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                  <text>On this
day in
history …

Partly sunny.
High of 89.
Low around 65.

Wahama
seniors enjoy
historic finale.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 92, Volume 69

Middleport
discusses Board
of Public Affairs

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 s 50¢

Fund honors Kopp

By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — Two members have been
added to Middleport’s Board of Public Affairs,
and a third member is being sought after Monday
night’s Middleport Council meeting.
Bruce Martin and Ron Burkhammer have been
added to the board, which will operate the village’s water and sewer systems. Mayor Michael
Gerlach told council and the audience that four
of the water and sewer employees quit their positions and one position — the position of village
administrator held by Faymon Roberts — was
eliminated, leaving water and sewer with no director or operator.
The mayor said the Logan and Hysell street project is to be started within the week, but according
to the EPA the village must hire an operator of
record or face large ﬁnes soon. Gerlach also suggested bringing in Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
if there should be a leak in the water system. However, because of the severance package for Roberts
that cost between between $54,000 and $56,000,
water and sewer money is down in Middleport.
EPA said that they couldn’t understand why
council had done what they’d done and that council must read the National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination permit to see what they have to comply with. The mayor said that according to legal
counsel, neither the mayor or council can hire new
water and sewer employees, causing the need for
the Board of Public Affairs.
“No matter what we do tonight, it’s not going to
keep the clock from ticking … our ability to stay
operational is in jeopardy,” Gerlach said.
All voted in favor of Burkhammer, with a tie
vote for Martin. Gerlach said that Burkhammer
told him that if Martin wasn’t approved Burkhammer would not join the board. Gerlach then broke
the tie with a yes vote, and approved both men to
the board, saying that Burkhammer has a ﬁnancial
background and Martin a chemistry background,
which will both be integral to the board.
Fiscal Ofﬁcer Sue Baker asked council to reconsider cutting the Street Fund revenue — two permissive taxes that were $5 each — citing the vitality of council bringing in revenue for the village.
“Councils everywhere, it’s your duty to maintain
revenue so you can offer your village services,” she
said. “That’s what government is.”
Baker said that the revenue from the street fund
is what’s used to salt and plow the roads in winter,
and without the $16,000-$18,000 to pay for salt
and other expenses, the roads will not be as fully
protected, potentially causing damage to cars.
Heighton made a motion to rescind council’s
decision to cut the Street Fund revenue.
“Give us a chance on our streets,” Gerlach said.
The motion died for lack of a second.
Mike Hendrickson, Middleport building inspector and ﬂoodplain administrator, asked for a $25
increase to the fee for zoning appeals. Currently,
the fee is $25. Hendrickson said the extra $25
will help to cover administration costs. All council
members approved the increase. Hendrickson also
publicly announced the need for another member
of the zoning committee. The current committee
consists of Bob Pooler, Danny Thomas and Lawrence Powell.
Visitors to the meeting were Tim King and
George Hoffman.
King gave a public thank-you to the Middleport
Community Association and all volunteers who
cleaned sidewalks and street corners for alumni
weekend.

Photo courtesy of Rick Haye, Marshall University.

Marshall University’s late president, Dr. Stephen J. Kopp, presented graphic design student Brianna Jarvis with a plaque for the life-size
bison that Jarvis decorated as part of the Visual Arts Center grand opening events, Sept. 18-20, 2014.

Memorial honors late
Marshall president
Staff Report

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— Beginning spring
2016, Marshall University’s College of Arts
and Media will make an

dent, who died in December, and his wife, Jane.
Established by the
Marshall University
Foundation Inc. to reward
students’ exhibition work,
the endowment will place
award from the Stephen J. priority with standouts
from the Annual Student
Kopp Memorial EndowJuried Exhibition.
ment Fund for AchieveEach year during his
ment in the Visual Arts to
tenure, Stephen Kopp
a student.
The fund is in honor of hand-selected art from
the university’s late presi- the Annual Student

Juried Exhibition to be
featured in a special, oneyear exhibition located
in his ofﬁce, according to
Jane Kopp.
“It meant a lot to him
to be able to display the
students’ art,” Jane Kopp
explained, “and I think
it meant a lot to the students, as well.”
School of Art and
See KOPP | 5

Annual River Sweep slated for June 20
Staff Report

POMEROY — The 30th annual
Ohio River Sweep will be 9 a.m. to
noon June 20, and volunteers are
needed to assist in this massive,
six-state clean-up.
River Sweep is an event organized by the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission, an
interstate water pollution agency
for the Ohio River Valley, along
with environmental protection and
natural resource agencies from
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky,
West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
Locally, the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District will
administer clean-up sites in Pomeroy and Racine. There will be no

clean-up site in Syracuse. For more
information on those sites, contact Jenny Ridenour at the Meigs
SWCD at 740-992-4282.
In addition, a clean-up will be 6-9
p.m. June 19 at Forked Run State
Park near Reedsville. More information on that site is available by contacting Todd Bissell at 740-444-1388.
Volunteers may report that morning to the central gazebo near the
riverfront amphitheatre in Pomeroy, or to Star Mill Park in Racine.
Volunteers will get an Ohio River
Sweep T-shirt and pizza. Gloves
and bags are provided.
Since 1989, this award-winning
clean-up for the Ohio River and
its tributaries brings thousands of

volunteers to the riverbanks to collect tons of trash and debris. River
Sweep encompasses the entire
length of the river, from its origin
in Pittsburgh to its end in Cairo,
Ill., including nearly 3,000 miles of
shoreline and many tributaries.
More than 20,000 volunteers
from public organizations, civic
groups, recreational clubs, and the
general public in six states bordering the river come together to collect more than 20,000 tons of trash
and other debris from the banks of
the Ohio River and tributaries.
For more information about the
Ohio River Sweep or to ﬁnd other
clean-up sites visit www.orsanco.
org/sweep.

See BOARD | 5

DeWine: Avoid Cavaliers ticket scams

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

Staff Report

— SPORTS
NBA: 6
Baseball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 5
Classified: 7-8
Comics: 9

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

said. “We’re encouraging
Cavs fans to be vigilant
COLUMBUS — Ohio
and to look for the signs
Attorney General Mike
of a scam. If someone
DeWine warned Cleveoffers to sell you tickets
land Cavaliers fans to
at a price that’s a little too
beware of phony offers
good to be true or says
for tickets to see the Cavs
you have to wire money
face the Golden State
to buy the tickets, it’s
Warriors in the NBA
likely a scam.”
Finals on Thursday in
Ticket scammers often
Cleveland.
post
phony ads on Craig“A chance to see the
slist
offering
tickets to
Cavs play in the NBA
popular
events
at a good
Finals is one of the hotprice.
Victims
pay
for the
test tickets in Cleveland
tickets,
generally
by
wirright now, and scam arting the money or buying
ists know that,” DeWine

a prepaid card and
providing the card
number, but they
receive nothing in
return.
In December,
two Ohioans lost
DeWine
$800 each trying
to buy tickets to
see Ohio State play Alabama in the 2015 Sugar
Bowl. They found offers
for tickets on Craigslist
and sent payment to the
sellers but never received
the tickets.
DeWine’s ofﬁce has

pursued several criminal cases
involving ticket
scams, including one against
a Coshocton
husband and wife
who took more
than $200,000
from hundreds of victims
throughout the U.S. and
Canada by selling but
never delivering tickets
to events like the NBA
Finals, Super Bowl, and
concerts.
See DEWINE | 5

�LOCAL

2 Wednesday, June 10, 2015

DEATH NOTICES

DONALD CROY, SR.
COLUMBUS — Donald
Croy Sr., 71, of Columbus, passed away Monday, June 8, 2015, at his
residence.
He was born Jan. 4,
1944, in Columbus, son
of the late Arthur and
Gladys Pullins Croy.
He is survived by two
sons, Donald Croy Jr.,
Robert Croy and Jim
Croy; two daughters,
Donna Hawse and Denise
Hannah; and several
grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
In addition to his par-

ents, he was preceded in
death by his wife, Barbara
Croy.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Thursday, June 11,
2015, at White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio, with Pastor Gene
Goodwin ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in White
Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call the
funeral home Thursday
from 11 a.m. until time of
service.
You may sign the online
guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

EUGENE EVERETT HAWKINS
MIDDLEPORT —
Eugene Everett Hawkins,
83, of Middleport, passed
away Tuesday, June 9,
2015. He was born Nov.
4, 1931, in Pomeroy,
son of the late Everett
Hawkins and Francis Niemeyer Hawkins.
Hawkins was a member of St. Paul Lutheran
Church. He worked at
Rowley &amp; Reed Hardware
for 12 years and Cross
Hardware for 10 years
before retiring as director
of maintenance for Meigs
Local Schools after 25
years of service.
He is survived by his
children Regina (Mark)
Simpson and Ronald
(Frances) Hawkins;
grandchildren Joshua
Simpson, Tiffany (Bryan)
Howell, Cindy (Eric)

Cisco, Michael Hawkins
and Matthew Hawkins;
and great-grandchildren
Walker and Cooper Cisco
and Jayda and Dalton
Hawkins.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by his wife of 54
years, Mary Lou Smith
Hawkins.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Thursday,
June 11, 2015, with Pastor Gary Ellis ofﬁciating
at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Middleport. Burial will follow
at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Visiting hours will be 6-8
p.m. Wednesday at the
funeral home in Middleport.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

COLEMAN
CHESHIRE, Ohio — Dorothy F. Coleman, 87,
of Cheshire, passed away Tuesday, June 9, 2015 at
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center, Middleport, Ohio.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday, June 12, 2015, at
Addison Freewill Baptist Church with Pastor Rick
Barcus and Pastor Jack Parsons ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in Reynolds Cemetery. Friends may call
at the church between 6-8 p.m. Thursday, June 11,
2015. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
CONARD
GLENWOOD, W.Va. — Ervin Lee Conard, 67, of

Glenwood, died Monday, June 8, 2015, at St. Mary’s
Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Thursday, June 11,
2015, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. Burial will follow at the Conard family cemetery in Glenwood. Visitation will be two hours prior
to service Thursday at the funeral home.
SPEARS
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Raymond Spears II, 43
of Huntington, passed away Monday, June 8, 2015.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio,
is in charge of arrangements which are incomplete.

