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                  <text>Prep volleyball
action,Bt

Meigs Co.
Dems rally, A2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Election letter
deadline

11 Meigs Co. non-profits could lose tax exempt status
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MOTNEws@MYDAILYTAIBUNE COM

Sunday, O.:t. 17 is the final
day that letters to the editor
\\jl] be piinted regarding the
Tuesday, Nov. 2 general
election. Plea-;e remember
that letteP.&gt; should be limited
to 300 worth.. All letters
must be signed by the author
and include a \alid retum
address and valid telephone
numbet:

POMEROY - Several
local non-profit organizations are in danger of losing their tax-exempt status due to failing to tile
required tax returns for
lhc years 2007, 2008 and
2009.
Earlier this year. the
Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) announced a onetime relief program lor
non-protits al risk of los-

e Horseshow
Saturday

through the IRS and any
income gained before taxexemption is reinstated,
may be taxable. The IRS
will publish a list of those
organi1ations that have
lost their tax-exempt status in early 2011 and
donors who contribute to
these organintions are
protected until the final
list is published.
The smallest organizations can go to the IRS
Web site, fill out a form
and electronically file it

by
the
deadline.
Organizations that are
slightly larger must file
their delinquent returns
by Oct. 15 and pay a compliance fee. Larger organizations are ineligible to
file
their delinquent
returns in the new IRS
program.
"We are doing everything we can to help organizations comply with the
law and keep their valuable tax exemption," IRS
Commissioner
Doug

CFI
offering
workshop
on winter
crop and
com posting

BY BETH SERGENT

POMEROY - Some
recent, political polls show
John
Kasich,
RWesterville, leading Gov.
Ted Strickland by only
four points in the race for
the governor's office- a
race which will make a pit
stop at 2 p.m., Saturday,
Oct. 16 at the Meigs
County Republican Party
Headquarters.
The headquarters, located on Second Street will
host a visit by Kasich and
running
mate
Ohio
Auditor of State Mary
Taylor. The duo will be
m.ailable for a meet-aDdgreet as well as a question
and answer period at the
headquarters. The visit is
supposed to last around
one and one-half hour,
according to a local party
official.
This will be Kasich 's
second visit to Meigs
County this year. He was

ATHENS -Community
xxllmtiathes announces a
\\ inter crop and compo-.ting
workshop to be held
Saturday at 4 p.m. at the
Nelsonville
Community
Gardens.
1be g&lt;m.lens are located
behind the old C&amp;E
Hardware off of H(x:king
College Parkway.
Pennaculturists
Kurt
Belser and ~lolly Jo St&lt;mley 1
will show how to put a gar- -~-----------den to bed for the winter ELECTION
using organic techniques that

