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Obama plans to
help a middle class
'under assault,' A6

Saints soaking in
landntark victory, Bt

Printed on 100%
Recycled ;"1/ewsprlnt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

D.,

~

Income tax increase back to ballot

OBITUARIES
Page AS

B Y B ETH S ERGENT

·Marvin Graham Burt
·Vivian V. Fry
• E. Mae Morgan
• William T. Shelton

BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Though it
was soundly defeated by 68
percent of the vote la::,t
May, the Village of
Pomeroy will once again
attempt to pass an increase
of the local income tax on
this May's ballot.
The village currently has

SPORTS

a I percent income tax in
place while the proposed
increase is for I /4 of I percent. If passed. the 1 1/4
income tax would be paid
by those both working and
living in Pomeroy who
earn income. Only those
who live in Pomeroy will
get a chance to \ ote on the
ballot issue unlike those
who work in the village.

pay the tax but li've elsewhere. The tax is normally
handled through payroll
deductions.
The vote to put the
increase on the ballot was
not
unanimou&amp;
with
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun
and Councilman Victor
Young voting against the
motion. Spaun cited a 17
percent unemployment rate

as her reason for voting
against the motion.
Mayor John Musser said
the increase. if passed, would
add $80,000 to Pomeroy's
annual income; income
Musser called "sorely needed." Last year, Musser said
those on a fixed income will
not be affected by the
increase. Those who have
retired but decide to go back

• Eastern soars
ast Marauders.
• ee Page 81

to work earning new income
would pay the income tax
only on that new income. If
passed. the increase would
likely go into effect June 1.
Council also unanimously
approved the second reading of an amendment of
Ordinance 445, which currently requires those in the

Please see Income tax, AS

'09 sales tax:
Retail economy
holding its own
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Meigs County Court
news. See Page A2
• Law You Can Use:
Schools must
assist students with
reading difficulties.
See Page A2
• State representative
speaker at SAR.
See Page A3
• O'Bieness offers
health screenings.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Ohio Briefs.
~

Press room
upgrades in
workS at OVP

Page A6

B Y A NDREW C ARTER
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATIIER

I

•

High : Mid 30s.
Low: Lower 20s.

Sammy M. Lopez, new publisher of Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. said the improvements being made to the printing
press in Gallipolis will allow OVP to better serve its readers
and advertisers.

INDEX

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. (OVP) is in the process of making
upgrades to its press room located at company's headquarters in Gallipolis.
According to publisher Sammy M. Lopez.
three units are being added to the current
printing press that will increase the capacity
of the local operation, which is set to add
more printing jobs to its current lineup that
includes the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. Point
Pleasant Register, The Daily Sentinel. Sunday
Times-Sentinel and Tri-Countv Marketplace.
The upgrades to the press will allow OVP
to handle a wider range of commercial print
work and allow for more use of color in the
daily papers. However, until the upgrades
are complete. use of color in the local papers
could be limited.
"We are pleased with the improvements that
are being made that will allow us to better

.

A3

..assifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

l )!IJIJ !Ill.!I!II

4

B Y BETH SERGENT

MIDDLEPORT
The
Riverbend Arts Council building
in Middleport was filled with
Latin beats Monday night, meant
to inspire a fun, one-of-a-kind
workout via Zumba.
Monday's class was nearly a
sellout with approximately 100
Zumba fanatics working off those
calories to Latin music. With a

video of their progress projected
on the wall. instructors on stage
and a dee-jay encouraging them
on. the class felt more like a pru1y
than a workout.
According to its official Web
site, the Zumba program fuses
hypnotic Latin rhythms and easyto-follow moves to create a oneof-a-kind fitness program that
will blow you away. The goal is
to inspire people to want to work
out. to love working out and to

B Y ANDREW CARTER
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

get hooked. The routines feature
interval training sessions where
fast and slow rhythms and resistance training are combined to
tone and sculpt a body while
burning fat. The Latin flavor
spices up the workout. All of
these elements have allowed the
program to become the latest
workout craze and as of July of
last year, the Zumba program was

Please see Zumba, AS

Please see Oasis 2010, AS

Please see Upgrades, AS

Zumba: Get fit, get rhythm
BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Oasis 201 0 coming
to tri-county March 19
GALLIPOLIS - Some of the leading
speakers in Christian ministry will be
gathered on one stage during Oasis 2010,
which is planned for Friday, March 19 at
the University of Rio Grande Lyne Center.
The event, sponsored by Elizabeth
Chapel Church of Gallipolis, will feature
nationally known motivational speaker
and minister Dr. Rick Rigsby, Christian
comedians Brad Stein and Cleto
Rodriguez and contemporary Christian
musician Phil Wickham.
Rigsby, Stein and Rodriguez have b~en
featured in recent years at Promtse
Keepers men's ministry conventions
across the United States.
Promise Keepers (PK) had been one of
the premier national men's outreach ministries since its founding in 1990 by former University of Colorado fo~tball coach
Bill McCartney. PK held stadtum events

2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars

POMEROY- Retail sales took a hit in
Meigs County last year. but merchants selling retail goods held their own last year.
Economic Development Director Perry
Varnadoe said Monday the local retail
community has seen the local market
remain steady in the past year. 2008 was a
particularly good year in terms of retail
sales. At that time, retailers credited the
high cost of gasoline for keeping buyers in
the local community.
While 2009's sales tax collections will
likely be less than those of the year before,
they indicate the retail business community in Meigs County may be doing better
than others in the region, Varnadoe said.
Based on a sales tax comparison provided by Auditor Mary Byer-HilL collection of
the county's one-percent sales tax is down
by just under $100,000 for the year, with
just one more month's revenue unpaid.
The state pays the county its share of sales
tax collected by Meigs County merchants
two months behind. The latest payment,
received earlier this month, totaled $105,741.
That tax was collected in November 2009.
That payment made the county's year-todate collections $1.113,750. In 2008. the
county received $1,233.824 for the year.
2008 was a relatively good year for
retailers. if their collection of sales tax is
an accurate indicator. It was the first year
in at least six the county saw an increase
in sales tax revenue from the year before.
"In talking to local business owners, it
seems that they have been able to run a steady
course in the past year:· Varnadoe said.
· ''While it has been challenging to do business
in this economy, they seem to be faring better
than those in other areas nearby.''
Varnadoe said there were no significant
retail closings last year. another indicator of
a steady climate in which to do b~siness ..
"'While they are not expanding thetr
businesses, they are able to maintain."
Varnadoe said those merchants are finding it more challenging to keep local shoppers in the local market. holding on to
their share of the available disposable
income. Of course. the sales tax comparison does not reflect all sales - groceries.
are exempt. of course, as are prescription
medications - but new car sales are subject to sales tax. as are restaurant meals.
The first sales tax payment received last
year, that for sales in January 2009, was the
lru·gest received in the year- $129.192.

�Page.A2

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County
Court news
PO~lEROY- :\tteig~

Count) Court Judge Steven

L. Stor) recently processed the folio'" ing cases:

Pamela J. Abbs. Appleton. Wis~ .. S30 and costs.
speeding: Alli:-.on M. Adair, Williamsburg, Ky.. $30
and costs. speeding: Kimberly D. Akshire. Crown
City. $30 and costs. failure to control: Eric S. Allen.
Ashley. $30 and costs, spcetling: Whitney M. Allen.
Athens, $30 and costs. speeding; Joshua f.
Althouse, Pomero). $375 .tnd Ct)sts, probation, 90
days in jail. 87 suspended, license suspended. DWI
and/or drugs of abuse; John E. Anderson. Ceverte,
W.Va .. $30 and costs. seat belt' iolation; Steven M.
Anderson. Rutland, $40 and cost· probation. speeding, $200 and costs. 10 da) s in jail. se\en suspended, probation. no operator's license: Cory J,
Anfinson, Inno. SC. $30 and costs, speeding; Julie
K. Ankrom. Columbus. $30 and costs, speeding;
Vernon R. Anns, Pataskala, $30 and costs. speeding: Ashley L. Ashworth. Rncme, $100 and costs.
probation. 10 days in jail, uspended. attempted
wrongful entrustment; Carole J. Augustine.
Lancaster. $30 and costs. speeding; ~1ichael
AvelJino. Lancaster, $30 and costs. speeding;
Shawn W. Bailey. Reed, ville, $30 and costs, failure
to control: Tessa L. Bailey. Acworth, Ga .. S30 and
costs. speeding; Richard L. Baron, Wheeling.
W.Va .• $375 and costs. probation, 180 days in jail,
177 suspended. license suspended. DWI and/or
drugs of abuse: s~·ott M. Barrett, Bidwell, $80 anc
sots. ille~ally taking deer; .John B. Beat, West
Chester. S30 and costs, speedmg.
Mark C. Bell. Converse, Texa.... $30 and costs,
speeding; Paul Blair, Jacksonville. Fla., $30 and
costs, speeding: David J. Bly, Bellbrook, $30 and
costs. peeding: Joshua A. Bolin. Rutland, $30 and
costs, failure to control: John D. Boos. Columbus,
$30 and costs. speedin~; Bryce L. Bowling. Racine,
$200 and cost . probatJOD, 10 days in jail, suspended, no operator's license: Dennis E. Boyd,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, probation. 10 days in jail,
seven su&lt;&gt;pended. no operator's license, $30 and
costs, probation, seat belt violation: Jordan W.
Bradford, Syracuse, $30 and costs. speeding;
Robert A. Brewer, Columbus, $30 and costs. speeding; Seth C. Brody. Chapel Hill, NC. $30 and costs,
speeding: Brian S. Brown, Racine, $20 and costs.
failure to )ield halfroad"-ay; Terry ~rumfield, \~est
Hamlin. W.Va .. S 120 and costs, Illegally takmg
deer: Michael E. Brunty. Huntington, W.Va., $30
and costs, speeding; Brandyn J. Bumgardner,
Rutland. S30 and costs. seat belt-passenger; Frances
R. Butch, Charleston, W.Va, $30 and costs, speeding: Regan R. Butler. Westerville, ::&gt;30 and costs,
speeding: Jeralyn A Bye, Pent Water. Mich .. S30
and costs , speeding; Man.:u A. Canada, Columbus,
$30 and co:-.t~, speeding; Jessica K. Capehart,
Racine • .$30 nnd costs, assured clear distance:
Robert Car!&gt;on, Letart, W.Va .. S30 and costs. speeding; L)nd:-.ey A. Case), Gahanna. $30 and costs,
speeding: Pcgg)' S. Ca5to. Pomero), $30 and co~t.s,
assured clear distance: Rebecca L. Caudill. Albany,
$30 and cost~. left of center; Jerry B. Childer:-..
Parkersburg. W.Va., $30 and costs, improper pas~­
ing; Francts G Cicchim. Fayetteville. NC. $30 and
costs. speeding; Jerrod A. Clay. S)racu e. $30 and
costs, equipment misuse; Sandra D. Clay, Racine.
$500 and costs, probation. 180 da)" in jail. 177 ~us­
pended. hcense -.uspended. DWI and/or drug~ of
abuse. $30 and cost. , probation, failure to control:
Kyle J. Collins, Coolville, $90. db-orderly conduct;
David W. Coppick, Middleport. $30 and costs, seat
belt violation: Christopher A. Cramer. Franklin. $30
and costs. speeding; Richard J. Croston, Syracuse.
$30 and costs. speeding; Brittany L. Curfman.
Vinton, $30 und costs, speeding; Shawn E. Dailey,
Racine. $30 and costs, speeding; Jin H. Daniels,
Columbus. $90 and costs, speeding; Aaron D.
Davis. New Haven, W. V&lt;~ .. S30 and costs. speeding:
David M. Davis, Langsville. S 120 and costs. spotlighting: Brian K. Delong. Baltimore, $30 and
costs. speeding: Brinn R. Delong. ~1arietta. $30 and
costs. seat belt violation: Ryan C. Denehy,
Columbus. $30 and co~ts. ~reeding; ~anacy A.
Deroberts-Moore. Columbus. $30 and costs, speeding; Bruce L. Dill. FederaJ...burg, Md .. $30 and
costs, speeding; Da' id L. Dixon, Roanoke. Va .. $30
and costs, speeding; Kase) A. Dixon. Glouster. $.30
and costs, failed to )'ield: Elit.abeth M. Dove.
Goldsboro, NC. S30 and costs , speeding: Nathaniel
K. Dowler, Pomeroy. $50 and cost-.. probation.
three days in jail, suspended, passing bad checks;
Thomas J. Duffy, Thornville, $30 and costs, speeding: Melody ~1. Duna'' a), The Plains. $30 and
costs, speeding; Gregory J. Dunn. Worthington, $40
and costs. equipment mism.e: Shari A. Eblin,
Syracuse. $375 and costs. probation, 180 days in
jail. 177 suspended.licl'nse suspended, DWI and/or
drugs of abuse; Kathy J. Elias. Rutland. $160 and
costs. failure to confine dog; Summer Falcone.
Lancaster, $30 and cost'&gt;. speeding~ Rachel L.
Farcas. Athens. S30 and costs, speeding; Daniel L.
Fisher. Somerset. $30 and cost\, pt.!rmit violation,
$30 and costs, overwitlth violation: Lee S.
Fleshman. Panna Heights, 5;30 and costs, speeding:
James J. Flint, Columbus. $30 and costs, speeding:
John C. Foster. Indianapolis, Ind .• S30 and cosb.
speeding: Chelsea J. Fowler, Mason, W.Va., $30
and costs. speeding: Natalie A. Fox, Athens. $30
and costs. speeding: Robert B. Frazier,
Harrisonburg. Va.. $30 and costs, speeding:
Michael F. Freeman. Middleport. $90, probation. 30
day in jml, suspended, disorderly conduct: Phillip
A. Freeman. Grove Cit). $30 and co~ts, speeding:
Stacey Freeman, ~tiddleport, $90. probation, 30
days in jail. suspended, disorderly conducr; David
G. Frye. West llumlin. W.Va., $120 and costs. illegally taking deer.