Alumni Association holds banquet
Staff Report

POMEROY — The
annual Pomeroy High
School Alumni Banquet
was held recently at the
Meigs High School Cafeteria with approximately
180 in attendance.
Master of ceremonies for the event was
Michael Werry (1962)
of Belpre. The meeting opened with the
Pledge of Allegiance led
by George Harris, Jr.
(1965), followed by the
group singing the Purple
and White. The invocation before the banquet
meal was given by
Joseph Struble (1947).
Following the banquet meal, classes were
recognized. They were
1937: Cordelia Curtis
Bentz, Pomeroy; 1938:
Sara Hawk Cullums and
Marie Dorahs Curd,
Pomeroy; 1939: Mildred
Thoma Ziegler and June
Forbes Sayre, Pomeroy;
1943: Belva Jung Glaze,
Pomeroy; 1944: Betty
Couch Thomas, Powell,
Ohio; 1945: 70th anniversary: Agnes Bentz
Rose, Little Hocking,
Ohio; 1946: George
Wright and Howard
Mullen, Pomeroy; 1947:
Frank Ryther, Syracuse,
Ohio, Ida Johnson Murphy and Joseph Struble,
Pomeroy; 1948: William
Knight, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., Nelda Drenner
Mockey Hickory, N.C.,
Kenneth Harris and June
Whaley VanVranken,
Pomeroy; 1949: Lois
Smith Hawley, Peggy
Dailey Houdashelt, Martha Struble, Pomeroy,
and Ann Foster Cotterill,
Lancaster, Ohio; 1950:
65th anniversary: Patricia Burnside Thoma,
Bonnie Eichinger Kelly
and Nora Riggs Eason,
Pomeroy; Betty Genheimer Knight, Point

Pleasant; and Emmogene Edwards Hamilton,
Syracuse; 1952: Shirley
Beegle Huston, Syracuse, Richard Gilkey,
West Columbia, W.Va.
and Phyllis Meier May,
Pomeroy; 1953: William
Roush, El Paso, Texas,
Marilyn Vickers Graham,
Columbus, Theodore
Scott, Westland, Mich.;
Kenneth Cole, Washington Court House,
Ohio, Sue Struble
Tubbs, Syracuse; 1954:
Donald Yeauger, Canal
Winchester, Ohio. and
Rosalie Story, Pomeroy;
1955: 60th anniversary: Bill Hysell, Nancy
Jacobs Hanold and
Paul Wise, Columbus;
Roger Hines and Flora
Hayes Karnes, Logan;
Gordon Winebrenner,
Syracuse, Ray Shasteen,
The Villages, Fla.; Stacie
Arnold, Thomas Smith,
Harley Johnson and
Janet Bowers Venoy,
Pomeroy; 1956: Carolyn
Brown Charles, Columbus, Shirley Bowers
Bumgardner and Mary
Scott Wise, Middleport
and Dorothy Amberger,
Syracuse; 1957: Brenda
Strauss Eimer and Gary
Carman, Columbus;
Rita Ball Matthews,
April Shasteen Smith,
Lila Terrell Mitch and
Dan Morris, Pomeroy;
1958: Marcia Grueser
Arnold, Thelma Davis
Jeffers and Jerry Fields,
Pomeroy; 1959: Kathryn
Slack Johnson, Pomeroy;
1960: 55th anniversary:
Fred Brown, Plant City,
Fla.; Janet Rummel,
Hamburg, Iowa; Paul
Roush, Tuppers Plains,
Jan Thomas Gettles,
Jackson; Ronald Carman, Columbus, Janice
Zwilling, Syracuse;
Albert Martin and Elsie
Arnold Martin, Vincent;
Richard Poulin and

Marilyn Blackwood
Poulin, McMurray, Pa.;
Rose Hysell Haggy,
Springﬁeld, Howard
K. Parker, Marietta,
Barbara Eskew Fields,
Vincent Knight and Phillip Harrison, Pomeroy;
1961: Michael Roberts,
Akron; Don Sayre, Merritt Island, Fla.; Norman
Price and Ben Ewing,
Pomeroy; 1962: Michael
Werry, Belpre and Jean
Hilton, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; 1963: Charlene
Diehl Rutherford, Judy
Wehrung Sisson and
Allen Downie, Pomeroy;
1964: Keith Whaley,
Lancaster, Jennifer Crew
Solomon, Chester, S.C.;
Yvonne Beal Young and
Don Mayer, Pomeroy;
1965: 50th Anniversary:
Brenda Potts Hopfer,
Cenverville; Patty Owens
Carson, Ocala, Fla;
Katie Morarity Davis,
Marathon, Fla; Susanna
Arnold Fitzgerald, Gardner, Kan.; Faye Cramer
Isenhour, Claremont,
N.C.; Larry Brown, Delaware, Ohio, Sheila Hicks
Deems, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Bonnie Smith, Little Hocking, OH; Diana
Zirkle, Middleport;
Jean Phelps Cleland,
Dupont, Ind.; William
Sayre, Minford, Ohio;
Carla Will Werry, Belpre;
William Jewell, Tucson,
Ariz.; Joe Gilmore,
Wadsworth, Ill.; Joseph
Hall, Don Cullums,
Donna Hauck Carr,John
Anderson, Joan Hewetson Anderson, John
Curd, and Linda Darnell
Mayer, Pomeroy; George
Harris, Jr., Peggy Folmer Crane, Linda Jeffers Milliron and Ed
Durst, Middleport; Kay
Wyatt Profﬁtt, Racine;
Robert Emler, Mesa,
Ariz.; Arthur Barry
Boyer, Malta, Ohio; and
Larry Marshall, Long
Bottom and Thomas
McGowan,Houston,
Texas; 1966: William
Francis, Reedsville;
Thomas Bentz, Rex
Cummings, Syracuse,
and Guy Sargent, Pomeroy; 1967: Judith Smith
Bunner, Decatur, Ind.;
1968: Paulette Hudson
Harrison, Pomeroy.
Jean Hilton (1962)

presented a humorous
reading preceding the
nominating committee report. The ofﬁcers
elected for 2015-2016
are William A. Young
(1961) President; William Francis (1966) vice
president, secretarytreasurers: Marcia
Grueser Arnold and
Thelma Davis Jeffers
(both 1958) and the
executive committee of
Mary Jane Wise, April
Smith, Judy Sisson, Lila
Mith, Charlene Rutherford and Carol Kennedy.
The Advisory Committee elected are Norman
Price, Jean Hilton, Ed
Kennedy and JoAnne
Williams.
Scholarship winners
were announced. Receiving the Pomeroy Alumni
Scholarship in amount
of $1,000 was Amanda
Harra of Olathe, Kan.,
granddaughter of Patricia Blakeslee Circle.
The Pomeroy Alumni
Scholarship in amount
of $1,000 to Haley Kennedy, granddaughter of
Edward Kennedy and
Carol Strauss Kennedy.
The Dan and Robert
Morris $1,000 scholarship went to Jessica Litz
of Circleville, Ohio who
is the granddaughter of
Brenda Strauss Eimer.
The $1,000 Robert and
Sheila Strauss Eastman
scholarship was awarded
to Meghan Rice of Vincent, Ohio, granddaughter of James and Sharon
Louks.
The Charles Gibbs
$1,000 scholarship for
education majors went
to Sierra Cottrill, Lancaster, who is a greatgreat granddaughter
of Maria Skinner and a
great granddaughter of
Ann Cottrill.
Francis Florist and
Bob’s Market &amp; Greenhouses were thanked for
providing ﬂowers and
balloons for the banquet.
Group singing of the
Alma Mater led by June
Whaley Van Vranken
and the Benediction by
Joseph Struble concluded the banquet. Group
photos of reunion classes
were taken at the conclusion of the evening.

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.
60589103

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

Need to advertise?
Call
740.992.2155

• 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.

