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                  <text>~~ ~- ~~---------------

Meigs falls short to
Golden Rockets, Bt

Taking off the
pounds,A2

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Printed on 1011%:
Recycled Ne~sprint D~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Tri-county jobless rates improve in March

OnnuARIES
Page AS

BY ANDREW CARTER

• Doris June Bailey
• Earl B. Bickford
• Evalyn J. McKenzie
• Carole E. Mclaughlin
• Sieglinde Franz Miller
··Virginia Lee Pooler

MDTNEWS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

UNDATED - Mason,
Meigs and Gallia residents
received a bit of good news
on the unemployment front
in March as jobless rates
dropped in each county.
Mason County saw the
most improvement last

month as the unemployment
figure dropped to 13.8 percent in March from 15.1 percent in February. according
to figures released by
WorkForce West Virginia.
Approximately 1,380 Mason
Countians are currently
without jobs. according to
the report. Mason County's
total labor force is 9,940.

Overall, West Virginia's
unemployment rate dropped
from 10.9 percent in
February to 10.1 percent in
March. The agency reported
that 78,800 state residents
are currently out of work.
The state's total labor force
is 779,700.
The Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services

reported
that
Meigs
County's jobless figure
declined in March to 16.9
percent. It was 17.7 percent
in February. According to
ODJFS. a total of 1.600
Meigs residents are without
work. The total labor force
in the county is 9.700.
Gallia County's unemployment rate dropped

slightly in ~arch to II .8
percent after .hitting 12.1
percent in February. ODJFS
reported that' I ,700 c6unty
residents are currently out
of work. Gallia's total labor
force is 14.700.
Ohio's
unemployment
rate increased slightly in

Please see Rates, AS

Thefts,
accidents
reported

• Lady Marauders fall to
Wellston. See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
Beth Sergent/photo

Raeline Reeves (left), fifth grader at Meigs Intermediate School is this year's Meigs Cou11ty Spelling Bee Champ.
Coming in second place was Mitchell Howard (right), seventh grader at Meigs Middle School. The two are presented their trophies from Kim Allen of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center.

Spell check
Champion spellers square off
Bv BETH SERGENT

• Coloring contest
winners announced.
See Page A3

;

•~===
WEATHER

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
After spelling
rutabaga and photosynthesis. the
Meigs County Spelling Bee all
came down to one word - incapable.
When the dust cleared, Meigs
Intermediate School fifth grader
Raeline Reeves was in fact capable
of takin,P home the top priLe with
Meigs Middle School seventh

grader Mitchell Howard coming in
a close second after the pair went
round aftef round. word after word.
The spelling bee, hosted by the
Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center. was held at Southern
Elementary with judges Tony
Deem, superintendent of Southern
Local. Bill Buckley, superintendent
of Meigs Local and Rick Edwards,
superintendent of Eastern Local.
John Costanzo, superintendent of
Athens-Meigs ESC and Kim Allen.

director of gifted services for
Athens-Meigs ESC, coordinated
the event with retired teacher
Becky Zurcher having the duty of
being the spelling bee pronouncer.
The event featured students from
all three school districts in fourtheighth grades: students who \vere
deemed the top spellers in their
respective classes.
Eastern Elementary and Middle

Please see Spelling Bee, A6

Law enforcement
training day a success
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

High: Lower 70s.
Low: Lower 40s.

INDEX
2 SECTIO:'IIS- 12 PAGES

.

C11lendars

A3

assifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley PublishinK Co.

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

Above: Lt. Dave
Williams of the
· Athens Police
Department gave a
presentation on
identifications and
lineups.
Right: Meigs
County Procecuting
Attorney Colleen
Williams organized
spring training day
for local law enforcement officers.
Submlt1ed photos

POMEROY - Law enforcement officers attending a spring training day organized by Meigs Couqty
Prosecuting Attorney Colleen S. Williams were
informed about law changes. and given tips on lineups and drug investigations.
The training session was held at the Pomeroy
Library and attended by officers from the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department, the Middleport Police
Department, Adult Probation and Parole and the
Meigs County Major Crimes Task Force.
Presenters included Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
Matthew J. Donahue. who discussed recent changes
in the law: Lt. Dave Williams of the Athens oiTce
Department who talked about identifications and lineups: and Capt. Steve Kane who spoke on the subject
of dmg inve!&gt;tigations. Chuck Haegle of the Athens
Police Department also assisted in the presentations.
Williams had conducted a similar training last
year. and plans to make training available to local
Jaw enforcement on a regular and continuing basis.
she said.
"Training only makes us better:· Williams said.
"Training provides us ar. opportunity to learn new
things and look at things in new ways."
Williams expressed her thanks to all those attending and invited suggestion' for future trainings. She
provided lunch for those attending.

POMEROY - Thefts and auto
accidents are currently being investigating by the Pomeroy Police
Department, according to Chief
Mark E. Proffitt.
Sgt. Ronald Spaun arrested
Matthew Warner. 27, Pomeroy, for
obstructing official business and
petty theft for allegedly stealing a
neighbor's jewelry and then selling it
for money to the Cash Land store on
West Main Street. April Coppick. 23.
Pomeroy reported a diamond ring
and gold necklace was stolen earlier
this month. Spaun reported Warner is
due in Pomeroy Mayor's Court at 5
p.m., April 26 to answer the 'charges.
Ronnie Taylor. New Marchfield.
reported his lawn mower mis~ing
after dropping it off at Jim's Mower
Service on Welshtown Hill in the fall
of 2009. When Taylor returned for
the mower this month, it \vas missiiH!
from the shop. The mower
described as a Bolens brand, red and
white mower with I 2-13 horse
power motor with shaft drive.
The Pomeroy Save-A-Lot recently
reported the coin-operated Pepsi
machine had been forced open \vith
an estimated $80-$100 missing.
The following traffic accidents are
being investigated:
Hailey Ebersbach, Gallipolis.
reported she parked a yellow. Chc\ y
Cobalt on the Pomeroy Parking Lot
between Court and Lynn Streets and
says it was damaged while parked

is

Please see Reports, AS

New festival
added for
summer kickoff
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - "Save )'our twoliter bottles. anything plastic or
inflatable and keep June 19 open for
a new festival - the ''Kickin ·
Summer Bash" to take place on the
Pomeroy levee and parking lot.
That's the word from a committee
chaired by John Musser about a ne\\
summer festival which will feature
activities along and on the ri\·er. To
be included will be a fireman's river
rescue race, an "Anything That
Floats" race. canoe and kavak races.
a lighted boat parade. a battle of the
bands. and a photo contest. All these
activities will take place on Saturdn)
beginninc: at noon.
.Area schools and local people
interested in having a concession or
crafter space are asked to contact
Brenda Roush at 992-3034. The idea
is to invite local on!anizations before
opening the area to out~iders. There
i~ limited space and all re-,ervation~
for local participation needs to be
into the office b) May 1. After that
date, anyone out~ide the local area
will be able to reque::.t space.
To obtain a cop) of the rules for
the "Anything That Floats" race, the
photo contest or the canoe and kayak
races, or to .-;ponsor an event. is
asked to contact the Tourism office ut
992-2239 or stop bv the oftice located at 23R Wes"t Main Street,
Pomeroy.

•

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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

W ednesday, April

21 , 2010

New watchdog probe
into Ohio wildlife licenses

·Taking off the pounds

Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Submitted photo

The winning team at the annual Pleasant Valley Hospital 60-Day Challenge dropped 95 pounds and 12.55% of their total
body fat. In addition to claiming the top prize of $500 for their favorite charity, the trio also received a $750 donation from
AB Construction to split three ways. As incentive, if the trio keeps the weight off for an entire year, then they will receive
another check for $600. Shown above at the recent check presentation were, left to right, Darin Smith, manager of the
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, Michael VanMatre II (contestant), Michael VanMatre (contestant), Michell Richmond
(contestant) and Mike Sigler, a representative of AB Construction in the Contracting and Modular Home Division. This is
the fourth year that Pleasant Valley Hospital and Sunny 93.1 FM have hosted this healthy event and the first year for AB
Construction as a sponsor.

Rapist who claimed drug allergy executed
Bv

MATT LEINGANG

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LUCASVILLE - A serial rapi:-.t who strangled a 16year-old girl in 1988 and
who had argued he might be
violently allergic to the
state'::. execution drug was
put to death Tuesday with
no apparent complications.
A~ the lethal injection
began,
Dat'l') I
Durr
clenched hi~ fists, grimaced
and held his head up for
about I 0 seconds before
gently putting it down. It
wasn't clear if he was m
pain or emotionally reacling
to the moment.
Durr. 46. was pronounced
dead at 10:36 a.m at the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility in Lucasville.
"He was a monster," the
victim's mother. Norma
Jean Godsey, said after witnes:-.ing the execution.
Durr- kidnanpcd 16-yearold Angel Vincent from her
home in Elyria on Jan. 31.
1988, while her mother and
stepfather were away at a
Super Bowl party, prosecutors said. He raped and
strangled her with a dog
chain and hid her body
inside two orange traffic
barrels placed end-to-end in
a Cleveland park.
In what appeared to be an
unu~ual legal maneuver.
Durr\ lawyers said last
\\ eek they uncovered C\ idence of Durr'::. ane::.thesia
allergy in his 800-page

prison medical record.
Ohio uses a large dose of
anesthesia to execute condemned inmates. and Durr
ar!!ued that no one knew
ho\\ his body would react
to the drug. ·
The state countered that
there was no proof that an
allergic reaction would
occur before Durr was
already deeply unconscious
and that the worst reaction
would be death from low
blood pressure and impaired
breathing, effects that
would be irrelevant in the
context of an execution.
The U.S. Supreme Court
declined
to
mtervene
Monday,
upholding
a
judge's ruling that Durr
waited too lon!! to raise the
allergy issue.- then relied
mainly on speculation to
ask for time to investigate.
Dennis Sipe. one of two
attorneys wno witnessed
Tuesday's execution on
behalf of Durr, said Durr\
reaction
more
likely
stemmed from physical pain
rather than his feelings
about being executed.
"I think he had come to
terms with the fact that the
state was go~ng to end his
life." Sipe said.
In a final statement
Tuesdav, Durr addressed a
minister. sa) ing: "I planned
to go out in a struggle. but I
want to make you proud. I'll
go out in peace."
He also told Vincent's
family he was SOIT) for their

pain but maintaiJied his
innocence. He said he
hoped the courts \\ ou ld
have allowed further D!'iA
testing on a necklace found
on the victim.
"Unfortunately, that's not
going to happen,'' he said.
Experts testified there
would be no DNA on the
necklace, and authorities
couldn't guarantee the
necklace had been preserved properly as evidence.
Prosecutors said Durr was
obsessed with Vincent.
Durr, then 24, had
fathered a child with a
teenage girlfriend who lived
do\\ n the street from her.
Durr named his newborn
daughter Angel and made
his girlfriend model the
jeans he had removed from
his victim the night she was
abducted. prosecutors said.
Three months later. several boys playing in the park
not1ccd a foul odor and
found Angel Vincent's
(kcomposed body inside the
traffic barre Is.
The
case
remained
unsolved until Durr was
arrested on t\VO unrelated
rapes in September 1988.
His girlfriend, Deborah
Mullins, came forward and
told authorities that Durr
had picked her up the night
Vincent
disappeared~
Vincent was tied up in the
back of the vehicle ..Mullins
said. and Durr said he was
going to "waste" her.
Durr dropped her off at an

apartment, Mullins said.
then returned about four
hours later and placed
Vincent's rinc and bracelet
on a coffee~ table. Durr
boasted that he had :-.trangled Vincent, Mullins ::.aid.
. He was convicted largely
..9n the testimony of Mullins,
•who said she waited months
to tell police about the murder out of fear that Durr
would
harm
her.
Prosecutors said Mullins
knew facts about the case
that she· could not have
known without Durr telling
her. including the location
of the body.
Godsey. who now li\es in
Monticello,
Ky.,
said
Vincent was her only child.
She drank and smoked
heavily for four years after
the murder. leading to
chronic bronchitis and other
health problems that require
her to carry an oxygen tank.
"He took everything from
me," she said.
Godsey said she was disappointed that Durr didn't
admit his guilt and ask God
for forgiveness.
Wesley Brewer. Vincent's
uncle, said he was glad Ohio
has the death penalty but
wished the state used the
electric chair instead. Lethal
injection. he said, is too
humane for a killer like Durr.
Durr was the fourth
inmate executed thb vear in
Ohio, which is on pace to
execute a state record' 11
inmates in 2010.

Estranged wife of former state AG faces ethics charge
Bv J uuE CARR

SMYTH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS
The
estranged wife of former
Ohio Attorney General
Marc Dunn has been hit
with a state ethics charge
accusing her of using her
husband's position to get
state funding for a universitv where she works.
• The charge against Alyssa
Lenhoff was filed late
Monday. Prosecutors allege
she acted. improperly in
securing a $6,500 grant
, from Dann 's office for the
State
Youngstown
University journalism program she directs.
Dann ultimately canceled payment when questioned by a lawyer in his
office, but e-maib expected to be releused in an
investigative
report
Monday show ~~ series of
communications between
Lenhoff and Dann 's staff.
said
Ohio
Ethics
executive
Commission
director David Freel.
Lenhoff is to appear in
cou11 in Columbus on
t.1onday to enter a plea on
the ftrst-degrce misdemeanor charge. which carries a maxunum penalty of
six months in jail and a
$1 ,000 fine. A message
seeking comment was left

•

Tuesday with her attorney,
Sam Shamansky.
Freel said Lenhoff proposed to use the money to
teach journalism and criminal justice students about
the difficulties of solving
cold criminal cases.
The charge against her
comes less than a week after
Lenhoff filed for divorce
from Dann. It has been two
vears since Dann. a
YoungstO\vn Democrat who
won a longshot victory in
2006 against a veteran
Republican state officeholder, admitted to an affair \vith
a young female employee
amid allegations of sexual
harassment by senior staff
members.
Two of hh former aide~
- one-time communications chief Leo Jennings
and former chief of staff
Edgar Simpson - pleaded
guilty to misdemeanor
ethics charges last month
resulting from investiga
tions of Dann 's former
office.
Simpson \vas charged
with failing to report on
required state financial disclosure forms $350 he
recch·ed from Dann 's campaign committee and about
$800 he received from the
committee Dann formed
dunng his transition into
office .

Jennings was charged
"ith accepting more than
S15.000 in supplemental
income from the two Dann
committees and subsequently funneling the
monl'y to Dann aide
Anthony Gutierrez in the
form of 14 months of lodging expenses at a Columbus
condominium.
Gutierre~. a central figure
in the sexual harassment

scandaL worked as Dann 's
general services chief. He
was sentenced in November
to 45 days on an unrelated
theft-in-office charge and
other counts.
Gutierrez. Jennings and
Dann periodically roomed
together at a Columbus-area
condominium where they
hosted young women from
the office for piaa parties
and drinking.

Xenia office.
Haines is one of six oftlASSOCIATED PRESS
cialco; who have pleaded
guilty in the 2&lt;XJ6 case o
COLCNIBUS- The state Ohio wildlife officer wht
watchdog is investigati ng a South Carolina officer use
allegations that wildlife ofti- his horne address to receive
ccrs broke the Jaw by provid- a $19 Ohio hunting license,
. ing out-of-state wildlife offi- saving $106. Haines was
cers Ohio fishing licenses at charged with one count ol
a discount, The Associated obstructing justice and one
Pre~s has leamed.
count of complicity.
The probe by the Ohio
Josh Zientek, one of the
Inspector General follows wildlife officers reprimandsimilar allegations invoh- ed over the fishing license
ing a hunting license that jssue. declined to comment
has led to felony charges Tuesday.
against the wildlife divi··1 trust the system and
sion's top administrators.
we· ve just got to let the sysAll are on paid leave tem \vork,'' he said.
whtle they are pro..,ecuted
At issue \\ ith the hunting
over the hunting license license io; whether Ohio ofticials knowingly broke the
allegations.
The Ohio Division of Ia\\. Several told investigaWLdlife reprimanded two tors that the practice was
officers in 2007 for helping widespread in the past.
fellow wildlife officers
David Graham. chief of
from Indiana obtain Ohio the Ohio Wildlife Division,
lishing licenses at the lower. told investigator:-. the pracOhio rate of $19 , according tice of providing the in-state
to wildlife records released license rate was probably
to the AP through a records outdated but he didn't think
request.
of it as a crime.
•
..I just had come to the c.;
The officer:-. let the Indiana
officers use the Ohio address elusion over time that it just
of wildlife regional offices in wasn't the probably a socialXenia in southwe:-.t Ohio. ly acceptable thing to do anyNunnally. the Indiana offi- more," Graham said in a Feb.
cers \\ ould ha\e paid $40 for l. 2010, interview with investigators reviewed by the AP.
the license.
Indiana allow~ out-ofHowever, the inspector
state wildlife officers who general's investigation of the
are in the state on official hunting license issue released
bm.iness to obtain huntin!! la.;,t week says officials knew
and fishing licenses at in': what happened was illegal.
state rate::.. Ohio does not
"The reality is that Wildlife
ha,·c a similar policy. and it administrator::. kne\\ that prois illegal to put down false viding false infonnation on
information on the licenses the hunting licen~e applicawhen filling them out.
tion is a criminal offense,"
The Oct. 7. 2008, letter of the report said.
Graham also acknowlreprimand indicates the
officers had a supervisor's edged to investigator~ he
authority to obtain the was close friend:-. with Allan
Wright, the wi ldl ife officer
licenses.
Despite that, "This was who -allegedly obtained the
against Division of Wildlife cheaper hunting license for
directive and should not be the South Carolina official.
Graham has pleaded not
repeated again in the
futJre." according to the let- guilty to one count of
ters signed by Todd Haines. obstmcting justice and one
then the manager of the count of complicit).