Tu esd ay, January 26 ,

~U

Jazz Festival to feature Thompson, Abate

HUNTIKGTON. W.Va.
- .Marshall UniversJt) 's
41st Annual Jazz Festival.
which will tuke place Jan.
28-30. will feature guest
artists Bob Thompson.
pianist. and Greg Abate.
saxophomst. Thompson and
Abate will pe1form. adjudicate school ensembles and
present clinic sessions as
part of the re..tival.
Bob Thompson's music
has communicated with
audiences around the globe
during a professional career
that has spanned more than
30 years. From his early
days with the Modern Jazz
Interpreters.
to
an
acclaimed series of solo
albums on labels such as
Capitol and Ichiban. to his
latest work with his fivemember Bob Thompson
Unit. Thompson ha~ won
the respect and praise of
jazz critics and fans alike.
With appearances on BET,
the internationally-broadcast public radio show
Mountain Stage and several
tours abroad. he's been a
visible presence in the jazz
world. For the past eleven
years Thompson's holiday
jazz show. "Joy to the
World," has been broadcast
on
Public
Radio
International.
Greg Abate. jazz saxophonist. flutist and compos-

er. 1s an international
Jazz/recording artist who
spends 150 days a year touring the globe. In the mid1970s. after graduating
from the Berklee College
Of Music, Abate played
lead alto sax for the Ray
Charles Orchestra. He also
formed his own group.
"Channel
One,"
that
became a favorite in the
New England area. He also
played tenor sax with the
revived
Artie
Shaw
Orchestra.
Abate's post hard-bop
style has been featured at
jazz festivals. jazz societies
and jazz clubs throughout
the world, His recordings
include ·'Evolution·· (2004)
which received 4 Grammy
nominatiOns. He teaches
Jazz Studies at Rhode
Island College and is an
active clinician who conducts workshops and master classes through the U.S
and abroad.
Thompson and Abate join
a long list of artists who
have performed at Marshall
and with the MU Jazz
Ensemble. Included among
them are Joe Fanell. Phil
Wilson, Clark Terry. Gary
Burton, Rich Matteson, Art
Pepper. Jamey Aebersold.
Maynard Ferguson and
Orchestra, Stan Kenton and
Orchestra, Woody Herman

HUD Subsidized
Efficiency/1 Bedroom
;; 50yrs or qualifying disability
Low Income priority

;:-,,ALl Yi.
~ IJlltflltS t
1

~ A~t 1&gt;A ~~

• ~/I"''~

7 40-992-7022

Silverheels
A Realty Company-EHO

and the Thundering Herd. Combo). the MU Jan
Herbie Mann, Gar;· Burton. Ensemble
and
the
Ed Soph. Dominae Spera. Thundering Herd All-Stars.
the
Tommy
Dorsey
The following festival
Orchestra with Buddy events are in the Joan C.
Morrow. the Count Basie Edwards Playhouse on 5th
Orchestra, Mike Vax. Chris Ave, on the Huntingto'
Vadala. Bill Watrou.-.. I.ddie campus:
Danieb, Oliver Nelson.
• Thursday. Jan. 28 Dave
Valentin.
Alvin p.m .. High School Honors
Bati1&gt;te, TeiTy Gibbs. Denis Ensemble
and
Bob
and
Sean
DeB lasio, Conrad Herwi~, Thompson
James Dapogny. LoUJs Parsons. piano duo
Bellson, Arturo Sandoval.
• Friday. Jan. 29 - 9
Columbus
Jazz a.rn.-5 p.m.. High School
The
Orchestra.
Paquite Adjudication: 8 p.m. Gue.;r
D'Rivera and the Dizzy artist Greg Abate with
Gillespie All Stars. Sherrie Bluetrane
Maricle and the DIVA Jazz
• Saturdav, Jan. 30 - 9
Orchestra
and
The a.rn.-1 p.m~. High School
Knoxville Jazz Orchestra adjudication: 2 p.m. Greg
Abate master class; 8 p.m.
with Dan Trudell.
Marshall's jazz festival is Thundering Herd Jazz Allone of the longest continu- Stars: 8:30 p.m. Festival
ously. running college festi- Finale: Marshall University •
vals 111 the country. It has Jazz Ensemble with guest
been an important part of saxophonist Greg Abate.
West Virgmia 's artistic
Admi~sion for each day
community since its begm- is $10 for adults and $5 for
ning in 1970. It attracts students. Tickets for e\·ents
nationally recognized artists in the Joan C. Edwards
and supports the MU Jazz Playhouse are available at
Studies program in its the JCE ticket office or by
efforts to educate students. phone at (304) 696-ARTS
to entertain the public and (2787)
to !?reserve the rich heritage
For additional inform.
tion, contact Dr. E
of Jazz.
Additional contributions Bingham. director of jaz
to the festival include per- studies at Marshall. at 304formances by Dr. Sean 696-3147 or visit :-..IU Jau
Parsons.
Bluetrane. Studies online at www.mar(Marshall's Faculty Jazz shall .eduljazz.

LAW YOU CAN USE

Schools must assist students with reading difficulties
Q: My child had a hard effectively teaches phonetime learning the alpha- mic awareness, phonics and
bet, and now he is having fluency.
difficulty learning to read.
Q: If my child can't
What are schools supposed to be doing to teach read , does this mean he
my child to read ?
has a low I.Q.?
A: No. There may be a
A: In 2000, the National
Reading Panel, a group of number of reasons why
experts convened by the your child is having trouble
National Institute of Child reading. For example. indiHealth
and
Human viduals with dyslexia can be
De,elopment, found that for extremely bright. successful
typical children. there are and high-achieving people.
five readmg skills that particularly if they receive
schools
must
teach: the right kind of teaching
Phonemic awareness (abili- early in their school careers.
ty to distinguish and manipQ: What should I do if
ulate the sounds in words),
phonics (the relationship my child 's reading skills
between letters and sounds), do not seem to be developfluency (ability to read ing?
A: Make a written request
accurately and quickly).
vocabulary (word knowl- to your principal. special
edge) and comprehension education director. or super(understanding of what is intendent asking that your
read). These five essential child be evaluated for specomponents make up the cial education eligibility.
legal definition of reading The school is obligated to
that is incorporated in the evaluate your child if teach"No Child Left Behind" ers and administrators ''suslaw. which all schools must pect" that the child has a
disability. If the school
follow.
agrees to evaluate. you will
Q: If m) child can't have to sign a consent fonn.
read, does this mean he If school staff members do
not "suspect" a disability.
has dyslexia?
A:
Not
necessarily. they must send you a formal
Dyslexia is a neurological notice. called "prior written
disorder that interferes with notice" or form PR-O I.
the child's ability to remem- explaining why they do not
ber. manipulate, sequence suspect a disability. Along
and organize the alphabet with this written notice.
and the sounds of the they should give you a
booklet entitled. nose Idea
English language
It can be difficult for chil- Is This. This booklet
dren with dyslexia to explains your right to file
decode or "sound out" complaints with the Ohio
words as a result, which Department of Education.
makes them slow and chop- and/or to file a due process
PY oral readers unless they complaint against your
have special. intensive school district if you disinstruction. Not all children agree with a decision made
who have difficulty decod- by your school district.
ing words arc dyslexic,
Q : I requested the evaluhowever. Some children
have weaknesses because ation and the school told
they haven't been provided me RTI had to be tried
with a reading program that first before they would

private evaluations supportevaluate. What is RTI?
A: RTI stands for ing disability to the school
"Response to Intervention," disttict.
an optional evaluation
Q: The school says if I
method that requires the
school to use a research-val- just give it time, my child
idated teaching program to will catch up. Should I just
instruct a child who is wait and see?
A : There are specific proexhibiting difficulty in
decoding. reading fluency. grams that have been shown
reading comprehension. or to be effective with children
other areas. The school who have dyslexia or other
must collect data regarding reading disabilities - pro~
the child's perfonnance in grams that provide !Step-by- .
the program. review it along step. explicit instructio.
with other infonnation gath- regarding the sounds. syll
ered from various tests and bles and spelling of words.
asses.-.ments. and use it in The earlier 'our child.
determining whether the recei' es instruction through
child is eligible for ::.pecial such program::.. the more
education. It may take likelv thev are to be effeclonger than 60 days to tive: Experts tell us that
dete1mine whether the child children who are not on
is responding appropriately track with reading by the
to the intervention, so Ohio end of third grade haYe little
:
allows schools to wait to chance of catching up.
This "Law Yo u Can Use"
provide a multi-factored
special education'evaluation column was provided by
until after the intervention the Ohio State Bar
program can be evaluated Association. It was prepared by attorney judith C.
for effectiveness.
If a school is doing RTI. it Saltzman of H ickman &amp;
knows that the child rna) be L owder Co., LPA in
eligible for special educa- Cleveland. The column
tion. You may be able to offers general information '
persuade the school to eval- about the law. Seek an
uate sooner rather than later attomey's advice before
by speaking to the supe~in­ applying this information
•
tendent. and/or pre:-.enung to a legal problem.

F~ ILY
,_ ':. HEARTlAND PUBLICATIONS - -

.

'&gt;Publishing for the Heart"

Reach the Lost &amp;
Hurting Families

BECOME A "SUGAR HElPER~'
Are you a diabetic?
Do you know a diabetic?

Help lead diabetic support
Free Training- Free Materials

T aking Applic a t ions

The Maples

2 010

For more informtation
Contact
Andrew Brumfield
at

Invite them to your church
Touch their souls with God's Word.

Meigs County Health Department

[;ije @allipolisnlailp ~ribunc
740-446-2342 ext. 17

740-992-6626

God said: •'They do not need to go away.
You give them SOf!lething to eat: • Matthe" 4: 16

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 26,

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Meigs woman recognized
ATHENS - The Ohio
University December 2009
Classified Staff Employee
of the Month is Janice
Haynes,
Administrative
Assistant for the Cutler
Scholars Program.
Ha) nes enjoys working
'th a program that supports
education and develop. .t of scholars. She is a
graduate
of
Harding
University, Searcy, Arkansas
with a B.A. in Biology.
Haynes is also a licensed
massage therapist and often
'olunteers at community
events as a sports massage
therapist providing pre and
post event massages on athletes. More recently, she
volunteered
for
the
Palatonia Bike Race lead by
Lance Armstrong.
Haynes has worked for
the univer~ity for 4 years
and was nominated for the
award by her associate

Is nephewS talent going to waste?
BY OR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Janice Haynes

director for her outstanding
efforts and positive attitude.
She was presented with a
day off work with pay certificate, a gift bag of items
donated by various OU
departments, and a keepsake pillow.

State representative
speaker at SAR
GALLIPOLIS - Ewings
pter, Sons of the
erican Revolution, will
et at the Presbyterian
Church in Gallipolis 6:30
p.m. Thursday. The church
is located at 51 State Street.
Dinner will be served by the
Presbyterian
Church's
Women's Auxiliary
Speaker will be the State
Representative
Clyde

tr

Evans. of Rio Grande.
Special invitations have
been sent to the French
Colony Chapter of the D.A.
R. of Gallipolis.
Should
residents
of
Gallipolis have ancestors
who fought in the American
Revolution wish to explore
the advantages of the SAR,
call
Bill
Beegle
in
Gallipolis at 446-2152.

Southern to host alumni
basketball contest
RACINE - The annual
"Big Fooze Scholarship"
Southern Alumni basketball
night event will be held
Saturday, Feb. 20, in Charles
W. Hayman gymnasium.
All proceeds wi II go to the
Alumni Association and the
Hilton "Big Fooze" Wolfe,
Jr. scholarship fund. Players
·shing to participate
1Uld
contact
Junie
•.
ynard via e-mail at
Junie .Maynard@ SouthemL
ocal.net or call Maynard at
740-949-4222, Ext. 1129.
E-mail is preferred.
Cheerleaders should con-

tact Nikki Ihle Whobrey at
whobzkidz2@gmail.com. 'fo
accommodate more players
there will be two women's
games ahd three men's games
to assure more playing time.
Admission is $3 for adults
and students $1. Players and
cheerleaders participating
will have an additional $3
registration, making a total
$6 commitment to play or
cheer. Organizers noted that
if ''you don't pay, you don't
play". lst through 4th grade
students singing or in the
band will be admitted free
with coupons.

O'Bieness offers health screenings
ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer blood pressure
screening as well as cholesterol and glucose screening
Wednesday,Feb.3.
The free blood pressure
screening will be open to the
public from 9. a.m. until noon
m the hospital's patient
entrance lobby. The cholesterol and glucose screening,
which will be offered for a $5
fee, wiU be available at the
same location by appointment only from 9 a.m. until
noon. To make an appointa nt,
call
O'Bleness'
~unity Relations office
at (740) 566-4814. Please call
as soon as possible because
appointments are limited.
Free colon-rectal cancer
home screening kits and

2010

information can be obtained
on a daily basis at the hospital's patient and visitor
entrance information desks
as well as at the Castrop
Center information desk.
Cholesterol levels typically do not change dramatically in one month so individuals may want to wait two to
three months before being
screened again. Also, screenings do not take .the place of
testing. A screening will
indicate whether an individual's level is below, at or
above riormal ranges; however, for specific readings,
an individual may be directed to see a physician for fur-,
ther testing. The cholesterol
and glucose screening measures total cholesterol, HDL
and glucose levels.

Dear Dr. . Brothers: My
little nephew is one gifted
child. After he finishes his
homework, he races to the
basement to play his guitar.
He's completely self-taught
- he's learned a repertoire
of around 150 songs, all by
ear. He plays everything
from Beethoven to Bruce.
and he's 9 years old. My sister somehow sees this differently. She actually discourages him from playing!
I'm afraid she's going to
destroy this child's gift what do I do? - B.T.
Dear B.T.: I don't think
your sister is intent on
destroying the gift for music
that your young nephew has
displayed. With his repertoire of so many songs, he
obviously has had plenty of
artistic freedom with which
to operate! But it would be
wrong to assume that an
interest such as his couldn't
be squelched by a wrongheaded parent. Chances are,
the child simply would wait
till he was an adult, and his
music would flower again .
But if his spilit were crushed,

he might set aside his guitar
forever. It is more common
for me to hear about parents
with a musically gifted child
pushing him beyond all reason and allowing their own
·pressure and that of others to
ruin his motivation to enjoy
and learn music. So a little
caution is a good thing.
I think much of what you
are concerned about will
work itself out. The child is
approaching the age when
he can participate in band at
school, and this would be a
good outlet for him. Much
of the enthusiasm he needs
will be generated by fellow
musicians and his music
and band teachers. I'm sure
they will go on to suggest
further courses of study, and
if the parents have an open
mind. he may even receive
scholarships. Why don't
you sit down with them and
perhaps give a gift of some
music or an instrument he
could enjoy? This would let
everyone know that you are
on the side of the child and
his musical talent being
fully developed.

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: I'm

24 years old and still live at
home. I'm not a mooch or
anything - I pay my parents for rent and groceries. I
also keep up with the lawn
work and stuff. Both my
parents and I are very happy
with the arrangement we've always gotten along
fine. The only people this
seems to bother is my
friends. They just cannot get
over that I still live at home,
and are constantly haranguing • me about it. What is
wrong with a girl having a
good relationship with her
folks? - C.C.
Dear C.C.: There is nothing at all wrong with this
arrangement, as long as it
suits your parents and yourself. That is to say, if you
were living in a vacuum
there would be nothing
wrong with it. As it is, you
are having a conflict with
your friends that is causing
you some grief. So in a way,
this living at home is a problem that will not go away
until your circumstances
change. As you get older,
your friends probably will
be on your back even more.
And if there comes a time

Meigs .County Forecast

Local Stocks

Tuesday...Cloudy with a
40 percent chance of snow
showers. Cooler with highs
in the mid 30s. West winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the lower 20s. West winds
JO to 15 mph.
Wednesday ... Partly
sunny. Highs in the upper
30s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy. A chance of
snow showers after midnight.

AEP (NYSE} - 35.62
Akzo (NASDAQ)- ~9.79
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 39.63
Big Lots (NYSE} - 29.58
Bob Evans (NASDAQ} - 28.83
BorgWarner (NYSE} - 37.03
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ} 13.14
Champion (NASDAQ}- 1.51
Charming Shops (NASDAQ} 5.73
City Holding (NASDAQ} - 32.22
Collins (NYSE} - 53.51
DuPont (NYSE} - 32.82
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.81
Gannett (NYSE) - 16.04
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.37
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 23.42
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.21
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.82
Limited Brands (NYSE} - 18.60
Norfolk Southern (N'YSE} - 49.87

Cold with lows in the upper
20s. Temperature rising into
the mid 30s after midnight.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Thursday...A chance of
rain showers in the morning. Cloudy with a chance
of snow showers. Highs in
the mid 30s. Temperature
falling into the upper 20s in
the afternoon. Chance of
precipitation 40 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of snow
showers after midnight. Cold
with lows in the lower 20s.
Chance of snow 40 percent.

Community
Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Jan. 28
· POMEROY -Alpha IOTA
Masters will meet at 11 :30
a.m. at Bob Evans in Mason.

'

'

Public meetings
Tuesday, Jan.26
POMEROY Oh-KAN
Coin Club will meet at 6:30
at the Pomeroy Library for a
meeting and auction.
Friday, Jan. 29
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
township building.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two public hearings at the
Meigs County Commissioners Office, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio on Wednesday,
February 10.2010 at 1:15 P.M. for the purpose of providing the public information and
receiving comments as to the Notice of Availability of FY 2010 Community Housing
Improv~menl Program Funds (CHIP) from the Ohio Department of Development,
Office and Community Partnerships.
The Community Housing Improvement Program provides grant funding to qualified
public agencies for improvement and provision of affordable housing for low to
moderate income households and secondary activities. The CHIP Grant ceiling for each
qualified applicant is $500.000. Eligible activities include: Homeownership Assistance;
Owner Occupied Rehab; Home Repair; Tenant Based Rental Assistance; Rental
Rehabilitation; Public Rehabilitation: Fair Housing Activities; and Infrastructure
activities.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on February 10.2010 to make
ions and to provide public input on various activities which may be undertaken
this program. If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped
material, assistive listening device, other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria
Kloes, Clerk, prior to February 10, 2010 at 740-992-2895 in order to ensure that your
needs will be accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Written comments will be accepted until I :00 P.M., February 10,2010, and may be
mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Tom Anderson, President
Meigs County Commissioners

..

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
- 20.38
BBT (NYSE} - 27.57
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 10.61
Pepsico (NYSE} - 60.23
Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.11
Rockwell (NYSE) - 46.63
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ} - 8.60
Royal Dutch Shell - 58.34
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 96.62
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 52.88
Wendy's (NYSE} - 4.59
WesBanco (NYSE)- 13.41
Worthington (NYSE) - 15.38
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for Jan. 22, 2010, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

.,
Tell Someone You Love Them
InA Special Way...