60585198

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 3

Grange discusses federal regulation of more streams
Staff Report

RACINE — Racine Grange
met recently to discuss the
current proposal of the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) and the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to increase
federal control over streams.
Currently, all free-ﬂowing
bodies of water are under control of the of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers. This
includes the Ohio River and
ends of some tributaries like
the Shade River, but not the
entire Shade.
Without the passage of a law
by Congress, these two agencies are asking to take control

over all water, according to the
report. The members of Racine
Grange voted unanimously on a
resolution to oppose this regulation. The EPA is currently
taking testimony by letter on
the issue. Any person may comment if they have the identiﬁcation number of the proposed
change.
The legislative agent reported that President Obama is
now working to make it a law
to require adults to have certain vaccinations as children
are required to have before
attending public school, according to the report. Although
the Grange took no action, the
sentiment of the members was

against more federal control.
The state of Ohio, under its
new education funding formula,
states that rural schools will
not receive any cuts, although
they will probably not receive
any increases despite inﬂation.
Also, proponents of legalization of marijuana in Ohio are
looking for more signatures to
get it on the ballot this fall. The
group also discussed President
Obama’s stance on the legalization of illegal immigrants.
Charles Yost, master, reported that Racine Grange had a
good attendance at the recent
Meigs County Pomona Grange
banquet. He commended the
banquet speaker, Ohio State

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Grange Master Robert White,
on his stand on protection of
land rights. Nita Yost, family
activities chairman, reported
that Emma Ashley won ﬁrst
place in the county for her
Cherry fruit bars, Olivia Yost
won ﬁrst place on the youth
cookie contest and Keith Ashley won second place for monkey bread. The ﬁrst-place winners were taken to state ﬁnals.
Under community service,
the Grange donated children’s
books to the Racine Library
for its Easter egg hunt and Bill
Downie donated feed sacks
to the Junior Grange for their
crafts. Also, coupons are being
sent to troops overseas. June

Ashley donated a television to
the Grange for having videos
shown for lecturer’s programs.
Emma Ashley, lecturer, held an
education program on the history of Mother Goose. A quiz
on the opening words of Mother Goose rhymes was given.
The youth are preparing for
Ohio State Grange summer
camp and Junior Grange camp.
It was reported that Carson
Yost graduated from Marshall
University. Hemlock Grange
will visit Racine Grange this
month and the annual inspection by the Ohio State Grange
will be conducted. A potluck
dinner will precede the meeting.

DOGS OF THE WEEK

Codery Cemetery
Grave Marking

ary War soldier Jacob Cowdery, an
ancestor of Keith Cowdery and Mary
Cowdery, at Codery Cemetery in
Keno, June 20 at 2 p.m. The cemetery
is located four miles from Chester
CHESTER — The Ewing Chapter
Court House and interested parties
of the Sons of American Revolutionary War Soldiers will have a ceremony may gather at the courthouse at 1:30
to mark the grave of Revolutionp.m. to go as a group.

MEIGS COUNTY —The Meigs
County Dog Shelter
is located at 41790
Fairgrounds Lane in
Pomeroy. Donations
of food, gas cards and
monetary contributions are always needed and welcomed.
Volunteers are also
appreciated. For
information contact
the shelter at 740992-3779 or email

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
THURS., JUNE 11
WELLSTON — The
GJMV Solid Waste
Management District
Board of Directors will
meet at 3:30 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce in
Wellston.

SAT., JUNE 13
REEDSVILLE —
Bethel Worship Center, located at 39782
State Route 7, will
host Good Gospel
Singing from 4-8 p.m.
Featured singers will
be Rick and Ginny
Towe, Mike Cadle,
John and Velma Dolly,

Jerry and Diana Frederick, Brian and Family Connections and
Angela Gibson and
Others. Concessions
are available. For more
information call 740508-6782.
POMEROY — The
Annual Kids Fishing Derby will start
at 8 a.m. The event
is being held by the
Meigs County Fish
&amp; Game Association. Anyone 15 years
or younger must be
accompanied by an
adult. One rod and
reel per child. Bait can

only be night crawlers and chicken liver.
No minnows or live
bait. There will be
free food, free drinks
and prizes. Local merchants helped sponsor
the event. To get to
the Derby location,
from Pomeroy, take
State Route 7 north,
turn left on Texas
Road and follow the
Derby signs.
LETART TOWNSHIP — The regular
meeting of Letart
Township will be 5 p.m.
June 15 in the Letart
Township Building.

ABOVE, Clyde is a 5-yearold Walker coonhound. A big
boy at 75 pounds, he has a
really sweet disposition and
loves to be with people. Clyde
is neutered and would like
to go home with someone
soon. AT RIGHT, meet Daisy,
an 18-month-old red tick
coonhound, measuring about
35 inches tall. A little shy,
there is nothing a few days
of TLC with a “forever family”
won’t cure. She is spayed.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 53.46
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.46
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 126.81
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.86
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 59.99
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 11.60
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.400
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 47.05
Collins (NYSE) —93.35
DuPont (NYSE) — 69.21
US Bank (NYSE) — 44.07
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.33
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.02
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 67.17
Kroger (NYSE) — 70.70
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 83.93
Norfolk So (NYSE) —90.44
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.50

BBT (NYSE) —40.60
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.76
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.05
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.49
Rockwell (NYSE) — 125.12
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.94
Royal Dutch Shell — 57.93
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 36.61
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 72.46
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.23
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.13
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.21
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions June 9,
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.

Honor Your Dad On His Special Day
With a Note of Appreciation on the

&amp;
Father’s Day page
Dedicated to all Fathers in Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties.
Ad size shown below.

Cost is $52.50 – Full color included.
Call 740-446-2342 or 304-675-1333.
Email jschultz@civitasmedia.com
with photo and selected announcement.

60576582

Deadline for reserving space is
4pm on Thursday, June 18th.

Check out the ﬁve-day forecast
on the weather page or online at

Mydailytribune.com
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Mydailysentinel.com
brought to you by

About Your

GOALS

Timmy Sawyer
You are the best father and loving husband.
www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

60588992

Let’s Talk

Love, Kim Sarah and John

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

McDowell
mentoring
The following editorial appeared in the HeraldDispatch, Huntington, on June 3:
“We are the future, and now is the time to follow
our dreams.”
That may be a high school commencement clich,
but it is one we would all hope to be true.
However, for too many teens in our region, it
is not always easy to see those possibilities. The
struggles their parents have faced and their own
life experience may have limited their goals and
already led to some bad choices, such as dropping
out of school.
But a mentoring program in McDowell County
shows that the input of some caring adults can
help change those perspectives, according to a
report .
The Broader Horizons program grew out of the
public-private Reconnecting McDowell project
set up by the American Federation of Teachers to
improve opportunities in the county. This year 17
of the 18 students picked a year ago will graduate
from Mount View High in Welch and River View
High in Bradshaw. The 18th is a junior.
Many of those new graduates have focused college plans in place and credit the program for helping them ﬁnd the direction or in some cases the
ﬁnancial means to make it happen. In McDowell,
that is no easy task.
The county was once one of the biggest coal
producing areas in the country with a population of almost 99,000 in 1950. Today it is home
to about 20,000 people with some of the highest
poverty and unemployment rates in the state and
many of the social ills to go with it.
Those difﬁcult circumstances have contributed
to very high truancy and drop-out rates in area
schools. Even among those who graduate from
high school, only about 25 percent go on to college.
The mentoring program is working to change
those odds. Students not only take trips to see colleges and the nation’s capital, but more importantly meet regularly with an adult mentor to discuss
school, life issues and choices. Among the inspiring stories is Rayven Bailey, who is pregnant, but
still has plans to major in elementary education at
Blueﬁeld State College and return to McDowell
County to help the next generation.
“There are kids here that have parents that have
drug habits and they don’t have anybody to really
look up to,” Bailey told The AP. “So I’d like to be
that person for them.”
Her powerful story underscores the importance
of mentors and the impact those volunteers can
have on young lives and even generations to come.
If you feel that calling, check with the United Way
of the River Cities’ Education Matters program
and one of the area other dropout prevention
efforts in our region to see how you can help.
Online: http://www.herald-dispatch.com

The Daily 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.

