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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE

WEATHER

SPORTS

Today in
history
... Page 4

Partly sunny.
High near 87. Low
around 65... Page 2

Local sports
action... Page 6

OBITUARIES
Arbana Gleim, 71
Tracy F. Hysell, 50
Irene L. Lewis, 71

Freda Meenach, 85
Violet Louise Neal, 72
Timothy Payne Jr., 30
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 105

Discussion continues on director position

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — A heated
discussion on whether to hire an
economic development director,
who to hire, who has the authority by law to hire, and whether
the village can actually afford to
fill the position, took place at a
special meeting of Middleport
Village Council on Monday night.
The position was established
by Council several weeks ago after five months of discussion and
following a letter of application
last fall from Fred Hoffman, of
Middleport, for a position which

at that time did not exist asking that he be employed by the
village as an economic development director.
Over the past several years,
Mayor Michael Gerlach, as a part
of his position as mayor, has voluntarily done the village’s grant
writing at no additional cost to
the village, bringing in thousands of dollars for programs
and projects.
This spring, by a majority
vote of council, the position of
economic development was established, and last month newspaper advertising was published
for applicants for the 20 hour a

week job, at a salary of $15 an
hour. There were two applicants.
Fred Hoffman was one of them.
Maria Shaefer, of Middleport,
was the other applicant
At Monday night’s meeting, Susan Baker, village clerk/
financial officer, reported on
expenditures of the year and
the adverse financial impact of
adding a new position on village
finances. According to a section
of the Ohio Revised Code read at
the meeting, if the mayor, as the
legislative authority, authorizes
anything that is financially detrimental to the village, then he
bears the fault.

A lively discussion between
the mayor and council members
evolved over the position, and the
legislative and judicial interpretations of the law as to who has
the legal authority to make the
decision on new employees. Gerlach, again referred to the Ohio
Revised Code as it pertains to executive power and the right to appoint using legislative authority.
At that point Councilman
Douglas Dixon countered with,
“We have the authority, not you.”
Gerlach responded, “The Ohio
Revised Code is the final authority.”
Roger Manley said the ordinance passed by Council states,

“… shall be hired by council.”
Dixon said he was told by the
village solicitor, Mick Barr, that
Council members make the decision. Again, Gerlach cited the
Ohio Revised Code as the final
authority.
Baker again reminded members of the lack of money for a
new employee. Asked by Councilman Richard Vaughan why
she shows a lack of money, she
responded that her reports show
where every penny is spent.
Vaughan’s reply to her response
was, “No, no,no.”
The meeting adjourned without any action being taken.

Health hazards
of hot weather
A word from the Meigs
County Health Department
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

AT LEFT, the London Pool of Syracuse Village added this Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant lift to their pool for the use of disabled
pool patrons. AT RIGHT, the slides are a popular attraction to poolgoers, said London Pool of Syracuse Village Manager Ashley Deem.

London Pool proves a great place to beat the heat
SYRACUSE — On these hot
summer days, the London Pool
of Syracuse Village is packed with
those looking for a place to cool off.
In order to accommodate new
patrons, the pool has recently purchased new equipment.
According to Wendy Egan, head
of the Pool Committee and Syracuse Village Council member, in
the last five years major equipment
purchases have included new eightfoot fencing around the pool area,
a new diving board that cost more
than $2,000 to replace the previously cracked one and a chlorinator. The village of Syracuse paid
for $4,700 of the fencing cost, and
the remaining $12,000 was funded
through a distress grant, she said.
Purchases to comply with unfunded federal mandates include a drain
cover for wading pool, purchased
in 2013 (to comply with Virginia
Graeme Baker Act) for $19.99, a
Safety Vacuum Release System
(SVRS), 2013 (to comply with Virginia Graeme Baker Act) for $549
and an Americans With Disabilities
Act-Compliant lift chair and cover,
purchased in 2013 for $3,350.
“There was a family going
around to pools and hotels (in the
United States) and suing all the
pools that didn’t have (disability
equipment) a few years ago,” pool
manager Ashley Deem said. “We
got the chair so the family wouldn’t
come around and sue us.”
She said the chair has come in
handy, and has been used by one
pool patron multiple times. The

chair has a strap that is placed
around its user, and is lowered very
slowly into the water so any user
with a disability may easily enter
the pool.
The large water slide structure
became new London Pool equipment in 2012 and was a work in
progress until about the time it
opened in 2013, Deem said. A lifeguard watches the slide at all times,
and it has become a popular attraction for the only public pool in
Meigs County. The slide is partially
funded by ODNR grant and donations between 2012 and 2013, Egan
said. A lightning detector was purchased in 2013 for $78 in order to
upgrade the pool.
The pool also acquired new rescue tubes in 2013 and 2014 and a
new lifeguard chair to replace an
outdated one. It was first used May
25, 2013, in order to make the pool
a safer place to swim. The chair
was purchased for $1,662. Other
equipment purchased to replace
outdated equipment included a
pump for the main pool, purchased
in 2013 for $4,222 and a cash register, purchased in 2014 for $199.
Egan said that there is nothing
budgeted for the pool currently, although both pools will need to be
resurfaced because the fiberglass
coating is starting to fail. The pool
will also need an operable commercial microwave, new working
chairs, tables and benches, repaired
and replaced concrete, bathroom This new lifeguard chair, made by Tailwind
fixtures and life jackets for custom- Furniture, allows lifeguards a better view of
the pool surroundings for safety.
er’s use.

POMEROY — Summer is the perfect time
for fun-loving activities and a care-free lifestyle.
But, said Frank Gorscak, emergency response coordinator at the Meigs County
Health Department, preparedness plays a major role in enjoying the weather and the festivities — and staying healthy.
In his list for “Summer Preparedness,”
Gorscak suggests limited sun exposure, wearing light-colored, cotton clothing, limiting time
with exposed skin under summer sunlight, using sunscreens and sun blocker, and wearing
sunglasses with UV protection.
Practice good hydration, he said, by drinking plenty of cool water, limiting large quantities of caffeinated- and alcohol-containing
beverages, and exercising in the mornings or
evenings when it’s cooler.
For a cooler home interior, he says if you
have air conditioning, use it. If you have fans,
use them since moving air is cooler air. Do not
leave your refrigerator door open because this
practice will only make the room hotter, and
don’t be surprised by the unexpected heat of
summer — prepare for it.
Gorscak noted Meigs Health Public Health
Emergency Responses, which kicks in when necessary. He spoke of summer weather problems that
have occurred in Meigs County in recent years.
“First, September 2010: A tornado went
through the area from Eden Ridge down 124
to Reedsville causing great damage to over 40
homes, farms and businesses,” Gorscak said.
“The Meigs County Health Department responded by sending its BlueMed Response Shelter to
Eden Ridge and establishing it as a command
center for recovery operations. We also set up
our mobile vaccination trailer in a central location to perform Tetanus vaccinations and distribute water to those affected citizens in need.
“Secondly, late June 2012: A derecho wind
storm tore through the county, leaving families
without electric power for a week and wind
damage from the storm’s impact,” he said.
The Meigs County Health Department responded by making sure the generator was
working and cooling the health department
building. Then, working with the Meigs Senior
Center, a cooling spot was established for families in the senior center. Also, working with
the Meigs EMA and FEMA, water and ice was
distributed to the local VFDs and to families
in need until the electric power was restored.
“We’ve had an ‘all-hazards’ emergency response plan for a decade now. We’ve learned
it, practiced it, edited it and used it,” Gorscak
said. “It’s been used for flu outbreaks, mass
vaccinations, tornado recovery and wind recovery — and it works.”
Preparation and planning works, so stay cool
this summer by being prepared, Gorscak said.

OhioHealth Wound Care Recognized with national awards
ATHENS — The OhioHealth
Wound Care has earned the Robert
Warriner III, M.D. Center of Excellence Award, as well as a Center of
Distinction Award by Healogics Inc.,
the nation’s largest provider of advanced wound care services in the
United States.
According to a release issued by
Sydney Webber, director of marketing and communication for Ohio
Health O’Bleness Hospital, chronic
wounds are those that won’t heal after four weeks, can greatly diminish
quality of life, put a limb in jeopardy
of amputation and be life-threatening.
They can occur in patients with diabetic ulcers and poor circulation or

as a result of injury, trauma, surgery
or burns. OhioHealth Wound Care
has a team of physicians and nurses
who specialize in the comprehensive care of problem wounds and use
the most up-to-date approaches to
wound care. Because treating chronic wound often requires treating the
whole body, the center often involves
primary care physicians and other
care experts in its treatment plans.
“We have been working toward the
Robert A. Warriner III, M.D. Center
of Excellence Award since we opened
in March of 2010” said Anna Riley,
RN, program director and clinical
coordinator at OhioHealth Wound
Care. “I am extremely proud of this
group of nurses and physicians. They

really do go beyond expectations to
ensure quality outcomes for our patients.”
To be awarded the Robert A. Warriner III, M.D. Center of Excellence
Award and a Center of Distinction
Award, hospital wound care centers
must achieve a patient satisfaction
rate of 92 percent or higher, a healing
rate of 91 percent or higher and an
outlier rate of 19 percent or less all in
a median of 30 days or less.
OhioHealth Wound Care has taken this a step further and exceeded
these rates, reaching a patient satisfaction level of 96 percent, a healing
rate of 93 percent, an outlier rate of
11 percent and a median of 27 days
to heal.

Submitted photo

OhioHealth Wound Care was recently recognized with national awards for clinical excellence. Pictured left to right, front
row, Anna Riley, RN, Program Director; Arren McDonald, LPN;
Kristen VanMatre, RN; Kristin McGee, RN; back row, Jacqueline Lather, DNP, CNP; Earl Driggs, DPM; Stenneth Adams, MD;
John Ortman, MD; Carl Ortman, MD; Krista Duval, DO; and
Mark Rothstein, MD, Medical Director.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Community Calendar

Today: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly
sunny, with a high near 87. Calm wind becoming southwest 5 to 7 mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is
50 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an
inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tonight: A chance of showers and thunderstorms,
mainly before midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around
65. Light northwest wind. Chance of precipitation is 30
percent.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Northwest wind 5 to 8 mph.
Thursday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 60.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81.

Thursday, July 3
CHESTER —Chester Shade Historical Association, annual meeting,
7 p.m. at the Academy

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 55.21
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.65
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 109.21
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.98
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 50.64
BorgWarner (NYSE) —66.08
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 16.01
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.350
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.26
Collins (NYSE) — 79.24
DuPont (NYSE) — 65.41
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.34
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.40
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 70.33
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 57.57
Kroger (NYSE) — 49.53
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 60.16
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 102.55
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.61
BBT (NYSE) — 39.74

Monday, July 7
POMEROY — Pomeroy Village
Council will meet in special session
at 6 p.m. to review/interview applicants for the vacant council seat.
POMEROY — The Meigs County

Cancer Initiative, Inc. (MCCI)will
meet at noon in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health Department. New members are welcome.
For more information, contact Courtney Midkiff at 740-992-6626 (Monday through Friday 8 a.m.-4 p.m.).
RACINE — Southern Local Board
of Education will meet in special session on Monday, July 7 at 6:30 pm in
the high school media center.

Thursday, July 10
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge
453 will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.

Meigs County Church Calendar
Church Homecoming
POMEROY — The Mount Union Baptist Church will
have its homecopming on July 13. There will be a dinner
at noon followed at 1:30 p.m. by special singing by the
Graceman Quartet.

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 27.27
Pepsico (NYSE) — 89.13
Premier (NASDAQ) — 16.34
Rockwell (NYSE) — 125.69
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.27
Royal Dutch Shell — 82.79
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 40.41
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.28
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.65
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.69
Worthington (NYSE) — 43.76
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions July 1, 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.

Tuesday, July 8
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Board of Health will meet at 5 p.m.
in the conference room of the Meigs
Cunty Health Department which is
located at 112 E.; Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy.

