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                  <text>Party 5K race
results, A3

Holzer celebrates
100 years, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 59, No. 239

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Gregory Cundiff
• James Edward
Fish, Sr.
• Richard Bradford
Elberfeld
• Laura Geraldine
“Gerri” Haught
Buzzard
• Gladys M. Jones

Gas prices up 9
cents from last
week
COLUMBUS (AP) —
Ohio gasoline prices are up
9 cents from last week amid
a pipeline leak that has disrupted gas supplies in the
Midwest.
A survey from auto club
AAA,
the
Oil
Price
Information Service and
Wright Express puts the
state’s average price for regular-grade gasoline at about
$2.80 per gallon, up from
$2.71 last Monday. The current Ohio price is 9 cents higher than the national average.
A leak has shut down a
Chicago-area oil pipeline
that carries 670,000 barrels
of crude oil per day from
Canada to refineries in the
U.S. Midwest. Supplies
have been affected, leading
to a spike in gas prices
across the region.
One year ago, Ohioans
were paying an average
$2.48 for regular.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Study: Coal emission reduction improves
public health
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY POMEROY A
report released last week determines reducing emission of
fine particle pollution from
coal-fired power plants can
have a positive effect on public
health.
Several Ohio areas are highly-ranked in the report for
deaths, hospitalizations and
heart attacks caused by power
plant pollution, including
Cleveland,
Cincinnati,
Columbus,
Steubenville,
Sandusky, Mansfield and
Springfield areas.

“The Toll from Coal” is the
third study on the subject by
the Clean Air Task Force.
Reports conducted in 2000 and
2004 documented the progress
in using modern pollution control technologies to decrease
emissions and progress to date
in reducing disease and death
believed caused by coal-fired
power plants.
The Ohio Environmental
Council, which joined in
announcing the results of the
new report, originally filed
objections to two permits
sought by American Municipal
Power when it planned a coalfired plant in Meigs County,

along with other environmental
groups.
One of those permits was the
air permit to install, which was
ultimately granted by the state,
and another was a permit relating to waste water.
In Ohio, researchers found
that health impacts from coalfired power plant emissions
remain severe, with pollution
blamed on 1,221 deaths, 835
hospitalizations and 1,891
heart attacks.”
The
American
Lung
Association said power plants
are “spewing heart and lungdamaging pollutants all over
Ohio, leading to asthma, bron-

chitis and heart attacks.”
In the Columbus Dispatch, an
American Electric Power
spokesman said the company
disputes the findings in the
report, and note the company
continues to reduce the emission of sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen oxides, pollutants tied
to the health problems cited in
the study. The two emissions
create soot, which can cause
breathing and heart problems.
The CATF, based in Boston,
Mass., acknowledged that federal clean air standards and litigation requiring scrubbers at
plants have reduced air pollution.

Hundreds show appreciation to veterans

Bicyclists balk
at ʻrumble
stripesʼ plan
COLUMBUS (AP) —
Ohio’s plan to install “rumble stripes” along hundreds
of miles of state roads has
hit a bump with bicyclists.
The grooved edge stripes,
6 inches wide, are meant to
alert motorists that they’re
about to drive off the road.
The
Ohio
Bicycle
Federation says bike riders
could crash if, for example,
they’re forced to go rumbling over the grooves to
avoid debris on the shoulder of a road. Federation
chairman Chuck Smith
says the stripes are a safety
hazard.

WEATHER

Charlene Hoeflich/photos
Lt. Col. Amanda Clark, U.S. Army retired, speaks on “What it means to be
a veteran.”

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Charlene Hoeflich/photos
A member of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War. Cabot-Blessing Camp of Gallipolis carries the flag.

Please see Veterans, A5

Crowd comes to ʻPartyʼ
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

High: 82
Low: 56

INDEX
2 SECTIONS — 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

B5

Editorials

A4

Sports

POMEROY POMEROY Hundreds
of people lined the streets of Pomeroy
Saturday to watch a parade recognizing
veterans, remembering those who were
prisoners of war and missing in action,
and the Sept. 11, 2001, first responders.
Military and veterans organizations
from across the area were represented
in the parade which marched down
Main Street to the music of bands from
Meigs, Wahama, and Wirt County,
W.Va., each pausing briefly before the
review stage to play a patriotic selection.
The Drew Webster Post 39, American

Legion, honor guard led the parade followed by Mick Williams, parade marshall. There were floats carrying dignitaries like Lt. Col. Jennifer Menchini
Kirby, commander of the 142nd
Acromedical Evacuation’s Squadron,
Delaware Air National Guard, and
flight nurses Lt. Col. Kay Nardone and
Sandy Mulroony who work in the evacuation of injured military personnel.
There were entries in memory of First
Sgt. Bobby Barton II, another to
POW’s, and area Legion and VFW
Posts along with Civil War Veterans’
organizations.
Speaker was Lt. Col. Amanda Clark,

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE RACINE A combination of Bucky and free
admission helped to make
Racine’s Second Annual Party
in the Park bigger and better
this year, laying the groundwork for 2011.
Mayor J. Scott Hill said he
was pleased with this year’s
event and hopes it continues
and continues to be free
thanks to corporate sponsors
and donations. Hill said
though there are no official
numbers, it appears at least
2,000 people showed up for
the free concert given by
country music singer Bucky
Covington
on
Saturday
evening and even more filtered through during the twoday event.
Covington did a meet-andgreet for eager fans and fan
club members before the show
and after the show signed
autographs for a couple hundred fans that snaked through
the Star Mill Park parking lot
which was practically full dur-

ing his concert.
Lee-Anna
Hudson
of
Syracuse, daughter of Cyndra
and Dencil Hudson was
named Party in the Park
Queen; Michelle Ours of
Racine, daughter of Becky
Ours and Scott Ours was
named
first
runner-up;
Stephanie
Berryman
of
Syracuse, daughter of Todd
and Betty Hoschar was named
Miss Congeniality. Hudson
took home a $400 scholarship
from the Racine-Southern
Class of 1975 among other
prizes.
Hudson and her court rode in
the Party in the Park parade
which was led by members of
the Ohio State Highway Patrol
who are also Southern High
School graduates. Parade winners included: Floats (sponsored
by
RACO),
Pentecostal
Assembly, first place float,
$100; Dan and Donna Jean
Smith, second place, $75.
Walking Units (sponsored by
Sonshine Circle), Ohio State
Highway Patrol, first place, $50,
Please see Party, A5

Beth Sergent/photo
A large crowd gathered for the Bucky Covington concert, filling the
Star Mill Park parking lot.

�Tuesday, September 14, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Boehner says heʼd support a middle-class tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP)
— House Minority
Leader John Boehner
says he would vote for
President Obama’s plan
to extend tax cuts only
for middle-class earners,
not the wealthy, if that
were the only option
available
to
House
Republicans.
Boehner, R-Ohio, said
it is “bad policy” to
exclude the highest-earning Americans from tax
relief during the recession, and later Sunday he
accused the White House
of “class warfare.” But he
said he wouldn’t block
the breaks for middleincome individuals and
families if Democrats
won’t support the full
package.
Income tax cuts passed
under President George
W. Bush will expire at
the end of this year
unless Congress acts and
Obama signs the bill.
Obama said he would
support continuing the
lower tax rates for couples earning up to
$250,000 or single taxpayers making up to
$200,000. But he and the
Democratic leadership in

Congress refused to back
continued lower rates for
the fewer than 3 percent
of Americans who make
more than that.
The cost of extending
the tax cuts for everyone
for the next 10 years
would approach $4 trillion, according to congressional
estimates.
Eliminating the breaks
for the top earners would
reduce that bill by about
$700 billion.
Boehner’s comments
signaled a possible break
in the logjam that has
prevented passage of a
tax
bill,
although
Republicans would still
force Democrats to vote
on their bigger tax-cut
package in the final
weeks
before
the
November congressional
elections.
“I want to do something for all Americans
who pay taxes,” Boehner
said in an interview taped
Saturday for “Face the
Nation” on CBS. “If the
only option I have is to
vote for some of those
tax reductions, I’ll vote
for it. ... If that’s what we
can get done, but I think
that’s bad policy. I don’t

think that’s going to help
our economy.”
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs
issued
a
statement
Sunday saying, “We welcome John Boehner’s
change in position and
support for the middle
class tax cuts, but time
will tell if his actions will
be anything but continued support for the failed
policies that got us into
this mess.”
Boehner responded to
that press release with
one of his own. “Instead
of resorting to tired old
class warfare rhetoric,
pitting one working
American against another, the president and the
Democratic leadership
should start working with
us this week to ensure a
fair and open debate to
pass legislation to cut
spending and freeze tax
rates without any further
delay,” he said.
Austan Goolsbee, new
chairman of the White
House
Council
of
Economic Advisers, said
on ABC’s “This Week”
that he hopes that
Democratic lawmakers
who also want an across-

the-board extension will
join Obama and others in
the party in supporting
legislation aimed at the
middle class before the
November elections.
In response to Boehner’s
initial
comments,
Goolsbee said, “If he’s for
that, I would be happy.”
With
congressional
elections less than two
months away, both parties
have been working to
score points with voters
generally unhappy with
Congress. Democrats are
bearing the brunt of voter
anger over a stubborn
recession, a weak job market and a high-spending
government, giving the
GOP an opening for taking back control of the
House and possibly the
Senate.
Democratic
leaders
would relish putting up a
bill that extends only the
middle-class tax cuts and
then daring Republicans
to oppose it. In response,
GOP lawmakers probably would try to force
votes on amendments to
extend all the tax cuts,
arguing that it would be a
boost to the economy,
and then point to those

who rejected them.
A compromise over the
tax-cut extensions had
been suggested by some
senior Democrats. In a
speech last week in
Cleveland, Obama rejected the idea of temporarily extending all the tax
cuts for one to two years.
The tax-cut argument
between Obama and
Republican lawmakers
focuses on whether the
debt-ridden country can
afford to continue Bush’s
tax breaks, which were
designed to expire next
year. Republicans contend that cutting back on
government
spending
ought to be the focus of
efforts aimed at beginning to balance the federal budget.
If Republicans regain
control of the House,
they would remove
Democrat Nancy Pelosi
of California as speaker,
a position that is second
in line to the presidency
after the vice president.
Boehner would be the
most likely successor,
and he already is the
focus of criticism from
the Democrats’ re-election campaign.

Obama himself has been
leading the charge against
Boehner, traveling last
week to the Republican
minority leader’s home
state to accuse him of
offering little but stale
ideas that led to the economic meltdown.
In keeping with that tactic,
the
Democratic
National Committee said
Sunday it plans to begin
airing an ad Tuesday in
Washington and on national cable that portrays
Boehner as a supporter of
tax cuts for the wealthy
and a foe of spending for
teachers, police officers
and firefighters.
“Boehner has a different plan,” the ad states.
“Tax cuts for businesses
and those that shift jobs
and profits overseas.
Saving multinational corporations 10 billion.”
At a White House news
conference Friday, Obama
described the Republican
proposal for a tax extension for the highest of
earners as an effort “to give
an average of $100,000 to
millionaires.” Instead, he
said, both parties should
move forward on their
areas of agreement.

Ohio prison staff sometimes miss execution prep
COLUMBUS (AP) —
Members of the state’s
volunteer execution team
occasionally
miss
mandatory practice sessions because of weather,
sickness, vacation and
other reasons, Ohio’s
prison director says in an
affidavit providing new
details about the training.
The prison employees
who serve on the 12member execution team
have other responsibili-

ties besides the executions and are covered by
union-mandated
allowances for time off,
Ernie Moore said in the
affidavit filed late Friday
in U.S. District Court in
Columbus.
“An occasional excused
absence from a training
session is to be expected
and hardly calls into question the ability of the team
members to effectively
perform their duties,”

Moore said in the filing.
Prisons system spokeswoman Julie Walburn
declined to comment,
saying the court filings
would speak for themselves.
Attorneys for death
row inmates in Ohio
allege the state doesn’t
consistently enforce the
mandatory
training
requirements for the people who carry out Ohio’s
executions.

The lawyers also want
U.S. District Court Judge
Gregory Frost to allow
inmates
immediate
access to their attorneys
as an execution is carried
out in case something
goes wrong with the procedure.
Moore says lawyers
have ample access to
their clients and notes
that inmates could designate their attorney to be
one of three witnesses

allowed by Ohio execution procedures.
Last September, in an
unprecedented move, the
state stopped the attempted execution of Romell
Broom after about two
hours when executioners
failed to find a usable
vein. Broom has sued,
arguing that a second
attempt to put him to
death would be unconstitutionally cruel.
Lawyers have argued

that Phillip Kerns, the
former warden at the
Southern
Ohio
Correctional
Facility
where Ohio executions
are carried out, missed
some of the training sessions before Broom’s
execution.
Moore says in his affidavit that Kerns had
extensive prior experience from other training
sessions and actual executions.

