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

60434391

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Holzer welcomes
new doctor.... Page 3

Partly sunny.
High near 80. Low
around 58... Page 2

Browns hoping
to shed losing
image.... Page 6

Jo Anna Morris, 73
William G. ‘Bill’ Scarberry, 87
Robert Milton Shank, 84
Wilma Thomas, 81
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 118

Council hears energy aggregation benefits
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — While a proposal on the aggregation electricity
program for Middleport village was
presented at Monday night’s meeting, no action was taken by Middleport Village Council on a group buying plan pending further information.
Aggregation is when a group of
people, like in a village, comes together to have greater buying power
which results a lower rate for consumers, explained Mike Hollinger of
Aspen Energy, the broker for Constellation, who met with Council.
Hollinger said that a combined
community rate is “something below
six percent.” By going alone, customers can’t get the buying power which
comes from “bundling all together.”

He reported that nothing can
happen without the approval of the
people, that it has to go on the ballot following two public hearings.
The earliest it could possibly go on
the ballot is Primary 2014 because
of the requirement for the advance
hearings. Asked when those hearings
should take place, Hollinger suggested not too far in advance of the
primary election.
Hollinger explained that no
changes are required for continued
electrical service, that there are no
hookups or billing changes. He said
bills would continue to come from
the power company but with a lower
electricity price secured by Constellation, and that the utility company
would continue to service distribution lines and meters as well as respond to service issues.

In conclusion, Hollinger said that
“opting into a municipal aggregation
electricity program is financially beneficial to customers … it is a buying
opportunity for the community.”
During the meeting, Officer Mony
Wood who handles the jail operation,
reported that he got a good report on
the jail inspection which took place
recently. He said the jail is full most
of the time and sometimes he’s having
trouble finding a bed for everyone. He
said two additional beds are needed,
one for each cell, and that the cost is
between $325 and $400 for each one.
Council approved the purchase.
Wood said that the village is workSarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel
ing closely with the sheriff’s depart- Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood, center, accepts a $1,500 doment sharing information and ser- nation from the Village of Middleport to be used for the Shervices. He noted that the sheriff is iff’s Office K-9 unit. Pictured with Wood are Middleport Police
See BENEFITS ‌| 3

Chief Bruce Swift, right, and Assistant Chief Monty Wood, left.
The donation was approved by council at Monday’s meeting.

2013 Big Bend Blues Bash headliner Bernard Allison

Big Bend Blues Bash
set for this weekend

Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Numerous wreaths were placed at the McCook monument by various local and state organizations and Civil War
descendants. Here Randy Smith reads a proclamation from the Meigs County Board of Commissioners.

See BASH ‌| 3

Meigs Commissioners
approve agenda items

A tribute to Major
Daniel McCook

Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

PORTLAND — Meigs Countians who fought
for the Union in the Battle of Buffington Island and
their descendants were honored in Saturday’s ceremony held at the monument of Union Major Daniel
McCook in Portland as a part of the commemoration
of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War.
See TRIBUTE |‌ 3

The rifle carried by Major Daniel McCook in the Battle
of Buffington Island was displayed in the Portland Community Center Museum for the Civil War sesquicentennial commemoration.

POMEROY — The
Pomeroy Blues &amp; Jazz
Society’s Big Bend Blues
Bash kicks off its annual
event on Friday evening
and continues throughout

the day on Saturday.
The bash will kick off on
Friday at 6 p.m. with a multiple performers throughout the evening.
Ben Davis Jr. of Jackson,
Ohio, will kick off the eve-

Jean Hilton, president of the McCook Circle #104 of the
Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic, presented a
tribute at the monument rededication. She also spoke
at the park memorial service for the Ohio Department
Ladies of the Grant Army.

POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners handled several agenda items during last week’s regular meeting.
A request for a renewal levy had been received by the commissioners on behalf of the Meigs County Council on Aging.
The commissioners referred the request to the auditor’s
office to certify the amounts required for the paperwork
before it can be voted on by the commissioners.
The levy would be a renewal of the current five year 1.1
mill levy. The proper documentation must be approved by
Aug. 7 to appear on the November ballot.
The commissioners also received a request for the
change of name of Dr. Jones Road in Scipio Township to
Martin Lane as requested by landowners. A letter of support from the Scipio Township Trustees was also received
with the request. The request was referred to the Meigs
County Engineer and Prosecutor to complete the requirements before a change could occur.
A request from the Meigs Historical Society for second
half funding was approved. The amount is $3,500.
New line items were created as follows, E001-E06, sewer, payroll/fringes and E002-E06, water, payroll/fringes.
A transfer back from an advance was approved in the
amount of $3,780 into county fund.
A resolution was approved to allocate $500 annually to
the roads and bridges line item. The money is from the
sales and use tax.
Bills were approved as presented in the amount of
$241,994.71, with $10.253.70 from county general.
As detailed in an article on Friday, the commissioners
approved a proclamation in recognition of the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Buffington Island.
The commissioners meet each Thursday at 11 a.m. on
the third floor of the Meigs County Courthouse.

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

For The Record

Meigs Local Briefs

911
July 17
9:01 a.m., Betzing Road, chest pain; 9:13 a.m., Tornado
Road, chest pain; 12:16 p.m., Crouser Road, lines down/
pole down; 1:23 p.m., Elk Run Road, dizziness; 1:27 p.m.,
Church Street, medical alarm; 2:25 p.m., Ohio 7 and 681,
motor vehicle collision; 2:26 p.m., Little Forest Run Road,
fall; 4:27 p.m., Texas Road, difficulty breathing; 5:28 p.m.,
Seneca Drive, fall; 5:29 p.m., East Main Street, unknown;
7:10 p.m., East Memorial Drive, chest pain; 7:38 p.m.,
Happy Hollow Road, high temperature; 10:31 p.m., Butternut Avenue, difficulty breathing; 11:01 p.m., South
Third Avenue, kidney stone possible.
July 18
12:09 a.m., Pearl Street, chest pain; 12:47 a.m., Bald
Knob-Stiversville Road, chest pain; 2:21 a.m., Woods
Road, fractured body part; 4:55 a.m., Ohio 124, abdominal
pain; 9:36 a.m., West Main Street, anxiety/panic attack;
9:55 a.m., South Third Avenue, heat related emergency;
10:13 p.m., East Memorial Drive, chest pain; 11:16 a.m.,
East Memorial Drive, chest pain; 12:55 p.m., Swick Road,
pain general; 1:31 p.m., Liberty Lane, chest pain; 2:45
p.m., Ohio 124, motor vehicle collision; 3:20 p.m., South
Third Street, dizziness; 5:14 p.m., East Memorial Drive,
chest pain; 6:19 p.m., Leading Creek Road, motor vehicle
collision; 7:42 p.m., Walnut Street, dizziness.
July 19
12:02 a.m., Ohio 684, structure fire; 1:32 a.m., Oak Grove
Road, hemorrhage; 1:48 a.m., Pearl Street, chest pain; 8:01
a.m., Ohio 124, 12:23 p.m., Ohio 143, difficulty breathing;
4:17 p.m., West Main Street, motor vehicle collision; 7:26
p.m., Rose Road, cardiac arrest; 8:12 p.m., East Second
Street, seizure/convulsions; 11:44 p.m., Lincoln Street, difficulty breathing; 11:46 p.m., Grant Street, difficulty breathing.
July 20
6:03 a.m., East Memorial Drive, fall; 7:10 a.m., Beech Street,
chest pain; 10:09 a.m., West Main Street, chest pain; 10:16
a.m., Lasher Road, altered mental status; 2:27 p.m., Nichols
Road, diabetic emergency; 11:19 p.m., Ohio 124, chest pain.
July 21
5:47 a.m., Beech Street, laceration; 10:25 a.m., West
Main Street, difficulty breathing; 1:09 p.m., Beech Street,
chest pain; 6:02 p.m., East Memorial Drive, chest pain;
7:43 p.m., Peach Fork Road, headache.
July 22
3:48 a.m., East Memorial Drive, fall; 4:10 a.m., Pearl
Street, chest pain; 5:13 p.m., McCumber Road, difficulty
breathing; 5:55 p.m., West Main Street, chest pain; 7:31
p.m., New Lima Road, difficulty breathing; 9:11 p.m., Butternut Avenue, cardiac arrest; 9:58 p.m., Rose Hill Road,
laceration; 10:30 p.m., Pearl Street, chest pain.
July 23
5:17 a.m., Pearl Street, Chest Pain.

Stover Reunion
RACINE — The 77th
annual reunion of the Stover will be held Saturday,
Aug. 3 at the Racine Methodist Church, in the shelter
house if it’s nice weather, in
the church fellowship room
if it rains. A potluck dinner
will be served at noon with
a program to follow.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Wednesday: A slight chance of showers before noon,
then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms between
noon and 3 p.m. Partly sunny, with a high near 80. North
wind around 7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 58.
North wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82. Calm
wind becoming northeast around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 61.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62.
Saturday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a
high near 84. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 81. Chance of precipitation is
40 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 83.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 47.10
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 88.39
Big Lots (NYSE) — 35.98
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 51.55
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 91.60
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.40
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.25
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.27
Collins (NYSE) — 70.68
DuPont (NYSE) — 57.12
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.54
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.71
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 55.96
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 56.67
Kroger (NYSE) — 38.93
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 53.17
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 76.87
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.00
BBT (NYSE) — 35.73

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.33
Pepsico (NYSE) — 86.20
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.39
Rockwell (NYSE) — 93.04
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.91
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.41
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.81
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 78.55
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 7.23
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.16
Worthington (NYSE) — 36.24
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for July 23, 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.

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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.
Basket game fund raiser
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 Pome-

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

roy. Hosted by River City
Players to benefit performing arts opportunities.
Summer Craft Expo
RACINE — A Summer
craft expo and Christmas
in July will be held from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday,
July 27, at Kountry Resort
Campground. Admission is
free. Activities will include
a craft show, kids Olympics (11 a.m.), Christmas
cookie bake off (4 p.m.),
the cloggers (6 p.m.) and a
hayride (8 p.m.)
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

Vacation Bible Schools
RACINE — Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church will host Vacation
Bible School from 6-8:30 p.m., July
22-25 at the Sutton Church Building, Bashan 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.

TUPPERS PLAINS — Bethel
Worship Center will host its annual Vacation Bible School Monday
through Friday, July 22-26 at the
church from 6:30-8:45 p.m. This
year’s event theme is “Gotta Move!:
Keepin’ in step with the Spirit.”
Bethel Pastor Rob Barber and Kid
Zone children’s director Dot Norman
welcome all area children ages three
years through sixth grade to join in
the VBS fun with singing, Bible lessons, snacks, games, crafts and more!
Parents can register their kids on site
at the church, or in advance at www.
bethelwc.org. For more information
please visit Bethel’s web site or call
the church at (740) 667-6793.
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.
MIDDLEPORT — The First Baptist Church of Middleport, 211 S.
Sixth Ave., will be holding Vacation
Bible School beginning Monday, July
29 through Thursday, August 1, with
a pool party being held on Friday,
August 2 for the attendees. VBS is
for children of preschool age through
the 8th grade. This year’s theme is
Jesus Loves Me. There will be lessons about Jesus, music, games, and
snacks each evening from 6 to 8 p.m.
Registration will be held on Monday
or the first night that your child can
attend. A fun VBS Kickoff will be
held the afternoon of Sunday, July
28, following the morning worship
service. Bouncies and games will
be in the church yard. All kids that
would like to attend VBS are invited
to the Kickoff. Children under 12
should be accompanied by an adult.
Bring your lawn chairs.
Missionary Service
HARRISIONVILLE — A mis-

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60431079

sionary service will be held at the
Harrisonville Community Church,
S.R. 684, at 7 p.m. Friday. Speaker
will be Samuel Davis, missionary
worker from Mexico. The public
is invited. Pastor of the church is
Theron Durham.
Community Dinner
MIDDLEPORT — A community
dinner will be held with serving beginning at 5 p.m. on Friday, July 26
at the Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center. The menu will
include sloppy joes, tossed salad,
macaroni and cheese and dessert.
Everyone is welcome.
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.
Benefit sing
CHESTER —A Fall Harvest Gospel Sing will be held at the Chester
Nazarene Church, 6 p.m. on Sunday,
July 28. Singers will be Martie Short,
The Dollys, and Brian and Family
Connections. It will be a song and
praise service.

