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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

WEATHER

SPORTS

Today in
history
... Page 4

Mostly sunny.
High near 77. Low
around 54... Page 2

State, national
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OBITUARIES
Gregory S. Chapman, 50
Bernard C. Moeller, 89
Robert A. Wood, 56
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 113

Middleport Council passes 2015 budget
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — A budget
for 2015 showing expected revenue and expenditures was passed
by Middleport Village Council at
Monday night’s meeting and will
be filed this week with the Meigs
County Auditor.
Prior to passing the budget,
Councilman Douglas Dixon
asked questions concerning the
51 percent of general fund monies
where expenditure figures were
not listed, and the payroll figures
for the village where figures are
listed on the budget sheets. Baker

explained the process of putting
the budget together using estimates in calculating the figures.
Meeting with Council were Bill
Spaun and John Hood, Salisbury
Township Trustees, to discuss the
amount Salisbury Township pays
the Middleport Fire Department
for fire protection. For many
years the township has contracted with Middleport and Pomeroy for protection.
Jeff
Darst, Middleport fire chief, was
at the meeting and again talked
about the long-term contract
with Salisbury and the $1,100 the
township has paid Middleport
for fire protection. The trustees,

which noted that Salisbury Township does not have a fire levy, said
they could increase the amount
to $1,400 next year. No decision
on renewing a contract was made
pending further discussion with
the fire department. The trustees
did mention that home insurance
coverage sometimes includes a
$500 payment for service from a
fire department applying for it.
The employment of Fred Hoffman as the village’s economic development director was again an
issue at Monday night’s meeting.
Councilman Roger Manley made
a motion to “put Fred Hoffman on
the payroll.” No second came to the

motion after Susan Baker, financial
officer, said “there is no money in
the general fund to pay Hoffman.”
Mayor Michael Gerlach supported
that opinion and the issue remains
unresolved pending an opinion
from legal counsel on the process
of hiring employees. The solicitor
will be asked to clarify some issues
regarding the authority of council
and the mayor in hiring employees.
Mony Wood, who is in charge
of the jail operation, gave a report
on personnel and shift changes
showing no increase in cost. Faymon Roberts talked about leaks
in water and sewer lines, the emphasis on locating the leaks and

making the repairs. Council gave
permission to Wayne’s Place for
closing a block on Race Street
for a street party, but denied a request for having alcohol outside.
Wood reported on a dog incident that occurred and the apparent lack of a satisfactory resolution for Lawrence Manley, who
spoke about it at Council. Wood
said that everything the law allows was done by Middleport
police and that the dog warden
was involved. The incident is in
regard to two pit bull dogs on a
leash being walked in a neighborhood following an alleged incident with a pedestrian.

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Farmers Bank donates seven computers to the Computers for
Students program. With Paul Reed, president, is Iva Sisson
who initiated the program of putting computers in the homes
of middle and high school students without.

Dave Harris photo

Will Kimbrough and Brigitte DeMeyer delighted the audience with their music.

Musicians delight audience
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Will Kimbrough
and Brigitte DeMeyer, described
as among the best of Americana
musicians, played to a packed
amphitheater Friday night at the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society’s
14th annual Rhythm on the River.
The two musicians performed
each other’s songs and included
a few others showing excellent
acoustic guitar work and tight
harmonies. They threw in a few
other songs, much to the delight
of the crowd on a perfect evening
for enjoying music along the Ohio
River.
Acclaimed as an excellent musician and song writer, Kimbrough
has written songs for the likes of
Jimmy Buffett, Little Feat, John
Prine, Emmylou Harris, Rodney
Crowell, Steve Earl, Billy Joe
Shaver, Todd Snider and countless others.He was joined by DeMeyer several years ago to concert tours.

Submitted

Music at this Friday’s Rhythm on the River will range from Cajun to zydeco
to blues and rock.

The 8 p.m. Friday night show
this week will feature a taste of
music gumbo by Louisiana natives
Big Al and the Heavyweights,
ranging from Cajun to Zydeco to
blues to rock with a little taste of
the Mardi Gras.

On the weekend of July 25-26
the Big Bend Blues Bash will take
place on stage on the lower parking lot, and a week after that the
Rhythm on the River concert series will resume.

Clark sentenced to prison for assault, drug possession
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — A little
less than a year after she
was sentenced to probation for attempting to stab
a man in 2012, a Gallia
County woman was sentenced to prison last week
in two separate cases.
Gallia County Common
Pleas Judge D. Dean Evans
handed down a 17-month
prison sentence against Sabra L. Clark, 24, of Thurman, after her community
control was revoked in her
first case and she pleaded
guilty to drug possession
in a second case.
A charge of felonious
assault was initially filed
against Clark late in 2012
following a stabbing that
occurred Nov. 19, 2012, at
the defendant’s former residence on Tick Ridge Road
in Raccoon Township.
As previously reported,
Gallia County deputies
were dispatched to Clark’s

taken into investigaresidence
durtive custody at that
ing the evening
time, gave the depuof Nov. 19, 2012,
ties permission to
in reference to
search the residence.
a possible stabAfter entering the
bing. Upon their
mobile home, the
arrival on scene,
deputies discovered
deputies
ob- Sabra Clark
droplets of blood on
served a female
holding her arms behind the kitchen floor, on the
her back exiting the mobile living room carpet, on a
couch, as well as on a glass
home belonging to Clark.
After several commands table.
A blood-stained towel
were given, the person,
later identified as Clark, soaked in bleach was also
stopped at the front of the found in a bedroom of the
deputies’ patrol cars and residence along with two
complied with their orders. butcher knives with dried
The suspect reportedly blood on their blades in the
had dried, smeared blood kitchen sink.
The victim, who had
on the left side of her neck,
on her left arm and on both reportedly escaped to a
neighbor’s house to call for
of her calves.
Clark reportedly told law help following the assault,
enforcement that the vic- told deputies that, prior
tim had grabbed her by the to the incident, he had
throat and had cut himself been lying on the couch
on a table in the residence. in Clark’s residence when
She later told deputies that she charged at him with a
he had cut himself after he knife in each hand, cutting
him and attempting to stab
had exited her home.
The suspect, who was him.

The victim, who had
escaped to a neighbor’s
house for help, was transported to Holzer Medical
Center by Gallia County
EMS for treatment for severe lacerations.
Clark was arrested and
transported to the Gallia
County Jail. She made an
initial appearance in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court
on Nov. 21 and bond in the
amount of $10,000 was
posted for her release on
Nov. 26.
A grand jury later indicted her on one count of felonious assault on Dec. 13,
and, after receiving a summons to appear in court on
Dec. 21, Clark entered a
not guilty plea to felonious
assault.
On Jan. 7 of last year, the
defendant’s counsel filed a
plea of not guilty by reason
of insanity with the Gallia
County Clerk of Courts. A
subsequent entry filed by

Computers for students,
a program in progress
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — A program that kicked off earlier this
year aimed at providing computers to needy middle and
high school students is moving into full gear as another
school year approaches.
Iva Sisson, of Rutland, came up with the idea and says
she has plans to have some new and refurbished computers ready to be delivered before school starts this year.
She is intent on achieving her mission of providing computers to students without access. Paul Reed, president of
Farmers Bank, where computers are rotated at intervals,
recently provided Sisson with seven good computers the
bank had replaced. Previously, those computers had been
sold; now they will go into homes without a computer.
In this age of electronics, having access to a computer
in the home is almost a necessity for students, particularly those in middle and high school, if they are to keep
up with their studies.
Several other sources for assistance with the program
are about to get under way. Connect Ohio is interested
in a fundraising program, as well as providing other services, and Joy Padgett, of the Governor’s Office for Appalachian Ohio, is communicating with Sisson. Both will
be involved in promoting and supporting the program.
As explained by Sisson, the schools have computers for
students to use during study halls and for a time after
school, but that does not always provide enough time to
complete an assignment. The result is that many students
who do not have computers in their homes are falling behind because they cannot access the material they need to
prepare after regular school hours.
In Meigs County, where unemployment is high and economically disadvantaged families are prevalent, purchase
of a computer for the home is not possible.
Knowing that, Sisson said she decided to take on the
See COMPUTERS | 3

Ohio University: No
evidence of shooting
No threat to campus
found following
investigation at OU
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

ATHENS — Following
the report of a possible
shooting at a dormitory located on the Ohio University campus in Athens on
Tuesday afternoon, officers
with the Ohio University
Police Department found
no evidence of a shooting,
but are continuing their investigation.
According to informaSee CLARK | 3 tion posted on the Ohio

University website, Ohio
University police began
their investigation of a report of a possible shooting
in the vicinity of Gamertsfelder Hall, a residence
hall on the East Green of
the Athens campus, after
3 p.m. Tuesday. As of 4:30
p.m. Tuesday, Ohio University police had not found
any evidence of a shooting
at the residence hall. No
additional reports of the
possible shooting were reported.
University police did
evacuate the East Green
area as a precaution and
further advised employees
and students to avoid that
area on campus until their
See SHOOTING | 3

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Community Calendar
Wednesday, July 16
POMEROY — The Ride Ride
Club will meet at the Beech
Grove Cemetery exit Wednesdays at 5 a.m.

Jane Walton, 7:30 p.m.
Friday, July 18
ATHENS — Visit Athens Ohio
presents “Ladies Night with the
Copperheads.” Join the group
before the game from 5-7 p.m.
at the West End Cider House
located at 234 West Washington,

Thursday, July 17
POMEROY — Alpha Iota
Masters will meet at the home of

just blocks from Bob Wren Stadium, home of the Copperheads.
The event includes “Ladies Only
Drink Specials,” food, giveaways
and a special appearance by Copperheads Mascot “Homer.” Free
Copperheads autographs will
take place at 6:45 p.m., with the
game starting at 7:30 p.m. For

more information call 740-5921819.
Tuesday, July 22
POMEROY — Mina Swisher
will be 100 years old on July 22.
Cards can be sent to her at 258
West Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
45679.

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Church Calendar

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77. Calm
wind becoming west 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.
Wednesday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 54.
West wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 81. Calm
wind becoming west around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Thursday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 58.
Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 79.
Friday night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62.
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 80. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Saturday night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 86. Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Sunday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.
Monday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly sunny, with a high near 89. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

Bible Study
POMEROY — The Restoration Fellowship Chuch of
Pomeroy is beginning a study of God’s Word concerning
“Forgiveness,” on Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. Author Reinhard Hirtler has provided 50 books for the Bible Study.
Pastors Pete and Brenda Barnhart invite the public to
come expeience the power to forgive.

