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I

I

HARNESS RACING:
A HIT AT MEIGS
CO. FAIR,A6

VA CLINIC OPEN IN
GAILIA COUNTY,
A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBITUARIES

Commissioners: Close budgetary monitoring in order
Bv BRIAN

Page AS

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSE'lTINEL.COM

• Gladys Jones
• Gregory Cundiff

Toledo school
district plans
teacher cuts
TOLEDO (AP) bout two dozen more
teachers will be laid off in
one of Ohio's largest cities
because of declining public school enrollment.
Toledo Public Schools,
Superintendent Jerome
Pecko tells The Blade that
the exact number of cuts
will be determined this
week and then notices will
go to teachers and a few
classroom aides. He says
the district does not want
to exceed a ratio of 25 students per teacher.
Officials say enrollment
is down 5.4 percent from
this time last year.
Pecko calls the layoffs "a
business decision that has
to be made."
The new cuts would be
in addition to 400 teaching
and other positions already
eliminated as part of the
school district's efforts to
fend off a $39 million
-~ficit for the current
. ,hool year.
•

POMEROY
- County
Commissioner Mick Davenport
said Tuesday the board and other
county officeholders must be
particularly mindful of cash
flow issues as the county begins
the last quarter of its fiscal year.
Facing a budget crunch due to
a $100,000 carryover shortage
in January and a $100,000 drop
in real estate tax collection for
the second half, the county has
experienced a shortage of avail-

able cash in the past weeks.
Davenport said that situation has
improved, but said the board and
all county officials must closely
monitor their spending and cash
availability for the remainder of
the year.
''We don't anticipate another
cash flow problem like that
again this year," Davenport said,
"but it depends on a lot of
things. We will be monitoring
departmental
budgets
and
reports closely."
Davenport said commissioners receive a cash flow report

STERNWHEELERS ARRIVE

•

WEATHER

Please see Budget. A3

Increasing
Pomeroy
water fees
passes first
. reading
BY BETH SERGENT

POMEROY - This week
Pomeroy Village Council unani.,
mously passed the first of three
required readings on an ordinance which will increase the
fees customers pay for watt;r
usage.
Mayor John Musser said the
increases are needed to finance
improvements to the water system,
general maintenance and to pay for
an increase in operating expenses.
The amendment calls for a three
percent increase on water rates
every year starting in 2011.
However, beginning with the
billing cycle starting on or about
Nov. 10, if customers go over their
minimum limits. the current
amendment's proposed fees will
increase for every 100 gallons used
over 2,000. Also, proposed fees
will increase on deposits for connects and reconnects.
The new amendment lists the
current base charges for water
usage as well as the new overBrian J. Reed/photo
age, disconnect and connect

Although Pomeroy's Sternwheel Riverfest doesn't officially begin until Thursday evening, the boats
have begun to arrive at the levee. On Wednesday afternoon, the sternwheelers and other pleasure craft
created a picturesque preview of this weekend's festival.

Please see Water, A3

Old Middleport fines going to collection agerlcy
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Offenders with ~npaid
fines in Middleport will
soon face a collection
agency, and pay 30 percent more in order to
resolve their cases.
Meeting
Monday
evening,
Middleport
Village Council approved
a contract with Capital
Recovery Services, a col, lection agency working
on behalf of police
departments and local
governments.
The agency will return

100 percent of the fines
collected back to the village, but will charge 30
percent additionally for
1ts service. That amount
must be paid in full by
the offender in order to
clear the case from the
village's records.
Council agreed that
accounts
should be
referred to collections
after six months of inactivity, but held an extensive discussion on how to
address cases such as
those on payment plans.
According to Mayor
Michael Gerlach, the village is owed an estimated

$369,000 in old fines dating back to 15 years.
Many of those owing old
fines no longer live in the
area. Gerlach said the
collection agency has
access to current addresses and other personal
information necessary to
collect the funds.
Gerlach said other
agencies use the provider
to collect old fines.
Meigs County Court has
used the agency in the
past, a clerk said, but
does not actively submit
accounts because of the
heavy caseload there.
Village approved a res-

olution allowing the
exchange of the traffic
light removed from Ohio
7 in the Village of
Cheshire for frre protection services to the village for a two-year period. The light and controls
are valued at $5,600, and
Cheshire
pays
Middleport $2,800 each
year for fire service.
The agreement will
provide two years of nocost service in 2011 and
2012. Gerlach said the
traffic light will be
reserved as a spare, and
may be particularly useful if the village deems it

necessary to re-install the
light at Pearl Street and
General Hartinger.
Village offices are
expected to move into the
old elementary school on
Pearl Street, and Gerlach
said the Meigs County
Council on Aging has
considered a move to
Middleport. There is also
a possibility that another
grocery will move into
the vacant store in that
area, and a11 of those
developments
could
cause an increase in traf·
fie in that part of town. :

iYo quiero Taco Bell' en Pomeroy!
New restaurant chain moving in

High: 85
Low: 56

BY BETH SERGENT

INDEX

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

. lassifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

Will commissioners impose
limits on departmental spending? Davenport said he has
never seen a "spending freeze"
imposed since he assumed office
12 years ago, although commissioners have resorted to them
before.
Last week, commissioners
met with the Board of Elections
and staff to discuss unpaid bills
relating to the August special
election and the upcoming
November general election.

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Transplant
· patient
promotes
donation

CLEVELAND (AP)The woman who had the
nation:s frrst face transplant is asking Ohioans to
register as organ donors.
WJW-TV reports that
47-year-old Connie Culp,
who was released from the
Cleveland Clinic several
weeks ago, spoke in the
Cleveland area Monday at
the opening of a new
office for LifeBanc. That's
a nonprofit organ and tissue recovery organization·
in northeast Ohio.
Culp says there aren't
enough donors like the
anonymous person who
made her surgeries possible.
Culp was shot by her
usband in a failed murer-suicide in 2004. The
blast shattered her nose,
cheeks, the roof of her
mouth and an eye.

each week before their regular
meeting, and review that report
before approving bills for payment.
Davenport noted that revenue
from the county's one-percent
sales tax has been on the rise for
two months. July's receipts.
which came in this week, are
$6,000 more than they were in
July, 2009. That sales tax check,
along with a check from the
state in local government revenue, represents an important
part of the county's cash flow
revenue each month.

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ll.l!IJ. !I!I.!I,II

POMEROY Soon, the
phrase "do you want mild or hot
sauce with that" will echo
throughout Pomeroy when a
Taco Bell franchise moves into
the village.
Franchise owner and local
restaurateur Danny Crow said he
hopes to h~ve the resta!-'rant ~p
and runnmg sometime m
December. He added the restaurant will be based on the company's latest design and seat
around 50 people, complete with
a drive-thru which is estimated
to bring in 75 percent of the
restaurant's
business.
He
guessed the establishment could

.~

"

employ between 25-30 people.
Workers
from
Derek
Engineering of Cincinnati have
begun construction on the site
located along West Main Street
across from McDonalds in the
Monkey Run area. Crow said the
contractor had to be approved by
Taco
Bell
and
Derek
Engineering has built similar
Taco Bells in Athens, Marietta
as well as several in West
Virginia
and
Kentucky.
Contractors are currently raising
the lot, which is about five acres,
above the flood plain level
which Crow said was about five
Beth Sergent/photo
to eight feet.
This
site
along
West
Main
Street
in
the
Monkey
Run area will house
Crow said he's been trying to

Please see Taco Bell, A3

a Taco Bell restaurant set to open in December. Workers are currently raising the lot above the flood plain.

�Pagej~

The Daily SEu1tinel

VVednesday,Sept.t5,2010

EIPA old gas drilling c:loes, does not taint water
BINGHA 1TON. N.Y.
(AP) - Rep. Mallrice
Hinchey told a fcc. crul
hcarin~ Monday that the
En,tronmen ul
Protection Agency lust
regulate hydraulic raeturing. the natural gas
extraction process th t he
said has contamin tied
water ncar drilling ites
around the country.
"Tht!re are numejrou s
reports of water cont ~mi­
nation
related
to
hydrauli c fracturin g in
...tate acro"s the ce&gt;untry." ... aiel Hinchey, DN. Y. "Despite the f act
that EPA is. in many
ways, precluded from
taking regulatory action
in re.sponse to these
reports. J belie,•e EPA
mu ... t imestigate
to
understand what is bleing
done - to keep water
supplies safe and sect re."
The process.
lso
known as fracking, b asts
millions of gallon or
water mixed v. ith and
and chemicals. som of
them carcinogens. ecp
into the earth to fre gas
dense
s ale
from
deposits. As a gas ush
... v.eeps parts of the •ast
and lucrative Marc llus
Shale region that unaerlies
New
York.
Pennsyhania, Ohio nd
West Virginia. em i,ron-

metll.llists are concerned would create 280 000
for the watershed that jobs over the nextt I 0
prm ides drinking water years, jobs sorely nethkd
for 17 million people m the black commut1ity
from Philadelphia to
"This is not the till e to
.New York City.
further limit cnerg)l job
Environmentalists fear opportunities forth( e in
the process. which leaves n.ecd.'' llurmon said
as mU&lt;:h as 90 percent of
Congress has or
the post-fracking water EPA to conduct a
known as "produced fracking study and
water" deep under- is considering
how
gr.ound. ~·ill irreversibly broadly to construct it,
ta1nt aqlllters ..
since the agency's W04
No water supplies ha' c study that declare the
been poi oned by frack- technology safe
mg, the petroleum indus- \\ idcly criticized as
·try says, and the process flawed. The earlier study
-which promises lucra- had enabled passag1.! of
ti\e induo;try profits and 2005 energy legisl&lt;ition
thousandc; of jobs in eco- exempting [racking from
depressed federal regulation under
nomically
areas- ts safe.
the Safe Drin~mg Water
"Billions of dollars in Act, leaving regulation to
economic impact on 1'\ew individual state .
York and its citizens is at
''The EPA must do itll it
stake here." said Brad can to insure that its sciGill of the Independent entists and rcscarcl1ers
Oil and Gas Association. arc not influenced hy
with drilling promising industry or by politi s as
more than 60.000 jobs in they were influc ced
New York alone. ,"The back in 2004," Hin hey
positivi! impact is stag- said, "so that the p ihlic
gering but it doesn't can be assured that this
~ome at the expense of study b being carrie I out
environmental protec- in the public interest. '
tion."
Hinchey is one of' the
John Harmon of the authors of the so-culled
New York-New Jersey FRAC Act in Cong;ress.
African
American "hich would put fracking
Chamber of Commerce under EPA regulation.
said full development of
The petroleum indu...try
the Marcellus Shale is strongly opposed to

federal regulation which it says would be
more costly than complying with adequate state
rult.!s.
Gill said "strict state
regulations" for decades
have governed fracking
and the industry has ··a
stellar
environmental
record" La show for it.
In New York. he said.
there are about 14.000
producing natural gas
wells. thousands of
which were begun by the
fracking process. Nev.
York has not seen one
case of groundwater contamination by fracking
fluids, he said.
"A Hollywood actor
holding a glass of cloudy
water proves nothing
except that fear-mongering and emotion will
always trump science and
logic," he said, taking
aim at the recent critical
TV
documentary
"Gasland." by Josh Fox.
The Marcellus rush is
barely two years old m
Pennsylvania and West
Virginia. where thousands of wells have been
fracked. Some geologists
es1imate the Marcellus
contains more than 500
trillion cubic feet of natural ga... , of which fra~k­
ing ·could recover 50 trillion cubic feet -enough

to supply the entire East
Coast for 50 years. The
proximity of the gas
stores to the large East
Coast energy market
makes it particularly
valuabk.
Hundreds of people on
both sides gathered for
the last of fmu public
hearings on a pending
EPA study of tracking.
The Binghamton hearings. twice postponed
because of anticipated
large crm' ds, are split
into double sessions on
Monday and again on
Wednesday.
"Kids can't drink gas"
and "Protect our water.
Stop fracking America,"
were some of the signs
carried by opponent....
Supporters.
mcluding
umon workers eager for
jobs, carried signs that
said ''Yes to science, no
to paranoia" and chanted
''Pass gas now!"
New
Ynrk's
Department
of
Environmental
Conservation has h&lt;tlted
issuing drilling pcm1its
until it draws regulations
to gmcrn the process .
Complaints of v. ell water
contamination and surface spills of post-fracking water have forced
revision of state rules in
\\here
Pennsylvania,

more than 1,600
have already been
in the Marcellus
and more than
mits have been
Drilling
have used frack1
release natural gas
other shale re
around the cou
earlier held
Colorado. Texas
Pennsylvania.
Paul Rush of New ~ork
City's Departmen ' of
Environme tal
Protection noted tha: half
the state's popule1tion,
re~idin!! in New !York
City and its environs,
depend on unfiltered
water from the CatslkillsDclaware watershed that
i::, in the Marcellus ~'hale
region. T\\o DEP stl dies
showed serious ris~'s to
the watershed if gas
drilling is allowed ere.
He urged the EPA to read
the studies posted o the
DEP's website.
"There's no wa)l this
can be done safely. I. w~
toxify the air. wate ' an~
soil:' said pro ester
Kathy Shimberg. 7.3. of
Mount Vision. N.Y,
wearing a T-shirt that
read "Love N.Y.? Bon't
frack it up."

Sma I business credit measure clears Senate hurdle
WASHINGTON (AP)
- In a win for Presi ent
Barack Obama and his
political allie , Sc] ate
Democrats on Tuc. lay
\Von a crucial ,·ote to lear
the way for a hill to ct ate
. a $30 billion gnvernt ent
fund to help open up I nd~
mg for credit-sta ved

ment rate ticked up to 9.6
percent last month.
The new fund wou~U be
available to comm~ ity
banks with less than $1 0
billion 111 assets to
encourage lending to
small businesses. Th hill
would combine the und
with about $12 billiJn in
tax breaks aimed at :&gt;oth
lar!!e and small busil esses ~ over the coming
decade.
Democrats say blinks
should be able to use the
lending fund to Ieve ra~e
up to $300 billior.t m
loans. helping to loosen
tight credit markets.
Some Republicans. how-

e\er. have likened it to
the unpopular bailout of
the .financial industry.
Democrats say the
measure is needed to help
small businesses cope
with a credit crunch that
worsened dramatically
after the financial crisis
two years ago.
"This bill is about .
righting a v. rong that was
done to small business
v. hen Wall Street closed
Mnin Street down and cut
off acces~ to capital,"
said
Sen.
Maria
Cant\\ ell, D-Wash.
"Small businesses are
holding off on hiring
while they wait for us to

act,"
satd
Senate
Majority LeadeJ Harry
Reid. , D-Nev. "Banks
large and small are holding onto their capital
while they wait for us to
act."
The small business tax
cuts in the hill include
breaks for restaurant
ov. ners and retailers who
remodel their stores or
build new one~. Larger
businesses could more
quickly recover the costs
of capital improvements
through
depreciation.
Long-term ime'itor in
some small busine se~
would be exempt from
paying capital gains

taxes. And loan caps
under the Small BusJ~ness
Administration's crhief
lending program ~uld
be significantly raise .
Much of the bi11 ould
be paid for by allo ing
taxpayers to co l'vert
40 I (k) and gove ment
retirement accounts into
Roth accounts, in hich
they pay taxes up front
on the money they contribute. enabling th~m
withdraw it tax-free
they retire.
who convert accounts
this year would pay the
ta:&lt;es in 2011 and 2012,
£enerating an estimated
~5.1 billion.

In· alks, no progress seen on Israeli settlements
SHARM EL-SHbl H.
Egypt (AP) Under ssurc to compromise. Is ,1cli
and Palestinian leader on
Tuesday dug into the
tral issues blocking a ace
deal but ended the I test
round of talks without isiblc progre~s on the divisive
issue of Jev. ish settlcm~·nts.
Israeli Prime Mini tcr
Benjamin Netanyahu and
Palestinian ' President
Mahmoud Abbas held an
extm, unscheduled : esion with U.S. Secre tary
of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton, but there wa.. no
word on si~ns of &lt;1 h~:ak­
through. Alter the leaders'
first meeting at this IRed
Sea resm1, U.S. peace
envoy George Mitcl ell
offered repm1ers a mudly
. positive assessment.
~itchell said the
issues in the p 1cc
proccs.., were discus ed.
hut all sides agreed n t to
rc.veal which ones or ith
what results.
'T m not going to
attempt to identify each
ooe that was discus ied.
bnt several were,in a ry
serious, detailed 11ncl
extensive dtscus"ion,"
Mitchell snid at a nnws

U.~;.
WASHINGTON (J P)
- The Obama admil istmtion is considering filing the first crim · al
cnarges against r.1cl cal
det ic Anwar .tl-Aw tkl
in case the CIA fail
kill him nnd he is
tured alive in Yemen.
The decision contil tes
the White Houc;e's str te81 of fighting te1To sm
both in court and on the
battlefield.
d
Al-Awlaki. a U S
Yemeni citit.en born in
New Mexico, hd in ptred
a ''ave of attempted
attacks again f the U.S.