Judge rules for Ohio men’s same-sex marriage
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Two Ohio men who want
their out-of-state marriage recognized as one
of them nears death have
gotten a ruling in their favor from a federal judge,
who wrote that they deserve to be treated with
dignity in a case that’s
seen as encouraging for
same-sex marriage supporters in the state.
Federal Judge Timothy
Black ordered Monday
that the death certificate
of ailing John Arthur
show that he was married
and that James Obergefell
is his surviving spouse.
The ruling means the
pair can be buried next
to each other in Arthur’s
family plot, located at a
cemetery that only allows

descendants and spouses.
Ohio does not recognize
same-sex marriage.
Arthur and Obergefell
say they’ve been in love
for more than 20 years,
that Arthur is likely on the
verge of dying from Lou
Gehrig’s disease, and that
“they very much want the
world to officially remember and record their union
as a married couple,” according to a lawsuit filed
by the couple Friday
against Ohio Gov. John
Kasich, Attorney General
Mike DeWine and a Cincinnati official responsible
for filing death certificates.
Obergefell said Tuesday
that he and Arthur’s fight
was about more than just a
piece of paper.
“To have a federal judge

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Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Road 10
(Carpenter Hill Road)
will be closed for approximately one month beginning July 29. County
forces will be replacing a
culvert with a new bridge
on County Road 10 at a
site approximately 2,000
feet north of County Road
17 (Cotterill Road).
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.

Meigs County Church Calendar

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say, ‘You know what, John
and Jim, your relationship
exists and it’s just as valid
as any other married couple,’” Obergefell said. “It’s
an incredible feeling —
that we do matter.”
Though Black’s order
was specific to the couple’s
case, opponents of Ohio’s
ban on gay marriage were
encouraged by it.
“This is one more step
toward marriage equality
in the state of Ohio,” said
the couple’s attorney, Al
Gerhardstein, who said
he’s gotten calls from other same-sex couples who
married in other states and
are exploring their options
to have their marriage recognized in Ohio.
He said that Arthur and
Obergefell were courageous to take on the legal
fight, given Arthur’s declining health.
“They’re in the middle
of every couple’s worst
nightmare,” Gerhardstein
said. “This is a very difficult time for them and to
share this time with the
world as they try to solve
these problems — it’s been
a huge sacrifice for them
and I admire them.”
The couple, determined
to marry before Arthur

died, flew in a special jet
with medical equipment to
Maryland, which recognizes gay marriage. They wed
July 11 inside the plane on
an airport tarmac before
returning to Cincinnati
the same day, according to
court records.
In his ruling, Black said
that historically, Ohio law
has recognized out-ofstate marriages as valid
as long as they were legal
where they took place,
pointing to marriages between cousins and involving minors.
“How then can Ohio,
especially given the historical status of Ohio law,
single out same-sex marriages as ones it will not
recognize?” Black wrote.
“The short answer is that
Ohio cannot.”
DeWine’s spokesman,
Dan Tierney, said in a
statement that “this is a
temporary ruling at a preliminary stage under sad
circumstances.”
He said DeWine’s office will defend the right
of Ohioans to define marriage and that the U.S. Supreme Court has recently
emphasized that it is a
definition that traditionally lies with states.

�Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Doris Kampe, MD, joins Community Calendar
Holzer Health System
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Health System announced Monday that Doris
Kampe, MD, Hospitalist, has joined the
team of highly skilled professionals.
Dr. Kampe completed her internal medicine residency at the Interfaith Medical
Center, Brooklyn, New York. Dr. Kampe
will be providing inpatient services at our
medical center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Holzer Health System is a multi-discipline health care system of over 160
Board Certified Physicians providing
care in more than thirty areas of expertise in fifteen clinical locations throughout southeastern Ohio and western
West Virginia. Holzer is committed to
providing the best and brightest medical
professionals in our health system, and
are proud to welcome Dr. Kampe to the
Holzer family.
For a complete list of services, please
call 1-855-4-HOLZER or visit us on the
web at www.holzer.org.

Thursday, July 25
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid
Waste Management District Policy Committee will meet at 3:30 p.m. at the district
office, 1056 S. New Hampshire Avenue,
Wellston, Ohio.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Soil
and Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will meet at 11 a.m. at the district office located at 113 East Memorial
Drive, Suite D.
RACINE — The Southern Local Board
of Education will hold a special meeting at
7:30 a.m. in the Elementary Library to discuss a renewal levy and any other business
that may be brought before the board.
Saturday, July 27
CHESTER — The Chester Township
Trustees will have a special meeting at 9
a.m. at the town hall.
RACINE — The Circle Family Reunion
will be held at Carmel Church with dinner
beginning at noon.
Monday, July 29
POMEROY — The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9

Doris Kampe

a.m. at 117 East Memorial Drive.
Tuesday, July 30
JACKSON — PERI District 7 (Gallia,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, and Vinton counties) will have
the annual district meeting at the Jackson County Extension Office off Ohio 93
at 17 Standpipe Road in Jackson. Registration is at 10 a.m. and the presentation
by OPERS on health care begins at 10:30
a.m. All PERI members are welcome to
attend. For further information contact
Carolyn Weddle at (740) 533-9376.
Wednesday, July 31
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern Local Board of Education will meet at 6:30
p.m. for their regular July meeting. The
meeting will be held in the Eastern Elementary library conference room.
Tuesday, Aug. 13
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Board will have
their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the
TPRSD office.

Benefits
From Page 1
getting a drug dog, and
said Middleport will benefit from the work the
dog will be doing to help
out police officers. It was
proposed that a good gesture of the cooperative
efforts on the part of the
village would be to make

a one-time donation to the
purchase and training of
the dog. Council voted to
make a donation of $1,500.
The need for an upgrade in the bucket (water) truck was discussed.
It was reported that after
checking around the village found a heavy duty
truck at Wheels and Deals

at a good price. The cost
with the old truck as a
trade-in would be $4,600.
The mention of the truck
touched off some discussion about whether it was
needed since as Council
member Roger Manley
charged “we just keep
buying equipment,” and
resident Lawrence Powell

commenting about employees “running up and
down the street in trucks”
and then insisting the village has too many employees, “more than ever” he
said. Both Mayor Mike
Gerlach and the financial officer, Susan Baker,
contended that wasn’t
true, and with that Pow-

ell asked for a complete
list of village employees.
Baker said she would get
the list together for him.
When Council voted
on purchasing the truck,
the count was three for,
Craig Wehrung, Emerson
Heighton,
and
Rae
Moore, and two against,
Manley and Penny Burge.

Only a majority vote was
required to move forward
on the purchase.
In other business, Council voted to retain Travis
Grate for IT services (technology) on an on-call basis
and to handle upgrades in
the electronic equipment.
The rate set was 20 hours
a month at $20 an hour.

Tribute
From Page 1
The monument was placed
near the site of Major McCook’s
death by the Ohio Historical
Society many year ago and was
refurbished earlier this year in
preparation for the sesquicentennial commemoration. Major
McCook was one of the “Fighting McCooks” which numbered
15, who fought in the war to
save the Union. Major McCook
was killed near the site of the

monument on July 19, 1863.
For the weekend observance,
the rifle carried by Major McCook which is a part of the permanent display at the McCook
House, was brought to Meigs
County and exhibited over the
weekend in the Portland Community Center Museum. Valued at over $200,000, the rifle
sealed in a display case which
included a picture of the famed
warrior, was under guard by an
office of the Meigs County Sher-

iff’s office while here.
For the ceremony honoring
McCook, Keith Ashley, Ohio
Commander the Ohio Commandery Military Order of the
Loyal Legion of the United
States, (MOLLUS,) who organized the recognition program opened the ceremony
with a bugle call to attention.
A prayer was given by the Rev.
John Frank and the pledge of
allegiance was led by members
of Boy Scout Troop 299. On

hand to participate in the program was Robert Irwin who
portrayed Araham Lincoln, Jeffrey Burden, the Loyal Legion
commander-in-chief, and David
Mowery, a Civil War author.
More than two dozen wreaths
were placed at the monument
by various military organizations, those holding political
offices, and descendants. Representing the Daniel McCook
family at the event was David
Holmes of Marietta, Ga., a di-

rect descendant, who placed
the first wreath. A resolution by
the Meigs County Commissioners in support and appreciation
of the event was presented by
Commissioner Randy Smith
Jean Hilton, president of the
McCook Circle 14 LGAR gave
a widow’s tribute, and in conclusion Ashley presented blue
ribbons of recognition to descendants of Meigs County’s
Union soldiers present for the
observance.

Bash
ning at 6 p.m., followed by
local rock group Blitzkrieg
at 6:45 p.m..
The Muggs, a Detroit,
Michigan based group, will
perform at 8 p.m., followed
by The Gas House Gorillas
at 9:30 p.m.
Day one will wrap up
with a 10 p.m. performance
by Rattle Snake Shake at
the Court Street Grill.
Ben Davis Jr. is an
Americana/Alt. Country/
Folk singer. A veteran of
the stage at the young age
of 23, Davis has been host
of Open Stage at the Court
Street Grill. A new release,
and his first full-length album with the Dirt Poor
Troubadours, is expected
later this year. “I’m really
excited to share this record with everyone and let
you hear the intensity and
variety the band brings
into the picture!” The Dirt
Poor Troubadours are Jacob Dunn a fellow singer/
songwriter from Pomeroy
on bass, Dustin Nash of
Middleport on lead guitar
and Nate Sisson of Pomeroy on drums.
Blitzkrieg is a fast paced,
hard hitting rock band
formed in 1978 in the rolling hills of Meigs County.
The current lineup includes
the bands founding father,
Phil Moon on lead guitar
and vocals, his brother, Lyle
Moon on bass and vocals,
Rob Heady on drums and
vocals and Ed Sisson on
rhythm guitar and vocals.
Touted as an “arena rock
bar band” the boys in Blitzkrieg love playing hard rock
and classic metal covers
from your favorite bands as
well as originals.
The Muggs is an American blues-rock band from
Detroit, Michigan. Formed
in February 2000, the band
features guitarist Danny
Methric, bassist Tony
DeNardo and drummer
Todd Glass. The Muggs
are many times over winners of the famed Detroit
Music Industry awards including Best Blues Artist
and Best Rock Band and
stars of several automobile
television commercials for
Chevy and Dodge.
The Gas House Gorillas
are a New York City based

band lead by singer Rick
Fink and bassist Crusher
Carmen. The Gorillas
are considered by many
to be the most fearlessly
uninhibited
performers
ever witnessed and a sure
fire guarantee for a rippin’ good time. The band
describes their sound as
“Punk Americana” a broad
range of styles that include
Jump Blues, Rock &amp; Roll,
Swing, Cajun Music and
early Punk Rock.
The Rattlesnake Shake
are a 4 piece Fleetwood
Mac tribute band from Detroit, Michigan, covering
the work of the great Peter
Green. The Peter Green
era of Fleetwood Mac,
1967-1970, is considered
to be some of the most
influential British Blues
music ever produced. The
Rattlesnake Shake consist
of the Muggs, Danny Methric on guitar and vocals,
Tony DeNardo on bass,
Todd Glass on drums plus
the addition of Betty LaVette guitarist, Brett Lucas, on guitar and vocals.
Saturday’s events will
feature the return of the
Blues School for Kids, the
film fest and 10 bands performing on the Pomeroy
Parking Lot.
Blues breakfast will be
served at Court Street
Grill beginning at 9 a.m.,
where the film fest will begin at noon.
The Blues Film Fest is
featuring the blues documentary Songs From the
Road at the Court Street
Suite. The great blues
singer and guitarist Luther
Allison died in August of
1997, just a month after
being diagnosed with a
malignant lung tumor.
Four days prior to that
diagnosis, he played a blistering show in Montreal; it
was filmed for later airplay
on Canadian television,
and most of the show is
captured on the CD/DVD
set. Songs from the Road
is a bittersweet but more
than welcome look back at
one of America’s lost musical treasures.
For the sixth year a Blues
School for Kids will be held
on Saturday at the Court
Street Mini-Park. The
Blues School, which begins
at 1 p.m., is a free songwrit-

