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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

Eastern High School
honor roll posted....
Page 2

Mostly sunny.
High near 83.
Low around
58......... Page 2

Bruins take 2-1
lead in Stanley Cup
Finals.... Page 6

Ruby Frances Blackburn, 76
Sharron R. (Davis) Bradbury, 72
Beulah May Cline, 83
Maricus A. Goodbar, 35
Lawrence Lemley, 82

50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 98

Willard ‘Dike’ Moore, 93
William B. Pierce, 66
Jack A. Ratliff, 87
Donald K. Riffle, 75

Kids’ summer food program under way
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — A kickoff to the summer food program for children sponsored by the Meigs County Council
on Aging with funding from the Ohio
Department of Education was held
Saturday at the Kickin’ Summer Bash
Festival in downtown Pomeroy.
Not only was lunch served free to
all kids there but from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. they rode the carnival rides
without having to pay, thanks to the
sponsorship of Meigs Senior Center
and Farmers Bank.
In addition to providing a sack
lunch and free carnival rides for
the children, volunteers conducted
games and awarded prizes to the
winners. Flip-flops in many colors
and sizes were distributed to the chil-

dren along with a variety of novelty
items by volunteers Catie Theiss and
Katie Alexander.
While the Council on Aging considered Saturday’s event as the kickoff to the luncheon program, meals
have actually been served to the children at sites around the county for
the past week.
All children from age one through
18 are invited to eat lunch free at the
various sites. The program will continue through Aug. 15, according to
Beth Shaver, executive director of
the Meigs County Council on Aging.
There are four sites open in Meigs
County with two being open Monday
through Friday. They are at Grace
Episcopal Church on East Main
Street in Pomeroy and the Meigs
Senior Center at 1123 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Both will be serv-

ing from 12 noon until 12:30 p.m.
Lunches will be also be provided
at the Meigs Museum on Butternut
Avenue in Pomeroy on Tuesdays
through Fridays from 11:45 a.m. to
12:15 p.m. and at the First Baptist
Church in Racine on Tuesdays and
Thursdays from 12:15 to 12:45 p.m.
Lunches are also being provided to
children enrolled in the Meigs County
Library’s summer reading programs
at Pomeroy, Racine and Eastern.
This is the second year for the Council on Aging to sponsor a summer food
program but this year it is being offered on more days in more locations.
In addition to the Council on AgCharlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel
ing’s program to feed children dur- The Senior Citizens Center served free sack lunches from the
ing the summer months when they back of a van at last weekend’s Summer Kickin’ Bash as a kickoff
do not have access to school lunches, to a children’s summer food program. Here Beth Shaver, executive director of the Meigs County on Aging, left, gets some assis-

See PROGRAM ‌| 5 tance from her granddaughter, Catie Theiss, in distributing food.

Despite search, Yoczik
case still a mystery
Staff Report

GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS — After nearly three
months of extensive searching by
land, air and boat, local law enforcement say no new clues have been uncovered as to the whereabouts of a
Sharon Yoczik
missing Gallia County woman.
Gallia County Sheriff Joe Browning reported Tuesday
that the search for Sharon Yoczik, 68, has continued since
her reported disappearance on Friday, March 22.
According to Browning, Yoczik was initially reported
missing March 22 by her husband who returned home to
find her missing from their residence on Neighborhood
Road. Investigators received information that the missing
woman was spotted walking along Ohio 7 near the intersection with Ohio 218 on the Thursday evening before
her reported disappearance.
A search with canine assistance along this portion of
the Ohio River yielded a pair of eyeglasses along the riverbank believed to have belonged to Yoczik. Browning reported that the eyeglass prescription, as well as the type
of eyeglasses, were later matched by a local optometrist
to the eyeglasses worn by Yoczik.
The eyeglasses have remained the only reported trace
of Yoczik uncovered by police since her disappearance.
Due to this evidence and other factors, the sheriff stated
that, along with ground searches near her home, the multiagency search for Yoczik has continued along the Ohio River south of Gallipolis with the help of countless volunteers.
However, despite extensive ground searches, blood
hounds, helicopters, organized volunteers and even help

After weeks of nurturing, the hickory nut plants have sprouted and are growing. He has several to share.

Raising hickory nut trees
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — George
Wright has always been somewhat of a conservationist at
heart, so it was no surprise
to see him transplanting kingsized hickory nuts into a tub
of dark soil.
“King hickory nut trees
are scarce here,” he says.
“My goal is to help get them
re-established in this part of
the country.”
Asked where he got his
“seed” hickory nuts, he said
a couple of places, one being
underneath a tree near Annie Chapman’s Morgan Rest
Bed and Breakfast on Lin-

coln Hill in Pomeroy.
The whole process of starting King hickory nut tree
starters began a number of
months ago. George said
it takes storage of the nuts
in a cold place six to eight
months in order for them to
germinate. So they remained
refrigerated until the weather
began to warm a few weeks
ago at which time he planted
them in a tub and then waited and watched until little
sprouts finally came up and
growth began.
His goal has always been
to plant enough so he could
keep a few for himself and

See SEARCH ‌| 5

‘Dogs for Dogs’ to be
held for dog shelter
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

The process of raising King Hickory Nut trees

See TREES ‌| 5 begins with planting germinated nuts in a tub.

POMEROY — A “Dogs for Dogs” fundraiser will be
held on Friday to benefit the Meigs County Dog Shelter.
The event will include the sale of hot dogs to raise money for the shelter.
Rich Wamsley, along with other volunteers have helped
to organize the event with the support of local officials,
including the Meigs County Commissioners.
Lunch will be served from 11 a.m to 1 p.m. on Friday
at the Meigs County Courthouse. It will be held at the
visitor’s center which is located on the first floor of the
courthouse on the side near the Sheriff’s Office.
Donations will be accepted for the lunch, with all proceeds going to supplies and other needs for the shelter.
Items for the lunch are all being donated.
In addition to the need for supplies, the shelter also
has many dogs who are in need of a home. Dogs at the
shelter can be adopted or fostered. The shelter is also
in need of volunteers.

River City Players to perform Cafe Murder Saturday
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — A “Cafe Murder” a comedy/mystery where the audience gets to solve the crime, will be
presented by the River City Players
at 7 p.m. on Saturday in the Middleport Village Hall auditorium.
The RCP have assembled a comedic
cast of veteran performers who Roger
Gilmore describes as “having difficulty
making it through the rehearsals because they are laughing to hard.”
“Café Murder” is a hilarious murder mystery-comedy for which the
River City Players (RCP) Community Theater has assembled a killer

(pun-intended) comedic cast. The
cast list includes: Celia McCoy as an
overbearing, hypochondriacal birthday girl, eldest of five sisters; Dixie
Sayre her sister, an aging hippie,
paranoid and quite inappropriate;
Linda Warner, another sister who
is a very proper conservative bank
executive, intelligent, and sexually
repressed; Jessica Holliday, another
sister, self-absorbed, airhead “Valley
Girl”; Janis Carnahan, the sister who
is a long-haul trucker – rude, crude,
and thinks she’s a dude; Gary Walker, a scattered, self-taught detective
with a limited vocabulary; Mike Kennedy, an incompetent waiter; Tony
Carnahan, a French chef for whom a

great deal is lost in translation; and
Roger Gilmore, a snooty maitre’d and
owner of the restaurant. This talented group of RCP veterans promises
to provide a real laugh riot, and you
don’t want to miss the fun.
While this will not be a dinner
theater presentation, appetizers and
desserts will be served prior to and
during the performance. The doors
open at 6:30 p.m. Admission is
$10 with advance seating available
through the Fabric Shop in Pomeroy
or at the door. For more information,
visit www.rivercityplayers.org, Facebook River City Players – Middleport, email rcp.showinfo@gmail. Tony Carnahan, Celia McCoy and Mike Kennedy cook up some
comedy in Cafe Murder, set for this weekend.
com or phone (740) 444-1595.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Meigs Local Briefs

Meigs County Community Calendar

Christian artist at area church
REEDSVILLE — Christian artist Jimmy Dooley will be
in concert at the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene at 10:45
a.m. on Sunday, June 23. The church is located on the corner
of Fellowship Drive and SR 124 near the entrance to Forked
Run State Park. A carry-in dinner will be held afterwards.

Wednesday, June 19
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge
453 will hold a special meeting for
the purpose of conferring the Fellowcraft Degree on one candidate, 7 p.m.
Refreshments to follow.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Clerk of Courts Legal Office and Title Office will be closed for the staff
to attend training.
MIDDLEPORT — A free community
dinner will be held at 5 p.m. at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene. Pastor
Daniel Fulton invites everyone to come
and join in the food and fellowship.
CHESTER — A special meeting of
Shade River Lodge 453 will be held

Forrest Run Hosting Gospel Sing
POMEROY — The Jackson County, W.Va. Senior Choir
will present a concert at 7 p.m. June 28, at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church. The public is invited. Southern gospel music, Gaither style, will be featured.
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
HARRISONVILLE — Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will meet Monday, 6.24 at 11 a.m. at the Presbyterian
Church. Blood pressures will be taken after which a potluck luncheon will be held.
PHS Alumni Luncheon
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High School class of 1959
will be having their 3rd Friday lunch June 21 at noon at
the Wild Horse Cafe. A former classmate who has not previously been there will be attending.

at 7 p.m. to confer the fellow craft degree on one candidate. Refreshments
will be served after.
Thursday, June 20
POMEROY — The Meigs County Office of Vital Statistics will be
closed for training. No birth or death
certificates will be issued or filed on
this day. Normal business hours will
resume at 8 a.m. on June 21, 2013.
Monday, June 24
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Veterans Services Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. at the office located at
117 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.

RACINE — The Southern Local
Board of Education will meeting in
regular session at 8 p.m. in the Elementary Library.
Sunday, June 30
CHESHIRE — Bradbury-Jenkins
reunion, 1 p.m., Old Kyger Baptist
Church located on Old Kyger Church
Road off of Stingy Creek Road. A potluck meal will be served.
HENDERSON — Descendants of
Sam and Melvina Birchfield will hold
a reunion at the Henderson Community Center in Henderson, W.Va.
Friends and family are welcome. A
basket dinner will be held at noon.