~

-

_____

.._

conference.
Israeli of11cials said
Sharm ci-Sheikh '"'a"
chosen for Tuesday's
meeting in recognition of
Egypt's key role . in
regional peace efforts.
"We were guests of the
Egyptian
President
Mubarak." said Mark
l'\etanyahu's
Regev,
spoke~man. "Egypt play...
an important role in supporting this process.''
The talk' shift to the
holy city of Jerusalem
Wednesday in another
symbolic gesture aimed
at underscoring the
Importance of the negotiations, the first direct
talks between the Israelis
Palestinians
in
and
almost two years.
The status of Jerusalem
is . one of the thorniest
issues dividing the two
sides. Israel claims the
undivided city a., its capital.
while
the
Palestinian&lt;; want the
eastern part to be the capital of an eventual state.
Clinton did not comment, but told reporters
on the night to Egypt
from Washington on
Monday that •·the time is

ripe'' for an agree cnt
based on the notion f a
Palcsti ian
sovereign
state and a ..,ccure Isr el.
Mitchell was press d to
sav whether there vas
progress on scttlen nts
and responded: "We •ontinuc our efforts to 1 aake
progress and we believe
that we arc mo\ ing in( the
right direction. ovemll."
He repeated Clinl1on ·
call for hracl to extend
it... soon-to-expire curb on
settlement construction
in the West Bank.
··we tl\ink it makes
...ense to extend the momtorium. especially ~ ven
that the talks are movtrtg in
a constntcti,·e Jin:cti &gt;n,"
he said. "We know thi is a
politically ...ensitivc i sue
in Israel. But we've • !so
called on President A has
to take steps that elp
encourage and facil late
this process."
The ultimate aim s a
deal that creates a st ·crcign Palcstiman
ate
beside a secure brae
Regev. i':etanya lll 's
spokesman, aid
uch
\\ ork lay ahead and that
the Palestinian and I neli
leaders ha' e to 1 ake

hard decisions. "The way
to an agreement is to look
at all the core Issues
together. not to run away
from any one of them."
he said.
The Palestinians want
brael's settlement curb
extended beyond the current Sept. 26 deadline
and have said failure to
do so " ill bring the peace
talks to an earlv end.
Netanyahu has suggested
at lea... t some of the
restmints will be lifted.
Clinton said the Obama
administration believes
Israel should extend the
moratorium. but she also
said it would take an
effort by both sides to
find a way around the
problem. She spoke with
reporters Monday during
a flight from Washington
to Egypt for the latest
round of talks. which
began this month in.
Washington.
The settlement freeze
is not the only ob,taclc
negotiators face. The two
sides disagree over what
to discuss first: security
or borders.
A -;enior Abbas aide.
Mohammed hhtayeh.

appeared to take a hard
line on the issue of settlement construction, telling
reporters that an f...raeli
extension of its partial
freeze woultl not signal
progress in the negotiations but rather progre"s
in "confidence huilding.'
"The freeze on settlements (construction) is not
a topic in the negotiation...."
he said. "Removing "ettlements is.''
From the Israeli said.
~etanyahu
spokesman
~lark Regev said. "If the
expectation is that only
Israel has to o;how flexibility then that is not a
prescription for a successful process."
The Palestinian group
Hamas, which rule::&gt; the
Gaza Strip and doesn't
recognize Israel. isn't
party to the negottations.
Hamas spokesm~m Ismail
Ridwan des&lt;..'ribcd the
negotiations as a "shameful path'' and said they
would not benefit the
Palestinians. "Instead,
they \viii serve the
(Israeli) occupation and
pro' ide it '' ith a green
light to continue it
crimes." he said.

Ahmed Jaabari. the
of
shadowy
leader
Hamas' military
threatened a wave o
lence intended to
the talks.
Israeli Interior Min.ister
Eli Yishai spoke out
Tuesda) against the settlement
slowd &gt;wn,
reflecting the in~ense
pressure on Net~y~m to
resume construction !:mce
the moratorium ends.
''The freeze in the West
Bank is incorrect and its
good that it is ending,"
Yishai told Israel Radio.
as the meetings in Egyp
were taking place.
On Sunday. Netan~~ahu
seemed to reject a otal
frec?.e on construcl ion.
}lc said Israel would not
of
build
thousands
planned homes. But
\Vithout providing dl:l ails
or a timeline, he ! aid,
''We will not freeze the
lives of the residents '
Although some analysts caution that any
peace deal faces dau 1ting
obstacles. Clinton has
said an initial roun 1 of
talk!\ in Washin!!ton on
Sept. 2 generate~d J some
momentum.

considers terror charges for cleric ai-Awlaki
and ha becqme fliQaida's leading Englishspeaking \Oicc for rcmliting and moti\u.tting terrorists.
Counterterrorism
officials said ai-Awlaki.
since mtd-2009. has
become a key operational
ligme who selects targets
·
and gives orders.
Shortly after the failed
Christmas Day bombing
of a Detroit-bound U.S.
airliner. which officials
belie\c aJ-Awlaki had a
hand in planning, the
White House took the
unprecedented step of
authoriz.ing the CIA to

kill or capture hin 1 A
decision on crim nal
charges is expected i the
next several weeks, fficials said. speakin~ on
conditi011 of anonym1 · to
discuss the deliherati( s.
The Nigerian
an
charged with the atte1 pled
bombing,
U 1ar
Farouk Ahdulmutalj~ah,
~uggestcd in Dt.!troit 1ed~
eral court .~londa) th&lt; he
wanted to plead guilt~· to
some charges. raisin the .
possibility that his CO•operation could form the
foundation for chatge:.
against al-1\wlaki.

The Obama administration ha" rewritten the
nation's counterterrorism
stmtcgy, treating terrorism.
as Ol)th a wartime issue to
be handled by the nuhtary
and CIA. and a legal issue
to be settled in com1.
That has alternately
angered both liberals anti
conservatives.
Con~ressional

Repuhltcans have cast the
adminbtration as soft on
terrorism for using criminal courts rather than nulitary tribunals to prosecute suspected attackers.
Ch il libcrtie~ groups.

meanwhile, ha' c calle.d
lethal action against alAwlaki unconstitutional.
AI-Awlnki is living in a
mountainous n:gion of
Yemen. sheltered by his
family and religious lead~
crs who say h~ has no tics
to terrorism. Yemeni ofticiab havt.! said they will
not tum him over to the
U.S. because. as a Yemeni
citizen. ht.! must be prosecuted there.
Yemen has been an
unreliable U.S. partner
when it comes to holding
terrorists in prison, hO\\ever, and charging al-

.,
~

f

measure to the Hou ...e.
which is likely to
approve it for Obama's
signature.
The bill is probably the
last piece of Democrats·
ambttious jobs· agenda
that would become law
bef(&gt;rl' midtenn elections.
wh1ch will determine
~mall businr~ses.
v. hether Democrats keep
Democrat crack U a their majorities in the
GOP filibuster of the bill House
and
Senate.
v. ith the help of t\\O Democrats started the
Republicanc;:
S'!n&lt;;. year with ambitious
George Voinq\ ich of plans for a series of bills
Ohio
and
George designed to boo"t the
LeMieux of Florida.
economy and job creThe 61 -37 tally sets the ation but have relath ely
stage for a final 'ote later little to show for it. The
this week to retum the nationwide unemploy-

Av.·!aki in the U.S.
make it easier
Obama
demand he be
Such charges,
would come with vv·~·l\.u..l
anc.J intelligence-o,tlnl'll-•n
risks. Count,.rtPrrni~i
officials regard
as a terrorist
not just a
they have revealed
specifics. Charg'
Awlakt with having
involvement in tPrrnl·1"
coultl require the lJ. . to
rt.!veal evidence gle meJ
from foreign wiretap.s or
confitlential informants

..

�=----------------------------------------~--~----

--

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Wednesday, Sept.
15
CARPENTER
Meigs
County
irefighters'
iation, 7:30 p.m.
ssion on changes
radio frequencies to
narrow banding will be
the main topic although
no facts and figures are
available at this time.
Thursday, Sept. 16
POMEROY
American
Cancer
Society Meigs County
Advisory
Bo ardiS u rvivo rsh i p
Taskforce · meeting,
noon, banquet room of

Wild Horse Cafe.
MIDDLEPORT
Free community dinner,
4:30-6 p.m., Dave Diles
Park, pulled pork. hot
dogs, baked beans,
desserts, drinks. sponsored by Heath United
Methodist Church.
· Friday Sept. 17
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees 3
p.m. at the office building.
Saturday, Sept 18
POMEROY
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
Employees
annual reunion, 1 to 4
p.m. at the Mulberry

Community
Center.
Potluck with beverages
furnished. Memorabilia
to be on display.
POMEROY The
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
Employees
will have their annual
reunion 1 to 4 p.m. at
the
Mulberry
Community
Center.
The event will be
potluck with beverages
furnished. A table of
memorabilia will be a
feature of the reunion.
ROCKSPRINGS
Antique tractor pull
hosted by Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club, 1

p.m.,
Rocksprings
Fairgrounds. No charge
for spectators.
Monday, Sept. 20
HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville
Senior
Citizens,
11
a.m.,
Presbyterian
church,
blood pressure taken,
potluck afterwards.
Tuesday, Sept. 21
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323, D of A,
7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Church events
Saturday, Sept. 18
SYRACUSE
Beacon Ministries, open

Continuum of Care slates Saturday fund raiser
POMEROY
A
fund-raiser on Saturday.
Sept. 18. at the Kountry
Campground
Resort
near Pomeroy. sponsored by the GalliaJackson-Meigs- Vinton
Continuum of Care, will
vide funding toward
eting the needs of the
•
meless in the fourcounty area.
The
event
titled
"Driving
Out
Homelessness" will run
from I0 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
the Campground (740)
formerly
992-6488
Royal Oak Park, 44705
Resort Road) and .will
include a car show,
Chinese auction. activities for children, food ,
McCabe Entertainment
and entertainment by a
popular local band.

''Still Standing:·
Interested parties can
register for the car show
between 10 a.m. and
noon for a $ I 0 entry fee
and can win trophies
that include best of
show up to 1989 and
runner up same category, also best of show
1990 and up and runnerup in the ~arne category.
There will also be
numerous other awards
and door prizes.
Trophy award presentatic:ms will begin at 2:30
p.m. In addition to the
Chinese auction which
is a combination of a
raffle and an auction
where bidders can buy
tickets to try to win specific prizes. the event
ha&lt;; the option of a silent
auction. and a 50/50

drawing. Ticket drawings will begin at
approximately 3 p.m .
Those who purchase
tickets but cannot be
there should designate
someone to claim their
winnings since all items
need to be distributed
the day of the event.
The Continuum of Care
is a consortium of numerous
agenctes
in
Southeastern Ohto, offering assistance through a
variety of ways and in
cooperation with other
agencies. The emphasis of
the work is with those in
poverty, unemployment,
Jack of transpottation, and
limited resources or support systems.
The agency assists
with temporary shelter
and has the mission to

build a stable union of
community
partners
\\ ho work together to
make the most of federal , state and local
resources. The goal is to
establish linkages to
support the planning.
funding, and development of housing options.
Another goal is provide
other supportive services to the homeless
population and those at
risk of becoming homeJess living in the four
county area.
Questions about the
fundraiser may be directed to any member of the
Advocacy I Fundraiser
Committee:
Linda
Michael (740) 992-3883,
Lisa Minshall (740) 4465500 Ext.411 or Melissa
Kimmel (740) 446-6752.

Dance studiO marks anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - To
The Pointe Dance Studio
will celebrate its second
anniversary with an open
house from 4-6 p.m .,
Saturday, Sept. 18. The
cnt is .free and open to
! pubhc.
ccording to studio
owner Sarah Roush,
dancers and staff from To
The
Pointe will provide
"
games, makeovers, dancing and birthday cake for
those who attend.
"We want every child
to know the joy of dancRoush
said.
ing,"
''Having this spectal
birthday party for the
community is our way of
making sure that happens. Even if taking
dance classes isn't a possibility for some children, at least they will be
able to come to the party
and celebrate the beauty
and joy of dance ··
To The Pointe is located at 2.61 State Route 7
North in Gallipolis. For
information. call 7 40441-9542.

e

Church annual homecoming, with Pastor
Gene Goodwin speak·
ing at 11 a.m ., a potluck
luncheon at 12:30 p.m.,
afternoon service at 2
p.m.
featuring The
Sonshine Singers and
local talent.
Monday, Sept. 20
SYRACUSE
Revival,
7
p.m .,
Syracuse Community
Church on Second St.,
Pastor Denver McCarty,
singing
by
Gospel
Bluegrass Gentlemen,
Bill Carney, Debbie
Dodrill, Sid and Carol
Hayman, Sandra Wise.

ASK DR. BitOTHERS

Co-worker makes habit
of stealing supplies
I&gt;ear Dr. Brothers: I
have a good buddy at
work. We joke around and
go to lunch. and have collaborated on a bunch of
neat projects together.
He's a neat dude who has
a Jot of talent and is going
to move up the corporate
ladder quickly. so I am
basking in his reflected
glory while he is around.
Anyway, he has one bad
Dr. Joyce Brothers
habit: He takes stuff home
from the stockroom all the
time. It's just office sup- don't think his actions fit
plies and stuff, and he with the image of a ris\ng
gives it to his kids. but I superstar, and you should
wonder if I should tell him tell him so.
that's not cool. - S.K.
The other thing you
Dear S.K.: Wow. you might try- if your opinshould tell him that's not ion of him doesn't count
cool before someone in for as much as you
authority finds out and · would like - is to ask
tosses him out on the him to consider what this
sidewalk. or calls in law behavior says to his chilenforcement. You know. dren. Surely they must
in today's economy. busi- know that their dad is
nesses are finding it bringing home stuff from
awfully hard to protect his office for them to use.
the bottom line. and your They will think this must
buddy is not ac.&lt;nowl- be OK since they look up
edging that his kind of to Dad, and that will
petty theft really can become part of their own
make a difference. If he ethical
background.
is not careful. his job Later on. as they get
could be eliminated to older, there will be a time
make up for all the when they realize that
increased costs in office what he was doing was
supplies! Even if he wrong. That should help
docsn 't see it as a dollars- stop the pilferage. if
and-cents type of issue, nothing else will.
he should at least think
about what it says about
him to those who are in
the know. I'm sure you

Keeping Meigs &amp;
Gallia informed
Submitted photo
To the Pointe dance instructor Sarah Roush is shown with assistant instructor Sabryna Strauss and students Lexey Adams, Savannah Wilcoxon and
Olivia Tabit.

Rio Grande students to study in Wales

RIO GRANDE - Six
area college students,
four
from
Meigs
County, departed for
Great Britain Sunday
from the Charleston.
W.Va., airport, destined
for the ancient land of
Wales.
Students going on the
trip
\\ere
Krystle
Clemens of Austintown,
Joe Rosier of Shade.
Angela Stuart. Matt
Hosken
and
Derek
Weber, all of Pomeroy.
and Kia Wright. of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
The six were selected
from among a slate of
candidates to participate
in Rio Grande's international Welsh Student
Exchange program with
The University of Wales:
Trinity Saint David (on
internet, www.triniaintdavid.ac.uk) in
armarthen,
Wales.
which provides the stu·
dents the opportunity to
study abroad for a
semester while earning
college credits toward
their degrees from Rio
Grande.
Likewise. six Welsh students
from
The
University of Wales will
study at Rio Grande for

house/kick off, 1-4 p.m.,
located in the former
Bear's
Market/B&amp;R
Market,
food,
door
prizes, music by Chad
Dodson, Todd Wolfe and
River City Fellowship.
Sunday, Sept. 19
RACINE
Homecoming at Mt.
Moriah Church of God,
Mile Hill Road, with
morning service at 9:45
a.m.,
with
Herman
Stuart
as
speaker.
Dinner at 11 :30 a.m.
Service at 1 p.m. with
special singing.
ALFRED
- Alfred
United
Methodist

~unbnp
~imes -~entinel
Me1gs • 992-2155
Gallia • 44&amp;2342

Sign Up Online! WW't't.loeaiNetcom

~~

C8l Tooay&amp;Sa-19

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Rell.lble Internet Access Since 199-4

Memorial Bike Run

UNITED EXPRESS

In Memory of

Timothy Todd Klein SR.
September, 18th

Submitted photo
Krystle Clemens ol Austintown, Joe Rosier of Shade, Angela Stuart, Matt Hosken
and Derek Weber, all of Pomeroy, and Kia Wright, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., left to
right, University of Rio Grande students, left Sunday from the Charleston, W.Va.,
airport for Great Britain.

a semester this fall. The
Welsh Student Exchange
program is coordinated
by Rio Grande's Madog
Center for Webh Studies
at Rio Grande. The
director is Jeanne Jindra.
As representatives of
the Umversity of Rio
Gmndc, as well as the

United States. all six
Rio Grande students
will live on campus and
pursue a full time course
of study in Wales. eventually transferring their
course
credits
and
grades back to Rio
Grande after they return
to the U.S. shortly

before Christmas.
As they work at their
studies and Jearn more
of the other language of
Wales (in Wales. both
English and Welsh arc
spoken), they plan to
take weekend excursions to include historic
castles and cathedrals.

'

Sign up will be $10.00 per bike
which will be collected as you park
in reserved parking area on
Court Street Parking for bikes only. Sign-in
will start 11 :45am till 12:45pm 1st bike out will
be older brother Robert Klein with
Timothy Todd Sr.'s oldest son
Timothy Todd Jr. Klein following.
Other bikes continue to follow,
run will start out toward Union Ave
go through Memorial Site
&amp; end at Ponderosa in
Jackson, Ohio for dinner.
There will be tickets sold at time
of sign up $1.00 each for drawing
for chance to win Gift Certificates
$50 from Dettwillers Lumber two $1 0
Gift Certificates from Powells food Fair
&amp; a $1.0 Gift Card from Kings Hardware.
Which at this time I
•
(Tammy Sue Klein) would like to
Tnank all our sponsors
whom sponsored for shirts
&amp; gift Certifrcates.
All benefits received will go to
Timothy Todd Klein Sr.'s wife
Usa Klein to help out with expenses.