ing and performing workshop conducted by Todd
Burge, a full-time performing country folk songwriter
from West Virginia. The
kids coming to the Blues
School will write a blues
song and learn to play it
on harmonicas. Following
a free luncheon in the park,
they will have another practice and then perform on
the main stage at the Big
Bend Blues Bash.
Performing on the main
stage on Saturday will be
The Euphemism (1 p.m);
Blues Cowboys (2 p.m.);
Echo Mecca (3 p.m.); Blue
Z Band (4 p.m.); Hank
Poole as Elvis (5 p.m.);
Chris Sutton (5 p.m.); PettCrow Band (6 p.m.); Chaz
Humley &amp; the Effects (7
p.m.); Albert Castiglia (8
p.m.); and Bernard Allison
(9:30 p.m.).
Todd Wolfe Band will also
perform at 10 p.m. on Saturday at Court Street Grill.
The Euphemism is
an Athens based group
which has an already accomplished talent as high
school classmates with six
years of experience. This
band has now graduated to
a new level of music as college knocks on their horizons. Their originals cover
a broad range of musical
sound and genres, with a
refreshing flavor of rock,
blues, jazz, and well owned
covers. Zack Shafer serves
as the guitarist and vocalist. He is accomplished in
acoustic and electric guitar
playing with an occasional
harmonic accompaniment.
John Mollica adds soulful
bass lines that give their
songs a perfect depth and
originality. Yonry Zhu,
on drums, lays down his
own creative beat with
high speed riffs to low

bass rhythm that begs the
body to move.
The Blues Cowboys are
a group of friends who’ve
played music together in
some form or another most
of their lives, often with
each other. The group began when David “Uncle
Buck” McPherson began
having bands appear at his
rustic saloon and dance
barn in the deep-country
near New Marshfield, Ohio.
Echo Mecca is an Ohiobased musical collaboration between longtime
friends and co-conspirators Stephanie Filson and
Brad Hoffman. Hoffman,
who is an accomplished
bass player, began relaying
the music in his head via
computer software a few
years ago, but Echo Mecca
wasn’t born until those
musical gems were fused
with Filson’s lyrics and
vocals. Compositions are
at times jazz-like, ethereal
or even spiritual. The duo
is just getting started, but
Echo Mecca is on the rise.
The Blue Z band hail
from the river cities, playing
classic rock and blues. This
power trio includes guitar
madman Sammy Doolittle,
bassist Milt Call and drummer Anthony Call.
Chris Sutton has been
playing acoustic blues as
a soloist and with his band
C&amp;S Railroad since 2003.
As soloists go he is a triple
threat, vocals, songwriting, and guitar playing.
His talents have taken
him twice to the International Blues Challenge in
Memphis, Tennessee as
a soloist. Once in 2004
sponsored by the BJFM
and again in 2006 with
the Western Pennsylvania
Blues Society as his sponsor. He won again in Mari-

etta, and will return to the
IBC’s in 2013.
An all-original bluesrock band, Pett-Crow has
an up-beat sound that is
all their own. Young in
age but seasoned beyond
their years in talent, each
member plays multiple
instruments, writes and
records their own music
and is putting a new face
on Blues-Rock. Front-man
Wes Crow (age 15), bassist Julia Crow (age 14) and
drummer Brandon Pettiford (age 13) are swiftly
making a name for themselves on both local and national scenes in their quest
to keep the blues alive
for the next generation.
Their unique take on blues
blends a very robust mix of
blues, acoustic, funk, soul
and, of course, some good
ol’ rock ‘n roll.
Spanning 60 years, the
music of Chaz Humley and
the Effects is as timely today as it was when Robert
Johnson went down to the
crossroads, as it was when
Albert King made his
memorable remark about
bad luck being all that he
had, or as it was when BB
King lamented that the
‘thrill is gone.’
Albert Castiglia is a
South Florida guitar man
who’s made a big splash on
the National Blues scene
this past decade. He got
a big break after meeting
Junior Wells in 1996, and
became Junior’s lead guitar
player until Wells passing in
1998. His 2008 CD, These
are the Days, contained five
original Castiglia songs,
including a tribute to his
mentor Junior Wells, “Godfather of the Blues.” These
are the Days earned a Blues
Music Award nomination
for “Song of the Year” for

the original track, “Bad
Year Blues.”
Bernard Allison — headliner for the 2013 Blues
Bash — is the guitar-playing, singing, and songwriting son of late legendary
blues guitarist Luther Allison. True to form for this
“chip off the old block,” the
young Allison injects every
bit as much energy into
his live shows as his father
did. When he was seven
or eight, he began having
aspirations of becoming a
guitar slinger like his father. Luther Allison was
more than just a casual
record collector, and so
Bernard benefited from
his father and brothers’
collections of classic blues
and gospel.
The Todd Wolfe Band
are based in New York
state. Wolfe began playing on the New York scene
back in 1979 with his band
Nitetrain. The wave of guitar players that included
Eric Clapton, Peter Green,
Jimi Hendrix, Michael
Bloomfield were and are
influential and evident
in Wolfe’s style and approach to guitar-playing.
The Todd Wolfe Band with
Todd on guitar and vocals,
drummer Roger Voss and
bassist Justine Gardner
play with real tubes, tones
crackling with a blues-adelic sound reminiscent
of the best rock and roll
bands of the ’60s.
Admission to the event
is $10 on Friday and $15
on Saturday, with kids 12
and under admitted free.
Weekend passes are also
available for $20. Admission to the events at Court
Street Grill is $5.
Lawn chairs are welcome, but pets and coolers
are not permitted.

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

60431144

From Page 1

60431197

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Avoid what-not-to-say
Getting Syria-s
moments with new parents
Tom H. Hastings

Leanne Italie

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Your
sex life will never be the
same. In my day. What, not
breast-feeding?
From diet tips to “little
baby, little problems,”
sleep-deprived and superstressed new parents have
heard it all. And they want
you to stop it.
As Britain’s Prince William and his wife, Kate,
move along on their parenting journey, it seems
even the queen has had a
what-not-to-say moment.
According to a special edition of Us magazine on raising royals, she exclaimed
soon after William’s birth:
“Thank goodness he hasn’t
ears like his father!”
Most every new parent has a greatest hits of
lame advice and annoying
remarks. For fitness buff
Brook Benten, mom of
4-month-old Hayes, her list
included her post-baby body.
“My swollen uterus
made me look like I was
still five months pregnant,”
said the Round Rock, Texas, mom. “I was elated to
be a mother, but I knew
good and well that I looked
baaaaad. Well-intending
visitors would look me
once over and say, ‘Wow!
You look great!’”
And how SHOULD that
have gone? “Compliment
our baby. Tell us he/she
is the cutest baby you’ve
ever seen. But don’t compliment the body of the
new mother.”
Devon Clement is a postpartum doula in Princeton,
N.J. Basically, her job description is to be helpful
to new parents. She has
overheard some doozies
and made up a facetious
script for clients to hang
on their doors. It covers a
lot of ground:
“Dear Guests,
Thank you so much for
coming to see our new
addition(s), and for bringing your smiles, gifts, and

good wishes. Thank you,
also, for leaving your germs
at home! If you think you
may be sick, we’ll have a
visit by waving at each other through the window. We
also greatly appreciate the
hot or easy-to-heat-up meal
you’ve brought us, and the
fact that you plan to keep
your visit nice and short.
We’ve had a busy few
days/weeks around here, so
please excuse the mess in
the house and the fact that
I am still in my pajamas. …
I may need to breastfeed
while you are here. If this
offends you or makes you
uncomfortable, I keep some
blankets close by for you to
put over your head.
While we find it very
interesting to hear your
stories about what things
were like when you had
your babies, please keep
your advice to yourself
unless asked, especially
if it comes with an air
of judgment. We have
enough information coming at us, and we are doing OK, thanks.”
Perhaps most acutely
distressed in the very early
months are the parents of
preemies.
Megan Lubin of Philadelphia gave birth three
months early to her now2-year-old and spent that
time in a hospital’s neonatal
intensive care unit. Once
he did come home, during
winter, she and her husband didn’t host many visitors or go out that much.
“When we did interact
with the outside world,
the comments and questions flooded in,” she said.
“We certainly didn’t mind
if people were curious or
genuinely interested in
our son, but it was hurtful
at times when strangers
would compare their child
to ours.”
Things not to say to the
parents of a preemie?
“‘Well, my child is the
same age and much bigger!’ Or, ‘Your son is awful-

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ly thin,’” Lubin suggests.
“The worst was when they
would compare what their
child was able to do.”
Brandi Jordan, who owns
a parenting resource center
in Los Angeles, said the
way to avoid ticking off new
parents is pretty simple.
“I think that people
should not give advice.
Period,” she said. “People see it as open license
when they see someone
with a baby to give them
their opinion on how they
should have socks on, or
they should have a hat on,
or they need sunblock,
or you shouldn’t be taking them out, they’re too
young. Some people make
themselves armchair experts because they’ve read
a lot of things.”
That, she said, is why
the what-not-to-say problem is so out of control
these days. Blogs, social
networks and simple online search are the armchair expert’s best friends,
said Jordan, who has a
6-year-old.
Instead of advice, how
about not coming over
for a visit when you have
a cold, even though you
think you and your kids
are no longer contagious?
How about not asking the
new parents of multiples:
“Are they natural or IVF?”
But she has a suggestion for new parents, too:
How about not rejecting
outright the experiences
of your own parents due to
their grandparently status?
“A lot of new parents discount what their own parents actually know, but a
lot of grandparents do have
good traditional things that
work really well,” she said.
First, she said, parents
need to realize that they
really do need help. “Before, you didn’t need help
because your family was
right there and did everything, but so many people
are far removed from
their families.”

Finally, the Pentagon is getting a bit realistic about Syria and possible US intervention, with a report of options laid out
by letter from the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey,
to Carl Levin of the Senate Armed Forces
Committee, and the Chiefs warn about expense, loss, and blowback.
The Cold War was a time of proxy
wars, showcasing the relative strengths
and weaknesses of the arms produced
by the two superpowers, fought in other
people’s countries. Indeed, except for
Hungary in 1956, no war was fought on
the soil of white people the whole time,
an indication of the deep cynicism of
both sides. The US always had better
big weapons and the Soviets had the
daily weapon of choice, the AK-47.
Soviet tanks were only good for rolling
over friendlies in the Warsaw Pact and
their nukes were big and dumb, but
their AKs were the gold standard for
violent insurgency.
Most of the world is less excited about
being crash test dummies for the US and
Russia nowadays, although Syria seems
to be an exception. Basher al-Assad
spends his entire allowance every week
on new shipments of Russian warmaking
gear to use against his own people. The
rebels get their gear mostly from the US
through Qatar and Saudi Arabia, often
also via Turkey. Both sides fight dirty, ignore international rules of warfare, and
yet the kneejerk reaction of many hawks
in the US is to ship weapons to anyone
fighting the Russian weapon-wielders.
Just because the US-backed mujahedeen
in Afghanistan used their leftover weapons given to them originally to fight the
Soviets against the US later—hence the
term blowback—let’s forget that ever
happened and give more guns and rockets and ammunition to insurgents who
behead, execute, blow up civilian markets, torture, and in the most ghastly
extreme case, a Syrian rebel leader is
shown carving the heart out a government soldier and eating it. Those are the
fighters Republicans in Congress want
to support and many Democrats actually
join this bloodthirsty insanity.
But even though Congress — and
apparently President Obama to some
degree — have mostly forgotten those
lessons, some in the Pentagon seem to
suddenly remember, especially as they
see the sequester shine a more realistic
light on the formerly illimitable funding picture.
The usual kneejerk kill-em-all-let-Godsort-em-out are attacking Dempsey.
Will someone tell John McCain that if
he keeps up with that apoplectic visage,

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respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
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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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Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words.
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accepted for publication.

But even though Congress
— and apparently
President Obama to some
degree — have mostly
forgotten those lessons,
some in the Pentagon
seem to suddenly
remember, especially as
they see the sequester
shine a more realistic light
on the formerly illimitable
funding picture.

one of these days it’s going to become
his permanent look — oops! Too late.
The sad truth is that the nonviolent
revolution was stolen from the Syrian
people, who started their Arab Spring
just as nonviolently as did Egyptians,
and very soon after. When the US intervened in Libya, that made the violent ones in Syria assume they’d get
US military help too, so they picked up
arms. The nonviolent revolution was
overwhelmed and defeated in no small
measure by this Libya Effect, and that is
indeed an Obama decision that resulted
in lots of gratitude from Libyans (you
could tell by the way they assassinated
our ambassador) and also set total fear
in Assad’s heart and made him image
Qaddaffi, bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. That made him totally commit to
clinging to power by all means, including the ones that he uses so devastatingly on his own people.
Sun Tzu said build a golden bridge
over which your enemy can retreat. That
golden bridge is built by nonviolence
plus negotiation, what we just saw as
millions of people used social media to
back up successful Norwegian efforts to
get the United Arab Emirates to release
Marte Deborah Dalelv, a woman from
Norway who was raped and then jailed
in Dubai for having extramarital sex!
The Norwegian Prime Minister was diplomatic and delicate and it all worked.
In Norway, of course, Conflict Resolution and Peace Research experts consult
with the highest levels of government.
In the US, we listen only to the Joint
Chiefs, so good thing they sober up on
occasion.
Tom H. Hastings is PeaceVoice Director and teaches in
the Conflict Resolution program at Portland State University.