THEIR VIEW

Hold politicians accountable
you ﬁnd something that
As Treasurer of Ohio, I
interests you, we included
believe taxpayers have a
a social media share funcright to know how their tax
tion. One click and your
dollars are spent.
Facebook friends and email
All too often, we the
contacts will see what you
people aren’t able to follow
see.
our money once we write a
By shining sunlight on
check to city hall, the state
Josh
spending decisions made
capital or Washington, D.C. Mandel
The concept is simple.
Contributing deep in the bowels of the
state bureaucracy, citizens
When government is big,
Columnist
are able to follow their
the people are small. But
money and play an active
when government is small,
role in helping to root out waste,
the people are big. As someone
fraud and abuse.
who sees his boss as the 11.5 milOhioCheckbook.com has
lion people of Ohio, I am all about
received overwhelming bipartisan
power to the people.
support from taxpayers, newspaSo this past December I
pers and good government groups
launched OhioCheckbook.com,
across the state and country and
which for the ﬁrst time in Ohio
recently earned Ohio the No. 1
history puts every single state
transparency ranking in the nation
expenditure online. $408 billion
by the nonpartisan U.S. Public
of state spending over the past
seven ﬁscal years is now at the ﬁn- Interest Research Group. As a
gertips of anyone with an Internet direct result of OhioCheckbook.
com, we improved Ohio’s governconnection — from $2 for a pack
ment transparency ranking from
of pencils to $2 million for road
46th to ﬁrst in the nation!
expenditures, and everything in
We’ve come a long way in makbetween.
ing Ohio’s government more open
When we were creating Ohioand transparent, but we’re not
Checkbook.com, we understood
done. In fact, we’re just getting
that this information would only
started. Now, my goal is to build
be useful if it was easy to navigate
upon what we have done at the
and use. You shouldn’t need to be
state level and spread the same
a CPA or a computer expert to
level of transparency to every city,
understand how your money is
county, school district, township,
being spent.
village, library, sewer district,
OhioCheckbook.com is an easy
water district and other districts
to use, cutting edge website that
across Ohio.
breaks the mold of a hard-toI recently sent a letter to every
navigate government data dump
local government and school
site. Simply type in what interests
ofﬁcial representing 3,962 local
you in the “Google-style” search
governments throughout the state,
engine and you can instantly drill
down with fully interactive charts, inviting them to place their checkbook level data on OhioCheckgraphics and compare tools. If

book.com. I offered this invitation
at no cost to the local governments
and school districts in your community. If they send my ofﬁce
their spending information in a
useable format, we’ll get it posted
online for you to see it.
Since that invitation, hundreds
of local government leaders across
Ohio have expressed interest in
becoming early adopters. These
ofﬁcials have chosen to be leaders
for transparency, rather than followers.
While taxpayers care about what
their state and federal governments are doing, the governments
in which they are typically most
involved are closest to them – like
their city, township, school, or
library. These are the local governments that are helping to provide
safe streets, services for seniors
and a positive learning environment for our kids.
My hope is that local governments across Scioto County will
join me in this mission of creating a more open and transparent
government and post their checkbooks online. As a citizen, it’s your
right to know how your money is
being spent.
My goal is to set off a race for
greater transparency across Ohio
that will empower taxpayers to
hold public ofﬁcials accountable.
The momentum is building and
I encourage you to contact your
local ofﬁcials to urge them to put
their ﬁnances on OhioCheckbook.
com.
To learn more please visit OhioCheckbook.com.
Josh Mandel is treasurer of the state of Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
June 10, the 161st day of
2015. There are 204 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On June 10, 1935,
Alcoholics Anonymous
was founded in Akron,
Ohio, by Dr. Robert Holbrook Smith and William
Grifﬁth Wilson.
On this date:
In 1692, the ﬁrst ofﬁcial execution resulting
from the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts took
place as Bridget Bishop
was hanged.
In 1864, the Confederate Congress authorized
military service for men
between the ages of 17
and 70.
In 1915, author Saul
Bellow was born in
Lachine, Quebec, Canada.
In 1921, President Warren G. Harding signed
into law the Budget and

Accounting Act, which
created the Bureau of the
Budget and the General
Accounting Ofﬁce.
In 1940, Italy declared
war on France and Britain; Canada declared
war on Italy. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt,
speaking at the University of Virginia, said the
U.S. stance toward the
conﬂict was shifting
from one of “neutrality”
to “non-belligerency.”
Jamaican-born Pan-African nationalist Marcus
Garvey died in London
at 52.
In 1942, during World
War II, German forces
massacred 173 male residents of Lidice, Czechoslovakia, in retaliation for
the killing of Nazi ofﬁcial
Reinhard Heydrich.
In 1944, German forces
massacred 642 residents
of the French village of
Oradour-sur-Glane.

Today’s Birthdays:
Britain’s Prince Philip
is 94. Columnist Nat
Hentoff is 90. Attorney F.
Lee Bailey is 82. Actress
Alexandra Stewart is 76.
Singer Shirley Alston
Reeves (The Shirelles)
is 74. Actor Jurgen
Prochnow is 74. Media
commentator Jeff Greenﬁeld is 72. Football Hall
of Famer Dan Fouts is
64. Country singer-songwriter Thom Schuyler
is 63. Former Sen. John
Edwards, D-N.C., is 62.
Actor Andrew Stevens
is 60. Singer Barrington
Henderson is 59. Former
New York Governorturned-media commentator Eliot Spitzer is
56. Rock musician Kim
Deal is 54. Singer Maxi
Priest is 54. Actress Gina
Gershon is 53. Actress
Jeanne Tripplehorn
is 52. Rock musician
Jimmy Chamberlin is

51. Actress Kate Flannery is 51. Model-actress
Elizabeth Hurley is 50.
Rock musician Joey Santiago is 50. Actor Doug
McKeon is 49. Rock
musician Emma Anderson is 48. Country musician Brian Hofeldt (The
Derailers) is 48. Rapper
The D.O.C. is 47. Rock
singer Mike Doughty is
45. Rhythm-and-blues
singer JoJo is 44. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal
is 44. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Faith Evans is 42.
Actor Hugh Dancy is 40.
Rhythm-and-blues singer
Lemisha Grinstead (702)
is 37. Actor DJ Qualls is
37. Actor Shane West is
37. Country singer Lee
Brice is 36. Singer Hoku
is 34. Actress Leelee
Sobieski is 33. Olympic
gold medal ﬁgure skater
Tara Lipinski is 33. Model-actress Kate Upton is
23. Sasha Obama is 14.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Kopp

WEDNESDAY EVENING
3
4

Board

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)

“It made the town look a lot better,” he said. “Thank you.”
George Hoffman read from a typed paper and told
council that they were making decisions that were
negatively affecting citizens. He also talked about not
reﬂecting on how things were done in the past, but
instead looking to the future and including the younger generation of Middleport in decisions.
“We need to be honest about our problems and seek
solutions,” he said.
Council also approved minutes from the last
meeting May 11, approved bills in the amount of
$24,987.98, approved the income tax report, the
ﬁnance report and the Public Works report.
The next council meeting will be Monday, June 22 at 7 p.m.

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

39

2 PM

63°

83°

HEALTH TODAY
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.

Today
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
2:05 a.m.
2:34 p.m.

First

Jun 16 Jun 24

Full

Jul 1

Jul 8

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
7:12a
8:01a
8:48a
9:35a
10:24a
11:14a
12:07p

Minor
12:59a
1:48a
2:35a
3:22a
4:10a
5:01a
5:54a

Major
7:38p
8:27p
9:15p
10:02p
10:51p
11:42p
12:34p

Minor
1:25p
2:14p
3:01p
3:49p
4:37p
5:28p
6:21p

WEATHER HISTORY
A woman was sucked through a window in her home in El Dorado, Kan.,
by a powerful tornado on June 10,
1958, and carried 60 feet. A broken
record found next to her was entitled
“Stormy Weather.”

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

10:30

8

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10

PM

10:30

THURSDAY

High

Partly sunny, hot and
humid

An afternoon
thunderstorm in the
area

Mostly cloudy and
humid with a t-storm

Portsmouth
90/67

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
500

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

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.27
16.24
21.36
12.45
13.25
25.00
12.96
25.73
35.06
12.98
16.20
34.40
14.40

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.47
+0.53
-0.12
-0.17
+0.41
-0.08
-0.09
+0.12
-0.04
+0.14
-0.10
+0.10
+0.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

9:30

PM

10

PM

10:30

88°
67°

87°
65°

Some sun with a
Some sun with a
A stray morning
thunderstorm; humid t-storm or two; humid t-storm, then t-storms

Marietta
87/65

Murray City
87/66
Belpre
88/65

Athens
86/65

St. Marys
88/65

Parkersburg
87/65

Coolville
86/65

Elizabeth
89/65

Spencer
88/65

Buffalo
90/65
Milton
91/65

Clendenin
88/64

St. Albans
90/66

Huntington
88/64

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
78/55
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
73/57
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
76/63
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
89/65

Ashland
89/65
Grayson
90/67

MONDAY

86°
68°

Wilkesville
87/64
POMEROY
Jackson
88/65
89/65
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
89/65
90/65
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
89/68
GALLIPOLIS
89/65
89/65
88/66

South Shore Greenup
89/65
89/66

53

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

Logan
87/66

McArthur
87/66

Lucasville
90/65

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.

