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""'·
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'I
Printed on 100%
ReQ·cled :Scwsprint

Middleport • Pomer oy, Ohio

Refuse fee hike in works for Middleport

SPORTS
• High school volleyball
action. See Page Bl

Bv BRIAN

J . REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport residents will
see a three-percent increase
in the1r refuse service if village council approves a new
contract with Rumpke.
At Monday evening's regular meeting, council discussed terms of a proposed
contract with the Wellston-

based refuse company.
Rumpke proposes a threepercent increase in its percustomer rate for 2010.
Council authorized Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker to discuss contract terms with the
company and present a final
contract
for
counci I 's
approval.
Councilman Sqawn Rice
asked that hours of collection outlined in the cun·ent

contract with Rumpke be
modified in keeping with a
village ordinance. That
ordinance limits collection
hours to after 7 a.m., and the
current contract allows collection after 6.
Council held the second of
three readings of an ordinance relating to fees for
building demolition. The
revision eliminates an outdated $2 demolition fee paid

to the mayor. and outlines
the procedures required for
capping sewer lines and
other work required at a
demolition site.
Demolition fees are now
paid to the building inspector, who should be contacted
before demolition begins.

Other business
Council met in executive
session, and voted to
increase the salary of Fiscal

Bv BRIAN

OBITUARIES

to present
program
about Amish
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

J . REED

POMEROY - With more
and more Amish people
migrating
into
Meigs
County, the Meigs County
Consortium, a group of community service providers,
has organized a presentation
on these often misunderstood members of society.
The free presentation will
be at I :30 p.m., tomorrow in
the conference room of The
Ohio State University's
ExteQsion site (former
Infirmary) and is estimated
to last about an hour, followed hy ample time for
questions and discussion.
Sharon Strouse. resident
of Holmes County for 30
years. will give the presentation. Holmes has both personal and professional contacts with the Amish and
has· traveled nationwide to
share her knowledge of this
culture.
Strouse is currently an
.assistant professor at OSU
and
serves
as
the
Community Development

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RUTLAND -

Rutland

· Page AS
Mayor Lowell Vance said
• Eula Mae Odegard, 91 I the three members of vil-

==========

.

INSIDE

• Alumn! scholarships.
See Page A2
• Meigs Medicare
.Check-up Day
announced.
See Page A2
• Church to observe
35th anniversary.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page AS
~ Jolie Holland in
concert at Stuart's.
See Page A6

l

lage council there may soon
be joined by others.
For years, the village has
operated on a council with
vacant seats. and village officials have been unsuccessful
in findim! new recmits to
sene as ~council members.
Th: ~.:e ptopk serve: Abe
Grueser, Marie Birchfield
and Heath Richmond. They
have all been appointed to
the1r seats and continue to
serve without set term limits
because no candidates tile
for seats when they are up for
election.
This year's general election
includes members of village
councils. but there are no candidates for Rutland Village
Council on the Nov. 3 ballot.
Vance said Tuesday he and
the council members are talking to interested Rutland residents who might agree soon
to join the council. There are
at least two such potential
candidates, whom Vance said
would be appointed by council, but said that action might
not happen right away.
Council was scheduled to
meet last night.
There are contested council races in both Pomeroy
and Syracuse. In Middleport.
the four candidates on this
November's
ballot · are
incumbent council members.

Please see Amish, AS

Beth SergenVphoto

For many years and many seasons the Moredock family angel has greeted visitors to
PomerC?y's Beech Grove Cemetery with her unwavering, serene expression. As another
autumn arrives, the trees in Beech Grove are going out in a blaze of glory; once again setting themselves on fire behind the angel's back while she pays them no attention.

·Pomeroy
Merchants
Chamber hears 'qualifications for business loan'
plan for
Christmas Class offered on small businesses financing
Bv BETH S ERGENT

BY C HARLENE HOEFLICH

BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A2

INDEX
, 2 SECTIONS -12 PAGF.S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

l

torials

A4

ituaries

As
B Section
A2

Weather

© 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

l J!IJI,I !I!I, !I!II
..

POMEROY- Christmas
activities including the decoration
of
downtown
Pomeroy, the annual parade,
and a tour of homes decorated for the holiday season
were planned during a
meeting of the Pomeroy
Merchants
Association
Tuesday.
"Christmas Along the
River" will be the theme for
the observance. Decorating
will begin the first week in
November. Again this year
the stage and the gazebos
will be decorated by three
churches. New Beginnings
United Methodist. Trinity
Congregational, and Sacred
Heart Catholic.
It was decided to seek
assistance from a church
youth group to decorate the
mini-parks on Comt Street.
Pomeroy
Mayor
John
Musser will solicit help from
village employees in putting

Please see Merchants, AS

Officer Susan Baker by
$8 ,000 per year.
Mayor Michael Gerlach
said a town meeting on
pending infrastructure projects earlier this month was
well-attended.
Attending, in addition to
Gerlach and Baker, were
members of council: Rice,
Rae Moore, president Jean
Craig, Sandy Brown, Craig
Wehrung. and Julia Houston.

osu professor

Rutland
council
recruiting
members

Sports

a
D.,

POMEROY - Yesterday
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce members heard
a preview of an upcoming
class on small business
financing planned for 9
a.m., Oct. 29 . at the
Pomeroy Library.
The class will be conducted by Mick Howell of
Peoples Bank who also
spoke at yesterday's business-minded . luncheon.
Classes will be $10 per person with a lid1t breakfast
and refreshments provided.
Call Chamber Director
Michelle Donovan at 9925005 to register.
Yesterday Howell told
Chamber members banks
are lending money these
days but "conservatively."
Howell said this is partly
due to property values
going down. a tougher regulatory process and the threat
of inf1ation should unemployment rates slow down.
As for .the class, Howell

said one of the most important points he would discuss
is asking the prospective
business owner if they
know what type of business
they want to sta1t? Other
important points that will
be hit on include: how to
weigh the pros and cons of
owning a business: knowing your product; how to
price product; different
types of businesses (including franchises); financing:
breaking down business
plans; discussing marketing
plans; studying balance
sheets and trends.

Other
Chamber
announcements:
Karla
Sanders.
an
AmeriCorps
volunteer
spoke about organizing the
Leading Creek Citizen's
Committee which ;s forming for an organizational
meeting at 5:30p.m. tomorrow nt the Pomeroy Librarv.
All those interested are weicome. The mission of the
LCCC is to ensure lasting
stewardship of the Leading
Creek Watershed through

projects designed and run
by local residents and
landowners. The Leading
Creek Watershed consists of
approximately 150 square
miles stretching across the
western half of Meigs
Count; and portions of
Athens and Gallia Counties.
Chamber member Bill
Quickel spoke about the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association's
plans to hm e a Christmas
tour of homes. He also
reminded Chamber goers
about the annual Pomeroy
Christmas Parade held the
Sunday after Thanksgiving.
Tina Rees of Peoples
Bank of Pomeroy said the
branch is beginning its
annual Coats For Kids campaign next month with luncheons planned to raise
money to purchase winter
coats for chiltlren in elementary-junior high school.
The branch is also collecting canned goods for the
less fortunate.
Alan Dunn of Mercurv
Publishing spoke of ai1

Please see C::hamber, AS

1'1-=,~- ~~-------

Tri-State
Auction
Mania hits
fever pitch
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@~LYSENTlNELCOM

GALLIPOLIS - TriState Auction Mania is in
full swine as thousands of
resident-&gt;from Ohio. West
Yirgmia and Kentucky
are placing bids on merchandise from Heattland
Publications advertisers
across the tri-state region.
All 12 Healtlandowned newspapers in
our region - including
the Galltpolis · Da;f),

Tribune, Poim Pleasant
Register and The Dedi)'
Sentinel - are participating in this online auction and local bu&lt;&gt;inesscs
have put more than
$500.000 worth of merchnndise up for bid.
Bids have been placed
at a steady clip since the
auction
opened
on
Sunday. All bids must be
placed by 9 p.m. on
Munday, Oct. 19.
Ti1e bidding i~ open
'2417 online at \VWw.tristateauctionmania.com.
Interested parties can
also place bids by calling
toll tree (800) 3 10-9314.
Phone lines are open
from 5 to l) p.m. datly.

Tri-State
Auction Mania
www.tristateauctionmania.com

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

\ Vednesday, Octobe r

Alumni scholarships

Sonshine Circle
moves forward
on projects

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto
Four $500 scholarships were awarded by the Mergs Local Alumni Association to Meigs Hrgh School graduates, Amanda
Gilkey, left, and Amber Hockman at Friday night's football game. Also receiving scholarshrps but unable to attend were
Morgan Lentes and Kimi Swtsher. Money raised by the MLAA from the sale of alumm t-shirts and other fundraising events
is used for the scholarships and for expenses of organizing the annual Reunion on the River.

•iQS Med•ICare Check-up Day announced

Me

0 pen enr0·11ment NQV. -tI 5- DeC. 3-tI
B v CHARLENE HOEFLICH

lnfonnation
Program
HOEf'UCH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
&lt;OSHIIP) and is conducted
free and unbiased with all
POi\IEROY
Helping dec1sions being left up to the
beneficiaries understand Med1care ~cipicnt or their
Medicare coverage ana representathe.
determine which plan rna)
For those who are unable
best fit their needs will be to get guidance durmg the
the focus of a Mcdicure Medicare Check-Up Day
Check-up Day to be held at here, the Meigs County
the Senior Citizens Center Council on Aging has a taff
in Pomerov on Nov. 24.
member who can offer
Medicare Check-up Da) s ass1stancc. Beth Sha\ er,
are held in each of Ohio\ exccut1ve director, advises
88 count1cs to complement that Rhonda Rathburn JS
Medicare's annual "coorch- knowledgeable and availnated election'' period able to elderlv residents
which starts Nov. 15 and anytime they need informaends Dec. 31. Coverage tion and also that once a
secured during the open month a Social Security
enrollment period will representative is in the
begin on Jan. l, 2010, It is office to give assistance.
only during each year's
No appointments are
open enrollment period that needed for a conference
Medicare beneficiaries can with one of the representachange the plans by which tives on Medicare Check-up
their benefit"&gt; are delivered. Day, according to Shaver.
The emphasis of Check-up Sessions with Medicare
Days is to help family mem- recipients will begin at JO
bers and caregivers under- a.m. and continue until
stand the different Medicare afternoon.
coverage options and to pro"Check-up Days provide a
v1de assistance in plan selec- great opportunity ro·r people
tion. It is sponsored by the with Medicare to learn about
Ohio
Department
of their plan options and hov. to
J n~urance through its Ohio secure the appropriate coverSenior Health Insurance age," said Mary Jo Hudson,

Director of the Ohio
Depmtmcnt of Insurance.
SJ
d
· ·
• lc encourage parllclpatmg by beneficiaries, and for
those unable to attend to call
OSHIJP hothne al 1-800686-1578 with any questions
they might have about
Medicare co,eroge.
During the "Coordinated
election period. people on
Medicare can select one of
~e' eraI CO\ eragc options:
Original Medicare for their
health co' erage needs
paired with a stand-alone
Pa11 D prescnption drug
plan: a Medicare Advantage
Plan, which provides comprehensive health benefits
mcludmg drug covera~e; or
determme if their ex1sting
covera~e already meets their
health msurance needs. Plan
benefits may change each
year so Ohioans are encouraged to contact OSHIIP for
a plan review. ln addition,
Hudson said, financial assistance is available to those
with limited income.
At each Check-Up Day
event, OSHIIP representatives will discuss changes to
Medicare and preventative
benefits. how to manage
expenses durmg the Part D
coverage ''doughnut hole"
or gap m coverage. share

14, 2009

information on financial

as~istance available to those

RACINE
Estimates on
the landscaping pro_~ect at
the
Bethany
United
Methodist Church to be
done in memory of Mary
Cleek and Julie and Julia
Campbell
have
been
received but no deci~ion as
been made, it was reported
at the recent Sonshine
Circle meeting
It was noted that the liquid candles in memorv of
Mary Cleek have been "purchased. The group during
the meeting conducted by
Kathryn Hart made its
monthly donation to the
1
Meigs County Council on
Aging. and noted that
desserts had been delivered
to God's NET. :\!embers
discussed projects including
fmit baskets to he delivered
as
remembrances
in
February, and collecting
hears to he used in consoling children in traumatic situations. in January.
Collection of aluminum.
egg cartons. fronts of
cards. pop tabs. and
coupons are continuing. As
a fund raiser for the group.
noodles will be made again
in November. The members voted to continue
Christmas projects the
same as last year.
Fare well gifts were presented to A\ is Harrison,
who is moving to Florida.
and Holly Stump \\ ho is
moving. t~
Arizona .
Celebra!mg btrthdays ~·ere
Ruth Stmpson and Gmny
Richard. It was reported that
the group's float took a first

in the September "Party .
the Park" parade a
received S100.
A fam1ly holiday dinner at
the church will he held on
Nov. 10 and a Chri~tma~
dinner for the Circle at the
Wild Horse Cafe on Dec. 7.
Scripture ""'as read by
~1ildrcd
Hart.
Betty
Proffitt Jed the group in
prayer. and Mabel Brace
and Hazel McKehey read
·'I Knov. Something Good
About You' and "I Ain 't
Dead Yet " officer reportsd
were ghen b) Mary Ball
and Ann Zirkle. Edie
Hubbard read thank you
cards from Glenna and
Anna Lee tucker. Sandy
Codner and Edna Knopp
and the group signed I 03
cards of encouragement
provided by Hart.
Hurt. Brace. ~lcKelvcy,
and Ginnv Rkhard served
refreshments
to
Edie
Hubbard. Blondena Rainer,
Martha Lou Beegle. H ~
o
Stump, Bett)
Prof
Jackie
White.
Kat
McDaniel. Letha Proffitt.
W1lma
Smith,
Avis
Hamson. Bernice Theiss,
Mattie Beegle, L1llian
Ha) man, Ruth Simpson,
Shirley Beegle. Louise
Frank. Evelyn Foreman.
Mary Ball. Ann Z1rkle , and
Kathryn Hart .
Next Meeting is Nov. 12.
with Beegle, Betty Proffitt,
Fore.man, and Richard present!ng the program and
servmg refreshments. All
area women arc invited to
attend.

,. h 1· · d · •
. d .·,,
\\bIt efitn~It~
m~fontlhe . .t 'I:-;~:
en d~cwtnesthl
ey can
coor ma e o er coverage
and also run ~omparison I - - - - - - -- - - - - - - reports on vanous plans. 1
OSHBP can help beneficJUl l I
nes enroll in their Medicare
coverage of choice.
Wt..'&lt;lnesda~ ...Rain likely in
percent chance of rain.
Those attending CheckOut Day are. encouraged to the moming ...Then a chance Hi!!hs in the mid 40s.
Friday night. •.Cloudy
bring a list of their prescrip- of shO\\ers in the afternoon.
tions drugs. dosages and Highs in the upper 40s. w1th a 40 percent chance of
preferred pharmacy infor- Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. rain. Lows in the upper '
Saturday...Mostly clo
mation . as well as any infor- Chance of min 70 percent.
Wed nesday
night ... in the morning ...Tl
mation on pension. VA or
other medical care benefits Mostly cloudy. A chance of becommg partly sunny.
rain ...Mainly in the evening. 50 percent chance of rain .
they are receiving.
For a complete listing of Lows in the upper 30s. Hieh!) m the mid 40s.
Saturday night ...Mostly
available Part D and Northeast winds around 5
Medicare Advantage plans, mph. Chance ofrain 40 per- cloudv with a chance of
rain. Lows in the lower 30~ .
visit
www.medicare.gov. cent.
Thursdav
..
.Mostly
cloudy
Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Those with Med1care quesSunday...Mostly sunny.
tions and those who need with a 50 percent chance of
enrollment assistance (start- rain. Highs in the upper 40s. Highs in the lower 50s.
Sunday
night
and
ing November 15) and/or Northeast winds around 5
Monday ...Mostly
clear.
information about financial rnP.~·
.
assistance programs can call
.1hursday mght ...C!oudy Lows in the mid 30::.. Highs
OSHIIP at 1-800-686-1578 \\'l.th a 50 percent chance of in the lower 60s.
Monday night an d
Monday through Friday, 7:30 ; r~m. L_ow~. around 40.
Tuesday
••.Mostly
clear.
a.m. to 5 p.m., or Medicare at • Northeast \\ tnds around 5
1-800-MEDICARE (1-800- m~h:
.
_ Lows around 40. Highs in
633-4227), 24 hours-a-day,
n day...Cloudy With a .:&gt;0 the mid 60s.
seven days-a-week.
--------------------A listine of Medicare
Check-Up Days is available
on the Department's web site
at www.insurance.ohio.go\.
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General Electric (NYSE) Robert Brown, Cindv 16.33
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Morgan (NVSE) - 45.66
Debbie Clay. to TP-CWD. JP
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Limited Brands (NYSE)- 18.46
Robert Brown. Cindy Norfolk Southern (NYSE) Brown. Danny Brown. 45.68
Bonnie Brown. Mark Clay, Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS26.10
Debbie Clay. to TP-CWD. DAQ)EIBT (NVSE) - 27.77
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Eric Stover. Dmrta Sto' cr. Rocky
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Allen Sail, Steven R. Pavton,
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I

I

Local l:lleather

Local Stocks

Real estate transfers posted
POMEROY - The following real estate transfers
were recently posted by
Recorder KaY. Hill:
Steven C. Bachner. Kelly
Bachner. to Tamara K.
La\endcr, deed, Vi llage of
l'v liddleport.
Lynn Benson Mowery.
John W. Mowery. Jr., Lynn A.
Benson.
to
Steven
Hunnaman, Terry D. Kei!.cr,
Chnstme Keiser. deed. Olive.
Steven L. Stewart. Kelly
R.
Stewart.
Gertrude
Stewart, to Ros~ Stewart,
Jr.. deed. Rutland.
Edna L. Knopp to Brandon
L. Smith. deed, Sutton.
Susan Hagerty to Steve
Hagel1). deed, Columbia
Richard A. Hagerty.
Dorothy Hagerty, to Ste'Ven
M. Hagcrt), deed. Columbia.
U:tm K. McGrath. Barbara
J. McGrath, to Ohio
Department ofTrnnsportation.
deed, Bedford.
Betty D. Crouso to Emcst
E. Crouso, cleed. Sutton.
Julie Luwson, PatricJ.,. L.
Lawsnn, to .J osh un D.
Wandhng, right of way.
Columbia.
C.11olyn
Bachner.
Steven
deceased.
to
Bachner, certificate of transfer, Village of Middleport.
Jamce Cleek to Am) L.
Young. deed. Village of
Racine
f·ranklin W. Molden,
deceased. to Joy R. Molden,

of
certificate. Village
Pomerov.
Joy R. l\lolden to Shawn
M. Molden. deed. Village of
Pomeroy.
Phyllis
M.
Glasgo,
deceased, to Jovcc Ann
Ritchie. affidavit. Village of
Racine.
M.
Glasgo.
Phyllis
decea~ed, to Joyce Ann
Ritchie, affidavit, Village of
Racine,
Lurry R. Hubbard. Edith
A. Hubbard. to Tuppers
Plam-;-Chester
Water
District, deed. Sutton.
Delbert A. Smith. Ruth D.
SMith, to Gathng Ohio,
LLC. deed, Sutton.
Shirley F. G1bbs to
Randall Jordan Gibb:s, deed,
Chester.
Teresa L. Stewart, Larl)
W. Stewart, to Benton
Phillips. deed. Rutland
James L. R1denour. June
Ridenour. to TP-CWD,
nght ol way, Che~ter.
Rocky R. Hupp, Carol .1 .
Hupp. to TP-CWD, right of
way, Olive.
Jeffrey Peal. Marilyn F.
Peal. to TP-CWD. right of
wny, Orange.
Denise Nutter to TPCWD. right of way. Orange.
Joseph J. McCarter,
Janice McCar.ter. to TPCWD, right of way. Orange.
Don M. Anderson, David
H. Anderson, to TP-CWD,
right of way. Orange.