Perrysburg couple assists migrating monarch butterflies
BY JANET ROMAKER
THE (TOLEDO) BLADE

PERRYSBURG — On
slender slats of wood in
Susan Garn’s backyard,
seasonal visitors hang
around for several days,
dangling like pieces of
polished green jade,
flecked with gold.
Garn puts out the welcome mat each year for
these jewels of summer.
She invites them into her
Toledo area home, where
she protects them, feeds
them, frets over them.
On this sun-drenched
morning, one orangeand-black butterfly, just
emerged
from
the
chrysalis stage, dances in
the breeze, pumping its
wings and preparing for
first flight.
Many more butterflies
raised by Garn will wing
away from Wood County
in the coming weeks, and
some will trek toward
Mexico as part of the
annual monarch migration now under way.
For Garn, a biology
teacher at Perrysburg
High School, rearing
monarchs is akin to
teaching children. “I try
to take care of my stu-

Charged
ex-official still
on pumps
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Officials in Ohio’s largest
county say there are no
immediate plans to remove
gas pump stickers showing
the smiling face of the former county auditor charged
in a corruption case.
The stickers picturing
Frank Russo let motorists
know that pumps in
Cuyahoga County were
inspected by the auditor’s
weights and measures
department.
Russo
resigned
Thursday, the day he was
charged with taking more
than $1 million in bribes in
exchange for steering
county contracts and hiring
political pals. His attorney
has declined comment.
County commissioners
voted 3-0 Monday to
appoint a new auditor, for-

dents,” she said, “but at
some point you have to
let them fly so they can
go wherever they can
go.”
More and more people
are caring for the beleaguered beauties as habitat loss, both at wintering
sites and throughout the
spring and summer
breeding range, threatens
the monarchs. Efforts to
increase monarch population and protect butterfly habitats include projects developed by parks,
zoos, businesses, schoolchildren and homeowners.
Garn and her husband,
Grant, have tended to
monarchs for several
years, and with practice,
have learned how to better raise and protect
them.
Initially, Susan Garn
would count the wee
baby caterpillars on
milkweed plants in her
yard, but wouldn’t collect
them until they were several days old.
However, many of the
young caterpillars would
vanish. “The spiders and
ants would get them,” she
said. She now gathers
caterpillars as soon as she

spies them. “I am not
going to let anything get
them,” she said.
Little ones live in the
Garns’ makeshift nursery, a plastic container
with a lid. Caterpillars,
big and small, scoot
about the bin, seeking
something to chomp on.
They are like eating (and
pooping) machines; fresh
milkweed leaves are
added often and the frass,
or waste, is cleaned up as
needed.
Several “escapees” live
outside the box, and are
now, at the chrysalis
stage, firmly attached to
a window frame near the
back door or to leaves on
a potted plant.
So far this summer,
nearly 75 butterflies have
hatched out, and 20 to 30
are in the chrysalis stage.
Quite a few caterpillars
are still indoors at the
Garns’ house, and in a
few days they too will
become butterflies.
Grant Garn, zoning
administrator
for
Perrysburg Township,
fashioned an unfurling
area for the aerial insects.
He placed narrow strips
of wood, held in place by
red bricks, between two

step ladders. With thin
pieces of duct tape, he
secures each jade green
chrysalis to the wood,
about 25 per board. And
then they watch for the
monarchs to emerge.
It’s a bittersweet
moment.
“I know they are soon
going to take a sip here, a
sip there. I know after a
while they are going to
fly away,” Susan Garn
said. And that is much
like her children, as
adults, flew away to live
in Tennessee, California
and Indiana, she said.
These monarchs, her
husband said, are “the
last batch now before
migration. I think we’re
getting monarchs coming
down from the Lake
Michigan area. I think
this is their last stop
before Mexico.”
Hundreds of millions
of monarch butterflies
migrate from eastern
North America to Mexico
each fall to overwinter in
the
high
elevation
oyamel fir forests in central Mexico, according to
Monarch Watch, which
promotes the creation,
conservation and protection of monarch habitats.

Monarch habitats are
rapidly declining as a
result of urban sprawl,
roadside management
practices and increased
use of herbicides.
Unless human beings
provide habitat for the
monarchs, the species
will collapse, said Chip
Taylor,
director
of
Monarch
Watch,
a
University of Kansasbased network of students, teachers, volunteers and researchers that
encourages the establishment of resource-rich
monarch waystations.
Waystations, much like
the Garns’ yard, provide
habitats to attract monarchs
and
provide
resources for the butterflies. In recent years,
more than 4,000 waystations have been created
across the country,
including many in northwest Ohio and southeast
Michigan.
Preservation of monarchs is a passion for
Susan Garn, who shares
her interest in butterflies
with friends, relatives
and students.
In biology class, butterflies teach students to
be curious about nature.

“Students become more
observant,” she said.
Sometimes,
after
studying monarchs, students will dash into class
to show off the interesting creatures they have
found, such as a praying
mantis from a football
practice field. One day,
some students found a
toad, and Garn could
hear them coming down
the hall, excited about the
discovery. The insects,
after being studied
briefly, are returned to
the wild.
In her classroom, in her
backyard.
Patterns
repeat.
“I see the students as
they learn and grow.
They take flight as well.”
Students, after graduation, write notes to her,
and she can tell in their
words that they have
experienced a change, a
metamorphosis.
They are soaring. They
are tilting their wings.
“They get it. They get
that I do care about them,
and they get that maybe
they are like the butterflies. I take care of them,
and I know when to let
them go.”

mer county administrator
David Reines (RYNZ).
The auditor’s job will be
abolished in January when
a new form of county government takes office.

into the building.
The chief estimates the
fire caused at least $350,000
damage.
The American Red Cross
was at the scene trying to
arrange temporary housing
for the displaced residents.

ventable. Police say they
are surprised at how
many people still leave
valuables in plain sight.
The cards seemed to be
helping. The number of
car break-ins in three
often-targeted neighborhoods dropped from 125
in July to 66 last month.
The program is a variation of earlier efforts,
such as one last year that
urged drivers to leave
their personal items in
the trunk.

the west side of Interstate
71 has been renamed
Jeffersonville Crossing.
General manager Bill

Brown says the complex
aims to offer a mix of discount stores and a large,
upscale flea market.

Blaze
displaces 17
families
FAIRFIELD (AP) — A
fire that swept through an
Ohio apartment building
has left the 17 families who
live there looking for other
places to stay.
Fairfield Fire Chief Don
Bennett says no residents
were hurt in Sunday afternoon’s fire in the community 13 miles north of
Cincinnati. A firefighter was
hospitalized for a leg injury.
Bennett says it’s not clear
what caused the fire. Fire
officials believe it started on
an apartment balcony and
spread to the roof, causing
part of the roof to collapse

Cincinnati
cops caution
about car
thefts
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Cincinnati police are
placing notes on cars
parked around the city,
cautioning owners not to
leave laptop computers,
GPS devices or other
equipment in their vehicles where it can be seen
by would-be thieves.
Police say the “vehicle
security report cards”
aren’t traffic tickets, just
reminders that car breakins are common and pre-

I-71 outlet
mall plans
comeback
JEFFERSONVILLE
(AP) — A struggling outlet mall with a far more
successful neighbor in
southwest Ohio will try
to make a comeback
under new ownership.
The former Jeffersonville
II/Home Goods center on

Dining with
Diabetes
Are you a diabetic?
Do you know a diabetic?
Free training &amp; recipes for diabetic support

Sept. 27th - Oct. 4th &amp; 12th
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Courthouse Annex
Pomeroy, OH
Contact Andrew Brumfield
at 740-992-6626
Meigs County Health Department

�The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

RACINE
— Kody
Wolfe and Jennifer
McCoy, both of Racine
were the overall fastest
male and female runners
in the Second Annual
Party in the Park 5K
Run/Walk held this past
Saturday.
Wolfe set a new Party
in the Park record by pacing the 3.1-mile course in
16 minutes and 38 seconds, almost a minute
and half faster than the
18:04 recorded in last
year’s Inaugural Party in
the Park 5K Run, while
McCoy completed the
run in 21 minutes, 57
seconds. They are both
students at Southern
High School and members of the Southern
Cross Country Team.
In the 5K walk, the
overall female and male
winners were Paulette
Harrison, Pomeroy, with
a time of 38 minutes and
seven seconds and Lloyd
Talkington, Washington,
W.Va. with a time of
35:26.
Age group winners in
the run were as follows,

in order by time:
Male under 18 –
Andrew
Ginther,
Portland, 20:45; Justin
Hettinger, 20:55; Bradley
McCoy, Racine, 21:06;
18-29 – Bryan Harris,
Racine, 22:00; Nathan
Cook, Pomeroy, 23:02;
Colby
Roseberry,
Syracuse, 24:48; 30-39 –
Brian Allen, 27:01; 4049 – Jim Freeman,
Racine, 21:43; Jeff
Caldwell, Racine, 28:15;
Paul Harris, 33:42; 5059 – Carl Johnston,
22:02; David Snodgrass,
24:35; 60 and older –
Gale Shrimplin, 29:12.
Female, under 18 –
Jessica Cook, Pomeroy,
29:07; Kyrie Swann,
31:08; Marissa Johnson,
33:36; 18-29 – Kristiina
Williams, Racine, 25:45;
Deana Pullins, 29:47;
Jenna Hupp, 31:44; 3039 – Monica Freeman,
Racine, 28:30; Catherine
Snyder, 33:19; Jessika
Codner, 37:45; 40-49 –
Amy Perrin, Pomeroy,
24:22; Melanie Weese,
31:56; 50-59 – Patty
Aldridge,
Reedsville,
29:51; Anita Musser,
Portland, 36:31; Francie

Too much structure for
child at preschool?

Submitted photo
Kody Wolfe and Jennifer McCoy, both of Racine, were
the overall fastest male and female runners in the
Second Annual Party in the Park 5K Run/Walk held
this past Saturday.

Shrimplin, 43:56; 60 and
older – Ann Collins,
Reedsville, 40:04.
Age group winners in
the walking event were as
follows, in order by time:
Female, 18-29: Kim
McKendree, 46:51; 3039 – Christie Smith,
45:12;
Ann
Engle,
49:18; Amy Diddle,
50:52; 40-49 – Dawna
Arnold, 44:38; Theresa
Wolfe, 53:59; 50-59 –
Kathy Wyatt,
39:08;
Judy Harrison, 52:52;
Brenda Johnson, 1:01:34;

60 and older – Mary Ann
Fowler, 49:06; Carol
Reed, 54:26; Terry Shain,
54:29.
Male, 20-29 – Jesse
McKendree, 46:52; 3039 – Jeff Rose, 47:37; 4049 – James Hall, 47:33;
60 and older, Cliff
Ashley, 47:50; Billy Joe
Spencer, 1:00:39.
Proceeds from the event
benefit the Southern
Fitness Center, which is
also open to the public. Full
results will be posted on
www.raceontheriver.net.

Physical therapists discuss healthy lifestyle
RACINE — A program on the importance
of a healthy livestyle was
presented by Holzer
Hospital physical therapists speaking at a meeting of the Sonshine
Circle at Bethany Church
Thursday.
Joan Anderson and
Shannon Williams talked
about the role of exercise
and diet as a way of
maintaining good health.
They discussed osteoporsis and ways a proper
diet and regular exercise
can delay the onset of the
disease which may lead
to fractures, and spoke of
their role in restoring
function.
The group made its
monthly donation to the

Meigs County Council
on Aging and also made a
contributon to the boy
scouts who lost their
meeting place when the
Hemlock Grove Grange
burned. Kathy McDaniel
gave a report on the
“Presious Ones” donations, and also gave an
update on the program
conducted by Debbie
Powell, “Feeling BetterLooking Good.”
Kathryn Hart presided
at the meeting which
opened with devotions by
Lilian Zarzar and read by
Hart from “Apple-osophy.” Sandy McDaniel
of the Carmel Sutton
Church displayed jewelry
with the craft of making
jewelry being described

by Jackie White.
Officers’ reports were
given by Mary Ball and
Ann Zirkle.
Edie
Hubbard reported 68
remembrance cards were
signed and 16 mailed out
early. The cards were
provided by Mary Ball.
Birthdays celebrated
this
month
were
Blondena
Rainer,
Bernice Theirss, and Jan
McKee.
Hart and Zirkle presented a program on
Johnny Appleseed. Hart
read about his life history
and Zirkle read a poem
about apples and an article about the nutritional
value of the apple. They
then
served
apple
dumplings and ice cream

to the three guests and
Odessa Proffitt, Joann
Proffitt, Edie Hubbard,
Blondena Rainer, Kim
Smith, Betty Proffitt,
Genny Richards, Hazel
McKelvey, Letha Proffitt,
Wilma Smith, Kathy
McDaniel, Jackie White,
Denise Holman, Jan
McKee, Ruth Simpson,
Bernice Theiss, Mildred
Hart, Mabel Brace,
Louise Frank, Evelyn
Foreman, and Mary Ball.
Next meeting is scheduled for Oct. 21 at the
church with Mildred Hart,
Hazel McKelvey, Mabel
Brace,
and
Genny
Richards has hostesses. A
silent auction will be held.

Community Calendar
Tuesday, Sept. 14
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Tuppers
Plains
Regional
Sewer
District, 7 p.m., at the
office.
POMEROY
—
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. at
the home of Manning
Roush.
POMEROY
—
Bedford
Township
Trustees, 7 p.m. at town
hall.
SYRACUSE — The
Board of Trustees of the
Syracuse Community
Center will meet 7 p.m.
at the Center.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Tea Party, regular meeting, 7 p.m.,
Mulberry
Community
Center, presentation on
Constitution.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Chamber of

Commerce, businessminded luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy
Library,
Pamela Martino of the
American Red Cross
speaking,
Pomeroy
McDonalds
catering,
RSVP 992-5005.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Genealogical
Society, 5 p.m., at the
Meigs County Museum.
Public welcome.
Thursday, Sept. 16
MIDDLEPORT
—
Free community dinner,
4:30-6 p.m., Dave Diles
Park, pulled pork, hot
dogs, baked beans,
desserts, drinks, sponsored by Heath United
Methodist Church.
POMEROY
—
American
Cancer
Society Meigs County
A d v i s o r y
Board/Survivorship
Taskforce
meeting,

noon, banquet room of
Wild Horse Cafe.
Friday Sept. 17
LETTART — Letart
Township Trustees 3
p.m. at the office building.
Saturday, Sept. 18
POMEROY
—
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
Employees
annual reunion, 1 tro 4
p.m. at the Mulberry
Community
Center.
Potluck with beverages
furnished. Memorabilia
to be on display.
POMEROY — The
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital Employees will
have
their
annual
reunion 1 to 4 p.m. at
the
Mulberry
Community Center. The
event will be potluck
with beverages furnished. A table of memorabilia will be a feature

Local Briefs
Scholarship
applications
POMEROY — The
deadline for the Meigs
County Retired Teachers’
Scholarship application is
Oct. 12.
Applicants must be
Meigs County residents
and a junior or senior currently enrolled in a college, majoring in education with at least a 2.5
grade point average.
Applications
must
include a current college
transcript showing the
two previous years of

credits and grades, a
resume of volunteer
activities and work,
career objectives and
three references, including an instructor. A current photo and the name
and adress of the college
attending must also be
provided.
All applicants will be
evaluated on GPA and
compliance with requirements, with consideration
of activities and career
objectives. Applications
must be mailed to MCRT
Scholarship Committee,
c/o Joan Corder, 297
Wright St., Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769.