Local Stocks

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250.
Please call for more information on local pricing.
Full price single copy issues are $1 daily and $3 Saturday.

CONTACT US

CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Jessica Chason
740-446-2342 Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com

ADVERTISING:
740-992-2155
Sarah Thompson, Ext. 15
Brenda Davis, Ext. 16
NEWSROOM:
740-992-2155
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155

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

Chester’s Civil
War Ball
CHESTER — The Boys
of the Hock will be playing
for the Civil War Ball on
Saturday night, which will
wrap up Chester Shade
Day.
The ball to be held in the
auditorium of the Chester
Community Center will
begin at 7 p.m. The Boys
of the Hock are known for
providing instrumental interpretations of Irish traditional music. They are said
to “weave together lively
jigs and reels, stately hornpipes, and haunting airs to
bring the sounds of Ireland
to the hills of Appalachia.”
They are described as being equally at home on
stage or at the head of a
dance floor.
In addition to formal
concerts, they perform
for Ceilidh (KAY-lee) and
Contra dances providing
music for dancers of all

skills and ages.
Community Dinner
POMEROY — A community dinner will be held
Wednesday, July 23, at 5
p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center park area.
The menu will be pulled
pork sandwiches, salad,
dessert and drink. The dinner is an outreach project
of New Beginnings United
Methodist Church. The
public is invited to attend.
Road Closing
CHESTER — A section
of Scout Camp TR-112 will
be closed Saturday for the
5K run being held as a part
of the Chester Shade Day.
The road will be closed
from State Route 248 to
Mill Street.
Ikes Family Picnic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County IKES Club
will hold its annual family

Meigs Cooperative Parish events
POMEROY — The Meigs Cooperative Parish hosts a
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.

picnic at 7 p.m. July 28.
Bring a covered dish, drink
and table service. The club
will provide hot dogs and
hamburgers. Spouses and
children are invited.
River City
Players project
MIDDLEPORT — The
River City Players will have
basket games as a fundraiser July 24 at Middleport Village Hall in the gymnasium.
The doors will open at 5
p.m., and games will begin
at 6 p.m. Tickets are available at the Fabric Shop.
Mulford Reunion
CHESHIRE — The
2014 Mulford reunion/picnic will be 1-5 p.m. July 27
at the Gavin Clubhouse in
Cheshire. Families of Harvey and Emma Margaret
Rupe Mulford are invited
to attend. Take a covered
meat or vegetable dish or
dessert.

Ice Cream Social
SALEM CENTER — The
township Volunteer Fire Department will hold its 36th
annual ice cream social July
19. Serving will from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. The Fire Department is located on State
Route 124 in Salem Center
in Meigs County. There will
be 10 flavors of homemade
ice cream, sloppy joes, hot
dogs, pies and more. For
more information, contact
Linda Montgomery at 749669-4345.
Red Cross Blood Drive
SALEM CENTER —
The Star Grange will hold
an American Red Cross
Blood Drive from 1-7 p.m.
July 31 at the Grange Hall
on County Road 1 north of
Salem Center. Take your
donor card or photo ID.
Homemade food will be
provided to donors. To
make an appointment call
740-669-4245.

US Alzheimer’s rate seems to be dropping
By Marilynn Marchione
Associated Press

The rate of Alzheimer’s disease and
other dementias is falling in the United
States and some other rich countries —
good news about an epidemic that is still
growing simply because more people are
living to an old age, new studies show.
An American over age 60 today has a
44 percent lower chance of developing
dementia than a similar-aged person did
roughly 30 years ago, the longest study
of these trends in the U.S. concluded.
Dementia rates also are down in Germany, a study there found.
“For an individual, the actual risk of
dementia seems to have declined,” probably due to more education and control
of health factors such as cholesterol and

blood pressure, said Dr. Kenneth Langa.
He is a University of Michigan expert on
aging who discussed the studies Tuesday at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Copenhagen.
The opposite is occurring in some
poor countries that have lagged on
education and health, where dementia
seems to be rising.
More than 5.4 million Americans and
35 million people worldwide have Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia. It has no cure and current drugs
only temporarily ease symptoms.
A drop in rates is a silver lining in the
so-called silver tsunami — the expected
wave of age-related health problems
from an older population. Alzheimer’s
will remain a major public health issue,
but countries where rates are dropping

may be able to lower current projections
for spending and needed services, experts said.
Recent studies from the Netherlands,
Sweden and England have suggested a
decline, and the new research extends
this look to some other parts of the
world.
THE UNITED STATES
The federally funded Framingham
study tracked new dementia cases
among several thousand people 60 and
older in five-year periods starting in
1978, 1989, 1996 and 2006. Compared
with the first period, new cases were 22
percent lower in the second one, 38 percent lower in the third and 44 percent
lower in the fourth one.

We’ve Got
Money to Lend!
60519929

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 26.29
Pepsico (NYSE) — 90.34
Premier (NASDAQ) — 16.18
Rockwell (NYSE) — 123.24
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.70
Royal Dutch Shell — 82.00
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.91
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.84
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.27
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.42
Worthington (NYSE) — 41.81
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions July 15, 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.

Civitas Media, LLC

EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 18
michaeljohnson
@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Vacation Bible School will be held at
First Southern Baptist Church, located at 41872 Pomeroy
Pike Monday-Friday, July 21-25 from 6-9 p.m. For more
information, call 740-992-6779, or email fsbc@fsbcpomeroy.com.
MIDDLEPORT — Vacation Bible School will be held
at Ash Street Church in Middleport July 21-24 from
6-8:30 p.m. The theme will be “Celebrating the Jewish
Jesus.” Open for ages 3-12.

Meigs County Local Briefs

60517665

AEP (NYSE) — 53.93
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.83
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 107.93
Big Lots (NYSE) — 44.45
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.89
BorgWarner (NYSE) —65.37
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 17.58
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.280
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.22
Collins (NYSE) — 79.40
DuPont (NYSE) — 64.58
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.30
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.61
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 66.03
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 58.27
Kroger (NYSE) — 49.33
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 58.55
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 104.35
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.15
BBT (NYSE) — 40.08

Bible Schools
POMEROY — The New Beginnings United Methodist
Church will sponsor a Vacation Bible School for youth,
3 through 12. Beginning July 1 and continuing every
Tuesday in July, it will be held at the Mulberry Community Center. Theme will be “Weird Animals.” Children
are invited to come at noon for a nutritious lunch at the
Mulberry Country Kitchen and then join in the music,
stories, crafts, games and learning about Jesus who loves
them.
MIDDLEPORT —Children 3 years old through sixth
grade are invited to come to Vacation Bible school at the
Middleport Church of Christ, July 14-18 , 6 to 8:30 p.m.
each evening. Theme will be “Living Inside Out.” Parents
may pre-register their children on line at www.middleportchurch.org or by picking up a registration form at the
church, 437 Main St.

Friday, July 25
MARIETTA — The Regional
Advisory Council for the Area
Agency on Aging will meet on
Friday, July 25 at 10 a.m. in the
Buckeye Hills-HVRDD Area
Agency on Aging Office in Marietta, Ohio.

740-949-2210

See RATE | 5

�Wednesday, July 16, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Maggots in food among new prison food complaints
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — Maggots in
food, staffing shortages and reports
of running out of foods are among
new complaints facing the vendor
that won the contract to feed Ohio
inmates.
Reports obtained by The Associated Press through records requests
found numerous problems reported
since April, when the state took the
rare step of fining the vendor because of contract failures.
The records show 65 instances
where Philadelphia-based Aramark
Correctional Services failed to provide food or ran out of it — usually
the main course, such as hamburgers or chicken patties — while serving inmates, leading to delays and
in some cases security concerns as
inmates grew frustrated. Substitute
items were provided in most cases.
On May 28, guards stopped
breakfast “to preclude a mass demonstration” at Warren Correctional
Institution in southwest Ohio by

inmates upset at being served only
white bread and peanut butter after
the supply truck was apparently late.
The records also show several
days when Aramark employees simply failed to show up and cases of
unauthorized relationships between
inmates and Aramark workers. Reports allege sexual activity between
some inmates and workers.
Records also show five reports of
maggots since January in food or the
preparation process. Last month,
for example, an Aramark employee
notified a prison guard at Trumbull
Correctional Institution that “one of
the two serving lines had maggots
falling out of the warming tray.”
A report by the local health department called the incident isolated and said the Aramark supervisor
followed necessary steps to ensure
food safety.
At issue is a bigger national debate over privatizing prison services — from food preparation to
the running of entire facilities — to
save money at a time of squeezed
state budgets. Proponents say pri-

vate industry can often do the job
more efficiently and more cheaply,
unencumbered by union and administrative rules, while opponents say
a focus on the bottom line leads to
cutting corners that creates danger
for inmates and employees.
Aramark called the complaints
“an ongoing political and media circus about anti-privatization” of prisons, saying it had never had such
claims about its operations in more
than 500 correctional facilities.
“We continue to make steady
progress in managing the operational issues,” spokeswoman Karen Cutler said in an email. “The number of
issues continues to decline.”
Aramark’s $110 million deal to
feed some 50,000 Ohio prisoners began in September and runs through
June 30, 2015.
The state fined the company
$142,000 in April, saying it had
failed to meet promised staffing levels, among other problems.
“Food service is a critical operation and we have made clear to
Aramark our concerns,” said JoEllen

Smith, spokeswoman for the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction.
It’s difficult to compare food service before and after Aramark since
the agency didn’t track incidents
internally before, she said. The state
investigated occasional reports of
maggots or food running short before Aramark, Smith said.
The agency is inspecting all prisons and asking local health departments for independent reviews at
some, she said. Aramark is also
having an outside company review
procedures, Smith said.
Ninety-six Aramark employees
are banned from working in Ohio
prisons, 20 more than when the
fine was levied, according to prison
documents.
Cutler said safety is improved because Aramark employees breaking
the rules are dismissed immediately,
compared with a lengthy grievance
process for union members before
the contract.
The prison employees union has
filed a formal grievance over the

Aramark contract. It said it offered
a competitive proposal to keep food
service in-house. It disputes the
notion a pre-Aramark comparison
wasn’t possible, saying problems
were documented, with prison employees disciplined for failing to
meet standards.
“The number of incidences are
not decreasing. If anything, they’re
increasing,” said Sally Meckling,
spokeswoman for the Ohio Civil
Service Employees Association.
In Michigan, Gov. Rick Snyder
says he may reconsider Aramark’s
three-year, $145 million contract
with the prison system, citing issues
with the company’s performance,
including about 30 inmates having
symptoms consistent with food poisoning.
Aramark said it was told last week
that the state couldn’t find a connection between those reports and its
food preparation. Messages were
left with the Michigan Department
of Corrections.

