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                  <text>Rio's Mattia earns
NAJA ScholarAthlete Award, Bt·

Going tropical, A3

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

O BITUARIES
Page AS
• Lowell Beaver
·Herman C. Michael
• Comella F. Woods

S PORTS

. . • LeBron says Cavs

Program to fund $238K in summer jobs
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Department of Job and
Family Services has received a
$238,000 allocation of funds to
provide qualifying youth, ages
14-24, with summer jobs.
Today, from. 3-6 p.m. at the
DJFS in Middleport, is the only
day youth can register for the pro-

gram funded by Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families
funds and federal stimulus money
from the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of which Ohio
received $47 million.
In addition to the age criteria,
participants must meet the following TANF eligibility criteria:
household income is at or below
200 percent of the Federal Poverty
Guideline; youth ages 14-17 is a

minor child in a needy family and ipant and all minor children in
is in school; or youth ages 18-24 is the household. Only residents of
in a needy family that also has a Meigs County are eligible.
minor child; or youth ages 18-24
Chris Shank, director of
that have a minor child and are . MCDJFS, said the jobs will
considered needy.
offered in the public sector Any youth under 18 must be for example, the pr9gram h&amp;s
accompanied by a parent or been made available to the
guardian for today.'s screening county's five incorporated vilprocess, Bring proof of house- lages, the three school districts,
hold income for the last 30 days
and proof of age of youth pa1ticPlease see Jobs, AS

have edge in free
agency. See Page 81

.•

a
D.,

Summer
crisis CCA
program
begins
July 1
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

E
• Family Medicine:
'Brain Attack' new
term for stroke.
See Page A2
• Ohio bill seeks
fast payment to
wrongly convicted.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• BP stock tumbles
as feds announce
oil-spill probes.
See Page AS
• Music shops in
mid Ohio cater to
local musicians.
See Page AS

•

Submitted photos

These Eastern seniors assist in cleanup and repair of the old Chester Elementary School which is being converted into a place for youth activities. The work was done in lieu of attending class to make up for missed snow
days this past school year.

Old Chester school being ·
renovated jn.to youth center
SENTINEL S TAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

WEATHER

High: Upper 80s.
Low: Mid 60s.

TUPPER&amp; PLAINS Bethel Worship Center
welcomed its new youth
pastor, Kris Butcher, earlier this year with a tough
assignment for 20 10 get an old abandoned
school facility cleaned
up, repaired,.and ready to
serve the community this
summer.
The thought was that
the Chester Elementary
School, vacated many
years ago and most ·
recently used as a church
home, while a significant
undertaking, would be a
blessing for youth of the
Ohio River valley.
It was in that building
that the Bethel Worship
Center congregation met ' These Eastern High School boys volunteered their time to cleanup around the old
Please see Center, AS Chester Elementary School which is being turned into a youth center.

CHESHIRE The
Gallia Meigs Community
Action Agency will be
able to assist income eligible and medically qualified residents with assistance through the 20 10
Emergency
Summer
Crisis Program starting
July 1.
Sandra
Edwards,
Emergency
Services
Division
Director,
reports that the program
will run through Aug. 31
or until the funds are
depleted.
She emphasized that
there are no air conditioners this year. She also
emphasized that income
eligible persons must
make an appointment to
be seen by a representative at the Community
Action Agency.
There are two types of
households· that may be
assisted, according to
Edwards. They are as follows:
• An inc0me eligible
household with a member who has a current
qualifying medical condition/breathing disorder
verified b} physician
documentation from a
medical
professional
may be qualified to
receive the foliO\\ ing:
one pa) ment for a s;urrent
electric bill or PIPP.
whichever is greater. but
not to exceed $175. No
disconnect is required.
• An income eligible
household with a member who is 60 or older is
eligible to receive: one
payment for electric bill
up to the current bill or
PIPP. whichever is more,
but not to exceed $17 5.
No
disconnect
is
required and no physician documentation is
required.

Ready to 'Relay' Stolen equipment recovered
INDEX
.

t

B Y B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SF.CTIONS- 12 PAGES

A3

lendars
assifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
B Sect ion

Sports

1:£) 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~ J!IJI,I !I!.!I!I

POMEROY The
Meigs County Relay for
Life, slated to begin at
noon on June 12 and end
at 6 a.m. on June 13 at
the Meigs County Fair
Grounds, was a major
topic of discussion at the
most
recent
Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Advisory Board
meeting.
Long-time RFL CoChair JoAnn Crisp told
the advisory board entertainment has been finalized with a variety of different
performances

I

.. •

awattlng
participants.
There are only 15 teams
this year, down slightly
from last year which was
near 20. The advisory
board had been concerned about adequate
food sales at the event
due to only around five
teams indicating they
will be offering concessions. Teresa Alley, a
mobile food vendor, was
asked tb be on-site selling food and has agreed
to donate a portion of her
sales to the ACS.
Mini-Relays were also
recently held at Southern

Please see Relay, AS

Sgt. Daniel Leonard
of the department of
Meigs County Sheriff
Robert Beegle displays some stolen
equipment which has
been recovered from
a Leading Creek residence. There are
five lawn mowers, six
weed eaters, and a
chain saw. Owners
can claim their equipment by contacting
the sheriff's office.
The name of the
alleged thief has not
been released.
Charlene Hoefllch/photo

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Study: 10 minutes of exercise, hour-long effects
Bv

variability between peapie," says Dr. Robert
Gerstten of Massachusetts
WASHINGTON
General Hospital, whose
Ten minutes of bri:.k team just took a step
ex~rcise triggers meta- toward that goal.
bohc changes that last at
The researchers mealeast an hour. The unfair . sured
biochemical
news for panting new- chanaes in the blood of a
bies: The more fit you 'variety of people: the
are, the more benefits healthy
middle-aged,
you just might be getting. some who became short
We all know that exer- of breath with exertion
cise and a good diet are and marathon runners. '
imp_ortant f~r health. p~oFirst, in 70 healthy
tectmg ag~mst heart d1s- people put on a treadmill,
ease and diabetes, among the team found more than
other conditions. But 20
metabolites that
what ~xactly causes the change during exercise.
healt~ Improvement from naturally produced comworkmg _up a sweat or pounds involved in burnfn?m e~tmg, say, more ing calories and fat and
ohve oil than saturated improving blood-sugar
fat? And are some people control. Some weren't
biologically predisposed known until now to be
to get more benefit than involved with exercise.
others?
Some revved up during
They're among ques- exercise, like those
tions that metabolic pro- involved in processing
filing, a new field called fat. Others involved with
metabolomics, aims to cellular stress decreased
answer in hopes of one with exercise.
day opotimizing those
Those are pretty wonky
benefits - or finding findings, a first step in a
patterns that may signal complex field. But they
risk for disease and new back today's
health
ways to treat it.
advice that even brief
"We're only beginning bouts of activity are
to catalog the metabolic good.
LAURAN NEERGAARO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

"Ten minutes of exercise has at least an hour
of effects on your body:·
says Gerszten. who
found some of the metabolic changes that began
after 10 minutes on the
treadmill still were measurable 60 minutes after
people cooled down.
Your heart rate rapidly
drops back to normal
when you quit moving,
usually in 10 minutes or
so. So finding lingering
biochemical
changes
offers what Gerszten
calls "tantalizing evidence" of how exercise
may be building up
longer-term benefits.
Back to the blood.
Thinner people had
greater increases in a
metabolite named niacinamide.
a
nutrient
byproduct that's involved
in blood-sugar control.
the team from Mass
General and the Broad
Institute of MIT and
Harvard reported last
week in the journal
Science
Translational
Medicine.
Checking a metabolite
of fat breakdown, the
team found people who
were more .fit - as mea-

sured by oxygen intake
during
exercise
a,ppeared to be burning
more fat than the less fit.
or than people with shortness of breath. a possible
symptom of heart disease.
The extremely fit- 25
Boston Marathon runners
- had ten-fold increases
in that metabolite after
the race. Still other differences in metabolites
allowed the researchers
to tell which runners had
finished in under four
hours and which weren't
as speedy.
"We have a chemical
snapshot of what the more
fit person looks like. Now
we have to see if making
someone 's metabolism
look like that snapshot,
whether or not that's
going to improve their
performance,'.'
says
Gerszten, whose ultimate
goal is better cardiac care.
Don't expect a pill e~er
to substitute for a workout
- the new work shows
how complicated the
body's response to exercise is. says metabolomics
researcher Dr. Debbie
Muoio of Duke University
Medical Center.

Dieting for dollars? More U.S. employees trying it
ATLANTA (AP) How much money would
it take to get you to lose
some serious weight?
$100? $500?
Many employers are
betting they can find your
price. At least a third of
U.S. companies offer
financial incentives, or
are planning to introduce
them, to get their
employees to lose weight
or get healthier in other
ways.
"There's
been
an
explosion of interest in
this,'' said Dr. Kevin
Volpp, director of the
University
of
Pennsylvania's Center
for Health Incentives.
Take OhioHealth, a
hospital chain whose
workforce is mostly
overweight. The company last year embarked on
a program that paid
employees
to
wear
pedometers and get paid
for walking. The more
they walk, the more they
win - up to $500 a year.
Anecdotal success stories are everywhere. Half
of the 9,000 employees at
the chain's five main hospitals signed up, more
than $377,000 in rewards
have already been paid
out, and many workers
tell of weight loss and a
sudden need for slimmer
clothes.
But does will this kind
of effort really put a permanent
dent
in
American's seemingly
intractable obesity problem? Not likely.
"It's probably a waste
of time," said Kelly
Brownell, director of
Yale University's Rudd
Center for Food Policy
and Obesity.
Brownell's assessment
is harsher than most. But
the science seems to back
him up.
Only about 15 to 20
U.S. studies have tried to
evaluate the effect of
financial incentives on
weight loss. Most of
those studies were small
and didn't look at
whether such measures
worked beyond a few
months. None could
make conclusions about
how much money it takes
to make a lasting difference for most people.
Perhaps the largest
effort to date was an
observational study by
Cornell University. It
looked at seven employer

programs and the results
were depressing: The
average weight Joss in
most was little more than
a pound.
Sure. there are grounds
for optimism. Smaller
experiments rep011 some
success. And other studies have shown promising results against tobacco. One study published
last year in the New
England
Journal
of
Medicine, co-authored
by Volpp. found th~t cash
rewards of a few hundred
dollars nearly tripled
quit-smoking rates.
One problem: ''Food is
more difficult than tobacco.'' said Steven Kelder.
an epidemiology professor at the Universit} of
Texas School of Public
Health.
While cigarettes can
be addictive. people
don't need to smoke to
live, and advertising and
clean-air
restrictions
curb tobacco's presence.
People must eat, however, and sugary drinks and
fatty snacks are everywhere. Kelder and others
said.
Health officials lament
that more than two-thirds
of American adults are
overweight and one-third
obese, and lecture on
fat's role in deaths from
diabetes, heart disease
and other conditions The
problem has a huge economic impact, too, with
obese workers costing
U.S. private employers
an estimated $45 billion
or more annually in
health care costs and lost
labor. That's according to
a
report
by
the
Conference Board, a
research group focused
on management and the
marketplace.
In a campaign led by
Michelle Obama, federal
officials are emphasizing
several approaches to
slim the nation. Food
companies.
worried
about potential anti-obesity rules and laws. have
publicly endorsed the
first lady's message and
recently pledged to offer
lower calorie foods.
change recipes and cut
portion sizes.
While watching to see
if foodmakers follow
through, some experts
remain fascinated by the
idea of using economics
to get people to eat better
and exercise. Sales taxes

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have been used to drive
up the cost of cigarettes
and drive down Sll}oking
rates, and Brownell and
others are pushing for
similar taxes on soda.
Companies tend to be
more interested in incentives than disincentives
like taxes. But the perks
they attach to wellness
programs come in a variety of forms and sizes.
Some reward employees just for having a
health evaluation or simply enrolling in a class whether they complete it
or not. Others require
measurable weight loss
or exercise achievement.
~ometimes structuring it
in a contest along the
lines of "The Biggest
Loser" TV show.
Some companies offer
money, some vacation
trips. Some refund the
cost of Weight Watchers
classes. Others reduce
health insurance premiums.
The value of rewards
can range from measly to
thousands of dollars.
Hunches and human
resources budgets - not
research - often drive
decisions about financial
incentive
details.
Companies are quite
frank about it.
OhioHealth set the
max1mum reward for its
step-counting program at
$500. "It just sounded
right to us. We thought
that would be a big
enough number to help
people think twice.'' said
Lisa
Meddock,
OhioHealth 's benefits
manager
IBM rewards employees for doing 12-week
Web-based h"'ealth programs. They offer $150
per program completed
because there was a feeling that was the right
amount to get people
involved. said Dr. Joyce
Young, the company's
wellbeing director.
Companies "are mak-

ing best their guesses
about what might work
and giving it a shot." said
Robert
Jeffery.
a
University of Minnesota
professor. He's been
experimenting
with
financial incentives and
weight loss since the
1970s and is perhaps the
most veteran researcher
in the field.
If companies asked the
experts, they might be
counseled to make their
incentives more dramatic
- more cash or a bigger
penalty in premium costs.
Psychologists say people are more motivated
by the risk of losing their
own money than by a
chance they'll win somebody else':.. Applymg
that idea to weight loss.
some studies have set up
refundable bond systems:
Volunteers sign a contract agreeing to lose a
certain amount of weight
by a certain date or they
forfeit their deposited
money.
One of the seven companies in the Cornell
study offered a refundable bond option to
employees. Its average
weight loss was nearly 4
pounds. That doesn't
sound like a lot but it's
almost twice as much as
the average weight loss at
companies that paid
quarterly rewards.
A 2008 University of
Pennsylvania
study
found that after 16 weeks
people who put fheir own
money on the line lost
about a pound more, on
average. than people who
got cash from others.
Besides employers. a
few companies market
refundable bond contracts to people trying to
Jose weight. Using a
twist of black humor. a
company
called
StickK.com, sends the
forfeited money from
those who fail to an organization the customer
despises.

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"'oil Free: 877-428-8196
•'

FAMILY MEDICINE

l

'Brain Attack' •
new term for strok'e

l

Bv

MARTHA

A. SIMPSON, D.O., M.B.A.

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF FAMILY MEDICINE
OHIO UNIVERSilY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

i
,.