I

Cincinnati man convicted of
wife's murder, dismemberment
William Mathews II told the
CINCINNATI (AP) An Ohio man was convicted judge.
Prosecutors said Strutz
Tuesday of killing and dismembering his wife. whose delayed rcp011ing his wife
torso was found in a trash missing. and that he bought
can outside their suburban bleach to try to ma~k the
odor of her decomposing
Cincinnati home last year.
Minutes after hearing body and garbage bags to
closing
arguments. put her body parts in. They
Hamilton County Common said the couple had marital
Pleas Judge John West problems. while Strutz's
announced the guilt) ver- attorney. said the marriage
dicts for John Strutz, 31, on had been imprO\ ing.
Strut~ reported his \\ ife
one count of murder. two
count~ of tampering with
mis ...ing to police on the
evidence and one count of afternoon of Aug. 15. 2009.
abuse of a corpse.
The next day. police found
Strutz had taken the stand her torso wrapped in tra~h
bags in the garbage can out~londav and denied killin!!
28-year-old Kristan Strutz. side the couple's Delhi
The couple had three Township home.
Strutz said he didn't how
daughters. and ::.he also had
a son.
his wife died or who cl
"He thought he got awa) have dismembered herb
with the petfect murder, but He said he saw a blon c
woman running to a pickup
he
dtdn't."
~!egan
Shanahan. an asststant tmck parked ncar hi., house
county prosecutor. said in when police brought him
her closing argument. home after questioning and
Prosecutors said Stnttz cut before the torso was found.
West had acquitted Strutz
up the body and tried to dison Monday or a separate
pose of it in garbage hags.
His attornev contended in murder count alleging that
hi" closing itrgument that he killed his wife as the
the prosecution's case was result of committing or
attempting to commit feloall circumstantial.
'There's a crack in the nious assault. He heard the
very foundation of the case after Strutz \\ ai\ ed a
state's 'case." attorne) jur) trial.

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Page~1

HE

-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Al&gt;ril

21, 20~0

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday ... Most! y
sunny. Highs in the lower
70s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph.
Wednesday
night. ..
Partly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 40s. West winds 5 to
10 mph.
Thursday..•Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Northwest winds around 5
mph .. .Increasing to around
10 mph in the afternoon.

Thursday night. .. Partl~
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s. Northwest winds 5 to
10
mph
in
the
evening ...Becoming light
and variable.
Friday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 70.
Friday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. A chance of
thunderstorms after midnight. Lows in the lower

50s. Chance of ra1n 50
percent.
Saturday... A chance of
thunderstorms.
Showers
likely ...Mainly in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 70s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday
night ...
Shov.·ers and thunderstorms
likely in the evening ... Then
showers likely with a
chance of thunderstorms
after midnight. Lows in the

mid 50s. Chance of ram 60
percent.
Sunda} ...Mostly cloudy
with a chance of shov.ers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 70s. Chai1ce of
rain 50 percent.
Sunday night ...A chance
of thunderstorms 111 the
evening. .Mostly cloud)
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 50s
Chance of rain 40 percent.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Effects of divorce may be delayed
Submitted photo

Emily Reynolds, county champion in coloring contest.

e Coloring contest

·'Winners announced
POMEROY
"Conservation
Habits' Healthy Habitats" was the
theme of the 2010 Meigs
: Soil and Water Conservation
.Coloring Contest held by
Meigs Soil and Water
Education
Coordinator
Jenny Ridenour.
.. Emily Reynolds of Meigs
Primary was selected as the
overall county champion in
the coloring contest and
received $10.
A total of $120 was
'awarded in the contest, with
first place winners in each
~ class receiving $5 and sec. ond place winners receiving
$3. Each student received a
''Wild Ohio for Kids'' mag_azine and a pencil. Winners
in each class were, listed
•
t and second respective-

ly by class were as follows:
At Meigs Ashley Walker
and Chasity Jones, Alexa
Russell and Alyssa Leib,
Philip Whiley and BJ Young,
Jaimee Minshall and Jerrica
Smith, Emily Reynolds and
Rose Andrew, Maddie
Pethtell and Jessica Rowley,
Jade Jewell and Isaac Kauff.
At Southern, Dylan Lyons
and Emira McCoy, Natalie
Harrison and Chase Bailey,
Kyler Rogers and Caelin
Seth.
At
Eastern,
Layla
Simmons
and
Sydney
Sanders, Olivia Barber and
Brad Hawk,Tia Arix and
Jenna Chadwell, Bryleigh
Wei gum ·and Katlyn Lawson.
At Mid-Valley Chrisian,
Cassie McClanahan and
Tres Smith .

Community Calendar
-

·Public meetings

'-

Wednesday, April 21
TUPPERS PLAINS ·Eastern Local Board of
,Education, regular meeting,
-6:30
p.m.,
Eastern
' Elementary library confer:ence room.
'•
Thursday, April 22
• POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervisor,
·regular meeting, 11 :30 a.m.
.at district office, 33101
. 'Hiland Road.
~' POMEROY- Meigs High
··School parent-teacher conferences, 4 to 7 p.m. at the
high school. Discussion will
be on student progress and
performance.
OMEROY- Retirement
inar at . the Senior
•
zens Center, 5 to 7 p.m.
·with Judge Scott Powell pre..senting information on wills,
.durable power of attorney,
living will, trusts and reverse
mortgages.
Saturday, April 24
- POMEROY- Free health
screenings at the Mulberry
Community Center 9 to 11
· a.m.
No
appointment
required.· Includes non-fasting total cholesterol and
~ blood glucose, bone densi. ty, body mass index, blood
pressure, health education.
Monday, April 26
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
Southern High School
media room.

Clubs and
organizations

t:

Thursday, April 22
OMEROY Meigs
. unty Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon, Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. Michael Gerlach
_to speak on history of Big
·Bend area. Luncheon reservations due Tuesday, 9923214. Guests welcome.
Take paper products and
other items for women's
'shelter.
HARRISONVILLE
•Harrisonville 0. E. S. # 255
annual inspection, 7:30p.m.
at Harrisonville Masonic
building. ,

TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW, Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. at St. Paul United
Church
in
Methodist
Tuppers Plains. Hostesses,
Kila Frank, Janice Young,
Janet Connolly and Debbie
Gilmore.
SYRACUSE Meigs
County
Women's
Republican Party, regular
meeting,
6:30
p.m.,
Carleton School, refreshments served, call 9853537 or 696-1 042 for more
information.
GALLIPOLIS - Ewings
Chapter Sons of the
American Revolution will
meet at Our House, 1st
Avenue, Gallipolis, 6 p.m.
fostd of candlelight meal,
$15 with reservations to be
made with Bill Beegle, 740446-2152.

Church events
Wednesday, April 21
VINTON Revival at
Pine
Grove
Holiness
Church on Roweville Road
through April 25. 7 p.m.
every night except Sunday
when service begins at 6
p.m. Rev. James Brown,
speaker.
POMEROY
New
Beginnings U. M. Church,
community fellowship dinner, 4:30 to 6 p.m., free
chicken and noodle dinner.
Saturday, April 24
ALFRED - The Alfred
United Methodist Church
annual open to the public
breakfast. Serving begins at
6:30 a.m. with donations
accepted followed by • an
auction of baked goods and
miscellaneous items at 1 0
s.m.

Other events
Thursday, April 22
POMEROY
Free
Composting Workshop, 68:30 p.m., OSU Meigs
County Extension office,
Hal
Kneen
discussing
opportunities for people to
learn about the benefits of
composting, how to com·
post, and different methods
of composting.

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
wife and I got divorced
about a year ago. It was as
amicable and easy a process
as possible for this sort of
thing, and I didn't think it
would really affect our three
kids very much, especially
since they're high-school
age and older. But my
youngest son has been having trouble, and the only
thing I can pinpoint is the
divorce. Is it possible that
he's been upset for a year,
and I only now am figuring
it out? And is there anything
I can do at this point to
help?- O.H.
Dear O.H.: In any
divorce, no matter how
civil, family dynamics can
get mixed up, and this can
take a toll on children that
we don't necessarily think
about. Even when a separation goes as well as possible, you can't underestimate your son's sense of
loss. Civility certainly limits the damage, and your
kids have a better chance of
adjusting to this change
since you parted on good
terms with your ex-wife.
However, this is still a huge
change to adjust to, and it
will have an inevitable
impact. This type of loss
can cause a child to lose his
sense of security at home,
and when home is no longer
a safe place, that can cause
problems in the long term.
Your son may have been
holding back his feelings
for fear of causing problems, and they're now bubbling to the surface.
Being open and allowing
your son to express his feel-

Pomeroy
Alumni tickets
now on sale
POMEROY - Tickets for
the annual Pomeroy High
School Alumni Banquet are
now on sale at Swisher &amp;
Lohse
Pharmacy
and
Francis Florists i Pomeroy.
They may also be purchased
by mail by sending a
stamped, self addressed
envelope to the Pomeroy
Alumni Association. Box
202. Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
Tickets are priced at $15
again this year. The banquet
is Saturday, May 29, 2010
at the Meigs High School
Cafeteria.
There will be a social
hour from 5:30 - 6:30 p.m.
followed by the dinner
catered by Parkfront Diner
of Gallipolis. Reunion
classes to be honored this
year are: 1935, 1940, 1945,
1950, 1955, 1960 and 1965.
One $1 ,000 Bob and
Sheila Strauss Eastman
scholarship
and
three
$800.00 Bob Roberts schol~
arships will be given to students who are either a child.
grandchild or great-grandchild of a PHS graduate.
There are no official application forms. Those applying are to send a resume,
transcript of grades, letter of
application, a current photo
and information of relationship to the Pomeroy graduate to the above address. In
addition, the Charles Gibbs
Memorial Scholarship is
available to graduates living
in Pomeroy and going into
the educational field. The
deadline to submit information is May 21.
Pomeroy
Alumni
Association officers are: Bill
Young, president; Joanne
Williams, vice president;
Carol Kennepy, second vice
president;
and
Marcia
Arnold and Thelma Jeffers.
secretary and treasurers.

Dr. Joyce
Brothers

ings freely to you can help
him get through his adjustment period. If he doesn't
feel comfortable talking to
you about you and your exwife, that's OK. You can
suggest that he talk to a
guidance counselor at his
school, or another trusted
adult, and work out his feelings about the divorce and
the changes to his family.

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers:
There's been a lot of talk in
my ''new moms'' group
about using educational
DVDs to teach our infants
how to talk and even read at
an earlier age. Everyone
seems to think that learning
to talk and even read as easily as possible will make his
or her kids smarter and
more successful. I'm skeptical of the value of these
DVDs. Do things like this
actually work? And is there

really any benefit for my
baby if she learns new
vocabulary words earlier?
-B.T.
Dear B.T.: You are completely right to be skeptical
about the \ alue of these
educational DYDs that are
designed to encourage language development in toddlers. A study recently published in the Archives of
Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine presents the most
definitive evidence to date
that these DYDs don't actually do what they claim to
do. Several other studies
also concur. and even suggest that infants who spent a
lot of time watching educational DVDs learned fewer
words and scored lower on
some cognitive tests by the
time they started preschool
than the children who didn't
watch these DVDs.
While we're not sure
exactly why these types of
educational DVDs don't
work, there are a fev. potential explanations. It is possible that these videos overstimulate infants· brains.
and don't allow them to
learn in an interactive.
repetitive and reinforcing
way. Ho\vever. the effect
could be larger t.han that.
Spending time watching a

video takes away from the.
time an infant might spend
v.ith a parent. engaging and
communicating with a live
person. Social interaction i-;
critical to children, and ic;
especially important for
learning language m kids
under the age of 2. In fact.
the American Ac.ademy of
Pediatrics has recommended for several vcars that
kids under 2 not 'watch any
videos or television - there
is no substitute for a par
ent's attention.
(c) 2010 by King Features
Syndicate

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, April

21, 2010

Congratulations on your
new school-issued laptop!
In other news, your teacher
has been laid off.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lope~
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Cotlgress shall make uo law respecting au
..., establishment of religiott, or proltibitiug tltefi•ee
exercise tllemif; or a_bridgi11g tire freedom of speech,
• Ol' of the press; or tire l'ight of the people peaceably
to assemMe, and to petition the Got,erllment
..
for a redress ofgrievances.
The First Amendment to tlle U.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. April 21, the 111th day of 2010.
:rhere are 254 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
• On April 21, 1910. author Samuel Langhorne
Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, died in Redding,
Conn., at age 74.
On this date:
In 1509, England's King Henry VII died; he was succeeded by his 17-year-old son. Henry VIII
. In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act, which provided
for freedom of worship for all Christians, was passed by
the Maryland assembly.
· In 1789, John Adams was sworn in as the first vice
president of the United States.
In 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston
defeated the Mexicans at San Jacinto, assuring Texas
Independence.
• In 1918, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the German
ace known as the "Red Baron," was killed in action during World War I.
, In 1930, a fire broke out inside the overcrowded Ohio
Penitentiary in Columbus, killing 332 inmates.
. In 1940, the quiz show that asked the "$64 question,"
"Take It or Leave It," premiered on CBS Radio.
In 1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital, Brasilia,
transferring the seat of national government from Rio de
Janeiro.
In 1975, South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu resigned after ten years in office.
.
In 1980, Rosie Ruiz was the first woman to cross the
finish line at the Boston Marathon; however, she was
later exposed as a fraud. (Canadian Jacqueline Gareau
was named the actual winner of the women's race.)
. Ten years ago: The lower house of the Russian parliament overwhelmingly approved the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
Five years ago: A commercial helicopter contracted by
the U.S. Defense Department was shot down by missile
fire north of Baghdad; eleven people, including six
American bodyguards, were killed. Army Sgt. Hasan
;A.kbar was convicted by a military jury at Fort Bragg,
N.C. of premeditated murder and attempted murder in an
attack that killed two of his comrades and wounded 14
others in Kuwait. (He was later sentenced to death.)
Zhang Chunqiao (jahng chuhn-kee-OW'), one of the
Gang of Four that terrorized China during the Cultural
Revolution, died at age 88.
One year ago: Calling on Americans to volunteer,
President Barack Obama signed a $5.7 billion national
service bill tripling the size of the AmeriCorps service program. The sole survivor of a pirate attack on an American
cargo ship off the Somali coast was charged as an adult
with piracy in federal court in New York. (A ·prosecutor said
Abdiwali Abdiqadir Muse had given wildly varying ages for
himself before finally admitting he was 18.)
: Thought for Today: "I came in with Halley's Comet
in 1835. It is coming again next year (1910), and I
expect to go out with it. It will be the greatest disappointment of my life if I don't go out with Halley's
Comet. The Almighty has said, no doubt: 'Now here .
are these two unaccountable freaks; they came in
together, they must go out together."'- Mark Twain
(1835-1910).

. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
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will not be accepted for publication.

:; The Daily Sentinel
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Reader Service

(usPs 213-960)

Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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bO accurate. If you know of an error Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
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An idea for Congress: Try democracy
Strategists for the Democratic and
to check populist passions can, '"hen
Republican parties are pondering
adopted by passionate populbts, turn
how best to use Congress's vote on
the place into a go\·eming body of
health-care reform in~ the fall elec100 autocrats." This cannot be good
tions. Both sides will undoubtedly go
for the country.
Lee·
overboard in trying to spin the bsue
The issues in the .House arc differin their favor. but it's fair
ent - but quite revealing as a re~;uJt.
game. Members of Congress \Vent on
There, majority rule isn ·r the quesrecord with their votes, and now the
tion: it's runaway majority rule.
American public has a chance to
House procedures call to mind
weigh the pros and cons of their
Madison's wo1Ties about a po-,sible
actions.
,
"tyranny of the majority." The House
But wait. We may get to hold our ing lawmakers spent a full month majority routinely ami skillfi.llly
representatives to account for health- dickering over a measure that pretty shapes the rules for procedures on th~
care overhaul writ large, but on any much everyone agreed to from the House floor in order to exclude vote~
start."
number of crucial issues, we don't
It is especially notable these days on major policy options and den)
actuall) know how Congress might
that a simple majority of senators members. usually the minority, from
have acted. A public option for peooffering key amendments that could
ple seeking an alternative to the pri- cannot work their will in the Senate. affect the final :-.hapc of kgi-,h.tt!Un.
That body's rules make it possible to
vate health-insurance market? Not
threaten a filibuster - in essence, to How did that happen in the House
even voted on in the Senate. because
threaten endless debate - unless 60 . where, supposedly. the people go .
a couple of Democratic senators
votes can be mustered. This makes it ern?
objected to the idea. Malpractice
On one side of Capitol Htll. then.
exceedingly difficult to accomplish
reform as a way of reining in runaway
the
give-and-take that ought to be
anything. A single senator placing a
costs? Never made it to the floor for hold on legislation - as one senator part of the legislative process is no\\
an up-or-down vote. A si.ngle-payer from Kentucky famously did in far too easily shut down by the minorsystem. supported in the polls by a March on legislation extending ity. On the other side, it's all too often
majority of Americans'? Not even a unemployment benefits - can gum shut down b) the majorit). Rule-. that
floor debate.
up not only Capitol Hill, but allowed for a balance betwe~n ddibThese are key issues, and if you Americans' lives.
eration and effectivenes&lt;. \\hen folstep back a moment. it's actually
For much of its regular business. lowed judicious!) are producing the
quite incredible that Congres!'. \\ ould the Senate no longer operates by opposite when pushed too far.
try to reform the health-care system • majority rule. How did that come
The answer, I think. is to rcas-.eJt
without voting on them.
democracy
as a goal. At both end&lt;. of
about in a world-renowned democraBut then, there are a lot of things tic body'?
the
Capitol.
legislators should have
,
Congress doesn't vote on these
I want to be careful here. The the chance to argue O\er and then
da) s. Scores of high-ranking posi- Senate was designed, in part. to tem- vote on the key issues that Amencans
tions in various federal departments per runaway popular sentiment and to care about. There are sev~ral
have gone unfilled for manv months make sure that issues of great import instances in which our Constitution
becau~e some senator put a .~hold" on v,:ere considered carefully. Its rules calls for more than a simple .major it),
the nomination - often for reasons evolved differently from those of the including overriding a presidential
unrelated
to
the
nomination House for just that reason, and there's veto or ratifying a Constitutional
ibelf. Crucial
votes
affecting much to be said for legislating delib- amendment. On evcr\thing else. kt's
Americans' livl.!s get wrapped up in erately and thoughtfully - even allow a measure onto~ the floor
tit-for-tat political maneuvering that slowlv.
through a fair process. then \ o'te It up
either postpones their con..,ideration
Wh.at we've been seeing of late. or do\\ n by simple ma.Jorit) rule.
or finishes it off altogether. As Ne\v howe\er. is not deliberation but frus- Why should the \\ orld's grer1te:-.t
York magazine put it recent!) about tration - in both sen'ies of that word. democracy not prm:ticc democrac) "!
an unseeml) delay last fall in extend- With the rise in extreme partisanship , (Lee Hamilton is Oirel'tor oj
ing unemployment bcncfib to laid- on Capitol Hill. the Senate has Center on Con~re.,' at lndimu,
off Americans, the bill ··spent a become a far less functional bod). As u"nil·ersit\. He li'(IS {/ membu Of the
month in limbo ... before the Senate New York magazine put it. "The U.S. H01ise of Represe11tmil·e, for 34
passed it by a vote of 98-0. suggest- same Senate rules that were designed years.)

