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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

Standing up for clean
air rules... Page 4

Storms. High near
78. Low around
52... Page 2

Vol. 64, No. 90

OBITUARIES

SPORTS

Dorothy B. Boggs, 84
Willis Goody, 42
Jerry L. Rorrer, 67
Kenneth I. Shafer, 77
Calvin W. Waugh, 92

Local spring sports
action... Page 6

50 cents daily

THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 2014

Agencies unit to offer EMT training
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs County
EMS and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services are
partnering to offer an Emergency
Medical Technician training program
Announcement of the training program was made this week by Chris
Shank, director of Jobs and Family
Services, and Robert Jacks, EMS director, Eric Rock, EMS captain.
The classes will begin July 7 and
run through mid-November. They
will be held every Monday and
Thursday from 6-10 p.m. at the EMA/
EMS/911 Communications Center
located at 41859 Pomeroy Pike.
Shank noted that he Meigs County

Department of Job and Family Services has limited funding available
to assist TANF eligible individuals
with the cost of the training. To be
considered eligible for JFS funding,
interested individuals must reside in
Meigs County, be over the age of 18,
have a minor child and be below 200
percent of the federal poverty level.
“For example, a family of three
would need to have an income below
$3,299 per month,” Shank said. A
valid driver’s license and the ability
to pass a background check is also required for all said interested individuals, whether funded by JFS or not.
Shank said that even those who are
not eligible for JFS funding can take
advantage of this training opportunity. For those who do not qualify

for assistance, Meigs County EMS is
able to offer this training at a much
cheaper rate as compared to other
training providers.
On June 17, an orientation will
be held in which representatives
from Meigs County EMS and the
Meigs County Department of Job
and Family Services will be on hand
to answer any questions about the
training and to discuss funding opportunities. The orientation will be
held at the Ohio Means Jobs-Meigs
County office, located at 150 Mill St.
in Middleport starting at 6 p.m.
For more information about the
training or to sign up for the orientation, contact Chris Shank at 9922117, ext. 102.

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Left to right, Robert Jacks, EMS director, and Eric Rock, EMS
captain, converse with Chris Shank, director of the Meigs
County Jobs and Family Services, about partnering to offer
Emergency Medical Technician training.

Rio Grande McDonald’s
to hold celebration of
grand reopening Friday
Staff Report
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

RIO GRANDE — The McDonald’s restaurant in Rio
Grande will host a grand reopening celebration Friday
through Sunday for its remodeled restaurant.
The celebration will kick off with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 11 a.m. Friday. McDonald’s owner/operator
Kurt Sauber will cut the ribbon to officially open the new
restaurant. Representatives from local government and
business entities will be present. Ronald McDonald will
appear live from 4-6 p.m. Friday.
Customers have a chance at being one of 100 randomly
selected guests to receive a coupon for a free breakfast or
dinner sandwich per week for one year. The coupons will
be distributed throughout the day Friday through Sunday.
Guests may also sign up to win one of several daily door
prizes, including electronics. Drawings for major prizes
will take place at 6 p.m. each day.
This restaurant showcases McDonald’s new modern
design, both inside and out. The interior features a designated customer order area and modern décor, including
digital menu boards. The dining room was enlarged to
nearly double seating capacity, from approximately 40 to
72 seats. A self-service beverage bar was also installed in
the dining room.
The former single lane drive-thru was replaced with
two lanes and new menu board technology. The three-sided rotating displays are intended to eliminate customer
confusion as to which meal is being served.
Joseph C. Taylor

Search for child abductor
POMEROY — Joseph C. Taylor Jr., 42, of Pomeroy, has been
charged with gross sexual imposition and abduction of a minor
child in Meigs County Court.
According to Pomeroy Police

Chief Mark Proffitt the incident occurred May 29 and a warrant was
issued June 2. He said the child is
now with the parents and a search
is under way for the alleged offender who was last seen in Pomeroy.

Proffitt is asking for the public to keep a lookout for Taylor
and if seen to contact either the
Pomeroy Police at 992-6411 or
the Meigs County Sheriff’s office
at 992-3371

RACO presents $21,300 in scholarships
RACINE — The Racine Area Community Organization
held their scholarship dinner at the Baptist Church Outreach Center on Tuesday, May 27.
Jess McKendree, youth pastor at the church, led the
event with Grace before dinner. Kathryn Hart, president
of RACO, welcomed all scholarship winners and their
families, RACO members and volunteer yard sale workers. Volunteers attending were Victor and Alice Wolfe,
Irene Dill and Erma Norris.
Hart presented $1,000 RACO scholarship checks to
Nathan Leamond, son of James and Maria Leamond. Nathan will be attending Ohio University and majoring in
English; Casey Pickens, son of Valessa Hunnell and Eber
Pickens. Casey will be attending college and majoring Pictured, from left, for Vinas Lee Educational Scholarship

($1000 each): John Bentz (presenter), Brad Crouch (presenter),

See RACO | 2 Jamie O’Brien, Taylor McNickle and Curt Crouch (presenter).

AT LEFT, pictured, from left, for Cruisin’ Saturday Night Car Show scholarship ($1000 each) are Melody Bailey (presenter),
Taylor McNickle, Wyatt Jarrell, Marvin Hill (presenter) and Celestia Hendrix. AT RIGHT, pictured, from left, for Raco scholarship
($1000 each) Lacey Hupp, Katie Jenkins, Jordan Huddleston, Jamie O’Brien and Joyce Weddle. In the back, from left, are Taylor
McNickle, Nathan Leamond, Casey Pickens, Wyatt Jarrell, Brandon Grueser and Chris Yeater.

New Haven goes to the polls
Election results announced
By Mindy Kearns

Special to The Register
PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

NEW HAVEN — The
ballots have been cast in
the Town of New Haven,
and for the most part, voters seem satisfied with the
status quo.
Four of the five incumbent council members were
re-elected to their posts in
Tuesday’s election, according to the unofficial tally.
Getting the top council vote
at 125 was incumbent Amy
Ferguson Gordon, while
Jessica Howard, also an
incumbent, and newcomer
Vinson “Smitty” Jarrell
garnered 121 votes each.
Rounding out the council
will be incumbents Ken
Vickers, with 120 votes, and
Jim Elias, with 92 votes.
Only four votes separated
Elias and the number six
candidate, Jeffrey Zerkle,
who got 88 votes. With only
three provisional ballots,
however, Elias is secure in
the number five position.
Longtime council member Sarah Gibbs was the
only incumbent not to regain her seat. Gibbs, who
has served on council for
the past 34 years, received
81 votes.
Other council candidates
and their vote count were
Elnora Weaver, 58; Timothy Stone, 32; and the late
Frances Weaver Taylor, 14.
Taylor passed away recently and her name remained
on the ballot. Had she won
the election, the new administration would have appointed a council member

after they took office July 1.
The council seats were
the only real contest in the
election, with only one candidate each vying for mayor
and recorder. Charles R.
Yonker will take over the
mayor’s position after receiving 146 votes. Incumbent Recorder Roberta
Hysell will remain in her
position after getting 178
votes.
Yonker said he is looking
forward to both the opportunity and the challenge
ahead as the new mayor. He
added he has been spending the past two to three
months working closely
with the present administration and employees,
learning and observing.
“I look forward to working with the council and the
town employees,” Yonker
said. “I already have some
ideas that I feel will be fruitful.”
More than 200 residents
voted in the election, including 99-year-old Margaret Flowers, who told poll
workers she would be turning 100 on July 15. When
contacted, Mrs. Flowers
said she feels it is important to vote.
“I always find the time to
vote, and try to get the right
ones in that will do the job,”
Flowers said. “If we don’t
go to express our feelings,
we can’t complain.” Flowers
added she was also a former
poll worker in elections.
The present council will
meet Thursday to canvass
the ballots and make the
tallies official.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Community Calendar Meigs County Church Calendar
June 4
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet in special
session on Wednesday,
June 4, at 5 p.m. in the high
school media center.
June 5
CHESTER — ChesterShade Historical Association will have its monthly
meeting at 7 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.
POMEROY
—Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the DAR will meeting at 1
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
New officers will be installed
by the OSDAR chaplain
Robin Rose. At 2 p.m. Jay
Russell who specializes in
tombstone restoration reclamation and monument
preservation will speak. The

public is invited to attend.

Special service
LANGSVILLE — The House of Healing Ministries in Langsville will be hosting Evangelist Gary Pollard as their special
June 6
CHESTER — A commu- speaker beginning at 7 p.m. June 5. Everyone is invited to attend.
nity benefit will be held at
Revival Service
Baum Lumber in Chester to
RUTLAND — Revival services will be held at the Rose of Sharaise money for the medical
expenses of Amos Cross, a ron Holiness Chapel at Rutland, June 3-8, at 7 p.m. each evening.
Viet Nam veteran, and his The Rev. Ben Watts will be the speaker. Pastor is Dewey King.
wife Dee Dee. It will begin
at 11 a.m. and continue into
Meigs Cooperative Parish events
the afternoon. There will
POMEROY — The Meigs Cooperative Parish hosts a
be food, drinks, music, and
raffles to include a 12 gauge
Remington Turkey Exp. and
a patio set of table and two
padded chairs to be held on
July 7. The menu for Friday’s event consists of hot
dogs, homemade noodles,
and baked goods. Music
will be provided by G&amp;H
D.J. and Karaoke Sound Co.
Free will donations will be
accepted.

variety of events and service projects available throughout the week at the Mulberry Community Center. Some
of those are as follows:
Meals at the Mulberry Country Kitchen — 11:30 a.m.12.30 p.m.
Free soup and roll Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday. Meal or salad buffet for $3 or meal of three
items Tuesday and Thursday; salad buffet on Wednesday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m. Tuesday-Friday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.

Ohio Valley Forecast

ABOVE, pictured, from left, for Edison Brace Memorial scholarship ($600 each) and Jean Alkire Memorial scholarship
($500) are Wyatt Jarrell, Kathryn Hart (presenter), Cameron
Harmon, Jamie O’Brien and Marvin Hill (presenter). AT RIGHT,
presenting the Jim Adams Memorial Scholarship ($500) is
Thursday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, Carol Jean Adams to Chris Yeater.

mainly before 11 a.m. Some of the storms could be severe. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with
a high near 78. North wind 8 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Thursday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 52.
North wind 5 to 7 mph.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 80. Northeast wind
around 5 mph.
Friday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 53.
Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 84.
Saturday night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61.
Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 86. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 53.99
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.67
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 105.01
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.89
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.42
BorgWarner (NYSE) —64.39
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 14.30
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.400
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.04
Collins (NYSE) — 79.06
DuPont (NYSE) — 69.32
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.36
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.55
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 71.33
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.68
Kroger (NYSE) — 48.04
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 58.49
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 99.18
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.00
BBT (NYSE) — 38.15