~

Question: My husband's doctor told him he
might have a ''brain attack" if he doesn't control ~
his high blood pressure and diabetes. What is a
''brain attack"'?
I have never heard of this, and I am a 75-year- !
old former nurse.
.
J
Answer: A ''brain attack" is a new and increas- ~
ingly popular term for a ~troke. and it's catching
on among physicians and the general public.
The idea is that. ~ince everyone seems to respond 1
to the tern1 "heait attack,'' people might pay more
attention to the risk of stroke if it had a similar 1
1
name. After all. the two disease processes are quite J
similar, as you know from your nursing days.
In a heart attack. the arteries that carry blood to
the heart muscle either rupture or become l
blocked. In a brain attack, the arteries servicing 1
the brain rupture or become blocked. Once these I
critical arteries fail. the heart or brain is depriv:ed S
of blood, and therefore, oxygen. Without oxygen, ~
heart and brain cells both begin to die.
;
Strokes are the leading cause of disability in
adults, and they kill more than 150.000 people in !
the U.S. each year. Risk factors for both strokes 1
and heart attacks include high blood pressure and
diabetes. as you mentioned, plus smoking. elevat- ,
ed cholesterol and heart trouble.
Although the causes of strokes and heart attacks ~
are similar, the symptoms differ widely. Heart
attacks cause sho1tness of breath and pressure.
squeezing or pain in the ehest and upper body. A \
brain attack or stroke, on the other hand. usually
causes sudden. partial ~aralysis and/or an inability to walk. talk, eat or swallow.
~
One common warning sign of a brain attack is a t
transient b.chemic attack, or "mini-stroke." These
come on with the same symptoms as a full stroke,
but last short periods of time. Other stroke warning signs include difficulty speaking or under- •
standing speech, problems walking, severe visual
disturbances - often in one eye, and sudden
weakness or numbness on one side of the face or •
in limbs on one side of the body.
Any of these symptoms should be viewed as ~
medical emergencies, even if they fade away
within hours or even minutes. Immediate treatment can prevent a full stroke - and potentially,
death or permanent loss of function.
One possible problem with the terms "heart
attack" and '·brain attack.'' is that \vhile the phrases sound serious and familiar, they somewhat l
obscure the source of the problem. There is no
"attack" on the heart or brain, and neither do these
organs "attack" the body. Instead, as I described
above, the problem occurs within the arteries, or
the vascular svstem.
Perhaps the bigger issue here is that many people
do not understand terms related to the vascular system. such as atherosclerosis - the leading cause of
both strokes and heart attacks. Atherosclerosis is 1
the build-up of dense. fatty plaque in the arteries.
Avoiding this condition, through a healthy diet,
exercise and regular doctor visits, will help you
prevent both heart and brain attacks.
Family Medicine® is a weekly column. General
medical questions can be sem to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio Universit_v College
of Osteopathic Medicine, Communication Office, '
Athens,
Ohio
45701,
or
familymedicine@oucom.ohiou.edu.
J

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Page A

The Dai.ly Sentinel

Wednesday, June

2, 2010

Going tro_pical
Clare Genevieve McKelvey

l\1cKelvey birth
UPPER ARLINGTON Kate, and maternal grand- Michael and Krista parents. Dick and Janice
McKelvey
of Upper Ahrns of Minster. Ohio
Arlington, Ohio, announce and paternal grandparents,
the birth of their second Marvin
and Eleanor
daughter. Clare Genevieve McKelvey' of Po1tland.
McKelvey. She was born Paternal great-grandmothon April L 2010 at ·er is Hnel McKelvey of
Riverside
Methodist Portland and the late
Hospital in Columbus.
William
McKelvey.
The infant weighed 6 Maternal great-grandparpounds 11 oz. She was ents are the late George
welcomed by her sister, and Genevieve Schneider.

ASK DR. BROTHERS
Submitted photo

Residents at Overbrook Nursing and Rehabilitation Center recently enjoyed the tropical weather in the center's
courtyard during Tropical Cruise Day. Pictured are residents Harry and Edna Roush.

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
biggest fear is having to
go sit in front of one or
two people at a new company where there is a job
opening and tons of applicants. I hate competition,
and I am shy. I know I
have to sell myself, but it
is just not my style! I am
laid-back and enjoy working on my own. My
industry needs people like
me, but I am afraid that
someone who is "Mr.
Personality" will have no
problem overshadowing
me. I know I am wellqualified - what can I do
to get the job? - T.C.
Dear T.C.: It must be
very a frustrating feeling
to know you've got the
stuff to succeed but just
can't seem to get it out
re in a way that Jets
ers see your potential.
let's see if there are
me things you can do to
change your fate when it
comes to interviewing. It
won't hurt to make sure
your references are truly
glowing - to show that
your initial shyness doesn't get in the way of your
character or ability to do
the job. Make sure that
the jobs you are going for
are not going to require an
outgoing, vibrant personality if you always tend to
be a bit of an introvert or
a quiet. solitary type. That
way, you will not be trving to go for somethir g
that just doesn't suit you
anyway, if you manage to
get past the interview.
Making sure you are
well-prepared with information about the company
and your own credentials
at your fingertips should
ake you feel more confit. Don't be afraid to let
interviewer know that
you are a bit nervous, if
you can do it in a somewh~lt lighthearted way.
They are used to nerves
from many applicants, so
don't feel you will stand
out as a freak of nature!
One of the best ways to
prepare for the interview
is to practice yol'r
response3 v itl1 ~;c•mebody.
By the time you get to the
real thing, you should be
more relaxed. That's what
political candidates do, so
why not you? Be comfottable with yourself, and it
will show.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
have a question. My
mental and emotional
age don't seem to match
rriy age in years. I can't
seem to wrap my head
around doing things that
.s.._orne&lt;)ne my age is "sup~~~

Ohio bill seeks fast payment to wrongly convicted

Dr. Joyce-Brothers
posed·" to enjoy, like
playing bridge or making
quilts or whatever it is
that senior citizens think
is fun. I live in a big city,
and when I visit my siblings in their suburban
"active living" communities, I feel so out of place.
Right now, I am off to a
rock concert! Is there
something wrong with
me, honestly? - D.M.
Dear D.M.: You know,
I can tell you are feeling
strange, or even freakish.
Why, it's possible to
think back just a generation to when our parents
all enjoyed being grownups and sliding comfortably into middle age and
elderhood, all the while
changing their activities
and interests to match
their advancing years.
They retired to Florida
and played shuffleboard,
like they were supposed
to! Today, things are different for a great many
people. You are not the
only one to defy your
years and refuse to leave
the world of your youth.
The baby boomers really
are still running things
when it comes time to
change their image, and
many of them just aren't
interested in following
the traditional path.
So, where does this
leave you? When you are
on your honv turf. the big
city. it seems you feel perfectly comfortable with
your lifestyle and your
approach to aging. It. i.s
only when you go to .v1s1t
your suburban relatives.
w1-J.o are living a more traditional rl.!tirec life, that
you feel like a duck out ot
water. So. don't let the
way others have chosen to
Jive determine how you
feel about yourself. You
may never want to buy
into that other t)' pe of
lifestyle, but you don't
really have to decide right
now. Just go with the flow,
and know that a trait of
your generation is the
ability to march to the beat
of a different drummer.
(c:) 2010 by King

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio needs to speed up
payments to people who
are wrongly imprisoned
for crimes they didn't
commit, a lawmaker
pushing for faster compensation said.
State
Sen.
David
Goodman, Republican
from New Albany, introduced a bill last week
that would require the
state to pay wrongly
imprisoned people 50
percent of their mandated
compensation within 60
days of their release from
prison.
In the past, the wrongly
convicted have waited
for months - sometimes
more than a year - to
receive settlements from
the state.
"They should be able to

move on with their lives
as quickly as possible
without fighting and waiting so long to receive
compensation," Goodman
said. ''Nothing will ever
be able to compensate
them for their pain and
taking part of their. life
from them, but this is the
right thing to do.''
The latest example
came last week in
Columbus, when Robert
McClendon, who was
released from priSon in
August 2008. was finally
awarded a $1.1 million.
McClendon, 54, spent
nearly 18 years in prison
for a rape he didn't commit. He was cleared by
DNA testing.
The
holdup
in
McClendon's case was
determining lost wages

~q QP.b.ril?]ITY COLlEGE

Your FURTURE within REACH
MEIGS CENTER

an annuity and will place
the rest of his settlement
money in a savings
account.
The Ohio attorney generals office. which negotiates wrongful-imprisonment
settlements,
issued a statement saying
the office is reviewing
Goodman·s proposal.
Michele
Berry,
a
Cincinnati lawyer who
represents McClendon,
said the measure is crucial
to helping people who are
trying to rebuild a life.

Community Calendar

Internet
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Public
meetings
Wednesday, June 2
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
Pageville Town Hall
Thursday, June 3
CHESTER
The
Chester Shade Historical
Association will meet 7
p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse.
Monday, June 7
RUTLAND
The
Rutland
Township
Trustees will meet on
Monday June 7 at 5 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire
Station.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, 7
p.m. Syracuse Village
Hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Jun~ 3
TUPPERS PLAINSTuppers Plains VFW
Post
9053
Ladies

Auxiliary, regular meeting, 7 p.m.
Friday, June 4
POMEROY - Meigs
PERl
74,
1
p.m.,
Mulberry
Community
Center. Kim Thompson to
speak.
Saturday, June 5
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will meet at the hall for a
potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by a meeting at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to attend.

Other events

Birthday
Sunday, June 6
POMEROY - Wanda
Neigler will observe her

..£rAPn:F

90th birthday on June 6.
She originally lived in
Syracuse but is now a
patient at Darst's Private
Care, 33164 Children's
Home Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45760.
Mel~

lo 25x

fasler!J

,'C41 \3mote

Sign Up Online! www LocaiNetcom

Reliable Internet Access Sonce 1994

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un

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L •.:u:gest selection ofE:os::ercise F.quipn1.enr
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in. Meigs c;oun.ty.
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Sunday, June 6
RACINE
28th
Annual George Holter, Jr.
Family Reunion, 1 p.m.,
home of Karen Werry,
bring covered dish and
family photos, chicken
provided.

&lt;.o:"iioan1 - 4:oovn\
ik oomn - '2.:00'P"'l

Taking Applications

The Maples
t.....,, · Ll

f

~

HUD Subsidized
Efficiency/1 Bedroom
50yrs or qualifying disability
!/{.. Low income priority

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Silverheels
A Realty Company-EHO

AR£ 1&gt;A1~

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SEnLE IRS TAXES
For ·a fraction of what you owe
If )OU qu&lt;JJil\

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tax liC'n&lt;

Features Syndicate

t1NIVERSIH OF

- money he would have
earned if he had not been
in prison.
Under Goodman's proposal, those who were
wrongly
imprisoned
would
receive
the
remaining 50 percent of
their mandated compensation when they reach
an agreement on lost
wages as pa1t of a master
settlement with the state.
"I was disappointed it
took so long in my case,
but I was one of the lucky
ones," McClendon said.
"I had loved ones and
friends that helped me
make it through this."
~cClendOJ1
started
shopping for hou~e~ last
week and plans to use
about $300.000 fq_r his
home, a car and furnishings. He put $300,000 in

740-992-7028

.&amp;.

INGELS

www .rio.edu

CARPET

42377 Charles Chancey Drive • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-1880

175 North 2nd Ave • Middleport, OH

York Ingels, Owner

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If ~ou o\\e over $13,000 in hack ta•e~
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PageA4

[The Daily ~entinel

Wednesday, June

2, 2010

..

The Daily· Sentinel

i!

111 Court Street · Po meroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 · FAX (740) 992-2157

Ui

www.mydailysentinel.com

Oh io Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

ENJO( \T...
\F You W1N \N

~

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

D

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

NoVEMBER,

~

v

You'LL BE
1UE P&gt;UM ...

•

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislrmeut of rel(f!ion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridgin,!! the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govermnettt for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUI~

OP I NION

Ultimate sacrifice
Dear Editor:
Paying homage to America's finest heroes who
gave everything in ·defense of our freedom is difficult. Difficult in that while more than 1.2 million
men and women have perished in or as a result of
military conflicts, we are still able to live in a free
society. Infinite in its vadety, sometimes turbulent, but all the more valuable for having been
tested by adversit).
Memorial Da) is not about celebrating the
beginning of the summer season or sales at the
shopping malls. lt IS a solemn day of remembrance. a day that should be properly set aside for
nationwide mouming.
t; nfortunatel y. that sentiment is not always
shared. There are those who fail to understand
what had to be given in order to win and preserve
our freedom.
The best way to honor the dead is to serve those
who lived but came home sick and wounded.
Those who made it home often carry heavy burdens upon their shoulders. They often know they
must fi!!ht on in honor of their fallen comrades,
Jiving life to the fullest in spite of severe disabling
injuries or illness.
The newest veterans are in many ways the ones
~·ith the greatest needs. New to them is the seemingly daunting process necessary to receive their
earned and needed care from the Department of
Veterans Aff&lt;!.irs. Veterans have long returned to
find our government's administrative systems
rigtd, cumoluted and not always ready to meet
their generations particular needs.
The burdens of our veterans young and old, men
and \VOmen and their families is extreme. Perhaps
the most fitting way we can honor those who
never made it home is to do all we can to take care
of those who did. now and in the future.
Less than one percent of the population is currently serving in our nation's military. That is far
and away the smallest percentage ever for the
United States during wartime.
That is a remarkable testament to just how special today's servicemen and servicewomen are.
They, like so many in America's history,. are
putting everything at risk for you, for me and for
our future.
Your patriotism and your commitment to the
men and women of our armed forces - past and
present - should never be forgotten.

Ellen M. Darby
Adjutant Meigs Disabled A merican Veterans
Auxiliary 7987.
Bidwell

LETTERS TO T H E EDIT OR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

Great American debt roll
BY FRED

A. KINGERY

CENTER FOR VSION &amp; VALUES

Financial markets function to
discount the future. Usually, by
the time you read about something in the newspaper, financial
market pricing has already "discounted" that event weeks,
months, or perhaps even years
before it hits the front page and
becomes evident to everyone else.
That's what it means to "speculate."
The whole world is beginning
to seriously speculate that the
Treasury is becoming a deadbeat
borrower. Normally, such speculation would be expressed as a
higher cost for borrowing, meaning higher interest rates on treasuries. coupled with a reluctance
by lenders to offer long-term
financing. If you have money to
lend, why would you risk it by
lending long term when you
would be exposed to less risk by
lending short term? The risk for
lending long term to the Treasury
is that there is more time for
something bad to happen like
inflation, a currency collapse or
even default. As Will Rogers once
said, "I airft so much wonied
about the return on my money as
the return of my money." ·
So, Treasury bond market speculators have a problem. The
Federal Reserve's current monetary policy is unintentionally
manipulating the market's willingness to expre:&gt;s a true perception of the growing credit deterioration of the U.S. government's
balance sheet.
Specifically, lenders to the
Treasury would prefer to lend
short term (under one year) rather
than long term (beyond five
years). However, the Fed has
pegged interest rates in the short
end of the treasury market at near
zero percent. Lenders willing to
lend money short are getting no
return. Beyond five years, where
Fed policy influence is significantly less, the return for a lender
is much better at 3.5 percent or
higher.
So here is the problem: The
market wants to lend short, but

that desire doesn't get paid. The
market is reluctant to lend long,
but that reluctance is rewarded
with a higher return. So, what
happens when the Fed begins taking its foot off the monetary
accelerator and short rates in the
treasury market begin rising? The
Fed will almost certainly begin
raising short rates in the ne~t six
to 12 months.
Currently. about 30 percent (c.
$4 trillion) of total outstanding
Treasury debt matures in less than
one year. About 55 percent (c.
$7.5 trillion) of the total national
debt matures in Jess than three
years. If the Treasury €urrently
matures $4 trillion of debt each
year, and, in addition. runs an
annual deficit of $1.4 trillion, then
the total annual borrowing
requirement will be $5.4 trillion.
What h&amp;ppens if the 55 percent of
the debt that matures in three
years decides to migrate to a
maturity of less than one year as
reluctant longer-term lending
gives way to preferred short-term
lending. encouraged by an
inevitable shift in Fed policy to
raise sho11-term interest rates?
ln that case. the total annual
bonowing requirement (maturing
debt plus the deficit) becomes a
gigantic $8.9 trillion. Each year's
maturing debt has to be "rolled"
(new debt sold to replace that
which is maturing) to the next
year (at least), and each year's
new borrowing need (the deficit)
has to find buyers from the same
pool of lenders. The annual
maturing debt "roll," plus the
annual government deficit, make
up the total annual borrowing
requirement for the Treasury.
How gigantic is $8.9 trillion?
It's approximately the combined
size of the second and third
largest GDPs on the planet, Japan
and China. combined. It's also
approximately the sum of the
GDPs of Germany, France,
England, and Brazil. U.S.
Treasury debt financing, which
already depends on the kindness
of su·angers. will become even
more so. And each year the
world's lenders (the notorious
"bond vigilantes") will get to

(Fred A . Kingery is a selfemployed. private-equity investor
in domestic and internation.
financial markets from N
Wilmington, Pa., and a guest
commentator for The Center for
Vision &amp; Values at Grove City
College.)
·

(usPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh10.
Second·class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated' Press
and the
Ohio
Newspaper
Our main numb er Is
Association.
(740) 992-2156.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
Department extensions a re: tions to The Daily Sentinel. P.O.
Box 729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Correct ion Po licy
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story. call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

~TON'£.,

\T lSN'T...