i

~~~n~~~~~~~~:~~f~~

WEATHER

See Visit, AS

201 0

3 weeks to go: p·ortman, Kasich still lead in polls

talk abo~t reclaiming some
1
traditional foodv.&lt;tys.
Bv ANDREW CARTER
Local raw food enthusia'&gt;t..
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIJeanette Ammon, will teach 1
BUN E.COM
how to sprout nuts &lt;md seeds, I
"very nutritious and bcnefi- 1 COLCMBCS - \Vith
dal to digestion'' at horne. just three weeks to . go
For
info,
e-mail before the general election,
kurtcfi@frognet.net or call the latest poll ~ta shov.s
40-593-5971.
that th7 Republtcan _candidates tor the two highest•
profile races in Ohro U.S. Senate and governor
- still maintain leads over
their Democrat counter1

See Tax, AS

BSERGENT MYDAilYSENTINELCOM

Beth Sergent/photo
Bobbi Harris of Racine
was crowned Southern
High School's
Homecoming Queen
Friday night dunng halftime festivities. Harris is
the daughter of Paul and
Kristine Harris. Bobbi
was escorted by Braxton
Thorla of Racine, son of
Brian and Shelly Thorla.

I

Shulman said in a press
release earlier this year.
"So if you do not have filings up to date, now's the
time to take action and get
back on track."
The Pension Protection
Act of 2006 mandated,
beginning in 2007, that all
tax-exempt organizations,
excluding churches and
church-related groups,
file an annual tax return
with the IRS. This act fur-

Kasich, Taylor
visiting Meigs

Harris
crowned
queen at
Southern

PORTLAND The
Ohio River Pn.xJucc~ Horse
Fun Show will be held
Saturday. Oct. I 6 at the
Portland Show Arena behind
the Portland CommunitY
Center 111e arena opens at
I 0 a.m. and the show start'&gt; at
11 am. Refreshn1enL') and
con&lt;..'essions sold. Call S&lt;X&gt;9936 f01 more infonnation.

•

mg their tax-exempt status for un,tiled tax returns.
This program allow.s all
the organizations at risk
of losing their tax-exempt
status to tile their returns
with the IRS by Oct. 15.
With the Oct. 15 deadfast-approaching.
line
local accountants are
warning these non-profits
to file their hack tax
rctums before losing their
status. If a non-profit
loses its tax-exempt status, it will have to reapply

part~.

In the race for Ohio·s
U.S. Senate seat currently
held by George Yoino\'ich.
a Suffolk University poll
compiled Oct. 4-6 shows
Rob
Po11man,
R-

Cincinnati. with a 10 point
lead over Lt. Gov. Lee
Fisher. D-Shaker Heights.
The poll sun eyed 500 indi\ iduals who identitied
themsel\es as likely voters.
A FOX News/PORRwm1Ussen poll dated Oct
2 had Portm&lt;m leading by
16 points. That poll surveyed I ,000 people who
also identified themselves
as likely voters.
A Quinnipiac poll compiled Sept. 29-0ct. 3 had
Ponman leading by 19
points. That poll suneyed
1.025 likely voters.
According to an aver.1gc
of all recent polls listed on
the Web site Real Clear

Politics (RCP). Portman is
ahead by 13.8 points. That
average is taken from polls
compiled between Sept. 23
and Oct. 6.
Ponman, a former budget director and US trade
representative
under
President George W. Bush,
ha-, held a double-digit lead
in near!) every poll taken
since the summer. While
Fisher's campaign ads haYe
sought to use Portman's
link to Bush a-; a negative.
it hasn't appeared to have
had an effect, at least
according to the polls.
Fisher. on the other hand.
h~t\ not been above 43 percent in any poll since June.

Fundnusmg has also been
an issue for Fisher.
Other candidates running
for C.S. Senate this year
are Eric W Deaton of the
Constitution Party, independent .rv1ichael L. Pryce,
Socialist Party member
Daniel H. LaBotz and
write-in candidate Arthur
T Sullivan. None of those
candidates has made a dent
in any of the polls compiled.
While the C S Senate
race appears to be going
the \vay of the GOP. the
battle for the governor's
mansion in Ohio has tightened up quite a bit in the
!a-.t month or so. Gov. Ted

Strickland, D-Lucasville,
and former congressman
John
Kasich,
RWesterville, have been
locked in a contentious
campaign. trading advertising pieces that vilify the
other.
Strickland's campaign
has labeled Kasich as a
Wall Street insider with no
concern for the average
person. while the rhetoric
from Ka&lt;&gt;ich's camp places
the blame for 400,000 lost
jobs in the Buckeye State
squarely at Strickland's

feet.
A

Suffolk University

See Polls AS

Emergency heating assistance begins Nov. 1
High: 79

Low: 48

======
INDEX
2 SECrtONS- 12 PAGl-~'i

Calendars
.

lassifieds
Comics
Editorials
Spotts B Section
CC) 2u1o Ohio Vallev Publishing Co.

liJ,I!IJ.!I. I

STAFF REPORT

CHESHIRE
Gallia
Meigs
Community
11 Action Agency's (CAA)
Emergency
HEAP
Program begins on· Nov.
1, 20 I 0. and will continue
through March 3 I, 201 I.
Sandra
Edward's,
Emergency
Services
Division Director, said
that the SSA will begin
booking appointments on
Friday. Oct. 29, at 8 a.m.
Appointments can be
made by coming to the
otlice or calling in.
However, :-.he stressed
that an appointment "may
not extend a scheduled
utility shut-off."
Edwards explained that
HEAP provides tinancial
heating assistance for our
area's neediest residents,
who may be on a tixed

inconw or among the
\Vorking poor. "It helps
senior citizens and families with children avoid
the choice ot heating or
eating. ''she said, stressing that "people who
need help should choose
HEAP." Eligible households must be at or below
200 percent of the federal
poverty guidelines.
''Most of the HEAP
recipients are our neighbors who arc living on
lixcd income or working
for low \\'ages. They are
the elderly or single parent household and our
disabled. HEAP gives
them the extra help they
need to make it through
the cold Ohio winter,"
said Edwards.
Emergency HEAP provides assistance to households that have had utili-

ties disconnected, face
the threat of disconnection or have." lO days or
less supply of bulk fuel.
The program allows a
one-time payment per
heating season to restore
or retain home heating
services
for
AEP.
Columbia Gas. BREC
and Knox Energ). f-or
propane and fuel oil
clients. the payment may
cover up to 200 gallons
for proJ?ane/bottled gas or
fuel 01!. Clients heating
\\ ith wood or coal will be
assisted also.
T h e
amount allowable for
assistance \\ill be determined before Nov I.
Homeowners or renters
may qualify if their total
household income is at or
helow 200 percent of federal povert) guidelines,
Ed\vards explained.

The Regular HEAP
program offers heating
a-;si'&gt;tance once per heating season to low income
households while defraying the high cost of home
heating. Regular HEAP
pays a portion of eligible
households' winter heating bills. The amount of
assistance ts determined
by
total
household
income. the number of
people in the household
and the type of heating
fuel used.
The income guidelines
for both progran1s are the
same. However. Regular
HEAP requires the previous 12 months income
while the past three
months income is acceptable
for
Emeroencv
b
•
HEAP. The 12-month
period or three-month
period is determined from

date of application making it possible for some
with decreased income
during these periods to
qualify later in the program.
Examples of these type
situations could occur
from layoff. strike. retirement, disability or death
of a spouse or household
member. Documentation
verifying income must be
provided when applying
for HEAP. Also a copy of
the ~lpplicant's recent
electri~ bill is required.
It is also suggested that
applicants provide a birth
certificate or other forrp
of citizenship for the primru') applicant. This can
be Passport. Military
Sen ice Records, Voters
Registration. etc.

See Heating AS

�Tuesday, October 12,

201 0

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page A.2

www.m ydailysentinel.com

Dems Rally
Ohio GOP candidate
defends Nazi re-enactments
COLUMBUS (AP) A Republican congressional candidate from
Ohio. countering criticism from a House GOP
leader, said he did nothing wrong by wearing a
Nazi uniform while participating in World War

group's roster for longer.
He said he and his thenteenage son had joined
as a part of a shared
interest in history.
The
House
Repuhltcans'
No.
2
leader, Eric Cantor of
Virginia, on Sunday .said
n re-enactment~.
he
repudiates
I ott's
Rich lott told The actions and would not
Associated Prc~s in an support someone who
interview Monday that would dress in Nat.i
he took part in the histor- attire. His remarks on
ical re-enactments to "Fox News Sunday"
educate the public, and came after Democratic
docs not agree \Vith the Rep. Debbie Wasserman
Nazis' views or their Schultz, of Florida, cited
actions against Jews.
lott as an example of
Asked whether it wa~ GOP candidates with
wnmg to wear u Nazi extreme views.
uniform. lott said: "l
"You know good and
don't l\ee anything wrong well that I don't suppon:
about educating the pub- anything like that," said
lic about events that hap- Cantor, who is Jewish.
lott said Cantor had no
pened. And that's the
whole purpose of histori- information or backcal re-enacting."
ground about his relott faces Democratic enacting.
incumbent Rep. Marcy
"What Cantor did is
Kaptur in northwest exactly the illustration of
Ohio in the November why people are disgusted
with politicians," Iott
election.
The Atlantic magazine said. "He made comtiN reported Friday that ments and took a posi!ott had participated in tion that was good· for
the re-enactments wear- him at the time. regarding a Waffen-SS uni- less of whether it was
good for anyone else or
form.
loU said Monday he good for the voter~:·
Iott said he ha~ been
was in a re-enactment
group called Wiking for involved in re-enactmentli on and off for
three or four years though he believed his roughly 35 years. He
name remained on the said he has dressed as an

Amencan soldier for
World War I and World
War II re-enactments, as
well as a soldier from
each side of the Civil
War. !ott said he could
not recall when he and
his son joined the Wi!Ung
group but that he was no
longer involved.
"Never, in any of my
re-enactiQg of military
history, have I meant any
disrespect to anyone who
served in our military or
anyone who has been
affected by the tragedy
of war, especially the
Jewish Community,'' lott
said in a statement
Saturday.
During the peak of his
involvement in the early
2000s. lott said he
dressed up about a half
dozen times a year at the
most. He said he wore
the Nazi uniform in battle re-enactments, presentations at schools and
public events.
Asked what he said
while wearing the Nazi
uniform in the schools, ·
he said, "We talked about
the atrocities that were
committed and it was a
horrible, horrible part of
history. But we can't forget about it or, you know.
sweep it under the mg.
Because those who forget about history are destined to repeat it."

No boost for Social
ecurity checks in 2011
WASIIlNGTON (AP)
- More than 58 million
retirees rutd disabled
Americans will ha\c to go
another year without an
increase in the1r Social.
Security benefits, the government is expected to
announce thts \\eek.
h would mark only the
second year without an
increa...,e since automatic
adjustments for inflation
were adopted in 1975. The
first ye.•r was this year.
The
cost-of-living
adjustments, or COLAs,
are automatic~llly set each
year by an inflation measure that was adopted by
Congress back in the
1970s. Because consumer
prices arc ~till lower than
they were they were two
years ago, the last time a
COLA was awarded, the
trustees who oversee
Social Security project
there will be no benefit
increa"e for 20 I I.
The lack of inflation will
be small comfort to many
older Americans whose
savings and home values
still haven't recovered
from the financial collapse.
Many haven't had a raise
since January 2009, and
they won't be getting one
until at lea't January 2012.
''While people aren't
getting COLAs they certainly feel like they're
falling further and further
behind. particularly in this
economy." said David
Ccrtner, AARP's legislative
policy
director.
"People are very reliant on
Social Security as a major
portion of their income
and, quite frankly. they
have counted on the
COLA over the years."
The COLA projection
will be made otlidal on
Friday. when the Bureau of
Labor Statistics releases
inflation estimates for
September. The timing
couldn't be worse for
as
they
Democrats
approach an ~lection in.
which they are m d~mg~r ~I
losing their Ho~1se !llaJo~­
ty. and possibly the1r
Senate m~~ority a' \veil.
Democrats have been
working hard to make
Social Security an election-year issue, num~ng
politi&lt;.:&lt;tl ads and holdmg
press confcrcl.tces to
accuse Republicans of
plotting to _privatize the
national ret •rcment pro-

gram.

"If you're the mling
party, this is not the sort of
thing you want to have
happening two weeks
before an election," ~aid
Andrew Biggs, a fanner
deputy commissioner at
the
Social
Security
Administration &lt;md now a
resident scholar at the
American
Enterprise
Institute.
"It's not the congressional Democrats· fault, but
that's the way politics
works," Biggs said. "A lot
of people will feel hostile
about it."
Social Security was the
primary source of income
for 64 percent of retirees
who got benefits in 2008,
according to the Social
Security AdministratiOn. A
third relied on Social
Security for at least 90 percent of their income.
A little more than 58.7
million retirees and disabled Americans receive
Social
Security
or
Supplemental
Security
Income. The average
Social Security benefit is
about $1.072 a month.
Social Security recipients got a one-time bonus
payment of $250 in the
spring of 2009 a.s part of
the government's massive
economic recovery package. President Barack
Obama lobbied for another
one last fall when it .
became clear seniors
wouldn't get an increao.;e in
monthly benefit payments
in 2010.
Congress took up the
issue. but a proposal by
Sen. Bernie Sanders died
when 12 Democrats and
independent Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut
joined Senate Republicans
to block it. Sen. Olympia
Snowe of Maine was the
only Republican to support
the second bonus payment.
Smtders. 1-Yt., said he
will continue pressing for
another $250 payment
when Congress returns
after the election in
November.
"During these very difficult economic times many
seniors and disabled veterans arc spending a lot of
their limited incomes on
rising health care anJ prescription drugs costs."
Sanders said. '1'hey need
help.''
Rep. Earl Pomeroy. DN.D., chairman of the
Ways and Means sulxom-

mittee on Social Security.
has introduced a new bill
to provide $250 payments
to seniors, if there is no
increase in Social Security.
Maybe. he said. there will
be more of an appetite in
Congress to pass it after
lawmakers hear from voters in November.
Federal law requires the
Social
Security
Administration to base
annual payment increa&lt;;es
on the Consumer Price
Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical
Workers. which measures
intlation. The CPI-W is
ba-;ed on the cost of gO&lt;X.b
and services. such as food.
housing. transportation
and energy. typically purchased by urban wage
earners and clerical workers.
Officials compare inflation in the third quarter of
each year - the months
of July. August and
September - with the
same months in the previous year.
lf consumer prices
increase from year to year.
Social Security recipients
automatically get higher
payments. starting m
January. If inflation ts
negative. the payments
stay unchanged.
Social Security pay
ments mcreased by 5.8
percent in· 2009. the
largest increase in 27
years, after energy .prices
spiked in 2008.
But energy prices
quickly dropped. For
example, average gasoline
prices topped $4 a gallon
in the summer of 2008.
But by January 2009. they
had fallen below $2.
Today, the national average is roughly $2.70 a gallon.
As a result. SocJal
Security recipients got an
increase in 2009 that \\as
far larger than actual intlation. However, they won't
get another increa'le until
consumer prices exceed
the level measured . in
2008. The Soc1al Security
tmstees project that will
happen next year, resulting in a small increase in
benefits for 2012.
Social
Security
spokesman Mm·k Lassiter
said the agency has no Iccway to increase payments
if the inflation measurement doesn't call for it.

Brian J . Reed/photo
State Rep. Debbie Phillips, County Commissioner Mick Davenport and Charles
Williams, Democratic Executive Committeeman, were among those attending
Saturday's Rally on the River. a fund raiser for Olive Township families affected by
last month's tornado. The Democratic Party hosted the picnic in place of its annual Kennedy Day Dinner. Congressman Charlie Wilson was also scheduled to
attend.

Online charter schools •
draw more students
school year.
COLUMBUS (AP) The e-charters are
As
more
students
choose
web-based drawing more students
learning for reasons that because they till a need
can include bullying or and provide families
health issues, enroll- with options, school
ment at the state's pub- officials and parents
licly funded onlme said.
Online schools can be
charter schools has risen
by nearly half within attractive to students
t1ve years. according to who feel they're being
data from the Ohio bullied at a traditional
De part men t
of school and need a
refuge,
said
Nick
Education.
Department figures Wilson. a spokesman
show that the state· s 27 for the Columbus-based
free e-schools had more Electronic Classroom of
than 29.000 students Tomorrow. ECOT is the
taking classes by com- state ·s oldest and largest
puter during the last Internet charter school.
The schools also draw
school year, up from
about 20.000 in 2005. students who are unable
The enrollment numbers to go to a classroom
of illness,
were
first
reported because
Monday
by
The Wilson said. or students
Columbu~
Dispatch. who need. flexibility
which also noted that because they compete in
the increase came dur- sports such as gymnasing a period when no tics or work full time to
new online charters help support their famiopened in Ohio. The lies.
"We've been doing
state imposed a moratorium before the 2005-06 this for 11 years now,

and it seems that every
day we're hearing new
reasons for why students would choose an
online school,'' Wilson
said Monday.
The latest figures put
ECOT's enrollment at
nearly 9,300 statewide.
more than about 20 of
Ohio's school districts.
The other e-charters
range down to as few as
26 students.
Raychelle
Staron's
three children attend
Ohio
Connections
Academy,
which
opened in 2003 and has
nearly 2, I 00 students
throughout the state.
The teachers are acce··sible and the curriculu
is strong, helping t
make the option a good
one for her family, she
said.
Some of the e-charter
schools offer computers
for students to use at