Hamilton

1/,.

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~~~~~.-.--------------------------------------------------~--------------~~-----~----------~------

c dnesday, April

\ \7

The Dai1y Sentinel • Page i\5

www .myda ilysentinel.com

21, 2010

Obituaries

Deaths

Evalyn Josephine ·Eva Jo' McKenzie

Sieglinde Franz Miller

Evalyn Josephine "E\ a Jo"
McKenzie. 94. Gallipolis,
passed away on Saturday.
it 17, 2010. at Holzer
·
Center.
he was born October 25.
15. in Pomeroy. daughter
of the late Walter P. and Lucy
Jane Moore White and wife
to the late CH. "Casey"
McKenzie. Casey and Eva Jo
were ucth e in the .:ommunitv, devoted to its ~rowth and
development as \\ell •a:. an
association with Bob Evans
Fanns, Inc., and the University of Rio Grande. Eva Jo's
heart was also so tnae and tender: devotmg her life to those
she loved. Today, we honor her, while cherishing our memories together. Mom (and Momma) "ill be missed dearly
and forever held close in our hearts.
Eva Jo is survived by one daughter. Janice K . McKenzi~:
seven grandchildren, Jody (Eddie) Harrington, Jason
(Tarnmi) Sommer. Joe (Holl)) Moody. Jennifer (Hugh)
Graham. Jill (Gabe) Bevan. Erica (Alex) Saunders. all of
Gallipolis. and Seth (Stephanie) Thompson of Villa Hills.
Ky.: 12 great grandchildren, Candice Sommer. Robert
Casey Sommer. Alexis and Jac&lt;&gt;on Be\an. Joey Moody.
Hobie Graham. Brody Saunders. Nolan Thompson, Jessica
Johnson, Jay Carr. Josie Carr and Justin Hinner: three gn~at
great grandchildren. Leslie Burchett. Jayla Sturgeon 1tnd
Eden Johnson: former son-m-luw, Rick Moody; and special
friend and caregiver. Yvonne Price.
In addition to her parents and husband C.H. "Casey"
cKenzie. she was preceded in death by a daughter,
mctte McKenzie ~loody; a grandson. John Sommer: two
others, Bill and Eli White: two sisters. Freda Ebersbaugh
and Alta White Deval: sister-in-law, Kathleen My9att;
niece Mandy Starcher; great great grandchild. Asnlcy
Nichole Sommer: forn1er son-in-law. ~tike Sommer: and
special friend and caregiver Sharon Ri1er.
Services will be at II a.m .. Friday. April 23. 2010, at
Willis runeral Home with Pastor Jim Lusher officiating.
Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call from 5-7 p.m. on Thursday. April 22,
20 I 0, at the funeral home.
Pallbearers will be Joe .\lood). Rick Moody, Justin
Flinner, Case) Sommer, Eddie Harnngton. Kyle Dople,
Seth Thompson. Gabc Bevan and Bumper Graham.
Honorary pallbearer will be Jason Sommer.
In lieu of flowers. please consider. donations in Eva
Jo's memory to Alzheimer's Associatfon or your favorite
charity.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Sicglinde Franz Miller. 69, of The Plains, Ohio passed
away on April 19!20 10, to be with the Lord.
She was born on February 20, 1941 in Boeblingen,
Germany. She is preceded in death by her husband Garland
A. Miller, mother Annelicse and grandfather Otto Franz.
- Sieglinde believed in Go~l.and it wa~ i_mportant for her to
lmd out more about the dtlferent reltgtons and about the
sense of life. She had many discussions about that with her
friends and relatives. She was an avid reader and loved to
travel and meet new people. Sieglinde graduated from a
school of commercial education and then she worked in a
Gcnnan fim1 first and later for the American Army. where
she met her husband Garland (Bill).
When Bill died, they used the words of Psalter 23, Der
Herr ist mein Hirte. for the burial ceremony. Although
Linda \Vas living in the USA for more than 30 years, she
always was very much loved by her family in Germany.
She cared for everybody and showed interest in all what
happened there and especially her aunts Gretel Arndt and
Ruth Baum (both 87 years old) were always in her heart.
The grand cousins shared a lot of fun and unforgettable
moments with Sieglinde and her husband. Special cousin
Christel &amp; husband Reinhard Zestermann.
Special fnends Ann and Dale Colburn and daughter Rose
F1fe Barbara &amp; David l..o\e Svlvia Robinson.
Aiso sun'l\'tng are s 1 ster-J~-law (last sun· 1vmg sibling of
Garland A. Miller) Geneva Goodman. Pounding Mi ll.
Virginia and se\eral niece&lt;&gt; and nephews.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, April 22, 2010
at 12 p.m. at the Anderson Funeral Home in Pomeroy,
Ohio. Visiting hours \Viii be from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m . on
Thursday. Burial will be at the Tom Ward Cemetery in
Richlands, Virginia at I p.m. on Friday. April 23, 2010.
An on-line registry is available at www.andcrsonmcdaniel.com.

Earl B. Bickford

l

Earl B. Bickford, age 52, died April 4 at his hume in
Rutland, Ohio.

Space sh uttle o·ISCOveru,
1
crew of 7 back on Earth

--------------------1

~

.
C~PE CANAVERAL, Fla: (AP) - Shuttle Dtscovery
and !ts astronauts return~d safe)~· to Earth on Tuesday after
ma!dng a rare fiy&lt;~v?r of ~m~nca's heartland to wra.p up
I thetr 15-d~y. 6 mllhon-mJle JOurney to the lnternattonal
Space Statton.
.
. .
The touchdown was delafe.d b) r~t~ and fog that dlsStpated as the sun rose: al~owmg ~l tSSt&lt;?n Control t&lt;? take
advantage of the mornmg s sec?nd lanclmg opportumty.
Shuttle comm~ndcr Ala~ ~omdexter held a small U.S.
flag ~s he stood m f~ont of Dtscovery. two hours later. and
descnbed the "beautifu l entry."
"We got the bonus of coming over the entire United
States. and it \vas just absolute!) gorgeous,'' said
Poindexter. flanked by his si~ crewmates. "'The ~ntire entry
track took us over the Rocktes and over the M1dwest and
acr~ss the Mississippi Delta. It was just a fantastic cn~ry."
Dtscovel')' swoop.ed.thro~gh_ a hazy sky before landm~ a
day late because ot .ram. Wtthm a few hours of completmg
what one Nft:S~ m.~nager described as an ··un be lieva~ly
successfu~ m1ss1on. the spa~e agency was announcmg
delays to 1ts last two ~huttle. fltghts.
. NASA almost c~rtat~ly will need to ke~p the shuttles fiy tn~ beyond the advertised September ret irement ~ate, s~t d
Mtke Moses. a launch manager. He stressed the mtentton
still is to :"'rap cveryt~ing up by year's end. A final launch
schedule ts expected m the next few weeks.
.
No matter "hat, this was D is:overy's next-to-last fl ight.
Only one more mission remains for l':ASA's oldest survi\ing shuttle. Once remo\ed from the runway, it was going to
Carole E. McLaughlin, 78. of Pomeroy, Ohio passed start undergoing preparations for a fall launch .
away on April 18. 2010 .•
Until this week, Discovery was scheduled to make the
She was born on Dec. 2. 1931 in Vanlue, Ohio daughter last shuttle flight in September. But following touchdown:
of the late Ralph Arden Hotelling and Doris Presler NASA reported a major delay for its next-to-last mission. g
llotelling.
space station trip by Endeavour to deliver a particle physics
She is sun•ived by her five children. Cheryl (Wilfiam) detector. Science teams in Europe want to replace the magHo\l.ells, Allan (Marilyn) McLaughlin. Deborah Kay net in the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer so it can operate
Cooke. Duane (Debbie) McLaughlin and Kevin (Terri) longer in orbit. Doing so means the instrument will not be
McLaughlin: 13 gmndchildren: seventeen great-grandchil- ready for a late Jul) liftoff. as initially planned.
·
dren: one great-great-grandson; two brothers. Forrest
.Moses said all options are being explored, including
Eugene Hotelling and Dale Arden Hotelling.
swapping the order of the la~t two flights or changin~
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by which shuttle flies what.
her: husband. Kenneth Earl McLaughlin: two sisters.
For days, NASA had prpmised a spectacular show. weathBonnie Tyson and Norma Wedge: and great-grandson. er permitting. for early risers along Discovery's tlight path.
Scott Allan Howells II.
The I 1/2-hour delay Tuesday morning may have made it
Funeral services will be held on Saturday. April 24. 20 l 0 more difficult to spot the descending shuttle. Moses said.
at I I a.m. at Anderson' McDaniel Funeral Home in
Discovery zoomed over the North Pacific on its way
Pomeroy. Burial will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens . home before crossing into North America m·cr Vancouver.
Visiting hours \\'tll be on Friday from 6-8 p.m. at the funer- British Columbia. Then it headed toward the southeast, flyBeloved Wife. Mother and Grandmother Doris June al home . A registr) is available on-line at \vww.andersonm- ing over northeastern Washin~!ton, Helena. Mont.:
Baile), 81, of Middleport. Ohio passed away on April cdaniel.com.
w)·oming: southwestern Nebraska; northeastern Colorado:
19.2010.
southwestern Kansas: Oklahoma: Arkansas: Missbsippi:
She was born on March 30. 1929 in ~e\\ Haven. W.Va.,
Alabama: Georgia and finally florida east of Gainesville.
daughter of the late Jesse Ray Barker and Susan Fern
A NASA research team captured infrared images of the
well Harris. She was a member of the Middlep01t
Virginia Lee Pooler. 72, of 36740 Texas Road, Pomeroy. shut!l_e zoom.ing. ove.r Arka~sas_. &lt;~n a~d~tio~: i'~ASA
turch of Christ.
•
She is survived by her: husband of 63 years. Richard B. surrounded b) members of her family went home to be rec~t\ed repo11~ of son1c boom, betn0 heatd ,ts fat away~~
Tuskaloosa. Al,.t:
.
.
. . .
.
.
Bailey; children, Christine (Gary) Sampson. Cathy (Tom) with the Lord on Monday. April 19,2010 at her home.
Born on Oct. 31. 1937 at Sistersville. w. Va. she was the
It was the fust ttme smce 2007 .that &lt;l spctce ~huttle
Cooper, Rich (Rita) Bailey, Carin (Michael Norton) Taylor,
Connie (Chris) Taylor and Carole (Jeff) Gilkey; grandchil- daughter of John Paul and Olive Bell Kelley. She was a descended over s~ n;u~h of. the Umtcd ~tat~s. _Wtth the
dren, Michelle Sampson Haslinger. SheiT) Cooper i\1urphy. homemaker·and enjoyed quilting. She was a member of the I shu.ttle prograf!l '' l ~dme d?".n. there aren t expected to be
~ any. more cor~tment,tl fiyo' ers_. .
Sharla Cooper Burke. Brad (Emil) Fackler) Whitlatch. Mt. Hermon United Brethern Church.
She is sun·ived by her loving and devoted husband of 52
i\ASA typtcally prefers bnngmg a shuttle. back home
Rachel Taylor, Ca) Ia Taylor. Carty Taylor and Zach Gilkey:
years.
Emerson
Pooler
and
two
daughter:.
Kathy
Dyer
and
from
.the south\l.est. up over.. ~he South P?ctfic ..Cen~r~1
sisters, Jeanette (Sherman) Weimann and Carolyn (Bill)
Demoskey: sister-in-law, Dian Bailey; aunt and uncle, )im Lisa Howard. both of Pomcro). and a son, Lawrence Amen~~ and ~he Gul~ o.f Mext~o. That \l.a). t~ere s mmrand Faye Ball: great grandchildren, Heliena Haslinger, (Cheryl) Pooler of Urbana, a brother and sister-in-law. mal fl) mg O\C~. hea\ tl) pop~lated. areas .. In -003, s.pace
Stanley (Marsha} Kelley, and grandchildren. Nicole (Aaron) shuttle Colu~1~1,1 shatte.~ed. o.' er Tex;s du~n~ re-~ntr). but
Paige and Morgan Denney and Chase Whitlatch.
.
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by Weaver. Noelle Pooler. Megan Dyer, Madison Dyer, Alysa no one on the ground w?s .mJured b) t~c f.tllm~ ""r~ckag~ .
~ASA .w~n~~? t? n~a~~mtze the cr~w s "~·or~ t1m~ 111 orbll~
her sister, Anna Fern Barker Carter; brother-in-law, Howard, and great-grandchldren. Joey. Reygan. and Rylee
whtle. mmimlz.t.ng f.ttt 0 ue. That 1esultcd 111 th1s North
Stephen Bailey; son-in-law. Rick lhylor: mother-in-law Weaver. and several nieces and nephews.
o •
.
Besides her parent::; she was preceded in death by an Am~r:~an crossu~g. .. .
and father-in-law. Lester Bailey and Mary Jackson Bailey.
!vi•ssJon Conti01 1ad toed con0 ratulations as soon a~
Funeral services will be held on Frida), April 23. 20 I0 at infant brotter and another brother, Jack Kellev.
Funeral services\\ ill be held at 11 a.m . Friday. April 23, D~~co\:ery t~uched ~o~·n o n, the 1_1l~war...
.
.
.
II a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
.Middleport with Pastor AI Hartson officiating. Burial will 201 at the Ewing Funeral Home with Pastor Peter •. It ""as .a great rmssaon. \\ e enJO) ~d 11. Pomdcxte~ sa1~ .
follow at Riverview Cemetery. Visiting hours will be on Mattindale officiating. Burial will be in Mt. Hermon .An~ we r: gl.ad.. that the InternatiOnal Space Statton ts
.
.
Thursday from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. A regastry is Cemetery. Friends rna) call at the funeral home 6 to 8 p.m. stocked up '1 g~m.
on Thursday
Before leavmg the space stat1on Saturday. Pomdexter. a
available on-line at W\1. w.andersonmcdaniel.com.
·
Navy captain, and his crew dropped off tons of supplies and
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - equipment. Poindexter is the son of retired ~avy Adm.
John Poindexter. national security adviser under President
Ronald Reagan.
from Page At
The main delivery was a tank full of ammonia coolant,
·
which took three spacewalks to hook up.
there. Damage was reported ing lot of Pomeroy Auto parked
2005
Dodge Pomeroy. made contact with
A nitrogen pressure valve refused to open after the tank was
Caravan owned by Lori L. a 2003 Pontiac driven by Rita installed. and for a day, NASA considered sending the shuttle
lfllliiil..the side door. mirror and Parts on Second Street.
end quarter panel.
Sut.anne M. Grueser. 20, Hurd . Pomero). Grueser D. Smith. Middleport in the astronauts out on a fourth spacewalk to fix the problem. But
Donna
M.
Boyd. Middleport. was backing was cited for improper parking lot at McDonalds . engineers concluded it was not an emergency and that the
No citations were issued space station crew or future shuttle fliers could deal with it.
Pomeroy. reported her I 996 out of driveway on Wright backing.
the
accident
A 1993 Subaru driven by because
Saturn was damaged while Street when the 2005 Chevy
H istory. meanwhile, was made with the presence of four
J.
Holloway, occurred on private property. women in space: three on the shuttle and one at the station.
parked in the former park- she was driving struck a Christina
Disco\ ery returned with a couple tons of trash and discarded space station equipment. Most of that was jammed
into a cargo carrier that was launched Apri l 5 with three
times that in fresh supply weight. The Italian-built carrier
from Page At
1 will be outfitted, reflown and installed pennanently at the
• Ross - March 13.3 per- orbiting outpost sometime this !all.
• Athens - March 9.8
March to 11 percent, just up
• Putnam - March 8.1
cent, Feb . 13.7 percent
On~y th:ee shuttle missions •remain for ~ASA befo_re t~e
from Februarv's figure of percent. Feb. 8.9 percent
percent, Feb. 9.5 percent
•
Vinton
_
~larch
15.61
fleet
1s rettred after n~arly 30 years of operation. Atlantis'' Ill
10.9 percent,· according to
• Wirt ~ Ylarch 15.4 per• Hockin!! - ~1arch 13.2
percent.
Feb.
16.1
percent
carry
up a small Russtan lab and othereqmpment next month.
ODJFS. The number of cent. Feb. 17.6 percent
percent. Feb. 13.6 percent
unemployed Ohioans stands
• Wood - .March 10.9
• Jackson - March 12.9
• Washington - March
at 655.000, up from 648.000 percent. Feb. 11.2 percent
percent. Feb. 13 percent
10.5 percent, Feb. I I .4 perCalhoun County recorded
in Februarv.
• Lawrence - March 8.8 cent
The U.S. unemployment the highest unemployment percent. Feb. 9.6 percent
Clinton County recorded
rate for March was 9.7. in West Virginia at 18.8 per• Morgan - March 17.2 the highest jobless rate in
which was unchanged from cent. That was down from p~rcent. Feb. I 8.3 percent
Ohio for March at 18.7 perFebruary.
I•cbruary 's figure of 22 per• Pike - March 17 .I per- cent. Delaware County had
Following is a list of cent.
the lo,.,·est rate at 8.4 percent.
cent, Feb. 17.5 percent
counties adjacent to Mason
Monogalia
Count)
County with the unemploy- enjoyed the lowest jobless
ment rates for March and rate at 5.6 percent for
FebrU\try:
March. down from 6 per• Cabell - March 8.5 cent in February.
·cent. Feb. 8.7
Following is a list of·
&amp;
Jackson - March 13.9 southeastern Ohio counties
with
the
rcent.
Feb.
15.3
percent
unemployment
•
1391 Safford School Rd. Gallipolis, OH
• Kanawha - March HJ rates for March and
740-446-9416 • 1-800-872-5967
February:
percent. Feb. 8.9 percent
Fax 1-740-740-1911

