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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

For The
Record.... Page 2

Partly sunny.
High near 85.
Low around
61......... Page 2

Local diamond
action.... Page 6

Levi Curtis Barnett, infant
Donna J. Hoffman
Betty Jane (Forbus) Mitchell Morrow, 82
Luella ‘Bill’ Raike, 94

50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 82

Man in custody following two-day standoff
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

CHESTER TWP. — One person
is in custody following a more
than 24-hour standoff with law
enforcement officials.
Jack Ritchie — the elderly man
who barricaded himself in his home
— was taken into custody by officers at 3:18 p.m. according to Meigs
County Sheriff Keith Wood.
Wood stated that at 3:13 p.m. —
after hours of negotiations failed
— the officers with the Athens, Gallia, and Washington Emergency Response teams and the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office took steps to remove
Ritchie from his home.
According to the Sheriff, the of-

ficials used gas to help force Ritchie
from the home at that time, and by
3:18 p.m. Ritchie was in custody.
Wood said that every effort was exhausted prior to officers making entry into the home.
Ritchie was evaluated at the scene
by emergency personnel before being
taken to the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office to be processed. Wood stated
that Ritchie would then be taken to a
hospital for evaluation.
Officers were working to obtain
a search warrant for the property
as part of the investigation on
Tuesday afternoon.
A statement from the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office Facebook page read,
After a long battle, the standoff
is finally over. We have the male in

custody. Nobody was hurt in this incident. We want to thank everyone
that was involved.
No one was injured as part of
the standoff which began just after
noon on Monday.
On Monday, officers from the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office responded to a
dispute call, with the situation escalating to a standoff situation.
Wood stated that Deputies Adam
Smith and Joe Barnhart responded
to the call of a dispute between
Jack Ritchie and his co-partner in
a vehicle business.
According to Wood, the dispute
escalated with Ritchie threatening
his co-partner with a gun and then

Photo courtesy of the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office

Officials from many departments have been on the scene of a
See STANDOFF ‌| 5 standoff situation since early Monday afternoon near Chester.

Emma Perrin

Megan Dyer

MHS announces top
scholars in Class of 2013

Charlene Hoeflich,

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Fred and Jacquelyn Smith tell the story of the role of blacks in the Civil War.

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Reflections on Civil
War Days highlight
observance

POMEROY — The top
students of the Meigs High
School’s graduating class of
2013 have been announced
by Steve Ohlinger, principal.
They are Emma Perrin
and Megan Dyer, co-valedictorians, and Alyssa Cremeans, salutatorian.
Emma, the daughter
of Jon and Amy Perrin of
See SCHOLARS ‌| 5 Alyssa Cremeans

Training offered for
writing SCIP grants
Staff Report

Charlene Hoeflich

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — An impressive program on Civil
War days by reenactors Fred and Jacquelyn Smith of
Youngstown highlighted the annual Memorial Day
service at the Civil War monument on the Meigs
County Courthouse lawn Saturday.
The Smiths travel extensively telling the story of
colored soldiers who served in the Civil War, those
who wanted to fight for freedom but were refused
the opportunity because of their race, the battle
hardships endured by those who did serve,, and the
many who died in that war.
The two gave recitations from the works of Negro
Poet Paul Lawrence Dunbar who is credited with being the first American Negro to show the high poetic
quality of his people.
Smith, a direct descendant of a Civil War soldier,
spoke of the importance of tracing one’s ancestors
and the benefits it brings in the way of understanding the life and times of earlier generations. He emphasized the importance of “keeping the memory of

Jean Hilton, known as “Miz Rosebud,” emceed the Memo-

See OBSERVANCE ‌| 5 rial Day observance.

MARIETTA — A training session for the District 18
Ohio Public Works Commission State Capital Improvement
Program where information on how to apply for funding
assistance on infrastructure improvements will be held on
June 5 at the Holiday Inn in Marietta.
Topics covered in the training session will include
instructions on preparation of the application for consideration of project funding and information on loans
and loan assistance.
Meigs County is one of the 10 counties in District 18
which may quality for a project. the other counties in the district are Athens, Belmont, Hocking, Monroe, Logan, Muskingum, Noble, Perry and Washington.
The training is offered for all persons interested in applying for funding from the State Capital Improvement
Program. Local government entities, county, township,
city, village and water and sewer districts are eligible to
participate in this program.
The State Capital Improvement Program and the Local
Transportation Improvement Program were created to assist in financing local public infrastructure improvements.
Local subdivisions that require financial assistance in
See GRANTS ‌| 5