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.02
Pepsico (NYSE) — 87.43
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.63
Rockwell (NYSE) — 122.35
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.98
Royal Dutch Shell — 78.39
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 40.17
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.13
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.28
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.38
Worthington (NYSE) — 40.16
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions June 4, 2014, 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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RACO
From Page 1
in civil engineering; Wyatt Jarrell,
grandson of Peggy Hill. Wyatt will
attend Bluffton University and major
in exercise science; Katie Jenkins,
daughter of Steve and Liz Jenkins.
Katie will be attending Ohio University with a major in middle childhood education; Chris Yeater, son of
Angie Harton and William Harton.
Chris will be attending Ohio State
University and majoring in biomedical sciences; Taylor McNickle, son of
Terry and Tricia McNickle. Taylor
will be attending Ohio University
and majoring in civil engineering;
Lacey Hupp, daughter of James R.
Rupp and Tamara S. Rupp. Lacey
will be attending Marshall University and majoring in accounting; Jamie O’Brien, daughter of James and
Sherry O’Brien. Jamie will be attending Ohio University and majoring
in early childhood education; Joyce
Weddle, daughter of Lee Weddle.
Joyce will be attending Hocking College and majoring in nursing; Jordan
Huddleston, daughter of Mike and
Camellia Huddleston. Jordan will
be attending the University of Rio
Grande and majoring in early childhood education; and Brandon Grueser, son of Kelly and Tammy Grueser.
These scholarships are funded
through two yard sales held in May
and September at Star Mill Park.
Hart presented the Edison Brace
Memorial Scholarship checks to
Cameron Harmon and Wyatt Jarrell.
She spoke of her father always wanting every child to have an education
that he was not able to have.
Hart presented the Anderson and
Eleanor Owens Educational Scholarship $500 check to Celestia Hendrix,
daughter of Petie and Christi Hendrix. Celestia will be attending Bethany College and majoring in special
education. The Andersons are from
Cincinnati and Hart is a friend of
their son. Both of their parents were
educators; Anderson’s dad was the
superintendent of Newport, Ky.,
schools and Eleanor’s dad was principal of several Cincinnati schools.
Anderson and Eleanor met at the
University of Cincinnati Teachers
College. Eleanor taught school, quit
to raise a family and returned to
teaching. She eventually became a
librarian. Anderson taught math for
several years, then went into administration, becoming vice principal in
several Cincinnati schools. The couple now reside in Rio Grande.
Hart presented a $500 check for
the David B. Sayre Memorial Scholarship to Jamie O’Brien. Hart discussed how Sayre always supported

the scholarship yard sale for many
years. On behalf of Kel and Brenda
Weller, Hart presented the Clarence and Ruth Bradford Memorial
Scholarship check of $500 to Jamie
O’Brien.
Hart read a statement from the
Wellers. They spoke of a favorite saying of Danny Thomas: “There are
two kinds of people in the world: the
givers and the takers. The takers eat
well, but the givers sleep well.”
Hart thanked RACO for providing
the opportunity to award the scholarship. Both of her parents grew up in
Racine. Her dad was an avid seaman
and served in Merchant Marines during World War II. He rowed 6,000
miles on the Ohio River going to
and from work. He was a volunteer
fireman and served on town council. Her mother was active in PTA,
and worked many hours for the band
boosters. Both parents supported the
school levies and flew the American
flag every day.
She said she was highly pleased
with the application of the winner of
her parents’ scholarship.
Kathy McDaniel presented the Leo
and Helen Hill Memorial Scholarship
check for $500 to Lacey Hupp. Both
of their parents were graduates of
Racine High School. She said her
dad was a late bloomer in education.
While he was finishing his degree,
her mother was tending the home
and raising five children. She made
his education possible.
Carol Adams presented the James
Adams Memorial Scholarship check
of $500 to Chris Yeater. She thanked
RACO for the opportunity to present the scholarship and talked about
the criteria that she used to select the
recipient. She said that the applications she received from RACO had
the names removed and she had to
choose by the information provided
by each student. She chose this year’s
applicant based on the student’s high
GPA and the extracurricular activities
in which they were involved. She especially picked the Chris because he
had already completed some college
courses and had no school absences.
According to her, Jim Adams was
known as “Big A” and liked to farm
and teach. On the farm, he sowed the
seeds in the ground, and at school
he sowed seeds of wisdom. He was
principle at Southern for 22 years,
and was a basketball coach and math
teacher.
John Bentz, Brad Crouch and Curt
Crouch were guest speakers for the
evening. All three were previous
scholarship winners and have started
the Vinas Lee Memorial Scholarship.
John graduated in 2006 from SHS

and from Ohio University in 2011
with a master’s degree in engineering. He’s working for Pickerington
Associates in Parkersburg.
Curt graduated from SHS in 2003
and received his bachelor’s degree
from Mt. Carmel School of Nursing.
He is now an RN at O’Bleness Hospital in Athens.
Brad graduated in 2006 from SHS
and from Ohio University in 2011
with an engineering degree. He now
works as a quality engineer for Honda in Marysville.
All three stated that RACO scholarships helped them start college
and they were very grateful, which is
why they wanted to give back to the
community by honoring the memory
of Mrs. Lee. Vinas taught in Racine
schools starting in 1956, and retired in
1976. She kept very active in her community by helping RACO, her church
and her friends. She was always grateful of time spent with others, and took
many trips with friends after retiring.
The three men presented the Vinas
Lee Educational Scholarship checks
to of $1,000 to Jamie O’Brien and
Taylor McNickle. Tonja Hunter presented the Meigs County Engineering Scholarship check of $1,000 to
Taylor McNickle. It is sponsored
by her son Jacob, SHS 2007 graduate, and GenMar Corp. He received
RACO scholarships and wanted to
give back to the community. He was
very grateful for the money received
and he and his sister, Emma, SHS
graduate in 2009, were able to pay
for their first year of college with the
scholarships. They are aware of the
cost of education.
Melody Bailey and Marvin Hill
presented the Cruisin’ Saturday
Night Car show Scholarships checks
of $1,000 each to Wyatt Jarrell, Celestia Hendrix and Taylor McNickle.
They start collecting this money in
February. Marvin stated that Melody
does most of the work, and this will
be their 10th year to do the car show.
Their co-sponsors for the scholarships are Hills Classic Cars, Home
National Bank, Roses Excavating and
Hagerty Insurance.
Marvin Hill presented the Jean Alkire Memorial Scholarship check of
$500 to Jamie O’Brien, stating that
Ms. Jean taught in Southern School
District for years and wanted to give
the scholarship to one that will be a
teacher. Pastor McKendree closed
the program with prayer. Attending
were RACO members David and Ann
Zirkle, Libby Fisher, Kim Romine,
Sherry Kincaid, Lillian Weese, Mel
Weese, Tonja, Eli and Lucas Hunter,
Mary Ball, and Pastor Jesse and Kim
McKendree.

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�Thursday, June 5, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Bartrum speaks on
county issues
to retired teachers

Meigs County Local Briefs
Scholarshi
applications available
SYRACUSE — Applications for
the 2014-15 Carleton College Scholarships for higher education are available for legal residents of the village
of Syracuse. Residents can pick up
an application from Gordon Fishser,
14802 Dusky Street, Syracuse.
Applications are due by June 23,
2014. Residents of Syracuse can qualify for scholarships for a maximum of
two years.
Square Dance at Park
REEDSVILLE — A square dance
will be 7-10 p.m. Saturday at the
Forked Run State Park. There will be
a cake walk, special drawings, food
and drinks. The event is being sponsored by Forked Run Friends. For
more information call 740-667-6513.
Consumer Confidence Reports
MIDDLEPORT — The Village of
Middleport has mailed its 2013 public
consumer confidence report. Anyone
not receiving one can pick one up at
the Public Works Office at village hall
located at 659 Pearl Street.
Church sales
MIDDLEPORT — The Heath
United Methodist Church, 339 S.
Third Ave. Middleport, will have a
rummage sale Thursday and Friday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene will have
a yard sale Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
the house beside the Tuppers Plains
BP gas station. It is sponsored by the
Ladies Ministry of the church. All proceeds go to the church carpet fund.
RACINE — Morning Star United
Methodist Church yard sale, 9 a.m. to
2 p.m. at 46515 Morning Star Road,
Racine.
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Community Church on Second Street will
have a craft and bake sale along with
serving hot dogs at the church beginning at 10 a.m. Friday.
MHS Class Having Fundraiser
POMEROY — In support of the
class of 2017 a yard sale will be held
at Meigs High School from 8 a.m. to

3 p.m. Anyone interested in reserving
a spot for yard sale items should contact Samantha Carroll 740-590-7796.
Cost is $5 for one table, $8 for two.
The sale will be held in the student
parking lot. In the event of rain it will
be moved to the school cafeteria.
Coon Hunters Youth Day
POMEROY — The Shade River
Coon Hunters Youth Day will be observed at noon June 7 at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. There will be
hunting, treeing and bench show
demonstrations, along with an archery trailer on site. For more information contact Bill Spaun. 992-3992
or Tammy Cremeans, 992-3259 . The
event is sponsored by the Shade River
Coon Hunters and the Ohio Division
of Natural Resources.
Yard Sale
CHESTER — The Chester Courthouse and Museum will have a yard
sale June 6-7, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
courthouse. Clean items are needed
to put into the sale which will benefit
the historical buildings.
Senior Citizens Trip
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Council on Aging is planning a all
trip to Niagara Falls and Toronto, but
the deadline for signing up to attend
is May 27. The trip will be by motor
coach and the four-night, five-day trip
will be from Sept. 22 to Sept. 26. Included in the price of $485 (per person double occupancy) will be motor
coach transportation, eight meals,
guided tours of Niagara Falls and
Toronto, a journey to the Falls on a
Hornblower Niagara Cruise, gaming
at Fallsview Casino, a visit to Niagara
on the Lake and Queen Victoria Park,
and a visit to Casa Loma, Canada’s
most magnificent castle. Payment of
$75 is required when signing up.
Kids fishing derby
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Fish and Game Association will have
its annual kids fishing derby 8 a.m. to
noon June 14. Age for participation
is 15 years of younger and children
must be accompanied by an adult. A
rod and reel will be provided for each

child who doesn’t have one to bring..
Since local merchants help sponsor
the event, there will be free food,
drinks and prizes. To reach the site,
take Ohio 7 north from Pomeroy, turn Staff report
left on Texas Road and follow the derby signs. For more information, call
POMEROY —Mike BarDave Doerfer, 992-0026 or 416-9333. trum, Meigs County Commissioner, talked about
Southern Memory Books
the work of the CommisRACINE — The Southern High
School Class of 1964 has compiled a sioners for the county’s
memory book for its 50th class reunion benefit when he addressed
project. Biographies of the 64 students the Meigs County Retired
who graduated that year, along with Teachers, at a meeting at
Congregational
many pictures and mementos, are in- Trinity
cluded. The cost for the spiral-bound Church recently.
Bartrum talked about
and professionally printed book is $20.
Those interested in getting a copy are things the commissioners
asked to contact Carol Reed, 949-2910, are working on and noted
that he had a meeting reor Sharon Cottrill, 992-4275.
cently to talk about the
Health Department Change
FEMA issue and insurance
POMEROY — The Meigs County rates which are triggered
Health Department has extended hours with new legislation. He
for public visits. On the first Tuesday of mentioned that Congresseach month, the office will be open un- man Bill Johnson is a pertil 6 p.m. Services available will include son who really fights for
nursing (immunization clinic, etc.) en- Meigs County.
vironmental health and vital statistics.
He also noted that the
The duration of the extended services new Emergency Managewill depend on public use. The WIC
clinic will also be serving clients on each ment Operation Center is
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. begin- now occupied and an open
ning today. Call EIC for an appointment
at (740) 992-0392.

Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
immunization clinic Tuesday from
9-11 a.m.and 1-3 p.m. Children must
be accompanied by a parent or guardian and bring shot records.

POMEROY — Farmers Bank celebrated Pomeroy customers with a Customer
Appreciation Day on Friday, May 30.
The event was held from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. at the Pomeroy retail location at 640
East Main St.
Customers and community members
stopped by to have a free lunch, sign up
for their chance to win a great prize, and
to visit with employees of the branch.
“I hope our customers know how important they are to us and to our business,” said Edna Weber, branch manager
of the Pomeroy location. “I hope that we
show them that not only today, but every
day of the year.”
Farmers Bank is hosting Customer Appreciation Day for their Tuppers Plains,
Mason and Point Pleasant locations on
June 13. Gallipolis Customer Appreciation Day is set for June 20. Over the
duration of their Customer Appreciation
events, Farmers Bank plans to give out
Submitted photo
more than 800 free lunches.
Enjoying lunch on the parking lot of the Pomeroy Farmers Bank.

The Bells and Beaus on the move
W.Va., where they joined the Dancers Choice , then on to Lubeck,
W.Va., to dance with the Stardusters Club. and to Jacks where they
joined the Wagonwheelers.
The club meets every Monday

night in Cheshire at the Gavin
Employees Club at 7 p.m. and has
open dances at 7:30 p.m. on the
second Saturday of each month
at the Middleport Community
Building.

