<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2232" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/2232?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T15:20:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12134">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/1c32bb12a87331f7be6cee03e9ec1717.pdf</src>
      <authentication>45e1d09e3605c4a795422f84816db6d6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8148">
                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

Did Gitmo prisoner
exchange constitute
treason?.. Page 4

Mostly cloudy.
High near 83. Low
around 63... Page 2

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

OBITUARIES

SPORTS
Local spring sports
action... Page 6

Ralph A. Barcus, 73
Julie Glenn, 59
Charles Higginbotham, 78
Patricia Johnson, 72

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 96

Sylvia Sims Lambert, 77
Jeffrey Ohlinger
Jane Lee Powell, 86
Violet J. Walker, 94

School Board affirms not to reemploy decision
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY —At last week’s
meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education, following
an executive session, the Board
voted to re-affirm the intentions
taken at an earlier meeting regarding a vote not to reemploy
staff members Leslie Dunfee and
Pierrette Morales.
The Board unanimously
voted to affirm the intention
of the Board as taken at that
meeting in both of the cases,
Dunfee and Morales, and to authorize the Board President, in
consultation with legal counsel
to issue a written decision to

this effect within ten days.
Also after executive session,
the Board, by unanimous vote,
decided to move the Director
of Curriculum and Federal Programs (a 260 day position) to
the same column of the Administrative Salary Schedule as the
Special Education Coordinator,
retroactive for the 2013-2014
school year.
Personnel for the coming
school year hired by the Board
included Edmond Fry as health/
PE teacher at Meigs High School
on a one year contract pending
the completion of all administrative requirements; Nick Michael as the instrumental music

teacher at Meigs Middle School/
High School on a one year contract; Carrie Abbott and Donna
Wolfe as summer school teachers at Meigs High School; Cassady Willford as head varsity
wrestling coach for the coming
season, Amber Ridenour as head
varsity girls basketball coach;
Edmond Fry as head boys varsity
basketball coach; Lea Ann King
as junior varsity volleyball coach;
David Hoover as Meigs Middle
School Cross country Coach;
Joy Hysell as first grade teacher
at Meigs Primary; and Matthew
Simpson on a supplemental contract as web designer retroactive
for the 2013 -2014 school year.

The Board approved an overnight field to Spring Lake, N.
C. for the MHS football players,
July 8 and 9, 2014 and an overnight field trip for the Meigs
High School FFA students to
Camp Muskingum, June 28 to
July 2 to attend FFA Camp.
A report was given on the cafeteria operation over the past
month and it was noted that the
district’s summer food program
is underway. Approval was given for transportation payment
to Tonya R. Smith for her son,
Randall Scott, a post secondary option students attending
the University of Rio Grande in
the amount of $454.12 for the

2013-14 school year.
Vision insurance renewal with
Vision Plus was approved for the
employees with no cost increase
for the coming year. The treasurer was authorized to obtain
quotes for bread, milk, dairy, garbage, rash and gas products for
the coming school year.
Amy L. Jackson was hired as
assistant to the treasurer on a
one year contract.
Attending the meeting were
Board members, Ryan Mahr,
Heather Hawley, Roger Abbott, Todd Snowden, and Larry
Tucker,Treasurer/CFO
Mark
Rhonemus, and Superintendent
Rusty Bookman.

CAA summer crisis
program to begin
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Submitted photo

Bringing in the treats at the Tuppers Plains event.

Farmers Bank continuing Customer Appreciation Days
TUPPERS PLAINS — Last
Friday three lucky people walked
away with $100 cash at Farmers
Bank Customer Appreciation Day
in Tuppers Plains, Mason, and
Point Pleasant. This Friday you
could be next.
That’s the word from Farmers
Bank which is hosting Customer
Appreciation Day at the Gallipolis
office located at 164 Upper River
Road on Friday, June 20. The

event will be held from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. During the event, customers and community members are
encouraged to stop by for a free
lunch, sign up for their chance
to win $100 cash, and visit with
Farmers Bank employees.
“Customer Appreciation Day
gives us an opportunity to have
a great time with customers
and community members,” said
Lisa Hysell, Gallipolis Assistant

Branch Manager. “I always look
forward to this occasion.”
Farmers Bank hosted Customer Appreciation Day for its
Pomeroy location on May 30 and
its Tuppers Plains, Mason, and
Point Pleasant locations on June
13. Over the duration of Customer Appreciation Day, Farmers Bank will give away over 800
free lunches and $500 cash to five
lucky community members.

Sheriff’s office investigating death of small child
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia
County deputies are currently conducting a death
investigation following the
death of a five-year-old girl
on Sunday.
Gallia County Sheriff Joe
Browning has reported that a
small child died early on Monday morning after she reportedly fell into a septic tank at

her Addison Township home
on Sunday afternoon.
Reportedly, deputies responded along with Gallia
County EMS personnel to
the residence on Bulaville
Pike on Sunday, June 15 to
a report of a five-year-old
female who had fallen into
a septic tank and was not
breathing. The call was reported to dispatchers at the
Gallia County 911 Center
at approximately 12:24 p.m.

Browning further reported that, according to
information provided by
the caller, emergency responders learned that the
child had not been seen for
approximately 10 minutes
prior to being found.
The child was transported to Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, and she
was later transferred to Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.

The Franklin County
Coroner’s Office reportedly notified Gallia County
authorities early on Monday that the victim had
died on Monday morning.
Browning stated that the
case appears to be accidental, but further investigation is being conducted.
The victim’s name is being withheld pending confirmation of the notification of the victim’s family.

CHESHIRE — Summer arrives Saturday and the
Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency is gearing
up to assist eligible residents with benefits provided
through this year’s Emergency Summer Crisis Program
which begins on Tuesday, July 1.
Sandra Edwards, Emergency Services Division Director, said that the program will run through August
29 or until the funds are depleted. There may be air
conditioners available in special situations. However,
the electric bill will be the first priority, she said. If we
must use the maximum benefit to assure the electric is
good for at least 30 days, then no other benefit will be
available; i.e. air conditioner. Income eligible persons
may call to make an appointment, beginning Friday,
June 27.
Eligible applicants/household members served by
the program will include:
— An income eligible household where the individual has a current qualifying medical condition/breathing
disorder verified by up-to-date physician documentation from a medical professional or,
— An income eligible household where the applicant
is 60 or older.
— An income eligible household served by an unregulated utility (Buckeye Rural in our area) with a
Disconnect Notice.
The income eligible household may receive one payment for electric bill up to the current bill or PIPP Plus,
but not to exceed $350 (AEP) or $400 (BREC). If you
are in default of shut-off status, you will be required to
pay the difference before we can assist with our maximum payment of $350 (AEP) or 400 (BREC).
Edwards noted that required medical forms to be
filled out may be picked up in any of the Community
Action Agency offices.
She also noted that priority is given to elderly clients.
Appointments can be made by calling the Cheshire Office at 740-367-7341 for Gallia and Meigs Counties.
Edwards stressed that eligible clients must bring,
with no exception, the following information:
1. Proof of income (3months/13 weeks) ( at or below
175% of the federal poverty guidelines)
2. Names, birth dates and Social Security cards of
all household members (Birth Certificate for applicant)
3. Electric bills which must be in the name of the applicant or spouse.
4. Medical documentation if under 60 years of age.
Applicants must bring documentation or they will not
be assisted.
The financial criteria for participation is as follows: Annual income eligibility for 1 person in the
household is $20,442.50, 2 persons $27,527.50, 3
persons $34,632.50, 4 persons $41,737.50, 5 persons
$48,842.50and 6 persons $55,947.50. For households
with more than six (6) members, add $7,105 per member.
Edwards said that applications will be taken from
8:30 to 10:45 a.m. and 1 to 3:30 p.m. Monday through
Thursday in the Cheshire Office at 8010 N. SR 7,
Cheshire, Ohio 45620

Huntington man arraigned in Gallia County on drug charges
Mitchell charged with possessing
hundreds of Oxycodone tablets
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — A Huntington man stopped by a trooper
with the Ohio State Highway Patrol late last month was arraigned
on Monday in the Common Pleas
Court of Gallia County on drugrelated felony charges.
Rubin A. Mitchell, 28, of 2740
Collis Ave., Huntington, W.Va.,
appeared before Judge D. Dean
Evans with his retained counsel

Jeffery L. Finley on Monday and
pleaded not guilty to one count
of drug possession, one count
of trafficking in drugs and one
count of tampering with evidence.
Mitchell
was
reportedly
stopped by a trooper with the
highway patrol while in Gallia
County on May 31 for a traffic
violation. According to the original complaint filed and signed by
the arresting officer, following
the stop, the trooper reported

that drug indicators were present. After a search of the vehicle
revealed marijuana and search of
the suspect revealed contraband,
the trooper obtained a warrant
and the defendant was reportedly searched by a doctor at Holzer Medical Center who “found
the 265 Oxycodone tablets in the
rectal area of the defendant.”
Rubin was subsequently arrested and made an initial appearance in the Gallipolis Municipal Court on June 2. His
bond was set at $400,000, 10
percent. A preliminary hearing
in this case was later held in the
municipal court last week, and
this case was bound over to the
common pleas court where it

was heard by a grand jury.
The indictment in this case
filed on June 12 states that on
May 31, Mitchell was in the possession of 265 Oxycodone tablets — an amount equal to or five
times the bulk amount but less
than fifty times the bulk amount
— a felony of the second degree.
In addition, Mitchell had allegedly prepared the said contraband
for sale or resale — an offense
that occurred in the vicinity of a
juvenile — a first degree felony.
The tampering with evidence
charge stipulates that on May 31,
Mitchell, knowing that an official
proceeding or investigation was
in progress, did conceal the Oxycodone tablets in his rectal area,

a third degree felony.
During his arraignment hearing on Monday, Mitchell’s bond
was set at $40,000, own recognizance, with an additional $1,500,
10 percent bond. As a condition
of his bond, he was ordered to
have no contact with law enforcement or any violations of
the law.
Mitchell is scheduled to appear for a pre-trial settlement
conference on Aug. 4. A negotiated plea agreement may be
filed on Sept. 4 with the clerk
of courts office. A jury trial has
been scheduled for Oct. 2.
Bond was posted for Mitchell’s
release from the Gallia County
Jail following Monday’s hearing.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Community Calendar

Tuesday: A slight chance of showers before 1 p.m.,
then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Mostly sunny, with a high near
92. Light south wind becoming southwest 5 to 9 mph in
the morning. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 68.
Southwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming calm after midnight.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 92. Calm
wind becoming west 5 to 9 mph in the morning.
Wednesday Night: A slight chance of showers before
1 a.m., then a slight chance of showers after 3 a.m. Partly
cloudy, with a low around 69. Chance of precipitation is
20 percent.
Thursday: A chance of showers between 7 a.m. and 9
a.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 9
a.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 90. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Thursday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 68. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Friday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Partly
sunny, with a high near 88. Chance of precipitation is 60
percent.
Friday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.

Wednesday, June 18
POMEROY — Pomeroy Village
Council’s finance committee will
meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy Village Hall.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 53.09
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.69
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 105.34
Big Lots (NYSE) — 44.35
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 49.42
BorgWarner (NYSE) —65.14
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 15.00
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.400
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.78
Collins (NYSE) — 79.50
DuPont (NYSE) — 68.11
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.75
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.82
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 68.74
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 56.87
Kroger (NYSE) — 47.08
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.70
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 101.56
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.12
BBT (NYSE) — 38.20

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.64
Pepsico (NYSE) — 87.55
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.77
Rockwell (NYSE) — 125.66
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.50
Royal Dutch Shell — 80.77
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.20
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.34
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.31
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.14
Worthington (NYSE) — 41.03
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions June 16, 2014, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Thursday, June 19
POMEROY — The Meigs County
American Cancer Society Volunteer
Leadership
Council/Survivorship
Taskforce meeting will take place
at 12 p.m. at the Wild Horse Cafe.
New members are welcome. Contact
Courtney Midkiff at (740) 992-6626,
ext. 24, for more information.
RACINE — Sonshine Circle will
have a bake sale/yard sale at Bethany
Church, Tornado Road, in Racine,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. All proceeds
benefit community projects. For

more information, contact Kathryn
Hart at 740-949-2656.
Friday, June 20
RACINE — Sonshine Circle will
have a bake sale/yard sale at Bethany
Church, Tornado Road, in Racine,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. All proceeds
benefit community projects. For
more information, contact Kathryn
Hart at 740-949-2656.
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High
School Class of 1959 will have its “Third
Friday lunch” at Fox Pizza at noon.
Saturday, June 21
TUPPERS PLAINS — An 80th
birthday celebration for Dorsel Bibbee will be 5 p.m. at the old Tuppers
Plains grade school in Tuppers

Plains. He has been a local gravedigger for more than 61 yrs. Bring a covered dish and plan on enjoying food
and fellowship.
Saturday, June 28
POMEROY — This year the Chamber of Commerce is planning a 5K
mud run. The events will take place
on Saturday, June 28. The obstacle
course will be set up on the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. Partnering with
the Meigs County Fair Board, the
proceeds will be divided between the
Chamber and renovating the grandstand at the fairgrounds. There are
plans to have several obstacles set
up around the track. Each obstacle is
meant to get the runners wet, muddy
or both.