Computers
From Page 1
challenge of seeing that every student in
middle and high school in Meigs County
has a computer in their home.

Collecting old computers and having
them repaired has not been as successful
as she thought it might be, so an account
has been set up at Farmers Bank for those
who want to make monetary donations to

the project.
Sisson said that students will be able
to put his or her school assignments on
a flash drive, open it on the home computer, download the material, and then re-

load it when completed, and take it back
to school the next day.
Anyone interested in assisting with the
project of helping our own can contact
Sisson at 740-742-2187.

Clark
From Page 1
the court orders a mental
evaluation of the defendant
to determine “the Defendant’s mental condition at
the time of the commission
of the offense(s) which she
is charged.”
Following a pre-trial
settlement conference in
this case in March 2013,
no other entries were filed
until May 1, 2013, when an
entry filed by the defense
withdraws the defendant’s
plea of not guilty by reason
of insanity, and continues
her original plea of not
guilty.
After negotiating a plea
agreement in this case,
Clark pleaded guilty last
July to aggravated assault,
a lessor offense than the
original charge and this
matter was continued for
sentencing on July 31,
2013.

After being placed on
probation, violations were
filed in this case on Sept.
19 by Clark’s probation officer. These probation violations allege that, among
other violations, she had
failed to report in person
since being placed on probation, and had been arrested in September by the
Gallipolis Police Department — an arrest that was
made after she was found
to be in the possession of
drug abuse instruments,
a weapon, and was also
found in the company of a
convicted felon.
According to the police
report filed in this case,
Clark was arrested at approximately 9:15 p.m. on
Sept. 15 after her vehicle,
a Mercedes crossover, was
pulled over by a city police
officer.
Clark gave officers
consent to search the ve-

hicle that night and, subsequently, one empty syringe
was reportedly found in
the driver’s side door, one
loaded syringe was found
in the center console and
two empty syringes and a
tourniquet were found in
a bag behind the driver’s
seat.
In addition, officers confiscated a crossbow that
was found in the back seat
of the vehicle, as well as
a checkbook that did not
belong to the suspect, as
stolen property.
Following her arrest,
new felony charges were
filed against Clark in December stemming from the
traffic stop in September.
According to this indictment, Clark was in the
possession of 0.9 grams
of 6-monoacetylmorphine
on Sept. 15, a fifth degree
felony.
Clark was not arrested

he said. “Safety is our highest priority at Ohio University, and we appreciate
the concerted efforts of all
involved to ensure the protection of the campus and

our community.”
Further information on
this incident will be released as it is made available by Ohio University
officials.

on a warrant on indictment in this case until
May, when, on May 21,
she was arraigned and her
bond was set at $20,000,
10 percent.
Bond was later posted
for Clark’s release from the
Gallia County Jail, and a
plea and sentencing hearing was later scheduled for
last week.
During last week’s hear-

ing, Clark pleaded guilty
to the possession of drugs
and was sentenced to 11
months in the Ohio Reformatory for Women. She
was given credit for 51
days served and ordered
to pay the costs of prosecution.
In her first case, Clark’s
probation was revoked and
she was sentenced to 17
months of imprisonment

for aggravated assault. She
was given credit for 71
days served.
The sentences in her
two cases were ordered
to be served concurrently
with each other, and, following the hearing, Clark
was remanded to the custody of the Gallia County
Sheriff’s Office and will be
transported to the appropriate prison facility.

Shooting
investigation had been
completed. The university
was never reported as being on lockdown.
Posts released through
the Ohio University Twitter feed at approximately
5:30 p.m. report that the
Ohio University Police Department had finished its
search of the East Green
and there was “no evidence
of [a] shooting” or an “ongoing” threat. Police had
reopened the East Green
on the Athens campus by
approximately 5:30 p.m.
and an “all clear” was issued for the incident just
prior to 6 p.m. Tuesday.
Further, updates on the
university’s website indicate that no injuries have
been reported.
In a statement released
Tuesday evening, Ohio
University President Roderick McDavis reported
that, in response to the
notification of the possible
shooting on Tuesday, the
university
immediately
implemented their established safety and communication protocols through
the Ohio University Police Department and the
Critical Incident Response
Team.
“I am very pleased with
the swift response of our
emergency responders, including OUPD, the Athens
Police Department, Ohio
State Highway Patrol and
the Athens County Emergency Medical Services,”
McDavis said. “I also commend our students, staff,
faculty and community for
their cooperation today.”
McDavis also said the
university
would
use
Tuesday’s incident as an
assessment and will continue planning with local
emergency response teams
in the event of any future
emergency on campus.
“The investigation of
the incident is continuing, and we will continue
to assess our emergency
response to this incident,”

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From Page 1

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

Deregulating birth
control considered a
prescription for peace?
If Americans ever want to get past the culture wars,
they’re going to have to learn to get along. Step one in
that process: stop picking unnecessary fights.
Given all the controversy over contraception that’s come
in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in the Hobby
Lobby case (which held that Obamacare’s contraception
mandate violated the religious liberty of companies whose
owners had moral objections to providing abortifacient
drugs), you’d think this was a zero-sum game: that we’ll
either have free contraception for all or force women to
go without birth control. Nothing could be further from
the truth.
As many defenders of the court’s decision have explained, women’s access to contraception wasn’t threatened by the ruling. They can still freely access birth
control — they just can’t necessarily have it paid for by
employers with deep-seated religious objections.
The court made the right decision, but there’s still more
progress to be made on this front. Decisions about something as personal as birth control should be matters of individual choice, not the subject of political debate. The
best way to accomplish that end: deregulation. Make oral
contraception available over the counter.
Yes, it’s true that there can be side effects associated
with birth control — but that’s hardly a justification for
restricting access. There are a wide variety of products on
the market that pose similarly modest levels of risk and
don’t require a prescription to purchase. We trust that
women will have the intelligence and self-discipline to
consult with doctors when necessary. That’s also the opinion of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which has also endorsed over-the-counter sales.
This is a reform that should, in theory, make all sides
happy. Progressives will get the widespread access to
contraception that they’ve relentlessly advocated for in
recent years. Employers with conscience objections will
see themselves removed from the process. And consumers
will benefit from more choices and their economic corollary: lower prices.
Quite apart from ideological concerns, the contraception mandate was always bad economics. The purpose
of health insurance is to provide a safety net for large,
unexpected medical costs. Birth control meets neither of
those criteria. As an expense that is relatively modest and
predictable, it should be paid out-of-pocket rather than
bundled into monthly premiums.
As we’ve noted before on these pages, we could go a
long way toward decreasing social strife by spending more
time working out policy solutions that allow contending
sides to live and let live. A policy that allows women unfettered and direct access to contraception — and keeps
employers out of the mix — is better for both parties.
Let’s make contraception available over the counter —
and declare a truce on this front of the culture wars.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

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Let’s make a deal before it’s too late
By Winslow Myers
My dreams are invaded these days
by the specter of methane frozen under arctic ice bubbling up as the ice
above it melts, setting up a potentially irreversible cycle: more methane,
more climate change, yet more methane, yet more climate change.
A group of us here in our little
coastal Maine town are so disgusted
with congressional gridlock and so
eager to do something that we have
formed a cooperative to help our fellow citizens transition off fossil fuels
in their homes. Co-op members walk
their talk; outside each meeting it’s a
veritable pride of Priuses.
For a couple of decades back in the
1980s, I was haunted by a different
flavor of catastrophe: I might hear a
real jet roaring overhead but believe
in my dreams that I was hearing a
fleet of Soviet missiles arcing toward
our major cities.
But there are many reasons why
global climate change and nuclear
weapons are really one issue: They
both require a level of international
cooperation based on transnational
shared self-interest. Even a small
nuclear war could cause even more
rapid descent into climate chaos.
Leaders of great powers have the
opportunity to see that, especially
because genuine security depends
upon resolving the climate challenge,

maybe there is a grand bargain to be
made to cut international spending
for nuclear weapons systems where
everybody can win big.
Even if a nuclear exchange somehow remained below the threshold
necessary to cause a nuclear winter,
far from resolving whatever conflict
engendered it, it would only create
conditions thousands of times worse
than when any given war began. The
weapons, no matter who owns them,
are strategically useless.
Don’t take my word; ask Henry
Kissinger, who spends his declining
years advocating steps toward abolition. Yes, there is the nuclear terror
issue, but the solution to that is to
have fewer weapons and components
floating around. Moreover, all the
nuclear weapons in the world won’t
deter an extremist.
Meanwhile the United States is a
case study in the tail of out-of-control
defense spending wagging the dog of
policy. Perhaps the most egregious
example is the Navy plan to build
12 new Ohio class submarines, 600foot behemoths of mass destruction.
Professor Lawrence Wittner reports
that to build, deploy and maintain
this fleet, scheduled to be phased
in by 2031 and operate until 2070,
would cost about $350 billion — an
amount so great that the Navy worries about how it will squeeze other
shipbuilding priorities, and Congress
has begun to think about how to fund

it outside the parameters of the regular budget. Of course the U.S. is not
alone in its insanity: six other nuclear powers seem to be in the process
of expanding or renewing their own
submarine hardware.
That kind of money _$350 billion
— would buy an awful lot of solar
panels, windmills, fusion research
and desalinization plants for the
water-starved in our own country
and abroad. It seems remarkable that
no leader has initiated some kind of
international conference to address
our horrendous misplacement of resources.
Imagine the heads of the nuclear
powers realizing that they could divert those hundreds of billions of dollars (or yen, rubles, rupees, pounds,
Euros, etc.) presently designated for
ultimately useless weapons into projects that would contribute to some
genuine increase in peoples’ health,
like cleaning up the air in Peking or
Moscow. Treaties are especially feasible because our technical capabilities can bypass trust and go right to
verification.
Nothing would increase global security more than authentic, substantive mitigation of climate chaos, with
the dividend of mitigating fears of
nuclear apocalypse at the same time.
Winslow Myers writes on global issues for PeaceVoice and serves on the Advisory Board of the
War Prevention Initiative.