(Your Way)~ On February 12th

'

With A Sentinel Love Message!

Church events
Thursday, Jan. 28
MIDDLEPORT - Heath
United Methodist Men's
Group, community dinner for
all, 6 p.m. at the church,
speaker B~ent Watson,
Foothills assistant district
superintendent of United
Methodist Church, spaghetti,
Texas toast, desserts served.

when you can afford to
share an apartment with one
or two of them, they probably will be very disappointed if you seem to be choosing your parents over your
close friends. It's not really
what you are doing, but that
may be how it will seem to
them.
So, before things tum ugly
between you and your
posse, it may be time to at
least begin to look ahead to
the future and make a few
tentative plans for a possible
timetable. You may live with
your parents the rest of their
lives, or you may fall in love
and get married and move
right into your first home
with a husband. And in
between, there are countless
other possibilities. Perhaps
you have never become
unhappy with your arrangement because you really
believe that you can't afford
to move out, and you don't
want to be feeling bad about
it. Or maybe you are very
dependent and don't want to
face those issues. So, first,
get to ''know thyself.''
(c) 2010 by King Features
Syndicate

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3 INCH AD ...$24.00

2 INCH AD ...$18.00

(Approximately 60 words)

TOMYHONEY

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow is straight
and true. In bringing this
thought of love to you.
I'm sorry about the other
night. When we had that
terrible fight.
A Tribune love message
was a good idea. To
show you just how much
I love you. Maria

Writing this love
message gives me the
opportunity to tell you
JUSt how much I love
you and enjo)' being
• your husband. I know I
sometimes don't show it
but I really do.
Happy Valentine's Day!

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A

WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER.

ADS MUST BE RECEIVED
BY 5:00P.M.
TUESDAY
FEBRUARY 9, 2010

--------------------------------,
Write your Message Below:

Mail or drop off Your Love Message and pre-payment to:

The Daily Sentinel
II 1 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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Name: _ _- - = - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Phone:
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Page

The Daily Sentinel

Tu esday, January 26,

2 010

The Daily Sentinel
Let il,OUr voiee
be hea:rdr ...
writei/OJJ.r

111 Court Street · Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

A VE1rt

LARGE
CHECK ...

con1fress:ttUltl ...

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy.M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Con,{!l'ess shall make 110 law respecting au
establisllmetrt of religiou, or. prohibiting the free
exercise tlrereof; or abridging tire..freedom of speech,
or of tire press; o1· the right of the people peaceably
to assemble, a11d to petition tile Govemmeut
..for tl redress o..f.s?.riermuces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUR OP I N I ON

No U.S. 35 toll
Dear Editor:
I am opposed to putting tolls on the U.S. 35 upgrade
to pay for completion. Why not wait until funds are
available to complete the Henderson to the Buffalo
Bridge section?
Was this road considered for the Stimulus Funds as
was CoJTidor H for which I understand West Virginia
turned dO\\ n ~orne $21 mill ion because the necessary
preparauon \\ ork for the t\\ o bridges that would ha\ e
been em ered had not been completed? \Vith the number of deaths recorded on old U.S. 35 should not this
project have been a major consideration in allocating
the rederal Stimulus funds a\ ailable to West Virginia
e'en over the C01Tidor H project?
Del. Brad) Paxton of Putnam Count) indicated that
an option would be to \\ait until there is enough monc)
to complete the U.S. 35 upgrade. But he didn't "think
that's what the people want." Have the people of Mason
and Putnam counties been given a voice on whether
they want a toll road? I lave the people of West Virginia
been gi\'cn a voice? Wh) not put this to a vote?
I further suggest that no toll should be charged on the
completed section from the Buffalo Bridge to W.Va. 34
since this has already been paid for with matching federal funds and our taxes.
My concern is th1s question: "Will this be another
West Virginia Turnpike situation with tolls on the US 35
upgrade for the rest of our lives'?" Having been stuck on
the turnpike for some 20 hours on Dec. 18.2009. I feel
another We~t Virginia toll road is ill-advised. With the
prospect of another toll road will we be depending upon
outside road commission for maintenance. upkeep, and
sno\\ removal as we ha\'e with the West Virginia
Turnpike?
Gene Zopp
Gallipolis FerQ , W.Va.

lZ.EMEMBERING

And if )OU, personal\), are unsure
when life begins, con ider Reagan's
recommendation: ''If there ·s even a
Given the somber anniversaf\ of question about \\hen human hfe
Roc v. Wade - source of 40 million begin'&gt;, isn't it our duty to en· on the
ab011ions since 1973
I thought I'd side of life?''
share an excellent but forgotten
Reagan "a" the onslaught against
speech hy Pres1dent Ronald Reagan. America's unborn as so ferocious that
The
~pecch\\ riter
''as Peter he fa\ ored a ''human life amendRobinson. featured guest of our ment" to the Con..,titution. At the
Reagan Lecture tf1is ) ear.
time. this seemed extreme. but we've
Reagan':-. remarks. made in July learned that unless amendments are
1987 to pro-1 ifc leaders. are moving attached to bill after bill - the Hyde
to read anu watch. They are prescient Amendment.
the
Stupak
in ' light of the widening abortion Amendment-anonymous powers
abyss we face under the Obama ensure all sorts of "unintended'' conadministration and Pclosi-Reid sequences. including taxpayer fundCongress.
ing of abortion.
Reagan began with a reminder I
Speaking of such funding, Reagan
often share with my secular-liberal also acknowledged h1s "Mexico City
friends. He told the pro-life acti\ ists: policy.'' which blocked U.S. taxpayer
"[M [any of you. perhaps most. never funding of international "family plandreamed of getting imolved iri poli- ning" groups. One of the first things
tics. What brought you into politics President Obama did \\as rescind that
was a matter of conscience. a matter policy - immediate!) after the
of fundamental conviction.''
~larch for Life last January.
That point cannot be underscored
Another polic) Reagan highlighted
enough. Fe" things rile me more than in his speech was the prohibition of
demands that pro-lifers - especiall) federal nds to finance abortion" in
those motivated by their faith - keep the
ct of Columbia. This, too.
out of politics: Quite the contral), was
urned last year. thanks to a
many did just that. quietly goiqg to Democratic Congress and president
church and reading their Bibles. until that rejected funding for school
one day they awoke to learn the vouchers for poor children in
Supreme Court had passed Roe v. Washington. DC. but supported fundWade ... and the hellacious assault in!! for abortions for the mothers of
was on. They entered pro-He those children.
activism reluctuntly. as a reaction to
Yes. I know the contrast i~ breathwhat was thrust upon their culture taking. but it's true.
Reagan talked more about abortion
and country. The last thing they wanted was to get involved in politics. The funding. and specifically "the socalled Grove Cit) [College I kgislaDeath Culture came to them.
Reagan next added: ''Many of tiQO sponsored by St'IHitor [Ted]
you've been attacked for being sin- Kennedy." "This bill,'' noted Reagan.
gle-issue acth ists or single-issue vot- ""' ould meaJi that all hospitals and
ers. But I ask: What single issue colleges rcceh in~ federal funds. C\'en
those "'ith religious affiliations,
could be of greater significance?"
A2reed. For me. the life issue is my '' ould be open to Jawsuits if the)
starting point. of far greater value failed to provide abortions." The usuthan where a politician stands on all) affable Reagan said: "this one
social security or the minimum wage. real!) touche my temperature conObviously, other issue&lt;; matter. The trol."
Needless to say. all of this is
right to life, however. is the first and
most fundamental of rights, without extreme!) relevant right now, thanks
which other rights are impossible. to how Americans voted on
B Y D R. PAUL KENGOR

CE"'TER FOR VIS ON' AND VALUES

Today is Tuesday, Jan. 26, the 26th day of 2010. There
are 339 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 26, 1950, India officially proclaimed itself a
republic as Rajendra Prasad took the oath of office as
president.
On this date:
In 1837, Michigan became the 26th state.
In 1861, Louisiana seceded from the Union.
In 1870, Virginia rejojned the Union.
In 1925, actor Paul Newman was born in Shaker
Heights, Ohio.
In 1942, the first American expeditionary force to go to
Europe during World War II went ashore in Northern Ireland.

Thought for Today: ''As long as men are free to
ask what they must, free to say what they think, free
to think what they will, freedom can never be lost,
and science can never regress. " - J. Robert
Oppenheimer, American physicist (1904-1967).

LETTERS TO TH E EDITOR

OK. 1 ADMIT IT,

I TCX)I&lt; STEROIDS.

The Daily Sentinel
&lt;usPs 213-9so&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

:\o,ember 4. 2008.
There "'as much more Reagan said
in this speech. but I'll clo e "'ith t\\0
poignant thoughts:
"Many who turn to abortion do so
in han·o" ing circumstances,'' Reaean
emphasized: including \\Omen "nlisled b) inaccurate information.»
"lWje must remind those who disagree with us. and sometimes e\en
ourselves. that we do not seck to condemn. \Ve do not seek to sit in judg
mcnt.. .. [I]t is our duty to rise abm c
bitterness and reproach."
Pro-lifers must heed that call.
respecting the human dignity ot
everyone. All victims reyuire love
and charity. On that. Reagan finished
with this:
''I'd like to leave \\ ith ) ou a quotation that means a great deai to me.
These are the "'ords of my friend. the
late Terence Cardinal Cooke. of Ne\\
York. 'The gift oflife. God's
gift. is no Jess beautiful \\
accompanied b~ illness or
hunger or pO\ ert~, mental or ph) sical
handicaps. loneliness or old age.
Indeed. at these time-... human lift;.
gains extra splendor as it requires our
special care. concern. and reverence.
It is in and through the weakest of
human 'esseb that the Lord contin ...
ues to re\ eal the po'' er of Hi" IO\ e ....
Here \\as a \\arning against the
pallbearers of the progrcssh e death.,
march. from Planned Parenthood.
founder Margaret S.mger-whn
hoped to expunge the gene pool of
''human \\·eeds"- to the cuthambi&lt;l
precipice to '" hich America is being
dragged. It "tarts \\ ith the \\ eakest ol
\essels: the infant in its mother·~
womb.
Timeless words of wisdom to bear
in mind this week, as America strug
gJes to sui'\ he another \ear ol Roe '.
\\'ade.
•
(Dr. Paul Kenr:or is profi ~;)Or oj
political .)cience and e.\ecwh e director of the Cemer for \'i;)ion &amp; Value~
at Grove Cit) College. His book'
mclude "God and Ronald Rear:m.1 ''
"God and Georrt.e \l. Bu&lt;&gt;lz.'' l
"God and Hillm)' Clinton.")
"I.V. . ,.I&lt;lll-"

'

Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters are
subject to editing, must be Signed and Include address and telephone
number No uns1gned letters w111 be published Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You• letters
will not be accepted tor publicatiOn.

Correction Polley

V. WADE

Forgotten warning from Ronald Reagan

TODAY IN H ISTORY

Reader Service

l~OE

Tl-IE CJ.IILD BORN TO T~E
WOMAN I '-lAO AN
AFF"AIR WITJ-1 ? MINE.

I SENSE
VOTEQ
D15r-0NTENTIW

Our ma1n concern In all stones 1s to Published every morning, Monday
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
1n a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohto. Second-class postage
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Our main number Is
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Reporter: Bnan Reed Ext 14
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Tuesday, January 26,

2 010

Obituaries
William Thomas Shelton
William Thomas Shelton. 78. of Logan, passed away Jan.
25, 2010 at Select Specialty Hospital, Columbus.
Born March 8, 1931 in Ross County, he was the son of
the late Truman T. and Mary Belle (Pence) Shelton. Bill
was the manager for Hocking Auto Parts for 34 years and
d worked as a clerk for Saving Hardware in Logan. He
a US Anny Veteran of the Korean War and a member
•
e American Legion. He attended St. John Catholic
Church in Logan.
He is survived by his loving wife Carol Jean (Sater)
Shelton; daughter. Debra Ann Shelton, Middleport; stepson . Michael Thomas (Ammie) O'Donnell. Sherrodsville;
step-daughter, Debra Denise (Jon) Juracich, Columbus;
four grandchildren. Ashleigh, Alyssa, Jimmy O'Donnell.
Kyle Juracich; several special friends and relatives and special pet "Pepper.''
In addition to his parents. he was preceded by wives
Betty and Martha Shelton, and one sister, Margaret
Wilcoxen.
A funeral service will be held at 10 a.m., Thursday. Jan.
28. 2010 at the Roberts Funeral Home, 60 West Hunter
Street, Logan, with Pastor Don Byard officiating. A
01ristian vigil service will be held at 8 p.m., Wednesday
in the funeral home with Deacon Donald A. Roberts.
Friends may call from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. on
Wednesday at the funeral home. Burial will be in Oak
Grove Cemetery, Logan. In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the Hocking County Hospice c/o 282
Sells Road, Lancaster, 43130.
Letters of condolence may be left at www.robertsfuneralhomelogan .com.

Marvin Graham Burt

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Wai-Mart cuts about 11 ,200 Sam's Club staffers
NEW YORK (AP) Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will
cut about II .200 jobs at
Sam's Club warehouses as
it turns over the task of instore product demonstrations to an outside marketing company.
The move is an effort to
improve sales at Sam's Club
and comes on top of a decision to close 10 undcrperforming warehouse locations. which cost I .500 jobs.
The cuts represent about
I 0 percent of the warehouse
club operator's 110.000
staffers across its 600
stores. That includes 10,000
workers, mostly part-timers,
who offer food samples and
showcase products to customers. The company also
eliminated 1 ,200 workers
who recruit new members.
Employees were told the
news at mandatory meetings on Sunday morning.
"In the club channel,
demo sampling events are a
very important part of the
experience," said Sam's
Club CEO Brian Cornell in
a phone interview with The
Associated Press. ''Shopper

Events specializes in this
area and they can take our
sampling program to the
next level."
Shopper Events, based in
Rogers, Ark.. currently
works with Wal-Mart's
namesake stores on in-store
demonstrattons. Sam's Club
is looking to the company to
1mprove sampling in areas
such as electronics. personal
wellness products and food
items to entice shoppers to
spend more.
Sam ·s Club has underperformed the Walmart chain
in the U.S. and abroad.
Cornell has been working to
improve results since taking
the helm in early 2009.
introducing new store formats, price cuts and offering
more variety and more
brands of items from takehome meals to baked goods.
As consumers eat out less
in the shaky economy, Sam's
Club has tried to steal customers from grocery chains
and rival warehouse stores
like Costco Wholesale Corp.
by offering more everyday
goods like food and health
and beauty items and paring

its assortment of general
merchandise like furnirure
and clothes .
But during Wal-Mart
Stores' most recent quatter,
revenue at the Sam's Club
division slipped nearly 1
percent to S 11.55 billion
while U.S. Walmart stores
posted a 1.2 percent sales
increase to $61.81 billion.
"Sam's has been the relative laggard. and it has lagged
relative to its direct competitors. Costco and the smaller
BJ's (Wholesale Club)," said
Craig Johnson, president of
retail consultanc) Customer
Growth Partners.
The move to outsource its
food sampling efforts is a
way for the company to tout
its fresh food offerings in a
cost-effective
manner,
Johnson said.
"'Fresh· is where the real
competitive battles are
being fought in the club sector," he said.
Shopper Events
will
launch a new demo program
called ''Tastes and Tips" with
new carts, signs, unifmms
and a trained team. said
Cornell. He said the move

was not made to save money.
"It's not a cost cutting
measure, its really an
inve~tment in enhancing our
demo program,'' he said.
Cornell added that Shopper
Events plans to hire "roughly the same number of people.. cut. and said Sam's
Club workers are invited to
apply for those positions.
Cornell said Sam's Club
decided to eliminate its membership
recruiting
unit
because "we have found that
we can more effectively drive
membership through targeted
member acquisition events
and by increasing our partner
membership programs.''
"I feel betrayed,'' said
Sally Grueling, 56, who had
worked at Sam's Club for
nine years, most recently in
Hilliard, Ohio as a new
business membership rep.
In a memo to employees,
Cornell said eligible workers will receive severance
pay and benefits, and that
the company will help them
find opportunities at other
Sam's Clubs and in Walmart
stores, in addition to
Shopper Events positions.

arvin Graham BUlt, 84. of Pomeroy died Jan. 24,2010.
s residence following a brief illness.
e was the son of the late Herman Burt and Ruby Recker
Burt, and was retired from American Electric Power. He
was a member of Trinity Congregational Church, a veteran
of the U.S. Navy, and a member of the VFW.
He is survived by a daughter Melanie (Larry) Davis, and
sons, Jeff (Janelle), Randy (Jacki) and David (Lita) Burt.
five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. In addition
to his parents he was preceded in death by his wife, Lois.
A memorial service will be held at Trinity
Congregational Church at 3 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 27.
Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to the Trinity Church or the VFW.

