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                  <text>For growing and showing
flowers: Meigs gardeners
show real talent, A3

Fair Scenes, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS
• Favre coming back
with Vikings. See Page Bl

Authorides seeking iail escapee
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Sheriff's
deputies and police were still searching Wednesday for a Reedsville man
who escaped from the Middleport Jail
Monday.
Ernest Roach, 31, of Ohio 681 ,
Reedsville, was a sheriff's department
inmate incarcerated in the Middleport
Jail. He reportedly escaped from custody through an old door in the jail
area that had been sealed off, by chip-

ping through the
masonry.
Roach is six feet
tall. !50 pounds.
with brown hair and
brown eyes. He was
in sheriff's custody
in lieu of bond on
charges including
pandering, menacErnest Roach ing. fleeing and
eluding.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said Roach
has been housed in the Meigs

County Jail. Washington County Jail
and in Middleport's jail since he was
first taken into custody on July 9.
He was removed from the county
jail and moved to Marietta because
of a conflict with another inmate,
Beegle said.
Anyone with information relating
to Roach's escape or his current location is asked to contact the sheriff's
department at 992-3371. The search
for Roach is ongoing by all law
enforcement agencies in the area.
Beegle said.

Pomeroy man
admits to
obstructing
justice in murder
investigation ~
STAFF REPORT

~

MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO~

POMEROY - A man
charged with providin&amp;
false information to investigators in the murder of
Winfield Hardiman of
Albany has admitted to the
charge.
Prosecuting
Attorney:
Colleen S. Williams said
Calvin D. Donohue. also
known as Calvin D. Tolley,
34, of Route 143. Pomeroy.
appeared before Common
Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow III to enter a plea of
guilty to one count of
obstructing justice, a felony
of the third degree.
Donohue gave false information and withheld information he had in connection
with Hardiman's murder.
1
Williams said Tuesday. His
brother. Trinity Whitcraft,
also known as "'Ty" Tolley,
entered a plea of guilty to
one count of murder on July
21. in connection with that
death.
Crow accepted the plea of
guilty
and
sentenced
Donohue immediately to a
term of four years in prison.
Also in Common Pleas
Court Monday:
• Buford W. Small\vood,
Jr., 22, of Middleport. pled
guilty to three counts of
unlawful sexual conduct
with a minor. and one count
of escape. Crow sentenced
Smallwood to a term of 18
months for unlawful sexual
conduct with a minor and
five years for escape.
Smallwood was remanded to the custody of the
Sheriff to be transported to
prison.
• Tabatha Haning, 39,
Pomeroy, appeared for sentencing after having previously admitted to violation
uf lt:rrns and conditions of
community control/probation. Haning had original!~
pled guilty to a charge of
possession of drugs in 2008
and was sentenced to a term
of one year in prison in
February of this year.
~
She was granted judicial
release in May. In July;
Haning was cited for violat~
ing community control b~
using alcohol and drugs;
Crow ordered that Haning
be continued on communit~'

I
OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Margaret M. Holter, 86
• H. Marcus Weaver, 91

INSIDE

• Proctor takes top
prize in paintings.
See Page AS
• Steve Earle to
perform at Stuart's
Opera House.
See Page A2

Tuesday was kids' day at the fair and
despite drizzling rain during the afternoon,
no one seemed to care if they got a little
wet. Kids were admitted to the grounds free
until noon and could ride all the rest of the
day for just $5. All afternoon there were
lines at many of the rides and plenty of
action at the game booths and in the
arcade. Numerous electronic gadgets were
awarded at a kickoff of kids' day held on the
hill stage at noon, and Buffo the Clown was
there to entertain.

Please see Court, AS

Holter, Pullins named top dairy showmen
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Details on Page A2

'

INDEX
:

2 SECfiONS -

~nie's

Mailbox

A2

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics
.

12 PAGES

itorials
Obituaries
.Sports
Weather

Bs

A4
As
B Section
A2

© 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

l )JIJI,I !I!I.!I!II .

ROCKSPRINGS
Brenna Holter was named
grand champion showman
while Audrionna Pullins
was named reserve champion showman in the Junior
Fair Dairy Show.
In the "old pro" showmanship division, the top
three showmen were Holter,
Pullins and Kiana Osborne;
also participating in this category were Benjamin Ayres,
Brianna Ayres, Nathan
Cook. Trenton Cook, Jordan
KublentL, Kirk Pullin~.
Garrett Ritchie, Hannah
Yost. Kayla Tripp took first
place in the "experience"
category. In the "yearling"
category, the top three were
showmen were Taylor
Parker. Clayton Ritchie and
Laura Pullins. In the
"novice" category, the top
three
showmen
were
Mattison Finlaw. Jessica
Cook
and
Rachel
Kesterson. Also showing in
the "pee wee" category (in
no particular order) were
Michael Kesterson, Coltin

Beth Sergent/photo

Beth SergenVphoto

Brenna Holter (back row, left) and Audrionna Pullins (back
row, right) were named the grand and reserve champion
showmen, respectively, at this week's Junior Fair Dairy Show.
Also pictured (from left) Haley Perdas, fair queen first runnerup, Taylor Parker, dairy princess, Samuel Evans, fair king.
Parker. Tiffany Tripp.
Olivia Yost.
Other winners in the dairy
show
included:
Kirk
Pullins, grand champion
ayrshire; Brenna Holter,
Rachel Kesterson. grand
and reserve champion.
respectively, brown swiss;
Kiana Osborne. Brianna

Ayres. grand and reserve
champion,
respl!ctivcly.
guernsey: Garrett Ritchie,
Jordan Koblcntz. grand and
resen:~ champion. respectively:, jersey:
Brenna
Holtef, grand and reserve
champion, holstein: Brenna
Holter. grand and reserve
champion. shorthorn.

Jonathan Barrett (far left) and Jenna Burdette (far right)
were named grand and reserve champion showmen,
respectively, at the Jun1or Fair Breeding Beef Show Also
pictured Haley Perdas, fair queen first runner up, McKenzie
Long, Little Miss Meigs County, Erin Patterson, fair queen.

Barrett, Burdette take
top showmen awards
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Jonathan Ban·ett and Jenna
Burdette were named grand
and
reserve champion
showmen, rcspecti ve Iy. at
the Junior Fair Breeding
Beef Show.

Also participating in the
showmanship category were:
Senior Division. Craig Jones,
first place Jordan Wood. second place. Samuel Evans.
Intennedi&lt;.1te
Di\'ision.
Barrett. first place, Ashley
Putnam, second place. Jumor

Please see Showmen. AS

�THE

~e Daily Sentinel

PageA2

EN

VVednesday,August19,2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

piscuss concerns honestly with intended
, BY KATHY MITCHELL
MARCY SUGAR

...

,• AND

: Dear Annie: I have been
:with an amazing man for
:many years. "Todd" is
·funny and sweet. and my
family
adores
him.
However. I continue to
question our relationship
-because. although he's very
:motivated, he lacks the fol·lQw through.
·: Todd has started and
·~lopped numerous careers
and changed his course of
school study more times
· than I can count. I, on the
:other hand, have finished
·two degrees and started a
.career. He is in the exact
same place he was when we
started the relationship. My
family loves him so much
that they make excuses for
.his situation. They say,
·"Give him time," but it's
:been four years. Am I being
:too picky? Should I be
·happy that I have found
:someone who treats me
: well? And if I do give him
·more time, how long do I
wait for him to get his act
together?
I believe Todd may have
ADD. He mentioned he was
diagnosed as a teen but
-stopped taking the medica:tion because it "made him
:jittery." I'm sure many
•advances have been made in

the treatment of ADD within the last 10 years. How
can I approach him about
seeking help again without
hurting his feelings or making him defensive?
Restless and Waiting
Dear Restless: rf you are
planning to marry Todd,
you ought to be able to dis·
cuss your concerns honestly
with him. Ask if he is bothered by his inability to stick
with a specific career.
Mention that adult ADD can
be problematic, that there
might be medication that
works better for him and
that. along with behavior
modification. he could find
ways to be more focused.
Then decide whether Todd's
other qualities make up for
this particular irritation.
because we can't promise it
will change. Not every man
has to be the ambitious
breadwinner.
Dear Annie: My wife
quit smoking a year ago.
However, she has recently
started buying and using
nicotine gum.
I have not been able to
summon the courage to talk
to her about this and ask
about her reasons. She is a
professional who works
hard in the medical industry.
It scares me that she is using
this chemical. Based on current information, do you

think I have reason to
worry? - Nervous Nick
Dear Nick:
Maybe.
Replacement nicotine gum
is better for her health than
smoking, but it's not
intended for long-term use,
which has been associated
with insulin resistance.
severe allergic reactions
and possible cardiovascular problems. If your wife
is chewing the gum
because she is having cigarette cravings and plans to
use it temporarily, she
should be OK. Please don't
be afraid to express your
concerns to her.
Dear Annie: "Desperate
in Pennsylvania" said she is
experiencing an annoying
click while swallowing. I
suggest she consult with a
hospital-based speech/language pathologist who specializes in swallowing disorders. The therapist might
suggest a swallowing study
in conjunction with radiology to view the mechanics of
the swallow and ultimately
offer a few simple compensatory techniques involving
head positioning that may
minimize the clicking. A
physician's referral to get
the ball rolling would be
appropriate. Retired
SLP in Ft. Myers
Dear Ft. Myers: Thanks
for your suggestion. Here

·Local Weather

: Wednesday...Partly sunny
with a chance of showers with
a slight chance of thunderstorms in the moming ...Then
mostly cloudy with showers
likely with a chance of thunqerstorms in the afternoon.
•Humid with highs in the
lower 80s. Southwest winds 5
to I0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Wednesday night... Mostly
cloudy. Showers likely with a
chance of thunderstorms in
the evening .. .Then a chance of
showers after midnight.
Humid with lows around 70.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.

thance of rain 60 percent.
•

are two more:
From Michigan: I urge
"Desperate" to make an
appointment with a neurologist as soon as possible. It's
possible she has something
called "Arnold-Chiari I
Malformation," a rare condition where the brain is
pushed into the spinal column, restricting spinal fluid
flow. I know because my son
has it. A neurologist can help.
Maryland: I recently
experienced the same clicking in my throat, as well as in
my ears. Under the care of
an ENT, 1 suffered with these
symptoms for nine months,
all the while treating sinus
infections and aJiergies.
Finally other symptoms
showed 1 had acid reflux,
even though I never suffered
from heartburn or typical
reflux symptoms.

Steve Earle

Steve Earle to perform
at Stuart's Opera House
NELSONVILLE - Grammy winning singer-songwriter
and music legend Steve Earle will be appearing at Stuart's
Opera House in Nelsonville on Thursday. Aug. 27 at 7:30p.m.
Earle just released "Townes'' a tribute to his good friend
and mentor, the late Townes Van Zandt. Earle is a songwriter solo and acoustic performer.

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Allison Moorer will open the show. Information on tickMarcy Sugar, longtime edi- ets is available at 740-753-1924 or, on the web, at www.stu·
tors of the Ann Landers artsoperahouse .org.
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailboxcomcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
F.W.B. Church, thr.
Public meetings Kyger
about Annie's Mailbox,
miles off Cheshire, Route
and read features by other
554. 6 p.m. Saturday.
Monday, Aug. 24
Creators Syndicate writers
Featured singers, Voices of
POMEROY
Meigs
and cartoonists, visit the
Faith. Dolly and Brycle,
Creators Syndicate Web County Public Library Brian
and
Family
page at www.creators.com. Board, regular meeting, Connections, Jerry and

Community Calendar

3:30p.m., Pomeroy Library.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.68
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 54.65
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 33.20
Big Lots (NYSE) - 23.15
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.53
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 30.13
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 11.54
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.77
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.46
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.52
Collins (NYSE) - 42.98
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.33
US Bank (NYSE) - 21.51
Gannett (NYSE) - 7.88
General Electric (NYSE) - 13.59
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 21.62
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 41.70
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.80
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 13.97
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with showers likely
with a chance of thunderstorms. Humid with highs in
the lower 80s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph with
gusts up to 25 mph. Chance
of rain 60 percent.
Thursday night...Showers
likely with a chance of thunderstorms. Humid with lows
in the upper 60s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of rain 60 percent.
Friday...Showers likely
with a chance of thunderstorms. Highs in the lower
80s. Chance of ram 60 per-

cent.

School events
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 29.74
BBT (NYSE) - 27.53
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.93
Pepsico (NYSE) - 56.24
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.50
Rockwell (NYSE) - 39.02
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.80
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.02
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 74.41
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 51.36
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.33
WesBanco (NYSE)- 16.04
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.31
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Aug. 18, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
LEjsley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674·0174.
Member SIPC.

Monday, Aug. 24
POMEROY
The
Meigs Middle School will
have an open house, 5 to 7
p.m. All students are welcome to attend. Sixth grade
students and all new students who enrolled this
summer are encouraged to
attend the open house. For
those with questions call the
Middle School anytime
between 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Church events
Saturday, Aug. 22
KYGER
Benefit
gospel sing for Fall Harvest

Gospel Sing, at the old

Diana
Frederick.
and
Angela Gibson. For more
informatoin, call 985-3495.

Birthdays
Friday, Aug. 21
POMEROY - Pauline
Hysell is celebrating her
85th birthday today and
cards can be sent to her at
40498 Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, 45769.
Sunday, Aug. 23
MIDDLEPORT - The
90th birthday of Evelyn
Warner will be celebrated
with a party at 2 p.m.
Sunday
at
Overbrook
Center. Friends and relatives
are invited to attend. c
~
may be sent to Mrs. W
c/o Overbrook Center, Pa0

Street, Middleport, 45760.

,
HAVE YOU BEEN LED DOWN ,.? .? •
• ? ?
•
THE YELLOW PAGE ROAD?
46.11

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

•

SEPARATE FACT FROM FICTION I
~

••

FICTION: The Yellow Page directories are read regularly by a large audience.

FICTION: Yellow Page directory advertising is creative, active advertising.

FACT: The Yellow Pages is a highly passive advertising medium. In the homes and
businesses throughout your area, the Yellow Pages directory remains closed more than 99%
of the time. Because the Yellow Pages is read and used so seldom, your display advertising
becomes ineffective .

FACT: It's hard to be creative when you have to limit your message. Harder still when you
realize you can only change that message once a year, Yellow Page advertising by necessity is
stagnant, passive advertising. Your products change. Your services offered change. Your prices
change. Your customers change. So should your advertising!

