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                  <text>On this
day in
history …

OHSAA meet
under way
in Columbus.

Decoration
Day in
Meigs Co.

OPINION s 4A

SPORTS s 1B

FEATURES s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 22, Volume 49

Kickin’ Summer
Bash is coming
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The week immediately following
the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival belongs to Kickin’ Summer Bash, which takes place June 12-13.
The bash kicks off with a boat race beginning
at noon. The race offers a monetary purse of
$250, with each winning boat receiving money
for either first, second or third place. The first
place winner will receive $125; the second
place winner will receive $75; and third place
will take home $50.
Anyone wanting to sign up for this race may do
so starting at 11:30, with the race beginning at
noon on the levee. Anyone with questions about
race rules can stop by the Chamber of Commerce
ofﬁce or can call 740-992-2239.
Saturday events start at noon as well, with free
inﬂatables available all day for kids. Also at noon
the Kids’ Bicycle Decorating Contest/Parade will
start, with kids as old as 12 lining up at the corner
of Main and Lynn streets at 11:45 a.m. with their
best decorations. There will be two age groups for
the bicycle race. Age group one will be kids 2-7,
and the second age group will be ages 8-12. The
winners of both groups will either receive $25 for
ﬁrst place, $15 for second place or $10 for third
place.
Beginning at 1 p.m. is the Kids’ Pet Talent
Contest on the amphitheater stage. Pets must be
dressed in summer attire to compete. There will
be three judging categories, with prize money for
each category. The ﬁrst category will Owner LookA-Like, the second category is Most Talented and
the third category belongs to the audience in the
form of People’s Choice.
At 2 p.m. the “We Got Talent II” contest will
begin with young people presenting their talent.
If you are up to 17 years old you may participate,
with the winner receiving $50, the second-place
winner receiving $25, the third-place winner
receiving $15 and the fourth-place winner receiving $10.
Another event is “Let’s Make A Deal,” where
anyone can present unusual items when they are
asked for, and whoever presents has a change to
receive money and prizes. The game begins at
4:30 p.m. at the amphitheater.
The Kickin’ Summer Bash committee invites
all pleasure boats to join the Boater’s Light
Parade, which begins at 8:30 p.m. in front of the
amphitheater. Participants can win prize money
for their decorations and lights, with more
lighting meaning a better chance of winning.
The winning purse is $200, with the ﬁrst-place
winner receiving $100, the second-place winner will receive $50 and the third-place winner
will receive $25, with People’s Choice, or fourth
place, receiving $25.
See BASH | 6A

Sunday, June 7, 2015 s $2

Relay for Life event

Photos by Dean Wright | Daily Tribune

Relay for Life teams raise money throughout the year to support the American Cancer Society to prepare the medical field in its fight
against the disease. Teams walked First Avenue and sidewalks closest to the riverfront in City Park and up to the bandstand before
returning to their starting point on First Avenue.

City Park hosts
20th annual event
By Dean Wright

“I had thyroid cancer
and they operated on me
on my 62nd birthday. I was
GALLIPOLIS — City
laying on the gurney and I
Park played host Friday
said, ‘This was a heck of a
evening to Gallia County’s way to spend my birthday.’
20th annual Relay for Life That was the ﬁrst time I
in support of the Amerirealized that I was going
can Cancer Society and
to die some time. I never
cancer battle research.
would have believed it
The event opened with before,” he said. “(While
a survivors’ celebration,
I was lying) there before
registration and dinner
they wheeled me into the
at 4 p.m. sponsored by
(surgery room), I realized
Drs. Alice and Eddie
life is short. I decided then
Dachowski. The pair pro- to retire and spend the rest
vided all food and beverof my life supporting the
ages for the meal.
good of people.”
Tony Gallagher, 75, GallTinna Diddle, of Sunny
lipolis City Commission
93.1, served as mistress
member and twice survivor of ceremonies and invited
of cancer, noted the imporFred Williams, a local chaptance of Relay for Life to the lain, to lead the ceremony’s
Gallia County community
invocation around 6 p.m.
and the necessity of celebratRelay for Life is well known for honoring cancer survivors who led
ing cancer survivors.
See RELAY | 4A the first of four walks around the southeast side of City Park.
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

Medical Mission continues through Thurs.
Courtesy photo

Event is free, open to everyone in
Mason, Meigs and Gallia counties

The Kickin’ Summer Bash kicks off with a boat race beginning at
noon. The race offers a monetary purse of $250, with each winning
boat receiving money for either first, second or third place.

By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 5A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Track: 1B
Baseball: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 6A
Classified: 4-5B
Comics: 3C

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com or
mydailysentinel.com
and visit us on facebook
or twitter to share your
thoughts.

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Animal Care Special Susan Farrell helps wash equipment that aids
in spay and neutering operations. About 10-12 spay and neuters are
done a day, depending upon which operation is done. According to
Frank Gorscak, Meigs County Emergency Response Coordinator
and volunteer, spays take longer than neuters because they are a
more internal operation.

OHIO VALLEY — The Ohio River Medical Mission will
continue until Thursday, June 11, with volunteers and staff
reminding everyone that no one will be turned away because
of their age, address, income level or insurance situation.
ORMM medical services are available at Meigs
High School, 42091 Pomeroy Pike, in Pomeroy, and
veterinary services will continue at the Thompson
Roush Building, located near the front of the fairgrounds at 41850 Fairgrounds Lane, right across the
highway from the Meigs High School.
All mission services are free to any person who
decides to come and are provided by trained medical,
dental, vision and veterinary professionals. There are no
appointments, and services are provided on a ﬁrst-come,
ﬁrst-serve basis, with limited slots available each day.
See MISSION | 4A

�LOCAL

2A Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
ROBERT KARL CHRISEMER
GALLIPOLIS — Robert “Bob” Karl Chrisemer,
71, of Gallipolis, went to
be with his Lord on Saturday, May 30, 2015, at
Holzer Hospital Hospice.
He was born April 28,
1944, to the late Karl
Chrisemer and Hilda
Nibert (Delmar) Quickel.
He married Hazel Mash
on May 22, 2002, in Kentucky. He was an active
member of Old Bethel
Church in Middleport.
Bob worked most of his
life as a professional
painter. He served in the
U.S. Army in Germany.
He is survived by his
wife, Hazel; daughters
Lee Ann (Stevie White)
Chrisemer, of Gallipolis,
and Amy Chrisemer, of
Rio Grande; grandson
Cody Robert Massingo;
granddaughters Kristen
Brooke (Chris McCain)

Massingo, of Rio Grande,
and Kayla Bennett, of Rio
Grande; great-grandchildren Bentley Matthew
Massingo and Trevor Karl
Molihan, Brooklyn Coleman and Vayda Martin
Smith, of Tampa, Fla.;
best friend and cousin
Don (Carolyn) Carmen;
and special friends Nina
Butcher and Andy Stone.
Keeping with his lifelong wishes, his mortal
remains were donated
to Ohio State University
medical school.
A memorial service
will be 2 p.m. Saturday,
June 20, 2015, at the Old
Bethel Church located
at 28451 State Route 7
and Story Run Road in
Middleport.
Rememberances may
be made to Old Bethel
Church.

DARRELL ELLIS

JORDAN KIMES

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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
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elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

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at Travis Air Force
Base, Calif. He was
employed at Heck’s
Stores in Parkersburg and Point
Pleasant, W.Va., for
20 years. He and
Gladys owned and
operated a dairy farm
for more than 30 years.
He also welded and constructed trailers and farm
implements for many
years. Darrell was a member of the Little Kyger
Congregational Christian
Church. He will be sadly
missed by his family and
friends. Friends may call
from 6 to 8 p.m., June
7, 2015, at Heck Funeral
Home, Milton. Funeral
service will be held 1
p.m., June 8, 2015, at the
funeral home with Rev.
Gordon Rutherford ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
in Forest Memorial Park,
Milton. Online condolences may be expressed
to the family at www.
heckfuneralhome.com

GALLIPOLIS
— Darrell Malone
Ellis, 78, Ohio
passed away at
his home Friday,
June 5, 2015.
Darrell was
born September
24, 1936 in Scott Depot,
W.Va., a son of the late
Lyle and Millie Guthrie
Ellis of Ona.
He was preceded in
death by three brothers,
Bill, Bruce and Willard
Ellis and three sisters,
Virginia Rayburn, Edna
Kennan and Wanda
Ellis. He is survived by
his wife, Gladys Louise
Henry Ellis of 57 years,
daughter, Lisa Kay, and
son-in-law, Tim Reese,
a granddaughter, Erin
Renee Reese Hines and
her husband, Kevin, a
great granddaughter, Karlee Alyse Hines, a sister,
Romadeda Richardson
and several nieces and
nephews.
Darrell was in the Air
Force 1954 through 1957

Civitas Media, LLC

DALE WILLIAMS

Pool Masters.
He is survived
by his father Klare
Kimes; his mother
Tammi and Buddy
Stover; a brother,
Luke Kimes;
two sisters, Sara
McGlumphy and Erica
Waxler; paternal grandmother Paula Hollowell;
paternal aunt Regina and
Tommy Reed; maternal
uncle Terry and Dawn
Sayre; maternal aunt
Traci Sayre; maternal
great-grandmother Clara
Sayre; his girlfriend Jessica Queen; and several
cousins and friends.
He was preceded in
death by paternal grandparents Clifford and
Wanda Kimes; and maternal grandfather Charles
“Fritz” Sayre.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Tuesday, June 9, 2015, at
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home, Coolville, Ohio,
with Pastor Gene Goodwin ofﬁciating. Burial will
be in Eden Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home between
5-8 p.m. Monday, June 8,
2015.
You can sign the online
guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

REEDSVILLE
— Jordan Kimes,
25, of Reedsville,
passed away Friday, June 5, 2015.
He was born
Nov. 17, 1989,
in Parkersburg,
W.Va., son of Klare Kimes
and Tammi Sayre Stover.
He was a 2009 graduate
of Eastern High School,
where he played football
and basketball. He was an
avid Ohio State Buckeyes
fan, a member of Forked
Run Gun Club, a coal
miner and worked for

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GALLIPOLIS — Dale
M. Williams, 63, passed
away at 6:50 p.m. June 4,
2015, at her residence.
Born Nov. 17, 1951, in
Findlay, Ohio, she was
the daughter of the late
Jess and Freda Blazer
McGuire.
She was a homemaker
and enjoyed working in
her ﬂower gardens.
Surviving are her
ﬁve children, Teresa
Fooce and John (Patty)
McGuire, both of Gallipolis, Brenda (Steve) Simpson, of Oak Hill, Ohio,
Nick (Michelle) McGuire,
of Ray, Ohio, and Rusty
(Brenda) McGuire, of
Walker County, Ga. Williams is also survived by
a step-daughter, Clarice
Williams, of Tennessee.
Williams is survived by
18 grandchildren: Randall Fooce, Anna Fooce,
Jamie Fooce, Michael
Chandler, Walter Chandler, James Simpson, Lisa
Woods, Erica Williams,
Tyler McGuire, Merissa
Landreth, Christian Landreth, Krista Landreth,
Joey Durham, Mary Dur-

ham, Bo Durham, Shanna
Durham, Christopher
Hunt and Tyler Hunt.
She had several greatgrandchildren; one sister,
Nova “Jeannie” McGuire,
of Oak Hill; her long-time
companion Elmer George;
and several nieces and
nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her ﬁrst husband Roger McGuire;
second husband Charles
Williams; sister Anna
Riley; and brothers Willie McGuire, Chuck
McGuire, Jack McGuire
and Jimmy McGuire.
Funeral services will
be noon Monday, June 8,
2015, at Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Ofﬁciating will
be Pastor Donna Wedemeyer. Interment will be
in Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call between
6-8 p.m. Sunday, June 7,
2015, at the funeral chapel. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

DEATH NOTICES
AKERS
RACINE — Connie Akers, 42, of Racine, passed
away Friday, June 6, 2015, at Riverside Methodist
Hospital, Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, Ohio.
HUPP
WATERLOO — Mary Elizabeth Hupp, 51, died
Friday, June 5, 2015, in Waterloo.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.
LEFFINGWELL
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — William Lloyd Lefﬁngwell, 74, passed away Friday, June 5, 2015 at home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.
SPURLOCK
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Hal Dial Spurlock Jr., 76,
of Huntington, passed away Thursday, June 4, 2015.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Sunday, June 7, 2015,
at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio, by Pastor Brady Lipscomb. Burial will follow in
Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller, Ohio. Visitation will
be 1-2 p.m. Sunday, June 7, 2015, at the funeral home.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUN., JUNE 7

POMEROY — Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel,
RACINE — The Marlocated at 39589 St.
tin and Emma Sayre
Rt. 143 will host the
Reunion will be held at Allegheny Wesleyan
Star Mill Park beginCollege singing group
Rejoice at 11 a.m.
ning at 1:00 p.m.

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BUSINESS!

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Recorded Event Details Available at:
1-800-331-2644 Option 6

General Health Screenings (Bring RX)
'HQWDO�VFUHHQLQJV��FOHDQLQJV��VHDODQWV��ÀOOLQJV��
extractions, x-rays; no pain medications (Tylenol only)
Vision screenings (prescriptions for glasses/contacts, single-vision glasses)
Behavioral health screenings
All services are provided by trained medical,
dental professionals.
Any resident living in the area can receive
no-cost treatment. There are no age, income,
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60586327

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60581686

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hot Summer Nights begins

GALLIA LOCAL BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Gallia Local
Briefs will only list event information
that is free and open to the public.

Sunday, June 7, 2015 3A

galliacpr.org to ﬁnd out more and stay
connected for upcoming meeting and
event announcements.

Gallia CPR coalition Library hosting
sets hospital meeting safe driving class
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia CPR, Citizens for Prevention and Recovery, the
county’s ﬁrst response to substance
abuse prevention, treatment and
recovery, will meet at noon June 8, in
Holzer Hospital’s French 500 Room.
All Gallia County residents are invited
to attend and lunch is provided by
Holzer Hospital to all who RSVP by
email to Lee Bauman at lbauman@
winghaven.org . This coalition is
a group of concerned citizens and
agency providers who are passionate about prevention and education
efforts that helps stop drug activity
in Gallia County among youth and
adults. Visit their website at www.

GALLIPOLIS — A safe driving
class sponsored by the AARP in connection with the Bossard Memorial
Library will be noon to 4 p.m. June 12
at the library. The Safe Driving Program is a classroom driver improvement course for drivers age 50 and
older, although there is no age limit.
This program developed by AARP
can sharpen driving skills, help prevent accidents and keep older drivers
on the road longer and more safely.
Registration forms can be completed
by calling Bossard Library at 740446-7323. The cost of the class is $15
for AARP members and $20 for non
members.

VFW donation to Shrine Club

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR
CARD SHOWER
Dorothy Rippey will
be celebrating her 90th
birthday on June 6.
Cards can be sent to:
808 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH 45631. There
will be an open house in
her honor between 2-4
p.m. June 6 at Apostolic
Faith Church, 190 Vale
Road, Bidwell.
Lona Wamsley will be
celebrating her 105th
birthday on June 9.
Cards maybe sent to:
14 Grape St., Gallipolis,
OH 45631.
Mabel Halley will be
celebrating her 85th
birthday on June 10.
Cards may be sent to:

254 Lanes Branch Road,
Crown City, OH 45623.

with the Gallia County
Health Department.

EVENTS

THURS., JUNE 11

TUES., JUNE 9
GALLIPOLIS — The
Bossard Memorial
Library/Gallia County
District Library Board
of Trustees will meet at
5 p.m. at the library.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County Sheriff Joe
Browning’s volunteer
group of TRIAD/S.A.L.T
will meet at 1 p.m. in the
second ﬂoor meeting
room of the Gallia County Courthouse. Featured
speaker will be Tasha
Aldaro, registered nurse

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis Board of Zoning Appeals will meet at
5 p.m. at the Municipal
Building Conference
Room, 333 Third Ave.
The meeting room can be
accessed from the door
adjacent to 2 1/2 Alley.
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis Garden Club
will meet at 7 p.m.
in the fellowship hall
of First Presbyterian
Church. Becky Stump
will present the program
for the evening on rock
gardens.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 53.44
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.05
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 126.25
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.26
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.70
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 60.06
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 11.67
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.400
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.61
Collins (NYSE) —93.08
DuPont (NYSE) — 69.08
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.99
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.29
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.30
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 67.41
Kroger (NYSE) — 71.01
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 85.46
Norfolk So (NYSE) —92.51
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.20

Bud Hunt | Times-Sentinel

Hot Summer Nights actually turned out to be quite pleasant for those who attended the French Art
Colony’s first concert of the 2015 season on Thursday evening. Sam Stephens was the evening’s
entertainment treating the gathering to tunes on the keyboard and saxophone. Tuscany Cunni catered
the event held and craftsman from The Gallia County Artisan Market displayed their handiwork. The
series continues every Thursday evening through the summer. Admission is $5 and gates open at 6 p.m.