Family dinner
ATHENS — Modern
Woodmen will host a dinner and family life program at 6 p.m. at the
Church of God, 67
Columbus Rd., Athens.
The chapter will provide
chicken, rolls and drinks.
Those attending should
bring a covered dish.
A drawing will be held
for a family door prize.
David Brothers will present a program on
Principles of Freedom.

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mydailysentinel.com

Your online source for news

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

A S K D R . B RO T H E R S

Partyʼs 5K race results
STAFF REPORT

Page A3

of the reunion.
Tuesday, Sept. 21
CHESTER — Chester
Council 323, DofA, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
Church Events
Sunday, Sept. 19
RACINE
—
Homecoming at Mt.
Moriah Church of God,
Mile Hill Road, with
morning service at 9:45
a.m.,
with
Herman
Stuart
as
speaker.
Dinner at 11:30 a.m.
Service at 1 p.m. with
special singing.
ALFRED
— Alfred
United
Methodist
Church annual homecoming, with Pastor
Gene Goodwin speaking at 11 a.m., a potluck
luneheon
at
12:30
p.m., afternoon service
at 2 p.m. featuring The
Sonshine Singers and
local talent.

Dear Dr. Brothers:
My 4-year-old is enrolled
in
a
neighborhood
preschool, and it has
always gotten pretty
good reviews from the
parents around here. So I
had no problem putting
him in this year’s class —
in fact, there was a bit of
a waiting list, and we
were lucky to get a spot.
But now it turns out that
it is really hard to get him
to go to school! I don’t
want to take him back to
day care. He says he has
to always line up and be
quiet and sit on the circle,
and he doesn’t like it!
Help! — P.A.
Dear P.A.: There is
always a lot of attention
paid to the transition to
kindergarten,
middle
school and high school,
but the kids who are
going from day care to
preschool
sometimes
have just as big an adjustment to make. Like the
children who have had a
mother or baby sitter at
home, they have had a
variety of experiences
and daily routines, and
interaction with other
kids may have been
somewhat limited. But
the biggest change is
likely to be the level of
structure — these days
even 4-year-olds are
expected to be able to
follow instructions and
sit in a circle. It is partially just a practical matter
for the teachers, so that

Dr. Joyce Brothers
something
can
get
accomplished without
chaos, but it also is considered an age-appropriate way to help prepare
kids for “real” school.
Your son may not have
been asked to do things
in a regimented and disciplined way in the past,
and he is finding it a bit
difficult to fall into line.
This is not unusual, nor
does it mean he isn’t
going to enjoy school or
be able to learn. You
might help him at home
with some of your own
activities. Ask him to
start following some simple instructions and procedures — picking up his
toys when he is finished,
helping you set the table,
practicing sitting in a
specific seat for a period
of time, etc. But if he is
frustrated, make sure he
knows that you understand.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

Simms announce birth
MIDDLEPORT — Ginger and Kevin Simms of
Middleport announce the birth of a son, Tanner Ray
Simms, Aug. 24 at O’Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Athens.

Meigs County Forecast
Tuesday: Sunny, with
a high near 81. West
wind around 5 mph
becoming calm.
Tuesday
Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 54. Calm
wind.
Wednesday: Partly
sunny, with a high near
81. Northeast wind
around 6 mph.
Wednesday
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 54.
Thursday: A chance
of showers after 3pm.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 82. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 59. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
Friday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 78.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 55.
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 79.

Saturday
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 56.
Sunday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
83.

FREE
HEALTH SCREENINGS
CHOLESTEROL, BLOOD PRESSURE AND DIABETES
Free screening and education for Cholesterol, Blood Pressure and
Diabetes will be available to the community on Friday, September
24, 2010 from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm at the Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center at 36759 Rocksprings Rd. in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Total Cholesterol and Glucose can be non-fasting. Lipid Panel
(cholesterol, triglyceride, HDL &amp; LDL) require fasting for 9-12
hours.
There is no charge for the screenings.
Screenings and health information will be provided by the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Community Health
Programs. Registration is not required. For more information, please
call 740-597-1212 or 1-800-844-2654.

�OPINION

Page A4
Tuesday, September 14, 2010

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
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exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
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peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Bright economic future predicted
BY MATT GOURAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Some of the biggest names in business said Monday
that they see a bright future for the economy, with
famed investor Warren Buffett declaring the country
and world will not fall back into the grips of the recession.
“I am a huge bull on this country. We are not going
to have a double-dip recession at all,” said Buffett,
chairman of Omaha, Neb.-based Berkshire Hathaway
Inc. “I see our businesses coming back across the
board.”
Buffett said the same things that worked for the
country through a century of two world wars, a
depression and more — all while increasing the standard of living — will work again. He said banks are
lending money again, businesses are hiring employees and he expects the economy to come back
stronger than ever.
“This country works,” Buffett said during a question-and-answer session via video at the Montana
Economic Development Summit. “The best is yet to
come.”
The likes of Buffett, Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve
Ballmer and General Electric Co. Chairman Jeff
Immelt told the nearly 2,000 business leaders, government officials, aspiring entrepreneurs and others at
the summit that things are getting better. They also
offered some ideas for what needs to be done.
Ballmer said there soon will be more technological
advancement and invention than there was during the
Internet era. That will help drive business growth, he
said.
“I am very enthusiastic what the future holds for our
industry and what our industry will mean for growth
in other industries,” said Ballmer, whose company is
based in Seattle.
He envisions new technologies that move beyond
the Internet to tie together computers, phones, televisions and data centers to create amazing new products. And the pace of innovation will increase as technology makes workers more productive.
The conference was organized by U.S. Sen. Max
Baucus. The Montana Democrat said it leaves “bickering and name-calling” back in Washington, D.C., so
leaders can find good ideas.
Immelt said angry political rhetoric is not helpful
and headlines are too focused on finding negative
indicators. He said business at GE, one of the world’s
largest companies, is improving.
Immelt said the country is going to need to adjust,
though. The economy since the 1970s has been driven
by consumer credit and a misguided notion in building a “lazy” service economy, he said, and manufacturing, with an aim to reduce the trade deficit, is the
key.
“It was just wrong. It was stupid. It was insane,”
Immelt said of the push for a service-based economy.
“The future of the economy has to be as an exporter.”
He said Fairfield, Connecticut-based GE is now
finding it profitable to build manufacturing and service centers in the United States rather than overseas,
because it is more competitive to do so.
More investment is needed in technology innovation, exports need to be rejuvenated, and clean energy
and affordable health care need to be given top billing
for policymakers, Immelt said.

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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One more time: GOP
vs tea party challengers
BY DAVID ESPO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Republican establishment
confronts a final round of challenges from tea party activists
Tuesday in Delaware, New
Hampshire and New York, the
end of a tumultuous primary season dominated by voter anger at
government-as-usual.
Even before the campaigning
ends, Republicans argue that
their spirited primaries portend
big gains this fall when they hope
to win control of the House and
Senate as well as gain several
governorships
now
in
Democratic hands.
So far this year, “roughly four
million more Republicans than
Democrats have gone to the polls
in primary elections which lends
more evidence to the enthusiasm
gap between the two parties and
which should be of deep concern
for Democrat leaders as we move
towards November,” said Sen.
John Cornyn of Texas, who
heads the Republican Senate
campaign effort.
But as in previous primaries,
Democrats will be watching
Tuesday’s GOP contests closely,
hoping for additional upsets that
— they say — will saddle
Republicans with unelectable
candidates this fall.
“The messes created by these
primaries have given Democrats
a more competitive edge in a
handful of key races,” said Eric
Schultz, a spokesman for the
Senate Democratic campaign
committee.
In all, seven states and the
District of Columbia are holding
primaries this week, and some
offer races of both local and
broader interest.
In Rhode Island, Mayor David
Cicilline of Providence is seeking the Democratic nomination
for an open House seat. If elected
this fall — he is favored to win
the primary in the heavily
Democratic district — he would
become the fourth openly gay
member of Congress.
In the nation’s capital, Mayor
Adrian Fenty faces a strong primary challenge and has spent
weeks apologizing to his constituents for behaving arrogantly
during his four years in office.
Yet the races drawing the most
national interest are for statewide
office and along the Eastern
Seaboard, an area not generally
associated with the tea party
movement that has achieved its

most notable victories so far in
Western and Southern states such
as Nevada, Colorado, Utah,
South Carolina and Kentucky.
The recession has not hit
Delaware, with 8.4 percent
unemployment,
or
New
Hampshire, 6 percent joblessness, as hard as many other
states. But the insurgent challengers seek to tap into the same
voter anger that has been evident
elsewhere.
“We are the king of our country,” New Hampshire Senate
contender Ovide Lamontagne
told a small group of supporters
during the day as he labored to
defeat front-runner Kelly Ayotte
in the Republican primary. “They
are not serving us. They are ruling us.”
In Delaware, Rep. Mike Castle,
71 and a fixture in state politics
for more than a generation, faces
a
threat
from
Christine
O’Donnell, supported by former
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and the
Tea Party Express, which has
reported spending more than
$200,000 on her behalf in recent
days.
Republican officials disclosed
Monday they had contacted the
Justice Department after state
party chairman Tom Ross
received a death threat. Ross has
been among Castle’s most outspoken supporters, saying at one
point that O’Donnell “could not
be elected dog catcher” in
Delaware.
In contrast to Castle, who is a
former two-term governor and
has held the state’s lone House
seat for nine terms, O’Donnell
has never been elected to public
office.
For most of the campaign,
Castle seemed content to ignore
her, but when Sen. Lisa
Murkowski was unexpectedly
defeated for renomination in
Alaska two weeks ago, he and
the party abruptly switched
course.
In the days since, O’Donnell
has been buffeted by a string of
unflattering disclosures about her
personal life.
Her house was threatened with
foreclosure at one point; the IRS
once filed a lien against her, and
she did not, as she long claimed,
graduate from college more than
two decades ago. Instead,
Fairleigh Dickinson awarded her
a degree last week.
But Castle is arguably the most
moderate Republican in the
House, and his record — he

voted for the bank bailout of
2008 — has made him a ripe target.
“We cannot elect any more liberals to Washington, D.C., especially ones who wear the banner
of being a Republican. It is an
honor to be a Republican,”
O’Donnell
told
supporters
recently.
GOP strategists view Castle as
the party’s only chance to win the
seat now in Democratic hands —
Democrats exceed Republicans
in statewide voter registration —
and they have made it clear that
if he loses they will abandon
O’Donnell in a fall campaign
against
the
presumptive
Democratic nominee, New
Castle County executive Chris
Coons.
If so, it would support a claim
that Democrats have made
repeatedly as tea party-backed
insurgent candidates have won
primaries elsewhere, including
Kentucky, Nevada and Colorado.
But the situation is not the
same in New Hampshire, where
Ayotte has the support of both
the establishment and Palin.
There, party strategists say that
while the front-runner is their
choice, Lamontagne could also
win a statewide race, and would
have their support.
Rep. Paul Hodes is unopposed
for the Democratic nomination,
and spent part of the summer
assailing Ayotte in television
commercials — a fact the
Republican front-runner likes to
point out to her audiences.
The seat is currently held by
retiring GOP Sen. Judd Gregg,
and its loss would all but doom
any hope the Republicans have
of winning control of the Senate.
The race for the New York
Republican gubernatorial nomination may have roiled the party,
but it would take a remarkable
turn of events for it to make a difference in the fall in the heavily
Democratic state.
Former Rep. Rick Lazio began
the race as the front-runner, the
choice of leaders in the
Republican and Conservative
parties.
But Carl Paladino, a wealthy
developer who is a political
novice, has gained traction with
the help of tea party activists.
He’s
campaigned
against
“Liberal Lazio” and has said
Lazio and Democratic contender
Andrew Cuomo are both “gutless” for proposing caps on property tax growth rather than cuts.

�Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Obituaries
Gregory Cundiff
Gregory Keith Cundiff, 60, of Story’s Run Road,
Cheshire, died Sunday, Sept. 12, 2010, at his residence.
He was born Jan. 16, 1850, in Mason, W.Va., son of
Robert and Hazel Nelson Cundiff.
Surviving are his wife, Brinda Cundiff; daughters:
Nancy of Mt. Vernon, Charlotte of Reys, Adrian of
Chauncey and Amantha of Rutland; a son, Shelby, of
Huntington, W.Va.; sisters, Jackie Blackburn of
Columbus and JoAnn Whaley of Delaware; and
brothers Ralph (Lois) Cundiff and Charles Cundiff;
and 14 grandchildren.
Also preceding him in death were Eugene Cundiff,
Betty Charles, Eddie Parick and Anna Jo Patrick and
Robert, Jr. and Lucille Cundiff.
Funeral will be at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 15,
2010, at Ewing Funeral Home with Pastor Ed Varney
officiating. Burial will be at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call from 9 a.m. until the time of funeral at the funeral home.