Chester Council observes Mother’s Day
CHESTER — Mother’s
Day was observed at a recent meeting of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America.
Each mother attending
was presented a flower. Julie Curtis was noted as the
only member with a living
mother, Mary Rose.
The program consisted

of information by Esther
Smith on Mother’s Day,
started in 1914. Opal Hollon read “The Images of
Mother” and Mary Ballinger, “What is a Mother.”
It was reported during the meeting that the
Chester DAR had received
a good report from State
Councilor Cindy Murphy

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following insprection.
Reported ill were Maxine White, Mary Jane and
Bonnie Loxley. The deaths
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members for gifts at the
rally.

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Students, left to right, Hannah White, Shelby Hudnall, Olivia Haggy, were joined by staff members
Julie Mayer, social worker, Bethany Wyatt, PTO secretary, and Sarah Lee, PTO president, for a picture.

Meigs school raises
funds for Relay for Life
POMEROY — Meigs Elementary PTO sponsored a mini Relay for Life during the school’s
annual field day activities on May 21-23.
PTO officers worked in conjunction with the
counselors and social workers, physical education
staff, and principals to plan the event which consisted of inflatables, karaoke, cotton candy, popcorn and throwing water balloons at the principals.
This year’s event raised $3,005 for Meigs
County Relay for Life, which will take place on
June 13-14 at the Meigs Country Fairgrounds.
Sarah Lee, PTO president, said, “We never anticipated making this much money for our first event,
but we are thrilled to have raised it for a good cause.
We are already planning improvements and more
events to make next year even bigger.”

Legion Auxiliary selects
Girl State representative
POMEROY — Haley
Kennedy, a student at
Meigs High School has
been selected by the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39 to attend
Buckeye Girls State. She
is the daughter of Carrie and Mike Kennedy, of
Middleport.
Announcement of her
selection was made at the
recent meeting of the auxiliary that meets the first
Monday of each month at
6:30 p.m. A new time and
date for its meeting is the
first Monday of the month

at 6:30 p.m.
President Alice Wamsley led in the Pledge of Allegiance and Preamble of
the American Legion, and
prayer was given by Chaplain Barbara Fry.
The birthday observance
of member Gladys Cummings on May 10 at the
Wild Horse Cafe was noted.
The auxiliary participated with the legionnaires
in the Memorial Day activities. New members, Kathy
Thomas, Betty VanMatre
and Golda Roush, were
welcomed.

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house will be held next Tuesday.that AEP is working for
three substations to upgrade
the grid; how the county is
working to get dollars from
a med flight facility along
with funding for the county
dog pound. Some of the retired teachers mentioned
that what this county needs
is a good hotel.
During the business
meeting, officers gave reports, a card was signed
for Anna Rice, and Joan
Corder, scholarship chairman, asked for names of
students pursuing a career
in education.
The next meeting will be
Sept. 18 at the Wild Horse
Cafe and the speaker will
be Randy Overbeck, author and Vice President
of ORTA. Members are to
take school supplies for
needy children.

Red Cross CPR Class
CHESHIRE — AEP, Gavin Plant, is
holding a free CPR class at their facility in Cheshire on June 14. The class
will run from 7:30 a.m. until 4 p.m.
and will include CPR and AED adult
and child, as well as First Aid. Upon
completion of the class, students will
be certified. Lunch will be provided.
Seating is limited and pre-registration
is required. To register call the American Red Cross of Southeastern Ohio
at (740) 593-5273.

Bank to host customer appreciation days

POMEROY — Members of
Meigs County’s Belles and Beaus
Dance Club traveled recently to
Elizabeth, W.Va., to dance with
the Farmers and Charmers club.
They then traveled to St. Albans,

Page 3

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OPINION

Letter to The Editor
Meigs County rocks
for our troops, veterans
Dear editor,
I would like to thank Charlene
Hoeflich and staff for a wonderful job
of covering all the veterans events,
graduations and Bikers Memorial Run. I personally want to thank
thank all veterans and military for
serving and defending God, country
and freedom.

Please remember all of them in your
prayers and be sure to thank them for
serving. They need to hear that.
I want to say, recently I was blessed
to work with Drew Webster Post 39
American Legion for our Poppy Donation Drive. Our auxiliary is a good
group of ladies helping veterans and
families. It was great talking with all
the people, veterans (hearing their stories) and the bikers on Sunday. Thanks

to all these good people we exceeded
our goal and will be able to buy more
stuff for our local veterans, hence all
the money stays in Meigs County.
Thanks to all our great workers for
making this a successful project.
I’m proud to be an American, live
in Meigs County and to come from a
big military family. May God bless all
of us and keep us safe!
Joanne Newsome

Forgetting what happened in Tiananmen Square
By Ruth Marcus
The young man approached with an air of furtive urgency, covering his mouth with his hand. “Please can you tell me,” he asked,
“what happened in 1989?” In China, there is a single answer to
that question: the Tiananmen Square massacre, 25 years ago this
week. The quarter-century mark is not auspicious in Chinese culture, but the date itself has acquired iconic significance: 6/4 is to
China what 9/11 is to the United States.
Except that in place of public commemoration in China, there
is careful whispering and sly references to troops firing on unarmed pro-democracy demonstrators.
And, an even more unsettling exception: As the young man’s
question illustrated, a new generation remains ignorant, uninterested or both about Tiananmen. China has become, in the title of
a new book by National Public Radio reporter Louisa Lim, “The
People’s Republic of Amnesia.”
For Americans, the image of the unknown young man standing in front of a menacing tank is seared into memory or — for
the post-Tiananmen generation — taught as a central moment in
modern Chinese history.
Yet for many Chinese, as became clear on a trip here sponsored
by the Committee of 100, a U.S. nonprofit dedicated to promoting mutual understanding, the topic remains best unmentioned,
if not unknown. Only the bravest teachers broach it, and then
most likely as a cautionary tale of popular protest that unfolded
too fervently, too soon.
The horrors of the Cultural Revolution have become safe
ground for public discussion. The events of 1989, by contrast,
remain distinctly off-limits. Imagine a comparable moment of
searing national shame — Kent State, Watergate, Abu Ghraib —
effectively banished from public discussion.
Certainly, suppression of free speech plays a significant role.
Five years ago, as the 20th anniversary neared, dissidents were
detained, foreign newspapers had pages excised, television
screens went strategically dark, and the plug was pulled on Internet sites.
Today, if anything, the government is even more heavy-hand-

ed; recent bombings in the western province of Xinjiang have
only added to the imperative to stifle dissent.
Still, the “Great Firewall,” China’s effort to censor the Internet, is rather easily breached, especially by a techno-savvy young
generation adept at enlisting virtual private networks to evade official blockages. Young people determined to discover the events
of 6/4 can find a workaround.
But that assumes a widespread discontent with the free-speech
status quo that instead seems disconcertingly muted.
Eric Li, a Shanghai-based 46-year-old venture capitalist who
watched the protests from afar, as a Berkeley undergraduate —
he went on to work for Ross Perot and earn a Stanford MBA —
expressed undisguised relief at the crackdown, notwithstanding
the “tragic” loss of life. Li echoes the official view that letting the
protests continue would have jeopardized governmental stability
and imperiled an economic rise that has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty.
Many younger Chinese express a similar tolerance. Amanda,
a graduate student, described being “shocked” on seeing a video
of Tiananmen in a constitutional law class, her first exposure to
the protests. The professor’s message? “It is difficult to change
the situation of China.”
This has become a privileged, me-first generation of “little
emperors” and empresses, only children coddled by parents and
grandparents. Even with rising tensions over China’s astonishing income inequality and anxiety over whether those less wellconnected will be able to nab their share, this new cohort enjoys
a standard of living unimaginable at the time of Tiananmen.
They are, according to pollsters, particularly nationalistic —
more worked up over Japan’s wartime atrocities and perceived
territorial incursions than over issues of personal freedom, or,
perhaps more threatening to Chinese leaders, unrest over rampant corruption and pollution.
For them, the explosion of wealth often seems worth the price
of studied ignorance about Tiananmen. Hence the chilling question: If those who cannot remember the past are condemned to
repeat it, what becomes of those who never knew the past at all?

Obama out of the loop … again
By Kathleen Parker
Former President George
W. Bush once said, rather
proudly, that he didn’t read
newspapers.
President Barack Obama,
a confirmed newsie, has
claimed to read the major papers, perhaps to learn what’s
going on in his own administration.
Latest to the list of presidential discoveries, thanks
to the dailies, is the horrific

news that the Department
of Veterans Affairs has kept
secret lists of veterans waiting for treatment. Some have
died during the wait.
In a world of faux outrage,
finally we have something
about which to be scandalized. It is hard to imagine
leaving our veterans to wither
and die after they’ve survived
enemy fire and war. It must
be particularly painful for the
families of those who never
reached the top of the list.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to be accurate. If you
know of an error in a story,
call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.
Our main number is
(740) 992-2155.
Department extensions
are:
News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich,
Ext. 12
Reporter: Sarah Hawley,
Ext. 13
Advertising
Retail: Sarah Thompson,
Ext. 15
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
Circulation
Circulation Manager:
Jessica Chason, 740-4462342, Ext. 25
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Information
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The deepest cut is knowing that the president, who as
a candidate promised that veterans care would be among
his highest priorities, hasn’t
burdened himself with keeping this promise.
Instead, we learn that
Obama knows more or less
what every newspaper-reading American knows. Does
he also do more or less what
Americans do in response?
Shake his head, cluck his
tongue and then turn the
page? The president didn’t
know, for instance, how badly
things were going over at
Health and Human Services
preceding the dramatic nonrollout of the Affordable Care
Act.
In other breaking news,
Obama was surprised to learn
that the Internal Revenue Service was paying special attention to conservative groups.
And, who, by the way,
knew whatever was going
on in Benghazi that horrific
night? Not to pound the
Republican drum, which
too often sounds like a car
alarm, but was the administration’s first impulse really
to call YouTube? So says
Rep. Darrell Issa, Republican chairman of the House
Oversight and Government
Reform Committee. Issa recently noted a State Department email indicating that
one of the White House’s
first responses to the attack Sept. 11, 2012, was to
contact the video-sharing
website to warn of the ramifications of posting the antiIslam video initially blamed
for the attack.
The fact that the White
House was contacting YouTube as Americans were being attacked merely confirms

that the administration really
believed that the attack erupted during a video-induced
riot.
What difference does it
make at this point, one might
ask? Does it matter that the
president gets his news from
the media rather than from
his staff and Cabinet? Does it
matter that time after time —
add the NSA’s spying on our
allied leaders and the Justice
Department’s tapping into reporters’ communications —
the president doesn’t know
what’s going on in agencies
his Cabinet oversees?
Yes, it all really matters.
It matters because denial of
knowledge tastes like chicken
and smells like cover-up. At
best it sounds like incompetence. It matters because
this White House has failed
to perform in a manner that
justifies the public’s faith and
trust in its leadership.
Being president is surely
the least enviable job imaginable. Staying abreast of so
many complex issues — not
to mention foreign affairs —
must be overwhelming at
times. And, to be fair, sometimes agency leaders don’t
like to share bad news with
their commander in chief.
Finally, the problem of
admitted ignorance may be
less a matter of negligence
than a symptom of an even
bigger problem — the programs themselves. To admit
that our government bureaucracies and our hulking
programs are too big to succeed, however, is to admit
to a failure of ideology.
The president likely knows
this in his heart, which may be
why he prefers being surprised
by news than collapsing under
the burden of being wrong.

