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                  <text>Kloes nruned
outstanding senior
couple,A3

Friday night
football previews,
Bt

•
J&gt;rinlld on 100'1:
Rcc.)clcd C\\Sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

s_o§

D ....

i-8 • Vol. 6o, No. 3 ·.: ;._ft~

Cordray sues
Ally Financial
WASHINGTON (AP)
-Ohio's attorney general
is o;uing All) Fmnnciallnc.
and its GMAC Mortgage
divi ion, allegmg the company 'iolated state froud
laws in handling foreclosure cases
Thl' action could be the
first in a wave of lawsuits
by state regulutors over
what appem· to be wideread pmblcms in &lt;.locuents used by the nation's
argest mortg,,ge lenders.
Attorney
General
Richard Cordra) said
Wedne d&lt;~y the nllegcd
fraud could imolve hundred of foreclosures in
the state. The Ia\\ suit
clmm the compan) 's
employees stgned and
filed fat e affida\ its to
mislead court . Cordray
called the alleged fr:aud the
"tip of rut iceberg of industry\\ ide abuse of the foreclosure process."
Cordray io; asking for
civil penaltie11 of up to
$25,000 for every \lOlation of the state's cono;umcr laws and for the
company to pay back any
financial losses to the
homeo\\ ncr. J le also wmlls
the court to halt any Ally
foreclosure or 5, 1Jc of
property no\\ pending 111
hlo.
He
!oCnt
letter
ednesday to four maior
~
""!ortgage _lenders ~nd servtcer
m OhiO
' JPMo.rgan,
B~nk of
A~~enca. Wells f·argo and
Ctugroup - to find out
more about thc1r foredosure processes.

Benefit sing
POMEROY - Se\eral
local churches will be
hosting a benefit Gospel
sing for the llemlock
Grove Chnstian Church
from 6-8 p.m., Saturday,
Oct 16 at the Mulberry
Community Center. There
\\ill be food and b,lkcd
goods for ale. Admio;sion
io; free though donations
to\\ tu-d rebu1lding the
church \\ ill be accepted.

~BITUARIES
Page AS
• Evelyn May Warner
• James Laudermilt
• Vickie S. Johnson

WEATHER

Commissioners approve grant for energy upgrades.
J.

the 325,000 grant program, \\ hich will reimburse commissioners for
POMEROY -Meigs money they spend to
County Commissioners repl.tcc heating and coolexecuted a grant agree- ing systems and make
ment
through
the other energy-efficient
American Recmery and upgr:adcs at the multipurRem\ estment
Act pose senior center and the
Wednesday for energy- county office annex.
S.t\ ing renm)ttions at two
County Conunis,wncrs
county-owned buildings. anticipate receiving fundGrants Administrator ing through the American
Jean Trussell met with Recovery
and
commissioners to discuo;s
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED MYDAA.YSE/ffiNa.COM

Reinvestment Act to
upgrade heating and arr
conditioning systems in
the county annex and
health department headquarters, both located on
Mulberry Heights.
The
upgrades arc
expected to save the commi)lsioncrs as much as
$14,000 per year once
they are completed. Plans
for the grant funds
include a ne\\ boiler and

other heating upgrades,
and a new rooftop air
conditioning chiller for
the multipurpose building.
Commis~ioner~ spent
$20,000 last ~ummer on
air conditioning repair
ami replacement on county-owned buildings.
At the anne~ the former county home, commissioners will replace
the heating o;ystcm boiler

with a 95-percent effiCient model, clean duct
work and other equipment and add insulation.
Window air conditioners
will be replaced. ·
Commissioners also:
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$212,695.17.

• Changed their meeting time to 10 a.m.

See Upgrades, AS

Meigs Co. educator receives FAO grant
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH MYDALYSENT~ELCOM

POMEROY
A
Metgs County educator
wiII be receh ing a S trh e
for Excellence MiniGrant as a result of the
gcncrosit)
of
the
Walmart
Foundation
working in partnership
with the Foundation for
Appal.1chian
Ohio
(FAO.)
1 The rcc.~pien.t of !~e
$2,500 g• ,mt •~ He1ke
Perko, a fourth gr~de
teacher
at
t-.1e1gs
Intermedmte School. ~he
plans to use the mtmgrant to expand the
&lt;&gt;chool g:rrden ~tarted Ia t
y~ar b) addmg more
ratsed beds, some fnut
trees, berry bushes. additiona! \egetable and
flower plants and bcnche .
..My goal is to teach
di\ ersity, sustainability,
composting. and the
reuse of \\ ater, to teach
the kids they can grow
healthy foods in an inexpensive way.'' -,a•d Perko.
She went on to explain
that plans being considered include organizing

an after-school garden
club, invohing community people \\ ith experti e m gardening, and
perhaps e\en growing
enough produce to bring
into Pomeroy's Friday
night farmers market.
While she explained tillS
would be minimal particIpation she smd it \\auld
teach a bu iness sen"e like how to put a budget
together and ho\\ to manage money
The garden io; currently
a 12 x 12 plot, but Perko
anticipates the grant \\til
alia\\ for the space to he
doubled She also anticipates that there will be
mone' enough from the
grant to purcha e recycled plasttc benche
\\ htch \\'ill allo\\ students
to u e the garden as a
tud) area on nice da) s.
E\erythmg for the project. \\ ith the exception
of the benches. will be
purchased locally to support the local economy,
she said.
~e\\ curnculum \\ill
be incorporated for the
entire fourth grade, link-

See Grant, AS

Charlene Hoeflich/photo
Montana Martin (left) picks some dill and chives, as fourth grade teacher Heike
Perko and Drew Humphreys gather in some chard from the Meigs Intermediate
School garden .. Perko has received a $2,500 FAO grant to expand the gardening
project used a tool for teaching how to grow nutritious foods inexpensively.

Pomeroy PO investigating wrecks, theft
near
Nye
A\enue.
According
to
Sgt.
Ronald Spaun. 1'\eal A.
POMEROY - The White, Pomero). \\US
Pomeroy
Police stopped at the traffic
Department is currently light on ~ye A\ enue
im estigating e\ era! traf- when Butcher accidenfic accidents. including a tally struck White's \Chihit-skip. as well as a theft cle. Butcher alleged!)
at
Fruth Pharmacy, fled the scene but later
according to Pomero) turned herself 111 to
Chief of Police Mark E. police. 'I here \\i!re no
injuries.
Proffitt.
Paul L. f\lcDanicl, II ,
Sherry M. Butcher.
Albany, was cited for Pomeroy, was cited for
assured clear distance, failure to control \\hen a
driving under suspension vehicle he was drh ing
and the leaving the scene struck the side of c1 \chiof an accident, in relation cle dnven by .M~tin A.
to a two-car fender ben- McAngus. Pomeroy, at
der on East Main Street the intcr~cction o: \\olfe

High: 74
Low: 40

INDEX
2 SI·CilONS- 12 PAGF~&lt;;

lendars
A3
Classifieds
B3-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
Sports
B Section
2010 Oh10 \ 11le-. l'ubhshmg Cn

l J!IJ ,I !1!.!1,11 . I
..

a

B Y BETH SERGENT

BSHIGENT MYDA LYSEtffiNELCOM

Eastern
Homecoming
Court
Submitted photo
Candidates for Homecoming Queen at
Eastern High School Friday, pictured
with their escorts, are Beverly Maxson
and Jonathan Barnett, Ashley Miller and
Colin Connolly, and Brittney Morrison
and Devon Baum .

Dri\e
and
Spring
A\enue. Contact caused
McAngus' \chicle to be
spun into a vehicle
parked in the dri\e\\ay at
400 Spring Avenue.
There \\ere no injurie~.
Patrolman D. Laudermilt
is im estigating.
John ~orthup, Racine,
reported while tra' cling
westbound on Chester
Road, his vehicle \\as
~tru~k h} an object
which had been thrown
by a wcedeater being
operated by an employee
of the Village of
Pomcro). The object

See Pomeroy, AS

Beth SergentlphotO
This traff1c accident in Pomeroy occurred Wednesday
afternoon at the traffic light on East Main Street and is
one of many the Pomeroy Police Department has
under investigation. There were no further details
available about this accident at press time.

�Thursday, October 7,

2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page .A2

Panel: White House blocked worst-case oil spill figures .
WA_SHING'fON (AP)
'I he .~hitc House
bl?ck~d efforts by feder~
~cientists to tell the publt.c
JU~t how bad the Gulf Oil
spill c.ould have been,
acco~d10g to a J?ancl
appomted by Pr~side~t
Barack Obama ~~ uwest!ga~e t.he worst .otlshore Oil
spill m U.S. history.
In documents released
~'edne~day. the ~at!onal
Oil .. spill cormm~swn 's
statt. reveals that m late
Apr!l or early May the
~h1te H~use budget
office dented a reguest
Natwn~l.
from . the
Occamc and Atmosphenc

Administration to make
public the worst-case discharge from the blownout well. The Unified
Command- the government .team in charge of
the sp~ll response - also
~a.s dtscussmg the possibihty of making the numhers public, the report
says, citing interviews
With government officials.
~e White House did
not Immediately respond
to a request for comment.
But Jerry Miller, head
of the White House science office's ocean subcommittee, told The

Associated Press in an
interview at a St.
Petersburg, Fla., conference on the oil's flow that
he didn't think the budget
office censored NOAA.
"I would very much
doubt that anyone would
put
restrictions
on
NOAA's ability to aniculate factual information,''
Miller said.
The April 20 blowout
and explosion in the Gulf
of Mexico killed 11
workers, spewed 206 million gallons of oil from
the damaged oil well, ana
sunk the Deepwater
Horizon drilling rig.

BP's drilling permit for
the Macondo well originally estimated the worst
scenario to be a leak of
6.8 mmion gallons per
day. In late April, the
Coast Guard and NOAA
received an updated estimate of 2.7 mi11ion to 4.6
million gallons per day.
While those figures
were used as the basis for
the
government's
response to the spill they appeared on an internal Coast Guard Situation
report and on a dry-erase
board in NOAA's Seattle
war room - the public
was never told.

ln the meantime, government officials were
telling the public that the
well
was
releasing
210,000 .gallons per day
- a figure that would,be
later adjusted to be much
closer to the worst·case
estimates.
''Despite the fact that
the Unified Command
had this information,
relied on it for operations,
and publicly states that it
was operating under a
worst·case scenario, the
government never disclosed what its...scenario
was," the report says.
University of South

Florida oceanographer
David Hollander, who
was also at the St.
Petersburg meeting of
150 scientists studying
the
oil
flow
on
Wednesday, said he was
surprised to find that
White House
office gagged NOAA.
said public disclosure
would have helped scientists to figure out what
was going on.
"It would have been
much better to know from
a scientific point of view
the reality," he said in an
interview with The
Associated Press.

U.S. apologizes for attack on Pakistani soldiers
ISLAMABAD (AP)The U.S. apologized
Wednesday for a recent
helicopter attack that
killed two Pakbtani soldiers at an outpost near
the Afghan border, saying American pilots mistook the soldiers for
insurgents they were pursuing.
The apology. which
came after a joint investigation. could pave the
way for Pakbtan to
reopen a key border
crossing that NATO uses
to ship goods into landlocked
Afghanistan .
Pakistan closed the
crossing to NATO supply
convoys in apparent
reaction to the Sept. 30
incident.
Suspected
militants
have taken advantage of
the impasse to launch
attacks against stranded
or
rerouted
trucks.
including
two
Wednesday where gunmen torched at least 55
fuel tankers and killed a
driver.
''We extend our deepest apology to Pakistan·
and the families of the
Frontier Scouts who
were killed and injured."
said the U.S. ambassador
Pakistan,
Anne
to
Patterson.
Pakistan
initially
reported that three soldiers were killed and
three wounded in the
attack, but one of the soldiers who was critically

injured and initially close the Torkham borreported dead ended up der crossing that consurviving, said Maj . nects
northwestern
Fazlur Rehman, the Pakistan
with
spokesman
for
the Afghanistan through the
Frontier Corps.
famed Khyber Pass. The
Pakistani soldiers fired closure has left hunat the two U.S. heli- dreds of trucks stranded
copters prior to the alongside the country's
attack. a move the inves- highways and bottletigation team said was necked traffic heading to
likely meant to notify the the one route into
aircraft of their presence Afghanistan from the
after they passed into south that has remained
Pakistani airspace sever- open.
al times.
There have been seven
''We
believe
the attacks on NATO supply
Pakistani border guard convoys since Pakistan
was simply firing warn- closed Torkham, including shots after hearing ing those Wednesday.
the nearby engagement
NATO officials have
and hearing the heli- insisted that neither the
copters flying nearby,'' attacks nor the border
said U.S . Air Force Brig. closure have caused supGen.
Tim
Zadalis, ply problems for NATO
NATO's director for air · troops since hundreds of
plans in Afghanistan trucks still cross into
who led the investiga- Afghanistan each day
tion. "This tragic event through the Chaman
could have been avoided crossing in southwestern
with better coalition Pakistan and via Central
force coordination with Asian states.
the Pakistan military."
But
reopening
The head of U.S. and Torkham is definitely a
NATO
forces
in priority
NATO
for
Afghanistan. Gen. David because it is the main
Petraeus, al-;o expressed crossing in Pakistan, the
his condolences. · saying country through which
in a statement that "we NATO ships the majorideeply regret this tragic ty of its supplies into
loss of life and will con- Afghanistan.
Other
tinue to work with the routes are more expenPakistan military and sive and logistically difgovernment to ensure ficult.
U.S.
and
this doesn't happen
Both
again.''
Pakistani officials have
Pakistan moved swift- predicted
Torkham
ly after the attack to would reopen soon, and

the apologies issued there were any casualWednesday could pro- ties.
Of the seven attacks on
vide Pakistan with a
face-saving way to back convoys bringing supplies in from the port city
down.
Reopening the border of Karachi since the
could reduce the fre- Torkham closure, five
quency with which mili- were on trucks heading
tants have attacked to that crossing and two
NATO supply convoys were on their way to
in recent days, although Chaman.
The convoys bring
such attacks occurred
regularly even before fuel, military vehicles,
spare parts, clothing and
Torkham was closed.
The
first
attack other non-lethal supplies
Wednesday came early for foreign troops in
in the morning when an Afghanistan.
unidentified number of
It was unclear who was
gunmen in two vehicles behind the latest attacks,
attacked trucks as they but the Pakistani Taliban
sat in the parking lot of a have claimed re&amp;ponsiroadside hotel on the bility for similar assaults
outskirts of Quetta, the on NATO supplies.
The helicopter attack
capital of Baluchistan
province. They were and the border closure
making their way to the have exposed the frequent strains in the
Chaman crossing.
One driver was killed alliance
between
in the attack and at least Pakistan and the United
25
trucks
were States. But Pentagon
destroyed by fire that spokesman
Geoff
spread quickly from Morrell downplayed the
vehicle
to
vehicle, possibility of any lasting
senior police official effects.
"There are incidents
Hamid Shakil said.
On Wednesday night, which create misundersuspected
militants standings, there are setarmed with assault rifles backs, but that does not
opened fire on oil mean the relationship tankers parked along the this crucial relationship
road
in
Khyber to us - is in any way
Pakhtunkhwa province derailed," Morrell said
as they were making Tuesday.
their way to Torkham.
Even if the border is
At least 30 tankers were reopened,
underlying
engulfed in flames, said tensions will remain in
local police officer Nisar the U.S.-Pakistan relaKhan. It was unclear if tionship, especially over

Pakistan's unwillingness
to go after Afghan
Taliban militants on its
territory with whom it
has strong historical ties
and who generally focus
their attacks on Western
troops, not Pakistani targets.
The U.S. has responded by
dramatically
increasing the number &lt;A
CIA drone strikes i.
Pakistan's tribal belt,
two
including
Wednesday that killed 11
militants
in
North
Waziristan, according to
Pakistani intelligence
officials speaking onl
condition of anonymity
because they were not
authorized to talk to the
media.
In the first attack, a
U.S. drone fired two missiles at a house near
Miran Shah, the main
town
in
North
Waziristan, killing six
militants, said the officials.
About two hours later,
missiles struck a house
near Mir Ali, another
major town in North
Waziristan, killing five
militants, said the officials.
•
The U.S. does not pu
licly acknowledge th
drone strikes in Pakistan,
but U.S. officials have
said privately that they
have killed several senior
Taliban and al-Qaida
commanders.

Midnight grocery runs capture economic desperation
FREDRICKSBURG.
Va. (AP) Once a
month, just after midnight. the beeping checkout scanners at a Walmart
just off Interstate 95
come alive in a chorus of
financial desperation.
Here and at grocery
stores across the country.
the chimes come just
after food stamps and
other monthly government benefits drop into
the accounts of shoppers
who have been rationing
things like milk. ground
beef and toilet paper and
can finally stock up
again.
Shoppers mill around
the store after l I p.m ..
killing time until their
accounts are repleni~hed.
When midnight strikes.
they rush for the checkout cou"ter.
"The kids are sleeping,
so we go do what we've
gotta do. Money is tight."
Martin Young said as he
and· his wife pushed two
carts piled high with
ground beef. toilet paper
and other items.
The couple said they
need food-stamp benetits, which are electronically deposited onto
debit cards. because his
job as a restaurant server
doesn't quite cover
expense:. for their five
children.
"We try to get here
between I 0:30 and 11
because we know we've
got a lot of stuff to get.
That way by 12 o'clock
we're at the line cashing
out and done." he said.
More than a year after
the technical end of the

Great Recession. mil- they want in the beginlions of Americans still ning of the month, and
have a hard tim~ stretch- we have bigger meals," a
from
the
ing their dollars until the reprieve
first of the month, or rationing that is the rule
for the rest of the month,
even the next payday.
One
in
seven she added.
Stores have always
Americans lives in poverty. and more than 41 mil- noted swings in spending
a
lion are on food stamps. a around paydays record. Last year the fig- drop-off in buying in the
ure was about 35 million. days before shoppers
As a result. there are receive paychecks or
more scenes like the one government subsidies,
last week at a 24-hour followed by a spurt of
Kroger in Cincinnati. As spending once the money
the final hours of is available.
The recession and its
September ticked down,
about five dozen cars aftermath have taken the
were in the parking lot. trend to an extreme.
It's much slower on nor- Tight credit is a factor.
too. When cash runs out,
mal weeknights.
"This here is emer- many can no longer fall
gency
bread,"
said back on credit cards to
Malinda Patterson, 36, buy what they need.
There is no broad data
who . has been without a
full-time job since the on the impact of this
recession began and had shopping pattern, known
started shopping 20 min- as the paycheck cycle.
utes before midnight. The timing of governThat's when $435 in food ment assistance is differstamps kicked in to help ent from state to state,
and when payday falls
feed her six children.
The
same
night, varies by employer.'
But stores have learned
Shavoo Smith and her
four young children were how to adapt to the
loading up on meat, fruit, surges, which typically
bread, water. tissues and occur on the first and the
cereal at Kroger's Food 4 15th of the month, when
Less store on Chicago's many people get their
West Side. Those staples paychecks. They monitor
had begun running out the pay schedules from
more than a week earlier. big employers in the
"Tonight, they were towns where they opertired and hungry. so I ate.
Walmart,
Kroger,
said, 'Let's go ahead and
do it now,"' said Smith, Krnart and others have
who had $600 in food worked with their supplistamps
electronically ers to stock more gallons
deposited to her electron- of milk and supersized
ic debit card at midnight. packages of toilet paper
''They can go to the and detergent at the
fridge and get whatever beginning of the month.

