<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3557" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/3557?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:52:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13468">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2a9289de03fcaca4f6a78680ce760fdf.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4695c2f04dc1a0597e4e43f07c58e32e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="12690">
                  <text>Strickland proposes
freezing mcome
tax cuts to boost
education funding, A2

Subway of Galli olis,
Holzer Hospice team u
for fun aising effort, A2

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

lie WI p

le

SPORTS
• Eagles open lVC
Hocking play at Tnmble.
See ]&gt;age Bl

J . REED

Jm.:kson\ mcce each m.1de
emotional statement-; a&lt;&gt;
part of a day-long hearing
POMEROY - Charles in Me1gs Count) Common
Williams admitted to the Plea~ Court.
robbery and murder of
Mcig~ County Common
Doris Jackson, a longtnne Pleas Judge Fred W. •Crmv
family f1iend, to a three Ill, Gallia County Common
judge panel Wednesday.
Pleas Judge Dean E\ ans
Withams \Viii serve life in and
Morgan
County
prison with no parole for at Common Pleas .Judge Dan
accepted
least 30 vears for the Fa-.. reau
February cri.mes.
Williams' plea, found him
Williams, 40. entered guilty, and agreed to the
into a plea agreement with negotiated sentence on all
the state that will keep him I0 counts of an indictment
behind bar::. for at least returned a month after
most of hi~ life. He and Jachon \vas lulled.
Bv. B RIAN

BREFD@MYDAILYSENTINE.. COM

le

Two months after chang- and WJlham Eachus of Plains home in late
ing h•s plea to not guilty by Gallipolis, huve main- February. Three days later,
reason of in sa nit). Williams tained that William~ suf- her bod~ was found in her
&lt;~dmttted yesterday to two
fers from mental ill_nes.s. dining room beneath a pile
count&lt;; of aggravated mur- althou&amp;h a ps)CIHatr~c ot her personal belongings.
der, three counts of kidnap- evaluatiOn perf~rmed th1s Her car, stolen along with
ping, aggravated robbery. summer found .lnm compe- , fireanns, jewelry, cash and
&lt;~ggravated burglary. two
tent to stand tnal.
other items. was recovered
count&lt;; of receiving stolen . At yc~terday'~ pic~ ~car- at an apar1ment complex on
propl..!rty and tampering mg, Kn1ght smd \\Ill tams Rtchland Avenue in Athens.
with C\ idence. He will be has been treated fo1: mental
Jackson was strangled
Oncnt health problems smce he and bludgeoned to death.
transported
to
Reception Center by mid- was 14. and has been trans- When inv~esticators discovday today.
por!cd for t~C~ltmcnt of men- ered her bmG', her throat
Williams was scheduled !n! Illness s1nce h&lt;; was.fiN had been cut and her hands
to face a jury in early Jaded for Jacksons murder. bound w1th a telephone
Jackson was reported
December. His .lttorney-;,
Please see Williams. AS
Charles Kmght of Pomeroy missing from her Tuppers

~

Appointments
needed for
Women's
-Health Day

OBITUARIES

B v B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENnNEL.COM

Page AS
• Judy Holter, 50

INSIDE
• Family Medicine:
High-risk groups
for H1 N1 differ
seasonal flu.
Puge 1\J
• Law You Cep Use:
Use caution when
considenng foreclosure
and debt mnigation.
See Page AS
• ODH honors rural
health providers.
Sec Page AS

File photo

. Sunday 1s
. the S yracuse Nazarene C hurc h's F1fth A nnua I B'k
. begms
. a t 11 a.m. WI"th
Th1s
1 er S un day. The ou td oor serv1ce
regisfration beginning at 10 a.m. Minister Paul Morton of Reno is the keynote speaker with a singing performance by popular entertainer Dwight Icenhower scheduled. Food and fellowship will follow at the Syracuse Community Center.

'

Nazarene Biker unday rolls on

• Ban handguns?
Supreme Court taking a
new look. Sec Page A6

•

-

WEATHER

Details on Page A3

INDEX
2 S PCI10NS- 12 P AGI.S

Calendars
Classifieds

A3

B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSEFIGENTOMYDAILYSENTINF.l COM

SYRACCSE ~ The Svracuse
Na1arene Church's Fifth "Annual
Biker Sunday will roll on for another
year begmnmg with registration at 10
a.m. thi~ Sunday followed by an outdoor church ser. ice along the Oh10
Ri\er at II a.m.
This year's keynote speaker b Paul
Morton. minister and pastor o.f Valley
View Baptist Church in Reno ncar
Marietta. Morton will be joined by
popular entertainer Dwight Icenhower
1 who will be singing ,dong with peri formances by a praise band. Rich
Fitch, who perform::. will puppets. will
also be at the festivities for children in
attendance.
Morton, who grew up in nearby
Jackson County. W.Va., said Ius message on Sunday will be ''Jesus, friend
of sinners.'' Morton says his approach
to preaching is to be "honest and real,
he~ause I think that's what the gospel
1s ··Morton, who is the son of a preach-

Obituaries

Spo1ts
Weather
~ 2009

A4

As
B Section
A3

Ohio Vnlh•) Publishing ( o,

l )jiJI,I !I!1.!I!II .

cr. has a degree in Crimmal Justice
from West Virginia State and \\as a
Charleston police officer before going
to Southeast Baptist Theological
Seminary in Wake Forest, l\:C. He has
ministered to youth and adults and say-;
J1c even had dn ''interlude of operating
a private inve~tigat1on company for SIX
years " Howe\ c..r. l 1 2002, he become
the 35th pastor at Valley View Baptist
Church which w.as founded in 1859.
Morton, who describes himself as a
Baptist minister with a pony tail and
beard, ~ays -;ince 1996 he's been riding a Harley Davidson Heritage
Softail and has put 94,000 miles on the
bike. He is abo a member of the
C'hristwn Motorcycle Association.
''My hmr and m) Harley get ~e
mto some places m) double-breasted
suits can't get me." Morton said
about being chosen to speak at Biker
Sunda). "I think becau!'e I am a
biker I ha\ e some credibilit) With
bikers. Biker~ are people .. .the) 're
mommies and dadd1es with kids and
they have the ~arne o;truggles and are

trying to get through life."
Morton said he hopes to deliver a
message showing tho.-.e in attendance
that the beo;t wa) to get through,Jife is
by following Christ.
Immediately followmg the service,
hiker~ will be taken on a shon bike ride
from Syracuse to Letan Fall" and then
back to the 'iyracuse Community
Center for a hog roast. food and fellowship. In addition. thL·re will bc.a bike
sho\V and bike games at the community center. Abo, Wayne Bowman. who
sells different biker patches will be in
attendance to sew and sell patches.
Each year twganizer-; of Biker
Sunday pick a Bible verse to focus on
with this year's being Mark 8:34
which reads "Then he called the crowd
to him along with his disciples and
said: ''If anyone would come after me.
he must deny himself and take up his
cross and follow me.''
Last year's Syracuse Nazarene
Church Biker Sunday was the Jm·ge~t
with 167 bikes and 353 people in
attendance.

I

5

Bank donates to
Christmas Gift Give-away

B3-4

Bs
rials

'

TUPPERS PLA INS The mobile mammography
van from The Ohio State
University's James Cancer
Center is in danger of canceling its tnp to Women's
Health Day on Oct. 13 in
Tuppers Pla,ns if more
appointment&lt;; aren't filled.
The van \\ill be participating in Women's Health Day
from 9 aJ11.-3 p.m. on Oct. 13
at St. Paul·~ United Mt.thodi()t
Church. The Meigs CountY.
Cancer Initiative's Think Pin!(
Program. funded by the Susan
G. Kamen Breast Cancer
Research Foundation, will be
pro' iding free mammograms
1 for Meigs County women
who qualify. Those women
I who qualify and show up for
the1r appointment will receive
1
a free. S20 gasoline V?ucher.
Grueser
, Carolyn
d Th. k p·
k s 'dot
theMCCI
OSU
10
~~n n~~ds 2 a~onfirm 'd
appointments. For those w~h
or \'.'ithout insurance who
ma) qualify for these
appoinhnents. call Grueser at
992-3853.
Qualifications
include but are not limited to
low income women.
In addition to OSU's
mobile mammography van
being on site. there will be a
varietv of free health
screenin!!s available which
don't re~quire an appointment. Those screenings
include (but arc not limited
to) blood pressure measurement. blood sugar, total
cholesterol finger stick testing. fitne&lt;;s and body mass
calculations, dexascans for
Osteoporosis. pulse oximetry testing to measure oxygen in the blood stream. etc.
These services a~ well as
free. healthy snacks will be
available from 9:30 a.m.2:30 p.m. at the church. In
addition, Ohio University's
S.:hool of Osteopathic
Medicine will offer free
gynecological exams, pnvate clinical breast exams,
etc. from its mobile van by
appointment. Call 1-800844-2654 or 593-2432 to
schedule an appointment for
these services.

Bill Nease,
president of
the Home
National Bank,
presents a
check for$750
to Jill Holter
for th1s year's
Christmas Gift
Give-away to
be held on the
first Saturday
in December
at the Bett"Jel
Church.

B v CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The first donation to the 2009 Christmas Gift
Gl've-awa) geared to seeing that
every child has a happy holiday
wa'i made this week by the Home
National ~~ank.
The bank's $750' contribution
was presented by Bill Nea'\e, bank
president. to Jill Holter ,., ho \tart
cd the project more than II years

Submitted photo

"

ago in her garage. As it grew over
several vcars it was moved to a
Reedsville church. and then four
years ago became a project of the
Bethel Worship Center.
Holter. no\'. co-chairman for the
ghe-away at the Bethel Church.
says she can't imagine not being
involved. '·I get way more blessings and rewards from this than
those being helped.lt's something
the Lord put on my hea11 many
Please see Donation, AS

�Page.A2

JE

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 1,

2009

rickland proposes freezing inco e
tax cuts to boost education funding
Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPO~:&gt;EIIIT

COLUMBUS Gov.
Stricklund
on
Ted
Wednesday proposl·d freez111g income tax cuts for two
I years to fund education in
1 the wake of a court decis1on
1 that halted h1s plan to put
lottery slot machines at
1
racetracks.
.
.
Strickland
suggested
Subway of Gallipolis Will conduc! a fundralsing campaign 1n 1 postponing the final )Car of
pctober to benefit Holzer Hosprce. Ten percent of all pro- the overall 21 percent tax
ceeds from sales made betwee~ 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. ~ach cut. raising about $850 milSaturday 1n October at the Galhpohs Subway store Will be hon. The cuts were scheddonated to Holzer Hospice. Pictured are Sharon Shull, uled to be phused in over
BSN, AN, Holzer Hospice Program Director (left), and five years at a rate of 4.2
Subway owner John Ra1rden.
percent a year.
The
governor,
who
pu:shed t~rs year for _an
'
overhaul m !SChool fundmg
~mJ curriculum:~aid lcad.ers
lace three ch01ces: nusmg
taxes. cutting education
r~1nding or p~stponing lhl.!
fi!H~l &gt;'Car Ol lllCOIJle-ta.x
GALLIPOLIS
Suhwa) Rt·staurant of Gallipolis is reductiOns.
"I am more convinced than
&lt;;prarheachn~ a fundraising effort in October to support
eVL'r that Ohioans understand
Holt.er Hosptce.
Sub\\ay owner John Rairden saiJ Holter Ho~picc will the link bctw~en cducatton
receh e 10 percent of the proceed., from all sales between and job creation.'' Strickland
10 ,Lm and 2 p.m. each Snturda) in October at its Eastern said. "Linderfunding educaA' enue store in Gallipolis. ln addiuon to the Gallipoli:, tion at this critical t11ne
location. Rairdcn O\\ ns Subway stores in Jackson. Pomeroy would undermine our ability
to position our Mate for
and Rio Grande, Ohio. and Point Plea-..ant. W.Va.
Rairden smd Tom Young. Business Development growth after the economy
Rcpresentathc for the Holler Health S)stems Long Term· recovers. It would also be
Care Division, approached h1m with the fundraising idea devastating for our schools in
the near term.''
and he wa!&gt; glad to lend a hand.
Strickland said that in
"I hope to help educate the public about the benefits of
postponing
the income-tax
Hospice through this project." Rairden !&gt;aid. "Hospice is a
reduction, Ohioans'' ill only
good program and ''e .tre glad to help support it."
Rairden is no stranger to Holzer Ho~pice. He has been a pay more in the 2009 and
spono;or of the annual Hits for Hospice softball tournament 2010 tax years than the 2008
tax year if they earned more
and has been invohed in other Hospice e\ents.
··we are excited about this purtnership with Sub'' ay," money. Otherwise, Ohioans
:-;a1d Teresa Rem). MHA, LNHA. BSN. RN, System Vice will see no change - and
,President Long Term Care/Home Care Services for Holzer mo~t will actually see a
Health Systems. "We are thankful for Mr. Rairden's gen- slight decrease because the
amount that can be claimed
erosity and for h1s support of IJol.t.er Hospice."
Holzer Hospice was founded in 1994 and provides hos- as .t personal exemption has
pice &lt;1nd pallrative care to resident)': Gallia, Jackson and grown, he said.
The governor's request
,Meigs counties as well as portions of Athens. La\\ renee
and Vinwn counties in &lt;;outhem Ohio Hospice is part of must be approyed by the
Holzer Health Systems' Long Tem1 Care Di\'ision, \\hich state Legislature. where the
includes Holzer Home Care. Holz~r Senior Care Center, House IS controlled by folHol1.er A%istcd Li\ ing in G&lt;1llipolb and Jackson, Holzer low Democrats and the
Senate is .controlled by
Extra Care. Holzer Semor Outreach and LifeLine.
"Hospice pro\ ide;; a '\:aluable service for so many fami- Republicans. Strickland did
lies in our region. and we apprecmte the support of com- not request that lawmakers
munity partners like Mr. Rairden and Subwa)."' said Holzer
Hoc;,pice Program Director Sharon Shull, BSN. RN
_For info~·marion about Holzer Hospice or the other !crwces proVIded by Holzer Health Systems, call (800) ::&gt;004850 or (740) 446-5074, or visit Ho/zer.org.
I BY MIKE STOBBE

i

• I"IS
a
1p0
G II
team up
Holzer Hospl•·ce
• effort
or
un
raiSing
f f d
SUb· way 0 f

AP photo

Gov. Ted Strickland talks about eliminating final year of state income tax to fix state budget at the statehouse in Columbus Wednesday.
act on his proposal within a
certain amount of time. but
.said "the sooner the better."
Stnckland :-aid he plans to
move fon\ ard on the final
4.2 percent reduction once
the current budget's troubles are alleviated ..
Last week. the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled that
the slot machine proposal
Strickland first turned to
during the budget pinch is
subJeCt to voter approval.
Stnckland, \\ ho reversed
himself on expanding gambling to propose the slots
plan, had been counting on
it contribute about $850
million to help balance the
t\\ o-year education budget.
Strickland said the court's
decision made it impossible
for the slots revenue to contribute to the current-two
year budget. The plan also
faces two additional )U\\suits questioning the constitutionality of expandmg the
Ohio Lottery to include slot.

Strickland said he will
seek a declaratory judgment
from the Ohio Supreme
Court on whether the slots
plan is legal. lf it h,
Strickland Sdid he \\Ould
consider going forward with
it in the future but not soon
enough to raise money for
the current budget.
The governor's political
opponents are likely to hammer him for what, in their
VIC\\. is a tax increase proposal he announced Wedne-,day.
The move wao; characterized
as a tax increase before the
governor's news conference
announcing it had e\en concluded.
State Rep. Jay Hottin2:er,
a Republican from Newark,
said in a statement he was
grateful the Democratic
governor had started the
debate on til hng the hole
created by the slots.
''However,
Governor
Strick1and has consistently
maintained that raising

taxes in a poor economy ia
bad idea that will lik~
delay the economic recoverv of Ohio. Now he has
changed
h1s
mind,''
Hottinger said. "I think he
was right the fiNt time.''
Strickland said putting off
tax cuts for two years is not
a tax increase, but the
a' oidance of one
"Nov.. of cour e. some
will try to score political
poinh by branding this
delay as a tax increase,"
Strickland said. "Contrary to
what some may think I don't
spend mo~t of my life thinking about an election and
what my opponents may or
may not say about me."
The initial tax cuts were
pa11 of a package of tax
reforms proposed by former
a
Gov.
Bob
Taft,
Republican, in 2005 and
enacted ac; part of n larger
package of tax Ia\\
intended to make

Qh"IQ among 16 states Where drug deaths OUtnumber
·
traffiC• fatals
have overtaken traffic fatal- University of Washington lJ .S. deaths nationwide
ities has gone from eight in research scientist.
from traffic accidents in
2003 to 12 in 2005, and 16
"There has been a dramat- 2006, and about 39,000
in
2006. They
are: ic change in how doctors from drug-induced causes.
~ew
Massachusetts,
prescribe opiates." BantaAbout 90 percent of those
Hampshire, Rhode Island, Green said.
drug fatalities are sudden
In the 1990s, he said, doc- deaths from overdoses, but
Connecticut. New York.
New Jersey. Maryland, tors began recognizing that the count includes people
Pennsylvania.
Ohio, chronic pain was undertreat- who died from organ damMichigan.
Illinois, ed. The prescribing of age from long-term drug
Colorado. Utah. Nevada, painkillers escalated after use or abuse.
that. Today, about one in five
Jn Massachusetts. there
Oregon and Washington."
It's not clear why those U.S. adults and one in 10 were more than I ,000 drugstates have seen such a shift, adolescents are prescribed related deaths in 2006, doubut experts said certain an opiate each year. he said. ble the number of traffic
"The pendulum swung in deaths. according to the
drug:- may be more of a
problem in some states than the other direction." he said. CDC. Michigan had about
Using death certificate 500 more drug deaths than
in others.
While cocaine and heroin data. CDC researchers 'ehicle fatalities, and New
continue to be si!!nificant counted more than 45,000 York had 350 more.
killers, most of the ~increa e
is attributed to prescription
opiates such
as the
painkilleJ"s
methadone,
Oxvcontin and Vicodm.
f-:rom 1999 to 2006, death
a~
rates for suoh medications
climbed for every age group.
Deaths from methadone
alone increased sevenfold,
according to the CDC.
It's not all black market
Rd. North of Pt Pleasant. ......,.._
stuff. either.
About half of the opiate
medication deaths in King
County, Wash., whil·h
includes Seattle, involved
people who got their dmgs
thtough legal prescriptions.
said Caleb Banta-Green. a
Sa\\ mill Demo's
Antique Gas and Engine Shm\

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Court: Ohio drunken
·drivi~g penalty constitutional

1

BY STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATE::D PRESS

· COLUMBUS- 'l1te Ohio Supreme Court on Wednesday
upheld an additional 1()-day jail penalty for repeat drunken
Clriving offenders who refuse to t.ake a breath test when
pulled O\er on suspicion of another DUI offense.
The court's 4-3 ruling Wednesday O\erturned a state
appeals court findmg that the additional penalty for refusing a breath test violated the constitutional ban on unreasonable searches and ~eizures.
Ohio law sets a mandatory minimum of a 10-day jail sentence for a repeat dmnken driver offender. and that sentence
gets bumped to 20 days 1f the offender refuses a breath test.
Attorne)S for Union Count)' motorist Corey Hoover, who
was stopped by a deputy sheriff in September 2006. ar!!ued
in their appeal to the Supreme ·court that both the extra
pen,llty and the drunken drivin!? law itself should be over.tumed. Hoover had been com 1cted of a drunken driving
offense in the previom. six years.
Writing for the majority. Justice Judith Ann Lanzinger
wrote that a prior offender had no constitutional right to
refuse a "re,1sorMbly reliable chemical test."
"Askmg a d1iver to comply with conduct he has no right to
reluse and thereafter enhancing u later sentence upon conviction docs not viol.ttc the constitution.'' Lanzinger wrote.
She noted Ohio's ''implied-consent'' law in which anyone
who operates u motor vehicle is deemed to have giwn con~ent lOa chemical test of blood, urine or breath.
Lant.ingcr also said the test isn't administered unul after
probable cause exists. The officer pulled Hoover over after
she saw hun drive across the center line. and she then
smelled a strong odor of alcohol and required him to do
·
field c;obriet) tests.
Justice Paul Pfe1fer wrote the dis'&gt;enting opinion, in
which he was joined b) Chief Justice Thomas Moyer and .
ju&lt;;tice Terrence O'Donnell.
Pfetfer \\rotc that the court's decisions diverged from
pre\ iou'&gt; decisions that affirmed only admmistrative penaltie&lt;&gt; for failure to consent to a chemical test. ~uch as suspen!&gt;ion of a license.
Pfeifer !\atd the additional 10-day jail sentence was a
cnmmal s.tnction.

uried in
Credit Card Debt?
We can get you out of debt quickly
and help you avoid bankruptcy

ATLANTA- In 16 states
and counting. drugs now
kill more people than auto
accidents do, the government said Wednesday.
Experts said the startling
shift reflects two oppos1te
trends: Driving is becoming
safer. and the legal and illegal use of powe1·ful prescnption painkillers is on
the rise.
For decades, traffic accidents have been the btggest
cause of injury-related
death m the t.: .S .. and they
are still No. 1. But drug
overdoses are pulling ahead
in O{lC state after another.
"People see a car accident
as something that might
happen to them." sa1d
Margaret Warner, an epidemiologist
with
the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Aut us for
death from a dmg overdose,
"maybe they see 1t as something that's not going happen to them."
The drug-related death
rate roughly doubled from
the late 1990s to 200fi.
according to the most recent
CDC data.
The number of statel&gt; in
which drug-related deaths

for your FREE consultation

. 877-264~8031

(3041 675-5737

BDYNG
SCRAP GOLD

CEOs Quilt Shm'
\ntique Bottle Show • Crawl) S\\ap Meet
Singing h~ De\\~ Taylor
Gourd Club "ill be having n ~ale
Antique Tractor Pull (Sat. Onl~ lit 1 pm)
Gun Stingers Sho\\ (Sat. Only 12 ~oon, 2 pm &amp; 4 pm)

''ill

Re\. Larry Fleming
be conducting Church
Sen ices Sundn) 9 nm in our Log Church

US COINS &amp; CURRENCY at
COIN SBOW

Go::.pel Sing Sunday 1:30pm
Group~:

Sunday October 4th
9am to 3 pm • Holiday Inn Gallipolis
'

CALL CREDIT CARD RELIEF

state Farm

.