home. while others provide locations with terminals for logging on.

Keeping
Meigs County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today 740-992-2156

.

Visit
us

online
at
mydallysentlnel.com

Your
online source
for news

NQTlC.E.IO MEIGS_cQUNrtJ:lQUSEHOLDS
Applications for the Ct:t_
IP .
Home repair- Housing reh.ablhtatiOI")and Homebuyer Assistance w1ll be ava1l~ble
to Low/Moderate income. households In
Meigs County on Tuesday, October 26. and
Wednesday. Oct. 27, 2010 from
9:00A.M. to 3:00 P.M. at the
Meigs County Grants Office at .
117 E. Memorial Drive. Pomeroy. Oh10
(behind Holzer Clinic) _
Applicants should park. b~hmd
the Meigs Annex Bu1ld1ng
or in the lot across from t~e former ,
Veterans Hospital. to avo1d l?arkmg
•
on Holzer Clinic property. Fundmg Will be.
available on a First Come- First Served bas1s.
CHIP funding can address the following:
•
HOME REPAIR
The repair of no more than two items n~eded to
maintain home. Must be owner occup1ed.
~·
Straight Grant!
i10USltiQ..R~;HA6lUIAI10NRehabllitation of all items that do not meet
housing rehab code. Must be owner occupied.
Requires a 1 0 year, no monthly payments/
no interest mortgage on the property.
Ninety percent for~iven after nin~ years,
leaving a 10% hen on the property.
payable if property is ever vacated
sold ..

or

tiQMEJru'lER.ASSlSJANC];::

Payment of down payment and closin9 costs
plus rehabilitation of any items not mee!mg the
housing code after purchase. Same no tnterest
-no monthly payment mortgage as above.
For more Information or questions,
please contact Jean Trussell,
Chip Admlnlstrator,at 740·992-7908.

,,

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

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

0' leness giving local artist's prints

ASK DR. BROTHERS

r-------------------.

ATHENS
October
Nntwn,\1
Breast
Can~.:er
Aw.uencss
Month.
In
obser\.ance
0' Blenes
Memonal
11al is !' 1V1ng
by Joc.tl artist
ra Kostohry1. to
\\omen who have a
mammogrum nt the
l\l,munography Suite
in the Castrop Center
,tt O'Biencss.
For
thoc;e women who
ha\e already h.td "
mammogram
in
October 20 I 0 they can
receive a print b) c,tllmg (740) 566-4540
Deborah
Shaffer.
director of de\ elopment,
said. "It is O'Blcness'
\\ ny of saying thank ) ou
Submitted photo
for selectm us as the
pro' idcr of your recent Pnnts by local artist Barbara Kostohryz are being presented to women having
mammograms at O'Bieness this month.
mammogram··
Kostohryz presented Mammography Suite. A 0' Bleness by Kostohryz. Medical Park, 75 Hospital
the origin,tl JMintm to limited number of prints
The Mammograph) Drhc. Suite 140. Athen::.,
O'Bleness. \\-hrch is drs- of the pmnting were Suite is located at The Ohio.
played in the 0' Blcness made and donated to Castrop Center, 0'131eness
is

heers for our soldiers fundraiser
POMbROY
fhe Roberts Field.
Meigs High School
Accepted
items,
Cheerleaders Me spon- according to Debbie
!Wring "Cheer for Our Evans, .tdvisor, include
Soldiers" by sendmg di posable camera::..
cnre pack.tges to our phone
cards,
deployed troops and envelope • pens, paper,
are invitin" the public mngazines,
playmg
to help.
cards. taffy, hard or
Collection
boxes sour candy. beef jerky.
will be n\ctil,tble .tt the nuts. packs of cookies,
last home football snack crackers, fruit
game forid.ty night. snacks, gum, mints,
Oct. 15, 20 l 0, at Bob Vienna sausages, sar-

dines, peanut butter,
cup of soup. chips.
Paper back books,
razors, shaving cream.
deodorant, body wash.
toothbrush, toothpaste,
wisps,
mouthwc1 h,
noss, flea collars. foot
powder, sock , wipes.
Neosporin. eye drops.
nasal spray, Oragel,
hand sanitizer, plastic
silverware, chapstick,
nail clippers. ziplock

bags, hand held games,
batteries.
Yahtzee
games,
checkers, snack cakes.
cereal bars, potted
meat, gel msoles, sun
block, "ater balloons,
band aids, kool-aid
packs. q-tips, pop
tarts. power bars. ba ...eballs, footballs. soccer
balls. basketballs, puzzles, and mist fans.

p.m. at the
Syracuse
Community
Center. Betty Milhoan to
give program on purple
martins.
POMEROY ..... Alpha
IOTA Masters. regular
meeting, 11:30 a.m., New
Beginnings
Methodist
Church, hostesses Carol
Adams, Donna Byer,
Margaret Stewart.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m..
at hall.

Revival at the Point Rock
Nazarene Church at
Wilkesville, 7 p.m. nightly
through Oct. 17, with
Sunday morning worship
at 11 a.m. Located on
S.R. 689 Albany. Rev.
Bud Allman evangelist.
The
Brian
Family
Connection singing.
Thursday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - Revival
services will be held at
the
Calvary
Pilgrim
S.R.
143,
Chapel.
Pomeroy, Oct. 14-17, 7
p.m. nightly. Rev. Paul
Bates, evangelist, and
singers. Pastor is the
Rev. Charles McKenzie.

onnnmuty Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, Oct. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS Plains Reg1onal
D1strict 7 p.m.,
OffiCe.
Wednesday, Oct. 13
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education meets in special session, 7 p.m., to
meet with representatives of the Athens-Meigs
Service
Educational
Center
Board
of
Education to consider
personnel issues.
WELLSTON The
GJMV
Solid
Waste

Management
District
Board of Directors, 2:00
p.m. at the district office,
1056 S. New Hampshire
Avenue, Wellston.
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees regular meeting 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

Clubs
and organizations
Thursday, Oct. 14
CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453 stated
meeting at 7:40 p.m.
Refreshments.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,

6:30

Church events
Tuesday, Oct. 12
WILKESVILLE

investing, don't
at U.S. border
Jn less thru1 tv.o \\CCks,
Umted Nations D.1y will be
celebrated. It' an occasion
highlight ,md reflect on
work of the United
lions, whose mrssion is
to promote undcrstandmg
and coopemtion among the
' v.orld's countries. Of
course, in an era of insllmtaneous communications :Uld
speedy global trn,el. v.e nrc
all connected much more
closely than ever bdore.
And that's certainly llue in
the financial rnm kets. llXl,
ba:ause as an in'&gt;'estol,
you 'vc got a world full of
Op[XU1llllities.
Many people. ho\\-C\er.
still think the U.S. totally
dominates the invl:stment
scene. But the fact is that
U.S. srock markets n1.1kc up
les than half of the tolltl
global stocl m.u'ket value.
according to the Census
Bureau And thai should
come as no surpnc;e to you
when you consider many of
the products you usc on a
daily basis. from the
ndai (South Kore.l) you
to \\Oik to the Nestle
hru (parent compa
ny in Switzerland) you
~nnckcd on at lunch to the
Sony tclevio;ion (J.1panl you
watch at night

Not only arc many ~trong
companies based in the
de'&gt;'eloped countries. but
ome emerging markeb countries such as China
India. Br.lljl and Mexico
that are charciCterized by
younger. less mature
economics- arc gro\\-ing
rapidly. which may produce
good imesunent oppottunities.
Keep in mind,
though, that emerging markets do involve investment
risk~ Jillcrent from those of
more developed countlies.
Securities may be less liquid and more volatile
because economic ~true­
lures are genemlly less
diverse ru1&lt;J mature.
And by im esting internationally. you can gain
another key benefit improved di\ ersification. If
you only invested domestically, and a dov. ntum rub
us, your portfolio\\ illlil\ely
t,lke a hit. But, at any gh-en
time. international market'&gt;
may perfonn quite differently than the U S. market.
Consequently, if vou
expanded your ime::.tnient
hOiiton beyond U.S. borders, your foreign in\estnwnts could be doing relallvdy well, even if your
American
investments

v.ere lagging. Keep m
mind. though. that diversification, by itself. cannot
guarantee profits or protect
against lo . though it rna)
be able to hele reduce the
effects of volatility.
While you can gain some
benefit:; by im esting internationally. you'll al o lll."'Cd
to consider the risks, such
as political rkk. For example. new gm cmments can
come in, n.ttionalite companics. dra,tically chang~
policies or mlcs alll.'Cting
commerce, or take other
actions that could h.t\C a
big clfl'Ct on your investments. You might also
encounter cun"Cncy risk that is. changes in the \alue
ofthe U.S dollar. rclati\e to
forci~n currencies, could
negatiVely affect the value
of your imestments.
Another factor to consider
is the difference m accounting stcmd&lt;ud~ bet\\ een the
US. ru1d othe1 countJies. a
di!Tercnce that c.m result in
dilliculty ana1)7ing the true
value and perfonnance of
foreign imestmcnt~ .
You can cnhm1ce your
portfolio's diversilication
without investing a lot
abroad. If you arc considering international invest-

mcnt.' you may want to
limit the foreign exposure
to no more than 20 to 25
percent of your o\emll portfolio, with the exact an1ount
depending on your individual risk tolerance. time
horiton and long-tem1
goals. Also. given the more
complex issues involved in
international
investing.
you'll wmlt to consult \\ith
a profe ional financial
.tch i...or before taking
action.
But once )Ou\e done
your ..due diligence," don't
be afraid to launch vour
voyage to the world of
international investing.
Yo•• tmght hke \\hat )OU
ce on your joumey.
(Js,mc ~1ills 1s ~~ financial
advisor \\ ith Edw·c~rd Jones
!me tments, 990A Second
1\\ e., Gallipolis, phone
441-944 I. Ed\\ ard Jones
h&lt;b been serving the needs
of individual investors
since
1871.
member
SIPC.)

Whatever happened
to boys don't cry?
Dear Dr. Hrothers: J
don't consider myself
old-fashioned at all, and I
am pretty cool with all
the recent trends. A.:, a
middle-age woman, I
have seen a great deal of
life and all ...orts of characters. Maybe I am
watching too many reality shows on
hut 1 just
wanted to a~k: Does it
seem like there are men
crying all over the place
now, as opposed to the
way it u ed to be? I
remember when it was
"'boys don't cry," period.
and that's pretty much
how mine were raised.-

·rv.

Dr. Joyce Brothers
rule about how far away
he can go? This is very
upsetting. - A.P.
Dear A.P.: I'm sure it
is up etting to imagine
your child so far away in
college that you can't be
there or have him visit
every weekend. But that
might not be a very practical criteria for you to
lay down. UnJe:ss he is
living at home or goes to
school within your metropolitan area, chances
are you really should not
expect to have him back
on your doorstep with
any regularity between
\acations. And you certainly don't want to be
showing up at his college
without an m\ ttation for
parent ' weekend or
another specific event
outside of an emergency.
So if you are not going to
make him go to school at
home - and I hope you
wouldn't. at least not for
purely selfish reasons you might therr try setting some more-reasonable guidelines.
Many parents distinguish between locations
they can easily drive to in
a day ot those that logically would require an
airplane trip. So if the
comfort zone of all of
you extends only to those
colleges that he can reach
by throwing his stuff in
the car and drh ing four
or fi, e hours. that should
include plenty of choices.
Finding the comfort level
of you, your hu),band and
your on might be a challenge. But it's a good
way to start your son's
long journey to independence.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate,

F.R
Dear ER.: It seems to
bother you that boys and
men have begun· to tum
on the waterworks with
impunity - and no, I
don't believe it is your
imagination or too many
reality shows. Although
there would be too much
generalizing going on for
me to say that it is now
considered
perfectly
~ocially acceptable for
boys to bawl, it does
seem to be much less of
an embarrassment now
for a fella to cry- e pecially on a happy occa:,ion. Tears of joy eem
to be much more acceptable. becau e they don't
-.eem to indicate the
dreaded lack of masculinity the way they
would if a grown man
were to cry, say. after
falling and scraping his
knee. So yes, men have
received cultural permission to let their feeling~
show, a-. long a:. the feelings are happ} ones.
As \\ell a letting the
tear~ flo\\ at a \\edding
or other joyous occasion,
it seems much more likely to ee men crying on
moving occa),ions no" as
well. They are not as
afraid to show their sensitivity as they might
have been in the past.
Ho\\ do you feel about
thb? Do you think it i
difticult nO\\ for your
sons to express themselve~ i( they feel like
crying'? Young people
today mi~ht not have
those restnctions as they
grow up. Kids ulways
will make fun of boys
~ho cry cxccssivcl}. but
boys today arc allo\\ ed to
cry. and that's a healthy
thing.
•••
Dear Dr. Brothers:
Our son has alwa) s been
a little shy and what I
:-.uppose you would call a
mama·~ boy. That h fine
with me, as I ha\ e
al\\ays lo\ed being \\ith
him and have enjoyed
\\ atchmg him grow and
change. Well, now it is
time for college trips.
and "hile we a~sumed he
would want to stay close
to home, all the schools
he is interested in arc at
least three or four hours
away. or more - a lot
more! Should we set a

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The Daily Sentinel
~The

Tuesday, October 12,

2010

Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director .
Cott,s?ress slwll m11ke uo 1,,, respectitr,S! em
establishment t~f rt'l(f!iott, or prohibiting tlu fru
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Gor•cmmcut for a redress of.!!ricl'tlllces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Stocks end flat at the start
of busy earnings week
NEW YORK (APJ -The stock market finished
at about the same plnce where it started Monday
as traders waited for a packed week of report:-; that
will give them a better view of\\ here the econo
my is headed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
remained stuck in a 52-point range throughout the
day, ending the day 10 points above the ll,OOO
milestone.
Bond trading was closed for Columbus Day.
Traders have been pushing the stock market
higher over the last two weeks, cxpectmg that the
Federal Reserve will act in the com111g weeks to
stimulate the economy and drive interest rates
lower. If the Fed announce~ an expansion of its
bond-buying proguun at its nl'Xt meeting in early
r-;ovember, traders assume that investors will
regain buying stocks because low interest rates
will make bonds less appealing.
The Dow has risen tivc of the past six weeks
and is omv less than 2 percent from. its highest
)e\ el of the year. which it touched in late April.
Interest rates have also been plummeting in
anticipation of the Fed's move
Traders will get key economic repo1ts at the end
of the week. including data on mflation, retail
sales and consumer sentiment, that could influence trading. The Fed has said part of the reason it
might buy bond-; i&lt;; to get innation more in line
with hbtorical levels.
ln corporate ne\vs. shares of Gymooree Corp.
jumped 22.4 percent after Bain Capital announced
that it was taking the children's clothing retailer
private in a $1.8 billion deal.
Earnings season also pick:; up this week with
industry bellwethers Intel Corp., JPMorgan Chase
&amp; Co. and General Electric- Co. releasing quarterly results.
'l11e Dow Jones industrial average gamed 3.l-:6,
or 0.04 percent. to close at 11.0 I0.34.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index rose 0.17 to
1.165.32. while the i\asdaq composite index rose
0.42. or 0.02 percent, to :!.402.33.
Rising stocks narrowly outpaced declining ones
on the New York Stock Exchange. where volume
came to 3. I billion shares.
The dollar rose ~tonday against the euro and
Japan's yen. It had heen falling consistently in
recent we~:ks agamst those two currencies. Lower
interest rates on American bonds would make it
less attractive for foreign investors to hold the dollar. A weekend meeting of the International
Monetary Fund and Group of 20 linancc ministers
did not yield any new agreements over the recent
currency moves.

Democrats who took over
House now under GOP duress
BY

DAVID ESPO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks
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i

Conservative Indiana provided
the first sign of a Democratic
sweep in 2006 when Republicans
lost three House seats in the
Hoosier state. then glumly
watched dozens more fall as polls
closed across the country.
:--:ow a resurgent Republican
Party wants to rerun the same
scnpt with a distinctly different
ending. atmmg to recapture
dozens of seats it lost in 2006 and
2008
and
putting
junior
Democrats under political duress
from Kew Hampshire to New
Mexico.
And Indiana. where unemployment is measured at 10.2 percent
and newspapers run page after
dreary page of home foreclosure
notices. could again be an early
indicator. Republicans appear to
be on their way to reclaiming one
of the three seats they lost in 2006
and are mounting a strong challenge for a second.
They entertain hopes of taking
back the third, as well, although
their candidate. state lawmaker
Jackie Walorski. is conservative
enough to accuse the National
Rifle Association of being irresolute.
''The economy hasn't gotten
1
better. A lot of things haven't
changed in Indiana. and I think
that may be what's driving some
of these elections," said Chris
' Chocola. a fonner congressman
,.,·ho lost his seat in 2006 and nmv
heads the conservative Club for
Growth in Washington. "If anythim!. things have gotten worse ...
so Crhink ~there's a little buyer's
remorse."
Counting the Indiana seats held
by Reps. Joe Donnelly. Baron Hill
and Brad Ellswmth, who is now
running for the Senate. Democrats
took 55 districts away from the
Republicans in 7006 and 2008 as
they built their majority and then
strengthened it. Some of them are
all but certain to fall to
Republicans this fall. and the millions of dollar!' in campaign
advertising now pouring into
many of the rest arc evidence of
renewed political stgnificance.
1
A majority of the 55 stretch
l
across the nation's northern tier,
from
New
Hampshire
to
Michtgan More than one-quarter
are 111 New York (6) Pennsylvania
(5) and Ohto (4). There also are
four in Flonda and three each in
Arizona and Virginia.
The polttu.:al particulars vary,
but the overall drift is the same as
in Indiana - Democrats under
pressure.
In Alabama, Rep. Bobby

Bright. seeking separation from
his party, announced recently he
won't vote to re-elect Nancy
Pelosi as House speaker if he
earns a new term to the seat he
won in 2008.
In Ohio. Democrats concede
privately they are likely to lose
the seats that Reps. Steve
Drichaus and Mary Jo Kilroy won
in 2008 . Both parties are advertising heavily in districts where Rep
Zach Space is seeking a third term
and Reo John Boccieri a second.