Eastern High School honor roll posted

TUPPERS PLAINS — Eastern
Earning “A and B” honor roll Scowden, Shaye Selbee, Lindsay
High School recently announced its were, 12th grade: Alex Amos, Re- Wolfe; 10th Grade: Breanna Baifourth quarter honor roll.
becca Chadwell, Garret Hall, Gabri- ley, Haley Bissell, Abigale Collins,
Earning All A honor roll were, elle Hendrix, Mallory Nicodemus, Lindsay Hupp, Jenna Kehl, Kristen
12th grade: Marshall Aanestad, Kiana Osborne, Larissa Riddle, King, Austin Little, Brock Smith,
Victoria
Goble,
Alexandria Garrett Ritchie, Joseph Scowden, Morgan Tackett, Meloney Victory;
Hendrix, Julia Poole; 11th grade: Maria Sharp; 11th grade: Latham 9th grade: Abigail Causey, Andrew
Katie Keller, Dakota O’Brien, Bissell, Zach Browning, Jenna Coates, Zachary Connolly, Megan
Madison Rigsby, Erin Swatzel; Burdette, Cassidy Cleland, Paige Douglas, Ross Keller, Kourtney
Vacation Bible School
9th grade: Holly Johnson, Elisha Cline, Brandon Coleman, Kendra Lawrence, Jesse Morris, Emily SinPOMEROY — Bradford Church of Christ will host “King- Martindale, Jillian White.
Fick, Benjamin Sampson, Zackary clair, Dillon Swatzel.
dom Rock” Vacation Bible School June 17-20. VBS will be
from 9-11:30 a.m. each day at the church, located at 38260
Bradbury Road. For more information call (740) 992-5844.
COOLVILLE — Whites Chapel Wesleyan Church in
Coolville will have Bible School, June 24-26 from 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. Theme will be HayDay. The kick-off party will
be at the church on Sunday, June 23, 6 p.m. For more
MASON — On Satur- Virginia and is currently President; Jim Stewart, Co- McMillion; Class of 1963:
information call Bonnie Putman at 667-6343.
day, May 25, 2013, the working at Holzer Clinic President; Chloris Machir 50 years — Daniel Artis,
McQuaid, Vice President; Sandra Sayre Ballard, John
Wahama Alumni Associa- as an athletic trainer.
Scholarship Applications
Dee Anderson Bumgardner, Call, Dannie Harbour, WilA
memory
board
detion
celebrated
the
53rd
reSYRACUSE — Applications for the Carleton College
Scholarships for Higher Education are available for legal union. The reunion years signed by Chloris Mc- Co-Vice President; Judy ma Grimm Harmon, Caroresidents of the village of Syracuse. Residents can pick up an honored ended with the Quaid honored the May Duncan McWhorter and lyn Lieving Hesson, Paul
application from Joyce Sisson, College Road, or from Gor- number three. Celebrating 2012-May 2013 deceased Mary Foster Hendricks, Hesson, Hubert “Bucky”
don Fisher, 1402 Dusky Street. Applications are due back this year were the classes alumni members and was Secretaries; Susan Zuspan Johnson, Sharon Kelley
Winebrenner, Co-Secretary Chloris Machir McQuaid,
by June 25, 2013. Legal residents of Syracuse can qualify for of 1937 through 2013. on display for viewing.
and Historian; Mary Ar- Elizaberth Reichert OhDues
collected
from
the
The
banquet
was
held
in
scholarships awards for a maximum of two years.
the Wahama Jr./Sr. High alumni members go to- tis, Treasurer; Sally Yeager linger, Kenneth Reynolds,
ward the alumni scholar- Ross, Co-Treasurer. Other Amy Roush, Ralph Russell,
School gym.
Immunization Clinic
The Wahama High ship fund and this year the committee members in- Robert Russell, Gay CartPOMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct as childhood and adolescent immunization School National Honor association was able to pro- clude: Jackie Capehart Sis- wright Sherman, Dewey
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, at the Society provided tours of vide a total of $2,800.00 in son, Irma Grinstead Dod- Smith, Jr., John Sprouse,
Meigs County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial Drive the school to the alumnus scholarships. Individuals son, Judy Fry Reiber, Karen Charles “Dick” Tennant,
in Pomeroy. Please bring children’s shot records. Children from 3:30-5 p.m. Several and/or individual classes Stewart Werry and Emma Claudia Zerkle Thomas,
Jane Weaver Harrah.
Charles Yonker;
must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Please alumni toured the school are encouraged to contribRex Howard, Jim StewClass of 1964 — Linda
bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if and made comments on ute to the scholarship fund. art and Chloris McQuaid
Scholarships
were
Lathey
Capehart, Dianna
how
they
were
impressed
applicable. A donation is appreciated, but not required.
awarded by the Alumni introduced the following Miller Harbour, Faye Lywith the school facilities.
ons Johnson; Class of
Greeting and register- Association were award- classes and attendees:
Class of 1937 — Clara 1965 — Mary Artis, Mary
ing fellow alumni were, ed as follows, $500 to
Judy Duncan McWhorter, Jenna Fields, daughter Rollins Capehart; Class Foster Hendricks, Judith
Mary Artis, Mary Foster of Jeff Fields and Denise of 1943: 70 years — Gale Duncan McWhorter; Class
POMEROY — Basis of a Successful Start (BOSS) Hendricks and Beverly Shaw, $500 to Casey Berry; Class of 1944 — of 1966 — Floranell RusGilbert, daughter of Rus- Lawrence Foreman and sell Banks, Bonnie Blake
class will take place on Tuesday, June 25, 2013, from Carson Knapp.
sell and Bonnie Gilbert, Ralph Sayre; Class of 1945 Crabtree, Nancy Proffitt;
Rex
Howard,
President,
2-4 p.m. at the Meigs County Senior Center, 112 East
welcomed everyone to the (these two scholarship — Joyce Roush Carson; Class of 1967 — PatriMemorial Drive in Pomeroy.
The class is for those interested in starting their own alumni banquet and led were made possible from Class of 1946 — Orpha cia Maynard and Wanda
Weaver Fields and Charles
business. Topics covered will include types of ownership, the group in the Pledge of donations by Elaine Sayre Yeager; Class of 1947 — Harrah Stafford; Class of
1968 — Philip Burgess,
Allegiance. Invocation was Elliott in honor of the
licensing, tax requirements, sources of financing and how given by Claudia Zerkle Class of 1953); $500 to Enid Layne Adams, Rob- Kathy Ingels Farr, Gary
to market your product or service.
Deeanna Sayre, daugh- ert W. Barton, Martha Green, Kathy Roush RickThomas, class of 1963.
BOSS class is offered free of charge and is sponsored by
Dinner was prepared by ter of Kurt and Donita Cook, Willis Dudding and ard, Sonya Yonker Roush,
the Ohio University Small Business Development Center. the Mason Chapter Order Sayre; (this scholarship Sarah Kelly Gibbs; Class Sandra Shell; Class of
Please contact Trenia Twyman at (740) 597-1460 or of the Eastern Star. The was made possible from of 1948 — Kathleen Grin- 1970 — Terry Foreman,
twyman@ohio.edu to register.
menu consisted of salad, donations in honor of the stead Roush and Barbara Beverly Carson Knapp,
rolls, noodles, mashed po- class of 1955); $250 to Lieving Zerkle; Class of Sheila Lieving Roush;
tatoes, baked steak and Kylie Roush, daughter of 1949 — Jane Foreman Class of 1972 — Debra
gravy, green beans and des- Nathan and Jenna Roush; Abbott and Rosanna Fry Russell; Class of 1973: 40
serts. The meal was served $250 to Kelsey Billups, Manley; Class of 1953: 60 years — Steven Carpenbuffet style, with the Sassa- daughter of Michael and years — Betty Hoschar ter, Pamela Elias, Mike
fras 4-H Club members as- Kimberly Billups; $200 to Davidson, Doris Litton Foreman, William “Bill”
Wednesday: A chance of showers, mainly before 7 a.m. sisting alumni who needed Kelsey Zuspan, daughter Harrah, Glen Harrah, Gibbs, Juanita Harrah
of Fred and Sonia Zuspan; Shirley Hesson, Susannah Grimm, Judy Lieving,
Mostly sunny, with a high near 83. North wind 3 to 7 assistance.
Following dinner “Down $200 to Caroline Thomp- Roush Lewis and Wilford Don Machir, Mackie Rickmph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Lane
1963” son, daughter of Matthew Scarberry; Class of 1954 ard, Kent Sayre, Kathy ArWednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 58. Memory
was presented by Chlo- and Kendra Thompson; — Martha Henry Cole- nold VanMatre, Michael
Light north wind.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 82. Light and vari- ris Machir McQuaid and $400 to Paige Gardner, man, Mary Stewart Fowl- Wolfe; Class of 1975 —
Charles Yonker. A memo- daughter of Danny and er, John “Pete” Roush, Lesa Scott Carpenter and
able wind.
Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 62. rial tribute was held for the Lisa Gardner (donated by Ruth Lieving Roush, Rex Howard;
Class 0f 1983: 30 years
classmates of 1963 who the Class of 1957).
James Stewart;
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 85.
Presentation of gifts was
had passed away. A white
Class of 1955 — Peggy — Kim VanMeter Billups;
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 66.
remembrance rose was provided by the banquet McDaniel Edwards and Class of 2008 — Gabe
Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.
committee to the lucky Sylvia Sayre; Class of Roush; Class of 2013 —
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 69. placed in a vase and a candle was lit in their honor. winners.
1956 — Braunda Ballou Kelsey Billups, Jenna
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.
A $25 gift card was pre- and Betty Jones Rawlings; Fields, Paige Gardner,
The class history was read
Sunday Night: A chance of showers and thunder- by various members of the sented to Gay Cartwright Class of 1958 — Linda Casey Gilbert, Kylie Roush,
storms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 69. Chance of class of 1963.
Sherman for traveling the Brinker Meadows, Edna Deeanna Sayre, Caroline
precipitation is 30 percent.
Guest speaker for the farthest distance to attend Crump Scarberry, Dot- Thompson, Kelsey Zuspan.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.
The banquet concluded
evening was Gabe Roush, the banquet and spending tie Ferguson Williamson;
Wahama class of 2008. time with her classmates. Class of 1959 — Doris El- with the singing of the
Gabe attended West Vir- She traveled approximate- liott Coffee; Class of 1960 Alma Mater.
Plan to attend the 54th
ginia University and ma- ly 1,200 miles from Hous- — James Maynard; Class
jored in Science Athletic ton, Texas.
of 1961 — Dee Anderson annual Wahama Alumni
A brief business meeting Bumgardner, Jackie Cape- Banquet on Saturday, May
Training and after graduation he worked for the was held with the election hart Sisson, Susan Zuspan 24, 2014. Classes celebratDenver Broncos as Ath- of officers for the year 2013- Winebrenner; Class of 1962 ing special reunion years
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.64
AEP (NYSE) — 45.90
letic Trainer. Recently 2014. The following officers — Okey Capehart, Sharon end with the number four
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.66
Pepsico (NYSE) — 82.57
Gabe moved back to West were elected: Rex Howard, Turnbull Knight, Howard (1934 – 2014).
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 86.74
Family Reunion
CHESHIRE — The family of Otto and Phyllis Mulford
will hold a family reunion Sunday, June 30, from 1 to 4
p.m. at the Gavin Clubhouse in Cheshire. Family members of Harvey and Emma Margaret Mulford are also invited to attend. Those who plan to attend are asked to
contact Janice at 740-992-5207

Wahama holds alumni banquet

Class to be offered

Ohio Valley Forecast

Local stocks
Big Lots (NYSE) — 33.64
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 47.79
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 86.72
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.06
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.17
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.36
Collins (NYSE) — 64.70
DuPont (NYSE) — 54.02
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.35
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.33
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.19
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 54.11
Kroger (NYSE) — 35.52
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 52.32
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 77.03
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.10
BBT (NYSE) — 33.38

Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.94
Rockwell (NYSE) — 88.11
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.12
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.99
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 47.06
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.73
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.99
WesBanco (NYSE) — 25.31
Worthington (NYSE) — 34.25
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for June 18, 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.

Wake-up call: Starbucks to post calorie counts
NEW YORK (AP) — Starbucks has
a new way to wake up its customers:
showing the calories in its drinks.
The Seattle-based coffee chain says
it will start posting calorie counts on
menu boards nationwide next week,
ahead of a federal regulation that
would require it to do so.
Calorie counts on menus are already required in some parts of the
country, including New York City.

But starting June 25, Starbucks
Corp. says customers at its more than
11,000 U.S. locations will be able to
see that there are 300 calories in a
small caramel Frappuccino and 230
calories in a small Iced Caffe Mocha.
Pastry cases will also show calorie
information, in case customers want
to save some calories and opt for a
Morning Bun (350 calories) instead
of a blueberry scone (460 calories).

Joining Parkersburg
Orthopedic Associates

Middleport Community Association
Announces their July 4th
Cornhole Tournament
Dave Diles Park

Steven Miller, M.D.

Board Certiﬁed Orthopedic Surgeon
Specializes in the treatment of bone and joint disorders, injuries,
fractures and arthritis. Dr. Miller also treats sports injuries,
children’s injuries, work-related injuries and some nervecompression conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome.

TEAM TOURNAMENT- 5pm $5.00 @ for 2 person team
1st $40.00 per team 2nd $30.00 per team
3rd 20.00 per team 4th 10.00 per team

119 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

SINGLES TOURNAMENT- 7pm $10.00 @
1st $40.00 2nd $30.00 3rd $20.00 4th $10.00

740-992-2020
60427388

Contact Brian Howard @ 740-525-5764 or brian.howard@fbsc.com
to pre-register or sign up that day!

60422631

Rick Price, Owner

The move by Starbucks comes as
the Food and Drug Administration
irons out the details of a regulation
that would require companies with
more than 20 locations to post calorie information on their menus. Other
chains including McDonald’s Corp.
have also moved ahead with posting
the information, saying they’re providing it to be more transparent rather
than because they’re being forced to.

