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

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Civil War election
ballots... C1

Showers likely.
High, 81, Low, 67.
... Page A3

Greenbrier Classic
coverage... B1

Charles Booth, 53
Dr. Rodney Dayo, 43
Betty Lou Johnson, 83
James Jim’ Porter, 59

$2.00

SUNDAY, JULY 7, 2013

Vol. 46, No. 26

Marvin Stephens, 77
Clara Wellington
Carolyn Yeauger, 69

Cozart enters plea of not guilty by reason of insanity
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The man accused of the aggravated murder of Wallace R. Chaffin in
May of this year has now entered a plea of not guilty by
reason of insanity.
Ryan A. Cozart, 32, of Racine
entered the plea in a document
filed by his attorney Dennis Sipe
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court last month.
Sipe has also filed an entry
suggesting to the court that

Cozart is incompetent to stand
trial, and asking for an evaluation of the defendant.
Entries were filed on July 3 by
Judge I. Carson Crow ordering
the defendant to be evaluated
for both the plea of not guilty by
reason of insanity and his competency to stand trial.
Both entries state that the
evaluations and reports are due
to the court within 30 days of the
order which would be Aug. 2.
Cozart is charged with aggravated murder, tampering with
evidence, and aggravated rob-

bery in the case.
Aggravated murder is a special felony and carries a sentence ranging from 15 years to
life. Tampering with evidence is
a felony of the third degree and
aggravated robbery is a felony of
the first degree. A third degree
felony carries a possible sentence of 3-5 years, while a first
degree felony carries a possible
sentence of 11 years.
Bond for Cozart was set at $1
million as requested by Meigs
County Prosecutor Colleen Williams. Marietta based public

defender Sipe was appointed to
represent Cozart in the case
The charges against Cozart
are in connection with the stabbing death of Chafin at the Meigs
Motel on May 9.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood, officials
with the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office, Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation,
and the Meigs County Coroner
responded to the Meigs Motel
soon after midnight on Thursday, May 9. Upon responding,
officers found evidence of an al-

tercation and a homicide.
Ariel R. Smith, 22 of Pomeroy,
and Sara J. Craig, 33, of Portland, have also been charged in
connection with the case.
Smith is charged with complicity to felonious assault a
felony of the second degree,
and tampering with evidence, a
felony of the third degree.
Smith has retained Gallipolis based attorneys William Eachus and Jeff Finley
as counsel. Bod for Smith has
See PLEA ‌| A2

Nick Claussen | photo

The Payne family runs their own small farm while doing other
work, and SOACDF funding helped them to begin raising sheep.

Tobacco settlement
provides grant money
to Gallia County
Nick Claussen

Special to the Sunday Times-Sentinel
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Greg Weatherbee

The Psylodelic Gallery, located on St. Clair Road in Pomeroy, is open to the public Wednesday through Friday from 12
to 6 p.m.; Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. For a private tour, call 740-992-2575.

Kaukonens open Psylodelic Gallery
Silo turned museum features
momentos from the psychedelic era
Greg Weatherbee

gweatherbee@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Far from the
Haight–Ashbury District of San
Francisco and miles away from
Yasgur’s Farm in New York, a
small museum opened last weekend in the rolling hills of Meigs
County to pay tribute to a sound
and culture that forever changed
the societal landscape of a nation. Jorma Kaukonen and his
wife, Vanessa, added Jorma
Kaukonen’s Psylodelic Gallery
to the grounds of The Fur Peace
Center for Art and Culture, drawing visitors from as far away as
Maine and California. The event

was capped off by a performance
by Big Brother and the Holding
Company, the band who helped
launch the career of Janis Joplin.
In the mid 1960s, artists and
free-thinkers began to converge
on southern California, mainly
in the area of Haight-Ashbury.
The Haight-Ashbury District is
named for the intersection of two
streets bearing the names Haight
and Ashbury. This assembly of
artists is widely considered the
birth of the Hippie movement
and also spawned many iconic
musical acts such as The Grateful
Dead, Janis Joplin, Big Brother
and the Holding Company and
Jefferson Airplane.

Kaukonen, who was attending
Santa Clara University in 1962 and
teaching music in nearby San Jose,
was asked to audition for Jefferson
Airplane by founding member Paul
Kantner. His unique finger-picking
guitar style made an impression,
and Kaukonen was added to the
band’s original lineup.
Jefferson Airplane quickly took
off on the local music scene, producing such hits as “White Rabbit”
and “Somebody to Love”. Seven
years later, their success landed
the band at the storied Woodstock
Music Festival at Yasgur’s Farm in
upstate New York.
Jefferson Airplane dissolved in
1972, but Kaukonen and Airplane
bassist, Jack Cassidy, had already
formed the band Hot Tuna as a side
project in early 1970. Kaukonen
See GALLERY ‌| A2
Exhibits inside
the museum
include a typewriter, which can
be heard in the
background during the recording of the “Typewriter Tapes”.
The Typewriter
Tapes are a rare
1964 recording
of Kaukonen
and Janis Joplin
playing in the
living room of
Kaukonen’s
southern
California home.
At the time of
his recording,
his late ex-wife,
Margareta, was
typing a letter to
her mother using the typewriter on display.

Editor’s note: This is the second in a two-part series
about the long-term local effects of the 1998 tobacco settlement. The first installment can be found at www.mydailytribune.com.
GALLIA COUNTY — While the 1998 tobacco settlement may be a forgotten news item for many people
around the state and country, it is still having a huge impact on Gallia County.
The settlement of the tobacco lawsuit resulted in billions of dollars for states across the country, and part of
the money in Ohio was used to create the Southern Ohio
Agricultural and Community Development Foundation
(SOACDF).
Since 2002, the Foundation has invested roughly $90
million in the 22 Ohio counties that are recognized as traditional tobacco-growing counties. All of the counties are
located in southern Ohio.
Gallia County is designated as one of the top tobacco
See TOBACCO ‌| A2

Peoples Bancorp
Inc. to acquire Ohio
Commerce Bank
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

MARIETTA — Peoples Bancorp Inc., holding company for Peoples
Bank, National Association, announced that on
July 1, 2013, Peoples
Bank signed a definitive
agreement to acquire all
of the outstanding common stock of Ohio Commerce Bank, which operates a single branch in
Beachwood, Ohio, banking market.
“We are pleased to continue to grow our footprint while acquiring a
well performing bank that
complements our current
growth strategy,” said
Chuck Sulerzyski, Peoples Bank president and
CEO. “Dell Duncan and
the Ohio Commerce team
have done an excellent
job of building a franchise
that focuses on serving
the banking needs of local
small businesses and entrepreneurs. We are excited about the opportunity
to provide our extensive
product offering and a
full spectrum of financial

expertise to Ohio Commerce customers.”
Sulerzyski continued,
“For the past 111 years,
Peoples has earned the
reputation as a leader in
community banking by
providing a personalized
brand of banking, a broad
choice of financial products and services delivered through state of the
art technology. We are
large enough to provide
the same products and
services as the region’s
large banks, but with a
much higher degree of
personalized service. Our
goal is to be the leading
provider of financial services in the region, with
local decision-making and
familiar faces for our customers.”
Stuart Kline, Chairman
of Ohio Commerce, commented, “We are excited
to be affiliated with an
outstanding community
bank such as Peoples,
and we believe this transaction will be beneficial
for our customers and
community. Our customSee BANK ‌| A2

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A2

Gallery

Tobacco

From Page A1
and Cassidy still tour with Hot Tuna
on a limited basis, but along the way,
the new museum owner has explored
multiple musical ventures and styles.
How does an accomplished musician and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
member find himself living in rural
southeast Ohio? Well, Kaukonen said,
“It was just something you couldn’t
have planned in a million years.”
In 1990, he said he was sitting at his
home in upstate New York when he
received a call from a friend he hadn’t
talked to in more than 25 years. The call
was to tell Kaukonen about a piece of
property for sale in Meigs County, Ohio.
“So I came down to take a look at
it,” he explained. “Once I got here, I
just had a good feeling about it, but
my wife thought I had lost my mind.”
Long before the Fur Peace Ranch
and the Psylodelic Gallery, Kaukonen
said he was enamored with the area.
“Before we even got into the building of the ranch, I really liked the area.
I really liked the way it felt,” he said.
Kaukonen’s wife, Vanessa, described the move to Meigs County
as “the single most amazing thing I
could have ever dreamed possible in
my life.” She said, at the time, the
couple was on “auto-pilot”, and they
weren’t really contributing anything
to society. Her husband smiled as he
sat in his lawn chair listening to his
wife’s account of the decision to move
to such an out-of-the-way location.
Vanessa recounted her first time in
Meigs County without her husband.
She said she went for a drive on U.S.
33 to acclimate herself with the area.
“I just kept driving and driving,” she
said. “I saw puffy white clouds and
blue skies. Then I saw all these rolling
hills, and they just wrapped around me
like a mother’s arms and took me in.”
Psylodelic Gallery, which is a play
on words since the museum is housed
inside a small silo only a few feet
away from the concert hall, was Vanessa’s dream come to fruition. John
Hurlbut, the Fur Peace Ranch guitar
camp manager, joked on stage during the opening event, “What a great
idea Vanessa had for this museum.
Although we might have thought the
idea was a little crazy at first, it all
turned out for the best.”
“It’s kind of nice for us to be able
to provide,” Kaukonen said of the Gallery. “I mean, there are other places
you can go, too. The Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame, which obviously focuses
on music, the guys who were members and that kind of stuff, but it’s
more than that.”
Kaukonen said some of the items
in the museum are on loan and others
are part of his personal collection.
“We’re planning on rotating stuff as
interest develops,” Kaukonen said as
he explained the exhibits in the museum. “I’ve saved a lot of stuff, not that I
perceived it might be of value in some
way, but I’m just kind of a pack-rat,
and I have trouble throwing things
away, and thank goodness I didn’t,”
he said. “Many of the things, like the

jewelry, are things of mine that lay in
a drawer for decades. So, in this exhibit, most of the stuff belongs to Vanessa and myself. When I can get my
friends, who have a lot of that stuff,
to actually take us seriously and know
we’re not just going to take the stuff
and sit it in our living room and play
with it, we hope to get some more interesting exhibits up.”
Exhibits inside the museum include
a typewriter, which can be heard in
the background during the recording
of the “Typewriter Tapes”. The Typewriter Tapes are a rare 1964 recording of Kaukonen and Janis Joplin playing in the living room of Kaukonen’s
southern California home. At the
time of his recording, his late ex-wife,
Margareta, was typing a letter to her
mother using the typewriter on display. The acoustic guitar Kaukonen
played in the Typewriter Tapes is also
featured as one of the many exhibits.
There are several items from the
historic 1969 Woodstock Music
Festival included in the museum’s
inventory. The shirts Kaukonen and
Cassidy wore while performing with
Jefferson Airplane at the festival are
proudly displayed.
Another interesting gallery piece is
the sleeping bag Wavy Gravy slept in
while attending Woodstock. Wavy Gravy, who was born Hugh Nanton Romney, is an entertainer, peace activist, radio show host, author and, notably, the
official clown of the Grateful Dead. He
was given the nickname “Wavy Gravy”
by B. B. King following the 1969 Texas
International Pop Festival. After being
arrested several times at peace demonstrations in the mid 1960s, Wavy
Gravy took to dressing as a clown in
hopes police would be more reluctant
to arrest him. For the most part, the
ploy worked, and he continues entertaining as a clown to this day.
The second floor of the gallery features a video montage of photos from
the turbulent times of the 1960s. The
video, which is viewed on the ceiling
as onlookers sit in multi-colored beanbag chairs, is set to music to enhance
the experience. Several viewers on
hand during the opening were moved
to tears by the end of the video.
Kaukonen said he believes the
quotes covering large areas throughout
the gallery may be as important as any
of the displays. As you enter the gallery, the walls of the foyer are littered
with quotes from memorable political,
musical and activist figures from the
peace movement. The quotes also line
the walls of the spiral staircase leading
to the second floor of the museum.
“To me, like a lot of the quotes that
are in the foyer when you go in are as
important, or maybe more important,
as any of the exhibits. The exhibits
are to give you a tangible feeling of
the atmosphere, but there was a lot of
really interesting stuff going on back
then. That’s kind of what we’re all
about here. We want to let some of the
people who weren’t there try to get
some of that feeling,” he explained.
Big Brother and the Holding Com-

From Page A1

There are several items from the historic 1969 Woodstock Music Festival
included in the museum’s inventory.
Jorma and Vanessa are pictured with
the shirts Kaukonen and Cassidy wore
while performing with Jefferson Airplane at the festival.

pany finished off the night with a performance inside the the Ranch’s music
hall. The band, who is credited with
putting the voice of Janis Joplin on
the musical map, played before a soldout crowd and featured songs from
their Joplin recordings. The band also
mixed in newer recordings performed
by the updated lineup. The present version of the band includes two original
members, Peter Albin (bass) and Sam
Andrews (guitar). Lead vocalist Cathy
Richardson, guitarist Ben Nieves and
drummer Dave Getz now round out
the current band membership.
Before the band took the stage,
Kaukonen and Hurlbut brought out
Andrews and Albin for a question and
answer session. The Big Brother duo
answered questions from Kaukonen
about their time with Joplin, how the
two band members met and about the
times leading up to and following Big
Brother’s rise to fame.
At the end of the day, however, the
Psylodelic Gallery is not about any one
exhibit or performance. It’s a means of
capturing the essence of an era.
“It’s kind of funny. I’m not a nostalgic kind of a guy, generally speaking,
I mean some things tweak my nostalgia, but you kind of take it for granted,” Kaukonen said when reflecting
on Vanessa’s inspiration for the gallery. “My wife is younger than I am, so
I kind of caught her enthusiasm about
a time that, when you think about it,
was a magical time.
“There was a perfect sort of a storm,”
said Kaukonen. “There was a confluence of things that, I don’t know, it’ll
probably happen again, but I don’t see
it happening in my lifetime, where the
music, the art, the spoken word were so
tied in with what was going on.”
The Psylodelic Gallery, located on St.
Clair Road in Pomeroy, is open to the
public Wednesday through Friday from
12 to 6 p.m.; Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.; and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
For a private tour, call 740-992-2575.

Bank
From Page A1
ers will gain access to a
greater array of products
and services, including
retirement plan services,
investment,
insurance
and more commercial
loan products, while continuing to see the same
high level service they
have come to expect.