4

Deaths
Vivian V. Fry
Vivian Y. Fry, 80, of Columbus, formerly of Mason. died
Jan. 23, 2010.
There will be no visitation. Graveside service will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Sunrise Memorial Gardens in
Letart, W.Va. Pastor Charles Hargraves will officiate.

•

E. Mae Morgan

E. Mae Morgan, 87, passed away Friday, Jan. 22,2010.
at Overbrook Nursing Home in Middleport.
A funeral service will be held at 1I a.m., Thursday. Jan.
28. 2010, at Phillips Funeral Home. 1004 South Seventh
Street, Ironton. Burial will follow in Sugar Creek
Cemetery. Friends may call from 10 a.m.-11 a.m .,
Thursday, at the funeral horne. To offer condolences to the
family, visit www.phillipsfuneralhome.net.

Local Briefs
Trustees organize
RUTLAND - The Rutland Township Trustees held its
organizational meeting recently with Joe Bolin being elected president and Steve Lambert being named vice president.
Charles Barrett is the third trustee. Opal Dyer is the fiscal
officer. Regular meetings were set for the first Monday of
each month at 5 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

Visitor restrictions lifted
ATHENS - O'Bleness Memorial Hospital has lifted the
ation on numbers of visitors as well as on visitors
r the age of 18 that was previOusly in place due to
•
widespread HlNl influenLa.
Effective immediately, patients may have normal visitation. Visitor restrictions may be reinstated if HlN1
becomes a problem in the future.

Retirement party
POMEROY - A retirement party will be held for
Margaret Parker from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday at the Meigs
County Extension Office. Parker worked at the Extension
Office from 1989 to Jan. 15,2010.

Tax assistance available
POMEROY - Again this year the RSVP volunteers at
the Senior Citizens Center will be available to assist senior
citizens with their tax preparation. The volunteers have
been trained through the AARP tax assistance program.
T.hey will be available every Tuesday and Thursday.
Appointments will be scheduled from 9 to 11 a.m. beginning Feb. 2 through Aprill5. Call992-2161 to schedule an
appointment.

Income taX rrom PageAt
•
pick-up service to pay a $50 annual permit fee to
operate in the village. The amendment would raise this
annual fee to $100. There are currently nine independent
trash collectors legally operating in the village. The original ordinance was approved in J974.
Council approved transferring $10,000 from the general
t(l the street fund.
Council approved annual appropriations for 2010 at $2.2
million, which is up from last year's appropriatiom. Clerk
Treasurer Kathy Hysell attributed some of this to federal
stimulus funds which were received by the village for a
water meter replacement project.
(Editor's note: This is the first of Mo stories about
Monday's meeting of Pomeroy Village Council.)

Beth Sargent/photo

Nearly 100 people packed the Riverbend Arts Council building last night for a Zumba Class offered by the Wellness
Center arm of the Meigs County Council on Aging. Zumba fanatics of all ages attended, enjoying a DJ and pa rty atmosphere while burning calories.

Zomba from Page AI
beinl! taught at over 40,000
locailons in 75 countries.
One of those locations is
the Riverbend Arts Council
which hosts the class from
5:30-7:30
p.m.
every
Monday night. Classes are
for all ages, cost $5 and are
offered by the Meigs
County Council on Aging
Wellness Center. The Meigs
Wellness Center is branchmg out and offering Zurnba
classes at 5 p.m. and 6:15

p.m . on Wednesday at the
Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis.
Also beginning on Feb. 4.
classes will be offered at 6
p.m. on Thursdays at Meigs
High School.
According to Zumba's
website, celebrity fitness
trainer. "Beto" Perez. stumbled upon the concept of
Latin-inspired dance-fitness in his native Cali.
Colombia in the midl990s. The story goes, ··one

day. he walked into his aerobics class and realized he
had forgotten his aerobics
music. Thinking quickly.
he grabbed whatever tapes
he had in his backpack.
Be to's tapes were comprised of songs he loved.
the traditional Latin salsa
and merengue music he listened to all his life. But it
was a challenge to improvise a whole class on the
spot using non-traditional

aerobics music. Be to rose
to the challenge and from
this last-minute improvisation a re\ olutionary new
concept in fit ness was born
the Zumba FitnessParty. The class soon
became the most popular
class at his fitness fac ility."

Oasis 2010 from Page AI
all across the nation, but
experienced somewhat of a
decline in recent years. In
fact. the ministry held just
one national event last year
- a stadium conference in
Boulder. Colo.
One Oasis organizer. who
asked not to have his name
published because he didn't
wish to bring attention to
himself. said the local conference is an effort to
spread the gospel of Jesus
Christ
and
encourage
Christians to become more
involved in ministry.
The main difference
between Oasis and Promise
Keepers, according to the
organizer, is that Oasis is
open to both men and
women.
While Elizabeth Chapel is
the sole financial sponsor
for Oasis 2010, the official

said there are at least 13
local churches from several
denominations involved in
the effort. He said he
expects to have at least 200
volunteers
from
area
churches.
Oasis will also include an
expo during which local
churches and businesses
affiliated with the event can
showcase their ministries
and services.
Oasis 2010 is scheduled
to begin at 7 p.m. on
Friday. March 19. Doors at
the University of Rio
Grande Lyne Center will
open at 6 p.m .
Tickets cost $15 each and
are available through the
Web site oasis20 l.org, or at
any of the following locations: Farmer's Bank in
Gallipolis
and
Point
Pleasant. Willa's Bible

Upgrades from Page At
serve our readers and advertisers," Lopez said. "We
appreciate your patience during this process.''
In addition to the local
publications. OVP will soon
be printing the followmg sister newspapers in the
Heartland
Publications

chain: Portsmouth Daily
Times (Ohio). Community
Common (Ohio), The Hazard
Herald (Ky.). Floyd County
Times (Ky.) and an affiliated
shopper publication in Floyd
County. OVP will also print
the The Telegram newspaper
based m Jackson, Ohio

..... _ - - ----------···-..-........-------

Book Store in Point
Pleasant, Grace United
Methodist
Church
in
Gallipolis, River Valley
High School (contact Aaron
Walker)
and
Gallia
Academy High School
(contact Josh Riffe).
Ticket information is also
avalable by contacting Amy
Saunders at (740) 2561565, or by e-mail oaststickets@yahoo.com.

Prnonallud F 11n•rol Stn·lcr.

Middleport Pomcro~
•
992-5141 992-5+W
-~·.and=aniel.com

Proud to be a
part of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

NOTICE
The Ohio Department
of Health, Wonien
Infants and Children
(WIC) Program is
currently accepting applications for
farmers to transact and redeem fruit
and vegetable vouchers issued to WIC
participants. Completed applications
must be postmarked or received no
later than February 1, 2010.
To request an application contact
Robin Ridenour at (614) 644-8285 or
Kadie Donahoe at (614) 644-7570.

__.--...._....._....,;,;...__ _ _ _ _ _ __.._ __

....._ _ _ _ _ _11111111...._11111111. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._

..

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

------

- ~ ~-

--

----

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 26,

Obama plans to help a
middle class 'under assault'
BY BEN FELLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Declaring America's middle
class is ··under assault,'"
President Barack Obama
unveiled plans Monday to
help hurting families pay
their bills, save for retirement and care for their kids
and aging parents. His comments
previewed
Wednel&gt;day's State of the
Union Address.
Obama 's proposals won ·r
create jobs. but he said they
could "re-establish some of
the security that's slipped
away." His remarks aimed
to lift the nation's dour
mood and show he is in
touch with the daily struggles of millions of people as
resentment runs high about
lost jobs and the economy.
The initiatives amount to
a package of tax credits,
spending expansions and
new mandates on employers
to encourage retirement
savings by workers. Most of
them will be included in
Obama's budget for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, and
they will require approval
from Congress. Obama will
release that budget Feb. 1.
The president's latest rollout of ideas served as a preview of his ptime-time State
of the Union address. The
economic elements of that
speech will also cover
Obama's plans to boost job
creation and reduce swelling
budget deficits - areas of
concern to the public.
Obama's address will outline his second-year agenda
across a spectrum of issues,
including tighter rules on
Wall Street behavior and a
push for financial discipline
in Washington. He also is
expected to touch on the
issue of gays in the military.
In an interview Monday.
Obama defended his agenda
and said he would not support only smaller issues that
avoid controversy. "I will
not slow down in terms
going after the big problems." he told ABC News.
Among the president's
economic ideas:
• Nearly doubling the tax
credit that families making
under $85,000 can receive
for child care costs, with
some help for families earning up to $115,000, too.
• Capping the size of periodic federal college loan
repayments at I0 percent of

AP photo

President Barack Obama announces economic initiatives
for struggling middle class families Monday in the
Eisenhower Executive Office Building across from the
White House in Washington.
borrowers· discretionary
income to make payments
more affordable.
• lncreasmg b} $1 .6 billion the money pumped into
a federal fund to help working parents pay for child
care, covering an estimated
235,000 additional children.
• Requiring employers
who don't offer 40 l (k)
retirement plans to offer
direct-deposit IRAs for their
employees, with exemptions for the smallest firms.
• Spending more than
$100 million to help people
care for their elderly parents
and get support for themselves as well.
The White House maintained that its imperative
still is to create jobs.
Unemployment remains in
double digits, and the economy is the public's top concern. Yet Obama said that
squeezed families need help
in other ways, too: paying
for child care, helping out
aging parents, saving for
retirement, paying off college debt.
What matters ultimately
to people, Obama said, is
"whether they see some
progress in their own lives.
So we're going to keep
fighting to rebuild our economy so that hard work is
once again rewarded, wages
and incomes are once again
rising. the middle class is
once again growing."
Less clear was how much
the programs would cost or
where the money would
come from.

Officials deferred comment until the release of the
budget.
Obama, whose poll numbers are off, is trying to
sharpen his economic message in a way that shows
people he is on their side.
White House officials say
they know people have been
turned off by the long,
messy fight for health insurance reform. Plus, there's a
perception that families
have gotten far less help
than big banks.
The economy is growing,
but not fast enough to bring
down widespread joblessness. The unemployment
rate is at 10 percent and
most economists say it
could take until at least
2015 for it to return to more
normal levels.
The plans Obama set
forth came from the yearlong work of a task force,
led by Vice President Joe
B iden, that was charged
with helping the middle
class.
··we're talking about dignity. We're talking about
security,"
Biden said.
''We're talking about knowing your pension is safe,
your health insurance is
reliable, your elderly parents and your children are
going to be cared for, your
neighborhood is safe."'
Obama 's initiatives also
include expanding and simplifying a tax credit that
matches retirement savings,
and making 40 J(k) rules
easier to understand.

Ohio Briefs
2010 GOP contenders
shaking out
COLUMBUS (AP) - One of the two
Republican candidate:-. tor Ohio attorney
general has decided to run for state auditor, avoiding a primary for fonner U.S.
Sen. Mike DeWine.
The decision gives DeWine a clear
shot to face Democratic Attorney
General Richard Cordray in the fall.
Delaware County Prosecutor David
Yost announced he · d switch races
Monday. He drew criticism from
~epublican state Rep. Seth Morgan and
hts Tea Party backers. Morgan, of Huber
Heights, jumped into the auditor's race
last week after incumbent Mary Taylor
was picked as running mate by GOP
gubernatorial candidate John Kasich.
Democratic auditor candidate David
Pepper of Cincinnati was outraising
Taylor roughly 3-to-1 when she made
the move.

Some school districts
reroute education aid
COLUMBUS (AP) - State officials
say 1 13 Ohio school districts are
diverting $22 million in federal stimulus money intended for special-education services and spending it on other
programs.
It\ a small portion of the $438 million
that schools are getting statewide for
special-Ed. But advocates for the disabled are upset.
Jennifer Cohen. a policy analyst for
the New America Foundation in
Washington D.C .. calls it sneaky.
The U.S. Disabilities Education Act
allows districts that get additional federal dollars to reduce their local spending
by up to 50 percent of the increase.
The state Education Department says
the law is intended to give eligible districts flexibility and that any money
spent on general education also will benefit special-needs students.

Neighbor: Boy
blames himself
for river deaths
FREMONT (AP) - A neighbor says
an 11-year-old Ohio boy who watched
two younger brothers and his best friend
fall through ice on a river feels responsible for their deaths.
Neighbor Toni Singleton says she visited D' Andre Everett in a hospital hours
after the Sunday accident. She says
Everett told her it was his idea to go out
on the Sandusky River near Fremont
and that he was collecting dead fish
from the icy surface when the others
fell through.

Sandusky County Sheriff Kyle
Overmyer says the older brother ran
home to get help and at least one neighhor tried to toss a rope to save the three
boys in the water.
The boys were identified 7
Jay'Den Taylor·Everett: his brother,
year-old Da'Vontae Everett; and 10year-old Rafel Villanueva, all of
Fremont.

Diocese: No
landmark status for
Cleveland churches
CLEVELAND ( AP) - The Roman
Catholic Diocese of Cleveland says it
doesn't want the city to grant landmark
status to its churches.
Cleveland's Landmarks Commission
is recommending that six Catholic
churches be designated as historical city
landmarks, which would give them some
protection against demolition or structural changes.
Four of the six churches have been
closed or ordered closed by the diocese
as it reconfigures itself because of fewer
priests and population shifts.
If the empty buildings are declared
landmarks. selling them could be difficult because the resttictions placed on
the property might narrow the uumber
possible buyers.
In a letter to the city, diocese fmance
officer John Maimon says he doesn't
approve of the landmark proposal.

Government
studies Manhattan
Project park sites
DAYTON (AP)- The government is
exploring national park status for sites
involved in the World War II-era
Manhattan Project nuclear bomb
research effort.
The sites being examined are Los
Alamos National Laboratory and town
site in New Mexko . the Hanford site in
Washington
state,
Oak
Ridge
Reservation in Tennessee and assorted
sites in Dayton.
The top-secret project resulted in scientific and technological advancements
that ushered in the atomic age and
helped the United States win the war.
The Manhattan Project operated from
December 1942 until September 1945
and employed 130,000 workers at ·
height.
Research done at several laboratories
in Dayton produced polonium used to
ttigger the first atomic explosion in 1945
and the bomb dropped over Nagasaki.
Congress directed the park ~ite study
in consultation with the Department of
Energy.

Republicans head to Waikiki to workon strategy
BY HERBERT

A.