FICTION: All your customers will use the Yellow Pages.

FICTION: Your ad should be as large as your competitors.

FACT: Referral or repeat customers already know you, or have you in mind. What they
probably need is your phone number or locations. And that doesn't require an ad in the
Yellow Pages. The white pages are much more convenient as an easy reference. Did you
know the white pages are used 8 times more frequently than the Yellow Pages?

FACT: The size of your ad is not as important as the content. Here's where you can work
smart and save your valuable advertising dollars. Your ad in a directory should be large
enough to get across a quick, simple message. Buy the space you need. not the space your
competitor buys. You'll have cost efficient Yellow Page advertising.

FICTION: Yellow Page directories create brand awareness.

FICTION: It's best to have your ad at the beginning of a classification in the Yellow Pages.

FACT: Brand awareness or store image are an important part of your advertising plan. The
key to success for you is repetition and exposure. something the Yellow Pages cannot
provide. If the Yellow Pages built brand awareness, you would see large ads from major
manufacturers,like Coca Cola or Sealy mattress. in the Yellow Pages. But you don't because
the Yellow Pages are meant to be a directory and are not at all effective in creating brand
awareness or promoting the image of your business.

FACT: Yellow Pages are designed with bid ads at the head of the classification and small ads
last. Have you been told to get to the head of the list by buying the biggest ad? Biggest isn't
always best! See for yourself. Pick up the phone book and find your ad. Nine times out of ten,
you start at the back of the directory and flip pages toward the front. Most of the time the first
ads you see in a classification are the small ads.

~

~

"'

FICTION: Display advertising is necessary and effective in a Yellow Pages directory.
FICTION: Yellow Page directories sell products.
FACT: Yellow Pages arc not designed to sell. You're not allowed to advertise the prices of
your products or services. You're not allowed to tell the reader why you should be chosen
over your competitor. The Yellow Pages are just a reference tool, a directory. How can your
display advertising work the best for you if you're not able to provide the information needed
for a potential customer to make a decision between competing products or services?

FACT: Display advertising is completely out of context in a directory. People use a directory
to find information about where a product or service is sold. Even after they've found your
store·s name and phone number. they'll probably continue to look through other listing. A
large display ad is unnecessary and docs not provide the best retum on your advertising
dollars.

TAKE ANOTHER LOOK AT YOUR YELLOW PAGE ADVERTISING

We can help you save money on your Yellow Pages bill and convert those wasted dollars into timely, effective newspaper advertising
Call
, us today!

THE DAILY SENTINEL (740) 992-2155
~I

1

i

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0

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==·

Page .A 3

TITY

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August19,2009

For growing and showing flowers: Meigs gardeners show real talent
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - When it
comes to growing and
showing flowers. no one
can deny that Meigs County
rdeners have real talent.
•
That was apparent at the
Monday flower show at the
Meigs County Fair where
more than 600 arrangement
and specimen entries were
judged for quality of plant
materiaL creativity of
design, and imagination in
depicting an idea.
The judge, Faye Collins
McGuiness of Minford. is
accredited by the Ohio
Association of Gardens
Clubs and well qualified to
pick the best from the rest.
Winning the junior sweepstakes award with numerous
In artistic design, Shelia
specimen exhibits, mostly sunflowers, was Breeanna
Curtis of Long Bottom, took
i
Manuel of Racine.
the best of show rosette for
her op-art abstract design in
geometric form in the
· "Scarecrow Festival'' class .
Her arrangement featured
contrived flowers and magCharlene Hoeflich/photos
nolia leaves painted in flo- Judging hundreds of specimen flowers is a tiring task but judge Faye Collins McGuiness
rescent colors and was dis- of Minford, right, did it with the assistance of garden club member Joy Bentley.
played before a black background.
The creativity award went
Joy Bentley of Syracuse
•
r her unique tubular
. design in the "Art and Jazz
Festival'' class. Flowers
included were glads and
philodendra. Bentley was
. also the recipient of the
reserve best of show with an
all-green arrangement in the
· Dublin Irish Festival, as
. well as the horticulture
sweepstakes award for
specimen exhibits.
• In the junior division, the
top award in artistic
went
to
arrangements
Deanna A. Sayre of Racine.
for her all-green arrangement in the class ''Frog
Jumping Festival.'' Jennifer
Schaeffer of Middleport
. was the reserve best of
show winner in junior
arrangements.
Breeanna
This creative tubular design using glads and philodendra m
Manuel of Racine received
the Arts and Jazz Festival class won the creative award for
the horticulture sweepstakes
Joy Bentley, Syracuse.
award winner m the junior
The op-art creations, many in florescent colors, staged
division.
Blue ribbon winners in before a black background was a major attraction for fair~ir respective classes of goers, like Gladys Cummins of Pomeroy and Ro)':&gt;in
. Splay were as follows: Stephenson , an Adams County Extension Agent, shown
Shelia Curtis, Scarecrow here. The flower show class was "Scarecrow Festival."
Festival and Ohio Gourd
Show; Shirley Hamm of
Racine, Twin Days; Joy
Bentley, Art and Jazz
Festival, Antique Show,
Sweet Corn Festival and
Dublin
Irish
Festival:
Amanda Crane. Middleport.
Art and Craft Pottery;
Deanna A. Sayre, Frog
Jumping Festival; and
Jennifer Schaeffer, Popcorn
Festival.
Blue ribbon winners in
Reg. $2069 ·sofa &amp; Chair I Blue ........... .. ................. .. . $1499
classes for specimen flowers were as follows:
Reg. $1979 Sofa &amp; Chair I Burgundy .. .. ... ... .... ... .. ...... $1479
Roses: Duane Weber of
Rutland, four: Joy Bentley,
Reg. $2989- Sectional I Brown or Green ..... ..... .. .. .. .... $1799
two.
Glads: Penny Elam.
Reg. $2099 Sofa &amp; Loveseat I Brown &amp; Gold !weed $1499
Dahlias: Melanie Stethem,
Reg. $869- Sofa I Green Microfiber ........ ........... ..... .... . $599
Pomeroy. Shelia Curtis.
Cosmos: Peggy Crane of Shelia Curtis of Long Bottom captured the best of show
award in the Monday flower show with her abstract design
Middleport.
Zinnias: Melanie Stethem in geometric form in the "Scarecrow Festival" class. Her
arrangement featured contrived flowers and magnolia
and Shelia Curtis.
$10 DOWN
APR
Marigolds: Shirley Hamm leaves painted in florescent colors.
0
$10 PER MONTH
Racine, Alice Thompson
•
for 1 Year
In junior hmticulture. the
Echinacea: Sharon Dean.
of Pomeroy, Joy Bentley.
Mint: Deborah Mohler. blue ribbons for flowers
Celosia: Shelia Curtis.
went to Deanna A. Sayre,
Pomeroy.
Sunflower: Joy Bentley.
Zebra Gra:ss: Deborah Breeanna N. Manuel, two:
Duane Weber, Patricia
Bethany
Allman
of
Mohler.
Holter.
Other grass: Melanie Pomeroy; and to Deanna
Caladium: Joy Bentley,
Sayre for perennial herbs,
· two; Joyce Manuel of Stethem.
and a fairy garden with
Perennials:
Deborah
Racine.
plants.
Caladium: Joy Bentley. Mohler, Shelia Curtis.
''Ohio, the Heart of it All"
Horticulture blue ribbon
Joyce Manuel.
was
th~ theme of Monday's
w~nners
were
Shelia
Curtis
Hosta: Joy Bentley, three;
Sharon Dean, Melanie with a fairy garden; Joy flower show. A second show
Bentley with a hanging bas- will be staged on Thursday
Stethem.
Culinary Herbs: Shelia ket. and Joyce Manuel with using the theme "More
Happenings in Ohio." The
a cactus.
: Curtis, Joy Bentley, three.
Plants: Joyce Manuel. shows are held in the
Feverfew: Pat Holter.
Thompson-Roush Building.
three, and Joy Bentley.
Yarrow, Joy Bentley.

SUMMER
ClEARANCE
SAlE

So£a Sale

FINANCING SPECIAL

oo;

ALL RECLINERS

30%0FF

At the County Fair

.

Amid the hustle. bustle
The hot and humid air
The groans of overwork-

Others ride the hurricane
At the county fair.

.

mg

A ride upon the carousel
G ives one a breath of air
Or atop the ferris wheel
At the county fair.

Men shape the county
fair.
•

People sit and wait all
day
To see pals of yesteryear
Others come to see the
shows
At the country fair.

Many come to eat the

.

reSTf)mc· Mattress Sale
.

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The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August19,2009;

The Daily Sentinel Analysis: Liberals tired of health care compromise
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich·
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
: the Government Jot a redress of grievances.
:- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Healthy
Breas!feeding Awareness Month
Dear Editor:
August is Breastfeeding Awareness Month in Ohio.
Gov. Ted Strickland is urging all Ohioians to support
breastfeeding. The theme for Breastfeeding Awareness
Month is "Breastfeeding- A Vital Emergency Response.
Are you ready?"
Breastfeeding provides better health outcomes than fornmla 'feeding for both the mother and baby. It also provides
unequaled protection against malnutrition and disease during
disasters, emergencies, and economic downturns. Breastmilk
is a free, safe and reliable food source for infants and young
children. There have been many reported instances of children being kept alive during disasters by breastfeeding.
During an emeFgency, the breastfeeding mother and her family have the comfort of knowing that the baby has a safe and
adequate food supply available as long as necessary.
All citizens need to be prepared for any situation.
Pregnant women and their families should aim to breastfeed. Families need to think about how they would feed
their baby if clean water, sterile bottles and formula, or even
shelter were not available. This is especially important in
this economic downturn where bread winners are losing
their jobs and sometimes families are losing their homes.
The Centers for Disease Control reports that Ohio's
breastfeeding initiation rate of 59.6 percent ranks 44th in
the nation. We can do better. All elements of the community should cooperate and support breastfeeding mothers so
that babies can be assured of a free, safe and reliable food
source whenever a disaster strikes.
For more information about breastfeeding, call the Meigs
WIC office at 992-0392.
Leanne Cunningham
Meigs WIC office
Pomeroy

BY CHARLES BABINGTON
AND
RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON
Frustrated liberals have a
question
for
President
Obama
and
Barack
Democratic lawmakers: Isn't
it time the other guys gave a
little ground on health care?
What's the point of a bipartisan bilL they ask, if we're
making all the concessions?
A case in point:
Sen. Charles Grassley, a
key Republican negotiator
on health care, was on a winning streak as Congress
recessed for August, having
wrung important concessions
from Democrats, including
an agreement not to tax
employer-provided health
insurance and a limit to
demands on drug companies.
How did Grassley reciprocate? With an attack that
struck Democrats as stunning and baseless. Grassley
told an Iowa crowd he would
not support a plan that
"determines when you're
going to pull the plug on
Grandma." The remark
echoed conservative activists
who wrongly claim a House
health care bill would require
Medicare recipients to discuss their end-of-life plans
with doctors.
For liberals supporting
far-reaching changes to the
nation's health care system,
it was another sign that
months of negotiations have
been a one-way street. It's
time to move on without
R-epublicans, they say.
On Tuesday, liberals were
fuming over Obama's
recent remarks suggesting
he might also yield on the
federally run insurance

option he's been promoting.
Many saw it as a huge concession that could leave
them with nothing more
than watered-down insurance cooperatives.
But the Senate's secondranking Republican, Jon Kyl
of Arizona, dismissed even
such co-ops as a "Trojan
horse'' leading to government control of health care.
Many liberals are fed up.
"It is clear that Republicans
have decided 'no health care'
is a victory for them," Andy
Stern, president of the
Service
Employees
International Union, said in
an interview. "There is a
point at which bipartisanship •
reaches a limit, and I would
say it's reaching that limit."
The growing liberal
unhappiness sets a difficult
stage for Obama this fall.
Political pragmatists want
him to keep seeking a middle ground that will attract
at least a few Republican
lawmakers as well as moderate Democrats who could
prove crucial to passage in
the House and Senate. Even
modest achievements, such
as preventing insurers from
refusing to cover pre-existing medical conditions,
would allow Obama to
claim a victory and perhaps.
try for more later, they say.
Liberal activists say there's
no point m the Democrats
winning the House, Senate
and White House unless they
use their clout to enact the
major measures that Obama
campaigned for - with or
without some Republican
support.
For now, Obama seems
on the defensive. He spent
valuable time this month
knocking down claims that
Democratic plans could

lead to euthanasia of the
elderly. And his chief
spokesmen spent much of
Monday and Tuesday insisting that Obama still supports a government-run
health insurance option
despite mixed signals from
the administration.
On Saturday, Obama told
a Colorado crowd, "The
public option, whether we
have it or we don't have it,
is not the entirety of health
care reform. This is just one
sliver of it."
While liberals are discouraged, the endgame
remains unclear. Some still
hope that Obama and congressional Democratic leaders will use all their parliamentary powers - which
could prove especially divisive in the Senate- to pass
a far-reaching bill that
would include a public
option for health insural).ce
and more palatable consumer costs for prescription
drugs and other needs.
The pivotal decisions will
be made this fall, with
administration officials saying the debate cannot lapse
into the midterm election
year of 2010.
What seems clear is that
the room for compromise
between Republicans and
Democrats is shriveling to
almost nothing. Some
Democrats found Kyl's
remarks
rarticularly
galling. Even i Democrats
manage to prod~:~ce a health
care bill that won't increase
the federal deficit over 10
years, Kyl said, "that doesn't mean Republicans
would support it."
And Grassley has said
he's uninterested in a compromise that draws only
so
Senate
three
or

Republicans' votes.
The continued outreach to
Republicans. meanwhile, is
testing Democrats' unity.'
This week, more than 50
House Democrats issued a
letter saying: "Any bjJl tl.
does not provide. at ami
mum, for a public option ·
with reimbursement ratesbased on Medicare rates - ..
not negotiated rates
is .
unacceptable.''
Some of them told House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D- ·
Calif., in a conference call
Tuesday that discussions with •
Republicans are pointless.
White House spokes-'
woman Linda Douglass:
played down the intraparty ·
fuss, noting that it's far from'
clear how the final legislation will turn out. She said '
negotiations
involving
Obama have led drug manufacturers to agree to reduce
costs for the nation's health •
care system by $80 billion ·
over 10 years. while hospitals have agreed to an addi- '
:
tiona! $155 billion.
Those concessions will:
carry weight with lawmakers as they ''look at enacting"
reform that will lower co.
and increase stability a
security," Douglass said in
an interview.
·
But such concessions cut ;
several ways. Phannaceutical
industry leaders say the $80
billion agreement should end :
efforts to allow the govern- :
ment to negotiate lower·
prices for prescription drugs'
used in Medicare and other ·
programs.
:
Liberals say such price ..
reductions are precisely the'_
type of change Obama
called for in his presidential
campaign. And now, they
say, is the time to turn those
promises into reality.