Today in history...
Today is Wednesday, July 16, the 197th day of
2014. There are 168 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On July 16, 1945, the United States exploded its
first experimental atomic bomb in the desert of Alamogordo, New Mexico.
On this date:
In 1790, a site along the Potomac River was designated the permanent seat of the United States government; the area became Washington, D.C.
In 1862, Flag Officer David G. Farragut became
the first rear admiral in the United States Navy.
In 1912, New York gambler Herman Rosenthal,
set to testify before a grand jury about police corruption, was gunned down by members of the Lennox
Avenue Gang.
In 1935, the first parking meters were installed in
Oklahoma City.
In 1951, the novel “The Catcher in the Rye” by J.D.
Salinger was first published by Little, Brown and Co.
In 1964, as he accepted the Republican presidential nomination in San Francisco, Barry M. Goldwater declared that “extremism in the defense of liberty
is no vice” and that “moderation in the pursuit of
justice is no virtue.”
In 1979, Saddam Hussein became president of
Iraq.
In 1980, former California Gov. Ronald Reagan
won the Republican presidential nomination at the
party’s convention in Detroit.
In 1981, singer Harry Chapin was killed when
his car was struck by a tractor-trailer on New York’s
Long Island Expressway.
In 1989, conductor Herbert von Karajan died near
Salzburg, Austria, at age 81.
In 1994, the first of 21 pieces of comet ShoemakerLevy 9 smashed into Jupiter, to the joy of astronomers awaiting the celestial fireworks.

In 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife, Carolyn, and
her sister, Lauren Bessette, died when their single-engine plane, piloted by Kennedy, plunged into the Atlantic Ocean near Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts.
Ten years ago: Martha Stewart was sentenced to
five months in prison and five months of home confinement by a federal judge in New York for lying
about a stock sale. Some 90 children were killed in a
school fire in southern India. Chicago held the grand
opening of its new Millennium Park. Former Georgia Gov. George Busbee died in Savannah at age 76.
Five years ago: Saying that civil rights leaders
from decades past had paved the way for his election
as the nation’s first black commander in chief, President Barack Obama paid homage to the NAACP during a convention in New York, and advised members
that their work remained unfinished. In an embarrassing acknowledgment, NASA admitted that in all
likelihood, it had recorded over the original videotapes of the Apollo 11 moon landing.
Today’s Birthdays: Former Attorney General
Dick Thornburgh is 82. Soul singer Denise LaSalle
is 80. Soul singer William Bell is 75. International
Tennis Hall of Famer Margaret Court is 72. College
Football Hall of Famer and football coach Jimmy
Johnson is 71. Violinist Pinchas Zukerman is 66.
Actor-singer Ruben Blades is 66. Rock composermusician Stewart Copeland is 62. Playwright Tony
Kushner is 58. Dancer Michael Flatley is 56. Actress
Phoebe Cates is 51. Actor Daryl “Chill” Mitchell is
49. Actor-comedian Will Ferrell is 47. Actor Jonathan
Adams is 47. College and Pro Football Hall of Famer
Barry Sanders is 46. Actress Rain Pryor is 45. Actor
Corey Feldman is 43. Rock musician Ed Kowalczyk
(Live) is 43. Rock singer Ryan McCombs (Drowning
Pool) is 40. Actress Jayma Mays is 35. Actress AnnaLynne McCord is 27. Actor-singer James Maslow
is 24. Actor Mark Indelicato is 20.

�Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Death Notices
CHAPMAN
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio
— Gregory Scott Chapman, 50, of Proctorville,
died Sunday, July 13, 2014,
at home.
Funeral service will be
2 p.m. Thursday, July 17,
2014, at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory in Proctorville. Burial will follow in
Maupin Cemetery, Milton,
W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Wednesday, July 16,
2014, at the funeral home.
MOELLER
CHESHIRE, Ohio —
Bernard C. “Ben” Moeller,
89, of Cheshire, died Monday, July 14, 2014, atHolzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Graveside services will
be noon Thursday, July 17,
2014, in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire. Full military graveside rites will be

conducted by Gallia County Veterans Funeral Detail.
McCoy-Moore
Funeral
Home, Wetherholt chapel,
Gallipolis, is serving the
Moeller family.
WOOD
JACKSON, Ohio —
Robert Allen Wood, 56, of
Jackson, died Tuesday, July
8, 2014, at Adena Medical Center in Chillicothe,
Ohio.
A memorial service will
be 7 p.m. Friday, July 18,
2014, at Willis Funeral
Home, with Pastor Ralph
Workman
officiating.
Friends may call from 6-7
p.m. Friday prior to the funeral.
In lieu of flowers, please
consider a donation to the
family to help with expenses, Christy Myers-Wood,
P.O. Box 122, Thurman,
OH 45685.

Rate

www.mydailysentinel.com

she was is in critical condition at a
hospital in Danville, Pennsylvania, and
was to have another surgery Tuesday.
Sharon Budd, a language arts
teacher in Perry, was sitting in the
front passenger seat when the rock
blasted through the windshield at
around 11:45 p.m. Thursday.

Sharon Budd, 52, was struck in the
face by the rock dropped onto Interstate 80 near Milton, Pennsylvania,
on Thursday night. Four teens are
charged with assault for dropping the
7- to 8-pound rock from an overpass.
Her husband, Randy Budd, told the
Akron Beacon Journal Monday that

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio
teacher was in critical condition
Tuesday after police say some teenagers deliberately dropped a rock
from a highway overpass onto the
windshield of the family’s car as they
drove through Pennsylvania on their
way to New York City.

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The average age at which dementia was diagnosed also rose —
from 80 during the first period to 85 in the last one.
During that time, there were declines in smoking, heart disease and strokes, factors linked to dementia, and a rise in the
number of people using blood pressure medicines and getting a
high school diploma, which reduce the likelihood of developing
the condition.
“The results bring some hope that perhaps dementia cases
might be preventable, or at least delayed” by improving health
and education, said the study leader, Claudia Satizabal of Boston
University.
Dallas Anderson, epidemiology chief at the National Institute
on Aging, agreed.
“For those who get the disease, it may come later in life, which
is a good thing. Getting the disease in your 80s or 90s is a very
different than getting it in your early 70s,” he said.
GERMANY
Researchers from the German Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases say that claims data from Germany’s largest public
health insurance company suggest that new cases of dementia declined significantly between 2007 and 2009 in men and women.
Dementia prevalence — the proportion of people with the disease — also declined dramatically in women ages 74 to 85. There
was a trend toward a smaller decline in men but the difference
was so small researchers couldn’t be sure of it.
The trends corresponded with fewer strokes and better treatment of high blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes, and more
education, they said.
ASIA, AFRICA
An updated study of dementia prevalence by Alzheimer’s Disease International in 2009 concludes that its previous estimates
for the disease worldwide were too low. The group now says dementia prevalence appears to have increased from about 5 percent to about 7 percent in East Asia, and in Sub-Saharan African
from between 2 percent and 4 percent to nearly 5 percent.

Page 5

Woman critical after rock dropped on car

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Meet the
organization to help control Earth's alien population. TVPG devise a plan to rob an underground vault that serves three casinos. TV14 Fockers TV14
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Clyde and The King"
"California Kustom"
Hollywood"
the Negotiator"
Crowns "Beauty is Pain"
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Housewives/NewJersey
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Apollo Live
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In TV14
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�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

WEDNESDAY,
JULY 16, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Capehart Golf League wraps up at Hidden Valley
By Bob Blessing
Special to OVP

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
Mother Nature thought about
spoiling the day for the young
men and woman scheduled to
play in the Frank Capehart Tri
County Junior Golf League’s
final tournament of the year at
the Hidden Valley Golf Course
in Point Pleasant, WV. However,
after seeing the enthusiasm on
the faces of the players, the rains
held off just long enough for play
to be completed.
The play provide some good
competition and set the stage
for the awards and prizes distributed afterwards. The winners
in the season long race for age
group champions were named
with each winner receiving a
handsome plaque.

CJ Angel won a narrow 4 point
decision over Sam Arnold in
the 10 and under boys division.
Lindsey Martin won the girl’s division of this age group.
The 11-12 year old boy’s division was a 3 way battle most of
the season. Colby Martin managed a 2 point victory over Cooper Davis. Nicholas Durst was in
the hunt most of the season and
ended up in third place. Other
participants in this age group
included Jay Sayre, Cole Arnott,
Weston Baer, Landon Acree, Ty
Bartrum and Brant Rocchi.
The Champion Golfer in the
boys 13-14 year old age group
was Colton Blakeman who won
by 4 points over Levi Chapman.
Wyatt Nicholson finished in third
place and also had a hole-in-one
to his credit. Jasiah Brewer, Carl
Sayre, Jonah Hoback, Calab

Stanley and Primo Averion also
played in this age group. The
girl’s division Championship
Plaque in the age group was won
by Kaitlyn Hawk.
Competition among the boys
in the 15-17 year old age group
was intense the entire season.
Nathan Redman finally came
away with the Championship
Plaque winning by 2 points over
Matthew Martin. Jacob Hoback
was also in the mix finishing a
close third. Other competitors in
this division. included David Davis, Jacob Brewer, Grant Gilmore, Evan George, Zack Morris,
Cliff Chapman, Jared Parissi, Michel Metts and Tristin Davis. Allie Gruser earned the Championship Plaque in the girl’s section
of this age group defeating Victoria Walker and Katelin Edwards.
Alyssa Cremeans was the

Champ in the girl’s division in
the 18-19 year old age group.
Handicaps, based on previous weeks scores, were used to
determine winners in each age
group in the final day’s play. The
low gross score was used to determine each player’s position
in selecting prizes providing by
the sponsors. Prizes ranged from
golf balls, hats, tees, and many
other golf related items. Each
golfer, regardless of their age,
went home with several nice
prizes. A drawing was even held
for a very nice, brand new Taylor
Made putter .
Pizza and soft drinks were
provided for lunch to all golfers.
Several parents provided items
for dessert including a wonderful cake that was decorated to
look like a golf hole complete
with a water hazard and sand

trap. Cookies and Brownies were
plentiful.
Everything considered it was
a very successful season for the
league. Each of sponsors, Home
National Bank, Farmers Bank,
Peoples Bank, John Sang Ford ,
and Smith Buick all help to make
this league possible. Parent volunteers also play a major role in
each week’s activities. And, the
local golf courses gift of their
time and facilities allow and
encourage the young men and
woman to participate. Because
of all this cooperation, young
men and woman are learning the
game. It is a game they can enjoy
for many, many years to follow.
The directors of the league,
Jan Haddox, Jeff Slone and Bob
Blessing are looking forward to
continuing this league for many
years.

Thomas A. Ferrara | Newsday | MCT photo

Yoenis Cespedes of the Oakland Athletics wins the All-Star
Game’s Home Run Derby at Citi Field in New York, New York,
Monday, July 15, 2013.