We will also have a significantly larger lending
limit, which will allow us
to invest even more in our
local communities.”
Under the terms of the
agreement, Peoples Bank
has agreed to pay $13.75
in cash for each share of
Ohio Commerce common stock for a total cash
consideration of approxi-

mately $16.5 million. Peoples expects this acquisition to be accretive to its
2014 earnings per share.
The transaction is subject to customary closing
conditions, including regulatory approvals and Ohio
Commerce shareholder approval, and is anticipated to
be completed in the fourth
quarter of 2013. At that

time, Ohio Commerce’s office will become a branch of
Peoples Bank. At March 31,
2013, Ohio Commerce had
total assets of $107 million,
total loans of $86 million
and total deposits of $95
million. Ohio Commerce is
being advised by Boenning
&amp; Scattergood, Inc. and
Vorys, Sater, Seymour and
Pease LLP. Dinsmore

Plea
From Page A1
been set at $750,000 as requested
by Williams. A jury trial in the
case is set for July 23.
Craig is charged with tampering
with evidence, a felony of the third

degree; obstructing official business, a felony of the fifth degree;
and receiving stolen property, a
felony on the fourth degree.
Public defender David Baer represents Craig in the case. He was
previously appointed as counsel

in two other open cases against
Craig in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court. Bond for Craig has
been set at $500,000. Craig is
scheduled for a pre-trial hearing
at 11 a.m. on July 25, with a jury
trial scheduled for Aug. 8

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growing counties in the
state and, in turn, has received a large portion of
the SOACDF funding.
Over the last 11 years,
the money from the Fund
has helped Gallia County
residents go to college,
assisted tobacco farmers
with the transition to other
types of farming, helped
with economic development projects, played a
key role in important infrastructure projects and
helped to change lives.
For Brian and Amy
Corbin, the SOACDF
funding has helped them
in their transition from
tobacco farming to other
forms of farming. The
Fund has also provided
some scholarship money
for one of their daughters
to go to college.
The Corbins have applied for and received
matching funding for
different projects over
the years, and the most
recent project was for a
new barn located on the
top of a hillside on their
picturesque farm.
Don Branson, executive
director of the SOACDF,
explained that the Fund
makes strategic investments with farmers such
as the Corbins in order to
help keep agriculture sustainable. Since 2002, the
Fund has provided roughly
$8 million in agriculture
development funds for Gallia County residents.
“We’re trying to help
the farmers be more efficient and more profitable,” Branson said, adding that the funding is
used in a variety of ways
and is used with matching
funding. Grant recipients
have to go through an involved application process
and come up with matching funding, and then the
SOACDF follows the projects closely to insure that
they meet their goals.
Across the 22 counties
covered by the SOACDF,
the Fund has provided
more than 14,000 grants
to farm families and has
assisted with the building
of more then 750 miles of
livestock fence and 250
barns and buildings.
The Corbin family desperately needed a new barn
to store hay and equipment and to work with
their cattle. The family has
moved away from tobacco
farming in recent years and
now works in other areas
of farming. Receiving assistance with building the
barn was a big help, Brian
Corbin said.
He added that while he
liked tobacco farming, he is
very happy with the farming work that he is doing
now.
Brian and Amy Corbin
both work other jobs in addition to farming, and they
work very hard to keep all
of the bills paid. They enjoy running their own family farm, though, and said
they have been very happy
with the assistance from
the SOACDF.
Scott and Jamie Payne
also run their own small
farm while doing other
work, and SOACDF funding helped them to begin
raising sheep.
“So far, so good,” Scott
Payne said about the new
venture. Scott and Jamie
Payne come from families
who were involved in tobacco farming in the past,
and they are enjoying raising sheep. They hope to
greatly expand their farm
in the future, and said they
are thankful for the assistance they have received
from the SOACDF.
When Gallia County
resident Tammi Brabham
needed to expand her business, the SOACDF funding
proved critical.
Brabham is the CEO of

Red’s Truck Center, which
received funding for an
expansion project that allowed it to create additional jobs. The truck garage
had to supply matching
funding along with a business plan that showed how
the grant money would
help the business grow and
either retain or create jobs.
“As long as it creates local jobs in the community,
it helps the community as
a whole,” Branson said.
Since 2002, the Fund has
contributed approximately
$3 million in economic development funds towards
projects in Gallia County.
Across the 22 counties
covered by the SOACDF,
the Fund has helped to
create or retain more than
1,200 jobs through its economic development grants.
For Brabham, the grant
money has helped her business expand, become safer
and more efficient. She is
very pleased with the process that has been set up to
apply for grant funding and
with the assistance that the
Fund has provided for her.
Her business attracts
customers from around the
region, and it continues to
grow and create jobs for
area residents.
In addition to helping
Red’s Truck Center, the
SOACDF has been able
to provide a wide range
of matching grants for local businesses in numerous fields.
At the Silver Bridge
Coffee, for example, the
SOACDF provided matching funding for new equipment that allowed the
company to increase its
productivity.
“It was really important,” owner Lorraine
Walker said. The brewing
equipment that she needed
for the expansion was very
expensive, but she was
able to purchase it with the
grant money. That funding
has allowed her business to
sell more products, expand
its sales in the region and
create more jobs.
The stories highlighted here are just a few of
the many projects that
the SOACDF has been
involved with in Gallia
County, and the Fund has
also worked with countless
other projects in the other
southern Ohio counties in
recent years.
Branson explained that
the SOACDF funding from
the tobacco settlement is
beginning to dwindle, and
it may decrease greatly or
even go away completely in
a few years. He is hopeful
that the state legislature
will be able to find more
funding for the SOACDF,
though, because he has
seen the impact it has
made in the region.
The money has helped
people go to school, assisted individuals who
are starting or running
their own businesses,
helped improve the infrastructure in certain areas
so that business could locate there and grow, and
has helped agriculture
stay strong even while
tobacco farming has decreased. Agriculture is
one of the main driver’s
of Ohio’s economy, and
Branson is proud that
the fund has been able to
help family farmers continue to succeed.
Branson and the others who work with the
SOACDF are very proud of
the work that the Fund has
been able to do and they
are proud of the impact
that the Fund has had on
the community. They know
that while many people
may not even remember
much about the tobacco
lawsuit settlement in the
1990s, the impact of that
case is still having a very
positive effect on Gallia
County today.

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�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A3

Meigs County Community Calendar

Sunday: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 81. Calm wind becoming
southwest 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. South wind around
5 mph becoming calm in the evening. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Monday: A slight chance of showers, then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms after 3 p.m. Partly sunny,
with a high near 87. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 71. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Tuesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 87. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Tuesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 70. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Wednesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Partly sunny, with a high near 86. Chance of precipitation
is 50 percent.
Wednesday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near 84. Chance of precipitation is
60 percent.
Thursday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 44.28
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.37
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 84.74
Big Lots (NYSE) — 32.97
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 49.33
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 86.29
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.05
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.20
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 41.96
Collins (NYSE) — 64.38
DuPont (NYSE) — 53.00
US Bank (NYSE) — 36.76
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.24
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 55.25
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 53.99
Kroger (NYSE) — 36.07
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 49.67
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.33
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.21
BBT (NYSE) — 34.88
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.20
Pepsico (NYSE) — 80.80
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.94
Rockwell (NYSE) — 86.74
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.35
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.22
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.13
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.21
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.93
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.12
Worthington (NYSE) — 33.40
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 5, 2013, provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Gallia County
Community Calendar

Tuesday, July 9

TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
Board will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.
SALISBURY TWP. — The Salisbury Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. at the home of Manning
Roush.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Board of Health Meeting will take
place at 5 p.m. in the conference
room of the Meigs County Health
Department, which is located at 112
E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.

Thursday, July 11

CHESTER — Shade River
Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
at the hall. Refreshments served
following the meeting.

CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board
meeting at 10 a.m. in Room A of
the Ross County Service Center at
475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe,
Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are held the first Thursday of
the month. For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.
POMEROY — A free community
dinner of hamburgers, hot dogs, salads, desserts and drinks will be held
with serving from 5:30-7:00 p.m. at
St. Paul Lutheran Church.

1400 Pike Street in Marietta.
RACINE — A scholarship garage
sale for the RACO/Edison Brace Memorial Scholarship will be held from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Dale Hart residence on Yellowbush Road.

Friday, July 12

TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern
Local Board of Education will meet at
6:30 p.m. for their regular July meeting.
The meeting will be held in the Eastern
Elementary library conference room.

MARIETTA — The Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District Executive Committee will meet at 11:30 a.m. at

Wednesday,
July 24

Gallia County Briefs
City schools board
meeting scheduled

GALLIPOLIS — A Gallipolis City School District
Board of Education meeting will be held at 8:30
a.m. on Monday, July 8 in
the superintendent’s office,
61 State Street, Gallipolis.
The board will consider
the employment of personnel, approve job descriptions and curriculum. For
more information, call
(740) 446-3211.

Upcoming road
closure

GALLIA COUNTY —
Gallia County Engineer,
Brett A. Boothe, has announced that Lincoln Pike
will be closed beginning
at 6 a.m. on Monday, July
8 until further notice. The
closure will be located at
the bridge over Raccoon
Creek between Northup
Road and Johnson Road.
Residents are asked to use
other county roads as a detour.

Rio Valley Stables
hosting ‘horse adventure program’

RIO GRANDE — Rio
Valley Stables, located at
635 Farmview Road, will
be hosting a “horse adventure program” this summer
on July 8-12, July 22-26
and August 12-16. The program is for ages seven and
up and teaches basic horsemanship, safety, handling
and care of horses. Riders
will meet every morning
from 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Arena
riding experience will be
for children ages 7-9 and
trail riding experience will
be for those attendees ages
10-18. Upon completing

the course, students will
receive a certificate. Preregistration is required and
availability is limited. For
more information or to register call (740) 245-5342.

Children services’
board meeting
change

GALLIPOLIS — The
regularly scheduled Gallia County Children Services’ Board meeting has
been changed to 4 p.m. on
Thursday, July 11 at the office located at 83 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis, Ohio.

SOCOG to hold
board meeting

CHILLICOTHE — The
Southern Ohio Council of
Governments (SOCOG)
will hold its next board
meeting on Thursday,
July 11, 2013, at 10 a.m.
in Room A of the Ross
County Service Center
at 475 Western Avenue,
Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601.
Board meetings usually are
held the first Thursday of
the month. For more information, call 740-775-5030,
ext. 103.

SUVCW to hold
bi-monthly meeting

GALLIPOLIS — The
local
Cadot-Blessing
Camp #126 of the Sons
of Union Veterans of the
Civil War will have its
next bi-monthly meeting
at 6:30 p.m. on July 12.
The meeting will be held
at the Gallia County Visitor’s Center located at the
corner of Third Ave. and
Court Street in Gallipolis,
Ohio. The Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War
is a Congressionally Chartered organization founded

for charitable, fraternal,
patriotic and educational
purposes and is the sole
heir to the Grand Army of
the Republic (GAR). Any
person with Civil War ancestry is encouraged to pay
the ultimate honor to that
ancestor by joining their
ranks.

erning Board will hold a
regular monthly meeting at
5 p.m. on Tuesday, July 16
in Bob Evans Farms Hall,
room 103, on the University of Rio Grande campus.
Call (740) 245-0593 for
more details.

Look Good,
Feel Better slated

RIO
GRANDE
—
Family Addition Community Treatment Services
(FACTS)/New
Alternatives is providing
a fishing event for youth
ages six and up. The event
will be held from 10 a.m.-2
p.m. on Friday, July 19 at
the Bob Evans Farm shelter house in Rio Grande.
The shelter house is located across from the restaurant. Participants will
need to bring their own
pole. Please notify FACTS
if this is a problem. For additional information or to
register, call FACTS/New
Alternatives at (740) 4467866 or (740) 286-1589.
Parents must sign a release
form for participation.

GALLIPOLIS — Look
Good, Feel Better sponsored by the American
Cancer Society, will be
held at 1 p.m. on Monday, July 15 at the Cancer
Resource Center in the
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, 170 Jackson Pike.
This free program is for
women with cancer who
are dealing with radiation
and/or chemotherapy treatments. They will be given
advice on how to care for
their skin and other helpful
tips to give them self confidence. Please call (740)
441-3909 for an appointment before 10 a.m. on
Monday, July 15.

BADAMHS
meeting change
announced

GALLIPOLIS — The
July 15 meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction
and Mental Health Services has been cancelled.
The board typically meets
on the third Monday of
each month at 7 p.m. at the
board office, 53 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis.

Gallia-Vinton ESC
announces meeting

RIO GRANDE — The
Gallia-Vinton Educational
Service Center (ESC) Gov-

FACTS sponsoring
fishing day

Annual ice cream
social slated

SALEM CENTER —
The Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department
will hold its 35th annual
ice cream social on Saturday, July 20. Serving will
be from 11 a.m to 3 p.m.
at the fire house which is
located on Ohio 124 in
Salem Center. In addition
to 10 flavors of homemade ice cream, sloppy
joe sandwiches, hot dogs,
and pie will be available.
For more information
contact Linda Montgomery at (740) 669-4245.

Mother: Trayvon Martin cried for help on 911 call

Card showers
SANFORD, Fla. (AP)
Victor Burgess will be celebrating his 92 birthday on — The mother and brothJuly 19. Well wishes may be sent to 5631 State Route 141, er of Trayvon Martin tesGallipolis, Ohio 45631.
tified Friday that screams
for help captured on auEvents
dio of a 911 call came
from the 17-year-old.
Sunday, July 7
Sybrina Fulton and JahGALLIPOLIS — Jacob and Maggie Sluyter Davis fami- varis Fulton took the witly reunion, 1 p.m., Christ United Methodist Church, 9688 ness stand during the trial
Ohio 7 South, Gallipolis. For more information, call (740) of George Zimmerman,
245-9605.
the former neighborhood
watch volunteer charged
Tuesday, July 9
with second-degree murGALLIPOLIS — Triad/SALT meeting, 1 p.m., Senior der in Martin’s shooting
Resource Center, 1167 Ohio 160.
death. Zimmerman has
RIO GRANDE — P.E.R.I. Chapter 58 picnic, 12 p.m., pleaded not guilty and
Bob Evans shelter house in Rio Grande. The chapter will says he shot the teen in
supply meat and beverages and members are asked to self-defense during a fight.
bring a covered dish and table service. Rep. Ryan Smith
After the audio was
will be the guest speaker.
played, prosecutor Bernie
de la Rionda asked SybThursday, July 18
rina Fulton, “Who do you
RIO GRANDE — Basic horsemanship class, 8-9 a.m.,
Rio Valley Stables, 635 Farmview Road, with instructor
Mark Abell. Students may bring their own horses, but
some will be available through Rio Valley Stables. Waivers, helmets, long pants and boots are required. Call (740)
245-5342 for reservations.
RIO GRANDE — Gallia County Republican Corn
Roast, 6 p.m., Bob Evans Shelter House. Free food: hamburgers, smokey boys, corn on the cob. Guest speaker:
Judge Judith L. French.

recognize that to be?” She
replied, “Trayvon Benjamin Martin.”
Identifying
the
screams on the 911 call
could be critical to the
case because it may help
determine who was the
aggressor during the
scuffle between Zimmerman and Martin.
Under cross-examination, defense attorney
Mark O’Mara suggested
that Sybrina Fulton may
have been influenced by
others who listened to
the 911 call, including
relatives and her former
husband.
O’Mara also asked
Fulton
hypothetically
whether she would have

to accept it was Zimmerman yelling for help if
the screams did not come
from her son. He also
asked if she hoped Martin
didn’t do anything that
led to his death.
“I heard my son scream-

ing,” Fulton said. “I
would hope for this to
never have happened and
he would still be here.”
Jahvaris Fulton, Martin’s brother, also testified the screaming voice
was that of Martin.

2nd FRIDAY LIVE MUSIC SERIES

2nd Friday of each Month Through October 2013
ARTS ADVENTURES CLASSES &amp;
WORKSHOPS

Summer Camps, Dance Classes &amp; Much More
For more information contact:
French Art Colony
Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446-3834
frenchartcolony.org

13th Annual Gallia County
Chamber Golf Scramble
Thursday, September 12, 2013
LUNCH 12:00 P.M.
SHOTGUN START AT 1:00 P.M.

Cliffside Golf Club

Sunday, July 21

PERRY TWP. — MJ Clary family reunion at O.O. McIntyre Park Shelter #2. Lunch will be served at 12:30 p.m.
Bring a favorite dessert for the dessert contest.

Saturday, July 13

SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 and Star Junior Grange #878 will
meet with potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

For More Info Call 740-446-0596
*Sponsorships Available*

60430046

*CASH Prizes*

60430741

JULY 25 &amp; 26

60422563

60430585

60328520

60420792

Ohio Valley Forecast

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Opinion

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court’s landmark ruling on
same-sex marriage has private employers around the country scrambling to make sure their employee
benefit plans comply with the law.
The impact of the decision striking down part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act is clear in the
13 states and the District of Columbia where gay marriage is currently
legal or soon will be: Same-sex married couples must be treated the
same as other spouses under federal laws governing tax, health care,
pensions and other federal benefits.
But employee benefit experts
say the effect of the ruling remains
murky in the other 37 states. The
court left intact another provision
of the federal anti-gay marriage
law that allows one state not to
recognize a same-sex marriage performed elsewhere.
“What’s the federal government
going to do when you have a valid
marriage in New York and the couple moves to Texas? We don’t know
the answer to that,” said Scott Macey, president of the ERISA Industry
Committee that represents large
employers.
The confusion is creating uncertainty for many companies
that operate nationwide and
want to administer benefit plans
in a uniform manner.
“My members are all across the
country,” Macey said. “Most, if not
all of them, would prefer to have a
consistent rule across the country.
They don’t want to worry about
changing things from state to state.”
For workers living in states
that have legalized same-sex
marriage, the Supreme Court’s
decision means gay spouses are
entitled to a host of benefits they
were denied previously. The decision extends pension and Social Security survivor benefits to
same-sex spouses, grants equal
access to the Family and Medical
Leave Act and gives employees
married to same-sex spouses the
guarantee of uninterrupted health
care coverage under the federal
COBRA health benefits program.
Same-sex couples can also get
the same tax break on health
coverage that other couples have
been receiving. Before the court’s
ruling, same-sex spouses covered
by employer health plans had to
pay taxes on the benefits they received, which on average added up
to an extra $1,000 year. And employees now will be able to seek reimbursement from flexible health
spending accounts for the medical

Reader Services

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Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, please call one of our newsrooms.