Eastern completes first year of archery program
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS — Eastern Local
School District recently incorporated the
N.A.S.P. (National Archery in the Schools
Program) into the school district.
The program was incorporated under the guidance of Jeff Jones as Head
Instructor, district administration, and
several parent volunteers, who became
NASP certified instructors that assisted
in getting the program up and running.
The students and coaches recently
completed their first year of the program attending the State tournament
(Arnold Classic) in Columbus and

participating in several other competitions around the area.
The students did well, taking second
place team awards at two different competitions. Numerous individual also won
trophies throughout the season.
The program is another outlet for
the students not involved in “traditional” school sports. The program
promotes student education, physical
education and participation in the life
long sport of archery.
The kids saw progress throughout the
first year of competition.
A picnic and year end awards were
recently held to recognize the students
Eastern archery student were recently honored during a picnic and awards.
who participated.

Submitted photo

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Community Calender Meigs Local Briefs
Wednesday, May 22
Class Reception
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education
Planned
will meet at 8 p.m. in the high school media center. The
MIDDLEPORT — The
meeting was moved from Monday due to both the softball Middleport High School
and baseball playing in tournament games.
class of 1953 will have a reception at the Middleport
Thursday, May 23
Fire House from noon til
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers 4 .m. Saturday to mark the
will meet at noon at Wild Horse Cafe in Pomeroy for a 60th year since graduation.
luncheon meeting. The speaker will be Representative Former Coach Dave WinDebbie Phillips. She will speak on legislative updates efordner plans to attend
with a question and answer session to follow. Guests are and looks forward to seewelcome.
ing former team members
POMEROY — Pomeroy Village Council will hold from 1952, 53 and 54. All
its second meeting for May at 7 p.m. The meeting was are invited.
moved due to Memorial Day.
POMEROY — The monthly meeting of the Meigs Soil
Cleanup Day
and Water Conservation Board will be held at 11 a.m. at
POMEROY — Pomeroy
the Meigs SWCD office in Pomeroy.
Village Cleanup Day will
POMEROY — Alpha Iota Masters will meet at 11:30 be held on Wednesday,
a.m. at Fox’s Pizza in Pomeroy.
May 22 within the village.
Those wishing to particiFriday, May 24
pate can place items to be
HARRISONVILLE — Harrisonville Chapter #255, collected in front of homes.
O.E.S. 106th Annual Inspection of Officers by Deputy Items such as televisions,
Grand Matron, Kathy Wentz to be held at the Harrison- computers, batteries, garville Masonic Hall at 7:30 p.m. Chapter members to pro- bage and chemicals will
vide potluck.
not be accepted.
Saturday, May 25
POMEROY — The Meigs High School Class of 1993
will hold its 20 year class reunion at Court Street Grill in
Pomeroy.
HARRISONVILLE — The 84th annual reunion of the
Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni Association, 6:30 p.m. at the
H. S. Alumni Center on Graham farm, 36008 S.R. 143,
near Harrisonville.

Memorial Day Service
RACINE — The Racine
American Legion Post 602
Memorial Day service will
be held at 10 a.m . on Monday, May 27. Larry Fisher
will speak. World War II
veterans will be honored.
Southern Band will play,
Sunday, May 26
and refreshments will be
RUTLAND — Dr. Nelson Perdue will be the guest served.
speaker at 7 p.m. at the Independent Holiness Church,
338 Main Street in Rutland.
Revival
POMEROY — Calvary
Tuesday, May 28
Pilgrim Church will hold
POMEROY — The final Team Captain Meeting for a revival May 23-26. Ser2013 will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the basement of the vices will be held at 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Library. Light refreshments will be available.
Thursday-Saturday
and
6:30 p.m. on Sunday. SpeFriday, May 31
cial singing each night.
MARIETTA — The Buckeye Hills Area Agency on Ag- Pastor is Rev. Charles
ing Regional Advisory Council will meet at 10 a.m. at the McKenzie.
Comfort Inn, 700 Pike Street, Marietta.
Pomeroy Alumni Tickets
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School
Alumni banquet is May
25th and tickets may be
purchased at either Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy or