�r---------------·-------------

Page.A4

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Septernberts,2o1o

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cot~gress

slaall make 110 law respectit~g an
establislrmerrt of reli~iotr, or prohibiting the free
exercise tlrereoj; or abridging tire freedom of
speech, or of tire press; or tire ri~lrt of the people
peaceably to assemble, atrd to petitiotr the
Gor,erument for a redress ofgrievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

August retail sale~ up 0.4 pet.,
best in 5 months
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Retail sales ro~e in Au&amp;ust by the largest amount in
five ~onths. addtng to evtdence that a late spring econoiiDc swoon was temporary and not the start of
another recession.
Retail sales increa-;ed 0.4 percent last month. the
Cof!Ullen:e Dep~ent said Tuesday. It was the second
strrught m~&gt;nthly mcn:ase ~d the biggest gain since Man:h.
Excludmg a declme tn autos. retail sales increased
0.6 percent. That followed two relatively flat months
and a sharp drop in May.
A separate Commerce report said inventories held
by businesses_jumped in July by the largest amount in
two years whtle sales rebounded after two months of
declines. The rebound in sales was an encouragino
sign that consumer demand is rising after two weak
mo:tt.hs. Businesses bt~ild up their stocks when they
anttc1pate stron¥er retml demand in the months ahead.
The strength 111 August retail sales came in a number of are~s from department stores to clothing stores
and sportmg goods outlets. However, bigger-ticket
items s.uch as furniture and electronics fell last month.
Retail sales rose a revised 0.3 percent in July after
posting back-to-back declines in May and June.
Those decreases had raised concerns that the economic recovery was losing strength and that a second
recession was possible. Consumer spending accounts
for 70 percent of total economic activity.
Even with the sales rebound in July and August.
economists expect 2 percent growth in the second half
of this year. That would be better than the 1.6 percent
growth rate in the April-to-June quarter. But it would
be well below the Jnnuary-to-March quarter's 3.7 percent growth rate and not enough to lower the 9.6 percent unemployment rate.
Analysts cautioned that the August retail sales figures may not indicate a trend. Discounts on back-toschool merchandise helped drive gains of ·lowerpriced items. such as clothing. they note. At the same
time. the weak housing market has dampened demand
for more expensive items. Furniture sales were down
0.5 percent. the fourth decline in the past five months.
· Part of the boost in August reflected tax-free shopping
days offered as an incentive by several states to spur sales.
Economists said it was not surprising that consumer
spending is not growing at a faster pace given all the
problems facing households.
One area of weakness last month was auto sales,
which fell 0.7 percent. That confirms earlier reports
that August was the auto industry's worst month for
sales since 1983. General Motors, Toyota. Honda and
Ford all reported declines last month compared to
July and also compared ~o August 2009.
But other areas were strong. Department stores and
general merchandise stores both posted 0.4 percent
gains. The latter category includes big chains such as
Wal-Mart and Best Buy.
·
Analysts said they expect stores will need to keep
discounting to get shoppers to spend this fall and for
the holid~y.
Sales were up I .9 percent at gasoline stations. an
increase that in part reflected higher pump prices.
Excluding gasoline stations, retail sales would have
risen 0.3 percent in August after a 0.1 percent July
increase.

The Daily Sentinel
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Correction Polley
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to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story. call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156

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Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

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AP-CNBC Poll: Investors
wary of stock trading •
BY ALAN ZIBEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wild gyrations on Wall Street
have made U.S investors leery of
buying individual stocks and
skeptical that the market is a fair
place to park their money.
In an Associated Press-C.:'\BC
poll of investors. 61 percent said
the market's recent volatility has
made them Jess confident about
buying and selling individual
stocks. And the majority of those
surveyed - 55 percent - said
the market is fair only to some
investors.
The survey confirms that average investors have been growing
more concerned about the stock
market as a safe place to invest for
retirement. And news about the
market has been unsettling for
&lt;&gt;rdinary investors of late: More
than 60 percent of those surveyed
said they had paid attention to
news reports about swings in the
stock market.
Perhaps as a result, investors
have been moving their money
away from stocks and into bonds.
which are generally more conservative investments and less
volatile.
Louise Pollard, 72. and her hus
band have decided to shift the
bulk of thelf portfolio into bonds
after the market nose-dived two
years ago. The pair, a retired engineer and computer systems librarian who live near Salt Lake City.
remain comfortable financially.
But they don't foresee their
finances climbing back to the
level of three years ago.
"At this point. I would not want
to get back into regular stocks,"
Pollard said. "I don't have any
confidence in the stock market. to
be honest. It's just a gut feeling.''
This shift among investors like
the Pollards has been huge. From
January 2008 through July 2010,
investors pulled a net $244 billion
out of stock mutual funds. according to the Investment Company
Institute. which represents mutual
funds that collectively hold about
$11 trillion.
While all that cash was tlowing
out of stocks, investors put nearly
$589 billion into bond funds over
that 31 month period.
May's "flash crash," in which

the Dow Jones industrial average
plunged nearly 1,000 points in
less than a half-hour. has added to
investors· worries. But those
polled in the AP-CNBC survey
blame Wall Street's swings more
on economic uncertainty and
company news than on computerdriven trading. Few considered
the move to high-tech transactions harmful.
Wealthier people assign more
blame to computers for dramatic
stock market moves. Among
those with assets of at least
$250,000, mor6 than half blamed
computerized trading for the big
swings. compared with about a
third of those with a net worth of
less than $50,000.
The perception that the market
is unfair is widespread. Nearly 90
percent of those with portfolios of
less than S5U.UUO sa1d the market
is unfair to small investors.
People with substantially more
money agreed. More than 75 percent of investors worth at least
$250.000 say the market is unfair
to the little guy.
Frank Schorr. 61. a computer
network analyst from outside
Atlanta. says the market's downturn has confinned his conservative approach to investing. He has
always kept about 70 percent of
his retirement savings in bond
funds and other stable assets. with
the remainder in stock mutual
funds. That's kept him from suffering big losses.
''I've had too many friends over
the years lose their shirts," 111 the
stock market. he said. "I'm getting too close to retirement to go
messing around too much with
anything speculative."
The poH also found widespread
distrust in regulators· ability to
oversee the financial system. Just
8 percent expressed strong confidence
in regulators.
Half
expressed little or no confidence.
includjng 16 percent with no confidence at all.
Asked to rate six investment
options as a way to build wealth,
mutual funds were the fa\·orite.
with 62 percent calling them a
good investment. Exchange traded funds - increasingly populnr
securities that track an indt.·x or
basket of assets apd can be traded
throughout the day - finished at

the bottom, endorsed by just over
a quarter of those polled. About
half had no feelings either way
about these funds, perhaps indicating tl;lat little is still known
about them among the general
public.
Drawing the highest number of
negative reviews were real estate
and savings accounts. Both were
considered bad investments by
about I in 4 people.
Better-off individuals were
more likely to give good grades to
most investments than more modest mvestors. About three quarters
of those earning at least $100.000
annually rated mutual funds as
good investments. compared with
58 percent of. those making less
than $50.000.
As for individual stocks. more
than 60 percent of investors ·
asset!- of $250.000 or
favored them, compared with
than half of those worth under
$50.000.
That sentiment switches for
bank savings accounts. Sixty percent of those with investments
worth less than $50.000 liked savings accounts. compared with 35
percent with assets of $250.000
and up.
Americans appear to have heeded the advice of investment gurus
who have long warned against
reacting to short-term swings in
the market. Nearly 80 percent of
those surveyed said the best way
to make money in the stock market is to buy stocks and hold them
for a long time before selling.
The Associated Press-C~BC
poll on investing was conducted
Aug. 26-Sept. 8. 2010 and is
based on 1,035 inten ie\\S of
adults who own stocks. bonds or
mutual funds. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.9
percentage points.
The national survey wa~ conducted online by Knowled.
Networks of Menlo Park. Cali .
under the direction and supervision of AP's polling unit.
Knowledge Networks initially
contacted people using traditional
telephone and mail polling methods and followed with an online
interview. People chosen for the
study \Vho had no Internet access
were given it for free.

�Obituaries

Riverfest duck derby set for Saturday

Gregory Cundiff
Gregory Keith Cundiff, 60, Story's Run Road,
Cheshire, died Sunday, Sept. 12, 2010, at his resice.
e was born Jan. 16, 1950, in Mason, W.Va., son of
late Robert and Hazel Nelson Cundiff.
Surviving are his wife, Brinda Cundiff; daughters:
• Nancy of Mount Vernon, Charlotte of Reys, Adrian of
Chauncey and Samantha of Rutland; a son, Shelby, of
Huntington, W.Va.; sisters, Jackie Blackburn of
Columbus and JoAnn Whaley of Delaware; and
brothers, Ralph (Lois) Cundiff and Charles Cundiff;
and 14 grandchildren.
Also preceding him in death were Eugene Cundiff,
Betty Charles, Eddie Patrick and Anna Jo Patrick and
Robert, Jr. and Lucille Cundiff.
Funeral will be at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 15,
2010 at Ewing Funeral Home with Pastor Ed Varney
officiating. Burial will be at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call from 9 a.m. until the time of funeral at the funeral home.

Deaths
Gladys Jones
Gladys Christina Gleason Jones, 85, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Sept. 13, 2010, at St.
Mary's Medical Center.
Funeral will be at 11 a.m. on Thursday, Sept. 16,
0, at the Bellemead United Methodist Church, and
• rial in Vansickle Cemetery. Visitation will be from
6-8 p.m. on Wednesday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the church.
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
85. Light north wmd.
Wedilesday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
56. East wind arotmd 5 mph
becoming calm.
ThurSday: A chance of
showers, with thunderstorms also possible after
3 p.m. Partly sunny, with a
high near 83. South wind
between 5 and 15 mph.
Chance of precipitation is
40 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch,

except higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms before 10
p.m., then showers likely
and possibly a thunderstorm between 10 p.m. and
midnight, then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 60. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
New rainfall amounts
between a quarter and half
of an inch possible.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - After
plans were finalized for
the duck derby Saturday
at
the
Sternwheel
Riverfest the Pomeroy
Merchants Association's
attention turned to downtown beautification for
the holiday season.
It was noted that ducks
still remain to be "adopted" in business places,
and will also be available
at the festival until just
before the 4 p.m. derby.
Grand prize will be $500
in Chamber Bucks, with
savings bonds from
Pomeroy's three banks,
Farmers, Ohio Valley,
and Peoples, along with a
variety of prizes donated
by merchants.
The names of the winners will be announced

Common
Pleas
POMEROY - Clerk
of Court Diane Lynch
filed the following as part
of the court's public
record:
Domestic
• Divorce action filed
by Robert A. Marcinko
against Yajie
Yang,
Flushing, N.Y.
Civil
• Foreclosure action
filed by John Deere Credit
against . Roy R. Smith,
Portland, and others.
• Delinquent land tax·
foreclosure action filed by
Peggy Yost, county treasurer, against Peggy Lewis,
Middleport, and others.

911

Taco Bell

•

Fines
fromPageAl

Council accepted a bid
from Joe DeMarco,
Middleport, for preparation for and painting of
the freight depot in Diles
Park. DeMarco submitted the lowest bid of
$350. Paint will be provided by the village.
Council also:
• Set trick or treat for
6-7 p.m. on Oct. 28.
• Approved a wage
adjustment for Mike
Klein, police department

employee, to reflect new
mayor's court duties.
• Approved
the
mayor's report of fees
and fines collected in
August, $35,933.26.
• Approved payment
of bills, $35,933.26.
• Excused Councilman
Shawn Rice.
• Approved monthly
reports of the finance,
income tax, refuse and
public works departments.

Budget
fromPageAl
Most of those bills were
approved for payment as
part of last week's regular business, but the dission was a sign of
blems . ma_ny ?ffices
are expenencmg m one
• form or another.
Some office holders are
seeing an increase in costs
because their offices are
simply busier. Clerk of
Courts Diane Lynch said
she has seen a necessary
increase in supplies costs,
for example, because of a
larger number of cases
filed in her office.
The personalized file
jackets cost over .$1 each,
,,,

and cannot be substituted
with less expensive folders because they represent a permanent public
record which must withstand time and wear.
Paper costs and cost of
other
supplies
has
increased in proportion
to the caseload as well,
although Lynch said
other measures have
allowed her to save costs.
While some of those
costs can be anticipated,
others cannot, she noted,
and that is a challenge for
anyone managing a county office in the present
economic climate.

Meigs

911 dispatched these calls
for emergency assistance:
Monday
2:39 p.m., Tornado
Road, motor vehicle col4:34
p.m.,
lision;
Pomeroy Pike Road,
weakness; 5:01 p.m.,
Ebenezer Street, anxiety;
5:37 p.m., Broderick
Hollow Road, diabetic
emergency; 6:19 p.m.,
Ohio 7/0hio 143, motor
vehicle collision; 6:53
p.m., East Main Street,
Pomeroy, pain; 7:47p.m.,
East Memorial Drive,
dizziness; 8:43 p.m.,
Lebanon Township Road
43, difficulty breathing;
9:42 p.m., North Second
Avenue, Middleport, person hit by car; 10:37
p.m., Liberty Lane, code
added; 9:51 p.m., East
Second Street, Pomeroy,
laceration.
Thesday
6:15 a.m., Railroad

Water

fromPageAl
approved a $250,000
grant for the Community
Improvement
Corporation to build a
road in the Monkey Run
area. This road will run
pas~ the restaurant and
will tie in to West Main
and Locust Streets. The
road will come complete
with drains, concrete
curbs and be black
topped.
The CIC is investing
$100,000 in the construction of the road estimated
to cost $350,000. The
Ohio Department of
Transportation will oversee the project and after
the road is built, the village will own it.

following the derby. Prizes
are to be picked up at the
Chamber of Commerce
anytime after that.
Susan Clark-Dingess
reported that gift bags for
the captains of sternwheelers
here
for
Riverfest are being prepared, and more items
are needed.
It was announced by
Bill Quickel, president,
that the Christmas parade
will be held on Nov. 28.
In preparation for that
decorations were discussed
and George
Wright proposed purchasing new lights of a
long-lasting quality for
the wreaths which adorn
the period lamp posts in
downtown Pomeroy.
Since the Merchants'
bank account is at a low,
donations for purchasing
those lights are being

taken. Dan Short of the
Ohio Valley Bank gave a
personal gift of $200 to
kickoff the project.
Tina Rees, Pomeroy
Peoples Bank, advised
that the bank will again
this year have Santa
available after the parade
to meet and greet children. Charlene Hoeflich
volunteered to again this
year handle the annual
cookie, candy and crafts
contests where winners
are selected and prizes
provided by banks.
It was noted that the
limited edition Christmas
bulbs in red gloss featuring an etching in white of
the
Meigs
County
Courthouse are for sale in
the banks and by several
merchants.
Clark-Dingess, Dan
Short, and Hoeflich were
named to the nominating

committee.
Promotion of shopping
local to improve the
economy was encouraged, particularly since it
is the local merchants
which contribute to the
schools and many other
organizations. It was
decided to prepare a list
of local services and merchandise available here
as they pertain to schools
and students, such as
class rings, invitations,
and senior pictures, to be
mailed out to each school
district.
Printed letters to Gov.
Ted Strickland regarding
the need for funding to
improve restrooms at the
two U.S. 33 parks were
distributed to the members.
The 4th annual Meigs
Local Alumni Association
reunion to be held Oct. 12 was announced.

For the Record

POMEROY -

bring the franchise to
Pomeroy for the past two
years and felt the restaurant, with its reasonable
prices, would do well in
the area.
"It gives everyone
another choice of food in
the area," Crow said.
"I'm just a big fan of
Taco Bell and think it
will do well here."
In addition to a new
restaurant, Pomeroy will
also see additional economic development in the
form of a new road which
will be constructed near
Taco Bell. As reported in
June in The Daily
Sentinel, the Appalachian
Regional Commission

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.ntydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,Septentber15,2010

tracks, Hobson, diabetic davit, Village of Rutland .
emergency; 7:56 a.m.,
Audrey
Haley
to
New Lima Road, fall.
James E. Haley, Connie
L. Nelson, deed, Rutland
Village; Mildred Grate
to Roger D. Coates,
Diana K. Coates, correcPOMEROY
Recorder
Kay
Hill tive deed; Roger D.
Diana
K.
reported the following Coates,
Coates,
to
Nicole
transfers of real estate:
Rachel Gorman Stout, Phillips, deed, Rutland;.
Harold Stout, Yvonne K. Diana Stover to Brett
deed,
Richardson, Hiram A. McCammon,
Bedford.
Richardson, Sr., to Eddie
Frank Herald, Jr.,
L. Nelson, Connie M.
Nelson, deed, Sutton; deceased, to Travis M.
certificate,
Bobby
Joe
Rupe, Pierce,
deceased,
to Karen Orange/Chester/Village
Frank
Rupe, affidavit, Village of Pomeroy;
Herald, Jr. to Travis M.
of Pomeroy.
Terry L. Rieber, Judith Pierce, to Dinah M.;
Rieber, to Carol Sue Stewart, certificate of
Brickles, deed, Village transfer, Village of
of
of Pomeroy; Loraine Pomeroy/Village
Kiser, Kenneth E. Kiser Syracuse/Chester; Frank
to Christopher T. Wolfe, Herald, Jr., deceased, to
deed, Sutton; James A. Dinah M. Stewart, M.
Haley, deceased, to Travis Pierce, certifiAudrey B: Haley, affi- cate, Rutland.

Recorder ·

Local Stocks

fromPageAl
charges. It reads as follows:
For 5/8 and 3/4-inch
service, a monthly base
charge of $21.50 for the
first 2,000 gallons of
water plus 65 cents for
each 100 gallons or fractions thereof of usage in
excess of 2,000 gallons
per month. The current
fee for overage is 55
cents for each 100 gallons over 2,000 gallons
per month.
For l-inch service, a
monthly base charge of
$53.50 for the ftrst 2,000
gallons of water plus 65
cents for each 100 gallons or fractions thereof
of usage in excess of
2,000 gallons per month.
The current fee for overage is 55 cents for each
100 gallons over 2,000
gallons per montb.
For 1-1/2-inch service
a monthly base charge of
$84.50 for the fust 2,000
gallons of water plus 65
cents for each 100 gallons or fractions thereof
of usage in excess of
2,000 gallons per month.
The current fee for overage is 55 cents for each
100 gallons over 2,000
gallons per month
For 2-inch service, a
monthly base charge of
$143.50 for the first
2,000 gallons of water
plus 65 cents for each
100 gallons or fractions
thereof of usage in excess
of 2,000 gallons per
month. The current fee
for overage is 55 cents
for each 100 gallons over
2,000 gallons per month.
For 4-inch service, a
monthly base charge of
$274.50 for the ftrst
2,000 gallons of water
plus 65 cents for each
100 gallons or fractions
thereof of usage in excess
of 2,000 gallons per
month. The current fee

City Holding (NASAEP (NYSE) - 36.42
for overage is 55 cents
Akzo (NASDAQ)
DAQ)-28.90
for each 100 gallons over 59.82
Wendy's (NYSE) ........
2,000 gallons per month.
4.55
Big Lots (NYSE) For 6-inch service, a 33.36
Daily stock reports are
monthly base charge of
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) the 4 p.m. ET closing'
$463.50 for the first -28.00
quotes of transactions for
2,000 gallons of water
BorgWarner (NYSE) September 14, 2010, pro-'
plus 65 cents for each -47.40
vided by Edward Jones
100 gallons or fractions
Century Alum (NAS- financial advisors Isaac
thereof of usage in excess DAQ)-11.34
Mills in Gallipolis at
of 2,000 gallons per
Champion (NASDAQ) (740) 441-9441 and
month. The current fee -1.27
Lesley Marrero in Point
for overage is 55 cents
Charming
Shops Pleasant at (304) 674-·
for each l 00 gallons over (NASDAQ)- 3.51
0174. Member SIPC.
2,000 gallons per month.
For
master-meter
accounts such as certain
' apartment complexes, a
base charge of $21.50 per
unit per month, plus 65
cents for each 100 gallons of usage in excess of
the product of 2,000 gallons times the number of
units in the complex.
Hydrant feeds are $4
per month.
Tap fees: 3/4-inch line,
$330 plus $8.25 per foot
of highway crossing; linch line, $495 plus
$8.25 per foot of highway crossing; 2-inch
line, $660 plus $11 per
foot of highway crossing;
4-inch line, $770 plus
cost of pipe.and materials
used; 6-inch line, $1,320
plus cost of pipe and
materials used; 8-inch
line, $2,200 plus cost of
pipe and material used.
Bulk water fee is $4.75
per each 100 gallons.
Water deposit fees will
go from $75 to $100;
reconnect fees will go
from $50 to $100.
Anyone found using
water that is unauthoBeth Sergent/photo
rized to receive service
Country
music
singer
Bucky
Covington
(pictured) got
will be charged $500.
Pomeroy raised the up close and personal with the many fans who flocked
minimum charge for to his free concert at Racine's Second Annual Party in
water rates by a flat $5 the Park this past Saturday.
increase at the beginning
of this year. There are
880 customers who purchase water from the
Village of Pomeroy.

