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

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Local student named
ECOT valedictorian....
Page 3

Mostly sunny.
High near 92. Low
near 73... Page 2

Yoenis Cespedes
wins homerun
derby.... Page 6

Joseph E. Godwin, 60
David L. Hendren, 59
Vinas L. Lee, 98
Phil S. Unroe, 57
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 114

Meth cases arraigned in Meigs Court
New meth arrest
made in Racine
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — The five individuals arrested on Sunday and
Monday on methamphetamine
related charges appeared for arraignments in Meigs County
Court on Tuesday afternoon.
On Monday night, Meigs

County Sheriff Keith Wood reports that deputies arrested
Mark A. Parsons, 51, of 45782
Ohio 124 in Racine after deputies found and eight pot methamphetamine lab and chemicals
used in the manufacturing of
methamphetamine.
According to the Meigs County 911 call log, a meth lab call
was received at 10:22 p.m. for a
lab located in Antiquity at the old
store which is along Ohio 124.
Assisting Meigs County Deputies at the scene was the Middleport Police Department — who

neutralized the lab along
housed in the Middlewith the others found in
port Jail.
the past week. The RaFour
individuals
cine Fire Department and
were charged in the
with Medics from Meigs
discovery of chemicals
County EMS also assisted
for the manufacture
on the scene.
of methamphetamine
Parsons
is
being
on Sunday evening in
charged with illegal
Pomeroy.
manufacturing of meth- Mark A. Parsons
Arrested at the
amphetamine, a felony of the scene were Kelly Marcinko, 39,
second degree. Bond was set at and Jennifer K. Morris, 32, both
$25,000 with 10 percent cash of whom lived at the residence,
permitted. Attorney Charles along with Kimberly D. Haley,
Knight was appointed to rep- 34, of Pomeroy, and Dusti J.
resent Parsons. He is being Belcher, 29, of West Columbia,

W.Va. All four individuals are
being charged with illegal possession of chemicals used to
manufacture methamphetamine,
a felony of the third degree.
Marcinko and Morris were
released on a $50,000 personal
recognizance bond. Attorney
Trenton Cleland was appointed
to represent Marcinko and Denise Bunce was appointed to represent Morris.
Bond for Haley and Belcher
was set at $50,000, with 10 perSee METH ‌| 5

Winners in 4-H food
projects announced
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Judging of the project work
of Meigs County’s 4-H
club members got under
way Monday at the Meigs
County Extension Office.
The grand and reserve
champions and those receiving honorable mention on their food projects
in their respective classes
were as follows:
Yeast Bread on the Rise:
Andrea McGrath, grand
champion; Miranda Greenlee, reserve champion; and
Bruce Davis and Tyler Barber, honorable mention.

Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

From an empty field to a construction site, the future site of the Emergency Operations Center is in the early stages
of construction with the pipes being placed for the plumbing.

From the ground up
Construction taking place on EOC
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS — Progress is
becoming visible in the construction of the new Meigs County
Emergency Operations Center.
On Tuesday morning, contrac-

tors were working on placement
of pipe for the plumbing of the
building. Block for the foundation is also in place around the
perimeter of the facility.
The facility will house dispatch offices, the Meigs County
Emergency Management Agency,

Meigs County EMS, and the 911
center. The facility will also include a garage which will allow for
the storage of needed equipment,
including a trailer and truck used
for emergency response.
The facility will be completely
backed up by generator in case of
power outages and will be a secure
facility with security locks on the
See CONSTRUCTION |‌ 5

You’re the Chef: Nicole
Moodispaugh,
grand
champion.
Pathways to Culinary
Success: Tyler Barber,
grand champion.
Let’s Bake Quick Breads:
Madison Lisle, grand
champion; Logan Greenlee, reserve champion.
Party Planner: Katlyn
Barber, grand champion;
Marissa Brooker, reserve
champion.
Racing the Clock to
Awesome Meals: Miranda
Greenlee, grand champion.
Snack Attack: Emma
Bing, grand champion;
See PROJECTS ‌| 5

Crews continuing search
for missing Gallia woman
Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis City
Police Officers continued their
search Monday for a missing woman
from Gallipolis who was reportedly
last seen on Wednesday morning.
Crews with the Gallipolis Fire Department along with city police offi- Lisa L. Miller
cers were reportedly out on the fire department’s rescue
boat on Monday searching the Ohio River for any sign of
Lisa L. Miller, 43.
Miller, who is described as being five-feet, three inches
tall, 100 pounds, with sandy-brown hair and hazel eyes, was
reported missing by family members at approximately 6
p.m. on Wednesday, July 10. She had reportedly been living
See SEARCH ‌| 5

Looking back to Civil War days
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

CHESTER — Since Chester was
an 1863 Civil War focal point in the
action of Confederate Major John
Hunt Morgan and his men in their
move toward Buffington Island,
an emphasis of this year”s Chester
Shade Days to be held Saturday will
relate to that time period.
The afternoon, 1 to 2 p.m., will
feature a Civil War tea in the Academy kitchen. A Civil War ball will
take place from 7 to 9:30 p.m. under
a tent on the Chester Commons and
a new feature of that this year will be
an old-fashioned cake walk.

Century old games will be directed
by Girl Scout leaders throughout the
day and crafts of earlier days will be
demonstrated in commemoration of
the sesquicentennial of the Battle at
Buffington Island.
At 5 p.m. the annual harmonica
competition for the title of Ohio’s
State Harmonica Championship will
take place . Musicians from across
the state are expected to participate
by playing selected material on the
harmonica, the instrument of choice
for entertaining in earlier times.
The Chester Post Office will be
on the grounds all day offering the
150th anniversary Civil War commemorative stamp.

The opening ceremony at 10 a.m.
will be preceded by breakfast served
in the Academy from 8 to 10 a.m. by
Mercy Mission. A fun run/walk at 9
a.m. leaving from Summerfield’s Restaurant will be featured with the first
15 participants to complete the route
being rewarded with a Civil War 150th
anniversary commemorative T-shirt.
Again this year a pie baking contest will be held with prizes of $30
for first and $25 for second. Other
features of the day will be demonstrations on assorted crafts, a program
Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel
on honey bees by Greg Bailey and John Bailey and Cleo Smith were named the 2012 Meigs Counthe use of beeswax by Jocelyn Bailey, ty’s Finest at Chester Shade Days. They were recognized by
Pat Holter, chairman. This year’s honorees, the oldest attend-

See DAYS ‌| 5 ing, will be recognized at noon.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Meigs County Community Calendar
and open to the public.
Saturday, July 20
POMEROY — A reunion of the Priddy family
will be held at noon at the
Westgate Park, 455 Westgate Avenue, Columbus.
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.
Sunday, July 21
ALFRED — The annual Watson Family reunion
will be held at the home
of Jim and Debbie Watson
on Woods Road in Alfred.
Lunch at noon. Take covered dish.

Monday, July 22
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet in regular
session at 8 p.m. in the
K-8 Library.
CHESTER — The Meigs
County Ikes Club will hold
its annual family picnic at 7
p.m. at the Club House in
Chester Township. Members are to bring a covered
dish, drink and table service.

Tuesday, July 23
POMEROY — Leading
Creek Conservancy’s office
will be closed from 11:30
a.m. to 2:00 p.m. for personnel matters; followed by the
July regular board meeting.
Wednesday, July 31
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Eastern Local Board
of Education will meet at
6:30 p.m. for their regular

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Local Briefs

Wednesday: Isolated showers and thunderstorms after noon. Mostly sunny, with a high near 92. Calm wind
becoming north 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon. Chance of
precipitation is 20 percent.
Wednesday Night: A slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms before 10 p.m. Partly cloudy, with a low
around 73. Northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm
in the evening. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 p.m. Mostly sunny, with a high near 92.
Calm wind becoming southwest 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 72.
West wind around 6 mph becoming calm after midnight.
Friday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms
after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 90. Chance of
precipitation is 20 percent.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 71.

Preparing bus routes
POMEROY — The
Transportation
Department at Meigs Local School
District is preparing bus
routes for the 2013-2014
school year. To ensure that
every student has transportation this school year
the district needs a correct address. Those who
have moved this summer,
are being asked to call the
Bus Garage at 742-2990
between the hours of 7
a.m. to 10 a.m. with your
new address and phone
number. The district is still
in need of reliable drivers
with a good driving record
to take the bus driver’s
class. Call the bus garage
for that information also.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 47.23
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.49
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 84.96
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.01
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 50.56
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 87.21
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.13
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.201
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.94
Collins (NYSE) — 67.85
DuPont (NYSE) — 54.38
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.27
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.43
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 55.07
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.01
Kroger (NYSE) — 38.13
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 51.81
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 76.16
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.88
BBT (NYSE) — 34.84

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.26
Pepsico (NYSE) — 84.02
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.43
Rockwell (NYSE) — 91.01
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.08
Royal Dutch Shell — 67.17
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.16
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.37
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 6.57
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.85
Worthington (NYSE) — 34.76
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for July 16, 2013, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Road closing
CHESTER — The Scout
Camp Road from Route
248 to Mill Street in Chester will be closed from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday
during activities of Chester Shade Days
Vacation Liberty School
MIDDLEPORT — The
Meigs County Tea Party and
the Ohio Liberty Council
will be presenting Vacation
Liberty School on July 1519 from 6-8 p.m. at the First
Baptist Church of Middleport, 211 S. 6th Ave. This
is non-partisan and non-denominational and is free to

the public. VLS is a fun way
to teach early American history to young people, ages
9 and above. Snacks will
be served. People bringing
their children/grandchildren
are invited to stay also.
TB Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Tuberculosis
Clinic recently received an
ample supply of Tubersol
used for skin testing. The
office is conducting tests
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 8 a.m.noon and 1-4 p.m. The office is open on Thursday,
but tests are not given. Any
organization wanting an
outside clinic should contact the office at 992-3722.
Event cancelled
McARTHUR — The motorcycle event set for July
20 at the Vinton County Airport has been cancelled due
to the lack of participation.
However, the Ridgetop Music Fest is in the planning
stages with bands already
set to perform. This event
will be held Saturday, August 10 and will be combined with the airport’s
Big Boy Toy Day. News releases will be forthcoming
as plans are finalized. For
more information, contact
Vinton County Pilots and
Boosters President Nick
Rupert at (740) 357-0268
of Secretary Steve Keller at
(740) 418-2612.
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 —Basket
games at Syracuse Community Center, Thursday,
July 25. Doors open 5 p.m.,
games begin at 6 p.m. Advance tickets available at
The Fabric Shop in Pomeroy. Hosted by River City
Players to benefit performing arts opportunities.
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.
Legion changes
meeting time
POMEROY — Drew
Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion will
change its meeting time
from 7 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
starting on Aug. 6.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.

July meeting. The meeting
will be held in the Eastern
Elementary library conference room.
Birthdays
POMEROY
—Mina
Swisher will observe her
99th birthday on Monday,
July 22, 2013 . Cards may
be sent to her at 258 West
Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
County Road 46, Success
Road, will be closed for
slip repair from Ohio 7 to
Baker-Smith Road beginning Monday, July 15. It
will remain closed for approximately two weeks.
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.

Casto completes physician assistant program
MARIETTA — Jonathan
Casto of Vinton graduated
from Marietta College’s
Physician Assistant Studies
Program on July 13.
Casto was one of 36 students in the 10th graduat-

ing class that completed
the 26-month program.
The
Physician’s
Assistant
Program
began in 2002 after
receiving a grant from
the Appalachian Regional

119 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2020
SL-400208.000 • PB-100643-000

Rick Price, Owner

60431490

Friday, July 19
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School
Class of 1959 will be having their “3rd Friday”
lunch at noon at The Wild
Horse Cafe.
MIDDLEPORT — An
ice cream social will be
held from 1-3 p.m. at
Overbrook Center, 333
Page Street in Middleport. The event is free

SEE US FOR PAYDAY LOANS!!