James Edward Fish, Sr.
James Edward Fish, Sr., 71, of Rutland departed
this life Saturday, Sept. 11, 2010 at his residence.
Born Oct. 13, 1938 at New Cumberland, W.Va., he
was the son of the late Robert Edward Fish and Edith
Mae (Crago) Spires. He attended Mt. Union Church,
Pomeroy, was a US Navy veteran serving during the
Vietnam War and a retired heavy equipment operator
at Sandshill Coal.
Jim is survived by his wife Alta Louise Clonch
Fish; daughters, Elaine (Ralph) Gueltig, Connie Sue
Fish and Dawn Marie Fish, all of Rutland, Theressa
Harvey, Pataskala; son, James (Renee) Fish, Jr.,
Pomeroy; brothers, Richard (Janita) Fish, Dennis
(Yvonne) Fish, all of New Cumberland, W.Va.,
Ronald Fish, Johnstown, Pa.; sisters, Marjorie Ralph,
New Cumberland, W.Va., Diana (Dan) Waggner,
Pataskala; 10 grandchildren; eight great grandchildren, several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by in-laws George and Francis Clonch.
A service will be held at 11 a.m., Wednesday, Sept.
15, 2010 at Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland with
Pastor Dennis Weaver officiating. Burial to follow at
Wells Cemetery, Pomeroy. Family will receive friends
from 5-8 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2010 at the funeral
home.

Richard Bradford Elberfeld
Richard Bradford Elberfeld of Hamilton, died
Saturday, September 11. He was 86.
Born in Pomeroy, Ohio on November 19, 1923 to
Alfred Mees Elberfeld and Helen Laughead
Elberfeld, he graduated from Pomeroy High School,
attended Ohio State University, where he was a member of Phi Delta Theta, and graduated from Miami
University in 1947.
During the war, he was a volunteer ambulance driver in the American Field Service, serving with the
British in the China-Burma-India Theater and in Italy
and Germany, where he was part of the liberation of
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
Following college he entered the family retail business, managing Elberfeld stores in Jackson, Marietta
and Hillsboro. He subsequently was employed by
Elder-Beerman in Hamilton and Centerville. Prior to
his retirement, he was Director of the Butler County
CETA office.
A longtime subscriber of the Cincinnati Symphony
and the Cincinnati Opera, he was a devoted music
lover and a voracious reader with a wry sense of
humor. An Episcopalian, he served on the vestries of
St. Mary’s, Hillsboro and Trinity Church, Hamilton.
He is survived by his wife of sixty-four
years, Mildred Walker Elberfeld and four children:
Richard Elberfeld, Jr., (Sung Hui) of Erie,
Pennsylvania, Robert Elberfeld (Julie) of Richmond,
Virginia, David Elberfeld (Amy) of Batavia, and
Anne Cole (Allen) of Mt. Healthy. Ten grandchildren, three step grandchildren and one great-grandchild survive, as does his sister Mary Elizabeth
Morris of Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by his parents and his
sister Helen Francis Rovere of California. One of the
most satisfying things in his life was to be honored
by the United States Holocaust Commission as a
Liberator.
The family will receive friends at Trinity Episcopal
Church at 115 N 6th Street, Hamilton, Ohio 45011
from 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, September 15th followed by the funeral service at 11 a.m.. Burial will
be in the churchyard. In lieu of flowers please send
donations to the Animal Friends Humane Society of
Butler County or to Future Through Faith at Trinity
Episcopal Church.
Online condolences are available at www.weigelfuneralhome.com.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Veterans
from Page A1
U.S. Army retired after
20 years of active service, and now residing in
Mason County. She
spoke of the privilege of
serving one’s country,
describing it as a calling,
and talked about what it
means to be a veteran.
In her talk she emphasized the changes military service brings into
the lives of those who
serve and how that experience carries over into
later civilian life. “It
teaches values, loyalty,
integrity and personal
courage,” she said, “and
returns those who serve a
different and better person.”
But, she continued,
“freedom isn’t free and
we have veterans to
thank for this. Lives have
been changed, families
have lost loved ones;
many have given their
all.”
She spoke of her
dependence on God
through her years in the
military and how she
had been bought closer
to the Creator and then
concluded with a song
in tribute to God and
country.
Also speaking was
Alan Wallace, a first
responder
at
the
Pentagon on Sept. 11,
2001 who related the
story of what happened
there the day of the
attack.
Joe Struble of Legion
Post 39, emcee for the
program, made several
introductions and recognized two of Meigs
County’s World War II
prisoners of war s World
War II prisoners of war
Charles E. Humphrey
and Richard Boring, who

Charlene Hoeflich/photos
American Legion pays tribute to veterans with a parade float for freedom.

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Members of Post 9926, Mason VFW, present a memorial tribute to POW/MIAs.
attended, along with VFW Post 9926, and placed in the Ohio River
Nathan Biggs, one of the there was special patriot- by Navy veterans Eddie
county’s most decorated ic music by the River Ball and Jack Lewis,
City Players, Dustin after which the Drew
World War II veterans.
A special candlelight- Digman, and Sharon Webster Post firing squad
gave an honor salute foling ceremony in tribute Hawley.
A wreath in tribute to lowed by taps to conto MIA-POWs was presented by the Mason those who died at sea was clude the program.

Party
from Page A1

Southern Band, second
place, $30, Pentecostal
Assembly
(walking
group), third place, $20.
The Kiddie Tractor
Pull results were as follows: 35-55 pounds
class, Mitchell Evan,
Portland, first place;
Jason
Tubbs,
Pittsburgh, Pa., second
place; Chase Bailey,
Racine, third place. In
the 56-75 pounds class,
Preston Thorla, Racine,
first
place;
Laura
Tubbs, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
second place; Natalie
Callahan, Pittsburgh,
Pa., third place. Hupp
Landscaping once again
sponsored the event.
Kody Wolfe and
Jennifer McCoy, both
of Racine were the
overall fastest male and
female runners in the
Second Annual Party in
the Park 5K Run/Walk.
In the 5K walk, the
overall female and male
winners were Paulette
Harrison,
Pomeroy,
with a time of 38 minutes and seven seconds
and Lloyd Talkington,

Submitted photo
Lee-Anna Hudson (third from left) was crowned the queen of the Second Annual
Party in the Park, Michelle Ours (fourth from left) was named first runner-up;
Stephanie Berryman (second from left) was named Miss Congeniality. Also pictured, candidates and members of the court Vadamae Counts (far left), Bobbi
Harris (far right). Not pictured Sara Reitmire.

Washington,
W.Va.
with a time of 35:26.
Emceeing the twoday event was Jordan
Pickens of Syracuse.
Also taking place during Party in the Park was
the Cruisin’ Saturday
Night Car Show sponsored by Hill’s Classic
Cars, Home National
Bank and Gatling, Ohio
to raise money for scholarships for Southern
High School seniors.
Submission of results
from the car show are
pending.
Jordan Pickens/photo
Runners and walkers lineup for the start of the
Second Annual Party in the Park 5k Run/Walk which
benefited the Southern Fitness Center. Use of the fitness center is offered to the public for free.

Deaths
Laura Geraldine “Gerri”
Haught Buzzard
Laura Geraldine “Gerri” Haught Buzzard, 93,
died Friday, Sept. 10, 2010, at the Willow Brook
Christian Village.
Funeral services will be held at 1:00 p.m.,
Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2010, at the Sandhill Church of
Christ, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation was held
at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home from 6 until 8
p.m. Monday.
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home handled arrangements. An online registry is available at
www.crowhussellfh.com.

Gladys M. Jones
Gladys M. Jones, 85, of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
died Monday, Sept. 13, at the St. Mary’s Medical
Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete and will
be announced by Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, after 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 14.
An online registry is available at www.crowhussellfh.com.

Keeping Meigs
County informed

The Daily
Sentinel
Subscribe • 992-2155

Submitted photo
Winners of the Party in the Park Kiddie Tractor Pull
are front row (from left) 35-55 pounds class, Mitchell
Evan, first place, Jason Tubbs, second place, Chase
Bailey, third place; second row (from left) 56-75
pounds class, Preston Thorla, first place, Laura
Tubbs, second place, Natalie Callahan, third place;
third row (from left) Party in the Park Miss
Congeniality Stephanie Berryman, Queen Lee-Anna
Hudson, 2010 Ohio Jersey Queen Audrionna Pullins,
Jeremy Hupp, representative for tractor pull sponsor
Hupp Landscaping of Long Bottom.

�Tuesday, September 14, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

C E N T E N N I A L C E L E B R AT I O N

Andrew Carter/photos
Holzer Health Systems held a community celebration to mark its 100th anniversary on Saturday, Sept. 11. The event, held at Gallipolis City Park, was open to everyone in the tri-county area and featured free food, inflatable toys for children, a cornhole contest, karaoke, face painting, free health screenings and a variety of other
events. This event is just one of many centennial anniversary events Holzer Health Systems has conducted during its year-long celebration of the legacy of Dr. Charles
E. Holzer, Sr., and his family.

W.Va. man brings excursions back
to Kanawha River
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (AP) — The title
on his business card
reads “Transportation
Specialist.” At West
Virginia Used Auto
Sales, he wheels and
deals in cars and power
sports vehicles — ATVs,
dirt bikes and motor
scooters.
Now, his transportation
expertise extends to a
more serene and elegant
mode of travel: A paddlewheel excursion boat.
In June, Capt. Dick
Daugherty bought the
Spirit of West Virginia,
an 85-foot sternwheeler
that’s bringing floating
parties and sightseeing
tours back to the
Kanawha River.
For years, the P.A.
Denny reigned as the
queen of the Kanawha, a
picturesque showpiece
for
the
Sternwheel
Regatta and a popular
social venue, a scenic setting for proms, reunions,
wedding receptions and
corporate picnics.
In 2004, she chugged
off to Cincinnati and her
new role as a floating
classroom operated by
the nonprofit Foundation
for
Ohio
River
Education.
The queen has fallen
on hard times. Today,
she’s in dry dock in disrepair, desperate for a new
hull (among other renovations) and shopping for

a buyer -- $75,000 as is.
The Spirit of West
Virginia is churning up
wheelwash where the
Denny left off six years
ago.
Moored
at
Daugherty’s riverside
home in Dunbar, she’s
available for boarding at
Haddad Park and other
ports of call, an authentic
sternwheeler certified by
the Coast Guard for chartered river adventure
cruises.
Daugherty credits the
Denny for infecting him
with paddlewheel fever.
“I worked as a deckhand
and bartender on the
Denny,” he said. “I
thought that was a dream
job. I remember the early
days of the regatta and
how much fun it was. I
wanted to get back on a
paddlewheeler.”
He also owns a personal
paddlewheel toy, Fancy
Nancy. Before that, he
owned the Shelly P, the
original starting boat for
the regatta. “I’ve got some
history with steel boats,”
he said, “but I never envisioned a business with a
paddlewheeler.”
Changes
on
the
Kanawha inspired the
commercial
plunge.
“We’ve got Haddad Park
with the new paddlewheel stage. We have
docks going in at the
Capitol. We have several
river restaurants — Huck

Finn’s, Tomahawks, the
Barge.
“The focal point of
Charleston is becoming
the river again. I decided
it was a good time to get
into the excursion business and make it part of
the river scene.”
He bought the Spirit
from Frank and Maureen
Burdette. The Burdettes
purchased it in 2003 and
operated it as an excursion boat until health
problems forced him to
unload it.
Only two-thirds the
size of the Denny, the
Spirit of West Virginia
has an 18-foot beam and
holds 49 passengers. A
canopy for the top deck,
a new sound system and
a beer and wine license
are in the works.
“It has a brand new
hull, a rebuilt Detroit 371
diesel engine and a new
twin disc marine transmission,”
Daughtery
said. It was recently
painted and recarpeted.
The Spirit’s history
goes back to 1973, he
said.
The
Ruble
Sternwheel Co. built the
boat in ‘73 and christened it the C.P.
Huntington. “It had a sister boat, the Camden
Queen.
Both
boats
worked at Camden Park.
Later,
the
C.P.
Huntington went to
Blennerhasset Island and
shuttled passengers back

and forth. Then it became
the Katherine Helen
Hook and worked as a
bed and breakfast on the
Muskingum River near
Marietta.”
Over Labor Day weekend, Daugherty took the
boat to Point Pleasant for
the Tribute to the River
National Maritime Days
Celebration. “We had a
great reaction, three days
of cruises up and down
the Ohio and the mouth
of the Kanawha.”
He’s pleased with the
response here, too.
“We’ve booked a lot of
charters, weddings, a
business meeting, a 60th
birthday, a 10th anniversary, a church board
meeting.”
Most people rent the
boat for two hours, he
said. Without catering,
the fee is $490 for the
first hour then $400 for
each additional hour. “So
you can take a two-hour
cruise for under $1,000.
“We allow them to do
their own catering,” he
added.
For entertainment, he
recommends the Earl of
Elkview. That’s his father,
George Daugherty.
The web site wvpaddleboat.wordpress.com
offers additional information and includes a
video of the paddlewheeler moseying past
various Kanawha River
landmarks.

Doomed minersʼ notes warned of coal dust
JULIAN, W.Va. (AP)
— About the time
Michael Elswick was
wrapping up work deep
inside the Upper Big
Branch mine, he phoned
a colleague on the surface with an ominous if
relatively routine report.
Three conveyer belts
needed to be sprinkled
with pulverized stone to
cover a layer of combustible coal dust and
reduce its danger, the
veteran coal miner said,
according to a copy of a
log book The Associated
Press obtained through
an open records request.
Just 32 minutes later,

Elswick and 28 other
men were dead.
Authorities say they
died instantly in an April
5 explosion that investigators suspect began
with methane, then
gorged on coal dust as it
turned 90-degree corners, rounded a 1,000foot-wide block of coal
and built enough force to
kill men more than a
mile away.
The
information
Elswick and his coworkers
dutifully
recorded in the hours,
weeks and months
before the worst coal
mining disaster in 40

years shows it struck in
what could be considered a predictable place:
a mine with a chronic,
stubborn coating of coal
dust, which can make a
minor flare-up much,
much worse.
According to the log
book, provided to the AP
by the West Virginia
Board of Coal Mine
Health and Safety,
Elswick’s
co-worker
Scott Halstead reported
problems with five of the
six belts he inspected the
day of the explosion.
The reports show the
need for rock dust along
belts stretching more

than three miles underground in the southern
West Virginia mine
owned
by
Massey
Energy Co.
Elswick called the surface at 2:30 p.m. with
the latest safety update.
Most workers were getting ready to head to the
surface and home to
their families. It was the
day after Easter.
Elswick, Halstead and
others had made similar
reports for months, noting
that vast areas of the mine
needed rock dusting. And
shift after shift, they
reported that the problem
areas had been treated.