Smaller packages and
store brands are given
prominence leading up to
payday.
Walmart is collaborating with vendors to offer
even smaller sizes for
under a dollar to win
back customers who are
heading to dollar stores
to buy mini-size laundry
soap and other items
because they only have a
few dollars left until the
next payment. Earlier
this year. Kmart began
pushing $1 items on
snack packs and other
food items, timed a week
before the 15th of each
month to help customers
stretch their budgets.
"This is the new norsaid
Richard
mal,"
Hastings, macro and consumer strategist with
Global Hunter Securities.
''This is going to be like
this for many years to
come.''
Not counting Social
Security, one in six
Americans now receives
some form of government assistance, including
food
stamps.
Medicaid and extended
unemployment benefits.
These government pay~
outs now account for
about 20 percent of
Americans' total after-tax
income, said David
Rosenberg. an economist
at
mvestment
firm
Gluskin Sheff. The average over the past halfcentury is 13 percent.
The high number of
people on government
assistance is atypical for
this stage of an economic
recovery. Usually at this

Visit us online at mydailysentlnel.com

point, growth in assis- who is retired and gets
tance rolls should be flat- Social Security on the
tening, Rosenberg said.
first. was in the detergent
Americans relying on aisle at Target, explaining
government benefits are to a reporter why Costco
doing their homework to had a better deal on Tide.
stretch the payments. The Costco was offering 20
vast majority interviewed more ounces for the same
by The Associated Press price.
as October dawned last
"Every penny counts,''
week were carefully she said.
scrutinizing prices and
In
Cincinnati,
had a game plan of what Patterson said she had
to buy where.
learned how to budgeta
In Harlem, shoppers
She said she hopes thW
were running back and
midnight shopping ends
forth from Target to
soon.
Costco to compare prices
"It's going to be getting
just after 10 a.m.. the
time most of the stores colder,'' Patterson said.
open, on the first day of ''Hopefully, it won't be
like this much longer."
the month.
Sandra Bennerson, 66,

Meigs County CDBG 2010 Community
Housing Improvement Program
Notice of Explanation
Flood Plain Development
Meigs County intends to undertake a CDBG
Community Housing Improvement Program
(CHfP) project, fo_r_th~ purpose of
.
home repair/home rehab1htatlonlhomeownersh1p
of various housing units within Meigs County.
Portions of the project may be located
in the 100 Year floodplain. The proposed
projects cannot be undertaken in any other
location as there is no practical alternative for
the location of the projects. The CHIP project
can only take place where there is a need
and it is known that the need may be targeted
in these base flood areas. Therefore, it is the
judgment of the Meigs County'&lt;?ommission_ers
that the benefits to the LMI res1dents that hve m
these areas in various locations in Meigs County,
outweighs consideration of
Executive Orders 11988 and 11990.
A more detailed description of the project and
the FIRM Flood Maps are available for citizen
review at the Meigs County Grants Office,
117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 7,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Meigs County Commissioners
Tom Anderson, President

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

p geA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thu rsday, October 7,

0 tst nding Senior
Coupe named
POMEROY
June an~ Manning Kloes have been
voted the 2010 Outst.mdmg Senior Couple hy their
peers at the Mctgs Semot Center.
Mr. !'!ld Mts. ~Joe . \\~re presented a plaque in
1t!on of thc1r serv1cc 111 the community. Togerher
dch~c1 !ncn!" lot the ~utiition Program to local
ncss~s, smg tn the (;hotr at the Center. help with
. mo1 B1hlc Sehoul, the Yestc1yt·ar Program, munitor
t!l~ Coon llu!1tc1 's .Butlding dtJJ ing the Meigs County
hur .md VISit 1e.,.1dcuts at Rocksprings Rehab and
O\e1brook Centct.
Mrs. Kines, n mtr..e, docs hlood pressures at The
~vh~ples nnd the llamsom ille Senior ~·enter, has assisted 111 I he past. wllh the .mnual flu shot clinic, and bloodmobtle. She ts .tlso amolvcd in the Seniors in Schools
Program, and s a m~mber of the RSVIP Adviwry
Bo,lfd, us ''ell as a C'llazen Corps member.
Mr. and M~s. Kloc hc~ve been manied for 57 years,
ha\1! to/CC c.htldre~ and sc\en gmndchildrcn. and spent
thear h\es an Meags County. They are members of
Trimty Church in Pomeroy.
"
To.be constdered for the .tward the couple had to be
marncd, rcsadents of Mcags County and volunteer in
the commu111t}.

Local woman completes basic training

2 010

A S K D R. BRO THERS

Daughter wants to
go bare at the beach

Submitted photo
June and Manning Kloes display the 2010 Outstanding
Senior Couple plaque presented to them at the Meigs
Senior Center.

Be careful when
choosing 2011 benefits

Dear Dr. Brothers: Our
daughter will h&lt;JVe the privilege of spending next summer in fmncc. She's a senior
in college. and has been
selected to be part of a ))mall
group that will ~tudy the
architecture of Paris_ She
shocked both my wife and
me by saying she mtends to
visit a nude beach while
there. In the age of
Facebook and the Internet.
we are worried that pictures
of her will show up on the
Net How can we stop her
from making such a big mistakc?-M.C.
Dear M.C.: J can understand that you want to be
protective of your daughter
when she is trn\cling in a
foreign country and ~
scnting her parents a&lt;&gt; well
ao; her college and her country while abroad -that's a
lot of presslU'e, and it ccrtainly should make her think
twice about doing anything
that would cmb~ur.t&lt;:&gt;s hcrself. her school or you. And
I'm sure yourcmx:em is that
she not get caught up in
some terrible DVD that i
beihg sold on a porn website. That is \eiy unlikely to
happen. though. since she is
going to France instead of
the spring break-type coast
of Aorida or Te.xas seaside
resort towns.

Dr. Joyce Brothers
We thought he would grow
up to be a priest or something, but it seems like he's ·
fallen in with a very extreme.
bunch of people after breaking with our churCh. He's
begun lhing on a commune
and shows no interest in the
outslde world or his family.
It's kind of freaking us out
Can we get him out of a
cult?- T.V.
Dear T.V.: Although
there arc very few places
you could take your brother
if it were clear that he WdS
not making decisions for
hirn.c;.clf and wao; open to
being rehabilitated after
joining a cult, }ou have a lot
of investigating to do before
you take such a step. And if
you can keep the lines of
communication open as
much as possible, you ha\ e
a good chance of not losing
your brother to a dangerous
lcind of lifestyle that will
make him wish you had rescued him in thi end. Try to
find out as much as possible
about the group he ha"
joined, and whether local
authorities consider the
commune a problem or you
are ju...t v.orricd that they
might.
In any cao;;e, you should
attempt to see and talk to
your brother, to make sure
that he is all right and still in
his normal frame of mind. If
you can't get through to him
or he seems hostile or
changed in a major way.
}ou will want to know this
firsthand. It mav be that he
is not in hann'~ way and is
discovering his true calling.
whatever that may be. You
certainly don't want to jwnp
to conclusion_s ahd end up
alienating him further. But
you do have a right to be
concerned about his '' elfare
and a'k him to keep in close.
touch with you until you are
convinced that he is safe and
in full control of his own
day-to-day activiues. Don't
give up on him.

POMLROY
N.1vy Seaman Recruit Katlyn R.
Plcshctw, daughter of1tffany A. and Bruce E. Pleshaw
of Alb.my recentlr completed U.S. Navy basic trainIn the coming weeks, miling at Rccmit1taming Command, Great Lakes, Ill.
1ions of Americans will
, D.UJ it~ g. the ci~ht-~v~ek pro9r:uT~, Plcshaw completn.·ceivc 20 II employee bent.:d c1 v.mety ot tnunmg wluch mcluded classroom
etit open enrollment materistudy and pr,1ctical instructwn on naval customs tirst
als. Yes, it's a pain to wade
firefighti~g. water safety and survival. and 'shipthrouph all that information,
rd and mrcrnft s,tlcty. An emphasis was also
but Stmply opting for your
v ced on ph) steal lltness.
current coverage could
The cap tone event of boot camp is "Battle
prO\e to be a costly mistake.
Stations" "Jbis exercise gives recruits the skills and
Here's why:
Plan changes. Many benconfidence they need to uccced in the fleet. "Battle
Station " as d stgned to gahamze the basic warrior
efit plans _ e:-pecially
attributco; ?1 sacnfice, dedicatton, teamwork and
medical - change coverJason Alderman
d .1 fr
endurance an c.1ch rccnnt th10ugh the practical applietat s
om year to
cation of ba ic Na\ y skills and the core \alues of - - - - - - - - - age
year. Common changes
Honor. ( ourage and Commitment. Its distinctly Navy
include:
fla,or was dest~ned to take into account what it
• lncrea ed monthly premiums for employee and/or
If you have ne\er been to
means to be a Saalor.
dependent coverage.
the South of France or to the
• Increased deductible and/or copayment amounts for Can'bbean islands frequentdoctor visits. prcscriptJons, prcventi\ e care, ho:-pitaliza- ed by European . you will
tion. dental or vision benefits, etc.
find a somewhat different
• Revised dmg formularies (the list of co.. ered med- atmosphere on the beaches
POMEROY The Meigs Soil &amp; Water ications. including copayment level for different drug there than you may be used
Consen at1on DJ tnct (SWCD) will host its se. . enth classifications).
to ut home. If there Lo; illlY
Annual Le&lt;\(.lin~ Creek Wntcrshl'd Tour on Saturday,
• Preferred doctors or ho5pitals may withdraw from 1 nude sunhathing to be had
Oct. 23, beglllmng at 10 a.m.
the plan's preferred provider network, boosting the cost -mxi I ha\e to say thalli is
The tour will cclcbr.ltC the beauty of fall and to usc them or even eliminating them as an option.
not so unusual in that neck
explore the Leading Creek Watershed area. It is free
• Raising maximum yearly out-of-pocket expense lim- of the woods -just make
to c~ll and will .showcase the projects of Leading Creek its.
I slU'e you di5Cll'\S "ith your·
in the past yea1•
In addition, the Affordable Care Act states that group daughter what kind of
Stops on the tour willanclude site~ of historical sig- medical plans offering dependent cO\erage now must behavior is acceptable and
nificance, natural be.mt)'. and em ironmcntal 'restora- extend that co,erage to adult children under 26 in most v.'hat is not. Even though she
uon. A highlight of the event will be an electro-fish- cases, e\en if they no longer live v. ith you or arc claimed is just doing a bit of Rand R
or 'fish shocking.' demon!\tration on Leading as }Our dependent. Ask your Benefits Department if this after working at a serious
k Other stops,, ill include project locations such ~rovision aeplies and how much you would pay in addi- pace this sununer. you Jl"Obhe Meigs SWCD Consenation Area where a new tJonal pre~1!ums. (To learn more about proVIsions under ably hotild have that con•
hclter hou e p.lVllion is being built.
the Act. 'asat \~&gt;v..healthcare.gov.)
\er allon. The beaches
Paa1icipants should meet at the Meigs SWCD office
Compare WJth SJl?U e's coverage. Compare your · she'll be visiting will h.'l\'C
at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy. v.here vehicles will employer's plll!l \\ath those offcn;d by your :-.~'?use's thcirownmlesandpolicies.
be departing at 10 am. The e\ent will end around employ~r. particularly \\hen d7~admg where to msure and then they are more than
12:30 with a free picnic lunch.
your children. Ju t make sure at s apples-~o-apples. For willing to Jet your daughter
Limited tran'\port,1tion v.ill be available, so carpool- e~ample, one plan may charge lower P':Cnuum~ b.ut have participate as long as she
ing jr, encour, gcd. Pre-registration is requested. h1gher deductables and CO{'aymenh: or 1t may hma~ ne~d- obeys them. But he may
Please call the Meig&lt;~ SWCD at 740-992-4282. Raina ed coverage- say ~our k1d takes an a'\thma medacat1on lose her nerve completely!
Fulks is the I eading Creek Water:-hcd Coordinator
that one plm1 doesn t CO\ Cr.
• ••
·
Review flexible spending ac.count (FSA) contribuDear Dr. BrothlTS: My
~~--------tions. Jf offered by your employer. health care and brother's always been a 'CI)'
Squonk Opera coming to Stuart's cial
dependent care FSA), arc a great way to offset the finan- religious pcrstm. Since he
impact of medical and dependent care expenses.
,
With FSAs, you pay eligible out-of-pocket medical and was young. he s always
NELSONVILLE
The Pittsburgh based theater dependent c.u·c expenses on a pre-tax bao;is. that is. ~nvcrydevout-scrvmg
group Squonk Opew will be coming to Stuart':-; Opera before federal, state and Social Security taxes are a"-~ ~tar. txly and ne;e~
House in Nclc;om illc tor a performance uf Lheir show deducted from your paycheck. This reduces your taxable 111Issmg ma-;s on Sunda).
income and therefore, your t&lt;Lxes.
"Mayhem and Majesty" on Friday. Oct. 15 at 7 p.m.
Since 1992, Squonk Opera has created 10 miginal
You must re-enroll in FSAs each year- amounts don't
showo; and has performed m more thaa1 250 venues cany 0\er year to year. If your health insurance
c~cross the Umtcd States. Time Out New York says deductible and copaymcnts are increasing. consider
Squonk Opei,t IS "A bla1ingly umque spectacle! A increasing your FSA contributions accordingly. To Jearn
flood of contr.tpllono;, \ isual JOkes, and gloriously more about how FSAs "ork. visit Practical .Monev Skills
RIO GRANDE -A ne\\ art exhibit on displaY at
eccentric mu ac that would o;tretch even Tim Burton's for Life(",, \\.pmcticalmoney kills.comlbenefits), Visa
the Uni\ ersity of Rio Grande features a wide range of
imagmation"
Inc.'s free personal financial mm1agement ~ite.
In addition to the e\ ening perfom1ance. Stuart\ '' iJI
Con ider family status change . If you marry, di\ orce. outstandmg ceramics pieces, along with a video disbe bringing an around 900 7th and 8th grade students or gain or lo c dependents. i~ could impact the type- and play and other artwork .
The exhibit. "In 3. 2, 1.. .'' i on display in Rio
m Nelsom ille-Ym k. Trimble, Federal Hocking. co t -of your covem~e optaon . For example:
• Compare matermty and pediatric benefit:-. offered by Grande's Greer ~1u.;eum through Oct. 24. A reception
Logan Schools fm special daytime perfom1ances.
•
These shows are part of Stuart's Children's the various medical plan options. Slightly lower month- is planned for the exhibit on Friday, Oct. 8, from 5-7
Edu~ational Progrdam, 111 w~ich ?tuart's works to off~r ly premmms might not be \\OI1h more re:-trictive coYer- p.m. in the Greer Museum.
The exhibit as a whole is a very nice mix of works,
music, theater. an the per.on~ung arts to student" m age.
Athens and surrounda.ng coun~tes.
.
• If you usc a dependent care FSA. carefully estimate and it fit:- well into the Greer Museum. The exhibit
Tickets and fmther mformat1on arc m·a1lable at 740- 1 how much childcm-c (or day c:1rc for eligible adult features the work of some Ohio University students
753-1924 or. on the web, at W\\ w.stuartsopera- 1 dependents) you'll need next )Car to maximize your tax who may be new to the art world, but it also features
the work of faculty and staff member:- "ho have had
house.otg.
aJ,antagc.
their work shown ;u-ound the country and m-ound the
world.
The Greer Museum is open from 1-5 p.m. Tuesdays
through Sundays at Rio Gnmde throughout the academic )Car.
For more informaHon on the •·Jn 3, 2, I ..." exhibit
POMEROY - Carleton
9053, 6 p.m. potluck, 7 Church events
Public meetings
and
other upcoming exhibits that will be displayed at
Church homecoming.lunch
p.m. meeting.
~luscum, call JimAHcn at 1-S00-282-7201.
the
Greer
at noon to 2 p.m. with spe· For additional
Friday, Oct. 8
CHESTER - ChesterMonday, Oct. 11
information on upcoming events at Rio
cial afternoon services.
LONG BOTIOM
Historical
POMEROY
Bedford Shade
Grande. a~ "ell a infonnation on the wide nmge of
Tuesday,
Oct.
12
7
p.m., Hymn sing with "Portal," 7
academic programs offered on Rio Grande's secnic
Township Trustees regular Association,
WILKESVILLE
p.m., Farth FuJI Gospel
Chester
Courthouse.
campus,
log onto W\\ w.rio.cdu.
meeting 7 p.m. at the town
Revival at the Point Rock
Church.
Saturday, Oct. 9
hall.
Nazarene
Church
at
Sa1urday, Oct. 9
POMEROY - Return
Tuesday, Oct. 12
Wilkesville, 7 p.m. nightly
TUPFERS
PLAINS Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter
TUPPERS PLAINS
through Oct 17, with
Reviva
at
St.
Paul
United
Tuppers Plains Regional DAR, regular meeting, Methooist Church, 7 p.m. Sunday morning worship at
Sewer Oistnct, 7 p m., dis· Pomeroy Library, Makya through Monday. Rev. 11 a.m. Locadted on S.R.
M1lhoan
presents
trict offtce
689 Albany. Rev. Bud
"Sacagawea,"
with
host- Brent Watson to speak. Allman evangelist. The
WELLSTON - The
Special
music.
GJMV
Solid
Waste esses Peggy Moore, Mary Homecoming Sunday, with Brian Family Connection
agement
Distnct Rose and Betty Milhoan.
morning seJVice at 10:15 singing.
Monday, Oct. 11
of Directors, 2:00
a.m., and carry·in dinner,
POMEROY - Monthly 12:30 p.m. Music by Other events
p.m. at the distJ ict office,
1056 S. New Hampshire meeting of Big Bend Fann ~Heaven's Rush."
Antiques Club, 7:30 p.m.,
Saturday, Oct. 9
Avenue, Wellston.
Sunday, Oct. 10
Mulberry
Community
SHADE - SiXth Annual
MIDDLEPORT
Center.
Clubs and
Homecoming at Ash Street Jerseyville Festival. Shade
Thursday, Oct. 13
organizations
Church, 9:30 a.m. Sunday Community Center, Athens
CHESTER - Shade School, 10:30 a.m., mom· CR 33A, Shade. Pie-baking
River Lodge 453 stated ing worship. Potluck fol- contest, Federal Valley
Thursday, Oct. 7
meeting at 7:40 p.m. lows. The Weekleys to sing Cloggers, arts and crafts,
TUPPERS PLAINS
epple butter and cider makRefreshments.
after lunch.
VFW ladiOS AUXIliary
ing, children's activities.

I

MSWCD plans watershed tour

I

I

Rio Grande features
ceramic art exhibit

Community Calendar

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 7,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
'

11 1 Co urt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(7 40) 992· 2156 • FAX (7 40) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez

""MJf We kJ JO 71"
if we•J"e
,, ;..i t &lt;'luu~ t h is,

Publisher

} }OVI"

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

or if TJliS is

w.a t ch in~ us

Pam Caldwell

'?