Carole E. McLaughlin

Doris June Bailey

Virginia Lee Pooler

o

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The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April

21, 2010

Around Ohio
Ohio man arrested in
foreclosure stalking case
COLUI'v1BUS (AP) - Authontiel-1 say an Ohio man
accused of stnlking a couple before they moved out of his

I

;,~~~:~.~i;i~::~,:~:~·:::: ~::d::~le~::,~:c:;a:~:··::~::~ I

after "iolating a protection order last weekend by putting
literature about his current run for Cungre:-.s in the family'c:;
mailbox outside Columbus. The 64-ycar-old Zukowski is
making a Repuhlican primary bid against n,·e-tcnn central
Ohio Rep Pat Tiberi.
Zukowski has pleaded not guilt). He remained jailed
Tuesday on $50.000 bond.
John and Jamie Petree say Zuh.owski tried to frighten
them awa\ after thev bought the Columbus-area home he
lost to fo1:Cclosure u1 2000~ They left in 2008 after a menacing by stalking charge against Zukowski was dismissed
on appeal.

Family sues over man's
2008 stun gun death
COLU~1BUS (AP) -The family of a Chicago man who
died after police in Ohio used a stun gun on him says officers \veren "t trained properly and the device ·s maker misrepresented its dangers.
The parents of Kevin Piskura have sued the city of
Oxford and Taser Intemational over the 2008 death of 24vear-old Kcvm Piskura.
Beth Sergentlphotos
· The lawsuit says police used the Taser even though Piskura Top spellers and participants in this year's county spelling bee !rom Eastern are (from left) K~telyn ~ill, Lindsay Hu.
was trying to obey officers· commands and wasn "t a threat. Owen Arix, Katelyn Edwards, Gracie Roush, Holly Johnson, Jam1e Card, Garrett Chalfant, Jasmme Sm1th, Joshua Par
The stlit. filed Monday in U.S. District Court in
Columbus. also savs Taser falsely claimed the device is
safe for use on people who have been drinking.
Oxford police say Pi~kura had been fighting with bar bouncers in the colle!!e tmvn &lt;1bout 40 miles noi1hwest of Cincinnati. ~
Messages seeking comment were left for the city and for ~
Ta:-.er Iniernationa(
•
.
1

-

Security camera captures
runaway saw blade

I

LORAIN (t\P) ~A home secunty camera in Ohio has captured a constmction mi::-hap that could have been a lot worse.
Vid~:o from the camera shows a large blade ::.pinning
off a saw bemg used to cut through a street. The blade
:then rolled through a yard and ended up leaving a 3-foot
gash in the :-.ide of an empty house in I~orain. 26 miles
west of Cleveland.
Rachel Gayhart say&lt;; she and her husband checked their
video :\1onda) to see why the street work wasn'! finished.
She says the blade missed a gas meter on the s1de of the
neighboring house b) only two feet.
The video shows a construction worker retrieving the
~
runawa) ·blade and putting it back on the saw.
Loraio officials say the firm doing the work under contract for the cit) is investigating the incident.

Ohio high court asked to
remove murder case judge
CLEVELAND (AP) - Attorneys for a Cleveland s~rial­
killing suspect tell the Ohio Supreme Court that the judge
on the case should be removed "to avoid even the appearance of impropriety."'
Lawyers for Anthony Sowell have said anonymous online
criticisms traced to the judge ·s personal e-mail showe~ ~ias
against one member of the defense team. In ~1onday's tlimg,
the attorneys ask Ohio ·s highest court to disqualify Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold.
Saffold has said from the bench that she sees no reason to
step aside. The judge's daughter has claimed to hme posted the on! ine remarks.
A message seeking comment on the Supreme Cou1t filmg
was left for the judge on Tuesday.
Sowell is charged with killing II women.

Top spellers and participants in this year's county spelling bee from Meigs are front row (from left) Raeline Reeves, Grant
Adams, Bryanna McGuire, Paige Dill, Steve Laudermilt, Peyton Humphreys, Jake Roush; back row (from left) Mackenzi
Hunte!r, Adriahna Patterson, Michael Cox, Mitchell Howard, Megan Snodgrass, Tara Walzer-Kuharic.

Spelling Bee from Page At
School top spellers and participants were: Owen Arix.
Garrett Chalfant. grade
four: Katelyn Edwards.
Gracie Roush. grade five:
Jamie Card. Holl) Johnson.
grade six: Katelyn Hill.
Lindsay Hupp. grade seven:
Josh Parker. Jasmine Smith.
grade eight.
Meigs
Intermediate
School: Paige Dill. Peyton
Humphreys,
Steven
Laudermilt.
Bryanna
McQuire, grade four: Grant
Adams. Gracie Hoffman.
. Raeline
Reeves.
Jake
Roush. grade fh·e. Meigs
Middle
School:
Tre)
Coates. Mackenzi Hunter.

Veteran's brother defends VA
DAYTON (AP) - A brother of the Iraq veteran who
killed himself outside an Ohio Veterans Affairs medical
center says emergency room staff provided correct treatment hours before his brother committed suicide.
Charles Huff is a VA nurse and Arnw Reserve staff
sergeant. He says he and his father met V.·ith Dayton VA
officials to review Jesse Huffs medical records.
He says he "s impressed \Vith the way his 27-year-old
younger brother's emergency roo.m visit ~as handled. at
about I a.m. Friday. but he declined to d1sclose details.
Jesse Huff returned at about 5:45a.m. and shot himself outside the center's main entrance.
His brother says Jesse had a back injury l~om a boi~lb blast
in Iraq and had been treated for post-traumatiC stress d1sorder.

Ohio entices more schools
tQ help win grants
~OLLJMBC"S (AP) -

~Jhio_ is promising that if. it's a

wmner m a federal educatiOn tundmg sweepstakes. It will
pass more of the prize money along to school districts.
State schools Superintendent Deborah Delisle on Monda)
released a new plan for distributing any funds awarded to the
.state through the govemment's ''Race to the Top" education
grant competition. School districts would be guaranteed at
least $100,000. up from $5.000 in Ohio's original plan.
Scores and reviewer remarks from the program'&lt;; initial
phase indicated Ohio was lacking in school district participation. Fev.·er than half the state's districts agreed to c&lt;my
out a related plan to improve schools.
Tennessee and Delaware won the first grants. totaling
$600 nullion, while Ohio came up empty.

Adriahna Patterson. John
Stumbo. grade six: Jordyn
Arnold.
Cheyenne
Gorslene. Mitchell Howard.
Trevor Williamson. grade
seven: Michael Cox. Megan
Snodgrass. Tara Wal:terKuharic.
Dominique·
Watson. grade eight.
Southem Elementary and
tvliddle Schools: Ham.
Evans. Sailor Warden. gr
four: Sierra Cleland. Kie1 ,
McCourt. grade five: Parker
Hill. Andrew Shockey.
grade six: Caleb Klien,
Bradley

McCoy.

grade

seven: Chandler Dmmmer.
;\;athan Leamond. grade
eight.

SPRING SPECTACULAR!!

Top spellers and participants in this year's county spelling
bee from Southern are front row (from left) Hannah Evans,
Sierra Cleland, Sailor Wadenl; back row (from left) Andrew
Shockey, Bradley McCoy, Paker Hill.

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside
PPHS pounds Raiders, Page 82
Charleston Catholic rolls past Wabama, Page 86

Wednesday, April21, 2010

)Y -

fror

A schedule of

~pcoming

Lady Rockets outlast
Meigs in 8 innings

htgh

•'Y sporting ovenls tnvolvtng teams

a;.

"" ME?tgs ond Gollia counties

Wednesday, April.21
Baseball
South Gallia at Southern. 5 p.m.
Wahama at Man. 5:30 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth. 5 p.m.
Parkersburg at Eastern. 5 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Gallia at Southern. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth 5 p.m.
Po•nt Pleasant at Poca, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Roane County, 5 p.m.
River Valley at South Point. 5 p.m.
Track
Meigs. Southern at Athens, 4:30 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Gallia Academy at Lucasville Valley,
4:30p.m.

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCKSPRINGS. OhioThe Meigs Lady Marauders
(7-6. 3-3 TVC Ohio) battled
back from a three run deficit
early in the game, but fell to
Wellston 9-7 in eight
innings on Tuesday evening.
Wellston (9-8. 5-4 TYC
Ohio) scored three nms in
the top of the first inning,
with a lead off single, an
error, a double. and a fielder's choice.
Meigs' Tricia Smith hit a
single in the first inning, the
only Meigs hit in the first.
Chandra Stanley reached on
an error in the second
inning, with Shanalle Smith
dropping down a sacrifice
bunt, and Micki Barnes driving Stanley in with a single.
Erin Patterson led off the
third inning, reaching on an

Thursday.. Aprll22
Baseball
Fa~rland at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 5 p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern. 5 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Softball
Fairland at South Galha, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 5 p.m.
Girls Tennis
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover. 4:30

P-m.
Boys Tennis
mouth at Gallia Academy, 4:30
•

Cox records 1st
ace of season
at Cliffside GC

VanMeter

Patterson

error. Meri VanMeter hit a
two run homerun, bringing
Patterson in with one out in
the inning. Tricia Smith singled, but was left on base.
Wellston added two runs
in the top of the fourth
inning, with a pair of singles, two reaching on fielder's choice plays, and two
errors.
Meigs scored two runs in
the fourth, with Shanalle

Please see Meigs. 86

Sarah Hawley/photo

Meigs' Chandra Stanley, middle, makes contact on a pitch from Wellston's Brittini Hall (24)
during the second inning of Tuesday night's TVC Ohio contest at Rocksprings, Ohio.
Stanley reached safely on the play thanks to a WHS error.

Lady Vikings
slip past
Eastern, 2-1

GALLIPOLIS. Ohio Dusty Cox became the first
golfer of the 2010 season to
record a hole-on-one at
Cliffside Golf Course.
Cox aced the 175-yard ,
13th hole on Sunday. April
18.
The feat \Vas witnessed by
Mike Haynes. Bob Ratliff
and Fred Staley.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

SPORTS BRIEFS

URG volleyball
camp dates set
JO GRANDE, Ohio ,ts are still available for
•
2010 Uni-versity of Rio
Grande RedStorm !!trls'
volleyball camp this summer.
The camp for players in
grades 6-8 will be held June
27-29 inside the Newt
Oliver Arena on the campus
of the University of Rio
Grande. The camp for players in grades I 0-12 will be
July 6-8. The cost for both
camp_s is $200. . .
Sarah Hawley/photo
Ta~e Jh~ ~p~o~tumty to ·bde , Meigs' Ryan Payne, left, approaches both home plate and his teammates after hitting solo homerun in the second inning
cboac e h ) ahn. . mf~ntot~
of Tuesday night's TVC Ohio Division contest against Wellston in Rocksprings Ohio.
y sout em 0 10 s mest m
'

~~\rfi~~d. aA~~~~~~e~~r=

American. a former AllOhio player. conference
players Of the year and
NAIA national leaders in
their area.of expe11ise.
.
To regtster contact. ~10
Grande head coach Billrna
Donaldson at (~40) 9~~6497 ~r by e-matl at btlhnad@no.edu.
nline registration is also
'ww.rioredstorm.com on
•
the Rio volleyball page
under summer camp VB
registration.

URG splits With
Campbellsville
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

•

1

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

ROCKSPRINGS. Ohio
The Meigs Marauders
dropped their second league
contest of the 2010 season
on Tuesday evening, with a
. . . W 11
3 - 2 1oss to vtsttm~
e stan
(7-7 · ?-4 TYC Ohto).
Metgs (8-6, 4-2 TVC
Ohio) ~co~ed first, with a
second mnmg solo homerun
off the bat of Ryan Payne.
Wellston had a double to
lead off the second inning,
the only other hit in the first
_

1

1

three innings of the contest.
The Golden Rockets hit a
single to lead off the fourth
inning, and added another
single and a wal to drive in
the first Wellston run of the
game.
Meigs scored again in the
bottom of the fourth inning,
with Justin Cotterill hitting
a double and coming
around to score.
Ryan
Jeffers and Payne each singled in the inning, with
Payne earning the RBI.
Wellston added one run in

~----...,.. ,__

_____

Please see Sweep. 82

Please see Eastern. 86

D
away in the seventh inning
on the strength of a five-run
frame in which all the activity occurred with two outs.
With Rio leading SA,
freshman second baseman
Katie Fuller reached base on
a passed ball after striking
out to keep the inning alive.
Rio followed with four consecutive singles to blow the
game open. After an error,
Heading collected the fifth
hit of the inning to close out
the scoring.
Rio Grande tallied 18 hits
in the second game triumph.
The top of the batting order
was lethal for Rio Grande as
Hamman. Bowman and
Heading all notched three
hits each. Hamman had
three RBrs while Bowman
and Heading had one each.

non-

Brooks and Smith added
two hits each while freshman rightfielder Jessica Gall
was 1-for-3 with t\VO RBI's.
Stewart and sophomore
pitcher Allison Mills also
recorded
RBI
hits.
Sophomore Nicole Sargent
was 1-for-1 and Rector went
1-for-4 with a mn scored.
Mills started the game and
went five innings, but did
not figure in the decision.
The game was tied at 3-3
when she left the game.
Smith picked up the win in
relief, firing two innings.
allowing one hit and one
unearned run.
Amber Matteoli took the
loss in relief for St.
Catharine.

drive in the run.
Meigs starter Cotteri II
pitched six plus innings,
striking out eight and walking three. Caleb Davis
pitched the remainder of the
seventh inning. facing three
batters.
Wellston starting pitcher
Darnell pitched a complete
game, striking out four and
Jeffers
Davis
allowing four hits.
The Marauders were led
the six'th inning to tie the
score, and added the win- ip hits by P~yne with two
and
two RBis.
ning run in the seventh with hits.
two singles and a double to Please see Marauders. 86

RedStorm finish off sweep of St. Catharine

RIO GRANDE. Ohio Heading closed out the scorBY MARK WILLIAMS
Fans
of
Mid-South
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
ing with a two-run double in
Conference baseball don't
the seventh. Heading had
really know any more than
two hits in the game. Junior
RIO GRAMDE. Ohio
they did before the weekend
baseman
Chelsie
began as far as who the bet- The University of Rio first
ter team is - Rio Grande or Grande RedStorm softball Brooks was 2-for-3 while
Campbellsville.
team fini~hed off a four- freshman third baseman
The two teams split a dou- game ~enes s.we~p of St. Jaymie Rector was 1-for-2.
Senior centerfielder Leah
bleheader for the second Catharme. wmmng both
straight day at Bob Evans • games of ~ twinbill _on Hamman and junior short~
Field. Campbellsville took Saturday. Rto won the ftrst stop Amber Bowman were
the first game 5-2 and Rio game 7-0 and c.aptured game both 1-for-4 with a run
Grande responded with a 5- two 10~4. puttmg the game scored.
Sophomore hurler Anna
I victory in game two to ~w~y w1th a five-run sev~nth
Smith was masterful as she
even the series at two games mm.ng .
ce.
Rto Grande (26-18, 15-11 fired a one-hitter at the
io Grande (39-8. 19-5 MSC) has won eight in a Patriots (14-32, 6-16 MSC).
C). ranked No. 25 in the row and II of its last 13 Smith (15-13) fanned 11 bat•
ters and did not allow a walk
latest NAIA Top 25 poll. games.
had some defensive diffiThe RedStorm grabbed in seven innings.
cultics in the first game as the lead early in the first
Ashley Hardin took the
they committed three errors , game and were never head- loss in game one for St.
and just seemed a little off ed. Freshman leftfielder Catharine.
She
was
across the board.
Kaitie Stewart started the roughed up by the Rio
Camphellsvi lie (31-15. sconng with a three-run offense, yielding 10 hits and
19-4 MSC). ranked No. 21 home run in the opening seven runs in seven innings
in the NAIA Top 25. scored inning. Stewart would add with five strikeouts and one
twice in the first inning and a two-run single in the sixth walk.
never trailed in picking up inning to end the game with
Game two was a back•
a career-high five RBI's.
and-forth affair with Rio
Please see Sphts. 8
Senior catcher Kaylyn Grande putting the game