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Century of Service

Since 1913

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

Mike Putman

Owners

60412545

60431252

Commission (ARC).
The master’s program is
designed to help meet the
need for qualified health
care providers, by choosing individuals who have
the academic, clinical, and
interpersonal
aptitudes
necessary for education as
physician assistants.
The program is broken
into two phases - didactic
and clinical. The didactic
phase begins with classroom and lab experiences
in the basic medical sciences and clinical medicine. It is scheduled for the
first 12 months. The clinical phase, which includes
the capstone project, is designed to provide instruction in the clinical setting
by physicians and PA preceptors. It is scheduled for
the final 14 months.
Students who wish to
enter the program must
have already obtained a
bachelor’s degree, having
earned
a
minimum
cumulative GPA of 3.0 in
all prerequisites and their
GRE scores.
Located in Marietta,
Ohio, at the confluence of
the Muskingum and Ohio
rivers, Marietta College is
a four-year liberal arts college. Tracing its roots to
the Muskingum Academy
begun in 1797, the College
was officially chartered in
1835. Today Marietta College serves a body of 1,425
full-time students. The
College offers more than
40 majors and has been
listed among Barron’s Best
Buys in College Education
and Peterson’s Competitive Colleges, and has been
recognized as one of the
top regional comprehensive colleges by U.S. News
and World Report and The
Princeton Review

�Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Church Calendar
Vacation Bible Schools
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.
REEDSVILLE — Reedsville
Community VBS will be from
6-8:30 p.m. on July 15-19. This
years theme is Kingdom Rock.
All children age preschool
through teen are welcome. VBS
will be at the Reedsville United
Methodist Church. The Reedsville United Methodist Church

is located on State Route 124
in Reedsville across from Reeds
Country Store.
RACINE — Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church will
host Vacation Bible School from
6-8:30 p.m., July 22-25 at the Carmel Fellowship Building, 48540
Carmel Road, Racine, Ohio. The
theme is Polar Expedition.
ROCK SPRINGS — The
Rock Springs united Methodist
Church will be holding Vacation
Bible School July 22-25 from
6-8 p.m. each night. The theme
will be a Wild West Adventure.
Transportation is available. For
more information call Carissa
Collins at (740) 416-3568, Diana
Ash at (740) 992-5960 or Louanna Smeck at (740) 707-3733.
MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street
Church will host Vacation Bible
School July 22-24, from 6-8:30
p.m. nightly.
POMEROY — The First
Southern
Baptist
Church,
48172 Pomeroy Pike, will have
Vacation Bible School from July

22 to July 26 with classes to be
held from 6 to 9 p.m. Theme
of the Bible School will be
carry “A Day at the park, with
Coaster Alley for Bible Study
being a first stop. Other stops
during the week will be Cotton
Candy Cafe for snacks, the
Adrenaline Zone for recreation;
the Tune Town for music, the
Global Expo for missions,
and the Scissors and Stuff
Emporium for crafts. The Bible
school is for kids age 2 through
sixth grade. To register for the
event or for more information
call 992-6779 or visit the
website
www.facebook.com.
fsbcpomeroy.
POMEROY — The Carleton
Church will have Vacation
Bible School, July 22-26 from
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Theme will
be “Everywhere Fun Fair.” On
Friday evening there will be a
program and display of crafts,
followed by a wiener roast. The
church is located on County
Road, 18, Pomeroy.

ANTIQUITY —The Antiquity
Baptist Church will have Bible
School from July 29 to Aug. 2.
Classes on the theme of “Kingdom Chronicles” will be held
from 6 to 8 p.m.
Community Dinner
MIDDLEPORT — A free dinner will be served at 5 p.m. on
Wednesday, July 17, at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
Pastor Daniel Fulton invites the
public for food and fellowship.
Church yard sale
RACINE — Sonshine Circle
will hold a bake and yard sale at
Bethany Church, Racine (Dorcas) on Thursday and Friday,
July 18 and 19 from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. All proceeds will benefit our
community projects.
Revival Services
MIDDLEPORT — A three day
revival will be held at the Hobson Christian Fellowship church,
Middleport, 7 p.m. , July 19, 20

and 21. Chester Osborne of Auburn, W.Va. will be the speaker.
There will be special singing.
Ice Cream Social
COOLVILLE — An ice cream
social will be held beginning at
4 p.m. on Saturday, July 27, at
North Bethel United Methodist
Church on Old Route 7 south of
Coolville. Home made ice cream
will be served along with hot
dogs, sloppy joes baked beans,
slaw chips, pie, and cake. Gospel music featuring Day Spring
of Athens and Jim Blair and
Friends of Marietta will be from
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Church Picnic
SYRACUSE — Ash Street
Church in Middleport will hold
a church picnic beginning at
5:30 p.m. on Saturday, July 27,
at the Syracuse park shelter behind the pool/ball field. Swimming will then take place at the
pool from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Everyone is invited.

For The Record
Common Pleas Court
Civil
An action of foreclosure has been filed by Wells Fargo
Bank against Wesley Allen Mintz.
A civil action has been filed by Willie G. Ward against
Julia J. Ward and the Ohio Valley Bank Company.
A delinquent land tax action had been filled by the
Meigs County Treasurer against Ben H. Ewing, Benny
Ewing Jr., Beth Acree and Kim Ewing Hawley.
Domestic
An action of divorce has been filed by Ashley Spradling
against Ephriam Herdman II.
An action of divorce has been filed by Nancy Lou

Schartiger against Mary Wayne Schartiger.
A divorce has been granted to Joseph C. Moodispaugh
from Kerry L. Moodispaugh.
A divorce has been granted to Rusty Lawson from
Yvonne Lawson.
A divorce action between Angelia D. Smith and Ricky
J. Smith Jr. has been dismissed.
An action of dissolution has been filed by Brandy N.
Dalton and Kevin D. Dalton.
An action of dissolution has been filed by Kevin White
and Amanda White.
An action of dissolution has been filed by Jennifer
Lynn Doczi and Todd Allen Doczi.

A dissolution has been granted to Misty M. Powell and
Ivan E. Powell.
A dissolution has been granted to Joshua T. Davis and
Elaine Elizabeth Davis.
A dissolution has been granted to Tara M. Seymour
and Steven M. Seymour.
911
July 15
12:52 p.m., South Third Avenue, difficulty breathing; 1:29
p.m., Liberty Lane, chest pain; 2:23 p.m., East Memorial
Drive, allergic reaction; 3:07 p.m., Roy Jones Road, stroke/
CVA; 4:06 p.m., Mitchell Road, structure fire; 10:22 p.m.,
Ohio 124, meth lab; 10:28 p.m., South Fourth Avenue, fall.

Local student named Board rejects clemency
ECOT valedictorian for condemned Ohio killer
This was reportedly the
largest high school graduating class in the United States.
David Yost, auditor of
the state of Ohio, gave a
special presentation at the
graduation which was followed by Justice Terrence
O’Donnel, the commencement speaker.

ECOT was founded by
William Lager and is reportedly the fastest on-line
school in Ohio.
Young is the daughter
of Jodi and Wesley Young,
and the granddaughter of
Debbie Tillis and the late
Jeff Tillis and Roger and
Yvonne Young.

Lawmaker asks W.Va. AG
to investigate meth problem
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — A House of Delegates leader is seeking
Attorney General Patrick
Morrisey’s help in efforts
to combat methamphetamine labs.
Health and Human
Resources
Committee
chairman Don Perdue,
D-Wayne, has asked Morrisey to investigate sales
of pseudoephedrine, a
common cold medication
that is an ingredient in the
manufacture of meth.
Perdue made the request
in a letter sent to Morrisey last week. He also
asked the attorney general
to take any legal action
against drug companies
that make the cold medication while knowing it’s diverted to make meth.
“The manufacturers and
sellers of PSE are damaging not only the health of
West Virginians, but our
business climate as well,”
Perdue wrote.
Perdue told one newspa-

per that he hopes Morrisey
will go after companies
that manufacture pseudoephedrine the same as
former Attorney General
Darrell McGraw, who sued
tobacco companies and
manufacturers of the prescription painkiller OxyContin.
Perdue said drug makers and retail pharmacies
“certainly must know” that
pseudoephedrine is being
used to make meth. He
cited law enforcement officers’ statements that up to
80 percent of the cold medication is being diverted to
the manufacture of meth.
About 300 meth labs
have been seized by law enforcement in West Virginia
so far this year, compared
to 288 in all of 2012.
“I’m hopeful the attorney
general will look closely
at this with an eye to do
something beneficial for all
citizens of West Virginia,
including first responders
and property owners,” Per-

due told the newspaper on
Monday.
“We need to look outside the box to resolve this
problem,” Perdue said, “or
this problem will be buried
in a box that’s six feet underground.”
Morrisey spokeswoman
Beth Ryan told the newspaper that the attorney general’s office will review the
request. She said it’s premature to comment further.
Wide-ranging substance
abuse legislation approved
in 2012 requires retail
pharmacies to subscribe
to an electronic tracking
system called the National
Precursor Log Exchange,
or NPLEx. The measure
also limits the number
of pseudoephedrine boxes people can buy each
month and year.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A condemned Cleveland killer moved one
step closer to execution Tuesday despite a rare plea for mercy from the
prosecutor overseeing his case and
support from nearly half of a board
that previously voted unanimously
against him.
The Ohio Parole Board voted 6-4
to turn down a request for clemency
for death row inmate Billy Slagle, sentenced to die for stabbing a neighbor
17 times almost three decades ago.
The entire board ruled against
clemency two years ago for Slagle,
but that was before the election of
new Cuyahoga County prosecutor
Tim McGinty and a change in his office’s approach to capital punishment.
McGinty, who is applying new
criteria to both old and new death
penalty cases, has said he doesn’t believe his office could obtain a death
sentence for Slagle today. McGinty is
pushing for life without parole, arguing that without that option in 1987,
jurors trying to ensure that Slagle
would never go free chose the only
option before them: a death sentence.
Slagle was convicted in the death
that year of Mari Anne Pope, who
was killed while two young children
she was watching were in the house.
“The egregious nature of Slagle’s
crime and circumstances surrounding it outweigh the mitigation present here,” the parole board wrote in
Tuesday’s ruling, which called the
slaying “unprovoked, merciless, and
completely senseless.”
McGinty said he respected the
board’s decision.

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“We will continue to make our position known to Gov. John Kasich as he
weighs one of the most difficult decisions that any governor must make,”
the prosecutor said in a statement.
Attorneys for Slagle, 44, have long
argued his sentence should be commuted to life without parole, citing
his age — at 18, he was the minimum
age for execution in Ohio when the
crime happened — and a long history
of drug and alcohol abuse.
“Billy was exposed to alcohol from
the womb to the crime,” Joe Wilhelm,
a federal public defender, said at a
hearing this month.
Wilhelm said Tuesday he was encouraged that four members voted in
favor of clemency.
“We have a very strong case and
we’re hopeful that the governor will
do the right thing and commute Billy
Slagle’s sentence,” Wilhelm said.
The parole board members who
supported clemency cited McGinty’s
change of position, with one noting
that Slagle’s “age and immaturity at
the time of offense significantly mitigate his sentence.”
In 1996, Ohio law changed to allow
jurors to choose between execution
and life without parole. In 2005, lawmakers added a provision allowing
prosecutors to pursue life without parole in non-death penalty cases.
“Slagle’s case is a close call,”
Cuyahoga County assistant prosecutor Matthew Meyer told the
parole board at the hearing. “We
can’t in confidence tell you that had
it happened today, this would be a
death case.”

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POMEROY — Victoria Young was one of nine
valedictorians
selected
from over 3,400 students
that graduated from the
Electronic Classroom of
Tomorrow (ECOT) on
Sunday, June 9, in ceremonies held at Shottenstein
Center in Columbus.

