said softly. "He still has a
long way to go, but he's a
pretty nice young man."
Others nominated for and
receiving votes for the Mr.
Football award include West
Chester Lakota West linebacker
Jordan
Hicks,
Steubenville quarterback
Dwight Macon, Columbus
DeSales defensive lineman
Travis Jackson, Cleveland
St. Ignatius quarterback
Mark Myers, Logan quarterback Patrick Angle and Ada
quarterback Heath Jackson.
Howard will soon receive
his second plaque in the
shape of Ohio.
Davis recorded 79 tackles
and three sacks in his final
season with MHS, and also
hauled in 23 catches for 464
yards and three touchdowns. Harrison made 71
tackles and picked off three
passes while also catching
12 passes for 245 yards and
one score for the 3-7
Rebels.
Milhoan made a teambest 134 tackles and also
recorded three sacks for the
Eagles, while Johnson
hauled in 41 passes for 655
yards and 10 touchdowns.
Pratt finished the season
10 1-of-181 passing for
1,284 yards with 11 TDs
and eight interceptions,
whith Connery adding 813
rushing yards and eight
touchdowns on 142 totes.
Eastern finished 6-4 overall this season, the only
winning record from the six
schools on the Ohio side of
the OVP area. River Valley
was the lone program without an All-Ohio nominee
this season after a 1-9 finish.
some years and I knew he
wanted the job," Corrigan
said.
Holtz wanted it so much
he took a pay cut, Corrigan
said.
Corrigan said the only
person he consulted before
hiring Holtz was former
Notre Dame coach Ara
Parseghian.
"He and I agreed there
wasn't anyone out there better than Lou," Corrigan said.
"It was pretty simple. No
agents involved. No nothing .... Jack's got a much
tougher job than I had."

.

2009

Browns place Lewis on IR, a sad end to RB's career
BEREA (AP) - Jamal
Lewis has plowed into the
line for the Last time.
Cleveland's punishing
running
back,
who
announced last month that
he planned to retire following this season, was placed
on
injured
reserve
Wednesday with post-concussion symptoms, a premature and unceremonious
ending to his illustrious
NFL career.
Coach Eric Mangini,
who declined to mention
Lewis' injury in two news
conferences this week, said
the decision to put Lewis
and safety Brodney
Pool - on IR came after
consulting with the club's
medical team.
"As I've said before,
organizationally, players'
health and safety are paramount in any decision we
make with regards to
putting them. back on the
field," Mangini said in a
statement. "Jamal has been
an integral part of this
team and he has exhibited
a great work ethic. He
worked hard, studied hard
and set a good example for
the
younger
running
backs."
Pool sustained at least
his fourth known concussion against the Bengals.
The Browns' decision on
Lew}s and Pool came
hours after the NFL implemented stricter instructions for when players
should be allowed to return
to games or practices after
head
injuries.
Commissioner
Roger
Goodell sent a memo to the
32 clubs saying a player
who gets a concussion
should not return to action
on the same day if he

shows certain signs or
symptoms.
With a bruising style that'
flattened would-be tacklers, Lewis rushed for
10,607 career yards, ranking him 21st on the NFL's
all-time list, just 36 yards
behind Ricky Watters
(10,643) for 20th place.
Lewis was the league's
offensive player of the
year in 2003, when he
rushed for 2,066 yards
with Baltimore.
Unfortunately, Lewis'
final season was his worst.
He ran for 500 yards on
143 carries - a 3.5 average - and did not score a
touchdown. He did not
start in Sunday's game at
Cincinnati, but came in for
the second offensive play
and finished with a teamhigh 40 yards on 11 carries.
Lewis' final carry was a
1-yard run with 14:02 left.
Earlier
this
season,
Lewis, an offensive cocaptain, criticized Mangini
for working Cleveland's
players too hard in practice. He also questioned
the team's lack of an offensive identity. Lewis backtracked on his comments a
few days later, blaming
reporters for "blowing it
out of proportion."
Lewis seemed content
with the idea of retirement,
and said he was looking
forward to life away from
football. He owns several
lucrative
businesses,
including a trucking company based in Atlanta.
Lewis signed as a free
agent with the Browns in
2007. He rushed for 1 ,304
yards that season - the
most by any Cleveland