Courtesy photo

Bob Caruthers and Harold Roush, of the Mason W.Va., VFW, present their annual $500 donation to
Gallipolis Shrine Club president Doyle Saunders for the Shriners Hospital for Children. The Shriners will
be out in full force this weekend in Gallipolis and Rio Grande for their annual International Tabloid Days,
a campaign to raise awareness about the group’s mission and to raise money for the Shriners Hospital
for Children. The Gallipolis club last year raised about $6,000 during International Tabloid Days.

BBT (NYSE) —40.20
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.75
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.05
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.46
Rockwell (NYSE) — 125.17
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.04
Royal Dutch Shell — 58.34
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 40.74
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 73.06
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.27
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.13
Worthington (NYSE) — 28.26
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
June 5, 2015, 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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�LOCAL

4A Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Relay

Dean Wright | Daily Tribune

The Friday evening event saw individuals writing “messages to Heaven” on balloons before releasing them into
the sky to commemorate lost loved ones and friends.

Mission

operation needed for a
spay, so more spays may
mean fewer operations
From Page 1A
done in a day.
There is also a
Regarding veterinary
90-pound limit on aniservices, Frank Gorscak,
mals, and each animal
Meigs County Emergency coming for a spay or
Response coordinator
neuter will be assessed
and volunteer, said the
by veterinary volunteers.
fairground gates will con- Anyone having their dog
tinue to open at 8 a.m.
spayed or neutered must
every morning, with only bring a leash for a dog
10-12 spays and neuters
or a carrier for a cat, and
done daily, depending on may drop off their animal
which surgery is needed. and come back at a later
According to Gorscak,
time. Other services
the volunteer vets follow offered by volunteers are
a formula that every spay basic screenings, and
(female operation) is
Rabies and canine/feline
equivalent to two neuters distemper vaccinations.
(male operation) because All animals will be ready
of the deeper incision and to go home by 5 p.m.

Anyone receiving medical or dental care at Meigs
High School must ﬁll out
a form with every medication they are taking,
including herbal supplements. There are still
forms available for printout on the Ohio River
Medical Mission Facebook
page, as well as forms to
ﬁll out while attending the
event. There will be volunteers to help ﬁll out the
form for anyone needing
assistance.
Medical services
include general health
screenings, school sport
physicals, dental screenings, cleanings, sealants,
ﬁllings, extractions and
X-rays, vision screenings

in the survivors’ line. She had her
last cancer treatment March 1, 1997.
She was soon recruited for a relay
From Page 1A
team afterward. She walks to honor
her mother, friends and herself as a
Paul Koch and Boy Scout Troop
survivor. She wore a pink mustache.
2001 marched the American ﬂag
“I always told people I had it three
to the stage and led the Pledge of
time because it took (God) that
Allegiance. Karrie Davison led the
many times to get me to understand
relay’s oath
that I can make money,” Brown
“We conﬁrm that we are here to
shared with a laugh.
celebrate the lives of cancer surviBrown has supported cancer
vors, to support those ﬁghting canresearch and fundraised ever since
cer and to remember those we have her last battle with cancer in 1997.
lost. Our commitment will be symCaretakers of cancer patients then
bolized in every step we take, each
followed with their walk. Fundraising
and every step moving us nearer to teams came after the caregivers and
our goal — the goal of a cancer-free were recognized by Diddle for their
world,” she and the audience spoke support over the stretch of the last year.
in unison.
At 7 p.m., Shana Smith, a local
Survivors then lined up in the
country artist, took the stage to
midsection of City Park nearest
entertain the crowd before being folto First Avenue before starting on
lowed by the band Ordinary People.
their promenade south. Once they
Paul “Bub” Williams performed last.
reached the intersection of Court
Crowd attendees that ﬁt none of
Street, they turned and followed
the previous walk categories then
luminaries along the sidewalk
took to the walk path. Bryna Butler
toward the bandstand and then
led the following luminaria cermarched toward the intersection
emony and a quiet candle walk was
of First Avenue and State Street.
held for all.
Finally, they marched back to the
The 2015 ACS Gallia County
starting line.
Relay Leadership Committee led the
Sharon Brown, three-time survivor closing ceremony followed by the
of cancer, was one of the ﬁrst walkers closing benediction.

including visual acuity,
screenings, prescriptions
for glasses or contacts,
and single-vision glasses,
behavioral health screenings and community
referrals.
No pain medications
will be available on site,
although the mission has
provided a temporary
pharmacy within the
high school. Participants should bring a list
of current prescribed
medications, herbal
supplements and over the
counter drugs with name,
strength and dose.
Mindy Cayton, program development coordinator for Buckeye Hills
Area Agency on Aging

and community coordinator, emphasized the
importance of the event.
“We’re very hopeful
that Ohio Medical Mission helps get people
get on the road to better
health, and better health
maintenance and management,” she said. “We’re
going to make sure
they’re connected to local
sources.”
Innovative Readiness
Training, along with
providing medical coverage for anyone who
decides to attend, also
provides real-world training opportunities for the
nation’s military service
members and units to
prepare them for their

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wartime missions while
also supporting the needs
of America’s under-served
communities.
The event was established after Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development
District and the Meigs
County Commissioners
secured a Medical Innovative Readiness Training
event for Meigs County
and the surrounding communities, partnering with
the 7241st Medical Support Unit, Army Reserve
Medical Command from
Lexington, Ky.
The Meigs County
Health Department has
also assisted in bringing the Medical Mission
to Meigs County. Amy
Imbrosciano, health commissioner, has worked
with Ohio University to
bring volunteers to the
medical side of ORMM,
and she has worked on
required licensing to get
medical services done
between county doctor,
Dr. Hunter Douglas, and
the OU medical wing to
do work during the mission.
Environmental Health
team members who
also serve on the Meigs
County Fair Board
offered the Roush building at the fairgrounds as
the hub for veterinary
services throughout the
10-day period, including
registered sanitarian Colleen Murphy-Smith and
Director of Environmental Health Steve Swatzel.
The health department
also assisted in providing
infrastructure for the military and supplies, including blankets and towels,
and providing volunteer
help in the veterinary
and Women, Infants and
Children areas, including
the WIC motor home that
provides WIC information as well as a place for
diaper changing.
The event can also
use volunteers for the
rest of the mission, and
all volunteers must sign
a volunteer agreement.
Volunteers older than 55
are eligible for beneﬁts,
including mileage reimbursement through the
Retired Seniors Volunteer
Program. Volunteer positions include check-in
clerks, registration clerks,
patient guides, veterinary
assistants, check-out
clerks, Ohio Beneﬁt Bank
counselors for check-out,
runners and hospitality
assistants.
For more information,
contact Katie Alexander
at kalexander@coadinc.
org or at 740-992-2117.
Recorded event details
are available at 1-800331-2644 Option 6. For
transportation, call 740367-7341.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

�E ditorial
5A Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Communicating
effectively
for your benefit
By Marcus Geiger
Guest Columnist

Good communication is about more than
just promptly taking a customer’s phone call or
directing them to a helpful website. It includes
providing useful information in a clear and easyto-understand way, in writing, on the web, and
over the phone. June is National Effective Communications Month, but at Social Security, we’re
at the forefront of clear, concise communications
all the time.
Our efforts to better serve and clearly communicate with the American public are paying off,
and people like you are reaping the beneﬁts. We’re
proud of our consistently high ratings in customer
satisfaction and usability.
In the most recent ForSee E-Government Satisfaction survey, Social Security’s website outranks
the customer satisfaction ratings of the private
sector websites of icons like Amazon, LL Bean,
and Apple. Out of the top-ranked government
websites, ﬁve of our sites were ranked in the top
six, including the Retirement Estimator, Business Services Online, my Social Security, and our
online beneﬁt application sites.
This year, for the second year in a row, we
received conﬁrmation that we’re doing a great
job of explaining our programs and services to
the American public in our written products. We
scored an “A” on the 2014 Federal Plain Language
Report Card from the Center for Plain Language.
This grade means we’re exceeding the standards
of the Plain Writing Act of 2010, which requires
federal agencies to communicate clearly with the
public. We’re the only federal agency to earn this
honor for two consecutive years!
Not only is our website simple to navigate and
understand, our publications and Frequently
Asked Questions (FAQ) are easy to read and
understand as well. You can browse through our
collection of publications at www.socialsecurity.
gov/pubs to learn about Social Security, our
programs, and what they mean to you and your
family. Many publications are available in up to 17
different languages, and they’re written in plain
language. If you prefer a printed copy of a publication, you can call us at 410-965-2039, and we’ll
mail you a copy.
Our online FAQs provide quick and accurate
answers about our programs for millions of people
every year. Recently, we streamlined and consolidated our FAQs so you can ﬁnd answers easily and
efﬁciently. You can visit www.socialsecurity.gov/
faq for accurate information at your convenience.
Nothing is more important to us than meeting
the needs of those we serve. We thank you, our
customers, for your valuable feedback and vote of
conﬁdence. Our customers continue to express
their satisfaction because of our effective communication, and we remain committed to maintaining
these high standards.
Marcus Geiger is Social Security district manager in Gallipolis.

THEIR VIEW

A life-changing decision far from home
One of the soldiers
before his draft number came
turned to Private Howup. But now, as the others
ard. “What about you,
chattered excitedly, all he
Old Man? Want to join
could think about was the
us to ﬁnd some beautiful
commitment he had made
island girls when we get to
to himself to do the things
Hawaii?”
he had been taught, and to
As they approached
always attend church when
Daris
Hawaii, all the soldiers
he could.
Howard
could talk about was the
So, to the other soldier’s
Contributing
fun they would have when Columnist
question, Private Howard
they got there. World War
shook his head. “Since it
II was raging, and for
will be Sunday when we get
months they had been enduring
there, I’m hoping to go to church.”
the hardships of boot camp. When
The other soldier, and those
they had ﬁnished, after a short
near, roared with laughter. “You’ve
leave, they were being shipped
got to be kidding,” one of them
out to Hawaii before heading to
said. “You know that soon you
the ﬁghting in the Paciﬁc. But as
could be dead, and you have a
they traveled, Private Merrill How- chance to live it up for a few days.
ard sat quietly, not joining in the
You’re not going to waste time
excitement of the others.
going to church, are you?”
He had grown up in a farm famThe word of what Private Howily, and when his father became ill, ard had said spread quickly, and
Merrill dropped out of school to
soon everyone was teasing him. It
help. He would work all day, and
made the last part of the journey
then study by candlelight, trying
seem to last forever.
to keep up on his studies. Once in
When they arrived in Hawaii,
a while he would take a day and
Private Howard wondered how
go back to school to test on the
he would get to church, but they
lessons he had prepared. When
hadn’t even had time to settle in
graduation came, those in his class when a young lieutenant showed
were shocked to learn that he had
up at their barracks. “Anyone
ﬁnished the course work on his
in this company want to attend
own and would be graduating with church?” he asked.
them.
The other soldiers chortled as
He had hoped to go to college
they pointed at Private Howard.
but had barely enrolled when his
“You want to go to church?” the
father asked him to return home
lieutenant asked him. Private Howagain. He was 25 when Japan
ard nodded, so the lieutenant led
attacked Pearl Harbor, but he
him out to a waiting truck. Simiwasn’t married, so it wasn’t long
larly, a few men joined them from

other units, all telling the same
story of being teased for going.
While most of the soldiers spent
their time in riotous living, Private Howard and those few men
with him spent the week enjoying
church socials. But soon the week
was over, and everyone packed
their dufﬂe bags. As Private Howard lined up with the others, his
commander barked at him, “Howard, take your gear with you and
report to the ofﬁcer’s hall.”
When he arrived at the hall, he
found the other men he had gone
to church with already there. The
lieutenant was also there. When
Private Howard walked in, the
lieutenant said, “You men are to
be transported to the computer
center at Diamond Head. You will
be working there for the duration
of your service. The general over
that computing command center
told me to ﬁnd some good men to
work there. I could think of no better way than by ﬁnding out who
would stick to what he knew was
right by attending church, even
when he was far from home.”
Now, when I look at the ﬂag ﬂying over my father’s grave, indicating his service to his country, I am
proud that Private Howard is my
father. I am also grateful that he
taught me by example to try to do
what I know is right, even when
I’m far from home.
Daris Howard, award-winning, syndicated
columnist, playwright, and author, can be
contacted at daris@darishoward.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

Today is Sunday, June
7, the 158th day of 2015.
There are 207 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On June 7, 1965, the
U.S. Supreme Court, in
Griswold v. Connecticut,
recognized a constitutional right to privacy
as it struck down, 7-2,
a Connecticut law used
to prosecute a Planned
Parenthood clinic in New
Haven for providing contraceptives to married
couples.
On this date:
In 1769, frontiersman
Daniel Boone ﬁrst began
to explore present-day
Kentucky.
In 1892, Homer Plessy,
a “Creole of color,” was
ﬁned for refusing to leave
a whites-only car of the
East Louisiana Railroad.
(Ruling on his case, the
U.S. Supreme Court
upheld “separate but
equal” racial segregation,
a concept it renounced in
1954.)
In 1929, the sovereign
state of Vatican City came

into existence as copies of
the Lateran Treaty were
exchanged in Rome.
In 1939, King George
VI and his wife, Queen
Elizabeth, arrived at Niagara Falls, New York, from
Canada on the ﬁrst visit
to the United States by a
reigning British monarch.
In 1942, the World War
II Battle of Midway ended
in a decisive victory for
American forces over the
Imperial Japanese.
In 1954, British mathematician, computer
pioneer and code breaker
Alan Turing died at age
41, an apparent suicide.
(Turing, convicted in 1952
of “gross indecency” for a
homosexual relationship,
was posthumously pardoned in 2013.)
In 1955, the quiz show
“The $64,000 Question”
premiered on CBS-TV.
In 1965, actress-comedian Judy Holliday, 43, died
in New York.
In 1972, the musical “Grease” opened on
Broadway, having already
been performed in lower
Manhattan.

In 1981, Israeli military
planes destroyed a nuclear
power plant in Iraq, a facility the Israelis charged
could have been used to
make nuclear weapons.
In 1985, the adventure
comedy “The Goonies”
was released by Warner
Bros.
In 1998, in a crime that
shocked the nation, James
Byrd Jr., a 49-year-old
black man, was hooked by
a chain to a pickup truck
and dragged to his death
in Jasper, Texas. (Two
white men were later
sentenced to death; one of
them, Lawrence Russell
Brewer, was executed in
2011. A third defendant
received life with the possibility of parole.)
Today’s Birthdays:
Movie director James
Ivory is 87. Former Canadian Prime Minister John
Turner is 86. Actress
Virginia McKenna is 84.
Singer Tom Jones is 75.
Poet Nikki Giovanni is
72. Actor Ken Osmond
(TV: “Leave It to Beaver”)
is 72. Former talk show
host Jenny Jones is 69.

Actress Anne Twomey is
64. Actor Liam Neeson is
63. Actress Colleen Camp
is 62. Singer-songwriter
Johnny Clegg is 62.
Author Louise Erdrich
is 61. Actor William
Forsythe is 60. Record
producer L.A. Reid is 59.
Latin pop singer Juan
Luis Guerra is 58. Singersongwriter Prince is 57.
Rock singer-musician Gordon Gano (The Violent
Femmes) is 52. Rapper
Ecstasy (Whodini) is 51.
Rock musician Eric Kretz
(Stone Temple Pilots) is
49. Rock musician Dave
Navarro is 48. Actress
Helen Baxendale is 45.
Actor Karl Urban is 43.
TV personality Bear
Grylls is 41. Rock musician Eric Johnson (The
Shins) is 39. Actress Adrienne Frantz is 37. Actorcomedian Bill Hader is 37.
Actress Anna Torv is 36.
Actress Larisa Oleynik is
34. Tennis player Anna
Kournikova is 34. Actor
Michael Cera is 27.
Actress Shelley Buckner
is 26. Rapper Iggy Azalea
is 25.

�LOCAL

6A Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bash

ing the evening. Friday evening
K.L.A.S.I.K. Heat will start the
entertainment at 6 p.m. with
From Page 1A
Marauder (Blitzkrieg Chilled)
going on as the last band of the
Children’s activities, in addievening, starting at 9 p.m. On
tion to contests, will take place
Saturday, the Riverside Cloggers
on the lower parking lot from
will perform at 3 p.m., followed by
noon to 4 p.m., and activities
Zoot Suit Magician at 4 p.m. South
from 4-8 p.m. include inﬂatables,
of the River Band will perform at 7
ﬁnger printing and IDs provided
p.m. and the ﬁnal act of the night
for free by the Meigs County
will be Todd Berry at 9:15 p.m.
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce and Meigs CounRockin’ Reggie will also proty Sheriff Keith Wood, and face
vide entertainment for kids Satpainting. Saturday from noon to
urday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on
8 p.m. will include balloons and
the upper stage arena.
a magic show as children’s activThere is still space for artisans
ities. Various county vehicles
and concessions, and space can
will also be on display for chilbe reserved at 740-992-2239.
dren and parents alike, including
Hummers and ﬁretrucks.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT.
Local bands will entertain dur2555.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Improvement Program will be 10 a.m. to noon June
11 at Best Western (previously known as the Holiday
Inn). All interested parties are encouraged to attend
the training session. RSVP by Friday, June 5, to
mhyer@buckeyehills.org or call Michelle Hyer at 740376-1025 for more information on the SCIP program.