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

�Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Death Notices
Morris

Jo Anna Morris, 73,
Gallipolis, Ohio, died
Monday, July 22, 2013, at
her residence.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 1 p.m., Friday, July 26, 2013, in the
McCoy-Moore
Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis, with Rev. Gene
Harmon officiating. Burial
will follow in the Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens.

Friends and family may
call from 11 a.m. until the
time of service on Friday at
the funeral home.

Scarberry

William G. “Bill” Scarberry, 87, of Lesage, W.Va.,
died Monday, July 22,
2013, at St. Mary’s Medical Center.
Funeral service will
be conducted at noon,
Thursday July 25, 2013,

at Chapman’s Mortuary
Huntington with John
Steele, Ernie Bowser, J.L.
Steele, William Steele and
Eddie Steele officiating.
Burial will be in Greenbottom Memorial Park. Veterans Honor Guard Post
16 will conduct military
graveside rites. Friends
may call at Chapman’s
Mortuary from 4-8 p.m.,
Wednesday, July 24, 2013.

Shank

Robert Milton Shank, 84,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, formerly of Lancaster, Ohio, died
Monday, July 22, 2013, at
his home in Gallipolis.
A celebration of Robert’s
life will be held at 11 a.m.,
Friday, July 26, 2013, at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant with Pastor Jim Lusher officiating.
Burial will follow at Floral
Hills Memory Gardens in

Lancaster, Ohio. Visitation will be held two hours
prior to the service Friday
at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be
made to Holzer Hospice,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or a charity
of your choice.

Thomas

Wilma Thomas, 81, Galloway, Ohio, formerly of

Gallia County, Ohio, died
Monday, July 22, 2013, at
her residence.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m., Thursday,
July 25, 2013, in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
208 Main Street, Vinton,
Ohio, with Rev. Heath
Jenkins officiating. Burial
will follow in the Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m. on
Wednesday, July 24, 2013,
at the funeral home.

William, Kate, show off newborn royal baby boy
LONDON (AP) — A beaming Prince William and his wife,
Kate, emerged from a London
hospital on Tuesday with their
newborn baby boy, presenting
the world with a first glimpse of
the prince who is third in line to
the British throne.
The royal couple, both 31,
looked happy and relaxed as they
waved at the crowds of journalists and onlookers gathered outside London’s St. Mary’s Hospital, posing for photographs and
joking with reporters.
Kate, wearing a baby blue
polka dot Jenny Packham dress,
smiled and waved as she stepped
out from the hospital doors with
the future monarch in her arms.
“It’s very emotional. It’s such a
special time. I think any parent
will know what this feeling feels
like,” she told journalists.
Kate then gave the baby to
her husband, who, cradling their
child, said: “He’s got her looks,
thankfully. He’s got a good pair
of lungs on him, that’s for sure.”
William added: “He’s a big boy.
He’s quite heavy,” and laughed
when a reporter asked him about
the baby’s hair.
“He’s got way more than me,
thank God,” he said.
The couple also revealed that
William has had a go at changing the infant’s first diaper. “He’s
very good at it,” Kate said.
The new parents drew whoops
and excited applause from wellwishers as they revealed the
newest member of Britain’s royal
family. William said they’re still
trying to decide what to name
the little prince.
The couple re-entered the hospital to place the child in a car
seat before re-emerging to get
into an SUV. William drove them
away — palace officials said
they will head to an apartment
in Kensington Palace and spend
the night there.
The young family’s first
public appearance together
has been the moment that the
world’s media and crowds of

onlookers camped outside the
hospital had long been waiting for, and the photographs
snapped Tuesday are likely to
be reprinted for decades as the
baby grows into adulthood and
his role as a future king.
The appearance recalls a
similar one three decades ago,
when Princess Diana and Prince
Charles carried a newborn William out to pose for photographs
on the same steps in 1982.
Katie Allan, 26, was elated to
witness the 2013 edition. “William gave us a wave as they drove
away so it was perfect. Days like
this really bring the country together,” she said.
Earlier,
William’s
father,
Charles, and his wife, Camilla,
as well as Michael and Carole
Middleton — Kate’s parents —
visited the young family at the
hospital.
Charles called the baby “marvelous,” while a beaming Carole
Middleton described the infant
as “absolutely beautiful.”
It was not immediately clear
when Queen Elizabeth II would
meet the newborn heir.
The couple’s Kensington Palace office said Kate, the Duchess
of Cambridge, gave birth to the
8 pound, 6 ounce (3.8 kilogram)
baby boy at 4:24 p.m. Monday.
The news was greeted with
shrieks of joy and applause by
hundreds of Britons and tourists
gathered outside the hospital’s
private Lindo Wing and Buckingham Palace.
Revelers staged impromptu
parties at both locations, and
large crowds crushed against
the palace gates to try to catch a
glimpse — and a photograph —
of the golden easel placed there
to formally announce the birth.
Hundreds were still lining up
outside the palace gates Tuesday
to get near the ornate easel.
In London, gun salutes were
fired, celebratory lights came on,
and bells chimed at Westminster
Abbey, where William and Kate
wed in a lavish ceremony that

Stephen Lock | i-Images | Zuma Press | MCT

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with their new baby boy stand outside the Lindo Wing of St Mary's Hospital
in London, England, on July 23, 2013.

drew millions of television viewers worldwide.
Halfway around the world,
royalist group Monarchy New
Zealand said it had organized
a national light show, with 40
buildings across the islands lit up
in blue to commemorate the royal birth, including Sky Tower in
Auckland, the airport in Christchurch, and Larnach Castle in
the South Island city of Dunedin.
A similar lighting ceremony
took place in Canada; Peace
Tower and Parliament buildings in the capital, Ottawa, were
bathed in blue light, as was CN
Tower in Toronto.
The baby is just a day old —
and may not be named for days
or even weeks — but he already

has a building dedicated to him.
Australian Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd said an enclosure
at Sydney’s Taronga Park Zoo
would be named after the prince
as part of a gift from Australia.
The government would donate 10,000 Australian dollars
($9,300) on the young prince’s
behalf toward a research project
at the zoo to save the endangered bilby, a rabbit-like marsupial whose numbers are dwindling
in the wild.
British media joined in the celebration, with many newspapers
printing souvenir editions.
“It’s a Boy!” was splashed
across many front pages, while
Britain’s top-selling The Sun
newspaper temporarily changed

its name to “The Son” in honor
of the tiny monarch-in-waiting.
The birth is the latest driver
of a surge in popularity for Britain’s monarchy, whose members
have evolved, over several decades of social and technological change, from distant figures
to characters in a well-loved national soap opera.
“I think this baby is hugely
significant for the future of the
monarchy,” said Kate’s biographer, Claudia Joseph.
For some, though, it was all a
bit much.
“It’s a baby, nothing else,”
said Tom Ashton, a 42-yearold exterminator on his way to
work. “It’s not going to mean
anything to my life.”

FDA: Menthol cigarettes
Study: Organ donor with
likely pose health risk
rabies had two raccoon bites

RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
— A Food and Drug Administration review concludes
that menthol cigarettes
likely pose a greater public
health risk than regular cigarettes but does not make a
recommendation on whether to limit or ban the minty
smokes — one of the few
growth sectors of the shrinking cigarette business.
The federal agency released the independent
review on Tuesday and
is seeking input from the
health community, the tobacco industry and others
on possible restrictions on
the mint-flavored cigarettes.
The FDA evaluation
concluded that there is
little evidence to suggest
that menthol cigarettes
are more or less toxic or
contribute to more disease
risk to smokers than regular cigarettes. However,
there is adequate data to
suggest that menthol use
is likely associated with
increased smoking initiation by younger people and
that menthol smokers have
a harder time quitting, the
review said.
There’s also evidence
indicating that menthol’s
cooling properties can
reduce the harshness of
cigarette smoke and that
menthol cigarettes are
marketed as a smoother alternative, the review said.
“Menthol cigarettes raise
critical public health questions,” Mitch Zeller, director
of the Center for Tobacco
Products, said in a conference call with reporters.
Zeller said there’s “no
holdup” on the FDA proposing restrictions on menthol
but that there are still “some

important questions” that
need to be answered. The
agency is commissioning
further research.
A 2011 FDA advisory
panel report, which was
mandated under the 2009
law giving the agency the
authority to regulate tobacco, made many of the same
findings, and said that removing menthol cigarettes
from the market would benefit public health and highlighted greater use among
minorities, teenagers and
low-income people. Panels
like the tobacco committee
advise the FDA on scientific
issues. The agency doesn’t
have to follow its recommendations, but often does.
Meanwhile, a tobacco
industry report to the FDA
acknowledged that all cigarettes are hazardous but
said there’s no scientific basis for regulating menthols
differently. The industry
also has raised concerns
that restrictions on menthol would lead to a black
market for the cigarettes.
Menthol cigarettes are
one of the few growth areas in a shrinking cigarette
market. The percentage of
U.S. cigarette smokers using menthol brands grew
from 33.9 percent in 2008
to 37.5 percent in 2011, according to a study by the
federal Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration, with
more significant growth
among younger smokers.
The FDA is “simply kicking the can down the road,”
Joseph Califano Jr., former
U.S. Secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare under President Jimmy Carter,
and Louis Sullivan, former

Health and Human Services
Secretary for President
George H.W. Bush, said in a
joint statement. Along with
other public health advocates Tuesday, they urged
the agency to ban menthol
cigarettes. “The failure
of this administration to
act undermines the public
health and is particularly
harmful to vulnerable young
Americans and AfricanAmericans,” they said.
A menthol ban or other
restriction on the flavored
cigarettes would fall heavily on Lorillard Inc., whose
Newport brand is the topselling menthol cigarette in
the U.S., with nearly 38 percent of the market. Lorillard, based in Greensboro,
N.C., is the country’s thirdlargest tobacco company.
CEO Murray Kessler
said in a statement that Lorillard looks forward to participating in the regulatory
process and reiterated its
long-held belief that menthol cigarettes shouldn’t be
treated differently.
The move comes ahead
of a Wednesday deadline
for the U.S. to respond to
the World Trade Organization’s findings last year that
the FDA’s ban on manufacturing, importing, marketing and distributing candy-,
fruit- and clove-flavored
tobacco breaks trade rules
because it exempts menthol
cigarettes, most of which
are made in the U.S.. The
investigation was launched
following a request from
Indonesia, which claims
more than 6 million of its
people depend on the production of clove cigarettes
— a staple of the country’s
smoking culture.

WASHINGTON (AP) — An Air
Force recruit whose organs were donated to four patients including a kidney recipient who died of rabies had
at least two untreated raccoon bites
several months before he became sick,
and tests confirm his rabies-infected
kidney caused the recipient’s disease,
according to a medical journal report.
Doctors initially attributed the donor’s death to other causes. But during an investigation prompted by the
kidney recipient’s death in February,
lab testing found evidence of rabies
in the donor’s brain tissue and also
detected encephalitis, a brain inflammation that can be caused by rabies.
The virus was consistent with raccoon rabies and was nearly identical
to a virus found in the transplanted
kidney and other tissue from the
recipient, an Army veteran from
Maryland, said the report, compiled
by researchers from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and others and published Tuesday in the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
Investigators don’t know if organs
given to three other patients — the
North Carolina donor’s heart, liver
and second kidney—were infected
with the rabies virus, but all three were
considered at risk. Their recipients received anti-rabies treatment “and to
date remain well,” said CDC researcher Dr. Neil Vora, the lead author.
While the case is rare, it underscores the need to improve screening
for would-be organ donors with suspected encephalitis, the report’s authors say. They say a uniform donor
questionnaire could help better identify risk factors for the virus and that
rabies should be considered in donors
with unexplained encephalitis.
The United Network for Organ
Sharing issued guidance last year

to help organ procurement organizations screen for encephalitis and other central nervous system infections
in potential donors. It urged caution
in accepting organs from donors
with an untreated central nervous
system infection.
The researchers want to improve
awareness that rabies can be the
cause of encephalitis, said co-author
Dr. Sridhar Basavaraju, another
CDC researcher. But he added,
“We wouldn’t want to mandate any
screening that would potentially exclude transplantable organs.”
The study is based on a review
of laboratory tests and medical records, and interviews with relatives
of the organ donor and recipient. It
provides the most detailed account
of the chain of events that led to the
two deaths and the investigation that
followed, which prompted health authorities to recommend vaccines for
dozens of people who were in contact
with the donor or recipients.
The case attracted public attention
because of the rare circumstances,
including the long time between infection and death of the transplant
recipient — about a year and a half.
It was just the third documented
transmission of rabies through a solid
organ transplant, the report says.
Also, there are only roughly two
human rabies deaths in the United
States each year, and all but two domestic cases between 2000 and 2010
were linked to bats, according to the
report. The authors say raccoons
pose an under-recognized risk for
infection and their spread into urban
areas raises concern.
The patient who received the North
Carolina donor’s kidney at the Walter
Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. in September
2011 has not been publicly identified.