2-1

conference
decision at
D
o
n
J a c.k son
Field
in
M e i g s
County.
Both the
host Ladv
Gillian
Eagles ( 144) and Lady Vikings produced four hits and committed two etTors in the contest,
and all four miscues played
major roles in how each of
the three nms came across
the plate.
The game was scoreless
through~ three complete, but
EHS struck first blood in
the bottom of the fourth
when both SYHS errors
came back to bite the
guests.
Britney Morrison led the
frame off by reaching safely
on an error at third. then
Morrison was advanced
over to second on a fielder's
choice by Allie Rawson.
Kasey Turley followed by
reaching safely on an error.
allowing Mon·ison to score
for a I -0 advantage.
Rawson. Turley and Sami
Cummins. however. \'&gt;'ere
left stranded on the ba!!s, as
SVHS starter 1'\ikki ~ancc
struck out the next. three
batters to keep the deficit at
one through four fun
frames.
The score staved that \\'U\
until the sixth: when backto-hack one~out errors
allowed ~ance an Brooke
Skinner to reach base safely.
Chelsea Wall followed with
a single to load the bases.
then Kavla Ross delivered a
two-RBI single to center allo\\ ing Nance and Skinner
to score~ for a 2-1 advantage.
The Lady Eagles left the
bases loaded in their half of
the sixth and stranded the
tying nm at !-&gt;Ccond in the
seventh. EHS left nine runners on base. while S)nHnes

Marauders fall short to Golden Rockets, 3-2

I

TUPPERS PLAINS. Ohio
- Errors and timing can
ultimately play huge~ roles
in the outd~me of a~ softball
game.
Eastern found out the
hard way on Tuesday.
The Lady Eagles committed
two
errors and
surrendered
two hits in
the
sixth
inning,
allowing
visiting
Symmes
Vallev to
raily · back
from a 1-0
deficit to
claim
a
hard-fought

�- -F-

.... --- . . ·- -- - -.. - -

--~~-- ---~----~------~-~-~--..,..

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Splits
from Page Bl
the game one win. Richie
Rowland powered the
Tigers offense \'.!ith three
RBI's, including a sacrifice
fly and a two-run home run
that put Campbellsville up
by a 5-1 margin in the rifth
inning. Logan Smith added
t\VO hits and an RBI to the
Tiger cause.
The RedStorm made the
score 2-1 in the second
inning. but could have done
considerably more damage
in the frame had they been
able to get that timely hit.
Senior centerfield\!r Ryan
'{akura drove in both Rio
Grande runs w1th a sac fly
in th-: second and a double
in the sixth. Senior third
baseman Tvler Schunk was
2-for-3 with a double and
scored both Rio runs.
Semor desi£~:nated hitter
Chris Mahon and senior
catcher Tyler Plumpton had
one hit each as the
RedStorm amassed only
five safeties in the first
game.
Rio junior Angel Santiago
lost his first game of the
season. Santiago
(6-1)
pitched six innings. allowing eight hits and five runs
with five strikeouts and
three walks.
Eric Mattos (8-1) pitched
five innings to get the win
for the Tigers. despite
allowing seven walks. Rio
managed only two hits
against him and two runs
while he fanned five batters.
Alex Tolmachoff pitched
two scoreless innings to
pick up the save.

Sweep
from Page Bl
"The secondi'game was a
little closer than the score
indicated." said Rio Grande
head coach David Pyles.
"We scored several runs late
that kind of opened things
up."
"The first game. we hit
real well. hit early, Kaitie
Stewart had a real big day
with five RBI's, a three-run
homer in the first inning
that kind of opened things

- . . . - ____,., ••

www.mydailysentinel.com

In game two. it was Rio
Grande who scored first and
never
trailed.
The
RedStorm put up two runs
in the first inning with
Schunk and JUnior lcftfieldcr Michael Lynch ripping
bad~-to-back doubles with
two outs to give Rio a 2-0
lead.
Rio added two more runs
in the fourth frame and one
more in the sixth. Senior
rightfielder John Storey was
2-for-2 with a walk and two
RBI's to lead the RedStorm
offense in the second game.
Junior second baseman
Christian Frias was 0-for-2
with an RBI.'
Yakura and Mahon were
both l-for-3 with doubles
and Plumpton added a hit as
well.
The story of game t\VO
was senior lefty .Ryan
Cramer. Cramer (3-0) fired
an absolute gem in holding
the Tigers to three hits and
one unearned run in six
innings of pitching. He
struck out two and walked
two.
Sophomore Ryan
Chapman fired a scoreless
seventh in relief to finish off
the Tigers.
Curtis Payne (3-4) took
the loss for Campbellsville.
He was chased ·from the
mound in the third inning
after giving up three hits
and three runs with one
strikeout and two waiks.
The second game "ictory
g1ves Rio 39 wins on the
season. which establishes a
new-school record for a single season. The old mark
of 38 was set last season.
Rio Grande will travel to
St. Catharine College next
weekend for a four-game
set beginning on Friday at I
p.m.

Wednesday, April

21, 2010

Point Pleasant pounds Raiders, 18-8
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESHIRE. Ohio
After an 0-6 start to the
20 I 0 regular season. the
Point Pleasant baseball
team is now one win away
from .500 following an 18·
8. six-inning victory over
host River Valley on
Tuesday in a non-conference matchup in Gallia
County.
PPHS (R-9) never trailed
in the contest and pounded
out 12 hits overall, establishing leads of 3-1. 8-5 and
I 0-6 through each of the
first three innings of play.

Krebs

A. Smith

Then in the fourth, Point
Pleasant exploded for seven
runs to increase its lead to
17-6. but the Raiders ( 1-2)
rallied for two runs in the
bottom of the fourth to
make it a 17-8 contest.
The score stayed that way

until the top of the sixth, as
PPHS plated one final run
for a 10-run cushion. The
guests wrapped things up in
the bottom half of the sixth,
allowing the mercy-rule to
be enforced.
D.W. Herdman was the
winning p1tcher of record,
·while Cody Smith took the
loss for RVHS.
Clay Kreb::. led Point
Pleasant with two hits and
four RBls. including a oneout grand slam in the second inning. Titus Russell
also had two hits and drove
in three RBis.
Herdman. Steven Porter,
Justin Cavendar, Brock

McClung. Jason Stouffer.
Powell
and
Donovan
Michael Musgrave also had
a safety apiece in the triumph. Porter and Herdman
both drove in two runs.
Austin Smith led
Raiders with three hits
y
two RBis. followed
Smith, Tyler Smith and Josh
Helms with one safety each.
Both teams committed four
errors in the contest.

t

POINT PLEASANT

18,

RIVER VALLEY 8
352 701 18 12 4

Pomt
A Valley
141 200 8 64
WP - OW. Herdman· LP - Cody
Smith.
HR - PP; Clay Krebs (second 1nnlng,
three on one out)

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE ·

l

I

up early for us," Pyles
added. "We got really
~ood pitching all weekend
rrom Anna and Allison.''
"OveralL it was good performance, to go that far
from home. to get off the
bus. stay overnight and play
that well for four games that's \Vhat we need to do
here in a couple of weeks,"
he said.
Rio Grande will step out
of conference on Tuesday
with a doubleheader versus
former American Mideast
Conference foe Cedarville
at home. First pitch is set
for 3 p.m.

j

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
'Y'o-..r

SHERIFF'S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV 107,
PEOPLES BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,

vs.

CHARLES A. LANDERS
AKA CHARLES LANDERS AKA CHARLES
ANDREW LANDERS,
SR., ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of said
Court in the above action, Robert E. Beegle,
the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will expose to sell at public
action on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County. Ohio, on Friday, May 14, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
Being a tract of land located In the South onehalf of Section 2,
T-OS-N, R-15-W, Salem
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio and being
the lands conveyed to J
&amp; M Land, Inc., as
recorded in Volume 75,
Page 77 of the Meigs
Coun.ty
Official
Records, and being further described as follows:
Beginning at a point In
the centerline of State
Route 124 which bears
N 52 42' 35" W, 3355.93
feet from the Southeast
corner of Section 2;
Thence departing said
road, N 76" 37' 1S" E,
passing an iron pin set
for reference at 29 feet
for a total distance of
14S.24 teet to an iron
pin set;
Thence S S7' 22' 01" E,
95S.64 feet to an Iron
pin set:
Thence S 07' 53' 13" W,
237.50 teet to an iron
pin set;
Thence N S3 44' 26" W,
935.94 feet to an iron
pin set:
Thence N S4 49' 4S" W,
passing an iron pin set
for reference at 114.09

feet for a total distance
of 142.1S feet to a point
In the centerline of
State Route 124;
Thence along the cen·
terline of State Route
124, N 01 • 11' 21" E,
130.16 feet to the point
of beginning and containing 5.005 acres.
The above described
tract is· subject to all
legal easements and
rights-ot-way
on
record.
All courses are corrected magnetic and
are for angular pur·
poses only.
All iron pins set are
1/2" in diameter and
30" in length with I.D.
cap.
This description was
prepared from the results of an actual survey made August 1999.
Being a part of the real
estate described in Volume 75, Page 77 of the
Meigs County Official
Records.
Reference Deed: ·volume 111, Page 739,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditor's Parcel No.:
13-00712.001
The above described
real estate is sold "as
Is" without warranties
or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
31510
SR
124,
Langsville, OH 45741.
CURRENT
OWNER:
Charles Landers and
Diana Landers
REAL ESTATE AP·
PRAISED
AT:
$50,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than 213rds the
appraised value. The
appraisal does not include an Interior examination
of
any
structures, if any, on
the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
down on day of sale,
cash or certified check,
balance due on
confirmation of sale.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS

,

ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
FOR
ATTORNEY
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L: Sheets, LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LL~
211-213 E. Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740)
992-66S9
(4) 21, 2S, (5) 5
-------

Public Notice
------Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 09 CV
134
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company,
as Trustee in trust for
the benefit of the Certificateholders
for
Ameriquest Mortgage
Securities Trust 2005R9,
Asset-Backed
Pass·Through Certificates, Series 2005·R9
Vs
Kelll L. Ballard, et al
Court of Common
Please, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of and
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
in the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday April
30,2010 at 10:00a.m. of
said day, the following
described real estate:
THE
FOLLOWING
REAL PROPERTY, SIT·
UATED IN THE CITY OF
POMEROY, VILLAGE
OF
POMEROY,
COUNTY OF MEIGS
AND THE STATE OF
OHIO:
BEING IN FRACTION
17, SECTION 20, TOWN
2, RANGE 13, OHIO
COMPANY'S
PURCHASE,
BOUNDED
AND DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT THE
NORTHWEST CORNER
OF LOT 456: THENCE
SOUTH 11 1/2 DEG.
EAST ALONG THE

EAST SIDE OF A
STREET
RUNNING
FROM
BENJAMIN
BIGG'S CARPENTER
SHOP
TO
JACOB
DURST'S
STABLE,
NOW
KNOWN
AS
BRICK STREET, FOR A
DISTANCE OF 60 FEET;
THENCE NORTH 7S 1/2
DEG. EAST 50 FEET;
THENCE NORTH 11 1/2
DEG. WEST 100 FEET
WHICH LINE DIVIDES
LOTS 456 AND 453;
THENCE NORTHWEST
ALONG THE SOUTH
LINE
OF
LASLEY
STREET 50 FEET TO
THE
CORNER
OF
BRICK
LASLEY &amp;
STREETS;
THENCE
SOUTH ALONG THE
EAST SIDE OF BRICK
STREET 40 FEET TO
THE PLACE OF BEGIN·
NING. AND BEING THE
WEST OF LOT 453 AND
456 IN THE VILLAGE
OF POMROY. BE THE
SAME MORE OR LESS,
BUT SUBJECT TO ALL
LEGAL HIGHWAYS.
EXCEPTING THERE·
FROM THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL
ESTATE BEING IN THE
NORTHWEST CORNER
OF SAID LOT #453 BEGINNING
AT
THE
NORTHWEST CORNER
OF SAID LOT WHERE
THE EAST LINE OF
BRICK STREET INTERSECTS THE SOUTH
LINE
OF
LASLEY
STREET;
THENCE
SOUTHERLY 1S FEET
ALONG THE EAST
LINE
OF
BRICK
STREET;
THENCENORTHEASTERLY
26 FEET TO THE
SOUTH
LINE
OF
LASLEY
STREET;
THENCE WESTERLY 1S
FEET ALONG THE
SOUTH
LINE
OF
LASLEY STREET; TO
THE PLACE OF BEGINNING. BE THE SAME
MORE OR LESS, BUT
SUBJECT TO ALL
LEGAL HIGHWAYS.
Parcel
Number:
1601104000
&amp;
1601105000
Property Located at:
115
Brick
Street,

~ighot

Pomeroy, OH 45769
Prior Deed Reference:
Volume 312, page 363,
Meigs County Deed
Records.
Property Appraised at:
$30,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds for the ap·
praised value.
10%
down on day of sale,
case or certified check,
balance due on confir·
mation of sale.
The appraisal did in·
elude an interior exam·
ination of the house.
~obert
S.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Melanie D. Butler Attarney for the Plaintiff,
Lerner Sampson and
Rothfuss
PO Box 54SO Clncinnati, OH 45201-5480
(513)241-3100
(4)7, 14, 21
-------

Public Notice

------SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 09-CV066
Select Portfolio Servlcing, Inc., Plaintiff
-vsEstate of Alice C. Chapman. et al .. Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
in pursuance of an
Order of Sale In the
above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at
public auction In the
above county on the
30th day of April, 2010
at 10:00 a.m. at the
door of the courthouse,
the following described
real estate:
SEE LEGAL DESCRIPTION
ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT
"A"
Approved legal can be
found at the Recorder's
office.
Said premises also
known as 39615 State
Rt 143, Pomeroy OH
45769-9756
PPN: 1401201000
Appraised
at:
S40,000.00 and cannot

to

I&lt;.,ow~

be sold for less than
two.thlrds (213) of that
amount.
TERMS OF SALE:
CANNOT BE SOLD
FOR
LESS
THAN
213RDS OF THE APPRAISED VALUE; 10%
DOWN ON THE DAY OF
SALE, CASH OR CERT·
FlED CHECK. BAL·
ANCE
DUE
ON
CONFIRMATION
OF
SALE.
THE AP·
PRAISAL (DID OR DID·
NOT) INCLUDE AN
INTERIOR EXAMINATION OF THE HOUSE.
ROBERT E BEEGLE,
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF.
THE LAW OFFICES OF
JOHN D. CLUNK, CO.,
LPA
John
D.
Clunk
#0005376
Ted
A.
Humbert
#0022307
Timothy
R.
Billick
#0010390
Robert
R.
Hoose
#0074544
4500 Courthouse Blvd,
#400
Stow OH 44224
PH: 330-436-0300
FAX: 330·436-0301
Publication dates: (4)7,
14, 21
-------

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
CASE
NUMBER
09CV046
lndyMac Federal Bank
FSB, Plaintiff
-vsRobbie P. Jacks, et al.,
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale In the
above entitled action, I
will offer tor sale at
public auction In the
above county on the
14th day of May, 2010 at
10:00 a.m. at the door
of the courthouse, the
following
described
real estate:
SEE LEGAL DESCRIP·
TION
ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT

P.._.l-:.lic ~otices i.,. 1'-lcvvsp-pc:r:s.
I&gt;eli'Vc:rcd I~igl11t t o "'Jr:"&lt;~-....- I&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;r.