Bible Schools
POMEROY — The New Beginnings United Methodist
Church will sponsor a Vacation Bible School for youth, 3
through 12. Beginning July 1 and continuing every Tuesday in July, it will be held at the Mulberry Community
Center. Theme will be “Weird Animals.” Children are
invited to come at noon for a nutritiiouis lunch at the
Mulberry Country Kitchen and then join in the music,
stories, crafts, games and learning about Jesus who loves
them.
MIDDLEPORT —Vacation Bible School will be held
at the First Baptist Church of Middleport, 211 South
Sixth Ave., on July 7-11 from 6 to 8:30 p.m. This year’s
VBS will be “God’s Backyard Bible Camp under the
Stars,” where kids have a blast serving Jesus. The kids

will learn about service — serving family, friends and
neighbors, serving community, and most of all, serving
Jesus. All lessons are taken from scripture. There will
also be singing, crafts, games, and snacks. Anyone desiring more information, call 740-992-1121. All children
are welcome.
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
Friday, July 4
MIDDLEPORT — The float from Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion,
will be leading the Middleport Parade on
July 4.
The participating Post members are
asked to wear their uniforms if possible
and meet at the Annex prior to 4:45 p.m.
or the Middleport Dairy Queen by 5:30

p.m. Any other area veterans are invited
to join the Post members on the parade
float.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Masonic
Lodge 363 will be serving dinners in the
basement of the lodge hall at 288 N. Second St. in Middleport from 4-8 p.m. July
4. The food is from Honey Creek Barbecue
and a $10 donation is being requested.

Board retires from Kyger Creek

60517665

Robert E. Board Jr., an
operating supervisor at the
Ohio Valley Electric Corp.’s

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Middle "The The
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Motive "Raw Deal"

Big Brother (N)

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"Persuasion"

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Secrets of the Dead "Bones
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CSI: Crime Scene "De Los
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18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
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Funniest Home Videos
Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng Rules of Eng
Weekly (N) Beer Money Beer Money Reds Weekly MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at San Diego Padres
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Boston Red Sox Site: Fenway Park -- Boston, Mass. (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
ESPN FC "World Cup Encore"
Boxing Friday Night Fights Farenas vs. Davis (L)
Abby's Studio Rescue
Little Women: LA "The Ex- Little Women: LA "Movin' Little Women: LA "She's
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"Abby Meets Her Match"
Factor"
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"Abby to the Rescue"
Melissa &amp;
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Mystery Girls YoungHuYoung and Mystery Girls
Beetlejuice A newly deceased couple tries to drive
away the obnoxious new owners of their house. TV14
Joey
Joey
ngry "Pilot" Hungry (N) (N)
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Liar
Cops "Coast Cops
Cops
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops
to Coast"
to Coast"
Liar #5"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
SpongeBob Thunder.
Sam &amp; Cat
Webheads
Full House
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Law &amp; Order: SVU "Torch" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Paternity"
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Seinfeld
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Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer
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A. Bourdain "Mexico City" A. Bourdain "Colombia"
Castle
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Castle "Little Girl Lost"
Castle
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(5:45)
Jaws: The Revenge (‘87, Hor)
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Jaws (1975, Horror) Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Roy Scheider. A great (:45)
Lance Guest, Lorraine Gary. TV14
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Survival "Mayan Mayhem" Survival "On the Edge"
Survival "End of the Road" Dual Survival: Untamed (N)
Duck
Big Smo
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Wahlburgers "4th of July
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(:40) Big Smo
Dynasty
"Less is Smo" Dynasty
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Special"
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Treeh. "Canopy Clubhouse" Treeh. "Treetop Taphouse" Treehouse Masters
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She's All That An athlete bets his friend that he can Bad Girls Club "A Diamond Bad Girls Club "Rapper's
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Anonymous"
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Law &amp; Order "Dissonance" Law &amp; Order "Standoff"
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LawOrder "Burn Baby Burn" Law &amp; Order "Amends"
Kardash "Color Me Lonely" E! News (N)
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(5:00) Miracle Landing on
Drugs, Inc. "Windy City
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the Hudson
High"
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Tour de France Preview
Cycling 2013 Tour de France Stage 17 Embrun - Chorges Tour de France Preview
America's Pre-game (L)
UFC 162
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(5:00) Journey to 10,000 BC American Pickers "Pinch
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Million Dollar Mistake"
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Million "Reunion Part Two" The Real Housewives
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Lockout A man must save the President's daughter
Alien III (‘92, Sci-Fi) Sigourney Weaver. Ripley continues to be
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War of the Worlds (‘05, Act) Dakota Fanning, Tom
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ape on a mysterious island. TV14
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during the following year.
In 1990, he was promoted
to a unit supervisor and
in 1997, to an assistant
shift operating engineer. In
2011 he became an operating supervisor.
Board and his wife,
Lucinda, reside in Point
Pleasant.

For the Record

10:30

America's Got Talent "Audition" The auditions continue
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America's Got Talent "Audition" The auditions continue
around the country. (N)
Middle "The The
Modern Fam The
Drop Off"
Goldbergs
"First Days" Goldbergs
Nature "Salmon: Running
Nova "The Ghosts of
the Gauntlet"
Murdered Kings"
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"First Days" Goldbergs
Criminal Minds
"Persuasion"
You Can Dance "Top 20 Perform" The Top 20 finalists, 10
guys and 10 girls, will perform live for the first time. (N)
Nature "Salmon: Running
Nova "The Ghosts of
the Gauntlet"
Murdered Kings"

Kyger Creek Plant, retired
June 1 with 35 years of service with the company, as
announced by G. Annette
Hope, plant manager.
Board joined Kyger
Creek in 1979 and was
promoted to an auxiliary
equipment operator in the
operations
department

10:30

The Counselor (2013, Drama) Penélope Cruz, Michael
Fassbender, Cameron Diaz. After entering the drug scene, a
lawyer finds he's bitten off more than he can chew. TVMA
(:15)
Warm Bodies (‘13, Com) Teresa Palmer,
Nicholas Hoult. Julie finds herself in a strange new series of
events when she is saved by a zombie. TVPG
60 Minutes Sports
Californica- Nurse Jackie
tion "Grace" "Flight"

Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

Common Pleas Court Civil: An act of foreclosure has
been filed by Urban Financial Group against Dorothy C.
Greene.
Common Pleas Court Domestic: An act of dissolution
has been filed by Van S. Counts and Paula J. Counts.
Common Pleas Court Civil: An act of delinquent land
tax has been filed by the Meigs County Treasurer against
Jack L. Ervin and Joyce Ervin.

Racine’s traditional
July 4 celebration
RACINE — Racine’s
annual Fourth of July celebration will kick off at 10
a.m. Friday with a parade
through, followed with a
chicken barbecue by the
Racine firemen and an ice
cream social by the Auxiliary at the fire station with
serving to begin at 11 a.m.

Entries in the parade will
assemble at the high school
and from there will go down
Third Street, through town,
up Fifth and back to the
school. They will make a
stop at the Home National
Bank for a flag raising.
The traditional fireworks
display will held at 10 p.m.

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�Wednesday, July 2, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Measles outbreak complicates two big Amish events
SHILOH, Ohio (AP) —
Visitors from around the
world to two upcoming
events in Ohio’s Amish
country could come away
with more than they bargained for, health officials
fear — a case of measles
from the nation’s largest
outbreak in two decades.
The outbreak, with more
than 360 cases, started after Amish travelers to the
Philippines
contracted
measles this year and returned home to rural Knox
County, where it spread
thanks to a lower rate of
vaccination among the
Amish and the difficulty
public health authorities
had in getting the word
out to largely rural communities where phones
are few and the Internet is
nonexistent.
Health officials believe
the outbreak is slowing in
Ohio thanks to vaccination clinics and door-todoor visits by public health
nurses. But Horse Progress Days, an international
showcase of horse-drawn
equipment scheduled for
Friday and Saturday, is expected to draw more than
20,000 Amish and others
from around the globe.
And a large annual auction
that raises money to help
Amish families pay medical bills for children with
birth defects is scheduled
for Saturday.
Authorities are trying to
spread education — and
vaccination.
“Very easily someone
could come for these

events, be exposed to
someone who didn’t know
that they were sick, and
travel home, and start another outbreak in another
community somewhere in
the United States or overseas,” said Dr. D.J. McFadden, health commissioner
in Holmes County, site of
Horse Progress Days and
home to one of the country’s largest Amish populations.
The county has 54 cases
of measles and one hospitalization. Most of its
Amish were already vaccinated before the outbreak,
McFadden said.
Symptoms of measles,
which is caused by a virus,
include fevers, coughs,
rashes and pinkeye. Before
widespread vaccinations in
the U.S. beginning in the
1950s, 450 to 500 people
died each year, 48,000
were hospitalized and
nearly a thousand people
suffered brain damage or
deafness. Though nearly
eradicated in the United
States, measles remains
common in many parts of
Asia, the Pacific and Africa.
The Amish eschew
many conveniences of
modern life. Their religion
does not prevent them
from seeking vaccinations,
but because their children
don’t attend traditional
public schools, vaccinations are not required and
therefore not routine.
For Amish who aren’t
vaccinated, Ohio health
officials say, reasons in-

clude religious objections,
unwillingness to shoulder
the cost because they don’t
have insurance, and not
seeing the need for a disease that isn’t common.
Outreach efforts to deliver vaccinations and
education have been hampered by communication
— few Amish have phones
— transportation and the
strapped resources of rural counties without big
health departments, said
Richland County public
health nurse Sue McFarren.
But when they’re contacted, most Amish have
cooperated, she said. Officials have distributed
about 10,500 vaccines in
Ohio, about half in Holmes
County in central Ohio.
The other affected areas
are mostly, but not all,
nearby — in Crawford,
Ashland, Coshocton, Highland, Holmes, Richland,
Stark and Wayne counties.
“They have been excellent about quarantining
themselves,”
McFarren
said. “If they have a case,
they stay home until it’s
run its course.”
Amish dairy farmer
Daniel Weaver got a vaccination during a clinic at
a pole barn near Shiloh in
northern Ohio on July 25,
concerned because he travels often.
“The Amish in general are not reacting that
much differently than the
rest of the population,”
said Weaver, 48, of nearby
Shreve. “It’s just because of

AP Photo

A horse and buggy arrive for the Health and Safety clinic that included measles, mumps and
rubella vaccinations for the Mennonite community of Richland County in Shiloh, Ohio. Health
officials said Ohio’s current outbreak of measles consists of more than 360 cases and is the
biggest in the U.S. since 1994. The outbreak started after Amish travelers to the Philippines
contracted measles this year and returned home to rural Knox County.

our tight proximity, it creates a different effect.”
Several
Mennonite
families visited the same
clinic, arriving one after
the other in horse-drawn
buggies with fluorescent
orange triangles affixed to
the rear. These “horse-andbuggy” Mennonites live
a lifestyle similar to some
Amish, though many have
phones and other modern
conveniences.
Mennonite dairy farmer
Samuel Zimmerman, who
got his vaccine after hearing about the outbreak,
said he’d never really had
an opinion about vaccines
before.
“I guess when I was

growing up we were hale
and hardy, and we didn’t
think about vaccinations,”
said Zimmerman, 36, of
Blooming Grove.
Organizers of Horse
Progress days said they are
distributing letters to international visitors warning them of potential measles exposure. Past events
have drawn non-Amish
from countries including Australia, Colombia,
Germany, Mexico, South
Africa, Sweden and New
Zealand.
Posters will provide information about measles
and encourage people with
symptoms to go home, and
a hospital will provide free

vaccinations Friday, general coordinator Daniel
Wengerd said.
Saturday’s auction for
the Ohio Crippled Children’s Fund is being held
at the Kidron Auction
House in Wayne County.
An auctioneer there said
he wasn’t familiar with officials’ concerns.
The Ohio outbreak is the
biggest in the U.S. since
1994. Overall, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention are tracking 529 cases in 20 states,
with the next biggest outbreaks in California and
New York, none of which
involve the Amish.