For the Record
Probate
POMEROY — Probate Judge L. Scott Powell
issued marriage licenses to:
• Brandon Lee Fitch, 25, Jillian Nicole Cochran,
25, Long Bottom.
• Cory Dwayne Dill, 22, Jessica Nicole Smith, 24,
Pomeroy.
• Joshua Clinton Smith, 25, Kelsey Kay Sellers, 21,
Racine.
• Justin Edward Williams, 18, Middleport,
Elizabeth Laoma Cremeans, 21, Middleport.

Common Pleas
POMEROY — The following were filed in the
public record of Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch:
Civil
• Foreclosure action filed by Bank of America
against James M. Bing and others.
• Foreclosure action filed by Chase Home Finance,
LLC, against Beth Howes.
• Foreclosure action filed by Flagstar Bank, FSB,
against Laurie K. Allman, and others.
Criminal
• John Andrew Pullins sentenced to five years community control, non-support of dependents.
• Samuel McKinney arraigned on indictment charging failure to appear after recognizance release.
Counsel appointed, bond set, trial Oct. 14.
• Matthew Stewart arraigned on indictment charging non-support. Counsel appointed, bond set, trial
Oct. 14.
• Richard Wilson, Jr. arraigned on indictment
charging non-support. Counsel appointed, bond set,
trial Oct. 13.
Domestic
• Divorce granted Pamela Hess from Gary Hess.
• Divorce granted Melinda S. Minshall from Shawn
W. Minshall.
• Divorce granted Pamela S. King from Edward J.
King.

911
POMEROY — Meigs County 911 dispatched these
calls for medical assistance:
Thursday
10:55 a.m., Fifth Street, Racine, difficulty breathing; 6:37 p.m., Condor Street, high temperature; 9:44
p.m., South Fourth Ave., Middleport, anxiety; 4:03
a.m., Railroad Street, difficulty breathing.

�Inside

SPORTS

OVP Scoreboard, Page B2
Point golfers win tri-match, Page B6
Volleyball Roundup, Page B6

LOCAL SCHEDULE

Tuesday, September 14
Volleyball
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 6
p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant, 6
p.m.
St. Joe at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Sherman at Hannan, 6:30 p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Piketon, TBA
Golf
Gallia Academy, River Valley, South
Gallia at Cliffside, 4:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Trimble, Point Pleasant at Wahama,
4:30 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:30 p.m.
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant (G),
8 p.m.
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant (B),
6:30 p.m.

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

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Point dominates
Sissonville, 49-3

POMEROY— A schedule of upcoming
high school varsity sporting events in the
Ohio Valley Publishing coverage area
involving teams from Mason, Gallia and
Meigs counties.

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

B1

BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Jan Hattox/photo

Point Pleasant running back Chris Blankenship takes a handoff and runs towards
the line of scrimmage during this second quarter attempt against Sissonville
Saturday night in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Dominating.
If asked to describe the
Point
Pleasant
Big
Blacks’
49-3
win
Saturday night against
Sissonville in one word - that would be the word.
“How dominating were
they?” Glad you asked.
Coach Dave Darst’s
charges had eight offensive possessions in the
game and scored touchdowns on seven of them.
The only possession that
did not result in a touchdown was on the locals’
final drive of the

Point CC
competes at
Chick-fil-A

Hannan’s
Heather
Ellis, left,
bumps the
ball in the
air as teammates
Jasmine
Campbell
(3) and
Emily Holley
(12) look on
during a trivolleyball
match at
Point
Pleasant
High School
on Monday.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RedStorm OVCS sweeps tri-match
move to 5-0 against Hannan, Point
added one point.
B S
H
with win
Point
Pleasant’s
Cheyenne Preece had
over IWU
POINT PLEASANT, five points to lead the
Y

ARAH

AWLEY

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

CEDARVILLE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm men’s
soccer team, ranked No.
3 in the most recent
NAIA Top 25 rating,
knocked off Indiana
Wesleyan, 3-1, in the first
game of the Dave Jones
Classic at Cedarville on
Friday evening. The goal
by IWU was the first
allowed by the RedStorm
this season.
Rio Grande (5-0) took
the early lead when
sophomore forward Scott
Bibby
(Doncaster,
England) scored in the
second minute of the
game. Junior forward
Joel
Thiessen
(Newcastle, Australia)
was credited with an
assist on the play.
Indiana Wesleyan tied
the game with an unassisted goal in the 34th
minute
by
Josh
McKinley.
The RedStorm would
take the lead for good in
the 40th minute when
sophomore midfielder
Rafael Maccauro (Sao
Paulo, Brazil) connected
on a penalty kick, which
gave Rio a 2-1 lead.
The 2-1 score would
hold until the 78th
minute when Rio Grande
picked up an insurance
marker with sophomore
forward/midfielder
Richard Isberner (Sao
Paulo, Brazil) finding the
back of the net after
receiving a feed from
senior midfielder Chris
Anderson
(Lancaster,
England).
Sophomore goalkeeper
Jonathan
Viscosi
(Ottawa, ONT) collected
the victory, despite yieldPlease see URG, B6

Please see Point, B2

CC Roundup

Sarah Hawley
/photos

BY MARK WILLIAMS

evening, and even then
the Big Blacks crossed
the goal only to have the
score called back on a
holding penalty. Point
actually had two TD’s
called back on their last
possession, if you count
Layne Thompson’s rare
touchdown on a kickoff
that was also brought
back due to a penalty.
Thompson’s score was
rare because it was the
Big Blacks who kicked
off. Colton Fleck fielded
the ball for the Indians
and started up field when
he met Thompson at the
Sissonville 40 yard line.

W.Va. — The Ohio
Valley Christian Lady
Defenders (2-0) defeated
both Hannan and Point
Pleasant in a tri-match
held on Monday evening
at Point Pleasant High
School.
The Lady Defenders
defeated Point Pleasant
25-16 and 25-10 in the
first match.
Madison Crank had 13
points (six aces) to lead
the Lady Defenders in
the win.
Samantha
Westfall had 12 points
(two aces), Maggie
Westfall had 10 points
(four
aces),
Allie
Hamilton added seven
points (two aces), Beth
Martin had four points,
Sarah Schoonover had
three points (one ace),
and Bryanne Hamilton

Lady Knights. Courtney
Hatfield had two points,
with Rebekah Dunham
and Kayla Mitchell each
adding one point.
Samantha Westfall had
four assist and Maggie
Westfall had one. Martin
had two digs, with Crank,
Allie Hamilton, and
Maggie Westfall each
adding one.
Maggie Westfall had
two kills, while Crank,
Allie Hamilton, and
Samantha Westfall each
had one. Crank, Allie
Hamilton, and Maggie
Westfall each had one
block.
In the second match,
OVCS defeated Hannan
by scores of 25-13 and
25-21.
Please see OVCS, B6

Point Pleasant’s Rebekah Dunham (18) dinks the ball
over the net as teammate Cheyenne Preece, right,
watches on during a tri-volleyball match at Point
Pleasant High School on Monday.

MINERAL WELLS,
W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant cross country
program participated in
the Class AA-A Chickfil-A Invitational on
Saturday, with the Big
Black Knights coming
away with a 12th place
finish in the boys division while the Lady
Knights did not have
enough competitors for a
team score.
There were 135 competitors and 14 teams in
the boys event, which
saw PPHS post a team
score of 332 to finish
12th. St. Mary’s won the
team event with 70
points, finishing 18
points ahead of runner-up
Grafton with 88 points.
Drew Woodford of
Grafton won the individual title with a time of
16:47, finishing one second ahead of runner-up
Wil Shaffer of Scott.
Caleb Riffle led Point
by finishing 47th overall
with a time of 19:29, followed by Riken Nowlin
in 77th with a mark of
20:49.
Elijah
McClanahan (21:15) was
83rd, Guy Fisher (22:12)
was 104th and Logan
Burch (23:26) was 120th
to round out the team
score.
There were 102 competitors and 10 teams in
the girls event, with
Philip Barbour capturing
the team and individual
titles. PBHS won the
team event with a score
of 49, finishing well
ahead of runner-up St.
Mary’s with 70 points.
Please see CC, B6

Bobcats claw past
Hannan, 52-0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ASHTON, W.Va. —
The Hannan football
team dropped its 15th
consecutive regular season decision Saturday
night during a 52-0 setback to visiting Green in
a
non-conference
matchup
in
Mason
County.
The Wildcats (0-3) surrendered 515 yards
defensively while mustering only 175 yards of
total offense, as the
Bobcats (2-1) stormed
out to a 33-0 halftime
advantage.
Green — which accumulated 500 rushing
yards on 39 attempts —
had touchdown runs of
24, 32, 68, 15 and 11

yards, all of which led to
the 33-0 intermission
advantage.
Tyler Hughes — who
had three first half touchdown of 24, 68 and 11
yards — scored his
fourth rushing TD of the
night with 5:23 left in the
third quarter after a 79yard jaunt made it 40-0.
Green’s second team
went on to tack on two
more rushing touchdowns in the fourth, as
Kyle Frazier busted loose
for 39- and 77-yard runs
to wrap up the 52-0 triumph.
Hughes had 200 rushing yards on nine
attempts, while Frazier
finished the evening with
121 yards on four carries.
Please see Claw, B2

Bryan Walters/photo

Hannan coach Keith Taylor, facing front, gives instruction to quarterback Tyler
Jenkins (6) and the offensive line during a third quarter timeout against Green on
Saturday night in Ashton, W.Va.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

OVP Scoreboard — Week 3

Point
from Page B1

PREP FOOTBALL

Layne stripped the ball
out of Fleck’s hands and
raced into the end zone
for the unusual touchdown.
The game statistics
were as one-sided as the
score. The Big Blacks
rolled up some 521
yards of total offense,
including a whopping
433 yards on the
ground.
The locals
accomplished that total
on 54 carries – an 8.0
yards per rush average.
Also, Point picked up
88 yards via the pass,
completing 6 of 7.
Quarterback
Eric
Roberts hit on 5 of 6 for
73 yards and a score,
while junior Brandon
Toler completed one of
one for 15 yards and a
touchdown. Toler was
on the receiving end of
Roberts’ TD throw.
The Big Blacks ran off
61 offensive plays on
the night and picked up
24
first
downs.
Sissonville, on the other
hand, ran 23 times for
23 yards and was 3 of
10 for 67 yards. The
Indians only had 4 first
downs on the evening.
Individually, the Big
Blacks had two rushers
go over the 100 yard
mark.
Chris
Blankenship led the
way with 136 yards on
just 7 carries, while
fullback
JaWaan
Williams added 122
yards on 15 carries. In
all, eleven players toted
the old pigskin for
Coach Darst’s crew, and
all turned in good performances. As far as
the pass catchers go,
Toler had one grab for
36 yards and that score,
while Tylan Campbell
caught two aerials for
25 yards. Others catching one pass each were
Thompson, Williams,
and Orrin Chason.
The game’s opening
minutes, though, was
not a preview of things
to come. Sissonville
kicked off to start the
game and booted a short
kick about 15 yards
downfield. Nobody for
the Big Blacks covered
the ball, though, and
after the ball scooted
another
10
yards,
Sissonville jumped on
it.
Three plays later,
the Indians had the ball
at the Big Blacks’ 18
yard line, facing a second and five. But, an
incomplete pass and a
two yard loss moved the
ball back to the 20
where the visitors had
fourth down.
Jared
Proctor, the big 260
pound place kicker for
the Indians then calmly
booted a 37 yard field
goal to five the Indians
a quick 3-0 lead.
It was Hall of Fame
Night and the home
opener, so the stands
were full of red and
black-clad supporters.
But, those first two minutes brought an uneasy
quiet to the home side.
It did not take long,
though, for the Big
Blacks to bring the
crowd back to life.
Chris Blankenship got
the Big Blacks on the
scoreboard when he
capped a 10 play, 67
yard drive with a nifty
24 yard jaunt into the
end zone. Jerrod Long
added the extra point,
his first of 7 on the
night, and the locals
were on their way.
The Big Blacks would
get the ball four more
times in the first half
and each would end the
same way – in the end
zone. Sissonville managed four more possessions in the opening
half, but two ended in
punts, one on an interception by linebacker
Jason Stouffer, and the
other ended when the
clock ran out.
Point’s next score
came via a 9 yard run by

Saturday’s Box Scores

Point Pleasant 49,
Sissonville 3
Sissonville
Pt Pleasant

Jan Hattox/photo

Point Pleasant’s Layne Thompson (14) makes a tackle on a Sissonville running back during the first half of
Saturday night’s Week 3 football contest in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

bruising
wingback
Jerrod Long, who bullied his way through the
right side of the
Sissonville defense for
his second touchdown
of the season. Six minutes later, Toler hooked
up with Thompson on a
halfback pass, and then
three minutes after that,
Williams bolted over
from the one yard line.
Stouffer’s interception came at the 1:36
mark of the first half,
and set up Roberts’ 37
yard scoring pass to
Toler. After Long’s
extra point, the Big
Blacks led 35-3. The
game was, for all intents
and purposes, over and
all that was left was to
play out the clock.
Blankenship’s 89 yard
touchdown run on the
locals first possession
of the second half was
probably the highlight
play of the night, and
then sophomore Tylan
Campbell closed out the
scoring for the Big
Blacks with a nice 9
yard in the last quarter.
The ensuing kickoff
brought
about
Thompson’s rare score
that was brought back.
Coach Darst and his
staff then let some of
the younger guys play
and they did themselves
proud.
Sophomore
quarterback
Jacob
Gardner directed a 14
play drive that saw one
touchdown called back - a 23 yard run by
sophomore
Marquez
Griffin. Gardner and
other
underclassmen
such as Teran Barnitz,
Robbie Wallace, Levi
Russell, and senior
Tyler Doss took the ball
to the Indian two yard
line, but three illegal
procedure calls effectively took the wind out
of the local sails.