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TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 19, the 231st day of 2009.
There are 134 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Aug. 19, 1909, the first
automobile races were run at the just-opened Indianapolis
Motor Speedway; the winner of the first event was auto engineer Louis Schwitzer, who drove a Stoddard-Dayton touring car
tWice around the 2.5-mile track at an average speed of 57.4 mph.
:In 1976, President Gerald R. Ford won the Republican presidential nomination at the party's convention in Kansas City.
Thought for Today: "Being an intellectual creates a lot of
questions and no answers." - Janis Joplin, American rock
singer (1943-1970).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

~

The Daily Sentinel

: Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.

(usPs 213-9so&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

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through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
tions to The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box
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ALL BUSINESS: How tough ts the SEC?
During a June congresAP BUSINESS WRITER
sional appearance. Schapiro
said that the "SEC needs to
NEW YORK - The gov- send a clear message that
ernment appears to be get- corporate wrongdoing will
ting tough on corporate .not be tolerated, and penalshenanigans, securing $83 ties for securities violations
million in fines last week will be stiff.''
from Bank of America and
But to keep her word, the
General Electric for mis- SEC must not only extract
leading investors.
settlements out of compaProblem is, it's like a traf- nies but also individuals
fic cop ticketing a speeding responsible for corporate
car instead of its driver.
misdeeds. That's fairest to
No one at Bank of shareholders, who get stuck
America or GE has been with the bill for corporate
ordered to pay for their mis- fines even though they've
deeds. If the Securities and often been hurt the most by
Exchange Commission is corporate misconduct.
serious about cracking down
"Entities don't do bad
on illegal behavior, the peo- stuff. People do bad stuff.''
ple - not just companies said Lynn Turner, former
must be held accountable.
chief accountant for the
. "If the SEC really wants SEC in the late 1990s who
to regain its title of top cop, is now a senior adviser to
then it will have to prose- LECG. a legal, economic
cute individuals involved," and forensic accounting
said Thomas Gorman, who firm. "To stop that, people
chairs the securities litiga- need to know the SEC is
tion practice at the Jaw firm going to come down on
Porter Wright Morris &amp; them like a ton of bricks."
Arthur and is author of the
In recent months, the SEC
blog, SECactions.com. "Big has been more aggressive at
fines (at companies) won't targeting individuals. The
stop bad behavior."
biggest cases have included
To be sure, any action the charges regulators filed
· even if it targets companies against former executives of
instead of people - is a mortgage lender Countrywide
step forwru·d for the SEC. FinanciaL including former
Over the last year, it has CEO Angelo Mozilo, for
been rightfully criticized for allegedly failing to disclose
failing to spot major frauds, the risks of its business pracincluding Bernie Madoff's tices to investors. Also sued
Ponzi scheme, and warnings was a fo1mer executive of
signs leading up to the Beazer Homes for allegedly
financial crisis.
committing fraud and misSince Chairman Mary leading company auditors.
Schapiro took over in late
But the cases against
January, the agency has Bank of America and GE
been on a tear. Since then, haven't gotten that far. and
its enforcement division has they should. The settleopened about 525 investiga- ments are laudable. but the
tions, up from 475 during SEC could make a bold
the same period in 2008.
statement by pursuing the
BY RACHEL BECK

~

individuals involved. That
"GE bent the accounting
could include anyone from rules beyond the breaking·
the executive suite to audi- point."
said
Robert
tors. lawyers and more.
Khuzami. head of the SEC's
In the case of Bank of enforcement division. in a
America, the Charlotte, N.C.- statement when the settlebased company agreed ment was announced.
Monday to pay $33 million to
GE. which is based in~
settle federal charges that it Fairfield, Conn .. doesn't
misled
investors about admit or deny the alle9
Merrill Lynch's plans to pay tions, but said in a sta
$5.8 billion bonuses to its ment that it coJTected i ·
executives. The SEC "claims financial statements for
that Bank of America, as it SEC filings made between
sought approval to buy 2005 and 2008. GE said
Merrill, told investors that two of the violations outMerrill would not pay the lined by the SEC were •
year-end bonuses without intentional, but that the;
Bank of America's consent. other two were negligent :
Bank of America made that errors by company offi- :-"materially false and mis- cials, some of whom have·
leading'' claim in a mailing to been disciplined or fired.
~
283,000 shareholders of both
In this case. the SEC left:
companies, the SEC said.
the door open for future
The bank settled the actions by saying the charges •
charges without admitting ..conclude the SEC's investior denying the allegations.
gation with respect to the
Merrill ended up paying company:· GE declined to ·
$3.6 billion in bonuses in comment on indiYiduals.
2008, even though it lost
As for Bank of America. :
$27.6 billion that year, a the SEC said the investiga- :
record for the firm. The tion was ongoing. Bank of ·
bonuses amount to nearly America spokesman Scott:
12 percent of the $50 billion Silvestri said the company:
that Bank of America paid continues -·to cooperate •
for Merrill.
with authorities on all of:'
On Tuesday, General these investigations."
•
Electric agreed to pay $50
But New York federal :
million to settle federal judge Jed Rakoff h~
·
charges that it committed ordered a hearing on t
accounting fraud for two bani-. 's proposed settlemen .•
years earlier this decade.
In
a
statement
late :
The SEC said that GE vio- Wednesday. Rakoff said the:
lated U.S. securities laws settlement .. would leave·
four times between 2002 and uncertain the truth of the :
2003 when accounting for very serious allegations ~
items like commercial paper made in the complaint."
r
funding and the sale of train
What happens next in:
locomotives and aircraft both these cases should be :
engine spare patts. The SEC closely watched. The out-:
said the accounting matleu- come will say a lot about •
vering helped GE maintain a whether SEC today is really:
string of earnings that beat as empowered as the invest- ;
Wall Street expectations.
ing public hopes it will be.

1\

.,

�'Vednesday,August19,2009

Obituaries
H Marcus Weaver

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Proctor takes top prize in paintings
B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LETART, W.Va.- H. Marcus Weaver, 91. died Tuesday
POMEROY - An oil
Aug. 18, at his residence.
' painting
of the Sugar Run
Born on June 21 , 1918 at Maggie WV. he was the son of Mill on Mulben·y Avenue
the late John Homer Weaver and Alice (Pritchard) Weaver. by Julia Proctor took best of
He was the owner/operator of The Twin Pines Farm. He
in the amateur paintwas the director and a member of the Western Soil show
ing
competition
servation, Dairymen Coop Sales AssociatiOn in Meigs County Fair. at the
leston, WV: Dairy Council in Charleston, WV; WV
The painting of the picarm Bureau for 60 years, Past Board of Directors turesque
mill which operatSouthern States. State Farm Director for 8 years at the ed for more
than 160 years
Farm Bureau.
and
closed
down
last year,
He was an 81 year member of the Peniel United was entered in the
landMethodist Church where he served as a superintendent,
of
the
oil-expescape
class
teacher, and trustee, honorary FFA member in Point
Pleasant, WV: 1980 Farm Family of the Year, past member rienced category. Proctor
of the Odd Fellows, cattle chairman of Mason Co. Fair for also took blue ribbons in
many years, life member WV State Farm Museum, former the landscape class of
member of the American Jersey Cattle Club, former acrylic experienced, and the
pencil, pen. or crayon class
M.em~er of the WV Jersey Cattle Club, past member of the
H1llbdly 4-H Club, past delegate of the MMI, life-long of other media, experienced
farmer at Letart, 1938 graduate of Point Pleasant High category.
Taking reserve best of
School, Forest Fire Warden, Soil Conservationist.
show
in the oil-experienced
He was preceded in death by a son. John Weaver. a soncategory with a floral study
i~-law: Chester Rose; great granddaughter, Jessica Rose;
SISters, Helen Catter, Mary Brown, Emma Ledlie; and a was Lula To ban of Pomeroy
who also took a blue ribbon
brother, Herbert Weaver,
Survivors include his wife of 60 years, Dora Weaver of for her entry in the picture
Letart, WV; a daughter: Maxine Rose of Racine, OH, and from life.
In the amateur painting
her children: Brent (Chasity) Rose of Racine. OH; Jeff
Rose (Sarah Grueser) of Racine, OH; Tara Rose (Tyler classes of oil paintings,
Johnson) of Portland, OH; son. Aaron (Evelyn) Weaver of junior, the blue ribbon winwere
Jennifer
Letart, WV, and his children: Brandon Weaver of Letart, ners
WV; lillian (George) Harris of Pinch, WV; daughter: Schaeffer of Middleport in
Juanita (Marc) French of Racine, OH; and her son: Tyler animal study, and Eric
French of Racine, OH: two great grandsons: AJ Roush and Pierce of Racine in both
landscape and animal study.
stin Rose.
In the adult division for
riends may call at the Foglesoing-Tucker Funeral Home
• m 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 20, 2009. Funeral ser- oil paintings. blue ribbons
vices will be held at 11 a.m. n Friday, Aug. 21, 2990 adt the went to Peggy Crane of
funeral home with the Rev. Bobby Woods and the Rev. Jack Middleport, in landscape;
Sharon Dean of Racine in
Mayes officiating. Burial will be in suncrest Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in memory to
West Virginia State Farm Museum, 1458 Fairground Road,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 or Peniel United Methodist
Church c/o Dora Weaver Rt. 1 Box 479 Point Pleasant,
wv 25550.
control but that she be
placed at the MonDay
Correctional Facility in
Dayton.
The original charge was
the result of an investigation
by the Pomeroy Police
Department.
• Jamey Nelson, 31, of
MALTA - Margaret Marie Holter, 86, of Malta, Ohio,
former Meigs County resident, died Sunday. Aug. 16, 2009, Syrause, also appeared
before Judge Crow to enter
at the Selby Hospital in Marietta.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Delbert Holter. pleas of guilty to one count
Friends may call at the Snouffer Funeral Home in of forgery and one count of
Zanesville from 6 to 8 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 23. Funeral receiving stolen property,
services will be held at 11 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 24, with each a felony of the fifth
degree and each carrying a
burial in the Malta cemetery.
possible penalty of one year.
Sentencing was continued
to Oct. 19. Nelson remains
free on bond pending completion of a pre-sentence
investigation and report by
the Adult Probation officer.
The charges were the
POMEROY - There is a mandatory meeting required by
of an investigation by
result
the OHSAA for all parents of Meigs students who will be
playing fall sports to be held at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 2, the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
at Meigs High School.
• Jason E. Milliron, 31, of
Albany, entered a plea of
guilty to one count of nonsupport of dependents, a
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- The 2009 Miss Mothman felony of the fifth degree,
Festival Pageant is still seeking contestants.
which carries a possible
The deadline has been extended until Friday, Aug. 28. penalty of one year in
Entry forms must be received by that date. For more prison. Sentencing was coninformation, contact Delyssa Huffman at 304-593-8998 tinued to Oct. 19 to permit a
or 304-576-4181. Information can also be obtained by
visiting the Web site, www.missmothmanfestivalpageant.com.
Entry fee to enter is $40 for the Tiny-Mrs. divisions and
$15 for the Pretty Baby Contest.

Deaths

Margaret Marie Holter

Local Briefs

·~--------------Meeting called
Mothman seeking contestants

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto

Julia Proctor's oil painting of Pomeroy's historic Sugar Run Mill won a best of show for her
from among the 57 entries in this year's Meigs County Fair painting competition.
floral study and also in picture from life.
In the acrylic painting
adult category, the first
place winners were Peggy
Crane in landscape and picture from life; Ryan Mees of

Portland, animal study'; and
Shirley Hamm of Racine,
floral study.
In the water color category, Shirley Hamm of Racine
won the blue ribbons in all
three classes.landscape, ani-

mal study, and floral study.
Ryan Mees took frrstin other
media, adult in the class for
pencil, pen or crayon.
Fifty-seven
paintings
were entered in the competition.

Court from Page At
pre-sentence investigation
and report. Bond was continued as previously set.
Milliron was charged as a
result of investigation by
the Meigs County Child
Support
Enforcement
Agency.
• Megan Burnette, 23, of
Cheshire, appeared for sentencing on prior pleas of
guilty to one count of theft
of drugs and one count of
possession of drugs. Crow
sentenced Burnette to the
maximum as to each count
and ordered the sentences to
be served consecutively, or
one after the other, for an
aggregate sentence of two
and a half years. The sentences were suspended and
Burnette placed on community control for a period of
five years, with it being a
specific condition that she
be placed at the MonDay
Correctional Facility in
Dayton.
Burnette was remanded to
the custody of the Sheriff;
she was charged as a result
of an investigation by the
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
• Timothy Wickersham,

29, of Racine, appeared for
arraignment on an indictment charging him with
failure to appear after recognizance release, a felony
of the fourth degree. The
Indictment, returned by the
Meigs County Grand Jury.
alleges that Wickersham
failed to appear in another
felony criminal case in July,
after having been released
on a personal recognizance.
Wickersham entered a plea
of not guilty to the charge.
Bond was set and the court
appointed an attorney to
represent Wickersham upon
a finding of indigency. Trial
is set for Oct. 19.
• Phillip Brooks, 47, of
Pomeroy, appeared for
arraignment on an indictment charging him with one
count of burglary in connection with an incident
which occurred in May of
this year.
Burglary. as
charged, is a felony of the
second degree. and carries a
possible penalty of eight
years in prison. Brooks
entered a plea of not guilty
to the charge. A cash bond
was set. Trial was scheduled for Oct.l8.

• Alex A. Craig, 23, of"
Racine, failed to appear for
sentencing on a earlier
admission of violation of
terms and conditions of
community control. Craig ·
had previously pled guilty ;
in 2008 to unauthorized use
of a motor vehicle, a felony
of the fifth degree, and failure to appear after recognizance release, a felony of
the fourth degree.
A bench warrant for his
arrest was issued.

Internet
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Boil advisory
POMEROY -A boil advisory was issued by Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District, through 4 p.m. Wednesday,
for Court Street Road and customers west in Sutton
Township, Chester and customers west in Chester
nship, and Hemlock Grove and surrounding area
•
h. Customers are asked to boil water used for drinking and cooking for three minutes before consuming it.
The outage was necessary due to repair of a main line
break in Chester.