MTS
Coins
151 2nd Avenue • Gallipolis

(ilorylaud Believers, The She/tons.
The I ightners &amp; The f.'lldie William\· Family
Apple Bu1ter making,
Apple Cider making and
Homemade Veg. Soup made outside
in large kettte over an open fire

446-2842
..

"

�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 1,

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Thurpday, Oct. 1
SYRACVSE - Syracuse
. lage Council, regu ar
7 p.m., VIllage hall.
1111
""1'f"'" Oct. 5
RACINE
Racrne
V1llage Council, regular
meeting at MW time, 6 p.m.,
muricipal building.
Wednesday, Oct. 7
MARIETIA Natural
Resources
Assistance
Council meets at 10 a.m .,
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
Aeg1onal
Development District, 1400
Pike St., Manetta. The counci wi'l rev,ew applications
for Round 6 eligibility.
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meettng, 5 p m.,
conference room, Meigs
County Health Department.

.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 1
CHESTER Chester
~hade
Historical
~sociation, 7 p.m. at the
~hester Courthouse. Plans
for appreciaton dinner for
Chester's volunteer firemen.
TUPPERS PLAINS Ladies Auxiliary VFW, 6
p.m. potluck and mspection,
at the post home.
Friday, Oct. 2
POMEROY
Me1gs
PERl,
Chapter
74,
Muilberry
Community
Center. Phillip Roberts, Dist.
7 representative to speak
on PERl legislative process.
Saturday, Oct. 3
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, special
meetmg to confer the
Fellowcraft degree on one
candidate. Breakfast, 8
a.m., degree work at 9 a.m.
All Fellowcraft and Master
Masons invtted.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 fun night and
poti.Jck super 6:30 p.m. at
alem Center Hall on
&gt;Un1y Ro d 1.
•
Mo d~, Oct. 5
POMEROY j Meigs
Band Boosters, 6 p.m., h1gh
school band room. All parents and others mterested
asked to attend
POMEROY
Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon, conference room Meigs County
Health Depar1ment.
Tuesday, Oct. 6
MIDDLEPORT- Regular
stated meeting of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, 7:30
p.m. Bring non-perishable
food item for food bank.
Refreshments. at 6:30.
Thursday, Oct. 8
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m., refreshments served afterwards.

Other events
Sunday, Oct. 4
POMEROY -The Meigs
cal
Ennchment
•
foundation (MLEF) has
called a meeting of all former Meigs football players

ASK })J~. BR.oTHEI~s

;~~~m~~.\~~~~·~~;~~.
of the meeting is to provide
information on the MLEF
and the alumni football
game set for Oct. 10.

Could preschooler be depressed?
Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brother'S: :My
husband and I arc involved
man argument thnt has gone
on for weeks. \Ve both are
coneerncd about our J-ycarold little girl. She docsn't
Saturday, Oct. 3
seem huppy. But this is
RACINE John Dill where we di rrcr: l'vc sui'..
Fam1ly Reunion, 3 p.m.1 fered from depression in the
Buddy and Sally Ervin's res- past, and I wonder if she
Idence, everyone bring cov- could be depressed. My husered d sh.
band (the eternally happy
type) says this is nonsense,
but I can !'lee he is alv, ay s
trymg to cheer her up. So. is
Saturday, Oct. 3
it poso;Jblc for a child so
REEDSVILLE Prayer young to be suffcnng from
Awakening Conference, 9 depression'? - J&gt;.C.
Dear D.C.: This is n qucsa.m. to 1 p m., Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, tion that would have been
Ohio 124. Free of charge. unheard of just a few generRev. Elaine Pettit, presenter. ationo; ago. The picture of a
Breakfast at 8 a.m, served by happy. carefree little child i::.
God's Pearls women's group. one that is hard to tamper
HARRISONVILLE
With - surelv there b nothGospel Sing, 6 p.m., ing that coul~l be wrong at
Harnsonville Presbyterian ' that nge, and besides, what
Church on Ohio 143, New child of 3 or 4 is emotionalCity Singers and Victory ly rn.ature enoug.h t~l have
River Quartet.
sustamcd depression mstcad
MIDDLEPORT - Benefit ot' momentary bad moods or
gosel sing for Fall Harvest the occnsioiHll tantrum? But
Gospel
Sing,
Hobson some recent research has
Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. given nsc to a theory that
Featured singers include

Reunions

Church events

Frederick, Randal St. John,
and the Hobson Singers.
Sunday, Oct. 4
MIDDLEPORT - Heath
United Methodist Church,
free Gospel Concert. 7 p.m.
at the church, featuring the
Sunderman Fam1ly from
Belpre,
Riverblend
Barbershop Quartet, Mary
Hawk, BJ Smith Kreseen.
TUPPERS PLAINS South Bethel Community
Church Homecoming, 9
a.m, Sunday school, 10
a.m., communion service,
12:30 p.m. afternoon service, 2 p.m., special music.
HEMLOCK GROVE Homecommg. at Hemlock
Grove Chnst1an Church,
With regular worship ser- I
VICe, 9:30 a.m., potluck d n-~
ner at 12:30 p.m., at Grange
Hall, and aftern.oon. P!O·
wam, 2 P:m. Spec~al s~ngmg
With Forg1ven Aga1n tno.
REEDSVILLE - Revival
at Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene,
thr~ugh
Wednesday, 7 :J.m. mghtly
and . 10:45 . a.m. Sunday.
Healing sen.:1ce on Tues~ay.
Evangelist IS Rev. Elaine
Pettit of Kalamazoo, Mich.
Mus1c by Rev. Jeremy Pettit.
POMEROY Rev1val
through We.dnesday, Mt.
Hermsn Un1ted Bret~ren
Church. Sunday serv1ces,
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
services Monday through
Wednesday.
Wayne
Mclaughlin, Chillicothe, is
evangelist. ~p.ec1al singing
eac~
evenmg.
Peter
Martmdale IS pastor.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.99
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 61.98
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 43.22
Lots (NYSE) - 25.02
Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.06
&gt;rn\11/Ar.n nr (NYSE) - 30.26
Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.35

Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.99
Charni1ng Shops (NASDAQ) 4.91
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.81
Collins (NYSE) - 50.80
DuPont (NYSE)- 32.14
US Bank (NYSE) - 21.86
Gannett (NYSE)- 12.55
Gencml Electric (NYSE)- 16.42
Harley·Davidson (NYSE) - 23
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.82
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.64
Limltod Brands (NYSE} - 16.99
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)- 43.11

good chance of lea\ ing the
re5&gt;t behind fi'i well. Jucot
don't hang over h1m. prc"suring him to give up biting
his nail , sucking Ius thumb".
twirling his hair or whatever
he is doing. And make c;urc
he i:'!n't mto seJf.tfc..,trucuve
habits like cutting or drugc;
or dieting to execs .... AH
those can be tempting fur a
child wht; is anxious and has
low self-esteem.
It's w1se not to compare
your children - and the
firstborn often ha.... 1t a little
rougher when it comes to
expectations and his O'-"n
Joftv goals. You should come
do~n~hard on the smoking,
though - he rna) be the
f)pe who \\Ould quickly
t;ccome
psychologically
dependent on cigarettes. not
to mention the health hazard
they po c from being physical!) addictive and hn7.ardous to his health Kids
today aren't stupid
emphasize his health. aml
chances arc he will be frightened out of becoming an
addict. Sports arc a good
antidote to that poison.
(c) 2009 hy King Features

Syndicate

•

High-risk groups for Hl.Nl differ from season~~1 flu
Question: There is

w

Flu shots are preventi\e

1m 1ch

going 011 with flu measures. but they are not
right 110 w that I am not guarantees that you will not
sure what to do. Do I need get the tlu. Besides getting
a regular flu shot a11d also your flu shots. safeguards
an/11 N I vaccination when are necessary to a' oid conthat comes out? Should I tracting both the seasonal
wait to get my regular flu flu and the HI N I virus.
shot u11til the J1 IN1 vacciMost important!). wa'ih
nation is ready? Does your hands. Wash them rege••eryo11e 11eed both shots'! ularly and thoroughly wrth
Please help!
soap and warm water, espe-

A. Simpson, D.O., M.BA.,
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic
Medici11e,
Communication
Office,
Athens, Ohio 45701, or ••ia
e-mail to readerquestion s@fami lymedicillenews.org. Me,d ical information in this calumll is
provided as a11 educational
service only. It does not
replace the judgment of
your personal physician,
who should be relied 011 to
diagnose ami recommend
treatment for any medical
conditio11s. Past columns
Family Medicine® is a are available online at
weekly column. To submit w w w .fa m i lymetli cinequestions, write to Martha news.org.

handkerchief. sneeze into
your elbo''.
Avoid touching your face.
as you can contract a VIrus
by touching an object that
ha.-; hcen contammatcd with
the virus and then touching
your nose, lips or eyes.
not share dnnks or uten:-.ils.
Just because -;omeone has
no obvious symptoms docs
not mean they cannot
spread the H IN I virus.
Once contracted, the \'irus is
alive and well m pee~ple for
about 24 hour" before they
begin to feel ill.

Do

Answer: Let's start with cially after you cough or
the seasonal influen1a va~sneeze and before you eat.
cines. which are a\'ailable
Always cover your nose
now. These are the annual
and mouth when vou
flu shots that most people
sneeze or cough, as viruses
should get e\er) year.
can spread through droplets
When it comes to the seapropelled into the air. If you
o;onal tlu, there arc some
do not have a tissue or
higher-risk populations, for
whom the llu shot is a
"must ha\ e.'' Higher-rbk
groups include children
between six months and 18
yenrs of age. pregnant
women. people over the age
of 50, anyone with a chronic illness like diabetes or
emphysema and people who
live in nursing homes or
institutions.
The seasonal tlu vaccine
abo is highly recommended
for health care workers and
caretakers of people in
these hi~h-risk groups. If
) ou fit mto any of these
groups or live with :-.orneone who docs, you should
go ahead and get your
annual tlu :.hot now.
You can al~o get an annual flu shot if you simply
"'ant one. The seasonal flu
vuccinc is also available in a
n,u,al mist that can be u:.ed
by health) people· between
Saturday, Oct. 3
the age'i of two and 49.
MIDDLEPORT Big
Recommendations for the
Bend
Youth
Football H 1N I mfluenza vaccine are
league, annual homecom- , a bit d1~ferent than the ~ea­
ing parade, line up at noon, ~onal mflucnza. va~c111e.
Rejoic!ng Life Church.
fhc HI N 1 vaccme 1s not
available yet, but it should
be available in October.
Some people will need one
shot; othl:'rs \Viii need two.
As with the seasonal nu,
40s. Southeast winds 5 to 1o this vaccine is recommendmph.
ed for all pregnant women.
1
FridaY...Cioudv
with as the) arc at particularly
::-.howers~likcly with a slight high risk for ~erious compli"
chance of thunderstorms. cationo; from the HI N I
Highs around 70. South 'irus. Other people at a
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance higher risk for catching the
You may be eligible to participate in a global
HI N I 'irus are babies •
of r.lin 60 percent.
·
clinical research study.
]&lt;rida~ night ...Shm,erl&gt; under s1x months of age and
their caretakers. all health
likely. Lows in the lower 50s. care \\ orkers, everyone
Participants may receive study-related medical
Chance of rain 60 percent.
between the ages of 6
months and 24 years, and
care, study medication, laboratory work, and
P.eople with other chronic
evaluations, at no cost.
11lnesses.
Healthy people over 65
seem to carry immunity to
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA$the HI N I flu and are curDAQ)- 26.50
rently not a risk group that
BBT (NYSE) - 27.24
hould be vaccinated for
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 13.05
To learn more about th1s cl meal research study,
Pepsico (NYSE) - 58.66
H 1N I in the 1irst wave of
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.66
please call today. All calls are confidential.
v .tcci nat10r.1s.
Rockwell (NYSE) - 42.60
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 6.17
Royal Dutch Shell- 57.19
Laurie Wayland, LPN
Scars Holding (NASDAQ) - 65.31
Holzer Clinic Department of Research
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 49.09
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.73
90 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631
WesBanco (NYSE)- 57.19
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.90
740.441.3990
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transwww.mydallysentlnel.com
actions for Sept. 30, 2009, provided by Edward Jones finan·
clal advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
a.·005856 02109
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.

Are You Unable to Manage Your

Type 2 Diabetes
With Diet and Exercise Alone?

Youth events

If you ...

Local Weather
Thursd:w...Areas of dense
fog with patchy frost in the
mornmg. Sunny. Highs in the
upper 60s. Light and' ariable
wmd!'. ..Becoming southwest
around 5 mph in the after
noon.
Thursda) night ... Partly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of sho\\crs. Not as
cool \\ 1lh low in the upper

children of preschool ages children, but no one could
can indeed suffer from help but notice the differdepression. According to the ences bel\\oeen my. two
National Institute of Mental boys. !"he oldest 1s 12. He's
Health , a study of 200 always had trouble \\ ith one
preschoolers between the ner.•ou" habit or another.
ages of 3 and 6 showed that and now I am afraid he is
during a two-year period, 75 trying Cigarette~ out m the
were diagnosed with major garage or Whei1 he's with
depression, and among his fc\\ friends. In the
those who were depressed meantime. hi., little brother,
initially. mental-health tests "'ho is 8, IS sunny, carefree
at four different exams Wld very popular. I don't
showed that 20 percent "'ere like to puntsh the o.ldcr one,
because he'., so eas1ly upset.
depressed at all of them.
Depression m children 1s How do I deal with his teen
generally tied to a traumatic year&lt;&gt;? - L.S.
Dear L.S.: Let'~ take 1t
event or a mother with a
deprcs~ive illness or other one step at a time. There's a
mood disorder. This does huge variation of behavior
not mean that there is any- in the teen )'Car&lt;&gt;. and your
thing wrong with your son ts 1kely to change quite
motherinc, but neither is the a bit during those turbulent
diagnosis- of your hu::.band times. So, dealing with the
pre ent is a little easier to
that it ic; "nonsense'' the correct response. Your cope \\ith. He rna) ha\e
child might benefit from a used all those nen ous habits
medical d1agnosis and some to calm and &lt;&gt;oothe himself
therapy, as giving psychi- when he wus feeling anxatric drugs to children that iouc;, and as long as he wasyoung is controversial since n't teased a lot or harshly
long-term effects are not yet punished, he has had a
ehance to outgnw.· some of
clear.
them. As he feels more mas•••
tery of his environment
Dear Dr. Brothers:
don't like to compare my when he matures. he has a

Family Medicine

~r~:~itancea~~om D~t~i~y
Connection, Jerry and Diana

2009

• Have not been treated with, or have had only
limited exposure to, oral antidiabetic medication
• Are between 18 and 77 years of age

Visit us
online at

Your online
source for news

\

�·----..,.------------........-------....
PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Senate stopgap keeps feds in business

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (7 40) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
e.stablislrmen t of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlrereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tire press; or tire right of tire
p eople p eaceably to assemble, and to petitiou
tire G ovcrmnent for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

TO DAY JN H JSTO RY

Bv ANDREW T AYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRCSS

Up against a midnight
deadline to avoid a go\ernment shutdown, the Senate
passed
legislut ion
Wednesday thm temporaril)
would extend spending on
most federal programs at
current levels while mising
Congress' budget h) 6 perCt'nt.
The ,measure. approved
by a 62-;18 vote that sends it
to President Obama's desk,
\\OUld keep the go\emmcnt
open for one more month.
Obama is virtuall) Fertain
to sign it before da) 'send.
The legislation also
.... ould patch over problems
in the struggling postal ser' ice and pa) for soon-toexpire h1gl1\\ ay programs
for an additional month .ts
well. The o,;topgap measure
l i!) needed because Congress
' has failed to complete ~\ ork
on the II remaining spending bills for agenc) bud~ets.
The community actiVist
group ACORN was 111 lmc
for another hi! as Democrats
added langaugc saying the
organit.ation could not
receive fl!dernl dollars
Iunder the stopgap measure
or an) prior l~gislation.
~ ACORN has reccncd fcdcral funds for pro\ iding coun~eling to homco\.\ ner.s f~cI mg forecl~s~re and help•ng
people ehgtble for food
stamps apply for the progmm.
1

Today is Thursday, Oct. 1. the 274th day of 2009. There
are 91 days ten in lhc year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. I , 1949, Mao Zcdong proclaimed the People's
Republic of China dudng a ceremony in Beijing.
On this date:
ln 1800, Spain ceded Louisiana to France in a secret
treaty.
ln 1908. Henry Ford introduced his Model T automobile
to the market.
In 1936. Gen. Francisco Franco was proclaimed the head
of an insurgent Spanish state.
In 1939. ~Vin ston C}mrchill, recently appointed First
Lord of the Admiralty by British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain. de~cribed Russia as "a riddle wrapped in a
mystery inside an enigma" during a radio address on the
mva:.ion of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. i
In 1949, a 42-day strike by the Umted Steelworkers of
America began over the issue of retirement benefits.
In 196 1•.Roger Maris of the New York Yankees hit his
6 1st home run during a 162-game season. compared to
Babe Ruth's'60 home runs during a 154-game season.
In 1964, the Free Speech Movement was launched at the
University of California at Berkeley.
In 197 I . Walt Disney World opened in Orlando, Fla.
In 1979, Nigeria's military rulers handed over power to a
civilian government.
In I 987. eight people were killed. when an earthquake '
measuring magnitude 5.9 struck the Los Angeles area.
Ten years ago: South Korean activists thanked. the t.J .S.
go,·ernment for promising to investigate an Associated
Press report that U.S. forces had killed refugees at the start
of the Korean War, but also demanded the U.S. punish
some of the veterans involved and compensate the victims'
relatives.
Five years ago: Mount St. Helens in Washington state ~
erupted for the first time in 18 years, but without nearly the
force of the 1980 disaster. Police found Lori Hacking's
body in a landfill after picking through the tra-;h for weeks
in a search for the young Utah woman murdered by her
husband, Mark. Fashion photographer Richard Avedon
died in San Antonio at age 81.
One year ago: After one spectacular failure in the House,
the $700 billion financial industry bailout won lopsided
passage in the Senate, 74-25. after it wa-; loaded with tax
breaks and other sweeteners. Nick Reynolds, a founding
member of the Kingston Trio. died in San Diego at age 75.
T V actor House Peters Jr.• the original "Mr. Clean;· died in
Los Angeles at age 92.
Today's Birthdays: former President Jimmy Carter is 85.
Pianist Roger Williams is 85. Actor Tom Bosley is 82.
Actress-singer Julie Andrews is 74. Actress Stella Stevens
is 71. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Rod Carew is 64. Aclor
Randy Quaid is 59. Retired MLB All-Star Mark ~lcGwire
is 46.
Thought for Today: "Just think of the tragedy of teaching
children not to doubt.'' - Clarence Darrow. American
lawyer (1857-1938).

