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log onto www.mydailysentinel.com or www.mydailytribune.com for archive • games • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

FAC annual art
competion ... C1

Partly sunny.
High near 81.
Low, 64.

Wahama wins it
... B1

Ruby Stover Barch, 92
James R. “Turk” Blain, 78
Wayne Lewis Day, 76
Carroll R. McDaniel, 88
Homer Marshall Noble, 95
Alice “Hank” Orr
Rosemary (Notter) Sheets, 75
Adrian G. “Abe” Spencer, 74

SUNDAY, JUNE 30, 2013

Vol. 46, No. 25

$2.00

Mitchell arraigned in 2009 robbery of Farmers Bank
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The man
charged in the Sept. 2009
robbery of the Farmers
Bank branch in Tuppers
Plains was arraigned in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court on Friday
morning, nearly four years
after the crime.
Sean Bradford Mitchell,
44, formerly of Athens, appeared before Judge I. Carson Crow on four felony
counts in connection with
the robbery.
Mitchell has been incarcerated in Mississippi since
his arrest in Nov. 2009 on
one count of aggravated

robbery in Ocean Springs,
Mississippi. Mitchell was
convicted on that charge
and is not scheduled to to
be released until Nov. 2017
according to the Mississippi Department of Corrections website.
Mitchell was indicted in
Dec. 2009 on one count
each of aggravated robbery, robbery, theft and
kidnapping. Aggravated
robbery and kidnapping
are each felonies of the
first degree, robbery is a
felony of the second degree, and theft is a felony
of the fourth degree.
Friday was Mitchell’s
first appearance in a Meigs
County courtroom on the

charges.
Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams said
that bringing Mitchell
to Meigs County on the
charges required extradition paper work and a
warrant from the governor of Mississippi. Due to
a change in that office the
paperwork had to be completed twice, one under the
former governor and again
with the current governor.
Mitchell was transported to Meigs County earlier
this week by Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood and
Major Scott Trussell.
At the time of the offense, first degree felonies
carried a maximum sen-

tence of 10 years (it is
now 11 years), a felony of
the second degree carries
a maximum sentence of
eight years and a felony
of the fourth degree carries a maximum sentence
of 18 months in prison.
If convicted on all
counts, Mitchell could
face a maximum sentence of 29 years and six
months in prison.
According to reports
by The Daily Sentinel
in 2009, Mitchell was arrested in Ocean Springs,
Miss., in Nov. 2009, for
allegedly robbing the
Merchants and Marine
Bank there.
See ROBBERY ‌| A2

Sarah Hawley/photo

Bank robbery suspect Sean Mitchell sits in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court on Friday morning as he awaits arraignment on a four count indictment. Sheriff Keith Wood, right,
and Deputy Jeff perry are also pictured.

State’s first-ever
double roundabout
remains on schedule

Photos courtesy of the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce

A highlight of the annual River Recreation Festival, this year’s Independence Day parade will begin at 7 p.m. on July
4 and will follow the Rotary Mile, which begins at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday.

River Recreation Festival opens July 3
GALLIPOLIS — This year’s
River Recreation Festival promises
to have some great entertainment,
fabulous prizes and fun for people of
all ages, but the final details are still
being worked out and a few more
donations would help a great deal.

This year’s Festival will be held
July 3-6 in the Gallipolis City Park.
A few of the highlights this year
will be the fireworks, live auction,
Independence Day Parade and a
performance from the Ohio Valley
Symphony.

HOCKING COUNTY — Since breaking ground earlier this year on Phase I of the $5.3 million U.S. Route
33 and Ohio 664 double roundabout interchange near
Hocking Hills, construction crews will soon be ready to
begin Phase II as early as August.
“This project is more than just about safety — it’s
about creating a unique and beautiful interchange that
enhances the experience for the millions of visitors
traveling to this area each year,” said ODOT District 10
Deputy Director Steve Williams. “And more importantly, this project creates opportunities for future economic
development in and around southeast Ohio.”
Work on Phase I of the state’s first-ever double roundSee ROUNDABOUT ‌| A2

The Festival will feature a wide
range of other fun events, too, such
as wiener dog races, frog jumping,
sack races, talent shows, egg races,
hay rolling, bubble gum blowing,
See FESTIVAL ‌| A5

Evan Shaw nominated for Emmy awards
Charlene Hoeflich
choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Evan
Shaw, who was one of the
first Tech-Prep graduates
of Meigs High School,
just keeps getting recognition for his photography and television productions.
Shaw is assistant ath-

letic director for multimedia/marketing
for
Ohio University and
producer of the daily/
weekly sports program
for the television show
“Relentless — An Inside Look at Ohio Football,” which this year has
been nominated for five
Emmy Awards by the
Ohio Valley Chapter of

the National Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences, which consists of
television stations in four
states.
This year’s Emmy
nominations make a total
of 11 for BobcatTV since
the program launched in
2009 under the direction
of Shaw. The nomination
See SHAW ‌| A2

Evan Shaw

The new bridge, pictured here, is currently being constructed
on Ohio 664 as part of the double roundabout project.

60428919

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A2

Shaw

Obituaries

From Page A1

Wayne Lewis Day

Wayne Lewis Day, age
76, of Knoxville, Tenn., formerly of Gallipolis, passed
away Friday afternoon,
June 28, 2013 at his home.
Wayne was of the Baptist
faith. He was retired from
the U.S. Air Force after 20
years of service and later
retired from the City of
Knoxville as a Computer
Operations Manager. He
was a member of Elks Club Lodge #160 in Knoxville.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Aaron and
Virginia Kinder Day; good friend, Basil Betz; special
companions, Muffet and Simon.
Wayne is survived by his loving wife of 27 years, Nancy
Coker Day; beloved children, Kim, Virginia, Donna and
Juanita; special grandchildren, David and Ashley; several other grand and great grandchildren; sisters, Adeline
Smith and Arlene Smith; brother, Robert Day; several
nieces and nephews; special companions, Beau and Brianna.
The family will receive friends from 5 to 6:45 p.m. on
Tuesday, July 2 followed by a Celebration of Life at 7 p.m
at the Click Funeral Home Middlebrook Chapel with Rev.
Richard Beeler officiating. Full military honors will be
conferred by the U.S. Air Force. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Young Williams Animal Center,
www.young-williams.org.
Click Funeral Home Middlebrook Chapel, 9020 Middlebrook Pike is serving the Day family, www.clickfh.com

Rosemary (Notter) Sheets

Rosemary
(Notter)
Sheets, 75, a loving wife,
mother,
grandmother,
great-grandmother,
and
sister of Kettering, Ohio,
was called home June 25,
2013.
She was born in Gallipolis, Ohio April 28, 1938.
She was the daughter of
the late Cecil and Mary
(Clark) Notter. Her call
in life was taking care of
children, leading people
to Christ, and making
chocolate chip cookies and
chicken noodles. She enjoyed watching the children grow.
When first moving to Dayton she became a member of
East Dayton Free Will Baptist, then to Cherry Hill Baptist. We have many loving memories of her rejoicing with
loving friends like family. At the end, she was a member of First Baptist of Kettering Church, still rejoicing.
Her passion in life was serving God and her family. In
addition to her parents, she is preceded in death by her
daughter, Darlis Kay Sheets.

Survivors include husband of 56 years, Harlis Harold
Sheets; daughters, Mary Diana (Jim) Periman and Dana
Lynn (Kenny) Beekman; six grandchildren, James Harold Periman, Rachel Diana (Steve) Bugge, Darlis Lynn
(Josh) Periman, Jennifer Lynn (Justin) McVicar, Cecilia Rose Periman, and Chad Edward Beekman (fiancée,
Jessica Lauren Bowser); four great-grandchildren, Tyler
James Burrey, Bradley Lynn Burrey, Chloe Paige Randal,
Blake David McVicar; brother, John (Ann) Notter, and
sister, June (Ronnie) Halley.
Family will receive friends from 5-7 p.m. on Friday,
June 28, 2013, at Newcomer Funeral Home, 3380 Dayton-Xenia Road, Beavercreek, as well as from 4-6 p.m.
on Saturday, June 29, 2013, at Willis Funeral Home, 12
Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, where funeral services will follow at 6 p.m. Burial will take place at Mound Hill Cemetery, Gallipolis, on Sunday, June 30, 2013 at 1 p.m. To
leave a special message of condolence, please visit www.
NewcomerDayton.com or www.willisfuneralhome.com.

Adrian G. “Abe” Spencer

Adrian G. “Abe” Spencer, 74, of Bidwell, left this
earth to be with Jesus in his
heavenly home on June 27,
2013.
He is survived by his wife
of 54 years, Delores Nibert
Spencer. To this union was
born Connie Gillispie, Gary
Adrian (Lyndsey) Spencer,
both of Bidwell and Amy
(Chip) Spencer Blair of
Proctorville, all surviving.
He was born December
8, 1938 in Drift, Floyd
County, Ky. and his family
moved to Ohio in 1948. He was preceded in death by his
parents, Lee and Nanny Spencer, sister Joyce Seybold
and brothers John and Sherwood “Chub” Spencer. He is
survived by sisters, Lavonda Jeffers of Puyallup, Wash.
and Velma Coleman of Bidwell and brothers, Daniel
(Ruth) Spencer of Wellston and Robert (Joy) Spencer
of Gallipolis.
He is also survived by granddaughters, Amanda Gillispie, Erika Gillispie, Sara Gillispie, Megan Spencer and
Valerie Spencer; grandson Gary Adrian Spencer II; and
great grandsons Christopher Parsons, Dylan, Lyall and
Adrian Riley Spencer.
He worked for 30 years and retired from GKN Powdered
Metals in Gallipolis. He will be missed by his loved ones
and many friends. We thank God for his 74 years of life and
plan to meet him again.
Funeral Services will be held at 1 p.m., Tuesday, July 2,
2013 at the Willis Funeral Home. Pastor Pat Henson will
officiate the service. Burial will follow at Ridgewood Cemetery, Wellston. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Tuesday, from noon-1 p.m. prior to the service. There will
be a military graveside service by the Wellston American
Legion.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

came in the category of
daily/weekly sports programs. Working with
Shaw on “Relentless”
were Sean Fisher and
Chris Sabo, associate
producers.
Shaw was also nominated for an additional
Emmy for his role as
director during the production of “Relentless.”
He, Fisher and Sabo
were also nominated
in the “Sports Feature”
category for their work
on “The Scotty Hasting
Story,” a feature focusing on former Ohio Defensive Lineman Corey
Hasting’s brother, Scotty, who was critically
wounded in Afghanistan.
In addition, the three
were also nominated in
the category of Sports
Photography and Sports
Editing for their camera work throughout
the 2012 Ohio Football
season and during productions of “Relentless,”
and in the category of
Sport Editing for their
combined efforts.
Shaw has been nominated for 12 Regional
Emmys throughout his
career. As a student at
Ohio University, he won
an Emmy for his work
as Director on WOUB’s
“Gridiron
Glory,”
a
program covering high
school football in Southeastern Ohio.
In 2009, he won in the
category of Sports Photography and he paired
with Russ Eisenstein in
2010 to take top honors
in the Sports Feature

category.
In 2011, Shaw was
awarded an Emmy for
Sports Editing. He has
also been nominated for
a National Sports Emmy
five times for work as
part of a team with NFL
Films.
He began shooting
football as an undergraduate for WOUB in Athens. His career in sports
television has taken him
from the football fields
of rural Southeastern
Ohio all the way to Super Bowl Sunday. In addition to his duties with
Ohio University, Shaw
has long patrolled the
sidelines of professional
games for NFL Films as
a ground cinematographer.
Now Shaw is about to
take another step up in
his career.
Beginning this week he
will assume a new position at WOUB as Producer of Documentaries
and Special Projects. He
will continue to work for
the NFL as he has done
for several years but will
transition out of OU athletics.
Recently his completed a documentary on the
Cemeteries at the Ridges
(The 1900’s: Voices from
the Athens Asylum) written by Sherrie Roussou
which was well received.
Earlier in his career he
worked on a documentary on the rock festival in
Chicago, “Lollapalooze.”
While Shaw is adding
a new dimension to his
career, he says he plans
to continue doing NFL
sports documentaries.

ment will follow in Forest
Cemetery, Circleville.
In lieu of flowers you
may make a memorial
donation to Alzheimer’s
Research at OSU, Fund
302185, P.O. Box 183112,
Columbus, Ohio 43218,
or Berger Hospice, 1170
N. Court St., Circleville,
Ohio 43113; or Pickaway
County Senior Center,
2105 Chickasaw Dr. Circleville, Ohio 43113.

Death Notices
Noble

Homer Marshall Noble,
95, of Mason, W.Va., went
to be with the Lord on Friday, June 28, 2013 at his
residence in Mason with
his family by his side.
There will be graveside
service only, officiating
will be Rev. Carl Swisher at
the Sunrise Memorial Gardens in Letart, Monday,
July 1, 2013 at 11 a.m.

McDaniel

Carroll R. McDaniel,
88, of Ironton, Ohio, died
Thursday, June 27, 2013,
at the Community Hospice
Care Center, Ashland, Ky.
Funeral services will
be held at 1 p.m., Tuesday, July 2, 2013 at the
Coal Grove Church of the
Nazarene with Pastor Jeff
Canfield officiating. Burial will follow in Wood-

Roundabout
From Page A1

about interchange included widening the exit and
entrance ramps at U.S. 33
and Ohio 664, constructing a portion of the new
Ohio 664 bridge, embankment and drainage work
and installing temporary
and permanent pavement.

Phase I stats include:
· Placing 3,500 tons of
asphalt for temporary and
permanent pavement;
· Pouring 750 cubic
yards of concrete for the
new bridge deck, sidewalks, curb and other portions of the bridge structure;
· Moving 36,000 cubic

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land Cemetery, Ironton.
Friends may call from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. on Tuesday
at the church.

be no visitation. A memorial service will be held at
2 p.m. on Sunday, June
30, 2013, at Deal Funeral
Home with Isaiah Crump
officiating. Burial will be
at the convenience of the
family.

James Roger “Turk”
Blain, 78, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday,
June 28, 2013, at the PVH
Nursing &amp; Rehabilation
Center.
At his request, there will

Ruby Blake Stover
Barch, 92, formerly of
West Columbia, W.Va.,

died June 27, 2013, at
Brown Memorial Home,
Circleville.
Friends may call on
Sunday, from 2-4 p.m.
and 6-8 p.m. at the Oliver-Cheek Funeral Home,
420 W. Main St., Ashville,
with a funeral service at
11 a.m., Monday, July 1,
2013, with Chaplain Jim
Ferrell officiating. Inter-

yards of dirt as part of the
embankment work at the
entrance and exit ramps
as well as on various other
portions of the project.
Before switching to
Phase II, ODOT and the
contractor will finish minor pavement work as
well as pouring the bridge
walls and approach slabs
on the new bridge. An
approach slab is the area

between the bridge deck
and the roadway. A bridge
approach slab is used to
provide a smooth and
structurally sound transition from the pavement to
the bridge.
The switch to Phase II
will shift traffic to the new
bridge where two lanes
of traffic will be maintained at all times. Once
the traffic shift is made,

construction crews will
begin removing the existing bridge deck on the
Ohio 664 bridge, raising
the piers and finally pouring new concrete on the
bridge.
“As a major gateway
to tourism in our county,
I am pleased to see the
progress ODOT has made
on this important interchange,” said Hocking

Hills Tourism President
Rick Webb. “Once complete, the roundabouts
will make it easier for locals and visitors to access
beautiful Hocking Hills
and historic Logan.”
Weather permitting, the
project is estimated to be
completed on October 18,
2013.

into the Farmers Bank office and told tellers it was
an explosive device.
Bond for Mitchell in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court was set at

$500,000 with 10 percent
allowed. Mitchell would
still be in custody of the
State of Mississippi if
bond were posted in Meigs
County.
The Athens Public Defenders Office was appointed to represent Mitchell.
Pre-trial hearings in the
case are scheduled for 11
a.m. on July 29 and 11:15
a.m. on Aug. 12. A trial
date is scheduled for Aug.
29.
Mitchell is not the only
person currently in custody for allegedly robbing
the Farmers Bank branch
in Tuppers Plains.

Chad Rennicker is also
in custody awaiting trial in
the May 2013 robbery of
the same bank. Rennicker
has been charged with one
count of aggravated robbery and six counts of kidnapping.
Rennicker is scheduled
for a pre-trial hearing in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court at 11 a.m. on
July 29, and a trial date of
Aug. 15.
Rennicker is currently
housed in the Washington
County Jail in Marietta,
while Mitchell is in the
Southeast Regional Jail in
Nelsonville.

Blain

Barch

Robbery
From Page A1

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�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Ohio Valley Forecast
Sunday: A chance of
showers, with thunderstorms also possible after
3 p.m. Partly sunny, with a
high near 81. Calm wind becoming southwest around
6 mph in the afternoon.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Sunday Night: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 64. Calm
wind. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday: A chance of
showers, with thunderstorms also possible after
2 p.m. Partly sunny, with
a high near 82. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday
Night:
A
chance of showers and

thunderstorms before 11
p.m., then a chance of showers between 11 p.m. and 3
a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 64. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Tuesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with
a high near 82. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Tuesday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms.
Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
64. Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Wednesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 82. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Wednesday Night: A

Local Stocks
chance of showers and
thunderstorms.
Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
65. Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
Independence
Day:
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms.
Partly
sunny, with a high near 83.
Chance of precipitation is
40 percent.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms.
Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
67. Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Friday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with
a high near 83. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.

Meigs Calendar
Monday, July 1
POMEROY — Meigs
County Agricultural Society will meet at 7:30 at the
fairgrounds.
SYRACUSE — The Sutton Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Village Hall.
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 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Republican
Party Executive Committee
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
court house. The meeting
will be concerning July 4.
Tuesday, July 2
POMEROY — The Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, will
meet at 1 p.m. at the hall.
ALFRED — Orange
Township Trustees will
meet at 7:30 at the Orange
Township building.
Wednesday, July 3
MIDDLEPORT — The
American Red Cross will
hold a blood drive from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ
on Main Street in Middleport. Walk-ins welcome or
schedule your appointment

AEP (NYSE) — 44.78
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 18.81
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 83.50
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.53
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.98
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 86.15
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.28
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.201
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.95
Collins (NYSE) — 63.41
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.50
US Bank (NYSE) — 36.15
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.19
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.82
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.79
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.54
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 49.25
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.65
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.39
BBT (NYSE) — 33.88

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.08
Pepsico (NYSE) — 81.79
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.04
Rockwell (NYSE) — 83.14
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.12
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.80
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.08
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.49
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.83
WesBanco (NYSE) — 26.43
Worthington (NYSE) — 31.71
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for June
28, 2013, 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.

Gallia Calendar
at 1-800-REDCROSS or
online at www.RedCrossBlood.org (enter sponsor
code: MCofC). Presenting
donors will receive a free
Red Cross Baseball Hat,
while supplies last.
HARRISONVILLE —
The Scipio Township Trustees will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7 p.m.
at the Harrisonville Fire
House.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners will hold their
weekly meeting at 11 a.m.
The meeting was moved
due to the July 4 holiday.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Eastern Local Board
of Education will meet
at 5 p.m. to consider the
budget/appropriations for
the fiscal year 2014 and
any personnel items. The
meeting will be held in the
Eastern Elementary library
conference room.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical Society will meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, July 9
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Board will have
their regular meeting at 5
p.m. at the TPRSD office.
Thursday, July 11
CHESTER — Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall. Refreshments served following the meeting.

www.fbsc.com

Events
Sunday, June 30
CHESHIRE — Bradbury-Jenkins reunion, 1
p.m., Old Kyger Baptist
Church located on Old
Kyger Church Road off
of Stingy Creek Road.
A pot-luck meal will be
served.
Monday, July 1
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis
Neighborhood
Watch meeting, 1:30
p.m., meeting room,
Gallipolis Police Department, 518 Second Avenue.
Tuesday, July 2
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Clinic and Holzer
Medical Center Retirees
will meet for lunch at
noon on Tuesday, July 2.

Meeting will be held at
the Golden Corral Restaurant.
Saturday, July 6
GALLIPOLIS — GAHS
Class of 1954 will meet
at 9:30 a.m. for brunch
at the Golden Corral.
Anyone interested from
other classes or other old
friends are welcome to
join.
RIO
GRANDE
—
Horse Traders Day at
Rio Valley Stables, 635
Farmview Road, Bidwell.
Horse and horse-related
items only. Gates open at
9 a.m. Tack auction begins at 4 p.m. For more
information, call (740)
245-5342.
Sunday, July 7
GALLIPOLIS — Jacob and Maggie Sluyter

Davis family reunion,
1 p.m., Christ United
Methodist Church, 9688
Ohio 7 South, Gallipolis.
For more information,
call (740) 245-9605.
Tuesday, July 9
GALLIPOLIS — Triad/SALT meeting, 1
p.m., Senior Resource
Center, 1167 Ohio 160.
Thursday, July 18
RIO GRANDE — Basic
horsemanship class, 8-9
a.m., Rio Valley Stables,
635 Farmview Road, with
instructor Mark Abell.
Students may bring their
own horses, but some
will be available through
Rio Valley Stables. Waivers, helmets, long pants
and boots are required.
Call (740) 245-5342 for
reservations.

Every Life Celebrated with a
Century of Service

60425593

Since 1913

Funeral Home
Celebrating 100 Years of Serving
Meigs County
Kevin Schwarzel
Mike Putman
Directors
740-992-2121

call us or stop in....
we’d love to show you the changes we’ve made
60428843
60426429

Sunday, June 30
MIDDLEPORT — Rev.
Barry Sheets will be bringing the message, “True
Patriotism”, for the Sunday Morning Service at
the First Baptist Church of
Middleport, 211 S. Sixth
Ave. Rev. Sheets, in addition to preaching, is a
scholar who teaches classes
on the Constitution. There
will be no evening service
on that day. The service begins at 10:15 a.m.
REEDSVILLE — BiramHayman Reunion, 1 p.m. at
Shelter House 2 at Forked
Run State Park.
CHESHIRE — BradburyJenkins reunion, 1 p.m., Old
Kyger Baptist Church located on Old Kyger Church
Road off of Stingy Creek
Road. A pot-luck meal will
be served.
HENDERSON — Descendants of Sam and Melvina Birchfield will hold a
reunion at the Henderson
Community Center in Henderson, W.Va. Friends and
family are welcome. A basket dinner will be held at
noon.
CHESHIRE — The
family of Otto and Phyllis
Mulford will hold a family reunion Sunday, June
30, from 1 to 4 p.m. at
the Gavin Clubhouse in
Cheshire. Family members
of Harvey and Emma Margaret Mulford are also invited to attend. Those who
plan to attend are asked to
contact Janice at 740-9925207.
RACINE — The Neville
T. and Martha Rose family
reunion will be held at 1
p.m. at the home of Karen
Holter Werry on Court
Street Road (Morning Star
Area). BBQ chicken and
pork roast will be provided.
All family and friends are
invited. Contact Karen at
(740) 416-7285 for more
information.