To see what else we have visit our website

visittaylor.com

60431079

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Essential parenting Egypt confronts modernity
Dr. Gary Welton
If you believe everything you read, then kids
are doomed. If both of
their parents work outside
the home, then it’s hopeless. If one parent is a pastor, then forget about it. If
one parent is missing, too
bad. What if you skip on
piano lessons, or soccer?
What if you are in a bad
school system? What if
you home school? Or what
if you don’t? How is a parent to know?
Along with my colleagues, I surveyed teens
and parents in order to address this question: What
are the essentials of effective parenting?
First, we must define
the positive results that
we are after. What are we
looking for in our youth?
Ultimately we want mature, independent, contributing members of
society, who will, at the
proper time, give us a few
wonderful grandchildren,
who will visit us for a few
hours at a time. By independent, we mean adults
who will be able to pay
their own way without
coming to us for financial
help; we don’t mean adults
who no longer ask for our
wise counsel. But in the
short term, during the formative years, what are we
looking for?
Psychology has begun
to study the domains of
character
development
and positive youth development. We measured
contentment,
altruism,
forgiveness,
resilience,
and gratitude. Combined,
these provide a reliable
measure of positive youth
development.
Home school students
scored
significantly
higher on positive youth
development than students from other school
settings. Perhaps home
schooling students benefit from spending more
time than other children
in the socialized family
environment. However,
the data do not indicate
that home schooling your
child is an essential element of parenting. Families who home school
their children tend to
have different values from

other families. As a result,
home school teens are
more religious than students from other school
settings. Hence, the reason that home schooling
youth demonstrate more
character might be due
to their religious background rather than to
their school setting.
Our data suggest two answers to the question, what
are the essential elements
of parenting? What should
be my priorities if I want to
raise sons and daughters
who will exhibit positive
youth development?
The first and largest
predictor of positive youth
development is healthy
parent-teen relationships.
The quality of parent-teen
relationships
predicted
nearly
half
of
the
variance in positive youth
development.
According to psychological theory and research, good parenting
is not overly permissive,
because permissive parenting fails to provide
adequate training. Good
parenting is not overly
authoritarian,
because
authoritarian parenting
does not teach self-control. Instead, good parenting sets limits that are
reasonable and age appropriate and communicates
these limits in a manner
that conveys warmth and
love. We measured these
parent-teen vertical relationships with questions
such as “My parent respects my feelings.”
The establishment of
such an environment is
the first key to fostering
character development
in your teens. It may be
that some children are
harder to love than others. It may be that to a
certain extent children
play active roles in shaping the give-and-take of
the family environment.
Nevertheless, it is the
parent’s duty to establish
a home in which children
have a strong foundation
in a healthy parent-child
relationship. Such a positive vertical relationship
between parent and teen
is a very strong predic-

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tor of positive youth development.
There is a secondary
component to essential
parenting, and that is to
foster religious faith and
practice in your children.
Religiosity was measured
using three components:
the frequency of attendance at formal religious
services, the frequency of
private religious activity
such as meditation and
prayer, and the extent to
which religiosity was a
core part of one’s being.
Healthy parent-teen relationships and a life of
religious faith and practice were both important predictors of positive youth development.
Other parts of our lives
made little if any difference. Home schooling our
children was a choice we
made because we thought
it was best for our family. The data, however,
did not show that home
schooling added to (or
subtracted from) the prediction of positive youth
development. Two parent
families and the existence
of strong romantic relationships between these
two parents provide a
great deal of stabilization
to our society and our
children, but these did
not add substantially to
the prediction of positive
youth development.
What can I do to foster
positive youth development in my children? More
than half of the variance
in positive youth development is predicted by two
components. First, pursue and establish healthy
parent-teen relationships.
Second, model and support a life of religious faith
and practice. These are
the essentials of parenting.
These should not be negotiated or compromised.
Beyond these, decide what
makes the most sense for
your family.
Dr. Gary L. Welton is assistant dean
for institutional assessment, professor of psychology at Grove City
College, and a contributor to The
Center for Vision &amp; Values. He is a
recipient of a major research grant
from the Templeton Foundation to
investigate positive youth development.

Q&amp;A with Herbert Meyer
In light of the turmoil in Egypt, The Center for Vision &amp; Values contacted its longtime friend, Herb Meyer, for his insight.
Mr. Meyer was special assistant to the director of the Central Intelligence Agency in
the Reagan administration. He also served
as vice chairman of the CIA’s National Intelligence Council. Mr. Meyer is the author
of two eBooks, “How to Analyze Information” and “The Cure for Poverty.”
V&amp;V – Herb, do you have any thoughts
about what’s going on in Egypt?
Meyer – It’s good to hear from you! I
could write a 2,000-word essay on the turmoil in Egypt. Come to think of it, I did
write a 2,000-word essay on the turmoil
in Egypt more than two years ago. To the
best of my knowledge, absolutely no one
read that piece.
V&amp;V – You are a tremendous analyst,
Herb, and we’re not surprised that you
saw this coming. After all, you were way
out front in forecasting the demise of the
Soviet Union for President Reagan and
CIA Director Bill Casey. Are our intelligence services in regular contact with
you? Have you had opportunities to mentor young analysts?
Meyer – No one in our intelligence service has the slightest interest in checking
in with me from time to time. I’d love to
help teach an entire new generation of
analysts how to do it. When I was there
we ALWAYS stayed in touch with those
who came before us – we always figured
we could learn from them, even if we disagreed with them from time to time – but
apparently the current crowd doesn’t do
that. There’s always tomorrow….
V&amp;V – Recently, and before the lid came
off Egypt, you had a fascinating conversation
with Rush Limbaugh. Please share some of
the insights that you shared with him. They
seem remarkably relevant right now.
Meyer – As I said in that conversation
with Rush, the world is becoming modern.
This is really what “the war” is all about.
Islam is finally starting to do what Christianity and Judaism did centuries ago:
figure out how to reconcile faith with the
modern world. In effect, the Islamic world
has started to write the code for Version
2.0. This is a momentous development in
world history. Remember that it took us a
long time to get it right, so to speak, and
we shouldn’t expect the Muslim world to
accomplish this overnight.
For 30 years, Hosni Mubarak kept
Egypt from becoming modern. He and his
military took control of the economy, and
they wrecked it. This is a country of 90
million people, half of whom are illiterate,
70 percent of whom live on the land – and
which imports half its food. This was okay
with U.S. policymakers, because in return
for keeping Egypt from moving forward
Mubarak kept the peace with Israel. At
some point the lid on this pressure cooker
had to blow off, and that’s what happened
last year. It was idiotic for all of our (selfproclaimed) professional conservatives to
say we should have urged Mubarak to put
the lid back on. That cannot be done; at
least, not without gunning down 20,000
or 30,000 protestors and then explaining
that the U.S. said it would be okay….

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religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
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peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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V&amp;V – An apology to you, Herb. We
followed your analysis about the Muslim
world going through convulsions on the
way to becoming more modern, that is
to say, more liberal and free in the classical sense. Frankly, we thought you were
wrong. You called the February 2011 Egyptian revolution, just a “half-revolution.” You
predicted that the Egyptians would seek
more freedom than what they would get
under the rule of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Meyer – Apology accepted, and thank
you! Morsi did absolutely nothing to make
Egypt “modern” and, in fact, was taking it
backwards. Moreover, Egypt now is on the
verge of mass starvation. The country is
dead broke – its only successful industry,
tourism, no longer exists. It’s this prospect
of mass starvation that brought 20 million
Egyptians into the streets this month.
They’re running out of food, and also fuel.
I don’t know if they’ll “get it right” this
time. But if they don’t – well, they’ll try
again and keep trying until Egypt is finally
on the road to modernity. It’ll probably be
a mess for a while, but as I keep pointing
out, in the real world there’s no rewind
button. You can only go forward.
If U.S. policy would focus on “modernity” we would have a global framework on
which to base our policies, and on which
to decide which groups we support in other countries and which we oppose.
V&amp;V – By modernity, you mean liberal
government in which the state serves the
individual while the institutions of church
and state allow for the unleashing of human creativity and economic freedom. Is
that correct? If so, are you calling for a
U.S. global framework that includes more
military intervention in support of Islamic
factions moving toward modernity?
Meyer – You’ve got it precisely. We want
the world to become “modern” for several reasons. First, modernity will bring
a massive reduction in poverty. Second,
societies that are modern and increasingly
prosperous become middle-class societies. And middle-class societies are less
likely than failing societies to start wars.
Human nature is imperfect, but we’ll be
safer when the overwhelming majority of
people in the Islamic world would rather
have a Starbucks on the corner than a car
bomb; when they’d rather see a Wal-Mart
or an IKEA being built in their neighborhoods than another radical mosque.
Keep another point in mind: As the world
emerges from poverty, it means the total
customer base for every product and service
American and other Western-based companies can provide will grow enormously. And
that will create the jobs we need in our own
countries for our young people.
So, if our policymakers in Washington
would start to see the world through this
prism of “modernity,” they’d have a clear
idea of what we want to happen, of whom
we support and whom we oppose, and of
when to just let events run their course and
when our interests require us to intervene,
either with money or military power.
Mr. Herbert Meyer was special assistant to CIA Director Bill Casey in the Reagan Administration from 1981
- 1987. He also served as the vice chairman of the CIA’s
National Security Council. Meyer is the author of “How
to Analyze Information” and “The Cure for Poverty.”

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary
Vinas L. Lee

Vinas Lucille (Wilson) Lee, 98, of Racine, Ohio, passed
away Monday, July 15, 2013, at Mayfair Village, Columbus, Ohio.
She was born December 24, 1914, in Harrisonville,
Ohio, to the late Charles and Kathryn Wilson.
Vinas graduated from Harrisonville High School in
1933 and graduated from Ohio University in 1936.
Her first teaching position was at Harrisonville High
School, where she taught English, shorthand, typing and
bookkeeping. She then transferred to Middleport High
School. She began teaching at Racine in 1956 until her
retirement in 1976. In Racine, she also was the editor
of the yearbook. After her retirement she taught in the
headstart program for an additional 12 years. She was a

member of the Racine Methodist Church, Eastern Star,
active in RACO, and was a volunteer at Veterans Hospital, where she will be remembered for baking and delivering peanut butter pies, red velvet cake and other goodies
when someone was ill.
She is survived by two sons, Jeffrey (Nancy) and Jerry
(Rebecca) Lee; two grandsons, Jerry Lee Jr. and Scott
(Erie Jane) Lee; and a special niece and nephew, Amy
Lee and John Bentz.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her husband, Jacob “Jake” W. Lee and two sisters,
Nora Johnson and Ada Easterday.
Calling hours will be held from 4-7 p.m. on Friday, July
19, at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, Ohio.
A funeral service will be held at 10 a.m., Saturday, July

Death Notices
Unroe

Phil Steven Unroe, 57,
of Gallipolis, died Monday,
July 15, 2013, at his residence.
Graveside services will
be 11 a.m., Thursday, July
18, 2013, at Swan Creek
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Willis Funeral Home
from 10-10:30 a.m. prior to
the graveside service.

Godwin

Joseph Edwin Godwin,

60, of Coolville, Ohio, died
Monday, July 15, 2013, after a battle with cancer.
A memorial service
will be held at 3 p.m.,
Saturday, July 20, 2013,
at
White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio, with Tony Varner
officiating. There will be
no visitation.

Hendren

David Lyle Hendren, 59,
of Waverly, Ohio, formerly

of Gallipolis, died July 16,
2013, after a battle with
kidney cancer.
Funeral services will be
held 3 p.m. Saturday, July
20 at the Boyer Funeral
Home in Waverly, Ohio,
with Pastor Dale Reed officiating, followed by military services by American
Legion Merritt Post #142,
Waverly. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 1
p.m. until the service hour
on Saturday.

Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

The first level of blocks are in place in the area which will become the Emergency Operations Center.

Construction
From Page 1
doors. The facility will also
be capable of monitoring
situations which may arise
involving the rivers also.
In the case of an emergency, the facility will have
an executive room where
officials can meet to discuss the situation.
The facility has been
planned by RVC Architects
with input from several other individuals and agencies.
June 9 marked four years
since the work began to
acquire the new facility for
the county. Meigs County
Emergency Management
Agency Director Bob Byer
estimated that the facility
would be in use late this
fall, weather permitting.