Point’s offensive night
ended on a fumble,
which
Sissonville
recovered at their own
14 yard line.
Defensively, the Big
Black defenders stood
tall and proud. They
were led by junior linebacker Jason Stouffer,
who had the interception and seven tackles.
Trey Livingston had 6
tackles,
Michael
Musgrave was credited
with 5 as was Josh
Hereford and Jerrod
Long. Teran Barnitz
and Layne Thompson
both
recovered
Sissonville fumbles.
“I was impressed with
our team tonight, but
the thing that impressed
me the most was the
improvement we made
after correcting problems from last week,”
said Coach Darst after
the game. “We saw
some things on film and
we dedicated ourselves
to fixing those problems
and the kids responded
very well to that. Our
offensive line did a
great job, all of our
backs ran well, especially
Chris
(Blankenship), JaWaan
(Williams), and Tylan
(Campbell).
Our
defense was aggressive.
We had to make some
changes early due to
some offensive sets they
were running that we
didn’t expect, but the
kids listened and did
what we told them to
do. But, we have an
experienced team and
they played tonight the
way we expect them to.
All in all, it was a great
football game,” added
Darst.
The Big Blacks will
be home again next
week when South Point
comes to town for a
7:30 p.m. game.

3 0
7 28

0 0 — 3
7 7 — 49

Scoring summary
First Quarter
S—Jared Proctor 37 FG 9:51
PP—Chris Blankenship 24 run (Jerrod Long kick)
5:30
Second Quarter
PP—Jerrod Long 9 run (Long kick) 11:54
PP—Layne Thompson 15 pass from Brandon
Toler (Long kick) 6:01
PP—JaWaan Williams 1 run (Long kick) 2:59
PP—Toler 37 pass from Eric Roberts (Long kick)
1:05
Third Quarter
PP—Blankenship 89 run (Long kick) 7:12
Fourth Quarter
PP—Tylan Campbell 9 run (Long kick) 9:48

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles lost
Penalties-yards

S
4
23-23
67
90
3-10-1
2
0-0

PP
24
54-433
88
521
6-7-0
3
9-75

Individual Statistics
Rushing: S—Lynch 5-22, Withrow 11-17, Miller
1-0, Painter 1-(-1), Crawford 5-(-15).
PP—Blankenship 7-136, Williams 15-122, Darst
5-37, Campbell 7-37, Barnitz 6-36, Russell 3-18,
Wallace 2-15, Roberts 5-12, Long 1-9, Griffin 2-9,
Doss 1-2.
Passing: S—Crawford 3-10-1 67.
PP— Roberts 5-6-0 73, Toler 1-1-0 15.

Receiving: S—Fleck 2-59, Painter 1-8.
PP—Toler 1-37, Campbell 2-25, Thompson 1-15,
Williams 1-6, Chason 1-6.

Green 52, Hannan 0
Green
Hannan

14 19
0 0

7 12 — 52
0 0 — 0

Scoring summary
First Quarter
G—Tyler Hughes 24 run (Keith Stepp kick) 9:45
G—Cody Bruce 32 run (Stepp kick) 2:02
Second Quarter
G—Hughes 68 run (kick blocked) 9:04
G—Mike Avery 15 run (Stepp kick) 6:20
G—Hughes 11 run (kick failed) 0:24.4
Third Quarter
G—Hughes 79 run (Stepp kick) 5:23
Fourth Quarter
G—Kyle Frazier 39 run (run failed) 9:25
G—Frazier 77 run (run failed) 3:17

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

G
18
39-500
15
515
1-2-0
4-2
8-45

H
12
42-144
31
175
4-17-2
7-3
10-70

Individual Statistics
Rushing: G—Tyler Hughes 9-200, Kyle Frazier 4121, Cody Bruce 10-91, Chad Lewis 7-46, Mike
Avery 4-20, Mike Turvey 1-10, Clay Applegate 28, Jacob Cochran 2-4.
H—Delmar Black 14-70, Jerry Diaz 5-23, Brad
Fannin 8-19, Chris Smith 5-14, Daniel Reynolds
8-14, Robert Harper 1-3, Tyler Jenkins 1-1.
Passing: G—T.J. McCloud 1-2-0 15.
H—Tyler Jenkins 3-14-1 24, Jerry Diaz 1-3-1 7.
Receiving: G—Clay Applegate 1-15.
H—Colton Campbell 2-20, Brad Fannin 1-7,
Delmar Black 1-4.

Bryan Walters/photo

Hannan quarterback Brad Fannin (11) looks to deliver a stiff arm to a Green
defender during the fourth quarter of Saturday night’s Week 3 football contest in
Ashton, W.Va.

Claw
from Page B1
Cody Bruce — who
added a 32-yard TD run
— had 91 yards on 10
carries. Mike Avery also
scored on a 15-yard run
in the second canto.
Hannan — who failed
to score for the first time
this season after averaging 21 points per game
after two weeks — finished the night with 144
rushing yards on 42
attempts. HHS also had

31 yards passing in the
setback.
Green won the battle of
first downs by an 18-12
margin and also finished
the night plus-three in
turnover
differential.
GHS was penalized eight
times for 45 yards, while
the
Wildcats
were
flagged 10 times for 70
yards.
Delmar Black led the
Wildcats with 70 rushing
yards on 14 carries,
while Jerry Diaz was
next with 23 yards on
five totes. Brad Fannin
also had eight carries for
19 yards.

Hannan’s Tyler Jenkins
was 3-of-14 passing for
24 yards, throwing one
interception. Diaz was 1of-3 for seven yards with
a pick. Colton Campbell
hauled in two passes for
20 yards to lead the
wideouts.
Green’s T.J. McCloud
was 1-of-2 passing for 15
yards,
with
Clay
Applegate making the
lone reception.
Hannan returns to
action Saturday night
when it travels to Burch
for a Week 4 non-conference matchup at 7:30
p.m.

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Tuesday, September 14, 2010

P O L I C I E S
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
¾Errors Must Be
Reported on the first
day of publication
and the TribuneSentinel-Register will
be responsible for no
more than the cost of
the space occupied
by the error and only
the first insertion. We
shall not be liable for
any loss or expense
that results from the
publication
or
omission
of
an
advertisement.
Corrections will be
made in the first
available edition.
¾Box number ads are
always confidential.
¾Current rate card
applies.
¾All Real Estate
advertisements are
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of
1968.
¾This
newspaper
accepts only help
wanted ads meeting
EOE standards.
¾We
will
not
knowingly accept any
advertisement
in
violation of the law.

200 Announcements

Notices

NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
Lost &amp; Found
CO. recommends that
you do business with
Lost Bubbly Taby people you know, and
yellow cat. Belongs NOT to send money
to Ruth Young 740- through the mail until
you have investigating
446-0264
the offering.

Lost F. Red Pit Bull
w/a reddish gold coat
&amp; nose: gold/amber
eyes; has white on
chest &amp; toes &amp; some
white on nose. Last
seen on Rt. 588 newr
Texas Rd wearing a
blue collar. Childs
pet.
740-531-0493
leave mess. Reward.
Lost F Bengle/fox
hound dog. Tri color.,
red color. Reward
$100 safe return.
740-446-4249

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

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

300
Services
Lost
Blond
York
shire, F, No tail,
about 10lbs, Sophie,
Home Improvements
small reward. 740794-0321
SUMMER SPECIAL
1. Driveway Seal,
Lostred/wh
Coating &amp; Repair.
Australian Shepherd,
F, Racine area, 740- 2. Gutters cleaned,
repaired &amp; installed.
949-1325
3. Painting &amp; yard
work &amp; misc. odd
jobs.
Senior discount,
licensed &amp; bonded.
Home ph. 304-882Read your
3959
newspaper and learn
Cell ph. 304-812something today!
3004

Home Improvements

Yard Sale

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446-0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

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

Other Services
Pet Cremations. Call
740-446-3745

Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Win!
1-888-582-3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537-9528

1000

Joe's Tv repair on
most
makes
&amp;
models. House calls
304-675-1724
400

Pets

Want To Buy

Yorkie puppies for
sale. 8wks old. 1 m,
1 f, tails docked,
declawed,
&amp;
wormed. Mother &amp;
father on prem. $300
call 304-675-5356

Ginseng- want to buy
other
botanicals,
Twin Oaks Service
Station
junction
RT7/33,
Wednesdays
12-1
starting
22
September, call 330674-4195 for price
list.

Financial

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE
of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
licensed. (This is a
public
service
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

500

Education
Lessons

Beginner
Clogging
Classes,
Tuesday,
Sept. 14, 6:00pm,
Mulberry Community
Center, 2nd floor,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 740992-7853, 740-4442119
600

Animals

Livestock
Boer goats. 18 bred
nanies, due to deliver
in Oct., 1 billie.
$2,200.
Serious
enquires only 740446-3845,
leave
message.

With so many
choices, it’s easy to
get carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
in the classifieds!

Real Estate
Sales

For Sale By Owner
6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740446-0390
Houses For Sale
For sale by owner
modular home. 4
acres, country sitting,
7 miles from Vinton
off of St Rt 325. 3BR,
2BA,
garden
tub.,dining room, lg
living
rm.,
utility
room, all appliances
including
washer/dryer,
24
above
pool,
detached 30x56 3
bay garage, $95,000.
call 740-742-1900
Lots

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Repairs

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Recreational
Vehicles

3000

Pets
7 wk kittens long
haired 3 tiger striped
f, 1 yellow m. 4468567
Mini Fox Terrier/Jack
Russell for sale 740379-2282
AKC registered male
Collies, $150, 740992-2822, 740-4166469

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment

900

Merchandise

End of Sumer sale
on 4',5',&amp; 6' rotor
Equipment /
tillers Special Round
Supplies
Bale Feeders were
$195 now $125 Jims Black
Beauty
Farm
Equipment sandblast sand $6
446-9777
per 100-lb bag, ten
or more $5 each.
304-773-5332
John Deere 5210
tractor, 2950 hrs,
Miscellaneous
excellent
condition
$10,750 filrm. 740- Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
379-2789
rebuilt in stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800-

537-9528

0.6 acre located 500
ft. behind mason co.
ins. call: 304-67595 Chevy M.H. Road 3753
Trek 210 Popular,
Real Estate
74647 miles, 350 3500
Rentals
eng. , a/c, sleeps 4,
runs good. $14,000.
740-446-4325
Apartments/
Townhouses

2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www.carmichaeltraile
rs.com
740-4462412

2BR
APT.Close
to
Holzer Hospital on SR
160 C/A. (740) 4410194

CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
small houses for rent.
Call 740-441-1111 for
24 ft goose neck
application
&amp;
trailer for sale. Good information.

cond. See at 6778
lincoln Pike Patriot.
Asking $1,995

Free Rent Special
!!!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, W/D
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P.
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
(304)882-3017

07 Brecken Ridge
40' camper, country
blue &amp; beige, 3 slide
outs, full size bath &amp;
kitchen, 2 bedrooms,
sliding glass doors,
exc.
condition, Twin Rivers Tower is
beautifull,
$25,900 accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
740-247-2475

subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
Heritage 675-6679

Motorcycles

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at
2007 HD
Carmichael Equipment For Sale Winchester Softail. 4,695 miles740-446-2412
30-30
$450, Showroom
cond.

