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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

River City Players
bring Valentine’s
show .... Page 2

Prep basketball
action .... Page 5

Eileen Pigott Bahr, 87
Roger Brown, 74
Lawrence E. Bush, 88
Jack Collins
Doris L. Davis, 86

Chance of snow
and sleet. Cloudy.
High of 44. Low 29.
........ Page 2

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 26

Josephine M. Gergel, 90
George N. Lemley, 96
James L. Lloyd
Samuel W. Kemper, Sr., 73
Robin S. Shamblin, 56
Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr., 91
Millard ‘Doc’ Swartz, 95
50 cents daily

APEG launches program aimed at local job creation
Sentinel Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Appalachian Partnership for Economic
Growth (APEG) of Nelsonville
is partnering with Ohio Development Services Agency to rollout
Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) services for an
eight-county area in southeastern Ohio which includes Meigs
County.
To ensure Ohio’s industrial
base prospers in the 21st Century
global economy, the Ohio MEP
and APEG are coordinating
their strategies with centers of
expertise throughout the region.
As one of three unique satellite
partners, the Innovation Center

at Ohio University will support
the total regional outreach effort
by providing products, services,
and assistance vital to the health
of manufacturing businesses
with fewer than 50 employees
located in Perry, Morgan, Noble, Monroe, Hocking, Athens,
Washington and Meigs counties.
It was announced that Jesus
Pagan, Field Engineer, will be
the point of contact for this outreach at the Innovation Center.
Additional partnerships with
the Muskingum County Business
Incubator in Zanesville, and the
Manufacturing and Technology
Small Business Development
Center at the Ohio State University South Center in Piketon,
will provide similar services to

manufacturers with fewer than
50 employees in the remaining
counties in the region. APEG
will directly deliver and promote
MEP services to manufacturers with 50 or more employees
throughout the entire 28 county
region while coordinating the
service delivery of the satellite
partners. Dorinda Byers, MEP
Coordinator and Project Manager, will serve as the point of
contact for manufacturers with
50 or more employees throughout the region.
By working with these partners, APEG is best able to
provide a highly focused and
detail-oriented approach to each
individual company’s specific
challenges and opportunities.

Through MEP, local manufacturers gain access to a nationwide
network which provides worldclass technical assistance that
can help with every aspect of
their operations. The development of regional and statewide
clusters of innovation, that include businesses of all sizes, is
vital to sustaining Ohio’s global
competitive advantages for
product development, company
growth, manufacturing competitiveness, and job creation.
“Southeast Ohio has a rich
and renowned history of highlevel manufacturing. Our goal for
MEP in the region is to strengthen our manufacturing companies
and promote their growth and
competitiveness in the global

marketplace.” said John Molinaro, president and CEO of
APEG. “Our region is arriving at
a crucial moment where changes
in global trade patterns give us a
one-time opportunity to revitalize manufacturing and provide
an economic boost that will help
sustain and improve our economy for decades to come.”
In addition to partnering
with regional business incubators, APEG has placed JobsOhio
Program Managers strategically
around the region to support
companies and community
economic development efforts.
APEG staff will be working
closely with business and community leaders to build sustainable, widely-shared prosperity.

Filing deadline
announced for
mayor candidates
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Awards were recently presented to local residents who assisted during last summer’s stroms. Receiving awards were
(front row, L to R) Teresa Smith, Tina Carson, Lisa Smith, (back row) Meigs County EMA CERT Director Russ Carson,
Steven Grady, John Smith. Robin Dorst was not present. Awards were given by the Ohio Citizens Corp a division of
the Ohio Department of Public Safety.

CERT training to be offered for second year
Awards presented
to CERT members
POMEROY — The Meigs County Citizens Corps Council and the
Meigs County Emergency Management Agency (EMA) will be
hosting a Community Emergency
Response Team (CERT) Training
during the month of March for the
second straight year.
Awards were recently presented to individuals who took part in
last year’s training and help with
damage assessments during the
wind storms last summer.
Award recipients were Teresa
Smith, Tina Carson, Lisa Smith,
Russ Carson, Steven Grady, John
Smith and Robin Dorst.
This year the training will take
place over four sessions, with attendance required at all four sessions to complete the course.

CERT is a concept that was
developed and implemented by
the Los Angeles City Fire Department in 1985. The program is
designed to help citizens understand and prepare for their roles
in disaster situations.
The program is designed to
instruct people about readiness,
people helping people, rescuer
safety and doing the greatest
good for the greatest number in
emergency and disaster situation.
CERT training is a challenging
program that takes place over several days. Each day includes training and hands-on activities.
Participants will learn to size
up an emergency situation, manage utilities and extinguish small
fires, use first aid to treat three
medial killers, understand disaster psychology, and search for and
rescue victims safely.
Classes will take place from

7-10 p.m. on Friday, March 8, and
9 a.m.-4 p.m. on Saturday, March
9, 7-10 p.m. on Friday, March 15,
and 9 a.m.-4 p.m. on Saturday,
March 16. All sessions will take
place at the Courthouse Annex
Basement Conference Room located at 117 East Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy, Ohio.
There is no charge to attend the
trainings, and what is learned may
saves a life.You must be 18 years
old or older to take the training.
Registration must be completed
by March 1.
To register contact Russ Carson at the Meigs County EMA.
Carson can be reached by phone
at (740) 992-4541, by fax at (740)
992-9582, or by email at chiefcarson@windstream.net. Registration can also be sent by mail
to Meigs County Citizen Corps,
Meigs County EMA, 117 E. Memorial Drive, Suite 4, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Plea agreements entered in case of Taylor death
Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Plea
agreements have been entered in cases against three
of the suspects charged in
connection with the June
death of a Gallipolis man,
while the fourth suspect is
set to appear before a jury
later this month.
Lacey Redmond, 26,
Gallipolis, and Steven L.
Williams, 31, Bidwell, both
pleaded guilty in their respective cases last week in
the Common Pleas Court
of Gallia County, while Eugene O. Wasonga, 25, Point
Pleasant, entered a guilty
plea in December after negotiating a plea agreement.
In conjunction with their
plea agreements, Redmond,
Williams and Wasonga have
all agreed to testify against
any or all of their co-defendants at trial.
In this case, James C.
Garrett, 21, Point Pleasant,
remains as the only suspect
not to enter a guilty plea
in this case. The defendant
is slated to appear for trial
on February 27 and is be-

ing represented by retained
counsel, Todd A. Long and
James D. Owen of Columbus. He is being held in the
Gallia County Jail under a
$1 million, 10 percent bond.
Garrett, along with Redmond, Williams and Wasonga were arrested and
charged following the murder of Zane Taylor, 33, on
the afternoon of June 11,
2012, at his home on Ohio
218 near Gallipolis.
The suspects allegedly
entered Taylor’s residence
in an attempt to rob him —
an incident that reportedly
later led to his death.
Redmond, Williams and
Wasonga were later charged
with conspiracy to commit
aggravated robbery, aggravated robbery and complicity to commit murder following the incident, while
Garrett, who is also facing
similar robbery charges, is
the only suspect facing a
charge of murder.
During a hearing on February 5, Redmond pleaded
guilty to aggravated robbery and complicity to involuntary
manslaughter,
both first degree felonies.

Pursuant to her plea
agreement and her cooperation in testifying against her
co-defendant, it is expected
that Redmond will be sentenced to five years of imprisonment for aggravated
robbery and 10 years for
complicity to involuntary
manslaughter.
Redmond is scheduled
to appear on March 12 for
sentencing. She is being
held under a $1 million, 10
percent bond.
Williams, who had his
original case dismissed in
the common pleas court in
lieu of new charges, pleaded
guilty on February 6 to a bill
of information outlining a
charge of robbery and tampering with evidence.
According to the plea
agreement in this case, the
state will recommend that
court sentence Williams to
30 months of incarceration
for the charge of robbery
and a total of 12 months for
tampering with evidence
for a total of 42 months,
pending his cooperation in
testifying at trial.
Williams, who is being
held in the Gallia County

Jail under a $1 million, 10
percent bond, and is also
facing charges of drug trafficking and drug possession
in two separate common
pleas cases, will appear for
sentencing on March 6.
Wasonga was the first
co-defendant in this case to
enter a plea, pleading guilty
to one count of robbery
and one count of tampering with evidence during a
hearing on December 11,
and, as a condition of his
plea, Wasonga also agreed
to testify against his co-defendants at trial.
The plea agreement filed
in Wasonga’s case stipulates that the state, pending Wasonga’s cooperation
through his testimony
against his co-defendant,
will recommend he receive
a total of 30 months of incarceration for the charge of
robbery and 12 months of
incarceration for tampering
with evidence.
Wasonga was later released on a $30,000, own
recognizance bond and is
also scheduled to appear on
March 6 for a sentencing
hearing.

POMEROY — With the resignation of Mary McAngus formally accepted on Monday night, the process
now turns to finding the person who will serve the remainder of her term as Mayor of Pomeroy.
The Pomeroy Mayor seat will appear on the November General Election ballot, along with four council
seats from the Village of Pomeroy.
Becky Johnston, director of the Meigs County Board
of Elections, said that Independent candidates who
wish to be considered for the mayor position must file
a nominating position no later than 4 p.m. on the 10th
day after the vacancy occurred.
According to Pomeroy Village Solicitor Michael Barr,
the seat officially became vacant on Feb. 11, meaning
the deadline for independent candidates would be Feb.
21.
Partisan candidates have until 4 p.m. on Aug. 12 to
file for the mayor position.
Filing deadlines for the open council seats are different than the deadlines for the mayor seat.
The deadline for partisan council candidates has already passed, but independent candidates can file until
4 p.m. on May 6.

Water ordinance
differences aired at
Middleport Council
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — The water/sewer rates and the ordinance by which they are levied were again discussed
by Middleport Village Council at Monday night’s meeting.
At the Jan. 28 meeting following a complaint by
Councilman Roger Manley about the three-percent
rate increase, the ordinance committee composed of
Emerson Heighton, Manley, Rae Moore, and Craig
Wehrung, was directed to review the ordinance and decide whether changes were needed in order to trigger
annual reviews of rates.
A report from the committee, presented by Mayor
Mike Gerlach, was to the effect that the current ordinance already has a provision whereby Council can
change rates, an increase or decrease, on an annual
basis. Susan Baker, financial officer, for the benefit of
Council, displayed on a bulletin board just how much
the three percent increase this year for minimum use
affected a resident’s bill. Bills for minimum use, according to her figures, went from $45.70 to $47.05 or three
percent. The majority of the committee did not recommend any changes in the current ordinance.
Manley then made a motion to repeal the ordinance
regulating water rates with Council member Penny
Burge seconding the motion. While Manley and Burge
voted yes for the appeal. Moore, Sandy Brown, Wehrung and Heighton voted no defeating the motion for
repeal.
On the recommendation of Mike Hendrickson, village building instructor, Council gave a first reading
on an ordinance providing for changes in inspection
fees. The changes recommended set a fee of $15 for a
re-inspection and then in cases where more inspections
are needed the fee increases to $25.Plans were also discussed for compiling a data base for tenants.
On recommendation of Chief of Police Bruce Swift,
Randy Arnold was hired as a part-time correction officer, and Shannon Smith who has been part-time, was
taken on as a full-time officer.
Council entered into a lease agreement with Jeffery
D. Brown for a 300 foot radius around the new well being drilled by the village on land adjacent to Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center with crossing privileges given to
Brown. Action on the lease followed an executive meeting with the village solicitor.

�Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Community Calendar Meigs County Local Briefs
Wednesday, Feb. 13
POMEROY — St. Paul Lutheran Church will begin
their Lent service at 7 p.m. Community welcome.
LONG BOTTOM — Ash Wednesday Service at the
Long Bottom United Methodist Church, 7 p.m. with Rev.
Norman Butler, speaker.
MIDDLEPORT — A free spaghetti dinner will be held
at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene from 5-6:30
p.m. Pastor Daniel Fulton invites the public to join in the
food and fellowship.
Thursday, Feb. 14
POMEROY — A free community dinner of soup, sandwiches and desserts will be held with serving from 5:30-7
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church. Community welcome.
CHESTER — Shade River Loge 453 will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Refreshments will be served before the
meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS — VFW Post 9053 will meet at 7
p.m. with a meal at 6 p.m. at the hall in Tuppers Plains.
POMEROY — Alpha Iota Masters will meet at 11:30
a.m. at New Beginnings United Methodist Church. Hostesses will be Linda Bates and Debbie Finlaw.