"'A''
PARCEL 1:
Situated. in Bedford
Township,
Meigs
County, State of. Ohio
and being of Fraction 2,
Town 3 North, Range 13
West of the Ohio Company's Purchase and
being described as follows: beginning at an
Iron pin set, said iron
pin bearing N S3° 24'
47" W, a distance of
1460.69' from a large
stone found with the
initials J .M. on It, on
the Southeast line of
Plcketts' parcel as described In the Meigs
County Deed Records.
Volume 247, Page 129;
thence s so· 23'19"
a distance of S0.27' to
an Iron pin set;
thence S 70' 34' 02' w, a
distance of 176.S5' to
an Iron pin set;
thence N 20 37' 26" W,
a distance of 112.S3' to
an Iron pin set:
thence N S4 40' 22" E,
a distance of 2S6.9S' to
an Iron pin set;
thence oo' 04' 27" w,
a distance of 60.00' to
the POINT OF
BEGINNING, said described tract containing 0.5000 Acres, more
or
less. Reference Deed:
Volume 247, Page 129,
Meigs County Deed
Records
Bearings are assumed
and are for angle measurement only.
The above description
is based on a survey In
September 2000 by E &amp;
E Borderline Surveying, Robert R. Eason,
Ohio P.S. No. 7033.
Auditor's Parcel No:
part of 01 - 00569.000
PARCEL2:
Situated In Bedford
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and being In, Fraction
2, Town 3 North, Range
13 West of the Ohio
Company's Purchase
and being described as
follows; beginning at
an iron pin set, said
Iron pin being N 75' 51'
2S" W, a, distance of

w.

s

1131.9S' and S 65° 20'
14N W, a distance of
1S6.73' and. S SO 23'
19" W, a distance of
1S6.2S' from a large
stone found with the
initials J.M. on it on the
Southeast line of Pick·
etts' parcel as de·
scribed In the Meigs
County Deed Records,
Volume 247, Page 129;
thence S ooo 04' 27" W,
a distance of 344.93' to
a point in the centerline
of County Road, 163.
passing an Iron pin set
at 322. 05' for reference,
thence S SO' 33' 52" W,
a distance of 2S.70'
along the centerline of
said County Road 163
to a point, thence S 73'
54' 07" W, a distance of
105.S7' along the centerline of said County
Road 163 to a point:
thence N 20' 37' 26" W,
a distance of 327:76' to
an Iron pin set. passing
iron pins set at 26.05'
and S6.76' for reference;
Thence N 70' 34' 02" E,
a distance of 176.S5' to
an iron pin set; thence
N so· 23' 19" E, a distance of S0.27' to the
POINT OF BEGINNING,
said described tract
containing
1.5000
Acres, more or less.
Reference Deed: Volume 247, Page 129,
Meigs County Deed
Records.
Bearings are assumed
and are tor angle measurement only.
The above description
Is based on a survey In
September 2000 by E &amp;
E Borderline Surveying, Robert R. Eason,
Ohio P.S. No. 70333.
Auditor's Parcel No:
part of 01-00569.000
Deed Reference: ORBook 116, Page 77
Parcel
Number;0100569-005
Said premises also
known as:
42170 CR 163 Midkiff
Rd.,
Pomeroy,
OH45769-9700 PPN:01·
00569-005
Appraised
at:

$125.000.00 and cannot
be sold for less than
two-thirds (213) of that
amount.
Terms of Sale: CAN·
NOT BE SOLD FOR
LESS THAN 213RDS OF
THE
APPRAISED
VALUE, 10% DOWN ON
THE DAY OF SALE,
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK,
BALANCE
DUE ON CONFIRMATION OF SALE. •
APPRAISAL (DID
DID NOT) INCLUD
INTERIOR EXAMINATION OF THE HOUSE.
ROBERT E. BEEGLE
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF.
Our office does not require the property description but if you do
not Include one please
advise that a current
property description
can be located at the
Meigs
County
Recorder's Office In the
Court House.
Robert E. Beegle
Sheriff of Meigs County
THE LAW OFFICES OF
JOHN D. CLUNK, CO.,
LPA
John
D.
Clunk
#0005376
Ted
A.
Humbert
#0022307
Timothy
R.
Billick
#0010390
Robert
R.
Hoose
#0074544
4500 Courthouse Blvd,
#400
Stow QH 44224
PH: 330-436-0300
FAX: 330-436-0301
(4) 21, 2S, (5) 5

LL
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

�----------~--~~~------------~~----

------

-- - -- - ~-

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

~- - -

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www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83
~~

~ribune-

'

Sentinel - l\egtgter
CLASSIFIED

.

'·

E--mail
mdtclassified@mydailytribune.com

____________

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

E.LUS Y_QUB AD NOW ONUNE

~

~

..
-,i

\~ ~! ~'

IJ

·~

Meigs County, OH

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

To Place
~ribune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
ct~SJG~A~!
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 . (304) 675-1333 •
:!I
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

OtHltiA~U'

Word_Ads

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

I

...

«POLICIES«

200

Announcements

300

Serv1ces

Lost &amp; Found

Home Improvements

Lost 2 young beagles
w/shock collars in Leon
big
area
reward
304-812-6963

Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondi1ionat lifetime
guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740·446·:&gt;870, Rogers
Basement Wateproofing.

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
business with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have 1nvestigat·
ing the offering.
FREE
6-Room
DISH
Network Satellite System!
FREE
HD·DVRI
$19.99/mo, 120+ Digital
Channels (tor 1 year.)
Call Now • $400 Signup
BONUS!
1·877-223·7921.

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

Lawn Service
Best lawn Care now
making awointments for
this week for all your
lawn care needs. Please
call740-645-1488.
Lawn
Care
Service,
Mowing, Trimming, Free
estimates.
Call
740-441-1333
or
740-645-0546
Other Services
Pet
Cremations. • Call
740·446·3745

DIRECTV
For the best TV
experience, upgrade
from cable to
DlrecTV today!
Packages start at

$29.99
1-866-541·0834

.cJ.S..I::l
NETWORK

Wanted
to
take down bam for a portion of the wood. Call
740-446-4543.

Save up to 40% off
your cable bill! Call
dish Network
today!
1-8n.274-2471

'
•

;
'
"
•
"

'
..

•nr•or.Lmuor&lt;' .................................................. 700
t-nuortmoonr .....................................,. 705

ce .......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctions .......................................................915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
EqulpmenVSupplles....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ............, ......................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Corner .................................................960
Mlscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Sunday In-column; 9•0.0 a.m.

sunday Olsploy: 1:00 p.m.

Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepatd•

Now you con hove borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
_( ~
-""'
Borders$3.00/perod
E!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

~

1

POLICIES: Ohio '-"lley Publlllhlog rewvee tilt right to tdll rejecl, or cencel any ad l1 any lime. Erro,. must be reponed on the fnst day ol pUblicatfOf' and the
lll~rCint!-Reghlter will be reeponalble for no more ttlln ttll cott the space occupied by the error and only the fii'M it'Mftoon. We stan not be liable lor
any lo18 or e&gt;epeo. that raulla from the pl.tbllc:atton or or~~ leeton olen advartl18mant. Correction Will be made on 1he !lr$1 available edition. ·BOll number ads
are e1wap c:onfldentlal · C~Wrent nrte card appllee. • All real 181ate acsvenlaemente are IM.Ib)eC! to lht Federal Fair Housing Act ol 1968. • This newcpap;r
ac:c:epta onlt help warud ads mHIIng EOE ll!anclar&lt;lt Wa will not knowingly aCQ!p( Ill)' advertiSing In ~lolatoon olthe law. WW not lXI responslble for lillY'
errore In en ad taken OYer the phoOii'.

of

Other Services

Yard Sale

For Sale By Owner

Lifelock

Garage Sale Fri. Apr. 30
and Sat. May 1. 10AM at
the District II Frre House
in Mercerville. All proceeds to go to the Fire
Dept. Concession Stand.

Garage Apc:tment for
sale Approx. 810 sq It
garage 32x38 overs1zed
lot to build rouse LaKin
wv
$65000.00
304·687-8213

Are You Protected?
An identity is stolen
every 3 seconds. .
Call Llfelock now to
protect your family
free for 30-daysl
1-8n·481-4882
Promocode:
ID

1000

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888·582·3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

(:LASSif.IEDS!!
Security

Ammals

600

A1ll
Free Home
Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services.
Call1·888·274·3888
Tax / Accounting

AMERICAN TAX
BELIEF
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 In back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1·877·258-5142

Animal Supplies
Polled
Hereford
Bulls
dark red 1Q-12 mths
1/2angus 1/2 hereford 2
years old 304-882-2774
Hof$es
1/2 Welch Pony, 1/2
Quarter Horse 8yr old.
Green broke. $250 OBO.
24 ft. swimming pool.
everything
1nc.
$600
OBO. 740-590-9095

Financial

Financial Services

CREDIT CARE
RELIEF
Buried in Credit Card
Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1·877·264·8031
Money To lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance 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 team
if the mortgage broker or
lender is property li·
censed. (Th1s is a public
service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74Q-446-4367
1-800·214-0452
galhpohscarecrcollegc.edu
ACCred1te&lt;l Member Accre&lt;l~·
ong Council lor ln&lt;lepB(ldent
Colleges and Schools 12748

900

Merchandise

Furniture
Blue Sofa &amp; Matching
Recliner-S200.
White
4pc. BR Su t w/ Full S1ze
Box Springs &amp; Mattress.
$300. All ir good condi·
lion. 740-446-9780.

livestock
lambs 4H quality. bom
2-6·10 thru Feb. 16. Suffolk·Hamp cross. $125.
740-992-1606

AKC Reg English Bulldog puppies mlf for free
contact
jjevans02@ gmail.com
Reg.. femate Boxer puppies. wormed, 9 wks. old.
Call 740 -446 •7217
700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVENTORYAT
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740-446-3825
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out our
useo
rnventory
at
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740·446-2412
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now Available at Carmi·
chael
Equ1pment
740-446·2412
Garden &amp; Produce
Flower
&amp;
Vegetable
plants, large vanety ol
hang1ng
baskets
to
choose
from
Potting
soll·pplants to loll your
own baskets. Largo pot·
ted tomatoes. Daylight
hours, No Sun. sates.
Closed My 13th Yoder's
Greenhouse
10
min.
wets of Gallipolis on 141 .

Pilgrim 42' camper Lake
model. glass sliding pat10
doors, continues hot wa·
ter. 2 slide outs, full size
refrigerator,
&amp;
much
more, 740·992-3465 atter 5pm

2006 3BR 2 5BA Green
Twp. L1v1ng Room w Pre
Place.
Farrlly
Room,
Separate Drmng Room
Spacious
K1tcherr
w/Gramte Countertop &amp;
Island in the Mrddle &amp;
Hardwood
Cabmets
Laundry Room 72 x27' w/
2Tx50' Attac11ed Garage
3.5 Car Beaut1ful View 1r
Country w/2.38 ~cres.
Pnced
to
sell
PH
740-339-2780. Must soc
to appreciate. No rea tors
and no land contracts.
Serrous carlers only.
land (Acreage)

5.35 acres 1n "vlergs
County, Ohro on t.Jew
Crew Rd., septic approved and all utrhtres
available,
aSKing
520.000 or OBO call
2007 Palom1no Thorogh· 740-985·4300
bred 5th wheel camper ~~~=~~~~!!!!!
30ft 1 slideout only used
lots
12 times mov1ng must ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
sell
518000.00 10 66 acres
Horresite
304-687-8213
all utilit1es, 24 x 48 shed
minutes lrof" Galhppohs
8 ft. Heavy Duty Slide rn Green Twsp. 56..~ 000
Truck Camper, $2.500. Call 740_ •4703 _
645
Call740-446-8945.
Real Estate .
2000 Fleetwood Mobile 3500
Rentals
home 14x50 2 bedr'l1s
cent air kit.appl. porch
excellent
condt.
Apartments/
$14500.00 (304-593-0728
Townhouses
RV Service at Carmichael
74Q-446-3825

Trailers

and 2 bed;oom apts.,
furnished
and
~onfur·
RV
nished. and houses 11
317-Silver
Washington Service at Carmichael Pomeroy and Middleport.
Quarters. Nice &amp; Clean. Trailers
security deposrt reqUireo.
$3.50 ea: Also Federal 740·446·3825
no pets. 740-992-2218
Reserve Note, U.S. Cur- ~=====~~=
rency, Five Hundred DolMotorcycles
2BR APT.Ciose to ~-tottar
Bill,
1934 Series, =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==~- zcr Hospital or SR 160
'Scarce"
$895. 07 Yamaha V Star Sil- CIA (740) 44HJ194
74Q-533-387:&gt;.
verado 650, Saddlebags _....;._.;...._ _ _ __
and windshreld. blk, 1200 2BR apts. 6 "'' from Ho
Jet Aeration Motors
mi. exc. cond. 54700, zer sorrc "'· •85 pd. or
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt 446·6688 or 339-4221.
apphar&gt;ces
vall
In stock. Call Ron
S450/mo
~
dep
Evans 1·800-537-9528
740-418-528!)
or
2000
Automotive 988·6130
Large Estale Sale Don
CONVENIENTLY
LOand Ruth Carter, 106
Mabeline
Dr.·Gallrpolis
Autos
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
April 22 3 t•J 7 PM, April
ABLE! Towrhouse apart
23 &amp; 24 9 AM to 6 PM Quality Cars &amp; Trucks rrents.
andor
smal
Cash
only. wlwarranty all pnced to houses lor rent
Call
Antiques-Jars,
crocks, sell, 15 yrs. rn business 740-441-1111 'or app 1Giassware,
Furniture, Cook Motors. 328 Jack- calion &amp; 1nfoM1atron.
Pottery. To:&gt;ls. Collecti· son Pike.
Free Rent Special !!I
bles &amp; More Household Gallipolis,
OH 2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
4
Items-TV's,
Tables, 740· 46-0103.
up, Central A
W/0
Chairs, Beds. Couches,
hookup,
te:1ant
h._.ys
Trucks
"'
lamps, Stereo, Dishes.
electnc
Call between
Miscellaneous

Pets
400

Hay, Feed, Seed, Groin
Mixed round bales for
sale.
4x4 and 4x5.
74Q-446·2412

Houses For Sale

Vehicles

12' bass boat, 9.9 hp
four stroke Mercury en·
grne, running lights. car·
pet. aerated live well, rod
holder,
dry
storage,
built-in
trolling
motor
plug, boat cover. two
padded sw•vel seats. 14
boat trailer wtspare tire,
phone: 740-992-7230

Get reliable phone
service from
Vonage.
Call Today!
1-8n·673·3136
Professional Services

Recreat~onal

Boats / Accessories

VONAGE
Unlimited local
and long
distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
AT¥ ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles ......................................................1010
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLeaae .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utility ..............................................2030
Trucks.........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial................................................301 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................~ ...............3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................ 3510
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ..........•.......•........•.....••...... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment. ..............................................6000
Accounting/Financial ................................ 6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Education................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ..........................: ........... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
ManagemenVSupervlsory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs ..................................................6036
Madlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporarles ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Tradea ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................:.. 6052

Ill

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Friday For Sundays Paper

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals...........................................................100
Announcements ............7............................. 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ............................: ........ 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ...........•......................................... 230
Wanted ........................................~............... 235
Services ....................................................... 300
ance Service ....................................... 302
utnmo·tivA .................................................. 304
ls ....................................... 306
......,., ......,,,, ...................................: ................. 308
Caterlng........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Oomestics/Janitorial ...................................318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financial .......................................................322
Health ...........................................................326
Heating &amp; Coollng .......................................328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Orama .................................... 336
Other Services ..•..........................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal .....................................340
Professional Services.................................342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ..................................•........ 350
.Travel/Entertainment ..................................352
Financial ......................................................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School... ........................ 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal .......................................•............... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplies .......................................... 605
Horses ....•.................•......•.•.•.....•...•......•....... 610
Llvestock ......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
to buy..................................................625

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 9:00 a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

• Start Your Ada Witt! A Keyword • Includ~ Complet~
Daulptlon • Include A Ptic:e • Awld Abbrelllatlona
• Include Pttone Humber And AcldreN Wben Heeded
• Ada Should Run 1 Day.

I
I

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Bedding, Tools, Comput- 87 Dodge Dakota. 85 the hours of BA·bP
ers &amp; More.
Oldsmobrle Cutlass SuEHO
preme. 2 Wheel Car
Ellm VIew Apts.
trailer for sale. Call
WantTo Buy
(304)882·3017
446·3243 after 5.
Twin Rivers Town IS ac
ceptrng applications lor
Absolute Top Dollar • Sll·
Vans
wattlng list 'or HUD sub·
ver/gold
corns.
any ~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~= sidizeo, 1-BR ~partmef't
10KI14KI18K gold jew· 1988 Ecoline Ford Van
'or the elderly d1sable&lt;l
elry, dental gold, pre w/wheel
chair
lift
call 675·66'9
1935
US
currency. $2300.00 304·675·6736
proof/m1nl
sets,
dia·
monds, MTS Coin Shop.
Want To Buy
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;.-;;;;;;;;;= 1 BR and bc::h. frrst
polis 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars,
mo11ths ren~ &amp; deposrt
call740-388-0884
references reQ 1red 'llo
--------and
c "an
Real Estate Pets
Oiler's Tow1~g. Now buy- 3000
740-441-0245
Sales
1ng junk cars wtmotors or
w/out. 740-388-0011 or
Beaulrful 1BR apatt"lent
740-441-7870.
In the country fr!.lSrly
For Sale By Owner
painted very clean WID
hook up nrce ::ouni'1' set106 Mabelhne Dr. Galli- ting only '0 m1ns trorr
Yard Sole
polis. 2BR. 1BA. Full town Must see to app e·
Basement.
Remodeled c1ate. Water pd $375 rrc
kitchen. t Car Garage. 614·595·77'13
or
Garage
SateDale
Cent. a1r. All app. stay. 740·645·595J
Harts- 1018 Yellowbush
$89,900. 740-645·7965.
Rd. Racine. April 22-23
N. 4th A~ie. Middleport
from 9·4. Glider rocker, 12 Unit Apt. Complex. 2 br lurn1shed apt dep
dishes. lots of linens. 2 446-0390.
&amp;
'ef..
No
pets
small tables and cha1rs.
74Q-992·0165
books and ots ol m1sc 3/4 BR cape cod, 2.5 BA.
pt
All proceeds go to Raco granrte ceramic, rard- New 2 BR
R a.'Jackson
Brace shaoiarshlp lu11d. wood, 2700 sq. ft. pn· Hookup
va1e settrng close to area $52:' 'rrc, + d
Thanksforyoursupport.
Call740-645-1286
town. Call740--446·1776

G)

�._,

_______________

---

---------------._.-------~-

-

.....