Both parties also are investing
in a pair of-Arizona races. one
involving Rep. Harry Mitchell.
first elected in 2006, the other
where Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick is
mnning for re-election for the seat
she first won in 2008.
In Indiana. Republican ambitions run well beyond House
seats.
Ellsworth trails former Sen.
Dan Coats 111 opinion poll" in
their race for a Senate seat.
Republicans. y, ho control the
state Senate. hope to pick up the
three seats needed for a majority
in the Indiana House as \Veil. If
successful. they would control
reapportionment of the state ·s
congressional districts in 20 II
and strengthen their political position for a decade to come.
Democrats are guilty of
''extremism of national policy in
the last year or two. People here
have really recoiled from it.''
Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels
said in an inten iew He cited as
examples economtc stimulus legislation that passed Congress in
2009, this year's health care bill
and an energy measure that
cleared the House last year
The seat EllsY.orth is vacating
in the southwestern part of the
state is \\'idely \ tewed as a lost
cause for the Democrats. Their
candidate. state Rep. Trent Van
Haaften. is up against Republican
Larry Bucshon. a cardiac surgeon
making his ftrst nltl for office
In an
adJacent dtstrict.
Republican Todd Young opposes
Democratic Rep. Baron Hill m an
area that is so politically divided
that the incumbent won the seat.
lost it and won it back. all sincc19l}8, Polls make it a close race
and both parties are adverttstng
on television.
The outcome of Walorsk1's
challenge to Donnelly in north
.central Indiana may help detine
the limits of any Republican electwn-year wa\e.
Donnelly.
a
t\\O term
Democrat. is campaigning as an
independent lawmaker who
opposed one of Obama 's signature bills and advertises agamst it
as ''Nancy Pelosi's energy tax on

Hoosier families.··
Like Democrats elsewhere. he
assails his rival as extreme.
But the National Republican
Congressional Committee cast
him a-; anything hut independent
in a television ad that be!!an shortly after Labor Day.~ It said
Donnelly voted with Pelosi 8R
percent of the time. and suppor.
a "Wall Street bailout." the e"
nomic stimulus measure and
health care legislation .
Donnell) declined numerous
requests for an interview.
Walor.ski, a 4 7-year-old state
lawmaker, has unquestioned conservative credentials. Sarah
Palin's endorsement and seeming
ly bMndless energy. In one recent
evening. she appeared at a dinner
held by nnti-ab011ion activists, at
a Baptist Chun:h where the audience cheered the idea that the)
could displace Pelo"i. and then
the Elkhart Rifle and Pistol Club
There, she said she wants to
defund the health care bill.
1mpose term limits on lawmakers
and put a freeze on federal spending with "no tax increases, no
exceptions."
She -;peaks rnpidly. and her targets include the Obama ndnunistration. Pelosi. Donnelly and the
National Rine Association. " I
authored the lifetime handgW
pennit. which I hope everyone
has in their pocket. I ha\ e one in
my pocket.'' "he said. adding that
the NRA refused to help pass tlw
measure in the Legislature.
Local unemployment is about
IJ percent, and when she says the
economy is ''going to hell 111 a
handbasket." Jon \\ itmer. breaks
in from the audience: "I think the
handle ·s broke off that handb&lt;h
l.:et."
1\s the men in the audience
walk t() their cars afterward, they
offer praise.
''Jackie's the real deal. She tells
you what she's thinking·• said
Blake Doriot. a resident of nt•arby
Syracuse.
In Indiana. as elsewhere,
Democrats won't concede publicly that an) seats are lost. But
the changed atmosphere is evi-

c,a

de-nt

Fou1 ) eats ago. in mid-October.
then-Rep. Rahm Emanuel vi
Indianapolis as chamnan of t
House campaign committee to
generate support for Donnell).
Hill and l~llsworth.
Nothin•' similar b scheduled for
this fall. \'ke President Joe Bilkn
plans a fundraiser on Thursday for
Ellsworth. But in a year when
many Indiana Democrats want to'
minimize ties to their part). it\\ ill
be held hundreds of miles :l\\ ay.
in \V,tshington. D,C.

�Tuesday, October 12, 2010
According to the IRS
Web site, the following
local organizations, as of
July 26, 20 I0, arc at-risk
of losing their tax-exempt
status:
• Big Bend Citizens
Band Radio Club, Inc ..
Middleport;
• Big Bend Youth
Football
League,
Middleport;
• Citizens Development
Co, Inc., Middleport:
• National ~ssociation

of
Letter
Carriers,
Middleport;
• Meigs County Fish
and Game Association,
Inc., Pomeroy;
• Pomeroy Gun Club,
Inc., Pomeroy;
• American Legion
Auxiliary, Racine;
• Sutton and Chester
Farmers Mutual Fire
Insurance
Company,
Racine:
• Veterans of Foreign
Wars Department of West

endorsed Monday by The
Columbus. Dispatch over
Strickland. Kasich has
also received endorsements
from
The
Cincinnati Enquirer and
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Strickland has received
endorsements from the
Akron Beacon Journal and
Dayton Daily News.
Kasich maintains a platfonn of "creating a business environment that
rewards inve~tment and
increases wages." Other
Ka ...ich core beliefs for the
state to succeed (according

Tax
From Page A1
thcr mandated that any
tax-exempt organization
that fails to file for three
consecutive years automatically loses its federal
-exempt status. Thus,
ny organi:r.ations arc
I unaware of the
changes and have failed
to file the proper returns.

'

Visit
From Page A1
the keynote t-ipcaker at the
Meigs County Republican
Party's Lincoln Day
Dinner back in March and
spoke to a packed house.
Though he entertained a
double-digit lead last
month according to one
poll, Kasich now tinds
himself in a real nail biter,
at least this week - political polls can change like
the weather. Kasich was

Poll$
•

m PageA1

poll, compiled Oct. 4-6.
shows Kasich with a slim.
4-point edge. That poll surveyed 500 likely voters.
A Quinnipiac poll. com. piled Sept. 29-0ct. 3. had
Kasich ahead by 9 points.
That data was collected
from 1.025 people who
identified themselves a&lt;;
likely voters.
A FOX News!PORRa-.mussen poll, compiled
Oct. 2, showed Ka'iich
with a 6-point lead. The
sample for that poll wa-;
1.000 likely voters.
The RCP average for this
race has Ka'iich ahead by 5
points with three weeks to

Heating
From Page A1
The following income
els by household size
•
uld be used to determine eligibility. These
income guidelines represent the 200% calculation
and are revised annually.
Allowable annual income
for a I perl&gt;on household
is $21,660, 2 persons
$29,140.
3
persons
$36,620.
4
persons
$44,100,
5
persons
$51.580. and 6 persons

Virginia, Racine;
• Tuppers
Plains
Volunteer
Fire
Department,
Tuppers
Plains;
• Veterans of Foreign
Wars of the United States
Department of Ohio,
Racine.
For information about
non-profit tax exemption
and the one-time relief
program, visit the IRS
Web
site
at
www.irs.gov/tharities.

to the candidate's Web
site) include:
• Lower taxes
"Create a tax climate that
allows Ohio to compete
with other states to attract
new businesses. foster job
creation, and keep our precious, existing jobs here."
• Make government
more efficient and effective "Skinny-down
state bureaucracy to
ensure taxpayers are getting their money's worth,
and refonn state government into a 21st century
partner with Ohio's job

10 a.m. Partly sunny, with
a high near 66. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
New
rainfall
amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Thursday
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 42.
Friday: Mostly sunny.
with a high near 67.
Frid ay Night: Mostly
clear. with a low around
39.
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 71.
Saturday
Night:
Clear, with a low around
44.
Sunday: Sunny. with a
high near 74.
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
44.
Monday: Sunny. with
a high near 73.

go before Nov. 2.
Previous polls, compiled
from June through early
September, showed Kasich
with a double-digit lead as much ac;; 17 points at one
time,
according
to
Quinnipiac. However, that
lead dwindled to single
digits in mid-September
when Strickland s campaign began a television
advertising blitz hammering Kasich for his involvement
with
Lehman
Brothers. the failed investment finn whose collapse
wa'i linked to the overall
downward spiral of the
U.S. fmancial system in
2008.
Job and population loss
in Ohio continue to be
millstones
around

Strickland's neck, though.
with pro-Ka&lt;&gt;ich ads continuing to trumpet those
stolies to the voting public.
Strickland's
running
mate for lieutenant governor is Yvette McGee
Brown. Kasich 's running
mate is M;uy Taylor, the
former Ohio auditor of
state.
Other candidates running for governor and lieutenant governor are Dennis
S. Spisak and Anita Rios of
the Green Party. Ken
Matesz and Margaret Ann
Leech of the Libertarian
Party and write-in candidates David L. Sargent and
Andrew C. Pfeifer. Like
the minor party candidates
in the U.S. Senate race.
none of the minor party

gubernatorial contenders
have
displayed
any
prowess in the polls.
Early voting 1s still available for Ohio residents. In
Gallia County, residents
who choose early voting
may cast ballots at the
Gallia County Board of
Elections office from 8:30
a.m.-4 p.m. Monday·
Friday. and from 8:30a.m.noon on Saturday, Oct. 30.
The last day for early voting is Monday, Nov. 1. The
Board of Elections is located on the second floor of
the ' Gallia
County
Courthouse, 18 Locust St..
Gallipolis.
(Online: Real Clear
Politics. www.realclearpolitics.com; Ohio Secretary of
State. www.sos.state.oh.us)

AEP (NYSE)- 36.29
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 62.13
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 53.56
Big Lots (NYSE)- 33.54
Bob Evans (NASDAQ}- 29.70
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 52.52
Century Num (NASDAQ) -14.15
Champion (NASDAQ) -1.15
OmriYJSqJS(NAS(Wl)-3.73
City Holding (NASDAQ)-31 .87
Collins (NYSE) - 59.23
DuPont (NYSE} - 46.09
US Bank (NYSE) - 22.26
Gen Electric (NYSE) -16.96
HaOOy-DavK1son (NYSE}- 31.63
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 39.73
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.59
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 29.31
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 60.66
OVBC (NASDAQ) -18.64
BBT (NYSE) - 23.50

Peoples (NASDAQ) -12.31
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.37
Rockwell (NYSE) - 62.22
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 7.73
Royal Dutch Shell- 62.87
Smrs ~OJ (N.ASDAQ)-71.62
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.61
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.53
WesBanco (NYSE) - 17.14
Worthington (NYSE) -14.93

$59.060.
Households
with more than six members should add an additional $7.480 to the yearly income.
Both
Emergency
HEAP and Regular
HEAP applications can
be completed at the
Gallia C.A.A. Heap
Office, 859 3rd Avenue,
Gallipolis.
Central
Office. 8010 N. SR 7.
Cheshire or the Meigs
C.A.A.
HMG/Heap
Office at 122 N. 2nd
Street.
Middleport.
Applications will be
taken by appointment

from 8:30 to 10:45 a.m.
and from 1:00 to 3:30
p.m., Monday through
Thursday.
For those who are
employed. CAA offices
will
offer
evening
appointments until 5:30
in some instances. ·
As in previous years.
the CAA 1s still operating
under the appointment
system to apply for
Emergency
HEAP.
Oflicc telephone numbers are 992-6629 for
Meigs County and 3677341 for Gallia County.
Appointments will be

scheduled bi-weekly on
the scheduled dates of
Friday Oct. 29. Nov. 12,
Dec. 3, Dec. 17, Jan. 7,
2011. and Jan. 21, 2011.
Each time appointments
will be booked for the
following two weeks.
The toll-free number for
Regular HEAP inquiries
is 1-800-282-0880. For
the hearing impaired with
a
telecommunication
device for the deaf
(TDD) 1-800-686-1557
For further information. contact the Cheshire
Oftice at 367-7341 or
992-6629.

Deaths

Zumba classes
SYRACUSE- Zumba classes aFe offered from
5:30-6;30 p.m .. Thursdays at Syracuse Community
Center. Proceeds go towards the Meigs Senior
Center and Syracuse Community Center. Adults
and children eight years old and up welcome.
Debbie Jones. Debbie Wayland and Paulette
•
rrison are instructing.

Young Eagles
offer view from the sky
McARTHUR The date for the Young
Eagles/Leaf Peep event at the Vinton County
Airport has been changed from Sunday. Oct. 17 to
Saturday, Oct.J6.
This event gives those who want to take airplane
rides an opportunity to see the changing colors of
the leaves from the air and also allows youngsters
up to age 17 to take one free airplane ride.
The event will begin at noon and end at 4 p.m.
Food will be available during the day. It is sponsored by the Vinton County Pilots and Boosters
Association and all proceeds are used to maintain
the airport and keep it open for general aviation.
For more information contact Booster President
Nick Rupert at 740-357-0268 or Steve Keller at
740-418-2612. The Vinton County Airport is located about 6 miles north of McArthur just off St. Rt.
93 on Airport Road .

unt.ed Hero Field
CENTERVILLE - The Centerville Volunteer
Fire Department's Haunted Hero Field begins
Friday and runs through October. Haunted Hero
Field will be open from 8-11 p.m . each Friday and
8 p.m.-midnight each Saturday in October. It is
located on Centerville Road at the old Centerville
Ballfield. All proceeds will benefit the fire department.

I'

Meigs County Forecast

Tuesday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
79. Calm wind becoming
west between 4 and 7
mph.
Tuesday
Nigh t:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 48. North wind
around 5 mph becoming
calm.
Wednesd ay: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
creators - not one that 72. Calm wind becoming
punishes business with west around 5 mph.
outdated or unnecessary
Wednesd ay Night: A
regulation."
chance
of showers, main• Transform the educaly
after
midnight. Mostly
tion system - "Help our
kids achieve, compete and cloudy, with a low around
succeed to meet the work- 48. North wind between 3
force demands of tomor- and 5 mph. Chance of
row's economy."
precipitation is 30 per• End the influence of cent.
New ' rainfall
special interests - "Build amounts of less than a
common-sense solutions tenth of an inch possible.
to our problems and kick
Thursday: A chance of
out those who, for too
showers,
mainly before
long, have kept us from
tixing all that is wrong in
our state."

Local Stocks

Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for October 11,
2010, provtded 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.

Sidney C. White
Sidney C. White, 86. Mason. W.Va.. died at home
on Oct. 10, 2010 following a long illness and is awaiting the resurrection.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m .• Thursday.
Oct 14 at Foglesong-Roush Funeral Home. officiated
by Rev. Jim Lucas and Rev. Clyde Ferrell. Visitation
will be held two hours prior to the funeral service.
Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.

For the Record
Recorder

Local Briefs

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Retired teachers lunch
RODNEY - The Gallia Co. Retired Teachers
luncheon will be held at noon on Thursday, Oct. 14
at Rodney United Mcthod1-.t Church. The speaker
will be Melvin Biars. RSVP to Karen Cornell at
256-6846.

Women in
Appalachia workshop
PIKETON - The OSli South Centers in Piketon
will host the workshop Women in Appalachia from
10 a.m.-3 p.m .. Thursday. Oct. 14. Visit
www.20 I Owomen.cventbrite.com to register.

Homecoming
at Wilkesville Methodist
WJLKESVILLE Wilkesville Methodist
Church wtll host homecoming services beginning
at 9 a.m .. Sunday. Oct. 17. Sunday school begins at
10 a.m. A carry-in dinner will be served at 12:30
p.m. The afternoon service wiJJ begin at 1:30 p.m.

Visit us online .at
mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported the
following real estate transfers:
Donald Taylor. deceased, to Diana S. Taylor,
affidavit of transfer. Olive: Maureen Morgan to
Maureen Morgan, Colleen M. Phillips. deed.
Columbia: Edward R. McKinney to Edward R.
McKinney. Debra Steele. deed. Salem:
Christopher K. Becker to Leroy P. Hendrix. Lois
Hendrix. deed. Village of Middleport.
Deborah L. Diamond. James E . Diamond, to
Paul E. Adolph. Denille K. Diamond. deed .
Salem; Fred Priddy. deceased. to Barbara
Priddy. certificate, Rutland: Enc Nazareth
Priddy to Eric Manuel Priddy. Shern A. Pridy.
deed. Rutland; Nathan L. Brady to Daniel L.
Puskas, Ricky Brady, Terry E. Brady, Darrell W.
Clark, deed. Salem.
William J Martin to Daniel L. Puskas. Ricky
D. Brady, deed. Salem. Nathan L. Brady to
Daniel L. Puskas. Terr) E. Brady. Donald
Rollin. Daniel Henry Fulk. deed. Salem, l:.dith
A Fraley to Paula R. Allen. deed, Scipio:
Mildred M. Elkins to Timothy James Triplett.
certificate, Lebanon.

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~

.

,

.

.

________

_

--

.

-

www.rnydllysentinel.corn

1'ue day, Oetobcr 12, 20 I0

"•
t

I
I

•

r

..•

THE FACTS
Research shows certain factors increase a woman's chance of getting breast cancer,
including the following:
-A family history of cancer
- Defects in one of two inherited genes
- Early onset of menstruation or late onset of menopause
- Never experiencing childbirth and use of hormones
BREAST CANCER CAN'T BE IGNORED
-Nearly 2,000 men in the U.S will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year.
-About 212,920 women and men in the U.S. will be found to have invasive breast cancer in
2006 .
-Approximately 40,970 women will die from the disease this year.
-More than 2 million women in the U.S. have been treated for breast cancer.

..

YOU CAN FIGHT BACK
When breast cancer is found early, your chance for survival is the greatest. So keep these
things in mind:
- Remember to perform monthly breast self-exams
-After age 40, go in for annual clinical exams and mammograms.
- If you are under the age 40 with a family history of breast cancer, discuss risk and
mammograms with your doctor.
- If any change occurs in your breast, such as redness, pain, swelling or discharge, visit your
doctor.
.
_ Help protect yourself with regular exercise and a healthy diet.

~

..

OmoVALLEY

BANK

•

Think Pink
provides the
following services:
You could qualify for a FREE mammogram. if
you are :

Since 1872

Member FDIC

Brogan Warner
Insurance Services
David L. White • Robin A. White
Michael L Warner, Agents
214

Main St. • Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-6687

2nd Office Opening Soon
502 Elm Street • Racine, Ohio
(Home National Bank)

• A Meigs County Resident