Valentine’s
Dinner and Movie
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Community
Association will host a
Valentine’s Day Dinner
and movie on Thursday,
Feb. 14 at Middleport Village Hall. The dinner of
lasagna, salad, dessert and
drink will be served from
6-7 p.m., with the movie
beginning at 7 p.m. The
cost will be $5 per dinner
with the movie shown free.
For reservations call 9925877, 992-1121, or 7423153.

River City Players
performance
MIDDLEPORT — The
River City Players will be
Friday, Feb. 15
performing an evening of
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High School Class of 1959 love songs at 7:30 p.m.
will be having their “3rd Friday” lunch at Fox’s Pizza Den, on Saturday February
518 E. Main Street, Pomeroy at noon.
16, at the Middleport Vil-

lage Hall. The songfest
is titled: “All you need is
Love…. and a little chocolate!” Tickets sold at the
door; $10 per person
or $15 per couple/pair.
Decadent desserts will be
served. Talented vocalists
from River City Players
will entertain with a variety of songs about love
and romance.

Meigs County Health Department will be closed on
Monday, Feb. 18 in observance of President’s Day.
Business hours will resume
at 8 a.m., on Feb. 19.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County TB Clinic will be
closed on Monday, Feb. 18,
in observance of President’s
Day. No skin tests will be
given on Friday, Feb. 15.

Fish Fry
POMEROY — Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy will hold a fish fry on
Friday, Feb. 15, and 22,
March 1, 8, 25 and 22 from
noon to 7 p;m. Carryout
is available. The fish fry is
sponsored by Knights of
Columbus. Proceeds benefit local charities.

Free Health Screenings
POMEROY — Free
blood pressure, glucose
and cholesterol screenings
will be offered by the OUHCOM Community Health
Program from 9 a.m.-noon
on Friday, Feb. 22 at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Road. Total cholesterol and
glucose can be non-fasting,
A lipid panel requires a 9-12
hour fast.

Holiday office closures
POMEROY — The

Saturday, Feb. 16
POMEROY — Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR
will meet at 1 p.m at the Pomeroy Library. The program
topic will be “Women in History” to be presented by Opal
Grueser with emphasis on the National Society DAR museum quilts and the women who made them.
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will hold their fun night and potluck supper
Are you looking for a great Valentine date night, or
at 6:30 p.m. at the Grange Hall. Everyone is welcome to
perhaps just a relaxing evening out with your friends
come and bring a covered dish.
and family doing something a little different. River City
Players has just the thing.
On Saturday, February 16 at the Middleport Village
Hall (former Middleport Elementary) join the River
City Players for: “All you need is love … and a little
chocolate”.
Enjoy a smorgasboard of delectable desserts and conAEP (NYSE) — 44.90
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.43
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.04
fections while talented vocalists from River City Players
Pepsico (NYSE) — 72.17
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 78.09
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.54
entertain with classical songs about love and romance.
Big Lots (NYSE) — 33.25
Rockwell (NYSE) — 91.34
Admission is only $10 per person, or $15 per couple
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 42.44
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.48
(not necessarily a “date” couple), and tickets may be
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 75.41
Royal Dutch Shell — 67.76
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.14
purchased at the door. Doors open at 7 p.m., and music
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 47.75
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.07
will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 71.40

River City Players
bring Valentine’s show

Local stocks
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.47
Collins (NYSE) — 59.49
DuPont (NYSE) — 47.98
US Bank (NYSE) — 34.31
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 22.58
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 53.28
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 49.14
Kroger (NYSE) — 28.54
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 44.84
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 71.64
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.65
BBT (NYSE) — 30.60

Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.28
WesBanco (NYSE) — 23.27
Worthington (NYSE) — 28.53
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for February 12, 2013, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Lincoln Day Dinner
POMEROY — The annual Lincoln Day Dinner
will be held on Thursday,
March 7 at Meigs High
School. Tickets must be
purchased prior to Feb.
25. To purchase tickets
call Judy Sisson at 4167104. Peggy Yost at 304482-5748 or Kay Hill at
416-4564. The speaker
will be Congressman Bill
Johnson.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct a
childhood immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at
the office located at 112
East Memorial Drive.
Flu and pneumonia shots
will also be available for
a fee.

Ex-cop exchanges
fire with authorities

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A person believed
to be the fugitive ex-Los Angeles cop sought in
three killings exchanged gunfire with authorities
in the San Bernardino Mountains on Tuesday,
a law enforcement official said on condition of
anonymity.
The officer requested anonymity because the
officer was not authorized to speak publicly
about the ongoing investigation.
The officer told The Associated Press it’s believed Christopher Dorner committed a residential burglary of a cabin and had a couple tied up
in the cabin. One was able to get away and make
a call.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Wednesday: A slight
chance of snow and sleet
before 9 a.m., then a slight
chance of rain and snow between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m.,

then a slight chance of rain
after 10 a.m. Cloudy, with
a high near 44. Calm wind
becoming northwest 5
to 7 mph in the morning.
Chance of precipitation is
20 percent.
Wednesday
Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 29. Northwest wind
around 7 mph becoming
southwest after midnight.

Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 46.
Thursday
Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 31.
Friday: Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 45.
Friday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
27.
Saturday: A chance of
rain and snow showers.

Mostly cloudy, with a high
near 34. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Saturday Night: A
chance of snow showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 20. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Sunday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 32.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around 18.

Carl Jones,
Open Heart
Surgery patient

Choudhary Rayani, MD
Cardiac Electrophysiology
Holzer Health System

Visit http://youtu.be/hJqUBuN9wic
to hear my story!

We specialize in:
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�Wednesday, February 13, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Obituaries
Eileen Pigott Bahr

Eileen Pigott Bahr, 87,
left the arms of her loving
family to enter her Heavenly home on Tuesday, February 12, 2013. Eileen was
born “down on Egypt” near
Long Bottom, Ohio, on October 21, 1925, the fifth of
seven children of Riley and
Daile Coffman Pigott.
She married Henry E.
Bahr on August 28, 1943.
They spent all of their married lives on their farm
near Chester. They are the
parents of 10 children, grandparents of 17, great-grandparents of 26 and great, great-grandparents of one. Eileen
was a homemaker and attended South Bethel Community
Church. She was devoted to her family and spent her lifetime making others happy. Her husband and many others
called her an “angel on earth.”
Surviving are her husband, Henry E. Bahr; daughters
and sons, Kaye (Richard) Fick, Roger (Mary) Bahr, Jackie (Kenneth) Hartung, Pat Bahr, Howard (Kim) Bahr,
Jeanne (Dave) Baker, Tammi (Rob) Barber, Terri (Darrell) Huck, Jim Bahr, and Randy (Chris) Bahr; sisters,
Lori Wolf and Lucille Wilson; sisters-in-law, Evelyn Bahr
Well, Lila Bahr Winters, Nancy Bahr and Bettie Bush Pigott; and brother-in-law, Rexal Summerfield. She is also
survived by 16 grandchildren, 26 great-grandchildren, and
one great, great-grandchild. She also leaves multitudes of
nieces, nephews, friends and acquaintances who mourn
her loss.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her siblings, Willard Pigott, Annie Pigott Summerfield,
Sina May Pigott Bailey, and Donald Pigott; brothers and
sisters-in-law, Clayton and Virgene Bahr, Kyle and Elsie
Bahr, Victor and Mildred Lipsey, Norman and Daylene
Bahr, Victor and Wilma Bahr, Vernon Bahr, Royal Wilson,
Rex Bailey; and grandson Kevin Fick.
Calling hours will be from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. on Friday, and her celebration of life service will be at 11 a.m.,
Saturday, February 16 at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville. Graveside services will follow at South Bethel
Community Church on Silver Ridge. Please join the family for a meal in the church annex following the service.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Kevin
Fick Memorial Scholarship Fund in care of Pat Bahr, 2
Circle Drive, The Plains, OH 45780.

Lawrence E. Bush

Lawrence E. Bush, 88, of Racine, Ohio, left this world
at 3:05 p.m. on February 11, 2013, at Overbrook Center,
Middleport, to be with his Lord and Savior. Born May 26,
1924, at Old Town Flats, he was the son of the late Roy
and Constance Lewis Bush.
He was a United States Army Veteran of World War
II, Lawrence entered the Army on April 23, 1943, and
separated on January 7, 1946. Trained in Texas in the
124th Calvary Regiment, his tour of duty took him to
China, India and the Burma Trail. He received The Pur-

ple Heart; The American Theater’s Ribbon; The Asiatic
Pacific Ribbon with 4 Bronze Stars’; The Good Conduct
Medal; and China’s “Breast Order of Yun Hai” award. He
was a member of the Racine American Legion Post #602,
and a lifetime member of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
# 9053, Tuppers Plains. He worked for the Farm Bureau
and Land Mark for 40 years and pastored 35 years at Mt.
Olive Community Church, Long Bottom.
Lawrence is survived by his wife of 65 years, Violet Arnott Bush, whom he married in Antiquity on January 31,
1948. His daughter and son-in-law, Connie Mae and Rusty
Tucker of Racine, and grandson, Cody Aaron Tucker of
Racine; brothers, Ernest L. Bush of Middleport, Charles
(Marie) Bush of Racine, George (Mary) Bush of Portland,
Tennessee; sisters, Susan Elizabeth “Betty” Pigott of Nelsonville, Clara Mae (Herbert) McIntyre of Long Bottom;
sisters-in-law, Suzanne Bush of Racine, and Gloria Bush
of East Liverpool; and several nieces and nephews also
survive. .
In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by
brothers, Robert Bush, Roy F. Bush and Jacob M. Bush;
sister-in-law, Flossie Bush; and brother-in-law, Willard
Rigott.
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m., Friday,
February 15, 2013, in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, with Rev. Jim Satterfield and Rev Jim Corbett officiating. Internment will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery
with full military honors provided by the Racine American Legion Post # 602. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on
Thursday at the funeral home.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Rev. Robert ‘Bob’ E. Smith, Sr.

Rev. Robert “Bob” E.
Smith, Sr., passed away
at his residence on Hysell
Run Road on February 10,
2013. Robert was born on
December 24, 1921, in
Rutland, Ohio, to the late
Ernest and Maude (Cremeans) Smith. He was a
1939 graduate of Rutland
High School.
He developed an early
love for railroads and enjoyed working on the Crestline Railroad near Bucyrus,
Ohio before proudly serving his country with the Army
detached service in the Pacific Theatre of World War II.
He also worked in the coal mines and had his own sawmill and became a master electrician at the Philip Sporn
Plant near New Haven, W.Va. He became a minister at the
Hysell Run Free Methodist Church and later help found
United Faith Church. Currently, he was a member of the
Rutland Independent Holiness Church. He was involved
in scouting for several years as district commissioner.
He enjoyed singing — especially gospel singing with
his wife and children and the Smith Family Singers which
included his wife, sisters, Glennis and Delores and brother, Luther. He helped form the Olde-Timers Quartet with

Melvin Drake, Paul Musser and his son, Ernest. He developed a passion for painting landscapes and model railroading. Most of all, he loved his vegetable gardens and
canning the produce it provided. He said the garden was
the place he felt closest to his dad.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his
first wife, Eloise (Tate); brothers, Luther and Carroll
Smith; sisters, Glennis Musser, Delores Schoppert Rodgers and Phyllis Hawk.
He leaves to cherish his memory his wife Shirley;
daughter, Roberta Meyer of Middletown, Ohio; sons,
Ernest Smith of Middleport, Ohio and Robert E. (Paula) Smith Jr. of Shelbyville, Kentucky; step-son, Martin
(Tammy) Woodard of Pomeroy, Ohio; and step-daughter,
Tonya (Jay) Lawson of Reedsville, Ohio.
Also surviving are his grandchildren, David (Tina)
Smith, Jason (Andrea) Smith, Erin Edwards, Devin
(Mubeenah) Moore, Brandon (Tricia) Smith, Indrek
Meyer, Sarah Woodard, Ashley Woodard, Amber Lawson and Jason Lawson; great-grandsons, Bradley, Cody,
Branden, Tyler, Justin, Levi, Maxwell, Clayton, Dalton,
Naeem, Kyan, Weston, Baha and Miyaz; great-granddaughter, Eloise; great, great-grandson, Addison; great,
great-granddaughter, Keira; sisters-in-law, Mary Smith,
Barbara Smith, Carol (Marty) Hall, Alice (Rodney) McKee, Barb (Joe) McKee, Kay (Larry) Giffin and Ruth Tate;
brothers-in-law, Dow (Betty) Lowery, Glenn Lowery, Bill
(Cathy) Lowery, Roger Lowery and Raymond Smith; and
two special survivors, Shirley (Smith) Bucher and Carolyn (Ferrell) Siers.
Funeral Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, February 16, 2013, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with the Rev. Gene Musser officiating. Burial
will follow in the Miles Cemetery in Rutland. Visitation
for family and friends will be held from 6-8 p.m. on Friday,
February 15, 2013, at the funeral home and one hour prior
to the funeral service.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the American Legion Post, Middleport.
An online registry is avalible at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Millard ‘Doc’ Swartz