Fair Results
Hay show results
POMEROY - Results of the hay show at the
Meigs County Fair have been announced.
In the class for 75 percent or more alfalfa, Roy
Holter of Pomeroy took first and Patricia Holter, second. In the all grasses category, Blai.11o Windon of
Pomeroy took first, Diana Windon, second. and
Patricia Holter. third.
In the 49 percent or less legumes class. Roy Holter
took first. Patricia Holter. second and Blair Windon,
third.

Demolition derby results
POMEROY - In Monday night's demolition
derby in front of the grandstand at the Meigs County
· the feature winner was Travis Hendricks of
y with Billy Bays of Gallipolis coming in
second.
The two winners in each of the three heats were as
follows:
Heat 1: Denzil Roberts and Doyle McDonald with
Tyler French, third.
Heat 2: Billy Bays and Jeffrey Bush. with Justin
Wells third.
Heat 3: Ryan Glover and Roger Raffetty with Brent
Whaley third, and Travis Hendricks, fourth.
In the compacts, Justin Goode was the winner with
Tim Spices placing second.

Division, Burdette, first place,
Dylan Milam, second place;
also participating in this division in no particular order,
Courtney Bauerbach, Cassidy
Cleland, Jacob Parker, Jordan
Parker, Austin Ross. Novice
Division, Elizabeth Collins,
first place, Charles Bret
Cleland, second place.
Also picking up awards at
the show were: Ashley
Putnam, ftrst place, sirnmental calf; Jordan Wood, frrst
place, Craig Jones, second
place, angus calf; Craig
Jones, ftrst place, senior yearling angus; Jordan Wood,
frrst place, summer yearling
charolais and bull calf under
six months old; Ashley
Putnam, ftrst place, junior
yearling, Maine anjou, Dylan
Milam. first place, Austin
Ross, second place, Ashley
Putnam. third place Maine
anjou calf; Dylan Milam,
grand champion, Ashley
Putnam, reserve champion.
Maine anjou; Jordan Wood.
ftrst place, summer yearling
shorthorn, Samuel Evans,
first place, bull calf under six
months old; Jonathan Barrett,
first place, Jenna Burdette,
second place, calf crossbred;
also showing in this category
(in no particular order)
Cassidy Cleland, Charles
Bret Cleland, Elizabeth
Collins, Dylan Milam. Jacob
Parker, Jordan Parker, Ashley
Putnam.
Courtney
Bauerbach, first place, Jordan
Wood, second place, bull calf
under six months old.
The judge for the 1unior
Fair Breeding Beef Show
was Kenny Wells.

For more information comact:
Brem Patterson
(740) 99].1880 or
Sarah Booth
(800) 282·720/, ext. 7026
Email:
bremp@rio.edu or sbooth@rio.edu
On the Web, go 1011 W11.rio.edulaJmissions

RIO GRANDE MEIGS CENTER
BER&gt;; \RO \: Hl.TZ CE:\TER

Fall Semester 2009

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�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

FAIR

VVednesday,August19,2009

Dave Harris/photo

Despite taking the stage an hour and a half late due to rain, the Norris Brothers Band performed in front
of the grandstand Tuesday night at the 2009 Meigs County Fair. The Ravenswood group took the crowd
back to the days of Wolfman Jack and Casey Kasem and top 40 AM radio with a collection of Sixties and
Seventies music.

Beth Sergent/photo-

A view from the Midway at the Meigs County Fair shows the rides were
busy with fair goers seeking a thrill ride.

Beth Sergent/photo

Yesterday was "kiddie day" at the Meigs County Fair where kids were not only admitted for free until noon
but participated in games, like the hula hoop competition, for free prizes.

Beth Sergent/photo

Earie Wood gets a laugh out of 13-month old Trinity Wood of Pomeroy during Monday's Junior Fair Dairy Show.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Derrick Powell, a member of the Lakeside Leaders 4-H Club, garnered a lot of attention with his pair of
well-behaved turkeys, who sat in the stands with him at Tuesday's Junior Fair Poultry Show.

Kasey Sevoy, 2,
of Tuppers
Plains keeps
himself busy
with his John
,
Deere tractor
during the Junior
Fair Breeding
Beef Show.
Beth Sergent/photo

Beth Sergentlphoto

Cassie Bowsher, 4, of Langsville, prepares to enter the show ring during
the Open Class Breeding Beef Show.

�~------------~-

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Strasburg to pitch for ~ats, Pa~e 82
Steelers looking to run, Page 86

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Prep Golf Round up

Point golfers best Wahama, Southern
S TAFF REPORT
MOS$PORTSOMYOAILYH 'ITINEL COM

MASON - In a high
school golf tri-match held
Monday at the Riverside
Golf Course, the Point
Pleasant varsity shot their
lowest score of the season to
best both the teams from
Wahama and Southern.
Three of the Point players
broke 80 with the fourth
score being onl) 2 strokes
from joining that group. The
final total for the Big Blacks
in the play six. l:ount four
format was a season best of

316.
Opie Lucas and Alex
Porter both shot an excellent
78 to share medalist honors
for the day. Travis Grimm
continued his fine play of
late with a score of 79. Erik
Albri2ht added the 4th score
included in the total by
shooting an 81. The 88
turned in by Jason Stouffer
and the 94 from Justin
Ca\ender were not included
in the final total for the winners.
The \Vahama team contmucs to be up and down from
1 nine holes to the next.

llowcvcr, their final total of
359 did place them in second position for the day. The
White Falcons were led by
their co-captains Dave
Greene
and
Brandon
Johnson.
Dave finall) showed signs
of returning to last years
fom1 by shooting a solid 80
for the day which included a
one over par 36 on the back
side. Brandon also struggled
on the front ~ide. but played
the back in 41 to turn in an
R9 for the day.

Please see Golf, Bl

DAYS
GAHS, Meigs
football preview

AP photo

This is a July 20 file photo showing former Marshall football
player Mike Hamrick, during a news conference in
Huntington after being named the schools athletic director.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy will be hosting
Meigs this Friday night at
Memorial Field in both
schools· 2009 football preview at 7:30 p.m.
Admission is $5 per person, with the two halves
scheduled to be played.
Both varsity squads will
play in the first half, \Vhile
the junior varsity teams will
take to the gridiron in the
second half.

Marshall looks to end 4
straight losing seasons
CHARLESTO~ (AP) Mike Hamrick ha-; come full
circle at Marshall.
Hamrick officially takes
over a&lt;; Marshall's athletic
director this week to find the
football program without a
winning season since 2003, a
shell of its high-octane days
when Chad Pennmgton,
Randy Moss and Byron
Leftwich racked up record
after record.
The last time Hamrick \•.:as
part of the Thundering Herd.
he was a linebacker in the
late 1970s during the
's somber streak of 18
losing seasons.
he knows about the
struggles. He also knows he
can do something about it
this time.
Hamrick is taking a waitand-see approach. including
about coach Mark Snyder's
handling of the team. Snyder
has a 16-31 record in four
seasons and Marshall is
picked to finish near the bottom of Conference USA's
East Division again this season.
'Tm the athletic director.
I'm not the football coach
and I don't micromanage
coaches. I never have and
never will." Hamrick told
The Associated Press in a
recent telephone interview.
"But at the same time it's my
job to evaluate coaches and
their programs.
"It's no secret that it'~
important that we have a
successful football season
year."
amrick was hired on July
after six years as AD at
UNLV. He spoke with
Snyder briefly then and
' again by phone later.
Hamrick noted that Snyder,
too, is a former Marshall
player and badly wants to
get the program back on
track.
• "There's no agenda on my
part," said Hamrick, who is
scheduled to appear with
Snyder at a fan rally in
Charleston on Wednesday.
'Tve said that from Day
One. As soon as I get in
there, rll sit down whh him
and see what we need to do
'to give him every opportunity to be successful.'
: Thin~s haven't alway~
been th1s sour.
: When Hamrick was athletic director at Arkansas-Little
Rock in 1991 , he drove his
:Wife and three youn~ children nearly 700 miles to
tch his alma mater play
first game in its m:w stam. Those were much happier times at Marshall, pa1t
of a run of 20 consecutive
.winning seasons that included
Championship
Subdivision national titles in
1992 and 1996.
The success continued
after Marshall transferred to
the Bowl Subdivision in
1997. Marshall went 13-0
and earned its only top 10
national finish in 1999 and

.
I

eYCntually won five straight
bowl games
~
Then came 2005. Bob
Pruett retired before the start
of spring practice, Snyder
was hired and Marshall !
moved from the MidAmerican Conference to
AP photo
Conference USA.
Quarterback
Brett
Favre
smiles
as
he
holds
up
a
Minnesota
Vikings
jersey
during
a news
It's been all downhill
conference at the NFL football team's training facility Tuesday in Eden Prairie, Minn.
since.
Marshall lost the mojo it
enjoyed at home. Attendance
slipped to 24,766 last season
GALLIPOLIS
- the lowest under Snyder.
McGraw's Fall Basketball
Snyder is 13-10 in games
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. and president Mark Wilfmet when Favre waved as he got League will begin on
played in Huntington. while (AP) - Brett Favre unre- Favre in Mississippi with out. ~o less than 90 minutes Sunday. September 13.
his two predecessors. Pruett tired again and will be wear- their private plane. Childress later, he was on the field in
Boys and girls in grades
and Jim Donnan. went a ing purple this time. Chew himself picked him up at the h1s familiar No. 4 jersey 7-12 will start at 1 p.m.,
on that. cheeseheads.
combined 91-7.
St. Paul airport. and a news with purple shorts and a pur- while boys and girls in
Marshall showed signs of
Pulling an about-face on helicopter hovered over ple helmet, a v1sion that has grades l-6 will start at 3
improvement in 2008. but a his playing status for the their route to the team's sub- had Packers fans cringing p.m.
3-1 start wa-; followed bv a second straight summer. the urban practice facilit) in about for months.
For more information,
1-7 finish.
·
three-l!me .MVP quarterback Eden Prairie.
He shook hands with a please contact (740) 352But Snyder is excited will suit up for his old rival
1407 or visit us on the web
Once the vehicles arriYcd,
Please see Favre, 86
about this season.
Minnesota starting with hundreds of fans roared
at www.mcgrawleague .net
Offensive
coordinator Friday's preseason game at
John Shannon and defensive the Metrodome. The goal;
coordinator Rick Minter help the Vikings win that
have a year in Snyder's sys- elusive tirst Super Bowl.
tem and Marshall returns 15
"You need to cross over
starters. Snyder said there is that tine. You need to take
a continuity to fall camp in that chance," Favre said at
terms of leadership and his introductory news coneveryone knowing what to ference Tuesday. recalling
expect.
the advice Minnesota coach
:·w~. have.n't changed.'' he ' Brad Childress gave him.
smd .. That s the advant~ge "At 39 years old, your arm
bemg around fo~ a while. 1' may not feel like it did at 21 .
'I ou see the coachm&amp; staffs but the pieces arc in place
lf\oU arc enrolled m lhe :\dumtra f•·N'dom l\1NiiC'are Pl:an. or lta\ e \H.TN
":~o have ha~. consls~.ncy here v. here you don't have
v. 1t~out thmos ch~n~mg. to do as much.''
orPEIA msu
th~t ~ why the} contmue to
He added: "If they were
WITnh.
h f ~r h 11 .
willing to take that chance. I
. e teet o .n· ars a~
s was, too."
hneup. are the mne start~rs
The wait for Favre's decion defense, led by defens1ve
.
h
,
d Albert McClellan. Seven slon dragged throug M~) ·
PleN ha\ e 'oun su
~f the top 10 tacklers return. Ju~e and J~ly - at which
"We do feel like our po~nt he sa1d he v.ould stay
~ lb\\Cr ~'®r qu.. uo
or
defense is going to be the r~tu·c.~· ~Lit that. w?s thre~
Pieasant \,. r ' Ho pltal has :m C\pcri t\;"'d 111
e
strenoth," Snyder said. v.eeks .tgo. On ~ucsday. tt
therapiSt on ~All to accontm&lt;XI • &gt;ou• therap~Ult~.: need"
"Prob;bly the most talented, all wa::. resolved Ill a ma!tcr
~ .
. .
fast defense we've had o~ hours.
around here at Marshall in
ream owner Zyg1 Will
quite some years."
Based on a strong spring
performance,
Brian
Anderson. last season's
backup quarterback, is slated
to start ahead of 2008 starter
Mark Cann. Anderson completed 22-of-39 passes for
305 yards. three touchdowns
and an interception a year
ago. Cody Slate needs 88
receiving yards to become
the top tight end in school
history.
Although he has been suspended for the season opener
due to a drug arrest. Darius
Marshall returns at running
back after rushing for 1,095
yards and five touchdowns
last season.
"We've got some marquee
players and that's what it
takes," Snyder said. "We're
a very veteran football team
and we're exc1ted to get this
thing going."
For a guy who saw his
share of defeats when he lettered at Marshall in 1978·79,
Hamrick is. too.
''I'm just looking forward
to getting there and seeing
what I can do to help,'' he
said.

Favre coming back with Vikings

McGraw Fall
Basketball League

or

r

You can now pay your bill online at:

www.pval ey.org

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley J)rive • Point Pleasant. WV. (304) 675-4340

•

�4

Page B2 • 1he Daily Sentinel

.

: AP photo

No dropoff for Edwards
BEREA (AP) - One game,
bne big drop. Braylon
~wards 1s back at it.
• Cleveland's talented wide
receiver. who can dazzle and
tlisappoint in equal helpings,
ctropped a touchdown pass on
the first ball thrown to him in
Saturday's 17-0 preseason
loss to the Green Bay Packers.
, Late in the first half,
~wards got free in the end
~one and was in perfect position to score but let a perfectly
thrown £asS from quarterback
Brady (2uinn bounce away.
The drop became magnified
when Quinn. battling Derek
Anderson for the struting job,
threw an interception on a
pass intended for Edwards on
the next play.
"Ifs just part of football,"
Edwards said Tuesday.
And it's just the preseason,
but unfortunately for the
Browns, it's also more of the
same from Edwards, who led
the NFL with 16 dropped
passes last season.
He has had an interminable
case of the drops since his college days at Michigan. From
one play to the next it's hard to
know which Edwards will
show up - the one who takes
your breath away with a spectacular, leaping, one-handed
grab or the one who lets a 5yard toss slide through his fin-

gers.
In Cleveland's offense,
which has failed to score a
touchdown in seven straight
games dating to last season,
Edwards is a key weapon not a once-every-other-play
receiver, but the go-to-guy
down after down.
Edwards' inconsistency has
been a sore spot for Browns
fans since his arrival as the
No. 3 overall pick in 2005.
They expect more from
Cleveland's top playmaker
and his inability to string
together catches and solid perfmmances has prompted a
backlash of sorts.
It wasn't long after his
opening-night
drop
at
Lambeau Field that the Web
and local spotts radio talk
shows were ovetrun with negative
comments
about
Edwards.
"That (inconsistency) drives
anybody crazy," he said.
"Nobody's perfect. At the end
of the day you strive to be.
What drives you is what drives me, to be the best at what
I do. When I drop a pass, I'm
(ticked) at myself. I wish I
could catch everything no
matter where it was or what I
have to do to get to it. That's
just not reality. The thing you
can control is the focus and
the concentration."