• Low to moderate income
• Uninsured or underinsured
• A baseline Mammogram beginning at age 35
• Screening mammograms for women ages 40-49
• Referral to other mammography programs for
women age 50 and over
• Screening mammograms for women ages 50-64
who do not meet eligibility for other breast health
programs
• FREE$ lO.OO gas vouchers available for Meigs
County' women \Vho qualify to provide assistance
getting to mammogram appointments
• Education in the community

.

To learn more, call i'iorma Torres or Carol)n
Grueser (740) 992-5469 or (740) 992-3853

MCCI

SUSOnG.

Kamen
cure
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Gravely
7ractor
Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor Street Pomeroy, OH

740-992-2975

1910
a

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Pleasant Valley
Hospital

NATIONAL
U(IU I HIACUSl

We've Got Itt

l\leigs County Health Department
encourages breast health ~·ear-round!
• llost to OSU i\lobile :\1anmlograph) Unit
offering screemng mammograms for ladies 35+.
• Clinical breast exams \ ia the Famil) Planning
Program for women of child~bearing age.
• Referrals to the Southeastern Ohio Breast and
Cen ical cancer Project 1 -800-23-~0BLE and
her nvailable funding sources for low in~.:
and un/underinsured ladies. ~~~ r'l

9

For more informatioiz or to sdzedule an

--

appoillfmellf. call 740-992-6626

I
I

�·------------------------Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Adkins'' ins l..t•s bsin~nhart lrn., Pag~ B2

OSU No. I, Pngl' B6

'

Thcsday, October 12, 2010

•F===================================
n
locAL S

1

PIt E P V C) L LEYBA L L H.O UN l) UP

POM ROY
A eGhO&lt;Iole c.l upc moog
h gh scl'ool varalty sporting events
lnvulvo glon s lrorr' Meog M•lon ond
Gar ac u tea

~IIY.~I~2

Volleyball
Gal a Aca at Portsmo"tt&gt; 5 15 p m
M er at Eastorn 6 p tn
Southern at Fed HOCk 6 p m
A.cx !'lder at Me gs 6 p "'
To s~a at Po nt PI asar• 6 p m
Cross Lanes Ctlr at Hannan 6 p m
Cross Country
Pt Pleasant at Cerci a Coo TBA
Soccer

Spmg Va'Jet Ill Pt. Pleasant (G) 6 p.n
Pomt Pleasant (B) at Hert&gt;e t
Hoove 6 pm
OVCS at Bclpro 6 p m

Devils draw
Warren in D-2
bracket
•

SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS MYDAILYSl'm NE'l COM

JACKSON, Ohio
The postseason i~ set lor
the Gallia Academ) soccer
tc;am foliO\\ ing Saturda) 's
Dhision II bo)' socc:er
toumament dr.m held at
Jackson High School in
Jackson Count)
The Blue Devils (6-7-2)
eamed a seven '\eed and
will face ~econd-seeded
Warren (I 1-::!-1) m a D-2
sectional semifinal contest
at \\ arren High School at
6 p.m. on Tuesday. Oct.
19.
The "inner of that contest "Ill hu t the D '2 o,;ectional final at 4 p.m. on
Saturday. Oct. 2~ against
either Chillicothe or
Unioto.
Complete brackets of
the 20 I 0 bo) s o;occer postseason are available on the
.
eb at W\\\\.seodab.org

•

Local teams
fare well at
sectional
drawing

Mergs'
Shelhe
Bailey
spikes
the ball
over
River
S ENTINEL STAFF
Valley's
MllSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTMLCOM
Ka1tlyn
Roberts
JACKSON, Ohio (5) and
I The postseason road is
Kelsey
now set for six Ohio volSands
leyball teams in the Ohio
Valley Publishing area,
(6) durand five of those local
ing
squads earned home
Monday
evening's games following the 2010
sectional
tournament
nondrawings
for
divisions
II.
league
Ill
and
IV
held
Sunday
at
match.
Jackson High School.
Baiey
Four of the local teams
recorded Gallia Academy.
her
Meigs. Eastern and
1,000th
Southem - will open the
career
second season at home;
k1ll tn the while River Valley and
first set
South Gallia will be the
of tne
only OVP schools not to
have a home game in the
match.
post cason.
Bryan
Three of those clubs Watters/
River Valley. Eastern and
photo
South Gallia - will also
have to win only one
match to make it to districts, while both Mei~s
and Gallia Academy wdl
have to "'in at least twice
to advance to the Divisioq
II districts. Southem will
19. 25-23 decision at also ha\ e to win twice in
RVHS Jac;t montl} during Division IV to make it to
a
tri-match
with districts.
Starting in D-4, Eastem
Southern.
The historical part of ( 17-2) came away with
the evening came on the the area's highest seeding
opening point of Game I, at No. 3 and will host the
of the Federal
when
MilS
senior "inner
Hocking-Belpre contest
Shellie Bailey nailed the on
Thursday. Oct. 21. in a
1,000 kill of her career.

Lady Marauders sweep River Valley in 3
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS®MYDA LYSfm NEL COM

ROCKSPRI~GS. Ohio
- The ~lcigs volleyball
program won its fourth
stratght match. and made
a little history in the
process. during a 25- J2.
25-11. 26-24 victory over
visiting River Valley on

Monday night m a nonconference nHttchup at
Larry
R.
Morrison
G) mnasium.
The Lady Marauder~
( 12-8) stormed out to
leads of 13 or more in the
first t\\o game~;, which
allowed the hosts to
storm out to a quick 2-0
match lead.

The Lad) Raiders (14led by a~ many as six
pomts ( 12-6) in Game 3.
but l\leigs rallied through
six ties and seven lead
changes in the finale to
claim a two-point victory
and a 3-0 match sweep.
MHS also claimed a
season sweep of the
enes after winning a 257)

Please see Roundup, Bl

Please see Draw, Bl

Beth ScrgenVphoto

Southern head coach Kyle Wickline, center, talks w1th players during Friday
evening's Homecoming contest against the Miller Falcons.

Tornadoes fall to Miller on
Ho~ecoming, 36-14
B Y SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY MYDA YTR BUNE COM
~

RACINE. Ohio
TI1e Southern football
team (2-5. 2-3 TVC
Hocking) fell to \1iller
in a Homeconung night
conte~t
on
Friday
evening in Racine,
Ohio.
Miller ( 1-6. I 4 'I VC
tock111g) defeated the
,sts by a score of 36~.

Miller's Colten Gill
scored a p:1ir of
Rushing touchdowns in
the first two quarters to
give the Falcons the
halttime lead.
Southern scored its
first point'&gt; on a 45 ) ard
touchdown run by Tyler
Barton. '' ith Danny
Ramthun adding the
PAT. GiJI.scored again

for Miller to offset the
Southern score.
Miller held a 15 point
lend going into the final
quarter.
The Falcons' Hunter
Starhn scored on a 23
yard pass from Gill to
increase the lead.
Southern's Trenton
Deem
scored
the
Tornadoes
second
touchdlm n of the game
on a 24 ) ard pass from
Ramthun.
Ramthun
added the PAT kick.
. Gill added a final
rushing touchdo\\ n in
the fourth quarter to
seal the win for the
htlcons.
Southern had 27 carries for 137 yards on the
ground. Barton carried
the ball six times fur 71
) ards, !-ric Buzzard had
I0 carries for 41 ) ards.

Ramthun had I0 carrieo;
for 21 ) arcls, and
Trenton Deem had one
carry for four ) ards.
Ramthun completed
six passes for 71 )Clrd&lt;;
and had one touchdo\\ n
and one Interception.
Hunter Johnson had
three catches for 28
) ardc;. Deem had one
catch for 24 yard!..
Buzznrd had one catch
for 16 \ants, and Barton
had 01i1.· catch tor three
vards.
• Gill kd the Falcons
with 26 carries for 202
) ards and four rushing
... cores. Gill was ~-5
pas~ing for 76 ) rml ...
and a touchdown.
!'he Tornadoes will
travel to Waterford on
l•riday for a TVC
Hock111g contest at 7:30
p.m.

save, save

E.
The Daily Sentinel

. dail) sentincl.com

11" 11 .Ill)

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentincl.com

-~------

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Adkins wins Les Esinenhart
Invitational
'
Bv SARAH HAWLEY

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

WORTHINGTON
Ohio
Galli&lt;~
Academy's
Peyton
Adkins took first place at
Saturday's
Les
Esinenhart Invitational at
Thomas
Worthir1gton
High School.
Adkins posted a time
of 18:47 to beat Dublin
1 Coffman's
Rachel
Bosworth by :05.
I The Blue Angels'
Madison Holley (21; 15)
placed 60th, Sam Barnes
Jessica St. :James photo/Courtesy of the Ironton Tribune j (21 :35)
was
72nd,
River Valley's Brandon Bagshaw wraps up a Mckenna Warner (22:08)
Chesapeake ball carrier during Friday's ovc game in was 98th, Hannah Watts
(2~:29)
was
!39th,
Chesapeake.
Elrzabeth Holley (23:45)
was !45th, and Lexi
Henry (28:25) was 16lst.
The
Blue
Angels
'BY BRYAN WALTERS
0 game at the 5:51 mark :

Raiders fall to Chesapeake
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRlSUNE CCM

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio
- Riwr Valley dropped
it-. sixth straight overall
ucci..,ion and seventh consccuti" e league contest
Friday night Lfollowing a
45-7
..;etback
to
Chesapeake in a Week 7
Ohio Valley Conference
gridiron matchup in
Lu\\ renee County.
The visiting Raitlers ( 16. 0-2 OVC) tntileu 20-0
after one 4Ui111cr and were
do\vn 39-0 at the intennis..;ion, which ultimately
allowed the Panthers (2-5.
2-0) to establish their
bigl!cst lead of the night,
45:.0. at the end ofthe third
quarte1:
RVHS - which had
only 151 vards of total
(ltfense - • finally broke
into the scoring column
with II :53 remaining in
regulation following a 6yaru touchdown nm by
Kyle Brown, which concluded the scoring at 45-7.
BnJ\\ n had a productive
ni!!ht for the Raiders.
cbl'u·ning out 116 rush_ing
yards on 14 carnes.
RVHS. however. rmmaged
onl) 131 rushing ymds on
24 attempts.
CBS. on the other hand,
amasseu 374 rushing
yards on 42 cm·des and
had a total of 378 yards of
total offense. Patrick Hintz
led that \!round attack with
159 yards and two TDs on
seven totes.
Hintz stm1ed the scor. ing with 7:53 shll\Ving in
the first quarter after a I 0yaru scamper made it a 60 C{lfltest.
Trey West made it a 14-

Draw
from PageBl
home sectional tinal. That
contest will start at 6 p.m.
South Gallia ( 13-7)
eamcd the lifth-seed and
will travel to South
Webster on Thursday,
Oct. 11, for a D-4 sectional final contest against the
fourth-seeded l.Cidy Jeeps
( 11-6).

Southem (5-13) earned
a seven seed and will host
I Oth-seeded Ironton St.
Joe (2-15) on Monday,
Oct.l8. in a D-4 sectional
semifinal at 6 p.m. The
winner \Viii advance to
the sectional final on
'11nrrsuay, Oct. 21. at second-seeded
Waterford
I 17-2) at 6 p.m.
River Valley ( 14-6) the lone Division lil
school in the area earned a fi\'e seed and
will travel to fourth-seeded Trimble ( 13-5) on
Saturday, Oct. 23. for a
sectional final match at 4
p.m.
Gallia Academy (12-5)
earned the four seed and
will host fifth-seeded
Waverly
(12-4)
on
Wednesday, Oct. 20. in a
Divi::iion II sectional
semilinal at 6 p.rn
The winner moves on
to the D-2 sectional tina!
on Saturday. Oct. 23, at 3
p.m., and will tmvel to
either Jackson. South
Point or top-seeded
Marietta.
Meigs ( 11-8) earneu the
.seven seed and \\ill host
1Ot h-seedcd
Vinton
County
(5-15)
on
Monday. Oct. I~. in a D-2
sectional quarterlinal at 6
p.m. The winner will play
at second-sceued Wan·e!l
( 17-4) in a sectional semrlinal on Wednesday. Oct.
20. at 6 p.m.

fi~lowinga7~a~runand

placed 13th
overall
with a team
score
of
3 4 0
Hoover
took
the
team title
with
a
score of 80.
Adkins
In
the
boys race.
Matt Watts led the Blue
Devils with a time of
16:50 to take 27th place.
Timmy Warner (21: 15)
was !74th, Quenton
McKinniss (21 :47) wa~
!77th. Casey Lawrence
!79th,
(23:01)
was
Patrick Brown (23: 17)
was
!80th,
Logan
Greenlee (24: 12) was
181 st, and Ben Roach
(30:49) wa.s I R2nd.
Westerville
North ·s

Brian Hannaford and Jeff
Hannaford took first and
second place, respectively. with times of 15:24
and 15:37.
4
The Blue Devils placed
23rd as a team with a
score of 635. LaSalle
won the team title with a
S&lt;.:Ore of 56. •
Complete resulb are
available
at
www.baum!&gt;page.com
POINT CC COMPETES AT
CCHS INVITATIONAL

CHARLESTON.
W.Va
The Point
Pleasant cross country
team took part in the
Charleston Catholic High
School Invitational in
Charleston, W.Va.
Andrea Porter led the
local finishers placing in

J8th with a time of 22:05
in the girls race. Avery
Daughtery placed 141 st
with a time of 31 :52 for
the Lady Knights.
Charleston Catholic's
Sami Harris placed first
in the girls race with
time of 19:51.
In the boys event,
Caleb Riffle placed 118th
with a time of 21:14,
Elijah McCiananhan was
I 28th with a time of
21:39, Guy Fisher was
!58th with a time of
22:45, and Logan Burch
was !86th with a time of
24:22.
Fairland's
Tanner
Mattie placed first in the
boys race with a time of
16:56.
Complete results are
available
at
ww.runwv.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­

Roundup

successful two-point
conversion. Dylan Nichols 1
added 4-yard score at 3:41
to close out the tirst quar- 1
firom Page Bl
ter scnring at 20-0.
Hintz opened the second quarter scoring on a Bailey. a four-year starter
55-yard jaunt at the I 0:46 for the Lady Marauders.
mark for a ~6-0 auvantage, is the first and only
the11 Brandon Noble
cau(lht
a 4-varu
TO pass I Meigs volleyball player
0
,•
f rom Austrn McMaster at \ to net 1.000 kills in a
4:58 for a 32·0 lead.
career.
Nichols added his secValerie Conde and
ond nrshing TO of the Jordan Anderson led the
night with 3:2.9 remaining service attack for Meigs
in the half following a 25- with 11 points apiece.
yard run. making it 39-0 at • followed by Emalee
the break.
.
Glass with 10 and Bailey
\Yest added,I1JS second with
eight
'points.
nr:o;hrn~ TO ot ~e _game Miranda . Grueser and
w~th lu:58 showrng_rn t~e Chelsea Patterson both
t_htrd quarter. plungrn_g rn added three points to the
trom trvc yards out for a
. .
.
.
comfortable 45-0 cushion wrnntng cause, whrle
through three complete.
Ch.andra Stanley had one
Chesapeake claimed a porn~.
14-8 edge in first downs
Alrson Brown led the
and dia not commit a MHS net attack with 12
turnover in the triumph. kills. followed by Bailey
finishing plus-3 ovemll in with II for a current
mistakes.
CHS
was career total of 1,010 kills.
tlagged t\~O times f~r 30 Stanley and Morgan
yards, whrle the Rmders Howard both added
:vere penalized three times seven kills each while
tor 25 yards.
Alaine Arnold hdd three
RVHS
quarterback
d E ·1 K'
h d
Jacob Hefner went 2-of-9 an
mt Y mnan a
passing for 20 yards. two.
throwing two intercepHoward a l~am-best
tions. Trey Noble caught three blocks. "7'hrle Glass
both passes for 20 yards.
led the passmg attack
McMaster was 1-of-2 with 37 assists.
passing for four yards and
Katelyn Birchfield led
a TD. Brandon Noble RVHS with seven kills.
mad~ the TD catch.
followed by
Kelcie
Rrver Valley returns to Carter with six and
action Friday when it trav- Kaitlyn Roberts with
cis to Coal Gro~·e for five. Kelsey Sands added
another OVC matchup at two kills for the Lady
7:30p.m.
Raiders, while Beth
Misner and
Denise
Madriz
both
rounded
The winner of the
Warren match will host the things out with one kill
sectronal
final
on apiece.
Birchfield led the Lady
Saturday. Oct. 23, at 3
Raiders
with six service
p.m., against either Athens
points.
including
one ace.
or Unioto.
Senior
Meigs
will
have
Complete brackets of
the 2010 volleyball post- Night on Thesda) when
season are available on the it hosts Alexander in a
TVC Ohio Division
web at www.seodab.org
a

i

!

!

Bryan Walters/photo

River Valley's Kelcie Carter sets the ball during Monday evening's non-league
match at Meigs High School in Rocksprings, Ohio. River Valley's Beth Misner (11 ),
Kelsey Sands (6), and Katelyn Birchfield prepare for the hit as Meigs' Morga.
Howard jumps for the block.
rnatchup at 6 p.m., while the Lady Tornadoes with Stewart with six points,
River Valley travels to 12 points (two aces). fol- and Kali Harris and
Jackson for a non-confer- lowed by Bobbi Harris Katlin Clarke with one
ence contest at 5:30p.m. with 10 points (two point each.
Jordan
Strang had 20 kills to
aces),
Lady
Huddleston with six lead
the
lADY TORNADOES TOP
pomts (three aces). Tornadoes . Thomas
WAHAMA IN 3
Kelsey Strang with six and Cummins each had
pomts (tv.o aces). Katie three kills, Huddleston
MASON, W.Va.
The Southern volleyball Jenkins with four points had two kills, and
ace),
Amber Harris and Hayman
team (6-10, 6-7 TVC (one
Hayman
with
three added
one
each.
Hocking)
defeated
(two
aces). Thomas had 24 assists.
Wahama (0-13 TVC pointe;
Strang,
Hocking)
Monday Maggie Cummins with while
two
points.
and
~takayla
Cummins.
and
evening at Wahama
Huddleston each added
High School in Mason. Findley with one point.
For the Lady Falcons, two. and Jenkins had
W.Va.
The Lady Tornadoes were led by Ally Gagnon one.
Southern will travel
won b) scores of 25-13. and Kastle Balser with
25-19. and 25-20.
eight points each. fol- to Federal Hocking on
by
Brittan) Tuesday.
Courtney Thomas led lowed

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

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SerVICes

1000

Line
Danc1ng
Lessons at Merry's
Appliance Services Fam1ly Winery Every
lost &amp; Found
Found
black
F Joe's TV Repair on Thursday 7·9 740·
makes
&amp; 388..0578
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304-675·1724
740-446-2230
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Lost in
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Reward
304·593·2260

Do you owe over
$10000 to the IRS?
Stop wage
garnishments and
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Settle Out Over Due
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1-888-692-5739

Notices

Home Improvements

NOTICE
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CO recommends that
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must b e p l c ked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not

~

Financial

picked up Will
be

Baeement
woterproo1tng
UncondttlonallrfetJme
guarantee Loca
references furmshed.
Estabt1shed 197S Call
24 Hrs 74o-446-08?0,
Rogers Basement
waterproofing

2000

SHREDDER

Pet Cremations. Call
6 3745

sI FlED s

Other Servicea

VJl!:lAG£

NOTICE Borrow Sman
Contact
the
Ohio
Dlvtslon of Ananclal
FREE! Unlimited
lnstltuttO s Office of
local and long
consur1)8r
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distance calling for BEFORE you refmance
only $25.99 per
your me or obtain a
loan. BEWARE of·
month.
Call today!
requA«~s for any large
r·
advance payments of
1.866-798-0692

9 wk old Poo/Terriers
to giveaway. 3F, 1M.
7 40-256·9071
700

Agnculture

farm Equipment

STIHL Sales &amp; Servtee
the Office
of Consumer
Available
at
tees
or Insurance.
Call Now
Profesaional Services A({lars toll free at 1· Carmrchael Equipment
886-278-0003 to learn 740-446-2412
TURNED
DOWN
ON
if
mortgage
broker
SOCIAL SECURITY or the
lender
IS property
Hay, Feed, Seed,
SSI
nsed. (This Is a
Grain
No Fee Unless We
public
serviCe
Wtnl
announcement from the Good mixed hay, sq..
$2.50 4x5, round
...
Ohto Valley Publtshtng
SEPTIC
PUMPINQ .;,C;;.;om.;.;~p;;;;a;.;,ny"")---- bales $20 00. Stored
Ga11ta Co. OH a1J
Inside 740-446-2075
Mason Co. WV. Ron 500
Education
Evans Jackson, OH
900
Merchandtse
800-537-9528
Business &amp; Trode
School
Miscellaneous