Meigs County Church Calendar
Meigs Cooperative Parish events
POMEROY — The Meigs Cooperative Parish hosts a
variety of events and service projects available throughout the week at the Mulberry Community Center. Some
of those are as follows:
Meals at the Mulberry Country Kitchen — 11:30
a.m.-12.30 p.m. Free soup and roll Tuesday, Wednesday,

Thursday. Meal or salad buffet for $3 or meal of three
items Tuesday and Thursday; salad buffet on Wednesday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m. Tuesday-Friday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Scholarship
applications available
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2014-15 Carleton College Scholarships
for higher education are
available for legal residents
of the village of Syracuse.
Residents can pick up an
application from Gordon
Fisher, 14802 Dusky St.,
Syracuse. Applications are
due by June 23. Residents
of Syracuse can qualify for
scholarships for a maximum of two years.
Consumer
Confidence Reports
MIDDLEPORT — The

Civitas Media, LLC

Village of Middleport has
mailed its 2013 public consumer confidence report.
Anyone not receiving one
can pick one up at the Public
Works Office at village hall
located at 659 Pearl Street.
Southern
Memory Books
RACINE — The Southern High School Class
of 1964 has compiled a
memory book for its 50th
class reunion project. Biographies of the 64 students
who graduated that year,
along with many pictures
and mementos, are included. The cost for the spiral-

bound and professionally
printed book is $20. Those
interested in getting a copy
are asked to contact Carol
Reed, 949-2910, or Sharon
Cottrill, 992-4275.
Health
Department Change
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department has extended
hours for public visits.
On the first Tuesday of
each month, the office
will be open until 6 p.m.
Services available will include nursing (immunization clinic, etc.) environmental health and vital

statistics. The duration
of the extended services
will depend on public use.
The WIC clinic will also
be serving clients on each
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. beginning today.
Call EIC for an appointment at (740) 992-0392.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct an
immunization clinic Tuesday from 9-11 a.m.and 1-3
p.m. Children must be accompanied by a parent or
guardian and bring shot
records.

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250.
Please call for more information on local pricing.
Full price single copy issues are $1 daily and $3 Saturday.

CONTACT US

CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Jessica Chason
740-446-2342 Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com

ADVERTISING:
740-992-2155
Sarah Thompson, Ext. 15
Brenda Davis, Ext. 16
NEWSROOM:
740-992-2155
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155

Belles and Beaus honor recent graduates

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Your protection is
personal.
Get a quote today from:
Jeffrey J Warner
JEFFREY J WARNER LUTCF
(740)992-5479
warnerj1@nationwide.com

Auto. Home.
Life. Business.
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and Affiliated Companies. Home office: Columbus, Ohio 43215-2220. Nationwide
Life Insurance Company. Nationwide, the Nationwide Framemark and On Your Side are service marks of Nationwide
Mutual Insurance Company. Subject to underwriting guidelines, review and approval.Nationwide, Nationwide Insurance,
the Nationwide framemark, Nationwide is On Your Side and Join the Nation are service marks of Nationwide Mutual
Insurance Company. © 2013 Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. All rights reserved. NPO-0194M1 (01/13)

The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club had its yearly
graduation ceremony May 19.
The students completed their nine
months of dancing instruction from
Roger Steele, Western square dance
instructor from Southside, W.Va.
Students graduating were Bob and
Phyllis Fogel, of Hurricane, W.Va.,
Loretta Roberts, of Pomeroy, Ray
Boggs, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Dick Jaycox, of Wellston, Ohio.
New members were tested on their
dancing skills by the “WV Dancing Inspector” Carol Pabst, of Marietta, and

all the students passed with “flying
colors.” Games, an evening of square
dancing, and a potluck meal were enjoyed by all 60 people who attended.
Also present besides Belles and
Beaus members, Western square
dance callers from the surrounding
area. They were Keith Smith, of Hurricane; Ed Pabst, of Marietta; Homer
Magnet, of Minford, Ohio; and Roger
Steele, of Southside.
Workshop sessions are held every Monday night at the Gavin
Power Plant Employees Clubhouse
in Cheshire, Ohio. New classes

will begin in September.
All Western square dancers are
welcome to attend and dance with
the group 7-9 p.m. every Monday,
and from 7:30-10 p.m. every second
Saturday of each month. Saturday
dances include a potluck meal.
For information, call one of the
club officers: Betty and Bill Knight,
304-675-3275; Jim Stewart, 740-9853972; Donna and Willie Shaw, 740446-4213; Rosemary and Jackie and
Roger Starcher, 740-992-7561; Ronnie Vance, 740-698-2608; or Sharon
and Bob Horel, 740-592-5668.

60510093

Do You Have A

Patriotic Pet?
It is time to start submitting your
Patriotic Pet photos!!
We will be accepting photos
of your Patriotic Pets from
June 2 to June 15.
All photos must be
submitted via email to:
home@homenatlbank.com.
All entries will be posted to the
Home National Bank Facebook
page on June 16, 2014

Voting will be

June 16 through June 30.
The entry with the most number of
“LIKES” will be the winner.
We will be awarding prizes to the 3
pets with the most “LIKES”.
RACINE
740-949-2210
60510960

EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 18
michaeljohnson
@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE
740-992-6333

OWN A

HOME?
GET A

DISCOUNT.
PinPoint Auto® Insurance
from Grange offers one of
the deepest discounts in
the industry, up to 10%.
That means just owning
a home can give you
lower rates on your car
insurance. And you might
qualify for even more
discounts on top of that.
Find out how you can
save up to 30% with

PinPoint Auto.
Call 740.992.3381 or visit
simmonsmusserwarner.com

Products and coverages not available in all states

60510079

�Tuesday, June 17, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

54th Annual Wahama Alumni Banquet held
to the area food banks. The
area food bank that covers
Mason County is located
in Huntington, WV.
A memory board was
on display, in the hallway,
of the gym, naming the
Wahama graduates who
have passed away since the
alumni banquet of 2013 till
the banquet of 2014. The
display was designed by
Chloris McQuaid.
Each year alumni members pay dues to the association. The dues collected, helps the association
provide scholarships to
several graduating seniors.
This year the association
was able to provide a total
of $3,300.00 in scholarships. Individuals and/or
individual classes are encouraged to contribute to
the scholarship fund.
Scholarships
were
awarded by the association
to: $500.00 to Benjamin
Foreman, son of David and
Beth Foreman; $500.00
to Michael Hendricks,
son of Harley (Chipper)
and Crystal Hendricks;
$250.00 to Holly Greene,
daughter of George and
Jenny Greene; $250.00 to
Bunni Peters, daughter of
Dixie and Steve Peters;
$250.00 to Thomas Wyatt
Zuspan, son of Billy Zuspan, Tamara Zuspan and
Lori Zuspan; $250.00 to
Sarah Bumgarner, daughter of Ryan Bumgarner;
$325.00 to Emily Casto,
daughter of Wayne and
Malinda Casto; $325.00
to Leah Roach, daughter
of Melvin “Lee” Roach;
$325.00 to Victoria Gilland, daughter of Darren
and Kelly Gilland; $325.00
to Jess C. Roush, son of
Eddie and Lisa Roush. The
class of 1955 presented a
scholarship of $500.00 to
Hunter Bradley, son of Ron
Bradley. Class of 1965 presented two $100.00 scholarships one to Michael
Hendricks, and the other
to Thomas Wyatt Zuspan.
Congratulations to all
scholarship winners.
White mugs with a
red “W” on the side were
filled with red and white
mints and presented to

members of the classes of
1937 to 1946. A red and
white flower arrangement
was presented to the Clara
Rollins Capehart, (class of
1937) for being the oldest
alumni attending.
Door
prizes
were
awarded by ticket drawings. Prizes donated: four
ferns by Bob’s Market in
Mason, garment travel
bag by Travel Times and
Mary Fowler; WVU hat
and sunglasses by Thompson Hardware in New Haven; shampoo kit by Foxy
Locks in New Haven; small
grill by City National Bank
in Mason; plaque by Junes
Country Charm; $25.00
gift certificate by Mason
Exxon – Fast 4 You in Mason; red and white floral
arrangement by Oopsa
Daisy in Mason.
A $25.00 Wal-Mart gift
card was purchased by
the association to present
to the person traveling
the farthest. This year the
gift card was presented to
Sharon Brinker Heiss from
Orlando, Fl. She traveled
approximately 850 miles
to attend the banquet.
Dan Riggs and Health
Aid Pharmacy of New Haven provided red and white
balloons to decorate the
stage. Table favors were
provided by Pleasant Valley Hospital and Ohio Valley Bank, Point Pleasant.
A thank you was expressed to The Tiger Music Ensemble for the use of
their sound equipment.
A brief business meeting was held with the
election of officers for the
year 2014-15. The following officers elected: Rex
Howard, president; Jim
Stewart,
co-president;
Chloris Machir McQuaid,
vice president; Dee Anderson Bumgardner, covice president; Beverly
Carson Knapp, secretary;
Debra Paugh Bemgarner,
co-secretary; Mary Artis,
treasurer; Susan Zuspan
Winebrenner, historian/
memorials.
Rex Howard, Jim Stewart and Chloris McQuaid
introduced the following
classes and attendees:

Class Of 1937 Clara Rollins Capehart; Class Of
1941 Jean Redman Davis;
Class Of 1943 Gale L. Berry And Annabelle Hudnall;
Class Of 1944 – Celebrating 70 Years
Lawrence Foreman And
Ralph M. Sayre Class Of
1945 Joyce Roush Carson;
Class Of 1946 Betty Roush
Burris, Howard “Pete”
Burris And Orpha Weaver Fields; Class Of 1947

Enid Layne Adams, Willis L. Dudding And Sarah
L. Gibbs; Class Of 1948
Verla V. Harrah. Kathleen
Grinstead Roush And Barbara L. Zerkle; Class Of
1949 Rosanna Fry Manley;
Class Of 1952 Lawrence R.
Scarberry; Class Of 1953
Betty Hoschar Davidson,
Doris L. Litton Harrah,
Glen C. Harrah, Susannah
Roush Lewis And Wilford
Scarberry; Class Of 1954 –

Celebrating 60 Years Martha Henry Coleman, Mary
M. Stewart Fowler, Phyllis
Williams Gilkey, Ralph V.
Hudson, Alice M Howard
Leach, Curtis O. Mcdaniel, Joseph Franklin Paugh,
John “Pete” Roush, Ruth
Lieving Roush, James R.
Stewart; Class Of 1955
Peggy L. Edwards; Class
Of 1956 Carolyn Bennett
See BANQUET | 5

Sponsored by The University of Rio Grande

VOTE NOW!!!

mydailytribune.com s mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com
7 WINNERS
Grand Prize
Newborn (0-12 months) s Toddler (12-24 months) s 2-3 Years Old
� � 9EARS /LD s � � 9EARS /LD s � �� 9EARS /LD

Share your
cutest kid photo
with us and get a

PoppyLane

15 % discount
on your order
of $75 or more!