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
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• I

finance~

decide if they want to
over half of the entire maturing Treasury debt structure.
Bottom line, in the next year or
,two, interest expense as a percentage of federal government's
receipts could easily explode to
the upside and exceed 20 percent
(the
Congressional
Budget
Office's projection for the current :
year is 9.5 percent) as Fed policy •
change translates immediately ·
into higher interest expense on
what might be approximately 55
percent of the Treasury's total
outstanding debt. Fed monetary
policy will then become hostage
to the combined annual maturing
:
debt "roll" and deficit.
At that point. the Fed's predica- _
ment will be that it won't be able
raise interest rates to stop inflation or defend the U.S. dollar for
fear of what it y.·ill cost the
Treasury in additional interest .
expense. Lenders, both foreign •
and domestic, would begin s .
speculate that the Treasury co
soon be caught in a borrowin
death spiral (funding both maturing debt and deficit increasingly
driven higher by rising interest
expense). These lenders would be
very easily tempted to withdraw
liquidity from the Treasury bond
market (the dreaded buyers
strike). That. in turn, will force
the Fed to simply print the money
in order to provide the required
financing. The money pnnting
would then easily translate into a
serious inflation (hyperinflation)
and a currency collapse .
Anyone want to ''speculate" on
an alterrtative happy ending to
this story?
Realists may wish to ask a more
profound question when confronted with the shocking size of
America's annual debt "roll" and
deficit: Where is the current leadership in Washington taking our
nation?

The ·Daily Sentinel I
R ' 'E. r Servic

.

�' W ednesday, June

2 , 2010

Obituaries
Herman Clifton Michael
Herman Clifton Michael, 92, of Pomeroy, Ohio
passed away on May 3 1, 20 10.
He was born on March 5,1918 in Harrisonville,
Ohio son of the late Raymond J. Michael and Janie
Michael. He was a retired welder from the forVanadium Plant in New Haven.
'is .survived by Larry (Irma) Michael, Darlene
David$On, Joyce (James Beach) Ash, Ryan
n.lluuJ.uaJ Dill, Sheena Ash, Virginia Michael, Janet
, special relatives, Virginia Michael and Janet
Manuel, several grandchildren. great grandchildren,
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by his wife, Clyda Michael; children., Bonnie,
Thomas, Raymond, Tim and Terry Michael; brothers
and sisters, Cecil Michael, Pete Michael, Cliff
Michael, Thelma Moore, Phyllis Morris. Kenny
Michael and Beatrice Lightfoot.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday. June 3,
2010 at 11 a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow at Bradford
Cemetery. Visiting hours will be on Wednesday from
6-8 p.m. at the funeral horne. An on-line registry is
available at www.andersonrncdaniel.com.

Th e Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

BP stock tumbles as feds announce oil-spill probes
NEW ORLEANS (AP) inc the actions of those divert the oil, BP was
- BP's stock plummeted involved in the spill. If using robotic machines
and took much of the we fi nd evidence of ille- to carve into the twisted
market down with it gal behavior, we will be appendages of the cripTuesday as the federal extremely forceful in our pled well. The latest
government announced response," Holder said in ~ttempt involved using
tools resembling an overcriminal and civil inves- New Orleans.
tigations into the Gulf of
BP's stock nose-dived sized deli slicer and garMexico oil spill• BP engi- on Tuesday, losing near- den shears to break away
neers, meanwhile, tried ly 15 percent of its value the broken riser pipe so
to recover from a failed on the first trading day engineers can then posiattempt to stop the gush- since the previous best tion a cap over the well's
er with an effmt that will option - the so-called opening.
.
initially make the leak "top kill" - failed and
Even if it succeeds, it
was aborted at the gov- will temporarily increase
worse.
Attorney General Eric ernment's direction. It the flow of an already
Holder, who was visiting dipped steeply with massive leak by 20 perthe Gulf to survey the Holder's late-afternoon cent - at least 100,000
fragile coastline and announcement, which gallons more a day. And
meet with state and fed- also sent other energy it is far from certain that
eral prosecutors, would stocks tumbling, ulti- BP will be able to cap a
not say who might be tar- mately causing the Dow well that one expert comgeted in the probes into Jones industrial average pared ·to an out-of-control fire hydrant.
the largest oil spill in ' to tumble 112.
U.S. history.
"It is an engmeer's
After six weeks of fail''We will closely exam- ures to block the well or nightmare," said Ed

'

Overton, a Louisiana
State University professor of environmental sciences. "They're trying to
fit a 21-inch cap over a
20-inch pipe a mile away.
That's just horrendously
hard to do. It's not like
you and I standing on the
ground
pushing
they're using little robots
to do this."
The operation has
never been performed in
such deep water, and is
similar to an earlier failed
attempt that used a larger
cap that quickly froze up ..
BP PLC officials said
they were applying
lessons learned from the
earlier effort, and plan to
pump
warm
water
through pipes into the
smaller dome to prevent
any icing problems.

Relay from Page At

Deaths
Lowell Beaver
Lowell Beaver, Middleport, passed away unexpectedly on May 31, 2010, at St. Mary's Hospital in
ntington, W.Va. Arrangements are being handled
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Horne in Middleport
•
-and will be announced when completed. An on-line
registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.corn

Comella Faye (Stover) Woods
Comella Faye (Stover) Woods, 70, of Gallipolis
Ferry, died Sunday evening, May 30,2010.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., Friday,
June 4, 2010, at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
Burial will follow in Beale Chapel Cemetery. Apple
Grove, W.Va. Visitation will be held at the funeral
home from 6 until9 p.m., Thursday, June 3, 2010. An
online guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfh.com.

Local Briefs

Local,
Meigs
High
School
and
Meigs
Middle School with
MMS raising the highest
total at $4,000. The advisory board also decided a
quilt made by Rmalie
Johnson from past and
present Relay T-shirts
will be sold by silent auction at Rely to raise even
more funds.
Crisp then announced
she will be retiring from
RFL after 11 years of
in vo I vernen t/l eadersh ip.
Attendees
expressed
appreciation to Crisp for
her dedication and efforts
toward RFL throughout
the years.
ACS
Income
Development Staff Partner
Hilary Patrick will be
asked to mail survivor
invitations to Relay sta.Iting today. Several volunteers are also calling

known survivors to per- dinating a Worksite
sonally invite them to RFL Wellness Conference on
to encourage attendance.
June 30 at the Middleport
Advisory
Board Church of Christ Family
Member Courtney Sim Life Center. The main
reported
the
Meigs topic will be healthcare
County Cancer Initiative, reform. There will be a
Inc. (MCCI) implement- ''Tools for Schools" coned ACS' ''Fresh Start'' ference on Aug. 5 at
tobacco cessation pro- . Eastern Local for school
gram Last month at the food service personnel
Mulberry Community with 20 participants
Center. The facilitator, already pre-registered for
Lora Rawson, is a former the event. Also, MCCI
employee of the Holzer continues to offer $20
Medical Center Tobacco transportation vouchers
Prevention
Center. for local cancer patients
Additional facilitators traveling for medical
will be solicited and appointments - call S im
trained with the next ses- at 992-6626 for more
sion in July. Andy information. Sirn can
Brumfield coordinates also be contacted about
client referrals and regis- participating in RFL or
tration and can be purchasing Luminaries in
memory of loved ones
reached at 992-6626.
Brumfield/Meigs who have fought the batCounty
Health tle against cancer.
Department will be coorMembers also voted to

Sketching class offered
MIDDLEPORT- Caitlin Nease, a 2006 graduate
of Southern High School and now a junior at
Marshall University majoring in art education, will
fering a four-week class in basic sketching at
iverbend Arts Council in Middleport starting
week.
The classes will be held on Wednesdays, June 9, 16,
23, and 30, at 6:30p.m. Those enrolling are to take a
sketch pad and a #2 pencil.
The cost for the four classes is $25. To register call
Mary Wise at 992-2675 or Nease at 416-5505.
Registrations are requested by June 7.

Stuart's Opera House
sponsors wine express
NELSONVILLE - Stuart's Opera House is hosting it's annual Summer Wine Express on the Hocking
Valley Scenic Railway Friday. The train departs at 7
p.m . from the Nelsonville Depot, at the comer of U.S .
33 and Hocking Parkway.
The Wine Express features wine, cheese and crackers, and a trip through the scenic. Hocking Valley.
Tickets will be available at the Hocking Valley Scemc
Railway Depot before the train leaves the station,
those who purchased tickets in advance can pick them
.
.
up then ac; well. .
Tickets are available and are $35 for the firSt class
car or $25 for coach. The proceeds from ticket sales
will benefit Stuart's Opera House. For more information or to purchase tickets call (740) 753-1924 or visit
.
ebsite at www.stuartsoperahouse.org.

For the Record
Accidents reported
POMEROY - Meigs County 911 reports the.following motor vehicle accidents over the holiday
weekend: 8:52 p.m., Friday, May 28. Ohio 143,
Pomeroy; 9:01 p.m., Friday, May 28, Ohio 681 ne.ar
Coolville· 3:26 p.m., Saturday, May 29, Laurel Chff
Road Po~eroy; 9:55 p.m., Saturday, May 29, Ohio
\24, Long Bottom; 3:08p.m., ¥onday, Max 31: Ohio
681 near Reedsville. These accidents are bemg mvestigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post of t~e Ohio State
Highway Patrol and no further details were available
at press time .

~--------------------------------------

JobSrromPage Al
Carleton School and Meig~ Industries, the Athe~s­
Meigs Educational Service Ce~t~r and Metgs
County office holders. Shank anticipates the proproviding jobs for around 75-85 youth who
fy.
e program reimburses employers, 100 perc~nt,
for wages as well as fri nges (wor~ers compensatJOn,
social security, PERS, etc.). which the employee
earns between J une 1-Aug. 31. The program will pay
a wage up to $ 10 per hour but Shan~ said after spe.~­
ing with employers, most wages will be either mlmmum wage or $8 per hour.
Jobs are not guaranteed in the program and i~ th~~e
are more candidates than employers, Shank smd 1t s
likely a waiting list will be developed should slots
open up.
.
.
.
With many workplaces m the public sector cuttmg
back to save money, the program is also geared to fi ll
this staffing gap as well as provide jobs to those who are
~ligible and wish to work.

merge the Meigs County
Survivorship Taskforce
with the Meigs County
ACS Advisory Board.
ACS Employee Amy
Magorien reported that
ACS Ohio Division is
engaging in merger discussions
with
Pennsylvania. The main
goal is to reduce redundancy of executive staff
members. Mission goals
and programming will
remain the same per
Magorien. It is hoped
that ''synergism" will
result , according to Sirn.
In addition to Sirn,
Crisp and Magorien.
attending the recent meeting were President Rae
Moore, Maxine Griffith,
Gloria Oiler. The advisory board next meets at
noon, Thursday, July 15
in the banquet room at the
Wild Horse Cafe.

Center from Page At
prior to constructing and
moving into its new
church building five
years ago.
"That
building
weighed on my heart in
recent months and in
prayer I felt the Lord
wanted me to pursue use
of the old school again
to help in the realization
of Bethel's vision to
reach out with the
gospel to those within a
50 mile radius," said
Pastor Rob Barber.
Barber met with Tom
Karr of Karr Contracting,
and his wife Diana who
agreed to donate use of
the building rent free to
the Bethel Worship
Center until it is sold.
"We're excited to be able
to offer a facility for the
kids on this end of the
county. We need the
space for the kids and
their families and are just
glad to help out," commented Karr.
With that the Bethel
pastor and its congregation began plans to begin
work on making the
building suitable for
youth use. Because much
work had already been
done on the building
years ago prior to its closure by Meigs County's
Eastern school district,
and by Bethel volunteers
when it served as the
church house. the task of
making it serviceable
again was not as daunting
as it once was.
The youth minister and
members of Bethel's new
"Revolution" teen youth
ministry. along with
other volunteers overseen by church member
Randy Jewell. are working on the project.
The youth pastor envisions " a unique new outreach to the Meigs
County and area communities with space to house

the Bethel clothing and
food pantries, basketball
facilities, a cafe/eatery,
classroom space. and a
center for youth to meet
and play games. attend
concerts and teaching
sessions·, eat and hang
out with friends, and just
plain have some fun all in a safe, clean Christcentered environment."
Pool and ping pong
tables have been donated
and community leaders
are offering to help.
Eastern seniors assisted
with some work, and
many community leaders
have expressed an interest in helping. Eastern
Superintendent
Rick
Edwards, collaborating
with
Eastern
High
School Principal Scot
Gheen volunteered the
Eastern senior class to
assist with work on the
building as community
service partially in lieu of
attending class to make
up for missed snow days
this past school year.
Ron Vance, Meigs
County Juvenile Court
probation officer and
community
service
supervisor, also suggested that some of the
youth under his supervi-

sion could be available
to help with work on the
building.
Dr. Nan Cervantes,
site director at the
Woodland Centers in
Pomeroy
(Meigs
County's public behavioral health facility), has
expressed a desire to
assist, stating that she is
very interested in partnering with the Juvenile
Court to provide community service opportunities for Woodland's
youth clients, particularly as such involvement
helps youth to take pride
in their local community. In addition. once the
center is in operation,
Dr. Cervantes would
like to utilize the facility
for therapeutic activities
for children and their
families.

For answers, and more
information on the project, please contact
Pastor Rob Barber at
740-667-6793, or visit
www.bethelwc .org.

Larry Hudson
10/30/43- 12/26/09
The days may come and
go, but the times we
shared will always
·remain.
Your loving wife &amp;
granddaughters. great
grandsons and great
granddaughter. We love
you &amp; always will, Hon.

Hay Equipment Central

hael
~·
\NVVW.careq.com

•

Lori (Hudson)
Hensle)
I 0/ l/66 - I 0/7/2006
The days may come and
go. but rhe times we
shared will always
remain.
Love. Mom. Ronnie, Tiff
&amp; Britt, Na-nan's boys,
Rohwan, Blaise &amp; Eastin

&amp; granddaughter
Love Always

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• 12 Used .New Holland &amp; John Deere
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740-446-2412 Gallipolis
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606-833-1408 Greenup County

�I.

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June

Around Ohio
Ohio homes evacuated,
bomb-like device harmless
COLUMBUS (AP) - Firefighters say Ohio residents whose apartment buildings were evacuated
because of a device that looked like a bomb can return
home because it was a harmless imitation.
Paramedics responding to a call about a woman's
possible suicide attempt at a Columbus apartment
Tuesday found guns and what appeared ro be a rimer
attached to sticks of dynamite. Four or five of the several buildings in the Saddlebrook apartments complex
were evacuated for hours.
Fire Battalion Chief David Whiting says the device
was a dummy and wasn't created to scare anyone. He
says a man in the apartment has permits for the guns
and likes to tinker with such materials.
Whiting says the woman in the apm1ment wasn't
suicidal and didn't need to be treated. He says the 911
call about her was a misunderstanding.

Police try to find cause of
crash at parade site
WEST CHESTER (AP) - Police in Ohio are trying to determine what caused a crash that occurred
when a car driven by a World War 11 veteran went off
the road and injured at least four people lined up for a
Memorial Day parade.
Authorities say 84-year-old Everett Cole's vehicle
rolled over and hit a tree in front of a house in West
Chester, about 15 miles n01th of Cincinnati.
Cole and two others who were take to hospitals were
treated and released. A fourth man, 83-year-old Korean
War veteran Ralph Grophjan, of West Chester Township.
remained hospitalized in stable condition Tuesday.
Cole had been assigned to drive a car in the parade
Monday morning. The accident delayed the parade's
start by 30 minutes.
West Chester police said no charges had been filed
as of Tuesday pending an investigation.

