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•

AI~ONG THP, RlrV"RR

\IN&lt;

A history of gristmills along Raccoon Creek:
New exhibit open at Bob Evans Farm, Cl

The skinny on smart sandwiches, 01

~unba!' uttme' -i&gt;en tnel
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley PubHshing Co.
F IVE S TAR

•

0 0000
SAlES
SERVICE
PARTS
BODY SHOP

Printed on lOOo/t-

Recycled ~cwsprlut

•

ODOT to begin ·Racine road project
B Y B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
The
Village of Racine has not
one, not two but three
major
infrastructure
improvement projects
going on in the village
this summer, including a
$484.000 widening of the
road at the intersection of
Elm and Fifth Streets.
Alan L. Craig. project
engineer for the Ohio

Department
of
Transportation District
10, said the project,
which his agency is overseeing, has a bid award
date of July 29. Craig
said work typically
begins 30 days after the
bid award and after that,
contractors will have
until Oct. 31 to complete
the work.
The work includes·
widening the intersection
at Elm and Fifth Streets

from two to three lanes
near the village's commercial development distiict which contains the
new Home National
Bank (still under construction) and Dollar
General. When most villages are struggling to
attract traffic, Racine has
the unique problem of
expanding the infrastructure to prevent traffic
congestion in not only
the business distiict but

traffic associated with
other economic development projects in the area
which use Ohio 124.
Craig
previously
explained there would
be 525 feet of work
done on Elm Street centen~d around the Fifth
Street intersection and
400 feet of work on
Fifth Street going south
from Elm Street.
In his own words,
Craig
previously

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MDTNEWS@MYDAJLYTRIBUNECOM

Fire damages
A:lk Hill H.S.
~MES-SENJ"INEL STAFF
MOTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Submitted photos

Storytellers Donna Wilson of Middleport (left) and Suzanna "Granny Sue" Holstein, Jackson County, W.Va., will
be part of the "Stories by _the River's Edge" series that will make stops in the tri-county area in July.

StorytellerrJ coming to river tow/hi
B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT - "Stories by
the River's Edge." featuring storytellers from across the area, will
again this year be a feature of
summer entertainment in the
Bend area.
Several years ago storyteller
Donna Wilson of Middleport, with
support from the local Riverbend
Arts Council and with a grant from
the Ohio Atts Council. started a
storytelling program in communities along the Ohio River.
In the past the programs were
held in three or four communities
along the river's·edge but this year
the program has been expanded to
include nine locations.
The expansion of programming
can be credited to the Ohio River
Border Initiative. a joint project of
the Ohio Arts Council and the
West Virginia Commission on the
Arts, which provided a funding
grant, and through contri_but~ons
from several area orgamzat1ons

and businesses interested in seeing
the expansion of art opportunities
in Appalachia.
Contributing were Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., Gallia County
Convention and Visitors Bureau,
the town of Mason, the Point
Pleasant River Museum, the
Jackson County, Pleasant County
and Sistersville Libraries.
Storytelling will be held on
seven days between July 2 and
July 21 with four storytellers participating in different morning and
afternoon sessions. As always the
stories are geared to appeal to all
ages and are presented free of
charge. Some are open air, others
are held in , community facilities.
For those held outside, the
Gallipolis. Mason and Syracuse
sites, those attending are encouraged to take lawn chairs or bring
blankets to sit on.
The schedule is as follows:
• July 2. 10 a.m. at the Ripley
Library, and 2 p.m. at the
Ravenswood Library, with Granny
Sue Holstein as storyteller;

• July 7, I0 a.m. at the Pleasant
River Museum and 2 p.m. at the
French Art Colony in Gallipolis.
with Keith Maynard, stor)teller;
and 10 a.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center, and 2 p.m. at
the Mason Municipal Park w~th
Suzi "Mama'' Whaples. storyteller;
• July 12, 12 noon at the
Sistersville Library and 2 p.m. at
the St. Marys Library. with Donna
Wilson storyteller:
• Ju1y 14. 10 a.m. at the Point
Pleasant River Muse.um and 2
p.m. at the Our House Museum.
Gallipolis, Donna Wilson. storyteller;
• July 16. 12 noon at the Ripley
Library and 2 p.m. at the
Ravenswood Library, with Suzi
··Mama: Whaples storyteller;
• July 19, 12 noon at the
Sistersville Library . and 2 p.m. at
St. Mary's Library with Granny
Sue Holstein as storyteller;
• July 2 1, 10 a.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center and 2 p.m . at

Arkansas .
He is the
of
son
David and
J o y c e
Moore of
Cheshire.
Moore

B Y ANDREW CARTER

INDEX
-

SECTIONS -

24 PAGES

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds
D2-4
Comics
Ds
Editorials
A4
Sports
B Section
·© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

IIIliI] I!IJI,IIII! 1!1 !I!Ill III

MOTNEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A
native Galli a Countian
will be the face or" the
new farmer's market,
which will make its debut
on Saturday, June 19 in
downtown Gallipolis.
Jeff Moore, a 2002
graduate of River Valley
High School, has been
named manager of the
farmer's market. Upon
graduation from high
school. Moore studied at
Morehead
State
University ·in Kentucky,
where he completed a
bachelor's degree in animal science. He then
earned a master's degree
from the University of

,

Moore

s

a i

d

although
running the farmer's
market will be his first
managerial experience,
he is looking forward to
developing it into a
viable operation.
"I was up for a challenge and this is something that will help agriculture in the area and the
local consumers. too,"
Moore said. ''I look forward to the opportunity
to work with the local

GALLIPOLIS
Gallia County Sheriff's
Deputies investigating a
recent theft case arrested
Maria Patterson. 35.
Vinton. in connection
with the case.
Patterson is charged
with breaking and entering as a result of the theft
of property from parked
cars located at the Dollar
General Store near Porter
in Spiingfield Township.
Deputies later found
other stolen items at her
residence.
Patterson
ts
also
charged 'v\. ith tampering
v,.ith e\idence as a result
of attempting to remove
and conceal an ID card of
a victim from the vie\\' of
investigators.
The case \\'as reported
b) employees at the store
and it \\'as later determined that Patterson had
remo\ ed keys to the
vehicles from an office
located inside the store
and used them to enter
the parked cars. She was
captured on surveillance
video entering a vehicle.
Patterson was arrested
on June 4 and additional
charges are pending.
Patterson was out on bond
for a prior burglary charge .

Meigs sheriff
investigating
truck heist
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The
theft
of a 2006 Toyota
Please see Story, A2
Tundra pickup with an
ATV in the back owned
by Mike Doherty of
Belpre is· under investigation by the Meigs
producers and introduce to be able to sell their County Sheriff Office.
Sheriff Robert Beegle
consumers to the people product," Fowler said.
who are producing their "The second thing we reported that Doherty. a
food. and to build some wanted to be able to do well maintenance man,
relationshiQs."
was to offer people a had parked the truck
Moore's role will be to healthier choice of food . along the road and had
serve as the public face It's home grown. it's gone into the woodline
of the farmer's market locally grown. And third- to
check
a
we ll
and be the ptimary con- ly, working with the ctty. Wednesday and when he
tact for producers who to use it as a tool that can returned the truck was
wish to participate. His be used to reinvigorate gone. He said someone
responsibilities include the downtown area."
reported having seen the
selling stalls to vendors
The farmer's market is truck going north on
and selling sponsorships the result of cooperation Ohio 7. The theft
to local businesses.
between
the
Gallia remains under investigaJeff Fowler. chairman County
Boarcl
of tion.
of the farmer 's market Commissioners.
John Wilcox, Lovett
board in Gallia County. Gallipolis City Board of Road, Racine. reported
said the board members Commissioners, Gallia that sometime last weekhope the market will County
Agriculture end the window of his
achieve three primary Center Board. County vehicle had been broken
goals.
Economic Developme~1t out. The vehicle was
"We wanted to create a
Please see Heist Al
Please see Moore, Al
venue for local producers

Moore to nianage Gallia Co. farmer's market
High : Upper 80s.
Low : Upper 60s.

Please see Road, A2

for theft

• Cindy Lucas Bailey
• Mirrical N. Cordell
• Esther V. Frecker
·Nancy L. French
• Glenna Mae George
• Ruby P. Holley
• Delb~rt L. Sigler

\

explained the work and
need for it as follows:
''The work will widen the
current intersection to
three lanes (two lanes in
one direction and one
lane ir, the opposite direction) so that each left turn
location will have a separate Jane from the traffic
making right turns or
going straight through the
intersection. The turning

Gallia
woman
nabbed

Page AS

W EATHER

u .,.-

$1.50 • Vol. 44, No. 24

Sunday, June 13, 2010

:O BITUARIES

OAK
HILL
Firefighters from four
departments in Jackson
and Gallia counties
responded to a blaze that
damaged Oak Hill High
School on Friday after~
noon.
The Madison-Jefferson
Volunteer Fire Department
was dispatched to the
school at 4:30 p.m. Friday
after witnesses reported
seeing smoke pouring out
of the roof of the building.
The fire reportedly
broke out in a chemistry
classroom and was contained to the room.
Firefighters had to cut a
hole in the roof above the
classroom to battle the
blaze~
No
IOJUnes
were
orted.
irefighters from the
•
Jackson, Coalton and
Centerville departments
also responded to the
scene.

~

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-

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PageA2

iunbap ~tme~ -ientinel

Sunday,June1J, 2010

Aging con man pleads guilty to 2 Ohio murders
AKRON (AP)
For
the second time this
wee'k, an aging con man
criminal pleaded guilty
to a three-decade-old
double murder.
Edward Edwards. 76.
pleaded guilty Friday to
killing a young Ohio couple near Akron in 1977,
two days after he pleaded
guilty in Wisconsin to
killing a young couple
there.
Edwards was sentenced
to two life terms in Ohio.
He will be sentenced later
in Wisconsin but must
first serve his sentence in
Ohio. where he won't be
eligible for parole consideration until he is 97.
He sat stone-faced and
cuffed to his wheelchair
during a one-hour plea
hearing marked with a
review of the charges. his
plea agreement and emo-

tion-charged statements
from relatives of the victims.
The Ohio victims.
Judith Straub. 18, of
Sterling. and Bill Lavaca.
21. of Doylestown. were
shot in the neck at close
range in August 1977.
Edwards stroked his
forehead with his right
forefinger and occasionally repositioned his
cuffed left 'hand as
Straub ·s brother spoke
about missed holidays
without his sister.
' "Judy was my older sister and friend,'' Jeff
Straub said. '"I never actually got to say goodbye.''
Lavaco·s sister, Kathy
Cardinal, sobbed and
shook uncontrollably as
her statement directed as
Edwards was read in coutt
by a victim's advocate.
"I miss him so much.

He took that from me.''
she wrote.
.
Edwards responded to
questions about the proceedings from Judge
Thomas Teodosio with
one or two words. He
turned down a chance to
address the court before
he was sentenced.
Officers
from
Wisconsin were in the
courtroom to take him
back for his sentencing in
the two other murders.
Edwards, of Louisville,
Ky .. was arrested in July
after DNA connected him
to the deaths of Tim Hack
and his girlfriend, Kelly
Drew. two 19-year-olds
who disappeared from a
Wisconsin
wedding
reception in August 1980.
Their bodies were found
weeks later in the woods.
In April. he confessed
to Ohio authoriti~s that

he also shot Lavaco and
Straub.
Born in Akron in J 933.
Edwards wrote in his
1972
autobiography
"Metamorphosis of a
Criminal" that he spent
his early years being beaten by nuns in an orphanage. When a nun asked
him what he wanted to be,
he told her, ''Sister. I'm
gonna be a crook. and r m
gonna be a good one."
According to his book:
he escaped from jail in
Akron in 1955 by pushing past a guard and fled
across the country. holding up gas stations for
money. He never wore a
mask because he wanted
to be famous.
In 1961 he landed on
the FBI's Ten Most
Wanted Fugitives list. He
eventually was captured
in Atlanta.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Parent doesn't.see teen girl as a bully
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
saw a recent incident on
the news about a girl who
had killed herself to
escape bullies i-n high
school. 1 always had
thought of bullies as little
boys stealing lunch
money and such, and it
got me to thinking. It said
that what might pass for
normal teenage behavior
might have a bad effect
on sensitive kids who
find it hard to ignore or
laugh off what is happening. I know my daughter
has been very combative
and has a lot of enemies.
I took it for strength.
until now.- D.V.
Dear D.V.: You have
mentioned a very popular stereotype: the little
boy
stealing
lunch
money is the farthest
thing from your popular.
pretty teenage daughter,
right? Parents often are
blind to the fact that girls
can be bullies. including
teenage girls who should
know better. And just
because your daughter
isn't starring in some
YouTube video of girls
brawling doesn't mean
she couldn't be bullying
other girls in much more
subtle ways. You may
think that your daughter
doesn't do anything of
the sort, or you may feel
that girls always are

her honestly as someone
who thinks being mean
is OK. Talk about the
horrible consequences
of bullying. and discuss
ways of handling conflict. Most of all. open
your eyes. Sometimes.
the truth hurts.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers:
It's the same thing every
night: My son sits down
Dr. Joyce Brothers
to do his homework
(after a half-hour of permean to one another suading by me) and as
because that was your soon as he starts workown experience growing ing, my husband is there
up. Or, being mean to interfering. He says he
siblings or others may be always had help with his
the rule in your house- homework from hi~ dad,
hold and you don't even and that's the way it
notice that not everyone should be. I never had
any help with homebehaves in that manner.
So, the long and short work, and don't want my
of it is that it's possible child to have a crutch
you don't have the full like that. He is doing
picture of what a bully fine in school, and I
is. Teens who are natur- think if he needed help,
al leaders, who find it he would ask. He is 10
easy to manipulate oth- years old. Can you settle
ers or convince them of this?- P.R.
Dear P.R.: Your son is
thetr point of view, often
are terrific at bullying. old enough to have someSo tt is really up to you thing to say about this
to take a closer look at battle. Is he the kind of
your daughter's behav- kid who really functions
ior, whether it be with well with his assignher friends or through ments and a desk and
her e-mails and text some time alone to do his
messages
don't work? Perhaps he just
snoop, but ask her to needs help with a schedshare some of her feel- ule or an alarm clock that
ings with you. Look at he can set for himself. No

one likes nagging or
being nagged. That said.
perhaps he really does do
better with a little help on
certain assignments, on
an occasional basis.
On the other hand, perhaps the problem is with
your husband. If he
insists on settling in and
doing the homework or
helping whether your son
wants him to or not. there
could be an underlying
issue of control or just
nostalgia here. Your husband's dad always helped
him, so he will help his
son. It may be the only
way he knows how to
bond. Or he secretly may
be worried about his
son's ability to compete
in the world of grades
and college admissions
and who knows what
else. Talk to your husband and see if you can
get an idea of what's in
his head, and lay off the
criticism. I'm sure he
means well; you just
have to be able to
approach this issue as a
team. Maybe once a
week you could take
turns asking your son if
he needs any help. This
way. he's in the driver's
seat when it comes to his
own petformance, which
is how it should be.
(c)

2010

by

King

Features Syndicate

Story from Page At
the Mason Municipal
Park.
\\ ith
Keith
Maynard, storyteller.
Keith Maynard is a
third generation railroader. writer, storyteller. and
poet. Keith brings his
railroading experience to
his storytelling, telling
classic rai !road stories
and stories from his
experience on the rails.
He is from Leon. W.Va.
Suzi "Marna'' Whaples
has been telltng stories
for many years and is
honored this year to be a

featured teller at the
National
Storytelling
Festival in Jonesboro,
Tenn. She is from
Dunbar. W.Va.
Granny Sue Holstein is
from Jackson County.
W.Va .. and is well-known
storyteller. She tells and
sings stories in the oldtime front porch style. She
wi 11 be a featured teller at
several storytelling festivals this year. as well as,
telling at libraties, parks
and events.
Donna Wilson is a sto-

ryteller from Meigs
County and tells many
Appalachian stories and
home-grown tales. Her
stories have taken her all
over Ohio and West
Vi,rginia.
·'Storytelling takes 1isteoers back to a time when
stories were part of the
fabric of every day, when
parents told children tales
from their past and children shared daily adventures." ~aid Suzanna
''Granny Sue" Holstein
who assisted Wilson in

securing grant money
from the Ohio River
Border Initiative for the
summer programming.
"Stories remind us of
who we are. where we
came from. and why it is
impprtant to remember
our heritage. People
everywhere are rediscovering the joy of simply listening to a story and joining in on a song. It's an
ageless wa) of connecting
with others in the magic
of a tale well-told.''
Holstein concluded.

·Around Ohio
WWII vet in Ohio fined
$165 for Memorial Day crash
WEST CHESTER (AP) - Police have fined a
World War II veteran $165 for driving his car off the
road and striking four people lined up for a Memori.
Day parade in Ohio.
Everett Cole paid the fine this week after police
cited him for failure to control his vehicle. Authorities
also filed paperwork to require the 84-year-old Cole
to take another driver's license test.
West Chester police Lt. "Joe Gutman said an investigation showed that Cole backed his car into a~other
vehicle, panicked and then couldn't control hts car
drh:ing forward.
Cole had no comment Friday.
He and two others received minor injuries. An 83year-old Korean War veteran who was hospitalized is
recovering.
West Chester is about 15 miles north of Cincinnati.

•
:

•

Woman donates $1 OK to medics
COLUMBUS (AP)- An Ohio woman grateful to
medics who gave her a tide to a hospital has donated
$10,000 a community's emergency medical team.
The woman, who wished to remain anonymous,
dropped off the check to medics at the Delaware
County Emergency Medical Services, north of
Columbus. A handwritten note indicated that the
money was her way of saying thank you.
EMS Chief Rob Farmer says the woman became ill
last summer and had to be transported.
County commissioners on Thursday approved plan.s
to use the money to buy hand-held sensors that ca
measure cru·bon monoxide and oxygen levels in th
blood and heart rate.

Road from Page At
radius at each comer of the intersection will be
improved to help trucks make right turns easier. Curb
and gutter and stonn sewers will be constructed and
the existing waterline and sidewalks will be replaced."
Craig went on to say: ''The construction of the new
businesses at the intersection has given the Village of
Racine the opportunity to coordinate the roadway
improvement with the new business construction. The
bank is providing the village with the additional right
of way needed to improve the intersection. This intersection improvement will allow for trucks to make
turns at the intersection without encroaching on the
opposing traffic lares which will improve safety and
accessibility."
Village officials in Racine have long supported this
road widening project as a crucial asset to the commercii:\~ development district.
Racine's water line replacement project, which
began on May 24, will wrap up around the end of
August. Racine's Star Mill Park improvement pro.- ·
ject. also overseen by ODOT, will start on June 1
and wrap up Sept. 7 or 9, just before Racine
Second Annual Party in the Park, Sept. 10-11.
Obviously, residents and those traveling through
Racine should be aware of some minor traffic delays
all summer long, though the end result, village offi·
cials feel. will be worth it.

Moore from Page At
Director Melissa Clark and Gallia County OSU
Extension Agent R1chard Stephens.
The farmer's market will be open from 3-7 p.m.
each Thursday and from 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m. each
Saturday beginning June 19. The market is scheduled
to run through September. Fowler said the market
schedule could be extended to accommodate fall
crops. The market will be located on the State Street
side of Gallipolis City Park.
Producers interested in participating in the farmer's
market can contact Moore by phone at (740) 339-3216,
or by e-mail at galliafarmersmarket@yahoo.com.

Heist from Page Al
parked at the Park and Ride on Ohio 7/124.
•
The sheriff's depattment is also investigating a dnveoff without paying after filling up with gas at the
T&amp;T Pit Stop. The subject as in a gray Toyota pickup
traveling no11h toward Middleport, it was reported.
As of Thursday James Deems of Racine remained
confined in the Meigs County Jail on an indictment
for receiving stolen property pending payment of
court fees.

MARK YOUR CALENDARS!
D &amp; W Homes
will be holding all{
Open House June 25th, 26th, &amp; 27th G
So mark your calendars
~r--~6~~~~'~--:-t-~-~-~-.....i
~~l for the spectacular
~............
three day event!

State Route 35
Henderson, WV
1-800-676-4429

.

t'

Don't miss it!! Come join the fun June 25th, 26th &amp;27th
Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-5, Sun. 1-4

�-----------------~:-------------------

PageA3

iunbap ~ime~ -i&gt;entinel

Sunday, June 13,

FFA TRAINING

Meigs County calendar
Monday, June 14
POMEROY Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club regular meeting,
7:30 p.m., Mulberry
Commumty Center.
POMEROY - Me1gs
County
Republican
Party.
7:30
p.m.
Courthouse.
Public
welcome.

Church Events

.

Submitted photo

The R1ver Valley ~FA Chapter a~ended the District 10 Banquet and Officers Training held at Marietta High
School. Members m attendan?e mcluded Kyla !haxton, Haley Cox, Alisha Green, Lisa Cox, Megan Clonch,
Tre~or ~aker, ~yan Cox, Jess1ca Halley, and Michelle Aaron. Breakout sessions were held to train the presi., v1ce pres1dent. secretary. treasurer, reporter, sentinel and student adviser.

•

Gallia County calendar
Sunday, June 13
Knights of Columbus will
KANAUGA
gather at 6:30 p.m. in
J&lt;anauga Sportsmen's Lourdes Hall at St. Louis
Club
12-gauge gun Church for a dinner meetshoot, noon. Public Invit- ing. All Knights are
encouraged to attend.
ed.
UNDATED Haner
Card Shower
reunion at home of Clara
Haner. Dinner at 12:30
Kenneth Waugh celep.m.
brated
his 86th birthday
Monday, June 14
BIDWELL- Flag Day on June 12. Cards may
ceremony, 10 a.m., New be sent to 14543 State
Hope Baptist Church, Route 7 S., Gallipolis, OH
45631.
18671 Ohio 554.
Tuesday, June 15
Church Events
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Co.
Rural
Water
Sunday, June 13
Association
regular
ADDISON - Services
meet1ng. 7:30 p.m.
10 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
:Thursday, June 17
Addison
Freewill Baptist,
ALLIPOLIS - Gallia
with
Rev.
Rick Barcus
American Red CrossGallipolis Daily Tribune preaching.
GALLIPOLIS- Dickey
Everyday Heroes break' fast, 7:30 a.m., Gallia Chapel Church homeCounty Senior Resource coming with Rev. Donnie
Spurlock and Rev. Bob
Center.
Hurshman. Singers: For
GALLIPOLIS
French 500 Free Clinic, H1s Glory, Faith Valley
1-4 p.m., 258 Pinecrest Trio, Leon Queen, Vickey
and Abigail Baldwin.
Drive, Gallipolis.
Tuesday, June 15
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
GALLIPOLIS
County
Children's
Christian
Services Board meeting, Gallipolis
Women's
Connection
5
p.m..
Children's
Services
Office,
83 meeting, noon, Courtside
Shawnee
Lane, Grill, 302 Second Ave.
Ronald
and
Dixie
Gallipolis.
Westervelt
guest
speakVINTON
lnfo/reservat ons:
Huntington-Morgan ers.
Crime Watch meeting, 6 linda at 446-4319 or
p.m., Vinton Town Hall. · Nancy at 367-7 443.
Wednesday, June 16
Friday, June 18
GALLIPOLIS - 0.0.
Mcintyre Park Dlstnct
board mec.ing, 11 a.m.,
Park District Off1ce,
ia
County
rthouse.
•
Monday, June 21
RIO
GRANDE
Gallia Co. Family/Civic
Engagement Team meeting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Davis
Univ. Center, cont. room
C, Univ. of Rio Grande.
Info: Gallia·Vinton ESC,
245-0593.
JACKSON
DAV
Mobile Serv1ce Off1.:-3, 1C
a.m.-6
p.:.i.,
DAV
Chapter Home, 170 Pearl
St., Jackson. Info· NSO
9harles Lambert, (513)
684-2676.
:Tuesday, June 22
EWINGTON
American Legion Post
161 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
in the academy building.
Happy hour will begin at
6:30 p.m. All members
are
encouraged
to
attend.
Saturday, June 26
GALLIPOLIS - Mido Valley Amateur
io Club National
eld Day activities at
Mound Hill Cemetery,
Gallipolis. Public invited.
Cookout. Door prizes.
Sunday, June 27
GALLIPOLIS
Strother
and
Nellie
at
Swindler reunion
Raccoon Creek County
Park
Bob
White
Shelterhouse #5. Info:
256-6028.
Monday, June 28
GALLIPOLIS

ADDISON - Business
meetmg and aible study,
7 p.m , Addison Freewill
Baptist Church.
Friday, June 18
GALLIPOLIS
Gospel in the Park. 7
p.m .. Gallipolis City Park.
Featunng
God's
Ambilssadors
and
Farleigh Brothers.
Saturday, June 19
WILKESVILLE- Free
clothing giveaway and
free hot dogs, 11 a.m.-1
p.m., Wilkesville United
Methodist Church.
Sunday, June 20
ADDISON - Sunday
school, 10 a.m., AucJ1:sor1
Freewill Baptist Church.
Father's Day cookout
after Sunday school.
Evening service, 6 p.m.
Rev. Rick Barcus preach.rng.
'
Wednesday, June 23
ADDISON Prayer
meeting, 7 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Rev
Jamie
Fortner
Preaching .
Friday, June 25
GALLIPOLIS
Gospel in the Park, 7
p.m., Gallipolis City Park.
Featuring New Southern
Harmony, The Concords
and Martie Short.
Sunday, June 27
ADDISON - Sunday
services, 10 a.m. and 6
p.m., Addison Freewill

2010

Baptist Church. Rick
Barcus preaching.
UNDATED
Homecoming, 1 p.m.,
Bethesda
United
Method1st Church. Meat
provided. Bring' covered
dish.
Monday, June 28
GALLIPOLIS
Knights of Columbus will
gather at 6:30 p.m. in
Lourdes Hall at St. Louis
Church for a dinner meeting.. All Kmghts are
encouraged to attend.