I

I

Congress was rewarding itself with a 6
percent budget boost, though the $51
million increase for the House office
budget account represents an 8 percent
increase. The Senate gave itself a 6
percent boost for its office accounts.
ACORN. short for the
Assoc.ation of Communitv
Orgamzations for Reform
::--:0w. has come under fire
O\ er a set of 'idcotapes
made by conservative
activists that shO\\, among
other things, employees
offerine advice about how
to establish a brothel \\ ith
underage prostitute-,.
The underl) ing legtsla
t1on 1s a $4.7 billion mea-;ure covenng Congress'
budget for the fbcal year
beginning Thursday. That
spending bill was chosen
becau~e it can't be amended
before going to Obama,
which saves time and spares
Democrats potentially difficult \ otes.
It's not unu"ual for
Congress to tack !)UCh stopgap bills onto other spending measures to speed them
along. But by choosing the
legi&lt;&gt;latne branch bill to be
the first measure presented
to the president, majorit)
Democrats opened them"ehes to GOP criticism that

they \\-ere pulling the1r own
budgets ahead of agencies
such a~ the Depm1ment of
Homeland Sccunty.
"Thb is the woro,;t display
that I have C\ er ~een in ITI)
) cars of service in the
Congress," 'idid Sen. Tom
Coburn, R-Oklu. "We h.1ve
the audac:it) to take care of
us hefore \\e take care of the
re~t of America.:.
Sen John McCain. RAril., took aun at $500,000
included to not1fy constituents about town hall
meetings, even though
people pa~:kcd such events
in Augu:,t.
"Has anyhotly had any
trouble lately having people come to their town hall
meetings," McCain said.
•·we need to spend
$500,000 additional to
nottfy people?"
Congre~s 'Wa~ rewarding
itself with a 6 percent budget boost, though the $51
million increase for the
House
office
budget
account represent~ an 8

percent incrca e. There's
abo a big jump in -;pending to repair I louse office
buildings, includins a $50
million to refurbish the
oldest one.
The Senate gave itself
6 percent boost for
office accounts.
The Po:,;tal Service could
delay $4 billion in payments due next month to a
health care fund foi
retirees. Some $5.4 billion
is suppo-;ed to be paid, but
officials say the) don't
have enough money to
make the payment.
The mea-;ure also would
extend the federal highway
program for one month.
Congre-.s is working on a
three-month extension.
The stopgap legislation
would extend funding for
the operating budgets of
Cabinet departments and
other agencies at current
levels ~hrough Oct. 31.
•Exceptions would be made
for the Census Bureau,
which gets a hig ,infusion
to prepare for next year's
count, and vctenms' medical programs, both of
which would operate at
•
increases
Also
Wednesda
House-Senate neeotiators
clo-.ed -out talks on a final
compromise version of a
$33.5 billion measure
funding energy and water
proJects and a $121 .I billion agnculture spending
mea.;ure.

- - - -----

~t:. ~WU..\lt{\
R~\~\0
~'f\\\\t(l \\t.Rt..

.,

'

I

LETTERS TO TH E
EDITOR
Letters to tht' editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All le11ers are subject to editing, ln!ISt be
signed, ami include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities. Letters of
t.hanks to organizations and indi\·iduals will not be accept~d for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

&lt;usPs 213-9 so&gt;

Correction Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern 1n all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
1n a story, call the newsroom al (740)
992-2156.

Publistoed every morning, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Stree!,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper AssociatiOn.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
liOns to The Dally SentJne!, PO. Box
729, Pomeroy. OhiO 45769

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ex!. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13

:

Advertising

. Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell
:740·446·2342, Ext. 17
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext, 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ex! 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ex!. 10

Circulation
Circulation Manager: David Lucas,
,740-446-2342, Ext.11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
E-mail:
mdsnews@mydallysentlncl com
Web •
www.mydallysenunel.com

Subscription Rates
By carr ier or motor route
4 weeks ... .. ........ .'1 1.30
52 w eek s •.••.•••••••'128.85
Dally ••.•... • •.•..•••••.50'
Senior Citizen rates
26 week s •..•....... • .'59.61
52 weeks .•......••. •'116.90
Subscribers should remit in advance
direct to The Daily Sentinel No sub·
scription by ma1l permitted 1n areas
where home carrier service IS available.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks ............ .'35.26
26 Weeks •......... .'70.70
52 Weeks • • . . . . • 1140.11
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks
• . • . • . .'56.55
26Weeks • . .•..... '113.60
52 Weeks ........... .'227.21

G-20 goals noble) not necessarily feasible
BvToM

leaders of. the Group of 20
top economics vowed last
week to submit their poliU.S. financial regulators cil!s for the first tim~: to a
told
Congress
on "peer review" from the
Wcdne~day that national
other governments.\.\ ith the
di ffcrences nre vex mg International
Monetarv
eff011s to make go1l(l on Fund
monitoring
the
pledges by \\ orld leaders to process.
eo,;tablish new mtcrnattonal
They abo moved toward
mechanisms to prc\ent ...ettinc limits on bankers'
another financial meltdo\.\ n .• salaries and bonuses and
Reprcsentati\es of the toward requiring banks to
Treasury
Department, hold larger capital reserves
Federal
Reserve
and as a cushion. Thev also
Securities and Exchange agreed to move toward a
Commis::;ion said they were shift in IMF ownership,
workmg to coordinate the1r with China and other de\ elacti\ itie\ more close!) with oping countries claiming a
foreign go\ernments and b1gger voting stake.
centml banks and finding
And they promised to
the wa) difficult at times
take steps to end imbalances
While there ha5 been con that threaten world grm\ th.
siderablc progress already Export-dominated countries
in strengthcnin~ the interna- l1ke China and Japan would
tional financ~td system, do more to encourage
''much more remains to be domestic · consumption,
done,'' Mark Sobel, an act
European countries would
ing assistant Trea~ury sl'crc- do more to encourage
tary. told a Senate llanking investment and the debt-ritlpanel.
den Unitetl States would tr)
"Some of the naws in &lt;Jur to save more and reduce
financwl system and regula trade and budget deficits.
tory
framework
that
Jf the nutiono; carry
allo\\ed this crisis to occur. through on the pledges. it
and m many wa) o,; helped to would amount to a farcause it, arc o,;till in place." reaching reordering of the
Sobel smd.
world economic order. But
At a summit ip Pittsburgh. the group stopped short of
R AUM

ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

setting spec1fic targets or ruptc) and banking regulaputting in place any tions from country to counenforcement mechanisms.
try "may limit what can be
"The conventional wis- achieved" in terms of movdom on intl'rnational coor- ing toward international
dimition 1s that at the sum- banking standards.
mits, countries talk glohally
Furth~crmore, Tarullo said
but nfterward they act local
that deciding to formally
I)." said Sen. Evan Buyh. expand the former Group of
D-Ind.. chairman of the Eight nations to the G-20
banking subcommittee on for setting international eco..;ecurit) and international nomic policy docs make the
trade and finance. Ba\ h group better reflect today's
questioned whether despite \\orld by bringmg in develth() loft) G-20 rhetoric from oping economies like China
Pittsburgh. the end result and India.
was a raft of "unenforceable
But it also might m ke it
vague \tandards."
harder to reach consensus
E\en as Prestdcnt Barack bccau:.e of the larger memObama pushe" for tougher bership. Tarullo "s.~id. He
regulation of complex inter- cited ··some risk progress
national fmancinl institu- \\ill get bogged down."
tionc;, hie; proposal to beef
Secuntie~ and h:chnnge
up finnncial regulation nt Commissioner
Ka
~lome appears bogged dm" n Casey told the panel
111 Congress.
because of money can 1
Not only must the interna- quickly through the inter
tional community act to fol- connected global financial
low through on the G 20 sy ... tem "only collecu\ e regcnmmit1uents but "each G- ulatol)' action can he efTcc20 countrv must nO\\ inten- tive in full) addressing
sil) its effort to help en~ure eros---border acth it).''
tl1.1t the-.e commitments are
The financial cris1" h.1s
implemented at the national revealed regulator) g.tps
IC\ el ,'' said Sobel.
and merlaps. Case\ satd,
Feder.tl Reo;en e Go' and ··some market 1'\'\UC"
Daniel K. "I~1rullo told the 1..-annot be full) aod "" d
panel that d1fferent bank- \\ ithout legislative ac.; 1'

�Thursday, Oct ob er t,

www .mydailysentinel.co~n

2009

Obituaries
Judy Holter
LO~G

BOTfOM - Judv Sue Holter, 50, of Long
Bottom. OH passed awa) ~lfinday, September 29. 2009 it
Ohio State University Hospital, Columbus.
She was a 1979 Eastern High School graduate and a
member of the United ~1ethodist Church in Long Bottom.
enjo7·ed knitting. word puz:tlcs. her many friends and
fnend~ at Arcatlw Nursing Home.
udy is survived b) her mother. Orva Jean Bissell Holter
Bond; her fathcr. Harold (Hank) Holter; two brothers, Steve
(Pris) Holter and Mark (Mdissa) Holter: an aunt. Marilyn
(Mark) Miller: an uncle, L. Mike (Pat) Bissell: a special
cousin, Dianne Stra\vser; nieces, Stacy, Stephanie and
Nattie: nephews, Kyle. Zac and Hanson: and many cousins.
Services ''ill be held 1'1 a.m., Saturday. Oct. 3. 2009 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville. with Ronald
Cowdery officiating. Burial ''ill be in the Sandhill
Cemetery. Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the funeral horne Friday, from 6-8 p.m.
You can 5ign the online guestbook at W\\ w.whiteschwarzelfu neralhome .com.

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

ODH honors rural health providers
OU recognized for free clinics
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

PO~vtEROY - Efforts of
the Ohio Univer:-.ity's College
of Osteopathic Medicine to
increase accco.;s to care in nmtl
Ohio. ~pecifkally through
clinics in Athcn~. Meigs and
Washington counties have
been recognized by the Ohio
Dcpmimcnt of Health.
Awards were presented in a
recognition · program during
the Sept. 18 Bridging the
Digital Dtvidc in Rural Ohio
Conference
at
Ohio
University. Featured speaker
at the conference were ODH

Director Alvin D. Jackson.
M.D. whosa1d that"addressing di::.parities in health care
b one of my priorities.'' The
honorees
were
chosen
because of their passionate
efforts to address such disparities. said Jackson.
The winners were:
Rural
Health
Administrator:
Kathleen
Trace. director of Ohio
University's College of
Osteopathic
Medicine's
Community Health Program.
Under Trace ·s leadership. the
program established a free
clinic in Athens County and
expanded clinics in Meigs

and Wao;hington counties: the
clinics provide free exam.....
treatments and referrals to
uninsured rcsillents.
Rural Health Program:
lntcrprofcssional Partnero;
for Appalachian Children,
~thcns. This new program
Increases access to quality
mental hc&lt;\lth !&gt;en•ices for
young chiklrcn and includes
assessment .tc.ams consisting
of &lt;1 physicHHl, a mental
health specialist, an audiologist. a speech therapist and
a family care advocate.
Rural Health Provider:
There!&gt;a Ulrich of Perry
County. During her 26 years
with Perry County Family
Practice tmd membership m

the National Association of
Rural Health Clinics. Ulrich
helped hospitals and clinics
develop mral health programs. allowing financial!)
challenged but cnucal ~ml
health care :-.ystems to StU"\' I\ e.
Rural Hospital: Bucyrus
Community. Honored for its
recent expansion. Bucyrus
Community is also recognized for it::. Affair of the
Heart and Hearty .Mnn 's
Bowl programs, wh1ch conduct cardiac and pulmonary
rehabilitation. respectively,
for the ButT Up Bucyrus
program and for ih partnerships '"ith community and
business leaders to conduct
area health fairs.

Ohioans encouraged to 'Own Your Future'
Report endorses cleanenergy economy for Midwest A planning guide for long-tern1 care
B Y J OHN FLESHER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SENTINEL STAFF
MOSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. - Midwestern states should
PotviEROY - In recoguse their abundant natural resources and manufacturing mt1on of October as
base to build an economy based on clean energy, according Natwnal Long-term Care
to a report to the region's governors.
Planning
Month.
all
The document. prepared for a m~eting of the Midwestem Ohioans, no matter what
vernors Association next week in Detroit. acknowledges . age. arc being encouraged
t the 11-state area ''ill keep relying heavily on coal to rnakc decisions now
•
which generates nearly three-fourths of its electricity about the type of care
lon!! into the future.
they'd like to receive, where
B~ut it calls for stepped-up de,·clopment of technology ; they'd like to have it. and
that captures the emission of carbon dioxide from burning how they'll pay for it.
coal and stores it underground instead of releasing it into
Barbara E. Riley. directhe atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is a leading greenhouse tor of the Ohio Department
gas believed to cause global warming.
of Aging. reports that seven
The report also suggests policie~ that support conserva- out of 10 people over the
tion. the development of renewable sources and infrastruc- age of 65 will require some
ture to bring them to the marl&lt;et, and more research into lon!!-term care services,
advanced energy technologies. Also needed is an educated and~ that likelihood increaswork force that can handle the jobs a clean-energy econo- es with age. But, she said.
my v.ould create. it says.
younger people should
"A transition of this magnitude cannot happen plan, too since nearly 40
overnight,'' it Sa) s. "Logistical. technical, and cost obsta- percent of those currently
cles persist for many promising zero and low-carbon receiving long-term care
renewable and fossil cn~rgy technologies."
are between the ages of 18
It's not too soon to lay the groundwork for re-orienting and 64.
the regional economy around cleaner energy. the report
Riley said residents can
says. States could enact needed laws and regulations. fund visit at W\Vw.longterm·
research and offer incentives that make the commercial use care.gov to learn more
of green technologies less financiatly risky.
about long-term care planThe Teport makes specific recommendations to carry out
broad clean·energy goals for the region the governors
approved in 2007. Among those goals: Thirty percent of the
electrici
consumed in the region should come from

gov~~r':t~~e~::orn~~~·t~~e~~~~·~&amp;e;~~fsi~02g~;~ 1_

Williams

1

years ago and I wouldn't give it up for anything. Just to
watch their face~ light up as they select Christmas gifts for
their kids, it means sn much."
Holter !&gt;aid that last year 186 families came in to get gifts
for their more than 500 children. In addition to six or seven
toys each one receives an outfit of clothing and sometimes
pajamas or shoes. With the high unemployment in the
county and the growing number of disadvantaged families.
Holter says the C hurch is beginning now to prepare for an
increase this yenr in the numbers in need of help to provide
· gifts for their children.
Donations that come in are combined with project money
from the church and area organizations who have held fund
raisers to buy new toys. Last summer Bethel had a yard sale
and raised over $2.000. Some community groups have
done special proJects to raise money. others have collected
barely-us~d toys \\ hich are cleaneq, refurbished as needed
and put in plastic bags. This goes on all year. according to
ter. who says it takes thar long to get ready. About 20
le are ulrcady working on the project, and many more
w be helping out as thc time grows near for distributing
the toys and clot hes.
All of the items as they come in or are purchased arc
stored during the year ami then moved to the church on the
Sunday aftemoon before the Saturday distribution which
always takes place on the first Saturday in December.
Holter describes a scene where the sanctuary is "emptied
out" and converted into a gift shop. where families come in,
browse, and select things for theJr children.
The check from the I lome National Bank is the first business contribuuon for this year's Christmas Gift Give-away.
Holter says it takes thou5ands of dollars to buy the gifts but
she has the faith that the money will come in. that the need
will be supplied.

•

Law You Can Use

Use caution when considering foreclosure and debt 1nitigation

paper, w'th representathes of industry, agriculture.
Q: I've been sued on a
environm pta! groups and government agencies.
credit card debt, and am
ir propos seeks a middle ground between the ideals also facing foreclosure on
sought by competing interests. said Emily Marthaler, a • my house. I don't want to
spokeswoman for the governors association.
lose a lawsuit and have"my
wages garnished or lose
my home, but I don't
know what to do. I've
from Page At
heard about companies
that say they can get peocord. Williams admitted yesterday that he, alone. was
pie out of debt and a,·oid
respon!&gt;ible for Jackson's death. but said Garnes had helped
foreclosure.They sound
plan the robbery which went awry on Feb. 23. and that two
like a dream come true.
others had transported him to Jackson's home and helped
What should . I know
d ispose of evidence of the robbery and murder.
b
efore I contact one of
A co-defendant in the case, James Lee Games. Jr.. is now
these
companies?
serving a six and a half-year prison term for receiving
A: First, you should be
stolen property and tampering with evidence, and \Viii be especl
.ally alei·t, 1·n these
sentenced next month on charges of obstructing justice in economically trying times,
the Jackson murder investigation and an unrelated charge for solutions that sound too
of escape.
Only Williams and Garnes have been charged in the case. good to be true. They usualIn a statement read by his attorney, Charles Knight. ly are. Second, do not
Williams said Garnes and two others who were never engage any organization
charged in the Jackson case had significant roles in the that requests an up-front
events of Feb. 23, and said the state should be expected to deposit (typically $500 to
S I ,500) to help you negotiprosecute the three for their roles.
Williams was apologetic to family members in the court- ate with your lenders, or
m, but also deflected blame on the three others he said offers to buy your house and
rent it back to you with the
~e involved .
opportunity
for you to reackson 's niece, Patricia Harris. Reedsville. said Jackson
was well-loved by family and neighbors. She spoke on purchase it later. These
organizations are not attorbehalf of Jackson's extended family.
·
. ::what. happened to her was cruel. and she didn't deserve neys and cannot represent
you in cou11. The money
1t. Hams said.
you advance to such an

Donation from Page At

ning and the options they
should consider. as well as
download or order the free
"Own Your Future" planning kit.
She advised families with
an immediate need for long·
tenn care to contact their
area agency on aging at 1866-243-5678 to request a
free personal assessment by
a professional long-term
care planner.
"There is too much
money and too many people
involved in long-term care
for it to be an impulse decision." Riley added. "All
issues - from the person's
needs and preferences. to
the types of care available
need thoughtful and
thorough exploration. The
·own Your Future' kit and
the state's area agencies on
aging can help.''
Paying for care can be
expensive: currently about
$60,000 a year for a nursing
horne and $38.000 for home
care in Ohio. Average lifetime expenditures for a per-

wages and productiVIty if
the) work.
.
Caregi\ in!! also takes a
son who needs long-term physical and emotional toll
care can reach $150,000. on a person. A long-term
Medicare and ~vlcdicarc care plan should take family
supplements generally do caregi' ing into account and
not pay for long-tenn care, provide the carcgtver with
and many people 4ualify for the peace of mind that
Medicaid only after the things will be taken care of
costs of long-term care have should she no longer be able
vi11twlly wiped out all of to provide care or the care
thcfr financial resources. As recipient's condition ~ors­
a re~ult. the) find them- ens.
selvc" in a t1rne of crisio;;
The Ohio Department of
with
limited
choices. Aging prO\ Ides leadership
Planning, including lookmg for the de1iVCI)' of services
at options for long-term and supports that improve
care in urance, can make and promote qualit) of life
these decisions easier.
and personal choice for
In an AARP survey. most older Ohioans. adults with
Ohioans said they'd prefer disabilities. the1r families
to recei\'C the care thev and
their
caregivers ..
need in their own homes. Working with 12 area agenThis is made pos..;ible, in cies on aging and other
large part. due to the contri- commumty partm:rs. the
bution and sacrifice of fam- department offers home-.
ily members ~md other' and
community-based
loved ones who supplement ~1edicaid waiver programs
paid professional care in the such as PASSPORT. careIH)me. ·For these families. giver support. the long-term
long-term care can cost the care ombudsman program.
caregiver as well. both in the Golden Buckey~ Card
more.
Visit
terms of money they spend and
on care and in tetms of lost www.aging.ohio.gov.

organization
might
be
applied, instead, to reduce.
your debt or to hire an attorney who specializes in
debtor representation.
Organizations such as the
Consumer
Credit
Counseling Sen ice (now
nationally
known
as
Apprisen
Financial
Advocates) can help you
with these problems, do not
require up-front rnone). and
will suggest that you consult an attorney if and when
it is determined that you
nee4 one.
If you do need to consult
on attorney who represents
debtors and handles banklllptcies, you may wish to
contact your local bar association for an attorney
referral. The attornev can
negotiate with lcndcJ7s and
credit card &lt;.:ompanies, rt:present you in colllt if luw
suits have been filed, und
help
you
determine
whether your financial
problems can be solved
without resorting to bankmptcy filing. If banklllptcy
is necessary. the attorney
can handle that filing.