Hayley Weston. Hayley
Escue,
to
Chad
D.
Ferguson. deed. Bedford.
John E. Blake to We:&gt;ley
R. Pearson, Chloeanna L.
Pearson, deed. Village of
Pnn1eroy.
David Jonathan Dailey.
Deborah Lynn Dailey, to
Douglas I Iauber, Denise
Dawson. Scott Hauber, and
John Bogard, Jr., deed.
Lebanon.
Kenny Ramey, Jud)
Ramcy.David Ramey. Cindy
Ramey. Craig Ramc). to TPCWD. right of way. Bedford.
Lola J. Proffitt to TPCWD, right of way, Letart.
Jack Perry,Carol)n Perr).
to TP CWD, nght of way,
Scipio.
Chc~rlcs Payne. Sr., Carol
Payne. to TP-CWD, nght of
way. I ctart.
Bruce Blackston, Pamela
J. Blackston. to TP-CWD,
right of way. Chester.
Charles Spaun. Betty
Spaun, to TP-CWD, right of
way. Letart.
Robc'n L. Wood. Wanda
S. Wood, to TP·CWD. right
of wa), Letart.
JEI M Enterpmes, LLC.
to American Municipal
Power, casement. Lctat1.
Terry Napper. Sandy
Napper. to Shane P. Napper.
deed. Salem.
Scott Napper. Terry
Napper. to Scott R. Napper.
Pam Napper. deed. Salem.

Buried in
.Credit Card Debt?

877-264-8031
"

.

�Pagei\..'J

The Daily Sentinel

\'\Tednesday, Octo b er 14 , 20 0 9

Nelson birthday
COOLVILLE
McKayla Nelson recently
celebrated her fit-...t birthdav
at her grandparents' home iit
1
Coolville.
1 he themes were Winnie
The Pooh and Ftrst Birthday
Princess. Attending were
her parents Chad and Jackie
Nelson and her sister.
J\lcKen1ie: grandparents
I Teresa nnd Ernie Calaway
and Jack and Anita Parker:
I
great grandparents Rayand
Leoma Hall, Roger and
June Epple and Annie
Calaway.
A ho attending
were
1 Ashley Putnam, Cratg Jones,
Brad Bobbi and Rya!'l
Parker, Crystal and Paul
Sallee. Madison Brook:.-.
Eric and Ellb Needs. Mike.
Heather. Gmge and Destenee
Hart, Sarah and Zoic Mayes.
Dorothy Snyder, Julia and
Olivia
Wood,
Lucille
Rtdenour. Lila Ridenour and
l)a, c nnd Deloris Holter.

Sending gifts were Brett.
Jcn and Emma Parker. Nola
and Larrv Brown. Freda and
Jennifer ·wm. Barbara and
Ed Rou~h. Ste\en Crystal
Taylor Justin Baile) .111~
Ragen Needs. Bobby and
Boggs,
Sherry
Linda
Lombardo and Vicky Holly.

Chester DofA hears commission
t
Submitted photo

·Scene from the recent lad1es retreat at the Cheshire Baptist Church.

hesh·r

h

CHESHIRE
The Cheshire
Churl:h recent!) ho:;ted its
fourth annual ladie.., retreat.
, Guest speaker and singer was
Maril) n Hysell of Dallas, Texas.
-Music \\as also prO\Jded by Kim
Cle\enger of Kentuck). A continental
; breakfast and a luncheon were
enjoyed by those attending Door
pnzes were awarded.
Attending were Connie Palmer.
Claudette Pinkerman, Rita Little.
• Rachael Bum~. Karen Hawley. Jackie
. Darst. Rosalie M. Jan JS, Gerri Halley,
B&lt;~pllst

Donna Sla) ton. Kaye Paugh, Lina
Edwards, Blance Siden.. Cl) '&gt;t.ll Hall.
Jennifer Pappus. Judy McHaffie.
Dianne Hicks. Tamm) C'ornelt-,, S.lra
Blanken hip, Tarissa Bruer. Brenda
Musgni\e, Peg Th&amp;ms, Anne Swurt1..
Emma IPammcr, Virgima l'ylet.
Carolyn Da'viS, Kallc Shocm,1kcr,
Connie Bradbury, Ahce ~1olmu·. Pergy
John..,on, Dianna Ash, Bca Wood,
Denise Weekly. Dec Tracewcll. Cathy
Gilmore. Opal Thompson, Ph) IIi!&gt;
Ru~sell, Bonnie Cleland, Elstc Folmer.
Cathy Denm~on. Glona Curry.

retreat

.
.
l.u~da P1ckard. Maxme ~tttle. !,met
Hamtlton. Usther Hatdcn. D1ane Ztrkle,
f-aith Havman. ~1aril) n. Deemer, Tma
f'en·cll, Marga~et Caudtll. Ruth Ann
Curfman, LoUic;e Cald\\cll, C'onme
Hud&lt;..on. June Hud&lt;-on. Charlene D.trst,
Gertntde H}sell.
Bonme Eber... bach. Donna Jean
Hood, Irene Long. Betty Smith. Sonya
Roach, Connie Morn:-.. Nancy
Scarbrod~h. Dixie Wolfe. Becky
bd\\ards. Marilyn Hyc;ell, Kam
Cle\'enger. Jeannie ~lcAllister, and
Samantha McCallister.

CHESTER
The commisson of JoAnn Ritchtc as
deputy !'itate councilor was
read at a recent meeting of
Chester
Council
323,
Daughcrs of America, held
at the hall.
Marge Fett) conducted
the meetmg which opened
I with the American and
· Christian flag pledges, followed by a scripture reading
and the Lord'o; Praver m
unison.
•
Rep01 ted ill were Kathryn
I Baum Bob Ritchie and
Melis~a Coleman. A card
from the Thelma White

Church to observe 35 h anniversary

l

SYRACUSE
Th,
Syracuse Church of Gull
will celebrate its 35tt.
anni\ersary Sunday.
The doors will open at 3
p.m. with the \\Or.;,hip ser~
'1ce to begin at 4 p.m.
·ere will be singing b)
1c Cadle Trio. Rachel
Jque .1nd others before a
soup and s,md\\ ich buffet at
5:30 pi.m. FoliO\\ ing the
dmner a 6: 0 p.m. \\Orship
wtll be led by, Earthen

Vessels and Truly Saved.
Tours of the church \\ hich
ha"&gt; been renovated over the
)Cars can be taken at 3 p.m.
History -.hows that the
building on the comer of
Second and Apple Streets in
Syracuse \\-OS originally the
town hall. In 1866 the butlding \\a... purchased b) the
Board of Education and
Syracuse
became
the
Elemental") ''here school
was held until the ne'"

school bu1lding w,ts com- 1983 until 1985 After her
pleted bet\\ een I929 and came Juett Hoster who was
1931. It later became the the pastor from I985 until
home of the Syracuse f&lt;tre 1990. and finally David
Department. it has been Russell who became the
reported. Then in I97 3 the church's pastor Sept. 22.
buildmg
became
fhe 1991 until present.
Syracuse Church of God
Tne public is Jn\ ited and a
continumg .1s a house of special invitation is given to
worshtp to thi.., d,t).
those who have attended m
George 0Jicr "as the fir..,t the past. An~one '.Vith more
pastor of the church from mformatoin about the burldI 973 until I9R ~ Jo) Clark mg·, histor) '" asked to
then became the pastor from 1:-~harc it with the church.
--------------

ASK DR.. BR..&lt;)THER.S

family wa!-&gt; read and a donation in memory or .:\1ary
Carr. a member of the
Forrest Rose Council and
her brother, Charles Carr, a
member of Chester Council
was acknowledged.
Refre~hments were served
to Judy Buckley, Gary
Holter, Julie Curtis. Marge
Fetty. Opal Hollon. Doris
Grueser. Sharon Riffle.
Mary Jo Barringer. E\erett
Grant. Jo Ann Ritch1e.
Thelma White, Sandy
White. and Laura Mac Nice .
r-;ext meetin!! \\ill be Oct.
20. 7 p.m. at the hall.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings

Quartet performing.
POMEROY
Presentation on Amish cui·
ture, including customs and
beliefs, 1 :30 p.m., Meigs
County Courthouse Annex
basement conference room,
presenter
ts
Sharon
Strouse, OSU Extension
Educator in the Northeast
Region of Oh1o.

Wednesday, Oct. 14
MARIETTA - Dtstrict 18
Execut1ve Committee, 10
a.m., Holiday Inn. Revjew of
proJects for Round 24
SCIP/LTIP only. No points
assigned.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community Watch Group
Organizational meeting, 7
p.m., Syracuse Community
Saturday, Oct. 17
POMEROY - Hallelujah
Center, open to all citizens
Harvest Family Carmval A
1 tnterested in learning how to
help the police department free event in the New
Beginnings Church parking
prevent cnme.
lot, Second St., Pomeroy.
Thursday, Oct. 15
Shade Weiner roast, games, and
CHESTER
River Lodge 453 will con- fun. Starts at 4 p.m.
duct highway cleanup at. Everyone welcome.
5:30 p.m. All Masons invited
dre\V you into the organua-1 to assist.
tion. What feels like a
unique ..,,tuatton to you
Thurs day, Oct. 15
could be something others
MIDDLEPORT
Free
have faced. and they might 1
4:30-6
community
dinner,
have dev1sed vanous &lt;;tratep.m., Heath United Methodist
gte~ to deal wtth such a 'ill• Thursday, Oct. 15
Church, chicken and noodles.
uation. Without complainPOMEROY
Me1gs
POMEROY- Gospel coning or crittctzmg your County Ret1red Teachers, cert,
1:30 p.m. et the Laurel
client. se~ 1f. the other \OI- luncheon, noon, W1ld Horse
Cliff
Free
Methodist Church.
untcers can understand and Cafe, speaker from Ohio
Singers
to
include The Dolly's
. relate to\\ hat ) ou are going Consumers' Council, disand
Bricle
Vo1ces
Faith and
through. There e'en may be cussion on saving on ener- Truly Saved. For of
more inforguidclmes in place to help
you through a situation like gy costs, River Blend mation call 992-2272.
this. If all else fails, the ke\
is to get other 'olunteerc; to
pitch in and give tillS
woman a more 'aned group
of people to become interestcd in. It i.; \\onderlulthat
Subscribe today • 992-2155
&lt;&gt;he is so outgomg. and perhaps .1 group of teens wanting to sene the community
can reach out to her and
adoptherasgroup.Don'the
the only fish 111 the o;ea.

Other events

:Dad hides the fact that he has been laid off
Bv DR. J OYCE B ROTHERS

have to apologize to your friendly per&lt;;on, but I nm
lam tly for deceiving them, becoming more and more
• Dear Dr. Brothers: Just and face their dbappoint- uncomfortable wtth this.
as my two teeno; were going ment in addition to hm ing to She 1s all &lt;~lone. How do l
'back to high c;chool thio; look for a job. They may keep a distance hut not hurt
)'Car; I got a notice that I'd understand that you \VCre tl)- her'?- C ..J.
been laill off. M) job has ing to -;pare them the worry
Dear CJ.: Thb i.;, indeed a
been a hi~ part of my life. you are going through. But I rather c,;.td situatton. What
and whiie 1 am tr) ing hard am fairly sure they'' ill be .tt you took on as nothmg more
to get another one, 1 am least a little bit upset by the than a \Oiuntcer job, to do
feeling pretty deprec;scd. 1 deception. So wh) not plan good and gh•c b,tck to the
didn't want to tell mv kids to get rid of that part of your communtty -,umeone el.;,e
or m)' w1fc on the first day problem right away'? Once has come to think of ao; u perof c,;chool, so I've been the new5 b out. people can c;onal relationship and a\ ital
QOing off in the mornmg as start to help you.
part of her life. That kind of
&gt;Ugh to \\ork. but it's real•••
disparity m looking at a rcl.1onlv to look for work.
Dear Dr·. Brothers: Last tion..,hip make.;, fm an a\\ k•
Now {feel 1 ha\e to keep year J took on a volunteer ward. if not rather heartpretendmg unti 1 1 get a job. job at the urging of a church rending o;;et of circumstances.
Am 1 really protecting my friend. I deliver meals to But let's see how we c~m
ktds, or not?_ L.F.
some of thr seniors in our make this work out well for
Dear L.F.: Although tltis community who are home- both of you. The last thing
: scenario is new to you, let hound;and it has been a sat- you want to do i'&gt; hurt thi-;
: me as..,ure you it ha~ been isfying job. But one of the lady'&lt;; feelings. but I under• around forever
or at least very elderly clients has stand how alarming it must
:smce the dre,1ded pink slip taken a great interest 111 me he to ha\e her trymg to
: wa::. invented. It has ah\,1ys and my family, and has cmt?ed hcn.clf in your family.
:been a hu~e blow to lose a asked to be included in my
f1rst 1 would take th1s
(c) 2009 by King Fwwre.\
:JOb, espcctall)' for the man daily life. l'm a giving and problem to the person who Swulicafe
• of the family. even ifhe isn"t
: the on I) breadwinner. But I
:sense that )OU took the route
• of "don't tell" becauc;e you
:were trying to '&gt;p.tre your
: two teenage children embarSponsored by:
: rassment. That 1s "&gt;O 'cry
Down Syndrome Association of Southeastern Ohio
: thoughtful of you - but m
• th1s economy. I behc\e they
: will be uc;ed to hearing sto·
: ries such as ) ours and will
: be more amprco;sed by your
U
honesty about what is happening than they might be tn
ow you were h1d ing the
MUSIC ·
off to make sure they didSCHEDUl EOF EVENTS:
FOOD· BAKE SALE
fee l .111y discomfort or
•
J:00 Welcome
have to put up with teasing
GAMES
· from their frien ds.
l :30 Balloon Launch &amp; \\lalk
You want your kidc. to
know that you can trust them
2:00 Cornhole Tournament with guaranteed pa~ -out
to handle the tntth. and that
2:30 -3:30 :vi usic by Paul f)oeflinger
the)' are resilient and s.trong,
.ts are you. So I think the best
3:30 Clo~i
'' ay to do this Js to let the c,it
**No registration fcc to " alk--donations accepted**
out of the bag before the charade goes nny further. The
For more information call (740) 992-6121
last thing you want to do JS

Church events .

Clubs and
organizations

Proud to be apart of your life.

Are You Unable to Manage Your

Type 2 Diabetes
With Diet and Exercise Alone?

October 8,2009

Pomeroy Parking Lot

Walking Path

If you .••
• Have 1ot been treated with, or nave had only '11T'1ted
exposure to, oral antidiabetic med1cat1on
• Are between 18 and 77 years of age
You may be eligible to participate in a global clinical research study.

Participants may receive study-related medica! care, study
medication, laboratory worit. and evaluations. at no cost.
To earn more about t sclinical researc• swdy,
!llease caw today. Al calls are confide:rtla
laurie \'/lytatld LPN
Holle&lt; Cl " Oe9rml! 1 o' Reselrcft
80Jao:&lt;son l';;.e &lt;;, po 1 OH45531
740&lt;1413900

�~------~~----------------~--------~-------------·------~-------------------------------------

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 14,

Education grants aimed at riform

The Daily Sentinel

BY LtBBY QUAID

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

ASSOCIATED PRE.,S

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

With states jockeying for extra
www.mydallysentinel.com
school dollars from the economic
stimulus, Education Secretary Arne
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Duncdn reminde.d them Tuesday the
Dan Goodrich
point is to help kids do better.
Cash-strapped state-; are competing
Publisher
for $5 billion in gmnts from the.ecoCharlene Hoeflich
nomk stimulus for changes the
Obama administration wants, such as
General Manager-News Editor
charter s&lt;.:hools and teacher pay based
Pam Caldwell
on student performance.
Advertising Director
"It's really not about the money - , it's about pushing a strong refonn
agenda that\ going to 1mprove ~tudent
Congress shall make no law respecting an
1 achievement," Duncan said in an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
inten ie\\ with The Associated Press.
States can't even appl) for the
free exercise thereof; or abridgi11g the freedom
money
yet. St1ll. mnc states have
of speech, or of the press; or the right of tile
changed their Ia\\ s or made budget
people peaceabl)' to assemble, and to petition
decisiom to improve their standing.
The late&lt;&gt;t is California. "'here a bi11
the Government for a redress of griel'ances.
was signed Sunday allowing student
test
scores to be used to evaluate
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
teachers.
Duncan said the moves are encouraging. Still, he said states w1ll haYe to
do more than make promises.
"We're going to invest in those
Today is Wednesday, Oct. 14. the 287th day o.f 2009. states that aren't just talking the talk
There are 78 days left in the year.
but that nrc walking the \Valk,'" he said.
Today's Highlight in History:
"If folb are doing this to chase
On Oct. 14, 1939. during World War II, a German U-boat money, it's fnr the wrong reason~."
torpedoed and sank the HMS Royal Oak. a British battleship anchored at Scapa flow in Scotland's Orkney Islands:
833 of the more than 1.200 men aboard were killed.
On this date:
In I 066. Norman~ under William the Conqueror defeated
the English at the Battle of Hastings.
In 1890, Dwight D. Eisenhower. 34th president of the
United States. was born in Deni::.on, Texas.
In 1912, Theodore Roo-;evelt, campaigning for the presidency. was shot in the chest in Milwaukee. De~pite the
wound, he went ahead with a scheduled speech.
In 1933, Nazi Germany announced it was withdrawing
from the League of Nations.
In 1944. German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed suicide rather than face execution for allegedly con~pir­
ing against Adolf Hitler.
In I 947. Air Force test pilot Charles E. ("Chuck"} Yeager 1
broke the sound barlier as he flew the expenmental Bell
XS-l (later X-1) rocket plane over Muroc Dry Lake in
California.
In 1959, actor Errol Flynn died in Vancouver. British
Columbia, at age 50.
In 1960, the idea or a Peace Corps was fir:.t suggested by
Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy to an
audience of students at the Umver;ity of Michigan.
In 1968. the first successful hve telecast from a manned
U.S. spacecraft was transmitted from Apollo 7.
In 1987. a 58-hour drama began in Midland. Texas, as
18-month-old Je:.sica McClure slid 22 feet down an abandoned well at a private da) care center: she was rescued on
Oct. 16.
Ten years ago: President Bill Clinton accused Senate
Republicans of recklessness and irrespon~ibiJity for defeating the nuclear test ban treaty. and pledged the United
State::. would refrain from testing de:.pite the treaty's rejection. Japan's Sumitomo Bank and Sakura Bank announced
they would merge. Julius Nyerere, Tanzania ·i&gt; first prestdent, died in a London ho~pital at age 77.
Five years ago: The Treasury Department announced that :
the federal deficit had surged to a record $413 billion in tis- •
cal 2004. A suicide bomber killed four Americans in the
U.S.-guarded "Green Zone" of Baghdad.
One year ago: Big bank~ started falling in line behinu a
revised bailout plan that was fast becoming more of a buy.in: the Bush administration announced it would fork over
as much as $250 billion in exchange for partial ownership.
A grand jury in Orlando, Fla. returned charges of firstdegree murder, aggravated child abuse and aggravated
manslaughter against Casey Anthony in the death of her 3
year-old daughter. Caylee.