Advertising Director
Congress slla/1 m ake uo law respectiug au
establisllmeut of rrli._{!iou, or prollibititt.'! tl1e free
exerdse tlureof; or a l~ridgiu.'! tile freedom of
speec/1, or of tl1e press: or tlu righ t of tile people
peaceaM}' to assemble, au d to petitiou tl1e
Go,,erumeut for a redress ofgrie1•auce.s.
T h e First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

AP-GJK Poll: Working-class·
whites move toward GOP

September retail sales edge up
Bv MAE ANDERSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Americans kept spendi ng carefully last month.
buymg eb.:tronics and back to school clothes but
holdmg back on luxuries.
Erratic \\Cather and tepid economic new-; dampened sale , accordin&amp; to data released Wednesday
b) MasterCard Ad\ tsors' SpendmgPulse, which
includes tranllactions m all forms mcJudmg cash.
But pockets ot growth durin€- the five weeks
bet\\ een Aug. 29 and O~.:t 2 polllt to a modestly
more robust holida) 'ieason tlus )Car than last
Clotlung !&gt;ales rose 3.8 percent, driven by children's and fruml) clothing. which includes 1een
retailers, as store-; oiT~red back-to-school discou 1ts.
Other po itt\C categoric" mcluded electromcs.
up 4.7 percent. In that categof), mo t of the
gro\\ th came Ill sale bel\\ een 500 to $1.000. as
\\ell as under $25
l·ootwear and Je''eh) each mched up 0.7 percent.
And, ns usual. onhne sales \\ere a bright spot. rising
7.8 percent. led b) hi her online clothmg sale-;.
But luxuf) sale . excluding jewehy, tell by 5.4
percent !rom last year's already weak totals. losmg ground despite recovery m the stock market
- the S&amp;P 500 rose 9 percent during the month.
"The overall stOf) here is there is some growth
but not dynamic gtowth," said !'vtichael
McNamara, vtce president ·of research and analysis for Spending Pulse. He said September \\as
ltke August, with "mtld growth in certam areas.
but omc (nrcns) contmued somewhat stwggling"
1 he results come as the cructal holiday season
looms, but this one could be better than last }ear'&lt;;
tf the tock market keeps reco' ering and undhployment tmprove.;, McNamara aid.
"If \\e can JU t get ome stability m the economic en-.Jronment. that puts you in a better postuon for the ;pendmg environment as you enter
November .md December,'' he satd.
Meanwhile, the N.ttional Retail J•ederation, a
trade group, satd it expect sales during the hohday
ea on to n e 2.3 percent to $447.1 billion. better
than the 0.4 percent gam in 2009's hohda) season.
That mcrcase \\ ould be the largest since 2006.
when retmlers had a 3.1 percent increase. But it
would still f&lt;tll "hort of the 10 year hi'itoric aver
age of2.5 percent, according to NRF calculationS'.
The total rctnil sales figurec; from the NRF
exclude ~uto dealers, gas c;tations, re(;taurants and
businesses that opet ctte only online but include
online sales from physical stores.
The forecast is roughly parallel wtth t~ose from
economists, who ger}crally fores~e hohday s~les
rising. The InternatiOnal CouncJI of Shopptng
Centers expects selected U.S. chain stores reporting monthly re,enue Thursday to show 3 percent
to 3.5 percent mcrcasec; at locations open at least
a year - the lorgest increase since 2006.

~0

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telephone number No un51gned letters will be published
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ahtles "Thank You" letters w111 not be accepted tor pubhcallon

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Riday
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B Y ALAN FRAM
ASSOC ATED PRESS

1

Working-class whites are favoring Republicans in numbers that
parallel the GOP tide of 1994
when the pan) grabbed control of
the House after four decodes.
The increased GOP tilt b) these
\Oters, a major hurdle for
Democrat'&gt; truggling to keep
control of Congress in next
month's elections, reflects a mix
of two foctors, an Associated
Press-GfK poll sugge&lt;;ts: unhappiness with the Democrats' stewardshir of an ailing economy that
has hJt this group particularly
hard, and a persistent discomfort
with President llnrack Obama.
"They're pushing the country
toward a larger government,
toward too many social pro·
grams," said Wayne Hollis. 38, of
Villa Rica. Ga .. who ''orks at a
home supply store.
'f1te AP-GfK poll shows whites
\\ithout four-year college degrees
preferring GOP House contenders
58 percent to 36 percent. That 22point bulge i double the edge
the e voters gave Republican congressional candidates in 2006 and
2008. when Democrnts \\On
Hou e control and then padded
their majority.
Ominously for Democrats. it
re embles the Republicans' 21pomt advantage with \\ orkingclass whites in 1994. when the
GOP captured the House and
Senate m a major rebuke to the
Democrats and President Bill
Clinton. The advantage is about
the same as the 18-point margin
this group gave Repubhcans in
2004, when President George \\'.
Bush won re-election and helped
give the GOP a modest number of
additional House and Senate
seats.
..Obama ran as a centrist. ond
clearly he's not been that," said
GOP pollster Da' id Winston.
"People who hove been part of
our majorit) coalition are looking
to come back to u ...
Working-cia s whites have long
tilted Republicnn. Many were
dubbed Reagan Democrnt in the
1980s, \\hen ome m the North
and Mtdwest who had previously
preferred Democ!ats began. supportmg conscrvattve Repubhcans.
The Democrats can hardl)
afford further erosion from a
~roup that comprises about four
111 I0 voters nationally.
To lure them, Obama has used
televised l: hals in people: 's back-

yards to emphasize his efforts to
lift the economy for average
Americans. The Democratic-led
Congress passed legislation with
tax cuts and loans for small businesses before breaking for the
election. On the campaign trail,
Democrats
pounced
on
Connecticut GOP Senate candidate Linda !'vtc.Mahon 's refu al
last week to rule out reducin~ ~e
minimum wage to help athng
companies.
.. Democrats ha\e to make it a
choice between two individual
candidates, not a referendum on
do you like where things are or
not. because no one likes where
things are,'' said Democratic pollster Dave Beattie.
Working-class wJ1ites' views
contrast with whites who have
college degrees, who the AP-GfK
Poll shows are plit evenly
between the two panics' candidates. Minonties decisively back
Democrats.
Working-class whites backed
GOP House candidates by 9 percentage points in 2006 and II
points in 2008. according to exit
polls of 'oters. Whites with college degrees were about e'&gt; en!)
divided in 2006 and leaned
toward Republicans by 7 pomts in
2008.
Compared '' ith better-educated
whites, workin!!-&lt;:lass \\ hites tend
to be older and~more conservative
- groups that traditionally lean
Republican and are uneas) with
the y~ung president's activist
go\'emmg.
From the start, this group has
never embraced Obama. ln the
2008 presidential race, when he
said some bitter small-town residents cling to guns and religiOn
for solace. the.;e voters preferred
his rival for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Rodham Chnton,
by 2-1. In the general election,
they backed Republican nominee
John McCain b) 18 points.
According to the AP-GfX poll.
they are more likely than bettereducated '' hites to dislike Obamn
personally and more negative
about his leadership. 0\ er half
c;a) he doe.;n't understand ordinnf) Americans· problem . 1'he)
are also likelier to disapprove of
Obama ·, perfonnance as president. including more than twothirds who nrc unhapp) "ith his
"tewardship of the economy.
In addttion, workin~·cla"s
whites are likelier than \VIute college graduates in the poll to say
their fami lies are suffering tman-

cially and to have a relative whcA
recently lost a job. They are le.
optimistic about the country·s
economy and their own financial
situations, gloomier about the
nation's overall directwn and
more critical of how Democrats
are handling the economy.
"Democrats are more apt to
mess wtth the middle class and
take our money." said Lawrence
Ramse). 56. a \\arehouse manager in Winston-Salem, N.C.
Polls from around the country
show the impru::t of working-class
whiles'
disaffection
with
Democrats. While a Marist Poll
shO\\S both of New York's
Democratic senators running
.;trungly, one trails ond the other is
even among white working-class
voters. Qumnipiac University
polls show clear advantages with
this group for GOP Senate candidates in Florida. Pennsylvania and
Ohio.
"The country hasn't come up
the wa) it should have und.
Obama,"
said
Barba
Sch\\ ickrnth. 64. a clothing sto
employee from Brooksville. Fla.
Republican ha\ e aimed their
O\\ n me sage
at this group.
umejling a .. Pledge to America"
that broadly promised tax and
pendmg cut and criticizing congressional leaders for adjourning
without voting to extend expiring
mcome tax cul!i. A TV ad by
Wisconsin Republican House
contender Sean Duffy features a
man m an orange hardhat and
snfct) vest getting ·flung off a
mlling log into a pond as Duffy
SO) s. "Our working folks ha' e
been tossed aside."
Education is usually used to
gouge the. le-.el of a popul~ti~n
group's hfe t) le because tt b
clo ely linked to the earnings and
t) pes of job peopJe. attain.
Salaries and cost of h'&gt; mg vary
''ide I) across regions of the c.ountf), making income an unreliable
yard th.k.
"I he AP-GfK Poll was conduc.ted Sept. 8-13 b) GfK Rop
Public Affairs &amp; Corporate
Communication" and invol\'ed
landline and cell phone interviews
"ith 1.000 randomly chosen
adults. "J11e margin of sampling
error was plus or minus 4.2 percentage points. l nclu~ed w.ere
intervil'\\'S \\ 1th 4 16 whttes Wtthout college d egr~es . for who~ the
error margin was plus or mmus
6.6 points.

�Thursday, October 7,

The DaHy Sentinel • Page As

www.m yd a ilysentincl.co m

2010

Obituaries

Upgrades

Meigs County Forecast

From Page A1

Evelyn May Warner

instead of 1 p.m. on Oct. 13.
• Announced closing of the courthouse on Monday
for Columbus Day.
Clerk Gloria K1oes announced a tuberculosis clinic

Evelyn May Warner. 91 ,
M iddleport, passed away
on Oct. 5, 2010, at
Pleasant Vnlley Hospital,

at the courthouse at 9 a.m. Monday. Tests will be read
on Wednesday. K1oes opened the meeting with the
Pledge of Allegiance.
Also pre ent were Commissioners Tom Anderson,
Mick Davenport and Michael Bartrum.

T hursday: Sunny, with
a high near 74. West wind
be tween 5 and 8 mp h.
T h rsd N'ght
Cl
u
ay 1 : ear,
with a low around 40.
Northwest wind around 5

Columbus Day: Mostly
sunny, w1th a high near 80.
Mon day Night: A
chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
53. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Thcsday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 75.
Chance of precipitation i~
30 percent.
Thesday Night: A
chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
49. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday:
Partly
sunny, with a high near 71.

Pleasant, W.Va.
mph becoming calm.
was born on Aug.
Friday: Sunny, with a
• 1919. in Bedford Twp..
high near 80. Calm wind.
Meigs County, dau~hter of
F riday Night: Clear,
the late Dana Hanang and
with a low around 44.
Edna Carrie
Cuckler
Haning.
Evelyn
also
Saturday: Sunny, with
re~ided in Harrisonville
a high near 80.
and Zephyrhills, Fla. She
Saturday
Night:
was formerly employed as
From Page A1
Mostly clear, with a low
a seamstress at the Fabric: Shop in Pomeroy. She was
around 45.
a member of the Hemlock Grove Church of Christ.
ing science with art, social studies, language arts and
Sunday: Sunny. with a
In addition to her parents. she wa preceded by her math, according to Perko. Units on sustainability and high near 81.
husb~nd, John Warner; her secon~ husband .. Harold healthy lile.st~Ie will al:;o be addressed.
1
Sunday Night: Mostly
Morns; a brother, Harley Hanmg; sons-m-saw:
In announcmg the grants the FAO noted that over clear withalowaround51.
Wayne Cobb. Ron Campbell and Terry Carpenter. a $125,000 in Strive for Excellence mini-grants is
'
granddaug;hter, Ronda Cobb; and a brother-in-Jaw, going to educator:, across the 32 counties of - - - - - - - - - - Hilbur Qutvey.
Appalachian Ohio. Educators across the region were
She is surv1ved by daughteN: Louise (Vernal) Well, asked to develop and submit applications for classShade; Zelda Kaldor, Zephyrhills, Fla.; Helen (Eddie) room experiences and activities that would result in
Peoples (NASDAQ) -12.08
Gipson, Colutt:lbus; Donna (Benny) Spears, increased pursuit of post-secondary education and AEP (NYSE)- 36.26
Middleport; Cletlth Brogan, Texas; Glada Campbell, career opportunities for their students, and the recipi- PJaD (NASDAQ)- 62.30
Pepsico (NYSE) - 68 11
Columbus; M~y Carpenter, Denham Springs, La; ent electton was made from those applications.
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 50.67
Premter (NASDAQ)- 6.25
sons, John (Ins) Warner, Gahanna; Dana Warner,
Strive grants are pro\ iding investments ranging Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.77
Rockwell (NYSE)- 62.06
Reynoldsburg: Gary (~onnie) Warner, Long Bottom; from $500 to $2,500 to encourage and support those
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.02
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -7!i5
Tery Warner, Robmsvtlle, N.C.; sister, Helen Quivey, efforts. FAO believes educators know best how to
' Royal Dutch Shell- 62.54
Pomeroy; grandchildren. Jack (Joyce) Well, Jill help their students achieve success, and it is not lack BorgWamer (NYSE) - 52.19
(Troy) Harden. Judy (Ste\e) Jackson, Renee Adams. of passion, but financial resources often prohibiting Century Alum (NASDAQ) -13.47 Sears Hold :1g (NASDAQ)
Champion (NASDAQ)'-1.15
71.22
Rudy Kaldor, Mike (Carla) Gipson, Jeff Gipson, innovative programming.
bie (Julie) Gtpson, Denise (Jack) Nobles, Juh
'The Foundation is happy to partner with Walmart CharmilgShops(NASDAQ)-3.63 Wai-Mart (NYSE) -54.56
tt) Borthwick, Laura ( Dr. Jared) Sheets, John to help eliminate barrier~ to post- secondary educa- City Holding (NASDAQ)-31.91
Wenr1/s (NYSE)- 4.31
gan, Teresa (Danny) Valdez. Rita (Bill) Tobias, tiona! pursuits for students throughout Appalachian Col ms (NYSE)- 59.34
WesBanco (NYSE) -1726
Kim (Earl) Linhart, John Wamer. Heather (Jason) Ohio," said Cara Dingus Brook, FAO Prestdent and DuPont (NYSE)- 45.87
WorthJOgton (NYSE) -14.91
Carida~. Chad Campbell, Jeanine Warner, Jn on CEO. "'Jbe Foundation is committed to ensuring
US
Bank
(NYSE)22.41
(Amanda) Warner, Andrea (Jo~h) Clegg. Philip every child in the region has access to the educationDaily stock reports are the 4 p m
Warner, Jeremiah (Taryn) Carpenter. Amber aJ opportunities necessary for success and is delight- Gen EJectrlc (NYSE) -16.00
Carpenter, Tiffany (Marc) Rodriguez: tep-grandchil- ed to support teachers like Heike Perko in promoting Hatley-Davidson (NYSE)- 30.99 ET closing quotes of transactions
drcn. Phyllis (Randy) Cross; 33 great-grandchildren; student advancement."
for October 6, 2010, provided by
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.00
14 great-great-grandchildren; four step great gmndKroger (NYSE)- 21.22
Emwrd Jones financial advisors
children; one step great-great-granddaughter; nieces,
Isaac M1fls in Gallipolis at (740)
ltd Brands (NYSE) - 27!i9
Jane Quhey, Nnn (Don) Morrb.; nephew: Rodney ,
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero tn
Norfolk So (NYSE)- 59.67
(Connie) Quivey; seveml nieces and nephews of John
Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-lJ174.
OVBC(NASDAQ)-1920
Warner's brother and sisters.
Member
SIPC.
BBT (NYSE)- 24.30
Funeral service will be held at I I a.m. on Saturday,
From Page A 1
Oct. 9, 20 I 0, at Andcrlion McDaniel Funeral Home m
Pomeroy. Officiating will be Pastor Carl Swisher.
Burial will be in Wells Cemetery. Friend may call on struck the passenger side door glass and shattered it.
Vehicle~ driven by Joyce H . Circle, Middleport.
Friday. Oct. 8. from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be and Anna D. Demoskey, Middleport, accidentally
made to: Hemlock Gro\e Church of Christ Building backed into each other in the Holzer Meigs Clinic 911
Fund. C/0 Marge Barr, 39186 Hemlock Grove Road, parking lot. No citation wa~ listed. No injuries were
POMEROY- Meigs County 911 dtspatched the folPomeroy, OH 45769.
lowing calls for emergency medical assistance:
reported.
An on-line regi try is available at www.andersonmThesday
.
Gregory Davis, Racine, was found at fault for an
cdaniel.com.
9:36
a.m.,
North
Second
Avenue,
altered
mental
staaccident between hb motorcycle and a vehicle driven
tus; 10:01 a.m., East Memorial Drive. fall: ll:40 a.m.,
by April Coppick. Pomeroy. on We~t Main Street East Memorial Drive. fall: 3:18 p.m .• Elm Street
near Cashland. According to the report. both vehicles Middleport, fall; 5:10p.m., East Memorial Dri,e, diffiwere headed in the same direction. Davis went to tum culty breathing; 5:59 p.m., Rocksprings Road, difficulty
mes
Andrew
into an alley as did Coppick {who was in front) breathing.
dermilt, 61, We t
though Da\ is told the officer Cop pick didn't tum on
umbia, W.Va., died
the blinker to indicate she was going to tum. The Common Pleas
sday, Oct. 5, 2010, at
motorC)'cle and car then made contact. In relation to
POMEROY- Oerk of Courts Diane Lynch filed the
Lakin Hospital.
He wa born Feb. 11.
this accident, Coppick was later cited for d.rivi.ng following actions in the court':s public record:
Civil
under suspension and ob~tructing official business.
1949 . ·m M ason, w.y a ..
•
Foreclosure action filed by \Vesbanco Bank, Inc.,
son of the late Herbert and
Coppick's vehicle received .damage to the driver
Freda
Mae
Edwards
side quarter panel, driver side door and was towed against Judith Ann Williams, Syracuse. and others.
• Foreclosure action filed by Beneficial Financial 1.
Laudermilt. He worked as
from the scene. Da\'is' bike received damage to the Inc., against Charles Otis Noland. Jr.• Shade.
a general laborer on conentire right side. front fender, faring and left ide mir• Complaint for judgment and execution of sale of
struction.
ror. There \\ere no injurie .
property filed by Peoples Bank again~t Frank S. Herald.
Besides his parerits, he
Also, Fruth Pharmacy recently reported an unidenDomestic
was preceded in death by
tified customer stole a bag of prescriptions while
• Dissolution action ftled by Eric Wayne Sim and
an infant son; brothers and sister: James Bland. Larry
.
Laudermilt. Gary Laudermilt, John Laudermilt and waiting at the pharmac) counter. Donna Eblin, assts- Courtney Camille Midk'iff Sim.
• Dissolution action filed by Eric T. Toops. Jennifer L.
Betty Laudermilt.
tant manager at Fruth Pharmacy. told the investigatToops.
He is survived by his children: Jamie Hudson, And) ing officer while he was working the pharmacy
(Donna) Jones of Mason, Michael (Stephanie) Jones counter, the man asked to pick up the medication
of Pomeroy. Robert Jones of West Columbia, and which consisted of six prescriptions. all for different
Ka~hy Mac Jone of West Columb!a; his companion, people. The man gave Eblin a Pomeroy address for
Shuley Jones of West Columbm: ~\\O brothers, the pharmacy's records.
Charles "Ted" (~anet) Bla_nd of ~untsv:tlle _and Wal~er
Eblin sat the medication on the counter while wait(Jud~) Laudermllt of ~acm~: a ~tster. ~ane (Denn.ts) mg to use the computer and while waiting, went to
H~s of Pomeroy; a sast~r-m-la\\. Hattle L~uderymlt, answer the phone. When he returned the medication
Racme· everal grandchildren and a pecaaJ fnend,
. .
"d
· 1
and customer were gone. The med1cat1ons were 1 enB 1'Jly B'nm
ey.
f EJ' .
h' h .
Funeral will be at 11 a.m. on Friday. Oct. 8, 201 O, ttfied as six prescn~t10ns o
1m1te cream w 1c 1s a
at Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Point Pleasant, W.Va., treatment for scab1es. The phone numbers on. the
'th Rev. Herman St~wart officiating. Burial will be account ":ere disconnected. A. disk wa~ obt.amed
Jraharn Cemetery m New Haven, W.Va.
from the f·ruth Pharmacy surveillance system m the
•
riend may visit from 6-8 p.m. Thur day at the investigation.
funeral home. Online condolences to www.wllcoxenfuneralhome.com .

Grant

I

Local StOCks

Pomeroy

For the Record

James Laudermilt

f

I

I. . ..

Need a Mammogram?