School shooting victims’
families sue charity

Francis Florist in Pomeroy.
Seniors are reminded that
the deadline for submitting
applications for the scholarships given by the Alumni
Association is May 17.
Chester Alumni
CHESTER –The Chester High School Alumni
banquet will be held at 6:30
p.m. on Saturday, June 2,
at the Eastern Elementary
School Cafetorium. The
dinner and dues are $20.
Dues alone are $5. Reservations are to mailed or
telephoned to Betty Newell, P. O. Box 36, Chester,
Ohio 45720 or telephoned
to 740-985-3351. Classes
to be honored are 1933,
1938, 1943, 1948 and
1953. Decorating for the
banquet will take place at
6:30 on May 31 and volunteers to assist are needed.
Church Yard Sale
RUTLAND — Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church
will hold an inside yard
sale from 9 a.m to 4 p.m.,
May 30, 31 and June 1.
Lunch will also be served.
Route 143 yard sale
HARRISONVILLE —
The fourth annual Route
143 yard sale, described
as 21 miles of fun and treasures, will be held from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday,
June 1. The sale will begin
at Route 7 at Pomeroy and
continue to Route 50 near
Albany. The Scip8io Volunteer Fire Department in
Harrisonville will have a
pancake breakfast and hot
dogs later in the day and
Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department will
also be serving food. Both
fire department will have
rest rooms available for the
shoppers. Space at both fire
departments will be avail-

CHARDON, Ohio (AP) — Relatives of three teenagers killed in an Ohio school shooting are suing a charity that maintains a fund set up to benefit the families
and support the well-being of students and others in
the affected community.
The lawsuit filed Tuesday against United Way says
911
more than $950,000 has been donated to the Chardon
May 17
Healing Fund since the Chardon High School shoot12:24 p.m., Hysell Run Road, dehydration; 2:28 p.m.,
ing last year. The suit says the families have received East Memorial Drive, overdose; 3:15 p.m., Ohio 124,
less than $150,000 and have had some requests for unconscious/unknown reason; 4:48 p.m., Ohio 124, fall;
funding denied.
6:59 p.m., West Main Street, psychiatric emergency; 7:58
p.m., Ohio 325, seizure/convulsions; 9:18 p.m., Loop
Road, assault/fight.
May 18
3:12 p.m., South Fourth Avenue, difficulty breathing;
3:57 p.m., South Second Avenue, fractured body part;
6:30 p.m., Ohio 7, syncope/passing out; 6:58 p.m., Powell Street, pain general; 9:09 p.m., Pearl Street, diabetic
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.73
AEP (NYSE) — 49.36
emergency; 10:44 p.m., Fourth Street, head injury.
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.14
Pepsico (NYSE) — 82.63
May 19
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 89.52
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.49
2:52
a.m.,
Bridle
Road,
difficulty breathing; 3:55 a.m.,
Big Lots (NYSE) — 38.78
Rockwell (NYSE) — 90.69
unknown,
abdominal
pain;
7:20 a.m., Broadway Ct., pain
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.37
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 16.25
general; 9:36 a.m., Rose Hill Road, difficulty breathing;
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 83.95
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.38
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.01
9:51 a.m., Cotterill Road, difficulty breathing; 12:53 p.m.,
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 59.79
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.11
Ohio 7, fall; 3:49 p.m., Gibson Road, difficulty breathing;
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.39
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 40.43
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 6.06
10:38 p.m., Water Street, burns.
Collins (NYSE) — 66.76
WesBanco (NYSE) — 25.51
May 20
DuPont (NYSE) — 56.38
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.19
1:14 p.m., Ohio 248, police call; 4:33 p.m., Broadway
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.29
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.66
Ct., high temperature; 5:41 p.m., Ohio 124, difficulty
ET closing quotes of transactions
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 59.19
breathing; 6:57 p.m., Ohio 124, difficulty breathing; 8:31
for
May
21,
2013,
provided
by
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 53.02
p.m., East Memorial Drive, chest pain; 9:47 p.m., Ohio
Edward
Jones
financial
advisors
Kroger (NYSE) — 34.83
143, chest pain; 10:07 p.m., Ohio 124, head injury.
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 51.95

able for rent to anyone who
might want to sell “goodies.” The fire department
contacts are Rexie Cheadle
at 740-591-6086 for Columbia, and Dan or Rhea Lantz
at 740-742-2819 for Scipio.
Dave or Paula Carr can be
contacted at 740-742-2819
for more information or for
rental spaces.
Immunization Clinics
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct a
childhood immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at the
office located at 112 East
Memorial Drive.
ATHENS — The Ohio
University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-HCOM), Community
Health Programs offers free
immunizations through the
Childhood Immunization
Clinic every Thursday. Created in 1994, CHIP strives
to keep children in the region healthy by providing
free or low-cost immunizations to protect against
preventable diseases such
as polio, rubella, meningitis
and mumps. Free services
are available to uninsured,
underinsured and Medicaideligible children up to 19
years old. For additional information, or to make an appointment, call (800) 8442654 or (740) 593-2432.
Ohio River River Sweep
REEDSVILLE
—The
Ohio River River Sweep at
Reedsville will be held on
Friday, June 14, from 6 to 8
p.m. at Forked Run. There
will be free t-shirts, pizza,
chicken dinners, and beverages, according to Todd
Bissell who can be contacted at 740-444-1388.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY —

Ohio 143 (located just 0.25
miles south of State Farm
Road) will be reduced to one
lane to allow for a bridge replacement project. During
construction there will be a
10’ width restriction. Traffic
will be maintained with a
portable traffic light. Weather permitting, both lanes of
Ohio 143 will be open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.
Free Diabetic Clinic
POMEROY — A diabetes education and support
group will be held the last
Tuesday of each month
from 5:30-6:30 p.m. at
the therapy gym at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Road. For more information call Frank Bibbee,
Referral Manager at (740)
992-6606.
ATHENS — The Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM), Community Health Programs
offers a free diabetes clinic on the second Tuesday
of every month. Patients
at the Diabetes Clinic
are treated by physicians
specializing in diabetes,
diabetic
nutritionists
and diabetic nurse educators. Patients receive
two follow-up visits annually with a diabetic
educator and nutritionist. All services are free
to those who qualify. For
additional information, or
to make an appointment,
call (800) 844-2654 or
(740) 593-2432.

For The Record

Local stocks

Norfolk So (NYSE) — 79.98
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.98
BBT (NYSE) — 32.72

441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Wednesday: Showers
and thunderstorms likely,
mainly after 1 p.m. Partly
sunny, with a high near
85. Light southwest wind
increasing to 8 to 13 mph
in the morning. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter
of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms.
Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
61. Southwest wind 7 to
11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter
of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms before 2pm, then
showers likely and possibly
To Everyone Who
Made My 95th
Birthday Special
Thank You!

Pauline Cunningham

a thunderstorm between
2pm and 4pm, then showers and thunderstorms
likely after 4pm. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near
75. Southwest wind 8 to
11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New
rainfall amounts of less
than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday Night: Showers and thunderstorms
likely before 11pm, then a
chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
51. Chance of precipitation
is 60 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than
a tenth of an inch, except
higher amounts possible in
thunderstorms.
Friday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 70.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around 47.
Saturday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 75.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around 51.
Sunday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 79.
Sunday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 56.
Memorial Day: Mostly
cloudy, with a high near 78.

Land Transfers
POMEROY — The Meigs County Recorder’s Office
recently recorded the following land transfers: Anastasios Polis, Kelley Jean Grueser to Karen S. Bontrager,
Robert N. Skinner, deed, Pomeroy Village; Lula F. Harris,
James E. Harris to Roger L. Manley Sr., Connie M. Manley, Roger L. Manley Sr. Trust Agreement, deed, Middleport Village; Jay Anthony Blackwood, Christy Dawn
Blackwood to Jay Anthony Blackwood, Christy Dawn
Blackwood, deed, Orange; Jill L. Holter to Daniel Gheen,
Randi Gheen, deed, Meigs; Tara Gillian to Jammi Gillian,
deed, Olive; Adrian Lowell McCoy, deceased, Adrian L.
McCoy, deceased, to Linda E. McCoy, affidavit, Lebanon;
Gertrude Blanche Edwards, deceased, tp Joseph Edwards
Sr., Betty Edwards, deed, Salisbury; Gertrude Blanche Edwards, deceased, to Joseph Edwards Sr., Betty Edwards,
deed, Salisbury; George Cozart, Sylvia M. Cozart, David E.
Cozart to George Cozart, David Cozart, deed, Pomeroy Village; Home National Bank to Clifford S. Thomas III, Bree
S. Thomas, deed, Syracuse; Ernest M. Cale Jr., Jacqueline
A. Radford, Jacwueline A. Cale to Jeffrey S. Needs, Sandra
L. Needs, deed, Chester; Village of Racine to Meigs County
Community Improvement Corporation, deed, Racine Village; Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation
to Sycamore Way LLC, deed, Racine Village;
Gladys L. Cumings to Rex F. Cumings, Jeneele Herlehy,
deed, Salisbury; Eloise Morris, Eloise Watkins, Meda Eloise Watkins to Susann A. Knight, deed, Chester; Joyce Ash
to Jack B. Levy, Linda L. Levy, deed, Bedford; Patty L.
Powell, Delbert D. Powell to Joshua A. Barringer, deed,
Olive; James Michael Smith, deceased, to Amanda Maynard, affidavit, Olive; Marilyn Bobo to Carolyn Smart,
judgement entry, Columbia; Rick E. Lunsford, Rickey E.
Lunsford, Kimberly S. Lunford to Rick E. Lunsford, Rickey
E. Lunsford, Kimberly S. Lunsford, deed, Letart;
James Everett Pape, deceased, James E. Pape, deceased, to Judy A. Pape, affidavit, Syracuse Village; Lynn
J. Ramage to Nicole M. Ramage, deed, Salisbury; Marlin
Eugene Goff, deceased, to Jason Wayne Goff, Ricky Eugene Goff, Vicki Marie Goff, certificate of transfer, Salem;
Gloria K. King to Nick A. King, Jared King, deed, Bedford; Gary E. Wisor to Penny L. Wisor, deed, Columbia;
John W. Dean, Dean Revocable Living Trust, Belinda K.
Dean to Roger E. Swartz, Marlene M. Swartz, easement,
Bedford; William Kenneth Cogar Sr., William K. Cogar
Sr., Shirley A. Cogar to William Kenneth Cogar Sr., Shirley A. Cogar, deed, Sutton;
Dallas Gene DeBord, deceased, to Jannice Marie
DeBord, affidavit, Scipio; Claudia Hale, deceased, to