TODAY IN HISTORY

Thought for T(Jday: ''To think is to speak low. To speak is
to think aloud. •· - F. Max Mueller, German philolo~tst
(1823-1900).

Correction Polley

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

Our ma•n concern •n all stories is to P~.o~lished every mormng Monday
be accurate. 11 you know of an error through Friday, \11 Court Street,
Jn a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy. Ohio Second-class postage
992·2156.
pa1d at Pomeroy.
Member: The ASSOCiated Press and
the Ohto Newspaper Assoctatior
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc·
(740) 992-2156.
lions to The Oarly Sentinel, PO. Box
Department extensions are:
729, Pomeroy. OhiO 45769.
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich Ext 12
By carrier or motor route
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!lOll.

~1ost

of the action has been on charter schools, which arc publici)' funded
but operate independently of local
school board~.
Chm1er school re:;tricuons have no\\
been eased in Louis1ana. Illinois,
Tennessee. Delaware ~md lndiana. and
bud!!et cuts for charter schools were
defeated in Ohio. Connecticut and
Rhode Island.
The administratiOn has also pressured states that prohibit student test
scores from bemg u~ed to evaluate
teachers. Those states arc Wiscon-;m,
Nevada and, until Sund!ly. California.
Wisconsin lawmakers are considering
a change, while i'\cvada officiab seem
unlikely to act.
New York has a similar prolub1tion
on using test scores in teacher tcnun:
decisiOtl.-.. but it expires next year.
Many of President Barack Obama 's

The t'und is a fraction of the $100,
billion for schools provided by the
stimuluo;. But the $5 billion dwarfs all'
the discretionary money Duncan's
predeces!;ors received combined for.
their own priorities.
Moreover. the fund has taken on
even more Importance because in
m,tn) slates. the rest of the stimulu
money is be.ng spent to fiJI budge~
hole&lt;&gt; and no~ on in no\ ations Obama
\\anb.

Duncan pointed out that the administration has even more. mone) to
a\\ ard. another $5 biJiion, from other
grant programs that can be used for
similar priorittes.
"We "ant ~tates to start thinking
comprehen::.ively about all these
potential opportunities to bnng scarce
dollars where they're pushing a strong
reform agenda:' he said.

BY DANIEL WAGNER
ASSOC ATfO PRE"SS

The pitched drama O\ cr
Letters 10 tlze editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing. must be bonuses for bailed out execsigned, and include address and telephone number. No uti-ves will be revived on
unsigned lctrcrs ~,..-ill be pub/is/zed. Letters should be in Capitol Bill today as a govgood taste. addressing i.uues, no1 personalities. Letters (~f emment watchdog explains
thanks w organizations and indi~·idtwls will not be accept- how some executives nearly
brought down the finan&lt;.:ial
ed for publication.

Reader Services

Cash-strapped states
are competing for
$5 billion in grants
from the economic
stimulus.

education priorittes are controverl&gt;ial,
e-;pecially among teacher5 · uniono;,
"'hich make up an influential &lt;,egment
of ht~ Democratic bal'!e.
The SS billion grant fund. pat1 of the
sumulu!'! law enacted this )Car, is seen
as Obama '::. big opportunity to overhaul !.chools over the next couple of
year:-. Obama wanted to usc the qitl
ulus both to help !;Chools rid~ out tl
rc&lt;.:esston and to try to tran~lonn t
federal government's role in educa-'

·Treasury to answer for AIG bonuses

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

2009

system - then pocketed
millions.
Neil Barofsky, the special
inspector general for the
$700 bilhon financial rescue program, will answer
4uestton~ about a new
report outlining the official
m1ssteps that led to massive
bonus payments for executh es at insurer Amencan
International Group Inc.
In a report released
Tuesda), Barofsky wrote
that
the
Treasury
Department d1d not understand AIG's by1..antine pay
structures when it gnvc the
firm billion\ in aid last fall.
The government ha::. cornmitteu a tot.tl of more than
$1 XO billior' to wind down
the New York-based insu·rancc and finan&lt;.:ial scrvici!S
conglomerate, and now
owns about 80 percent of
the company.
A IU 's bonuses sparked a
political firc&lt;&gt;torm ~arlicr
th1s )car \\hen 11 \\as
rc-.ealcd that the govern
I nu~nt could not legally stop
AlG from paying millions
in bonuses e\en after taking
billion in bailout money.

I

Officials from the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York discovered 620
AIG bonus programs totaling $455
million, and 13 retention plans
allocating $1 billion.
Barofsky's appearance is
expected to recall testimony
in March by Treasury
Secretary
Timothy
Geithner. who was president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York when
AIG first was bailed out.
The Federal Resen•e provided AIG's first lifeline.
Geithner ...aid at the time
he had not known about
nearlv $1.75 bilhon Ill
bon use!&gt;. retention pa)ments and deferred compensation that AIG was contractually obligated to pay
it~ v,:orkers. Millions went
tn employees in the unit
whose bets helped sink the
company.
Barofsky found no evidence that Geithncr knew
about the payments before
March. But he wrote that it
was a "failure of communication'' for the top executi\e
of the agcncie:. overseeing
AIG to be unaware of the
payments.
AIG has asked employees

to return some of the mone\
voluntarily.
~
The report also said the
Obama administration's pay
ctar has asked American
International Group to \\ ithhold some of the million::. in
bonuses promised to its
employee .
Kenneth
Feinberg. the special master
for executi \ e compensation.
"has informal!\ ad' ised
AIG not to pay tlte full~ 198
million" employees expect
to receive. the report said.
Feinberg is locked in
negotiations with the ~even
companies thut rece1ved the
most expensive taxpayer
bailouts. AIG's was hy far
the largest. To ~ecurc its
bailouts, i\I&lt;J argued to
Trca~ury that its failure
would doom the broader
finan&lt;..ial system.
It took offi~.inl'&gt; from the
r·edcml Resene Bank of
New York months to untangle A IG ·:. "staggeri ngl)
complex. decentralized"
compensation structure, the

report sa):.. The) e'i entually
discoYered 620 bonus pro·
!!ram-; totaling $455 m~
lion. and 13 retention plW
allocating $1 biJlion.
The company is talking to
Feinberg about matter~
"including future payments
lO
employees of AIG
Financial
Products."
spokeswoman
Christina
Pretto said in a stntem~ntr
Employees ha\e until the
end of the vear to return vol~
untarih st1me of the bonuS)
pa:.• they received in March,
she added.
Barof::.k) 's report recommends that Trcasur) \\ ork
close!) "'ith officials from
the New York Feu, which is
fundmg parts of the AIG
batlout. It abo suggest
Treasury improve m er5ight
of companies that it owns,
tncluding revie\\ ing compensation programs before
bu~ ing major ownership
stakes in companies.
In a written response,
Herbert M. Allison .Jr..
Treasun•'s asslstarll !;CC
tary in charge of the~(
ment bailout, s:ud
depat1ment ts unplcmcnting
thl· !!ttideline" and "has no
present intention"' of buying
anoth.:!r financial company.
"We welcome your com ..
ments and suggc-.tions as
Trea:sur) continues to
strengthen O\ ersight of
financial
institutions"
receiving go' ernment as. is-,
tance. Allison wrote.

�Justice O'Connor heari.ng cases in Ohio

Obituaries
Eula Mae Odegard
Eula Mae (Haggy) Odegard. 91. of Pomeroy, passed
away on Oct. 12, 2009. She was born on September 27,
1918 in Syracuse, daughter of the late George Hood and
Winford Quillen Hood.
She is survived by: children, Jean (Harold) Norton of
Pomeroy. Delores Surface of Middleport, Lloyd (Joyce)
Ai Haggy of Pomeroy. Gar (Lelia) Haggy of Pomeroy. Shirley
rold) Meadows of Mason, W.Va .. Ruby (Dale) Gum of
yrna. Tenn .. Jack (Janice) Haggy of Pomeroy, and Ernie
enda) Haggy of Pomeroy: 17 grandchildren; 26 great
grandchildren; one great great grandchild.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by:
' first husband, Emory Allen Baggy; second husband. Ted
Odegard; and a special friend. Arthur Johnson.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. tomonow at
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport with
Pastor Glen McClung officiating. Burial will follow at
Rocksprings Cemetery. Visiting hours will be from 6-8
p.m. tonight at the funeral home. In leiu of flowers, please
make a memorial donation to the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. A registry is available on-line at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Briefs
Basketball officiating course offered
WELLSTON - A course of instruction will be offered
for any person wishing to obtain an Ohio High School
Athletic Association basketball officiating perinit.
Enrollees must be enrolled in high school or older to eam
an OHSAA permit. The class will begin on Nov. 7. Class
fee is $110 per person and that includes course instruction,
material and permit fee. New students will be eligible to
ciate in the upcoming season.
•
or more information visit www.makeyourcall.com or
call John Derrow at 740-710-5069.

Apple butter making set
RACINE -The Southern Charge UMC Men's Group
will be making apple butter with apple peeling beginning at
9 a.m. today and 9 a.m. Thursday at the home of Lan·y
Circle. Canning begins at dawn on Saturday.

Wastershed committee meeting
RUTLAND - The Leading Creek Citizen's Committee
is forming with its first meeting being at 5:30p.m., tomorrow at the Pomeroy Library. The mission of the LCCC is
to ensure lasting stewardship of the Leading Creek
Watershed through projects designed and run by local residents and landowners.
Committee project ideas include monthly sustainability
workshops, community gardens, after-school programs.
skill share programs. ride share programs, reuse free
stores, school sustainability committees, recycling programs, after-school programs. etc. It's also hoped the
LCCC can work on a plan for the future success of watershed projects as well as ~stablish funding opportunities
for the watershed.
more information, call Karla Sanders at 992-4282 or
her at Sanders.lcwg@yahoo.com.

Amish from Page Al
Extension Educator f&lt;&gt;r the
Western Reserve Region in
the northeast area of the
state. This region is a ninecounty district that includes
the well known Holmes
County. which has Ohio's
largest population of Amish
people. She has also conducted surveys with this
population to increase her
knowledge of their customs
and beliefs.
With this personal and
professional experiences,
Strouse is able to share a
vast knowledge of Amish
beliefs. One of the topics
she plans to include is a
clarification about emergency medical situations
and how the Amish typicalespond.
trouse said "the Amish
economical in their
health care choices and
prefer to use practices of
faith healing, herbal treatments and other non-traditional medical remedies.
However, if there does not
seem to be improvement as
a result of their own remedies, then they will usually
turn
to
health
care
providers for . service.
Thus, when an Amish person does show up in the
emergency
room, the
provider often assumes
that the person has already
experienced much pain and
may be advanced in their
medical condition. The
expression of physical
symptoms may be minimized, since this might be
interpreted as complaining
against God's will.''
According to 2009·statistics from The Young
ter for Anabaptist and
tist
Studies
at
zabethtown College in
Elizabethtown. Pa .. there
are an estimated 56,430
Amish people living in
Ohio. Pennsylvania follows Ohio with an estimated Amish population of
51 ,435 people. ln comparison. West Virginia has an
estimated Amish population of 405 people.
For questions about this
un ique presentation, feel

t

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,Octobert4,~0o9

free to contact Connie Little
at the Meigs County Health
Department, 992-6626.
The
Meigs
County
Consortium, a group of
community
service
providers, meets quarterly
under the auspices of the
Meigs
County
Health
Department's Child and
Family Health Services
Grant. Little is the project
director for the grant program.

CINCINNATI (AP) O'Connor is hearing arguFormer U.S. Supreme Court ments in nine cases during
Justice
Sandra
Day her two-day stay.
O'Connor is serving as a
O'Connor Tuesday and
visiting judge this week on made it clear Tuesday that
the U.S. 6th Circuit Com1 of she would challenge attorAppeals in Cincinnati.
neys with tough questions.
The
79-year-old.
The panel of judges heard

appeals in a personal injury
lawsuit. the case of a man
accused of lying on government documents, a dispute
over assets in a bankruptcy
and a lawsuit over employee benefits.
After serving with the 6th

For the Record

which handles
from
Ohio.
Mtch1gan. Tennessee and
Kentucky. O'Connor will
head ~e~\ nex~ week t&lt;? serve
as a ns1tmg JUdge V.'Jth the
9th Circuit. which covers the
nine most westem states.
appe~ls

•

dissolution of marriage were
filed m Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
POMEROY - The fol- Jason E. Griffith, Huntington,
POMEROY - The following were arraigned by lowing were sentenced by· W.Va., and Debbie L. G1iffith.
Judge Fred W. Crow III on Common Pleas Court Judge Reedsville, and Billie R.
indictments returned by the Fred W. Crow III:
Saxton, Vinton, and Jessica
• David E. Wells. 4 1/2 M Saxton, Middlep011.
Meigs County Grand Jury
years, five years community .
in Common Pleas Com1:
• Ahcia Shuler, on charges control. 500 hours of comof burglary and receiving munity service, on two
stolen property. $1 ,000 per- counts of unlawful sexual
POMEROY - An action
sonal recognizance bond, contact with a minor.
for
divorce was filed in Meigs
•
Trenton
McClintock.
five
trial set for Dec. 8.
County
Common Pleas Cowt
years
community controL
• Robe11 Dalton, on two
by
Jennifer
L. Rollins.
SEPTA,
on
participation
in
counts of non-support of
Albany.
against
Ernest
charges
of
burglary,
receivdependents. $ LOOO personal recognizance bond, ing stolen property and Thomas Rollins IL Albany.
$1,000 surety bond. Trial obstructing official business.
• Larry Barnhart. 18
set for Dec. 17. Christopher
months
with seven days
Tenoglia appointed counsel.
POMEROY - Civil fore• Jeremy Pierce, on wo credit, on a motion to
closure actions were filed in
counts of non-support of revoke community control.
Meigs County Common
dependents. $1.000 personPleas Court by Cinmo11gage,
al recognizance bond. Trial
Inc., O'Fallon, Mo., against
set for Dec. 8. Chlistopher
POMEROY - Actions for Floyd Hickman, Murray
Tenoglia appointed counsel.·

Arraigned

Circuit.

Sentenced

Divorce

Foreclosures

Dissolutions

City. and others, and by
Deutsche Bank. Coppell.
Tex .. against Kelli L. Ballard,
Pomeroy, and others.
Foreclosures were granted to BAC Home Loans
Servicing against Charles
W. Hawk. and others. and to
Home
NatiOnal
Bank
against Patricia Lynn Durst,
administrator of the estate
of Ralph Larry Durst.

Judgments
POMEROY
Civil
judgment actions were filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by State Auto
Insurance Co .. Columbus,
against Eric T. Smith.
Middleport. and others. and
by PNC Global Investment
Servicing, Westboro, Mass ..
against Gloria J. VanReeth,
Pomeroy.

Merchants from Page AI
up the garlands and wreaths
on the period lamp posts
along the downtown streets.
The annual parade will be
held on Nov. 29, the Sunday
after Thanksgiving with
Toney Dingess in charge.
Parade marshall will be
George Wright.
The tour of homes is
planned for Sunday from 4
to 8 p.m. and tickets at $7
each will go on sale soon.
Co-chairman Susan ClarkDingess and Edna Weber
reported that eight. homeowners have committed to

participate.
It was repot1ed that Gavin
has donated quantities of
wiring which will be used to
wire and re-wire an area of
the parking lot near the
levee making electricity
more accessible to boaters
and others.
lt was not~d during t.he
meeting conducted by Bill
Quickel, president. that proceeds from the duck derby
held at the Sternwheel
Riverfest were down this
year. A total of $2,015 was
collected on duck sales,

according to chairman Edna
Weber, with the secretarytreasurer reporting expenses, including the grand prize
of
$ 1 ,000,
promotion
expenses of $142. leaving
net proceeds for the
Merchants fund of $593.
The success of Veterans
Appreciation Day with a flyover was repOited by Quickel
who also called for a letter of
endorsement for the upcoming Meigs Local School
District 1.92 mill five year
levy for a multi-complex
buildipg, (earlier described

as a stadium with an alunmi
component) on the high
school
campus.
The
Merchants Association voted
to give a letter of endorsement to the ·levy which will
be on the November ballot.
A guest at the meeting was
Karla Sanders who is serving
with Americorps at the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District. with her concentration on the Leading Creek
Watershed Project. She spoke
briefly about the organization
of the Leading Creek
Citizen's Committee.

Chamber .from Page AI
upcoming plat book project
for the county. Books will be
sold at the Chamber office
for $18. Mercury Publishing
is donating 100 books to the
Chamber to sell.
Mark Porter of Mark
Porter GM Supercenter
spoke about recently attending a General Motors meeting in Detroit, saying with
the
discontinuation of
Pontiac, the company will
be more focused . on the
Chevrolet brand. He said
GM is working on at least
four new vehicles which
will receive 40 miles to the
gallon. Porter also said in
the next two years he hopes
to remodel the showroom of

hjs Pomeroy dealership.
A "For Women Only" free
clinic by appointment only
will be held on Friday at
O'Bleness Health System in
Athens. There will be free
cervical and clinical breast
exams and a referral for a
free mammogram if recommended by healthcare professional. Call 566-4814 for
more information.
The
Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce
2009 Recognition Dinner is
set for 6 p.m., Thursday,
Nov. 12 at Kountry Resort.
Guest speaker Joe Stanton

is with the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes. is an excollege wrestler and insurance executive. Tickets are
$25 per person. Call 9925005
or
email
michelle@meigscountychamber.com for information on sponsorship or tickets.
Chamber President Patty
Pickens reported there will
be no Chamber luncheon
for November. Pickens also
recognized
Pomeroy
Flower Shop for providing
the luncheon's flowers,
Bun's Party Barn for cater-

ing the luncheon and the
Pomeory Library for providing the space.

