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                  <text>Local
sports
action

Partly
cloudy. High
around 84

Today in
History
FEATURES • 4

Weather • 5

SPORTS • 6

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 145, Volume 64

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 • 50¢

Meigs chamber luncheon
Discussing football, business parallels
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Submited photo

Pat Newland speaks to the attendants of the Business Minded Luncheon about
the parallels between coaching high school Football and running a business.

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce held its monthly luncheon, the Business Minded
Luncheon, on Tuesday, Sept.
9 at noon at the Wild Horse
Cafe.
“It’s a good opportunity
for business people to come
around and network,” Whitney Thoene, executive direc-

tor of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, said.
“We try to bring in people
with concerns, or with something that’s going to interest
the business population. This
time was football coaches,
who kind of paralleled
between sports and business,
and everyone loves football.
It’s a local pasttime.”
This month’s invited guests
were all three high school
football coaches from Meigs

County: Mike Bartrum, head
coach of Meigs High School,
Kyle Wickline, head coach of
Southern High School, and
Pat Newland, head coach of
Eastern High School. However, due to scheduling conflicts,
only Newland could attend.
Newland spoke about how
this year’s season is going,
why he took a break from
football for a few years and
why he returned to coaching.
See Meigs | 5

Former fugitive
sentenced in
Gallia County
Amber Gillenwater

and Hajj was later
arrested in January
2013 in Georgia.
GALLIPOLIS — A
Following sentencing
man arrested by the
last week, Gallia CounU.S. Marshal’s Service
ty Prosecuting Attorlast year after warney Jeff Adkins thanked
rants were issued for
victimized local busihis arrest in multiple
ness owners for their
states for check fraud
cooperation throughout
was recently sentenced proceedings.
on charges in Gallia
“We are very pleased
County.
to have these cases
Joseph Christopher
resolved which involved
Hajj, 34, formerly of
theft from multiple
Thomas, Ga.,
businesses here
Nitro, W.Va., and
in Gallia County,
Gallipolis, was
specifically
sentenced this
Thomas Do-It
past week to 17
Center, Kawasaki
months in the
Motor Sports
Ohio Departand John Sang
ment of RehaFord,” Adkins
bilitation and
Joseph C. Hajj said. “The ownCorrection after
ers of these busihe pleaded guilty
nesses were great to
to two counts of passwork with as we crafted
ing bad checks and one a resolution to this
count of theft in three
case, which included
separate cases through
restitution of funds
the Common Pleas
stolen by the defendant
Court of Gallia County. and significant prison
Charges against Hajj
time.”
came after the defenAssistant Gallia
dant wrote bad checks
County Prosecutors
for equipment and vehi- Britt Wiseman and Eric
cles at local business in Mulford both said the
Gallia County, as well
defendant had comas in Meigs County.
mitted similar crimes
Hajj subsequently fled
in multiple states
the area as warrants
and expressed their
were issued for his
pleasure that Hajj has
arrest both locally and
already begun serving
in surrounding states.
his prison sentence.
A manhunt followed
See Gallia | 5

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

Facebook “f ” Logo

CMYK / .eps

--NEWS
Obituary: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

Submited Photo

The festival begins Thursday and continues through Saturday night, the scene is to be one of sternwheelers docked at the levee,
entertainers taking the amphitheater stage to share their talent with festival-goers, delicious food, local art being displayed and sold,
and much more.

Sternwheel Festival tomorrow
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — “A celebration of a great river,
great boats, great fun,
and great people” is what
the Pomeroy Sternwheel
Riverfest is all about and
plans are finalized for the
annual event on the banks
of the beautiful Ohio.
The festival begins
Thursday and continues
through Saturday night,
the scene is to be one of
sternwheelers docked at
the levee, entertainers
taking the amphitheater

Facebook “f ” Logo

CMYK / .eps

stage to share their talent
with festival-goers, delicious food, local art being
displayed and sold, and
much more.
The festival will kick
off Thursday with by the
traditional parade of fire
equipment — engines,
tankers, rescue units,
ladder trucks and boats,
as well as others paying
respect and marching
honor of the victims of
9/11. The parade will be
followed by the opening
ceremonies by Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, on the downtown

Pomeroy parking lot.
There will be a “Welcome Party” on Court
Street after the parade in
celebration of the Sternwheel Boats that have
visited the festival. The
“Wild Honeybees” will
take the stage on Court
Street at 8-10 p.m.
On Friday, craft and
food vendors will open for
business at 10 a.m., and
at 2 p.m. local historian
Mike Gerlach will lead
groups on a historic walking tour of Pomeroy.
Amphitheater entertainment in the evening

will kickoff with “Insured
Sound” from 6-8 p.m.,
after which Paul Doeffinger will perform from
8-9:30 p.m. The band
“Out for a Buck” will
wrap up the night with
music from 10 p.m. to
midnight.
There will also be
plenty of action throughout downtown Pomeroy
on Friday evening with
carriage rides available
and an Art Walk (featuring local Artists and their
works) will take place
from 5-10 p.m.
See Festival | 5

Ell, Ballard to headline Racine’s Party in the Park

-- SPORTS
High School: 6

By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

-- FEATURES
Comics: 10
Television: 3
Classifeids: 8, 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
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thoughts.

RACINE — The annual
Racine’s Party in the Park will
begin Thursday and last through
Saturday.
One major part of Party in the
Park is the entertainment that is
provided. This year, entertainment will be provided by headliners Lindsay Ell and Frankie
Ballard, who will both perform
Saturday. Ell will perform from
7-9 p.m. and Ballard will perform
from 9 p.m. to close.
Few artists in the history of

country music have risen from
obscurity to prominence with the
speed of Warner Bros. Records
guitar slinger Frankie Ballard.
On his debut album for the label,
this performer brings a bluesy,
rocking edge to the country
scene. His talents as a vocalist,
songwriter, instrumentalist and
showman have already made him
one of the genre’s most memorable new personalities.
In addition to its swiftness,
Ballard’s ascent is notable for the
seeming ease with which it has
happened. In 2008, he signed
with the first song publishing

company for whom he ever auditioned. In 2009, the first time
he staged a showcase for record
companies, he got a major-label
contract, according to his biography provided by his agent.
Ell’s passion and study has
served her well, leading to
several unique opportunities,
including an opening slot with
blues icon Buddy Guy; however,
her first songwriting trip to
Nashville was the catalyst that
brought her early affinity for
country full circle.
See Party | 5

�Local

2 Wednesday, September 10, 2014

obituary

Daily Sentinel

Meigs calendar
John W. Bailey

POMEROY — John W.
Bailey, 102, of Pomeroy,
went home to be with the
Lord on Monday, Sept. 8,
2014, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
He was born Aug. 31,
1912, in Pomeroy, son
of the late Henry F. and
Nora Will Bailey. He was
a farmer and, in later
years, was a school custodian. He lived his entire
102 years in the family
home at Flatwoods. He
was a longtime member,
Sunday School teacher
and superintendent
of Flatwoods United
Methodist Church. John
was an avid hunter and
outdoorsman. He was a
reserved, quiet person,
getting excited only in
church and while hunting. He was the moral
example to his family and
friends that his Savior
wanted him to be.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by his wife of 74
years, Henrietta Reitmire
Bailey, in 2010; three
brothers, James, Olin and
Franklin; sister Jenny
Abbott; granddaughter
Anita Ball; and three
sons-in-law, Roger, Max
and James.
John is survived by
his children Joyce Messenger, of Lancaster,

Darlene (Gary) BuckleyLong, of Parkersburg,
W.Va., and Greg (Jocelyn)
Bailey, of Pomeroy; his
grandchildren, Robbyn
(Steve) Holt, Tamara
Boyer, Scott (Theresa)
Robinette, Kevin (Diana)
Buckley, Bryce (Pam)
Buckley, Renee (Tim)
Barton, Kelli (Nate)
Radford and Juli (Matt)
Simpson; step-grandchildren Chris (Kristin) Baer
and Andy (Vicky) Baer;
19 great-grandchildren;
10 great-great-grandchildren; as well as several
nieces and nephews. He
is also survived by one
sister-in-law, Leota
Roush.
Funeral services will
be 2 p.m. Friday, Sept.
12, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Mount Herman
Cemetery. Visiting hours
will be 5-8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 11, 2014, and
1-2 p.m. Friday at the
funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
In lieu of flowers,
memorial donation may
be made to Meals on
Wheels, P.O. Box 722,
Pomeroy, OH 45769; or
Gideons International at
www.gideons.org.

Saturday, Sept. 13
POMEROY —The Alpha
Omicron Chapter of Delta
Kappa Gamma will meet at
10:30 a.m. Sept. 13 at Trinity Church in Pomeroy. Delta
Kappa Gamma is a national
teacher’s honorary society.
The program will include
members sharing talents and
hobbies. We will be collecting
paper products for the Serenity
House Women’s Shelter. For
further information contact Jo
Ann Hays at 740-742-3105.
Tuesday, Sept. 16
RACINE — Racine Area
Community Organization
(RACO) will be holding their
fall yard sale at Star Mill Park
in Racine on September 16-18.
All proceeds benefit the scholarship fund for Southern High
School seniors. Times are
Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Wednesday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
and Thursday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Starting at noon on Wednesday, clothing will be $1.00 a
bag. On Thursday, all other
items will be one-half price.
For information, contact Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
Thursday, Sept. 18
POMEROY —The Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center on Sept. 18
for lunch at noon, followed by
a program. The speaker will be
Randy Overbeck, author and
state vice president of the Ohio
Retired Teachers, presenting
“Teachers: The Real American
Heroes.” Guests are welcome
for this special program. Call
992-3214 for lunch reservations by Sept. 17. Members are
also asked to bring in student
and teacher school supplies.
Saturday, Sept. 20
RUTLAND —The 19th
annual St. Jude Saddle Up Trail
Ride will be at noon. There

will be a 50/50 drawing, saddle
raffles and door prizes. Food
will be served. For more information call 740-742-2849.
POMEROY — The Veterans
Memorial Hospital reunion
will be held at the Meigs Co-op
from 1-3 p.m. Bring finger
foods. If you have any questions, call 740-992-5919.
Tuesday, Sept. 30
POMEROY — The OH-KAN
Coin Club will meet between
6:30-8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
Thursday, Oct. 2
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene will
hold a simulcast event Oct.
2-4 for women desiring a fresh
encounter with Jesus. There is
free registration, but donations
support the conference. To register, visit www.cometothefire.
org. If you have any questions,
please call 740-444-5093 or
614-783-2051.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 52.99
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.04
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 105.84
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.37
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.72
BorgWarner (NYSE) —61.82
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 28.71
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.300
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.60
Collins (NYSE) — 76.77
DuPont (NYSE) — 65.27
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.60
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.90
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 64.81
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.06
Kroger (NYSE) — 51.74
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 63.67
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 108.78
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.82

death notice
France
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — James Walter France,
79, of Huntington, died Sunday, Sept. 7, 2014, at The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House in Huntington.
Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 11,
2014, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory in Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial
Gardens in Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2014, at the funeral home.