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(304) 675-1333

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www.mydailytribune.com
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www.mydailysentinel.com
Register • Pt. Pleasant, WV
www.mydailyregister.com

Our e-mail addresses are:
Tribune • Gallipolis, OH
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(USPS 436-840)

Reader: Put God back
in our schools

expenses of gay spouses.
“This affects a thousand laws
and regulations that touch employee benefits,” said Bruce Elliott, manager of compensation
and benefits at the Society for
Human Resource Management,
an industry association.
But many questions were left
unanswered by the court. What
happens if an employee lives in
Maryland, which allows same-sex
marriages, but works in neighboring Virginia, which doesn’t? What
happens to an employee who has a
valid gay marriage in Iowa, but then
moves to Alabama, which doesn’t
recognize same-sex marriages?
“It answers one question and
raised many more,” said Susan
Hoffman, a Philadelphia attorney
who focuses on employee benefits. “There may be pressures
on the employer, but there is no
legal mandate.”
About 62 percent of Fortune
500 companies already offer samesex domestic partner health benefits, according to the gay advocacy
group Human Rights Campaign.
More of those companies, and perhaps smaller firms, could decide to
extend those benefits in light of the
court’s decision.
Several companies that already
offer domestic partner benefits
told The Associated Press that
they did not plan any immediate changes. That includes Ford
Motor Co., which has offered
same-sex benefits to hourly and
salaried employees since 2000,
spokesman Jay Cooney said.
At glass manufacturer Corning
Inc. in New York, spokesman Daniel
Collins said the company has been
in the process of revising its policies
as different states legalize gay marriage. For now, though, it plans to
keep its domestic partner benefits
until it has more guidance.
“It’s so new and actions are occurring so quickly,” Collins said.
Verizon spokesman Ray McConville said the company was still
evaluating the decision.
Hoffman said the legal ambiguities will have to be resolved
in future court decisions as gay
couples seek to protect their
benefits in states that don’t recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states.
Macey said the federal government could go a long way in clarifying things when it issues regulations establishing how the court
ruling should be implemented. The
court seemed to leave it up to the
Internal Revenue Service and other
various federal agencies to decide
how to resolve conflicts between
states over gay marriage.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Ohio Valley Newspapers

Published every Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631. Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis. Member: The Associated Press, the West
Virginia Press Association, and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Postmaster: Send address corrections to
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Letters to the Editor:

Same-sex ruling has
employers tweaking benefits
Sam Hananel

Page A4

Dear Editor,
Why have we as Christians, Methodist,
Baptist, Catholics lost our way? My answer is
that we let the government lead us, not God.
The politicians of this era have lost their way,
they look at [money], not what this country
was founded on. Why do we let this happen?
[Be]cause we listen to them cause we think
they are our leaders and God put them there
for a reason cause that’s what we believe —
everything happens because God wants it to
happen. I’m sure they may have been God’s
people before they got there, but its what
happens when they get in office that they
forget the real reason why and how they got
there,they see [dollar signs].
Please don’t misunderstand me. I’m saying that
30 years ago we could say the pledge of allegiance
in school but since it has God in it they are not

even taught it. It’s sad when my 5th grader has
never done that. There are more of God believers
in the USA than non believers but yet again we
were told to shut up and stay out of schools, and
guess what we just stood there and said ok.
Forty to fifty years ago we had God in
schools and how many school shooting did
they have and guns were a lot easier to get
back then. As we keep taking God out of stuff
like schools,marriage, kids life, everything in
general the more are country hurts and the
more we hurt as a group, community, and
most of all we hurt ourselves! I’m saying we
need to get back to God’s way, bring God back
to schools, back to our communities. I feel if
that would happen are country would be better off in more ways than one. God gave us life
and if the government keeps taking God out
of everything God can take life.
Brian Jacobs-Johnson,
Gallia County

Revolutionary reminder: A budget
that celebrates the freedom to succeed
most every small
This week, we
business by 50
honored the birth
percent. Allowof our great naing Ohioans and
tion and the freesmall businesses
doms for which
— who employ
generations
of
half of Ohio’s priAmericans have
vate sector workfought and —
ers — to keep
sometimes — givmore of their own
en their lives. It’s
money is essena time to spend
tial if we want to
with friends and
continue Ohio’s
family and celeconomic growth.
ebrate the liberty
We know that
and opportunity
John R. Kasich
these
kinds of
that continues to
Governor of Ohio
pro-growth polimake the United
cies work because
States a force for
of how they’ve helped propel
good in the world.
As a fitting companion to Ohio’s comeback in the past
Independence Day, I recently two years. Last month our
signed into law a budget bill state was the number one jobfor our state which reinforces creator in the nation and a resome of the best things about cent survey of CEOs by Chief
America and Ohio, especially Executive Magazine said
the freedom to pursue our Ohio has the most-improved
dreams and the opportunity to climate for business in the
reach our God-given potential. nation. Our new budget will
All too often we hear about keep this success going.
To ensure that every Ohioan
fighting and gridlock in government and the inability for has the chance to participate
elected officials to get anything in a strong, prosperous Ohio,
done. It frustrates me also and I the budget also devotes condo everything I can in my work siderable resources to educaas governor to cultivate a pro- tion and training. Our new
ductive, civil atmosphere that al- Achievement Everywhere plan
lows Ohio’s state government to invests $1.5 billion in new
work better and more efficiently funds into Ohio’s classrooms
for Ohio taxpayers. That’s what to provide valuable support to
happened in writing this bud- students and their teachers. It
get, I’m proud to say, and why also creates a new $250 milwe were able to get so many lion fund to encourage school
improvements that increase
needed reforms done.
Freedom from high, unfair achievement and make our
taxes was part of what moti- education dollars go even furvated our nation’s first patriots ther. And college students will
and it’s something for which now have better support for
we still strive today. This bud- achieving their education goals
get cuts income taxes by 10 with a new funding formula
percent and cuts taxes for al- that rewards public colleges

and universities for improving
graduation rates. All of these
improvements help make sure
that Ohioans have the skills,
training and experience to prepare for a brighter job future
and to take part in the economic rebirth we’re beginning
to see take hold in Ohio.
We’ve got more work to do,
but Ohio is making big progress toward getting back on
track. Job creation has been —
and continues to be — our top
priority and we’re making major progress. Ohioans have created more than 170,400 new
private sector jobs and our unemployment rate is a full halfpoint below the nation’s. Two
years ago we faced an $8 billion budget hole but now we’ve
got $2 billion in the rainy day
fund. Education will always
be a top priority and our new
classroom-focused funding formula and $1.5 billion in new
funds makes sure every child
has the resources to succeed,
regardless of where they live.
We’re cutting red tape, improving our health care system and
providing needed new resources for infrastructure.
Our work is far from finished but, together, we’re
helping make Ohio stronger
and more prosperous for all,
and we’re doing it our way
— without the gridlock that
paralyzes Washington. Our
Founding Fathers shared a
common purpose to build a
nation on liberty and freedom
that set people free to dream
and achieve. That vision is
alive and well today in Ohio
and it’s making our state a better place now and for the Ohioans who will come after us.

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

Sunday Times Sentinel

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Phone (304) 675-1333

Letters to the Editor

Fax (304) 675-5234

Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
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Newspapers
200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

www.mydailyregister.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A5

Obituaries
Dr. Rodney Brawner Dayo

Dr. Rodney B. Dayo, 43,
of McMurray, died Friday,
July 5, 2013, at Family Hospice and Palliative Care. He
was born July 7, 1969, in
Pagadian City, the Philippines, the fifth of six children born to the late Drs.
Mateo and Zinnia (Aliac
Brawner) Dayo.
Dr. Dayo married his
beautiful wife, Lisa (Poulin) Dayo in 2002, and they
had their first child, Mia,
in 2003, and their second
child, Jack, in 2007.
In addition to his wife
and children, he is survived by his brothers and sisters,
Pag-asa Brawner Dayo, Almabel Dayo (Todd) Stewart,
Anafe Dayo (Dravon) Paniagua, Dr. Mateo Brawner (Jennifer) Dayo III, Jet Brawner (Fransha) Dayo; his fatherin-law and mother-in-law, Richard and Marilyn Poulin;
and several nieces and nephews.
In 1974, the family moved to Guyana, South America,
and later to Jersey City, N.J. By this time, the family had
grown to eight members. The family lived in a one-bedroom apartment, until his parents could afford a larger
apartment. His parents, both physicians, completed the
necessary licensing requirements to practice medicine in
the United States and then moved to a three-bedroom
home in Craigsville, W.Va., in 1978. In 1979, the family
moved to New Haven, W.Va., which they made their permanent home. Dr. Dayo graduated from Wahama High
School in Mason, W.Va., as did all of his siblings. There
he played football and earned his nickname, “The Gentle Giant.” He graduated from West Virginia University,
Morgantown, with a degree in pharmacy in 1992. There
he formed a bond with a set of lifetime friends. He then
went on to continue his education, obtaining a degree
in medicine from the West Virginia Osteopathic School
of Medicine in 1998. His professional career began in
1999 after he completed his clinical internship in West
Virginia University Hospitals. Originally, he pursued a
career in general surgery like his father. He started his
surgical residency in the Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield,
Wis. In 2000, Dr. Dayo decided to follow his passion for
anesthesiology, which stemmed from his pharmacy background. He joined the UPMC Mercy anesthesiology residency in 2000. There he met his future business partners
Drs. Yesh and Brinda Navalgund. This was also when he
began to date his future wife, Lisa Poulin. All three completed their residencies in 2003. Drs. Dayo and Dr. Yesh
Navalgund went on to complete their fellowships in West
Virginia University Hospitals. While completing his fellowship, he continued to work as a pharmacist in order
to support his family. Drs. Dayo and Navalgund made a
pact to complete their fellowships and start a private pain
management practice.
They formed a group named DNA, Dayo Navalgund
Associates. With no experience in private practice and no
experience in business, they relied solely on their faith in

God and each other to reach their dream. With personalities as individual as each of their backgrounds, they set
out to meet this challenge. It was this dynamic balance
that allowed them to succeed in their goals. Dr. Dayo was
instrumental in the structure and culture of the business.
His relentless demands which maintained trust and integrity within the group remains the foundation by which
the group practices today. Since the humble beginnings
of the practice, Dr. Dayo has been instrumental in its
growth to six locations and the involvement in multiple
surgical centers.
Prior to his diagnosis of a brain tumor in 2010, Dr.
Dayo had yet another dream he wished to pursue. He believed that the medical community was lacking a central
location to train and update physicians on current technology advancements. He once again teamed up with his
business partner, Dr. Yesh Navalgund to create Pavilion
X. Pavilion X is a world class training facility located in
downtown Pittsburgh. It was designed by Drs. Dayo and
Navalgund. This facility is dedicated to the training and
further education of physicians and surgeons of every
specialty. Pavilion X began operations in April 2011, and
continues to be one of the most successful and popular
training centers in the nation.
In addition to helping others through his medical career, he always tried to assist anyone who asked for help.
He went out of his way to help his family and friends.
He had an open door policy at his home. Everyone was
welcome at all times. He had a strong commitment to his
family. He loved his wife, Lisa, and his children, Mia and
Jack, dearly. His priority in life was to make his children’s
dreams come true during his short time with them. He
wanted to spend as much time with them as possible in
order to learn their personalities and engage them in his
interests as well as their own. Their wellbeing and future
were always foremost in his mind.
After he was diagnosed with cancer, he used his time
and condition to become a better husband, better father,
better brother and better friend. Dr. Dayo spent his leisure time as a musician. He was an accomplished vocalist and pianist. He loved the city of Pittsburgh, and he
was an avid Steelers fan. His friend and colleague, Dr.
Yesh Navalgund stated, “Dr. Rodney Brawner Dayo did
not allow life to dictate his path. He made his path and
forced life to follow. By surrounding himself with people
that shared his vision, he was able to make the impossible
possible.”
There will be no visitation. Family and friends will be
welcomed 3 p.m. Tuesday, July 9, 2013, at his Mass of
Christian Burial, in St. Benedict the Abbott Church, 120
Abington Dr., McMurray, Pa. 15317. Graveside services
will be held 2 p.m. Wednesday, July 10, 2013, in Sunrise
Memorial Gardens, New Haven, W.Va.
Memorial contributions may be made to Family Hospice and Palliative Care 50 Moffett St., Pittsburgh, PA
15243 or to the American Cancer Society. For further information and to send condolences, go to our website at
http://www.maloy-schleiferfuneralhome.com.
Arrangements have been entrusted to MaloySchleifer Funeral Home, Inc., Duquesne, Pa. (412466-3300), William B. Schleifer, supervisor, William
Brian Schleifer, funeral director.

Few Milwaukee clergy abuse victims get large sums
tims’ longtime claim that
Wisconsin for many years
was among the more difficult states for them to get
compensation. The main
reason was a 1995 Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling
that made it nearly impossible to hold the church
responsible for its priests’
actions. The court said
the church was protected
from negligence lawsuits
by the First Amendment.
No longer afraid of litigation, the archdiocese established a no-settlement
policy that lasted until
the national clergy abuse
scandal erupted in 2002.
“It was an appalling decision,” said Peter Isely, a
longtime activist who now
serves as the Midwest director for the Survivors
Network of those Abused
by Priests. “Because (Milwaukee victims) were
raped and sexually assaulted by a priest, unlike
anywhere else in the country, they could not exercise their civil rights and
file their case in court.”
It’s impossible to say for

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

certain how much money
clergy sex abuse victims
have received from the
Milwaukee archdiocese,
because accounting before
2003 is questionable. Annual reports released by
the archdiocese since then
put the total cost of clergy
sex abuse at $30.5 million
as of June 30, 2012, with
roughly $3 out of every $4
spent in the past decade
going to victim settlements, therapy and other
aid. An update for the fiscal year that just ended
has not yet been compiled.
While victims question
the archdiocese’s totals,
they can’t come up with
their own because the
archdiocese’s
accounts
and most settlement records are not public. The
6,000 pages of documents
released Monday represent only one-tenth of the
papers the archdiocese
turned over to victims’
attorneys during the bankruptcy case. The rest are
still sealed, and Jeff Anderson, who represents
350 of the approximately

Booth

Charles Mate Booth, 53,
of Huntington, WV, died
Thursday, July 4, 2013, at
the Emogene Dolin Jones
Hospice House, Huntington, WV. The family received friends 3 p.m. to 4
p.m. Saturday, July 6, 2013,
at Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville, Ohio. In lieu
of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to
Hospice of Huntington.

Porter

James R. “Jim” Porter,
59, of Huntington, WV, recently died. Funeral service
was held 1 p.m. Saturday,
July 6, 2013, at Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville,
Ohio. Burial followed in
Rome Cemetery, Proctorville, Ohio. Visitation was
held 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, July 6, 2013, at Hall
Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio.

Stephens

July 4, 2013, at the Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice
House, Huntington, WV.
Funeral service will be
conducted 2 p.m. Monday,
July 8, 2013 at Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville,
Ohio. Burial will follow
in Centenary Cemetery,
Chesapeake, Ohio. Visitation will held 1 p.m. to 2
p.m. Monday, July 8, 2013,
at Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville, Ohio. In lieu
of flowers memorial donations may be made to The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House.

Wellington

Clara Mae Wellington,
Vinton, Ohio, died Saturday, July 6, 2013, in her
residence. Arrangements
will be announced by the
McCoy-Moore
Funeral
Home, Vinton.

Yeauger

Carolyn Yeauger, 69,
of Gallipolis Ohio, died
Wednesday, July 3, 2013,
at her residence. At her
request, there will be no
services.

Marvin Eugene Stephens, 77, of Proctorville,
570 people with bankrupt- Ohio, died Thursday,
cy claims, said many more
files weren’t turned over.
The files that have been
made public, however,
support victims’ claims
that relatively few settlements were made before
1995, almost none were
NEW YORK (AP) — From solemn to spectacular,
paid after the state Su- the nation marked its independence with the reopenpreme Court ruling that ing of the Statue of Liberty for the first time since Suyear and, even once me- perstorm Sandy, extravagant fireworks that included
diation began in 2003, the a 19-burst salute to Arizona’s fallen firefighters and a
archdiocese gave victims musical tribute in Washington to those affected by the
little room to negotiate.
Boston Marathon bombing.
The largest settlement
“I always love July Fourth and I’m very happy to be in
paid to victims abused by this country, I know I’m blessed,” said 15-year-old Yoana
priests assigned to the Lorenzo, who was among the millions who watched the
Milwaukee archdiocese, New York City’s over-the-top Fourth of July Fireworks
nearly $16.7 million in show Thursday night. “To see all these people come to2006, went to 10 people gether and celebrate, it’s pretty great.”
in California who were
abused while the priests
were working there. It is
among the largest pervictim awards in the nation, according to Bisho p A c c o u n t a b i l i t y. o rg ,
which tracks clergy abuse
cases. In contrast, the re1st Month Tuition FREE
cords released this week
For Brand New Students
show the typical payment
to a victim in Wisconsin
has been $50,000.