9

SUNDAY

85°
68°

Chillicothe
90/69

Very High

SATURDAY

90°
69°

Very High

300

8:30

PM

91°
67°

Waverly
90/68

Primary pollutant: Particulates

8

Veep

FRIDAY

Adelphi
87/66

Primary: walnut, grass, other
Mold: 2024
Moderate

7:30

PM

Silicon
Valley

EXTENDED FORECAST

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

Pollen: 14
High

7

The Judge (2014, Drama) Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga, Robert Downey
The Good Lie
400 (HBO) Drama) Bryan Greenberg,
Jr.. A lawyer sets out to uncover the truth when his estranged father is
TV14
TVMA
suspected of murder. TVMA
Riddick (2013, Sci-Fi) Karl Urban, Katee Sackhoff, Vin
Serenity (2005, Sci-Fi) Gina Torres, Adam Baldwin, I Origins (2014, Drama) Brit
450 (MAX) Diesel. Riddick faces a predatory alien race and sends out Nathan Fillion. A renegade spaceship crew hides a
Marling, Astrid Bergesan emergency signal. TV14
disturbed young woman from a totalitarian regime. TV14 Frisbey, Michael Pitt. TVMA
(4:30)
The Hurricane Nurse Jackie Penny Dreadful "Glorious ALL ACCESS Jim Rome on Showtime (N) HAPPYish
Inside
500 (SHOW) ('99, Dra) John Hannah,
"Serviam in Horrors"
"Deontay
Comedy
Denzel Washington. TV14
Caritate"
Wilder"

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Moderate

6:30

PM

(5:00) Bessie (2015, Docu-

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

0 50 100 150 200

Last

PM

H.Danger
SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Uncle" Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Raw" SVU "Manipulated"
Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinf. 2/2
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
A. Bourdain "Budapest"
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "Always Buy Retail" Castle
Castle "Ghosts"
(5:00)
We Were Soldiers The story of the first major
Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome Mel Gibson. In the future, a
Sahara
battle of the Vietnam War, as seen by both sides. TVMA
warrior is sent into exile and becomes a savior to a tribe of children. TV14 TVPG
Bush "Rise of Browntown" Siberian Cut "Civil War"
Siberian Cut "Ice Gauntlet" Siberian Cut "Belly Up"
Sib. Cut "Road From Hell"
Duck
Duck Dyn.
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck Dyn.
Duck
Duck
"Plan Bee" Dynasty
Dynasty
"Jerky Boys" Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Tanked "Sweet Memories" Tanked! "The Pirate Queen" Tanked!
Tanked!
Insane Pools DeepEnd
(:15) Pracing (:45)
Madea's Family Reunion Tyler Perry. While planning a family The Prancing Player Gets Played "Face
The Prancing
reunion, a grandmother finds herself plagued by family trouble. TV14
Elites
Elites Project the Music" (P) (N)
Elites Project
Law &amp; Order "Doubles"
Law &amp; Order "Old Friends" LawOrder "Second Opinion" Law &amp; Order "Coma"
Law&amp;Order "Blue Bamboo"
Botched "House of Horrors" E! News (N)
He's Just Not That Into You ('09, Com) Ginnifer Goodwin. TV14
The Soup
(5:50) Dukes "Daisy's Song" Dukes "Mary Kay's Baby"
CMT Music Awards (N)
Loves Ray
Filthy Riches "Revenge and Yukon Gold "Know When to Filthy Riches "Revenge and Filthy Riches "Smoke 'Em" Yukon Gold "A Rock and a
Redemption"
Hold'Em"
Redemption"
(N)
Hard Place"
(5:30) FB Talk NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Tampa Bay Lightning at Chicago Blackhawks (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
TUF: 21 "Eyes on the Prize" TUF: American/ Black (N)
American Pickers
American Pickers "For a
American Pickers "The Big American Pickers "Good &amp; (:05) American Pickers "Red
"Knuckleheads"
Few Dollars More"
Bet"
Evel" (N)
Barn, Black Keys"
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List (N)
(:05) Game
(:45) Game
(:25) The Game
Chocolate City ('15, Dra) Robert Ri'chard. (P)
Game (N)
Frankie (N)
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Brother vs. Brother (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
The Lost World: Jurassic Park ('97, Adv) Julianne Moore, Jeff Goldblum. A
Jurassic Park III A wealthy couple trick a scientist
research group travels to an island inhabited by dinosaurs to study their behavior. TV14 into visiting an island populated by dinosaurs. TV14

1

Low

Thu.
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
2:41 a.m.
3:41 p.m.

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)

Primary: ascospores

MOON PHASES
New

42

83°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

40 (DISC)

8 PM

ALMANAC

SUN &amp; MOON

(AMC)

Partly sunny and more humid today. A shower
or thunderstorm tonight. High 89° / Low 65°

Low

10

Ninja War "Kansas City Qualifying" Competitors face new
obstacles the Big Dipper, Floating tiles and Stretch Hold.
I Can Do That!
Ninja War "Kansas City Qualifying" Competitors face new
obstacles the Big Dipper, Floating tiles and Stretch Hold.
Celeb Wife "Tami Roman/
Middle "The The
Modern
Black-ish
Sink Hole"
Goldbergs
Family
"Crazy Mom" Kerri Walsh-Jennings" (N)
Nature "Invasion of the
Nova "D-Day's Sunken Secrets" One of the largest
Giant Pythons"
underwater archaeological sites; seabed bordering the DDay beaches.
Celeb Wife "Tami Roman/
Middle "The The
Modern
Black-ish
Sink Hole"
Goldbergs
Family
"Crazy Mom" Kerri Walsh-Jennings" (N)
Criminal Minds "The
CSI: Cyber "Crowd
The Briefcase "Wiley/
Bailey-Stewart" (N)
Forever People"
Sourced"
Bullseye "Bullseye Bumper Eyewitness News at 10
Masterchef "Clawing to
Victory" (N)
Cars" (N)
Great Performances Hear Lennox perform Benise: Strings of Passion The virtuoso
selections from 'Nostalgia', her album from guitarist presents a global musical journey
the American Songbook.
of salsa, tango, samba and more.
The Briefcase "Wiley/
Criminal Minds "The
CSI: Cyber "Crowd
Bailey-Stewart" (N)
Forever People"
Sourced"

Charleston
89/64

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
75/55

Billings
81/56

Chicago
86/60
Denver
79/56
Kansas City
91/70

Montreal
77/61

Toronto
79/54

Minneapolis
80/62

Detroit
88/61
Washington
88/73

New York
83/68

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
86/65/pc
60/48/s
85/70/t
77/66/s
86/65/s
81/56/t
92/63/c
80/63/s
89/64/pc
89/68/t
75/55/t
86/60/pc
89/68/pc
86/63/t
87/68/pc
95/72/s
79/56/t
90/67/pc
88/61/t
86/73/pc
93/73/t
90/69/pc
91/70/s
91/72/c
94/73/s
76/63/pc
91/71/s
88/77/t
80/62/s
91/68/s
86/74/t
83/68/s
95/72/s
87/72/t
86/69/s
95/79/s
86/67/s
78/59/s
88/69/pc
90/70/pc
94/74/s
84/63/t
73/57/pc
78/55/s
88/73/s

Hi/Lo/W
86/59/s
59/48/pc
85/69/t
89/71/pc
92/70/pc
80/58/s
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84/61/t
93/66/pc
90/70/t
67/51/t
76/59/t
90/69/pc
78/63/pc
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99/77/s
86/65/t
83/60/t
91/71/s
94/72/s
91/77/pc
75/61/t
73/56/pc
75/53/pc
95/75/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
85/70

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Low

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97/75
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93/66

City
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93/73
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93/70

GOALS

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88/77

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
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60576589

8 AM

0.57
0.70
1.31
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19.39

9:30

PM

I Can Do That!

7:30

PM

9

31 (NICK) Thunder
H.Danger
34 (USA) Law&amp;Order: SVU "Recall"
35 (TBS) Seinfeld
Seinf. 1/2
37 (CNN) The Situation Room
38 (TNT) Castle "Hell Hath No Fury"

TODAY

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
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7

8:30

PM

30 (SPIKE)

DeWine

(in inches)

8

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
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Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Wheel of
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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

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7:30

PM

Met Mother Met Mother
Postgame
Pirates Ball
Baseball Tonight (L)
Fitness 2014 CrossFit Games
The Novack Murders ('15, Dra) Rob Lowe. The millionaire Cleveland Abduction The true story of Michelle Knight
Beyond the Headlines
27 (LIFE)
"Cleveland Abduction"
heir to a hotel fortune is found brutally murdered. TV14
who was abducted and held captive for 11 years. TV14
Becoming Us
Baby Daddy Melissa "Call Melissa &amp;
Varsity Blues A Texas high school football team is led
Baby Daddy
29 (FAM)
"#WelcometoMyWorld"
of Duty"
Joey (N)
(N)
by a back-up quarterback and an iconic coach. TVMA
(:15) Cops "Bad Girls"
(:55) Cops
(:35) Jail
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is very difﬁcult to recover.
Consider using a credit
card to make the purchase.
From Page 1
If a problem arises, federal
regulations may limit your
DeWine offers consumliability. Also, your credit
ers the following tips to
card company may have a
avoid ticket scams:Be
skeptical of offers that are buyer protection program.
too good to be true. Sell- Other payment methods
ers on Craigslist or other might not have these kinds
online marketplaces may of protections.
Ohioans can report
offer tickets at face value
potential
scams by calling
(or below) for events that
the
Ohio
Attorney
Generare sold out or highly in
al’s
Ofﬁce
at
800-282-0515
demand, but these offers
or visiting www.OhioAtmay be scams.
Don’t trust sellers who torneyGeneral.gov. They
say you must pay via wire also can report suspicious
transfer or prepaid money Craigslist ads to the Ohio
card. These are preferred Attorney General’s Ofﬁce
directly from Craigslist at
payment methods for
www.craigslist.org/about/
scam artists, because
once the money is sent, it scams.