Garden &amp; Produce

Contender
.221 $16,000 negotiable
$600, S&amp;W 1066 740-446-0121
10mm $500. Call
740-388-8221
2000
Automotive 2nd floor 2 BR
apartment,
overlooking Gallipolis
Remington model 11City
Park,
L.R.,
Autos
48
auto.28Ga.,
Unique little gun, 02 VW New Beetle kitchen/dining area, 1
BA,
very clean. $575. Turbo lots of etras 1/2
ALSO
1916
D good cond. 740-245- washer/dryer. $600.
mon + dep. 740-446Mercury dime, very 0619
4425 or 740-446rare. $575. 1921 D
2325
Liberty walking half

Richards
Brothers
Fruit Farm Yes we
have apple! Mon thru
Sat 8-12 &amp; 1-5. Sun
9-5. Many varieties
aailable jellies, jams,
cider, apple butter.
Co Rd 46 2054
Orpheus
Rd
Thurman
Oh. dollar, nice $350. 04 Cadillac Escalade Nice 2 &amp; 3 BR apt.
Serious calls only EXT. Exc. Cond. Gallipolis. $600 mo
740286-4584
740-533-3870
740-446-7249
incl.
w/s/g
&amp;
washer/dryer.
No
5 piece bedroom 03 Honda CRV call pets 740-591-5174
Hay, Feed, Seed,
suite,
large 740-446-1714
Beautiful
1BR
Grain
refrigerator, tables &amp;
apartment in the
Vans
other pieces, 740country
freshly
949-3601
painted very clean
1998
Lg. Round Bales of
W/D hook up nice
Plymouth.Voyager,
Hay for Mulch. Call
Tilt
a
lift-for
scooter
runs good;
$700, country setting only
740-992-7603
or wheel chair fits 740-992-5712, 740- 10 mins. from town.
Must
see
to
into 2 in. trailer 707-9173
appreciate.
Water
hitched call: 304Want To Buy
pd. $375/mo 614Want To Buy
675-3753
595-7773 or 740645Oiler's Towing. Now 5953
Elderberries,
spice 9X11 Lifestyle Rug
buying junk cars
bushberries,
Cream Shag Pd: w/motors or w/out. 1BR nicely furnished
pawpaws,
black $900.00 Selling for
740-388-0011
or apt. No smoking, no
walnuts,
740-698- $275.00 FIRM Call:
740-441-7870.
No pets. $400 mon &amp;
6060
dep. 740-446-4782
304-941-4653
Sunday call

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Pleasant
Valley
Apartments is now
taking
applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
Subsidized
Apartments.
Applications
are
taken Monday thru
Thrusday
9:00am1:00pm. Office is
located
at
1151
Evergreen
Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806

www.mydailysentinel.com
Houses For Rent

House for sale or
rent. Pretty, clean,
3BR.
Downtown
Gallipolis, close to
Washington
Elem.
Rent $750, no utlilite.
Sale $99,000. KellySpring Valley Green
Jo 645-9096 or 446Apartments 1 BR at
4639
$395+2 BR at $470
1BR $350/month in
Month. 446-1599.
Syracuse. Deposit,
Commercial
HUD approved, no
pets. 304-675-5332
Commercial building
weekends/740-591for rent 740-4460265
6565
Middleport N. 4th
Ave., 2 room effiency
apt.,
No
pets,
dep/ref,
740-9920165

Lease
Houses For Rent

Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1.5 BA, back
patio,
pool,
playground. No pets.
$450 rent. 740-6458599
Nice
2BR
apt.
appliances,
w/d
hookup, water pd.,
good location on
Centenary close to
hospital. No pets. call
after 5. 740-4469442
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, W/D hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017
Middleport
Beech
St., 2 br furnished
apt., util. pd, dep/ref,
No pets, 740-9920165

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

Entertainment
Need someone for
K&amp;D DJ Service,
Karoake/DJ
Business must have
valid drivers licinses
&amp; be sober, will work
by
yourself
&amp;
w/owner,
send
resume to Box 88,
Rutland, Oh 45775
or call 740-742-7709

Help Wanted General
Nanny Needed, eves
3 to 4 hrs per day
5days a wk for
activities
&amp;
light
house cleaning. Must
have
own
transportation
&amp;
references.
No
smoking. Call 740710-3100.

Food Services
We
are
seeking
career
orientated
individuals
that
demonstrates
teamwok is important
to their and the
company's success.
Your need to be
result orientated that
is achieved thru your
ability to be focused
and organized. The
team
that
you
managte
is
successful by a win,
win atmosphere. We
offer vacations, 401
K, wages based on
result uniforms and
meals. If interested
contact by E-Mail at
www.dobrit7@aol.co
m, office fax at 1740-446-3400, or in
person at Burger
King 65 Upper Ricer
Road in Gallipolis,
Ohio, E.OE.

Medical
Accepting Resumes
for a Receptionist
poistion at a local
Dentist office in Pt.
Pleasant.
Some
computer and phone
skills needed. Please
mail to Dental Office,
3984 Indian Creek
Rd., Elkview, WV
25071

Downtown Gallipolis.
3 br 1.5 bath, central
air, carpet/hardwood
floors,
kitchen
applicances
Manufactured
4000
included,
Overbrook
Housing
washer/dryer
hook
Rehabilitation Center
up. No Pets. Ample
is currently seeking
storage
available.
Rentals
someone with a Train
Deposit
Required.
the
Trainer
2BR Mobile Home
call 740-446-7654
Certification to teach
water, sewer, trash
CNA classes. All
pd.
No
pets,
interested applicants
Mobile
House
for
rent, Johnson's
should pick up an
740Vinton, 2 1/2 BR Home Park
application at 333
large
lot
with 446-3160
Page
Street,
buildings, $525 mon
Nice 16x80, for rent,
Middleport,
Oh
or
&amp; dep. Also 3Br
3 Bedroom, 2 bath,
contact
Michelle
mobile in Gallipolis,
Country
setting.
Gilmore, RN, DON at
$450 mon &amp; Dep.
740-339-3366 740740-992-6472.
call after 2 pm. 740367-0266.
Overbrook is an EOE
388-8000 or 740and a Participant in
2BR
mobile
$400
388-9003
Help Wanted the
Drug
Free
mon. $400 dep.HUD
General
Workplace Program
appr. No smoking no
New home in city, pets 304-849-2932
Homemakers
2BR, 1BA,LR,DR,K.
needed for the areas
Experienced Floral Southside, Buffalo,
Must have excellent
Designer &amp; Delivery Hannan &amp; Milton.
reference. Call for 6000
Employment
person. Person must Will Train. Immediate
details. 446-2801
know the area well. position
available.
Please
submit Must
be
CPR
Drivers &amp; Delivery resumes
&amp; certified.
ABODE
3Br, 1ba, 1 car
references to CL a Healthcare
Sevice
garage, large yard,
Box 251 Gallipolis Inc, 304-586-9441,
Truck
drivers
newly remodled, new
Ohio 45631
866-327-7262
windows,$625 mon + needed. Glat beds &amp;
dump
trailers.
Apply
dep. 167 Graham St.
Accepting
Rodney
Village. in person at 935
applications for part
pinecrest
Drive.
740-446-4543.
time cashiers apply
in person at ParMar
15289
R&amp;J
Trucking
is #38
Rd
seeking
CDL-A Huntington
drivers to run local Gallipolis Ferry or on
at
and regional routes. online
We feature weekend parmarstores.com

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Attention Crafters:

Yard Sale
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Saturday,
September 4
Center
Annual Oktoberfest
from 9:00
amheld
- 4:00
will be
on pm.
Saturday October 2, 2010
Follow
signs
from 11-2 at
Outdoor booth space
Tuppers
Plains
is available
at no charge,
51740
RiceisRun
Rd.
but space
limited.
Crafters
are to provide
All sizes
of Women’s
Clothing,
own table &amp; chairs.
Interested
craftersWomen’s
should
Toys, Boys clothing,
RSVP by Monday
Shoes,
Purses,27
Books,
A Dell
September
by calling
Michelle
Kennedy
at
Computer,
OSU
Beanbag.
(740)992-6472

ome time for regional
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nightly.
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Ins. with dental &amp; Rx
options
401(k)
Vacation &amp; Bonus
pays
&amp;
safety
awards.
Qualified
applicants must be at
least 23yrs have 1yr
of commercial driving
exp. clean MVR.

FIND A JOB
OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Grand Opening
J &amp; J Industries is
relocating its major
medical
device
facility to Gallia Co.
*10 to 15 full time
positions
*4 day work week
*6 hr shifts
*$14.25 to start
*$450/wk
Clerical,
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service, Repair.
Must be neat in
appearance. Must be
over 18 yrs old. Call
740-446-3057
or
304-709-0016
$350 sign on bonus
Dont
miss
opportunity!!!

Shop the
Classifieds!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Services Offered
To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155
ll Marcum Construction
CaCommercial
&amp; Residential

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Concrete Services

For: • Room additions • Roofing • Garages
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Foundations
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740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Fully insured
Free estimates - 25+ years experience

Formerly Robies Construction

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or 304-593-8458

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Owner: Sam Smith, Mason, WV

Myers Paving Inc.

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parking lots, sealing
driveways, Tar &amp; Chip
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CARPENTER SERVICE
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• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

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Stop &amp; Compare

THE
CLASSIFIEDS
aren’t only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad “In Memory”
of a loved one.

Make
Someone’s
Day!

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

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Point Pleasant Register
(304) 675-1333

PUBLIC
NOTICES

We’re showcasing the area’s latest and
greatest job opportunities!
Stay Informed...

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Point Pleasant Register
The Daily Sentinel

NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
WOOD
COUNTY,
OHIO
Wood County Clerk
of Courts
One
Courthouse
Square
Bowling Green, OH
43402
HSBC
Mortgage
Services, Inc. vs.
Paul D. Drew, Jr., et
al
Case No. 2010 CV
0342
Cameran Lee Drew,
whose last known
address is 2050
S.W. 33rd St., Cape
Coral FL 33914, and
if deceased, all
heirs,
devisees,
legatees, executors,
executrixes, administrators, administratrixes, assignees,
Unknown Spouse(s)
of all heirs, devisees, legatees, exe c u t o r s ,
executrixes, administrators, administratrixes, assignees
and John Doe, Unknown Spouse of
Carmen Lee Drew,
whose addresses
are unknown, will
hereby take notice
that on April 7,

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

2010, HSBC Mortgage Services, Inc.,
filed its Complaint
in Foreclosure and
Marshalling of Liens
in the Common
Pleas
Court
of
Wood County, Ohio,
One
Courthouse
Square,
Bowling
Green OH 43402
being Case No. 2010
CV 0342 against
Paul D. Drew, Jr., et
al praying for judgment in the amount
of $99,739.98 with
interest thereon according to the terms
of the
note from December 1, 2009 until
paid and for foreclosure of said Mortgage Deed on the
following described
real estate, of which
said
Defendant,
Paul D. Drew, Jr. is
the owner of:
Real estate located
at
8924
Custar
Road, Custar, OH
43511
as further described in Plaintff’s
mortgage recorded
on January
25, 2006 in Volume
2623, Pg. 171 of the
Mortgage Records
of Wood County,
Ohio.

Ohio Newspaper Association

and that Defendants, Cameran Lee
Drew, and if deceased, all heirs,
devisees, legatees,
executors,
executrixes, administ r a t o r s ,
administratrixes,
assignees,
Unknown Spouse(s) of
all heirs, devisees,
legatees, executors,
executrixes, administrators, administratrixes, assignees
and John Doe, Unknown Spouse of
Cameran Lee Drew
be required to set
up any interest they
may have in said
premises or be forever barred, that
upon failure of said
Defendants to pay
or to cause to be
paid said judgment
within three days
from its rendition
that an Order of
Sale be issued to
the Sheriff of Wood
County, Ohio, to appraise, advertise in
the Daily Sentinel
and sell said real estate, that the premises be sold free
and clear of all
claims, liens and interest of any of the
parties herein, that

the proceeds from
the sale of said
premises be applied
to the Plaintiff’s
judgment and for
such other relief to
which HSBC Mortgage Services, Inc.
is entitled.
Said Defendants are
directed to the Complaint wherein notice under the fair
debt
collection
practice
act
is
given.
Said Defendants are
required to answer
within twenty-eight
days after the publication. Said Defendants
will
take
notice that you are
required to answer
said Complaint on
or
before
the
12th
day of
October,2010
or
judgment will be
rendered accordingly.
HSBC
Mortgage
Services, Inc.
P l a i n t i f f ,
Stephen D. Miles
Vincent A. Lewis
Attorneys for Plaintiff
18 W. Monument Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45402
(8) 31, (9) 7, 14

�Tuesday, September 14, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Point golfers down RV, Buffalo
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. —
The Point Pleasant golf
team continued its winning ways last Tuesday at
Riverside Golf Club after
posting a 39-storke victory over the field in a nonconference tri-match in
Mason County.
The Big Black Knights
posted a winning team
score of 162, finishing
well ahead of runner-up
River Valley (201) and

third-place
Buffalo
(216). Erik Allbright of
Point Pleasant won
medalist honors with a
low round of 37.
Opie Lucas was right
behind Allbright with a
round of 38, followed by
Alex Potter with 40.
Travis Grimm rounded
out the team score with a
47,
while
Justin
Cavendar and Evan
Potter added respective
rounds of 51 and 55.
Dan Goodrich led the
Raiders with a low round

of 48, followed by Cody
Smith and Kyle Bryant
with respective efforts of
49 and 50. Matt Ball
closed out the team score
with a 54, while Derek
Gibson
and
Jacob
Gilmore added rounds of
55 and 61.
Cory Hoshar paced
Buffalo with a 38, followed by Katie Allen
with 57 and Drew Patten
with 58. Brad Harris and
Justin Gates also had
respective rounds of 63
and 64.