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60431323

MILWAUKEE (AP) —
Clergy sex abuse victims
have long accused the
Archdiocese of Milwaukee of spending more
money on lawyers to protect itself than to care for
those who suffered at the
hands of abusive priests.
An Associated Press
analysis of documents
released this week found
most of the $30 million
the archdiocese paid out
through mid-2012 went
to victim settlements and
therapy, but the bulk of it
went to just a few victims
— while hundreds of others got no money at all.
The archdiocese released the records as part
of a deal with victims suing it for fraud in federal
bankruptcy court. The
documents cover 88 settlements worth at least
$6.6 million and provide
the first detailed look at
which victims were paid,
how much and when.
Until this week, the archdiocese had only released
annual totals.
The records support vic-

Betty Lou Johnson

Betty Lou Johnson, 83, of Racine, passed away on July
4, 2013. She was born on July 7, 1929, in Racine, daughter of the late Ivan Roush and Mabel Hall Roush. She was
active in giving and donating to her community. She was
a member of the Morning Star United Methodist Church.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her husband, Stanley Johnson; son-in-law, Bryan Yonker; brother, Harry Roush; and sisters, Sylvia Hutchison,
Iva Mae Allen, Geraldine Cleland, and Gladys Counts.
She is survived by children, Linda Yonker, Debbie
(John) Powell, Darrell Johnson, Gregory (Beverly) Johnson; grandchildren, Derek (Paula) Yonker, Jason (Carrie)
Powell, Thom (Dianne) Powell, Corey (Mary) Yonker;
great-grandchildren, Christian, Brett, Ethan, and Slade;
brother and sisters, Dorothy Kerns and Phyllis (Ike)
Knighting; special children: James Taylor and Dottie Curtis; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., on Tuesday,
July 9, 2013, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. Arland King. Burial will
be in Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m.
on Monday, July 8, at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Morning Star United Methodist Church.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

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60412560

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A6

Meigs County Local Briefs
Vacation Bible School

LONG BOTTOM —The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene
will be having Bible School July
8 to 12 from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
each day. The them is “SonQuest
Rainforest.” The church is located at 54120 Fellowship Drive.
For more information call Tina
Carson, 74-378-6278.
RUTLAND — The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will be
having Vacation Bible School
beginning July 8-12 from 6-8:30
p.m. each evening.The theme
will be SonWest Roundup with
western type attire. A cookout
will be held on Saturday, July 13
and two bicycles will be given
away for each class. The names
of all having perfect attendance
will be collected and two names
drawn. All area children are invited. Parents too. For more information call (740) 742-2507.
Ed Barney Pastor.
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Church of Christ will

host “ScarForce” Vacation Bible
School where kids can participate in games, snacks, craft
projects, and more, all with a
sci-fi theme. It will be held from
6-8:30 p.m., July 15-19 at the
church, located at the corner of
Fifth and Main streets in Middleport. Call (740) 992-2914 for
more information.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Community Churches will sponsor
“Kingdom Rock” Vacation Bible
School July 15-19. VBS will be
from 9 a.m. to noon. each day at
St. Paul Lutheran Church, located at 231 E. Second Street.

Basket game
fund raiser

POMEROY — A basket game
fundraiser will be held at the Senior Citizens Center on July 18
with the proceeds to benefit the
Meigs County Council on Aging.
There will be 24 Longaberger
basket games plus other prizes.
The doors open at 4 p.m. with

the games to start at 6 p.m.

Syracuse reunion

SYRACUSE — The second annual Syracuse homecoming celebration will be held on Saturday,
July 20, at the Syracuse Community Center. Doors will open at
noon with a potluck dinner to be
held at 2 p.m.

Ice Cream Social

SALEM CENTER — The
Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its 35th
annual ice cream social on Saturday, July 20. Serving will be from
11 a.m to 3 p.m. at the fire house
which is located on SR 124 in
Salem Center. In addition to 10
flavors of homemade ice cream,
sloppy joe sandwiches, hot dogs,
and pie will be available. For
more information contact Linda
Montgomery at 669-4245.

Immunization Clinic

POMEROY — The Meigs

US economy adds 195K jobs;
unemployment 7.6 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. employers added a robust 195,000 jobs in June
and many more in April and May than
previously thought. The job growth suggests a stronger economy and makes it
more likely the Federal Reserve will slow
its bond purchases before year’s end.
The unemployment rate remained 7.6
percent. That was because more people
started looking for work in June — a
healthy sign. People without a job aren’t
counted as unemployed unless they’re
looking for one.
Hiring “continues to look more than
strong enough to keep unemployment
trending down … and probably more
than strong enough to lead to Fed tapering starting in September,” said Jim
O’Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High
Frequency Economics.
The Fed’s bond purchases have kept
borrowing rates low to encourage borrowing and spending. A pullback in its bond
buying would likely send rates up.
Pay rose sharply last month, the Labor
Department’s monthly jobs report Friday
showed. Pay has now outpaced inflation
over the past year.
Stocks opened sharply higher before
sharply trimming their gains by midmorning. The yield on the 10-year Treasury
note jumped from 2.56 percent to 2.69
percent, its highest level since August
2011. That’s a sign that investors think the
economy is improving.
The economy has added an average
202,000 jobs a month for the past six
months, up from 180,000 in the previous
six. Hiring and consumer confidence have
risen despite higher taxes and federal
spending cuts that kicked in this year.
Friday’s report showed the economy
added 70,000 more jobs in April and May
than the government had previously estimated — 50,000 in April and 20,000 in
May. Average hourly pay rose 10 cents to
$24.01, 2.2 percent higher than a year ago.
The hotels, restaurants and entertainment industry added 75,000 jobs last
month. Retailers added 37,000.
The health care industry added 20,000,
construction 13,000. Temporary jobs rose
10,000. But manufacturing shed 6,000.
Many of the new jobs were part time.
The number of Americans who said they
were working part time but would prefer
full-time work jumped 322,000 to 8.2 million — the most in eight months.

In June, 177,000 more people started
looking for jobs, and most found them.
The increase in job seekers suggests that
Americans think their prospects have improved. The number of unemployed was
largely unchanged in June at 11.8 million.
The percentage of Americans either
working or actively searching for work is
known as the “labor force participation
rate.” The participation rate has risen for
two straight months to 63.5 percent.
Still, the rate has been generally declining since peaking at 67.3 percent in 2000.
That’s partly the result of baby boomers
retiring and dropping out of the workforce.
Despite the solid pace of hiring in June,
the economy is growing only sluggishly. It
expanded at a 1.8 percent annual rate in
the January-March quarter. Most analysts
expect growth at roughly the same subpar
rate in the April-June quarter.
Weak economies overseas cut demand for U.S. exports in May. That led
some economists to predict that growth
in the second quarter might be slower
than forecast.
Still, many areas of the economy are improving. The Fed’s low-rate policies have
led more Americans to buy homes and
cars. They also helped boost stock and
home prices in the first half of the year,
increasing wealth and lifting consumers’
confidence to its highest level in 5½ years.
Auto sales in the January-June period
topped 7.8 million, their best first half
since 2007, according to Autodata Corp.
and Ward’s AutoInfoBank. Sales of previously occupied homes exceeded 5 million in May, the first time that’s happened
since November 2009. New-home sales
rose at their fastest pace in five years.
Though fewer exports have hurt manufacturing, factories fielded more orders in
May. And a measure of business investment rose for a third straight month.
Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial, said she thinks the improving job market will lead the Fed
to taper its bond purchases starting in
September. She predicts the Fed will announce that it will reduce its monthly purchases from $85 billion to $65 billion and
by an additional $20 billion in December.
Swonk said she thinks the Fed will end
its bond buying altogether in the second
half of 2014.

County Health Department
will conduct as childhood and
adolescent immunization clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs County
Health Department, 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied
by a parent or legal guardian.
Please bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance cards, if
applicable. A donation is appreciated, but not required.

Traffic Advisory

MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio
325 will be closed right before
the junction of Metheny Fairplay
Road due to a culvert replacement project. The road will be
closed beginning Thursday, July
11 through August 16. ODOT’s
Official Detour is Ohio 124 to
Ohio 160 back to Ohio 325.
MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio
143 (located just 0.25 miles
south of State Farm Road) will

be reduced to one lane to allow
for a bridge replacement project.
During construction there will
be a 10’ width restriction. Traffic
will be maintained with a portable traffic light. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio 143 will
be open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY — The
westbound lane of Ohio 124 (located at the 63.91 mile marker,
about 1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for
a bridge replacement project.
Traffic will be maintained by
traffic signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 124 will be open
November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio 124
(located 0.4 miles north of Williams Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a bridge
replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers. Weather
permitting, both lanes of Ohio
124 will reopen August 31, 2013.

Crews in SW Ohio see
spike in heroin overdoses
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) — First
responders in a southwest Ohio city
were called to 18 heroin overdoses
during the past two weeks, including
five in a single day.
One newspaper reports that most of
the recent overdose victims in Hamilton have survived.
EMS Coordinator Jennifer Mason
tells the newspaper that the percent of
overdose runs for the department has
more than tripled since last June, and

more than 90 percent involve heroin.
She says the problem is of “epidemic
proportions.”
The newspaper reports that budget
cuts effective June 1 have lengthened
response times in some areas.
Deputy Fire Chief Troy Pugh says
his crew responded to five overdoses
by 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. He says emergency workers are seeing both real and
synthetic heroin, and it’s become a big
problem in the community.

Experts: Expect bigger,
fiercer wildfires in West
LOS ANGELES (AP)
— There’s a dangerous
but basic equation behind
the killer Yarnell Hill wildfire and other blazes raging across the West this
summer: More heat, more
drought, more fuel and
more people in the way are
adding up to increasingly
ferocious fires.
Scientists say a hotter
planet will only increase
the risk.
More than two dozen
wildland fires are burning
from Alaska to New Mexico, fueled by triple-digit
temperatures and arid
conditions. In the Arizona
mountain town of Yarnell,
a blaze apparently sparked
by lightning killed 19 members of an elite firefighting
squad who had deployed
their emergency shelters
Sunday when erratic monsoon winds sent flames
racing in their direction.
While no single wildfire
can be pinned solely on

60431520

climate change, researchers say there are signs
that fires are becoming
bigger and more common
in an increasingly hot and
bone-dry West.
“Twenty years ago, I
would have said this was
a highly unusual, fast-moving, dangerous fire,” said
fire history expert Don
Falk at the University of
Arizona at Tucson, referring to the Yarnell Hill fire.
“Now unfortunately, it’s
not unusual at all.”
Wildfires are chewing
through twice as many
acres per year on average
in the United States compared with 40 years ago,
U.S. Forest Service Chief
Tom Tidwell told a Senate hearing last month.
Since Jan. 1, 2000, about
145,000 square miles have
burned, roughly the size of
New York, New England,
New Jersey, Delaware and
Maryland combined, according to federal records.
A draft federal report
released earlier this year
said climate change is
stressing Western forests,
making them more vulnerable to fires.
What’s happening now
“is not new to us,” said climate scientist Don Wuebbles of the University of
Illinois, one of the main authors of the federal report.
“We’ve been saying this for
some time.”
Communities nestled
next to wilderness are
used to girding for fire
season, which typically occurs in the summer. Compared with decades past,
however, the traditional
fire season now lasts two
months longer and first
responders
sometimes
find themselves beating
back flames in the winter.
Rising temperatures all
over the West, for one,
have created dangerous,
dry conditions.
Over the past 35 years,
Arizona has seen dramatic
warming, with the state’s
10-year average temperature jumping from 59.1
degrees Fahrenheit in
1977 to 61.4 degrees last
year — an increase of 2.3
degrees. By comparison,
the entire continental
U.S.’ 10-year average tem-

perature jumped only 1.6
degrees during the same
period. Experts say every
little spike in temperature
makes a big difference.
“Even a degree or so
warmer, day in day out,
evaporates water faster
and that desiccates the system more,” said fire ecologist Steve Running of the
University of Montana.
In Arizona, where a
drought has persisted for
nearly two decades, the
manzanita,
evergreen,
mount mahogany and oak
in the Yarnell area were so
crispy Sunday that a nearby state fire-monitoring
station recorded a nearmaximum level of potential
fuel in area vegetation.
In many places, decades
of aggressively snuffing
out wildfires also have led
to a buildup of fuel ready
to ignite. On top of that,
more people are living in
fire-prone areas near forests, grasslands and shrub
lands, which complicates
firefighting logistics.
Over the past years, firefighters on the front lines
have complained about
how flames “go berserk in
ways they never used to
see,” Running said.
Though the Yarnell Hill
Fire, at 13 square miles,
was not considered huge
compared with previous
fires in Arizona, its ferociousness caught many off
guard. Investigators said
it appeared the Granite
Mountain Hotshots were
overrun by flames fanned
by erratic winds.
At one point, the fire
raced four miles in just 20
minutes, fed by the dry
brush and 41 mph winds
that suddenly switched
direction, said Yavapai
County Sheriff’s Capt.
Jeff Newnum.
Climate scientist Jonathan Overpeck of the
University of Arizona
said unless greenhouse
gas emissions are curbed,
huge, fierce wildfires will
become the norm.
“We owe it to the men
and women who put
themselves in harm’s way
to do everything we can
to make their firefighting jobs safer,” Overpeck
said in an email.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

INSIDE

Sports

SUNDAY,
JULY 7, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

Angry Birds
go unbeaten
in OVAA
B3

Reds, Giants exploring makeup game options
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
Reds and Giants were exploring numerous options Friday for
making up their rained-out game
in Cincinnati, including the possibility of playing it on the road.
Day-long rain forced the teams
to call off the final game of their
series scheduled for Thursday
afternoon. It was San Francisco’s
only trip into town.
The teams share an off day on
Aug. 29, their only break in long
stretches of games. Manager
Dusty Baker said Friday that the
teams are exploring three or four
different scenarios, including the
possibility of playing the makeup

in Colorado or as part of a doubleheader in San Francisco.
“There is no easy solution to
this,” Baker said. “I’m sure this is not
the only time it’s going to happen to
somebody with the schedule.”
The packed schedule is the
problem.
The 29th of August is the only
time the Reds and Giants share a
day off. Both teams would prefer
to keep that day free. The defending NL Central champion Reds
play 20 days in a row before that
day off, followed by 13 consecutive days. Adding a game on the
29th would have them playing
for 34 straight days — a tough

thing late in the season.
The defending World Series
champion Giants play 16 straight
days before that one day off, followed by 17 straight games.
They, too, would wind up playing 34 straight days during the
decisive part of the schedule.
Baker said a long stretch of
games like that could wear down
a contending team.
“When you’re out of gas that
late in the year, you don’t get
gas back until after the season,”
Baker said.
The Reds conclude a series
in St. Louis on Aug. 28th, then
head to Colorado to start a series

on the 30th. The Giants wrap up
a series in Colorado on the 28th,
so the teams are considering
playing the makeup game at Coors Field on the 29th.
That option would eliminate
having them fly back to Cincinnati for one game, then back
out West.
Another option would be to
make up the game as part of a
day-night doubleheader in San
Francisco when the Reds visit
from July 22-24. That way, both
teams would get their off-day
later in the month.
Major League Baseball prohibits teams from playing

more than 20 days in a row.
The players’ union would have
to approve an exception.
The other option would be
to make up the game at the end
of the season if it’s necessary
to decide which teams make
the playoffs or how they’re
seeded. If it’s not necessary,
the game isn’t made up.
If that final game were needed
to decide teams and pairings for
the playoffs, it could be tacked
onto the end of the regular season.
“It would be better yet to just
not need that at the end of the
year and start the playoffs,” Baker said. “That would be perfect.”

Richard W. Rodriguez | Fort Worth Star-Telegram/MCT photo

Matt Every chips onto the 11th green during the third round of
the Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial, Saturday, May 25,
2013, in Fort Worth, Texas.