Claude Lester Hale, Claude L. Hale, affidavit, Salem;
Vincent Coolidge Davis, deceased, Vincent C. Davis, deceased, to Virginia M. Davis, affidavit, Lebanon; Vincent
Coolidge Davis, deceased, Vincent C. Davis, deceased, to
Virginia M. Davis, affidavit, Lebanon; Transportation Alliance to Home Opportunity LLC, deed, Middleport Village;
Margaret Mae Yost, deceased, to Charles E. Yost, Sutton;
Roscoe Mills to Jospeh P. Manuel, Ashlie N. Manuel,
deed, Sutton; Swanhilda A. Burgoon to David L. Burgoon,
Brenda S. Burgoon, deed, Salem; Craig C. Foley, Ruth S.
Foley to Monty L. Hannah, deed, Village of Martinsville;
John R. Vacca, Mary E. Vacca to John R. Vacca, Mary E.
Vacca, deed, Chester; William Richard Tipton Jr. to Keith
E. Searls, Carolyn J. Searls, deed, Middleport Village; David A. Brickles, Edith Brickles, Danny A. Brickles, Peggy
Brickles, Duane K. Brickles, Laura Brickles, Anthony
Pallone, Mary K. Pallone, David M. Brickles to David M.
Brickles, Danny A. Brickles, Duane K. Brickles, Mary K.
Pallone, Dale F. Brickles, deed, Bedford;
Kelly R. McClure, Kelly R. Roush to Anthony R. Roush,
Kelly R. Roush, deed, Middleport Village; Farmers Bank
and Savings Company to Brittany D. Preast, deed, Salisbury; Tuppers Plains Chester Water District to Tuppers
Plains Chester Water District, right of way, Sutton;
Tuppers Plains Chester Water District to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, right of way, Orange; Tuppers
Plains Chester Water District to Tuppers Plains Chester Water District, right of way, Sutton; Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District to Tuppers Plains Chester Water
District, right of way, Orange;
Harry Cunningham, deceased, Harry James Cunningham, deceased, to Brenda Sue Cunningham, affidavit, Chester; Brenda Sue Cunningham to Paula
Brown, Gregory Cunningham, deed, Chester; Linda D.
Darnell, Paul M. Darnell to Jeffrey S. Darnell, Tonya
R. Darnell, deed, Salisbury; Paul M. Darnell, Linda D.
Darnell to Jeffrey S. Darnell, Tonya R. Darnell, agreement, Meigs; Jerry N. Arnold, Peggy McCallum Arnold, Lorena V. Arnold to Roland E. Goodwin, Sherry
S. Goodwin, deed, Salisbury;Cathy Lamar, Doanld
Lamar to Steve Mason, Helen Gray, deed, Laebanon;
James E. Wingrove to Rickie L. Hollon Jr. Gail M. Hollon, deed, Orange; Paula Ann Rife, deceased, to Tim
Kauff, Sherri Tobin, Mary Tobin, Paul Kauff, Kenneth
Rife, Joseph Rife, certificate of transfer, Rutland;
D. Lee Richards, Christina Wood to Viki Brown, deed,
Middleport; Victor C. Young III, Katherine M. Young,
Brian C. Young, Jennifer R. Young, Victor C. Young IV to
Victor C. Young III, Brian C. Young, deed, Pomeroy Village/Salisbury; Tiffany R. Woodyard, Timothy L. Woodyard to Mary E. Dumouchelle, Joel Eugene Dumouchelle,
deed, Columbia; Ruth B. Frank to Anna L. Norman, deed,
Sutton/Racine; Anna L. Norman to Ruth B. Frank, deed,
Racine; Henry Land Co. LLC to Daniel H. Fulk, deed,
Salem; Daniel Henry Fulk, Carolyn Sue Fulk to Andrew
Iceman, deed, Salem;
Lula F. Harris to Roger L. Manley Sr., Connie M.
Manley, Roger L. Manley Sr. Trust, deed, Middleport
Village; John A. Brandewie, John A. Brandewie Trust
to Brandewie Rental Incorporated, deed, Rutland; Joy
Lyne Hawthorne, Darrell D. Hawthorne to Joy Lyne
Hawthorne, Darrell D. Hawthorne, deed, Orange; Harley
E. Johnson, Kathryn A. Johnson, Kathryn S. Johnson to
Justin M. Holley, deed, Salisbury; Shelia Cossin, Shelia
Ice, Newton E. Ice Jr. to Newton Ice Jr., Shelia Ice, deed,
Olive; Marion D. Speelman, deceased, to Celia A. Speelman, affidavit, Olive; Joseph P. Smith, deceased, to Racquel J. Smith, certificate of transfer, Middleport Village;
Carolyn J. Searls, Carolyn Searls to Keith E. Searls,
deed, Salisbury; Edna M. Nance, Edna M. Magneson,
David Howard Magneson to David L. Nance, deed,
Sutton; David M. Brickles, Edith A. Brickles to Derrick Jackson, deed, Letart; Patricia Lousie Noel to
Wells Fargo Bank, deed, Salisbury; Debra L. Jenkins to
George M. Jenkins, deed, Salisbury; James Satterfield,
Majorie A. Satterfield to Marvin Wayne Satterfield,
Shelly D. Satterfield, deed, Sutton.