back other than Hall of
Farner Jim Brown.
While Lewis' career is
over, Pool is facing a difficult decision on his future.
A five-year veteran, Pool
suffered · another cqncussion in the third quarter on
Sunday and may have to
consider ~ giving up the
game.
Mangini said no decisions have been made
about Pool's future beyond
2009.
"We haven't talked about
the long term," he said.
"That's a discussion for a
later time period. You
never want to have a conversation about injuries
with anybody, but unfortunately it's something that
is a reality and it's never a
fun conversation but they
are always important."
Pool has started 10
games this season and 49
since the Browns selected
him in the second round of
the 2005 draft out of
Oklahoma. In Sunday's
l6-7loss, Pool was injured
early in the second half.
He walked off the field,
was escorted to the locker
room and did not return to
the sideline.
Pool's situation has
many of his teammates
concerned about his health
- and their own. With
concussions a hot topic in
the league, players are
learning more about the
dangers of head injuries
and their lasting effects.
Browns
linebacker
David Bowens has seen a
big change in the way
teams are treating concussed players.
"Early in my career, it
was like, 'OK, he's got a

concussion, can he count
to three?' Now it's a big
deal. You see how the
older players, how it's
affected their lives postcareer and it is a serious
issue. I think the awareness level has definitely
heightened because of it,
and the teams are taking
better precautions. Safety
issues regarding helmets.
that's gone up. There's
lot of steps being taken."
Browns wide receiver
Mike Furrey said he spoke
on Tuesday to former
teammate Kurt Warner,
who missed Arizona's
game last week against
Tennessee with post-concussion symptoms.
"I don't think anybody
really has an understanding yet of the symptoms
and why things are happening the way they're
happening," Furrey said.
"There's no answers."
Furrey said it's not
uncommon for a player to
lie to a team doctor to keep
playing.
"When you're talking
about a little headache
throughout the week, you
obviously feel like you're
still going to be able to
play on Sunday," he said•.
"But nobody knows th
extremities . of
thos
headaches or the difference of a light one or a
heavy one or not having
any other symptoms, being
nauseated
and
sick
throughout the week.
"As a competitor you
want to keep playing, so
obviously you probably
would stretch the story just
a little bit to get back on
the field and it's just the
nature of any athlete that
wants to play on Sundays."

Bearcats

"That's for people on the
outside to think about,"
Revels said. "We don't go
into statistics, we don't go
into why this is happening,
why that is happening. The
only thing we're worried
abqut is putting up Ws and
right now, we're doing a
good job of it. So we can't
really question why things

are happening. We just
need to make sure they
continue to happen."
Of course, much
the
problem rests on the
defense itself. It could get
a little more rest if it got
itself off the field more
quickly. It doesn't force
many turnovers, which is
another shortcoming.

With only the Pittsburgh
game left on the schedule,
the Bearcats seem inclined
to let the offense lead the
way, scoring whatever is
necessary to win.
"It could be a shootout
and if that's what it comes
down to, we're ready,"
Guidugli said.
•

fromPageBl
The Bearcats have held the
ball longer than their opponent only twice this season. In two games, opponents had the ball for more
than 40 minutes.

ot

UR TJ flY 'EWSPAPERS ENCOURAGES YOU TO SHOP &amp;SUPPORT
THESE lOCAl BUSINESSES

. . . . . . . . .__.. . . . . . ._. . . . .

"'--·~-·-

Thursday, December 3,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

. . . . -.:.,_______________

_~-----.L .--.-..--~~-~-----

~-.--~--- ~-· - .

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