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                  <text>Foothills Festival to
kickoff Friday, A3

AlV action aplenty, A6

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS
• • Reds edge Brewers.
See Page Bl

Williams: Tax suits to begin with three properties
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Williams said she has
requested the law firm.
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner to
complete the necessary title
searches on three propetties
with delinquent taxes. She
said she intends to file the
first foreclosure actions in
years for delinquent tax collection against owners of
those three properties.

BREED@ MYDAI LYSENTIN EL.COM
POMEROY
"Preliminary steps" are
underway to begin foreclosure proceedings against
prope1ties subject to delinquent real estate taxes,
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen Williams said.

"These
foreclosure
actions are not against anyone who has contacted the
county treasurer to make
payment arrangements,"
Williams said. "Good communications is the key.''
"It is not the intention of
the county to leave families
homeless during these difficult times, but non-payment

of rea estate taxes hurt
schools and communities."
In March. Williams said
letters were being mailed to
owners of real estate ~·ith
delinquent taxes, notifying
them that legal action would
be taken to collect those
taxes if they are not paid.
Shottly after taking office
ealier this year, Williams

said she would act right
away to collect nearly $3
million in real estate taxes
owing the county. At that
time. she said her plan
included foreclosure actions
once an outside bonded
attorney began to provide
title search information.

Please see Taxes, AS

Jobless
rates inch
downward
BY KEVIN KELLY

BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Kellie Dawn Kirker, 40

INSIDE

• Barber wins
giveaway. See Page A3
• Juvenile speeding
cause of many traffic
crashes. See Page AS
• For the Record.
·See Page AS
• Fair Results.
See Page A6

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

,Annie's Mailbox
Calendais , i

A3
A3

t·
Classi eds . ;;.~

B3-4

n ,
\

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Comics's¥~\~

f

Bs

A4
As

to rials
Obituaries
Sports

B Section

As

Weather

.
·'0

2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

liJ!IJI,I!I!I.!I!II .

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

KKELLY@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ZALESKI - For some
locals who are into
ghosthunting,
the
Moonville Tunnel in Vinton
County is too tempting to
pass up.
The ghosthunters who
make up Unseen Forces
Paranormal Research Team
consist of members from
both Meigs County and
Mason County, W.Va. who
specialize in investigating
haunted places. Unseen
Forces has previously
investigated Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pomeroy.
As for their Moonville
Tunnel adventure, Unseen
Forces members Brenden
Black and Raven Johnson
said their-experience was by
far the most haunted the
group has documented.
Black, Johnson and members Ryan Ferrell and
Whitnee Russell have been
to the tunnel three times,
collecting evidence that the
location is indeed haunted
According to various
ghost hunting sources on
the Internet, the Moonvi!le
Tunnel is regarded as one of
the most haunted places in
Ohio by many ghosthunters.
The old tunnel sits along
Raccoon Creek in the
Zaleski Forest. The town of
Moonville was a mining
town founded in the 1850's
which was said to be located around the tunnel which
was used by the MariettaCincinnati Railroad. The
town's population is said to
have peaked in the 1870's at
under 100 residents. The
town then completely fell
off the map and disappeared
in the 1930's. All that's left
is the tunnel, a cemetery and
a few old foundations for
long-gone homes. The train
stopped running in 1986
and the tracks were torn out
in 1988.
Though
some
ghosthunters report there
were as many as six people
killed in the tunnel between
1859 and 1986, the most
popular "ghost" story

GALLIPOLIS - While
unemployment rates in
Ohio remained high during
July, joblessness in most
area counties inched downward. the Ohio Department
of Job and Family Services
reported.
County-by-county data
for last month was released
by the agency this week.
Gallia Count) saw its jobless rate notch down by
nine-tenths of a percent to
9.3 percent. after posting a
10.2 percent level in June.
For Meigs County. the
rate increased to 16.7 percent. up eight-t~::nth~ o[ a
percent over June's 15.9
percent reading. Numerous
Ohio counties were in the
double-digit range last
month. but Meigs was
among four counties with
rates at 16 percent or more.
The others are Highland
(16.5). Noble (16.2) and
1 Williams (1 7 .5).
Unemployment was up in
Athens County for July at
10.3 percent. up from
June's 8.9.
Decreases were also seen
m Jackson County at 11.9
percent. down t\vo-tenths of
a percent over June's 12.l
percent: Lawrence County at
8.8 percent, down five-tenths
of a percent from 9.3 m June:
Vinton County at 13.3 percent. down two-tenths of a
1

haunting the tunnel is the
ghost of a railroad worker.
The legend goes a MariettaCincinnati railroad worker
fell onto the tracks outside
the tunnel on March 29,
1859 and was hit by the
train. People claim to have
seen his ghost walking the
tracks with a lantern, wearing his railroad uniform.
The crew from Unseen
Forces believes they came
in contact with what could
be the mysterious railroad
worker during their investigatiOns at the tunnel. While
in the tunnel. Black said the
group turned on a flashlight
and began asking questions
of what they felt was a spirit near them. The group
asked the spirit to dim the
flashlight for "yes" and
brighten it for "no."
Through this communication, Black and Johnson said
the spirit answered to the
name of "Brakeman" and
said he died in the tunnel. He

TUPPERS PLAINS - A
half million-dollar grant
through the federal stimulus
program is on the way for
an expansion of service in
the Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District.
The Ohio Department of
Development announced
Wednesday it had awarded
Mel·gs County $SOO ' 000
f0 r the water district
,.

.

expansiOn. and the Vtllage

Please see Expansion, AS

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Please see Rates, AS
I --------------------

!Southern
discusses
health care
increase, staff
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - Anyone who
has been to a doctor recent! ly has firsthand knowledge
of the rising cost of health
care so it comes as no surPlease see Haunted, AS
prise that school districts
are also being affected.
For several vears Southem
jumped to dift-erent msurance
catTiers to avoid mcreases
but that can only be done so· =l
long before the distlict ca~1 't ·
be "re-rated.'' according to
Southern
Superintendent
Tony Deem. Deem said for 'f..
, BY
t:fOEFLICH
it is
..
total of the past two years the distticr
HOEFLIC~f#i~lL.~$,ENTINEL.COM time money which wlll ~t.f~§Y:51~' .~tlf~ttb into pay- has hccn with the OME~W:.'.
be available. aft~r that. i"t\~f~ring 'the~t'~~{~~~·~and fringt: RESA consortium when it
P~::&gt;rvi~O'\\~.L~ The total al.locatiO~ m many o~ ,· benefits lo1; ;F13~ additional come::. to health benefits.
;. Me1gs: •C.oc~J·l"~_oard of the proJects wtll be used fofd'teacher!--. ThC!t~~ill include Deem said this vear 'vhen the
Education has decided how two ye~u: programs.
two at fl:ie ''.c'J('mentary district was ··i-e-rated" the
didn't feel the
to spend_ the; $1,140,0_65
.H&lt;: satd that t~ere was a school, one for'math in the consot1ium
district
had
build
up the discommg mto th~ ~e1~s d1stnct leadersh1p team of .Middle School and one for
"reserve"
fund
accordtrict's
10
Local S~hool Dtstnct
~tbout 20 people w~o h~tl the high scHool alternative
ingly. Factoring this as well
!ederal stimulus ~oney des- mput .on the planm~g tor program.
t~nated f~.r spectal. educa- spendmg the stimulus
The remainder of the Title as some "large hits" or
tton and 1ttle ~ readmg and money.. an? note~. that. an 1 allocation will be spent as claims and Deem said the
math pr?grams.
. .
~mphasJs .15 .on creatm.g follows.
according
to renewal increase wasn't
entirely a shock.
Supcr.mten.dcnt WIIltat.ll J?bs .~n~ ~nng1?~ b~tc~ post- Buckley:
~
Southern took on a 17.81
Buckley advls.ed. the ~~rud ~?ns..whtch, ~~.'~. h.tvc been
Data analysis $35,625; percent mcrease 111 premi1 before the unammous \Otc
~.:hmm,Hed e.uhct.
KO ?
t
.
1
I
t
Accord'mg to f'tgures pre- $SB
'7-erven
on proJect ~xp~n d't
1 mes. a
OOO· s 111 ~.
, . ton
·I_ ums for .lui\ 1-June 30.
Tuesday mght s meettn~ sented by Buckley nearly
• ' .: · umm~::t t.:nnc 1 20 I 0. Dceni' said as a
that the money must be half of the mont:y in the ment S40,000; summer whole. the consortium took
spent within two years and Title I allocation of
Please see Meigs, AS
Please see Southern, AS

Half million
Meigs
Local
district
receives
awarded for
TP-C expansion $1,140,065 in stimul~ttmoney
in Meigs,
Boardqf Education approve~··{g&amp;plan
Athens countiec.~ ' C~Aiit.E~E
t~at
·:~·estr!cted QY:.~&amp;~:;ttJ~.~·)9~it
BY BRIAN J. REED
\t(i
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
i

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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

rsday, August 27, 2009

Karmi widens lead in Afgha otecount
B Y H EIDI VOGT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

AP photo

New Mexico's Gov. Bill Richardson gestures during a visit
to the former home of U.S. writer Ernest Hemingway (1899. 1961) in San Francisco de Paula, east of Havana,
Wednesday.
p

·NM gov. on Cuba mission,
~

plans White House report

_ SAN FRANCISCO DE
;.PAULA. Cuba (AP) ....'-:ew Mexico Gov. Bill
~ichardson said Wednesday
he plans to report to Barack
Obama ·s administration his
. assessment of Cuba-U.S.
relations following a fiveday trade mission to the
island even though he is not
an official envoy of
Washington.
Richardson is meeting
with a host of Cuban government officials, including
a scheduled encounter
Thursday with Foreign
•Minister Bruno Rodriguez.
He met Monday with
Ricardo Alarcon. president
of Cuba ·s parliament. So
· far. everyone has brought
up the U.S. embargo and
.other aspects of U.S. policy,
'Richardson said, without
'elaborating.
· · 'T m not an envoy of the
. (Obama) administration.
· I'm caiTying no message.
rm here as a governor seek·ing agricultural trade," he
, said.
~· "Obviously I do plan to
·.submit my impressions to
Jhe administration after I
conclude," he added. "I will
do that as a citizen and as a
governor. They're
my
impressions alone."
As
a
congressman,
Richardson secured the
release of three Cuban political prisoners during talks
with then-President Fidel
Castro in Havana in 1996.
As U.N. ambassador in
1997, he held talks on terrorism with then-Foreign
Minister Roberto Robaina.
Richardson
supported
Obama 's declaration during
last year's U.S. presidential
campaign that he would be
open to meeting current
President Raul Castro without preconditions. The governor also has opposed lifting the U.S. embargo. while
: advocating
negotiations
• \\' ith Cuba to promote
human rights.
The Obama administration has relaxed restrictions
on Cuban Americans' travel
· and money transfers to fam: ily on the island Most U.S.
: citizens cannot visit technically.
the
U.S.
Treasury Department bars
.them from spending money
in Cuba - in tandem with

p

the U.S. embargo imposed
in 1962 to weaken Cuba's
Communist govemment.
The U.S. and Cuba also
are resuming talks on
migration anl direct maiL
but they have sparred over a
U.S. suggestion that Havana
release its political prison
ers. Cuba insists that any
dialogue have no preconditions.
Richardson made his
rt:mai b. tu The Assul:iatt:d
Press while visiting Ernest
Hemingway's former villa,
Finca Vigia.
in
San
Francisco de Paula, 15
miles (25 kilometers) east
of central Havana.
Richardson marveled at
Hemingway's
extens1ve
book and art collections, his
mounted trophies from
hunting expeditions in
Africa and Idaho, his office
and his fishing boat, El
Pilar. during a tour of the
villa. The governor donated
a replica of a vintage telephone used by Hemingway
to curators of the home,
now a museum, on behalf of
the state of New Mexico and said all U.S. citizens
should be able to visit such
cultural gems.
"There's a link between
Hemingway and the United
States and Cuba, and now
there's a New Mexico link,"
he said. "I think enhancing
cultural and artistic and
educational ties is a prelude
to diplomatic and commercial ties. It always happens
that way."
''I'm
for
enhanced
tourism
travel
for
Americans."
Richardson said that travel should go beyond the socalled
people-to-people
educational and cultural
contacts promoted by the
Bill Clinton administration.
Opponents of enhanced
travel argue it would only
help subsidize a government that doesn't tolerate
dissent.
Richardson and state
Cabinet officials arc promoting exports of New
Mexico beef, corn. wheat,
potatoes and apples. Despite
the embargo, U.S. states can
sell agricultural and certain
other products to Cuba .
though sales on credit are
prohibited.

KABUL
President
Hamid Karzai has extended
his lead over his top challenger in Afghanistan's
presidential election under
the latest vote results
released, but remains short
of the 50 percent he needs to
avoid a two-man runoff.
Afghan election officials
are slowly releasing results
from last week's presidential election, and final certified results will not be ready
until
at
least
midSeptember, after dozens of
serious complaints of fraud
have been investigated.
Low voter turnout and the
fraud allegations have cast a
pall over the vote. seen as
critical to efforts to stabilize
the country. which is
wracked by Taliban insurgents and doubts over its
fragile democracy. Top
challenger
Abdullah
Abdullah
has
accused
Karzai of widespread rigging. including ballot stuffing and voter intimidation,
claims Karzai 's camp has
denied.
The latest returns released
Wednesday boost Karzai 's
standing to 44.8 percent.
Abdullah. a former foreign
minister, now has 35. I percent. The count is based on
returns from 17 percent of
polling stations nationwide,
meaning the results could
still change dramatically.
Tuesday's
returns
had
Abdullah trailing Karzai by
just 3 percent.
Although millions of
Afghans voted Aug. 20,
apathy and fear of militant
attacks meant turnout was
lower than in the nation's
first direct presidential election in 2004 that was swept
by Karzai.
This summer has been
Afghanistan's most violent
since the 2001 U.S. invasion. President Barack
Obama ordered an additional 21 ,000 troops to the
country this year, in part to
help secure the elections.
But violence has continued
torise.
)
NATO said two U.S.
troops died Wednesday in
two separate attacks, keeping August on pace to be the
deadliest month of the war
for the U.S. military. The
two deaths bring to 43 the
number of U.S. troops

AP photo

An Afghan woman, right, inks her finger to cast her vote at a polling station in Kandahar.
province, south of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Thursday, Aug. 20. Afghans head to the polls to.
elect the new president for the second time in the country's history.