To schedule an appointment: (304)

485-8040

www.orthodoc.aaos.org/drmiller

60422766

�Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Hoffa mystery still fascinates after four decades
OAKLAND
TOWNSHIP,
Mich. (AP) — The latest possible resting place of Teamsters
boss Jimmy Hoffa is an overgrown farm field where the normal calm of chirping crickets is
being drowned out by a beeping
backhoe, the chop of an overhead
news helicopter and the bustle of
reporters and onlookers.
Over nearly four decades,
authorities
have
pursued
multiple leads into Hoffa’s death
that yielded nothing. Yet the
mystery endures, fueled by a
public fascination with mobsters
and murder.
“It’s one of those things you’ve
always heard about,” said Niki
Grifka, who, at 37, was just an
infant when Hoffa vanished.
Over the past day and a half,
Grifka and a few dozen other
Oakland Township residents
gathered a couple of hundred
yards from where FBI agents
wearing hard hats and carrying
shovels sifted through about a
half-acre of red dirt for the re-

mains of a man who became as
large in death as he was leading
one of America’s most powerful
labor unions.
Hoffa’s rise in the Teamsters,
his 1964 conviction for jury-tampering and his presumed murder
are Detroit’s link to a time when
organized crime, public corruption and mob hits held the nation’s attention.
Hoffa was last seen July 30,
1975, outside an Oakland County restaurant where he was supposed to meet with a New Jersey
Teamsters boss and a Detroit
Mafia captain. His body has never been found.
But over the years, authorities
have received various tips, leading the FBI to sites near and far.
In 2003, a backyard swimming pool was dug up 90 miles
northwest of Detroit. Seven
years ago, a tip from an ailing
federal inmate led to a twoweek search and excavation at
a horse farm in the same region. Last year, soil samples

were taken from under a concrete slab garage floor north of
the city. And detectives even
pulled up floorboards from a
Detroit house.
No evidence of Hoffa was
found.
Other theories have suggested
he was entombed in concrete
at Giants Stadium in New Jersey, ground up and thrown in a
Florida swamp or obliterated in a
mob-owned fat-rendering plant.
Detroit’s long tradition of organized labor and auto manufacturing means the Hoffa saga still
resonates with countless Michigan families.
“Everyone has a connection
with Hoffa and the unions,” said
47-year-old George Newtown, of
Oakland County’s Rochester. “I
was in high school when he got
abducted, and my grandfather
was in the union.”
To Newtown, it would be
exciting if Hoffa’s remains are
finally found, but he doubts that
ever will happen.

“I just think it’s a tightly held
secret,” Newtown said. “I do
want closure, first for Hoffa’s
family and, I think, in a way for
Michigan.”
The latest tip about Hoffa’s
remains came from a reputed
Mafia captain Tony Zerilli, who,
through his lawyer, said Hoffa
was buried beneath a concrete
slab in a barn in the Oakland
Township field.
The barn is gone, but FBI
agents pored over the field Tuesday for a second day. Forensic
anthropologists from Michigan
State University were bought in
Tuesday to help. Michigan State
Police dogs were led through
the high grass and weeds in the
hopes that their sensitive noses
might sniff out a clue trampled
over by time and boots.
Zerilli, now 85, was in prison
for organized crime when Hoffa
disappeared. But he told New
York TV station WNBC in January that he was informed about
Hoffa’s whereabouts after his re-

lease. His attorney, David Chasnick, said Zerilli is “intimately
involved” with people who know
where the body is buried.
Zerilli’s mob connections give
his story more credibility than
tips that spawned past searches,
according to Keith Corbett, a former federal prosecutor.
“You have a witness who is in
a position to know, who says he
has specific information,” Corbett said Monday. “The Bureau
has left no stone unturned.
“Anytime you look for somebody and don’t find the body, it
is embarrassing. The thing the
public isn’t aware of but police
know is there are a lot of dead
ends in an investigation.”
Harmony Kinkle expects the
current search will lead to just
that — another dead end.
“Things like this don’t happen
here,” said Kinkle, a 28-year-old
operations director for a nonprofit. Anything “out-of-the-ordinary brings unexpected excitement out here.”

Wilson, Nobel winner for physics, dies in Maine
PORTLAND,
Maine
(AP) — Physicist Kenneth Wilson, who earned
a Nobel prize for pioneering work that changed the
way physicists think about
phase transitions, has died
in Maine, where he retired
to enjoy kayaking with his
wife. He was 77.
Wilson, who died from
complications of lymphoma, was in the physics department at Cornell University in Ithaca,
N.Y., when he won the
Nobel Prize in 1982 for

applying his research in
quantum physics to phase
transitions, the transformation that occurs when
a substance goes from,
say, liquid to gas. Wilson
created a mathematical
tool called the renormalization group that is still
widely used in physics.
The son of a Harvard
University chemist, the
Waltham, Mass., native
joined Cornell University
in 1963 and later retired
from Ohio State University, where he founded

the Physics Education Research Group.
His wife, Alison Brown,
still recalls the morning
they learned of the Nobel
Prize. She said on Tuesday that she eventually had
to take the phone off the
hook so he could finish his
breakfast.
Wilson loved to talk
physics, she said.
“He was very patient and
willing to explain things to
people. He never talked
down to people and made
them feel like they were

dumb,” Brown said. “He
was a kind person. He had
a good way of wanting to
explain what he was doing,
because he always loved
what he was doing.”
Part of Wilson’s gift
was his ability to remain
focused on complex problems, said Kurt Gottfried,
emeritus professor of
physics at Cornell. His first
project at Cornell involving elementary particle
physics took him about
five years to complete,
Gottfried said.

“He worked very difficult problems that required
concentration for a long
time — I mean months
and years,” Gottfried said.
In his down time, Wilson
was an avid hiker who enjoyed treks in Swiss Alps
and Italian Dolomites, as
well as the mountains of
New Zealand, his wife said.
Wilson didn’t talk much
during the hikes because
he was busy working out
problems, she said.
“His brain was still turning over. He was cogitating

on whatever problem he
was working on,” she said.
The couple met through
international folk dancing,
a passion they both shared,
while they were at Cornell,
where Brown worked in
the computing center.
Their love of kayaking
brought them to Maine.
The couple moved to
Maine in 1995, residing in
Gray, and Wilson remained
on staff at Ohio State until
retiring in 2008. He died
Saturday in a nursing home
in Saco, his wife said.

Chef
describes
Hitchhiking cat ‘Mata
Prosecutor: Three
kids’ grief over Hairi’ headed home
Ohioans enslaved
disabled mom, child Jackson’s death
CLEVELAND (AP) — A mentally disabled
woman and her young child were enslaved for
more than a year, sometimes denied food and
threatened with a pet python and pit bulls, and
the woman was beaten and forced to get pain
medication for her captors, authorities said
Tuesday in announcing federal charges against
three suspects.
The three invited the woman and her child,
whose names were withheld, to live with them
and, beginning in early 2011, forced the mother
to do housework by threatening to hurt her and
the girl, described as 5 or 6, federal authorities
and Ashland police said.
The mother and child were freed in October
after police investigated an abuse allegation one
of the suspects made against her, authorities
said, and they are doing well.
“The victim in this case is slowly recovering,”
U.S. Attorney Steve Dettelbach said.
Jordie Callahan, 26, Jessica Hunt, 31, and
Daniel J. “DJ” Brown, 33, all of Ashland, were
charged with forced labor. They were being held,
pending a federal court hearing. Callahan also
was charged with tampering with a witness in
the investigation.
No attorneys were listed for them in court records.
According to an FBI affidavit, the mother and
child were denied food at times or given leftovers; on one occasion when they hadn’t eaten
all day, the mother was given a plate of food and
ordered to feed the pet dog.
The trio looted the woman’s bank account
and public assistance and on several occasions
injured her and ordered her to go to the emergency room for pain medication, according to
the affidavit.
The woman told investigators the trio learned
of her plan to try to escape and punished her
by shaving her hair into a Mohawk and using a
marker to write “slut,” ”tramp” and “whore” on
her face and chest. She was forced to clean up
the hair without a broom or dust pan, according to the affidavit. The woman was forced to do
house work and shop for her captors and clean
up after pets, authorities said.
“They treated her with such cruelty that it is
hard to comprehend,” Dettelbach said. “They
tried to take away her human dignity.”
Police first got involved when the woman was
charged with shoplifting a candy bar and asked
to be jailed because the three suspects “had been
mean to her,” said Ashland police Lt. Joel Icenhour.
Police checking into her claim went to the
apartment after one of the suspects said it was
the woman who was abusive. Authorities said
the allegation was a ruse complete with a video
staged by the suspects.

LOS ANGELES (AP)
— Michael Jackson’s personal chef described for
jurors the home lives of
the children during the final months of the singer’s
life and their ongoing grief
over their father’s death
nearly four years ago.
Gone are the freewheeling days when the children,
Prince, Paris and Blanket
Jackson played with their
father and traded jokes at
the dinner table, chef Kai
Chase told jurors Tuesday.
It has been replaced,
Chase said, by a weight
on eldest son Prince Michael Jackson’s shoulders.
Daughter Paris Jackson
cries and no longer wants
parties for her birthday
since her father hosted
a private circus for her
11th birthday. Youngest
son Blanket, who remains
home-schooled, wears a
T-shirt with his father’s image every Friday, she said.
Chase recounted for jurors her interactions with
Jackson, his children and
her ongoing work with
the singer’s mother and
children for jurors hearing
Katherine Jackson’s negligent hiring case against
concert promoter AEG
Live LLC. The company
denies all wrongdoing.
After weeks of testimony
about Jackson’s business
dealings with AEG, Chase’s
testimony returned the
trial’s focus to the King of
Pop and his offspring.
“At 16, the weight of the
world is on his shoulders,”
Chase said of Prince Jackson, who is trying to figure
out girls and all the challenges adulthood brings.
His younger brother,
11-year-old Blanket, has
his older siblings to shield
him from pain but had the
least time to spend with his
father. “He never really had
a time when it was fatherson because he was so
tiny,” Chase said.

The singer’s only daughter seems to be having the
hardest time, Chase said.
“Being daddy’s little
girl, Paris is devastated,”
Chase said. “She’s devastated and lost.”
Chase’s testimony provided a look into the lives
of Jackson’s three children
before and after their father’s death in June 2009.
Michael
Jackson
was
fiercely protected of their
privacy, often using masks
to hide their faces when
they were in public.
She now has daily interactions with Jackson’s children since being hired to
serve as their chef in July
2012. Of Paris, she said,
“She’s trying to find herself
and find who she is,” Chase
said. “It’s taking a lot of
love and understanding
to keep her together. She
breaks down, she cries, she
talks about him.”
Earlier in her testimony,
she described an April
2009 birthday party for
Paris that included a private circus. The Cirque du
Soleil-style show featured
men on stilts and a woman
performing in a giant balloon, Chase said.
Paris Jackson, who was
turning 11, adored her
father and Chase helped
decorate a room filled
with posters and photos of
the “Thriller” singer. The
singer’s music was played
throughout the party.
It was the last birthday
party the 15-year-old has
had. “Paris hasn’t had any
birthdays since,” Chase
said. “She hasn’t wanted to
celebrate since.”
She described the routines in Jackson’s home in
the months before his death,
describing him as a vibrant
and hands-on father. But
by June 2009, Chase said
Jackson was deteriorating
and she witnessed Prince
having to help his father up
a staircase to his bedroom.

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HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A well-traveled cat
named “Mata Hairi” will soon be reunited with
her owner after spending nearly 10 months traveling thousands of miles with a hitchhiker who
rescued her from the rain.
The feline adventure started in Portland, Ore.,
when the cat’s owner, Ron Buss, let her out of the
house on Sept. 1. The cat, white with patches of
dark gray, usually left for no more than a couple
of hours at a time, but this time she didn’t return.
When Michael King, who has been homeless
since 2003, spotted Mata Hairi, she was crouched
under a table at a cafe, trying to stay out of the
pouring rain.
“I see cats all the time,” King said. “I don’t pick up
cats. I don’t want a cat, especially a full-grown one.
And he definitely didn’t want to haul around
the needed food and bowls that would add 20
pounds to his pack.
“Something told me to grab her. I don’t know,”
King told the Independent Record.
He named the cat Tabor, for the cafe where he
found her.
She traveled with King as he hitchhiked to
California, back to Portland and out to Montana,
where King’s foster father lives.
People often stopped them and asked to take
photos.
“She’s a hit on the streets of Portland,” King
said. “Very rarely do you see a cat riding on the
top of someone’s backpack.”
King and his foster father, Walter Ebert, recently took the cat to a veterinarian in Helena, where
a scan found a microchip, and the vet was able to
contact Buss.
Buss is planning a party marking Mata’s return,
and King agrees it’s an occasion for celebration.
But it’s going to be emotional for King, too.
“I didn’t want a cat in the first place. I just thought
I was saving someone’s cat,” King said. “And that’s
what I’ve done. Now I’ve grown attached to her.