Ex-Sen. Baker remembered
for crossing the aisle
HUNTSVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Former
Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr. was remembered Tuesday for his ability to bridge political divides in Washington while also establishing the Republican
Party as a statewide force in Tennessee.
The Republican’s 18-year tenure in the
Senate drew accolades from both sides of
the aisle. Baker, who died Thursday at age
88, is known for cutting to the core of the
1973 Watergate hearings when he asked of
then-President Richard Nixon: “What did
the president know and when did he know
it?”
Republican U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander
eulogized his former boss at a funeral at
the First Presbyterian Church in the former Senate majority leader’s rural hometown of Huntsville on the Cumberland
Plateau near the Kentucky state line.
Alexander described Baker as an “eloquent listener” and “the great conciliator”
for his ability to gather disputing senators
into a room, listen for a while, “then his
summary of the discussion would become
the senators’ agreement.”
By the time Nixon resigned in 1974,
Baker was a household name with a reputation for fairness and smarts that stuck
throughout a long political career. Besides
Senate majority leader from 1981 to 1985,
he later became chief of staff to President
Ronald Reagan and one of the GOP’s elder
statesmen.
Vice President Joe Biden, who attended
the service, said in an op-ed in the Knoxville News Sentinel, “He was honorable,
he was tough, and he was fair — traits
that served him well as he took on two of
the most challenging jobs in Washington.”
Dignitaries attending the funeral included former Vice President Al Gore, Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada,

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, and Tennessee Gov. Bill
Haslam.
As for Baker’s skillful listening, Alexander recalled statements Baker made in
2011.
“There is a difference between hearing
and understanding what people say,” he
quoted Baker. “You don’t have to agree, but
you have to hear what they’ve got to say.
And if you do, the chances are much better
you’ll be able to translate that into a useful
position and even useful leadership.”
Alexander noted that when Baker was
first elected to the Senate, Republicans
had largely been confined to the eastern
part of the state. He lauded Baker’s ability
to spot talent, like his former Watergate
aide Fred Thompson, whom Alexander
eventually succeeded in the Senate.
Baker was to be buried next to his first
wife, Joy Dirksen Baker, in a cemetery a
few hundred feet from the home he was
born. Three years after the death of his
first wife from cancer in 1993, Baker married Kansas Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, who was about to retire from the
Senate after serving three terms. It was
the first time two people who had served
in the Senate had gotten married.
Rep. John J. “Jimmy” Duncan Jr., a
Knoxville Republican, remembered Baker
first giving him the opportunity to speak
at a rally toward the end of Baker’s first
successful election to the Senate. He said
he has tried to emulate
“To me his legacy is he was the champion of civility in politics,” he said. “Today
we have too many people on both sides
who are angry. There’s a lot of good people on both sides in these political battles,
and always thought you could express you
opinions without attacking people.”

Members of the different branches of
the military stand
guard as the body
of former Tennessee Sen. Howard
Baker lies in state
at the The Howard
H. Baker, Jr. Center
for Public Policy on
Monday in Knoxville,
Tenn. He died June
26 at age 88. His funeral was scheduled
in Huntsville on
Tuesday.
AP Photo

Seven W.Va. Ethics Commission
members are reappointed
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — The West Virginia
Ethics Commission has
been reconstituted with
fewer members. But most
of them are familiar faces.
Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin
reappointed seven members to the commission on
Monday. The governor also
named two new members,
Karen Disibbio of Bluefield
and Larry Tweel of Huntington, media outlets reported.
A law approved this year
by the Legislature reduced
the commission’s members
from 12 to nine. The law
also established new requirements for the board’s
composition.
Board members must
include a former state
lawmaker; former officials
elected to a county, city
or school board position; a
representative from a rural
district; and four citizen
members. No more than
five commission members
can represent any political

party and no more than
four can be from the same
congressional district.
Members who were reappointed are: former State
Police
superintendent
and state Sen. Jack Buckalew, Morgantown lawyer
Monte Williams, former
Delegate Terry Walker of
Shepherdstown,
former
Secretary of State Betty
Ireland, former Logan
County school board member Robert Wolfe, Michael
Greer of Salem and Suzan
Singleton of Glen Dale.
Disibbio, Tweel, Walker,
Williams and Wolfe are
Democrats. Buckalew, Ireland and Greer are Republicans. Singleton is listed
as an Independent.
Greer was one of the
Ethics Commission’s original members in 1989.

Tomblin
appointed
Wolfe to serve as interim
chairman at the commission’s first meeting, which
has not been scheduled.
Wolfe said Tomblin’s
reappointment of seven
members will help give the
commission continuity.
“When you put all new
marbles into the game,
no one knows how they’ll
splatter,” Wolfe told The
Charleston Gazette (http://
bit.ly/1lPahLu ).
Rebecca Stepto, the commission’s interim executive
director, said the commission staff looks forward to
working with the new and
returning commissioners.
“We need them and we’re
glad that we have a new, full
commission,” Stepto told
the Charleston Daily Mail
(http://bit.ly/1iRB76D ).

www.mydailysentinel.com

60513513

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 2014

Political privilege
galls more than wealth
Bending over backward to avow that they’re not rich,
celebrity politicians are missing the point. It’s not wealth
ownership that turns off voters. It’s the political privilege
granted in today’s culture of cronyism.
Thanks to that privilege, beneficiaries can, and do, access outsized power, influence and exclusive opportunities for ambition and advancement — whether you wear
$2,500 shoes or, like Bill Clinton, $250 shoes.
We might laugh instinctively when Hillary Clinton insists she was “dead broke” after leaving the White House
and still isn’t “truly well off.” But it really is true that politics isn’t the best way to make the most money. Relative
to ambitious and talented people in the private sector, the
Clintons aren’t plutocrats.
Unfortunately, the reality is even worse. It’s embarrassing to see so many politicians eager to deflect populist
attacks against them misunderstand how to do it. As Hillary Clinton argued to the Guardian, populists “don’t see
(her) as part of the problem” because the Clintons “pay
ordinary income tax, unlike a lot of people who are truly
well off, not to name names; and we’ve done it through
dint of hard work.”
Left unspoken are the plum speaking fees both Clintons
command solely because of their partisan celebrity status;
the influential positions in corporate America obtained
solely because of their power position; or the gilded road
opened for Chelsea Clinton, whose top-shelf academic
credentials cannot account for her cushy job with NBC
news, where she was paid over half a million dollars for
sporadic work.
Americans can disagree over whether those kinds of
windfalls are inherently wrong. We should all agree, however, that there’s something especially corrupting about a
political culture that uses the trappings of power and fame
as a cash cow — the better to fund even further grabs for
power, and even greater celebrity.
It’s a lesson lost on Vice President Joe Biden, too. It’s
true that he’s not swimming in cash. Yet he really believes
he must tell people not to “hold it against” him that he
doesn’t own stock and only wears “mildly expensive”
suits. Meanwhile, his son R. Hunter Biden has been appointed to the board of directors of a Ukrainian natural
gas company.
Liberals are doing intellectual somersaults trying to simultaneously excuse and condemn this pattern of conduct
at the top of the Democratic Party. Of course, Republicans
aren’t immune, either. But Democrats’ efforts to capitalize on class envy and the rhetoric of “income inequality”
have focused so much on wealth that Republicans can now
swoop in to make the obvious point: Rich, poor or middle
class, if you use political office to secure a life of unparalleled privilege for yourself and your posterity, you’re worsening America’s corruption problem.

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

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject to editing, must
be signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters
will not be accepted for publication.

Learning to love, respect our flag
By Daris Howard
Some of the older men in our
community felt we scouts were not
performing our responsibilities in
handling the flag as respectfully as
we should. Therefore, just before the
Fourth of July, we found ourselves
in a meeting where a gentleman had
been invited to talk to us about it.
“Great!” Lenny quipped, looking
at the man who was waiting for his
turn to speak. “Just what I wanted to
be doing on a Tuesday night. Sitting
around and listening to some old guy
I don’t even know talk about the flag.
The flag just isn’t that big of a deal.”
We all nodded our heads in agreement. It was a beautiful, clear evening, just right to be swimming, or
playing baseball, or anything out of
doors — not the kind of day to be
spent in a meeting.
The man that was going to talk to
us really wasn’t that old; he was probably in his late 40s or early 50s, but
to teenage boys, that is ancient.
When it was his turn, he looked
at us and smiled. “You know, I can’t
instill in you a love for the flag and a
feeling of respect. I can only tell you
why I love it.” He then proceeded to
tell us a story that enthralled us.
As a young soldier, he had been assigned to the Philippines during the
beginning of World War II. That was
where he was when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. He described
how only a little more than a week
later the Japanese attacked the Philippines. With the United States’
ships destroyed, there was no means
to receive supplies, and within only
a few months, there was no option
except surrender.
He then described the Bataan

Death March, and what it was like to
watch many of his friends die from
disease, starvation, and the guns and
bayonets of the Japanese. He said
there were many times he wished he
could die too, rather than endure the
atrocities. When they reached their
destination, the camp they were interred in was not much better. Food
was scarce and less than adequate.
Many more died, and those who
lived seemed to lose hope. They
were not told of anything going on in
the outside world, and they began to
think they had been forgotten.
But after a couple of horrible years,
some British soldiers who had been
captured in fighting in Australia were
brought as prisoners to their camp.
Everyone learned from them that the
Allied forces were moving island by
island, and coming toward the Philippines. Excitement and hope soared
as the dream of possible deliverance
grew brighter. But then, just when
they could hear the bombardment
and knew the Allied forces were approaching, many of the prisoners
were loaded onto ships for transport
to prison camps in Japan.
They found themselves in the hot,
humid hold of a Japanese ship that
was full of foul smells that burned a
their eyes and choked their lungs.
They were packed so tightly that
they were forced to stand 24 hours
per day. As they heard the continuation of the bombardment from the
American planes everyone cheered,
even though they knew their own
ship could be inadvertently sunk
by a stray bomb. As the days grew
long, and more people grew sick
and died in their floating prison, when bombs would be heard
around them, some men would call
out, “Hit us! Hit us!” hoping to die

instead of endure any more.
When they reached the shores of
Japan, they were herded into a prison
camp where they found other emaciated inmates. They received very
little food or water, and disease and
death continued to be their constant
companions. However, after some
time, their treatment began to improve. Word was that it was because
the Japanese were beginning to fear
retribution as their loss in the war
seemed more and more imminent.
He told us about the day an American plane flew overhead and dropped
food into their camp. He said seeing the flag on the side of the plane
thrilled him as much as the food.
“But,” he added, “nothing will ever
compare to the day we saw a contingent of men approaching holding the
American flag.”
His voice choked as he continued.
“That flag symbolized the freedom I
had always taken for granted when I
was young, and had only learned to
cherish when it was no longer mine.
I will forever love it. I know you can
never feel the same as I do about it,
at least not unless you experience the
loss of your freedom that it stands
for. But I hope in some small way,
you can learn from those of us who
have been there how valuable that
freedom is and the flag that symbolizes it.”
And we did learn. And every time I
see that beautiful flag, I imagine myself imprisoned, and seeing it once
more, and I know I will never think
of it in the same way again. And even
more, I pray that it will wave free and
strong forever.
Daris Howard, award-winning, syndicated columnist, playwright and author, can be contacted
at daris@darishoward.com.