60505389

MASON — Wahama
Alumni Association celebrated its 54th annual
alumni banquet on May 24
in the high school gymnasium. The reunion years
honored ended with a
number four. Celebrating
this year were the classes
of 1937 through 2014.
Tours of the school was
provided by some of the
National Honor Society
students. Several of the
alumni that toured the
school were impressed
with the facilities. Of
course there were a lot of
comparisons to when they
attended Wahama High
School.
Greeting and registering
fellow alumni were: Judy
Duncan McWhorter, Mary
Artis, Mary Foster Hendricks and Beverly Carson
Knapp.
Rex Howard, President
of the association welcomed everyone to the
alumni banquet and hopes
that everyone enjoys visiting with classmates and
friends. Rex led the Pledge
of Allegiance and the invocation was given by Tom
Knopp, class of 1962.
Dinner was prepared by
the Mason Chapter Order
of the Eastern Star. The
menu consisted of salad,
rolls, beef and noodles,
mashed potatoes, green
beans and various desserts. The meal was served
buffet style, with the Sassafras 4-H Club members
serving alumni who needed assistance.
Following the dinner,
Joe Scites from the class of
1964 read the class history
and also shared several
funny stories that occurred
while the class of 1964
were students.
The guest speaker for
the evening was Tom
Knopp, from the class of
1962. Tom shared with the
group some of his experiences while walking twenty-five miles in each of the
fifty five counties in West
Virginia. The purpose of
his walking was to raise
awareness and money to
help Walk out Hunger in
WV. Donations were sent

Hit the water.
We’ve got you covered.
In the Nation, our custom coverage and superior
claims service provide you and your boat the
same quality protection you’ve come to expect
from our home and auto insurance. Plus, with
Vanishing Deductible*, you get $100 off you
deductible for every year of safe boating, until it
could vanish completely.
We put members first because we don’t have
shareholders.SM

Nationwide®
On Your SideSM
Join the Nation

60513179

Jeff Warner Insurance
113 West 2nd st.
Pomeroy OH 45769
740-992-5479
Warnerj1@nationwide.com
60512827

�The Daily Sentinel

Dear America: It’s over
(rulers of the world era)
By Tom H. Hastings
Reinvade, reoccupy, and redestroy Iraq. That
is the solution to the inevitable civil war that
happens when the U.S. pulls out?
Will we do it until either Iraq is remade in our
image or until the U.S. economy, political environment and culture is also destroyed?
Eight years ago, a group of Portland peace activists raised the funds to bring together a number of experts to produce an exit strategy from
Iraq. Ours was done, as it turns out, at the same
time that the Iraq Study Group did their work.
We were just unaware that the government had
finally, at long last, decided maybe it was time to
think Exit Plan.
Duh. I expect we were all simply inspired and
challenged by the insightful and cogent strategy
published shortly before in the widely cited peerreviewed journal, The Onion.
Still, despite the obvious — and our group,
which was informed by military experts and
conflict transformation experts alike, noted well
that no matter when the U.S. left, the Iraqis
would have a bloody civil war and settle on a
new autocratic government that shot its way to
power and repressed its citizenry — it took the
U.S. three more years to begin to leave, longer to
finish leaving, and now the correctly predicted
violent settling-out process is happening in earnest.
Naturally, the U.S. conflict industry is dismayed when the U.S. isn’t spending every last
centavo on weaponry and other military profiteering contracts. Time to respond! Go bomb!
Send in “advisers.” No-fly attacks, hunt down
insurgents with drones and war jets.
Remobilize U.S. troops because if there is one
glaringly blatant truth, proxy troops no longer
work in this post-Cold War era. They seemed to
be just fine and a great way to drain the American taxpayer when their loyalty was fairly dependable. But the era of “he may be a son of a
b——, but he’s our son of a b——” (ascribed a
bit dubiously to FDR about our boy Somoza, the
Nicaraguan dictator) is over. Our SOBs are now
routinely driven from power by the ballot, the
bullet, or the bodies — that is, by the elections
we no longer control, by violent insurgencies, or
by civil society nonviolent revolution.
Stop it. Stop interfering in other countries.
Stop sending arms. Stop the drones. Just support civil society with helpful and requested aid,
never guns or tanks or war jets or anti-insurgent
helicopters or anti-government rocket-propelled
grenade launchers.
And for any chance of success, keep U.S.
troops at home. Let Iraqis work it through and
then try to be a friend to their citizenry with our
goods of life. It may not be as fast as the “I’ve got
a gun to your head so go vote!” model of spreading “democracy” that is favored by our leaders
and our military industrial congressional complex, but it is the only one that actually works.
Can we please start now?
Dr. Tom H. Hastings is PeaceVoice director.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to be accurate. If you
know of an error in a story,
call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.
Our main number is
(740) 992-2155.
Department extensions
are:
News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich,
Ext. 12
Reporter: Sarah Hawley,
Ext. 13
Advertising
Retail: Sarah Thompson,
Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Circulation
Circulation Manager:
Jessica Chason, 740-4462342, Ext. 25
General
Information
E-mail:

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com
(USPS 436-840)
Ohio Valley Newspapers
Published Tuesday through
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated
Press and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address
corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Subscription Rates
Annual Civitas price for The
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is
$250. Please call for more information on local pricing. Full
price single copy issues are $1.

OPINION

Page 4
TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 2014

Rare Earth paradise
By Sandy Lyon
Will we dig up paradise to be able
to try to tweet a picture of paradise?
To tweet or not to tweet, that is the
question of our time.
So all those little pieces that make
up your electronic do-dads, iPhones,
Smartphones, Awesome Blackberries and computers and such. All
those little pieces need something
called “rare earth minerals”. Why?
I’m not sure, but they need them to
work. Without them there’s no tweeting amazing mountain pictures, or
sunsets or your friend sticking out
her tongue. No selfies from high atop
Mount Everest. No email, no instant
messages, without rare earth minerals. What’s a gal to do?
These so called rare earth minerals
are apparently not too rare. They’re
pretty much scattered around in places on the earth that are either hard to
get to or under some beautiful mountain range or forest.
So what I’m wondering is: will
people mourn the loss of tweeting
more than the loss of the mountain
that made that tweeted picture of a
mountain possible, or, will people
of the future mourn the loss of the
mountains and wonder what tweeting was, as some other technology
replaces yet another?
The rare earth part of rare earth
minerals must mean that the earth,
as it is, will be rare in the future if we
keep staring at our iPhones trying to
be smart as we do something really,
really stupid. Tearing apart the earth
so we can create technologies and
things that will quickly become garbage that expands the plastic island
in the Pacific Ocean, which is now
bigger than the state of Texas and
rapidly growing, as the natural earth
in its fertile form shrink-wrapped
within a poisonous layer of plastic
and waste.
Rare Earth indeed.
I have a growing gray spot in the
center of this grandmother’s heart as

I view into the future and see Sophia
and Hayden and Daniel facing the
results of these choices. I would put
down all electronic toys and technical trinkets if it could change their
world, but I’m saddened to know that
many would not and will not see that
it is our gift to the future to use less.
Yes, Use Less. Create less garbage
for the oceans to drown in. Resist
the urge to tweet needlessly. Resist
the urge to buy more stuff. Maybe, if
each time we are tempted by a new
this or a new that, that we see it as
bits of plastic and pieces of junk floating in the ocean. Not our ocean, but
their ocean. And maybe if compassion be our friend, then put the piece
down and take a deep breath for the
future and count to ten or seven,
generations, as the Native Americans
philosophy is.
For this earth, this place that we
call home is in fact very rare and it
is up to us to keep that rare gift for
those who will need a good earth in
the future, the near and dear future.
Those grandchildren, whose names
we know, will inherit our choices,
good, or bad, for we have borrowed
their future to support our present.
Not you, not me, but the so called
industrial captains of the ship of destruction/pollution are the ones driving this earth into becoming so rare
that this story may end up with our
own extinction. As a species.
It has, in fact, happened before to
other large apes whose time ended.
That is not exactly the kind of worldview vision we want to pass on to our
child and theirs. No, we are merely
the “consumers” in the game they are
playing out in the mountaintops they
remove and in the halls of democracy
they assault with money gifts and
power toys.
Our rare earth is being eaten by
their desire for power and gain. Our
role is just to be the ones to buy the
stuff that turns into junk. Maybe it
is time we starve that beast. Maybe
by simply not purchasing the latest

this or that we can slow the process
of human’s extinction so that maybe,
just maybe, our grandchildren, our
species and maybe some other species can live through this current
consumer madness, just slightly before we let the captains cause us to
consume our own future.
Use Less is not a useless idea. It
is an idea whose time has not only
come, but will be a life saver. Use
Less. A “consumers’ fast” to save the
rare earth for the long run.
The ocean’s plankton provide half
the oxygen the earth needs to support the life that currently lives, in
ocean tides or on land. The other half
comes mostly from forests. Forests,
like the Amazon, that are being cut
and burned by the captains to provide more stuff to fill the oceans with
plastic islands.
When the earth, around three billion years ago, started to have the
proper conditions for oxygen to enter our planet’s atmosphere, then the
earth began to have the proper conditions for life, the kind of life that supports humans and fish and elephants
and plankton and forests. Without
the proper levels of oxygen that life
can disappear, regardless of class,
income, political party, sexual orientation, political system, religion, race
or species.
Life that relies on oxygen will be
altered by changes in the levels of
oxygen on earth. On this round ball
we all live on. It is already beginning
to happen. Fox News will not report
on it, so other methods of fact finding will be necessary. Google it now,
before we run out of rare earth minerals, or our rare earth.
Our actions of consumption are
choking our grandchildren’s air supply. It’s that real. It’s that serious.
Stem the tide, use less.
Sandy Lyon is a baker and butterfly curator gardener who writes for PeaceVoice and fights for
Native and Earth rights in the far north of Wisconsin.

Did Gitmo prisoner exchange constitute treason?
By Harold Pease
Fury from both parties
hit the fan when President
Barack Obama released
five Gitmo prisoners —
three top intelligence officers and two top military
commanders — the five
most wanted by the Taliban; one a former Taliban
interior minister reportedly having had close ties
with Osama bin Laden.
These in exchange for
Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl,
said to be a traitor by his
companions in Afghanistan when he walked off
base seeking an Al Qaida
representative. Five soldiers died in the subsequent search for a soldier
who did not want to be
found. The president excuses this action on the
basis that Bergdadl was on
death’s door and prisoners
have been exchanged in
other wars by other presidents. These explanations
have been contested.
Senate
Intelligence
Committee Chair Dianne
Feinstein was the most
vocal Democrat to voice
contempt. She said, “It
comes with some surprise
and dismay that the transfers went ahead with no
consultation — totally not
following the law. And, in
an issue of this kind, of
concern to a Committee
that bears the oversight
responsibility” (“Feinstein
Says White House Broke
the Law on Bergdahl,”
NBC news, June 4, 2014).
Republicans, notably Sen.
Lindsey Graham, threatened impeachment if it
happened again.
Libertarian Judge Andrew Napolitano spoke of

the president’s action as
unlawful for two reasons.
One, Obama himself had
signed the statute forbidding the use of taxpayers’ money with respect
to Guantanamo detainees
without a Congressional
30-day notice, which he
violated. This was Sen.
Dianne Feinstein’s objection. Two, “by releasing
these guys into the theater
of war in the Middle East,
he has provided material
assistance to a terrorist organization.” This because
“Federal statute makes it
a crime, punishable by 10
years in prison to life, for
materially aiding a terrorist organization” and, “the
courts have ruled, any assistance knowingly or intentionally provided to a
terrorist organization by
an American makes that
American liable for prosecution under this statute.”
The assistance is the human assets that he has returned to the enemy. Anyone else would get 10 years
to life in prison for doing
the same thing (“Obama
Could be Facing 10 Years
to Life in Prison,” Shepard
Smith interviews Judge
Andrew Napolitano, FOX
News, June 6, 2014).
Missing in the whole
argument, and the reason
for this column on an issue receiving much media
coverage, is what does the
Constitution say? All war
powers are clearly listed in
Article I, Section 8, clauses 10-17 and all are left to
Congress alone except one,
allowing the president to
serve as commander and
chief subject to this oversight. The Founders never
intended for him to act