ki lied this month. Last ed in a truck. although local have suspects in custody
month was the deadliest of officials had said earlier a within 72 hours.
Kandahar lies in a swath
the war, when 44 U.S. cluster of five vehicle
of southern Afghanistan
troops died.
bombs caused the blast.
Late Wednesday, a rocket
The
Taliban
on dominated by Pashtuns, the
exploded in the main south- Wednesday denied any country's largest ethnic
ern city of Kandahar, caus- responsibility for the attack group from !Vhich the
ing no casualties but settin!! 111 Kandahar - the lslamist Taliban derives its supp.
a ~ood shop on fire. police movement's spiritual home. and recruits.
said.
But it is also a crucial
It often denies involvement
The attack occurred a day in attacks that kill civilians. electoral battleground. parafter a huge bombing in
"We are denying respon- ticularly for Karzai. who as
Kandahar killed at least 43 sibility. and condemn this a Pashtun and a Kandahar
people and wounded 65. attack in which innocent native, is expected to perThe Tuesday night attack, civilians were killed." form well there.
which destroyed dozens of Taliban spokesman Qari
The pre~idential returns
buildings, took place in a Yousef Ahmadi wrote in a announced Wednesday are
district that includes U.N. text message sent to an based on partial results from
facilities and an Afghan Associated Press reporter.
28 of the 34 provinces. but
intelligence office. Rescue
Interior Minister Hanif few votes have been counted
workers were still pulling Atmar said Afghan security from Kandahar and no votes
injured people from the
forces, supported by NATO from neighboring Helmand
ruins on Wednesday.
troops, would conduct a province. two areas that
An Afghan employee of
search operation and try to \vould boost Karzai 's totals.
the lntemational Committee
of the Red Cross was
among the dead.
Most of the victims were
Everyone
ordinary Afghan civilians,
needs to
like Mohammad Masoom,
26. a tailor whose shop was
save money
near the blast site. His
505 Mulberry Heights
$$$$
father, Mohammad Yusuf.
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
discovered his son's body at
/;.K"Ill&lt;•r.l "1.~11 aa"" fmm
hospital and condemned the
1/ol:rr ('IIIIi&gt;'
"cruel people" behind the
bombing. His other son was
WecansaA
wounded in the blast.
Phone: (740)992-9784
"They killed my son, and
moneyoJI'
Fax:(740)992-7980
so many innocent people. I
your health
don't know what these peoEmail:
insurance!
ple want:' Yusuf said,
ash!e&lt;:·;•lht&gt;~ghan•scncy com
weeping.
The Interior Ministry said
the blast was from remote740 992-971::4
controlled explosives plant-

~~===~you

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•
The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

Thursday, August

27,2009

Barber wins giveaway Foothills Festival to kiekoff Friday
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HARRISONVILLE - The
4th Annual Foothills Blues &amp;
Arts Festival will kickoff a
weekend nf m11sic and art at
5:30 p.m. Friday on the Sheets
family furm located near
Harrisonville.
The campgrounds will open at
5 p.m. to allow families to get
settled before Micah Kesselring
opens the evening entertainment
on the covered acoustic stage,
one of several structures in place
in a grassy field. Other entertainers will be C&amp;S Railroad , Izzy
and Chrh., AI Smyth &amp; FBnCC
and Sitdown Baby.
Saturday's action picks up
with music flowing from both
the electric and acoustic stage
from just after noon into the
night. Liz Pennock. Mojo
Theory, Mudfork Blues 8and,
Dennis McClung band, Albert
Castiglia and Lany Garner will
be on the electric stage. while
Duke Junior and the Smokey
Boots. C&amp;S Railroad, Bob
Stewart Band, Jzzy and Chris
and Sitdown Baby will wrap
up entertainment on the
acoustic stage.
An added feature of the festival this year is an expansion of
the art scene. The Athens Local
Professional
Artisan
arid
Craftsmen
Association
(ALPACA) has partnered with
the Foothills Music Foundation

and artists affiliated with that
organizadtion will be on site to
d~monstrate and display works
and offering hands-on activities
for the children and adults.
"There will be displays of a
wide range of arts and ·crafts.
including fiber arts, glass.
woodwork. leather. metal and
more, and artwork will be available for purchase." said David
Gustafson, ALPACA president.
Among those coming will be
Amanda Buchanan of Athens
who has'been producingj~welry
and photo frames under the
name Gemelli Contemporary
Crafts for seveal years. She
fuses glass in a kiln and then in
the case of jewelry finishes it
with either sterlit:~g or fine silver. Her jewelry is sold in several shops in. Southeasern Ohio
Mudfork Blues Band
and she regularly participates in
festivals such as Foothills.
There is plenty of parking and
free camping spaces at the Sheets
fann and several vendors selling
everything from pulled pork and
ribs to southern flied catfish will
be on site. It's suggested that
those coming to the festival bring
their own lawn chair.
The
Foothills
Music
Foundation is dedicated to
enhancing the quality of life in
the foothills region of southeaste.rn Ohio by encouraging, supporting. and promoting music
Submitted photo
and the arts. Assistance with
funding comes from the Ohio Amanda Buchanan will be at the Foothills Blues &amp;
Arts Council.
Jazz Festival demonstr~ting the art of jewelry making.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Brian J. Reed/photo

Alison Barber was this year's winner of the dairy heiffer
sponsored each year by Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
· Paul Reed, bank president, makes the presentation annually during the Junior Fair Livestock Sale, a highlight, he
said, of the bank's support of junior fair. Barber will be a
first-year dairy exhibitor next year.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Aug. 31
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission. 9
a.m .. 117 Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy.

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, Aug. 28
POMEROY - Class of
1959 luncheon at Wild
Horse, I p.m.
•
TUesday, Sept. 1
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363. regular meeting. 7:30
· p.m .. at the lodge, refresh• ments at 6:30 p.m.
CHESTER Chester
~ Council 323, Daughters of
Ameri&lt;.:a.
7:30
p.m.
Members bring items for
silent auction to follov.·
meeting.
POMEROY Meigs
Athletic Boosters. 7 p.m. at
. Meigs High School.

Church events

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Friday, Aug. 28
POMEROY
Adult
Bible School, 7 p.m ..
night-Friday. Laurel Cliff
ree Methodist Church.
keynote speakers each
night.
Sattlrday, Aug. 29 '
COOLVILLE Rev.
Delmar of Liberty. Texas to
preach at Faith Harvest
Church, Coolville. 7 p.m.
Saturday; 10 a.m. and 7
p.m. Sunday.
REEDSVILLE- Benefit
sing for Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing, 6 p.m .. Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene.
Featured singers: Brian &amp;
Family
Connections.
Angela Gibson, Chuck and
Claudett Harbin and Jerry
and Diane Frederick.
•COOLVILLE
Gracemen Quartet will perform at I p.m. at the
Carthage Gap Campground
located off US 50 on
Township Road 56. the con-

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Visit us
online at
'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Your online
source for news

cert is free and sponsored
by the First Southern
Baptist Church.
Sunday, Aug. 30
HEMLOCK GROVE Fifth Sunday Hymn Sing, 7
p.m.,
Hemlock
Grove
Christian Church, refreshments following.
POMEROY - Benefit
sing for Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing, 6 p.m .. Laurel Cliff
Free Methodi-;t Church.
Featured singers: Brian &amp;
Family
Connections.
Randall Johns. The Dollys,
Angela Gibson. Frank and
Ida Martin, Brenda Haggy,
Lawrence Eblin. Becky
Eblin and Jerry and Diane
Frederick. Refreshments
follow.
POMEROY - Dayspring
in concert, 6:30 p.m .. Mt.
Union Baptist Church.
39091 Carpenter Hill Road.
Monday Aug. 31
SYRACUSE - Denver
McCarty toi conduct revival
servcies at the Syracuse
Communty Church. 7 p.m.
through Sept. 5. Special
singing every evening Monday, Claudette Harbin:
Tuesday. Delores Long;
Wednesday, Voices of Faith;
Thursday, Joe McCloud;
Friday, Joe and Naomi
Gwinn; and Saturday, Two
for Jesus. Need a ·ride, call
992-3893, van with wheel
chair lift. Pastor Joe Gwinn.

Birthdays
Tuesda3-·, Sept. 1
SYRACUSE - Alberta
Hubbard will celebrate her
88th birthday today. cards
may be sent to PO Box 62.
Syracuse. 45779.
RACINE
Clara
Sargent will celebrate her
90th birthday today, cards
may be sent to PO Box 236.
Racine, 45771.

Don't put life on hold for errant spouse
have a stable. happy home
with or without her.
Dear Annie: I am iri my
Dear Annie: My com- early 30s and happily marmon-law wife of many ried. My husband and I have
years has left me for anoth- been trying to conceive for
er man. I let my pursuit of four years. We achieved
the dollar mle my life and pregnancy once, which
spent so much time working resulted in a miscarriage.
to support my family that 1 Meanwhile, our friends are
did not give them what they having babies left and right.
truly needed. I made many I no longer can handle baby
mistakes and the first was showers, but I always send
not standing before God and gifts and good wishes.
In these four years. we
marrying my wife.
Before "Carla" left. we have encountered both wellnever argued and I was · meaning and cruel people
totally unaware she was who say awful things to our
unhappy. She now has a faces and behind our backs.
new boyfriend, who has no Our struggles have served as
home. no car. no job, no gossip at parties. which is
future and a very bad repu- embanassing and hurtful.
Here are some of the gems
tation around our town.
I am in counseling. How we've heard: "There must be
can l convince Carla to join something tenibly wrong
me or at least consider rec- with you." "You're selfish for
onciling? She drops by the not coming to my baby showhouse to tend her horses, but er," "Fertility treatments are
often doesn't tell the chil- morally wrong, so it's no
dren when she's here and wonder they're not working,"
this hurts them. I don't and ''Maybe God doesn't
know how to get through to want you to have children."
How should we respond
her. I would do anything to
have my family whole to these types of comments?
again. - Heartbroken in It is painful to know that out
Norco, Calif.
fertile acquaintances don't
Dear Norco: It sounds as feel our situation deserves
if Carla is running away, respect or discretion. and she has chosen a Infertile Myrtle
boyfriend who reflects that
Dear Myrtle: Some of
sense of irresponsibility. those comments are utterlv
Until she is re.ady to face her reprehensible. You have
life as it is, she will not be several choices of response:
responsive to reconciling. "Thank you for your opin·
Continue with your coun- ion." "Sorry you feel that
seling so you can deal with way," 'Tm sure you didn't
your emotions about the sit- intend to be hurtful and
uation, as well as the prob- cmel" and the all-purpose "I
lems that will crop up. If can't imagine why that's
you are patient, Carla might your business." If you have
come back, but please don't not ~!ready done so, please
put your life on hold. You contact
Resolve
and the children deserve to (resolve.org) at 1760 Old
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR •

Meadow Rd., Suite 500,
McLean. VA 22102 for support and encouragement.
Dear Annie: "Patlick in
Stockton, Calif.." said men
enjoy strip clubs because
they aren't getting what they
need from their wives at
home. You said. ·'Insecure
men often prefer professional women because they don't
care \\hat the guy is like as
long as he has money.''
'As a practicing attorney. I
consider myself a professional woman. and I most
certainly DO care what a
guy is like. I finally concluded you must have used
the term "professional
women" in refer~nce to
females who work in the
sex trade. That's certainly
an unconventional use of
the word "professional.··
My dictionary says a profession is "a calling requiring specialized knowledge
and often long and intensive
academic
preparation."
Ship clubs and lap dances?
I don't think so.
Professi~nal Woman
Dear Woman: Plea...e tell
us
you
are
joking.
"Professional woman·· is a
common term used to denote
a female who is paid for sexrelated work. A reference to
"professional women" in a
letter about strip club~ should

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Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to amziesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

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Meigs County 911

If \~u have any questions

not bring to mind an attorney.
unless you have talents of
which we are unaware.

IJH~ pu ltou.,riJl&gt;ld·

Hrinr In

(~l'1llf tJd

OPEN: Monday thru Friday ·8:00am- 8:00 pm; Saturday 8 am- 5 pm

Ed Zatta, R. Ph.
Kenna1h McCullough,R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R.Ph.
Prascrlp11on Ph. 992-2955
112 East MalnStraet, Pomeoz. Ohio

L.

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Oper1 Weeknights
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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,August27,2009_

Ted Kennedy: Legislator with Jew peers

The Daily Sentinel

BY DAVID ESPO

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
WASHINGTON- In the
quiet of a Capitol elevator.
one
of
Edward
M.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kennedy's fellow lawmaken; asked whether he hall
Dan Goodrich
plans
for
a
family
Publisher
Thanksgiving away from
Charlene Hoeflich
the nation's capital. No. the
Massachusetts senator said
General Manager-News Editor
with a shake of his head,
Pam Caldwell
and mentioned something
Advertising Director:
about visiting his brothers'
gravesite~ ~1t Arlington
National Cemetery.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
In his half-century in the
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
public glare, Kennedy was.
above all, heir to a legacy
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
- a~ well as a hero to liberof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
als. a foil to conservatives, a
legislator \Vith few peers.
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
Alone of the Kennedy
the Government for a redress of grievances.
men of his generation, he
lived to comb gr~y hair. as
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution the Insh poet had 1t. It was a
blessing and a curse. as he
surely knew, and assured
that his defeats and human
foibles as well as many triumphs played out 111 publ\c
at greater length than hts
brothers ever experienced.
He was the o!llY Kenne~y
brother to run for ~he Whtte
House and los~. Hts brother
John was prestdent when he
was assassinated in 1963 a
few
. ~ays
before
Thanksgtvmg: Robert feU to
Dear Editor:
a. gunman in mid-campaign
During a recent visit to the Meigs County Dog Shelter. I ftve years later An older
was astonished to see a large sign indicating that no cats brother. Joseph Jr., was
should be brought to the pound.
killed piloting a plane in
Who could be trunking that the dog shelter took - or World War II.
ever accepted - cats? Cats have been dropped off since the
Runner-up in a two-man
sign went up, so I wonder if the people doing so this are race for the Democratic
illiterate or simply mal~cious. I found several cats in vary- nomination in 1980, this
ing stages of health and age in the back of the shelter. If Kennedy closed out his
people continue to bring cats to the dog shelter, in a short failed candidacy with a
time that area will be overrun.
speech that brought tears to
. The Ohio Revised Code requires that each county has a dog the eyes of many in a packed
shelter; this not apply, unfortunately, to cats who are left to their Madison Square Garden.
own fate.lf you care about cats in the county, I suggest, you:
"For me, a few hours ago,
1. Take over the care of one or more of those cats and kit- this campaign came to an
tens (keeping in mind that the Meigs County Humane· end," he said. "For all those
Society will help with spay/neuter coupons-just call the whose cares have been our
Thrift Shoppe in Middleport),
concern. the work goes on,
,2. Do all you can to make sure no one takes any addition- the cause endures, the hope
al cats to the shelter (thoughtless people have been putting still lives· and the dream
them in the dropbox with dogs, and you imagine their fate, shall never die."
or simply throwing out of cars to fend for themselves).
He was 48, older than any
I joined the Meigs County Humane Society and attend of his brothers at the time of
meetings to see what can be done about the cat problem in the their deaths. He lived nearly
county. Possibilities include TNR (Trap, Neuter Release). three more decades, before
donating to the spay/neuter fund, setting up foster homes. or succumbing to a brain tumor
even organizing to creating to create. a separate shelter to late Tu~sday at age 77.
•••
ensure that abandoned or unwanted cats so not starve to death
That convention speech
or die of disease. I realize these are dire economic times. but
was a political summons,
there is never an excuse for cruelty or neglect of animals.
for sure. But to what?
Alden Waitt
Kennedy made plans to
Snowville
run for president again in
1984 before deciding against
it. By 1988. his moment had
passed and he knew it.
Today is Thursday, Aug. 27, the 239th day of 2009. There
He turned his public enerare 126 days left in the year.
gies toward his congressionToday's Highlight in History: On Aug. 27, 1859, Edwin al career, now judged one of
L. Drake drilled the first successful oil well in the United the most accomplished in
States, at Titusville, Pa.
the history of the Senate.
On this date: In 1858, the second debate between senato'T m a Senate man and a
rial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas ·leader of the institution." he
took place in Freeport, Ill.
said more than a year ago in
In 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa blew up; the result- an Associated Press intering tidal waves in Indonesia's Sunda Strait cla~med some view. He left his imprint on
36,000 lives in Java and Sumatra.
every major piece of social
Thought for Today: "In order to have wisdom we mus.t legislation to pass Congress
have ignorance." - Theodore Dreiser, American author over a span of decades.
Health care. immigration.
(born this date in 1871, died 1945).
civil rights, education and
more. Republicans and
LETTERS TO THE
Democrats alike lamented
his absence as they strugEDITOR
gled inconclusively in
months
with
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less recent
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be President Barack Obama 's
signed, and include address and telephone number. No health care legislation.
He was in the front ranks
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of of Democrats in 1987 who
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- torpedoed one of President
Ronald Reagan's Supreme
ed for publication.
·
.
Court nominees. ·'Robert
Bork 's America is a land in
which women would be
forced into back-alley abortions. blacks would sit at
: Reader Services
(usPs 213-9so)
segregated lunch counters.
'
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
rogue police could break
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every morning, Monday
down
citizens· doors in midbe accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street.
night raids, children could
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class postage
not be taught about evolu992-2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
tion.'' he said at the time.

www.mydailysentinel.com

VIEW

READER'S

No excuse
Rejection ofcats is wrong

It was a single sentence
that catalogued many of the
issues he - and Democrats
- devoted their careers to
over the second half of the
20th century.
A postscript: More than a
decade later. President
Clinton nominated a former
Kennedy aide. Stephen
Breyer; to the high court. He
was confirmed easily.
•••
There were humiliations
along the way, drinking and
womanizing. coupled with
the triumphs that the
Kennedy
image-makers
were always polishing. After
the 1980 presidential campaigh, Camelot took another
hit when he divorced. He
later remarried, happily.
In later years came grumbling
from
fellow
Democrats that his political
touch had failed him and
• that he was too eaa~r
to
l:o
strike a deal with President
Georoe W. Bush on education :nd Medicare.
''I believe a president can
make a difference:' he said
over and over in that campaign of 1980, at a 'time the
country was suffering from
crushing combination of
hioh interest rates. inflation
and unemployment.
But it wasn't necessary to
be a president to make a difference. or to try.
He once startled a
Republican senator's aide.
·tracking her down by phone
in Poland, part of an attempt
to complete a bipartisan
compromise.
For years. he left the
Capitol once a week to read
to a student at a nearby publie school as part of a literacy program .
When a longtime Senate
reporter fell terminally ill,
Kennedy dispatched one of
his watercolors to her room
in a nursing home. ana
cheered her with chatty
phone calls.