SAMPLE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONOLULU - A hightax,
big-government
Democratic bastion for five
decades and President
Barack Obama's birthplace,
Hawaii would seem a curifor
the
ous
place
Republican
National
Committee to hold its winter meeting.
But riding high after
Republican Scott Brown's
surprise victory in last
week's Senate race in
another Democratic stronghold, Massachusetts, 168
RNC delegates are arriving
VVednesday unconcerned
about this isolated island
state's past political proclivities.
On
the
heels
of
Massachusetts plus GOP
triumphs in New Jersey
and Virginia governor's
races last fall, Republicans
invigorated
after
are
national elections that saw
them lose control of
Congress and then the
White House. Yet the party
faces deep internal divisions and other problems at
the opening of the 20 I 0
election season
Just
like
in
Massachusetts, Virginia and
New Jersey, the GOP has
tasted success in recent
years in Hawaii in gubernatorial elections. In 2002,
Hawaii
elected
Linda
Lingle its first Republican
governor since William
Quinn in 1959, when statehood was granted. Lingle
was re-elected by an almost
2-to-1 margin in 2006.
The gathering at one of
Waikiki's most prominent

beachfront resorts will be a
first for the RNC. which for
years sidestepped requests
by its Hawaii members to
bring its winter meeting to a
warm climate. "The concern
was appearances," said
Travis Thompson of Maui,
an RNC member from 2000
to 2008.
The lush, exotic locale
doesn't cover up polls
showing that Republicans
poorly
as
fare
as
Democrats at a time when
candidates' ticket for success with voters is distanc·
ing themselves from both
Conservatives
parties.
backed by the anti-establishment ··tea party" movement are
challenging
favored Republican:s in
House and Senate primaries across the country.
Some Republicans have
said they also may demand
a vote on a resolution to
rebuke RNC Chairman
Michael Steele over his
book and promotional tour
for it. Steele, critical of the
last two GOP presidents
and the GOP nominee in
2008,
wrote
that
Republicans lost their way
during most of the years
following President Ronald
Reagan's administration.
Others may propose resolutions that would bar party
contributions
to
Republicans who don't
meet a conservative litmus
test on a number of hot-button issues, including abortion, health care reform, climate change and illegal
immigration.
The resolutions would
"address the need for the
RNC to work to re-establish
our conservative bona fides

,

by ensuring that we only
support candidates for
office that are conservative," said James Bopp, a
lead supporter of the eff01t
and an RNC vice chair from
Indiana.
Steele's choice of Hawaii
for the meeting has also
upset some Republicans.
"Do I want voters to
think that Republicans do
nothing but go to beach
resorts in January? No,''
said Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia, the No. 2 House
Republican. He clashed
with Steele after the chairman said during his book
tour that Republicans
wouldn't win control of the
House this fall, a remark
Steele quickly took back.
In a recent interview
with The Associated Press,
Steele defended his decision to hold the meeting in
Hawaii. He said he wanted
to recognize the hard work
of committee members
from Hawaii and from
U.S. territories who frequently travel to the mainland for party events. He
said he also wanted to celebrate Lingle, an ally who
is in the last year of her
second term.
"People are trying to poison that and make it look
like it's some nefarious payback and all this other stupid silly stuff. It's not any of
that," Steele said.
Asked if he was concemed about the optics of
the RNC gathering in a
tropical place given the
recession, Steele said: "No.
Hawaii's going through a
recession, too. So we're
going to help the economy a
little bit."

2010

((In God

Invite them
your church.
Touch their souls W"th God's Word.

''We will shout.for joy wli we are
~'ictorious and lift up our ba en in the
nze of God.''
Psa 20:5
e ®alltpoh

~ailp

740-446-23'42

'atrihune

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Colts headed to Super Bowl, Page 82
WVU tops OSU, Paage 82

Thesday, January 26, 2010

-E~~ A~~~.~~~2~hlgh Lady Eagles win 4th straight, beat Athens LeBron saves
going on a 13-5 surge in the points apiece to round out the
Cavs in win
Tuesday January
third canto to take a &lt;.:om EHS scoring.
Boys Basketball
mancling 34-16 cushion into
Raven Cline paced Athens
South Point at River Valley, 6 p.m.
over Heat
TUPPERS PLAINS the finale. AHS closed the with nine points, followed by
Meigs at Belpre, p.m.
Hannan at South Gall a, 7:30 p.m.
The Eastern girls basketball
e&lt;:hool varalty apMing evenlllnvolvlng teams
lrom Me1gs, Mason, and Gallia counties.

26

BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

6

game with a 14-10 nm, but Elena Lein with eight markPoca at Po~nt Pleasant, 6 p.m.
team - ranked ninth in
never closed its deficit to ers. Cindy Willis and Emily
trimble at Wahama, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Cross Lanes Chnsllan, 7:30 Division IV in the AP girls
\Vithin single digits the rest Hopton werl! next with four
p.m.
poll - claimed its fourth
of the way.
markers each.
Glrla Basketball
Audrionna Pullins led the
ovcs at Cross Lanes Chnstian, 6 p.m. consecutive victory of the
Sherman at Point Pleasant, 5:45 p.m.
season following Saturday
Lady Eagles \.\ ith a gameEASTERN 44, ATHENS 30
6 5 5 14 - 30
night's 44-30 victoi') over ~..lo.----'~
high 10 points, followed by Athens
Wednesday. January 27
13 8 13 10 - 44
visiting Athens during a TriPullins
Connery
Boys Beaketball
Emeri Connery with eight Eastern
South Gall•a at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
(4·9). Ehza Chnstensen 2,
I Valley Conference non-divi- play. The Lady Bulldogs (4- and Allie Rawson \.\ ith ATHENS
Glrla Basketball
Cl ne 9. C•ndy WIts 4 EfTllly
Gallla Academy at Ironton. 6 p.m.
'i!Onal matchup at the Eagle's 9) \vere also outscored 8-5 in seven. Brenna Holter was Raven
Hopton
4,
Gracie Staten 2 Kayta
Wrestling
the second canto. allowing next with six markers, while Nicholson 1 Jamie S1ndelar 0, Elena Le•n
Logan. Fa•r1and at Gallia Academy, 5 Nest.
The Lady Eagles ( 13-1) the hosts to take a 21-11 Kasey Turley added five 8.EASTERN (13·1) Brenna Holter 6,
p.m.
never trailed in the contest. cushion into the intermission. pomts to the winning cause. Beverly Maxson 0. Audnonna Pullins 10.
Thursday, January 28
Hayley Gillian and Brooke Hayley Gtlhan 4, Kasey Turley 5, Emer•
storming out to a 13-6 advanEHS continued to tind its
Girls Basketball
8, Brooke Johnson 4. Allie
Eastern at Southern, 6 p.m.
tage after eight minutes of rhythm in the second half. Johnson both scored four Connery
Rawson 7
River Valley at Fairland, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant, 5:45 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Friday. January 29
Boys Basketball
Trimble at Eastern, 6:30 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan, 6 p.m.
BY SARAH HAWLEY
River Valley at Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
erford at Southern, 6:30 p.m.
gs at Alexander, 630 p.m.
th Gallia at Teays Valley Christian,
ROCKSPRINGS - The
.30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Hoops Classtc, 7:30 Eastern Eagles ( 12-1) comp.m.
pleted the season sweep of
Hannan at Wahama, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Ironton St Joe, 7:30 p.m.
the Meigs Marauders ( l-12)
Girls Basketball
South Gallia at Teays Valley Chnsuan, 6 on Saturda\ evening at
p.m.
Lari')·
R:
Morrison
Calhoun County at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Gymnasium.
Saturday, January 30
The Eastern Eagles took
Boys Basketball
2-0
lead in the first quarter
Southern at Wahama. 6 p.m.
on a Mtke Johnson twoRiver Valley at Eastern. 6 p.m
Point Pleasant at Hoops ClassiC, TBA
pointer, assisted by Kelly
'
Girls Basketball
Winebrenner. and kept the
Eastern at Me•gs, 6 p.m.
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
lead for the remainder of
South Gallia at Portsmouth Clay, 6 p.m. the contest. Meigs scored
Wrestling
Meigs, Gallia Academy, River Valley at its first basket at the 6: 18
New Lex, 9:30 a.m.
mark of the first on a Jesse
Point Pleasant at North Marion, TBA
Smith two-point goal. The
Eagles led 18-10 at the end
of the first quarter. The
Monday results
Eagles outscored Meigs llGIRLS BASKETBALL
4 in the second quarter to
take a 29-14 half time lead.
Coal Grove 60, R Valley 53
The Eagles controlled the
third period, ending the
Point 50, Sherman 37
quarter on an 11-2 that
Eastern 62, Wahama 31
spanned the final 2:30 of
S Gallia at East, late
the third The final quarter
eigs at Vinton Co, late
saw relatively little scoring
as Eastern outscored the
host s 8-4 in the period.
Eastern shot 25 of 60
( .417) from the field, and 5
of 12 ( .417) from threerange.
The
How a state panel of sports writers and point
Sarah Hawley/photo
broadcasters rates Ohio htgh school Marauders were 11 of 38
boys basketball teams in the weekly ( .289) from the field and Eastern's Kyle Connery dribbles around Meigs' Seth Wells during the first half of Saturday
Associated Press poll of 2010, by
evening's contest at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium at Meigs High School. The Eagles
OHSAA divisions, w1th won-lost record
Please see Eagles, Bl
completed the season sweep of Meigs, defeating the Marauders 66-26.
and total points (first-place votes In
parentheses):

Eastern soars past Marauders, 66-26

4

OhioAP Boys
Basketball Poll

DIVISION I

Saints soaking in landmark victory

1, Cols. Northland (27)
11·0 279
2, Mentor (1)
12·0 216
3, Warren Harding
11-1 210
METAIRIE, La. (AP) 4, Gahanna Lincoln
13·0 165
11-0 128 Sean Payton still hadn't gone
5, Mansfield Sr.
6, Cle. St. Ignatius
8·2 97
home yet when the New
10·2 71
7. Cin. La Salle
Orleans Saints returned to
8, Dublin Coffman
10·2 52
9, Cin. Moeller
11·2 50
work the day after the biggest
10, N. Can. Hoover
10·2 45
win in franchise history.
Drained after an emotional
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Massillon Jackson 37. 12, Cin. O\ertime triumph that set off
Princeton 36. 13, Wester~~JIIe S. 29. 14,
Cin. Wmton Woods 18. 15, Upper celebrations all across the
Art•ngton 15. 16, Marion Hard1ng 13. 17, c1ty. Payton joined family
Can. Timken 12
and friends for dinner downtown and then relaxed in a
•
DIVISION II
hotel.
"There was JUSt so much
1, Day. Dunbar (27)
11·0 278 emotion,"
Payton
said
:2. Day. Chaminade-Julienne 12·1 211
3, Cols DeSates
13·2 192 Monday at the team's subur4tAkr. Buchtel
10·0 183 ban training center. "You
5, F'v'and Seminary
9·1 123 know, when you finish with
6, Defiance (1)
11-1 122
7, Akr. SVSM
7·4 102 the locker room ... you just
try to find your family. My
8, Port Clinton
12·0 93
9, Cle. Benedictine
10·3 83
son's concern is the confetti's
10, Circleville Logan Elm 11·2 37
going to keep us from being
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11. able to play catch on the
St. Bernard Roger Bacon 18. 12, Athens field. That was his concern. It
16. 13 (tte) Middletown Fenw1ck, Tol. was just good to hug them
Libbey 14
and be around the family and
enjoy the time. There never
DIVISION Ill
seems to be enough of it."
"For them to have a chance
1 Ftndlay Liberty-Benton (24) 13·0 274
13·0 201 to be part of it I think it
2 Middletown Mad•son
3. E Can.
11·0 190 makes it really special:·
4, Coldwater
10·1 164
continued.
5. Plymouth
12-0 154 Payton
6, Cin. Taft (2)
10·2 124 "Obviously, the same goes
7, 0akHin(1)
11·1 119 for this upcoming game."
8, Wooster Tnway
10·3 35
The upcoming game hap8, Cols. Grandll•ew Hts.
9·3 35
pens to be the first Super
10, Card•ngton-L~ncoin
12·1 29
Bowl involving the Saints in
Others rece•v•ng 12 or more points. 11 the franchise's 43 years of
(tie) Metamora Evergreen, Otlawa·
Glandorf 26. 13 (tie) Peebles (1), Cle. existence.
VASJ 21 . 15, St. Henry 18. 16, Hamilton
This is only the ninth winning season the club has had.
'
din 17. ~~~;;;~~lsi:·
The 31-28 overtime victoty
over Minnesota on Sunday
night marked the first time
1, Newark Cath. (19)
12·0 255 the
Saints had hosted an NFC
2, Continental (4)
13·0 229
3. McDonald (1)
12·0 171 championship game. So
4, McComb
12·0 150 when it was over, fans in the
5, Ber1in Hiland (1)
12·0 135 Louisiana Superdome and
9. S. Charleston SE (1)
11·1 121
7, Day. Jefferson (1)
9-3 111 residents of a city that
8, Ft. Recovery
11-1 101
already acts on any excuse
~.RuSSia
10·3 33
for a party spilled into the
10. Reedsv•lle Eastern
12·1 27
streets and toasted the Saints·
Others receMng 12 or more po•nts· 11, success.
Youngs. Chnsttan (1) 24 12, Pandora·
Street
was
Bourbon
Gilboa 22 13, Ctn. Seven H1lls 18 14,
Kalida 14. 15 (t•e) M•lier C1ty, Canal mobbed with revelers in
W•nchester Ha111est Prep 13. 17, V•enna

AP photo

New Orleans Saints Mark Brunell holds as kicker Garrett Hartley (5) kicks the winning field
goal during overtime in the NFC Championship NFL football game in New ~rleans,
Sunday. The Saints defeated the Vikings 31-28 to advance to the Super Bowl agamst the
Indianapolis Colts
Saints Jerseys lctling out ed Brett Favre's pass in go out on the town and join in
high-pitched ho\.\ Is of delight Saints tetTitory in the last the celebration. but were so
tired they ended up just stayand stirring up impromptu minute of regulation.
"It was crazy. It was almost ing home and watching
chants of "Who dat say dey
like Mardi Gras:· said Porter, footage of the citywide party
gonna' beat dcm Saints!"
Some exchanged water)- \Vho would know because he on the local news.
"When 1 got outside this
eyed embraces after watch- grew up in south Louisiana.
A number of players. morning. I sU\\ the city was
ing their team pull out a highstakes thriller that appeared including Porter and feiiO\\' still standing so that was a
to be going the Vikings ' way defensi,':'"e back Darren
Please see Saints. Bl
before Trac) P011cr intercept- Sharper. said the) wanted to

________ __ --.............._

MIAMI (AP) - LeBron
James hit two free throws
after a scary tumble with 4.1
seconds left for the winnmg
points, and Dwyane Wade
missed a jumper at the buzzer
as the Eastern Conferenceleading Cleveland Cavaliers
beat the Miami Heat 92-9 1
on Monday night.
Wade finished with 32
points for Miami, all but two
of them in what was an epic
first half shootout between
superstars. But he missed two
big free throws with 41.2 seconds left, part of a 1 of 6
showing from the line by the
Heat in the fourth quarter and it cost Miami dearly.
Shaquille O'Neal scored
19,Daniel Gibson had 15 and
Anderson Varejao finished
with 13 points and lO
rebounds for Cleveland.
Wade had 10 rebounds and
five assists for Miami.
Jermaine O'Neal finished
with 18 points, Michael
Beasley had 16 and Rafer
Alston and Udonis Haslem
each scored 10 for the Heat.
As great as it was at times,
the last half-minute might be
all anyone remembers from
this one.
Guarding his good friend
for the first time all night,
Wade blocked James shot
with 28 seconds left, giving
Miami the ball and a onepoint lead. But on the ensuing
possession, James- defencfmg Wade this time - came
up with a steal, drove in from
halfcourt and caused what
became a frightening scene
for both teams.
James and Wade went
toward the hoop together.
with Quentin Richardson
defending as well. Both
James and Wade landed awkwardly. and James writhed in
pain for about 2 minutes as
the entire Cavs' bench came
out to check on their fallen
leader. He got ur· walked
Richardson's fou off and
made two free throws with
4.1 seconds left for a 92-91
lead.
And when Wade missed a
jumper. over James at the
buzzer. tt was over.
Jermaine O'Neal had 14 in
the first quarter, Wade had 13
in the period, and Miami was
off and running with a 34-24
lead after the first 12 minutes.
That was only the warmup
act.
The second quarter was
pure theater. Wade vs.
LeBron. with everyone else
merely witnesses.
So good was the show that
hardly anyone noticed that
Wade's teammates missed 15
straight shots over a 15?minute stretch, includmg 0
for 12 in the second quarter
alone. Miami missed 12
straight before Wade made a
stepoack jumper with 3:37
left in the half RUt Miami up
40-39, and he followed that
up with a 3-pointer while getting fouled by Jamano Moon
to tgnite the crowd.
James answered, a 3-pointer of his own making it a onepoint game again.
It was on.
Wade made a jumper and
couldn't contain his grin as
the building roared, knowing
it was seeing a glorified game
of l-on-1 between two of the
game's elite. James cleared
everyone else out against
Richardson, rebutting with a
fallaway jumper of hts O\.\n.
Alas. they were JUSt getting
started.
Wade missed a free throw
with 29 seconds left until
intennission, ran down the
rebound and gave Miami
another possesston - which
he capped with a 3-pointer
with 6.6 seconds left. flashing
dueling "3" signs behind his
back after sealing the fourth
30-point half of his career.
unaeterred, with 1.2 ticks
remaining. James hit - what
else? - a 3-pointer of his
own, cutting Miami's lead to
54-50.
Combined. the teams
scored 46 points in the sec
ond quarter. James (20) and
Wade (17) combined for 37
of them.
The pace slowed to a crawl
in the third. James scored
onl&gt; four points on 2 of 6
shooting. Wade went scoreless on four shots.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentin el.com