alone independent of Congress. If other presidents
have done so, this does
not make doing so constitutional. He most certainly
cannot break a law that he
helped create and sign.
But Article III Section
3 should have brought
Mr. Obama to a quick
halt. “Treason against the
United States shall consist
only in levying War against
them, or in adhering to
their Enemies, giving them
Aid and Comfort.” Is returning to the enemy three
of their most distinguished
intelligence personnel and
two of their most distinguished military officers,
each considered so dangerous that they had to be
moved across a continent
and an ocean to prevent
them from escaping to
strengthen the power of
the enemy, giving Al Qaeda aid and comfort? How
can a reasonable person argue otherwise?
Arguably this gift of “human assets,” returned by
our own president, is far
more helpful to the enemy
than money, commodities,
equipment or even military secrets. That these
five will serve for the rest
of their lives to strengthen
our enemy is not disputed.
The Constitution continues; “No Person shall
be convicted of Treason
unless on the Testimony of
two Witnesses to the same
overt Act, or on Confession in open Court.” The
overt act was the exchange.
The President has clearly
confessed, although not in
court, and all of America
exceeds the two-witness requirement. “The Congress
shall have Power to declare

the Punishment of Treason,
but no Attainder of Treason
shall work Corruption of
Blood, or Forfeiture except
during the Life of the Person attainted.”
Responsibility for punishing treason is left to Congress. The only restrictions
to punishment are prohibition of corruption of blood
(punishing relatives for the
acts of one) and forfeiture
of property, which must be
returned to relatives after
the death of the one punished for treason. Otherwise, again, innocent relatives would be punished.
Certainly impeachment is
an option, but something
far greater is also an option
as treason is the most serious national offense. The
law broken already dictates
the punishment if any other
American did the same
thing — 10 years to life in
prison.
Ironically, the Democrats
would be for impeachment
and 10 years to life in prison if it were a Republican
president and vice versa
for the other party. Political
parties have destroyed us,
as neither party will punish
its own. Even when the vast
majority believes Obama to
have at least broken the law,
if not having committed
treason, he will remain unpunished because of party
loyalty. A read of the Constitution clearly says that
his action requires Congress to consider even treason, irrespective of party
affiliation.
Dr. Harold Pease is an expert on the
United States Constitution. He has
dedicated his career to studying
the writings of the Founding Fathers and applying that knowledge
to current events.

�Tuesday, June 17, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Page 5

Death Notices
BARCUS
GALLIPOLIS — Ralph
A. Barcus, 73, Gallipolis,
died Saturday, June 14,
2014, in the Cabell-Huntington Hospital, Huntington, West Virginia.
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Friday, June 20, 2014,
at the Addison Freewill
Baptist Church. Officiating
will be Rev. Rick Barcus
and Rev. Jack Parsons. Interment will be in the Mina
Cemetery in Green Township. Friends may call from
5-8 p.m. Thursday at the
church. Funeral services
are entrusted to the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

JEFFREY WAYNE OHLINGER
POMEROY — Jeffrey
Wayne Ohlinger passed
away Wednesday, June 11,
2014.
He is survived by his children, Clayton (Kelly) Ohlinger, Elsa Mae Ohlinger,
Karl Von Ohlinger and Emily Faith Ohlinger; and two
grandchildren, Braelynn
Page Ohlinger, and Payton
Wade Ohlinger. He is also
survived by sister Jennifer
Lynn (Carter) OhlingerSmith and her children,
Troy Alexander Shuler, Regan Shuler, Ivy Rose Conde
and Audrey Gail Smith;
and seven great-nieces and
great-nephews.
He was preceded in
death by paternal grandparents, Troy Ohlinger Sr.,
and Rosa (Day) Ohlinger;

maternal
grandparents,
Anna Mae (Ihle) Obitz,
and Rudy Obitz. He was
also preceded in death by
father Troy Ohlinger Jr.;
mother A. Gail (Smith)
Ohlinger; and uncle Bruce
Smith.
Memorial service was
2 p.m. Sunday, June 15,
2014, at Restoration Fellowship Church, 526 Mulberry Heights Road, Pomeroy, with Pete and Brenda
Barnhart officiating.
Cremation arrangements
are under the direction of
the Anderson McDaniel
GLENN
Funeral Home in MiddleAPPLE GROVE, W.Va.
port.
—
Julie Rebecca Glenn,
An online registry is
59,
of
Apple Grove, W.Va.,
available at www.anderdied Saturday, June 7,
sonmcdaniel.com.
2014, at home.
A funeral service will be
VIOLET J. WALKER
at 1 p.m., Wednesday, June

POMEROY — Violet J.
Walker, 94, of Pomeroy,
passed away on Sunday,
June 15, 2014 at the Overbrook Nursing Center. She
was born on April 27, 1920
in Pomeroy to the late William and Myrtle (Davis)
Long. She was the owner
and operator of Jimmie’s
Pastry Shop in Middleport, member of the Enterprise United Methodist
Church, lifetime member
of the American Legion
Post 128 Ladies Auxiliary
and she graduated from
Pomeroy High School.
Violet retired from the
Rocksprings Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center after
many years of service. She
is survived by her daughter
and son-in-law, Karen and
Robert Sloan, Pomeroy;
son and daughter-in-law,
Larry and Kaye Walker of
Palatka, FL; grandchildren,

The Daily Sentinel

Timothy and Nina Sloan,
Angela Sloan, Christopher
and Merica Sloan, Brian
and Rebekah Walker, and
Bradley Walker; 8 great
grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews. She
is preceded in death by her
parents; husband, James
Walker; 2 brothers, Lewis
and Murrian Long and a
sister, Dorothy Long
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, June
19, 2014 at 1:00pm at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with Pastors Arland King
and Angel Crowell officiating. Burial will follow
in the Rocksprings Cemetery. Visitation for family
and friends will be held on
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
from 6-8:00pm at the funeral home. Online registry
is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

18, 2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Ted
Nance and Pastor Edwin S.
Harper officiating. Burial
will follow at Apple Grove
Memorial Gardens, in Apple Grove. Visitation will
be one hour prior to the
service at the funeral home.
HIGGINBOTHAM
SOUTHSIDE,
W.Va.
— Charles Alvin Higginbotham, 78, of Southside,
W.Va., passed away June
15, 2014 in Cabell Huntington Hospital.
Funeral services will be
held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., on Wednesday, June
18, 2014, at 1 p.m. with
Rev. Jack Mayes officiating. Burial will follow in
the Beech Hill Church cemetery in Southside. Friends
may visit the family at the
funeral home on Wednes-

day, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
prior to the service.
JOHNSON
GLENWOOD,
W.Va.
— Patricia “Pat” Gibson
Johnson, 72, of Glenwood,
W.Va., left this world to enter God’s pearly gates on
Sunday 15th day of June
2014 at her new home in
Ashton, W.Va.
Visitation will be from
6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at
Wallace Funeral Home,
Barboursville. Funeral services will be conducted at
2 p.m. Thursday, June 19,
2014, at Wallace Funeral
Home and Chapel, Barboursville, by Rev. David
Cardwell and Rev. Max
Spurlock. Burial will be in
White Chapel Memorial
Gardens.
LAMBERT
HILLIARD, Ohio — Sylvia Ann Sims Lambert, 77,

of Hilliard, Ohio, formerly
of Centerville, Ohio, died
March 12, 2014, at Dublin
Methodist Hospital after a
short illness.
Following her wishes,
only graveside services
were held. Burial was held
at Wesley Chapel Cemetery on Dublin Road in
Hilliard, Ohio.
POWELL
GALLIPOLIS — Jane
Lee Powell, 86, of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Friday, June
13, 2014, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
Family and friends may
call at Willis Funeral Home
on Wednesday, June 18,
2014, from 6-8 p.m. Funeral services will be 11 a.m.,
Thursday, June 19, 2014,
at the funeral home with
Pastor Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will follow in
Mound Hill Cemetery.

Gallia, Meigs youth recognized at BEST banquet

MARYSVILLE — The 2013-2014
Ohio Cattlemen’s Association BEST
(Beef Exhibitor Show Total) Program wrapped up May 10 with its
annual awards banquet at the Ohio
Expo Center in Columbus.
“The banquet is a time to celebrate
the many achievements of our BEST
participants, both in and out of the
show ring,” said Stephanie Sindel,
BEST coordinator. “Each participant
is recognized for their hard work by
family, friends and BEST supporters
alike.”
Several representatives from program sponsors Bob Evans Farms,
Burroughs Frazier Farms, Farm
Credit Mid-America, Green Oak
Farms, M.H. Eby, Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation and Weaver Livestock
were on hand to help present awards
Submitted photos
totaling more than $42,000 in belt
buckles, furniture, show materials AT LEFT, Gallia County youth had a successful 2013-14 BEST season and were recognized during the annual banquet May 10 in Columbus. Pictured, from left, are
and other awards.
This year’s BEST program fea- Tyler Dahse, BEST participant, Jordan Johnson, and Emily Dahse. AT RIGHT, Meigs
tured 17 sanctioned shows that County’s Jed Anderson earned Reserve Champion Maine-Anjou Steer honors.
weaved its way across the state with
380 youth participants showing 537 sixth overall Intermediate Showman. Steer honors went to Jed Anderson,
head of market animals and heifers. Jordan is the son of Stony and Amy of Albany. He is the son of Ron and
The following Gallia County youth Johnson, of Gallipolis.
Judy Burke.
were recognized:
Exhibiting the Champion ShortJonathan Barrett, of Coolville,
Reserve Champion Crossbred horn Heifer was Emily Dahse, of
WASHINGTON (AP) — When Federal Reserve officials gathshowed
the Reserve Champion Perer this week and Fed Chair Janet Yellen speaks with reporters, Heifer went to Jordan Johnson. He Thurman. She is the daughter of
centage
Simmental Heifer. Jonathan
also
showed
the
fifth
overall
MaineMatt
and
Angie
Dahse.
investors will be seeking clues to two big questions:
Reserve Champion Maine-Anjou is the son of Jill Burdette.
When will the Fed finally start raising short-term interest rates? Anjou Steer. Moreover, he was the
And how — and when — will it start unloading its vast investment holdings?
The answers will affect loan rates for individuals and businesses — and perhaps the direction of the economy. Yet few expect to
hear anything definitive.
The Fed remains in a tentative wait-and-see stance.
RACINE — A day camp New Beginnings United and the Lutheran Outdoor Bible study, crafts, singing,
Though the central bank has signaled optimism, officials are is being hosted and con- Methodist Church, Trin- Ministries of Ohio.
games and puppetry.
unsure how much the economy will strengthen the rest of the ducted by St. John Lutheran ity Congregational Church,
It
will
be
held
at
Grace
For more information
year. On Wednesday, the Fed will update its forecasts, and it may
Fellowship Episcopal Church June 23- and registration, please
downgrade its estimate of growth for 2014 after the government Church in cooperation with Restoration
call Fr. Tom Fehr at 740said last month that the economy shrank in the first quarter, de- Grace Episcopal Church, Church St. Paul Lutheran 27 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
pressed by a harsh winter.
St. Paul Lutheran Church, Church in New Haven, WV.
Activities will include 992-3968.

With economy hazy, Fed
is unlikely to shift course

St. John Lutheran Church in Racine to hold day camp

Banquet

Southern Local Wellness Center

From Page 3
Allensworth, Braunda B. Ballou, Betty
Jones Rawlings, James W. Roush And
Julia Edwards Willoughby; Class Of
1958 Linda Brinker Meadows, Agnes
Roush And Edna Crump Scarberry;
Class Of 1959 Doris M. Elliott Coffee
And James L. Fry.
Class Of 1960 Larry R. Hill, Sr.;
Class Of 1961 Peggy Anderson
Bumgarner, David F. Machir, Ruth
Scarberry Mcbride And Susan Zuspan Winebrenner; Class Of 1962 Okey
Capehart, Roy Friend, Tom Knopp,
Claude Mcdermitt, Eddie Vanmatre;
Class Of 1963 Dannie Harbour, Hubert
“Buck” Johnson And Chloris Machir
Mcquaid;Class Of 1964 – Celebrating
50 Years Phyllis Queen Bennett, Carolyn Bird, Carlottia Boyer, Tommy Ewing, Martha Thompson Friend, Dianna
Miller Harbour,Sharon Brinker Heiss,

Faye Lyons Johnson, Danny R. Kearns,
Deloris Greene Rife, Robert J. Roush,
Carolyn Rizer Sayre, Joseph Scites, Judith Williams Scites, Adele Sismondo
Shafer, Gale Shrimplin, Harvey Vanmatre And Barbara Sherry Zuspan; Class
Of 1965 Mary Artis, Mary Foster Hendricks And Judith Duncan Mcwhorter;
Class Of 1966 Bonnie Blake Crabtree,
Caroline June Devrick, Betty Scarberry Holden, Joyce Lewis Kearns, Judy
Hoffman Montgomery And Nancy
Proffitt; Class Of 1967 Wanda Harrah
Stafford; Class Of 1968 Philip F. Burgess, Kathy Ingels Farr, Gary L. Green,
Christina D. Harrah, Kathy Roush
Rickard, Sonya Yonker Roush And
Sandra Shell; Class Of 1969 Samuel R.
Scarberry.
Class Of 1970 Terry Foreman And
Beverly Carson Knapp; Class Of 1973
Clarice Davis Knopp; Class Of 1975
Rex Howard; Class Of 1979 Wayne
L. Casto; Class Of 1980 Malinda L.