Precipitation

6

CABLE

7

Funniest Home Videos
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Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

81°
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Eyewitness
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shall.edu/art or call 304-6967299. To add to the Stephen
J. Kopp Memorial Endowment Fund for Achievement
in the Visual Arts, contact
Krystle Davis at krystle.
davis@marshall.edu or 304696-6781.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10

6:30

PM

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

From Page 1

High
Low
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6

BROADCAST

6

WEATHER

Student Exhibition can be
seen April 7-May 6, 2016,
at the Birke Art Gallery in
Smith Hall on Marshall’s
Huntington campus.
For more information
about Marshall’s visual arts
program, visit www.mar-

commemorative plate and a
holiday card and, in recent
years, a digital greeting.
“Steve really wanted to
encourage the student artists
he crossed paths with,” Jane
Kopp said.
The 30th Annual Juried

the Visual Arts Center, but
the Kopps also personally
supported the university’s
visual arts. In 2007, they
turned to visual art students
for a unique gift for donors
and began sponsoring a
design competition for a

able gift to support students’
creative futures,” Reed said.
“Dr. Kopp had a true
From Page 1
appreciation for the arts and
recognized their importance
Design Director Sandra
in building a strong and
Reed said the endowment
vibrant community,” said Dr.
would help students ﬁnance Ron Area, Marshall’s senior
deﬁning experiences of their vice president for developMarshall education, such as ment and CEO of The Marambitious ﬁnal projects, Cap- shall University Foundation.
stone artwork and travel to
That kind of appreciation
New York City and Florence. is perhaps most recognizable
in the heart of downtown at
“This is a most remark-

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 5

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Blue Angel Volleyball Camp
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.

Blue Angels Basketball Camp
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

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 s Page 6

Cleveland believing in LBJ
CLEVELAND (AP) —
High above downtown,
there’s no visible evidence
of a painful 51-year professional sports championship
drought — the longest for
any major U.S. city.
Atop Terminal Tower,
42 stories over revitalized
Cleveland, heartbreak and
curses don’t exist. Just a
spectacular view.
Directly below the centerpiece of Cleveland’s skyline,
the city is undergoing a
modern renaissance as heavy
construction equipment
transforms Public Square in
advance of the city hosting
the 2016 Republican National Convention.
Orange barrels line nearly
every street. Pedestrians
jam the sidewalks, all seeming to wear something with
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
A sign outside of Quicken Loans Arena flashes the return Browns, Indians or Cavaliers
of LeBron James to the Cavaliers on Sunday, July 13, 2014, written on the front — or a
LeBron James jersey. In the
in Cleveland, Ohio.

distance, the sun’s reﬂection
dances off the windowed
atrium of the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame.
Behold a new, shining
Cleveland, once dubbed the
“Mistake on the Lake.”
The changes are more
than cosmetic. There’s been
a startling attitude adjustment among skeptical and
cynical Cleveland fans, who
hope for the best, expect
the worst and have agonized
through painful sports
moments given dubious
nicknames like “Red Right
88,” ”The Drive,” ”The
Fumble,” ”The Shot,” ”The
Move,” and “The Decision.”
One man has transformed
that. James has made Cleveland believe.
From the moment the
Akron kid turned basketball
king announced he was
returning home, preaching
See LBJ | 10

Eastern Golf Scramble
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 740-416-0344 or by email at
nickdettwiller@gmail.com

Youth Football Camp
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.

Football golf scramble
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The annual Gallia Academy
Football golf scramble will be held on Saturday, June 27,
at Cliffside Golf Course. Registration will begin at 7:30
am and the scramble will start at 8:30 a.m. The format
will be bring your own team. The team will be four
players, with only one handicap under 10 and a team
handicap of 40 or greater. There will be two divisions to
choose from. The blue division is a competitive division
that will be playing for cash prizes. The white division
is a fun division with no handicap requirements and
winners will be drawn at random. Food and beverages
will be provided. The deadline for registering is Monday, June 22. To register or for questions, please call
740-256-1897 or 740-446-8791.

Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Golf Club will
be hosting the seventh annual Kiwanis Juniors at Cliffside golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18 on Thursday,
July 9, at 10 a.m. The competitors will be divided into
age groups 9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and 16-18 and there is
a fee. Golfers ages 12 and under will be charged a $20
fee, while golfers ages 13 and older will have a $30 fee.
Awards will be presented to the top three golfers in
each age group. Spectators are allowed. To enter, please
contact the clubhouse at 740-446-4653 or Ed Caudill at
740-245-5919 or 740-645-4381.

Gallipolis Lions Golf Outing
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Lions Club
will be holding its 17th annual golf outing on Saturday,
June 20, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia County. The
event will be a four-man scramble format with a blind
draw and will also have a shotgun start of 8:30 a.m. The
cost is $50 per Cliffside member and $60 per non-member, and all proceeds beneﬁt Lions projects. Prizes will
be awarded to ﬁrst, second and third place teams, and
there will also be skill prizes awarded. Anyone interested can sign up at Cliffside Golf Course or contact Rick
Howell at 740-446-4624 for more information.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Recent Wahama graduates Kristopher Clark, Garrett Miller and Demitrius Serevicz, from left, pose for a picture with the 2015 Class A
baseball championship trophy after winning their final high school contest Saturday with a 7-0 decision over Man at Appalachian Power
Park in Charleston, W.Va.

Wahama seniors enjoy historic finale
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Being
part of a state championship is very
special in itself.
Knowing you’ll never lose another
high school game in your life is something entirely different.
Wahama seniors Kristopher Clark,
Demitrius Serevicz and Garrett
Miller are living the rarest of dreams
after ending their collective prep
careers Saturday with a 7-0 victory
over Man in the 2015 Class A baseball state ﬁnal at Appalachian Power
Park in Kanawha County.
The trio of recent WHS graduates
have been involved in the White
Falcon baseball program since their
junior high years, and each has had a
varying role with the varsity program
over the last four seasons. The sacriﬁces and hard work, however, paid
off in a big way — and that was even
before Saturday’s victory.
Since the spring of 2012, the
White Falcons have claimed four consecutive Section 4, Region 3 titles,
two straight TVC Hocking crowns
and the program’s ﬁrst regional
championship since 1998.
Wahama blitzed through the 2015
postseason by posting ﬁve shutouts
and winning seven games by a collective tally of 72-7, which also included
a 76-24 advantage in the hit department. The White Falcons also scored
three-or-more runs in one inning of
each of their seven tournament victories and committed only four errors
total.
So now, after all of the heartache
and setbacks, three proud Wahama
graduates head out into the world
already perched high on the mountain.
“It’s great to go out on top. It’s

what we’ve all been working toward
for four years,” Clark said. “We ﬁnally got over the hump and got what
we wanted. We knew we could do
this all the way back in pee wee ball.
We knew we could win it and worked
for it, and now we’ve done it.”
That hump, coincidentally, may
have come in the Region 4 semiﬁnals during a 6-4 victory over host
Charleston Catholic at Triana Field.
The Irish had previously knocked
WHS out of the Class A tournament
four of the previous six years.
“Honestly, the Charleston Catholic
game was so sweet to us because we
were ﬁnally able to put them away,”
Miller said. “I pitched against them
as a freshman in the regional championship game and lost, so I’ve always
wanted to beat them. To ﬁnally get
past them in my senior year and have
things end the way they have, I never
could have dreamed this for any of
us.”
In following his ﬁrst comment,
Miller was asked to try express what
being a state champion meant to him
at that moment.
“It’s indescribable. After all four
years, to ﬁnally achieve your one goal
in baseball in your ﬁnal game … it’s
something I may never be able to
describe,” Miller said. “I told people
that I’d never be able to duplicate
the feeling of winning a state championship in football as a sophomore
(2012), but to do this as a senior in
my ﬁnal high school game makes
even more special.”
Both Miller and Serevicz were
starters on the Wahama football team
that defeated Madonna in overtime
for the 2012 Class A championship at
Wheeling Island Stadium. The White
Falcons are also the last Tri-Valley
Conference boys team — Ohio or
Hocking Division — to win a state

championship for the league.
It also helped the Wahama cause in
seeing so many familiar faces showing support this weekend, at least
according Serevicz.
“It’s the best feeling in the world.
We’re number one and we are going
out on top. Nobody can ever take
away from this because this is done,”
Serevicz said. “It was pretty special
this weekend seeing all of the red
cheering us on. Our support was
great this weekend and I’m glad we
were able to give them something to
cheer about.”
This memory will always run a little deeper for Clark, both personally
and for his skipper — Tom Cullen.
“My cousin was part of the ﬁrst
championship here at Wahama back
in 1996, and I know Coach Cullen
was part of that team. It’s special
to be part of that ﬁrst one for him,
because it is kind of like a family
affair,” Clark said. “This is an awesome feeling for everyone involved,
but I am glad that Coach Tom ﬁnally
got one. He’s an awesome coach.”
Miller was also happy for his
baseball mentor, but in actuality
was thinking more of the Bend Area
when reﬂecting on what this title
meant overall.
“It’s not just for Coach Cullen or
for us, this championship was for the
whole Wahama community,” Miller
said. “This one was also for all of
those teams that came up short of
this in the past, as well as all of the
teams that will play at Wahama in the
future. That’s what so special about
it, it’s forever.”
Miller, Serevicz, Philip Hoffman
and Mason Hicks also represented
Wahama on the Class A all-tournament team for the 2015 campaign.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

Notices

Notices

MEIGS COUNTY COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
POMEROY, OHIO

Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, at the front door of
the Sheriffҋs Office, 104 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 in the above named
County on 12th day of June,
2015 at 10:00 A. M. the following real estate:

made in accordance with an
actual survey conducted under the
supervision of Eugene Triplett.
S-6766, on June 20 and 26,
2000. Bearing are assumed
and are
used to express angular measurement only. Being part of
Auditorҋs Parcel No. 2000052.000
Subject to all leases, easements and right of way of record.