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

WEDNESDAY,
JULY 24, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

MAC remains stable amid realignment
DETROIT (AP) — The MidAmerican Conference will have
a hard time topping the last 12
months, when Northern Illinois
made it to the Orange Bowl and
Central Michigan’s Eric Fisher was
the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft.
Still, there’s at least one other way the league can set itself
apart in the coming years.
“People say ‘the Mid-American
Conference’ — they know who’s
in it,” Central Michigan coach Dan
Enos said. “Some of these other
leagues, you could go around and

take a poll, they may not know
who’s in what conference.”
The MAC suddenly stands out
as a picture of stability on a college football landscape muddled
by realignment. No, it won’t be
challenging the Southeastern
Conference or Big Ten in terms of
brand recognition any time soon,
but fans of the mid-major conference know exactly what to expect
each season — exciting football
in a league with plenty of parity
and rivalries going back decades.
“We’ve kind of kept our head

down and kept plowing ahead,
and I’m fortunate and pleased
that we have had such stability,”
Commissioner Jon Steinbrecher
said at the conference’s media
day Tuesday. “There’s something
to be said for that.”
The MAC was founded as a
five-school league in 1946, and
Ohio is the only charter member
still in the league. But Western
Michigan and Miami of Ohio
joined in 1947, and Toledo, Kent
State and Bowling Green entered
during the early 1950s.

Central Michigan (1971),
Eastern Michigan (1971) and
Ball State (1973) have all been
with the conference at least four
decades, and Northern Illinois
was a member from 1975-86 before returning in 1997.
The newest members include
Akron (1992), Buffalo (1998)
and Massachusetts, which joined
as a football-only entry in 2012.
So that’s 13 teams, and almost
half have been in the league at
least six decades. There is occasional turnover, but not enough

to change the basic complexion
of the conference, which currently has six schools in Ohio and
three in Michigan.
“We look alike in so many
ways,” Steinbrecher said. “We’ve
been on a nice upward trend here
the last few years across a number
of different metrics, and the goal is
to keep moving in that direction.”
Last season, Northern Illinois
went to the Orange Bowl. Then
Fisher, the hulking offensive lineSee MAC ‌| 10

Gene Sweeney Jr. | Baltimore Sun | MCT photo

Cincinnati Bengals’ Carlos Dunlap (96) celebrates with the
crowd after he intercepted a pass for a touchdown at Paul
Brown Stadium on Sunday, Dec. 30, 2012, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
The Cincinnati Bengals defeated the Baltimore Ravens, 23-17.

Bengals fine-tuning team
that’s been playoff flop
Cleveland Browns head to camp
Ed Suba Jr. | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT photo

Cleveland Browns quarterback Brandon Weeden (3) fires a pass during first-quarter action against the Philadelphia
Eagles at Cleveland Browns Stadium in Cleveland, Ohio, Friday, Aug. 24, 2012.

CINCINNATI (AP) —
Marvin Lewis sees it as a
whole new series rather
than a summer repeat.
The Cincinnati Bengals
agreed to be the focus of
HBO’s “Hard Knocks”
training camp series for
the second time this summer. They also were in the
cable spotlight in 2009
with an entirely different
cast that reached the playoffs and flopped.
“It is a lot different football team,” the Bengals
coach said. “There are very
few players on this squad
that were here in ‘09, so
there’s a lot of interesting
positions, some battles that
we’re going to have. There’s
been quite a bit of change.”
One thing hasn’t changed:
the knack for falling flat in
the postseason. The Bengals have been to the playoffs each of the last two
seasons and lost to Houston both times. Those poor
performances extended the
seventh-longest stretch of
playoff futility in NFL his-

tory — no postseason win
since the 1990 season.
Andy Dalton is entering his third season as the
starting quarterback, and
young players like receiver
A.J. Green and defensive
tackle Geno Atkins have
emerged as stars. While
HBO’s audience watches,
the Bengals will try to finetune a roster that returns
nearly intact from last season and knows the stakes.
Five things to know as
the Bengals prepare to
open training camp with
cameras rolling at their
first practice at Paul Brown
Stadium on Thursday.
1. IT’S DALTON’S
TIME: He needs to take a
big step in his third season.
Dalton is the first Bengals
quarterback to reach the
playoffs in each of his first
two seasons. He has 47
touchdown passes, trailing
only Dan Marino and Peyton Manning for most in
the first two seasons. But
See BENGALS |‌ 10

NBC to take over
part of NASCAR
TV package in 2014
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR will return to
NBC in 2015, ending its eight-year partnership with both
ESPN and Turner Sports.
The 10-year deal with NBC Sports Group announced
Tuesday begins in 2015 and gives the network the final
20 Sprint Cup Series races of the season and final 19 Nationwide races.
It also makes NBC Sports Group the premier motorsports network with NASCAR, Formula One and IndyCar
among its properties.
“With NBC, you’re joining a family at NBC Sports
where you’ll be surrounded by incredible championshiptype programming,” said Steve Herbst, NASCAR’s vice
president of broadcasting and production. “Their football
package on Sunday night is the No. 1 show on television
… they are the home to championship programming and
we’ll be promoted and marketed and shown alongside
those top-tier events.”
NBC will air seven Cup races, while 13 will be on the
NBC Sports Network. The Nationwide Series will have
four events on NBC and 15 on NBC Sports Network.
Herbst said some of the Cup events will be a lead-in to
“Sunday Night Football.”
“We’re going to have the opportunity as we get into
the fall season and the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint
Cup to be on Sunday afternoons leading into NFL football, and that’s an exciting opportunity for us, given the
obvious power of the NFL,” he said. “We still have a

CLEVELAND (AP) — Rob
Chudzinski has his dream job.
There’s no telling how long he’ll
keep it.
Hired as Cleveland’s sixth
coach — and fourth in six years
— since 1999, Chudzinski returns to the team he cheered for
as a kid and the one he helped to
a 10-6 record in 2007 as the offensive coordinator. The orange
helmets are being directed by
Chud now, and while the Browns
still have a long climb to contention, he inherits more talent than
any of his predecessors.
The Browns have lost at least
11 games in each of the past five
seasons, a streak they should be
able to stop.
However, to do so, they’ll need
stability at quarterback, a position of constant change since
the Browns returned as an expansion franchise. Second-year
quarterback Brandon Weeden
showed promise last season but
needs to make major strides under new offensive coordinator
Norv Turner, who has a track
record for developing QBs.
Cleveland’s spending spree in
free agency — mostly on defense
— gave worn-out Browns fans reason to hope that 2013 would bring
a turnaround and dawn a new era.
But some of the optimism has
been erased by new owner Jimmy
Haslam’s legal troubles, which
have cast a shadow over the season already.
Five things to know as the
Browns open training camp this
week:
1. RICHARDSON ROLLING:

Running back Trent Richardson
may be the NFL’s toughest man.
Playing most of his rookie year
with two broken ribs he kept secret until the season ended, Richardson still rushed for 950 yards
and scored 11 touchdowns. The
Browns need Richardson, who
reported to camp banged up last
season, to shed the “injury-prone”
label and be 100 percent healthy
from the outset. He’s ready to
roll after missing some of the
spring workouts with a sprained
shin muscle. He averaged just 3.6
yards per carry — 45th among
the league’s runners.
2. WEEDEN GROWS: Weeden
passed for 3,385 yards in 2012,
not bad for a rookie. But he
was overshadowed by an elite
class of first-year QBs, three of
whom — Andrew Luck, Robert
Griffin III and Russell Wilson —
led their teams to the playoffs.
The Browns are adjusting their
offense to better fit Weeden’s
strengths, and Chudzinski said
he has already seen marked improvement in the 29-year-old’s
footwork, quickness and speed
in getting rid of the ball. Weeden
believes he has grown as a leader
as well and feels “like a completely different player” than last year.
3. HASLAM’S HEADACHE:
The owner’s ongoing legal entanglement has Browns fans on
edge, and the NFL on watch.
Haslam’s arrival gave Cleveland
a much-needed boost and he’s
already sunk millions into overhauling the roster, the team’s
suburban headquarters and a
$100 million face lift of FirstEn-

ergy Stadium is reportedly in the
works. Haslam recently reached
a settlement with customers his
Pilot Flying J truck-stop chain
cheated out of rebate money. Unless he is indicted, the league will
not consider sanctions against
Haslam, who has professed his
innocence from the start.
4. KICKING IT: Phil Dawson’s
departure leaves the Browns
with some huge cleats to fill. The
Pro Bowl kicker, who signed as
a free agent with the 49ers, was
an invaluable asset for 14 years,
handling field-goal and kickoff
duties while mastering the tricky
winds off Lake Erie. The Browns
signed veteran Shayne Graham,
who made 31 of 38 field goals and
scored 138 points for Houston
last season, to compete for the
job with rookie Brandon Bogotay.
The winner will have a difficult
time replacing the dependable
Dawson, the second-leading scorer in franchise history.
5. FLASH GORDON: Wide receiver Josh Gordon’s two-game
suspension for violating the NFL’s
drug policy makes it imperative
the Browns find some other offensive playmakers. Gordon will
miss the opener against Miami
and the following week against
Baltimore, depriving Weeden of
his top target. But more importantly, the Browns have to hope
Gordon, who was suspended for
marijuana use in college, gets his
head on straight and stays clean
in the future. His teammates rave
about his athletic gifts and view
the 22-year-old as a future star —
if he stays on the right path.

OVP Sports Briefs
SG Jr. High football
helmet fitting
MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— South Gallia will be
holding a junior high football helmet fitting at 4
p.m. Monday, August 5, at
South Gallia High/Middle
School. There will also
be a parents meeting that
night at 7 p.m.

River Valley Jr. High
Helmet Fitting
BIDWELL, Ohio —
There will be football helmet fitting on Monday,
August 5 at 6 p.m. at River
Valley Middle School for all
See NASCAR ‌| 10 seventh and eighth grade

students who plan to play
football this Fall. All students must have a a physical to play. For additional
information email David
Moore at gl_dmoore@seovec.org
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
Saturday, July 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
See BRIEFS ‌| 10