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A3

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Opinion

Page A4
Sunday,June 30, 2013

Jeep owners worry
about recall deal
Tom Krisher
AP Auto Writer

DETROIT (AP) — A deal between the government
and Chrysler over Jeeps linked to deadly fires isn’t sitting
well with many Jeep owners and auto safety advocates.
In early June, after a nearly three-year investigation,
the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration recommended that Chrysler recall 2.7 million older
Jeep SUVs because the fuel tanks could rupture, leak and
cause fires in rear-end crashes.
But last week, after talks between outgoing Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and Chrysler CEO Sergio
Marchionne, the agency compromised, letting Chrysler
limit the recall to about 1.5 million vehicles.
The agreement removed about 1.2 million Jeep Grand
Cherokees, model years 1999 to 2004, from the recall,
leaving some owners confused about the safety of their
vehicles. Chrysler argued that those Jeeps have a different design than the ones it agreed to recall and are as
safe as comparable models from other automakers.
The about-face has confused people like Els Sipkes,
a photographer from near Charleston, S.C. Her 2000
Grand Cherokee isn’t being recalled, although the government initially said it should be.
She says that every time she stops quickly, she checks
her rear-view mirror. “It’s in my mind that if a car crashes
into the back of me, that I’ve got to be on my toes and I’ve
got to get out,” she said.
Chrysler won’t comment on the recall, beyond the documents it filed with NHTSA outlining its case.
Sean Kane, a frequent critic of NHTSA who heads a
safety research company in Massachusetts, said the number of vehicles cut from the Jeep recall is unusual. But the
agency frequently negotiates the size of recalls with car
companies, he said. For example, in the early 2000s, Ford
negotiated a series of smaller recalls that held off a big
one for vehicles with cruise control switches that caused
fires, he said. But the company eventually recalled more
than 10 million vehicles.
David Kelly, former NHTSA chief of staff and acting
administrator under President George W. Bush, said
Chrysler probably presented data justifying the smaller
recall. “I am positive that the agency would never negotiate vehicles out of a recall if they felt they were unsafe,”
he said.
Yet critics say all the Jeeps should be recalled. And
they question whether Chrysler’s solution of adding a
trailer hitch as an extra buffer in the back is enough to
prevent deadly fires.
Under the recall Chrysler will, free of charge, install
hitches on any Grand Cherokees from 1993-1998 and
Libertys from 2002-2007 that don’t already have them
from the factory. About 65 percent of Jeeps from that era
were sold without factory hitches, according to Ward’s
Automotive. Chrysler will inspect those with hitches
purchased elsewhere and replace them if they have sharp
edges that could puncture the gas tank.
The 1999-2004 Grand Cherokees are part of a “customer service campaign.” Here, a Chrysler dealer will inspect a trailer hitch installed after the car was purchased
and replace it if necessary. But Chrysler won’t install a
hitch on any vehicle that doesn’t already have one.
Chrysler Group LLC, which is majority owned by Fiat
SpA of Italy, hasn’t disclosed how much the recall could
cost, although hitches sell for about $200 each on websites.
On June 3, the government sent Chrysler a 13-page letter requesting a recall of all 2.7 million Grand Cherokees
and Libertys in question. The letter included detailed
statistics on crashes involving fuel tank fires in SUVs
from model years 1993 to 2007. The agency said the data
showed the Jeeps were more prone to fuel tank fires than
similar models. The Jeeps have gas tanks behind the rear
axle, a design that was fairly common when they were
built but isn’t used much anymore. NHTSA had evidence
of 37 Jeep accidents that killed 51 people.
Chrysler argued that the vehicles were safe. The company said its data show the Jeeps are no more prone to
fatal crashes than comparable vehicles such as the Ford
Explorer, Chevrolet Blazer and Toyota 4Runner. But it
agreed to the smaller recall, it says, to improve the Jeeps’
safety.
When asked about the government’s change of position, spokeswoman Karen Aldana said in an emailed
statement that NHTSA let Chrysler remove the 19992004 Grand Cherokees from the recall because the design change made them safer than the older models. The
agency’s full analysis will be published when the investigation is completed, she said.
But NHTSA knew about the change to the Grand
Cherokee’s design long before it asked for the recall.
Documents on NHTSA’s website examined by The Associated Press show that Chrysler detailed the change in
a November 2010 letter to the agency.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
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accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, please call one of our newsrooms.

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Published every Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631. Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis. Member: The Associated Press, the West
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Letters to the editor
AIB judges contratulate
Gallipolis on participation
Dear Editor,
Having dodged what could have
been a large storm in mid-June and
as we enter storm season, AEP Ohio
is providing this community update
about our efforts to ensure our customers have access to reliable electric
service.
Making sure our customers have
electricity when they need it is of the
utmost importance to us. That is why
we continue to work on our infrastructure to reinforce our systems. Since
2009, we have invested more than $1.1
billion throughout the state to improve
reliability for our customers and improve our transmission and distribution systems to ensure an adequate energy supply in Ohio to meet growing
demand.
We plan to invest $1.2 billion more
from 2013 to 2015 on additional system improvements across Ohio. Our
work includes building and upgrading
substations, building and rebuilding
high- and low-voltage transmission
lines, distribution system maintenance
and improvements, and our vegetation
management program.
Our vegetation management program has allowed us to increase our
tree trimming efforts and clear lines
every four years. Our program of clearing the vegetation area around electrical lines has proven to minimize the
impact of tree limbs during storms.
It also has had a positive impact in
minimizing outages during normal
operations. AEP Ohio wants to work
collaboratively with our customers to
provide reliable service.
We encourage customers to let us
know about trees that are touching the
electric lines or interfering with the
system in any way. Also, let us know
about any outages or downed wires as
soon as possible — never approach or
touch downed wires. With customer
assistance, we can work to remove
threats to the electrical system as well
as to restore power in a timely fashion.
We also are focusing on improving
our communication with our customers. AEP Ohio has been utilizing email
to keep customers educated in advance
of a storm and continues to look for
new ways to keep customers informed.
If you are interested in receiving updates and information, provide us your

email address by contacting our Customer Solution Center at 1-800-6722231 or by going online through our
account management area at www.aepohio.com. On behalf of the men and
women of AEP Ohio, we take our customers’ trust and business seriously
and will continue our work to improve
reliability.
Pablo Vegas
President and COO AEP Ohio
Celebrate your independence as
an American
To the editor,
As we approach the 4th of July and
celebrate our nation’s independence, I
can’t help but marvel at how many of
the citizens of the USA have allowed
themselves to become dependent.
Our country was set up to where a
person could live a life of their choosing, based upon the sweat of their
brow and the grace of the Lord. There
was very limited intrusion from the
government.
Case in point, Davy Crockett having been elected to Congress, sought
funds to rebuild a building that had
burned down. Congress didn’t vote for
these funds having reasoned that if the
people wanted this structure rebuilt
they should rebuild it.
Today government will feed you,
clothe you, house you, entertain you,
and send you a monthly check. All you
have to do is meet their guidelines. In
doing so, you have allowed yourself
to become dependent. A puppet that
can be played, a prostitute that can be
bought.
On Independence Day take some
time to reflect on how dependent you
have allowed yourself to become. How
many liberties you give up for a price,
liberties bought by our forefathers’
blood.
Then decide if you are responsible
enough to celebrate your independence as an American.
Daniel W. Lantz
Pomeroy, Ohio
AIB judges congratulate
Gallipolis on participation
Dear Editor,
Congratulations to Gallipolis for
your eight years of participation in
the America in Bloom (AIB) national
awards program! Two AIB judges
peered through your parks, neighbor-

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

subscription by mail permitted in areas

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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.

hoods and business districts on June
20 and 21. All this probing was to determine and praise your community’s
progress in discovering and touting its
amenities and attributes; and improving the environment and the quality of
life of its citizens. America in Bloom’s
goal is to assist communities in becoming a destination to live, work and recreate.
America in Bloom is a community
building endeavor. The six criteria
judged — Overall Impression, Environmental Effort, Heritage Conservation, Urban Forestry, Landscaped
Areas, Floral and Displays — are designed to bring communities and people together to achieve improvements
to their quality of life. The judges provide insight and consultation toward
improvement and their recommendations will be available to you in September.
AIB has involved more than 200
towns across America. AIB offers
communities sustainable solutions in
view of budget busting economies,
out-sourcing, mobile lifestyles and environmental trends.
The culmination of this awards program is detailed in a scoring and evaluation document presented after the
Awards Ceremony and Educational
Symposium, held this year in Orlando,
Florida from September 19-21.
While top honors are awarded to
those who garner the most points
among the six criteria, all participants
are truly winners by virtue of their participation.
A healthy, functional community is
like a loving extended family where
each individual is valued for their intrinsic worth and contribution. A true
sense of community is a thing of great
beauty. For more information, check
out the AIB website at www.americainbloom.org
Our sincere thanks Beverly Dunkle,
Randy Finney, Karen Smith, Lori Kelly, Sandee Saxon, Kim Canaday and
so many others who made our visit so
memorable.
Dwight Lund and Alex Pearl
2013 America in Bloom Judges

Sunday Times Sentinel

Ohio Valley
Newspapers
200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Phone (304) 675-1333
Fax (304) 675-5234
www.mydailyregister.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Festival
From Page A1

hula hooping, corn hole
tossing, corn husking, split
the pot drawings and plenty
of great food. And if that
weren’t enough, the Festival
will also have a wide range
of bands, games for young
children and older children,
an activity area for children
with special needs, musicians, crafters and a wide
range of concessions.
Organizers expect roughly
10,000 people to visit the
Festival over the four days,
and they have packed the
schedule for each day. Lorie
Neal, Executive Director of
the Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce, said that while
it takes a lot of work to plan
for the Festival each year, it
is all worth it when crowds
of people from around the
region are involved in the different activities.
“The best part is just seeing everyone having fun,”
Neal said.
One of the main attractions this year will be Kids
Day, which will be held on
Saturday, July 6. From 9:30
a.m. until 6 p.m. on Kids
Day, prizes will be awarded
to children every 30 minutes.
Volunteer Gwen Doss does a
great job every year of working with local businesses to
get donations of outstanding
prizes for children young and
old, Neal said. In the past,
the prizes have included
bicycles, video games and
other very nice items.
The Festival also has several extremely fun games for
the children to be involved in
on Kids Day, including the
all-new Minute To Win It
contest, which will be sponsored by the Addison Freewill Baptist Church, Neal
said.
Another big event this
year will be the Live Auction, which will be held on
Thursday, July 4 after the
Independence Day Parade.
Sponsored by Wiseman Real
Estate and BTS Software
Solutions, the auction will in-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

clude several exciting items,
including one-year of room
and board at the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College. The
room and board item has a
value at more than $8,600.
“It’s really a great deal,”
Neal said.
The amusement rides are
always a big attraction for
the River Recreation Festival, and this year’s rides will
be provided by Michael’s
Amusements out of Fayetteville, North Carolina.
On Wednesday, July 3,
rides will cost just $1 per
ride, thanks to a generous
donation from Mark Porter
Chevrolet, Buick and GMC.
“He stepped up to the
plate and saved the day on
the discount rides,” Neal
said. The rides will open at
5 p.m. that day.
On Thursday, July 4, visitors to the Festival will need
to purchase tickets for the
rides, but on Friday and Saturday area residents will be
able to purchase wristbands
for $12 that will allow them
to go on as many rides as
they want during certain
hours.
On Friday, the wristbands
will only be able to be used
throughout the evening beginning at 5 p.m. The wristbands from Friday cannot be
used on Saturday.
On Saturday, visitors to
the Festival will be able to
purchase one wristband for
the rides between noon and
5 p.m. and then another
wristband for rides between
6-11 p.m. The wristband
from the afternoon cannot be
used for rides in the evening.
One other big attraction
for the River Recreation
Festival each year is the fireworks. The fireworks this
year will begin at 10 p.m. on
Saturday, July 6.
The organizers increased
the fireworks budget last
year in order to try to keep
up with rising prices, but
Neal would like to bring in
more funding for fireworks
in the future. Additional do-

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A5

Gallia Briefs
Northup Road to close
GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Engineer, Brett A.
Boothe, has announced Northup Road will be closed on Monday, July 1, 2013, from Lincoln Pike to Ingleside Camp from
8 a.m. until 5 p.m. for culvert replacement. Northup Road
will also be closed on Tuesday, July 2, 2013, and Wednesday,
July 3, 2013, from Ingleside Camp to Ohio 775 from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. for culvert replacement. Residents are ask to use other
county roads as a detour.
County commission meeting change
GALLIPOLIS — Due to the Independence Day holiday,
the Gallia County Commissioners regular weekly meeting
date has been rescheduled for 9 a.m. on Tuesday, July 2.
City commission meeting slated
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis City Commission will
hold its regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, July 2
at the Gallipolis Municipal Building, 333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio. The meeting room may be accessed through
the side entrance door adjacent to 2 1/2 Alley.

Fireworks will light up the sky this year over the Gallipolis
City Park beginning at 10 p.m. on Saturday, July 6. As in recent years, the fireworks show will begin immediately after a
free performance by the Ohio Valley Symphony at 8 p.m. This
year’s performance will feature the vocal group SEVEN.

nations this year or in future
years for the fireworks would
help a great deal, especially in
2015 when the Festival will
celebrate its 50th anniversary.
“Every little bit helps,” Neal
said about the donations. The
organizers are still looking for
additional donations to help
pay for different festival items
this year, she added.
For more information on
this year’s River Recreation
Festival, log onto the River
Recreation Festival Facebook

page. For additional information or to make donations to
the Festival, call the Gallia
County Chamber of Commerce 740-446-0596. The
Festival is sponsored by the
Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce and the River
Recreation Festival. A large
number of local businesses,
organizations and individuals
also make donations to the
Festival and assist in numerous ways each year.

DJFS accepting applications for school clothing/supplies
program
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Department of Job
and Family Services will be accepting applications for the
school clothing/supplies program now through July 3. Applications can be dropped off at DJFS, 848 Third Avenue,
Monday through Thursday, 7 a.m.-5 p.m. Applications must
include the last 30 days of household income and must be
completed with all household member, income and signed.
To be eligible children must be enrolled in kindergarten
through the 12th grade. Proof of enrollment will be needed
for children under age six and over age 17. Applicants will be
notified by mail, no later than August 12 if their applications
has been approved or denied. No phone calls, please. Shopping days will be held from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. on August 12-15 at
K-Mart and Peebles.
Wilkesville 4th of July parade
WILKESVILLE — The annual Fourth of July parade in
Wilkesville will be held beginning at 11 a.m. on July 4. Registration is free and begins at 10 a.m. There will be a $50 cash
prize giveaway plus a $25 Par Mar gift card for best 4-H float,
church float, and most unique entry. There will be a $50 prize
for the best old car and best horse entry. There will be a $25
prize for the best children’s entry, ages 1-10. Registration will
be on the hill by the new fire house. Registration for children
will be across from the old restaurant. Food will be served at
the Wilkesville Community Center following the parade. Call
669-5646 for more information.

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fractures and arthritis. Dr. Miller also treats sports injuries, children’s
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such as carpal tunnel syndrome.

To schedule an appointment:
(304) 485-8040
www.orthodoc.aaos.org/drmiller
60426886
60412545

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A6

Meigs County Local Briefs
Southern High School,
and those taking part
are asked to limit the
vehicles coming in and
out of the lot due to the
construction. The flag
raising will take place
at Home National Bank
during the parade. Following the parade will be
a chicken BBQ at the Fire
Department. Fireworks
will be held at 10 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — The

Middleport Fourth of
July celebration will be
held on Thursday, July 4,
with events beginning at
4 p.m., and concluding at
10 p.m. with fireworks.
Donations are currently
being accepted by the
Middleport Community
Association to help expand the fireworks display.
WILKESVILLE — The
annual Fourth of July pa-

GALLIPOLIS - 2 CRUISES
JULY 30th

rade in Wilkesville will be
held at 11 a.m. on July 4.
Registration is free and
begins at 10 a.m. Prizes
will be awarded for various parade categories.
For more information
call 669-5646.
Rutland’s annual Ox
Roast
RUTLAND — The
Rutland Fire Department’s
annual
ox
roast,traditionally held
in conjunction with observance of Independence Day, will be held
on Saturday, July 6. At
10 a.m. a parade will
kick off the celebration
after which activities
will move to the firemen’s park where there
will be games, refreshments, bounce houses,
tractor events, wrestling
and musical presentations concluding with a
fireworks display at 11
p.m.
Vacation Bible
School
LONG BOTTOM —
The Fellowship Church
of the Nazarene will be
having Bible School July
8 to 12 from 6 p.m. to
8:30 p.m. each day. The
them is “SonQuest Rainforest.” The church is
located at 54120 Fellowship Drive. For more information call Tina Carson, 74-378-6278.

RUTLAND — The
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will be having
Vacation Bible School
beginning July 8-12 from
6-8:30 p.m. each evening.The theme will be
SonWest Roundup with
western type attire. A
cookout will be held on
Saturday, July 13 and
two bicycles will be given
away for each class. The
names of all having perfect attendance will be
collected and two names
drawn. All area children
are invited. Parents too.
For more information
call (740) 742-2507. Ed
Barney Pastor
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.
Ice Cream Social
SALEM CENTER —
The Salem Township Vol-

Largest Selection, Over 225 Knives on Display

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Cincinnati on its Summer Tour of River
Cities. We will be stopping in Gallipolis
offering lunch and dinner cruises! Come
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top attractions during this annual tradition!

1-800-261-8586

check out our
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60421792

Health Department
closed
The Meigs County
Health Department will
be closed on July 4. Normal hours will resume at
8 a.m. on July 5.
July 4th activities
RACINE — The annual Racine Fourth of
July celebration will be
held begin at 10 a.m. on
Thursday, July 4 with the
parade. Line up will be at

unteer Fire Department
will hold its 35th annual
ice cream social on Saturday, July 20. Serving will
be from 11 a.m to 3 p.m.
at the fire house which is
located on SR 124 in Salem Center. In addition
to 10 flavors of homemade ice cream, sloppy
joe sandwiches, hot dogs,
and pie will be available.
For more information
contact Linda Montgomery at 669-4245.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just
0.25 miles south of State
Farm Road) will be reduced to one lane to allow for a bridge replacement project. During
construction there will
be a 10’ width restriction. Traffic will be maintained with a portable
traffic light. Weather
permitting, both lanes
of Ohio 143 will be open
September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio
124 will be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 124 (located 0.4
miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced to one lane to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio
124 will reopen August
31, 2013.

Independence Day
Freedom has its life in the hearts,
the actions, the spirit of men and so
it must be daily earned and refreshed else like a ﬂower cut from its life-giving
roots, it will wither and die.

~Dwight D. Eisenhower

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Decisions
Made Locally

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Pomeroy
740-992-5141 740-949-2300 740-992-5444
60421560

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www.andersonmcdaniel.com
60426521

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A7

Pottery collectors head to Crooksville show
POMEROY — Area Hull pottery collectors will be traveling to
Crooksville on July 12 and 13 for
the 20th annual Hull Pottery Association’s national show and sale which
is being held at the Crooksville High
School.
A variety of activities will take
place at the event which features a
display of hundreds of authentic,
rare, and one of a kind pieces of Hull
Pottery. Dealers and collectors from
across the country are expected to

be in Crooksville, the pottery capital
of the world, for the event.
Among those attending from here
will be Iva Stewart of Rutland who
is an avid collector and member of
the Hull Pottery Association. One
reason for her interest is that she
had relatives who worked at the factory which closed its doors in 1986.
At that time the factory was sold to
Friendship Pottery and then burned
to the ground in 1993.
The Hull Pottery Association was

formed in 1994 with 90 members. It
currently has hundreds on its membership list from across the country.
The Hull Pottery show at Crooksville is the largest in the world. The
goal of the Association is to support and promote the collection of
Hull Pottery. The opening event for
members will take place from 6 to
8 p.m. on July 11 at the Roseville
Community Center, located just off
Ohio 93 in Roseville.

Senior Center plans motorcoach trips
POMEROY — Several motorcoach trips are being planned by
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center.
The next one is on Aug. 22 with a
trip to the Cincinnati Reds and Arizona Diamondbacks game. Chandra Shrader, social worker for the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
advises that the trip is for all ages
and that there are pickup points in
Pomeroy and Gallipolis.

The cost of $75 each includes
field box seats near first base,
transportation and a box lunch. .
A second event booked is the Pigeon Forge and Smoky Mountains
Show Trip, Dec. 2 to 6. The cost
for the five days, four night trip,
is $445 with $75 due upon signing. The price includes motorcoach
transportation, four nights lodging, eight meals — four breakfasts
and four dinners. It also includes

admission to four evening shows,
Christmas at the Smoky Mountain
Opry, Country Tonight, The Smith
Family Show, and the Hatfield McCoy dinner show, and three morning shows and allows free time in
historic downtown Gatlinburg.
To register for the trip or to get
additional information call the Center at (740) 992-2161.

OU offering classes
POMEROY — The Ohio University Small Business
Development Center will be offering free business classes in four counties in July, one of which will be held in
Meigs County.
Emphasis of the meetings which are free of charge is
on start-up businesses. The Basis of a Successful Start
(BOSS) class will be given in Meigs County on July 23,
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Meigs County Senior Center, 112
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
BOSS will cover topics including types of ownership,
licensing, tax requirements, sources of financing and
how to market your product or service.
The first of the BOSS classes will be held at the Ohio
University Voinovich School of Leadership and Public
Affairs at The Ridges, Building 19, Room 102, from 10
a.m to 12 p.m. on Tuesday, July 9.
Other BOSS classes in addition to the one on July
9 in Athens and the one on July 23 in Meigs County
are in Hocking County at the Hocking County Library,
230 E. Main St., Logan, from 5:30 to 7:30 on July 11;
Perry County at the Somerset Courthouse at 100 Public Square, Somserset, from 9 to 11 a.m. and from 2 to
4 p.m., and at the Hocking County Chamber of Commerce, 4 East Hunter Street, Logan, 9 to 11 a.m. and 2
to 4 p.m. on July 24.
To register for one of the classes sponsored by the Ohio
University Small Business Development Center, contact
Trenia Twyman at 740-597-1460 or twyman@ohio.edu.

Chief: We might never know why Ohio boy killed

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Plans:

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Riverwalk Dental
R. Craig Mathews, DDS
530A West Union St.
Athens, Ohio 45701

for a
90 day supply

60430219

naugle said. “I don’t know if we’ll ever
know.”
The Franklin County coroner’s office in Columbus conducted an autopsy
and the state Bureau of Criminal Investigation is analyzing evidence from the
scene. Hawker said final results probably
won’t be known for six weeks or more.
The shooting happened Wednesday in
an upstairs bedroom at the home of the
boys’ maternal grandparents. Police say
the boys, Austin Wiseman, 12, and Blake
Campbell, 9, lived at the home.

2013 River Recreation Festival
INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE

For general dentistry and implant needs —
accepting new patients and emergencies.

$10

Ask a Pharmacist
for details

two casings were recovered along with a
.44-caliber handgun. The gun belonged
to the boys’ grandfather, Police Chief
Carl Eisnaugle said Friday. Investigators
don’t believe anyone else was involved.
Hawker said state investigators have
taken the older boy’s computer to look
for clues to what might have led up to
the shootings.
Eisnaugle said there might never be an
explanation.
“Whether or not it’s an accident would
be extremely hard to determine,” Eis-

Call 740-592-1483 or 1-800-923-7329
for appointment

Theme: The Many Faces of America’s Freedom
Thursday July 4 @ 7p.m.
Downtown Gallipolis
For more information, call the Chamber at

446-0596

Deadline to register, June 26, 2013

Nybble Café – Fresh. Innovative. Delicious.
Now a full service breakfast and coffeehouse in
addition to our ever popular lunch/dinner menu!