TODAY IN HISTORY

~

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There were other, far
more public ways that
Kennedy became the famj]y
standard bearer.
Robert Kennedy had spo-

•••
More than a quarter-century later. he was still eager
to make a difference. At a
critical point in the 2008
presidential
race,
he
endorsed Barack Obama
over
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton for the Democratic
nomination, then embarked
on an ambitious schedule of
campaign appearances.
He cast his endorsement
in terms that linked Obama
to the Kennedys.
"There was another time.

~~Q

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12 Weeks . . . . . . • . . ••.'56.55
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.....

•••

•••
"Thank you my friend for
your many couttesies. lf the
world only knew:· reads a
letter hanging, on one wall
of the office. It came from
Sen.
Trent
Lott
of
Mississippi.
once
the
Senate's top Republican.
As the most prominent
liberal of his day, Kennedy
was long an easy and popular target for Republicans.
The automobile accident
that resulted in the death of
a
yot~ng
Pennsylvania
woman. Mary Jo Kopechne,
drew snickers both before
and after it shadowed his
presidential campaign in
1980. Kennedy was driving
the car in the accident at
Chappaquiddick.
It is a cliche, yet true, that
if his name was invaluable
in Democratic fundraising.
conservatives long ago discovered they could generate
cash simply by telling
donors they were doing battle with Kennedy.
Kennedy understood that,
and knew how to turn it to
his own advantage.
When a Moral Majority
fundraising appeal somehow arrived at his office one
day in the early 1980s, word
leaked to the public,and the
consef\ative group issued
an invitation for hjm to
come to Liberty Baptist
College if he was ever in the
neighborhood.
Pleased to accept, was the
word from Kennedy.
"So I told Jerry (Falwell)
and he almost turned white
as a sheet." said Cal
Thomas. then an aide to the
conservative leader.
Dinner at the Falwell home
was described as friendly.
Desert was a political sermon on tolerance. delivered
by
the
liberal
from
Massachusetts.
··1 believe there surely is
such a thing as truth. but
who among us can claim a
monopoly?" Kennedy said
from the podium that night.
"There are those who do.
. and their own words testify
to their intolerance."

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b

•••
Kennedy took up painting
in earnest after a plane crash
that broke his back in the
mid-1960s and led to a
lengthy
convalescence.
Much of his work hangs in
his Senate office. several
seascapes or images of sailboats of the type he piloted
in the waters off Cape Cod.
The walls of other rooms
are filled with political and
personal memorabilia, family photographs or letters or
some combination of the
two that hint at the passage
of time and power.
In one room hangs a photo
showing Kennedy and his
siblings and parents in a
family portrait taken in the
1930s, at a time their father,
Joseph P. Kennedy. was U.S.
ambassador to England.
In another hangs a plaque
from the USS John F.
Kennedy, the Navy vessel
commissioned in 1968 and
named for the slain president.
In another, the letter he
wrote his mother. Rose,
teasingly accusing her of
having covered up a deficiency in math. No, she
wrote back firmly in penciL
she always got an A.
Elsewhere, this:
"To Dad. Thank you for
helping me get ahold of that
first rung." . wrote his son.
Pauick, after winning a seat in
the Rhode Island Legislature
in 1990. The parent had dispatched aides to Providence
to help assure victory for the
child, now an eighth-term
member of Congress.

ken of the assassinated presat
the
1964
ident
Democratic
National
Convention. Four years
later, he, too. was dead, and
this time the last surviving
brother delivered the eulogy.
"My brother need not be
idealized or enlarged in
death beyond what he was
in life." his voice trembled
at St. Patrick's Cathedral in
New York. "He should be
remembered simply as a
good and decent man who
saw wrong and tried to right
it. saw suffering and tried to
heal it, saw war and tried to
stop it."
A generatwn later. John
Kennedy Jr.. who had been
a toddler when his father
was in the White House,
died in a small plane crash
off Martha's Vineyard. This
eulogy invoked the words
of William Butler Yeats, the
poet: "We dared to think, in
that other Irish phrase, that
this John Kennedy would
live to comb gray hair. But
like his father. he had every
gift but the gift of years."

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when another young candidate was running for president
and
challenging
America to cross a new
frontier," he said.
"He faced criticism from
the preceding Democratic
president, who was wide!
respected in the pa!"tY
Kennedy said.
"And John
Ken
replied: 'The world IS
changing. The old ways will
not do .... It is time for a new
generation of leadership."'

:
•
.
•·

•••
That endorsement came a '
few months before the ·
seizure that signaled t~e :
presence of a deadly bram
tumor. There were memorable public moments ahead,'
a surprise visit to the Senate ·
to cast the decisive vote on a
Medicare bill and, before ·
that, a turn at the podium at '
the Democratic National '
Convention in Denver.
"As I look ahead, I am
strengthened by family and
friendship," he said there last
summer. "So many of you
have been with me in the
happiest days and the hardest days. Together we have
known success and seen setbacks. victory and defeat.
"But we have never lo.
our belief that we are a
called to ~ better country
and a newer world.'' he said.
"And I pledge to you.. I .
pledge to you that I will be
there next January on the
floor of the United States
Senate when we begin the
great test.''
His time in the Senate was
growing short. though. He
smiled broadly as he took :
his
seat outdoors at ·
Obama's inauguration on •
Jan. 20. then suffered a .
seizure a few hours later at a ,
luncheon inside the capitol. ·
"He was there when the ·
Voting Rights Act passed" ·
in the mid-1960s. the:
nation's first black president
said moments later in his
remarks. "And so I would
be lying to you if I did not
say that right now a part of
me is with him. And I think
that's true for all of us."

•••
Generations of aid
recall Kennedy telling
the biggest mistake of
career was turning down a
deal that President Richard
M. Nixon offered for universal health care. It seemed
not generous enough at the
time. Having missed the
opportunity then. Kennedy
spent the rest of his career
hoping for an elusive second chance.
Now. some Democrats
wonder privately if the party
can team from that lesson,
and take what is achievable
rather than risk evetything by
reaching for what it uncertain.
Republicans
and
Democrats
alike
say
Kennedy's absence has
affected the debate on
Obama 's signature issue,
with unknown consequences.
It was the issue that motivated him even after he was
no longer able to travel to
the Capitol to cast a vote.
He called it "the cause o.
my life."
And in July. in a ret1ection
on his own mo1tality, he worried that his precarious health
might mean Massachusetts
would have only one senator
for a brief while. and
Democrats would be handicapped as they tried to pass
health care legislation.
After 47 years in the
Senate - in a seat held by
his brother before him Kennedy urged a change in
state law so the governor
could appoint a temporary
replacement '"should a
vacancy occur."

'
.
:

·

.

.

�Thursday, August 27,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Juvenile speeding cause of manv nllic crashes-

Deaths

Obey the law or face consequences

Kellie Dawn (Lewis) Kirker
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Kellie Dawn (Lewis)
Kirker. 40, of Point Pleasant died Saturday Aug. 22. 2009
at StMary's Hospital
A memorial service will be held on Saturday, Aug. 29,
2009. at lO a.m. at the Deal Funeral Home. Burial will be
at the convenience of the family. Friends will be received
family members at the funeral home from 9 to lO a.m.

Reed appointed
POMEROY - Paul M. Reed, Middleport, president of
the Farmers Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy. was appointed by Gov. Ted Strickland to the Ohio Banking
Commission.
~
Reed has also served as a board member for the Ohio
Bankers League and the Ohio Bankers Benefit Trust. He is
an alumnus of Ohio University.
The Banking Commission reports to the Superintendent
of Banks its proposals on the issuance of certificates to
form new banks and on the examinations of banks. The
Banking Commission also conducts hearings for the
removal of bank directors or officers when the occasion
demands, and establishes limits and regulations regarding
banking procedures that affect other banks.

For the Record
Civil actions
APOMEROY - A complaint alleging personal injury was
.
ed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by James L.
Garnes, Jr., Pomeroy, against Sarah Marie Wamsley, Bidwell.
A suit to terminate and extinguish an easement was filed
by Bernice Louise Swan. Pomeroy, against Brenda K.
Darst. Pomeroy.

through
the
County
Treasurer, and entering such
an arrangement protects the
taxpayer from foreclosure,
as long as payments are
made as agreed.
Williams said anyone
with questions relating to
their delinquent taxes or
possible foreclosure actions
should contact Yost's office
at 992-2004.

Meigs from Page At
academy for freshmen,
,000; computers for
th and smart boards,
des 3 through 12,
,000; ASCD journals
for teacher development,
$8,000; computer program
' for
tracking
student
progress, $5,000; software
program for accelerated
math, $15,000; Alternative
School, salaries/fringes
$67,300
In the $539,123 in Special
Education funding, the allocation is as follows:
A total of $274,347 will
go to "supplant" state
That
means,
money.
explained Buckley, that
some salaries formerly paid
with state money will now

be paid with stimulus
money which leaves more
money for the district's discretionary use.
Other allocations are purchase of a handicapped bus,
$90,000; Alpha Smart
Board, for computerized
learning, $800; lift chair,
$750, for use at the Middle
School; a distance learning
lab, $13,000; Brigance PS
testing program. $5,000;
corrective reading, $50,000;
math intervention $40,000;
White Smart Boards for
special education classrooms, $24,000; trainers for
professional
trainers,
$12,000; computers to go
with the white boards,
$12,000.

Expansion from Page At
of Racine $422,400 for
water
infrastructure.
County
Commissioners
voted to apply for the grant
AJgram on the district's
.
half in July.
The awards are part of a
$12.9 million funding
award
through
the
American Recovery and
Reinvestment
Act's
Community Development
Block Grant program.
The program was open
to communities with populations less than 50,000
and counties with populations Jess than 200.000.
Projects must proceed
within 120 days.
Don Poole, district manager, told county commissioners last month an additional 73 households would
be added to the district's
system under the grant
award. He said a large percentage of those homes
now use weiJs contaminated with E coli and coliform
bacteria.
The grant will allow the
.LStrict to add customers on
achfork Road. Wolf Pen
oad, Ball Run Road,
Amold Road, and Bunker
Hill Road in Bedford
Township, Riebel Road in
Chester Township. Tanner!&gt;
Run Road near Racine, and
Troy Township Road 119 in
Athens County.
The district has already
received grant and loan
funds from other sources for
the $1.5 million expansion
project, but Poole said in

vers over the three-year
period. Of these citations,
1,199 were in Clermont
County and I ,144 in Stark
County. Rounding out the
top five counties were
Portage with 887 citations,
Fairfield with 879 and
Scioto with 874.
Through July of this
year, there were 8 ,0 18
crashes caused by juvenile
drivers, resulting in 2,3 J5
injuries and 16 deaths.
During this time troopers
have issued 5,133 citations

Local Weather

Local Stocks

Thursday ...Areas
of
dense fog in the morning.
Mostly sunny. Highs in the
mid 80s. East winds around
5 mph ... Becoming southwest around 5 mph in the
afternoon.
Thursday night ...Partly
cloudy with a slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the evening ...Then
mostly cloudy with a chance
of showers after midnight.
Lows in the mid 60s. East
winds around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Friday...Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in

AEP (NYSE) - 31.46
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.07
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 36.78
Big Lots (NYSE) - 26.37
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 27.99
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 29.89
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 11.06
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.85
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.32
City Holding (NASDAQ) 32.81
Collins (NYSE) - 44.99
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.38
US Bank (NYSE) - 22.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 8.67
General Electric (NYSE) 14.11
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 21.95
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.30
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.90
Limited Brands (NYSE) 15.28

the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Friday night...Mostly
cloudy with showers likely
with a chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
60s.
Southeast
winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Saturday and Saturday
night...Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower
80s. Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday...Partly sunny in
the morning ...Then becoming mostly cloudy. A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid 70s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.

driver license law, teens
have a one non-family passenger limit. with all passengers ages 4 to 15
required to wear a safety
belt regardless of where
they are sitting in the vehicle. Teen drivers under the
age of 17 cannot drive
between the hours of midnight and 6 a.m.; those 17
years of age and up to the
age of I 8 cannot drive
between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m.
To vieH' the juvenile driver statistical report,
please visit www.statepatrol.ohio .gov.

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 46.21
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 29.35
BBT (NYSE)- 27.64
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 16.82
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.88
Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.16
Rockwell (NYSE) - 41
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.93
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.23
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 65.27
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.80
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.27
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.33
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.23
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Aug. 26, 2009,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441 -9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Haunted from Page At

Taxes from Page At
At that time, Auditor
Mary
Byer-Hill
said
$2.995,000 was owed to the
county in delinquent taxes at
the end of the first-half collections last year. The county collects just over 80 percent of the real estate taxes
owed, considerably less than
it collected a decade ago.
There
are
payment
arrangements
available

COLUMBUS
The
Ohio State Highway Patrol
released statistics today that
illustrate during 2006 to
2008 speed was a factor in
58 percent of the crashes
that were caused by juvenile
drivers.
During this three-year
period. juvenile drivers
were at fault in 61,784 traffic crashes, resulting in
27,838 injuries and 212
deaths on Ohio roadways.
Troopers issued 34.921
citations to juvenile dri-

to teen drivers, with 18
percent being for driving
20 mph or more over the
posted speed limit.
"Teen drivers will be out
on the roadways on a regular basis with the start of
school,
extra-cmTicular
activities and sporting
events." Colonel Richard H.
Collins, Patrol superintendent. said. "We need to
remind our young drivers of
the consequences of not
obeying traffic laws and the
importance of the graduated
driver license law."
Under Ohio's graduated

July the project could not go
forward unless the CDBG
application is approved,
because the rate structure
for customers would be cost
prohibitive. Poole said 62
percent of those in the
expansion area are low to
moderate income.
Poole said 75 percent of
the private wells in the areas
where expansion will take
place are contaminated with
coliform, and 37 percent
with E coli. Coliform itself
is harmless when consumed, Poole said, but it is
often an indicator of more
dangerous contaminants.

told the team he is staying at
the tunnel because he feels
he has a purpose there. He
also communicated he did
live in Moonville, is happy
and feels at peace, was killed
at night time and there was
an important thing he wanted the team to know but he
couldn't tell them. The
Brakeman also said there
was a girl in the tunnel who
died there. In fact there are
reports of a small girl dying
in the tunnel in 1986 after

she was struck by a train.
In addition, team members
reported being touched by
unseen hands and heard
unexplained noises and footsteps in the tunnel. The team
also captured a photo of what
appears to be the shadow of a
person at the far end of the
tunnel. Black said the photo
was taken during daylight
and no one saw the "shadow
man" in the tunnel when the
picture was snapped.
Black said the team uti-

lized video recorders. digital
cameras,
voice
recorders, EMF detectors,
contact thermometers, UC
blacklight flashlights and
K2 meters to complete the
investigation. In addition
they used laser levels in the
tunnel which occasionally
would show breaks in the
light as if something unseen
was walking past.
"It is definitely haunted."
Black concluded about the
tunnel.