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

·Colts hoping experience Butler leads No. 11 WVU past No. 21 OSU
pays Super Bowl dividends W~st
wnn~m

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - Da'Sean Butler
scored 21 points and No. 11
Virginia came from I 4
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Polian called that rule "di~ ­ work for the Saints ( 15-3) pomts down to beat No. 21
- The Indianapolis Colts tastcful" and a "fiasco" on in unfamihar surroundings Ohio State 71-65 on
started this season \\ ith his \Veekh radio shu\\ or hotel rooms. New Saturday.
Darryl Bryant added 14
one goal: winning another Monda) night.
Orleans is in the Super
lnd) '.s team plane also is Bowl for the first time in points and Wellington Smith
Super Bowl.
II
for
the
scored
Now they are a victory expected to arrive a little franchise history.
away from a championship earliet than it did three
Another possible prob- Mountaineers (15-3), who
and headed back to the site years ago because of new lem: Most people who overcame yet another slow
start to beat the Buckeyes
of their previous one.
rule~ implemented in 2008. come to town want to
But with nearly half of vacation or party. But the ( 14-6) for the second
No, the plans haven 't
changed much from Indy's Indy's roster having Super Colts have a job - com- straight season.
William Buford led Ohio
last postseason trip to Bowl experience, Caldwell pleting a mission deemed
Miami. This week will be will rely on his veterans to so essential they threw State with 22 points and
spent putting in a gaJ111e help younger players cope away a chance at perfec- Evan Turner added 18.
West Virginia scored the
plan, and next week, first- with the countless distrac- tion to win a title.
year coach Jim Caldwell IS tion~ of the next two
So the Colts don't want first I 0 points after halftime
taking a page right out of weeks. Players. like fans. anything derailing their to take control. Butler had
16 after the break, including
Tony Dungy's playbook. are scrambling to make plans.
3-pointers
a couple minutes
The Colts will stay at the travel plans, fill countless
"I guess it is kind of a
that
put
the
same hotel. practice at the ticket requests and answer relief that we've made it, apart
same facility and follow all kinds of e-mail and text but we're not satisfied just Mountaineers ahead 62-56
almost the same routine messages. Caldwell said he being here," left guard with 6:28 left. Ohio State
that they did before beat- had about 250 e-mail and Ryan Lilja said. "We want made just one field goal over
ing Chicago in the rainiest more than 150 text mes- to win, we want a ring, and the final 8 minutes.
The Buckeyes couldn't
Super Bowl on record.
sages after Sunday's 30-17 that means you shouldn't
"We'll chanoe some victory over the New York be hanging out on South
things. We'll r:eak them Jets.
Beach on Saturday night."
and adjust them a little bit.
Pro Bowl center Jeff
Indy's leaders will make
according to how \'&gt;'e en\'i- Saturday offers some sure that does not happen.
sion some things, and it advice
Among those singled out
fromPage Bl
depends on what happens
"Make a list of how by Caldwell were Freeney,
to us this week," Caldwell man) tickets you're going Manning, Saturday and
said Monday. "We'll make to have. set a priority. and Wayne - all of whom are good thing:·• Sharper said. "I
some adjustments, it's not tell them the tickets will be likely to treat this trip like didn't get a chance to go out
an iron-clad smt of rou- there at will cal1 when you the business trip they made and celebrate last night
tine. But. overall. we'll get there. Let them find to Miami in February because I was a little bit too
sore to enjoy myself. I
probably be fairly close to their ways down, because 2007.
what we've done previous- it can become a mad"Hey, we've got three couldn't have been celebratly."
house,"
he
said. months to hang out after ing if 1 couldn't move my
to see who was around
Some of the changes are ''Truthfully. it falls a lot to this," Saturday said. "You head
me."
not by choice.
our wi" es and family can hang out on South
Saints defensive players
Four-time MVP Peyton members who help us out. Beach for three months if were bound to be exhausted
Manning and his Pro Bowl It can get anybody you want. But we have a and sore. The Vikings had
teammates, who mclude stressed.''
job to do first."
the ball for nearly 37 minDallas Clark, Dwight
Preferably, the Colts (16And it's that attitude that utes and ran 82 offensive
Freeney
and
Reggie 2) would like everything Caldwell believes will plays to the Saints' 55,
Wayne. are expected to be resolved before returning make a difference on game including overtime, when
in town Sunday afternoon to practice Wednesday.
da).
only the Saints had the ball
for a pregame news conThe reason? Once Indy
"The ultimate goal is to and ran 10 plays on their
ference - a full day reaches Miami, Saturday win it all," he said. winning drive, which was
before the rest of the Colts recalls, players will study "Nobody is going to be sat- capped by Garrett Hartley
field goal.
arrive. Team president BilJ film and do additional prep isfied until we do that."
Hartley wasn't about to
live a young kicker's dream
without celebrating a little.
He joined friends and stayed
downtown for a while, shaking hands with countless
appreciative fans, many
dressed in Saints-themed
costumes.
"It was absolutely crazy. It
was awesome." Hartlev said.
"Everybody, from the way
that they're dressed to the
way that they're acting and
just coming up to me and
thanking me.''
The
team
gathered
Monday for meetings, some
light workouts and treatment
for players who were banged
up. Payton said there did not
appear to be any serious
injuries. He said kick returner Courtney Roby's right
knee was "dinged," that running back Lynell Hamilton's
left ankle injury appeared
minor and that tight end
Jeremy Shockey did not
have any setbacks with his
bruised right knee.
Payton also gave players
Sarah Hawley/photo
Eastern's Jake Lynch (left) and Meigs' Ryan Taylor run toward the loose ball during the Tuesday and Wednesday off
to rest before they return
third quarter of Saturday evening's contest between the Meigs County teams.

Saints

Eagles
fromPageBl
did not make a three-point
field goal. The Eagle~ went
9 for 17 (.529) from the free
throw line, and Meigs was
4 for 5 ( .800). The Eagles
out
rebounded
the
Marauders 25-18 in the
contest. Eastern also won
the turnover battle by a 1226 margin.
Kelly Winebrenner led
the Eagles in scoring with
15 points, going 6 of 10
from the field, and led the
team in rebounds with five.
Devon
Baum
joined
Winebrenner in double figures with 13 points.
Brayden Pratt and Titus
Pierce each scored eight
points, Jake Lynch had
seven points, and Mike
Johnson scored six point,
all in the first half.
Kyle Connery scored four
points, Tyler Hendrix added
three points, and Jacob
Parker had two points.
The Marauders were led
in scoring by Jesse Smith
and Tanner Hysell with six
points each. Seth Wells and
Tanner Hysell had four
points each, and Di]uan
Robinson. Cody Mattox,
and Ryan Taylor had two
points each.
Meigs won the JV game
by a score of 49-43.
Eastern was led in scoring

by Max Carnahan with 17
points, and Meigs was led
by Darrell Geoff and
Nathan Roberts with 13
points each.
The Eagles won the first
matchup between the two
teams on Dec. 22, by a
score of 66-39.
Eastern hosts Trimble on
Frida) evening beginning
at 6:30 p.m. in a TVC
Hocking matchup, while
Meigs travels to Belpre on
Tuesday evening at 6 p.m.
EASTERN
Eastern
Meigs

66,

MEIGS

18 11 19 8 10 4 8 4 -

26
66
26

EASTERN (12·1): Mike Johnson 3 0·0
6, Jake Lynch 2 2·2 7, Kelly
Winebrenner 6 0·0 15, Brayden Pratt 3
2·4 8, Titus P erce 3 2·5 8, Tyler
Hendrix 1 1·2 3, Max Carnahan 0 0·0 0,
Jacob Parker 1 0·0 2. Kyle Connery 1 1·
2 4, Devon Baum 6 1·2 13, Jonathan
Barrett 0 0·0 0. TOTALS. 26 9·17 66.
Three·polnt goals: 5 (Winebrenner 3,
Lynch, Connery)
MEIGS (1-12). Ryan Payne 0 0·0 0,
Jesse Smith 3 0..0 6, Di)uan Robinson 0
2·2 2, Cody Mattox 1 0·0 2. Colton
Stewart 1 2·2 4, Ryan Taylor 1 0·1 2.
Seth Wells 2 0·0 4, Tanner Hysell 3 0·0
6, Conner Swarlz 0 0·0 0, Jon
McCarthy 0 0·0 0. Colt Kerr 0 0·0 0.
TOTALS· 11 4·5 26. Three·polnt goals:
None.
Team statlstlcsllndivlduelleadars
F1eld goals E 25·60 (.417), M 11·38
(.289); Three·polnt goals: E 5·12 (.417).
M 0·11 (.000): Free throws: E 9·17
(.529). M 4·5 (.800): Total rebounds: E
25 (Winebrenner 5). M 18 (Hysell 7); ·
Offensive
rebounds:
E
15
(Winerbrenner 3, Hendrix 3. Baum 3).
M 7 (Jesse Smith 2, Stewart 2, Hysell
2): Assists: E 15 (Connery 5), M O:
Steals: E 15 (W.nebrenner 3, Connery
3), M 4 (Taylor 2): Blocks: E 1
(Johnson). M 2 (Taylor. McCarthy),
Turnovers E 12. M 26; Team fouls: E 15,
M 16, JV score: M 49, E 43

forget last year's 76-48 loss
to the Mountaineers in
Columbus. Ohio State's
largest margin of defeat ever
at home against an unranked
opponent.
And for a while it looked
like Ohio State would get
revenge.
West Virginia stepped up
its intensity inside. though,
outrebounding the Buckeyes
35-26 after the teams were
about even in the first half.
Turner, who had I 3 firsthalf points, was quiet for
most of the second half but
made five free throws over a
2-minute stretch to keep the
Buckeyes close.
Jon Diebler hit two free
throws with I :37 left and

Dallas Lauderdale scored
off a Turner miss with 56
seconds left to bring the
Buckeyes within 69-65. but
Ohio State didn't score
again.
West Virginia's Devin
Ebanks continued
his.
January slump. going to the·
bench and getting an earful·
from coach Bob Huggi.
midway through the fi
half for lapses on the offen·:
sive end.
Ebanks, the team's third-:
leading scorer, had just:
seven point~. the fourth time:
in five games he's been:
below double figures.
Butler's day didn't start so
well. He had three early
turnovers, Ohio State scored:
the game's first eight points:
and led 29- J5 midway·
through the first half.
~
It marked the fourth time:
in six games that West
Virginia fell behind by double digits in the first half.

Thursday to prepare for the
next biggest game in Saints
history against native son
Peyton Manning and the
favored Indianapolis Colts.
If the Saints puJJ off the
upset, that will mark their
third win of this postseason.
In the previous 42 years, the
Saints and their fans celebrated a grand total of two
playoff victories.

"That's a tough history to:
have." Sharper said. "That's
part of the reason why they
embrace it so much because
they know it's hard ro come.
by. They've been through so
many tough times and now.:
it's a time for us to pret• •
much rejoice and apprecia
us being at this point. We're
going to make the most of it:
believe that."
•

~

~~

0
UIJIIII!:~:!.Ii

~ ...

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE.