Today in history...
Today is Wednesday, July 2, the 183rd day of 2014.
There are 182 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed
into law a sweeping civil rights bill passed by Congress.
On this date:
In 1776, the Continental Congress passed a resolution saying that “these United Colonies are, and of right
ought to be, free and independent States.”
In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln signed a measure
establishing the National Statuary Hall inside the former
House Chamber of the U.S. Capitol.
In 1881, President James A. Garfield was shot by
Charles J. Guiteau at the Washington railroad station;
Garfield died the following September. (Guiteau was
hanged in June 1882.)
In 1926, the United States Army Air Corps was created.
In 1937, aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred
Noonan disappeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make the first round-the-world flight along
the equator.
In 1943, Bing Crosby and the Ken Darby Singers recorded “Sunday, Monday or Always” for Decca Records.
In 1961, author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to
death at his home in Ketchum, Idaho.
In 1979, the Susan B. Anthony dollar coin was released
to the public.
In 1982, Larry Walters of San Pedro, Calif., used a lawn
chair equipped with 45 helium-filled weather balloons to
rise to an altitude of 16,000 feet; he landed eight miles
away in Long Beach.
In 1994, a USAir DC-9 crashed in poor weather at
Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, killing 37 of the 57 people aboard. Colombian soccer
player Andres Escobar, 27, was shot to death in Medellin,
10 days after accidentally scoring a goal against his own
team in World Cup competition.
In 1999, former Northwestern University basketball

coach Ricky Byrdsong was shot to death in Skokie, Ill.;
authorities believe he was the victim of a three-day shooting rampage by white supremacist Benjamin Nathaniel
Smith that targeted minorities in Illinois and Indiana.
(One other person was killed and others wounded before
Smith committed suicide.) “Godfather” author Mario
Puzo died on Long Island, N.Y., at age 78.
Ten years ago: Elijah Brown, 21, described by police
as a disgruntled employee, went on a shooting rampage
inside a ConAgra Foods Inc. plant in Kansas City, Kan.,
killing five co-workers before taking his own life.
Five years ago: Thousands of U.S. Marines poured
into Taliban-controlled villages in southern Afghanistan in
the first major operation under President Barack Obama’s
strategy to stabilize the country. North Korea test-fired two
short-range missiles. The 35-nation International Atomic
Energy Agency chose Yukiya Amano of Japan as its next
head. Federal marshals took possession of disgraced financier Bernard Madoff’s $7 million Manhattan penthouse,
forcing Madoff’s wife, Ruth, to move elsewhere.
Today’s Birthdays: Former Philippine first lady
Imelda Marcos is 85. Jazz musician Ahmad Jamal is 84.
Actor Robert Ito is 83. Actress Polly Holliday is 77. Racing Hall of Famer Richard Petty is 77. Former White
House chief of staff John H. Sununu is 75. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox is 72. Writer-director-comedian Larry David is 67. Luci Baines Johnson, daughter of
President Lyndon B. Johnson, is 67. Actor Saul Rubinek
is 66. Rock musician Roy Bittan (Bruce Springsteen &amp;
the E Street Band) is 65. Rock musician Gene Taylor is
62. Actress-model Jerry Hall is 58. Actor Jimmy McNichol is 53. Country singer Guy Penrod is 51. Rock musician Dave Parsons (Bush) is 49. Actress Yancy Butler is
44. Contemporary Christian musician Melodee DeVevo
(Casting Crowns) is 38. Actor Owain Yeoman is 36. Race
car driver Sam Hornish Jr. is 35. Singer Michelle Branch
is 31. Actress Vanessa Lee Chester is 30. Figure skater
Johnny Weir is 30. Actress-singer Ashley Tisdale is 29.
Actress Lindsay Lohan is 28.

�Wednesday, July 2, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary

Page 5

Death Notices

TRACY FRANKLIN HYSELL
POMEROY — Tracy
Franklin Hysell, 50, of Lancaster, formerly of Pomeroy, died unexpectedly
Sunday, June 29, 2014.
Born Feb.y 25, 1964, in
Columbus, he was the son
of Grace Barrett Hysell and
the late Aaron “Bo” Hysell.
Tracy was a 1982 graduate of Meigs High School
and was in the U.S. Marine
Corp from 1982 through
1985. He was employed as
a carpenter.
Besides his mother, he
is survived by three sons,
Bobo Hysell, Justice and Jason Hysell-DeMoss; three
brothers, Toby Hysell,
Terry Hysell and Timothy

The Daily Sentinel

(Mary) Hysell; one sister,
Penny (Jeff) Wilson; several nieces and nephews;
and a special friend Connie
Collison.
Besides his father, he
was preceded in death by a
sister, Vicky Hysell.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Thursday, July 3,
2014, at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with
Pastor Steve Hayes officiating. Burial will be in Coy
Hill Cemetery in Danville,
where military services
will be conducted. Friends
may call at Ewing Funeral Home from 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday.

AP Photo

Houston police officers learn how to apply a tourniquet to a leg at the police academy in Houston. Cities
across the country are training and equipping police
officers to use tourniquets and combat gauze.

Tourniquets
make comeback
HOUSTON (AP) — Rushing into a Houston
home, police officer Austin Huckabee encountered a drunken, combative man bleeding profusely on the kitchen floor. He quickly realized
the blood was spurting in rhythm with the man’s
heart and cardiac arrest was just moments away.
Pulling a tourniquet from his belt, the former Army captain and his partner restrained
the man, wrapped the band around his arm and
twisted an attached rod to tighten it until the
bleeding stopped. Then Huckabee waited for
paramedics, knowing a life had been saved.
The tourniquet, one of the world’s oldest and
most easily used medical tools, is making a
comeback on American streets after more than
a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan showed
how a simple, 20-second procedure could save
lives.
Now law-enforcement agencies nationwide
are equipping officers with the blood-stanching
bands in an effort to duplicate that battlefield
success.
“The only silver lining that comes from any
war is improvements in medical care and specifically in trauma care,” said John Holcomb, director of the Memorial Hermann Texas Trauma Institute, who is leading the push to give Houston
police tourniquet kits.
Tourniquets fell out of favor during the Civil
War, when prolonged use invited amputation,
particularly for wounded men who lay on the
battlefield for days. Those fears lingered, and
tourniquets were rarely used, even in Vietnam.
Today, battlefields are often cleared in less than
an hour, Holcomb said, and doctors know how
little time they have to save both life and limb.
Instead of a cloth and metal, modern tourniquets feature Velcro and a plastic rod known
as a windlass. But the basic operating principle
has not changed since the Civil War: The device
compresses damaged limbs to the point that
blood vessels are squeezed shut and bleeding
stops.
In Houston, all 5,000 officers are expected to
be carrying the kits by September. Dallas officers got the same equipment late last year. Boston police received tourniquets shortly after last
year’s marathon attack. New York and Los Angeles are in the process of obtaining them.
One of the most common emergencies encountered by officers is a motorcycle accident
like the one that severed Jeremy Brooks’ right
leg in May. Brooks barely remembers the crash,
but he recalls clearly being told by doctors that
the person who put the tourniquet on his severed
limb at the scene probably saved his life — and
possibly his knee. The knee will make it easier
for him to be fitted for a prosthetic.
“I was surprised someone knew how to do it.
… It’s not common nowadays,” said Brooks, who
plans on learning how to use a tourniquet and
carrying a kit himself.
When the U.S. went to war after the Sept.
11 attacks, most of the military did not have
tourniquets, said Frank Butler, chairman of the
Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care in
the Army Medical Research and Material Command.
Change began in 2004 when Holcomb, a seasoned combat surgeon, was asked to help research battlefield deaths. The study found that
deaths from blood loss were largely unchanged
since Vietnam, when about 7.4 percent of fatalities bled to death. In the early years of the war
in Afghanistan, hemorrhaging caused about 7.8
percent of deaths.
Doctors concluded that applying a tourniquet
could cut those numbers. By 2011, deaths from
bleeding extremities had decreased to 2.6 percent.

GLEIM
GALLIPOLIS — Arbana
Gleim, 71, Gallipolis, died
Monday, June 30, 2014, at
her residence.
Funeral arrangements
will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
LEWIS
GALLIPOLIS — Irene
L. Lewis, 71, of Gallipolis, died Monday, June 30,
2014, at Holzer Medical
Center.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Saturday, July 5, 2014, at
Willis Funeral Home with
Pastor Mark Williams officiating. Burial will follow

in Ridgelawn Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral home from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. prior to the service.
In lieu of flowers, please
consider a donation in
Irene’s memory to Gallia
County Relay for Life, c/o
Bonnie McFarland, Holzer
Medical Center, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH
45631 or French City Baptist Church, 3554 State Rt.
160, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
MEENACH
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio
— Freda Mae Meenach,
85, of Proctorville, died
Monday, June 30, 2014, at

sisting the family.

The Emogene Dolin Jones
Hospice House in Huntington, W.Va.
Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory in Proctorville is
in charge of arrangements.

PAYNE
COTTAGEVILLE, W.Va.
— Timothy Ray Payne Jr.,
30, of Cottageville, died
Saturday, June 28, 2014, at
Charleston Area Medical
Center, General Division.
Service will be 8 p.m.
Wednesday, July 2, 2014,
at Casto Funeral Home
chapel, Evans, W.Va., with
Pastor Bradley Goodwin
officiating. Visitation will
be from 6 p.m. until time of
services. Interment will be
11 a.m. Thursday, July 3,
2014, at Blaine Memorial
Cemetery in Cottageville.

NEAL
GALLIPOLIS — Violet
Louise Neal, 72, of Gallipolis, died Friday, June 27,
2014, at Holzer Medical
Center.
A time of fellowship and
sharing with the family
will be 6 p.m. Thursday
July 3, 2014, in the community room at Woodland
Centers. Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home is as-

More torrential rain worsens Midwest flooding
ST. LOUIS (AP) —
More torrential rain worsened flooding in the Midwest, spawning high water
that swept away an Iowa
teenager, caused a traffic
nightmare near one of the
nation’s busiest airports
and threatened to swamp a
Missouri town for the fifth
time in less than a decade.
More than 3 inches
of rain fell over much of
eastern Iowa and northern Illinois Monday night
and Tuesday morning,
and some areas got up to
5 inches of rain, National
Weather Service meteorologist Mark Fuchs said, capping a week of downpours
in the region.
Six Midwest states —
North and South Dakota,
Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois
and Missouri — were dealing with significant flooding and there were pockets
in some other states. By the
weekend, the Mississippi
River will be at major flood
stage along many Iowa, Illinois and Missouri communities, forecasters said.
River flooding could close
highways, potentially top
levees and threaten some
homes and businesses.
The Mississippi River
rise came suddenly after a
spate of thunderstorms in
the last month, Fuchs said.
“The spring wasn’t that
terribly bad. It was minor
flooding, kind of ho hum,”
he said. “We had a very wet
June, and it looks like, initially at least, July will follow suit.”
In Iowa, rescue crews
were searching for 17-yearold Logan Blake, who was
swept away in a Cedar Rapids storm drain Monday
night. The storm sewer
drains into a lake and rescue crews were using sonar
and boats to search.
The sudden rain overwhelmed the Kennedy Expressway, a major Chicago
thoroughfare that runs to
O’Hare International Airport. All but a single lane
of traffic heading to the airport was closed for several
hours Tuesday because of
standing water. Some desperate air travelers were
getting out of taxis and
hauling luggage the rest of
the way to the airport.
Karen Pride, a spokeswoman
for
Chicago’s
aviation department, said
Tuesday that some 125
flights at O’Hare had been
canceled. A dozen more
were scrapped at Midway
International Airport.
A Chicago area water authority released millions of
gallons of storm runoff and
sewage into Lake Michigan
to relieve tunnels and reservoirs, the Metropolitan
Water Reclamation District
of Greater Chicago said.
The exact amount won’t
be known for a couple of
weeks, it said.
In Kane County, Illinois,
west of Chicago, storms
washed out a stretch of an
unlit, rural road and created a 10-foot sinkhole that
a Ford Taurus drove into
early Tuesday morning,
trapping both occupants. A
pickup truck followed suit
a short time later. No one
was seriously hurt.
The fast-rising Mississippi River prompted sudden
flood-fighting efforts in
several towns from southern Iowa to near St. Louis.
The timing was worrying
for Mark Twain’s hometown, Hannibal, Missouri.
The community’s popular
National Tom Sawyer Days
festival over the Fourth of
July weekend should go
ahead because all of the
major events — the fencepainting and frog-jumping
contests among them —
are inside the flood levee.

AP Photo

A car attempts to make its way Monday through the flooded intersection of University Boulevard and North Midvale Road in Madison, Wis., after heavy rain moved through the area.
Severe thunderstorms packing high winds and heavy rain have downed trees and power lines
all across southern Wisconsin.