RACINE —The annual Holter family reunion
will be 12:30 p.m. June 7 at the home of Karen
Werry on Court Street Road in Racine. All family
members are welcome. Barbecue chicken will be
provided. Bring a covered dish and a place setting,
as well as any family photos or articles that you
would like to share. The patriarch of Holter family,
George Holter Sr., came from Norway via Germany
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2015to Frederick County. George Jr. brought his family
2016 Carleton College Scholarships for Higher
by covered wagon to Meigs County around 1836.
Education are available for legal residents of the
village of Syracuse. Residents may pick up an
application from Gordon Fisher, 1402 Dusky St.
Applications must be returned by June 23. Legal
residents of Syracuse can qualify for scholarship
MARIETTA — Training session for the District
awards for a maximum of two years.
18 Ohio Public Works Commission State Capital

Scholarship Applications

Improvement Program
SUNDAY EVENING
6

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)

6:30

PM

WSAZ News
3
Inside
Edition
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
(5:00) Sister
Acts (My
Music)
Eyewitness
News at 6
CBS Evening
News
Paid
Program
PBS
NewsHour
Weekend (N)
13 News
Weekend

6

CABLE

7

PM

7:30

8

NBC Nightly Dateline NBC "Growing
News
Hope" (N)
NBC Nightly Dateline NBC "Growing
News
Hope" (N)
ABC World Jimmy
NBA
News
Kimmel Live Countdwn (L)
From Broadway Exploring the history of
great music written for Broadway musicals
and Hollywood films.
ABC World Jimmy
NBA
News
Kimmel Live Countdwn (L)
10TV News 60 Minutes
at 6:30 p.m.
Paid
Bob's Burger Bob's
Program
"Seaplane!" Burgers
History Detectives A 1775
BBC
Newsnight Almanac indicates strained
family ties.
CBS Evening 60 Minutes
News

6:30

PM

7

PM

7:30

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

SUNDAY, JUNE 7

MONDAY EVENING

10

BROADCAST

10:30

PM

Dateline NBC (N)

A.D. the Bible Continues
American Odyssey "FUBAR
"Brothers in Arms" (N)
Bundy" (N)
Dateline NBC (N)
A.D. the Bible Continues
American Odyssey "FUBAR
"Brothers in Arms" (N)
Bundy" (N)
NBA Basketball Playoffs Cleveland Cavaliers at Golden State Warriors
NBA Postgame (L)
Final Game 2 Site: The Oracle -- Oakland, Calif. (L)
The Tenors: Under One Sky The Tenors
The Statler Brothers Farewell Concert On
return to share their album 'Under One Sky' October 26, 2002, the Statler Brothers took
with the world.
the stage for the last time.
NBA Basketball Playoffs Cleveland Cavaliers at Golden State Warriors
NBA Postgame (L)
Final Game 2 Site: The Oracle -- Oakland, Calif. (L)
The 69th Annual Tony Awards Honoring excellence in the performing arts. (N)

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10 PM

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)

10:30

6

CABLE

27 (LIFE)

27 (LIFE)

(FAM)

31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)

6

PREMIUM

6:30

PM

7

PM

7:30

8

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10

(4:30) The

The Judge (2014, Drama) Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Robert Downey
Game of Thrones (N)
Jr.. A lawyer sets out to uncover the truth when his estranged father is
TV14
suspected of murder. TVMA
(:55)
Transcendence ('14, Action) Rebecca Hall, Paul (:55) I Origins ('14, Dra) Michael Pitt. A
(:45) Max on
Bettany, Johnny Depp. A researcher gains immeasurable
molecular biologist studying the human eye Set (N)
power after downloading his mind into a computer. TV14 finds his scientific beliefs challenged. TVMA
(5:00)
Last Vegas ('13, Nurse Jackie HAPPYish
Penny Dreadful "Above the Nurse Jackie HAPPYish (N)
Com) Michael Douglas,
"Managed
Vaulted Sky"
"Serviam in
Robert De Niro. TVPG
Care"
Caritate" (N)

400 (HBO) Good Lie

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

66°

2 PM

80°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

86°
59°
80°
59°
96° in 1899
41° in 1945

Precipitation

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
0.08
0.74
20.51
18.82

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:51 p.m.
12:10 a.m.
11:13 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
6:03 a.m.
8:52 p.m.
12:50 a.m.
12:20 p.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Jun 9

First

Jun 16 Jun 24

Full

Jul 1

Minor
10:42a
11:39a
12:06a
12:59a
1:48a
2:35a
3:22a

Major
4:55p
5:53p
6:47p
7:38p
8:27p
9:15p
10:02p

Minor
11:08p
---12:34p
1:25p
2:14p
3:01p
3:49p

WEATHER HISTORY
On June 7, 1982, violent early morning thunderstorms produced gusts
to 80 mph which caused considerable structural damage and power
outages in Topeka and Kansas City,
Missouri.

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Fri.

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.53 +0.17
Marietta
34 15.73 -0.19
Parkersburg
36 21.34 -0.36
Belleville
35 12.34 -0.18
Racine
41 13.32 +0.70
Point Pleasant
40 25.44 +0.53
Gallipolis
50 13.28 +0.30
Huntington
50 25.50 -0.75
Ashland
52 35.15 -0.01
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.60 -0.13
Portsmouth
50 16.70 -2.20
Maysville
50 34.40 -0.60
Meldahl Dam
51 15.60 -3.00
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

74 (SYFY)

6

PREMIUM

6:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10

American Ninja Warrior 'American Ninja Warrior' heads
to Houston where the competitors tackle six obstacles. (N)
American Ninja Warrior 'American Ninja Warrior' heads
to Houston where the competitors tackle six obstacles. (N)
The Bachelorette Cliff and JJ face off against the
remaining men and each other. (N)
Antiques Roadshow
Antiques Rd. "Vintage
"Vintage Los Angeles"
Milwaukee" Updates include
items such as a Tiffany lamp.
The Bachelorette Cliff and JJ face off against the
remaining men and each other. (N)
2 Broke Girls Mike &amp;
Scorpion "Pilot"
Molly
Can Dance "Detroit Auditions" Auditions continue as the
judges search for the next dancer to take the crown. (N)
Antiques Rd. "Vintage
Antiques Roadshow
"Vintage Los Angeles"
Milwaukee" Updates include
items such as a Tiffany lamp.
2 Broke Girls Mike &amp;
Scorpion "Pilot"
Molly

7:30

PM

8:30

8

PM

8:30

9

9:30

PM

7

7:30

PM

8

PM

8:30

9

9:30

PM

500 (SHOW)

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

88°
64°

NCIS: Los Angeles
"Expiration Date"
PM

10:30

Partly sunny and
humid

FRIDAY

PM

10:30

(:15) 1stLook Game of

"Jurassic
Thrones
World" (N)
Up in the Air ('09,
Rom) Vera Farmiga, George
Clooney. TVMA
HAPPYish
Nurse Jackie
"Serviam in
Caritate"

SATURDAY

89°
65°

86°
62°

Warm with times of
sun and clouds

Mostly sunny, warm
and humid

Humid with rain and a
thunderstorm

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
82/67

Murray City
84/70
Belpre
86/67

Athens
84/68

Today

St. Marys
85/66

Parkersburg
85/67

Coolville
85/67

Elizabeth
87/67

Spencer
86/67

Buffalo
88/67

Ironton
89/67

Milton
89/67

Clendenin
89/66

St. Albans
89/67

Huntington
88/66

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
83/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
73/56
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
80/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Independent Lens "God
Loves Uganda"

90°
65°

Wilkesville
87/66
POMEROY
Jackson
87/66
87/68
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
87/67
88/68
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
84/68
GALLIPOLIS
87/66
87/67
87/67

Ashland
89/68
Grayson
89/68

10:30

The Whispers "Hide and
Seek" (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
"Expiration Date"
Eyewitness News at 10

10

The Out List A cross-section Dawn of the Planet of the Apes ('14, Sci-Fi) Jason Clarke,
Gary Oldman. A nation of evolved apes launches a war
2 TVPG
with a handful of human survivors of a virus. TV14
John Oliver stories.
(4:45) The
Superstar An awkward Catholic
(:55)
Mrs. Doubtfire (1993, Comedy) Sally Field,
Dukes of
schoolgirl dreams of being a star in order to Pierce Brosnan, Robin Williams. An actor poses as a female
Hazzard
kiss her dream boy. TVPG
housekeeper in order to spend time with his children. TVPG
(5:15) Iverson ('12, Doc) Tom (:55)
Mission: Impossible III ('06, Act) Philip Seymour Penny Dreadful "Glorious
Brokaw, Larry Brown, Allen Hoffman, Tom Cruise. An agent is called out of retirement Horrors"
Iverson. TVMA
to rescue a fellow agent from an arms dealer. TV14

450 (MAX)

Logan
84/70

PM

The Island "Easier Said
Than Done"
The Island "Easier Said
Than Done"
The Whispers "Hide and
Seek" (N)
Independent Lens "God
Loves Uganda"

10

Last Week

(4:30)

McArthur
85/69

500

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)

TUESDAY

South Shore Greenup
89/68
87/67

59

Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

67 (HIST)

Periods of clouds and
sunshine

Portsmouth
88/68

AIR QUALITY
Primary pollutant: Particulates

The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Major
4:28a
5:26a
6:21a
7:12a
8:01a
8:48a
9:35a

Very High

300

64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Lucasville
88/69

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

SOLUNAR TABLE
Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

High

(E!)
(TVL)

86°
60°

Very High

Primary: cladosporium

7

PM

400 (HBO) Dolphin Tale Tonight With of interviewees share their

Waverly
87/70

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 2254
Moderate

(WE)

62 (NGEO)

Disturbia ('07, Cri)
Sarah Roemer, Carrie-Anne
Moss, Shia LaBeouf. TV14
Penny Dreadful "Glorious
Horrors" (N)

Chillicothe
85/66

Pollen: 37

Low

(OXY)

58
60
61

Adelphi
84/70

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
High

57

Veep (N)

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

Moderate

52 (ANPL)

81°
64°

3

Low

(A&amp;E)

42

MONDAY

Clouds and sun today. A shower and thunderstorm
around tonight. High 87° / Low 66°

ALMANAC

(AMC)

40 (DISC)

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

82°

31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)

10:30

PM

Silicon
Valley (N)

30 (SPIKE)

39

8

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Salem
MLB Baseball Milwaukee Brewers at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
NCAA Baseball Division I Tournament Super Regional (L)
NCAA Baseball Division I Tournament Super Regional (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
(5:00)
Made of
27 Dresses A perennial bridesmaid struggles to
Devious Maids "From Here UnREAL "Relapse" (N)
to Eternity" (N)
Honor TV14
accept that her sister is marrying her secret crush. TV14
(5:30) Pitch Perfect A freshman joins her university's allThe Fosters "Wreckage"
Becoming Us
The Fosters "Wreckage"
girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TVPG
(SP) (N)
"#WelcometoMyWorld" (N)
(5:50) Bar Rescue "PunchBar Rescue "Two Flew Over (:05) Bar Rescue "Bikini
(:15) Bar Rescue "When Life (:20) Bar Rescue "Drunk and
Drunk and Trailer-Trashed" the Handlebars"
Bust"
Doesn't Hand You Lemons" Dirty Dolls"
Thunder
H.Danger
H.Danger
100 Things Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
NCIS "The Good Samaritan" NCIS "Enigma"
WWE Monday Night Raw
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy American D. American D. The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Quiz "70s Edition" (N) CNN Tonight
M.Crimes "Special Master" M.Crimes "Special Master" M.Crimes "Jane Doe #38" Major Crimes (N)
Murder in the First (N)
(4:00)
Erin
The Shawshank Redemption ('94, Dra) Morgan Freeman, Tim Robbins. A
TURN: Spies "Gunpowder,
Brockovich TV14
banker is wrongly convicted of a double murder and is sent to prison for life. TVM
Treason and Plot" (SF) (N)
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws: Full
Street Outlaws (N)
Fast N' Loud (N)
The First 48 "One of Ours" The First 48 "Best Laid
The First 48: Extreme Kills The First 48: Extreme Kills 48: Extreme Kills "Murder
Plans/ Burned Alive"
"Hale Storm" (N)
"Deadly Morning" (N)
in Pleasant Grove" (N)
Wildman
Wildman
Finding Bigfoot: XL
Finding Bigfoot
Finding Bigfoot: XL
TBA
Wildman
(5:00) THS Invest. "Inside
THS Investigates "Women Who Kill"
Snapped "Whitehead
Snapped "Kristin Lobato"
the Mind of a Serial Killer"
Twins"
CSI: Miami "Camp Fear"
CSI "Entrance Wound"
CSI: Miami "Bunk"
CSI: Miami "Forced Entry" CSI "Dead Woman Walking"
Botched "House of Horrors" E! News
#RichKids "#RingOnIt"
Botched
Botched "House of Horrors"
(:20) Gilligan's Island
Gilligan
(:35) Gilligan (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Just a Formality" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
American Genius "Wright American Genius "Jobs vs. American Genius "Wright American Genius
American Genius "Hearst
Brothers vs. Curtiss"
Gates"
Brothers vs. Curtiss"
"Farnsworth vs. Sarnoff" (N) vs. Pulitzer" (N)
Pro FB Talk NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Tampa Bay Lightning at Chicago Blackhawks (L)
(5:30) Pregame World Cup Today (L)
FIFA Soccer World Cup United States vs. Australia (L)
World Cup
FIFA Soccer World Cup (L)
(5:00) Texas Rising "Fate
Texas Rising "Blood for Blood" Sam Houston orders his
Texas "Vengeance Is Mine" General Sam Houston and his
and Fury"
army south to force a final battle with Santa Anna.
Rangers launch a surprise attack on the Mexican Army. (N)
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
Odd Mom Out (N)
(5:00)
For Colored Girls ('10, Dra) Loretta Devine. TV14 Sparkle (2012, Drama) Carmen Ejogo, Whitney Houston, Jordin Sparks. TVPG
Love/List "Daily Squeeze" Love It or List It
Love/List "Close-Knit Clan" Love It or List It (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30) City of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader The Pevensie Jurassic Park Genetically re-created dinosaurs break out of
Ember TVPG children encounter dragons &amp; lost warriors as they return to Narnia.
captivity and wreak havoc in a theme park. TV14

(FAM)

29

7:30

PM

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

6:30

PM

18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) (4:00) NCAA Baseball

30 (SPIKE)

7

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls
"Feathered
Friends"
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

18 (WGN) (4:00) Million Dollar Baby
24 (ROOT) Rodeo
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) Billiards