Are you 55 or older and
unemployed?
Are you wanting
to learn new skills to be more
employable?
Would you like to improve your
computer skills for work or
personal use?
There will be a free information session about Mature
Services Employment &amp; Training Solutions and training
opportunities in Gallia and
Meigs County on Tuesday,
June 16th from 2 – 3 pm.
The meeting will be at the
Gallia County Council on Aging
located at 1167 State Route
160 Jackson Pike Rd,
Gallipolis.
For more information please
call the Portsmouth office at
1- 866-734-2301.
www.matureservices.org
Mature Services, Inc. is an
equal opportunity employer
and service provider.

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.

Help Wanted General

PEGGY S. YOST, et. al.
incl. HOCKING VALLEY BANK
Plaintiffs
-vsDANTE N. OLIVERI et.al.
Defendants.
CASE NO. 14DL13
JUDGE GROW

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH

LEGAL NOTICE-SHERIFFҋS
SALE 0.48 ± AC Syracuse,
Ohio
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, at the front door of
the Sheriffҋs Office, 104 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 in the above named
County on 12th day of June,
2015 at 10:00 A. M. the following real estate:
SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A
Said premises appraised at
$30,000.00 and cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds (2/3) of
that amount.
ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEATEMPTOR.
THE PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
OFFICE OF THE ATHENS
COUNTY RECORDER AND
CLERK OF COURTS. THE
ATHENS COUNTY SHERIFF
MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS
TO STATUS OF TITLE
PRIOR TO SALE.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% Cash
or Certified Check by 2:00
P.M. on day of sale. Balance
due upon delivery of deed, approximately 30 days.

For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

EXHIBIT A: LEGAL DESCRIPTION 0.48 ± AC Syracuse-0
W. Side S.R. 124 (Rear)

$$$$$$$$$

Situate in 100 Acre Lot No.
297, Town No. 2, Range No.
12 of the Ohio Companyҋs Purchase, bounded as follows:
Beginning on the south side of
an alley, at the northwest
corner of E.P. Bartelsҋ 53/100
acre lot, as described in Deed
Book 125, Page 185; thence
along the south
side of said alley, west 149
feet; thence South 36 feet to
an iron post; thence West 69
feet to the North side of State
Route No. 124; thence along
the north side of said State
Route 124, South 53º East 274
feet; thence North 200 feet to
the place of beginning, containing 52/100 of an acre,
more or less.

60583312

LEGALS
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, June 13, 2015, at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will
be held at 211 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company is selling for cash in
hand or certified check the following collateral:
2007 Chevy Cobalt VIN:
1G1AL15FX77343035
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”,
with no expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contract Randy Hays at 740-9924048.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 7

Situate in the Village of Syracuse, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:

Excepting a parcel containing 4/100 of an acre, which
was conveyed by Emmet
P.Bartels and Helen Bartels to
George C. Nease, by deed
dated 16 March 1949, recorded in Book
163, Page 16, Meigs County
Deed Records.
Deed Reference: Volume 38,
Page 649, Meigs County Official Records
Parcel Number 2000055.00
Last Reference: Volume 175,
Page 379, Meigs County Official Records
KEITH O. WOOD
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
FRANK A. LAVELLE, ESQ.,
ATTORNEY FOR HOCKING
VALLEY BANK
8 N. Court St., 2nd Fl.
Athens, OH 45701
(740) 593-3347-Phone
05/27,06/03,06/10/15
IN THE MEIGS COUNTY
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS, OHIO
PEGGY S. YOST, et. al.
incl. HOCKING VALLEY BANK
Plaintiffs,
-vsDANTE N. OLIVERI et.al
Defendants
CASE NO. 14DL13
JUDGE CROW
LEGAL NOTICE-SHERIFF'S
SALE
0.63 ± AC Syracuse, Ohio
In pursuance of an Order of

SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A
Said premises appraised at
$60,000.00 and cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds (2/3) of
that amount.
ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
THE PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
OFFICE OF THE ATHENS
COUNTY RECORDER AND
CLERK OF COURTS. THE
ATHENS COUNTY SHERIFF
MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS
TO STATUS OF TITLE
PRIOR TO SALE.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% Cash
or Certified Check by 2:00
P.M. on day of sale. Balance
due upon delivery of deed, approximately 30 days.
EXHIBIT A: LEGAL DESCRIPTION Apx.0.63 ± AC Syracuse–0 S.R. 124
Situate in the Township of Sutton, County of Meigs State of
OhioThe following described
real estate situated in the Village of Syracuse, Sutton
Township,Meigs County, in the
State of Ohio, 100 Acre Lot
297, Township 2 North, Range
12 We st of the Ohio Company Purchase and being a
new parcel created out of the
Judith A. and John T. Williams
property (Meigs County Official Records Vol. 68, Pg. 883),
bounded and described as follows:Commencing for reference at the intersection of the
centerline of Ohio State Route
124 and the East line of the
Patrick and/or Mary OҋBrien
property (Meigs County Deed
Records Vol. 313,Pg. 439) at
Station 1+63.60; Thence leaving the centerline of Ohio State
Route 124 along the East line
of the Patrick and/or Mary
OҋBrien property south 00 deg.
41' 03" West a distance of
1123.28 feet to an iron pin
found by this survey on the
East line of said OҋBrien property on the South lie of a forty
foot wide easement, passing
an iron pin found by this survey at 56.94 feet and iron pins
set by this survey at 852.42
feet and 1083.12 feet; Thence
along the South line of a forty
foot wide easement South 82
degree 09' 19" East a distance
of 181.42 feet to an iron pin
found by this survey at the
Northeast corner of the Brenda
Darst property (Meigs County
Official Records Vol. Pg. 773)
on the South line of a twenty
foot wide easement, passing
an iron pin found by this survey at 90.71 feet; thence continuing along the South line of
a twenty foot wide easement
south 82 degrees 09' 19" East
a distance of 181.42 feet to an
iron pin found by this survey at
the Northeast corner of the
Mitchell Chapman property
(Meigs County Official Records Vol. 48 Pg. 679),
passing an iron pin found by
this survey at 90.71 feet, said
iron pin being the true point of
beginning for the parcel of real
estate herein described;
Thence continuing along the
South line of a twenty foot wide
easement South 81 deg. 01'
27" East a distance of 65.69
feet to an iron pin set by this
survey; Thence leaving the
South line of a twenty foot wide
easement along a line created
by this survey South 00 degrees 41' 03" West a distance
of 416.76 feet to a point on the
North Bank of the Ohio River,
passing an iron pin set for reference by this survey at
374.73 feet; Thence along the
North Bank of the Ohio River
South 87 deg. 21' 47" West a
distance of 65.11 feet to a
point, said point being the
Southeast corner of the
Mitchell Chapman property;
Thence leaving the North Bank
of the Ohio River along the
East line of the Mitchell Chapman property North 00 degrees 41' 03' East a distance
of 430.00 feet to the Point of
Beginning, passing an iron pin
found by this survey at 129.27
feet, containing 0.6318 acres,
more or less . All iron pins set
by this survey are 5/8"x 30" rebar with plastic I.D. cap
stamped “E. Triplett S-6766.”
The above description was

KEITH O. WOOD
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
FRANK A. LAVELLE, ESQ.,
ATTORNEY FOR HOCKING
VALLEY BANK
8 N. Court St., 2nd Fl.
Athens, OH 45701
(740) 593-3347–Phone
05/27,06/03,06/10/15

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.

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8 Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!

Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
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Dish TV Retailer- SAVE 50%
on qualifying packages! Starting $19.99/month (for 12
months.) FREE Premium
Movie Channels. FREE Installation! CALL, COMPARE LOCAL DEALS 1-800-401-1670

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.

Private - Riverfront: Cottage
newly remodeled, screened
porch overlooking river. 2Bdrm 1 bath, Garage /loft 740446-4922 $750 + Dep.

Dish TV Retailer- SAVE 50%
on qualifying packages! Starting $19.99/month (for 12
months.) FREE Premium
Movie Channels. FREE Installation! CALL, COMPARE LOCAL DEALS 1-800-401-1670

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

Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
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to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045
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Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!