Golf

Kyle Bryant led River
Valley with a score of 56,
followed by Jacob Leach
with 58. The duo of Matt
Ball and Zack Polcyn
rounded out the RVHS scoring with matchmg 59s. D.L.
Gibson and Cody Wimmer
also had respective efforts
of 63 and 68 for the Silver
and Black.
Jackson senior Morgan
Dobbins was the lone golfer
to shoot a sub-40 round.
earning medalist honors
with an even par round of
36. Dylan Newsome was
next with 44, followed by
Alec Ray with a 48. Logan
Simpson concluded the
Iron men's team score with a
round of 63.
Ayron Lord and Josh
Wiley also had respective
efforts of 64 and 68 for JHS.
Fairland was led by Jared
Boster with a 46, followed
by Dalton Froelich and
Kyle Riley with 52 and 53,
respectively. Alex Earl
rounded out the Dragons'
scoring with a 57.
Ryan Wooten and Patrick
McCoy also had rounds of
53 and 66 for FHS.

from PageBl
. Freshman
Samuel
Gordon had a solid 44 on
the back to finish with a 94
total. Kevin Back and
Dakota Sisk both shot 96
for the day.
And, freshman Caroline
Thompson became only the
second lady golfer in recent
.history to play for the White
Falcons. Caroline more than
held her own in her initial
outing even though her
score was not included in
the final team total.
The young men from
Southern were playing only
their second match of the
season and their inexperience showed at times.
Veteran Taylor Deem turned
in a score of 89 for the
.match.
Taylor was followed by
Andrew Roseberry who
shot a 108. Nathan Roush
added a 112 while Dyllan
Roush finished with a 118.
Both Colby Roseberry and
John Powell played, but
their scores were not counted in the final total of 427.
Wahama plays again on
Wednesday in their traditional match against Ripley
for the River Cup. Point
Pleasant will play host to
Poca at Hidden Valley on
•Wednesday.
• DEVILS WIN QUAD MATCH
AT CLIFFSIDE

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallia Academy golf team
continued its winning ways
on Monday at Cliffside Golf
Club, posting a 21-stroke
home victory over the likes
of Jackson, Fairland and
River Valley in a non-conference quad match.
The Blue Devils posted a
team score of 170, finishing
well ahead of the runner-up
lronmen with 191. FHS
placed third with a team
mark of 208, while the
Raiders finished the day
with a team tally of 232.
Corey Hamilton led the
GAHS with a low round of
40, while the duo of Nick
Saunders and Boeing Smith
followed with matching
43s.
Jordan
Cornwell
rounded out the team scoring with a 44.
Rob Canady and Corey
Arthur also had respective
efforts of 45 and 52 for the
victors.

VVednesday, August19, 2009

'Unlikely' Strasburg will pitch for Nats in '09

Cleveland
Browns
"
wide
~ receiver
• Braylon
·Edwards
catches a
pass dur• ing practice at the
:cleveland
: Browns
:NFL foot• ball train• ing camp
• Tuesday
in Berea.

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

....... ,. ____ --------.. --····==1

POINT KNOCKS OFF
RAIDERS

GALLIPOLIS - In a
dual match held at the
Cliffside Golf Course this
past Thursday, the Point
Pleasant golf team defeated
the team from River Valley.
The 9 hole match was
played with a play six,
count four format.
Point Pleasant won the
match with a score of 172.
Opie Lucas was once again
the leading scorer shooting
a 39 for the day. Eric
Albright followed with a 43
to go along with the 44 from
Travis Grimm and a 46
from Justin Cavender.
A 47 shot by Alex Potter
and a 49 turned in from
Jason Stouffer were not
included in the final team
total.
The young and inexperienced team from River
Valley shot a team total of
224 for the 9 holes. Chris
Goodrich shot a 51 to lead
his team. Both Matt Ball
and Zach Polcyn each
added scores of 57.
Kyle Bryant turned in a
59 to account for the final
team total. Cody Wimmer
and Jacob Leach also
played, but their scores
were not counted in the
final total.

WASHINGTON (AP) Long standing Washington
Nationals "face of the franchise" Ryan Zimmerman
was in the home clubhouse
before Tuesday's game,
fielding question after question about newly signed No.
1 draft pick Stephen
Strasburg.
A few feet away, wisecracking teammate Josh
Bard yelled over: "Did you
hear? Strasburg's going to
start tomorrow. And he's
throwing every game the
rest of the homestand."
Moving the joke along,
Zimmerman replied: "Yeah,
he's going to start AND
close."
OK, OK, we get it.
Strasburg is a special
prospect, one who commanded a record-breaking
contract from Washington
worth a guaranteed $15.1
million over four years in
negotiations that closed
about a minute before
Monday night's deadline.
Strasburg gets a $7.5 million signing bonus payable
over three years. His 2009
salary is the $400,000 minimum, which comes to a prorated $102,732. He gets $2
million in 2010,$2.5 million
in 2011 and $3 million in
2012.
The total is roughly 50
percent higher than the previous record for a drafted
player, the $10.5 million the
Cubs guaranteed Mark Prior
in 2001.
"He's coming into a tough
situation. where everyone's
going to expect him to strike
out everyone, throw 110
mph," Zimmerman said.
"And you've got to kind of
tell him to go out there and
be himself. Don't try and do
too much."
Indeed, the Nationals set
about tamping down everyone's expectations for the

hard-throwing Strasburg,
who has been labeled a
once-in-a-generation talent.
Acting Nationals general
manager Mike Rizzo said
Tuesday it's "very unlikely"
Strasburg will be called up
to the majors this season.
And 20 I 0? Even that is
not a certainty.
"We're going to see where
his development takes him,
and we're going to be very
cautious with him and develop him like one of the elite
prospects in the game,"
Rizzo said. "There's no
expectations of him to be in
the rotation in 2010. If he
earns it, and he's ready for it,
then we'll see where his talent takes him."
Strasburg has not pitched
in a game since May 29,
when he and San Diego
State were beaten by
Virginia 5-l in an NCAA
regional game - his only
loss of a junior year in which
he went 13-1 and led
Division I in strikeouts (195
in 109 innings) and ERA
(1.32).
Rizzo said it typically
takes about a month to get a
pitcher ready to compete
again. So the Nationals plan
to have Strasburg head to
their Florida spring training
complex to work with minor
league pitch coordinator
Spin Williams.
Then the pitcher probably
will spend some time in the
Florida
Instructional
League. followed by the
Arizona Fall League, Rizzo
said.
As for the difficulty of living up to outsized anticipation?
"It's external pressure,
because we've never talked
(about) him as the savior of
the organization," Rizzo
said, although he did shortly
thereafter use the phrase
"crown jewel."

AP photo

In this April 3 file photo. Stephen Strasburg, of San Diego
State University, pitches during a game in San Diego.

"We expect him to develop at a usual pace," Rizzo
continued, "and hopefully
when he gets to the big
leagues, he's ready to be
here, and he's everything
that we think he's going to
be."
The 6-foot-4, 220-pound
Strasburg probably will travel from California to
Washington on Thursday,
and there are tentative plans
to formally introduce him
fudey.
The Nationals already are
familiar with him from
watching tape of his college
performances.
"Great body for a pitcher.
If you could draw it up,
you're looking for a guy his
height, kind of a ranginess to
his body, lean guy, Jim
Palmer-type body. So you
just see all these things that

you think, 'OK, this guy
should be a successful pitcher,"'
manager
Jim
Riggleman said. "If you 'd
never seen him pitch, you'd
say, 'That body there should
work.' But once you see t.
results: 'Try to sign h'
..,
upThe Nationals did just
that.
Now his teammates are
preparing to rib the rookie a

b~.

Zimmerman, after all,
played his college baseball
at Virginia before being the
No. 4 overall pick in the
2005 draft.
"They obviously got the
better of him,·· Zimmerman·
said with a chuckle, thinking
back to Strasburg's lone
loss. ''He'll definitely hear
about that.''

11

!
~

J

I

i

Champs Sports Bowl announces deal with Big East
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)
- The Big East announced
a four-year agreement
Tuesday that will give the
Champs Sports Bowl the
choice of anv conference
team not headed to a Bowl
Championship Series game.
But under the deal. the
conference runner-up may
have to step aside in favor of
Notre Dame once during
those four years.
The Big East's No. 2 had
gone to the Gator or Sun
Bowls under an arrangement
that also involved Notre
Dame as well as the Big 12.
That agreement ends after
this season.
The new deal allows the
Champs Sports Bowl to pick
Notre Dame over a Big East
team once, if the Fighting
Irish's record is at least 7-5
and within two wins of the
Big East's No.2 school, said
Steve Hogan, the chief executive of Florida Citrus

Sports, which runs the bowl.
That means a 9-3 Big East
team could lose its spot in
the bowl to a 7-5 Notre
Dame squad.
Big East Commissioner
John Marinatto defended the
arrangement as good for
both the conference and
Notre Dame, which is a Big
East member in other sports.
"We provide them with the
opportunity to get to a bowl
like the Champs Sports
Bowl and they provide us
with the opportunity to
upgrade to a bowl like the
Champs Sports Bowl," he
said.
Hogan said the bowl did
not require that the Big East
include Notre Dame in the
deal.
"You could fairly say that
a Big East deal would have
been done if Notre Dame
wasn't part of the package,
but the fact that they are

makes it that much more
attractive," he said
Notre Dame has been part
of the Big East bowl package since 1998, when it
became clear that all the
bowls were making conference tie-ins. said John
Heisler, Notre Dame's
senior associate athletic
director. The Irish have
taken the Gator Bowl spot
just twice since then, he
said.
"As this evolved, for us it
was a BCS-or-bust type situation," he said. "So this kind
of became something that
seemed to make sense based
on our relationship with the
Big East, and it's now been
added to by some scheduling
opportunities between us
and Big East schools."
The Big East champion
goes to a BCS Bowl. The
runner-up this season will
head to the Gator Bowl. The
league also has tie-ins this

season to the Meineke Bowl,
International
Bowl,
Papajohns.com Bowl and St.
Petersburg Bowl.
The league has not
announced any other de'
for next season.
Marinatto said talks with t e
Sun Bowl and others are
ongoing. and he expects
more announcements soon.
The Champs Sports Bowl
will be played either Dec.
27,28 or 29.2010. and will
pay each participant about
$2.5 million.
Hogan said the Big East's
opponent has not been determined, but the bowl remains
in talks with the ACC, which
had previously played a Big
10 opponent in the game.
"We remain in discussions
on that side of the ball, along
with several other conferences:' he said. 'Tm hopeful that we can close out that
side of our game in the next
week to I 0 days."

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�...--~------..,--~~.,-· ~----.,...,-~ - ,--.-- --·... ""11"~·--......,.._,.__.....,.,_,_~-----:

---~------

VVednesday,August19,2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\!Cribttne - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

Web.Sites.
In One Week With Us
www.mydallytribune.com
rndtclassificd~;~y~1!uytribwte.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydailyreglster.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONUNE
To Place
l\egister
\!Cribttne
Sentinel
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
ca II Today... Or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
,..e~ HOW TO WRITE AN AD

t: '

Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...
Successful

\

«POLICIES«
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors
Must

lJeat!Air&amp;~

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

·

-

POUCIES: Ohio Valley PubliShing r - v • 1he ~ht to adlt, rejl&lt;:t, « C:On(ellll) ad at any time. Errore mua1 be reponad on the ftnll day of pt.bllcttloo and tho
Tr1b~.~»Serllnel·~leter wtll be reepontlble lor no m«e then the coet ot the epace occupied by tl&gt;e e~rorand only the tlnlll=-rtlon. We shall not be llab~ lor
any 10111 or expen• thai raeulte llom tne publlca110n or om111a10n of an al1vtl11eement. Corrtc:lon wtll be made In tht 111111 avaftabte adnlon. ·Box number Ide
are alway a contldurtlal • Cwroot rate card appllea • All real ..we adveniiG!IItntl are tubject to the Federal Falr Ho~aing Act ot t&amp;e8. • Thla """''Paper
eceopts only netp wanted ell$ meeting EOE ctanclarde.. Wo wtll not knowingly acc.pl any ldvertlalng In violation o! the law Will not be reeponeib!o t« any
trrorw In an lid taken D'ier the phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

Announcemeni~'

Wanted

Apartments/
Townhouses

Pets

Busy
3ee
Cleaning Free male yellow&amp; wh te
Homes &amp; Offrces. Expen- cat. reut.&amp; declawed, to

"Move-In Special'
$50.00 off 1st months
rent rent, must move
In by September 1st.
Rural Development
Property Currently rentIng 1 &amp; 2 BR un1ts SpaCIOUS floor plans, ranch
&amp; townhome style liv·
mg. playground &amp; basketball court. on·site
laundry facility, 24 hr '
emergency mainte·
nance, quiet country lo·
cation close to major·
medical
facilities,
pharmacies, grocery
store ...Just minutes
away from other major
shopping in the area.
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive #113
Bidwell, OhiO 45614
740-446·3344
OffiCe Hours M, W, F

lost &amp; Found

ence,
references. good homeJ htstory of
304-812.(809
or abuse 304-882·2798
M1ss1ng Female German 304-675·~208
shepherd
black
back
tan head &amp; legs. M1ss1ng
700 '
Agriculture
.
s nee Tues
838 Ward
$100 REWARD Bo\\ lmg-bJI l.tf hlwbluc
Road.
pearl
llamm~r ~de elec
Phone 388·9436
Farm Equipment
keyboard for • 2 mg guuar

.