�Ben H. Ewing aka Benjamin H.
Ewing, et al
Defendants.
Case No. 130L003
JUDGE CROW
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
www.mydailysentinel.com
The LEGAL
DailyNOTICE
Sentinel • Page 7
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
IN THE COURT OF COMDeed Book No. 67, Page 530,
MON PLEAS MEIGS
Records of Meigs County,
COUNTY, OHIO
Ohio; and by the said Wm. M.
Peggy S. Yost
Shannon conveyed to W.N.
Meigs County Treasurer,
Davis by deed dated
Plaintiff,
The Buffington Island BattleAugust 8, 1906, and recorded
field (boundary increase) in Le- vs.
Ben H. Ewing aka Benjamin H. in Volume 95, Page 359-360 of
banon Township, Meigs
the Meigs County Record of
Ewing, et al
County was determined eliDeeds.
Defendants.
gible for inclusion in the NaReference Deeds: Cert. of
Case No. 130L003
tional Register of Historic
Transfer from Philip Sommer
JUDGE CROW
Places on April 17, 2013. Due
to Anna Louise Harbrecht,
LEGAL NOTICE
to a majority of owner objecVolume 171, Page 659;
The Heirs, Executors, Detions it has not been listed and
visees, Administrators, Person- Volume 165, Page 38 Deed
will not be listed unless owner
Records, Meigs County, Ohio.
al Representatives or Assigns
objections are removed.
Reference Deed: Volume 298,
The nomination was submitted of Doris Ewing, if any, their
Page 725, Meigs
County Deed
names andLEGALS
residences being
to the Keeper
of the National
Professional Services
LEGALS
LEGALS
Medical / Health
Records.
unknown and which cannot
Register in the National Park
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16with reasonable diligence be
Service, U.S. Department of
Stanley
00744.000
ascertained, will take notice
the Interior, for a formal deTRACT II. The following real
that on June 26, 2013 the
termination of eligibility. This
Tree Trimming
Plaintiffs Peggy S. Yost, Meigs estate situate in the Village of
procedure is required and outDr. Kelly K. Jones D.C
Miscellaneous
&amp; Removal
Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
County Treasurer filed a Comlined by Part 60 of the Code of
• Prompt and Quality Work
and State of Ohio: Being Lot
plaint against Ben Ewing, et.
Federal Regulations and per"A Place to Call Home"
• Reasonable Rates
351 in V. B. Horton's Second
al., as Defendants in the Court
mits the completion of the fedFOSTER PARENTS
• Insured • Experienced
Addition to Pomeroy, Ohio, as
of Common Pleas of Meigs
eral planning process if in the
NEEDED
• References Available
Most Insurances Accepted
shown by the Meigs County
County,Ohio,
being
Case
No.
future property in the historic
Plat Records on file in the
130L003
in
said
Court,
dedistrict
boundary
increase
is
inIN YOUR COUNTY!!!
M-W-F
Sameday
Gary Stanley
manding that the Court issue a Meigs County Recorder's Ofvolved in a federally funded, li$25-$45 a day for the care
740-591-8044
9-5
Care
fice. Reference Deed: Volume
foreclosure order for unpaid
censed or sponsored project.
of a child in your home.
1-304-273-5321
247, Page 979, Meigs County
Please leave a message
taxes on the following deThe National Register is this
316 St. Ravenswood, WV
Can be single or married
scribed real estate, and for oth- Deed Records.
nation's list of cultural properAUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16er proper legal and equitable
ties considered significant and
Call Oasis to help a child
LEGALS
EMPLOYMENT
00506.000
relief. The real estate is deworthy of preservation.
ﬁnd a place to call home.
TRACT III. Being Lot Number
scribed as follows: Situated in
The nomination was made in
TRAINING BEGINS
The Buffington Island BattleThree Hundred Thirty Five
the County of Meigs, State of
connection with a state plan to
Help Wanted General
August 3 at Albany.
field (boundary increase) in Le- identify and document prehis(335) on the west side of
Ohio, and Village of Pomeroy,
Call 740-698-0340 for
banon Township, Meigs
and bounded and described as Mechanic Street between 4th
toric and historic places in
Full-time/Part-time
County was determined eliand 5th Streets in said Village
Ohio, which meet National Re- follows:
more information or to
gible for inclusion in the Naof Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
TRACT I. The following real
gister criteria under provisions
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s
register for training.
tional Register of Historic
of the National Historic Preser- estate situated in the County of State of Ohio.
Experienced Preferred
Places on April 17, 2013. Due
Also three (3) feet off the North
Meigs, in the State of Ohio,
vation Act of 1966 as
But Training Available
to a majority of owner objecside of Lot No. 336 in said Viland in the Village of Pomeroy
amended.
Interested Candidates can
tions it has not been listed and
and bounded and described as lage of Pomeroy, and abutting
Additional information regardCall 304-273-9482 or
on the South side of Lot No.
will not be listed unless owner
follows: Forty feet off of the
ing the National Register proCome in and fill out an
335. Reference Deed: Volume
objections are removed.
Southeast side of Lot
gram can be obtained from
275, Page 369, Meigs County
The nomination was submitted Burt Logan, State Historic Pre- Numbered One Hundred and
Application
to the Keeper of the National
servation Officer, Ohio Historic Sixty-Four (164) in the said Vil- Deed Records.
Ravenswood Care Center
in the
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NOS.:
Register in the National Park
lage, fronting on Mulberry
Preservation Office, Ohio His1113Washington St.
16-02101.000 and 16Service, U.S. Department of
Street and extending back at
torical Society, 800 East 17th
Ravenswood, WV 26164
00505.000
the Interior, for a formal dethe width of Forty (40) feet to
Avenue, Columbus, Ohio,
TRACT IV. Situated in the Viltermination of eligibility. This
43211-2474, phone (614) 298- Mechanic's Street; and being
Miscellaneous
lage of Pomeroy, County of
procedure is required and outthe same premises conveyed
2000.
Meigs, and State of Ohio:
lined by Part 60 of the Code of
to William M. Shannon by T.
7/24
Federal Regulations and perMallory by deed dated Novem- The following described tract
lying in 160 Acre Lot No. 1224,
mits the completion of the fedber 14, 1890, and recorded in
IN THE COURT OF COMTown 2, and Range 13,
eral planning process if in the
Deed Book No. 67, Page 530,
MON PLEAS MEIGS
bounded and described as folfuture property in the historic
Records of Meigs County,
COUNTY, OHIO
lows: Beginning 47 feet South
district boundary increase is in- Peggy S. Yost
Ohio; and by the said Wm. M.
20 1/2 degrees West from the
volved in a federally funded, liShannon conveyed to W.N.
Meigs County Treasurer,
most Southerly
censed or sponsored project.
Davis by deed dated
Plaintiff,
comer of the 69/100 acre tract
The National Register is this
August 8, 1906, and recorded
vs.
nation's list of cultural properBen H. Ewing aka Benjamin H. in Volume 95, Page 359-360 of of real estate described in
Are You Still Paying Too Much
Volume 212, Page 477, of the
the Meigs County Record of
Maketies
theconsidered
Switch tosignificant
Dish and Ewing, et al
For Your Medications?
Meigs County Deed Records;
worthy of preservation.
Deeds.
Defendants.
TodayThe
and
Save upwas
to made
thence South 20 1/2 degrees
nomination
Reference Deeds: Cert. of
You can save up to 90% when you fill your
50%in
Case No. 130L003
prescriptions at our Canadian and
West to the old road 150 feet;
connection with a state plan to
Transfer from Philip Sommer
JUDGE CROW
International Pharmacy Service.
thence South 84
identify and document prehisto Anna Louise Harbrecht,
LEGAL NOTICE
e
c
ri
P
Our
degrees East 115 feet; thence
toric and historic places in
Volume 171, Page 659;
The Heirs, Executors, DeGet An Extra $10 Off
Promotio
Celecoxib*
nal which PREMIUM
South 63 degrees East 81 feet;
Ohio,
meet National
MOVIE Revisees, Administrators, Person- Volume 165, Page 38 Deed
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&amp; Free Shipping On
es
st
arting atgister
CHANNELS*
thence South 44 1/2 degrees
provisions
Records, Meigs County, Ohio.
$58.00
al Representatives or Assigns
Your 1st Order!
only ...criteria under
East 77 feet; thence North 7
of the National Historic Preser- of Doris Ewing, if any, their
Reference Deed: Volume 298,
Call the number below and save an
Generic equivalent
TM
additional
$10
plus
get
free
shipping
of Celebrex .
vation Act of 1966 as
Page 725, Meigs County Deed degrees East 360 feet; thence
names and residences being
on your ﬁrst prescription order with
Generic price for
South 63 1/2 degrees West
amended.
Records.
unknown and which cannot
Canada Drug Center. Expires March
200mg x 100
31, 2013. Oﬀer is valid for prescription
Additional
information regardAUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16- 256 feet to the place
mo.
with reasonable diligence be
orders only and can not be used in
compared to
of beginning, containing 1ing the National Register pro00744.000
ascertained, will take notice
conjunction with any other oﬀers.
CelebrexTM $437.58 Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
21/100 acres. The tract degram can be obtained from
II. The following real
Auction
that on June 26, 2013Real
the EstateTRACT
For 3 months.
Typical US brand price
scribed in this deed is divided
Burt Logan, State Historic Pre- Plaintiffs Peggy S. Yost, Meigs estate situate in the Village of
Use code 10FREE to receive
for 200mg x 100
this special offer.
from the 69/100 acre tract by a
servation Officer, Ohio Historic County Treasurer filed a ComPomeroy, County of Meigs,
Call
Now
and
Ask
How!
street 33 feet wide, lying
Preservation Office, Ohio Hisand State of Ohio: Being Lot
Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
plaint against Ben Ewing, et.
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.
torical Society, 800 East 17th
between the lines bearing
351 in V. B. Horton's Second
al., as Defendants in the Court
Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Avenue, Columbus, Ohio,
North 63 1/2 degrees East,
Addition to Pomeroy, Ohio, as
of Common Pleas of Meigs
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
43211-2474,
phone
(614)
298SAVING and EXCEPTING
shown
by
the
Meigs
County
County,Ohio, being Case No.
*Oﬀer subject to change based on premium channel availablity
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
2000.
from this conveyance all the
Plat Records
on fileLAND
in the
POINT
PLEASANT
POST
OFFICE
130L003
in said
Court, de7/24
coal and other minerals in the
manding that the Court issue a Meigs County Recorder's Of62 Deed: Volume same; and the right to mine the
fice. Reference
foreclosure order forSTATE
unpaid ROUTE
same without incumbrance to
247, Page 979, Meigs County
taxes on the following
de- PLEASANT,
POINT
WV
the surface; and all ways and
scribed real estate, and for oth- Deed Records.
AUDITOR'S
PARCEL NO.: 16- rights of way along any minerer proper legal and AUCTION
equitable
OPENS
We’ll Repair Your Computer
al seam therein. Reference
00506.000
relief. The real estate is deTRACT
Through The Internet!
scribed as follows: Situated JULY
in
8 III. Being Lot Number Deed: Volume 264, Page 247,
Meigs County Deed Records.
Three Hundred Thirty Five
the County of Meigs, State of
Solutions For:
TOURS(335)
UPON
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16on the REQUEST
west side of
Ohio,INSPECTION
and Village of Pomeroy,
Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
00514.000
Over $10,000 in credit card bills?
and bounded and described as Mechanic Street between 4th
Spyware &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections
LOUIS MANCUSO
TRACT V. Situated in the VilCan’t make the minimum payments?
and 5th Streets in said Village
follows:
lage of Pomeroy, Meigs
of Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
TRACT I. The following
real 331-9451
(404)
Affordable Rates
✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY
County, Ohio. Being Lot No.
estate situated in the County of State of Ohio.
For Home
✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
Also three (3) feet off the North 337 as delineated on the Plat
Meigs, in the State
of Ohio,
louis.mancuso@gsa.gov
of said lots, excepting 6 feet off
side of Lot No. 336 in said Vil✔ WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY
and in the Village of Pomeroy
&amp; Business
the Westerly side of said lot,
https://realestatesales.gov
and bounded and
described as lage of Pomeroy, and abutting
60432687
Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
which 6 feet parcel was sold by
on the South side of Lot No.
Call Now For Immediate Help
follows: Forty feet off of the
consumer credit counseling programs
deed recorded in Volume 142,
335. Reference Deed: Volume
Southeast side GENERAL
of Lot
SERVICES
CREDIT CARD RELIEF
Page 34, Meigs County Deed
275, Page 369, Meigs County
Numbered One Hundred and
for your FREE consultation CALL
Records.
Sixty-Four (164)
in the said Vil- Deed Records.
ADMINISTRATION
(GSA)
877-465-0321
Service
00 Off
Reference Deed: Volume 255,
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NOS.:
$
lage, fronting on Mulberry
We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Mention Code: MB
Page 199, Meigs County Deed
16-02101.000 and 16Not available in all states
Street and extending back atNotices
Records.
00505.000
the width of Forty (40) feet to
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16TRACT IV. Situated in the VilMechanic's Street; and being
00513.000
lage of Pomeroy, County of
the same premises conveyed
You are required to answer the
Meigs, and State of Ohio:
to William M. Shannon by T.
Complaint on or before
The
following
described
tract
Mallory by deed dated Novemlying in 160 Acre Lot No. 1224, September 18, 2013. You are
ber 14, 1890, and recorded in
also required to serve a copy
Town 2, and Range 13,
Deed Book No. 67, Page 530,
of your Answer upon C. David
bounded and described as folRecords of Meigs County,
Warren, Special Meigs County
lows: Beginning 47 feet South
Ohio; and by the said Wm. M.
Prosecutor, 117 W. Second
20 1/2 degrees West from the
Shannon conveyed to W.N.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
most Southerly
Davis by deed dated
Diane Lynch
comer of the 69/100 acre tract
August 8, 1906, and recorded
Clerk of Court of Common
in Volume 95, Page 359-360 of of real estate described in
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio
Volume 212, Page 477, of the
the Meigs County Record of
7/10, 7/17, 7/24, 7/31, 8/,7
Meigs County Deed Records;
Deeds.
8/14,
thence South 20 1/2 degrees
Reference Deeds: Cert. of
West to the old road 150 feet;
Transfer from Philip Sommer
thence South 84
to Anna Louise Harbrecht,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
degrees East 115 feet; thence
Volume 171, Page 659;
South 63 degrees East 81 feet;
Volume 165, Page 38 Deed
thence South 44 1/2 degrees
Records, Meigs County, Ohio.
East 77 feet; thence North 7
Reference Deed: Volume 298,
Notices
Page 725, Meigs County Deed degrees East 360 feet; thence
South 63 1/2 degrees West
Records.
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16- 256 feet to the place
PUBLISHING CO.
of beginning, containing 100744.000
Recommends that you do
21/100 acres. The tract deTRACT II. The following real
Business with People you
Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
scribed in this deed is divided
estate situate in the Village of
know, and NOT to send Money
supplies with li�le to no cost to you.
from the 69/100 acre tract by a
Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
through the Mail until you have
street 33 feet wide, lying
Call NOW to make sure
and State of Ohio: Being Lot
Investigated the Offering.
between the lines bearing
you are ge�ing
351 in V. B. Horton's Second
the best deal on your
North 63 1/2 degrees East,
Addition to Pomeroy, Ohio, as
Pictures that have been
SAVING and EXCEPTING
Diabetic Supplies!
shown by the Meigs County
placed in ads at the
from this conveyance all the
monitoring
Plat Records on file in the
starting aro
und
����YOU�MAY�QUALIFY�FOR�
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
coal and other minerals in the
Meigs County Recorder's Of• A glucose meter upgrade
same; and the right to mine the
must be picked within
fice. Reference Deed: Volume
• Free prescription delivery
same without incumbrance to
30 days. Any pictures
247, Page 979, Meigs County
per week
• Great deals on products
the surface; and all ways and
*with $99 customer
Deed Records.
that are not picked up
ation e and
purchase of alarm install
monitoring charg
services.
&amp; services
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16- rights of way along any minerwill be
discarded.
• And FREE gi�s
al
seam
therein.
Reference
00506.000
Deed:
Volume
264,
Page
247,
TRACT III. Being Lot Number
Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!
AMERICA’S�DIABETIC�
AUCTION / ESTATE /
Meigs County Deed Records.
Three Hundred Thirty Five
SAVINGS�CLUB
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16YARD SALE
(335) on the west side of
00514.000
Mechanic Street between 4th
CALL�NOW!�����-���-����
Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST
TRACT V. Situated in the60436002
Viland 5th Streets in said Village
SERVICES
lage of Pomeroy, Meigs
of Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
County, Ohio. Being Lot No.
State of Ohio.
Also three (3) feet off the North 337 as delineated on the Plat
of said lots, excepting 6 feet off
side of Lot No. 336 in said Vilthe Westerly side of said lot,
lage of Pomeroy, and abutting