~--

----

-.

-----

Apartment available now
Riverbend
Apts.
New
Haven WV. Now accept·
1ng
applications
for
HUD·subsidized,
one
Bedroom Apts Utilities
included Based on 30%
of adjusted 1ncome. Call
304·882-3121.
ava1lable
tor Senior and Disabled
people.

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts.
in
Middleport.
740-992-5064.
Equal
Hovsing
Opportunity.
Th1s inst1tut1on is an
equal opportunity pro·
v1der and employer.
Modern 1BR
740·446·0390

apt.

Call

Nice 2BR completely fur·
nisl:led $600 + elect.
$600 dep. 446·9585 or
446·9595
Spring
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 740·446-1599.

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~--~-

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmenb/
Townhouses

~

Good
to the

Last
·word

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

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

Rentals

2 BR Mobile Home, All
Elec.
spac1ous,
NO
PETS. New Deck, stor·
age bldg., $450/mo (water, trash. tnc.) 128 Dol·
phin St.(740) 446·4234
2 Br Gallipolis Ferry 740 or (740) 208-7861 .
973-8999 S400.00 mth
$400.00 deposit
2BR Mobile Home, Wa·
3 BR Farmhouse near ter, sewer, trash pd. No
Addison Remodeled. LP pets. Johnson's Mobile
Fumace. No inside pets. Home Park. 446·3160
$525/mo + dep. (740)
2 br mobile home in
367-7760.
Rac1ne, rent $325, dep,
4 Bedroom 2 Bath house S325. No pets. years
or At. 33 Mt. Alto lease, No calls after
$725.00
call 9pm, 740·992·5097
304·532·6059
Nice 1BR house in Galli·
Sales
polis. Walk to everything AA New 4 Bedrooms
•you need. Very clean
Only 544.970
umt. w1th new paint.
2010 Singlewide
$275 per mol$100 sec.
Incredible $19,995
dep. Sorry, no pets. Call
mymidwesthomes.com
Wayne for information
404·456·3802.
740.828.2750
1BR Cottage in Gallipolis, No Smoking, No
Pets. Ref Req Off St.
Parking. S300tmo. (740)
339·2584 or 446·891 9.

--======•

4000
.

Manufaclu~ed

Houstng

• lots

New3BR, 2BA
as low as $241.68
per mo. and 1563.00
down. WAC
740-446·3570

Trailer Lot for Rent • Ad·
dison Pike . $150/mo, Will build on your land as
sec dep same.
Can· low as $499/mo., Call
446·3644 for application.
740·446·3570.

Sales

Help Wanted. General

"The Proctorville
Dtfference"
S1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888·565-0167

Local Law Firm seeking
Recptllegal Asst. Please
send resumes to CLA
Box100 .;;/o Pt. Pleasant
Register 200 Main St. Pt.
Pleasant WV 25550

6000

Employment

Child/Elderly Care
Become a Foster Parent·
$30·$48 a day for caring
for a child 0-18 in your
home. Foster parents
can be single or married.
Reqwrements
over
' 21-pass
a
criminal
check-complete
training
that begins at Albany.
April 24 Call oasis for
more information toll free
1·877·325·1558.

FIND A JOB
OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy, Ohto
30 Years Local Experience

-Winter Specials -

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Gallia·Meigs Commun1ty
Action IS seek1ng a
part-time 11 month Program Ass1stant. Position
will require a depend·
able, accurate, detailed
onented person with exAccepting applications or perience in Microsoft Ex- '-------=~--'
resumes for Subway art· eel. High school diploma
1st at new location. Apply or GED with two years
on line @ www.parmar- office
experience
reCONSTRUCTION
stores.com or apply in quired. Davis-Bacon Act
Remodeling,
person M-F between 10 • WH34"1
experience
a
1 @ 15289 Huntington plus. Applications w1th
Roofs, Garages,
Rd., Gallipolis Ferry, WV resumes will be accepted
Pole Buildings,
or_c_
~
al17_4_
0-52_5_
·049_7_.__ until 3:30 p.m. on May 3,
11
Siding, Decks,
Do you wake up excited 2010 at the Cheshire ofabout going to work lice. GMCAA is an Equal Drywall, Additions
every day? Are you chal· Opportunity Employer.
and New Homes.
lenged by the work you
Insured· Free
do? If not, joimng the •
• lnfoCislon
101.5 BOB FM radio Come work for a top em·
Estimates
sales team could be the ploywer. committed to of740-742-3411
fering employment opbest move you'll ever
portnilles
in
our
area!
make. We're looking for
the right person with a
BA~KS
Start Work lmmedi·
passion for helping local
ately!
C O:'\STRt: CTIO~
businesses succeed in a
competitive market. Out· Hiring Full and Part Time
side sales experience IS
Pomeroy. Ohio
Positions
preferred but not reCommercial•
Onsite Doctor
quired. Email your re·
Weekly Pay &amp; Bonuses
Residential
sume
today
to
Fun &amp; Professional
• Free Estimates
pneace@connoisseurWorking Environment
medja com. Connoisseur Complete Oenefits Pack·
C740l 992-5009
Media is an Equal Op·
Custom Home Build•ng
age
portunity Employer.
Sted Frame Building'
Let us show you what
Butlding. Remodeling
makes lnfoCision a
General repa•r
GREAT place to work!
" " n.bankscclb.com

SUNSET

BULLETIN BOARD

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155

Call NOW to schedule
you r Interview!
1-888-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
2457
Apply online;
http://jobs.infocislon.c
om

.H:VI'S SMALL

Medical

The Middleport American Leg1on

Autism Awareness Day

Longaberger Basket Bingo

April 24, 2010
1 p.m.

Food, Popular Longaberger
Pottery and Baskets

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Registered
Nurse
needed for growing di·
alysis facility in Pt. Pleas·
ant. Fax resume to (304)
675;1505

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages •
• Complete
Remodeling

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • :\oletal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

in Gallipolis, OH

David Lewis

Cost $40.00 for 20 games
Special Games $5.00 Each
Contact: Jane or Jerry Hawley at
740-992-3934
or Stacy Hawk at Fruth Pharmacy
in Pomeroy
Hurry and get your tickets in
advance for the chance to win
The Ohio State University Basket
Buddy set

All autistic ch ildren with
their families are invited

740-992-6971

For more information please
call

WV042182

Insured
Free Estimmes

. ~~~

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Rehabilitation Services,

1 ~: ~ - , \

~ ~
, -..: :W r

(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 2418

_

~

Dump Truck
Service
We do driveways
Limestone • Gravel
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

740-856-2609

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 09-CV·
135
Peoples Bank, National
Association
Vs
Loretta G. Kinsinger, et
al
Court of
Common
Please, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an d
order of sale to me di·
rected from said court
in the above entitled
action, I w ill expose to
sale at public auction
on the front •steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday April
30, 2010 at 10:00a.m. of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Situated In the State
of;OH, County of Meigs
artd In the Village of
M(ddleport.
Being Lot Number
Twenty-nine (29) of
JONES ADDITION to
said Village of Middle·
port, as the same is
numbered and delin·
el(ted
upon
the
reeo rded plat thereof,
of.record in Recorder's
OOice, Meigs County,
Ohio.

Parcel Number: 15·
00448
Property Located at:
125 South 3rd Avenue.
Middleport, OH 45760
Prior Deed Reference:
Deed Book 55, Page
963 of
the
Deed
Records
of
Meigs
County, Ohio.
Property Appraised at:
$55,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/3rds for the appraised value.
10%
down on day of sale,
case or certified check,
balance due on confir·
matlon of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior examination of the house.
Robert S. Beegle.
Meigs County Sheriff
Susana E. Lykins Attorney for the Plaintiff,
Lerner Sampson and
Rothfuss
PO Box 5480 Clncln·
natl, OH 45201·5480
(513)241·3100
(4)7, 14, 21

tlon
NOTICE TO THE PUB·
LIC OF FINDING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
For Family Healthcare,
Inc., Meigs Health Cen·
ter
In accordance with the
National Environmental
Policy Act, the Council
on
Environmental
Quality regulations for
Implementing NEPA (44
CFR
Parts
1500
through 1508) and the
HHS General Administration Manual Part 30
Environmental Protection
(February
25,
2000), HRSA has determined that the Meigs
Health Center project
proposed by Family
Healthcare, Inc., will
have no significant ad·
verse impact on the
quality df the buman
environment. As a re·
suit of this FONSI, an
Environmental Impact
Statement will not be
prepared.
The Health Resources
and Services, Adminls·
- - - - - - - - tratlon (HRSA) of the
Public Notice
Department of Health
and Human Services
Health Resources and (HHS) provides discreServices Admlnistra· tionary grant and coop-

erative
agreement
awards to support
health centers expand
their capacity to pro·
vide primary and pre·
ventive health care
services to medically
underserved populations nationwide.
Family Healthcare, Inc.,
in Chillicothe, Ohio has
applied for a grant
under the Capital lm·
provement
Program
(CIP) initiatives. The
applicant proposes to
use CIP funds to construct a new 9,600
square foot medical
building
at
41865
Pomeroy
Pike
in
Pomeroy, Ohio. The ap·
pllcant has submitted
an Envltonmental As·
sessment (EA) that
documents Impacts of
the proposed action.
This EA Is Incorporated
by reference into this
FONSI.
Additional project In·
formation is contained
in the Environmental
Assessment for this
project, which is on file
at the following ad·
dress for public examl·
nation upon request
between the hours of

8 :00a.m. and 4:00p.m.,
Monday through Fri·
day.
Meigs County Development Office 238 West
Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Attn : Perry Varnadoe
Phone: (740) 992-3034
E
m
a
i
I
:
d irector @meigscoun·
tyohio.com
No further environmen·
tal review of this proj·
ect is proposed prior to
final approval from
HRSA
Public Comments
Any individual, group,
or agency disagreeing
with this determination
or wishing to comment
on these projects may
submit written comments to Family Health·
care, Inc., Attn: Mark
Bridenbaugh,
CEO,
1049 Western Avenue,
P.O. Box 188, Chilli·
cothe, Oh 45601-0188
HRSA will consider all
•comments
received
within 15 days of this
" Notice" prior to final
approval from HRSA.
(4) 21 , 25

Torn \\vlfe
7.J0-41 6-2575

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

HafllW~~d Cabln~rY Ail~ Fufnitur~
www.tlmbercr-telu:ab!nury.C'.,

740.446o

* ~xperienced

References Available !
Call Gary Stanley @
740-59 1-8044
Please leave message

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

2 9 l,ike Street
H arlford , W V
30-'-882-3060

Fa x 30+882-3080

Inc.

Syracuse, Ohio
740..992-6778

Now Open 9-5 daily Sunday Closed
4''- 6'' - s·t- 10" pots available
AU Flats $8.00

SEASON SPECIAL fO" FERNS $6.00

rr'LOoking For-,

ANew Home?
TrY the
Cfassifieds!!

-

f.;, rl!,t.:,llt.'\t.'l" rrn/tll.hl'tttb '~n

':.!&lt;'per lb Ca'h onh
Pmt a:-. ret.J.l."r~u m ....h.__.nC\'
Shipm~nt-

.mw. e1~•)

nthrr Frida\

sJ construcliQl\

Pole Barns, Garages,
New Construction, Room Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber,
Concrete Work,
Any Type remodeling, Decks
Phona:74~7~16

Call 741).447-3642
38 yrs exp. Free Est. FuUy Insured

Owners:

Tim Cremeans &amp; Roger Sellers
MICHAEL'S
SER\'J('E ('ENTER
1555 :\\'EAve.
J&gt;omerov. 0 H
• Oil &amp; filter chan&lt;&gt;.:

• Tune Ups e
• Brake Sc.:r1·icc
• AC Rel'harge
• Mmor exhaust
repair • Tire Rep:tir
• Tran,rnission f ilter
&amp; Fluid Change
• General ~tee hank
work
(740) 992-0910

Rooting. Sidmg
Sotltt. D&lt;!d.s, Donr,,
Wmdnws, l:lt:ctm:.
Plumbn1~. Dl'} 11 Jll

R.:modding, Room
Addti!On'
Lol:al Coutntl:tur

740-367-0544
Free Estimates
7 40·367-0536

S ew Con ~tmctiu11 a11d
Repfac&lt;•ment \ 'iny/11 imfow1

m

CONTRACTOR WINDOW SUPPLY
&amp; MANUFACTURING.llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

IIi• Spt•t iali,t•ln Rcpltlcemem \lint/c. '
For Older Homes &amp; Tr.ulcn
Sr&gt; extra char~t· to rtplan metal jramt' " ndou 1

&amp; •
Richard Smith
C'o-OIIner \'icePr~&gt;~dcnt
C'oohilk OH

,
'

,&gt;\mv Veteran

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured

RUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

(Jirln , -, . ._ l •a lf"r 1 Hi*'L"IUiron

Owner

Pole Barns/Metal Roofs
Fire &amp; Water Damage
Drywall/Repair

Cell

• H ou": \'Vindu\\ Rcpla t'Nncut
• M irr m -s C u t 'f'u O nka· • Mohilt• SJn ic&lt;.,
• An·t'p!t:cl h.\ A ll Jn~unwn-.;
• All Wur·k G u :trun lt•t'&lt;l
• Lt&gt;t·all.• 0\Uit'&lt;l ...... Opcnaled

. Public Notices in Newspapers.
Y our Righi t o Know, D e li ver e d Rig ht to Your Doo r.

~.