-~%ukrson fJvic'Danie{
_f.~J)!!a{ ?fonu

Adam McDaniel

&amp;. James Andenton
DIREcrORS

Visit us online at
www.mydailysentinel.com

Your online sourcefor news

Rocksprings

et

Show Off Your "Pumpkin" ;
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In The Sentinel
~

~ PUMPKIN PATCH~
-·~

i;
~~

~

~

We will be accepting ctmned good donations m the entrance that will benefit our
local food pantry as we stri~·e to give back to our commlmity.

Pictures will r un:
Friday,
October 30

1tJesdav,
Octo~er 2.0, 1009
p~ ·bp~ Carf)iVa( gaMes ~ Ba((e Sa(
6pM • 7 p~ ··1ric(( or Treat

3'! Deadline for Entry:
Friday,
i; October 23
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On\y
$1Q.O.O

Gryphon
"Love Ya!''
Alwayz, Nana &amp; Papal

Mail or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October

Jolie Holland in
concert at Stuart's
NELSONVILLE
Singer-songwriter
Jnlie
Holland will appear in concert at Stuart 'li Opera House
in Nelsonville on Saturday,
Oct. 17. 8 p.m .
Holland appeared last in
Nelsonville at the May
Music Festival. l\'latt Rauer
will open the show.
Holland's new alhum on
Anti Records, the Living &amp;
the Dead is a work between
worlds, of moving on and
finding something new, of
missed
chances,
and
promises on distant horizons.
The
Texas-bred
Holland navigates a new
rock approach that is built
upon the folk, blues and
jazz spectors that populated
her three acclaimed previous albums .

14 , 200 9

Columbia November gas costs to be 53°/o lower than 2008
Typical residential customer to save $36 compared to last year ~~;~~~~~satf~Y~ ·!f o~1i~~·~

atures . combmed v. ith the
it was 48 cents.
COLUMBUS
Bauer is a songwnter that Columbia Gas of Ohio
"The fact that our higher GCR, will increase
calls many places home today fi led its Gas Cost No\'ember gas costs will be the typical residential cusincluding Brooklyn and Recovery (GCR) adju~t­ well belO\v . last year 's is tomer s No' ember bill to
Lexington,
Kentucky. ment for November with the especially good news for $61 .10, compared to $3 1.67
Skyscraper says this of his Public Utilities Commission our customers now that in. October. Average resine\v record The Island of Ohio.
we're headed into another dential gas usage is 26 Cl'f
Moved in the Storm, "There
The GCR of 56 cents per winter heating season ," said in Octob~.:r.
is an economic darkness on 100 cubic feet (Ccf) of nat- Columbia Gas of Ohio
Tlw November GCR will
this recording. Lonely ban- ural gas will be 63 cents, or President Jack Partridge. be in effect from Oct. 27
jos ride along sharp ridges, 53 percent, lower than "Winter is when customer through Nov. 24. The
horns swirl in cold creeks, November 2008, when it usage is the highest and PUCO requires Columbia to
and there is subtle sense of was $1.19.
when lower tuel charges adjust its GCR charge
loss in Bauer's music that
The typical residential mean the biaoest bill sav- monthly to reflect market
e;::
leaves the impression of a customer using 62 Ccf of ings .''
conditions.
man whose demons will not natural gas would see a
The c hange in the
It's important to remembe stilled."
November bill of $61.10, ber that, bv law, Ohio utili- November GCR does not
Stuart's Opera House will according to company esti- ties may t1ot profit on the affect customers who puropen its doors at 7 p.m. mates. That bill is down sale of gas to their retail chase their gas from a thirdSaturday night. Tickets are S36.05
compared
to customers. Columbia mere- party marketer through the
still available. for more November 2008, when it ly passes its cas costs Customer
CHOIC En '
information and tickets call was $97 .15.
through to customers on a Program, unless the mar(740) 753-1924 or visit the
kcter·s rate is tied to
The November 2009 GCR dollar-for-dollar basis.
website at www.stuartsoper- of 56 cents is Columbia's
Natural gas costs make Columhia's GCR . About
ahouse .org.
lowest heating-season fuel up about 56 percent of the 53% of Columbia Gas cuscharge since the November typical residential cus- tomers purchase their gas
directly from 1he uttlity.
2002 through January 2003 tomer's bill.
Columbi a Gas of Ohio.
Compared
to
October
quarter. when it was 65
hcauquartcrs
in
cents. The last time a heat- 2009. the November GCR with
ing-season GCR was lower will be up by 7 cents to Columbus. is one of the
than next month's charge reflect higher natural gas nine energy dislribution
was
November
200 I costs. Higher natural gas companies of NiSource Inc .
NI).
Serving
through January 2002. when usage due to colder temper~ (NYSE:

8X counties . it is the largest
natural ga~ utility in the
state. ~iSource distribution
companies ~enie approximately 3.8 million gas and
electric customers primarily
in seven states. More info~~
f'
mation about Columbia G·
uf Ohio is available a
ColumbiaGasOhio.com.

Even when a spouse
dies, debt lives on
The death of a loved one
is a paralyzing event. ~lanv
survivors find it dif1icult. If
not impossible to start dealing with the financial afterlife of a ~pouse even if
they've planned extraordinarilY well.
Consider then , the one
single element that can turn
this difficult pmcess into a
length)
nightmare and
potential financial disaster
for a surviving spouse the deceased's out~tanding
debt.
Married couples - particularly those who hold
credit cards jointly and keep
month-to-month balances
on them - really need to
pay attention. And we're not
simply talkmg about elderly
spouses. A spouse can dte at
any time.
The earlier a married couple focuses on the joint
issues of credit management
and estate planning, the better. And a financial advisor
like a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER1 "' can tie
the necessary elements of
estate. retirement and debt
planning together becau e
they absolutely need to be.
While the foliO\\ ing
information can be a guide
for individuals who have
lost a spouse, it's a much
better guide for couples in
good health who want to
alleviate major financial
problems for their survivors
later on.
Just remember: The worst
time to deal with joint or
separate credit issues is
after the funeral. Some key
point&lt;; to consider:
Joint cr edit in moder ation .•. o r no t at a ll: If
spouses have separate credit, then their rating won't
be affected by the spouse's
bad credit behavior (late
payments.
charge-offs.
bankruptcies, etc.). Joint
credit leaves the surviving
spouse with a total obligation for any debt remaining
on a car loan. credit card ,
mortgage or any other kind
of debt.
Watch those "add itional
card " offer s : Again, it
might seem like a great idea
for both spouses to carry
credit cards on the same
account. but in death, outstanding balances arc often
treated the same wny as
joint account is. It's not
unusual for an issuer to
come after the holder of the
additional card for that outstanding debt.
They will find you:
You've never met Big
Brother until you've tussled
with today's toughened-up
lenders. Particularly as
problem credit has grown to
epidemic proportions. credit
card compames in particular
have gotten a lot better
about determining whether
customers have died so they
can make a claim against
the deceased's assets. Most
states have specific Jaws
that put a timetable on a

Mark
Curry

lender's ability to make
claims a2ainst an estate, and
executors may have certain
responsibilities under those
laws to inform those creditors. A planner or estate
attorney can help you go
over those requirements in
your home state as you're
addressing your estate,
retirement and debt issues.
Keep in mind that keeping separate credit won •t
protect the estate's assets:
Granted, a deceased partncr's bad credit may not
affect your ratmgs on your
lieparate accounts. but creditors \\Ill go after the assets
of your shared estate to settle up. So what's the meso;age here? Keep debt under
control at all times.
If t he worst happens.
wha t 's the process? It's
important to contact all
lenders swiftly to let them
know your spouse has died
for several reasons. First,
identity thieves are getting
more sophisticated about
checking death notices and
tracing that information to
their
credit
accounts.
Dealing with a deceased
spouse's debt is one problem. Dealing with an identity theft calamity based on
your spouse's accounts is
even worse. Also, if you do
have joint accounts. ask the
issuer if it will issue the card
in your name only. and keep
in mind that you will still
need to maintain payments
on those balances to presene your credit rating as a
single
person.
Lastly,
lenders tend to look askance
at customers who fail to
make disclosure of a
spouse's death. So matter
how tough things are. you
need to make these calls.
W ha t a bout the last
j oint accounts? ~or joint
accounts. removmg the
deceased's name from the
account should have no
impact on the survivor's
credit score. but the survivor should think twice
before he or she closes the
account, because it cuts
back the amount of credit
available to the survivor.
.Just get rid of the debt:
Debt-free is the best way to
go through any crisis.
Couples should strive to be
debt-free not only for the
good times, but for the
awful ones as well.

This column is produced
by the Financial Planning
Association, the member,·hip organization for the
financial planning community, and is provided by ] .
Mark Curry, CFP, a lOcal
member of FPA .

Auction closes 9pm Mondav, October 19
Just soma of the items up tor sale...
R,•tclil \ 'ctluc S500 ·
,

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

Get ready to Zoom
7'be Zoom Adwrncrd P(Jf,.'"I'T Wbitming S) · ~m!
Jn.Offirr U biwring Syst~n
trill m4kr your t«tb dr&lt;~mdtiCillll· 'U'bit"
;, ltu than '"' bOJrr.

$500
K&lt;•tail \'ahu.· $595 ,

Foreman &amp; Abbott

O a k T a ble a nd 6 Chairs

Heating &amp; Cooling

72" x 42" rectangular table
4 side chairs &amp; 2 arm chairs
with padded scats

Mason Furniture Co.
2nd Street

773-5592

Ma son , WV

Retail Value

.......

391 N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH
1-740-992-5321
1-800-359-4303

Frigidaire 18 cu Foot
gins slzeh·es. auto defrost

Servirrg the area since 1953

Retail Value

Current Bid

$1200

8 • Ohio River Bears

......................
........

lhll liver Bar 01111111
Current Bid

lttm Oat: 8cst of lilt Artd'l20lll Aooh~ SeuJD.AdmiVm Car :2
lltlft r.ol Ariel\ la-HO!lll' ProdliCtlon St-moo-AdmbWAiot:1
In 'fluwl Arld',.IJt.llot~~~r l'rocturtla. ~MmM® tor 4
llfllt'OW"t Gbb Pl,'lglu 0111 \\ith CMTCoinedhJI Etta M.}·&amp;dmmkm(at4
lltlll F1m (lit\&gt; Nigtlt Out •ill! CMT Colnnwdlall Etta )hy.Admi»J,m Cm4
lwm Sh • \'~ Dll1t :\i&amp;ld· Adlamioo fLlr l
lkm &amp;&gt;em \D-oti~~e~ Date ~lght· A~ forl
llalltl&amp;ht• A llallo•ffa Honw ~!· Adm. forJO. ~for an) lll;hl otopualloa

,t:/'~'t\ Cc~~
~
, ~ 428 2Dd A\t, Gallipolis, OH

~
..,..:l"' ~
iiiiOliiil Ailfamt

7..o..446-.o\RTS
"""'.aritllhtlltrt.ora

;?elitil Vl~lli(~$5(~()
~

rent

-

-

Retail Value

5 pc. Queen
Bedroom Suite
(Solid Wood &amp; Veneer)
Includes Headboard, rootboard,
ralls &amp; slats, dresser &amp; mirror.
(Hot Included S dr. chost &amp; nltestond.)

~iii

Current Bid

$195
~14rl.:

$1299

7)4QUSufou

1 a. t4t4t~
7)~Ada~tt

Visit us
online at

I

~

11· I 4 it t;J4 tted/4u

~~
~
Current Bid

5Pc. Di11ette Set

42" Round
Solid Oak

Schrock'sHome Furnishings
11625 SR 588 • Rio Grande. OH
740·2•5·0628

Retail Value.

750

-

�Bl

The 'Daily Sentinel
OVCS blanks South Point. Page B2
Rio soccer, Page B6

\\'ednesday,.October 14,2009

Bengals living
on edge,
sitting in first

Prep Volleyball

ports Briefs
MEIGS BASKETBALL
GOLF SCRAMBLE

POMEROY
The
Meigs boys basketball program will be holding a golf
scramble on Saturday, Oct.
17. at Pine Hills Golf
Course.
The event will be a fourperson team format over 18
holes, with the shotgun start
beginning at 9 a.m.
Only one player with a 10
or under handicap can be on
any team. while the team
handicap must be 40 or
over.
The entry fee is $50 per
player or $200 per team which includes the skin'
game. mulligan, lunch and
cart fees.
'The event is limited to the
first 20 teams that sign up,
while extra teams will go on
a waiting lbt.
e top-three teams \viii
ve cash prizes at the
•
end of the event. There will
also be a skins game and
prizes for the longest drive,
longest putt and close...t to
the pin.
· There is abo an optional
cash pot for teams mterested.
The fundraiser is to rat:-.c
money for purchasing uniform. for the MHS boys
basketball program.
For more information,
contact Ben Ewing at (740)
416-0824 or Mike White at
(740) 992-6312.
Team registration will he
the day of the event. starting
at 8:15a.m.
MYL CO·ED SOFTBALL
TOURNEY

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Youth League
wlll be ho:.ting an all-night
q. softball tournament
aturday, Oct. 31. at the
dleport ball fields.
lte cost per team is S 125
~r team and balls arc provided for the tournament.
The winning team will
receive hooded sweatshirts.
For more information.
contact Dave Boyd at (740)
590-0438.

l

CO-ED SOFTBALL
TOURNAMENT

SYRACUSE - Therl.!
will be a co-ed softball tournament on October 17 and
18 held at the Syracuse
Ballfields. First place winners will receive team pull
overs. Cost per team is
$150. Hit vour own ball.
To register contact Amy at
740-416-7733.
PVH SURGEON MAKES ACE
16 OF THE SEASON AT
RIVERSIDE

1

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern's Brenna Holter spikes the ball over a Wateriord defender in Tuesday's Senior Night contest at Eastern High
School. Defending the potential block are (from lett) Kasey Turley, Sami Cummins, and Beverly Maxson.

Eastern keeps title hope alive with wili
BY SARAH HAWLEY
MOSSPORTSOM)'DAILYSENTINEL COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Lady Eagles arc
one game away from taking
~.1ck the TVC Hocking
crov.n.
Eastern (18-3. 8-1 TVC
Hocking) defeated the
defending TVC Hocking
champion
Wate'rford
Wildcats (13-7. 7-2 TVC
Hocking).
Eastern came back after
losing the first game, 18-25,
to win three strai!!ht for the
victory. Scoring~ in games
two, three. and four v.ere
25-13,25-17, and 25-14.
On Senior Night, the
Eastern Seniors led the team
to victory. Sami Cummins
led the team in scoring with
12 points on the night.
Kasey Tut'ley led the team in
both kills and blocks with 13
and 12 respectively. Lauren
Cummings.
Karissa
Connolly, and Whitney
Putman round out the

sen1or~

for the Lady Eaglec;.
Connolly had nine points,
one kill. and one block,
Beverly !Vtaxson added nine
pomts and eight kills,
Cummmgc;
had
se\ en
points. Brenna Holter added
five points and four kills,
and Britney Morrison had
four pomts and five kills.
Jamie Swatzel also added
II kills dnd two blocks.
With the victory. Eastern
snapped a three match losing streak to the Lady
Wildcats. Watelford won
the TVC Hocking title last
season snapping the Lady
Eagles II year run of league
titles.
Eastern will travel to face
Trimble
on
Thursday
eventng in their last regular
season game.
If E;.tstcrn wins, they arc
TVC
Hocking
the
Champions.
If Trimble
wins. there could be a three
way tic between Eastern,
Trimble, and Waterford, if
they defeat Miller.

MEIGS FALLS TO
ALEXANDER IN THREE
GAMES

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs Lady Marauders volleybJII team (13-6. 7-4 TVC
Ohio) fell to the Alexander
Lady Spartans (14-4, 10-1
TVC Ohio) in a TVC Ohio
matchup Tuesday evening at
L~rry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasium.
Alexander won the three
games by scores of 25-17.
25-17,
and
25-17.
Alexander was tied for the
TVC Ohio lead with Athens
prior to Tuesday night's
matches.
Meigs was led in scoring
by Tricia Smith with seven
points and one ace and
Emalee Glass with one
point. Meri VanMeter added
pqints.
Chandra
three
Stanley had two points, and
Shellie Bailey added one
point
for
the
Lady
Marauders.
Glass also led the team in

assists wtth 10.
Smith
added nine assists. \Vhilc
Bailey and VanMeter ~&lt;~ch
had one.
Morgan Howard had two
blocks for the Lady
Marauders and Stanley
added one.
Bailey led the team m kilb
with II for the contest.
Alison Brown added nine
kills, Stanley had three, and
Howard added one.
The Lad\ Marauders were
48-52 sen ing on the
evening, and added 24 kills.
21 assists, and three blocks.
The Meigs Junior Varsit)
team improved to 15-4 v. ith
a two game \ ictory over
Alexander.
The Lad)
Marauders won by !SCOres of
25- 19 and 25-15.
Meigs travels to Ri\'er
Valley tonight with the JV
game beginning at 5:30p.m.
The Lady Mnraudcrs lin·
ish out the regular :-.enson on
Thursday a:. they tra\el to
face TVC Ohio opponent
Belpre.

Prep Notebook: Another special night for Mr. Football
BY RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

Ohio's reigning Mr.
Football, ~orth Canton
.
ASON. W.Va. - Dr. Hoover's Erick Howard,
Mike Kennerlv of Point continues to rack up
Pleasant has made the 16th records.
hole in one or the 2009 golf
The senior became Stark
season at Riverside Golf County's career rushing
Club in Mason on October leader Friday night. running
I Oth. Mike aced the 120 for 222 yards and four TDs
yard ninth hole using an in a 31-20 win over
eight iron to accomplish the Austintown Fitch. That
feat. It was the lirst hole in gave him 5.248 yards for
one for the 63 year old sur- his career, passing former
geon who practices at Canton McKinley star
Pleasant Valley Hospital in 1\lorgan Williams. who
Point Pleasant. The shot gained 5.177 from 2004-06.
\•las witnessed by fellow
Howard also became
surgeon, Dr. Steve Rerych. Hoover's career scoring
who also Jives and works in leader with 436 points.
Point Pleasant.
eclipsing former Ohio State
RB Jeff Logan. who scored
BASKETBALL OFFICIATING
426 in the early 1970s.
COURSE OFFERED
Howard needs two TDs to
become Stark County·s
A course of instruction career scoring leader. too.
will be offered for any perOh. and he also was
son Wishing to obtain an named Homecoming king
Ohio High School Athletic Friday night.
A:ssociation basketball offiTHEY WENT AWAY'?
fiating permit. Must be Jeff Aubin rushed for 215
led in high school or yards and three TDs as
• r to obtain OIISAA per- Moeller beat Elder 35-13
rrtit. The class will bl'gin before 10,000 fans. snap·
November 7, 2009. The ping Elder's 16-game home
class fee is S 110 per person winning streak.
which includes course
Moeller won seven biginstructiOn, material, and school state titles between
permit fees. New students 1975-85 but recent!) has
will be eligible to officiate been overshadowed in
in the upcoming season.
Cincinnati
by
Elder,
For more information Colerain and St. Xavier,
v
i
s
i
t
which all won state titles
www.makeyourcall.com or this decade.
call John Derrow at 740"\Ve'repack." Aubin said.
710-5069.