– Latte
– Cappuccino
– Espresso
–Coffee
– Iced Coffee
– Smoothies
– Amazing and innovative breakfast
sandwiches, wraps, and ﬂatbreads

New Hours of Operation:
Monday - Friday: 7am to 8pm,
Saturday: 7am to 7pm,
Sunday: 11am to 3pm
“It’s my favorite place to go grab a cappuccino and get
some work done on my iPad.” ------- Abraham Lincoln
Come check out the popular Nybble Café Open
Mic Night on Wednesdays starting at 6pm

Like us on facebook to ﬁnd daily specials
and track what’s fresh at
Nybble Café!
#galliaﬁrst
60428594
60430153

60420678

followed by suicide. Authorities say each
boy had a single gunshot wound to the
head.
“You want to think it was an accident,”
Hawker said, adding that there’s not
enough evidence yet to draw any conclusion.
“There was no sign of a struggle,”
Hawker told The Associated Press.
“The younger boy was just sitting in a
children’s chair, sitting there like he was
watching TV.”
He said only two bullets were fired, and

60425114

CINCINNATI (AP) — Ohio authorities are investigating multiple possibilities for why a 12-year-old boy fatally
shot his 9-year-old half brother and then
turned the gun on himself, a coroner said
Friday.
The police chief said the answer might
not ever be known.
Jackson County Coroner Dr. Gregory
Hawker said investigators don’t know
whether the shootings in Jackson in
southern Ohio were a murder-suicide, a
suicide pact or an accidental shooting

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A8

Immigration legislation faces obstacles in House
Tom Cole, an Oklahoma
Republican who said it
could be late this year or
perhaps early in 2014 before the outcome is known.
His own constituents are
“very skeptical, mostly opposed,” he said.
Supporters of the Senate’s approach sought to
rally support for its promise of citizenship for those
who have lived in the United States unlawfully, a key

provision alongside steps
to reduce future illegal immigration.
“The Republican Party
still doesn’t understand
the depth…of this movement and just how much
the American people want
comprehensive immigration reform,” Rep. Luis
Gutierrez, D-Ill., said on
Friday. “We need to make
sure they come to this understanding.”

But Rep. Matt Salmon,
R-Ariz., said in an interview that any bill that results in citizenship was a
nonstarter. He called the
approach “patently unfair”
to those trying to “do it the
legal way.”
Within hours after the
Democratic- controlled
Senate approved its bill
Thursday on a 68-32 vote,
President Barack Obama
telephoned with congratu-

lations for several members of the bipartisan Gang
of Eight who negotiated an
early draft of the bill that
passed.
Traveling in Africa, he
also called House Speaker
John Boehner, R-Ohio, and
Democratic leader Nancy
Pelosi of California from
Africa, urging them to pass
an immigration bill.
Yet not even a firm timetable has been set.

The House Republican
rank and file is scheduled
to hold a closed-door meeting on the issue shortly after returning from a July 4
vacation, and Boehner has
said previously he hopes
legislation on the topic can
be passed by the end of the
month. Aides also say it is
possible the issue wouldn’t
come to the floor until the
leadership had successfully
resurrected a farm bill that
was defeated last week.
In contrast to the allin-one approach favored
by the Senate, the House
Judiciary Committee has
approved a series of singleissue bills in recent days,
none including a path to
citizenship that Obama
and Democrats have set as
a top priority.
One, harshly condemned
by Democrats, provides
for a crackdown on immigrants living in the United
States illegally. Another
sets up a temporary program for farm workers to
come to the United States,
but without the opportunity for citizenship the
Senate-passed measure includes.
A third, which drew
several Democratic votes,
requires establishment of a
mandatory program within
two years for companies
to verify the legal status of
their workers. The Senate
bill sets a four-year phasein, although supporters of
the legislation have also
signaled they are agreeable
to tighter requirements.
A fourth increases the
number of visas for highlyskilled workers.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., criticized the approach
followed so far by House
Republicans. “We have
taken up a series of smallbore partisan bills that are
in some cases bizarre,” she
said at a panel discussion
hosted by Bloomberg Government and the National
Restaurant
Association.
“We have not touched the
whole issue of how you
get 11 million people right
with the law.”
Also appearing on the
panel, Republican Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida
said the House must find a
solution for the estimated
11 million immigrants now
living in the United States
unlawfully. “Ignoring that
reality does not make it go
away,” he said.
Lofgren and Diaz-Balart
are part of a bipartisan
group that has tried to
struggled unsuccessfully so
far to produce legislation
roughly comparable to the
one drafted by the Gang of
Eight in the Senate.

BMV
announces
reduction in
fee for late
registration

60420309

WASHINGTON (AP)
— The focus of hotly contested immigration legislation swung Friday from the
Senate to the House, where
conservative Republicans
hold power, there is no bipartisan template to serve
as a starting point and the
two parties stress widely
different priorities.
“It’s a very long and
winding road to immigration reform,” said Rep.

COLUMBUS — Effective July 1, 2013, the current fee for late renewal
of motor vehicle registration will be reduced from
$20 to $10. In addition,
the previous 7-day grace
period associated with
the fee has been extended to 30 days.
The BMV asks drivers to keep in mind that
it is still illegal to operate a motor vehicle after
the registration expiration date as doing so can
result in citations and
fines.
In order to avoid a late
fee, the BMV reminds vehicle owners to complete
renewals up to 90 days
before the expiration
date, either in person, at
your local deputy registrar, by mail or on-line at
www.OPLATES.com.
Vehicle registrations
typically expire on the
motorist’s birthday, as
some mistakenly believe
expiration is at the end
of the month.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sports

SUNDAY,
JUNE 30, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

INSIDE
The Chosen
win OAC points
championship
...B4

Tri-County golfers end regular season
Staff Report
MASON, W.Va. — The Riverside Golf Course hosted the final
regular season Frank Capehart
Tri-County Junior Golf League
tournament Thursday morning.
Mother Nature, for the second
day in a row, threaten the young
men and woman with showers.
However, the showers stopped
before play started and basically
stayed away for the entire round.
A large contingent of players
took part in the contest shoot-

ing for the “champion” status in
most of the age groups.
Laith Hamid needed to play a
decent round to secure his first
place position in the 10-and-under
age group. He did just that posting a 42 for the day to win eight
points, bringing his grand total
for the year to 27. Dylan Tayengco
won the 10 available points for the
day by shooting a fine 39. Even
though Dylan had been ill for the
season’s first two tournaments, he
was still able to finish in second
place in the final standings.

The 11-12 year old age group
continued to be dominated by Jasiah Brewer. His score of 44 gave
him his fourth tournament victory in a row as well as the title
of champion in this age group.
And, once again, for the fourth
consecutive tournament, Wyatt
Nicholson finished second to Jasiah to win the day’s second place
trophy. Gabe Gilmore finished in
third place for the day and in the
race for the championship. Colby
Martin and Nicholas Durst also
played in this age group.

Morgan Miller walked away
with the championship in the
girls division of the age group.
Her score of 41 for the day was
her best of the season and gave
her a combined four-week point
total of 40 for the year.
Matthew Martin, following a
two-week absence, returned to
shoot a 46 and win the first place
position for the day and a total of
20 points for the year which was
good for an overall third place
finish in the championship.
Jonah Hoback was only a

shot behind Matthew and the
eight points he earned gave him
the tournament championship.
Grant Gilmore finished in third
place for the fourth week in a
row. However, his consistency
gave him 24 points for the year
and a final standing of second
place in the championship race.
Colton Blaken, Jacob Ratliff
and Conner Wolfe also participated in the days play.
The girls division was won by
See GOLFERS ‌| B3

Photos by Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Members of the Wahama football team pose for a picture after winning the 2012 Class A championship following a
43-42 overtime victory over Madonna at Wheeling Island Stadium in Wheeling, West Virginia.
Nhat V. Meyer | San Jose Mercury News | MCT photo

California’s Tyrone Wallace (3) goes in for a layup over UNLV’s
Anthony Bennett (15) in the first half of the men’s NCAA basketball tournament at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, California,
on Thursday, March 21.

Cavs welcome top
pick Anthony Bennett
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) — Anthony Bennett
wasn’t really all that interested in playing basketball. Yeah,
it was cool dunking on guys, and a great way to make new
friends after moving from Toronto to the city’s suburbs.
Then, he decided to get serious about six or seven
years ago.
His future was calling.
“I just started growing,” Bennett said, flashing a smile
while talking about his unique path to the NBA. “And everyone said, ‘You should probably play basketball.’ So I said, ‘All
right. I’ll give it a shot.’ Look where it got me now.”
Look indeed.
Bennett was formally introduced Friday by the Cleveland Cavaliers, who shocked the draft by selecting the
UNLV power forward with the No. 1 overall pick on
Thursday night.
Although he wasn’t regarded by many draft experts as
the best player available, Bennett was always at the top of
Cleveland’s board. They scouted the 6-foot-7, 240-pounder extensively all season, fell in love with his game and
after getting rave reviews about his character, chose him
over Kentucky center Nerlens Noel, Kansas guard Ben
McLemore, Georgetown forward Otto Porter Jr. in a
flawed draft.
“As we did our evaluations throughout the entire year,
we just kept coming back to his ability and his talent and
how it fit with our guys,” Cavs general manager Chris
Grant said. “A lot of times, like last year, it’s just clear-cut.
But for us, through the year, we always had him very high
in our rankings and as we went back and reviewed the
film and went on campus and visited everybody, we came
away saying he’s a great kid. He’s willing to work and do
the right things and he’s got a bunch of talent.”
From almost the moment they won the lottery until
they had to call the league with their pick, the Cavs
listened to multiple trade offers before taking Bennett,
See BENNETT |‌ B3

OVP Sports Briefs
GAHS Youth
Football Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy High
School football staff will be
conducting a youth football
camp from 6 p.m. until 8:30
p.m. on Monday, July 22,
through Wednesday, July
24, for students in grades
1-8 at the high school.
There is a fee for each
camper and a reduced rate
for multiple campers from
the same family, and registration will run from 4:45
p.m. until 5:45 p.m. on the
first day of camp. All campers will receive a t-shirt.
The camp will cover
fundamentals for all positions and players will be
instructed by the GAHS
football staff and players. Campers should wear
shorts, t-shirt and tennis
shoes or cleats. Water will

be provided but a water
bottle is recommended.
For more information or
to register, contact GAHS
football coach Wade Bartholomew at (740) 412-0104.
Big Bend Youth ]
Football League
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio —
The Big Bend Youth Football League will be having
football and cheerleading
signups from 11 a.m. until
1 p.m. every Saturday in
July at the Middleport Veterans Memorial Stadium.
Signups are for all interested kids in grades
3-6, and second graders
may sign up if they meet a
50-pound minimal weight
requirement. There is also
a signup fee.
For more information,

OVP Story #1: Wahama wins it all
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Every year when I recap a sports season’s best
stories, I often state the
following in regards to
comparing state championships — which usually
ends up being the top
story of each year.
“In this business, there
is nothing better than writing about a state championship. And since the
competition cannot beat
a state champion, neither
can another story about
another state champion.
Rather it be an individual
title or a team crown,
the thrill of being a state
champion only comes to a
handful of blessed people
in high school. And regardless of the sport, they
are all equally worthy of
top billing.”
I still to this day believe that statement to
be true 99.9-percent of
the time. And this is that
one-tenth of one percent of the time that this
statement simply does
not apply.
Why? Because football
truly is king.
When it comes to high
school sports, nothing
gets a community more
passionate than seeing
their local boys take to
the gridiron. Few sports
in high school generate
more revenue, more interest and more enthusiasm than Friday nights
under the lights.
You won’t find a harder
sport to come away with
a state championship in
than football. It’s a game
that requires a minimum
of 11 really good players — and in all reality,
at least a handful of quality reserves as well. It’s
a game of numbers and
inches and strength and

speed — and most importantly, execution.
No gridiron team in
the Ohio Valley Publishing area has collectively
played the game better
than Wahama over the
last three seasons, and
the 2012 campaign allowed the White Falcons
to stake their claim as
one of the best programs
in all of West Virginia.
Wahama, since joining
the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division in the
fall of 2010, has simply
owned its regular season
competition.
The White Falcons
have won 31 consecutive
regular season contests,
compiled a perfect 24-0
mark against TVC Hocking foes while winning
three straight outright
league titles and have won
at least two playoff games
en route to making it the
Final Four of the Class A
playoffs each of the last
three postseasons.
That’s quite a bit in itself, and that span also includes becoming the first
OVP area school to ever
play for a state championship — when WHS lost a
28-14 decision to Wheeling Central Catholic in
the 2010 final. Wahama
also made it to the state
semifinals in 2011 before
falling to eventual state
runner-up Williamstown
by a 24-7 count.
Wahama didn’t blow
teams out this year like
they did the previous
two, as the White Falcons
averaged 44.6 points per
game offensively while
posting a weekly winning
margin of 31.4 points.
Those same numbers
were 44.8 and 38.7 in
2010 and 51.6 and 44.1
last year, respectively.
The difference this
year, however, came

Wahama football coach Ed Cromley, in his 18th year with
the program, lifts the 2012 Class A championship trophy
after his White Falcons claimed a 43-42 overtime victory
over Madonna at Wheeling Island Stadium in Wheeling,
West Virginia.

down to a handful of intangibles. Experience,
leadership, determination, luck and most importantly — guts.
The White Falcons improved to 7-0 alltime at
Ohio Valley Bank Track
and Field in Point Pleasant during playoff games,
which landed Wahama in

its third straight Final
Four appearance. It also
secured a date with host
Magnolia in the Class A
state semifinals, which
Wahama eventually held
on to win by a hardfought 10-7 margin.
The White Falcons ran
See WAHAMA ‌| B4

Gress wins first half Riverside Seniors title
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — Jimmy Gress of
Letart captured the first half championship Tuesday afternoon in the 2013
Riverside Senior Men’s Golf League
being held at Riverside Golf Club.
Gress posted a winning first half
tally of 155.0 points, which ended up
being eight full points aheads of the
field. Richard Mabe was the first half
runner-up with 147.0 points, while
Rick Handley (144.0) edged out Dave
Seamon (143.0) by a single point for
sole possession of third place.
See BRIEFS ‌| B2
The first half ended with a total

of 121 different players taking part
in league play for at least one week.
The league averaged 68 players per
week in the first half. Next week, the
standings will start fresh at zero for
the second half of play.
A total of 71 players were at the
first half finale on Tuesday, making 18
points available to the 17 foursomes
and three-man team participating.
The low score of the day went to
the quartet of Carl Stone, Jim Blake,
Siebert Belcher and Ed Debalski,
who collectively fired a 12-under par
round of 58.
Bobby Oliver, Roger Hoschar and

Dave Seamon placed second with
a 10-under par round of 60, while
Charlie Hargraves, Bob Hill, Rex
Young and Jim Capehart finished
third with a 9-under par effort of 61.
The closest to the pin winners
were Phil Burgess on the ninth hole
and Phil Burton on the 14th hole.
The final top-10 standings of the
2013 Riverside Senior Men’s League
first half standings went as such:
Jimmy Gress (155.0), Richard Mabe
(147.0), Rick Handley (144.0), Dave
Seamon (143.0), Bill Yoho (141.5),
Jim Lawrence (140.0), Roger Hoschar
(136.0), Jack Ocheltree and Dave Bodkin (132.5), and Ed Debalski (131.0).

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B2

Briefs
From Page B1
visit Facebook @BBYFL or
call Sarah (444-1606), Tony
(416-3774), Chrissy (9924067), Angie (444-1177)
or Jim Porter (416-2636).
Wahama HOF
nominations
MASON, W.Va. — A reminder that nominations
for the 2013 Wahama
High School Athletic Hall
of Fame will conclude on
Monday, July 1. Potential
candidates, including athletes, former coaches or
WHS athletic boosters,
will be considered for induction provided they are
nominated on the nomination form that can be
obtained from any Hall
of Fame Board of Trustee
member or by visiting
the Wahama High School
web site and visiting the

sports or forms link.
The completed nomination forms may be submitted prior to the July 1
deadline to any WHS Athletic Hall of Fame Board of
Trustee member or by mail
to Kenny Greene, P.O. Box
131, 84 Greenfield Drive,
Hartford, WV 25247;
Ralph Sayre, P.O. Box 475,
124 Howard Street, New
Haven, WV 25265; or Gary
Clark, P.O. Box 704 New
Haven, WV 25265.
The Wahama Athletic
Hall of Fame Board of
Trustees will be conducting a meeting on Tuesday,
July 2 at 6 p.m. at the Riverside Golf Course to begin the 2013 selection process. All Board of Trustee
members as well as anyone
wishing to participate in
the Hall of Fame procedures are urged to attend.

Gallia Academy
all-comer meets
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting
two all-comer track meets.
These meets will be open
to all ages and the first
meet will be Saturday, July
13, with registration beginning at 9 a.m. and events
starting at 11 a.m. There is
also a meet scheduled for
August 10 at 11a.m.
There is a fee for competitors and spectators and
volunteers are still needed.
Heats will be combined
if needed, but winners
will be determined by age
groups. Competitors must
check in with the clerk at
the second call prior to
their event start.
Competitors must have
your own implements for
shot and discus and must
have experience throwing

the discus or on the pole
vault. We will not allow
the novice vaulters or disc
thrower to throw or jump
for safety reasons. Parents please supervise your
kids, you are the coach
for the day and please ensure they make it to their
events on time.
We will not enforce limits on the number of events
you may enter, but please
monitor number for the
smaller kids.To volunteer,
for more information or
if you have any questions
please call (740) 645-7316
or email ff1023@att.net
O.O. McIntyre Park
coed softball
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The O.O. McIntyre Park
District is now accepting
registrations for the Coed
Softball League. There is a
limit of eight teams for the
league, with a format that
will consist of six men and
four women per squad.
Games will be played on
Tuesday and/or Thursday
evenings beginning July 2.
There is an entry fee for
each team and the deadline
for registration is Monday,
July 1. For more information, contact Mark Danner
at (740) 446-4612, extension 255.
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The Cliffside Golf Club
will be hosting the fifth
annual Kiwanis juniors
at Cliffside golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18
on Thursday, July 11, 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

Monday
Special $20
100 Cliffside Drive • Gallipolis, OH
740-446-4653

or Ed Caudill at (740) 2455919 or (740) 645-4381.
2013 Capehart
Tri-County Junior
Golf League
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The 2013 Frank
Capehart Tri-County junior golf league has begun. Play is open to boys
and girls for the following
age groups: 10-under, 1112, 13-14, 15-16 and 1718. Registration for play
is between 8:30 a.m. and
8:50 a.m. and play begins
at 9 a.m. There is a fee
but lunch is included. The
golf league will conclude
July 1 at Hidden Valley
Golf Course. For additional information contact Jeff Slone (740) 2566160, Jan Haddox (304)
675-3388 or Bob Blessing
(304) 675-6135.
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
– The University of Rio
Grande women’s basketball
program will conduct its
2013 overnight instructional camp, July 7-10, on the
URG campus. The camp,
which will utilize both the
Newt Oliver Arena and the
auxiliary gymnasium in
the Lyne Center, is open to
girls in grades 4-12.
Campers will be under
24-hour supervision of
the Rio Grande coaching
staff and a talented group
of counselors comprised
of college and high school
coaches and players. Certified athletic trainers will
also be on site. Campers
will receive daily instruction in three specific areas
– shooting, post play and
defense. Daily schedules
will include evaluation of
shooting form, individual
and group shooting drills,
instruction in post moves,
instruction of post defense
and rebounding and daily
drills on team and individual defensive techniques.

A number of individual
and team awards will also
be presented on the final
day of the camp. There is
a fee involved, which includes lodging, meals, a
camp t-shirt, a certificate
of participation and use of
the Lyne Center swimming
pool. A camp store will also
be available throughout the
week, allowing campers the
opportunity to purchase
drinks, snacks, pizza and
Rio Grande apparel.
To register, or for more
information, visit the
women’s basketball page
at www.rioredstorm.com,
e-mail Rio Grande head
coach David Smalley at
dsmalley@rio.edu, or contact the basketball office by
phone at 740-245-7491 or
1-800-282-7201, ext. 7491.
Alexander Spartans
Golf Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The
22nd annual Alexander
Spartans Golf Scramble
will be held at 8 a.m. Saturday, July 20, at the Riverside Golf Club in Mason
County. All proceeds will
benefit the Alexander
High School Boys Basketball Program.
There is an entry fee per
golfer (includes Green Fee,
Cart, Food, Beverages, and
Prizes). Teams consist of
4 people (form your own
team and 40 handicap
minimum).
First-place
receives $500 per team,
second-place receives $300
per team and third place
receives $100 per team.
To register or if additional information is
needed, please contact Jim
Kearns at jkearns@alexanderschools.org or (740)
591-8153 or Jordan Hill
at jhill@alexanderschools.
org or (740) 416-0728.
Entry fees may be paid
at the golf course on the
day of the event or mailed
to Alexander Boys Basketball c/o Jim Kearns,
11474 Pleasanton Road,
Athens, OH 45701.

60429875

Gallipolis River
Recreation Festival

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60426844

July 3-6, 2013

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B3

Golfers
From Page B1
Caitlyn Vanscoy. Becka Groves
played in her initial tournament
of the year and finished in second place. Caitlyn’s victory also
won her the title of champion in
the division.
The popular 15-17 year old age
group had 14 players attempting
to win the day’s first place trophy
with many of those players still in
the running for the championship.

Michael MacKnight improved
his score from Wednesday by
11 strokes to shoot a very good
37 for the day to claim the first
place trophy. Nathan Redman’s
score of 42 not only earned him
second place for the day, but also
jumped him into second place in
the championship race.
Nolan Pierce posted a score
of 43, which was his best score
of the season and earned him

the third place trophy. However,
none of the above was enough to
dislodge Dakota Sisk from his
first place position in the quest
for the title of champion. Even
though Dakota struggled a bit
for the day, his point total of 24
points won him the coveted title.
Third place in the title race was
shared by Jacob Hoback and Jordan Howell.
Also playing in this age group
at Riverside was Ryan Schen-

kelberg, Logan Rosier, Cuyler
Mills, Benjamin Foreman, Chris
Brumfield, Cliff Chapman, Jacob
Brewer, and Howard Metts.
The final tournament of the
season will be held Monday,
July 1, at the Hidden Valley Golf
Course in Point Pleasant, WV.
Handicaps for the season’s
play will be calculated and used
to determine the best net score
for the day. Prizes will be issued
to all who participate. Trophies

for both Wednesday’s and Thursday’s play will be issued as well
as the Championship plaques for
each age group.
Lunch will be served to all
players. It is not necessary to
have played in any of the previous events to take part in Monday’s final outing of the year.
A small fee is charged to each
player. Registration begins at
8:30 a.m. with play getting under way at 9 a.m.