29

Backdraft (1991, Action) William Baldwin, Robert De Niro, Kurt Russell. TVMA
Salem (N)
Sports Unlimited (N)
Ball Up "Combine: Day 2" In Depth (N) Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
Baseball Tonight
MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Los Angeles Dodgers Site: Dodger Stadium (L)
NCAA Baseball Division I Tournament Super Regional (L)
NHRA Drag Racing
(5:00) The Girl He Met
Deadly Revenge Alicia Ziegler. A woman suspects that her Double Daddy A teenage boy impregnates two girls and
Online Yvonne Zima. TV14 perfect fiancé may be trying to kill her. TVPG
social backstabbing is taken to a new level. TV14
Knocked Up ('07, Com) Seth Rogen. Two people try to build a
Pitch Perfect ('12, Com) Anna Kendrick. A freshman joins her
relationship after their one-night stand results in a pregnancy. TVPG
university's all-girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TVPG
(5:45) Bar
(:55) Bar Rescue "Anything You Can Yell, I Bar Rescue "A Dash of
(:10) Bar Rescue "Storming (:15) Bar Rescue "Lagers
Rescue
Can Yell Louder"
Bitters"
the Castle"
and Liars"
SpongeBob 100 Things H.Danger
Nicky
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
SVU "Wednesday's Child" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Closet" Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Web" Law&amp;O: SVU "Possessed" SVU "Educated Guess"
(5:30)
The Longest Yard Adam Sandler. TV14
Rush Hour 3 ('07, Act) Chris Tucker. TV14
Men in Black II TV14
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Madagascar" A. Bourdain "New Jersey" A. Bourdain "Budapest" (N) High Profits (N)
(5:00)
The Help ('11, Dra) Emma Stone. TV14
The Blind Side ('09, Spt) Tim McGraw, Sandra Bullock. TV14
Movie
(5:00)
Wild Hogs ('07,
Erin Brockovich ('00, True) Aaron Eckhart, Julia Roberts. A legal assistant tries to Halt and Catch Fire "New
Com) John Travolta. TV14
bring down a company that is poisoning a city's water supply. TV14
Coke" (N)
Naked "Edge of Madness" Naked "Mayan Misery"
Naked "Primal Fear"
Naked and Afraid (N)
Naked and Afraid (N)
(5:30)
The Italian Job Thieves plan the heist of their
The Proposal A pushy woman forces her assistant
Two Weeks Notice
lives by creating the largest traffic jam in L.A. history. TV14 to marry her in order to avoid deportation to Canada. TV14 Sandra Bullock. TV14
The Last Alaskans
The Last Alaskans (N)
The Last Alaskans
Mountain Monsters
Finding Bigfoot
Snapped "Pamela Phillips" Snapped "Amanda Kaur"
Snapped: Killer "Miranda Snapped "Chie CogginsSnapped "Linda Pedroza"
and Elytte Barbour"
Johnson and Scott Barker"
CSI: Miami
CSI "Rock and a Hard Place" CSI "Down to the Wire"
CSI: Miami "Bone Voyage" CSI: Miami "All Fall Down"
Botched
Botched
Botched "Dolly'd Up"
Botched (N)
#RichKids "#RingOnIt" (N)
(:25) Reba
Reba
(:40) Reba
(:20) Reba
King-Queens (:35) Queens (:10) Queens (:50) Queens
Ultimate Dino Survivor (N) T. Rex Autopsy A look inside a full-size T. Rex for the first
Dino Death Trap
24 Hours After: Asteroid
Impact
time ever to reveal how it may have lived. (N)
/Drive
OceanRace UCI Cycling
F1 Auto Racing Canadian Grand Prix Site: Circuit Gilles Villeneuve
F1 Extra (N)
UFC Flash
Insider (N)
MLS Soccer FC Dallas at San Jose Earthquake Site: Avaya Stadium (L)
Garbage (N) UFC Countdown (N)
American Pickers
American Pickers "Step
American Pickers "Escape American Pickers "Texas
Texas Rising "Blood for
"California Streaming"
Right Up"
to Motor Mountain"
Hold 'Em"
Blood"
Kandi's Ski Trip
Kandi's Ski Trip
Kandi's Ski Trip (F) (N)
Married to Medicine (N)
Blood, Sweat and Heels (N)
(3:30) Life
Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins ('08, Com) Martin Lawrence. TV14
FrankieNef. The Game
(:40) Husbands
House Hunters Renovation House Hunters Renovation Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Caribbean
Caribbean
IslandHunter IslandHunter
(4:00)
Shutter Island
City of Ember Tim Robbins. Two teenagers search The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
Leonardo DiCaprio. TV14
for clues that will help them save the City of Ember. TVPG The Pevensie children encounter dragons &amp; lost warriors as they...

MONDAY, JUNE 8

6:30

PM

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

10 (WBNS)

The
Brooklyn 99 Family Guy Golan (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Simpsons
"Payback"
Secrets Secret Servi Lift the Last Tango in Halifax Kate Last Tango in Halifax
veil of secrecy on MI6, the
finds Lawrence's mums new Carolina whisks Kate off for
legendary agency.
relationship difficult.
a romantic weekend.
The 69th Annual Tony Awards Honoring excellence in the performing arts. (N)

8

3

6

Charleston
88/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
80/57

Billings
80/59

Montreal
74/58
Minneapolis
78/62

Toronto
70/62
Detroit
81/66

New York
72/58

Chicago
80/63
Denver
71/50

Washington
80/65

Kansas City
86/65

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
86/62/pc 86/65/pc
60/46/s 58/46/pc
89/71/t
87/72/t
71/53/s
79/68/t
78/60/s
85/68/t
80/59/s 88/61/s
90/63/t 94/66/s
66/50/s
67/61/t
88/67/t
86/62/t
86/67/t 89/69/pc
66/47/t
74/53/t
80/63/t 80/61/sh
86/68/pc
77/63/t
84/68/t
77/61/t
85/70/pc
79/62/t
93/69/s 93/70/s
71/50/t
77/55/t
85/64/pc 86/64/pc
81/66/t 80/61/pc
86/72/s 85/73/pc
93/69/s 91/72/pc
86/68/c
79/62/t
86/65/pc
84/64/t
93/72/s 99/75/s
93/74/pc 93/72/pc
80/63/pc 86/65/pc
90/72/pc
80/67/t
86/76/t 88/75/pc
78/62/t 82/59/pc
91/70/s
86/67/t
90/75/t
91/75/t
72/58/s
76/68/t
92/67/s
88/67/t
90/72/t
90/70/t
78/59/s
84/70/t
99/75/s 104/80/pc
84/68/t
78/61/t
68/48/s
61/56/r
83/66/s 88/71/s
80/62/s 88/73/pc
91/74/pc
86/69/t
74/57/pc 82/61/s
73/56/pc 77/58/s
83/58/s 80/55/s
80/65/s 88/73/pc

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
89/71

High
Low

El Paso
89/69
Chihuahua
90/66

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

101° in Death Valley, CA
28° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
121° in Amarah, Iraq
Low -16° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
93/69
Monterrey
91/70

GOALS

Miami
86/76

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Holter Family Reunites

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 7, 2015 s Section B

OHSAA meet under way

By Alex Hawley

“We’re very proud of him,”
said Marauders head coach Mike
Kennedy. “He’s worked hard and
COLUMBUS, Ohio — The 2015 listened to Coach Brothers a lot
OHSAA State Track and Field
this season. By mid-year he was
Championships are under way at
our only kid to pr at every meet.
the Jesse Owens Memorial StaHe’s just been getting better and
dium on the campus of The Ohio
better, and we are proud that he’s
State University.
representing us.”
Meigs, River Valley, Gallia AcadThe Blue Angels were representemy, Eastern and Southern all had
ed
by sophomore Madi Oiler, who
participants in the opening day of
posted
the eighth best preliminary
competition, with the Marauders
time
in
the 300m hurdles (46.31),
getting on the board ﬁrst.
and qualiﬁed for Saturday’s ﬁnal.
Meigs’ lone participant, junior
Eastern was led by the girls’
Cory Scarberry, claimed ﬁfth in the
wheelchair shot put with a throw of 4x800m relay team of Laura Pul7 feet, 2.5 inches. Scarberry’s ﬁfth lins, Asia Michael, Taylor Parker
and Jessica Cook, which ﬁnished
place mark ties Mason Metts for
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
13th with a time of 10:05.33. Pulthe
best
ﬁnish
at
the
OHSAA
state
Meigs junior Cory Scarberry competes in the wheelchair shot put, while
lins, a sophomore, ﬁnished 16th
Marauders assistant coach Tyler Brothers looks on at the 2015 OHSAA meet in MHS history. Metts was
State Track and Field Championships at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium.
in the 400m dash with a time
ﬁfth in the 2009 boys’ shot put.
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

of 1:02.36, while classmate Alia
Hayes fouled on all three attempts
in the girls discus throw.
River Valley’s boys 4x400m relay
team of Ethan Hersman, Mark
Wray, John Qualls and Andrew
Moffett was 13th with a time of
3:30.46.
Southern’s lone state qualiﬁer,
sophomore Jaylen Blanks, was 16th
in the 200m dash with a time of
23.60.
Five athletes, three from GAHS
and two from EHS, will be competing in ﬁnals on Saturday.
Complete results of the 2015
OHSAA State Championships can
be found on the web at www.ohsaa.
org
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

OHSAA to
sponsor lacrosse
starting 2016-17
By Tim Stried
For Ohio Valley Publishing

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio High School
Athletic Association (OHSAA) Board of Directors approved a recommendation from an OHSAA
subcommittee that boys and girls lacrosse become
sports sponsored by the OHSAA beginning with the
2016-17 school year, Commissioner Daniel B. Ross,
Ph.D., has announced.
Lacrosse will be a spring sport with the ﬁrst
OHSAA statewide tournament series beginning in
2017. The Board unanimously (8-0) approved the
recommendation during its regularly scheduled
meeting today at the OHSAA Ofﬁce in Columbus.
“The members of the subcommittee did an outstanding job studying lacrosse in Ohio and researching the sport both statewide and nationally,” Ross
said. “I know they also received tremendous assistance from Paul Balcerzak, commissioner of both the
Ohio High School Lacrosse Association (OHSLA)
and the Ohio Schoolgirls Lacrosse Association
(OSLA). Lacrosse is deﬁnitely growing in our state
at both the youth and high school levels, and it’s
exciting when schools want their sport to be part of
our association and also exciting that more students
will be able to complement their high school experience with another participation opportunity.
“It also should be pointed out that the both the
boys and girls lacrosse associations have required
their membership to adhere to OHSAA Bylaws and
Sports Regulations for several years now, so the transition to the OHSAA should be smooth.”
Lacrosse will become the ﬁrst sport in the
OHSAA’s newly developed category called “emerging” sports, since lacrosse currently does not have
the required 150 schools to become an OHSAA
“recognized” sport per OHSAA bylaws. Currently
organized by the OHSLA and OSLA, there were 122
boys schools and 118 girls schools that sponsored
lacrosse in 2015, with an additional 18 boys club
teams sponsored.
As an emerging sport, lacrosse will be handled
very similarly as all OHSAA “recognized” sports,
with the major exception being that the Board of
Directors will conduct an annual assessment of
lacrosse to review items such as growth and ﬁnancial solvency to determine if it will continue as an
“emerging” sport; be elevated to a “recognized”
sport, or be suspended or discontinued as an
“emerging” sport.
The Ohio High School Lacrosse Association has
been conducting a statewide tournament series since
the 1988-89 school year, and the Ohio Schoolgirls
Lacrosse Association has had a statewide tournament series since 1999-2000. While both the boys
and girls currently have two tournament divisions,
the Board of Directors did not take action to determine how many tournament divisions there will be
in lacrosse when the OHSAA begins oversight in
2016-17.
“On behalf of the Ohio High School Lacrosse
Association and the Ohio Schoolgirls Lacrosse Association, I would like to express sincere gratitude and
excitement with the decision of the OHSAA Board
of Directors to adopt boys and girls lacrosse as the
newest OHSAA sports,” Balcerzak said. “It was
quite a learning experience to work with the subcommittee, but I’m glad all of our efforts have paid
off. Our associations are committed to making the
transition to the OHSAA as smooth as possible, and
we can’t wait to get started.”
The addition of boys and girls lacrosse increases
the number of “recognized” and “emerging” sports
sponsored by the OHSAA to 26, which includes 13 for
boys and 13 for girls. The OHSAA last added sports in
2006-07 when boys and girls bowling were adopted.
Tim Stried is the Director of Information Services for the Ohio High
School Athletic Association.

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

Wahama senior Demitrius Serevicz, middle, is swarmed by teammates as he touches home plate following a two-run homer in the top of the
seventh inning Friday night against Bishop Donahue in a Class A state semifinal baseball game at Appalachian Power Park in Charleston, W.Va.

White Falcons go for 3rd Class A title
By Bryan Walters

the ﬁrst time in 17 years.
The White Falcons — who came
away with the 1996 and 1998 Class
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The
A titles in baseball — have now won
prize is within reach. All that’s left is ﬁve straight Final Four state tourto take it.
nament games and will face either
Wahama broke a three-all tie with Man or Mooreﬁeld at approximately
three runs in the top of the seventh, 4 p.m. Saturday at Power Park.
then the guests made that lead stick
Afterwards, WHS coach Tom
while advancing to the state baseCullen spoke about his troops colball championship game following
lectively coming through when they
a 6-3 victory over Bishop Donahue
needed to. The 10th-year mentor
in a Class A semiﬁnal Friday night
also noted that seeing Miller and
at Appalachian Power Park in
Serevicz — a pair of seniors —
Kanawha County.
come through in the clutch made
The White Falcons (24-7) fell
the day that much extra special.
behind 2-0 through two complete,
“At ﬁrst, I was just happy to get
but the Red and White responded
here. That’s a lie, because we wantwith three scores in the fourth to
ed to do as well as we could when
claim a narrow one-run cushion.
we got here,” Cullen said. “I told
The Bishops (21-6) answered with
the kids that as long as they played
a run in the ﬁfth to knot things up
hard, I’d be happy with that.
at three, which ultimately set up one
“To see a pair of seniors step
climactic ﬁnish.
up and close the deal for us, that’s
The White Falcons broke through big-time right there. Things started
in the top of the seventh after Kaileb getting a little hairy there in the botSheets led things off with a ground- tom of the seventh, but we managed
rule double, then Philip Hoffman
to get through it.”
provided a sacriﬁce bunt to advance
Although Miller technically
Sheets to third with one out.
provided the game-winner, it was
Garrett Miller delivered a single
Serevicz’s blast that provided
to left-center that allowed Sheets to enough breathing room for the
score the eventual game-winning
guests to relax headed into the botrun for a 4-3 edge, then Demitrius
tom of the seventh.
Serevicz unloaded a 400-plus-foot
After battling back from a menisbomb to right center that cleared
cus tear that occurred during
the fences —allowing the Red and
wrestling season, Serevicz was in
White to secure a three-run lead
awe of his personal feat. But, as he
headed into the ﬁnal half-inning.
put it, the hard worked paid off and
Hoffman — who fanned nine
his guys have another chance to do
through six innings on the mound
again in less than 24 hours.
— ran into trouble in the home half
“This means the world to me
of the seventh as Bret Moore and
and I can’t wait to play tomorrow,”
Andrew Cunningham reeled off
Serevicz said. “After all of the hard
back-to-back one-out singles, then
work just to get back to the baseball
Matt Vucelik walked with two away team mid-season, this truly is amazto load the bases.
ing. We have one more game and we
Alex Riedel stepped to the plate
can’t wait to get back here.”
as the potential game-winning run,
Wahama had opportunities early
but eventually ﬂew out to WHS
on, but ultimately stranded a runcenterﬁelder Jared Nutter — leavner on base in each of the ﬁrst
ing the bases loaded as Wahama
three frames. The White Falcons
advanced to the Class A ﬁnal for
produced ﬁve baserunners during
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

that span, but only one made it to
second base.
Hoffman retired the side on
strikeouts in the ﬁrst, but quickly
found himself in a pickle in the bottom of the second. Riedel doubled
to start the frame, then Logan Wells
produced an inﬁeld hit that allowed
BDHS to put runners on the corners
with nobody out.
Wells slid in under the tag at
second on a steal to put a pair in
scoring position, then Hoffman
uncorked a wild pitch that allowed
Riedel to score and sent Wells
to third. Wells later scored on a
groundout by John Stocklask to give
the hosts a 2-0 cushion through two
complete.
Wahama ﬁnally broke through
in the top of the fourth as Miller
led the frame off with a walk, then
Serevicz received a one-out walk to
put a pair on base.
Both Miller and Serevicz
advanced up a base on steals, then
Jared Oliver grounded out and
allowed Miller to score for a 2-1
deﬁcit. Serevicz later scored on an
RBI-single by Ryan Thomas to knot
things up, then Thomas came homeward on a single to right by Ricky
Kearns for a WHS 3-2 advantage.
Wahama dodged a bullet in the
fourth after Hoffman walked a pair,
but then he recorded the ﬁnals two
outs with Ks — allowing the guests
to maintain that one-run cushion.
The Bishops, however, tied the
game in the ﬁfth after a one-out
walk to Andrew Cunningham led
to a run on a two-out RBI single to
left by Matt Vucelik — making it a
three-all contest through ﬁve complete.
The White Falcons outhit the
hosts by an 8-5 overall margin, while
Bishop Donahue committed the
only error in the contest. The guests
stranded eight runners on base,
while BDHS left seven on the bags.
See TITLE | 6B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OVP area lands 19 on TVC Hocking softball team
By Donald Lambert

ﬁfth and South Gallia tied for seventh.

elambert@civitasmedia.com

Eastern, Southern, Wahama and
South Gallia collectively landed 19
people on the 2015 All-Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division softball team,
as voted on by the coaches within the
league.
The list of Eastern players include
seniors Grace Edwards, Breanna Bailey
and Jourdin Grifﬁn, sophomores Jessica
Coleman, Alia Hayes and Katlyn Barber,
and freshman Sidney Cook.
Southern’s list of players include
seniors Cierra Turley, Caitlyn Holter
and Grace Wolfe, junior Ali Deem, and
freshman Paige VanMeter.
Wahama’s players include senior
Elisabeth Hendrick, as well as juniors
Rachel Roque and Morgan Harrison.
South Gallia’s players include seniors
Sara Bailey and Shelby Sanders, as well
as junior Caitlyn Vanscoy.
Cook and Deem were named the
C0-Offensive Most Valuable Players.
Carley Tabler of Federal Hocking was
named Defensive MVP. Eastern skipper
Bryan Durst was named Coach of the
Year.
Edwards, Deem, Turley, Bailey,
Tabler, Allissa Jayjohn (Trimble) and
Sarah West (Miller) were also repeat
selections from the 2014 All-TVC Hocking squad.
The Lady Eagles ended the season
atop the conference standings. Southern
ﬁnished second, while Wahama ﬁnished