Casto; Class Of 1981 Beth Knight
Foreman And Eddie Roush; Class Of
1982 Alan Machir; Class Of 1983 Darren Gilland; Class Of 1984 – Celebrating 30 Years Gerald W. Arnold, Ii, Ron
Bradley. Suzie King Francis, Patty Ohlinger Roush And Brenda Allensworth
Warner; Class Of 1987 Ryan Bumgarner; Class Of 1992 Kelly Yonker Gilland; Class Of 1994 – Celebrating 20
Years John Gregory, Beth Mcdermitt
Knapp And Chris Knapp; Class Of
2014 Hunter Bradley, Sarah Bumgarner, Emily Casto, Benjamin Foreman,
Victoria Gilland, Michael Hendricks,
Bunni Peters, Leah Roach, Jess C.
Roush And Thomas Wyatt Zuspan.
The banquet concluded with the
singing of the schools Alma Mater.
Plans have already started for the
55th annual Wahama Alumni banquet
on Saturday, May 23, 2015. Classes celebrating special reunion years end with
the number five (1935-2015).

Healthcare for All Ages
M-F
7:30am - 4pm
(while school
is in session)

Phone: (740) 949-2348 • Fax: (740) 949-2536
s 7E CAN ADJUST FEES BASED ON FAMILY SIZE �
INCOME �IF QUALIlED
s 3LIDING FEE SCALE
s -OST INSURANCE � (-/�S ACCEPTED
s /HIO -EDICAID APPROVED

Welcoming
students,
staff &amp; community

Operated by Wirt County Health Services Association, Inc.

60509849

Call Us
Today!
Proud to Serve
Meigs, Mason &amp;
Gallia Counties
Portable Toilet Rental &amp; Septic Tank Cleaning
� ��� ��� ���� s ��� ��� ����

No Job Too BIG or small

60511418

s (OME COOKED MEALS FRESH DAILY
s &amp;AMILY !TMOSPHERE
s &amp;RIENDLY COUNTRY SETTING
25 YEARS
IN MEIGS
s #ATERING SERVICE AVAILABLE
COUNTY
s &amp;AMOUS (OMEMADE PIES
CELEBRATING

Open 7 days a week/6 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Turn at caution light on Co. Rd. 5

We’re specialists in comparing insurance
companies and rates for busy people. We’ll search
products offered by top companies, like Grange,
and review them with you when you’re ready. Call
us at 740.992.3381 or visit us at
simmonsmusserwarner.com.

60509906

Mi l l i e’s Resta ura nt

60509955

The Best Zero Turn Mower Built in the USA!

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
Sales • Service • Parts • Pick Up • Delivery

740-992-2975 • 740-508-1936

*See store for details

Manning K. Roush, Flip &amp; Butch
owner

Proud to have sold Gravely for 37 Years

60509916

L UNCH A LONG T HE R IVER
1st Wednesday of Each Month
April - September
11am - 1pm
Dave Diles Park
Delivery Available
740-591-6095 740-416-2247
Hosted by
The Middleport Community Association

Need to advertise?
Call

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

60509931

ATTENTION!

WE NOW OFFER INTEREST FREE EASY FINANCING*

����� "RADBURY 2D� s -IDDLEPORT /(
740-992-7713

60509927

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
JUNE 17, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Spurs beat Heat 104-87 to win NBA title
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Tim
Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony
Parker, the winningest trio in NBA
postseason history, shared hugs.
Players wrapped themselves in
flags from around world, a reminder
that the San Antonio Spurs look far
beyond the border to build champions, as confetti fell from above.
Painfully denied 12 months ago by
the Miami Heat, this victory party
was worth the wait.
“It makes last year OK,” Duncan
said.
The Spurs finished off a dominant
run to their fifth NBA championship
Sunday night, ending the Heat’s twoyear title reign with a 104-87 victory
that wrapped up the series in five
games.
“We had a great first quarter, but
from that point on they were the better team, and that’s why they’re the
Jerry Lodriguss | Philadelphia Inquire | KRT photo champions in 2014,” said LeBron
The Padres’ Tony Gwynn acknowledges the crowd as he is James, who led the Heat with 31
honored by the Philles in a pre-game ceremony on Thursday, points and 10 rebounds.
August 9, 2001.

Al Diaz | Miami Herald | MCT

The San Antonio Spurs celebrate with the NBA Championship Larry O’Brien trophy
after defeating the Miami Heat, 104-87, in Game 5 of the NBA Finals at the AT&amp;T
Center in San Antonio, Texas, on Sunday.

Tony Gwynn,
sweet-swinging
‘Mr. Padre,’ dies at 54
SAN DIEGO (AP) —
Tony Gwynn, the Hall of
Famer with a sweet lefthanded swing who spent
his entire 20-year career
with the Padres and was
one of the game’s greatest hitters, died of cancer
Monday. He was 54.
Gwynn, a craftsman at
the plate and winner of
eight batting titles, was
nicknamed “Mr. Padre”
and was one of the most
beloved athletes in San Diego.
He attributed his oral
cancer to years of chewing
tobacco. He had been on
a medical leave since late
March from his job as baseball coach at San Diego
State, his alma mater. He
died at a hospital in suburban Poway, agent John
Boggs said.
“He was in a tough battle
and the thing I can critique is he’s definitely in a
better place,” Boggs told
The Associated Press. “He
suffered a lot. He battled.
That’s probably the best
way I can describe his fight
against this illness he had,
and he was courageous until the end.”
In a rarity in pro sports,
Gwynn played his whole

career with the Padres,
choosing to stay rather
than leaving for bigger paychecks elsewhere. His terrific hand-eye coordination
made him one of the game’s
greatest contact hitters. He
had 3,141 hits, a career
.338 average and won eight
NL batting titles. He excelled at hitting singles the
other way, through the “5.5
hole” between third base
and shortstop.
Gwynn’s wife, Alicia,
and other family members
were at his side when he
died, Boggs said.
Gwynn’s son, Tony Jr.,
was in Philadelphia, where
he plays for the Phillies.
“Today I lost my Dad,
my best friend and my
mentor,” Gwynn Jr. tweeted. “I’m gonna miss u so
much pops. I’m gonna do
everything in my power
to continue to … Make u
proud!”
Gwynn had two operations for cancer in his right
cheek between August
2010 and February 2012.
The second surgery was
complicated, with surgeons
removing a facial nerve because it was intertwined
with a tumor inside his
See GWYNN | 10

OVP Sports Briefs
Camp scholarship opportunit
available to local girls
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
and Marjorie Evans would like to make high school girls
who reside in Gallia and Meigs aware of an opportunity
to apply for full and partial scholarships to attend Rio’s
overnight basketball camp.
The camp, which is directed by long-time Rio Grande
women’s basketball head coach David Smalley, is scheduled for July 6-9.
Evans, a Rio Grande College alum and a retired school
teacher, has generously sponsored an endowment in memory of her late husband, D. Wayne Evans. The endowment
will provide one full and several additional basketball
camp scholarship opportunities for high school girls at
each high school in both Gallia and Meigs counties.
To be considered for the scholarship program, campers simply need to complete the online application form,
which can be found on the women’s basketball page of the
University of Rio Grande’s athletic website (www.rioredstorm.com). Applicants can click on the “D. Wayne Evans
Camp Scholarship” tab at the top of the page and the application will be forwarded directly to Smalley.
Evans, an avid local sports fan, understands the importance of extracurricular activities for high school girls.
Through the establishment of the scholarship program,
she is hoping to support area high school girls who have
established a balance of academics, servant leadership
qualities and financial need.
For more information, contact Smalley by phone at 740245-7491 or by e-mail at dsmalley@rio.edu
2014 Frank Capehart Tri-County
Junior Golf League
The schedule for the 2014 Frank Capehart Tri County
Junior Golf League has been released. The tour will begin play this season on June 16 at the Hidden Valley Golf
Course in Point Pleasant. The age groups are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
Trophies are awarded each week to the first and second place winners in each age group. All participants receive weekly points according to their position in their
age group. A man/woman of the year is determined at the
See BRIEFS | 8

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Southern defenders Tristen Wolfe, left, and Zac Beegle (5) scramble to recover a fumble during the second half of a
Week 3 football game against Belpre in Racine.

OVP Story #5: Regional runs
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Regionals are most commonly known as the Sweet
16 — meaning that there are only 16 teams left playing in a certain division or classification.
It’s also the step between the start of a postseason
and qualifying for state, and it usually follows a title
in either a sectional or district tournament.
It is — from a certain standpoint athletically —
like knocking on Heaven’s door.
The Ohio Valley Publishing area had numerous athletes come within striking distance of a state berth
this past school year, and a handful of those accomplished athletes went on to fulfill that dream. You will
also be reading about a majority of those state qualifiers throughout the rest of this week.
But, as for now, the fifth-best story to come from
the OVP tri-county area this school year simply revolves around all the young men and women that —
for a moment at least — were within reach of obtaining a dream trip to a state competition.
There were 15 teams and 98 individuals that made
their way out of the first round of the postseason this
year, which made for some thrilling postseason moments for several communities within the area.
Wahama managed a double-dip this spring after
advancing to regionals in both baseball and softball,
Point Pleasant sophomore Karissa Cochran releases a while Point Pleasant did the same in both baseball
pitch during an April 11 contest against Logan at Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

See REGIONAL | 10

Kaymer in class of his own in 8-shot US Open rout
PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) — They
could’ve given Martin Kaymer the
trophy before the weekend the way
he ripped through Pinehurst No. 2
like he was playing the local muni.
Certainly, they could’ve had the
ceremony on Saturday, after he
shook off five bogeys to maintain a
commanding lead at the U.S. Open.
By the time the USGA got around
to handing Kaymer his hardware in
the fading sunlight Sunday evening,
this felt like a coronation that had
been delayed far too long.
That’s how dominant Kaymer was.
He played his own event.
Everyone else was in the second
flight.
With a performance reminiscent of
Rory McIlroy’s domination at Congressional and Tiger Woods’ romp
around Pebble Beach, Kaymer blew
away the field in the sandhills of
North Carolina, on a course that was
as tough as advertised — for everyone except the 29-year-old German.
Kaymer closed out his eight-stroke
victory with a 1-under 69, the only
player in the final eight groups to
break par. He finished at 9-under 271

overall; only two other guys managed
to get into the red, Erik Compton
and Rickie Fowler, tied for second
but nowhere close to winning.
“I knew we were playing for second,” said Compton, a two-time,
heart-transplant recipient who drew
some of the loudest cheers of the
week.
Compton was inspiring.
Kaymer was dominant.
With a win last month at The
Players Championship — a de facto
major — and his rout at Pinehurst,
Kaymer has resoundingly reclaimed
his place as one of the game’s top
players.
He was in that spot not so long ago
after winning the 2010 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits and moving up to No. 1 in the world rankings
early the next year. Despite his success, he felt something in his game
was missing, the sort of all-around
repertoire he would need to stay on
top. He had always been successful
with the fade, working the ball from
left to right, but knew he needed a
draw to round things out.
The change was a slow, tedious

process, resulting in a winless streak
that stretched over 29 tournaments
and 18 months.
Now able to work the ball in both
directions, he was back on top at
Sawgrass.
Then he made a mockery of Pinehurst.
“You want to win majors in your
career, but if you can win one more,
it means so much more,” Kaymer
said. “When I went through that low,
they called me the one-hit wonder
and those things. … It’s quite satisfying to have two under your belt.”
Kaymer opened with back-to-back
65s, his 10-under score the lowest
ever at the Open through 36 holes.
He struggled a bit in the third round,
settling for a 72 in much tougher conditions, but that was good enough to
take a five-stroke lead to the closing
round.
The finale was nothing more than
a formality.
“He kind of killed the event in the
first two days,” said Henrik Stenson,
among those who tied for fourth at
281. “He went out and shot two 65s
and left everyone in the dust.”