As for those who don't
believe in hauntings. Black=·
and Johnson said. "you· n..
believe once you experience·
it." As for why do'
ghosthunting? Johnson said
"it's a rush."
The evidence collected at
the Moonville Tunnel as
well as during other•
Unseen Forces' investiga-'..:
tions can be viewed on the'
group's myspace page or at
www.unseenforcespr. webs:.
·.·
com.

Southern from Page At
on a six percent increase on
average. Deem said eligible
employees of Southern
Local pay two percent of
their health care costs.
Currently, a family health
care plan costs the district
$1,234.22 a month while an
individual plan costs the
district $556.23 a month.
At its most recently meeting, the Southern Local
Board of Education voted to
renew their health insurance
with OME-RESA.
Other action taken at the
meeting:
Approved a handicap
accessible bus bid from
Marietta Track Sales for
$79,583. Only one bid was
received. Payment will be
made from a grant.
Awarded/renewed
bids/quotes for the upcoming school year from Burlile

Oil for fuel, Malone
Warehouse Tire for tires,
Gordon Food Service for
food, Broughton's for
milk/dairy, Reiners for
bread/bakery.
Approved increasing the
limit on super blanket purchase orders from $20,000
to $50,000.
Transferred $5,925 into
the district athletic account
for fall sports expenses.
Also approved reimbursing
the $65 fee for the coaching
class mandated by OHSAA
to all board approved coaches. This is a one time fee.
Hired Lester Manuel on a
one-year contract for the
seventh-eighth grade math
position at step 10 with a
master's degree. Hired
Kathy Miller for the midday
vocational bus route on a
supplemental contract in the

amount of $1,700 for the
school year.
Approved property, fleet,
liability and violence insurance coverage through the
Ohio School Plan effective
Sept. 1 through June 30,
2010 with an annual premium of $18,968 prorated for
$2 million/occurence and
$4 million aggregate coverage.
Waived instructional fees
for the 2009-10 school year.
Approved the following
county approved certified
substitutes for this year: Ilse
Burris, Janice Curry, Michelle
Evans, Beth Gregory, Lorie
Grimm, Janel Kennedy,
Lester Manuel, Amanda
Reed,
Charles
Rymer,
Jacqueline Smith, Hannah
Sundberg, Roxane Williams,
Delores Wolfe, Teresa Carr,
William Downie, Robert

Fish, Vicki Griffin, Jordan
Hill, Ron Logan, Jan Noms)
Nathan Robinette, Deborah
Sayre, Evelyn Stanley,.
Angela Weeks, Michael
Winebrenner,
Nikki
Whobrey.
Approved the following
county approved classified
substitutes for this year:
Deborah Allen, Susan Brauer,
CatTie Carpenter, Angela
Hoalcraft, Louanna Smeck,
Julie Zirkle, Stephanie Allen~
Sandra Butcher, Kollet~
Fridley, Janel Kennedy,
Launa Teaford.
of .
Southern
Board
Education members present
for the meeting were Denny
Evans. Dennie Hill, Richard,
Hill, Don Smith, Peggy
Gibbs. The next regular .
board meeting is at 8 p.m.,
Sept. 28, high school media
room.

Rates from Page At
percent from 13 .5 percent
last month; and Washington
County, which dropped a full
percentage point from 10.4
in June to 9.4 in July.
DJFS reported last week
that Ohio's unemployment
rate ticked up a notch to
11.2 percent in July, another
level not seen for more than
a quarter century.
Last month's rate was up

Over6rool(~ha6iutation

from June's 11.1 percent
and was 4.5 percentage
points higher than the July
2008 rate of 6.7 percent.
DJFS spokesman Brian
Harter said the last time
the state had unemployment of 1 I .2 percent was
in August 1983.
Department
Director
Douglas Lumpkin said in a
statement that last month's

gains in services jobs were
partially offset by losses in
manufacturing.
Officials say the number
of unemployed in Ohio was
664,000 during July. up from

663,000 in June. The numL
ber of out-of-work Ohioans
has increased by 265 ,000 in·
the last 12 months.
(The Associated Press.
contributed to this story). •.

Center's

13th Annual Oktoberfest
Saturday, October 10,2009-11 am- 2 pm

• MUSIC • GAMES • CRAFT SHOW
• HOME DECOR VENDORS • HOG ROAST

Hope to
You

ther:~e

Free to the public as a thankyoufor your support in making
Overvbrook your Leading Healthcare Facility in Nursing Care
For More Information Or To Reserve Booth Space,
Contact Michelle Kennedy: (740) 992-6472

Sat, Sept. 5th, 7 pm

Tickets $9.00 on sale at Dan's in Pomeroy
or call 992·6759 for more lnformatton
f'lart~ har&lt;J~ witll the c;Ht
af'f~I·S,-,'furt1
'5 show M tht"

~

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
333 Page Street Middleport, Ohio

www.overbrookrehabilitationcent~r.com

Sunl Sept. 6th, 2 pm &amp; 7 pm

Meigs Elementary School

Sponsored by

L.!!.~Farmers
~

ank

THE FARMERS BANK AND SAVINGS CO

�. .-------------....._...........

.......

·--------~----------

wwcuw

-~.....,

* •

.....

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 27,

2009

:Fair Results
A "inner
POMEROY - The Rtght to Life Bear awarded by the
Meigs County Right to Life in a drawing at the fair was
\\on by Pam Foreman of Portland.

Results from garden tractor pull
POMEROY - Saturday night's Meigs County Pair winners in the garden tractor pull have been announced. They ,
an.: as follows:
In the 13-18 horse power. 800 pounds, garden tractor pull
were, lish:d first through fifth, Chris Reeder of Coolville.
Austin Collins of Athens, Allen Peoples of Pomeroy. Shayna
Thomas of Vinton County, and Amber Fryar of Pome~oy.
In the 13 to 18 horsepower. 900 pounds class. the wmners
were. first through fifth. Ryan Esparza of Albany, Ala.n
Peoples of Pomeroy. Austin Colli~s of Athen!-., C.hns
Reeder of Coolville. and Kasey Rankm of Tuppers Plams.
In the under 13 to 18 horsepower. 800 pound class. the
winners. first through sixth. were Cylan Boivin of Albany,
Kasey Rankin of Tuppers Plains. Austin Collins of Athens,
Allen People&lt;; of Pomeroy. Ryan Esiparza of Albany, and
Sha) na 1110mas of Vimon County.
In the under 13 to 18 horspo\\er. 900 pound class. the
winners. first through fifth. Amber Hart of Athens. Allen
Peoples of Pomeroy, Dylan Boivin of Albany, Kasey
Rankin of Tuppers Plains. and Amber Hart of Athens.

..

Farm Tractor Pull
winners announced
POMEROY - The ATV
pull always draws a crowd
of contestants and this
Meigs County fair was no
different.
A set of bleachers was
~dded to accommodate the
spectators who didn't want
to sit on the barriers or tote
along a lawn chair.
The winners have been
announced by the Fair
Board and are listed first
through fifth respectively as
they placed in the various
categories of competition.

They are:
Utility: Paul will of
Pomeroy. Jason Hall of
Pomeroy, Jon Bartlett of
Guysville. John Richardson
of Los Angeles. Calif: and
Daniel Hall of Pomeroy.
1100 found open: Sharon
Coen o Lawrence County.
Curt
Smith
of
McConnels\ ille.
Trevor
Shafer of Crown City. Gary
VanSkiver of Vienna, W.Va ..
and Daniel Buchanan of
Parkersburg. W.Va.
800 cc 1200 pounds:

Shawn Corn of Lawrence Danny Hall of Pomeroy.
County, Curt Smith of Colton Hall of Pomeroy;
McConnelsville.
Trevor Frank Shamblin of Racine,
Shafer of Crown City. Gary and Daniel Karr of Racine.
Greathouse of Parkersburg,
Ladies: \Vendi Miller of
W.Va. and Colton Hall of Pomeroy. Joyce Smith of
Pomeroy.
McConnelsville.
Anca
IOOcc 950 pounds: Philip S~ith of Pon;eroy, Ashley
Erwin of Pageville: Ryan Knder of Racme and Tracy
Collins of VIenna. W. a .. Hall of Pomeroy.
Gray VanSkyver of Vienna.
Kids: Kenzie H~ll o~
W.Va.. Daryl Lee of Pomero). S_ef Smtth of
Pageville. and Steve Smith ~1c~onnelsv1pe.
J,&lt;yan
of Racine .
Colh_ns of ~ 1enna. \\ .Va..
650 cc, I I00 pounds: Austm Hendf!cks of Rutland.
Dalton Smith of Racine. and Adam Will of Pomeroy.

Motorcross a
popular fair event
POMEROY
Motorcross was a popular
event at this year's Meigs
County Fair with high participation.
The first place winners in
classes of the event were
Cory Buttrick, two: Chri~
Meadows,
two:
Tyler
Wooldridge, two; Cory
Buttrick, Anthony Mullins,
Tim
Creath,
Harold
Beasley. Cameron Bayha.
Naoh Inboden, two: Garrott
Coe, three; Chad Wolfe,

Travis Edwards. Thomas
Shepherd, John Manley.
Jeremiah Downour. Lexi
Coen. Zachary Bayha,
Garrett Coe. Derick Powell ,
Cory
Cuttrick. "'fa) lor
Wooldridge. Laura Pullins.
Kirk Pullins. Garrett Dye.
Chris ~1eadows, Ryan
Hesson. Tracey Ford, Corey
Powers. Makayla Rose. and
Tanner Eltringham

POMEROY- Winners in the farm tractor pull contest at
the Meigs County fair. listed first through fifth respectively. in their weight classes are as follows:
.
•
7500 pounds: Travis Burgridge of Albany. AI Childs
Athen~. Tom Theiss of Racine. Huck Wagner of Racine.
and Dave Perry of Albany.
10.500 pounds: Joe Pinkerton of ~atderford. _Rusty
Wilson of Stockport, Curt Schott of Whtpple. AI Chtlds of
Athens. and Tyler ~ibcrt of Waterford.
9000 pounds: Travis Burbridge of Albany, Tom ~heiss of
Racine, AI Childs of Athens. Huck Wagner of Racme, and
Paul Biehl.
1
9500 pounds: Joe Pinkerton of Waterford. Rust) Wilson
, of Stockpot1, Larry Ritchie of Chester. Curt Schott of
1 ·w hipple. Da\id Smith of Racine.
6000 pounds: Floyd Nibert of Waterford. Vance Cline of
Leon, w. Va .. David McDaniel of Leon. W. Va., Edwin
Roush of Letart. W. Va .. Scott Kish of Millfield.
5000 pounds: Dloyd Nibett of Waterford. Vance Cline of
Leon. W. Va .. Travis Burbridge of Albany. and David
McDaniel of Leon. W.Va.
10.000 pounds: Bill Burbridge of Albany, Tom Theiss of
Racine. AI Childs of Athens. Huck Wagner of Racine, and
Dave Perry of Albany.
8000 pound diesel four wheel truck: Rain Vlasak of
Cutler. Kyle Collins of Coolville. Kyle Vlasak. Cutler,
James Vannest of Ravenswood and Glen Stone of Red
House. Ohio.

Horse pull results
POM~~ROY - Winner.., in the horse pulling con
the ~1eig~ County Fair in the 3200 poung lightweight c
were Jimmy and J.D. ~cguire first. and Richard Douglas.
ssecond. In the hea\ y weight. 3300 pounds and over. the
\\ inners were Dave and John seevers. first: Dewey H.
Daugherty. second, and Tom Moore third.

Bikes of all kinds driven by
all ages participated in the
motorcross event at the
Meigs County Fair.
Brenda Davis/photo

OLZE

CLI

IC

MEl

P

tStov s
Statlinq @ 139
•

3 rcl r\rlfl LJal !:I olz_
c 1iri1 c t\)J St.1 gJ

F~e£~PY~G~ I~

Foodt
Where: Holzer Clinic (Meigs Branch) Back Parking
Lot
When: August 2g.h 10:00 am - 12:00 pm {Weather
Permitting)
Ages: 3-12 years old

Gallipolis; OH

740446-2002
~

on·Sat8 7•Sun 11 5

Pt. ~lcasant, \W
304-675-5200
~on·Sat 8· 7 • Sun 11·5

Valley Lumb r &amp; SupplY Co.
7

1• 800-733-3334

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Eastern Football Schedule, Page 86

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Reds outlast Brewers in 10
MILWAUKEE (AP) Pinch-hitter
Darnell
McDonald hit an RBI double to drive in the winning
run in the lOth inning. and
the Cincinnati Reds beat the
Milwaukee Brewers 4-3 on
Wednesday night.
McDonald, who threw out
Ryan Braun trying to score
the winning run in the ninth
Tuesday night. hit a liner
that Braun in left field misjudged.
Wladimir Balentien hit a
ground-rule double past diving right fielder Jody Gerut
off Mike Burns (3-5). the
fifth Brewer reliever. with
one out in the lOth. Craig
Tatum then hit into a fielder's choice, advancing to
second when Balentien was
caught in a rundown.
Tatum
scored
on
McDonald's drive that went
over the head of Braun, who

DAY
WEEK

broke in at first then
watched the ball sail over
his head.
Francisco Cordew pitched
the lOth for his 27th save,
one night after blowing his
second save of the season.
Dan icl Herrera (3-4)
pitched an inning for the
win.
Claudio Vargas failed to
protect a 3-2 lead for
Milwaukee starter Braden
Looper. letting Cmcinnati
tie the game on his throwing
error in the ~ighth .
Scott Rolen legged out an
infield single, advanced on a
groundout, stole third and
scored when Vargas fielded
pinch-hitter Kevin Barker's
chopper toward third and
threw over the head of a
leaping Prince Fielder at
first.

Please see Reds, Bl

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Brandon Phillips, left, tags out Milwaukee Brewers' Casey McGhee,
right, as he attempted to steal second base in the second inning of a baseball game
Wednesday in Milwaukee.

1 GAMES

Anderson doesn't mind
suspense of QB derby

FRIDAY GAMES

Athens at Gallia Academy
Tug Valley at Point Pleasant
Meigs at Coal Grove
Minford at River Valley
Symmes Valley at Southern
Buckeye Trail at Wahama
South Gallia at Waterford
Alexander at Eastern

BEREA (AP) - A collective cheer resonated from
the middle of the field at the
Cleveland Browns practice
facility on Wednesday.
1
1 No. coach Eric Mangini
has not settled on a starting
quarterback. The players
were simply relieved they'd
reached the end of training
camp and daily life in a
hotel.
The competition bet\veen
Derek Anderson and Brady
Quinn that has engulfed
camp will continue into the
team's third preseason game
Saturday night against
Tennessee. Anderson. who
has carved a reputation as
laid-back and easygoing.
doesn't mind waiting on
Mangini's decision.
•Til ride it out.'' Anderson
said. "I don't have a
choice."
Mangini hasn't even
announced who will start
Saturdav's exhibition. but
that's not unusual.
Anderson said Mangini
has told the quarterbacks
'&gt;Vho will start "the night
before sometimes - or not.