On March 8, 2012, the
county was approved to
receive a $700,000 grant
for
the
construction
of the EOC. The grant
agreement was between
the Port of Huntington
Tri-State, Area Maritime
Security Committee and
Meigs County Emergency
Services Agency. Grant
funds are from the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) through
the West Virginia Public
Port Authority.
In May 2013, the Meigs
County
Commissioners
opened bids for the project, with the contract
awarded to Hoon Incorporated of Athens, Ohio, the
low bidder on the project.
The base bid from Hoon

Inc. was in the amount of
$544,000. There were also
two alternates on the project for a concrete parking
area and changes to the
septic system.
RVC Architects of Athens completed the design
work for the project and
reviewed the bids prior to
awarding of the contract.
The 5,000-square-foot
EOC is being constructed
on property provided by
the Community Improvement Corporation and located near the newly built
Family Healthcare medical
office on Pomeroy Pike.
A standalone emergency
room facility is also to be
constructed in the area
with Holzer Health Systems operating the facility.

Meth
From Page 1
cent cash permitted. Attorney Jeremy Fisher was
appointed to Belcher and
Knight was appointed to
represent Haley.
Haley and Belcher are
being housed in the Washington County Jail.
Parsons,
Marcinko,
Morris,
Haley
and
Belcher are scheduled to
appear in Meigs County
Court on July 25.
The four individuals
charged in the two methamphetamine labs last
week made initial appearances late last week in
Meigs County Court.
Norma J. Ratliff, 39, and
Ashley L. Hamilton, 29,
were arrested on Thursday
night following the discovery of a four pot lab at
Ratliff’s Story’s Run Road
residence.
Both Ratliff and Hamilton are charged with illegal
manufacturing of methamphetamine, a felony of the
second degree.

20, at Racine Methodist Church. There will also be visitation one hour prior to the service at the church.
In lieu of flowers, please make contributions to Racine
Methodist Church, 818 Elm Street, Racine, OH 45771 in
Vinas’ memory.
The family would like to extend a very special thanks
to Mayfair Village for all the love and care they have given Vinas over the past several years and especially during the final days. During the final days a special thanks
to Gentiva (Odyssey) Hospice for their commitment to
Vinas.
The family wants to thank the community for their
continued love and support after Vinas re-located to Mayfair Village. The community has been amazing. She loved
you all.

Panama finds suspected
weapons on N. Korean ship
PANAMA CITY (AP) — A North Korean ship carrying weapons system parts
buried under sacks of sugar was seized as
it tried to cross the Panama Canal on its
way from Cuba to its home country, which
is under a United Nations arms embargo,
Panamanian officials said Tuesday.
The ship appeared to be transporting
a radar-control system for a Soviet-era
surface-to-air missile system, according to
a private defense analysis firm that examined a photograph posted on Twitter by
Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli.
Martinelli said the ship identified as the
14,000-ton Chong Chon Gang was carrying ballistic missiles and other arms, but
he provided no specific evidence or details
about the cargo. He said on his Twitter account that the arms were “hidden in containers underneath the cargo of sugar.”
The photo posted by the president
shows a green tube that appears to be a
horizontal antenna for the SNR-75 “Fan
Song” radar, which used to guide missiles
fired by the SA-2 air-defense system found
in former Warsaw Pact and Soviet-allied
nations, said Neil Ashdown, an analyst for
IHS Jane’s Intelligence.
Jane’s isn’t sure where the system in
the photo was manufactured but the radar
would be useful to North Korea as part of a
dense air defense network, Ashdown said.
“It is possible that this could be being
sent to North Korea to update its high altitude air-defense capabilities,” he said.
The U.N. Security Council imposed
sanctions against North Korea after its first
nuclear test in 2006 and stepped up sanctions after its second test in 2009 to try to
derail the country’s rogue nuclear weapons
and ballistic missile programs. The second
round strengthened an arms embargo, authorized ship searches on the high seas for
suspected banned items, and ordered an asset freeze and travel ban on companies and
individuals involved in the country’s nuclear and conventional weapons programs.
Panamanian authorities believe the ship
was returning from Havana on its way to
North Korea, Panamanian Public Security
Minister Jose Raul Mulino told The Associated Press. Based on unspecified intelligence, authorities suspected it could be
carrying contraband and tried to communicate with the crew, who didn’t respond.
The 35 North Koreans on the boat were
arrested after resisting police efforts to
intercept the ship in Panamanian waters

Days
From Page 1
and contests like hog calling, a watermelon seed spitting with a watermelon going
to the winner, an apple peeling contest
with prizes of apples, and a hog calling
contest with ham and bacon for prizes.
An archery trailer provided by the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources will be
on the grounds and again this year a chain
saw contest will be held. Courts for croquet, horse shoes and corn hole will be in
place all day for the enjoyment of those at-

records. At that time, a
warrant was issued for her
arrest in the case.
Early last Wednesday
morning, John A. Ward, 48,
of Pomeroy and Matthew
T. Gilmore, 18, of Albany
were arrested following the
discovery of a one-pot reactionary vessel in a vehicle at
Ward’s residence on Township Road 1004 in the Harrisonville area.
Ward and Gilmore are
charged with two counts
of illegal manufacture
of drugs, a felony of the
second degree, according
to Meigs County Court
documents.
Both Ward and Gilmore have been released
on $10,000 bond. Attorney Charles Knight was
appointed to represent
Gilmore and Trenton
Cleland was appointed to
represent Ward.
Preliminary hearings for
Ratliff, Hamilton, Ward
and Gilmore are scheduled
for Thursday, July 18 in
Meigs County Court.

tending, as will stations for face painting.
Again this yer Meigs County Meigs County’s Finest (the two oldest citizens there)
will be recognized and presented gifts.
At noon time there will be a variety
of food to choose from. In the Academy kitchen, homemade noodles will be
served, at the fire station, homemade ice
cream will be served, on the commons,
the Grace Episcopal Church will have a
barbecue bar, and outside somewhere Ed
Werry will be serving soup beans.

Projects
From Page 1

Bond for both was set
at $10,000. Attorney Trenton Cleland was appointed
to represent Ratliff, and
Charles Knight was appointed to represent Hamilton.
Ratliff is out on bond,
while Hamilton remains in
the Middleport Jail.
Ratliff has a prior conviction from Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from
charges stemming from a
2007 methamphetamine
lab at the same residence.
Hamilton also had an
active warrant from Gallia
County in a case involving illegally manufacturing
methamphetamine.
She
was arrested last August
along with two other individuals at a residence on
Story’s Run in Gallia County. She was indicted on one
count of illegal manufacture of drugs, a felony of
the first degree, and was
scheduled to stand trial
last month, but did not
appear for a scheduled status conference hearing on
June 3 according to court

on Thursday as it moved toward the canal
and take it to the Caribbean port of Manzanillo, Martinelli told private RPC radio
station. The captain had a heart attack
and also tried to commit suicide during
the operation, Martinelli said.
Panamanian officials were finally able to
board the ship to begin searching it Monday, pulling out hundreds of sacks of sugar.
The illicit cargo “seems to be a type of
missile, of rocket. Next to them there’s another container that appears to have a type
of control system,” said Luis Eduardo Camacho, a spokesman for Martinelli. He said authorities had only searched one of the ship’s
five container sections, and the inspection
of all the cargo will take at least a week.
“This material not being declared and
Panama being a neutral country, a country
in peace, that doesn’t like war, we feel very
worried about this war material and we
don’t know what else will have … passed
through the Panama Canal,” Martinelli said.
The governments of North Korea and
Cuba made no public comment on the case.
In early July, a top North Korean general, Kim Kyok Sik, visited Cuba and met
with his island counterparts. Cuban Communist Party newspaper Granma said he
was also received by President Raul Castro, and the two had an “exchange about
the historical ties that unite the two nations and the common will to continue
strengthening them.”
The meetings were held behind closed
doors, and there has been no detailed account of their discussions.
“After this incident there should be
renewed focus on North Korean-Cuban
links,” said Hugh Griffiths, an arms trafficking expert at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Griffiths
said his institute told the U.N. this year
that it had uncovered evidence of a flight
from Cuba to North Korea that travelled
via central Africa.
“Given the history of North Korea, Cuban military cooperation and now this latest seizure, we find this flight more interesting,” he said. “
The Chong Chon Gang has a history
of being detained on suspicion of trafficking drugs and ammunition, Griffiths
said. Lloyd’s List Intelligence said the
34-year-old ship, which is registered to
the Pyongyang-based Chongchongang
Shipping Company, “has a long history
of detentions for safety deficiencies and
other undeclared reasons.”

Elizabeth Nease, reserve champion; Abigail Bauerbach, honorable mention.
Sports Nutrition 1: Kaylee Haning,
grand champion; Allison Barber, reserve
champion.

I Spy in the Kitchen: Arielle Beeler,grand
champion.
Science Fun with Dairy Foods: Elizabeth Nease, grand champion.
Cake Decorating: Ashley Buchanan,
grand champion beginner senior; Katie
Hawkins, grand champion beginner junior; Baylee Wolfe, honorable mention.

Search
From Page 1
on the Ohio riverbank near Riverview Drive
and Cruzet Avenue — side streets located
just off of Eastern Avenue in Gallipolis.
After responding to the area on
Wednesday evening, city police officers
found signs that led them to believe that
the missing woman had, indeed, been
living on the riverbank and may have entered the river. Police officers immediately
began searching along the riverbank near
where Miller had be residing, as well as
at other locations she was known to frequent. Since that time, officers have continued their search of the river with the assistance of the Gallipolis Fire Department
and the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office.
According to Captain Jeff Boyer of
the Gallipolis Police Department, investigators are keeping their options open
in regard to the ongoing search and are
continuing to encourage those with any

information about Miller’s whereabouts to
contact the police department.
“We will continue to follow leads and
are still asking for information,” Boyer
said. “We would be glad to hear from anyone with information.”
Boyer further stated that, currently, officers do not believe any foul play was involved in Miller’s disappearance.
“At this time, we have no reason to believe there was any foul play,” he said.
According to the police department,
Miller has worked at two car washes on
Eastern Avenue, and, most recently, at
the car wash located next to French Nails
on Upper River Road. As of last report,
Miller was seen wearing blue jeans and a
brown windbreaker.
Anyone with information about Miller
or her possible whereabouts is encouraged to call Gallipolis Police Department
dispatchers immedately at (740) 446-1313
or call 911.

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

WEDNESDAY,
JULY 17, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Muirfield produces worthiest of champs
GULLANE, Scotland (AP)
— From behind the 18th green,
Paul Azinger stared out toward
a golf course where he nearly
won a major title, where so many
greats of the game have carved
their names on the claret jug.
Sure, it’s a classic links layout
— right by the sea, filled with
inexplicable humps in the fairways, terrifying bunkers stuck
in the strangest of spots and
knee-high grass ready to punish
a wayward shot.
But Muirfield is different.

There are all those quirky elements that make it worthy of a
British Open. There’s just —
uhhh, how should we put this?
— not TOO many of them.
“It’s not a luck-fest out there,”
Azinger said Monday, as the
world’s top golfers arrived en
masse to prepare for the third
major of the season. “If you make
the ball do what you want it to
do, you’ll play well.”
Maybe that’s the reason the
roster of winners looks more like
a who’s who of the sport.

Harry Vardon. Walter Hagen.
Gary Player. Jack Nicklaus. Lee
Trevino. Tom Watson. Nick Faldo. Ernie Els.
And let’s not forget Harold
Hilton, James Braid and Henry
Cotton.
Of the 13 players to win the
Open at this course east of Edinburgh, 11 are enshrined in the
World Golf Hall of Game (and
you can make a pretty strong
case that another, Ted Ray,
should be). Only Alf Perry looks
a bit out of place on this elite list,

and even he was a three-time
member of Britain’s Ryder Cup
team in the 1930s.
Not a stiff in the bunch.
“That’s not a fluke,” Faldo
said. “You have to have a good
mind game. You have to know
where you’re going to land it,
where the next bounce is and
where the run is.”
And, of course, have the ability
to pull it off.
Faldo recalled his second victory at Muirfield in 1992, with
Fanny Sunesson on the bag.

“That’s what we worked out so
well,” he said, “where to land the
ball 20 yards short of the green,
which way it would kick, and
obviously where it would stop.
That’s part of the calculations.
But you’ve got to land the ball
from A to B first. And that has
to be a solid shot. If that’s a mishit, the ball doesn’t react close
to what you intend. You look at
all those guys, we all hit it pretty
darn solid in our era.”
See MUIRFIELD ‌| 8

Thomas A. Ferrara | Newsday | MCT photo

Yoenis Cespedes of the Oakland Athletics wins the All-Star
Game’s Home Run Derby at Citi Field in New York, New York.