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�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Ohio police chief takes When lying is acceptable, public loses
criminals to task online
Liz Sidoti

The Associated Press

Kantele Franko

The Associated Press

KENT, Ohio — If you’re
up to no good in this
pocket of northeast Ohio,
especially in a witless way,
you’re risking not only jail
time or a fine but a swifter
repercussion with a much
larger audience: You’re in
for a social media scolding
from police Chief David Oliver and some of his small
department’s 52,000-plus
Facebook fans.
And Oliver does not
mince words.
In postings interspersed
with community messages
and rants, the Brimfield
Township chief takes to
task criminals and other
ne’er-do-wells — his preferred term is “mopes,”
appropriated from police
TV shows and an old colleague who used it — for
the stupid, the lazy and
the outright unlawful.
Even an ill-considered
parking choice can spur a
Facebook flogging.
“If you use a handicapped space and you
jump out of the vehicle, all
healthy-like, as if someone
is dangling free cheeseburgers on a stick, expect
people to stare at you and
get angry,” Oliver wrote
last year. “You are milking
the system and it aggravates those of us who play
by the rules. Ignoring us
does not make you invisible. We see you, loser.”
His humor, sarcasm and
blunt opinion fueled a tenfold increase in the Facebook page’s likes in the past
year, bringing the total to
about five times the 10,300
residents the department
serves. It’s among the mostliked local law enforcement
pages in the country, trailing
only New York, Boston and
Philadelphia police, according to the International Association of Chiefs of Police
Center for Social Media.
Not bad for a guy who
initially hoped maybe 500
locals would pay attention
when he noticed other
businesses’ pages and
decided to start his own
three years ago.

***
Facebook posting, May
16, 2013: “I call criminals
mopes. I do not comment
on them being ugly, smelly
or otherwise beauty impaired … even though some
are. I do not comment on
their education, social
status, color, sex, origin
or who they marry. I care
about crime and character.
If you come to Brimfield
and commit a crime we are
all going to talk about it.
The easiest way to not be
called a criminal is to not
be one. It is not calculus.”
***
The chief loves justice,
Westerns and dogs. John
Wayne and Abraham
Lincoln peer out from
frames on the gray walls
of Oliver’s office, where
the 45-year-old chats with
anyone who stops by.
His Facebook messages
extend that open-door
policy online for conversations about road closures,
charity events, lost pets
and whatever else crosses
his mind. Some are serious, such as salutes to
slain officers and updates
during school threat investigations. Others are
light-hearted, like the attempt to find an escaped
swine’s owner with an unusual APB — an “All-Pig
Bulletin” — or his promise
to “ticket” child bicyclists
with coupons for free ice
cream if they wear helmets.
And, of course, there’s
crime. One posting berates
a man accused of physically assaulting a woman and
two children. In another,
Oliver suggests that hiding
near an occupied police
K-9 vehicle wasn’t a shoplifting suspect’s smartest
move.
Resident Mark Mosley,
a daily reader, said he likes
such “humorous arrest stories” best.
“It’s one of those things,
like you can’t fix stupid,”
Mosley said.
His officers and others
say the online character of
the chief, a big, beefy guy,
matches real life.
“He is definitely a very
large personality. It kind of
goes with his size,” local fire
Chief Robert Keller said.
Oliver’s 15-person de-

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partment handles more
than 13,000 calls for service annually and deals
largely with arrests for
driving violations, thefts
and drug crimes by out-oftowners. Arrests in those
crime categories dropped
last year but are trending
upward again, and Oliver
says it would take more
time to determine whether
the Facebook messages are
having an impact.
Occasionally, his rants
cover topics far outside
his jurisdiction, among
them the Boston Marathon
bombings and the highprofile rape case from Steubenville in eastern Ohio.
He rarely mentions names
but doesn’t shy from addressing specific suspects
or brands of criminals.
***
July 31, 2012: “Dear
Father or Mother Meth
Cooks,
“You have lost your
mind. What in hell are
you thinking when you
make the decision to cook
meth with your child in the
house? You have violated
the very basic principle of
being a parent, which is
the safety of your child. I
am fed up with watching
it and also with being concerned with the long-term
effects of what you have
exposed YOUR child to.”
***
The word is out even
among mopes, a few of
whom have told Oliver
they read his updates. During a March traffic stop
with several drug-related
arrests, one suspect overheard Oliver being called
“Chief” and, after connecting the dots, requested not
to be mentioned on the
page, police said. Oliver
didn’t oblige.
His postings, also republished to the department’s
Twitter account, spur dozens or hundreds of comments from as far away
as Australia or Germany.
Some praise the department. Others say Oliver
uses work time inappropriately for Facebook or
criticize him for discussing suspects in a public
forum. (His response: It’s
public record.)

WASHINGTON — A member of Congress asks the director of national intelligence if the National Security Agency collects data on millions of Americans. “No,
sir,” James Clapper responds. Pressed, he
adds a caveat: “Not wittingly.”
Then, NSA programs that do precisely
that are disclosed.
It turns out that President Barack
Obama’s intelligence chief lied. Or as he
put it last week: “I responded in what
I thought was the most truthful or least
most untruthful manner, by saying, ‘No,’
because the program was classified.”
The White House stands by him. Press
secretary Jay Carney says Obama “certainly believes that Director Clapper has
been straight and direct in the answers
that he’s given.” Congress, always adept
at performing verbal gymnastics, seems
generally unmiffed about Clapper’s lack of
candor. If there have been repercussions,
the public doesn’t know about them.
Welcome to the intelligence community,
a shadowy network of secrets and lies reserved, apparently, not only for this country’s enemies but also for its own citizens.
Sometimes it feels as if the government
operates in a parallel universe where lying
has no consequences and everyone but
the people it represents is complicit in deception. Looking at episodes like this, it’s
unsurprising that people have lost faith in
their elected leaders and the institution of
government. This all reinforces what polls
show people think: Washington plays by
its own rules.
Since when is it acceptable for government — elected leaders or those they
appoint — to be directly untruthful to
Americans? Do people even care about
the deception? Or is this kind of behavior
expected these days? After all, most politicians parse words, tell half-truths and omit
facts. Some lie outright. It’s called spin.
And yet this feels different.
The government quite legitimately
keeps loads of secrets from its people for
security reasons, with gag orders in effect
over top-secret information that adversaries could use against us. But does that
authority also give the government permission to lie to its people in the name of
their own safety without repercussions?
Should Congress simply be accepting
those falsehoods?
It wasn’t always this way.
Congress was apoplectic when former
aides to President Richard Nixon perjured
themselves in the Watergate cover-up and
when President Bill Clinton was less than
truthful during the Monica Lewinsky
scandal. But in those cases, the issues divided over partisan lines, and classified
information relating to national security
wasn’t involved.
In this instance, most Republicans and
Democrats on Capitol Hill support the underlying NSA programs even though the
public is divided over them. And lawmakers

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aren’t quick to hold Clapper accountable because, when it comes to telling the truth to
Americans, their hands are hardly clean.
The public, meanwhile, has responded
to Clapper’s falsehood with a collective
shrug. Are we just resigned to this?
Consider the results of 2012 surveys.
One from the Public Affairs Council
found that 57 percent of Americans felt
that public officials in Washington had
below-average honesty and ethical standards. Another from the Pew Research
Center found 54 percent of Americans
felt the federal government in Washington was mostly corrupt, while 31 percent
rated it mostly honest.
Trust in government has dropped dramatically since the 1950s, when a majority
of the country placed faith in it most of
the time. But by April 2013, an Associated
Press-GfK poll had found just 21 percent
feeling that way. And people have even
less faith in Congress; a new Gallup poll
found just 10 percent of Americans say
they have confidence in the House and
Senate — the lowest level for any institution on record.
In this case, Ron Wyden of Oregon and
Mark Udall of Colorado, Democrats on the
Senate Intelligence Committee, long had
tried to raise concerns over the scope and
breadth of post-9/11 intelligence gathering.
They were privy to the secret techniques but were barred by law from disclosing any classified information. So they
had to be subtle.
Discussion on Capitol Hill about topsecret programs usually takes place in a
secure room so opponents of the United
States won’t learn of the details.
Nevertheless, in March — before the
programs the senator knew existed had
been disclosed to the world — Wyden put
Clapper on the spot. The senator asked
about the classified intelligence operations, which Clapper was prohibited from
talking openly about, in a public committee hearing.
“Does the NSA collect any type of data
at all on millions or hundreds of millions
of Americans?” Wyden asked.
“No, sir,” Clapper answered.
“It does not?” asked Wyden.
“Not wittingly,” Clapper said, offering a
more nuanced response. “There are cases
where they could, inadvertently perhaps,
collect — but not wittingly.”
Three months later, a former NSA contractor leaked information on top-secret
surveillance programs that do, in fact, file
away phone records on millions of Americans. Wittingly.
That, said Udall, “is the type of surveillance I have long said would shock the
public if they knew about it.”
Within days, Wyden — who says he
gave Clapper a heads up a day earlier that
he would be asking the question about
classified information at an open hearing — accused Clapper of misleading the
Senate committee in public and later in
private when the intelligence director declined to change his answer from the firm
“no” to the question.

The Daily Sentinel
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Stephanie Filson
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�Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

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Obituaries
Willard Moore

Willard “Dike” Moore left us on June 17, 2013.
He was born August 6, 1919, in Middleport, Ohio, and
was the youngest of eight children.
He was preceded in death by his parents, George and
Ruth Moore; his wife, Thelma; daughter, Connie; and
brothers and sister.
He is survived by three sons and their wives; eight
grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; two great-greatgrandchildren; numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and
friends. Most of his life was spent in Ohio and Arizona
with the last of his days spent in his home town of Middleport, Ohio, where he loved it the most. Willard served
in the Army in France and Germany in WWII and was a
POW.
In lieu of flowers, donations made to Hospice or the
Veterans Association would be appreciated.
His life was full and we hope a happy one. Love from
his family and friends.

An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Lawrence Lemley

Lawrence Lemley, 82, of Middleport, passed away at
1:18 a.m. on Monday, June 17, 2013, in the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. Born September 1, 1930, he was
the son of late Homer and Thelma Tanner Lemley. He
was a United States Army Veteran of the Korean Conflict
serving from August 6, 1951, to July 23, 1953. After his
military service Lawrence worked as a lineman for the
Con Edison Company, of New Jersey. He then worked
at the Pride Tobacco Warehouse in Huntington, W.Va..
After retirement, he managed concession stands at the
local fairs and festivals.
He married Doris Wetheholt Lemley on November 26,
1951, in Gallipolis, and she proceeded in him in death on
August 18, 2006.
He is survived by his children, Keith Allen (Lenni)
Lemley of Holiday, Florida, Kevin Lawrence Lemley of

Middleport, Kurtis Douglas (Sandra) Lemley of Melbourne, Austrialia, Konni Francis Susan (Mitchell) Potts
of New Bern, N.C., Kraig Watson (Hedie Gilbert) Lemley
of Bidwell, Kendall Matthew (Amanda) Lemley of Belpre, and Karrel David Lemley of Pomeroy. Twenty-four
grandchildren, eleven great-grandchildren, and numerous
nieces and nephews also survive.
In addition to his parents and his wife Doris, Lawrence
is preceded in death by two sons, Kyle Luella Lemley, and
Michael Edwin Lemley; a granddaughter, Sara Sue Luella
Dawn Lemley; four brothers, Pete Lemley, Andrew Lemley, and Johnny Lemley, and Terry Lemley who passed
away in infancy.
In keeping with Lawrence’s wishes there will be no calling hours or funeral services. Interment will be Mound
Hill Cemetery at the convenience of the family. The Cremeens-King Funeral Home of Pomeroy is entrusted with
Lawrence’s arrangements.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensking.com.