Cespedes wins again,
beating Frazier in HR derby
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
— Yoenis Cespedes knew
how to pace himself in this
rain-delayed home run derby, drawn out further by a
new format.
The Oakland Athletics
outfielder simply trusted
his own strength.
Cespedes became the
first repeat winner of the
All-Star skills contest in
15 years, powering his way
past Cincinnati’s Todd Frazier 9-1 in the final round
Monday night.
Ken Griffey Jr. took the
title in 1998 and 1999.
With a serious, determined look on his face the
whole time, Cespedes finished with 28 homers. That
was four fewer than last
year, when he beat Washington’s Bryce Harper 9-8
in the final round.
The 28-year-old Cuban
even told Athletics teammate Josh Donaldson he

was doing this wrong.
“I knew he wasn’t going
to win because his mentality was to take the ball out
of the stadium, and I told
him that is not the way
you win this competition,”
Cespedes said through an
interpreter.
He added: “I’m somebody who’s very conscious
of the power that I have. So
I don’t need to put more of
a swing or more of an effort in order to hit a home
run. I just have to look for a
good pitch and put a good
swing on it, and it usually
takes care of it.”
Cespedes saved his best
for last, a 452-foot blast to
the third deck above left
field that officially measured as the longest of the
night. A’s third base coach
Mike Gallego again pitched
to Cespedes, who went
See DERBY | 10

AP Sports Briefs
Marshall extends Holliday’s contract 2 years
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) — Marshall has extended
the contract of coach Doc Holliday two years and raised
the payouts for the incentives in the deal.
Athletic director Mike Hamrick announced Monday
that Holliday’s contract now runs through the 2017 season.
Holliday is 27-24 at Marshall and coming off a 10-4 season. His base salary of $600,000 will stay the same but his
new deal increases his incentives to a total of $145,000 if
they are reached.
Holliday will receive a $30,000 bonus for conference
championships and $30,000 for each bowl appearance,
both an increase of $10,000 over his previous contract.
Dawg Pound: Browns getting
dog mascot ‘Swagger’
CLEVELAND (AP) — Johnny Manziel’s newest teammate with the Browns has four legs and can roll over on
command.
A dog named “Swagger” will lead them onto the field
next season, Cleveland team vice president of marketing
Kevin Griffin revealed in a radio interview. Griffin says
the dog is a bull mastiff, described by The American Kennel Club as a dog “that possesses great intelligence and a
willingness to please, making them ideal family companions and protectors.”
The dog mascot is an attempt to re-connect with Cleveland’s Dawg Pound of the past. The notoriously rowdy
bleacher section in old Municipal Stadium gave Cleveland
one of the best home-field advantages.
The Browns will be the fourth team in the league with
an animal mascot, joining Seattle (hawk), Denver (Arabian horse) and Baltimore (two ravens).

Al Diaz | Miami Herald | MCT photo

The Miami Heat’s Dwayne Wade drives against the San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on
Thursday, June 5, 2014, at the AT&amp;T Center in San Antonio. The Spurs won, 110-95.

Dwyane Wade re-signs with Heat
By Tim Reynolds
Associated Press

Dwyane Wade is staying with
the Miami Heat, and his latest
deal is designed to give both the
player and the only franchise he’s
ever known some flexibility in the
coming years.
Wade signed a new contract
with the Heat on Tuesday. It’s a
two-year deal, the second of those
seasons a player option, said a
person familiar with the situation. The person spoke to The
Associated Press on condition of
anonymity because neither side
announced terms.
“Home Is Where The Heart Is…
My Home,My City,My House,”
Wade wrote on Twitter, then used
the phrase “HeatLifer” when attaching a photo of himself standing below the three NBA championship banners that hang at

the arena the Heat call home in
Miami.
Financial terms were not announced, though it’s expected
Wade’s salary for next season will
not reach the $20.2 million he
would have made under his previous contract.
Heat President Pat Riley confirmed that Wade again bought
into the Heat mantra of sacrifice.
The contract he signed four years
ago left millions on the bargaining-room table, in part to make
the deals with LeBron James,
Chris Bosh and Udonis Haslem
happen.
“Dwyane has been the franchise
cornerstone for this team since
the day he arrived 11 years ago,”
Riley said. “He has shown his
commitment to the Heat many
times over the course of his career and has always been willing
to sacrifice in order to help build

this team into a champion. This
time is no different.”
Wade’s return was not in any
way unexpected, yet still represents a huge win for Miami during free agency — especially since
it comes less than a week after
James left the Heat after four seasons and returned to the Cleveland Cavaliers.
So now, what was the “Big 3” is
a “Big 2.” Bosh is in the process of
finishing a $118 million, five-year
contract with Miami.
Also Tuesday, the Heat signed
Luol Deng to a two-year, $20 million deal, which was agreed to
over the weekend.
“Luol Deng is one of the most
important free agent signings that
we have ever had in the history
of the franchise,” Riley said. “He
is a proven All-Star and quintesSee WADE | 10

World Series of Poker reaches nine finalists in Vegas
Nine poker players from
six countries passed the
biggest bubble in cards
early Tuesday, making
the World Series of Poker
main event final table and
earning a shot at $10 million in November.
Mark Newhouse had
been here before, finishing ninth last year. And he
carried the finalists across
poker’s grandest threshold with the session’s last
hand, into a four-month
break to prepare to compete for millions.
Newhouse
eliminated
series veteran Luis Velador
in 10th place, calling Velador’s all-in raise behind two
bettors for the last of Velador’s chips. Velador held
pocket fours, Newhouse
turned over pocket fives,
and the community cards
kept Newhouse ahead for
the knockout.
“This isn’t realistic to me,”
said William Pappaconstantinou, a 29-year-old dealer
at a charity poker room in
New Hampshire. The player
known as “Billy Pappas”

from his days as a nine-time
world foosball champion sat
seventh in chips after lasting
through what he said was
the tournament’s toughest
session of cards.
“I’m just a poor kid dealer trying to live a dream,”
he said.
He can’t call himself
poor anymore — the nine
finalists will be paid more
than $730,000 each later
Tuesday, then play for the
rest of their cash when the
final table starts Nov. 10
back at the Rio All-Suites
Hotel &amp; Casino.
The grind of more than
13 hours including breaks
was the latest in a no-limit
Texas Hold ‘em marathon
unfolding over thousands
of hands. The nine finalists topped a field through
68 1/2 hours of cards split
over seven sessions.
Three tables with 27
total players began play
at noon Monday, with 11
bounced by dinnertime.
Eddy Sabat was eliminated just after the break in
16th place, winning nearly

$348,000, while Thomas
Sarra Jr. and Oscar Kemps
were out soon after, winning nearly $442,000 each.
Sabat and Kemps lost
the last of their chips to
31-year-old Jorryt van
Hoof of the Netherlands,
who propelled to a lead
that would carry him to
the final table with the
most chips in play. Chips
don’t have any monetary
value in the tournament;
each player must lose all of
his or her chips to be eliminated, and win them all for
the title and gold bracelet.
The other finalists include 23-year-old Felix
Stephensen of London,
22-year-old Andoni Larrabe of Spain, 30-year-old
Dan Sindelar of Las Vegas,
William Tonking, 27, of
Flemington, New Jersey,
27-year-old Martin Jacobson of Stockholm, and
31-year-old Bruno Politano
of Ceara, Brazil.
The tournament started
July 5, attracting 6,683
players over three starting days including some

of poker’s biggest names,
including Phil Ivey, Daniel
Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth
and Johnny Chan. Only the
top 10 percent of finishers
saw any profit on their
$10,000 buy-in.
Newhouse, 29, made
his second final table at
the main event in as many
years — a slim prospect
before the tournament began given fields of more
than 6,000 contenders
each year. He won more
than $773,000 last year. He
is the first player to make
consecutive main event final tables since the World
Series of Poker began
delaying its final table in
2008, and the first overall
since Dan Harrington did
it in 2003 and 2004.
Series
organizers
changed the payout structure to guarantee $10
million for first place, the
largest main event prize
since Jamie Gold won $12
million for topping a field
of 8,773 players.
“We all have a shot,”
Pappaconstantinou said.

�EXECUTORS, SPOUSES,
SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS STEVENS,
if deceased, ET AL., DEFENDANTS.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Described by new survey as
Daily Sentinel Page 7
To: AMOS STEVENS, JOHNThefollows:
W. TAYLOR AND TERESA
Situate in the State of Ohio,
PAGE STEVENS DYKE and
County of Meigs, Township of
spouses, if living, AND THE
Bedford, being in the West half
UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
of Section 25, Range 13 West,
KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTownship 3 North, and being
TRATORS, EXECUTORS,
bounded and described as folSPOUSES, SUCCESSORS
lows:
AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS
STEVENS, JOHN W. TAYLOR
Commencing for reference at a
AND TERESA PAGE
STEVENS DYKE, if deceased, stone pile found at the Northeast corner of Section 25;
Addresses Unknown.
You are hereby notified that
you have been named Defendants in the action entitled Mark
Moore, Plaintiff, vs. Amos
Stevens and spouse, if living,
and the Unknown Heirs, Next
of Kin, Devisees, Administrators, Executors, Spouses, Successors and Assigns of Amos
Stevens, if deceased, et al.,
Defendants. This action has
been assigned Case No. 14
CV 058, and is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio. The object of the Complaint demands
that the title to a certain parcel
of real estate be quieted in the
Plaintiff, Mark Moore, and that
said Plaintiff be found to be the
owner in fee simple absolute of
the real estate described in the
Complaint. Plaintiff further requests that he be granted
costs and all other relief, either
in law or equity, which shall be
proper.
The real estate is described as
follows:

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

LEGALS

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

On July 3, 2014 the Village of
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amends the village s Flood
Damage Reduction ordinance.
A copy of this ordinance may
be obtained at the Rutland Village office at 337 Main Street,
Rutland, Ohio.(07),16,23

60517845

LEGALS

Gary Stanley

740-591-8044
Please leave a message
Miscellaneous

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, CASE NO.: 14 CV 058,
IN THE MATTER OF MARK
MOORE, PLAINTIFF, VS.
AMOS STEVENS and spouse,
if living, AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS, SPOUSES,
SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS STEVENS,
if deceased, ET AL., DEFENDANTS.
To: AMOS STEVENS, JOHN
W. TAYLOR AND TERESA
PAGE STEVENS DYKE and
spouses, if living, AND THE
UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS,
SPOUSES, SUCCESSORS
AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS
STEVENS, JOHN W. TAYLOR
AND TERESA PAGE
STEVENS DYKE, if deceased,
Addresses Unknown.