Found small black lab
female puppy, Syracuse.
OhiO 740.992·3435

1()4..(i7.5~~~~

300

Services

Notices
Come In and check out
our Early Bird Specials
Child / Elderly Care
Ventless gas stoves. and
heaters.
BUY EARLY SAVE BIG!
State cert. in home child
August 1-31,2009
daycare has opening, accepting p1vate pay &amp; link
( limited heaters In
304-882-€247.
stock only)
PAINT PLUS HARD·
WARE
304-675-4084

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

Other Servi~;es

Modern
roofing. shing es
metal
and
repa1r.
74().645-1876

16 112 horse Kabota die·
sel belly l!'ower back
blade,
S7,000.
740-742·2498 anytime
STIHL Sales &amp; Serv1ce
Now Available at Carmi·
chael
Equipment
740·446·2412
Garden

&amp; Produce

Canning
tomatoes
al·
ready
p1cked.
Rowe
Farrr 740-247·4292

900

· ·M«chandise

Appliances
2004 kenmore gas range

30 whte lil&lt;o new Dela·

..

- - - - - - - - val
ant1que ll'arual
cream separator. good
600
Animals , cond 304-633-5548 on
Jerrys Run Ad
Pets

~~~~~~~~
;;;;
Miscellaneous

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

Portable
Free kittens: ready end fac·N·Piay
of Aug., 2 f., 1 m., Bassinet. bed &amp; playpen
740·949-3408 after 4pm 1n one Hardly used tod·
dler bed complete like
leave message
Wanted
new.
fold1ng stroller
Nice Family of 4 look1ng Free female Jack Aus· good cond. child bed
g~oard line row baby &amp;
for a rental home or mo· sel,
energetic,
Sl"eet
bile homo. Please Call about 1 i/2 yrs. old loves toddler toys, clean, well
kept 740·446-6306
740-709·0181
kids call 3:&gt;4·675·3999

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
MemoryfT'honk You ..................................... 220
Nolices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
.
....................................................... 300
Servlce ....................................... 302
Autonnotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................31 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320
Flnanclal ....................................................... 322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces ................................. 342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Rooflng .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TravoVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnancln1 .......................................................400
Financial Servlces.......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lcnd ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Suppllos .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock ......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
.............................................. 700
o-niiJinma·nr ..........................................705
PrCiaUCe.......................................710
Seed, Grain ............................... 715
ng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Applianco ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equiprnent1Supplles ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coai/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ..........................- .. - ..................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Mlscclloneous..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale .....................................................975

~ -~~

Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories ................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentalll.ease .....................................2005
Autos ..........................................................2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercialllndu:;trlal ....................... ,...... 2020
Parts &amp; Accessones ..................................2025
Sports Utility ..............................................2030
Trucks ......................................................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................301 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal................................................351 0
Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ...................................-....... 3525
Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing .............................4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ..................._.................................. 4015
Sales... - .....................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale .......................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment..............................................6000
Accounting/Financlal ................................6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professlonat .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk .............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Oellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics ..................................................6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ...................................................... 6040
Port-Time-Temporaries ............................ 6042
Restaurants .............................................. 6044
Sales..........................- ............................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory......................................... 6052

Yard Sale

Table w/ 3 cha11s S75,
whrte cabrnet S25, twin
bed w/ box spring &amp; mattress $40. car dolly $500,
baby bed wtoul mattress
$35. shower shder chair
S20.
10X10X6
heavy
duty dog kennel $350.
rolator
$75,
weather
maker by carrier gas furnace $300, dresser w 8
drawers S25, glass top
table $15, sm table w/ 4
cha1rs
$25,
entertain·
mont center S25, micro·
wave oven $25, Dora's
chrld table w/ 2 chairs
S15, lull SIZe box spring
or matterss w rans $20.
Call 446-4426

Variety Yard Sale
A wide selction of Items
available.
Fnday, Aug.
21 &amp; Sat. Aug 22 From
SAM·SPM 3399 SR 141
in Gallipolis (Centenary·
just past the Jumbo)

Wontlo

Buy

95 Subaru Legacy LS,
loaded looks, runs &amp;
dnves
great.
Garage
kept $3750. Mathews LH
Comp. Bow w/ ace,
$300. 4 trres 225. 70r15
like new $160.388-9416
Up nght Schubert Piano
Beautiful satin cherry finIsh nice touch to keys
good
sound
always
slorod in controlled envi·
ronMent. Wonderful pi·
ano for a beginner.
$1200. 740·710·2528
NEED CASH
Barg n Tools SA 554
Buy1ng all kinds of tools
bus.- 388-8915, home388·1515 cell· 794·1188.
Three Taylor SWift Con·
cert TICI&lt;ets, Cleveland,
01-1
Ocl 3rd, $200.
446·4895 leave message
Absolute Top Dollar - s1l·
ver/gold
coins,
any
10K/14K/18K gold jeW·
elry, dent&amp;. gold, pre
US
currency,
1935
proof/m1nt
sets.
dia·
monds, MTS Corn Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
polis 446·2842
Yard Sale
Hugo 2 Fam1ly Yard/Garago Salo Aug 20, 21, &amp;
22, 9AM·? 6125 SR 588
ncar Rodney
Huge Yard Sale
8121-8122·8128·8129
everything must gol
1294 Charleston Ad Pt

PleasantWV

5PM

e 2009 by NEA, Inc

Miscellaneous

Hot Tub Outlet. Top
Quality, Free Delivery,
Save 50%. Tiki Tubs:
606-929·5655

9/\M

~

www.comics.com

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000

ATV ............................................................. too5

VISA

Now you can have borders and orophics
added to your classified ads
_( ~
Borders$3.00/perod
I!1
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publlc:ation
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for sundays PatH~r

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Alb With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dacrlptlon • Include A Price • Avvld Abbre\iatlon5
• Include Pbooe Number And Address When Needed

.

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Display Ads

Daily In-Column• 9:00a.m.
Monday-Frodny for Insertion
In Next Day'$ Paper
Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For SundaVIl Paper

•-

JUST SAY

CHARGE IT!

3000

Real Estate
Sales

:
;;;::::;;

g

~

Houses For Rent

Sl99 mo' 4 bed. 2 bath, •
Bank Repo' (~ do,..n I~ •
)e:m. 8 APR) for hsun~
rol·f,2().4946 ex R027
3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; r~
fng. fum. Gas heat. CIA
No Smoking, WID hook
up. No Pets. S600/mo +
deposit.
Nice locat Ol"
Gathpohs. Call 446·3667
2BR house Gall•poiiS 0~
S3951mo $400/dep plus
utllit1es No Pets Call
740·256-6661
Very nice 1 BR home 10
Pomeroy. great neighborhood,
large
yard,
ideal for 1 or 2 people,
new appliances. No lfl.·
door pets. Non smok1ng,
Call
740·992·9784
or
740.992-5094 and .cave
a message.
3BA 1 bath home n le·
Grande Blvd $650 rent
$650 dop. renter pay:~
utrlit•es. NO PETS. Ca
446-3644 for applicaton •
For rent 2 br house &amp; 2
br. apt. 5375.00 a mon
each o~ 5th St. Pt Pleas·
ant 304-812-4350.

~~~~~~~~
'======-===='
~
I br.ground·le•el &amp;.:! br.Apt
For Sole By Owner

2 Rentals 1 Duplex &amp; 1

Nice
clean
2br.base·
ment/garage
central
near dwnt"n Pt. Plea..ant airiheat ref. &amp; dep.' no
util. pd. HUD accpt.'\o pel'
,.,.11304 360-0I 6~.
pets 304·675-5162.

Manufaclu~ed
House, in cty; 133 &amp; 135 2br apt. Rodney area. No 4000
Housmg
2nd Ave. &amp; 641 5th Ave. pets. Dep/Ref required.
$100,000.
Call 740·446-1271
- - - - - - - - - 740·709·1490
Recreati.onal
Rentals
1 000
3 room and bath down·
Veh1cles
Houses For Sale
stairs first months rent &amp; 2 br. m Gall. l·ciT) \\'\'
deposit. references re- 304·675-4100
or
2 bed 1 bath $300/mo.
quired, No Pets and 740-97.H&lt;l'N
446·3570
Motorcycles
clean. 740-441-0245
Fam1ly Pride
B .,2
8 1h
tl' 'D
2br 1ba
2004 Honda shado\\ 750 '
"
• '
cu
"
2 bedrooms 1.15 baths Mbl.
Hm.Prk
$400.
many .xtra,, gar•ge kept homcs!Onl) 19'1'amon.'5~
0/mo + $540/dep. No
554
8000. mile&lt; $3800 080 d"n 1 ~ &gt;""· al S
amon.
$300.
dcp -+ref.
lor l.st Pets. Call441·1124
304-674·58621304-674·
304-675·7126.
800·620-IQ~ex T4fu
58
Beautiful
1
BR
apartment
__63
_ -6
_ 75_-4
_ 567
_ __
_ 304
1 Br2Ba HUD homc:;!Only
in the country freshly Mobile Home on Cora
For sale 2002 Kawaski 238'amon'S~"n
250 , Endro
$2000.00 yrs at8"'
100c6204946 e.x painted very clean WID MiD Rd off 325 4 m1fes
hook up niCe country set· 'rom Rio Grande No Pets
304·675-6831
ROi9
hng only 10 m1ns. from References
Req.
MadiSOn Ave. Pt. Pleas·
town. Must see to appre- 245-5622
2000
Automotive ant, frame house on 2 ciate.
S3501mo
lots, excellent locatron for 614·595-m3
or 3BA 2bath 14x80 $476
2 future rentals, $10.000. 740·645·5953
rent S475 clepos t. B~lav·
74().645-0938
111e P1ke. 740-367-n62
Autos
LeG:'ande
Blvd
3BA MOVE IN READY Com- Trailer for rent an Porter
2001 Lexus GS 1 owner.
bricK, hardwood floors, pletely tum•shed 2BR. all Area 14X70 3BR, 1 S
garage
kept
68,000
TV,stereo
FA, 2 full baths central epphances,
lnq. air, 10X14 metal bUild· sys. linens &amp; complete bath new heat pump,
mites.
senous
304-675·5114
ask
for 1ng, 5 m1rs lrom town, kitchen ware $700/mo -+ new floonng newly re·
modeled, front porch W1th
Lesa Doeffrnger
elec SSOO/dep. 446·9585
$89,000. 741)-709·1858
roof. nice area. S450imo
1
Beaut1lul
custom
built Two, second floor. 1BR. + S450 dep. For mora
72
Dodge
Challenger home 2800 sq It plus full unfurnished
apartments info call 446·4514
S5000, coupe. automatic, basement :&gt;n 2.5 acres for lease. comer of SecWhy rent when you ca,n
8 cyl. interior black, exte· w1th extra lot $289,999. ond &amp; pine in Gallipolis.
own. New Gov't linance
rior yellow, Title: Clear, 1163
Central
atr.
No
Pets.
RefWatson
Rd.
loans. 0% down as loiv
Gasoline, atr condition- 740·441·9772
erences required.. Water as 1% interest. Low to
ing.
email:
1ncluded. $325 and $290
4 bedrooms. 3 baths, 2 per month. Security de· moderate tncome. D&amp;W
elizabpilar@ gmali.com
Homes. 877-288-9995 or
car
garage
attached,
Phone: (5003)213·3247
pos•t. can 446·4425 or 800-788·5474
covered
front
porch, 446·3936.
basement, atttc, adJacent
Trucks
371· 14x70 mobile hor.-e
lot Included, good neigh· 2
bedroom
apartment for rent, very good condj·
1998 Red F-ord ranger frber borhOOd. dead end st·eer
Syracuse. tion,
Racme
ava•lable in
gla&lt;&gt; tonneau CO\ cr. 4 C) I in Pomeroy, $120,000,
5200 deposit, S375 per 740·949·2237
auto.
170.000
m1les 74().992·2475,
month rent. rent rncludes
S2675.00 304 576-2046 or 74().992-6949
water, sewer &amp; trash. No 2 bedroom mobile tlo!T'.
~n 104-593 2MS.
Pets, Suffrclent income Ill Rac1ne. S325 a morU.
Houso for sate Crew
needed
to
qualify. S325 dep. yrs. lease Nb
Rd , Pomeroy, $89,000, 740.378-6111
Pets, No calls after 9pln.
2003 Dodge 3500 1 ton 740.992·3549
74().992·5097
dually, diesel, auto, 4x4, 4 bed
bath S600/mo 2 br. 3rd St. downsta•rs
25
Soles
all power, ale, c/d player possible cwnor hnance Racine, $350 a mo. plus
gooseneck hitch electr1c
dep., plus utffities. . No
Country hvmgbrakes, good ll'echan~cal 446-33S4
pets 740.247-4292
2-3
BA on
operty
shape &amp; body, 517,800 7rm., 3·4 br ,kit wash·
He-aut'!"•fut~3br-.-2--ba
--apt
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OBO,
74().247·2229, rOOI'I\
bath,
d1n 740·247·2019.
cell rm .deck, total rcnova· 2000 sq. ft $650.00 per Financing1 We own the
\\atcr. g:u't-age bank.
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02!!!6~1~~~~ tion. 42K, w111 look at all mon. gas
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trailer,inside
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45'
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740·645·164li
condition, w1th three s1de Bailey Run Rd , Pomeroy electric. no pets call for 740·446-2515
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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
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45760
DeadlineAugust 24, 2009

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Thomas do it center
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ground &amp; drug checks,
for
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call Applications are being
740 742 2377
accepted for a CArtifiP.d
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Part-time care-giver to help position and substitute
elderly female, light duties positions with the Gallia
CLA Box 27. 200 M~m St County Board of MRIDD
Pt Plea,ant WV 25550
transporting
enrollees
who
attend
Guiding
Educ:atioA
Hand School and Gallco
Workshop.
Qualifica·
Part-time
instructors
needed during the day tions: Current bus driver
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Mathematics and eco- and
School bus certificanomic instructors must tion certificate. Applicahave a master's degree lions are available at the
in the disciphne. If inter- Guiding Hand School, n
ested please email a re- Mill Creek Road, Galliposume and cover letter to lis, Ohio 45631
jdanicki@ gallipolisca·
Apply to: Gallia County
reercollege.edu
Board of MRIDD, n Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis,
Help Wanted- General Ohio
45531 or call
AVON! All Areas! To Buy 740·446·6902
or Sell Shirley Spears
304-675·1429
The
Gallla
County
Board of MR/00 Is an
equal opportuntly employer

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384-4211 to request ap·

PUEILIC
NOTICES
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08CV013
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. Plaintiff VS
Raymond &amp; Megan Andrews et al Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me di·
rected from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at Public Auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Sept.
4th, 2009 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
The following real estate situated in the VIIlage of Middleport,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and
de·
bounded
and
scribed as follows:
Being known as Lot
No. 56 In Palmers Addi·
tion to said village of
Middleport, Ohio, late
the Village of Sheffield
and for further descriptlon of said lot, refer·
ence is to be had to the
recorded· plat of said
Village. lot is 96 feet on
Lincoln Street and 66
feet on alley.
Reference Deed: Volume 54, Page 903,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditor's Parcel No.:
15-01709.000
Property known as: 240
Lincoln Street, Middleport, OH 45760
Attorney for Plaintiff:
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner,
211-213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, Oh
45769, Telephone: (740)
992-6689
Current Owner: Raymond &amp; Megan Andrews et al
Property at: 240 Lincoin St.
Middleport, Oh 45760
PP#15-01709.000
Prior Deed Preferences: Volume 54,
Page 903
Appraised at $40,000
terms of sale: cannot
be sold for less than
2/3rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, balance due on confirmatlon of sale.
The appraisal did not
include an Interior examination of the house.
Robert E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Little Sheets &amp; Warner
211-213 E. 2nd St.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
740-992·6689
(8) 12. 19, 26

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08CV132
The Bank of New York
Plaintiff VS
Amle Hart et al defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me directed from said court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at Public Auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Sept.