Monday, June 14
SYRACUSE
Revival
serv1ces
Syracuse Commumty
Church, Second Street.
Syracuse, June 14-19,
7 p.m each evenmg.
Pntt
Rev.
Markco
preach1ng.
Spec1a.
music will be held as
follows.
Monday,
Proclaim,
Tuesday,
Church youth cho1r;
Wednesday,
Truly
Saved:
Thursday,
Delores Long: Friday,
Light
of
Hope;
Saturday,
Debbie
Powell.
Friday, June 18
POMEROY Any
church mterested In
playing in a fall co-ed
softball leagues, contact Mike Stewart at
992-7196, or Bryan and
Melissa Colwell. 9920565. league play Will
begin
in
August.
Deadline to sign up is
Wednesday, June 30.

Card Shower
Ruth Stethem, longtime resident of Long

Bottom, Will observe
her 107th birthday on
June 14 She lived in
her
Long
Bottom
home until she was
100 years old and
then moved to Canton
to res1de with her son.
Gerald Stethem, and
his wife. Cards may
be mailed to Mrs.
Stethem at 5911 Lake
O'Springs
N.W.,
Canton, Ohio 44718.
Robert
"Bob"
Jeffers, will celebrate
h1s 90th birthday oin
June 16. Cards may
be sent to h1m at P. 0.
Box 5, Syracuse, Ohio
45779.
Donna
Watson
Brooks formerly of
Tuppe s Plains, wil
observe
her
80th
birthday on June 19.
Cards may be sent to
her at 2203 Hill St.,
Apartment E, Belpre,
Ohio 45741.

~~
LocaiNef

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Tt.ere is no o e exactly fikg you Raymor&lt;l Jamoo
f 3 1CJOI aav sors t.nden&gt;tand that. You I'ave goals
values and relationships tl'at 'lJ(j{e your ,ot..mty
ur1que That's why your adv1sor tJas the freedom to
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RAYMONDJAMFS
FINANCIAL SfRVICES

IndiTlduaiJOiotlocu from tndependent advitort

J3y CaldwelL CJ~ P
441 Second

~\c.

INC.

Mtll'ltr F NRAitiPC

Galli poll . OH

740-44o-21 ~5 • 800-487-~ 129

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PageA4

i&gt;unbap tiUmes -i&gt;entinel

Sunday,Junet3,2~10

Applying Ohio values
to federal financial woes

6unbap Q;fmes . ~entinel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis. Ohio

(740) 446-2342 ·FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydailytrlbune.com

overnight. but ju~t like working [amtlies, we must. sta.
paying it do\o,.·n. Right no\\.\
pay more in annual interest &lt;H
our debt then we do on education and velerans programs
each year. rhat is not right and
I have taken the following
steps to reduce our debt:
• I signed onto the Targeted
Deficit Reduction Act '"hich
would require Congres~ to u~e
procedural ~trategies to reduce
Trim the fat
the deficit each ~ear during
During difficult times, work- the Budget proce!'&gt;::..
in!! families make do with less.
• I signed onto a hill that
They do not 'top :-.pending alto· pressured the Adn11m~trat10n
gether; they prioritite. For to create a bipartisan commisinstance. they ma) not turn olf sion to focus on \\a~., to IO\\ er ·
the TV. but they may live "ith- our debt.
out cable's premium channcb.
• Finally. I Authored and
or cable altogether. That i~ the will
soon
introduce
the
fat trimming our gO\ernment "Check the Debt .. Act. ~1any
should be doing, With that in Ohioans have asked me what
mind, I have taken the follow- they can do to help get .
ing actions:
America's fiscal house in
• I signed onto and voted for order. I am.touched that they
the
~Improper
Payments want to help: that they belie\c
Elimination and Recovery Act in this country and want to
that recent I y passed the U.S. help put us on the right par A
House. This bill en~ures that Mv hill ''ill allo" Americaour federal agencies stop mak- to· play a part in pa) ing down
ing payment errors while our national debt. The Federal
allo" ing them to recover over- Go' ernment a tread) collects
pa~ ment-... If enacted. this could non-:wlicited donations to pa)
sa' e our countr) $98 billion do" n
the
national
debt
annuallv.
through the Office of Public
• I signed onto the Spending
Debt
in
the
Trea~urv
Reduction Aet. '' hich "ill fore/.! Department. This bill \\ ould
the !!O\ ernmcnt to tighten ih
add a '"Check the Debt'- box to
be It ~' er the next fi, c ~years b)
Enact common
reducing our non-securit) dis- annual tax form~ that \\Ouid
cretionary :-pending. This hill allo\\ indi' iduah to contribute
~ense spending
would saYe American ta.\payers $3 to pay down the debt, ~imi­
lar to the public financing of
Working families mu~t li\e $400 billion over three ) em~.
campaigns
option that b
• I co-authored an upcoming
"ithin their means. 'l'hev cannot
already
available.
i'iearl) 33 ,
btl\
that
would
establish
a
just put everything on ·a credit
million
people
each
year opt
card. For too long, our govern- bipartisan commission to deterto
contribute
to
public
camment has been putting everything mine. which federal commispaign
financing
to
the
tune
of
on the credit card and leaving it to sions should be continued and
almost
S
I
00
million_
Just
\\
hich
should
be
allov
..
·~:d
to
the next generation to pa) for it.
fade into the sunset and no think if we could pay off that
Thi~ has got to stop and I am
much of our debt every year. It
proud to take part in the follm\ ing longer receive funding.
would
not :-.olve the problem,
• I authored an upcoming bill
common sense efforts:
hut
every
little bit helps.
• I signed onto and \'Otcd for to eltminate an S18 million fedI
rcah;e
that we sttll ha\ e a '
eral
program
that
has
outlhed
Statutory Pay Go. "hich is· now
law.lfCongrcs:o. wants to ~pend . it its usefulness_ This grant pro- long \\ :t) to go in order
must figure out a \\a) to pa) for gram ~hould be eliminated fully restore our countf'
because the 2009 conversion to financial ''ell-being. But j
it.
• I signed onto the Go\ cmment digital teJc, is ion signab has like families all over Ohio. Y.e
Efficiency, Effectiveness. and made it complete!) unnece~­ need to work to!!cther and
Perfonnance lmpro' ement Act. sar). It is just another example make the tou~h ·decisions that Each fedcml agenc) will take an • of \\ astdul ~pending that ,.. e will ~et our countn back on
the ri'ght track. If :-.ve bring our
annual look at all of it~ programs: need to cut.
Ohio \'alues to \\'a-..hin!:!ton.
If a progr,un is 1'1\lt \\Qrking.
together \\ e can make a dlfferChip away at the debt
Congress could adjust the proencr
gram or stop funding it.
A working family must chip
( l.; .5. Rep. Charlie Wilson. D• I signed onto the Balanced
Budget Amendment. Thi.:; \\ould awa) at their debt. other\\ ise St C/mrsville. repre:,em~ Ohio
force Congress to balanc~· our the interest payments cat them Si \th Conweuional District in
national budget each year. Ohio ali' c. The debt our countr) the
U.S.
House
oj
already docs it. So should Uncle has built up over the last sev- Represelllatil•e,·. On the lnremet
eral decades will not go away at H'll'll'.charliell'il wm .house .gm·.)
Sam.
I ~hare the t'oncerns that
many American~ h:l\ r about
our country's ritwnc1al future.
With our drhl at more than 13
trillion dollar:-. and growing,
there is a legitimate concern
about how \\e begin to correct
our economic course. A~ n
Blue Dog Democrat, I IHl\C
nlwnys taken tackling our debt
verv serious!".
Economic • experts
from
ucro~s
the country ha\ e
\\eighed in with .:,uggestions
and solutions, and their opinions should be heard and con~idercd. But, as J'\e often
found
since
coming
to
Congress. sometJmes the best
ideas come from home. Ohio\.
working families know hnw to
manage their finance!\ in tough
economic time~. They make
common scr~sc spt·nJing dedsion~. th~:) trim the fat, and
they chip away at their drht.
This is exactly the type of
three pronged approach that
Congres:-. should adopt to tackle the national deht.
I recently announced that I
backing
a comprchcnsi\ r
package of lcgi-.lation that
includes I 0 bills that I wi II
shorll) introduce or co-~pon­
'or. Each of the ten bills
\\ ould either enact common
sense .. pending deci iom. trim
the fat. or chip a\\ U) at the
debt.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cou&lt;f!rt•ss shall make rw lall' respt•cti"J! au
establislrmerrt of reliJ!iorr, or pr,,Jribititr.l! tire free
exercise tlrereof; or dbridJ!i"J! tire freedom of
spcerll, or of tiH• press; or tire r(ftlrt of tire people
peaceabl}' to a$Semblt•, aud to pelitiou tire
Gol't'rrrmt•rrt j('r a rt•drt•ss 'if griel'atrces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TC)J)AY IN HISTORY
Today IS Sunday, June 13, the 164th day of 2010.
There are 201 days left 1n the year.
TodaY,'S Highlight in History:
On June 13, 1966, the Supreme Court issued its
landmark Miranda v. Anzona decision, ruling that
criminal suspects had to be informed of their constitutional right to consult with an attorney and to
remam silent before bemg questioned by police.
On this date
In 1886, Ktng Ludwig II of Bavaria drowned in
Lake Starnberg.
In 1927, av1at1on hero Charles Lindbergh was
honored w1th a t1cker-tape parade in New York City.
In 1935, James Braddock claimed the title of
world heavyweight boxmg champion from Max
Baer in a 15-round f1ght m Long Island City, N.Y.
' Becky Sharp," the ftrst movie photographed in
"three-strip' Techmcolor, opened in New York_
In 1944, Germany began launchmg flying-bomb
attacks against Britain dunng World War II.
In 1957. the Mayflower II, a replica of the ship
that brought the Pilgrims to America in 1620,
arrived at Plymouth, Mass., after a nearly twomonth journey from England.
In 1967. President Lyndon B. Johnson nominated Solicitor-General Thurgood Marshall to become
the first black justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
In 1971, The New York Times began publishing
excerpts of the Pentagon Papers, a secret study of
America's mvolvement in V1etnam.
In 1981, a scare occurred during a parade in
London when a teenager fired s1x blank shots at
Queen El zabeth II.
In 1983, the U.S. space probe P1oneer 10 launched
in 1972, became the first spacecraft to leave the solar
system as 1t crossed the orbit of Neptune.
In 1996 the 81-day-old Freemen standoff ended
as 16 remaintng members of the anti-government
group surrendered to the FBI and left their
Montana ranch
Ten years ago. Italy pardoned Mehmet Ali Agca,
the Turkish gunman who'd tried to kill Pope John
Paul II m 1981. (Agca was then sent back to Turkey
to serve a prison term tor a killing there; he was
released m Jan. 201 0.)
Five years ago: A jury 1n Santa Maria, Calif acquitted Michael Jackson of molesting a 13-year-old cancer survivor at his Neverland ranch. The Supreme
Court warned prosecutors to use care in striking '
mmorities from juries, siding with black murder defendants in Texas and California who contended their
juries had been unfatrly stacked with whites. The
Senate apologized for blocking antl-lynch·ng legislation in the early 20th century, when mob violence
against blacks was commonplace.
Thought for Today: ''What intellectual snobs
we have become! Virtue is now in the number
of degrees you have - not in the kind of person you are or what you can accomplish in
real-life situations.''- Eda J. LeShan, American
educator (1922-2002).

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n a story pease call one o• our
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Wilson

. Retail sales drop 1. 2 percent in May
becau-..e the numbers can be
\Oiatile from month to month.
But the) :-aid 1f future months
A big drop in Ma) retml sales shO\\ \\CaKnC~~. then the\ \\ill be
has raised ne\\ concerns about the forced to trim their e~titnate~ for
durabilit) of thr economic recO\- O\ eraII economic growth in the
er).
second half of this )Car.
Retail sale' plunged 1.2 percent
The O\ era \I econorm. a:- mealast month. the Commerce sured b) the gro:-s doniestic prodDepartment said Frida). It "as uct. ~rew at an annual rate of 3
the largest declirw in eight perc;nt in the first three months
months.
of this vear. Much of that wa:- the
Americans sl&lt;hhed spending on result
a 3.5 percent expansion
everything from cars to clothing in consumer spending - ti1L' best
to building matenals. Auto sales shm\ ing for this category in three
fell 1.7 percent. E.\cluding auto'-. year:-.
sales fell 1.1 pcrccnl.
The sharp decline in U.S retail
Economist~ arc \\ orried that
sak:-. in :Vfuy '"dramatically weakhouseholds will start tnmming ens the outlook for consumption
out Ia) s lb the) continue to ht• bat- gro\\ th in the second quarter ...
tered b) high unemployment and and b a remihder that hOtheholds
unce11:unty in the stock. market. arc not gomg to be the enginl.! of
Consumer spending account~ for gro\\ th for some time," said Paul
70 percent of total cconormc Dales. U.S . .:cononu-..t for Cnpitul
acti\ it).
Economic ...
There's also concern that
Analvsts 'aid the kc\ \\ill be
spending will frce1e up a~ cmplo~-mcnt and inconie gnm th
American~ see
their wealth in the month~ ahead. But mo~t
shrink. hn estors hm e sold off expect. the unemplo) mcnt rnte of
~lock' for more than a month 9.7 percent \\On't fall much in the
because of concerns thdt hurope ·~ cornin!! month,,
So\ ereJgn debt d·i,i'i
slo\\ a
"Our m\ n ' ie'' i~ that thc labor
world\\~ide economic rebound. mati.et rcco' cry "ill he a grudgThe DO\\ Jon(.'~ industrial"' crage ing one. that consumers \\ill
fell 7.lJ percent last month. the en_jo) only modest gains in ''ages
worst ~Ia) for till' blue chip index and salaries for some time and
silK(' 19H&gt;.
that consume1 :-pending growth
A sepanttc Commerce report "ill therefore prove disappointFriday ~aid bus1ncs~ ill\ entorics ing." said Joshua Shapiro. chief
rose 0.4 percent in April for lhe U.S. cconotmst at ~II·R Inc .. an
fourth conscn1ti\e month of economic con~ultinl! finn in NL·w
~
gains. Business sales dimbed 0.6 York.
percent in April for the 13th
The decline in ~hi) ret,1il -,ales
traight monthl) increasl.!.
was the largest since ~ales had
Some economists cautioned fallen 2.2 percent in September.
again'&gt;! O\ erre.tcting to the The go\ ernment did re" isc up
gloomy Ma) retail sales report ~lightly the April performance to
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to tho ed1tor should be liMited to 300 words. All letters
are sUbJect to ed111ng must be s1gned and .nclude address and
telephone number No uns1gned letters w111 be pubushed.
Letters should be 111 good taste. address.ng issues. nol personalities Thank Yo1..0 letters Will not be accepted for pubucation.

Charlie

I

.

of

''ill

-..hm' a gain of 0.6 percent for the
month instead of the origina\1)
reported 0.4 percent increa~e.
Pullin6 Jo" n the O\era\1 Ma~
numhcr \\.1~ a 9.3 percent piun.
in build n!.! m.lleriab_ That f
IO\\ s the e~piration of a tax credn
for hornebuyer~ in April that
spurred home sales this spring.
Depanment store sale:- fell l.S
percent while sales in the broader
category of general merchandise
stores. which includes big retailers such as Wai-Mart. fell ~1.1 percent.
Gasoline ....rations ~ale::. \\ere
down 3.3 percent, a drop that :
rclle&lt;.·ted in part k)\\er gasoline '
~
pump prices during the month_
The Federal Rcsen e reported
Thursday th: t household'· net
\\ orth rose for the fourth con..ecuth e quarter. but since then ..rod:
price~ ha\t~ been tumbling.
Economists ~m it rna\ not be
until 20 12 or 2013 at t&gt;e~t before
Americans· '' ealth return .. to its
pre-recc~~ion Je, cis.
La.,t "eek. th~ International
Cound\ of Shopping Centers
n.·portcd that its index for re' enue
at ~lore:- open !~as~ year
cd .1 2.6 pcrcrnt nse tn 1\la' co
pareu to sales in Ma) 2009. Tha
!'oliowed .1 0.8 percent April
mcreas~: and a 9 percent surge 111 .

m a po.

~lard1.

·~·m:gct Corp . postec a -,mall ~
gam Ill M,l\ that \\as belo\\ inter·
nul foreca~ts while drpartment
store t'hain J.(. Penne\ Co. and
man) teen merchants- including
Ab~:rcromhie &amp; Fitch Co. and •
American Eagle Outfitter' Inc.
repo11cd declines in re'&lt;enue at,
~tnre,s opt•n at lea~t a , car.

�p
,.

' '
Sunday, J une 13,

.

Local Briefs
Letters of interest

Cindy Lucas Bailey

SYRACUSE- Syracuse Village Council is taking
letters of interest from residents who wish to serve on
the board of public affairs to fill a vacancy. Drop off
letters by June 25 at Syracuse Village Hall or mail to
P.O. Box 266. Syracuse. OH 45779.

Cindy Lucas Bailey,
47. Gallipolis, passed
away unexpectedly on
Friday, June 11, 2010, at
her residence. Cindy was
born July 3, 1962, in
Gallipolis, Ohio, to
Scotty and Lorene A.
(Peters) Lucas and they
survive her in Cheshire,
Ohio. She was a 1980
graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, an avid
reader and writer and
enjoyed music.
Cindy mruTied Richard M. Bailey on May 30, 1984,
in Dillon, S.C., and he survives her along with a
daughter, Andrea Elizabeth Bailey, and her fiance
Clayton Saunders of Gallipolis: a son Nick Bailey of
Gallipolis. three brothers, Teny Lucas of Cheshire,
Brian Lucas and Bob (Wendy) Lucas, both of
Bidwell; nieces. Megan Lucas, Tricia Lucas, Alyssa J.
Lucas, Emma Grace Lucas and Kara Beth Lucas; and
a nephew Sean Lucas.
Funeral services will be at I p.m., Monday June 14,
2010, at Willis Funeral Home with Rev. Dan
Lamphier officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call from 5-8 p.m.,
Sunday, June 13, 2010, at Willis Funeral Home.
Pallbearers will be Nick Bailey, Terry Lucas, Brian
Lucas, Bob Lucas, Clayton Saunders and Tyler Lucas.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to e-mail
condolences.

BIDWELL - A Flag Day ceremony is scheduled
for 10 a.m .. Monday, June 14 at New Hope Baptist
Church. The church is located at 18671 Ohio 554
between Bidwell and Rio Grande. The public is invit-

.

~.

Concert, bike show
POMEROY - Oasis Church will present Concert
Fest and a Bike Show on Saturday, June 26 at the
Pomeroy Levee. The concert will be an all day event
and feature perfo1mances by Ian Henry &amp; Jeff
McCoy. BJ. Smith Kreseen. Brad Ramsburg &amp;
Lauren Nicole Mayes, Straight Way, Oasis Worship
Band and others. Speakers will be Chad Dodson and
Dodger Vaughan.
Registration for the bike show is 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
with a $20 entry free. The first 25 entries will receive
a free T-shirt. First place wins $100, second, $50,
third, $25. There will be concessions and drawings.
All proceeds benefit Good Works lnc., which serves
the needy and homeless.

Gallia Rural Water
1

LLIPOLIS The Gallia Rural Water
iation will hold its regular meeting at 7:30p.m ..
s ay, June 15.

'Everyday Heroes' breakfast
GALLIPOLIS - The 2010 Gallia County
American Red Cross-Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Everyday Heroes awards breakfast is scheduled
for 7:30 a.m., Thursday, June 17 at the Gallia
County S~ior Resource Center. For information,
call 446-8555 or e-mail galliaredcross@sbcglobal.net.

Free clinic
GALLIPOLIS - The French 500 Free Clinic will
be open from 1-4 p.m., Thursday, June 17. The clinic
is located at 258 Pinecrest Drive off Jackson Pike.

Children's Services
board meeting
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Children's
Services Board will meet at 5 p.m., Thursday, June 17
at the office located at 83 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.

1

'OCime.s - ~entinel • Page As

Obituaries

Flag Day ceremony

\

~unbap

P omeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

Crime watch meeting

VINTON - Huntington-Morgan Crime Watch will
meet at 6 p.m .. Thursday, June 17 at Vinton Town
Hall.

OOMPD board meeting

Greg Fooce of Gallipolis; great grandmother. Thelma
(Norman Behagen) Patterson of Gallipolis; great
grandfather, Herbert Cordell, Sr. of Gallipolis; uncles,
Jericho Kanniard and Dante Fooce, both of Gallipolis;
great uncles, Herbert Cordell and Kenneth Cordell.
both of GalliP.olis.
Services will be at 11 a.m., Tuesday, June 15,2010,
at Willis Funeral Home with Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send email condolences.

Glenna Mae George
Glenna Mae George, 94, Ashville, Ohio, and formerly of Gallia County, passed away Saturday, June
12, 2010, at Berger Hospital, Circleville, Oh10. She
was born April 19, 1916, in Gallia County, daughter
of the late Homer and Mary Eliza Moore Kemper.
She is survived by a son, Robert George of
Ashville, and several nieces, nephews and extended
family.
In addition to her parents, Glenna was preceded in
death by her husband, Gola Lee George; four brothers
and two sisters, Claude Kemper, Buck Kemper,
Sherman Kemper, Harold Kemper, Georgie Bradham
and Rev a G. Kemper.
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m.,
Tuesday, June 15, 2010, at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis. Burial will follow in the Rife Cemetery near Addison. Friends may
call from 6-8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.
Condolences may be sent to the family at
www.mccoymoore.com.
·

Nancy Lou French

Esther V. Frecker
Esther V. Frecker,
Palmetto, Fla ., died June
3, 2010 in Riverside
Hospital,
Columbus,
from injuries due to a
fall.
Born July 7. 1919, she
was the daughter of
George Frecker and
Lucinda
Sponagel
Frecker, Pomeroy.
She is survived by a
.son, Dan
DeWolfe,
Aspen. Colo., daughters,
Teresa Bates, Rochester,
Wis., Pat DeWolfe, Allentown, Pa. and Lisa Krueger,
Platteville, Wis., and five grandchildren. She is also
survived by nieces and nephews: Anna Jean Phipers,
Rosemary Keller, Don Rose, Eunice Jones, Mary
Nicely, Jo Ann Celani, Sharon Downing, George
Frecker, Mona Mi1ler, Ed Frecker, and Bob Frecker.
She was predeceased bY. a brother, George V.
Frecker, and sisters Mary H lll, Martha Rose and Ruth
Spencer, son Ted DeWolfe, nephews Paul H ill and
Roger Rose, and niece Janet Theiss.
A memorial Mass and graveside service will be held.
in spring 2011. date to be decided, at Sacred Heart
Church and Pine Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Condolences can be sent to the family c/o Pat
DeWolfe, 1916 E. Greenleaf Street. Allentown, PA
18109.

Nancy Lou French, 78, Circleville, went home to be
with the Lord and her beloved husband on
Wednesday, June 2, 2010. She was born October 10,
193 1, in Niles, Ohio, daughter of the late Lyle
Quimby and the late Mildred Frazier. In addition to
her parents, Nancy was preceded in death by her loving husband of 55 years, George French, Jr. She is
survived by her son, David (Carla) French of
Circleville; sister, Gladys Durig of Vienna, Ohio;
brother, Jack (Kay) Quimby of Gallipolis; grandchildren, Scott and Logan French; and sister-in-law Linda
Lear of GalJipolis.
Mrs. French will be remembered by many in the
Gallipolis area as an employee of the Warehime
Clinic when it opened its doors in the early 1950s.
She was also employed as an operator by Ohio Bell
Telephone Company from which she retired after 30
years service.
Nancy loved to experiment with recipes and was an
excellent cook. She was an avid animal lover and
enjoyed working withrcrafts.
A private viewing was held Sunday, June 6 in
Grove City. Further arrangements have been entrusted to Newcomer Funeral Home SW Chapel. 3393
Broadway, Grove City.

Deaths
Delbert L Sigler
Delbert L. Sigler, 69, Gallipolis, died Friday, June
11 , 20 10, at Holzer Medical Center. Arrangements are
by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

Mirrical Nevaeh Cordell

Mirrical Nevaeh Cordell,.l month, passed away on
Wednesday, June 9. 2010 at the Holzer Medical
Center emergency room.
'
She was born on May 9. 2010, in Huntington,
Ruby P. Holley, 94, Gallipolis (Fairfield
W.Va., daughter of Shanika J. Cordell who survives
Community), died Saturday, June 12, 2010. Funeral
her.
In addition to her mother, she is survived by her arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens
grandmother, Lynn Cordell of Gallipolis; grandfather, Funeral Chapel.
EWINGTON - American Legion Post 161 will •
me~~ 7:30 pm .• ~~d~. fune 22 u Ew~g~n
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Academy. Happy hour begins at 6:30p.m. All members are encouraged to attend.

GALLIPOLIS -The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District
board will meet at 11 a.m ..•Friday, June 18 in the Park
District Office at the Gallia County Courthouse.