�Tuesday, June 17, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
County Paving Project –
ROUND 27 will be received by
the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The
Meigs County Courthouse, 100
E. Second Street, Suite 301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
11:10 A.M., June 26, 2014,
and then at 11:10 A.M. at said
office opened and read aloud.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
County Paving Project –
ROUND 27 will be received by
the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The
Meigs County Courthouse, 100
E. Second Street, Suite 301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
11:10 A.M., June 26, 2014,
and then at 11:10 A.M. at said
office opened and read aloud.
LEGALS

Professional Services

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured
• Experienced
• References Available

60508241

Sealed proposals for the
County Paving Project –
ROUND 27 will be received by
the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The
Meigs County Courthouse, 100
E. Second Street, Suite 301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
11:10 A.M., June 26, 2014,
and then at 11:10 A.M. at said
office opened and read aloud.

Gary Stanley

Resurfacing portions of CR 10
Dexter RD, CR 10 Carpenter
Hill RD and CR 4 Bowles RD.
The engineer’s estimate for
this project is $478,354.00
Miscellaneous
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

Resurfacing portions of CR 10
Dexter RD,LEGALS
CR 10 Carpenter
Hill RD and CR 4 Bowles RD.
The engineer’s estimate for
this project is $478,354.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
cashiers check, or irrevocable
letter of credit upon a solvent
bank in the amount of not less
Are You Still Paying Too Much
Bid documents may be sethan 10% of the bid amount in
For Your Medications?
cured at the office of The
the favor of the aforesaid
You can save up to 93% when you
fill
your
Meigs County Engineer, 34110 Meigs County Commissioner.
prescriptions at our Canadian
and
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Bid bonds shall be accompanPromotional
International Pharmacy Service.
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
ied by Proof of Authority of the
Packages
ice
r
P
r
FOR 12 signing
MONTHS the
Ou
for a $10.00
official or agent
Get An Extra740-992-2911
$10 Off
Starting
At...
for Hopper
Celecoxib
non-refundable
fee.
bond. Notoreligible
iPad mini offer
&amp; Free Shipping
On

mo

$64.00

Your 1st Order!

Generic equivalent
of CelebrexTM.
Generic price for
200mg x 100
compared to

CelebrexTM $679.41
Typical US brand price
for 200mg x 100

bid $10
must be accompanCall the number below and Each
save an additional
byprescription
either a bid bond in the
plus get free shipping on ied
your first
order with Canada Drug
Expires of the bid with a
fullCenter.
amount
December 31, 2014. Offersurety
is valid for prescription
satisfactory to the aforeorders only and can not be used in conjunction with
said
Meigs
any other offers. Valid for new
customers
only. One County Commistime use per household. sioner or by certified check,

Bids shall beUpgrade
sealed andto
marked as Bid for: County
Paving Project – Round 27 and
mailed or delivered to:

DISH
TODAY!

Meigs County Commissioners

cashiers check, or irrevocable
The Meigs County Courthouse
Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
Use code 10FREEletter
to receive
of credit upon a solvent
100 E. Second Street, Suite
NOW
this special offer. bank in the amount CALL
of not less
301

than 10% of the bid SAVE
amountUP
in TO
Pomeroy,
50%! Ohio 45769.
the favor of the aforesaid
(06),10,17
Meigs
County
Commissioner.
Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Bid bonds shall be accompanUse of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0114
ied by Proof of Authority
of the
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
official or agent signing the
bond.

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.

1-800-734-5524

YOU CAN SAVE
Try a Little
Bids shall be sealed and
®
AN ADDITIONAL
marked as Bid for: County
TENDERNESS
Paving
Project
–
Round
27
and
$5 PER MONTH
mailed or delivered to:

FOR 12 MONTHS WITH ENTERTAINMENT AND ABOVE.

Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite
301
Per Mo For 12 Mos. After Instant
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Rebate With 24-mo. Agreement
ORDER
(06),10,17
NOW AND
LOCK IN 2
YEARS OF
SAVINGS

DON’T WAIT

CALL NOW!

CHOICE™ AND ABOVE.

800-903-2155
ALL DIRECTV OFFERS REQUIRE
24-MONTH AGREEMENT.** Offer ends 7/23/14

Is Credit Card Debt
driving you batty?

PLUS, 4 More

Burgers FREE!

The Favorite Gift
2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins
4 (4 oz.) Boneless Pork Chops
4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers
4 Stuffed Baked Potatoes
4 Caramel Apple Tartlets

49377MSL

4999

Reg. $154.00 | Now Only... $

FIX YOUR COMPUTER NOW!
We’ll Repair
Your Computer
Through The
Internet!

Lower your monthly payments
Reduce or eliminate interest rates

Affordable Rates
For Home
&amp; Business

FREE

SOLUTIONS FOR:

Call:(800)908-6923

Limit 2. Your 4 (4 oz.) burgers will ship
free per address and must ship with
The Favorite Gift (49377). Not valid
with other offers. Standard S&amp;H will be
applied per address. Expires 6/30/14.
©2014 OCG | 20180 | Omaha Steaks, Inc.

Call 1-800-712-4684 and ask for 49377MSL
www.OmahaSteaks.com/father01

Let Consolidated Credit Help You:

Take the first easy step:

Perfect for FATHER’S DAY

Slow Computers
E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Spyware &amp; Viruses
Mobile Device Training

Call Now For
Immediate Help

2500

$

OFF SERVICE
MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

Resurfacing portions of CR 10
Dexter RD, CR 10 Carpenter
Hill RD and CR 4 Bowles RD.
The engineer’s estimate for
this project is $478,354.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Bid documents
may be seLEGALS
cured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
cashiers check, or irrevocable
letter of credit upon a solvent
bank in the amount of not less
than 10% of the bid amount in
the favor of the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioner.
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: County
Paving Project – Round 27 and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite
301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
(06),10,17
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
County Paving Project –
ROUND 28 will be received by
the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The
Meigs County Courthouse, 100
E. Second Street, Suite 301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
11:15 A.M., June 26, 2014,
and then at 11:15 A.M. at said
office opened and read aloud.
Resurfacing portions of CR
25A Charles Chancey Drive,
CR 10 Carpenter Hill RD, CR
32 Eagle Ridge RD, and CR
18 Kingsbury RD. The engineer’s estimate for this project is
$531,611.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN SECTION 153.011
OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS PROJECT.
COPIES OF SECTION
153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The
Meigs County Engineer, 34110
Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769; Phone Number
740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the
full amount of the bid with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check,
cashiers check, or irrevocable
letter of credit upon a solvent
bank in the amount of not less
than 10% of the bid amount in
the favor of the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioner.
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: County
Paving Project – Round 28 and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite
301
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.(06),10,17
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

Notices

Help Wanted General
Chief Executive Officer

*******************
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

WCHSA, a federally qualified
health center located in Elizabeth, WV is seeking a visionary leader to serve as CEO.
The ideal Candidate must have
a Bachelor’s Degree (Master’s
Degree preferred) preferably in
Public Health Administration,
Business or related field and at
least 5 years in a senior management position in a health
care organization. This individual will also need excellent
leadership and communication
qualities and be capable of
leading a diverse staff and volunteer board. Organizational
development strategic planning, fundraising and grant
writing knowledge is critical, as
is the ability to oversee the financial viability of the organization. Experience in federal program management or clinical
program supervision is also
preferred. Develops and maintains relationships with community leaders, local government officials and other business entities with relation to
the organization. Competitive
salary and comprehensive benefits provided. EOE
Deadline to apply is Monday
June 23, 2014
Please send the following
Cover Letter, Resume, List of
References

Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Wanted Driver - Starting $9.00
hr, Part-time to Full-time. Must
have knowledge of Gallia Co &amp;
S.E part of Oh. Must be a
people person, Will be certified in CPR &amp; First Aid, DVM
and BCI Background - Must be
23yrs or older Send resume to
4528 St Rt 850 Bidwell,Ohio
45614
Help Wanted General
WANTED: Part-time worker
needed to assist individuals
with developmental disabilities
in Bidwell: 27.5 hrs: 3:30-11pm
Fri; 10am-7pm Sat; 2-11pm
Sun. High school degree/GED,
valid driver's license and three
years good driving experience
required. $9.50/hr after training. Send resume to: Buckeye
Community Services, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640; or
email: beyecserv.yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants:
6/20/14 Pre-employment drug
testing. Equal Opportunity Employer. For more information:
buckeyecommunityservices.org

Service &amp; Support Administrator wanted. Bachelor's degree
in Human Services related field
required, prefer experience
working with individuals with
developmental disabilities,
families and agencies; developing coordinating and monitoring individualized service
plans. Position requires strong
written and verbal skills. Send
resume by June 30th to:
Meigs county Board of Developmental Disabilities
P.O. Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779

To: Cheryl Davis
HR Coordinator
WCHSA
P.O. Box 609
Elizabeth, WV 26143
Or email to
cdavis@wchsa.com
Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking an instructor for its office and medical office administration programs. Applicants
must have experience in office
administrative applications including medical office, computerized medical manager, and
keyboarding skills. Send resumes to director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite 312,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Liquid Asphalt Drivers Needed.
Must be at least 21 years old.
Have a clean MVR. Class A
CDL.
With Tanker Endorsement and
Hazemat with TWIC.
1-800-598-6122
Need market research participants with access to a Cadillac, Buick, or Chevrolet
vehicle to evaluate local establishments. Apply FREE:
Shop.BestMark.com or call
800-969-8477
Part-Time Mobile X-Ray Tech
needed for Pt. Pleasant and
surrounding area. Send resume to:
postbanking@qualitymobileimaging.com
Part-Time Site Manager. Pt.
Pleasant area. Multifamily apt.
complex. Tax credit knowledge a plus but not necessary.
ADA/EOE Fax resumes To:
(866)579-6151 or email:
jrhoads@pisonmanagement.co
m
VACANCY: Information Technology Instructor of Interactive
Media. Certifiable as Information Technology or Comprehensive Business Instructor.
CONTACT: Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD
(740) 245-5334, Ext. 256. EEO
The Olive Township is looking
for a full-time general road
maintenance employee. Experienced equipment operator
with CDL liscense preferred.
Please send resume or letter
of interest with qualifications
to:
President, William Osborne
53497 St Rt 681
Reedsville, OH 45772
by Monday June 30, 2014
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
3 Bdrm / 2 bath - 23 Dewitt
Drive - (Rodney) 740-709-1446