SATURDAY GAMES

Valley-Wetzel at Hannan

Pitino: Sex
scandal 'pure
hell' for family
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
Louisville coach Rick
said Wednesday a :.ex
,... aa,• uaa involving a woman
accused of trying to extort
millions from him has been
"pure hell" for his family,
fuming that newly released
video of her police interview revived her "total fabrication."
Pitino spoke at a hastily
called news conference
hours after Louisville police
released audio and video
recordings of phone calls
and an interview with Karen
Cunagin Sypher. the woman
at the heart of the scandal.
Pitino has told police that he
had sex with her six years
ago.
Sypher claims in the
interview that Pitino sexually assaulted her. an alle~a­
tion she brought to pohce
after she was accused of trying to extort millions from
the coach. She has pleaded
not guilty to federal charges
extortion and lying to the
I.
•
The coach lashed out at
the media for again reporting on her accusations by
&lt;}~ring clips of the internews
Wednesday.
Prosecutors did not pursue
charges against the coach.
"Everything that's been
printed. everything that's
been reported. everything
that's been breaking in the

= Please see Pitino, Bl

~

Please see Browns, Bl

AP photo

In this photograph taken on Tuesday, Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor looks on during NCAA college football practice in Columbus.

All eyes on Pryor for No. 6 Buckeyes
COLUMBUS ( 1\P)
Everywhere he goes. the
eyes are on him.
He would stand out anywhere because he stands 6foot-6, a willowy athlete's
body replete with tattoos .
But in a city of more than
750,000 football-mad people, in a state that reveres its
Buckeyes and particularly
the guy who directs the Ohio
State offense, no one takes
their eyes off Terrelle Pryor.
When he goes out, he
wears dark sunglasses to
avoid the swarms of
Buckeyes fans.
"I try it but it doesn't
work." he said.
During the team's recent
open scrimmage at Ohio

Stadium, several thousand
fans showed up . There wasn't much question about
who they came to sec. The
flashbulbs fired everv time
Pryor took a snap. made a
run or threw a pass.
Pryor has become accustomed to the attention. He
fed off of it as the nation's
No. I qumterback recruit out
of Jeannette. Pa. He dealt
with it last year when he
took over as Ohio State's
starting quarterback four
games into what would be a
10-3 season. including a
share of a fourth consecutive
Big Ten title and a third
straight Bowl Championship
Series appearance.
Now. as one of the few

Michigan
suites cost up to $85K/per year
.
AN!'\ ARBOR, Mich.
(.AP) - The University of
Michigan has sold much of
the premium seating at the
Big House despite a poor
economy, a school-record
nine losses last season and a
finished product people
couldn't see.
nior associate athletic
Joe Parker said
the school has
commitments for 70 percent
of the luxury suites and
almost 70 percent of the club
seats that will be in the newlook Michigan Stadium in
2010.
"We're pleased
with
where we are." Parker said
during a tour of the $226
million renovation. ''When
the project is complete, we
expect all of our premium

Just whenever he tells me.''
The third preseason game
traditionallv is the most like
the regular season. with
starters routinely playing
well into the second half.
Receiver Bravlon Edwards
acknowled!!ed Mangini's
game plan... for the Titans
seems to be thicker and
more thorough, but stopped
short of saying the stat1ing
quarterback Saturday night
- whoever it is- will have
a decided advantage in the
competition.
"This game. in terms of
who starts. don't bet your
chips on it.'' Edwards said.
"Mangini is still coach
Mangini. He's still going to
make the decision at the end
of the da~. and who knows
what he's thinkin!!'? I wouldn "t bank anything...on it and I
wouldn't make anythmg of
it."
Mangini has dtv1ded the
practice
snaps
evenly
between Anderson and
Quinn. although Quinn
received the bulk of the.

seating to be sold.''
For $55.000 to $85 .000
per season and at least a
three-year
commitment,
well-heeled fans will have
16 comfortable seats in a 15foot wide by 28-foot deep
box that comes \Vith t\VO
TVs, granite countertops
and sapele wood cabinets.
The
climate-controlled
suites have huge windows,
which can be opened to let
the air and crowd noise in or
closed to keep inclement
weather out. Suite owners
will be able to have invite
two guests who have tickets
elsewhere in the stadium to
watch games with them in
the fourth quarter and can
buy up to four standingroom-only tickets to put up
to 22 people in the box.

Parker said 58 of the 82
suites have been secured
with S10,000 deposits.
There are 3,000-plus club
seats that cost $1 ,500$4,000 each per season.
Some of them are indoor and
most of the outdoor ones arc
covered.
Eighty percent of costs for
the suites are tax deductible
while 73-82 pl!rcent of the
money spent on club seats is
tax deductible.
Parker said some fans
have scaled back their commitments,
downgrading
from suites to club scats.
The school will begin giving tours of the premiumseating areas this fall on
Fridays and Saturdays.

recognizable names on a talented but not well known
sixth-ranked
Buckeyes
squad. Pryor is a rock star in
shoulder pads.
··I think he accepts that.''
offensive lineman Andrew
Moses said. "If \OU're a
quarterback at a university
like this you're going to
know that's going to be a
part of the deal. Terrelle just
wants to be the best player
he can be for his team. I
don't know if he's really
nervous about it. He doesn't
show it.''
A year ago. Pryor came to
campus as the school"&lt;; most
acclaimed
quarterback

AP photo

Cleveland Browns quarterback Derek Anderson throws a
pass as wide receivers Lance Leggett, left, and Braylon
Edwards, right, watch at the Cleveland Browns NFL football
Please see Buckeyes, Bl 1 traming camp Tuesday in Berea.
,,

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·,.YolfCould Be Eligible ·
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rho are enrolle\ m lh: Ad\ nntt

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McditJtrr Plan odtm e \ ETN \
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Adrnntra f"ret:c~mr lj a.\!( ..l"w\ ldl w "'~' flwak I , '. Jtw.~rwcc r.km
For more mfomr.:rtmn pf~e II Ple;mmt \·nUt) llospitf\1
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the,.~pt!&gt;1
tatTto ac.oom odl!e 'our Utet ~ue need

Please see Suites, Bl

f

�---.----y-. · Page B2 • 'l11e Daily Sentinel

Suites
from Page Hl
C'orl'.. truction began the
day after the Wolvcnnes
lost to Ohio State 111
i O\ ember 2007.
: The masonry and roof on
~ach ~ide of the stadrum has
j)ccn completed und construction crews nrc working
on finishing off the in~idcs
of the towering structures
,tlong l•.'ach sideline at the
;toried wnuc.

Buckeyes
from Page Bl
i-ecruit since Art Schlichter
jn 1979. He .,., atched Todd
Boeckman, a first-team Allig Ten player '" ho led the
~uckeyes to the national
shampionship game the
-season before, direct the
~ffcnse for three games. But
~fter the Buckeves were
lhrottled
by ·Southern
California 35-3. Ohio State
coach Jim Tressel stunned
.many by benching the tifth;year senior staner and
:replaL·ing him with Pryor.
who had yet to attend his
first day of college classes.
The results were mixed.
numbers were 0oood
Prvor's
•
- 631 yards rushing and
-six touchdowns, a 61-pcrcent completion rate with
12 TDs and four interceptions. and an 8-1 record as
n ~tnrter (he was at wide
receiver for the first play of
the bowl game, even
though he played most of
the game at quarterback).
But he came up short
against the two toughest
opponents left on the
Buckeves' schedule. He
failed ·on a short fourthdown run while trying to
lead a fourth-quarter comeback at home against Penn
State and then had a
i11ediocre outing against
Texas in the Fiesta Bmvl.
Ohio State lost both games.
He seldom threw the ball
farther than 15 yards all
:-.eason. leading some to
question whether he could
throw it far and accuratelv.
He often disdained the pa~s
to break out of the pocket
on a run .
Tre-;sel said he believe-..
there's a natural progress ion for a young quarter-back. and compares Pryor's
maturation '' ith that of the
Buckeves' 2006 lleisman
Troph)•-winning quarterback, Troy Smith .
_ ''He'll evolve every year
-from that standpoint. not
unlike Trov," Tressel said.
"Troy's t ir~t year. he was a
600-, 700 yard rusher.
Then he was a 500, and hb
last )Car around 175
because he got more experienced and he knew more
~bout coverage and knew
more about checking dO\\ n
and all those things.
Terrelle has a lot more
expenence than Troy had at
the outset, so I'd like to
thrnk he'll grO\\ into that
mold ."

:e

Browns
from Page Bl
..passing attempts in the first
preseason game agai n~t
Green Bay.
Anderson tightened up
the race with his performance against Detroit last
Saturday. directing the
Browns to their first offensive touchdown 111 c;even
games. He completed 8 of
J3 passe~ for 130 yards,
though a late interception
""hen he \\as reinserted to
run a 2-mmute drive near
the end of the first half tarnished his final numbers.
Anderson isn't \\ orried
about whether he'll start or
come off the bench against
the Titans.
''I'll
go
in
when
(Mnngmi l tells me to go in
and take advantage of every
play that
is called."
Ander::-.on said. ''Hopcfully,
they're all positive."
If Anderson, who went to
-the Pro Bowl in 2007, is
frustrated over another
-competition to keep his
starttng job, he's not showlllg it. He hns steadfastly
refused to get drawn m to
an) debates over the quarterbacks.
Wednesday he declined to
dissect what he and Quinn

'- w w

www.mydailysentinel.com

After Michi!!an ho~t:. the
Buckeyes thi~~ sca~on. the
existing pres~ box will be
torn down and 704 chairback seats with contoured
backs and cup holder:. will
be built in its place.
To improve wheelchair
access, the stadium's capacity dipped to I 06.20 I and
slipped behind Penn Statc'::-.
Beaver Stadium

a~

the

country's biggest football
venue. Parker expects the
Big House will be back on
top with 108,000·plus scats
in the future.
Pryor often i~ compared
to Vince Young. the tall and
lanky ex-Texas quarterback
now with the ~FL's
Tennessee Titans.
Pryor ha~ tired of the
comparisons. Young also
was considered a run-first
quarterback. even though
he hit several memorable
passes while leading his
team to the national championship as a senior with a
stirring win over USC.
''I have to play my game,
play Tcrrclle
Pryor's
game." he said. "I'm not
trying to be someone 1'm
not. (I'm) trying to be better someday. I don't strive
to be Vince Young.
Because I'm not Vince
Young. I won't be Vince
Young.''
One reason Pryor is such
a focal point thts year for opposing defenses as
well as Ohio State fans is that the Buckeyes arc
wathout most of their top
weapons from a year ago.
Leading rusher Chris
"Beanie"
Wells.
top
receivers Brian Robiskie
and Brian Hartline and
three starters on the offensive line are gone.
During a preseason
scrimmage. with the defensive line bowling over lineman and applying heat on
Pryor. it was clear that he
was frustrated.
"Yeah. he was," defensive
tackle
Doug
Worthington said. "He's
just somebody who wants
the best for his offensive
line. his runnin!! backs and
the team as a w~holc. When
we pre~sured him a few
times he got really. really
flustered and a couple of
times I just told him to
calm down and keep playing and\\ hatnot. But he's a
co'inpetitor. You've got to
love it."
If the fans· massive
expectations are weighing
on him. he's not .;hawing it.
Asked
about
being
sclcctcd as the Big Ten's
preseason player ~of the
year. he swatted aside the
question like an off-balance. undersized tackler.
"It's one thing to be an
All-American and All-Big
Ten and the player of the
year at the end of the season. Before it. it doesn't
mean anvthmf!... he ~aid.
"It 's gre"at
ha\'e that
before the sea~on. but it
means nothinf!. I didn't do
anything yet.':\Vhatever he docs, a lot
of people will be \\ atching.

to

¥

--·-w-_.. ,_____
. 1

Thursday,August27,2009

Wolves' GM Kahn says no resolution yet in Rubio case
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Minnesota Timberwolves
president Dm id Kahn disputed a Spanish report
Wednesday that point guard
Ricky Rubio will be staving
in Spain for another "two
years.
The Spanish Wch site
Marca.com reported earlier
in the day that Regal
Barcelona had reached a

Reds
from Page Bl
With runners on first and
third, Vargas struck out
Drew Stubbs and then
caught Paul Janish looking
to end the threat.
Reds emergency starter
K1p Welb, whose longest
outing this season in three
appearances was four
innings of relief against

af!reement with I have attained today, n0 Rambic; get closer to training
Rubio'~ team. DKV Joventut team in any league has camp.

buyout

for $5.3 million. The report
said Rubio \\Ould sign a sixyear deal with the team that
included an affordable buyout in 20 II that would allow
him to come to the NBA.
' But Kahn Issued a statement saying no deal has been
reached.
"Based on the information

reached a deal wtth DKV
Joventut concerning Ricky's
buyout. which must be
accomplished before Ricky
is released from his contract
with DKV Joventut." the
statement read.
That means that Rubio's
~aga will continue as the
Wolves and new coach Ktut

The Timberwolves selected Rubio "'ith the fifth ptck
in the June draft, knoY. ing
full well of the ::-.ticky buyout
'' ith
DKV
situation
Jo\·entut. Rubio JS under
contract for another two
vears with Jovcntut. a
that includes an $8 mill
buyout.

Washington on Aug. 15.
made a 2-0 lead stand up
until the Brewers broke
through with three runs in
the lifth.
Gerut homered to make
it 2-1, and an out later
Wells walked Braun. After
a vi:.it to the mound from
manaf!er Du~tv Baker.
Wells: making· the spot
start for Aaron Harang,
who had an emergency
appendectom) over the
weekend and is out for the

year, gave up a horner to
Fielder. The 435-foot towering drive to right barely
stayed f,tir.
f'ielder's 34th home run
of the season pu~hed his
major league-leading RBI
total to 112.
Wells walked three and
struck out two in his first
start since July 21. 2008.
for Colorado. His start
snapped a string of 66 consecutive relief appearances.

After hitting two solo
home runs Tuesday in the
Reds' 8-6 extra-innings
victory, Laynce Nix hit his
13th of the season. off
Looper for a 1-0 lead. The
~1ilwaukce
right-hander
leads the majors in home
runs allowed with 32.
Corky l\liller, promoted
Tuesday from Triple-A
Louiwille in time to catch
all 13 innings of Tuesday's
win. singled and :-cored on
Janish" iingle.