Cespedes steals show from
All-Stars, wins HR Derby
NEW YORK (AP) —
Yoenis Cespedes certainly
made his mark at the AllStar game — and he’s not
even on the roster.
Actually, it was a dent.
Oakland’s second-year
slugger won baseball’s
Home Run Derby with a
dazzling display of power
Monday night, becoming
the first player left out of
the Midsummer Classic to
take home the crown.
Cespedes beat Bryce
Harper 9-8 in the final
round at reconfigured Citi

Field, hitting the decisive
drive with five swings to
spare. The outfielder from
Cuba flipped his bat aside
and raised his left arm in
triumph when he sent his
32nd homer of the night
some 455 feet to center
field, where it caromed off
the back wall of the black
batter’s eye.
He was swarmed by the
American League All-Stars
near the third base line.
“You come for a show
in New York. He put on a
See CESPEDES |‌ 8

Pilot Flying J to repay
trucking companies
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The truck-stop company
owned by Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam has
agreed to pay back the trucking companies that were
cheated out of fuel rebates, according to a settlement
given preliminary approval Tuesday.
Under the agreement approved by a federal judge in
Arkansas, Pilot Flying J would pay the companies what
they are owed with interest.
Federal agents raided the Knoxville headquarters of Pilot Flying J earlier this year after an employee claimed the
nation’s largest diesel retailer was systematically cheating
its clients. Five employees have since pleaded guilty to
federal charges.
Jimmy Halsam is the brother of Tennessee Gov. Bill
Haslam, who has an undisclosed ownership share in the
company. Both have denied any wrongdoing, and there
was no mention of wrongdoing in the settlement.
Under the terms of the preliminary settlement, Pilot
Flying J would pay all legal fees and other expenses. That
includes the cost of auditing the accounts and then auditing the auditors.
The lawsuit names eight plaintiffs. Other companies
that participated in either the rebate program or the discount program will be sent a notice informing them of the
class-action settlement. If they choose to opt out of the
settlement, they could still sue separately.
“The advantage to them, if they choose to accept this,
is that they get all their money back. They pay no legal
fees and no administrative fees,” Pilot Flying J attorney
Aubrey Harwell said. “It’s in keeping with what Jimmy
Haslam committed to all along. He said, ‘We’re going to
do this right. They’re going to be paid quickly and fairly.’”
Jimmy Haslam said in a statement that the company is
working to make things right with its customers.
“This is an unfortunate time for our customers and our
company, but we remain committed to making things 100
percent right with our customers, to put systems in place
to help ensure this does not happen again, and to re-earn
our customers’ trust,” he said.
The lead attorney for the trucking companies, Don Barrett, said he expects the other companies to be “pleased
to death” with the settlement because so many of them
don’t know whether they are owed money or not. With
the settlement, they will find out what they are owed
and get that money back with 6 percent interest accrued
“from the minute they sent the check and it was less than
it should have been,” Barrett said.
Barrett said the settlement offers customers the most
complete relief he has seen in more than 40 years of practicing law, and he said much of that was due to Jimmy Halsam, “who stepped up to the plate and did the right thing.”

Chuck Myers | MCT photo

Bradley coach Geno Ford, right, encourages his play during the first half against George Washington University at the
Smith Center in Washington, D.C., Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. Bradley defeated GWU, 67-66.

Kent St. wins judgment against ex-coach
KENT, Ohio (AP) — Kent State
has won a $1.2 million judgment
against former men’s basketball
coach Geno Ford for leaving in
2011 to become coach at Bradley.
The lawsuit claimed Ford had
no permission to terminate his
Kent State contract, which was
scheduled to expire in 2015.
Ford’s teams went 68-37 in three
seasons at Kent State.
Bradley University issued a
statement Tuesday saying its
actions and Ford’s actions “have
been entirely ethical, legal,
and transparent. The lawsuit
is ongoing and will continue to
be addressed through the court
system.”
Fritz Byers, an attorney repre-

senting Ford, declined comment.
Messages seeking comment were
left for the coach.
While Kent State agreed to let
Ford talk to Bradley, “Consent
to interview was not a consent
to breach the employment
contract,”
Portage
County
Common Pleas Judge John
Enlow said in a 14-page ruling
Friday. “KSU did not acquiesce
to Coach Ford’s abandonment of
their mutual contract.”
Ford was Kent State’s head
coach from April 2008 through
March 27, 2011, when Bradley announced him as its new coach.
Ford led Kent State to its second
consecutive Mid-American Conference regular-season title in 2010-

11. The Flashes finished 25-12 and
lost in the NIT quarterfinals.
Ford also has coached at NAIA
Shawnee State and Division III
Muskingum.
Ohio Attorney General Mike
DeWine said the ruling reflects a
state obligation to insure contract
enforcement.
“When coaches and high-profile
employees leave public universities in breach of their contracts,
the state of Ohio has an obligation to seek the compensation to
which it is entitled,” DeWine said
in a statement Tuesday.
Kent State’s claims against
Bradley for alleged contract interference are scheduled for trial
Oct. 7, DeWine said.

OVP Sports Briefs
Paxton records Ace
at Riverside
MASON, W.Va. — Charlie Paxton of Letart, West
Virginia has recorded Riverside’s seventh ace of the
2013 golf season. Paxton’s
hole in one was fired on the
fourth hole during Tuesday’s senior league. Paxton
is 80 years old and used a
five hybrid to hit the 125
yard shot. This marks the
third ace of Paxton’s career
and it was witnessed by
Gary Minton, Haskel Jones
and Bruce Zirkle.
Football Officials
Training Class
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Ohio —
Kanawha Rivers Officials
Association is planning to
conduct a training class
for individuals who may
be interest in becoming
registered football officials
in West Virginia. Interested individuals must be
at least 18 years of age,
have a good knowledge of
and interest in the game
of football, and be willing
to attend the classes and
study and learn the rules
of the game. Those who
successfully complete the
training program and become registered as an official with the West Virginia
Secondary Schools Activities Commission will be
eligible to officiate Middle

School and Junior Varsity
football games during the
upcoming season.
The initial training
meeting is planned for
Sunday, July 21 at 2:00
p.m. in the McNeil Room
of the Pleasant Valley
Hospital cafeteria. All interested individuals are
asked to attend. For more
information regarding the
training class or officiating, you can contact Kevin
Durst at 304-593-2544.
Chester Bowhunters to
hold Archery tourney
CHESTER, Ohio —
The Chester Bowhunters
invite all area youth and
their families to the 2013
NASP/Youth Open 3-D
archery tournament on
Sunday, July 28. Signups
start at 11 a.m. at the club
on Pomeroy Pike, with the
first scoring arrow to be released at noon.
Shooting times will run
from noon until 4 p.m. to
allow plenty of time for an
enjoyable experience.
All participants must be
accompanied by an adult.
A lunch will be provided
for the participants.
Classes are as follows:
NASP grade school, NASP
middle school, NASP high
school, pee-wee age 5 and
under, cub age 5-12, and
youth open age 12-15 .
Open-class participants

may use any compound
or recurve with no limitations on accessories.
NASP class participants
must use NASP approved
equipment.
For more information,
contact club president Jon
Smith at (740) 516-4103.
MYL Fall Ball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— The Middleport Youth
League will be having Fall
Baseball and Softball signups for boys and girls from
the ages of 5 through 16
from noon until 4 p.m. on
the Saturdays of July 20
and 27 at the Middleport
Ball Fields.
You can come as a team
or sign up individually.
If there is enough interest for a 17-18 league, the
MYL will have a league for
them also. For more information, contact Dave at
(740) 590-0438 or Jackie
at (740) 416-1261.
GAHS Youth
Football Camp
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— The Gallia Academy
High School football
staff will be conducting a
youth football camp from
6 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. on
Monday, July 22, through
Wednesday, July 24, for
students in grades 1-8 at
the high school.
There is a fee for each

camper and a reduced rate
for multiple campers from
the same family, and registration will run from 4:45
p.m. until 5:45 p.m. on the
first day of camp. All campers will receive a t-shirt.
The camp will cover
fundamentals for all positions and players will be
instructed by the GAHS
football staff and players. Campers should wear
shorts, t-shirt and tennis
shoes or cleats. Water will
be provided but a water
bottle is recommended.
For more information
or to register, contact
GAHS football coach
Wade Bartholomew at
(740) 412-0104.
Big Bend Youth
Football League
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio —
The Big Bend Youth Football League will be having
football and cheerleading
signups from 11 a.m. until
1 p.m. every Saturday in
July at the Middleport Veterans Memorial Stadium.
Signups are for all interested kids in grades
3-6, and second graders
may sign up if they meet a
50-pound minimal weight
requirement. There is also
a signup fee.
For more information,
visit facebook @BBYFL
See BRIEFS ‌| 8

�Wednesday, July 17, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

Help Wanted General

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY:
Karr Contracting,
Chester, OH is seeking
skilled carpenters with
rough &amp; finish carpentry
experience. Please send
resume postmarked by
7/24/13 to:
P.O. Box 68
Chester, OH 45720
Attn: Job# KARR71013.
Karr Contracting is
an Equal Opportunity
Employer and will
consider all qualified
applicants without regard
to race, color, region,
sex, national origin,
military status or ancestry.

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

60431228

Professional Services

740-591-8044
Please leave a message
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General

LEGALS
60432536

Experienced Preferred
But Training Available
Interested Candidates can
Call 304-273-9482 or
Come in and fill out an
Application
Ravenswood Care Center
1113Washington St.
Ravenswood, WV 26164

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Area Agency on Aging at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
P.O. Box 370, Reno, Ohio
45773 is requesting proposals
from agencies who would like
to provide Legal Assistance to
persons 60 years of age and
older within the AAA8 Planning and Service Area; Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington. Funding source is TitleIII B of the Older Americans
Act, as amended in 2006.
The PY 2014-15 proposal
packets will be available July
23, 2013 on the AAA8 website
by close of business:
www.areaagency8.org. Proposal packets and instructions
will be available in electronic
format only.
7/17

60434346

Full-time/Part-time
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Area Agency on Aging at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
P.O. Box 370, Reno, Ohio
45773 is requesting proposals
from agencies who would like
to provide Legal Assistance to
persons 60 years of age and
older withinLEGALS
the AAA8 Planning and Service Area; Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington. Funding source is TitleIII B of the Older Americans
Act, as amended in 2006.
The PY 2014-15 proposal
packets will be available July
23, 2013 on the AAA8 website
by close of business:
www.areaagency8.org. Proposal packets and instructions
will be available in electronic
format only.
7/17

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Area Agency on Aging at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
P.O. Box 370, Reno, Ohio
45773 is requesting proposals
from agencies who would like
to provide Legal Assistance to
persons 60 years of age and
older within the AAA8 Planning and Service Area; Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and WashMiscellaneous
ington. Funding
source is TitleIII B of the Older Americans
Act, as amended in 2006.
The PY 2014-15 proposal
packets will be available July
23, 2013 on the AAA8 website
by close of business:
www.areaagency8.org. Proposal packets and instructions
will be available in electronic
format only.
Too
Much
7/17