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Briefs
From Page 6
of the first four weeks of play based on the points accumulated.
The final event of the year is a “ Fun Day “ where handicaps are used to determine the winning scores for that
day. The final day scores will also be used to break any
ties that may exist after the first 4 weeks.
The tournaments, courses and dates of play are as follows :
1. Monday, June 16, at Hidden Valley Golf Course in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
2. **At Meigs County Golf Course in Pomeroy, Ohio.
3. Monday, June 30, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis, Ohio.
4. Monday, July 7, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason,
W.Va.
5. Monday, July 14, at Hidden Valley Golf Course in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
** — Day of the week not yet determined. Will be announced ASAP.
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player. A small
lunch is included with the fee and will be served at the
conclusion of play each week. Registration begins at 8:30
a.m. with play starting at 9 a.m.
League officials are looking for sponsors to cover the
cost of the weekly trophies. Please contact one of the
following if you can contribute or have questions concerning the tour. Jeff Slone (740) 256-6160, Jan Haddox
(304) 675-3388 or Bob Blessing (304) 675-6135.
Kiwanis junior golf tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Golf Club will
be hosting the sixth annual Kiwanis juniors at Cliffside
golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18 on Thursday, July
10, at 1 p.m. The competitors will be divided into age
groups of 9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and 16-18 and there is a fee.
Awards will be presented to the top three golfers in each
age group. Spectators are allowed, while hole sponsors
and volunteers are needed. To enter please contact the
clubhouse at (740) 446-4653 or Ed Caudill at (740) 2455919 or (740) 645-4381.
GAHS Athletic HOF meeting
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia Academy is currently accepting nominations for the GAHS Athletic Hall of Fame
Class of 2014 from now until Friday, July 18. Individuals
may obtain HOF application forms from the school website. Boys applications will be accepted for any athlete
who played prior to the 1991-92 season, while the girls
are accepting applications from any athlete who played

prior to the 1995-96 campaign. The 2014 HOF ceremonies will be held on Friday, Oct. 3, before the start of
the home football contest against Belfry, with the awards
banquet happening the following night at GAHS.
2014 URG soccer camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
soccer programs have announced their 2014 summer
camp schedule.
Residential team camps for middle school squads and
for high school teams from West Virginia are scheduled
for June 15-19. Cost is $305. The camps fall during the
three-week, out-of-season workout period for prep programs from the Mountain State.
A team camp for girls’ high school squads is planned
for July 6-9, with a boys’ high school team camp slated
for July 13-17. Cost for the girls’ camp is $270, while the
boys’ camp has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential camps include lodging, meals,
training sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are URG men’s soccer head coach
Scott Morrissey, men’s assistant coach Tony Daniels and
Rio women’s soccer head coach Callum Morris.
The camp brochure is available on the men’s soccer
link of the school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.
com. Online registration and payment is available at
www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms should be mailed to URG Lyne Center, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks should
be made payable to Scott Morrissey.
For more information, contact Morrissey at (740) 2457126, (740) 645-6438 or e-mail scottm@rio.edu; Daniels
at (740) 245-7493, (740) 645-0377 or e-mail tdaniels@
rio.edu; or Morris at (740) 853-2639 or cmorris@rio.
edu.
URG men’s basketball camp/shootouts
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
men’s basketball program has announced its extensive
summer camp schedule for 2014.
Coaches who would like to bring both their varsity and
junior varsity teams can do so during shootouts scheduled for June 19-20. Cost is $170 and teams will again
receive at least four games. Efforts will be made to avoid
conflicting game times.
All games for the team shootouts will take place inside the Lyne Center, using both the upper (Newt Oliver
Arena) and lower gyms. A coaches hospitality room will
also be available.
There will also be a shooting camp for both boys
and girls, age 8-18, June 16-18, from 9 a.m.-noon

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WPBY)
13 (WOWK)

6 PM
WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6
Global 3000

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
Eyewitness ABC World
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening
at 6 p.m.
News
The Big Bang Two and a
Theory
Half Men
BBC World Nightly
News:
Business
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening
6:00 p.m.
News

6 PM

CABLE

6:30

6:30

TUESDAY, JUNE 17
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Fortune
Modern
The Big Bang
Family
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

America's Got Talent "Audition" The audition process
The Night Shift "Grace
continues around the country. (N)
Under Fire" (N)
America's Got Talent "Audition" The audition process
The Night Shift "Grace
continues around the country. (N)
Under Fire" (N)
Jimmy
NBA
NBA Basketball Playoffs San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat
Kimmel Live Countdwn (L) Final Game 6 Site: American Airlines Arena (L)
A Simple Piece of Paper
American Experience "Freedom Riders" The Freedom
Adoptees access their
Riders risked everything to demonstrate the unfairness of
original birth certificates.
segregation laws.
Jimmy
NBA
NBA Basketball Playoffs San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat
Kimmel Live Countdwn (L) Final Game 6 Site: American Airlines Arena (L)
NCIS "Monsters and Men" NCIS: Los Angeles "Tuhon" Person of Interest "Lethe"
Family Guy

Brooklyn 99 New Girl
"Pilot"
Burning Springs
NCIS "Monsters and Men"

8 PM

The Mindy
Project
Moving
Monument

Eyewitness News at 10
Rev. Leon
Sullivan

Soul of The
Senate

NCIS: Los Angeles "Tuhon" Person of Interest "Lethe"

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Miami Marlins Site: Marlins Park -- Miami, Fla. (L)
Met Mother Met Mother
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L) Postgame
Beer Money
24 (FXSP) Access
25 (ESPN) (5:30) FIFA Soccer World Cup Rus./Kor. (L)
NCAA Baseball Division I Tournament World Series Site: TD Ameritrade Park (L)
26 (ESPN2) SportsCenter
SportsCenter The day's news in the world of sports.
World Cup Tonight (L)
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)

Little Women: LA "The 'M' Little Women: LA "Little
Little Women: LA "Who Do Little Women: LA "The Ex- Little Women: LA
Word"
Women, Big Drama"
You Think You Are"
Factor" (N)
Chasing Life "Pilot"
Pretty Little Liars "EscApe Pretty Little Liars "Whirly Chasing Life "Help
Pretty Little Liars "Whirly
From New York"
Girlie" (N)
Wanted" (N)
Girlie"
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Lucas Black. An American
Law Abiding Citizen (‘09, Cri) Jamie Foxx. A man wages a deadly
avoiding jail time gets drawn into the world of drift racing in Tokyo. TV14 war on the justice system after his family's murderers are set free. TVMA
Thunder.
Sam &amp; Cat
Sam &amp; Cat
Webheads
News (N)
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Penetration" SVU "Merchandise"
SVU "Funny Valentine"
Royal Pains (N)
House (N)
House (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Town Hall "Hillary Clinton's Hard Choices"
Rizzoli "Just Push Play"
Rizzoli "Food for Thought" Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli "A New Day" (N)
Perception "Paris" (SP) (N)
(4:30)
X-Men (‘00,
Ghostbusters (‘84, Com) Sigourney Weaver, Bill Murray. Three
Ghostbusters II (‘89, Com)
Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman. TV14 parapsychologists open a ghost removal business in New York. TVPG
Sigourney Weaver, Bill Murray. TVPG
Deadly Catch "Lost at Sea" Deadliest Catch
Catch "Miracle on Ice" (N) Deadliest Catch (N)
Siberian Cut "Civil War" (N)
Shipping
Shipping
S. Wars "The Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Shipping
Shipping
Wars
Wars
Gutfather"
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Bigfoot "Caught on Tape" Monsters "Killer Mysteries" Wild Russia "Siberia"
Wild Russia "Primorye"
Wild Russia "Arctic"
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls Club "Seeing
Bad Girls Club
Tattoos After Bad Girls Club Seven 'bad' Bad Girls
Redd"
"Reddemption" (N)
Dark (N)
girls live under one roof.
Club
Law &amp; Order "Hate"
Law &amp; Order "Ramparts"
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
(5:00)
The Craft TVMA E! News (N)
Kardash "Color Me Lonely" THS "The Kardashians"
THS "Reality Ex Wives"
(:20) Rose. "Homecoming" Roseanne
(:35) Rose.
(:10) Rose.
(:50) Who'sB? (:25) Who's the Boss?
King-Queens King-Queens
Wicked Tuna "The
The Savage Line "Wild Boar Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Life Below Zero "Breaking
Reckoning"
Rampage"
"Madman Manhunt"
"Smell of Death"
Point"
(5:30) FB Talk Fight
Mixed Martial Arts World Series of Fighting
Mixed Martial Arts World Series of Fighting
America's Pre-game (L)
WPT Poker Alpha8
MLB 162 (N) BackShop (N) Pecos Lg
Pecos Lg (N) MLB Whiparound (L)
Modern Marvels "The
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "New Pawn "Dam Top Gear "80's Power" (N) The Hunt "Night Stalker"
World's Fastest"
Old Man"
Good Time"
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
Kandi's Wedding
The Real Housewives (N)
The People's Couch (N)
106 &amp; Park (N)
RealHusband RealHusband RealHusband RealHusband Being "Storm Advisory"
Being "Mixed Messages"
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop House Hunt. House (N)
(5:00)
Resident Evil
Priest Paul Bettany. While disobeying church laws, a priest Wil Wheaton Wil Wheaton Heroes of Cosplay "Wizard
Milla Jovovich. TVM
hunts down vampires who have kidnapped his niece. TVPG Project (N)
Project
World Portland 2014" (N)

6 PM

PREMIUM

400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

(5:30) Real

Man of Steel (2013, Action) Amy Adams, Michael Shannon, Henry Game of Thrones "The
(:15) Vice
(:45) Last
Time With
Week
Children" Tyrion sees the
Cavill. An alien raised as a human confronts members of his race who
Bill Maher
Tonight
have come to claim Earth. TV14
truth of his situation.
(5:15)
Two for the
(:20)
Top Gun (1986, Action) Kelly McGillis, Val
(:15)
My Super Ex-Girlfriend (‘06, Com) Luke Wilson,
Money (‘05, Dra) Al Pacino. Kilmer, Tom Cruise. Personal tragedy leads a cocky,
Uma Thurman. A girl who happens to have superpowers
TVMA
undisciplined navy pilot to reassess his career. TVPG
destroys a guy's life because he broke up with her. TV14
(5:30) The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Nurse Jackie Californica- The Last Exorcism Part II (‘13, Hor) Ashley Penny Dreadful "What
"Sidecars and tion "Dinner Bell. As Nell attempts to rebuild her life, the Death Can Join Together"
Part 2 The Volturi are in uproar upon
learning of the birth Edward &amp; Bella's chi... Spermicide" With Friends" evil force returns with a horrific plan. TV14

Houses For Sale

Apartments/Townhouses

Brick Ranch, 52 acres +/-,
central air, fireplace, 2 BR 1
BA, Large kitchen, dining
room, living room, and family
room, utility room, possible 3rd
BR, well and city water, outbuilding and barn built 1980,
Longhollow Rd 9/10 mile off rt
2 call 937-748-2073 or 304674-1945

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Immaculate 2 BR apt. in country, new carpet and cabinets.
Freshly painted, appliances,
W/D hook-ups, water/trash
paid. Beautiful country setting,
only 10 minutes from town.
Must see to appreciate
$425/mo 614-595-7773
or740-645-5953
MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE,
Brand New Spacious Gargage
Apt. Lg covered front Porch &amp;
back Deck. $400/month Rent,
$50/month Sewage, Water,
Trash, 1st month &amp; Dep. Ref.
Req. NO PETS 740-578-6830

Enjoy fishing, boating or a
beautiful view of the river? This
property is for you. New 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, hardwood
floors, stainless appliances,
large porches and decks. Owner financing available.
$169,000 740-861-0110 or
740-256-1686
Nice 2 yr old 3-Bdrm &amp; 2 1/2
bath home / lg detached Garage $110,000.00 Seller pays
closing cost - No Down-payment if Qualified 1-740-4469966
Apartments/Townhouses
1 Bedroom Apt. for Rent 740446-0390