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You are hereby notified that
you have been named Defendants in the action entitled Mark
Moore, Plaintiff, vs. Amos
Promotional Stevens and spouse, if living,
Packages and the Unknown Heirs, Next
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Defendants. This action has
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2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
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4 Boneless Chicken
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| Omaha
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restrictions may apply. Expiresand
11/30/14.
a ©2014
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Deed: Volume 25,
FIX YOUR Reference
COMPUTER
NOW!
Page
42, Meigs County
Deed
Records.

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Situate in the
State of Ohio,
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E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems Section 25;
Spyware &amp; Viruses
OFF SERVICE
Thence,
with the East
of
Mobile
Device Training
MENTIONline
CODE: MB
Section 25, South 11 degrees
Call Now For 31' West, a distance of
Immediate Help1311.96 feet to an 5/8" rebar
with cap set at the Northeast
corner of a 60 acre tract as
conveyed to Kenneth and Jill
Hossler by Official Records
Book 352, Page 888 of the
Meigs County Recorder s Office;

800-416-5406

Thence, leaving the section
line with the North line of said
Hossler property, (Note: Reference bearing being along this
line), North 78 degrees 48' 50"
West, a distance of 2111.57
feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap
set, at the Northwest corner of
said Hossler and the Northeast corner of a 20 acre tract
as conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 25 of the Meigs County
Recorder s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Moore property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 528.43' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set and being
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGIN-

To: AMOS STEVENS, JOHN
W. TAYLOR AND TERESA
PAGE STEVENS DYKE and
spouses, if living, AND THE
UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF
KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS,
SPOUSES, SUCCESSORS
AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS
STEVENS, JOHN W. TAYLOR
AND TERESA PAGE
STEVENS DYKE, if deceased,
Addresses Unknown.
You are hereby notified that
you have been named Defendants in the action entitled Mark
Moore, Plaintiff, vs. Amos
Stevens and spouse, if living,
and the Unknown Heirs, Next
of Kin, Devisees, Administrators, Executors, Spouses, Successors and Assigns of Amos
Stevens, if deceased, et al.,
Defendants. This action has
been assigned Case No. 14
CV 058, and is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio. The object of the Complaint demands
that the title to a certain parcel
of real estate be quieted in the
Plaintiff, Mark Moore, and that
said Plaintiff be found to be the
owner in fee simple absolute of
the real estate described in the
Complaint. Plaintiff further requests that he be granted
costs and all other relief, either
in law or equity, which shall be
proper.
The real estate is described as
follows:
The following described piece
of land, to wit, beginning at the
Northwest corner of said
Taylor s land; thence West to
the middle line of Section
Twenty-five, Town Three,
Range Thirteen of the Ohio
Company s Purchase; thence
South eighty rods; thence East
to said Taylor s Southwest
corner; thence North eighty
rods to the place of beginning,
being the overplus of the South
half of the Northeast quarter
supposing it to be four acres
and a half be it the same, more
or less.

The following described piece
of land, to wit, beginning at the
Northwest corner of said
Taylor s land; thence West to
the middle line of Section
Twenty-five, Town Three,
Range Thirteen of the Ohio
Company s Purchase; thence
South eighty rods; thence East
to said Taylor s Southwest
corner; thence North eighty
rods to the place of beginning,
being the overplus of the South
half of the Northeast quarter
supposing it to be four acres
and a half be it the same, more
or less.

Thence, with the East line of
Section 25, South 11 degrees
31' West, a distance of
1311.96 feet to an 5/8" rebar
with cap set at the Northeast
corner of a 60 acre tract as
conveyed to Kenneth and Jill
Hossler by Official Records
Book 352, Page 888 of the
Meigs County Recorder s Office;
Thence, leaving the section
line with the North line of said
Hossler property, (Note: Reference bearing being along this
line), North 78 degrees 48' 50"
West, a distance of 2111.57
feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap
set, at the Northwest corner of
said Hossler and the Northeast corner of a 20 acre tract
as conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 25 of the Meigs County
Recorder s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Moore property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 528.43' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set and being
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING for this description;
Thence, from said Point of Beginning, with said Moore property South 11 degrees 14' 33"
West, a distance of 1317.91
feet to a 5/8" rebar set at the
Southwest corner of said
Moore and the Northeast
corner of a 4 acre tract as conveyed to Edson and Lana Hart
by Official Records Book 346,
Page 504 of the Meigs County
Recorder s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Hart property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 131.57' to a 5/8" rebar with capLEGALS
set at the Northwest corner of the Hart property
and in the East line of Ursula
McDaniel;

Reference Deed: Volume 25,
Page 42, Meigs County Deed
Records.
LEGALS
Described by new survey as
follows:
Situate in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs, Township of
Bedford, being in the West half
of Section 25, Range 13 West,
Township 3 North, and being
bounded and described as follows:
Commencing for reference at a
stone pile found at the Northeast corner of Section 25;
Thence, with the East line of
Section 25, South 11 degrees
31' West, a distance of
1311.96 feet to an 5/8" rebar
with cap set at the Northeast
corner of a 60 acre tract as
conveyed to Kenneth and Jill
Hossler by Official Records
Book 352, Page 888 of the
Meigs County Recorder s Office;

Thence, with the East line of
said McDaniel and Flucke
property for part of the following course, North 11 degrees
14' 33" East, a distance of
1317.91' to a 5/8" rebar with
cap set at the Southwest
corner of a 40 acre tract as
conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 705 of the Meigs Coutny
Recorder s Office;
Thence, with the South of said
Moore property, South 78 degrees 48' 50" East, a distance
of 131.57' to the Point of Beginning:
Containing 3.98 acres, more or
less.

Thence, leaving the section
line with the North line of said
Hossler property, (Note: Reference bearing being along this
line), North 78 degrees 48' 50"
West, a distance of 2111.57
feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap
set, at the Northwest corner of
said Hossler and the Northeast corner of a 20 acre tract
as conveyed to Mark Moore by
Official Records Book 53,
Page 25 of the Meigs County
Recorder s Office;
Thence, with the North line of
said Moore property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 528.43' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set and being
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING for this description;
Thence, from said Point of Beginning, with said Moore property South 11 degrees 14' 33"
West, a distance of 1317.91
feet to a 5/8" rebar set at the
Southwest corner of said
Moore and the Northeast
corner of a 4 acre tract as conveyed to Edson and Lana Hart
by Official Records Book 346,
Page 504 of the Meigs County
Recorder s Office;

Thence, with the North line of
said Hart property, North 78
degrees 48' 50" West, a distance of 131.57' to a 5/8" rebar with cap set at the Northwest corner of the Hart property
Described by new survey as
and in the East line of Ursula
follows:
Help WantedMcDaniel;
General
Situate in the State of Ohio,
Thence, with the East line of
County of Meigs, Township of
Bedford, being in the West half said McDaniel and Flucke
of Section 25, Range 13 West, property for part of the following course, North 11 degrees
Township 3 North, and being
14' 33" East, a distance of
bounded and described as fol1317.91' to a 5/8" rebar with
lows:
cap set at the Southwest
of a 40 acrehas
tract as
Commencing
for reference
at a cornercurrently
Pleasant
Valley Hospital
a
conveyed to Mark Moore by
stone pile found at the NorthopeningOfficial
for aRecords
caterer.
Book 53,
east cornerfull-time
of Section 25;
Page
705 of experience
the Meigs Coutny
Minimum
three
years
cooking
Recorder s Office;
Thence, with the East line of
required.
Serve
safe certified preferred.
Section
25, South 11
degrees
Thence, with the South of said
31' West, a distance of
Previous
preferred.
Moore property,
South 78 de1311.96
feet to ancatering
5/8" rebar experience
grees 48' 50" East, a distance
with cap set at the Northeast
of
131.57'Hospital,
to the Point of Becorner of a Apply
60 acre at
tract
as
Pleasant
Valley
ginning:
conveyed to Kenneth and Jill
Hossler
by Official
Records
2520
Valley
Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550,
Containing 3.98 acres, more or
Book 352, Page 888 of the
less.or apply on-line at
Meigs
s Ofor County
fax to Recorder
(304) 675-6975
fice;
www.pvalley.org.
Subject to all legal highways,
zoning
ordinances,
subdiviThence,
leaving
the section
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
is
a
partner
of
Cabell Huntington
Hospital
and the
sion regulations, and to restricline with the North line of said
Marshall
University
Joan
C.
Edwards
School
of
Medicine.
EOE:
M/F/D/Vand
tions,
reservations,
leases
Hossler property, (Note: Refereasements, if any, of record.
ence bearing being along this
line), North 78 degrees 48' 50"
Help WantedSubject
General
to the right-of-way of
West, a distance of 2111.57
Ball Run, T-20A.
feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap
set, at the Northwest corner of
Subject to the 100-year Flood
said Hossler and the NorthWanted:
Buckeye
Plain restrictions, Servicif applicable.
east
corner of a 20
acre tract Community
ases
conveyed
to
Mark
Moore
by
is
opening
a
new
home
in
MiddleAll iron pins set are 5/8" x 30"
Official Records Book 53,
rebar capped
and labeled
Page
25 of
the Meigs
County
port
and
needs
part-time
workers
to
“Prine OH#8146”.
Recorder s Office;
Reference Deed: Volume 25,
Page 42, Meigs County Deed
Records.