Jury deadlocked in
tub drowning retrial
LEBANON (AP) - A jury in the retrial of an Ohio
man accused of drowning his wife in their bathtub has
deadlocked and was dismissed without reaching a verdict.
Jurors in the Ryan Widmer murder case deliberated for
the fourth day Tuesday before telling a judge in southwest Ohio's Warren County that they could not reach the
unanimous verdict required for conviction or acquittal.
The 29-year-old Widmer is accused in the 2008
death of wife Sarah Widmer at their home near Mason
northeast of Cincinnati. His first trial found Widmer
guilty in 2009, but a judge set aside the conYiction
following allegations of juror misconduct.
Widmer says he is disappointe::.u anu want::. tht:
ordeal to be over. He maintains his innocence.
Lawyers are under a gag order, and it was not
immediately known whether prosecutors would try
Widmer a third time.

2, 2010

Music shops in.mid Ohio cater to local musicians
BY DEAN NARCISO
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

COLUMBUS (AP) With dusty, out-of-print
music filling the shelves
and the quiet - absolute
quiet most days.
· Pontones Music &amp; More
in Grove City might be
mistaken for a library on
some days.
As more instruments,
sheet music and even
lessons are sold online or
through chain · stores,
independent music shops
are struggling as never
before.
But it's different on
Wednesday nights.
The industry gloom
makes the Pontones
Music Jam all the more
welcome to the fiddlers,
guitar pickers and crooners who gather at the
shop on Broadway each
week.
"That's when you get
music coming from out
of a music store," said
co-owner
Maria
Pontones.
The washtub bass and
ukulele player, flutist and
more than a dozen guitarists aiTive well before
the official 6:30 p.m.
start.
Pontones is master of
ceremonies during the
three hours. as almost 20
singers lead songs that
are heavy on bluegrass
and
country.
Merle
Haggard
and
Hank
Sr.
are
Williams
favorites .
Most of the players follow along by ear. unable
to read music, said Jim
Ross, who plays guitar
and sings. ·'It's relaxing,

although you go home all
wired up.
"I feel kind of Joyal to
them," he said of the
Pontones store, "because
they care enough about
doing something I like."
The independent music
store is something of an
endangered species.
Mount Vernon lost its
only full-service music
store recently when a
larger company bought
out Colonial Music there
and turned its focus to
school musicians and
mail orders.
"We were losing more
sales to Walmart for inferior products," said company President Judy
Kessler.
And the venerable
Shoppe
in
String
Columbus' University
District shut down when
South
Campus
the
Gateway complex built
out a few years ago.
Pontones had to make a
hard decision about the
future of the Grove City
store six years ago, after
the deaths of her parents,
who founded it in 1968:
"We couldn't sell it,
and we couldn't liquidate
it:' she said, adding that
she decided, "If you can't
get rid of it, you've got to
do something with it."
That's when she enlisted the help of a childhood friend, Clara Jo
Vance, who was unemployed at the time and
now is co-owner.
The shop is a sort of
time capsule for 1968. A
commemorative dinner
plate honoring President
Lyndon B. Johnson
hangs on a wall. A "Sing

Meigs County Forecast

Thursday
night ...
Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny. Areas of dense fog Mostly cloudy. Showers
in the morning. A slight and thunuerstorms likt:chance of showers in the ly in the evening ...Then
afternoon. Highs in the a ~hance of showers
upper 80s. Southwest wit'h a slight chance of
after
""rods 5 to 10 mph. thunderstorms
Chance of rain 20 per- midnight. Some thunderstorms may produce
cent.
Wednesday Right. .. heavy rainfall. Lows in
lower
60s.
Mostly cloud) with a the
slight chance of thun- Southwest winds 5 to 10
CINCINNATI (AP) - An Ohio judge has sentenced derstorms. A chance of mph. Chance of rain 70
a Kroger supermarket employee to the maximum five showers ... Mainly after percent.
years in prison for stealing more than $I 00.000 worth of midnight. Lows in the
Fri.day•.•Partly sunny.
scratch-offlo.ttery tickets in the store where she worked. mid 60s. Southeast A chance of showers in
Judge Dennis Helmick sentenced 53-year-old winds around 5 mph. the morning. Highs in the
Deborah Strong, of Cincinnati .. on Tuesday in Chance of rain 30 per- lower 80s. Chance of rain
.
Hamilton County Common Pleas Court.
30 percent.
cent.
Strong pleaded guilty May I 0 to a charge of aggraFriday night•..Partly
Thursday ... Mostly
vated theft. She told the judge she kept leftover tick- cloudy. A chance of cloudy. Lows around 60.
ets when refining the scratch-off ticket machine.
showers with a slight
Saturday
through
Strong admitted stealing $189,000 wor1h of scratch- chance of thunderstorms Sunday...Mostly cloudy
off lottery tickets. Kroger has said it believes the actu- in the morning ...Then with a chance of showers
al amount stolen was more than $500,000.
thunderstorms.
showers and thunder- aod
Attorney James Bogen has said Strong wanted to storms likely in the after- Highs in the lower 80s.
take responsibility for her actions. He said Tuesday · noon. Some thunder- Lows in the mid 60s.
that she has acknowledged a gambling addiction.
storms may produce Chance of rain 40 perheavy rainfall in the cent.
Sunday
night
afternoon. Highs in the
Tuesday ...
lower 80s. Southwest through
winds 5 to 10 mph. Partly cloudy. Lows in
Chance of rain 70 per- the upper 50s. Highs in
ST. CLAIRSVILLE (AP) - Officials say one cent.
the upper 70s.
inmate was killed and five others were hurt by lightning that struck at a prison in eastern Ohio.
Authorities at the Belmont Correctional Institution
say lightning hit just before 6:30 p.m. Monday as
inmates were in a recreation yard. Thirty-three-year-old
Dalin Anderson of northeast Ohio's Summit County
Your Local Source For
and another inmate were taken to a hospital, where
Anderson was pronounced dead. Prison spokeswoman
• Furniture
Kathy Cole said the other inmate was still hospitalized
• Appliances
Tuesday with injuries that are not life threatening.
Four other inmates who were hurt were treated at
• Carpet
the prison.
106 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH
Records show Anderson was at the prison since 2005
on charges of drug possession and illegal possession of
740-992-3671
chemicals. He was expected to be released in 2014.

Grocery worker
sentenced in lottery theft

for Candy" bowl is filled
with treats.
Pontones' 5-year-old
poodle, Beni, is a constant presence.
Pontones, 58, who also
is a nurse, is happy to
keep the store open.
despite barely covering
her $575 monthly rent.
What profit is made
comes from consignment
sales, music lessons.
reeds, valve oil. strings,
tuners and other accessories. The shop is open
daily except Sundays.
Small shops credit personal service and knowledge of their community
for helping them stay
afloat.
For Tim Becker, coowner of Martin Music in
Newark, an occasional
Internet sale helps.
"Our first commitment
is to our community, but
on a pragmatic basis. we
want our business to survive and prosper."
He recently sold a rare.
1973 French Loree oboe
to
a
professor in
Philadelphia for OJletenth of its $9 .000 fist
price.
''I'm selling a professional oboe that, chances
are, there was no home
for in· Newark," he said.
When a music shop
dies. part of the cominunity goes with it, Becker
said.
"It affects the local guitar player, the local music
teacher. the school music
programs and the old
lady who plays piano on
Sundays."
For all the challenges
that independent music
shops face, hope for a

resurgence remains in the
renewed
interest in
music. buoyed by TV's
American Idol and the
video game Guitar Hero.
"Music's prevalence in.-... 1
our society right riow ha.
never been higher,"· ·sai
Scott
Robertson.
spokesman ' for
the
National Association of
Mu~ic Merchants, which
represents more than
4,500 mu-;ic shops.
"Music is critical to
life. It's what it means to
be human,'' he said.
"Retailers are working
harder than they ever ·
have to earn their customers· business.''
For independent shops,
that means being part of
the fabric of a community.
At Becker's store in :
Newark, that's represented by a jug that sits on a
counter. silently accepting donations of spare
change for a fund to help _
kids pay for lessons and
earn instruments. Local
teachers nominate stu- • ·
'dents to receive aid.
At Pontones in Grove
City. that means bein.
the place to be o
Wednesday nights for
amateur musicians such
as Chadie Hummel. 82.
''It's sort of a therapy
thing for us guys who
can't play professionally
or in front of people," he
said. "When you· re playing, you can't think of
anything else."
Pontones is pragmatic
about her future. "We
don't know. Hopefully,
we stay open.
''It's better than a nursing home.''

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31.20
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 50.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 51.07
Big Lots (NYSE) - 34.76
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 28.01
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 36.44
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)- 9.71
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.87
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-4.30
City Holding (NASDAQ) 31.19
Collins (NYSE)- 57.15
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.24
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.29
General Electric (NYSE) 15.98
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 29.18
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.54
Kroger (IIIYSE) - 19.87
Limited Brands (NYSE) 25.23
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

55.03
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 1.9.40
BBT (NYSE) -29.77
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 14.05
Pepsico (NYSE) - 62.76 '
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.5
Rockwell (NYSE) - ·52.22
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 8.06
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.14
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 83.02
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 50.92
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.44
WesBanco (NYSE) - 17.93
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.86
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for June 1, 2010,
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.

Lightning kills inmate
in yard at Ohio prison

Ander ri's.

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�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Local Sports Briefs, Page B6
PitcheA 'ulnerable on the mound, Page B6

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

~cAL· ScHEDULE Stone leads Riverside Senior Men's Golf League
•

POMEROY - A schedule of upcomtng
• htgh school varstly sporlmg even1 s
' Involving leams from Metgs, Muson. and
Gallta counties

Thursday,. June. 3
Baseball - Class AA state semis
Point Pleasant versus Braxton
County at Appalachian Powore
Park tn Charleston , 4:30 p.m.
Friday, JuOJL4
Track and Field - State meet
• Gal a Academy, Eastern. A tll()r
Va ley at Jasso Owens Stadtum In
Columbus. 9 a m
Saturday. Jun~t..5
•Track and Reid - State meet
Gan a Academy, Eastern, Atver
Valley at Jesse Owons Stadium In
• Columbus, 9 a.m

S ENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

MASON. W.Va.
Carl Stone from Ripley,
W Va .. has 121.0 points
for the year to lead sec1 ond place Bub Stivers
j from Pomeroy. Oh;o. by
six point~ with his 115.0
point tot~!. Third place is
being held down by Mick
Winebrenner of Racine .
Ohio with a 99.0 point
total for his 2010 efforts.
j A total of 77 players
were on hand for
Tuesday's beautiful day.
The players were paired
into l7 teams of four and
three teams of three players each.
The lowest score for
the day was 56 ( 14 under
par) shot by the team of
Carl Stone, Bill Boyd.
Bill Arnott, and Haskel
Jones.
The second lowest
score was 59 ( 11 under
par) by the team of Ra)
Redman.
Bob
Humphreys. Bruce May.
and Bub Stivers.
There was a three way
tic for third place with a
score of 60 ( I 0 under
par) by the teams of

I

I

I
========
I er
R•10's M•11
Completes
marathon
at natl·onals

•

B Y MARK WILLIAMS
SPECI! t

HI '&gt;ENTINEL

:\1ARION. Ind .
Universitv of Rio Grande
sophomore Zane Miller
completed the men's
marathon on Saturday
morning at the '\ \lA
Track &amp; Field '\ at1onal
Championships
at
Indiana
Weslc) an
University.
Miller. a nati ve of
Grove City. Ohio . finished 28th overall (out of
- 42 finishers) with a time
of 2:50:51 .90.
Miller was ranked 45th
in the nation going into
the event. His 4ualifying
time for the national meet
was 1: 16: 17.00 at the
Capital
City
Half
Marathon.
Miller \\US the last of
three Rio Grande athletes
compete at the nationmeet. Nick Wilson ran
the 5.000-metcr run .
finishing 25th in the
:-emifinals . Cassie ~I attia
competed in the 400meter hurdles on the
women's side - fini shing 15th overall.

Charlie Hargraves. Dick
Dugan,
Bobby
Joe
Roush. and Ralph Sayre.
and Chuck Stanky.
Glenn Johnson. Kenny
Greene. and
Jim
Cunningham. and Tom
Dotson.
Bill
Winebrenner. and Willb
Dudding.

2010

MEN'S SENIOR
LEAGUE S TANDINGS

Bill Yoho
Jerry Dean
Chet Thomas
Rich Mabe
Haske! Jones
Paul Maynard
Rick Northup
Mitch Mabe
Bill Winebrenner
Dave Shinn
Catbird Roush
Gary Bates

67.5
66.5
66.0
65.0
64.5
64.0
63.5
63.5
63.5
63.0
60.5
60.5

R USSELL WINS 201 0
121 .0 G.Q. R OUSH MEMORIAL
Carl Stone
Bub St1vers
115.0
AFTER FOUR HOLE
Mick Winebrenner99.0
PLAYOFF
Bob Humphrey 98.5
94.0
Don Corbin
MASON. W.Va.
Clyde Jarvis
94.0 · Ryan Russell of New
Dick Dugan
92.0
Haven, W.Va. has taken
Bob Oliver
89.5
the championship in the
Ke'n Whited
88.5
2010
G.O.
Roush
Ralph Sayre
83.0
Memorial
Handicap
Gary Minton
80.0
Tournament. The tournaBobby Joe Roush 77.0
ment is played annually
Ed Debalski
75.0
in memory of Grant 0.
Cuzz Laudermilt 74.0
Roush. the father of
Frank Brown
74.0
Riverside owner Gary
Claude Proffitt
73.0
Roush. The tournament
Kenny Greene
73.0
is 36 holes of stroke play
Craig Barnes
72.5
\\ ith handicaps and is
Cecil Minton
69 .5
open to all Riverside
Curtis Grubb
68.5
members with 2010 ghin
68.0
Bob Hill
handicap cards.
Chuck Butterworth
The tournament ended
67.5
with a three-way tie for

first
between
Ryan
RusseJI of New Haven.
W.Va .. Jason f reeker of
Pomeroy. Ohio. and
Sterling
Shield"
of
Mason. W.Va. The playoff format was in two
hole segments with
Russell making an eight
foot bogey putt on the
fourth hole to seal the
2010 championship .
A total of 42 pia) crs
started the tournament
with the top II players
receiving prizes for their
play. Grant Roush. the
two year old son of
Mitch Roush. was on
hand to present the win
ner with the pla4ue for
his victory.
Prize winners were
(70Ryan
Russell
59= 129), Jason Frecker
(65-64= 119), Sterling
Shields
(67 62=129).
Fred
Bryant
(6764=131). Ed Coon (6864= 132).
James
MacKnight
(7261=133): Jeff Arnold
(70-63= 133 ).
Trent
Roush (67-67=134-). P.J.
Gibbs
(63-71= 134).
Core)
Miller
(6470=134).
and
Tom
Xunnery (72-63=135).