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LEGALS
SBA Towers, LLC proposes to
increase the height of an existing 199-foot self-supporting lattice telecommunications tower
to an overall height of 251 feet.
The tower is located at 40907
State Route 689, Albany, Ohio
45710 (39° 10ʼ 29.4” N, 82° 17ʼ
17.4” W). The FCC Form 854
File Number is A0843218. Interested parties may raise environmental concerns about
the proposed structure by filing a Request for Environmental Review (RER) with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The FCC strongly
encourages interested parties
to file RER online; instructions
can be found at
www.fcc.gov/asr/environmentalrequest. However, if an online request is not possible, interested parties may mail their
request to: FCC Requests for
Environmental Review, Attn:
Ramon Williams, 445 12th
Street SW, Washington, DC
20554. Comments relating to
Historic Properties may be
sent to Sims &amp; Associates, ATTN: Ms. Seagrave, 201 S.
Lakeline Blvd, Ste 402, Cedar
Park, TX 78613. Ms. Seagrave
can be reached at (512) 9969299
7/17
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Peggy S. Yost
Meigs County Treasurer,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Ben H. Ewing aka Benjamin H.
Ewing, et al
Defendants.
Case No. 130L003
JUDGE CROW
LEGAL NOTICE
The Heirs, Executors, Devisees, Administrators, Personal Representatives or Assigns
of Doris Ewing, if any, their
names and residences being
unknown and which cannot
with reasonable diligence be
ascertained, will take notice
that on June 26, 2013 the
Plaintiffs Peggy S. Yost, Meigs
County Treasurer filed a Complaint against Ben Ewing, et.
al., as Defendants in the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
County,Ohio, being Case No.
130L003 in said Court, demanding that the Court issue a
foreclosure order for unpaid
taxes on the following described real estate, and for other proper legal and equitable
relief. The real estate is described as follows: Situated in
the County of Meigs, State of
Ohio, and Village of Pomeroy,
and bounded and described as
follows:
TRACT I. The following real
estate situated in the County of
Meigs, in the State of Ohio,
and in the Village of Pomeroy
and bounded and described as
follows: Forty feet off of the
Southeast side of Lot
Numbered One Hundred and
Sixty-Four (164) in the said Village, fronting on Mulberry
Street and extending back at
the width of Forty (40) feet to
Mechanic's Street; and being
the same premises conveyed
to William M. Shannon by T.
Mallory by deed dated November 14, 1890, and recorded in
Deed Book No. 67, Page 530,
Records of Meigs County,
Ohio; and by the said Wm. M.
Shannon conveyed to W.N.
Davis by deed dated
August 8, 1906, and recorded
in Volume 95, Page 359-360 of
the Meigs County Record of
Deeds.
Reference Deeds: Cert. of
Transfer from Philip Sommer
to Anna Louise Harbrecht,
Volume 171, Page 659;
Volume 165, Page 38 Deed
Records, Meigs County, Ohio.
Reference Deed: Volume 298,
Page 725, Meigs County Deed
Records.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 1600744.000
TRACT II. The following real
estate situate in the Village of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
and State of Ohio: Being Lot
351 in V. B. Horton's Second
Addition to Pomeroy, Ohio, as
shown by the Meigs County
Plat Records on file in the
Meigs County Recorder's Office. Reference Deed: Volume
247, Page 979, Meigs County
Deed Records.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 1600506.000
TRACT III. Being Lot Number
Three Hundred Thirty Five
(335) on the west side of
Mechanic Street between 4th
and 5th Streets in said Village
of Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
State of Ohio.
Also three (3) feet off the North
side of Lot No. 336 in said Village of Pomeroy, and abutting
on the South side of Lot No.
335. Reference Deed: Volume
275, Page 369, Meigs County
Deed Records.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NOS.:
16-02101.000 and 1600505.000
TRACT IV. Situated in the Vil-

00506.000
TRACT III. Being Lot Number
Three Hundred Thirty Five
(335) on the west side of
Mechanic Street between 4th
and 5th Streets in said Village
The Daily Sentinel • Page
of Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
State of Ohio.
Also three (3) feet off the North
side of Lot No. 336 in said Village of Pomeroy, and abutting
on the South
side of Lot No.
LEGALS
Help Wanted General
335. Reference Deed: Volume
275, Page 369, Meigs County
Teacher for School Age SpeDeed Records.
cial Education Class needed.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NOS.:
Must have current ODE licen16-02101.000 and 16sure and have or be eligible for
00505.000
Intervention Specialist validaTRACT IV. Situated in the Viltion. Part-time Early Intervenlage of Pomeroy, County of
tion Specialist needed to work
Meigs, and State of Ohio:
with children ages birth
The following described tract
through 2 with developmental
lying in 160 Acre Lot No. 1224, delays and/or disabilities and
Town 2, and Range 13,
their families. Minimum qualibounded and described as folfications include bachelor delows: Beginning 47 feet South
gree in education, health, so20 1/2 degrees West from the
cial or behavioral science or
most Southerly
related field.
comer of the 69/100 acre tract
Send application or resume by
of real estate described in
July 24th to: Carleton School
Volume 212, Page 477, of the
1310 Carleton Street
Meigs County Deed Records;
P.O. Box 307
thence South 20 1/2 degrees
Syracuse, OH 45779
West to the old road 150 feet;
The Meigs County Board of
thence South 84
Developmental Disabilities is
degrees East 115 feet; thence
an EEO.
South 63 degrees East 81 feet;
The Meigs Co. General Health
thence South 44 1/2 degrees
District, An equal opportunity
East 77 feet; thence North 7
employer, is seeking a full-time
degrees East 360 feet; thence
Public Health Emergency PreSouth 63 1/2 degrees West
paredness- Grant Coordinator.
256 feet to the place
Bachelor's degree preferred,
of beginning, containing 1but equivocal experience will
21/100 acres. The tract debe considered. IT experience,
scribed in this deed is divided
from the 69/100 acre tract by a valid Driver's License required.
Must submit to background
street 33 feet wide, lying
check, Entire Job description
between the lines bearing
may be found at www.meigsNorth 63 1/2 degrees East,
health.com. Submit
SAVING and EXCEPTING
resume,civil service applicafrom this conveyance all the
tion, three letters of reference
coal and other minerals in the
same; and the right to mine the electronically to
meigcohd@odh.ohio.gov by or
same without incumbrance to
before 4pm on July 26th.
the surface; and all ways and
rights of way along any minerMedical / Health
al seam therein. Reference
Deed: Volume 264, Page 247,
LPN
Meigs County Deed Records.
Valley Health is looking for
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16- LPNs for its Point Pleasant,
00514.000
Huntington and Hurricane ofTRACT V. Situated in the Vilfices. The successful candidlage of Pomeroy, Meigs
ate must be energetic and posCounty, Ohio. Being Lot No.
sess the ability to work as part
337 as delineated on the Plat
of the team to provide quality
of said lots, excepting 6 feet off patient care. Great benefits!
the Westerly side of said lot,
Great hours! Current WV nurswhich 6 feet parcel was sold by ing licensure is required. Apdeed recorded in Volume 142,
ply online at
Page 34, Meigs County Deed
www.valleyhealth.org. EOE.
Records.
Reference Deed: Volume 255,
Page 199, Meigs County Deed Pleasant Valley Hospital is in
Records.
need of a full-time WV liAUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16- censed LPN for a subspecialty
00513.000
physician office. Ideal candidYou are required to answer the ate should be a hard-working,
Complaint on or before
self motivated, and professionSeptember 18, 2013. You are
al individual eager to work at a
also required to serve a copy
busy pace. Prior experience in
of your Answer upon C. David
a physician office or hospital
Warren, Special Meigs County
related area is preferred. ExProsecutor, 117 W. Second
cellent benefits.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Send resumes to: Pleasant
Diane Lynch
Valley Hospital, c/o Human
Clerk of Court of Common
Resources, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
7/10, 7/17, 7/24, 7/31, 8/,7
(304) 675-6975, or apply on8/14,
line at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Wanted : Part-Time worker
needed to assist individuals
with developmental disabilities
in Bidwell
Lost &amp; Found
20 hrs/wk: 9am to 7pm Sat
3pm-11pm. High School deLOST: Ladies Eyeglasses
gree / GED, valid driver's li7-10-13 on Rt 160, near Dr.
Ragans Office. Reward: Call if cense and three years good
driving experience required.
found 740-853-0316 or 740$9.25/hr after training. Send
446-1804
resume to: Buckeye Community Services, P.O Box 604,
Notices
Jackson, Oh 45640 : Or e-mail:
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
beyecserv@yahoo.com. DeadPUBLISHING CO.
line for applicants 7/19/2013.
Recommends that you do
Pre-employment drug testing.
Business with People you
Equal Opportunity Employer.
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
EDUCATION
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.
Miscellaneous
*FREE*
32" Toshiba Console TV.
Works great, xcpt. speakers.
Shelves for DVD/CD unit. 304675-3440
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
Garage Sale July 18,19, 20th.
2 1/2 miles East of Porter on
St. Rt 554.
SERVICES
Health
Dr. Mark Nolan
Still accepting new patients.
But as of October 1st, will no
longer be practicing OB, but
will be continuing with GYN.
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

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

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
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REAL ESTATE SALES
Condominiums
3 bdrm. condo w/ finished
basement. Gallipolis Ferry on
river, Cntrl A/C. $700 mo. $700
S.D. No Pets. 740-446-3481
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1 &amp; 2 BR, $375 to 575 month
Downtown, clean, renovated,
newer appl, lam floor, water
sewer &amp; trash incl. No pets.
Application req. 727-237-6942
2 Bdrm 1 bath - Lg - Country
Style Apt. Close to work &amp;
shopping fully renovated,Patio,
quite area, private parking New
Carpet &amp; Tile, Huge Closets,
$525mo. Water &amp; Garbage included - NO PETS - Ph: 419359-1768
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
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

Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265

7

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Muirfield

Cespedes

From Page 6

From Page 6

At the other eight courses in the Open rotation, that’s
not always the case.
A crazy bounce here. An unexpected roll there. Suddenly, the door is open for an improbable winner, someone like Ben Curtis or Todd Hamilton.
Muirfield is more straightforward, with few blind shots,
and the way it’s laid out — with two loops of nine holes
running in opposite directions — evens out the devilish
breezes, assuming they don’t suddenly change directions
during the course of a round.
“It’s not going to bad luck you to death,” said Azinger,
who made that assessment even though he bogeyed the
final two holes of the 1987 Open and lost to Faldo by a
single stroke. “It’s a terrific course.”
Given what has happened here before, this would seem
the most appropriate spot for Tiger Woods, ranked No. 1
in the world, to end the longest major-less drought of his
career — more than five years and counting. If not him,
how about second-ranked Rory McIlroy, just 24 but already
a two-time major champion and less than a year removed
from his runaway victory at the PGA Championship?
But Woods is coming back from an injured elbow, so
no one is quite sure what kind of shape he’ll be in when
the shots start counting for real at Muirfield. Even when
healthy, the aura of invincibility he once held over the rest
of the field has slowly faded away since the last of his 14
major titles at the 2008 U.S. Open.
Woods insisted Tuesday that his elbow is fully healed.
Even though he shot his worst round as a professional at
Muirfield, an 81 in miserable conditions during the third
round of the 2002 Open, he has great respect for the course.
“I mean, look at the list of past champions, the number
of Hall of Famers that have won here,” Woods said. “You
can’t just hit one way. You have to shape it both ways and
really control the shots. … You’re playing almost in kind of
a circle, in a sense, because you’ve got so many different
angles and so many different winds. You have to be able
to maneuver the ball both ways.”
That doesn’t bode well for McIlroy. His game is in disarray after he switched to new clubs and a new ball this
season, in addition to dealing with off-the-course issues
involving his management team.
“I’m very surprised that just 11 months (since that
eight-shot win at Kiawah Island) he would’ve become an
afterthought,” Azinger said. “He is adrift.”
Woods still draws the biggest crowds, and there’s no denying his fellow competitors keep an eye out for him on the
leaderboard. But, while he’s resumed his dominating ways
in regular PGA Tour events since changing his swing and
battling through well-documented personal problems, he
no longer looks unbeatable on the biggest stages.
“Tiger is in a different mode where he’s winning regular tournaments, but he gets to the majors and something happens,” Faldo said. “The self-belief you have to
have, maybe there’s a little dent in there. He hits the
wrong shot at the wrong time, where before Tiger would
hit the right shot at the right time.”