PARTY ON,
BUCKY!

VISit us online at
mydallysentinel.~om

Your online source for news

..

••

•

�Page:A6

The Daily Sentinel

NEW CLIN'IC

Meigs County Fair harness
racing a hit with local fans

Submitted Photo
The Daily Sentinel blanket was won by Pat's Flash with AI Jones in the sulky for
owner David Seif of Waverly whose horses claimed the first two races.
Sentinel photo
Sabrina Blankenship, a supervisor from the Huntington VA Medical Center, is
shown in the reception area at the new Gallipolis VA clinic, which opened its doors
to area veterans on Tuesday. The facility is located in the same complex as Dave's
American Grill behind the Super 8 Motel on Upper River Road in Gallipolis. The
clinic is open from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday. The telephone number
is 446-3934. The facility is operated by the Huntington VA Medical Center. A grand
opening for the Gallipolis facility'is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 7.

Mothman Festival to feature
eyewitness among speakers
movie also is set for
Saturday. The screening
will take place at 4 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT, and will feature a quesW.Va. -The ninth annu- tion and answer session
al Mothman Festival is with Matt Pellowski.
set to take over down- Sunday's festival activitown Point Pleasant this ties will feature more
weekend.
guest speakers as well,
Aside from activitie,s, including: Christa Carr,
including a pageant. 5K .West Virginia State
run/walk, hayride and Social Studies Fair prolive music, this year's ject winner, "Mo,thman,"
festival will feature sev- noon; Ericca Cordier.
eral guest speakers. author of "Mothman
Those speaking at this Returns," 1 p.m.; Kurt
year's festival primarily McCoy, author of "White
have ties to the paranor- Things,'' 2 p.m.; and
mal world and the Andy Colvin. author and
Mothman legend.
Mothman photographer,
All guest speaker pre- 3p.m.
sentations will take place
In addition to guest
at the Historic State speakers, festival-goers
Theater, located on Main will have an opportunity
St. Chad Lambert, cre- to meet with the original
ator of the Mothman Mothman eyewitnesses
Comic and festival regu- on Saturday from 1-3
lar, will take the stage p.m.
first at 10 a.m. Saturday.
Live music will begin
Following Lambert's pre- during the festival on
sentation several other Saturday,
Sept.
18.
guest speakers are lined Performing first will be
up for the day, including: the Jesse Crawford Band
Joe Clark, founder of at noon. Jesse Crawford
Commonwealth is the 2010 Bull 98.3
Paranormal, 11 a.m.; Colgate
Country
Alan Caviness, UFO Showdown winner. Other
investigator, "Caviness groups set to perform on
Report," noon; Susan Saturday include the
Shephard, author and Jeremiah
Meadows
ghost hunter, 1 p.m.; Band, 1 p.m.; Blue Z
Rosemary Guiley, author, Band, 2 p.m.; 40 lb.
2 p.m.; and To~ Ury, Snapper, 3 p.m.; and All
Mothman
eyewttness, of the Above, 4 p.m.
. .
The Mothman Band
1966, 3 p.m.
A special screenmg of also will perform at the
the "Eyes of Mothman" West Virginia State Farm
BY HOPE ROUSH

HROUSH@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

$4.4M for
paralyzed
inmate
COLUMBUS (AP) An Ohio judge has
awarded an ex-inmate
and hi.s children $4.4 million
for
paralyzing
injuries the man suffered
during a 2004 flag football game in prison.
Court documents say
Eric Schnetz was left a
quadriplegic after a collision during the annual
Thanksgiving Day game,
which came while he
served a one-year sentence for domestic violence.
Ohio Court of Claims
Judge Clark Weaver on
Monday
awarded
Schuetz $4.3 million and
another
$80,000
to
Schnetz' three children.
Weaver had previously
ruled that responsibility
for the injury was split
directly between Schnetz
and the Ohio prison system.
Weaver says Schnetz
knew the rough game
was poorly supervised
and could have stopped,
while prison officials
should have stopped the
contest when it became a
tackle football game.

•

Museum at 8 p.m. during
the TNT area hayrides.
Mothman Festival music
will continue on Sunday,
Sept. 19 .with several performances. Those set to
perform are: Jeremiah
Meadows Band, noon;
Mark Smith, 1 p.m.;
Jesse Crawford Band, 2
p.m.; and Parry Casto, 3
p.m.
In addition to music,
festival-goers will be
entertained with a variety
of activities, including
the
Rodders-Club
Cruise-In vintage car
show, slated for noon on
Saturday. Tram rides,
which will take festivalgoers on a tour of historic
downtown
Point
Pleasant, will be available as well. A replica of
the famous "Mystery
Machine"
from
the
Scooby Ooo series also
will be on display during
the festival.
Kentucky's
"Turtle
Man" will return to this
year's festival to entertain the crowd. Saturday
evening will provide
entertainment
with
hayrides in the TNT area.
Hayrides are set to start
at 7 p.m. at the farm
museum.
For information on the
Mothman Festival or for
a complete schedule of
events, visit the Web site,
www.mothmanfestival.c
om.

· Tea party
group says
schools skip
tax forum

own public forums on
taxes.

LEBANON (AP)
An Ohio tea party group
complains it offered a
forum for school districts
to talk about tax issues on
the November ballot but
none showed up.
Lebanon Tea Party
spokesman Joe Wilson
says it's a shame that
schools superintendents
from throughout southwest Ohio's Warren
County skipped his
group's
meeting
Monday night. The
Cincinnati
Enquirer
reports the gathering
drew more than 200 people to the county fairgrounds.
Officials say they
offered school districts
the chance to make 10minute presentations on
their proposed tax hikes
or renewals, with no
questions from the audience.
At least two .superintendents said they were
given short not~ce and
had other commitments.
Several also noted that
they've planned their

CINCINNATI (AP) A Cincinnati woman says
her mother and 2-yearold daughter were caught
up in a drive-by shooting
that killed the older
woman as she protected
the child.
Twenty -year-old
Amanda Eudaly will
bury her 42-year-old
mother, Christine Mae
Withrow, on Wednesday.
She is still stunned by the
events of last Friday
evening.
Eudaly says while they
were sitting on their front
porch chatting, shots
were fired from a car at a
man walking in front of
their aprutment building.
A
bullet
pierced
Withrow's chest as she
wrapped her arms around
her
granddaughter.
Haley. Withrow died
within minutes.
The
Cincinnati
Enquirer reports the
intended victim ran
away. Police say a 17year-old youth is in custody and more arrests are
possible.

Bv Scorr WOLFE
ROCKSPRINGS
Bringing that fairtime
feeling and competitiveness to the Meigs County
Fairgrounds, the Southern
Valley Colt Association
ran off a string of 12 harness races to a good:..sized
crowd in the main grandstand of the infamous
"Rock"
at
the
Rocksprings fairground.
Winners were greeted
in victory lane and presented the 'winning blankets by Horse Princess
Sarah Scheokelberg.
Throughout the day,
Quality Print Shop, longtime sponsor of Harness
Racing at the Meigs
County Fair sold programs and provided
prizes for those in attendance at the horse racing.
There is nothing like
winning in front of the
hometown crowd. Just
ask Pomeroy's Don
Spencer and Racine's
Ralph Calvert. Jr. Both
claimed populru· wins in
respective
divisions
Saturday .
afternos:m.
While Calvert ran just
one race for a perfect
day, Spencer ran several
times and placed in the
races he did not win.
Several Spencer rides
were
provided
by
Michael Swatzel.
Great racing highlighted the sultry day, that was
made tolerable by a continuous breeze. Action on
the track remained hot,
however, as many of the
heats went down to the
wire- some of the photo
finish variety.

M.E. Lavec Ross was
the first race winner with
AI Jones in the sulky for
owner David Seif of
Waverly, Ohio. Seif's
horses claimed the first
two races. Pat's Flash of
Al Jones took the second
race in a close battle with
Blue Rock Annie with
Bill Long, Jr. in the sulky.
The crowd broke into a
barrage of cheers as the
competitors came to the
exciting finisb for The
Daily Sentinel blanket.
Crown Time McJess
with Ryan Holton in the
sulky edged Baywood
Firm withAl Jones in the
sulky. Holton in the seat
of Esther Crownover's
entry broke the David
Seif win streak at two in
another race that went
right down to the wire.
Worries Stay Small
claimed the photo finish
win over early leader Son
of Ben in the fourth race.
The eventual winner
stayed astride Son of Ben
much of the race then both
horses exploded for the
stretch run with Worries
Stay Small and Ryan
Holton in the Bike for
owner Reeves Barnhouse.
Another David Seif
entry claimed the fifth
race with AI Jones in the
bike of Liz's Lexus. Race
five was another close
finish as the winner narrawly
edged
Macs
Audrey for the win.
Pomeroy's Don Spencer
was within one length of
the win in third behind
Andrea Pauline.
The number six went to
Belikin Da Pelican. driver Ryan Holton and

owner DM Stables and
Joyce
McClelland,
Zanesville, over Beer
Money
and
driv,
Charlie Schoonover.
Ryan Holton broug
home the seventh straight
win overall for Bit 0
Looks and owner Paul A.
Stolfa from
Akron.
Holton again brought
home the winner in Race
eight on Sam's Slot
Machine, the C.D. Casto
entry from Milton, W.Va.
Race Nine brought
back much enthusiasm to
the crowd as hometown
favorite Don Spencer in
the sulky of Uncle Billy,
a horse bred, trained,
owned and driven by
Spencer claimed the win.
As the rains started to
trickle in for race ten
Ralph Calvert, Jr. of
Racine beat not only the
competition. but also the
weather. Our Oops-EDam, a horse bred,
trained, owned, and driven by Calvert claimed
the win. Another!.
ovation greeted the l
Calvert in victory lanth
Ryan "Flyin' Ryan·•
Holton claimed the last
two wins for his sixth and
seventh victories at the
fair, the most in one day
according to announcer
Chris Patterson. In race
eleven, as the skies began
to empty a wall or rain,
Little Moola driven by
Ryan Holton, and trained
by
Kathyrn
Hawk
claimed the win, while
one race later in heavier
rain, Holton won for the
seventh time-this time in
the bike behind the
Bailey's Dream entry.

Cincy woman
dies shielding
cliild

Submitted Photo
Horse ~acing provided plenty of action on the Rock Springs Fairground's track on
Saturday of fair week. In Sulky #5 is Don Spencer of Pomeroy driving Steve
Swatzel's horse.

Keeping Meigs
County informed

The Daily
Sentinel
Subscribe • 992·2155

HARVEST SO WEEKEND
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September 17-18-19
Andie Swartz Memorial Weekend
See the Biggest Stars in Dirt Track Racing!
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..

��PAGE2

STE~ELRIVERFEST

"RALLY BY THE RIVER"
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS • SEPTEMBER 16, 17 AND 18
AMPIDTHEATER • POMEROY, OIDO
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
7-9 p.m. Public Cruise- Sponsored by: Athens Shrine Club
Thursday, September 16, 2010
6 pm. Opening Ceremony - Drew Webster Post, American Legion
6:30pm.- Fire Truck Parade
·
7-9 pm. Public Cruise (Sponsored by Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party)
7-10 pm. Entertainment - Southern Accent
Friday, September 17,2010
10 am.-10 p.m.- Craft &amp; Food Vendors Open
Noon - Meigs High School Band
1-2 p.m. -Public Cruise for Seniors and Guests (Special fare $4.00)
5-6 p.m. - Public Cruise
5-6:45 p.m. - Entertainment - Still Standing
6:30-7:30 pm.- Public Cruise
7-9 p.m. - Entertainment - Sirnba
8-9 pm.- Public Cruise
9:15-11:30 pm. - Entertainment - South of the River Band
9:30-10:30 p.m.- Public Cruise
Saturday, September 18, 2010
8 a.m.-2 p.m. - Chili Cook off (Winners will be announced at 12:45 pm.)
9 a.m.-10 pm.- Craft &amp; Food Vendors Open
10 a.m.-1 p.m. - Kids' activities (Free Event- All Kids Welcome)
11 am.-Noon - Chalk Drawing Contest (Sponsored by Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co.)
11 a.m. - Line Throwing Contest (Meet in front of the upper stage area)
2-3 pm. - Entertainment" We've Got Talent 2" All kids up to 18
2-3 p.m.- Public Cruise
3 p.m. - Com Hole Tournament
3:30-5:30 pm. - Entertainment - Cross Road Station
3:30-4:30 p.m. - Public Cruise
4-4:45 p.m.- Ducky Derby Race (Sponsored by Pomeroy Retail Merchants)
5-6 p.m. - Public Cruise
5:45-6:45 pm. -Entertainment- "We've Got Talent" (Anyone 18 or over)
6:30-7:30 p.m.- Public Cruise
7-8 p.m: - Men's Sexy Leg's Contest
7-10 p.m.- Teen Dance- DJ. Rockin' Reggie on the Lower Parking Lot
8-10:30 p.m. - Entertainment - Insured Sound
8-10 p.m.- Fireworks Cruise ·
'
9p.m.- Fireworks
10:30 p.m.-Midnight- Entertainment- Paul Doeffinger
(Tickets available for all cruises at the Stemwheel Riverfest tent.)
I

�PAGE3

Sternwheelers lining the docks at the Pomeroy levee for Riverfest.

WE ·ARE DELIVERING
Home Delivery of
Prescriptions Available

�,PAGE4

f .

Riverfest offering
fun for everyone
BY CHARLENE HOEFICH
HOEFICH@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

The call today is to "rally by the
river" for the annual Sternwheel
Riverfest where there will be fun
crui es on a stem wheeler, entertain, ment galore in the amphitheater,
several competitions for prizes. and
plenty of festival food.
The Ruble Sternwheeler is
docked at the levee to provide
cruises up and down the Ohio River
several times a day through
Saturday. Special cruises will be
one for senior citizens on Friday
afternoon and the nightime one on
Saturday evening offering passengers the thrill of watching the 9
p.m. fireworks display from the
nver.
As for entertainment in the
amphitheater on Friday, the local
band Still Standing will perform at
5 p.m., followed by SIMBA at 7

and South of the River at 9:15.
Activities heat up for Saturday
with performances by Cross Road
Station at 3:30 p.m. and Insured
Sound at 8 p.m., finishing off with
Paul Doeffinger from I 0:30p.m. to
midnight.
Included in the Saturday schedule
are several coinpetitions. "We've
Got Talent" contests, one for those
under 18 ancl the other for those
over 18, sidewalk drawings fo· · e
kids, the chill cooking contes
e
men's sexy leg competition, an
line throwing event are included in
things where trophies, cash, or
both, will be awarded.
The docks along the river are
already filled with sternwheelers
and pleasure boats here for the
festival. The crafters and food vendors are in operation, and festival
goers are finding Pomeroy's parking lot this weekend's favorite
place to play.