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The Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center Board of Education hereby
gives public notice in accordance with
Section 3307.353 of Ohio Revised
Code that Deidre Dransﬁeld, who is
currently employed by the Board of
Education as Autism Coordinator, will
be retiring and seeking reemployment
with the Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center in the same position
following her service retirement. The
Board of Education will hold a public
meeting on the issue of re-employing
the above-named person at a meeting
to be held on Thursday, September 12,
2013 at 6:00 p.m. at the Chauncey
Ofﬁce, located at 21 Birge Drive,
Chauncey, Ohio.

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Kingsbury joins Gundy as
QB-turned coach in Big 12
DALLAS (AP) — Like
Mike Gundy, Kliff Kingsbury is now head coach at
the Big 12 school where he
was previously a standout
quarterback.
There is a big difference
between the two.
Kingsbury is just getting
started at Texas Tech, where
this fall he will be the youngest coach in a BCS automatic-qualifying league. He will
be 34 when the Red Raiders
play their season opener
Aug. 30 at SMU.
Gundy, meanwhile, is going into his ninth season at
Oklahoma State. His Cowboys have been tabbed as
the preseason pick to win
the conference title.
“I’ve been very fortunate
to be at Oklahoma State.
I’ve said that, and I mean
it,” Gundy said Monday.
“They took me on as a
young player when I don’t
think most coaches would
have. … I don’t know that
I would have recruited me.
“They gave me an opportunity, and it worked out
well. And obviously as an
assistant coach and been
fortunate enough to be the
head coach,” he said. “For
me personally, and I think
it’s different for everybody,
it means more to me to be
at Oklahoma State.”
On the first day of Big
12 media days, Gundy
was the first coach to take

the podium. Kingsbury
was the fifth and last of
the day. In between were
Kansas State’s Bill Snyder,
TCU’s Gary Patterson and
second-year Kansas coach
Charlie Weis. The league’s
other five teams — Baylor, Iowa State, Oklahoma,
Texas and West Virginia —
will be featured Tuesday.
Gundy was a Cowboys assistant for four seasons before becoming head coach,
which was 16 years after his
last game at quarterback.
He threw for 8,473 yards
from 1986-89, leaving as the
Big Eight Conference career
passing leader and with a
school record that stood until Brandon Weeden broke it
two years ago.
Kingsbury held several
since-broken Big 12 records after his final game
at Texas Tech in 2002, ending a four-season run when
he threw for 12,429 yards
and 95 TDs in 43 games.
Now only 11 years later,
a season after serving as
Texas A&amp;M’s offensive
coordinator with Heisman
Trophy-winning
quarterback Johnny Manziel,
Kingsbury is the Red Raiders head coach.
“You have those (surreal) moments, but you try
not to let it overwhelm you.
You just attack each and
every day, how can I make
this program better today.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Krzyzewski begins the
quest for third gold
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Mike Krzyzewski thought he was done with USA
Basketball. He said he was done, too.
After helping Team USA win
two straight Olympic gold medals,
there appeared little left for him to
accomplish. After the team won in
London last summer, Krzyzewski
prepared to walk away.
It didn’t take long for Jerry Colangelo to know that Krzyzewski wasn’t
as resolute in his stance as he made
it seem. Just a couple of weeks after
their triumph in London, the two reconvened in Springfield, Mass., for
the Hall of Fame induction ceremony.
And that’s when Colangelo, the managing director for USA Basketball,
knew there was still a chance.
“He was having withdrawal already,” Colangelo said. “He started
talking about the future. No commitments, but it was there.
“I didn’t have to plan it, but it was
there. My attitude was, I know what
he said. I know what he’s also said to
me privately. I’m going to give him all
the time he needs and when the timing is right, we’ll have that sit-down
again. Usually when I sit down with
him, there’s a good result. And it happened again and it was a positive result and I’m thankful for that.”
Ten months after Colangelo first saw
that gleam return to Krzyzewski’s eye,
and three months after the coach made
his return official, the two men are back
to work at a four-day camp that began
Monday. As Krzyzewski sat down in
a chair outside a meeting room at the
Wynn resort with a red polo and the
USA logo on the left breast, he said he

That’s all I’ve done since
I’ve been there,” Kingsbury
said. “The first couple days
you get the job, you sit in
your office, what do I do
next? It’s been amazing.
The reception we’ve had
for Texas Tech and watching all the fans get back
on board and pushing this
program in the right direction has been incredible.”
Oklahoma State has
averaged 46 points a
game over the past three
seasons, and even with a
new offensive coordinator, Gundy plans for his
team to play even faster
this season. The Cowboys
do have two sophomore
quarterbacks (J.W. Walsh
and Clint Chelf) who
started multiple games
last season and receiver
Josh Stewart (third in
Big 12 with 7.8 catches a
game last season).
Kingsbury will incorporate his own high-tempo
offense with the Red Raiders, no surprise considering what he did as a player
and as a coach at Houston
and Texas A&amp;M.
“Kliff is a smart guy. He’s
had success. He’s obviously
got good pedigree,” Gundy
said. “He’s been trained by
one of the best in the game,
and I’m sure that he’s very
excited to be back in Lubbock, and will definitely
bring more excitement for
you guys and for the fans
to Big 12 football.”

Professional Services

Help Wanted General

Installation / Maintenace / Repair

Apartments/Townhouses

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

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Email cover letter and
resume to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

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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

Education
Mason County Schools in
Point Pleasant WV has a position for a Culinary Arts – Restaurant Management Teacher
(ProStart) posted. Interested
parties can view the qualifications and complete job description on our website
http://www.edline.net/pages/m
cboewv/ or 304 675 4540 Personnel Department , all applications must be received prior
to 3:30PM on July 24. As required by federal law and regulations, the Mason County
Board of Education does not
discriminate on the basis of
race, color, national origin, sex,
age, disability or retaliation in
employment or in its educational programs and activities

Teacher for School Age Special Education Class needed.
Must have current ODE licensure and have or be eligible for
Intervention Specialist validation. Part-time Early Intervention Specialist needed to work
with children ages birth
through 2 with developmental
delays and/or disabilities and
their families. Minimum qualifications include bachelor degree in education, health, social or behavioral science or
related field.
Send application or resume by
July 24th to: Carleton School
1310 Carleton Street
P.O. Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779
The Meigs County Board of
Developmental Disabilities is
an EEO.
The Meigs Co. General Health
District, An equal opportunity
employer, is seeking a full-time
Public Health Emergency Preparedness- Grant Coordinator.
Bachelor's degree preferred,
but equivocal experience will
be considered. IT experience,
valid Driver's License required.
Must submit to background
check, Entire Job description
may be found at www.meigshealth.com. Submit
resume,civil service application, three letters of reference
electronically to
meigcohd@odh.ohio.gov by or
before 4pm on July 26th.

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

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

REAL ESTATE SALES

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renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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sec dep $300 &amp; up
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tenant pays elec
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Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
Middleport - 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm Apts.
some with utilities Pd. Deposit
&amp; reference, NO PETS, 740992-0165.
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.

David Eulitt | Kansas City Star | MCT photo

Coach Mike Krzyzewski of the United
States men’s basketball team wears
several of the players’ gold medals on
Sunday, Aug. 24, 2008, in the Games of
the XXIX Olympiad in Beijing, China.

spent most of Duke’s college season
last year fully convinced he wouldn’t be
back for a run at a third gold.
“Throughout the year I did not think
I would be coaching (Team USA),”
Krzyzewski told The Associated Press
before the camp kicked off. “I just felt
that that wasn’t going to happen. But
then after discussions, not just talking
with Jerry, but my staff and my family, to be given that opportunity again,
it’s something I’m really excited about
and feel very honored and privileged
to have that opportunity.”

Houses For Rent
House for Rent:112 Vinton
Crt, Gallia 3BR, 1BTH, Carport, Cntrl heat &amp; air. W/D,
Range, Frige incl. $500mo,
$300dep. No pets. Ref &amp; Sec
ck req. 304-675-6453

Boats &amp; Marinas

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

10" Dobsonian Telescope Lots
Extras $300, Girls Bicycle $35,
Couch &amp; Chair (flowered)
$150, Women's Golf Bag &amp;
Cart $50, Bowling Balls (men's
&amp; women's) $20

Rentals
14 x 60 2 Bdrm M.H with Garage. 3 miles N. of Gallipolis of
Rt 7. $45mo and $400 Deposit.
740-367-7760
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
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
ANIMALS

2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331

AUTOMOTIVE

1972 AMF Slick Craft 21.5 ft.
302 IB runs good, very sound
classic boat $2,500 or consider Trade for Good 4/WD
truck. 740-696-1241

Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265

AGRICULTURE

Miscellaneous

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

Want To Buy
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

Pets
FREE TO GOOD HOME
2 fem kittens, 8 wks. Blackish
grey &amp; Blk w/white paws &amp;
face. 304-675-1310