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

MARION, IN - The
National
Association of
Intercolleg i a t e
Athlet i c s
(1\ AlA)
released
its 2010
D a k tronics~ AlA Track and Field
Scholar-Athletes
list
over the weekend at the
l\AIA Outdoor National

•
I
LeBron says Cavs have edge 1n free agency fu~i~:nt~~s?/bJitt~~

CLEVELAND (AP)
- One month from the
start of the NBA's free
agency frenzy. LeBron
James said he's not close
to making any decision.
However. he has handicapped his field of suitors.
The
Cleveland
Cavaliers lead the pack.
In his first interview
since the Cavs' season
ended with a shocking.
second-round loss to
Boston. James told
CNN 's La!T)' King that
Cle\eland has "an edge"
to re sign him. when the
greatest. collectiOn o.f free
a~ents m league history
h1ts the open market on
Jul). I.
.
. .
Kmg. who mterv.e~ed
James at the two-ttme
MVP's home near Akron
on Tuesday. asked the
superstar if Clev~land
has "an edge going in?"
"Absolutely.'' James
said in a portion of the
interview rele&lt;ISed by the
network. "Because. you
know. this city. these
fans. I mean. have given
me a lot in these seven
ycars. And, you know.
for me. it's comfortable.
So I've got a lot of memorics here. And so it does
have an edge.
&amp; T. LOUI~ (AP) "It's going to be a very
'lllll!"h'c Cincinnati Reds interesting summer and
made two bullpen moves I'm looking forward to
Tuesday. putting right- it."
hander Mike Lincoln on
Also during the inter• · the 15-day disabled list view, which will air
· with a strained upper Friday on CNN's "Larry
back and demoting right
King Live," James said
hander Carlos Fisher to he can't wait for July 1 to
arrive and that he has not
Triple A Louisville.
et decided where he'll
First baseman Joey sign.
Y
Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal/MCT
Votto returned to the line'Tm far from close." Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James grimaces after being fouled by Boston Celtics'
up after missing six
· games with a sore neck. he -was quoted as saying Paul Pierce in the fourth quarter in an NBA Eastern Conference semifinal game at
and was batting third. in a transcript posted on Quicken Loans Arena on Monday, May 3, in Cleveland, Ohio. The Celtics won 104• Miguel Cairo started all WEWS-TV's website in 86
Jerse) ~ets and Los ~arne time. it\ not
six games and was 12 for Cleveland. "Jul) is still a than anybody else.
··so it's unfortunate.
Angeles Clippers are always about the cit). It's
28 ( .429) with two month away. less tnan a
month away. I've thought ow ish him the best and I among a group of team~ about winning. If )OU put
homers.
. Manager Dusty Baker about it. but I haven't think he\ going to have a expected to make a me and Bo~h on th~ ~amc
strong push for James. team. if ) ou put mc and
• said if \'otto hadn't been began to strategize exact- great coaching ~career."
Before sitting down who is humbled by all the Dwayne Wadc on thc
· ready Tue:-.day. he \\Ould- Iy.''
James also made his with King. James had not attention as well as recent same team. a lot of tcams
n 't have been in the lineup until Friday because first comments about for- talked any media mcm- comments b)- :\'"e\v York \\Ould bc much b~..·ucr.
Michael )ou kllll\\. th~..· c~n s
he didn't want Votto to mer Cavs coach Mike bers since the Cavs were \1ayor
face Cardinal:-. ace Chris Brown. who was fired in eliminated by the Celtics. Bloomberg. who wants \\Ould be mwch b~tt~..·r: ·
of who then knocked off h1m to sign \\ ith the
And while he'll um:-ult
aftermath
Carpenter his first game the
back. Carpenter :-tarts Cleveland's startling loss Orlando and will meet Knicks. and President with aJvisl..'r~. famil\ and
dncsday for St. Louis to the Ccltics. James said the l.os Angeles Lakcrs Barack Obama. who friends . .lanK'S sai~l the
.•
the Reds have a day he was sorry to see in the finals starting would like to see him choicl' of his nl''\1 tl'am
Brown Jet go after. five Thursday.
step
into
Michael will up to onl' pcrsnn
ff Thursday.
James bclicvl.!s the Jordan's shadow with the
"It's -going to bt• mi.'."
Lincoln allowed a run se,as0 n.S·
"He was a great coach, Celtics can beat the Bulls.
he satd. ''I'm going to
• on four hits in I 2-3
James
seemed have to sit down and say
in
Monday, fivc great years we had Lukers and win their 18th
innings
we
turned
a
NBA
title.
intrigued
b}
the
Clippers
·v.·herc do you want to
together
and
night's 12-4 loss to the
He also plans to meet and the chance to play play'?
Cardinals and is 1-0 with franchise that hadn't seen
James has spl'nt all
a 7.32 ERA . Fisher gave a lot of thmgs in a lot of \\ ith Dwyanc Wade. ncar Hollywood.
years."
James
said.
Chns
Bosh
and
other.,
in
"They've
got
some
seven
sca~ons as a pro
up four runs in an in~1ing
"But ultimately. we a star studded summit of really good players. with the Cavs. who
Monday and is 1- 1 with a
both. myself and Mike free agents to talk about Some really nice. solid offered him a contract
9.82 ERA .
Brown.
didn't accom- their future plans .
pieces that. if the) add a extension la~t ye~r and
Mana~cr Dusty Baker
" I am the ringleader." free agent here or a free can gh c him $30 million
said L111coln was not plish what we \\anted to.
agent there. it could be a more than any other tcam
injured ~fonday night but and that was (win) the James told King~ •
NHA championship. And
The Ne\\ York Knicks. really good team. It's a in a maximum-length
Please see Reds, B6
I think we wanted it more Chicago Bulls, New great city. But at the deal.

Reds place
Lincoln on
DL, demote
Fisher

•

Rio's Mattia
earns NAIA
ScholarAthlete Award

.

~

rep:ese~ted
t~e
Unlverstty
o! RIO
Grand~ on the hs.t.
Mattia. a natJve .of
West Chester, OhiO,
also won the honor in
the fall for cross country. She is majoring in
Mass Communications.
In addition to her excellcnce in the classroom.
Mattia also qualified for
both the indoor and outdoor nat1onal championsh1ps.
\1attia qualified in
both the 600-meters and
800-meters
at
the
indoor championships
but on! y competed in
the 600. She set a new
school record in the 600
at Findlay, January 30
with a t'me
of 1·41 92
1
·

·

·

Two weeks later she
topped her school .best
~1ark at D~Pauw With a
t1me of 1.38 .98. She
ran. 24th . over~ll at
natwnals With a time of
I :40 12.
She ran the 400-meter
hurdles at the outdoor
championships
and
ad\ anced to the semifinals \\here she finished
15th \\ ith a time of
I :05.61. She qualified
(or tne national meet at
the
Mid-South
C o n f e r e n c e
Championships. April
24 with a time of
I :03.74.
"Obviously
I'm
extremely proud of
her," said Rio Grande
head coach Bob Willey.
" It's very exc iting to
have any of our studentathletes
earn
this
honor."
''This is what it's all
about," Willey added.
"We aim for this honor
more than we do them
earning All-American
in competition."
"Casste
is
very
de sen mg of this honor.
She puts the time in and
dedicates herself to
..,tudying and competing." Wille) said. "It' ~
a great tribute to the
I) )e of student/athlete
1
that she is."
Mattia is the daughter
of Anthony &amp; Miche lle
\1 tt"
a IU.
A total of 548 t
s udent athletes were recognizcd by the NAIA .
for their work in the
classroom. Student-athlctcs are nominated by
their head coach and
must mamtam a minimum grade point a\erage of 15 on a 4.0 scale
and ha\ e achie' ed
junior academic status
to qualify.

�Page 82 • The DC}ily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

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700

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAP
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS.
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
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N TRAILERS. B+W
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VIEW OUR ENTIRE
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AT
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WWW.CARMICHAELT
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740·
many
extras,
all yoo need to own your
446-3825
genuine H.D never dream home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
Have you priced a John down, like new, 14,000
888-565-0167
Deere lately? You'll be miles over $ $25,000.
surprised! Check out invested must sell call . - - - - - - - - . . . ,
Get A Jump
our used inventory at 740·339·0312
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Carmichael Equipment
SAVINGS
740-446-2412
Real Estate
3500
Rentals
900
Merchandise

Apartments/
Townhouses

WantTo Buy
Absolute Top Dollar
silver/gold coins, any
1OK/14K/18K
gold
jewelry, dental gold, pre
1935 US currency,
proof/mint
sets.
diamonds, MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Second floor 1 B.A.
apartment overlooking
Gallipolis City Park,
L.R.•Kitchen/dinning
area, bath. washer &amp;
dryer $400.00 mo call
740·446·4425 or 740·
446-2325.

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fer prtva~ -'Y
fGP pi'IYate party llllt'CIIIInllll, 1 _............_., 1

PM"tY

Runs •~() ,..
...:Jys 1t':::'~~ Item per lllf 1111 · - ; ; ; . ;
PI•" ;~~' ·'dd
tfllln $100 1000
$&amp;01-$1,000
8100

m;;;

O,tJY$1 0

l2.gg"

8

Free blk/wht kitten?
304-593-2641
to
FREE
Kittens
good home. 2 F, 3 M,,
1 Tiger, 4 Black,
are
mitten,
Call 740-441-

700

~14:99

1

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SMART BUY DEALS ON
~r Pf'IVll~ pert)'
WHEBZ
l*'eba....., 1
Ct!&lt;J, lMicila,
lt88i per 1111
II VI, 4·WIIeeler11,
$1001 86000 ftc. 1 1111n1 per 1111
411n8S, 14 da]lll 4
45 llaYI

s29.99

YARD SALE

~r prt~•~ party

r;.._......;....:.......;;..:.:.:.;'--'-......:.o...:.;;....:....:;....:;....:"""--..;;;......:.......,.::...;.:'-'=-'~~---'

Seasoned
cow,
manure dirt for sale,
ground ear com, $7

Otner Services

a hundred, 740-992-•
2623 740-992-2783

'""'*•
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Pet Cremations. Call
740·446·3745

DIRECTV

900
Merchandtse
Free Home
Security
S850 Value
Miscellaneous
with purchase of
Jet Aeration Motors
alarm monitoring
repaired, new &amp;
services from ADT
rebuilt In stock. Call l
Security Services.
Call1-888·274-3888. Ron Evans 1-81)()..
537-9528

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Love
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Inspiration in Todays
Settle IRS Taxes for
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Save up to 40% off
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click:INGodslovebyja
you owe. If you owe
your cable bill! Call
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machine,
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over $15,000 In
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back taxes call now
today! 1-877-274·
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for a free
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2
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Life lock
$50 ea, elec. edge
400
Financial
Are You Protected?
$50, Craftsman lawn&lt;
An identity Is stolen
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Call Lifelock now to
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Wanted
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bassist vocalist and
guitarist call 304812-6007

300

Services

Slnllkl amllllultifamily ullle
4 11Ms, 3cta~s

Agricullure

J

Notices

fJt;Jt\&gt;

VII-.

Free Blk lab mix
puppies 3 female,2f
male very cute 304675-6267

200 Announcements

_I

ONliNE
May

Female JackRussell\
teri mix Harmon Park
area 304-674-3085

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Campers/ RVs &amp; Bedroom Apts. at
Village Manor and
Trailers
Riverside
Apts.
in
RV
Service
at Midlleport.
740-992Carmichael
Trailers 5064. Equal Housing
740-446-3825
Opportunity.
This
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and employer
Service at Carmichael
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Manufactu~ed
4000
740-446-3825
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'

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditionallitetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished
Eslablished 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446·0870.
Rogers Basemenl
Waterproofing.

and long
distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.