Brown

BBT (NYSE) — 37.27
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.15
Pepsico (NYSE) — 91.42
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.20
Rockwell (NYSE) — 115.93
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.12
Royal Dutch Shell — 77.64
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 32.90
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.74
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.11
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.75
Worthington (NYSE) — 39.80
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions Sept. 9,
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.

BIDWELL — Andrew Brown Jr., of Bidwell,
died Tuesday, September 9, 2014, at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.

Taylor
PATRIOT, Ohio — Joyce Ann Taylor, 66, of Patriot,
died Friday, Sept. 5, 2014 at home.
There will be no services. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory in Proctorville, Ohio, assisted the family
with arrangements.

Carlyle
SOUTH BLOOMFIELD, Ohio — Beatrice A. Carlyle, 74, of South Bloomfield, and formerly of Racine,
died Saturday, Sept. 6, 2014, at Grant Medical Center
in Columbus.
A funeral service will be noon Friday, Sept. 12,
2014, at Wyoma Pentecostal Church in Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va. with Pastor Roger Bonecutter and Pastor
Mike Lape officiating. Burial will follow in the church
cemetery. Visitation will be 5-8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept.
10, 2014, at the Redeemer’s Church West in Grove
City; 5-8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 11, 2014, at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and Friday
one hour prior to the service at the church.
Online condolences may be made at www.wilcoxenfuneralhome.com.

Johnson
GALLIPOLIS — Shawn Johnson, 34, of Gallipolis,
died unexpectedly on Monday, Sept. 8, 2014, at his
residence. Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.

Trent
GALLIPOLIS — Winston C. Trent, 73, of Gallipolis, died Monday Sept. 8, 2014, at The Ohio State
University Medical Center in Columbus.
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept.
11, 2014, in Mt. Tabor Cemetery near Vinton, with
the Rev. Heath Jenkins officiating.
Full military graveside rites will be conducted by
Vinton American Legion Post 161. The McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, is honored to serve the Trent
family.

Vinton County Air Show takes off Sept. 21
McARTHUR —
The Vinton County
Air Show, one of the
premiere events in
the region, is set for
Sept. 21 and members
of the Vinton County
Pilots and Boosters
Association have hammered out most of the
details of the show.
The air show will
begin at 1 p.m. and
the airport’s airspace
will close at that time
to incoming traffic.
Barbecue chicken
dinners featuring
one-half chicken plus
baked beans, potato
salad and a roll will be
$8, which is the same
price as charged the
last two years in an
effort to keep prices
down for airport visitors.
The air show is free
to attend, but a donation for parking will
be requested, with the
suggested donation
being $10 per vehicle,
which includes all
passengers. Load
the car or truck
with the entire family and some friends

and everyone in the
vehicle will be able to
enter the airport for
that one donation.
Airplane rides will
be given following the
air show and the cost
of a ticket will be $30
per seat. Rides should
begin at about 4:30 or
5 p.m.
The Vinton County
High School Band
will entertain before
the start of the show
and skydivers guiding
their chutes to the
ground will mark the
beginning of the day’s
activities. There will
be at least four big
airplanes with pilots
doing daring maneuvers. One will even
turn off the engine of
his plane and do an
entire show without
the engine running.
There will be
remote control aircraft performances
and a flight by a powered parachute, which
is a new act this year
plus some very precise formation flying
by a group of pilots
who fly their Yaks

port’s website and its
Facebook Page.
The Vinton County
Airport is located
about six miles north
of McArthur, just off
Ohio 93 on Airport
Road. Follow the
signs. Arrive early and
watch the airplanes
arrive from not only
airports in Ohio, but
from several adjacent
states.
There will be a full
day of activity at the
Vinton County Airport.
Proceeds from all
airport events are
used to operate and
maintain the airport
for general aviation
pilots and for the public.

Civitas Media, LLC

(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

Meigs briefs
Meigs County Republican
Party Hog Roast
POMEROY —The Meigs
County Republicans will be hosting their Hog Roast from 1-4 p.m.
Sept. 14 in the Thompson Roush
Building at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. Alex Scharfetter will
be present representing U.S. Rep.
Bill Johnson; Judy French and
Sharon Kennedy, both running for
Ohio Supreme Court judge; Yolan
Dennis, Tim Ihle, Meigs County
Commissioner; Scott Powell, Juve-

to the airport. There
could be a surprise or
two. You just never
know at the Vinton
County Air Show.
At the end of the
show, there will be
at least one candy
drop for the kids and
possibly two, one for
the littlest of those in
attendance and one
for older kids. Vendors
will setup near the
terminal and will sell
their wares all afternoon.
For more information about the air
show, contact booster
president Nick Rupert
at 740-357-0268 or
secretary Steve Keller
at 740-418-2612. You
can also check the air-

nile Court; and Mary Hill, Meigs
County Auditor, all running for
re-election, will be present. Kip
Grueser will provide music. Dress
is casual. For more information,
call Sandy Iannarelli, chairman, at
740-541-0735, or vice chairman
Bill Spaun at 740-416-5995.
Eastern Local School Board
accepting member applications
REEDSVILLE —The Eastern Local Board of Education
recently accepted the resignation
of Mark Hall, a former Eastern

Local Board of Education member, effective immediately, after
entering into executive session,
according to a news release. A
special meeting is set for 6:30
p.m. Sept. 17 in the Elementary
Library Conference Room, during
which interviews and the eventual
appointment of an applicant for
the board member vacancy will
take place. The next regular meeting will be 6:30 p.m. Sept. 24 in
the Elementary Library Conference room.

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

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 3

Construction boom at Ohio State costly to students
when the industry saw a
slight uptick.
Over the next five
years, Ohio State is committed to construction
projects that total $1.3 billion; $554 million of that
is to be spent this school
year. The university pays
for its projects through a
mix of fundraising, state
money, student fees, debt
and other sources.
But after years of marquee projects, the school
plans to rein in construction.
“We built two of probably the biggest projects in
Ohio State history. Over
the next few years, it’s
hard to imagine it going
up,” said Keith Myers, the
OSU associate vice president of physical planning
and real estate. “It’s tested
everybody to build these
giant projects.”
Still, OSU leaders said
the payoff is worth the
toil and cost. In a new,
225,000-square-foot building, scientists from different disciplines will work
alongside one another.
A massive overhaul of
the North Campus will
add eight dormitories,
intended to make the
area feel like a neighborhood. Machines in a new
chilled-water plant will
help save energy at buildings across campus.
By 2016, Ohio State
plans to knock down 11
buildings and erect 10
new ones along the north
stretch of campus near
Lane Avenue and High
Street. Eight of the new
buildings will be dorms.
For now, though, that
quarter of campus is a
dusty clutter of cranes,
rubble and skeletons of
new buildings. The cost of
the project is estimated at
$370 million, but campus
officials alerted the board
of trustees last month that
the cost of construction
materials might rise.
When finished, the
overhaul will add 3,200
beds to campus. It’s
part of a plan pushed by
then-OSU President E.
Gordon Gee to require
sophomores to live on
campus; such a mandate
applies only to freshmen
now. The goal is to keep
students connected to
campus after class.
Ohio State plans to
start keeping all sophomores on campus in fall

MCT Regional News

COLUMBUS — Kim
Concillado turned a
corner, a block from her
next class at Ohio State
University, and hit a dead
end.
Another chain-link
fence. More hard hats. No
way through.
“A new year, new construction everywhere,”
the 21-year-old senior said
as she walked an extra
three blocks to her electrical-engineering class.
When summer break
ended last month, students returned to clanging hammers and heavy
machinery. Work is wrapping up on a $1 billion
cancer hospital at the university’s Wexner Medical
Center, the largest building endeavor in OSU history. Farther north, in the
area where most students
attend class, construction
is in full swing on other
projects that will total
$580 million over several
years.
Now, students and
professors dodge road
barricades and concrete
mixers.
There’s a cost beyond
inconvenience, too: To
help pay off debt tied to
construction, campus
housing fees are rising an
average of 4.2 percent this
school year, university
records show. The university also is asking its
Office of Student Life to
cut costs by $1.8 million
next year.
“Capital resources are
not free. They aren’t given
to us by God or someone; they cost money,”
said Richard Vedder, an
economics professor at
Ohio University and the
director of the Center
for College Affordability
and Productivity. “You
can defer most of the cost
through borrowing, but
the costs are there, and
they are substantial.”
Ohio State has continued to tackle major projects while other colleges
scale back. New construction at campuses across
the country has been
sliding for much of the
past five years, according
to market research by
McGraw Hill Construction. This year, the total
square footage of new
campus projects is down
7 percent from last year,

2016.
“At the core of Ohio
State University’s new initiatives is a commitment
to redefining the student
experience, with a focus
on enhancing the education of students beyond
the classroom,” Dan Hedman, a spokesman for
the administration and
planning office, wrote in a
statement.
Hedman answered
questions about construction for the university via
email, saying that project
managers preferred not to
talk directly with reporters.
Along with dorms, the
work will add a dining
hall, event space and a
recreation center.
Most days at 6 a.m.,
Yukin Song, a freshman
from Beijing, hears the
deep rumble of machinery
roll past her window in
Nosker Hall. Near that
dorm and others near the
construction, the university has posted workers
to direct traffic as work
crews come and go. Lane
Avenue is cut to one lane
heading east, gumming
up traffic during home
football games.
“While construction
can seem like a short-term
inconvenience, it all has a
purpose, which is tied to
long-term benefits for our
students, faculty, staff and
visitors,” Hedman wrote.
•••
Last year, workers
carved a pit into the heart
of campus. Out of it has
grown a sweeping glass
building that will house
high-tech research labs
next year.
Two departments that
are based in buildings that
went up in the 1960s —
chemistry and chemical
biomolecular engineering — will move into the
new site. Thus, the wordy
name given to the building: the Chemical Biomolecular Engineering and
Chemistry Building. Ohio
State calls it the CBEC for
short.
It’s designed to be “a
community of scientists”

where researchers can
study the areas where
their fields intersect,
according to university
records. It replaces four
buildings that were demol-

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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, September 10, 2014�

Daily Sentinel

our view

Probe of IRS
scandal
taxes patience
It’s been 15 months since Attorney General
Eric Holder announced that he had ordered
a Justice Department investigation to determine if Internal Revenue Service employees
broke the law when they targeted for extra
scrutiny conservative groups applying for federal nonprofit status.
Fifteen months later, Justice Department
officials have issued no update on the investigation, save for the statement in July by
Deputy Attorney General James Cole, that he
and his boss, Mr. Holder, saw no need to turn
over the stalled investigation to an independent prosecutor.
If we didn’t know better, we’d suspect that
Mssrs. Holder and Cole were determined to
keep the investigation in house and drag it
out as long as possible; the better to contain
whatever political damage the IRS scandal
might have on President Obama and congressional Democrats.
Indeed, IRS Deputy Associate Chief Counsel Thomas Kane disclosed last week in an
affidavit that a government-issued BlackBerry
phone belonging to Lois Lerner, who notoriously ran the IRS office that placed conservative groups on a special “Be on the Lookout
List,” had not only been “wiped clean,” but
also “removed as scrap for disposal” two summers ago.
And that follows the agency’s disclosure last
week to Judicial Watch, a conservative watchdog organization, that some two years worth
of emails to and from Ms. Lerner that were
subpoenaed by the House Oversight Committee, but that were declared irretrievable by
IRS officials because of an all-too-covnvenient
computer crash, actually were backed up on a
government mainframe and may be recoverable, after all.
Maybe, Ms. Lerner’s emails contained no
incriminating evidence of criminal wrongdoing. Or maybe they contained a smoking-gun
revealing that the former head of the IRS taxexempt division was acting under orders of
politically motivated higher-ups.
It could be that Ms. Lerner was the designated patsy in the IRS scandal. Indeed, during her stormy appearance before the House
Oversight Committee in May 2013, she told
lawmakers: “I have not broken any laws. I
have not violated any IRS rules or regulations, and I have not provided false information to this or any other committee.
Of course, Ms. Lerner’s pronouncements
might have been more persuasive had she
not immediately followed them by pleading
the Fifth Amendment; and had she not subsequently retired from the IRS, upon learning
that the agency was moving toward terminating her.
There have been various news reports suggesting that Justice Department officials
— including, presumably, Mssrs. Holder
and Cole — decided more than six months
ago that criminal charges would not be filed
against anyone connected to the IRS scandal,
including Ms. Lerner.
Yet, just last month, Mr. Cole told a House
oversight subcommittee that no final decisions had been made regarding criminal prosection.
We find Mr. Cole’s assurances less than
reassuring. And with Obama campaign donor
Barbara Bosserman heading the Justice
Department’s investigation of the IRS scandal, we have little confidence that justice, ultimately, will be served.

Their view

Summer of our discontent
Despite these last few
months of hot and lazy
days, it’s been hard not
to notice a cold political
wind blowing through the
country.
The magazine Foreign
Affairs captured it with
its latest cover, a mockup
of a travel poster featuring
a crumbling U.S. Capitol
with the tagline, “See
America: Land of Decay
and Dysfunction.”
Americans are clearly
uneasy. I know it anecdotally, because at virtually
every public gathering I’ve
addressed over the last
few months someone has
spoken up with his or her
worry that our nation is in
decline. And the polls bear
it out.
In June, a Washington
Post article, “Is the American Dream Dead?” noted
a string of polls showing
majorities of Americans
believe their children will
be worse off than they
were.
By early August, an
NBC-Wall St. Journal
poll was reporting that
a full three-quarters of
those surveyed lacked
confidence that the next
generation would be better
off — the most pessimistic
results in the history of
the poll. Regardless of
income, ethnicity, religion
or gender, Americans
don’t think much of our
future.
This is a ground-shaking

turnabout. Since
to crumbling infrawell before I began
structure to a world
my political career
in which the forces
in the early 1960s,
of chaos and turthe keystone of
moil appear to be
our politics was
expanding.
an unflagging
Yet I think Foroptimism that as
eign Affairs has
Americans we could Lee
nailed the biggest
Hamilton factor: the perface head-on the
Contributing ceived dysfunction
task of improving
our own and others’ Columnist
of our political
lives and deliver on
system. As political
our responsibility to future scientist Francis Fukugenerations. As Chris
yama writes in the lead
Cilizza wrote recently in
essay, dealing with our
The Washington Post,
problems “requires a
“So much of every politihealthy, well-functioning
cian’s patter — Democrat
political system, which
or Republican — is built
the United States does not
on the idea that America
currently have.”
has always overcome hard
Simply put, Americans
challenges, always made
have no confidence that
things better for our kids
our system can resolve the
than for us, always had
challenges before us. They
achieving the American
don’t expect miracles, but
dream as a real possibilthey do expect political
ity.” Now, he notes, “A
leaders to make progress,
large bloc of the electorate and they haven’t been seeno longer believes any of
ing much.
that.”
I can understand why
so many people would be
Why not? Partly, it’s
pessimistic, yet I don’t
the economy: growth has
find myself sharing their
been sluggish, we’re not
fatalism. That’s because
generating enough good
political moments are just
jobs, and the benefits of
that: moments. Over the
the recovery have flowed
long reach of our history,
more to some than to the
many. The growing aware- we’ve learned time and
again that when our politness of a lopsided society
ical leaders do focus on
— one in which a rising
tide fails to lift all boats — our challenges, speak to
one another directly, and
has put many people in a
surly mood. That problem are determined to find a
solution to our problems,
of income inequality is
they can overcome their
joined to a host of others
differences and make
— from climate change

progress.
Our Constitution has
been in effect for 225
years. The system it created, with its checks and
balances, and its carefully
constructed equilibrium
between constraining and
enabling government, has
seen us through no small
share of bruising times.
It has protected our freedom, given hundreds of
millions of Americans by
birth and Americans by
choice an opportunity
to pursue the lives they
wanted, and allowed us
to speak freely, associate with the people we
choose, and openly follow
the religious and spiritual
lives we want.
There is no shortage of
challenges facing the system — from the influence
of money on elections to
the encrusted rules that
hamstring capable public
officials to the scorchedearth political culture
that reigns in Washington
these days. But I am
convinced that they are
no match for an aroused
and determined public
that recognizes we are all
in this together, that we
can adapt to changing circumstances, and that we
should not give up on the
system.

Lee Hamilton is director of the
Center on Congress at Indiana
University. He was a member of
the U.S. House of Representatives
for 34 years.

Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

Today in History …

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor

Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300 words. All
letters are subject to editing, must be
signed and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters
will be published. Letters should be
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You” letters will not be accepted for
publication.

Today is Wednesday,
Sept. 10, the 253rd day
of 2014. There are 112
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On September 10,
1939, Canada declared
war on Germany.
On this date:
In 1608, John Smith
was elected president of
the Jamestown colony
council in Virginia.
In 1813, an American
naval force commanded
by Oliver H. Perry
defeated the British in
the Battle of Lake Erie
during the War of 1812.
(Afterward, Perry sent
out the message, “We
have met the enemy and

they are ours.”)
In 1914, movie director Robert Wise (“West
Side Story”; “The
Sound of Music”) was
born in Winchester, Ind.
In 1919, New York
City welcomed home
Gen. John J. Pershing
and 25,000 soldiers
who’d served in the U.S.
First Division during
World War I.
In 1935, Sen. Huey
P. Long died in Baton
Rouge, La., two days
after being shot in the
Louisiana state Capitol,
allegedly by Dr. Carl
Weiss.
In 1945, Vidkun Quisling was sentenced to
death in Norway for

collaborating with the
Nazis (he was executed
by firing squad in October 1945).
In 1955, the longrunning TV Western
series “Gunsmoke,”
starring James Arness
as Marshal Matt Dillon,
premiered on CBS television.
In 1963, 20 black students entered Alabama
public schools following a standoff between
federal authorities and
Gov. George C. Wallace.
In 1974, the West
African country of
Guinea-Bissau became
fully independent of
Portugal.
In 1979, four Puerto

Rican nationalists
imprisoned for a 1954
attack on the U.S.
House of Representatives and a 1950
attempt on the life of
President Harry S. Truman were freed from
prison after being granted clemency by President Jimmy Carter.
In 1984, a revival
of the TV game show
“Jeopardy!” hosted by
Alex Trebek premiered
in syndication.
In 1994, the prison
drama “The Shawshank
Redemption,” starring
Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman, premiered
at the Toronto International Film Festival.

�News/weather

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5

No debates imminent between Kasich, FitzGerald in top race
By Jim Provance
MCT Regional News

COLUMBUS — The
campaign for Ohio governor has thus far been so
lopsided in terms of cash
and exposure that incumbent Gov. John Kasich
has had little incentive to
mention Democratic challenger Ed FitzGerald on
the stump.
A debate, however,
would provide FitzGerald a rare opportunity to
stand side by side on a
stage with the incumbent
Republican, providing
an hour when, perhaps
for the first time in the
campaign, the two will

Meigs
From page 1

Gallia
From page 1

“This defendant’s modus
operandi was to present
fraudulent documentation
to businesses and purport
to be someone who he
was not. This defendant’s
criminal acts were not
focused solely on our
county, as this defendant
had multiple agencies
investigating his actions in
the states of West Virginia
and Georgia,” Mulford
and Wiseman said in a
joint statement. “We are
pleased that this defendant
was ordered to immediately begin serving his 17
months in prison.”
Hajj was initially indicted in April 2012 after he
wrote a bad check on Feb.
28, 2012, in the amount
of $51,888 to John Sang
Ford in Gallipolis, a fourthdegree felony.
He was arraigned in this
case on July 27, 2012, and
was later released from the
Gallia County Jail on Aug.
24, 2012.
Following his release
from jail, he failed to
appear for a pre-trial settlement conference on Oct.
17, 2012, and a warrant
was issued for his arrest

be addressing the same
issues at the same time.
Both campaigns say
negotiations for one or
more debates continue,
citing confidentiality
agreements in not discussing the talks further.
Kasich spokesman Connie Wehrkamp did not confirm that the governor has
committed to participating
in at least one debate with
FitzGerald, who trails in
polls and whose campaign
has scrambled to regain its
footing following a series
of missteps.
FitzGerald has publicly
accepted invitations for
events with Kasich in Sandusky, Cleveland, Cincin-

nati, Columbus and Zanesville, and has challenged
the governor to additional
debates in Toledo, Lima,
Youngstown, Dayton and
Marietta.
“We accepted those
11 debates several weeks
ago,” FitzGerald spokesman Lauren Hitt said.
“Regardless of whether
Gov. Kasich accepts all of
those, we are interested in
roundtables or events in
those areas. We are very
eager to meet face to face
with Kasich.”
In 2010, the schedule
of two debates between
then Democratic Gov. Ted
Strickland and Kasich had
been set by early August.