4, 2009 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Exhibit A
Situated in the Town·
ship of Rutland, County
of Meigs, and State of
Ohio, and bounded and
described as follows:
Being in Section No.1,
Township No. 6, and
Range No. 14 of the
Ohio Company's purchase,
In
Rutland
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio, beginnlng 76 rods South of
the Northeast corner of
said Section No. 1;
Thence North 87 deg.
West 459 feet; Thence
South 27 314 deg. East
53 feet; Thence South
41 314 deg. East 72 feet;
Thence S,outh 60 deg.
East 40 feet; Thence
North 88 1/2 deg. East
44 feet; Thence South
49 314 deg. East 85 feet;
Thence South 38 1/2
deg. East 45 feet;
Thence South 63 1/4
deg. East 74 feet;
Thence South 69 1/2
deg. East 60 feet;
Thence East 81 1/2 feet
to the section line;
Thence North 244 feet
to the center of the
public road, the place
of beginning, containJng 1.75 acres, more or
less, and being the
same property con·
veyed to Emerson Russell by W. L. Hysell and
Ida Hysell, his wife, by
deed dated March 29,
1898, and recorded In
Book 83, Page 282 of
the Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio
and by William L. Hysell by deed dated December 5, 1905, and
recorded in Book 94,
Page 394 of said deed
records, except and
subject to a perpetual
easement and right-of·
way for public highway
and road purposes in,
upon and over said
premises, being a strip
of land not in excess of
30 feet In width and
'containing 0.40 acres,
more or less, conveyed
by Lucy Russell and
Emerson Russell, her
husband, to the State
of Ohio by Instrument
dated December 6,
1933, and recorded in
Volume 1, at Page 479
of the Easement for
Highway
purposes
Deed Records of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Also the following Real
Estate situated In the
Township of Rutland,
County
of
Meigs
County, Ohio, and
bounded
and
described as follows:
Being In Section No. 1,
Township No. 6 and
Flange 14 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase
in Rutland Township,
Meigs County, Ohio,
beginning at a point 75
rods South of the
Northeast corner of
said Section No. 1 ;
Thence West 479 feet
to center of the Hysell
Run Creek; Thence
North 32.5 deg. West 31
feet to a point In the
center of said creek;
Thence North 69 deg.
West ~3 feet to a point
in the center of said
creek; Thence North 23
feet to the right-of-way
of the Pomeroy-Rutr

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Public Notices in Ne"Wspapers.
Your Right to Knovv. Delivered Right to Your Door.

land Road; Thence scribed real estate situalong the South side of ated in Salisbury Townsaid right-of-way 530 ship,
Village
of
feet; Thence South 7 Middleport, 64 acre Lot
feet to the place of be- 313, Town 1 North,
ginning, containing 62 Range 13 West, as
square foot move or recorded in Volume 2,
less and being the Page 8, Meigs County
same property con- Plat Records, Meigs
veyed
by
Emma County, Ohio. The West
Gloeckner et al to one-half of Lot No. 58
Emerson Russell, by In I.H. Behan's Third
deed dated June 7, Addition to what Is
1920 and recorded in known as the incorpoBook 120, Page 524 of rated Village of Middle.the deed records of port, Meigs County,
Meigs County, Ohio Ohio, situated on the
and being the same southeast corner of
property conveyed by Third
and
Locust
Emerson Russell to Street,
Lucy F. Russell by deed Parcel
No.
15dated September 16, 004009.000
1932 and recorded In More commonly known
Book 139 at Page 38 of as: 812 S. Third Avthe Deed Records of enue, Middleport, Ohio
Meigs County, Ohio.
45760
Parcel
Number: Current owner: Melinda
1100320000
&amp; McCallister
Property at: 812 S.
1100321000
Property
Address: Third Avenue
37893 State Route 124 Middleport, Ohio 45760
PP# 15-004009.000
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Current Owner: Arnie Prior deed references:
Volume 2, Page 8
Hart
Property at: 37893 St. Appraised at $32,500
Rt. 124
terms of sale: cannot
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
be sold for less than
2/3rds of the appraised
PP#11-00320
value. 10% down on
11-00321
Prior deed preferences: day of sale, cash or
Volume 138, Page 38
certified check, balAppraised at $32,500 ance due on confirma·
terms of sale: can not tion of sale.
be sold for less than The appraisal did not
2/3rds of the appraised Include an interior exvalue. 10% down on ami nation of the house.
day of sale, cash or Robert E.
Beegle,
certified check, bal- Meigs County Sheriff
ance due on confirma- Attorney for the Plaintiff
tion of sale.
The appraisal did not Laurito &amp; Laurlto
Include an Interior ex- 35 Commercial Way
amination of the house. Springboro, Oh 45066
Robert
E.
Beegle, 913-743-4878
(8) 12, 19, 26
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
Public Notice
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
600 S. Peart St.
Columbus, Oh 43206
Sheriff Sales
614-221-1662
Case Number 09CV018
Deutsche Bank Na·
(8) 12, 19, 26
tiona I Trust Plaintiff VS
Don F. Pooler et al Defendants
Public Notice
Court of Common
Sheriff Sales
Pleas, Meigs County,
Case Number 08CV149 Ohio.
Countrywide
Home In pursuance of an
Loans Inc. Plaintiff VS order of sale to me diMelinda McCallister et rected from said court
In the above entitled
al Defendants
Court of Common action, I will expose to
Pleas, Meigs County, sale at Public Auction
on the front steps of
Ohio.
In pursuance of an the Meigs County Court
order of sale to me di· House on Friday, Sept.
rected from said court 4th- 2009 at 10 a.m., of
In the above entitled said day, the following
action, I will expose to described real estate:
sale at public auction Legal Description
on the front steps of Parcel One:
the Meigs County Court Situated in Section 24,
House on Friday, Sept. Town 3, Kango 12,
4th, 2009 at 10 a.m., of being a part of a tract of
said day, the following land laid out in lots and
described real estate: sold to G.W. McCleSituated in the Town- nathan, guardian of
ship of Salisbury, VIl- minor heirs of Lyma
lage of Middleport, Stedman, deceased,
County of Meigs and and designated on the
State of Ohio: 64 acre plot of said lots, as Lot
Lot 313, Town 1 North, No. 3 and transferred
Range 13 West, as from John P. Kimes and
recorded in Volume 2, wife to Milo Ridenour,
Page 8, Meigs County January 3, 1895.
Plat Records, Meigs Beginning at the southCounty, Ohio. The East west corner of Susie
one-half of Lot 58 in I. H. Foster's lot 150 feet
Behan's Third Addition from the old Chesterto what is known as the Keno Road; Thence
Incorporated VIllage of South 80 feet along
Middleport,
Meigs Emma Reibel's lot to a
County, Ohio, situated corner; Therace East
on the southeast cor- 110 to a stone; Thence
ner of Third and Locust North 80 feet to a
stone; Thence West
Street.
Also, the following de- along Susie Foster's

line to the place of be- Iron pin set 16 feet from
ginning.
the old easterly corner
The
following
de· of the former Susie
scribed real estate, to- Foster
residence;
wit; Situated in the thence South 2 degrees
County of Meigs, in the 52' 39" East 158.37 feet
State of Ohio, and in ·along the east line of
the
Township
of two parcels conveyed
Chester, and In the to Susie Foster In Vol·
Ohio Company's Pur- ume 146, Page 173 and
chase and further Volume 146, Page 562
bounded
and
de· to the point of begin·
scribed as follows: nlng containing 0.451
Being in Section 24, acre. Subject to ali
Town 3, Range 12, legal easements.
being in a part of a tract The above description
of land lid out In lots was prepared In accorand sold by G.W. Me- dance with an actual
Clenathan, Guardian of survey conducted by
minor heirs of Lyman Eugene Triplett RS
Steadman, deceased, 6766 on March 12,1991.
and designated on the Bearing are assumed
plot of said lots as Lot and are intended to deNo. 3, and transferred note angles only.
from John P. Kimes and A copy of a plate is atwife to Milo Ridenour, tached hereto and
Jan. 3, 1895. Beginning made apart hereof.
at the northwest corner The old description reof Emma Reibel's lot ferred to above Is also
and the Chester and subject to terms of a
Long Bottom Road to Boundary Line Agreefollow the road In a ment, recorded in Vol·
northerly direction for ume 323, Page 687 of
24 feet; Thence in a the Meigs County Deed
northeast direction 130 Records, which Bound-'
feet to a stake 16 feet ary Line Agreement In
from the corner of the effect establishes the
Foster house; Thence northeasterly line of
In a southerly direction .451 acre survey de80 feet to a stone; scription above.
Thence in a westerly di- The above described
recti on 110 feet to the real estate has been as·
Emma
Reibel
lot; signed Auditor's Parcel
Thence in a northerly Numbers: 03-01116.
direction 150 feet to the The Grantor further
place of beginning.
slates that Frank Sam·
Being the same real es- alowitz, the grantor in a
tate conveyed by Fred deed dated October 19,
W. Crow, Jr., Commis- 1988, and recorded in
·sioner of James L. Volume 312, Page 339
Wickham, deceased, to of the Meigs County
Elizabeth Wickham by Deed Records, at the
deed recorded in Deed time of the signing of
Book 191, Page 293 of that deed was single.
the Meigs County Deed Parcel Two:
Records.
Also a 15-foot right of
Reference Deed: Vol· way casement for
ume 312, Page 339, ingress and egress to
Meigs County Deed New Hope Road (T-91)
Records.
more fully described in
The above described instrument recorded In
real estate has been Volume 323, Page 689
corrected by the new of the Meigs County
survey more accurately Deed Records, which is
described as follows:
incorporated and made
The following real es- a part hereof as If fully
tate situated In Chester rewritten herein.
Township,
Meigs 36384 New Hope Road
Bottom,
OH
County, State of Ohio, Long
Section 24, Township 3, 45743
Range 12 of the Ohio Permanent Parcel No.:
Company Purchase; 03·01116.000
being the Ruth Sarna- Current Owner: Don F.
towltz property (Vol- Pooler
ume 312, Page 339, Property at: 36384 New
Meigs County Deed Hope Rd
Records) bounded and Long Bottom, Oh 45743
described as follows:
PP# 03-01116
Beginning at a stone Prior Deed Reference:
found at the southeast Volume 238, Page 69
corner of said Sarna- Appraised at $65,000
towitz property thence terms of sale: cannot
North 84 degrees 8' 0" be sold for less than
West 107.77 ft. to a 213rds of the appraised
stone found on the east value. 10% down on
line of the Henry &amp;/or day of sale, cash or
Nara Harman property certified check, bai(Volume 313, Page 797, ance due on confirma·
Meigs County Deed tion of sale.
Records,
fromerly The appraisal did In·
Emma Reibel's lot): elude an Interior examThence North 1 degree ination of the house.
Beegle,
46' 22" east 237.19 feet Robert E.
along the east line of Meigs County Sheriff
said Hartman property Attorney for the Plain·
to an Iron pin found on tiff
the south side of New Lerner Sampson &amp;
Hope Road at a west- Rothfuss
ern corner of the Lewis P.O. Box 5480
E. &amp; Barbara A. Pulver Cincinnati, Oh 45201property (Volume 275, 5480
Page
331,
Meigs 513-241-3100
County Deed Records): (S) 12, 19, 26
Thence South 45 de·
grees 37' 48" East
128.59 feet along the
southerly side of the
existing driveway to an

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VVednesda~August19,2009

4P4W

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www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

I~
J

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Gomez's
last name
7 Gawk at
11 "Settle
down!''
12 Billiard
needs
13 Make
unreadable
14 Corp.
bigwigs
15 Rain cloud
17 Toothpaste
buy
20 Extreme
23
Dhabi
24 Illegal
26 Haddock's
cousin
270ne or
more
288&amp; 8
29 Really
enjoyed
oneself
31 Take in
32 Panache
33 Crackpot
contents
34 "The
Jumpoff"
rapper
37 Buffalo's
lake
39Wise
sayings
43Crew
leader
44 Opera star
Stratas
45 Wagers
46 Prize

SlTTI NG AT THAT DESI&lt;
DOESN'T MAI&lt;E HIM A
LEADER ANY MORE THAN
STANDING IN A KITCI1EN

MAKES YOU AN APPLE

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85 •

Tom Batiuk

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 High
card
2 Oxford
blgWIQ
3Ciinlc
n1ckname
4 Solitary
5 Calflength
Skirt

17 RPM
measurers
18 Lusitania
7 Mystic
sinker
field
19 Online
8 Host's
chat enuenumeramerat1on
tion
21 Zellweger
9 Guitarof
maker
"Chicago"
Fender
22 1970s
10 Snaky
veep
shape
24 Bread ring
16 Harbor
25 - tear
sights
6 Goblet
part

30 UFO fliers
33 Bright
35 Writer
Chopin
36 March
time
37 Decline
38 Fish eggs
40 "Aw,
shucks!"
41 Jargon
suffix
42 Friend of
Frodo

.