-IJtGilltln ~....,.~.
l]POOWQ~~

~IJID~
~~~
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�PAGES

Line throwing

Competitors in the line throwing contest show off their skills, most having
rned while working on the Ohio River, during the contest at Riverfest.
contest begins at 11 a.m. Saturday. Last year's winner was Kevin
of Racine.

The Hobby Ill

�PAGE6

Insured Sound
8 to 10:30 p.m. Saturday

Festival favorite Insured Sound then steps to the microphone from
8-10:30 p.m. on Saturday. The group has played in Pomeroy's
amphitheater for several festivals o~er th~ past several years. Formed
in 1975, Insured Sound has provtded ftrst class entertainment for
audiences across Ohio and West Virginia . The group performs
everything from Frank Sinatra to classic ballads to the sounds of
Motown and favorite dance oldies. Sometimes "Elvis" even makes a
special appearance during the group's show.

We

'

what yo

LLYG
top otec t~en d(vers.

'J

�PAGE7

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto
These young men competed as the Blues Brothers in last year's contest.

'We've Got Talent'
all those who know they have
talent waiting to be discovby a vast, live audience, then
the Sternwheel Riverfest's talent
competitions may be for you.
Whether the talent is playing an
instrument, singing or dancing, the
Sternwheel Festival committee
invites you to take part in "We've
Got Talent" if you are over 18 , or
the "We've Got Talent 2" for those
under 18.
In the "We've Got Talent," the
grand prize will be $200 in cash,

with the runner-up to receive $100.
Contestants take the stage at
5:45p.m.
In the "We've Got Talent 2" the
contest will be he1d at 2 p.m. There
will be a cash prize of $100 for first,
and $50 for the runner-up.
Contestants must provide their
own music (CD, live music or
instrument) and are asked to register
in advance at the Chamber office,
238 W. Main St., in Pomeroy or
by calling the tourism office at
992-2239 . There is no fee to enter.

Middleport Flower Shop
www.middleportflowershop.net
784 N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport, Ohio

7 40-992-3533
Hrs: M-F 9-6; Sat. 9-12

'JOY THE RIVERF£
Owners:
Debbie S arkman &amp; Linda Birtcher

is to exceed our customers expectations
qu4Uty, wdue and professional service"

•

•

�PAGES

Simba
7 to 9 p.m. Friday

Simba Jordan is scheduled to perform Friday at the Riverfest.

LOCATED
ON THE
OHIO RIVER

open
24 Ilr~ ,
-p\ay\and

Boat
docking
,available

423 W. Main Street • Pomeroy, OH
7 40-992-5600

..

�PAGE9

The Pomeroy
Merchants
salute the

2010
Sternwheel Riverfest

We invite you to shop
historic, beautiful downtown
Pomeroy with its interesting
collection of buildings with
a Victorian flavor. Our
variety of specialty shops
and personal service makes
for an exciting shopping
experience along the
Ohio River.

�PAGE 10

Crossroad Station
3:30 to 5:50p.m. Saturday

Saturday's musical
entertainment kicks off
with Crossroad
Station, above, which
performs from 3:30 to
5:50 p.m. This thre~­
piece rock 'n roll band
formed in late 2009
and mixes classic
rock, southern rock
and blues into their
performances. The
band emphasizes driving rhythms and killer
guitar chops to keep
. the audience engaged
and entertained.

South of the River Band
9:15 to 11:30 p.m. Saturday

South of the River Band will also perform.

Over6roof(_~lia6i[itation

Center

rryr Ce{ebration of Life "

333 Page Street Middleport, OH
(7 40) 992-6472
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

�PAGE 11

Paul Doeffinger
10:30 to midnight Saturday

Finally, the festival wraps up with a musical performance by local favorite
Paul Doeffinger who hails from Mason County, W.Va. Doeffinger performs
from 10:30 p.m . - midnight on Saturday, Sept. 18. Doeffinger will send all
the sternwheelers off with songs by everyone from Harry Chapin to Eddie
Money to Keith Whitley, with his own originals thrown in the set.

• ·o one lows to shop for insuranct•· c\ccpt us. So let us do it for }OU.
We look at dozens and onl) recommend companil's that do claims right· like Grange.
Call 740·992-6688 or visit brogan-warncr.wl'llagcnt.tu.com

w

Grange

�PAGE 12

Southern Accent

e

7 to 9 p.m. Thursday

Southern Accent
takes the stage
from 7 to 10 p.m.
Thursday, Sept.
16. Southern
Accent delivers
Southern rock
along with a variety of other popular genres. Band
members Randy
Bunce, Bill
Cremeans and
Wayne Needs,
have local roots
and have been
together for
three years.

Still Standing
5 to 6:45p.m. Friday

Still Standing takes the stage from 5 to 6:45 p.m. on
Friday, Sept. 17. Known as one of Southeast Ohio's
most entertaining bands, the group has a combined
total of over 150 years of playing experience and
plays e'verything from classic rock to country to standards. Band members have local ties and are Ray
Frank, Ron Grimm, Tim Travis, Dennis Wolfe.

�PAGE 13

e Ruble ·sternWheeler

F.or those who enjoy
the festival from the
river instead of the
shore, there will be
many opportunities for
cruises on the Ruble
Sternwheeler. The first
cruise is Wednesday
evening and the last is
the fireworks cruise
on Saturday night.
a special
seniors at
1 p.m. on Friday at the
reduced price of $4.
the public cruises are
$6 a person for those
over 13 and $4 for
childrer'l, and the fireworks two-hour cruise
is $10 a person.
Tickets are on sale at
the Sternwheel
Riverfet tent.

Snow cones are a popular treat at the Riverfest.

~~attM1&lt;~

CHRISTOPHER E.
TENOGLIA
Attorne) At Law

Telephone (740) 992-6368

�PAGE 14

Duck derby offers $500 grand
The "adoption" papers for rubber
ducks to be entered in the annual
derby at the Stemwheel Riverfest will
remain on sale until just before the
derby gets underway at 4 p.m.
Saturday.
The event is sponsored by the ,
Pomeroy Merchants Association, and
is the largest fund raiser for the organiiation which uses the money for
downtown beautification like flower
plantings, banners for the period
lamps, and Christmas decorations.
The grand prize of $500 in Chamber
Bucks will go to the duck which crosses the fmish line first. Ducks are

•

dumped into the river across from
Powells and will float toward the finish line which is a designated location
near the lower parking lot. There will
be boats in the water to retrieve each
duck as it comes across the fmish line
and record the numbers in order.
In addition to the grand dozens of
smaller ones contributed by local merchants and businesses will be awarded. The award presentation will be
held at the stage area right after the
derby concludes. Winners do not have
to be present to win. Prizes can be
picked up at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce offic·e.

"
A&lt;

'

~

~-r~~:
"'"I
-.-~,..,.,-

RIO GRANDE MEIGS CENTER
PROGRAMS:

• Business Management
• Early Clzildliood Del'elopment
• General Studies/Tran.~f"er Module
• Information Technology

BERNARD V. FULTZ CENTER
FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
42377 Charles Chancey Driw
Pomewy. Ohio 45769

t\d;acell! to the Meigs Middle School
and Meigs Hi.~h School Campuses

Your FUTURE within REACH

�PAGE 15

Lida Ann

�PAGE 16

1910 - 2010

'
Serving the Community;
Past_, Present &amp; Future
Racine and s, racuse locutions... Checking, Su' ings. Home &amp; Auto Loans,
Electronic Funds Transfer, Money Market, CD'-;, Wire Transfers, Visa Cards.
Direct Deposit, ATM Cards. Chrbtmas Club, No tar), Retirement Accounts,
ln-house Bookl.eeping, Internet Banking &amp; Online Bill Pay!

�--

~---~--------~~~--~~--------._~--.-~.---------.---------~--~--~~,-~

~

---

..,...___..

----~----~~-~- · - · --.

I

Bl

The Daily Sentine~

Inside
OSU's Boren remembers upset, Page B2
Prep·Notebook, Page B6

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule of upcom1ng
high school varSIIy sporllng events
u•vutvtng teams from Metgs, Mason, and
Gallla counlles.

Wednesday. September 15
Volleyball
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southern. 6 p.m.
Golf
Eastern at Miller, 5 p.m

•

Thursday. September 16
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe, 5:15
p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.m.
South Point at Rtver Valley, 5:30
p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Tolsia, 6 p.m.
St. Joseph Central at Hannan, 7
p.m.
Golf
Southern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford. 4:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant, Huntington St. Joe
at Twin Silo. 4:30 p.m.
Soccer
allia Academy at Logan, 5:30 p.m.
int Pleasant (G) at Poca, 6 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at Point
Pleasant (B), 6 p.m.
Belpre at OVCS, 5 p.m.

APOhioHigh
School Football Poll
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a
state panel of sports writers and
broadcasters rates Ohio high scboot
football teams in the first weekly
Associated Press poll of 2010. by
OHSAA divisions, with won-lost record
and total points (first-plaCe votes in
parentheses):
DIVISION I
1, Cle. Glenville (10)
3·0 203
2, Cin. Colerain (4)
3-0 164
3, Lake. St. Edward (3) 3-0 156
4, Htlliard Davidson (3) 3-0 133
5, Cin. Moeller (2)
3.() 112
6, Pickerington Cent (2) 3-0 91
7, Middletown
3-0 67
8, Cin. Anderson (1)
3-0 59
9. Solon
3-0 57
10, Centerville
3-0 54
Others receiVing 12 or more points: 11,
Can. McKinley 47. 12. Willoughby S
39. 13, Cin. La Salle (1) 38. 14,
Massillon Perry 36. 15, Tol. St. John's
31 16, Cin. St. Xavier 28. 17, Sy1vania
Southview 26. 18, Youngs. Austintown·
Rtch 22. 19, Twinsburg 20. 20, Hilliard
Darby 19. 21. Cle. St. lgnetlus 16. 22,
rrysburg 15. ,
•

DIVISION II
, Cin. Turpin (3)
3.() 144
2, Marion-Franklin (1)
3-0 100
3, Maple HIS. (3)
3-0 91
4, Mentor Lake Cath. (4) 2·1 87
5, Tot. Cent Cath. (1)
3-0 84
6, Avon (1)
3-0 83
7, Lexington (1)
3-0 80
8, Walsh Jesuit
3-0 78
9, warren Howland (1) 3-0 75
10, Winton Woods (1)
2-1 71
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 63. 11,
Trotwood·Madison (1) 63. 13,
Uniontowr) Lake (4) 57. 13, New
Albany (2) 57. 15, Copley (1) 55. 16,
Kent Roosevelt 46. 17, Sunbury Big
Walnut (1) 42. 18, Mansfield Sr.32. 19,
Cols. Walnut Ridge (1) 31. 20, Day
Carroll 27. 21. Zanesville (1) 26. 22,
Cols. St. Charles 19. 23, Ashland 18.
24, Aurora 12.
DIVISION Ill
1, Steubenville (16)
3-0 239
2, Cols. Watterson (6)
3-0 199
3,Youngs.Mooney(1)
2-1 169
4, Cols. DeSales (2)
2·1 109
5, Roger Bacon (1)
3-0 91
6, Clyde
3-0 81
7, Napoleon
3-0 78
T8, Thornville Sheridan 3-0 55
T8, Salem
3-0 55
1o. Alliance Marlington 3-0 54
Others receiVing 12 or more po.nts: 11,
Cin. McNicholas 46. 12, Akr. SVSM 43.
13,Eaton41.14,Cin.Wyoming39.15,
Washington C.H. 21. 16, Minerva 18.
17. Hunting Valley University 17 18,
Akr. Buchtel 16. 19, Spring. Kenton
Ridge (1) 14. 20, Parma Padua 12.

•

DIVISION IV
1, Kenton (8)
3-0 166
2. Cols. Hartley (3)
3-0 139
3, Ottawa-Glandorf (3) 3-0 122
4, Perry (3)
3-0 106
5, Elyria Cath. (1)
3-0 96
6, Kettering Alter (4)
2-1 83
7, Clinton·Massie (1)
3-0 82
8, Akr. Manchester
3-0 81
9, Cin. N. College Hill
3-0 69
10, Genoa Area
3.() 68
Others receiving 12 or more potnts: 11,
Chagrin Falls (1) 66. 12, Carlisle 61.
13, Ironton (3) 56. 14, Campbell
Memorial 42. 15, Heath 38. 16,
Middletown Fenwick 37. 17, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 25. 18, Portsmouth W
24. 19, Peninsula Woodridge 16. 20,
Martins Ferry 13. 21, Metamora
Evergreen 12.21, Germantown Valley
View 12.
DIVISIONV
1, Youngs. Ursuline (20) 3.() 240
2, Versailles (1)
3-o 163
3, Anna
3-0 147
4, Petrick Henry (3)
3-0 138
5, Cuyahoga Hts.
3·0 81
6. N. Union (1)
3.() 71
7, Kirtland
3.() 70
8, Oak Hill (1)
3·0 62
9, Mtnford
3-0 57
10, W.Jefferson
3.() 46
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11.
Defiance Tinora 45. 11, Archbold 45.
13, Fredericktown 43. 13, Collins
Western Reserve 43. 15, Caldwell 27.
16, Lucasville Valley 24. 17, w.
Lafayette Rtdgewood 23. 18, Orwell
Valley (1) 20. 18, Hamilton
20. 20, Lima Cent. Cath. 17. 21,
Henry 16. 22, W. Liberty-Salem 14.
DIVISION VI
1, Oel. St. John's (15)
3.() 234
2, Mana Stein Marion(5) 3·0 179
3, Newark Cath. (1)
3-0 142
4, Ada
3-0 113
5, Dalton (4)
3-0 104
6, Bucyrus Wynford
3-0 87
7, Hopewell-Loudon
3-0 85
8, Shadyside
3·0 83
9, McComb
3-0 76
10, Mogadore
3-0 61
Others receivtng 12 or more points: 11,
Covington 47 12. Lockland 41. 13,
Edgerton 37. 14, Fremont St. Joseph
33. 15, Willow Wood Symmes Valley
(1) 26. 16, Berlin Center Western
Reserve (1) 25. 17, Danville 19. 18,
Thompson Ledgemont 18. 19.
Norwalk St. Paul15 19, Bridgeport 15.

1---'

PREP VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP

Lady Defenders improve to 3·0; Southern wins at Belpre
B v S ARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNECOM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - The
Ohio Valley Christian volleyball
team improved to 3-0 on the season with a three set victory over
Ironton St. Joe.
The Lady Defenders have
been victorious in all seven sets
they have played this season.
OVCS won by scores of 2519. 25-19, and 25-14 on
Tuesday evening.
Maggie Westfall and Sarah
Schoonover each had I 6 points
to lead the .Lady Defenders.
Maggie Westfall had seven aces
and Schoonover had two. Allie

Hamilton had 13 points (five
aces), Madison Crank added 10
points (one ace), Samantha
Westfall and Amy Ours each had
seven points and two aces, and
Beth Martin had six points and
one ace .•
Samantha Westfall had 10
assists and Maggie Westfall
added five. Crank led the team
in di~s with four, followed by
Hamtlton
with
three,
Schoonover, Maggie Westfall,
and Samantha Westfall with two
each, and Martin and Ours with
one each.
Maggie Westfall had six kills,
Hamilton had four, Samantha
Westfall had three kills and two

blocks, Crank had two kills, and
Schoonover added one kill.
The Lady Defenders host
Chesapeake on Monday at 6
p.m.
lADY T ORNADOES RALLY
TO BEAT BELPRE

BELPRE, Ohio - After dropping the first set on Monday
evening at Belpre, the Southern
volleyball team won the next
three for the four set victory.
The win was the second of the
season for the _Lady Tornadoes
and their second in the TVC
Hocking following last week's
win over Miller.

Belpre won the opening set by
a score of 25-17, with Southern
winning the next three by scores
of 25-18, 25-15, and 25-14.
Kelsey Strang led the Lady
Tornadoes in points with 14.
Amber Hayman added 10 points
(five aces), Hope Teaford had
eight points, Maggie Cummins
added seven points (two aces),
Courtney Thomas had four
points (one ace), Bobbi Harris
ha.O three points, Emily Ash h&lt;fd
two points. and Michelle Ours
added one point.
Strang had 12 kills to lead the
next attack for Southern.

.SSAC football
computer ratings

Point
Pleasant's
Erik Allbright
putts on the
first green
during
Monday
evening's
quad match
against
Wahama,
Gallia
Academy,
and Rivet
Valley at
Riverside
Golf Course
in Mason,
W.Va.

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)- Tl'l&amp;
Secondary
School
Acttvities
Commission's high school footban
computer ratings released Tuesday:
with team records and points. Tl'le
top 16 teams qualify for the playoffs
•
begtnning Nov. 12:
CLASSAAA
1. Morgantown
3-0
3..()
2. Hurricane
3 Capital
3-0
(tie) George Wash. 3-0
3.()
(tie) Martinsburg
3.()
6. Bridgeport
(tie) University
3-0
8.Logan
3·0
2.()
9. Hampshire
2·1
10 Brooke
(tie) Fairmont Senior 2·1
12. South Charteston2·1
'13. Elkins
2·1
(tie) Greenbrier East 2·1
(tie) Robert C. Byrd 2·1
(tie) Spring Valley
2-1
17. Nicholas County 2·1
2-1
(tie) Pburg South
19. Lewis County
2·1
20. Cabell Midland H
(tie) St. Albans
1·1

Sarah Hawley/
photos

Point Pleasant golfers win·quad at Riverside
S ENTINEL S TAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MASON, W.Va.- The
Point Pleasant High
School varsity golf team
continued their winning
ways Monday afternoon
defeating, Gallia Academy,
Wahama and River Valley
at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason, W Va.
The heavy rain that fell
for a brief period ·did not
seem to have any effect on
the victors in the play 6,
count 4 format. Point's
winning total of 156 was 9
strokes better than runner
up Gallia Academy's score
of 165. Wahama finished a
distant 3rd shooting a 199
while River Valley completed the match with a
207 total.
Opie Lucas led the balanced scoring for Point
Pleasant firing a one over

Please see Golf, 81

.

Please see Volleyball, 86 :

13.33
13.00
12.6'1'
12.67.
12.67
12.00
12.00
11.09·
9.00
8.67
8.67
8.33
8.00 •
8.00
8.00
8.00
7.33
7.33
6.67
6.50
6.50

CLASSAA
1. Bluefield
2. Ravenswood
3. Braxton County
(tie) PikeView
5. Greenbrier Wast
6. Tug Valley
?.Magnolia
8. Frankfort
9. Wayne
10. James Monroe
11. Poca
12. Chapmanville
(tie) Sl\ady Spring
14. Oak Glen
15. Liberty Harrison
16. Independence
17. Point Pleasant
(tie) River View
(tie) Roane County
(tie) Scott

3·0
3-0
3.()
3-0
3.()

3..()
3..()
2.0
3·0
3.()
2·1
2-1
2·1
2·1
2·1
2·1
1-1
H

1-1
1-1

11.67
10.00
9.67
9.67
9.33
9.00
8.67
8.50
8.33
8.00
6.67
6.33
6.33
6.00
5.67
5.33
4.50
4.50
4.50
4.50

CLASS A

Wahama's Michael MacKnight marks his ball on the first green during Monday's
round at Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va., as the rain fell. Wahama faced
Point Pleasant, Gallia Academy, and River Valley in a quad match.

1 Wheeling Central
2. Mount Hope
3. Fayetteville
(tle) Pendleton Co.
5. Matewan
(tie) Wahama
(tie) Wirt County
8. Bishop Donahue
(tie) Madonna
(he) Man
11. Meadow Bridge
12. St. Marys
13. Buffalo
(tie) Doddridge Co.
(tie) East Hardy
(tie) Tucker County
17. Williamstown
18. Notre Oame
19. South Harrison
(tie) Van
(tie) Williamson

2.()
2.()
3.()
3.()
3.()

2..0
3·0
3.()
3..()
2·1
2.()
2-1
2·1
2·1
2-1
2·1
1-1
2·1
2·1
2·1
2·1

11.50
8.00
7.33
7.33
7.00
7.00
7.00
6.33
633
6.33
6.00
5.33
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
4.50
4.33
4.00
4.00
4.00

Point rallies for 2·2 tie
·with Spring Valley.
SENTINEL STAFF
~PORTS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POINT PLEASANT.
W.Va.- lfs not how you
start something. It's how
you finish it.
The Point Pleasant
boys soccer team rallied
back from a 2-0 deficit to
score twice in the final 13
minutes and claim a hardfought 2-2 draw with visiting Spring Valley on
Tuesday night during a
non-conference matchup
in Mason County.
The Big Black Knights
(3~3-2) had their twogame winning streak
come to an end at the
of
the
hands
Timberwolves. who outshot the hosts by a 9~5
margin.
SVHS took a 1~0 lead
at the 12 minute mark
after Dakota McCoy netted a cross pass from
Jacob Maddox. The score
remained that way until

halftime.
The guests added to
that lead in the 45th
minute after McCoy
scored his second goal,
this time off of an assist
by Jacob Massie, for a 20 cushion.
Point Pleasant finally
cracked the scoring column in the 67th minute
after Parker Hill netted a
shot from the top of the
box, cutting the deficit to
2-1. Hill's goal was
assisted by Steven Porter.
Then with 6:30 remaining in regulation, Hristian
Lenkov netted a pass
from Hill for the gametying goal. Lenkov took
control of a loose ball
pass uncontested and netted it from about three
yards out, which knotted
the contest at two.
Brady Reymond made
seven saves in goal for
Point Pleasant, while

Please see Soccer, 86

Bryan Walters/photo

Point Pleasant's Andy Fairchild controls possession of the ball as a Spring Valley
defender approaches during the second half of Tuesday's boys soccer match in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
I _ __

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Boren remembers
loss to
Appalachian State
COLUMBUS. Ohio
(AP) - There's no need
to preach to Ohio State
offensive lineman Justin
Boren about how good an
underdog can be, or what
one can accomplish.
You see, Boren has
firsthand knmvledge of
one of the biggest upsets
in college football history.
On Sept. I. 2007.
Boren
played
for
Michigan when the fifthranked Wolverines \vere
sliocked 34-3::! by cham~
p ton sh i p-su bd i vis ion
Appalachian State.
"Appalachian
State
was a good team. People
think
that
these
(unranked) teams are so
much different. but
they"re really not," Boren
said Tuesday. ·'They"re
all very capable teams.
Appalachian State was a
very good team. People
'look at it and. like, dan!!,
Michigan must be tenible. It's not like that:·
~ow in his second year
starting since transferrin!!
to Ohio State. that aftei:
noon is indelibly etched
in Boren's mind. With
the
second-ranked
Buckeyes favored by
more than four touchdOwns
over
Ohio
University on Saturday.
Boren scoffs at what the
oddsmakers and expe1ts
say.
'"h seems like every
year there's a couple of
those games," he said.
"It's a real issue. it can
happen an) \veek."
·n1e Bucke)es are comipg off a huge victory. a
36-24 decision over then1\lo. 12 Miami on
Saturday. They are well
aware that their next four
Ohio.
opponents
Eastern Michigan. at
Illinois and then home
against Indiana - are
given little chance of
beating them.
But Boren recognizes
that the gap between a
great team and an
unknown one isn't as
large as many might
think.
"You think the talent's
going to be so much better on a No 1- or a No. 2ranked team and there are
better players. but everyone that's playing college
football is a good player." he said. ''You have
guys at Ohio U. who can
play on some of these
bigger programs.''
Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel called the Mtami
game a bruising contest
that was also highly emotional. Many times. it's
difficult for a team
involved in a game like
that to risl! to the occasion a week later.
But Tressel said there
are reasons why the
Buckeyes won't look
past the instate Bobcats.
"The first thing that
will make it difficult is
Oli will be tough and
they'll be good," he said.
"The second thing is reality. that when you play in
an emotional game. is
there that human tendency to take a deep breath?
We kind of take the
approach of showing the
film. showing \Vhere we
nc;ed to get better."
One film that \Viii
undoubted!) be playing
at the Tressel Theater this
week is the 2008 video of
Ohio's fmay into Ohio
Stadi m. In that game.
the Bt beats kd 7-6 at tht!
'halfanU '14-12 going into
the fourth quarter before
the
third-ranked
Buckeyes came back to
pull out a 26-14 victory.
A tlat Ohio State struggled all day. barely
escaping with the win
despite f rcing five
tum overs.
''If you look back two
years ago, llll · is a team
we kind of struggled
with," defensive lineman
Dexter Lanmore said.
"On defen~e we took
their starting quarterback

out and then all of a sudden Boo Jackson comes
in and has a heckuva
game. He's running all
O\&lt;Cr the place. converting third down&lt;:, getting
first downs on his feet
and slinging the ball all
around.''
Jackson completed just
9 of 25 passes for 86
yards with three interceptions that game in relief
of the injured Theo Scott.
But he scrambled for 55
yards on seven carries
and kept his team in the
hunt until Ray Small's
69-yard punt return for a
touchdown with Jess than
6 minutes left. Jackson,
by the Wa). will quarterback the Bobcats on
Saturday.
It's only human nature
to think some teams are
vastly better than others.
Larimore said he and his

teammates can't atford to
buy into that, however.
''Obviously.
there ·s
always that risk of that.
com{ng after a big win
against Miami and coming into a game against a
team that, quote unquote,
isn't supposed to be able
to contend with you:· he
said. "Normally this
would be t.hance to overlook a team. But this
year. with the guys and
~he
leaders and the
seniors we have. we'll
get our young guys ready
to play on Saturday."'
Tressel said there's no
excuse to not be ready to
play every week.
"If we can't get excited
12 times in one calendar
year. shame on us." he
said.
It took some time for
Boren to reali?.e. after the
loss to Appalachian
State. the magnitude of
Michigan's defeat.
"I remember after we
lost that game it really
didn't sink in.'' he said.
"Then we walk in the
practice facility and
there ·s I 00 reporters. I
remember dri\'ing past
the stadium and ESPN
was filming in front of
our stadium and I kind of
looked down like. dang
- that's when it really
sunk in - like. we lost to
a Division I-AA team."

VVednesday,SeptembertS,20tO

·Golf
from Page Bl
par 36 which gave him
medalist honors for the
match.
Travis Grimm
ended a short slump by
shooting a fine 39. Erik
Allbright added a 40 while
Denver Thomas and Evan
Potter both turned in 41
with only one of those
scores counting in the final
total. Alex Potter's 42 was
not included in the team's
total.
Gallia Academy's Rob