Big Garage Sale 1679
Addison Pike
1 mile past Tara apartments.
June 12 &amp; 13

Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045

Yard Sale

MOVING SALE- THURS &amp;
FRI, June 12th &amp; 13th, Flatwoods Rd in Pomeroy, 2 miles
from TAZ/TWIN OAKS look for
signs. 9AM NO EARLY
SALES
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
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Meet singles right now! No
paid operators, just real people
like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now:
800-404-1874
Got an older car, boat or
RV? Do the humane thing.
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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
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from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Meet singles right now! No
paid operators, just real people
like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now:
800-404-1874
Got an older car, boat or
RV? Do the humane thing.
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Houses For Sale
CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
$0 DOWN
LENDERS AVAILABLE
740-446-3570
4 BDRM, Family RM, Basement, Garage $85,000. Owner
pays closing cost. No Money
Down to Qualified Buyer. LeGrande Blvd. Gallipolis 1-740446-9966
OPEN HOUSE Sat. 6pm to
9pm @ 1558 St. Rt 141 - 4Bdrm - 2,600 sq. ft. completely
renovated. 740-709-6241
Apartments/Townhouses
2 bdrm $625. Downtown, newer appl, lam floor, water, sewer &amp; trash incl. No Pets. Application req. 727-237-6942
2 BDRM Apt. for Rent/ $600
per month. Appliances, Trash
Service, and Water included.
No smoking, no pets. Please
call Jennifer 740-446-2804
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Garage apt for rent: Nice and
clean, 1BR Non-smoking, ref,
dep, no pets. 304-675-5162

Pets
Dalmation Puppies. AKC Registered. $450.00 each. Phone
304-675-6767
Farm Equipment
Hay Tetter, 2-10ft. grain feeders,ford cargo van (low
mileage) 446-1019

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

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

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

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

Autos for Sale

Miscellaneous

Want To Buy

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.

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

Manufactured Homes
TRADE IN
$0 DOWN
LENDERS AVAILABLE
740-446-3570

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
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
$700 mo. includes utility allowance. 540-729-1331
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
Sales / Business Development

Liquid Asphalt Drivers Needed.
Must be at least 21 years old.
Have a clean MVR. Class A
CDL, with Tanker Endorsement and Hazemat with TWIC.
1-800-598-6122
Resumes are being accepted
at the Meigs Commissioners'
Office for a full-time maintenance worker at the Court
House and other countyowned buildings.
TEST 2

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Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
stairs! **Limited time -$250 Off
Your Stairlift Purchase!** Buy
Direct &amp; SAVE. Please call 1800-942-6692 for FREE DVD
and brochure.
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$19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of
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gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

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

Call

CAREER OPPORTUNITY!
Transportation Planning Coordinator, Ohio Valley
Regional Development
Commission, Waverly, Ohio
$45,000 and up; visit
www.ovrdc.org for details.

Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.

ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door Omaha
Steaks! SAVE 78% PLUS 4
FREE Burgers-The Happy
Family Banquet-ONLY $49.99.
ORDER Today 1-800-7159127 use code 43285KZG or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/obmb
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Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Help Wanted General

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!

Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045

Business &amp; Trade School

Sales

We are looking for people with a passion for sales, success and customer service to join
our dynamic sales executive team. Use your marketing, sales and advertising savvy to
aggressively increase revenue by growing current partnerships and developing new
business relationships, while incorporating innovative digital media strategies into
clients’ advertising plans.

Position Requirements
Ability to nurture existing and new client relationships with
creative media solutions
Excellent written and verbal communication skills
Strong creative, editing and interpersonal skills
Demonstrated knowledge of advertising and digital media solutions
Ability to multitask and stay organized in a fast-paced environment
Ability to work both independently and as part of a team

We offer a competitive salary along with a
no-cap commission plan.

In Print. Online. In Touch.

We also provide a full benefits package and a
strong sales support team to help promote your
success.

To submit your resume today
careers@mydailysentinel.com

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH, 45769
740-992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

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BLONDIE

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 9

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10 Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Daily Sentinel

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Louisville extends Rick Pitino’s
contract to 2025-26 season

Tournament regional ﬁnal appearance in eight years,
a stretch that has included the 2012 Final Four and
the school’s third national championship the following
year.
Pitino, 62, is the ﬁrst coach to win NCAA titles at
two schools, having previously won with Kentucky in
1996. He is 368-126 in 14 seasons at Louisville and
722-254 in 30 seasons overall.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Louisville has extended
coach Rick Pitino’s contract four years through the
2025-26 season with his base salary increasing from
$4.48 million next season to $5.093 million annually
after that.
Pitino will also earn a $7.5 million retention bonus
to be paid incrementally every three years, starting
with $750,000 in July 1, 2017, and increasing to $2.25
million. The 2013 Hall of Fame inductee had seven
years remaining on his current contract.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Michael Waltrip RacPitino said during a Tuesday news conference that
“I never looked at this as a job; I looked at it as a privi- ing , seeking a solution for its season-long slump,
swapped crew chiefs for Clint Bowyer and David
lege.”
The Cardinals are coming off their ﬁfth NCAA
Ragan on Tuesday.

MWR swaps crew chiefs for
Bowyer, Ragan as teams slump

Brian Pattie had been with Bowyer since the team
was formed in 2012, but he will now move to Ragan’s
car. Billy Scott had been crew chief for the No. 55
Toyota since late 2013, but he will now crew chief
Bowyer.
Bowyer is 17th in the standings and could still
make the 16-driver Chase ﬁeld, but he isn’t particularly running well enough to be a legitimate contender.
He has led just two laps all year, has only three top-10
ﬁnishes and is winless since 2012.
Ragan has only been with the team for four races. He
is the replacement driver for Brian Vickers, who is sidelined with blood clots and not likely to return this year.
Ragan’s best ﬁnish with MWR was 13th at Dover.
He’s 24th in the standings, but MWR is the third
team he’s driven for this year. Ragan was also the
injury replacement for Kyle Busch at Joe Gibbs Racing
for nine races.

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pleted 143 seasons without one ﬁnishing on top.
Close calls and runner-up trophies
From Page 6
have scarred the locals. Something
always cancels the parade.
togetherness to a fan base he
If not injuries, it’s Browns quarspurned by leaving as a free agent for terback Brian Sipe forcing a pass
Miami in 2010, a new positive vibe
and getting intercepted by Oakland’s
has enveloped a place that often sees Mike Davis in 1981 (Red Right 88
the glass not as half full, but broken. was the play call). It’s John Elway’s
And although the Cavs lost All98-yard march in the 1986 AFC
Stars Kevin Love and Kyrie Irving
championship or Earnest Byner’s
to season-ending injuries, James’
muff at the goal line in Denver the
brilliance and gritty contributions
next year. It’s Michael Jordan’s hangfrom unlikely players like Matthew
in-the-air jumper over Craig Ehlo,
Dellavedova and Timofey Mozgov
owner Art Modell taking the Browns
have the team within three wins of
to Baltimore or James announcing
an NBA title.
South Beach would be his new home.
The Cavs are tied 1-1 with the
Or it’s 1997, when cases of chamGolden State Warriors heading into
pagne and the World Series trophy
Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Tueswere wheeled into, then out of the
day night.
Indians clubhouse when Jose Mesa
“Not only are we becoming a desblew a save in Game 7 of the World
tination that people want to come to, Series.
but we potentially have a championThe drought is ingrained in the
ship team,” said Laura Kubinski,
citizenry’s collective psyche — part
operations director of Cleveland
of a Clevelander’s DNA.
Clothing Company, a hip downtown
“I’ve only been around for 38 years
store. “It’s our time. It’s about damn of it,” said Nathan Zaremba, standing
time for Cleveland to win a champioutside Quicken Loans Arena after
onship.”
buying a new Cavaliers cap for his
Since the Browns won the NFL
6-year-old son, Milo.
title in 1964, the city’s three pro
Zaremba said Clevelanders know
teams and a hockey club that merged all the bad moments and experience
with Minnesota in 1978 have comthem from the ﬁrst day of their lives.

“In Cleveland, you never quite
have that hope, but we’re feeling pretty conﬁdent,” he said. “We’re closer
than we’ve ever been. And, we’ve got
LeBron.”
Understandably, some Cleveland
fans can’t shake their disbelief. After
all, they’ve been raised to repeat the
phrase “Only in Cleveland” any time
there’s misfortune. But others remain
proud, able to laugh at their own
misfortune, dust themselves off and
lose again. Some seem to relish the
anguish.
“It’s almost like a badge of honor,”
said Browns Pro Bowl tackle Joe
Thomas. “It’s kind of funny, it’s like,
we’re still the most die-hard fans in
all of sports and we haven’t had a
championship in 50 years. Hopefully,
these next couple weeks we won’t be
able to say that anymore.”
Cleveland’s time could be near, if
James can turn the punching bag for
other cities into a title town.
As Kubinski looks out the door of
her store, the thought of a parade
down Euclid Avenue makes her eyes
tear.
“I get goose bumps. It’s emotional,” she said. “My dad was at the
1964 game when the Browns won.
His dad took him to the game. For all
of us, this is huge.”

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PHOTO SUBMISSIONS: JUNE 1st – JUNE 13TH
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