Millard “Doc” Swartz, 95, of Alfred, Ohio, died Tuesday, February 12, 2013, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
He was born December 11, 1918, in Alfred, Ohio, son
of the late Vere and Grace Swartz.
He attended the Bethel Worship Center in Reedsville,
Ohio.
He is survived by his wife, Barbara Stalder Swartz; a
son and daughter-in-law, Terry and Nancy Swartz: two
daughters and sons-in-law, Janice and Dale Kuhn, Sandra
and Jim Wright; and several grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
In addition to his parents, he was proceeded in death
by his first wife, Juanita; and two brothers, Vernon and
Richard Swartz.
Graveside services will be held at 11 a.m., Thursday,
February 14, 2013, at the Cherry Ridge Cemetery in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
There will be no visitation.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Death Notices
Brown

Roger Brown, 74, of Gallipolis, died Monday, February 11, 2013, at his residence.
Services will be 1 p.m.,
Friday, February 15, 2013,
at the Willis Funeral Home
with Pastors Doug Downs
and Eugene Harmon officiating. Burial will follow
in White Chapel Memorial
Gardens in Barboursville,
WV. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Thursday,
February 14, 2013 from 6-8
p.m.

Collins

Jack Collins, Marion,
Ohio, and formerly of
Wellston, died Tuesday,
February 12, 2013, at his
residence.
Funeral
arrangements
will be announced by the
Huntley-Cremeens Funeral
Home, Wellston.

Davis

Doris L. Davis, 86, of
Gallipolis, died Saturday,
February 9, 2013, at Holzer
Medical Center.
In keeping with Doris’
wishes, there will be no
calling hours. A memorial
service will be at 2 p.m.,
Saturday, February 16,
2013, at the Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Alvis
Pollard officiating. Burial
will follow in Ridgelawn
Cemetery,
Mercerville.
Pallbearers will be her
nephews, Mike Davis, Matt
Davis, Joe Hineman, David
Hineman, Dean Hineman,
and Charles Hineman.
In lieu of flowers, please
consider making donations in Doris’ memory
to the Missionary Fund at
First Baptist Church, 1100
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, OH
45631 or Holzer Hospice,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Gergel

Josephine M. Gergel, 90,
of Mount Laurel, NJ, died
Feb. 11, 2013, at Samaritan Hospice, Virtua Mount
Holly.
Relatives and friends
are invited to Josephine’s
Life Celebration Service at
Inglesby/Givnish of Maple
Shade 600 E. Main St on
Thursday February 14,
2013, from 10 – 11 a.m.
followed by her Prayer Service at 11 a.m. Interment

Mount Carmel Cemetery,
Moorestown, NJ. Lunch
following at the Coastline
Restaurant 1240 Brace Rd.,
Cherry Hill, NJ.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to
Samaritan Hospice, 5 Eves
Drive, Suite 300, Marlton,
NJ., 08053.

Kemper

Samuel W. “Sam” Kemper, Sr., 73, of Gallipolis,
died Monday, February 11,
2013, at Four Winds Community, Jackson, Ohio.
Services will be conducted at 11 a.m., Saturday, February 16, 2013, at Church of
Christ in Christian Union
with Pastor Robert Isaacs
and Pastor Calvin Minnis
officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the
church on Friday, February
15, 2013, from 5-9 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Chris
Kemper, Greg Thacker,
Dave Thacker, Richard
Griffith, Ronnie Griffith
and Bobby Griffith. Honorary pallbearers will be
Calvin Minnis and Dayton
Garber.
Arrangements are by the
Willis Funeral Home.

Lemley

George N. Lemley, 96,
died Monday, February 11,
2013, in Holzer Medical
Center.

Arrangements will be
announced by the McCoyMoore Funeral Home,
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.

Lloyd

James Larry Lloyd, of
Patriot, died Monday, February 11, 2013, at his residence.
A funeral service will be
held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, February 14, 2013, at
the Lewis-Gillum Funeral
Home in Oak Hill. Burial
will follow at the Gallia
Baptist Cemetery. Friends
may call from 4-8 p.m. on
Wednesday, February 13, at
the funeral home.

Shamblin

Robin S. Shamblin, 56,
of Gallipolis, died Monday,
February 11, 2013, at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Services will be conducted at 2:30 p.m., Thursday,
February 14, 2013, at the
First Church of God with
Pastor Paul Voss officiating.
Burial will follow in Calvary
Cemetery, Rio Grande,
Ohio. Friends may call on
Wednesday, February 13,
2013, at the Willis Funeral
Home from 5-8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, please
consider a donation in Robin’s memory to First Church
of God Youth, Attn. Gloria
Bickle, 1723 State Rt. 141,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

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�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Wednesday, February 13, 2013

In a switch, GOP governors Cruise industry
back expanding Medicaid starting to recover
Thomas Beaumont
The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa
— Once largely united in
resisting the Obama administration’s new health
care overhaul, a growing
number of Republican governors are now buying into
parts of the system as the
financial realities of their
states’ medical costs begin to counterbalance the
fierce election politics of
the issue.
This week, Michigan’s
Rick Snyder became the
sixth GOP governor to propose expanding his state’s
health insurance program
to cover more low-income
residents, in line with the
Democratic
administration’s strong recommendation. Eleven Republican
governors have rejected
the idea while a dozen,
who have been mostly critical, have not announced a
decision.
Although the Democratic president’s re-election
last fall cleared the way for
providing health insurance
for millions of Americans
who don’t have it, many
Republican governors have
resisted parts of the plan
that remained optional.
They have been reluctant
to expand their Medicaid
programs to cover more
low-income residents. And
many declined to take responsibility for the online
marketplaces — called exchanges— that would offer
subsidized private coverage to the middle class.
Both would pose costs
to the states and also involved cooperating with
a larger government role
in health care that many
Republicans strongly opposed.
However, the federal
government’s agreement
to pay most of the added
Medicaid expense, and
belief that fewer residents
would be showing up at local hospitals without insurance, have begun to break
down some governors’ opposition.

“Politically, the dynamic
may be shifting,” said Matt
Benson, a senior aide to
Arizona Republican Gov.
Jan Brewer, who proposed
expanding Medicaid last
month. “There may be
some folks looking at this
anew.”
Two high-profile Republican governors, Scott
Walker of Wisconsin and
Rick Scott of Florida, have
voiced skepticism about
the federal terms but are
still considering the option.
Most Democratic governors have supported
expanding their Medicaid
programs to cover more
low-income
residents,
mainly adults with no children at home, who don’t
qualify now. With such
an expansion, Medicaid
would account for almost
all of the state’s poor. Under the new federal plan,
higher earners would be
required to get private
insurance. Together, the
provisions are aimed at
sharply reducing the 15%
of Americans who are uninsured.
But many Republican
governors shrank from taking on any further costs for
Medicaid, which has heavily burdened state budgets.
The federal government
would pay the full cost for
the first three years under
the new system, but the
states would pay up to 10
percent later. Some governors worried that the
federal government could
decide to trim back its contribution in the future.
The governors now
agreeing to opt in and expand Medicaid include
Republicans from different
regions of the country and
different ideological leanings. This has prompted
hope among some health
care overhaul supporters
of more GOP defections.
In addition to Snyder and
Brewer, Republican governors who support expanding Medicaid include Jack
Dalrymple of North Dakota, John Kasich of Ohio,

The Daily Sentinel
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Brian Sandoval of Nevada
and Susana Martinez of
New Mexico.
In each state, the proposal must still be approved by
the legislature, where there
is still Republican opposition.
Snyder said that in
Michigan, the expansion
would provide coverage
for about 500,000 uninsured residents, mostly at
federal expense, and save
state taxpayers $1.2 billion
through 2020. Many states
now help hospitals cover
some of the cost of treating
those without insurance.
“This is a federal program that we would not
have necessarily created
for Michigan,” he said
Wednesday, but “this is
saving money and improving lives.”
Governors have been
under immense pressure
to opt in from hospital and
medical associations, as
well as advocates for the
poor.
In explaining their decisions, Kasich, Brewer and
others have said rejecting
an expansion would mean
their taxpayers would subsidize care for those in
other states, while receiving no benefits themselves.
In Ohio, that would be an
estimated $2.4 billion over
two years, Kasich said
Monday.
“Ohio taxpayer dollars
are coming back to Ohio to
support a significant need
we have,” he said.
But governors elsewhere
said they fear the states
would be saddled with
huge costs if the federal
government later reneged
on its commitment.
“The federal government, because of their budget problems, starts cutting back and…then you’ve
just bought into something
of a lead sinker,” said
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad,
among the skeptics. He has
asked federal officials to
allow his state to craft its
own plan for low-income
residents.

Beth J. Harpaz
AP Travel Editor

NEW YORK — Cruise watchers looking
back at the industry’s past year say the Concordia disaster affected everything from
prices to safety drills to first-time cruisers,
but bookings appear to be picking up as the
2013 cruise booking season gets under way.
The first three months of each year are
known as “wave season,” a period when
many cruisers book trips as they plan ahead
for summer vacations. The Costa Concordia ran aground and capsized Jan. 13, 2012,
killing 32 people just as last year’s wave season began. Experts have blamed the captain
for the disaster, saying he took the ship off
course in a stunt. The wrecked ship is still
lying on its side in waters off Tuscany, Italy.
“In hindsight the market took a bigger hit than anticipated,” said Michael
Driscoll, editor of the industry newsletter
Cruise Week. “First-time business (from
people taking their first-ever cruise) was
off in particular.” The lowered demand led
to a decline in prices because cruise lines
are loathe to sail a ship without filling every
room, so they’ll drop prices until the ship is
at capacity.
Driscoll said a gradual recovery for
the cruise industry began to emerge in
the fourth quarter of 2012, and now, said
Driscoll, a year after the Concordia disaster, “top travel agents are reporting a surprisingly strong winter season bookings for
sailings that depart in later 2013, not great,
but good.”
Heidi Allison-Shane, spokeswoman for
CruiseCompete, said “cruise demand and
prices were down significantly last year at
CruiseCompete, with first quarter demand
down in the 15 percent to 18 percent range.
This was largely a result of the negative
publicity surrounding the Costa Concordia
sinking, but a very warm winter in most of
the U.S. and a slow economy were also factors.”
She added that “the low booking volume
early in the year led to more inventory being
available throughout the year, causing prices overall to be down an average of about 5
percent to 7 percent across all cruise lines
according to our measures.”
Allison-Shane also said booking activity
picked up on CruiseCompete in January of
this year, about 7 percent overall but even
more for premium and luxury cruises, “but
we are still seeing some lower prices as a result of lower sales in 2012 as the lines have
more promotions.”
Allison-Shane said CruiseCompete,
which is a cruise-booking website for consumers, generally sees 30 to 35 percent of
cruises for the year booked during wave
season.
Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of CruiseCritic.com, said “we’re definitely seeing
everything rebounding. I see advertising is
going back to appeal to first-time cruisers.

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exercise thereof; or abridging
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peaceably to assemble, and to
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The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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accepted for publication.