~~~~~~=

~;;::::;;~;;;;;;;;~=-

400

Fmanctal

Gallipolis
Career
College
(Career's
Close To Home)
CaliToday! 740-4464367
1·800-2140452

Accredited
Membet
Acae&lt;litng
Counclt lor
Independent Colleges and
Schools t274B

600

Ammals

financicl Services

Livestock

~BED/ICARD

Black Angus Bulls 1
&amp; 2 yr olds. call after
5 pm. 740-288·1460

BELIEF
Burled In Credit
Card Debt?
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Security Syatem
wtth $99 installation
and purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services
Call1·888-367·2171

~IJe

Townhousea
Free Rent Special
Ill
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours ol SA·SP.
EHO
Ellm Vlew Apts.
(304)882-3017
Twm Rivers Tower Is
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment for
the
elderly/dtsabled,
call
675-6679

Automoltve

For
lease:
1BR
unfurnished 2nd floor
apt.
near
Gallia •
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. required,
max1mum occupancy
2, $350 mon. 740Want to buy Junk 446-3936 or 740Cars, call 740-388· 446-4425
0884
2 Bedroom Apt. Rio
Real Eslate Grande $400 Dep. •
3000
740-245·
Sales $400mth

Otler's Towmg. Now
buytng Junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870.
No
Sunday call

YMENT
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2004 Jayco Camper
31ft. Long $6,400.00
Ph. 740-446-6754

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74

Campera / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Free HD for life.
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1·866-541-0834

For
all
your
construction needs.
Also Winterizing' 24
hr servtce. 304·593·
0859

Recreational
Vehtcles

_W_h_o~M~a~de~W~h-o~C~Iu~b
Calf. Lead broke
75011·
hairy,
$1500.00 304-857·
2166

Pets
Regtstered 1yr old
Collie Black &amp; White
Great
with
Kids
$150.00
ph.
740)446·6754
Giveaway short hair
tiger stnp
kitten,
femal,
litter
box
tratned 446-8567
CKC
Miniature
Pinscher
Pups.
Shots.wormed,Tall
Dock PO.P $250.00
ea. 740-388·8788

;;;;~~~-90W--~~~
For Sole By Owner

6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740·
446-0390
Home for Sale 74
M1dway Dr. Bidwell

2nd floor 2 BR
apartment,
overlooking Gallipolis
Chy
Park.
L.A.,
kitchen/dining area, 1
112
'BA,
washer/dryer. $600.
mon + dep. 740-446·
4425 or 740-446·
2325

$50,000.00
20%
down
on
Land
Contract. 740·7941013
2 BR apt. 6 mi from
~~~~=~~ Holzer $400 + dep.
Houses For Sole
Some utilities pd.
740·645·7630
or
Home in Gallipolis, 2
740-988-6130
story, 3BR, 1BA,
carport, deck,2 out 1BR nicely furnished
buildings, 4.5 car apt. No smoking, No
garc:ge/shop
pets. $400 mo. +
wtcarport.
Asking dep. 740-446-4782
$112,000 Call 740·
578-6687 or 352· Beautiful
1BR
817-8652
apartment in the
country
freshly
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;== 2 MI. FROM NEW painted very clean
Jet Aeration Motors
wv
&amp;
HAVEN,
WID hook up nice
re:Jt~lr:!t~;; Call 2BDRM, 1BA. FULL country setting only
Ron Evans1-80Q.
BASEMENT. ON 2 10 mins. from town.
537-9528
ACRES, SEVERAL Must
see
to
~~~~""!""~~ OUT
BUILDINGS, appreciate
Water
FIREWOOD &amp; HAY MEAT
SHOP pd. $375/mo 614FOR SALE 304-882· "FORMERLY
595·7773 or 740·
2537
JOEY'S
DEER 645·5953
CUTIING" GOES W/ ...,~-~-~GIVE-AWAY: Several HOUSE
304-593· Tara Townhouse Apt.
pa1r of women shoes
2BR 1.5 BA, back
5920
size 8 narrow call·
patio,
poo,1
304-458·1657
LOOKING
FOR playground. No pets.
tTo Buy
DEAL? FIND US $450 rent. 740-367·
Wan
NOW!!!
0547
4anoakwoodhome.c
Absolute Top dollar- omf737 &amp; Facebook
FIRST MONTH
sliver/gold coins any
FREE
tOKJ14KJ18K
gold
Real Estate
2&amp; 3 BRAPTS.
3500
Rentats
jewerly, dental gold,
$385&amp;
pre
1935
US '
UP,
Sec.
Dep $300
currency. proof/mint
&amp; up,
sets, diamonds, MTS
Aportmenb/
AJC. WID hook·up,
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Townhouses
tenAvenue,
Gallipolis 2BR APTCiose to
ant pays electric,
446·2842
Holzer Hospital on SR
EHO
Yard Sale
160 CIA (740) 441·
Ellm View Apta.
;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;~;:; 0194
304-882-3017
Evelyn's Yard Sale: ~~~~~-CONVENIENTLY
&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
&amp; 1
Friday Rt. 62 above LOCATED
Mason
supporting AFFORDABLE!
houses In Pomeroy &amp;
gospel music electnc Townhouse
Mtddleport. NO Pets,
range,
clothes, apartments.
andfor 740-992-2218
numerous items.
small houses lor rent Middleport,
senior
Call 740·441-1111 for
......,F,.,.,IN,...,.,D='""""A-J-:-:::Q:-:B~
livmg, 2 br, furnished
application
&amp;
apt, dep. &amp; ref., no
inlormatton
pets, uttlities paid,
1 BR and bath first 740-992·0 165
months
rent
&amp;
Nice,
deposit. references Clean,
required. No Pets Efficiency 1BDRM,
and clean. 740-441· Ref.. Dep., NO pets
304-675·5162
0245

OR A NEW

CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

www.mydailysentinel.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

2br.
stove/refr.
furnrshed
CIA
$385.00 a mon +
dep 304 675·7783

Apartments/
Townhouses

Pleasant
Valley
Apartments Is now
tak1ng
applications
for 2 3 &amp; 4 b~ HUO
Subsldtzed

Housea For Rent

~ BA , 1 BA STove &amp;

Apartm~nts

1-2 BDRM Apt's rn
Pt
Pleasant
all
uttht1es pard call 304·
360-0163
Very Nice 2 &amp; 3
BEDROOM APTS.
Gallipolis
City.$550.00 &amp; up
Includes w/s/g &amp;
Washer &amp;Dryer NO
PETS...
740)5915174

Houses For Rent

1Br cottage off street
Spring Valley Greer pkg very clean $300
Apartments 1 BR at mon+utl
446·8919
$395+2 BR at $470 or 446·2074
Month 446·1599