The situation was far
more serious for Clarksville, Missouri, about 70
miles north of St. Louis.
The town of only about
400 residents draws tens of
thousands of visitors every
year to one of the widest
and most scenic spots on
the Mighty Mississippi.
It also has no flood protection. In four of the past
eight years, Clarksville
has been forced to spend

bagging this year.
“The city has no funding to deal with this flood,”
Smiley said. “Individuals
and business owners are on
their own.”
Homeowners and merchants are already using
sand and bags left over
from last year to fortify
their own properties. Smiley is also trying to get
prisoners to help fill and
place the bags.

$400,000 to $700,000 in
city funds to pay for sandbagging operations — the
entire annual city budget is
$350,000.
The flood is expected to
crest nearly 10 feet above
flood stage on Tuesday.
That’s enough to put water into several homes
and most downtown businesses. But Mayor Jo
Anne Smiley said there
will be no organized sand-

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�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

WEDNESDAY,
JULY 2, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Cliffside hosts Week 3 of Capehart golf league
By Bob Blessing
Special to OVP

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League found its way
to Cliffside Golf Course on Monday as part of the third leg of the
league’s tour of area golf courses.
It was a somewhat cloudy day,
but the course was green and
lush. Rain threaten but did not
make an appearance. The clouds
actually helped the youthful golfers by keeping the temperatures
cooler than expected.
The large turn out of golfers
played some excellent golf. Only
one of the age groups has a leader that cannot be caught within
the remaining events scheduled.
C.J. Angel has assured himself
of victory in the 10 and under boys

age group. C.J. won for the third
week in a row giving him a total
of 30 points. Sam Arnold, who
missed the first weeks action has
locked up second place. Lindsey
Martin won for the second week
assuring herself of winning the
girls division of this age group.
The competition in the 11-12
year old age group is outstanding. Currently, there are 3 young
men tied for the lead with an
accumulated total of 20 points
each. Colby Martin’s win on
Monday gives him 20 points for
the season. Nicholas Durst and
Cooper Davis have also gathered
20 points each. The following
young men in this age group and
their point totals are as follows
: Weston Baer (12), Cole Arnott
(10), Jay Sayre (8), Brant Rocchi
and Landon Acree have accumu-

lated 2 points each.
The 13-14 year old age group
is another race too soon to call
after the third round. Levi Chapman won Monday’s tournament
posting a score of 45. Colton
Blakeman finished second with a
score of 48. There was a 3 way
tie for third place with Wyatt
Nicholson, Jonah Hoback and
Jasiah Brewer all shooting 49.
Blakeman’s total of 24 points
leads this group while Nicholson is second with 20 points and
Chapman is third with 18 points.
Other players and their accumulated scores are : Jonah Hobach
( 14 ), Carl Sayre ( 12 ). Calab
Stanley and Primo Averion each
have 2 points for the year.
In the girls 13-14 year old
group, Kaitlyn Hawk finished
first on Monday and now has

a total of 20 points placing her
well ahead of her group.
Nathan Redman shot a 41 Monday to win first place in the 1517 year old age group. Matthew
Martin and Evan George tied for
second place with both posting
a score of 47. Jacob Hoback was
third with a score of 49. The winner in this group has yet to be determined. Nathan Redman has 28
total points and Mathew Martin
is second with 18 points.
Third place currently belongs
to Jacob Hoback and David Davis with 10 points each. Other
scorers and their totals are Evan
George ( 8 ), Zack Morris ( 8 ),
Jacob Brewer and Grant Gilmore
with 6 points each. Cliff Chapman has 4 points and Tristan Davis has 2 .In the girls division of
this age group, Allie Gruser shot

a 62 for a 5 shot win over Katelin
Edwards on Monday. Allie has
victory wrapped up in this division with 20 accumulated points.
Alyssa Creameans won the ladies 18-19 year old competition
on Monday with a score of 47.
This assures Alyssa of winning
this competition for the year.
The fourth leg of the TriCounty Junior Golf League will
take place on Monday, July 7, at
the Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va. Play is open to all area
youth. There is a fee of $10 which
includes the golf and a small lunch
afterwards. Registration begins at
8:30 a.m. with play starting at 9
a.m. Questions can be answered
by calling either of the following
: Jan Haddox (304) 675-3388,
Jeff Slone (740) 256-6160 or Bob
Blessing (304) 675-6135.

David Santiago | El Nuevo Herald | MCT photo

Cleveland Cavaliers guard Kyrie Irving, left, and Miami Heat
forward LeBron James stand near one another during the
fourth quarter at the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida, Sunday, February 24, 2013. The Heat defeated the Cavaliers 109-105.

Cavaliers building on
momentum; LeBron next?
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Sitting on a stage last week
alongside No. 1 overall
draft pick Andrew Wiggins
and new coach David Blatt,
general manager David
Griffin said he hoped this
would be a monumental
offseason for the Cavaliers.
It’s already been quite a
summer.
And LeBron James is
still out there.
Cleveland kept its momentum rolling early Tuesday by getting All-Star
point guard Kyrie Irving
to agree to a new, five-year,
$90 million contract extension.
Irving’s deal, completed
with a handshake in New
York with owner Dan Gilbert, cements a commitment with Cleveland that
wasn’t always so strong.
“I’m here for the long
haul Cleveland!!!! And I’m
ecstatic!!” Irving wrote on
his Twitter account shortly
after the agreement was
reached. “Super excited
and blessed to be here and

a part of something special.”
For months, Irving’s future with the Cavs seemed
uncertain. There were reports he wasn’t happy in
Cleveland as well as speculation the Cavs didn’t believe he was a cornerstone
player. There were trade
rumors and rumblings the
team was not going to offer
him the maximum extension.
Whatever
differences
there may have been seem
to have been worked out.
Griffin, who likes to refer
to his team as “family,” has
the Cavs united.
James surely has noticed.
The Cavs have waited
four years for their chance
to lure the four-time league
MVP back home. This may
be the perfect time.
Because Irving’s extension doesn’t kick in until
the 2015-16 season, the
Cavs have room under the
salary cap to pursue free
agents.
See LEBRON | 10

Cavs make a splash
with max deal for Kyrie
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) — Kyrie Irving isn’t going anywhere.
Dogged by rumors that he has wanted out of Cleveland,
Irving and Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert tweeted Tuesday
morning that they have agreed to terms on a new five-year
contract extension. Neither side announced the terms of
the deal, but several outlets reported that it was a maximum deal worth about $90 million that will keep him in
Cleveland for the next six years.
“Looking forward to the next 6 years of KyrieIrving in
CLE,” Gilbert tweeted not long after the free agent market opened at midnight on Tuesday. “Just shook hands
(and) intend to sign on the 10th. Can’t be more excited
about cavs.”
The deal cannot officially be signed until July 10, per
NBA rules. But it was a huge step forward for the Cavaliers and for Irving, and the first big splash of the new
NBA fiscal year.
While most eyes were fixated on what LeBron James
will do as an unrestricted free agent, Gilbert and a contingent of Cavaliers brass, including new head coach David
Blatt, immediately set their sights on Irving, the No. 1
overall pick in 2011 who has been equal parts sensational
and frustrating in his first three seasons in the league.
Irving has made two straight All-Star games, was
named MVP of last year’s festival in New Orleans and
has positioned himself as the new age point guard, a balldominant, score-first attacker who averaged 20.8 points
and 6.1 assists last season.

Lui Siu Wai | Xinhua via Zuma Press | MCT photo

Team USA coach Jurgen Klinsmann is seen before a Group G match between the U.S. and Germany during the FIFA
World Cup at Arena Pernambuco in Recife, Brazil, on June 26, 2014.

US World Cup ends with 2-1 OT loss
SALVADOR, Brazil (AP) — They captured the eyes
and hearts of a suddenly awakened soccer nation, who
gathered in unprecedented numbers to watch the world’s
game.
But the end of the ride came at the exact same point as
four years ago: with an overtime loss in the World Cup’s
round of 16.
Kevin De Bruyne finally beat goalkeeper Tim Howard
in the third minute of extra time, Romelu Lukaku scored
12 minutes later to give Belgium a two-goal lead, and the
Red Devils hung on for a 2-1 victory Tuesday.
“It’s heartbreaking,” Howard said. “I don’t think we
could have given it more.”
Before exiting, the U.S. showed the spunk that captured America’s attention. Julian Green, at 19 the youngest player on the U.S. roster, stuck out his right foot to
volley in Michael Bradley’s pass over the defense in the
107th minute, two minutes after entering the game.
They nearly tied it up in the 114th, when Clint
Dempsey peeled off the ball and was stopped point-blank
by goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois after being fed by Bradley on a free kick.
But it wasn’t enough, and U.S. players fell to the field
at the final whistle in their all-white uniforms like so
many crumpled tissues.
“You get to this point and these games are always
about a play here and play there,” Bradley said.
The Americans advanced from a difficult first-round
group that included Germany, Portugal and Ghana to
reach the knockout rounds of consecutive World Cups
for the first time. Four years ago, they were eliminated in
South Africa by Ghana 1-0 on a goal in the third minute
of overtime.
Fans who had made the trek south of the equator
chanting “I believe that we will win!” could hardly believe they lost, extending a World Cup winless streak
against European nations to nine games over 12 years.
The crowd of 51,227 at Arena Fonte Nova appeared to be about one third pro-U.S., with 10 percent backing the Belgians and the rest neutral. Back
home, millions watched across the United States in
offices, homes and public gatherings that includes a

huge crowd in Chicago’s Soldier Field.
At some large financial firms in Manhattan, 70-inch
screens were brought in for employees to watch. President Barack Obama joined about 200 staffers in an Executive Office Building auditorium to watch the second
half.
“I believe!” he exclaimed as he walked in at the front
of the hall. “I believe!”
That sparked a chorus of the chant, and as Obama
took a front-row seat, he said sheepishly: “I was worried
that if I walked in and Belgium scored, I’d get in trouble.”
Howard, playing the finest game of his career, stopped
a dozen shots with his legs and arms to keep the Americans even through regulation and force an additional 30
minutes. He wound up with 16 saves.
In its first World Cup under Jurgen Klinsmann, the
U.S. had promised to play attacking soccer. But once
again the Americans had trouble maintaining possession and for much of the night it seemed as if the field
were tilted.
Howard, at 35 one of the American veterans, kept saving his team.
But when Matt Besler lost his balance on an attack
down the right, Lukaku sped in alone and crossed in
front of the goal. The ball rebounded off a defender, and
De Bruyne controlled it, spun and beat Howard just over
his right foot.
Then with the U.S. pushing for an equalizer, De
Bruyne burst ahead and fed Lukaku. He slotted the ball
past Howard, his Everton teammate, seeming to put the
Red Devils out of reach.
But Green, among five German-Americans on the
U.S. roster and a surprise pick, woke up the team and its
fans with his first touch of the game, setting off raucous
chants of “U-S-A! U-S-A!” But there would be no final
comeback this time.
Chris Wondolowski had a chance to win it in stoppage time when Jermaine Jones flicked the ball to him at
the top of the 6-yard box, but with Courtois coming out
Wondolowski put the ball over the crossbar.
“The dream falls short, but this is an incredible
group,” Howard said, “and we’ll never forget this night.”