And we’re seeing more fresh sign-ups” on
CruiseCritic.com.
She added that 2012 had been expected
to be “the first bullish year for the cruise industry in the last three or four years. The
cruise industry was going to go all out and
reach out to virgin cruisers — people who
are new to cruising, who are so important to
the lifeblood of cruising.”
But after the accident, “people who were
thinking about cruising but who’d never
done it before took a step back,” Spencer
Brown said, adding that ads that had been
planned for 2012 geared to the new-to-cruising market were pulled. “They changed the
marketing stance back to the people who
already cruise and who understand that this
tragedy was an anomaly,” Spencer Brown
said.
The good news, said Paul Motter of
CruiseMates.com, is that “many predicted
the anniversary would mean a drop in sales
this January, but I think it passed largely unnoticed.”
Motter said the impact of the Concordia
was worse in Europe and still hangs over
the market there “because that was where
it happened, it got far more publicity there,
and it was a European cruise line (Costa)
marketed to Europeans. The worst part is
that it only adds to the chill hanging over
Mediterranean cruises in 2013,” which have
also been hurt by political strife in North Africa and the bad economy in Greece, Spain
and Italy.
A report issued in November 2012 by
PhoCusWright, the global travel market
research company, said the cruise industry
continued to grow in 2012, but at a much
slower pace than the 10 percent growth rate
of 2010 and the 7 percent growth rate of
2011. PhoCusWright said revenues for the
industry would “rise only 4 percent in 2012
… as the challenge of recent years — the
U.S. recession, the European financial crisis,
and high airfares — remain unresolved and
have been compounded by the worst shipwreck in recent memory.”
High airfares depress cruising because
many cruisers fly to the port of embarkation
for their ship.
PhoCusWright’s forecasts for cruising for
2013 and 2014 are better: 6 and 7 percent
respectively.
Spencer Brown said one positive thing to
emerge from the Concordia disaster was improvements in safety, for example more attention being paid to emergency drills. Prior
to the accident, international conventions
dictated that the drills, called muster drills,
be held within 24 hours of embarkation.
Since then, members of the Cruise Lines
International Association, which represents
most major cruise companies in North
America and many international companies
as well, have agreed to conduct the drills
before ships leave port. If guests happen to
board after the drill takes place, they will be
given individual or group briefings.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
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Sammy M. Lopez
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slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

WEDNESDAY,
FEBRUARY 13, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Lady Raiders end season with 49-32 loss
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — If the shots
don’t fall, it’s really hard to win a basketball game.
The River Valley girls basketball
team shot 25 percent from the field
and never led Monday night during
a season-ending 49-32 setback to
Crooksville in a Division III sectional
semifinal matchup at Jackson High
School.
The 13th-seeded Lady Raiders (715) missed their first eight shot attempts in the opening period, allowing the fourth-seeded Lady Ceramics
(11-10) to jump out to an early 6-0
edge three minutes into regulation.
A Leia Moore jumper at the 3:52
mark gave RVHS its first points, but
the Lady Raiders would never be
closer than four points (6-2) the rest
of the night.
Crooksville led 13-4 after one quarter of play and was ahead 28-16 at

halftime. The Lady Raiders — who
made just 7-of-32 shot attempts in
the first half — trailed 40-23 headed
into the finale and were twice down
by as many as 21 points in the fourth.
River Valley — which had won
4-of-6 decisions headed into the postseason — finished the night 13-of-52
from the floor, including an equal
4-of-16 effort from three-point range.
Defensively, RVHS limited the
Lady Ceramics to an 18-of-47 effort
(38 percent) from the floor, but the
lack of an offensive punch over 32
minutes ultimately led to the end of
an otherwise noteworthy season.
“Tonight was hard. We were getting some good looks at the basket,
but it just wouldn’t fall through,”
RVHS coach Renee Gilmore said afterwards. “Over time, it took a lot of
aggression out of us … especially on
the defensive side. You get frustrated
when the shots are not falling, and
we never really found that spark that
we needed it tonight.

“If we would have had a few shots
fall together at some time, it may
have put the wind back in our sails.
It could have been a different outcome.”
River Valley went just 2-of-14 from
the field in the opening period, and
CHS turned an 6-2 edge into a 10-2
lead at the 2:24 mark of the first stanza, but Rachael Smith added a bucket
at 17 seconds later to pull the guests
to within six.
Kaitlyn Mills sank a trifecta at the
1:57 mark to push Crooksville out to
a 13-4 advantage, and neither team
scored over the remainder of the first
period.
The Lady Ceramics took their
first double-digit lead at 16-6 just
42 seconds into the second quarter,
then the hosts established two different leads of 17 points — the last
of which came at 28-11 with just 30
seconds left in the half.
The Lady Raiders closed the secSee RAIDERS ‌| 8

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

River Valley senior Cady Gilmore (32) dribbles past Crooksville Kirsten Fuzner, left, during the second half of Monday
night’s Division III sectional girls basketball semifinal contest
at Jackson High School.

Alex Hawley | file photo

Southern senior Kyrie Swann (24) shoots a jumper during the
Lady Tornadoes loss to River Valley on January 23rd in Bidwell.

Fed Hock rolls past
Lady Tornadoes in
sectionals, 60-34
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

THE PLAINS, Ohio — The Southern girls basketball
team had its 2012-13 campaign come to a close Monday
night during a 60-34 setback to Federal Hocking in a Division IV sectional semifinal matchup at McAfee Gymnasium on the campus of Athens High School.
The eighth-seeded Lady Tornadoes (6-16) committed
33 turnovers and shot just 18 percent from the field in the
entire contest, while the ninth-seeded Lady Lancers (713) connected on 44 percent of its chances in the 26-point
triumph. The win also allowed FHHS to claim 2-of-3 decisions against Southern this year, as the two squads split
in the regular season.
Federal Hocking advances to face top-seeded Eastern
in a D-4 sectional final at 6:15 p.m. on Thursday at Athens
High School.
Celestia Hendrix gave Southern an early 2-0 advantage
with the opening basket of the game, but Fed Hock countered with an 8-1 run to secure a five-point advantage after eight minutes of play. The Lady Lancers followed with
a 21-8 second quarter surge to secure a comfortable 29-11
cushion at the intermission.
FHHS kept that momentum going into the third period, as the guests went on a 19-11 run to claim a 48-22
lead headed into the finale. Both teams scored 12 points
apiece down the stretch, wrapping up the final margin of
victory.
Southern connected on 7-of-40 shot attempts overall,
including a 2-of-12 effort from three-point range for 17
percent. SHS was outrebounded 39-35 overall and also
went 18-of-30 at the free throw line for 60 percent.
Celestia Hendrix led the Lady Tornadoes with 14
points, followed by Kyrie Swann with six points and Hannah Hill with four markers. Jordan Huddleston was next
with three points, while Maggie Cummins, Shelby Pickens and Haley Hill each chipped in two markers. Darien
See SECTIONALS ‌| 8

OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, Feb. 13
Boys Basketball
River Valley at Oak Hill,
6 p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 6
p.m.
Girls Basketball
Meigs vs. Ironton at
Jackson HS, 6:15
Thursday, Feb. 14
Girls Basketball
Eastern vs. Fed Hock at
Athens HS, 6:15
URG Sports
Women’s Basketball at U
of Cumberlands, 6 p.m.

Men’s Basketball at U of
Cumberlands, 8 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 15
Boys Basketball
Chillicothe at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Southern, 6
p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 5:45
Miller at South Gallia, 6
p.m.
Point Pleasant at Lincoln
County, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Nels-York, 6
p.m.

Gallia Academy sophomore Kendra Barnes (left) shoots over South Point’s Lakin Adams (24) during the Blue Angels
52-48 sectional semi-final win at Meigs High School.

Blue Angels avenge South Point, 52-48
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— The third time’s the
charm.
After losing twice in the
regular season to South
Point the Gallia Academy girls basketball team
avenged those losses with
a 52-48 victory over the
Lady Pointers in the sectional semi-final at Meigs
High School.
South Point (7-12) took
the early 8-6 edge in a slow
paced first period. The
Lady Pointers expanded
their lead to six points by
halftime, out scoring Gallia
Academy (9-14) 14-to-10
in the second quarter.
The Blue Angels came
out in the second half with
a press defense, which
proved to be trouble for
SPHS. Gallia Academy
forced 10 turnovers in the
third period, while out
scoring South Point 21-to9 and taking the six point
lead. The Lady Pointers
scored 17 in the fourth period but GAHS marked 15
to seal the 52-48 victory.
“Everything went pretty
much the way we thought
See ANGELS ‌| 8

GAHS sophomore Micah Curfman (11) shoots a layup during Gallia Academy’s 5248 sectional semi-final victory at Larry R Morrison Gymnasium.

Lady Dragons burn Meigs, 70-31
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Can’t
stop perfection.
The Fairland Lady Dragons rolled
to a second straight 20-0 season, the
Lady Marauders just happened to be
the latest victim of the Ohio Valley
Conference champion. FHS defeated
Meigs 70-31 Monday night in Lawrence County.
The Lady Dragons (20-0) began
the game with a 29-8 run in the first
quarter and followed it with a 1512 spurt in the second. Fairland out
scored Meigs (4-18) 11-to-7 in the
third period and 15-to-4 in the finale

to take the 70-31 victory.
Brittany Krautter led the Maroon and Gold with eight points in
the game, followed by Delilah Fish
with five. Mercadies George, Hannah Cremeans and Kelsey Hudson
each scored four points on the night,
while Ally Maxson, Tess Phelps and
Morgan Russell each marked two.
The Lady Marauders were a perfect 6-of-6 from the charity stripe
in the game, while Fish hit the lone
MHS triple. Meigs committed just
eight fouls in the game.
Haley Woodall led Fairland with
15 points, followed by Terra Stapleton with 14 and Kayla Swinger with
11. Mackenzie Riley finished with

eight points, Chandler Fulks added
five, while Pieper Lewis and Mariah
Chaffin each had four. Caitlyn Stone
contributed three points, while Briana Dickess, Kelsey Riley and Taylor
Perry each had two points.
The Lady Dragons finished 9-of-12
from the charity stripe, equaling 75
percent. Swinger, Stone and Fulks
each had one three pointer in the
game.
Fairland also defeated MHS on
November 29th in Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium by a count of 66-31.
That game was the Lady Marauders
season opener. Meigs lost four consecutive games to end the regular
season.

�Wednesday, February 13, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS

LEGALS

Happy Ads / Birthday / Anniversary

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 12-CV-055
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
Vs
John H. Gibson, et al.
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of
sale to me directed 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, February 22, 2013 at 10:00 a.m. of
said day, the following described real estate:
Situated in the County of
Meigs, in the State of Ohio,
and in the Township of
Columbia and bounded and
described as follows:
Situated in and being a part of
Section 23, Town 9, Range 15,
Columbia Township, Meigs
County, Ohio. And being more
particularly described as follows:
Commencing at the SouthEast corner of the West OneHalf of the North-East Quarter
of the said section 23.
Thence North 90o 00ʼ 00”
West for a total distance of
726.67 feet to a point;
Thence North 00o 00ʼ 00” East
for a total distance of 540.05
feet to a point;
Thence North 90o 00ʼ 00”
West for a total distance of
469.91 feet to an iron pin found
at the Grantors South-East
corner;
Thence along the Grantors
East line North 06o 34ʼ 30”
East for a total distance 353.00
feet to an iron pin set. Said iron
pin set also being the True
Point of Beginning for tract described herein.
THENCE along a new line
South 68 degrees 55 minutes
57 seconds West for a total
distance of 493.04 feet to a
point in the center of State
Route 143 (Passing through an
iron pin set at 463.04 feet)
THENCE following along the
center of said State Route the
following courses North 13o
21ʼ 28” West for a total distance of 85.31 feet to a point in
the center of said State Route
143. THENCE North 16o 15ʼ
41” West for a total distance of
219.23 feet to a point in the
center of said State Route 143.
THENCE leaving said State
Route along the Grantors
North line 90o 00ʼ 00” East for
a total distance of 554.58 feet
to an iron pin found at the
Grantors North-East corner
(Passing through an iron pin
found at 50.00 feet)
THENCE South 06o 34ʼ 30”
West for a total distance of
117.00 feet to the Point of Beginning and containing 2.44
acres more or less.
Being a part of 5.01 Acre tract
as recorded in Volume 4, Page
473, Meigs County Deed Records.
Excepting all legal easements,
right-of-ways, oil, gas and other mineral reservations and
leases of records, if any,
The Basis of Bearing based on
survey by John M. Branner
dated January 1992 and described in Volume 4, page 473,
Meigs County Deed Records.
All Iron Pins set at 5/8” x 30”
Rebar.
Survey performed under the
supervision of Branner Surveying, John M. Branner P.S.
6805, 12500 N. Peach Ridge
Road, Athens, Ohio (614) 5924778
Parcel Number: 05-00390-003
Property Located at: 28660
State Route 143
Albany, OH 45710
Prior Deed Reference: 183/553
Property Appraised at: 100,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% certified
check (personal checks are not
accepted) is due at the time of
the sale by individuals buying
the property. No deposit is required by the bank.
The appraisal did not include
an interior examination of the
house.
Keith O. Wood, Meigs County
Sheriff
Lori N. Wight
Ohio Supreme Court Reg.
#0080789
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480 Cincinnati, OH
45202-4007 (513) 241-3100
1/30/13, 2/6/13, 2/13/13