Bennett
From Page B1
who averaged 16.1 points
and 8.1 rebounds in his
one season with the Runnin’ Rebels.
Bennett didn’t find basketball as much as the
sport discovered him.
After his family moved
from the rough Jane and
Finch area of inner Toronto to Brampton, Ontario,
Bennett enjoyed playing
hoops, but it wasn’t his
passion.
“I was just playing
around and just wasting
time,” he said.
His mother, Edith, was
encouraged to get him on
an organized team, but as
she watched her boy clumsily run up and down the
floor, she never dreamed it
would one day become his
profession.
“At first, people were
saying, ‘Oh, he can’t play’,”
she said. “But a few of the
coaches stuck with him
and gave him a chance.
See what a chance will get
you?”
Bennett’s arrival didn’t
come without some risks
for the Cavs. He recently
underwent shoulder surgery to repair a torn rotator cuff and has reportedly
struggled with his weight
while recovering.
Grant, though, sees him
as the next piece — along
with Kyrie Irving, Tristan
Thompson and Dion Wait-

ers — to help turn around
a franchise that has gone
64-166 in the three seasons
since LeBron James left.
“A lot of guys in this draft
were out for medical reasons, but at the end of the
day we just felt like this was
the right guy to add with
all the talent he has,” Grant
said. “You put him in a pick
and roll with Dion or Kyrie,
he’s going to be pretty difficult to guard because he
can shoot the ball and is
athletic and can handle the
ball and get to the rim.”
There’s a strong possibility Bennett won’t even
start as a rookie next season. He could wind up as a
backup to fellow Canadian
Tristan Thompson, who
was taken by the Cavs in
the first round in 2011.
Like Bennett, Thompson
grew up in Brampton.
“I feel like me and
Tristan will become best
friends,” Bennett said.
“He’s going to be my go-to
guy just because he’s from
Canada. I’m sure there
are lot more guys on that
team I can go to, but just
because even if I’m here in
Cleveland or back home
in Brampton, I can talk to
him anywhere I am.”
Some questioned why
the Cavs would take another power forward with
Thompson on the roster
and other pressing needs
like a shooter or small
forward. Cavs coach Mike

Brown isn’t concerned
about having two potential
starting power forwards
and is confident playing
time will begin to get sorted out in training camp.
“They have to go out
and compete,” Brown said.
“They may be buddies, but
once they cross that line,
I think they’ll get after

each other. They’ll want to
make themselves better, as
well as the team. It’s great
to have depth in all areas.
Anthony is definitely a guy
that has added that to us.
He is versatile. He’s different than the bigs we have.
“He can be used in a lot
of different ways.”
As his skills developed

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

He’s already made history as the first player from
his country to be taken first
overall, and Bennett says
there’s plenty more talent
north of the U.S. border.
And now that the Cavs
have two Canadians, is he
expecting to hear “O Canada” played before games in
Cleveland?

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and his game blossomed,
Bennett kept a list of players he dunked over. A
dunking diary, so to speak.
“I thought it was pretty
fun to do,” he said with
laugh. “It was between me
and my friends growing up
in Canada. I thought, ‘Why
not?’ I think I gave it a year
and a half. When I got to
100, I stopped.”

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NEW SUMMER HOURS STARTING JULY 2013
Gallia County Sites
Buckeye Hills Career Center
740-245-5334
Mon.-Thurs. 9 am - 12 noon
GME
740-446-6734
Mon.-Thurs. 9 am - 12 noon

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740-446-3222
Tuesday 8 am - 4:30 pm
Meigs County Site
Middleport Library ABLE
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60426720

60428658

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B4

Outdoor notes The Chosen win OAC points championship
Jim Freeman
In The Open

Animal ‘orphans’ usually aren’t
This is the time of year that wildlife professionals
get calls from concerned people regarding “abandoned”
whitetail deer fawns.
Unless you actually see the mother killed, i.e. struck by
a car right in front of you, the assumption should be that
the fawn is simply hiding. Deer aren’t always the smartest of animals, so sometimes the mother will attempt to
“hide” its baby in plain sight; in most cases the fawn will
simply lay there, giving people the impression that it has
been “abandoned.” Very rarely do animal mothers abandon their young, in most cases the mother may be nearby
but afraid to approach because of the presence of a large
predator – you!
The fawn doesn’t need to be rescued. Leave it alone
(and make sure your dogs leave it alone), and the mother
will come and get it when she feels it is safe to approach.
By the way, in most instances it is illegal for private
citizens to possess wild animals, so don’t try to adopt
the wild baby. In most cases these situations end in
heartbreak. What generally happens is that the person
finds they are unable to care for the animal and it is ultimately destroyed because deer rehabilitators are few
and far between.
The Division of Wildlife also offers the following tips to
help avoid wildlife orphans:
- Check for nests before cutting down a tree or clearing
brush. It is best to cut trees and clear brush in the autumn
when nesting season is over.
- Place caps on all chimneys, vents and window wells to
prevent animals from nesting there.
- Keep your pets under control so that they do not injure wild animals.
- Educate children to respect wild animals and their
habitat, and not to try and catch or harass them.
- Exercise caution when driving and watch the roadsides for wild animals, especially at dawn and dusk.
- Conserve habitat for wildlife.
For more information refer to the Ohio Division of Wildlife
pamphlet “Wildlife Orphans? Think Before You Act” available at http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/Portals/9/pdf/pub310.pdf
or call the Ohio Department of Natural Resources-Division
of Wildlife, District 4 office at 740-589-9930.
Hunter Education Camp slated
Camp Heritage, Inc, in conjunction with the Athens
Fish &amp; Game Club and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife, is hosting the annual
Hunter Education Camp the weekend of July 12-14, 2013.
According to the Division of Wildlife, the camp is held for
youths ages 9-15 who have not successfully completed a
hunter education course. Pre-registration is required and
is limited to the first 50 campers.
During the three-day camp each participant, under
full supervision, will shoot .22 rifles, shotguns, muzzleloaders, and archery equipment. They will also learn
wilderness survival skills, first aid, and hunter ethics.
This is a sleepover event with participants staying in
cabins provided by the camp. The participants will be
grouped by gender for sleeping. Adult staff will also be
camping overnight.
Please note this is for youth who have not already successfully completed a hunter education course. There is
no charge for participants, as the weekend is grant funded and operated by Division of Wildlife staff, members
of the Athens Fish &amp; Game Club, certified instructors,
and local sportsmen and sportswomen. Upon successful
completion of the course (pass test with a score of 80% or
better) participants will be issued an official certification
card necessary for all first time license purchases.
The Camp Heritage facility is located at 600 Robinette
Ridge Road, New Marshfield. For more information or to
register for the workshop, please contact Tara Riley at
740-591-9650, or check out the Camp Heritage website at
http://athensfishandgame.org/camp-heritage.html.

Submitted photos

The Chosen are a group of youth grapplers from the River Valley Wrestling Traveling Club between the ages of 5-12
year old who were recently named the 2012-13 Ohio Athletic Committees points series champions out of over 100
teams. The OAC has a designated point system at tournaments that run for 18 consecutive weeks, running from
November through March. Each wrestler gains points for his or her team based on how each finishes in his or her
division. The Chosen have competed in tournaments held in Missouri, Michigan, Kentucky, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Virginia — going up against some the country’s best youth wrestlers. The Chosen is coached by Mack Huck
and assisted by Chuck Winters, Tracy Stump, Jason Andrick and Chad Shamblin. Members of the team include Ayson Beaver, Gunner Andrick, Andrew Huck, Hudson Shamblin, Hunter Shamblin, Justin Stump, Nathan Cadle, Justin
White, Colin Watson, Seth Bowman, Jacob Winters, Jake Edwards and Derek Johnson. Jacob Stump, pictured below,
won the OAC Divsion 2 Ironman award for the 2012-13 season as the top point-scorer in the Ohio Athletics Association Grade School Wrestling Program. Stump was also a first team All-Ohio honors recipient for those same efforts.

Jim Freeman is wildlife specialist for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District and a long-time contributor to the Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted weekdays at (740) 992-4282 ext. 109 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

Wahama
From Page B1
into a buzzsaw in the state
championship
contest
against Madonna, where
the two squads battled
through two ties and five
lead changes in regulation
to force an overtime ses-

sion deadlocked at 35.
The fourth-rated Blue
Dons (12-2) received
five touchdowns and 276
yards of total offense from
quarterback Ross Comis,
whose two-yard score in
the extra session gave Madonna a 42-35 advantage.

The third-rated White
Falcons (14-0) responded
with a one-yard scoring
run by Zach Wamsley, then
made a gutsy all-or-nothing call to go for two on
the point-after try. Quarterback Trenton Gibbs

made the most of a broken
play and bullied his way
into the endzone, giving
the White Falcons a thrilling 43-42 triumph.
It was the first state
championship in Wahama’s
illustrious football history,

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University of Rio Grande Fine Arts
GALLIPOLIS GARDEN TASTING TOUR
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Menendez, Zack Wamsley,
Austin Jordan, Justin Tillis, Crandale Neal, Trenton
Gibbs and Austin Cole,
who finished the final
three years of their football
careers with an astounding
39-2 record.
There was also a side
note to this story of significant importance, as
Wahama alum and HOF
inductee Gary Clark completed his 40th season
on the sidelines covering
White Falcon football for
the Point Pleasant Register. After four decades
and a bout with cancer,
I can truly say that I am
glad he was able to both
witness and cover this
top story from the 201213 sports year.

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as well as the first time
that WHS had ever won 14
games or gone unbeaten in
a gridiron season. It was
also the first state football
championship in Mason
County history, as well as
the tri-county area.
More impressively, it was
the first time that a team
based in a southeastern
Ohio league had won a state
football crown since Wheelersburg accomplished the
feat way back in 1989.
Nelsonville-York (1981) is
the only other program to
win a state football title as
a member of the Tri-Valley
Conference.
It was a fitting end for
seniors Brandon Rickard,
Benny Youkers, Louis

rocchipools.com

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B5

Earnhardt sets record
to take Kentucky pole
SPARTA, Ky. (AP) — The questions during NASCAR Sprint Cup qualifying Friday
were how many drivers would raise Kentucky Speedway’s record and by how much.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. provided the answer
of the eight that broke it, clocking 183.636
mph to wrest the mark from Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson and
the pole for Saturday night’s race.
Earnhardt’s speed was nearly 2 mph
faster than Johnson’s 181.818 mph last
June, which he needed to keep Johnson
from keeping the record.
Minutes before, Johnson had a lap at
183.144 mph to hold off Ryan Newman
(182.254). Earnhardt set the standard in
the No. 88 Chevy soon after and survived
several furious attempts to unseat him
before coming away with his 12th career
pole and first at Kentucky.
Carl Edwards (183.306 mph) eventually
grabbed the outside front in the No. 99
Ford. Johnson settled for third with Kyle
Busch (182.593) fourth in a Toyota.

Marcos Ambrose (182.587) qualified fifth
in a Ford and will start alongside Denny
Hamlin, whose No. 11 Toyota ran 182.340
mph. The final two over 182 mph were Newman and defending race winner and Cup
champion Brad Keselowski (182.192).
“I thought we had a good car in practice,” Earnhardt said, “and we got some
cloud cover. That gave us an opportunity
to run a good lap.”
Drivers felt as if a track record was possible with NASCAR’s new Gen 6 car, even
on Kentucky’s bumpy surface. Anticipation grew even more with cooler-thanexpected temperatures and intermittent
clouds, and several drivers gave chase to
Johnson’s mark early in the session.
Johnson, the series points leader,
promptly raised the bar higher with a
speed that seemed to put the pole and the
record out of reach even with two-thirds of
qualifying remaining. Newman gave chase
and briefly had the second spot before settling for a solid berth in the field.

2013 Mason County football schedules

Mark Cornelison | Lexington Herald-Leader | MCT photo

Kentucky Wildcats forward Nerlens Noel (3) blocks the shot of LSU Tigers forward Johnny
O’Bryant III (2) during game action at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky, Saturday, January
26, 2013. Kentucky defeated LSU 75-70.

Cavs take Bennett with top pick in draft
come official until July 10
because of salary cap concerns, according to another official with knowledge
of the deal.
The Cleveland Cavaliers
started things by passing
on centers Noel and Alex
Len, who went to Phoenix
at No. 5, in favor Bennett,
the UNLV freshman forward who starred for Canada’s junior national teams
and was the Mountain
West Conference freshman
of the year. Bennett led
a record 12 international
players who were taken in
the first round.
“I’m just as surprised as
anyone else,” Bennett said.
There was suspense
right until the end, either
because the Cavs were
unsure who they wanted
or were trying to trade
the pick. Most predictions
had them taking one of the
big men, with Noel largely
considered the favorite for
the No. 1 choice even after
a torn ACL that ended his
lone season at Kentucky in
February.
“I thought everything
was in the air, so I wasn’t
thinking I was the No. 1
pick,” Noel said.
Stern, booed heavily in
his final draft, added to the
surprise of the moment by
pausing slightly before announcing the Cavs’ pick,
their first at No. 1 since
taking All-Star Kyrie Irving in 2011.
Orlando passed on both
of the big men, too, going
with Indiana swingman
Victor Oladipo with the
No. 2 pick. Washington
took Otto Porter Jr. with
the third pick, keeping the
Georgetown star in town.
Ten years after the
Cavaliers selected LeBron James to start a draft
that included future NBA
championship teammates
Dwyane Wade and Chris
Bosh in the top five, this
one lacked star power and

perhaps even the promise
of stardom.
Bennett, Noel and Len
are all coming off injuries
and couldn’t even work
out for teams, but the Cavs
decided Bennett’s shoulder surgery wasn’t enough
cause for concern.
Len walked up to meet
Stern and collect his orange Suns hat, then sat
down near the stage to
put on the walking boot he
needs for the stress fracture of his left ankle that
was discovered after Maryland’s season.
Noel finally went to New
Orleans with the next pick.
He didn’t seem upset at his
fall down the draft board,
hugging his mother and
shaking hands with Kentucky coach John Calipari.
It was a good start to
the night for the Hoosiers,
with Cody Zeller going to
the Charlotte Bobcats two
places after Oladipo.
Kansas
guard
Ben
McLemore, another player
who was considered a potential top-three pick, also
dropped, going seventh to
Sacramento.
Headed by a lackluster
class, the draft promised
confusion and secondguessing, with no consensus No. 1 pick and little
agreement among the order of the top five.
And with lesser-known
names in the draft, veterans
soaked up the spotlight in
the hours leading up to it.

60427388

HUGE

2013 Meigs County football schedules
Meigs Marauders
August
30 at Coal Grove
September
6 at Fairland
13 vs. River Valley
20 vs. Trimble
27 at Warren
October
4 vs. Nelsonville-York
11 vs. Vinton County
18 at Wellston
25 at Athens
November
1 vs. Alexander

Eastern Eagles
August
30 at Symmes Valley
September
6 at Miller
13 vs. Wahama
20 vs. Waterford
27 at South Gallia
October
4 vs. Belpre
11 at Trimble
18 vs. Doddridge County
25 vs. Federal Hocking
November
2 at Southern

* — All games begin at
7:30 p.m.

Gallia Academy
Blue Devils
August
30 vs. Athens
September
6 vs. Rock Hill
13 vs. Fairland
20 vs. Marietta
27 at Vinton County
October
4 at Belfry
11 at Portsmouth
18 vs. Warren
25 vs. Logan
November
1 at Jackson

River Valley Raiders
August
30 vs. Southern
September
6 vs. Adena
13 at Meigs
20 at Nelsonville-York
27 vs. Alexander
October
4 vs. Chesapeake
11 vs. Coal Grove
18 at Rock Hill
25 at South Point
November
1 at Fairland

South Gallia Rebels
August
30 at Sciotoville East
September
6 vs. Southern
13 at Trimble
20 at Miller
27 vs. Eastern
October
4 vs. Federal Hocking
11 at Belpre
18 vs. Wahama
25 at Waterford
November
1 vs. Van

* — All games are scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m.

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

Available Upgrades:
• Trim Packages • LowE/Argon • Triple Pane • Grid • Full Screens

5 for
$995

Also Available:
• Bay &amp; Bow Windows • Patio Doors • Siding
• Entry Doors • Storm Doors • Patio Rooms

CR 18 &amp; US 33 • Pomeroy, Ohio

60423104

Rings &amp; Things For Your
Anniversary, Wedding Or Engagement
Quality and beauty designed for a lifetime.
Choose from our outstanding collection.
Serving you and your family for 65 years.

$40 Visit

(740)446-2929
10 Airport Road
Gallipolis, OH

113 West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Tel: 740-992-5479
Fax: 740-992-6911
warnerj1@nationwide.com

60422821

No Health Insurance
No Problem

are

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

Walk Ins Welcome
DOT Physicals
Drug Screenings
60424878

Wal-Mart Plaza
Gallipolis, OH
740-446-3283

Evans-Moore Insurance
JULY 25 &amp; 26
And provide security when you need it most

SELECTION

We’re a full-service independent insurance agency with a
hometown attitude dedicated to providing you with the best
coverage possible and delivering superior service. Call us today

Recliners • Sofas/Sectionals • Casual Dining

Joe Moore
Sarah Evans Moore

60420796

Lifestyle Furniture
856 Third Ave Gallipolis OH
740-446-3045

Southern Tornadoes
August
30 at River Valley
September
6 at South Gallia
13 vs. Belpre
20 at Federal Hocking
27 vs. Symmes Valley
October
4 vs. Wahama
11 at Miller
18 vs. Waterford
25 at Trimble
November
2 vs. Eastern

2013 Gallia County football schedules

1-800-291-5600 • 1-740-992-4119

CC

740-992-2020

* — All games begin at
7:30 p.m. unless noted

Locally Owned &amp; Operated • Since 1993

anaday

Rick Price, Owner

Hannan Wildcats
August
30 at Valley Wetzel
September
7 at Hundred, 6 p.m.
13 at Federal Hocking
20 at Sherman
October
4 vs. Miller
11 vs. Twin Valley
18 at Gilmer County
25 vs. Midland Trail
November
1 vs. Montcalm
9 vs. Hundred 1 p.m.

Quality Window Systems, Inc.

WV#023477

119 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wahama
White Falcons
August
30 vs. Fayetteville
September
6 vs. Trimble
13 at Eastern
20 at Belpre
27 vs. Waterford
October
4 at Southern
11 vs. Federal Hocking
18 at South Gallia
November
1 vs. Miller
8 at Buffalo

740-441-1111

www.evans-moore.net
514 2nd Ave,Gallipolis, Ohio

60422333

60430585

418 Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-3400

60422669

NEW YORK (AP) —
Anthony Bennett was
stunned at the start. David
Stern had a big surprise at
the finish.
In between, Nerlens
Noel and a number of others experienced wild rides
to start their careers in an
unsettled first round of the
NBA draft.
Bennett became the first
Canadian No. 1 overall
pick, and Noel tumbled
out of the top five and
right into a trade, the
first of many moves that
took a back seat to one
in the works for the team
that calls Barclays Center
home.
The Brooklyn Nets will
acquire Paul Pierce and
Kevin Garnett from Boston
in a blockbuster deal that
was still developing as the
draft neared its conclusion,
according to a person with
knowledge of the details.
“There was a lot of activity,” said Nets general
manager Billy King, who
wouldn’t comment on the
trade. “As you guys will
find out, there will be a
lot of trades that are announced.”
His can’t be until July
10, after next season’s salary cap is set.
As for the draft, it was as
unpredictable as expected,
capped by Hakeem Olajuwon coming on stage at
the end of the first round
to greet Stern, dressed in
the same tuxedo style he
wore when Stern called his
to start the soon-to-be retired commissioner’s first
draft in 1984.
One of the favorites to be
taken first Thursday night,
Noel fell to No. 6, where
the New Orleans Pelicans
took him and then dealt his
rights to the Philadelphia
76ers for a package headlined by All-Star guard
Jrue Holiday, according to
a person familiar with the
details. That trade can’t be-

Point Pleasant
Big Blacks
August
30 vs. Lincoln County
September
6 vs. Ripley
20 at Logan
27 vs. Winfield
October
4 at Brooke
11 vs. Oak Hill
18 vs. Ravenswood
25 at Shady Spring
November
2 vs. Oak Glen, 1:30
9 vs. Lewis County, 1:30

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Drivers &amp; Delivery

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Help Wanted General

Drivers:

HELP WANTED
VILLAGE OF CHESHIRE

Home Weekends.
Pay up to .40 cpm.
Chromed out trucks
w/APUʼs
70% Drop &amp; Hook
CDL-A, 6mos Exp.
877-704-3773

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Auctions
SERVICES

MAINTENANCE DEPARTMENT: Part time help for
training then work at least two
(2) days a week alone. Will be
required to understand and
handle all machinery. Mowing, weed eating, trash removal, painting, ect. Please
send resume only of interested.

Help Wanted General

Sentinel
Transportation, LLC

Business Consulting

D&amp;Y Carpentry
Remodels, Rooﬁng, Interior/
Exterior Painting, and much more!
FREE ESTIMATES!

FISCAL OFFICER: To start
September 1, 2013; knowledge in accounting a must;
UAN system, computer, printers, fax, filling, payroll, human resources, OPERS,
monthly procedures such as
bill payments, taxes, and
yearly procedures. Work with
Gallia Co Auditor, Auditor of
State of OH offices, IRS, etc.