Ruby P. Holley

Post 161 meeting

National Field Day
activities planned
GALLIPOLIS - The Mid-Ohio Valley Amateur
Radio Club will host National Field Day activities at
Mound Hill Cemetery on Saturday, June 26.
Everyone 1S invited to join the event. A cookout will
.
eld. Door prizes will be given away.

. Swindler reunion
GALLIPOLIS - The Strother and Nellie Swindler
reunion will be held Sunday, June 27 at Raccoon
Creek County Park Hob White Shelterhouse #5. ror
information, call 256-6028.

GAHS Class of 1954 brunch
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Academy High School
Class of 1954 will meet for brunch at noon, Saturday,
July 3 at Golden CorraJ in Gallipolis. The class invites
members of other GAHS classes to join them.
Scrapbooks will be available. For inf01mation, contact Ina Barcus Sibley at 446-0186 or Jean Allison
Gillespie at 446-3969.

Smeltzer family reunion
GALLIPOLIS - The Smeltzer family reunion
w ill be held Saturday, July 3 (and possibly July 4) at
Raccoon Creek County Park in Gallipolis. For information or to RSVP, contact Christine Smith by email at cmsmithexec I @yahoo.com, or at (614) 3333 140.

•

RGHS reunion ·

RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande High School
reunio n is planned for noon. Saturday, July !7 .at
Simpson Chapel in Rio Grande. All classes are mvJted . The meal will be a pot luck. For information, call
245-5371.
.

GAHS Class of 2000

reun~on

GALLIPOLIS -The Galha Academy High School
Class of 2000 will hold a reunion on Saturday. Sept. 4
at the Gallipolis Elks Lodge. Tickets arc $20 ~ach .. Go
to gahs2000.myevent.com to purchase reumon tickets.

Ohio's Prescription Drug Abuse
Epidemic Impacts all Ohioans.
Bv ALVIN D.
J ACKSON M.D.
DIRECTOR,
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Over the past ten years
there has been an alarming increase in unintentional drug overdose
deaths in Ohio.
In 2007, unintentional
drug poisoning deaths
surpassed motor vehicle
deaths and suicides to
become the number one
cause of injury related
death in Ohio. On average, nearly four Ohioans
die each day because of
drug-related overdose. In
fact. prescription pain
relievers are associated
with more drug overdoses than any illegal dmg,
including cocaine and
heroin combined.
This issue impacts
communities across the
state but the highest
death rates from unintentional drug/medicationrelated overdose occurring in southern Ohio. In
addition. males aged 4554 have 1.5 times greater
unintentional drug medication-related overdose
death rate than the rate
for females. Teenagers
arc also at risk. as rrorc
than 25 r ..:~ nt of Ohi9
hJgh ~chool students
have reported using a
prescription drug without
a doctor's prescription at
least once.
In Ohio, we cannot
wait any longer to

address this critical
health issue and under
Governor
Ted
Strickland's leadership
are taking action in many
ways including the Ohio
Prescription Drug Abuse
Task Force (OPDATF).
The task force was
charged with developing
a comprehensive coordinated
approach
to
address this epidemic.
The task force was created on April 2010 and
ha$ already released an
initial report with recommendations that take the
first
steps
towards
addressing this critical
public health issue. By
bringing together leaders
from the public health,
law enforcement, treatment. healthcare, legislative and insurance fields
the
OPDATF
will
address the epidemic
from all sides. The task
force will continue to
meet often over the next
few months in full meetings and in working
groups to develop comprehensive strategies to
address the alarming rise
in prescription drug
abuse.
While the task force
'~ orks
to
d'evelop
state~ ide solutions, there
tm? things we can all do to
combat this complex
problem. The most important action is to raise
awareness about Ohio's
problem. Strike up a conver·sation
with
your

I'

friends. family, neighbors
and co-workers and talk to
them about the alarming
statistics, the importance
of taking medication only
as it is prescribed, the dangers of sharing medication
and the need to proper! y
store and dispose of
excess medication.
You can also get
involved in a local task
force and community
organizations. Across the
Buckeye state groups of
Ohioans are gathering
together to develop community level solutions to
prescription drug abuse
epidemic by planning
drug take back initiatives
and awareness cam-

paigns. Reach out to your
local health department
to learn how to get
involved or contact the
Injury
Prevention
Program at the Ohio
Department of Health at
( 614) 466-2144.
We will continue to
work on developmg
statewide solutions to
this problem but we need
Ohioans to join in the
fight against this deadly
prescription drug abuse
epidemic. To read the
task force's initial report
or to learn more about
Ohio's prescription drug
abuse epidemic visit:
http://www.odh.ohio.go\
/drugoverdose.

'J;lcCoy-Moore
'Funera{ IJ[omes
Serving Our Communities for Over 100 Years
flrrh. lean,

la~rd,

Meliug &amp; [or ,\toore - Dtirdot:r

420
Av~nuc, Gallipolit~, OH • (740) 446-0852
• 208 Main Street, Vinton, 011 •(740) 388-8321

illt

Keeping Gallia, Meigs
&amp; Mason informed
Subscribe today • Gallia: 446-2342 •
Meigs: 992-2155 • Mason: 675-1333

�' '

Page A6

i&gt;unbap ~ime~ -ienttnel

Sunday,June13,2010

SPLAT coming URG inducts 4 new board members
Foster, Pierce, LeGrand, Davisson Join, university BOT
to Gallia County
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

Gypsy moth aerial treatment
program under way
Coumy Engineer Slip
Repair Project for Sugar
Creek. White and Woods
GALLIPOLIS
Mill roads.
During their regular
• The commissioners
meeting on Thursday, the approved the purchase of
Gall ia County Board of two pickup trucks at a
Commissioners received total cost of $46.914.20
notification from the for the use by the County
Ohio Department of Highway Department.
Agriculture about local
• The commissioners
gypsy moth aerial treat- approved
a
bridge
ments.
inspection
agreement
A white. twin engine between the county and
aircraft will fly I 00 feet Prime Engineering in
above the tree tops in Col·umbus. The agreevarious areas of southern ment requires Prime
Ohio. and apply a single Engineering to perform
application
of
a load ratings on federal
Specialized Pheromone fracture critical bridges
and Lure Application within the county. The
Technology product or work will be performed
SPLAT. The product under the supervision of
does not kill the moth but the county engineer.
mating
disrupts
its
• Resolutions concernprocesses. SPLAT is not ing the Title IV-D service
harmful to birds, plants, contracts between the
pets or humans.
Gallia Count)' Child
The gypsy moth is a Support
Enforcement
non-native and invasive Agency and the Gallia
species that, in larva Clerk of Courts and the
stage, feeds off the leaves Gallia County Court of
of over 300 different Common Pleas were
species of trees and adopted.
shrubs in the eastern
• The commissioners
United States. The gypsy approved payment resomoth is especially fond lutions for the Kanuagaof oak and a healthy tree Addison and Mercerville
can usually only with- sewer projects.
stand two years of defoli• The commissioners
ation before it becomes attended a pre-bid meetpermanently damaged or ing for the speculative
dies.
building excavation proTreatment will take ject at the Dan Evans
place across the state on a Industrial Park.
total of 102,600 acres in
• An agreement was
Hocking,
Vinton, approved between the
Franklin,
Madison, commissioners and the
Pickaway.
· Fairfield, Gallia
County
Logan, Union. Paulding, Department of 1ob and
Greene, Athens, Jackson Family Services that
and Gallia counties. The ensures that the county
treatment began on June will be reimbursed for
10 and is expected to funding that has been
continue until June 19. made avflilable to assist
For more information businesses in employing
call (614) 387-0907 or youth over the summer
(800) 282-1955 ext. 37. for the purpose of gaining work experience.
after 5 p.m.
In other action:
• The commissioners
• The county commis- attended the construction
for . the
sioners opened a bid in meetings
the amount of $290,691 Kanauga-Addison and
from U.S. Bridge, in Mercerville sewer proCambridge, Ohio, for the jects.
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MOTNEWS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

RIO
GRANDE
The
University of Rio Grande Board
of Trustees has officially inducted
four new members.
The ne\l.- trustees arc Robert D
Foster. Mary McCurdy Pierce.
Glenna K. LeGrand and Thomas
F. Davisson.
Foster is Rio Grande graduate
who today is the owner and operator of a local transportation company. His business goals include
facilitating
infrastructure
improvements in Gallia County
and all across Ohio in order to
improve commerce. He also utilizes advanced technology in his
business in order to keep his company on the cutting edge of logistical resources.
Foster. who Jives in Bidwell, is a

member
of
the
National then teach in school dic;tricts in
Federation
of
Independent Texas, Columbus. Oak Hill and
Business Owners, the Gallia Jackson.
•
County Chamber of Commerce.
'LeGrand retired as a teach
and ·several other business and from the Jackson City School
community organizatiOns.
District and currently lives in
P1erce earned her bachelor's Jackson, where she is very active
degree in secondary education in professional organizations and
from Rio Grande and a master's community groups.
degree from Xavier University
Davisson is a Rio Grande gradubefore serving as a teacher and ate who went on to also earn a
administrator in the Pickerington
degree from the Louis National
City School District. Now retired,
University in Evanston, Ill. Today,
she is active with volunteer work
in her community anJ also serves he serves as the Senior Vice
of
the
Sullivan
as the President of the Rio Grande President
University
System
in
Louisville,
Alumni Association. She is proud
to now also be a member of the Ky.
During the induction ceremony
Board of Trustees.
for
Foster, Davisson, LeGrand and
LeGrand also served as a
McCurdy
Pierce, the four new
teacher after earning her degree
from Rio Grande. After graduation members all received Honorary
she went on to earn an additional Master of Public Service Degrees
degree from Ohio University and from Rio Grande.

•

Rethink Possible'"

'

•

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.45
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 51.71
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 53.06
Big Lots (NYSE) - 33.65
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.53
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 37.82
Century Aluminum (NAS·
DAQ)- 9.73
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.78
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-4.20
City Holding (NASDAQ) 31.74
Collins (NYSE) - 57.23
DuPont (NYSE) - 37.61
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.31
General Electric (NYSE) 15.56
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 27.05
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 38.09
Kroger (NYSE)- 19.99
Limited Brands (NYSE) 25.08
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 56.80

Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 17.86
BBT (NYSE) - 30.21
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 13.71
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.56
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.55
Rockwell (NYSE) - 52.88
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 8.16
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.40
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 78.55
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 50.86
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.65
WesBanco (NYSE)- 17.57
Worthington (NYSE)- 13.79
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for June 11,
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.

~

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PANT£01 REVEAL...,.

PANTFCH .INK"'

m~=

Thtthmlst

~~ ·

Nf~~

1\n

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PANTECH

PANTECH

Gallia-Meigs Forecast
Sunday...Partly sunny
in the morning ...Then
becoming mostly cloudy.
A chance of sh6wers and
thunderstorms. Humid
with highs in the upper
80s. West winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. A chance of
thunderstorms ... Mainly
in the evening. Humid

with lows in the upper
60s. Northwest winds 5
to 10 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
~onday
through
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy. Highs in the mid
80s. Lows in the lower
60s.
Thursday night and
Friday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Highs in the mid 80s.

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•

�Bl

Inside
Local Sports Banquets, Page B2 &amp; B3
Athletic Camps, Page B4

PORTS

In the Open, Page BS

~ ,:1

Sunday, June 13,2010

OVP Area lands
12 players on
All-District
baseball teams

LE

S.uruiaY,..J.un.e...13
Pickerington at Drew Webster Post
39 (DH), 1 p.m.
Tuesd ay .!u ne 15

Drew Webster Post 39 at Gallipolis,
6p.m.

Eastern's Bowen named
Coach of the Year

20 locals named
to All-District
softball teams

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
/

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

T he
Ohio
Valley
Publishing area has landed 20 softball players on
the 20 I 0 Southeast Ohio
all-district softball teams
selected by area coaches.
Eastern,
Southern.
Meigs. Gallia Academy,
and South Gallia each
had four players selected
to the teams.
River
Valley was qnrepresentA

allia Academy senior
Noe was the Blue
Angels lone frst team
selection.
Morgan
Leslie, Mattie Lanham,
and Courtney Shriver
were each named to the
Division II Second
Team.
The Lady Marauders
had a pair of second team
honorees and two honorable mention selections.
Senior Tricia Smith and
sophomore
Emalee
Glass were named to the
second team, with junior
Chandra Stanley and
Freshman Haley English
earning honorable mention.
Eastern earned the
most first team selections, with senior Kasey
Turley and junior Allie
Rawson each being
named to the Division IV
First Team. The Lady
les Brenna Holter
named second team
•
district, with Britney
Morrison being named
honorable mention.
Southern
senior
Breanna Taylor was
named to the first team,
with Lindsay Teaford,
Lynzee Tucker, and
Maggie Cummins each
earning second team
honors.

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
- After taking a 5-4 lead
after five innings on
Thursday evening. the
Drew Webster Post 39
baseball team feel to
Vinton County's Post
303.
Post 303 took the early
lead, scoring two in the
first and two in the
fourth, but could not hold
off Post 39 in the early
innings.
Post 39 scored one run
in the second and scored
four in the fourth to take
a 5-4 lead.
Justin
Cotterill scored the one
run in the second inning
on four singles, one each
by Heath Dettwiller,
Cotterill, Ryan Payne,
and Eric Buzzard.
Payne hit a single to
start off the fourth. with
Buzzard reaching on a
single that scored Payne.

Please see Softball, 86

Please see Post 39, 85

~y

Sarah ·Hawley/photo

Drew Webster Post 39 manager AI Dettwiller (17) talks vyith (from left) catcher Garrett Underwood, relief pitcher Heath Dettwiller, starting pitcher Michael Manuel, and first baseman Jordon Taylor before making a pitching
change in the sixth inning of Thursday evening's game against Vinton County.

Post 39 falls to Vinton County, 11-5
Post 39
starting
pitcher
Michael
Manuel
throws a
pitch
during
the first
inning of
Thursday
evening's
game
against
Post

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

303.

Manuel
pitched
five
innings
and did
not factor
in the
decision.
Sarah
Hawley/
photo

The
Ohio Valley
Publishing area has
landed
12 baseball
players and one coach
on the '20 10 Soutl)east
Ohio all-district baseball teams selected by
area coaches.
Each team - Gallia
Academy, Meigs, River
Valley,
Eastern,
Southern, and South
Gallia - earned at least
one first team selection.
Eastern lead the way
with three players and
its head coach being
named to the Division
IV North teams. Titus
Pierce and Nik Brannon
each earned first team
honors, with Andrew
Benedum being named
to the second team.
Pierce and Benedum
were each repeat selections for the 2009 season.
Eastern head coach
Brian Bowen earned
Coach of the Year honors for the second consecutive season.
Southern also landed
three players on the D-4
teams with Jordon
Taylor and Michael
Manuel being named to
the first team and
Taylor Deem earning
honorable
mention.
Taylor was a 2009 second team selection,
while Manuel was honorable mention a season
ago.
Gallia
Academy
earned two selections,
both on the first team.
in the D-2 South. Kyle
Dingess. a 2009 second
team honoree, • and
Caleb Warnimont were
both named to the first

Please see Teams, 86

An~ual PVH Hospice Tribute
Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration
0 Wednesday, June 16, 2010
0 PVH Main Entrance
O Noon
0 Public is cordially invited
I

For more information about this special event
or to learn more about !lospice or the "Wings"
CJ:iefSuppo_rt Group, p lease call, (304) 675-7400.

r------------------------------------~-,

Honor A Lo-ved Otae &amp; Reserve A Butterfly
For the Annual PVH Hospiee Tribu•e

With a donation of $5 to Pleasant Valley Hospice, you can reserve a butterfly for
this very special event. All of the butterfies will be released together in memory of
loved ones. Please fill-out form, detach and send with payment to:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPICE BUTTERFLY RELEASE, 1011 Viand Street,
Point Pleasant, W V 25550. Al1 checks should be made-out to Pleasant Valley Hospice.

e NA1\IE:
e ADDRESS : - - - - - - - - - - - - - e TELEPHONE: ,- - - - - - • IN MEMORY OF:

L--------------------------------------~
•

�~--~--~----- ----~~~~~- ~ - ~~

Page B2 • f$unbap ~inws -ferntind

----- --

--~--...-.--------...,.......---=---~--~,-~-~-._,-....-;--

Sunday,Junet3, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Plaque winners at the
South Gallia
Spring
Athletic
Banquet were
(front row left
to right) Tayler
Duncan, Adria
Stapleton,
Samantha
Hammond,
and Chandra
Canaday,
(second row)
Cody Rhodes,
Heath White,
Chris Fooce,
Josh Cooper,
and Cory
Haner, (third
row) Morgan
Gilliland,
Savanna
Hatfield,
Courtney
Blackburn,
Jackie Burns,
and Sara
Bailey.

.•

"

Submitted photo

South Gallia holds Spring Athletic Banquet • ·
TIMES-SENTINEL S TAFF
MDTSPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

MERCERVILLE, Ohio - South
Gal'lia High School recently heid its
Spring Athletic Banquet in the school
cafeteria.
Athletes from the track team, baseball team, and softball team were
honored at the event.
Junior high track awards were pre
sented to Sara Bailey, Cody Colley.
Lexie Johnson, Alexis Pinkerman,
Ethan Swain. Quinten Simms. and
Courtney Williams. Trophy winners
were Sara Bailey (High Point Awardgi"rls) and Qui·nten Simms (High Point
Award-boys).
Girls track team members were presented awards for number of years on
the team. First year award winners
were Mariah Jones, Jamie Chapman.
Paige Sanders, and Rachel Stapleton.

Second year awards were given to
Tara Clickenger and Adria Stapleton,
with Sara Fraley receiving the third
year award. Fourth year award winners were Jackie Burns and Savanna
Hatfield.
Plaque winners for the girls track
team were Savanna Hatfield (High
Point Award-field events), Adria
Stapleton (High Point Award-running
events), and Jackie Burns (Rebel
Award).
Boys track awards were presented
to first and second year athletes. First
year award winners ~ere Brandon
Campbell. Matt Cunningham, John
Johnson, Cody Rhodes, Isiah
Stapleton and Jesse Stewart. Josh
Cooper received the second year
award.
Plaque winners were Josh Cooper
(High Point Award) and Cody Rhodes
(Rebel Award).

Softball participation awards were
to Mallory Alderigi , Shi
Cremeens, Layna Lester, Natasha
Smith. Cheyenna Bowers, Makayla
Duke, Miranda Hammond, and Josie
Harrison. First year awards were presented to Crystal Adkins. Ellie
Bostic, and Meghan Caldwell.
Second year awards were giYen to
Courtney
Blackburn,
Chandra
Canaday. Tiffany Delaney, Tori
Duncan, Christina Howell, Maigen
Rainey. and Lauren Saunders. Third
year awards were presented to Tayler
Duncan, Morgan Gilliland. and
Marilyn Turner. with Samantha
Hammond receiving the fourth year
award.
Plaque winners for softball were
Chandra Canaday (Most Valuable
Player), Morgan Gilliland (Defensive
Award), Chandra Canaday (Offensive
Award), Courtney Blackburn (Rebel
pre~ented

Award), and Tayler Duncan (Rebel
Award).
. Baseball first year awards were
given to Levi Ellis, A.J. McDaniel,
and Alex Stapleton. Second year
awards were presented to Greg
Burgess, Bryce Clary, Jeff Clyburn,
Cory Haner, David Michael, Grant •
Simpson, and Andy Welch. Third
year awards were given to Chris
Fooce, Brandon Harrison, and Heath
White.
Plaque winners for baseball were
Cory Haner (Most Valuable Player
and Offensive. Player of the Year);
Chris Fooce (Defensive Player of the
Year), Heath White (Rebel Award),
and Grant Simpson (Most Improved
Player).
For Year Letter Award Plaques were
presented to Jackie Burns and
Savanna Hatfield for girls track and
Samantha Hammond for softball.

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�,-.,--~----"""!"'-----------~------------

Sunday, June 13,2010

------

------,-~-.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~mtb.w ~imcs -~rntml'l

• Page B3

•

•'

•

Submitted photos

All TVC baseball honorees were (left to right) Ryan Jeffers, Justin Cotterill, and
Caleb Davis.

All TVC and All district softball honorees were (left to right} Emalee Glass,
Chandra Stanley, Haley English, and Tricia Smith.

2()1 0 Meigs Spring
Sports Banque~
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSPRINGS,
Oh10 Meigs High
School recently held its
ng Sports Banquet.
Athletic
eigs
oostcr President Jim
Soulsby gave the invocation which was follov. ed by a dinner.
Soulsby acknowledged
Meigs Local board
members Larry Tucker
and Ryan Mahr. A certificate of appreciation
was given to trainer
Angela Anderson 111
recognition of her dedication to the sports programs.
The junior varsity
baseball team was the
first to be honored.
Team members were
Matt Casci. Gunner
McKinney,
Jared
Williamson.
Dustin
Ulbrich, Billy Duvall,
John. Smith. Bruno
Casci, Chris Folmer.
J sh Dunham. Jeffery
, and Felix Knull.
ify baseball team
mbers
recognized
were Ryan
Jeffers,
Caleb Davis, Justin
Cotterill.
Cameron
Bolin, Heath Dett\\ iller,

l

Jose Whitlatch. Colton
Stewart. Austin Sayre,
Zack
Sayre, Justin
Myers, Ryan Taylor.
Joseph PowelL Nathan
Rothgeb,
Treay
McKinney, and manager Jamal Lee.
Members of the boys
track team recognized
were Tyler Brothers.
Jacob Well. Jeremy
Smith, Tanner Hysell,
Wade Harrison. Stephen
Barcus,
Jeremiah
Myers, Charlie Barrett,
Blake
Crow, Cody·
Hanning, Taylor Jones.
Dustyn Lee, Steven
Mahr,
Ben
Reed,
Jeffery Roush, Zach
Sheets. Cole Turner,
and Dillon Boyer.
Girls
track
team
members were Ashley
Good, Hailey Williams.
Maren
Martimen,
Olivia Bevan. Louise
Christensen.
Olivia
Cleek, Dani Cullums,
Marlee
Hoffman,
Latesha Klein, Rachel
Bauer. Vanessa Crane.
Mercadies
George,
Makenzie
Greene,
Karlie Hall. Chandra
Mattox. Jessi Meadows,
Shawnella Patterson.
and Emma Perrin.
· Junior varsity softball

TVC All Academic winners were Lauren Barnes, Olivia Bevan, Cameron Bolin, Olivia Cleek, Justin
9otterill, Blake Crow, Emalee Glass, Cody Hanning, Marlee Hoffman, Steven Mahr, Erin Patterson, Ben
Reed, Nathan Rothgeb, Jeffery Roush, and Tricia Smith.
Glass, Cody Hanning.
players were Alison Erin Patterson. Chandra Jeffers, All TVC.
Brown.
Alyssa Stanley, Julia Lantz,
Softball honors were l\tarlee
Hoffman.
Cremeans,
Autumn Kelsey Shuler, Em~lee given to Emalee Glass Steven
:\1ahr,
Erin
Tackett.
Cheyenne Glass, Haley English . . and Tricia Smith. All Patterson, Ben Reed.
Beaver. Delilah Fish. and Tess Phelps.
TVC and second team Nathan
Roth!!eb.
Harley Fox. Kay la
Spec!al recognition all district. and Ch&lt;mdra Jcffer)
Roush. ~and
Graham.
Natalie was given to several Stanley·
and
Hale , Tncia Smith.
.
)
Michael.
Tanisha members of the baseWilliam Myers was
. ftb II
All TVC and
McKinney,
Alyson ba ll , so
a , an d t.1ac k English,
h
bl
t'
11
g1ven
a Certificate of
onora e men ton a
Da\ is,
Autumn teams. Receiving speAppreciation
for his
Williams,
Rachel cial honors in baseball district.
\\
ork
with
the
softball
TVC ,\ll Academic
Payne, and Tiffany Lee. were seniors Justin
team
and
Aaron
Varsity softball teaf\l Cotterill. All TVC and winners were Lauren
v.
as
also
given
Oliphant
members
recognized first team district, Caleb Barnes, Olivia Bevan,
for
his
time
a
certificate
Davis.
All
TVC
and
Cameron
Bolin.
Oli\'ia
were Mer·I VanMeter.
the
Tricia Smith, Shanalle honorable mention all Cleek, Justin Cotterill. spent ass1stmg
and
Ryan Blake Crow. Emalce Athletic Boosters.
Smith. M1cki Barnes, district.

Tuppers Plains Thunder .
wins Pomeroy Tournament

S.O.G.A. Gymnasts
win state titles,

Submitted photo

The Tuppers Plains Thunder defeated the Pomeroy Stars in the championship
game of the Pomeroy Tournament in honor of Emily Deem. Sportsmanship and
friendly competition were shown by all teams participating in the tournament. The
TP Thunder went 4-0 during the three day tournament ove rMother's Day weekend. Team members were (front row) Hannah Ridenour, (seco~d row left to right}
Lexa Hayes, Whitney Durst, Madison Kuhn, Ally Barber, Heather Ridenour, Ally
Durst, (third row) Alyson Bailey, Mollie Maxon, Emmalea Durst, Rebecca Pullins,
Sidney Cook, Cera Grueser, (back row) Coaches Bryan Durst, David Durst, and
Jason Pullins. Shelby Carter is not pictured.

Submitted photo

Southern Ohio Gymnastics Academy state champions at the Level 4 and 5 Ohio
State Gymnastics Championships were (from left) Andrea Balles, Bailey
Calandros, and Madison Greene. Bailes, level 5 (age 12}, was state champion 1n
the uneven bars, scoring a 9.625. Calandr9s, level 4, was state champ1on in the
all around with a score of 37.69, uneven bars with a score of 9.425, balance beam
with a score of 9.35, and floor exercise with a score of 9.475. Greene, level 5 (age
11 ), was state champion in the uneven bars with a score of 9.50.