Pitino
from Page Bt
news on the day Ted
Kennedy died is I 00 percent a lie. a lie," Pitino said.
"All of this has been a lie, a
total fabrication of the
truth.''
The 56-year-old married
father of five, who's a
Roman Catholic, said the
scandal hu:s taken a heavy
toll on his wife and family.
"It has been pure hell for
her and my family,'' he said.
"I admitted to you 1 made
a mistake, and believe me I
will suffer for that mistake;· he added.
Pitino 's remarks were his
tirst public statements since
a five-minute apology two
weeks ago for an ''indiscretion'' with Sypher at a
Louisville restaurant in
2003. Sypher later told
Pitino she was pregnant.
planned to ha\'C an abortion
but did not have medical
in~urance. He told police he
gave her $3,000, money his
attorney Steve Pence said
was for insurance, not an
abortion.
1 Pitino had planned to stay
mum and let the case go to
trial when he says "the truth
wtll come out." Pitino didn't di&lt;&gt;cuss details of the
case at the news conference
and said his lawyer had
advised him not to speak
out at all.
Instead, he opted to come
forward after local television aired portions of
Sypher's interview.
"Enough's
enough.
everybody is tired of it,"
Pttmo said. "We need to get
on with the important
things in life like the economy and really some crucial things in life like ba~­
ketball."
Pitino has kept a low profile since his apology,

AP photo

louisville basketball coach Rick Pitino makes a point during a news conference in
Louisville, Ky., on Wednesday. Pitino said a sex scandal involving a woman accused of trying to extort him has been "pure hell" for his family and that he's had enough.

focusing on preparing the federal case.
Included in the release of
Cardinals for the 2009-10
season. He was involved in audio and video by police
individual workouts on were a series of telephone
Wednesday. and updates on messages left for Sypher by
the Twitter pages of several Pitino. Most of the calls are
players indicated nothing brief. with him leaving his
except another seric::-. of name and asking for a call
back.
f!nrel in!! drills.
~ A~ his news conference
In one mcs::-.age, though.
Y.as carried live on televi- Pitino alludes to the "verv
•
sion in Louis\ ille, at least unfor1unate ::-.ituation.''
"It's not somethinf! I can
one station split the screen
with Pitino talkinf! the left, decide on," he says ~on the
and the police \ •ideo of mcssa~e. "I think the best
thing 111 all ~cenarios is to
Sypher on the right.
The video released under go through .,., ith it. But, that
Open has to be your call because
the
Kentucky
Records Act shows Sypher (inaudible) ... I'm a high
sitting across a table from profile person ... I can't
Louisville Police Sgt. Andy really gi \'C you any advice
Abbott. A full transcript of on this ..."
lt"s not clear from the
the interview was released
by police earlier this recording, part~ of which
arc inaudible. what decimonth.
Sypher wasn't accompa- sion he's referring to. Sgt.
nred by a lawyer at the time Robert Biven said the
of the videotaped inter- recordings were provided
new. An attorney who was to police by Sypher.
In an interview with
later appointed to represent
her, James Earhart. said police that wa~ not taped
he fore Pitino 's remarks that but was summarized in a
the release of the police police report. Pitino said
video has no bearing on the the encounter with Sypher

was consensual. Police
spokeswoman
Alicia
Smiley said Pitino's interview wasn't taped because
his attorney accompanied
him to the interview.
Federal prosecutors have
asked U.S. District Judge
Charles Simpson to order a
psychological exam for
Sypher, saying ~he rna) ••
be competent to understa
the proceedings against h
or assist in her own defense
in the extortion case.
Sypher's attorney had not
responded to that request as
of \Vednesda\.
Pitino said Louisville
would continue to be a Top
10 program despite the
scandal.
"It has not hurt recruiting
one bit. We will still bring
in Top 10 players.'' he said.
Pitino finished his eighth
-.eason with the Cardinals,
leading them to a 3 1-6
record and the Big East regular-season and tournament
titles. The Cardinals lost to
Michigan State 111 the
regional finals of the
NCAA tournament.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

do well, then later declined
to answer whether this
could be his final quarterhack competition with the
Browns.
''I'm under contract \\ ith
the Browns for another
year." he said. ''As far as my
career goes, you compete
with guys in camp cvery
single year. regardles~ if
you· re named tl:e statter or
the backup going in."
Quinn was unavailable
for
interviews
on
Wednesday but '.\'as expected to talk to the media on
Thursday.
NOl"ES: Wedne:.day is
Jamal Lewis' 30th birthday
... Mangini admitted he's
comfortable ~tarting defenSt\e tackle Shaun Rogers in
the season opener even if
the Pro Bowler misses the
entire preseason. "I feel like
I have a pretty good handle
on what he can do,"
Mangini
said. Rogers
missed practice again on
Wednesday. ... Offensive
lineman Ryan Tucker was
not
at
pracrice
on
Wednesday. ... Team PR
man Dino Lucarelli is rettring after 35 years with the
organization. Lucarelli mo~t
recently ~erved as the
team's director of alumni
relations. He will remain
with the team as a consultant.

'

�~---- -----------.--

Thursda~August27,2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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breed pups, 3 boys &amp; 1 Hobby/ Hunt &amp; Sport YS Sat Aug 29 8·5 Be:
Building Materials ....................................... 306 Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Business ..................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
gort. (740)245-5221.
GUN SHOW &amp; SALE • ley Run, 1 mole from 124
Cotering.............................- .........................31 0
Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
5 puppcs, part GALLIPOLIS, OH Holi· NICe kods dott-es, gorts
FREE·
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312 Trucks .........................................................2035
Australian Shephard, 4F, day Inn Sat '9·5 &amp; Sun 8 12, bo·tS 4-6 Name
Computers .................................................. 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Contractors .................................................. 316 Vans ............................................................ 2045
1M 74()..25&amp;1832
9·3 Aug 29 &amp; 30 State Brands.
Oomestlcs/Janitoriat ................................... 318 Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Route 7
Daoly Adm.
Recreational
Eloctrlcal ...................................................... 320 Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Pomeramran puppies, for $4.00 Dealer Tables $25 1000
Flnanclal .......................................................322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Vehicles
sale AKC Reg. Ch a~· 740-667•0412
He•lth... .. .
3~6
Commerclal ................................................3010
poof\ Oloodhne, SITe os
Heating &amp; Cooling .......................................328 Condominiums .......................................... 3015
AKC Champion, 3M, 2·
Miscellaneous
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
black. 1 chocolate. $500
Campers / RVs &amp;
tnsurance ..................................................... 332 Houses for Sole ......................................... 3025
form
Ask
for
Paula 1990 Kombali Poano, the
Trailers
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Land (Acreago) ..........................................3030
740-379·2164
DeSigner Collection, very
Music/Dance/Drama ....................................336 Lots .................................. ,........................3035
good condotoon, $1000 RV Servce at Carmo·
Other Servlces ............................................ 338 Want to buy................................................3040
1ra11ers
chael
Plumblng/Eioctrical ..................................... 340 Real Estate Rentols ...................................3500
700
Agr.cuiture 74()..448-4423
74()..446·3825
Professional Services ................................. 342 Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Repairs ........................................................ 344 Commercial ................................................3510
Jet Aeration Motors
Roofing .........................................................346 Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Farm Equipment
repaired, new &amp; robullt
RV
Security ........................................................ 348 Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
In stock. Call Ron
SeMCe at ,Carn1~~
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
6 It Spt King Kutter diSC Evans 1-800·537·9528 Traflers
TraveVEntertainment ..................................352 Storage....................................................... 3535
74()..446-3825
S450 OBO. 6 It MaSSie
Flnanclal........................._..., ........................400 Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Financial Servlces.......................................405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Ferguson
Heavy
duty
M
d
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots .............................................................4005
3pt disc has leavers to ~~~~---~ ~;;;;;;;~ot;;;o;;;r;;;cy;;;;;;;e;;;s~=
Money to Lend ............................................415 Movers........................................................4010
adJUSt angel cut $650 Oak Ent. Center.
ex GREAT BUY 06 HD s:•
Educ.tlon .....................................................500 Rentals ....................................................... 4015
OBO 3pt lome flash tertii· cond. &amp; 2003 Ford Tarus Bob 3 ,ooo mo. 2 seats
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Sales ...........................................................4020
ex.
cond. cbll motor lig'lts, rd pogs.
zor spreader $250 OBO. SES,
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510 Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Caii74Q.367·0596
740·256·6880
Leasons........................................................ 515 Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
1o,500. 44t·1508
Peraonal .......................................................520 Resort Property .........................................5000
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
WantTo Buy
Anlmals ........................................................ 600 Resort Property for sole ........................... 5025
KIEFER BUILT,
;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;· t982
Kawasalu
550,
Animal Suppllea .......................................... 605 Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Harsea ..._ ........................................, ..........610 Employment............................................... 6000
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· Up right Schubert P1ano :~ la~g. • :;r~ g=k
Llvestock......................................................615 Accounting/Financlal ................................ 6002
STOCK
TRAILERS Beaut1lul sati,n cherry lon·
.
tore.
740-742·2422
Pets...............................................................620 Admlnlstratlvc/Professlonal. ....................6004
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· Ish nice touch to keys
Want to buy..................................................625 Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
TRAILERS, good
sound
always
MENT
Agriculture ...................................................700 Chlld/Ederly Carc ..................................... 6008
Automotive
&amp; stored In controlled envi· 2000
CARGO
EXPRESS
Farm Equlpment..........................................705 Clerical ..................................................... 6010
HOMESTEADER
ronment Wonderful pi·
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................7,0 Construction .............................................6012
ano for
a beg1nrer
CARGO/CONCESSION
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
TRAILERS.
B+W $1200 740·71()..2528
Autos
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
GOOSENECK FLATBED
Want to buy..................................................725
1997 Che"Y Blazer silver
Employment Agonclcs ..............................6020
NEED CASH
Merchandise ................................................ 900
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
Entertainment ........................................... 6022
Antlquea .......................................................905
TIRE TRAilER INVEN· Bargon Tools SR 554 2 door 4x4 $2500 OBo
Food Servlcos............................................6024
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Buyorg all k1nds of tools 740-645·4127
TORY AT
Auctlons ....................................................... 915 Government &amp; Federol Jobs .................... 6026
bus.· 388·8917
home·
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Help anted· Gonorol .................................. 6028
2001 Neon a1r, auto
388·1515 cell· 794·1188
rAAILERS.COM
Cotloctibles ..................................................925 Law Entorcement ...................................... 6030
maliC, 4 doOr S2000
74()..446-3825
COmputers .............................._ .................. 930 Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Absolute Top Dollar • Sli- OBO. 1999 Dodge truck
EqulPfllell\/Supplles............- - - · - ·..······935 Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
16 112 horse Kabota, die- ver/gold
co ns,
any V6, standard, 112 ton
, . . ~ ........................- ..........._ ..... 940 Mechanics.................................................. 6036
sel belly l"lower, back 10K/14K/18K gold JCW· S25000
080.
2003
f:uel Oil CoaVWood/Gas .............- ............. 945 Medical ..................................................... 6038
$7,000, elry, denta• gold, pre
b'ado,
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Musical ..................................................... 6040
Neon 77,000 "''
ar
74()..742·2498
anytime
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ................................... 955 Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
US
currency. automatiC $3000 OBO
1935
Kid's Corner.................................................960 Restaurants ............................................... 6044
set$,
dra· 2005 Neon 66.000 ~~ 811,
STIHL Sales &amp; SeMCe prool/mont
Mlscellaneous..............................................965 Sales ........................................................... 6048
Now Avaolable at Carmi· &lt;nonds, MTS Corn Shop. automatic, 4 door $3500
Technical
Trades
.......................................
6050
Want lo buy .................................................. 970
or
256·1652
chael
Equopment 151 2nd Avenue, Galli· OBO
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975 Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052
256·1233
polis. 446·2842
740·446-2412

livestock

s

saoo.

•

Real Estate.
Sales

Apartments/
Townhou5es
;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;o;;;;;
Free Rent Special Ill
2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
up, Central All
w.D
hookup,
tenant
pays
electric.
Call between
the rours ol 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882:3017

Tw1n RIVers rower IS accept ng apphcatoos for
Houses For Sole
wa tong fist lor HUD s.Jb.
Sldozed, 1-BR apc:-tment
2 bed 1 bath $300/mo
for the etdorly/dJSabled,
448-3570
call 675-6679
Hcd.2
Bailt
HL D
homcs 10nl} 199 .. anon.~5'-&lt;
d\\ I' I~ yrs nt lilt for list
2 bedrooms 1 15 baths
S00·620-49~6c' T461.
S540/mo + S540/dep. No
I llr18a BUD home.~Onl~ Pets. can 441 •1124
218•amon'~ d"n 15
yrs .on8
f\00.620.-4946 ex 3 room and bath downstaors f rst months root &amp;
ROI'I
5 roon house with 2 car depos1t. references r&amp;garage bnck front, 3 bed· QUired, No P()IS and
rooms, 1 5 bath House clean. 740-441..0245 •

.

500

..{ ~

E.!1 ·

POUCIE.S· Ohio 1/elley Publltl11~ r-v•lht t1gh1to filii. ro~ or cancel any ad at any11mo Erro~t muet be r'PO'la&lt;l on the flrllday ol ptlllllell!lon and
Trlb~nllntl~lller will be reeporalblelor no mcwc thlln 1111 colt of the 11911CO DCOJpled by the error oild only the ltt1111Mel110n Wo atcn not be ll~bkl
any lon or ·~ th:ll recvtta from the pUblication or oll!'-tlon olan lldver:leement. Corroctlon will be m!ldo In the llt111 mall:lble a&lt;lniOtl. • Box number ada
ere alwllyo confidential • Currlfll rile Qlrd ll$lPIIH. • All rill atate adverllellmentsare tub)c:od to tho Federal Fa'r Housing Ac1 or 19G8 ·'This newspaper
accep1e onty help warta&lt;l at» mMtlng EOE atanclorcls. We will nol knotl1~y occept an; advortlllng In vlolellon of the law. WIU nat be rnpontlble for any
erroraln an lid takm 011er the phone

Financial I

Coleges and Schools 12748

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

ads must be prepaid"

Money To Lend

Building Materials

Found Aug. 15 on Crab
Cre€k Ad sm . grey shOrt
haired ( f) dog wt long
ears 74()..367-0938.

added to your classified ads
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for 'orge

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslne55 Days Pr.l.or To
Public:etlon
Sunday Displaya 1100 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

.

Found· brown Pot Bull SAVI. THOUSANDS"'
mix on Momongstar Rd.. '&gt;!eel ~rch buildings· .I ,,.
740·949·2188
or pod.
740-416·7274
'icUing lor ba,J11c&lt;~ O\\o:d,
10x10. lOx.W D"pl ' dos

Dally

400

DE

GEIYOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD HOJICED
Now you can hove borders and graphics

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
300

have been

Real
dvertisements
ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

"All

. : \.

Notices
mlasion
of
dvertisement.
orrections will
ade
in the firs
vallable edition.

Dally In-column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sund y In-columm 9 a0 0 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

ct~SJG~ln

&amp; lot $98,500 or Will se I
house &amp; lot plus 20
Acres $119.500. Located
at t 5302 SA 7S Crown
Coty, Ohio 45623 112 mi.,
below
Robert C. Byrd
Loc~ &amp; Dam Phone
74()..256·1142
---------~~-Madison Ave. Pt. Pleas·
ant f•ame house on 2
lots, excellent locatoon for
2 futuro rentals $10,000
74()..645-0938

·la,;,G~r,a..;;
;. nd~e--•B~Ivd
----..,3~B~R

bnck, hardwood floors,
Fq, 2 full baths, central
111r, 10X14 metao buold·
1ng, 5 m.ns from town.
$89.000. 740·709·1858
4 bedrooms. 3 baths, 2
car
garage
attached,
covered
front
porch,
basement. att1c, acf)Bcent
lot Included, good ne 9"bor+lood dead end street
n ~omeroy, $120,000.
74()..992·2475.
74()..992·6949
3br,2ba o.!,den, Dr,kit. w1
brkfast nooK. laundry rm
on 1/2 a&lt;. 101 Sandholi
Rd
304·675·1280
I
304·675·1762
4 bed 2.5 bath 8600/mo
poss1 lo owner finance
446-3384

Beaut•ful 1BR apartmem
In the country freSitly
paonted very clean WID
hook up noce country ~t­
tong only 10 mons. l•om
town. Must see to appr&amp;coate.
$350/mo
614·595-n73
or
74()-64 5•5953
....;;.,;,.....;.;..-..._____
MOVE IN READY Completely fum shed 2BR, all
appll::1ces,
TV,st~~
sys, I nens &amp; COI'T'P ate
k1tchen ware $700/rra +
elec $500/dep. 446·9585
Two, second floor, 1BR,
unfurnoshed
apartMent~
for lease, corner of Se.c·
ond &amp; pone in Gallipolis.
Central aor. No Pets. Ref·
erences requued. Water
ncluded. $325 and S290
per mont.,. Security deposot. Ca I 44&amp;4425 ur
446·3938.
2 br. 3rd St. downstars
Raane S350 a mo. plus
dep.. plus utohbes, No
pets, 740·247-4292
Beauljlul Apts. at JaCk·
son 'Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr, from $365 'to
$560.
• 740·446·2568.
Equal Housong Opport~;
roly. Th1s 11\Slotutof' IS an
Equal Opport~.;n ry Provider and Employer.