�Wednesday, May 22, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

Arias asks jury for life
term; deliberations begin
PHOENIX (AP) —
Jodi Arias begged jurors
Tuesday to give her life in
prison, saying she “lacked
perspective” when she told
a local reporter in an interview that she preferred
execution to spending the
rest of her days in jail.
Standing confidently but
at times her voice breaking, Arias told the same
eight men and four women
who found her guilty of
first-degree murder that
she planned to use her time
in prison to bring about
positive changes, including donating her hair to be
made into wigs for cancer
victims, helping establish
prison recycling programs
and designing T-shirts that
would raise money for victims of domestic abuse.
She also said she could
run book clubs and teach
classes to prisoners to
“stimulate conversations of
a higher nature.”
Arias became emotional
as she played a slideshow
of pictures from her photo
album for the jury. The
images included family
portraits, pictures of her
and friends and boyfriends
and young relatives she has
met only from behind bars.
Arias concluded her
statement by pleading
that jurors not give her the
death penalty for the sake
of her family.
“I’m asking you to
please, please don’t do
that to them. I’ve already
hurt them so badly, along
with so many other people,” she said. “I want
everyone’s healing to begin, and I want everyone’s
pain to stop.”
Arias admitted killing
boyfriend Travis Alexander
and said it was the “worst
thing” she had ever done.
But she stuck to her story
that the brutal attack —
which included stabbing
and slashing Alexander
nearly 30 times, shooting
him in the head and nearly
decapitating him — was
her defense against abuse.
“To this day, I can
hardly believe I was capable of such violence.
But I know that I was,”
she said. “And for that,
I’m going to be sorry for
the rest of my life.”
Her testimony came a
day after her attorneys
asked to be removed from
the case, saying the fivemonth trial had become a
witch hunt that prompted
death threats against a

key witness in the penalty
phase. They also argued
for a mistrial. The judge
denied both requests.
Arias acknowledged
the pain and suffering
she caused Alexander’s
family, and said she
hoped her conviction
brought them peace.
“I loved Travis, and I
looked up to him,” Arias
said. “At one point, he
was the world to me. This
is the worst mistake of my
life. It’s the worst thing
I’ve ever done.”
She said she considered
suicide after Alexander’s
death but didn’t kill herself
because of her love for her
own family.
Arias said she regretted
that details of her sex life
with Alexander came out
during the trial, and described a recorded phone
sex call played in open
court as “that awful tape.”
“It’s never been my intention to throw mud on
Travis’ name,” she said,
adding she had hoped to
reach a deal with prosecutors before the case ever
went to trial.
“I was willing to go
quietly into the night,”
Arias said.
The jury paid close attention to Arias as she spoke,
their gaze turning to the
large screen behind her as
she ticked through family
photos and explained the
stories behind each image.
Arias retained her composure throughout much
of her statement, pausing
occasionally as she apparently cried, but no tears
were visible.
Alexander’s
family
showed little emotion as
Arias’ mother, father and
sister looked on from the
other side of the gallery
and cried.
After Arias finished
speaking, the judge told
jurors they can consider
a handful of factors when
deciding her sentence,
including assertions from
the defense that Arias is
a good friend and a talented artist. Arias displayed her drawings and
paintings for the jury
during her slideshow.
Judge Sherry Stephens
also explained to jurors
that their finding would be
final, emphasizing the fact
that Arias’ life is literally in
their hands.
“You will determine
whether the defendant will
be sentenced to life in pris-