Chrysler agrees to recall Death Notices
of Jeeps at risk of fire
Blackburn

DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler abruptly
agreed to recall 2.7 million older model
Jeeps Tuesday, reversing a defiant stance
and avoiding a possible public relations
nightmare over fuel tanks that can rupture
and cause fires in rear-end collisions.
In deciding on the recall, Chrysler sidestepped a showdown with government
safety regulators that could have led to
public hearings with witnesses providing
details of deadly crashes involving the
Jeeps. The dispute ultimately could have
landed in court and hurt Chrysler’s image
and its finances.
The company said calls from customers
concerned about the safety of their Jeeps
played a part in its going along with the
government’s request.
Earlier this month, the automaker publicly refused the government’s request to
recall Jeep Grand Cherokees from model
years 1993 through 2004 and Jeep Libertys from 2002 through 2007.
The National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, the agency that monitors vehicle safety, contends that the
Jeep gas tanks can rupture if hit from
the rear, spilling gas and causing a fire.
NHTSA said a three-year investigation
showed that 51 people had died in fiery
crashes in Jeeps with gas tanks positioned behind the rear axle.
Chrysler had until Tuesday to formally
respond to NHTSA.
Two weeks ago, Chrysler said that the
vehicles aren’t defective, despite prior
statements to the contrary from NHTSA.
The company vouched for the vehicles’
safety again Tuesday.
Chrysler said that dealers will inspect
the vehicles and install trailer hitches to
protect the gas tanks. The company said
vehicles without hitches will get them, as
will those with broken hitches or hitches
that aren’t from Chrysler.
Chrysler Group LLC, which is majority owned by Fiat SpA of Italy, wouldn’t
say how much the hitches would cost,
although they sell for about $200 each
on Internet sites.
Erik Gordon, a law and marketing

professor at the University of Michigan,
says Chrysler realized it was headed for
a public relations disaster and decided to
reverse course.
“What happened is they get surprised
by how loud the hue and cry is. They
didn’t want to take the public relations
hit,” Gordon says.
Gordon says Chrysler’s image will still
get dinged a little “because it looks as if
they have done the right thing only because they were forced to.”
Chrysler executives probably realized
that their chance for success was slim,
because courts have given wide latitude
to government regulatory agencies, says
David Kelly, former acting NHTSA administrator under President George W. Bush.
“They have some very smart people at
Chrysler and probably looked into a crystal ball and didn’t think this would end the
way they wanted it to,” says Kelly. The
automaker, he says, historically has been
very committed to safety.
NHTSA said in a statement that it’s
pleased with Chrysler’s decision. The
agency plans to keep investigating the
issue as it reviews recall documentation
from Chrysler.
NHTSA began investigating the Jeeps at
the request of the Center for Auto Safety,
a Washington, D.C., advocacy group. Clarence Ditlow, the center’s director, says the
trailer hitch remedy should be tested by
NHTSA before the repairs are made. He’s
cautiously optimistic that the solution will
make the Jeeps safer.
“We’re no longer arguing over whether Chrysler is going to do a recall, but
we’re now discussing what we’re going
to do,” he says.
Chrysler will begin notifying owners
about the recall in about a month, the
company said.
The last time an automaker defied a
NHTSA recall request was early in 2011,
when Ford said that calling back 1.2 million pickup trucks for defective air bags
wasn’t justified. Ford later agreed to the
recall after NHTSA threatened to hold a
rare public hearing on the issue.

Ruby Frances Blackburn, 76, New Haven,
died June 17, 2013, at
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Friends will be received
on Wednesday, June 19,
2013, at the Shaffer Funeral Home, Romney,
from 5-7 p.m. Services
and burial will be Thursday, June 20, 2013, at 11
a.m. at Shaffer Funeral
Home with the Rev. Norman Landis officiating.
Interment will be at Moyers cemetery on Poland
Hollow Rd., Romney.
Following the funeral a
gathering will be held at
the Springfield Community Building for food and
refreshments to celebrate
Ruby’s life.

Bradbury

Sharron R. (Davis)
Bradbury, 72, of Gallipolis, died Tuesday, June 18,
2013, at her residence.
Services will be 10:30
a.m., Friday, June 21,
2013, at Willis Funeral

Home. Burial will follow
in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m.,
Thursday, June 20, 2013.

Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced later by Deal Funeral Home.

Cline

Jack A. Ratliff, 87, Gallipolis, formerly of Vinton,
Ohio, died Tuesday, June
18, 2013, at his residence.
Arrangements will be
announced by the McCoyMoore Funeral Home,
Vinton.

Beulah May Cline,
83, of Reedsville, died
June 18, 2013, at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis.
Arrangements will be
announced by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville.

Goodbar

Maricus A. Goodbar,
35, Point Pleasant, died
June 5, 2013.
A celebration of life was
held on June 13, 2013, at
First Baptist Church of
Weeki Wachee in Spring
Hill, Fla. Pastor Raymond
Willis officiated.

Pierce

William B. Pierce, 66,
of Point Pleasant, died
June 18, 2013, at his
home with his family at
his side.

Ratliff

Riffle

Donald K. Riffle, 75,
Gallipolis, Ohio, died
Monday, June 17, 2013,
in Holzer Senior Care
Center, Gallipolis.
Funeral services will
be conducted at 11 a.m.
Friday, June 21, 2013, in
the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home,
Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis, with
Pastor
Jack
Parsons
officiating. Burial will
follow in Brush Cemetery,
Vinton, Ohio. Family and
friends may call from 5-7
p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home.

Program
From Page 1
another program of providing food for children is underway by the Meigs Local
School District. Meigs Local was one of five districts
in Ohio to be included in a
summer feeding program
initiated by Gov. John Kasich in partnership with
the Governor’s Office of
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, the Ohio
Department of Education
and the Ohio Association
of Foodbanks.
An emphasis of that
program is to reach the
most at-risk children in

the remote, rural areas of
the district. It has been
suggested that maintaining children’s nutrition
in the summer months is
crucial to their ability to
be focused learners when
they return to school in
the fall. Chrissy Musser,
Meigs Local Food Service Director, is handling
the state-funded program
which consists of 10
weeks of food during the
summer months from delivery locations in Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland,
Harrisonville, Pageville,
Salem Center, Dexter and
Darwin. For families to

qualify for the food boxes
the children in the home
must be on free or reduced
lunch programs in the
schools. However, food
will be provided for all
children in the home who
are not enrolled in school.
Studies by state agencies
have shown that in Ohio 46
percent of children live in
families poor enough to
qualify for free or reduced
price school meals. According to Feeding America’s
Map the Meal Gap, Child
Food Insecurity, more than
one in four Ohio children
do not know where their
next meal will come from.

Search
From Page 1
from organizations like the National Underwater Rescue and Recovery Institution,
Yoczik’s whereabouts remain a mystery.
“We have been using every possible
investigative resource to locate Sharon,
including Ohio BCI [Bureau of Criminal
Investigation and Identification] and volunteer search teams, and thus far, have
not located her,” said Browning. “We need
information from the community if they
know anything that could help our case.”

Yoczik has been described by investigators as a white female, five feet, two inches tall and approximately 120 pounds. She
has blue eyes and grey hair.
Browning further encouraged property
owners near the Ohio 7/Ohio 218 area to
check around their property lines for possible clues to Yoczik’s disappearance.
Anyone with information about Yoczik is encouraged to contact Gallia
County Sheriff’s Office dispatchers immediately at (740) 446-1221 or the tip
line at (740) 446-6555.

Trees
From Page 1
have enough left to give
away to others interested
in propagating the kingsized hickory nuts.
The plants have now
grown into little trees four
to six inches high and are
ready to be planted in areas
large enough to accommodate a tall tree which in a

dozen or more years from
now will yield hickory nuts.
George is ready to give
them away to someone
like him who wants to
see the King Hickory Nut
trees more plentiful in
Meigs County.
Anyone interested in
getting one of the dozen
or so tree plants can leave

their name and telephone
number with his daughter, Susan Clark Dingess,
at Clark’s Jewelry Store
and George will get in
touch with them. He has
some specific instructions on how to handle
the planting and care for
the delicate plants so that
they will survive.

60412545

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 19, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Hacking probe in rape case targets Ky. man
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A
central Kentucky man who goes
by the online name KyAnonymous said Tuesday he is the target of an investigation into who
hacked into an Ohio high school’s
computer and posted a video related the rape of a teenage girl at
an alcohol-fueled party.
Hacker activists helped propel coverage of the Steubenville
rape case, in part by re-posting a
12-minute Internet video showing a former student joking
about the attack and the victim,

a West Virginia teenager.
Deric Lostutter, 26, told The
Associated Press he posted the
video on the school’s athletics
booster website, but he said he
didn’t hack into the site or any
computers. He said someone
else, who he wouldn’t identify,
hacked into the website.
Two football players were convicted of rape. Ma’Lik Richmond,
16, was sentenced to at least a
year in the state juvenile detention system. Trent Mays, 17, was
sentenced to at least two years in

juvenile detention. He was also
convicted of photographing the
underage girl naked.
Lostutter believes he could go
to prison for posting the video.
“I’m facing 25 years in prison
when rapists face one,” Lostutter said.
Lostutter’s attorney, Jason
Flores-Williams of New Mexico,
works with the Whistleblowers
Defense League. He said he expected his client to be indicted in
as soon as a few weeks.
“Deric is innocent and this is

a waste of taxpayer dollars. We’ll
be battling,” he said.
It’s not clear whether he will
face any charges. Kyle Edelen,
a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Lexington, declined to comment.
The Steubenville case gained
international attention through
the work of bloggers and hacker
activists who alleged a cover-up
to protect other football players.
The suspicions hinged on the
presence of other students when
the attack happened, including

at least two who captured it on
their cellphones.
Three teen witnesses were
granted immunity from prosecution by a judge to allow them to
testify against the two players.
Ohio prosecutors are investigating whether coaches or school
administrators knew of the rape
allegation but failed to report it.
In January, a 12-minute video
that first appeared on YouTube
after the rape and mocked the
See CASE ‌| 10

Michael Bryant | Philadelphia Inquirer | MCT photo

Phil Mickelson reacts to his bunker shot that narrowly
misses the 2nd hole during the final round of the U.S. Open
golf tournament at Merion Golf Club’s East Course in Ardmore, Penn., on Sunday, June 16.

Mickelson has silver
market cornered

ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) — The U.S. Golf Association is
not opposed to inflicting cruel and unusual punishment
at its premier championship, so here’s something it might
want to consider.
Award the “Phil Mickelson Medal” to the runner-up in
the U.S. Open.
There is precedent. The U.S. Open champion has received a gold medal ever since this brute of a tournament
began in 1895, and yet the USGA tinkered with 117 years
of tradition by last year changing the name to the “Jack
Nicklaus Medal.”
An argument can be made that Nicklaus, a four-time
champion, isn’t even the face of the U.S. Open. Bobby
Jones won it four times in eight years. The remarkable career and comeback of Ben Hogan was defined by the U.S.
Open. He won his four titles in six years, including the
year he couldn’t defend because he was recovering from
near-fatal injuries after a head-on collision with a bus.
But there is no disputing who has cornered the market
in silver.
Mickelson broke the U.S. Open record with his fifth
runner-up finish in 2009 at Bethpage Black. There was a
three-way tie for second that year with David Duval and
Ricky Barnes, and the USGA had only one medal to present at the closing ceremony.
“I’ve got four of those,” Mickelson said. “I’m good.”
Sam Snead was a runner-up four times, and that doesn’t
even include the 1939 U.S. Open in Philadelphia when he
had a two-shot lead with two holes to play. He made bogey
on the 17th and, not knowing the score, played the par-5
18th aggressively and took a triple bogey. Snead also lost
in a playoff to Lew Worsham in 1947 at St. Louis when
there was a dispute over who was away on the last hole.
Worsham called for a measurement, Snead went first and
missed a 3-footer to lose by one.
So maybe Mickelson has that going for him. He hasn’t
lost in a U.S. Open playoff yet.
There’s still time, of course, and that’s the good news.
The hunch — the hope — is that Mickelson will come
back for one more shot, even if that means another kick
in the gut for a guy who already has had the wind knocked
out of him enough.
Don’t read too much into the golf course.
There’s a lot of chatter about the U.S. Open returning next year to Pinehurst No. 2, where Mickelson was
runner-up for the first time in 1999 to Payne Stewart.
But what about Pinehurst in 2005, when Lefty was 12
See MICKELSON |‌ 10

OVP Sports Briefs
GAHS Football
Golf Outing
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The 2013 Gallia Academy
Football Golf Outing will
be held on Saturday, June
22, at Cliffside Golf Course.
The golf outing, which has
been conducted annually
for several years, is to raise
money for the 2013 Blue
Devil football season.
Proceeds will go toward
providing the players with,
and not limited to the following: ‘Spirit Pack’ gear
(shorts and T-shirts),

game-day shirts, sweatshirt or pullover jacket,
team video equipment
and locker name tags. The
tournament will consist of
four-man teams in an 18hole scramble format and
will also have a shotgun
start at 8:30 a.m.
A
paid
fee
and
registration
must
be
completed
before
the
competition,
and
registration will start at
7:30 a.m. on the day of
the event for last-minute

Nuccio DiNuzzo | Chicago Tribune | MCT photo

Boston Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk (55) and Boston Bruins defenseman Andrew Ference (21) keep Chicago
Blackhawks defenseman Nick Leddy (8) away from the puck during the third period in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Finals
at the TD Garden in Boston, Mass., Monday, June 17. The Boston Bruins defeated the Chicago Blackhawks, 2-0.