740-645-8025
60424213

Bob Donnet

FINANCIAL SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Needs Experienced LEAD MECHANIC
for our Belle, WV Terminal
(Must live within a reasonable driving distance of Belle,
WV &amp; hold a current CDL w/HazMat endorsement)
• COMPETITIVE PAY!
(Get Paid for Your Experience
&amp; ASE Certiﬁcations!)
• PAID HOLIDAYS &amp; PAID VACATION!
• MEDICAL, DENTAL, VISION
&amp; LIFE INSURANCE
• RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN
• COMPANY MATCHED 401K
• OVERTIME
Call: 304-949-6234
Ask for Keith Porter
www.sentineltrans.com
Must pass DOT physical, drug screen &amp;
criminal background check. EOE/MF

60425035

Private carrier for E I Dupont

Bruce Young

678-378-3244

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

RESUMES TO BE
MAILED TO:
Village of Cheshire
ATTN: Council of Village
119 State Route 554
PO Box 276
Cheshire, OH 45620
SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Entertainment

Drivers:

Excavating

$1000 Sign-On Bonus!
Dedicated Zanesville
Account! Great Pay,
Benefits, Miles,
Weekly HomeTime &amp; More!
1-888-567-3109

Reese
Excavating

Backhoe-Trenching-Trucking
Septic Systems-Basements
Land Clearning-Site Prep and
More!
Large or Small Jobs
Since 1963
Free Estimates
(740) 245-9921

Drivers: CDLA Teams &amp;
Singles. Owner Operators &amp;
Company Drivers Wanted.
$1000 Sign On Bonus for O/O
Dedicated Lanes. Great Home
Time, Safety Bonus Program,
Benefits available after 90
days. 6mo verifiable exp. Call
502-664-1433

Auctions

PUBLIC
AUCTION
60430386
Saturday, July 6 – 9:00 a.m.
8th Avenue, Parkersburg, WV

DIRECTIONS: From Athens take Rt. 50 east towards Belpre, exit to go over bridge to Rt. 68 S/Dupont Road exit
toward Ravenswood, turn right at exit ramp, then turn left at light onto WV-95/Dupont Road (near Western Sizzlin
Restaurant), about 2 miles turn left onto CR-2/14/8th Avenue, auction on left, watch for signs. NOTE: Be prepared, we
will run 2 auction rings most of the day.
VEHICLE, MOTOR HOME, BOBCAT, TRAILERS: 1993 Corvette in excellent condition with 12,681 miles, 2003
Harley Davidson V-Rod with low mileage, 1961 Corvair Pickup with 37,718 original miles in very good condition
(sold w/owner’s consent), 1994 Dodge Europa 28 ft. Motor Home with 22,787 miles new furnace &amp; AC (sold w/owner’s
consent), motor home roof mount air conditioning unit, 1989 Bobcat Ingersoll-Rand 843, several Bobcat blades &amp; parts,
Bobcat/Truck/Car Manuals, 3-utility trailers, tow package for rear of vehicle.
GUNS: Winchester Model 94 Lone Star Commenorative 30/30 lever action limited edition, Winchester Model 290 w/
scope 22 automatic long rifle, Harrington Richardson single shot 20 gauge, Stevens Arms Co. 410 Model 58A, Smith
&amp; Wesson 38 special pistol, Raven Arms Co. Model MP-25 automatic pistol, Webley Mark VI 45 cal. 1918 patent serial
#402.
TOOLS: crane lift, Oran generator, Commercial Service air compressor, bench grinder, Craftsman drill presses, post
drill press, pressure washer, oxyacetylene tanks/torches, electric chain saw, several work benches, HD table w/anvil vise,
tap &amp; dye sets, anvil, Craftsman 15” auto thickness planer, Craftsman joiner/planer, Craftsman 20” scroll saw, Dayton
band saw, portable band saw, Dynamic Specialties Iron Worker, Lincoln welder, various socket sets, 2-Craftsman tool
cabinets, wheel pullers, planer, air wrenches, impact, slip joint, combination &amp; alan wrenches, punches, side &amp; body
grinders, circular saws, lots of heavy duty shelving units, drafting table, floor jacks, battery chargers, PAK Master 50
plasma cutting system, bins full of bolts, etc., load binders, DeWalt cut off saw, come-alongs, pulleys, 2-sand blasters,
JohnWood salamander heater, tire chains, roll of wiring, Haul Master Mobility Carrier, surveyor tripod &amp; tools, very
large anvil, Talking Outdoor Fence, Security camera &amp; monitor, and more.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Quality Gas Toaster No. 92 (Roberts Amander Stove Co. Phila.), Cutlery Grinder,
gas &amp; kerosene hanging chandelier lights, Maytag motor, old galvanized wringer washer, 18-Mounts (deers, fox, mt.
goat, ram, possum, goose, skirrel, duck, beaver, raccoon, coyote, wild boar, turkey, pheasants, fish, bobcat &amp; others),
4-bugle horns, carousel horse, 1950s dinette table, lots of assorted glassware (some Fenton, Indiana Glass &amp; Roseville)
and knick knacks, Daisy churn, 10-cookie jars, coffee urns, set of silver in box, doctor’s bag, lanterns, Union Pacific RR
spittoon, small metal Coca Cola table/2-chairs, several Coca Cola advertiser pieces, Coca Cola dispenser cooler, lots of
advertiser signs, Redman &amp; Mail Pouch thermometer, totem pole, child’s Tom Thumb cash register, several collectible
porcelain dolls, Middleton dolls, Native American Indian collectibles, old framed photos of stern wheelers, 100+ record
albums, Elvis life size poster, table top jute box, Zenith table top radio, cheferobe, old cabinets, Duncan Phyffe style
dining table, oak dining table, humpback trunk, pitcher pump, old metal lawn chairs, iron kettle on stand, old metal
baby stroller, spinning wheel, wall clock, Coo Coo Clock &amp; Houka from Germany, butcher block table, 2-framed New
Orleans posters, Copper Hood (made from stil), lots of crocks &amp; jugs, cast iron pans, cast iron 8-horse hitch/wagon toy,
assorted collector plates, horse drawn plow, ox yokes made into lamps, grinding wheel, partial drilling rig, Keystone
Moviegraph, Karaoke Multiplexer Hi Fi Stereo system, several guitars: Serenader B &amp; J New York, Qualitycrafted 1st Act
Iscovey FG244,National Duolian, Harmony,Santa Rosa Electric, Singing Cowboys T-6528.
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; Miscellaneous: gossip bench, dining table &amp; chairs, 2-sets of Paltzgrath dishes, sits’
bath unit, large stainless steel pot, assorted yard/garden hand tools, large CB radio base unit &amp; CB radios, small safe,
lawn figures, and lots more.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of
funds available. 4% buyers premium on all sales with a 4% discount for cash payment. All sales are final. Food will
be available.
OWNER: Martha Busch
SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122
60430386

LEGALS

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B6

No Trespassing

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Trustees of
Cheshire Township will receive sealed bids until
5:30p.m. Daylight Savings
Time, Tuesday, July 9th,
2013..
1. Patches and overlay on various roads in Cheshire Township, 1000 tons, more or less
of ODOT #402 and #404 asphalt.
2. All patch joints beginning
and ending and intersections
shall be asphalt cemented and
heated while raking before
rolling.
Primes or tackcoat costs to be
included in the cost of the #402
and 404.
The attention of bidders is directed to the special statutory
provision
(O.R.C. 4115.03) governing
the prevailing rate or wages to
be paid on public improvements. The bid shall be accompanied by a bid bond or
certified check on a solvent
bank in the amount of ten percent (%) of the bid.
In Compliance with the O.R.C.
Section 5719.042, a notarized
statement from the contract
bidder that all personal property taxes have been paid is
required.
Only qualified bidders for
ODOT will be considered.
Terms of payment will be 50
percent upon completion, 25
percent by December 31st,
2013 and the final 25 percent
by March 31st, 2014.
The Board of Trustees reserves the right to delete any
of the work items, reduce or
add on quantities to adjust the
total cost of the project to
budgetary limitations.
The Board of Trustees reserves the right to waive any irregularities and/or informalities, and to reject any or all bids
or any part of the bid.
Sealed bids may be left with
the Fiscal Officer, or brought to
the Township Building by July
9th, 2013 prior to 5:30 p.m.
Bids will be publicly opened
and read aloud at 5:30 p.m. at
the Township Building.
By Order of the Board of Trustees of Cheshire Township.
Virginia Letson
Fiscal Officer
1908 Turkey Run Road
Cheshire, OH 45620
6/16 6/30

Yard Sale

The properties that are owned
by Deanna K. Davis are in
Meigs, Gallia &amp; Vinton Co. Mrs
Davis request that there be no
trespassing or hunting on her
property at any time.

Three family, 7/1 &amp; 7/2, 9am5pm, 44320 Forest Run Rd,
Racine, Misc items, girls &amp;
boys clothes, toys, DVD's.
SERVICES
Professional Services

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost &amp; Found
Lost 2 male copper nose
beagles (Brown &amp; White) Lost
in the 141 / VFW area. Call
740-379-2311.
Notices

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

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES

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.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
5 Family Rt 7N, left on Little
Kygor Rd, pass Old River Valley HS, 413 Gravel Hill Rd,
Little bit of everything, Harley
clothes, Air conditioner, too
much to mention, 1st, 2nd, &amp;
3rd. 9-5. more info 740-3677463
7/1-7/2-7/3,4 FAMILY, 561 2nd
St, Mason, WV, 6th house on
left off of bridge: table/chairs,
ex equip, M/W clothes, misc
July 1-3, 9am to 3pm. HUGE,
4 family yard sale, a little bit of
everything! S.R. 160 ¼ mile
north of Korner store on right.
Look for signs!
Large Garage Sale July 1st &amp;
2nd, 8:30-5, 6 miles below Gallipolis on ST RT 7 S, new tires,
canning jars &amp; lots more
One day only, 7/14 from 9-5,
33240 St Rt 833, Pomeroy.
Cabinets, desks, tables, light
fixtures, piano, clothes &amp; misc.
TESS PHELPS YARD SALE
@ Ben &amp; Sue Ewing's, 95
Wright St, Pomeroy, 9-3 Mon
7/1-Tue 7/2-Wed 7/3

Help Wanted General

Need Extra Cash???
Early Morning Newspaper
Delivery Route
Available in
Meigs County,OH
YOU MUST HAVE RELIABLE
TRANSPORTATION
Call Us Today!
740-446-2342
DAVID KILLGALLON EXT: 25
JESSICA CHASON EXT: 12
Help Wanted General

Program Coordinator
The Program Coordinator for sexual assault
outreach service to Meigs and Perry counties will
establish outreach, advocacy and support services
for victims and survivors of sexual assault in those
counties. Establish relationships with already existing
agencies to facilitate effective and efﬁcient response
services that respect victim's rights, raise community
awareness and ensure proper resource and referral
services. Bachelor's Degree, Licensure and/or at
least three years of experience in a related ﬁeld.
For more information and how to apply go to:
https://www.ohiouniversityjobs.com/postings/6640
Ohio University is committed to creating a respectful
and inclusive educational and workplace environment.
Ohio University is an equal access/equal opportunity
and afﬁrmative action institution.
60428425

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)

EMPLOYMENT
Drivers &amp; Delivery
LIQUID ASPHALT DRIVERS
NEEDED
in the Point Pleasant area.
Must be 21 years old or older.
Must have Class A CDL with
Hazmat Endorsement and
TWIC card. Good MVR. Local
Trips. Call 1-800-598-6122
Help Wanted General
INSTRUCTORS
MATH &amp; ACCOUNTING.
A MASTER'S DEGREE
in each subject area is required.
Email cover letter and
resume to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Licensed Practical Nurse
For full-time work in a 114-bed
long-term care State facility.
Must have current WV LPN license. Applicants may apply
online www.personnel.wv.gov
or at Lakin Hospital, 11522
Ohio River Road, West
Columbia, WV, Tuesdays &amp;
Thursdays, 10am to 2pm.
Lakin Hospital is an EEO/AA
employer. Pre-employment
criminal background check and
drug/alcohol testing are conducted. Employees may be
subject to streamline or
secondhand smoke.
VACANCY: Information
Technology Instructor of Interactive Media. Certifiable
as Information Technology or
Comprehensive Business Instructor. CONTACT: GalliaJackson-Vinton JVSD (740)
245-5334, Ext. 256. EEO
Medical / Health
Overbrook Center is currently
accepting applications for
STATE TESTED Nursing Assistants. Part Time positions
for all shifts are available. Interested applicants can pick up
an application or contact Susie
Drehel, RN, Staff Development Coordinator @ 740-9926472 M-F 8a-4:30p at 333
Page St., Middleport, OH. EOE
&amp; a participant of the
Drug-Free Workplace Program.
Pleasant Valley Hospital is in
need of a full-time WV licensed LPN for a subspecialty
physician office. Ideal candidate should be a hard-working,
self motivated, and professional individual eager to work at a
busy pace. Prior experience in
a physician office or hospital
related area is preferred. Excellent benefits.
Send resumes to: Pleasant
Valley Hospital, c/o Human
Resources, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
(304) 675-6975, or apply online at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V
EDUCATION
REAL ESTATE SALES

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B7

W.Va. Amateur champ looks forward to PGA event
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
— Eye problems and all, 13-time
West Virginia Amateur champion Pat Carter is looking forward
to playing in a PGA Tour event.
With plenty of fans expecting to back him, Carter will
tee off at The Greenbrier Classic next Thursday in White
Sulphur Springs.

Houses For Sale
Coral Brick Cape Cod, 115
Harrisburg Rd. 45614, Phone
740-645-6198 or 304-8125757, Listed: Owners.com
PTJ1150 45614
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2 Room efficiency Apartment
in County setting, 7 miles from
Gallipolis on Rt 7 South. All
Electric, Utilities NOT included.
$300/mo, Dep &amp; 1st mo. Rent
&amp; References required. Call
740-446-4514
1 &amp; 2 BR, $475 to 575 month
Downtown, clean, renovated,
newer appl, lam floor, water
sewer &amp; trash incl. No pets.
Application req. 727-237-6942
3 BR-home in town. Applications available at Wiseman
Real Estate. Call 446-3644 for
more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

“They’ll be pulling for me,”
Carter said. “That gives me added incentive.”
Carter earned an exemption
by winning the state Amateur
last year at The Greenbrier. But
he suffered an orbital fracture in
his left eye during an assault in
April that caused muscle damage
and blurred vision.

Apartments/Townhouses
Beautiful - 1400 sq ft. 2 bdrm.
apt. Gallipolis, w/d &amp; d -washer $700.00/mo. Parking, No
pets 740-591-5174
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
For rent 1 bedroom apartment
in Gallipolis $360 per month
plus deposit. Call (740) 3888277
Furnished - 2bdrm. Apt.
$450.00/mo. Incl. w/s/g Racine,Ohio No Pets 740-5915174
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165
Commercial
Office Space for Rent: 257
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. Available Immediately Approx 545
sq. ft. $400 plus UTS and
$400 deposit. Contact the CVB
at 61 Court Street, Gallipolis or
(740) 446-6882.
Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265

He tells The Herald-Dispatch
(http://bit.ly/123PqWf)
that
the golf ball can appear hazy at
times.
“Sometimes it’s fine. Sometimes you have to bear with me,”
Carter said. “There’s no reason
to whine about it. I have to learn
to live with it.”
Carter is known for his strong

Houses For Rent

short game and solid putting.
To play well at the Old White
TPC course, he said he needs to
improve his driving, which has
been inconsistent.
“I’ll try to get some practice
in,” Carter said. “I hope I can
keep this feel going.”
For PGA players, Old White
plays at 7,287 yards — several

Rentals

2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
For rent 3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy $450.00 per month
plus deposit. Call (740) 3888277

Trailer for Rent, 14x80, 3 Bedrooms. 1 1/2 Bath, Front Porch
&amp; Shed. New Heat Pump, New
Windows. Bidwell area. $450
Rent, Dep &amp; 1st Mo. Rent, References, No Pets 740-4464514
Sales

Very nice 1 BR home in
Pomeroy, great neighborhood,
large yard, ideal for 1 or 2
people, new appliances. No indoor pets. Non smoking. 740992-9784

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
ANIMALS

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

Pets

Rentals
3 BR, 2 BA, includes yard, carport, storage facility, front
deck, Bidwell area $600 +
dep.- Shown on Monday,
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday by Appointment Call Barbara @ 615830-4499
3BR, all electric, 16x80. SR
160. Nice 740-441-5150
FOR RENT:
2BR Apt. No smoking or pets.
750mo, 500dep. OFFICE
SPACE: Across from PVH
800mo, 500dep. 304-834-1128

FOUND: in Kanauga area,
Beagle mix, giveaway to good
home 740-339-3233
FREE TO GOOD HOME
Various cats &amp; kittens
Some neutered
304-593-3719
FREE TO GOOD HOME:
4-Kittens, 3-Young Cats, 2Rabbits that are black &amp; brown
males. 304-971-0030
FREE: to good home. 6 fluffy
kittens. 2 calico, 2 black, 2
white &amp; black. Litter trained.
304-675-8901

Garage apt for rent: Nice and
clean, 1BR Non-smoking, ref,
dep, no pets. 304-675-5162

hundred yards longer than what
Carter is accustomed to at the
Amateur.
Carter said he’ll be “happy
with pars” on three long par
fours that could give him trouble
— the 488-yard second hole, the
492-yard 13th, and the 444-yard
16th that golfers must carry their
drives over water.

AUTOMOTIVE
Boats &amp; Marinas
FOR SALE: Bass Tracker Pro
Team 185 Silver Ann Edition
w/75hp Mercury Mtr, Fish Finder, Trolling Mtr, Ex Cond
$9500. Call 9-6 740-446-9340
Pontoon boat, like new, 21', 90
HP, cover, trailer &amp; other
amenities. 740-416-0203 or
740-992-7214
Miscellaneous
REWARD $1000
For the return of or information
leading to the return of the following items stolen from Alexander McCausland Farm, Rt
35 Pliny, WV. 08 Hauling Trailer tandem single axle, 09
Yamaha Rhino Side by Side
ATV, 08 John Deere Zero Turn
riding mower, Generator from
Tractor Supply. All information
will be confidential. Please
contact Doug Brown at the following numbers: 304-4153818, 304-722-0051, 304-7222184
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

FOR SALE:
6 Antique blk rod iron chandeliers 75ea. 10 Heavy Duty
shelving units, 7' tall. Good for
pantry, garage, basement, etc.
75.ea 304-834-1128
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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Concrete &amp; Masonry
All types Masonry, brick, block,
stone, concrete, Free Estimate, 304-593-9143 or 304-6746051
Health Care
Dr. Randall F. Hawkins, MD
Internal Medicine/
Board Certified
304-675-7700
Accepting new patients
Office hours by appointment
Upholstery

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

AGRICULTURE

Miscellaneous

SNODGRASS UPHOLSTERY,
we help you to recover you
investments. Racine, OH
740-949-2202

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�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B8

Kansas freshman Wiggins taking on mythic status
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)
— The story that will accompany Andrew Wiggins’ first game at Kansas,
an impromptu exhibition
during coach Bill Self’s
summer camp, has already

story. But when is reality
as much fun as folklore?
And the play that Wiggins
made in the first couple of
minutes against current
and former Jayhawks lends
itself to a tall tale.

taken on a decidedly Paul
Bunyan-esque quality.
Those who were in
the gym last week, and
the thousands of people
who have seen video of
the game, know the real

What’s fact is that the
top high school prospect
in the country, the odds-on
No. 1 pick in next year’s
NBA draft — the next
LeBron James, as he’s been
called — found himself in

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the open court with the
ball in his hands and only
NBA center Cole Aldrich
standing in his way.
From there, the folk-hero
version goes like this: Wiggins elevated from beyond
the 3-point arc, posed midair for a couple of photos,
autographed the ball and
then slammed it down.
The truth: Aldrich
stepped aside and watched
as Wiggins effortlessly
dunked it.
Either way, the play was
enough to send Jayhawks
fans into a tizzy, light up
Internet message boards
and burnish the almost
mythical aura that already
accompanies the 6-foot-7
swingman.
“I let loose of all my
nerves,” Wiggins said
afterward, “so I felt good
after that dunk. I just let
my game come to me.
That’s what happened.
That’s what the fans
wanted to see.”
They’ll want to see plenty more of it this season.
Wiggins is arguably
the most talented player
to arrive in Kansas since
Danny Manning in the
’80s, and Self wonders
whether anybody has
created as much hysteria
since Wilt Chamberlain.
He has prototypical
NBA size and athletic ability, a game already far more
advanced than his peers’,
and an uncanny ability to
make the most difficult
plays seem pedestrian. He
also has the unmistakable
swagger, modest though
he may be, of a player who
simply knows that he’s
good.
It’s little surprise that
autograph seekers already
have descended on Lawrence, hoping to snag Wiggins’ John Hancock on a
ball or a photo four months
before his first real game.
“It’s kind of weird to me
because we’ve recruited

other good players before,
but we’ve never had anybody with this kind of attention,” Self said. “I kind
of feel for him. He’s going
to have to be able to tell
people no, and we have to
make it easier for him.”
Good luck with that.
There are only a handful of college basketball
programs in the country
that can rival Kansas for
pure passion, not to mention history or success.
There are five banners
hanging in the end zone
of Allen Fieldhouse to represent the Jayhawks’ national championships, and
dozens more herald more
modest triumphs such as
conference titles. Students
often camp out for days in
advance of a big game, and
the raucous environment is
one of the most intimidating in college sports.
It was the environment
that in part helped convince Wiggins to pick Kansas over a list of suitors
that included North Carolina and Kentucky, a couple
more tradition-drenched
blue bloods.
“Everyone here is really loving, friendly, so it’s
good,” Wiggins said. “I’m
getting to know people.
They’ve been showing me
around, so I’ve been comfortable.”
Wiggins’ comfort level
could be critical to the Jayhawks’ success this season.
They lost all five starters
from last year’s team to
graduation or the draft,
and return just a couple
of reserves who played
meaningful minutes. Self
restocked with a recruiting
class that included fivestar recruit Wayne Selden
and several other highprofile targets, but the lowkey announcement that
Wiggins would be joining
them stole every headline
across the state.
It also turned some
heads in the Big 12.

60430195

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Ask your pharmacist for more information
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112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone: 740-992-2955 | Fax: 740-992-5244
GoodNeighborPharmacy.com
Hours: Mon-Fri: 9:00am - 7:00pm, Sat: 9:00am - 2:00pm, Sun: Closed
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Pool Center
1412 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1733

740-446-6579
www.ratliffpools.com

60430401

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY,
JUNE 30, 2013

Along the River

C1

FAC festival exhibit winners announced

GALLIPOLIS — The annual
art competition, sponsored by
the French Art Colony, in conjunction with the River Recreation Festival, sponsored by the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, has been part of the celebration for 45 years. Looking
back, this art competition has
come a long way from the first
event, mainly local, consisting of
a few dozen paintings, hung on
chicken wire in the city park, to
the present high quality exhibits.
Today, professional and amateur artists, from four states, enter a variety of art media, to be
evaluated by professional jurors.
Selected works become the FAC
Gallery exhibit during July, while
all remaining entries are exhibited in the city park on the Fourth.
Very fine work appears in both
locations and it is an excellent
opportunity for art connoisseurs
to choose from a variety of paintings and sculpture, for personal
or business collections.
Jurors serving this year included Jan Safford and Jan Haddox,
from Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., and
James E. Allen from Thurman,
Ohio. Allen is Professor of Art at
the University of Rio Grande, a
position he has held since 1987.
Since graduating in 1973 from
Ohio State University, majoring
in Art Education and Painting,
and before coming to URG, he
taught at Bowling Green State
University, Malone College in
Canton and Asbury College in
Wilmore, Ky. Haddox, a graduate
of Marshall University, has been
a commercial artist in the area
for many years, has been juried
into Tamarack, has done illustrations for several books and had
exhibits throughout Ohio and
West Virginia. He has taught at
both Marshall and the University

of Rio Grande. Safford is a graduate of Miami University with
a degree in Art Education. She
has been an art teacher in Gallia County for 28 years, retiring
from River Valley High School in
2009. Currently she is art teacher at Pt. Pleasant Junior/Senior
High School.
In the Professional Division,
for watercolors, Frankie Wheeler, from Mason, Ohio, received
First Place for “The Hills of
Home”, a watercolor/acrylic, and
also received a purchase award
from the Wounded Goose Restaurant. Wheeler also received a
First Place for “Falling Leaves”,
a watercolor/ink design. This
painting received a Purchase
Award from Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Daniel. Sylvia Jackson, Catlettsburg, Kentucky, was awarded
a Purchase Award, from Red’s
Truck and Auto Centers, for a
watercolor, “Garden Display”.
Another watercolor by Pati
Payne, Ironton, Ohio, received a
Purchase Award for “Fishing by
the Mill”, from WesBanco Bank.
Also in watercolors, Rebecca
Adkins, from Huntington, was
awarded Second Place for “Irish
Glen”.
Several awards were given in
professional photography. Mane
Designers presented a Purchase
Award for a silver print by Jennifer Blake, Gallipolis. Larry Rood,
from Fairfax, Va., received recognition for three of his entries.
“Lucketts Store” was given Honorable Mention, “Where Have
all People Gone” received First
Place and “The Last Jenkins
Concrete Truck”, an enhanced
photo, received Honorable Mention. Through Our Eyes Photography received First Place for an
enhanced photo, “Sunset Dippin”. This also was given a Pur-

WesBanco Bank was represented by Nancy Buck, Head Teller,
and Peggy Saunders, Senior Personal Banker. They selected
two pictures for the bank: a watercolor, “Fishing by the Mill”,
by Pati Payne from Ironton, and an oil, “Magnolia in the Wilds”,
by Helena Stricker, Charleston, W.Va.