Page 4
THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 2014

Standing up for
clean air rules
By Dana Milbank
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy sounded like the sort of
unflinching liberal that progressives had hoped
Barack Obama would be.
Not only did McCarthy roll out a broad new
rule Monday that would cut carbon dioxide
emissions by 30 percent at existing power plants
over 16 years, but she did so while ridiculing
those on the other side.
“Critics claim that your energy bills will skyrocket. Well, they’re wrong,” McCarthy told a
crowd at EPA’s headquarters. Departing from
her prepared remarks, she added, to laughter
and applause, “Shall I say that again? They’re
wrong.”
She declared that “the critics are wrong about
reliability, too,” and she scorned those “pointing to the polar vortex as a reason not to act on
climate.” She adopted a singsong voice as she
mockingly anticipated “special interest skeptics
who will cry the sky is falling.”
McCarthy belittled those who “cried wolf” in
the past with predictions that industry would
“die a quiet death” — she made quotation marks
with her fingers — and she predicted that “those
same critics, once again, will flaunt manufactured facts and scare tactics, standing in the way
of our right to breathe clean air.”
Her speech finished, the administrator went
to a table to sign a page atop a five-inch-high
stack of paper explaining the rule — but she
returned to the microphone with a final, unscripted thought: “Whoever said the sword isn’t
mightier than the pen, they’re absolutely right.”
McCarthy, not quite a year into her job, spoke
with a Massachusetts accent and a Puritan’s fervor. After a career as an environmental adviser
to Democratic and Republican governors alike,
she sounded more like a politician herself than a
regulator, savoring a standing ovation from the
crowd and pointing and waving at people in the
audience.
Even more than the policy itself, McCarthy’s
unambiguous and uncompromising words
should delight environmental advocates and
frighten industrialists, who have been led by
Republicans to believe that the administration is
pursuing a “war on coal.” President Obama’s energy policy is inherently contradictory because
he proposes carbon reduction while simultaneously pursuing record carbon production. But
McCarthy, wielding the “pen” in Obama’s penand-phone strategy of acting without congressional cooperation, made no attempt to strike
the balance that the president does between energy and climate.
She made the obligatory mention of Obama’s
“all of the above” energy policy, but the rest was
about how Obama would “lead the world in the
global fight against climate [change]” — an
echo of George W. Bush’s “global war on terror.”
(That war on climate change might begin close
to home. In the room where McCarthy made
her remarks, the chandeliers that hung from the
30-foot ceilings illuminated the room with what
appeared to be incandescent bulbs, about 100
in all.) An EPA spokesman had no information
about the lighting.
A strong bass line pumped through the sound
system before McCarthy arrived, and she entered to woops and raucous applause. “Wow!”
the administrator declared after some hugs and
a handshake with Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va., seated
front and center. She praised EPA’s “wonderful
rule-making” and boasted, “That is how you
write a rule.” McCarthy assured those listening
that “this was the preferred path forward.”
She rattled off the various ills attributed to
climate change: “If your kid doesn’t use an inhaler, you should consider yourself a very lucky
parent. … 2012 was the second-most-expensive
year in U.S. history for natural disasters. … If we
do nothing, in our grandkids’ lifetimes, temperatures could rise 10 degrees and seas could rise
by four feet. … Lower-income families and communities of color are hardest hit.”
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says the
regulation would annually cut 224,000 jobs and
gross domestic product by $51 billion. But McCarthy dismissed any cost from the regulation
at “about the price of a gallon of milk a month,”
and she ridiculed those who will “deliberately …
overestimate the costs.”
McCarthy had a feistiness similar to that of
her home-state Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.,
whose populism has fired up progressives. As
she bemoaned the critics using “the same tired
play from the same special-interest playbook,”
she paused for a digression. “In the ’60s — you
remember the ’60s? Some of you do. I’m lucky
enough — sort of.”
McCarthy’s words Monday contained a bit of
the 1960s, a time before unapologetic idealism
gave way to “all of the above.” Love McCarthy’s
message or hate it, her honesty is refreshing.

�Thursday, June 5, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 5

The Daily Sentinel

Death Notices
BOGGS
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
— Dorothy B. (Willet)
Boggs, 84, formerly of
New Haven, W.Va., died
Tuesday, June 3, 2014, at
Ravenswood Village in Ravenswood.
A funeral service will
be 11 a.m. Friday, June 6,
2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant
with Pastor Brian Ross
officiating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant. Visitation will be from
6-8 p.m. Thursday at the
funeral home. Online condolences may be made
at www.wilcoxenfuneralhome.com.
GOODY
GALLIPOLIS — Willis
“Matt” Goody, 42, of Gal-

lipolis, died Monday, June
2, 2014.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Saturday, June 7, 2014, at
Waugh-Halley Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Alfred Holley officiating.
Calling hours will be 6-9
p.m. Friday, June 6, 2014,
at the funeral home. In lieu
of flowers, contributions
can be made to the funeral home, Waugh-Halley
Wood, 810 Second Ave.,
to help offset funeral expenses.
RORRER
MT. OLIVE, N.C. —
Jerry Lewis Rorrer, 67, of
Mt. Olive, N.C., formerly
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
died Sunday, June 1, 2014,
at home in Clayton, N.C.
A service to celebrate his
life will be 2 p.m. Saturday,

June 7, 2014, at Unity Baptist Church, 489 N.C. Highway 55, Mt. Olive. A private
graveside service for the
family will follow. Flowers
and memorials may be sent
to Unity Baptist Church. In
lieu of flowers, a donation to
Duke Cancer Center would
be greatly appreciated.
SHAFER
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio
— Kenneth Ira Shafer, 77,
of Proctorville, died Tuesday, June 3, 2014, at The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House in Huntington,
W.Va. Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Saturday, June 7,
2014, at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory in Proctorville. Burial will follow in
Miller Memorial Gardens in
Miller, Ohio. Visitation will
be 5-9 p.m. Friday, June 6,

2014, at the funeral home.

Columbus, OH 43214; or
Waugh Fellowship, c/o
Kenyon College, Office of
Development, Gambier,
OH 43022. The fellowship

WAUGH
NEW ALBANY, Ohio
— Calvin William Waugh,
92, died Tuesday, June 3,
2014, in New Albany.
The family will receive
friends from 6-8 p.m. Friday, June 6, 2014, at Willis Funeral Home. The funeral service will be held at
Providence Baptist Church,
3570 Teens Run Road, in
Crown City, Ohio at 1 p.m.
Saturday, June 7, 2014. The
service will be officiated
by Pastor John Arnold of
Proctorville, Ohio. Burial
will follow at Mound Hill
Cemetery in Gallipolis.
In lieu of flowers, the
family has suggested that
donations in honor of Calvin be directed to Honor
Flight, P.O. Box 12036,

was established by his family in 2008 to honor their
dedication to providing
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New lawsuits target cameras in two more Ohio cities
CINCINNATI (AP) —
New lawsuits Wednesday
targeted traffic cameras
used to cite motorists for
allegedly speeding or running red lights in two Dayton suburbs, he latest legal
challenge to camera use in
Ohio.
The cases charge that
the automated enforcement systems in Trotwood
and West Carrollton violate motorists’ constitutional rights to due process
and improperly bypass the
court system. Attorneys
from Cincinnati-based Michael K. Allen &amp; Associates filing the lawsuits in
Montgomery County have
been involved in several
other cases involving cameras, and have won judge’s
orders shutting off cameras
in the villages of Elmwood
Place and New Miami.
The filings Wednesday
state that the traffic camera system each city uses is
“invalid and unenforceable
because it fails to provide
adequate due process to
vehicle owners,” and also
“impermissibly
divests”
local courts of jurisdiction
over the cases.
The
lawsuits
were
against the two cities,
their heads of police, and
Redflex Traffic Systems,
a Phoenix, Arizona-based
company that contracts
with municipalities across
the country to provide and
operate traffic cameras.
West Carrollton’s city manager, Brad Townsend, said
Wednesday that the city
hadn’t seen the lawsuit
yet and couldn’t comment.
Officials of Trotwood and
the camera vendor didn’t
respond immediately to requests for comment.
Dayton attorney Thomas Manning and Paul DeMarco of Cincinnati are
also representing the Dayton area motorists who are
suing. Both lawsuits seek
class action status on behalf of other motorists.
“These two cities were
the next ones where citizens have brought us a lot
of information,” said attor-

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AP Photo

New lawsuits Wednesday targeted traffic cameras, such as these in New Miami, Ohio, used to
cite motorists for allegedly speeding or running red lights in two Dayton suburbs, the latest
legal challenge to camera use in Ohio.

ney Josh Engel, explaining
why Trotwood and West
Carrollton were added to
the list of sued municipalities. The attorneys earlier
sued the city of Dayton.
That case is pending.
Meanwhile, Ohio’s Supreme Court will hear
arguments next week in
a driver’s lawsuit against
Toledo’s cameras, and proposed legislation in the
Statehouse would restrict
or change rules for camera
use statewide.
Supporters say traffic
cameras stretch police resources and make drivers
and communities safer.
Most of Ohio’s largest cities use them, and the state
Supreme Court upheld
camera enforcement in the
city of Akron in 2008.
Critics argue that they
are mainly meant to raise
money, and that they don’t
give ticketed motorists a
fair chance to challenge
evidence, confront accusers, and have their day in
court.
The latest lawsuits
say that Trotwood has
been using cameras since
2006, reaping as much as
$327,466 in camera citation revenues in 2012 in
a city of some 24,000 residents. It states that West

Carrollton started using
them in 2009, and they
brought in $158,038 last
year in the city of some
13,000 people.
A recent series of lowercourt rulings in Ohio have
gone against municipalities that use cameras.
A Hamilton County
judge compared Elmwood
Place’s camera system to a
con artist’s card game, calling it “a scam.” Judge Robert Ruehlman has ordered
refunds of fines and fees

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totaling some $1.8 million
in Elmwood Place, where
thousands of motorists
racked up $105 speeding
fines within weeks of the
cameras’ installation. The
refunds are on hold pending an appellate court ruling.
Butler County Judge Michael Sage didn’t rule immediately on refunds in New
Miami, after it was estimated in court that more than
$1 million was collected in a
little more than a year.

Met Mother Met Mother Salem
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Beer Money Beer Money
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The Good Sister Sonya Walger. A husband falls for his
A Nanny's Revenge Victoria Pratt. A young girl takes a job
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wife's twin and is entangled in a life or death affair. TV14 as a nanny in order to avenge her parent's death. TV14
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The Middle The Middle Sixteen Candles A girl turning sixteen is set up with a
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Thef Auto"
to Coast"
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featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling.
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Ghostbusters
prevent an attack on the Vatican &amp; solve a murder. ...
parapsychologists open a ghost removal business in New York. TVPG
II TVPG
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Mountain Monsters
The First 48 "Motel No-Tell/ The First 48 "Southwick/
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Watch" (N)
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(5:30) H.Wives H.Wives "Choke-Lahoma" Married to Medicine
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TBA
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Life ('99, Com) Martin Lawrence, Eddie Murphy. TVMA
Phat Girlz ('06, Com) Mo'nique. TVPG
Fixer Upper
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HouseH (N) House (N)
(5:30)
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End ('07, Adv) Orlando Bloom, Keira The Bourne Ultimatum As government agents continue to
Knightley, Johnny Depp. The pirates battle Davy Jones and the East India Company. TV14 track him down, Jason Bourne searches for his identity. ...