Vickie S. Johnson
Vickie S. John on, 51, of Crown City. passed a\\ny
on Tuesday, O.ctober 5. 2010. at the James Cancer
Center, Columbus, Ohio.
She was born on Apnl 27. 1959. daughter of Linda
See Saxon and James Casey, who both sun•hc her.
Preceding her in death were one son, Joseph Joey
Thompson, two sisters. Mary Casey nnd Nancy
Casey and one brother, John Casey. Vicki~ enjoyed
motorcycle riding.
She is survived by her hu band, Raymond E.
Johnson of Crown City, Ohio; her nH&gt;thcr, Linda
Saxon of Point Pleasant. West Virginia; her father.
J ame~ Casey of M iddleport. Ohio; two brothers,
James (Rhonda) Casey of Alabama and C.W. (Amy)
Saxon of Point Plea~ant, W.Va.; several nieces.
nephews and cousins.
Services will be at I p.m., Saturday. October 9,
2010, at the Willis Funeral Home with Marlin
Wedemeyer officiating. Burial will follow in
Jan(J Memorial Gan.len~. Pt. Pleasant. W.Va.
may call at the funeral home fro m noon-1
p.m. prior to the service.
Pallbearer:. will be Dewayne Boster, Keith Pugh.
James Burdette. Adam W ray, C.W. Saxon and
J immy Casey
Please visit www.willisfunernlhome.com to send
e-mail condole nces.

Visit us online at
mydallysentinel.com

Female and under 65 years of age?
Underinsured or Uninsured?
Resident of Gal/is, Jackson or Vinton County?

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
1

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Saturday. October 16
Holzer Center for Cancer Care
You must make an appointment for this special offer and meet
the criteria mentioned above. Space is limited, call todayl .

740.448.5474 or 1.800.821.~

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CANCER CARE

A hMith fair wll be held dutlnQ tNa ttne with lt8e llafiiJIIInga, IWJIJith
/nforr'MtllOn, . , _ l'tliW, and~· filllabla Bring. tt1ehd
snd CelttbrllfrJ Women!
•

�Thursday, October 7,

2010

www.myclailysentinel.com

Daily Sentinel • Page A6

IMF sees global economy gaining,' U.S.
WASIIINGTON (AP)
The global ccl)nomy
\\ill likely strengthen the
rest of this year anti in
2011 as China and other
emcrgmg po\\ crs offset
\\eakncss m the United
State... and Europe.
That's the latest outlook
of
the
International
Monetary Fund. \\ hich
predil:ts the world economy Will expand 4.8 percent this year and 4.2 percent next year. That would
far ~urpass l&lt;~st year's 0.6
percent decline, the ~\orst
since World Ww· II. The
IMFs forecast for worldWide growth this year IS
0.2 percentage pomt more
than its pre\ ious estimate
mJuly.

must reduce their dependency on exports and
boost dome"--ic demand.
The IMF forecast was
prepared for the annual
fall meetings of the 187nation IMf· and its s1ster
lending organization. the
World Bank. Finance officials from the Group of
20,
reprc&lt;;enting the
world's richest nations
nnd fast-growmg developing countde&lt;;, are scheduled to hold talks Fnday.
Ohama admim&lt;;tration
officials c;aid they planned
to press other G-20 countries such &lt;~s China to
honor
commitments
they've made to reduce
the1r huge trade su~plu-;es,
which come at the

expense of other countries. Such tmde imbalances contributed to the
glohal downtum
The prediction of 2.6
percent growth for the
United State~ this year is
hic;torically weak coming
after a recession. But it
marks a sharp reversal
from the 2.6 percent
decline in U.S. activit)
last year. That was the
steepest drop since 1946.
The U.S. forecast is down
from a 3.3 percent projection the IMF made in July.
But the U.S. economy
slowed sharply 111 late
spring and summer this
year as the European debt
crisis shook the confidence of investors and

h slowing

businesses. The
foreca~t of 2.3
U.S. growth for
down from tts 3
estimate in July.
Growth pros
even weaker in
The 16 nations that
common euro
will sec their --··'"'"'"'
a\e1age
1.7
growth thb year
percent next yeru.
says. Still, both those
casts are upgrades
July. following a
sis that
in
and had
widen throughout ~···~·-·"·
Growth in Japan
jccted to be 2.8 nl-'. r&lt;'RinJ
2010 and 1.5
2011. Its 20 I

was trimmed because
Japan is still struggling to
emerge from nearly two
of
anemic
decades
growth
Combined, advanced
economic&lt;; such as the
United States and
are forecast to grow
percent this year and 2.
percent next year.
By contrast, emergmg
and
developing
economte&lt;; such as those
in China, Russia, Eastern
Europe
and
Latin
America, are expected to
expand 7.1 percent this
year and 6.4 percent in
20 II - more than double
the growth rates of the
advanced econmhies.

High court st uggles with funeral pr est case
WASHJNGTON (AP)
- Supreme Court justices on Wednesday pondered the vexing question
of \\ hcther the father of a
dead Manne should win
hi&lt;; lawsuit against a fundamentalist church group
that picketc&lt;.J hts son's
funeral.
The complexity .md
weightiness of the First
Amendment issue were
palpable in the courtroom
as juc;tices heard arguments in the case of
Albert Snyder. Hi" son
died in Iraq in 2006, and
members of the Westboro
Baptist Church protested
the funeral to make their
point that U.S. death-. in
Afghanistan and Iraq are
punishment
for

Americans' im
including to I
homosexuality and
tion.
Justice Ruth
Ginsburg s.1id the
tion is whether the
Amendment mlht
ate "exploiting
bereaved family.''
There was no
anS\\ er from the
Snyder i~ askt
court to reinstate
million verdict
the Westboro
who held signs
the funeral of
Matthew Snyder.
ing ones that read
God for Dead S
"You're Going to
and "God Hatco:;
USA." The .Mari

killed in a Humvee accident in 2006.
The church also posted
a poem on its wcb~;~te that
rtnacked Snyder and his
ex-wife for the way they
brought up Matthe\\.
Justice Stephen Breyer
said the Internet aspect of
the ca~e troubled him
because the church was
saying something "very
obnox1ous" about private
mdividuals.
"To what extent can
they put that on the
Internet?" Breyer asked.
" 1 don't know what the
rulec; ought to be"
The case pits Snyder's
right to grieve privately
against the church members' right to say what
they want, no matter ho\\

offensive.
Westboro members, led
by the Rev. Fret! Phelps,
have picketed many military funerals.
They welcome the
attention the protests
have brought, mocking
their critics and vowing
not to change their ways
whatever the outcome at
the Sup(eme Court.
"No American should
ever be required to apologize for following his or
her conscience," &lt;;aid
Marg1e Phelp~. a daughter of reed Phelp~ and the
lawyer \\ ho argued the
case for the church.
Fundamentalist church
members turned out in
advance of the al¥ument
Wednesday mormng. to

march tn front
court with placards
type they've been
mg to military fu
One young boy hel
sign that reads.
Hate'iYou.'·
A line ?f people
to get mto the
stretched around
ner of the nutie
ing perched atop
Hill.
Snyder won an
mtllion verd1ct
the church for
mfliction of emot
distress. among
daims. A judge req~c(:d
the award to $5
before the federal «PJ·I '""·'"
court in n... .~IIIIIVI
threw out the
gether, citing the

Fir;,t Amendment rights.
For Snyder, the case is
not about free speech but
harassment "I had one
chance to bury my son
and it was taken from
me," Snyder said.
Forty-etght states, ~
U.S. senators and ve
an&lt;; groups have sidt.:
with Snyder. asking the
court to shield funer.ils
trom the Phelpses' "psychological terrorism."
While distancing themselves from the church's
message. media organization.,, including The
Associated Press. have
called on the court to side
with the Phelpses because
of concerns that a victory
for Snyder could erode
speech rights.

FBI: Stripper, rugs, guns and judge on't mix
ATLANTA CAP) - A
67-year-old fedeml judge·s
wJid relationship with a
stripper started with a lap
dance. prosecutors said.
and quickly escalated into
escapades of prostitution
and gun-toting drug deals
for cocaine and prescription pills.
Senior Judge Jack T.
Camp. a veteran jurist who
had achteved a status that
allowed him a lighter ca&lt;;eload, now fmds himself in
a peculiar position, in front
of one of his peers, and
wtth lawyers combing
through his decisions,
wondering v. hether they
ha\ e grounds to challenge
them.
•·] don't know whether
the allegations are true or
whether they infected the
decision making, but it's
incumbent upon me to
raise these i'isUes." said
Gerry Weber, a civil rights
attorney \\ hu is readymg
an appeal m a case that
Camp ruled on in June.
Camp, a Vietnam War
veteran who was appointed
by Ronald Reagan. built a
reputation for handing out
stiff sentences, including
for drug convictions. He
could face years behind
bars on drug and gun
charge~. The judge's attorney has said he intends to
plead not guilty.
The strippe1~ who pre\iously had a felony tlrug
trafficking conviction. had
been secretly \\orking with
the FBI ... ince the spring to
build a case agamst the
judge. In exchange. prosecutors pledged not to
charge her.
Camp's
relation..,hip
with the dancer. who \\a~
not identilicd in court documents, hcgan earlier this
year. A day after receh ing
his first dance, he reH1111ed
to the Goltlrush Showhar
for more dances, and
added sex and cocaine to
his tab. authorities said.
Over the next few
months. the two used
cocaine and other drugs
together. sometimes at the
strip cluh, and the judge
would pay $40 to $50 to
join her getting high,
according to a sworn ~tate­
men!.
In June. the judge followed the -.tripper to a
house in the Atlanta suburb
of Marietta to buy dmgs,
canying a semiautomatic
handgun with him he later
told hrr he hrought to protect her, the allid&lt;\Vit said.

The relationship
Donaldson, a criminal
unf3vcled Friday.
defense attorney based in
told the stripper he
Albany, Ga. "You can
try to help with her
· enviston all manner of cirnal record and advi
cumstances where that
to tell a potential
might come into play."
\\ ho h,td rejected
The judge grew up on a
cation that "II was a
working farm in rural
offense and that one
Co\\eta County. and he
judges on the
enjoyed talking to colcxplam that
leagues about raising timaccording to the
ber, pumpkins and co\\s on
A few hours
a plot of land he still OWJls.
dancer asked Camp
low her to the Publi
eery store parking
northeast Atlanta to
dmg dealer. When ·
she feared for her
authorities
said
responded with a
braYado: "J not only
my little pistol, I've
b1g pistol so. uh.
care of any
come up."
Camp, who is
with two grown
then gave the oo:tnnn~•r
to buy the dmgs
undercO\ er ofijcer.
the agent. posing as a
cr, told Camp he had
the two a few extra
the judge sounded
"We'll call you
judge said.
FBI agents H~·~rnlPm
judge\ car about
utes later when he
the Velvet Room. a
night club. They ...,.,-·nnr•rPn
the plastic bag
blue pills and a w .........,,~,.,
stance. along '' ith
guns from his front
Not only has the
~hocked the legal
nity, it has created a
tlict of interest
Camp's hail hearin¥.
ecutors were flown m
Washington and a
trate
traveled
Alahama because the
judges recused
from the cu"c.
Camp supervised
cases while he was
investigated. includi
April trial involving a
charged with sh'
cocaine for dmg
ers. A jury acquit
p1lot after a trial in
prosecutors carted
kilograms of cocai
front of the jury
times.
It's unclear whet
of the judge'::. de~:
will he revisited.
"If vou could est
that a ]udge wa~
intlucnce of some
stance at lhc .
p;·csided or mled. t
could concCJ\'e ol a
for a challenge,' said

During his more than
two decades on the federal bench, he hated when
attorneys grandstanded
and sometimes required
them to cite the specific
fedeml code when they
dared...J«ise.. an objectloo.
But he always maintained
a cordial relationship, said
defen-;e attorney Page
Pate.
''He was a true

killed himself, his wife
and their 7-year-old son
I0 years behind bars for
prescription drug -related
charges.
At a brief hear~
·
Monday. the judge fo
himself surrounded
four defense attorneys.
flashed a quick smile to
hi-. family before he was
released on a S50,000
bond.

Digital ammography
means hr her quality
results w less
rad1at1on
Early Detect nand PreventionThe Key
so c ear or
mo ram After
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��Bob Evans Farm Festival-2010

Page 2

. BoB EvANs FARM FEsnv
Annual celebration of
Appalachian culture
ntarks 40th anniversary
RIO GRANDE - It's a southern
Ohio tradition that draws interest
from around the world. The Bob
Evans Farm Festival marks its 40th
anniversary in 2010 with another
outstanding weekend of activities
on tap Friday through Sunday, Oct.
8-10 at the historic spread Qn Ohio
588 just outside of Rio Grande.
The farm itself is a treasure trove
of history. For 20 years beginning
in 1953, it was home to Bob Evans
Farm, Inc., founder Bob Evans, his
wife Jewell and their family. It was
during this time that the company
began to blossom from a small
sausage-producing operation into
the multi-faceted corporation . that
has served millions of customers.
And as always, the Bob Evans
Farm Festival will feature a wide
range of demonstrations about life
"down on the farm," with everything from sheep shearing to quilting, sorghum making to corn
shelling and soap making to horseshoeing. Visitors will also be treated to a fun-filled lumberjack show
by the Great Lakes Timber Show;
tractor square dancing by the
Delaware County Tractor Square
Dancers; and a border collie
demonstration by Jenkins Border
Collies of Mansfield, Ohio.
Arts and crafts displays and
demonstrations, always a staple at
the farm festival, will dot the land
scape. Visitors will see wood
crafts, jewelry, leather crafts, folk
toys, candles, quilted items, dough
art and glass blowing, just to name
a few.
The weekend also features some
of the best bluegrass and country
music in the region. Headlining
this year's roster of entertainers is
bluegrass
sensation
Rhonda
Vincent and the Rage. Vincent is
the 7-time IBMA female vocalist
of the year and former entertainer

of the year. She is considered one
of bluegrass music's all-time best
entertainer .
Other bluegra'Ss groups scheduled to appear at this year's festival
include familiar names like The
Rarely Herd and The Johnny Staats
Project. Country bands on the
schedule
include
Broadside,
Rhythm Station and The Smoking
Section.
All bands will perform on the
Homestead Stage.
After Hours Entertainment will
be offered "In the Holler" from 7-9
p.m. Friday and Saturday. The
bands will perform a little extra
during the after hours segment for
festival-goers. There is no .
e
for After Hours Entertainme
For the kids, funnyman Mark
Wood brings his famous Fun Show
to the Bob Evans Farm Festival.
The cowpoke comedian will be
featured at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. each
day on the Barnyard Stage.
Children will also enjoy the
horseback and wagon rides, straw
castle, hay bale maze, game tent,
corn pile and other fun activities.
Kids can test their mettle in the
pedal tractor pull each day.
Registration begins at 9 a.m.
And don't forget the food!
Vendors will offer apple cider, kettle corn, maple syrup products,
gourmet fudge and a lot of yummy
stuff.
Daily admission to the Bob
Evans Farm Festival is $5 for
adults and $3 for children ages 618. Kids age 5 and younger will be
admitted free. On Friday, kids will
be given a Snack Shack coupon
good for one item.
The festival is open from 9
5 p.m. daily.

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 3

AL ENTERTAINMENf
Friday, Oct. 8
"Country Fun Day"
Homestead Stage
10 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.- Broadside
(country favorites)
.
lla.m.&amp; 2 p.m. - Rhythm
Station (traditional country)
Noon &amp; 3 p.m.- The Smokin'
Section (classic country)

Barnyard Stage
11 a.m. &amp; 2 p.m. - Mark Wood
Fun Show
After Hours Entertainment in the
Holler
7-9 p.m. (weather pem1itting)
Free and open to the public

Saturday, Oct. 9
"Down on the Farm Day"
Homestead Stage
10 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m. - Safire Sun
(gospel and bluegrass)
11 a.m. &amp; 2 p.m. - The Stevens
Bluegrass Band
&amp; 3 p.m. - The Rarely
Herd (bluegrass)

· Barnyard Stage
11 a.m. &amp; 2 p.m.- Mark Wood
Fun Show
After Hours Entertainment in the
Holler
7-9 p.m. (weather pem1itting)
Free and open to the public

Award-winning bluegrass artist
Rhonda Vincent and the Rage hit
the Homestead Stage at 3:30p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 10.

Sunday, Oct. 10
"Gospel Bluegrass Day"
Homestead Stage
9:15 a.m. - Congregational
Singing led by Clark Walker
10 a.m. - Worship Sen ice with
message by Bob Powell
11 a.m. - Son Rise (gospel
bluegrass)
.
12:30 p.m. - HatdDrive(bluegrn&amp;&lt;;)
2 p.m. - The Johnny Staat
Project (bluegrass)
3:30p.m. - Rhonda Vincent &amp;
The Rage

Barnyard Stage
11 a.m. &amp; 2 p.m. - Mark Wood
Fun ShoVv

�Page 4

Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

KID STUFF

face painting is always a favorite activity for kids who attend the
Evans Farm Festival.

Farmyard Fun
Face Painting
Splatter Painting
Game Tent
Lead Rides
Tractor Drawn Wagon Rides
Horse Drawn Wagon Rides (10
a.m., noon, 2 p.m., 4 p.m.)
Kiddie Train Rides (9 a.m., 11
a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m.)
Hay Bale Maze
Straw Castle
Com Pile

Contests
Pedal Tractor Pull (11 a.m.-1
p.m.)
The following games begin at
1:30 p.m.:
Team Cow Chip Tossing

Hula Hoop Contest
Chicken Scratch
Com Shelling Contest
Hay Bale Throwing
Feed Sack Races
Team Egg Toss Contest
Pie Eating Contest

Kids Entertainment
Mark Wood Fun Show (11 a.m.
and 2 p.m. daily)
Jason &amp; Company ventriloquist (
Noon and 3 p.m. daily)
Make &amp; Take Crafts (10 a.m.-4
p.m., on the hour)
Storytelling &amp; Puppet Show (10
a.m. and ~ p.m.)
Both sponsored by Sts. Pe.iii...&amp;
Paul Home &amp; School Associ.

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 5

Artisans like this woodworker will have their wares on display during the
40th annual Bob Evans Farm Festival, set for Oct. 8-10 at the farm in ~o
Grande.

INTRODUCING PEOPLES MOBILE
Need cash fast? Locate Branches &amp; ATMs by
visiting peoplesbancorp.com from any smart phone.

1.800.37 4.6123 peoples ban corp. com

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 6

Volunteers
like these
dents from
the University
of Rio Grande
who braved
the elements
in 2009,
donate their
time each year
to help make
the Bob Evans
Farm Festival
a success.
Bob Evans
also supports
many local
groups that
work booths
during the festival.

'EnjO!J tfie
40th .9Lnnua{
tJJob 'Evans ~arm ~estiva(

OctB-9-10
OHIO VALLEY
BANK

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 7

THE HOMESTEAD
trove of Bob Evans history

mous Bob Evans Homestead was home to Bob and Jewell Evans
family from 1953-1970. The cbzy manor was named to the
al Register of Historic Places tn December 1987. In 2003. the company renovated the Homestead, converting it into a museum that features
the history of the Evans family and Bob Evans Farms, Inc., as well as displays highlighting the history of Gallia County and Ohio's Appalachian
Region. Other highlights include lifesized models of the late Bob Evans
and his wife, Jewell, a reconstruction of the Evans' original Steak House
diner and videos o( Bob Evans commercials from the company's early
days. A tour of the Homestead Museum ts a must for visitors to the Bob
Evans Farm Festival. The Homestead Museum is open from 10:30 a.m.5:30 p.m. daily from April 1 through Dec . 23.