Mane Designers chose four pictures as Purchase Awards, selected by owner Cindy Sexton and her granddaughter, Gracie
Cremeans. They are “Here Kitty, Kitty”, Honorable Mention
Amateur Oil, by Janet Strohl from Ripley, W. Va.; “Good Morning Sunshine”, a charcoal drawing by Debbie Jarrell of Ravenswood, W.Va.; “Seasons Change”, a silver print by Jennifer R.
Blake of Gallipolis; “Ned and Ted”, an oil painting by W. Joe
Roush of West Columbia, W.Va.

chase Award by Farmers Bank.
Second Place was awarded to
Chris Blank, Gallipolis, for a traditional photo, “Looking Up”.
Joy Duffy, Gallipolis, was also a
winner in professional Photography. She received Honorable
Mention for a digital photo,
“Remedy”.
Works in pastels and charcoal
received several awards in the
Professional Division. Virginia
Carvour, Columbus, received
Honorable Mention for her pastel, “Flying Fish”. She received
First Place for “Hillside Sentry”.
This received a Purchase Award
from curator, Jan Thaler. Gerry
Enrico, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., received several awards. “Breaking Through” took Second Place
in Professional Pastels. He also
received Best of Show and first
Place for a charcoal, “Not to be
Copied”. His other charcoal,
“Curiosity”, received Second
Place. Enrico’s final winner
was a pastel, “Mystery of Desert Rose”, receiving Honorable
Mention and a Purchase Award
from Jan Thaler.
Other awards in the Professional Division include a First
Place in Oils/Acrylics to Jamie
Sloane, Gallipolis, for “Counselor” and Second Place in the
same division for “Primitive
Spring”. Second Place in Ceramics went to Paul Schultz,
Long Bottom, Ohio, for “Three
Faced Crock”. Kari LaBello received Honorable Mention for a
coil built ceramic piece, “Dissonance”. An oil painting, “Poppy
Field”, by Carmen Schultz, Long
Bottom, Ohio, was purchased by
Red’s Truck and Auto Centers.
All together, 36 professional art
entries were accepted by the jurors for the July Gallery exhibit.
In the Amateur Division, in

photography, Brad Alexander,
Vinton, Ohio, received First
Place for a traditional photo,
“Grappling Manhood”, and Honorable Mention for “Watching”.
He also received a Purchase
Award from the Ohio Valley
Bank for “Rising from Within”,
for the Holzer Health System collection. A photograph by David
Brown, Patriot, Ohio, received
a Purchase award from the Ohio
Valley Bank for “Upper Falls-Old
Man’s Cave”. In drawing, First
Place was awarded to Danny
Carter for a colored pencil rendition titled “Butterfly Study”.
Deidra Hall, Bidwell, Ohio, was
awarded Honorable Mention for
a pencil drawing, “I’m Falling to
Pieces”.
In Amateur Oils, Anna Day
received First Place for “Crack
of Dawn”. A charcoal drawing
by Debbie Jarrell, Ravenswood,
West Virginia, entitled “Good
Morning Sunshine” was purchased by Mane Designers. Also
by Jarrell, a mixed media painting, “Puppy Love”, received
Honorable Mention. She received First Place in Amateur.
Charcoal and Best of Show in
the Division for a charcoal, My
Sweet Obsession”. Maxine Kinnaird, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
received a First Place for her
watercolor, “Tanya’s Porch”. Second Place in Oil went to Brenda
Miller, Oak Hill, Ohio, for “Golden Rod &amp; Golden Granny.”
Other awards in the Amateur
Division include Honorable
Mention to Kayla Malone, Thurman, Ohio, for a photograph,
“Fall for Me-Self Portrait”. “Winter Casserole”, a ceramic piece
by Pam McGinniss, Chillicothe,
was purchased by Jan Thaler.
Mane Designers purchased “Ned
and Ted”, an oil by Joe Roush,

Robert Daniel chose for his wife and himself a watercolor/ink
painting by Frankie Wheeler of Mason, Ohio, entitled “Falling
Leaves”. It was awarded First Place in the Professional Division, Mixed Media.

West Columbia, W.Va. WesBanco
Bank gave a Purchase Award to
Helena Stricker, Charleston, for
an oil “Magnolia in the Wilds”.
Stricker also received Honorable
Mention for another oil, “Halo
Daffodils”. This piece received a
Purchase Award from Wounded
Goose Restaurant.
Additional awards in the Amateur Division include Honorable
Mention and a Purchase Award
from Mane Designers for “Here
Kitty, Kitty” by Janet Strohl, Ripley, W.Va. Amanda Taylor, Middleport, Ohio, received Honorable Mention for a photograph,
“Spider Web”. Suzanne Wise,
Crown City, Ohio, received a
Purchase Award for her photograph, “Love”. This was purchased by Ohio Valley Bank, one
of the sponsors of this event, and
will be a gift to the Gallia County
Convention and Visitors’ Bureau.
These selections and several
others will remain in the Galleries throughout July. Sponsors for
the competition are critical to
the success of this long-running
competition. Chair Thaler states,
“We couldn’t do this without
sponsors and it is so important
to affirm the work of talented
artists.” Title sponsor for several
years is Peoples Bank; supporting sponsors include Ohio Valley
Bank, WesBanco, Mane Designers and Farmers Bank, with additional support from Gallipolis
Career College. All programming
by the French Art Colony is also
supported by the Ohio Arts Council. Galleries at Riverby are open
Tuesday through Sunday, each
week, free of charge and visitors
are always welcome.

Karrie Swain-Davison, Communications Coordinator for Holzer Health System, and Bill Richards, Director of Media for
the Ohio Valley Bank, chose “Rising from Within”, a traditional
photograph by Brad Alexander of Vinton, as a gift from the
bank for the Holzer Health System collection.

Patrick Saunders, Vice President of Farmers Bank, chose
“Sunset Dippin”, an entry by Through Our Eyes Photography
in Gallipolis, which won First Place Professional Division Enhanced Photography.
For their own collection at Ohio Valley Bank, Bill Richards, Director of Media, chose a photograph by David Brown, entitled
“Upper Falls – Old Man’s Cave”.

Tammi Brabham, with her granddaughter, Ruby Swepston,
chose two pictures on behalf of Katherine Brabham, Ruby’s
mother and the owner of The Wounded Goose, They are
Frankie Wheeler’s watercolor/acrylic, “The Hills of Home”,
which won First Place Professional Division Mixed Media, and
Helena Stricker’s “Halo Daffodils”, an oil which received Honorable Mention Amateur Oil.

Red’s Truck &amp; Auto Centers made two purchase awards. Tammi Brabham, President, chose a watercolor by Sylvia Jackson
of Catlettsburg, Kentucky, entitled “Garden Display”, and an
oil by Carmen Schultz of Long Bottom, Ohio, entitled “Poppy Field”.

Bill Richards, Director of Media for the Ohio Valley Bank, along
with Amanda Crouse, Executive Director of the Gallia County
Convention and Visitors’ Bureau, chose “Love”, a photograph
by Suzanne Wise of Crown City, for the GCCVB’s collection, as
a gift from the bank.

Janice Thaler made three purchase awards: “Hillside Sentry”, by Virginia Carvour from Columbus, which received First
Place Professional Pastel; “Mystery of Desert Rose”, a pastel
by Gerry Enrico of Pt. Pleasant, recipient of Honorable Mention Professional Pastel; and a clay ceramic, entitled “Winter
Casserole”, by Pam McGinnis of Chillicothe.

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C2

Extension Corner

You mave have migrating Millipedes!
Millipedes are back! Are you
invaded by brownish black, inch
long worms with “thousands”
of legs appearing at your patio,
garage, swimming pool, or rock
wall? You may have migrating millipedes. Normally these
animals live in the leafy organic
matter of our forests however
when conditions are right they
migrate into new areas. Too
much rainfall or too dry of
conditions force the millipedes
to leave their forest homes to
seek new locations to live. Millipedes are a worm-like creature
with multiple segments that
have two sets of legs per body
segment. They can live up to
seven years. Females may lay
20- 300 eggs per year depending upon food and weather.
Young emerge from the eggs
and may mature in the same

to dry them out. Durseason.
Milliing periods of migrapedes like dark,
tion use chemical
cool and moist
sprays (Permethrins
e nv i ro n m e n t s .
or carbaryl) to make
Millipedes beyour areas near the
long
to
the
house less attractive.
same family of
Normally a ten foot
creatures as lobwide area will deter
sters, crayfish
the millipedes to miand centipedes
grate away from your
which
require
home. For further inmoist
living
formation check out
conditions.
Ohio State university
Prevention
is
Hal Kneen
Extension Fact Sheet
best in control2067A found at our
ling these creaExtension Corner
website www.ohiotures. Minimize
line.osu.edu, or pick
moisture near
your home. Reduce water- up one form our office.
***
ing or using water to clean up
Are you a woodland owner
dead millipedes. Sweep them
up. Seal cracks and openings interested in identifying and
in foundations with caulking learning about controlling pocompounds. Vent crawl spaces tential invasive plants in your

seohiowoods. Please RSVP by
calling OSU Extension Vinton
County at (740) 596-5212, or
email Dave Apsley at apsley.1@
osu.edu by July 8.
The “2nd Friday Series” are
sponsored by the Education
and Demonstration Subcommittee of the Vinton Furnace
State Experimental Forest
with support from the ODNRdivisions of Forestry and Wildlife, US Forest Service, Vinton
County Soil and Water Conservation District, Ohio State University Extension, US Fish and
Wildlife Service, National Wild
Turkey Federation, Hocking
College, and Glatfelter.
Hal Kneen is the Agriculture
&amp; Natural Resources Educator
for Athens/ Meigs Counties,
Ohio State University Extension.

forest and adjacent areas? Plan
to attend the “2nd Friday Series- Identifying and Controlling Invasive Plants” being held
at the Vinton Furnace State
Forest on July 12 from 9 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. This landowner program is designed to help them
learn how to identify and control common invasive plants in
their woodlands. Throughout
the day there will be opportunities to visit sites outdoors with
invasive plant specialists to
see these plants and see demonstrations of various control
techniques. A registration fee
of $10 will include lunch and
program materials. Participants
can bring in samples of invasive
plants contained in a plastic
bag for a specialist to identify.
For brochures and more information, visit http://go.osu.edu/

Target cuts ties with Deen;
drugmaker distances

Livestock Report
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers, Inc., livestock report of sales from June
26, 2013.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $90-$152.50, Heifers, $90-$140; 425-525 pounds,
Steers, $90-$149, Heifers, $88-$134; 550-625 pounds, Steers, $88-$130, Heifers,
$85-$125; 650-725 pounds, Steers, $85-$128, Heifers, $85-$120; 750-850 pounds,
Steers, $85-$120, Heifers, $85-$110.

NEW YORK (AP) —
Paula Deen’s multimilliondollar merchandise and
media empire continues
to unravel following revelations that she used racial
slurs in the past.
Target Corp., Home
Depot Inc. and diabetes
drug maker Novo Nordisk
on Thursday became the
latest companies to distance themselves from the
Southern celebrity chef.
Home Depot, which
sold Paula Deen-branded
cookware and kitchen
products only online, said
it pulled the merchandise
off its website on Wednesday. And Target said that
it will phase out its Paula
Deen-branded cookware
and other items in stores
and on its website.
“Once the merchandise
is sold out, we will not be
replenishing inventory,”
said Molly Snyder, a Target spokeswoman.
Meanwhile, Novo Nord-

Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $70-$87; Medium/Lean, $60-$69; Thin/Light, $34.50$59; Bulls, $75-$102.50.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $785-$1,075; Bred Cows, $935; Baby Calves, $40-$200; Goats,
$22-$106; Lambs, $83-$109; Hogs, $44-68.
Upcoming Specials
7/3/13 — No sale. Have a happy and safe 4th.
7/10/13 — Fat cattle sale, 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy at (304) 634-0224, Luke at (740)
645-3697, or Mark at (740) 645-5708, or visit the website at www.uproducers.com

isk said it and Deen have
“mutually agreed to suspend our patient education activities for now.”
Deen, who specializes in
Southern comfort food,
had been promoting the
company’s drug Victoza
since last year when she
announced she had Type 2
diabetes.
These are the latest
blows dealt to Deen since
comments she made in a
court deposition became
public. Last week, the
Food Network said that it
would not renew her contract. On Monday, pork
producer Smithfield Foods
dropped her as a spokeswoman. Then, on Wednesday, Wal-Mart Stores Inc.,
the world’s biggest retailer, said it too was cutting
ties with Deen following a
tearful “Today” show interview in which she said
she’s not a racist.
On the same day, Caesars Entertainment an-

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nounced that Paula Deen’s
name is being stripped
from four buffet restaurants owned by the company. Caesars said that
its decision to rebrand its
restaurants in Joliet, Ill.;
Tunica, Miss.; Cherokee,
N.C.; and Elizabeth, Ind.,
was a mutual one with
Deen.
The stakes are high for
Deen, who Forbes magazine ranked as the fourth
highest-earning celebrity
chef last year, bringing in
$17 million. She’s behind
Gordon Ramsay, Rachel
Ray and Wolfgang Puck,
according to Forbes.
Deen’s empire, which
spans from TV shows to
furniture and cookware,
generates total annual
revenue of nearly $100
million, estimates Burt
Flickinger III, president of
retail consultancy Strategic Resource Group.
But Flickinger says that
the controversy has cost
her as much as half of that
business. He also estimates that she could lose
up to 80 percent by next
year as suppliers extricate
themselves from their
agreements.
“The
accelerating
domino effect is commercially disastrous for Paula
Deen’s empire,” he said.
It’s a dramatic fall from
a woman who overcame
her humble Southern
roots and personal hardships to build a merchandising and media empire.
Deen, who grew up in
Albany, Ga., was grappling with a failed marriage, the death of her
parents and a prolonged
battle with agoraphobia
when she started her
home-based catering business called The Bag Lady
in June 1989, according to
her company website.

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�SundayJune
, June
2013
Sunday,
30,30,
2013

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C3

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
July 1, 2013:
This year new beginnings become
possible in a key area of your life.
Optimism evolves as you get into a
new luck and life cycle, which will last
12 years. Generally, the first year is
one of the luckiest. If you are single,
and you sincerely want to change your
status, you will meet someone of marriage caliber. If you are attached, this
could be one of those special years
where you experience unusual happiness together. TAURUS makes a very
loyal, yet sometimes stubborn, friend.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH Use the morning through
lunchtime for important matters. Avoid
making any formal agreements, as
communication could be confusing
today. You even might have to repeat
a conversation at a later date. Be
aware of others’ negativity. Tonight:
So what if it is Monday?
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH Though you might have
a problem getting energized in the
morning, by midafternoon, you’ll
be close to unstoppable. You greet
warmth from your inner circle, but
negativity from a key person. You can
turn around a difficult situation, if you
so choose. Tonight: All smiles.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Get an early start. By
midafternoon, you’ll have a lot to
think about. Whether you are doing
research or speaking to an expert, you
could come to a conclusion slower
than you might like, but you will be on
solid footing. Realize the possibilities.
Tonight: Do your own thing.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Many responsibilities could
be dropped on you. You might be
exhausted and looking for less to do,
but you’ll get the opposite. A late-afternoon meeting helps you find a way
out of the present problem. Know that
luck is on your side right now. Tonight:
Where the crowds are.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH You have an innate glow
that others notice, despite themselves, and you’ll sense this vitality.
Communication easily could get
messed up, so you might want to
take your time dealing with a change.
Realize that others will be watching
you carefully. Tonight: In the limelight.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

HHHH Make it a point to step away
from the group, as you need to get
a bigger picture of what is going on.
Don’t accept quick conclusions that
are not well thought-out. A meeting is
not only provocative, but it also indirectly gives you support in your quest.
Tonight: Follow the music.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Stop pushing so hard. A
partner would be more than happy to
pitch in and help. This person loves
spending time with you — allow this
to happen. Close relating brings better
results in both the professional and
personal world. Tonight: Follow someone else’s suggestion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH Someone could be very challenging, and you might want to avoid
this person. However, the ramifications could be an issue. In either case,
there is a lot to figure out. There is no
reason not to hope for the best, as
long as there are guidelines in place.
Tonight: Head home first.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You might want to understand exactly what is happening
behind the scenes with a loved one.
Know that you could be more negative
than you realize. Let events play out,
but choose not to verbalize your reactions. You could see events far differently, given time. Tonight: Relax.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Let your creativity emerge.
Understand what is happening with a
child or loved one who could be rejecting every solution that comes forward.
Go back to the creative cauldron; you
will be surprised at how much you
learn. Tonight: Be less disciplined. Let
go and enjoy yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH Tension builds. Understand
what is happening with a family member. Your mind keeps returning to this
situation. The smart decision would
be to stay close to home. A situation
surrounding work can’t be postponed
indefinitely. Tonight: In the middle of
everything.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You will open up to conversations. Listen to your inner voice, and
figure out what needs to be done. You
have to be OK with your ideas and
plans, because someone easily could
run interference. Laughter surrounds
a situation, once you relax. Tonight:
Catch up on others’ news.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

King graduates
POMEROY — Elizabeth
A. King, daughter of David
and Cyndi King of Pomeroy,
graduated from the South
Carolina Criminal Justice
Academy on June 21.
She was a member of the
12 week program of the Basic
Law Enforcement Class and
is now a deputy of the Greenville County, S. C. Sheriff’s
office. King also holds a bachelor of science degree in criminal justice from Bob Jones
University having graduated
from there in May 2012.
Her parents and brothers,
Stephen and Phillip King, attended her graduation. Elizabeth A. King
Elizabeth is the grand-

Elizabeth King

daughter of Mary Deloris
King and Hazel Blackwood
Oliver of Pomeroy and the
late Virgil King and Dean
Blackwood, Jr.

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C4

Chester Alumni gather for reunion
CHESTER — Seventyfive alumni and guests
attended the Chester
High School Alumni Association held June 1 at
the Eastern Elementary
School.
The colors of blue and
white were used in decorating the tables. Flowers were provided by the
Chester Garden Club with
Edna Wood, Barbara Mora
and Linda Blosser doing
the arrangements.
Harold Newell gave
the welcome in the absence of Kathryn Window,
president, who could not
attend. Maxine Whitehead was at the piano for
the singing of God Bless

America which following
the pledge of allegiance.
The invocation was given
by Forrest Rhodes before
the 4H for Fun Club served
the dinner prepared by the
VFW of Tuppers Plains
Auxiliary.
Reports were given during a brief business meeting. Officers elected for
next years were Kathryn
Windon, president; Bob
Wood, first vice president;
Roger Keller, second vice
president; Harold Newell,
third vice president; Betty
Newell, secretary; Don Van
Meter, assistant secretary;
George Morrison, treasurer; Rosemary Keller, assistant treasurer; and named

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to the decorating committee, Howard Larkins, Don
Mora, Don Van Meter and
John Ginther.
A moment of silence was
observed as Betty Newell
read the names and year of
graduation of the 16 members who have died since
the meeting last year.
Six graduates of Eastern High School were presented $500 scholarships
by George Morrison. The
one from Pepsi Co. went
to Kyle Young,one from
George Morrison and the
class of 1957 went to Bradley Geoglein, the Kautz
family and alumni went to
Jennifer Spencer, and three
from Alumni Association
went to Katie Hawthorne,
Marshall Aanestad, and
Max Carnahan.
The reunion classes recognized with the following
in attendance were:
1938 Arthur Rose, Paul
Hoffman.
1943, Charles Humphrey;
1948, Bertie Lou Prince
Polley,Betty Linn Prince
Burten, James Bailey,
Howard Wolfe, Grover
White, Jr., Kathleen Torrence Morris.
1953, Molly Petty Harris, Louise Bigley Frank,
Zetch McCain Chapman,
John Ginther, Virginia
Tyler,Floyd William Cassel, Jr., and Emma Ritchie
Rhodes.

Included in the other
classes were 1931, John
Bailey, now 100, the oldest
alumni in attendance, presented with a fruit basket;
1941 William Meredith;
1945 Don Mora, Maxine
Pickens Whitehead, Doris
White Ballard; 1946 Horace Karr; 1947, William
Sorden, Jr., Deloris Epple
Holter,; 1950, Paul Osborne; 1951 Howard Larkins, Harold Newell, and
Forrest Rhodes; 1952 Margaret Grace Catherine, Betty Smalley Reid, Betty Nelson Newell, Leota Young
Krautter; 1944, Kathleen
Hayman Seckman; Donna
Smalley Young, Frona Bissell Riffle; 1955, Roger
Keller,Emerson
Pooler,;
1956, Rosemary Rose
Keller, Ronald Clay, Darlene Bailey Long; 1957
Marion Sloter, George
Morrision, Lela King Windon.
Thanks were extended
to the Chester Garden
Club, Mitch Meadows and
Bob’s Market for hanging
baskets, and all those who
donated to the scholarship
fund.The hanging baskets
were given as door prizes
to Howard Larkins, Donna
Young, Paul Hoffman, Carolyn Ritchie, Horace Karr,
Judy Riggs, Zetah Chapman, and Leota Krautter.

Trails to be on Google Street View

Bruce Haupt, MD is a Holzer Health System Orthopedic Surgeon. Call 1-855-4-HOLZER with questions or to
schedule a consultation.
Every patient is diﬀerent, and individual results will vary. There are risks and recovery times associated with
surgery. Consult your doctor to determine if hip replacement surgery is right for you. For additional
information on the SUPERPATH™ Hip Replacement, and precautions associated with any surgery, please
visit superpathhiptechnique.com.

1-855-4-HOLZER

HONOLULU (AP) —
Hawaii’s volcanoes, rainforests and beaches will soon
be visible on Google Street
View.
Google Inc. said Thursday it was lending its backpack cameras to a Hawaii
trail guide company to capture panoramic images of
Big Island hiking trails.
Photos will be loaded to
Google Maps and the Hawaii Visitors and Conven-

tion Bureau website, gohawaii.com.
“The most magical places
that we all know and love in
Hawaii need to be reached
on foot — they need to be
explored that way,” said Evan
Rapoport, Street View project manager.
Mountain View, Calif.based Google has already
taken Street View images of
the Grand Canyon and other
places popular with travelers.