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Ryan Reynolds. A cop joins the Rest in Peace Department,
a unit made up of undead police officers. TVPG
(5:10)
The Devil's Advocate A young (:35)
The Ringer Johnny Knoxville. A (:10)
Doom (2005, Sci-Fi) The Rock, Rosamund Pike,
lawyer is lured into joining a firm where he young man decides to rig the Special
Karl Urban. A team is forced to go to war with mutants
is mentored by the mysterious boss. TVMA Olympics by posing as a contestant. TVPG while investigating a settlement on Mars. TVMA
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(:55)
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�The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY,
JUNE 5, 2014

SPORTS

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

James feels ‘blessed’ by shot at another NBA title
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — LeBron James should be used to the
NBA Finals by now. After five
trips to the championship series
in eight years, it would make
sense if he had a been-there, done-that attitude when stepping
onto the sport’s biggest stage.
He doesn’t.
On Wednesday James took a
seat inside a makeshift interview
area, sneaked a quick glance at
the NBA Finals signage that was
off to his left side, and beamed
like a kid in a candy store. Just
a couple years removed from being ripped for not delivering in
the moments that decide championships, James seems more
comfortable in these surroundings than ever.
“I’m blessed, man,” James
said. “That’s all I can say.”
And then, without stopping,
the four-time MVP said much
more.
“This is my fifth appearance in a finals,” he continued.
“I’m blessed. I was a kid who
watched so many finals appear-

ances and, you know, watched
Michael Jordan and watched
Shaq and Kobe … we watched
throwback finals games. … I
just wished maybe I could see
the finals verbiage behind me
and be a part of this.”
His wishes come true again
Thursday night, when James
and the Miami Heat open these
finals against the San Antonio
Spurs, the NBA’s first championship-series rematch since
1998. The Heat are going for a
third straight title, the Spurs are
trying for their fifth crown since
1999.
If Miami wins, the perception
will be James came through.
If Miami loses, the perception
will be he didn’t do enough.
James knows that’s the reality.
He doesn’t mind.
“I play for my teammates,
our team, the city of Miami, my
friends and family, and I gave it
all for that,” James said. “And at
the end of the day, win, lose or
draw, I’m satisfied with that. I
don’t get involved in what peo-

ple say about me and my legacy.
I think it’s actually kind of stupid.”
By now, the story behind
James’ rise to a champion is
no secret. He left Cleveland in
2010 because he felt Miami gave
him a better opportunity to win
titles. In 2011, when Miami
lost to Dallas in the final round,
James said he was relying too
much upon proving his doubters
and naysayers wrong.
So the next season, he vowed
to play the game the way he had
in the past. Championship No.
1 came in 2012, championship
No. 2 came last season in an
epic seven-game series against
the Spurs, and now the shot at
No. 3 is here.
“He’s really taken his game to
a whole other level,” Heat guard
Dwyane Wade said. “Obviously
as an individual he’s grown, as
a man, both on and off the court
from his own experiences. So I
think he’s done a phenomenal
job. … If I sit back and look from
afar, he’s done an unbelievable

job under the microscope that
he’s been under since he was
16 years old of doing things his
way and been very successful at
doing them.”
If James is feeling pressure
right now, it doesn’t show publicly.
Away from the public eye,
though, teammates have marveled all season about how
someone who makes more than
$50 million a year in salary and
endorsements is working perhaps harder than ever.
“Nothing he does is normal,”
Heat forward Michael Beasley
said. “He practices wearing a
weight vest. Does that sound
normal?”
James spent the majority of
his question-answering time
Wednesday laughing or smiling. Off-stage, he joked with a
few other people, chatting and
seeming as relaxed as he would
if this was the eve of a HeatSpurs game in January, not one
in June.
The Spurs are worried about

stopping James, they know that
won’t happen.
“We understand LeBron is
the best player in the league and
just physically he’s just a monster,” San Antonio forward Tim
Duncan said.
In 2007, when the Spurs
swept Cleveland, James was still
learning.
In 2011, he felt like he absolutely had to win, and failed to
get it done.
In 2012 and 2013, he just
played the game the way he felt
it needs to be played. And it’s
no coincidence that it’s all fallen
into place since.
“Every time I come up here
and talk to you guys or I do
something, you know, very well
on the basketball floor or off the
floor, my city is rewarded by
that,” James said. “My family
is rewarded by that, my friends
are rewarded by that, the kids
and all the kids in the world that
look up to me are rewarded by
that. That’s enough to get me by.
Everything else is extra credit.”

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Jacob Click (left) takes the handoff from senior Wade Jarrell in the 4x100m relay at the SEOAL
championships in Centenary.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Taylor Palmer, second from left, takes off after
a baton exchange from teammate Laura Pullins in the Division
III 4x800m relay final held at Fairfield Union High School.

EHS track trying to
score one for history
By Bryan Walters

A big weekend for GAHS track, possibly
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio — History has been kind to
Gallia Academy in regards to the state track meet.
This weekend at Jesse Owens Stadium, both the
Blue Angels and Blue Devils have another good shot
at nice fortunes.
GAHS will have eight athletes competing in six
different events both Friday and Saturday at the
2014 Division II OHSAA Track and Field Championships being held on the campus of Ohio State University in Franklin County.
The Blue Devils have seven boys – all first-time
state qualifiers – competing in five competitions,
which include a pair of relays and one event final.
The Blue Angels – who have scored at least one
point at the state level since 1997 – have only one
athlete in one event.
The one female, however, is senior Hannah Watts,
who will be competing in her fourth straight weekend at Jesse Owens Stadium. Watts, a three-time state
qualifier in the 400m dash, debuts in Saturday’s 800m
final with the fastest qualifying time headed in.
Watts, a two-time state finalist in the 400m dash,
made the podium last spring and extended the Blue
Angels’ state scoring streak to 17 consecutive seasons. The Blue Angels also finished as the D-2 state
runner-up, team-wise, in both 2006 and 2007.
GAHS has only three track and field state champions in school history. Amy Wilson (1998) and Alexis
Geiger (2009) both won long jump championships
in their senior campaigns, while Felicia Close won
the 100m hurdles as a senior in 2006.
The Blue Devils had zero qualifiers at the state
meet one year ago and haven’t scored a point at the
state level since 2011, when the 4x400m relay team
of Johnathan Caldwell, Ethan Moore, Tyler Campbell and Austin Wilson earned five points with a
fourth place effort.
Senior Logan Allison has the best shot at ending that scoreless drought as the Capital University

4x8oom competitions.
The foursome owns the
third fastest time headed
COLUMBUS, Ohio — into the 4x800m final on
There may never be a bet- Friday and also possesses
ter chance than now.
the sixth best qualifying
There has only been one time entering the 4x400m
podium finish in the histo- semifinals.
ry of the Eastern girls track
Pullins – the lone newand field program, but that comer to Jesse Owens
may very well change this Stadium – also heads into
weekend during the 2014 Friday’s high jump final
Division III OHSAA Track in a five-way tie for third
and Field Championships place by regional qualifiers,
at Jesse Owens Stadium in which puts her in the top-7
Franklin County.
going in.
The Lady Eagles have
Lawrence, like Pullins,
been relatively close to top- will compete in a third
8 finishes over the last few event as she enters the
years, but Melissa Nutter is 800m final Saturday with
still the only female from the ninth fastest qualifying
EHS to ever finish on the time.
podium at the state meet.
No girls from Southern
This year, however, the or South Gallia qualified
Lady Eagles will have four for the D-3 state meet.
athletes in four events, with
Nutter, a 1987 graduate,
three of those four having competed twice in the shot
competed at Jesse Owens put event at state in both
Stadium just one year ago. 1986 and 1987.
The quartet also enters the
Neither Eastern, South
weekend with top-10 quali- Gallia nor Southern had a
fying times in each event.
state qualifier on the boys
Half of Eastern’s four side in D-3. Meigs also
events are relays, with se- came up empty in the Diviniors Maddie Rigsby and sion II tournament, markKeri Lawrence, junior Tay- ing the first time since the
lor Palmer and freshman 2005 campaign that no
NEW YORK (AP) — California
Laura Pullins competing Meigs County boy qualiChrome became the 3-5 early favorite
in both the 4x400m and fied for the state meet.
on Wednesday to win the Belmont
Stakes and become horse racing’s
12th Triple Crown champion.
The Kentucky Derby and Preakness
winner will break from the No. 2 post
under Victor Espinoza on Saturday at
Belmont Park. Eleven Belmont winners have come out of that post, the
Friday, June 6
last being Tabasco Cat in 1994.
Track and Field
California Chrome will be listed
OHSAA state meet at OSU, 9:30 a.m.
No. 2 in the betting program, the
same number as 1973 Triple Crown
Saturday, June 7
winner Secretariat, who won the
Track and Field
OHSAA state meet at OSU, 9:30 a.m.
Belmont by a record 31 lengths
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Gallia Academy senior Hannah Watts runs in the 400m
dash preliminary at the Division II Region 7 Track and
Field Championships, Thursday at Muskingum University.

signee enters Friday final with the top qualifying distance out of 16 competitors in the long jump.
Junior Jacob Click – who is competing in three different semifinals – also has a chance at a podium finish after posting the seventh fastest qualifying time
in the 300m hurdles.
Senior Winston Wade, like Allison, will be competing in two different events and enters Saturday’s
800m final with the 14th fastest qualifying time.
Allison, Click, senior Wade Jarrell and sophomore Wes
Jarrell enter the 4x100m relay semifinals with the 15th
fastest time, while Wade, Click, senior Griffon McKinniss and junior Blake Wilson also head into the 4x400m
relay semis with the 15th fastest qualifying mark.
Neither Meigs nor River Valley had an athlete
qualify for the Division II state meet this spring.

California Chrome made 3-5 favorite for Belmont

OVP Sports Schedule

while setting a track record for the 1
½-mile race that still stands.
Wicked Strong was the 6-1 second
choice and drew post No. 9. The colt
finished fourth after an unlucky trip
in the Derby, sat out the Preakness
and comes into the Belmont off a
five-week rest.
Tonalist was made the third betting choice at 8-1 odds and will break
from the No. 11 post. The colt has
experienced on the track, having
won the Peter Pan Stakes, although
he is new to the Triple Crown trail.
Ride On Curlin, the 12-1 fourth
choice, and 20-1 shot General a Rod

are the only other horses besides
California Chrome who will have run
in all three legs of the Triple Crown.
Eleven horses were entered to take
on California Chrome in his bid to
win the Triple Crown for the first
time since Affirmed swept the Derby,
Preakness and Belmont in 1978.
Commanding Curve, second in the
Derby, was listed at 15-1. Four horses
were at 20-1: Commissioner, General a
Rod, Medal Count (eighth in the Derby) and Samraat (fifth in the Derby).
Matterhorn and Matuszak, both
new to the Triple Crown series, were
listed at 30-1.

�Thursday, June 5, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

COUNTY : MEIGS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

COUNTY : MEIGS

Professional Services

LEGALS
COUNTY : MEIGS

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured
• Experienced
• References Available

60508241

The following applications
and/or verified complaints were
received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx
or Hearing Clerk,
Miscellaneous
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us

Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

The following applications
and/or verified complaints were
received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
LEGALS
obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us
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0 West Side Main Street
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318 College Avenue
As per Ordinance Section (3),
the Village of Rutland is making every attempt to contact
any and/or all owners/lienholders of the above listed properties.
Written responses will be accepted by the Village of Rutland until June 27, 2014. Responses can be delivered to
the Rutland Mayor s Office,
Rutland Village Hall, 337 Main
Street, Rutland, Ohio or mailed
to Rutland Village Hall,
Mayor s Office, P.O. Box 297,
Rutland, OH 45775.
If no responses are received,
the Village will proceed with
demolition of the
structures.(06),05,12,19