Manziel’s playbook: hanging with Justin Bieber

CLEVELAND (AP) — Johnny
Manziel went from hanging out with
the Browns to hanging with the Biebs.
Cleveland’s rookie quarterback,
whose social life has overshadowed his
NFL arrival, posted photographs on
Twitter of him and Justin Bieber.
Manziel promised last week he
wouldn’t tone down his well-documented weekend living despite advice
from Hall of Famers Emmett Smith,
Joe Montana and Warren Moon.
The 22-year-old not only kept his
word but seemed to flaunt his celebrity
by posting the photos with the pop star
heartthrob as well as boxing champion
Floyd Mayweather and others.
Manziel is free from football for the
next few weeks. The Browns open
training camp July 26, when Manziel
will resume his competition with Brian
Hoyer for the starting job. Manziel
spent last week attending the NFL’s
rookie symposium with Cleveland’s
other first-year players.
On Friday, Manziel addressed the
clamor caused by his social life — he
See KYRIE | 10 has been filmed spraying champagne

on partygoers in Las Vegas, photographed floating on an inflatable swan
raft drinking champagne and seen in a
video talking on a fake money phone.
Manziel defended his right to party.
“I’m not going to change who I am
for anybody,” he said. “I’m growing
up and continuing to learn from my
mistakes and trying not to make the
same ones over and over again, but am
I going to live in a shell or am I just going to hide from everybody and not do
anything? I don’t think that’s the way
I should live my life and I’m not going
to do it.
“I’m here. I’m very committed to
football. I’m committed to my job, but
on the weekends, I’m going to enjoy
my time off.”
Manziel says he’s tired of all the talk
about how he spends his free time, and
he doesn’t believe he’s endangering his
career or chances of beating out Hoyer.
“Everybody goes out on the weekends and enjoys their life and lives
their life and just for them,” he said.
“They don’t have people that when
they walk into a place pull out their

phones and all they want to do is follow me around and record everything.
… Everybody goes out and has fun.
Everybody goes out and does that and
I’m not doing anything that’s putting
myself in a harmful situation. I’m not
doing anything that’s putting my team
or jeopardizing what I do here throughout the week, or what I’m looking forward to doing this season.”
After attending the three-day symposium, Manziel visited the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday and
spent Sunday in Cleveland filming a
TV commercial. But by Monday, he
was back in the limelight.
Browns coach Mike Pettine has said
he won’t speak to Manziel — or any of
his other players — about their off-thefield affairs unless they get involved
in criminal activities or it affects their
jobs.
To this point, Manziel’s only offense
seems to be a reluctance to avoid the
spotlight.

�or less.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Reference Deed: Volume 25,
Page 42, Meigs County Deed
Records.

www.mydailysentinel.com

TheDescribed
Daily Sentinel
7
by new survey Page
as
follows:
Situate in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs, Township of
Bedford, being in the West half
of Section 25, Range 13 West,
Township 3 North, and being
bounded and described as follows:
Commencing for reference at a
stone pile found at the Northeast corner of Section 25;
Thence, with the East line of
Section 25, South 11 degrees
31' West, a distance of
1311.96 feet to an 5/8" rebar
with cap set at the Northeast
corner of a 60 acre tract as
conveyed to Kenneth and Jill
Hossler by Official Records
Book 352, Page 888 of the
Meigs County Recorder’s Office;
Thence, leaving the section
line with the North line of said
Hossler property, (Note: Reference bearing being along this
line), North 78 degrees 48' 50"
West, a distance of 2111.57
feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap
set, at the Northwest corner of
said Hossler and the Northeast corner of a 20 acre tract
as conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 25 of the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office;

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

LEGALS

Professional Services

LEGALS

LEGAL NOTICE
Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Executors or
Administrators of
Lawrence Lemley, whose
place of residence is unknown
and Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, if
any, of Lawrence Lemley,
whose last place of residence
is known as 264 Rutland St,
Middleport, OH 45760-1058
but whose present place of
residence is unknown, will take
Gary Stanley
notice
Lost &amp; Found
that on May 9, 2014, HSBC
740-591-8044
Bank USA, National Association, as Indenture Trustee for
Please leave a message
the
registered Noteholders of
Miscellaneous
Renaissance Home Equity
Loan Trust 2006-4, filed its
Complaint
in Foreclosure in Case No. 14CV-045 in the Court of Common Pleas Meigs County, Ohio
alleging that the Defendants,
Unknown Heris at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Executors or
Administrators of Lawrence
Lemley and Jane Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Lawrence
Are You Still Paying Too Much
Lemley, have or claim to have
an interest in the real estate
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The
Petitioner
further
alleges
December 31, 2014. Offer is valid for prescription
200mg x 100
that by reason of default of the
orders only and can not be used in conjunction with
any other offers. Valid for new customers only. One
Defendant(s) in the payment
compared to
time use per household.
of a promissory note, accordCelebrexTM $679.41 Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
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note and conveying the
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the same has become absolute.
The Petitioner prays that the
Defendant(s) named above be
required to answer and set up
their interest in said real estate or be forever barred from
asserting the same, for foreclosure of
said mortgage, the marshalling of any liens, and the
Family Value
sale ofCombo
said real estate, and
2
(5
oz.)
Filet
Mignons
the proceeds of
monitoring
starting aro
2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins
und
said sale applied to the pay4 Boneless Chicken Breasts (1 lb. pkg.)
ment of Petitioner’s claim
in
PLUS,
4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers
the property order of 4itsMore
prior4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Jumbo Franks
and for
per week
4 Stuffed Bakedity,
Potatoes
*with $99 customer
Burgers
lation e and
purchase of alarm instal
such other and further
relief as
monitoring charg
services.
48829ZYL Reg. $154.00
is just$and99
equitable. FREE!
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39
THE DEFENDANT(S) NAMED
Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!
ABOVEand
ARE
TO
Call 1-800-712-4684
askREQUIRED
for 48829ZYL
ANSWER ON OR
www.OmahaSteaks.com/fvmb57
BEFORE THIS 6 DAY OF AULimit 2. 4 (4 oz.) burgers must ship with The Family Value Combo (48829). Not valid
with other offers, includingGUST,
Reward cards2014.
&amp; codes. Standard S&amp;H added. Other
©2014LAW
OCG | 20180
| Omaha Steaks,OF
Inc.
restrictions may apply. ExpiresBY:
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��� ���� ����������� ��� ���������� ����� ���������
THE
OFFICES
JOHN D. CLUNK CO., LPA
Charles V. Gasior #0075946
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner
4500 Courthouse Blvd.
Suite 400
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Stow, OH 44224
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Pomeroy Village Council currently has an open council
seat. Letters of interest/resumes will be accepted until
4PM on July 7th. Letters/resumes are to be turned into the
Pomeroy Village Clerk, 660 E.
Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769 or e-mailed to pomeroyfiscalofficer@gmail.com. Interested applicants are to attend
the special council meeting on
July 7th, 2014 at 6PM.
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LEGAL NOTICE
Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Executors or
Administrators of
Lawrence Lemley, whose
place of residence is unknown
and Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, if
any, of Lawrence Lemley,
whose last place of residence
is known as 264 Rutland St,
Middleport, OH 45760-1058
but whose present place of
residence is unknown, will take
notice
that on May 9, 2014, HSBC
Bank USA, National Association, as Indenture
LEGALSTrustee for
the
registered Noteholders of
Renaissance Home Equity
Loan Trust 2006-4, filed its
Complaint
in Foreclosure in Case No. 14CV-045 in the Court of Common Pleas Meigs County, Ohio
alleging that the Defendants,
Unknown Heris at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Executors or
Administrators of Lawrence
Lemley and Jane Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Lawrence
Lemley, have or claim to have
an interest in the real estate
located at 264 Rutland St,
Middleport, OH 45760-1058,
PPN #1500723000. A complete legal description may be
obtained with the Meigs
County Auditor’s Office located at 100 East Second
Street, Room 201,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner further alleges
that by reason of default of the
Defendant(s) in the payment
of a promissory note, according to its tenor, the conditions
of a concurrent mortgage deed
given
to secure the payment of said
note and conveying the
premises described, have
been broken, and
the same has become absolute.
The Petitioner prays that the
Defendant(s) named above be
required to answer and set up
their interest in said real estate or be forever barred from
asserting the same, for foreclosure of
said mortgage, the marshalling of any liens, and the
sale of said real estate, and
the proceeds of
said sale applied to the payment of Petitioner’s claim in
the property order of its priority, and for
such other and further relief as
is just and equitable.
THE DEFENDANT(S) NAMED
ABOVE ARE REQUIRED TO
ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THIS 6 DAY OF AUGUST, 2014.
BY: THE LAW OFFICES OF
JOHN D. CLUNK CO., LPA
Charles V. Gasior #0075946
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner
4500 Courthouse Blvd.
Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
requests@johndclunk.com.(06)
,25,(07),02,09
PUBLIC NOTICE
Murphy Oil Company, 1691
Lynn Drive, Lancaster, Ohio
43130, (740) 215-1011 is applying to permit a well for the
injection of brine water produced in association with oil
and natural gas. The location
of the proposed injection well
is the McKelvey #3, P# 3651,
Sec. 16, Lebanon Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the
Clinton formation at a depth of
5523 to 5591 feet. The average injection is estimated to be
2000 barrels per day. The
maximum injection pressure is
estimated to be 1270 psi. Further information can be obtained by contacting Murphy
Oil Company, or the Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the
Division is: Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management, 2045 Morse Road,
Building F-2, Columbus, Ohio
43229-6693, (614) 265-6922.
For full consideration, all comments and objections must be
received by the Division, in
writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal
notice.(06),26,27,29 (07),01,02
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, CASE NO.: 14 CV 058,
IN THE MATTER OF MARK
MOORE, PLAINTIFF, VS.
AMOS STEVENS and spouse,
if living, AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS, SPOUSES,
SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS STEVENS,
if deceased, ET AL., DEFENDANTS.
To: AMOS STEVENS, JOHN
W. TAYLOR AND TERESA
PAGE STEVENS DYKE and
spouses, if living, AND THE
UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS,
SPOUSES, SUCCESSORS

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, CASE NO.: 14 CV 058,
IN THE MATTER OF MARK
MOORE, PLAINTIFF, VS.
AMOS STEVENS and spouse,
if living, AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS, SPOUSES,
SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS STEVENS,
if deceased, ET AL., DEFENDANTS.
To: AMOS STEVENS, JOHN
W. TAYLOR AND TERESA
PAGE STEVENS
DYKE and
LEGALS
spouses, if living, AND THE
UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS,
SPOUSES, SUCCESSORS
AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS
STEVENS, JOHN W. TAYLOR
AND TERESA PAGE
STEVENS DYKE, if deceased,
Addresses Unknown.
You are hereby notified that
you have been named Defendants in the action entitled Mark
Moore, Plaintiff, vs. Amos
Stevens and spouse, if living,
and the Unknown Heirs, Next
of Kin, Devisees, Administrators, Executors, Spouses, Successors and Assigns of Amos
Stevens, if deceased, et al.,
Defendants. This action has
been assigned Case No. 14
CV 058, and is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio. The object of the Complaint demands
that the title to a certain parcel
of real estate be quieted in the
Plaintiff, Mark Moore, and that
said Plaintiff be found to be the
owner in fee simple absolute of
the real estate described in the
Complaint. Plaintiff further requests that he be granted
costs and all other relief, either
in law or equity, which shall be
proper.
The real estate is described as
follows:
The following described piece
of land, to wit, beginning at the
Northwest corner of said
Taylor’s land; thence West to
the middle line of Section
Twenty-five, Town Three,
Range Thirteen of the Ohio
Company’s Purchase; thence
South eighty rods; thence East
to said Taylor’s Southwest
corner; thence North eighty
rods to the place of beginning,
being the overplus of the South
half of the Northeast quarter
supposing it to be four acres
and a half be it the same, more
or less.
Reference Deed: Volume 25,
Page 42, Meigs County Deed
Records.
Described by new survey as
follows:
Situate in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs, Township of
Bedford, being in the West half
of Section 25, Range 13 West,
Township 3 North, and being
bounded and described as follows:
Commencing for reference at a
stone pile found at the Northeast corner of Section 25;
Thence, with the East line of
Section 25, South 11 degrees
31' West, a distance of
1311.96 feet to an 5/8" rebar
with cap set at the Northeast
corner of a 60 acre tract as
conveyed to Kenneth and Jill
Hossler by Official Records
Book 352, Page 888 of the
Meigs County Recorder’s Office;
Thence, leaving the section
line with the North line of said
Hossler property, (Note: Reference bearing being along this
line), North 78 degrees 48' 50"
West, a distance of 2111.57
feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap
set, at the Northwest corner of
said Hossler and the Northeast corner of a 20 acre tract
as conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 25 of the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Moore property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 528.43' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set and being
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING for this description;
Thence, from said Point of Beginning, with said Moore property South 11 degrees 14' 33"
West, a distance of 1317.91
feet to a 5/8" rebar set at the
Southwest corner of said
Moore and the Northeast
corner of a 4 acre tract as conveyed to Edson and Lana Hart
by Official Records Book 346,
Page 504 of the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Hart property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 131.57' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set at the Northwest corner of the Hart property
and in the East line of Ursula
McDaniel;