-·

,

··We're a force to be reckoned with."
DEFENDING THEIR
TURF: Middletown DB
Jerry Gates had three interceptions and a fumble
recovery in helping lead the
Middies to a 27-0 win mer
Lakota East: Sandu:-.kv's
Damyion Smith intercepied
three pa:.,cs and the Blue
Streaks cndl.!d an 11-gamc
losing streak to Findlay
with a 21-7 win that also
featured
Cordncy
Strickland's 40 carries for
225 yards: and Cortez
Nelson retumed two interceptions for TDs as ~orth
College Hill beat Clark
Montesson 27-6.
WORTH THE WAIT:
Albany Alexander made
school htstory on Friday.
The Spartans knocked off
county and league rival
Nelsom ille-York 21-0. The
two Athens County schools
have played every ye.tr
since 1972. and it was the
fir"t time that Alexander has
beaten N-Y. There was n tie
in 1974, making the :.cries
36 1-1 now. The win ulso
gave Alexander a 6-1
record, clinching only its
third winning sem.on since
1977 and first in I J years.
The ln~s was Ncl,onvillcYork's first of the season.
WORTH THE WAlT II
Most of Ccny-Rawson's
seniors &lt;&gt;tarted as sophomores on a team that \\ent
3-7 in 2007 and 3-7 again in
2008.
Now they can thank: their

own dedication. and a talented sophomore for their
turn-around 5-2 season.
Jeremiah Alspach is not
only the team's quarterback, the past two weeks he
has made game-saving
plays on defense. Two
weeks ago. Alspach mterccpted a pass in the end
1.onc with a minute left in a
27-20 win over LibertyBenton. This past Friday,
Alspach blitzed and made
the stop on McComb's twopoint conversion attempt
with I :08 to play. preserving the Hornets' 21-20 win.
WORTH THE WAIT
Ill:
Tradition-rich
Massillon Washington and
Steubenville, two of Ohio's
three winningest programs.
met for the first time since
1978 before a sold-out
crowd in Steubem ille. The
Big Red tametl the Tigers
13-3. Massillon had gone
15-0 I in the prcviou&lt;&gt; 16
meetings between the two
schools. Steubenville'~ last
win in the series was 14-8
in 1962. Big Red has won
67 straight in the regular
season, four behind the
state record.
AIR CAREY: Carey's
Tyler Brodman completed
14 of 39 passes for 217
\ ards - in the first si.\
games. But he c;howed he
could air it out. sort of, b}
hittmg 5 of ll passes for 98
) ards in Carey's 14-7 win
over Hopewell-Loudon in a
matchup of ranked teams.
Brodnian did :.core on a 68-

yard run anc,l Cy Strahm
returned a punt 69 yards for
a TD for the unbeaten Blue
Devils. Hopewell-Loudon.
last vear's D-VI state runner-up, fell to 5-2, the first
time since 2003 the
Chieftains haYe lost two
regular-season games .
TOPPING
200:
Hicksville's
Logan
Battershell ran for .325
yards and two touchdowns
in a 21-12 victory over
Holgate, keeping the Aces
unbeaten: Leipsic, off to ih
best ~tart in over a decade
(6-1 ). had two backs each
rush for over 200 yards in a
40-8 win O\ er Hardin
Northern, with Derrick
Schroeder carrying 14 times
for 210 yards and two TDs
and Sonny Hernandez
adding 209 yards c~nd three
TDs on 22 carries; m n 6133 win over Zane:-.ville
Mays vi lie,
Coshocton
rolled up 661 rushing yards
and had Marcus John on go
for 282 yards and four TDs
and Dom !\kCluski!V add
26X and two TDs: 'North
Colond
Robinson
Crawford's Mitch Phillips
rushed for 247 yard~ and
three TDs on 34 carries in a
28-7 win over Manc;ficld
Ontario: and Wmton Wood'
QB Dominique Brown
rushed fQr 224 yards and
four TDs and thre\\ a TD
pass in a 35- 12 wm over
Harrison.

Please see Notebook, 82

CINCINNATI (AP) -If
Limas Sweed holds onto
the ball in the end zone or
Joe Fiacco hits his wideopen recei ver down the
sideline. nobody is talking
Cincinnati
about
the
Bengals as a surpnse team.
They ' d be back in the
pack. trying to catch up to
the big boys .
Sweed
dropped
it.
Fiacco overthrew it. And
everyone in the AFC North
is chasing Cincinnati, a
team that's sitting in first
place because of a newfound knack for living on
the edge.
The ~Bengals (4-1) have
been the NFL's ultimate
h1gh-wire act. Every one
of their games has come
down to the final 22 second::.. All but once, the
final ticks have gone their
wav. A 17-14 victorv in
Baltimore on Sundav· left
the Bengab in sole possession of first place v. ith
their best start in four
) ears .
Real? Or mirage?
The Bengal:. acknowledge that~ there's luck
involved. If Swced catches
the ball in the third quarter. the Steeler~ are in control and liketx headed for
another win. If Fiacco gets
the ball to Mark Clayton
with less than three minutes left on Sunday. there's
no room for Carson
Palmer 's brilliance.
They have been fortunate.
But there's much more
to it. The Bengals have put
themselves in position to
pull off their improbable
wins by playing imprcssi\ e defen'&gt;e. getting brilliance under pressure from
their 29-) ear-old quarterback. and &lt;&gt;howing more
sustained poise and grit
than any Bengab team in
the last 20 )Car:-..
Something seems different about this team.
"1 honestly feel it's been
a good thing that we've
had these close games,"
safety Roy Williams said.
"You hear about teams that
once another team will
score and there's only a
minute left. they just kind
of gtve up . This tenm doesn 't quit at an) time. That's
the mo:;t reassuring thing
for a team."
The biggest difference is
in the defense. which has
been Cincinnati's downfall
for so long. The Bcngals
have invested a lot of high
draft pick:-. and a lot o,f
free-agent mone) in the
unit over the last four
years. and they're getting
returns.
Cornerbacks Johnathan
Joseph (first-round pick in
2006) and Leon Hall (first1 rounder in 2007) have
1 been shutting down oppoI nents'
top
receivers.
I Linebackers Keith Rivers
l (first-rounder in 2008) and
Rey :vtaualuga (secondhave
1 rounder in 2009)
brought toughness. End
Ant\\ an Odom (second
year of a fi\e-year, $29.5
1 milhon dent) is tied for the
1 league lead with eight
I sacks.
Inspired to win for coordinator Mike Zimmer,
1 whose w1fe died a few
davs earlier. the defense
held the Ra,1ens' highly
r,mked offense to seven
pomts on Sunda). its best
showing yet.
"I still think. we're n
work in progress.'' safety
Chinedum Ndukwe said.
"l don't think the defense
il:i really playing up to
v. here tt should he pia) in g.
We "re still doing a lot of
thing... wrong. but the
effort and intensit) we
approach the game \\ ith

Please see 8engals, 82

�·-~~---~-

Page B2 •

-

...

. ·- - -

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Christian
blanks South Point
BY SARAH HAWLEY
MDSSPORTSOt.'VOAILYSENTINEl COM

SOUTH Pbi~T - The
Ohio Valley Christian
School soccer team (7-5-3)
defeated South Point by n
score of 5-0.
OVCS took the lead early
in the game. c;coring in the
fifth minute. and never
looked back. John Van
~1etcr scored the opening
goal on an assist from Kyle
Scott
Van Meter \\Ould go on
to score the second OVCS
goal in the 30th minute.

Notebook
from Page Bl
DOWNTUUNS

Traditionul c;mall-schonl
pt)\\ er~ St. Henry and
Marion Local have suffered some setbacks of late.
After jumping to a 3-0
start. :-.!arion Local has lost
four
straight
games,
extending its streak with a
17-l4loss to New Bremen.
S~. Henry. after a\entglllg
38.5 points in the first four
!!ames of the season. has
~cored I 0 points total over
the next three, beating
Manon Local 10-7 before
bctng shut out back-toback \\eeks by Anna (14-0)
and Cold\\ater ( 17-0).
~OTEWORTHY:

Lexington ·s
Courtney
A\er) retumed from an
ankle injury that kept him
out of the previous game to
throw for 328 yards and
four TDs in a 34-32 win
over
Wnostcr:Che~hire
River Valley lost to
Proctorville Fairland last
weekt:nd but st iII got its
first win of the season
when ~1inford had to forfeit the first game of the
season for using an mcligt
ble pia) er during the final
two minutes of a 42-0
game: Ju:-.tin Buenger
broke Patnck Henry'c; c;eaon scoring record with
t\\ o TD runs and two more
on passes in a 28-21 \\in
over Bryan, giving him 150

Wednesday, October 14,

www.mydailysentinel.cOJ11

Bengals

~cason.

from Page lU

Paul Miller scored the covers up a lot of the misthird OVCS goal on a takes we make.''
The defense has kept
Caleb McKittrick assist in
games
close enough for
the 36th minute to give
Palmer
to rescue at the
OVCS the 3-0 halftime
end,
showing
he's far from
lead.
After the half. Alex finished.
lladdad added the fourth , Since he led the Bcngals
goal of the evening, scoring to the division title &lt;llld a
in the 46th minute of the playoff appearance in
2005 - Cim:innati 's only
game .
Paul :\1iller added his winning season in the last
second goal on the night in 18 )ears - Palmer has
been sidetracked b) severe
the 66th minute giving ~ inJuries. He tore up his left
OVCS the 5-0 lead.
OVCS travels to Elk knee during the 2005 playoff lo!\S to Pittsburgh. then
Vall~y
on
Thursday 1 tore a ligament and tendon
evemng.
m h1s passing elbow last
points on the ) ear: after
suffering a 70-6 lo s to
Delpho:- St. John·.~, the
New Bremen Cardinals
have \'&gt;On three straight
games to impro' e to 4-3
and move into the top eight
in Dh ision VI Region 24:
Defiance Tinora 's 51-0 win
over Defiance Ayersville
was the largest margin in
the series. with Ayersville
now
leading
22-11;
Portsmouth and Ironton
meet this weekend for the
115th time in the :-.tate's
oldest rivalry: 10-time
Division I state champion
Cleveland St. Ignatius
extended its winnin!! streak
to 21 games 'with ~a 10-7
squeaker
at
Warren
Hardin!!; Carrollton lost to
Louis\ ille 52-0, but is stilJ.
as::.ured of a winning season after ~oing 0-JO last
)Car: Archbord·s Aaron
Bontrager hit a 33-) ard
field goal with four seconds left to give the Blue
Streaks a !'7-15 \ictOr)
over Delta: Ironton held the
ball for 34 of the 48 minutes in a 28-7 win over pre' iously unbeaten Jackson;
and Rock Hill beat
Chesa"peake 34-7 to end a
19-game losing !Streak
A"JD
THE~
HE
MOWED THE FJELD:
Buc)'fU!&gt; Wynford"s Tyler
Brause rushed for three
TDs. threw a TD pass.
returned an interception
for a TD and ktcked all
the PATs in a 35-7 win
over ri\ al Bucyru~.

The Bengab have remvented themselves as more
of a running team this season
Cedric Benson
leads the league in rushing
and taken the load off
Palmer. who has tieen
ordinary until the final
minutes.
In hb first five seasonc;,
Palmer led onlv seven
fourth-quarter drives for
w·ins. He has done it each
of the last three \\eeks. and
would luwe had yet another in the opener against
Denver 1f not for the
Broncos' tipped touchdown play.
During those four lastminute drives. Palmer has
completed 66 percent of
his throws and ha:-. a pas&lt;;-

er ratmg of 112.8, \\ htch i-.
quite extraordtnary. The
rest of the time. he has
completed 56 percent of
his thrO\\ s and has a
below-average rating of
67 .4. Overall. he·.., rank.-ed
24th in the league in passing.
H1s calmnes
in the
clutch has rubbed off on
e\'eryone t1round him.
''Whenever one of those
situations happen. we
kno\\ we've been there
before," Williams ~aid.
"With Carson having the
ball in the last seconds.
I'm putting my mont.:y on
Carson.''
By beating Pitt::.burgh.
Cleveland and Baltimore
in con&lt;;ecutive '' eeks with
defenc;e and drama, the

2019

Bengals have put theJllselves in control of ttlc
AFC North. The) ·re 3-0m
the division with a pair of
road wins. The) spend the
next four weeks at home
- games against Houston .
Chicago and Baltimore
along with a bye.
The ~econd half of the
schedule includes games
again&lt;&gt;! Oakland ( 1 -4~ .
Cleveland ( 1-4), Detro
( l-4) and Kansas City (
5). Even if their luck rur ~
out, thcy'rt.: in good shape
so long as their confidence
holds out and Palmer stays
healthy.
''It's
a
confidence
builder,'' Hall said. "It will
help us out in December
and. hopefully. in
January.''

WE'D NESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

:

For .fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
~c•ILa,r

Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08CV147
The Citizens Banking
Company
Plaintiff
VS

Jon I Averlon et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
reeled from sold Court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Octo·
ber 16, 2009 at 10:00
a.m., of said day, the
following
described
real estate:
Situated In the County
Of Meigs, State Of
Ohio, and In the Village
of
Pomeroy,
and
bounded
and
de·
scribed as follows:
The East One·half (1/2)
Of Lot No. Ninety Six
(96) as the same is
known and designated
on the Plat Of Said VII·
lage of Pomeroy; Also,
The East One-half (112)
of twelve (12) feet off
the southerly end of
Lot No. One Hundred
Twenty One (121) In
said Village Of
Pomeroy, except the
landing in Front Of Lot
No. Ninety Six (96).
Also, the following real
estate situated In the
VIllage of Pomeroy, To
Wit:
Commencing Twenty
(20) feet east of the cor·
ner of front (Main) and
Lynn Streets In said VII·
lage; thence east five
(5) feet; thence running
back at the width of five
(5) feet, 70 feet to the
lot formerly owned by
Thos. Carleton and
being five (5) feet off
the east side of the
same lot conveyed by
Edwin C. Paden and
wife to Adolph W. See·
bohm, November 8,
1965.
Also, that part of lot no.
one hundred twenty
one (121) In sold village

of Pomeroy, bounded
and described as fol·
lows:
Beginning at tbe south·
easterly corner of said
lot no. one hundred
twenty
one (121);
thence northerly along
the easterly line of said
lot, twelve (12) feet;
thence westerly at right
angles with said east·
erly line two (2) feet and
four (4) Inches; thence
southerly parallel with
the easterly line of said
lot no. one hundred
twenty
one
(121),
twelve (12) feet to the
southerly line of said
lot number one hun·
dred twenty one (121);
thence easterly along
the southerly line of
said lot to the place of
beginning,
being
twelve (12) feet off the
southerly end of that
part of lot no. one hun·
dred twenty one (121).
Also, the followJng real
estate situated in the
Village of Pomeroy, to
wit:
Commencing at the
Northwest Corner of
Lot No. Ninety Six (96)
In said VIllage Of
Pomeroy; thence run·
ning back north along
the westerly line of lot
no. one hundred twenty
one (121), twelve (12)
feet;
thence
east
twenty five (25) feet;
thence south thirty (30)
feet;
thence
west
twenty five (25) feet to
the westerly line of lot..
No. ninety six (96)
north along the west·
erly line of lot no.
ninety six (96), eighteen
feet to the place of be·
ginning, being the
same premises convoyed by John A. Franz
to the Peacock Coal
Company by deed
dated November 1,
1912, and recorded In
Volume 109, Page
124, of the Records Of
of
Meigs,
Deeds
County, Ohio.
Also, the following real
estate situate In the Vii·
lage of Pomeroy, TO
WIT:

ten (10) feet square off 16·02063.000;
16·
02060.000
real estate, that is to Current Owner: Jonl
say, out of the south· Averion et at
west corner of the real Property at: 201 East
estate hereinafter de· Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
scribed:
being two-thirds (2/3) of Appraised at 555,000
Lot No. One Hundred Terms of Sate: Cannot
Twenty Two (122) and be sold for less than
being the two thirds ad· 2/Jrds of the appraised
joinln!J lot No. One value.10%down on day
Hundred Twenty One of sale, cash or certl·
(121). Also two and one fled check, balance due
third (2-113) feet from on confirmation of sale.
the adjoining part of The appraisal did not
Lot No. One Hundred include an interior exTwenty One (121), It amination of the house.
being the intentlqn of Robert E.
Beegle,
this conveyance to Meigs County Sheriff
convey only ten (10) Attorney for the. Plain·
feet square in the tiff
southwest part of prop· Means, Blchlmer, Burk·
erty above described, holder, R Baker Co.
being the same pram· 2006 Kenny Rd.
ises conveyed by Columbus, OH 614-485·
Alexander Fisher, et al, 2010
as trustees of the Ger· (9) 30, (10) 7, 14
man Methodist Episcopal Church to the - - - - - - - Martin Ebersbach Com·
Public Notice
pany, by deed dated - - - - - - - November 18. 1914, Sheriff Sales
and recorded in Vol· Case Number 09CV020
ume 112, Page 466, of Taylor Bean &amp; Whitaker
the Records of Deeds Mortgage Corp
of Meigs County, Ohio. Plaintiff
Parcel No. 2:
vs
The following
de· Danny Terzopplous et
scribed real estate situ- at
ated In the VIllage of Defendants
Pomeroy, County of Court of Common
Meigs and State of Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio, to wit:
Ohio
That part of Lot Ninety In pursuance of an
six (96) on the corner of order of sple to me di·
Front and Lynn Streets rected from said court
being twenty (20) feet o In the above entitled
the front street and run· action, I will expose to
ning back at that width sale at public auction
seventy (70) feet along on tha front steps of
lynn Street. In the vii· the Meigs County Court
I age of Pomeroy, Meigs House on Friday, Oct.
County, Ohio, and 16, 2009 at 10:00 a.m.,
being the same prop· of said day, the followerty conveyed to Jacob lng described real es·
J. Zelher by Wm. El· tate:
berfeld,
individually Being a part of a 1.00
and a guardian of Mil· acre, more or less.
ton P. Elberfeld, by tract of land as trans·
deeds dated Septem· tarred to Paul E. Beegle
ber 15, 1926, recorded and Eileen Beegle as
In Book 129, Page 231, recorded In Deed Book
and Book 131, Page 20, 290 at Page 413. Meigs
Deed Records of Meigs County Recorder's Of·
County, Ohio.
flee, Meigs County,
Parcel
Nos.
16· Ohio, and a part of a
02061.000;
16- 15.06 acre, more or less
2 0 6 2 . 0 0 0 ; tract of land as trans·

or out of the following

~igl1~

ferred to Paul E. and
Helen Eileen Beegle as
recorded In Deed Book
288, at Page 995 also
being a part Fractional
Section 16, Township •
I·North, Range 12·
West, Letart Township.
Meigs County, State of
Ohio and more particularly described as follows:
Beginning at an exist·
lng
railroad
spike
found In the centerline
of Stale Route 338
being the Northeast
corner of said 1.00
acre, more or less,
tract;
Thence leaving said
centerline and along
the East line of said
1.00 acre, more or less,
tract South 0 degrees
30' 00" West a distance
of 165.11 feet to a point;
Thence ' leaving said
East line North 67 de·
grees 02" 45" West
passing thru a 5/8" Iron
pin set at a distance of
7.93 fee1 and going a
total distance of 207.05
feet to a 518" Iron pin
set;
Thence North 48 degrees 11' 58" East
passing thru a 518" Iron
pin set a distance of
178.38 feet and going a
total distance of 194.07
feet to a point in the
centerline of State
Route #338;
Thence with said cen·
terllne South 46 degrees 30' 00" East a
distance of 65.38 feet to
the principal point of
beginning containing
0.3995 acres more or
tess, of said 1.00 acre,
more or less. tract and
0.1083 acre, more or
less, of said 15.06 acre,
more or less, tract for a
total of 0.5078 acre.
more or less. Subject to
all legal easements and
right-of-way.
Bearings were derived
from a previous survey
recorded In Deed Book
290 at Page 413.
The above description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
the 29th day of July,

tc•

~a .. c&gt;vv.