show,” said Detroit Tigers
pitcher Max Scherzer, set
to start for the AL on Tuesday night.
The final addition to the
field, Cespedes was the
fourth player not selected
for the All-Star game to
compete in the event.
Right off the bat, he
proved he belonged.
With family in the stands,
Cespedes hit a whopping
17 home runs in the first
round — more than any
other player managed in
their first two trips to
the plate.
“I felt that I was getting
into a very good rhythm,
and that as long as the
ball was right over the
plate, I felt like I was in
a good groove,” he said
through a translator.
“That was the key.”
Baseball’s big boppers
took aim at two trucks
parked beside the home
run apple behind the center-field fence, a popular
staple at Mets games dating to their days in Shea
Stadium.
With a shiny prize to
shoot for, Cespedes dinged
the hood on one and elicited a rousing cheer.
Cuban reliever Aroldis
Chapman of the Cincinnati
Reds brought Cespedes
water and a towel during
the first round, and 2010
champion David Ortiz
strolled over to offer encouragement and advice.
The Rockettes danced
atop the dugouts and did
their famous kickline between first-round batters.
“It’s far different from
in Cuba,” Cespedes said.
“There might be two people at our games. There’s
only one photographer,
and this is completely

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

different and foreign to
me. But I’m very happy
to be here.”
His first-round outburst
was enough to send him
straight into the finals,
though he added six long
balls in round two for
good measure. Some of his
drives were especially impressive, too.
Cespedes hit about a
half-dozen balls into the
upper deck in left, never
reached by anyone in a
game, and banged another
couple of shots off the restaurant windows in the
corner just below.
The 27-year-old Cespedes has struggled as a
sophomore, batting .225
with 15 home runs, but
hardly anyone in the game
doubts his ability.
“This trophy will motivate me so that things continue to go well for me, and
I just want to thank the
people that believed in me,
that thought I could play at
this level,” he said.
The 20-year-old Harper,
wearing shiny gold spikes
as his father pitched to
him, hammered eight homers in all three rounds. But
the Washington Nationals
phenom couldn’t keep up
with Cespedes.
“He’s
incredible,”
Harper said. “He’s an
absolute machine.”
Colorado
outfielder
Michael Cuddyer and
Baltimore first baseman
Chris Davis, who leads the
majors with 37 homers,
were eliminated in the
second round. Davis tied
Reggie Jackson (1969) for
the AL record before the
All-Star break.
“I had a little blister
come up second round.
It’s just one of those

things,” Davis said. “I
usually get one once a
year and it just happened
to be tonight. It actually
popped during a swing.
My main concern is obviously not to hurt myself
and to hang onto the bat.
“It’s something that I’ve
dealt with in my career
since I can remember.
You’ve just got to kind of
wear it for a couple of days
and then it hardens up and
you’re good to go.”
Citi Field opened in
2009 with a cavernous outfield and yielded the fewest
home runs in the majors
over its first three seasons,
according to STATS. But
the Mets erected a new
fence in front of the old
one, dubbed the Great Wall
of Flushing, before last season. That trimmed dimensions by up to 12 feet and
lowered the height of the
wall from as high as 16 feet
to 8 all around.
Since then, the ballpark
has ranked closer to the
middle of the pack in home
runs, 18th out of 30. But
it’s still no hitter’s haven.
In fact, hometown favorite
David Wright had joked
he would take his Derby
swings from second base.
Cespedes, however, and
most of the other sluggers
had little trouble clearing
the old wall. When they
got good wood, it was
long gone.
“This stadium may be
very difficult, but it’s not as
difficult as Oakland. And if
I can do it in Oakland, I
thought, why can’t I do it
here?” Cespedes said.
Wright and another
hometown darling, Pirates
slugger Pedro Alvarez,
were both eliminated in
the first round. Alvarez

went to high school in
New York City and grew
up in the same Manhattan
neighborhood as Manny
Ramirez.
Wright managed five
home runs as the sellout
crowd of 43,558 chanted
“Let’s Go Mets!”
“I ran out of gas,” he
said.
Also knocked out early
were defending champion Prince Fielder, the
only player besides Ken
Griffey Jr. to win multiple times, and American
League captain Robinson
Cano of the New York
Yankees, who made Cespedes his final pick.
NOTES:
Cespedes’
home run total matched
Ortiz (2010) and Cano
(2011) for the third-highest behind Bobby Abreu
(41 in 2005) and Josh
Hamilton (35 in 2008). …
Davis was credited with
the longest drive of the
night at 502 feet. … Oakland third base coach Mike
Gallego pitched to Cespedes, who averaged 405
feet on his home runs. He
became the first A’s player
to participate in the Derby
since Jason Giambi in
2001 and joined Mark McGwire (1992) as the team’s
only winners. “Before I
left, they asked me to bring
home the trophy,” Cespedes said. … The American League topped the NL
53-50. … Cano showed up
at the afternoon news conference in a snappy suit.
Harper was in a T-shirt,
mesh shorts, sneakers and
his spiky mohawk. At least
he was dressed in blue and
orange, Mets colors. …
By hitting 103 home runs
in all, the sluggers raised
$529,000 for charity.

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

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.

Briefs
From Page 6
or call Sarah (444-1606),
Tony (416-3774), Chrissy (992-4067), Angie
(444-1177) or Jim Porter
(416-2636).
Gallia Academy
all-comer meet
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting an
all-comer track meet that
will be open to all ages

and is scheduled for 11
a.m. Saturday, August 10,
with registration beginning at 9 a.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

Houses For Rent
Newly remodeled 4BR, 3BA,
Jackson Pike area, finished
basement, $800/month or
Lease/option to Buy. No Pets
740-534-2838
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
FOR RENT:
Mobile homes for rent in the
Point Pleasant area. Call 304675-3423 before 8pm

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

Rentals
3 Bdrm Trailer - 41098 Baker
Road Pomeroy, Oh 45769 - No
Pets - No utilities Pd. - $450mo
and $450 deposit. On dead
end road in country. 740- 4162960

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Miscellaneous

AGRICULTURE

2- 100lb Propane Tanks with
auto crossover Reg. Valve with
2 pigtails &amp; wrench. $160 Excellent Condition. 441-9571
Evenings.

Call

AUTOMOTIVE
RESORT PROPERTY
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Nice 3 Bdrm / 2 bath
Doublewide, near Walmart,
Yard &amp; central air. $625mo.
plus Deposit &amp; Utilities. Available Aug 1st, 2013. Ph :
740)645-6125

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

ANIMALS

Want To Buy

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Pets
GIVEAWAY
American Terrier, male, very
gentle, 4yrs old. 304-882-3108

Miscellaneous

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
REAL ESTATE SALES

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

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Baby Daddy Baby Daddy Melissa
Melissa
Melissa (N) Daddy (N)
Baby Daddy Melissa
Twisted
The 700 Club
Cops
Cops
Fight "Fight to Choose"
Fight Masters
Fight "Last Shot for Spot" Fight "Training Day" (N)
Ink Mstr "Baby Got Back"
SpongeBob SpongeBob Victorious
Figure Out
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "Knockout"
NCIS "One Last Score"
NCIS
Royal Pains "Vertigo" (N) Necessary Roughness (N) Suits "The Arrangement"
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Deal/It (N)
Conan (N)
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Castle
Castle
Castle
Franklin &amp; Bash "Freck"
Castle
Franklin &amp; Bash "Freck"
CSI "To Kill a Predator"
CSI:Miami "Tunnel Vision" ��� Sixteen Candles (‘84, Com) Molly Ringwald.
��� The Breakfast Club (‘85, Dra) Judd Nelson.
To Be Announced
Blood &amp; Oil
Blood &amp; Oil "Pay Dirt"
Blood &amp; Oil
Blood &amp; Oil
Blood &amp; Oil
The First 48
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
River Monsters
Gator Boys
Gator Boys
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Gator Boys
�� Maid in Manhattan (‘02, Com) Jennifer Lopez.
Bad Girls All Star Battle
All Star Battle "Reunion" I'm Havi "Thai/ Maria" (N) I'm Having Their Baby
Roseanne
Roseanne
Roseanne
Roseanne
House of Curves
Curves "Chubby Chasers" House of Curves
House of Curves
(5:00) Paul Blart: Mall C... E! News
PopInnovate "will.i.am"
The Kardashians
The Soup
The Soup
C. Lately
E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Friends
Friends
Hot In (N)
The Exes (N) SoulMan
(:35) Queens
Inside "Bath Salts"
Drugs, Inc. "Crack"
Drugs "Hurricane Blow"
Drugs "Zombie Island"
Inside (N)
Drugs "Zombie Island"
The Dan Patrick Show
Adventure Sports
Cycling Tour de France Stage 17 Embrun - Chorges
Motocross Highlights
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
Car Warriors "Corvette"
Hooters Swim Pageant "30th Anniversary" (N)
Car Warriors "Corvette"
Swamp "Deadly Duo"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Only in America
Top Shot All-Stars
Top Shot All-Stars
H.Wives "The Cold War"
The Real Housewives
Housewives/NewJersey
Million Dollar List (N)
Roblé "Deuces Wild" (N)
Watch (N)
Million Doll
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (N)
The Game
The Game
Husbands
� For Colored Girls (2010, Drama) Janet Jackson, Phylicia Rashad, Loretta Devine.
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Love It or List It, Too
Property Brothers
HouseH (N) House (N)
Property Brothers
Ghost "Vintage Spirits"
Paranormal Witness
Ghost "Hoover Damned" Ghost Hunters
Paranormal Witness (N)
Ghost Hunters
(5:45) Case of Curt Flood
(:15) Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days
The Newsroom
True Blood
Bill Maher
(:20) �� Original Gangstas (‘96, Act) Fred Williamson. Banshee
(:45) �� I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
��� The Blues Brothers John Belushi.
(:15) Gone (‘11, Thril) Lochlyn Munro, Molly Parker.
Ray Donovan "Twerk"
The World According to Dick Cheney
Goon Seann William Scott.

�Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday,
July 17, 2013:
This year the unexpected plays
a dominant role in your community
or your professional life. You might
not know what will happen next. At
first, you could have difficulty seeing
anything positive emanating from all
the surprises; however, you soon will
understand how your creativity can
point you in a new direction. If you are
single, a relationship could have wild
swings. Do not hesitate to date others
until you are sure of what you want.
If you are attached, the two of you
might be welcoming a new addition, or
a positive reflection of your bond will
come into play. SCORPIO’s intensity
can weird you out.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH You can expect a change
in how you view your downtime and
the people around you. Keep in mind
that your reaction will have much to do
with the outcome. Opportunities come
in situations where you are able to
remain levelheaded. Tonight: Chat with
a trusted confidant.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH Know when to defer to
someone else, as a situation could be
much more significant than you think.
Pressure rises, and it streamlines
the possibilities. Stay neutral. If you
detach, the right solution or response
will appear. Tonight: Make plans to go
out for dinner with a pal.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Your ability to move through
problems and change direction reflects
your optimistic perspective. A friend
could change course when you least
expect it. You see a unique quality
evolve in a meeting. Know that everything is subject to change. Tonight: Put
your feet up.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH You will feel empowered.
Your creativity saves the day with an
unanticipated problem involving someone you put on a pedestal. Everything
changes in time, so don’t worry about
what is said or what is happening —
just stay centered. Tonight: Do only
what makes you smile.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH You might hear shocking
news. By the time you recuperate,
you could be rethinking a decision
with more care. Consider what needs
to happen in order to make you feel
more comfortable. Accept change, as
it seems to be inevitable. Tonight: Not