Canady almost matched
Opie's score shooting a 38.
Boeing Smith provided a
score of 40 followed by
Wanen Patrick who added
a 42. Corey Arthur's 45
was the final score that
counted for the young men
from Gallipolis. Derrick
Gilmore's 49 and Gus
Graham's 52 were not
added in the final score.
The Wahama White
Falcons took a step or two
in the wrong direction with
only 2 scores under 50 for
the match anu those two
scores were just under that
benchmark. Sophomores
Dakota Sisk and Samuel
Gordon both shot 48 to
lead their team. Senior
Matt Amold added a 50
while Sophomore Caroline
Thompson contributed a
53 to account for the 4th
score that counted. Kevin
Back's
and
Michael
MacKnight's
identical
scores of 56 were not prut
of the final score.
River Valley also had
only 2 players shoot w1der
50 .. Kyle Bryant shot a 46
to lead his team and Matt
Ball added a 49. Dan
Goodrich and Derek
Gibson both contributed
56 to account for the final
2 scores counting in the
team total. Cody Smith
and Stephen Ball also
played for River Valley
with their scores not
included in the team's final
score.
EAGLES SOAR PAST
FEDERAL HOCKING

POMEROY, Ohio
The Eastern Eagles golf
team defeated Federal
Hocking by 51 strokes on
Tuesday
evening at
Kountry Hills Golf Course
in Pomeroy. Ohio.
The Eao!es won by a
score of 161-202.
Cruistian Amsbary took
medalist honors. leading
the Eagles with a score of
37. David Warner shot a
39. Cruis Bissell had a 42.
and Jay Warner shot a 43.
' Also playing for the Eagles
were Kyle Young (47) and
Luke Kimes (53).

Federal Hocking scorers
were Brandon Russell
&lt;48). Austin Russell !50).
Shane Gillian (50). Steve
Coen {54). Tylor Clemens
(56). and Zack Kidder
(63).

Sarah Hawley/file photos

Southern's Andrew Roseberry putts on the fourth green at Kountry Hills Golf
Course in Pomeroy, Ohio, during a match on Sept. 2.
MARAUDERS FALL
AT ALEXANDER

ALBANY. Ohio - The
Meigs Marauders golf
team fell to Alexander by a
score of 22 1- J81 at The
Elm Golf Course.
Meigs wa&lt;; led by Treay
McKinney with a round of
46. Dillan Andrews shot a
53. Jacob Sizemore had a
60. and Braden SPencer
shot a 62. Also playing for
the
Marauders
were
Gunner McKinney (63)
and Paul Gibbs (70).
Alexander's
Kyle
Lindner and
Dustin
Mullins were co-medalists
with rounds of 42. Taylor
Bolin had a 47, Trey
Gilden had a 50. Zach
Weftler had a 54. and
Clinton Sanders had a 59.
Meigs will host Vinton
County on Thursday
evening.
TOMACTS FEND
OFF SOUTHERN

GLOUSTER, Ohio
Eastern's Christian Amsbary putts on the fourth green
The Southern golf team during a match on Sept. 2 at Kountry Hills Golf Course
dropped a IS-stroke deci- in Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
•
sion to host Trimble on
Charles
Kish
wa&lt;;
behind
place
in
the
tri-match
held
Monday during a TVC
Hocking matt:h ·at Forest Davis for Trimble with a at Franklin Valley Golf
Hills Golf Club in Athens round of 45. followed by Coursewithascoreof 171.
matching 47s from Colin with South Gallia and
County.
The Tornadoes finished Smith and Kyle Russell. Chillicothe deadlocked at
the day with n team score Kendall Herbert ru1d Jeff 181. In the case of a tie,
the fifth score is the tie
of 195. which was just off Andrews fired matchino
0
breaker. Casin Roush's
the pace of the Tomcats· '51 s as wel I for the hosts.
round
of 52 was the fifth
tally of 180. Tyler Davis of
REBELS
TAKE
SECOND
AT
score
for
the Rebels, placTHS was the medalist with
ing them ahead of
FRANKUN VALLEY
a low round of 41 .
Chillicothe. with a 59 for
Andrew Roseberry its tie breaker score.
JACKSON. Ohio - In
who was the runner-up at
Gus Slone shot the low
the event - led the 'Does l~igh school golf the top round of 41 for the Rebels,
with a 42. followed by four scores go towru·d the followed
by
David
Adam Pape with &lt;44 and team totaL but some times Michael with a 46, and
Cole Graham with 50. it is the fifth score that Seth Jarrell and Cory
Brandon Marcinko com- makes the biggest differ- Haner each with a 47.
pleted the team score with ence.
Roush had a 52 and Ethan
That proved to be the Swain shot a 60 for the
a 59.
Trenton Cook and case for the South GaJJia Rebels.
Dvllan Roush also had golf team on Monday
Jackson was led by
respective efforts of 59 and evening.
medalist Evan Massie with
Jackson claimed first a round of 39.
63 for the guest&lt;;.

. .WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
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'

�•
Wednesday, September 15, 2010

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
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· or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To
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Oearlliru

Word Ads

~onday

thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

• Jnclucle Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Oays

300

POLICIES: Ohio \'alley Pubfl8111ng reeenes the right to edit. reject, Of cancel any ad at any ume. Err«• must be reported on tile ~!\!I day of publication and the
Tr1b~rtlnei·Regl81et will be responsible tor no m«e th4n the COlli of the tpaee OCCI/pled by the tHor and only the ftrlt lnsemol\ we atau not be liable lot
any lo98 or tJ&lt;poose that results trom the publication or omission of 111 advtrtleemlfll Correction wtll be made 1n the
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eHorsln an ad taken over the phone.

n!91

Yard Sale

Lots

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

Raco yard sale at
Star
Mill
Park,
Racine on Sept 14,
from 9-6, Sept. 15,
from 9-4 &amp; Sept 16,
from 9-2. Last day
clothing $1 a bag
and other items onehalf
price.
Entertainment
centers, sofa, chairs,
recliners,
bakers
rack, sets of bunk
beds, desks, tables,
books, toys, chest of
drawers
w/mirror,
pictures,lots of kids
clothing from b1rth to
6 years and lots of
misc. Largest sale.
'Thanks
for
your
support.

0.6 acre located 500
ft. behind mason co.
ins. call: 304-675·
3753

Repairs
Joe's Tv .repair on
most
makes
&amp;
models. House calls
304-675-1724

400

Services

Lost F Red Pit Bull
Home Improvements
w/a reddish gold coat
&amp; nose: gold/amber
Basement
eyes; has white on
Waterproofing
chest &amp; toes'&amp; some Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
white on nose. Last
seen on Rt. 588 newr references furnished
Established 1975. Call
Texas Rd wearing a 24 Hrs 740-446-0870,
blue collar. Childs
Rogers Basement
pet.
740-531-0493
Waterproofing.
leave mess. Reward.
Other Services
Notices
Pet Cremations. Call
NOTICE
OHIO 740·446-3745
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that Professional Services
you do business with TURNED DOWN ON
people you know, and • SOCIAL SECURITY
NOT to send money
SSt
through the mail until
No Fee Unless We
you have investigating
Win!
the offering.
1-888-582-3345

Publl~tion

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

Now you can have borders and graphics
1~
added to your classified ads
.{,~
..m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Professional Services

Notices

Pictures that
have been
Lost &amp; Found
placed in ads at
Lost 3 black feeder
the Gallipolis
calves
around
Daily Tribune
6/1/2010 If found call
must be picked
Owen Garnes 740within 30 days.
339-2483 or Ban
Evans
740-388- . Any pictures
8555. They crossed
that are not
Raccoon
Cr.
in
picked up will
Vinton &amp; wnet East.
be
discarded.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oescnption • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

200' Announcements

Lost Bubbly Taby
yellow cat. Belongs
to Ruth Young 740446-0264

DjspJa.y Ads

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

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Financial

There's
Something
For
Everyone
In
The•••

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
lnsiitutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE
of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1866-278-0003 to learn
WantTo Buy
Animals
if the mortgage broker 600
or lender is properly
Elderberries,
spice
licensed. (This is a
bushberries.
Livestock
public
service
pawpaws,
black
announcement from,the
walnuts,
740·698Boer
goats.
18
bred
Ohio Valley Publishing
nanies, due to deliver 6060
Company)
in Oct., 1 billie.
Ginseng- want to buy
$2,200.
Serious
other
botanicals,
enquires only 740·
Twin Oaks Service
leave Station
446-3845,
junction
message.
RT7/33,

1000

CLASSIFIED$!!
WantTo Buy
Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
1OK/14K/18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proff/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446-2842

Wednesdays
12·1
starting
22
Yard Sale
AKC registered male September, call 330Collies, $150, 740· 67 4-4195 for price
992-2822, 740-416- list.
6469
7th annual rummage
sale, Sept. 18, 2010,
Sam till ? Route 35,
Yorkie puppies for 900
Merchandise Lodge
Drive,
sale. Swks old. 1 m,
Southside, WV, lots
1 f, tails docked,
of
miscellaneous
declawed,
&amp;
items,
also
Equipment/
wormed. Mother &amp;
homemeade
hot
Supplies
father on prem. $300
dogs &amp; baked goods
call 304-675-5356
available for sale
Black
Beauty
700
Agriculture sandblast sand $6
per 100-lb bag, ten
or more $5 each. Thurs. Fie, Sat 4409
Farm Equipment
Bulaville Pike, 8-?.
304-773-5332
Toola, books, holiday
Wanted 2 gravity
items,
Precious
beds w/running gear
moments,
in good condition.
Miscellaneous
Longaberger, lots of
740-388-8950
misc.
Pets

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

~allipolis !JBallp \!tribune

~oint ~Ieasant

l\egister

The Daily Sentinel

j,unbap \!times -~enttnel

End of Sumer sale Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
on 4',5',&amp; 6' rotor
tillers Special Round rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800Bale Feeders· were
537-9528
$195 now $125 Jims
Farm
Equipment
446-9777
For Sale Winchester
$450,
STIHL Sales &amp; Service 30-30
Now
Available
at Contender
.221
Carmichael Equipment $600, S&amp;W 1066
740-446-24I 2
1Omm $500
Call
740-388-8221
Gorden &amp; Produce
Richards
Brothers
Fruit Farm ~
have apple! Mon thru
Sat 8-12 &amp; 1-5. Sun
9-5. Many varieties
aailable jellies, jams,
cider, apple butter.
Co Rd 46 2054
Orpheus
Rd
Oh.
Thurman
740286-4584
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain

5 piece bedroom
suite,
large
refrigerator, tables &amp;
other pieces, 740949 _3601
Trlt a lift-for scooter
or wheel chair fits
into 2 in. trailer
hitched call: 304675-3753

9X11 Lifestyle Rug
Cream Shag Pd:
Lg, Round Bales of $900.00 Selling for
Hay for Mulch. Call $275.00 FIRM Call:
304-941-4653
740-992-7603

4 family yard sale
Sept
16-18, 8-?,
1853 Neighborhood
Rd.
puzzles,
housewares, + size
clothing
&amp; much
more

Recreati.onal
Veh1cles

3500

Real Estate .
Rentals

Apartments/
Townhouses
2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer HOspital on SA
160 CIA. (740) 4410194
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
small houses for rent.
Call 740·441-1111 for
&amp;
application
information.
Free Rent Special

!!!

2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
Campers / RVs &amp;
hookup, tenant pays .
Trailers
electric. Call between
95 Chevy M.H. Road the hours of 8A-8f&gt;.
EHO
Trek 21 0 Popular,
Ellm View Apts.
74647 miles, 350
(304)882-3017
eng. , ale, sleeps 4,
Twin
Rivers T6wer is
runs good. $14,000.
accepting applications
740-446-4325
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized.
1-BR
2005 Jayco Eagle apartment
for
the
Gooseneck
Hitch, elderly/disabled,
call
sleeps six. Excellent 675-6679
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www carmjchaeltraile
~
740-4462412
Pleasant
Valley
Apartments is now
24 ft goose neck taking
applications
trailer for sale. Good for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
cond See at 6778 Subsidized
lincoln Pike Patriot. Apartments.
Asking $1.995
Applications
are
taken Monday thru
07 Brecken Ridge Thrusday
9:00am40' camper, country 1 :OOpm. Office is
blue &amp; beige, 3 slide
located
at
1151
outs, full size bath &amp; Evergreen
Drive,
kitchen, 2 bedrooms,
Point Pleasant, WV.
sliding glass doors, (304) 675-5806
condiliOn,
exc.
beautiful!,
$25,900
740-247-2475
Motorcycles

2007 HD Heritage
Softail. 4,695 milesShowroom
cond.
$16,000 negotiable
740-446-01§1
Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1.5 BA, bacl&lt;
patio,
pool,
playground.
No
pets.
Classic/ Antiques
$450 rent. 740-645Antique truck 50 8599
Chev Pick up. All
Beautiful
1BR
original.
740-446apartment in the
7557 or 740-446freshl9
country
3617
painted very clean
2000

Automotive

WID hook up nice
country setting only
Mahr,
Smith,
&amp; 1998
10 mins. from town
Thomas yard sale Plymouth. Voyager,
Must
see
to
Sept. 16, 965 Ash runs good;
$700. appreciate.
Water
St.. Middleport, 8-?, 740-992-5712. 740- pd. $375/mo 614Gymboree clothing, 707-9173
595-7773 or 740645boys, ladies &amp; men's
5953
Want To Buy
clothing, some new
Nice 2 &amp; 3 BR apt.
crochited bedspread,
Oiler's Towing. Now Gallipolis. $600 mo
2 matching lamps,
buying · junk cars incl.
w/slg
&amp;
dishes, knick-knacks,
w/motors or w/out. washer/dryer.
No
medical
supplies.
740·388-0011
or pets 740-591-5174
toys &amp; more, First
740-441·7870.
No
sale this year, rain
2nd floor 2 BR
Sunday call
cancels to following
apartment.
day
Real Estate overlooking Gallipolis
3000
Sales City
Park,
L.R.,
kitchen/dining area, 1
1/2
BA,
Sept. 18, Sat.. 3 F S0 I B Own
family yard
sale,
or
e Y
er washer/dryer. $600.
mon + dep. 740-446·
Alligator
Jacks 6 apts $137.000
parking lot, boys 10- rent $2030 mo. 740· 4425 or 7 40-446·
2325
12. womens. 8-?
446-0390
Vans

�'
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmerm/
Townhouses
Nice
2BR
apt.
appliances,
w/d
hookup, water pd.,
good locatton on
Centenary close to
hospital. No pets. call
after 5. 740-4469442

Refurbished
Building for lease
4600 sq ft. retail,
storage, et. .304-7735944 or 304-5931067
Manufactured
Housing

1BR nicely fumished
Rentals
apt. No smGking, no
pets. $400 mon &amp; 2BR Mobile Home
water, sewer, trash
dep. 740-446-4782
pd
No pets.
FIRST MONTH
Johnson's
Mobile
FREE
Home Park
740·
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
446-3160
$385 &amp;
Mobile Home on
UP, Sec. Oep $300 farm 3Br 2Ba all
&amp; up,
appl. including .w/d,
NC, WID hook-up, &amp; all utlit. incl. $750.
ten540-729-1331
ant pays electric,
EHO
Taking applications
Ellm View Apts.
for 2BR mobile. Very
304-882-3017
good condition. No
pets. $395 mon &amp;
Spring Valley Green dep. 740-446-3617
Apartments 1 BR at Nice 16x80, for rent,
$395+2 BR at $470 3 Bedroom, 2 bath,
Month 446-1599.
Country
setting.

--=====-

Commercial

740-339-3366
367-0266.

740-

Commercial building 2BR mobile $400
for rent 740-446- mon. $400 dep.HUD
6565
appr. No smoking no
pets 304-849-2932
Houses For Rent
2 story farm house 6000
Employment
on Holcomb Hollow
Ad near the college.
Call for appt. 740- Drivers &amp; Delivery
634-3023
Truck
drivers
Downtown Gallipolis.
3 br 1.5 bath, central
air, carpet/hardwood
floors,
kitchen
applicances
included.
washer/dryer hook
up. No Pets. Ample
storage
available.
Deposit
Required.
call 740-446-7654

www.mydailysentinel.com

Lease

4000

needed. &lt;;'lat beds &amp;
?ump trailers. Apply
1
~ person . at 935
pinecrest Dnve.
Trucking
is
seeking
COL-A
drivers to run local
and regional routes.
R&amp;J

We feature weekend
orne time for regional
drivers. Local drivers
home
nightly.
Excellent pay, Health
Ins. with dental &amp; Ax
options
401 (k)
Vacation &amp; Bonus
&amp;
safety
pays
awards.
Qualified
applicants must be at
least 23yrs have 1yr
of commercial driving
exp. clean MVR.

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

Help WantedGeneral
Experienced Floral
Designer &amp; Deliveiy
person. Person must
know the area well.
Please
submit
resumes
&amp;
references to CL a
Box 251 Gallipolis
Ohio 45631

100

Legals

appointment
to
inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date
contact Cyndie or
Ken at 992·2136.
(9) 15, 16, 17

(3aft Marcum Construction

THE
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
WILL AUCTION THE
FOLLOWING ITEMS
ON
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER
18,
2010, AT 10:00 A.M.
AT HE THE BANK'S
LOT BESIDE OUR
DRIVE-THRU.

Wanted:
Direct
supervision
to
employees
overesee male youth
in a staff secure
residential
environment.
Must
pass
physical
training requirment.
Pay
based
on
1999 DODGE RAM
experience. Call 7402500
4X4
379-9083 M-F from
3B7KF23Z5XG 11141
8-4
9
Accepting
1990 FORD F150
applications for part 4X4
time cashiers apply 1FTEF14Y6LLA0997
in person at ParMar 6
#38
15289
Ad
THE
HOME
Huntington
BANK
Gallipolis Ferry or on NATIONAL
THE
online
at RESERVES
RIGHT TO REJECT
parmarstores.com
Nanny Needed, eves ANY AND ALL BIDS.
3 to 4 hrs per day ALL VEHICLES ARE
5days a wk for SOLD,
AS
IS
activities
&amp;
light WHERE IS, WITH
house cleaning Must NO WARRANTIES
.
EXPRESSED
OR
have
ow~ IMPLIED. FOR AN
transportation
No APPOINTMENT TO
references.
smoking. Call 740_ SEE, ALL 949-2210
ASK- FOR SHEILA.
710-3100.
(10) 15, 16, 17
Medical
Accepting Resumes
. for a Receptionist
poistion at a local
Dentist office in Pt.
Pleasant.
Some
computer and phone
skills needed. Please
mail to Dental Office,
3984 Indian Creek

,,,,Wednesday, September 15, 201 0

Farmers Bank and
Savings Company,
located at 211 West
2nd Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, has filed
notice/application of
a proposed new
banking office with
th e Oh.10 o·lVI·s·o
1 n of

Rd., Elkview,
25071

WV Financial Institutions,
77
South
High
~0-v-erb~ro_o_k____ Street,
Columbus,
3Br, 1ba,
car
43215-6120
Rehabilitation Center Ohio
garage, large yard,
is currently seeking and with Mr. Anthony
newly remodled, new
someone with a Train Lowe,
Regional
windows,$625 mon +
the
Trainer
Director,
·
Federal
dep. 167 Graham St.
Certification to teach Deposit
Insurance
Rodney
Village.
CNA classes. All Corporation,
500
740-446-4543.
interested applicants West Monroe Street,
should pick up an Suite 3500, Chicago,
New home in city,
application at 333 Illinois 60661, to
2BR, 1BA,LR,DR,K.
Page
Street, establish a
new
Must have excellent
Middleport, Oh or banking office at 640
reference. Call for
contact
Michelle East Main Street,
details. 446-2801
Ohio
Gilmore, AN, DON at Pomeroy,
Entertainment
740-992-6472.
45769,
Meigs
Overbrook is an EOE County. Any person
House
for
rent,
and a Participant in who
wishes
to
Vinton, 2 1/2 BR
Need someone for the
Drug
Free comment on the
large
lot
with
K&amp;D OJ Service, Workplace Program proposed
banking
buildings, $525 mon Karoake/DJ
office must do so in
&amp; dep. Also 3Br
Business must have """""'~~~~~..... writing to the Division
mobile in Gallipolis, valid drivers licinses
Legals within fourteen days
$450 mon &amp; Dep. &amp; be sober, will work 100
after the date of this
call after 2 pm. 740- by
&amp;
yourself
publication and in
PUBLIC NOTICE
388-8000 or 740- w/owner,
send
writing to the FDIC
388-9003
resume to Box 88,
NOTICE: is hereby within fifteen days
Rutland, Oh 45775
on after the date of this
given
that
House for sale or
or call740-742-7709 Saturday
publication.
The
rent. Pretty, clean,
September 18 at non-confidential
3BR.
Downtown
10:00 a.m., a public portions of the FDIC
Gallipolis, close to
Food Services
sale will be held at application are on file
W{lshington
Elem.
211 W. Second , in the appropriate
Rent $750, no utlilite.
Pomeroy,
Ohio. The FDIC office and are
Sale $99,000. KellyJo 645-9096 or 446- full time grill cook Farmers Bank and available for public
during
apply in person only savings Company is inspection
4639
business
Park front diner 314 selling for cash 1n regular
Beautiful
newly 2nd ave Gallipolis
hand or certified hours; photocopies
nonthe
remodeled/restored
check the following of
2006 confidential portion of
home in Pomeroy for - - - - - - - collateral
rent. 3 bedroom, 2 We
are
seeking Chevy
Cobalt the FDIC application
bath, large kichen, career
orientated 1G1AK55F16785543 file will be made
upon
laundry
room, individuals
that 6 The Farmers Bank available
fireplace. Nice quiet demonstrates
and
Savings request. (9) 15
neighborhood. Call teamwok is important Company, Pomeroy,
740-992-9784
to their and the Ohio, reserves the
day1ime or 740-992- company's success. right to bid at this
Your need to be sa1e, an d to w1t· hdraw
5094 evenings.
result orientated that the above collateral
Very nice home for is achieved thru your prior to sale. Further,
rent in Middleport, ability to be focused The Farmers Bank
savings
good neighborhood. and organized. The and
that
you Company reserves
Newly
remodeled. team
is the right to reject any
New appliances, 2 managte
bedroom, 1 bath. successful by a win, or all bids submitted.
The
above
Large kitchen, sun win atmosphere. We
room, central air &amp; offer vacations, 401 described collateral
heat. Nice outdoor K, wages based on will be sold "as isspaces, Call 740- result uniforms and where is", with no
992-9784 or 740- meals. If interested expressed or implied
contact by E-Mail at warranty given.
992-5094
www dobrjt7@aol co
For
further
1BR $350/month in m. offic~ fax at 1- information, or tor an
Syracuse. Deposit, 740-446-3400, or in
HUD approved, no person at Burger
pets. 304-675-5332 King 65 Upper Ricer
weekends/740-591- Road in Gallipolis,
Ohio, E.OE.
0265

Commercial &amp; Residential

~ • Room additions • Roofing • Garages

• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
M lKE W. MARCUM, &lt;Jol N ER
47239 Riebel Rd., LOng Botton, 00

740-985-4141

~0-416-1834

Fully insured
Free estimates - 25+ yrars experience
i\nl a[Jili;,trd \\ilh \lik•• \larrum lloolin~ &amp; lll·IIIIKklin~l

Formerly Robies Construction

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED
33 Years Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458
Owner: Sam Smith, .Mason, WV

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• New Garages • Electrical &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and

...THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Porch Decks

WV 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

ROBfRT BISSfLL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

--111111111!11-----------------------..

..

Public Notice
The Village of Middleport will hold a
Public Meeting on
September 16,2010
In the Train Depot
in Diles Park in Middleport at 7pm on
September
16th.
The topic of discussion will be the upcoming
Sewer
Improvement Project.
August 19, 25, September 1, 8, 15

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
PUBLIC ~~
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AUCTION~
SAT., SEPTEMBER 18, 2010
lO:OOP.M.
AD

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Attention Crafters:

•
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center
Annual Oktoberfest
will be held on
Saturday October 2. 201 o
from 11-.2
Outdoor booth space
is available
at no charge,
but space is limited.
Crafters are to provide
own table &amp; chairs.
Interested crafters should
RSVP by Monday
September 27 by calling
Michelle Kennedy at
(740)992 6472

Newspapers
·are your
wlnCiow

to the

'NJD~ddl

Auction

Auction

NXTIOO WILL BE HEW Nr HE J\OCTIOO
CENI'ER, ROtJI'E 62 ~, MASON, WV.
SELLING ITEMS FROM POINT PLEASANT
ESrM"ES AND omms.

ITEMS OF INTEREST
Vehicles: 1979 Ford F250. Flatbed.
85,261 Miles; 2004 Honda 450 Foreman
4-Wheeler (Nice); Murray 17.5 HP Lawn
Tractor;
Guns: Savage # 110 270 with Scope
(syn): Thompson 50 Cal. Hawkins
.Muzzle Loader; Remtngton 870 Express:
Stevens #86 22 Rifle; Ruger Model I 022 Stainless Steel Auto with Scope; NE
Pa.rdner 4-10; Steven Model 62-22 Aut9
(syn); Mossberg Model 9200 12G.
Camo.Auto;
Bows: Golden Eagle; Jennings; Buck
Master; Bear; PSE: Arrows: Work
Station for Bows; Reloading Equipment;
Tree Stands; Tools
Furniture: 58'' Mitsib1shi Flat Screen
TV; BR Su1te's: and much more.
Glassware &amp; Collectibles: 62pc.
Sterling S1lver Hatware; Old Quilts:
Nippon Glass; Several Rods &amp; Reels;
and much more.
For Listing and Pictures go to
www.auctionzip.com
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH ID.

RICK PEARSON, JR
. #A1955
Licensed and bonded in the State of
West V1rginia. '

With so many
choices, it's easy to
get carried away
with our
Mercha~dise listings
in the classifieds!

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

-·-·-,~-~~-...--------...---...--

Wednesday, September 15, 201 o

www.m~ailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