SXT

Ayenger

�Page 84 • ~ttttbtW {[rimes -~rntinl'l

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday,June13,2010

Meigs 8th grade finishes season 14-2 · Local Sports Camps
Southern basketball camps

Subm!tted photo

The Meigs 8th grade baseball team finished the season with a 14·2 record. Pictured are team members (front
row left to right): Taylor Rowe, Colton Walters, Bradley Helton, Brandon Mahr, Brandon Moodispaugh, Christian
Romine, Damon Jones, (back row) Ty Phelps, Dillion Blankenship, Jacob Sizemore, Morgan Tucker, Darrin Will,
and Derik Hill. Coaches of the team were Toby Swartz, Tim Helton, and Brandon Fackler.

RACINE, Ohio - The Southern basketball program will be hosting a pair of basketball camps this
summer.
The first camp is for boys entering the 7th, 8th. and
9th grades will by held June 14-17 at the high school.
The camp will be from I p.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Cost
is S40 for one camper or $65 for t\\ o campers from
the same family. Regi~tration is from 12:30 p.m
I p.m. on the first day of camp.
The camp \viii be ran by the coaches and high
school players and will teach offensive and defensive
fundamentals, along with team concepts that are
important at the high school level. Competitions will
be held and 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 forn'ler
varsity players. Fundamentals will be stressed and
awards presented for 3 on 3. "HORSE". and free
throw competitions.
Cost is '540 for one camper or $65 for two campers
from the same family. Each camper will receiYe a
camp T-shirt. Registration is from 8:30a.m. to 9 a.m.
on the first day of camp.
For further information about either camp contact
coach Jeff Caldwell at 740-949-3129.

-,
·•
~

•
·.
-.
•
,
.
•
•
•
:

SHS Volleyball Camp
Preregistration
RACINE. Ohio - Southern High School will be :
offering a volleyball camp for girls going into grades :
3-8 from August 2-5. in the high school gym. T.
:
learning experience will be a chance for girls to inte
act with high school coaches and players and devel- :
op an understanding of volleyball mechanics and :
fundamentals through drills. matches. games. and :
contests. Each camper will recieve a free t-shirt and :
have the opportunity to win several other ptizes
•
The camp will by split in to two groups, with girls • •
from 3rd to 5th grades from 9 to II :30 a.m. and girls .
6th to 8th grades from I to 4 p.m. There is a fee of •
$35 per camper or $60 for a family of t•vo. Campers
are asked to bring knee pads and a water bottle, and '
are asked to an-ive early on the first day for registration.
To preregister call Coach Dickson at 740-5252500.

RVHS Basketball Camp
BIDWELL. Ohio - The Rtver Vallev Basketball •
Program will be holding a basketball ca'mp for boys •
entering grades 6-9 from June 21-24. The camp will
be held at River Valley High School and \vill run
from 8:30a.m. to .Noon each da\.
·
The Camp will be conducted by Head Coach
Jordan Hill along with assistant coaches and current
and former players. Fundamentals. team conce' t ·
and effort necessary for becoming a varsity bas
ball player will be taught. Camp features '
include station work, skills games, and competitive
team play. Each camper will recei\e a River Valley .
Basketball T-shirt.
Cost for the camp is $40 per camper or $35 per ,
camper for two or more from the same household. ,
Camp brochures can be picked up in the high school
office. Payment must be received on or before the
first day of camp. Checks can be made payable to the
RVHS Boosters. Registration will be held on the first
day of camp.
Early registration and payment can be mailed to •
River Valley High School Jordan Hill Head basket-'
ball coach, 8785 St. Rt. 160. Bidwell. Ohio. 45614.
For questions contact Coach Hill at 740-416-0728.

John Bonecutter - Coach of the Year

PPHS coaches honored,
youth camp set
leading the 'Big Blacks'
to their first state
wrestling title in school
POINT PLEASANT history.
The
Na~iqnal
Also rece1vmg an
Wrestling
Coaches honor is Point Pleasant
Associati~)n 's Scholastic' High School Assistant
Division recently named Wrestling Coach. Jed
Point Pleasant High Ott. He has been named
School's Head Wrestling the 2010 NWCA West
·Assistant
Coach. John Bonecutter Virginia
as the 2009-20 I 0 ·coach Coach of the Year'.
of the Year' for the state
Tl1e Black Knights
of West Virginia.
won
the
Cardinal
Bonecutter .w&lt;ls nomi- Conference and Region
nated and recommended IV Tournament and then
by the NWCA State the Point Pleasant grapRepresentative.
He. plers dethroned Oak
along with Huntington Glen's incredible 13High Head Coach. Rob ycar reign as the Class
Archer. and Parkersburg AA-A Champions of
South Head Coach. Paul West Virginia with an 18
Jackson. were all candi- point margin of victory.
Not
since
1996
dates for the award.
According to Tammy (Independence) had anyN. Tedesco. NWCA's one not name Oak Glen
Ass1stant Director. this won the class AA-A
prest1g1ous award is crown.
Bonecutter and Ott
given out at the end of
each season to a deserv- have nothing but praise
ing coach who has for the young men they
achieved great success are leading. Thev will
with their" team during tell you th.rt the team set
the year. Bonecutter had a goal to be state cham
already been named the p1ons early in their seaWVSSAC AA Wrestling son and because of hard
'Coach of the Year' at work. dedication and
the 63rd annual State commitment they were
W . restl
ng able to accomplish their
Championships. after goal.
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

MDTSPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

"I trust Nationwide=
You can too."
-oale earnhardt Jr~r

CALL FOR A QUOTE TODAY ·

(740) 446·196.
OoiJ9111d Dan Blown
lbt Brown Agtney
brol'ondlUfl.ltiOnwilk.&lt;om

990SR160
Gallipo~\. OH 45611

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

POINT PLEASANT
- The 20 IU Tri-county
Junior Golf Tour will
open its annual summer
run on Monday. June 14
at Hidden Valley Golf
Course in Point Pleasant.
According to officials.
this marks the 28th summer of operation for the
tour. which is open to
young golfers - boy~
and g1rls - in the folfowing age groups: 1517. 13-14, 11·12 anJ 10and unJer. In addition to
•Hidden Valley, tour

stops include Cliffside
Golf
Course
in
Gallipolis, Pine llilb
Golf Course in Pomeroy
and Ri\'erside Golf
Course in Mason .
Following is the tour
schedule for 2010:
• Monday. June 14 H1dden Valley
• Monday. June 21
Rl\erside
• Monda\'. June 28
Pine Hills ·
• Monday, July. 12
Cliffside
• Monda]. July 19 Hidden Valley (grand
tinale)
Registration is sched-

Insurance

Jed Ott - Assistant Coach of the Year

The
PPHS
State
Championship Wrestling
team will be hosting a
State Champ Youth
Camp June 29 -July 1.
from 10 a.m. to noon.
.
. . $"'0
E"'arIy reg1strat10n IS _, ,
and door registration
will be $40. If your child
would like to take

Tri-county Jr. Golf To~r opens Monday
MDTSPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

DNationwide·

uled at 8:30 a.m. each
week at the respective
courses with play beginnmg at 9 a.m. The registration fee is $10 per
round, payable at each
course during registration. The registration fee
covers course fees and
lunch that will be served
following each round.
For intonnation about
the tour. contact the participating golf courses:
Cliffside. (740) 4464653; Hidden Yallcy.
(304) 675-9739: Pin~
Hills. (740) 992-6312:
Riverside. (304) 773 5354.