LEGALS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be received at the:
DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL
RESOURCES
2045 MORSE ROAD BUILDING H, THIRD FLOOR
COLUMBUS, OHIO 432296693
until JUNE 25, 2014 AT 1:30
P.M., and opened thereafter
for furnishing the materials and
performing the labor for the execution and construction of:
SOUTHERN/TEAFORD
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROJECT NUMBER MG-Sb74

in accordance with the plans
and specifications prepared by
the DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT,
COLUMBUS, OHIO. PROPOSALS WILL BE OPENED
IN THE SECOND FLOOR
CONFERENCE ROOM OF
2045 (BUILDING H-2) OF THE
FOUNTAIN SQUARE OFFICES OF THE OHIO DEMiscellaneous
PARTMENT OF NATURAL
RESOURCES.
The United
Business Services
REACH
2 MILLION NEWSPAPER
Surface
MinREADERS with one ad placement. ONLYStates
$295.00.Office
Ohio’sof
best
community
ing Reclamation
and Enforcenewspapers. Call Mitch at AdOhio Statewide
Classified Network,
614ment or
is check
supplying
100%
of at:
the
486-6677, or E-MAIL at: mcolton@adohio.net
out our
website
funds for this project. The conwww.adohio.net.
struction completion date for
this project is November 28,
Business Services
REACH
OVER
1 MILLION
OHIO ADULTS
2014.
THE
ESTIMATE
FOR
with one ad placement. Only $995.00. THIS
Ask your
local newspaper
about
PROJECT
AS DETERMour 2X2 Display Network and our 2X4 Display
Network
or Call OF
INED BY
THE$1860
DIVISION
Mitch at 614-486-6677/E-mail mcolton@adohio.net.
or check out our
MINERAL RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT IS
website: www.adohio.net.
$23,683.90.
Education/Training
MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED!
MANDATORY
pre-bid
Become a Medical Office Assistant! NO A
EXPERIENCE
NEEDED!
Onlinemeeting will be held on JUNE 12,
training as SC Train can get you job ready! HS Diploma/GED &amp; PC/Internet
2014 AT 10:00 A.M., at the
needed! 1-888-528-5176
project site. It is the intent of
Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED
DRIVER at
ORthe
RECENT
pre-bid meeting
desigGRAD? With Swift, you can grow to be an
award-winning
A CDL
nated
time. PriorClass
to comdriver. We help you achieve Diamond Driver
status with
supportan
mencement
of the
thebest
meeting,
attendance
form
shall
there is. As a Diamond Driver, you earn additional
paysign-in
on top of
all the
bebest,
distributed
among
the
concompetitive incentives we offer. The very
choose Swift.
Great
Miles
tractors
present.
This form will
= Great Pay, Late-Model Equipment Available,
Regional
Opportunities,
be Benefits.
collected
by DMRM
staff
Great Career Path, Paid Vacation, Excellent
PLEASE
CALL: (866)
when the pre-bid meeting be837-3507

present
for the
purpose
Help Wanted
Owner
Operators
CDL-A
Up to of determining
eligibility
bidPursub$200,000 a year. Out 2 weeks. Home as many
days as
needed. for
Lease
mission acceptance. Participachase Available. Sign on bonus. 855-803-2846
tion in the site viewing sub-

sequent
to the
completion
Education/Training
WERNER
NEEDS
DRIVER
TRAINEES!of
the discussion of the detailed
Drivers are IN DEMAND! We need YOU! No CDL? No problem! 16-Day CDL
specifications will not be retraining avail! Opportunity Awaits, CALLquired
TODAY!in1-866-203-8445
establishing attendance. NO PLANS OR SPE-

We’ll Repair
Your Computer
Through The
Internet!

Help Wanted
“Partners
in Excellence”
OTRBE
Drivers.
CIFICATIONS
WILL
SOLD
APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger
2012 &amp; Newer
equipAT policy.
THE PRE-BID
MEETING.
ment. 100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825 www.butlertransCopies of the plans, specificaport.com
tions,Drivers
and proposal
forms Pay
will
Help Wanted
Flatbed
Starting Mileage
bePer
forwarded
the
Division
up to .41 cpm, Health Ins., 401K, $59 daily
Diem pay from
, Home
Weekends.
of Mineral Resources Manage800-648-9915 or www.boydandsons.com

Affordable Rates
For Home
&amp; Business

Help Wanted
Dedicated
I-80 corridor.
$1,000
check lane
or money
order
in the
min. wkly. pay. Weekly home time. New amount
trucks. Lease
purchase
or company
of $13.00
made
payjobs available. Limited openings available.
Hirschbach
888-474-0729
able to the Ohio Department
www.drive4hml.com
of Natural Resources

Slow Computers
E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Spyware &amp; Viruses
Mobile Device Training

Call Now For
Immediate Help

SOUTHERN/TEAFORD
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROJECT NUMBER MG-Sb74

ations shall be deemed
Limit 2. Your 4 (4 oz.) burgers will ship
free per address and must ship with
The Favorite Gift (49377). Not valid
with other offers. Standard S&amp;H will be
applied per address. Expires 6/30/14.
©2014 OCG | 20180 | Omaha Steaks, Inc.

Call 1-800-712-4684 and ask for 49377MSL
www.OmahaSteaks.com/father01

Lower your monthly payments

Call:(800)908-6923

until JUNE 25, 2014 AT 1:30
P.M., and opened thereafter
for furnishing the materials and
performing the labor for the execution and construction of:

gins. Only those contractors
signed in prior to collection of

Let Consolidated Credit Help You:

Take the first easy step:

DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL
RESOURCES
2045 MORSE ROAD BUILDING H, THIRD FLOOR
COLUMBUS, OHIO 432296693

Help Wanted
ATTN:
Quality
Home in
time!
Avg
theDrivers
form who
remain
attend$1000 Weekly $$$ Up to 50 cpm $$$ BCBS
+ 401k
+ Petthe
&amp; Rider
Orienta- of
ance
through
discussion
tion Sign On Bonus. CDL-A Req - 877-258-8782
www.ad-drivers.com
the plans
and detailed specific-

The Favorite Gift

49377MSL

Sealed proposals will be received at the:

the DMRM to commence the

TENDERNESS®

FOR 12 MONTHS WITH ENTERTAINMENT AND ABOVE.

The following applications
and/or verified complaints were
received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us

2500

$

OFF SERVICE
MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

in accordance with the plans
and specifications prepared by
the DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, DIVISION OF MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT,
COLUMBUS, OHIO. PROPOSALS WILL BE OPENED
IN THE SECOND
FLOOR
LEGALS
CONFERENCE ROOM OF
2045 (BUILDING H-2) OF THE
FOUNTAIN SQUARE OFFICES OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL
RESOURCES. The United
States Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement is supplying 100% of the
funds for this project. The construction completion date for
this project is November 28,
2014. THE ESTIMATE FOR
THIS PROJECT AS DETERMINED BY THE DIVISION OF
MINERAL RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT IS
$23,683.90.
A MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on JUNE 12,
2014 AT 10:00 A.M., at the
project site. It is the intent of
the DMRM to commence the
pre-bid meeting at the designated time. Prior to commencement of the meeting, an
attendance sign-in form shall
be distributed among the contractors present. This form will
be collected by DMRM staff
when the pre-bid meeting begins. Only those contractors
signed in prior to collection of
the form who remain in attendance through the discussion of
the plans and detailed specifications shall be deemed
present for the purpose of determining eligibility for bid submission acceptance. Participation in the site viewing subsequent to the completion of
the discussion of the detailed
specifications will not be required in establishing attendance. NO PLANS OR SPECIFICATIONS WILL BE SOLD
AT THE PRE-BID MEETING.
Copies of the plans, specifications, and proposal forms will
be forwarded from the Division
of Mineral Resources Management, Department of Natural
Resources, upon receipt of a
check or money order in the
amount of $13.00 made payable to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources
(ODNR) and mailed to ODNR,
Division of Mineral Resources Management, 2050
E. Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge, Ohio 43725 Attention: Dona St.Clair (Telephone Number: (740) 4399079). Plans and specifications become the property of
the prospective bidders and no
refunds will be made. A copy
of the plans and specifications
will be available for public review during normal business
hours at Division of Mineral
Resources Management, 2050
E. Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge, Ohio 43725. For information regarding the project
the primary contact person is
the Project Engineer, Brady
G. Johnson, P.E. Or in his absence you may contact the
Design Engineer, Peter G.
Moran, P.E., or the Project
Officer, Scott Davies. They all
can be reached in the Athens
District Office (740) 592-3748.

ment, Department of Natural
Resources, upon receipt of a

Each proposal must be accompanied by a BID GUARANTY,
meeting the requirements of
Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code.

(ODNR) and mailed to ODNR,

CONTRACTORS ARE ADVISED THAT EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
CONDITIONS ARE APPLICABLE TO THIS PROPOSAL IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THE
PROVISIONS OF SECTIONS
153.59 AND 125.111 OF THE
OHIO REVISED CODE. THIS
PROJECT IS SUBJECT TO A
5% EDGE PARTICIPATION
GOAL IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE PROVISIONS OF
O.R.C. SECTION 123.152
AND O.A.C. 123:2-16-08.
WAGE RATES ESTABLISHED IN ACCORDANCE
WITH SECTION 1513.18 AND
1513.37 OF THE REVISED
CODE ARE ALSO APPLICABLE TO THIS PROPOSAL.

Division
of Mineral
ReHelp Wanted
OWNER
OPERATORS!!!
Cargo
Van,
sources
Management,
2050
Straight Truck &amp; Tractor positions available.
Great mileage
rates &amp; FSC
E. Wheeling
Lease Purchase Program for Straight Trucks,
Only $1,000Avenue,
Down. NoCamCredit
bridge, Ohio
43725 AttenCheck. $$Guaranteed Incentive$$ 877-878-9911
www.TST911.com
tion: Dona St.Clair (Telephone Number: (740) 439-

Help Wanted
AVERITT
EXPRESS
Increase
9079).
PlansNew
andPay
specificaFor Regional Drivers! 40 to 46 CPM + Fuel
Bonus!
Also, Post-Training
Pay
tions
become
the property
of
Increase for Students! (Depending on Domicile)
Get Homebidders
EVERY Week
the prospective
and +no
Excellent Benefits. CDL - A req. 888-362-8608
Apply
AverittCareers.com
refunds
will@be
made. A copy
Equal Opportunity Employer - Females,of
minorities,
protected
veterans and
the plans
and specifications
available for public rewill be
individuals with disabilities are encouraged
to apply.

view during normal business

hours New
at Division
of Mineral
Misc.
FLAT ROOF LEAKING?
Commercial
Roof
Resources
Management,
$2.99/sq.ft. Call Diamond Seal, the Liquid
Rubber Roofing
People. Call 2050
for
E.
Wheeling
Avenue,
Camfree estimate today!! Fantastic Special! www.299roof.com 740-818-1545
bridge, Ohio 43725. For information regarding the project

Misc.
VACATION CABINS
RENT contact
IN CANADA.
Fishis
for
the FOR
primary
person
walleyes, perch, northerns. Boats, motors,
CallBrady
Hugh
thegasoline
Projectincluded.
Engineer,
1-800-426-2550 for free brochure. Website
www.bestfishing.com
G. Johnson,
P.E. Or in his abRVs for Sale
2010 Park Model
12x38,you
2 Bed,
1 Bath.
Vinylthe
siding,
sence
may
contact
Peter G.
Shingle roof, Electric heat and air. ONLYDesign
$15,900.Engineer,
1-800-686-1763

Moran, P.E., or the Project

Officer,- Vinyl
Scott
Davies.
They all
Sales
Thermal Tech Exteriors
Siding,
Window
be reached
in 99.00
the Athens
&amp; Roofing Blowout Sale! FREE Estimates.can
All Credit
Accepted.
per
Office (740) 592-3748.
month, no payments for 6 months. Call District
Today! 740-385-6511
Each proposal must be accom-

Education/Training
AIRLINE
JOBS
here-Get
Trained
panied
bybegin
a BID
GUARANTY,
as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Housing/Financial
aid for qualified
meeting the requirements
of
students. Job Placement assistance. Aviation
Institute
of Maintenance.
Section
153.54
of the Ohio Re1-877-676-3836
vised Code.

CONTRACTORS ARE ADVISED THAT EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

CONTRACTORS ARE FURTHER ADVISED THAT, IF
AWARDED THE CONTRACT,
BOTH THE CONTRACTOR
AND ITS
SUBCONTRACTOR(S)
SHALL PERFORM NO SERVICES REQUESTED UNDER
THIS CONTRACT OUTSIDE
OF THE UNITED STATES IN
ACCORDANCE WITH EXECUTIVE ORDER 2011-12K.
Sealed proposals shall be delivered to the address given at
the top of Notice To Bidders.