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LEGALS
SHERIFF`S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
CASE NO.: 12CV067
Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger to BAC
Home Loans Servicing, L.P.,
fka Countrywide Home Loans
Servicing, L.P.
Plaintiff
vs.
Donna J. Spears, et al.,
Defendants
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale to me directed from said
Court in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on the
Front Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse on March
8, 2013, at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following described
premises:
A copy of the complete legal
description can be obtained at
the Meigs County Recorder's
Office, OR Volume 310, Page
459 and OR Book 183, Page
271
Permanent Parcel Number 1500382.000
Property address 180 SOUTH
SECOND AVENUE, MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760
APPRAISED AT: $ 45,000.00
and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
Terms of Sale: Ten Percent
(10%) of the purchase price
down at the time the bid is accepted. Balance to be paid
within Thirty (30) days. Any
sum not paid within said Thirty
(30) days shall bear interest at
the rate of Ten Percent (10%)
per annum from the date of
sale.
ROBERT E. BEEGLE, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
George J. Annos
Attorney for Plaintiff
24755 Chagrin Blvd, Suite 200
Cleveland, OH 44122
(216) 360-7200
2/13 2/20 2/27

Letart Township will hold its
regular meeting February 18,
2013, at the Letart Township
Building at 5:00 pm. Township
books are available for public
viewing.
2/13

LEGALS

LEGALS

SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
12 CV 091, PEOPLES BANK,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS. THOMAS P.
BROOKS, 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, Keith O. Wood,
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, March 8,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
Situated in the County of
Meigs, State of Ohio, and
Township of Salisbury, and
bounded and described as follows:
Situated in 100 Acre Lot No.
370, Section 34, Town 1,
Range 12 of the Ohio Companyʼs Purchase.
Beginning at an iron pin at the
Southwest corner of Grace
Mulfordʼs land; thence North
14 deg. 41' East 116 feet to the
Southeast corner of the Harry
Mohler lot; thence South 861/2 deg. West 187 feet to
Mohlerʼs Southwest corner;
thence South 16 deg. West
200 feet; thence South 86-1/4
deg. East 201 feet; thence
North 14 deg. 41' East 84 feet
to the place of beginning, containing 0.87 acre, more or less.
Save and except a right of way
16 feet wide running Northerly
and Southerly through the East
half of said 0.87 acre for
egress and ingress to the lots
adjoining on the North.
Also save and except a right of
way 16 feet wide running
Westerly from the first exception to the land adjoining on
the West reserved to the
Grantor. This conveyance subject to right of way for power
line heretofore given.
Reference Deed: Volume 150,
Page 719, Meigs County Official Records.
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 1400287.000
Also a 2003 Clayton Worthington manufactured home, Serial No. CLH028203TNAB, Ohio
Certificate of Title
#5300158606.
The above described real estate and manufactured home
are sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
28042 State Route 7,
Cheshire, OH 45620.
CURRENT OWNER: Dorothy
Jane Brooks and Thomas P.
Brooks (real estate); Thomas
P. Brooks (manufactured
home).
REAL ESTATE AND MANUFACTURED HOME APPRAISED AT: $22,500.00. The
real estate and manufactured
home cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal does not
include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
only) down on day of sale, balance (cash or certified check
only) due on confirmation of
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff.
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(2)13, 20, 27

COUNTY : MEIGS
The following applications
and/or verified complaints were
received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us
APPLICATION FOR ANTIDEGRADATION PROJECT
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL CO
PO BOX 269
WILKESVILLE-OH-45695 OH
ACTION DATE : 02/12/2013
RECEIVING WATERS: UNT
PARKER RUN
FACILITY DESCRIPTION:
WASTEWATER
IDENTIFICATION NO. :
0IL00027
Amended proposed action. A
public hearing will be held
March 26,
2013 at 6 PM at the Rutland
Civic Center Council Room,
307 Main St,
Rutland, OH 45775. Submit
comments by 4/2/13 to Permits Processing,
PO Box 1049, Columbus, OH
43216-1049.
2/13

Salem Township Trustees,
Meigs County. Annual financial report for the calendar year
of 2012 is complete and filed.
The report is available through
the Fiscal Officers by appointment. Contact Bonnie Scott at
740-669-3091 for appointment.
Bonnie Scott, Fiscal Officer
Salem Township
Meigs County
26310 Legion Road
Langsville Ohio 45741
2/13

Salem Township Trustees are
accepting closed bids for mowing of Township Cemeteries for
the upcoming year. Any or all
bids can be rejected. A copy of
the mowing requirements and
list of cemeteries can be obtained from the Fiscal Officer.
Bids are to be in by 6:00 PM
February 25, 2013 at the
Salem Fire house on State
Route 124. Bids can be mailed
to Salem Township 26310 Legion Road Langsville OH
45741 Phone 740-669-3091
Bonnie Scott, Fiscal Officer
Salem Township
Meigs County
26310 Legion Road
Langsville Ohio 45741
2/13 2/19 2/22
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
12 CV 089, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. TODD WILLIAM HYSELL AKA TODD W.
HYSELL, 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, Keith O. Wood,
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, February 22,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
PARCEL NO. 1:
Situated in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs and Township of Salisbury, and in Fraction 24, bounded and described as follows:
Beginning at a point in Thomas
Fork Creek on the South line of
said Fraction 24 and at the
Northeast corner of the 8.50
acre tract of land owned by E.
G. Harper; thence in a Westerly direction following the said
South line of said Fraction 24
to the Southeast corner of an
11.42 acre lot belonging to Dot
B. Gilkey; thence in a Northerly direction following the East
line of said lands of Dot B.
Gilkey to the Southwest corner
of a 14 acre lot of land belonging to Goldie H. Elberfeld;
thence in an Easterly direction
following the South line of Goldie Elberfeldʼs land to the center of Thomas Fork Creek;
thence in a Southerly direction
following the meanderings of
said Thomas Fork Creek to the
place of beginning, containing
34.67 acres, more or less.
SAVE AND EXCEPT about
1.30 acres of land heretofore
conveyed to the State of Ohio
for highway purposes.
ALSO EXCEPTING from the
above described real estate
the following:
The following real estate situate in Salisbury Township,
Fraction 24, and beginning at a
point in Thomas Fork Creek on
the South line of Fraction 24 at
the Northeast corner of the
8.50 acre tract formerly owned

The

SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
12 CV 089, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. TODD WILLIAM HYSELL AKA TODD W.
HYSELL, 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, Keith O. Wood,
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, February 22,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
PARCEL NO. 1:
Situated in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs and Township of Salisbury, and in Fraction 24, bounded and described as follows:
Beginning at a point in Thomas
Fork Creek on the South line of
said Fraction 24 and at the
Northeast corner of the 8.50
acre tract of land owned by E.
G. Harper; thence in a Westerly direction following the said
South line of said Fraction 24
to the Southeast corner of an
11.42 acre lot belonging to Dot
B. Gilkey; thence in a Northerly direction following the East
line of said lands of Dot B.
Gilkey to the Southwest corner
of a 14 acre lot of land belonging to Goldie H. Elberfeld;
thence in an Easterly direction
following the South line of Goldie Elberfeldʼs land to the center of Thomas Fork Creek;
thence in a Southerly direction
following the meanderings of
said Thomas Fork Creek to the
place of beginning, containing
34.67 acres, more or less.
SAVE AND EXCEPT about
1.30 acres of land heretofore
conveyed to the State of Ohio
for highway purposes.
ALSO EXCEPTING from the
above described real estate
the following:
The followingLEGALS
real estate situate in Salisbury Township,
Fraction 24, and beginning at a
point in Thomas Fork Creek on
the South line of Fraction 24 at
the Northeast corner of the
8.50 acre tract formerly owned
by E. G. Harper, which is also
the Southeast corner of 34.67
acre tract of land described in
Volume 147, Page 163, of the
Deed Records of Meigs
County, Ohio; thence West following the South line of said
Fraction 24, 306 feet to the
center of State Route 143;
thence in a Northerly direction
along the center line of State
Route 143, 294 feet to the center of a meandering run;
thence East following center
line of said run to where said
run intersects with the center
of Thomas Fork Creek, the
East line of said 34.67 acre
tract of land; thence in a
Southerly direction following
the meanderings of Thomas
Fork Creek to the place of beginning, containing 2.17 acres
of real estate, more or less.
ALSO EXCEPTING two (2.00)
acres of land conveyed to Matthew Riffle and Christina Riffle,
as recorded in Volume 337,
Page 245, Meigs County Deed
Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 0.37 acre
of land conveyed to Brenda
Hysell as recorded in Volume
305, Page 465, Meigs County
Deed Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 0.326 acre
of land conveyed to Brenda
Hysell as recorded in Volume
64, Page 105, Meigs County
Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 0.75 acre
of land conveyed to Lewis
Harper, Sr. and Linda Harper
as recorded in Volume 305,
Page 269, Meigs County Deed
Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 2.35 acres
of land conveyed to Raymond
D. Roach as recorded in
Volume 279, Page 793, Meigs
County Deed Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 2.9911
acres of land conveyed to
Christopher T. Taylor and Connie L. Taylor as recorded in
Volume 94, Page 559, Meigs
County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING .63 acres,
more or less, conveyed to
Robert L. Bailey and Kelley R.
Bailey by deed dated March
26, 2011, and recorded in
Volume 310, Page 310, Meigs
County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 6.00
acres, more or less, and a right
of way, conveyed to Jerome
Howard by deed dated June
16, 2010, and recorded in
Volume 299, Page 520, Meigs
County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING the real
estate, or that part, conveyed
to Raymond H. Roach and
Pamela S. Roach by deed
dated March 11, 2003, and recorded in Volume 166, Page
113, Meigs County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING a right of
way recorded in Volume 299,
Page 518, Meigs County Official Records.
Said real estate is subject to a
Boundary Line Agreement
dated November 19, 2002, and
recorded in Volume 169, Page
803, Meigs County Official Records.
Reference Deed: Volume 136,
Page 216, Meigs County Official Records.
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 1400691.000
PARCEL NO. 2:
The following described real
estate situated in Salisbury
Township, Meigs County, in
the State of Ohio, Fraction 24,
Township 2 North, Range 13
West, of the Ohio Company
Purchase, and being a new
parcel created out of the Lyle
W. Hysell property (Volume
236, Page 297 Meigs County
Deed Records and Volume
243, Page 257, Meigs County
Deed Records) bounded and
described as follows:
Commencing at the intersection of the south line of Fraction 24 and Ohio State Route
143; thence along the centerline of Ohio State Route 143,
the following two courses:
North 05 degrees 38 minutes
42 seconds East 96.89 feet
North 02 degrees 30 minutes
11 seconds East 47.15 feet to
the point of beginning of the
real estate described herein;
thence continuing along the
centerline of Ohio State Route
143 North 02 degrees 30
minutes 12 seconds East
11.94 feet;
thence along the new parcel
line North 86 degrees 23
minutes 01 seconds West
279.92 feet to an iron pin set