advantage of this opportunity to work with the
State
ChaJ)1pion
Wrestling Team. contact
Coach Bonecutter at
304-593-1562.
~~~~-,-)(-)J-l-~-?-~T-L-J-li-~-~-0-U-~-.C-E-:s-,J-,U-.B-I-J-C-S-~-~-P-I-~'-G-J-f-E-T-~-~-~-;~~~~
4on Proposed ,\EP .Hountaineer CCS 11 Project

1'/ze U.S. IJepartmetlt of Energy (DOE) recemly issued a ,\'otice of lntellt.to prepare llll
Enrirmunental lnlfmct Statement (E/S) for the propo~ed action of prol·iding financial
ani stance (up to $33.J million) .for the coll\truction ami opC'ration of a projut fJrOJ)(IH'd
by the ,1melican Electric Power Senice Corporation (,\EP). DOE selected the project
for a financial assi\tance award through a compt'titive proce.~s under tlte Clean ( oa/
Poll'er lttitiati1·e Program. , u;p·~ Mountaineer Commercial Scale Carbon Capture and
Storag£' Project (.l/ouutaiueer CCS II Pro.iett) would comtruct a commercial \tale
&lt;'arbiJn dioxide c·upture and \forage s,nfL'11l at .4EP\ cxisti11g
Mountaineer Power Plant and 011 other ,U:'P pmpcnie~ and rights-of-war located near
,\ nr Haven. in .Uamn County, W&lt;·st \'ir~inia. ·
·
DOE i\ luHting a public \copinR meeting to pre\ellt an tll'en-iew of the propo\C'd
and to provide till' public ll'ith mt opportuni~\·to cmmm·m and ask questiml\·.
meeting will be held on: Tuesday.)utte 22,2010 • 5:00pm -7:00pm- Open Jlm11e
7:00pm -9:(}()pm ·Formal Scopittg ML•t!tiug
at: Sew Haren Elemetttan School
138 Mill Street • .\'L'll' Hm·e11, (rest Virginia
F(/r additional information, to sign up to present &lt;·ommcnts at the meeting, or to prtJI'ide
commems brother meam mtthe KOpc ofthe HIS. plea,·e contact: Mr. Jfark Lu.,k,
J\'f.'PA Docu.ment .lfanager. by mail O&gt;OB-Xatioual Energy 'f'eclrnology Laboratmy
(Sq'l,), 3610 ColliII\ Ferry Road,
P.O. Hox 880, Wi 1107. Mm-,:autmm, l\ l' 26507-1)880): telephone (..fJ2.J86-'N35 or
toll-(rcL'i-877-812-156l/i; electro/lie mail (.Holllllaineer.EJSO.J.J5@'netl.doc.gm1: or
fax (30.J-285...J403). , \dditional pr~iect h1{omurtion i.\ ami/able at DOH-SETL ·.\
website at ltttp://wH'II'.IIt'll.doe.gol'/publicatiou\JllthenlnepaliTtdt•x.html.

�Local Sports Briefs
Blue Devil Golf
Shootout
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
- The Gallia Academy
golf team will be hostino
the Blue Devil Golf
t, a fundraiser
program, on
, June I 9, at
Cliffside Golf Club in
the Old French City.
The Blue Devil Golf
Scramble will be a ninehole scramble and a
nine-hole low two-best
ball format, with skins
and mulhgans available.
Foursomes will consist
a three-man team made
up of golfers in categories of A, B and C,
plus one lottery pick
golfer that will be selected in a blind draw by
current
and
former
GAHS
golfers
and
coaches.

A player with a 0-10
handicap will be in category A, while category B
. will consist of golfers
with a handicap between
11-15. Category C will
be made up of handicaps
of 16 or more.
The cost of the event is
$60 per person and only
$50 for members, which
includes greens fees,
cart, food and prizes. The
shotgun start will happen
at 9 a.m.
All participants are
encouraged to be in
attendance for the GAHS
golfer lottery that day at
8:30a.m.
Proceeds from the
tournament
will go
towards facilitating the
needs of the GAHS golf
team - cover practice
round costs, team equipment and inclement
weather gear.
You may register your

team at Cliffside Golf
Club or by contacting
GAHS golf coach Corey
Luce at (740) 709 6227.
You may also email
Coach·
Luce
at
corcy.luce@ gmail.com
The deadline for entry
is Thursday, June 17.

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

Sarah Hawley/photo

Post 39's Ryan Payne dives back to the bag at first during a pick off attempt in
Thursday evening's game.

A single by William
Zuspan scored Buzzard
before Michael Manuel
hit a single.
Garrett
Underwood hit a two
RBI double to score
Zuspan and Manuel.
Post 303 scored one
run in the sixth, two in
the seventh, and four in
the eighth for the 11-5
victory.
Post 39 managed four
hits in the final four
innings of the game, with
CotterilL Payne, Greg
Jenkins, and Taylor each
hitting a single.
Manuel pitched five
innings. allowing four
runs and six hits .
Dettwiller and Kyle
Cunningham combined
to pitch the final three
innings, allowing seven
Dettwilfer took the
ach starter for Post 39

~unbap m:t~ -~entinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday,Junet3,2010

had at least one hit.
Payne lead the team in
hits with three. Taylor.
Cotterill, and Buzzard
each had a pair of singles,
and
Jenkins,
Zuspan,
Manuel,
Underwood,
and
Dettwiller each had one
hit.
VINTON Co 11,
POMEROY 5

Post 303 200 201 24-11 15 1
Post 39
010 400 00-5 14 1
WP - Andy Grillo; LP - Heath
Dettwiller.

POST 39 SPLITS DOUBLEHEADER AT BELPRE

BELPRE. Ohio - The
Drew Webster Post 39
baseball team split a doubleheader on Tuesday
evening at Belpre.
Post 39 won game one
by a score of 10-9.
Kyle
Cunningham
earned the pitching victory, going six innings and
allowing eight hits.
William Zuspan, Titus
Pierce. Heath Dettwiller.
and Ryan Payne each had

two hits for Post 39.
Justin Cotterill. Jordon
Taylor, and
Garrert
Underwood each had one
hit. Underwood had two
RBis, with Zuspan,
Dettwiller, Payne, and
Michael Manuel each
having one.
In game two, Post 39
lost by a score of 6-4.
Ryan Taylor pitched
the first four innings,
allowing six runs on
eight hits. Ryan Payne
pitched two scoreless
innings in relief.
Andrew Benedum had
two hits to lead Post 39.
Zuspan, Jordon Taylor,
and Greg Jenkins each
had one hit.
Benedum and Zuspan
each had one RBI.
POMEROY

10,

BELPRE

BELPRE

6,

POMEROY

Conservation and wildlife go
··
hand-in-hand
Two weeks ago I discussed how soil and
water districts, specifically the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District. were formed
following the Dust Bowl
era in the 1930. particularly to protect topsoil
from erosion: this weekend I want to include
how many of the conservation practices that protect soil and water also
benefit wildlife.
Many of the conservation practices that are
designed for protecting
topsoil and water are
also
beneficial
to
wildlife; in fact, you
should consider the two,
conservation
and
wildlife, as fundamentally connected.
Grass filter strips
around
ponds
and
streams provide nesting
cover and shelter for
wildlife in addition to filtering sediment, fertilizer and pesticides from
run-off, riparian buffers
. (tree-lined
corridors)
along creeks provide
cover for land animals
and h.elp improve water
quality and aquatic habitat in addition to protecting streams from cattle
or other livestock.
Agencies like the Ohio
Division of Wildlife, the
Resources
Natural
Conservation
Service
and organizations like
Ducks
Unlimited,
Pheasants Forever, Quail
Unlimited
and
the
National Wild Turkey
Federation often join
forces in providing planning. funding and technical know-how into constructing or implementing conservation practices designed to benefit
wildlife.
The NR CS and the
NWTF recently teamed
up to conserve, maintain
and improve turkey habitat in a 16-county area of
southeastern
Ohio,
including Gallia and
Meigs counties. The
Turkey
Habitat

In
the
Open
Jim Freeman
Improvement
Project
will focus on eliminating
troublesome
invasive
species on land near or
adjacent to the Wayne
National Forest and designated state wildlife
areas.
It was stressed that
these projects aren't
strictly to benefit wild
turkey and that other
game and non-game
species will also benefit
as a result. The landowner's first contact should
be with the NRCS office
in their county if they are
interested in learning
more about this project.
Many of the calls we
receive here at the Meigs
SWCD
concerning
wildlife habitat assistance are just general
questions from landowners who want to know
how to plant food plots,
what to plant and when,
how to improve their
habitat for wildlife, or
who to contact for more
assistance.
These
landowners may be new
landowners who have
recently purchased a few
acres for hunting, or people who live in the country who simply love
wildlife. These people
don't want a detailed
wildlife habitat improvement plan, they just want
a little bit of information
and of course we help
them out as best we can.
One way of protecting
topsoil and benefiting
wildlife at the same time
is through no-till planting; no-till farming causes less soil disruption
compared to traditional
plowing and disking, and

also reduces labor, fuel,
and irrigation and equipment costs. The benefits
to wildlife are crop
residue remaining on the
field and less soil disturbance, and less sediment
in streams resulting from
soil erosion.
No-till agriculture is
accomplished using a
no-till planting drill; the
term "drill" is a little
misleading, there is no
actual "drilling" in the
traditional sense that
goes on. A drill features a
series of rolling cutters
or coulters which open
up a slit in the soil
through existing ground
cover or crop residue;
seeds are dropped into
the opening which is
then closed by a series of
packing wheels.
On the other hand, notill drills a(e expensive
pieces of equipment ana
most producers have a
hard time justifying the
expense. That's where
your SWCDs come in
handy. While much of
this equipment is used
strictly for agricultural
purposes, the drills are
occasionally used for
planting wildlife food
plots.
The Meigs SWCD has
two 10-foot John Deere
grain drills and a 7-footwide Tye drill, in addition to an 8-foot-wide
Brillion grass seeder for
use on fields that have
been disked, a tree
planter and a two lime
spreaders. The Gallia
SWCD has a 10-footwide John Deere drill, an
8-foot-wide Tye drill and
a chisel plow.
For more informatien
about using the no-till
drills, contact your local
SWCD.

Jim
Freeman
is
wildlife specialist for the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District.
He can be contacted
weekdays · at 740-9924282 or at jimfreeman@oh.nacdnet.net

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Page B6 • fa&gt;unbap m:nncs -fa&gt;entinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010 Southeast Ohio
AII:.District Teanis

201 0 Southeast Ohio All-District Honorees

Sunday,June13,2010

Baseball
DIVISION

1-11

SOUTH
First Team
Tyler Procter
Warren
Kyle Dean
Athens
Andy Grillo
Vinton Co
Kyle Dingess
Gallla Aca.
Waverly
Harn:.on Martin
Zach Heath
Warren
Wes Bouillion
Unloto
Doug Chapman
Athens
Caleb Warnlmont Gallla Aca.
Cameron Bronski Marietta
Derek Roback
Waverly
Eric Landrum
Jackson
Second Team
Nick Rose
Unioto
Marty Dunn
Chillicothe
Jacob Glick
Logan
Honorable Mention
Landon Kern
Warren
Patrick Angle
Logan
Dean Maffin
Athens
Coach of the Year:
Mark Farr, Warren

DIVISION

\

Jr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Jr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Sr
So
Sr
Jr

Ill

SOUTH
First Team
Josh Myers
Portsmouth Jr
Anthony Knittel
Ports. West Jr
Chad Fisher
Fairland
Sr
Josh Marlene
Rock Hill
Sr
Kyle Dickess
South Point Jr
River Valley Jr
Austin Smith
Jared Delong
Northwest Sr
Aaron Oesch
M1nford
Sr
Tyler Walls
Oak Hill
~o
Justin Cotterill
Meigs
Sr
Zach Buckiewicz Valley
Sr
Josh Pancake
Ironton
Sr
Brandon Daniels Crooksville Sr
Andrf1ov Elliott
WheelersburgSr
Nick Kemper
WheelersburgSr
Alex Halcomb
Valley
Jr
Ray Bryan
Minford
Sr
Alex Thackston
Fairland
So
·
Second Team
Brandon Hall
WheelersburgSr
Evan Richard
Valley
Sr
Tyler Sanford
Minford
So
Jesse Parker
Oak Hill
Jr
Honorable Mention
Bryce Hall
Wheelersburg Sr
Mark Murphy
Ports. West Sr

Brice Crabtree
Valley
Jr
Caleb Davis
Meigs
Sr
James Montgomery Crooksv1lle Sr
Coach of the Year:
Michael Estep. Wheelersburg

DIVISION

IV

SOUTH
First Team
Luke Taylor
Sym. Valley Jr
John Morrisette
S. Webster Sr
Brock Hannah
Notre Dame Jr
Matt Ratcliff
Green
Jr
Tanner Riley
Iron. St. Joe Jr
Justin Crager
East
Fr
Tyler Eastham
Sym. Valley Sr
Brent Smith
S. Webster Sr
Cory Haner
South GalllaSo
Payton Blair
Iron. St. Joe Jr
Tyler Noel
Notre Dame So
Claeb Lewis
Green
Sr
Second Team
Robert Russell
Western
So
Jayson Meemach Green
Sr
Jacob Patterson Sym. Valley Jr
Honorable Mention
T.J. McCloud
Green
Jr
Anthony Edler
Pike EasternSr
David Blair
East
Sr
Coach of the Year: Shannen
Z1mmerman, South Webster
NORTH
First Team
Jordon Taylor
Southern
J.D. Chesser
Trimble
Titus Pierce
Eastern
Derek Ginther
Waterford
Jacob Reynolds
Miller
Dawson Little
Manchester
Nathaniel Miller
Fairfield
Gage Carraher
WhiteOak
Nlk Brannon
Eastern
Mike Manuel
Southern
Ben Barnett
WhiteOak
Kiefer Standley
Trimble
Second Team
lan Adams
Fairfield
Andrew Benedum Eastern
Pete Rigdon
Manchester
Honorable Mention
Southern
Taylor Deem
Tyler Campbell
Fairfield
Levi McCutcheon Waterford
Coach of the Year:
Brian Bowen, Eastern

Noe

Turley

Rawson

B. Taylor

Canaday

Glass

Lanham

Shriver

Teaford

Tucker

Holter

Cummins

Stanley

English

Hammond

Ta. Duncan

Gilliland

Morrison

Dingess

Warnimont

A. Smith

Cotterill

Haner

J. Taylor

Pierce

Brannon

Manuel

Benedum

Deem

Davis

Sr
So
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Fr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Jr
Jr

Softball
DIVISION

'

II

First Team
Bekha Lucas
Logan Elm Sr
Lindsey Webb
Circleville Sr
Raven Cline
Athens
Sr
Catlin Shilling
Waverly
Sr
Amy Noe
Gallla Aca.Sr
Taylor Dolak
Warren
Sr
McKenna Jennings Circleville Sr
Kate Hammond
McClain
Sr
Erin Bane
Unioto
So
Kira Wilson
Sheridan Sr
Emileigh Cooper
Jackson Jr
Chelsea Huchison Marietta
Sr
Andi Strahler
Miami
Sr
Kelsey Daniels
Wash. CH Jr
Kayla Martin
Logan Elm Sr
Nikki Grambo
Logan Elm Jr
Courtney Mautz
Sheridan Sr
Chloe Cottrell
Unioto
Sr
Player of the Year:
Bekha Lucas, Logan Elm
Coach of the Year:
.Jeri Hartley, Logan Elm
Second Team
Richelle Hecker
Athens
Sr
Courtney Hanna
Fairfield
Fr
Hannah Zimmerman Warren
So
Emalee Glass
Meigs
So
Megan Dettwiller
McClain Jr
Trlcla Smith
Meigs
Sr
Chelsey Johnston Vinton Co Sr
Olivia Mick
Miami
Sr
Courtney Porter
CircleVille Jr
Ashley Buckalew
Fairfield. Fr
Taylor Stockwell
Miami
Sr
Morgan Leslie
Gallla Aca.Jr
Sara Lentz
Wash. CH Fr
Mattie Lanham
Gallla Aca.Jr
Stevi Gualtieri
Circleville Jr
Jayne Seymour
Athens
Sr
Kandi Preston
Waverly
Sr
Courtney Shriver Gallla Aca.Jr
Honorable Mention
Ali Walls
Waverly
Jr
Brooke Hoskins
Waverly
Jr
Ally Spence
Warren
So
Brittany Pontious
Logan Elm Jr
Alex Taylor
McClain' Sr
Cortney Hyer
McClain
Sr
Miami
So
Danielle Thomas
Katie Depuah
Wash. CH So
Deven Riley
Wash. CH Jr
Kaley Taylor
Vinton Co Jr
Donyel Castor
Vinton Co Jr
Kaley Haynes
Vinton Co Jr
Jessica Apsley
Jackson
Jr
Kan Jenklns
Jackson
Fr
Chandra Stanley Meigs
Jr
Haley English
Meigs
Fr
Abby Pomento
Athens
So
Sarah.Stalter
Marietta Jr
Allie Milligan
Marietta Jr

DIVISION

Ill

First Team
Kirsti Yates
Adena
Sr
Sheila Zimmerman Piketon
Sr
Holly Brabson
Piketon
Sr
Braiden Dillow
Valley
So
Rachel Lute
Northwest Sr
Kayln Bailey
W'burg
Jr
Courtney Clever
Zane Trace Sr
Allison Chapman
Ches.
Sr
Brytan Givens
Adena
Jr
Breanna Hall
Wellston Sr
Amber Mclaughlin Alexander Jr
Trinity Brown
Valley
Jr
Courtney Duncan Rock Hill Jr
Fr
Hayleigh Swayne Peebles
Lexey Kegley
Ports. West So
Erika Blair
W'burg
Jr
Alyssa Wolfe
New Lex. Sr
Macey Anders
Crooksville So
Crystal Detty
Adena
Jr
Maria Johnson
Eastern
Fr
Players of the Year:
K~rsti Yates, Adena and
Sheila Zimmerman. Piketon
Coach of the Year:
Montie Spriggs, Lucasville Valley
Second Team
Sarah Mayo
Ches.
Jr
Em1ly Lilly
Ironton
Sr
Kara Redman
Westfall
Jr
Zane Trace Sr
Kristen Bennett
Jessica Humphreys Oak Hill
Jr
Shaylan McDaniels Peebles
Jr
Sashe Burcham
Fairland Jr
Christian Graf
Ports. West Sr
Lara Fuhrnann
Minford
Jr
Chelsey Martin
Nels.· York Sr
Bnttany Ellis
Northwest Sr
Shelby Williams
Alexander Sr
Brittany Montavan Minford
Jr
Brittany Williams
Northwest Jr
Bnttni Hall
Wellston So
Kaylee Purdy
Eastern
Jr
Chelsea Delong
Coal Grove Sr
Janie Morris
Ironton
Sr
Morgan Schug
Rock Hill So
Emily File
N. Adams Fr
Honorable Mention
Chelsea Harper
Rock Hill
Morgan Damron
Rock Hill
Shelby Brown
Dawson Bryant
Rob1lyn Kemper
Dawson Bryant
Brooke Cooper
Valley
Ashley M1lls
Valley
Kelsey Jenkins
Wheelersburg
Jessica Pistale
Wheelersburg
Olivia Watts
Crooksville
Ashley Allman
Crooksville
Danielle Zavora
New Lexington
Nicole Ozimak
New Lexington
Patricia Baker
New Lexington
Bnttany McCarter Wellston
Emily Trace
Wellston
Sara Link
Westfall
Olivia Cabb
Westfall
Whitney Daugherty Alexander
Crystal Goims
Alexander
Kayla Gorby
Crooksville
Jessica Seyfang
Adena
T1ffin1 Hale
Oak Hill

Alex Kuhn
Amber Grooms
Alexandra Bowles
Keri Pinkerman
Jam1e Ph1111ps
Amber Bias
Alex Phippes
Becca Mosley
Courtney Spriggs
Autumn Griffith
Ciera Seaman
Kirsten Sowards
Ashley Taylor
Whitney Siders
Kaylee Stout
Taylor Reynolds
Courtney Wiford
Courtney Heffner
Sidney Boyle
Amanda Prickett
Sierra Sigman
Gabbie Carpenter
Stephanie Elswick
Brittany Armentrout
Aryn Harris
Jessica Moore

Oak Hill
West Union
West Union
Fairland
ra~rland

Fairland
Ports. West
Ports. West
Minford
Minford
Peebles
Peebles
North Adams
North Adams
North Adams
Eastern
Eastern
Chesapeake
Chesapeake
Zane Trace
Zane Trace
Dawson Bryant
Ironton
Westfall
Piketon
Piketon

DIVISION

Softball
from PageBl
Chandra Canaday was
a first team selection for
South Gallia. The Lady
Rebels Tayler Duncan,
Morgan Gilliland. and

Samantha
Hammond
were honorable mention
selections.
Academy's
Gallia
Shriver and Noe. Meigs'
Smith. Eastern's Turley
Rawson,
and
and
Southern's
Taylor,
Teaford. and Tucker
were all repeat honorees
on the all-district teams.

IV

First Team
Nikki Nance
Sym. ValleySr
Chelsea Wall
Sym. ValleySr
Kasey Turley
Eastern Sr
Holly Hempill
Clay
Jr
Stevie Thornsberry Eastern
Sr
Maggie Lawlor
Waterford Sr
Regina Leftwich
Belpre
Jr
Kendra Clark ·
S. Webster Sr
Haley Fisher
East
So
Hannah Shupert
N. Dame Sr
Lauren Larrick
Fairfield
So
Breanna Taylor
Southern Sr
Tori osborne
Clay
Sr
Allie Rawson
Eastern Jr
Chandra Canaday S. Gallla So
Rachel Staker
Eastern. Jr
Brooke Skinner
Sym. ValleySr
Tanna Wallace
Waterford Jr
Players of the Year:
Nikki Nance. Symmes Valley and
Chelsea Wall. Symmes Valley
Coach of the Year:
Jeff "Odie" Estep, Symmes Valley
Second Team
Taylor Mason
Belpre
Jr
Kelli Jenkins
Western So
Lindsay Teaford
Southern Sr
Whitney Hanenkral Fairfield
So
Megan Spergin
Miller
Jr
Meghan Williams East
Jr
Tiffany Kammer
East
Jr
Brittney Elllfntt
S. Webster Fr
Kala Hall
Western So
Lynzee Tucker
Southern Sr
Lyndsey Mader
Clay
So
Cass1e King
Green
Sr
Brenna Holter
Eastern
So
Heather Huff
Fairfield
Jr
Katie Kayser
N. Dame So
Marissa Messer
Clay
Fr
Cassie Nutter
Waterford Sr
Maggie Cummins Southern Fr
Honorable Mention
Brandi Fitch
Belpre
Sr
Natalie Perry
Belpre
So
Samantha HammondS. Gallla
Jr
Tayler Duncan
S. Gallla Jr
Morgan Gilliland S. Gallla Jr
Lexi Coulson
Western. Fr
Aubrey Hand
Miller
Jr
Abby Toth
Miller
Sr
Meghan Vogelsong Miller
Sr
Jen Arnzen
N. Dame Fr
Marinda Pauley
N. Dame Fr
Toni Lang
East
Jr
Kayla Bentley
S. Webster Sr
Kaci Messer
S. Webster Fr
Kelcie Downs
Trimble
Fr
Demi Moore
Trimble
Fr
Taylor Stevens
Green
Sr
Anna Marie Welch Waterford Jr
Gabrielle Boone
Fairfield
Sr
Brltney Morrison Eastern Jr
Chelsea Pack
Eastern
Jr
Anna Mills
Eastern
Jr
Erica Corn
Sym. ValleySr

Teams
from Page Bl
team.
Meigs also had two
honorees. with Justin
Cotterill being named
first team in the
Division IIJ South and
Caleb Davis earning

second team honors.
Davis v.as a repeat honoree from 2009.
River Valley's Austin
Smith earned a first
team selection in D-3.
South Galli a's Cory
Haner rounded out the
D-4 selections. being
named to the first team
111
the Division IV
South.

~ LEATHERMAN.

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Cl

mtme£i -~entinel

.

GT
Sunday,June13,2010

AHISTORY OF GRISTMILLS ALONG RACCOON (REEK

New -exhibit open at Bob Evans Farm
Bv A NDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

A couple of weeks ago. Ray
McKinniss from Bob Evans Farm in
Rio Grande calls me and says, ''Hey,
Andrew, we've got this great new
exhibit at the farm. It's a history of
gristmills that were located along
Raccoon Creek in Gallia County."
''That's great. Ray!" I answered.
Immediately after we hung up I
googled "gristmill" to find out what
in the world he was talking about.
Cut me some slack. I'm a kid from
. the suburbs. The only mills I knew
about back in the day were General
Mills and Hayley Mills.
Needless to say, the gristmill
"bit at Bob Evans Farm is pretty
esting - even to a kid from the
bs.
So what have I learned about gristmills? From the exhibit. I found out
that in the 18th and 19th centuries the
'mills were used to grind grain into
meal or flour and were key fixtures in
many communities across America.
Bob Evans Farm employee Gale
Leslie conducted an extensive
amount of research and pieced
together the exhibit from a wide
range of sources, including information provided by local residents
wh~e families owned and operated
some of the mills as well as news
publications and historical volumes.
So far, the Bob Evans Farm gristmill display features 11 panels with
l information about what exactly a
gristmill is (r learned a lot from that
one) and short histories about some
of the 14 gristmills that once lined
Raccoon Creek from Clay to
Huntington township.
Leslie explained that the exhibit is
:not meant to be an exhaustive listing
Raccoon Creek gristmills, but
~er a starting point for a work in
gress. She said she welcomes
mput from local residents and others
\Vho may have information about
other gristmills that were located
along the creek. but whose information is missing from the recorded history of the area.
McKinniss said the exhibit is part
of Bob Evans' plan to revamp the
farm to include more educational displays that the company hopes will
attract more visitors and offer added
points of interest to those who attend
the annual Bob Evans Farm Festival .
Following is a listing of the gristmills included in the Bob Evans
exhibit with the dates the mills were
built:
• Harrisburg Mill, early 1800s
• Adamsville Mill, 1803
• Nehemiah Wood Mill, 1806
• Northup Mill (Harrington Mill).
1810
• Vinton Mill, 1815
• Cottrell Mill, 1820
• Dooner and Booth Mill, 1820
• Cora :.1ill (Falls of Raccoon
Mill), 1835
Ewington Mill, 1840
•
Waugh Mill, 1845
• Smeltzer Mill, 1847
• Wood Mill (Tycoon Mill), 1853
• Yellowtown Mill (Plymale Mill).
1856
• Lewis Mill, no date available
Of the mills listed in the exhibit,
only the one at Cora Dam is still
intact. It is currently owned by
Cedric and Helen Lewis, who purchased it in 1974. Cora Mill was
placed on the National Register of
Historic Places in 1981.
Also included in the exhibit is the
Bob Evans Farm gristmill, a working
operation that is showcased each
year during the Bob Evans Farm
Festival. The mill was first operated
by Ted and Helen Harder during the
1974 festival. In 2004, the Von
Cremeans family took over operation
of the mill during the festival.
Leslie said she gleaned information for the exhibit from the following sources:
• Laura Wood Baker
• Donna DeWitt
• D.W. Garber, Waterwheels and
"llstones, 1970
• Ted Harder
•
• History of Gallia County, H.H.
Hardesty &amp; Co .. Publishers
• Cedric and Helen Lewis
• Mary Ann McCarley
• Kingsley N. Meyer. Jr.
• James L. Murphy. The Columbus
Dispatch Maga-::_ine, Sept. 1977
• Mary Walker Niday
• James Sands
The gristmill exhibit is open during
the regular operating hours of Bob
Evans Farm.
(On the Internet: Bob Evans,
W\\w.bolievcms .com.)

t

ills along Raccoon
Creek1Gallia County, OH

lS40 and operated
l976.

1

The V!Uage of l'lor!hup Wa$ aid out b John "'art:
for 0&lt;1e of th pionee~ of Galfla County. Dan

came to

txloodf. 'vfilf

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e CO!Intv n t804

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---~--------~--------------------------------.---------~--------------------.---

IHI

i&gt;unbap ~imes -i&gt;entinel

PageC2

1MIJE1r
Sunday, Junet3,2010
Livestock Judging Team

Submitted photo
Submitted photo

Capt. Penny Lope Coon (U.S. Army retired) was the speaker for the CadetBlessing Camp #126 Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War. Capt. Coon spoke
of the freedoms we have in this country and the sacrifices made by many
Americans in all branches of the military over the years.

Deputy honored

Ten students from the Gallipolis FFA Chapter attended the State Livestock
Judging Contest at the Ohio State Fairgrounds. The contestants evaluated beef,
sheep and swine classes for both breeding and market purposes and were
required to utilize performance data when placing livestock. In addition, students
learned to evaluate cattle based on their carcass quality through grid based mar- •
keting. Chris Elliott, Drew Shong and Briggs Shoemaker were the top three indi- :
viduals for the Gallipolis team, which placed 36th out of 156. The contestant.
from left to right, are Kar~ Crance, Dakota Thomas, Cory Angell, Brigg
Shoemaker, Chris Elliott, Brook Plantz, Jonathan Holley, Drew Shong, Cody Call
and Brad Swisher.
'

Meigs student donates
bicycle to St. Jude
POMEROY - Meigs
Primary student, eight
year old Katilyn Brinker.
announced in a recent
awards ceremony at her
school that she wil I be
donating the bicycle she
won · for all her hard
work and exceptional
grades to the kids battling cancer at St. Jude
Children's
Research
Hospital.

Submitted photo

Dep. Scott Darst of the Gallia County Sheriff's Office has been named 2009
American Legion Law Enforcement Officer of the Year Darst (right) is shown receiving the award from Larry Kemper, American Legion Commander. Darst was honored
on May 25 during the Legion's Law Enforcement Officer of the Year banquet.

Gallery 842 to host
Watercolor Society exhibition
HUNT I NGTON. niques - despite the fact experience for an); attist
W.Va. - Gallery 842, that they are all under the or att enthusiast. Summer
located at 842 Fourth umbrella of watercolor hours are as follows:
Ave.
in
downtown paintings," Farley said. Wednesdays. Thursdays.
Huntington. will host the "Viewers \Viii find every- and Fridays from noon to
2010 West Virginia thing from highly repre- 5 p.m. and Saturdays and
Watercolor Society juried sentational portraiture to Sundays from 1-5 p.m.
exhibition Festival of gestural abstract paintFor more infon11ation
Colors from June J I to ings."
or questions
about
July 30. The opening
Gallery 842 is both a Gallery 842. or an;
reception is from 6-9 communityand College of Fine Arts
p.m. Friday. June II.
e\ents. contact Jaye Ike
Marshall
University-held
WVWS
President
spaee
to
promote
local
by phone at (304) 696Jeannine Romano was
3296
or by e-mail at
t~lent
and
initiative.
The
pleased for the organization to be exhibited at gallery is a free cultural jaye.ike@marshall.edu.
Gallery 842•.
"During the past two
years as president o~ the
West Virginia Watercolor
Society. I have been continually amazed and
inspired by the caliber of
talented mtists we have
in our state." Romano
said. "The motto 'to pro~
mote and ensure a high
standard of watercolor
painting' is demonstrated
by many of our members.
who mentor and teach
watercolor
painting
throughout the region. It
is excitmg for us to bring
our creative flair to the
Huntington area."
Sa.\JiV\~
iS ele~V\to.ry
The exhibit was juried
b; John Farley. gallery
6reo.t ro.tes + lot-Cl.i, •r'IGeper~del\t o.ger~t ""' \Jo,lve
director and ·adjunct art
at
faculty
member
Than It you fbr rating Aulo-Own&lt;·rs ln.surancr
Marshall University. A
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Mindy
Scott and
Brinker. Katilyn's parents. feel both grateful
and blessed by their

daughter's concern for
other children.
''I have to say first
that we are two of the
proudest parents in the
world right now. Our
daughter. who is only
eight, worked very hard
in school this year and

won a bike for her hard
work. Instead of her
bring that bike homt
she would like to
donate it to children
with cancer," commented Brinker
Katilyn will present the
bicycle to representatives
from St. Jude at 11 a.m.
on June 18 at Meigs
Primary
School
in
Pomeroy.

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�'1
PageC3

i&gt;unbap mtme~ -i&gt;entinel

Sunday,June13, 2010

(Tinkers:' Pulitzer Prize
for Fiction) 2010

NRA Big Shooters

Submitted photo

The Gallia Area National Rifle Association Chapter raised $75,000 for the national association during its
fund raiser on April 24. The Gallia County Chapter ranks No. 1 in Ohio and is in the top 10 in the United States
in money raised per capita during the banquet. Local NRA members raised $168.33 per person. Nick Johnson,
Ron Toler, David Duncan and Rick McCormick received special recognition for their efforts. The capacity crowd
enjoyed a prime rib dinner prepared by the Gallipolis Emblem Club. Lee Johnson conducted a live auction that
included NRA items and other memorabilia. The Gallia Area Chapter NRA committee members include Larry
Betz, David Tawney, Ed Clary, Ron Toler, Nick Johnson, Phil and Donna Heck, Robbie Jenkins, Bill Medley
and Pam Delille.

What kinds of photos do you carry around?
LOS ANGELES (AP)
- The next time someone reaches for photos
and offers: "Let me show
you some pictures of my
little darlings," you
might be surprised who's
mugging for the camera.
According to a recent
Associated
PressPetside.com poll, neatly
(45 percent) of all
wners say they carry
nd photos of their
pets - in wallets, purses,
cell phones. laptops,
iPods, iPads and other
mobile devices.
Dog owners (48 percent) are a bit more likely than cat owners (37
. percent) to cany pet pictures with them, and
women (52 percent) are
more likely than men (36
percent).
Over half of those
under age 50 say they
carry pet pictures, but the
number diminishes with
age. Just under a qua1ter
of those age 65 and up
still cany such photos.
Tigger, a 6-year-old
Persian cat, is such a fashion plate and so agreeable
that Larry Beal of
Newburyport, Mass .. can't
help but take photos. "Plus
we love him," the 66-yearformer teacher said,
e will do anything
_ ask him to. My wife
Jresses him in all kinds
of doll clothing and stuff.
He wears costumes for
Easter and Thanksgiving
and
Halloween and
Christmas and all sorts of
things,·· Beat said.
Beal cruries most of the
photos in his cell phone
because he doesn't use ,'

I

wallet. But he does carry a
portrait of Tigger in a
plastic sleeve in his pocket secretary. Refrigerator
magnets and framed photos of the cat are all
around his house. He's
only too happy to share
pictures of Tigger with
friends and acquaintances.
"Usually someone else
starts it,'' he said. "Then
after they tell me about
theirs, I say, 'Well. look
at what we have."'
But Tigger and his
four-legged friends are
still on the outside looking in, according to the
poll conducted by GfK
Roper Public Affairs &amp;
Media.
Almost all women 90 percent - say they
carry pictures of their
children, as do 80 percent
of men, including David
Jeter, 51, of Los Angeles .
Jeter is married with
two sons, ages 9 and 13,
and a 6-year-old yellow
Lab named Lucky. He
has uploaded lots of photos from his digital camera
to
his
global
Blackberry, but Lucky
didn't make the cut.
Because he travels all
over the world and son1etimes doesn't see people
for six or 12 months at a
time. he canies the boys'
pictures so he can update
them.
"The only people who
have ever she wn me pictures of their animals
were people without
kids. That recently happened }n a business meeting. Everyone started
showing pictures of their
kids and there was one

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Over 60 Groups expected

guy who didn't have kids
but he. was talking about
his dogs.'' Jeter said.
There are family photos on Jeter's refrigerator,
on his computer screensaver and in frames
around the house. His
favorite is one of everyone (except Lucky) on
vacation in Bhutan in the
Himalayas.
Jeter said he's not likely to take out his phone
and start looking at pictures when he's traveling.

"'It makes me homesick. I
try to avoid it because
then I start remembering
where I am not at."
The AP-Petside.com
Poll was conducted April
7-12, 2010, and involved
landline and cell phone
interviews w)th I , 112 pet
owners nationwide. It has
a margin of sampling
enor of plus or minus 3.3
percentage points.
(Onlille:

http://wwH'.petside .comlp
hoto-po/1)

Tinkers is a strange little novel. the debut work
of Paul Harding. It was
this year's Pulitzer Prize
winner for fiction. It is
beautifully written. but a
strange choice for such
an honor.
Tinkers is the story of
three generations of men.
George Crosby lays
dying, surrounded by
wife. children and grandchildren. He was a
repairer of clocks. There
arc passages on how
wound clocks work - all
the intricate mechanical
connections which must
mesh to give us the cor. rect time.
George's father was
Ho¥.ard, a tra,eling tinker who sold small
goods to housewives
from a cart stocked with
household supplies and
gadgets. He fixed things
- pots, pans and \\.hatever needed fixing. He
was married to a silent.
taciturn woman, and
they had four children .
George was the eldest.
Howard also had epilepsy. During one of his
seiwres, he bit into
George's hand while the
son was trying to insert a
piece of wood into his
mouth to keep him from
biting or swallowing his
tongue. The wife decided to send Howard to the
State Hospital in Maine,
where
they
lived.
Howard found out about
it and fled. He drove his
cart (horse drawn) to
Philadelphia. sold it, and
took up residence under
an assumed name. ·
Howard remembers his
own father, a Methodist
minister who lost his
mind and was taken
away. Perhaps that is the
reason he fled when he
discovered his wife's
plans.
The book contains
lyrical passages. but is
at times hard to understand. There is little
plot. Harding studied
under
Marilynne

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Beverly Gettles
Robinson.
another
Pulitzer winner, author
of Gilead and Home,
which this book resembles somewhat. I personally much prefer
Robinson's
writing.
Home is listed in T!Te
1001 Book.\ Yrm lvfust
Read Before You Die.
Here's the description
of one of George's visitors as he lays dying:
"'Nikki was an old
woman who dressed
like an aging ·former
starlet whose most dramatic, and final, role
was that of the aging
former starlet persevering under the tyranny of
time. She was, in fact. a
nurse.''
Howard, the father
who fled his nasty wife,
achieved some measure
of financial success and
found a second. more
understanding wife. He
traced the movements of
his former family and
eventually' isited George
at his home.
It may not have been a
mistake
to
a¥. ard
Tinkers the Pulitzer, but
it will never compare
with
To
Kill
a
Mockingbird.
my
favorite fiction winner. I
fear this one is destined
for
obscunty,but
Harding is a masterful
writer. He needs a bit
more plot and a little
less description. Like
the Toby Keith song. "A
little less talk and a lot
more action" would be
just fine.

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�iunbap ~imes -ientinei

CHURCH
.NOTEBOOK
Christian ,
Women's
Connection
GALLIPOLIS · The
Gallipolis
Christian
Women's
ConnectiOn
luncheon is planned for
noon. Tuesday, June 15 at
Courtsidc Grill. 302
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Guest speakers will be
Ronald
and
Dixie
Westervelt. For information or to make reservations, call Linda at 4464319 or Nancy at 3677443.

Gospel in the
Park
GALLIPOLIS - The