~~~~--~~~~~

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker
1: ~AVE TOGO
WITH MY WIFE
TO HER GARDEN
CL.UB TONIGHT

'\-IS

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

•

Chris Browne
61)T I CAI·I't
9/JY 11" B&amp;C/W&amp;e
MY N/f!GH80/&lt;.
ALREAPY HAG

ONE!

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85 •

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
46 Beef buys
1 Test pilot
Chuck
DOWN
7 Strike
1 Orange
11 Niche
tuber
120cean
2Yale
motion
rooter
13 Hand
3Do
warmer
something
14Wildly
4 Coped
eager
5 At any
18 Dodge ' 30 Blows
15 Exhalatime
19 Urban
one's top
tion
6 Painter
transport 33 Peace
17 Depend
M agritte
21 One of
goddess
20 Explosive 7 Radio
Lear's
35 Crazes
stuff
problem
daughters 36 Leave out
23Ring
8 Drizzle
22 Track
371mpress
legend
9 Bustle
legend
38 Gal of
24 Racer's
10 Cribbage•
team
Jesse
song
need
26Used a
24 Juan or
40 Pasture
16 Pays to
shovel
Eva
41 Tick off
play
27Genesis
25 " - got
42 Block17 Speed
name
it!"
head
checker
28 Historic
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $'1 75 (cnecklm.o.) lo
Thomas Joseph Book '. I' 0 Box !1364/!1, Orlando, FL 32853·64 75
time
29 Sticks
31 Author
Fleming
32 Stylishly
quaint
33 Hostels
34Seek, as
office
37 Pronto
39 Hilary
Swank
movie
43 Be patient
44Casual
eateries
45 Pipe
bends

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

l. !&lt;NOW YOU'RE'

William Hoest

OIJ1'1HERe. GOME:W~toRe.,
.OSUN9E'AM .
www.thelockhoms com

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell
I

ATE VOOR.
1-fOME.WORt&lt;...

ASSIGNMENT.

_/

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

•

by Dave Green

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll
flm•e.-5-Dynamic; 4-H~&lt;.itn&gt;e; J-Avrmg.·;
2-S&lt;rso; 1-Difjicrtlt
'

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4 7
9
1
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6
5
4
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P.
7
5
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9
4
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9
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6
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1 2
8 3
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7
9
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Dlfficufl)·I .e' el * * *

ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
***You keep ooming up with
questions that you pose in order to
find solutions. If you are not comfortable with various elements, you Vl'&lt;.'r in
a new direction. Too many pvtcntial
fields of quicksand might point to a
new direction, and with good rea~&gt;n.
1onight Discuss and take the lead in a
key is.&lt;;ue.
TAURUS (April 20-M.1y 20)
Just when you thought vou
were in the 'Ainner's circle, you dio.;a.wcr there might be reason to back off.
"Though disappointed, you can opt tn
move fotward in a new direction or
explore your options. Ti.might: Ld yt)ur
imagination choose a favoritt' p.1stimc.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
**** Keep pushing for answers.
Others ~m to balk at the pn.."-Cnt
leadership and issues. You cannot
make someone listt.n. Let this play out,
and remain an observer. You willlx•
happier. Tonight Say ''\"es'' I&lt;) an offer.
It is nearly too good to be true.
CANCER Qune 21-Juh• 22)
*** Stay focu....."'&lt;i. even if vou sec
m.my rc~ns a cum.nt pmjl'l:t simply
cannot draw the support of others.
Take news with a gr.1in of a salt. You
might find !!'tat letting others figurt'
thiS is,;ue out is the lx&gt;st way Stay clt'i'lr.
IOnight Why, where and wlwn? You
have many options.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
**** You want to allow gn.•an.•r
creativity and understanding. Lisn.•n to
forth~rning inform,1tion. It is interest-

I

-

Q

" ... now I can tell how old Barfy and
Sam are in dog years."

u

'0

DENNIS THE MENACE

Hank

Ketchum

1

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:;
;
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~

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f'I-IOTO OP1''

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"Now THAT WAt:::. P!;FINIT'E:l-'1' A GR€"1&gt;-.T

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Y..hine:-;cia);
Sept 15, 2010:
This year, you often find yourself
challenged both personally and in
dealings with othen;. Though you
might want to throw your h.1nds in the
air, resolution oomes from focusing on
what works for both your professional
image and your oommunity status. Put
that extra effort into your work, and
you will see rewards. If you arc single,
you might meet a lot of people, though
it might be difficult to develop a rda·
tionshlp that goes past the dating
phase. If you are attached, vm1 might
not be very happy with some of the
choices of your sigitificant other. Know
that this is a phase, not grounds for
separation. CAPRICORN pmvidcs
ideas.