·l

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

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POUCI!t: Ohio .,_llty PUblllhl~ rewv• ttlt righ1to tell!, rej&lt;tct, Of canctii"V tel Ill an~ time. I!Tor. 1\'11111 ~ reported 011 1M n..- d.V of pubi~IOI'Iand thf
Tl1bii'!Hian11MI·Regl•er will be IWpOnllblt lor no more than thf 0011 of thf epece occupied by lhf error and only thf flrtl lneertlon. We 111111 not ~ llebll for
any loll or tJCpln4t thll t~~ulte from tilt publicatiOn or orn1111on of an advertlllment. Correction will~ made tn thf flltl evalllble td"lon. • aox num~r edt
trl I IWiyt OOnlldtnllll • C\lrent rete car(~ appllll. • All IWIIIIII!e adVtrtlllmllltl II'IIUbjtol lo ttlt l'ldtrlll'alr Houtlng Act of 1MI. · Tllll MWI!lll*
~~~~· only tltlp wenltd ade mttllng EOE etandardl. We Will not ~nowlngly a001pt any adwertlll~ In violation of the law. Will not ~ responlllbll for any
erroraln an ld liken over 11'11 phont.

Fin.mc1~1

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Dlvl·
slon of Financial lnstltu·
tlons Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
taln a loan BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or Insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars
toll
free
at
1-866·278·0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker or
lender Is properly II·
censed. (This is a public
announcement
service
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

SEPTIC

PUMPING

Twin Rivers Tower Is ac·
cepting applications for
waiting list for HUD sub·
sldlzed, 1·BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
call 675-6679

pups. 1 male Pot Belly
Pig 740·379·2467

Galtia
Co.
OH
Mason Co. WV.
Evans
Jackson,
800·537·9528

and - - - - - - - Ron
OH 600
Animals Rat Terrier Puppies Blue
&amp; White $75. Call
645·6857 or 379-9515
Jobs Wanted: Office &amp;
Residential Cleaning 30+
Livestock
years exp./3 yrs. self emFor sale- CKC male
ployed in cleaning. Ex· 12 Calves 200-400 lbs. Yorkie, black &amp; tan $500,
cellent ref. Please Call Steers &amp; Heifers cross born
Nov.
21,
call
Deb (740) 446·2819
bred 304-773-5192.
740-444-2092

=======;;;;;;;

SEBRING, White 4 DR.
PW, PO, AM-FM CD, Tilt
wheel. 60K miles keyless
entry, runs great $6,800
Free trees to be cut for OBO. Call 740·645-4232
firewood
in Mason WV or 740·446·1996
call 304·773-9566.
We have a full inventory
of cars &amp; trucks starting
$1700.
Cavaliers,
at
Seasoned firewood.
Sunfires, Buicks, Saturns
All Hardwpod
or &amp; l]lOre! Cook Motors,
740-853·2439
328
Jackson
Pike.
740·446·9204.•
Fuel / Oil / Coal /
Wood/Gas

(740)446~0103.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
Announcements .......................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205 Blcycles......................................................1010
Happy Ads ....................................................210 Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215 Camper/RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Notlces ......................................................... 225 Other ..........................................................1030
Personals ..................................................... 230 Want to buy ...............................................1035
Wanted ........................................................ 235 Automotive ................................................ 2000
Services ....................................................... 300 Auto RentaVLease .....................................2005
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302 Autos .......................................................... 2010
Automotive .................................................. 304 Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Building Materials ....................................... 306 CommerclaVIndustrlal .............................. 2020
Buslness ...................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accessorles .................................. 2025
........................................................310 Sports Utllity ..............................................2030
~hllld/E:Idf!rlv Care ....................................... 312
Trucks .........................................................2035
................................................. 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
....-,.................., ..................................................316 Vans ............................................................ 2045
Domestlcs/Janltorial ................................... 318 Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Electrical ...................................................... 320 Real !!state Sales ...................................... 3000
Flnancial.......................................................322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Health ........................................................... 326 Commerclal ................................................ 301 0
Heating &amp; Coollng .......................................328 Condominiums .......................................... 3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Insurance ..................................................... 332 Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Lawn Service ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
Other Services.............................................338 Want to buy................................................3040
Plumbing/Eiectrical .....................................340 Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500 .
Professional Servlces .................................342 Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Repairs ......................................................... 344 Commerclal ................................................ 3510
Rooflng .........................................................346 Condominlums ..........................................3515
Security ........................................................ 348 Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352 Storage.......................................................3535
Flnancial .......................................................400 Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Financial Services .......................................405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots .............................................................4005
Money to Lend ............................................ .415 Movers........................................................4010
Educatlon .....................................................soo Rentals ..............................................., ....... 4015
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... sos Sales ...........................................................4020
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 51 0 Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Lessons ........................................................515 Want to Buy ...................................., .......... 4030
Personal ....................................................... 520 Resort Property .........................................5000
Anlmals ........................................................ 600 Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605 Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Horses .......................................................... 61 0 Employment. ..............................................6000
Llvestock ......................................................615 Accountfng/Financlal ................................ 6002
Pets ...............................................................620 Admlnlstratlve/Professlonal ..................... 6004
Want to buy..................................................625 Cashiar/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Agriculture ................................................... 700 Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Farm Equipment ..........................................705 Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710 Constructfon .............................................. 6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
ntlng &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Educatlon ................................................... 6016
to buy ..................................................725 • Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
................................................ 900 Employment Agenclea .............................. 6020
Antlques .......................................................905 Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Appllance ..................................................... 91 o Food Servlcee ............................................ 6024 •
Auctions .......................................................9115 Government &amp; Federal Joba .................... 6028
Bargain Baaement.......................................920 Help anted· Ganeral .................................. 6028
Collectlblee .................................................. 9215 Law Entorcement ...................................... 8030
Computars ................................................... 930 Malntenence/Oomeatle~ ............................. 6032
Equlpmentl8uppllee ••.•••.•...•: .••.••••.•.••••••••...•935 Management/Supervlaory ........................ 6034
Flaa Markete ................................................ 940 Mechanlca .................................................. 8038
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gil ............................. 9415 Medloal ....................................................... 8038
Furniture ............. :........................................ 9150 Mualcal ....................................................... 8040
Hobby/Hunt &amp; 8port.................................... ll55 Part•Time·Temporerlaa ............................. 8042
Kid'e Corner.................................................ll80 Reateurante ............................................... 8044
Mlscellaneoua••••..•.••.••..••...•..••..•...•..•••••••...••.9815 Salea ......................................................: •.•. 6048
Want to buy ..................................................ll70 Technical Tradea ....................................... eoso
Yard Sale .....................................................1175 Textllei/Fectory ......................................... 80112

Townhouse•

Free Rent Sp~clallll

Education

•ng Counc•l for Independent
Colleges and Schools 12748

Apartment./

Townhouaes

2&amp;3BR apts ~95 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup,
tenant
pays
electric.
Call between
the hours of SA·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882·3017

know, and NOT to send
Other Services
money through the mail
Busi ness &amp; Trade
until you have investigat- Pet
Cremations.
Call
School
ing the offering.
740-446·3745
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Gallipolis Career
GUN SHOW. Marietta
Prof.ssional Services
College
Comfort Inn, Jan. 30 &amp;
(Careers Close To Home) , l....!!:;..-:...:!!...:.:::..;.:....__ _.;;......:...-..:...:........;:..:::::.__.;:_....:;;::..-.;;.......;;..-:.:...:.....:...:--1
31 . 1·77 Exit 1. AdmS4 6'
TURNED DOWN ON
Call Todayl 740-446~4367
TBLS
$25, SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
Autos
Pets
1·8Q0-214·0452
740.667-0412.
Merchandise
900
No Fee Unless We Win!
galllpol,scareercoUege~edu
FOR
SALE·06 CHRY
1~888~582-3345
Accredited Member Accredit·
2 male Chihuahua mixed

P1ctures 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.

Apartment./
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLEI Townhouse apart·
ments,
and/or
small
houses for rent. Call
740·441-1111 for appli·
cation &amp; Information.

Money To Lend

Building Material•
Lost, Gold Band Ring, In·
scribed: To Lizzy From Going to Auction!! Steel
Seth,
1869,
Reward. arch buildings ,eJhng for
446·2286
balance oiled. fe11 buildings
LOST··Large Black Lab lef1. 16x24.20x26 and 25x34
1
around
the Call before !hey re gone
Mix
PatnoVRio area 2 white 1·866-352-0469.
toes on one back foot.
Home Improvements
smiles
@
you.
Call
740·379:2696
or
Basement
740·645-7962
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
Notices
guarantee. Local refer·
ences fumished. Estab·
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
lished 1975. Call24 Hrs.
PUBLISHING CO. rec·
740·446·0870, Rogers
ommends that you do
500
business with people you Basement Waterproofing.

a:rtl
JUST SAY

Miscellaneous
Free 1 female Hamster
with cage &amp; food call af36·Silver Dollars, Com·
ter 6pm 304·937·3192.
mon Dates. $18 ea. Also
have 86 Silver Quarters
Half
Dollars.
Free 2 • 7 mon. old ( f) &amp;
1/2 Basset hound &amp; 1/2 740·533·3870.
Terr. 1 Black, 1 Whtte
304·812·0439.
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
Free to good home. 5
In stock. Call Ron
chow pups, 5 weeks old
Evans 1-800·537·9528
call (740} 245·5221.
For sale Amish built en·
Pekingese Puppies, 1st
terta1nment center solid
$150.
set of shots.
$400.00
honey
oak
256-1664
304-675·3214.

Vans

;;;;;;======;;;;;;;

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Available at Carmi·
chael
Equipment
740·446·2412

H~, ~ead, Seed, Grain
Ground ear corn, SB.OO a
100 lba, bring your own
bags, 740·992·2623 or
304·991-8011

MIDDLPORT,
1 BED·
ROOM
APARTMENT,
APPLIANCES
FURNISHED,
NO
PETS,
NON SMOKING, NICE,
740.856·8863
-------N. 4th Ave., Middleport.
2 br. furnished apt., dep.
&amp;
ref.,
No
pets,
740·992·0165
Apartment available now
Riverbend
Apts.
New
Haven wv. Now accept·
ing
applications
for
HUD-subsidized,
one
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
included. Based on 30%
of adjusted 1ncome. Call
304·882-3121,
available
for Senior and Disabled
people.

1999 Ford Windstar SEL
133 m. call after 6:30pm Beautiful 2 BR apt. for
304·675·3069
or highly qualified person or
304·633-8924
couple. WID hookup &amp;
dishwasher. Inc. water,
Real Estate
sewage &amp; trash. Central
3000
Sales heating &amp; air No pets.
$525/mo.
Kelly
740-645·9096.
For Sale By Owner
Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
12 Unit Apt. Complex. son Estates. 52 West·
446-0390.
wood Dr., from $365 to
$560.
740-446-2568.
Houses For Sale
Equal Housing Opportu·
2006 3BR 2.5BA Green nity. This institution IS an
Twp. Living Room w/Fire . Equal Opportunity Pro·
Place,
Family
Room, vtder and Employer.
Separate Dimng Room, Brand New Apts. Be
Spac1ous
Kitchen the 1st to move in.
w/Granite Countertop &amp; Spacious,
2BR
1BA,
Island in the Middle &amp; Well equipped w/ fridge.
Hardwood
Cabinets, stove.
micro.
WID
Laundry Room 72'x27' wt hookup, dishwasher. gar·
27'x50' Attached Garage bage disposal, and cen3.5 Car. Beautiful View in tral air. Country setting.
Country w/2.38 Acres. Convemently located just
to
sell
PH. minutes from Jackson or
Priced
740·446·4910. Leave a Rio Grande. Overlooking
message. Must see to us 35. S525/mo + dep.
appreciate. $149,900. No Call740-645~1286.
realtors and no land con· Efficiency Apt. for rent no
tracts
Senous callers pets, no stairs, 1 or 2
only
1624
Cttatam
people
Real Estate Ave. (rear) Call (740)
446-4234
or
(740)
3500
Rentals 208·7(j61

WantTo Buy
Young Female Cat, In·
side only. Litter trained.
Absolute Top Dollar - sil·
Spayed. Ph. 446·3897.
ver/gold
coins.
any
1OK/14K/18K gold jew~
700
Agriculture elry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
prooflmtnt
sets,
dia·
monds, MTS Co1n Shop.
Farm Equipment
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
EBY,
INTEGRITY, polis. 446-2642
KIEFER BUILT,
RecreaUonal
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· 1 000
Vehtcles
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
Campers/ RVs &amp;
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
Trailers
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
9+W RV
GOOSENECK FLATBED Service at Carmichael
$3999. VIEW OUR EN~ Trailers
TIRE TRAILER INVEN- 740·446·3825
TORY AT
Apartments/
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
RV Service at Carmi~
Townhouses
TRAILERS.COM
Trailers
chael
740-446·3825
740-446-3825
1 and 2 bedroom apts..
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll • be
surprised! Check out our
used
Inventory
at
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740·446·2412

~
1 BR and bath. first
months rent &amp; deposit.
references required, No
Pets
and
clean.
740-441-0245

Nice 3 9R Apt for rent;
stove, refridg, &amp; water
Inc. WID hookup, Close
to hospital, Centenary
Rd. Gallipolis, OH. no
pets. 446·9442 after 5pm
-------Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
bath, back patio, pool,
playground, (trash, sew·
age, water pd.)No pets •
allowed.
$450/rent,
dep.
Call '
$450/sec.
740·645·8599
Houses For Rent
2 BR, 1 BA House for
rent $350 mo 350 Dep
Call740·446·4450

~~~-~----~

213BR 1BA Houses, con· ~
crete dnves w/carports,
WD HJU newly remod·
eled. 1 country setting
close to town, 1 on edge
of city 112 off 1st month's
rent after app. approval.
Call
740·339·3046
or.
740·645·7661
2BR House in Kanauga.
$425/m0+$425 dep. No
pets.
Plus
Utll. .
740-441·2707.
.;..;.;;...;..;..;.;.;.;..;,;...._ __
2BR House on Bulaville
Pike on comer of Bulav·
ine Pk and 554. Ref. req.
+ dep. 388·1100
..,........,............_ __
House for rent in Racine.
appointment
only
740·949·1329,
.;.
74
.;.;0;..·9;..4;.;;.
9.;;·2;.;,
45;.;7_ _ __
Syracuse- Duplex. very
nice, 2 BR. each wlfull
bath.
LR/KIT/Laundry.
w/WD, $625 mo. 111- •
eludes elecVwater/sewer,
614-570·0490
3BR house on Kerr Rd.
No pets, drugs, smok1ng,
or alcohol. $450/mo + $400dep. 245·5064
4 Rms + Ba. Stove &amp;
fridge. 50 Olive St No ,
pets. $450/mo + dep.
446·3945.
4000

Manufactured
Housmg

Rentals
2 BR Mobile Home, No
pets. Water, sewer, trash
included. At Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740-645-0506.
2BR
$400
inc.
Ref.
area

Trailer
$450/mo
dep. Water &amp; Trash
HUD Accepted. 2
No pets. VInton
388·0011.

2BR. ideal for 1 or 2 peo~ .
pie, $300/month,
Refernces, No Pets, NO
CALLS
after
7pm ·
740·441·0181
Mobile home for rent.
Hud accept. call be·
fore 9pm
304·675·3423.
-------Nice 3BR, 2 Bath, 16x80,
Country
Setttng. •
367-0266 or 339·3366.

For Rent, 2 BR. Duplex
In
town,
$475/mo. Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
Dep.+ref. No pets. Quiet w/1 acre. 5% down. $525
place. 446·1271.
mo, WAC. Near Holzer.

:;;;;;;;;;;...;..;.;;..;.;;~--- :..7!!!
40~-4!!!!4;;;6~
·3;;;57~0i!!!.~~~~

Freshly painted clean 1 ::
br. efficiency apt. ref. &amp;
Sales
2000
Automotive
dep.
no
pets
304·675·5162.
AA New 4 Bedrooms
;.;.;.;.;.;;.;;..;.;.;;;..._ _ _
Onlv S44.970
Gracious Living 1 and 2
_ __ .. ------Autos
Bedroom Apts. at Village
201 0 Singlewide
and
Riverside
Incredible $19,995
1985 Mer. 300 Turbo 2. br. In Pt Pleasant Manor
mymldwesthomes.com
Diesel, 700 Third Ave. close to hospital ground· Apts. In Middleport, from
floor lg. rooms $450.00 S327
to
$592.
740.828.2760
Gallipolis. 446·0714
a mon. no pete water In· 740·992·5084.
Equal For Salt 14 X 70 39R 1
eluded 304·874·4668.
Housing Opportunity.
BA SB,OOO &amp; will
112
93
Oldsmobile
S1500 2BR APT.Cioea to HOI· Modern
1BR
Apt. transport.
Call
OBO,
98
Plymouth zer Hospital on SR 1!10 .;.44•6·3•7-38_ _ _ _....,_ 740·446·4080
or
eva
Breeze $1600 090, 98 CIA. (740) 441·0194
Modern 18R apt. Call 740·387·7762.
Neon 51 !lOO OBO, 99
2BR apte. 8 mi. from Hoi· 740·446·0390
New 3BR, 2BA
Dodge Caravan 81700
zer. aome utilities pd: or Spring Valley Green
aalow as $241.68
OBO, 05 Neon S3000
appllanc11
avail
per mo and 1563.00
OBO, 03 Neon 82600 ~!50/mo
+
dep. Apartmentl 1 BR II
down. WAC
OBO, 02 Neon $2200 740·418·8288
or $395+2 BR at $470
740·448·3570
090. 258·1233
Month. 740·448·1699.
988·8130

;;;;;;===--==;;;;;;;

furnished
and
unfur·
nished, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required,
no pets. 740.992•2218

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====;;;;;;;

�--- --..-...-- - -

~-.----------------oor-~""'!:--------- ----------

----

--·. :---..,.-~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 26, 201 0

Medical

Sales
"The Proctorv He
Dtfferenco·
$1 and a deed IS all you
need to Own your dream
home Call Now'
Freedom Homes
888·565-0167

Overbrook Rehabtlttallon
Center IS currently seek·
tng a beaullctan to work
In the !act tty's beauty salon Candidates should
passoss a valtd Ohio
Manag ng Cosmetologtst

- - - - - - - - - license Salary

IS

based

Trade m your old s ngle· on commtss on
Inter·
wide for a new home. 0 osted cand dates should
111 out an application at
money down. 446·3570.
- - - - - - - - 333 Page Street, Mtddle·
part,
OhK&gt;
Overbrook
6000
Employment Center parttctpates tn the
drug tree Workplace Pro·
gram.
Food

~ ----- ~-

Services

Accepting resumes lor
exp. FT Subway Mgr. @
new location In Gaihpolis
Ferry, VN. Salary &amp;
Bens 0 Interview. Send
resume to Mgr. 0 24968
Lashley Rd ..Ouaker City,
OH 43773 or app y on
Hne
0
www.parmar·
stores.com

Tuppers Plains Regtonal
Sewer District wants a
Class 1 licensed opera·
tor send resume to: Tup·
pers
Plains
Regional
Sewer District, PO 175,
Tuppers
Plains
Oh
45783
-------Band
Mill
Sawyer
Wanted. Excellent pay
740..352·0906.

Help Wanted • Gtntral
GMCAA ,s tak ng appll·
cations for a temporary
OBB Counselor/Tax preparer. M n•mum require·
ments: High schdol dl·
ploma or GED, sorre tax
preparatiOn
expenence,
excellent computer SkillS,
abthty to work w•th all so·
cial
economic
back·
grounds. good wrttten
and verbal skills, wtlltng·
ness to travel throughout
the area, and a valid
driver's license. Send re·
sume to: GMCAA, 8010
North SR 7, Cheshire,
Oh. 45620 before 4:00
PM on Thursday, Janu·
ary 28, 2010

Gallia Metgs Commumty
ActJon ts seeking labor·
ers for the Weathenza·
uon Program Applicants
should have experience
and a general knowledge
of
insulatng,
wealher-stnpptng,
and
home repatr. MUST be
capable of working In
htgh
places
crawl
spaces. closed·tn places,
and all weather condtllons. Send or dehver re·
sume/references
to
GMCAA, Attn: Sandra
Edwards. 8010 N SA 7,
Cheshire. Ohio 45620 by
1•29. 10. GMCAA 1s an·
EOE.

Office
&amp;
Restdenttal
Cleaning 32 hrs per/Wk
exp. &amp; ref. req Apply C
Thomas Do It Center,
Galhpahs Thur 1 28 10 &amp;
Fri
1129110
between
108m·5pm

Calland Schedule Your
Interview:
1-888-IMC-PAYU ext.
2331
http://jobs.infocision.c
om

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Warehouse
Personnel
Needed
Position may tnclude (but
not ltmtted to) Shtpping
and Recelvtng, Dlstribu·
tton.
Loadtngi\Jntoadtng
items from trucks. Pick·
ing/Packlng
ttems
for
shtpment. Heavy biting
may be required. Com·
puler
knowledge
and
prevtous work expen·
ence tn a Warehouse

AA/FOF

1·888·1MC·PAYU ext.
1940
Apply online:
http://jobs.lnfoclslon.c
om
Satellite Installers
Become part of our in·
stallalion team lor Dtsh
Network
FfT beneltts,
tratning, co. truck &amp; work
sJpplted.
Strong work
ethic &amp; willingness to
team Is req d
Back·
ground check &amp; drug test
req., must 11avo clean
dnvtng
record.
Ca I
800-893·1991 Option 8.