�struction completion date for
this project is November 28,
2014. THE ESTIMATE FOR
THIS PROJECT AS DETERMINED BY THE DIVISION OF
Page
8 The
Daily Sentinel
MINERAL
RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT IS
$23,683.90.
A MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on JUNE 12,
2014 AT 10:00 A.M., at the
project site. It is the intent of
the DMRM to commence the
pre-bid meeting at the designated time. Prior to commencement of the meeting, an
URG
baseball
attendance
sign-inresechedules
form shall
be distributed
among
the conprospect
tryouts
tractors present. This form will
RIO
GRANDE,
Ohio
— The
be collected by DMRM staff
University
of Riomeeting
Grande
when the pre-bid
be-basecontractors
Only those
ballgins.
program
will
be conductin prior
to collection
of on
ingsigned
its
2014
Prospect
Tryout
the form who remain in attendTuesday,
June
10
at
Bob
ance through the discussionEvans
of
Field
theandURG
Campus.
the on
plans
detailed
specific-The
ationswhich
shall behad
deemed
tryout
been schedpresent for the purpose of deuled
for
Wednesday,
4, has
termining eligibility forJune
bid subbeen
cancelled
as a result
of the
mission
acceptance.
Participation in the
site viewing weather
subforecast
of inclement
in
to the completion of
thesequent
area.
the discussion of the detailed
On-site
registration
specifications
will not be will
re- take
place
from
8:30-9 a.m.
each day,
quired
in establishing
attendance.
PLANSsessions
OR SPE- to bewith
theNO
workout
BE SOLDThe
ginCIFICATIONS
immediatelyWILL
thereafter.
AT THE PRE-BID MEETING.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 5, 2014

OVP Sports Briefs

tryout is open to recently graduCopies
of theas
plans,
ated
seniors,
wellspecificaas to those
tions,
and proposal
forms will
who
were
high school
sophobe forwarded from the Division
mores
and juniors
thisManageseason.
of Mineral
Resources
Players
MUST have
a completment, Department
of Natural
upon receipt
of a(availed Resources,
Medical Consent
Form
orRio
money
order webpage)
in the
ablecheck
from
baseball
amount of $13.00 made paybefore
being
allowed
to particiable to
the Ohio
Department
of in
Natural
Resources
pate
the tryout.
Baseballs will
andbut
mailed
to ODNR,
be (ODNR)
provided,
players
should
Division of Mineral Rebring
appropriate
gear.
Cost is
sources Management, 2050
$60.
E. Wheeling Avenue, Cambridge, Ohio
43725
Checks
should
beAttenmade payDona
St.Clair
(Teleabletion:
to
URG
Baseball
Fund and
phone Number: (740) 439should
presented
on the day
9079).be
Plans
and specificaof the
registration
tionstryout.
becomeOnline
the property
of
the prospective
no
is also
available bidders
on theand
baseball
refunds will be made. A copy
page
of plans
the Rio
athletic
of the
and Grande
specifications
website,
www.rioredstorm.com
will be available
for public reviewmore
duringinformation,
normal business
For
contact
hours
at Division
Mineral
head
coach
Brad ofWarnimont
at
Resources Management, 2050
bradw@rio.edu
E. Wheeling Avenue, Cam-

bridge, Ohio 43725. For information
regarding
the project
Gallia
Academy
the primary contact person is
youth
baseball
camp
the Project Engineer, Brady
CENTENARY,
G. Johnson, P.E. Ohio
Or in his—
ab-The
senceAcademy
you may contact
the
Gallia
baseball
proPeter
G.
Design
Engineer,
gram
will
be
hosting
a
three-day
Moran, P.E., or the Project
youth
baseball
camp for
allallkids
Officer,
Scott Davies.
They
entering
grades in3-8
can be reached
the from
AthensMon(740) 592-3748.
day,District
JuneOffice
9, through
Wednesday,

June
12,proposal
at Eastman
Field
Each
must be Ball
accomon panied
the campus
of GAHS. The
by a BID GUARANTY,
meeting
of until
camp
will the
runrequirements
from 10 a.m.
Section
the Ohio
Renoon
each153.54
day, of
with
instruction
Code.
by vised
GAHS
coach Rich Corvin, his
staff
and players focusing
CONTRACTORS
ARE AD- on the
VISED THATof
EQUAL
EM-fielding,
fundamentals
hitting,
PLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
throwing,
pitching,
catching
and
CONDITIONS ARE APPLICbase
running.
ABLE
TO THIS PROPOSAL IN
ACCORDANCE
WITH
THEis $50
The
cost of the
camp
SECTIONS
perPROVISIONS
camper orOF$40
apiece for
AND 125.111 OF THE
two153.59
or more
children
OHIO
REVISED
CODE. from
THIS the
same
family.ISEach
camper
PROJECT
SUBJECT
TO A will
5% EDGE
PARTICIPATION
receive
a camp
t-shirt and other
GOALwill
IN ACCORDANCE
awards
be presented, includWITH THE PROVISIONS OF
ingO.R.C.
prizes
for daily
competiSECTION
123.152
AND
O.A.C.
123:2-16-08.
tions
and
a ‘Camper
of the Week
WAGEon
RATES
ESTABAward’
the last
day of camp.
LISHED IN ACCORDANCE
Campers
are
asked
to AND
bring a
WITH SECTION 1513.18
baseball
1513.37glove,
OF THEbatting
REVISEDgloves,
CODE
ALSOshoes,
APPLICcleats
andARE
tennis
baseball
ABLE TO THIS
PROPOSAL.and a
pants/jogging
pants/shorts
batCONTRACTORS
if so desired. For
AREmore
FUR- inforTHER ADVISED THAT, IF
AWARDED THE CONTRACT,
BOTH THE CONTRACTOR
AND ITS
SUBCONTRACTOR(S)
SHALL PERFORM NO SERVICES REQUESTED UNDER
THIS CONTRACT OUTSIDE
OF THE UNITED STATES IN
ACCORDANCE
WITH EXECLEGALS
UTIVE ORDER 2011-12K.

mation, contact Rich Corvin at
(740) 645-4801.
Lady Raiders
basketball skills camp
BIDWELL, Ohio — The River Valley girls basketball program will be hosting the Lady
Raiders Basketball Skills Camp
for all girls grades 3-8 from
June 11-13 at the RVHS gymnasium. The camp — which will
be conducted by RVHS coach
Sarah Evans-Moore, staff and
players — will run in two different sessions, based on grade
level. Grades 3-5 will have
camp from 8 a.m. until 10:30
a.m. and grades 6-8 will run
from 11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m.
The focal points of the camp
include instruction on ball handling, passing, shooting form,
offensive moves, defense and
rebounding. Each camper will
receive a t-shirt and personal
workout plan as part of the camp
fee, which is $50 per camper. A
discount is also offered to any
family for a second camper.
For more information, contact
Coach Evans-Moore at (740)
441-1616 or send email to sarah@evans-moore.com
Gallia Academy
volleyball clinic
CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy volleyball program will be hosting a two-day
mini clinic for girls entering
grades 4-7 in the upcoming
school year. The clinic will
run from 9 a.m. until 11 a.m.
on Tuesday, June 10 through
Wednesday, June 11 at the
GAHS gymnasium. The cost of
the mini clinic is $20 per child,
which is payable at the door
when bringing you child to the
clinic. A guardian must accompany the child to pay and sign a
waiver before the child can participate. For more information,
contact GAHS volleyball coach
Janice Rosier at (740) 441-5993
or by email at janice-rosier@att.
net
SGHS boys basketball
bingo games
MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
South Gallia Boys Basketball
Bingo Games, 5 p.m., Saturday,
May 31 at South Gallia High
School. Game packet cost is $20.
Children under the age of 18 can
play if accompanied by an adult.
Prizes include 31, Longaberger
and business donations. Paper
cards will be used. Bring your

own daubers or buy one at the
door. Refreshments will be available. Proceeds benefit the South
Gallia boys basketball team. For
more information, call (304)
633-3016.
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Cliffside Golf Club will be hosting the sixth annual Kiwanis
juniors at Cliffside golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18 on
Thursday, July 10, at 1 p.m.
The competitors will be divided
into age groups of 9-10, 11-12,
13-15 and 16-18 and there is a
fee. Awards will be presented to
the top three golfers in each age
group. Spectators are allowed,
while hole sponsors and volunteers are needed. To enter please
contact the clubhouse at (740)
446-4653 or Ed Caudill at (740)
245-5919 or (740) 645-4381.
Wahama Athletic
HOF basketball camp
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama Athletic Hall of Fame will
be sponsoring a youth basketball
camp for all boys and girls entering grades 1 through 8 from June
11-13 at the high school gymnasium. The camp will be conducted by WHS boys basketball
coach Ron Bradley and will run
in two different sessions, with
grades 1-4 going from 9 a.m. until noon and grades 5-8 will go
from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. Fundamentals and individual attention
will be emphasized at the camp,
which costs $40 per camper.
Each camper will also receive a
regulation size basketball. For
more information, contact Ron
Bradley at (304) 773-5539.
GAHS Athletic
HOF meeting
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia
Academy is currently accepting nominations for the GAHS
Athletic Hall of Fame Class of
2014 from now until Friday,
July 18. Individuals may obtain
HOF application forms from
the school website. Boys applications will be accepted for any
athlete who played prior to the
1991-92 season, while the girls
are accepting applications from
any athlete who played prior
to the 1995-96 campaign. The
2014 HOF ceremonies will be
held on Friday, Oct. 3, before
the start of the home football
contest against Belfry, with the
awards banquet happening the

also openings still available for
a handful of one-day shootouts.
A junior varsity only shootout
is set for Sunday, June 8, while
coaches who would like to bring
both their varsity and junior
varsity teams can do so during
shootouts scheduled for June 6,
12, 13, 19 and 20. Cost is $170
and teams will again receive at
least four games. Efforts will be
made to avoid conflicting game
times.
All games for the team shootouts will take place inside the
Lyne Center, using both the upper (Newt Oliver Arena) and
lower gyms. A coaches hospitality room will also be available.
A Point Guard Camp for boys
and girls age 12-18 is set for
Saturday, June 14, from 9 a.m.-1
p.m. Cost is $30.
There will also be a shooting
camp for both boys and girls, age
8-18, June 16-18, from 9 a.m.noon each day. Cost is $60 per
camper.
The crown jewel of the camp
schedule is the annual Hard
Work Camp, which is scheduled
for Sunday, June 22-Friday, June
27. The individual camp is for
boys only, age 10-16.
Cost is $200 for commuters
and $285 for overnight campers. Fees include lodging, meals,
awards, a reversible camp jersey
and a camp t-shirt.
The camp emphasizes offensive and defensive fundamentals, team play and work ethic.
It also features “The Triple”,
the only triple-elimination tournament in the country, which
begins around noon on the 26th
and concludes in the early morning hours of the 27th.
The awards ceremony, in
which parents are encouraged to
attend, is scheduled for Friday,
June 27, from 9:30-11 a.m., and
will conclude the camp.
Online registration for all of
the camps is available through
the men’s basketball link on the
school’s athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com. Registration
forms are also available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center during
regular business hours.
Registration forms should
be mailed to Rio Grande Men’s
Basketball, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to Big
Red Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact
French at (740) 245-7294, 1-800282-7201 (ext. 7294), or send email to kfrench@rio.edu.

following night at GAHS.
2014 URG soccer camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande soccer
programs have announced their
2014 summer camp schedule.
Residential team camps for
middle school squads and for
high school teams from West
Virginia are scheduled for June
8-12 and June 15-19. Cost is
$305. The camps fall during the
three-week, out-of-season workout period for prep programs
from the Mountain State.
A team camp for girls’ high
school squads is planned for
July 6-9, with a boys’ high school
team camp slated for July 13-17.
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.com. Online
registration and payment is
available at www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms should be
mailed to URG Lyne Center,
P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, 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.
URG men’s basketball
camp/shootouts
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
The University of Rio Grande
men’s basketball program has
announced its extensive summer camp schedule for 2014.
The Little Storm Day Camp is
scheduled for June 9-11, from 9
a.m.-noon each day at the Lyne
Center on the URG campus. The
camp is open to boys and girls,
ages 6-9, and the cost is $60.
The camp will focus on the
fundamentals of the game and
will be conducted by Rio Grande
head coach Ken French, his staff
and current players. There are

Classifieds - continued from page A7

Sealed proposals shall be delivered to the address given at
the top of Notice To Bidders.
No bidder may withdraw his
bid within sixty (60) days after
the actual date of the opening
thereof.
The Director of Natural Resources reserves the right to
reject any or all bids, or to accept the bid which embraces
such combination alternate
proposals as may promote the
best interest of the State.
(05),29,(06),05
Lost &amp; Found
LOST DOG MIXED COLLIE
BLACK LONG HAIR PORTLAND AREA ON 124.740-5918187
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.