Gospel in the Park concert series continues
Friday. June 18 featuring
God's Ambassador's and
the Farleigh Brothers.
The concert begins at 7
p.m. in Gallipolis City
Park. The concert will be
canceled in case of rain.

Free clothing
giveaway
WILKESVILLE
Wilkesville
United
Methodist Church will
host a free clothing giveaway from II a.m.-1
p.m., Saturday, June 19.
Free hot dogs will also be
available. ~

Bethesda UMC
homecoming
UNDATED
Bethesda
United
Methodist Church \\ill
host homecoming services on Sunday, June 27.
The event begins at 1
' p.m. Meat will be provid
ed. Those planning to
attend should bring a
covered dish.
~

K ofC dinner
GALLIPOLIS - The
Knights of Columbus
dinner
meeting
1s
planned for 6:30 p.m.,
Monday, June 28 at
Lourdes Hall on the campus of St. Louis Catholic
Church in Gallipolis. All
Knights are encouraged
to attend.

Elizabeth
Chapel weekly
walk
GALLIPOLIS
Elizabeth Chapel Church
invites the public to join
its \veekly walking program. held at 7:30 p.m.
each Thursday. The
church is located at the
comer of Third Ave. and
Locust St. in Gallipolis.
Interested- parties are
asked to meet at the
Third Ave. entrance.
Each participant will
receive a bottle of water.
For information. contact
Paul Saunders at 3792152.

Church of
Christ meetings
GALLIPOLIS
GA LLIPOLIS The
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets at 234
Chapel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are: 9:30
a.m .. Bible class; 10:30
a.m., worship; 5 p.m.,
evening assembly. The
church meets at 7 p.m.
Wednesday for Bible
study. Bill Mead wi ll

be speaking Ju ne 13.

In keepi ng with Nev.·
Testament teaching and
example. the Lord's
Supper is remembered
each first day of the week
and singing is vocal, with
no instrumental accompaniment.
·
Free Bible courses are
offered are by mail, or
there are Christians who
would be glad to study
the Bible with you personallv in vour home .

..

..

PageC4

IEJLJE

Sunday, June 13, 2010

ARBOGAST
BIRTH

M OTHER, SON
CELEBRATE
BI RTHDAY

David
and
Kelly Arboga-.t of
Point Pleasant arc
,proud
to
announce
the
birth of their
daughter, Kin~:y
Brooke Arbogast.
Kin1.y was born
\pril 12. 2010 at
Holzer Medical
Center.
She
weighed
s1x
pounds.
13
ounces and was
20 and a half
inches long.
,____ _ _ _ _..............___.__ _-.J
Kinzy \'vas weiKinzy Brooke Arbogast
corned home by
her big sisters, Kenly Arbogast at hom~. and i\1aria .
Arbogast of Point Pleasant.
Her maternal grandparents are su ... an Paulson of
Point Pleasant and the late Bob Fluharty Her:
paternal grandparents are Freda Arbog&lt;ht of Point .
Pleasant and Oil a Arbogast of Point Pleasant. Her
paternal great grandmother is l\.1ertic Doole) ol .
Mt. Ncbo.

Send your name and
postal address to the
address above, or call
446-1494 to take ad vantage of either service.
Web site: www.chapelhi llchurchofchrist.org.

Christ UMC
meeting times
GA LLIPOLIS
Christ United Methodist
Church in Gallipolis
meets for services every
Sunday and Wednesday.
Sunday school begins
at 9:30 a.m. Morning
worship and Children ·s
Church are held at 10:30
a.m.
Sunday.
The
Wednesday Night Kids
meeting runs from 4 to 6
p.m. Bible study is held
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. each
Wednesday.
Christ
United
Methodist Church is
located at 9688 Ohio 7,
south of Gallipolis. The
Rev. Kandy Nuce is the
senior pastor.

Healing room
open at Garden
of My Heart
BIDWELL - Garden
of My Heart Holy
Tabernacle invites the
public to it healing room.
which is open from 6 to
7:30 p.m. each Tuesday.
The church is located on
Ohio 850 in Bidwell. For
information, call 3880414 or (304) 675-0660.

Gallipolis
church of
Christ
GALLIPOLIS - The
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets at 259
Third Ave. Sunday services include 10 a.m.
Bible study, with classes
for all ages·. and J I a.m.
worship. Bible study is
also held at 7 p.m.
Wednesday.
The Lord's Supper is
remembered the first day
of each week in keeping
with New Testament
teaching and example.
The singing is vocal with
no instrumental accompaniment.
Christians are available
to assist with Bible study
upon request. Send your
name and address to 259
Third Ave., Gallipolis.
OH 45631, or call (740)
446-1618.
The Web site address is
\v w w . g a II i p o I i s c h u r chofchrist .net.

Nazarene
church meeting
times
GALLIPOLIS - First
Church of the Na7are-ne
in Gallipolis offers services and ministries for
all ages. Sunday school
meets at 9:30 a.m. each
week. followed by morning worship at 10:40 a.m.
Sunday evening services
begin at 6 p.m. Midweek
services for all ages
begin at 7 p.m. each
Wednesday The church
also has a food pantry,
which is open from 9
a.m. to
I :30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
For informatiqn. call
446-1772.

:

Sarah and Ian Hood celebrated their birthday on
May 21 . Mom turned 30 and son marked his first
birthday. They celebrated with family and friends at
the Cheshire Shelter House. Ian enjoyed a 2-layer
blue cake with a frog on top. resembling one of his
favorite toys.

M ILLS BIRTH
Isaac
and
Jennifer Mills of
Gallipolis
are
happy
to
announce
the
birth of their first
child.
Abigail
Audrey
Mills.
Abby was born at
11:54 p.m. on
Thursday. May 6,
2010, at Holz.er
Medical Center in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
She weighed at 7
pounds. I ounce
and measured 21 ' - - - - - - - - ------"-----'
inches long.
Abigail Audrey Mills

MOSSMAN
BIRTH
Shaun
and
Amber (Pullen)
Mossman
are
happy
to
announce
the
birth of their son,
Stephen
Kade
Mossman
of
Huntington.
Stephen
was
f/J
born April 4.
2010
at
St.
Mary's Medical
Center
in
Huntington.
He is the grandson of Mark and '--------~.-..... •IOOQII~
Rita Hogan of.
Stephen Kade Mossman
Mason, and the
late Stephen Pulle 1 Robert and llena Mossman ofNew Haven. His uncle and aunt are Heath and Tabitha
Stanley of Mason
He is the great grandson of Mary and Phil Burton of"
Mason. Bob and Patricia Mossman of Miners' illc. ·
Ohio. and Betty Van Meter of Mason. and the late
Winfield Van Meter.

T AY LOR BIRT H

ROBINSON
BIRTH

Lyndee Taylor is
proud to announce
the birth of her
baby sister, Macy
Ted Robinson r-----------.....,
Jean Taylor. They
and
Amber Beegle
are the daughters of
of Glenwood are
Richie and Melissa
proud to announce
(Burdette) Taylor.
tbe birth of their
Macy was born
son. Dylan Jared
May 14 at 12:59
Edward Robinson.
a.m. at Cabell
Dylan was born
Huntington
May 27.20410 at
Hospital.
She
4:56
a.m.
at
weighed seven
Holzer Medical
pounds,
seven
Center
in
ounces and was
20 inches long.
..___ _ _ _.-z......__ _ _ ___, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Her maternal
Macy Jean Taylor
He weighed six
pounds,
five
grandparents are
Ron and Lori Burdette of St. ClairsYille. Ohio, and Linda ounces and \\as
(Jordan) and Bob Taylor of Paducah, Ky. Her paternal 20 inches long.
Dylan Jared Edward Robinson •
He was welgrandparents are Danny and Dee Taylor of Letart.
Macy's great grandparents are Ronald and Jessie comed home b)
Burdette of Leon. and Milford and Jean Jordan of Mt. his big sister and brother, Tori and Braidcn Robinson. ·
Alto. Her paternal great grandparents are John and
He is the maternal grandson of Bill and Elizabeth ·
Pauline Taylor of Letart, and Dickie and Gerry -Barnette of Leon, and the patemal grandson of Bill
Duncan of Point Pleasant.
and Penn) Robinson of Glenwood. ~

Vacation Bible Schools
June 14-16, Central
Christian Church, I 09
Garfield
Ave ..
Gallipolis.
Theme:
Studio GO Game Show.
Time: 6-8 p.m. daily.
Registration at 5:30p.m.
each day. Info: 4460062.
June
14-18,
First
Baptist Church. II 00
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
Time: 9:30 a.m.-12:30
p.m. For ages 4-Grade 6.'
Info: 446-0324.
June 14-19, Victory
Baptist Church, Crown
City. Time: 6:30-8:45
p.m. daily. Info: 2561914.

June I 'l-19. Ri\'er of
Life United Methodist
Church, 35 Hilhie\\
Dri\e, Gallipolis. Theme:
Galatic Blast. Time:
6:30-8:30 p.m. June 1518. 9:30 a.m.-noon June
19. Lunch sen·ed on June

19. Info: Crvstal. 3393246.
•
June 16-18. Thurman
United
Methodist
Church. Time: 6-8 p.m.
nightly. Info: (740) 5778175.

PROUD TO BE A
PART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Sunday
Ti111e s-SentiJlel
Subscnbe today

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PageCs

i&gt;unbap ijttme~ ~~enttnel

Sunday,Junet3, 2010

Jacobs named Franklin Walter Award recipient
BIDWELL
Jacqueline Jacobs, a
senior at River Valley
High School. was selected as a recipient of the
Franklin Walter AllScholastic Award. This
· ious award was
by the Ohio
County Superintendents'
Association to promote
student achievement and
to recognize outstanding
students. A senior from
each county within the
state of Ohio receives an
award.
. Jacobs has participated
m many school activities, including Beta
Club, National Honor
Society, French Club,
Art Club, Math Tutor,
Quiz Bowl, Volleyball,
and Basketball. Honors
have included Academic
Excellence Foundation
Award,
Regional
Scholar, Best of Art
Show at Ohio State Beta
Convention,
Hugh
O'Brian
Youth
Ambassador, University
of Cincinnati Summer
Institute for Talented and
Gifted
Students
in
teal Practices and
s, Ohio University
omen in Science and
Engineering. and Who's

Andrea Buckley

J a cob Lynch

Chester High School
·alumni meet

CHESTER - Special recognition was given to
reunion classes and three scholarships were awarded
at the annual Chester High School Alumni
Association banquet held at June 5 at Eastern
Elementary School.
Classes having r~unions were those of L935, 1940,
1945, 1950, 1955. Alumni attending from reunion
classes were: 1935: Harry Lee Bailey, Mildred
Caldwell, Samuel Michael 1940: Gladys Pickens
Meredith, Helen Marcinko Henry, Lila Bahr Winters;
1945, Jack Eiselstein, Harry Lodwick, Donald Mora,
River Valley High School senior Jacqueline Jacobs was the 201 0 recipient of the Frances Miller Reed, Maxine Pickens Whitehead,
Franklin Walter Award. Back row, from left to right, Rochelle Halley, River Valley Helen Sprague Wolfe, Marlene Wolfe Thompson,
High School principal; Dr. Denise Shockley, Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Doris White Ballard; 1950: Nola Epple Brown,
Center (ESC) superintendent; and Mike Jacobs; seated from left to right, Dr. Elizabeth Smith; and 1955, Joyce Bailey Messenger.
Charla Evans, Gallla County Local Schools superintendent; Jacqueline Jacobs, Roger Keller, Janet Orr Grueser, Betty Ours Gaul,
Franklin Walter Award recipient; and Earnestine Jacobs.
Emerson Pooler, Ralph Trussell, Shirley Guinther
Peterson, Paul Torrence.
Scholarships were awarded to graduates who were
Who Among American
Jacobs is the daughter in biology. Future plans
High School Students. of Mike and Earnestine include earning. a mas- grandcildren of Chester High School alumni, They
She is also an active Jacobs. She will attend ter's degree in occupa- were Darci Bissell, granddaughter of Thelma Smith
(1951), who will attend Rio Grande University majorKingdom Hall member.
Ohio University to major tional therapy.
ing in education; and Jacob Lynch, grandson of Roger
Riebel (1956) who will attend Washington State
College, Marietta.
Andrea Buckley was awarded the Kautz scholarship. She is the granddaughter of Darlene Bailey
RIO GRANDE
Jeanne Jindra, director of Buckley (1956), the great granddaughter of John
Darlene Ringhand, Ph.D ..
the Madog Center for Bailey (1931), and the granddaughter of John Riebel,
spent last year researching
Welsh Studies. The quilt Sr. (1956). Andrea will attend Rio Grande University
Welsh Needle Art of the
features the Welsh alpha- where she will study radiology.
past and present, and spoke
bet, six different Welsh
One hundred seven alumni and guests attended
about her research and
quilt patterns, the Welsh the banquet. Barbara Mora and Edna Wood decoratfmdings at a recent event at
dragon, the name of the ed the tables with blue and white streamers and
the University of Rio
Madog Center for Welsh flower arrangements provided by the Chester
Grande and Rio Grande
Studies and other designs Garden Club.
Community College.
that are beautiful and
Roger Keller, president, gave the welcome. Those
Ringhand, who lives in
unique.
attending gave the Pledge of Allegiance and sang
Gallipolis, is a faculty
"It is very special, and "God Bless America" led by Maxine Whitehead.
member at Rio Grande and
we are proud to have it on
John Riebel, Sr. gave the invocation before the
served as the 2009-20 lO
display at the Madog Pioneer 4-H club served the banquet prepared by the
Madog Faculty Fellow.
Center," Jindra added.
VFW of Tuppers Plains Auxiliary.
Rio Grande's Madog
Ringhand's presentation
The officers for 2011 will be Roger Keller, presiwas very well received, dent; Elizabeth Smith. secretary; Frances Reed,
Center for Welsh Studies
and Jindra said she ·was assistant secretary; John Riebel, Sr., treasurer, and
sponsors a Madog Faculty
impressed with the work George Morison- assistant treasurer. Kathryn Smith
Fellow each year to
research a Welsh history
she did on her project.
Windon read the names of the alumni who died durThe presentation also ing the past year. A moment of silence was
of my passions is
.
featured the announcement observed.
•
le art,'' Ringhand said,
of the names of the Rio
Alumni attending in addition to those in reunion
Grande students who will classes were:ttending: 1937 Alfred Wolfe; 1941 John
explaining how she decidbe spending the 20 10-20 11 Lodwick, Eloise Buckley Loqwick; 1943 Charles
ed on her topic. When
fall semester in Wales Humphrey; 1946 Betty Dean Chevalier, Horace Karr;
Ringhand was five years
studying at Trinity College 1947 Delores Epple Holter; Woodrow Mora, William
old, her grandmother introin Carmarthen, Wales. Rio Sorden, Dayton Spencer, Cleo Weber Smith, Robert
duced her to needle art.
Grande students have the Wood;
Later in life, she worked
opportunity to spend a
closely on needle art pro1948 Bertie Lou Prince Polley, Betty Linn Burton,
) jects with her mother-in- stitching pattems. noted wem both very populru· in semester in Wales each
Kathleen Torence Morris
law, Arline Ringhand, and the influence of the Celtic Wales. Samplers were year through an exchange
Grover White, Howard Wolfe; 1949 Charles F.
gained a great interest in culture and learned a great used as teaching tools for program between Rio King; 1951 Howard Larkins. Harold Newell, Forrest
and
Trinity Rhodes, Thelma Smith; 1952 Betty Nelson Newell,
the many different types of deal about Welsh history young women who were Grande
learning about needle art. College.
needle art projects and through her work.
Margaret Groce Cauthorn, Betty Smalley Reid; 1953
In southern Ohio, she and quilts were used for
Also during the presen- Emma Ritchie Rhodes, Zetah Buckley McCain, John
stitches.
tation, audience members
For her research project, visited with people such as cQmfort and warmth.
Guinther, Luella Riebel Thomas
In
her
research. were
treated
to
a
Ringhand looked at the Etta Altizer, who is from a
1954 Frona Bissell Riffle, Richard Gaul, Donna
Carving
history of Welsh needle art, Welsh-American family Ringhand found that many Lovespoon
Smalley Young, Nara Wolfe Hartman; 1956 Roger
and then studied what hap- and is very involved in of the cultural traits and Display by Laura Jenkins Epple, June Ridenour Epple, John Riebel,Sr. Dallas
styles of quilting and nee- Gon.ln. Laura Jenkins
pened with the needle art needle rut.
Marks; 1957 Sue Lambert Quigley, George Morrison,
dle art in Wales came \Vith Gorun creates beautiful
has
some
beautiful
"She
styles when the Welsh
Marion Sloter, Don Van Meter, Kathryn Windon,
migrated to southern Ohio. examples of quilts from the settlers to southern Welsh Love spoons (they Lelia King Windon.
are known as Jenkins
area,'' Ohio.
the
She traveled to Wales to do around
Hanging baskets of flowers donated By Bob's
"And
these
traditions
are
Lovespoons) and the audiRinghand
said.
part of her research, while
Market,
Mason,W.Va. were given as door prizes.
Early Welsh needle art still alive and well here in ence members enjoyed
also conducting a great
seeing her different items.
deal of research work in came out of necessity and southeast Ohio,'' she said.
As part of her project,
For information on the
function, Ringhand said, as
southern Ohio.
In Wales. she visited the needle art pieces were Ringhru1d even designed presentation by Madog
and stitched a sampler by Faculty Fellow Darlene
people who are inter- needed by the families
Around the time that the using Welsh quilting styles Ringhand, call Jeanne
d in needle art and
people
began and an antique Welsh sam- Jindra at (800) 282-7201.
amined historic and cur- Welsh
On the Internet at
rent Welsh needle art migrating to southern pler as a theme.
"It is awesome," said www.rio .edu.
pieces. She looked at the Ohio, quilts and samplers

~e

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�PageC6

iunba:p ~ime~ ~~entinel

Sunday,June13,2010

Colgate Country Showdown comi~g to Point Pleasant
REGISTER STAFF
MDRNEWS~MYDAILYREGISTEA.COM

SubmiHed photo

Bluegrass band Open Rail features, from left to right, John Cardwell, Pup
Williams, Perry Cardwell, Brian lson, Don Titus.

Open Rail brings
bluegrass to the Ariel
Bv ToM CoNsoLo
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

GALLIPOLIS - Your
grampa may know the
tunes, but don't expect
your grampa's bluegrass
music from Open Rail.
The Gallipolis-based band
comes to the stage of the
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre
for a Summer Bluegrass
Series - three concerts
on the third Saturdays of
June, July and August.
The series kicks off at 8
p.m. June 19 at the historic Ariel-Dater Hall.
Open Rail has been
together for only about
two years. At first, the
band's members just got
together to jam in the living room of bass player
Perry Cardwell. It wasn't
long, though. before "we
figured we ought to get
out and play for people,"

said
guitarist-vocalist
Brian Ison.
Also this summer,
besides the series at the
Ariel, the band will perform at 2:30 p.m. July 3
as part of the Point
Pleasant
Sternwheel
Regatta at Tu-Endie-Wei
State Park, and they'll
return to the River
Recreation Festival, playing at 6:30 p.m. July 4.
The summer concerts
- the other Ariel shows
are July 17 and Aug. 21
- aren't Open Rail's first
at the Ariel. They performed as part of the
Down Home Gospel Sing
in May. Lora Snow, the
Ariel's Artistic Director,
said she was happy at the
response then and is
excited to have the group
back. She said the group
already has been booked
for a Christmas show on
Dec. 18.

Snow said Open Rail
was interested in making
the Ariel its home base.
"We're hORmg they'll be
the- Ariel's 'house band,"
she said. "We're just
going to let it grow.''
Snow said that, even
though the Ariel was
restored primarily as the
home of The Ohio Valley
Symphony, she's happ) to
see other groups in the
historic theatre. She noted
that. beside OVS dates.
there are still nearl) 350
nights a year available.
"The Ariel is there for
everyone, and we're
committed to vanety,"
Snow said. "We just want
performances to be quality events and that definitely includes Open
Rail." she said.
For ticket information,
visit arieltheatre .org or
call (740) 446-ARTS
(2787).

POINT PLEASANT.
W.Va. - The 29th annual
Colgate
Country
Showdown is coming to
Point Pleasant.
WBYG "Big Country
99" will host the America's
largest country music talent search and radio promotion. Approximately
$200,000 in cash and
prizes will be awarded
nationwide. including the
grand prize of $100,000
. cash to the national winner.
presented at the National
Finals held in Nashville,
Tenn.
Designed to find the
most promismg country
music talent in the United
States for the past 29 years,
the Colgate Country
Showdown gives aspiring
artists a chance to launch
their professional careers.
Thousanqs of perfonners
compete annually for the
Country Showdown title.
Each year, hometown
talent contests sponsored
by over five hundred local
radio stations across the
country. pave the road to
stardom. Local winners
advance to over 40 state
contests where the prjzes
include $1 .000 in cash and
the opporturrity to compete
at one of five regional contests in the fall. The five
regional winners receive
an~expense-paid trip to the
National Finals to compete
for $100,000 and the coveted National Title.
"We consider the Colgate
Country Showdown one of
the most anticipated events
in CQtmtry music each
year," Tom Payne, WBYG
on-air personality said. "It
is an exciting community
event that provides aspiring
artists in our area an opportunity for state, regional,
and national exposure
while promoting a greater
appreciation of. country
music. We are pleased and

proud to join the Regatta
Committee. Peoples Bank
and Angell Accounting as
local sponsors in the 29th
Annual Colgate Country
Showdown."
Open to vocal and/or
instrumental performers.
the Colgate Country
Showdown
welcomes
individual acts or groups
with up to seven members
to compete. Acts also must
not have perforrned on a
record chatted in the top
I 00 country format of
Billboard, Radio and
Records, or the Gavin
Repo1t within 18 months
preceding local competi, tion. A $ 15 entry fee is
required of all acts entering
the Showdown competitions produced by participating country music radio
stations. To ensure fairness. a uniform judging

system i:-. used on all levels
of competition.
To enter Big Country
99\ Showdown. a CD
must be submitted to the
station by close of business
oJYJune 18. Only 12 finalists will be chosen to
pete during the
Pleasant
Stern
Regatta on Friday, July 2 at
6:30 p.m. Monetary prizes
will be given to the top
three, with· the winner
advancing to the State
Competition
in
Parkersburg.
Jesse Crav.;ford of Apple
Grove was last year's winner in the Colgate Country
Showdown held at the
Point Pleasant Riverfront
Park.
For more information,
call 304-675-2763 or ~·isit
the
Web
site
at
www.wbyg .com.

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�------~--~-=--------~-

Dl

~unbap ~itrtes - ~entinel

Sunday,June13,2010

•
on mart
ann weather has many people looking to lighter
fare full of seasonal flavor. Salads and fruit plates
have their place. but, with the right ingredients,
it's possible to indulge in a satisfYing sandwich
that is big on taste but not on calories.
Bethenny Fnmkel. celebrity natural food chef and author of ·
'The Skinnygirl Dish: Easy Recipes for Your Naturally Thin Life,"
s the skinny on ho\\ to make sensible sandwiches that you'll
.•
veto eat. Using Pepperidge Farm Deli Flats thin rolls. Frankel
has created three delicious sandwiches that each total to 200 calories
or less.
'·Pepperidge Farm Deli Flats thin rolls offer a soft, wholesome
and delicious taste in a figure-tiiendly portion. I love recommending them to frie1,1ds and clients,'' said Frankel. ''At I 00 calories and
five grams of fiber pe.r roll, they· re a good foundation for everyday
healthy eatmg and an Important part of makmg smarter sandwiches,
better burgers and more."
With four varieties to choose from - Soft I 00% Whole Wheat.
Whole Grain White, 7 Grain and ne\' Soft Honey Wheat - you
can create an endless menu of smart, delicious sandwiches.
For more information, visit www.pepperidgefarm.com.

W

..

•
Grilled Chicken Club Sandwiches
No more boring lunches ... instead you can sen·e this
savon chicken sandwich. accented with ai'Ocado and
bac01~. Its a great way to revitali:e leftover chicken.
Prep: 10 minutes
Makes: 2 servings
2 Pepperidge Farm Deli Flats Soft 100% Whole
Wheat thin rolls
2 tablespoons mashed avocado
1 slice bacon, cooked and crumbled
4 slices refrigerated fully-cooked grilled chicken
2 slices tomato
2 leaves red lettuce
Split each roll into 2 layers.
Stir avocado and bacon in small bo-..\•1. Spread half the
avocado mixture on each bottom layer. Divide chicken.
tomato af!d lettuce between bottom layers. Top with top
layers.
Nutritional Values per Serving: Calories 196, Total Fat
6g, Saturated Fat Ig. Cholesterol39mg, Sodium 52lmg,
Total Carbohydrate 2lg, Dietary .fiber 6g, Protein 17g,
Vitamin A 7%DV, Vitamin C 6%DV. Calcium I%DV,
Iron 38%DV

•
...

Mediterranean
Vegetarian Sandwiches
You won I miss the meat in these mouthwatering
sandwiches that feawre a scnunptious combination ofeggplant. hummus a~dJeta cheese.
Prep: I 0 minutes
• Broil: 5 minutes
Makes: 2 seT\ ings
2 Pepperidge Farm Deli Flats 7 Grain
thin rolls
6 slices eggplant, 1/4 inch thick
Olive oil cooking spray
2 tablespoons red pepper-flavored
prepared hummus
2 tablespoons crumbled feta cheese
•
ace eggplant onto bakmg sheet. Spray eggplant
with cooking spray.
Heat the broiler. Broil the eggplant4 inches
from the heat for 5 minutes or until the eggplant
is br0\\11Cd, turning the eggplant over halfway
through broiling.
Split each roll into 2 layers. Spread half the
hummus on each bottom layer. Divide eggplant
and cheese between bottom layers. Top with top
layers.
Nutritional Values per Serving: Calories 158,
Total Fat 4g, Saturated Fat lg, Cholesterol6mg,
Sodium 289mg, Total Carbohydrate 26g. Dietary
Fiber 9g, Protein 8g. Vitamin A I%DV. Vitamin C
4%DV, Calcium 8%DV. Iron 9%DV

•

Pesto Thrkey
Sandwiches
Lookingj(Jr a wav to ja:z up a turkey sandwich?
Tl)' this easy rwpe that uses prepared pes to and
peppery m-ugu/a to tllrn ordinary turkey sandwiches
into something real(\ special.
Prep: I 0 minutes
Makes: 2 servings
2 Pepperidgc Farm Deli Flats Whole
Grain White thin rolls
2 teaspoons prepared pesto sauce
2 teaspoons mayonnaise
2 slices roasted or deli turkey breast
2 slices tomato
6 leaves baby arugula
Split each roll into 2 layers.
Spread half the pesto and halfthe mayonnaise
on each bottom layer. Divide turkey. tomato and
arugula between bottom layers. Top with top
layers.
.
\'utritional Values per Sening: Calories 200, ·
Total Fat 8g. Saturated Fat lg. Cholesterol23mg.
Sodium 28lmg. Total Carbohydrate 21g, Dietary
Fiber Sg, Protein 15g, Vitamin A 4%DV. Vitamin
C 3%DV, Calcium YloDV. Iron 9%DV

I•

�------------~--....
=~cu~.-~..~-~~~~-.~,~----~--~~~--~--------~--------------~------~------~--~------~~~--~----------------~~--~

Page 02 • &amp;unbap ~im~ -&amp;entintl

Sunda~Ju n e1 3, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

--~----~------------------~
\!Cribune - Sentinel - l\egigter

. .rr
~

l.
~

CLASSIFIED

mdtclassif~d~·~v~!n~1ribune.com

•J:ol

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

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Sentinel
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Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 •
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44s-aooa
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234 •

{)utlliru
Word.Ads
Display Ads
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRII.E AN AD
Successful A4s
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

*POLICIES*

Ohio vaney
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
&gt;Errors Must
eported on the II
ay of publica!'
nd the Tribun
ntinei·Register wil
responsible for n
ore than the cost o
he space occupl
y the error and on
he first insertion. W
hall not be liable fo

mission
of
·sement.
orrectlons wUI
ade in the f1rs
vailable edition.

Form Equipment
EBY,
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will
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i
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Recreati.onal
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Campers / RVs &amp;
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740-446-3825

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lost &amp; Found

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Real Estate
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==-=-=-=-==

Have you priced a John
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In M e mory

You can shed tear' that she 1' gone
Or you can smile be~ au c she h,l, lhed
You can dose your eyes and pra) that she\\ ill
come b.tck
Or you can open your eyes ami sec all that she
ha' lett
I
'Our he.trt ••m be empty hecausc you can 't sec
her
Or you can be full of the lm c that ) ou 'hared
You can tum your back on tomornm' and h\e
yestc:rthry
Or you •·an bc happy for tonronow becau'c of
' ) c'tcrday
.
You ~an remember her and lllll) thai 'he 1s
gone
Or you can chcnsh her memo') .md let it lhe
on
You c.tllll) .md close your rnrnd,
he empty ;md turn your back
,
1Or you rnndo \\hat 'he \\ould \\ulll.
,nule. open )l&gt;ur C)Cs,lme and go on.
Da' id Harki n'

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REGIONAL FLEET
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u..:.-.......,...,_.

In Memory

Lo'e you,
Murshn and Ken &amp; Families

Security

opportunrhes
you
AliT
may prck up an
Free Home
application at any
Security
Health
Westbrook
$850 Value
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w ith purchase of
may also apply on alarm monitoring
line
at services from ADT
www.westbrookhealt
Security Services.
h.com or by e-mail at Calll-888·274-3888
jtyre@ westbrookheal
Tox / Accounting
th.com

NETWORK

-------------'i11
She is Done

Drivers

Health

Scr ap
Metals
Basement
Recycling, Inc. wrll
Waterproofing
be closed Monday unconditional lifetime
June
21st.
thru
~uarantee. Local
Fnday June 25th for re1erences furmsh,ed.
6000
Employment employee's vacatron. Es·abhshed 197 5. Call
We will reopen on 24 Hrs 740' 446-0810 •
Monday, June 28th.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofrng.
Help Wanted we are sorry for any
General
Inconvenience
this
lawn Service
Thank ~~===~~
Dnving
Instructor may cause
You
Cal
for
FREE
needed
Must pass
Estimate
Lawn
background
check
rctu res a
moNing and weed
work
eve/weekends
have been
eat.ng.
740·388Drop resume off at
Gallipolis AAA offrce or p laced In a d s a t 0320
tax attn AI 740-351
the G a llipo lis
Other Services
0537
Daily Tribun e
Pet Cremations. Call
must b e picked
M edical
within 30 days. 74C-446-3745
Overbrook
A
· t
Rehabilitation Center is
ny pte u r e s
OlSJi
currently
acceptrng
t hat are not
resumes
for
the
p icked up will
Save up to 40% off
posrtlon of activity
be
your cable bill! Call
drrector. The qualified
discarded.
d ish Network
appl:cant Will possess
today! 1-8n-274the
followrng ~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=
2471
reqUirements:
Must
Wonted
have strong written and
oral
communication
Lifelock
skills.
must
have J &amp; J Pamting
Are You Protected?
excellent organrzational Interior/exterior
washtng An ident ity Is stolen
skills knowledge of power
MDS and State Federal homes garages barn. every 3 seconds.
regulations. must be Free Est. have ref. Call Llfelock now to
creative and have 304·812-7689
protect your family
experience working 10
free for 30-days! 1an actrvrty program or
877-481-4882
LAWN
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POUCIEG Ohio \IIIIey PubD~ng - ... lht light to edll. rtjeet. or cencel any ld It any Irma Error• mU81 ~reponed on the ft111 day of piAlllccUon and tr.
Trlb~ttlllllf.fle911« w11 be rMpOMlb!tlol no morerr.n rr. CIOII oftr. ~occupied by the error and onfy tt.llrlt hanlon. Wt ar.M not ~ loable let
any lOa 01 ~ thllmuta tram the putllialllon or 0t118fion ot111 ed'&lt;llt1811Mn1. ComctiCrl wlD be tudtln rr. lll'llnaiiiOII ec!l!lOI\ • Box IU'Ilbel edt
we ttft!'l conlldn•l • C11rtnt r. . CIIIC &amp;~~PIIea. • All ltll atilt ldwertfendl lit IUbjlcllo tht Fed..t Fair Houtlll!l Act ot t eel • Thll ~ •
11CQ9t1 only hl!p Mrttd ldt 1!14tllng EOE ttrodara Yit w1ll not knofi1119ly Ketpl lll1'f ldnrtislng In ~biiiiOrt Cllhe ln. VI I not ~ ~tilt Jot any
errors In., lid ta~ttn O'cer the ph011t

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Rodney Village.
740·446·4543.

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Borders$3.00/ per ad
I!1

Daily In-Colum n• 9 : 00a.m .
All Dls play1 12 Noon 2
Mond ay-Friday f o r Ins e rt ion
Buslnes• Days Prior T o
In Next Day'• Paper
P u blication
Sunday I n .Column: 9 :00 a .m . Sunday DhJplays 1 : 00 p.m.
Frid ay For Sunday$ Paper
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A k~yword o IJiclade Complete
Oet&lt;rlptlon • ll'ldude A Prke • Avoid Abllrt~atoont
o lnducle Pllone Number And Address Whea Needed
o Ad1 Should Run 1 Ollyt

Apartments/
Townhouses

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD HOTlCED

applications
for
vanous
vacancres
from individuals who
obta1ned
a
have
Bachelors
Degree.
Job opportun•tres are
ava1lable 1n Wood
County as well as the
other
counties
Westbrook &lt;Services.
If you are rnterested
1n being considered
for any of these
In Memory

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Win!
1·888·582·3345
SEPTI C
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
E\·ans Jackson, OH
SCQ-537-9528
In Memory

Dear ;!unt Bernice:
It still seems impossible. after a year
gone b), that GOD ha~ lakcn you.

And though your life on earth is pas!. in
HEAVEN 11 starts anew.
You'llli\e lor all etcm•ty.ju\t ns GOD
has promts~d )OU.

And though )Ou·,e \\alkcd through
flhi\\ r:.r-:·s gate.
We arc nc\'l!r far apart.

for e\cry tunc we chink of )llU, You're
nght hen:. deep\\ ithin our hearts.

Lmc ond ~1 tss )OU,
Your Niece
MuJnnl! Joe

AMERICAN TAX
BELIEF
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 In
back taxes call now
for a free
consu ltation. 1-8n_
258 5142
400

Financial

Financial Services

CREDIT CARE
,
BELIEF
Buried in Credit
Card Debt?
C:all Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877-264-8031
Money To lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Oh1o
Divtsion of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments or
tees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1866·278·0003 to learn
rf the mortgage broker
or lender 1s properly
licensed. (This is a
public
setVice
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishrng
Company)
600

Animals

Pets

Hoy, Feed, Seed,
Groin

CKC Cocker Spaniel
puppies, black &amp;
buff, vet checked,
shots, tails docked &amp;
dewclaws removed.
asking $250, call
304-882-2440
or
304_674_5966

Seasoned
cow
manure dirt for sale,
ground ear com, S7
a hundred, 740-9922623, 740-992-2783
--- - - - -Standing hay on
Goldridge Rd .. 740Free. fann kittens 992-2648
friendly.
good
hunters. 1 M, 1 F 4 900
Merchandise
mo. old, 740·992-'
7312
------Appliances
Free
kittens.
all ~~~~~==
colors call 740-949- NC 23,000 hke new
3408 leave message must have 220 hookif no answer
up $175.00 304-882~--....,.--~~ 2539
PLEASE
HELP! ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=
found 13 abandon
Miscellaneous
kittens, all colors. ~~=---~~;;;;;;;;;;
Jet Aeration Motors
healthy. will pay to
repaired , new &amp;
have
spayed
or rebuilt In stock. Call
neutered, 740·416·
Ron Evans 1-8000799
537-9528

Shih-tzu
puppres.
livestock
healthy &amp; playful,
good
compan1on,
Bulls
&amp; parents on premrses,
Angus
Heifers. High EPD's , $150. 740-992·5939
Over
40
yrs. 5yr. old long/hair
performance
chihuahua
female
selection.
Top tanlwht
304-773bloodlines for growth, 5883
milk
&amp;
carcass. - -- -- - Priced
reasonably.
Agriculture
Call (740) 286-5395 700
or (740) 418-0633.
Form Equipment

FutonJbunkbed
full
bed,
combo,
30x31 Jeans, scrubs
S,M L,
m1crowave,
740-441-7224.

Hioo

Recreational
Veh1cles