He also tied in the act of coaching football with running a successful business,
including failures, learning from them and
coming back to fix a team or a business.
“You can work as hard as you can, and

through the Gallia County
Common Pleas Court. A
second warrant was later
issued for Hajj’s arrest by
the Gallia County Sheriff’s
Office after the defendant
wrote a bad check in the
amount of $9,113.73 payable to Kawasaki Motor
Sports, located on Ohio
160, on Dec. 20, 2012.
Several days later, Hajj
again wrote another check
to Thomas Do-It Center
for equipment, including
a generator and a pressure
washer, valued at $1,468.
At that time, warrants
were also issued for Hajj’s
arrest in Meigs County
on a charge of felony theft
by deception, and in West
Virginia after he allegedly passed bad checks to
obtain a 2012 white Dodge
Ram in Beckley.
The checks that Hajj
had been writing to local
businesses were reportedly made to appear as if
they were from a business,
such as BA Contracting,
Johnson Construction or
JJ Construction, and the
address on some of the
checks had appeared to be
from Nitro.
Following an investigation, the stolen truck from
Beckley was later observed
a few days after the inci-

dents at Kawasaki Motor
Sports and Thomas Do-It
Center at a residence on
Quail Creek Drive in Gallia
County.
Gallia County deputies
later responded to investigate the area, and, reportedly, the officers were
later informed that a white
male, later identified as
Hajj, had fled out the back
door of the home on Quail
Creek upon their arrival.
The truck parked at the
residence was later identified as the vehicle that had
been stolen from Beckley.
It was towed from the
scene and the fake checks
that Hajj had used to
purchase items from local
businesses were reportedly discovered inside the
truck. The vehicle was
later returned to authorities in West Virginia.
At that time, officials
reported that Hajj was also
wanted in Kentucky and
Georgia for grand larceny
of an auto and a probation violation in Georgia.
There were also, reportedly, seven warrants for his
arrest in West Virginia.
The Associated Press
later reported in January
2013 that Hajj had been
arrested at a Red Roof Inn
in Kennesaw, Ga., by the

John Green, director of
the Ray C. Bliss Institute
of Applied Politics at the
University of Akron, said
there’s more at stake in
a debate for FitzGerald
as he seeks to change the
dynamics of the race and
less incentive for Kasich
to participate.
Still, he predicted that
the incumbent will have to
commit to at least one.
“Because of the difficulties that FitzGerald has
had, a debate for him is
more important than for
other challengers in the
past,” Green said. “It gives
him a chance to change
the subject to policy
issues.”

AP photo

Ohio Gov. John Kasich, left, has had little incentive to mention
Democratic challenger Ed FitzGerald on the stump. The two are in
negotiations for possible debates, but none have been scheduled.

The state of FitzGerald’s campaign has led to
speculation that the Ohio

you can do everything right, but sometimes it just doesn’t work out,” Newland
said about both business and football.
“And you can do two things: you can quit,
sell the business, or you can get back up,

U.S. Marshal’s Fugitive
Squad.
At the time of his apprehension, Hajj was reportedly in the possession of a
2012 Dodge truck that was
allegedly stolen the previous day from a dealership
in Canterville, Ga. This
vehicle had been stolen
through the reported use
of a fraudulent check.
Also reportedly arrested
at the time was James H.
Moore, 31, of Middleport,
who was apprehended in
Chattanooga, Tenn.
The two men were
reported as the pair who
were found writing a
bad check for the ATV at
Kawasaki Motor Sports
in Gallia County on Dec.
20, 2012, as well as giving Family Ford of Marietta a fraudulent check for
$52,654 for a 2013 Ford
truck on Dec. 19, 2012.

Democratic Party has
shifted its focus to down
ticket races.

figure out the problems and work hard.”
Next month’s luncheon will be Oct. 14
at noon at the Wild Horse Cafe, and will
feature the candidates for commisioner
and state representative.

At the time of his arrest
in Tennessee, Moore was
reportedly driving the stolen truck from Marietta.
The Associated Press
further reported in January 2013 that, at the time,
the men were collectively
accused of obtaining more
than $400,000 worth of
vehicles, firearms, tools
and gasoline through the
use of fraudulent checks.
Both men were later
extradited to Marietta,
Washington County, Ohio,
where they were later prosecuted.
According to the Meigs
County Clerk of Courts
online docket, Hajj has two
pending cases through the
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court and has been
charged with three counts
of forgery and four counts
of theft. He is scheduled
to appear for a jury trial

before Judge Carson Crow
on Sept. 11.
In an unrelated case,
Moore had previously been
charged with receiving stolen property, safecracking
and tampering with evidence in Gallia County and
was sentenced last year to
60 months of community
control after he pleaded
guilty to safecracking.
Moore was reportedly
released from the Pickaway Correctional Institute
in May 2014.
During his sentencing in
Gallia County last week,
Hajj was further ordered
to pay restitution in the
amount of $9,113.73 to
Kawasaki Motor Sports,
and $1,468 to Thomas
Do-It Center. He was further ordered to have no
contact with the victims
and was given credit for
time served.

For the best local weather coverage, visit mydailysentinel.com

Festival
From page 1

The traditional Chili
Cook-Off will get under
way at 8 a.m. Saturday
and the winners will
be announced at 1 p.m.
From 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
bounce houses and other
fun games and crafts will
available for kids on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot.
Saturday will also be
filled with various entertainers, young and old,
starting with a Story

Party

Time and Sing Along
with Elsa in the Pomeroy
Mini Park, followed by
a Kids Talent Show at
noon on the amphitheater
stage.
Highlighting the
afternoon will be a
performance by locals
Renee Stewart and Nate
Sisson from 1 to 2 p.m.
Rockin’ Reggie will be
entertaining the crowd
from 2-4 p.m., and local
band “Rustic Revival” will
take the stage from 5-7
p.m. Chicago Blues Act
“Studebaker John and
the Hawks” will perform

from 7-9 p.m. and another
local band, “Marauder,”
will wrap up the evening’s
entertainment from 9
p.m. to midnight.
At 10 p.m. Saturday,
there will be a memorial lantern launch at the
parking lot to honor those
who have gone before.
To sign-up for the ChiliCookoff or the Talent
Show and for more information, visit its Facebook
Event page (Pomeroy
Sternwheel Riverfest), or
contact Brian Howard at
740-525-5764 or brian.
howard@fbsc.com.

the same vocal category as Josh Turner
or Chris Young, according to a release
from his agent. But if he has to be compared to anyone in the business, he says,
From page 1
he hopes it’s for his character.
“When I got here, it was like I was
“I just want to be a class act, a good
home,” she said. “I didn’t need to put on guy and the man my dad raised, with
a facade of who I was or wasn’t. And I
a great work ethic, a strong sense of
finally fell back into my roots. Coming to responsibility, and a love of making music
Nashville brought me to who I am and
that goes right down to my toes,” he said.
who I’m meant to be.”
Other activities during Party in the
This fall, Ell will embark upon one of
Park include carnival games, a video
her most exciting opportunities to-date:
arcade, a kiddie tractor pull, arts and
an opening slot on The Band Perry’s “We crafts vendors and exhibits, inflatables,
Are Pioneers World Tour” encompasskiddie and adult rides, the Cruisin’ Saturing 50 dates throughout Europe and
day Night Car Show, the Queen competiNorth America and kicking off Nov. 8 in
tion and the 5K Race.
Gothenberg, Sweden, according to her
The queen candidates for 2014 are
biography provided by her publicist.
Bethany Theiss, Ashley Baker, Lauren
Other entertainers include Ben Davis
Dunn, Danielle Icenhower and Autumn
Jr. and the Dirt Poor Troubadours at 6
Porter. The 5K Race will be Friday, Sept.
p.m. Thursday, followed by Blitzkreig at 8 12, rain or shine. Registration is at 5 p.m.
p.m.; and Friday performers The Wayfar- and the race will begin at 6 p.m., starters on Friday at 7 p.m. followed by Dylan ing at Racine Legion, across the road
Scott at 8 p.m.
from Star Mill Park.The registration cost
Because of his rock-bottom baritone,
is $20. All proceeds benefit future 5K
Scott knows some people will put him in events.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel�

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 6

Tornadoes

Marauders win
5th TVC Ohio
golf match

Topple Miller

Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — The gap is shrinking.
The Meigs golf team rebounded nicely from
a disappointing home outing last week by
posting a six stroke victory during the fifth
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division match of
the season held Monday night at Franklin Valley Golf Course in Jackson County.
The Marauders posted a winning team tally
of 180, which was half-dozen shots better the
runner-up Vinton County and its final total
of 186. River Valley was third overall with a
192, while host Wellston (195) and Alexander (199) rounded out the top five. Athens
finished sixth with a 214 and Nelsonville-York
was last with a 226.
Austin Ward of VCHS won his second
straight medalist honor after posting a 7-over
par round of 41 on the par 34 front nine.
Logan Sheets of RVHS was the overall runnerup for the second consecutive match with a
42.
David Davis and Evan George paced the
Marauders with identical rounds of 43, while
the trio of Chase Whitlatch, Levi Chapman
and Mitchell Metts added matching 47s for
the victors. Matthew Foster also shot a 50 for
MHS.
Zach Morris followed Sheets for the Raiders
with a 43, while Evan Justus and Grant Gilmore rounded out the scoring with respective
rounds of 50 and 57. Cliff Chapman and Cameron Marcum also posted efforts of 60 and 66
for RVHS.
The top four scores from the non-local
teams were as follows.
Alexander: Tyler Martin 46, Dallas Sweeney
48, Kyle Holt 52 and Casey McDonald 53.
Athens: Zach Shrivers 50, Ryan McCarthy
52, Ryan McCarthy 54 and Jordan Dean 59.
Nelsonville-York: Chase Koker 50, Ben Johnson 56, Stephen Bishop 60 and Colt Yinger
60.
Vinton County: Austin Ward 41, Alec
Boothe 46, Alex Dixon 48 and Noah Waddell
51.
Wellston: Blake Royster 45, Dakota Martin
47, Ken LeMaster 50 and Seth Coulter 53.
After the fifth of seven rounds in TVC Ohio
play, Vinton County is still in sole possession
of first with a 27-3 mark. Meigs is second
with a 26-4 mark, while River Valley sits third
with a 22-8 overall record.
Athens and Wellston are tied for fourth
place with identical 11-19 marks, while Alexander (7-23) and Nelsonville-York (1-29)
respectively round out the final two TVC
Ohio team spots.
The sixth TVC Ohio Division golf match
will be Thursday as Alexander hosts the field
at The Elm in Albany, Ohio.

Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern junior Haley Hill (6) hits a spike attempt
as coach Chris Carroll watches on during Game 3
of Monday night’s TVC Hocking volleyball contest
against Miller in Racine, Ohio.

RACINE, Ohio — Visiting Miller put up a fight in
the first and third contests,
but the Southern volleyball
team ultimately came away
from Monday night with a
straight-game 25-20, 25-9,
25-21 victory in a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division matchup in Meigs
County.
The host Lady Tornadoes
(2-2, 2-2 TVC Hocking)
never trailed by more than

five points in the entire
match, which happened to
come in the early moments
of Game 1 after the Lady
Falcons (1-4, 0-3) stormed
out to a 5-0 lead. SHS rallied for nine of the next 12
points to take a 9-8 edge and
never trailed again in the
opener.
Miller came as close as
16-15 midway through the
first, but the hosts answered
with a 9-5 run to win Game
1 by five points. SHS also
never trailed in Game 2 and
took its biggest lead of the
entire match with a 16-point
final margin.
See Tornadoes | 7

Alex Hawley/photo

GAHS sophomore Ryleigh Caldwell (1) goes for a spike during the Blue Angels triumph over Point Pleasant, Monday in Centenary.