Rask shuts down Blackhawks
Bruins take 2-1 lead
BOSTON (AP) — The puck
bounced off the post and rolled
across the crease, away from the
goal line. The red light flashed
briefly, but replays would confirm
that Tuukka Rask’s shutout streak
was intact.
For the last 122 minutes, 26
seconds of the Stanley Cup finals,
the Bruins goalie has prevented
Chicago from scoring.
Rask made 28 more saves in
Game 3 on Monday night to earn
his third shutout of the postseason, leading Boston to a 2-0 victory over the Blackhawks and a 2-1
lead in the best-of-seven series.
“We ran up against some of the
best goalies in the league here,”
Chicago coach Joel Quenneville
said. “Tonight I thought we made
it rather easy on him as far as traffic and finding and seeing pucks.
I think we’ve got to be better at
going to the net.”
After playing four extra periods in the first two games, the
Bruins made an early night of it
in Game 3 with second-period
goals by Daniel Paille and Patrice Bergeron.
Corey Crawford had 33 saves
for a Blackhawks team playing
without Marian Hossa, who was
scratched just before gametime.
Game 4 is Wednesday night
in Boston before the matchup of
Original Six franchises returns
to Chicago for a fifth game. The
teams split the first two games
there, with the Blackhawks winning Game 1 in triple-overtime
and the Bruins stealing home-ice
advantage on Paille’s goal in the
first OT of the second game.
“Obviously, you go triple-over-

time, (then) overtime the next
game, it takes a lot of energy out
of you,” Rask said. “But we’ll take
a regulation win, for sure.”
This time the intrigue came before the opening faceoff instead of
after the end of regulation.
Hossa and Bruins defenseman
Zdeno Chara both left the ice after
warmups. But while Chara needed
just some stitches after a collision
with teammate Milan Lucic, Hossa
was dropped from the lineup with
an unspecified injury.
“I was as surprised as anybody else,” Bruins coach Claude
Julien said. “I can definitely tell
you they lost a pretty important
player on their roster, but that
doesn’t mean we change our
game. I think it’s important we
stick with what we believe in.”
Julien said Chara slipped and
“had a little gash over his eye.”
“Nothing serious,” the coach
said of his captain and No. 1 defenseman, who still managed to
lead the team in ice time.
Quenneville was less forthcoming with information on Hossa’s
malady, sticking to the standard
NHL diagnosis: Upper body.
“We’ll say ‘day-to-day.’ We’re
hopeful he’ll be ready for the next
game,” he said, adding that it did
not happen during warmups, as
had been reported on the team’s
Twitter account and the TV
broadcast. “It was a game-time
decision after the warmup there.
That’s when we made the call, after warmup.”
Hossa, who has three gamewinning goals in the playoffs this
year, was tied for the team lead
with 15 playoff points and was
third on the Blackhawks with 17
goals during the regular season.
It was a loss the Blackhawks
couldn’t afford.

Not with Rask stopping everything that came his way.
The backup to Conn Smythewinner Tim Thomas in the Bruins’ 2011 Stanley Cup run, Rask
didn’t face as difficult a test as in
the first period of Game 2, when
the Blackhawks sent 19 shots at
him but managed just one goal.
The Bruins outshot Chicago 2618 and led 2-0 after two periods.
The Blackhawks had a 10-9 edge
in the third, including a late flurry
on a 6-on-4 — a power play with
Crawford pulled for an extra skater — that led to Bryan Bickell’s
shot off the post with 42 seconds
left in the game.
The puck caromed off the right
post as play continued for another
30 seconds before the whistle
blew and the game degenerated
into fisticuffs. Chara was on top
of Bickell, pounding away, and
Andrew Shaw got the better of
Brad Marchand.
By the time it was all sorted
out, the benches were a little emptier and the scoring column for
Chicago was still blank.
“You’re playing the last five
minutes of the game, you know
they’re going to throw everything
at you that they possibly can,”
Rask said. “Got the penalty there.
Got a little lucky there, one save
off my blade and the post.”
After a scoreless first period,
the Bruins made it 1-0 when Paille
slapped in the puck at 2:13 of the
second, falling to one knee for extra power. It stayed that way until
late in the second, when the Bruins
picked up their first power plays of
the game on two nearly identical
sequences, with a Bruin racing to
the net and a Blackhawk undercutting his skates and sending him
See BRUINS ‌| 8

Mother Nature rains out Tri-County junior golfers
Staff Report
Special to OVP

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The young
men and women playing in the Frank
Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League are a hardy bunch. However,
Mother Nature showed who the boss
really was Thursday morning at the
scheduled tournament to be played
See BRIEFS ‌| 8 at the Cliffside Golf Course.

Actually, in spite of the heavy
rains that fell early Thursday morning, the golf course was very playable and the young ones teed off at
approximately 9:30 a.m.. About an
hour later, the rains returned washing out the days play.
Thursday’s tournament has been rescheduled for Wednesday, June 26, at
the Cliffside Golf Course. All players
who paid the entry fee for Thursday’s

outing will not be charged to play on
the 26th. Lunch, because it was available after the rain stopped play Thursday, will not be served on the 26th.
All other scheduled Tri-County
Junior Golf Tournaments will be
played as scheduled. Next week’s
play will be at the Meigs County
Golf Course in Pomeroy, Ohio. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m., with
play starting at 8:50 a.m.

�Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, June 22, 2013 at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W. Second St.
Pomeroy OH. The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company is
selling for cash in hand or certified check the following collateral:
2005 Chevy Silverado Vin #:
2GCEK13T251114346
1994 Cadillac Fleetwood
Hearse Vin #:
1G6DW52P8RR716700
ANNOUNCEMENTS

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, June 22, 2013 at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W. Second St.
Pomeroy OH. The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company is
selling for cash in hand or certified check the following collateral:

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1996 Cadillac Fleetwood Limousine Vin LEGALS
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LEGALS

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2005 Chevy Silverado Vin #:
2GCEK13T251114346
1994 Cadillac Fleetwood
Hearse Vin #:
1G6DW52P8RR716700
1996 Cadillac Fleetwood Limousine Vin #:
1G6DW52P0TR705505

EDUCATION
REAL ESTATE SALES

1989 Pace Arrow Motor
Home Vin #:
1GBKP37W8K3317000

Miscellaneous

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
above described collaterMakeThe
to is-where
Dish is”,
althe
willSwitch
be sold “as
noSave
expressed
or 50%
implied
Todaywith
and
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1989 Pace Arrow Motor
Home Vin #:
1GBKP37W8K3317000
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”,
with no expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contract Randy at 740-992-4048.
6/19 6/20 6/21

SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
13 CV 021, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF, VS. KEVIN L.
LAYNE, 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, July 12, 2013,
at 10:00 a.m., the following
lands and tenements:
Situated in the Village of Racine, County of Meigs, State of
Ohio, and in Section No. 16,
Town No. 2 and Range No. 12,
beginning at the Southeast
corner of a 17/100 acre tract of
land now or formerly owned by
Florence A. Hartley, being on
the North side of Elm Street
(Buffington Island Road);
thence with said North line of
Elm Street to the Southwest
corner of a tract of land now or
formerly owned by Garrett
Circle; thence with the Circle
West line to the Southeast
corner of the lot now or
formerly owned by Stella
Weaver; thence with the Stella
Weaver South line to the
Northeast corner of the lot now
or formerly owned by S. M.
and J. W. Cross; thence with
the East line of S. M. and J. W.
Cross and Florence A. Hartley
lots to the place of beginning,
containing 55/100 acre, more
or less.
Excepting therefrom the oil,
gas and other minerals, the
same having been reserved by
the State of Ohio.
Reference Deed: Volume 306,
Page 387, Meigs County Official Records.
AUDITORʼS PARCEL NO.:
19-00255.000
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 305
Elm Street, Racine, OH 45771.
CURRENT OWNER: Kevin L.
Layne.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: $22,000.00. The real estate 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:
Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(6)12, 19, 26
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Notices

Medical / Health

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.

Pleasant Valley Hospital is in
need of a full-time WV licensed LPN for a subspecialty
physician office. Ideal candidate should be a hard-working,
self motivated, and professional individual eager to work at a
busy pace. Prior experience in
a physician office or hospital
related area is preferred. Excellent benefits.
Send resumes to: Pleasant
Valley Hospital, c/o Human
Resources, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
(304) 675-6975, or apply online at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V

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.
Wanted
Wanted : Someone to mow
Bethel Cemetery on Bladen
Rd. For details call Keith
Campbell at 256-1444 or Roger James 256-6015
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
4 - Family Yard Sale @ Rodney Community Building June
21 &amp; 22 9am to 5pm

Garage sale at DeLong's, St Rt
143, Pomeroy, Fri 6/21 &amp; Sat
6/22, 8-5.
Moving Sale @ 446 Spruce St.
Ext. June 20,21,&amp; 22nd - 8am
to 5pm, Furniture, household &amp;
sewing items to much to list.
SERVICES
Automotive
1985 BMW 325 E, Asking
Price $1,200 Ph : 446-7383
ask for Paul.
Lawn Service
Mowing &amp; Brush Cutting. Free
Est. 30yrs Exp. Call 740-4463682 John

EDUCATION
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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

REAL ESTATE SALES
Houses For Sale
3.53 acres w/3BR, 2BA,
Double Wide, permanent
foundation, black top driveway.
8x24 sun porch, 8x16 covered
back deck, 24x24 detached
vinyl siding garage, 30x24 pole
barn, w/small lean to. Evenings 740-446-6689 or 740-4417488
FARM &amp; HOUSE 4-SALE:
DW on perm. foundation. 38
acres, 2 barns, 2 bldgs. 192
Buffalo Dr., off Wilding Rd.
Rvnswd. 304-373-5278
$189.9

Professional Services

Lots

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

Trailer lot for rent, $175 mo, incd water, 33533 Bailey Run
Rd, 252-564-4805

Sewer &amp; Waterline Repair
Call:
304-675-3824
304-593-1991
Repairs

Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General
"Hiring Direct Care Staff for individuals with developmental
disabilities. If interested please
call 740-853-0526 or apply in
person from 10a-3p at 352 2nd
Ave Gallipolis, OH (BTS Building)"
HELP WANTED: Fruth Pharmacy is seeking a Store Manager, 5-7 yrs. management experience preferred, strong customer service skills, strong
computer skills, merchandising experience, benefits
available, pay commensurate
with experience. Email resume with Store Manager in
subject line to
dgatewood@fruthpharmacy.co
m
H.S. CAREER-TECHNICAL
MATH INSTRUCTOR - Valid
Ohio Math license required.
CONTACT: Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD (740) 245-5334,
Ext. 256.
DEADLINE: 6/21/2013. EEO

REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
3 BR-home in town. Applications available at Wiseman
Real Estate. Call 446-3644 for
more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
APT for rent, Syracuse, 2 BR,
1 BA, water, sewage, trash incl, avail immediately, $450 mo,
$250 dep. 740-591-1578
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
Ideal downtown location for
single or professional couple.
Newly renovated, 2 bedrooms,
1 1/2 baths, spacious living
and dining area, kitchen with
appliances included and laundry with w/d hookup. No
smoking or pets. Deposit and
references required. Call 740446-7654

Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Bruins
From Page 6
crashing into the left post.
Boston set up its offense during
the 11-second two-man advantage,
and just five seconds after it expired — but before Dave Bolland
was able to get back into the play
— Jaromir Jagr slid one across the
middle, past Lucic in the center

to Bergeron on the other side; he
settled it and then knocked it in.
It was Jagr’s 197th career playoff point in 199 games, moving
him into sole possession of fifth
place on the NHL’s all-time postseason points list.
Notes: Jagr had been tied
with Paul Coffey on the career
postseason scoring list. … Two

of Jagr’s playoff points came on
goals scored against the Blackhawks when they were swept
by the Penguins in 1992 final.
… Boston’s Gregory Campbell,
who broke his leg blocking a
shot in Game 3 of the Eastern
Conference finals, attended the
game. … The Bruins have killed
off 27 straight penalties in the

their history. They also did it in
1939 and ‘41 and again in 1970
and ‘72. … The Bruins won their
seventh straight home playoff
game. … The Blackhawks fell to
3-5 on the road in the postseason. … Ben Smith, who played
just one game this regular season and none in the playoffs, replaced Hossa in the lineup.

playoffs. … Boston’s David Krejci entered the game tied with
Chicago’s Andrew Sharp for the
most goals in the postseason
with nine. The Bruins center
entered the game leading all
scorers with 23 points. … The
Bruins are attempting to win a
Cup for the second time in three
seasons for the third time in