Retrlg Furn., Gas
Applrcatrons
are ~~====~
tleat,
Cantrall
taken Monday thru
HGuses For Rent
N,C,WtD hook up
Thrusday
9 OOam
cluport, No Smoktng,
1 OOprn
Offrce IS 1\irce 1BR house in
NO pets $600 per
loc;ated
at
1151
Gall•pohs
Walk to m
$600 Dep 105
Evergreen
Dnve,
every1h1ng you need. Ba tlanr, Gallrpohs
Potnt Pleasant. WV Very clean unit wrth
Cal
446·3667,
(304) 675-5806
new parnt $275 per Tak g appltcatrons.
mo/$1 00 sec dep.
Sorry no pets. Call
in
Wayne
for
Information 404·456·
3802

;.;;.;======

6000

4
br.,
bath,
detached
garage,
acre &amp; 1/2 land,
newly
remodeled,
located 1 mile out
CR 10 · langsvrlle,
$650 per mo. $650
dep
No Uliltttes
Pard; also 3 br 1
bath
furnrshed
mobrle home, water
&amp; trash pard. $450
per mo $450 dep.
located 1 mrle off
Rd
Kngsbury
Pomeroy Lease &amp;
references requrred
No Pets Allowed
740·416-2960
Available

October

22 house for rent rn
P:&gt;meroy
$750
deposit requrred, call
740-992·7511
or
740-591-0800

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Child/Elderly Care
Do you need a
chnsttan nanny '"
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Help Wanted·
675-5332 Weekends
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740·591·0265
Miscellaneous
New Salon open1ng ~~~~=~=
2BR.
1BA Stylist, wanted booth FREE- Electric Organ
Stove&amp;Refrig.
rent. leave message (13Pedals)
304-882furnlshed, gas heat, 740-446-7053
2385
ac. w/d hookup, NO ~----.....PETS.
$400mo.· Wanted
Direct
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;;;Jo;;;;n;;;;e;;;;s~T-re;;;;e~S~e-rv~ic=e
$200dep.
2013 supervrsion
10 complete tree care,
n.marn
st. employees
pl.pleasant.wv 304· overesee male youth stump
• grinding,
674.0471
rn a staff secure bucket truck &amp; crane
resrdential
environment.
Must Ins- Worker Comp.
House for rent close
physical 740·367-0266, 740ass
tc Locks RT2 no P
339·3366
or training reqwrment.
pets, drinking
Pay
based
on
smokrng, must have
expenence. Call 740· 100
ref's. 304-576·2642
Legals
379·9083 M·F from
4000 Manufactured 8·4
The annual election
Housing
of the Board of
DJrectors for the
positions Meigs
Cleaning
County
Rentals
available
in
Pt. Agricultural Society
area w1!l be held at the
Mobile Home Pleasant, WV
water, sewer, trash industnal Sitting 304· Secretary's office at
pd.
No
pets, 529-7379
the faJrgrounds, on
Johnson's
Mobile
Monday. November
Home Park
740ABODE
HEALTH 1 2010. The polls
6·3160
CARE
SERVICES wtll be open from 5
INC. Home Makers. p.m. to 9 p.m. on
3BR.
2BA. $575
Day.The
CNA
wanted
for Election
election shall be by
dep+utl 1722.5 Southside
&amp;
C atham Ave 740Glenwood posrt1ons ballot. Ballots must
645·1646
be marked wtth an •
1·866-327.7262
opposite
the
14X70 mobrle home
name or it w111 not be
3BA $425 + Ulilttles
counted
The
Mature
worker casting of votes for
Ref/security
depdsit,No
Pets. needed for part time directors by proxies
Janttor work. Call are not permitted
614-364-2042
Norma at 304·531- Only Me1gs County
6868
for residents
holding
Must membership tickets
Wobila, Homes for appointment.
Rent 1Pt
Pleasant be 55 or older and for at least 15 days
area ~all 304-675- WVresident
before the date of
3423 pr 304·675election
may
0831 before 8:30pm
vote.Members of the
Exp. Person to assist society must declare
Sales
w/ milktng on modern therr candidacy for
darry farm, houstng &amp; the office of Director
BRAND
utilities can be a part of the Socrety by
foreclosur
of
package
fax f1ltng
with
the
ready to
resume w/ 3 ref. to secretary,
Debb1e
$39,900.0
304-675-5074
Watson,
42455
446·3093
Woods
Road.
Coolville,
Ohro
45723
a petition
0
ANEW
signed by 10 or more
C AREER
members
of
the
society
who
are
I N THE
residents of Meigs
CLASSIFIEDS County, at least 7
days
before
the
annual election of
directors is held.
Only
, regularly
nominated
candidates who have
met
the
filing
requirements will be
eligible for election
as director (10) 12,

Meig.~ &lt;"mUll)

•nirgrounds
Arrhal: Oct. 30,2010
9:00 am • IJ :00 a.m.
Rt·lease: l..a~t Saturday In April. 2011
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f,urgrounds other lh n stated date~
Bmld111g space IS fi.-st come f1rst serve
lns1dc St )rage $4 00 If
Open Span $2 00 If

lnsrde h-nce $1 00 If

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�Tuesday, October 12, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebr un

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 "For 1 Le Pew o t
sake!"
cartoons
6 Lectu re
2 Test
follower
3 Bath
11 B e
s pots
jubilant
4 B uilding
12 De plete
wing
13 S pan ish 5 Placed in
the hold
bo rn
cellist
6 Hard
15 Pnnt untts
m 1ne ra 1
22 Seething 34 R igging
16 Combat
7 C art
24 Cacao
support
17 Deli b read
p ulle r
container 35 Washed
18 Lets off
8 Approach 25 M ex.
out
steam
9 Properly
neighbor 36 Skilled
20 W as
10 Basilica
26 For each 38 Flag Day
fu rious
part
30 Takes
month
23 C lose. as 14 Patnt
pleasure 39 Pop star
a jacket
contarner 31 Astro40 Cry like a
27 M iles off 18 Bo rder
n omical
baby
28 Face
19 Tendon
slghtlngs 42 Was
feature
20 C raze
33 Football's
ahead
29 Avoid
21 A lien craft
M anno
43 Use oars
31 Fragra nt
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Serd $4 75 (cnctWm.o) to

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34 Restful
resort
37Toast
s pread
38 T riangu lar
sa 11
41 C hilean
poet
44Bac k
st reet
45 Thus far
46 C ia rinet
parts
47Big w ave

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg W alker

THELOCKHORNS

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K AT IT THIS WAY ... YOU CAME IN WITH A
JONKER AND NOW YOU HAVE AN EXPENSIVE CAR..'"'

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

5 9
8
8
3 2
7 17
6
2 9
" ••• They make you think up y o ur
own pictures."

3
8

DENNIS THE MENACE
H ank Ketchum

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tucsda\~
Oct. 12, 2010:
•
lltis ye;u; you often become creative when othCIS are difficult or rigid.
Sumctimes a'.;ociates pull away
because they arc not lL.-.cd to the new
you. Give others the sp.,re and time to
adjust If you are single, your allure is
quite intcnr.,c, and others want to come
in cl~r You h11ve many p:&gt;tcnti&lt;~l
~-ui!ors to gct to know and dl'cidc if
you want to get t~ know better. fnjoy
the process- dating can be fun. If
you are attached, your relationship
will benefit from adding some good
old-fa-;hioncd dates. SAGliTARIUS
1-w. many ideas -and opinions.
The Stan&gt; Show the Kind of Day )(m7J
Hm~: 5-Dynmruc; 4-Pos:ttve: 3-At\"Tagl':
2-»!'0; 1 Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
**'* Flex with the moment and
undel"tmd what is h.1ppcrting behind
the scenes. Your creativtty is hl~ and
you demonstrate a ~q_ue abihty to
problem-.oh•e. An insight. though
upsetting.. guides you. Relax. knowing
that you need thb knowledge.
Tonight: Get some expert opinions.
TAUR US (April20-tv1ay 20)

*** Be \\ilfmg to work \\ith one
other person directly. \hu'll gain
unusual results. Be open to thl' unexp,t.'Ctcd. knO\\ing when you have h,,d
enough of a situation. Your in-;ight will
evolve if you kick back and deddt• nut
to trigger. 'll:m.ight: Chat with a friend.
Get his or her imp~-;ion.
GEMINI (May 21-Jum.• 20)
*** You could ~'C a situation far
differently from oth&lt;TS at fir;t. Your
ability to mo\'C in a new direction
dCJX!Ilds on your wil~ to \\ ork
,,;th others. Kno\\ing \~ to say
"cnoughn rould be more important
than you realize. Tonight Meet a
loved one for dinner.
CA."';CER Oune 21-July 22)
***** You might want to sec a
situ.1tion in a different light than in the
P&lt;!St. Your scno;e of humor emcrgrs
when dL'iCU ...-.mg a problem. You realiT.e how trivial it might be when you
cono;ider another ~rsfX'd)vc. Thnight:
Go \\ ith vour in..."tincts.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
**** Kl.'t'p tap('ing into your cn.'ativity to find the nght an.~wcr fllr
cilch situation. Once more, a p.,rtncr
proves to be unpnxiictablc .md quite
deliberate in his or her actiLn-;. You
might w.mt to give thb pcrstm more

space m the future. fonight \\'here the
fun as.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.3-Sept. 22)
*** If you can -.tay close to home,
plc."ISC do. There is a lot of give-andtake bctv.'l.'Cl\ a situation and what
goes on. Others tL'!ld to make a me.s
of pl.1ns. If rou fL"&gt;CI a ru.'l.'Ci tl.'&gt; have
matter; go m a certain dii\.'Ction, con·
~lJl'r gui11g uut t&gt;n your own. Tonight:
Nc1p, then dl.'Cide.
llBRA {Sept. 2.3-CA."t. 22)
***** Kecpa-;king the~me
qucsbnn until you get the an-;wer you
nCL'CI. Phrase your words differently if
you must. kno\\ing full well where
vou are coming fn'&gt;m. Tonight I lead
home, then decide.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Your ability to home in
on some ba-.KS allows (or greater giveand-take. When someone tolpl.&gt;doe&gt;
~ agn.'\..~t or e.xi..,ting plaru- you
•
will know what to do. Realize your
limits financiall)~ and you won't make
an error. Tonight A little sclf-dio;ciplinc
b'OL'S n long way.

**""* **

SAG lTii\RIUS (, ov. 22-Dec. 21)

**'*** You can go a long wa\'
completing a prujcct. You can handle
any interfurencc, as you are goaldirected. f\lllow your i.Jbtinct:;;, and
you cannot go \\Tong. let your Cl\.'ativity olx--n up. Ibnight Ju~ follow
your whims.
CAl'RICOR.'J (IA'&lt;". 22-J.,n.l9)
** M.1kc plan..,; n•s(·~,rch importnnt dl'Cisions. 'ri.&gt;u Wlm't be on hold
much lnngt'r. \our instinl'!s could be
ouitl.• out of wh.1ck ''ith mone\: You
ffiight l"l{• secmg oruy what you want
to &amp;'e. Know tllat this type of warped
pen;pccth'C asn't your norm. Tonight

*

l'\ap; decide btct:
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
**"** Usc today to push any key
pm)Cd fom ard. '\ou amid be -.ur

priscd by your options if you [i.,1cn to
several diffunnt J'L'Ople \dlo don't
think like you. Don't think in terms of
wasted fundo; and time Tonight Make
11 an C.lrlv night
PISCES {Ft.-b. 19-:'\lan.h 20)

*'* Know that you rm..-d to make
the fi~t mo,·c m order to make a ~itud­
tiOn work. )ou knm' '' hen you have
too far for too long. Thke a
~p ba('k later in the day to look
.uuund. Ton.ght Could be lztte.
pl~

/IU%[rtelmt' Br~ar IS em the lutenrct
at htt]l.f/ttruru•.JlUrflldmelnsar.ctmr.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

•

�Page B6 • ~,

he Daily Sentinel

ay, OctobcJ· 12,

www.Inydailyscntincl.com

2010

Reds expect to be back i playoffs soon
CJ~C'Ii'\NATI (AP)
\n empty bottle of l;hampagne rested on the bot
tom shelf of Brandon
Phillip~' locker. a keepo;nke from the best
moment of the Cincinnati
Reds' season. It was
spra)ed the night they
clinched their first pla)
of1 spot in 15 years.
Less than two week&lt;;
after that bubbly celebration. that long-awaited
ela) off appearance was
lmished. A 2 0 loss on
Sunday night completed
a Ph ill ics SY. eep and
ahruptl) ended the Reds·
breakthrough season.
"I can't bc·lie\e it's
over."
a
downca:.-.t
Phillip~ said.
l n sonw important
wa)s. it was a starting
point.
The Reds surpassed
their own expecmtions
b) '' mning the NL
Central '' Jth a core of
)Oung.
players '' ho
emerged ahead of schedule. The\' re ) oung.
they ' re at'fordablc and
they're learning what it
takes to "'in those highpressure games. the ones
that were totally new to
them thi&lt;; time.
" It's di-;appointing to
get !"mept in the first
round ot the pia) ofts. but
)OU'\e got to considerl
think
we
O\erachie,cd." MVP contender Joey Votto said.
''You'\e got to consider
th.lt the) (the Phillies)
ha\ e twtce the payroll
and experience. I think
we did great this ) ear."
It shaped up as a tran i
tional year at the outset.
f11e Reds were on a run
of nine straight lo~ing
sea ons. the1r \\Orst such
streak in a half-century
., he) ''ere bringmg
along young players Votto. Ja) Bruce. Drew
Stubb . Mike Leake.
Tra\ is Wood - while
trying to ch,mge thetr
merall personality.