Every takes lead, Lefty
misses cut at Greenbrier
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP) — The first
page of the Greenbrier Classic leaderboard is filled with
golfers who’ll get to do something they’re unaccustomed
to lately: Playing on the weekend.
Matt Every shot an 8-under 62 on Friday for a onestroke lead over five other players midway through
the Greenbrier Classic.
Every needed just 26 putts during his best round of
the year and is at 9 under for the tournament on the
Old White TPC course. He missed four putts inside
12 feet that could have made his bogey-free second
round even more special.
“I played really well tee to green, finally made some
putts,” Every said. “I haven’t made anything all year and
it just finally happened today. Been waiting for it.”
Every has been in this position before, leading after the
first round of the 2012 Texas Open and tying for the thirdround lead at the 2012 Sony Open, yet the 29-year-old is
still looking for his first PGA Tour victory.
“I know I can win out here,” he said.
One stroke behind him at 8 under are Russell Henley (65), Bill Lunde (66), Daniel Summerhays (67),
Steven Bowditch (67) and first-round co-leader Johnson Wagner (70).
Four others are two shots behind at 7 under. Ben Curtis and Greg Owen each shot 66, Jonas Blixt had a 67
See GREENBRIER |‌ B2

Blue Jackets lock up
Bruins’ Nathan Horton
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— The Columbus Blue
Jackets made a major move
on Friday to shore up their
lagging offense by signing
free-agent right wing Nathan Horton away from the
Boston Bruins.
The 28-year-old playoffhardened forward, who
visited Columbus earlier
this week, signed a sevenyear deal worth $37.1 million — with $30 million of
that coming in the first five
years.
“This is a team on the
rise with great players and
I’m looking forward to being a part of it,” Horton
said of the Blue Jackets.
“We felt at home as soon as
we visited here and it was
pretty clear to us that this
is where we wanted to live.
This is a great fit for me and
my family.”
He was to be formally
introduced at a Friday afternoon news conference.
Horton, who still needs
offseason shoulder surgery
which will delay the start
of his season, provides the
Blue Jackets with punch it
lacked a year ago when it
just missed the playoffs on
a tiebreaker.

Columbus finished finishing 25th in the NHL in
goals. Horton has averaged
23 goals over the last eight
seasons.
“Nathan Horton was the
player we identified as a
perfect fit,” Blue Jackets
general manager Jarmo
Kekalainen said. “He is
an elite power forward
who brings size, skill and
a great desire to compete
to our lineup. He is also a
person of great character
and someone who will fit in
very well with our team.”
The Blue Jackets’ are
built around Vezina Trophy-winning goalie Sergei
Bobrovsky, who recently
signed a two-year contract.
The club badly needed a
scoring threat to go with
Marian Gaborik and several
rising young forwards.
The signing was one
of the biggest free-agent
moves ever by the franchise, which made a surprising leap into playoff
contention after dawdling
near the NHL cellar for the
first third of last year’s abbreviated season. The Blue

Robert Duyos | Sun-Sentinel | MCT photo

Andy Murray, of Great Britain, (left) defeated Novak Djokovic, of Serbia, in the men’s Sony Ericsson Open tennis tournament final in Key Biscayne, Florida on Sunday, April 5, 2009.

Djokovic, Murray set up 1 vs. 2 Wimbledon final
LONDON (AP) — Novak
Djokovic might win Wimbledon
this year. Juan Martin del Potro will
not.
No matter how it ends, both men
will always have their spot in one of
the most memorable matches in the
storied history of the All England
Club.
Slugging back and forth over a
semifinal-record 4 hours, 43 minutes of backbreaking tennis Friday,
top-seeded Djokovic emerged with
a 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (2), 6-7 (6), 6-3 victory to move one win away from his
seventh major title.
“One of the most epic matches
I’ve played in my life,” Djokovic
said.
On Sunday, Djokovic will play
second-seeded Andy Murray, who
defeated No. 24 Jerzy Janowicz 6-7
(2), 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 to make his second straight Wimbledon final and
move one win away from becoming
the first British man in 77 years to
capture his country’s home tournament.
This will be their third meeting
in the last four Grand Slam finals.
Murray won at the U.S. Open last

year and Djokovic won in Australia
this year. On Murray’s mind every
bit as much, however, will be his
7-5, 7-5 win on Centre Court last
year in the Olympic semifinals.
“I’ll take that thought to my head
when we play on Sunday,” Murray
said.
With skies starting to darken,
the Murray match was interrupted
for a half-hour while the roof was
closed over Centre Court. Murray
protested the delay, saying there
was still sunlight left. He had other
reasons, too. He had just rolled off
five straight games to close out the
third set after falling behind 4-1.
“It’s a tough situation,” Murray
said. “There were probably 45 minutes of light left. I’d like to think this
is an outdoor event and you try to
play as much as you can outdoors.
But I managed to regain focus. I
took a shower, talked to the guys a
little bit and got back to it.”
The late finish came courtesy of
what had been billed as the undercard, but turned into something
much better. Del Potro and Djokovic played the longest semifinal in
Wimbledon history. The match

came up only five minutes short of
the 2008 five-set final between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal that’s
generally considered the greatest
match played on Centre Court —
and perhaps anywhere.
Djokovic and del Potro spent the
entire, sundrenched afternoon exchanging huge groundstrokes, long
rallies and even a few laughs during
their marathon, which covered five
sets, 55 games, two tiebreakers and
368 points.
“I think this match is going to be
memory for a few years,” del Potro
said. “We play for four hours and a
half on a very high level. We didn’t
make too many errors. I don’t know
if the rest of the players can play like
us today.”
Eighth-seeded Del Potro, back in
a Grand Slam semifinal for the first
time since winning the 2009 U.S.
Open, saved two match points in
the fourth-set tiebreaker, then won
the final four points to take it 8-6.
Shortly after, the match hit the
4-hour mark, guaranteeing it would
surpass the 1989 match between
See WIMBLEDON ‌| B2

OVP Sports Briefs
SGHS-SGMS Fall Athletic
Parents Meeting

MERCERVILLE, Ohio — South Gallia High School and South Gallia Middle School will be holding a fall athletic
parents meeting at 7 p.m. Monday, July
8, in the high school gymnasium. The
meeting is for parents and athletes that
plan to participate in football, volleyball,
golf or cheerleaders this fall.

River Valley Volleyball Camp

BIDWELL, Ohio — The River Valley volleyball team will be holding their
2013 camp from Wednesday, July 10,
through Friday, July 12, at River Valley
High School. Camp for players entering grades 3-6 will be held from 8 a.m.
until 10 a.m. with camp for players entering grades 7-9 running from 10:30
a.m. until 12:30 p.m. There is an entry fee involved. For more information
See JACKETS |‌ B2 email jpriddy7918@suddenlink.net or

gl_dtoler@seovec.org

Riverside Open to
be held in July

MASON, W.Va. — The 41st annual
Riverside Open Golf Tournament
will be held Saturday, July 13, and
Sunday, July 14, at the Riverside Golf
Club in Mason County.
There is an entry fee that includes a
practice round, which is to be played
the week prior to the tournament.
The players will be required to call the
pro shop for tee times.
Each player will be flighted according to 2013 GHIN Handicap, and players will be permitted to declare for the
championship flight if desired. The Riverside Amateur is designated as a point
tournament for the West Virginia Player
of the Year Award this year.
All entries must be received by the
tournament committee no later than

Tuesday, July 9. Players that do not have
an official 2013 handicap will allowed to
enter the Championship Flight or the
First Flight.
For more information, contact Riverside Golf Club at (304) 773-5354.

GAHS Youth Football Camp

CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia
Academy High School football staff will
be conducting a youth football camp
from 6 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. on Monday,
July 22, through Wednesday, July 24, for
students in grades 1-8 at the high school.
There is a fee for each camper and a
reduced rate for multiple campers from
the same family, and registration will
run from 4:45 p.m. until 5:45 p.m. on
the first day of camp. All campers will
receive a t-shirt.
The camp will cover fundamentals
for all positions and players will be
See BRIEFS ‌| B2

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B2

Wimbledon
From Page B1
Boris Becker and Ivan Lendl
— a 4-hour, 1-minute affair
— as the longest semifinal
in Wimbledon’s long history.
It’s not the first time
Djokovic has been involved in one of these. His
2012 Australian Open victory over Nadal lasted 5
hours, 53-minutes. Only a
month ago, Nadal outlasted
Djokovic at Roland Garros
in a semifinal that went 4
hours, 37 minutes.
“When you feel good
physically, when you know
you’re fit and you don’t feel
a huge fatigue, that gives
you mental confidence, obviously,” Djokovic said.
Sliding on the grassturned-dirt behind the baseline, doing the occasional
splits and, at one point, diving for a shot, then laying
on the ground, face-down
in despair, Djokovic put on
a stellar show, filled with

80 winners but also lots of
counterpunching, always
making his 6-foot-6 opponent hit one more shot.
Despite the pressure of
the match, both players took
it for what it was: sports entertainment at its finest. Del
Potro played to the crowd
and also exchanged a few
fun back-and-forths with
his opponent. In the sixth
game of the fourth set, the
Argentine chased down a
drop volley and flicked a
forehand down the line. His
momentum carried him to
the other side of the court
and the shot was called out.
Should he challenge?
“He asked me, What’s
going on?’ I said, ‘Listen,
if I was you, I would challenge,’” Djokovic recounted. “He said, ‘No, but you
know it’s out and don’t
waste my challenge.’ I said,
‘OK, you decide whatever
you want. But truly, I’m
not lying to you.’”

All this was done with
smiles on their faces. Del
Potro opted against the
challenge but won the
fourth set anyway, putting
his 4-6 lifetime record in
five-setters against Djokovic’s mark of 18-7.
Djokovic’s
fitness
played a big role in landing him the decisive break
in the fifth set.
It came with del Potro
serving behind 4-3. With
the score 15-all, Djokovic
hit a drop shot-lob combo
to close out a breathtaking 22-shot rally. Del
Potro dropped his hands
onto his knees and clearly
hadn’t regained his wind
on the next point, when he
sliced an easy backhand
into the net. Two points
later, Djokovic had the
break, and the 5-3 lead.
He saved a break point in
the final game by hitting an
off-balance drop shot winner
off a del Potro serve return

Jackets

Briefs

From Page B1

From Page B1

Jackets have made the playoffs just once in
their 12 seasons, and were swept by Detroit
in that one trip in 2009.
Kekalainen, creating his first major buzz
since taking over last winter, said after the
season that he hoped to add a hard-working
forward who could score goals. Horton fits
the mold on both counts.
Horton’s new contract will result in a
$5.3-million cap hit.
A skilled player with an edge, he was a
central figure in the Bruins winning the 2011
Stanley Cup and in their trip to the finals this
past season.
He injured his shoulder in this year’s
playoffs and surgery will likely cause him to
miss training camp. Horton held off getting
the operation until his new team’s doctors
were involved. He also had a concussion in
January 2012 that caused him to miss the remainder of that season. He also missed the
last four Stanley Cup finals games in 2011
because of a concussion.
One of his new teammates, defenseman
James Wisniewski, posted on his Twitter
account: “I would first off like to personally
welcome Nathan Horton! #winning”
Horton has also been valuable in shootouts, with one of the best goal percentages
in the league.
There is no disputing Horton’s effectiveness in the postseason, particularly for a club
striving not only to make the playoffs but
also to win there for the first time. This past
season, he had the seven goals and 12 assists
— and a remarkable +20 plus/minus rating
— in the Bruins’ 22 playoff games that ended
with a six-game loss to Chicago in the finals.
During Boston’s run to the title in 2011, he
had eight goals and nine assists in 21 games
before being injured.
He put up 13 goals and nine assists in 43
regular-season games with the Bruins during
the truncated 2013 season.

instructed by the GAHS
football staff and players. Campers should
wear shorts, t-shirt and
tennis shoes or cleats.
Water will be provided
but a water bottle is recommended.
For more information
or to register, contact
GAHS football coach
Wade Bartholomew at
(740) 412-0104.

Big Bend Youth
Football League

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— The Big Bend Youth
Football League will
be having football and
cheerleading
signups
from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.
every Saturday in July at
the Middleport Veterans
Memorial Stadium.
Signups are for all interested kids in grades
3-6, and second graders may sign up if they
meet a 50-pound minimal weight requirement. There is also a
signup fee.
For more information, visit facebook @
BBYFL or call Sarah
(444-1606), Tony (4163774), Chrissy (9924067), Angie (4441177) or Jim Porter
(416-2636).

Gallia Academy
all-comer meets

CENTENARY, Ohio
— Gallia Academy High

that clipped the net cord. Two
points later, Djokovic had his
53rd career win on grass —
24 more than del Potro.
“You can see I played my
best tennis ever on grass
court,” del Potro said, “but
was not enough to beat the
No. 1 in the world. I was
so close.”
It was quite a taxing stay
at Wimbledon for del Potro,
who came into the semifinal
with his left knee heavily
taped, a victim of two nasty
slips that sent him tumbling
earlier in the tournament.
The second fall came two
days earlier, on the fifth
point of his quarterfinal
against David Ferrer. Del
Potro said the trainer gave
him a couple of “magic pills”
— anti-inflammatories —
and that kept him going in
his straight-sets win over
the No. 4 seed.
Against Djokovic, del
Potro showed few signs of
an aftereffect.

School will be hosting two all-comer track
meets. These meets will
be open to all ages and
the first meet will be
Saturday, July 13, with
registration beginning at
9 a.m. and events starting at 11 a.m. There is
also a meet scheduled for
August 10 at 11a.m.
There is a fee for
competitors and spectators and volunteers are
still needed. Heats will
be combined if needed,
but winners will be determined by age groups.
Competitors
must
check in with the clerk
at the second call prior
to their event start.
Competitors
must
have your own implements for shot and
discus and must have
experience throwing the
discus or on the pole
vault. We will not allow
the novice vaulters or
disc thrower to throw or
jump for safety reasons.
Parents please supervise
your kids, you are the
coach for the day and
please ensure they make
it to their events on time.
We will not enforce
limits on the number of
events you may enter,
but please monitor number for the smaller kids.
To volunteer, for more information or if you have
any questions please call
(740) 645-7316 or email
ff1023@att.net

Tested throughout by a variety of Djokovic drop shots,
del Potro got to most. More
than once, the Argentine did
his impression of a lanky golden retriever — chasing the
tennis ball from wide of the
court on the forehand side to
wide of the court on the backhand side. After going wide
in the third set to hit one of
his 48 winners, del Potro
stood on the ledge separating the court from the stands,
waiting for a high-5 from one
of the fans at courtside.
The fans soaked in the
del Potro experience, cheering on the underdog as he
pushed the world’s best
player to the limit.
“They help me a lot for
fight, to keep trying, keep
going,” del Potro said. “Of
course I’m sad now, but in
a couple of days, I will see
how big the match was.”
Midway through the
fourth set, Del Potro lost
his serve to fall behind 4-3,

Kiwanis junior
golf tournament
at Cliffside

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The Cliffside Golf
Club will be hosting the
fifth annual Kiwanis
juniors at Cliffside golf
tournament for golfers
ages 9-18 on Thursday,
July 11, at 1 p.m. The
competitors will be divided into age groups of
9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and
16-18 and there is a fee.
Awards will be presented to the top three
golfers in each age
group. Spectators are allowed, while hole sponsors and volunteers are
needed. To enter, please
contact the clubhouse
at (740) 446-4653 or
Ed Caudill at (740)
245-5919 or (740) 6454381.

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

but broke right back, finishing the game with a big
backhand winner, a guttural
grunt and a fist pump.
They held serve until
the tiebreaker, and when
del Potro won that one, he
looked like the del Potro of
2009, the man who broke
the Federer-Nadal-Djokovic
stranglehold on the majors
by overcoming a 2-1 deficit
against Federer in the 2009
final at Flushing Meadows
to win the title.
If he stays healthy, he’ll
certainly be someone to
contend with two months
from now in New York.
But this week, it’s Djokovic playing for a title after
putting on one heck of a
show.
“I know that I have been
pushed to the limit today,
as my opponent was also,”
Djokovic said. “It was one of
the most thrilling matches
that I have ever played, especially here in Wimbledon.”

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 740245-7491 or 1-800-2827201, 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.