Money To Lend

Oiler's Towing, Now
buying
junk cars
NOTICE Borrow Smart. w/motors or w/out.
or,
Contact
the
Ohio 740-388-0011
Division of Financial 740-441-7870.
'
Institutions Office of
Get reliable phone
Yard Sale
Consumer
Affairs
service from
BEFORE you refinance
Vonage.
your home or obtain a Staffhouse Rd. Pt.
near
Call Todayl
BEWARE
of Pleasant
loan.
1-877-673·3136
requests for any large fatrgrounds Sat. 5th
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call 5 family yard sale,1
1/4 mile out 218,
Zirkle Storage, units lhe Office of Consumer
1
Affiars toll tree at 1- baby items. baby
available
Call 866-278·0003 to learn girVwomen/jr.
immediately.
or 1f the mortgage broker clothes, TV's, kitchen'
304-882-2314
or lender is properly items,
304-67 4-3559.
licensed. (This is a comforters,
service purses. Wed-Sat.
public
announcement from the
Professional Services Ohio Valley Publishing Yard Sale, June 4th
Company)
&amp; 5th, Baby clothes,
Books, Nick Knacks,,
TURNED DOWN ON
etc., 305 Amblestd~
600
Animals Dr., Kerr. OH.
SOCIAL SECURITY
t
SSI
Large 6 family sal
No Fee Unless We
Win! .
Mason·
behind
1·888-582-3345
Pets
Lodge,
Racine
;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o; Thurs,
Fri.,
Sat..
~~~~~~~
clothing,
tumtture,
SEPTIC
PUMPING AKC
Dachshund Nissan
topper,
Gallia Co OH and pupp1es, 6 weeks
antique
cupboard.,
Mason Co WV Ron old, $300.00, 740\
car seats, hi-chair,
_
.
Evans Jackson, OH
256 1498
800-537-9528
bedding, lots misc.

t

•

___•

___.

l

�-- - ~

Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Yard Sale

Yard Sale

Huge
3
family
basement sale- 8·
5pm, 48040 Adams
Rd., Letart Falls, Oh,
Thurs. June 3, One
Day Only, Rain or
Shine! adult &amp; teen
clothes, housewares,
Home
Interiors,
AVon, baby stroller,
toys, games, lawn
furniture, twin bed,
Christmas items &amp;

Moving out sale,
dining room table &amp;
chairs,dlshes, grill, 1
set of chinaware,
pictures,
lots
of
evrything,
1776
Centenary Ad 3rd &amp;
4th

4-Sth, 9-3pm,
Bradbury Rd.
Middleport,
infant,
toddler,
children
clothing, toys, cribs.
stroller,
crafts,
Longaberger, grills,
mise

Thurs. 6·3, 8 • Dark,
Fri 6-4, 9·3, Antiques
&amp; Collectables, oak
library table, wash
stand, lawn furniture,
oak rocker, doll beds.
Germany
dishes,
cookie
fjars.
Christams
decorationn, candles.
light sets,
wioker
plant stands, books,
toys, play pens, high
chairs,
picnic
baskets,
crafts,
sleeping
bags,
pictures, desk chair,
quilt
rack,
new
games, cat exercise
stands, cast iron
skillet, knick knacks.

Jeremy
Rose
residence, CR 28, 1
mi from Racine, June
3-4, 9·4, name brand
clothes,
children's
items.
Primitives,
holida~
deco.,
housewares, lot of baby afghans, cow
misc. rain/shine, No decorations.
early arrivals please Yard Sale, 4th Ave &amp;
Moving
sale, Olive, 6·3 · 6-5.
camping
everything must go, clothes,
31683
SR
325 equip., small app.,
Langsville, June 3rd- turn, dishes, linens.
misc. 8- s
4th, 9-5pm
Multi family, June 4·
5,
Art
Lewis.
Middleport look for
sign across from
Park

•

Yard Sale, 6·4 &amp; 6·5
@
the
Rodney
Community Center, 8
-?,Baby items, Boys
&amp; womens cloth1ng,
Pomeroy, June 5, Christmas
dryer, decorations, etc.
lathes
rinters, many other
items, 2
mi on """"'~~~~~~
Real Estate
Flatwoods Ad turn L 3000
Sales
on Smith Goeglein.
watch for signs, 9am3pm

~====~

Tues. &amp; Wed. June
1 &amp;2,
9-4,
girls
clothes, shoes, etc.,
adult clothes &amp; other
misc.
items,
1.8
miles from Old Rt. 7Forest
Run
Rd.,
Racine

;;;;;;;;H;;;;;;;;ou;;;;s;;;;e;;;;s;;;;F;;;;or;;;;;;;;Sa;;;;l;;;;e;;;;;

Price
reduced,
MUST SELL, 3 BR,
2.5 BA. Paxton Rd.,
3.5 car
attached
garage w/2.38 acres,
$148,900, 740-339·
2780.
NO
Land
5 Family Garage
Contracts.
Sale, Fri. 6-4, , off At
7,
1/2 mile out
Addison Pike. Baby
Real Estate
Bed, &amp; various items. 3500
Rentals
Clay Townhouse ,on
Lover Ln. June 3,4,5
9·?
Glassware,toys,ect

Apartments/
Townhouses

Community
Yard
Sale, Ann Dr., 6·4 &amp;
6-5. 9 - fi, turn right
on Raccoon Rd. off
At. 7S.

2BR APT. Close to
Holz:er Hospital on SA
160 CIA. (740) 441·
0194

June 3,4,and
23212 34 CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
Dr. LOCATED
Addison
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
Yard Sale, Hot dogs,
apartments,
and/or
baked goods. 6·3 &amp;
small houses for rent.
6-4, 10 • 4, @ Trinity Call 740-441-1111 for
UM Church, Rt. 160, application
&amp;
Porter.
information.

-~ - ~ --·- ----~~--,.~-'""!'""'--~---

www.mydailysentinel.com
Apartmenh/
Townhouses
Free Rent Special

Ill
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, W/D
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electric. Call between
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(304)882-3017
Twin Rivers Tower is
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call
675-6679

Sales
Beautiful
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Country
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Price $50,000
6000

Employment

Accounting /
Financial

1 BR and bath. first
months
rent
&amp;
deposit. references
required, No Pets
and clean. 740·441·
0245

~~--~~­
2 br, washer/dryer
hook up, Thurman
area. 740-441·3702
or 740-286-5789.

Our company needs
male and female
representative to act
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our
opened
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bookkeeper. Contact
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about this job send
your
resume
to
bill.h211@ gmail.com
Drivers &amp; Delivery

Domino's Pizza Now
hiring safe drivers for
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APTS.
1 br, Hud and Pt.
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subsidised. elderly &amp; apply in person.
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304·
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992-0165
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Qualified applicants
BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2 must be at least
BR APTS., Jackson 23yrs ~ave a min. of
Estates,
52 1 year of safe
Westwood Dr., 740· commercial
driving
446-2568~
Equal experience in truck.
Housing Opportunity. HazMat cert. clean
This institution is an MVR &amp; good stability.
equal
opportunity We offer competitive
provider
and benefits &amp; 401 K &amp;
employer.
vac. pay. Contact
Kent AT 800-462Clean 1 br. furn. 9365 to apply or go
apartment, Dep &amp; to
Ref req. no smoking, www.rjtrucking.com
call
304-593-5125 EOE
after 4pm
Electrical / Plumbing

a

New 2 BR apt. W/0
Hookup, app. inc.
Rio/Jackson
area.
$525/mo + deJ:l. Call
7 40·645·1286

NeededHVAC
experienced installer,
background check,
Drug-free workplace,
740-416·3039

Help Wanted •
General

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~--

EXPERlENCED
MAINTENANCE
TECH:Local
manufacturing
organization seeking
an
experienced
maintenance tech to
provide mechanical
and electrical support
for
a
continuous
operation
facility.
Position
is
responsible
for
installation,maintena
nee and repa1r of
facility
equipment
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Experienced
Individual with strong
background
in
welding
and
fabrication preferred,
Extended education
also
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Willing to consider
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PLASTICSRAVENSWOOD PO.
Box
249
Ravenswood,
WV
26164 EOE M/F/DN
Medical

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333 Page Street,
Middleport, Ohio is
Pleased to Announce
We Are Accepting
Applications for Full
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State Tested Nursing
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Our Friendly and
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Players with Positive
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in
Providing
Outstanding, Quality
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Our
Residents, Stop By
and Fill Out an
Application M-F 9am5pm or Contact Lucy
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Goff,
Development .
Coordinator @ 740- ,
992-6472 EO'E &amp; A
Participant of the
Drug-Free
Workplace Program

The Daily Sen tine\· Page 83

Services Offered
To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155
-----x

t _~p;;f)
.{E; ~

--~\

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29 !'ike Stre('r
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Commercial &amp; Residential
.l!l!:.: • Room additions • Roofing • Garages

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740-985·4141
740·416·1834
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Formerly Robies Construction

Help Wanted·
Spring Valley Green
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Month.
_
.
Now Hiring Prep
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Insured
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Houses For Rent

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BULLETIN BOARD

1 BR, nice, PP area.
$325·
Homestead
Realty, Ask for Nancy
675-5540, 675-0799.

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Nice 1BR h:&gt;use in
Gallipolis.
Walk to
everything you need.
Very clean unit, with
new paint, $275 per
mo/$100 sec. dep.
Sorry no pets. Calf
Wayne
for
information 404-456·
3802.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Dave's
American Grill
Wednesday's 10¢ Wings
and
Announcing Thursday's
25¢ Ribs
with 99¢ Sides
Open Daily at 4

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED
Job Announcement
The Meigs County Health Department ha~
extended the deadline for applications for the
position of: WIC Breastfeeding Peer Helper
~- Dep.:ndcnt upon quahfications.
Final Filing Date: Applications must be
postmarked or dropp.:d off at the Health
Department by June 7. 2010 at-1:00pm.
Date Available: July 2010
Minimum Oualificatiom
Education: High school graduate or
equivalent. Experience: Ideal candidate will
ha\c breasted an infant for 6 months: have
similar economic, educational, racial. and
cultural background as the WIC participant:
be a former or current WIC participant: good
organizatiom1l skill!,; e~ccllent oral and
written communication skills and community
relations techniques: tlextble schedule.
Must possess valid driver's license.
informational Breastfeeding Peer Helper
Tea wdl be held on June 2nd from II am to I
pm at the Mulberry Community Center.
Applicants arc encouraged to attend RSVP
b&gt; June I stat 992-0392.
Pick up and Return Employment Application
and Three Letters of Reference to:
Meigs Count) Health Department
Leanne Cunningham, WJC Director
112 East Memorial Drive, Suite A
Pomeroy, OH 45769
The Meigs County Health Department is an
equal opportunity employer and provider.

-

~-~-

2 BR Duplex-644
2nd ~ve $450/mo
plus
deposit
&amp;
utilities. Stove and
refrig. W/d hookup
no pets. One year
lease.
References.
446-0332 9am to
5pm Mon-Sat
3
Br.,
2
bath,
doublewide
in
country w/3 porches.
fenced-in yard on
Baker
Rd.
off
Kingsbury, Pomeroy
area, $650 a mo.,
$650 dep., 1 yr
lease, No Pets, 740·
416-2960
4000

Manufactu~ed

Housmg
Rentals

3 bedroom trailer,
Clay Chapel Rd. ,
Gallipolis, $400 rent,
$400 deposit, 740·
256-6408, 740-441·
0583, NO Pets
3 BR. 2 BA, includes
yard. carport. storage
facility, front deck,
Bidwell area $600 +
dep. Call 615·830·
4499
RENTERS WANTED
Let Clayton Homes
turn you from renter
to owner, CALL 1·
866-338·3201.
RENTERS WANTED
Let Clayton Homes
turn you from renter
to owner CALL 1·
866-338-3201.

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The Qaily Sentinel
iunbap mtntes ·ientittel

SHERIFF'S SALE •
REAL ESTATE
CASE NO.: 10 CV
018
BAC Home Loans
Servicing, LP fka
Countrywide Home
loans Servicing LP
Plaintiff,

v.
Regan Shuler, et al.,
Defendants.
COURT OF COM·
MON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
In pursuance of
an Order of Sale to
me directed from
said Court In the
above entitled action, I will expose to
sale at public auction, on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on Friday, June 25,
2010 at 10:00 AM,
the following de·
scribed real estate:
Prior
Instrument
Reference:
Book 239 Page 243
Instrument
#
200600002432
Current
Owners
Name:
Regan
Shuler
Property Address:
315
Broadway
Street Middleport,
OH 45760
Permanent Parcel
No.
&amp;
1501377000
1501379001
AT
APPRAISED
$25,000.00

PubUr \olices in Xmpa(lffi.
Your Rightlo Kno''· DeU,ertd Rigbllo \our Door.

TERMS OF SALE •
Cannot be sold for
less than 2/3rd of
the appraised value.
Ten percent (1 Oo/o)
of the purchase
price to be paid by
the purchaser, the
day of sale, by cash
or certified check.
Balance due upon
confirmation of sale
by Court of Common Pleas.
This
Sheriff's Sale operates under the doctrine
of Caveat
doctrine of Caveat
Emptor. The Sheriff
makes no guarantee
as to status of Title
prior to sale. Ap·
pralsals based on
EXTERIOR view of
buildings only.
Robert t:. Beegle,
Sheriff,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
Jeffrey R. Jinkens,
Esq.
Luper Neldenthal &amp;
logan
50
West
Broad
Street, Ste 1200
Columbus,
Ohio
43215·3374
(614) 221-766
(6) 2, 9, 16

Accounts
and
vouchers of the following named fidu·
ciary has been filed
In
the
Probate
Court,
Meigs
County, Ohio for ap·
proval and settle·
ment.
FILE NO. 30482 The Annual Account
of
Mary Arnold
long and Laura
Hodge, Co-Trustees
of the Trust of Elizabeth Cutler, de·
ceased.
Unless exceptions
are filed thereto,
said account will be
set for hearing before said Court on
the 1st
day of
July, 2010, at which
time said account
will be considered
and continued from
day to day until fl·
nally disposed of.
Any person Inter·
ested may file written exception • to
said account or to
matters pertaining
to the execution of
the trust, not less
than five days prior
to the date
set for hearing.
L. SCOTT POW·
Public Notice
ELL
Judge
IN THE MATIER OF Common
Pleas
SETILEMENT
Court, Probate Dlvl·
OF
ACCOUNTS, sion
Meigs County, Ohio
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY, (6) 2
OHIO

�~ ---

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Public Notice
Sheriff Sale of Real
Estate
Case Number 08CV-078
u.s. Bank, N.A. fka
Firstar Bank, N.A.
fka Star Bank, N.A.
Vs
Robert E. Boring, ct
al.
Court of Common
Pleas,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auction on
the front steps of
the Meigs County
Court House on Friday, June 25, 2010
at 10:00 a.m. of said
day. the following
described real estate:
Situated In the
State
of
Ohio,
County of Meigs
and in the VIllage of
Harrisonville:
PARCEL N0. 1
Being Lots Numbered Seven (7) and
Eight (8) of DUN·
LAP'S ADDITION, to
the said Village of
Harrisonville, Meigs
• County, Ohio.
PARCEL NO.2
Lot Ne. Nine (9) in
DUNLAP'S
ADDI·
TION to the Village
of
Harrisonville.
Also the following
being in Fraction 7,
Town 7, Range 14,
In the Ohio Com·
pany's
Purchase,
beginning at the
northwest corner of
Lot No. 9 In Dunlap's Addition to the
Village
of
Harrisonville; thence
North 69&lt;» West 100
feet; thence 21..,
East 75 feet to the
place of beginning,
containing one-half
acre, more or less.
Parcel Number: 1700427, 17·00428,1700426, 17·00425
Property Located at:
38397 State Route
684
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Prior Deed Reference: Vol. 107, Page
555
Property Appraised
at: 25000
Terms of Sale: Can·
not be sold for less
than 2/3rds for the
appraised
value.
10% down on day of
sale, case or certl·
fled check, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
The appraisal DID
NOT include an interior examination of
the house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County SherIff
Jeffrey R. Helms, At·
torney for the Plaintiff,
Lerner,
Sampson &amp; Roth·
fuss
P.O.
Box
5480
Cincinnati,
OH
(513)
45202·4007
241-3100
619/10.
6/2/10.
6/16/10
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
CASE NO. 09-CV·
090
CitiCorp Trust Bank,
FSB, PLAINTIFF
vs.
•
Robert W. Crow, et
al.
DEFENDANTS.
Notice Is hereby
given
that
on
Wednesday.
the
25th day of June,
A.D.• 2010, at the
hour of 10:00 a.m.. I
will offer for sale Inside the Door of the
County Office Com·
plex
In
Bellefontaine, Ohio, the
following real estate, to wit:
Situated In the VII·
lage of Syracuse,
County of Meigs
and State of Ohio
and described In
parcels as follows,
to-wit:
The following real
estate situate in the
county of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and In
100 acre Lot No.
297, Town No.2 and
Range No. 12 of the
Ohio
Company's
Purchase
and
bounded and de·
scribed
as follows: Begin·
nlng at a point fit·
teen (15) feet North
of the North East
corner of Lot No.
Fortynine (49) in
Carleton's Addition
to Syracuse; thence
North one hundred
and forty (140) feet
and two (2) Inches;
thence West two
hundred and ninetyfive
(295)
feet;
thence South one
hundred and forty
(140) feet and two
(2) Inches to a 15
foot alley; thence