Q:

W h at arc some
things J can do to resoh·e

the foreclosure problem
myself.
·
A: You can contact the
loss mitigation department
of your mortgage lender to
discuss the possibility of
modifying your loan. This
may involve extending the
term of the loan. lowering
the intere.st rate. reducing
monthly payments, or
putting some of the missed
payments at the end of the
loan. To apply for loan
modification. you will need
to complete budget forms
provided by the lender.
·
. .
wnte a 1etter exp 1ammg
your current situation, and
provide any documents
your mortgage lender may
request
·typically
tax
returns, bank statements
and pay stubs. Your mortgage lender also may
require you to pay some
money to reimburse the
lender for anv advances
that may have· been made
on your behalf for taxes
and insurance.

Q: Does Ohio have a
program to help people

facing foreclosure?
A: Yes. You may qualify
for help through Ohio's
"Save the Dream" program.
This progmm is designed to
help consumers avoid foreclosure and save their
homes. Many borrowers
have received help from
volunteer attorneys and
mediators across the state,
For details about this program and access to a wide
variety of resource:;, visit
http://w\vw.savethedream.o
hio.gov/ or call (888) 4044674 (toll-free hotlinc).

Q: How might I resolve
mv other credit issues
m)·self?
.
A: Regarding other debb.
including debt related to
credit cards and various
types of bank loans. contact
the creditor direct}). You
should do this as soon as
you begin to experience
credit problem::;. Ignoring
the problems will not mak~
them go away. With )OUr
creditor, ,·ou can discuss the
possibilities of deferred
payments.
interest-only

payments or lump-sum settlements. and your creditor
may be receptive to one of
these solutions if the alternath·e is having your debt
discharged in a bankruptcy.

This ''Law You Can Use"
column was provided by
the Ohio State Bar
Association (0SB1!).1t was
prepared by Akron attorney
Terry D. Zimmerman of
Hardesty,
Kaffen
&amp;
Zimmerman. The column
offers general information
about the law. Seek an
,
d ·
b ,r.
attorneys a v1ce eJore
1·
11 · · .1':
•
app ymg us mJormatwn
10
a legal problem.

Botox &amp; Evolence TOGITIIIR

Grettlw b~ of bot}, worlds
and bok fWS fOihiBerl
HOLZER
CLINIC .
DEPARTMENT OF
PLASTIC SURGERY

Call 740446-5225 for
more information or to
schedule a consultation**

Reg. Price $725

Botox - \Vrlnl&lt;le correctiOn at ettner the Glacena (cetween eycbro'tts).
crow's Feet (outer corners of~) or Foreheaa
Evo ence Derrrar Fi. ~r • Wrtnl&lt;le corra"tlon at e:ther the
NaSolaOlal Fo os ( nes from SlOe Of nose to comer or mouth), o•aJ
Commissure (comers Of moutn: or Ma onette Jnes ( nes frOm

comers or moutn towaro ct1n)
'ClillOOt be canbincd w1th anv O!hcr dlSCOUil!S.
• • Musr be dmncd a~ b) aHolzer Clm~e Pb.I!K Saq;C!) Pro\ JI1CI
il

�...._.,.--._..,~

--

---- - -

....

----- ......

- -·~~---------

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Ban handguns? Supreme C urt taking a new look
B Y M ARK SHERMAN

Plaintiff Colleen
Lawson watches
fellow plaintiff
Otis McDonald,
center, speak
during a news
conference following a U.S.
Supreme Court
announcement
that it will·review
the Chicago ban
on handguns,
Wednesday, in
Chicago, with
attorney Alan
Gura listening.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WAS HINGTOi': - The
Supreme Court says it will
take up n challenge to
Chicago's han on handguns,
opening the way for a ruling
that could set off a vigorous
new campaign to roll back
state and local gun controls
across the nation.
Victory for gun-rights
proponents in the Chicago
case i!-. considered likely,
even by supporters of gun
control, in the latest battle in
the nation\ long and often
biuer dispute over the
Second ,\mendment right to
keep and bear arm:.. A rul·
ing against the city's out·
right ban could lead to legal
challenges to less-re~tricri ve
laws across the country that
limit who can own guns.
whether firearms mu&lt;;t be
registered and how they
should be stored.
The case is to be argued
early next year..
Last year, the justices
struck do'" n a prohibition
on handguns in the District
of Columbia. a city with
unique federal status, as a
violation of the Second
Amendment. Now the court
will decide whether that rul·
ing should apply to local
and state laws as well.
The cout1 has previously
said that most, but not all,
rights laid out in the
Constitution's Bill of Rights
serve as checks on state as
well as federal restrictions.
Separately. 44 state constitutions already enshtine gun
rights.
Though faced with potential limits from the high
court on their ability to
enact laws and regulations
in this area. 34 states
weighed in on the gunrights side before the justices agreed to take the case
Wednesday, an indication of
the enduring strength of the
National Rifle Association
and its allies.
The gun case was among
several the court added to
ib docket for the tenn that
begins Monday. Others
include:
• A challenge to part of a
Jaw that makes it a crime to
provide financial and other
aid to an) group designated
a terrorist organization.
• A dispute over when
new, harsher penalties can
be given to ~ex offenders
who don't register with state
sex offender databases.

AP photo

• Whether to throw out a he said.
~RA
Executive Vice
human
rights
lawsuit
against a former prime min- President Wayne LaPierre
ister of Somalia who is !-.aid he hopes the court rules
accused of overseeing that "core fundamental freekillings and otJler atrocities. doms like speech, religion
The issue is whether a fed- and. we believe. the right to
eral law gives the former keep and bear arms are
officiaL Mohamed Ali intended to apply to every
Samantar. immunity from individual in the country.''
lawsuits in U.S . courts.
Paul Helmke. president of
In the gun case, outright the Brady Campaign to
handgun bans appear to be Prevent Gun Violence, said
limited to Chicago and sub- the court's decision to take
urban Oak Park, Ill. But a up the new case was unsurruling against those ordi- prising in light of last year's
nances probably would · ruling.
"open up all the gun regulaThese cases should "take
tions in the country to con- the extremes off the table.''
stitutional scrutiny. of Helmke said. referring to
which there are quite a bans on guns and unlimited
few,'' said ~lark Tushnet. a gun ri~hts. ''What's critical
Harvard Law School pro- for us ts how the court goes
fessor whose recent book about fleshing out what the
"Out of Range.. explores the limits are.''
often bitter national debate
Mayor
Mtchael
Bloomberg of New York,
over guns.
Alreadv. Alan Gura. who which under state law
led the legal challenge to requtres handgun permits
the Washington law and and a safety course, said he
represents the plaintiff in hopes the court brings clarity
Chicago, is suing to over- to gun laws. "My hope is
turn
the
District
of that they will decide that rea·
Columbia's prohibition on sonable restrictions, which I
&lt;.·arrying firearms outside a think is the way most reaper:-;on's home. Illinois and sonable people in this counWisconsin have similar' try think. are approptiate,"
restrictions.
Bloomberg said.
In voiding Washington's
The 7th· U.S. Circuit
handgun ban last year. Court of Appeals in
Justice Antonin Scalia sug- Chicago had upl}eld the gun
gested that gun rights, like bans
legitima\e expresthe right to speech, are lim- sions of local and state
ited and that many gun con- rights.
trol measures could remain
Judge Frank Easterbrook.
an appointee of President
in place.
Ultimately. said Thshnet. Ronald Reagan. wrote in the
the court will have to ruling that "the Constitution
decide, possibly restriction establishes a federal repubbv restriction. which limits lic where local differences
are reasonable.
are to be cherished as ele''It's very hard to know ments of liberty rather than
where this court would extirpated in order to prodraw the line between rea- duce a single, nationally
sonable and unreasonable," applicable rule."

as

"Federalism is an older
and more deeply rooted tra·
dition than is a right to cany
any particular kind of
weapon,"
Easterbrook
wrote.
Evaluating
arguments
over the extension of the
Second Amendment is a job
"for the justices rather than
a court of appeals," he said.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor.
then an appeals court judge.
was part of a three-judge
panel in New York that
reached a similar conclusion in January.
The high court took the
:-.uggestion Wednesday.
Judges on both courts Republican nominees in
Chicago and Democratic
nominees in New York said only the Supreme
Court could decide whether
to extend last year's ruling
throughout the country.
The New York ruling also
has been challenged. but the
court did not act on it
Wednesday.
Sotomayor
would have to sit out any
case involving decisions she
was part of on the appeals
court. Although the issue is
the same in the .Chicago
case. there is no ethical bar
to her participation in its
consideration
by
the
Supreme Court.
She replaced Justice
David Souter. who dissented in the 5-4 Washington
case. so the five-justice
majority remains intact.
Several Republican senators cited the Sotomayor
gun ruling. as well as her
reticence on the topic at her
confirmation hearing, in
explaining their decision to
oppose her confirmation to
the high court.
The case is McDonald v.
Chicago. 08-1521.

Conditions combined for devastating tsunami
Bv SETH BORENSTEIN
AP SCIENCE

WASHINGTON
Because of a lethal wmbi·
nation of geology and geography. the people of
American Samoa didn't
stand much of a chance.
Almo~t every condition
that triggers bad tsunamts
was in place this time, gen·
crating waves that raced
toward the island tetTitory at
speeds approaching 530
mph, or as fast as a 747
jumbo jet. And there was
almost nothmg to ·s low the
water down.
It all started with a type of
earthquake that tends to
generate strong tsunamis
because of the angle at
which the ground breaks.
Also, the quake was
extremely powerful. with a
magnitude of 8.0. It st111ck
just below the ocean floor.
which means very little lost
energy. And it happened in
deep water, which means
bigger waves.
The deeper water also
meant the tsunami sped
along the ocean faster.
American Samoa happened
to be close to the eptcenter,
about 125 miles. and at just
the right angle. with aln1ost
no shallow water to slow
the speeding waves down .
Put that all together and
there was less th.m 25 rnm·
utes, maybe as littll: as 13
minutes,
between
the
ground shaking and the first
tremendous waves swamp·
ing Samoa.
A nd it didn't help that
an international computer·
ized system. designed for
relief agencies to figure
out if they needed to
respond, had a computer
fai lure that caused it to
pooh-pooh the tsunami's
wrath initially.
~

"This is the kind of earth- harm\ way in the middle of
quake one would expect to the Pacific Ocean.
be verv · destmctive in the
The key factor thts t1me
areas ciose to the epicenter. was the type of earthquake.
and unfortunately it was," It was an "outer rise"
said
Stuart Weinstein, quake - one that breaks
deputy director at the the sea floor in a way that
Pacific Tsunami Warning concentrates the energy
Center in Ewa Beach~, and pushes up at the water
Hawaii.
to create a wave, said
The shaking at the weath- Bruce Jaffe, an oceanograer service office . in Pago pher and tsunami specialist
Pago, the capital
of at USGS in Santa Cruz,
American Samoa. was so · Calif. Strong· quakes are
bad that one official imme· usually a different type.
diately called the tsunami called a thrust event.
warning center in Hawaii.
The area where it hit is no
while the island's chief stranger to quakes, getting a
meteorologist
phoned few magnitude-6-to-7 ones
homeland security to acti- per year. said Peggy
vate the warning system. Ilellweg, a geophysicist at
Just before 7 a .m. local the Berkeley Seismological
time, bulletins were issued Laboratory. Because quakes
and alerts aired on TV and are measured on a logarithradio.
mic scale. a magnitude-8 is
But there wasn't enough l ,000 times stronger than a
time. Four sets of waves 15 magnitude-6 in terms of
to 20 feet high hit. As of energy released, Hellweg
Wednesday afternoon, the said.
death toll had climbed well
Tuesday's quake was the
over 100.
fourth-strongest outer rise
"It's one of those heart- on record, Geist said
wrenching situations where
This quake was also rela·
you have some time, but tively shallow in the
what can you do? It's not ground. only II .2 miles
much time." said Eric Geist, under the sea floor. That's
a tsunami specialist and important because the closgeophysicist at the U.S. er the quake is to the surface
Geological Survey in Menlo of the ocean, the less energy
dissipates as ·it travels
Park. Calif.
Tsunamis are towering through the ground.
waves ttiggered by earthIt was also in deep
quakes. They can top 100 water. Initial estimates are
feet, and can stick around that there was well over 3
for as much as an hour, miles, maybe even 4
recede violently, then come miles, of water ahove the
hack hours later.
shaking ground, Geist
In some ways. the geo- said. That means more
logical conditions were water displaced, and thus
even worse for Tuesday's · bigger waves. If there had
tsunami than they were dur· been only I mile of water
ing the devastating 9.0- above the quake. the
magnitude quake and tsuna- waves would have been
mi that killed more than about 11 feet smaller.
150,000 people in Asia in Geist estimated.
2004. But this time. there
That deep water also was
were fewer people in responsible for the blinding

speed of the tsunami. The
deeper the water, the faster a
tsunami travels.
This water was so deep
that the tsunami could have
been zipping along at 530
mph, Geist sa!d. Usually, a
tsunami slows down when it
hits shallow water. Around
the United States. for example, the shallow continental
shelf slows downs waves
dramatically.
Samoa didn't have that
protection until just before
the tsunami reached the
shore. And by the time it hit,
it was still coming at 30 mph.
And by the time you see a
tsunami, "it's usually too
late to outrun it," Geist said.

California Gov.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger
speaks at the
second
Governors'
•
Global Climate
Summit in Los
Angeles
Wednesday.

-

-

-

-- - -'~

,..

EPA moves to
regulate smokestack
greenhouse gases
B Y D INA CAPIELLO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTO!'i - The
Environmental Protection
Agency
took
steps
Wednesday to control the
emissions blamed for global
warming from power plants.
factories and refineries for
the first time.
The EPA proposal would
require polluters to reduce
six greenhouse gases. by
installing the best available
technology and improving
energy efficiency whenever
a facility is significantly
changed or built. The rule
applies to any industrial
plant that emits at least
25.000 tons of greenhouse
gases a year.
These large sources arc
responsible for 70 percent
of the greenhouse gas em is·
sions mainly carbon
dioxide from buming fossil
fuels - that are released in
the U.S .. the EPA said.
"By using the power and
authority of the Clean Air
Act, we can begin reducing
emissions from the nation's
lar~est
greenhouse gas
emitting facilities without
placing an undue burden on
the busines~es that make up
the vast majority of our
economy,''
EPA
Administrator Lisa Jackson
said. ''We know the comer
coffee shop is no place to
look for meaningful carbon
reductions."
Earlier this year. the
Obama
administration
announced that it would
start developing the firstever greenhouse gas emissions standards for cars and
trucks. Those regulations.
which would take effect in
20 I0. compel the EPA to
control greenhouse gases
from large smokestacks as
well. the agency said.
Industry groups immediately
questioned
the
agency's argument. They
charged that the EPA \Vas
skirting the law. since the
Clean Air Act typically covers any facility releasing
more than 250 tons a vear of
a recognized pollutm1t. That
threshold would require
more facilities to fall under
the ne\v regulations.
''This proposal incotTectly
assumes that one industry's
greenhouse gas emissions
an~ worse than another's.''
said Charles T. Drevna,
president or the National
Petrochemical and Refiners
Association.

Jeff Holmstead . a former
top EPA air pollution oflicial who is now a lobbyist
for the energy industry, said
the agency was trying to ''fit
a square peg into a round
hole.''
"Normally. il takes un act
of Congress to change the
words of a statute enacted
by Congress, a':d many .
us are very cunous to s
EPA's legal justification for
today's
proposal.''
Holmstead said.
Jackson. speaking at a
news conference at a climate change summit being
hosted by California Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger,
said the rule was legally
defensible.
"The EPA would not propose a rule that we didn't
believe ... made good legal
sense,'' she said.
''EPA would not propose a
rule that did not make legal
sense.'' she said.
The EPA's announcement
came hours after Senate
Democrats unveiled legislation that would !-.Ct limits on
the amount of greenhouse
gases from large industrial
sources. The Senate bill,
unlike the House-passed
version. preserves the EPA's
authority to regulate und· ·
the Clean Air ~ct.
Environmentalists s~.
Wednesdav( the two efforts
go hand-iii-hand.
- '·You can't have one without the other if \\C're going
to be successful in movin*
America to clean energy.·
said Emily Figdor. director
of the global warming pro·
gram
at
Environment
America. an advoca&lt;.·y
group.
The move will likely
increase
pressure
on
Congress to pass a bill to
avoid less-flexible. and
what Republicans said
would be more costly, rcgu·
lations. Supporters of the
legislation have already
used pending EPA rules as
leverage to get Congress to
act.
Senate Republicans have
already attempted to block
the EPA from issuing regulations to buv more time for
Congress to ·,vork on a bilL
At least one Republic.
leader. Sen. James lnhofe
Oklahoma. said Wednesda)
that Congress would try to
stop the EPA again.

• ••

On the Net:

Environmental Protection
Agency: www.epa.gov

Come on over to Bob's•••
for aU your FALL Plants fl Fruit
WlDter H~ Panda and Bud¥ M~-·-·•·
PlaDt pur
d NOwt1
Presli appfes
BOBt&amp;t"
fzave arrived'
PO'rntn lrAI:.r.. MUMS

$599EGeh
WITH IIANT COLOU
TO CB008B FBOIIUI
l%Y!Jj,[J;j fll1j

fiE[J]
TO PLANT
. .RENNIALS,
JI'LOWERINC
CAIIBACE AND

KALE
(RED, 1VHI1'.E,
I'VIli'£B, AND
PlllfiQ
ACULAR
COI.OU.

FAU. ECORAnNG ITEMS:
.nL4W UI.U 0 IJIZD), UAO£
GO~ 111111 DOI!JI,DI, Wlllft'Ji·'fll
PUJIPJC.Jlq, JIBOIILAJI
COliN ft~ INDIAN CO&amp;N AND

PC/JIIIfCI,.,

MUCHIIOUtU

*GOLDEN DELIC:IOVS
• RED DELICIOUS
*EMPJBB MACS
• GOLDEN SUPREME
• ROME BEAVTT
*GALA
*BOHETC&amp;ISP

•AND IDA RED.
TBT SOME FRESH

PRESSED emu, A

CANDY OR CAR.A.MEL
APPLE.

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Blue Dc,ils go to Portsmouth, Page 82
Winebrenner \\ins Senior League, Page H2
Rebels loot· for \\in number h\0, Page 86

Thursday, October 1, 2009
•

ady Rebels crush Lady Tornadoes

6PREP
Foo·mALL GAMF.S
.1 '

FRIDAY'S GAMES

BY ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Eastern at Trimble
Southern at Fed Hock
Warren at Meigs
Gallipolis at Portsmouth
River Valley at S. Point
Fairfield Christian at S. Gallia
Wayne at Point Pleasant
Hannan at Williamson

All games start at 7:30p.m.