£ B s L
6 9 G ~.
L v 8 6
~ G L 9
B ~ 6 £
G s B v
s 6 -9 1G- 9 L v B
v 8 ~ s

***

ing to S&lt;.~ the.• conflict in details and
infom1ation from various sources. Your '
im.1gimtion could kick in. Tonight
Follow the trail with the least conflict.
vmGo (Aug. 2&gt;-Sept. 22)
***The instinct to withdraw is
not all that abnormal. The real issue is
determining the most effective way to
stay out of an impending oonflict
lx•twem key clements in your life.
Understanding \viii evolve given time.
'li,)night: Ll't your imagination rock and •
miL

UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**** Kt'Cp communication
actiw. lake news that comes fom·ard
,,;th a h'Tain of salt Focus on accompJi..,hing a., mochas you can Be aware
that ,m e&gt;.pcnditure might be necessmy. A family mcmbe( proves to be
o;,upportiw. 1onight I le1d home early.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-No,·. 21}
* * * \ \'alch a tendencv to go to
c.xtrem&lt;."&gt;. llold tlff on making any
financial commitment!;. You are coming to a point of view that isn't necessarily gmundl'CIIo other.;. Be careful
with making &lt;my agreements today.
'looight: l\k'l't friend-..
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
**** l'orging ahead on a set path
could lx• .1 problem, a ... there is an enormous ,m10unt of flak coming from
~lmt'Ont.' close. You care about peace
on the honw front. llold off, if possible,
to st.'t' ,1 situ,1tion open up. Give youl'~lf timL'. limight: Your treat.
CAPRICORN (IXc. 22-Jan. 19}
**You might want to pull back
and lbiL'n more. Qu~tions and oonver'io"ltion.., point to ,1 sn.1fu. Give yourself
time to figure out which Is the best
path. You know where you want to go.
Tonight: l"t-cling n.•·awrgized.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18}
**** You {l'letl'&gt; on the basic;.
Listen to friend~, but rt.'alize you might
h.we hl say no to the expenses. At
tin-e; you might want to s.w yes, but
vou &lt;:impl)' can't afford to do so.
looight: lake some much-needed personal time.
PISCES (Feb. lQ-March 20)
***You takl•" st.1nd that is long
overdue. Investigate an opportunity a
bos-. pn.."&gt;Cnts. Understanding evolves
to .1 ne" level bchvccn you and those
in charge. You could be in a no-win situation. i\ !,1te nweting ~resolutions.
looight: Where the gang is.

jncqttelme Bignr is 011 the Internet
at ltttp://wll'lt'.jncqttelmebignr.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

•

•

•
~

•
:

•
•
-·
,
~

,
•

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
In this file
photo
from July
20, the
He isman
trophy of
former
Southern
California
running
back
Reggie
Bush is
shown at
USC in
Los
Angeles.
Cal.
Liz 0.
Baylen/Los
Angeles

IIJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f!!!!!!!!!~~ Times/MCT

Bush forfeits 2005
Heisman Trophy
NEW YORK (AP) Reggie Bush took the
unprecedented step of giving back his Heisman
Trophy on Tuesday, saying the ~candal over
improper benefit&lt;; while he
was a star running back at
Southern
California
should not stain ''the dignity of this award.''
The
New
Orleans
Saints· star won the
Heisman - symbol of the
best player in college football - m 2005.
Returnin~ the trophy has
no practicru effect on Bush
since he's already in the
pros and a member of a
Super Bowl championship
team. However, It is the
first time in the award's
75-year history that a player has returned it.
USC was hit with heavy
sanctions by the NCAA
this swnmer after it determined Bush and his family had received hundreds
of thousands of dollars in
gifts from two fledgling
California-based marketina agents. The NCAA
rufed that Bush was ineligible for the 2005 season.
which opened the possibility that the Heisman
Trophy Trust would take
back the award.
One of the few ~uide­
lines given to He1sman
Trophy voters is that a
player must be in compliance with NCAA rules to
be eligible tor the trophy.
"The persistent media
speculation regarding allegations dating back to my
years at USC has been
both painful and distracting," Bush said in a statement released through the
Saints. "In no way should
the storm around these
allegations reflect in any
way on the dignity of this
award, nor on any other
institutions or individuals.
"For the rest of my days,
I will continue to strive to
demonstrate through my
actions and words that I
was deserving of the confidence placed in me by
the Heisman Trophy
Trust.''
Just after USC was
sanctioned, the eightmember trust. based in
New York. said it was considering what to do about
Bush, who won in a landslide vote over Texas quarterback Vince Young.
The trust met Tuesday;
it had no comment.
Whether
the
2005
Heisman will be vacated
or given to Young remains
to be seen.
"Just
heard
about
Reggies Heisman," Young
posted on his Twitter
account. ''Reg will continue to be the 2005 Award
recipient and I will continue to be honored to have
been in the 2005 Heisman
campaign with such a talented athlete."
Allegations of improper
benefits to Bush and his
family were tirst reported
by Yahoo! Sports in
September 2006. months
after Bush had already
been drafted No.2 overall
by the Saints.
The NCAA and Pac- I 0
began investigating Bush
and the USC football program soon afterward, and
Bush immediately denied
any wron~doing.
One of the marketing
agents, Lloyd Lake, sued
Bush trying to recoup
nearly $300,000 in cash
and gifts. Bush was supposed to give a deposition
m the case. but never did.
Eventually, the case was
settled and Bush never had
to give his side of the story

Wednesday, September 1&amp; 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

publicly.
In handing out its penalties. the NCAA cited USC
for a lack of institutional
control. Its report cited
numerous improper benefits for Bush and former
basketball player O.J.
Mayo. who spent just one
year with the Trojans.
The penalties included
the loss of 30 football
scholarships. over three
years and vacatin~ 14 victories in whicn Bush
played from December
2004 through the 2005
season. ,USC, under coach
Pete
Carroll.
beat
Oklahoma in the BCS title
game on Jan. 4, 2005, and
won 12 games during
Bush's He1sman-winning
season. which ended witn
a loss to Texas in the 2006
BCS title gan1e.
After the 2009 season.
Carroll left USC to take
over as coach of the NFL's
Seattle Seahawks.
In July, USC rt&lt;placed
athletic director Mike
Garrett \vith Pat Haden.
and one of the first moves
Haden made was returning
USC's copy of Bush's
Heisman ·rrophy.
Bush's decision ends
four years of questions.
debate and turmoil surrounding allegations that
tainted one of the o-reat
performances in college
football history.
"I think it's a sad day,
that's the way I feel about
it." said former Nebraska
quruterback Eric Crouch,
who won the Heisman in
200 I. "Having to actually
be the ftrst time in the history of the award that
someone has given it back
... I don't know if he actually had to. Maybe this is
on his terms."
Eddie George, the 1995
Heisman winner from
Ohio State. felt the same
way: "I don't think he
should've
gave
his
Heisman away. r think it's
a shame that it's come to
this for Reggie."
USC won 34 straight
games and two national
titles during Bush's sensational three-year career.
In 2005, he was spectacular, running for 1.740
yards. scorino 18 touchdowns and belping the
Trojans reach the national
game
championship
against Texas and Young.
When it came time to
award the Heis.man, Bush
ran away with the vote. He
received 784 first-place
votes, the third-most m the
history of the award and
finished 933 points ahead
of the Texas star.
But it was Young who
came away with the
biggest prize. He had one
of the greatest oames in
college footbati history
and scored the winning
touchdown with 19 seconds left in Texas' 41-38
victory at the Rose Bowl.
Meanwhile, Bush's most
memorable play from the
title game was an illadvised lateral that resulted in a USC turnover.
Bush jumped to the
NFL as a junior after the
Rose Bowl and was drafted by the Saints.
As a pro, he's had some
brilliant moments and has
been a productive player.
However. so far. he has
fallen sh01t of becoming
the star he was projected
to be.
"Now that this is behind
me I look forward to the
future and winnin~ more
awaFds and cnampionships here in New
Orleans! Who.Dat!" Bush
tweeted.

Prep Notebook: No sirens this time in Vanlue
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The fire trucks were
silenced in Vanlue on
Friday night.
It had become customary to roll out the ftre
trucks to escort the football team thr.ough town
after recent Vanlue wins.
That was because wins
were so rare they were
cherished by the tiny
school in the southeast
corner
of
Hancock
County, the smallest public school in the state
which plays football.
There are only 16 players on the team: 15 boys
and one girl.
The first impromptu
parade came after the
Wildcats opened the season with a 26-7 win over
Ridgemont. The big red
trucks were out and the
sirens were wailing again
the following week when
beat
Hardin
Vanlue
Northern 24-13, marking•
the first time since 1984
that the Wildcats were 2..:

0.
With winless. Arcadia,
Vanlue's rival, coming up
next, Vanlue had a shot &lt;tt
reaching 3-0 for the first
time since 1962.
But Arcadia broke
open a close game with
three touchdowns in 3:09
of the third quarter and
went on to ruin Vanlue's
parade, 34-13, in the 86th
meeting between tne
backyard rivals.
SMART
MOVE:
Following a 33-6 loss to
Youngstown Liberty, the
Niles ~cKinley coaching staff decided to turn
to the running game in
hopes of recharging a
sluggish Red Dragons
offense. In a 40-24 victo ....
ry over Coventry, Reggie
Wells rushed for 325
yards on just 20 carries
16.25 yards per
attempt - and scored
four first-half touchdowns on runs of 2, 7 l,
58 and 91 yards. Wells
had 303 yards on 16 carries before halftime.
RUN FOR IT! Conor
Hundley carried 22 times

Soccer
fromPageBl

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Katelyn
Hill
and
Hayman each had six
kills. and Thomas had
one. Cummins and Hill
each had one block.
Thomas led the Purple
and Gold in sets with a
near perfect 81-83 (.976)
evening.
As a team, the Lady
Tornadoes were ll3-146
(.774) passing in the four
sets.
Cummins and
Strang were each 29-34.
Hill was J7-21, Ash was
14-19, Thomas was 1014. Hayman was 4-9, and
Harris was 2-7. Jordan
Huddleston was 6-6 and
Stephanie Berryman was
2-2.
The Lady Tornadoes
host TVC Hocking opponent
Wahama
on
Wednesday at 6 p.m.

Battle

SWITCH: When Ada's
all-state QB Mil:chell
Paine was injured in
third game a year
coach Mike Fell repl
him with all-state receiver Heath Jackson. All
Jackson did was pass for
2, 131 yards. rush for 905,
add 781 yards receiving
and account for 47 TDs
in leading Ada· to a 12-1
season. Jackson is now at
Bowling Green State
University,
but
the
receiver-to-quarterback
trend continues for Ada.
Konnor Baker, an allOhio end in 2009 when
he caught 67 passes for
1.147 yards and 13 TDs.
has taken over at QB this
season. He threw for 375
yards and six TDs in a
game-one
wil)
over
Hardin Northern, and has
the Bulldogs off to a 3-0
start.
ALL
STATE(S):
Steubenville Big Red has
defeated a team from
Michigan
(Inkster,
Pennsylvani
(McKeesport),
Wes
Virginia (Brooke) and
takes on a team from
Washington D.C. (St.
John's College Prep) this
week. Big Red will play
two
West
Virginia
schools
(Morgantown
and Wheeling Park) in
Weeks 5 and 6 and will
play its first team from
Ohio (Massfllon) in
Week 7.
FATHER'S
DAY:
Youngstown
Ursuline
coach Dan Reardon had
an eventful week. On
Thursday, Reardon and
his wife Amanda welcomed a n~w baby boy.
Patrick Reardon was
born at 2:25p.m. By 3:35
pm, Reardon had left the
hospital and was at practice. -He was· back at the
side of his wife and son
by 5:30.
On Friday, Reard.
guided the Irish (3-0) t
14-1 0 win over previous
ly unbeaten Mentor Lake
Catholic.

BLUE DEVILS' LAST
SECOND GOAL NOT
ENOUGH AGAINST ATHENS

feU to Athens on Tuesday
evening.
Caldwell's goal was
assisted by Jared Lester.
Athens won by a 3-1
score after leading 2-0 at
the half.
Gallia Academy (4-3,
1-3 SEOAL) had nine
shots on goal in the
game, with the majority

coming in the second
half. ~
The Blue Devils' goal
keeper Zach Northup had
14 saves in the loss.
Athens had 17 shots on
goal.
GalJia Academy will
travel to Logan on
Thursday. with the game
to begin at 5:30 p.m.

each had two points,
while Miranda Grueser,
and
Valerie Conde,
Morgan Howard each
had one point. Glass had
one ace.
Glass led the way with
20 assist and Howard
added one.
Bailey had eight kills
for the Lady Marauders.
Ali5on Brown added
five, Stanley and Howard
each had three, Emily
Kinnan had two. and
Alaine Arnold had one.
Kinnan had one block.
Meigs
will
host
Eastern in a battle of the
Meigs County teruns on
Wednesday evening at 6

A N 0 T H E R

p.m.

(two
aces).
Tayler
Duncan had six points
(one ace). Shelby Merry
TRIMBLE TOPS
added
six
points,
lADY REBELS
Chandra Canaday had
five points. Meghan
GLOUSTER, Ohio
had
three
The South Gallia Lady Caldwell
Rebels (5-3) took a tough points. and Jasmyne
loss on Monday evening Johnson added one point.
at the hands of the · Caldwell Jed the net
attack with 16 kills
Trimble Lady Tomcats.
South Gallia won the nine blocks. Bostic ha
first set by a score of 25- six kills and one block,
23, with Trimble winning Merry added four kills
two
blocks.
the next three by scores and
of 25- 17, 25-22. and 25- Canaday had three kills.
and Johnson added one
20.
Tori Duncan led the kill.
Lady Rebels with 10
Tayler Duncan had 17
points (three aces). Ellie · assists and Canaday
Bostic had eight points added eight.

aP.

LADY MARAUDERS
FALL TO ATHENS

ROCKSPRINGS.
Ohio - The Meigs Lady
Marauders (2-3) fell to
Athens in a TVC Ohio
contest at Meigs High
. School
on
Tuesday
evening.
Athens won by scores
of 25-13, 25-12. and 2516. The Lady Bulldogs
had 12 blocks in the
match.
The Lady Marauders
were led in points by
Emalee
Glass
and
Chelsea Patterson with
three each.
Shellie
Bailey. Jordan Anderson,
and Chandra Stanley

this

Schankweiler had 165
yards rushing, caught one
TO pass and ran for four
more, including the
game-winning score on a
19-yard run with 14.3
seconds remaining for a
34-28 win.
NOTE THIS: The
Middletown-Lima Senior
series came to an end
with the Middies taking a
49-14 victory last week,
giving them a 34-17-2
advantage in the rivalry:
Danbury's
Lucas
Kennedy ran for four
TDs, passed for one and
pick~d off two passes as
the Lakers - who have
just 16 players - defeated Fostoria St. Wendelin
33-20 for their first home
win in four years: Josh
Cook threw two TO passes and had a 75-yard
interception return for a
score as Lisbon David
Anderson snapped a 29game losing streak with a
20-7 win over Wellsville;
after entering the season
with a 5-94 record this
millenium.
Sebring
McKinley won its second
straight game by defeatYoungstown
ing
Christian,
33-14;
Archbold scored 35
points in the second quarter en route to a 52-0
halftime lead and a 59-21
win over Sherwood
Fairview;
Symmes
Valley beat Chesapeake
27-12 for its ftrst win in
the series since 1989:
Hamilton Badin's Alex
Rieman had seven catches for 108 yards in a 3113 victory over Hamilton
Ross. giving him a
school-record
1,313
career receiving yards:
and Lucasville Valley QB
Blake Yates scored 31
points in a 49-21 victory
over Coal Grove.
HONORING
COACH
REED:
Coldwater started 1-2 for
the first time since 1994.
The Cavaliers will honor
longtime coach John
Reed. who passed away
in May after a battle with
esophageal cancer, when
they host St. Henry in the

THE PLAINS, Ohio Caldwell
Jonathan
Spring Valley keepers
scored Gama Academy's
managed four saves.
PPHS
will
host lone goal with 42 secHuntington St. Joe on . onds remaining in the
game as the Blue Devils
Thursday at 6 p.m.

Volleyball

Backyard
weekend.

for 25 1 yards and three
TDs as Cincinnati St.
Xavier beat Louisville
(Ky.) St. Xavier, 32-13:
Fredericktown's
Matt
Smith rushed for 249 and
two TDs (48, 58) on 18
carries in a 42-14 win
over Ashland Crestview;
Lucas Rosebrook rushed
for 230 yards and three
TDs in Hamler Patrick
Henry's
win
over
Montpelier; and Oak
Harbor's Jake Scott ran
for 217 yards on 36 carries and recovered a fumble as the Rockets defeated Eastwood 34-7.
AERIAL ATTACK:
Canton South's Jared
May tied a school record
with nine touchdown
passes in a 62-14 win at
East Palestine. completing 26 of 38 passes for
451 yards with no interceptions; Brody Flegal
threw for 365 yards and
ran for J48 leading
Edgerton past perennial
Michigan power Mendon
48-27;
McComb's
Andrew Dee has completed 65 of 85 passes
(76.4 percent) for 970
yards and 13 touchdowns
in three wins; Eric Martin
of Cincinnati Turpin was
12 of 18 for 30 1 yards
and had six TD passes four to Shade Whitfield
- in a 50-0 win over
Indian Hill: and Dakota
Dartis was 14 of 18 passing for 408 yards and
three TDs, and added a
I 2-yard TO run as
Cincinnati North College
Hill beat Madeira 52-13.
NEVER TOO LATE:
North Lewisburg Triad
led
Milford
Center
Fairbanks 34-7 early in
the third quarter. But
Fairbanks QB
Nick
Gibson ran for three TDs
and threw for another for
a 37-34 victory, sealed
when
Ryan
Rausch
kicked a fteld goal with
three seconds left. And
Wheelersburg went 8-2
and made the playoffs
last season but lost its
first two games this season Facing- Portsmouth
in Week 3, Brandon

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