Land (Acreage)

Island V.ew Motel has
bid. vac::ooes
S35 00/N ght
74()..44&amp;0406
s te, close to Roosevelt
school, 'lO I"''OOie 11omes One BR Apt close to
$25 000 304·675·7934.
flOsprtal. Free cable WiD
hookups (740)339·9492
25+'
acres
Prospect
Ch1.rch
Ad
Bidwell Pleasant Valley Apart·
$50,000
Call ments ts now takong ap
phcatoons for 2, 3, &amp; 4
74()..446·9357
Bedroom
HUD
SubS!·
Real Estate dozed Apartments Appli·
3500
Rentals catiors aro taken Mon·
day t!tro~.ogh Friday 9·00
am-1 00 pm Ofhce IS lOcated at 1151 Evergreen
Apartments/
Dnve,
Pont
P easant.
Townhou$8$
(304)615-5806.
and 2 bed:oom apts ,
TownroL.se
':.~~nlsred
and
unlur· Tarn
rushed. and houses on Apart:11ents - 2BR 1 5
PoMeroy and Moddleport, bath, back pat10. pool,
sccunty deposit requucd, playground. (trash. sew·
age. water pd )No pets
no pets. 740·992·2218
allowed.
$450 •ent,
over
garage $450/scc.
tbr,1ba.
dep.
Cali
:~pi $500 00 a mon + 74()..645-8599
$500 00 dep. 870 sq.
It located at Lakin WV
Commercial
coup rs or SlllQ e pe~n
only, no ch ldren or pets,
Office/
no smoking ns de must
WarehouscJStorage
have ref 304·687·8213
Groat Locat on 749 Th11d
2BR APTCiose to Hoi·
Avo , Galhpohsl
zer Hospotal on SR 160
$399 month for 1800
CIA. i740) 441..0194
sqft Buolti·out negotiable
Call Wayne
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
404 456 3802
&amp;
AFFORD
CATED
ABLE:' TownhOuse apart·
I'T'ents,
and/or
srnali
l-ouses tor rent. Ca.! ~~H•o=us•e=s•F=o~r;;;R=!e;;;nl=•
74()..441 1111 for apph· Sl9'1 m&lt; • o1 bc:l ~
catlon &amp; nloMlatoon
UanL Rrpo' (~
Gracious Living 1 and 2 )t:IB S ,_I'RI r h IIIli
Bedroom Apts at V.lago SOQ.t&gt;!O 4946 e~ RJ1"
Manor
and
Rovers de
Apts m Middleport from For ren1 2 br house &amp; 2
$327
to
S592 br BPI $375.00 a mon
740·992-5064.
Equal each on 5th St Pt Pleas·
anl304·812·4350.
Housong Opportunoty.
1.15ac:e

beauto1ul

wv

I

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
Education

Classlfleds

an

l

ap

Thursday,August27,2009

Help Wanted· General

Trc Athens·Metgs Ed~o
23 hrs/wk - Part
cauonal ServiCe Certer
'las an open ng tor a
lime Evenrng
reacher at the Athens
Shift
A tema!iVe School •o the
4 day woi'X week
2009·2010 School Year
5·30·11 cfo P"' +weeK·
Applicants must be cert1ef'd day
I edlllotnsed as al"' Inter- Local OffiCe 1n search of
ventiOO
SJ)eCia ist 15 even ng 511ft en-ployM diModerate (K-12) or ees a,-,hed applicants
to e1 g1ble to get a Sup- would be able to exh1b11
plement: L10ense nus courteous pt'one rT'anner
Is a !J-month pos111on
and basic keyboarding
wltl1
Board
approved
skills H1gh School
benefits
Salary based
graduate or GED preon expenenco and certlf'
!erred
calion accord,ng to the
-877-463-62 47
1
'&gt;&lt;llary schedule Subm1t
lettor of mterest, resume
x192i
and references to John --~----­
D. Costanzo Superinten- Looking for condent. Athens·Meigs esc.
venient work
507 Richland Avenue,
schedule while
SUite #108 Atrtns, 0h
45701 ApplicatiOn Deadyour Child iS in
llno· Septerrbcr 3 2009,
school?
4 30prT'. The AMESC IS
an
Equal
Opport~Oily
Part lime DayEmployer/Provider
shift- 28 hrs/wk
8:()()-1:30 +weekend
day
Help Wanted - General
Local 01f1Ce 10 search of
15 daysh It employees
S$ Need to ftll 50
0"-llif:ed appliCC:liS
open positions S$
would be able to exh bat
- courteous phone rranner
:-a thiS troubled economy,
and baSIC !(e~d ng
rt 1s reass1..1rtng to know
Skits H gh School
ltlatlnfoC1s or. can offer
graduate or
YOU a stable career
GED preferred
AND steady paycheck al1-877-463-6247
lowang you to prov1de lor
x2321
yourfc:;'l'laly'
$15/hr
Quality Control
Alter Ninew years 1n the evaluate
reta11
stores,
aarea, we have proven
traimng prov1ded
that we are comm1Hed to cat8n·712-0008
pleas
Gal11polls. and are cut·
tently seeking depend·
Medical
abto employees to help
Are You Tired of trc Cor·
fulfill cllont needs.
porate
Headaches
an
Horrecaro? Come Jo1n
You will take lncon11ng
and 'llako Outgo1ng calls a Fart'lly Owned Home
'or well known orgaraza- Healt''l Agency Provad1ng
FleXIble Hours and a
tions
Great Wor111ng Environment
Now Accept10g
Stop By ard Complete
Applications
for
Part
Your Apphcat1011·
lnloCis1on Management lir!1e RN's and LPN s
Ca
us
at
Corporauon
1-866-368-1100
242 Th rd Avenue
Gal1pol s. Or10

a

J0tfV

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SMART BUY DEALS ON

YARD SALE

WHEB2

fDr' prtvahl •lll'tY

$1001 S&amp;OOO

ft¥1, 4·"'-'trl,
ne. lttamlliH'ad

4 N-, a '-'•

4 - · 1411aya

4 - · 4G llayo

- .1
ftlm ..... ad

'29.99

c.ro, ,...,..,

llnele ead munJ.
faml)' . . . .

$45.99 ' $34.99

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com
Houses For Rent

Manufactu~ed

4000

3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; relng. fum. Gas heat, C/A,
No Smoking. WfO hook
up, No Pets. $600/mo +
depos1t. NICe locatJOn.
GallipoliS. Call446-3667
Accepting appiiC8tiOOS, 3
bd., 2 bath, S500 mo.
plus utll1t1es &amp; deposit,
Cia &amp; heat, no pets, Forest Run area, references
required, available Sept
15th, 740-416-0799

Sales

Education

"Th; ProctoMt e
Difference"
S1 and a deed 1s arr you
need to own your dre8f'l
home. Call Now'
FreedOfTI Homes
888-565-0167

letter ol 1n: ·est resume
and references to John
D. Costanzo, 51/penntendent, Athens-Me gs ESC
507 Rlcl&gt;land Avenue,
Ste #108 At'lens, Oh
45701 Appllcauon Deadline: September 3 2009.
4.30pn The AMESC IS
an
Equal
Opportumty
Employer/P ovtdor.

Housmg

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

!:

Rentals
~~--~~~~~
2br.,1ba. M.H. $400.00
mnth.+$300.
dep.+ ref.
304-675-4567 304-6745862,304-674-5863.
~~-~-~-~
Double w1de for rent 6000
Employment
3BR. 2 bath, Porter area
S600 rent + deposit.
740-367-0654
or
Child/Elderly Care
740-645-3592

3BR 1 bath home n LeGrande Blvd' $6!?0 rent
$650 dep. renter pays
utilities. NO PETS. Call
446-3644 for applicaton.

3Br mobile home 1n the CHILDCARE
country.
Fundraising Director Na740-256-6574
tionwide co. Call Direc2 bedroom mobile home tors and owners to help
an Rac10e, $325 a monf1.1. them rase money. Avg
3br,
$500./month
in $325 dep. yrs. lease, No $15-$20/hr.
We
train.
Syracuse. Deposit. HUD Pets, No calls alter 9pm, 813-355-3889
approved.
No
Pets 740-992-5097
304-675-5332 weekends !"'---~..,....,_-...,. ..,_-----~~-740-591.()265
Trailer m Gall Fcrl) \\'\ Chlldcare offered Flat$400.00 a mon +~.00 woods Rd. area, 15
For Rent: 3 Bedroom, d&lt;;&gt;
JO.I {&gt;75-4 tOO or years e~penence more
stove
&amp;
ref.
Oep. 740-IJH-8999
1nto call740-992-1821
(740)~79-?540, Patnot
Sales
For Rent: house 2 Bed· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::=;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;~ Home health aide lor eldroom, 1 Bath, W&amp;D Country IMng- 3-5BR, erly cou:&gt;le 10 Hamsonhookup,
offiCe space, 2·3 BA on property. vi le, Meags Co. expenlarge yard. Total eloctrie, Many floor plans' Easy er~eed \oJAizheimers pre$400 a Month plus De· F nancing! We own the ferred, must have refer·
posit, also for Sale 14x70 bank
Call
today! ences. wtll do back·
1980
Windsor
house 866-215-5n4
ground &amp; drug checks,
Tra1ler
older
Model. --~~~~-- for
application
call
Needs some TLC $3500
OHIO'S
740-742-23n
OBO.
Call
BEST BUYs
(740)446-2667 II no an2010 3BR Doublewide
swer leave message.
Clerical
S39,9n ·
House lor rent: 4 BR
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
house in Vinton 12 mo
FHA$349mo
Gallia-Me1gs
CAA
is
Lease or will sell on land
2010 3br/2ba Single
seeking an Intake Clerk
contract.
(740)441·5150
from $199 mo
to work with Emergency
or (740)379-2923.
MIDWESTHOMES
Programs.
Organizational skills, computer exMobile Home lor Rent: mymldwesthomes.com
perience a MUST and
Nice Mobile home SR
740.828.2750
ab1lity to deal with per160, 5 mi north of Holzer.
The BIG Sale
sons
of
venous
$450
mo
+
sec.
Used
Homes
&amp;
Owner
deposlt.(740)441-5150 or
SOC1o-eco1om1c
backFinar~e1ng
•
New
2Q1
0
(740)379-2923.
grounds. Temporary fullDoublewide $37,989
time (6 months). possibly
New 4br.,3 112 ba. downAsk about $8,000 Rebecom1ng
permanent.
stairs &amp; garage leave
bates
Valid
Dnvers
license.
message
lor
appt.
mymidwesthome.com
high scl):x&gt;l graduate or
304-882-1151.
740-828-2750
equovalen~ Resume w11t1
three (3, referer~ees to
Ms
EdWards,
GallO
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Me~gs C.A A., 8010 N.
State RoJte 7, Chesh re,
OhiO, 45620 by 09W09.
GMCAA IS EOE.
The Gallipoli~ Daily Tribune is seeking a

Sportswriter

motivated, people·oriented individual to
fill a vacancy in the news department as a
sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for
the daily edition of the newspaper, as well
as assist with the production of sports
pages.

Excellent

writing

and

English

skills, photography skills and knowledge
of desk-top publishing arc sought. The
pos1t1on

is

full-time,

with

benefits.

Interested partie~ can send resumes to:

ONUNE
BOOKEPPER
NEEDED TO WORK ON
BEHALF OF OUR COMPANY.
ACCOUNIING
EXPERIENCE
NOT
NEEDED . ANY JOB EXPERIENCE NEEDED
YOU WILL EARN UP
T0$3000 MONTHLY
CONTACT US AT ( cnsben204@gma,l.com
)
FOR
MOREINFORMATION."

Kevin Kelly, Managing Editor,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co ••

Education

825 Third.Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or mdtncws@mydailytribunc.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for full-time, part-time
and per diem OB/PEDS and ICCU
Registered Nurses. Applicants must have a
current West Virginia license. Previous OB
experience and previous ICCU experience.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
cjo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675·4340, fax to {304) 6756975
or
apply
on-line
at

~.pvalley&amp;r~
AA/EOE

Part-time
Instructors
needed dunng the day
In:
mathematiCS, economiCS, and account1ng
Mathematics and economiC instructors 'llust
have a rraaster's degreo.
an the d1SC1pl1ne If anterested please emaal a resume anc cover leiter to
jdanicki@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

The Athens-Me1gs Educational Serv1ce Center
Is seeking a Full Time
Educational Aide for the
Athens County EO (Emotionally Disturbed) Elementary Unit. Th1s 1s a
9-month pos1t10n
with
Board approved benefits
Applicants must pass a
criminal
background
check. and Meet all re·
qulrements needed to
servo as an Educatlong,
Aide. Salary will be
based on quahfiCBUons
and experier~ec Sublrat

•
SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Or Calland Schedule
Your lnteMew:

1-888-IMC-PAYU
ext. 2457
http:tfjobs.lnfoclsaon.com
Quality Control, eam up
to SIS an rour, evaluate
reta11 stores, tra1mng proVIded,
call
1·80Q-901·2694

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
• Room Addillons &amp;
Rcmodol,ng
• New Garages
• 'ilectrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooling &amp; Gullort
·VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
· Pallo And Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740-591 -0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

MICIIAEL'S
SERVICE CE:"TER

1555 '4YE AH' .
l'umrm\, Oil
• Oil &amp; 1lter change
• Thne l ps
• Brake Sen ice
• AC Recharge
• Mmor exhaust
repaar • lire Repa1r
• f!"'illlsm•~sion Hlter
&amp; FlUid Change
• General ~lcchamc
'1\0rk
!7-'0&gt;
992·0910
..__
__
_ _ __

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
· Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

29625 Bashan Roar}
Racine, OH 45771

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

• 740-367-0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

Hours

7:00 am - 8:00 pm

(3att Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Gai'-ages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinll &amp; wood siding
MIKE W.·MARCUM, OWNER

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Full~ in~ured &amp; honding ;nuilahlc
Fn:e e'timates- 25+ ~car~ c'J&gt;cricncc
('nl :tllili:th•rl " ilh \like \I arcom Rnnfiu~: ~ Rcmndchn~:l

.-------E-R---:z----~

't'\\'1\B
-=

~iardw~'d ca~Jnetrr And FufnHure
www.timbercr~etey.com

740.446.92

2459 St Rt. 160 · Gallipolis

LEWIS

C&lt; )1\STR t:CTI O:'\
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
All1)pcs Of
Concrete \\ork
29 Year~ Experience

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
f~qimatc\

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell:

740-416-5047

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

ROBERT
BISSEll

Public ~o~ in ~ell papt~
Your Ri2bt to Kno11, Delmml Rigbl to \our Door.