Greenbrier
From Page B1
and first-round co-leader Tommy
Gainey a 71.
The posh Greenbrier resort
is in a small town named for
its hot spring waters that the
locals have touted for centuries for their healing qualities.
It seems as though the Greenbrier Classic is doing wonders
for some golfers, too.
Prior to this week, Wagner went
seven straight tournaments without advancing to the third round.
Other streaks that were broken
this week were five straight for
Lunde, four for Bowditch and
three for Summerhays.
Every had missed cuts in

four of his last five tournaments, and Owen and Curtis
had in three in their last four.
Gainey made the cut for only
the 10th time in 23 tries.
“It’s coming down to the end
of the year,” Every said. “It’s a
big week for a lot of people. If
you play good it can change your
life.”
Henley is an exception with
one missed cut in his last four
tournaments, which includes
a sixth-place finish at the Memorial.
He’s 16th in the FedEx
Cup points standings. Every
(104th) and Summerhays
(123) are the only other play-

ers within two shots of the
lead who are in the top 125 in
the FedEx Cup standings.
The playoffs are less than two
months away.
“It’s crunch time,” Wagner
said. “We’ve got to make these
playoffs. It’s a short year. Fortunately I’m exempt for next year
due to my win at the (2012) Sony
Open, but I still want to finish in
that top 125 and have a chance
to win the FedEx Cup. I’m sure a
bunch of guys up there are kind
of in the same position I am —
really needing to have some good
weeks to extend our years.”
The tournament could be
shaping up for another close

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finish. It has been decided by
playoffs the last two years, and
Stuart Appleby won by a stroke
in the inaugural tournament in
2010 after shooting a 59.
Among a group of six golfers at
6 under includes Jordan Spieth,
the 19-year-old Texan in search
of an elusive win that would give
him his PGA Tour membership
and make him eligible for the FedEx Cup playoffs. He’s won more
than $1.1 million this year and is
assured of a tour card when the
new season starts in October.
Others advancing to the weekend include Kenny Perry at 5 under and Tom Watson at 3 under.
Because 81 players made the

cut Friday at 1 under, there will
be a 54-hole cut to get to the top
70 scores, plus ties.
Phil Mickelson is already assured of getting the weekend off.
He shot 68 on Friday and finished at 2 over.
It marked the first time in his
career that Mickelson missed
three consecutive cuts at one
tournament. Mickelson blamed
his lackluster showings at the
Greenbrier Classic on estimating
distances with his iron shots.
“They end up not just a yard or
two off from where I figure, but
they’re 10 or 12 yards off from
where I figure,” he said.

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Gallipolis 441-0781
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�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Angry Birds go unbeaten in OVAA

Submitted photo

The Vinton Angry Birds recently finished the A-ball softball division of the Ohio Valley Athletic Association as regular
season champions. The Angry Birds also won the postseason tournament and finished the 2013 season with a perfect
12-0 record. Kneeling in front, from left, are team members Isabella Mershon, Destiny Dotson, Kaylee Schultz, Hunter
Copley, Kaylee Jones and Kelsey Brown. Standing in middle are Rachel Reynolds, Kalynn Sturgeon, Cierra Reynolds,
Britney Davis, Skyler Johnson, Kelsey Jones, Hanna Davis, Cierra Roberts, Lyvia Prince and Brianna Blazer. Standing in
back are coaches Nick Roberts, John Copley, Brian Blazer and Brian Mershon. Absent from the photo was Hailey Burris.

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B3

Tony Stewart
talks soda
cookies and splits
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — SPOILER ALERT:
Stop reading if you believe Tony Stewart is an agile, limber
and graceful athlete.
That wasn’t Stewart doing a split in his new Mobil 1 commercial with Formula One driver Jenson Button.
And he doesn’t actually eat “soda cookies.”
The spot, which began airing last month, shows Stewart
using Mobil 1 oil to lubricate his hips and legs before sliding
into a full split to dunk his cookie in a glass of soda.
“Let’s make no mistakes about it — if I got down there,
I would still be down there,” Stewart said Friday at Daytona International Speedway. “They did not ask me to do
that. They had me get down on the ground for the camera
shot, but they had green screens. They had some male
gymnast do it, I don’t know who it was, I didn’t want to
be there when he did it.”
Mobil 1 currently has two ads out with Stewart and Button, and the second one has the drivers comparing their fitness levels with Stewart easily riding a stationary bike. Both
scripts were a surprise to Stewart when he showed up to film.
“It actually was a lot of fun shooting the spots because I
never look at what the spots are supposed to be and I get
there and I’m starting to read the scripts and it’s saying ‘Tony
is getting on an exercise bike, he’s doing splits’ and I’m like
‘Which Tony is doing this? Is there another Tony?’ ” he said.
And the soda cookies were knew to three-time NASCAR
champion who has never tried to hide his love of fast food
and snacks.
“I can’t say that I’ve ever sat down and grabbed a coke
and grabbed Oreos … I’ve ate Oreos and I’ve chased
them with coke, but I can’t say that I’ve done a lot of
dunking,” he said. “It actually was pretty good. I might
have started a trend now.”

Hot dog vendor retires after 60 seasons with Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) —
With 60 seasons in the big
leagues, Millie Wilson is calling it quits.
“I’ve seen playoffs, World
Series, All-Star Games,” she
said. “There’s nothing new
for me at the ballpark.”
Her career highlights
would amount to fine
print on the back of a
baseball card. If, that is,
they issued baseball cards
for hot dog vendors.
“People would need a
magnifying glass to read
about what I’ve seen,” the
78-year-old native East
Ender added, letting out a
laugh while adjusting her
black Reds baseball cap over
her white hair.
“I’ve seen it all,” she said.
“That’s why I’m hanging it
up. My last game is Friday.”
With that she went to work.
Ninety minutes before game
time, as Tuesday night’s
Great American Ball Park
crowd trickled in, bags of
peanuts needed stacking.
Hot dogs barked to be kept
warm.
Ninety minutes later,
Homer Bailey began his second career no-hitter.
“I’ve seen no-hitters,” Millie said. “A bunch.” Six, to be
exact, counting Bailey’s latest gem.
The divorced mother of
three - “only are two living,
a boy in California, a girl
in town” - bustled about
the concession stand. Her
station is at the end of the
third-base line, on the View
Level, across from Section
410, the all-you-can-eat
seats. For Millie, the stand
marks the end of the line
for a career that began in
1954 at Crosley Field.
“That’s my favorite ball-

park,” said this veteran of
three Reds homes, Crosley,
Riverfront Stadium and
Great American. She leaned
on the concession stand’s
stainless-steel counter and
looked out to see a green
sliver of right field. In her
mind’s eye, she could see all
of Crosley Field.
“That was a true ballpark,”
she said. “It was homey. The
players walked by the concession stands on their way
to the field. Their wives
stopped by to talk with you.
It was in a neighborhood.
They should have kept that
standing and left it for kids
to play in. Instead, they tore
down a piece of history.”
Millie’s rookie season
coincided with the first bigleague at bat for Chuck Harmon, her home team’s first
African-American
player.
When he broke the Reds’
color line that year at home
in April 1954, Millie was
there. “I was at a concession
stand,” she said, “selling
hamburgers, brats, metts and
hot dogs.”
When the end comes tonight, she’ll still be at a stand
selling hot dogs. She joked
that it looks like she never
got a promotion. “I’m just a
plain, old worker,” she said.
Hardly.
Plain, old workers never
amass these career stats: She
outlasted 22 Reds managers.
Reds skipper Dusty Baker is
No. 23. She has watched no
fewer than 932 Reds take the
field. She has seen parts of
4,730 regular-season games.
At work, she’s never seen a
complete game. Someone
is always coming up to her
wanting something. A cold
beer. A hot dog.

Millie turned up her nose
at the mention of a hot dog.
“Don’t like ‘em,” she said.
“Never have.”
Her eyes scanned the
crowd. Two guys approached
the stand.
“Sir! Can I help you?” Millie asked in a friendly, but
firm, shout.
One of the two timid guys
pointed a finger to his chest
and said: “You talking to
me?”
Millie nodded. From her
60 years of experience, she
knows this is how to keep
the customer satisfied and
make money for her employer, Delaware North, the
Reds’ concessionaire.
Kevin Kleman, a salesman
from Ludlow Falls, Ohio,
“75 miles, one way from
Cincinnati,” stepped closer.
He smiled and ordered two
hot dogs with a side order of
baseball chatter.
He noticed Millie’s white
hair. He found out she was in
her 60th season.
“You like the Reds?” he
asked.
“Love ‘em,” she replied.
He started grilling her like
an underdone hot dog.
Her favorite Reds manager?
She told him she had
none. But, she has a soft
spot in her heart for “Fred
Hutchinson. He got cancer
and died in 1964, long before
his time. He took the Reds to
the World Series in 1961.”
Her favorite Reds ballplayer?
Millie plays no favorites.
“But I loved Pete Rose and
the Big Red Machine. There
will never be another team
like that in a million years.”
Kleman mentioned Rose’s
gambling problems.

“I like to gamble,” Millie
piped up. “But I go to the casino. Never bet on baseball.”
Can’t say the same for
Rose.
“If Pete had just gone to
a casino,” Millie added, “he
might still be in baseball.”
Kleman turned to go. He
asked Millie if she was going
to come back next year for
her 61st season.
“Nope,” she happily replied. “After Friday night’s
game, I’m done.”
Kleman reached out
and rubbed her arm “for

luck tonight for the Reds
and for luck for you in
your retirement.”
His touch got to Millie.
She tried not to let it show.
But that got her talking
about why she is retiring in
midseason. “My ride was
one of the girls who worked
at the ballpark,” she said.
“She got herself fired. Now,
I’m taking the bus. My kids
don’t like me coming home
by myself late at night, crossing two busy streets and
walking past 25 houses before I get home.”

She handed over four bags
of peanuts to two customers.
The men, showing signs of
never missing a meal, were
in the all-you-can-eat section.
After they lumbered away,
Millie insisted she won’t
miss spending her days and
nights at the ballpark. “Been
doing this since I was 19,”
she said. “My aunt got me
the job. I used to work at
River Downs and Cincinnati
Gardens, too.”
Always at a concession
stand. Never in the stands.
Always handling hot dogs.

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*Geographic and service restrictions apply to all services. Call to see if you qualify.
60412545

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B4
Help Wanted General

Miscellaneous

HIRING LEGAL
SECRETARY

FOR SALE:
8 Grave Cemetery Lots. Center sections. Sunrise Mem
Garden, above New Haven.
$3850. Call 304-882-3173

Busy law office seeks
legal secretary for
typing, filing, court
runs &amp; answering
phones. Must be able
to multi-task &amp; be
pleasant to the public.
Paralegal or law office
experience preferred.
Please send resumes:
c/o Colleen Williams,
Meigs County
Prosecutor,
117 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
No phone calls, please
60432253

LEGALS

Business Consulting

D&amp;Y Carpentry
EMPLOYMENT

Remodels, Rooﬁng, Interior/
Exterior Painting, and much more!
FREE ESTIMATES!
Bruce Young

740-645-8025
Bob Donnet
60424213

678-378-3244
Professional Services

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

Drivers &amp; Delivery
DRIVERS
NEEDED/IRONTON OH:
Company &amp; Owner/Op, Regional
Runs, Home 3-4 Nights Per Week,
Class A-CDL + Tank + Hazmat +
TWIC, Benefits Include Medical/
Dental/RX/Life/Disability/401K
&amp; More!!! Apply
@ www.thekag.com OR
Call 800-871-4581 Option #2

Drivers:

Great Pay,
Benefits &amp; Hometime!
Haul Flatbed OTR.
CDL-A, 2yrs Exp.
EEO/AA
www.trinitytrucking.com
800-628-3408

Drivers:

CDL-A, Home Weekly!
Avg 60k year!
$1000 Sign-On Bonus! Must
qualify for tank and
hazmat endorsement.
www.RandRtruck.com,
1-866-204-8006

Drivers:

60431228

• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available
Gary Stanley

Drivers &amp; Delivery

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

GALLIPOLIS CITY SCHOOL
DISTRICT
Legal Notice
Invitation to Bid
Sealed bids will be received by
the Gallipolis City School District at the Administrative Building located at 61 State Street,
Gallipolis OH 45631 until 12:00
p.m. local time on July 8, 2013.
Project: Provide and install sufficient field lighting over the entire area of a 180ʼ x 360ʼ soccer field. Said lighting to be installed on property owned by
the Gallipolis City School District
Board of Education known as
the Eastman Athletic Complex,
113 Centenary Church Road,
Gallipolis OH 45631. Drawings and specifications prepared by Breech Engineering.
Bids will be opened and read
immediately afterwards. No
bidder may withdraw its bid
within 30 days after the bid
opening. The school district reserves the right to waive irregularities in bids, to reject any or
all bids, and to conduct such
investigation as necessary to
determine the responsibility of
a bidder.
Gallipolis City Schools
Board of Education
61 State Street
Gallipolis OH 45631
Ellen M. Marple, Treasurer
7/2 7/7
ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

Auctions

Lost &amp; Found
REWARD
Missing 425lb black steer.
Around Yauger Church,
Debbie Rd, 10 mile area. 304458-1814

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
Yard Sale July 8,9,10. Knick
Knacks, toys, clothes, pictures,
ect. 46 Burnett Road
SERVICES
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES
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
Administrative / Professional
Experienced Administrative
Assistant needed: Full-time position M-F. Pay based on experience/education. Must have
excellent computer/telephone/
people skills. Must be self-motivated, very organized, able to
multi-task and work well independently. Benefit package includes health insurance and
paid vacation. Must pass background check and drug screen.
Email resume to
ccopatriot@gmail.com
Drivers &amp; Delivery
LIQUID ASPHALT DRIVERS
NEEDED
in the Point Pleasant area.
Must be 21 years old or older.
Must have Class A CDL with
Hazmat Endorsement and
TWIC card. Good MVR. Local
Trips. Call 1-800-598-6122
R&amp;J Trucking is seeking qualified CDL drivers for local and
regional routes with our SemiDumps and regional driving
positions with our Bulk Tanker
division. We feature weekend
home time for our regional
drivers, we offer health &amp; dental insurance, vacation and bonus pays, 401(K) and safety
awards. Applicants must be
over 23 yrs., &amp; have at least 2
yr. commercial driving exp.
Haz-Mat Cert., and a clean
driving record. Contact Kent at
800-462-9365. EOE.
Help Wanted General

Drivers: CDLA Teams &amp;

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

Drivers:

60425403

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

Auctions

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, July 13 – 9:00 a.m.
42370 Thompson Way, Pomeroy, OH

DIRECTIONS: From 33 East of Athens or 33 West of Pomeroy, exit Co. Rd. 19-Peach Fork Road, .8 mile turn
right on Rocksprings Road, .5 mile turn left on Thompson Way, go back long lane, watch for signs.
TRACTOR, EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS: Full sets of farm implement instruction manuals and tractor parts
list books w/schematics for Ferguson, New Holland &amp; others from Fulton-Thompson Tractor Sales, Ford
Ferguson T030 Tractor, MF 3 pt. 7 ft. blade, MF sickle bar mower, disk, Dearborn 2-bottom plow, culipacker,
spike tooth drag harrow, horse drawn mowing machine, hand crank bean duster, Gravely walk-behind
mower w/sulky &amp; plow, 2-old walk-behind mowers, dual wheel 6x16 ft. trailer, 2-utility trailers, Troy Bilt
Super Tomahawk Chipper, Troy Bilt Horse rototiller, yard cart, Stihl weed eaters, old 2-man chain saw,
push cultivator, Wittle Engine Works w/Milling Machine, Lombardini (made in Italy) 22 hp diesel engine
w/generator &amp; air compressor, Forming welder, Craftsman tool cabinet, misc. hand tools, Honda 3200 psi
pressure washer, 3-phase Case grinder, Steelman HD drill press, homemade engine hoist, bins of nuts/bolts,
floor jack, jack stands, roll of electrical cable, roll of plastic pipe, 4-standard ATV wheels/tires, alum. fl at
bottom boat, Evinrude 20 hp boat motor, 3-fishing poles, squirrel cage blowers, old school bus shell on
frame, old RV shell, antennae tower, 2-HD metal cabinets on wheels w/table top, lots of glass bulk milk tank
pipes, 3-piles of cherry lumber,
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Weaver Skiff cyprus 16 ft. boat, Ferguson System Tractors &amp; MF signs, 4-milk
cans w/implement seats attached, anvil, lots of old hand tools, wood post auger, hand operated post drill,
chest drill, large stilyard, old wrenches, Railroad wick lantern, D-Lite &amp; Buhl lanterns, 2-wood rakes, wood
grain cradle, wood pitch fork, 2-scythes, crosscut saw, ox yoke &amp; shoes, horse drawn push plow, homemade
potato plow, 50+ insulators, assorted mining tools, tin boiler w/lid, 2-apple peelers, 2-school desk seats, 4-old
wood theater seats, oak swivel desk chair, oak flat wall cabinet, oak wash stand w/towel bar/mirror, oak lamp
table w/glass ball feet, walnut gateleg drop leaf table, library table, pressback chairs, 3-rocking chairs, 125
yr.old rope bed, dresser w/claw feet, vanity dresser, lowboy dresser, Singer sewing machine (electrified) in
treadle cabinet, 2-foot locker trunks, humpback trunk, assorted old picture frames, Royal manual typewriter,
kerosene lamp, 20-crocks/jugs, McCoy pottery, set of Pyrex mixing bowls, glass refrigerator dish w/lid,
assortment of collectible glassware-plates, milk glass pieces, few Blenko vases, 10-quilts handmade by Alice
(White-on-White, Drunkards Path, Star Design, Embroidered Floral, Log Cabin, Wedding Ring, Flower
Garden &amp; Others), spinning “wheel” only, 2-quilting frames, pile of 40+ large sandstone rocks, 40+ hand
carved assorted wood bowls signed/dated-list available, and other items,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; Miscellaneous: Roper refrigerator, 2-upright freezers, maple dining
table w/extra leaves, 6-maple chairs, maple drop leaf table, table &amp; floor lamps, desk, bookshelf, unfinished
cedar chest, 2-chest of drawers, newer wardrobe cabinet, 2-4 dr. &amp; 2-2 dr. file cabinets, 2-computer desk,
3-arm chairs, 2-recliners, hide-a-bed sofa, maple coffee table, newer oak TV cabinet, 2-folding picnic tables,
2-compost tumblers, 3-folding cots, canning jars, juicer, Kitchen dishes, pots/pans &amp; misc. small appliances,
Kitchen Aide mixer, microwave, metal kitchen cabinet, Purple Martin bird houses, 2-wheel chairs, 2-RV
captains chairs, and other miscellaneous items.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank
authorization of funds available. 4% buyers premium on all sales with a 4% discount for cash payment. All
sales are final. Food will be available.