nie L. Taylor as recorded in
Volume 94, Page 559, Meigs
County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING .63 acres,
more or less, conveyed to
Robert Sentinel
L. Bailey and •
Kelley
R. 6
Daily
Page
Bailey by deed dated March
26, 2011, and recorded in
Volume 310, Page 310, Meigs
County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING 6.00
acres, more or less, and a right
of way, conveyed to Jerome
Howard by deed dated June
16, 2010, and recorded in
Volume 299, Page 520, Meigs
County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING the real
estate, or that part, conveyed
to Raymond H. Roach and
Pamela S. Roach by deed
dated March 11, 2003, and recorded in Volume 166, Page
113, Meigs County Official Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING a right of
way recorded in Volume 299,
Page 518, Meigs County Official Records.
Said real estate is subject to a
Boundary Line Agreement
dated November 19, 2002, and
recorded in Volume 169, Page
803, Meigs County Official Records.
Reference Deed: Volume 136,
Page 216, Meigs County Official Records.
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 1400691.000
PARCEL NO. 2:
The following described real
estate situated in Salisbury
Township, Meigs County, in
the State of Ohio, Fraction 24,
Township 2 North, Range 13
West, of the Ohio Company
Purchase, and being a new
parcel created out of the Lyle
W. Hysell property (Volume
236, Page 297 Meigs County
Deed Records and Volume
243, Page 257, Meigs County
Deed Records) bounded and
described as follows:
Commencing at the intersection of the south line of Fraction 24 and Ohio State Route
143; thence along the centerline of Ohio State Route 143,
the following two courses:
North 05 degrees 38 minutes
42 seconds East 96.89 feet
North 02 degrees 30 minutes
11 seconds East 47.15 feet to
the point of beginning of the
real estate described herein;
thence continuing along the
centerline of Ohio State Route
143 North 02LEGALS
degrees 30
minutes 12 seconds East
11.94 feet;
thence along the new parcel
line North 86 degrees 23
minutes 01 seconds West
279.92 feet to an iron pin set
by this survey, passing an iron
pin set by this survey at 31.90
feet;
thence along the Matthew
and/or Christina Riffle property
(Volume 337, Page 245, Meigs
County Deed Records) the following two courses:
1) South 00 degrees 55
minutes 14 seconds East
120.22 feet to an iron pin found
by this survey;
2) North 89 degrees 04
minutes 46 seconds East
100.00 feet to an iron pin found
by this survey;
thence along the Brenda
Hysell property (Volume 305,
Page 465, Meigs County Deed
Records) the following two
courses:
1) North 04 degrees 09
minutes 51 seconds East
100.00 feet to a corner;
2) South 86 degrees 23
minutes 01 seconds East
170.00 feet to the point of beginning, passing an iron pin
found by this survey at 140.00
feet, containing 0.326 acres,
more or less.
Subject to all legal easements.
The above description was
made in accordance with an
actual survey conducted under the supervision of Eugene
Triplett, P.S. #6766 conducted
on July 16, 1997. Bearings are
assumed and are intended
only to express angular measurement.
Reference Deed: Volume 64,
Page 105, Meigs County Official Records.
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 1400691.003
PARCEL NO. 3:
Situated in the Township of
Salisbury, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:
Being in Fraction 24, Town 2,
Range 13, in Salisbury Township, bounded and described
as follows:
Beginning at a point in the center of State Route 143, which
point of beginning is 44 feet
north of the north fraction line
of Fraction 32 and south fraction line of Fraction 24; thence
100 feet north following the
center line of State Route 143;
thence west 170 feet to a
marker; thence south 100 feet
to a fence line; thence east
along said fence line 170 feet
to the centerline of State Route
143, the place of beginning,
containing approximately
37/100 acre, more or less.
The Grantees are hereby further granted a perpetual easement for the purpose of obtaining water from the water well
drilled approximately 300 feet
from the boundary line of the
above-described real estate;
said easement to include the
right to enter upon the remaining premises of the Grantors
for the purpose of installing
such equipment as may be desirable for the obtaining of water from said well by mechanical means and the placing of
such equipment, including water line, pumps, electric lines
and such other equipment as
may be necessary or convenient for the exercise of this privilege. The easement further includes the right to enter upon
the premises for the purpose of
maintaining the well and repairing and replacing all equipment used in connection with
the exercise of the easement.
No person other than Lyle W.
Hysell and Leona Hysell, or the
survivor of them, shall ever
have any right to use the water from this well. If any person other than Lyle W. Hysell
or Leona Hysell shall become
the owner of the property upon
which the well is situated, then
the right to use water from the
well shall become exclusive to
Thomas E. Hysell and Brenda
Hysell, their heirs and assigns.
Reference Deed: Volume 324,
Page 347, Meigs County Official Records.
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 1400698.000
Subject to the United States of
Americaʼs right of redemption
under 28USC Section 2410(C).
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
39367 State Route 143,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
CURRENT OWNER:
Continued(Parcel
on next page
Nos. 1 and 2) Todd W. Hysell;
(Parcel No. 3) Todd William
Hysell.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: $20,000.00. The real es-

�554.12 feet to an iron pin set at
the northeast corner of an
82.540 acres tract as conveyed to Scott and Pamela
Napper by Tract No. I of Official Records Volume
56, Page
www.mydailysentinel.com
301 of the Meigs County Recorder's Office, passing
through two iron pins set at
distances of plus 40.00 feet
and plus 140.00 feet, respectively;
LEGALS
Money To Lend
Thence, leaving the section
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
line with the north line of said
the Ohio Division of Financial InNapper property, the following
stitutions Office of Consumer Afthree courses: (I) North
fairs BEFORE you refinance your
86°45'24" West a distance of
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
660.00 feet to an iron pin set;
of requests for any large advance
(2) Thence South 03°42'25"
payments of fees or insurance.
West a distance of 171.60 feet
Call the Office of Consumer Affito an iron pin set in the south
ars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
line of the northeast quarter of
learn if the mortgage broker or
Section 19;
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
(3) Thence, with the quarter
from
the Ohio Valley Publishing
section line, North 86°45'24"
Company)
West a distance of 668.37 feet
to The Point of Beginning;
EMPLOYMENT
Description of Parcel No, 8
Containing 18.604 acres,
more'or less, being a new split
Drivers &amp; Delivery
out of Parcel No. 1300598.000.
Gallia-Meigs Community AcSubject to all legal right-oftion seeks a Permanent, Partways, easement, restrictions,
time, Transportation Driver for
reservations, and zoning reguthe Non-Emergency Transportlations of record. Subject to the ation program. Usually 24 – 40
right-of-way of County Road
hours weekly. Willingness to
No. 65.
travel in and out of the area
Subject to a 50.00 feet wide
transporting clients to medical
easement being reserved unto
appointments. Must have valid
the grantors (Bruner Land
drivers license, good driving
Company, Inc.), their heirs,
record, and be insurable. Send
and or assigns, forever. Said
resume with work history and
easement being for the purbackground to GMCAA, Attn.
pose of running utilities to othS. Edwards, POB 272,
er parcels of land on or near
Cheshire, Ohio 45620. ApplicCounty Road No. 65. Said
ations accepted through
easement runs in a north-south 2/18/13. GMCAA EOE
direction across the northeast
2/10 2/12 2/13 2/14 2/15
end of the above-described
property with the east line of
Help Wanted General
said easement being the
IMMEDIATE OPENING
centerline of County Road No.
District Circulation
65. Containing 0.666 acre,
Sale Manager
more or less, of easement.
Responsibilities include recruitSubject to the 100-Year Flood
ing and training Carriers, CusPlain restrictions, if applicable.
tomer Service and Meeting
MI iron pins set are 5/8" x 30"
Sales goals. If you have a posrebar capped and labeled
itive attitude, are self-starter,
"Claus 6456".
and a team player, we would
The bearings in this descriplike to talk to you. Must be detion are for angle calculations
pendable and have reliable
only and are based on the
transportation. Position offers
north line of Section 19 used
all company benefits including
as North 86°45'24" West.
Health, Dental, Vision and Life
A plat of the above-described
Insurance, 401K, Paid Vacasurvey has been submitted for
tion, and Personal Days.
file at the County Engineer's
Please send resume to:
Office.
DAVID KILLGALLON
The above description preGallipolis Daily Tribune
pared by Roger W. Claus, Re825 Third Ave.
gistered Surveyor No. 6456,
Gallipolis OH 45631
based on an actual field surOr email to
vey of March 21, 2005; said
dkillgallon@civitasmedia.com
survey being subject to any
facts that may be disclosed in
a full and accurate title search. Local Home Health Agency
Prior deed: Official Records
Now Hiring for Home Health
Volume 208, Page 129
aides. STNA's, PCA's Flexible
Surveyor
scheduling. Will trian. If interMEIGS COUNTY SHERIFFS
ested please call 740-441OFFICE
1377
SHERIFF KEITH 0. WOOD
Looking for salesperson
104 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
for lawn, garden, and
Phone: 740-992-3371 Fax: 740 Ag. equipment at
-992-2654
Bridgeport Equipment
Date: 1/17/2013
To: Shapiro Van Ess Phillips &amp; and Tool in Bidwell,
Barragate Fax # 847-627-8805 Ohio. Sales and equipRe: Sheriffs Sales Case #
ment
12CV036
experience preferred
JPMorgan Chase _vs_ Randy
but not required. 740Smith
The above property was ap446-2412
praised on 12/20/2012. It apSalesperson needed Janitorial
praised for
– Restaurant Products
$80,000.00 . The appraisers
Contact 446-3163 or
DID NOT gain entry to the
jhsupplyllc@gmail.com
home for appraisal.
The property has been set for
Wanted experienced barsale on the courthouse steps.
tenders. Call after 5pm ask for
The sale date is
Will 419-310-0564
Friday February 22, 2013 at 10
am.
Medical / Health
Also please note that 10% cerDr. Randall Hawkins is now
tified check (personal checks
taking new patients. 2520 Valare not accepted) is due at the
ley drive Suite 212 Pt. Pleastime of the sale by individuals
buying the property. No depos- ant WV. (304)675-7700
it is required by the bank.
Excepting and reserving to
EDUCATION
former Grantors all coal, oil
and gas and other minerals in
and under the above deBusiness &amp; Trade School
scribed real estate.
Gallipolis Career
College
1/30 2/6 2/13
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost &amp; Found
Found tire on 2100 Block Mt.
Vernon Ave. fell off of a maroon Chevy ext. cab truck.
Tire is located on the grassy island by the pole on Mt. Vernon Ave.
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
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(Careers Close To Home)
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Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES
Houses For Sale
3 BR 1968 Econo trailer 12' X
50' w/12' X 22' room addition
for sale, $800, tires &amp; axles
incld. You haul away. 740-4162960
5 room house w/furn, 15 X 15
in ground pool (fenced), half
basement, 1.5 acres, $85,000
by appt. Harrisonville, OH.
740-992-3152
Land (Acreage)
76 AC With barn, great for livestock/hunting near Timber
Ridge Lake. Old 2 story could
be hunting cabin, $125,000,
Bev @ Stillpass Realty 740643-2589
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses

SERVICES

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

Professional Services

2 bdrm apt. appliances furnished, water pd, in Centenary
$425 phone (740) 256-1135.

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

J &amp; C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience, insured
No job too big or small.
304-675-2213
304-377-8547
FINANCIAL SERVICES

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Help Wanted General

WANTED

Part-time position available to assist an
individual with developmental disabilities
in Meigs County (Shade). 25hrs/wk: 8p8a S/S. Must have high school diploma or
GED, Valid driver’s license, three years good
driving experience and adequate automobile
insurance. $9.25/hr, after training.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604
Jackson, OH 45640
Deadline for applicants: 2/15/13.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

60392204

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Apartments/Townhouses

Miscellaneous

Furnished 1 bedroom Apartment - Racine Oh, NO PETS,
740-591-5174
Middleport, 2 BR furnished apt,
no pets, dep &amp; ref. 740-9920165
newly remolded 2BR apt. on
588 for rent water and trash included. No pets call 419-3089741 or 419-359-1768
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Upstairs Apartment, 238 1st
Ave. Kitchen with stove &amp; refrigerator. No Pets. $425 month
+ Utilities &amp; deposit also references required 740-446-4926
Houses For Rent
Small 2 bedroom mobile home
in Middleport, $250 rent, $250
dep, 1yr lease, no pets, no
calls after 9pm, 740-992-5097
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
3BR, Trailer. $500 rent, $500
deposit. 2005 Mazda 70,000
miles. $7,500, new ties, Ex.
Condition 740-367-0641
Trailer for rent. 2 BR 1Bath in
country. Rent $350 plus Heat
&amp; Electric Also $300 deposit.
No inside pets (740)256-6202
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

ANIMALS
Want To Buy
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00 388-0011 or 4417870
AUTOMOTIVE
Autos for Sale
2007 Buick Lacross CXL fully
loaded excellent condition
28,500 miles $12,900 (304)675
-6555
2011 BMW 750 LI, like new,
40,000 miles, $65,000. Tom
Anderson, 740-992-3348

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877-356-1913
MY COMPUTER WORKS
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections-FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help.
1-877-617-7822
Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Manufactured Homes

Trucks/SUVs/Vans
2000 Dodge 360 4 X 4, blue,
quad cab, salvage title, body,
motor &amp; transmission good,
$1000. 740-416-2960
2001 Dodge 318 4 X 4 single
cab, standard, white, $5000,
132,000 miles, 740-416-2960
2006 Ford Turbo 350 Dulley
4X4 one owner ext. cab.
28,000 miles $26,995.00 Like
New 740-446-8151
2007 Chevy K1500 Silverado,
4 X 4 ext cab, auto, V8, one
owner, good maint, 89,000
miles, $8600 or make a deal.
740-992-0101
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

AAG
Ever Consider a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years old?
Stay in your home &amp; increase
cash flow! Safe &amp; Effective!
Call Now for your FREE DVD!
Call Now 866-935-7730

3 BR 2 bath Mobile home on
farm, All Appliances, $600 mo,
Plus $300 utility allowance,
540)729-1331
Get A NEW HOME! Zero
Money Down EZ Finance with
your land or family land
(740)446-3570
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Mobile Homes For Rent
Water/Trash paid. NO PETS!
Great Location @ Johnson's
MH Park! Call 740-578-4177
WANTED Single wides and
Double wides- Top trade in allowance free appraisals Freedom Homes of Gallipolis 740446-3093
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
Continued on next page

Auctions

LARGE AUCTION
SAT. FEB. 16TH, 2013
@ 10:00 A.M.