OVCS shuts out Chesapeake, 11-0
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio
— The Ohio Valley
Christian soccer team
held Chesapeake to one
shot in 80 minutes of
play
on
Monday
evening, to win by a
score of 11-0.
Richard
Bowman
scored the Defenders
first goal in the fifth
minute on an assist by
Daniel Irwin. Chance
Burleson had the team’s
second score in the ninth
minute. Irwin scored the
third goal of the game at

URG
from Page B1
ing his first goal of the
season. Viscosi notched
three saves in the match.
This was the first game
away from Rio Grande
for the RedStorm this
season.
Dylan McCauley registered four saves for
Indiana Wesleyan.
Rio Grande will square
off with Bethel (IN) on
Saturday afternoon at
4:30 p.m. Bethel defeated the host school,
Cedarville by a 2-1 score
in the nightcap.
REDSTORM

ROLL TO 7-0
WIN OVER BETHEL

CEDARVILLE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm men’s
soccer team, ranked No.
3 in the NAIA Top 25 rating, cruised to a 7-0 victory over Bethel (IN)
College on Saturday
evening at the Dave
Jones Memorial Classic
hosted by Cedarville.
Rio Grande (6-0) put
the match away early
with three goals in the
first 10 minutes of the
game. Junior midfielder
Neil Harries (Lancashire,
England) began the scoring with a goal in the 3rd
minute.
Sophomore
midfielder
Rafael
Maccauro (Sao Paulo,
Brazil) recorded an assist
on the play.
Four minutes later, the
RedStorm had upped the
count to 2-0 on a goal by
sophomore forward Scott
Bibby
(Doncaster,
England). Fellow classmate Richard Isberner
(Sao Paulo, Brazil) had
the assist. It was the
start of what would be a
big night for the sophomore forward as he
would score two goals
and add another assist
later in the contest.
Isberner’s first goal
came in the 9th minute
when he knocked home a
penalty kick to make the
score 3-0.
The 3-nil score would
hold until the opening
moments of the second
half when sophomore
forward/midfielder
Oliver
Hewitt-Fisher
(Swansea,
Wales)
notched the first of backto-back goals in the 47th
minute. Isberner and
senior forward Ederson
Lopes
(Sao
Paulo,
Brazil) were both credited with assists on the
play.
Hewitt-Fisher
scored again in the 54th
minute, this time he
teamed up with senior
midfielder
Chris
Anderson
(Lancaster,
England) to make the
score 5-0 in favor of the
RedStorm.
Isberner would score
his second goal of the

the 18th minute.
Burleson assisted on
goals to Alex Haddad
(20th minute) and T.G.
Miller (27th minute) to
give OVCS the 5-0 lead.
Alex Haddad scored a
second goal in the 30th
minute, with Richard
Bowman scoring his second in the 36th minute.
Irwin added his second
on a Burleson assist in
the 37th minute, giving
OVCS the 8-0 halftime
lead.
Six minutes into the
second half Rachel
Haddad scored on an
assist
by
Richard

Bowman. Alex Haddad
completed the hat trick
in the 55th minute with a
goal assisted by Josh
Blevins. Evan Bowman
scored the Defenders
final goal in the 60th
minute for the 11-0 win.
Ohio Valley Christian
had 28 shots on goal
compared to one for
Chesapeake.
Pete Carman had the
save for OVCS in the
first half, with T.G.
Miller taking over at the
goal keeper position in
the second half.
OVCS hosts Belpre on
Thursday at 5 p.m.

game in the 70th minute
as he was assisted by
senior defender Steven
O’Hara. Isberner now
has seven goals and three
assists (17 points) on the
season.
F r e s h m a n
midfielder/forward Paul
Wyatt
Smith
(Chillicothe, OH) closed
out the scoring for Rio
Grande with his first collegiate goal. The goal
came off a penalty kick
in the 76th minute.
Rio Grande peppered
the Bethel goalkeeper
with 22 shots, 15 of
which were on goal.
Bethel (3-3) was able get
off five attempts with
two being on target.
Sophomore goalkeeper
Jonathan
Viscosi
(Ottawa, Ontario) played
72 minutes in the net and
recorded both saves
while
junior
Jack
Marchant
(Leeds,
England) played the final
18 minutes in goal and
did not have to face a
shot attempt.
Bethel
goalkeeper
Cody Troyer posted
seven saves in the game.
Rio Grande head coach
Scott Morrissey was
pleased with his team’s
performance on Saturday
after a less than stellar
effort on Friday. “I
think probably the Friday
game against Indiana
Wesleyan, we just were a
little sluggish, we never
got into a really good
rhythm and tempo of the
game,” Morrissey said.
“For whatever reason, it
just seemed to be a little
bit of a struggle for us on
Friday.”
“On Saturday, we really came out and played
well and not making
excuses, but it rained in
Cedarville and the surface was really wet and it
really helped with the
speed of the play and you
could tell right from the
start,” Morrissey added.
“We scored three times
within the first 10-12
minutes and really set the
tempo and the guys really played well. We
scored some terrific
goals - the build-up was
great, really proud of
how the guys played.”
“They really responded
and played well, against
a good team too, that was
important, so I was
pleased with the result.”
Rio
Grande
will
resume
Mid-South
Conference play on
Wednesday
evening
when it plays host to
WVU Tech at Evan
Davis Field. Kick-off is
set for approximately 7
p.m. or 15-20 minutes
following the conclusion
of the women’s game,
which kicks off at 5 p.m.

dual meet for the
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm men’s cross
country
team
on
Saturday as they ventured up state route 32 to
face off with the Ohio
Bobcats. The trip did
not go so well for the Red
&amp; White as they lost the
meet, 48-15.
Sophomore
Nick
Wilson (Fleming, OH)
was the top RedStorm
finisher, crossing the line
6th overall with a time of
15:53.83 for the fivekilometer event.
Junior Zane Miller
(Grove City, OH) was the
second Rio runner to finish. He was 16th with a
time of 16:51.87.
Other
RedStorm
results: sophomore Kyle
Goode (Racine, OH),
25th (18:19.93); freshman
Dylan
Roush
(Racine, OH), 27th
(18:39.61) and junior
Justin Hartley (Glouster,
OH), 29th (18:57.79).
There were 31 runners
in the race, 12 of which
competed unattached.
The Bobcats claimed
the top five spots in the
race with Scott Meyers
winning the event with a
time of 15:40.08.
Rio Grande will get
two weeks off as they
prepare for the Rio
Grande Invitational on
September 25 at the
Stanley Evans Athletic
Complex.

RIO

DROPS DUAL MEET
WITH OHIO

ATHENS, Ohio — It
was a good old-fashioned

REDSTORM WOMEN FALL
TO OHIO IN DUAL MEET
ATHENS, Ohio —
The University of Rio
Grande
RedStorm
women’s cross country
team faced off with the
Ohio Bobcats in a dual
meet on Saturday afternoon and lost the headto-head match-up, 5017.
Junior Cassie Mattia
(West Chester, OH) finished with a strong fifthplace effort to lead the
RedStorm
ladies.
Mattia covered the 3.1mile course in 19:40.79.
Junior Kayla Renner
(Galloway, OH) was the
next Rio harrier to cross
the finish line as she
placed 16th overall with
a time of 21:02.74.
Other
RedStorm
results: sophomore Amy
Lower
(Westerville,
OH), 19th (21:31.72);
senior Hillary Haines
(McConnellsville, OH),
20th (23:10.10); junior
Danielle
Stockham
(London, OH), 21st
(24:01.47) and sophomore Holly Haines
(McConnellsville, OH),
22nd (24:39.88).
There were 22 runners
in the event with four
running unattached.
Rio will have next
weekend off and return
to
competition
on
September 25th when
Rio Grande hosts the
Rio Grande Invitational.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Lady Eagles sweep Wahama in straight games
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MASON, W.Va. —
The Eastern volleyball
team returned to its winning ways Monday night
during a convincing 255, 25-7, 25-3 victory over
host Wahama in a TriValley
Conference
Hocking
Division
matchup
in
Mason
County.
The Lady Eagles (7-1,
4-1 TVC Hocking) had
little trouble shaking off
last Thursday’s loss
against Waterford, as the
guests allowed the Lady
Falcons just two service
points in the entire
match.
The
straight-game
decision also allowed the
Green and White to claim
a season sweep in the
series after winning the
season opener against
WHS by a 25-4, 25-10,
25-4 decision.
Britney Morrison led
the Lady Eagles with 14
service points, followed
by Ally Hendrix with 10
and Brenna Holter with
seven points. Janae
Boyles and Shawna
Murphy both added six
points apiece.
Beverly Maxson and
Jamie Swatzel chipped in
five and four points,
respectively. Breanna
Hayman,
Brooke
Johnson
and
Erin
Swatzel also added a

OVCS
from Page B1
The Lady Defenders
were led by Allie
Hamilton with 12 points
(five aces), followed by
Martin with 11 points
(two aces). Crank had
eight points (two aces),
Maggie Westfall had
seven points (one ace),
with Schoonover and
Samantha
Westfall
adding six points and two
aces each.
Hannan was led in
points by Stephanie
Dillon with nine (one
ace). Jasmine Campbell
had
eight
points,
Samantha Blain had
eight points (two aces),
Tiffany Adkins added
three points, Katie Ellis
had two points, and
Heather Ellis and Jazi
Casto each had one point.
For
the
Lady
Defenders,
Samantha

CC
from Page B1
Sara McCauley won the
individual crown with a
time of 18:53, nine seconds faster than the rest
of the field.
Andrea Porter led the
Lady Knights by finishing 14th with a time of
22:03, followed by Avery
Daughtery in 100th with
a mark of 33:25.
Complete results of
Chick-fil-A Invitational
are available on the web
at www.runwv.com
RIVER VALLEY CC
COMPETES AT ZT INVITE
KINNIKINNICK,
Ohio — The River Valley
cross country program
participated in the Zane
Trace Invitational on
Saturday,
with
the
Raiders coming away

point each to the winning
cause.
Maxson led the net
attack with seven kills,
followed
by
Jamie
Swatzel
and
Kiki
Osborne with five kills
each. Morrison added
four kills, while Hendrix
and Baylee Collins both
had one kill. Swatzel also
had the lone EHS block
in the match.
Hendrix led the passing
attack with 12 assists,
followed by Swatzel with
six assists. Hayman and
Maxson also had an
assist apiece.
Katlin Clarke and Kali
Harris both had one service point each for the
Lady Falcons.

OAK HILL, Ohio —
The South Gallia Lady
Rebels competed against
Oak Hill and Fairland in
a tri-match on Saturday
at Oak Hill High School.
The Lady Rebels
defeated Fairland by
scores of 25-17 and 2517 in the first match.
Tori Duncan had eight
points (four aces) to lead
the team.
Jasmyne
Johnson had seven
points
(four
aces),
Chandra Canaday had
four points (two aces),
Tayler Duncan had three
points (one ace), Ellie
Bostic had three points

(two aces), Meghan
Caldwell added three
points, and Shelby Merry
had two points.
Caldwell had nine
kills, Bostic had seven
kills, Merry had five
kills, Johnson and Brynn
Adams each had two
kills, and Tayler Duncan
and Canaday each had
one kill.
Tayler Duncan had 17
assists and Canaday had
eight assists. Bostic had
two blocks and Adams
added one block.
In the second match,
South Gallia fell to the
Lady Oaks by scores of
25-19, 20-25, and 25-20.
Tayler Duncan had
eight points to lead the
Lady Rebels. Caldwell
had five points, Canaday,
Johnson, and Chrissy
Howell each had four
points, Tori Duncan had
three points, and Bostic
had two points. Johnson
had two aces and Howell
and Canaday each had
one.
Merry had nine kills,
Caldwell had eight kills,
Bostic added six kills,
Canaday had five kills,
Johnson had two kills,
and Tori Duncan had
one.
Bostic
had
three
blocks, Caldwell had two
blocks, and Merry and
Canaday each had one.
Tayler Duncan had 18
assists and Canaday
added four.

Westfall had nine assists,
Maggie Westfall had
five, Bryanne Hamilton
had one, and Martin had
one. Allie Hamilton had
six digs, Maggie Westfall
had three, and Crank,
Schoonover,
and
Samantha Westfall had
two each.
Allie Hamilton had six
kills,
followed
by
Maggie Westfall with
five, Samantha Westfall
had two, and Crank,
Martin, and Schoonover
each had one. Samantha
Westfall had one block.
Jasmine Wiese had
seven digs and Blain had
six digs to lead the Lady
Cats, followed by Katie
Ellis with four, Dillon
and Adkins with two
each, and Heather Ellis
and Casto each had one.
Dillon had one block
and one spike for
Hannan, with Blain
adding two spikes, and
Heather Ellis one.
In the finale of the trimatch, Point Pleasant

defeated Hannan by
scores of 25-9 and 25-11.
The Lady Knights
were led in points by
Preece
with
15.
Dunham, Kaci Riffle,
and Hatfield each had
five points, Michelle
Gibson had three points,
and Mitchell had one
point.
Hannan was led by
Heather Ellis with five
points. Dillon had four
points, Holley had three
points, Katie Ellis, Blain,
and Casto each had two
points, and Campbell and
Angelica Brumfield each
had one point.
Blain and Heather Ellis
had two digs each, with
Katie Ellis, Bledsoe,
Wiese, and Adkins each
adding one. Dillon had
one block in the game.
Point Pleasant will host
Herbert Hoover at 6 p.m.,
OVCS will host Ironton
St. Joe at 6 p.m., and
Hannan
will
host
Sherman at 6:30 p.m. all
on Tuesday.

with a 12th place finish
in the boys division
while the Lady Raiders
did not have enough
competitors for a team
score.
There were 148 competitors and 15 teams in
the boys event, which
saw the Raiders post a
team score of 324 to finish 12th. Unioto won the
team event with 45
points, finishing nine
points ahead of runnerup Fairland.
Adrian Ross of Unioto
won the individual race
with a time of 16:31, finishing two seconds ahead
of runner-up Tanner
Mattie of Fairland.
Trent Wolfe led the
Raiders by finishing 30th
overall with a time of
19:12,
while
Jared
Hollingsworth followed
in 56th with a mark of
20:17. Jamil Stepney
(21:59) was 94th, Ritchie
Jackson (22:24) was 99th
and Aaron Harrison

(23:41) rounded out the
team score by placing
117th.
There were 105 competitors and 13 teams in
the girls division, with
Zane Trace capturing the
team and individual
titles. ZTHS won the
team event with 30
points, finishing well
ahead of runner-up Teays
Valley with 75 points.
Taylor Hatfield won the
individual crown by
more than a minute with
a time of 19:40.
Katie Blodgett led the
Lady Raiders by finishing fourth overall with a
time of 21:41, while
Keyana Ward was 37th
with a time of 25:12.
Jessie Halley (29:45) and
Sonja Rankin (32:35)
also had respective finishes of 81st and 95th.
Complete results of the
2010
Zane
Trace
Invitational are available
on
the
web
at
www.baumspage.com

LADY REBELS SPLIT
TRI-MATCH AT OAK HILL

4 Person Golf Scramble
Saturday - Sept. 18th
Shotgun Start at 9 am • Team Registration 8:15 am

Kountry Hills Golf Course
$60 per player
includes
skins game,
Mulligan,
Lunch &amp; cart
fees

Pomeroy, Ohio 740-992-6312
Hole sponsorships $50.00 per sign
Contact Benny 740-416-0824
1 Player with 10 or under
Handicap only per team
Top 3 Teams receive cash prizes

Proceeds benefit Meigs High School
Boys Basketball Program for equipment
Info call Benny Ewing 740-416-0824, Steve Clay 740-416-7923

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <tag tagId="2881">
      <name>haught</name>
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    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
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