Full-time opening
for a Caterer

60520750

Professional Services

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, CASE NO.: 14 CV 058,
IN THE MATTER OF MARK
MOORE, PLAINTIFF, VS.
AMOS STEVENS and spouse,
if living, AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, DEVISEES, ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS, SPOUSES,
SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS OF AMOS STEVENS,
if deceased, ET AL., DEFENDANTS.
LEGALS

Reference Deed: Volume 25,
Page 42, Meigs County Deed
Records.

assist individuals with developmental

The bearings in this descripThence, with the North line of
disabilities.
Evening/weekend/overnight
tion are for angle calculations
said
Moore property, North
78
only and degree/GED,
are based on the
degrees
48'
50" West, a High
disshifts
available.
school
North line of Glenn Stout, used
tance of 528.43' to a 5/8" rean assumed
bearing good
of North
bar
with cap
set and license
being
valid
driver’s
and
three years
THE TRUE POINT OF BEGIN- 78 degrees 48' 50" West.
driving
required. $9.50/hr. after
NING
for thisexperience
description;
The above description pretraining.
Send
resume
to: Buckeye
Comby Richard J.
Prine,
Thence, from said Point of Be- pared
Ohio Registered Surveyor No.
ginning, with said Moore propmunity
Services,
P.O.
Box
604,
Jackson,
8146, based on information oberty South 11 degrees 14' 33"
tained from an actual field surWest,
a 45640;
distance of or
1317.91
OH
email:
beyecserv@yahoo.
vey on March 26th, 2014.
feet to a 5/8" rebar set at the
Southwest
corner of said for applicants: 7/22/14.
com. Deadline
You are required to answer the
Moore and the Northeast
Pre-employment
testing.
Complaint
within twenty-eight
corner
of a 4 acre tract as con-drug
veyed to Edson and Lana Hart (28) days after the last publicaEqual
Opportunity
Employer.
tion of this Notice, which will be
by Official Records Book 346,
published once each week for
Page 504 of the Meigs County
six (6) successive weeks. The
Recorder s Office;
last publication will be made on
the July 23, 2014, and the
Thence, with the North line of
twenty-eight (28) days for ansaid Hart property, North 78
60520036

Subject to all legal highways,
zoning ordinances, subdivision regulations, and to restrictions, reservations, leases and
easements, if any, of record.
Subject to the right-of-way of
Ball Run, T-20A.
Subject to the 100-year Flood
Plain restrictions, if applicable.
All iron pins set are 5/8" x 30"
rebar capped and labeled
“Prine OH#8146”.
The bearings in this description are for angle calculations
only and are based on the
North line of Glenn Stout, used
an assumed bearing of North
78 degrees 48' 50" West.
The above description prepared by Richard J. Prine,
Ohio Registered Surveyor No.
8146, based on information obtained from an actual field survey on March 26th, 2014.
You are required to answer the
Complaint within twenty-eight
(28) days after the last publication of this Notice, which will be
published once each week for
six (6) successive weeks. The
last publication will be made on
the July 23, 2014, and the
twenty-eight (28) days for answer will commence on that
date. In the case of your failure to answer or otherwise respond as requested by the
Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure,
judgment by default will be
rendered against you and for
the relief demanded in the
Complaint.
Dated this 13th day of June,
2014.
Jennifer L. Sheets (0020044)
Attorney for Plaintiff
LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR,
LLP
P.O. Box 686
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(6) 18, 25; (7) 2, 9, 16, 23
“TO NICOLE MULLINS,
DAUGHTER OF
RHONDA FISH”
MEIGS COUNTY PROBATE
COURT
Please be advised an Application to Relieve Estate from Administration has been filed in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. If you should object to
this matter, please appear before the Court on the 28th day
of July, 2014, at 1:30 p.m. Otherwise, if you feel this estate
should proceed and would like
to finalize your mother s estate,
you may simply call the Law
Office of Trenton J. Cleland at
(740) 992-7101 to schedule a
time to sign the proper documentation.(07),09,16,23
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application to transfer coal
mining &amp; reclamation
permit/application from Southern Ohio Coal Company, P.O.
Box 269, Wilkesville, Ohio
45695 to Consol Mining Company LLC, Consol Energy Center, 1000 Consol Energy Drive,
Canonsburg, PA 15317, permit number D-0355 has been
submitted to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources
Management. The surface permit/application area is located
in Meigs County, Ohio, in
Columbia Township; Sections
13,19, 25, 26, 31, 32, 33 and
34, Fractions 17 and 33, Township 9, Range 15. Salem
Township; Sections 16, 17, 23,

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briefs
South Gallia hosts Friday Night
Lights Elite Camp
MERCERVILLE, Ohio — The South
Gallia Rebels are hosting a one-day
Cheerleading camp for any child entering
grades k-8 and a one-day Football camp
for any child 2-8. The camp will be at 7
p.m. on July 18, and gates open at 6 p.m.
It is open to students from any school but
only 75 spots are available and spots are
filling up fast. The cost is $20 and to sign
up contact Toni Wright at (304)544-2787,
Emily Northup at (740)256-1218 or Jason
Peck at (740)612-9349.

that every child plays in the game. This is
a strictly enforced league rule.
League fees are $30 per person ($25
per person if more than one family member) and they include all regular season
and tournament games.
There are also cheerleading singups for
girls entering grads 3-through-6 going on
at the camp.
For more information visit www.facebook.com/GalliaCountyYFL or call Coach
Chris Rathburn (740) 645-2827, Coach
Mike Canaday (740) 446-7538, or David
Burnett at (740) 208-0554.

Football officials training
classes to be offered
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Attention anyone interested in becoming a
football official, training classes will begin within the next few weeks. Anyone
interested should contact Kevin Durst at
(304)593-2544 for more details.

URG softball camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University
of Rio Grande softball program will conduct a pitching/catching camp on Sunday,
July 27, at Rio Softball Park on the URG
campus.
The camp will run from 1-3 p.m. for
players age 7-13 and from 3-5 p.m. for
players age 14-18 on both dates. Cost is
$30.
New Rio Grande softball head coach
Amber Bowman will direct the camp,
while RedStorm players will also be assisting in the instruction.
Bowman was a four-year starter at
shortstop for Rio from 2008-11. She then
spent two years as a graduate assistant
coach for the RedStorm before serving
as an assistant coach at the University of
Northwestern Ohio in 2014.
The pitching camp will provide beginning pitchers with a specific fundamental
basis. They will leave with a daily workout progression. Advanced pitchers will
receive instruction on spin pitching along
with advanced coaching on leg drive and
balance.
Parents and coaches are welcome to attend any of the sessions to observe and
ask questions.
Players MUST have a completed Medical Consent Form, which is available from
the Rio softball webpage on the school’s
athletic website (www.rioredstorm.com),
before being allowed to participate. Softballs will be provided, but players should
also bring appropriate gear to the tryout.
Both an online registration form and

2014 Gallia County Youth
Football League
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia
County Youth Football League is having
sign-ups now through August 4. Parents
can pick up forms at BCMR next to the
post office in Gallipolis or they can be
downloaded from www.facebook.com/
GalliaCountyYFL the league facebook
page. The annual camp will be held August 4 and 5 at 4:30 p.m. at Memorial
Field in Gallipolis. The camp is free and
all camp participants will receive a free tshirt.
Immediately following the last day of
camp the league will hold its draft. All
students entering 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th
grades are encouraged to attend.
The league will be split into two inner
leagues, with 3rd and 4th grade playing
each in one and 5th and 6th grade in the
other. All coaches are concussion trained
and certified and the league will provide
PUBLIC NOTICE
ll helmets,
pads and jerseys. All league
games
will be played
on coal
Saturdays at MeAn application
to transfer
morial
Field.
mining
&amp; reclamation
permit/application
from SouthThe
league employs
out of area officials
ern Ohio Coal Company, P.O.
andBoxis269,
instructional
and fun. The team
Wilkesville, Ohio
rosters
kept between
14-18 players so
45695are
to Consol
Mining Company LLC, Consol Energy Center, 1000 Consol Energy Drive,
Canonsburg, PA 15317, permit number D-0355 has been
submitted to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources
Management. The surface permit/application area is located
in Meigs County,
Ohio, in
LEGALS
Columbia Township; Sections
13,19, 25, 26, 31, 32, 33 and
34, Fractions 17 and 33, Township 9, Range 15. Salem
Township; Sections 16, 17, 23,
24, 29, 34, 35 and 36, Fractions 6, 35 and 36, Township
8, Range 15. Vinton County,
Ohio, in Wilkesville Township;
Section 4E, Township 8 Range
16. The permit contains 316.8
surface acres. The underground workings are located in
Meigs County, Ohio, in
Columbia Township; Sections
7, 11, 12,13, 16, 17, 18, 19,
23, 24, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35,
36 and Fractions 1, 2, 4, 6, 7,
12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 23, 24, 25,
30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 36 Township 9, Range 15. Meigs
County, Ohio in Salem Township; Sections 11, 12, 16, 17,
18, 23, 24, 29, 30, 34, 35, 36
and Fractions 23 &amp; 35 Township 8, Range 15. Vinton
County, Ohio in Wilkesville
Township; Sections 4E, 5E,
6E, 6 and 12 Township 8,
Range 16. The permit is located on the Vale Mills and
Wilkesville Ohio 7 ½ Minute
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle Maps,
approximately 1 mile of southwest of Point Rock, Ohio.

a registration form which can be printed
and returned by mail are also available on
the website,
Checks should be made payable to Amber Bowman and mailed to 218 North College Avenue, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674.
For more information, contact Bowman
by phone at (740) 245-7490 or by e-mail
at abowman@rio.edu.
MYL Fall Baseball/Softball
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth League will be having Fall
Baseball and Softball sign-ups for boys and
girls ages 7-18 with mature six-year olds
also being allowed to play. Age groups are
7-8 coach slow pitch, 9-10 fast pitch, 1112, 13-16, and for the 17-18 group if we
have enough interest. The date is Saturdays July 19 from noon until 4 p.m. at the
Middleport Ball Fields. You can come as
a team (which most do) or sign-up individually. If there are any questions you can
call Dave at (740) 590-0438 or Jackie at
(740) 416-1261.
Meigs Marauder Youth
Football Camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2014
Meigs Youth Football Camp will be held
on Saturday, August 2, 2014 at Holzer
Field, Farmers Bank Stadium on the campus of Meigs High School. The camp is
for kids in grades 1-8 and begins at 9 a.m.
and will end at noon. Cost of the camp is
$20.The camp will focus on attitude, effort, hard work, team work, fundamentals,
technique, individual drills and group
drills. Instruction will be provided by current Meigs players and the coaching staff.
Also scheduled to attend is Marshall and
New England Hall of Famer, three-time
Super Bowl Champion Troy Brown along
with college football coaches and players.
Any child that pre-registers by July 19th
will be guaranteed a camp team shirt.
Registrations will be accepted after the
deadline and on the day of the camp but
they will not be guaranteed a camp t-shirt.
Registration on the day of the camp is 8
a.m. Proceeds from the camp will benefit
the Meigs High School Football program.