We/Come to tM. 40tn hnllllf

ue~141U#111edUI4t

•

Gallia County
Convention and
Visitor's Bureau

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

ROCKETS

Page 8

OvER RIO

Annual fireworks display set for Oct. 9
RIO GRANDE - What is fast
becoming a fall tradition in Gallia
County will be revisited on
Saturday, Oct. 9 when the Village
of Rio Grande hosts Rockets Over
Rio.
The fireworks display has been
offered free of charge by the village for the past three years on the
Saturday night of the Bob Evans
Farm Festival. Mayor Matt Easter
said Rockets Over Rio has quickly
developed into a popular event,
which this year is fully funded by
outside sponsorships.
"The first one, we had 700-800
people and it's slowly grown every
year," said Easter. "I'd say last year
we had 3,000 people there. There's
room for double that, if not triple.
Now it always depends on the
weather. Luckily, we've had really
good weather three years in a row.
"There's no municipal money
involved in putting on this event,"
he added. "It's all been done by the
people."
Rockets Over Rio is scheduled to
begin at 9:30p.m. on Oct. 9. Easter
said the best seating for the event
will be in the parking lot of Bob

;

Evans Farms Hall on
University of Rio Grande
The fireworks will be fired
from a clearing located between
the Evan Davis Soccer Field and
the URG practice soccer field
below Lyne Center.
"The fireworks show is fantastic;
it's a perfect area to set them off,"
Easter said. ''Where else can you
go in October and see fireworks?
Plus, it adds to the farm festival,
because all those campers down
there, they get the show. The university works with me really well.
It's great for the village and the
university to work hand in hand."
Easter
said
Legendary
Entertainment of Commercial
Point, Ohio, coordinates the fireworks display.·
Admission is free. The Rio
Grande Volunteer Fire Department
will have·a concession stand available. No alcohol is permitted.
Prior to the fireworks, the
University of Rio Grande men's
soccer team will play host to
Cumberland College in a MidSouth Conference match begi ·
at 7 p.m.

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 9

Rockets over Rio Fall Fireworks Extravaganza
October 9, 2010 9:30pm
Bob Evans Farm.Hall Parking Lot
Proudly Sponsored By:
Buckeye Rural Electric Company
Subway of Rio Grande
American Legion Post m
The Bob Evans Farm
BP of Rio Grande
4-Seasons Veterinary Clinic
McCoy- Moore Funeral Home of Gallipolis &amp;Vinton
Holzer Medical Center
American Electric Power
Rio Grande Child Development Center
Giovannis of Rio Grande
The Committee to Elect Darla Saunders Gallia County Auditor
The Committee to Elect Jason Sherrill Gallia County Commissioner
Creative Nook and Farm
S&amp;J Lumber
is Shrine
Valley Bank
1Dubs Grub
Merry Family Winery
Lois, Bill, and Angie in Memory of Shawn Henry
Laurel Valley Creamery
Temple Tattoo
The University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College
Me Donalds of Rio Grande
Sunny 93.1
Summer Image
Spring VaUey Marathon
Rio Tire
Montgomery Barber Shop
The Committee to Elect Harold Montgomery Gallia County Commissioner
Rio Grande Memorial Association
Rio Grande Volunteer Fire Department/Ladies Auxiliary
Sister of Delta Theta

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 10

Bob Evans Farm·
A short history

RIO GRANDE -The history of chance to study the history of Bob
the Bob Evans Farm dates back to Evans Farms and the natural histo1800, when Revolutionary War ry of Southeastern Ohio.
veteran Adam Rickabaugh moved Homestead, listed on the N
his family from Virgi~ia to the sce- Register of Historic Places,
nic valley that would come to be welcomes a variety of traveling
known as Rio Grande.
exhibits into its friendly surround- ·
In 1820. Nehemiah Wood built a ings each year.
large brick farmhouse that has
The Bob Evans Farm itself has
become a symbol of Bob Evans grown from a family farm to a
Farms. Inc .. at the foot of a tree- 1 ,000-acre
showcase
for
covered hill in western Gallia Southeastern Ohio that attracts tens
County. The Homestead, as it of thousands of visitors annually.
became known, served as the II'l addition to The Homestead
Wood family dwelling, a stage Museum, curious tourists flock to
coach stop and hotel over the years. see the work of talented artisans on
The University of Rio Grande display in the Quilt Barn and his(then Rio Grande College) pur- toric sites such as the Bob Evans
chased The Homestead and farm in Mound (a Native American burial
1938, allowing students to work
there to earn money for school and ground), the Revolutionary Warera cemetery in Adamsville and the
maintaining a working farm.
Fast-forward to 1953 when . Bicentennial Barn, a tobacco bam
Gall ia County entrepreneur Bob that is adorned with the Ohio
Evans and his wife Jewell pur- Bicentennial logo. The logo was
chased The Homestead and sur· painted on the barn during the
rounding farm to begin raising state's bicentennial celebration in
their family and launch a family 2003.
Bob Evans Farm bustles with
business that would become Bob
acttvtty
throughout the year,
Evans Farms, Inc.
Today. The Homestead (renovat- although the annual Farm Festival
ed in 2003) is a museum and cul- is definitely the marquee event.
tural center that offers visitors a the calendar.

�Bob Evans· Farm Festival 2010

Page 11

DEMONSTRATIONS

Cloggers and
other dancers
are always a hit
with Farm
Festival crowds.

The Ohio
Top Hand
Drill Team
will entertain visitors
to the Farm
Festival
again this
year.

Barnyard Stage
heep ~hearing, Cow Milkmg by Laurel Valley Creamery and
Horseshoemg (9:30a.m., 12:30 p.m .. 4 p.m.)

Horse Arena
Tractor Square Dancing with Ed Moore and the Delaware Co. Tractor
Square Dancers ( lO a.m .. I p.m., 3 p.m)
Ohio Top Hand Drill Team. equine mounted drill team (II a.m .. 2 p.m.)

Field Demonstration
Border Collie Herding by Dave Jenkins and Jenk.ms Border Collies
from Mansfield ( 10:30 a.m., I :30 p.m .. 3:30p.m.)

Pond
ODNR Water Safet; (II a.m., I p.m .. 3 p.m.)
Great Lakes Timber Show (II a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m.)

Beside Homestead
Reno Family Horseshoe Pitcl11ng ( 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m., 2:30p.m.)

Clogging Stage
Various doggers and line dancing groups ( 10 a.m.-5 p.m.)
niv. of Rio Grande's Grande Chorak Variety Show (10 a.m .. 2:15p.m.
ay)

�Page 12

Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Stop by after the
Bob Evans Farm Festival
for Wine, Music, &amp; Dinner
Located just n1inutes from the farm!
Dinner is served 6:00-8:30pin
Friday October 8: Pasta Night
Saturday October 9: Baked Steak
or Smothered Chicken
Catered by Parkfront Diner
Free Entertainment by

Noah Shull
Specializing in
Real Mississippi Delta Blues

You Won't Want To
Miss This Event!

lk

2376 tate· oute 850
Bidwe ~ l,

740-245-

OH

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

No trip to the Bob Evans Farm Festival is complete without a tractor ride.
Kids - big and little - enjoy the da1ly tractor and hors~rawn wagon
rides at the .Farm Festival, which is scheduled for Oct. 8-10 at the farm in
Rio Grande.

~Jet_
..... : 00

H

-- 9 -

I()

' \1 - ~ : 00

1"/\1

Free Parkng
Galli Co. Jr. Fair Ground
On Jackson Pik t the corn -r
of St. At. 160 &amp; At. 35

Minute from the
Bob Evan ~ tiv II

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Page 14

CRAFrS

Artisans like Ed "The Broom Man" Wiggins (above) and Darlene Wils
(below) will have their wares on display all weekend during the Bob Evans
Farm Festival. Both crafters are scheduled to be at the 2010 festival.

�Bob Evans Farm Festival 2010

Lead rides and
horse-drawn
rides
be availfor kids
during the
40th annual
Bob Evans
Farm Festival.

Page 15

�Bob Evans Farnt Festival 2010

Page 16

FEATURING:
Beautiful, Hardy Fall Garden Mums
Variety of Colors from which to choose. .___~::;..___.;
,

Frost Proof Pansies

Plant NOW for Beautiful Early
Spring Beds.
Ready Made Planters
Ready to ·sit on porch or deck
And of course Pumpkins.
Gou.fds and Indian Com,

Stop by our Gallipolis Garden Center
for all your Fall Decorating needs,
including Baled Strnw, Fodder Shocks,
'
Fall Flags and Wreaths.
Gallipoli location
Directions from Bob Evans Festival:
Rt 35 east. Exit RT 7 Gallipolis/Pomeroy Exit
Tum Right on Rt 7 toward Gall polis
._......~-Approximately

I l/2 2 mi on right.

2400 Eastern Ave. (A(rosS from K-Mart)
GaJilpolis, OH • (740) 446·1711

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

RedStonn bla nk 1ountnln St., 1•ngc U2

\

Thursday, October 7, 2010

·~============================================
LoCAL
ScnEDUI.E
POMEROY
A aci' dule ot u om g
gl

school vnr5 ly aporllng

vont

~:~~~~:::::so~

Md

Volleybnll
Cht teothe at Got n Aco 5 l5 p,.,
Federal Hocking at East rn 6 p rr
Waterford ot Southern 6 p M
We StOll at Me g 6 p f1'
Rock H I at Atvor Va oy 5 30 p rr

Pt Pleasant 8l H :bert Hoover Gp.m
Hannon a• OVCS 6 p m
Cross Country
Me gs Southern at Log
TBA

Soccer
logan at Ga 18 'Academy 5 p m
Point PleaSDnt (B) at Ironton St

Joe 6pm
South Potnt at OVCS 5 30 p m

EiliiAY

O~JI
Footbllll
Ch tcott&gt;o at Gall a Ace 7 30 p M
Metgs at Nelsonvtle York 7 30 p
rr nble at E:ostern 7 30 p rr
Be pre at South Gallla 7 30 p 1"1
Mtller at Southern 7 30 p rn
Wot-ama at Fod Hock 7 30 p m
Rtver Valloy at Chesapeake 7 30 p m

Poca at Point P'casant 7 "30 p m
G lmer Co at H nan 7 30 p rr
Volleyball
ays Va toy at OVCS 6 p M

•

Soccer
Tc ys Va loy at OVCS 5 p m

Hannan, Po1'nt host'1ng·,
Wahama hits the road

evening
in
Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Point Plc.tsant 1s ridThe West Virginia ing a four game win&lt;,tde of the Ohio Valley mng streak. having not
Publt-;hing area ,, 111 lost sance t.he . season
start Week 7 this Fnday • opener at 1 olsw (21night, as Point Pleasant 28).
,tnd Hannan will be
Point Pleasant has
hosting '' hile \\'ahama P?Sted wins agrunst
hits the road.
Sissonville
(49 3),
Here's a brief look at South Point (48-8),
Frida) mght's Week 7 Vinton County (48-0).
and previous!) unbeat
mmchups
en Wayne ( 13-8).
Poca had alternated
P ocA AT
wins and losses thi"
P OINT PLEASANT
season, beginning with
The Point Pleasant n 34-6 victory in v.'eck
team
will one against Nitro. 'I he
football
return home for a home- Dots defeated Bu1falo
coming night contest 41-24 111 week three nnd
against Poca on Friday
Please see W.Va., Bl
BY S A RAH HAWLEY
AND B RYAN W ALTERS

Bryan Waltersffile photo

Wahama's Isaac Lee runs away from a Southern defender during Friday's game
an Mason, W.Va.

Meigs Homecoming match ups plentiful in Week 7
defeats
Southern
B Y BRYAN W ALTERS AND
S ARAH H AWLEY

SENTINEL S TAFF
MOSSPORTSttMYOAlLYSE'fT I

COM

RACINE. Ohio - fhe
:-.teigs 'ollc) ball tcnm
{I 0-8) defeated Meigs
Count)
opponent
Soul hem (5-12) 111 three
sets
on
\Vednesday
evening in Racine, Oh1o.
l\1etgs \\On by scores of
25-6, 25-11. and 25-18.
Valerie Conde led the
Lady Mamuderc; "'tth 12
points. Chandra Stanle)
lded 10 points. She)lte
nile\ had eight point .
.malee Glass had se\ en
•
points. Morgan Ho'' ard
added six point; . Kel ey
Shuler had five points, and
Jordan Anderson had one
point.
Conde \\ a..o;; 14-14 o;;ervmg. Stante) ''as 12-12.
Baile) was I 1-12. Glass
\\as ll-11. Howard \\aS 89, Shuler was 6-6.
Anderson was 3-6. and
Chelsea Patterson \\as I 1.
For the Lady 1bmadocs.
Kelsey Strang und 1\ l a~gic
Cummins em:h hnd tnree
points, CourtnC) l'homas
had two I&gt;Oints, und Bobbi
Harris. ~ ope "lenford. and
Jordan Huddleston each
had one point.
Thomas was 6-7 serving. Cummins \HIS 5-8.
Strano
''as
5-5.
Huddieston was 4-4.
Teaford \\as 2-2. Hanis
and Amber l la) man were
each 1-1.
Alison Bro'' n led the
ady Marauders '' ith 13
•
~~Is, f&lt;?llowed b) Bail.ey
wtth mne. Stanle) '' tth
seven. Ho\\ ard with four.
and Alaine Arnold \\ith
1\\0.
Stanley had one
block.
Glass had 33 assist&lt;; for
Meigs. while Baile),
Anderson, and Stanley
each had one.
Strang lc~l tl~c L~1dy

Tornadoec; w1th e1ght kills,
followed b) Cummins and
Hudd Jec;ton Wtth 1\\0 each.
and Ha) man ,md Thomas
with one ench Hayman
added t\\O blocks.
Thomas
had
nine
assists. Huddleston and
Cummins each had two.
and Maka) In Hndle) had
one.
WATERFORD TOPS
EASTERN IN 4

WATERI·ORD. OhioThe Eastern volle) ball
had its I0-match
ning streak
not to
ention its hopes for
another league championship - come to an end
Tuesday night t oll owin~ a
19-25 25 21. 25 20, ...516 scthack to Watert(ml in
a Tri-Valley Con ~e~e~cc
JJocking
DIVISIOn
rnatchup in Washington
County.
The Lady Engles ( 16 2.
10-2 TVC Hocking)

Please see Roundup, B6

League and playoff
implications \\ill play a
b1g part in Friday night's
Week
7
gridiron
matchups on tlae Ohio
side of the Ohio Valley
Publishing nrea.
C~allia
Academy,
Eastern. Southern and
South Gallia will all be
involved in Homecoming
contests, while both
Meigs and River Valley
will be on the road in
league matchups.
Here's a bnef look at
Friday's
Week
7
mntchups
T RIMBLE AT E ASTERN

Two teams fighting for
theu postseason live.-, will
battle it out Frida) night
at East Shade Rh er
Stadium when Eastern
hosts Tnmble m a Week 7
Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking
Division
tn
Meigs
matchup
County.
Both the Eagles (4-2. 41 ·1 VC Hocking) and visitinu fomcatr. (3-3. 3- I)
wilf be battlin~ for sole
posse-.sion ot second
place in the league standmgs. and both squads are
currently on the oubide
looking in for a spot in the
Division VI. Region 23
pla}'off bracket
l:nstem currently :-.its
ninth in Region 23. while

Please see Ohio, B6

Halladay
tosses 2nd
postseason
no-hitter
PH I LADELPHIA
(AP) - Talk about a
postseason debut.
Roy Halladay threw
the second no-hitter in
po tseason history. leading the Philadelphia
Phillies
over
the
Cincinnati Reds 4-0 in
Game I of the NL divi&lt;&gt;eries
sion
on
Wednesda).
Don tarsen is the only
other pitcher to throw a
post ·ea on no-hitter. He
, thre\\ a perfect game for
, I the !'lew York Yankees in
I the 1956 World Series
again-..! Brooklyn. The
54th anniversarv of
Larsen's gem is this
Frida).
~
"It\ .surreal. it reallv
i._," Halladay said. "I just
wanted to pitch here. to
pitch in the post!'eason.
lo go out and have a
game like that. it's a
dream come true.''
Halladay took the Ye~r
Tom Pulllnslsubmlttcd photo
Eastern players nng the victory bell at East Shade River Stadium following the of the Pitcher into the
po tseason. The exciteSept. 3rd vtctory over Mtller.
ment spread beyond
Citizens Bank Park the last two outs were
shO\\ n on the video
board at Tar!!et Field.
where the T,'\-ins were
prepanng . to play the
't ankecs. and ~t innesota
fans cheered.
I 'he All-Star right-hanJer. who tossed a perfect
game at Florida on May
29. dominated the Reds
with a :-harp fastball and
a de' astating slow cur\'e
m hi" fir..,t playoff start.
The ovem1atched Reds
ne\ er came clo~e to a
hit. Hall ada) allowed
on I) runner. \\ alking Ja)
Bruce on a full count
with l\\ o oms in the
fifth. and ~truck out
eight.
Halladn) spent 12.sea~ons \\ ith Toronto. far
from the posbeason. A
trade last offseason
brought him to the
defending two-time Nl.,
champions, and gave
him this chance.
"This is what you
en me
here
for."
Hallada) said. ·'It 's a
good tcnm. the) know
how to win .... It's been a
great ) car, a fun ) ear. we
ob\ iousl) have a ways
to go."
Sornh Hawley/file photo
With a .;ellout crowd

Lucas finishes-third at W.Va. State Golf Tournament
B Y S ARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY MYOAILY"RIBlJNE COM

WHEELING. W.Va.
Point Plcao;ant's
Opie Lucas finished
third at the 2010 W.Va.
l ligh
School
Golf
Tournnmcnt held at
Oglehny Park's Speidel
Golf
Course
in
Wheeling. W. \'a.
Lucas, a junior, followed up his first round
score of 83 with a final
round of 76 for a total
of 159.
Poca's
George
Hamrick was the Class
AA individual champion \\ ith a score of 152
(77-75). followed b)
Chapman\ ille's Zach
Gresham with a 157

&lt;n-79&gt;.