North along said
ailey to the place of
beginning. This Is a
part of a tract of 131100 acres of land
that was conveyed
by Isaac Carleton to
' George W. Gilliland

Public Notice
and recorded In Vol.
53,
Page
370
Records of Deeds of
Meigs County, Ohio
and Is also a part of
tract of 1·68/1 00
acres that was de·
vised to Curtis and
Adam Lallance
under the Last Will
and Testament of
George W. Gilliland,
Deceased.
Excepting N. 1 deg.
of said Lot which
was conveyed by
Curtis Lailance and
Sarah E. Lallance to
Robert C. McBride,
and Cora L. McBride
by deed dated 3·15·
19 and recorded in
Vol. 117, Page 605
Deed
Records.
Meigs County, Ohio,
and for a more complete description of
said Lot reference Is
had to said deed. Be
the same more or
less, but subject to
all legal highways.
ALSO:
Said ailey (street) Is
described as follows:
The following de·
scribed real estate
situated in the Village of Syracuse,
County of Meigs
and State of Ohio,
and being part of a
100 Acre Lot 297,
T2N·R12W,
Isaac
Carleton 2nd Addi·
tlon as same is
recorded In Volume
2. Page 34, et seq, of
the Meigs County
Plat Records, and
_,elng more particularly described as
follows:
That the portion of
Bean Ailey, de·
scribed as a 7 1/2'
wide and 294' long
strip of Bean Alley
extending from Col·
lege Road westward
below the South
side of certain real
estate deeded to
Robert H. Crow and
Kathryn H. Crow In
Volume 197, Page
64~ of the Meigs
County
Deed
Records, be and the
same hereby ill vacated. Be the same
more or less, but
subject to all legal
highways.
PPNS: 20·00115.000
&amp; 20-00795.000
KNOWN
FOR
STREET NUMBERING
PURPOSES
AS:
1181 College Road.
Syracuse, OH 45779
&amp; 0 West Side Colloge Road, Syracuse, OH 45779
APPRAISEMENT:
560,000
And cannot sell for
less than two thirds
of said appraisement.
Said premises to be
sold as the property
of Robert W. Crow,
et al., to satisfy a
judgment in favor of
CitiCorp Trust Bank,
FSB, on an order of
sale issued from the
Common
Pleas
Court of Meigs
County. Ohio and to
me directed as
Sheriff
of
said
County.
Terms of Sale: - •
CASH or CERTIFIED
CHECK. Deposit of
five percent (5%) of
the appraised value
on day of sale; Balance In Thirty (30)
days from date of
confirmation
of
sale.
Robert E. Beegle,
Sheriff
Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio
Publication Dates:
June 2, 9, 16
Atty. Patrick D. Hen·
dershott
(419) 241-2222
(6) 2, 9, 16
Public Notice
Sheriff's Sale of
Real Estate
Revised Code, Sec.
11681
Rev I sed
Code Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
Chase Home Fi·
nance LLC
Plaintiff
• vsChantel M. Dearth.
et al.
Defendant
Case No. 09CV129
In pursuance of
an Order of Sale in
the above entitled
action, I will offer for
sale at public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Pomeroy, Ohio in
the above named
County, on Friday,
the
25th day
of June, 2010 at
10:00 A.M. o' clock
.M., the following
described real estate, to-wit:
Situated In the State
of Ohio, County of
Meigs and In the
Township of Salls·
burgy.
Being part of Lots
Forty Five (45),
Forty-Six (46) and
Forty-seven (47) of
Phillip Jones
Addition to the Vii·
lage of Middleport,
as the same Is num·
bared and delin·

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

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Public Notice

Public Notice

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Public Notice

eated upon the
recorded
plat
thereof, of record in
Deed Book 11, page
405, Recorder's Office. Meigs
County, Ohio. and
being part of 100
acre lots 311 and
312,
Township-1North, 13-West.
Beginning at a point
on the West line of
said Lot 46 which
bears North 17" 00'
00" East a
distance of 123.52
feet from the South·
west corner of Lot
48 of said addition;
Thence along the
East line of a 14 foot
alley North 1'7" 00'
00'' East a distance
of 21.08 feet
to an existing iron
pin;
Thence leaving said
East line South 73"
21' 15" East a dis·
tance of 112.15 feet
to a point
from which an existing. masonary nail
bears South 73" 21'
15" East a distance
of 9.90 feet;
Thence along the
assumed West right
of way line of North
Third Street South
17" 00' 00"
West a distance of
64.20 feet to a point;
Thence leaving said
West Right of Way
line North 73" 12'
57" West passing
thru a 5/8"
Iron pin set at a distance of 4.72 feet
and going a total
distance of 77.53
feet to a 5/8'. iron
pin set;
Thence North 12•
42' 52" East a dis·
tance of 40.67 feet
to a 5/8' iron pin
set; ,
Thence North 59•
04' 59" West passing thru a 5.'8" iron
pin set a distance of
30.34 feet and
going a total distance of 31.65 feet
to the principal
point of beginning
containing 560.74
square feet in lots
45, 3740.78 square
feet in lot 46 and
1503.97 square feet
In said lot 47 for
a total of 5805.49
square feet, more or
less.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
249 North 3rd Avenue, Middleport,
Ohio
PROPERTY OWN·
ERS:
Chantel M. Dearth
PRIOR DEED REF·
ERENCE:O ff I cia I
Record Book 267,
Page 277
PPN#:

sale.
REIMER, LORBER &amp;
ARNOVITZ
CO.,
L.P.A.
By:
Douglas
A. Haesslg (Reg.#)
Attorney for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg,
Ohio
44087
(330) 425-4201 Ext.
111
Fax: 330·425-0347
E m a I I :
dhaesslg@reimerlaw.com
Robert
Beegle,
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
(6)2, 9, 16.

OHIO
GMAC MORTGAGE,
LLC A.K.A. GMAC
BANK
Plaintiff
vs.
DANIEL R. JAMES,
et al.
Defendants
Case No. 09cv154
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale In the
above entitled ac·
tlon, I will offer for
sale at public auction, the Meigs
County Courthouse
steps, In the above
named County, on
Friday, the 25th day
of June, 2010, at
10:00 a.m., the fol·
lowing described
real estate towlt:
Sltuat!ld In the VIllage of Middleport,
County of Meigs
and State of Ohio:
Being Lot No. 21 of
Riverview
Acres
Subdivision,
as
shown
on
plat
recorded In Volume
4, page 39, Meigs
County
Plat
Records.
PPN : 1500688000
Said Premises lo·
cated
at
25
Riverview
Place,
Middleport,
OR
45760
Said Premises appraised
at
$40,000.00 and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds that
amount.
Terms of sale: 10%
of the purchase
price down the date
of sale with the re·
malnlng balance to
be paid within thirty
days from the date
of sale.
W.
Cliffe
David
(0059537) Attorney
for the Plaintiff
WWR#1 0030200
(6) 2, 9, 16

Thence North 63 degrees 10 minutes
West 443 feet to a
stake;
Thence North 1 degree West 278 feet
to the North line of
Fraction No. 10 and
Lot No. 274;
Thence East along
said North line of
Fraction No. 10, 400
feet to the place of
beginning, save and
except Lot No. 85
and 86 of the Village
of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio, con·
talnlng 3.1 acres.
PROPERTY
AD·
DRESS:
100 Wolfe Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio
PROPERTY OWNERS:
Jeffery H. Lundy
and
Andrea
D.
Lundy
PRIOR DEED REFERENCE:O f f i cia I
Record Book 231.
Page499
PPNI:

7, TOWNSHIP 6,
RANGE 14, OHIO
COMPANY'S PUR·
CHASE.
BEGINNING AT THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF A 314 ACRE
TRACT OF REAL
CON·
ESTATE
VEYED TO WARREN D. CLAY AND
PHYLLIS J. CLAY,
BY
DEED
RECORDED iN VOLUME 261, PAGE 671,
MEIGS
COUNTY
DEED RECORDS;
THENCE
WESTERLY ALONG THE
NORTHERLY LINE
OF SECTION 7 TO
THE
INTERSEC·
TION OF STATE
ROUTE
124,
THENCE
IN AN
EASTERLY DIRECTION FOLLOWING
THE LINE OF STATE
ROUTE 124 TO THE
SOUTHEAST COR·
NER OF THE WARREN
D.
AND
PHYLLIS
J. CLAY PROPERTY;
THENCE
NORTHERLY
ALONG THE WEST
LINE OF THE SAID
WARREN D. CLAY
AND PHYLLIS J.
CLAY PROPERTY
TO THE PLACE OF
BEGINNING, CON·
TAINING 1.03 ACRE,
MORE OR LESS.
Prior
Instrument
Reference:
200700002282
Current
Owners
Name: W I I II a m
Pierce
Property Address:
36902 State Route
124; Rutland, OH
45775
Permanent Parcel
No.
1100920000
APPRAISED
AT
550,000.00
TERMS OF SALE Cannot be sold for
less than 213rd of
the appraised value.
Ten percent (10%) of
the purchase price
to be paid by the
purchaser. the day
of sale, by cash or
certified check. Balance due upon confirmation of sale by
Court of Common
Pleas. This Sheriff's
Sale operates under
the
doctrine of
Caveat doctrine of
Caveat Emptor. The
Sheriff makes no
guarantee as to sta·
tus of Title prior to
sale.
Appraisals
based on EXTERIOR view of buildings only.
Robert
Beagle,
Sheriff.
Meigs
County, Ohio.
Jeffrey R. Jlnkens,
Esq.
Luper Neidenthal &amp;
Logan
50
West
Broad
Street, Ste 1200
Columbus.
Ohio
43215-3374
(614) 221-766
(6) 2, 9. 16

1501355001,
#1501356001, and
#1501354000
Said Premises Located at: 249 North
3rd Avenue, Middleport, Ohio
Said Premises Ap·
praised
at
$35,000.00

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday June 5 at 10:00
a.m .• a public sale
will be held at 211
W.
Second
,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company
is selling for cash in
hand or certified
check the following
collateral
2003 Kla Sedona

V

a

n

KNDUP131 X364284
11
The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw the above collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farm·
ers Bank and Savings
Company
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids
submitted.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold "as Iswhere Is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty
given.
For further information, or for an appointment
to
Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date
contact Cyndle or
Ken at 992·2136.
(6) 2, 3, 4
Public Notice
BID FOR BUS
Heart of the Valley
Head Start, 39105
Bradbury Road Middleport, Ohio 45760
Is accepting bids for
one 30 passenger
school bus. Specifications for the bus
can be obtained by
calling
Athens·
Meigs Educational
Service Center at
740-992-4286.
Quotes
will
be
opened In the trea·
surer's office at
noon on Thursday,
June 10, 2010. The
board reserves the
right to reject all or
any part of the bid.
Bids should be Ia·
beled
"Bid
for
School Bus" and
mailed to:
Heart of the. Valley
Head Start
Treasurer's Office
39105
Bradbury
Road
Middleport.
Ohio
45760
(5) 26 (6) 2

And cannot be sold
for less than twothirds
of
this
amount.
TERMS OF SALE:
Cannot be sold for
less than 213rds of
the appraised value.
10% of purchase
Public Notice
price down on day
of sale, cash or certified check, bal- IN THE COURT OF
ance
on COMMON PLEAS
confirmation
of
MEIGS COUNTY,

'

Public Notice
Sheriff's Sale of
Real Estate
Revised Code, Sec.
11681
Revised Code Sec.
2329.26
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
Natlonstar
Mortgage LLC
Plaintiff
- vs.
Jeffery H. Lundy, et
al.
Defendant
Case No. 09CV139
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale In the
above entitled action, I will offer for
sale at public auction ·on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio In
the above named
County. on Friday,
the
25th
day of June
2010 at 10:00 o'clock A.M .• the following described
real estate, to-wit:
Situated In the VIIlege of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs
and State of Ohio
Being In Fraction
No. 10, Lot No. 274
and bounded and
described as follows:
Beginning at the
Northeast corner of
said Lot 274, In the
Village of Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio,
thence South 478
feet to the North·
west corner of Lot
89 In the VIllage of
Pomeroy;

1601058000
Said Premises Lo·
cated at: 100 Wolfe
Drive,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Said Premises Ap·
praised at S
100,000.00
And cannot be sold
for less than twothirds
of
this
amount.
TERMS OF SALE:
Cannot be sold for
less than 213rds of
the appraised value.
10% of purchase
price down on day
of sale, cash or certitled check, bal·
on
ance
confirmation
of
sale.
REIMER, LORBER &amp;
ARNOVITZ
CO.,
L.P.A.
By:
Peter
L.
Mehler (Reg. #)
Attorney for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg,
Ohio
44087
(330) 425-4201 Ext.
191
Fax: 330-405-1092
E m a i I :
pmehler@relmerlaw.com
(6)2, 9, 16
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE REAL ESTATE
CASE NO.: 09-CV·
153
BAC Home Loans
Servicing, LP fka
Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing LP
Plaintiff,

v.
William Pierce. et
al.,
Defendants.
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS.
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO •
In pursuance of
an Order of Sale to
me directed from
said Court In the
above entitled ac·
tlon, I will expose to
sale at public auction, on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on Fridays, June 25,
2010 at 10:00 a.m.,
the following de·
scribed real estate:
SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF RUT·
LAND. COUNTY OF
MEIGS AND IN THE
STATE OF OHIO,
DESCRIBED
AS
FOLLOWS:
BEING IN SECTION

Public Notice
Sheriff Sale of Real
Estate
Case Number 09·
CV-163
PHH Mortgage Corporation fke Cendant
Mortgage
Corporation
dba
Coldwell
Banker
Home Loans
Vs
Rachel F. Robinson.
et al.
Court of Common
Pleas.
Meigs

Public Notice .
County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auction on
the front steps of
the Meigs County
Court House on Friday, June 25, 2010
at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following
described real es·
tate:
Situate In the-State
of Ohio, County of
Meigs and Town·
ship of Scipio, and
In Fraction No.7,
Town No.7, and
Range No. 14 of the
Ohio
Company's
Purchase,
and
bounded and de·
scribed as follows:
Tract One:
Beginning at a stake
In the center of the
public road leading
from Harrisonville
to
Downington,
Ohio at a point of
the South line of the
135.62 acre lot of
land now or formerly owed by G.F.
Mayhugh, where the
public road leading
from Harrisonville
to
Downlngton,
Ohio Intersects the
South line of said
Mayhugh tract of
land; thence in a
Northeasterly direction following the
meanderings of said
public road Fifteen
rods to a stake;
thence West Thirteen rods to the
public road, the
place of beginning,
containing
about
One acre, and five
rods, more or less.
Tract Two:
The following described premises.
s tuated In the VIr.
lege
of
Harrisonville, County of
Meigs, State of
Ohio, and Township
of Scipio:
Being Lots No. Five
(5) and Six (6) of A.
Dun laps Addition as
set out In Plat Book
No, 2. at Page 39,
reference to which

Public Notice
Is hereby made for
definite descrptlon
of said lots and
being more particu·
larly described as
follows, to-wit:
Beginning at a point
where the North line
of Fraction No. 7
crossesthe
East
boundary of the
Gallipolis-Athens
State Road, which
road Right-of-Way is
60 feet wide, as
shown by the above
plat record; thence
South 21" West 194
feet to the North
side of a 10-feet
alley; thence South
70 112• East along
the North side of
said 10-feet alley
100 feet; thence
North 21" East 230
feet to the North line
of Fraction No. thence West on s
fraction line 107
feet to the place o
beginning.
Parcel Number: 1700607.000.
1700608.000,
17-00609.00
Property Located at:
38504 State Route
684
Pomeroy. OH 45769
Prior Deed Reference: Book 256,
Page 139
Property Appraised
at: 25000
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds fo r the
appraised
value.
10% down on day of
sale, case or certified check, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
The appraisal DID
NOT Include an Interior examination of
the house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Matthew J. Feeney,
Attorney for the
Plaintiff,
Lern.
Sampson &amp; Ro
fuss
P.O.
Box
5480
Cincinnati,
OH
45202-4007
(513)
241-3100
619/10,
6/2/10,
6/16/10

Need a
lob Done?

Shop
7'he

Classilieds

�--- - ---~

-----~-~

I

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Lively
1 Central
dance
6 Stir-frying
needs
DOWN
10 S kater1 Remote
2 Starti ng
O hno
11 Pago
b ids
Pago
3 Swelled
setting
head
4 Out of the
12 Freshen
13 Court
w ind
15 Take
29 Metal
event
5 Denotes
man
14 Formerly
p ressed
17 N eck
30 Kitchen
15 B um p into 6 M uch of
g lands
come-on
16 Fixed
history
20 Yak it up 31 Screen
dot
~ c ha rge
7 O verlooks 21 Utmost
17 Cargo
8 Eucalyp- 24 Footstool 3 5 Drum mer
unit
tus eater 25 GetK rupa
18 Texas'
9 Witch trial
together 36 Singing
H ouston
setting
27 Travel
star
19 Scare
11 Pa leolithic
sto p
38 Skin art, ,
22 Command
tim e
28 Must
for short
-to Fido
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (cnecl&lt;/m.o.) to
Thomas
Book 1. PO Box 536475. Orlando, FL 32853-6475
23 P roton's
place
26 Illuminat e
29 Ludacris'
music
32 Early
hour
33 Golf prop
34 Source
36 Be too
fond
37 Like CD
sets
38 Bashful
37
39 Signs
39
40 - -garde
41 Yarn

-

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Ch ris Browne

Wlt.l.. YoJJ G£N"TLSMEN
HAll&amp; A t,.I9A'TION
BEFORE !?!NNE!&lt; '?

6-2

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker
1

THELOCKHORNS

oo,.._,,.- N!:'e:o -ro cso

W illiam Hoest

IO GCHOOL- 10 ~OW
A60tJ,- &lt;;;Ot.J&gt;-R POW£R.

l

J

r

f

~

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

To SH\..E E P '
PERCHANCE To

I #UR\_··