on or death,” Stephens told
the panel. “Your decision is
not a recommendation.”
The jury heard closing
arguments Tuesday afternoon, with defense attorney Jennifer Willmott
citing Arias’ mental health
problems and lack of a
criminal record among the
reasons to spare her life.
“Having borderline personality disorder is not an
excuse for what she did to
Travis Alexander,” Willmott told the jury. It is a
reason “that you have to
be merciful.”
Prosecutor Juan Martinez told jurors that despite
Arias’ claims, there were
no factors in the case that
would warrant a sentence
other than death.
He implored them to
look at the “whole panorama” of the case, not
just Arias’ statement Tuesday. And he asked them to
“do the right thing, even
though it may be difficult.”
After closing arguments,
the jury was sent to begin
deliberating Arias’ fate.
Arias initially claimed
she knew nothing about
Alexander’s June 2008 killing at his suburban Phoenix home. She then blamed
masked intruders before
eventually arguing self-defense. Prosecutors contend
she killed Alexander in a
jealous rage because he
wanted to end their relationship and go to Mexico
with another woman.
Arias’ attorneys also
tried without success to
withdraw from the case
after Arias gave her postconviction TV interview.
“Longevity runs in my
family, and I don’t want to
spend the rest of my natural life in one place,” a visibly shaken Arias told Fox
affiliate KSAZ from a holding cell inside the courthouse. “I believe death is
the ultimate freedom, and
I’d rather have my freedom
as soon as I can get it.”
Arias
directly
addressed those comments
Tuesday, telling jurors
she wanted to live.
“Though I meant it, I
lacked perspective. To me
life in prison was the most
unappealing outcome. …
But as I stand here now, I
cannot in good conscience
ask you to sentence me to
death because of them,”
she said, pointing to her
family members.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Teachers credited with
saving students in Okla.
MOORE, Okla. (AP) — The
principal’s voice came on over the
intercom at Plaza Towers Elementary School: A severe storm was approaching and students were to go to
the cafeteria and wait for their parents to pick them up.
But before all of the youngsters
could get there, the tornado alarm
sounded.
The plan changed quickly.
“All the teachers started screaming into the room and saying, ‘Get
into the hallway! We don’t want
you to die!’ and stuff like that,” said
sixth-grader Phaedra Dunn. “We
just took off running.”
In the moments that followed,
some of the children at Plaza Towers Elementary would, in fact, die. At
least seven were killed by the twister
Monday afternoon. Others would
crawl out of the rubble, bloodied and
bruised, utterly terrified.
The tornado that devastated this
Oklahoma City suburb of 56,000
people destroyed Plaza Towers and
also slammed Briarwood Elementary, where all the children appear to
have survived. Students and parents
recounted stories Tuesday of brave
teachers who sheltered their pupils,
in some cases by herding them into
a closet and a restroom amid the
fear and panic.
After the tornado alarm went off,
students at Plaza Towers scrambled
into the halls. But the halls — some
of which were within the view of windows — did not appear safe enough.
Sixth-grader Antonio Clark said
a teacher took him and as many
other youngsters as possible and
shoved them into the three-stall
boys’ bathroom.
“We were all piled in on each other,”
the 12-year-old said. Another teacher
wrapped her arms around two students and held Antonio’s hand.
Twenty seconds later he heard a
roar that sounded like a stampede of
elephants. His ears popped.
Then it all stopped almost as sud-

denly as it started. Crouched down,
his backpack over his head, Antonio
looked up. The skylight and the ceiling were gone, and he was staring up
into a cloud filled with debris.
Antonio and a friend were among
the first to stand up. They climbed
over debris where their classroom
had been just moments earlier. Students and teachers were struggling
to free themselves from under the
bricks, wooden beams and insulation. Some people had bleeding head
wounds; blood covered one side of
someone’s eyeglasses, Antonio said.
“Everybody was crying,” Antonio
said. “I was crying because I didn’t
know if my family was OK.”
Then Antonio saw his father ride
up on a mountain bike, yelling his
son’s name.
Phaedra survived, too. Her mother rushed to the school just moments before the tornado hit, covered Phaedra’s head with a blanket
to protect her from hail and ushered
her out the door. Phaedra’s 10-yearold sister, Jenna, didn’t want to
budge from the school.
The principal “grabbed her backpack, put it over her head and literally
said, ‘You’re mom’s going to open the
door. Get out. You’re safer with your
mom,’ and pushed her out the door,”
said Amy Sharp, the girls’ mother.
At Briarwood Elementary, the students also went into the halls. But a
third-grade teacher didn’t think it
looked safe, so she herded some of
the children into a closet, said David Wheeler, one of the fathers who
tried to rush to the school after the
tornado hit.
The teacher shielded Wheeler’s
8-year-old son, Gabriel, with her arms
and held him down as the tornado
collapsed the school roof and starting
lifting students upward with a pull so
strong that it literally sucked glasses
off kids’ faces, Wheeler said.
“She saved their lives by putting
them in a closet and holding their
heads down,” Wheeler said.