Ritchie County won
the Class AA team title
o..vith a score of 50 I for
the t\vo day C\'ent. Poca
finil-.hed second with a
score of 506.
In
Class
AAA.
Whceltng Park wtm the
team title with a score
ot 4~0. foll&lt;l\\·ed b)
Brtdg_eport with a score

Please see Golf, 81

Point Pleasant's Opie Lucas tees off at Riverside Golf Course 1n Mason, W.Va. durIng a quad match against Wahama, Gallia Academy, and R1ver Valley. Lucas
placed th1rd in the W.Va~ State Tournament held tn Wheehng, W.Va. this week.
J

Please see No-hitter, B6

'

�~- ,-.,.--------""'!"'-----~--------~~~~--~-"!'-"-:--.

l)agc H2 • 11lc Daily Sentinel

__. ,. ._,__. . .,_

___,~- - ~ -~-- ,_,--~---I'!W'---,.__,.,..

www.m yd ailyscn tin el.com

·rnurs day, October 7,

2010

W.Va. high school golf tournament scores
WHEELING, W Va (AP) Final results
WednO&amp;day from the West Vrrgmia hrgh IChool
golf tournament at Oglebey Park's par·71 Speidel
GoH Course

RedStorm women
blank Mountain State

Geoff lucas-Scott Hand, Wheel ng 90-86-NA
Mason Humphrey·Ayan Anderson 100·89-NA

CLASS AA

CLASS AAA
1 A tchle County

TEAM SCORES
1 Wheeling Park

3 Fairmont Senior

248·234-460
246·241-487
246-245-491

4 Parl\ersburg
5 Greenbrier E~t
6, George Washrngton
7 Cabell M dland
8 RobertC Byrd

251·251-502
255·251-506
259·254-613
266·261-627

2. Bridgeport

TEAM SCORES

248·2~96

2. Poca
3 Chapmanville
4
5
6
7

Shady Spnng
Qak HiP
Ph I p Barbour
Gratton
(tie) Ravenswood

251·25()-5()t
25~251-506

256·261-517
269-27&lt;&gt;-539
27+268-642
265-283-648
288-31&lt;&gt;-698
297-301-598

CLASS A
1 M3donna

TEAM SCORES

2 Chaneston Catholic
3 Parllefsburg Catholic
4 Man
5 Tnnlty
6 Mooref•eld
7 Pocahontas County

8 Richwood

251·258-509
271·263-534
268·273-541
271·275-548
276-280-556
278·291-569
296-316-612
324~

INDIVIDUAL SCORES
for Mountain State.
ArOew Goblock, Madonna
74-75-1 49
Oavtd
Mrller,
Charleston
CatholiC
84·83-167
Mountain State (1-9)
INDIVIDUAL SCORES
Shane l.Mngston Wheel ng Contral86-83-159
George Hamrick. Poca
77-75-152
missed a golden chance
Patrlcll Thomas, Trinity
86-85-171
NDMDUAL SCORES
Zach Gresham, Chapmanv IJe
78·79-157
RIO GRANDI , Ohio in the first half that could
Cort HOShof, BuHalo
86-85-171
Thad Obocny. Wheel ng Park
82·71-153
Ople L.ucaa, Point Plea.. nt
83-7S-15g
- The University of Rio have changed the com- Russo I James. Brooke
Aaron Pellilly Charleston Catholic 90-81-171
76-8G-156
Jordan Sheller, Ritchro County
80-83-163
Th&lt;lmas Dransfield, St. Joseph
86-86-172
81·76-157
Devoy Ju&amp;!, Tug Valley
8~85-165
Grande
RedStorm plexion of the game Alan Cooke. Parkersburg
Tyler Sertz, Trinity
86-84-172
J.J McPilerson, Prrnceton
'77·82-159
NathonifJI 6!9loy Oall Hill
86·81-167
women's soccer team when Kaylu Richardson Tyler Morrlf old Fairmont Sen or 77-83-160 Josh
lan Morris, G lmor County
87-87-174
Motz. R1tcho County
87-81-168
Marl\
Pjnti
Bridgeport
80-8(}-160
Bra'ldon Kuby Montcalm
90-84-174
overcame a lackluster nussed a free kick off the
Ryan Carpenter R•IChle County
65-86-171
Chns WiWems. Winfield
77-84 161
J•m Ferrell. Parkersburg Catholic 87-88-175
Evnn Thompson, Shady Spnng
80-93-173
first h.llf to detent visit- crossbar.
Josh Carter, Greenbner Eas1
78-84-162
Tyler Cardonas. Patl\ersburg Cath 86-90-176
Sydney Snodgrass. R tchle County 86-87-173
ing Mountain State, 2-0
Jansen McCloy. Parl«lrsburg
79·83-162
Cody Carter, Man
90-86-176
Tytor
Farley
lndopondence
88·85-173
"It's always great to Tommy 0 Noll, George Washington 80-82-162
Stephen
Loudermllll,
Poca
87-87-174
Pat McCtine, Madonna
85-92-177
with a pair of second half get a win.'' said Rio Eli Lambie Wheeling Park
84·79-163
Dylan Beddow. Berkoloy Spnngs
88·86-174
Michael Rogers, Madonna
92·91-183
goals
on
Tuesday Grande
Schwartzmrller. Robert C Byrd 84·79-163
Craig Buchannan, Oak Hdl
90-84-174
Aaron Wrlard, Man
90-94-184
head coach Jay
Jacob Carpenter. Whee ng Park
80-84-164
Justin Thorne Ph p Barbour
85-90-175
Ouilcy Fraley, Moorefreld
91·93--184
e\ enm • at Evan Davis Amber Oliver. "The girls Hunter
Woods Morgantown
82-82-164
Jordan Nelson. PikeVIew'
88-87-175
Claude Drummond Moorefeld
94-91-185
Field.
Christopher
Gates.
Bridgeport
85·79-164
88-92-180
Jordan Simpson, Man
91·95-186
didn't play real well in Sterfrng Frtzwater, Fatrmon1 Sen1or 84·82-166 Ke 1 Garrett. Chspmanvt le
Ryan Albaugh, Shady Spring
90-90-180
R10 Grande (3-6) was
Ni!Cas Batt!Sla, Madonna
94-92-186
the lirst hal r and we Wrll Evans. George Washrngton 84-82-166
Tanner Srgman. Poca
91·89--180
Brlllldon Hatton, South Harrison
101-87-188
slu!;gish in the first half nsked them to pick it up NiCk Sinclair, Fairmont Senror
86-80-166
Seth Thompson, Pflteraburg
86-9~181
Cody HiU, Pocahontas County
91·99-190
Cameron Fora, Brk1goport
8t-8t&gt;-t67
as 11 played a scoreless
Johllaltlan Lester, Chapmanville
91-ll0-181
Tory
AIIOwan,
f&gt;arl(efSburg
catholic
95-9!)-190
and 'they definitel) did in Blake He:U!flgor, Cabe I M!llland 84·84-.168
AISlon Spears, Roaoo County
93-90-183
Jaoob Rigglns Man
96-96-192
openmg period.
Ben McM !on. Greenbrier EaSl
85-84-169
Josiah Laulls, Phi p Barbour
90-95-185
the second hnlf."
Enc: lsabe Rlchwood
93-too-193
Stephan Sinc!a r, Fwrmoot Senior 85-85-170
The RedStom1 stepped
Drew Musgrove, Grafton
89-~188
Ale&gt;: Schlarb, Charleston Catholic 97·99--196
"It
was
great
to
ha\e
Ryan
Mamaw.
Washrngton
83·88-171
Tyler
Gordon,
Phrllp
Barbour
90·98-188
up the lnten ... ity after
Selh Mongold, Mooref•eld
93-107-200
Nrck Gilkerson, Cabell Midland
87·84-171
Tyler Coll•ns, Chapmanville
90·96-188
Trmmy Gibb, Pocahontas County
101-w--200
halftime. F-reshman for- Alex find the goal twice Joe Lynch Greenbner East
88-83-171
BJ Hall. Shady Spnn_p .
99·91-190
Thomas Wa 1$. Tnnlty
102-111-213
Hickman, Prlnooton
84·88-172
Landy Pe~ Shady Spring
103-89--192
\\ard
Alex
Da\ is ngnin this game," Oliver Jack
Brody Prudniek Char1eston Cath 9!H 16-215
ChriSUan H n Bndgeport
90-82-172
Jacob Lavender, Ravenswood
104-89--193
added.
PhirpWIIson Notre Dame
111-1~17
received a great feed
Brooke Bellomy, Cabe I Mld;a~
88-87-175
Matt Dofln. Scott
92·103-195
Oliver was pleased Chase Wheeler. Spring Volley
Sld'ley Cnst. Midland Tra
11&amp;-1m-2'21
86-90-176
Lucas Ware. Grafton
99-98-195
from sophomore forward
Garren Clark, Pocahon!as
104-00-00
Jonathan Gladysz, Robert C Byrd 92·85-177
Nrbort, Oak Hrll
98·103-201
Jordan Rutan und beat with how the team Krls Webster, George Woshrngton 91-87-178 Zach
Andrew Morrison, Pocahontas
104-DO-OO
Garrett Clark, Ravenswood
95·107-202
responded
after
the
halfRyan
Bennett.
RIChwood
11~117-232
Tyler Clay Cabell Midland
92-8&amp;-178
Lonnie EIUs. Ravenswood
98·105-203
Mountain State goalCocley
Horton
Richwood
11&amp;117-233
Jam!c RIChard Jefferson
91-88-179
time
pep
talk.
"We
know
Jacob Frnney. Poca
99-104--203
keeper Megan Alderman
Grant Talbott Greenbrier East
89-94-183
Tyler Poff Richwood
12+1~
Tyler Moore, Grslton
1~115--215
John Tampoya Trinity
Drew DAngelo, Oak H D
113-106-219
to get Rio Grande on the '' hnt they're capable of Lou s Roncagllone. George Wash. 95-88-183
Katchur, ParkerGburg
88-97-185
Ca"SSOWeyer-Bonamln Colo
11~1
Torey Wolle, Ravenswood
OQ.DO-OO
scoreboard in the 66th doing and how they're Michael
Blake Krgflr, Robert C, Byrd
90-97-187
zach Summers-Tyler Poston
114-119-NA
Logan Plumley-Cody Sharp, Pocah.122·118-NA
capable
of
plnying
and
minute.
Nick Dyer, Robert C. Byrd
1~1!n-200
94·98-NA
lsalah Simon-Parker Kinos
Brandon Ball, MOCfel•eld
10&amp;00-00
Davi · tally was the we just ask them to show
on!) one that Rio Grande us that every minute thut
County.
W AHAMA AT
before picking up its
would need on the they are on the field.''
With
the
victory.
Rio
The
Wildcats
(0-5)
first
win against Belpre
FEDERAL
H
OCKING
evening. but she added
by a score of 24-7.
\\ill
be celebrating
another for good mea- Grande is now 3-1 at
from Page Bl
Senior Night on Friday.
sure on a penalt) kick home this season and 1
No. 1 ranked Wahama Federal Hockinf!'s lossmoved
to
2-0
all-time
1
as
HHS
will
be
playing
"ith nine seconds left in
returns to the road on es include league oppoin its final home contest Friday evening with a nents Waterford (0-25),
the game to make the against Mountain State.
tinal score 2-0. Davb. The only other previous ~erbert Hoover 27-2,4 of the season. The visit- trip to Stewart. Ohio, to Southern (14-21 }, and
Po~a s ing Titans (l-5), on the face TVC
nO\\ leads Rio Grande meeting came in 2007 an week five.
Hocking South Galli a ( 12-22).
and non-league oppowith four goal on the ''ith Rio Grande win- two losses were agamst other hand, are coming opponent
Federal nents River Valley (6ning
by
a
4-0
count.
Ravenswo?d
(14-37)
ad
...ea on.
off their only win of the Hocking:
27) and Sciotoville East
The RedStonn have a Chapmanvtlle (t)6-69).
Junior
go;llkecper
season - a 35-13 triWahafha is ranked (0-37).
The . Putman County umph over Tygarts first in the SSAC
Mara Howell recorded three-game road trip on
Wahama 's opponents •
her second shutout of the the horizon with the first team ts led by head Valley. Hannan ended Computer
Rankings thru the first SIX weeks
season as she stopped stop at the University of coach Bob Lemley.
three-game scoreless which were released on are a combined ll-19,
Point Pleasant is tied streak la&lt;;t weekend in a Tuesday.
seven shot on the night. the 'Cumberlands on
while
Federal
with Frankfort for ninth 46-6 loss to Fayetteville
Alderman had nine sa\es Saturday at 1 p:m.
The White Falcons Hocking's opponents
m the most recent Perry.
(5-0. 5-0 TVC Hocking) are a combined 11-25.
SSAC computer rankBoth squads have bat- and the Lancers ( 1-5. 1The White Falcons
ings, while Poca sits at tled injury this fall,
38.8
3 TVC Hocking) wlll be are averaging
;o.;o. 14. The Big Blacks with both programs
meeting for the eighth point!&gt; per game this
are seventh in the having to forfeit one
time ~ince 2001, with season. while allowing
Charleston Daily Mail contest. HHS forfeited
8.2
Wahama winning six of 30 points less
poll, while the Dots are to Buffalo earlier this
points
per
game)
the previous seven.
14th.
Fede
sea"on in Week 5. while
Wahama 's five wins five f!ames.
Festivities. including GCHS
Hocking is scoring 9
forfeited
to
this
season
have
all
BEREA. Ohio (AP)
the crowning of the Paden City in Week 4.
points per game a
come
agaimt TVC allowing 23.2 points
- Browns quarterback
queen. will take place at
Hannan is averaging Hocking
opponent:&gt;, per contest.
Jake Delhomme is testThe
halftime of the game.
9.6 points per game including a
season Lancers are scoring
ing his right ankle again
offensively and is also opening victory against 12.5 points per game in
in practice and will start
GILMER COUNTY
allowing
37.2 points defending league cham- TVC Hocking contests
this Sunday against
AT HANNAN
defen~ively,
while pion Trimble ( 14-6). and allowing 18.75
Atlanta if it responds
Gilmer
County
is
aver- The White Falcons have point~ per game.
favorably to the extra
Hannan will look to aging 22.2 points offen- defeated Easter ( 41-14).
Wahama won the last
workload.
end its 17-game losing sively and allowing Belpre
(48-0),
meeting
between the
Delhomme has been
streak Friday night 35.8 points as a defen- Waterford (42-21 ). and two teams in 2007 by a
Delhomme
seemed
inacth e
from
when it ho:sts Gilmer
score of 21-14. Federal
Southern (49-0).
more mobile during the County in a Week 7 sive unit.
Cle\eland'~ last three
Hocking\ last win in
Gilmer
County
won
Federal
Hocking
game
after
badly 30 minutes of practice non-conference
the
~eri.es came in 2006
.
last
year's
matchup
by
a
began
the
season
with
spraining ht" right ankle open to reporters on matchup
111
Mason 42-10 margin.
by
a
score of 14-7.
four
:.traight
losses.
in the season opener on Wedne ...day.
Browns coach Eric
Sept. 12. He returned to
practice last Thursday Mangini said he'll wait
on a ljmitcd basis, but to see how Delhomme's
responds
on
his
injury
didn't ankle
Subscribe today.
Thursday
before
decidimprove enough for him
ing
on
his
playing
sta992-2155
to
play
against
Cincinnati and Seneca tus.
Wallace made his third
consecutive start.

BY MARK W ILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENT NEL

W.Va.

I

I

Browns' Delhomme
testing ankle

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCALFOLKS.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Golf
from Page Bl
of 487. The Class AAA
individual
champion
was Wheeling Park's
ThaJ Obecny with a
score ol 153.
In Chtss A. Madonna
won the team title by a
25 strokes. Madonna
shot a two day total of
509 to beat Charleston
Catholic
(534 ).
Madonna's
Andrew
Gobleck shot a two da)
total of 149 to take lop
honors.
Lucas - a third year
state tournament participant - improved 17
strokes from last season. In the 2009 tournament Lucas shot a
first round of 85 and a
second round 91 for a
total of 176.
Lucas was the medalist
at
the
20 I 0
Riverside High School
Invitational and in the
reg10nnl tournament.
Lucas was one of five
Point Pleasanl golfers
to participate in the
2009 stntc tournament.
and wns the team's lone
representative in this
year's event. The learn
finished fourth in 2009.

----· --t--------

__

�Thursday, October 7, 2010

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Bulaville Pike 1 mile
M1I
lndependenl CollegeS and inside 740·446·2075 off #160 Oct 8 &amp; 9
Schools 12748
Free Home
Security System
900
Merchandise Yard Sale Oct 7,8.9
Animals
with $99 installation 600
4867 Rt# 850 9am·?
and purchase of
Cheap
alarm monitoring
Furniture
Livestock
services from ADT
GIVE·AWAYJII Love Garage Sale 10/8, 9·
Security Services
Black Angus Bulls 1 seat, 2 cha•rs, fair 5, 3498 ST RT 141,
Call1-888·367-2171 &amp; 2 yr olds. call after
glassware,
condition, call 304· doors.
5 pm. 740·288·1460 675-2620
g•rls-adult
clothes,
~;;~=~=~ lamps, &amp; lots more
Peb
Miscellaneous
3 family basement.
Half grown Tom cat
Jet Aeration Motors garage &amp; barn clean
to giveaway, b/w,
repaired, new &amp;
out. Salem Center
likes people. 446·
11
0
~~~~~~:~~
~~~.
School
Lot Rd. Oct.
1542
· 8,9,10, 2010, 9am·?
537_9528
9 wk old Poe/Terriers
to giveaway. 3F, 1M. FIREWOOD &amp; HAY Yard sale, Oct. 8 &amp; 9,
740-256·9071
FOR SALE 304-882· 9:00,
Rocksprings
Ad. Pomeroy, Oh
2537

------.. . . .

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

o.

READ All ABOUT IT
in the
The Daily Sentinel

\!rbe ~allipolts 1!lailp \!rributte
\!Cbe ~~oint flleasant ~egister

Recreational
Vehicles

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

2005 Jayco Eagle
Goosenecl&lt;
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
Want To Buy
www caanichaeltraile
740·446·
Absolute Top dollar· ~
silver/gold co1ns any 2412
gold
1OK/14K/18K
jewerly, dental gold, 2004 Jayco Camper
pre
1935
US 31ft. Long $6,400.00
currency. proof/mint Ph. 740-446·6754
sets. diamonds, MTS
Automotive
Coin Shop 151 2nd 2000
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446-2842
Parts &amp; Acceuories

For
all
your
construction needs
Also Winterizing! 24
hr service. 304·593·
0859

Top
Smooth
Kenmore
Electric
Range $250 00 Call
740) 388-8372

1000

GIVE·AWAY a gas
range, and 2 garage
doors call 304·675·
5162

Home Improvements

Uncond1t10nal hfet1me
guarantee. Local
references furn:shed
EstabliShed 1975 Call
24 Hrs 740-446-0870
Rogers Basement
WaterP,rooflng

-mr

.Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
f, ~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
Sl.OOforlarge

Notices

Lost
Blond
York
sh1re F, No tall, ~======
about 1Olbs, Sophie, Appliance Services
small reward. 740·
Joe's TV Repair on
794·0321
&amp;
most
makes
FOUND·New Haven Models. House Calls
area small black dog 304·675·1724
wrre-haired w/ camo
collar 304·882-3570

-

IT!

GET YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD NOTICED

Dally In·Columnl ShOO a.m.
All Display: 12 Noon 2
Monday·Frlday for Insertion
Business Days Prior To
In Nel&lt;t Day's Paper
Publication
Sunday In·Column1 ShOO a.m. Sunday Display1 1100 p.m.
Friday For Sunday. Paper
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads Vllth A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre\'latlons