60389635

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60428632

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                  <text>A special supplement to the

Friday, June 28, 2013

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

Rhythm on the River
2013 Concert Schedule
July 5…………………………………John Horne Quartet
July 12…..………………………James Armstrong Band
July 19…………………………JP Soars &amp; the Red Hots
August 2………………………………………Johnny Rawls
August 9…………………………………………Webb Wilder
All shows begin at 8 p.m.
Free admission
Pomeroy Riverside Amphitheatre
Big Bend Blues Bash
2013 Schedule of Events
Friday, July 26
6 p.m…….Ben Davis Jr. &amp; the Dirt Poor Troubadours
6:45 p.m……………………………………………………Blitzkrieg
8 p.m………………………………………………………The Muggs
9:30 p.m……………………………..The Gas House Gorillas
10 p.m………….Rattlesnake Shake (Court Street Grill)
Saturday, July 27
Noon………………………….Film Fest (Court Street Suite)
1 p.m………………………………………….Kids Music Workshop
2 p.m………………………………………………………Hank Poole
3 p.m……………………………………………………Echo Mecca
4 p.m……………………………………………………..Blue Z Band
5 p.m…………………………………………………….Chris Sutton
6 p.m……………………………………………….Pett-Crow Band
7 p.m……………………………….Chaz Humley &amp; the Effects
8 p.m………………………………….Albert “The Kid” Castiglia
9:30 p.m…………………………………………..Bernard Allison
10 p.m………The Todd Wolfe Band (Court Street Grill)
All events are on the main stage unless otherwise noted.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 28, 2013

John Horne Quartet July 5 — 8 p.m.
Guitarist John Horne is professor of guitar and jazz studies
at Ohio University. He has also
taught for National Guitar Workshop, Fur Peace Ranch, TrueFire.
com, and has contributed to
Acoustic Guitar Magazine. The
John Horne Quartet presents
a wide variety of instrumental
blues and jazz music informed
by many of Horne’s influences
including pieces by guitarists
Larry Carlton, Robben Ford,
John Scofield, and even British
rockers, The Police. Joining
Horne will be saxophonist Matt
James, who has toured internationally with Phil Collins and the
Glenn Miller Orchestra; bassist
Steven Heffner, who works with
the Landau Eugene Murphy, Jr.
orchestra; and drummer Patric
Buchroeder, a recent graduate
of Ohio University School of
Music and Director of Bands at
Chillicothe High School.

JP Soars &amp; the Red Hots July 19 — 8 p.m.

60426433

The 2009 International Blues Challenge winner, is a trio of talented musicians featuring
the hot fret work of young blues-man, JP
Soars. Soars is not a typical blues guitarist.
He has a diverse musical background that encompasses a multitude of influences. “I love
T-bone Walker, Jesse May Hemphill, Wes Montgomery, Django Reinhardt, Muddy Waters,
Johnny Guitar Watson, Guitar Slim and Louis
Jordan. But I also love Tito Puente, Miles Davis, Hank Williams, Black Sabbath and Slayer.”
Soars toured the globe and recorded several
records with some of the most extreme metal
bands in the world before finding his home in
the blues. It is these attributes that are giving
Soars an instantaneously recognizable style.
“When I first heard JP Soars I knew right away
that he was separate from the rest of the
pack,” said Jimmy Thackery. In February 2009,
Soars and his band took home top honors in
Memphis, Tennesse, by winning first place
in the IBC (International Blues Challenge)
as well as the coveted Albert King award for
most promising guitarist. That win combined
with Soars’ intense work ethic, pure passion
for the music he plays, a constant desire to
improve and a continual strive for “customer
satisfaction” has allowed Soars and Company
to develop themselves into an in demand
international touring band that is growing day
by day, week by week and year after year.

�Friday, June 28, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

James Armstrong Blues Johnny Rawls August 2 — 8 p.m.
Band July 12 — 8 p.m.
Guitarist, singer and songwriter James
Armstrong was born to play the blues. His
mother was a blues singer. His father played
jazz guitar. Born in Los Angeles, California,
Armstrong formed his first band in the seventh grade and by the age of 17 he was touring the country. Today, he travels the world
and continues to infuse his voice and guitar
playing with his unique personality and seasoned skills.
Armstrong’s latest release Blues at the
Border, recorded in New York and Texas
for his new label, Cat Food Records, manages to honor the sound of traditional blues
while giving it the contemporary grit his
fans have grown accustomed to hearing
from Armstrong. Instead of buckling under
the pressures of being a touring bluesman in
the 21st century, he’s made them the topic
of many of the songs on his much awaited
new album. While economic hard times and
a climate of fear after 9-11 have ended many
careers in the industry, Armstrong is not a
stranger to hardship.
“As a survivor of a violent home invasion,
I’ve always known that life is not about how
many times you fall but how many times you
get back up. I wanted to make an album to
reflect how much the world has changed.”
Producers Michael Ross, Bob Trenchard,
and Armstrong went with Blues at the Border as the title cut to illustrate Armstrong’s
point. The song reflects a 21st century frustration when crossing borders. Young Man
with the Blues is his most autobiographical
song to date. It pays tribute to James’ father,
a musician himself who gave James the gift

Johnny Rawls was born in Columbia,
Mississippi in 1951 and raised in Purvis
and Gulfport, Mississippi. He acquired
an early interest in music when hearing
his grandfather play the blues guitar one
Christmas morning.
He began playing professionally
while still in high school with such
stars as ZZ Hill, Little Johnny Taylor,
Joe Tex and the Sweet Inspirations. In
the mid-70s, Rawls went to work for
OV Wright as Wright’s band director.
After Wright’s death in 1980, Rawls led
Little Johnny Taylor’s band until 1985,
when he began touring as a solo artist
and made his first solo recording under
the Rainbow label.
Recording under Touch Records,
Rooster Blues, Rock House, Reach and
JSP Records, Rawls has done it all from

See RAWLS ‌| 4 Johnny Rawls

James Armstrong

of music, a love of the road and, despite the
absence of a mother, a happy childhood.
Seen live, Armstrong has a confident stage
presence that combines grace with mischief.
Few blues artists know how to play the crowd
as James can, shifting dynamics from a whisper to a growl. Wherever he travels around
the world his magnetism continues to hush a
noisy rabble or entice a crowd to follow him
out into the street or down the length of a
beach. Little wonder he’s been dubbed: The
Ambassador of the Blues
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�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

Rawls
From Page 3
producing, songwriting, horn arranging,
Rhythm, Lead and Bass guitar, keyboard,
vocals and background vocals. Rawls
started his own record company, Deep
South Soul, in 2002 and has released
his CD’s Lucky Man, Live in Montana,
and The Best of Johnny Rawls. His
newest CD entitled Heart and Soul was
released in October 2006 and has been
nominated for “Best Soul Blues Album of
the Year (2007)” by the Blues Foundation
. No Boundaries was released under the
TopCat, Catfood and Deep South Soul
labels in 2005.
Rawls has appeared on the cover of the
April 2002 Living Blues Magazine and has
been nominated four times for the W.C.
Handy Award. His most recent award came
from the West Coast Blues Hall of Fame for
RB Male Vocalist of the Year 2006.
Rawls has performed at the Chicago
Blues Festival twice, The Russian River
Blues Festival, The King Biscuit Blues Festival, The Portland Waterfront Blues Festi-

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M i l l i e ’s R e s t a u r a n t
39239 Bradbury Rd. • Middleport, OH
740-992-7713

Snouffer’s
Fire Safety
&amp; Security

Locally Owned
&amp; Operated

Webb Wilder August 9 — 8 p.m.

There are Roots-Rockers, and then there’s Webb Wilder. Wilder is an evangelist for real Rock ‘n’
Roll. As a singer, guitarist, bandleader, film actor, songwriter and humorist, he may be roots-rock’s
only true Renaissance man. Hardly a purist, he has described the music he and his band, The Beatnecks, make as, “Rock for Roots fans and Roots for Rock fans.” In essence: Rock and Roll. There’s
nothing new about combining R&amp;B, Rock and Roll, Country, Blues, Pop and Rock. The Rolling
Stones and the Beatles proved that it can yield marvelous and diverse results. A native of Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Wilder moved to Austin, Texas, in 1976 with his boyhood friend, Bobby “Crow”
Field. Incorporating a British Invasion influence (among others) into their then double time tunes
separated Wilder’s music from the pack. After moving to Nashville, Wilder and Field formed the
Beatnecks in 1985. As Nashville moved toward unapologetically commercial fare, Wilder and Field
were busy crafting their signature brand of rock ‘n’ roll, founded on classic influences from both
sides of the pond. Wilder’s debut, It Came From Nashville, a brazenly rocking bar-band rave-up,
seems even more unlikely now than it must have seemed then. His subsequent albums (Hybrid
Vigor, Doo Dad, Town &amp; Country, Acres of Suede, About Time, and Born To Be Wilder (live)), have
continually maintained the high standard set by the first, becoming textbooks for aspiring roots
rockers and showing there was (and is) a vibrant market for their hybrid brand of Southern musical gumbo. In concert, Wilder spikes the punch between songs with potent doses of rustic wit and
character, transcendent mediations, incantations, and codes by which to live. Wilder’s first Blind
Pig release, Born To Be Wilder captured that on-stage alchemy with a set featuring favorites such
as “The Human Cannonball,” “Tough It Out”, “Miss Missy From Ol’ Hong Kong”, “Louisiana Hannah,”
and others, at their rockin’ best in front of a sold out enthusiastic crowd.

60426831

SNOUFFER’S

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60426549

CELEBRATING
25 YEARS
IN MEIGS
COUNTY

val, Poconos, as well as festivals in Sweden
and Poland. He tours constantly, playing
well over 200 dates a year. He can also be
heard on XM radio’s Bluesville. Whether he
is playing in a small club or a large blues festival, Johnny gives it his all and the crowds
love him!
In 2008, Johnny released Red Cadillac
which charted at #1 on the Living Blues
radio chart. He was nominated for Best
Male Soul Blues Artist and Best Soul
Blues Album by the Blues Foundation. He
won the Critics Award for Best Album of
the Year by Living Blues Magazine.
Ace of Spades was released in 2009 and
charted at #4 and remained in the top 20 for
three months. Johnny won Best Soul Blues
Album of the Year and was nominated for
Best Male Soul Blues Artist of the Year by
the Blues Foundation. In addition, Johnny
was honored with a Blues Trail Marker located at the original site of the Hi Hat Club
in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He shares the
plaque with soul blues legends Tyrone Davis
and Little Milton.

Friday, June 28, 2013

�Friday, June 28, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Ben Davis Jr. &amp; the Dirt Poor
Albert ‘The Kid’ Castiglia July 27 — 8 p.m.
Troubadours July 26 — 6 p.m.
Albert Castiglia is a South Florida guitar man
who’s made a big splash on the National Blues
scene this past decade. Castiglia’s history is
as colorful as his home town of Miami, Florida.
He got a big break after meeting Junior Wells
in 1996, and became Junior’s lead guitar player
until Wells passing in 1998. The Kid then went on
tour as band leader for Blues songstress Sandra
Hall. In 2002, the Kid returned to South Florida,
launched a solo career and his first CD, Burn,
a self-release collaborating with his long time
friend Graham Wood Drout. In 2006, he released
A Stone’s Throw, his second album and first release for Blues Leaf Record. His 2008 CD, These
are the Days, contained five original Castiglia
songs, including a tribute to his mentor Junior
Wells, “Godfather of the Blues.” These are the
Days earned a Blues Music Award nomination for
“Song of the Year” for the original track, “Bad
Year Blues.” Castiglia was nominated again by
the Illinois Blues Blast Awards and walked away
a winner for “Song of the Year” for “Bad Year
Blues,” as well as being nominated for the “Sean
Costello Rising Star Award.” The latest release,
Keepin’ On features five new original tunes, plus
covers of John Lee Hooker, Mack Rice, T-Bone
Walker, Robert Nighthawk and Bob Dylan.

Ben Davis, Jr. is an Americana/Alt. Country/Folk singer from southeastern Ohio.
A veteran of the stage at the young age of
23, Davis has been paying his dues with steady
gigs and as host of Open Stage at the Court
Street Grill. When performing live, Davis tells
a wide variety of stories and plays his heartfelt originals with angst, intensity and desire.
In his words he’s “just getting started” but to
those of us who know him, he’s well on his way.
In March of 2013, Ben released a solo
effort entitled “To My Gal In Oak Hill” A
five song EP about one of his early romantic
relationships, one that he says shaped him
into the person he is today. Two songs from
the EP, “How It All Fell Apart In Manpower
Park” and “Ruth” are promising and have Ben Davis, Jr.
gained radio exposure.
A new release, and his first full-length
The Dirt Poor Troubadours are Jacob
album with the Dirt Poor Troubadours, is
expected later this year. “I’m really excited Dunn, a fellow singer/songwriter from
to share this record with everyone and let Pomeroy, Ohio, on bass; Dustin Nash of
you hear the intensity and variety the band Middleport, Ohio, on lead guitar; and Nate
brings into the picture!”
Sisson of Pomeroy, Ohio, on drums.

Rattlesnake Shake July 26 — 10 p.m. (Court Street Grill)

The Rattlesnake Shake are a four-piece Fleetwood Mac tribute band from Detroit, Michigan, covering the work of the great Peter Green. The Peter Green era of Fleetwood Mac, 1967-1970, is considered to be some of the most influential British Blues music ever produced. B.B. King said of Peter
Green, “He has the sweetest tone I ever heard; he was the only one who gave me the cold sweats.”
The Rattlesnake Shake consist of the Muggs, Danny Methric on guitar and vocals, Tony DeNardo
on bass, Todd Glass on drums plus the addition of Betty LaVette guitarist, Brett Lucas, on guitar
and vocals. Only playing a handful of shows each year, this will be a must see performance for
Blues Rock enthusiasts and fans of the old dirty ‘Mac!

60426590

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 28, 2013

The Muggs July 26 — 8 p.m. Gas House Gorillas July 26 — 9:30 p.m.

The Muggs is an American blues-rock band from Detroit, Michigan. Formed in February 2000, the
band features guitarist Danny Methric, bassist Tony DeNardo and drummer Todd Glass. The Muggs
are many times over winners of the famed Detroit Music Industry awards including Best Blues
Artist and Best Rock Band and stars of several automobile television commercials for Chevy and
Dodge. A four-on-the-floor powerhouse of a band, they’ve enjoyed opening for countless classic
rock and national acts including Mountain, Robin Trower, Cactus, Savoy Brown, Ten Years After,
Glenn Hughes of Deep Purple/Black Sabbath, Johnny Lang and the North Mississippi All-Stars.
The Muggs popularity continues to grow, as exhibited by their making the “100 HOT Unsigned
Bands” list in Music Connection Magazine in December 2008, and by their over 86,000 fans and
fast-growing Facebook following.

The Gas House Gorillas are a New York City based band lead by singer Rick Fink and bassist Crusher Carmen. Heralded as God’s favorite Rhythm and Blues band, the Gorillas are
considered by many to be the most fearlessly uninhibited performers ever witnessed and
a sure fire guarantee for a rippin’ good time. Take it from those of us who know, they do not
disappoint. The band describes their sound as “Punk Americana,” a broad range of styles
that include Jump Blues, Rock and Roll, Swing, Cajun Music and early Punk Rock. Artists
as diverse as Wynonie Harris, Groucho Marx, Sam Cooke, Fats Waller, and The Ramones.
Burning down clubs and festivals all over the country for the past eight years, 2013 will see
the release of GHG’s next album on Lanark Records.

Bernard Allison July 27 — 9:30 p.m.

60425371

Bernard Allison, headliner for the 2013 Blues Bash, is the guitar-playing, singing, and songwriting
son of late legendary blues guitarist Luther Allison. True to form for this “chip off the old block,”
the young Allison injects every bit as much energy into his live shows as his father did. Bernard
counts among his influences icons like Albert King, Muddy Waters, and Freddie King, and later,
Stevie Ray Vaughan and Johnny Winter. He began accompanying his famous father to blues festivals in the early ’70s. There, he was introduced to a who’s who of Chicago blues stars: Muddy
Waters, Hound Dog Taylor, and Albert King, among others. When he was seven or eight, he began
having aspirations of becoming a guitar slinger like his father. Luther Allison was more than just
a casual record collector, and so Bernard benefited from his father and brothers’ collections of
classic blues and gospel. Bernard released his stunning U.S. debut, Keepin’ the Blues Alive, in early
1997, receiving a great deal of critical acclaim

�Friday, June 28, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

Blue Z Band July 27 — 4 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Echo Mecca July 27 — 3 p.m.
Echo Mecca is an
Ohio-based musical
collaboration between
longtime friends and
co-conspirators Stephanie Filson and Brad
Hoffman. Hoffman, an
accomplished bass
player, began relaying
the music in his head
via computer software a
few years ago, but Echo
Mecca wasn’t born until
those musical gems
were fused with Filson’s
lyrics and vocals. Compositions are at times
jazz-like, ethereal and
even spiritual. The duo
is just getting started,
but Echo Mecca is on
the rise.

The Blue Z Band hails
from the river cities,
playing classic rock and
blues. This power trio
includes guitar madman
Sammy Doolittle, bassist
Milt Call and drummer
Anthony Call. Blues Bash
favorites for the past
several years, they are
back on the big stage this
year.

The Todd Wolfe Band is based in New York state and
recall the days when “men were men and amps were
amps.” Wolfe began playing on the New York scene
back in 1979 with his band Nitetrain, a trio that clearly
reflected Todd’s influences — 60s bands like Cream,
Jimi Hendrix, Fleetwood Mac and other bluesyrocking-jamming bands. The wave of guitar players
that included Eric Clapton, Peter Green, Jimi Hendrix, Michael Bloomfield were and are influential and
evident in Wolfe’s style and approach to guitar-playing.
His next venture was Troy &amp; the Tornados, a band based
in the New York metro area. Todd met two women in
this time period that would eventually play a part in
his guitar-playing and song-writing experience: Carla
Olson of the Textones and Sheryl Crow, at the time an
unknown back-up singer. By the late ’80s, Crow had
sat in several times with the Tornados in New York City.
Eventually Todd decided to fly to Los Angeles and write
with Sheryl and showcase their new band in hopes of
a record deal. Nothing came of this particular venture,
but these two would find each other again on the same
stage just a few years up the road. The Todd Wolfe
Band with Todd on guitar and vocals, drummer Roger
Voss and bassist Justine Gardner play with real tubes,
tones crackling with a blues-a-delic sound reminiscent
of the best rock and roll bands of the 1960s. Relentless
touring, and spreading their legend from coast to coast
and shore to shore, has secured the Todd Wolfe Band
as one of the top power trios in the Blues world today.

60426587

The Todd Wolfe Band July 27 — 10 p.m.

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 28, 2013

Are You A Medicare Part B Beneficiary?
Beginning July 1, 2013, there’s a chance your current
mail order provider may no longer be able to ship your
covered diabetes testing supplies to you. Don’t worry,
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy can help. We’ll not only
help you get the supplies you need, we’ll also give you
the ability to better manage your diabetes and live a
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diabetes care.
Ask your pharmacist for more information on how
they can help.

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tel:740-992-2955
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HOURS

Friendly Service • Open weekdays till 7
Mon - Fri 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Sat. 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Sun closed
60426576

Chaz
Humley
&amp;
the
Pett-Crow Band July 27 — 6 p.m.
Effects July 27 — 7 p.m.

An all-original Blues-Rock band, Pett Crow has an up-beat sound that is all their own. Young
in age but seasoned beyond their years in talent, each member plays multiple instruments,
writes and records their own music and is putting a new face on Blues-Rock. Pett Crow had an
impressive 2012 year with the release of their CD — Layin Down the Blues and performing in
over 35 venues, opening for Grammy award winning acts and playing for audiences as large as
3,000. Front-man Wes Crow (age 15), bassist Julia Crow (age 14) and drummer Brandon Pettiford (age 13) are swiftly making a name for themselves on both local and national scenes in
their quest to keep the blues alive for the next generation. With talent beyond their years, they
are a powerful presence on the stage and have an impressive set of original music guaranteed
to get crowds on their feet and dancing. Their unique take on blues blends a very robust mix of
blues, acoustic, funk, soul and, of course, some good ol’ rock ‘n roll.

The boys of Chaz Humley, Scott Rogan,
Jim Spence, Allan Handley and Tim Coll
first got together to drink a few beers and
playing whatever old rock and roll songs
they knew. It was easy for all of them, as
they seemed to click instantly. And what
began as an evening jam session quickly
turned into learning songs.
But once they realized that the spark they
had was more than just four friends jamming, their direction became apparent. All
of them had grown up listening to and playing rhythm and blues, and blues influenced
rock and roll. The blues became a natural
extension of what they were, and what they
wanted to become.
Spanning sixty years, the music of Chaz
Humley and the Effects is as timely today as Chaz Humley &amp; the Effects
it was when Robert Johnson went down to
the crossroads, as it was when Albert King being all that he had, or as it was when BB
made his memorable remark about bad luck King lamented that the “thrill is gone.”

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                  <text>Week of June 22, 2013 - June 28, 2013

Ritchie arraigned on charges from May standoff
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The elderly man
who was involved in a 27-hour
standoff with law enforcement
in May was arraigned on Friday
morning in connection with the
standoff.
Eugene W. “Jack” Ritchie, 83, of
long Bottom, was formally charged
with four counts in an indictment
returned by the Meigs County
Grand Jury last this month.
Ritchie is charged with abduction, a felony of the third degree;

inducing panic, a felony of the
fifth degree; aggravated menacing, a misdemeanor of the first
degree; and having weapons
while under disability, a felony
of the third degree.
All four charges stem from
the May 20-21 standoff between
Ritchie and law enforcement
from around the region.
According to a report from
Sheriff Keith Wood at the time of
the standoff, hours of negotiations
failed, and officers with the Athens,
Gallia, and Washington Emergency
Response teams and the Meigs

County Sheriff’s office took steps
to remove Ritchie from his home.
Wood said the officials used
gas to help force Ritchie from the
home at that time. He emphasized
that every effort was exhausted
prior to officers making entry into
the home. Following his arrest
Ritchie was transported to the Appalachian Behavioral Healthcare
Facility in Athens for evaluation.
No one was injured as part of
the standoff which began just
after noon on May 20 when officers from the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office responded to a

dispute call, with the situation
escalating to a standoff status.
Wood said that Deputies Adam
Smith and Joe Barnhart responded to the initial call of a dispute
between Jack Ritchie and his copartner in a vehicle business.
According to the sheriff, the dispute escalated with Ritchie threatening his co-partner with a gun and
then threatening Deputy Smith.
Officers with the Athens, Gallia, and Washington County
Emergency Response Units, the
Washington County Sheriff and
Ohio State Highway Patrol were

Preparing for harvest
Area farms in full swing

Photos by Alex Hawley and Stephanie Filson

Now that summer is in full swing, the thought of mouth-watering local produce isn’t far from our minds. In just a few
short weeks, local farmers and farmers markets will be offering their bounty to area residents. Right now, however,
farmers are hard at work in the space between planting and harvesting. This time frame includes a lot of hoeing,
‘suckering’ and cultivating in order to offer delicious local produce a little later in the summer.

on scene throughout the situation
to assist local officers. Several
other agencies from around the
region were also there to assist.
Ritchie was found not to be
indigent, and must hire his
own attorney.
Bond for Ritchie was set at
$250,000 with 10 percent permitted. If Ritchie were to post bond,
a condition of that bond would be
GPS-monitored house arrest.
Pre-trial hearings were set
for 11:30 a.m. on July 8, and
10 a.m. on July 22, with a trial
date set for Aug. 6.