Gallia charges past Knights
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, September 10
Volleyball
Federal Hocking at Meigs, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Southern, Meigs, River Valley at NelsonvilleYork, 4:45
Golf
Federal Hocking/Trimble at Southern, 4:30
Thursday, September 11
Volleyball
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:15
Hannan at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Alexander at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Winfield at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5:30
Golf
Meigs/River Valley at Alexander, 4:30
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 4 p.m.
South Gallia/Waterford at Southern, 4:30

ADVERTISE
IT PAYS!

CENTENARY, Ohio —
Now that’s finishing what
you started.
The Gallia Academy volleyball team capped off a
straight game victory over
visiting Point Pleasant
with a 20-point win in the
third game, Monday night
in Gallia County.
The Blue Angels (8-2)
earned a 25-14 win in the
first game of the evening,
while taking a 25-15 win
in the second game. GAHS
rolled to a 25-5 victory in
the third game, securing
the match triumph over
the Lady Knights (0-2).
The Blue Angels were
led by Micah Curfman
with 14 service points,
including seven aces, and
Ryleigh Caldwell with
23 points and five aces.
Grace Martin marked
seven points and one ace,
Jenna Meadows added
five points and two aces,
while Brooke Pasquale had
five points and one ace.
Allison McGhee had four
points and an ace, and Jordan Walker rounded out
the GAHS service attack
with three points and an
ace.
Charli Leach led the
Lady Knights’ service
attack with three points,
followed by Michaela Cottrill and Brooke Entingh
with two each. Macy
Adkins, Megan Bates and

Alex Hawley/photo

Point Pleasant junior Megan Hammond (23) goes up for a spike during the Lady Knights loss at Gallia
Academy on Monday.

Karissa Cochran each
marked one point in the
setback.
Curfman marked a teamhigh six kills, Walker and
Caldwell each had four,
while Meadows posted
three kills. Martin fin-

ished with two kills, while
Makenzie Brumfield finished the match with one.
Walker had a game-high
seven blocks, followed
by Caldwell with three.
Curfman and Brumfield
each had two blocks in the

win, while Martin added
one. McGhee led the way
with seven assists, Curfman marked three, while
McCormick and Caldwell
each had two. Meadows
had the lone GAHS dig.
See Gallia | 7

�Sports

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 7

Allbright wins medalist honors at Riverside
Bryan Walters

ing Winfield claimed
a seven stroke victory
in a non-conference
MASON, W.Va. — It
match at Riverside
was like deja vu all over Golf Course in Mason
again.
County.
For the second time
The host Black
this season, Point
Knights dropped an
Pleasant senior Kelsey
eight-shot decision at
Allbright won medalist Sleepy Hollow Golf
honors in a golf dual
Club back on August
against Winfield. And
28, as the Generals
once again, Allbright’s
received four sub-50
leading effort wasn’t
rounds en route to a
enough for the Point
winning tally of 184.
Pleasant golf team
This time at RiverMonday night as visitside, WHS posted five

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

sub-50 rounded on its
way to a winning score
of 179, which was better than the 186 fired
by PPHS. Point finished
the par 34 front nine
with only three sub-40
efforts.
Allbright finished the
day with a 5-over par
round of 40. Grant Hedrick of Winfield was the
overall runner-up with
a 43.
Bryce Tayengco and
Matthew Martin followed Allbright with

Lady Eagles slip past South Gallia
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The Eastern
volleyball team earned
its first Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
victory of the season
Tuesday night, defeating
South Gallia in Meigs
County.
The Lady Eagles
(2-6, 1-2 TVC Hocking)
earned a 25-17 victory in
the opening game, while
South Gallia (0-5, 0-3)
evened the match with a
25-21 win in the second
game. Eastern won the
third and fourth games
by 25-22 and 25-23
scores respectively, taking the match by a 3-1
count.
Elayna Bissell led the

EHS service attack with
14 points, followed by
Makenzie Brooks with 13
and Kelsey Johnson with
nine. Breanna Bailey
added eight points, while
Katlyn Barber finished
with six, Sidney cook
added five and Sabra Bailey rounded out the Lady
Eagle total with three.
Kirstin Burnette, Sara
Bailey and Tiffany Beaver each marked eight
service points to lead the
Lady Rebels, followed
by Courtney Haner with
seven, Jayla Wolford with
five and Caitlyn VanScoy
with four.
Johnson led Eastern
at the net with eight
kills, followed by Barber
with seven and Hannah
Barringer with four.
Sabra Bailey led the

team with 18 assists
and also marked a kill,
while Brooks added one
kill. Barber led Eastern
with 18 digs, followed by
Johnson with 10.
The Lady Rebels were
led at the net by Wolford
with nine kills and Mariah Hineman with eight.
Haner posted seven kills,
while Bailey and Beaver
each had two. Haner led
the defense with seven
digs and two blocks,
while Hineman had three
blocks.
The Lady Eagles will
look for the season sweep
when they visit Mercerville on September 29.
South Gallia returns to
action on Wednesday at
River Valley, while EHS
will play again on Thursday at Wahama.

Gallia Academy to induct 6 into HOF
Hobart Wilson

teams won 68 games and lost 23. Sarah
scored 662 career points, picked off
697 rebounds (not counting her freshGALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Six individu- man year) and had 266 blocked shots
als will be introduced into the 2014
(not including her freshman year).
Gallia Academy High School Athletic
She was named Gallia’s “Defensive
Hall of Fame on the weekend of Oct.
Player of the Year” three times, was an
3-4 according to Tom Meadows, comSEOAL player two years, All District
mittee chairman.
in 1989 and honorable mention All DisThe 12th class honorees are: Sarah
trict one year.
Todd Hodges, Class of 1989; Vance
In track and field, Sarah was an AllJohnson, 1946; Dr. Gerald Vallee,
SEOAL performer in 1988. She was
booster; Winston Saunders, booster;
the SEOAL’s long jump champion in
Jack Payton, coach and administrator; 1989 at 6-9. She set a district long
and Robert (Bob) Foster, 1981.
jump record at 16-3.75 in 1998.
The nominees will be honored prior
Sarah was a member of the 4x100
to the GAHS-Belfry, Ky., game on
and 4x200 meter relay teams that
Friday, Oct. 3, at Memorial Field. On
placed second in the SEOAL in 1989
Saturday, Oct. 4, a banquet honoring
and was named top female athlete in
the 2014 nominees will be held at the
GAHS athletics in 1989.
Gallia Academy High School Cafeteria
After graduation from GAHS, Sarah
at 6 p.m.
attended Miami, Ohio University,
Sarah Todd Hodges
graduating in 1993 with a BS degree in
Sarah Todd Hodges earned seven
public administration
varsity awards in two sports during her
She was employed by the city of
four years as a Blue Angel, four years in Oxford as a special projects coordinabasketball and three in track and field. tor, and later was human resources
Sarah was a member of three South- director until moving to Louisville, Ky.,
eastern Ohio Athletic League champiin 1996 after getting married. Sarah
onships hardwood teams and three sec- currently owns a real brokage and
tional title teams, one district runnerrecently started a residential and light
up team and a district champion team
commercial cleaning company.
in 1889.
While a Blue Angle cager, Sarah’s
See HOF | 9

Special to OVP

respective scores of 44
and 49, while Rhett
Lanier rounded out the
Point scoring with a 53.
Trace Derenberger and
Hunter Holcomb also
added respective efforts
of 61 and 65 for PPHS.
Adam Perry and Evan
Haley followed Hedrick
for WHS with matching 44s, while Garrett
Keefer and Nick Nester
added identical 48s.
Peyton Moore also shot
an even 50 for the Generals.

Alex Hawley/file photo

Point Pleasant senior Kelsey Allbright putts on the first green at
Riverside Golf Club, in Mason.

Rio Women’s Soccer
blanked by Bengals
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

AMHERST, N.Y. — The University of Maine-Fort Kent limited
the University of Rio Grande to
just two shots overall and went
on to post a 2-0 win over the
RedStorm, Saturday afternoon, in
non-conference women’s soccer
action at Dimp Wagner Stadium.
The loss left the RedStorm at
1-2 on the season and winless on
their weekend road swing to the
Empire State.
The Bengals, who ran their
record to 3-0, scored what proved
to be the only goal they would
need with 1:24 remaining in the
first half when Kendra Fruend
took a pass from Catherine Bruno
and lofted a shot past Rio Grande
senior goalkeeper Allison Keeney
(Cincinnati, OH).
UMFK added an insurance
marker just over 24 minutes into
the second stanza when Kayla
Richards managed to stick a
crossing shot into the left corner
of the net.

“The first goal was the result of a
defensive error on our part and we
conceded a sloppy goal in the second half. It just wasn’t our day,” said
Rio Grande head coach Callum Morris. “I thought the girls played much
better today, although the final stats
may not show it. I think that, here,
anything from 50 yards and closer
is a shot. We’re disappointed, but
we did play with a lot better effort
today.”
The Bengals enjoyed a 15-2 edge
in total shots and an 8-1 cushion in
shots on goal.
Michelle Delgadillo had one save
in a route-going outing in goal for
UMFK, the defending United States
Collegiate Athletic Association
(USCAA) national champion.
Keeney was credited with five of
Rio Grande’s six saves in a losing
cause.
Rio Grande will attempt to get
back to the .500 mark on the season
when former America Mideast Conference rival Mount Vernon Nazarene pays a visit to Evan E. Davis
Field on Wednesday night. Kickoff is
set for 5 p.m.

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Tornadoes

contributed three points apiece to the
winning cause, while Jansen Wolfe and
Marlee Maynard rounded out the scoring with two points each.
From page 6
Wolfe led the net attack with 11 kills
MHS led 3-0 and 5-1 in the finale,
and two blocks, while Cierra Turley
but Southern went on an 11-7 run to
and Marlee Maynard respectively
knot things up at 12-all. SHS took its
added five kills and three kills. Maybiggest lead of Game 3 at 24-17 and
nard also led SHS with 12 assists and
eventually held on for the four-point
Deem led the defense with eight digs.
win and 3-0 match decision.
Makayla Alexander paced Miller
The Lady Tornadoes had 10 different with seven service points, followed by
players score points from the service
Tessa Pierce and Olivia Houck with
line, with Ali Deem leading the way
four points each. Janae Dutiel led the
with 13 points. Hannah Hill was next
net attack with four kills and Houck
with eight points, followed by Sierra
added a team-high three blocks to the
Cleland and Madison Maynard with
setback.
five points each.
Southern returns to TVC Hocking
Brooke Reynolds, Haley Hill, Savan- action Tuesday when it hosts Waternah Bailey and Cameryn Harmon
ford at 6 p.m.