·-

~==============================================================~=
William Hoest '•
THE LOCKHORNS

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

"I'M AFRAID VOOR L.OGGAGE COUl-D BE
ANYWHERE . .. EXCEPT ...ERE, OF COOR~E."'

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

@

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman ..

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ATW&amp;~FOR
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Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

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by Dave Green

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from the RV by the lake. Can he
stay overnight?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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HAPPY BIR1HDAY for \o\edne.od.1y. Aug. 19, 2009:
This year, you appl'O&lt;Ich life with renewed eners¥
and a constantly traru,1orming pe-~pective. You might
not always be comfortable \\ith fin.1nci.ll situaticms and
what is happening. yet you are able to intuit your pdth.
Still. keep a colU'lcil of e.:&gt;.perts or those in the k.J\0\1.:
Opportunities definitely come through nel\\Orking and
key associates. If you are single, you11w,mt to be careful about your choice of sweetie. You could choooe
someooe who is emotionally unavailable. If you are
attached, you gain from weekends awa}~ just the two of
you. LEO is a soul mate
Tize Stars Shqw the Kind ofDcr.:J You11 Hmr: 5-Dymmir;
4-Po-'itive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-D!fficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
****let your creati,ity emerge after a discussJOn
with a~ate:'. You might ieel ""ifyou ,\rem an a I·&lt;Jr·
nothing situation. Adapt your thinking. and you'll find
solutions. UndetStanding evokes, but it won't h,1ppen
like lightning. 1onight: Remember, it is only mkhwei&lt;J
TAURUS (April20-M,1y 20)
*** One cannot say you .1re l&lt;~z); but you might
want to vanish or play it low-key for se\er,\1 re,t~otl~.
By extracting yourself from a situation, you might '.'iew
issues and projects without as much feedb,u·k.
Detachment will increase your lTeclth ity. 'lbnight:
Happily at home.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Break p.1st a restrklion, .md honor your
objecti\·es. C"nderst.u1ding could help illumin&lt;1te .1 pmblem and display another pet';pective and solution. J'ruo;t
your in'iti.ncts. Tonight: Catch up on a friend's news.
CAI\:CER Uune 21-July 22)
**** You c:ti.._-;cowr wrut is going on \\ith an
investment. Your efforts do not go unnotked. ()ne-onone relating elicits many strong feeliMs. These lt&gt;el:ng..;
could be more steady and in.,ightful tlUn usual. Your
gentle manner draws many. Curb moodiness. Toni,.;;ht:
'rrur treaL
LEO (July ll-Aug. 22)
*****At be,i, vou can be a force who's hard 114.lt
to deal with. Your in{posing will and high d1&lt;1lbma
bll"'"'d, making you a fonnidahle figure. You rould be
wonied about the end re.ults. Your inslil14."1s point ll
strongt!r decisions. C"se ti.'l'ling to maximize wh.1! i~
happening. Tonight: What you w.ml.
VIRGO (Aug. 21-Sep!. 22)
*** Don'trmke a big de..ision \\1thout nt'Cl''i.''•'l)'

*****

HOROSCOPE

infonn.1lion. If vou slow do"':n the proces.s, the pos..,ibillly for more infonnation will emerge. 'rou are on top of
your game and c.m afford to hold on. Be aware of your
Jimi~. Torught £,·etythi.ng is h.1ppening quickly.
LIBRA {SepL 23-0:t. 22)
**** Emfhasi&lt;; does make a big difference, .:md
others respon• when you point to key directives. 'roo
are fur more upbeat when with groups. You might not
want to reflect over an emotional ~itualion. TouCh base
\\1th the many different options pos...ible before committing to an approadl. Tonight Where there are many
SCORPIO (Oct 2.1-~o': 21)
***"*Take a ..;tand, and others will ~'J'Oild.lf you
detach, look at what's happening behind the scenes.
R~,·el in the moment, as you gain understanding. Find
cm;wers through inquiry and obsetYalion. 'iou have a
unique mix th.lt makes a difference. Tonight A must
appearanre.
SAGITIARIUS (1\o\'. 22-Dec. 21)
*****Break past rigid thinking. C"p till no,,; your
ideJ.'i have been do.&lt;;e to impos..,ihle to unders!,md.
Onre you under.&gt;tand the manner in which you filter
infom\,\lion, you can make an adjustment. Be Oj)l!n to
.111 different types of feedback. Tonight: A must .1ppear-

.;

•

,

·•
•

.met'

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***** Ot&gt;itl with someone on ,m indh iduallewl
.md grow in a new way. Your ability to mow in a new •
dire..iiun open.., up pos.-;ibilities. Someone j,., clearly
"soft" on you. Listen to feedback. which will touch .you
in a pruiound manner. Deal with your finances \\ilh the
help of a sany indhidual. Tonight Dinner for two.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
***** 'roor ability to mow a project past another's mtical insight is helpful. Still. it would serw you
wt&gt;n to 8"' p.-1.-.t an immediate i_-.•;ue and s.1tht&gt;r more
information. )ou could be 0\·erwhelmed by e\"el)'thing
thc1t you hear Di..,._u,.;;ions ,,;th a partner could be
!&gt;L:lid. Tonight Sort through information.
PISCES (feb. 19-Mard120)
~-s your.;elf into work. )ou are more
entrenched than you ha,·e been in the past. Feelings
could be quite intense. Sort through your t'motions per
h.1p:; at another time, as you could be...'Ome quite distracted. L:nderstanding builds 00,·,1u&lt;.e of a friend's or
k" ed one's atlltude. Tonight: Get some e:~.ern~.
Jacque/me B1gar r:: tm 1/IIJ Intemrt
at http://tt'lm•jarquelirtrl11garrom.

**"*

�. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Steelers seeking return to
Super Bowl - and run game
LATROBE, Pa. (AP) Blame it on Willie Parker's
sore knee or Rashard
Mendenhall's nearly seasonlong injury absence. The
reconfigured offensive line.
Or maybe it was because the
Pittsburgh Steelers played
one of the toughest sched
ules of any Super Bowl win
ner.
Whatever the reason, or

maybe it was a combination,
the Steelers aren't accustomed to ranking ninth from
the bottom in rushing. Or not
having a 1,000-yard rusher
after getting nine such seasons from their top running
back since 1996.
Since the NFL merger in
J.970, no team has run the
ball nearly as well as the
Steelers. and no one is even
close. The Steelers' 83.907
yards rushing since then are
easily the most, with No. 2
Dallas trailing them by more
than 5,000 yards, according
to Stats LLC. Pittsburgh's
20,280 rushing attempts also
are the most.
Despite that unwavering
commitment to the run. the
Steelers were held to I ,690
yards last season, their
fourth-lowest total since the
merger and nearly 600 yards
fewer than any of their previous five Super Bowl-winning teams gained. Even the
1978 and 1979 teams that
were heavily pass-driven
y.•ith Terry Bradshaw at
guarterback ran for hundreds
of more yards than last season's team did.
Of course. going against
opponents such as the
Ravens (twice). Cowboys,
Giants, Colts. Patriots,
Eagles, Chargers and Titans
had much to do with the running game's slippage. So did
the changes along the offensive line, where there were
four different starters than in
2007.
Regardless. the Steelers
don't plan on a repeat of the

running game slowdown this
season, no matter how much
the offense revolves around
Ben
quarterback
Roethlisberger.
··we're JUSt going to do
everything that we can and
possibly do (to get back to
running the ball well),"
Mewelde
Moore
said
Tuesday. "As running backs,
we all carry a chip on our
shoulder and we always
want to do well and do our
best."
Parker has a similar attitude. Despite a medial collateral ligament injury that
occurred in the third game of
the season and helped limit
him to 791 yards, Parker is
fourth among NFL rushers
over the last four seasons
with 4,803 yards . He has
never gained fewer than
1202 yards in a full season
in which he wasn't hurt, yet
the 28-year-old Parker is
unsigned past this season.
Before his injury, Parker
ran for 243 yards in the
Steelers' first two games,
and he came back to gain
more than 100 yards three
times even after he was hurt.
Moore, signed to be a thirddown back, helped out by
averaging 90 yards during
his four starts and gaining
588 yards, many of them
when Parker was out.
Despite nursing their running game from week to
week - flrst-round pick
Mendenhall went down with
a fractured shoulder in their
fourth game - the Steelers
not only went 12-4, they won
their second Super Bowl in
four seasons. And they did it
with Roethlisberger throwing for 17 touchdowns, 15
fewer than his team-record
32 in the previous season.
"You know what, we need
to improve as a total
offense,"
Roethlisberger
said. "We need to set our
goals higher and be better.
We can't just rely on our

VVednesday,August19, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

defense every single game to
win for us. We're setting our
sights and the bar high this
year."
To get back to doing what
they do best. the Steelers
plan to give some of those
carries Parker once made to
Mendenhall , the only running back they've drafted in
the first round in the last 20
years. Pa1ker may be going
into a contract year, but sharing the load appeals to a
back who averaged more
than 325 carries during the
2006 and 2007 seasons.
"Most NFL teams are
emerging into a two-back
system. and I think it would
be great if I don't get as
many carries as I got two
years ago (321) .'' Parker
said. "A lot of backs don't
like it (having their work
load cut), but you've got to
look at both sides of it. I
think it will be a great deal."
It also may help that the
schedule doesn't appear as
challenging as a year ago
no NFC East or AFC South
and
matchups thts time
the offensive line is more
settled. The only likely
change is at right guard.
where Trai Essex is settling
in
ahead of Darnell
Stapleton, who had knee
surgery earlier this month.
Another surprise development is the progress made by
non-drafted rookie running
back Isaac Redman, who
scored twice against Arizona
last week on short-yardage
plays. He has been so productive in camp, coach Mike
Tomlin gave him all seven
carries during a goal-line
drill Sunday.
If Redman can keep scoring once he begins going
exclusively against starters,
the Steelers would have a
short-yardage threat to go
with a third-down back in
Moore, who has been a reliable receiver out of the backfield.

Favre
fromPage Bl
few of his new teammates
and quickly began throwing. as people pecked
through the security fence
to catch a glimpse of the
stubble-faced superstar.
"I think 1t's great for football," Favre said. ''I can't
see how you think it wouldn't be."
On July 28, the man who
holds every major NFL
career passing record told
Childress he wasn't ready
to play, citing a lack of confidence in his beat-up body
to hold up over an entire
season. Favre revealed
Tuesday that he was told by
Dr. James Andrews. who
performed the arthroscopic
surgery on his throwing
shoulder in May, that he's
been playing with a torn
rotator cuff for a few years.
Neither Favre nor the
Vikings expressed any concern about his health.
though, on this whirlwind
day. Favre was defiant,
actually, when asked about
widespread criticism of his
flip-flopping.
"Don't
watch,
you
know?" he said, adding:
"My legacy. it's mine. It's
what I think of it."
Wearing a ratty red baseball cap and a T-shirt.
Favre's eyes reddened
when he talk about letting
his daughter down last
month with his decision to
stay retired.
Favre also brushed off
suggestions he's driven by
revenge on the Packers,
who wouldn't let him have
his old job back last summer when he reconsidered.
Green Bay visits Minnesota
on Oct. 5, and the Packers
host the Vikings on Nov. I .
"The bottom line is it's
football,"
Favre
said.
"Once you step into the
huddle, I don't look at the
helmets. I look at the
faces."
The Vikings did not
release terms of the deal.
ESPN, citing anonymous

sources, said Favre would
receive $12 million this
season and $13 million next
season.
Last
month.
Favre
explained his decision by
saying he had to be "careful
not to commit for the
wrong reason::.."
''I'm 39 with a lot of
sacks to my name,'' he said.
He has a lot of interceptions to his name. too, more
than any other quarterback
in NFL history. The last
time Favn.! appeared in the
playoffs - a bitter loss at
Lambeau Field by the
Packers to the Giants in the
NFC championship game
following the 2007 season
- he put up one of his
worst performances in
recent memory.
Now
the
question
becomes how Favre will fit
in with a team that's
already done with the grind
of training camp, not to
mention how hi:. health will
hold up so soon after he
questioned it.
The Vikings got an
encouraging performance
in their preseason opener
la~t week from quarterback
Sage Rosenfcls, who has
been
competing
with
Tarvaris Jackson for the
starting job. But neither of
them have been consistently sharp in practice this
month.
And neither can compete
with Favre's ability or
resume. His zinger of an
arm and tou!!hness in the
pocket are a~ combination
few possess. With an
offense he daimed this
summer he could operate in
his sleep, Favre seems to fit
well with ~1innesota especially
given
the
Vikings' problems finding a
reliable quarterback since
Childress took over in
2006.
''This is a fluid business,
and we were moving ahead
but you always go back and
reassess," Childress said,
explaining his own reverse
in direction.
The coach added: "The
guys will learn him. He'll
learn them. and we've got a
whole month to put this

thing together."
The Vikings have Pro
Bowl players all over their
roster, with reigning NFL
rushing leader Adrian
Peterson in the backfield
and a dominant defensive
line. No matter who's
behind center. they ought to
be in position to defend
their NFC North title.
To win the conference,
and perhaps - finally - a
Super Bowl, they'll n
stability at the sport's
critical position.
Favre has wrestled with
retirement for most of this
decade and the will-he-orwon't-he saga became an
annual offseason drama for
the Packers, his longtime
home. In Green Bay, the
latest news elicited a few
shrugs. little more.
A few months after
Favre ·s tearful goodbye
news conference in March
2008. Green Bay traded
him to the Jets after he tried
to come back only to learn
the Packers were committed to Aaron Rodgers.
Favre started strong in New
York, but faded down the
stretch amid problems with
his throwing arm and, with
another
"I'm
done"
announcement, headed for
his second retirement.
The Jets released him
from his contract right after
the draft and soon after. •
Vikings
were
ope
expressing interest. Favre
spent the summer working
out in Mississippi and led
everyone to believe he was
on his way back to the NFL
unt1. last month.
Now. he is back.
"I don't have any problem rooting for one of the
greatest quarterbacks ever,''
said Phil Setala. a 23-yearold from Minneapolis who
was at practice proudly
wearing a purple No.4 jersey.
Even
the
governor
chimed in.
"It's going to be good for
the team," a giddy Gov.
Tim Pawlenty said after a
speech. "It's going to be
good for the state.lt's going
to be exciting."

2009 FALL SPORTS PREVIEW
FRIDAY, AUGUST 28,2009
• MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
• EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL • SOUTHERN
~
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