*******************
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

Yard Sale

Help Wanted General

Business &amp; Trade School

Apartments/Townhouses

Miscellaneous

Annual 4 family Yard Sale 1/4
mi. out St. Rt 218 Fri &amp; Sat
Garage Sale FRI ONLY, 6309
ST RT 588, 9 to 3
Huge Yard Sale June 6 &amp; 7
2916 Maple Ave, Pt Pleasant,
Household items, small furniture, hand tools, Men &amp; Womens clothes &amp; shoes, lots of
misc. items
Huge Yard Sale, Tack, Antiques, Adult &amp; Childrens clothing, New &amp; Used crafts &amp;
much, much more Fri-Sat 6-7
Starting 8 a.m. 3.8 miles up
Tribble Rd Leon
Indoor garage sale June 6-7
2416 Lincoln Ave Pt. Pleasant
9-6, Vintage toys &amp; Antiques,
Dinette Set, glassware, tools,
books &amp; misc
INDOOR YARD SALE June 6
&amp; 7, 9am-5pm.Old B&amp;R Baers
M/LT Location 2434 2nd st
Syracuse,OH
Multi Family Fri 6th, &amp; Sat 7th.
2 Peach Circle Dr,Middleport
look for signs across from
park.
YARD SALE JUNE 6-7 8AM-?
VFW IN MASON, WV
Yard/Garage Sale Friday June
6th ONE DAY ONLY. 9-5,
3705 Cora Mill Rd. 4 miles
from Rodney,OH, Patio &amp;
Porch furniture, Holiday Decorations, Collectibles &amp; Much
More

Behavioral Health Specialist
Wirt County Health Services
Association is seeking a full
time Licensed Independent
Clinical Social Worker (LICSW)
and/or PHD Licensed Clinical
Psychologist who will be responsible for counseling, assessment and coordination of
the Integrated Behavioral
Health and Substance Abuse
Services within a Primary Care
setting. Applicants should be
familiar with motivational interviewing, SBIRT and harm reduction methods. The applicant must be capable of performing brief assessments and
interventions as well as crisis
intervention. WCHSA is a
FQHC that is a fast paced, exciting environment with the opportunity to work with highly
talented individuals dedicated
to our organization s mission at
Jackson and Wirt County Centers. Competitive salary, excellent benefits EOE.

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

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Miscellaneous

Want To Buy

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

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

Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
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)

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Truck Driver Needed - Henderson WV based - CDL License
&amp; 2 yrs experience MVR required. Call 304-675-7434

Please send resume to or
mail to below address
cdavis@wchsa.com
Cheryl Davis
HR Coordinator
WCHSA
P.O Box 609
Elizabeth, WV 26143
304-275-8780
Direct Care Staff needed for
Jackson/Gallipolis surrounding
areas.
Applications accepted Mon Fri, 9 am - 3 pm,
located at 257 E Main St.,
Jackson, OH
Phone 740-286-0400
Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking an instructor for its office and medical office administration programs. Applicants
must have experience in office
administrative applications including medical office, computerized medical manager, and
keyboarding skills. Send resumes to director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite 312,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Tig welder needed with 2
years' experience. Must be
able to interpret diagrams and
assembly of prints, use various small hand tools and
power tools. Works well with
others and under supervision.
Have basic mechanical ability.
Traveing required. Health insurance available after 90
days. Send resume and copy
of certificates to:
Steelial Construction and Metal Fabrication
70764 St. Rt. 124 Vinton, OH
45686
740-669-5300

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

Houses For Sale
3 BR, 1 Bath on 1/2 acre lot at
Gallipolis Ferry, WV call 304675-3939
Brick Ranch, 52 acres +/-,
central air, fireplace, 2 BR 1
BA, Large kitchen, dining
room, living room, and family
room, utility room, possible 3rd
BR, well and city water, outbuilding and barn built 1980,
Longhollow Rd 9/10 mile off rt
2 call 937-748-2073 or 304674-1945
For Sale 1997 Clayton Mobile
Home 16 x 76 3 BR,
2 Bath on Rented lot 304-5932413
GREAT VALUE /CAPE COD
CORAL BRICK - 4 Bdrm 3bath 4.06 acre lot @ 115
Harrisburg Rd 45614 PRICE
REDUCED /MOTIVATED
SELLER Ph.304-812-5757 or
740-645-6198
HOUSE FOR SALE 3BR, 2BA,
2 CAR GARAGE, POLE
BARN, POND AND GAZEBO,
24X30 PICNIC SHELTER, 4.3
ACRES. CHESHIRE
740-367-7156
Nice 2 yr old 3-Bdrm &amp; 2 1/2
bath home / lg detached Garage $110,000.00 Seller pays
closing cost - No Down-payment if Qualified 1-740-4469966
Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2 BR-$375, &amp; 1 BR-$325, plus
dep &amp; util, 3rd St, Racine,
OH, 740-247-4292
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
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Houses For Rent
One Br house. Must See inside! appl. w/d hookup Deposit &amp; References. $400. Nancy
675-4024 or 675-0799
Homestead Realty Broker
Rentals
1 or 2 Bdrm Mobile Home in
Vinton - HUD is Okay, 740441-5150
FOR RENT: 2 br, 2 bath, all
electric mobile home. Spring
Valley area. $480/mo plus
$480 deposit. 740-446-4400
Mobile Home, 2BR, 1BA, big
yard, newly remodeled, in
County. $350/MO plus Deposit &amp; all Utilities 740-256-6202
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Auto - Classic / Antiques
1948 WILLYS JEEP CJ2A,
4x4, All Original! Great Condition! Asking $9,000
740-446-1272
RVs/Campers
Prime river lot for rent, beautiful beach, plenty of shade,
for info, call 740-992-5782
Trucks/SUVs/Vans

We will pick old Stove, Dryer,
&amp; Washers, also old cars and
scrap metal. Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341

�Thursday, June 5, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel

Page 9

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

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ZITS

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�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 5, 2014

AP Sports Briefs
Edwards, Newberry named to W.Va. hall
INSTITUTE, W.Va. (AP) — The West Virginia Athletic
Coaches Association’s Hall of Fame will induct two new
members this month.
Bob Mullett, director of the North-South Football Classic, announced the selections of Steve Edwards Sr. and
Steve Newberry on Tuesday.
Edwards is the former head football coach at George
Washington High School. He led the Patriots to a 1982
state title, and the school’s stadium is named in his honor.
Newberry is a former Peterstown High School multisport star and four-year starter for the West Virginia football team. He was elected to the university’s Sports Hall
of Fame in 2011.
Edwards and Newberry each participated in the NorthSouth Football Classic as players and coaches. They will
be honored June 21 at West Virginia State University.
Browns WR Gordon pleads not guilty to speeding
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns Pro Bowl wide receiver
Josh Gordon has pleaded not guilty to a speeding ticket.
Gordon, who is awaiting a possible NFL suspension for
failing a drug test, did not appear as scheduled in Berea
Municipal Court on Wednesday. According to the court’s
website, his attorney entered a not guilty plea Tuesday.
There is no new court date.
Gordon was stopped for going 74 mph in a 60 mph zone
on May 25. He was fined $187. His passenger was cited
for possession of less than 200 grams of marijuana.
Gordon could be facing a one-season suspension for another failed drug test. He was suspended two games last
season for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy.
He led the league in yards receiving.
Gordon has continued to practice with the team.

49ers QB Kaepernick receives six-year extension
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — San Francisco 49ers
quarterback Colin Kaepernick has received a new six-year
contract extension through the 2020 season.
The team announced the deal Wednesday. The sides
had made it a top priority to get a deal done before the
start of training camp for one of the NFL’s best young
quarterbacks.
Since taking over the starting job from Alex Smith midway through the 2011 season, Kaepernick led the 49ers to
their first Super Bowl in 18 years after the 2012 season
— losing by three points to Baltimore — and then to the
NFC championship game last season, a three-point defeat
to the rival and eventual Super Bowl champion Seattle
Seahawks.

Spurs’ Parker is a go for Game 1 of the finals
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Tony
Parker’s left ankle is ready for the
NBA Finals.
The San Antonio point guard has
pronounced himself ready to go for
Thursday night’s Game 1 of the title
series against the Miami Heat, after
spending much of the last few days
recovering from a sprain.
“I think he’ll be fine,” Spurs coach
Gregg Popovich said.
Parker acknowledged that he still
has some concerns about how the
ankle will hold up over the course of
the finals. He and Popovich both indicated in recent days that treatment
has helped considerably.
“I’m trying to be very positive,”
Parker said. “I’m trying to do everything I can, eat healthy, get my rest,
go through treatment and just trust
my body. I’ve been going for four
years nonstop since 2010, no vacation. … But I’m still here and I trust

my body to hold up for the whole
series.”
The Heat expect nothing less than
the best of Parker.
“Definitely, he’ll be 100 percent,”
Heat guard Mario Chalmers said. “I
doubt he’ll sit out any time during the
finals.”
Parker sprained the ankle in Game
4 of the Western Conference finals
against Oklahoma City, then aggravated the injury in Game 5 of that
series. He tried to play in Game 6 and
made it through the first half, before
the Spurs decided at halftime that his
night was over.
San Antonio was outscored by 11
points when Parker was on the floor
in Game 6 against the Thunder, and
rallied in the second half anyway. The
Spurs scored 37 points in the third
quarter — their second-highest total
during that period in 100 games this
season — and went on to win in over-

time to clinch their second straight
trip to the finals.
That meant Parker didn’t have to
play a Game 7 against the Thunder,
and could just rehab instead.
“That was huge,” Parker said.
“These five days were very helpful for
me. I’m so proud of my teammates.”
The Spurs were 13-6 in their first
19 games with Parker against the
Heat; they’re 4-6 since, in part because Miami has been able to frustrate him at times.
Over his last 10 appearances
against Miami, Parker is shooting 40
percent, including efforts of 5-for-14,
4-for-14, 6-for-23 and 3-for-12.
“Tony has a specific game plan that
he runs within his team,” Chalmers
said. “He’s not as unpredictable as
like a Russell Westbrook or somebody, but he’s not as predictable as
any other point guard. So you’ve got
to be aware of everything with Tony.”

Klinsmann: US defense still ‘work in progress’
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — The
U.S. is getting a little defensive about its
defense.
After allowing several decent scoring
chances early against Turkey last Sunday,
the Americans settled down in the 2-1 victory. But the rocky start caused more conversation and maybe more concern about
what many believe is the team’s glaring
weakness heading into the World Cup in
Brazil.
Players brushed aside questions about
the sometimes sluggish back line as they
practiced in Jacksonville for Saturday’s
sendoff series finale against Nigeria.
“I think we were great on the day,” de-

fender Geoff Cameron said Wednesday.
“We moved the ball around while we were
setting our lines up and trying to keep a
high line. They tried to exploit us in that
situation, but we kept a clean sheet in the
first half, so we were happy.
“We’re still getting used to each other.
We’re headed in the right direction. It’s
one step in the right direction. That’s what
we’ve kind of been doing the last three
weeks: one step, one process; another
step, another process.”
The defenders have grown tired of hearing about their inexperience, a popular
theme since coach Jurgen Klinsmann announced his 23-man roster last month.

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Ohio State track, cross country coach resigning
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio State says the head
coach of its men’s track and field and cross country programs is resigning.
A statement from the associate athletic director for
sport administration says Ed Beathea will coach the Buckeyes through the NCAA championships next week in Oregon.
Tuesday’s statement doesn’t give a reason for Beathea’s
departure. He became associate head coach of the track
and field program in 2006 and took over as head coach
two years ago.
Ohio State says it will immediately start a national
search for Beathea’s replacement.

George Bridges | MCT photo

Tony Parker (9) of the San Antonio Spurs carries the ball up court against the Houston Rockets in the first half of
their game on Monday, April 14, 2014, in Houston.

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