to be found.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Understand that you must
keep communicating, even if you don’t
want to. You subconsciously might
want to sever the tie with someone.
Once you are in a meeting with this
person, you will detach and see a
situation from a different perspective.
Tonight: Be a duo.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH You could be wondering
how much is “enough.” Think through a
problem carefully, especially if you are
hearing the same reaction from others.
Take a break for several hours, or take
the day off. Afterward, you’ll approach
life from a more relaxed perspective.
Tonight: Pay bills first.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH You’ll want to switch gears
and head in a new direction Trust
that you will have the opportunity to
do so. The offers that open up after a
shakeup could be quite surprising. Use
your knowledge of a situation to turn
it around. Tonight: Ask for something
you’ve been wanting.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HH You might not want to overextend yourself. Your sixth sense and
ability to see beyond the obvious could
be strong right now. You will see the
unexpected playing a big role in a new
relationship. Know that you are more
of an observer than a player. Tonight:
Kick back.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH You know what you would
like to happen, just as a key person in
your life knows what he or she would
like to happen. Look to similar longterm goals rather than squabble over
petty matters. Let go of what you think
must happen. Tonight: What you want
— just not alone.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH You might be a little too sure
of yourself, which is why you could
have a difficult encounter with someone whom you feel has power over
you. At the risk of creating uproar, take
a step back from the situation and say
that you have had enough. Tonight:
Write an important letter.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Your ability to detach allows
you to recognize the high road and
figure out the best way to proceed.
Use care with your funds, as a sudden
expense could shock you. A partner
or loved one will be instrumental in
helping you see other opportunities.
Tonight: Use your ingenuity.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Newbies rule in final table
for WSOP main event
LAS VEGAS (AP) —
Youth and online skills
dominated as the final
table of World Series of
Poker was set, but it was
an experienced grinder
who carried the day.
As Monday night bled
into Tuesday morning, the
most veteran player of the
final 10 gamblers competing for a seat at the nineperson final table worth
$8.4 million for the winner
was defeated by the second-most respected player.
Deep into the 14th hour
of play on the seventh day
of the world’s biggest nolimit Texas Hold ‘em competition, well-known Sacramento, Calif., grinder J.C.
Tran went head to head
with Carlos Mortensen, a
Spanish pro known as “El
Matador,” who won the
main event in 2001 and
was making a second run.
Tran was holding a
seven and an eight, while
Mortensen had an ace and
a nine.
The flop, the first three
common cards, came
down 10, six, three. Tran
went all in on the turn,
the fourth card, and
Mortensen called, pushing
all his chips in.
The turn was a nine,
giving Tran a straight.
Mortensen would have
needed a club on the river, or fifth card, to make
a flush but got a two of
diamonds instead, costing
him his spot in the championship.
As that card was dealt,
whoops went up from the
increasingly swaying and
song-prone crowds in the
bleachers of the makeshift
ESPN stage at the Rio casino off the Strip.
“The guy that I respected the most was the one
guy that I just busted,”
said Tran, 36, grinning
and bleary-eyed moments
after Mortensen busted
out. “It’s kind of sad to see
him go. But at the same
time, I’m happy he’s gone
because he’s the one I respected most.”
Tran, who holds first
place in the chip count,

might have reason to
think he can beat the other finalists to take the diamond-encrusted bracelet.
After all, many of them
are newbies.
Jay Farber, 28, fourth
in the chip count, has a
lifetime poker winning of
just over $2,000. That’s the
smallest lifetime earnings
of any of the “November
nine” since 2008.
The Las Vegas club host
acknowledged he was flagging as the tournament
entered its 70th hour Monday, despite the steady
cheering from a horde
of his club friends in the
stands that chanted “Oh,
Jay” to the tune of an Italian soccer song as 3 a.m.
Tuesday neared.
“I’m not a tournament
player. It’s frustrating coming from being a cash-game
player to playing 12 to 14
hours a day,” he said. “But
I really enjoyed the main
event because it’s like
playing a deep stack cash
game.”
As the field narrowed to
11 and then to 10, some
players hoping to avoid
bad beats and roller-coaster chip swings simply refused to gamble.
The conservative play
seemed to annoy tired fans
who began urging players
in heavily accented English to “double down” and
bet all their chips or, once
players went all in, yelling
out the card that would ensure a loss.
The youngest of the six
20-somthings who make
up the final table is Ryan
Riess, 23, of Las Vegas,
who was playing in his first
world series.
He reflected on his coming celebrity as he took in
the ESPN cameras swooping and diving above the
tables where the field of 27
was whittled to nine.
“Not only is it a ton of
money, which is obviously
life changing, but I feel like
so many people know of
me that did not know me.”
he said, adding, “I’ll still be
the same person.”
Also new to the ranks

of the tournament champions was Sylvain Loosli,
26, who dubs himself an
“online poker cash game
specialist” but had never
made the money at the
world series.
“I’m quite impressed I
didn’t feel any pressure,”
the Frenchman said, still
wearing the gray hoodie
he’d used to hide his eyes
during play.
Among the armatures
coming back in November are tattoo artist Marc
McLaughlin, of Brossard,
Quebec, and Columbia
University student David Benefield, of Fort
Worth, Texas. The rest
of the finalists are pros,
including Amir Lehavot,
of Israel, Michiel Brummelhuis, of Amsterdam,
and Marc Newhouse of
Chapel Hill, N.C.
The $10,000 buy-in competition, which began July
6 with 6,352 entrants, now
takes a break until Nov.
4, when the gamblers will
reconvene to determine
a champion on live television. Each player is already guaranteed at least a
$700,000 payout.
For Tran, the final table
could confirm his hopes
that tournament poker is
not only a young man’s
game.
“The past couple years,
I’ve been really distracted
with a lot of things going
on — I became a family man, married, I have a
son,” he said. “I came to
the world series not really
having that fire that I used
to have. And when I looked
back on the past couple
years, I said, look, these results are not so good.”
Tran
said
he
is
expecting a daughter and
hopes that his shot at the
final table may help him
realize a long-held dream
before retiring.
“I’m going to set one last
goal, and that is to win this
thing, and then I’m going
to take a nice little break,
enjoy my wife and my kids
and watch them grow up.
Poker should be for fun
from here on out.”

Kyle Robertson | Columbus Dispatch | MCT photo

Tiger Woods watches his tee shot on the 18th hole during the 4th round of the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, Sunday, June 2, 2013.

Woods says elbow fine,
no loss of confidence
GULLANE, Scotland (AP) — Tiger
Woods said his ailing left elbow is “good
to go” for the British Open, and he insisted Tuesday there’s no loss of confidence
despite the longest stretch of his career
without a major title.
Woods held his regular session with the
media ahead of the British Open at Muirfield, where he resumes his quest for a
15th major title. Once considered a lock
to break Jack Nicklaus’ record, he hasn’t
won one of golf’s biggest events since the
2008 U.S. Open.
“I feel very good about my game,”
Woods said. “I feel very, very good going
into major championships. I’ve had a pretty good year this year so far — won four
times. Even though I haven’t won a major championship in five years, I’ve been
there in a bunch of them where I’ve had
chances. I just need to keep putting myself
there and eventually I’ll get some.”
The biggest question mark for Woods at
this major is his health.
He strained his elbow at last month’s
U.S. Open, playing in visible pain while
struggling to a 32nd-place finish. He
hasn’t played since Merion, even skipping
his own tournament to give the injury
time to heal.
“The elbow feels good,” Woods said.
“It’s one of the good things of taking the
time off to let it heal and get the treatment
and therapy on it. The main reason was
that coming over here, the ground is going to be hard, obviously. And I’m going
to need that elbow to be good. And just

in case the rough was, well, reports were
it was going to be high, and it was going
to be lush. I needed to have this thing set
and healed. And everything is good to go.”
Woods has dealt with several injuries,
a swing change and major distractions in
his personal life since winning at Torrey
Pines five years ago.
Not like he hasn’t been in contention.
Woods has eight top-10 finishes in the
majors since his last victory, but he hasn’t
been able to break his drought. Now
he’s returning to a course where he shot
his worst round as a professional, an 81
in miserable conditions during the third
round of the 2002 British Open.
“It’s just a shot here and there,” he said.
“It’s making a key up-and-down here or
getting a good bounce there, capitalizing
on an opportunity here and there.”
Woods is again the world’s top-ranked
player, and no one comes close to his
13 PGA Tour victories over the last five
years. But he knows better than anyone
that major titles are what will determine
his legacy. These are the tournaments he
gears his entire season around, the ones
he wants more than any others.
In his eyes, it’s just a matter of time before he wins another one.
“It’s not much,” Woods said. “It could
happen on the first day, it could happen
on the last day. But it’s turning that tide
and getting the momentum at the right
time or capitalizing on our opportunity.
That’s what you have to do to win major
championships.”

Pirates 2013: Pittsburgh dares to hope — sort of
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Something odd has been happening
the past few weeks in the town
that’s home to the Pittsburgh
Steelers and the Pittsburgh Penguins — something very strange
indeed. People are talking about
a professional baseball club
called — what was that name
again? — the Pittsburgh Pirates.
They are speaking about alien
things, matters unfamiliar to a
community unaccustomed to
talking about baseball in anything but resigned tones. Things
like five Pirates headed to the
2013 All-Star team — the first
time so many are going since
1972. Things like a homerslamming slugger nicknamed
“El Toro.” Things like a closer
who leads the National League
in saves, a pitching staff that
leads the majors in shutouts and
a team that has one of baseball’s

best records — and for a time
the past few weeks, had the very
best of all.
Too many things have
happened between Pittsburgh
and its baseball team over
the past 20 years to make
expectations high — or, more
accurately, not enough has
happened. But in this, the
21st year since the Pirates last
finished with a winning record,
the talk in restaurants and
bars, on Little League fields
and in the concession lines at
PNC Park centers around some
form of this tentative, hopeful
question: Is this finally the year
when things change?
“It all feels new,” says Manny
Sanguillen, a catcher on the
1971 and 1979 World Series title
teams who now runs a barbecue
stand behind the ballpark’s center field fence.

“The fans, they’re completely
different this year. I walk down
the street, they shout over at
me. That wasn’t happening (the)
past few years,” Sanguillen said
before a game last week.
There hadn’t been much shouting at all — either the good kind
or the frustrated kind. While two
Steeler teams won Super Bowls
in the last decade and a Penguin
team won a Stanley Cup, the
Pirates watched from the cellar
as one of the worst pro baseball
teams playing in one of the major leagues’ best ballparks. Their
streak of consecutive losing
seasons is unparalleled in major
American sports.
Early season runs in 2011
and, more prominently, last year
ended with post-All-Star-break
implosions that have Pittsburghers skittish about supporting
anything related to baseball at

least until the back-to-school
sales begin. And even after this
season’s shining start, a recent
four-game losing streak — even
after the nine-game winning
streak that preceded it — produced audible mopery.
“It’s tough to be a fan when
you lose 20 years in a row,” said
Jeremy Bromley, 25, watching
batting practice one evening last
week before he saw the Bucs lose
to the Oakland Athletics, 2-1.
And yet …
The
bubble-gum-chewing
Clint Hurdle, manager since
the 2011 season, calls this
year’s Pirates “the best team
that we’ve had since I’ve been
here.” The team’s official gameday magazine last week dared
to contain an article with the
headline: “Hurdle’s Pirates are
shaping up as one of baseball’s
best teams.” Signs in the stands

express an ascending optimism
(“It’s Our Year,” says one). On
the field and off, players seem
to be having more fun. And one
of the city’s best-known sports
columnists, Gene Collier of the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, calls
this “a fateful and long-awaited
Pittsburgh summer.”
“For 20 years, it’s been the
Penguins and the Steelers. And
the Pirates have been the afterthought. And now the Pirates
are in the conversation. They’re
relevant,” says Scott Kaminski,
45, a lifelong Pirates fan and
college baseball player who is
now an attorney in neighboring
West Virginia. “For 20 years it’s
just been, ‘Well, let’s go see a
Pirates game for something
to do,’ or ‘Some great player’s
coming into town,’ or “It’s a
great ballpark.’” Now it’s ‘Let’s
go see the Pirates.’”

Are You A Medicare
Part B Beneficiary?
Beginning July, 1, 2013,
there’s a chance your current
mail order provider may no
longer be able to ship your
covered diabetes testing
supplies to you. Don’t worry,
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
can help. We’ll not only help
you get the supplies you need, we’ll also give you the ability to
better manage your diabetes and live a healthier lifestyle. We’re
proud to be your partner in diabetes care.
Ask your pharmacist for more information on how they can help.
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone: 740-992-2955 | Fax: 740-992-5244
GoodNeighborPharmacy.com
Hours: Mon-Fri: 9:00am - 7:00pm, Sat: 9:00am - 2:00pm, Sun: Closed

Chris Lee | St. Louis Post-Dispatch | MCT photo

60433476

The Pittsburgh Pirates’ Pedro Alvarez (24) is congratulated by teammates Garrett Jones, Andrew McCutchen and Neil Walker after hitting a grand slam in the first inning against the
St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday, June 30, 2012, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri. The
Pirates won their fourth in a row, 7-3.

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