-

the majonty of the
will be hack next
year,'' outfielder Jonny
Gomes said. "And the
ma)onty of the piece-.
wifl be one year better
The 20 I 0 team wao; a
te~lm to be reckoned
with The 20 I I team will
be ready to rock."
It'll have the one ingredient missing this year:
Big-game experience
The Pl11l11es had 17
players with playotf
experience. Cincinnati
had onl~· three in the
starting lineup and one in
the rotatwn
Bronson
Arroyo, v. ho will be
back . The imbalance
showed in how the Reds
played, commtttmg six
errors in the la&lt;&gt;t two
games.
,
The novelty ww; too
mueh for most of them.
" I his is a big expcriCQce. especially for my
young players.'' Baker
o;aid. "'I hey can take this
with them for a long
time. The thing we wanted to do when \\ e came
here was build this thing
to where you could have
a good chance to be in
this position for a number
of )Cars, especially consecutive years.
''And you talk to p~o­
ple around baseball. and
the) say we're on the
right course and right
path to have a chance to
do that."
I he Reds al'&gt;o starling
winning back fans who
were turned off by the,
nine yearc; of uninterrupted losing. Attendance
was up by more than
SOO,OOO. and the biggest
.crowd in Great American
Ball
Park's
histor)
showed up for the playoff
game on Sunda).
"They \\oere awesome,
C\ en before the first
pitch."
Bruce
-;aid.
"Hopefully. they'll be
back next year. We're
planning on this to be a
long stretch."
pie~:es

'J'hnsc losin•,
e .
were the result of
starting
pitching.
defense that regu
ranked
among
league's worst. and
offense that was
reli:-int on home runs
Ken Griffe) Jr.
Adam Dunn. In ma
Dusty Baker's t
they were a much
cut team.
They led the 1'\L
most major offensive
eg ~)ries, becoming
at dmng the little thi
They were the
going from first t()
on a hit, for insta
defense also deve
into one of the NL's
and the stat1ing
brimmed "ith you
- Leake. Wood. I
Bailey. Johnny
With the rest of
Central a mess. the
became champions
of schedule.
"And ''e believe a
orgamzation that we
position to be m the
oiTs and in contenti
many ) ear&lt;&gt; to
general manager
.JocJ..:etty said.
He's got enough p
to work with.
The Reds had
to compile a reliable
tion ~ ince thev won
World Serie~· in I
Now. they ha\ e
than enough sta
fill one out. giving
the luxury of trading
away to fill holes 111
C\ eryday lineup.
their top need'&gt; is a
handed hitter to
ment lefties Votto
Bruce.
''You look at our

Browns rookie
could start vs.
"Believe me.
BFREA. Ohio (AP) Colt McCoy. front and lot that
between
center. And don't trip.
n1e Clc' eland Bro\\ ns Wcdne.,da) \\ ith
with Seneca, with
need you nl)w.
With quarterbacks Jake mo\'es.'' Mangini
Delhomme and Seneca "'There's a a Jot of
Wallace both nursing parts here. so it's
se\ere ankle injuries. me to give you --~·"•••·~~
Bro\\ ns
coach
Eric that definitive
\1angini said Monda) it's there's nothing
possible that McCoy. a to give right noY.."
There wa-, mom
rookie with no NFL playing experience, will make later.
Shortl) after M
his regular-season debut
Sunday
against
the met \\ ith the mcd
&lt;•gent for 4uarterback
Pittsburgh Steelers.
At thi!&gt; point. the Ratliff confirmed
Bro\\ ns have few other Browns "'ill re-sign
client off Ne\\ Engl
options.
pmctke :-.4uad.
"It'~ only the SteeleP.i,
Agent Joe Palumbo
right?" Mangini said with
a perfect touch of sarcasm. in an e-mail to
··coming off a b) e week? Ao;sociatcd Press
Cle,.eland b bringing
They don't blitz much."
Once
again,
the Ratliff. who spent last
son with the Bmwns
quartcrba~.·k
Browns·
carousel is in overdrive. coming over in the
draft-day trade
When isn't it?
The Brown&lt;&gt; have used New York Jets. Ratli
15 different ~tarters at Cle\cland\ No.3
qum1erback since 1999. back for 14 games
For compm"ison's sake. the backup for t\\O.
ESPN.com tirst ···~·vt•·•,.,-i
Indianapolis Colt-, have
the Browns
used onl.!.
Mangini may have no Ratlitl to back up
other choice but to play again't the hlitz-c
McCoy after Wallace sus- Steders.
The Bro\\ ns did
tained "hat appeared to be
a severe ankle injury in announce an)
Sunda) 's Joss to Atlanta a spokesman said the
and Dclhomme came in "" ould not ha\ e
and appeared to rc-injurc tcxlav''
Afttmugh Ratliff
the badly sprained nght
ankle that sidelined hun the way. M 'ni
IXlised to give
for three f?ames.
Pollnwmg the game. f{mner l'cxas star. h
Delliomme "alked "ith a big bre&lt;lk as a pro.
noticeable limp. Wallace Dclhomme got hurt i
Y.dS much worse. He senson opener. M
could barely make it to the serwd as Wallace\
shO\\Cr. and famil) mem- up for three games
bers who had been waiting now could be thm&lt;;t
in the corridor out~idc the slatting lineu~
Cleveland's locker room one of the league s
tn see him, were brought est defense~.
Manoini is pre
to hie; cubicle.
"'
:\1angini. who guards play Mctoy.
injuries like a lea:.-.hed pit expected to go h
bull, would not provide an April's dralt but sl
uJXlatc on eithl'r player. He thml round. if he has
"Look. I've played
refused
to
say
it
Delhomme had suffered a a ton of rookies at
setback. He said the team spots. and at some
w,ts awaiting test results everybody has to
on both QBc; nnd that he their first game.''
would have a more defini- said. "At some
th c answer on the team's cverylxxly h&lt;Ls to ge
chance. 'Io me, that's
dire~.:tion by pmctice on
all these guys are loc
Wednesday.

.

for. that moment to show
,.,.hat they can do.
"l'he{'e pla)ed football thetr whole lh es and a
situation like Colt'~. he has
been a very :-.uccessful
yuarterback fnr n long
t1me. I'm sure he'schomping at the bit to get his iirst
chance to do that."
~fangim pointed out that
rookie safct) T.J. Wmd
couldn't wait to get on the
field and that ~ tcCoy,
whose 45 "'ins with the
Longhorns are the mo::.t in
NCAA history. i&lt;&gt; no different.
beheves
Mangini
McCoy wants the challenge.
''If )OU didn't hme that
gu), then ) ou drafted the
wrong gm,''l\langini ~aid.
"lf he's sitting at home at
night curled
in a blanket hoping he Jnesn't get
the start, )Ou've got the
~vrung guy. You look for
that competiti\'cness. You
want the ) otn~g guy:-. to
always be pushmg the SU)
in front of them. sa) mg.
'Come on. move out of the
wa). fhe me my chance
to do 1t. ...
Mangini said McCo~·
has taken ·•quite a tcw ·
snaps \\ ith Cle\ eland\,
lirst string oflcn~e sinec
Delhomme got hurt.
1\kCov
struguled
through much of the prese&lt;l.'iOll but 1inbhed stmn~.
In Cleveland's final exhtbition auainst Chicago. he
completed 13 of U passes
for 13 I ) ards. but was
"acked three times.
'l1u! last Browns rookie
QB to stmt against
Pittsburgh \\fts Charlie
Frye, who was sach·d
eight time' in a 41-0 loss
in 2005.
Browns rookie cornerbac:k Joe Haden believes
McCoy is ready.
"I know Colt." he said.
" In pt-:H:tice he plays a Int.
and he does well against
our defense. I know he'll
study hard und get
focused. He just loves to
play the game. so he's
looking forward to it.
Honestly. he's not afrnid ut
all . Ue wants to lx.• out
there on the field."

up

Jttlr&amp;atltiAn

Ohio State Buckeyes quarterback Terrelle Pryor
Hoosiers defensive end Darius Johnson (44) a
Leon Beckum (48) apply pressure in the second
ball game at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Oh1o,

Ouilter/Columbus Oispatch/MCT

makes a pass as Indiana
nd1ana Hoos1ers linebacker
of the NCAA college footrday. Oh1o State won, 38-10.

Ohio State is No. 1 AP Top 25
NE:W YORK (AP)
Hit the re&lt;&gt;et button on the
college football season.
There's a new No. I
team in Oh1o State and
uncertainty nt the top of
the mnkings for the firM
time all &lt;;cason. after
Alabama's 19-grune winning streak ended at South
Carolina.
"I he
Southeastern
Conleren~e. wh1ch has
won the last four national
chaq1pion'ihip,s. has some
catchmg. up to do in the
:2010 title chase. The
Bucke)es and No. 2
Ore~on have a couple of
BCS bu~tcrs in No. 3
Boase State and No. 4
TCC on their ta1lli. And for
the first time in about a
decade. !'lebrask.a i~ a
legitimate national champion-.htp contender.
11te Bucke\e&lt;: moved
up one spt;t m The
A&lt;;soctated Press poll after
pre&lt;;eason No. I Alabama
lost for the fir~t ttme since
the 2.009 Sugar Bowl. The
Crimson 1idc fell 35-21
on Saturday
Ohio State received '34
first-place votes and
Oregon (15). Boise State
(eight), TCC tone) and
No. 6 Oklahoma (t\\O)
also got first -place 'otes
from the media panel
Sunda).
Auburn is the highe.,t
ranked SEC' team at No. 7.
An SEC team. either
Rorida or Alabama, had
held the top spot in the last
29 AP polls. dating to 1\ov.
2, 2008. The last time the
highest mnked SEC team
was this far awa\ from
No. I was Oct. 21. :2(XJ6,
"'hen Auburn \\as ranked
"eventh.
The Crimson Tide
slipped to ~o 8 - and
,econd in the state " hile LSt; "'as No. 9 and
South Carolina mo' ed up
' nine spots to lOth after the
program·., first \\in again~t
a top-ranked team.
"Jbe last time Ohio State
was No. 1 wa~ the final
regular-season poll of
2007.
That 'ieason ended with
LSU beating the Buckeye~
in the BCS championship
game to become the first
national title "inner \\ ith
two lo''~"' That L) pe of
ma) hem is a .J&lt;,ng \\ ay
awa~. but the potential for
i BCS contro\CfS) is high.
' unlik~ la!'t sea~on, when
florida. Alabama dlld
Texas lllO\ ed into the top

three spots in
September and d.
budge until the SEC
game.
t•our team5 that
the o;e:L'&gt;on mnked in
top I0 have fallen
mcluding Texas
Virginia Tech. "hich
gone all together.
IS down to No.
losing its second
game. The Gators fell
29 to LSU and ha\e
worst showing in the
~inc:e they \\ere
to end the 2004 "'"''1.11\JII,
Ron Zook·s J,ist as
coach.
Seven other teams
started the season
are gone fmm the AP
25 thi.;, week.
1nere are eight
feated teamc; in the
and five more lurkmg
&lt;;ide of it, Martmg '" iih
II Utah. Arkansas i-.
12
\\ith
u
Michigan State at No.
Stanford and Iowa
out the top I5.
Florida State '·~uu•~u
-;even spots to !\o.
a 45-17 'ictof) at M
that
knocked
Hurricanes out of the
ings. 1'-:o. 17 A
followed b) Wi
then comes t
unbeaten team~:
Nevada. :'\o. 20 '-'"""''"'
State and 1'\o. 21 Mi
Florida. No 23
Force, Oreoon State
Wec;t Virgfnia
the "lop :!5.
The mo~t unde
teams there could be
end of this season 1
There are four UIIIIO::ill·
ens in the Big 12. but
will eventuall) sort i
out and Iem e no more
one. Oklahoma .
Nebraska don't play ·
regular sca ~cm but
meet in the Bi,g 12
game.
B01se State and ''h••~-·•~
of the Wcc;tern '"H""''L
Conference meet ,
m Reno, Ne-.. Both
fa\(1red in all their

BUR IE
in CHED I
CARD DE
Not a hlgh·pr1ced

coneolldatlon loan
orono of thOeo
coneumor crvdlt
couneollng programe

t.

bet\\een now and then.
1 he Broncos aren't just
looking to get into
BCS thi-; seac;on. the) 'r1
legatimatc contender
reach the championship
~ame from a non automatIC qualifying conference.
and that \\Ould be a first.
Same goes for TCU.
Ma)be even Utah. But not
both. 1be Mountain Wc,t
Conference rivals play
No" 6 in Salt Lake Clt).
Aubum and LS U are the
remainm!! unbeaten~ in
the SEC.~The two 'Iigers
pia) Oct. 23 m Aub'lmt.
Ala.. and both still have to
pia)'
Alabama
and
Ark ansa~ just to get out of
the SEC \\'est.
If Aubum and LSU keep
"'mning. the o;trength of
the SEC could pu~h them
past the te&lt;mlS 111 front of
them and intQ the thick of
the national title mix. But
it's JU'&gt;t a&lt;; likel) the SEC
wtll not produt.:c an undefeated champion and be
~hut out of the BCS championship game for the fi'
time since the 2005 s~
son. \\hen fexas and lJS
pl,l) ed for the title.
Of com-::.e. if there are no
undefeated teams. ) ou can
bet an SEC team will be
near the top of the ptle of
one loss s4uads. That's
\\hat defending national
champion Alabama is hoping for no\\.
Oregon is the only
unbeaten Pac-10 te&lt;ml but
nmnmg thmngh that tough
lea~ue unbeaten \\ill ~ a
senou!&gt; challenge. The
Ducks still ha' e to play
Ore&amp;on :State. Arizona and

usc

The first BCS standing
of the season are due out
next Sunda). It u:-.es the
~oaches· poll. 1-larri:-. poll
and computer rankin£s to
ordl.'r the teams. The hnest
coache~: poll had the same
top tl-.e as the AP. ex~ept
~cbrnska was ~o . 4 and
TCC wa' No. 5. 1be first
Hams poll was the s~l.
I 9 as the AP Top 25.

-

-

I 'IVPI $/1/ /HHI ,,/ I !I'll/' ,.Jn/ {Ill/ ;

.

1'1111111 -lot• /11'1/,itllt!WI/IflriYIIll'llf: '

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[~=::::::::::::;"/

L------''

w Heifer Prospects

"" Many with Calves
Heifers

At the farm in Bidwell

2010 Fall
Catalog
Online @

�</text>
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