Preparing for
Civil War events
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Improvements and changes at the Buffington Island Memorial Park at Portland in preparation
for the Civil War sesquicentennial observance to be held
July 20-21 were among the topics discussed at a recent
meeting of the Board of Directors of the Buffington Island
Battlefield Preservation Foundation.
Karen Hassel of the Ohio Historical Society met
with the Board of Directors and reported on a proposal
to change the name of the park to “Buffington Island
Battlefield Memorial Park.” She also reported that the
Ohio Historical Society is having the plaques cleaned for
the McCook memorial and that in preparation for next
month’s commemoration, some cleanup and other work
is ongoing at the park.
Some of the historical markers, she added, are being relocated, the abandoned well on the McKelvey property behind
the Indian Mound which is in the park area is being filled in,
and arrangements have been made for tapping into the well
at the community center for water at the park site.
She also noted that planning is going well for the
150th commemoration of the Battle at Buffington Island and reported on planned events to include a a trip
over a portion of Meigs County Heritage Trail, living
history demonstrations, and historical displays at the
Portland Community Center.l
It was suggested that Steve Evans be contacted about a
donation toward the event, that support be solicited from
the Meigs County Commissioners and local banks, and
that promotion by the local tourism bureau be requested.
Hassel noted that the History Fund Grants, generated
by donations of Ohio Tax refunds, are available to local
history organizations in Ohio.
Open seats on the Board of Trustees were discussed and
President Ed Sharp appointed Jean Hilton to serve the three
year term, 2013-2015. Suggested for other Board seats were
Dr. Carl Denbow of Athens, Jim Mourning of Middleport,
Jim Miracle of Vienna, W. Va. and Bill Reynolds of Marietta.
Contacts with two prospective board members will be made
by Keith Ashley. It was suggested that Al Tonetti take the
position of legislative agent on the board.
It was reported that all of the Heritage Trail signs marking John Hunt Morgan’s trek across Ohio toward Portland
where he hoped to take his men across the Ohio River
into the more friendly territory of what is now West Virginia are now in place.
As for the National Register application to expand the
Buffington Island battle acreage to be including in the
preservation area, Hassel reported that there is nothing
new. The application was filed several months ago and rejected by many of the owners who felt it was an infringement on their options for use or sale of their property.
The next board meeting will be June 29 at 10 a.m. at
the Museum Annex. It will be followed by a noon meeting
of the 150th Commemoration Committee.

Two years later, three
families still grieving
Questions still
surround deaths,
disappearance
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

MASON COUNTY — “I
can’t stand thinking we’re
going to die not knowing
what happened,” Connie
McCarty of Ashton, mother of the late Tonda McCarty Nelson said.
Tonda, along with her
cousin Ashley (Baird) Crawford, were found murdered
in a shallow grave along
Duncan Creek Rd. near Gallipolis Ferry back in July
2011 — the women were
27 and 26 years old, respectively. Both women were last
seen alive June 16, 2011, the
same night Ashley’s husband, William Jeffrey “Jeff”
Crawford disappeared, as
well. Jeff was 28 at the time
of his disappearance.
The Mason County

Detachment of the West
Virginia State Police have
issued warrants for Jeff’s
arrest for the murders of
the two women. The warrants were issued as a
result of an investigation
which included an eyewitness who claims to have
seen Jeff allegedly kill
Ashley and Tonda. The
eyewitness came forward
on July 28, 2011 — a day
after the bodies of the two
women were identified. At
the time the warrants were
issued, Troopers also said
they were investigating another person or persons of
interest that may have been
involved in the murders.
“I pray the Lord will
open the heavens and
help the police,” Connie
added, saying it’s been a
long two years of waiting
for a break in the case.
Last Sunday on June
16, the day the trio went
missing two years ago, a
balloon launch was held at
Pleasant View Church in
See FAMILIES ‌| 2

�Page 2

Tri-County Marketplace

June 22, 2013 - June 28, 2013

One arrested for drug
trafficking in Rutland
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

Syracuse K-9 Raiza is pictured with items found during
a traffic stop on Thursday
evening in Rutland.

RUTLAND — One person has been arrested on drug
charges following a traffic stop in Rutland on Thursday
evening.
Ryan W. Mossburg, 25, of Parkersburg, W.Va., was
stopped by law enforcement for speeding.
During the stop, the Syracuse K-9 unit indicated
drugs in the vehicle.
According to Rutland Police Chief Steve Williams,
several MDMA (raw Ecstasy), pills, and marijuana,
were found in the vehicles.
Mossburg is charged with drug trafficking and is currently being held in the Middleport Jail.

Photo courtesy of the Syracuse Police Department

Families
From Page 1
Gallipolis Ferry to mark the anniversary. Shela Crawford, Jeff’s
mother, attends Pleasant View
Church and helped organize the
launch to remember Jeff, Ashley
and Tonda and remember there
are still so many unanswered
questions in this case.
Shela and her family have long
maintained they don’t believe
Jeff committed the murders.
Shela said two years later, she’s
not heard from her son nor has
anyone in her family, including
Jeff’s young son who lives in
another state. Shela can’t stress
enough that her son is among
the missing, and she needs help
to find him. Though there is no
evidence to support it, the Crawfords believe Jeff is deceased.
Last Sunday, as over 170 balloons were launched into the air,
prayers were said and Amazing
Grace was sung. To Shela, Jeff remains a son, a brother, a father, a
nephew and husband.
“We love him, and we miss him
everyday,” Shela said about Jeff.
“It’s a nightmare we can’t wake
up from. You don’t realize things
like this happen … people think it
can’t happen to them, but it can.”
“As long as Jeff’s not found,
we’re never going to get answers, ever,” Connie said.
Both Connie and Ruth Baird of
Southside, Ashley’s mother, said
at this time, they feel Jeff didn’t
commit the murders but said there
was no way to be 100 percent sure.
There is still so much unanswered.
The only thing the two women
are sure of is their daughters were
more than victims.
“She was full of life,” Ruth said

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Submitted photo

A balloon launch at Pleasant View Church in Gallipolis Ferry took place last weekend to mark the second
anniversary of the disappearance of Jeff and Ashley Crawford and Tonda McCarty Nelson. The bodies of
Ashley and Tonda were later found and Jeff charged with their murders. Jeff hasn’t been seen since June
16, 2011 and his family, who believe he is also deceased, maintains his innocence.

nie going are Tonda’s three
children of which she and her
husband Johnny have guardianship. Tonda’s children are currently 12, 9 and 5 years old.
Connie says all of them have
memories of their mother and
unfortunately have had to hear
the hard truth about how Tonda left this world, at least, what
Connie knows of the truth.
“Some days I cry and cry,” Connie explained. “It’s been eating
me alive lately. I need to know.
I want to know who caused my
girl and Ashley to lose their lives.
What led up to it? Who did it?

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about Ashley. “I’m not saying
she was an angel, she was just …
I can’t describe it,” Ruth gushed,
unable to find words adequate
enough to do Ashley justice.
Ruth went on to talk about
how she prayed to have a daughter with big, brown eyes and
how she got her and had her, at
least for a while; a daughter who
was feisty and loved to ride four
wheelers or just be outside in
the world; a daughter who had
a family with parents, brothers,
aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews
and cousins.
“It’s hard to move on when
your heart is broken, and you
can’t fix it,” Ruth said. “It’s hard
to live each day not knowing
what happened to your child.”
Ruth had another setback this
year when Ashley’s father, Gary,
died suddenly of a heart attack.
“He died with a broken heart
grieving,” Ruth said. “He never got over it. I’m not over it.
Whoever did this wrecked the
whole family.”
The only solace Ruth and Connie can take is that whatever happened to the two girls, they were
at least together at the end.
“I feel so unhappy this time
of year,” Connie said. “It’s
worse lately … I miss my girl.”
Connie said her daughter
also wasn’t perfect but she was
more than what happened to
her — describing her as smart,
pretty and raised in church. She
made wedding cakes, created
flower arrangements, loved going to the beach and was even a
licensed phlebotomist.
One thing that keeps Con-

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Professional Services
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800-537-9528

FINANCIAL SERVICES
Money To Lend
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lender is properly licensed. (This
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Must have current WV LPN license. Applicants may apply
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Lakin Hospital is an EEO/AA
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Knowing won’t bring her back,
but it will help me. It tortures me
to death. I don’t care how bad it
was, I want to know. If it’s not as
bad as I had thought, it will ease
my mind. It can’t be worse than
I’ve imagined.”
“People get in more trouble
for killing a dog than anybody’s
got for killing two human beings,” Connie said. “They just
got thrown away (in the shallow
grave) and that’s it? But that’s
not it for us.”
All three mothers have imagined countless scenarios of what
fate their children met that June

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night; all of them still needing answers and hoping people
don’t forget.
“I don’t want people to forget,” Shela said. “I live with
this 24 hours a day … it doesn’t
go away.”
“I’d like justice for my
daughter,” Ruth said, though
acknowledging, nothing will
bring her back.
The West Virginia State
Police continue to actively
investigate this case. Anyone
with new information should
call the WVSP Mason County
Post at 304-675-0850.

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
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�June 22, 2013 - June 28, 2013

Tri-County Marketplace

Friday, June 28, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

Page 3

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday,
June 28, 2013:
This year you greet change more
openly than you have in a while. It
is quite apparent that you care a lot
about people, and vice versa. If you
are single, someone you know could
introduce you to Mr. or Ms. Right.
Remain open to people who have different lifestyles from your own. If you
are attached, curb a tendency to be a
bit cocky or arrogant when you think
you are right. At first, you might be
uncomfortable with this change, but
in the long run, your relationship will
work out better. PISCES understands
you almost too well.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH Seriously consider accepting someone’s offer to pitch in.
Recognize a tendency to get angry
at the drop of a hat, and know that is
because you have pushed too hard.
A child, friend or dear loved one has
a lot to share. Understand what is
needed. Tonight: Kick back and relax.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH You might want to try a
different approach. You know your
limits and what is needed. Share
more of your needs with a loved one.
You might want some help taming
a weakness or overindulgence you
think you might have. Remain open.
Tonight: Happy to greet the weekend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHH Your fun nature does nothing to ease a situation. In fact, this
trait might be complicating an already
difficult situation. You are full of
energy, and you’re in the limelight.
Understand that nothing will beat
openness with this person. Drop the
games. Tonight: A force to behold.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH You might want to see a
situation change, but you can’t force
others to back off their position.
As a result, you would be better
off relaxing and enjoying yourself.
Understanding will evolve to a new
level if you can accept what is going
on around you. Tonight: Follow the
music.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH You are full of energy, and
you will draw many people toward
you. Understand what you have
to offer. Someone might push you
beyond your limits. Take a walk or get
involved in some other distraction in
order to stay in control of your feelings. Tonight: Be direct with a partner.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Understand what is happening with a partner. If you seem
to be getting some grief from others, know that it is nothing personal.
These individuals simply are frustrated beyond their normal limits. Just
relax. Tonight: Allow greater give-andtake when dealing with others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH You are capable of squeezing a lot into a small amount of time.
You might feel pressured to get out
of town. Honor what needs to happen
within your inner circle of friends. You
often push beyond what most people
can and will tolerate. Tonight: Get
going to your destination.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Your manifested ideas
could leave many people in awe, yet
they also might get you into a lot of
trouble. A partner could be unusually
difficult. Understand what this person
expects, but also recognize that he or
she might be exhausted and emotional. Tonight: Togetherness works.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You might not be as in
control as you think you are. You
often delude yourself, which causes
problems for those involved. Take off
you rose-colored shades if you want
better results. If more than one person says the same thing, you need to
listen. Tonight: Happy at home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Speak your mind, and know
full well what you want. You are more
sensitive and together than you might
have realized. At present, there is an
issue regarding who wants to take the
lead in a project. This conversation
could become heated. Tonight: TGIF.
Meet friends.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH You might wonder what
has triggered a child or new friend.
Realize that this person is on the
warpath. Even if his or her anger is
directed at you, do not take it on — it
might be the result of a different situation. Give this individual some space.
Tonight: Follow the music.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH How and why you seem to
be irritating a family member might be
a mystery to you, as this person goes
off in a fit of rage. When he or she
has calmed down, consider initiating a
conversation. A loved one feels cared
by you. Tonight: Lead the gang into
Friday-night rituals.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 4

Tri-County Marketplace

June 22, 2013 - June 28, 2013

Gallia County Local Briefs
Historical preservation
board to hold meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Historical Preservation Board will hold a
meeting at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, June
24 at the city’s municipal building, 333
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The meeting
room can be accessed from the entrance
door next to 2 1/2 Alley. On the agenda is the approval of the minutes from
the May 28 meeting, case #1 — Sandra
Darnbrough, 311 Third Avenue, sign,
concerns on any other properties in the
historical district and any other matters brought before the board. For more
information, please call Bev Dunkle at
441-6015 or Brett Bostic at 441-6022.
Local board of education meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County
Local Board of Education will hold a
board meeting at 7 p.m. on Monday,
June 24 at the Gallia County Local
Schools Administrative Office located at
230 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
Rio Valley Stables hosting
‘horse adventure program’
RIO GRANDE — Rio Valley Stables,
located at 635 Farmview Road, will be
hosting a “horse adventure program” this
summer on June 24-28, July 8-12, July
22-26 and August 12-16. The program is
for ages seven and up and teaches basic
horsemanship, safety, handling and care
of horses. Riders will meet every morning from 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Arena riding experience will be for children ages 7-9 and
trail riding experience will be for those attendees ages 10-18. Upon completing the
course, students will receive a certificate.
Pre-registration is required and availability is limited. For more information or to
register call (740) 245-5342.
Gallipolis Lions Club 15th
Annual Golf Scramble
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Lions
Club 15th Annual Golf Scramble will be
held on Saturday, June 29 at Cliffside Golf
Course. Tee off will be held at 8:30 a.m.
Four person teams will be organized by
a blind draw based on handicaps. A sign
up sheet is located at the golf course. The
first place winner will receive $400, second place will receive $300 and third place
will receive $200. The event is a fund
raiser for eye-related projects. Split the
pot, prizes, mulligans, and a light breakfast will be held. The last day to sign up is
Monday, June 24.
Old-fashioned hoedown
JACKSON — An old-fashioned hoe
down will be held at the Wagon Wheelers
Square Dance Hall, located at 354 Summit
Street in Jackson, on Saturday, June 29.
Doors open at 6 p.m. and dancing is from
7-10 p.m. Big Country Band will provide
live music for clogging, square dancing

Mason County Church Calendar

and round dancing. New dancers are welMONDAYS
come. No alcohol is permitted,but concesGALLIPOLIS FERRY
sions will be available. For more informa- — Bible study with Roger
tion, call (740) 884-4506.
McCallister, 6:30 p.m., Mt.
Carmel Church.
County commission meeting change
TUESDAYS
GALLIPOLIS — Due to the IndepenGALLIPOLIS FERRY
dence Day holiday, the Gallia County
Commissioners regular weekly meeting — Service, 7 p.m., Pleasdate has been rescheduled for 9 a.m. on ant Ridge Church.
Tuesday, July 2.
DJFS accepting applications for
school clothing/supplies program
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Department of Job and Family Services will
be accepting applications for the school
clothing/supplies program now through
July 3. Applications can be dropped off
at DJFS, 848 Third Avenue, Monday
through Thursday, 7 a.m.-5 p.m. Applications must include the last 30 days of
household income and must be completed
with all household member, income and
signed. To be eligible children must be
enrolled in kindergarten through the 12th
grade. Proof of enrollment will be needed
for children under age six and over age
17. Applicants will be notified by mail, no
later than August 12 if their applications
has been approved or denied. No phone
calls, please. Shopping days will be held
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. on August 12-15 at KMart and Peebles.
Wilkesville 4th of July parade
WILKESVILLE — The annual Fourth
of July parade in Wilkesville will be held
beginning at 11 a.m. on July 4. Registration is free and begins at 10 a.m. There
will be a $50 cash prize giveaway plus a
$25 Par Mar gift card for best 4-H float,
church float, and most unique entry.
There will be a $50 prize for the best old
car and best horse entry. There will be
a $25 prize for the best children’s entry,
ages 1-10. Registration will be on the hill
by the new fire house. Registration for
children will be across from the old restaurant. Food will be served at the Wilkesville
Community Center following the parade.
Call 669-5646 for more information.
FACTS sponsoring fishing day
RIO GRANDE — Family Addition Community Treatment Services
(FACTS)/New Alternatives is providing
a fishing event for youth ages six and
up. The event will be held from 10 a.m.2 p.m. on Friday, July 19 at the Bob Evans Farm shelter house in Rio Grande.
The shelter house is located across from
the restaurant. Participants will need
to bring their own pole. Please notify
FACTS if this is a problem. For additional information or to register, call
FACTS/New Alternatives at (740) 4467866 or (740) 286-1589. Parents must
sign a release form for participation.

WEDNESDAYS

LEON — Bible Study,
6 p.m., Leon Bethel Interdenominational Church on
Leon Baden Rd.
HARTFORD — God’s
House of Prayer, evening
worship, 6 p.m., located
in Cornerstone Academy
School building.
POINT PLEASANT —
Service, 6 p.m.-?, House of
Praise and Worship.
POINT PLEASANT —
Evening service, 6 p.m.,
Church of Christ on Sand
Hill Road.
ASHTON — Bible
study, 7 p.m., Ashton Baptist Church.
POINT PLEASANT —
Bible study, 7 p.m., Gospel
Tabernacle Church.
POINT PLEASANT —
Bible study, 7 p.m., Krebs
Chapel United Methodist
Church.
POINT
PLEASANT
— Prayer service, 7
p.m., Wesleyan Holiness
Church.
ADDISON, Ohio —
Prayer meeting, 7 p.m.,
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church.
LEON — Bible study
and youth and children’s
ministry, 7 p.m., Leon
Baptist Church.
POINT PLEASANT —
Bible Study, 7 p.m., General Assembly of the Body
of Christ.
HARTFORD — Evening service, 7 p.m.,
Church of Christ in Christian Union.
POINT PLEASANT —
Evening service, 7 p.m.,
Gospel Lighthouse Church
POINT PLEASANT —
Evening service, 6:30 p.m.,
Lifeline Apostolic Church.
LEON — Bible study, 6
p.m., Mount Tabor Church
ASHTON — Bible study,
7 p.m., Palestine Baptist,
off of Zidcamp Road.
HARTFORD — Evening
service, 7 p.m., Father’s
House Church.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY

— Prayer meeting, youth
group, 7 p.m., Pleasant
View Church.

THURSDAYS

POINT PLEASANT —
Prayer meeting, 6 p.m.,
Point Pleasant Seventhday Adventist Church.
POINT PLEASANT —
Bible Study, 7 p.m., Morning Star Advent Christian
Church.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
— Evening service, 6 p.m.,
Mt. Carmel Apple Grove,
Millstone Road.
HARTFORD — Evening
service, 7:30 p.m. Pentecostal Lighthouse Church,
4th and Main Street.

SATURDAYS

POINT PLEASANT —
Sabbath School, 11 a.m.
and Worship Service,
12:30 p.m., Point Pleasant Seventh-day Adventist
Church, located at 4751
Ripley Road.
POINT PLEASANT —
Singing and preaching, 7
p.m., General Assembly of
the Body of Christ.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
— Service, 7 p.m., Pleasant Ridge Church

SUNDAYS

ASHTON — Sunday
school, 10 a.m., worship,
11 a.m., evening service, 6
p.m., Palestine Baptist, off
of Zidcamp Road.
LEON — Sunday school
9:45 a.m., evening worship
6 p.m., Leon Bethel Interdenominational Church on
Leon Baden Rd.
HARTFORD — God’s
House of Prayer, Sunday
school at 10 a.m., evening
service at 6 p.m., located
in Cornerstone Academy
School building.
LEON
—
Sunday
school, 10 a.m., morning
worship, 11 a.m., evening
service, 6 p.m., Wolfe Valley Baptist Church.
LEON — Pine Grove
Chapel Church, 10 a.m.
Sunday morning worship.
POINT PLEASANT —
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
preaching service, 10:30
a.m., and evening service,
7 p.m. , Wesleyan Holiness
Church.
POINT
PLEASANT
— Sunday Bible student,
9:45 a.m., worship service,
10:30 a.m., and evening

service, 6 p.m., Church of
Christ on Sand Hill Road.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
— Sunday services, 10
a.m., evening services 6
p.m., Zion Missionary
Baptist Church, located on
Crab Creek Road.
POINT PLEASANT —
Sunday school, 10 a.m.,
and worship service, 6
p.m., Gospel Tabernacle
Church.
POINT PLEASANT —
Sunday school, 10 a.m.,
and worship service, 7
p.m. Morning Star Advent
Christian Church, located
on Rt. 62.
POINT PLEASANT —
Sunday school, 10 a.m.-?,
and evening worship, 6
p.m.-?, House of Praise
and Worship.
POINT PLEASANT —
Sunday school, 10 a.m.,
morning worship, 10:45
a.m., and evening services,
7 p.m., Krebs Chapel United Methodist Church.
ADDISON, Ohio —
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
and evening service, 6
p.m., Addison Freewill
Baptist Church.
LEON
—
Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m., morning
worship, 11 a.m. and evening service 7 p.m., Leon
Baptist Church.
HARTFORD — Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m., morning worship, 11 a.m., and
evening service, 7 p.m.,
Church of Christ in Christian Union.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
— Morning service, 10
a.m., evening service, 6
p.m., Mt. Carmel Apple
Grove, Millstone Road.
POINT PLEASANT —
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
worship, 10:30 a.m., evening service, 7 p.m., Gospel Lighthouse Church.
LEON
—
Sunday
school, 10 a.m., evening
service, 6 p.m., Mount Tabor Church.
HARTFORD — Sunday
morning service, 11 a.m.,
Pentecostal
Lighthouse
Church, 4th and Main
Street.
HARTFORD — Sunday
morning service, 10 a.m.,
evening service 6 p.m., Father’s House Church.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
— Sunday worship services at 10 a.m., 7 p.m., Pleasant View Church

Farmers Bank offering
budgeting seminars
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Farmers Bank knows the face
of the economy changes
every day.
That’ is why they offered
to help people in the community understand the in’s
and out’s of personal budgeting by offering a seminar, “Making
Dollars and Sense Out
of Budgeting”, on June
13 at the Bethel Worship
Center in Reedsville as
part of their “Banking On
U” series.

“Banking on U” consists
of eight seminars with different topics on personal
finances. Jessica Staley,
Tuppers Plains Branch
Manager, and Shawn Arnott, Chief Financial Officer (CFO), took the lead
for the fourth seminar in
the series.
Topics that they covered
were: Tips to Help Decrease Spending and Save
More Money; Quick-Start
Budgets; Goals and Planning; Determining and
Constructing Your Budget;
and Credit Management.
Each “Banking on U”

seminar offers light refreshments,
giveaways,
and prizes. The seminars
are available to the public
at no cost and at the end of
the year, all attendees who
completed an event survey
will be entered into a drawing to win $1,000 cash.
The
next
seminar,
“Building Your Nest Egg:
Retirement IRAs &amp; Savings”, will be held at the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va. on Aug. 8
from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
RSVP at facebook.com/
myfarmersbank, call a local
branch, or just stop by.

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Shawn Arnott, Chief Financial Officer (CFO), took the lead for the fourth seminar in a series in
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