1991, by C. Thomas
Smith. Ohio Profes·
slonal Surveyor, #6844.
Current Owner: Danny
Terzopplous
Property at 49501 St.
Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
PPI 08-0054-001
Prior Deed References:
Volume 290. Page 413
Appraised at 575,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/Jrds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, Cash or
certified check, balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did In·
elude an Interior exam·
Ination of the house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the plain·
tiff
Lerner Sampson Roth·
fuss
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45202
513·241·3100
(9) 30, (10) 7, 14

t»aa I'JOIIc Nc•t i c e s ia~ 1'-ooJc""sJ'JOa.:a'J&gt;ea·s.
l&gt;cii"Vca•c«:l l~igl .. t to• ~&lt;&gt; ....a r l&gt;cc•c.,.a-.

of Dunlap's Addition, to
the sold VIllage of Har·
rlsonville,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
PARCEL No. 2:
Lot No. Nine (9) In Dunlap·s Addition to the Vii·
lage of Harrisonville.
Also the following
being In Fraction 7,
Town 7, Range 14, In
the Ohio Company·s
Purchase, beginning at
the northwest corner of
Lot No. 9 In Dunlap·s
Addition to the Village
of Harrisonville; thence
North 69' West 100
feet; thence 21' East 75
feet to the place of be·
ginning,
containing
one-half acre, more or
less.
Current Owner: Robert
E. Boring et ai
Property at: 38397
State Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio
PPI 17·00427.000, 17·
1700426.000.
00428.000,
17-00425.000
Prior deed reference:
Volume 107, Page 555
Appraised at $35,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/Jrds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or cer·
tilled check, balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior examination of the house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the plain·
tiff
Lerner Sompson &amp;
Rothfuss
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·
5480
513·241·3100
(10) 7, 14,21

Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me directed from said court
lnt he above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, October 23, 2009 at 10 a.m.,
of said day, the follow·
lng desribed real estate:
Situated In the Town·
ship of Olive. County of
Meigs and the State of
Ohio, and In the NE 1/4
of Section Thirty Six
(36), Town No. 3, Range
11, of the Ohio Company's Purchase and
being more particularly
described as follows:
Beginning at a point
bearing S. 79 deg. 45'
E., 609.72 feet from the
Intersection of Bigley
Ridge Road and the
West line of the NE 1/4
of Section Thirty Six:
thence, continuing S.
79 deg. 45' E., 203.24
-------feet along the center of
Public Notice
said road to a point:
-------Thence, South 432 feet
Sheriff Sale
to an Iron pipe; Thence,
Case Number 08CV078
N. 79 deg. 45' W., 203.24
US BankNA
feet to an Iron pipe;
Plaintiff
Thence, North 432 feet
vs
to the point of begin·
Robert E. Boring Et at
nlng, containing 1.98
Defendants
acres, more or less.
Court of Common
Excepting and reserv·
Pleas, Meigs County,
lng unto Guy T. HayOhio
man and Sue Hayman,
Inn pursuance of an
their heirs and assigns.
order of sale to me dl·
all the coal. oil, gas and
reeled from said court
other minerals with the
in the above entitled
right to remove the
action, I will expose to
same.
sale at public auction
Subject to all teases,
on the front steps of
easements and rights
the Meigs County Court
of way of tecord.
House on Friday, Octo·
Address: 50475 Bigley
ber 23, 2009 at 10 a.m.,
Ridge Rd.
of said day, the followLong Bottom, Ohlo
Ing described real es·
45743
tete:
Public Notice
• Parcel Number: 09·
Exhibit A· legal De·
01484.007
scription
Sheriff Sales
Land and Mobile Home
Shuated in the State of Case Number 08CV186 Current Owner: Tal·
Ohio, County of Meigs VAnderbilt Mortgage
madge Lewis Et al
and in the VIllage of Plaintiff
Prior Deed References:
Harrisonville:
VS
Volume 231, Page 115
PARCElNO. 1:
Talmadge Lewis at al
Appraised at S10.000
Being Lots Numbered Defendants
Terms of Sale: Cannot
Seven (7) and Eight (8) Court of Common be sold for less than 213
1

rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or cer·
tlfied check, balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did not
include an Interior ex·
amlnation of the house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
1997 New Moon Nobile
Home Seriall/11254824
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
Javitch Block &amp; R .
bone
602 Main St., Suite 300
Cincinnati, OH
513-744·9600
(10) 7, 14, 21

NO MATTER
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~

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POUCIEG Olio Ya'ley PubUG.'Ilfll reserves 111e right to edll. ll!je(:t, or cancel any Del at any limo. Errore must be reportod on the l&lt;t81 da~ ot publlelllon end tho
Tr!b~trtllliii·Roglster wtll b4t responelblo lor no mort than tho cocl ottho epaco occupltd by the t~rror and only thO first lnt«tlon Wt ai'IIIU not bo lltble lor
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must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
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Recreational Vehicles ............................ 1000
ATV ............................................................ 1005
Bicycles.....................................................1010
Boats/Accessories ............................. 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................ 1020
Motorcycles ............................................ 1025
Other .......................................................1030
Want to buy ......................................1035
Automotive .............................................. 2000
Auto RentaVLease .................................... 2005
Autos ................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques....... •••••••• •• ... ...... .... 2015
CommerciaVIndustrial ........................... 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ...............................2025
Sports Utility.........................................2030
Trucks.................................... ...... • •• • •• 2035
Utility Trailers ......................................... 2040
Vans ......................................................... 2045
Want to buy ................................... ••••••••• 2050
Real Estate Sales ............................. 3000
Cemetery Plots.................................. •... 3005
Commercial ................................................3010
Condominiums.......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.................................3020
Houses for Sale ....................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ......................, .....................................3035
Want to buy ................................ -...............3040
Real Estate Rentals .................................. 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ...................... 3505
Commercial ....................................... 3510
Condominiums ...................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ..................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) ........................................ 3525
Storage........ ••• •••• •• •• •• • ... ••• ••. •••• 3535
Want to Rent.................................... •.••.• 3540
Manufactured Housing ........... 1........... 4000
Lots.......................... •••• .... ••. •..• ••• •• •• .4005
Movers.........................................4010
Rentals .................................................... 4015
Sales....................................................4020
Supplies ................. ,... ... •• •• ••• •• ..4025
Want to Buy ........................................... 4030
Resort Property........................................ 5000
Resort Property for sale .................... 5025
Resort Property for rent. .: ••• .••• ...
• 5050
Employment.......................... •• •••• •.. . .....6000
Accounting/Financial .............................. 6002
Administrative/Professional ••••.••• .... •.•. 6004
Cashier/Clerk ........................ -................ 6006
Child/Elderly Care ................................... 6008
Clerical ...................................................... 6010
Construction ...........................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ................................. 6014
Education .................................................. 60t6
Electrical Plumbing .................................. 6018
Employment Agenctes .............. •.........6020
Entertainment... ••• .••• ... ............. .. •...... 6022
Food Services .......................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs ................... 6026
Help anted- General .......................... 6028
Law Enforcement ................................. 6030
Maintenance/Domestic .......................... 6032
Management/Supervisory ••••••••••••••• 6034
Mechanics........ ••••. ........... ........ •• • • ... 6036
Medical ............................................... 6038
Musical ............................................ 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries. .•• ••• •
• •• 6042
Restaurants... •••••• ..... .............. • ....... 6044
Sales................................................ 6048
Technical Trades ............................ 6050
Textiles/Factory .•• ••• .••• • .......... • .•6052

2003 Dodge '3500 one
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4x4 au power goose·
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals..........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads .........................~ .........: ..............210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ..............-..........................~ ..............225
Personals .....................................................230
Wanted ...................................................... 235
Services ......... ~ ........................................... 300
Appliance Servlce .............................-••.••••• 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Bulldrng Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ..................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................310
rhll..tJr!=lrt ... lru Care .....................................312
J;o,mputers ................................................... 314
'r:nntr:~"''"r" - ............................................ 316
Domestics/Janitorial ............................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnancla1.......................................................322
Health ......................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling .....................................328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Sorvice ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dancc/Drama.r.................................. 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumbing/Eiectrfcal ..................................... 340
Professional Services................................ 342
Rep:urs ......................................................... 344
Roo!lng .........................................................346
Securlty ........................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TrnveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnanclal.......................................................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405
Insurance ............................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education .................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ......................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................510
Lessons...................................................515
Personal ..................................'".................. 520
Animals ......................................................~600
Animal Supplies .........................................605
Horses ..........................................................610
Uvestock..................................._ ..............615
Pets ..........................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equipment .........................................705
Gnrden &amp; Produce......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grnln .............................. 715
lng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy..................................................725
ndise ................................................ 900
Antiquos ....................................................... 905
Appllonco .....................................................91 0
Auctions ..................................................... 915
Bargain Bascmcnt.......................................920
Collectibles. •.............................................925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplies...................... . ...........935
Flea Markets ............................................. ~40
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture .................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Ktd'a Corner,............................-..............960
Miscellaneous ............................................965
W&lt;~nt to buy ................................................970
Yard Sale ...................... ,.. ........................975

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Notices

® 2009 by NEA, Inc

400

-Rnanclal

Estate Sele Ftt 9·3. Sat
9-1 443 Jerry St Fum•·
Me, Be&lt;fd ng, D1Shes
G a&gt;SWare MJSC
Recreational
Vehicles

1000

Pets

Sale

To good home '!13!e t2 .; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;

.vk Old Moms"
Money To Lend

to llree
Wonted
Sr-nll horre repair, re·
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pa1n11ng
decks frm r work c.ld
w~n•ar brusr Cl:"•ng 20
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ten
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NO...tCE: Borrow SIT' an
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s1on of Fmanc ::1 II'Siil •
•·ons Offrce o' Consurrcr
AHarrs 8EFOR~" you refl·
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requests lor any i!rge
payll'ei'IS
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Package Deal, 4 b• 2
bill. 2 story. 34 base·
ment. fenced t:'! yard
central a r &amp; I'Jeat newer
ductwork &amp; the~o control dampe• system Ia rly
new 92" effiCtency fur·
'IBOCC 1 srrall hOuse 2
br. 1 CL garage a e ay
lias
tenant
1
large
80x20 w t5 addon &amp; at·
tic. fo:&gt;ner boat &amp; 'llOWOr
shop, 1 add tioral lot
evel &amp; cleared oR all 4
£•e conV'OI'tly connected
on a c1ty block, take oro
take all wll not spht top,
Cleland
Reality
74().992·2259 Cass Cle·
land or ..ames Pickens at
225·81 0·9927
askirg
$109,000 OBO
4 bed 2 5 bath S600/rro
posstble owner I nee
446-3384
for Sale· 2 Sto:ry 3 BR.
2 Bath N~ A :"'lode
543 3rd Ave wwwced;:.
va eyostates net
House for sale or ent 3
BR 1 BA. 1 Car Garage
Sale $59 000 Of rert
S6001110+dep 167 Gra·
ham St Rodl'ey Vi ago

.

TORY AT

1977 Ford

WWW CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS COM
740·446·3825

Exce crt No motor or
Land (Acreage)
trnnsmlss1011 G•eat pro· :;;;:;;;;;;:;~:$.;:;:;
reC't car Call 441..()'09
S600.

Have you priCed a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnscd• Chock oul our
uSed
Inventory
at
www CAREO.coll'
Car·
michael
Equ1pment
740·446·2412

-------2000
Pontiac
$1600,
2005
Cavalier
S•1700, 2005 Chevy Coball $5700. 2004 Chrys
let Sebnng $4000. 2007 - - - - - - - Cobalt
$7000.
Please
'Real Estate
3500
ca11740·256-6169.
Rentals

Animals'
STIHL Sales &amp; Servrce
Now Avatlable c• Carmr·
cracl
Equ j)ment
740.446-2412

Uvestock
prgmy
each

Othr.. Services

Professional Services

.

I ke kit·

'Sales .

TIR~" TRAILER .WEN· ======== ='4=().4=46-4=54=3===~

Business &amp; Trode

==~~~~~'=

I ner

Real Esiate"'

RegiStered Argus Bu I
Good G :'letces $1300
441·1489 .:lr 44f -3669
Pets

900

Merchandise

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800·537-9528

-------AKC
_ _....;.....;.....;.;;...___
AKC n r ature Schnau· - - - - - - - zers P rtr &amp; ClOCOIIltes
REE 8·'0 h tall Jeru·
Parents
en prem :;es S&lt;llem Arttc.'1ol&lt;o plants,
740-441 1657
como
&amp;
dig
up
304·882·2436
eke.
n rnturc
p1nscrer - - - - - - - 3rr OS Old p~,oppt !&gt; &amp; ..ad1os Sl•orls &amp; Coals,
eoults ohots worr. cd tnll dress
and
casual
docked
$1~0 &lt;;loL'los, hka new $2 e
740·388 8788
pc S1zes S. 6,8,10,12
Cml 446·4333
For sale Black Lab pups - - - - - - - - 4 !"'ale 3 furrale 6 wkS UIW"' Edger $10, lrol' no
old
S75 00
each Board S5, 5 pt luggage
et $15 Plastic sheet·
304-675·80:: E,
ng S7 2 counter stool
RABBITS FOR SALE
S15
sma I
corrput r
"&gt;an
n
M
k S30 Roo! ng &amp;h "
Neth
:ld
g
S10,
ChriStmas
$500
each
lor I e ST GF Gr'l S20
304-1.)37·3192
SK
c 446-4333
Bl