Gallia
From page 6

Leach, Michaela Cottrill, Gracie Cottrill,
Beth Porter and Becca
Musgrave each had a kill,

while Michaela Cottrill
led the defense with five
digs, followed by Karissa
Cochran with three.
Point Pleasant will look
for revenge on GAHS on
September 29, when the
Lady Knights host the
Blue Angels. Gallia Acad-

emy returns to action on
Thursday when it hosts
Jackson in a Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League tilt.
PPHS will host Hannan
and Huntington St. Joe in
a tri-match on Thursday,
in the Lady Knights’ next
contest.

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�8 Wednesday, September 10, 2014

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LEGALS
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Tara Fryar, whose places of
residence are known as 2440
Union Alley, Syracuse, OH
45779, 211 Leland Avenue,
Canyonville, OR 97417-9774,
and 132 Cameron Lane, Myrtle
Creek, OR 97457-7423 but
whose present place of residence is unknown, John Doe,
Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Tara Fryar, whose places of
residence are known as 2440
Union Alley, Syracuse, OH
45779, 211 Leland Avenue,
Canyonville,
OR 97417-9774,
LEGALS
and 132 Cameron Lane, Myrtle
Creek, OR 97457-7423 but
whose present place of residence is unknown, Minter Fryar,
whose last place of residence
is known as 3015 Eden Street,
Apt. 32, Pascagoula, MS
39581-3347, but whose
present place of residence is
unknown, and Jane Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Minter Fryar, whose last place
of residence is known as 3015
Eden Street, Apt. 32, Pascagoula, MS 39581-3347, but
whose present place of residence is unknown, will take notice that on March 20, 2013,
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company, As Trustee For Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust
2004-2 Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2004-2, filed its
Complaint in Foreclosure in
Case No. 13-CV-032 in the
Court of Common Pleas Meigs
County, Ohio alleging that the
Defendants, Tara Fryar, John
Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any,
of Tara Fryar, Minter Fryar,
and Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, if any, of Minter Fryar,
have or claim to have an interest in the real estate located at 2440 Union Alley, Syracuse, OH 45779, PPN
#2000520000. A complete legal description may be obtained
with the Meigs County
Auditorʼs Office located at 100
East Second Street, Room
201, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner further alleges
that by reason of default of the
Defendant(s) in the payment of
a promissory note, according
to its tenor, the conditions of a
concurrent mortgage deed given to secure the payment of
said note and conveying the
premises described, have
been broken, and the same
has become absolute.
The Petitioner prays that the
Defendant(s) named above be
required to answer and set up
their interest in said real estate or be forever barred from
asserting the same, for foreclosure of said mortgage, the
marshalling of any liens, and
the sale of said real estate,
and the proceeds of said sale
applied to the payment of Petitionerʼs claim in the property
order of its priority, and for
such other and further relief as
is just and equitable.
THE DEFENDANT(S) NAMED
ABOVE ARE REQUIRED TO
ANSWER ON OR BEFORE
THE 7TH DAY OF OCTOBER,
2014.

Tara Fryar, whose places of
residence are known as 2440
Union Alley, Syracuse, OH
45779, 211 Leland Avenue,
Canyonville, OR 97417-9774,
and 132 Cameron Lane, Myrtle
Creek, OR 97457-7423 but
whose present place of residence is unknown, John Doe,
Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Tara Fryar, whose places of
residence are known as 2440
Union Alley, Syracuse, OH
45779, 211 Leland Avenue,
BY: THE LAW OFFICES OF
Canyonville, OR 97417-9774,
JOHN D. CLUNK CO., LPA
and 132 Cameron Lane, Myrtle Charles V. Gasior #0075946
Creek, OR 97457-7423 but
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner
whose present place of resid4500 Courthouse Blvd.
Auctions
ence is unknown, Minter Fryar, Suite 400
whose last place of residence
Stow, OH 44224
is known as 3015 Eden Street, (330) 436-0300 - telephone
Apt. 32, Pascagoula, MS
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
39581-3347, but whose
requests@johndclunk.com.
present place of residence is
08/27/14,09/03/14,
unknown, and Jane Doe, Un09/10/14
known Spouse, if any, of
Minter Fryar, whose last place
of residence is known as 3015
Eden Street, Apt. 32, Pascagoula, MS 39581-3347, but
whose present place of residence is unknown, will take notice that on March 20, 2013,
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company,
As Trustee
ForTHE
Mer- AUCTION CENTER,
LOCATED
AT
itage Mortgage Loan Trust
R.
62
NORTH
2004-2 Asset-Backed Certific- MASON, WV.
ates, SeriesSELLING
2004-2, filed ITEMS
its
BELOW FOR
Complaint in Foreclosure in
Case
No.
13-CV-032
in
the
OVER STOCKED NEW FURNITURE STORE.
Court of Common Pleas Meigs
County, Ohio alleging that the
NEW: LR.
Suite,
Furniture, Dinets, Recliners,
Defendants,
Tara
Fryar,Br.
John
Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any,
Jewelry,
Armoires,
Pub
of Tara Fryar, Minter Fryar, Tables, Baby Beds, Lamps,
and
Jane Doe,Plus
Unknown
Sweepers,
New Merchandise &amp; 40+ Pc. of
Spouse, if any, of Minter Fryar,
Beautiful
have
or claimFenton!
to have an interest in the real estate located at 2440 Union Alley, Syracuse, OH 45779,
PPN
TERMS.
Cash-Check w/ ID.
#2000520000. A complete legFOOD!
al description may be obtained
with the Meigs County
Auditorʼs Office located at 100
East Second Street, Room
201, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner further alleges
that by reason of default of the
Defendant(s) in the payment of
a promissory note, according
Auctioneer
Note:
to its tenor, the conditions
of a
concurrent
mortgage
deed
givplan now to attend, building will be full!
en to secure the payment of
said note and conveying the
premises described, have
been broken, and the same
has become absolute.

NEW
FURNITURE
AUCTION

September 13
Saturday Evening 5:30 PM

60532920

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
Ricky Pearson Jr. #1955
1-304-773-5447 OR 1-304-593-5118

45779, 211 Leland Avenue,
Canyonville, OR 97417-9774,
and 132 Cameron Lane, Myrtle
Creek, OR 97457-7423 but
whose present place of residence is unknown, Minter Fryar,
CLassifieds
whose last place of residence
is known as 3015 Eden Street,
Apt. 32, Pascagoula, MS
39581-3347, but whose
present place of residence is
unknown, and Jane Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any, of
Minter Fryar, whose last place
of residence is known as 3015
Eden Street, Apt. 32, Pascagoula, MS 39581-3347, but
whose present place of residence is unknown, will take notice that on March 20, 2013,
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company, As Trustee For Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust
2004-2 Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2004-2, filed its
Complaint in Foreclosure in
Case No. 13-CV-032 in the
Court of Common Pleas Meigs
County, Ohio alleging that the
Defendants, Tara Fryar, John
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
Doe, Unknown Spouse, if any,
13 CV 046, PEOPLES BANK,
of Tara Fryar, Minter Fryar,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
and Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, if any, of Minter Fryar, PLAINTIFF, VS. HOWARD L.
WRITESEL, ET AL., DEFENDhave or claim to have an inANTS, COURT OF COMMON
terest in the real estate located at 2440 Union Alley, Syra- PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
cuse, OH 45779, PPN
#2000520000. A complete legal description may be obtained By virtue of an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of said Court in
with the Meigs County
the above action, Keith O.
Auditorʼs Office located at 100
Wood, the Sheriff of Meigs
East Second Street, Room
County, Ohio, will expose to
201, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
sell at public action on the front
The Petitioner further alleges
steps of the Meigs County
that by reason of default of the
Defendant(s) in the payment of Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio, on Friday,
a promissory note, according
September 26, 2014, at 10:00
to its tenor, the conditions of a
concurrent mortgage deed giv- a.m., the following lands and
tenements:
en to secure the payment of
said note and conveying the
Situated in the Village of Rapremises described, have
cine, County of Meigs and
been broken, and the same
State of Ohio, and bounded
has become absolute.
and described as follows:
The Petitioner prays that the
Defendant(s) named above be
The North half and ten (10)
required to answer and set up
feet off the North side of the
their interest in said real esSouth half of Lot #78 in the Viltate or be forever barred from
lage of Racine, Meigs County,
asserting the same, for foreOhio, except 10 feet of the
closure of said mortgage, the
East side thereof. Reference
marshalling of any liens, and
deeds are: Volume 84, at Page
the sale of said real estate,
577; Volume 137, at Page 170;
and the proceeds of said sale
applied to the payment of Peti- Volume 154, at Page 413 and
Volume 195, at Page 387. This
tionerʼs claim in the property
being the same real estate as
order of its priority, and for
such other and further relief as that conveyed from Orville J.
Gaul and Fern B. Gaul to Alis just and equitable.
THE DEFENDANT(S) NAMED bert Hill Jr. and Ora E. Hill by
deed dated February 14, 1958
ABOVE ARE REQUIRED TO
and recorded as aforesaid.
ANSWER ON OR BEFORE
THE 7TH DAY OF OCTOBER,
Reference Deed: Volume 252,
2014.
Page 915, Meigs County Official Records.
BY: THE LAW
OFFICES OF
LEGALS
LEGALS
JOHN D. CLUNK CO., LPA
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19Charles V. Gasior #0075946
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner 00036.000
4500 Courthouse Blvd.
The above described real esSuite 400
tate is sold “as is” without warStow, OH 44224
ranties or covenants.
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 402
requests@johndclunk.com.
Sycamore Street aka 407 4th
08/27/14,09/03/14,
Street, Racine, OH 45771.
09/10/14
PUBLIC NOTICE
CURRENT OWNER: Howard
Jason Writesel.
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, September 13,
REAL ESTATE VALUE SET
2014, at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211 W. 2nd BY COURT AT: Minimum Bid
Not Less Than $12,000.00. No
Street Pomeroy, OH 45769.
interior examination has been
The Farmers Bank and Savmade of any structures, if any,
ings Company is selling for
on the real estate.
cash in hand or certified check
the following collateral:
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (certified check only) down on day
2001 Dodge Stratus RT VIN
of sale, balance (certified
#: 4B3AG52H81E088400
check only) due on confirmation of sale. ORC 2327.02(C)
The Farmers Bank and Savrequires successful bidders to
ings Company, Pomeroy,
pay recording fees and associOhio, reserves the right to bid
ated costs to the Sheriff. Subat this sale, and to withdraw
ject to accrued real estate
the above collateral prior to
taxes.
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPreserves the right to reject any
ERATE UNDER THE DOCor all bids submitted.
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURThe above described collaterCHASERS ARE URGED TO
al will be sold “as is-where is”,
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
with no expressed or implied
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
warranty given.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
For further information, or for
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
an appointment to inspect colJennifer L. Sheets, LITTLE,
lateral, prior to sale date conSHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211tract Randy Hays at 740-992213 E. Second Street,
4048.09/10,09/11,09/12/14
Pomeroy, OH 45769, TeleSHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
phone: (740) 992-6689.(9) 3,
13 CV 046, PEOPLES BANK,
10, 17
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS. HOWARD L.
THE HUNTINGTON NATIONWRITESEL, ET AL., DEFEND- AL BANK
ANTS, COURT OF COMMON
-vsPLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
PAUL PERRY AKA PAUL W.
OHIO.
PERRYʼS UNKNOWN HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES AND
By virtue of an Alias Order of
ASSIGNS, et al., et al.
Sale issued out of said Court in
the above action, Keith O.
LEGAL NOTICE
Wood, the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, will expose to
Paul Perry aka Paul W. Perryʼs
sell at public action on the front Unknown Heirs, Devisees,
steps of the Meigs County
Legatees and Assigns whose
Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs last place of residence is unCounty, Ohio, on Friday,
known and whose present
September 26, 2014, at 10:00
place of residence is unknown,
a.m., the following lands and
will take notice that on July 16,
tenements:
2014, a Complaint was filed in
the matter of The Huntington
Situated in the Village of RaNational Bank v. Paul Perry
cine, County of Meigs and
aka Paul W. Perryʼs Unknown
State of Ohio, and bounded
Heirs, Devisees, Legatees and
and described as follows:
Assigns, et al., Case No.
14CV183364 in the Court of
The North half and ten (10)
Common Pleas Meigs County,
feet off the North side of the
P.O. Box 151, Pomeroy, OH
South half of Lot #78 in the Vil- 45769, seeking foreclosure
lage of Racine, Meigs County,
and alleging that the DefendOhio, except 10 feet of the
ant(s) Paul Perry aka Paul W.
East side thereof. Reference
Perryʼs Unknown Heirs, Dedeeds are: Volume 84, at Page visees, Legatees and Assigns
577; Volume 137, at Page 170; have or claim to have an inVolume 154, at Page 413 and
terest in the real estate deVolume 195, at Page 387. This scribed below:
being the same real estate as
that conveyed from Orville J.
Legal Description attached
Gaul and Fern B. Gaul to Alhereto as Exhibit "A".
bert Hill Jr. and Ora E. Hill by
Permanent Parcel Number:
deed dated February 14, 1958
1800964000
and recorded as aforesaid.
Property Address: 29485 Elige
Hill Road, Racine, OH 45771
Reference Deed: Volume 252,
Page 915, Meigs County Official Records.
The Defendant(s) named
above are required to answer
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19within twenty-eight (28) days
00036.000
after
the last publication.
Help Wanted
General
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.