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

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�Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, July 24, 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 24, 2013:
This year you’ll rely on your intuition, and you’ll land well. An associate understands the requirement of
responding to this feeling, and he or
she will encourage you. If you are single, you are likely to meet many people
on your path. Check out each person
with care, and make sure that he or
she is emotionally available. Be willing
to walk away from what doesn’t work.
If you are attached, be aware of what
is motivating you, and understand the
role your significant other plays. Give
this person as much acknowledgment
as possible. PISCES is a dreamer, but
he or she can sort reality from fiction.
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 might have pushed
the limits with a close associate. Your
ability to manifest your ideas allows
greater adaptability, and it also gives
you the strength to deal with problems.
How you see a situation could change
because of a partner’s feeling. Tonight:
Keep it light and easy.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Dealing with someone who is
as stubborn as you are could be difficult. You will stand your ground, but so
will he or she. Involve a third person to
help both of you get off your positions.
Friends or associates will pitch in and
try to point to the solution. Tonight: Till
the wee hours.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Decide how much confidence you have in someone’s mental
processes. If you become triggered,
detach. A serious discussion could
point to a more effective way of handling an issue. Be responsive to an
elder or a boss who needs extra time.
Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Use your creativity. You
have the ability to visualize a different solution or outcome based on a
new type of thinking. Break past any
personal limitations. You will be able
to make the correct decision if you are
able to tune in to your intuitive side.
Tonight: Whatever feels right.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Someone around you will
be inspiring. Brainstorming together
unleashes unusual creativity, and oneon-one relating takes you to the next
level. This person is very different.
Please note his or her vagueness in
certain matters. Tonight: Happiest out
of the house.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Others seek you out, but
you might opt to close your door and
screen your calls. You can deal with
only so much energy right now. Realize
what could happen without sufficient
structure and time. You might find that
to be a scary thought, on some level.
Tonight: As you wish.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH Emphasize the structure of
your day-to-day lifestyle. As you evolve
to a new level of understanding, you’ll
come to terms with other possibilities.
Consider making a change to your
environment in order to get yourself
out of a rut. Use caution with funds.
Tonight: Out late.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH What soon will be evident
is how shut down you have been as of
late. Your intuition could take you down
a new path, if you simply learn to go
with the flow. Tap into your intellectual
side, but do not deny the power of your
feelings. Tonight: Add more romance
to your life.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH Stay close to home, and
honor your bottom line when dealing
with others. You have a way of looking at a situation that remains unique.
If you need to get past a problem, the
time to do so is now. Recognize what
is happening with a close family member. Tonight: Head home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Be discreet in handling a
personal matter. Return calls, and
schedule a meeting if possible. It
appears that an associate or friend
wants to head off on his or her own
crusade. Emphasize what is important
to you in a long-overdue talk with this
person. Tonight: Feeling let down.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Use the morning to finish extra work, but try not to get too
caught up in a project. You might be
concerned about a financial matter, as
you can’t seem to get enough clarity.
Don’t take a risk if a money offer feels
unusually dicey. Tonight: Work within
your budget, and set limits.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Let your personality melt
barriers, especially with someone at a
distance. An ongoing problem needs
to come to a conclusion, so have a
long-overdue discussion. Be open to
feedback, even if you feel as though
the person has a rigid point of view.
Tonight: A favorite pastime.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

AP Sports Briefs
Bengals owner wants to
change team’s image
CINCINNATI (AP) — Bengals owner
Mike Brown says he agreed to do another
“Hard Knocks” training camp series with
HBO because viewers will see his team
has changed.
Brown said during interviews Tuesday
at the team’s annual preseason luncheon
that the Bengals got a bad reputation after they repeatedly drafted and signed
troubled players. He took responsibility
and said his thinking has changed. The
Bengals have shied away from troubled
players in recent drafts.
Brown touched on a variety of topics.
He said there’s no proof that concussions
contribute to dementia, though he’s glad
the NFL is emphasizing player safety. And
he disagrees with the league’s move to enhance the stadium experience for fans by
putting cameras in locker rooms. Brown
says he was “one of those arguing for the
good old days.”
Hoke invites boy who named
cancer ‘Michigan’
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Brady
Hoke is inviting the young Ohio State fan

who named his cancer “Michigan” to see
the Buckeyes play the Wolverines.
Michigan’s coach has offered Grant
Reed tickets to this year’s matchup between the two rivals in Ann Arbor. A
Michigan spokesman confirmed that
Hoke called Reed and his family Monday.
Columbus, Ohio, TV station WCMH
reports the 12-year-old Reed finished
his final chemotherapy treatment a
couple weeks ago. Reed’s father, Troy,
tells the station his son gladly accepted
Hoke’s offer.
When Grant was diagnosed with cancer
less than two years ago, he chose to name
his disease Michigan. He wanted to beat
it — and he has.
Town of Speedway requires
parking permits for race
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The town
of Speedway says it’s again implementing a residential permit parking program for this weekend’s Brickyard 400
NASCAR race.
Town Manager Barbara Lawrence says
the Indianapolis enclave developed the
pilot program to give its residents and

their guests a better chance for on-street
parking during race events without having to place traffic cones, barricades or
other items on the street to reserve parking spaces.
She says eliminating the items creates
cleaner and safer streets.
The permits apply only to an area south
of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway
bounded by 16th, Main and 10th Streets
and Lyndhurst Drive. It’s in effect Friday
and Saturday. If the race is delayed by
rain, it also applies to Sunday.
The town began the pilot program in
May for the Indianapolis 500.
Obama congratulates Louisville
for bracket bust
WASHINGTON (AP) — President
Barack Obama congratulated the University of Louisville men’s basketball team on
working toward a single goal — “to bust
my bracket.”
Obama picked Indiana to win the 2013
NCAA tournament, but Louisville came
out on top. For that, the Cardinals were
rewarded with an appearance with the
president in the White House East Room.

Obama teased coach Rick Pitino for
shirtless photos on the internet that
prove he didn’t “chicken out” on his
promise to get a tattoo if the team won
the championship.
Pitino gave Obama a team jersey and a
red Louisville Slugger baseball bat commemorating the victory. Pitino joked it
may come in handy at difficult press conferences.
Clippers sign free agent
C Byron Mullens
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Clippers have signed free agent center Byron Mullens, who has played the
last two seasons in Charlotte.
The 7-foot Mullens averaged a careerhigh 10.6 points and 6.4 rebounds in 53
games last season with the Bobcats.
Mullens was drafted with the 24th
overall pick in 2009 by the Dallas Mavericks and traded on draft night to Oklahoma City. He played in 26 games for the
Thunder before he was traded to Charlotte in 2011.
Mullens played one season at Ohio
State, averaging 8.8 points and 4.7 rebounds in 20.3 minutes per game.

MAC
From Page 6
man whose stock kept rising as
the draft approached, was taken
by the Kansas City Chiefs with
the top pick.
“If you’re a player, people are
going to find you,” Northern Illinois quarterback Jordan Lynch
said. “Eric Fisher — the guy was
a player, and they found him.”
Lynch finished seventh in the
Heisman Trophy balloting last
year, and he enters the 2013

season with plenty of hype. The
Huskies are trying to become the
first team to win three straight
MAC titles since Marshall won
four in a row from 1997-2000.
But don’t be deceived. Anything can happen in this league.
The last nine seasons have included six different champions.
Last year’s title game went to
double overtime after the previous two were decided in the
final seconds.
One area in which the MAC

deals with occasional upheaval
is in the coaching ranks — a
byproduct of the league’s reputation as a proving ground for
talented coaches. Nick Saban,
Urban Meyer, Brian Kelly and
Brady Hoke all passed through
the MAC earlier in their careers.
Sure enough, the league has
three new coaches this season
— Paul Haynes at Kent State,
Rod Carey at Northern Illinois
and P.J. Fleck at Western Michigan. Carey made his debut as

the Huskies’ coach in the Orange Bowl because predecessor Dave Doeren had taken the
North Carolina State job after
the regular season.
That was an odd scenario,
but it was the price of success
for the MAC, a league that
has built a nice tradition while
understanding the challenges
of competing with other, more
prosperous conferences. Now, the
rest of college football is in a state
of flux — and the MAC moves

forward amid minimal drama.
“I think that we have a
special league,” said Fleck, who
at 32 is the youngest coach in
major college football. “I think
that we’re kind of off in our
little special area over here,
and you don’t see everybody
either coming after us, or us
going after someone else. We
understand who we are, but
we also love who we are and
respect everything that goes on
in this conference.”

Bengals
From Page 6
he’s had two awful playoff
games — no touchdowns,
four interceptions and
a 48.6 passer rating. He
overthrew an open Green
in the end zone late in the
playoff loss at Houston last
season. Dalton has been

working on his long throws
and needs to find receivers other than Green with
more consistency. Tight
end Tyler Eifert, taken in
the first round, should give
him another option.
2. DALTON’S BACKUP: One of Cincinnati’s
biggest losses in free

agency was backup quarterback Bruce Gradkowski, who gave the Bengals
some security in case
Dalton got hurt. They
signed Josh Johnson, who
started five games for
Tampa Bay from 2008-11,
and claimed John Skelton
off waivers for Arizona,

which couldn’t settle on a
starter last season. Johnson knows offensive coordinator Jay Gruden from
their days in Tampa Bay.
Skelton has never run a
West Coast-style offense.
Although Dalton has been
very durable, missing only
half of a game because of
injury, a team with playoff
aspirations needs some security at the backup spot.
3. WHAT’S UP WITH
ANDRE? The Bengals
reached a three-year deal
with right tackle Andre
Smith as the draft started
in April, meaning their
entire offensive line would
return intact. But Smith
missed all of the team’s
offseason workouts and
its mandatory minicamp

because of personal matters, the only player who
wasn’t available. His conditioning will be a focus
in camp early. They’ll also
be looking at how center
Kyle Cook has recovered
from an ankle injury that
required surgery and
forced him to miss the
first 12 games last season.
4. TURNING HARRISON LOOSE: The
Bengals’ biggest offseason acquisition was linebacker James Harrison,
who left Pittsburgh after
they couldn’t agree on a
restructured contract. Coordinator Mike Zimmer
will be looking for ways to
turn the outside linebacker
loose in a defense than finished sixth in the NFL in

yards allowed last season.
Harrison says he’s healthy
and ready to make an impression with his new
team, especially when it
faces his old team.
5. PAGING DRE KIRKPATRICK:
Cornerback
Dre Kirkpatrick was the
17th overall pick in the
2012 draft, but missed all
of training camp and the
first seven games of the
season after injuring his
left knee during workouts.
He played in five games,
then suffered a concussion
and was bothered again by
the knee problem, ending
his season. Kirkpatrick has
been limited because of
the knee in the offseason.
His status will be another
focus in camp.

NASCAR
From Page 6
ways to go to figure out what races and
when, but it will be select races that go
into Sunday Night Football.”
The deal also gave NBC Sports Group
rights to the K&amp;N Series and NASCAR
Whelen Modified Tour events, NASCAR Toyota (Mexico) Series events,
the NASCAR Hall of Fame induction
ceremony and season-ending banquets,
live-streaming rights for Cup and Nationwide, and Spanish-language broadcast rights on Telemundo and Mun2
for national series events and NASCAR
Toyota (Mexico) Series.
NBC Sports Group replaces ESPN,
which carries 17 events and picks up
its portion of the schedule this weekend
at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and
Turner, which currently has six races on
the schedule.
NBC shared the television contract
with Fox from 2001-06 in the first national TV deal for NASCAR. NBC pulled
out of negotiations on an extension, and
ESPN picked up that portion of the
schedule in 2007.

John Skipper, president of ESPN, said
the network will continue to cover NASCAR when its deal expires.
“ESPN has enjoyed a long and mutually beneficial relationship with NASCAR. We have tremendous respect for
the France family, the drivers and all in
the sport and wish them well,” he said.
“We will continue to serve NASCAR
fans through SportsCenter and our other
news platforms as we continue to enhance our industry-leading collection of
quality assets. We are looking forward to
the start of our Sprint Cup season and
will continue with our deep commitment
to the highest quality coverage.”
Turner indicated earlier Tuesday it
could not compete financially in the negotiations to extend its 31-year relationship
with NASCAR.
“We think NASCAR is an attractive
property, but we are disciplined in our
approach to negotiating sports rights and
could not come up with a business model
that was financially prudent for our company,” said David Levy, president of sales,
distribution and sports at Turner.

Briefs
From Page 6
MYL will have a league for
them also. For more information, contact Dave at
(740) 590-0438 or Jackie
at (740) 416-1261.

60412545

Big Bend Youth
Football League
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio —
The Big Bend Youth Football League will be having
football and cheerleading
signups from 11 a.m. until
1 p.m. every Saturday in
July at the Middleport Veterans Memorial Stadium.
Signups are for all interested kids in grades
3-6, and second graders
may sign up if they meet a
50-pound minimal weight
requirement. There is also
a signup fee.
For more information,

visit facebook @BBYFL
or call Sarah (444-1606),
Tony (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
your own implements for
shot and discus and must
have experience throwing
the discus or on the pole
vault. We will not allow
the novice vaulters or disc
thrower to throw or jump
for safety reasons. Parents please supervise your
kids, you are the coach
for the day and please ensure they make it to their
events on time.
We will not enforce limits on the number of events
you may enter, but please
monitor number for the
smaller kids.To volunteer,
for more information or
if you have any questions
please call (740) 645-7316
or email ff1023@att.net

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