Pm•o

Body

•1•99•6-H-on_d_a_A_cco_r_d,-w-ell ~~~~~~~~
ma nta•red high m1age ~
run &amp; looks good, dnven
Apartments/
da •Y
S2 350
OBO
Townhouses
or ==;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;::;;;
740.247·2229
304-482..()216
1 ard 2 bed·oom apts
fu:n st&gt;cd
and
Lnfu •
For Sale. 2006 Toyota n~ and hot.ses
SciOn 92 000 m Excel· Porrcroy and M:dd eport
lent
conditiOn-remote secunty deposrt roqu ed
locks. 4 new tl·es. auto- no pets 740.992·2218
matiC,
S7 500 00
Ca
140-441-8299
or l br 'u:n apt n Pt
Pleasant
I;~
very
740-44'·5472
clean &amp; nJCC o!l ~·eet
We have a fu 1 Inventory park1ng. ra pc•s ca
of cars &amp; trucks startll'g 3
_04
_ 6_7..;.5-_1..;.555.;;.;..,_ _ __
at
SHOO
Cavaliers. 2BR APTCiosc to Ho
StJnftres. Bucks, Saturns zer Hospital on SR 160
8 morel Cook Motors, CIA. (740 ) 441 •
0194
126
Jacksol'
Pike
2br 1 12 ba S63000 a
1740)446·0103.
~~~~~~~~ rror all util Included m
rent 304·674-6988
Parts &amp; Accessories

LO·
Ul'i· CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
AFF-ORD
19'. CATED
ABLE! Townhouse apdrt·
ll'tr•s.
and ..&gt;r
~:nail
hot.ses 'or rent. C 11
Sports Ulility
74().&lt;141·1111 lor appli·
catton &amp; InforMal or
2001
Do&lt;lge
Durang"
S..T.
Loaded
SS.SOC
Free Rent Special !II
614·553·7066
2&amp;3BR opts $395
~
- - - - - - - - IJP
Central A r
W'O
2004 Pont&amp;ac Aztek suv hookup
t ant pays
83 000 ml AWD A op- elcclnc.
C
be'\\
tiOns, one owner neve the hou of 8A.SP
Sll'Oked 1r Below Book.
EHO
$840000
Ellm View Apt&amp;
74().&lt;146-2230
(304)882 3017

�- -- - ------~----------------~----------------~--Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
TownhouHs

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouaea

Twin RIVers Tower Is acceptmg applications tor
wartmg list tor HUD subsldtzed, 1-BR apartment
lor the elderly/dtsabled,
call 675-6679

4TH ST.
DOWNTOWN
PT. PLEASANT
1 br aptw/ kitchen, no
smoking,
no
dogs
304-675-3788 dcp. req

Tara
Apartments
bath, back
playground,
age. water
allowed.

Townhouse
- 2BR, 1.5
patio, pool,
(trash. sow
pd.)No pqts
$450/rent.
dep
can

Houses For Rent
Wtseman Real Estat&amp;-4
rentals
avaJiabte-call
446-3644 tor nore info
All
In-town-various
priCes referenoos 8 sec
deposits reqwed

~=======

EFFICIENCY APT FOR ~=,8
land (Acreage)
REN1
No stairs-No Pets, 1624
Farn~ous
G- age,
3 room and bath down· Chatham
Ave.
(Rear)
Houses For Rent
Bam, 165 Acres Lease
stairs first months rent &amp; ( 74014484234
or ;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;= tor deer ':lunters Jo10s
deposit. references r&amp;- (7401208 •7861
St&lt;l9 mo! 4 bed. 2 bath. Wayne Nat'! Forost Near
quired. No Pels and
Bank · R.:po' (5'&lt; dm&lt;1 t~ Waterloo. 740-643-2644
clean. 740·441·0245
- - - - -.....- - }c:lr,. ~"k APR I for li&gt;lmg•
MOVE IN READY Com· For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex !Ul0-6~049~6 ex R027
in
town,
$475/mo. - - - - - - - - Lease part or all 102
pletely furnished 2BR. all Dep+ret. No pels. OUiet 2 BA House, $395 per Acros on While Oak Ad
appliances.
TV,stereo place. 446·1271.
mo. $400 dep. no pets, + Great for farrntng &amp; live·
sys. linens &amp; complete ~~-~-~-- utilities.
Call stock. (407)247-8329
kitchen ware 5700/mo + Gracious Living 1 and 2 (740)256-6661.
elec $500/dep. 446·9585
Bedroom Apts. at V1llage 2br. house 2327 Jaffer1 &amp; 2 Br. furnished apt. Manor
and
Riverstde son Pt Pleasant HUD ap· ~~~~~~~~
start $450 &amp; up plus Apts. tn Middleport, from proved 304-593-6320.
~
dep., No pets, Ractne,Oh $327
to
$592.
BR House tor Rent on
Rentals
740.591·5174
740·992·5064.
Equal 3
554
6
Call 3br ,2 ba all elec 517
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 bed· Hous•ng Opportunity.
lor • S 50/m&lt;&gt;+dep.
applicatiOn
room unfurrushed &amp; fur- --~-~~-- 740.256_1556
or Burdette St Pt Pleasmshed apartment, de- tmmaculato 2 BR apt n
3ant rc! &amp; dep. roq.
30 4 59 5616
posit &amp; releronces, no the country, New carpet __ _._ _ _. --~- 304·675-5402 no pets'
pets, 740.992.0165
and cabinets,
Freshly 3BR 1 bath home n tepal!lled. Appliances. WID Grande Blvd $650 rent "'2.....,BR....,.M--ob_tl_e_H_om_e_.·N-o
Apartment available oow hookups.
Water
and S650 dep. renter pays pets. water, sewer, trash
Riverbend
Apts.
New trash pd. Beaut1ful coun- Utthttes. NO PETS. call tnclu&lt;led
At Johnson's
Haven· WV. Nov. accept- try setting, only 10 min. 446-3644 lor applicaton
Mob a
Home
Park
tng
applications
for from town. Must see to 3br.
S475.Jmonth
tn 740-645-0506
HUD-subsldzzed,
one apprec~ate.
S425/mo. Syracuse. Deposit, HUD - - - - - - - - - Bedroom Apts. Uhhttes 614·595-7773
or approved.
No
Pets 2BR. Ideal tor 1 or 2 peotncluded. Based on 30% 740-645·595
304·675-5332 weekends pie, S300/month
Reof adtusted Income. Call --~--~~':""':--" 740-591·0265
ternces. No Pets, NO
available Island Vtew Motel has - - - - - - - - CALLS
attar
7pm
,304·882·3121,
S ·
D bled
For rent 3 br briCk ranch
or amor and rsa
vacancies
$35.00/NJghl.
·
740-441.0181
peop1e
•
•
on
At
N
304-895-3129.
740 446 0406
.
Historic house
3BR 2bath 14x70 $475
Ap! $525, Dep req. Very Modern lBR apt. Call in PI Plca,am 7 rooms l-4 rent $475 depoSit. Bulavclean, 2 mt. from Hospt· 740-446·0390
br .2 full bath, lg rm' I• ille Pike. 740 367-7762
tal &amp; new high school.
b&lt;~.:k·yard. fmn1 &amp; bor~
441-1124 or 339·0865.
-N-t
'c_e_1....,.B~Rap-l-.~by~W~a~l- po«·h. Stove&amp; relridg.in· ------Wny rent when you can
Beautiful Apts. at Jack· mart. $550/mo. Uhl. incl. eluded • 8 "' heal, "" pch owr New Gov'l finance
555000 8
son Estates. 52 West· Ret. req 740·245·5555
mfln S'iSO.OO loans. 00~ down as low
675 2119
'
wood Dr, from $365 to or44t·5105.
dep.ref req 304as 1% tntcrest Low to
$560.
740-446-2568.
Very Nice 3BR &amp; 2 Bath, moderate 1ncome O&amp;W
Equal Housing Opportu- Ntce 1 BR wash-dry. LA. &amp; Dining Room, Holl'es. 877·288·9995 or
mty This instttutton IS an Stovo &amp; Fridge. All Ulili· FaMily Room. No pets. 2 800-788-5474
Equal Opportunity Pro- ties. Call 740-446-9585. m1 from Holzer. Dep ~
vtder and Employer
S600/mo.-S500 dep.
Ret.
$650.00
mo. DOUBLE w:D&amp; HOME
446·3292.
FOR RENT 3 BR 2
Help Wanted
\\annng tn rent to 1 con- Bath; Large deck Xtro
Help Wanted
"lo
Pets
stnklion "ori;ers. ;:'Ill be Ntce
1622
re3d' m 2 "ls fuU lnch $600 month,
Become a Foster Parent- $30-$48 cw.S:ot. rrept:rce, p h&lt;•lds Cha:harr Ave Ava bte
up to &gt; beds. ~unung nghb. Nov. 1 (740)446-4234 or
a day for caring for a child 0-18 in "eckty rate' of )130.00 a (740)208-7851

599

®

your home. Foster parents can be
single or married. Requirements
over 21- pass a criminal checkcomplete training that begins at
Albany, Oct. 24.
Call Oasis for more information
toll free 1-877-325-1558.
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

has an
MLT/l\1T.
Baccalaureate degree m MediCal Tecrnology or
related field plus eligtbility-- for ASCP and/or
associates degree m applied science or related
field plus eligibility for cerufication by ASCP.
Must be able to \\Ork all shtfts.

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently

openmg

for

a

full-ttmc

Send re1&gt;ume to:
Plea&lt;;ant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Re~urccs
2520 Valley Drive
Point flleasnnt, WV 25550
or fax to 304-675-6975 or apply ()nline at
\\'ww.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

:Jteartland Publications
Copy Editor/Page Designer
We are looking for someone skilled and
experienced In both page design and copy
editing. This person w1ll need to design
front pages. paginate inside pages, and
write great headlines. Experience with
layout, knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop is a must. Full t1me position
with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
is a must.
Send a cover letter and resume to:
~.llhpoltu Ihltlv

ll:niJunr

825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpublicatlons.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
The

Gallipolis

I&gt;uily

Tribune

is

accepting resumes for an outside sales
representative to join our sales team
and manage an ~tablished account list
while calling on new accounts.
This is a full time position offering
salary plus commission, full benefits,
mileage, and potential cart-er growth.
The successful

candidate

will

be

a

disciplined, self-motivated team player
that

understands the

importance of

developing strong, mutually beneficial
business

r elationships

with

()ur

acwunts, and have sales experience.
For confidenti al interview. plea&lt;;e send
resume and l'O\'er letter to
jf}alltpolt~

I:};uiJ&gt; tlrrebunr,

Attn: Pam Caldwell
P.O. Box ~69
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

\\I.;. each. must be c ean &amp;
neat 30 mm. from Ga' m Mobile

l'll::c.:p Sporn or

~lountamca

Plants 304-67~- 602

home •o rent
Hud accept call belo•e
9pm 304-675-3423

Help Wonted· General

Soles

Accepting Applications
No experience reqUired!
a , hanccs. must be roO\ed
No Credll Card Sales1
No Co.loct onsl
~10 ooo !11-1 tl~24S
You wtlt recru t volun- .....~--yt-on·.-..B~A. ~~B~
A.
2
198 7 03
3remodeled.
teers tor ron-profit orJust
ganlzatons
$10.000 Moved and set
Full Tme Posruons1
up 74o-367-n62
Profess onat Wo·k EnVl·
Country llv.ng- 3-SBR
ronmentt
2·3 BA on property
Madtcal, Dental, EAP,
Many "oor plans. Easy
40'K1
Ananclngl We own the
Weekly Pay • Bonus lnbank.
Call
today
centtvesl
• • n
866 215 5 4
Call TOOAYI
Interview TOMOR·
1987. 14x70 3 br., all
ROW II
electriC,
Albany
area.
must
move
$5400,
Work NEXT WEEKI!!
740·698-1815.
1-888-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
1921
740.416 •1103
Apply online~
AAA BRAND-NEW!
http:l/)obs.lnfoclslon.c
HUGE 4 BR
om
2 Bath SECTIONAL
Do you er oy helping
1
2x6wa s. Largo thefs
people? 11 so 1 w1 1 give
kilct&gt;en.SOyearSldlng
you FREE RE'NT AND
Otx apP=U tJkg, Pv!
FREE UTIUTIES plus an
:Yrm.G. ntwa:k-1
•ncome JUSI for movtng 10
e'.s Po1Ch cc:;;ros
and helping my 87 year
Giant great 'llOIII........
old mother. You Will live
NEW FHA F NANCING
here as 1t 11 were your
$47,651
ov.n home Minus t'le exMIDWEST HOMES
penses. 740-416-3130
mym1dwesthome.com
Gallta·Metgs Communuy
740.828.2750 ,ActiOn 1s seeking a
--~..-~~-- part-time 18 month ProOHIO'S
gram Asststant PosttJon
BEST BUYs
will requtre a dcpend• BR Doublewtde
able, accurate, dc'alled
20 0 3
s39,977
onented persor. with expenence tn M•crosoft E'x·
HUGE 2010 4brl2ba
FHA S3 mo
eel. High school d1ploma
49
th
2010 3br/2ba Single
or GED WI
two years
from St99 mo
off1ce
expanence
reMIDWESTHOMES quored. Davts·Bacon Act
WH347
expenenco a
mymtdwesthomes.com
plus. Applications wtlh
740.828.2750
resumes will be accepted
The BIG Sale
until 3:30 p.m. on OctoUsed Homes &amp; Owner
bar 19. 2009 at the
Ftnaneing-New2010
Chesh1re office GMCAA
Doublewtde $37 989
1s an Equal Opportunity
Ask about $8.000 ReEmployer.
bates
Help the NRA Protect
mymtdwesthome.com
Your Gun Rights I
--~74_o-a~2_a-_2.75":"0___
$8.80 lhr FT
"The Proctorv1ue
Recruit new members to
Difference•
jotn NRA
s1 and a deed 15 all you
Call rurrent NRA merrneed 10 own your dream
bers rrusrng Money and
hOMe Cal Now!
renewing membersn ps
Freedom Homes
Take advantage of our
888-565-0167
company's compr800'1·
s ve benefits package
performance bonuses,
professiOnal wooorg cn6000
Employment
vtronment, advancement
opportuntties and much
morel
1-888-tMC-PAYU ext.
Education
2311
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
14x60 Clavton 2br

under r· nm

&amp;

lb3

por~ +

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
•NcwGarag~

• Electrical &amp; Pltunblng
• Rooltng &amp; GuHcrs
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Pallo and Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740-591· 0195
Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Years local Experience
FUll.Y INSUREO

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

740·367-0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

LEWIS

MICHAEL'S
SER\'ICE CEI" I"ER

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

\II

J)pes Of

Concrete \\ork
29 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured

7 40-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

( 'O:'IOCRETE

(.'0;'\;STIWCTION

29625 Bashlin Road
Racme, OH 45771

1555 :-.;n: A\ c.

Pomerov. Off
• Otl &amp; ftlter change
•Tur:e Ups
• Brake Servtce
• AC Recharge
• Minor e\hau't
repair • Tire Repau
• Tmnsmt sion Filter
&amp; Auid Change
• Genernl Mechantc
\\Ork

t740) 992-0910

Hours
7:00am· 8:00pm

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

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

Ha? o ~

~b~ 1etrv AfJ~ FmllH!lr~

www.tlmher~..keabble'b'Y. :&gt;m

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement

~c~

Windo\\ s nnd
Vin) I Siding
Specialists,

J:ro

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • \'in) I
Windm\1&gt; • Metnl
nnd Shingle Roofs
• J&gt;rrks • Additiuns
•Eicl·trkul
• Plumbing
• Pull• Barn~

0
Part·tlme
Instructors ---....;;
..;.m_....,__
needed dunng the day
Part Time DayIn:
mathematics, eco·
shift
nom1cs, and accounting.
Mothemaucs and eco·
Fixed Schedule 28
nomiC Instructors must
hrslwl&lt;
haVe a master's degree
8:00-1 30 +weekend
SEAL IT
1n the diSCipline If mter·
day
CONSTRl 'CTIOJI.
ested please email a re·
Make tundraismg calls
Roofm~ Salrng P nt•"S
sume und cover letter to
lor conservative organtGuucn; Ocd&lt;.! etc
j&lt;lanJckl@gal pohsca·
zattons such as the NRAI
forlmt CDurttous
Stnu~, fn:t l:"stmwll's &amp;
rc~rcollege edu
Conducting lntervtews
Affordablt l'rlrts, Call.Now
l)tonn!s Bo~ d 740-991-2029
Stop By and Completo
Your Application:
ParH me computer trl·
l!lfoCISIOfl Management
RIHERS SALVAGE
5'7\JCior
'leaded
for
Corporaoon
740-992-5468
Thursday mommgs lrom
242 Third Avenue
October 8·0ecember 17.
Uu) ing scrap iron·
Gall poliS Ohto
Emat resume and cover
Or Cell and Schedule
tin-metals
letter to fdamck:@galli·
Your Interview:
1\f-Sat.
8am-4pm
poiiSCareeroollege.edu.
1·888-IMC·PAYU oxt.
SR 124 Pomcro).OH
or lax to 740-446.-4124.
2321
http://jobs.inloclslon.c
om
Help Wonted- General
Qualll,) C.ontml
fAR'-; up to SlS.OO an hr
Control $15/hr C\ aluat~ rcta1l S(ores tram
Dump Truck
stores, ing pm\ldcd 877 761&gt;-9507
s~nice
please The Mason County Day
Report Center Is seeking
\V.: Haul G1an~l.
a part·tlme Day Repon
Luncstonc. Coal,
Must bring rnsurance information
Quality Control. earn up Offtcer job duttes include
Compost,1op Soil
but
are
not
IJrruted
to
to $15 an hour, evaluate
Call Wah or Sandy
retrul stores, tra1mng pro· case managar11ent, ofVfdad,
call tender supeiVlSIOfl, data
7.t0-992-3220
entry,
and
traoktng
of
1·800·901-2694
program statistics. Interor 7400-591-37:!6
ested appacants must
(Cell)
have a bachelors degree
with expenonce m the - - - - - - - cniT'tnat 1t.St ce system
CASH FOR
Please send resumes to
TRACTORS
MCORC 225 6th street
WILL PICK UP
PI Pleasant WV 25550
PubUr Noticn in \ew~~.
Dead! ne for subrrltSSIOn
\our Righllo l\on11, Dflileml Righi to \our Door.
•s
Oct.
20
2009
MIKE NIEKAMP
MCORC IS an Equal Opportunity Employer

ATIOI,UC

HWltiH''WO'

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

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

Guttering

CO'IiS1'RUC 1'10~

Seasonal Flu
Vaccine Clinic
The Office of
Harold Ayers, MD
Pleasant Valley
Hospital
Suite 118
Thursday,
October 15, 2009
9 a.m. to Noon
1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

S&amp;L
Trucking

~~~~~~
PUBLIC
NOTICES
NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for
the Syracuse Community Center Electrical
Project Meigs County,
Ohio will be received
by the Meigs County
Commissioners at the
Meigs
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 1:00 p.m., Thursday, October 29, 2009
and then at 1:15 p.m. at
said office opened and
read aloud for the fol·
lowing: Syracuse Com·
munity
Center
Electrical
Project.
Specifications. and bid
forms may be secured
at the office of Meigs
County Commissioners,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 1740-992·2895
A deposit of 0 dollars
will be required for
each set of plans and
specifications, check
made payable to-. The
full amount will be re·
turned within thirty (30)
days after receipt of
bids.
Each bid must e ac·
companied by either a
bid bond In an amount
of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety
satisfactory to the
aforesaid
Meigs
County Commission·
ers or by certified
check, cashiers check,
or letter of credit upon
a solvent bank In the
amount ol not less than
10% of the bid amount
In favor of the afore.
said Meigs County

Commissioners. Bid
Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or
agent signing
the
bond.
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Bid for
Syracuse Community
Center Electrical Project and mailed or de·
livered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
At1entlon of bidders Is
called to all of the re·
qulrements contained
In this bid packet, particularly to the Federal
Labor Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon
Wages, various lnsur·
ance
requirements,
various equal opportunity provisions, and the
requirement for a payment bond and per·
formance bond for
100% of the contract
price. No bidder may
withdraw his bid within
thirty (303) days after
the actual date of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs County Commissioners reserve the
right to reject any or all
bids.
Mlck Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners
(10) 9, 14, 20

prise (DBE) Goal
Federal Fiscal Year
2010
The Ohio Department
of Transportation's Offlee of Transit hereby
announces the establishment of a DisadvanBusiness
taged
Enterprise
program
(DBE) goal of 27.6% for
programs funded and
authorized by the Federal Transit Administration
(FTA)
and
administered through
the Office of Transit for
Federal Fiscal Year
2010, October 1, 2009
through September 30,
2010. The FFY 2010
goal and information
regarding the DB!: Program are available for
public review at the address below between
the hours of 8:00 a.m.
to 4:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Comments regarding the
goal and the DBE program will be accepted
for a period of 45 days
following publication of
this Notice and should
be addressed to:
Ohio Department of
Transportation
Office of Transit
Marianne E. Freed, Administrator
attention: Dave Seech
1980 West Broad Street
Second Floor Columbus, Ohio 43223
ODOT Is an Equal Op- - - - - - - - portunity
Employer
Public Notice
and Provider af Services
Notice of Dlsadvan· (10) 14
taged Business Enter-

CAu.

1-419-925-5208

Medical
Gallipolis Developmental
Center IS currently seek·
1ng Part-Time Permanent &amp; Interim License
Practical Nurses. LPN's
must have an Oh1o LPN
License and a valid
driver's license,
Interested
persons
should submit an Ohio
Civtl Service Application.
You can submit online at
careers.ohto.gov,
by
ma11. tax or you can p1ck
one up tn the Adll'lntstral on Off1CB at GDC
Gall polis Developmental
Center
Attention· Human Resource Department
2500 Ohto A~enue
Gal potts, OH 45631
Phone: (740)446-1642
Fax: (740)446-2625
The Gathpolts Developmental Center IS an
Equal Opportumty E"l·
ptoyer.

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For
Everyone.....
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�The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

BLOND IE

CROSSWORD

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun
mm~~~~~~~~

By THOMAS JOSEPH
A CROSS
46 Called for
1 Activist
Clara
DOWN
7 Obsessed 1 Chips buy
whaler
2 Paris pal
11 One3 Cartoonist
celled
Chast
organism
4 Allegro,
12 Fodder
for one
holder
cousin
13 Gadgets
6 Shuttle
14Remain
on
waiter
15 Elephant
org.
19 Showing 35 Exact
7 Promise
sudden
treat
match
171n
8 Asking for
interest
36Bowling
addition
money
21 Buffy's
site
20Cork
from
weapon
37 Drunkard
people
9 Copying 22 Pro380ne or
1 0 Young
meted
231sland
more
souvenir
fellow
24 Wise
40 Rocker
24 Pretty
16 "Separate
ones
Vicipus
fast, on
Tables"
25 Swelled
41 Had
the
star
head
dinner
freeway
17 Permit
30 Relaxed 42 Marry
26AIIow
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! s"Cnd $4.75 (chccklm.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1, PO. Box 5364/5, Orlando, FL 32853-64/5
27Candle
count
28 Mountain
11
pass
29 Stop sign,
for one
311slands
strings
32 l::ye part
33 Went fast
34Get cozy
37 Long
story
39Poland
capital
43Responsibility
44Ask along
45 Sort

FORGET IT!IT MAI&lt;I:5 IT LOOI&lt;
LIKE WE ACTUALLY 00 SOMETHIN6
AROUNt; HERE!