Southem
eyes fourth
win
BY SARAH HAWLEY
•

.SPOATSO_M'fOAIL'fSE NTINE.. COM

STEWART
The
Southern Tornadoes football team look" for the1r
fourth straight \\-in Friday
evenmg againc:.t the \\in less
Federal Hocking Lancers
(0-5).
Southem (3~2) 1s coming
off a 25-16 "in against
Green last Frida). Southern
also ha-.; wins over South
Gallia (1-4) and Hannan (04) after losing their first two
games to Symmes Valle)
(4- I) and Wahama (5-0).
Against Green, Southern
saw a care~r high rushing
effort from Greg .knkms
who carried 21 times for
164 yard-. and two touchdowns. Dustin Salser also
added a 3-4 p.1ssing night
with 83 yards and a rushing
touchdown. Taylor Lemley
led the defense with 12
tackles and three sacks.
Hhcking is comof a tough ~ss against
Alexand~T..
e Lancers
have f&lt;tccd opp hents that
are a combined :_3-2 on1he
season. Losses for the
Lancers have came at
Monroe Central (5..0). Fort
Frye (4-1 ). and Alexander
(5-0). Home losses ha\e
been against Athen" (5-0)
and Shenandoah (4·1 ).
Federal Hocking hac.;
scored 13.2 points a game
and have givl!n up 39 points
per game to their opponents.
Southern i~ allO\ving 21.2
points per game on the scuson while scoring 22.2
points per game.
Kickoff is M!t for 7:30
p.m. at Federal Hocking
High School in Stewart.
J

Marauders
dominate
Lancers

MERCERVILLE - The
South Gallia Lady Rebels
defeated the Sou~hern Lady
Tornadoe~ in three games
Wednesda) night in a~ girls'
non-league varsity volleyball match. South Gallia is
14-3 overall. \Vhile Southern
drop" to 4-9. The Rebeb
won 25-11,25-9. and 15-14.
Although Southern took
a lead in the second game. it
was brief as the Ladv Rebels
bounced hack for ·the win
and the match. Other than
that Southern had little to
cheer abLHlt.
''Cool. calm, and collect~d." said Southern Coach
Katie Dickson. "That's the
appearance South Gall ia
had. They had confidence,
had a job to do. and came
out and did the job. We
showed :-orne signs of life.
but tonight v. e simply
played a better team."
Leading the way for
South Gallia \\as Hailee

Swain with 13 polllh, fi\ c
aces, five kilh. .nd one
block. Ta) lor Dun~. ..m added
13 pomt~. one ace. c111d three
kills. Megan Cald\\-ell had
twelve polllts. two kills. four
aces, and 9ne block.
Breanna West talhed eight
\
points. three aces. and three
kills. and Chandra Canada)
had six pomt:-, four nee~. and
t\\O kills. Ellie Bostic had a
good front line while another contributor was Shelb)
Merry.
Southern was led by
Ashley Walker and Gabby
Johnson with six points
each. Katelvn llill had nine
blocks' ml'd two dig...
Brcanna Taylor was H 12
spiking with three hlocks,
Kelsey Strang was 6-11 with
two block&lt;&gt;, and Johnson and
Hill each had 1wo digs.
Lindsay Teaford of
Southern was 5-5 serving,
Sarah Hawley/photo
while Emily Ash "as 2-3
and Courtney Thoma~ 6-6 Southern's Bobbi Harns sends the ball over the net as the
Lady Rebel's Megan Caldwell goes for the block. Southern
with a dig.

SENTINEL STAFF
MOSS?ORTSCM'fOAILYSENliNELCOM

I

Please see Southern, Bl

CHILLICOTHE -

All

good things must come to an

end.
That was the case for the
Mei~ golf team on Tuesday
at me Division II sectional
golf touman.1ent at the Jaycees
Golf Course in Ross County,
as the ~farauders failed both
as a team and individually to
advance anyone to 1he 2009
district tournament.
The Marauders - who
posted a team score of 373 finished II th overall out of 15
teams. coming up short on
their bid to extend their sea·
son. The top live teams and
top five individuals at the
event moved on to district
play next week at the
Pickaway Countrv Club in
Circleville.
'
MHS wa~ led by Tyler
Andrews with a round of 88,
tinishin!! just one ::.troke away
teammates (left to right) are Katie Woods, Courtney from a-playoff for the final
individual district spot.
Thomas, and Breanna Taylor look on.
Scon Kennedy was next
with a score of 91. followed
bv Bobbv King with a 93.
Rvan Jeffers rounded out the
tearn scoring with a 10 I. Ben
Hood also -fired a round of
ll3.
The ~1arauders- who finished 5-7 in the TVC Ohio
Division this fall- are saying
goodbye to eight seniors on an
eight-man roster. They are
Andrews, King, Jeffers,
Kennedy Hood. Anthony
Frederick.
James
Cunningham
and
Joey
Blackston.
For the season. the mem·
bers of this team had the following averages of nine holes:
Andrews (43.4), Jeffers
(45.8), Kil!~ (47.0). Blackston
(47.5). K.ennedy (49.1),
Frederick (52.8), Hood (53.1),
and Cunningham (552).
Also, MHS had one female
competitor freshman
Alvssa Cremeans - in the
Di\ision II girls sectional in
Upper
Lansdown
on
Wronesday. Cremeans fired
an 18·hole score of I 16, but
did not advance to disnicts.
Cremeans had a sea,.on average of 59.5 shots per nine
holes.

Eagles open TVC Hocking play at 11rimble
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRlBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER - One team
is off to ih best stmt in six
. ycarl&gt;. The other is off to its
wor"t in a decade.
But even with that said,
there is a lot of intrigue and
interest surrounding the
1 Eastern
and
Trimble
matchup this Friday night
when both teams begin the
2009 Tri-Vallev Conference
Hocking Division gridiron
season m a Week 6 matchup
at Tomcat Stadium in Athen&amp;
County.
Both the Eagle!&gt; (3-2) and
Tomcat5 (1-..f) enter this
weekend coming off losses
in their non-conference
finales. EHS lost to unbeaten Wahama 26-14. while
THS was shutout b)'
F-airland 14-0. The Eagles
hdd their three-game win·
ning streak snapped and the
Tomcats lost their second
straight.
I Eastern - which current·
ly sits ninth in the Division
VI. Region 23 playoff rankenters TVC Hocking
ings
pia) wnh a winning record
for the first time ~mce 2004,
when n finished 7-3 overall
for it5 last winning cam·
paign on the gridiron.
The Eagles, however, finished a::. the 2.004 TVC
Hocking runner-up
behind
Trimble.
The
Tomcats have also v.on eight

I

Team Scores

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Eastern's kicker Tyler Hendrix kicks during pregame warmups Friday against Wahama.
Ktrk Pullins is holding as Casey McKnight looks on. Eastern travels to face TVC·Hocking
opponent Trimble on Friday.

straight against the Green
and White.
Eastern's laf&gt;t win O\'er the
Tomcats came in 2000, a 346 decision at East Shade
Rh er Stadium during the
Eagles' only TVC Hocking
f&gt;eason.
championship
EaMern 's last win at THS
came m I 999 by a 14- 12
count. when Trimble started

that campaign with an 0-5
mark.
The Tomcats. however.
ha\e dominated the TVC
Hocking Division for most
of thi; decade. winning
league titles in 200 I. 2003.
2004. 2005 and 2008. THS
has also fared very well in
head-to-head
matchups
agamst Eastern. owning a

19-4 series record all time.
The Tomcats are abo 9-1
in the r last I0 TVC
Hocking openers. with the
lone exception' being
the
~
2000 matchup at Eastern.
The Eades are 2·8 in league
•
h
openers over t at same span.
Trimble's lone wm this

Please see Eastern, Bl

I

Logan Elm
Unioto
McClain
New Lexington
Westfall
Miami Trace
zane ~race
w~s~l.,gton CH