NOTICES

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

CO:\CRETE

hcc

~~-PUBLIC

'IIi t-1{1 L'
HI J...'tl' IHH I

[• IIi

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

PUBLIC NOTICE
2006 Suzuki LT F-250 bond.
Southern Ohio Coal A
T
V Bids shall be sealed
Company has submit- JSAAJ51A362109162
and marked as bid for
ted an Application to The Farmers Bank and NSPDemolitlon Project
Stop &amp; Compare
Revise a Coal Mining Savings
Company, and mailed or delivered
Permit (ARP) #R-354-64 Pomeroy, Ohio, re- to:
to the Ohio Department serves the right to bid Meigs County Commisof Natural Resources, at this sale, and to with- sioners
Replacement
Division of Mineral Re- draw the above collat- Courthouse
Windows and
sources Management. eral prior to sale. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
The ARP area to be re- Further, The Farmers Attention of bidders is
Vin~l Siding
vised Is located In Bank and Savings called to all of the reSpecialists, LTD
Fractional Section 2, Company reserves the quirements contained
(740) 742-2563
Township 8N, Range 15 right to reject any or all in this bid packet, parW, Salem Township, bids submitted.
ticularly to the require• Siding • Vinyl
Meigs County, Ohio. The above described ment for a payment
Win dO\\~ • Metal
This
ARP
encom· collateral will be sold bond and performance
and Shingle Roofs
passes 2.95 acres and "as is-where Is", with bond for 100% of the
Is located on the Rut- no expressed or 1m- contract price. No bid·
• Dct·ks • Addition~
land 7 1/2 Minute plied warranty given.
der may withdraw his
•Electrical
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle For further Information, bid within thirty (30)
• Plumhing
Map, approximately 1.8 or for an appointment days after the actual
• Pu~ Barn'
miles Northeast of to Inspect collateral, date of the opening
Salem Center, Ohio and prior to sale date con- thereof. The Meigs
approximately
1.5 tact Cyndie or Ken at County Commission·
miles Northwest of the 992·2136.
ers reserve the right to
Stanley TreeIntersection of Ohio (8) 26, 27, 28
reject any or all bids.
Trimming
State Routes 124 and
Mick Davenport, Presi325.
- - - - - - - - dent
&amp;
Removal
The application proPublic Notice
Meigs County Commis*Prompt .nd Quality
poses tho underground
sioners
Injection of treated acid NOTICE TO CONTRAC- (8) 27 (9) 1, 4
\\ork
mine drainage sludge TORS
*Reasonable Rate'&gt;
from Southern Ohio Sealed proposals for
*lnwred
Coal Company's Mine the
NSPDemolition
Public Notice
• Expencnccd
No. 31 Hydrated Lime Project Meigs County,
Water Treatment Facil· Ohio will be received FORCIBLE ENTRY
References r\\ ailahle!
ity. The Injection activ- by the Meigs County Meigs County Court
C.all Gary Stnnle) @
ity will occur within the Commissioners at the 2nd Street Pomeroy,
740-5\l 1-H114-'
abandoned
under· Meigs
Courthouse, Ohlo45769
ground mine workings Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Country Parks, Inc vs
Plc;a~c h~&lt;~vc II'IC\Sii)!C
of Southern Ohio Coal until 1 :00 pm, ThursJeanette Pierce &amp;
Company's Mine No. day, September 17, Robert Willis
Cuppkk ;."i; Son's
31.
2009 and then at 1 :15 Jeanette Pierce, whose
L:md~c111&gt;ing
The application Is on p.m., at said office last residence was
lllallnc &amp; Bu,int:ss)
file for public viewing opened and read aloud 5713 Canep Run Rd,
J.·1r) &amp; I''·' Cnpp~ek
at the Meigs County for the following:
Georgetown,
Ohio
Chm, 1-i:l'\'ill, Brad ,\ Se.ua
Recorder's·
Office, NSPDemolltlon Project. 45121
and
Robert
7-'11-IJn-3646
Meigs County Court· Specifications, and bid Willis, whose last resiCell: 74(1-50~-0075
house, 100 E. Second forms may be secured dence was, 46275 St At
ldt 740.508·0069
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio at the office of Meigs 124 Racine, Ohio 45771
45769 and shall remain County Commission- by and through any un·
so for at least 30 days ers,
Courthouse, known. estate; hereby
S&amp;I~
following the last date Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 notified that, pursuant
of publication of this Phone 740·992·2895. to R.C. 1920 and 3733,
notice. Written com· Adeposlt of 0 dollars upon a filed complaint
Dump Truck
fllents or requests for wilt be required for with the Meigs County
Sel'\ 1cc
an Informal conference each set of plans and Court seeking restitumay be filed with the specifications, check tion of the premises
We Haul Gravel.
Division of Mineral Re- made payable to. The upon which Pierce has
Limc~tonc. Coal,
sources Management, full amount will be re- abandoned herlhls mo20~5
Morse Road, turned within thirty (30) bile home and thereCompost, Top Soil
Building H·3, Colum· days after receipt of fore
is
still
In
Call Walt or Sand)
bus, Ohio 43229·6693 bids.
possession of the
within 30 days after the Each bid must be ac- property.
Therefore,
740-992-.3220
last date of publication companied by either a Plaintiff demands restior 7400-591-3726
of this notice.
bid bond in an amount tution of the premises
(8) 20, 27 (9) 3, 10
of 100% of the bid in its complaint.
(Cell)
amount with a surety No answer has been
satisfactory to the filed to the complaint.
Public Notice
aforesaid
Meigs The matter will be set
County Commission- for hearing upon comPUBLIC NOTICE
ers or by certified pletion of the publica·
NOTICE: Is hereby check, cashiers check, tion service before a
given that on Saturday, or letter of credit upon magistrate in Meigs
August 29, 2009 at a solvent bank in the County Courtroom lo10:00 a.m., a public amount of not less than cated at 2nd Street
sale will be held at 211 10% of the bid amount Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
w. Second St., in favor of the afore- Bonnita Heston AcPomeroy, Ohio. Tho said Meigs County counting
Manager,
Farmers Bank and Sav- Commissioners. Bid Country Parks, Inc
Ings Company Is sell- Bonds shall be accom- 30921 Lake Logan Rd
Ing for cash In hand or panied by Proof of Au- Logan, Ohio 43138
certified check the fol- thority of the official or 740-385-2434.
lowing collateral:
agent
signing
the (8) 27, (9) 3, 10, 17, 24,

140-992-1611

.

Trucking

Advertise
in this
spa.ce
for

$70

per
month

Larr:r.M,errroun. bt-ad._, oa

&lt;: 10 pe- lb ca,h onl~
Pmats ~ired n ad\;mce
Shipments arrl\e e\el')
olher Fnda'

BA:\KS

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

740-653-9657

CO~STRliCl'IO:\

co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial•
Re,idcntial
• Free Fstimatcs

l7-'0J 992-5009

:&gt;:o\\ Selling:
• Ford &amp; ~1otorcraft
Pari.\ • Engine,,
Transfer
&amp;
Tran,missions
• Aftem1arket
Replacement Sheet
~1etal &amp; Components
l·u \1 \ L 'e"•f \eh•de,
Racutc. Ohio

Cu,tom Home Bualdmg
su~el Frame BL&lt; ldm~,:s
Bu1ldmg. Remodehng
Gener.d rep;ur
'"' 'll.bank~cclh.com

cases

1956

Fresh, Home Grow11 Vegetables
Cabbage, peppers,tomatoes,
sweet com. green beam

SAYRE PRODUCE
47985 Adams Road
Racine, Ohio

(740) 667-6729
We Accept WIC and Senior Coupons!

sunset Home
Construction
"Buying Locally- Building l.omlly"
New Homes, Additions. Garages,
Pole Buildings. Remodeling. Roofs,
Siding, Decks, DQ" all.

740-742-3411
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling,~ letaI &amp;
Shingle Roofs. :-\e\\ Home·. Stding. [)e(.·k),
Bathroom Remodehnc. L1censed &amp; Insured
Rick Price- 17) 1"\. Experil'ncc
WVI 040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740-992.0730

,

�&lt;»#A

--------------~------------------~---- - ---PM~-----~~------------~

Thursday,August27,2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Bottle
1 Neighbor
parts
of Tibet
44 Follow
6 Downward arc DOWN
11 Crockett's 1 Forty
last stand
winks
12 Findable
2 New
fellow in
Haven
kid's
student
books
3 Deliverers
13 Singing
on bikes 17 Like many 31 Cracks
voice, Jn
4 NYSE
parrots
jokes
slang
18 Expiate
33 Bill
counter14 Closed
part
20 Sunday
34- Bator
15 Not
5 Is beaten
singers
35 Amusesubject
by
21 Golfer
ment
17 Lot sight
6 Used a
Stewart
36 Lincoln
19 Plop
22 Org.
nickname
broom
7 Covet
24 Nabokov 37 Clinic
down
20 Busy one 8 Hackbook
VIP
in Apr.
neyed
25 Jackson 5 39 Buckeyes'
23 Diamond
9 Poem type
hit
sch.
1 0 Okra unit 27 As a
40 "Lenore"
stats
16 Deceive
group
author
25 Cries of
insight
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (checkln.o.) to
26 Southern Thomas
JOSeph Book 2. P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, Fl 32353-6475
fellows
10
28 May It
Be" singer 11
29 Los
Angeles
suburb

Tom Batiuk

'

•••

..
t

•

.•
•
'•

..•

30Momes
31 Toast
spread
32 VCR button abbr.
33 Smear
35 Grows
dim
38 Smack's
cousin
41 German
sub
42 Authority
8-27

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

CHIP. yo(.)
ONL.:{ MCM/E:P

tAM 1'1-1~ L-AWN ...

....
r

VVJA.Y PIPYOLl
sroP~

"LEFTOVERS FOR DINNER, RERUNS ON TV ... IS
AN
OLD ARGUMENT YOU'D Lli&lt;E TO START UP AGAIN?"

Patrick McDonnell
WERE. GOING

HOME, MOB'j.

ZITS

S De

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman.

GOOD 6)'e.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

3 8
6

2 5

!

3

8
3 4

•

•'

by Dave Green

2 14

6
7

8 1
9

6
1 3

"When I get older will I have to
pretend I like coffee?"

5

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

4 5
Dtfficulty Lel'el

***

8
7 8

HAPPY BTRTI-IDAY for Thursda7; Aug. 2:1, 2009:
This year, focus is on your home life and chosen
direction. Be honest \'l-ith you~lf if you're not comfortable with everything th.1t might be going on. Use .special care \\ith your finances, especially with spending
invoking your home. In relationships, you m1ght h.1' e
a tendency to say one thing yet do another. lhis behavior could be confusing to your sweetie, if you are
attached. If you are single, you long for co:npcm)\ but
might mO\·e too quickly to the lh·e-in pha!;e. Be sm.ut.
SAGfiTAR.ICS can be an anch~ a ,·erv heaw one.

'17re Star&lt;: Show the Kind of'Dnl )ou1/Havc-5-Dynamic;
4-Posihvc; 3-AVtTO~; 2-»so; 1-Difficult
ARIES tMarch 21-April19)

* ****

Find solutions and create innO\ atiw 1deas
to achieve your desired resullo;. At thi~ morrenl, ne.1rly
.mything is possible. You ha' e a uni&lt;_~ue ability to see
what others don't even notice. lonighl: Brainstorm
time
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20)
Deal on an independent level; you'll ft.-el
more in conttol. More information comt&gt;s (orw,wd by
remaining on a one-on-one Je,·t&gt;l. Somrom' might be in
your way or seems to pre\'ent you from t&gt;st,lblishing"
goal. Discu.,sions could take many tums. 'llmight: In
the thick of life.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Deferring might not only be sm.ui, it
might be the easiest appro..1ch. Though you might nol
~any animosity or barrit&gt;rs, letting others have their
wav b enormously powerful. They Ciln see the n?!.ullo;
of their id&amp;l'i. Kothing can replace e.'perienre. Tonight:
Sort through your options.
CANCER Qnne 21-July 22)
***An e.b)' approaCh gets you much more of
what you want. Laughter play" a big role in e' ents and
what goes on. listen to news that !&gt;'UITOWlc.is a project
or matter that has a lot of impact on your daily life.
Integrate e\-erything tha.t is happening, but also o;tep
away. Tonight Ch~ a stres.s-busler.
LEO Q'uTy 23-Aug. 22)
Your im.1gination steps forw;ud .1nd takes
the lead. A OOis or parent could take a stand .md rain
on your parade. Obviously, you h.we f,u too many
ideas for this person to inlegratt&gt;. He or she needs more
boundaries and control. Say less. Tonight: Go for fun.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-St&gt;pt. 22)

*****

*****

*****

S·Z7

''1M TYING MV SPAGHI&lt;.Tfl !Ill K!IIOT5 60 IT'Ll..
•

£3£ S'A51E:R"iO EAT.~

***

R1sic security neEds to take over. If you mn
work from home, do. Your downtime will be slighUy
more relaxing. Your ideas are well-received in your
immediate erwironment Communication impron•s
•
later today. Tonight Buy a card or to~ of affection.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
lry another appi'OdCh \\ith a key a"-"'ciate.
You might be making :nore of a slight. Quite possibly,
the per.;on in\'ohed didn't even intend it a.-; you are
takins it. Openness allows you to expres.s your caring.
lbnight: Dinner \\;th a friend. Swap news.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-i\0\' 21)
;
*** Know when to head in another di.rectlon.
!
lhough you have a lot to offer, don't overestimate your ;
value. L'se gc101:i fiscal thinking to stabilize your budget. •
\ou might need to say "no" to an expenditure. Tonight i
Express your gratefulness.
:
SAGfiTARIUS (!'\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
***** Oaim your power and handle ex.:~ct.Jy
:
what you want Others l'llight make judgmenlo; or try to 1
gl'l you to veer in another diret.iion. Remember, it is
:
your choice. Li&lt;&gt;ten to news that comes forwan.i. A
mt&gt;t&gt;ting gives you a newfound resourcefulnes.o;.
Tonight: Whate\·er_puts .:1 smile on your (ace.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
A'iSume a low profile. Much is being s.lid, ,md
m.my op1ruon.; given. Meanwhile, your mind i~ active, •
pn.xiudng many thoughts. Sit back today, and just note !
wh.1t l'l)mes forward. Regroup and rethink a &lt;;ilu,ilion. :
Listen to news \'l-ith an o~n mind. Tonight: Do something ultimately for you.
AQUARIUS Q.m. 20-Feb. 18)
* Empha!&gt;ize the positives in your life. Your
friends mean more to you than most .;igns. Honor your :
prioriues. A meeting or get-together could bemme a lot ;
more because of how you value certain people there. A
key a-;sociate could be put off by your gregariou..,
nature. Tonight \Vhere the gang is.
PISCfS (reb. 19-M,mh 20)
***A mu-;t appeararce is lll'lportant. Realize what •
you need and where you are gomg. You muo:,t take the •
first ~tep, ao; others might be frightened and not as sure ,
of their direction. A partner could feel like an alb.1tross
right now Rel.1X; thiS loo will pa.,s. Tonight A must

*****

***

*** *

.lppea~-e.

jao1utlme Bisi•r r; 011 the lntmu-t
at hit}'://li'II"&lt;I:Pi'fJUi'littdngar.o.mt.

••
•t
I

�..

-.-----

1 ••

p

·-- -

...

Page B6 • The DaiJy Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009 Eastern

Thur sday,August27,2009

varsnv Football Schedule
8/28 Alexander at EHS
9/4

EHS at South Gallia

9/11

Sciotoville E. at EHS

9/18 EHS at River Valley
9/25 Wahama at EHS
10/2 EHS at Trimble
10/9 Fed. Hocking at EHS
10/16 EHS at Miller
10/23 Waterford at EHS
10/31 EHS at Southern

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            <elementText elementTextId="12616">
              <text>August 27, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="619">
      <name>kirker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