Tom Batiuk

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Chris Browne

William Hoest

THELOCKHORNS
Brian and Greg Walker

HI &amp; LOIS

"I WISH WE'D KNOWN WE WERE L.IVING
OND OUR
MEANS BEFORE ... WE COOL.D HAVE ENJOYED IT."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

·

4 1 716
9

3 9 8 5
5
2
6 2 1
3

3
5 8 4
2

5
7

2

6

"Daddy, can we get a hi~her ceiling
for my room? '

4

•

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

~

1 6 2

8 5 7
Dirficulty Level ***

G
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L 6
g 9
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£ 17
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-

-+--

--

HAPPY BIRlHDAY for Wednesday, Oct. H 2009:
This year, take your leave of situations; feel ~ to
withdraw and ret1ect. You simply know that sometimes.
you are on the wrong path. Your dynamic energy and
understanding open up many options, not only ior you
but for others. You play an important role in others'
daily lives. If you are single, you could meet someMe
who is una\·ailable. Take your time and date. If you are
attached, as a couple you'll benefit from frequent timeouts together. VIRGO makes a good doctor.
The Stars Show thr Kind of Day You71 Hmoe: S·Dyrramic:
4-Positive: 3-Average; 2-Sa-so: 1-Difficu/t
•
ARIES (March 21-Apri\19)
****All work and nothing else could be a bit
dreary. Though you might not ha,·e immediate plans
·on the horizon, don't fret. Do your job. Get your work
done. Complete your errands. Finish off your mw;t-dos.
For the majority of Ran'IS, there is more ahead than just
the daily grind. Trust. T&lt;.might: Listen to a proposal.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
*****Your creativity bloom~; plug some of your
ideas into your work. Listen to feedback, understanding you could see a big difference in what occurs. Smile
and be open to possibilities that come up if you indulge
a co-worker or friend. Tonight Good feelings bloom no
matter what you choose.
GEMINi (May 21-June 20)
****Anchor in, and be \\.illing to prioritize and
understand a partner's or key associate's needs. Relax,
and a lot will rome up from out of nowhere. A cbld or
loved one le~ you know how very !&gt;pedal you are.
Tonight: Treat a loved one to a special dessert.
CANCER Qune 21-July 22)
*****If you want to open up ronversatior.s and
get pa~t a problem, the time is r)O\V. A brainstoming
session addo; to the possibilities, and also to" per•ading
sense of good will. Consider a card or a token of afft'C·
lion for a loved one. 'l(might Hang out with your pak
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
***You haw an opportunity to deal \~ith hard
facts and facto; alone. Leaving out the story will only
help you come up with an even better solution. bdulge
someone who makes a difference in your day· to-day
life. Tonight Your treat.
ViRGO (Aug. 21-Sept. 22)
*****You are per..ond!ity-plus, and ,)ther.-;
respond to your humor and creativity. Let your mind

go without restrictions and without holding back.
VVhen you are resourceful like this, you are difficult to
stop. Indulge a whim today. Tonight Dance the night
away
LffiRA (Sept. 2'3-0ct. 22)
***Let others talk, and you keep your O\\n counsel. Strangely enough, you become even more appealing when you keep your mm company. Focus on
home and family is.•;ues during a break or later on. You
cannot settle e,·erything all at once. 'lonight Get some
extra R and R.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-t\ov. 21)
****Meetings are important. You feel more
together than you ha,·e in a long time Im·estigate
another's ~uggestion and pl.1y de\'il's advocate. If you
c1Sk. you will have manv more !&gt;upporters than you
think. 1onight: \\There the action is.
SAGITIARIUS (1'\o\. 22-Dec. 21)
****Take a stand and be \\illing to a~'&gt;ume
resporu;ibility. You'll dis(o,·er that you have a lot of
tean1 players. Loosen up and relax. You'll ~ a situation
far ditferently than in the past a-; a friend explain" e\actly where he or she is coming fmm. Tonight: Burning the
midnight oil.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J&lt;m. 19)
You might want to understand more of
what gael into a !&gt;ituation to make it work Your ability
to zero in on the re,1l issues comes from the ability to
detach and see e\'ent~ differently. Someone looks up to
you and pulo;; you on a pedestal. 1hnight Relax to good
music.
AQUARIUS Qiln. 20-Feb. 18)
****A partner could be out of whack, and there
is little you can do to ,,nchor him or her other than ask
the right questions to help tht~ person center.
Cndersianding ,\ill de,elop if you detach and~ how
h,ud thi.; person trie.-. '!(might: Go \lith another's
choice.
PISCES (Feb. 19-J\.larch 20)
*****A friend sh,1res a lol and giws you a differt&gt;nl perspective. lt might be surpri.;ing if you pull back
and see how much this peN)n h,ls tram;fonned in the
past few years. A kt&gt;y friend or asso~.;ate pcwes your
\l·ay. This person cares! 'lonight: C'.o along ,,;th :;ugges·

** ***

tion-;.
]&lt;lcqutline Brgift i.' ('11 tire l11tmret
111 lui)J:/ht~mtjacqu!.'lmto/lrgaramr.

----------,

�---------------------------------------~~-·-

-

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

\oVednesday, Octob er 14 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com
~

RedStorm women picked to finish
6th in MSC Hoops Poll

Long-term dangers of
physical play worry Steelers

;

B Y MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAl TO lHE SENTINEL

LOUISVILLE. KY
The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm women's
basketball team has been
picked to finish 6th in its
inaugural season in the MidSouth Conference .
The
RedStorm received 20 votes.
just six points behind
Pikeville College.
Rio Grande head coach
David Smalley is excited to
get the season started and
with his team being new to
the league he thinks the sixth
spot is a fair projection at
this point. ''First of all.
we're certainly excited to be
in the Mid-South and it is
certainly a step up for the
level of play. it's rich in tradition:: Smalley said. "In
the Mid-South there's been
at least two and sometimes
actually tlm~c of the teams
that have been to Jackson.
T~ and the national tournament."
"It's one of the premier
conferences in the (NA!A)
Division 1 level:· he added.
"We're certainly walking
into a hornet's nest in reference to us being ready to
compete at that level. The
poll coming out, placing us
sixth. I think that's justified
since we arc the new kid on
the block."
Smallev knows that in this
new league nothmg Will be
given to his team, just

because Rio Grande had
experienced a level of success in the American
Mideast Conference.
"1
think we're going to have to
cam anything that we get.
1f you look at the teams that
are below us. we actually
beat last year in West
Virginia Tech and St.
Catharine."
"Of course we also beat
Campbellsville. I think they
earned our respect last year
and I'm sure they'll be ready
for us this year." Smalley
added. ''Going into thb
new league and being sixth
kind of puts us incognito so
to speak, because I think
maybe some of those teams
may overlook us early in the
conference race. ··
·· V..'e · ve just got to go in be
our:-.elves. be fundamentally
sound. we like to play a lot
of kid:-.. our pressing maybe
will have an effect and I
think maybe our al:5ility to
shoot the three will have an
effect," he said. "We are
going to be thin in the post,
we just don't have the
dynamic big body that the
Mid-South is known for, but
what we do have is a lot of
heart, we have a lot of kids
that are very athletic and can
run and shoot the three and
that's going to create some
problems for somebody
down the stretch."
"We hope that we can
sneak up on sorr.e people
and certainly improve that

pre-season rating of No. 6."
PITTSBURGH (AP) The
Campbellsville Hines Ward's game is partly
University women's basket- defined by his willingness to
ball team is the Mid,.South deliver a nasty hit. Yet the
preseason Pittsburgh Steelers w1de
Confc:tc:ncc:
favorite in 2009-lO, accord- receiver cringes when he sees
ing to the MSC Preseason a player taking one - espeCoaches' Poll.
cially a helmet-to-helmet
Campbellsville received blow that might cause a con45 points, including three of cussion.
Ward is repeatedly cited in
the seven first place votes.
Coaches were not allowed to player surveys as bemg one of
the NFL's borderline dirty
vote for their own team.
The Lady Tigers shared players. But he didn't want
the MSC regular season title former Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow returning prewith the University of the maturely from a concussion
Cumberlands in 2008-09. Sept. 26 when the florida
The pair finishco one game quarterback's
helmet
in front of Lindsey Wilson slammed into a teammate's
College last season with 10- leg. Tebow came back to play
2 records.
Saturdav against LSU.
Cumberlands is second in
··some guys. we're powerthe prel\eason poll with 44 ful. and we want to come
points. The Patriots also back quick. not understanding
picked up three first place the mmifications of getting h1t
votes. Cumberlands added like that again:· Ward said. "l
the MSC Tournament title watched a TV special where a
last season to its share for high school kid lied to the
the regular season champi- doctors and said he was ready.
and he got hit in a similar way
onship.
and ended up paralyzed."
I jndsey Wilson is third in
While the Steelers · physithis season's poll with 40 cality and take-no-abuse perpoints. including the final sonality have rarely changed
first place vote while since the Steel Curtain days of
Georgetown College (27 the 1970s. Ward and other
points) is picked to finish players are concerned about
fourth.
studies that reflect the dangers
St. Catharine College ( 15) of playing in the NFL - and.
and WVU Tech (7) round espectally. of receiving conout the preseason coaches· cussions.
An
NFL-commissioned
poll.
The
Mid-South study reported Alzheimer's
Conference regular season dise~t: and dt:mentia were
diagnosed among fanner
begins January 14,2010.
players at a significantlv higher rate than the generaf population. While the (\FL cautioned there is no established
link betv.·een memory disorders and head injunes sus"
closed out the scoring in the tained by fonner players. the
86th minute after receiving a Steclers have been warned by
their own doctors for years
deflected feed from junior about the dangers of concusmid-fielder
Drew sions.
McCaffery (Ashland. KY).
The UPMC Center for
"With the way we l)tarted Sports Medicine. based in the
off, 1 thought we played , same complex \vhere the
really well in the first half," Steelers practice, has sntdicd
said Rio Grande head coach the effects of concussions ori
Scott Morrissey. "We were football players for most of
a little late on ~coring, but

RedStorm take care of business versus Daemen
B Y M ARK W ILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
RcdStonn men's soccer
team. ranked No. 8 in the
latest NA!A Top 25 poll.
continued its· hot streak with
an 8-l victory QVer Daemen
College on Saturday night at
Evan Davis Field.
Rio Grande (9-2) won for
the sixth consecutive time.
The RedStom1 had numerous chances early in the
game and finally broke
through in 22nd minute on a
goal from junior mid-fielder
Chris Anderson (Lancaster.
England). Anderson was
assisted on the goal by
sophomore mid-fielder Sam
Fairhurst (Wigan. England).
Anderson would add two
assists in the game.
Rio would score four more
times in the first half to take
a 5-0 lead to halftime.
F reshman mid-fielder/forward Richard lsberner (Sao
Paulo, Brazil) scored in the
24th minute to give the
RedStorm a 2-0 advantage.
Sophomore forward Joel
Thiessen
(Newcastle,
Australia) notched the first
of two goals, on a free kick.
in
the
40th
minute.
Freshman forward Scott

Bibby (Doncaster, England)
scored the first of two goals.
which now give him a teamhigh 12 on the season. in the
44th minute.
Thiessen
knocked in his second goal
with two seconds remaining
in the first half, again off a
free kick.
It did not take the
RedStorm long to get on the
board in the second half.
Freshman mid-fielder/forward Rafael Maccauro (Sao
Paulo. Brazil) scored in the
49th minute to give Rio a 60 lead. Anderson registered
the assist.
Daemen (2-9) would
break through and score on
its only opportunity of the
night. Ryan Benninger,just
moments after checking into
the ga~e, found the ?ack of
the net m the ~4th mmute·to
ke~p the Wtldc~ts from
~e,_ng shutou~. This was the
f1rst go_al R10 had surrendered smce the 2-1 loss to
Lindsey Wilson September
19.
'
Rio would score more
insurance goals over the
final 13 minutes of play to
put the capper or another
Impressive win.
Senior
mid-fielder Jon Brooks
(Blackburn, England) scored
in the 77th minute with
Anderson being credited
with the assist and Bibby

I

we created a ton of chances
and the execution was really,
really good."
"Probably the only blemish was the one dead ball
delivery that they had and
we were way too deep and it
just kind of bounced the
right way for them,''
Morrissey said.
"Apart
from that though I thought it
'was a good result and it's
good to get the win."
Rio now turns its attention
to a big week with former
American
Mideast
~
~d· r'll
on erence •Ol!S e an I e
and NAJA No. 4 Notre
Dame . College:
The
Cedarvtlle game •s set for
October 15 at
p.m. and
Notre Dame Will come to
town on Saturday for a 7
p.m. kick-off. "We've got
two big games next week. so
we'lllook forward to getting
back at it next week,"
Monissey said.

c

•

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm volleyball team
is improving, but they have
not arrived just yet. The
RedStorm gave visiting
Walsh all it wanted on
Saturday morning at the
Newt Oliver Arena. extending the hard fought match
to four games before losing, 19-25, 17-25. 25-21.
2 1-25.
Rio
Grande
(I 0-11)
received very strong play at
the net with freshman middle hitter Erin Sherman
(South Webster, O H) cornpiling 13 kills and five
block assists for the match.
f-reshman outside hitter
Whitney Smith (Albany,
O H) added 10 kills and 16
d igs to the Rio cause.
Junior middle blocker
Rachel Walker ( Ironton.
O H) was also a force at the
net. tallying five block
assists for the match and
junior m iddle hitter Kati
Moore ( Lancaster, OH)
registered two solo blocks
and two block ass1~to;;.
Junior hbero Jacquie
Whittle (Chillicothe. OH)
paced the defensive effort
for the RedStorm with 19

digs
while sophomore
defensive Specialist Kristen
Cassady
(Logan, OH)
reached double figures in
digs as well with 12.
Junior setter Ashley
Bloom (Columbus, OH)
handed out 17 assists and
freshman setter Micah
Motes' (Chillicothe, OH)
chipped in with ll assists.
Despite the loss, Rio
Grande head coach Billina
Donaldson was pleased to
see the improvement in her
team. "What we worked
on all week was the fact
that we haven't improved
all year, we have not
improved since our first
game and that's what we
worked on all week."
Donaldson said. " Let's
just go into this game with
the mentality that we're
going to come out of it as a
better team."
"Let's play a great team
and become a better team
ourselves."
Donaldson
added. ·" I think we gave
Walsh all they wanted. We
really fought them every
point.''
"We looked good, 1
thought we looked really
good, Donaldson said.
"Walsh is an unbelievable
team, had we had a little
·more experience against

there will be a fatality someday in an NFL game.
The NFL commissionedstudv released this season
generated enough concern
that
the NFL Players
Association formed a com.
mittee headed by forme
Steelers wide receiver Sea
Morey. now of Arizona. to
address the issue of head trauma among players.
To guard against athletes
pla) ing while still having b.
concussion.
lJPMC
researchers developed the
ImPACT test (Immediate
Post-Concussion Assessment
and Cognitive Testing) that
Steelers players must pass
before they can play again.
All 32 i\'FL teams use the
lmPACI' test or similar testing, ~nd _the !~ague. h~s
bccomm!! mcreasmg stnct m
re!.!ulatirl!! helmet-to-helmet
hi!; and tU1ing offenders.
"We know the studies, we
know the research that's
noing on behind it. but if you
fook at that stuff as a football
player. you probably shouldn't even be playino the game.
linebacker James F-arrior said.
"Down the road. after I'm finished. I'll probablv wony a
little bit more about it. but it's
definitely one of the sacrifice.
you make if you want to pia
this 2ame."
safety
Troy
Steelers
Polamalu has had seven concussions since his high school
days in Oregon, several at
Somhern canrornia. yet he
remains one of the game's
best defensive players. His
latest concus~ion occurred
last year a!!ain~1 the Giants.
Ward w:Ould be worried if
he had that many concussions
himself.
"I can't speak for Troy,"
Ward said. "But it is a concern. If you're having multiple concussion~. you really
need to think about 25 J'ears
down the line. You coul be a
fruitcake. When you have
one. two. that's part of football. When vou have multiples. you ·ve got to think about
lt."

c

?

RedStorm fall short against Walsh
Bv MARK WILLIAMS

thts decade. One of its studies
detennined that a player suffeling a second concussion
while recm·eling from an earlier concussion ri::.k:-. pennanent brain injury or death,
although NH. players n.:cover
more rapidly from concussions than do high school
players.
''It's something we've
known:· ~afcty Ryan Clark
said. refcning to the sport's
risks. ''It's like telling a boxer,
:Hey, you can get punch
drunk.' And he sttll goes in
there and fights 12 rounds as
hard as he can. Jt'&lt;; what zou
do. it's who you arc. V..e're
blessed with this talent and
we play because we lo\e it.
but 1t can be a problem."
Fonner Stcelers phy!"&gt;ician
Julian Bailes. chair of neurosurgery at West Virginia
Umversity, co-authored a
stud) four year&lt;; ago that
found players who received
muhipfc concussions are
more likely to develop postcareer problems ::.ttch as
depression. A UPMC study
rdeitsed in 2002 determined
football players who have
sustained multiple concussions have a greater risk of
developing a concussion than
a player &gt;vho has never had
one.
UPMC researchers also
have wanted there is no such
thing as a mild concussion.
and that a headache or
momentruy confusion caused
b) a hit can be the first sign of
a much more significant neurological problem.
''If you re not healed up and
ready to play. you can mess
yourself up real bad. not only
while you replaying but after
you're playing as well," Ward
-,aid.
Injuries arc inevitable is a
sport that is violent by nature.
and most Steclers players take
the· attitude that they can only
hope that a catastrophic
mishap Jl~n 't occur to them.
However, players arc getting
so big, so strong and so fast,
Bengals quarterback Carson
Palmer recently predicted

teams like that, I think we
would have probably given
them more."
Walsh (20-2), winners of
16 of its last 17 matches,
did what they had to do to
fend off a spirited charge
by the RcdStorm. "We
changed their game tremendously with Kati Moore
and Erin Sherman, Rache!
Walker
and
(Ashley)
Belknap and
Whitney
Smith even had a few
blocks," Donaldson said.
"Our block was in their
face all morning and they
had to change their game.''
"Our defense stepped up
and our blocking was unbelievable and I have b~?cn
saying this, since my
recruiting, we're going to
be some of the best blockers in the nation and today
we
definitely
were,"
Donaldson added.
Rio Grande returns to
Mid-South Conference play
on Tuesday (October 13) at
WVU Tech. T he match is
set to start at 6 p.m. Rio
Grande
defeated
the
Golden Bears at home on
September 16 in straight
sets, 25-11,25-6 and 25-14.
With
the
win
in
September, Rio Grande is
now 6-0 all-time versus
WVU Tech.

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1

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