Louella Roush, Trustee for Alice Thompson Irrevocable Trust
SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
60431735

Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Help Wanted General

Pleasant Valley Hospital has an opening
for a full-time MLT/MT. Three years or
greater general staff experience preferred.
Baccalaureate degree in medical
technology or related ﬁeld plus eligibility
or ASCP and/or associates degree
in applied science.

INSTRUCTORS
MATH &amp; ACCOUNTING.
A MASTER'S DEGREE
in each subject area is required.
Email cover letter and
resume to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Ohio Valley
Sleep Diagnostics
is currently seeking a full-time
sleep technologist, for our
Point Pleasant (PVH) location.
We will provide training. For
more information, call Ruth
Kelley at (304) 588-0887 or
email a resume to:
ruthkelley2@frontier.com
VACANCY: H.S. CAREERTECHNICAL PUBLIC
SAFETY INSTRUCTOR. Associate Degree in Criminal
Justice or Criminal/Forensic
Science. OPOTA Peace Officer certified. Prefer Detective/Investigation experience.
CONTACT: Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD (740) 245-5334,
Ext. 256. EEO
EDUCATION
REAL ESTATE SALES

Apply at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550,
online at www.pvalley.org or
fax to (304) 675-6975.
EOE: M/F/V/D

Land (Acreage)
Once Acre of flat, clean land
on East Bethel Church Rd,
Gallipolis. Already been surveyed, Ready for Sale $15,000
740-446-8114
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Auctions

Apartments/Townhouses

VERY LARGE COUNTRY PUBLIC AUCTION
BRIEN &amp; JUDY BURKE are selling the antiques &amp; chattels formerly the property
of the late KAAREN STAFFORD at the Farm known as HIGH POINTE ARABIANS FARM. The picturesque farm is located at
29140 State Route 143, ALBANY, OH 45710 (Meigs County)
Located on State Route 143 between Pomeroy and U.S. U.S. Route 50 south of
Albany. Easy to find. Field parking.
SATURDAY, JULY 13, 2013 @ 10:00AM
ANTIQUES….Large Selection of Furniture: Nice oak curved glass china cabinet,
oak bookcase secretary w/shield shaped mirror, fancy iron bed w/vertical brass
spindles, unusual oak Estey portable-folding pump organ, tall hat box chest w/
large oval mirror, nice Duncan Phyfe curved glass corner cabinet, nice oak bachelor chest w/mirror &amp; hat box, early cherry chest of drawers on turned feet, oak
claw foot sideboard w/mirror &amp; gingerbread crown, contemporary hall tree w/
marble shelf, oak drop-front writing desk w/mirror, dovetailed cherry commode
w/side towel bars, nice oak fireplace mantel, Victorian maple &amp; tiger maple dresser,
ornate cast iron arched top fireplace summer cover &amp; surround, 30s walnut/birdseye chest, serpentine washstand, Vict bed, 2-oak parlor stands, cherry Queen Anne
dining table &amp; 8-Windsor chairs, round oak dining table, oak extension table on
5-reeded legs, unusual upright steamer wardrobe, camelback steamer trunk w/
tray, Vict dresser w/carved pulls, nice oak carved high chair, maple tea cart, Jenny
Lind bed, Pembroke table, turned baby cradle, cedar wardrobe, chair sets &amp; parlor
tables, floor case for Victrola, other furniture! 6-Very Nice Guns: Winchester 94
1867-1967 Canadian Centennial 30-30 carbine-USA made. Winchester 1911 self
loading 12ga semi auto. Mossberg 500 410 shtgn. Marlin 22mag rifle w/scope,
Glenfield-Marlin 60 .22 rifle, w/scope. LeFever Arms Nitro Special 12ga double
barrel. Carved wooden Jumper Carousel Horse-78” nose to hoof, w/stand-needs
restoration. Small Antiques: Civil War era bayonet, Midnite wooden hobby horse,
ladies English riding boots, old violin in case, Shredded Wheat shipping box, Arm
&amp; Hammer shipping box stand, 2-nice pony saddles, ladies cowboy boots, marbles,
20 tintype photos, American Mandolin Special Niagara harp, 1964 G.E. Show ’N
Tell picture machine w/programs, dolls &amp; youth items, Seth Thomas beehive tablet
shelf clock, old flatware, records, lots more. WWII Photos, Soldier Drawings &amp;
Letters: 2-WWII photo albums (many Navy photos), drawings by serviceman
depicting life in the Philippines, 1945/46 serviceman letters, 32” 1945 Navy Day
photo of New York Harbor showing USS Midway-Enterprise-Missouri-New York
&amp; USS Helena. Nearly 100-Framed Prints &amp; Art from old to contemporary. Nice
selectin of Costume Jewelry. Lots of Glass, Pottery &amp; China: Majolica Victorian
English Monkey smoking pipe-ca1880s, Beatrix Potter Foxy Whiskered Gentleman &amp; Bunny teapot, P.V. French Opera teapot &amp; 2-plates, Wedgwood Nixon &amp;
Ike trays, decorated china, numerous pottery items, glass flowers, ruby flashed
pieces, Shirley Temple pitchers/mug &amp; nut set, Depression &amp; pressed glass, lots
more. Lots of Horse Figures including a horse clock, pottery horse lamp, Breyer/
glass/china/wooden/brass/miniatures horses. All Shapes and Sizes of Animal
Figures including 7-hand-carved Russian mechanical wooden animals. Dinner
China sets by Harker &amp; Syracuse. Several Limited Ed.Collector Plates. Quilts,
Linens, Furs &amp; Rugs. Good Selection of MODERN FURNISHINGS &amp; Accessories. Hundreds of Unlisted Items! LARGE AUCTION! Come Spend A Day in
the Country!
Terms: Cash or good check auction day. Positive Id . Federal Hocking FFA Food.
Bring lawn chair.
AUCTIONEER: OTTIE OPPERMAN &amp; PAUL HARPER. Chad N. Ricketts Apprentice
Ottie: 740-385-7195. Over 145 website pictures: www.opperman-auctions.com
or Auction Zip #12726
60431020

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 apt, $425 mo, plus
utilities &amp; dep, 3rd St, Racine,
OH. 740-247-4292

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

Furnished - 2bdrm. Apt.
$450.00/mo. Incl. w/s/g Racine,Ohio No Pets 740-5915174
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165
Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265
FOR RENT: 2BR House/Cottage. Gallipolis Ferry. 1st &amp; last
mos rent, ref. $500. 304-6752897

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

Houses For Rent
Newly remodeled 4BR, 3BA,
Jackson Pike area, finished
basement, $800/month or
Lease/option to Buy. No Pets
740-534-2838

LEGALS

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

Public Bid

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B5
Rentals

Rentals
FOR RENT:
2BR Apt. No smoking or pets.
750mo, 500dep. OFFICE
SPACE: Across from PVH
800mo, 500dep. 304-834-1128

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Livestock
Jacob Sheep, Lamb/breed
use, $75 to $150. Feeder Hogs
10wks, $50 740-441-5101

Bids Due: until 10:00 a.m. Local Time, Friday, July 26,
2013; at Rio Grande Community College, 218 North
College Avenue, Florence Evans Hall, Suite #131, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674

More Info: RVC Architects, Inc., 131 West State
Street, Athens, Ohio 45701, ph: 740.592.5615, fax:
740.593.8811, e-mail: callahan@rvcarchitects.com
60431549

AUTOMOTIVE

60432202

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Concrete &amp; Masonry

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

RELIGION PAGE

Need Extra Cash???

WORK AT HOME

Train for a career in Healthcare Documentation!
Be a

Medical Coding
&amp; Billing Specialist

FREE ONE HOUR SEMINAR
WEDNESDAY,
No
Train
Commuting
At Home
JULY 10TH
Or Selling
An In-Demand
7PM
Nationally Accredited

Gallipolis Quality Inn
577 State Route 7 N., Gallipolis, OH
'HSW��*/3$�$����www.at-homeprofessions.edu
Approved by the State Board of Proprietary School Registration

At-Home Professions

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

Help Wanted General

EDUCATION/TRAINING

Career

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

All types Masonry, brick, block,
stone, concrete, Free Estimate, 304-593-9143 or 304-6746051

Instruction &amp; Training

®

An Industry Leader in Home-Based Career Training for 30 Years!
�����/RZH�6WUHHW��)RUW�&amp;ROOLQV��&amp;2����������������������

60430906

All Bidders are strongly encouraged to attend the
Pre-Bid Meeting on Monday, July 15, 2013, at 10:00
a.m. until approximately 11:00 a.m., at the following
location: Rio Grande Community College – Wood
Hall Lobby
Bid Documents: Available for purchase from Cannell
Graphics, LLC., 5787 Linworth Road, Worthington, OH
43085, (866) 790-1429, Fax (614) 781-9759; website:
www.cannellplanroom.com at the non-refundable cost
of $100 per set, plus shipping, if requested.

AGRICULTURE

4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, 2 Car Garage, 5 Acres, Plus Pole
Barn. OHIO RIVER VIEW!
Located: Rt. 218 Gallipolis 740-441-1492

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

Want To Buy

ANIMALS

HOUSE FOR SALE

Contract
Estimated Cost
General Contract
$2,743,946.00
Alternate G-1 (Lecture Hall Seaating) $60,000.00(DELETED)
Alternate G-2 (Family Restroom)
$27,200.00
Alternate G-3 (Faculty Lounge)
$29,700.00
Alternate G-4 (Restroom Improvements)
$55,000.00
Alternate G-5 (Office Lighting)
$20,800.00
Alternate G-6 (VAV Mechanical)
($351,000.00)

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

Houses For Sale

Project #120915/RGC0100007
Rio Grande Community College
Wood Hall Rehabilitation
Rio Grande, Gallia County, Ohio

Miscellaneous

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

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

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All In: The Poker Movie Karen Abbott.
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Ray Donovan

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B6

Buffalo AD
Chapman signs with UC Beckley basketball
White in ‘NY
State’ of mind

Submitted photo

Recent Point Pleasant graduate Nathaniel Chapman, seated front and center, will be continuing his basketball career
after signing a letter of intent with the University of Charleston-Beckley. Chapman, a 6-4 post player that twice
earned a varsity letter with the Big Blacks’ hoops program, said of the opportunity to play at UC-Beckley, “I chose this
school because when I visited I felt like family from the moment I met the coach and teammates. I love the community of Beckley and I feel at home there. After praying and talking with friends and family, I felt it was an opportunity
that I could not pass up. I also have a special memory in Beckley from this past basketball season after beating then
undefeated Greenbrier East. When the state counted us out we upset them, so Beckley already had a secial place in
my heart and now I get to continue my career there. It’s always been my dream to play college basketball, I’m blessed
to be given this opportunity.” Nate plans on majoring in biology and is seated with his parents, Cinday and Michael
Chapman. Standing in back are Nate’s brothers, Josh, Aaron and Eric.

Favor Hamilton’s name dropped from Big Ten award
PARK RIDGE, Ill. (AP)
— The Big Ten female
athlete of the year award
no longer is named for
the Olympic track star
from Wisconsin who later
acknowledged working as
a prostitute.
Big Ten spokesman
Scott Chipman said Tuesday that Suzy Favor Ham-

ilton’s name was removed
from the award after
discussions between the
league and Wisconsin.
Minnesota hockey player Amanda Kessel was
named the winner last
week. Kessel was also the
national player of the year
after leading the Gophers
to an undefeated season
and a second straight
NCAA title.
Favor competed in the
Olympics in 1992, 1996
and 2000. The Smoking
Gun website in December
first reported that Favor
Hamilton had worked as a
$600-an-hour escort in Las
Vegas. She described it as
a “coping mechanism” tied

to depression and other
personal issues.
Favor Hamilton, 44,
was the Big Ten’s female
athlete of the year three
straight times beginning
in 1988 and one of the
most celebrated athletes
at Wisconsin. She won
seven U.S. national titles,
her last in 1999.
Before her double life
was revealed, she had
been hired for speaking engagements at Disneyland and was pitchwoman for the Wisconsin
Potato and Vegetable
Growers Association.
Favor Hamilton said
in a series of tweets last
year that her work as an

escort provided an “escape” for her.
“I do not expect people to understand,” she
tweeted. “But the reasons
for doing this made sense
to me at the time and
were very much related to
depression.”
Favor Hamilton had
told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in 2012 that
she dealt with anxiety, an
eating disorder and struggled with postpartum depression after the birth of
her daughter.
At the time of that interview, she was doubling as a
call girl going by the name
“Kelly Lundy.”

AP Sports Briefs
Daly withdraws at
Greenbrier, says
surgery coming

WHITE
SULPHUR
SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP) —
John Daly withdrew from
The Greenbrier Classic golf
tournament in West Virginia and tweeted later that he

needed elbow surgery and
would be away from golf for
up to four months.
Daly withdrew at 7 over
after playing just three
holes Friday. He shot a
5-over 75 Thursday on the
Old White TPC Course.
The PGA said Daly with-

HUGE
SELECTION

Recliners • Sofas/Sectionals • Casual Dining
Lifestyle Furniture
856 Third Ave Gallipolis OH
740-446-3045

60430884

Play Cliffside

Enjoy our 18-hole, par-72 golf course
with beautiful views. Our golf course features
impeccably maintained fairways, greens and bunkers.
Green Fees Weekday $27, Weekends $32
Green fees includes golf cart.

Monday
Special
18 holes including cart

$20

60432165

Call for Tee Time
(740) 446-4653
100 Cliffside Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio

drew with an elbow injury.
Daly said later on Twitter
that he would have surgery
next week and miss three
to four months. He followed with another tweet
saying he had a “bionic
new arm coming soon.”
Daly, who played at Arkansas, bogeyed the par-4
10th hole and the par-5
12th on Friday. He birdied
No. 12 on Thursday.

Pirates’ Burnett
to start Sunday
against Cubs

60432223

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Athletic director Danny White
is in a New York State of mind outlining his ambitious
plan to raise the Buffalo’s national profile.
Since New York is already part of the school’s official
name, White figures why not emphasize it? If Berkeley’s
Golden Bears can refer to themselves as California, then
there’s no reason why the State University of New York at
Buffalo can’t one day be regarded as simply “New York.”
“New York state’s one of the most powerful state’s
in the country. And we don’t see any reasons why we
should run away from our position in the state,” White
said. “So when we think about, ‘Can we turn this into
America’s next big-time college athletics brand?” I
think that there’s a possibility that we can.”
Don’t laugh. White’s serious about rebranding a
program that has struggled competing in the MidAmerican Conference, let alone made much of a dent
in the national landscape since making the jump to
the Division I-A level in 1999.
In the one year since taking over, the 33-year-old White,
and son of Duke AD Kevin White, has begun unveiling
the new vision.
New York is spelled out in large capital letters on the
breast of the new Nike-designed Bulls collared shirt White
wears. And it’s a theme most prominently featured on the
recently repainted Alumni Arena basketball court, on which
a map of the entire state is spread across center court.
White doesn’t intend to lose the name Buffalo, and
doesn’t consider the emphasis of New York as a knock
against the city.
“It’s certainly not a negative on Knoxville to have the
Tennessee Volunteers, or Ann Arbor to have the Michigan
Wolverines,” he said. “I think it’s only good for the city of
Buffalo, for western New York and for our institution if
we establish more of a national brand and get more nationally relevant as an athletic department.”
White, of course, acknowledges a long road ahead
transforming a program that’s lacked resources, success
or much of an identity.
Turner Gill didn’t realize Buffalo even had a football
program before he was hired as coach in 2006.
Buffalo’s teams have combined to win a total of seven
regular-season or postseason titles. That includes the Gillcoached Bulls winning the MAC title in 2008 and finishing with an 8-6 record — the team’s only winning finish
since 1996, when Buffalo was a Division I-AA program.
Lack of success aside, White noted the school has several advantages that have gone relatively untapped.
With an enrollment approaching 30,000, Buffalo is the
flagship school in the state’s system. More important, it’s
one of 62 members of the Association of American Universities, a collection of schools that includes Harvard,
Penn State, Ohio State and Michigan.