~~~~;;;;;;;;;;
~

ATVs
Talon GSR 150 Rail
Buggy asking $975
740-379·9515. 740339-2043.

2000

Automot1ve

;;;;;;=~A;;;ut;;;;o•s=~~
07 Cadillac CTS
Automatrc
power
wrndows, am/fm CD
Black 22,800 miles
$17000.00 304-675·
4849
Burgundy
1993
Cad1llac
Deville.
excellent condition,
50K miles, $5300,
1995 AWD
Ford
Aerostar v an. 155K
miles, S1000, 740 •
•
446 2624
- - - -..........~
3000

Real Estate
Sales

-===--==
Houses For Sale •
3 bedroom, 2 bath,
located on the corner
&amp;
of • Second
Worchester St near
Hubbard's
greenhouse
in
Syracuse. All major
appliances included.
Newly
installed
heating &amp; cooling
unit.
Contains
a
recently constructed
20x24 srngle vehicle
garage.
Interested
buyers may contact
us at 740-992·1820

Pets

STIHL Sales &amp; Se1V1Ce
Now
Available
at
Carmrchael Equrpment
Found small black 740·446-2412
male dog on St. Rt. =~~~~~~
218. 740-256-1337
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Groin
Free kittens
good home.
446·4052

to a
straw,
7406122

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

The family of
Jerry Johnson
would like to th~nk
enryone for their prayers
&amp; support.
Your
thoughtfulness
will ahl·ays be
remembered.

Robert "Bob''
Jeffers
90th Birthday
Celebration
June 19,2010 '
1:00 ·4:00pm

se

�Sunday, June 13, 2010
Houses For Sale
For
Sale
By
Auctio n : 31 Evans
Gallipolis,
Heights,
3bd/1 ba,
1368sf.
This property selling
via the BID NOW
SYSTEM. For local
call
Jim
info
Schmidt, Advantage
of Ohio Reality, 740·
354·5593,'
call
Hudson and Marshall
66·539-9552 or
to
..
toHouseAuction.c
om for details.
land (Acreage}
Gallia Co. wooded
16 acres $16.500 or
5 acres home sites
$22,900. Meigs Co.
Reedsville 10 acres
$17,900 or wooded
60+acres
$65,900.
More@ www. brunerla
l1d.&amp;Qm or call 740·
441-1492,
We
finance I
l ots
acre land on
Morning Star Rd.,
Racine Oh., elect. is
1n place, No mobile
homes, $16,000 call
740-949-2498
3500

Real Estate
Rentals

6unbap ~ftnti -6tntfntl • Page 03

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

A partments/
Townhouses
Twin Rivers Tower Is
accepting applications
for watting list lor HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675-6679

New 2br. apt. WID
Hookup, app inc.
Rio/Jackson
area
$525.mo +dep. call
740-645-1286.
Middleport 1 &amp; 2 br.
furnished apt., No
pets, dep. &amp; ref.,
7 40-992·0 165
Middleport
Beech
St., 2 br. furnished
apt., utilities paid, No
pets, dep &amp; ref, 740992-0165
BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2
BR APTS., Jackson
Estates,
52
Westwood Dr., 740·
446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
This institution ·is an
equal
opportunity
provider
and
employer.
Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446-1599.
Houses For Rent ·
1 BR, nice, PP area.
$325·
Homestead
Realty. Ask for Nancy
675-5540, 675-0799.
2br. house $275.00
per/month + ulit. dep
&amp; refer. no pets.304·
675-4874

MONDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

3 Br, house, $550.00
mo. Gallipolis area,
call Mike 740-853·
1101

Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive
#113
Bidwell, Ohio 4561
740-446-3344
TOO: 1·800·750·
0750
This institution is a
equal opportunity
employer.

Nice 1BR house in
Gallipolis.
Walk to
everything you need.
Very clean unit, with
new paint, $275 per
mo/$100 sec. dep
Sorry no pets, Call
Wayne
for
information 404·456·
3802.
BR, Rodney area,
WID, ref, stove inc,
NO pets, dep &amp; ref,
req'd. Call 740-4461271 or 740· 7091657.
Home for Lease in
Rio Gande city limits.
2 story, 3200 sq ft.
Rent $1500. Call
740-645-3980 for an
appointment
&amp;
applications.
cedarvalleyestates. n
et

1Brlbath apartment
nice across Post
Office No pets No
smoking
Deposit
304·675-3788 After
5P.M.
2 &amp; 3 BR houses for
2BR APT.Ciose to rent in Gallipolis, 1
Holzer Hospital on SR small dog ok in some
160 C/A. (740) 441· locations, references
0194
&amp; security deposit
reqUired.
740-446·
CONVENIE:NTLY
&amp; 3870
LOCATED
AFFORDABLEI
2 BR Duplex-644
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or 2nd Ave $450/mo
deposit
&amp;
small houses lor rent. plus
Call 740-441-1111 for utilities. Stove and
application
&amp; refrig. W/d hookup
information.
no pets. One year
References.
Free Rent Special lease.
446-0332 9am to
Ill
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and 5pm Mon-Sat.
up, Central Air, WID
hookup. tenant pays New 2 br. 1 1/2 bt
electric. Cal' 'Jetween washer &amp; dryer Town
house . 1 mile from
the hours of 8A-8P.
siver bridge. Rent
EHO
tim VIew Apts.
$575. Call for an
(304)882-3017
application 7 40·645·
•
1 BR and bath. first 5785

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

Houses For Rent

For Rent: 3br 2 bath
Double wide w!large
yard Rt 2 North near
Flatrock Fire Dept.
months
rent
&amp; 3 br., $425 a mo., 1 304-895·3129 ·304·
deposit. references br apt, $350 a mo., 675-7770
required, No Pets 3rd St., Racine, 740- Taking applications 7
and clean. 740-441· 247-4292
miles out Lincoln
0245
Pike, 2 story, 3 BR, 1
BA,
utility
room,
Announceme nts
Announcem e nts kitchen,
DR,
2
porches, nice yard,
feshly
painted,
13th Annual Gallia County
propane
heat,
Amish Schools Benefit Auction
includes water &amp;
June 19,2010
trash.
No
indoor
Directions: TakeS. R. 141 appro.ximately 10 pets, month to month
mih:s West of Gallipolis, or -10 miles East of $500, 1 yr lease
$475 + $500 dep.
Ironton on S. R. 141
Call740-256·1106

'

From Rio Grande. Oh: Take SR 325 South
approximately 6 m1les. then tum left on SR
141'. go I mile to Gage School
SALE STARTS AT 9:00A.M.
Lots ol \Old Oak and Cherry Furniture.
Bedroom Suites, log bedroom suite. Dining
Room Tabes and Cha1rs. Heart· Bench, Oak
and Cedar Chests, Toy chest, Hickory
Rockers. Handmade Clocb, Shelves, Storage
Barns. Outdoor Swmgs and Gliders. Lots of
wood m1scellaneous craft items. Two
ponies.
QUILJS SELL AT 1:00PM.
FURNITURE AND QUrLT SALE WILL
TAKE PLACE UNDER TENT WITH
SEATING PROVIDED.
Lunch Stand· Homemade lee Cream,
bar-b-que chicken and hamburgers.
Bake Sa/e.
ALL DONATIO!\S &amp; CONSIGNMENTS
\\ELCOME
For more information please contact one of
the Following: John Keim. Abe Miller. Ervin
Hershberger
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

4000

Manufactu~ed

Housmg

Rentals
For rent 2br, 14x70
all electric. 5 miles
from Holzer. Call
740-441-5141

2BR Mobile Home,
Water, sewer, trash
No
pets.
pd.
Johnson's
Mobile
Home Park. ,446·
3160

N1ce, 3 Bedroom
trailer for rent 10
Bidwell, all electric,
small porch, storage
building
,$400renV$400dep,
taking applications.
call740-446-4514.

Rentals
Small 2 br. mobile
home in Racine,
$225 per mo., $225
dep., 1 yr lease, No
pets, 740-992-5097

Ann ouncements

--Announce m e nts

FRANCHISE
OPPORTUNITY
You may qualify to own

Sales .

NEED
A
NEW
HOME? we help with
financing
many
programs for most
credit situations Call
for appt. 304·736·
3888.MODULAR
HOME with 2-car
garage will custom
build on your lost call
Clayton
Homes
B'ville
304-7::1::1HOME

PETLAND GALLIPOLIS
• AGreat Location (Next to Walmart)
• Complete Training
• Exclusive Products
• Financing Assistance for Qualified
, Candidates

Call (800) 221-5935
for more information
www.petland.com

He lp Wan ted
6000

Auc tion

Auction

Auction

REAL ESTATE &amp;
PE RSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
Saturday.Ju!) 10-IO:OOa.m.
4 1037 St. Rt. 692. Albany. OH
DI RECTIONS: From Rt. 32'50 west of Alhen,-8 mtb to Albany.
tum ea,;t on Rt. 68 t, go 5 1111les, 1um on Rt 692 to Page\ ille .6 mile.
house up h1ll on right. From Pomeroy-13 miles, take Rt . t43 to
Harrisonville, right n.m on Rt 684 toRt. 69::!. hnu~e up on hill on left.
watch for sigrs.
RF.AJ, EST.\TE sells at "1001\ 2.65 acres :'-111!. 1836 sq. ft.
manufactured home in e-.:cellelll condition "ith 6 roonh. 2 full baths
(living room. dinmg room. kitchen-open to famil) ro,lm w1th YoO&lt;xl
burning tir.:place. 3 bedrooms). vaulted ceilinp. ne" ro1&gt;t &amp; back
deck with handicap ramp on block basement with double car garage.
Tuppers Plain&gt; Yoatcr. Meig&gt; Schook T ER"S: Bl'YI:-~RS
PREMIUJ\1-10 &lt;"&lt; • Do\w pa)ment of $3000 on auction da),
balance in full at dosing and deh'cf) of deed 1\lllun 30 da)s.
Possession \\ithin 10 davs of closine. Sold \\lth O\\ner\ consent.
Selling as is Ill pn:sent conditiOn. linancing if needed must be made
prior to auction. &lt;ts \\CII ,._ any mspec·ti!llls. Propcr1) sells \\lth no
contingencies
Call for appointment to see this proper!).
OPEN HOLSE: Sunda), Jun~&gt; 27 .1. t :30

Help Wa nted

Employment

Child/ Elderly Care

Care-giver
needed
for lady, 48 hrs. Sat
morn till Mon morn,
Need ref. 304-675·
7273 call 9am-to
1pm.

CARE
TAKER
WANTED looking for
a care taker assistant
for
an
enjoyable
in
elderly
male
Cheshire, ref please,
serious inq. only 740·
794-0707

WANTED:
Part-time position available to assist
individuals with developmental
disabilities in Middleport: 8a-3p
Sat/Sun. Must have high school
diploma or GED, valid dnver's
license. three years good driving
experience and adequate automobile
insurance. $8.97/hr. after training.

Send resume to:
Buckeye C""""'"'"
P.O. Box 604, J ackson, OH 45640.

Ah.o Selling: Vehicle~ &amp; Camper • Golf Cart. Riding Ln\\ n
Mower, Toob, Antiques &amp; Collectibles, Household Fumishings &amp;
Miscellan.:ou~

ESTATE of Carolyn A. Perr) .
:\lleigs Count) Case #20101054
AUCTIONEER I REALTOR:

John Patrick "Pat" Sheridan
AUCTIO:-.IEERS:
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd. Mike Bo) d , Brent King Email:
ShamrockAuction@aol.com
WEB: WW\\ .shamnx:k-uuctions.com

'@
--

Deadline for applicants: 6/17/10.
Pre -employment drug testing.
Equal Opp01tunity Employer

Item

PH: 740-59_2-~0 or 800~419-91 22

[B

Alhrns

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDS I

�- ~ --~·~--------------_...

__
Sunday, June 13, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Page 04 • 6unbap ~ime~ -6enttne1

\[rtbune Sentinel l\.egister

MARKETPlACE

CLASSIFIED

Help WantedGeneral

Drivers &amp; Delivery
COL Driver needed
must have good
MVR.
Pulling
contarners, 740·4168377.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

DRIVERS-

SOLO AND TEAM
Fl:.ATBED DRIVERS
•TOP PAY, FULL BENEFITS
•DEDICATED FREIGHT
• EXCELLENT EQUIPMENT
Canadian Admissible a Plus!

~;r:,_~:,;;_A[~
888-771-0838
www.systemtrans.com
Auction

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

Auction

Auction

PtJBLIC AUCTION
Owner i s moving out of state.
(A few neighbors have added items to this auction.)
SATURDAY, JUNE 19,2010 at 9:00a.m.
Located at 1607 Summitt Road, Vinton OH
Directions: From Gallipolis 11.5 miles St. Rt. 160N to
Summitt Road, go 1.5 miles home on the right. Watch for
signs.
5000 Ford platform ll&lt;ICtor (diesel). Mitsubishi D 1300
tractor (diesel), 4 ft. finish mower. John Deere scrapper
blade. 54 in. Husqvarna riding mower. Wisconsin 3
bagger mortar mixer. Briggs and Stratton portable mortar
mixer. 6 ft. brush hog. guns. Craftsman 3 ton floor jack,
Craftsman 5-drawer with cabinet tool chest. Craftsman
4-drawer tool chest, Craftsman tO-drawer tool chest,
Craftsman 3-drawer toolbox. MBC (Snap-on) 6-drawer
tool chest, Craftsman 230 amp arc welder. Craftsman 3
hp 10 in. compound miter saw, Craftsman 16 gal. 6 hp
wet or dry shop vac. Craftsman drill bit set, slide
hammer set. shoveb. spades. hoes. rakes. mattocks,
chains. air hoses. battery cables, step ladders. Central
Machinery 12 speed heavy-duty Drill Press. 2200 psi gas
powered \.~·asher. misc. tools. Proto 3/4 ratchet, sockets.
Wright sockets. breaker bar. extensions. 21 pc. Import
3/4 12 point socket set (up to 2in).large pipe cutter. semi
air hose. Ingersoll-Rand compressed air filter. Cummins
l/2, hp grinder, Task Force by Delta!O in. band saw. fire
extinguishers. Cooper 4ft. shop lights. Black and Decker
automotive sander. boat winch. 1/2 hp electric motor.
hydraulic pipe bender. Jet 4 in. round metal pipe band
saw. 10000 lb. capacity overhead hoist canier (heavy
aluminum). 2 ton chain cumalong (tugit). Blackhawk
porto-power, push and pull porto-power, 1/4. ton Yale
overhead electric chain hoist, Am il-vice. Jabsco new
boat toilet. Burgess propane bug fogger, Pmter Cable air
operated nail gun. hitch extension, misc. paint supplies, 3
ton jack stands. Northwest laser level tripod. crmvbars.
36 in. wood clamps. sledge hammer. misc. battery drills.
Cobra CB. 30000 lb. portable utility winch: oxygen and
acetylene tanks with cart: drill bits: pipe cutters, car
manuals. large c clamps. 90000 btu natural gas unit
heater for shop (with piping;o install). Buckeye 235 coal
stove (brick lined). Mercury 50 h.p. boat motor, I nvader
12 foot flat bottom boat, Evenrude 9.5 and 5.5 hp boat
motors, Motorcycle carrying rack and more.
Roper washer, bar stools. desk. roll top desk. dc~k chairs.
6-drawer white dresser. kitchen island. Sunbeam
apartment refrigerator. Kenmore small freezer, patio
tables. lawn chairs. Sony 65 inch High dcf. TV (approx.
4 yrs old) and more.
AUCTIONEER Finis "Ike" Isaac
Licensed in state of Ohio.
Terms of Sale: cash or good check with ID.
Not responsible for accidents or lost items.
Pictures and more details are a·vailable on
Auctionzip.com. Phone: 740-388-8741

Auction

Auction

Regional Dump and
Pneumatic
Tanker
Drivers R&amp;J Trucking
Co. 111 Manetta,OH IS
searching
for
COL-A
qualified
drivers for regional
dump and pneumatic
tanker
positions.
Management /
ory;;i;;;:;;;:;;;;;
Qualified applicants -==S;;:;ui;;pe•rv=is..
must be at least ~
23yrs hav~ a min. of Dietary Manager &amp;
1 year of safe Aides Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
commercial driving
Center,
an
experience in a truck.
HazMat cert. clean Extendicare facility
MVR &amp; good stability. located in Pomeroy,
We offer competitive is searchmg for an
benefits &amp; 401 K &amp; experienced Dietary
Manager.
This
vac. pay. Contact individual will be
Kent AT 800-4629365 to apply or go responsible
for
to
maintaining,
trending. and making
www.rjtrucking.com
EOE
recommendations for
nutritional
needs.
Previous
Food Services
management
seeking experience,
are
COM
We
oriented and certification in
career
Safe
are
individuals
that Serv
required.
Dietary
demonstrates
teamwork,
is Aides We are also
important to their and searching for Dietary
the
company's Aides to assist in
nutritional
sucess. Your need servrng
to be result onented meals and snacks to
that is achieved thru our residents! We
your ability to be have both full and
focused
and part-time
organized. The team opportun1t1es for AM
that you manage is and PM shifts. =am
successful by a wm, great wages and
win atmosphere. We enjoy our excellent
offer vacations. 401 k, benefits! Interested
wages based on candidates
results, uniforms and contact:Andi Ayres,
E·Mail:
meals. If interesrted Recruiter
contact by E-mail at aayres@ extend1care.
www.dobrit7@ aol.co com Fax: 414-908·
m office fax at 7-740- 7204 Or apply in
or
in person
at:36759
446-3400,
person at: Burger Rocksprings
King 65 Upper River RoadPomeroy, OH
Road Gallipolis, Ohio 45769 Extendicare
Health Servrces, Inc.
EOE
is
an
equal
opportunity employer
Help Wantedthat
encourages
General
workplace diversity.
RESCARE · HOME
CARE Enjoy caring
for
the
Elderly?
Caregivers needed
Pt.
Pleasant/Leon
Area.
Good pay,
benefits.
Drivers
required.
license
Flexible hours.
1866-766-9832 or 1·
304-766-9830.
_
N_
o_
w--h-i-rin·g-F~fT

position, ability to
handle
animals,
people,
general
office duties. Must
be able to work
flexible
hours
(evenings
and
weekends)
submit
resume at Riverbend
Animal Clinic 1520
State Route 160
Gallipolis,
Ohio
45631
$300 monthly car
bonus, free gas &amp;
dinning cards. s2ooo
monthly
morgage/rent bonus.
weekly pay. dental &amp;
much more. 3 minute

4

~ e;~age:

Auction

On SITE AUCTION

Group!
.
.
'd. .f..
.
Terms: cash or check wtth posittve 1 cntt tcatton.
Auctioneer is not responsible for accident~.
Announcements Made at auction take precedence over
all printed material.

is
now
RHDD
accepting
applications
for
Honest. Caring &amp;
Compassionate
individuals to work
with developmentally
disabled adults in the
Athens County area.
Immediate opening
for Male Staff
·Health Benefits·
• Pard Time OW
• Employer Paid Life
Insurance Policy·
Must have a valid
drivers license and
High School Diploma
or GED.
Application
forms
ava1lable at:
5 Depot Street, Suite
103
Athens. Oh 45701
RHDD will provide all
Necessary training
.---..,..F=IN...,.D~-...,

EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Auction

Friday, June 18th
6:00pm

June 18,2010 5:30P.M.