Briefs
From Page 6
participants. A meal will
be provided for each
participant.
For more information,
contact Alex Penrod (740)
974-6498, Rusty Saunders
(304) 593-6531, Tom
Morgan (740) 441-5310,
or Wade Bartholomew
(740) 412-0104.
Gallia Academy
all-comer meets
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting
two all-comer track meets.
These meets will be open
to all ages and the first
meet will be Saturday, July
13, with registration beginning at 9 a.m. and events
starting at 11 a.m. There
is also a meet scheduled
for August 10 at 11a.m.
There is a fee for competitors and spectators and
volunteers are still needed.
Heats will be combined
if needed, but winners
will be determined by age
groups. Competitors must
check in with the clerk at
the second call prior to
their event start. Competitors must have your own
implements for shot and
disc and must have experience throwing the disc
or on the pole vault. We
will not allow the novice
vaulters or disc thrower to
throw or jump for safety

reasons. Parents please supervise your kids, you are
the coach for the day and
please ensure they make it
to their events on time.We
will not enforce limits on
the number of events you
may enter, but please monitor number for the smaller
kids.To volunteer, for more
information or if you have
any questions please call
(740) 645-7316 or email
ff1023@att.net
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The Cliffside Golf Club
will be hosting the fifth
annual Kiwanis juniors at
Cliffside golf tournament
for golfers ages 9-18 on
Thursday, July 11th at 1
p.m. The competitors will
be divided into age groups
of 9-10, 11-12, -13-15 and
16-18 and there is a fee.
Awards will be presented
to the top three golfers in
each age group. Spectators
are allowed, while hole
sponsors and volunteers
are needed. To enter please
contact the clubhouse at
(740) 446-4653 or Ed Caudill at (740) 245-5919 or
(740) 645-4381.
2013 Capehart
Tri-County Junior
Golf League
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The 2013 Frank
Capehart Tri-County ju-

nior golf league has begun. Play is open to boys
and girls for the following
age groups: 10-under, 1112, 13-14, 15-16 and 1718. Registration for play
is between 8:30 a.m. and
8:50 a.m. and play begins
at 9 a.m. There is a fee but
lunch is included. The golf
league will play on June 20
at The Meigs County Golf
Course, June 27 at Riverside Golf Club and the final
week will be July 1 at Hidden Valley Golf Course.
For additional information
contact Jeff Slone (740)
256-6160, Jan Haddox
(304) 675-3388 or Bob
Blessing (304) 675-6135.
Gallia Academy boys
basketball camp
CENTENARY, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy boys
basketball program will
be holding a cutting down
the net basketball camp
for boys entering 3rd-8th
graders from 1 p.m. until
4 p.m. at Gallia Academy
High School. The camp
will be held June 17-19th.
The camp will be structured to teach fundamentals and will be taught by
GAHS coaches and players. All campers will get
t-shirt and will be able to
compete for prizes at the
last day of camp. There is
a fee for each participant.
For more information contact Coach Gary Harrison
at 645-5816.

Blue Angels Youth
Basketball Camp
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— The Gallia Academy
girls basketball program
will be holding the Blue
Angel Youth Girls Basketball Camp for students
entering grades 3-6 from
8:30 a.m. until 11 a.m.
on Thursday, June 20,
through Saturday, June 22,
at the GAHS gymnasium.
The camp is structured
to teach the fundamentals
of the game and players
will be taught fundamentals through individual and
group drills by the Blue
Angel varsity coaches and
players. All campers will
get a Blue Angel basketball
t-shirt and will be able to
compete for prizes at the
last day of camp.
There is a signup fee for
each player and a discounted rate for families with
two or more campers. For
more information, contact
GAHS varsity girls coach
Joe Justice at (740) 6450080 or by email at joe.
justice@gc.k.12.oh.us
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
– The University of Rio
Grande women’s basketball program will conduct its 2013 overnight
instructional camp, July
7-10, on the URG campus. The camp, which

will utilize both the Newt
Oliver Arena and the auxiliary gymnasium in the
Lyne Center, is open to
girls in grades 4-12.
Campers will be under
24-hour supervision of
the Rio Grande coaching
staff and a talented group
of counselors comprised
of college and high school
coaches and players. Certified athletic trainers will
also be on site. Campers
will receive daily instruction in three specific areas
– shooting, post play and
defense. Daily schedules
will include evaluation of
shooting form, individual
and group shooting drills,
instruction in post moves,
instruction of post defense
and rebounding and daily
drills on team and individual defensive techniques.
A number of individual
and team awards will also
be presented on the final
day of the camp. There is
a fee involved, which includes lodging, meals, a
camp t-shirt, a certificate
of participation and use of
the Lyne Center swimming
pool. A camp store will also
be available throughout the
week, allowing campers the
opportunity to purchase
drinks, snacks, pizza and
Rio Grande apparel.
To register, or for more
information, visit the
women’s basketball page
at www.rioredstorm.com,
e-mail Rio Grande head

coach David Smalley at
dsmalley@rio.edu, or contact the basketball office by
phone at 740-245-7491 or
1-800-282-7201, ext. 7491.
Alexander Spartans Golf
Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The
22nd annual Alexander
Spartans Golf Scramble
will be held at 8 a.m. Saturday, July 20, at the Riverside Golf Club in Mason
County. All proceeds will
benefit the Alexander
High School Boys Basketball Program.
There is an entry fee per
golfer (includes Green Fee,
Cart, Food, Beverages, and
Prizes). Teams consist of
4 people (form your own
team and 40 handicap
minimum).
First-place
receives $500 per team,
second-place receives $300
per team and third place
receives $100 per team.
To register or if additional information is
needed, please contact Jim
Kearns at jkearns@alexanderschools.org or (740)
591-8153 or Jordan Hill
at jhill@alexanderschools.
org or (740) 416-0728.
Entry fees may be paid
at the golf course on the
day of the event or mailed
to Alexander Boys Basketball c/o Jim Kearns, 11474
Pleasanton Road, Athens,
OH 45701.

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
-NOW OFFERS-

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

Best Zero Turn Mower Built in the USA

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

60425118

740-992-2975 • 740-508-1936

Manning K. Roush - Owner
•
Flip - Manning - Butch
Proud to have sold Gravely for the past 37 years.
*See Store for details

60423104

Apartments/Townhouses
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
165 N. 4th Ave, Middleport,
OH, 3 BR, 2 BA, brick 2 story,
NO AC, carport, stor, $500 mo.
740-992-2704 or 992-7608
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
2BR, house for Rent in
Kanauga, $500/month,
$500/Deposit. plus utilities, No
Pets 740-441-2707
3 BR House, conveniently located. Ref, dep, no smoking
and no pets. 304-675-5162

Houses For Rent
3 BR &amp; 2 Bath House &amp; 2 car
garage - Rent $750 Dep. $750
Located in the Georges Creek
rd area. 388-9003 leave message- NO PETS, Serious Inquires only
FOR RENT: 3BR 1BA house.
Lg. fenced back yard. Attached garage. 750 mo. + dep.
304-892-4325, 304-531-1197
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

Rentals

Pets

Garage apt for rent: Nice and
clean, I bdrm. Non-smoking,
ref, dep, no pets. 304-6755162
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127

FREE KITTENS:Rescued, to
good homes only. 740-9493408 between 5-8 pm.
Free: Kittens to good home.
740-416-3848

GIVEAWAY - To a good home
8 Shar Pei mixed puppies Call
740)388-9310

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

AGRICULTURE

RESORT PROPERTY
Autos for Sale
ANIMALS

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

AUTOMOTIVE

FOR RENT: Trailer, 450. plus
dep. Gallipolis Ferry. 304962-0167

Miscellaneous

Want To Buy

Call

Rentals

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

85 Corvette $10,000 Ex. Cond.
06 Suz. Blvd Motorcycle 1500
Series $5500. 304-743-6123

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
Upholstery
SNODGRASS UPHOLSTERY,
we help you to recover you
investments. Racine, OH
740-949-2202
RELIGION PAGE

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��� I Am Legend ('07, Sci-Fi) Will Smith.
Deadliest Catch
The Big Brain Theory (N) Science "Power Junkies"
Myth "Duct Tape Canyon" Fast N' Loud
Myth "Duct Tape Canyon"
The First 48
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
(5:00) To Be Announced
Catches
Catches
Swamp'd!
Swamp'd!
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Swamp'd!
Swamp'd!
�� A Cinderella Story ('04, Com) Hilary Duff.
Bad Girls All Star Battle
I'm Havi "Sharanda/ Tory" I'm Having Their Baby
I'm Having Their Baby
Charmed
Charmed
L.A. Hair "The Nail Biter" L.A. Hair
Boot Camp "Grave Loss" Marriage Boot Camp
(5:00) ���� Juno
E! News
Rihanna 777
The Kardashians
The Soup
C. Lately
E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Hot/ Cleve. The Exes (N) SoulMan
(:35) Hot In
Locked Up Abroad
Lockdown
Lockdown
Lockdown
Lockdown
Lockdown
Crossover
Crossover
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Chicago vs Boston (L)
NHL Live!
Crossover
Pro FB Talk
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
Warriors "Best of CW"
Wrecked
Wrecked
Pinks!
Pinks!
Warriors "Best of CW"
Swamp "Endgame"
American Pickers
Pickers "Pinch Picker"
Only in America (N)
Top Shot All-Stars (N)
Top Shot "Crank Trigger"
Million Dollar List
Housewives/NewJersey
Housewives/NewJersey
Million Dollar List (N)
Chef Roblé &amp; Co. (N)
Watch (N)
Million Doll
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (N)
Awards (N) �� Notorious (2008, Biography) Mohamed Dione, Derek Luke, Jamal Woolard.
Husbands
Husbands
Cousins
Cousins
Cousins
Cousins
Elbow (N)
Elbow Room Property Brothers
HouseH (N) House
Property Brothers
Exit "That Sinking Feeling" P. Witness "The Lost Boy" Ghost Hunters
Ghost Hunters
Paranormal Witness
Ghost Hunters
(5:30) ��� Contagion Matt Damon.
�� American Reunion ('12, Com) Jason Biggs.
Veep
True Blood
Bill Maher
(5:50) ��� Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
Banshee
Banshee
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(:45) �� Deep Impact Elijah Wood.
Movie
���� People Like Us ('12, Dra) Chris Pine.
Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic ('13, Doc) The Borgias "The Prince" Gigolos
Movie

60422618

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Sales • Service • Parts • Pick up • Delivery

�Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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

Difficulty Level

By Dave Green

1
9
8 2
7
9
6

2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

zITS

6/19

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday,
June 19, 2013:
This year expect to experience some
adjustments and also some discomfort. You will enjoy people a lot. You’ll
swap jokes and exude charm. You
will learn how to balance your different
needs. Your daily routine becomes
even more important. Take good care
of your health: Get a flu shot, see the
dentist regularly and see the doctor if
need be. If you are single, you could
meet someone special in the next few
months; however, note that there could
be an element of instability connected
to this bond. If you are attached, you
and your partner will work on your
communication style. SCORPIO has a
similar curiosity as you do.
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 Once more you’ll encounter a depressed person in your life.
You might not know what to do next.
Investigate, and remain sure of yourself. A caring gesture could make all
the difference to this individual; you
understand what he or she is experiencing. Tonight: Dinner out.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH You might be projecting your
frustration more than you realize.
Certain situations could draw in a new
level of understanding. Reflect more
— not to prove that you are right, but
rather to gain a greater perspective.
Seriousness is in the air. Tonight: Let
there be music.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You’ll want to get a better understanding of a situation. Your
sense of direction might not be realistic
right now. You have great ideas; however, making them work could be a
challenge. Be clear and direct in your
dealings. Visualize more of what you
want. Tonight: Dream on.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Your resourcefulness comes
to the rescue. A very unhappy child or
loved one sees no way out of an emotional maze. You will help bring this
person back to reality. You instinctively
understand where he or she is coming from. Tonight: Remain sensitive to
others.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH You are very confident and
optimistic. Listen to feedback from an
important person in your life. You’ll
discover the importance of change, as
unexpected plans could be tossed your
way. Remember that you like excitement. Tonight: Choose to go along with