CHICAGO (AP) — A.J.
Burnett is set to return to
the Pittsburgh Pirates’ rotation.
Manager Clint Hurdle
says the veteran righthander will start Sunday
against the Chicago Cubs
after being sidelined the
past month because of a
strained right calf.
Burnett
apparently
looked good enough in his
bullpen sessions and simulated game that the Pirates
decided a minor league
rehab start was not necessary. Hurdle said Friday
he didn’t think his pitcher
would be “as stimulated”
as he would pitching at
Wrigley Field.
“He was able to stay involved in games, throwing
throughout this process
with the exception of the
first couple of days,” Hurdle
said. “First bullpen was
what we expected. Simulated game, I thought we saw
some good stuff. Next bullpen the timing and rhythm
were really pretty sharp.”
Burnett is 4-6 with a 3.12
ERA in 14 starts, but even
without him, the Pirates
continue to roll along.
They entered Friday’s
game against the Cubs
with a major league-leading 52-32 record and a twogame lead over St. Louis in
the NL Central.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY,
JULY 7, 2013

Along the River

C1

Ballots of 1864 cast by Meigs County Civil War soldiers
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
ceremonial opening of a
package wrapped in brown
paper and tied with twine
containing the voting ballots of Meigs County’s Civil War soldiers in the 1864
presidential election took
place last week.
The ballots have been
kept in storage for 149
years, first at the Meigs
County Board of Elections
office and more recently at
the Meigs Museum. The
package containing the
ballots were found by Jane
Frymeyer, a former Board
of Elections director, in a
storage room. Recognizing the historic value of the
contents, she took it to the
museum for safekeeping.
This year being the
150th anniversary of the
Civil War Battle at Buffington Island and with a commemoration scheduled for
July 20 and 21, Parker felt
it was the appropriate time
to open the package.
Wearing clear plastic
gloves, Historical Society
President Margaret Parker
carefully clipped the twine,
opened the package, and
then began the tedious
process of laying out the
frayed and somewhat faded
ballots.
On hand to witness that
were Meigs County Commissioners Tim Ihle, Michael Bartrum and Randy
Smith, Becky Johnson, director of the Meigs County
Board of Elections, Karen
Werry of the Museum
Board of Trustees, Robin
Parker, an employee, and
Joyce Davis, a Museum
volunteer.
One by one some of
the 697 ballots, voted by

Abraham Lincoln
Republican (Union)

George B. McClellan
Democrat

Meigs County soldiers in
the field and in hospitals
on Nov. 4, 1864, were carefully displayed on a table.
All will be encapsulated
in archival Mylar for a
permanent display at the
museum with the first public showing to take place
mid-July during Meigs
County’s commemoration
of the Civil War sesquicentennial.
Abraham Lincoln finishing up his first term as
president was the nominee
on the Union (Republican) ballot, while George
B.McClellan was the Democrat candidate running as
the “peace candidate.”
In the election Lincoln
won by more than 400,000
popular votes. His win for
a second term was credited
to the strength of the soldier vote. As for the Meigs
County vote on the ballots
which came to the Museum, 639 were for Lincoln,
58 for McClellan.
Those ballots were cast
by soldiers serving in companies in Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky,
Alabama, Georgia, West
Virginia, Washington D.
C., Maryland and Indiana.
History tells us that the

1864 election was, in several ways, unique. It was the
first time since 1812 that a
presidential election took
place during a war, the first
time a divided nation went
forward with the democratic process, and the first
and only time, a portion of
the United States did not
participate in the election.
The states of Alabama,
Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas
and Virginia did not cast
votes but continued upholding Jefferson Davis as
their own president.
The election also set
a precedent for absentee
voting which had never occurred before. But it was
Photos by Charlene Hoeflich
decided that since so many Historical Society President Margaret Parker displays the package containing ballots cast by
were in the midst of fight- Meigs County soldiers in 1864.
ing a war and the issues
were so great that they
should be given the privilege of participating.
The ballots in addition
to other Civil War artifacts
will be on display at the
Museum for public viewing during the local observance of the Civil War
sesquicentennial.

Watching in awe as the twine was cut and the fragile ballots displayed, were, from the left around
the table, Margaret Parker, Becky Johnston, Board of Elections director, Karen Werry, a Museum
trustee, and Meigs County Commissioners, Michael Bartrum, Randy Smith, and Tim Ihle.

The Union (Republican) and Confederate ballots

Margaret and Robin Parker begin the tedious process of preserving the voting ballots by encapsulating them in archival mylar.

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Steele
graduates
with honors

Madison Steele

Madison M. Steele
recently graduated with
honors from Mountwest
Community and Technical College. She earned
an Associate Degree in
Applied Science in Administrative
Medical
Technology. She was a
member and past president of Phi Theta Kappa
honors society. Madison
attended Gallia Academy
and is the daughter of
David and Diana Steele.

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C2

Raines-Hill
engagement
Lee and Michelle Raines of Albany and Jeffrey and Tamara Hill of Racine announce the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
children, Lauren Katherine Raines and Jordan
Kyle Hill.
Lauren is the granddaughter of Larry and
Thelma Raines and the late Russell and Kathryn Trainer. Jordan is the grandson of the late
Herschel and Eileen Roush and the late Billy and
Ruth Ann Hill.
The bride is a 2009 graduate of Alexander
High School and 2013 graduate of the University of Rio Grande with a RN degree. The groom
is a 2003 graduate of Southern High School and
2008 graduate of the University of Rio Grande
with a degree in education. He is employed as
a teacher and coach at Alexander High School.
The couple will be married on August 10,
2013 at the Athens Church of Christ.

Lauren Raines and Jordan Hill

Hit ‘Antiques Roadshow’ keeps on trucking for PBS

Luke Anderson Wamsley

Wamsleys announce birth
GALLIPOLIS — Matt and Sarah (Miller) Wamsley of
Gallipolis are pleased to announce the birth of their first
child, Luke Anderson Wamsley. Luke was born at Holzer
Medical Center at 4:08 p.m. Thursday, June 6, 2013. He
weighed 6 pounds, 12 ounces and was 22 inches long.
Luke’s maternal grandparents are Phil and June Miller
of Patriot. His paternal grandparents are Bill and Linda
Wamsley of Gallipolis. Luke is also the great-grandson of
Beulah Neigler.

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
— The items arrive by
the thousands, borne on
furniture dollies, in Radio Flyer wagons or nestled carefully in owners’
arms. The hodge-podge
parade consists of paintings, teapots, firearms,
mannequins decked out
in military uniforms and
more. Much more.
Grade-schoolers have
show-and-tell for their
treasures. The adult
counterpart is PBS’ “Antiques Roadshow,” which
has become an institution as it approaches its
18th season and holds
fast as public television’s
highest-rated series.
That’s right: It’s No. 1.
Not glamorous, romantic
“Downton Abbey,” but
homespun and earnest
“Antiques
Roadshow,”
where Civil War firearms, Tiffany lamps and
autographed
baseball
cards are the stars. Even
Kevin Bacon watches it,
which he admits in an
on-air PBS promo.
As the show hopscotches from U.S. city to city,

each stop draws some
6,000 people and the one
or two possessions they
believe are — or, wishful thinking, might be
— worth a few minutes
of TV airtime and a lot of
money.
But what they’re most
eager for is background
on their items and validation that their family
heirloom or garage-sale
find is special, said longtime executive producer
Marsha Bemko. It’s rare
that any piece featured
on “Roadshow,” no matter how valuable, ends up
being sold.
“People are so excited
about what they own and
so eager to learn about
it,” she said. “Most walk
out knowing more than
when they came in.”
And the audience gets
to share in that enlightenment. “It’s a very human and universal thing
to understand ourselves
and our objects help us
to do that,” Bemko said.
As part of an eight-city
tour for the new season
that begins airing next
January,
“Roadshow”
arrived recently in Anaheim, southeast of Los
Angeles and home to
Disneyland. For one
busy day, the gray cement floor of a convention center became a
field of dreams.
Maybe that blackand-white drawing discovered hiding behind
granddad’s painting will
turn out to be a rare
16th-century
century
print of “The Crucifixion” by Tintoretto (It
did, with an estimated
post-restoration value of

up to $15,000).
“I’ve always debated
with mom whether it
was real,” said its owner,
36-year-old Jason (PBS
asked that last names be
withheld for privacy and
security). He figured it
had to be a fake because
a date, 1569, was carefully noted in one corner.
What did he expect to
hear when he tells his
mother the news? “I told
you so,” he said, smiling.
Then there was the
piece plucked from the
trash in the 1970s. An appraiser sized it up as folk
art by Joseph Cornell,
one of his famed shadowbox displays, and worth
up to $150,000 at auction
if authenticated.
From the sublime to
the cheerfully ridiculous,
there was the stuffed
duck that served as
Groucho Marx’s prop
on his 1950s game show
“You Bet Your Life.” Purchased for $250 in 1986,
an appraiser gave it an
auction value of up to
$12,000.
The lucky Anaheim
visitors were among
those who sent in 24,278
requests for 3,000 pairs
of tickets distributed
through a random drawing. Local public TV stations have other tickets
that serve as donation
premiums.
Getting in is one thing;
getting on TV requires
more gantlet-running.
The action starts at the
so-called “triage tables,”
where visitors are directed to the best section
and experts for their belongings: A 1930s Mickey Mouse wristwatch is

GALLIPOLIS - 2 CRUISES
JULY 30th

sent to collectibles, for
example, rather than
timepieces.
Orderly lines form for
the stations that include
rugs and textiles, jewelry, firearms and furniture. Then comes a big
hurdle: Will an appraiser
consider an item or the
story behind it intriguing
enough to pitch to the
show’s producers for an
on-camera segment?
It’s not necessarily rarity or a big price tag that
will guarantee success.
“We are not easy to
impress. We’ve turned
down $200,000 items
where the guest knows
everything. We want
storytelling; we’re a TV
show. We want the drama of the guest learning
something,”
producer
Bemko said.
That’s done with viewers in mind. “If you’re
not excited by the object
because you don’t know
what it is,” she said,
you will be after you’re
schooled in its history.
The crowd is friendly,
not competitive, with a
fair amount of mutual
oohing-and-ahhing. Autograph-seekers extend
their admiration to host
Mark L. Walberg and volunteer appraisers including twins Leigh and Leslie Keno, who are very
familiar to hardcore fans.
Leslie Keno, a Sotheby’s veteran, said he
values the chance to use
material goods as a jumping-off point for lessons
in history and culture.
Plus, he said, “Antiques
Roadshow” is a treasure
hunt “that comes to me.”

60432193

Come join BB Riverboats’ Belle of
Cincinnati on its Summer Tour of River
Cities. We will be stopping in Gallipolis
offering lunch and dinner cruises! Come
ride the boat and enjoy one of Cincinnati’s
top attractions during this annual tradition!

The French Art Colony

530 1st Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 45631 • 740-446-3834
2nd Friday
Live Music Series
2nd Friday of each month through
October. Legal beverages and
fabulous food from Honey Creek
Barbecue will be available for
purchase.

Performances:
July 12 ~Shana Smith
August 9 ~ Mark Ward &amp;
Jenny Walker
September 13 ~ Stillwater “Lite”
October 11 ~ Paul Callicoat

Les Miserables, The Musical
Friday &amp; Saturday, August 16 &amp; 17 at 7PM
Sunday, August 18 at 2PM
University of Rio Grande • Fine Arts Auditorium
Tickets in advance or at the door • $10 All Seats

ARTS ADVENTURES
CLASSES &amp; WORKSHOPS
Presented By Maggie Roach
WEEKLONG CAMPS

1-800-261-8586

check out our
Specialty Cruises Page
at: www.bbriverboats.com/SummerTour
60430597

CLASSES

Broadway Stars ~
July 8 - 12
Once Upon a Time ~
July 22-26

SPECIAL WORKSHOPS / EVENTS

All Arts Adventures requires
an advance registration at
least one week prior

Clue Come to Life
Youth mystery themed Lock-In
Friday, July 19

Dance: Mondays, Ballet
Acting/ Theatre: Wednesdays

FASHIONS:
Then &amp; Now
August 3rd - 29th
Exhibit for variety of
fashions,
clothing and
accessories,
“old to new
eras”

60429586

�Sunday,
7, 2013
SundayJuly
, July
7, 2013

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C3

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
July 8, 2013:
This year your determination
couples with luck, which takes you to
a high point that you will remember
for years to come. You also will be
unusually creative and dynamic. If
you are single, you attract quite a few
potential suitors. One of them could
be significant to your life history. If
you are attached, avoid being too
me-oriented. Remember that a partnership is a duo. If you stay aware
of your sweetie, this year could be
significant for both of you. CANCER
can close down.
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)
HHH You’ll be unusually feisty
or touchy. Someone comes out of
the doldrums and expresses his or
her interest in a key project. Greet
the change positively, and let this
person take the lead — you might be
amazed at how helpful this adjustment could be. Tonight: Homeward
bound.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH Keep reaching out to
someone. Answers might be hard
to get if you don’t have a chat with
this person. You could be wondering about a forthcoming choice, as
you do not have a sense of what you
are facing. A loved one becomes far
more easygoing. Tonight: Out and
about.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Your finances could be
changing considerably, and for the
better, especially if you nix any wild
risk-taking. You have been rather
down in the dumps lately, and you
will be wondering why. Your mood
could change before you find the
answer. Go with the flow. Tonight:
Pay bills.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHHH Your creativity emerges,
and in some way, it will cause you
to approach an issue in a more positive way. A new friend who has been
giving you the cold shoulder for the
past few weeks finally might lighten
up. What has been difficult becomes
easy. Tonight: Be spontaneous!
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH Know when saying little is
the best course of action. Sometimes
you push very hard to get your way.
Lighten up, and do what you want.
At other times, you hold yourself
back. Stop interfering with your success. Enjoy the laughter around you.

Tonight: Get a good night’s sleep.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHHH Zero in on what you
want. A situation or relationship might
be shaky. You know when you need
to head in a new direction. You could
be surprised by the other party’s
agreement. Finally, you’ll be able
to see eye to eye with this person!
Tonight: Where your friends are.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH Dealing with a boss will
give you new insights, regardless of
whether or not that was your goal or
intention. You have felt stressed out
when interacting with this person in
the past, mainly because you couldn’t
ask for what you wanted. Be open to
change. Tonight: Do what you want.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHHH Detach in order to see
the big picture. Be willing to let go
of a need to have certain matters go
a particular way. Once you lose this
attachment for situations to conform
to your goals, you will be able to
see where others are coming from.
Tonight: Hop on the Internet.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You will feel less of a need
to hold back, once a partner decides
to reveal more of what is going on
with him or her. This person might
realize that there is no reason to sit
on his or her feelings. Both of you
will gain a new insight as a result.
Tonight: Discussion over dinner.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHHH What seemed impossible
now seems very possible. Doors
will open up because of a partner’s
willingness to walk through them.
You might not know what direction to
head. Open up to a positive change,
and you’ll see the path to a particular
goal. Tonight: Where the action is.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH You finally make a decision, but the question remains: Will
it hold? Whether you opt for a more
organized approach to work or a new
exercise program, it is likely that it
will require some self-discipline. You
have the energy to get through a big
project. Tonight: Put your feet up.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH A key relationship, perhaps one with a child or new friend,
will lighten up. You might be wondering what sparked this change.
Attempt to move through a problem,
but only when the other party seems
more willing. Know when to say “no.”
Tonight: Be more childlike.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Sunday, July 7, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C4

60431013

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