332
340
351
357
358
358

360
363

~~~:r1~ Unton

::

Meigs
Alexander

373
375

CorciEMIIe

380

Southeastern 397
V1nton County nla
·westfall won he breaker for 5th place

lndivicual auahhers

Colin Jessup (Fa!rtietd Unoon)
Ben Davos (Southeastern)
Jordan Long (Zane Trace)
Brad Landis (Moami Traco)
Ore-.v Dav1s (Zane Trace)

80
81

86
86
87

Marauder I ok o wr ck Warriors' undefeated record

Bv SARAH HAWLEY
MDSSPOR"SOWOA VSEtmNELCO'.I

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs Lady J\lamudcrs volleyball team defeated the
Federal. Hockmg
l.ady
Lancers m consecut1 vc games
Wednesday evening at Larry
R. Mon·bon Gymnasium.
Meigs (I J-3) v. on by scores
of 25-6, 25- II. and 25-21.
'fhe Lady Mamudcr'" scoring
was led b) Emalec Glass \\ith
~ 3 pomts on a 17-17 servmg
night. She also added II
a::.sists.
Meri VanMeter added a 13·
l3 serving night, earning 10
t&gt;oints. Shellie Bailey led the
Lady Marauders v. ith II kills
on the night. ~ \\Cil a~. 9
point&lt;; and one block on a 1314 serving parformance.
Tncia Smith led the team
~vith 24 assists. and also
three points, and one
Chandra Stanley .1dded
points and seven kilb on
a 8-8 serving night, ~'vlor!7at1
Howard had two points, nme
kills, :ull one hlock, Valcne
Conde had two points on a 4- •
4 serving night. while ,
Minmda Grueser m1d Chelsea
Patterson each had perfect
serving mghtf&gt;.
AJi,.on Brown had ~e\en
kills and Alaine Amold had
Sarah Hawley/file photo
two kill" and one block
The Meigs Marauders football team huddles up dunng Friday night's contest against the
Meigs trmcJs to Wellston Nelsonville-York Buckeyes in the TVC-Ohio matchup. Meigs host the undefeated Warren
for a TVC·Ohio matchup on Warnors thts Friday at Bob Roberts F1eld w1th kickoff set for 7:30p.m.
Thur5d.l) evening.

I

•

Meigs golfers
end season
at sectionaJs

BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY·- The murderous Me1gs Marauder
football schedule continues
this week when thev welcome the Warreh Warriors
to Bob Roberts FJeld.
The Warriors come into
the contest with a peli'ect 50 q1ark. and they will be the
thtrd Meigs opponent in a
row with a prefect mark. Of
the four Marauders losses.
their opponents ha\ e a combined record of 17-3 heading
into this week.
The Warriors are coming
off a 35-13 win over Pomt
Pleasant last Saturday night.
The\ arc outscoring their
oppZments by !I 200-60
account. This givl!s Warren
an average of 40 points p~r
game on the season. while
only all.nving 12 points per
CO!ItC'it.

The offense of Warren is
led b) quarterback· Cia)
Ellenwood. who h&lt;~s completed 31 of 59 for 485 yards
and eight touchdown~ on the
season. Grant Venham ha~
caught I 0 passes for 160
yards and three scores and
Justin Yokum seven for 146

and five touchdowns.
The Wa1Tior running game
is led by Kaleb Wolfe with
619 yards in 91 carries. and
an aveagc of 12 I yards a
contest. Kvie Pritt has added
188 vards ·in 34 tries.
O{fensivclv,
the
.Marauder:- aie led by senior
tailback Jeremy Smith.
Smith has carried I06 times
for 800 \ ards and has scored
I 3 touchdowns. including
all three scores last week.
Quarterback Jacob Well
has ~ompleted 40 of I0 I
through the air for 661 yards
and fi\'e touchdowns. Caleb
Davis has caught 12 passes
for 258 yards and I\\ o
scores.
On defen"e, the Marauders
ha,·e been playing hetter of
late Lus't week. N~lsonville·
York's all slate tailback.
Derek Arnold. rushed for
191 yards in 3 I ca1Tics. He
has been n thorn in the side
of everyone the Buckeyes
h&lt;ne pla)ed :-;ince his sopho·
more year. But despite the
effortc; of Arnold, Mcig~ had
a chance to tie the contest m
the final seconds.
Wan·en leads the all time

Please see Meigs, Bl

�- -

www.m ydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

__,..- ~

- '

~

- .

-- - - - -- -- -- - - - -

-

Thursday, Oct ober 1, 2009

Blue Devils travel Winebr~nner captures 2009 second half
to Portsmouth title of Riverside Senior Men's League
SENTINEL STAFF

Bv BRYAN WALTERS

MDSSPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BWA.TERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

MASON
Mick
PORTSI\10UTH - Th~
Winebrenner of Racine has
captured the second half
road doesn't get an) easier
for the Gallia r\cadcmv
Championship
of
the
Gallia Academy
footb,tll team this FridaY
Riverside Senior Men's
teague.
Winebrenner's
as it travels to the hrand
VERSUS
total of 182.0 points defeatnew I'rojan Colbeum to
ed Paul Somerville of Point
take on host Port-.mouth in
Pleasant who took second
a Week 6 Southeastern
place with 170.0 points for
Ohw Athletic League
his season dforts. The first
mutchup in Scioto County.
half
winner. Carl Stone of
The winles:-. Blue Devib
Ripley·gamished
third place
(0-5. 0-2 SEOALJ \viii
honors with 167.0 points.
Portsmouth
take another shot at earnSeventy-four players were
ing their first win of the
out
for the final week's play.
other
hand,
is
averaging
season against a Trojans'
Nineteen
points were possijust
12.4
points
offensivesquad that ended a twogame losing streak last ly and surrendering 36 ble with seventeen four man
Friday after posting a 3-l- points as a defensive unit. teams and two teams of
21 victory at Chillicothe. The Devils· opponents three players.
The low score of 57 (-13
The Trojans (3~2, 1-1) have a combined record of
under
par) was shot by the
started the season with a 21-4 this fall. with losses
threesome
of Jim Gress
pair of \ ictories, beating coming to Athens (21-0).
South Point in Week I by a Hillsboro (35-34 ), Ironton
24-14 margin and followed (39-6). Logan (57-6) and
that by christening its new Jackson (28-16).
athletic complex with a
The Blue Devils hold the
21·20
victory
over alltime edge in this series
Portsmouth West in Week by a 12-8-1 margin,
2.
including wins in seven of
BY RICK SIMPKINS
PHS followed those two the last eight meetings.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
wins with a pair of home GAHS also won last year's
lt1SSCS,
fa)Jing
tO
POINT PLEASANT contest at Memorial Field
Wheelersburg (68-14) and by a 7-0 decision.
The Point Pleasant Big
Jackson
(27-26) .
Portsmouth's
main Blacks finally get back
Portsmouth's opponents
home this Friday night
are a combined 14-11 this weapon is quarterback after nearly a month's
season. and the Tt·o jans are Josh Myers. \\;ho has absence. but this week's
averaging 23.8 points per amassed 337 rushing yards opponent is one hundred
game offensively while and thrown for another and eighty degrees away
~!lowing 30 points per 450 this season.
from the one who was here
contest.
Kickoff is scheduled for in August to help christen
Gallia Academy. on the 7:30p.m.
the new PPHS football
facility.
That seasop-opening foe
was the Tug Valley
Raiders, a team the Big
Blacks dispatched by a 570 score . The team here this
Friday?
The
Wayne
Pioneers. Probably the only
thing that Wavne and Tug
Valley have i~ common is
that both play with 11 players on each side of the football. Oh yeah. the footballs
that they use are pretty
similar. After that'? Not
much.
The Pioneers come into
this Cardinai Conference
match up sporting a 4-0
record and a #3 ranking in
this week's WVSSAC ratings. Wayne has defeated
Keyser.
Chesapeake.
Herbert
Hoover.
and
Sissonville. Just one half of
a ratings point separates
the Pioneers from number
ones Ravenswood and
Sherman. Going back five
. ,
.
.
.
Sarah ~awleylp_noto
years. the worst record for
South Gallla s Elite Bostic, nght, bumps the ballm the a1r_ as 1 a Wayne football team was
teammate Ch~ndr? Canaday, left, watches on dunng last season ·s 11 2 mark.
We~nesday ntg~t s non-c?nference volleyball match The only two losses were
agamst Southern 1n Mercerville.
to eventual state champion
teen,
w~ilc
Maggie Grafton in the semifinals of
Cummins.
Elizabeth the state playoffs. and a 22Shuler. and Vada Counts 21 loss to the Big Blacks
each had four.
from Page Bl
Southern
hosts
Trimble
Thursday
in a
South Gallia won the
TVC-Hocking
Matchup,
reserve game 25-12 and
25-12. Tori Duncan had while South Gallia travto
Fairland
on
ten for South Gallia and els
Monday,
Jasmine Johnson had thir-

(Letart, WV). Jim Spencer
(Ripley),
and
Paul
Somerville (Point Pleasant).
Second place was a tie
with scores of 60 (-10 under
par) between the teams of
Ken
Whited
(Point
Pleasant). Buford Brown
(Athens).
Don
Fields
(Hartford). and Bub Stivers
(Pomeroy). and Carl Stone
(Ripley). Chet Thomas
(Patriot).
Carl
Cline
&lt;Mason), and JetTy Arnold
(New Haven).
The closest to the pin winners were Tom McNeely
(Point Pleasant) on number
nine and Jim Gress on the
fourteenth hole.
Following Tuesday's play
the players were treated to
the Champions Dinner
catered by the Tee Time
Grill. Prizes were awarded
to the top six point scorers

for the s~cond half along
\Vith S 1.000.00 worth of
door prizes.
Officers were elected for
2010 with Bill Yoho as
President, Mike Bragg as
Vice-President, and Bob
Greene a:-. Leagu~ Secretary.
The annual closest to the
pin contest was last on the
~st for the day wtlh all players who had a closest to the
pin win taking a shot at the
80 yard shot for a $30.00
gift certificate. First place
went to Bob Hysell who
holed out the shot for an ace
for his win. Second place
went to Mick Winebrenner
and Paul Somerville took
third place.
Next year's league will
start the first Tuesday in
April with all male golfersfifty years of age or older
eligible to participate.

2009 SENIOR LEAGUE
STANDINGS
M1ck Winebrerl"£
Paul Somerville
Cart Stone
Jack Maloney
Haske! Jones
Bob Oliver
Bob Stewart
FranK Browr
Gerald Kelly
J1m Gress
Kenny Greene
Bob Hill
Bob Humphrey
M1tch Mace
Flichard Mabe
Tom F1sher
CurtiS Grubb
Don Corbm
Steve Safford
Bob Hysell
Bub Stivers
Russ Holland
Jack Fox
Claude Proffitt
Cecil Minton
Jimmy Joe Hemsley
Ed Wilson
Buford Brown
Bill Stncklin
Ed Debalskl
Earl Johnson
Carl Chne
Butch Bookmal"
Chuck Butterworth
Ken Whited

182.0
170.0
167.5
165.5
162.5
1SO.O
157.5
148.0
144.5
141.0
140 0

•

139.0
138.0

135.0
135.0
134.0
134.0

132.0
131.5
130.0
128.0
125.0
124.0
122.5

122.0
121.0
121.0
120.0
119 0
118.0

116.5
116.5
115.0
115.0

113.5

Big Blacks host unbeaten Wayne .

Southern

Meigs
from Page Bl
series winning four games.
while the maroon and gold
bas won three. The
Warriors won last year at
Vincent 31-22. The home
team has won the last two
matchups in the series.
Meigs won the last game
-the two played at Bob

Eastern
from PageBl
SC3(1on came against winJess Belpre in Week 3, a 5225 decision at BHS. The
Tomcats have h~VTie losses
against
unbeaten
Nelsonville- York (7-6) and
unbeaten Oak Hill (33-0),
as well as road losses to
FHS
and
unbeaten
Alexander (35-32).
Trimble's opponents are a
combmcd 18-7 this fall,
while Eagle opponents have
gone 14-l J so far.
Tnmble enters Friday
averaging 18 points per
game offensively while
allowing 22.8 per contest.

'

on the Pioneers' home
field. Wayne has made it to
the state semifinals in each
of those last five seasons.
··wayne has one of the
better AA football programs in the state:· said
PPHS Head Coach Dave
Darst. "Every year they are
at or near the top of Class
AA. They take a lot of
pride in their football and
r m sure they have had this
date marked on their calendar for a long time. Not
many teams go down there
and beat them and they will
surely look to come up here
and pay us back. Having
said that. our kids are
excited about playing
Wayne. We haven't had to
do much to get them ready
for this one. We have had a
good week of practice -probably the best week we
have had all year. If we get
out of the blocks early. who
knows? We have the talent
to beat anv team on our
schedule. Our only problem so far is we haven't
shown the abilitv to come
back once we ·have our
backs to the wall. A good
start means a good game,"
added the third year mentor.
Wayne returns a lot of
starters from a year ago.
including three offensive
linemen -- Garrett Rowe,
Mike Davis. and Justin
Riggles. plus their leading
rusher Corey Damron. who
compiled 1300 yards rushing last season. One key
departure is three year
starting quarterback Joey
Ferguson. Senior Adam
Frazier has taken over the
reigns of the offense. But.

perhaps the best player on
the team is senior tight
end/linebacker
Chase
Perry. a 6'2. 225 pounder
who Darst calls a "real
football player''.
Wayne will run out of the
Wing-T offense. although
their version is slightly different from the Wing-T''
used by South Point and
Warren Local. You won't
see a 220 pound fullback
th1s week. but a 160
pounder with good speed.
The Pioneers will also run
their Wing-Tout of an 'T
formation. They don't like
to throw the football a lot.
but they can if they need to
and they are successfu I
when they do.
The Bi!! Blacks come
into this g~ame healthy and
will start the same offensive lineup that started a
v.·eek ago. That lineup features Casey Hogg at center.
Gabe Starcher and Brock
McClung at the guards, and
Clay Krebs and Derry
Osborne at the tackles.
with Beau Bellamy at tight
end. The spilt end is Cody
Greathouse. The quarterback is Eric Roberts while
the fullback is Jan·od Long.
Nathan Roberts will start
tailback
and
JaWaan
Williams is the tlanker.
Also look for Chris
Blankenship and Anthon)
Darst to see time at fadback and James Fielder
somewhere in the backfield.
Defensively. the coaching staff has made one
change. Clay Krebs will
move from end to tackle.
while Ryan Warner will get

at

the first start of his car· ·
at the end slot. Ot
starters on defense \Vill 6
Brock McClung, Michael
Mus!!rave, Nathan Roberts.
Case~y Hogg. Chauncey
McClanahan,
Derek
Pinson. JaWaan Williams.
Donovan Powell. and
Layne Thompson.
Also on Friday. the Point
Pleasant High School
Athletic Hall of Fame
Committee will introduce
the 2009 inductees to the
hall of fame. Fifteen former athletes. coaches.
and/or boosters will jam
the elite group. On
Saturday at 6:00 p.m., the
Hall of Fame induction ceremony will take place at
the high school. Dinner
will be ~"erved at 6:00 at the
commons area. with the
ceremony to take place
immediately following in
the Lillian and Paul Wedge
Auditorium. Tickets will .
~
available at the door.
Another date to put
your calendar is Saturday,
October I Ot 1. The 1ackson
County Bears. a semi-pro
football team based in
Jackson County, West
Virginia will take on the
Cuyahoga County Spartans
at the PPHS field. Kickoff
is set for 7:30 and admission is $5.00. Two former
Big Blacks are on the
Be'itrs· roster -- Jimmy
Jordan and Chad Bright.
The PPHS football boosters are sponsoring the
e\ ent and concessions \.vill
be available.
The Big Blacks game on
Fridav will kickoff at 7:30
with~ pre-game festivitie:-.
slated for 7:00.

Roberts Field in 2005 by a
score of 29-7.
Kickoff is set for 7:30
p.m. at Bob Roberts Field
in Pomeroy.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Subscribe rodav.
992-2155 •

Eastern, on the other hand,
is scoring 24.4 points offensively and allowing 18.2
defensively per outing.
The
Tomcats,
who
haven't scored in their last
eight quarters, are primarily
led by running back Tyler
Dyla - who amassed 599
ru:-.hing yards this season.
The winner of this contest
will take somewhat of an
'early lead in the chase for
the TVC Hocking title,
although nothing will be
guaranteed. Out~ ide of
Eastern, only Southern (32) has a winning record
amongst the rest of the TVC
Hocking schoob.
Kickoff of the EasternTrimble matchup will be on
Friday at 7:30p.m.

•

�------_....----1

Thursday, October 1, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel· Page 83

\lrribttne - Sentinel - ll\egister
CLASSIFIED

In One Week With Us

Meigs County, OH

Websites:
www.mydailytribune com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

mdtclassifwd~~;:!uytribune.com

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLlN_E
l\egis'ter
JUST SAY
To Place
\lrributte
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 -~~

ca II Today...

Or Fax To (740) 446·3008

.Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m·. to 5:00 p.m.
HO:W TO WRIT.E AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .•.

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

0UJ.r1Airt14
Display Ads

Daily In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-f'rlday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
sunday I11-&lt;:olumn1 9:00a.m.
f'rlday For Sundays Paper

G.EI YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
~ ;'-.
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for smell
$1 .00 for large

All Display: 12 Noon 2
eustne- Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays P•per

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Ad$ With A Keyword • loclude Complde
Oc«rip\ion •Include A PriCe • Avoid Abbre\iatlons
• Include Phone Nuntber And Addreu When Needed
• .Ads Should Run 7 Days

POLICIES: Otic&gt; ~lley Publl81llrQ ret~Kves tile rlgl'lt to edit. reject. 01 car&gt;eel any ad 111 any time. Error11 mUSI be reported on the flrBI day of publleal!on and the
frlbl.l'le-Senllnel~lster will be responsible tor no more than the coat of the apace cx:cupled by the error ancl only the fu-. Insertion. We shelf 001 be liable tor
any ION or t)(j)9nee that rMutto from 1M publicatiOn or oml8$10n of an advertiNmant. Correc:1:on &gt;~o111 w made In the llrct avallablo e&lt;l~lon. • Box number ada
are alwa-,s confidential • Cutten! rllle cerd appflee. • AU real estate advertisements are subject to the Federal Fair Houstng Act of 1968. • This new11!11Per
eccept• ontv help wanted ad$ mMtlng EOE ataodar®. We will not knowingly accepe any advertising In violation of the law. Will not be retpOnaltlle tor any
erro1111n an adlaken over the phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit.
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must

Other Services

Professional Services

D/SHNET-

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800·537-9528

WJlBK
Save up to 40% off
your cable blii!Call
Dish Network today!
1·8n-274-2471

Computers

GUARANTEED
CONSUMER
Own a computer
for as little as
S29 ·99 per week!
No credit check!
Guaranteed
ConsL.mer Fund1ng
1·888-282-3595
•

~!!:!!!!~~~~~~~
Other Services

LIFELOCK
Are You Protected?
An identity is stolen
every 3 seconds.
Call L1!elock now to
protect your family
tree for 30·days!
1-877-481·4882
Promocode:
FREEMONTH
200

Announcements

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
bus1ness with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have tnvestigat·
ing the offenng.
Security

Mli.

.

Free Home Security System
$850 Value
w1th purchase of
alarm monitor·
ingservices from
ADT Security Serv·
ices.
Call 1·888-274-3888
Tax I Accounting

AMERICAN_
IMRELIEF
Settle tRS Taxes
For a fraction of
what you owe. If you
owe over $ 15,000 ·tn
back taxes call now
for a free consults·
tion. 1·877·258-5142
Financial

CREDIT CARD
.B.EJ,JJ;_F
Buried in Credit
Card Debit?
Call Credit Card Relief tor your
free consultation.
1·877·264·8031

DE.BI

· Plctures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.
Stop worrytng, get debt
relief today frorp a company you can fast. Need
cash fast. call toll free
1-800-360-6291
24 hr
toll free.
Wanted

~A

We solve debt
problems!
If you have over
512,000 in debt
CALL NOW!
1·877-266-0261

Other Services

DIRECTV
For the best TV
experience, up·
grade from cable to
Dlrectv today!
Packages start
at S29.9g
1·866-541·0834

400

Fmancial

Livestock
All natural. grain fed. angus freezer beef for sale.
(740)441-5705
or
256·9250.
Black

Past wmners, genetically
proven, fair steers. rea·
sonably
priced.
(740')441-5705
or
256-9250.
Yearling
Angus
Bulls.
Top Bloodline &amp; Performance $1200, Bred Angus
Cows
S1000
Call
740-286-5395
or
Cell
740-418·0633

Yorkies, females, champion
bloodlines.
Call
740-441-9510.
700

Agriculture

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifettme
guarantee 1..0ca1 refer·
ences furnished Established 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740·446·0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

Hay for Sale: Square
Bales and 4x5 Round
Bales,
Delivery
AvailMoney To lend
able. 740-367-0512 or
NOTICE Borrow Smart. 441·5502.
contact the Ohio Divisian of Fin.anctal lnstttuMerchandise
lions Office of Consumer 900
Affatrs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob~
taln a loan. BEWARE of
Antiques
requests for any large Antique Show, Buy, Sell
advance
payments
of or Trade, Oct. 3 &amp; 4 At
fees or insurance. Call the West Virginia State
the Office of Consumer Farm Museum Fall Festi·
Afftars
toll
free
at val
Fairgrounds Road,
1·866-278·0003 to learn Pt. Pleasant. 9am to
if the mortgage broker or 4pm,
Advertising,
Old
lender is properly li·
Bottles, Stoneware, .Lo·
censed. (This IS a public cal Memorabilia, Dealer
service
announcement Space
Available.
from the Ohio Valley
_ _
740 992 5088
Publishing Com'pany)
~~::=:!=~~~~
Miscellaneous
' 500
.
Education
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Business &amp; Trade
Evans 1·800·537·9528
School
=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Hospital bed &amp; other
Galtlpolls Career
medical
equipment
College
(740)992·7315,
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367 Die Cast Cars, More
1·800·214-0452
than 220, sizes from Mi·
galilpohscareercollege.edu
croMachines
to
1:18.
Accred1ted M901ber Accredit·
many VW Models. Some
ng Council for Independent
from 60's. 70's, 80's.
Colleges and Schools 1274B
Most in mint ancl/or packages. Pd more than
600
Animals $1000.
$500.
740-248-9439.

Child / Elderly Care

~

3000

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprisedl Check out our
used
inventory
at
www.CAREO.com.
Carmtchael
Equipment
Will clean houses or sit 740-446-2412
w/ elderly m Pt. Pleas.,
Mason,Gaii.·Ferry
area, STIHL Sales &amp; Servtce
call Kelly 304-675·2499 Now Available at Carmichael