" WOOL.DN'T RENEWING YOUR GYM MEMBERSHIP
COME ONDER THROWING GOOD MONEY AFTER BAD?"

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday,

'z iTS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

2

6
2
9

8

5

4

4

" Round what?"

*****What occurs allows many
different possibilities. You oould absorb
a lot of tension from other people.
Make sure you are on the same page
as someone else financially before
making a'ny decision&lt;&gt;. Tonight Meet
up with friends.

· Hank Ketchum

TAURUS (April2Q-May 20)

3
7 9 2 3 6 1 8

PENNIS THE MENACE

Difficulty Level

***

l019

v

.

B
8 9
s 6
9 g
B G
L ~
G 8
~ L
6 v

~

9 8
L 6 B
G ~ v
6 G ~
8 L s
17 B 9
B s L
9 v 6
s £ G

This year, stay focused on the bottom line. Don't get caught up in frivolous thinking. Do break past previously established mental barriers. The
more you open up, the greater the possibilities that could enter your life.
Curb a tendency to worry or push too
han:l Lead a more balanced. even life.
Going back to school or taking a seminar or nvo to increase your expertise in
your field would be smart. If you are
single, someone qttite exotic and different could enter your life. This person
has a lot of different ways you can
learn from. Jf you are attached, the nvo
of you might want to plan a second
honeymoon or another special trip.
AQUARIUS helps you bottom-out situations. Encourage discussions more
often.
The Stm'S Shmv the Kitul c~fDay You'l!
Hat&gt;e: 5-Dtpumric; 4-Positir:e; 3-At&gt;erage;
2-Slrso; 1-Dijfimlt
ARIES (March 21-April19)

7
3

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

June 2, 2010:

G 6 L s
s G ~ v
L B 8 9
8 L v B
v ~ 9 6
6 £ s G
9 v 6 ~
B s G £
~ 9 B L

*** You could feel extremely
pushed by a boss or parent You feel a
bit out of kilter with someone's display
of affection. You could be overly tired
and pushed. Choose the right situation
to express yom views. Tonight A must
appearance.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
***** Keep reaching out for
more information. Feel frt--c to dig up
an e\pert or n,·o. You want and need
different perspectives. You might feel
that someone is trying to ha%lc you.
Let it go. Tonight: New insights.
CANCER Oune 21 Juh' 22)
**** One key perscin S&lt;.'Cs y~1ur
lq,TJ.c and will defer to you. rhough
you could be confused about everything that is going on, stay centered. A
friend might not understand the implications o(what he or she is saying.
Gently a&lt;;k questioru;. Tonight Chat
over dinner.
LEO Quly 21-Aug. 22)
**** Others seck you out. You
might not feel oomfortable. You see a
situation differently from a boss. You
might hear what someone c;ays, but

not as this person meant it to be taken
You could be a little touchy. Confirm
what you are hearing. You might get a
pleasant surprise. Tonight Say "yes."
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
Emphasi7.e your skill&lt;&gt;,
· though someone might prove to be
quite challenging. Stay level as someone plays devil's advocate. Though
you could be frustrated, this process
will only strengthen your plans.
~onight Squeeze in some exercise.
Summer is nearly here.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
***** Allow greater give-andtake betv.'een you and a child. You see
a situation far differently. There might
not be a meeting of the minds right
now. Allow both of you to digest a
conversation. Tonight: Where the fun
is.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Stay level and clear as you
process new ideas and approach your
l.i!e differently. You easily oould be
overwhehned by another person. A
roommate or family member knows
how to challenge v'Ou. lbnight: Order
in.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
***** Your oomnmnication
skills oome forv:ard. Jc; someone choosir.g not to tmderstand, or is he or she
simply not getting it? Try to express
yourself in another way, and see if
your message gets thrOugh. 'Tonight
I lang out.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-}an. 19)
*** Be aware of expenditures.
You might want to splurge on a child
or loved one. Try to curb this tendency
to be extravagant. The receiver also
might get uc;cd to being treated like
this all the time. Tonight: Be aware of a

***

****

risk.

AQUARIUS Qan. 2Q-Feb. 18)

*****The Moon flatters you,
allowing for greater-give--and-take. You
might wonder exactly what i-; needed
to handle a domestic situation.
Som~&gt;t1ne has pushed you way beyond
your level of comfort. 'li.might •
Whate\'er makes you happy.
PISCES (Feb. lq_March 20)
*** T..1ke off early if you can. You
net.&gt;d some time to reflect and perhaps
work through a problem. You could
feel overwhelmed by a child or a new
friend. Est&lt;~blish appropriate limits.
Tonight Vanish earl&gt;:
jncquelme Bignr it&gt; on the lntemt't
at hnp:/lurww.jnfY{I wlmehigm:com,

�\

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pitchers are vulnerable to line drives to mound
NEW YORK (AP) CC Sabathia watched in
horror as Cleveland
Indians pitcher David
Huff lay motionless on
the mound after being
nailed in the head by
Alex Rodriguez's line
drive.
"That's always your
fear as a pitcher,"
Sabathia said.
A half-inning after
Huff was cruted off the
field, a grounder up the
middle caromed off the
New York Yankees ace's
foot and rolled to the
grass in right field for a
hit. Perhaps ruffled by
the succession of plays,
Sabathia went from
breezing through the
lndiat;ts' limp lineup to
losing the strike zone and
giving up three runs in
the inning.
Working 60 feet, 6
inches from home plate,
where a batter can send
balls screaming toward
the mound at speeds in
excess of 100 mph, the
pitcher might be the most
vulnerable player on the
field.
. Pitchers are rarely hit
m the head, but when it
happens it unfolds in a
terrifying instant.
"You never hear a
baseball stadium that
quiet," said Pirates righthander
Chris
Jakubauskas, struck near
the ear by Lance
Berkman's liner April 25
and still out with a concussion. "When you can
hear a pin drop in a stadium, it's usually not a
good thing~'
Several hours after
.l:?eing rushed to the hospital strapped to a board
and wearing a neck
brace, Huff returned to
Yankee Stadium and was
seen laughing in the clubhouse. He hopes to make
his next start.
Others have not been
so lucky.
Last
season,
the
Dodgers lost Hiroki
Kuroda for several weeks
with a concussion and
San Francisco Giants
rookie Joe Martinez was
out four months after
Mike Cameron's liner
gave the righty a concussion and three hairline
fractures in his skull.
In 2000, Boston righty
Bryce Florie's vision was
impaired when he was
tagged in the· right eye.
He tried to make a comeback the next season but
never succeeded as a big
league pitcher again.
Herb
Score,
the
Indians'
American
League Rookie of Year
winner in 1955, never
fulfilled his promise after

Cleveland
Indians
starting
pitcher
David

Huff
throws
against
the Los
Angeles
Angels
in the
second
inning
at Angels
Stadium
in
Anaheim,
California,

Monday,
April26.
Rose •
Palmisano/
Orange
County
Register/
MCT

being hit by a shot off the playing for how long?"
bat of a New York Jakubauskas said. "When
Yankee that broke sever- you look at it like that,
al bones in his face in the odds are prett) slim.''
Jakubauskas saw a
1957. Fearful of getting
hit again, Score altered replay of Huff getting hit.
:'I kind of glanced at it.
his motion and was never
I really didn't focus on it
the same.
"If you think it's going too much because I really
to be difficult to come didn't want to see it. I
back, I don't think you'll was in the training room
ever be able to come and I heard. 'Qhhh,"' he
back," Kuroda said said.
"You notice it more as
Saturday night.
Nick you go up through the
Minnesota's
Blackburn, who was higher levels. Guys hit a
struck in the face by a lot more things back
drive off Bobby Abreu's through the box in the big
bat in 2008, said the key leagues," he said. "I didto getting back on the n't lose consciousness at
mound is having a short all. Unfortunately, I dido 't. So I felt everything
memory.
''You can't really go that came with that."
out and be scared and be
He remembers it all
worried and thinking quite clearly.
"Once you get past the
about that," Blackburn
said in Minneapolis after initial shock of. 'Oh, my
Huff was hit. "But it's not gosh! This hurts!' you let
easy to not think about it. everybody know you're
Especially after I got hit, OK. My parents were
it was always in the back still looking, so l made
of my mind. You can't let sure I did sometning,"
that be your main focu~ Jakubauskas said. ·'When
or you won't be able to they first got out to me,
they asked me how if I
do your job."
He added: ''The more had any neck pain, I said,
you get out there, the eas- Tm dizzy and my head's
killing me. I just wanted
ier it gets."
Jakubauskas.
who's to lay there. I didn't want
just beginning to throw to get up."
There's little a pitcher
bullpen sessions without
feeling any effects of the can do to get out of the
concussion. is eager to way of a ball that takes
step on the rubber again. several tenths of a second
"It took me untiJ I was - yes, tenths - to zoom
31 years old to get hit in in on them. Good
the head, and I've been windups help a pitcher

become
square to the plate after
hurling a 90 mph pitch
and be in proper fielding
position, but sometimes
there is no time to get the
glove up anyway. Huff
said he had no time to
react.
Giants reliever Jeremy
Affeldt has avoided three
close calls with liners at
his head this year.
"I don't even think
about it," he said.
"Honestly, if a guy hits
the ball up the middle,
you think of it as an
advantage. 'I'm going to
get it and it's an out.' I've
had a lot of stuff hit up
the middle against me the
last couple of years. I'm
always blocking stuff. A
lot of times when you
leave the ball over the
plate it's going to happen."
Unlike the debate over
banning metal bats they create even faster
line drives - in youth
leagues and high school,
there is not much major
league baseball can do to
protect pitchers.
'·You really don't want
to see a pitcher with a
hockey mask pitching in
the game, or a screen in
front of him," Indians
manager Manny Acta
said. "The game has been
played for almost 200
years that way, and you.
don't want to make those
drastic changes."

Sources: Muirfield Village to
get Presidents Cup
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP)
- The Presidents Cup
is coming to Muirfield
Village in 20 13, two
officials said Tuesday,
giving the course Jack
Nicklaus built the distinction of hosting
golf's three biggest cup
competitions.
Muirfie1d Village held
the Ryder Cup in 1987
and the Solheim Cup in
1998.
The two officials with
knowledge of the plans
spoke on condition of
anonymity because it
has not been announced.
Nicklaus and PGA Tour
commissioner
were
expected to hold a press
conference Wednesday
at the Memorial.
Ty Votaw, the tour's
executive vice president
of
.communications,
declined comment.
It will be the third
American course to host

He also agreed to host
the Presidents Cup,
Nicklaus. whose 18
matches every two major
championship the Solheim Cup for the
years
between
the remain golf's bench- LPGA Tour. Putting it
United States and an mark, was instrumental on such a familiar
gave
those
International team of in bringing the Ryder;, course
players from every- · Cup to his course in matches a big recogniwhere but Europe. It 1987, even though it tion boost.
The 2013 matches
previously was held ended badly. Europe
four times at the Robert won for the first time on will be held the first
weekend of October.
Trent Jones Golf Club American soil.
in northern Virginia,
and at Harding Parking
in San Francisco last
year.
The matches will be
played
at
Royal
Melbourne in Au~tralia
in 2011.
Nicklaus has been
U.S. captain a record
four times and had a 2
1-1 record. It was not
clear if he would be
captain
for
the
Muirfield
Village
matches,
although
Nicklaus said after the
U.S. victory in 2007
that it was time for others to take that job.

Marcum Construction

Commercial &amp; Residential

• Room additions • Rooting • Garages
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse Barns

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834

www .skylinespeedway.net

FISH DAY!

NOW IS THf TIME FOR
STOCKING!

* Channel Catfish * Largemouth Bass * Redear * Koi
* Bluegil {Bream) * ~linnows * Black Crappie (if avail)
*Grass Carp

Wednesday, June 9, 2010
' Bidwell Hardware Shade River AG Sen ice
In Bidwell, OH
In Pomeroy, OH
12 \oon- 1 pm
2· 3 pm

The Feed Stop
In Gallipolis, OH
4-Spm

It'll encouT(lgt buildi11g muteriu/1 be purclum:clloculfy.
Support/om/ bu.~ineist.\

Full) insured
Fret• estimates- 25+ )Cars l'Xpcricncc
l:'llnl aftiliall·d \\ilh \likl' \larcum l~noling &amp; Rl·mudcling)

TO PLACE AN ORDER CALL 1-800-247-2615
www. farleysfishfarm.com
FARLEVS ARKANSAS PONDSTOCKERS, INC.

Flag Football Signups
POMEROY, Ohio - The Meigs Flag Football
League is currently signing up players for the 20 l 0
NFL Flag Football season. All players interested
should go to ~ww.meigsffl.com to signup before the
June I 5 dead! me. Payment will be taken online via
credit card. The league is for children in kindergarten
through sixth grade.

Southern basketball camps
RACINE, Ohio - The Southern basketball
gram will be hosting a pair of basketbaJI camps
summer.
,
The first camp is for boys entering the 7th, 8th, and •
9th grades ~ill by held June 14-17 at the high school.
The camp will be from I p.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Cost is
$40 for one camper or $65 for two campers from the
same family. Registration is from ·12:30 p.m. to 1
p.m. on the first day of camp.
The camp will be. ran by the c~aches and high
school players and wJ!l teach offenstve and defensive
fundamentals, al&lt;?ng with team concepts that are
tmportant at the h1gh school level. Competitions will
be held ana awards given.
The second camp is for boys and girls entering the ·
second through sixth grades. The camp will run from
June 21-24 from 9 a.m. to Noon daily. The 'camp will
be conducted by head coach Jeff Caldwell with help • ·
from assist coaches, as well as, current and former
varsity players. Fundamentals will be stressed and
awards ~resented for 3 on 3, "HORSE", and free
throw competitions.
Cost is $40 for on~ camper or $65 for two campers
from the same famtly. Each camper will receive a
camp T-shirt. Registration is from 8:30a.m. to 9 a.m.
on the first day of camp.
Fqr further information about either camp contact
coach Jeff Caldwell at 740-949-3129.

Meigs Football Golf Scramble •
MASON, W.Va. - The 17th annual Meigs Football
Golf Scramble will be held on Saturday. June 12 at
'
Riverside Golf CouPse.
The event will have a start time of 8:30 a.m. and
will have an entry fee of $60 per person.
The four-man team handicap is 40 or more. with
only one member of a team being allowed to possess
a 10 or under handicap.
Ther·e will also be a cash pot, skins aame and mulo
ligan options.
For more information, contact Meigs head football
coach Mike Chancey at (740) 591-8644.

Mid-Ohio Valley QB Skills Camp
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. -The Mid-Ohio Valley
Quarterback Skills Camp will be held on Saturdav
-'
June 12, from 10 a.m. to I p.m.
The camp is for athletes grades 7-12. and will be
held at the Blennerhassett Middle School practice
field in Parkersburg, W.Va.
The Gamp instructor is Coach Jeff Monteroso of
West Liberty University. Cost is $10. Bring football
shoes and one marked football.
For more information contact Coach Mike Lucas at
304-485-0023 or wrnlucas7l @hotmail.com,
Mike Flannery at 304-997-0822, or Coach
Duval at 740-336-8371.

Reds
from Page Bl
had
been
pitching
through the injury for a
while. In his last five outings, Lincoln surrendered 11 runs on 12 hits
in five innings his last
five appearances.
"We- need ltim to gel

back to himself;' Baker
said. "Something's been
bothering him, but not
enough to not pitch.
Finally, we're like 'Hey,
you've got to go get your
stuff together."'
Before Monday. Fisher
hadn't allowed a run in
four straight appearances
but Baker said he needed
to work on throwing con-

sistent strikes with his
fastball and breakingball.
~
"He showed flashes of
brilliance for us." Baker
said. ''He has the stuff."
The Reds recalled
right-banders
Logan
Ondrusek and Enerio Del
Rosario from Louisville
before Tuesday's game
against the Cardinals. It's
the second callup of the
season for both pitchers.
Baker said right-hander Jared Burton, who
has spent most of the
season on the DL with a
suspected thyroid problem. would be considered for a callup after he
gets more work. Button
has worked five innings
in
five
games •
Louisville.

BEST AUTO RATES

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