200 Announcements
Lost &amp; Found

JUST SAY

CHARG~

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

86 Honda Accord parts
car, new tires. $600.

740.208·7733
~~~~~~=
WontTo Buy
Oiler's Towing. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740·388.0011
or
740-441-7870.
No
Sunday call
Want to buy Junk
Cars. call 740·388·
_o_88_4_ _ _ _ __
3000

Real Estate
Sales

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
For Sale By Owner
6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740·
446·0390
Home for Sale 74
Midway Dr Bidwell
$50,000.00
20%
down
on
Land
740·794·
Contract.
1013
3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Apartmenbl
Townhouses
2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hosp1tal on SR
160 CIA. (740) 441·
0194
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
small houses for rent
Call 740·441·1111 for
application
&amp;
:nformation.
Free Rent Special
Ill
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
electnc. Call between
the hours ot 8A-8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017

•

Twin Rivers Tower IS
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized.
1·BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675·6679

Very Nice 2 &amp; 3
BEDROOM APTS.
Gallipolis
City.$550.00 &amp; up
includes w/s/g &amp;
Washer &amp;Dryer NO
PETS...
740)591·
5174

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartmenh/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Beaut1ful
1BR
apartment 1n the
country
tr hly
painted very cl an
W/0 hook up n
country setting n y
10 m1ns from town
Must
see
to
appreCiate
Wat
pd $3751mo 614
595 7773 or 740
645·5953

V !loy
Apartm nt
St~te
Route 325
Thurm n OH 45685
740 245 91 10
1 2
Bedroom apartment
With
app t~nce
furnished
on site
l:lundry facility Call
fo deta1ls or p1ck up
app! CiliiOn at rental
off1ce Pos lblhty of
rental
nss1stance

Pleasant
Volley
Apartments s now
taking
app' cat1ons
for 2 3 &amp; 4 br HUD
SubsidiZed
Apartments
App cations
are
taken Monday thru
Thrusday
9 ooam·
1 OOpm
Off1ce is
located
at
1151
Evergreen
Dnve,
Po1nt Pleasant WV

2 BR apt $300 also
2Br trailer now carpet
throughout
$350
Must have ret! 740
_
446 7602

6000

g

E.quul
Housing (304) 675 5806
1 DO
Opportunity
419 526 0466
I hts
tnslitution tS an Equal
Opportunity porv1der
~
Ntce 2BR apt S350 and Employer
p us
utrht1os
GallipOlis 446-8919
or 446·2074
.r.
R
Houses For ent
2 BA apt 6 m1 from
Holzer 400 + dcp
~•
1Br cottage off street
Some Ullht1es pd
l!:J
pkg very clean $300
740-645 7630
or
mon+utl
446 8919
or 446·2074
740 988 6130
~~~---- ~-~~-~~ 3
Tara Townhous Apt New 2Br
1 5BA BR, 1 BA STove &amp;
2BR 1 5 BA back Townhouse 1 m
Refng Furn ' Gas
pool from S1lv r Bndge heat
Central!
pat o
p ayground No pets $550 mon 140 64') NC WID hook up
carport No Smoking
$450 rent 740-367 5785
No pets $600 per
0547
mo. $ 600 Dep 105
1 BR and bath lrr t
Bastian
Galhpohs
months
rent
&amp;
Call
446 _3667,
depos1t
references
,., k
'a •ng app1lea!Ions
reqUired, No Pets
2 br, for rent or sale
and clean 740-441·
0245
m
Pomeroy
Full
basement wlgarage,
N1ce, k1tchen appl1ances,
2nd floor 2 BR Clean
Efflctency
1BDRM wtd hookup, rent
apartment,
overlooking Galhpplrs Ref Dcp NO pets $5001mo
plus
C1ty
Park,
L A 304-675 5162
utihlles No pets. ref
k1tchenldlnmg area 1
&amp;
dep,
askmg
112
BA 1·2 BDRM Apt s 10 $39,900,
740·992·
washerldryer $600 Pt
all 5502
Pleasant
mon + dep 740-446· utrlt1es pa1d call 304 -V-ery--m-ce_h_o_m_e-fo-r
4425 or 740-446
360 0163
rent m M1ddlepoort
2325
good ne ghbomood
FIRST MONTH
Spnng Valley Green newly
remodeled
FREE
Apartments 1 BR at New apphc:nces 2
2&amp;3 BRAPTS
$395+2 BR at $470 bedrooms 1 bath,
$385&amp;
Month 446 1599
large kttchen, sun
UP, Sec Dep S300
room central a1r &amp;
&amp; up
heat N1ce outdoor
AIC, WID hook up
spaces No pets non
tensmokng Call 740.
ant pays electnc
992·9784 or 740·
EHO
992-5094 for
Ellm View Apts.
deta11s
304-882-3017
2BR,
&amp; 2 br apt &amp;
Stove&amp;Refng
houses 111 Pomeroy &amp;
furnrshed, gas heat,
Middleport NO Pets,
ac, w/d hookup, NO
740·992·2218
PETS
$400mo.·
$200dep
2013
n ma1n
st
Auction
Auction
pt pleasant wv 304·
675-0471

l.!J

f1

s

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

I
I

Public
Auction
Fri., Oct. 8th, 2010 • 6 pm
Located at the \nn ets Building
108 ubert) A\C, (;nllipolis. 01145631
(I' rom Pomero) 12 mi ~. to Rhcrfront
Benda, turn right. From Pt. Pleasant,
WV Take Gallipolis exit, turn left ]/8
mi, turn left. \\ atch for signs.
l'ictures can be ,;c.,..cd at
\1" \l.liiiCtiom:ip.com

Broken Spoke Auction
Scr\'iccs
John\\, Lt-nrh. Ohiu I k. r\u. 200611001-t3

Cheshire. Oh 17401 3(,7-012.'
Terms: Cash or rhl'l-k

\1 11h pOSIII\C II&gt;
All sales ure fuwl Not rcsfiOilSihlc for
loss or :Kl"ldcnt~ No smok1ng pcrrmtted
Food \\Ill be a' a1lahlc for purchase
Announcement&lt;; the d.t) of sale take
precedence 0\Cr .m) pnntcd rnntcnal
VJe\\ mg IS hi at 1 00 pm until tart of

sale

House for rent close
to Locks RT2 no
pets
dnnkrng or
smok1ng, must have
refs 304·576·2642
4000
.

Manutactured
Housing

Employment

Child/Elderly Care
Oo you need a
chn tran nanny 1n
your home Reply 10
PO Box 1oo Pt
Pleasant wv
=~~~~==
Help Wanted·
General
Local Site M;magcr,
Genmal
Cleaners,
and
Floor
Techntcmns needed
1n R1o Grande Must
be dependable and
hard working
All
applicants WI' need
to be able to pass
background/drug
screen
To lnqutre
call 888·1306·5720

Help Wanted·
General

traI nI ng req urrment
Pay
b3sod
on
expenence Call 740·
379·9083 M F from
8·4
ABODE
HEALTH
CARE
SERVICES
INC Home Makers,
CNA wanted
tor
Southside
&amp;
Glenwood pos111ons
1·800 327 7262

Medical

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

A &amp; L Home Care &amp;
Tra1mng
Center
se k ng experienced
LPN for Resp1te
Nursmg o!fenng FT &amp;
PT hours mclud1ng
Oay Evemng N1ght
Sh Its
Benef1ts
nv ble for
FT
SeMng
Lawrence
and Ga' a Count1es
~all f/40) 1386-7623
or send Resume to
alhctc ' frontier com
tnsurnnce $8 97ftlr, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
after trolnlng Send
resume to . Buckeye
Commumty Serv1ces,
PO
Box
604,
Jackson,
Oh1o
45640 Deadline tor
applicants· 1014110
Pre employment

W nted
Part-time
po lion ava table to
a s t
ndMduals
with dov opmental
d1 bll1t1e
In
G lpoh
13hrfwk
MLst
have
h1gh
chool diploma or
GED valid drrvcr s
he nso three years
good
drlvmg
experience
and
M•quato automobile

drug testing

~-~--~- opportunity
Wonted
D1rcct
supcrv1s1on
employees
to
overesee m:~le youth
m a staff secure
res dcntral
'lVIronm nt
Must
pa
phys cal

Thursday, October 7 2010

Stay Connected
The Dail) Sentinel
740·992·2155
\\1\\\,mydail}sentinel.com

Equal

4
fully insurl'd
Frer estimates· 25+ ~ear; cxpt'ricnrt'
l'ol•ffillillrd "llh \likr \l•rtam ll'"olin:: &amp; llt111&lt;Mlo hn:•

1\telg.c; Count) Fairgrounds
Arrha!: Oct. 30, 2010
9:00 nm • 11:00 n.m.
Rrlease: J.ast Saturday in April, 2011
A ~ of $2000 "'11J be dwged for earl)
tumal, late arnval, earl) removal late
removal or anvume access IS WiUlled 10
f.urt~r und other than tated dates
Bwldmg pace 1s first l'Orne first serve
In Jde Storage $4 001f
Open Span: $2 00/lf
lns1de renee $1 00 If

Employer
~------CleaPrng
available
tn
Plea5ant WV
area
ndustrial Stttmg 304·
529 7379
~E-""P_ _ _ __
xp arson to asstst
w1mttklng on mod ern
da ry farm housmg &amp;
ut 111es can be a part
of
package
fax
resume wl 3 ret
304 675·5074

Call 985-4372 for more information

Medical
Lo::al Homo Health
Agoncy now hrnng
STNA's, CNA's &amp;
HHA's If Interested
call740·441-1377

• J&gt;rompt and Qunlit}' Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
References Alailable!
Call Gal') Stanley

40-591-8044

Ce117
Please len\e message

THE
CLASSIFIED$

I

PSI CONSTRUCTION

!

Spmalizing in Insurance Jobs indud.in~.
storm. \1 ind &amp; "ater damage.
Room Additions. Remodeling_, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, Nell Home!&gt;. Sidin2. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; In~ured

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use.
this widely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a lbank
You, and place an
ad ''In Memory"
of a loved one.

Rick Price • 20 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740·416·2960
740-992-0730

MAKE

For more information, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

SOMfONf'S
DAY!

Residential • Commercial
• 'e" Homes • Additions
Roofing • Insurance Claims
License • Insured

Rentals
2BR Mobile Home
water sewer, trash
pd
No
pets,
Mobile
Johnson's
Home Park
740·
446·3160
3BA, 2BA, $575
mo+dep+utl 1722.5
Chatham Ave 740·
645·1646
Soles
NEW
foreclosure 3br 2ba
ready to move rnto
$39 900 00 Call 740·
446-3093

304-882·3637

®allipohs 1ilailp U::rihune
(740) 446-2342

SUNSET CONSTRUCTION

The Daily Sentinel

Roofs, Remodeling, Garages,
Pole Buildings, Siding,
Decks, Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured· Free Estimates

(7 40) 992-2155

f}oint llleasant

304-882-2728
1938

~egistrr

(304) 675-1333

740-742-3411

Attention Business Owners

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740-992-21 55

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

�Thursday, October 7, 201 0

www.mydailysentlnel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

-;:;:;~;roP Mr;
•. IA1"cHtNI7 •l"'- 1/
V"
'-'IE 1"1IT'" •.
,Al-l....,.,...,

-

YOUR€ THeONe
GAINIIVG W€1GH7:.
/JOT ME I
'

-·

10-7

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Tom Batiuk

~

Chris Browne

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Wild
guess
5 Boxer's
bane
1 o Brit's
''bye!"
11 Longtime
Spanish
dictator
12 Way out
13 Praised
14 Mound
activity
16 Wedding
activ1ty
20 Spirited
horses
23 Squid's
home
24 letter's
paper
25 Smoker's
pipe
27 Hosp.
areas
281n general
29 Coven
acttvity
32 Truant
activity
36 Memorized
39 Grove
growth
40 Apportions
41 Mideast
nation
42 Criticizes
43 Basketball's
Archibald

JOSEPH
2 Curbside
cry
3 Fighting
4 Groups
5 Currency
replaced
by tho
euro
6 Chuckle
7 Conclude
8 Casino
card
9 Lawn
makeup
11 Moves
like a
butterfly
15 Conceal
17 "The
Doctor-"
18 Patricia of
"Hud"
19 lnd1ana
city
20 Deliberate

21 Co-star of
Felicity
and
Eva
22 Sunrise
site
25 Where
Parisians
save
26 "You
said
it!"
28 Catchers'
needs

30 Software
holder
3, Pointers
33~&gt;-La

Douce"
34 Dapper
35 Heredity
unit
36 Spanish
article
37 Bu1lding
wing
381nthe
style of

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! SCndS475(check/moJto
Thomas Joseph Book?, Po Box 536475 Orlando A. 328;,3-6475

DOWN
1 Dance

move

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

..ARE WE THERE VET?"

HAPPY BIR1HDAY for Thursday,

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

opportunities because of a \\illing·
ness to greet differences and enjoy
change. You decide to jump over certAin barriers, especially if they are
self-imposed. Your creativity surges
as you allow yourself more flex and
mental growth. If you are single, you
certainly can wave goodbye to your
"alone" status, if you so choose. If
you are attached, the two of you can
connect as if you were old lover.;.
Once more, \'OU are the dominant
force here. Work on not bcing too meoriented. A fellow UBRA can be very
different from you, but also motivated by the same bsues.
The Stars Show the Kmd of Day

1HSNSXTTIMG '10J
I(I;U.. fir w;. 1&lt;:&gt;
cu;.ANMI(~

I'M ~lNG '(A)
ll-IIS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

h\ Dm·L·

7.

1-

1--

6 3
8
-·~· (lOf'l'l

" ... And don't go too fast."

9

DENNIS THE MENACE

Hank Ketchum

Difli&lt;ul1y 1 cvcl

2 9

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••uo•"-•

9

1-

ARIES (March 2l-April19)
Others cmtinue to make
an effort. Some people tty charm; others could be overly serious. \\'hat is
clear is that someone wants a new
lx-ginning in relating. Can you let
bygones be bygones? Tonight Defer
to another person's suggestion.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
***You might be looking at
n.'Organizing a key element in your
life. Thi~ effort could b..! ,,s .;imple as
some fall cleaning. \\'hat is clear IS
that you want a change and will create it. Tonight Be sen'!itive to a friend
or associate.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
**** V\'hether swapping jokes
or lightening up another's mood, you
seem to represent lightne:-s and creativity. Single Gemini could sre a
change in their status in the tlc.'l r
iuture. Attached Gemini eye their fir.;t
child, Life could get C)..Oting! Tonight:
Think " weekend," PVPn if il1s a littiP
mrly.
CA."'CER Qune 21-July 22)
*"** If you am work from home,
by all means, do. Understand .... hat is
happening behind the scenes with a
familv member. Make a dL"Cision
about a discus.sion and help thi&lt;. person start anew. Tonight: Happy at
home.

****

1

f-

5

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

)1:m'U Have: 5-Dynmnic: 4-Positroe; 3Averogr; 2-So-:ii(); 1-Difficult

Cir~.?~n

8 6·- f2
1 ·-

2
1

Oct 7, 2010:
11us yeat you will encounter new

LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
**** You have lx&gt;en more serious and les....; light and easy. You could
see this behavior as you weigh thl'
pros anq cons of a nl'w major purchase- a computer, car or wiMtever

you llC\.~. Nevertheless, you will
decide to just do 1t. Torught: Catch up
on a pal's news.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
****You ,know the pro:- and
cons of a money decision. Decide
how to approach your .financ::cs, and
'''hat works best for you You will
decide to follo\\ through and will be
able to kL-cp a resolution. lonight
Check in with a n.""'pcctcd financial
expert.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
***** Onreyou relax. \OU can
move forn ard with a heartfelt desire.
Honor some ambiValence and have a
discussion" ith a trusted ad\'i--er. )ou
might be surpn._c;,..~ by the din.&gt;ction
you dcade to head in. Tonight: Use
the New Moon in your sign for a new
beginning.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-NO\·. 21)
SomL'timc•; the IC'&gt;S ...rud the
better You nught feel that you need
to eradtcate certain negative pattern.-.
Know that .... tth vour will po\' er,
nothing cnn stop you once you make
up yoor nund. Thnight Make it OK
to vanish.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
**"**Meeting.-. could be more
instrumental than you realize. Think
before you leap into action. Others
want to t,, lk and llpen up to po~sibili­
til'S. llumor helps climin.1tc tension
)(might: Where the gang b.
CAPRICOR.'Il (Dec. 22-Jan. lq)
* * A must event allow, greater
tlc.\ibility .md fun in your life. Take
nn opportunity to exprc,s your daring attitude. A new beginning
becl.lmcs a poss1bilit)~ )ou have an
opportunity to dear the air. P"mall}~
Thnight: A foi'Cl' to be dealt with.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-reb. 18)
*****Take an over\'ie\\. Be
wJihng In Opt&gt;n up to new po-..-.ihlhties. Invcsogatc an opportunity that b
forthcommg. You \\ill make a difference if) ou can gradously Jet go of
.... hat no longer works. Thnight:
Seriously cons1der t&lt;tking a workshop
or cla.'iS.
PISCES (Pcb. 19 Mmm 20)
**"*** Deal w1th other; din.'Ctly.
You'll discover what i:; h.lppening.
Understanding e\'OI\'cs bemccn you
nnd others, c ...pccially if you choo,e to
rel.1tc on an individual level. Tonight:
A disrussion owr dinner.

*"*

*

Jacqul'linc Bisar i~ on tire Internet
at llttp.//ii'WWJncquelinrlnsar.cxmt.