Eqwpment
i304·857·28001304-675·
740·446·2412
3686.

Dust
Bunny
Ridders
Cleamng Service, will do
general
house-cleaning
tn the Mason, New Haven &amp; Pomeroy OH.
area. for more tnfo. call
Pets
304-773-6152 to sched·
ule your next cteantng •
eke
minture
ptnscher
3mos old puppies &amp;
Services adults. shots wormed tail
300
docked
5150
740·388-8788

Will take care of the
elderly 10 thetr nome
call 304·675-3264.

Farm Equipment

Farm Equipment

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS.
Other Services
CARGO EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
Pet
Cremations.
Call CARGO/CONCESSION
740·446-3745
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
Professional Services
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TURNED OOWN ON
TORY AT
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI WWW CARMICHAEL·
No Fee Unless We Wml
TRAILERS.COM
1·888-582·3345
740·446-3825

Real Estate
Sales

Apartments/
Townhouses

MOVE IN READY Completely furmshed 2BR. all
appliances,
TV.stereo
Farm for sale Portland sys. linens &amp; complete
Ohto, 57 acres with kitchen ware $700/mo -thouse, 18 acres wood· elec $500/dep. 446-9585
land, older house on
property,
very
nice. New Haven, 1 bedroom
$175,000.00
appraised apartment has washer &amp;
value; 5 acres (commer· dryer. depoSit &amp; refer·
no
pets,
ctal), 2 mtles from Ra· ences,
venswood,
WV. 740-992-0165
545,000.00,
1 &amp; 2 Br. furnished apt.,
304·482-3361
start $450 &amp; up plus
For Sale By Owner

0
6
0

dep., No pets, Racine.Ob
740·591-5174
2 bed 1 bath S300/mo. Middleport. 1 &amp; 2 bed446·3570
room unfurntshed &amp; fur·
ntshed apartment, de·
Bed.2
Bath
Ill D posit &amp; references, no
homc,'Onlyl&lt;l9 •,,mon'5&lt;;f
pets. 740-992-0165
d"n I~)"· ,n sq, for li'l. - - - - - - - - I!00-1&gt;20.4946ex H61.
5
Rms.
With
WiD
Madison Ave. Pt. Pleas- hookup. Rg. &amp; Ref. turr,
ant, frame house on 2 Upstatrs 3 rms. Rg. &amp;
lots, excellent location for Ref· Iurn. Stngle umt very
2 future rentals. $10,000. clean. Both In town.
740·645·0938
441-0596.
Houses For Sale

0
0

House 1n Minersville. Oh
along Rt. 124, 3 br. 1
bth. cia. natural gas fur·
nance. new roof. new
septic system. siding &amp;
Yard Sale
therma pane windows. 2
carports, beautiful view
Oct. 1·3. Hillstde Rd. 5
of nver. (740)992-2997
1/2 mi. out Rt. 141
Clothing, white bedroom 4 bed 2.5 bath $600/mo
set, Men's Dress shirts. possible owner finance
446·3384
tent &amp; misc. 8 to 5.

Apartment available now
Riverbend
Apts.
New
Haven WV. Now accepttng
applications
for
HUD-substdtzed,
one
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
included. Based on 30•o
of adJusted 1ncome Call
304·882·3121.
available
for Senior and Disable&lt;{
people.

House for Sale. 113 4th
Ave.
Gallipolis. Newer
windows. siding &amp; roof.
538,000.
Negotiable.
740-441-5165.

Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr., from S365 to
$560.
740-446·2568,
Equal Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Provider and Employe~

www.comics.com

Yard Sale

Yard Sale

Yard Sale Hot Dogs
Bake Sale
Fri &amp; Sat Oct 2 &amp; 3
10AM·4PM
at
Trinity
U.M. Church St. RT. 160,
Porter. OH

Yard sale @ St. Paul
U.M. Church, Tuppers
Plains, Oct 2. 9-7 &amp; Oct
3rd, 9-2, dishes,clothing,
furniture. misc.
--------Yard safe, 3 family Maple
St, Middleport, near Val·
ley Lumber. Fri. 2nd. Sat.
3rd only
5 Family Annual Yard
Sale at Perry's Green·
house. 1 mi west Rodney
on old 35. Fri-Sun. 9·5.
Household,
clothes.
home tntenor-Fur Coat,
antique wicker baby bassinet.
Oak
Gossip
Bench, mise

A yard salers paradise,
22 yard sates 60 families. Sat. Oct. 3rd 9·5,
Sun. Oct 4th 10·4, South
Canaan Ad, Athens Co.
Ad 24 (6 112 mtles long)
located off Rt. 50 7.7
miles west of Coolville.
most sales Sat. &amp; Sun.
Rain or Shine, Food &amp;
Drinks available, if you
need or want something
someone prot&gt;ably has it.

5 family yard sale. Oct
Carport sale October 1st 2&amp;3. 9·5. 22062 SR 7 S.
Fall sale, Blue plush in &amp; 2nd, Tyree Blvd.,
Lots kids, mens, womens
stock.
516.95/yd
tn· Racine
clothing &amp; home decor.
stalled. Vinyl starting at
560
Sycamore St. Mid·
Garage sale. Oct. 1,2,3,
S5.95!yd. 740.446-7444.
somehting for everyone dleport, Ohio. on Fri.
Hot lub outlet. Top qual2nd, Sat. 3rd. will have
follow signs at 5 Points.
ity/warranties Free delivclohes, gun$, collector
ery,
wholesale.
New Garage/Moving
Sale, items, tools &amp; more. Ratn
Truckload.
Sat. only Oct. 3, rain or or shine. Come between
606·929·5655.
shine,
Wright
St., Sycamore &amp; Beech St.
Pomeroy
near
God's
WantTo Buy
NET. furniture, dressers. Clay Townhouse. St. Rt.
bicycle, men's /womem's 218· Oct. 2 &amp; 3· McCarty.
Buytng Paw Paws &amp; blazers, curtains &amp; lots Sames, Donne!.
black
walnuts , more.
Garage Sale-Oct. 1 &amp; 2.
740·698-6060
Huge yard sale, Fri. Sat. Rain or shtne at 2534
Absolute Top Dollar • sil· &amp; Sun. Oct. 2,3,4. 9·? In- Georges Ck. Rd. Chi!·
ver/gold
coins.
any dians, furniture, Alfred dren's clothing. 18 mo.
10K/14KJ18K gold jew- Dunner clothes, jeans, thru 12, mens, womens.
xsmall thru plus size.
elry. dental gold, pre lots
mtsc.
everything
1935
US
currency. must go, 27422 St. Rt 7, Window 29"x53", antique
proof/min!
sets.
dia· 3 miles soulh of Middle· table.&amp; table top, small
mends, MTS Cotn Shop. port above Meigs &amp; Gal- appliances, dog earner,
comforter set, all holiday
151 2nd Avenue. Galli· lialine
decorations, and lots of
polis. 446·2842
Large yard sale, Oct. 2 &amp; misc.
Yard Sale
3, 8:00am-4pm, clothes, Garage Sale. Fri.&amp; Sat
- - = = = = = = = curtains, shoes, house- 9-?. A lot of everything. 2
1120 Buck Ridge Rd.Bob hold items, Christmas mi. from city park on 588.
Cox
residence.
Wed, items &amp; misc. located in Winterplace Dr.
9/30. Thurs. 1011. Sat. b11llding behind Victory
10/3. 9-4. Infant clothes Baptist Church, 525 N. Huge yard sale. Chesh·
ire. Riverside Dr. Close
to size 8 slim boys/adult, 2nd
Ave.,
Middleport,
to Pepsi Plant. Name
and t\ousehold.
Tammy
Ball
brand clothing &amp; misc.
740·992-6142
items. Oct. 1·3, rain or
128 Bastiani Dr. entertainment ctr PC desk. Moving sale, Sept. 30th shine.
Household
goods. thru Oct 1,2,3.4,5, New
Large Garage Sale·Fn. &amp;
clotl)es, &amp; lots more. Fri. Crew Rd behind Meigs
Sat. Oct. 2 &amp; 3. 9·5. Lots
Co.
Fair
Grounds,
rain
or
only. 9-6
of nice men's &amp; women's
shine, 9:00·7:00
clothes. coats. laundry,
3 Fam. Yard Sale Oct
Oct. 3,4,5,6, 9-5. next to tub &amp; furnilure, used
3rd, Sam -? Flatrock
Eastem
School. kitchen appliances. 109
Fire Dept. purses ,
(985·3929) 10 families. 4 Summitt Rd. off 160
glassware. bicycle.
wheeler w/snow blade, Lg Garage Sale. Oct.
christmas stuff &amp;
nding town mower. 2000 1·2 9 till 5. Lane
more.
GMC Jimmy. DJ equip- dance. 1522 St. Resi·
Rte.
carpet,
tires, 141.'Gallipolis, OH
3 family yardsale. Fri. ment.
Oct 2. 2009, 9-6. Cloth· beauty shop equipment,
1ng,
household
items. furniture, clothes, baby Mov1ng Sale Oshel Rd.
fum..
clothing
shoes. coats, blankets. Items, kids playhouse &amp; tools.
home tnterior, trinkets &amp; kitchen, toys &amp; lots of ThurJFriJSat. watch for
signs.
toys.
some
vintage. miSC.
Neighbors
welcome.
Mulli Family Yard Sale
Oct. 2. 965 Ash St., Mid·
19329 St. Rt. 141. Pa·
St. At. 35 Lock 11
dleport,
baby
1tems,
!•tot.
Henderson WV 'Jhur .
boys. women's, men's,
-Sunday.
Yard sale. ra1n or sh1ne. little
gtrls
Gymboree
Oct 1.2,3, Rutland. 2 clothing, Fall &amp; W1nter, Yard Sale Frt. I Sat. 2226
mtles out
Beechgrove knick knacks. Christmas Mt. Vernon Ave. Pt Plea.
Sam·?
Rd. 740-742·2849
decorations, 9·?

Weeklong
Movtng
' Sale 112 mile above
Lakin Hospital on Valley Brook Ln. Home
Inter.. fum., lots of
everything. Thur Fn.
Sat. &amp; the following
week.
'---------'
Yard Sale, Fri. &amp; Sat. 8·4
approx. 4 mi out Bulaville
Pk on right.
Yard
Sale,
Fri.
&amp;
Sat.·178 Greenbrier Dr
Women's clothing. jewelry, weedeater, foldtng
chairs. 8 wood barstools,
etc.
1000

Recreati_onal
Vehicles

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

~

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

RV Service at Carmi·
chael
Trailers
740-446·3825
RV
Carmichael
Serv1ce at
Trailers
740-446-3825
;;;;;;;=;:;M;i:;:ot;:;o;:;rcy;;i;;:;c;:;le;;;;s==
03 Extreme Montana 250
Street Bike. 3910 mi.
Ready to ride. 51500
OBO. 256·1545.
2000

Automotive

Autos

land (Acreage)

Clean, flat 1 acre on East
Bethel
Church
Rd. Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
$14.000. 740·446-8114.
Manor
and
Riverside
Real Estate Apts. in Middleport. from
3500
to
$592
Rentals $327
740-992-5064.
Equal
Houstng Opportunity.
Apartments/
Island View ·Motet. has
Townhouses
vacancies
S35.001Nigt"ot.
740·446·0406
and 2 bedroom apts..
lurmshed
and
unfur· New Apt. 5400.00 a
nished, and houses in mon. + S400.00 dep. toPomeroy and Middleport. cated in Lakin WV. 1br
secunty depostt reqwed. 1 ba. all furn. except
no pets. 740-992-2218
mattress &amp; couch. no
smoking tnside apt. no
1 br fwn. apt. in Pt. pets. must have ref
Pleasant.
fum.
,very 304-687·8213.
clean &amp; nice. off street ;;.N,;,e_w,;,ly-..r,;,e;.m~od;;.e.le-d---b-r
parking, no pets call garage apt. call after
304·675·1386.
7pm. 304-675·2359.
2BR APTCiose to Hoi- Renovated, spactous 2
zer Hospital on SR 160 BR Apt. overlooking city
C/A. (740) 441-0194
park. $625 per mo. WaCONVENIENTLY
LO· ter, sewer, trash 10·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD· eluded. (740)709·1690.
ABLE! Townhouse apartTara
Townhouse
ments.
and/or
small
Apartments · 2BR, 1 5
houses for rent. Call
bath, back patio. pool
740-441·1111 lor appli·
playground, (trash, sew·
cat1on &amp; 1nformatton.
age. water pd )No pets
Free Rent Special!!! allowed.
$450/rent
dep.
Call
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and $450osec.
up. Central Air, WID 740-645·8599
hookup,
tenant
pays
Houses For Rent
electric.
Call between
the hours of 8A-8P
&lt;.1&lt;N.mo! -+ bed, 2 bath.
EHO
Bank R(po' S d0\\11, 1!\
Ellm View Apts.
\oaro.. ~(f c\PR) tor IJ,Itn£'
( )
_
304
882
3017
_ _;.;.;...;.;;.;.;..;.;..._ _

1987 Jeep Cherokee 4
wh. dr., Limited Ed.
good cond. $1500. OBO
304·882-3959.
Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
cepting applications for
1993 Geo Metro, 4 Dr. waiting list for HUD subLooks good &amp; runs great. sidized, 1-BR apartment
50+
mpg.
$1250 for the elderly/disabled.
call 675·6679
740-248-9439.
~

1997 Dodge Stratus. 4
Cyl. Runs Good $1,200
(740)256·6811.
Immaculate 2 BR apt In
the country, New carpet
2000
Pontiac
Sunfire
and
cabmets.
Freshly
$1600,
2005
Cavalier
painted. Appliances. WID
$4700, 2005 Chevy Co·
hool&lt;ups.
Water
and
bait $5700. 2004 Chrystrash pd Beautiful coun·
ler Sebring 54000. 2007
try setting, only 10 min.
Cobalt 57000.
Please
from town. Must see to
call 740·256·6169.
appreciate.
$425/mo.
614·595-7773
or
Vans
740-645·5953.
92 Ford Aerostar van 3 room and bath downruns great. h\gh m11es, stairs ftrst months rent &amp;
needs some body work. deposit. references regood work van, $750, quired. No Pets and
740·591-5174
clean. 740·441·0245

L!!.r

S00-620 4\1.16 ex ROl7

~~------­

2 BR House. S395 per
mo. $400 dep. no pets. -tutilities.
Call
•!7;.;4;.::0.:;;)2~5,;;;,6·.;;;6,;;::66::.1:.;.
. _ _ __
2 BR near SR 160 and
Holzer's.
$375/mo.
441-5150 or 379·2923.

3 BR 1 Bath on Le·
Grande Blvd. $650 rent.
5650 dAp. Renters pays
utililtes. Pets negotiable.
Call 446·3644 for apph·
calion.
S br house w/ bc.sem11nt
1n New Haven WV, all
etec.
heat-pump,
no
pets, dep 5425.00, rent
$425.00 304·882-3652.
3BR 1 bath home n LE'·
Grande Blvd 5650 rent
$650 dep. renter pays
utthltes. NO PETS. Call
446-3644 for applicaton

�Houses For Rent

Rentals

Sales

Drivers &amp; Delivery

3br,
$500.imonth
In
Syracuse. Deposit, HUD
approved.
No
Pets
304·675·5332 weekends
740·591·0265

2 BR on Private Lot.
Range, Ref, W'D &amp; AC
furnished. S350 per mo.
$350 deposit. No pets.
740-446-0945.

Newly remodeled 2 BR
1.5 Bath. V1nyl sld1ng.
Beautiful 2 level deck.
Lots of storage Huge
with
outside
building
electric
Quail
Creek
Community
Park.
740·245-0191
-------OHIO'S
BEST BUYs

CONTRACT DRIVERS
Earn extra mcome dehv·
ering packages to nurs·
ing homes using your
own
vehicle
on
a
part-time
basis.
Great
suppl$"'1ental
income,
great tax bent''its G~eat
Company to work for!
Fuel -surcharge protection as fuel costs rise.
Routes are round trip
from PI Pleasant WV.
You must ~avE! a w•nning
attitude.
appearance,
and
fue1-effic1ent
m1m-van.SUV or smatl
p1ck-upw/cap.
call 800·818·7958 tot a
interv1ewl
personal
www.networkexpressinc.
com

For . Rent Nice 3 BR
Bnck·1
Ba. Basement,
Carport. No Pets, No
Smoking. Security Dep.
&amp;
Rent
$625.00.
(740)446-4116.

2BR, Ideal fbr 1 or 2
pie, S300/month,
femces. No Pets.
CALLS
after
740-441-0181

peoReNO
7pm

Furnished all electric 2
bedroom tailer, Portland.
House for rent· 3 br. in Oh area, No pets, No
Point Pleasant, no pets Hud. ce11740-843·5515
$550.00
a
mon.
Soles
304-675·2319
Wiseman Real Estate-4
rentals
available-call
446·3644 for more info.
All
in-town-various
prices-references &amp; sec.
deposits required.
Land (Acreage)
Lease 102 Acres on
White Oak Rd. Great for
&amp;
livestock.
farming
(407)247-8329.
4000

Manufactured
Housmg

Rentols

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

BR
10
Hannan
2
Trace/South
Gallia
School District-$350 +
dep. Must have References. 740-256-1686.

2010 3BR Doublewide
$39.977
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
FHA $349 mo
2010 3br/2ba Single
from $199 mo
MIDWESTHOMES
Country
living- 3-5BR. mymidwesthomes.com
2·3 BA on property.
740.828.2750
Many floor plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
bank.
Call
today!
F1nanc•ng • New 2010
866·215-5774
Doublewide $37,989
1987. 14x70 3 br.. all
Ask about S8.000 Re·
electnc,
Albany
area.
bates
must
move,
$5400.
mymldwesthome.com
740-698·1815,
740-828 •2750
740-416·1103
ReModeled older mobile
home for small fam1ry on
1.4 acres on land con·
t $35 '000· $ 13·000
trac
Cashier/ Clerlt
down payment.
$250 per
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
mon th , no Interest • On Office Cashier $7.~ per
SA 143• Pom eroy• Oh hour, part-time, no week-

Education

~74;;;;0;,;,:·99:;:;.·.;;.;~.;.~~~~ ends, no evemngs. Galli-

2 BR Mobile Horne, No
pets. Water, sewer. trash
Included. At Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740·645-0506.

Govt Funds Available. 0
dOwn with land or family
land. Call for pre-ap·
ptoval. 888-565-0167
"The Proctorv~lle
Difference"
$1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Calt Now'
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED: Position available to
assist
an
individual
with
developmental disabilities Shade. 25.5
hrs/wk: 8p-8a Sat; 7:30p_-8a Sun.
Must have high school diploma/GED.
valid driver's license. three years
good driving experience and adequate
automobile
insurance.
$8/30/hr.
starting. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O.Box604
Jackson, OH 45640.
Deadline for applicants: I 0/2/09.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer

polis area; need:
com·
puter skills. people skills.
background check. re·
sume 3 references: Resume, PO Box 1145.
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Clerical
Athens Med1cal Lab is
looking to fill a billing position. Medical terminol·
ogy &amp; coding a must. Pri·
mary duty will be working
denied, unpaid cla1ms.
Send resume to Athens
Med1cal Lab, 400 East
State
St.,
Athens,Oh
45701

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Wanted: Part·hme posi·
tion available to assist an
individual with develop·
mental disabilities Gallia

We will train. Send rasume to: The Daily Senti·
PO
729·13,
nel,
·P-om_e_r_ov_.0
_ _h_45_7_69
_ __

County. 10 hrslwk. Must
have high school di·
ploma1GED. valid driver's
license. three years good
'driv1ng experience and
adequate automob•le in·
surance. $8.30/hr, start
ing. Send resume to:
• Buckeye ·
Community
Services, P.O. Box 604
Jackson.
OH • 45640.
Deadline for applicants:
10/2109. Pre-employmert
drug testing. Equal Op
portunity Employer.

Quality Control. ea:n up
to $15 an hour, evaluate
reiail stores. train1ng prov1ded.
call
1·800-901·2694
-------Quality Control, earn up
to $15 an hour. evaluate
retail stores, traimng provided.
call
1·800-901·2694

Crust11ng &amp; siz1ng operation 1n 'lead of multi-talented
people.
Heavy
eqUip. oper Mech. and
Need 7 ladies to sell elect COL's. a plus.
Avon. Call 446·3358.
304·882·3944
or
740-350·3962.

Get Your Message A::ross Will' A Darty Se tiref

BULLETIN BOARD
Help Wanted

•1J collimr 1och Neeldays

Care G1ver is needed.
Th1s IS a I"ULL TIME poSition, rnean•ng you w•ll
be liw1g here as 11 It
were your home. 1'111s is
NOT
s
daytime
or
mghll:ne only poshion
Sleep rore at night ard
do normal housel1old du
Ires thru the day. Person
needing
assistance
is
rrobile ..nd can function
01' her own. FREE RE:NT
&amp; -FREE UTfLITI£::5 plus
small
salary.
740·367-7129

·Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages

QI.;,\Lrn C'Ol\'TROI e.ur.
up ,o ) I~ J(J dn u . ";lluarc
n.:t.lil -.h.1re
1r unm)t pro~
\'ldcu '617 706 '1507

• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Paintmg
• Pallo and Porch Decks
WV036725

9000

Service I Bus.
Directory
Concrete

All types Masonry. bnck.
block. stone
corcrete
Free
Estimate.
304-593-6421,
304·773·9550

~ are looking for someone skilled and
experienced in both page design and copy
editing. This person will need to design
front pages, paginate inside pages, and
write great headlines. Experience with
layout, knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop is a must. Full time position
with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
is a must.
Send a cover letter and resume to:
~alii polls Da1lv ~nbunr
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
The

Gallipolis Daily Tribune is
accepting resumes for an outside sales
representative to join our sales team
and manage an established account list
while calling on new accounts.
This is a full time position offering
salary plus commission, full benefits,
mileage, and potential career growth.
The successful candidate will be a
disciplined, self-motivated team player
that understand the importance of
developing strong, mutually beneficial
business
relationships
with
our
accounts, and have sales experience.
For confidential interview. please send
resume and cover letter to
(f},llltpolts Ilmh• 1tnbunr,
Attn_: Pam Caldwell
P.O. Box 469

Gallipolis. OH 45631

992-6215
'
740·591·0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years local Expencnce

Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

MICHAEL'S
SERVICE CE;\;TER
1555 ~YE Ave.
Pomerov. 011
• Oil &amp; fihc1 chan!!e

•Tune Ups ~
• Brake Service
• AC Recharge
• [\ hnor exhau'l
repair • Tire Repair
• Transm1ss1on filler
&amp; Fluid Change
• Gencrall\iecliamc
work

David Lewis
740-992-6971

NOMATTfR
WHAT YOUR
STYLE ..

~\

)rh\

t~J

...THf
NfWSPAPfR
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

wv

lB?

ln,ured
1-rt:c E,t,natc'

(7..0) 992-0910

CONSTRUCTION

Owners:
Janet &amp; Dennie Hill

pm

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

(UITOM ~ABiNETRY

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

rJardJaO . . ~u:r~Jm~fy ~~ ~t.m11tU?e
'W'W'W.tinm~e~....e-tey.com

740o446o92QQ

740-992-1611
Stop &amp;Compare

2459 St. Rt. 160 · Gallipolis

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists.LTD
t7-'0) 7-'2-2563

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Saturday, ·october 3rd
10:00 am
Behind Racine Lodge
Racine, Ohio

Hours

7:00 am • 8:00

ROBERT
BISSEll

• Siding • Yinyl
Windo\\S • \letal
and Shingle Roof~

Auction

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'

740-367·0544

,

..

I

Local Contractor

FULLY INSURED

~ LEWIS
-CONCRETE
CONSTRUCl'IO!';

I~

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

Connete Work

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell:

740-416-5047

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

SEAL IT
CO:\STRUCTIOi\
Roof·n~

"'umg • Pilln!ln;;-

Gu!le'lo De"k10; ere
I ar f'au ( ourtem•l
Se11'i&lt;t, l"re~ E&gt;llmalcJ &amp;
•lffordabl~ Prien, Call...
Denni' Ro)rl 740-'-192·21129

RIDERS SALVAGE
740-992-p468
Buying scrap irontin-metals
\1-Sat. 8am-4pm
SH IU Pomeroy. OH

S&amp;L·
Trucking
Dump Truck
Serv;cc
We flitul Gnt\ el.
Limestone, Coal.
C0mpost. Top Soil
Call Walt or Sand)

Help Wanted

fJ-Ieartland Publications
.Copy Editor/Page Designer

V.C. YOUNG Ill

I

29 Year~ Expericnct•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or mdtnews@mydailytribu~e.com
Help Wanted

CarP,~~te_r·~-~r'[!_c~

• Eleclrlcal &amp; Plumbing

'I ,I.' {I
li. 'II r II

I.

All Types Of

Public Auction
Racine American Legion
Pork Chop/ Chicken Dinner
Sunday, October 4th
11-1 $6.00
Public Invited

. YOUNG'S ·

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Office work. has to be a
notary. 40 hrs a week
have to work on Satur·
day 446·311 0
Auction

Sportswriter
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is seeking a
motivated. people-oriented individual to
fill a vacancy in the news dcpanment 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 are sought. The
posttiOn is full-tune. with benefits.
Interested parties can send resumes to:

S$ Need to fill 50 FT positions SS
S8.80/t-.r
In this troubled economy.
11 is reassunng to know
that lnfoC1sion car offer
YOU a stable career
AND steady p11ycheck al·
IOW1ng you to prov1de for
your fam•lyl
After N1ne ye11rs 1n the
area. we t, ·ve provel'l
th::! we ara committed to
Gallipolis. and are c... r.
rently scek1ng depend·
able employees to help
fulfill che~l needs.
YoL w•lltake lncom1ng
and make Outgo1ng calls
for well known organiZations.
Stop By and Complete