For more information call 740-645-4479
or 740-416-5443.
Big Bend Youth Football
League Sign ups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The BBYFL
will be holding sign ups every Saturday in
July from 11am to 1pm at the Middleport
Stadium. Football players and cheerleaders
from any school may sign up and you will
be placed on the team from your school
district. Ages are from 3rd grade thru 6th
grade. Visit www.bigbendyouthfootball.
com or call Sarah (740)444-1606, Tony
(740)992-4067, Angie (740)444-1177, or
Chris Hill (740)208-0455 for addition information. Camp begins on July 28th.
PPHS youth baseball clinic
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The
Point Pleasant Baseball Junior Instructional Clinic will be held at the PPHS
baseball field from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. on
Wednesday, July 30.
Instruction on the game and fundamentals will be taught by the Point Pleasant
baseball coaching staff and players. The
camp is for all kids ages 9-13 and costs
$20 per camper.
For more information, contact PPHS
baseball coach Andrew Blain at (304) 5932540 or by email at blain7@marshall.edu
GAHS youth football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy football staff will be conducting a
youth football camp for students entering
grades 2-8. The camp will be held at Memorial Field on July 15-17 from 5 p.m. until
7 p.m. and will cover fundamentals for all
positions. Players will be instructed by the
Gallia Academy football staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $35 per camper
and $25 per camper with families of two
or more students. Students can register
the first day of camp. Registration will be
from 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. on the Tuesday,
July 15. All campers will receive a T-shirt.
Campers should wear shorts, t-shirt and
tennis shoes or cleats. Water will be provided but a water bottle is recommended.
For questions or to register, please contact GAHS football coach Josh Riffe at
(740) 256-1897.

Classifieds - continued from page A7

A road permit has been obtained to conduct coal mining
operations to mine through or
within 100 feet of Meigs
County Road 1 (valid May 27,
1987 and August 14, 1991), 1A
(valid May 27, 1987), 4 (valid
May 27, 1987), 52 (valid
September 30, 1987) and shall
remain in effect until all coal
mining and reclamation operations are completed.
A road permit has been obtained to conduct coal mining
operations to mine through or
within 100 feet of Columbia
Township Road 6 (valid February 4, 1991), 324 (valid June 1,
1987), 11 (valid March 3,
1997), 8 (valid February 2,
1998) and State Route 689
(valid March 31, 1997) and
shall remain in effect until all
coal mining and reclamation
operations are completed.

Notices

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses

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.

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)

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
Immaculate 2 BR apt. in country, new carpet and cabinets.
Freshly painted, appliances,
W/D hook-ups, water/trash
paid. Beautiful country setting,
only 10 minutes from town.
Must see to appreciate
$425/mo 614-595-7773
or740-645-5953
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

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

A road permit has been obtained to conduct coal mining
operations to mine through or
within 100 feet of Salem Township Road 625 (valid October
1, 1990) and shall remain in effect until all coal mining and reclamation operations are completed.

Yard Sale Friday, July 18 and
Saturday, July 19, 8:00 am 4:00 pm 3399 State Route 141
in Centenary
Yard Sale July 16,17 &amp; 18th 8am to ?. @ 4409 Bulaville
Pike - Lots of misc.

The application is on file at
Meigs County Courthouse, Recorder s Office, 100 East 2nd
Street, Ste. 205, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, and at the Vinton
County Courthouse,
Recorder s Office, 100 East
Main Street, McArthur, Ohio
45651 for public viewing.

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

Written comments or requests
for an informal conference may
be sent to the Division of Mineral Resources Management,
2045 Morse Road, Bldg. H-3,
Columbus, Ohio 43229 within
ten (10) days after the last date
of publication of this
notice.(07),16

Professional Services

Home Improvements

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Education
The VETERANS UPWARD
BOUND Mission: to Assist
and Support eligible Military
Veterans in their quests for
Higher Education / No Cost /
304-637-1257 /
www.vubwv.org
Help Wanted General
The Town of Mason is accepting applications for a Class I
Water Operator. Full-Time.
Applications can be picked up
at the the Town Hall.
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
2 bdrm, 1 bath, fixer upper,
front porch, basement, new
furnace, near town, 10 minutes
from Holzer. For information
call 815-939-7523.
2 bedroom house on 5th
street. 304-812-4350. Will
also rent $450 a month plus
utilities call 304-812-4350
2013 Mobile Home 14x70,
2BR, 2BA, Central Air, 740245-5530
4BR, located on East Bethel
RD. close to Hospital &amp; Stores,
$90,000, 740-446-7278 or 740645-2287
ST RT 588, 1 mile from City. 3
Large Bedrooms, Full Bath, 3/4
bath, 1/2 bath, 2 fireplaces,
Deck, Patio, Basement
$97,000 740-446-7874
VERY NICE BRICK HOME,
CLOSE TO WALMART,
CORNER LOT, APPLIANCES,
CENTRAL AIR, AND SECURITY SYSTEM."$98,000.00,
PRICE NEGOTIABLE." CONTACT 740-446-7874.
Apartments/Townhouses
Efficiency Apt $375 month
Downtown, clean, renovated,
newer appl, lam floor, water
sewer &amp; trash incl. No pets.
Application req. 727-237-6942
2 BR Apartment. 1 1/2 bath No pets. $550 a month.
(740)441-1124.
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Middleport, 2 room efficiency
apt. Also 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt,
no pets deposit and reference
required.(740) 992-0165.
New Haven, WV 1 bedroom
apt, no pet, deposit and reference. (740)992-0165

Houses For Rent
2 BR &amp; 1 Bath - In Bidwell$600/mo +$600 Deposit 740339-3224
3BR, Mobile Home in Cheshire
area, $500 month, $500 Deposit, No Pets, Plus Utilities
740-441-2707
4-Bdrm &amp; 3 Bath - Gallipolis$650/mo + $650 deposit Call
740-339-3224
5 Rooms &amp; Bath, Appliances,
No Smoking, No Pets. $475 &amp;
Deposit, 44 Olive St. 740-4463945
Rentals
3-Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo &amp; $500 deposit 740645-5975 or 740-367-0641
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Autos for Sale
1987 Honda GL 1200 Motorcyle in Perfect condition to give
away for good rider due to sudden accident contact fredmanjames1@gmail.com.
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100 percent guaranteed, delivered to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74 percent PLUS 4
FREE Burgers - The Family
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ORDER Today 1-800-7124684 Use code 48829ZYL or
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Miscellaneous

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ORDER Today 1-800-7124684 Use code 48829ZYL or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/fvmb
57
Want To Buy
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

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�Wednesday, July 16, 2014

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Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Derby
From Page 6
deep 32 times in last year’s
derby at Citi Field in New
York. Gallego’s arm looked
nearly out of gas by the
final round, which started
after 10:30 p.m. local time.
“Maybe next year I’ll put
up a better showing at the
end,” Frazier said. “Now
that I understand, maybe
I’ll do a couple of more
push-ups.”
Cespedes topped To-

ronto’s Jose Bautista, and
Frazier surprisingly beat
Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton
in the semifinals.
Bautista and Stanton
each earned a bye to the
semifinals under the new
bracketed format, which
gave each player seven
outs and pitted the survivors from each side in the
final round. Bautista went
deep 10 times in the first
round, keeping the fans
in the second deck above

left field on their toes, and
Stanton hit six.
That was all for him,
though. After a long wait
for his next turn, Stanton
put up a zero in the semifinals and let Frazier advance with only one.
Oh, but Stanton’s six
were beauties.
One landed in the third
deck above left field, about
a half-dozen rows shy of
the very top of the ballpark. Another reached

the second deck above the
center field batter’s eye, a
place never touched by a
ball during an actual game
here.
Bautista, the AL captain, has 11 home runs in
14 regular-season games
here, the most by any visiting player. That’s only one
less than Twins cornerstone Joe Mauer, who has
played 284 career games at
Target Field.
Cespedes, who beat

Donaldson in a tiebreaker
after each finished with
three in the first round,
breezed by Baltimore’s
Adam Jones in the second
round. Frazier topped NL
captain Troy Tulowitzki
on the other side.
Colorado’s Justin Morneau, the fan favorite after 10-plus years and four
All-Star games for the host
Twins, was eliminated in
the first round.
Morneau returned to his

roots, and so did the event
itself, considering the inaugural contest was held at
the Metrodome before the
1985 All-Star game. Admission then was a mere
$2, slightly less than the
$200-and-up price tags on
the derby these days. The
original form was actually a 1960s-era television
show, featuring sluggers
like Harmon Killebrew of
the Twins.
Delayed 54 minutes by
light rain on an unseasonably cool night — even
for Minnesota — with a
start-time temperature of
59 degrees, the contest
began with a rainbow protruding from the clouds beyond left-center field that
framed this limestone-encased ballpark that opened
in 2010.
Frazier went first, and
while he went deep twice,
he didn’t quite reach the
rainbow.
Neither
did
Twins second baseman
Brian Dozier, the smallest
of the participants who
had the backing of the
crowd with chants of his
last name during his twohomer round.
“Even my brother he said
he got chills,” said Dozier,
one of seven first-time
participants. His brother,
Clay, was his pitcher.
The loudest roars were
for Morneau, the only lefthander in the event his
year. His third derby appearance brought the fans
to their feet with AC/DC’s
“Thunderstruck” blaring
in the background, and he
hit two in the first round
before Frazier beat him in
the three-swing tiebreaker.
The only player shut
out? Dodgers sparkplug
Yasiel Puig. He was the
first homerless participant
since Robinson Cano two
years ago in Kansas City.

Wade
From Page 6
sential team player, both as
a scorer, as well as an AllNBA defender. He brings
the attitude of a warrior
and competes every single
night against the very, very
best.”
Wade is entering his
12th Heat season and is
the franchise’s all-time
leader in games, points,
assists and steals. He and
Haslem, who is also expected to complete a new
two-year contract with
Miami in the coming days,
are the only players to appear on all three of the
Heat teams that won NBA
championships in 2006,
2012 and 2013.
He was limited to 54
games last season, in large
part because of a maintenance program designed to
limit wear and tear on his
knees. But when he was on
the floor, he was effective
— shooting a career best
54.5 percent and averaging
19.0 points.
With James gone, Wade
likely won’t have the luxury of resting as much this
season.
He’s
averaged
24.3
points for his career, 16thbest in NBA history and
fifth-best among active
players with at least seven
seasons. And only seven
other players in league
history have as many
points (17,481), rebounds
(3,605), assists (4,301),
steals (1,262) and blocked
shots (696) as Wade has
posted so far in his career.
Wade could have lobbied
for more money — Bosh,
for example, got a max
deal — or insisted on more
years. But the Heat are positioning themselves to
have as much flexibility as
possible in 2016, a similar
approach to what brought
the “Big 3” together in
2010, and Wade taking
what would be at the most
a two-year deal helps them
greatly in that regard.
Wade still has a hectic
summer ahead. There’s an
upcoming marriage to actress Gabrielle Union, the
ongoing building projects
at the home he’s been remodeling for some time,
and the annual fantasy
camp that he hosts.
His biggest order of
business, however, is now
complete.

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