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11tursda), October 7,

2010

lne lornadoe... ,-.ill be ~trent~th of schedule of
C'lulllcothe
ha'\
drendlocko; und breathovernll.
l11c
outscored rts h\O ShOAL looking to nnp ,, two I B 18
mg deep!). At one pomt.
M,u-auders
are
averaging
game
losiJll'
~kad.
wlule
opponents
Portsmouth
Hernandez, from his
and Manetta - by a wm- Miller \\Ill be ~omg for 21.5 potnt'&gt; per game
from Page HI
from Page B1
crouched
position
otfens1vely while allowbllled margin of 68- 14 wm number one
behind
the
plate,
Southern
opened
the
mg 22 5 points as a defenmer
the
l.tst
two
weeks,
'&gt;tnndmr m the mnth and motioned for him to l'nmblc 1s I :!th an the whrch
mcludes
the c;;ea.,on With COn'iCI..Ull\C SIVe umt.
calm
dO\\ n.
same bracket I he top
chantlnp. ··t et's Go.
...es to Symm~:o; Valle}
1 he Buckeyes, on the
Volquez allowed our eight teamc; .tdvan&lt;.:c to defense not allowing a (lol't
. Doc~" Hallnda) got o
13-39) and South Galha other hand. are 2-1 at
sinrte
pomt
over
that
loud O\ at aon ''hen he runs and four hit'&gt; in I 2- the pm.to;e,t'\On, mnkulg span PHS returned a (6-X), betore postmg con home thic; year against a
I nday\ contest n p1votal krckofl lor a touchdown secutivc wmc-_ ·•romst &lt;;trcngth of schedule
Jogged to the mound to 3 1nnings. The lhtrd
one
for both clubs if they and Mnrietta scored on an Belpre (lfi 0) m~d I cdcntl 21 15 ovemll. NYHS
throwing
right-hander
stall the innanr.
\\ish
to play in Wee!\ II.
was
4-3
111 I:2 starts this
Hocking
(21 14). avemging 22.7 point&amp;
Interception return.
Ramon
llcrnandct.
bug,le~
wmne1s
The Cavs hnvc also had Southt:m has been hc:ld game offensively
JS
popped out to 'iccond sea~on after returning ol Thethree
straaght
two l!XJ-)ard rushers in ~corcles&lt;, the last two also nllllwing 18.0 points
bastman Chase Utle) rrorn elbow !&gt;urgery.
llnlladny w •• s so eager haven't ullowcd a sinp.le cuch ot the lnst two week!&gt; agamr,t Dh 11oion defensively.
tor the tiJ&lt;;t out. Pinchto
join tJlC Phtllies that point over the Ins! I0 weeks
Nelsonville-York
Brandon IV opponent \1eigs (0 ~4\)
hitter Mtruel Cairo then
quur1cr:s of play. "hi~,:h Whlllakcr ha~; topped the and undefeated Wah&lt;tma which currently sits lOth
he
passed
up
a
chance
to
foul~;d out to th1rd baseback-to back centuf) mark in both of (0 49)
Ill the Division V, Region
test free ag,ency alter this includes
man \\ ihnn Valdez.
shutouts ap.ainst South those wins. while Casey
\11ller
ha&lt;.
suft
·red
19 pl.t) off bmcket - has
and
s1gned
a
$60
season
Halladay then retired
Gallia and Belpre HIS Oates WI! Ill tor a I 08 league
loso,eo;
to los~es thio; sea&lt;;on to
million.
three-year
Brandon Phrlltps on a
''ill be aim in • for Jts fln.t yards last \\eek against Waterford
C20 40) Newark Catholic and St
tapper in front of the extene;ion to complete a four game \Yinning streak M
HS Quarterback Max ~astern (0-3"'). South C'lrurs\ aile, who are a
trade.
Halladay
probably
plate to end 11. Catcher
smce 2004 th1::. \\eekend Corcoran also had 137 Gallia
(20 ::?.4),
.md combined 11-1 this fall.
Cctrlos Ru11 pounced on \\oulcl've recei,ed the for Homecomanl
ru&lt;&gt;hing yard against Trimble (6-44). and po'&gt;t
1\:YHS. \\hich ~tonned
nchest
contract
ever
for
!·astern is averaging PJ-15 in Week 5.
the ball, •ettmg down on
ed non-league lo &lt;,es to out to a 22-7 halftime lead
tf
he
held
off.
a
pitcher
26 8 points per eame
hie, knee a., the ball
C'HS also hns skilled Crooks\Jile (0 47) .md la'&gt;t week at;,ainst the
rolled ne.tr Phillip · bat. but he W&lt;~nted to play in oflcnsi\Cl) and 1'- surren
Chn IJan Rockets. had me drfferpla)er" on special teams, fairtleld
Ph
al
adelphaa.
denng JUSt 14 2 JXmll'&gt; U'&gt; us Dylan O:;borne con- Acc~dem) (I q 55)
and made n !&gt;trong throw
ent pla)en. account for
1 here w.ts much talk a defens1ve umt I liS Js
for the final out.
Miller \\011 the 2009 touchdo\\ ns en route to
nected
on
held
goals
of
Hallada) pumped hrs dm\ n the 'itretch .tbout also 2 0 m home contests 45 ,md 25 yards la'&gt;t game bct\\een the t\\O chunung out 394 yards of
fist into tm glo\~ as Hallada) 's inexpenence this sea.&lt;•on - borh of \\eck lsa.1c Bc\erl) also schools b&gt; a &lt;,core of 30 total offcn e.
Dustin Young ran for
h.td an 85 )ard kickoff 24, ~nappmf a three •ame
Ru1z ru'ihed to the Ill the post&lt;&gt;ea•mn. The \\ hich ''ere shutou(l)
also
have and has posted three return that set up a scor- '' mnmg 'ilre.tk for the 151 ynrd-. and a score,
mound. Just hke catcher Phlllacs
O\ ernII tlus fall
an'
drive
agninst Tom.tdoes in the s.. ncs. \\lute Justin Cunningham
) og1 Bc1 ra did with Oswalt und Hamels. shutouts
I he lomcats. on the \1anetta.
Msller holds a 54 ad, an h~td S2 rushing ) ~ds and
I arsen, Ru1z sta11ed to Both pitcher5 ha\ e been other
hand, are nvcra•'mr
I he all time series tage in the sene&lt;; ~ince one "I D. Quarterback
JUmp mto ll allnda) 's dominant in pre\ ious 27 3 points per gc~me
!'Iathan Dean went 8-ofbet\\een the&lt;&gt;e two pro 2001
aum•. Unlike Berra, Ruaz playoff games. but offcnssvel) \\ hile allow
got
the
ball
and
"I
he
"Jo111ndoes
are
llalladny
13 pns~ing for 161 yards
at
tour
grams
is
ucd
didn't wrap up h1s patching 18.5 points as a H{&gt;iecc. "'ith GAHS win- averaginf'9· B JXmlts per and two scores. hooking
didn't di'&gt;appoint.
er in a bear hug.
Halladay g,ot hrs first deten'\e. 111S i.;; 2-1 m nmg Jao;t year's contest by game thts &lt;;Cason m 'iJX up with Daniel Kline (3
''I fl!lt like we got in a
road gdmcs tim. year and
margin Jackson ~ame&lt;; and have allo\\ed catche'i tor 87 yards)
grOO\C earl).'' Halladay stnkcout in the second, enters Frida) \\ith a t\\o ais 27-10
also unbeaten m _4.2 points per game Jared Dexter tl-33) '
fooling
Scott
Rolen
on
sard "Cnrlo'i has been
game winnmg c;trc.tk, ShOAl
pia), \\ hich M1ller is a\erngmo 10 8 I[) p::t ...e-..
oreat all )Cflr he helps .m 85 mph changeup He allowing JUSt 12 pomt' mean5. the winner \\ill points per game and
me get 1nto a rh) thm cau~•IH Rolen looking at over that span.
keep pace atop the league allowmg 40 1 pomts'IJer
RIVER VALLEY AT
I ramble has won the stand111gs
earl). tbro'' mg ~tnke&lt;;." a fastball on the outo,;ade
game
CHESAPEAKE
corner
to
start
the
1fth.
la'&gt;t mne contests between
Phallies aces Ro)
Southern·~;
fsf'\t sn;
fanned
him
again
on
and
these two clubs, whtch
Os\\ alt and Cole H.tmels
opponento; are a combm d
BELPRE AT
The Rl\ er Valley footran out of the dugout a 79 mph changeup m ha&lt;; .tllowed the Tomcats
18 17. wh1le Maller
ball team will be looking
SOUTH GALLIA
the
'&gt;e\enth.
to \\Ill srx of the last mne
5.ide b) ade to congr.ttu
opponents are a combmed for ll'&gt; tlr;t Ohio Valley
The Phllhe'i gave I\'( liockmg champalate the other memb ·r of
( onference win a2ainst
team \\Ill be Jook- 23 13 thru '.tX \\I!C~
mcludm • the m~One
In T\ (' Hockm pl.t). Che ... apeake on r,...rida)
Phtladelphia's Btg. J. Hallada) all the runs he onshaps
fur
11~ fir;t t\\ o game
last t\\o mer.tll. hastem s
Southern m conn JUSt e\erunr .t!&gt; the t\\O teams
Prell) &lt;&gt;oon. C\ cry one in \\Ould need 111 the first.
Shane Victorino c;Jiced last win agamst I nmble '' mning o;treak of the -.ea
under II pomt: per con battle m Che apeake.
n Phillies umform w.ts
c.tme m 2(XK) foliO\\ mg n ~on. '' hile .mother "'ill be test. whlle tlltm me- ne.U"
Smce JOmtng the OVC
part ol the 'ictof) part). a one-out double dov.-n 34 6 deci ... ion
naming for 1ts t1r;t '"in in
the left field line. He
just under t\\O year\ I) 18 pomto; per ame. 111 2002. the Raider.:&gt; have
Phil!Jes
short~top
f·riday night 1Vhen South Miller ha&lt;&gt; scored II 5 fuced Chesapeake each
Jimm) Rolline; made the stole third and scored on
CHILLICOTHE AT
L:tle)
's
sacrifice
fl)
to
Gallm hosts Belpre on point&lt;; per game m Je.1, ue )Car, with the Panthers
toughe"&gt;t pht) to preserve
GALLIA A CADEMY
right
A
ftred-up
Homecoming in a Tn- conte\t&lt;; and h.1ve allJ\VCd wmning. all eight lJleetthe no hitter, gomg deep
slid
headfirst
Victorino
Vallcy
Conference 35 po111ts pe1 game to ing~.
in the hole nnd making u
l11e race for the Hocking
River
Valley
and
barel}
ahead
of
Bruce\,
DiYision TVC' Hocking opponentb
-;tronu throw to retire
Southeaste• n
Ohio n1dlchup
Homecoming fc ttvJUcs Chc~apeake are both 1-5
one-hop
thro\\,
strong
in
Galha
Joe) Votto Ill the fourth.
wall be taking plucc at on the season. with River
Athletic Lcaruc chamlJtPilcher Tra' io,; Wood got up and patted plate onslup wrll become n it Count).
hal fume of Friday's game Valley's win coming in
umpue
John
Hirschbeck
The
Rebels
(3-3.
3-2
hat a ~ink1ng, liner to
the season opener and
tle
clearer
l·riday
night
in
Racine. Ohio.
nght th.tt J.ty son Werth on the behind on his wa} ''hen Galli a Acndem) I VC Hocking) are comC'heo;apeake
's
victory
ing ott their largest 'icto
caught in the th1rd. to the dugout.
commg
last
\\eek
in the
host
...
Chillicothe
m
a
batMEIGS
AT
ry margin of the fall. a 22Ruiz dre\\ a two-out
Pmch hitter
Juan
le.lgue
opener.
tle
ol
lcngw.~ unbcatens. on
NELSONVILLE-YORK
12 \act of) m cr fedeml
Francisco htt a hard walk. m the second and Homecoming
at Hockin~. fhe Golden
fhe Raiders defeat' •
an
\
aldcz
bounced
I
ederal
Hocking in we
grounder up the mrddlc
Memorial Field.
One
tenm
wJll
be
ann
boles !0 6. 0-4). on the
n1e Blue De,il.., &lt;5-1. other hand, drop~ their info for ats fir;t league \\Ill one b) a score of 27
in the sixth. but Rollins infield single that short
scooted O\ ct .rnd mnde it stop Orlando Cabrera 2 0 SE OAI ) are commg 17th straight decJ'iion m a o the e,tson, \\ h1le the before dropping nm
fielded on the second- oft an hic;tonc 41 17 'ic.
league game'\ a~ain~t
look eas)
other will lnok to n1.111"
41-0 loss to Eastern
base
s1de
of
the
infield.
S)
mrnes Valle' (u-43 ),
at
Lofan.
''
hrch
was
tof)
Hallada) bc~..ame the
the thmi t1me BHS has tam its ood fortunes Mea~-. {0-41 ). Fort Fn e
Chreftams
fir t been shutout O\ er the last Fnda) mght ''hen Me1
tlfth p1tcher to thro\\ Hallada) ·then hit a hard the
(0-4., ). and Alexander
t\\ o no-hlllers in the liner to lett that fell in. Sl'OAL home loss m four weeks
tnncls to "lelsom aile (20-49).
Rher Valley lost
ahead
of
JOJm)
Gomes'
three
)Cars
at
the
ne\\
tao;ame ) ear. lie JOmed
SGHS is a\eraging 14 0 York for a \\eek "~ In
Ia
t
\\eek's
league opener
Ruiz
sliding
attempt.
dium.
The
VtSJtsng
olan R)nn (1973).
pomts per game otfen- \all e) Conferenl:e Oh o b) a score of 14-56. The
scored
to
make
it
2
0.
Cm
alief'i
C-4.
:2-0).
on
\ irg1l Truck-; ( 1952).
and allowing 26.8 DivisiOn nMtchup in Raidc::l"'&gt; opponenb are a
the other hand. posted mel)
Allie Reynold-; (1951) After Rollins walked to their
as
a defensi\e unit Athen... Count\.
points
combmed 21-15 this easecond consecutive
load
the
bases,
Victorino
ll1e visrttn~ Marauder&lt;; son.
a •ainst a strength of
und Johnm Vander \1eer
'
ictOJ)
of
the
e.t~on
last
chased
Volquez
w1th
a
( 1938). •
.
J. O I I\(' OhiO) arc::
Che'\apeake lo~t ill. fir.-.t
''eekend w1th a 27-7 o,;chcdule that is 13-2) (3
coming
oil
a
heartbreak
li\e
games of the sea-;on
I he last time a p1tcher two-run single.
overall.
Belpre.
on
the
Homecomin['
tnumph
the crowd ":n
ing 33 27 Ius., to Athens
·
0 k H'll
(7 3")
is
scoring
just
other
hand.
came ~:lose to a no hitter ingWith
Ja~t \\eek rn their I~ague
•twunst
a · 1 Symmes
- ~ ·
their white-and-red O\ er Marietta
,.
\\ayne
(14-20).
6.5
pomts
per
game
while
in the postseason was "Fightin' Phils" rally
GAHS
-...hich 1s cur''hale
the Valley { 12-27). Valle)
quite n while ago. tO\\ els, Vktorino fouled rent!) sixth 111 the surrendering 35.5 IX)ints opl!ncr.
( ll-35). and Portsmouth
Boston's Jim Lonborg off ~onsecutive 3-2 Dtvio;ion Ill, Region 12 dcfcn!&gt;ivel) against a Bucke) e'&gt; (4 2, 1-0)
winner&lt;;
nf
'iiX
of
tl•e
la'&gt;l
West {6 ~4), with those
!-.trength
of
schedule
of
went 7 :! 3 innings pitches before lining a pl.tyoiTbrncket
io, a-.erseven I\(' Oh10 l"'O\\ no,; opponents having a comagainr.,t St I oui~ In the hit to left-center for a 4- aging 33.8 points per 19 16 merall.
It "'iII also be the first - pulled oft u 28-21 He- bmed record of 27-2.
I &lt;}67
World
Serie., 0 lead
game oltcn.,ivcl~ '' hile
Chesapeake\ fir-.. t ''in
contest
between these 1\\0 tOJ) o-.er \\ dl'iton.
aliO\\
ing
23
7
puants
as
a
before Julian Javier
The Phillies didn't defensh e un1t a!!ainst a program" in histof). The
NYHS leadc; the all came m lust \\eek':-. OVC
broke up the bid \\ ith n have their regular hneup
combmed strength ol Rebels are 1-:2 at home time senes b) an It) 12 opener again t Rock Hill
double
O\Crall margm. includm
b) a core of28-27.
for three trnight games schedule of 14 21 memll. thl'&gt; tall.'
The Plllllies led the the entire season, and
''
1Il
Jn
the
Ia
1
10
he.1dRi\er \aile) is a\'eragDevil arc ,,(so 2 0 at
maJOr'&gt; in wms (97) tor they probabl) \\on't in The
to-head matchups MHS • mg 10.2 points per game
MILLER AT SOUTHERN
home
thrs
tall.
the first time in franchise this series. Third base
last defeated Net . . on\ 11le and hac; .tllowed 39 7
1 he Ca\!o., meanwhJic,
hro;tor). captured their man Placrdo Po .mco are a\ emgmg 20.2 pomts
per
gam~
Southern (24. 2-2 TVC' \ork m 1999 b) a 32 14 pomts
Che upe.tke ha... :-.cor
fourth con ecuthe dh i- '' n~ &lt;,cratched w th a oiTensl\ d) and are allo\\- Hocking) \Hll ho~t ''in- margin.
Meip.~ as :2 I on the ro.td
13.3 pomts per game at
sion title and nrc tr) ing sore back.
le"s Miller on Friday
ing 23.3 pomts defcn J\e
to become the first NL
The Phillies got swept I) against .1 combmed e\ cmng in the 2010 thi )Car, mcludmn ,, p.ur h,ts aiiO\\ed :29.7 pomt~
team 111 66 yearc; to \\in by the Reds m the 1976 strength of schedule of Homecoming game at ot shutout \\ins O\ er per g.tme.
\,tlley
,111d
Chesapeake won the
Lee
Adams· Rhcr
three stra1ght pennant'\
NLCS. Philadelphia won 23-11 O\erall. CHS 1'\ Roger
Southem,
and
h,l\
e
20&lt;W
game b) n score of
Field
111
fhc) are prohibithe a franchise-record J0 I also 0-2 in road contests Memorial
played
.1
cornb111ed
49
14.
Racine.
Ohio.
this
sea'\on.
fa,orites m thi'\ bcst-nf- games that seac;on to
fl\e against the NL snap a 25-year pla)oft
Central champion Reds, drought. But_the Phillies
each. llendrix added fiv~ Jasmine Campbell with siX. Campbell added three.
"'ho are mukillg their mn into the Btg Red
kills, while M()rrison and ~c,en point~ (t\\O ace-;), and Dillon and Casto each
fir 1 postseason appear- Machine, which swept
Kiki 0-.lx,me contributed Jasmilie Wei~c '' ith sc\ en had I\\O.
ance since 1995.
Ihrough the poSISI!HSt)n
three
and two kills rcspec- points (one ace). .md
from Page BI
Game 2 •., F'nd,1y at to win its second con ecSOUTHERN FALLS
tivcl}
Kelsey l\l)crs also Ii~'an) Adkin" \\ ith four
utive World Serie~ title.
Phll.tdelphw.
pomts (one nee).
roTRIMBLE
hnd
one
kill
for
EHS
It's a reversed situa- droJ..&gt;ped their '\ccond
I he Red~ led the NL in
Hendrix led Ea,tern
Blain had three ki '"and
a\era •e ( 272). homers tion no'' The Philhcs straaght dccio;1on to the w1th tour block~. '' hilc Dillon h&amp;td one. Dillon
GL OC~ThR. Ohio
(188) and runs {790 ). call them the N'e\\ Red host I ady Wildcat ( 14 2. S\\atzel added three also added 1\Yo blocks The outhem \'olleyball
are perhaps 12 0) this f&lt;111. \\ hkh nil blocks and Maxson had Katie Hhs hnd st\ ;;.ets. team (5-11. 5-7 TVC
But the} couldn't do Machine
an) thsng
ara• nst in the middle of a but !'.ecured \\ntcrfo•d's one. llendri x aho h,td ct '' htlc C.unpbell. Blam. Hocking) fell to Trimble
\vhile second T\ C Hocking team-be'it 17 as-;i-.ts, \\hilc and \\cise e.tch had one
l)Jl
f uesdll) e\ ening Ill
Il.tllnd.t). who ''on 21 dynasty.
crown in the last three $\\cliLel added 13 and
Cincinnati
is
the
)OUng
1\.atte Elli., h.td II ch •.,, three sets.
game.., and is n strong
)Cars. \\liS ctlso \\On 1t
lnmbk \\Oil b) ~col"e!&gt;
team on the rise.
follO\\ed b) Blain \\lth
[\ lomwn had one.
candidate to \\Ill his sec
Note'\: Former Phrllies 12th strnight match \\ ath
I 1 tem abo lost the mne. \\~sse \\Ill '-IX. ol 25 l 0. .25-13. and 25ond C') Young Aw.trd
the four-g.mle triumph.
Jlllllor 'an.it) contest by a Campbell and Jaza C~to 18.
A determmed. inten e lll P Scott E) re. a memBe\ crl) Ma-.;son led the 25-18. 15 25, 26-:24 mar- '" ith tour e.1ch, Adk1n'
~1a~gje Cummin' and
of
the
championship
ber
Hallada) g(H ahead of
I ady l agles '' ith 12 '\er gin
wtth t\Hl. and Drllo 1 \\llh Bobb1 ~Harri~ each had
'08.
threw
out
team
in
hatters ,md '' orked
vk."C pomto,;, including nine
three points tor the Lad)
one.
quickly He thrC\\ first- the first pitch. ... The stnught ervice point-; in
Hnnnan \,a-. dc.•feated b) Torn. does Michelle Ours
lADY CATS SPUT '
Phillies
swept
a
ti~ht
patch stnke~ to 17 of the
Oak Hill. b\ "COres ol 14 had 1\\ o points,
four game serie' in Game I that allO\\C&lt;.I HIS
TAl-MATCH
tirst 18 batters.
to tum ·• 17 15 deficit into
Kd"e) Stranc.
25 nnd 22-25
Philadelphia
heading
Halladay C\en did it at
24
17
advantage.
J.unic
lluddle&lt;&gt;ton.
ana
a
Dillon
led
the
tc.un
"ith
S\11 1HFRS. W.Va the plate. lie ignited a intn the All-Star break. Swatzcl. Brenna Holter !'he
eioht
points
(two
rtccs), Thom.ts each added &lt;.me
I
Iannan
'olle\
ball
three run. two out rally winning by scores of 4- and BritnC) ~1omson ull team (3-15) ~plit :i' tri· foilm\cd by Campbell point.
~trang and Thoma:-. each
in the sectHld with nn ~. &lt;)-7, 1-0 and 1-0.... added cit;.ht points apiece match nt Valley Fayett~ on with the points (t\\O
Soccer
star
David in the losmg cau~c.
had
four kills, followed b)
H..:e-.),
and
Bl:un
and
Wease
RBI single
Tuesdn) e\ eni ng.
On the opposite &lt;;ide. Beckham \\as on the
with I\\O pomh (one accl llarrh \\ ith t\\ o. and
Ba) Ice Collms \\as next
The
Lad)
Cats
(kfcat~d
Cummins and Huddk-;t~m
27 year old
Ldinson field during Reds batting with two points, "hilc the Valle) Fnyctte in three sets ench.
Aclkms had one kill nnd '' 1th one each.
Volquez look~d like a p1actice. . Hallnda) hit duo of Jan.te Ao)le'i and by scores of 21-25. ~ 19.
had
nine
l'hnmils
D1llon had one block
pt)stseason rookie. lie . 141 ( 13 for 92) this sea
Ally lll!ndnx both added and 26-24.
Samantha Blain had Kat1c Elli&lt;&gt; had sb. eh in a'i!&gt;ISL...,, '' hile llarri~ added
ne\ er &lt;;Cemcd to get wn ... Rolen got "&gt;ooed one pomt.
t\\0, nnd Cummins and
Swatt.el Jed the net nine points (six ace-;) to the match.
comfortable on the by fans who still h,l\en't
Huddle~ton each had one.
torgotten
he
forced
a
Knttc
Hlis
h.td
10
dig
.
lc.Kl
the
team.
foliO\\
cd
by
attack
\Hth
14
k1lls.
lol
mound. takmg. h1o, tame
Amber
H.t) man added
\\ei
c
nnd
Hcnther
l
Jh~
trade
from
Philadelphiu
lo\\cd b) Holter and Stephanie Dillon with
between pitches, wgglllg
each had C\en, Blain h.td one block.
dunng
the
2002
season.
e1r,ht
points
(one
ace).
Mnx&lt;,on
\\lth
lllllc J...illo;
at hi-; ~ap and long

No-hitter

Ohio

aJ.

Roundup

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