Total Construction

t-O~n-e-C~a~/~1t-o~D-o_l_t_
,t_ll____ _
~

Trucking

Hartfora~

PUBLIC
NOTICES

~Erie
~Insurance·

R.L. Hollon

Ripley Auto Glass

~~~~~~~~

304-773-1111

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

299 Mill St. Middleport, OH

Hometown Insurance Center
~Jrwurancecenter.com

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

LEWIS

Will Power Tumbling
Gymnasium

(that's easy on your w allet)

Stop &amp; Compare

740-985-4422

Doors open at Noon Games
Begin at 2:00

Great coverage and
superior service

740-992-1671

ENGINE REPAIR
740-992-2432
Sales. Service
&amp; Repair
All makes &amp; models
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
All Types Of
Concrete Work
29 Years Experience

1'\nt :ollili.ttcd \lith \like MHrcum Rnolinl( &amp; llcmOt.lclingl

ROBERT
BISSEll

co.

Get Your Message Across With ADaily Sentinel

MIKE W. MARCUM. OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985-4141
740·416-1834
Fully insured
Free estimates • 25+ years experience

&lt;)1)2.1\21 S Hfi-SIJ J.fJIIJS

Da\id 740-541-3867

Help Wanted. General

• Room addition., • Rooting • G
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barn~ • \iin)l &amp; Woorl Fencin~
Foundations

wv 036725

Family Operated"
We' ll clean it up, haul
it away. or BOTH!

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Patio and Porch Decks

Rankin Cleaning &amp;
Refuse Trailer
"Christ Dril'ell,

Houses For Rent
1
Bedroom
House
S275tmonth,
$275/de·
pos1t + utllit1es. Call
740·256-6661

Wednesday, April 21 , 201 0

7411 -667-ti.\06
Fa'\: 74!1-667-11329
Toll Frt:e: li77- Wl -S I 9(a

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Renllldchng, ~kl&lt;~l&lt;
Shingle Rook ~cl\ Homes, S1ding. Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. L1cen,d:l &amp; ln,wcli
Riel.: Price • 17 ~ rs. Experirnre
WV#040954 Cell 740·416-2960 740·992-0730

�~

I

Wednesday, April 21, 201 0

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

Tom Batiuk

cAN RUIN ~IFE FOR ?foP!.£ WIKl
ARt :JUS'f'TRQIW:J 1'0 lAXlRK HARD
AND·PI..AQ Sfi111E RUl€5.

!

"

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Slip-on
1 Launder
garment
5 Diplomat's 40 Natural
asset
fuel
9 Take- at 41 Ex(try)
hausted
11 Political
meeting
DOWN
12 Author
1 Sash site
Todav·s Answers
Calvino
2Fall
8 Radials,
27 Power of
13 Church
flowers
in Britain
film
sight
3 Park
10Tuxedo
28 Hilary
14 Deterart
accessory
Swank
mined
4Film
11 Velocity
movie
15 Response
computer
16 Mixture
29Camera
to "You
5 Soft
18Agile
setting
wouldn't!"
mineral
21 Fabric
30 Nasty
17 "Honest!" 6 Tennis
worker
31 Put in
19 Print units
star
23 Haul in
office
20Brown
Gibson
24Wolfish
33 Real hoot
tint
7Cold and
25 Mideast
37 Soaking
damp
21 Week
region
spot
part
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 /5 (check/m.o.) to
22 Pass
1hornas Joseph Book 1 PO. Box 536475, Orlando, K 32853·6475
along
24 Put down
26Film
legend
Garbo
29 Cat coat
30 Kneeler's
words
32 "I don't
want to
hear it!"
34 Cath. or
Prot.
35 Leg bone
36 Boosted
38 Burger
add-on

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._._ _ _.......,

CROSSWORD

I. THOUGHT TONIGHT
OH, BEETLE, 'IOU
WE'D HAVE COCI&lt;TAIL5
~OUt-!D LIKE YOU'RE
IN THE CRYSTAL RO
JOI&lt;IN~!
THEN GO TO THE
OPERA AND END
UP DANCING AT THE /-.,.,........,A
SKYLIGHT TOWER

rr :J'US1' GAUS

- - - - -.. .

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

f'll£3 ' .. 1).! 6 ().)Pt.)
A 8UNCI1 Of
GR££W,

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_________ .,.._...... _ __.,- ..--------

APPA~/...tF6.

WA~11' CONC£1VE.D

WI1H FAIRNESS
INMI~D.

AMORAt...
(l')OROIJS .•.

-

4-21

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

HI &amp; LOIS

N

WHAT' Do vot.J !-\AVE:

FO~

Hrf1'1NG rfOI)f'

OF iH~ INFiet...l?'?

..
~UTTS
0

E_arth

"LET'S TRY ANOT...ER TRUST FALL, MR. LOCK...ORN ...
AND l"Hl~ TIME DON'T VEL.L. 'TIMBER!"'

Patrick McDonnell
•

Outdoors is where the great mystery lies,
so going into nature should be a searching
and humbling experience,
like going to church.
o
Skip Whitcomb

11

~N·
THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman !~

ZITS

0

.-

I hope I die bef~ I ~t '*)old ~ y01A)l'....v'11o-i41
-The

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

fir~?tN't;;,/1~ ./it~n;~ .J HOROSCOPE

by Dave Green

2 6 3 7
4
9

•
"No, Jeffy, I don't think I've had any
adventures since I last saw you."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

7
9
3
7 2
1
4
9
6
5 4 1
3
7
1 8
4
2
6 8 3
4 1
Diflkully Level ***

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9•6 9 L 9
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etc

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday. Aprii2L 2010:
Give yourself pennission this year to say "no" more
often. You v.'ill ha\·e a lot on your plate. Tight organi?.ation and discipline v.ill make a big difference.l\ews
from a dbian&lt;'e or an expert always i~ helpful, if you
keep your perspective. If you are single, you could
meet someone through your friends. T&lt;lke your time
getting to know thi~ person. If you are attached, the two
of you v.'ill bond even better if you focus on a goal
together. LEO works well with you. '\'ou both have the
same fOL'Us.
lhe Stars SIU11v tire Kiud o{D1111 You'll Have: 5-Dvnamic;
4-Pl&gt;..;itive; 3-Aocmge; 2-Sc&gt;-~; 1-Difficult
•
ARIES (March 21-Apri119)
**** Don't get upset if you can't focus until later
in the da)~ You have a lot on your mind. Your creatidly
kicks in midday, and you are energized mentally and
physically. You might be a&lt;;king yourself if you really
want lobe at work. Well? lbnight A midweek romp.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
· **** Get anything off your chest that i'&gt; bothering
you thi" morning. Catch up on mail, mes~ges, etc. The
afternoon pt;e,Sents a great time for thought and quiet
work. if you hang out the "Do 1\:ot Disturb" sign. OK?
'lbnight: 1\:esUe in.
.
GEMINI (Mav 21-June 20)
**** You h:'ive been grumbling a little too long
about money or the budget. The planets in\'ile you to
give it up this afternoon. Make calls and get together
with a key associate. It never hurt:; to network when
you are the ,,;uy Twin. lonight Out and about.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
***Use the morning to the max. You'll have a
greater influence during this period, a'&gt; the Moon shines
the spoUight on you. EnJOY. This afternoon, balc1nce
your checkbook before going out to buy ,1 new item.
Yes, it could be just for you! Tonight. Enjoy treating.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
**** Let the morning blahs go. By the afternoon.
your true spirit and energy come out. You are a fon.--e to
be dealt with. Others seek you out. An uncomfort.Jble
encounter with &lt;~n associate might not be as bad as you
,
think. 'Jbnighl: Whatever makes you smile.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
****Don't hesitate to zero in on what you \v-anl
this morning. A meeting could be importanta-; iar a.'i
gaming supporter:-; and like mind&lt;;. You also \\7:11!

diverse minds so that you c,m ha\·e m.my different
opinion-;. Tonight: Off thinking.
-:
LffiRA (Sept. 23-Qi. 22)
**** You might be put on the spot by someone ;
•tlus morning. How you deal \\ith this person could'
change in the p.m. If you have,, touchy or difficult situ-: •
ation, wait until .:~iter lunch. A partner might be
•
unknowingly pushing you. Tonight: Share with a friend: _
or lo\·ed one.
•
.SCORPIO (O..i. 23-l\:0\·. 21)
****Attempt to get an ove"·iew in th~ morning.
Find people you respect who are \\'illing to gi\e you
~­
another pe:r.-;pecth·e. A partner ~vuld interfere with
plans. A public appt&gt;arance or dealing with a key per- : ~
son seems ineviwble. Tonight: Burning the c.mdle at
both ends.
SAGlTIARlUS (;'\ov. 22-Dec:-. :!1)
*****A partner firully mows in de&amp;&gt;r and
•
shares with ,·ou what he or ~he w.mls. When the two of ~
you are on the same page, you are do-;e to unstoppable. ' '
Cse various resources to get a fuller or more complete ...
picture. Tonight: Go off and try,, new spot. ~t~t a
', ..
, ..
friend or loved one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·]c1n. 19)
~
**** Others cuntinue to rome forward and make •..
reque:-15. You ha\'e free will .:~nd choices. You can sa:
..
"no." Postpone an import.mt rom·er:-ation until the
afternoon. Don't even think th.1t thb will be ea-;y, but it ..
\\'ill be e.l.'&gt;ier! Tonight: C'.o with someone ebe's sugges- tion.
.,
AQUARIUS Q,m. 20-Feb. !H)
***You can only do so much. If you h.n-e e\tra
work dropped on you, knl1W th..lt you don't need to
pitch in. There is nothing \\TI.'lng 'dth saying that you
mn't. Be willing to defer to other:-; in the afternoon. A
key .1s~ate re\eals ,, lot 'lbnight Sort through your
im·itations.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
****Your mind drifts, but as you ,1re walking
..
through an imagin.ll'} held of !lowers, you al"' refresh
your mind and come up with even better 50lution-..
L"-;e this type of relaxation to empower you~! f. In the /
l?.m., concentmtt&gt; on a ~pt&gt;dfic task. Tonight Put your
teet up.

...

...

facquelme Bigar 1&gt; 011 the lnttntel
af /rtlp://iC'lC"&lt;I' i&lt;zcqlldilld.llgtrr:a&gt;/11.

�www.mydailysen~nel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April21_, 20lO

'

Charleston Catholic rolls past Wahaltla
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHARLESTON. W.Va.
Th~ Wahama Whit~
Falcons fell to Charleston
Catholk I :2 -2 in Tuesday
evening ' -; road contest.
The White l·alcon~ manag~.:.".l o nly l\\0 hits in the
game. one each by Terry
Henry
and
William
Zuspan.
Charleston
Catholic
scored one run in the first
inning. added SIX in the
third. three in the fourth.
.tnd two in the sixth for the
win.
\Vahama scored both

Eastern
from Page B1
Valley stranded ti ve on the
bags.
Rawson. Turley. Hayley
Gillian and Brenna Holter
had the lone hits for

Henry

Zuspan

runs in the fifth inning,
with Zack Warth and Matt
Arnold each crossing the
plate.
Zuspan had the only
extra base hit for Wahama
with a double.
Charleston Catholic was
Eastern. while Wall. Ross.
Nance and Brittanv Foster
had the lone safetie~s for the
Lady VIkings.
Nance was the winning
pitcher of record. allowing
four hits and one walk over
seven innings vihJle striking
out 13. Turley took the loss.
allowing four hits and one
walk over seven \nnings

led offensively and defens vely by ..Sam Wood who
\\as , tlw pitcher, going all
six inmng, and hitting a
two run homerun.
Wahama's Tyler Roush
started the game. and wa~
rf' fievrd lw Brice Clark in
the timet inning.
W.thama travels to face
l\1an
on
Wednesday
evening at 5:30p.m.
CHARLESTON CATHOLIC
12, WAHAMA 2
Wahama 000 020 Chas Cath 106 302 -

222
12 9 0

WP- Sam Wood; LP -Tyler Roush.
HR CC: Sam Wood (4th mning.
nobody out, one on)

while fanning nine.
The Lady Eagles return to
action today when they host
Waterford in a pivotal TVC
Hocking contest at 5 p.m.
SYMMES VALLEY
EASTERN 1
S Valley
Eastern

000 002
000 100

0
0

-

2,
2 42
14 2

WP- Nikki Nance; LP - Kasey Turley.

Lady
Marauders'
pitcher Hiley
English
throws the
~!Jail during
the first
inning of
Tuesday
evening's
TVC Ohio
contest
against the
visiting
Wellston
Lady
Rockets.
Wellston won
9-7 in eight
innings, with
English
pitching a
complete
game.
Sarah Hawley/
photo

Meigs
from Page B1
Sm1th hitting a double. and
Patterson hitting a two run
homerun. Wet1ston added
two more runs in the sixth
inning to take a 7-5 lead.
Emalee Glass scored on
in the sixth inning. after
reaching base on a dropped
third strike. Kelsey Shuler
drove Glass in with an RBI
triple. Meigs scored again

in the home half of the sev- complete game. striking out
enth inning, with Tricia five. allmving eight hits,
Smith scoring the tymg run. and walking one. ~
Wellston pitcher Brit Hall
Wellston scored two runs
in the top of the eighth pitched eight innings strikinning to take a 9-7 lead, . ing out eight, and allowing
eight hits.
and earning the victory.
Meigs travels to face
Meigs was led in hits by
Oh10
opponent
VanMeter with a single and TVC
on
a homerun. Tricia Smith Nelsonville- York
had two .singles. Patterson Thursday at 5 p.m.
hit a homerun, Shanalle
WELLSTON 9, MEIGS 7
Smith had a double, and
Wellston 300 202 02 983
Barnes and Glass each hit Meigs
012 201 10 785
singles.
WP - Brit Hall; LP - Hailey English.
Lady Marauder's starter HR: M: Men VanMeter (3rd inning. one
on, one out), Erin Patterson (4th inning,
Hailey English pitched a one on, two out).

Ed Suba JrJAkron Beacon Journal/MeT

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James, left, congratulates teammate Jamario Moon
after Moon hit a three-point shot against the Chicago Bulls in Game 2 of a NBA Eastern
Conference playoff game at Quicken Loans Arena on Monday in Cleveland, Ohio.

MOon's big night in Game 2
illustrates Cavaliers' depthe
CLEVELAND (AP) Jamario Moon has been
showing off his nifty
dance
steps
during
Cavaliers games all season.
Moon used his moves
Monday to slide into
Cleveland coach Mike
Brown's rotation during
Game 2 of the Eastern
Conference playoffs and he might stay awhile.
Moon made all three of
his 3-point attempts in the
fourth quarter on Monday
and finished with 12
points in Cleveland's 112102 win over the Chicago
Bulls. He played so well,
Brown couldn't get him
out of the game: Moon
played the ·entire fourth
quarter, grabbed a couple
of late rebounds and came
up with a big block on 6foot-11 Joakim Noah.
"J-Moon was excellent.
He's probably the main
reason we won,'' LeBron
James said. "He knocked
down big shot after big
shot."
Brown gave his team the
day off Tuesday after
evening the series. Game 3
is Thursday in Chicago.
Moon was a forgotten
man during the end of the
regular season, playing a
total of 40 minutes over 11
games from mid-March to
early April. It wasn't until
Cleveland clinched homecourt advantage throughout the playoffs that
Brown finally v. ent back
to him.
He started a pair of
games and averaged 14
points over the last four as
the
Cavaliers
rested
starters and killed time
until the playoffs began.
Moon played sparingly in
Game 1 against the Bulls.
but took advantage of
open looks in Game 2 to
knock down four 3-pointers.
"After that second one.
it felt like I was throwing
it in the ocean." Moon
said. · .. It was all about
being confident and being

ready to shoot the basketball. My teammates kept
believing in me and I kept
believing in my shot and
knocking them down."
Brown prides himself on
the Cavaliers' flexibility
and ability to play different styles. He briefly sent
Antawn Jamison to the
scorer's table to check in
during the fourth quarter
Monday, but was so
pleased with how the
reserves were playing, he
pulled Jamison back.
"The group that was on
the floor was doing a terrific job," Brown said. "I
felt a little bit of confidence.
swagger
and
momentum
from
that
group. I've said it all year:
Everybody's got to stay
ready. At any given time.
somebody's number can
be called."
Moon and fellow reserve
Delonte West played the
entire fourth quarter with
Mo Williams. while James
checked in with 8:34
remaining and went the
rest of the way. That left
starters Shaquille O'Neal
and Anthony Parker on the
bench for the entire quarter. Jamison played Jess
than 4 minutes.
"Mike has a time sheet
he goes off. but he went
with the guys that were
getting it done." James
said. "We're not a team
that cares about individuals. Shaq didn't sit there
and cry about it and neither did Antawn."
Moon was brought from
Miami last summer as a
restricted free agent to add
length on the perimeter.
His defensive prowess was
what
interested
the
Cavaliers. particularly in
an Eastern Conference
finals
rematch
with
Orlando should both teams
advance.
The 3-point shooting has
been a bonus. Moon shot
just. 32 percent during the
regular season (32 of 100).
but is already 5 of 7 in two
playoff games.

His fun-loving nature
easily fit with the carefree
Cavaliers. Starting in
place of James in their
home
finale
against
Orlando, he even mimicked James' pregame routine by throwing powder
in the air.
He was often out of his
seat and dancing during
pregame introductions this
season, and his moves
were a staple of in-arena
entertainment during timeouts. He would show the
crowd a dance step in a
taped segment on the
scoreboard - Monday's
was the "stanky leg'' and cameras would pan the
crowd doing the step.
Moon also developed
Cleveland's
signature
"goose neck" celebrations.
Players touch their in ~
finger to their thumb ,
hold it near their eye f
lowing all 3-pointers in
reference to how a players' wrist and forearm
resemble a goose neck following a jump shot.
"I celebrate everything
that's good," Moon said.
"It's just about keeping
everybody going. I try to
make sure we're loose and
positiYe and ready to
play."
Moon's path to the best
team in the league has
been long and winding. He
turns 30 in June, but didn't
reach the NBA until three'
years ago after playing in
Mexico, numerous minor
leagues and even spending,
time with the Harlem
Globetrotters.
It
has.
allowed him to fully.
appreciate all he is accom-'
plishing with the top-seeded Cavaliers.
·
"Coming from wherA
came from and the roaJIIIIP'
took to get here. this is'
great," Moon said. "To do
for my team what I did
(Monday). I don't want to
say it's the icing on the
cake, because it's not the
last game of the season.
but ,it feels great."

Browns open in Florida, close with Steelers
CLEVELAND (AP) For the first time since 1999,
the Cleveland Browns will
open the season on the road.
The Browns will play their
first game on Sept. 12 in
Tampa Bay. snapping an 11year home streak that began
when Cleveland returned to
the NFL as an expansion
franchise. They'l'l finish the
season at home on Jan. 2
against the rival Pittsburgh
Steelers, the last of three
straight AFC North games
Sarah Hawley/photo

Meigs' pitcher Justin Coterill throws a pitch during the third
inning of Tuesday's game against Wellston.

.

\

Marauders
from Page B1

three hits each.
~teigs
travels
to
Nelsonville- York at 5 p.m.
on Thursday.'

ili

Skyline Speedway
Stewart, Ohio
The Mid-Ohio Valley's Friday Night Track!

~
x

Friday, April 23
Rescheduled 2010 Season Opener

~

Spring Thaw J0-'1\\·in 30!. $1.500 to Win $200 to start
Sprints and tate \lodels
Adults $15 • Kids 12 &amp; Lnder FREE • Pits $30
Gales Open 4:30 pm- Hot Lap~ 7 pm • Racing 8 pm
Late ~todels &amp; Sprint Cars Reg Show \loditieds,
Pure Stocks, -l Cylinders
,

~
:·

Cotterill added a double
and Jeffers singled.
Darnell and Arthur led
the Golden Rockets with

·3, MEIGS 2
101 1 3 11 0
100 o 24 1

WELLSTON

Wellston 000
Meigs
010
WP - Darnell; LP - Justin Cotterill
HR: M: Ryan Payre (2nd mromg,
nobody on, two out)

I

:-:«-:-»:-»»»:«««-»»»»".-»!-»»:-"~)~"-:,
~

~

i

~

FISH DAY!
NOW IS THE TIME FOR
STOCKING!
* Channel Catfish * Largemouth Bass* Redear * Koi

* Blucgil (Bream) * Minnows * Black Crappie (if a'ail)
"'Grass Carp

Wednesday, Apri128, 2010
Bidwell Hardware
In Bidwell, OH
12 Noon - 1 pm

Shude Riwr AG Sen ice
In Pomero), OH
2- 3 pm

The Feed Stop
In Gallipolis. OH
4-5pm

;:!

~~

~
740-662-411~ • www~sk~·linespecd\\ay.net
~
~.....:.:-:««««-»"..:«-."-»:««-»:-."««-»"..:«-»:««««-»»."''X««~
'I

Cleveland does not have a
after a visit to Cincinnati on
Dec. 19 and a home game prime-time TV game for the,
against Baltimore on Dec. first time since 2007 but will
play the defending Super
i6.
After facing the Bucs, the Bowl champions for the
Browns will play their home third straight year. They' II
opener on Sept. 19 against visit the New Orleans Saints
on Oct. 24.
Kansas City.

TO PLACE AN ORDER CALL1-800-247-2615
www.farleysfishfarm.com
FARLEVS ARKANSAS PONDSTOCKERS, INC.

- - - - - - -- -;+ -----1

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