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER RT. 62 N. MASON,
WV. SELLING ESTATE FURNITURE COLLECTIBLES,
MODERN FURNISHINGS FROM 4 DIFFERENT HOUSES.

ANTIQUE AND MODERN FURNITURE + APPL.
FANCY OAK SIDEBAORD STAINLESS STEEL
REF-W/ICE MAKER (LIKE NEW), MAYTAG
WASHER &amp; DRYER, LG. VICT DRESSER, 3 PC
QUEEN SIZE BR SUIT, SET OF 8 SHEILD BACK
CHAIRS, ROUND OAK TABLE &amp; CHAIRS, OTHER
ANTIQUE DRESSERS, TABLES &amp;CHAIRS, NICE
2 PC LIVING ROOM SUIT, 2 PC MAPLE HUTCH,
WHIRLPOOL REF. GLIDER ROCKER, 6 NICE
ORIENTAL TYPE RUGS, CEDAR CHEST, BAR
STOOLS, CURIO CAB, QUILT RACKS, ROBOT
SWEEPER (NEW) &amp; MUCH MORE.
GLASSWARE &amp; COLLECTIBLES
CRANBERRY, HULL, FINGER OIL LAMP, NICE
SELECTION OF OLD BOOKS, F.C. BERRY
VIOLIN, LEATHER HORSE, ROCKING HORSES,
LONGENBERGER UNBRELLA STAND, LAMPS,
SETH THOMAS CLOCK, PICTURES, FRAMES,
PRINTS, LINNIS &amp; MUCH MORE. VERY PARTIAL
LISTINGS, BULDINGS WILL BE FULL!
GUNS &amp; BOW
50 CAL, THOMPSON MUZZLELOADER, 50. CAL,
HAWKINS MUZZLELOADER, BEAR COMPOUND
BOW IN THE CASE (NICE)
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR #A1955
304-773-5447 or 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures

60393226

westerly direction 260 feet,
Hysell, their heirs and assigns. more or less to the head of the
Reference Deed: Volume 324,
cave or waterfall; thence south
Page 347, Meigs County Offi36 feet, more or less to a
cial Records.
an “x” in the rock; thence in an
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 14Wednesday,
February 13,easterly
2013direction 300 feet
00698.000
more or less to the place of beSubject to the United States of
ginning. The purpose of this
Americaʼs right of redemption
conveyance is to convey all the
under 28USC Section 2410(C). hollow coming within the above
The above described real esboundaries.
tate is sold “as is” without warPARCEL NO.
3: The following
Continued
previous page
LEGALS
ranties from
or covenants.
real estate situate in the
PROPERTYLEGALS
ADDRESS:
County of Meigs, State of Ohio
39367 State Route 143,
and in the Village of Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
and bounded and described as
CURRENT OWNER: (Parcel
follows: Lots Nos. 1 and 2 of
Nos. 1 and 2) Todd W. Hysell;
David H. Lesley Subdivision of
(Parcel No. 3) Todd William
Lot No. 431 in the City (now
Hysell.
Village) of Pomeroy, Meigs
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
County, Ohio and also part of
AT: $20,000.00. The real essaid Lot No. 431 bounded as
tate cannot be sold for less
follows: Beginning at the
than 2/3rds the appraised
southwest corner of said Lot
value. The appraisal does not
No. 1 of said Subdivision;
include an interior examination thence south 6 deg. west 50
of any structures, if any, on the feet; thence south 73 deg. east
real estate.
162 feet to the southwest
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
corner of said Lot No. 2 of said
only) down on day of sale, bal- Subdivision; thence with the
ance (cash or certified check
west line of said Lot No. 2
only) due on confirmation of
northerly 50 feet to the south
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) reline of said Lot No. 1; thence
quires successful bidders to
north 73 deg. west along said
pay recording fees and associ- south line to the place of beated costs to the Sheriff.
ginning.
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPExcepting Lots 1 and 2 of DavERATE UNDER THE DOCid H. Lasley Subdivision, which
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. were conveyed to Jack CarPROSPECTIVE PURsey and Neacil Carsey, togethCHASERS ARE URGED TO
er with 17-1/2 feet off the north
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
side of Lot No. 3, by deed rePUBLIC RECORDS OF
corded in Volume 247, Page
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
485, Meigs County Deed ReATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
cords.
Michael L. Barr, LITTLE,
Further excepting 1.36 acres
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211more or less conveyed to Roy
213 E. Second Street,
E. Jones and Shelma Jones by
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Teledeed recorded in Volume 251,
phone: (740) 992-6689
Page 51, Meigs County Deed
(1) 30; (2) 6, 13
Records.
Excepting all the coal therein
Sheriffʼs Sale of Real Estate
and other mineral and the right
(Ohio Revised Code Sec.
to mine the same without en2329.26)
cumbrance to the surface and
The State of Ohio, Meigs
all ways and the right of way
County
along any mineral seam which
CITY NATIONAL BANK
are reserved by former grantPlaintiff
ors, their heirs and assigns.
VS. CASE NO. 12-CV-029
Parcel No. 16-00036
MICHAEL DELLAVALLE, ET
Parcel No. 16-00037
AL
Parcel No. 16-00038
Defendants
Parcel No. 16-00039
In pursuance of an Order of
Parcel No. 16-00040
Sale in the above entitled acLast Source of Title: O.R. 257,
tion, I will offer for sale at pubPage 953, Office of the Relic auction, on the Courthouse
steps in Pomeroy, in the above corder, Meigs County, Ohio.
*Said Premises Located at:
named County, on Friday, the
212 UNION AVENUE,
8th day of March, 2013 at
POMEROY, OHIO 45769.
10:00 oʼclock A.M., the followSaid Premises Appraised at
ing described real estate, situated in the Village of Pomeroy, $185,000.00 and cannot be
sold for less than two-thirds of
County of Meigs and State of
that amount. “All buyers beOhio, to wit:
ware: The appraised value
TRACT ONE:
may have been established
Situate in the Village of
based on an exterior view only
Pomeroy, Salisbury Township,
of any structures located on
Meigs County, Ohio, and bethe premises described
ing the south 30.3 feet of Lot
herein.”
Number 3, Lot Numbers 4, 5
TERMS OF SALE: The purand 6 and part of Lot Number
chaser at the foreclosure sale
7 in D. H. Lasleyʼs Subdivision
shall be required to deposit the
of Lot Number 431 and being
sum of 10% of the purchase
described as follows:
price in the form of cash or cerBeginning at an iron pipe on
tified check (personal checks
the westerly side of David
are not accepted). The balStreet, said Iron pipe being
ance is to be paid in full within
north 4° 00' east 391.6 feet
thirty (30) days after date of
from the centerline of Union
Avenue, along the westerly line Sale. If the purchaser fails to
complete the transaction withof David Street; thence south
in thirty (30) days, the deposit
4° 00' west 214.5 feet along
shall be forfeited to Plaintiff.
the westerly side of David
KEITH WOOD, Sheriff of
Street to the center of a small
Meigs County, Ohio.
creek; thence up the center of
Richard F. Bentley, Attorney
said creek north 65° 15' west
for Plaintiff,
212 feet to the easterly end of
425 Center St., Ironton, Ohio
a culvert under a stone foot
45638, (740)532-7000.
bridge; thence north 8° 39'
2/13 2/20 2/27
east 33 feet to a point 2 feet
easterly from the base of a set
DESCRIPTION OF PARCEL
of steps; thence north 77° 31'
NO. 8
west 68.5 feet to a rock;
Situated in the State of Ohio,
thence north 12° 00' east 11
feet to a rock; thence north 34° County of Meigs, Township of
Salem, being in the northeast
15' west about 225 feet to an
quarter of Section 19, Range
ion pipe in the westerly fence
15 West, Township 8 North, of
line of said Lot Number 431;
"The Ohio Company First Purthence south 73° 15' east
411.8 feet to the point of begin- chase of 1787", being part of a
101.85 acres tract (103.829
ning, crossing a + cut in out
crop of rock on hillside at 144.9 acre by new survey) as conveyed to Bruner Land Comfeet for reference, containing
pany, Inc. by Official Records
1.36 acres, more or less.
Volume 208, Page 129 of the
The bearings in the above deMeigs County Recorder's Ofscription are base on a survey
fice, and being bounded and
by Homer Hysell dated
described as follows:
November 9, 1962.
Commencing for Reference at
Excepting and reserving to
an iron pin set at the northeast
former Grantors, the right to
corner of Section 19 (Note:
grant an easement for water
Reference bearing on the north
and sewer across the real esline of Section 19 used as
tate for the benefit of property
North 86°45'24" West.);
heretofore conveyed to Jack
Thence, with the north line of
Carsey and Neacil Carsey by
Section 19, North 86°45'24"
deed recorded in Volume 247,
Page 485, Meigs County Deed West a distance of 1,760 88
feet to a point at the northwest
Records.
corner of a 2.30 acres tract as
Excepting all the coal therein
conveyed to Lois Barrett by Ofand other minerals and the
ficial Records Volume 142,
right to mine the same without
Page 276 of the Meigs County
encumbrance to the surface
Recorder's Office;
and all ways and right of way
Thence, with the west line of
along any mineral seam which
said Barrett property and the
are reserved by former granteast line of a 59.00 acres
ors, their heirs and assigns.
residue tract of an original 60
Reference Deed: Volume 264,
Page 233, Meigs County Deed acres tract as conveyed to
Kathleen and Diana Caton by
Records.
Official Records Volume 87,
TRACT TWO:
Page 823 of the Meigs County
PARCEL NO. 1: The following
Recorder's Office, South
real estate situated in the Vil03°43'39" West a distance of
lage of Pomeroy, County of
2,693.08 feet to an iron pin set
Meigs and State of Ohio and
in the south line of the northbounded and described as foleast quarter of Section 19;
lows, to-wit: Lot Nos. 429, 430
and 431 except so much of last Thence, with the quarter section line, South 86°45'24" East
named Lot #431 as is contained in Lots #1 and 2 of Dav- a distance of 433.47 feet to an
un-marked stone found at the
id H. Lasleyʼs Subdivision and
northeast corner of a 36.610
also excepting from said Lot
acres tract as conveyed to
#431 a tract of land 50 feet by
Kathleen and Diana Caton by
162 feet which lies south of
Official Records Volume 87,
Subdivision #1 and west of
Subdivision #2. This grant also Page 823 of the Meigs County
Recorder's Office, being THE
includes Lots Nos. 3, 4, 5, 6
TRUE POINT OF BEGINand 7 of David H. Lasleyʼs
NINQ for this description;
Subdivision of said Lot #431.
Thence, from said Point of BeThis grant also includes that
ginning and leaving the quarter
certain small angular piece off
section line, North 43°13'35"
the southwest corner of said
East a d; stance of 1,578.92
Lot No. 430.
feet to a point in the centerline
Also excepting all the coal
therein and other minerals and of County Road No. 65 (Red
Hill Road), passing through
the right to mine the same
two iron pins set at distances
without encumbrances to the
of plus 1,448.92 feet and plus
surface and all ways and right
of way along any mineral seam 1,548.92 feet, respectively;
Thence, with the centerline of
which are reserved by former
County Road No. 65, the folgrantors, their heirs and aslowing five courses: (I) South
signs.
32°54'52" East a distance of
PARCEL NO. 2: The following
93.00 feet to a point;
described real estate situated
(2) Thence South 31°31'39"
in the Village of Pomeroy,
East a distance of 187.54 feet
County of Meigs and State of
to a point;
Ohio and in Fraction 17, Town
(3) Thence South 28°59'28"
2, Range 13 and bounded and
East a distance of 131.81 feet
described as follows: Beginto a point;
ning at an “x” on a rock (which
(4) Thence South 26°58'26"
is the southeast corner of the
East a distance of 132.74 feet
tract hereby conveyed.) This
corner is 57 feet northerly of an to a point;
(5) Thence South 32°32'46"
“x” in a large rock, and also
East a distance of 35.49 feet to
about 78 feet northerly from
the northeast corner of Lot No. a point in the east line of Section 19;
432 now or formerly owned by
Peter Botzel. Thence north 264 Thence, leaving the road with
the section line, South
feet more or less to a rock
marked with an “x”; thence in a 03°42'25" West a distance of
554.12 feet to an iron pin set at
westerly direction 260 feet,
more or less to the head of the the northeast corner of an
cave or waterfall; thence south 82.540 acres tract as conveyed to Scott and Pamela
36 feet, more or less to a
Napper by Tract No. I of Offian “x” in the rock; thence in an
cial Records Volume 56, Page
easterly direction 300 feet
more or less to the place of be- 301 of the Meigs County Recorder's Office, passing
ginning. The purpose of this
conveyance is to convey all the through two iron pins set at
hollow coming within the above distances of plus 40.00 feet
and plus 140.00 feet, respectboundaries.
ively;
PARCEL NO. 3: The following
Thence, leaving the section
real estate situate in the
County of Meigs, State of Ohio line with the north line of said
Napper property, the following
and in the Village of Pomeroy
and bounded and described as three courses: (I) North
86°45'24" West a distance of
follows: Lots Nos. 1 and 2 of
660.00 feet to an iron pin set;
David H. Lesley Subdivision of

�Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Angels

Defenders fall
to Cross Lanes
Christian, 53-43
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Shooting woes stymie the OVCS offense.
The Ohio Valley Christian boys
basketball team shot 0-of-15 from
beyond the arc Monday night, as the
Defenders lost by a count of 53-43 to
host Cross Lanes Christian.
The Defenders (9-8) were held to
just six points in the opening stanza,
while CLCS (15-4) marked 16 in
the quarter. Ohio Valley Christian
answered with an 11-to-8 run in the
second period to cut the Warriors
lead to seven points at halftime.
After the half OVCS rallied for a
14-to-12 third period run that cut the
Cross Lanes lead to five points headed into the finale. The Defenders
scored 12 points over the final eight
minutes but the Warriors scored 17
to seal the 53-43 victory.
T.G. Miller led the Defenders

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

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From Page 5
it would,” Gallia Acadmey coach Renee Barnes
said. “Our press was the
key tonight, if we hadn’t
have put the pressure on
with the press got the
steals and the momentum
we probably would have
lost this game.”
Kendra Barnes led
the Blue Angels with 24
points on the night, followed by Micah Curfman
with 14. Chelsy Slone
finished with 11 points,
Abby Wiseman marked
three and Halley Barnes
finished with two points
for the victors.
Halley
Barnes
led
GAHS with six rebounds,
while Wiseman had a
team-high three assists.
Curfman finished with
five steals and two blocks

with 20 points, followed by Chance
Burleson with 14. Richard Bowman
marked four points, Phil Hollingshead added three and Evan Bowman
rounded out the OVCS scoring with
two points.
Ohio Valley Christian shot 14of-43 (32.6 percent) from the field
including 0-of-15 from three point
range. The Defenders shot 15-of19 (78.9 percent) from the charity
stripe. Ohio Valley Christian forced
11 turnovers in the game.
Cross Lanes Christian was led
by Tyler Corbin with 20 points and
Grant Humphrey with 18 points.
Austin Davis had 10 points, Anthony
Mahgiras added three points, while
Kyle Davis rounded out the CLCS
scoring with two points.
The Warriors shot 17-of-39 (43.6
percent) from the field, 3-of-11 (27.3
percent) from three and 12-of-17
(70.6 percent) from the line.

to lead the Gallia Academy defense.
As a team the Blue and
White had 22 rebounds,
eight assists, 13 steals and
two blocks. Gallia Academy committed eight
turnovers, while forcing
18. The Blue Angels shot
16-of-51 (31.4 percent)
from the field, including
2-of-10 (20 percent) from
three point range. Curfman and Slone accounted
for the GAHS triples. The
Blue Angels were 18-of26 (69.2 percent) from
the charity stripe, led by
Kendra Barnes, who was
8-of-8.
The Lady Pointers were
led by Haley Rawlings
with 15 points and Brett
Justice with 14. Abbey
Winkler had nine points,
while Lakin Adams and
Aundrea Bradburn each

had four. Bonnie Hilman
rounded out the SPHS
scoring with two points.
Gallia Academy advances to the sectional
final where it must play
SEOAL co-champion and
number one seed Jackson
(21-1). The Ironladies
have defeated GAHS in
both meetings this season but they are coming
off their first loss of the
season. The Blue Angels
have now won four consecutive games.
“Now we have Jackson, we’re preparing,
we’ve seen them and we
know what they do,” said
Barnes. “We’re going to
get our girls focused this
week, get prepared and
look at some game film.
We’ll go from there and
see what happens, that’s
all we can do.”

Sectionals
From Page 5
Diddle rounded things out with one point.
Federal Hocking was 24-of-55 from the
field, including a 3-of-12 effort from behind the arc for 25 percent. The guests
committed 24 turnovers and also went
9-of-22 at the charity stripe for 41 percent.
Cheyenne Singer paced the Lady Lancers with 14 points, followed by Ashton

Cale with 12 points and Megan Thompson
with 11 markers. Carley Tabler added 10
points to the winning cause, while McKenzie Steeler chipped in eight markers.
It was the final basketball game for seniors Caitlyn Cowdrey, Maggie Cummins,
Shelby Pickens and Kyrie Swann in the
Purple and Gold. Southern finished the
season with a 4-12 mark in Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division play.

Raiders
From Page 5
ond period with a brief 5-0
run, allowing them to trim
their deficit down to 28-16
at the intermission. River
Valley — which committed
14 turnovers, seven in each
half — shot just 22 percent

from the floor in the opening 16 minutes of play.
RVHS managed to pull
back to within 12 points
(35-23) with 3:14 left in
the third quarter after a
field goal by Cady Gilmore,
but CHS closed the period
with a 5-0 spurt to secure a

40-23 cushion headed into
the finale.
Crooksville claimed it
final 21-point lead (46-25)
with 3:53 left in regulation, but the Lady Raiders closed the game with
a 7-3 run to wrap up the
17-point outcome.
The Lady Ceramics
advance to the sectional
final on Saturday, as they
will face 12th-seeded Alexander at 2:45 p.m. at
Jackson High School. The

Lady Spartans upset fifthseeded Nelsonville-York
with a 41-38 decision.
Rachael Smith led River
Valley with eight points,
while Chelsea Copley and
Leia Moore each contributed six markers. Cady
Gilmore was next with
five points, while Courtney Smith added three
points.
Ashley Cheesebrew and
Justyce Stout rounded out
the RVHS scoring with

two points apiece. The
Lady Raiders were just
2-of-4 at the free throw
line for 50 percent.
Crooksville
finished
the night 18-of-47 from
the field, which included
a 2-of-9 effort from threepoint range for 22 percent. CHS committed 13
turnovers and also went
11-of-20 at the charity
stripe for 55 percent.
Shelbi VanMeter paced
the Lady Ceramics with

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a game-high 23 points,
followed by Sadona Sowers with eight points and
Kaitlyn Mills with five
markers.
It was the final basketball game for seniors Shalin Comer, Justyce Stout,
Cady Gilmore and Ashley
Cheesebrew in the Silver
and Black. It was also an
emotional night for RVHS
coach Renee Gilmore,
who is the mother of Cady
and like family to the others.
“I’ve watched these
kids grow over the years,
I’ve been around them in
basketball as far back as
third grade, so this is a
little difficult for me right
now,” Gilmore said. “They
are such good friends, and
just watching them grow
into the fine young people
they have become has
been a real joy. I’ve been
blessed to be able to coach
them and to know them.”
The Lady Raiders completed the 2012-13 campaign with a 4-6 mark in
the Ohio Valley Conference, which included a
sweep of Chesapeake and
the program’s first win
over South Point in over
a decade. Cady Gilmore
also became the program’s
fourth girl to ever eclipse
the 1,000-point plateau in
a career.

�Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday,
Feb. 13, 2013:
This year the unexpected runs rampant in your day-to-day life. It prevents
boredom, and it helps you identify your
priorities. You might have difficulty
walking away from drama. Rather than
fight the trend, let the exciting dynamics roll right past you. If there’s one
thing you can be sure of, it is change,
and it is right around the corner. If you
are single, you could have a sequence
of intense potential sweeties. Take
your time deciding, and you will benefit. If you are attached, the two of you
have a great time together. When you
relax, you are like two kids playing
together. ARIES makes you laugh.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH Put your best foot forward,
even in an unpredictable situation.
You tend to help others feel a lot
more relaxed and at ease. Claim
your power, and do what you want.
Someone who pushes you hard will
respect you more as a result. Tonight:
Do your own thing.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Read between the lines
rather than immediately react. In fact,
the less said, the better. You might
have difficulty getting past a problem
or a bad mood. Just let time do its
thing. Someone at a distance could
be exceptionally difficult. Tonight: Get
some extra R and R.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH Look at what is going on
in a meeting. Note the different roles
others play. These roles are interesting in that they reflect each person’s
issues. You might be so detached that
others could feel uncomfortable with
you. Recognize your limits. Tonight:
Only where the crowds are.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH Take a stand and know what
you want to do. Somehow others
easily misunderstand you. You could
feel as if someone is bullying you.
Walk away. You might take a strong
stand in a key matter. Realize that you
might be the one creating a problem.
Tonight: Take the lead.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHHH Take the lead in a situation before someone can interfere. The
unexpected occurs, and it floors you
and many others. A meeting points
your attention in the right direction.
Pressure comes from your schedule
and its demands. Tonight: Go to a
favorite spot that has music.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHHH Deal with someone you
care about directly. The interaction
might surprise you at first, and then
could delight you later. You need that
type of dynamic in a bond in order to
stay interested. Understand your need
for change. Tonight: Play “follow the
leader.”
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH Defer to others, and avoid
an argument. A power play might get
the best of you if you get involved in it.
The smart move is to steer clear and
do what is necessary. Do not respond.
If you continue to say nothing, the
game might end. Tonight: Say “yes” to
an invitation.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH You might try to bypass a
problem when the unexpected occurs.
Recognize that you can do only so
much. Do not attempt a power play or
any other type of manipulation. You
know what is acceptable. Tonight: Opt
for a foot rub or a massage, should
someone offer.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21-Dec. 21)
HHHHH Your playfulness emerges
when speaking to friends and loved
ones. You express your love of the
good life by living in the moment.
Pressure builds around your finances.
Someone might have an expectation you can’t seem to meet. Tonight:
Celebrate the moment.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Get back to the basics, and
understand what is happening with a
family member. You really don’t need
to ask questions. Just trust in this
person’s ability to work through these
issues. You have a little too much
energy for your own good. Go for a
jog. Tonight: At home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH You’ll speak your mind.
Others will either brainstorm with you
or decide to counter your thoughts.
Perhaps they even might choose to
ignore you. Make a call to a relative
you no longer can avoid. Have a gossip session if you want to keep the
peace. Tonight: Paint the town red.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH You could have a different
opinion from a friend about a money
matter. This situation could blow up in
your face or evolve into a major power
play. Decide which way to go, or
consider a different option. Your mind
can be unusually resourceful. Tonight:
Keep it low-key.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Wednesday, February 13, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

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