Thence, with the North line of
said Moore property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 528.43' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set and being
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING for this description;
Thence, from said Point of Beginning, with said Moore property South 11 degrees 14' 33"
West, a distance of 1317.91
feet to a 5/8" rebar set at the
Southwest corner of said
Moore and the Northeast
corner of a 4 acre tract as conveyed to Edson and Lana Hart
by Official Records Book 346,
Page 504 of the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Hart property,
LEGALSNorth 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 131.57' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set at the Northwest corner of the Hart property
and in the East line of Ursula
McDaniel;
Thence, with the East line of
said McDaniel and Flucke
property for part of the following course, North 11 degrees
14' 33" East, a distance of
1317.91' to a 5/8" rebar with
cap set at the Southwest
corner of a 40 acre tract as
conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 705 of the Meigs Coutny
Recorder’s Office;
Thence, with the South of said
Moore property, South 78 degrees 48' 50" East, a distance
of 131.57' to the Point of Beginning:
Containing 3.98 acres, more or
less.
Subject to all legal highways,
zoning ordinances, subdivision regulations, and to restrictions, reservations, leases and
easements, if any, of record.
Subject to the right-of-way of
Ball Run, T-20A.
Subject to the 100-year Flood
Plain restrictions, if applicable.
All iron pins set are 5/8" x 30"
rebar capped and labeled
“Prine OH#8146”.
The bearings in this description are for angle calculations
only and are based on the
North line of Glenn Stout, used
an assumed bearing of North
78 degrees 48' 50" West.
The above description prepared by Richard J. Prine,
Ohio Registered Surveyor No.
8146, based on information obtained from an actual field survey on March 26th, 2014.
You are required to answer the
Complaint within twenty-eight
(28) days after the last publication of this Notice, which will be
published once each week for
six (6) successive weeks. The
last publication will be made on
the July 23, 2014, and the
twenty-eight (28) days for answer will commence on that
date. In the case of your failure to answer or otherwise respond as requested by the
Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure,
judgment by default will be
rendered against you and for
the relief demanded in the
Complaint.
Dated this 13th day of June,
2014.
Jennifer L. Sheets (0020044)
Attorney for Plaintiff
LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR,
LLP
P.O. Box 686
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(6) 18, 25; (7) 2, 9, 16, 23
Lost &amp; Found
Lost Dog : Black Labrador Retriever(Female) 5mths oldwearing a blue collar- 2 miles
from Cheshire,Oh on St Rt 554
Call Ed Thomas if found at
740-367-0274
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.
Yard Sale
Garage Sale - July 3rd &amp; 4th
@ 1522 St Rt 141 (Lane Residence) 9am - 4pm. - Many
household items.
HUGH YARD SALE July 4 &amp;
5. 1 mile south of Tuppers
Plains SR 7. Lots of Avon.
Caldwell Produce Open all
Vegetables
Homegrown.(740)667-3493

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Nadal, Sharapova
lose; Serena
leaves with illness

Jeff Wheeler | Minneapolis Star Tribune | MCT photo

The Miami Heat’s Chris Andersen (11) greets teammates Ray Allen and LeBron Jones, right, as they walk off the court
during a timeout in the fourth quarter against the Minnesota Timberwolves at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Monday, March 4, 2013. The Heat defeated the Timberwolves, 97-81.

Riley’s time to build again arrives for Heat
MIAMI (AP) — Pat Riley stood
behind a lectern on Monday afternoon to introduce new Miami
guard Shabazz Napier, the lone
player that the Heat picked up in
last week’s draft.
The Napier event lasted for
20 minutes. Riley was gone after
about three.
“I’m going back upstairs with
Andy and crunch some numbers,”
Riley said before departing to rejoin Miami senior vice president
general manager Andy Elisburg.
The Heat president meant no
disrespect, and none was likely
taken. Free agency awaits, and
whatever he and Elisburg gleaned
from their number-crunching session on the eve of the NBA’s shopping season might end up shaping
the course of the Heat for years to
come.
Starting at midnight Tuesday,
when free agency begins across
the league, Riley gets back into
action. The mastermind of Miami’s 2010 free agency coup that
landed LeBron James and Chris
Bosh while retaining Dwyane
Wade will look to one-up himself
this time around — as he and the
Heat brass will set out to not only
keep those three, but surround
them with whatever they need
to make what would be a fifth
straight trip to the NBA Finals
next season.
“Challenge is what it’s all
about,” Riley said. “Challenge
is nothing more than playing
for higher stakes and raising the
ante.”
Riley made that comment late
last year, when he spoke at the

University of Miami’s December commencement. It still rings
true; Riley isn’t shy about using
phrases he likes many times over,
such as saying that by working in
basketball he works “in the toy department of human affairs.”
But whatever he said to James,
Wade and Bosh in 2010 might
not be needed this time. He
wasn’t even planning to travel for
12:01 a.m. meetings on Tuesday,
a change from his tactics of four
years ago right off the start. Wade
and Bosh did not yet have meetings with the Heat scheduled, and
James is heading to Brazil to take
in some World Cup action.
With James, Wade and Bosh
opting out, and Udonis Haslem
not opting in on a $4.6 million
deal, Miami should have somewhere around $55 million in salary cap room to play with over
the next couple weeks. It could
be enough to keep the “Big 3”
together and get them the pieces
they need to contend for another
title next year. If not, even the
doomsday scenario isn’t that bad
for Miami.
“It’s not always the players who
have the advantage because in
the worst-case scenario we could
have the most room than anybody
in the NBA or in the history of the
NBA if everybody decided to opt
out and go somewhere else,” Riley
said. “I’m not planning on that.”
At 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, Norris
Cole will be Miami’s best player,
since everyone else is a free agent.
Still, it’s true — Cole and his
$2 million contract is the only
fully guaranteed deal the Heat

have for next season.
“It’s a unique situation,” Cole
said Monday while working with
hundreds of South Florida kids at
two basketball camps he’s hosting
simultaneously this week. “But
I’ve had a unique start to my career. … I know that Pat’s going to
do what he has to do to build a
great team. That’s what he does.
I believe in that. I believe in the
front office.”
The three opt-outs are considered positive signs for the Heat,
and drafting Napier made James
happy. It also figures to not hurt
Miami’s chances of luring Ray
Allen back next season, since he,
like Napier, is a former Connecticut star.
“I’m looking forward to competing with the best,” Napier said.
Behind closed doors, the Heat
have basically been preparing for
this summer for four years. They
anticipated the opt-outs when
they were worked into the contracts of James, Wade and Bosh
in 2010. And it’s also why, just as
was the case four years ago, the
Heat have very little money committed to anyone for next season.
And now it’s Riley’s turn to see
what he can do this time.
“A person’s greatest fear is their
fear of extinction,” Riley said.
“But what they should fear more
than that is to one day become
extinct with insignificance. You
don’t want that. There’s nothing
wrong with separating yourself
from the pack. There’s nothing
wrong with leaving footprints.
There’s nothing wrong with being
great.”

Yard Sale

Help Wanted General

Business &amp; Trade School

July 3rd. 8:30-5, Lots of Home
Int., Figurines, nice clothes &amp;
lots more. 6 miles below GAllipolis on ST RT 7S

Experienced HVAC Installer
Needed, Must be able to
Solder, Read wiring diagrams,
Install Duct work, Work well
with people doing basic residential installations, excellent
pay based on experience. Applications Available at
Bennett's Heating &amp; Cooling
1391 Safford School Rd Gallipolis 45631 - 740-446-9416 or
bring resume between hours
9am to 5pm M-F.

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Yard Sale July 4th &amp; 5th @ 42
Mercerville Road, 9am to 5pm.
Lots of Everything.
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)

Education
The VETERANS UPWARD
BOUND Mission: to Assist
and Support eligible Military
Veterans in their quests for
Higher Education / No Cost /
304-637-1257 /
www.vubwv.org

Growing Home Care Agency is
seeking compassionate
CNA/homemakers in Mason
Co. Flexible schedule. Reliable transportation required.
Call: 888-453-4992.
Part-Time Mobile X-Ray Tech
needed for Pt. Pleasant and
surrounding area. Send resume to:
postbanking@qualitymobileimaging.com
Physician seeking Case Managers and CDCAs for new
Firm 740-441-9800
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
Town of Mason is now hiring
full-time WV certified police office. Applications can be
picked up at the town hall.

Apartments/Townhouses
Clean 1 bdr. furnished apt.
Deposit and references req.
304-593-5125

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

LONDON (AP) — Rafael Nadal ran out of comebacks
at Wimbledon, losing to a brash, big-serving, betweenthe-legs-hitting 19-year-old kid who might just be a future
star.
Maria Sharapova, somehow, seemed on the verge of a
turnaround despite a flurry of unforced errors, saving six
match points before finally succumbing on the seventh
with — what else? — a missed shot.
And in the most striking sight of a memorable day of
departures by past Wimbledon champions, Serena Williams couldn’t get the ball over the net in a doubles match
with her sister Venus, stopping after three games because
of what was called a viral illness.
All in all, Tuesday was chock-full of significant events,
and the most noteworthy winner had to be 144th-ranked
Nick Kyrgios of Australia, who used 37 aces and a haveno-fear approach to beat Nadal 7-6 (5), 5-7, 7-6 (5), 6-3 for
a quarterfinal berth.
“I was in a bit of a zone out there,” said Kyrgios, the
lowest-ranked player to beat the No. 1 man at any Grand
Slam tournament in 22 years.
“You’ve got to believe you can win the match from the
very start, and I definitely thought that,” the 6-foot-4
(1.93-meter) Kyrgios said. “I’m playing some unbelievable tennis on the grass.”
That’s for sure.
Playing in only his fifth major tournament — he got
into the field thanks to a wild-card invitation — Kyrgios
(pronounced KEER-ee-os) is the first man to reach the
quarterfinals in his Wimbledon debut in 10 years. He’s
also the first teenager to defeat the top-ranked man at a
Slam since Nadal was 19 when he beat Roger Federer at
the 2005 French Open.
“We keep saying, ‘Who’s the next guy?’ And I think we
may have found him,” seven-time major champion John
McEnroe said on the BBC broadcast.
Nadal dropped the first set in each of his previous three
matches before coming back to win. When he took the
second set Tuesday, though, Kyrgios stayed steady.
“Kyrgios is young; he has nothing to lose,” said Nadal’s
uncle and coach, Toni “It’s like when Boris Becker won
here. He was 17 and had a very good serve. He could beat
everyone because of his serve. It’s the same with Kyrgios.
He plays aggressively and without any doubts.”
For Nadal, who won Wimbledon in 2008 and 2010, it
was yet another early exit at the grass-court tournament
against a much-lower-ranked opponent. In 2012, he lost in
the second round against No. 100 Lukas Rosol. Last year,
he was beaten in the first round by No. 135 Steve Darcis.
Neither of those players is considered an up-and-coming
contender like Kyrgios is, but the common thread among
the trio was going for broke.
“The thing is, (on) this surface, when you have an opponent that decides to serve and to hit every ball very
strong, you are in trouble,” Nadal said.
Kyrgios, who saved nine match points while beating 13th-seeded Richard Gasquet in the second round,
showed zero hint of nerves. Indeed, he soaked up all
the attention and adoration offered by the Centre Court
crowd, particularly after an audacious trick shot: Facing
the net at the baseline, he whipped his racket around his
back and casually flicked a shot that sailed between his
legs and over the net for a winner.
He joked about reading that his mother said she didn’t
think he could beat Nadal.
“It actually made me a bit angry,” Kyrgios said, then
noted: “I’ll just text her a smiley face.”
On Wednesday, he faces No. 8 Milos Raonic of Canada,
another man never before this far at Wimbledon. The
other men’s quarterfinals: seven-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer against good friend and Australian
Open champion Stan Wawrinka in an all-Swiss matchup;
defending champion Andy Murray against No. 11 Grigor
Dimitrov; and 2011 champion Novak Djokovic against
No. 26 Marin Cilic.
The women’s quarterfinals Wednesday: No. 3 Simona
Halep against 2013 runner-up Sabine Lisicki, and No. 9
Angelique Kerber against No. 13 Eugenie Bouchard. The
semifinal on the other side of the draw was established
Tuesday: 2011 champion Petra Kvitova against No. 23 Lucie Safarova.
Kerber edged Sharapova 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6-4 Tuesday.
Sharapova made 49 unforced errors, 38 more than Kerber.
Still, the 2004 champion saved one match point at 5-2 in
the final set, then five more at 5-4, before pushing a backhand long to end it.
“I felt like I worked too hard within the match to let it
go the easy way. So I did everything I could in the end to
try to save those,” Sharapova said. “I did, but I didn’t save
the last one.”