THE HUNTINGTON NATIONAL BANK

BY: FELTY &amp; LEMBRIGHT,
CO. L.P.A.
Erin R. O`Malley, Attorney at
currently
has an opening for
Law
Attorney for Plaintiff-Petitioner
a full-time
MLT/MT.
Three1500
years
greater
CURRENT
OWNER:
Howard
W.or
Third
Street,general
Suite
Jason Writesel.
400
staff tech experience preferred.
Baccalaureate
Cleveland, OH 44113
REAL ESTATE VALUE SET
Phone: (216) 588-1500
degree
in
Medical
Technology
or related field plus
BY COURT AT: Minimum Bid
Not Less
Than
$12,000.00.
No
Situated
in the Township
eligibility for ASCP and/or
associates
degree of
in
interior examination has been
Sutton, County of Meigs, and
made of any structures,
if any,
State
of Ohio:
applied
science
or
related
field.
on the real estate.
Being in 150 Acre Lot 1200,
at Pleasant
Valley5,Hospital,
TERMS OFApply
SALE: 10%
(certiSection
Town 2, Range 12,
fied check only) down on day
of the Ohio Companyʼs Pur2520
Valley
Dr.,
Pt.
Pleasant,
WV
of sale, balance (certified
chase, and being25550,
in the Northcheck only) due on confirmawest corner of 103.04 acre
or
fax
to
(304)
675-6975
or
apply
on-line
at in
tion of sale. ORC 2327.02(C)
tract of land as is described
requires successful bidders to
deed in Vol. 223, Page 927 of
www.pvalley.org.
pay recording fees and
associ- the Deed Records of Meigs
ated costs to the Sheriff. SubCounty, Ohio, which in on the
EOE: M/F/D/V
ject to accrued real estate
North line of said 160 Acre60533124
Lot
taxes.
1200;
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 402
Sycamore Street aka 407 4th
Street,
Racine,
OH 45771.
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOC-

Thence South along the West
line of said 103.04 acre tract of

Daily Sentinel

THE HUNTINGTON NATIONAL BANK
-vsPAUL PERRY AKA PAUL W.
PERRYʼS UNKNOWN HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES AND
ASSIGNS, et al., et al.
LEGAL NOTICE
Paul Perry aka Paul W. Perryʼs
Unknown Heirs, Devisees,
Legatees and Assigns whose
last place of residence is unknown and whose present
place of residence is unknown,
will take notice that on July 16,
2014, a Complaint was filed in
the matter of The Huntington
National Bank v. Paul Perry
aka Paul W. Perryʼs Unknown
Heirs, Devisees, Legatees and
Assigns, et al., Case No.
14CV183364 in the Court of
Common Pleas Meigs County,
P.O. Box 151, Pomeroy, OH
45769, seeking foreclosure
and alleging that the Defendant(s) Paul Perry aka Paul W.
Perryʼs Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees and Assigns
have or claim to have an interest in the real estate described below:
Legal Description attached
hereto as Exhibit "A".
Permanent Parcel Number:
1800964000
Property Address: 29485 Elige
Hill Road, Racine, OH 45771
The Defendant(s)
named
LEGALS
above are required to answer
within twenty-eight (28) days
after the last publication.
THE HUNTINGTON NATIONAL BANK
BY: FELTY &amp; LEMBRIGHT,
CO. L.P.A.
Erin R. O`Malley, Attorney at
Law
Attorney for Plaintiff-Petitioner
1500 W. Third Street, Suite
400
Cleveland, OH 44113
Phone: (216) 588-1500
Situated in the Township of
Sutton, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio:
Being in 150 Acre Lot 1200,
Section 5, Town 2, Range 12,
of the Ohio Companyʼs Purchase, and being in the Northwest corner of 103.04 acre
tract of land as is described in
deed in Vol. 223, Page 927 of
the Deed Records of Meigs
County, Ohio, which in on the
North line of said 160 Acre Lot
1200;
Thence South along the West
line of said 103.04 acre tract of
land, 81 rods and 23 links to
the South line of 160 Acre Lot
1200;

Notices

*******************
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.

Thence East along the South
line of 160 Acre Lot 1200 in the
center of the Public Road as it
exists on September 18, 1967;
Thence in a Northeasterly direction along the center of said
Public Road to the North line of
said 160 Acre Lot No. 1200;
Thence West along the North
line of 160 Acre Lot 1200 to
the place of beginning, containing 50 acres, more or less,
but subject to any mineral reservations heretofore made.
It being the intention of this
deed to convey all the 103.04
acre tract of land that lies West
of the center line of the Public
Road commonly known as
Elige Hill Road.
08/13,08/20,08/27,09/03,09/10
,09/17
Lost &amp; Found
LOST Motorola Smart Phone
In black case @ Holzer Clinic
on 9/4/14. 740-777-1713

Miscellaneous
We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washers, also old cars
and scrap metal. Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Notices

Money To Lend

GUN SHOW

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)

MARIETTA
Washington Co Fairgrounds
922 Front St
Sept 13 &amp; 14
Adm $5
6' TBLS $35
740-667-0412
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Automotive
93 Ford Taurus Wagon, Auto
tran, PS, PB, excel tires runs
good. Make Offer. 740-4160182
Drivers &amp; Delivery
CLASS A CDL DRIVER FOR
HEAVY EQUIPMENT HAULING AND DUMP TRAILER.
CLASS B CDL DRIVER FOR
DUMP TRUCK. HOURLY
WAGES BASED ON EXPERIENCE.
HOME EVERY NIGHT. CALL
740-992-2478 OR EMAIL AT
pullins1@frognet.net
Help Wanted General
Direct Care Staff needed for
Jackson/Gallipolis
surrounding areas.
Applications accepted
Mon - Fri, 9 am - 3 pm,
located at 257 E Main St.,
Jackson, OH
Phone 740-286-0400
Clinical Assistant
Applications may be picked up
M-F 8-4
@ PVH STE. 112
304-675-1244

�Sports/classifieds

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 9

Horrible Saturday night levels Big Ten’s bullies
gan State, No. 8 Ohio
State and once proud
Michigan — all were
soundly defeated.
Factor in Wisconsin’s
loss to LSU a week
earlier and it’s easy to
see why the conference
could be a spectator for
the next four months
when the talk turns to
the best teams in the
country.
“We have enough
skill people on this
football team to get
by people,” Ohio State
coach Urban Meyer
said glumly after his
team took a 35-21
thumping against
unranked Virginia Tech
at home before an Ohio
Stadium-record crowd
of 107,517. “It didn’t
look like it (tonight).
But we HAVE to get by
people or you’re going
to see what you saw
today every week.”
Wow. Now that is
one dire forecast.
Favored by 11 points,
the Buckeyes — picked
by many, many experts

to make it into the
elite four-team playoffs — hadn’t lost to
an unranked non-conference team at home
since 1982.
Michigan State was
up by nine points in
the second half and
seemingly had a handle
on its game at No.
3 Oregon. But then
Ducks QB Marcus
Mariota started running over, around and
through the Spartans’
vaunted defense. All
of a sudden, a wave
of green submerged
Sparty, 46-27.
“We have a long season ahead of us and
we all understand that
this doesn’t make our
season,” said Michigan
State safety Kurtis
Drummond. “We have
a bye week coming up
next week, so we need
to put this behind us
and use next week to
get focused.”
It’s gotten to the
point in the Big Ten
where a bye week

is something to get
excited about. It gives
teams more time to
erase the awful defeats.
Michigan’s Brady
Hoke’s seat is so hot
no one will need handwarmers in the first 20
rows at the Big House
this season. His Wolverines have won just
three of their last 10
games.
At Northwestern,
ninth-year coach Pat
Fitzgerald — once
considered one of the
shining lights among
young coaches — has
one won of his last 10
games. The Wildcats
lost at home (where
they are 0-2) to Northern Illinois, 23-15.
As bad as Saturday
was, it still wasn’t the
worst day in Big Ten
football history —
although it was close.
Almost nine years
ago to the day, on Sept.
10, 2005, the conference got a black eye
when No. 3 Michigan
lost to No. 20 Notre

Dame 17-10, No. 4
Ohio State was beaten
by No. 2 Texas 25-22
and No. 8 Iowa fell to
Iowa State 23-3.
Maybe it’s because
the trio of Saturday
losses happened at
about the same time,
under the lights and
on millions of TV sets.
Maybe there’s a cumulative effect because
the conference has
been an easy target for
the past several years
due to an unending
series of high-profile
losses in bowl games.
Maybe it’s just the
big picture.
Those three powers
hadn’t lost on the same
Saturday since Sept.
17, 1988, according to
ESPN Stats.
Since 2010 against
the other Power 5 conferences, the Big Ten is
36-53. It is 8-29 against
ranked teams from
those leagues, according to CBS Sports.
And it wasn’t just the
big three that faltered.