2015 All-TVC Hocking
Division Softball team
1. Sidney Cook 9 Eastern 1B/3B/SS
2. Jessica Coleman 10 Eastern P/SS
3. Grace Edwards* 12 Eastern P/SS
4. Alia Hayes 10 Eastern 3B
5. Katelyn Barber 10 Eastern CF/C
6. Breanna Bailey 12 Eastern RF
7. Jourdan Griffin 12 Eastern C
8. Ali Deem* 11 Southern SS
9. Cierra Turley* 12 Southern P/1B
10. Caitlyn Holter 12 Southern CF
11. Paige VanMeter 9 Southern 3B
12. Grace Wolfe 12 Southern 2B
13. Katie Osburn 9 Belpre P/SS/3B
14. Madison Harman 9 Belpre P/1B
15. Bri Elkins 10 Belpre 3B/1B
16. Kaity Hager 12 Belpre SS/2B
17. Nikki Kish 11 Trimble P
18. Allissa Jayjohn* 12 Trimble 1B
19. Kaitlyn Spear 9 Trimble SS
20. Emily Ward 10 Trimble RF
21. Rachel Roque 11 Wahama CF
22. Elisabeth Hendrick 12 Wahama 3B/1B
23. Morgan Harrison 11 Wahama SS/C
24. Carley Tabler* 12 Federal Hocking SS
25. Tyra Mayle 9 Federal Hocking 3B
26. Chelsea Washburn 11 Federal Hocking P
27. Sara Bailey* 12 South Gallia SS
28. Shelby Sanders 12 South Gallia C
29. Caitlyn Vanscoy 11 South Gallia P
30. Alana Heiss 12 Waterford SS
31. Chelsey Streight 12 Waterford C
32. Madison Ohse 10 Waterford OF
33. Hannah Dishon 11 Miller C
34. Sarah West* 12 Miller P
Offensive Most Valuable Player (Co): Sidney
Cook - Eastern, Ali Deem - Southern;
Defensive Most Valuable Player: Carley

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Southern junior Ali Deem connects with a pitch in front of Eastern senior Jourdin Griffin during the
Lady Eagles’ victory over SHS on May 4 in Tuppers Plains.

Tabler - Federal Hocking; Coach of the Year:
Bryan Durst - Eastern
Final conference standings: Eastern 16-0,
Southern 14-2, Belpre 12-4, Trimble 9-7,

URG SUMMER CAMPS
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande has announced its
2015 summer camp/shootout schedule for men’s and
women’s soccer, men’s and
women’s basketball, volleyball, track &amp; ﬁeld/cross
country and softball.
MEN’S/WOMEN’S SOCCER
The University of Rio

Grande soccer programs have
announced their 2015 summer camp schedule.
A team camp for girls’ high
school squads is planned for
July 12-15, with a boys’ high
school team camp slated for
July 19-23. Cost for the girls’
camp is $270, while the boys’
camp has a fee of $305.
Fees for the residential
camps include lodging, meals,

training sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are URG
men’s soccer head coach Scott
Morrissey, men’s assistant
coach Tony Daniels and Rio
women’s soccer head coach
Callum Morris.
The camp brochure is
available on the men’s soccer
link of the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.

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Registration forms should
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OH 45674. Checks should be
made payable to Scott Morrissey.
For more information,
contact Morrissey at 740-2457126, 740-645-6438 or e-mail
scottm@rio.edu; Daniels at
740-245-7493, 740-645-0377
or e-mail tdaniels@rio.edu;
or Morris at 740-853-2639 or
cmorris@rio.edu.

Wahama 8-8, Federal Hocking, South Gallia
and Waterford 4-12, Miller 1-15.
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2106

Smith extends
Seniors lead
Staff report

Pyles currently sits in
second place with 92
MASON, W.Va. —
points, while Buddy
Dewey Smith of Bidwell Peaytt is now third with
has taken an 11-point
88.5 points.
lead at the 2015 RivA total of 68 players
erside Senior Men’s
took part in Tuesday’s
Golf League being
round, which made 16
held every Tuesday at
foursomes.
Riverside Golf Club in
The low round of the
Mason County.
day was a three-way tie
Through nine weeks
between the teams of
of play, Smith has a
Richard Mabe, Siebert
total of 103 points. Fred Belcher, Jack Ocheltree
and Kenny Greene; Bill
Yoho, Russ Wood, Cliff
Rice and Steve Theiss;
and Bob Humphrey,
Harry Grifﬁn, Bob
Avery and Jerry Arnold
— who collectively shot
an 10-under par round
of 60.
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June 3 - 11 ® 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. �
The current top-10
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are as fol®�Basic Screenings / Exam
lows:
Dewey
Smith
®�Cats &amp; Dogs Spay/Neuter; 10/day
(103),
Fred
Pyles
®�Rabies, Canine/Feline Distemper
(92), Buddy Peaytt
Vaccinations
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first-come, first-served
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Jay Rees (85.5) and Jim
Lawrence (84).

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60587023

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

SPORTS

Sunday, June 7, 2015 3B

OVP area lands 16 on TVC Hocking baseball team
By Donald Lambert

were named Co-Defensive MVPs.
Phil Faires of Trimble was named
Coach of the Year.
Wahama, Eastern, Southern and
Miller, Speelman, Richmond,
South Gallia landed a combined 16 Downs, Lunsford, Dante Bramplayers on the 2015 All-Tri-Valley
mer and Andrew Losey (Trimble),
Conference Hocking Division
Chayse Hostottle (Belpre), Isaac
baseball team, as voted on by the
Huffman (Waterford) and Devon
Maxey (Federal Hocking) were
coaches within the league.
also repeat selections from the
The list of Wahama players
2014 All-TVC Hocking squad.
include senior Garrett Miller,
Wahama tied for ﬁrst in the
juniors Kalieb Sheets, Mason
Hicks, Ricky Kearns and Jared Nut- conference with with Trimble, followed by Eastern in third, Southter, and sophomore Phillip Hoffern in seventh and South Gallia in
man.
ninth.
The list of Eastern players
include seniors Christian Speelman
2015 All-TVC Hocking
and Tyler Morris, junior Cameron
Division Baseball team
Richmond, and freshman Austin
1. Austin Downs* 12 Trimble OF
Coleman.
2. Caullin Lunsford* 12 Trimble C
Southern’s list of players include 3. Dante Brammer* 11 Trimble 1B
senior Jack Lemley, as well as
4. Andrew Losey* 11 Trimble P
sophomores Trey Pickens and Clay- 5. Terry Simerly 12 Trimble INF
6. Justice Jenkins 11 Trimble INF
ton Wood.
South Gallia was represented by 7. Cody Jones 11 Trimble 2B
8. Garrett Miller* 12 Wahama P/1B
senior Dustin Hornsby and junior
9. Kaileb Sheets 11 Wahama P/SS/C
Cuyler Mills.
10. Philip Hoffman 10 Wahama P/C
Austin Downs of Trimble was
11. Mason Hicks 11 Wahama 2B/P
named the 2015 Offensive Most
12. Ricky Kearns 11 Wahama LF
Valuable Player, while Hoffman
13. Jared Oliver 10 Wahama RF
14. Jared Nutter 11 Wahama CF
and Trimble’s Caullin Lunsford

elambert@civitasmedia.com

15. Christian Speelman* 12 Eastern C/P
16. Tyler Morris 12 Eastern SS
17. Cameron Richmond* 11 Eastern P/2B
18. Austin Coleman 9 Eastern P/2B
19. Alex Perry 12 Belpre P/C/OF/3B
20. Kole Counts 11 Belpre C/P
21. Chayse Hostottle* 12 Belpre P/SS
22. Tyler Andermanis 12 Belpre 1B
23. Clay Hayes 10 Waterford SS
24. Isaac Huffman* 10 Waterford C
25. Cody Paxton 12 Waterford LF
26. Tylor Newman 11 Miller 1B/P
27. Cole Geil 10 Miller INF/P/C
28. Austin Doughty 12 Miller SS
29. Jack Lemley 12 Southern UTIL
30. Trey Pickens 10 Southern 1B
31. Clayton Wood 10 Southern C
32. Noah McCune 12 Federal Hocking 1B
33. AJ Cobb 11 Federal Hocking SS
34. Devon Maxey* 11 Federal Hocking CF
35. Cuyler Mills 11 South Gallia P/SS
36. Dustin Hornsby 12 South Gallia P/SS
Offensive Most Valuable Player: Austin
Downs, Trimble
Defensive Most Valuable Player (Co):
Caullin Lunsford, Trimble; Philip Hoffman,
Wahama
Coach of the Year: Phil Faires, Trimble
Final conference standings: Trimble and
Wahama 14-2, Eastern 12-4, Belpre 11-5,
Waterford 8-8, Miller 7-9, Southern 4-12,
Federal Hocking 2-14, South Gallia 0-16

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McClelland fares well
Janelle McClelland, a recent
graduate of River Valley High
School, competed at the Junior
Olympic Level 10 National
Invitational Tournament on
Sunday, May 17, in Des Moines,
Iowa. She finished third on the
vault with a score of 9.450,
third on the balance beam
with a score of 9.40, and also
placed third in the all-around
competition with a score of
37.10. Janelle has already
committed to the Ohio State
University, where she will
continue her gymnastics career
as member of the Buckeyes
women’s gymnastics team
next season. Janelle is the
daughter of Jared and Jennifer
McClelland of Bidwell, Ohio.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Wahama sophomore Philip Hoffman pitches during the White
Falcons’ regional semifinal victory over Charleston Catholic on May
25 in Charleston, W.Va.

Do your part!
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PHOTO SUBMISSIONS: JUNE 1ST – JUNE 13TH
VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITES! JUNE 14TH – JUNE 27TH @ 11:59PM

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Honor Your Dad On His Special Day
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Dedicated to all Fathers in Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties.
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�CLASSIFIEDS

There will be a temporary water outage on Tuesday, June
9th between 9:00 a.m. and
2:00 p.m. so we can replace a
fire hydrant on the commons in
Chester.
The Village of Chester and the
roads effected are as follows:
SR 248 from SR 7 3,500ҋ East,
Mill Street Road, Scout Camp
Road from SR 248 to Allen
Street Road, Allen Street,
Sumner Road from SR 248 to
SR 7, Texas Road from SR 7
to Skinner Road, Pooler Road
from Texas Road to the end.
Once service is restored, you
will be under a boil advisory
until Wednesday, June 10th at
4:30 unless notified otherwise.
When a boil advisory is in effect, we ask all who are affected to boil their cooking and
drinking water for three
minutes before being consumed. We apologize for any
inconvenience this may cause.
If weather permitting, if not it
will be rescheduled to the following day.
Sincerely,
Matt Ridenour, Foreman
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District
MR:sc

REQUEST FOR BID
The Gallia County Department of Job and
Family Service (GCDJFS) is now accepting
bids for the provision
of transportation services through the
agencyҋs Non-Emergency Transportation
(NET) program. The
provision of the service will require the
transporting of Medicaid eligible consumers to scheduled
non-emergency medical appointments in
the GCDJFS designated “medical community”. Organizations interested in submitting a bid may obtain an RFB packet
f r o m
t h e
gallianet.net/bid notices. Completed Bid
Packets must be submitted no later than
June 17, 2015 at 4:00
p.m. to the Gallia
County Board of Commissioners located at
18 Locust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the City
Manager, City of Gallipolis,
333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 until Noon on June
25, 2015 and will be opened
and read immediately thereafter for the:
Gallipolis Riverfront Improvements Phase I of III
Riverfront Amphitheater
Engineerҋs Opinion of Probable Cost: $70,900.00
Completion Date – 90 days
from Notice to Proceed
This project consists of the
construction of concrete Amphitheater Seating as Phase I
of the Gallipolis Riverfront Improvements. Included is excavation, embankment, and reinforced concrete seating.
Bids must be in accordance
with specifications and on
forms available for review at
the Gallipolis City Managerҋs
Office at 333 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 and can
be obtained at the office of the

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Needed 2 Class B Drivers for
Rollback (Transporting)
Call 740-339-1620

Gallipolis City Manager, 333
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal, a Bid
Guaranty and Contract Bond in
accordance with Section
153.54 of the Ohio Revised
Code. Bid security furnished in
Bond form, shall be issued by
a Surety Company or corporation licensed in the State of
Ohio to provide said surety.
Each Proposal must contain
the full name of the party or
parties submitting the proposal and all persons interested
therein. Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of similar
size and complexity.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the
project will, to the extent practicable, use Ohio Products,
materials, services, and labor
in the implementation of their
project. Additionally, contractor compliance with the equal
employment opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter 123, the
Governor's Executive Order of
1972, and Governor's Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.

Help Wanted General

LINEMAN
Now hiring Journeyman Distribution Lineman. Class A CDL
Required. Evidence of journeyman status or equivalent experience may be requested for
evaluation. BREC offers an excellent benefit package. Interested candidates can obtain an
application on www.buckeyerec.com.
Underground Laborer
Needed: Must have a valid
driving license, be able to
travel and able to pass drug
screening. Pay rate $9.00 hour
plus incentive, work to start
immediately. Please send resumes to Underground
Laborer dgoodwin@critchfieldutilities.com or mail to:
Underground Labors 61 Fifth
St. Bldg. 1 Suite 102, Buckhannon WV 26201
Apartments/Townhouses

1-Bdrm Apt. 446-0390

2 bdrm $625. Downtown, newer appl, lam floor, water, sewer &amp; trash incl. No Pets. Application req. 727-237-6942

Bidders must comply with the
prevailing wage rates on Public Improvements in Gallia
County, Ohio as determined by
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, Wage and
Hour Division.
City of Gallipolis reserves the
right to waive irregularities and
to reject any or all bids.
BY ORDER OF
Eugene Greene, City Manager
City of Gallipolis, Ohio
5/31, 6/7
Lost &amp; Found
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Notices

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or play casually.

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No smoking, no pets. Please
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$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Frenchtown
Apartments,
727 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis is accepting applications for Waiting List for 1 BR, USDA Rural
Development subsidized apartment for elderly &amp; handicapped, 62 years of age or or
older, handicap/disabled, regardless of age. 740-4464652. This institution is an
equal opportunity provider, &amp;
employer.

Middleport, One bedroom
apartment. Security Deposit.
No Pets. References Required.
740-992-0165

Contact Brian at
304-675-1807
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

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

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Apartments/Townhouses

Farm Equipment

Want To Buy

One bedroom, unfurnished,
2nd floor, recently re-decorated, apt. 2nd ave.,Gallipolis.
No pets. Lease application,
with references. Security
deposit. $450/mo. No smoking.
Call 740-441-7875, 740-4463936 or 740-446-4425

3 PT. BACKHOES 7' REACH,
PTO PUMP $3900
NEW AND USED WAGON
GEARS, MANY WITH BEDS
$395 AND UP
GOOD DEAL ON TILLERS
4,5,6 &amp; 7'
CALL FOR PRICES
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
INC.
2150 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
740-446-9777

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

Three bedroom, unfurnished,
2nd floor, townhouse, on Court
Street. Condition excellent. No
pets,lease application, with
reference. Security deposit
required. $650 per month.
No smoking.
Call 740-441-7875,
740-446-3936 or
740-446-4425.

Three bedroom, unfurnished,
2nd floor apt.,overlooking
Gallipolis City Park, in historic
home. Lease application,
references required, $650/mo.
No smoking. Security deposit.
Call 740-441-7875,
740-446-4425

Autos for Sale

2006 Dodge Charger V8 HEMI
loaded leather seats, power
windows &amp; locks,6 disc stereo
92,000 miles 740-339-0087

Excavating

Reese Excavating
�Dozer  Backhoe
�Trenching  Trucking
 Septic Systems
�Basements
 Land Clearing
 Site Prep  and More!
Large or Small Jobs Since 1963

Miscellaneous

FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 245-9921

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

Auctions

Houses For Rent

2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
$700 mo. includes utility allowance. 540-729-1331

3 BR House small car
attached garage utility room no
pets Gallipolis area $600 plus
deposit 740-853-1101
Very nice 1 to 2 BR, new bathroom home in Pomeroy,great
neighborhood, deck with a
view of the woods,ideal for 2 or
3 people, new appliances. No
indoor pets.Non smoking.
Call 740-992-9784
Rentals

Private - Riverfront: Cottage
newly remodeled, screened
porch overlooking river. 2Bdrm 1 bath, Garage /loft 740446-4922 $750 + Dep.
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Location: 10321 SR 141, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 (corner of Cricket Trail Road &amp; SR 141)
Take S.R. 141 approximately 10 miles west of Gallipolis or 40 miles east of Ironton
From Rio Grande, Ohio, take S.R. 325 South 6 miles, turn left on S.R. 141, go 1 Mile to Gage School

Sale begins at 9:00a.m.
Furniture

Quilts &amp; More

Lots of Solid Oak and Cherry,
Bedroom Suites, Hutches,
Dining Room tables &amp; chairs,
Cedar Chests, Oak Chests,
Hickory Rockers, Clocks,
Shelves, much more!