Houses For Rent

Miscellaneous

2 &amp; 3 BR Homes for Rent, Deposit &amp; References required.
Call 740-446-2801
2 Bedroom house on 5th
Street. $450 a month plus utilities. 304-812-4350

Houses For Sale
2 - Bdrm /1 bath located on
Market St. $45,000.00 Call
740-339-3224
3BR, 2BA
READY TO MOVE IN
740-446-3570
4- Bdrm / 3 bath located on
York Drive $35,000.00 call
740-339-3224
Apartments/Townhouses
Efficiency Apt $375 month
Downtown, clean, renovated,
newer appl, lam floor, water
sewer &amp; trash incl. No pets.
Application req. 727-237-6942
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2nd fl, 1BR, Stove &amp; Refrig,
A/C, No Smoking, No Pets,
Wash/Dryer Avail, 258 State
St, $450/mo, $450/ Dep 740446-3667
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apartment available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Wva. Now accepting applications for HUD -subsidized, One
bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

First Day
Ask about Rent Special's
Camp Conley area
2 3 &amp; 4 BRMS Apt.
Electric &amp; Security Deposit
Accept Section 8 Vouchers
304-674-0023 or
304-610-0706
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
Middleport, 2 room efficiency
apt. Also 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt,
no pets deposit and reference
required.(740) 992-0165.
New Haven, WV 1 bedroom
apt, no pet, deposit and reference. (740)992-0165
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

For Sale/Rent with Option to
Buy, 3BR, 2BA, Mobile Home,
Country setting, 30 min from
Gallipolis 740-756-7473
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

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

OMAHA STEAKS:
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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

�Wednesday, July 2, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel

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By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

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Today’s answer

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

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BABY BLUES

ZITS

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By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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By Dave Green

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briefs
MYL Fall Baseball/Softball
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth League will be having Fall
Baseball and Softball sign-ups for boys and
girls ages 7-18 with mature six-year olds
also being allowed to play. Age groups are
7-8 coach slow pitch, 9-10 fast pitch, 1112, 13-16, and for the 17-18 group if we
have enough interest. The dates are Saturdays July 12 and July 19 from noon until
4 p.m. at the Middleport Ball Fields. You
can come as a team (which most due) or
sign-up individually. If there are any questions you can call Dave at (740) 590-0438
or Jackie at (740) 416-1261.
Southern Tornadoes
Basketball Camp
The Southern Tornadoes basketball
team is hosting their 2014 camp on July
8-11 from 9 a.m. until noon each day. The
camp will be held in the high school gym
and boys and girls entering grades 1-6 are
welcome to attend. Cost is $40, and $20 for
any additional member in the same family.
Each camper gets a t-shirt and basketball.
There will be free throw, “HORSE”, and 3
on 3 competitions in different grade levels
with prizes given to winners. Please call
Coach Jeff Caldwell at 740-949-3129 if you
have questions.
Meigs Marauder
Youth Football Camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2014
Meigs Youth Football Camp will be held on
Saturday, August 2, 2014 at Holzer Field,
Farmers Bank Stadium on the campus of
Meigs High School. The camp is for kids in
grades 1-8 and begins at 9 a.m. and will end
at noon. Cost of the camp is $20.The camp
will focus on attitude, effort, hard work,
team work, fundamentals, technique, individual drills and group drills. Instruction
will be provided by current Meigs players
and the coaching staff. Also scheduled to
attend is Marshall and New England Hall
of Famer, three-time Super Bowl Champion Troy Brown along with college football
coaches and players. Any child that preregisters by July 19th will be guaranteed a
camp team shirt. Registrations will be accepted after the deadline and on the day of
the camp but they will not be guaranteed
a camp t-shirt. Registration on the day of
the camp is 8 a.m. Proceeds from the camp
will benefit the Meigs High School Football program. For more information call
740-645-4479 or 740-416-5443.
Big Bend Youth Football
League Sign ups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The BBYFL
will be holding sign ups every Saturday in
July from 11am to 1pm at the Middleport
Stadium. Football players and cheerleaders
from any school may sign up and you will
be placed on the team from your school
district. Ages are from 3rd grade thru 6th
grade. Visit www.bigbendyouthfootball.
com or call Sarah (740)444-1606, Tony
(740)992-4067, Angie (740)444-1177, or
Chris Hill (740)208-0455 for addition information. Camp begins on July 28th.
Wahama Athletic HOF reminder
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama Athletic
Hall of Fame Board of Trustees wish to issue a reminder that nominations for the
2014 Hall of Fame inductees must be received by July 1 as the 2014 induction prospects will close at that time. Nomination
forms may be obtained by visiting the Wahama High School website and visiting the
forms section. Completed forms may be
returned to any Board of Trustee member
or by returning by mail to Wahama High
School, P.O. Box 348, Route 62 North, #1
White Falcon Drive, Mason W.V. 25260.
Answers to any questions may be obtained

by contacting a Board of Trustee member.
PPHS youth baseball clinic
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant Baseball Junior Instructional
Clinic will be held at the PPHS baseball
field from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. on Wednesday, July 30.
Instruction on the game and fundamentals will be taught by the Point Pleasant
baseball coaching staff and players. The
camp is for all kids ages 9-13 and costs $20
per camper.
For more information, contact PPHS
baseball coach Andrew Blain at (304) 5932540 or by email at blain7@marshall.edu
GAHS youth football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy football staff will be conducting a
youth football camp for students entering
grades 2-8. The camp will be held at Memorial Field on July 15-17 from 5 p.m. until
7 p.m. and will cover fundamentals for all
positions. Players will be instructed by the
Gallia Academy football staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $35 per camper
and $25 per camper with families of two
or more students. Students can register the
first day of camp. Registration will be from
4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. on the Tuesday, July 15.
All campers will receive a T-shirt. Campers should wear shorts, t-shirt and tennis
shoes or cleats. Water will be provided but
a water bottle is recommended.
For questions or to register, please contact GAHS football coach Josh Riffe at
(740) 256-1897.
Camp scholarship opportunity
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 longtime 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 740-245-7491 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
began 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 end 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 :
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) 245-5919 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.
A team camp for girls’ high school
squads is planned for July 6-9, with a boys’
high school team camp slated for July 1317. 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) 245-7126, (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 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) 245-7491, 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.

LeBron
From Page 6
They would have to move
some other contracts if the reports are accurate that James
will only sign for a max deal.
Griffin has said clearing space to
accommodate a five-year, $120
million contract would be extremely easy.
The hard part might be getting
James to believe the Cavs, who
have not made the playoffs since
he left in 2010, are title contenders — now.
They’ve got some quality
pieces for sure, but do they have
enough?
Irving, who played in a career-

high 71 games this past season,
has established himself as one of
the NBA’s elite point guards, and
now that the contract situation is
no longer an issue, it may unburden him to play the best basketball of his life.
The 6-foot-8 Wiggins would
have been the top pick a year
ago if he hadn’t gone to college
and James has long admired the
19-year-old’s gifts.
It’s somewhat interesting that
Griffin said Wiggins’ potential
greatness would come at shooting guard, perhaps leaving an
opening at small forward for a
certain former Cavalier.
To entice James, the Cavs may

need to make a blockbuster move.
They’ve got some assets to
play with and a trade involving
talented guard Dion Waiters
could bring back a starter.
Griffin hinted that he isn’t
done remodeling the Cavs.
“We need to continue to work
on the defensive side of the ball,”
he said at Wiggins’ introductory
news conference. “We need to
get better from a basketball IQ
standpoint, from a shooting perspective. And all of those moves
will be forthcoming.”
For several years, the Cavs
have been involved in trade rumors involving Kevin Love, who
has one year left on his deal with

Minnesota. If Cleveland can
package the right pieces together, they may be able to pry Love
away from the Timberwolves.
Love and James were teammates four years ago in the
London Olympics, where they
helped the U.S. win a gold medal.
Back then, James said that
when he won his first championship with Miami, his thoughts
quickly shifted to Cleveland and
what might have been.
“I wish I could have won one
there,” he said before a practice.
“I could only imagine how the
parade would have been down
East Ninth Street. Of course I
thought about it because Cleve-

land helped me get to that point.
The days that I spent there
helped me get to the point where
I was able to finally win one. It’s
just unfortunate I wasn’t able to
do it there.”
It’s possible James will re-sign
with the Heat and the Cavs will
move on without him. But if they
decide to pursue the two-time
champion in the days ahead and
get a meeting with James, the
Cavs can sell their team and tug
at his heart.
James has never rejected the
idea of a return to Cleveland.
Maybe this is the summer to
mend fences and start anew in a
familiar place.

Kyrie
From Page 6
But Irving has also been
prone to injury, has had a
difficult time getting on
the same page with his
backcourt mate Dion Waiters and has been criticized
at times for a style of play
that was perceived as selfish. He has yet to play in
a playoff game in his first
three years, will be playing
for his third coach in four
seasons and grew irritated
toward the end of last season by the constant speculation about his future in
Cleveland.

“The barrage and little
bit of attack that I saw, I’ve
been getting it all season
and I feel I definitely don’t
deserve it,” Irving said before a loss to Charlotte late
in the season. “It’s one of
those things where I can
deal with it, but at a certain point, it’s gotten too
much. It’s been like that
the whole entire season.”
After being non-committal about his future
in Cleveland for most of
last season, he wasted
little time after the market
opened at midnight Tuesday to show Cavaliers fans

that he’s all in.
“I’m here for the long
haul Cleveland!!! and I’m
ecstatic!!” Irving tweeted.
“Super excited and blessed
to be here and a part of
something special. #ClevelandKID”
The move was also a
smart financial decision
for Irving. Had he declined
the massive extension, Irving still would have had
to play two more seasons
before being eligible for
unrestricted free agency.
He could have become a
restricted free agent in the
summer of 2015. But any

other team would only be
able to offer him a four-year
deal, not the five years that
the Cavaliers gave him,
and Gilbert would have
had the right to match any
offer Irving received.
That it never got to that
point was a big step in the
right direction for Gilbert,
who has been searching for
some stability since James
left for Miami in 2010.
The offseason got off to
a rocky start when Gilbert
abruptly fired coach Mike
Brown after one season
and also dismissed GM
Chris Grant. He promoted

the well-respected David
Griffin to the top executive job and then made the
bold choice to bring Blatt
from Israel to take over as
coach.
The Cavs also have No.
1 overall pick Andrew Wiggins, a promising swing
man with major defensive
chops and athleticism, to
play alongside Irving, not
to mention a glimmer of
hope at getting James to
return to Cleveland in free
agency.
When
the
market
opened, many thought
the only team that could

convince James to leave
Miami, where he has won
two titles and been to four
straight NBA Finals, was
the Cavaliers. But when
fellow Heat stars Dwyane
Wade and Chris Bosh also
opted out of their contracts, the Heat became
heavy favorites to reunite
the three All-Stars.
James is the dream. Irving is the reality.
“We’re making strides
in the right direction,” Irving said when the season
ended. “I want to be part of
something special.”

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    <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>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="8203">
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        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>gleim</name>
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      <name>lewis</name>
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    <tag tagId="3034">
      <name>meenach</name>
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    <tag tagId="736">
      <name>neal</name>
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    <tag tagId="147">
      <name>payne</name>
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