Your Application:
lnfoCision Management
Corporation
242 Th1rd Avenue
GallipOlis, Ohio
Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview:
1·888-IMC·PAYU ext.
2454
httpJ/jobs.lnfoclsion.c
om

Part-time
Instructors
needed dunng the day
in:
mathematics,
eco·
nomics. and accounting.
Mathematics and eco·
nomic •nslructors must
have a masters degree
rn the discipl1ne. If inter·
ested please email a resume and cover letter to Quality Control
$15/hr
Jdanicki@galllpoliscaevaluate
retail
stores,
reercollege.edu
training prov1ded please
call877-712·0008.
Part-time computer in·
structor
needed
for Busy dental office seek·
Thursday mornings from rng motivated person to
October 8-December 17 tra•n as a dental ass•s·
Ema1l resume and cover 1ant, send resume to:
letter to jdanicki@galli- Dental
Assistant.
P6
pohscareercollege.edu.
704 Pomeroy. Oh 45769
or fax to 740-446-4124
Part-time tax preparers
Help Wonted· General needed tor busy tax of·
lice. Pomeroy Location.
Computer skills required.

2 531 3

Help Wanted

Thursday, October 1, 2009_

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

FORCIBLE ENTRY
Meigs County Court
2nd Street Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769
Country Parks, Inc vs
Jeanette Pierce &amp;
Robert Willis
Jeanette Pierce, whose
last residence was
5713 Canep Run Ad,
Georgetown,
Ohio
45121
and
Robert
Willis, whose last resi·
dence was. 46275 St At
124 Racine, Ohio 45771
by and through any un·
known. estate; hereby
notified that, pursuant
to R.C. 1920 and 3733,
upon a filed complaint
with the Meigs County
Court seeking restitution of the premises
upon which Pierce has
abandoned her/his mo·
bile home and there·
fore
Is
still
in
possession
of
the
property.
Therefore,
Plaintiff demands resti·
tution of the premises
In Its complaint.
No answer has been
filed to the complaint.
The matter will be set
for hearing upon com·
pletlon of the publica·
tlon service before a
magistrate In Meigs
County Courtroom located at 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Bonnlta Heston Ac·
counting
Manager,
Country Parks, Inc
30921 Lake Logan Rd
Logan, Ohio 43138
740·385-2434.
(8) 27, (9) 3, 10, 17, 24,
(10) 1

Agriculture, Rur.al Development for the Mid·
dleport
Sewer
Improvements Project.
This notice is pub·
lished in accordance
with Rural Develop·
ment regulations con·
tained
In
RUS
Instruction 1780.19(a).
The project Includes
Improvements to in·
crease the hydraulic
capacity of the inter·
ceptor sewers and to
increase the hydraulic
pumping capacity of
three lift stations, construction of a new force
main (18'') to the treatment plant, and upgrades the treatment
plant to accommodate
additional wet weather
flows.
A copy of the pre-appll·
cation to USDA Rural
Development is avail·
able for review at the
following locations:
Middleport Municipal
Building
237 Race Street
Middleport. Ohio 45760
USDARural Develop·
ment
21330 State Route 676,
Suite A
Marietta, Ohio 45750·
6799
Questions regarding
this application or to
review said application
should be directed to:
Faymon Roberts, Vii·
lage Administrator
237 Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(740)
992·5571 USDA
Rural
Development,
Gordon Parker
21330 State Route 676,
Suite A
Public Notice
Marietta, Ohio 45750·
VIllage of Middleport 6799
237 Race Street
(740) 373-7113
Middleport, Ohio 45760 (10) 1
PUBLIC NOTIFICATION ~~~=::::~:-,
OF INTENT TO FILE AN If
APPLICATION
The VIllage of Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohio hereby gives nolice of its intent to file
an application for fiRead your
nancial assistance with newspaper and learn
the U.S. Department of

something today!

)

740-992-3220
or 7400-5'91- '726
tCell)

H&amp;H

BAt\'1\.S

Guttering

CO:\STRUCTI0:-.1

co.

Seamless G~.otters
Roofing , Sid10g. Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

l'omero)'. Ohio
Commercial •
Residential

• Free Estimates
1740) 992-5009
Cu&gt;tom Hom~ Building
Steel Frame Buildmg'
Bu1ld)ng. Remodeling

t\'o\\ Selling

Gen~ral rcp;~ir

• Ford &amp; .\lotor,·raft
Parts • Eng me~.
Tran•Jcr Cases cl:::
Transmissions

"" ".b;mkscclb.com

• Aftermarket

Newspapers

Rcplacem.:nt Sheet
.\Ictal &amp; Cllmponents
For \II \tah•, (l(\ehicle~

Ru.:ine. Ohio
7-'0-949-1956

Free Estimates for
• Backhoe • Trenching
• Brush Hogging
• Portallle BandmiU
Trimming • 8ettlng
Poles &amp; Trusses

can 740·992-9572

eat£
Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Rooting •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • VinYl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
v·,

\

....---~-"-•~t·

~J~ul,l~. !•~s!l'\~ ,~ _bonding ~n~ailahlc

(.\'ul

Ersc cslim!l tc~·: ·7~+ years experience
:Jilili.1kd \\ith ,'ltil..e .\l:n'l'UJ~ Ro~olillg\\ R&lt;mndt•lin~l
... ~

""!

-

.. ....:::- ...-~•

\,_

-,.~·

•-.

®allipolis ]l)uilp ~ribunr

(740) 992-2155

isoint ~lrusmtt il\rgistcr
(304) 675-1333

--

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

(ONSTRUCI10N

Prompt und Qualil)

Roofs. Garages,

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

-

'J'

R&lt;.:&lt;Nlll,lblc R.. tes
Insured

E:.xpencnc-rd
References A' ;ulable!
Call Gar) Stanlc) (&lt;i
7~0

;..-_''eo

Remodeling,
Pole Buildings,

Wn1k
1 '·'

: SUNSET
·.
tc

591-8044
Please lt!ave me-;~.i)!C

Siding, Decks,
Drywall,
and New Homes.
Insured· Free
Estimates

740-742-3411

PSI ·: CONSTRUCTION ...
Room AtlditiOns. Remodclmg, ~Ictal &amp;
Shingle Rook t\c\1 Homes, Shling. Deck~.
Bathroom R~modcling. I 11.:ens~d &amp; ln~ured

Rick Price· 17) rs. Experirnrc
WV#040954 Cell740-416·2960 740·992·0730

�www.mydailysentinel.coll\

Dean Young4Denis Lebrun

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

---

CROSSWORD
By i HOMAS JOSEPH
ACRoss
45 Includes
1 Rem()ve
5 Egyptian DOWN
emblem
1 Fix socks
11 Skilled
~Reed
12 Place
Instru13 Hotel
ment
offering
3 Garden
14 Put one
area
over on
4 Like
mares
15 Some
crystal
and fillies 19 Future
31 New York
users
5 Tart fruit
nat1ve
blossom
6 Tennis
17 Quarter20 Fork
35 Demand
settings
feature
b ack
36 Lemon
21 Celeb
7 MisbeMann1ng
part
2 2 Poker
haves
'18 Hair
37 Invites
variety
8 Coarse
clusters
38 Crow cry
23 Glow
9 Ring
22 1s bold
39Had
28 Duel
legend
supper
2 4 Divided
helper
40"Tamer25 Massage 10 Put on
29 Stupor
the line
lane"
26 "Notwnter
16 M1l. sorts 30 High hit
dare!"
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4.75 (check!ll\..l I to
27 "Give it
Tllomas ..oscpll Book 2, PO Box 536475 OrtandO, n. 3285:1-6475
-!"
30 Inferior
32 High boot 11
33 Math
unity
34 Aussie
capital
3 8 Ness
nemesis
41 Longplumed
bird
42 Without
delay.
43 Easy twopointer
4 4 Did garden work

:.

I

10-1

William Hoest

THELOCKHORNS
Brian and Greg Walker

HI &amp; L01S

10- 1

11~1z

~0£:1(:.

SQUARE M

Patrick McDonnell

TRfANGl..E, I-4E WON'T BE '50 ROUND'?-

ZITS

J.erry Scott and Jim Borgman

'' LOVING
WHAT

IS

THE FA MILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

II

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
·

by Dave Green

3 4
3 .ssi

9

5
9· 5
5 3
6 4 9
4

___
/0-1

~ioot·--- N.
~

......__,=--· "Since your new c amera never
runs out of film, does It
run out o f dlgltals?"

1 ,~

2

Hank Ketchum
Difficult) Level

***

fi

l

1 9
1 3
I

'

1

DENNIS THE MENACE

"'

2 6 7

6 5-

c

:2

..,
:

::1

I

.f

I

~411

~
~

..""
5

"

l

1
R'

~

7
61

+

~

HAPPYBIRlHDAY for11-sursda); Ocl 1, 2009·
This ye.:~r, you are open to changes and more posithe conver.;ation~. You always .J?UI your lx«t foot forward, especially in your daily life. You might want to
rethink agreemt&gt;nl-; you make with~ or hiMel'ups that push )'Olii limits. Your instincts come through
one more ti'Tie. If you are single, many people fmd ) ou
appealing. You have more chotees than you are a\, are
of. Howev~ use care in the person vou choose; he or
she might not be emotionally a\ ailable, ,uthough this
person might give the impression othem·ise. Just re
Jware. If} ou are attached, tin'\e sp211t together on
favorite projects or away alone together rebuilds the
bond between ) ou. PIS&lt;.."ES works \\ell with you
Partner \\ith them more often at work or \\ith E_TOJCdS.
71re Stars Slurio tire Kmd of Dry }1m'll HatX· 5 uynmmc;
4-Posltive; 3-Al'crnge; 2-Sa-so; 1-DifJiCIIlt
ARIES (Nlarch 21-April19)
***Stop emolionc~l thoughts for a few minutes.
'J~1ke a deep breath or go for a walk. Then look .uuund.
'!he story can change considerably with some pe11'))€(~
live. Overindulgence is the natur,llthemt' of tht'
moment. Honor who you ,1re, and follow thmugh on ,,
key pn1jecf. Tonight Do your thing.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
* **** You are nimin:; for more of wh,ll &gt;'' lU
w.mt. Investigate pos~ibilihes with ,m open mmd. 'rou
1111ght see the logic in two different appro&lt;~che; to the
~une situation. \\'a\·ering won't work. Try one way or
the other. Tonight \\'here the action is.
GEMINI (Mav 21-June 20)
***'** You "miY.ht \ltant to do something very dif
ferent and cannot adlie\ e that goal .JS f.JSt as you inight
like. Take the lead on a project. If you have a clear
\isron of what is acceptable, or want a jo~ done the way
you want 1t done, you need to be the one to do 1l
Tonight Could be a late night.
CA:-.:CER Oune 21-July 22)
Reach out for more infonnation. Seeking out
new fads could be importanll'\ote that there is al!:O an
isl.-ue of perspective in choosing which facts are ree\ ant. Thke a look for yourself rather thJil depend on
someone else. Tonigllt Let your imagination WJilder.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
You are clecll' and direct "ith ulhe~ e;pecially a partner or associ.1te. Relate- to other:. on a oneon-one level, and you'll draw only posith·e results
Investigate alternatives in disrus-.toru&gt;. Tonight: Starting

****

*****

the weekend early'
Vll{GO (Aug. 23-Sepl22}
**"** You could see l'iSI;Ie&lt;i far differently from tlthers. Black-and-white thin:-:ing isn't the answer. C.1n you
make both views'' orkable? \Vhy is one more "right''
than .mother? In there lies the solution Someone could
see) ou ac; very desirclble Tonight Sort through your
opoons.
LIBRA {Sept :!3-0ct. 22)
*****" Easy \\ orks .md brmgs }ou to a new le\ el.
u~ten to news \\1th an eye to change at work. V.'hat is
aro&gt;ptable in this situabon? If necessary. be ,,iJJing to
c~dapt.leam and incorporate new types of thinking.
Tonight: Join a pal c1t a fa, mite c;pot
SCORPIO {Q.i. :?3-No\'. 21)
***** Your imagination combined with an iru1c1te
t.1lent tolkes you mto new realm" of thought Be willing
l&lt;) break past a bounclary and see whnt lies on the other
side reelings c1bound a~ creativity "urge'&gt;. lonight:
Kicking up your heels.
SAGITfARlUS (1\'o\', 22-Dec. 21)
****Sometimes you might want to keep )'llllr
opini,ms to yourself or share them with &lt;1 chosen few.
!hough such a low-key af'PfO,lch is generally not you,
it i'l workable and smart. f you can, take the d.1y off in
order to &lt;wok! a conflict. Tonight Where the acti(m is.
CAPRICORN (Dt.'C. 22-lan. 19)
"***"**You open up a door by being willing to
hd' e an overdue com ersation. Feeling.'&lt; flow, especially
if you detach from an immediate situation and fook at
the person in\•oh ed. Gh e up being reacti,·e. Tonight:
Share owr a meal
AQUARIUS (Jan 2(}-Feb. 18}
**'* Kno\, what \"OU are worth berond the
almighty buck. You offer many assets that others don't
Ask questions if you're confused by someone's perspecth e. A partner '-erbc11izes ·with ease. Dig in and get
a job compfeted. Tonight: Take a hard look at your budget
PISCES (Feb. 19-l-.1arm20)
You are in yrur element and resound with
good sense. You might want to present your ideac: in a
way that othe-rs canhear. Other~ are dispooed in vour
fu\'or; and your .,~ggestions seem to draw re••lltS.
Tonight: Wh,lte\·er knocks your ;;ocks off.

** * **

]acqut/m( Bigar i:; 011 flltJ.IItrmet
at lllll'iltcr:cw]l!cqutlmtt ~&lt;trAllll

�ww:W.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Raiders open OVC pi 1 at South Point
By BRYAN W ALTERS
6WALlLRSOMYOAll.YTR1BUNE COM

SOUTH POI 1T - Two
common teams haring one
common goal. Start league
play off on the right footby
picking up its first victory of
the year.
Someone is coming away a
winner this Friday night as
winless River Valley tl'U'vCis
to winless South Pomt in the
Ohio Valley Conference
opener for both teams during
a Week 6 matchup in
Lawrence Countv.
Both the Raiders (0-5) and
Pomter&lt;&gt; (0-5) have enJoyed
little thi-; fall on the gridiron,
ns neither club has been within single-digits of any of their

five opponen~ . South Point's
closest contest wa&lt;&gt; a Week I
loss to Portsmouth by a 2414 m9rgin, while River
Valley's closest game was
last week during a 26-6 loss
to :Waterford. ~
SPHS has also lo~t to

Wheelersburg
(49-0),
Portsmouth West (34-14),
Point Pleasant (35-0) and
Lu asville Valley (45-6) this
fall, all of which arc 500 or
better this season. Overall,
the combined record of South
Point opponents is 17-7.
RVHS, on the other hand,
has losses to Minford (42-0),
Oak Hill (38-0). Meigs (397) and Eastern (41-6). River
Valley opponents arc a combined 15-10.
Both teams are struggling
offensively thb season. as
SPHS is averaging just 6.8
points per game while the
Raiders are scoring just 3.8
eoints
per
contest.
Defensively. the Pomters arc

allcn~ ing 37.4 points per
game and RVHS is surrendering 37.2.
game on the season.
The Pointers own a fourWtlliamson is a eragmg
game winning streak in this
25.2
points per game. while
head-to-head matchup. River
allowing
22 points per
Valley last defeated the
game.
Pointers in 2004 at home bv a Hann~m Wi dc;1t (0-4) look
Wtlliamson has vJctot.
35-6 margin.
.for their fiq;t VIC Ol) of the
Both team's enter Friday ' season ci" tev tnl\el) to on me season ~ainst Tw .
with a winning streak in ~~llt~m~n lO act: the Vahey. Virgint..l 1 and Van.
The only common oppoOVC play. The Pointers - 1 1WIIIann•on Woltpack (2-2).
who shared the OVC title I
Hann;~ coming of a bye nent between the two
with Fairland and Coal v.eek -hf1er losing to schools. Van, defeated
Grove last season - have S\luthern 40-14 in week Hannan week 2 by a score of
34-12. Wilham.,on defeated
won three straight league V ur.
contests, while River Valley
llannan has unproved Van 32-7 in last weeks
won it~ sea&lt;&gt;on finale a year th r scoring m their first game.
Kickoff is set tor 7:30
ago against Rock Hill.
fou games, now averaging
Kickoff is scheduled for 10 p 'nts per game. Hmmar' p.m. Friday night at
7:30 p.m.
is all 1&gt;ving 36.7 points per Williamson.

I
I

PRI&lt;-"'P F OOTBALL STA~lJ~GS

Rebels look for win number two, face Fairfield Christian
B Y SARAH HAWLEY
MDSSPORTS NIYOAILYSENnNEL COM

MERCERVILLE - The
South Gallia Rebels (1-4)
host Fairfield Christian
Academy ( 1-4) Frida) night
with both team~ looking for
their second win in a row.
South Gallia 1s coming
off a huge win Saturday
agaiJtst Portsmouth Notre
Dame 8-6. The Rebels ' ictof) secured the first wm

for Gallia County on the
2009 football season.
South Galli a's victory
came as a result of a 46
yard touchdown run by
Austin Phillips and a twopoint conversion from Cory
Haner to Dalton Matney.
T he score late in the third
quarter was the only Rebel
points on the evening:
The eight points for South
Gallia was their highest
point total of the season.

South Gallia has losses
against Waterford (2-3).
Eastern (3-2). Southern (32), and Wahama (5-0).
Fairfield Christian won
last
week
against
Middletown Christian (2-3)
by a score of 14-6. Their
losses on the season have
come against Millersport
(2-3), Symmes Valley (4-1).
Lutheran East (1-4 J, and
Northwest (2-3).
On the season. South

Gallia is averaging 5.2
poinb per ganw. while
allowing 20 points per
game in the first five contests. Fairfield Ch~istian is
averaging 13.6 points per
game. while they have
allowed 23.8 points per
game
Kickoff at South Gallia is
set for 7:30 p.m., with
homecoming
festivities
being held prior to the
game.

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
Jackson
v. en ..

Loqal' .

lro

to:~

.

..

.

PoriSIT'OI.II' •

Chi ICO:Jle, •

Maretta .

Gal a Academy

SENTINEL S TAFF
MDSSPORTSOMYDAILY~E'NTINEI.COM

POINT PLhASANT. W.Va.
- Fruth Phannacy held its
18th annual scholarship gold
tournament recently at the
Greenhills Count!)' Club in
Ra\ens\\ood, W.Va.
There were 160 golfers in
this year's event which included representatives from 60 of
Fruth Pharmacy's bu~iness
pat1ners and suppliers. Fruth
Phatmac) assocrates also participated in the tournament
which rai ed O\er $25.000.
Proceeds are used to fund
the
Fruth
Scholarship
Program. set up to help Fruth
employees ana their family
members pursue a college
education. The scholarships
suppot1 students at :viarshall
Vmversuy, West Virginia
University, University of Rio
Grande and rhe University of
Charleston
School
of

In 1995, the tournament
miscd over $15.000. and the
Marshall University scholarship prowam wa'i established.
West \ irginia University.
University of Rio Grande and
University of Charleston
School of Phannacy scholarships were later added.
At
the
9th Annual
Scholarship golf tournament
in 2001, three new scholarships were announced by
huth's founder, the late Jack
E. Fmth. The new scholarships established included one
for a local student at the MidOhto Valley Center of
Marshall University in Point
Pleasant, an athlenc scholarship for women at M&lt;mhall
Umversity funded by Mr. and
Mrs. Jack E. Fruth, and a
scholarship for a student at the
Meigs County Center of the
University of Rio Grande
funded by Fruth Pharmacy.
"We arc honored to endow

the first scholars}tip for a full
time Mason County student to
continue their education aftei·
high sch09l by attending the
Mid Ohio Valley Marshall
Universitv Center. This is a
beautiful· facility and a wonderful asset to our community," said Mrs. Fruth.
11te tournament has continued to grow in sile and in the
number of scholarships
awarded. It is a fitting tribute
to Jack E. Fruth and his. desire
to help both his employees
and his conunumty. Plans are
already underway for next
}Car's event.
Fruth Pharmacy operates 25
stores in Southwestern West
Vrrgmta and Southern Ohio,
and ha-; been m business since
1952. For more mf01mation,
log on to www.fruthpharmacy.com.

W·L

c

PA
0

(}.(),
0
().C . 0
J-0.
0
:&gt;-0
0

0
0
0
0.

0-0

Coal Grove ...
~a~rland ..
C es3PS&lt;!kc ••
fl erVa ey.

(}.()

Rock H

So~Pof't.

Atnen.&gt;
NeiSOIIVIile-York
AJexanc;ler
Wellston ..•
Meigs ..
Vrnton Cou'l!)'

Belpre

o-o.

Soutl'{'·r

0.() ..
.Q.O.
0.()
.0-0

Water'ord
Mrler.
"'niT'ble ..
..ecleral Hocking .

W-

War

5
1-4
().4

rn1.
'lG... Ja

So
Hanran

0

0
0
0
0

eF

~s

26
40

Wayne ..
Chapl""'lllVI a
Herbert Hoover
SJssonv•Ue
Poca ..
P011'! Pleasart •.•.

CARD
W-L
PF
2..0
75
~· .
84
1·1. .50
1·2
42
0-'
26

0·'

H&lt;M:ae -rta.atre Syate.n

ConapleUt Sy•te.n laclude•
Abu It ln DVD/~/CD
Player &amp;VCR
A.1.l you aeed t . a TV:
• • • lia.lto.kif .t ....., h8clt
AY.,.. Nlfdl~ OtiJo 7..0-419.1 JGS
lUll .. !f. w p 9;(JO,f:JO TMni 9:.00 1:00 ht. 9:00 2;00
~

*lilriT 6.6 Gat
·~RBfunttt

Le.v rs

W·L

. •
1
1

PA

W·L

2

0
0.

0
0.
0
. 0

ALL

PF
5·0
207
50 ... H2
5·0
212
1-4 • 108
1-4
146
05
34
5
92

2~

"

1·4
1~

"

)

90
87

ALL
PF
122

PA
39
59
123
142
169
186
.225

PA
91

.111

1()6

61
61
90
66

96
169
114
195

PA
55
'00
'4..

Cardinal Conference

VCR

Mason, WV

1\l
42
14

lndep~
ents
'l

RCA

773-5592

132

189
180

PA

PA
. 18
. .26
.. 28
...68
84
• 42
8!1

0.0

Easter'l

HERE ARE JUST A FEW. ..

106 N .

75

,111
62

a

Hocking Division
TVC
W-L
PF

For more information call the advertising
rt ents at
(740) 446-2342 -The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
• (304) 675-1333- The Point Pleasant Register
• (740) 992-2155 The Daily Sentinel

Mason Furniture Co.

o

Ohio Dlvisron
TVC
VI-L
PF
2·0
38
.2.() ..63
1·0
.35
.11 .. 6C
c 2 .38
().1
0
o-2 . 6,

Sponsored by: Heartland Publications Newspapers in
~ Ohio • West Virginia and Kentucky
including ijr;J)e ~allipolis 1!lailp mrthune- moe ~oint
~Ieasant l\egister - The Daily Sentinel

72" x 42" r ectangular table
4 side chairs &amp; 2 arm choir s
with padd ed seats

PF

PA
90
60
55
61
1&amp;0

Tri-Valley Conference

TRI-STATE AUCTION M NIA

Oak T able and 6 Cha irs

PF
151
200
184
127
119

Ohio Valley Conference
ovc

Fruth Pharmacy hosts 18th Annual Scholarship Golf Tournary/ent
Pharmacy.
Justin
Bowe,
Ashley
flacken. Chesley Helmick and
Krysta Jenkins were the 2009
recipients for the :\1arshall
University
Scholarships.
Brinnna Darrow and Natalie
Heckathorn were awarded the
scholarships for West Virginia
Universit). Jessi I son was
awarded the athletic scholarship for \\'omen at Marshall
lJmversity funded by Fnmces
"Babs'' fhtth.
The first Fruth Golf
Tournament was held in 1992
at the Esquire Country Club in
Barboursville. W.Va. There
were apprmumately 50 golfers
who participated and $2000
" as raised with the proceeds
going to a school reading progr.un recommended by Babs
Fruth. "My parents always
placed a high value on education and gtving back to the
community" said Lynne
fmth, chairman of the Board.

ALL

SEOAL
W·L
PF
PA
2-c . 55
42
1-c . 35
19
.1.0
21
7
1·' . 46
27
11
60.48
,().1
21
34
0·1
1&lt;)
35
.o-2
22
67

tood6136
Dimem1 335'1 X16S' XlTH

6

w.

Pf\

40

75~

69
h

ao
1"

•

~

24

ALL
PF
PA
137
113
138
1 . 93
1 • . 97
11

'

52

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="561">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10012">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="12692">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12691">
              <text>October 1, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="800">
      <name>holter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