Handmade Quilts sell at 1:00pm
Outdoor Swings, Gliders, and more.
Lots of craft items

Lunch Stand:

Furniture &amp; Quilt
Sale will take place
under the tent
with Seating Provided!

Homemade Ice Cream,
Bar-B-Que Hamburgers &amp; Chicken
Bake Sale

Call

All Donations &amp; Consignments Welcome
Please contact one of the following:

Livestock

Angus Bulls High EPD's over
40 yrs. Performance selection,
Top bloodlines, low birth
weights, good for heifers.
Priced reasonably, Call
740)418-0633 see www.slaterunangus.com

Joni Yoder
2152 Cricket Trail Road
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Nelson Hershberger
29 Daft Road
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Aden L. Troyer
94 Wolf Run Road
Patriot, Ohio 45658
60587925

Help Wanted General

Auctions

Enjoy Flexible Work Schedule?
Enjoy a Friendly Working
Environment?

MAJOR LAND AUCTION

Wednesday, June 24th at 4:00PM

Ohio Valley Home Health is accepting applications
for motivated individuals to ﬁll our:

Registration &amp; Inspection begin at 3:00PM
Easily accessible off Rt 35 or Rt 2

Full Time &amp; Part Time

Physical Therapist Positions
SIGN ON BONUS!!
Competitive wages and excellent beneﬁts
including Health, Dental, Vision, Paid
Vacation Days, Extended Leave Beneﬁt,
Paid Holidays, Company Car and much more!

Mason County, WV
608 +/- Contiguous ACRES
A RARE opportunity in one of the BEST
hunting areas in West Virginia!

Qualiﬁcations:
s 04 n /( ,ICENSED
s %XCELLENT $OCUMENTATION 3KILLS
s "ASIC #OMPUTER +NOWLEDGE
s %XCELLENT /RGANIZATION AND 4IME
-ANAGEMENT 3KILLS
s !BLE TO WORK INDEPENDENTLY
s 7ILLING TO TRAVEL IN SERVICE AREA

Many large cleared meadows throughout the
properties. Horse trainers Paradise! Cattle Farmers
Dream Property!! Deer Farmers Reserve potential!
Offered in Multiple parcels or in Combination.
Located next to Chief Cornstalk-West Virginia
owed State Game Reserve. Only minutes from
Charleston, Parkersburg and Point Pleasant.
Following the individual sales of each
subject, the subjects will be offered in
combination with ﬁnal sale determined by
highest bid total. We don’t just list your
property - WE SELL IT!

For more information please call
!PRIL "URGETT 2. !DMINISTRATOR
at 740-441-1393
OR APPLY AT ���� *ACKSON 0IKE 'ALLIPOLIS /(
!PPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT WWW�OVHH�ORG
%MAIL RESUME� ABURGETT OVHH�ORG

Joe R Pyle Auction &amp; Realty Services
WWW�OVHH�ORG

5546 Benedum Drive, Shinnston, West Virginia 26431
For full details visit www.joerpyleauctions.com

(888) 875-1599 WV 212

60588534

60584693

Scheduled shut down
BOIL ADVISORY

LEGALS

60584194

LEGALS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

60587528

4B Sunday, June 7, 2015

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 7, 2015 5B

Scenes from day 1 of OHSAA state meet

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

ABOVE, Southern junior Jaylen Blanks runs down the
homestretch of the 200m dash on Friday at Jesse Owens
Memorial Stadium. AT LEFT, Eastern senior Asia Michael
hands off to sophomore Taylor Parker in the 4x800m relay
at The Ohio State University on Friday.

AT RIGHT, River Valley’s
Mark Wray takes the
handoff from Ethan
Hersman in the
4x400m relay at the
OHSAA Division II State
Championships, on
Friday in Columbus. FAR
RIGHT, Gallia Academy
sophomore Madi Oiler
clears the final hurdle in
the 300m hurdles prelim,
on Friday at Jesse Owens
Memorial Stadium.

Auctions

CLASSIC AUTOS, PETROLIANA, AND
COLLECTIBLES AUCTION
June 13, 2015 @ 10:00 a.m.
82 Old Coach Rd., Athens, OH

FARM
AUCTION
JUNE 13, 2015 10 AM

LOCATION: 35082 ROCKSPRINGS ROAD
POMEROY, OH 45769

WE HAVE BEEN COMMISSIONED TO SELL the personal property of William (Bill) Radford. Bill’s family has lived on the farm
located in Meigs County since the late 1800’s, many items have been on this farm for many years. Bill was a retired postman,
a Veteran and a good Christian man. Bill’s wife of 67 years and their children have decided to let many of the items go and
will be sold at auction.
Farmall F20, Farmall H, Farmall B, Cub Cadet 102 mower, Case tractors, Ford 8n, Massey Harris 30,
Farmall cub, Case vase tri-cycle wheeled tractor, Eclipse reel mower, self-propelled mower, Craftsman
wheeled weed eater, monarch sickle bar mower, lawn boy mower, roto tiller brand tiller, lawn wagon,
Troybuilt junior rear tine tiller, snapper mower painted red, steel wheel tobacco setter, roticul tiller, 3 snow
blades for Gravely, 10 ft wagon, cement mixer, portable saw mill, no blade, walk behind plows, walk behind
cultivators, wooden boxes, feed boxes, steel tool boxes for tractors, milk can stools with tractor seats
mounted, apple crates and baskets, several steel wheels, old sleds, hay forks different shapes and sizes,
shovels, rakes and hoes, silage chopper, hay knife, binders, circular saws, sulky, cross cut saws, 3 small
wood stoves, gem water pump, steel tractor seats, slip scrape, ladder jack, ladders, galvanized wash tubs,
canning jars, Flat wall cupboard, jelly cupboard painted blue, milk bottles, battery chargers, saw horses,
forged tools, pitch forks, post hole diggers, glass minnow trap, foot ads, sledge hammers, model t jack,
watering cans, Sears rotto tiller, power washer, old corn Sheller, Genneva feed cutter no. 12 red paint, old
steamer trunk, Coleman lanterns, max toys, baby scale, oil cans, stone crocks, William and Repert stone
crock, drop leaf table, maid rite wash board brass, cream separator parts, brass sprayer, small iron kettle,
iron skillets, wood pulleys, tractor book, Deering tractor seat, Moleen tractor seat, ox yokes, ice tongs,
popcorn poppers, several stoneware crocks, many kerosene lanterns, buddy 1 trucks, 2 gravely mowers,
several attachments for gravely tractors, hit and miss engines to name a few items.

AUCTIONEER: BILLY R. GOBLE JR.

AUCTIONEER: CHRIS COLLINS
Collins Auctions, LLC
Chris Collins, Auctioneer/Realtor
8118 Rolling Hills Drive
Athens, OH 45701
(740) 591-5837
www.collinsauctions.com

Auctions

Phone: 740-416-4696

Terms: Cash or Check with positive identiﬁcation.
Photos can be seen at: www.auctionzip.com/5548
PARKING WILL BE in hay ﬁeld - Food by Hemlock Grove Grange

60587348

OHIO VALLEY BANK

Auctions

ESTATE AUCTION
SAT. JUNE 13, 2015 @ 12 Noon

10:00 A.M.
***THIS AUCTION WAS MOVED FROM JUNE 6, 2015, TO JUNE 13, 2015 @ 10:00 A.M.***
LOCATED AT 1564 SECOND STREET, MASON, WV. SELLING THE ESTATE OF THE LATE CHARLES YEAGER.
MODERN FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES
4 Pc. Queen Size BR Suite; La-Z-Boy Recliner; 2 Pc. French Prov LR Suite; 3 Pc. Set of French Prov Marble Top
Tables; Acrosonic Piano; Maple Dinette Set; Roll Top Desk; Rocker Recliner; Gibson Washer &amp; Dryer; Whirlpool
Refrigerator; Small Dorm Refrigerator; Tappan Microwave; Patio Furniture; Picnic Table; Lg Gas Grill; Rainbow
Sweeper; Kirby Sweeper; Golf Clubs.
COLLECTIBLES
Nice Coca Cola Pop Cooler; Fancy Sword; Black Vintage Dress; Black Hi-Top Shoes; Old Pictures &amp; Frames;
Pitcher &amp; Bowl; Wooden Hobby Horse; Razors; Books; Dolls; Salts; Vintage Hats; Lanterns; Stone Crocks; Fruit
Jars; NYC RR Lantern; LW Noyes Dictionary Holder; Records; Oil Lamps; Longaberger Baskets; Victorian Clock;
Iron Pots; Glassware; 9 Place Setting of Dirilyte Flatware; Costume Jewelry; Early Newspapers; WWII Trunks; Marshal University Santa’s; Middleport, Pomeroy, &amp; Point Pleasant, WV Postcards; Plus other Postcards.
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
Beautiful Oak Side Board; Oak Hotel Wash Stand; Fancy Oak Dresser; Lg. spinning Wheel; Oak Claw &amp; Ball Table;
Super Nice Square Oak Table &amp; 4 Press Back Chairs; Oak Press Back Hi-Chair; Oak Singer Sewing Machine; Oak
Chair w/Lion Heads; Oak China Cabinet; Early 2 Drawer Table.
TOOLS, LAWN TRACTOR &amp; MISC.
Like New 21 HP Craftsman Lawn Tractor; Weed Eater; Lawn Mower; Schumacher Battery Charger; Hand Tools;
Step Ladder; B &amp; D Cordless Weed Eater.

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID • FOOD AVAILABLE
REAL ESTATE OFFERED BY ERA TOWN &amp; COUNTRY REAL ESTATE
BECKY STEIN LAMBERT BROKER 304-675-5548
RF STEIN JR. REAL ESTATE AUCTIONEER

60588980

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR. #1955 BREY GHEEN #2214A
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures
EXECUTRIX: SALLY ROSS

®

Public Auction
Auctioneer: Lee Johnson
Saturday, June 13, 2015
10:00 a.m.

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, JUNE 7th, 2015 • 2-4 OR BY APPOINTMENT

Deed Book 374 Page 458 Mason Corp Tax Map 1 54-56. ½ lot
of #20 ¼ lot of 22 on Anderson St., lot size 100x120 Beautiful
four br home with all electric lr, kit, dining room, basement, garage,
breezeway, porches, plenty of closets. Very nice Home. Sale of
property is AS IS, with no warranties.
Terms on Real Estate 10% down nonrefundable, day of sale. Balance of Purchase price shall be due upon
closing within 30 days. Buyer’s premium of 5%. Buyer’s premium will be added to winning bid price to arrive
at total contract price paid by the buyer. Real Estate being sold with owners conformations.

60588675

Auctions

Directions: Fron Athens, follow Old SR 33 (Pomeroy Rd.) to top of hill. Turn left onto Longview Heights. At intersection, turn right onto
Old Coach Rd. Follow signs. Easy to find.
COLLECTOR CARS: 1968 Pontiac GTO Convertible (Red w/ Black Interior, 400 Engine w/ Factory 4-Speed), 1964 Corvette Convertible
(Black w/ Black Interior), 1993 Olds Cutlass Supreme Convertible 2-Door (83,291 Miles, Red with Black Interior). 2003 Porsche Carrera
(54,774 Miles, Black w/Black Interior. All Cars Sell with Reasonable Reserve. Cars sell at 12:00 p.m. Title transfers when check clears.
PETROLIANA: Gas Pumps: Phillips 66 Tolheim Gas Pump (excellent condition), (4) Needing Restoration, (1) Frame, (2) 8’6” Air
Station Poles. Early 3-Pump Oil Cart on Iron Wheels, (3) Stationary Oil Dispensers. Super Shell Milk Glass Clam Shell Gas Globe.
Signs: Pure Oil Double Sided Porcelain sign (6’) on Original 19’ Cast Iron Pole, Ashland Double Sided Porcelain sign, Atlas Tire and
Battery sign, Lighted Arrow sign, (2) Texaco Motor Oil signs (signs), Lowr Brothers High Standard Paint Flange sign, Murad Cigarettes
Flange Sign, Milling Company sign (rough), Atlantic Lubrication Service sign, Used Cars Lighted sign, (2) Highway signs (Low Shoulder,
High Water), Railroad Crossing sign (Glass Beads), Railroad 2 Tracks sign (Glass Beads), Goodwill Lighted sign, Funeral Parking sign,
Lighted Open sign, Lighted EAT Hanging sign, Lighted Arrow sign, REO Trucks and Busses sign, Velvet Ice Cream Neon Sign, Circular
Sign Holder, 15’6” Sign Pole with Ornamental Iron Hanger. Marathon Lubricants 30-Gal. Grease Can, Mystik 30- Gal. Grease Can,
Penzoil Grease Can, Oil Island Display, Polarine Motor Oil Can, Sinclair Emerald Auto Oil Can, (3) Pure Oil Gas Cans, Old Oil Can,
Quaker State Sign Holder, Small Parts Shelf, Early Tire Changer, Quaker State Sign Frame.
Antique Furniture (Mission Oak Desk, Primitive 2-Door Cupboard (Old Green Paint), Sheraton Chest with Alligator Paint, Small
Bench with Storage and Boot Jack Legs, Oak Press Back Rocker, Oak Wall Phone, Jenny Lind with Straw Tick, (2) Cedar Chests, 6-Pane
Wall Mount Cabinet, Early Stick and Ball Doll Cradle, Early Print of Boy Smoking Pipe with Jesso Frame (Some Water Damage), Oak
Parlor Table, Shaker Style Table, Upholstered Rocker, Oak Princess Dresser, Waterfall Chifferobe, Hall Tree, Oak Cabinet with Carved
Crown, Walnut Victorian Dresser with Glove Boxes, Old Dresser with Brass Pulls, Waterfall Ladies Vanity, Oak Wall Phone, Old Hump
Back Trunk with Tray, Ornate Oak Fireplace Mantel with Carved Heads, Showcase (58 ½” x 40”, needs glass), Oak Baker’s Cabinet with
Sifters, Detroit Jewel Porcelain Gas Stove, Green Industrial Light Shades, Primitive Cabinet, Glass Front Wall Cabinet), Collectibles
(Coca Cola, Knives, Stone Jars), Households, Box Lots, and much, much more!
This is a brief listing! Much not listed!
Photos at www. collinsauctions.com or AuctionZip #21742.
Terms: Cash or Good Check with positive ID. No Out of State Checks. No Buyers Premium! Food available.

The Ohio Valley Bank will offer for sale by public auction the following items:

2006
2005
2013
2006
2008
2010
2002
2012
2002
2010
1999
1993
2004
2007
1999

Ford F150 4X4
Nissan Titan 4x4
Real Lite Truck Camper
Pontiac G6
Suzuki VL800 Motorcycle
Ford F150 4x4
Chevy S10 4x4
Polaris 800 Crew 4x4
Chevy S10 4X4
Dodge Avenger - SALVAGE TITLE
Lincoln Town Car
Ford Ranger 4X4
Clayton 14X52 Mobile Home
Suzuki King Quad 700 4X4
Pontiac Grand Prix

#C76502
#556263
#102635
#235484
#103544
#C22720
#218545
#698586
#206635
#221936
#710838
#A45882
#2009TN
#106008
#314374

These items are available at the Ohio Valley Bank Annex, 143 3rd Avenue, Gallipolis, OH on the
date and time specified above. Sold to the highest bidder “as-is, where-is” without expressed or
implied warranty &amp; may be seen by calling the Collection Department at 1-888-441-1038. OVB
reserves the right to accept / reject any and all bids, and withdraw items from sale prior to sale.
Terms of sale: CASH OR CASHIER’S CHECK.
60588165

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS Blue Angel
Volleyball Camp

Blue Angels Basketball
Exposure Camp

will also be presented on the ﬁnal day of camp. For more
information, contact GAHS coach Rich Corvin at 740645-4801 or Craig Sanders at 937-403-1820.

CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
Blue Angels volleyball teams will be holding a volleyball camp for girls entering grades 3-7 next year.
The camp will begin on Monday, June 22, through
Wednesday, June 24, from 2 p.m. until 5 p.m. in the
Gallia Academy High School Gymnasium. Players
will practice volleyball skills, work on volleyball fundamentals, and play volleyball games. The camp will
conclude on Wednesday with athletes participating in
game play from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.; parents and spectators are welcome. The cost is $50 per athlete, and
each athlete will receive a camp T-shirt. Registrations
may be picked up at the GAHS Ofﬁce Monday-Friday,
8-3 and from some local businesses. Players may
also register on Monday, June 22 beginning at 1:30
p.m. outside of the GAHS Gymnasium. Athletes who
come without a parent need to have the liability form
signed by a parent in order to participate. For more
information, contact head volleyball coach Janice
Rosier at 740-441-5993.

CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy girls
basketball team will be hosting an exposure camp on
July 20, at GAHS. The goal of this camp is to give the
student-athlete an opportunity to be seen for a chance to
play on the college level. This event is for female athletes
to showcase their talents against top competition while
being viewed by scouting services and college coaches.
The cost of the camp will be $150.00 per camper and is
for girls entering grades 10-12 and any unsigned seniors.
Check in will begin at 9 a.m. with games starting at 11.
The deadline to register is July 6. For more information
and to apply contact Blue Angels head coach Joe Justice
by email at joe.justice@gck12.oh.us

Eastern Golf Scramble

GAHS Youth Baseball Camp

Southern Football Camp

CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy baseball
program will be holding a youth baseball camp for any
boy entering grades 3-8 on Monday, June 8, through
Wednesday, June 10, at Bob Eastman Field on the campus of GAHS. The three-day event will run from 9 a.m.
until noon, and the campers will receive basic fundamental instruction from the GAHS baseball coach staff and
players. The cost is $50 per camper and there is a family
package that costs $40 apiece for two or more children,
and each camper will receive a t-shirt. There will also
be daily competitions and a Camper of the Week award

RACINE, Ohio — The Southern football program
will be holding its 2015 Southern Youth Football
Camp from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 21,
through Thursday, July 23, at Roger Lee Adams Field
in Meigs County. The cost is $25 for any camperin
grades 3-8 and a t-shirt will be given to all who register before May 27. The camp will be conducted by
Southern coaches and players. Checks should made
payable to Southern Athletic Boosters, courtesy of
Kyle Wickline, 920 Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 45771.
The makeup date will be Friday, July 24.

NOW
ENROLLING!
Adult Center:
*Medical Ofﬁce
*Industrial
*Medical Assisting Maintenance
Pneumatics/
*Cosmetology
Hydraulics
*Peace Ofﬁcer
*Welding

Financial Aid is available to
students who qualify.

“Creating Successful Lives”
For more information

740-245-5334
www.buckeyehills.net

Title
From Page 1B

Hoffman was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing
three earned runs, ﬁve hits and
ﬁve walks over seven innings while
striking out nine. Jesse Padlow
took the loss after surrendering
six earned runs, eight hits and ﬁve
walks over 6.2 frames while fanning eight.
Oliver led the victors with two
hits, followed by Kearns, Sheets,
Miller, Serevicz, Thomas and
Jared Nutter added a safety apiece.
Serevicz led the White Falcons
with two RBIs, while Miller and
Serevicz each scored twice.

POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern golf programs will be
holding a four-man scramble on Saturday, July 18, at the
Meigs County Golf Course. The 18-hole event will have a
9 a.m. shotgun start, with registration starting at 8 a.m.
that morning. The cost is $40 per player, which includes
18 holes, cart and lunch. There will also be prizes for closest to the pin, longest drive and other feats, as well as a
skins game and mulligans available for an additional fee.
The ﬁeld is limited to the ﬁrst 10 teams to register and
pay. For more information, contact Nick Dettwiller at 740416-0344 or by email at nickdettwiller@gmail.com

Cunningham, Riedel, Wells,
Vucelik and Moore had a hit each
for the Bishops.
Wahama has only once gone
without a state tournament win
during its six trips to the Final
Four, which occurred during the
very ﬁrst appearance in 1969. The
White Falcons lost to Tygarts Valley in the 1978 ﬁnal and fell to Van
in the 1988 championship, but also
defeated Van in 1996 and Mooreﬁeld in 1998 for the program’s only
two crowns.
Bishop Donahue, conversely, has
only appeared once in a state ﬁnal
— which ended in a 5-2 loss to Van
in the 1992 Class A title game.
Not to sound like a broken
record, but Cullen was quick to

note after the game that his White
Falcons have a spot in the ﬁnal.
That, more than anything, gives
them a chance to win it all.
“As I said last week, the only
way you can have a chance to win
a state title is to play in the state
ﬁnal,” Cullen said. “We have a
chance, now we just need to show
and play well — and have a little
luck too.”
Wahama will play Man at approximately 4 p.m. Saturday for the
2015 Class A baseball championship. The defending champion Hillbillies posted a 5-1 decision over
Mooreﬁeld in the second Class A
semiﬁnal Friday evening.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

60583715

888-675-8554

60588495

250 N. Columbus Rd. | Athens, OH 45701

Jeep Renegade

1023e with loader and 54" deck

2014 Dodge Journey SXT SUV

only 13,595
$

2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee Summit 4x4 SUV

Engine: 3.6L V-6 cyl, Transmission: Multi-Speed Automatic,
Exterior Color: Bright Silver,

or payment
nt as low as $180 / month

Your Price:

Engine: 3.0L V-6 cyl, Transmission: 8 speed automatic,
Exterior Color: Cashmere Pearlcoat, Stock Number: 44143390

$27,290

Your Price:

$57,585

3032E with loader and rear blade

2015 Chrysler Town &amp; Country Limited Platinum Van

2015 Dodge Challenger SXT Plus Coupe

Engine: 3.6L V-6 cyl, Transmission: multi-speed automatic,
Exterior Color: Billet Silver, Stock Number: 44150250

Engine: 3.6L V-6 cyl, Transmission: 8 speed automatic,
Exterior Color: Pitch Black, Stock Number: 42152000

Your Price:

only $17,995

$40,990

Your Price:

or payment
nt as low as $240 / month

$33,175

2015 Ram 2500 Tradesman
Truck Regular Cab

3038E with loader and rear blade

Engine: 6.4L V-8 cyl,
Transmission: 6 speed automatic,
Exterior Color: Maximum Steel,
Stock Number: 42151970

Your Price:
2015 JEEP® CHEROKEE LATITUDE FWD

only 19,495
$

WELL-QUALIFIED LESSEES CAN GET A -LOW MILEAGE LEASE FOR:

$

or payment
nt as low as $260 / month
Disclaimer: Prices do not include tax or applicable fees. Please call or stop in
for more details. Equipment prices are cash (not including tax) can be ﬁnanced
at standard rates. Financing is based on customer credit. Prices are subject to
change anytime and are not guaranteed.
60588468

"Pomeroy Location
Rentals Only"

$39,725

668 Pinecrest Drive, Bidwell, OH 45614

740-446-2412

34203 Ohio 7, Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-992-1438

$

285/MO. FOR 36/MOS.

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�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 7, 2015 s Section C

Photos by Lorna Hart | Times-Sentinel

Pictured are Mike and Ryan Harbour, Charles E. Mansfield, Constance White, Jean Hilton,Eddie Wolfe, Tom Galloway, Tim Ihle, Noah Anderson, Keith Whaley, Dale Colburn, Jacob Hoback, Sam Rosser and
Betty Ashley Snow Rosser.

Decoration Day
Meigs County marks occasion
with time period dress, ceremonies
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The day
was sultry and the sun
danced with clouds to
keep the rain at bay until
the May 30 Decoration
Day observances were
completed.
Held at the site of
the Civil War Memorial, located at the Meigs
County Courthouse, it
might have been a typical
Southern spring day in
1866 where the ﬁrst Decoration Day observances
took place.
Ladies in dresses made
of heavy fabric, their
skirts hanging atop oval
hoops, were fanning
themselves. One carried a
lace parasol to shield her
from the sun.
Soldiers in wool uniforms stood at attention,
ignoring the perspiration
streaming down their
faces.
Another soldier, looking as if he had just been
called from the ﬁelds
to ﬁght alongside the
regular Southern troops,
occasionally removed his
straw hat.
As wreathes were
placed at the Memorial,
music played, and if not
for an occasional passing
car, it was easy to forget
the year was 2015.
The ceremony began
with Dale Colburn introducing the participating
groups: Sons of the Civil
War Middleport Brook
Grant Camp 7, Daniel
Cook Circle 104 of the
Lady’s of the Grand Ole
Army of the Republic,
91stst Ohio Valley Infantry, Bufﬁngton Island
Preservation Foundation,
Morgan’s Raid Reenactment Committee and the
Ohio Horseman’s Council.
Wreaths were placed
at the foot of the Monument, and Constance
White sang the Battle
Hymn of the Republic.
Charles Mansﬁeld lead
the group in prayer.
“We are not here to celebrate war,” he said, “but
to honor those soldiers
who gave their lives.”
A brief history of Decoration Day was given by
Jean Hilton. Recalling
local springtime tributes

ABOVE, the North and South come together with Mike and Ryan Harbour as Union Troops, Charles
Mansfield and Eddie Wolfe as Confederate soldiers and Sam Rosser in an authentic Union uniform.
BELOW LEFT, Union soldiers stand watch as wreaths are placed at the Civil War Memorial, honoring
the 505 know Union troops from Meigs County who died in the Civil War. BELOW RIGHT, speaker
Keith Whaley on the history of the 75th Infantry Company D, Middleport. BOTTOM, Betty Ashley Snow
Rosser and Sam Rosser; “When Johnny Comes Marching Home”.

Pictured are Mike and Ryan Harbour, Constance White and Jean
Hilton

to the Civil War dead in
the South, one of the ﬁrst
occurred in Columbus,
Miss., on April 25, 1866,
when a group of women
visited a cemetery to decorate the graves of Confederate soldiers who had
fallen in battle at Shiloh.
Nearby were the graves of
Union soldiers, neglected
because they were the
enemy. Disturbed at the
sight of the bare graves,
the women placed some
of their ﬂowers on those
graves, as well.
The head of an organization of Union veterans,
the Grand Army of the
Republic (GAR), established Decoration Day
three years after the Civil
War ended. Maj. Gen.
John A. Logan declared
that Decoration Day
should be observed as
a time for the nation to
decorate the graves of the
war dead with ﬂowers.
May 30 became the ofﬁcial day.
Gen. Logan’s order
for his posts to decorate
graves in 1868 “with
the choicest ﬂowers of
springtime” urged: “We
should guard their graves
with sacred vigilance. …
Let pleasant paths invite
the coming and going of
reverent visitors and fond
mourners. Let no neglect,
no ravages of time, testify
to the present or to the
coming generations that
we have forgotten as a

people the cost of a free
and undivided republic.”
By the late 19th century, many communities
across the country had
begun to celebrate Memorial Day, and after World
War I, observers began to
honor the dead of all of
America’s wars.
So did the change from
the Southern observance
in April to the ofﬁcial
date established in May
have anything to do with
lingering animosities
between the North and
South? Mansﬁeld added
that he doesn’t think this
was the case. Instead,
it was because ﬂowers
that were placed on the
graves at that time were
picked from gardens
and meadows. Northern
graves were decorated in
May when ﬂowers begin
to bloom in the north.
Flowers begin to bloom in
the south a month earlier,
so by making the date in
May, ﬂowers would be
blooming in both locations.
Meigs County Commissioners issued a proclamation that was read
by Commissioner Tim
Ihle. The proclamation
declared that, “This Decoration Day observance
commemorate those who
have lost their lives in the
service of their country.”
A plaque was presented
to Carol Mourning in
honor of her husband,

Jim Mourning, who
passed away recently. The
group recognized Jim as
a wonderful person who
contributed much to the
preservation and history
of the Civil War.
Speaker Keigh Whaley
talked about the history
of the 75th Infantry Company D. The company
was formed in Middleport
in 1861, and Whaley’s
great-grandfather served
in the unit, which had

many encounters during
the war.
Betty Ashley Snow
Rosser sang “When
Johnny Comes Marching
Home,” accompanied by
Ken Sams on a lap guitar.
A closing prayer was
offered by Mansﬁeld, who
prayed for a safe return
for all soldiers who are
currently serving.
When the prayer
ended, Taps, played by
Jacob Hoback and Noah

Anderson, echoed behind
the courthouse, a solemn
reminder of the reason
for the observance.
According to sources
associated with the
groups participating
in the Decoration Day
observance, more Civil
War events and reenactments are planned,
especially for 2016.
Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155
EXT. 2551.

�LOCAL

2C Sunday, June 7, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA ACADEMY MIDDLE SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Hoover, Hannah; Howes, Justin;
Huffman, Richard; Jacks, Hannah;
Jacobs-Johnson, Bailey; Jeffers,
Madalyn; Johnson, Kylee; Johnson,
Trenton; Jones, Tessa; Kimble,
Abigail; Little, Evin; Little, Madison;
Long, Hannah; Long, Mackenzie;
Luoma, Ethan; Markin, Jeremy;
Masters, Alisha; Matthew, Felicity;
Mayes, Nicholas; Mayo, Kayon;
McGuire, Gary; Miller, Amaya;
Sixth Grade: Armstrong, James;
Minnis, Gene; Minton, Avery;
Beaver, Jakob; Belville, Zachary;
Moore, Jonah; Moore, Madelyn;
Best, Aurora; Bradley, Jaden;
Mynes, Ethan; Nichols, Logan;
Brock, Brianna; Bryan, Grantland;
Northup, Charles (CJ); Nuckles,
Buchanan, Kendra; Burnett,
Jadyn; O’Brien, Micah; Odom,
Braiden; Carpenter, Destiny; Clark, Arron (Chancey); Oesterreicher,
Kaylie; Clickenger, Hailie; Connelley, Savannah; Peters, Franklin; Petro,
Madisyn; Cook, Destiny; Cox,
Madison; Pishvazadeh, Darius;
Abigail; Cox, Aryan; Cox, Levi; Cox,
Pope, Erin; Preece, James (Tristan);
Tyler; Cremeans, Josie; Crisenbery, Preston, Madison; Rardin, Jacob;
Tristin; Crossen, Matthew; Curfman, Rees, Lillian; Rocchi, Braynt; Rocchi,
Bryson; Davis, William (Cooper);
Madison; Roe, Colton; Roush, Rita;
Deskins, Kylen; DeWitt, Kaleb;
Rucker, Asa; Scott, Jarrell; Seymour,
Donnet, Melody; Donohue III,
Dylan; Shadle, Cole; Siders,
Michael; Duncan, Coen; Ehman,
Kenneth; Simmers, Preston; Sipple,
Hailey (Hailey Jo); Evans, Caroline; Ryelee; Skidmore, Eric; Stanley,
Fitzwater, Abigail (Abby); Fletcher,
Malerie; Starnes, Riley; Stevens,
Shiana; Frye, Zane; Fulks, Cameron; Jacien; Stewart, Madison; Stout,
Gardner, Markeya; Geiser, Joel;
Adam; Stout, Michael; Thivener,
Gomez, Cameron; Halfhill, Malakai; Katlin; Thomas, Grace; Unroe,
Hamilton, Brooke; Hartshorn,
Autumn; Vanco, Noah; Walker,
Kayla; Hernandez, Nelida; Heskett, Dylan; Wamsley, Bode; Watts,
Sarah; Whealdon, Ethan; Wilcoxon,
Jamie; Hill, Brooklyn; Hill, Jacob;

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia
Academy Middle School principal Craig Wright is proud to
announce the following students are on the honor roll for
the fourth grading period for
the 2014-15 school year. These
students have achieved a 3.00
grade point average or above.