Apartments/Townhouses
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
One Br house. Must See inside! appl. w/d hookup Deposit &amp; References. $400. Nancy
675-4024 or 675-0799
Homestead Realty Broker
Rentals
FOR RENT: 2 br, 2 bath, all
electric mobile home. Spring
Valley area. $480/mo plus
$480 deposit. 740-446-4400
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

each day. Cost is $60 per camper.
The crown jewel of the camp schedule is the annual
Hard Work Camp, which is scheduled for Sunday, June
22-Friday, June 27. The individual camp is for boys only,
age 10-16.
Cost is $200 for commuters and $285 for overnight
campers. Fees include lodging, meals, awards, a reversible camp jersey and a camp t-shirt.
The camp emphasizes offensive and defensive fundamentals, team play and work ethic. It also features “The
Triple”, the only triple-elimination tournament in the
country, which begins around noon on the 26th and concludes in the early morning hours of the 27th.
The awards ceremony, in which parents are encouraged to attend, is scheduled for Friday, June 27, from
9:30-11 a.m., and will conclude the camp.
Online registration for all of the camps is available
through the men’s basketball link on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration forms are
also available in the lobby of the Lyne Center during
regular business hours.
Registration forms should be mailed to Rio Grande
Men’s Basketball, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made payable to Big Red Basketball
Camp.
For more information, contact French at (740) 2457294, 1-800-282-7201 (ext. 7294), or send e-mail to
kfrench@rio.edu.
2014 URG volleyball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
will host its 2014 Summer Volleyball Camp, June 29-July
1, at the Lyne Center on the URG campus.
The camp is open to girls in grades 6-12. There will
be two divisions for campers – grade 6-8 and grade 9-12.
Campers will receive instruction in fundamentals and
various drills from a staff that will include a former AllAmerican, as well as All-Ohio and Player of the Year honorees and NAIA national leaders in their area of specialty.
Campers will also be divided into teams for tournament play to conclude the camp.
Cost is $200 per camper, which includes overnight
lodging, meals and awards.
Registration forms and a camp schedule is available on
the volleyball link of the school’s athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and a $100 deposit should be
mailed to Billina Donaldson, Volleyball Coach, P.O. Box
500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be made payable to Billina Donaldson Volleyball Camp.
For questions or concerns, call Donaldson at (740)
988-6497 or send e-mail to billinad@rio.edu.
URG women’s basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande’s
2014 Women’s Basketball Camp is scheduled for July 6-9
at the Lyne Center on the URG campus.
The overnight instructional camp is open to girls in
grades 4-12. Cost is $275 per camper, which includes
lodging, meals, a certificate of participation and a t-shirt.
Campers will also receive 24-hour supervision from
coaches and counselors; lecture/discussion groups
and film sessions; daily instruction on shooting, ballhandling, post play and defense; and use of the school’s
swimming pool.
There will also be a camp store featuring drinks,
snacks, pizza and Rio Grande apparel for sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s basketball head coach
David Smalley, who ranks among the top 10 coaches on
the active wins list with more than 400, will be the camp
director.
Online registration is available through the women’s
basketball link on the school’s athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com. Registration forms are available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center during regular business hours.
Registration forms should be mailed to David Smalley,
Rio Grande Women’s Basketball Camp, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be made payable to
Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact Smalley at (740) 2457491, 1-800-282-7201, or send e-mail to dsmalley@rio.
edu.
URG distance running camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande
Track &amp; Field program will host its 2014 Distance Camp,
July 6-10, on the URG campus.
The objective of the camp is to increase the standards
and knowledge of distance running and to provide current knowledge in techniques that will result in life-long
benefits.
Campers will hear from a number of guest speakers.
Long-time Rio Grande track &amp; field/cross country
head coach Bob Willey will be the camp director. Willey
has over 40 years of coaching at the collegiate level and
has fostered a program of more than 100 cross country/
track &amp; field All-Americans.
Cost is $250 per runner, which includes room, meals
and recreation facilities. A $25 discount is available to
members of a school with five or more athletes attending. A $25 deposit is required with the return of a camp
application, with the balance payable on the participant’s
arrival at camp.
On-site registration will take place on Sunday, July 6,
from 1-1:30 p.m., at Bob Evans Farm Hall on the URG
campus.
Registration forms and the camp brochure are available on the track &amp; field and cross country links of the
school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and the non-refundable deposit
should be mailed to URG Lyne Center, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be made payable to
Coach Bob Willey.
Deadline for early registration is July 1.
For questions or concerns, send e-mail to rwilley@rio.
edu or call (740) 245-7487.

Motorcycles

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

2004 Honda Goldwing $10,000
- 43,000 miles lots of extras on
and off the bike. Also have a
1973 Honda CB350F $1,000
Needs carburetor work Call
740-441-0638 ask for Harold.

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!
1-800-734-5524

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE
Burgers - The Family Value
Combo - Only $39.99.
ORDER Today
1-888-721-9573,
use code 48643XMD - or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9

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

ANNUITY.COM
Guaranteed Income For Your
Retirement
Avoid market risk &amp; get guaranteed income in retirement!
CALL for FREE copy of our
SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus
Annuity
Quotes from A-Rated
companies! 800-423-0676
CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call
1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off
your prescription and free
shipping.

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.
FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping.
Nationwide Service.
$29.95/Month CALL Medical
Guardian Today
855-850-9105
MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386
We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washers, also old cars
and scrap metal. Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341

UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
DONATE YOUR CAR - FAST
FREE TOWING
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION
Providing Free Mammograms
&amp; Breast Cancer Info
888-928-2362
Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

�Tuesday, June 17, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel

Page 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

7
2
1 3 4
2
8
4
3 8
4 6
7
9
9
6
6 1 3
5
4
2

By Hilary Price

8
6
3 7
6
7

6/17

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

By Bil and Jeff Keane

Make the Switch to DISH Today
and Save Up To 50%
Call Now and Ask How!

1-800-401-1670
All offers require 24-month commitment and credit qualification.Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST
Promo Code: MB0913 *Offer subject to change based on premium movie channel availability

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Promotional
prices
ly ...
starting at on

FREE

OVER 30 PREMIUM
MOVIE CHANNELS

mo.

ths
for 12 monHo
pper
Not eligible wi2 th
or iPad offer.

For 3 months.*

2014 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Gwynn
From Page 6
right cheek. They grafted
a nerve from Gwynn’s neck
to help him eventually regain facial movement.
Gwynn had said he believed the cancer was from
chewing tobacco.
Gwynn had been in and
out of the hospital and had
spent time in a rehab facility, Boggs said.
“For more than 30 years,
Tony Gwynn was a source
of universal goodwill in
the national pastime, and
he will be deeply missed
by the many people he
touched,” Commissioner
Bud Selig said.

Gwynn was last with
his San Diego State team
on March 25 before beginning a leave of absence.
His Aztecs rallied around
a Gwynn bobblehead doll
they would set near the
bat rack during games,
winning the Mountain
West Conference tournament and advancing to the
NCAA regionals.
Last week, SDSU announced it was extending
Gwynn’s contract one season.
San Francisco Giants
third base coach Tim Flannery, who played with
Gwynn and then coached
him with the Padres, said

he’ll “remember the cackle
to his laugh. He was always laughing, always talking, always happy.”
“The baseball world is
going to miss one of the
greats, and the world itself
is going to miss one of the
great men of mankind,”
Flannery said. “He cared
so much for other people.
He had a work ethic unlike
anybody else, and had a
childlike demeanor of playing the game just because
he loved it so much.”
Gwynn played in the
Padres’ only two World
Series and was a 15-time
All-Star.
He homered off the fa-

cade at Yankee Stadium
off San Diego native David Wells in Game 1 of
the 1998 World Series and
scored the winning run in
the 1994 All-Star Game.
He was hitting .394 when
a players’ strike ended the
1994 season, denying him
a shot at becoming the first
player to hit .400 since San
Diego native Ted Williams
hit .406 in 1941.
Gwynn befriended Williams and the two loved to
talk about hitting. Gwynn
steadied Williams when he
threw out the ceremonial
first pitch before the 1999
All-Star Game at Boston’s
Fenway Park.
Gwynn retired after the
2001 season. He and Cal
Ripken Jr. — who spent
his entire career with the
Baltimore Orioles — were
inducted into the Hall of

Fame in the class of 2007.
A wreath was being placed
around his plaque in the
Hall of Fame on Monday.
Also in 2007, the Padres
unveiled a bronze statue of
Gwynn on a grassy hill just
beyond the outfield wall at
Petco Park. While Gwynn
was still with the Padres,
then-owner John Moores
donated $4 million to San
Diego State for a new baseball stadium that bears the
Hall of Famer’s name.
Gwynn was a two-sport
star at San Diego State in
the late 1970s and early
1980s, playing point guard
for the basketball team —
he still holds the game,
season and career record
for assists — and outfielder for the baseball team.
Gwynn always wanted
to play in the NBA, until
realizing during his final
®

Special Financing
Available!*
DEM

ONE

TOD O
A
Y!

IS® 600Z Regional

Outstanding Value
and Productivity

STARTING AS LOW AS

4,999†

$

48" cut

ST. RT. 7 &amp; POMEROY PIKE • CHESTER, OH
www.baumlumber.com

(740) 985-3302

Mon. - Fri.: 8am - 5pm • Sat.: 8am - 4pm
*Subject to credit approval. Minimum monthly payments required. See store for details.
† All loans subject to approval. Tax, set-up, and delivery fees not included. Models
subject to change without notice.

60513504

Do You Have A

Patriotic Pet?
It is time to start submitting your

Patriotic Pet photos!!

We will be accepting photos
of your Patriotic Pets from
June 2 to June 15.
All photos must be
submitted via email to:
home@homenatlbank.com.
All entries will be posted to the
Home National Bank Facebook
page on June 16, 2014

Voting will be

June 16 through June 30.
The entry with the most number of
“LIKES” will be the winner.
We will be awarding prizes to the 3
pets with the most “LIKES”.

60512769

60509993

RACINE
740-949-2210
SYRACUSE
740-992-6333

“Why I love my job in advertising...
Our programs are the best of the best!
There are many reasons why I love my job with Civitas Media.
Those that stand out are the exciting special programs and contests
that keep us motivated through friendly competition.
Our Summer Stimulus program is the best of the best. It has all the components that a
great revenue manager and leader loves! We combine great products and discounts for
our customers, along with competition among the Civitas team, the opportunity to
earn additional $$$ and the fabulous Summit of Success annual trip. You couldn’t ask
for more!
At the summit of success annual trip we felt like royalty, giving us the
opportunity to meet and get to know fellow members of other sales teams,
managers, revenue leaders and even CEO Michael Bush!! The enthusiasm and
knowledge we gained was priceless.”

-- Sherri Sattler
To begin your career in advertising
or advertising sales management
either locally or at locations in
eleven other states,
please contact Greg Sweet at
gsweet@civitasmedia.com

year at San Diego State
that baseball would be the
ticket to the pros.
“I had no idea that all
the things in my career
were going to happen,”
he said shortly before being inducted into the Hall
of Fame. “I sure didn’t see
it. I just know the good
Lord blessed me with ability, blessed me with good
eyesight and a good pair of
hands, and then I worked
at the rest.”
He was a third-round
draft pick of the Padres in
1981.
After spending parts of
just two seasons in the minor leagues, he made his
big league debut on July
19, 1982. Gwynn had two
hits that night, including a
double, against the Philadelphia Phillies. After doubling, Pete Rose, who had
been trailing the play, said
to Gwynn: “Hey, kid, what
are you trying to do, catch
me in one night?”
Gwynn also is survived
by a daughter, Anisha.

From Page 6
and softball in Class AAA.
The Lady Knights — who
advanced to their ninth
straight regional tournament in softball — were the
only program to get past
the semifinal round of play.
Both schools qualified
for the football playoffs
and also had athletes score
regional points at both the
boys and girls state track
meets, while the Hannan
boys also managed to score
at the regional track meet.
The Big Blacks and White
Falcons also had multiple
scorers at the regional wrestling meet.
Eastern got a regional
berth from its girls basketball program and the girls
track and cross country
teams also mustered district team championships
on their way to regionals
as well. All three of those
programs also enjoyed program-bests later on at the
state level.
The Southern football
team also qualified for its
first-ever playoffs this year
in Division VII, which
helped Meigs County become the only county in the
OVP area to have all of its
schools qualify for the football postseason.
Ohio Valley Christian
has four varsity sports, and
all four were involved in a
regional playoff contest in
some manner. Boys and
girls basketball both came
away with regional titles
this winter, while the soccer team also captured a
regional title in the fall.
The Gallia Academy golf
program advanced to its
school-best sixth straight
district competition, but
the Blue Devils did not
have anyone advance to the
state level for the first time
in four seasons. The Blue
Angels cross country team
also advanced to regionals
as a team.
Individually, there were
four regional qualifiers for
cross country, 58 regional
advancees for track and
field, 26 regional qualifiers
for wrestling and 10 more
district competitors for
swimming.
It made for a lot of work
and a lot more travel on
our end of things, but it
also made for some terrific stories and even better
memories — particularly
for those who were directly
involved in each of these accomplishments.

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="258">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="7682">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="8150">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="8149">
              <text>June 17, 2014</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="856">
      <name>barcus</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="237">
      <name>glenn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1372">
      <name>higginbotham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="178">
      <name>lambert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="674">
      <name>ohlinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="32">
      <name>powell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