Overbrook Center Is cu •
rently accophng app lea·
tlOns for State Tested
Nurstng Ass slants for all
shtfts. Interested applt·
cants can PJCk up an application or contact Lucy
Goff BSN AN Staff De·
velopr.1ent
Coord nator
C 740·992·6472 M·F at - - - - - - - - .
333 Page St., M1dd e·
part, Oh. EOE &amp; a par·
Construction
tiCipart of the Drug-Free
Workplace Program.
·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
MEDIC~L RECORDS
·Roofing
Excellent
opportuntty. ·Decks
Busy local practtce. Btll·
·Garages
tng
background
pre·
!erred
$13·14/hr.
de· ·Pole Buildings
pending on expen~Jnce. • Room Additions
Call877-748·5820.
Owner:
James Keesee II
PoSitiOn •mmed. tely a\ail· ....__7_4_2_·2_3_32
_ __.

YOUNG'S

J&amp;L

able for btlhn&amp; clerl; \\Ord
pi'IJ(esstng &amp; some computer ski s a must App ca
tton$ a' t ble all da' \\cd.

Carpenter Service
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New GArages
• EleCIIIC81 &amp; Plumbing
• Rool1ng &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Pnlntlng
· Pallo and Porch Decks

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

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
740·591 ·0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience'
FUl LV INSURED

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

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740·653·9657

foraslowas

304-773-1111

• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp;Compare

,

I

SUNSET
CONSTRUCTION

per mont

I
I

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

!I

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740-992-1671

0

PHYSICAL THERAPIST
Pleasant Valley Home Health Services
currently has an opening for a full-time
Physical Therapist. One year of Physical
Therapy experience preferred. Graduate
from an approved Physical Therapy
Program. Must have WV and Ohio license·.
Must have reliable transportation and valid
driver's license.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Attn: Human Resources •
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675·6975, or apply on-line
at www.pvalley.ore

Now Htnng Fu I and Part
limo Shtlts
Weekly Pay + Bonus
Paid Tra n ng
Ons te DoctorComplete
Benet ts Package
let us show you what
makes lnloCISion a groat
place to work'

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

Do you enJOY helptng
people? If SO, I will QIV8
~:~r;;e t~referred Send
you FREE RENT AND
FREE UTILITIES plus an CLA Box 31 200 Matn
Income just for movtng m
Street Pt Pleasant VN
and helptng my 87 year 25550
old mother You wtl hve
here as If it were your
own home, m1nus the expenses. 740-416-3130.

Full Time Positions
Available I
Make calls for the NRA
and other conservative
political orQanlzations.
Professtonal work envi·
ronment.
Weekly pay and bonus
oppartunittes.
Excellent Benehts.

Here's Your Chance
For a Better Employment Opportunity!

~

Erie
Insurance"

Total Construction
One Call to Do It All
Pole Barns ~Ictal Roofs
rirc &amp; \\'mer Damage
Ory\\aiURepair

Replacement
\\indo" and
\ inyl Siding

Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • \ in) I

\\indo"' • i\Mal
und Shingle Roofs

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

• De~·ks • Additions

•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole 8arns

740-742-3411

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

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

The Daily Sentinel

992-2155

R.L. Hollon
Trucking

Room Add tiOns. Remodehng. Metal &amp;
Shmgle Roof~. :--&lt;e\\ Home~ . S1dmg, Decks,
Bathroom Remod~hng. L1cen~eo &amp; Jn,ured
Rick Price • 17 ~ rs. Experience

J)ump Truck
Sl•n ice

We do drhc\\ll)S
Lime~tone • Gru' el
l'op Soil • fill Dirt

WVI040954 Cell 740416-2960 740-992-0730

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Classifieds

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

BAl'iKS
CO:\STRl CTIO~

*Prompt anJ QuJiit)

Commercial•

co.

Pomcm~, Ohio
Rc~idential

Work

*Rea.,onahlc Rate~
*ln!&gt;ured
*Expenenced
References A' ull.tble 1
C.rll Gar) Stanlc~. @
740·591-8044
Plea.'c lea\ e messo.~J::C

Baer

Ne;rJ

Builders

A Do-it-yourself classified ads

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

Ill Do-it-yourself convenience
Ill Easy to use
Ill Upload photos and graphics
Ill Print and Online options
Ill 7 great packages to choose from
SUPER
SAVER
merchandln, 1

Item per
$501-$1.000
4 111181, 10 daYS

SMART BUY DEALS ON
fer private party
WHEW
mBrCharulln, 1
COI'Il, Trucks.
Item per ad
RVs, 4·Whoelora,
$1001 $5000 Etc. 1 Item per all
4 HnB&amp;, 14 davo 4 ltncs, 46 days

$20.99 $29.99

FDI' prtvate party
Single and multi·
family aaiU
4 lfnoa, 3 daYS

$45.99 ' $34.99

The Daily ~entinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

Public Notice
The Village of Middle·
port is offering for sale
a
1998
Chevy
Cheyenne 3500 duel
rear wheel pickup and
a 1986 Ford Ranger.
The village will accept
sealed bids starting
Jan. 21. Each truck re·
quires separate bid.
Sealed bids must be
delivered to the Mid·
dleport Water Depart·
ment and the deadline
for bids Is Feb. 11 at
1 :30 pm. The Village
has the right to accept
or reject any or all
bids. Phone 992-5571
for more details.
Susan Baker
Fiscal Officer
(1) 24, 26, 28

-~.-11«4-

No\\ Selhng:

General rcpa. •
"\1 \\ .hankscdb.tom

• Aftennarkct

F'lr \II \!ale' of \'ehtc!es
Ra.:ine. Ohio

740-9-49-1956

•

:-"'

Fullv
insun:d
• .,
,

Se"' Constmclion and

CONTRACTOR WINDOW
&amp; MANUFACTURING.llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

\1 (I( I;

l~pl·s

oncrt·t~

-,..t

Replacem£111') inyl UmcfOll'l

(7401 992-0910

An

'

Fr~t· l''timatcs -.'25+ ~ l"ol" e\pcrienn·
(;\ulaffili.&amp;l&lt;&lt;l "ilh \lil.r \t.m·un; Koolin~: ,\ 'K&lt;nliMII'Iin~l
.
.

repair • )ire Repmr
• Tmnsmissron Filter
&amp; fltml Change
• General \1echank

(

can 740·992·9572

• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Hor'e
Barns • Yinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

• AC Recharge

CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Tree Trimming • Setting
Poles I Trusses

Commercial &amp; Residential '

• Minor exhaust

LEWIS

• Brush Hogl!lng
• Portable Bantlmtn

for: • Room additions • Roofing • Garage\

i\UCIIAEL'S

• Brake Service

Free
• Backhoe •

(3aa Marcum Construction

SEit\'ICI~ CE~'TER

I555 :"1 \'E "'e.
l'unwru\', 011
• Otl &amp; filter change
•Tune Up)

('u.,tom Home Butldmg
Steel Frame Bu dmgs
Butldmg, Remodelng

• Ford &amp; l\lotorcmft
Parts • Em:me~.
Tran,fer Ca~es &amp;
Tron,mi,,Jon'
Replacement Sheet
\let,il &amp;. Components

• Ne\\ Homes
• Complete,
Remodeling
• Plumbing
&amp; Heating
740-416-1568

Public Notice
PUBLICNOTICE
The Meigs County
Family and Children
First Council has pub·
llshed the annual Fl·
nanclal Report for
Calendar Year 2009. If
you would like to re·
view the report please
contact Andrea Os·
borne, Meigs County
FCFC Coordinator at
992·2117 Ext. 104.
(1) 26, 28, 31

• Free Estimate'
(740) 992-5009

1\e Sp&lt;'cralize In Replact'mcnt II inch," 1
For Older Humt .1 &amp; lrculcn
.Vo e1trq clwrg&lt;' to replaC'e 1111'/al framr ll'rmlolt

&amp;0

or

\\ork

29 Yl•ar" E\pl·rit'nce

David Lewis
7-t0-992-6971

I~

nt,rrrrot\n,bndson

~Ill

p.:r lb Cn~h onl~
req lfeJ m1•h nc.

P

t 1

Shtpmenl&gt; am\e C\CI')
other Fn fa,

•

�Tuesday, January 26, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Swelled
1 Shaker fill
head
7 Toe the
3 Young
line
seal
11 Large
4 - -mache
lizard
5 Foe
12 Wmdow
6 Ou 1te
piece
uncom13 Some
mon
sr
lOU&amp;~» an.. wers
15 Clanfy1ng
bid
words
8 Sheep
16 Low card
cry
21 Simmer· 31 Patriot
18 Take it
9 Concluing
Allen
easy
s1on
22 Recipe
33 " - La
21 Clock unit 1 0 Agreeable
amount
Douce"
22 Breakfast
answer
23 Summer 34 Topper
choice
14 Women's
zodiac
35 Live and
24 Night flier
quarters
sign
breathe
25 Lazy
16 Namely
25"Taps"
36 Singer
fellow
17 Schooltooter
Torma
26 Part of
bag item 28 Bleak
37 Bustle
Mao's
19 A rrange- 29 G ive
38 Relaxing
name
ment
one's
room
27 Bound
20 Flavorful
OK
39 C rafty
29 Car
NEW CROSSWO RD B OOK! Send ::&gt;4.75 (ChCcklm.o.) to
30Math
Thomas Joseph Book 2 PO BoK 536475 Orlamlo Fl32853·6475
course
9
10
31 Catch
,,
sight of
32 Narrow
cuts
34 Some ·
sharks
40 Region
41 Howie of
"Deal or
No Deal''
42 Sp ill the
beans
43 Cieopatra's
love

Tom Batiuk
MMMIV\ .. :J:'flt~
1'CV1 IAI/1)1 1'11 6
tc:IC6 OWfHA'f

l5Al0 A MAt.l

~~~D

A GUN AND
fill D 'FRIE:Z6 '.

006.

.

GAR THE HORRIBLE
WeRE CONl7/1C1'!NG
A ~tJR.VN,61~ ...
WE: HAVe A f!M
QJJE~TIONG APOtlT
IHE Q/JAL.ITYOF

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Chris Browne

Y' PPoPLc
AHI?IFOIJR
WERe

COUfl:reo!JG ANO

PROF~IO/'IAL A'T

Al-L 11ME6?

DOWN
1 Snapshot

Ot1{2. RAIOJNG•..

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

W illiam Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

,.FORGET ABOOT PL-EASING OTHERS. EXCEPT,
OF COORSE, FOR PAVING MV BIL-L-."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

i: THOUGHT
THE)''O RUN
OUT OF FLA KES •

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

B'J NOW.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green
HAPPY BIRTIIDA\ for Tuesd,1\, Jan. 26, 2U10;

3 6
9
2
.E
7
4 5
1i
.
1 7
4
2 ~
8
""
2
J:
4
7
3
6 9 t
9 2 1 6 ~~
8
li
15··-~
~
5
4 7
~

~.

:&gt;2

" I just got off the bus and
there it was."

~

~

DENNIS THE MENACE

0

Hank Ketchum

Difficult) Level

**

~

I 26

~ ~~------~---------+--------~
~

~~------

;

This)-ear. you often find that others ~ up.;el This

stale uf e\'ents and emotions rould ha, e more to do
\\ith the indi,·idual p.1rties than with you Unde!'itand
your limitations more fully. Know when lo "'•''/
"enough." learning more diplomatic way" ot saying
what you think rould make all the Jifferenct~ c15 well. If
you are single, you often wonder it you h&lt;l\e ll'hat it
takes to make a rei.Jtionship \\OTk. You \\ill have an
opporluruty to find out. If) ou .1re att.1.:hed, the two of
you will ltMm to juggle) our diffeamt concem-. in a
more rea_&lt;;()!'lab)e m.mner. GEI'.fll'\1 makes you J,lugh.
J11c Star&lt; Show the Kittd af Dmt You1/ Hat~t" .1-Dyn.unic;
4-Pil&lt;ttivc; 3-A!-ert~ge: 2-So-so; 7-D@atlt
ARIES C'vfarcn21-April19)
K~p (ommunkation flm,ing, e\'t•n ii at
some point you might w&lt;Vlt to slc1m the dlXJT shul Rest
a'&gt;•&gt;un&gt;d, that will gel you nowhere. Sometimes what
appears tube a di'H.1Ster tr,1nc;fmms into good new~, and
quickly at that today tonight Vt«iting with other...

****

TAURUS (April20.l\tay 20)

*** Know the l'OSls before vou even enterlilin the

idea of r:l project or some kind of JOint venture. If you
ha\ e &lt;l ~tter idea of your liability. HJU c&lt;~n make a
-,ounder decision. 1\o one can be responc;ible for your
choi~s but you! Torught· Your treat.
GEMINI (tvfay 2Hune 20)
****A boss most certainl) could ram on your
pa1&lt;1de. Can you handle it, or will you hanctle it? \our
ability to read past the ob\ ious ,md ~ another's true
intent sometimes needc; to be relied on slightly Je~.
'!~might As you like.
CANCER Oune 2 J.July 22)
*** Know when to back oft' and i!llow someone
else to rome forward and mJke ne&lt;.~~~ry demands.
There are times when evervone needs to do some
things differentl)~ You might want to rethink a decision
involving,, personal matter. l'omght: In the thick of
things.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
Zero in on what you feel vou must. \\'hat i~
l'lc'rklin i~ that you can no longer hi.de from the
mevil&lt;lble. You muld ft&gt;el out of sorts and pushed\\ il)
bevond your limits. Listen lo yuur "ixth ~n~ and
refuse lo get angry when decJiing with an as~x:i.1te
'Ji:might: Let another peNln in&gt;pire ) vu.
VIRGO (Aug. 21-Sept. 22)

***

****Continue to assume) our natural leadership
role. When \ ou really luwe had enough it 1\11! become
quite clear. Knowing your limil&lt;&gt; i« important. but
sometimes d.derring to the cau&lt;e rould be equally as
significant. Tonight Di-.cus-. a problem rather than ha,·e
it eat \ ou up.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0d. 22)
K~p unusual thinking in mind when trying to get p~t a problem. Ac;k you!'!it?lf how opposing
idea-. both could be nght. Otten. you nught ft.&gt;el that no
m.11ter "hilt\ directmn you go. you hit an ol~cle. The
trick will be to rise .1b0\e the obstacle. Tooight: Where
the action i~.
•
SCORPIO (Q"t. 23 :'\o,·. ~I)
You are "orking with a difficult person. and
getting the appropri.11e re~ponse rould be nothing less
than diffkull l:n.:ler-.tilnding \\ill grow a-. loog as you
Ciln stay out of the blame game. At this point. creati\ity
could cause more of a problem. Tonight: Togetherness
is the theme.

*****

****

SAGlTfARlUS (1'\o\'. 22-Dec. 21)
Dder to othets, mowing full well whc~t is

*****

going on between you ,md another person. Know that
YllU don't alwa) s nt:"ed to agree. lm esligate another's
response more fully: He or -ihe might have a worthwhile J?Oint here. ~isten. Tonight- Go with the most
appecllin):; suggest10n
CAPRlCOR!''II \Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Getting a project done might be more important than eg,J. You will focus on the JOb, while othe!'i'
egos eme~ge. You under..tand what is happening here.
Others might not. li-.ten to what is being shared.
'lbnight: You de:.er. e a break.
AQUARIUS Q.m. 20-Feb. 18)
**** You ~rtainly are the idea person. bllt unfort\mately, with each ide,, you seem Ill incur another per·
son·~ ire. lhi~ -.ituatilm could be cl05e to unacceptable,
but rou can change il Sin1pl) ""Y less right now
Torught: [\ aluate the importance of a key reJation.ship.
PISCES (Feb. 19·1\larCh 20)
You know what you want, though you
might ru.1t be "-Ure \\ h.1t is appropnate to say. The pros
anli oons of,, homE' office need to be weighoo first
1ather than acted lm Tonight: At home.

****

****

/iUlrutlrne Brgar L&lt; on t]re bzltmtt
at hitJ' l'll'lt}'!Cl]llc/m' ~·li:CUI/I

-se;- . . .

�-----

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

Page B6 • The Dail) St:ntinel

W\'.

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

w.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday. January 26, 20 10

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DONWOOD ® HvunDRI
830 E. State Street Athens, Ohio • 111·.216·83.25 • donwood.com

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President of Don Wood Automotive, Inc.

.. w OONWOOD ~TOYOTA
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