Montgomery, Kathryn (Morgan);
Mullen, Hayllie; Mullett, Tristan;
Neal, Trace; Owens, Darren; Paugh,
Daniel; Perkins, Kevin; Queen,
Seventh Grade: Adams, Chasity;
Carrissa; Queen, Katie; Roach,
Angel, Mason; Armstrong, Rylan;
Aryana; Roberts, Cade; Rodgers,
Bailey, Megan; Barnes, Alex;
Jaci; Rose, Cole; Russell, Alexis;
Beaver, McKensi; Black, Kayla;
Blazer, Elijah; Blouir, Logan; Bonzo, Saunders, Autumn; Shamblin,
Isabella (Bella); Bowling, Katelynn; Karsyn; Sheets, Dakota; Skinner,
Tessa; Smith, Grant; Snodgrass,
Burcham, Marybeth; Burnett,
Prestley; Stinson, Isaiah; Terry,
Alexia; Caldwell, Colton; Carter,
Gabriel; Thomas, Reece W.; Toler,
Bronson; Chapman, Alexis; Clark,
Natalee; Cox, Benjamin; Cremeens, Andrew; Trout, Joshua; Valadez,
Emmanuel; Valentine, Christopher;
Damon; Davies, Eliza; Davis,
Vance, Madison; VanSickle, Abby;
Natalie; Donovsky, Ryan; Eads,
Elizabeth; Evans, Makayland; Evans, Walker, Corbin; Wilcoxon, Justin;
Wray, Juanita (J R); Wright, Barbara
Wyatt; Facemire, Taylor; Garnes,
(Maddie).
LaRon; Graham, Hugh (Hobie);
Griffith, Logan; Grim, Paishence;
Eighth Grade: Abrahamson,
Halfhill, Samantha; Hall, Evann;
Zachary; Angus, Garrett; Baird,
Hamilton, Claire; Harris, Hanah
Elijah; Batten, Katelyn; Bauman,
(Grace); Heskett, Chloe; Hesson,
Emmolene; Bays, Shane; Bays,
Kirsten; Hill, Ian; James, Kirstin;
Stormy; Bowyer, Shannon; Burris,
Janes, Katilyn; Johnson, Abigail;
Johnson, Brooke; Johnson, Carley; Austin; Call, Cory; Campbell,
Carter; Carpenter, Katie; Carter,
Johnson, Dallas; Johnson, Noah;
Kingery, Haven; Lawler, Ethan; Lee, Blaine; Carter, Brendan; Casey,
Colin; Casto, Shayla; Copley,
Devin; Loveday, Morgan; Loveday,
Zachary; Mankins, Mahela; Martin, Hunter; Cremeans, Abigail;
Peri; Martyn, Daniel; Massie, Alexis; Crothers, Sydney; Davis, Cole;
Dischert, Sean; Donohue, Alaina;
Mayse, Angie; McCarley, James
(Will); McCormick, Kara; Meadows, Downs, Hannah; Dunphy, Nathan;
Eggers, Trinity; Ehman, Kaden;
Bailey; Meadows, Trenton;
Estep, Hannah; Evans, Ian; Faro,
Miller, Brianna; Miller, Sydney;
Sterling; Williamson, Kalyn;
Workman, Derek; Young, Bailie.

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
GALLIPOLIS — The
following students made
the A Honor Roll for the
fourth nine weeks at Ohio
Valley Christian School. An
asterisk denotes All As:

Third grade: *Austin Beaver,
*Cash Burnett, *Emma
Harper, Kelsey Henry, *Lillian
Sanderson, *Michael Staufer,
*Emily White, Madeline Young.

RIO GRANDE ELEM. HONOR ROLL

Johnson, *Marcie Kessinger,
*Autumn Trent.

The following students
made the B Honor Roll for
the fourth nine weeks:

Eighth grade: *Emily
Childers.

First grade: Eli George,
Ethan Killingsworth, Tyler
Fourth grade: *Catherine
Ninth grade: *Shelby Bing,
Morris; Second grade:
Haggy, *Micah Hughes, Trinity Cori Hutchison, Katie Westfall. Nathan Hall, Rowdy Lybbert;
First grade: Nathaniel
Norville.
Third grade: Haylie Beaver,
Beaver, *Benjamin Brown,
10th grade: *Debbie Reed.
Madison Beaver, Kathleen
*Savannah Davison,
Fifth grade: *Sarah Johnson,
Johnson, Savannah Riddle;
*Kayleigh Denny, *Mia
*Cody Mathias, Mallory
11th grade: Eric Blevins,
Fourth grade: Kenzie
Howerton, *Garrett Johnson, McDonald, *Jeremiah Riddle. Caleb Burnett, *Ashley
Childers, Christina Dong,
*Joshua Staufer.
Lilly Tolliver; Fifth grade:
Childers, Marshall Hood.
Isaac Blank, John Case, Kylie
Sixth grade: Josiah Johnson,
Second grade: *Makayla
Emma Shamblin, *Laura Young. 12th grade: *Emily Carman, Henry, Chloe Payne. Seventh
grade: Dayja Leach; Eighth
Anderson, *Isaac Conley,
*Alexis Clark, Ashten
grade: Trevor Blank; Ninth
*Jazahera Moore, *Brittyn
Seventh grade: Levi
Crank, *Teah Elliott, Phil
grade: Zach Long, Ben Riddle,
Anderson, Amy Dong, Laura
Snedaker.
Hollingshead.
YuYan Sun; 10th grade:
Jared Parissi, Nathanael
Riddle, Rachel Sargent; 11th
grade: Ann Bowman, Morgan
Jenkins, Hannah Westfall;
12th grade: Evan Bowman,
Delaney Bronosky, Cassandra
Hutchison, Rebekah Sargent.
�����TU�"WFOVF�t�(BMMJQPMJT �0)������

The French Art Colony
�������������t�www.frenchartcolony.org

FAC

Thursday, June 4 - August 27
Music to begin @ 6:30

The FAC lawn will come to life
with a mini-arts festival featuring:
t�-JWF�&amp;OUFSUBJONFOU�
t�-FHBM�#FWFSBHFT
t�'PPE�GSPN�-PDBM�3FTUBVSBOUT
t�(BMMJB�$PVOUZ�"SUJTBO�.BSLFU
Bring Lawn Chairs!
� �
"OE�NVDI�NPSF�

$5.00

Riverby Theatre Guild:
Plays, Musicals &amp; More!

HOW THE OTHER
HALF DIES
Comedy Murder-Mystery July 24-26

BROADWAY MUSICAL
REVUE

Joshua; Fink, Joshua; Fitzwater,
Molly; Flinner, Seth; Frye, Elizabeth
(Jolyn); Frye, Trinity; Gillispie,
Kelsie; Haddad, Noah; Halfhill,
Wyatt; Hamilton, Thomas;
Henry, Derek; Hoover, Elizabeth;
Hughes, Haley; Jarrell, Kaitlyn;
Johnson, Derek; Jordan, Arianna;
Kormanik, Kiesla; LaBello, Chance;
Liberatore, Mariah; Lincoln, Erin;
Longstreet, Brent; Lowe, Kitrick;
Lucas, David; Masters, Brittany;
Masters, Kyle; Mayo, Porsha;
McCarley, Tea; McClelland, Justin;
McConnell, Gretchen; McGuire,
Cheyenne; McGuire, Dorthy;
McKean, Cadha; McNeal, Tabatha;
Miller, Ashleigh; Nuckles, Mason;
Petrie, Samuel; Polinsky, Haylee;
Pullins, Lane; Rose, Logan; Ross,
Jonathan; Roush, Kenedie;
Rutherford, Eli; Saxon, Bo; Sheets,
Nicholas; Shepherd, Johnathan;
Short, Carlin; Sipple, Wyatt;
Sisson, Brett; Skidmore, McKenzie;
Skinner, Sophia; Smith, Bryce;
Stanley, Morgan; Staton, Taylor;
Stroud, Jason T; Sydnor, Alana;
Takahashi, Adara; Thayaparan,
Tulasii; Thomas, Reece D.; Traylor,
Kyra; Turley, Ashley; Walker, Bailey;
Ward, Derricka; Waugh, Mollie;
Webb, Ashton; White, Richard;
Williamson, Madalyn; Wood, Jenna.

Garden
&amp;
Tasting
Tour

RIO GRANDE — Jeremy Hout, principal of
Rio Grande Elementary
School, has released the
A/AB Honor Roll for the
2014-15 school year.

Third Grade
Mrs. Stephens Room
204 :(All A’s) — Emma
Dodson, Lily Gibson
Colley, Haley Holsinger,
Matthew Lawrence, Brody
Kindergarten
Moore, Leah Polcyn,
Mrs. Corvin Room 208;
JordanRardin, Conner
Mrs. Mayes: Room 209;
Roe, Aiden Toler; (A/B)
Miss Simmons: Room 106: — Autumn Brumfield,
Principal’s Improvement.
Hollee Castor,Tyler Dahse,
Timothy Moore, Lindia
First Grade
Phoenix, Wyatt Webb.
Mrs. Kimes: (All A’s)
Mrs. S. Rocchi Room 202:
— Hayden Morehouse,
(All A’s) — Caolina Sola,
Morgan Browning,
Kamryn Daniels, Lamiyah
Ryan Lucas, Kamron
Wilson, Elizabeth Hout,
Isaac, Zalah Scarberry,
Nathanael Baird, Kaden
Gage Holley, Ethan
Cochrane, Tristan Bentley,
Rose, Kyra Palmer,
Connor Davis, Rhys
Braeden Cardwell,
Davis, Sophia Tran, Emma
Logen Drummond,
Hammons, Silas Easter,
Zoey Thomas; (A/B’s)
Hannah Tagg; (A/B) —
— MuCayla Masters,
Jennah Polcyn, Mattee
Peyton Bryant, Kenya
Athey, Makayla Bunch,
Robinette, Hannah
Caiden Fulks, Bethan
Phillips, Jasmine
Wilfong, Devontae Fooce. Fourth Grade
Mrs. Lanham Room 113:
Mrs. Price Room 208
(All A’s) — Taylor Barnes,
: (All A’s) — Carson
Katee Bentley, Beckett
Wamsley, Chloe Rodgers,
Camden, Alec Conway,
Savannah Friend, Gracie
Caden Gaul, Shelby
Lee, Chris Moore,
Greenlee, Jaxon Myers,
Keagen Daniels, Mason
Justin Owens, Rachel
Skidmore, Courtney
Schenk, Nathan Shockey
Corvin, Emma Mayes;
— (A/B ) — Blake Howard, (A/B) — Morgan Gibson,
Evan DeWitt, Maggie
Hannah Young, Cody
McPherson, Cambell
Janes, Cody Bowman, Ali
Osborne, Mar’Quis Sledge. French, Draven Stapleton,
Cameron Ho.
Second Grade
Mr. Wothe Room 206: (All
Mrs. Blazer Room 205: (All A’s) — Maddox Camden,
A’s) Landon DeLille, Allison Kori Copley, Kylie Plantz,
Lawler, Cassandra Maillet, Grace Rucker, CJ Willis,
Mac Marazon, Madalyn
Luke Willis, Jacob Winters;
Miller, Colbie Nida, Sophia (A/B) — Jade Winters,
Rocchi, Reagan Skidmore, Taylor Warren, Kodi
Sarah Thomas, Kendal
Mandeville, Malik Hurt,
Walker; (A/B’s) — Aleesha Taylor Fitch, Brady Fitch,
Jordan, Trinity Still, Carrie Sydney Blouir, Brock
Winston.
Howard, Wyatt Athey;
Mrs. Randles Room 107:
Principal’s Improvement
(All A’s) — Evan Wilbur,
— Wyatt Athey, Maddux
Mckenna Moodispaugh,
Camden, Kori Copley,
Haleigh Adkins, Kayden
Brady Fitch, Taylor Fitch,
Gillenwater; (A/B) —
Laney Howard, Brock
Matthew Foster, Alison
Howard, Carley Kingery,
Webb, Savannah Hurd,
Kylie Plantz, Noah
Robinette, Grace Rucker,
Summer Walters, Taylor
Warren, Jacob Winter,
Jade Winters.

July 31 - August 2

LITTLE MERMAID

Saturday, June 20

August 22 &amp; 23

10:30-2:00
Tickets: $20

“Careers Close To Home”

ENROLL
TODAY!

Tour our fabulous backyard
gardens of historic French City!
SUMMER GALLERY
Many sites will offer tastings
from local restaurants included
EXHIBITS:
in your ticket. Also, wine &amp;
Galleries open Tues-Fri, 9-4 &amp; Sat. 10-3.
specialty iced tea reception
Free Admission
Frederick J. Ripley: Photography of Trains, @ FAC Thaler Memorial Garden
May 14-June 20
from 2:00 – 3:30
Festival Exhibit: June 30 - August 1
REGIONAL ARTISTS AT SELECT
Larry Rood: Photography,
SITES CREATING ORIGINAL
August 13 - September 19
GARDEN-INSPIRED ARTWORK

Summer Quarter
Begins July 6th

“FEEL THE
DIFFERENCE”
GALLIPOLIS CAREER
COLLEGE
740-446-4367

Beginning June 9th
Little Artists: "HFT����� 5VFTEBZT �����������
Arts Explorers:�"HFT������ 8FEOFTEBZT ����������
Advance Registration Required
$POUBDU�'"$�GPS�.PSF�*OGPSNBUJPO

60582795

YOUTH SUMMER ART CAMPS

Taesean Thomas.

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited by the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools
Reg# 1274B

Fifth Grade
Mrs. Fortner Room
209: (All A’s) — Brenna
Echler, Abigail Hammons,
Bryson Miller; (A/B)
— Arianna Collins, Ilo
Dodson, Brayden Easton,
Brady Fraley, Caleb
Geiser, Charles Mullins,
Preslee Reed. Principal’s
Improvement.
Mrs. Cochrane 207: (All
A’s) — Nolan Collins,
Brody Wilt; (A/B) —
Shawn Chafins, Noni
Davies, Rylee Gaskin,
Collin Watson. Principal’s
Improvement.

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, June 7, 2015 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

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�LOCAL

4C Sunday, June 7, 2015

Polcyn couple celebrates 50 years

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS —
United Producers Inc.,
livestock report of sales
from June 3, 2015.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds,
Steers, $250-$315, Heifers, $235-$275; 425-525
pounds, Steers, $235$290, Heifers, $200-$265;
550-625 pounds, Steers,
$220-$260, Heifers, $185$235; 650-725 pounds,
Steers, $200-$240, Heifers, $175-$220; 750-850
pounds, Steers, $195$215, Heifers, $165-$210.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

$93-$104; Thin/Light,
$85-$92; Bulls, $146.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs,
$1,900-$2,500; Bred
Cows, $1,175-$1,750;
Bulls, $145.50; Goats,
$42.50-$70; Baby
Calves, $80-$450
Upcoming specials
Fat Cattle Sale next
week, bred cows available on farm.

Direct sales or free
on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at
Fed Cattle
(740) 339-0241, Stacy (304)
Steers, select, $142-$156. 634-0224, Luke (740) 6453697 or Mark (740) 645Cows
5708 or visit the website at
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed,
$105-$123; Medium/Lean, www.uproducers.com.

UPCOMING SALE

The following properties will be for
sale by the Meigs County Sheriff on
Friday, June 12, 2015 at 10:00am at
the Meigs County Courthouse.
• 34250 Sugar Run Road, Long Bottom,
Ohio- 1,147 sq. ft. 1 story home with 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, and 1 car attached
garage, approx. 74 years old on 27 acres.
• 38660 Bradbury Road, Middleport, Ohio1,776 sq. ft. 2 story home with 4 bedrooms,
and 1 bath, approx... 55 years old, on
62.274 acres.
• 2448 Third Street, Syracuse, Ohio- 1,155
sq. ft. commercial building formerly a
restaurant, and 2 bathrooms, approx... 52
years old, with a 374 sq. ft. detached garage
building on 0.654 acre lot.

For further information contact Randy
Hays at Farmers Bank and Savings
Company 992-4048.

GALLIPOLIS — Chester Michael Polcyn and
Karen Curnutte Polcyn,
of Gallipolis, will celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary June 10.
The couple was married June 10, 1965, in
St. Albans W.Va. Karen’s
uncle Pastor Earl Curnutte ofﬁciated the ceremony.
Mike and Karen Polcyn
will be honored with an
open house June 7.
There will be an anniversary celebration at
Calvary Christian Center
between 2-7 p.m. June
7. Friends and family
are all welcome to visit
and share wishes and
enjoy refreshments, while
celebrating their many
years of love. No gifts
please, but cards or notes
may be mailed to Mr. and
Mrs. C.M. Polcyn at 1389
Johnson Ridge Road, Gallipolis OH 45631.
Mike and Karen are
two longtime citizens of
the county and are both
graduates of Kyger Creek
High School. They have
been very active in the
community.
Mike is an Air Force
veteran serving during the
early 1960s. He worked as
a communications technician for 28 years, retiring
from Ohio Bell.
He was also an active
member of the Gallia
County Local school board
for 12 years, and most
notably has served the parents and children of Gallia
County as an endearing
Santa Claus for 40 years.
Karen has not only served
as Mrs. Claus, but also as
an early education interventionist with Gallia County
schools for 16 years.
She graduated with a

bachelor’s degree in education from Rio Grande
College, and continued
her schooling to receive
her master’s degree from
Marshall University in
2004. She has been gracing the stages locally with
her singing expertise
since she was a child.
They have contributed
their voices to choirs at
Grace Methodist Church,
and the University of Rio
Grande many times, most
notably Handel’s Messiah.
They are the proud parents of Shannon (Leah) Polcyn, John Polcyn and Kari
LaBello, and grandparents
of Kanoa Stroop, Travis Polcyn and Mesa Polcyn.
They attend Calvary
Christian Center, 553
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis,
which is hosting the open
house.

60585198

Sponsored by:

Sponsored by Sponsor

The University of Rio Grande
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