The rest of the conference didn’t put anyone
in mind of the Monsters of the Midway.
Nebraska struggled
mightily before beating
McNeese State, 31-24.
Illinois had trouble
getting past Western Kentucky, 42-34.
Iowa barely survived
at home against Ball
State, 17-13. Minnesota was hard pressed
to get by Middle Tennessee, 35-24.
At least now the
conference that once
pretentiously gave us
Legends and Leaders,
can look forward to its
first 14-team league
race. Maybe Maryland
(which edged South
Florida 24-17) and
Rutgers (which got by
Howard 38-25) can lift
their peers.
Here’s the good
news, fans. League
play gets going this
Saturday with Penn
State at Rutgers.
A Big Ten team has
to win that one, right?

Southeastern Ohio First
Team Left End his senior
year.
Johnson attended
From page 7
Miami, Ohio University.
Sarah and her husband He later became owner of
Ken reside LaGrange, Ky., the Johnson Supermarket
with their twin children.
chain in the Tri-State
She is active in many
area. He was active in
community events. Sarah numerous activities.
was nominated by Joe
Johnson was nominated
Myers, Gallipolis.
for the hall of fame by
Vance Johnson, 1946
Michael and Barbara
Vance Johnson,
Johnson Huber.
deceased, was a threeDr. Gerald Vallee,
sport star for the Blue
booster
Devils.
Dr. Gerald Vallee has
Johnson earned the
served as Gallia Acadcoveted athletic key his
emy’s team basketball
senior and was a member doctor, a booster and
of the 1945 Southeastern and supporter and is conOhio Athletic League
sidered the Blue Devils
championship baseball
number one basketball fan
team.
since the 1969-70 camJohnson is best remem- paign.
bered during his senior
Dr. Vallee has not
year in football when he
missed a GAHS hardwood
caught three touchdown
game at home or away for
passes from freshman
45 years. Because of his
brother Bill Joe Johnson
dedication this year, his
against visiting Wellston
game attendance could
in the Gallians thrilling
eclipse 1,000 games,
24-19 win over the Golddepending on how far the
en Rockets.
team advances in tournaDubbed “the Blond
ment play.
Wonder on the Gridiron”
Over the years, Dr.
for his pass catching and
Vallee has provided team
running, Johnson earned meals, purchased equipthe Gallipolis Downtown ment, a refrigerator, and
Coaches trophy for being contributed much of his
named the Blue Devils
time and many things that
“Outstanding Football
have gone unnoticed.
Player.” Johnson was
Dr. Vallee is quite a
named first team All-

commitment to Gallia
Academy High School
and the GAHS basketball
program. He will always
be found sitting behind
the team bench and is
part of the team as the
players.
Dr. Vallee was nominated by John and Kathy
Thomas.
Winston Saunders,
booster
Winston Saunders
lettered three years in
football and four years in
track.
Saunders was a member
of the 1974 grid team
5hat posted a 9-1 season
mark, losing only a lastminute 15-14 decision to
Ironton’s visiting SEOAL
champion Ironton Tigers.
His teammates captured
the SEOAL’a Bill Thomas
All Sports trophy his
senior year by edging out
Ironton, 34 to 33 ½.
Saunders was cocaptain of the 1974 grid
team, and was honorable
mention All-SEOAL.
Saunders was active
in many school activities
and his actions on both
and off the field showed
leadership. After graduation, Saunders was instrumental in in the success
of the Gallipolis Midget
Football League. He also
coached MFL teams and

junior high teams to successful seasons.
Saunders also served
as commissioner of the
Gallipolis MFL for several
years. Overall, Saunders
spent 26 years guiding
future Blue Devil players.
Saunders was nominated by Thomas M. Evans,
a 1975 GAHS graduate.
Jack Payton, coach,
administrator
Jack Payton, a 1975
University of Rio Grande
graduate, taught and
coached cross country
and basketball at Gallipolis for 10 years (197585) before becoming an
administrator.
After serving the Gallipolis City Schools as
district curriculum less
than a month, Payton
was named principal of
Washington grade school,
(1985-94) a position held
for nine years. He was
named Gallipolis City
Schools superintendent,
(1994-2011) a position
he held 17 years before
retiring.
Payton was a volunteer
assistant track coach
(2002-2005) specializing
with pole vaulters. During
this time his son Jeff qualified for the state track
meet in 2004 and 2005.
He also coached Kim
T. Saunders to the state

track meet in 1979-80.
Payton also coached the
junior high, freshman, and
JV basketball teams and
was an assistant varsity
coach in 1990-91.
Payton’s other athletic
accomplishments while
superintendent included
maintained coaching salary increases as per starting base pay, soccer was
added as a varsity sport,
the old high school gym
was remodeled, Memorial
Field improvements were
made and a new soccer
field was built in Centenary.
Payton is a charter
member of the school’s
athletic hall of fame. Payton was nominated by
former GAHS grid coach
and teacher Brent Saunders.
Robert (Bob) Foster,
1981
Robert (Bob) Foster
earned six varsity awards
while attending GAHS—
three in football and three
in baseball.
Foster was a quarterback in football his senior
year. He was named an
All-SEOAL honoree and
was the team’s Co-Most
Valuable Player with Mike
Hemphill in 1980. Foster
also received a Jantzen
Golden Helmet award his
senior year.

During his senior year,
Foster scored 58 points
and rushed for 407 yards
in 98 attempts for a 4.1
average. He completed
21 0f 57 pass attempts for
301 yards and two touchdowns (with eight interceptions). Foster punted
34 times for 1,329 total
yards (39.8) per punt.
In baseball, Foster
played several positions
for three years. During
his senior year, Foster
batted .240, pitched 29.1
innings, struck out 27 and
had an ERA of 2.17.
After graduation, Foster
attended the University
of Rio Grande where he
received a BA degree in
three and a half years.
After graduating from
college, Foster purchased
a semi-truck with his
younger brother Joe and
started a transportation
business. Over the past
33 years the nominee has
been building Foster Sales
and Delivery, Inc., and
has expanded to serve 48
states, owning 35 trucks
with 50 in operation.
Foster is married to
Jennifer Byrnes Foster
and they have three children.
He was nominated by
Dan Greene, former Gallipolis Board of Education
member.

Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Michigan quarterback Devin Gardner
was talking about his
team being shut out
for the first time in 30
years.
He might as well
have been referring to
the whole sorry state
of Big Ten football.
“Well, yes, it’s embarrassing,” he said after
his Wolverines’ dreadful 31-0 beatdown to
Notre Dame in the final
game of their historic
rivalry. “But you have
to continue to fight.”
It’s barely September
and the Big Ten just
might be out of the
inaugural College Football Playoff race.
That sure didn’t take
long, did it?
A conference that has
had more than its share
of epic failures in big
showdowns in recent
years had a night to
forget on Saturday.
Three of its biggest
bullies — No. 7 Michi-

HOF

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Help Wanted General

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Experienced Machinist needed
to run CNC, manual lathes,
mills etc, able to write G codes
and conversational programs,
must be able to work from Cad
drawings, work primarily with
stainless steel, delrin and UHMW. Send resumes to Steelial Construction 70764 St. Rt.
124 Vinton, OH 45686

3 BEDROOM BRICK, 1 1/2
BATHS, LARGE FAMILY
ROOM, SECURITY SYSTEM.
1 CAR GARAGE AND FULL
BASEMENT CLOSE TO GALLIPOLIS WALMART. ASKING
$93,000. CONTACT 446-7874,
TO MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE
Home for Sale - Bi-Level 3
Bdrm 2 1/2 bath, Lg family Rm.
16 x 36 in ground pool, pool
house, New Kitchen with appliances, heat &amp; air cond. 5yrs.
old. Turn key ready, located at
3719 Bulaville Pike (Addaville
School) $131,900 Call 740709-1241

Apartment available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Wva. Now accepting applications for HUD -subsidized, One
bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Commercial space for lease at
Spring Valley Plaza. 1800 sq.
ft. Newly remodeled. Call 740446-3481
Lot for sale on Deenie Dr. in
Sunkist Subdivision.
192 x 177. $14,900 Call 740446-348

DISH TV Retailer.
Starting at
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starting at
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(where available.)
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ORDER Today 1-800-7124684 Use code 48829ZYL or
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OMAHA STEAKS:
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57

RN's, LPN'S, STNA'S....
OVERBROOK CENTER, LOCATED AT 333 PAGE STREE,
MIDLEPORT, OH IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR
THE ABOVE POSITIONS.
STOP BY AND FILL OUT AN
APPLICATION M-F 8:30 AM5:00 PM OR CONTACT
SUSIE DREHEL, STAFF DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR @ 740-992-6472. EOE &amp;
A PARTICIPANT OF THE
DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE
PROGRAM
Medical / Health
Dr. Randall Hawkins is now
taking new patients. 2520 Valley Drive Suite 212 Pt. Pleasant WV. (304)675-7700
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

Cemetery Plots
3 plots behind Beale Chapel
Methodist Church Cementary
call 330-426-2766 or 330-8811481

Apartments/Townhouses
1 - Bdrm Apartment - 446-0390
1BR, Upstairs, Util. Pd, AC,
Wash/Dryer Avail, No
Smoking, No Pets, $450/Mo,
$450/Dep. 258 State St. 740446-3667
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.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
For Rent - Racine Ohio 2 Bedroom Apts. Furnished
$500/mo NO PETS 740-5915174

Houses For Rent

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
1 Bdrm - unfurnished apartment. New Range &amp; Refrig.
provided. Water &amp; Garbage pd.
Deposit required. Call 740709-0072
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Commercial
Commercial building for
sale/lease. Office/retail/storage. 1800sqft with 10ft ceilings. Off-street parking. 749
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
$499 per month. Call Wayne
404-456-3802

Nice Home for rent in Middleport, good neighborhood.
Newly remodeled. New appliances, 4 Bedrooms, 2 Bath.
Large Kitchen. Sun Room,
covered deck. Central Air &amp;
Heat. Nice Outdoor spaces.
No pets, non smoking. call
992-9784 or 740-591-2317 for
more details.
Rentals
3BR, Mobile Home, $350 per
Month, all Electric, w/Wood
burning Fireplace, 3 miles from
Town 740-853-0173
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Trucks/SUVs/Vans
97 GMC Ext Cab, 160K, P/W &amp;
DL, Cruise &amp; Tilt, $2,200 OBO
740-379-2631
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

DISH TV Retailer.
Starting at
$19.99/month (for
12 mos.) &amp; High
Speed Internet
starting at
$14.95/month
(where available.)
SAVE! Ask About
SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1800-401-1670
DISH TV Retailer.
Starting at
$19.99/month (for
12 mos.) &amp; High
Speed Internet
starting at
$14.95/month
(where available.)
SAVE! Ask About
SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1800-401-1670

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

Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com
740-446-3093

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