the moment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH A discussion might be serious, but it will provoke an exchange
of ideas and solutions. A partner or
close associate could react in a most
unexpected manner. Stay sure of yourself and realize how much excitement
will be triggered by an event. Tonight:
Togetherness is the theme.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Be aware of the costs of
proceeding as you have. You just
might be a little tired of playing the
same old games. Switch gears or
simply refuse to partake, if you want
to change. Reach out to someone at a
distance who means the world to you.
Tonight: Balance your budget.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH You might come off too
strong, as if you’re pushing others
away. Know that they might not understand where you are coming from.
A loved one gives you the benefit of
the doubt. Discuss the ever-changing
dynamic of this particular relationship.
Tonight: As you like it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH Understand what is going
on with a family member who might
be sending you mixed messages.
You would like to have more clarity.
Understand what is motivating you as
well. A financial decision could feel like
extra pressure. Know your options.
Tonight: Keep it quiet.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Recognize what is happening with a child or loved one. Laughter
surrounds a potentially difficult decision. Make an effort to explain to
a friend what you are feeling; you
might get some interesting feedback
as a result. Acknowledge a change.
Tonight: Where the action is.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Listen to a suggestion, but
know that it might be something that
goes against your nature. You are
quite clear as to what you want and
expect. Communication could have a
surprising tone, especially if it involves
feelings. It might be hard to root out the
issue. Tonight: Out late.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Your great ideas might fall
on deaf ears right now. Others won’t
know what to say, even if they do
hear one or two of them. Do what you
need to do in order to pursue a goal. It
could be starting to plan your vacation
or making a special request. Tonight:
Relax with a friend.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Bruins rookie D Hamilton biding time as rookie
BOSTON (AP) — Dougie Hamilton spent his
20th birthday watching the
Stanley Cup finals.
He’d rather be playing
in them.
The Bruins rookie defensemen was in street
clothes when Boston defeated the Chicago Blackhawks 2-0 on Monday
night to take a 2-1 lead in
the best-of-seven series. It
also was the first day of his
post-teenage years.
After a regular season
in which he played 42 of
the 48 games, and then
seven of the first 11 playoff games, Hamilton hasn’t
suited up for any of the last
eight, including the fourgame sweep of Pittsburgh
in the Eastern Conference
finals and the three games
against Chicago.
So what has the 6-foot-5,
2011 first-round draft pick
learned?
“I’ve learned that it’s not
fun not playing,” Hamilton
said Tuesday. “It’s been
kind of tough in ways, but,
at the same time, you’re
just trying to have fun
and enjoy it. I think it’s a

pretty exciting opportunity to start the year in
junior hockey and you’re
two (wins) away from the
Stanley Cup.”
He still figures in Boston’s plans for the future despite his current idleness.
“I now know what it’s
like to go this far in the
Stanley Cup finals and see
what it’s like and the schedule and how guys play and
things like that. So I think
it’ll only help me,” he said.
“When I was younger, I
don’t know if I would have
thought I’d be in the NHL
at 19 and you look at what
I would be doing instead.
You just have to remember
how lucky you are.”
———
FACEOFF
DOMINATION: One of the most
lopsided stats in the Stanley Cup finals so far has
been Boston’s domination
of faceoffs, including Patrice Bergeron’s 24-4 edge
in the Bruins’ 2-0 victory in
Game 3.
In all, Boston has won
57 percent of the faceoffs
while opening a 2-1 lead
in the best-of-seven NHL

championship series.
“When we’re winning
draws the way we are right
now, it’s big for a team,”
Bruins
forward
Brad
Marchand said. “You’re
with the puck a lot more.
It’s always nice to start
with it, than chasing it. We
create a lot of opportunities from that. We really
have to give our centermen
a lot of credit. They’re doing a great job.”
Bergeron led the NHL
with a 62.1 percentage in
winning faceoffs in the regular season. He has won more
than 65 percent (63 of 96) of
his faceoffs in the series.
“Twenty-four and four on
the faceoffs yesterday, which
is an incredible stat,” Bruins
forward Milan Lucic said.
“That’s a part of the game
that he takes a lot of pride
in and that we take a lot of
pride in as a team. Every
pregame skate, I know the
guys are working on faceoffs
and it’s a lot easier starting
with the puck than it is chasing it. I’m sure they talked
about it and we need to stay
sharp on our faceoffs.”
Blackhawks
forward

Indians recall
streaking 3B
Lonnie Chisenhall

Dave Bolland also noted
the discrepancy and said
Chicago would work on
eliminating it. Playing in
Boston, where Bergeron
has the advantage of being allowed to put his stick
down last, makes it even
more difficult.
“We’ve got to be better,”
Bolland said. “We will be
better.”
———
PRETTY
‘SPECIAL’
TEAMS: Having a man
advantage against the
Boston Bruins isn’t much
of an advantage.
They haven’t allowed a
power play goal in their
last seven games while
facing some top scorers —
Sidney Crosby and Evgeni
Malkin with the Pittsburgh
Penguins and Jonathan
Toews and Patrick Kane
with Chicago.
The Bruins have killed
off 27 straight penalties,
including all 11 in the three
games against the Blackhawks. Chicago was scoreless on five power plays on
Monday night when Boston won 2-0 to take a 2-1
lead in the best-of-seven
Stanley Cup finals.

CLEVELAND (AP) — Lonnie Chisenhall took
his demotion in stride. He didn’t go down to the
minor leagues and sulk.
He picked up his bat and hit his way back to
the Indians.
Chisenhall, who began the season as Cleveland’s starting third baseman before a slump led
to him being optioned on May 13, was recalled
Tuesday from Triple-A Columbus and was in the
starting lineup and batting seventh against the
Kansas City Royals.
Being called up for the third time to the majors
wasn’t as thrilling to the 24-year-old Chisenhall as
his first time, but it represents a fresh start to a
season that started poorly.
“It’s not quite as life-changing as it was in
2011,” he said. “But it’s definitely a positive to get
back and contribute to the team what I can.”
Chisenhall was batting just .213 (20 for 94)
with three homers and 11 RBIs in 26 games and
his defensive was suffering before the Indians
decided to send him down to the Clippers. They
wanted him to clear his head, take a deep breath
and relax. It was obvious he was trying to do too
much and was only making his problems worse.
At Columbus, Chisenhall got his swing back.
He batted .390 with six homers and 26 RBIs in
27 games, and hit an eye-popping .467 with 16
RBIs in 16 games since May 29.

Case
From Page 6
attack was reposted on the high
school’s fan website, RollRedRoll.
The FBI raided Lostutter’s
home in April, seeking computer equipment, records related to RollRedRoll and a Guy
Fawkes mask, he said.

The warrant is not publically
available through the federal courts.
Lostutter said he worked
with the online hacking group
Anonymous and that a group
of FBI agents, joined by two
Kentucky
State
Troopers
and an officer from the Clark

County Sheriff’s Office spent
three hours in his home. During that time, Lostutter said
he and two others were handcuffed and not allowed to leave
or shown the warrant until the
search was over.
Lostutter said wasn’t told of his

rights before being handcuffed.
“When I realized I wasn’t Mirandized, I was like ‘score’,” Lostutter said.
Lostutter said he has tried to
settle the case with the Justice
Department.
“There’s no reason why I

should face more time for compromising a site by guessing a
security question to reset a password … than those people who
held down a drunk, underage
teenager,” Lostutter said. “And,
I did it in the name of good. And,
I didn’t even do it.”

Mickelson
From Page 6
shots out of the lead in a
tie for 33rd?
Also on the schedule
are newcomers Chambers
Bay and Erin Hills, along
with Oakmont, Pebble
Beach, Shinnecock Hills

and Winged Foot, which
will take Mickelson to
his 50th birthday. His advancing age is a greater
factor than where the
U.S. Open is played. Because Mickelson can win
— and fail — anywhere.
Despite his record six

silver medals, the U.S.
Open is the one major
that Mickelson has had the
most chances to win.
He plays the Masters
consistently better, and
he has won three green
jackets, but Mickelson had

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Gold Sponsor:
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Supporters:
AEP-Gavin Plant
Alpha Iota Masters Sorority
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home
Simmons-Musser-Warner Insurance
D&amp;M Pizza
Farmers Bank (Pomeroy)
Meigs Juvenile Court
First Baptist Church (Middleport)
Fox’s Pizza Den
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
John and Sue Lightfoot
Little, Sheets &amp; Barr, LLP
Meigs County Cancer Initiative, Inc.
Meigs Co. Council on Aging, Inc.
Meigs Co. General Health District
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Meigs County Agricultural Society
Karr Contracting
Shade River Coon Hunters Association
PDK Construction
The Athens Messenger
Home National Bank
WYVK 92.1 FM
McDonald’s of Pomeroy
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center

The Daily Sentinel (Charlene Hoeﬂich, Sarah
Hawley, Brenda Davis)
Pomeroy Library
Rio Grande Community College
Southern Ohio Disposal
Jack’s Septic Service
Candle Creations
Middleport Flower Shop
WJOS TV 27
Insurance Plus
Ridenour’s Gas Service
Superior Auto Body
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Dr. Kelsey Henry, DC
Meigs Co. Treasurer Peggy Yost
Meigs Co. Auditor Mary T. Byer Hill
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
Business that put out coin cans or posters

Entertainers:
Gospel Bluegrass Gentlemen &amp; Brenda
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Brian and The Family Connection
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Swinging Seniors of Meigs County

60426511

2400 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-1711
While Supplies Last

He had the outright
54-hole lead for the first
time, though add some
U.S. Open reality — seven guys were separated
by two shots, which in effect is like having no lead
at all. Mickelson didn’t
blow this one, not as he
did at Winged Foot. Everyone makes mistakes
in the final round of golf’s
toughest test.
Mickelson had a pair of
three-putts on the front
nine for double bogey,
another on the back nine
when his first “putt” was
with his wedge. The USGA
had him for 37 putts in the
final round. What let him
down were his wedges —
too strong on No. 5 and
No. 13, too weak on No.
15, three holes that cost
him four shots.
Justin Rose three-putted the 11th. He nearly
shanked a bunker shot on
the 14th. He three-putted
the 16th.
What will be remembered is how Rose saved
his best two swings for the
final hole, including that
4-iron that he said might
have made Hogan proud.
And this U.S. Open will
be remembered for Mickelson leaving with another
silver medal. No one ever
said golf was fair.

The Meigs County Relay for Life
Thanks the Following for Putting Us
“Over the Rainbow” in this Local
Fight Against Cancer!

Selected
Trees, Shrubs,
and Rose
Bushes

Just
Arrived

Tiger Woods, which was
not a fair fight. Mickelson
was six shots behind going into the final round
at Bethpage in 2009 and
was tied for the lead with
five holes to play. He
missed a 3-foot putt on
the 15th and an 8-footer
on the 17th.
He was right there at
Pebble Beach in 2010, the
most visibly angry he’s
been over how the USGA
let the greens get away in
the last round. How his
birdie putt stayed out on
No. 14 in the final round
is one of golf’s many
mysteries.
Every discussion about
Mickelson and U.S. Open
has to include Winged
Foot in 2006. He had a
one-shot lead and made
double bogey on the last
hole by trying to hit 3-iron
around a tree from left
of the fairway. If he had
punched it down the fairway, he had a good chance
at par and at worst made
bogey. Instead, he delivered a line that lives in
U.S. Open infamy. “I am
such an idiot,” he said.
As for Merion?
“This was my best chance
of all,” Mickelson said. “I
had a golf course I really
liked. I felt this was as good
as opportunity as you could
ask for. It really hurts.”

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only three other reasonable chances to win at Augusta National.
Mickelson has had only
two good shots at the
British Open, in 2004 at
Royal Troon and in 2011
at Royal St. George’s. And
while he won the PGA
Championship in 2005 at
Baltusrol, his only other
chances were at Valhalla
in 1996, Atlanta in 2001
when David Toms beat
him with a par putt on
the last hole, and Whistling Straits in 2004 when
he finished two shots out
of a playoff.
But the U.S. Open? Lefty
seems to be in the hunt every other year.
He twice had chances
at Shinnecock Hills. He
played the par-5 16th hole
in 6-over par for the week
in 1995. That would be
operator error. In 2004,
Mickelson ran into a great
putting performance from
Retief Goosen, who oneputted the last six holes
on greens so fast they
barely had any grass.
Mickelson contributed to
his runner-up finish with
a three-putt from 5 feet
above the hole on No. 17
for a double bogey.
Mickelson gave a valiant effort at Bethpage
Black in 2002. He started
the day five shots behind

Ute Looney
Scott Warner
Jeff McElroy
Rockin Reggie Robinson
Survivor James Soulsby

Volunteers:
Brian Bailey
Courtney Midkiff
Lois Oiler
Mary Price
Terri Mullins
Pam Roach
Survivor Rhonda Cullums
Janice Grimm
Drew Webster Post #39
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Pastor Diana Kinder
Survivor June VanVranken
Survivor Norma Torres
Lenora Leifheit
Jerry Frederick
Vendors:
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Teams:
Keith’s Get-R-Done
Meigs High School Student Council
Blessed (Rocksprings Rehab)
Star Grangers
Swisher and Lohse Pharmacy
Angels Fighting Cancer (Farmers Bank TP)

To all those who attended or donated to the
American Cancer Society in any way, we appreciate you!!

60426252

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