Bring a friend, a chair. and a good appetite a~ the food
will be Served by United Methodist Church Women's

Medical

Estate Sale

706 Art L ewis Drive, Middleport. Ohio 45760

Note: Identification is REQUIReD to re~ister!

212-990-

wwwFreeGasFreeFo
od.com

Auction

We have been commissioned to sel l the following
Items:
Large collection of toy horses (one looks like Silver
from~ the Lone Ranger). 2 old horse bridles. old miners
pick. Carbide carrier. old miner's lamp. Lawn Buy
lawmnower, 1983 PONTIAC Bonneville 135.000 miles
(clean car v6. 4 door). railroad items, large mirror,
Home Interior. old rolling pin. glass pic pan!&gt;, Club
Aluminum pots, police scanner. wa~hcr &amp; dryer (like
new). rcl'rigerator. microwave. tabk and chairs. end
tables. lamps. couch. chairs. \'acuum, llatware. blown
glas~. oil lamps, sewing machme. twin beds. f~ll size
beds. dressers, chest of drawers, cedar chest. pillows.
blankets. toweb. cos!llme jewelry. cross stitch table
scarves. Ox yoke. tools and many more to come .. .
Auctioneer: Billy R. Goble Jr.
Lie.# 1379 in fav~r state of Ohio
Phone:740-416-1164
Email billyriggsolboygoble@yahoo.com PHOTOS A
MUST SEE At: www.auctionzip.com (my# is 5548)

Doctor's office needs
enthusrastic, detail·
oriented person with
computer skills who
works
well
with
people and is a team
player. Will train.
Send resume to •
The Daily Sentinel,
PO Box 729·30,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Located at the Ann ets Building
108 Liberty Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631
(From Pomeroy 12 miles south to R1ver
front llonda, rurn right. From Pt.
Pleasant. W\ take Galllpolis e:-;it. turn
left. J/8 mrle. rutn left. Watch for signs)
Furniture: 3 Pc Bedroom Suite. Chair.-,
Love Seat, Cabinet. TV. Washer &amp;
Dryer, Desk, Lamps, chest o1 drawers.
~ora.

\lise: Pictures. Fenton Glass. Dishes,
Stone Crocks. Hamilton Stone Jar.
Clock. Golf Clubs. Cross BO\~. Tools
This is JUst a small listing. Come and see
evcr)thing we haw'! Pictures can be
viC\\Cd at WW\\,auct ontip.com
Auction conducted By:
Broken Spoke Auction Services
John \-\.Leach, Lie. ln Ohio &amp; West
Virginia
Cheshire, OH
'
(740) 367-0123
Term: Cash or chcd. with IJllsitive 10.
All sales arc final. Not responsible for
loss or accidents No smoking permitted.
Food will be U\atlablc for purchase.
Announcements the day of sale take
precedence over any printed material.
Viewing is hidily at I ;00 pm until start
of sale.

Medical
Nursing
Opportunities
Rocksprings
Rehabil itat1on
Center,
an
Extendicare facility
located in Pomeroy,
IS
currently
Interviewing for a
LPN
Nurse
Supervisor to work
full time day shift
The
LPN
Nurse
Superv1sor
will:
Perform
as
a
licensed care giver
and
assume
responsibility
and
accountability
for
assigned
residents/patients for
a shift of duty.
Provide nursing care,
including medication
administration,
through coordination,
implementation, and
evaluatifln of the
resident's/patient's
plan
of
care.
to
the
Adhere
standards of care for
the area, manage
the environment to
maintain
resident/patient
safety, and superv1se
the resident/patient
care
activity
performance
by
nursing assistants.
Follow
all
Extendicare policies
and
procedures.
Perform duties as
defined by the State
Nurse Practice Act.
And other duties as
assigned.ln addition,
we are searching for
full and part-trme
State Tested Nursing
Assistants to work
full or part-time on all
shifts. We offer an
industry
leading
salary and benefits
package:
Dental
Insurance
Vision
Insurance
Paid
Holidays
401 K
Sick
Vacation
S2,500
Annual
Tuition
Reimbursement
Interested
candidates contact
Andi Ayres. Area
Recruiter
E·mail
aayres@ extendicare.
com Fax: 414-9087204 Or apply in
person
at:36759
Rocksprings
Rd
Pomeroy. OH 45769
EOE

PUBLIC
NOTICES
PUBLIC
NOTICE
ROAD PETITION
The undersigned
freepetitioners,
holders of said
county residing in
the vicinity of the
proposed Improvement hereinafter described,
respectfully represent that the public
convenience and
welfare require the
VACATION of a Various unnamed Patriot Village alleys
on the line hereInafter described,
and make application to you to institute
and
order
proper proceedings
in the premises for
such
vacating
roads, the same not
being a road on the
State Highway System.
The following is a
general route and
termini of said
roads:
Being all that part of
unnamed streets/alleys In the Village of
Patriot, Sections 34
and 35, Township 5,
Range 16, Perry
Gallla
Township,
County, State of
Ohio, more particularly described as
follows:
Alley 1: Beginning
at the northeast corner of Lot ~5 in said
Village; thence West
along the north line
of
Lots
35,36,37,38,39,40,53
,54,55 and 56, 1023
feet to the northwest corner of said
Lot 56; thence north
16.5 feet to the
north line of said
Village also being
the north line of an
unnamed
alley;
thence with the
north line of said
Village and said unnamed alley, East
1023 feet to a point
in the west line of
an intersecting unnamed alley (now
known as Cricket

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Free Estimates. call
740-853-1474.

Trail Road); thence
leaving the north
line of said Village.
South 16.5 feet to
the said northeast
corner of Lot 35
being the place of
beginning.
Alley 2: Beginning
at the northeast corner of Lot 55 in said
Village; thence East
16.5 feet to the
northwest corner of
Lot 54; thence with
the west line of said
Lot 54, South 171.6
feet to the southwest corner of said
Lot 54; thence leaving said Lot 54 and
with the north line
of Gage Road, West
16.5 feet to the
southeast corner of
said Lot 55; thence
leaving said Gage
Road and with the
east line of said Lot
55, North 171.6 teet
to the said northeast corner of Lot
55 being the place
of beginning.
Alley 3: Beginning
at the northeast corner of Lot 39 In said
Village; thence East
16.5 feet to the
northwest corner of
Lot 38; thence with
the west line of said
Lot 38, South 171.6
feet to the south·
west corner of said
Lot 38; thence leaving said Lot 38,
West 16.5 feet to the
southeast corner of
said Lot 39; thence
with the east line of
said Lot 39, North
171.6 feet to the
said northeast corner of Lot 39 being
the place of beginning.
Alley 4: Beginning
at the northeast corner of Lot 37 in said
Village; thence East
66 feet to the northwest corner of Lot
36: thence with the
west line of said Lot
36, South 171.6 feet
to the southwest
corner of said Lot
36; thence leaving

said Lot 36, West 66
feet to the southeast corner of said
Lot 37: thence with
the east line of said
Lot 37, North 171.6
feet to the said
northeast corner af
Lot 37 being the
place of beginning.
Alley 5: Beginning
at the southwest
corner of Lot 25 in
said Village; thence
East with the south
line of Lots 25, 26,
27 and 28,359.7 feet
to the southeast
corner of Lot 28;
thence leaving said
Lot 28 and with the
west line of Cricket
Trail Road, South
16.5 feet to the
northeast corner of
Lot 21; thence leaving said Cricket
Trail Road and with
the north line of
Lots 21, 22, 23 and
24, West 359.7 feet
to the northwecorner of said L
24; thence Nort
16.5 feet to the said
southwest corner of
Lot 25 being the
place of beginning.
.Note: All of the vacated above becomes the taxable
property of the adjacent property owners at the time of the
granted vacation.
The Commissioners
will view the road
on Thursday. June
24th. 2010 at 11 :30
am. All persons interested are hereby
notified to be and
appear before the
Board of Gallia
County
Commissioners at the Galli a
County Courthouse
for a final hearing
on Thursday. July
1st, 2010, at 11 :00
a.m. to give testimony hearing upon
the necessity of va·
eating said road
and whether the
prayer of the petitioners should
granted.
June 13, 20,2010

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

•
•

,
•
~

•

•
•

•

IMMEDlATE OPENING
District Circulation
Sales Manager
Responsibihtie~

mclude recruitbg Jnd

traming carriers. customer sen t~c and

meeting salt's goab. If you ha1c ,t posit11e
attitude. arc self-&lt;,taner. and a team phl)er v.~
would like to talk to )OU. ~lu't be dependable
and ha\e reliable transponation. Po,nior
offers all comprul) benefih mc!uc ng health .
dental. \tsion and lite tnsur.tnce.
-!0 IK, paid \acation. and per,on,ll dav~.
Please send resume to:
PA\1 C.\LD\\"El.L
Gallipolis Dail~ Tribun~
825 Third A\'e. • Gallipolis. OH 4563 I
Or email to
pcald\\ ell@ heartlandpublications.com

BULLETIN BOARD~
Will Power
Tumbling

Gallipolis Lions
12th Annual
Golf Tournament
Thursday, June 17, 2010

Cheer, Jump &amp;
Tumble Clinic
June 21st 23rd

Cliffside Golf Course

740-441-1570
Pomeroy
Church of Christ
Welcomes

The Branches
June 13th 5 pm
Everyone Welcome
212 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH

Sign-up deadline
Monday, June 14
Return to:
PO Box 436
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: 446-7822

' I

�&amp;unbap ~tmu -&amp;enttntl • Page 05

Sunday, June 13, 201 0

BLOND IE

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Ticks off
6 Easy gaits
11 Grown-up
12 Vietnam's
capital
13 Sub
tracker
14 Overturn
15 Pistols
and rifles
17 Glimpse
18 Launchpad event
22 Bouncy
tune
23 Parking
attendants
27 Mosque
faith
29 Ham's
device
30 Cover, in
a way
32 River Of
Arizona
33Walking
sound
35 - Abner
38Tidy
39 Perfect
41 Pens for
hens
45 Suspect's
story
46Mumbai's
nation
4 7 Stopwatch
button
48Wee

JOSEPH
2 Wedding
words
3 Amusement
4 Arizona
city
5 Walk with
pride
6 To date
7 Dr. Ore's
music
8 Low bills
9 Muscle
quality
1 0 Flank
16 Fall mo.
18 Radarscreen
dot
19 Kudrow of
"Friends"
20 Friend
21 Paving
slab

24 Fix copy
25 Mosaic
piece
26 Bath
need
28 Like a
bright
night
31 Fish eggs
34 Unspoken
35 Deceitful
person

36 Goofing
off
37 Island
garlands
40 Lincoln
nickname
42 Poem of
praise
43 Sewing
aid
44 Put into
words

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (check!m.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1, P 0 BoK 536475, Orlando, FL 32853·6475

11

DOWN
1 Rural
mothers

HI &amp; LOIS

)

Wl-\'1' ARE' yol)
PU-r-riNC:::.A

FL-AG OrJ '(0\J!"t

Brian and Greg Walker
~Ll-r'iOu.AL.WAYG

THE LOCKHORNS

IV..vti1. A 61G FL-AG
ON '&lt;'OIJR PORCr\.

William Hoest

MAn... ~o&gt;&lt;.,MR.
WAvt:..RING&gt; '?

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell
THE
RAN OUT
OF THINGS
TO TEACH!

·)
•,.WHAT ARE MY WEDDING VOWS

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

4

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"'"''*'*"''l""'C....OfJlf""

"Mommy! PJ's startin' to create
another disaster!"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
June 14,2010:
This year, increasing your security
becomes a very high priority.
Understand that an element of the
unexpected runs through your life,
especially professionally. You can harness this energy and use it. Become
more creative and dynamic in your
ideas. Some of you might want to forge
a new career or one that is home-based.
H you are single, your charming ways
and wit draw many potential suitors.
Choosing the right one for you is
important. Don't commit until you are
sure you are with the right person. If
you are attached, communication is the
path to a better relationship. Know that
there is more to communication than
just words. LEO makes you laugh.
111£ Stars Show the Kh-td of Day You'll
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average;
2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
**** Unexpected dfmands come
in from out of left field. Stay on top of
your responsibilities, even though you
could be busy and overwhelmed.
Know when enough is enough. Let
your creativity float later today.
Tonight: What would prove to be most
fun?
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20)
****Keep communication flowing. You are often associated 'Arith the
calm and staid, and are able to respond
to some unanticipated behavior better
than many people. Maintain a sense of
humor. Tonight: Happy at home.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
***Take a strong stand.
Understand what is happening finan.
dally. Don't allow a current of unexpected events to hit your checkbook.
Avoid putting yourself in the position
of losing funds. Tonight: What begins
as a chat could go way into the wee
hours.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
***** Keep reachi.ng out for
more information, even if you don't
enjoy the answers. How you handle an
issue and what happens could be most
rewarding in the long run. Tonight
Join a friend or two.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
**If you feel off, maintain a low
profile. You might wonder which way
to go with a difficult situation. The
unexpected keeps coloring a relationship. Get to the bottom, to the essential
issue, to see if it is resolvable. Could
dominance or control be an issue?

Tonight Doing your thing.
vrn.Go (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
**** Use the daylight hours for
key projects, meetings and interactions.
Still, what becomes apparent is that
those around you express an unpredictability. Your exceptionally grounded manner is a high-ticket item right
now. Tonight: Vanish if you can.
LIBRA (Sept 2.3-0ct. 22)
***Others count on you appearing on time. You might not like the end
results if you don't surface as agreed.
What becomes apparent at this point is
that associates just won't put up \vith
anything other than the expected.
Toi-Ught Out with friends.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
****You come up with solutions
out of the blue, so mudl so that you
might even surprise yourself. Your caring does count, even if someone
doesn't respond as you would like.
Don't make it a big deal. Remember,
people e~l'ress caring as they want to
receive caring. Tonight: It could be a
late night.
SAGITTARllJS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Associates, partners and
others in general seem detennined to
have it their.way. The smart Sag will let
others have their way while going off
and pursuing another interest. Tonight:
Be imagi.{lative.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
****Others come forward with
new ideas, which might even be better
ones. Loosen up and worry less about
what is going on around you. Your
sense of humor comes out when plans
get tossed in the air. Work with the
unexpected. Tonight Someone wants
your time and attention.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
**** Pace yourself, though an
opening might occur for extra work or
making money in a new fashion. You
will be able to incorporate this extra
demand into your life. A friend or
loved one needs some personal lime.
Tonight: Go with cl different suggestion.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
****You might feel lucky.
Certainly you pull the wild card fmancially. understanding the p~s and
minuses of a risk could be very important A brainstonning session provides
many more options than you are aware
or. Tonight: Slow dov.&gt;n, for your sake.

****

]acquelir~e Biga,. L' 011 t}~P Intemet
at http://tr'IL''W.jat:qrtelirld.Jigttr.cvm.

�PageD6

iunbap ~times ~ienttnel

Sunday,June13,2010

ExTENSION (ORNER
as the 1870s in the castem U.S.
Serious outbreaks have
Have you notice~ ~he
drying up and defollat1~n been reported in past
of white oak leaves m years in the forests of
Indiana.
your backyard or forest Wisconsin.
areas?
Kentucky and Ohio. The
Look for the tell-tale wasp has two generations
signs of small pin head per year and the first gensize oak leaf galls found eration is composed
on the underneath side of entirely of parthenothe leaf formed by the genetic females that arise
gall making wasps of the from overwintered galls
family Cynipidae. There that Ii tter the ground.
are over 800 different These females lay eggs in
species of insect gall- early spring on swelling
makers that can' affect leaf buds. The resulting
oaks.
light tan. pinhead-sized
The three most com- blister galls
mature
mon inelude: "Jumping rapidly and release the
Oak Gall" produced by second generation that
the wasp, Neuroterus has males as well as
saltatorius; "Oak Button female wasps.
Gall" produced by the
The mated females lay
wasp. N. umbilicatus; eggs on expanding leaves
and a small, fuzzy, ball- to give rise to the galls
like gall sometimes that are currently being
called the "Fuzzy Oak found. They appear parBall Gall" that is pro- tially imbedded in the
duced by the wasp, N. underside of leaves.
verrucarum.
Eventually. these galls.
What is unusual is the drop to the ground once
large numbers of galls the wasp larvae have
being reported through- completed their maturaout southern Ohio that tion. The larvae can
are produced by a single cause tne galls to jump
oaJl-making wasp genus. around like Mexican
the "Jumping Oak Gall" jumping beans. thus the
wasp. The three afore- common name.
mentioned wasp species
It is assumed this
cause very similar symp- behavior helps the galls
toms white oaks. The to drop into cracks in the
galls found on the under- soil where the larvae
side of the oak leaves pupate inside the gall.
produce corresponding Although this gall may
chlorotic leaf deforma- cause serious injury to its
tions on the upper leaf white oak hosts. there has
surface. Jumping oak been little research on
galls are the f!lOSt 1'\0~ori­ effective
controls.
ous for causmg senous Research has shown that
leaf damage and defolia- white oaks leaf-out later
tion.
in the spring tend to be
The b.lister-like spots less affected presumably
on the upper leaf surface because the first generaturn from yellow to tion is unable to effecbrown and heavily galled tively target the new
leaves may drop from the leaves.
trees. The wasp has been
The
descriptively
described in the literature named circular, creamyas a non-native invasive
species and the galls have
been reported as far back
Bv HAL KNEEN

G A f~ D E N I f\; c; W I T H

c: H A H. L l E

Selecting Tomato Varieties
Bv KATHY BoNo~BORIE,
GUEST COLUMNIST

the season and won't quit
until the weather turns
too hot or too cold to sustain fruiting and growth.
(Family Features) How you will use the
With store-bought tomatoes nearly devoid of fla- fmit. When selecting a
vor, growing your own is tomato variety. keep in
the best way to truly mind what you plan to do
savor the taste of this with the fruits. There are
vegetable that captures varieties suited for just
the essence of summer. about every purpose But with thousands of eating fresh. making
tomato paste. canning,
varieties available from cherished heirloom drying even · for
types to the hottest new grooming into a county
hybrids - how do you fair prizewinner.
Seeds or transplants.
narrow your choices?
Ripening
time. If The easiest way to get
you're buying seed~ to your tomato patch started
start your own plants , is to purchase young
read catalog descriptions plants, also called transcarefully to discover plants or starts. You can
"days to maturity." This pick up plants at garden
indicates approximately centers or order them
how soon you can expect through catalogs or the
ripe fruit once you've Internet.
transplanted seedlings to
That said, starting your
the garden. Plants sold at own seed gives you an
garden centers are often almost endless list of
labeled "early," "midsea- varieties to choose from.
son," or "late'' to indicate allowing you te get just
when the variety should the type that will suit
ydur growing conditions
start ripening.
Determinate
vs. and tastes. Starting seeds
Indeterminate. gives you a chance to
Determinate plants stop exercise your green
growing once the flower thumb earlier in the seabuds emerge. Because of son. and nurturing plants
their more restrained size, from seed to harvest is a
many determinate vari- rewarding experience.
Plant seeds six to eight
eties need no staking or
caging, but providing weeks before the last
support can improve the frost date for your region.
quality of the fruit. All the and place them under flufruit ripens within a rela- . orescent lights. Contact a
tively short period of time nearby Extension Service
- usually about a week office or your local
to 10 days. This can be a weather service to find
boon if you're canning, out your last spring frost
but for the gardener who date.
Disease resistance. By
prefers to have a fewer
number of tomatoes over planting tomato varieties
a longer period of time, with built-in resistance to
indeterminate varieties diseases. you can have a
are a better choice. The bit more control over
vines continue to grow · your garden's success.
and set fruit throughout
For instance. many

Forestry workshop
set for June 24 at
Symmes Valley H.S.
WILLOW WOOD A forestry workshop will
be hosted by the USDANatural
Resource
Conservation
Service
and ODNR Division of
Forestry at 6 p.m. on
Thursday, Juen 24 at
Symmes Valley High
School. Landowners that
are interested in caring
for their forests and
obtaining financial assistance should attend.
"Woodlands on private
lands
in
Lawrence
County exceeds 70 percent and is often thought
of as not needing any
care" according to Ralph
Crawford, district conservationist for NRCS.
Woodlands can have
resource concerns that
need addressed just like
other
land
uses.
Landowners that want
the maximum out of their
woods may need pr~c­
tices such as grapevme
control, crop tree release
or invasive species control.
Woodland resources
and concerns can best be
identified working with
an
ODNR
Service
Forester and developing
a
Woodland
Improvement Plan. Perry
Brannan, ODNR s~rvice
forester. will be one of
the speakers at the workshop. Brannan is a graduate of Ohio State
University with a bachelor degree in forestry. He
has worked with ODNR
for 14 years and in south-

east Ohio for the past
four years.
"This workshop is a
great educational opportunity on how you can
care for your woods and
enhance the benefit it
provides for you and
your family." he said.
Carmichael Equipment
will
be
sponsoring
refreshments and will
have a display at the
workshop.
Landowners that are
interested in attending
the event, please RSVP
to the Lawrence Soil and
Water office at (740)
867-4737.

tomato vru;eties are resistant to soil-borne diseases
such as Verticillium and
Fusarium
wilts and
nematodes. Most seed
catalogs indicate resistance to these diseases by
putting F (Fusarium). V
(Verticilliuin). N (nematodes) after the variety
name. You'll also see
varieties with resistance
to viruses such as tomato
mosaic virus (T). and to
Alternaria (A), the fungus
that causes early blight.
Talk to a nearby
Extension Service office
or to other home gardeners to find out if any
tomato diseases are common in your area.
For more tips and garden information visit
www .garden .org
(Aformerjloral designer and interior plalltscaper. Kathy Bond-Borie has
spent 20 years as a garden ~·.:riter!editor, inclttding her current role as
Horticultural Editor for
the Narional Gardening
Association. She loves
designing with plants,
and spends more time
playing in the garden planting and trying new
combinations - than sitting and appreciating it.)
I

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. live,
stock report of sales from June 9, 2010.

Feeder Cattle-Steady
. '275-415 pounds. Steers, $90-$125, Heifers ..$85$120; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $90-$1 l.S.. Hetfers.
$85-$117; 550-625 pounds. Steers, $88-$112.
Heifers, $85-$105; 650-725 pounds, Steers. $88$100. Heifers, $85-$100; 750-850 pounds, Steers.
$88-$95, Heifers. $85-$95.

Fed Cattle
Choice. Steers. $87-$91.25. Heifers. $85-$88;
Select. Steers. $75-$86, Heifers. $75-$85;
Holstein. Steers. $0-$68.

Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed. $57-$67; Medium/Lean,
$54-$58; Thin/Light. $30-$53: Bulls, $51-$75.

Back to Farm
Cow-Calf Pa.irs. $450-$1000; Bred Cows, $450$685; Baby CalYes. $30-$240; Goats, $32-$125.
Manure to give away. Will load for you.

Upcoming specials
June 16- Ohio Approved Feeder Sale. 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits. Contact
Dewayne at (740) 339-0241. Stacy at (304) 6340224, or Mark at (740) 645-5708. or visit the Web
site at www.uproducers.com.

\

Ratllll Poolli Spa Center
www .ratliffpools .com
1412 Eastern Avenue Gallipol~, OH
(740)~6579

Never, Never

white oak button galls are
similar in size to the
jumping oak galls: however. these galls are
affixed to the lower leaf
surface with a small pedi
cle-like attachment.
galls have rounded
making them look .
tiny buttons. The tannishbrown fuay oak . ball
galls produced by the
wasp. N. verrucarum.
look like tiny. fuay b.alls
attached to the lower leaf
surface. As noted. these
galls as well as t~e button
galls produce ra1sed. yellow spots on the upper
leaf surface. The symptoms on the upper leaf
surface may be mistaken
for jumping oak gall;
however. it remains to be.
seen if these gall-makers
will produce the same
significant injury.

•••
Take time to clean up
around your yard. garden
·and garage. Pull the
weeds while they are •
smaller. Just I0-15 minutes a day of weeding
nO\\ •will save a lot •
effort in the futu
months and allow th
"good" plants to grow
stronger and bear more
flowers and produce.
Old equipment in the
oarage can be refurbished, sold or perhaps
thrO\vn away. If you want
to help our em ironment.
take time to help clean up
the Ohio River by participating in the Ohio River
Sweep. June 19. One
location
is at
the
Pomeroy levee. see you
there!
(Hal Kneen is the
Agriculture &amp; Natur.al
Re:iources Educator for
kfeig.\
County
and
Buckeve Hills EERA,
Ohio -S1a1e Unilwsity
Extension.)

3-G EXCAVATING

Excavation work
~
includes...
. ~~-Driveways- .L and Clearing
-Ponds -TrenchingReclamation &amp;
much more
740-590-3700- Manuel
740-590-9255- Danny
740-590-3701- Mike

FREE
ESTIMATES.'

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