Face-chewing victim recovering
MIAMI (AP) — A homeless man
whose face was mostly chewed off in a
bizarre attack last year appeared Tuesday
to be mostly at peace with his disfigurement, strumming a guitar, making jokes
and thanking people for their donations to
help pay for his care.
Ronald Poppo doesn’t like to leave his
hospital room, though, and he won’t allow
anyone to visit him, other than his doctors
and nurses. “My face,” he says.
Poppo lost his left eye, his nose and
most of the surrounding skin when a naked man attacked him for no reason alongside a Miami highway a year ago.
In a video posted online Tuesday by the
hospital caring for him, his left eye socket
is a hollow shadow, his blinded right eye
is covered by a skin graft and his nose is
reduced to just the nostrils. Still, Poppo
joked with his nurses and, though he
wears a baseball cap, leaves his face uncovered to address the camera.
“People in my predicament need to be
helped out, and I’m sure there’s other
people also that have the same type of
predicament. I thank the outpouring of
people in the community, I’ll always be
grateful for that,” Poppo said in the brief
video, which was shot recently.
He spent nearly a month in the hospital
after the attack, before moving to a longterm care facility. His doctors at Jackson
Memorial Hospital and the University of
Miami Miller School of Medicine praised
Poppo for his resilience and said he’s satisfied with the surgeries and skin grafts that
have closed his wounds.
Poppo could still use his own tissues
or prosthetics to replace his nose or
eye, but he is not interested in more facial reconstruction.
“There’s still work that can be done, but
he’s more than happy with how he is now,
and he’s quite grateful,” said Dr. Wrood
Kassira, a plastic surgeon.
A facial transplant wouldn’t be necessary, since Poppo didn’t lose any functions other than his vision.
“To put him through a lifetime of immunosuppression is not something he nor us
think is in his best interest,” Kassira said.

A Miami police officer shot and killed
Poppo’s attacker, Rudy Eugene. It’s still
not clear provoked Eugene. Callers reported seeing a naked Eugene swinging from
a light pole minutes before the attack. Lab
tests found only marijuana in his system.
Ruth Charles, Eugene’s mother, declined comment.
“To tell you the truth, I don’t feel like
going back to this thing again,” she
said. “I’m just trying to recover from
what happened.”
Poppo doesn’t blame Eugene for what
happened, said Adolfa Sigue, nurse manager at the Jackson Memorial Perdue
Medical Center, where he lives.
“The only thing that he always tells me is
that, ‘I’m sure that that man had a bad day
that day,’” Sigue said.
Poppo, 66, still requires daily medical
care for his wounds, and he’s working with
occupational therapists and specialists
from the Miami Lighthouse for the Blind
to learn how to adjust to his blindness. He
can dress himself and is learning again to
play the guitar, an instrument he had not
picked up for 40 years.
He’s gained 50 pounds, and though his
caretakers would like to see him exercise
more, he so far refuses to leave the facility
unless he’s going to the hospital to see his
doctors, said Patricia Copalko, a certified
nursing assistant at the medical center.
He also hasn’t allowed any visitors to
see him, other than his doctors, nurses
and therapists. Sigue said Poppo doesn’t
answer the telephone in his room and
hasn’t wanted to talk with relatives other
than a sister, who calls the nurse’s cellphone to get through.
“He doesn’t wander out of his room very
often,” Copalko said, adding, “He needs to
get out and he has refused. But also, I get
it. He says, ‘My face.’”
Poppo’s caretakers describe him as a
charming, cooperative patient who enjoys
listening to Miami Heat basketball games
on the radio. He can stay at the medical
center indefinitely. His care is covered by
Medicaid, and a Jackson Memorial Foundation fund has raised $100,000 for his
medical expenses.

60412545

�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Wednesday, May 22, 2013

After a decade, global
A Memorial Day remembrance
AIDS program looks ahead
Dr. Paul Kengor

Jim Abrams

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The
decade-old law that transformed the battle against
HIV and AIDS in developing countries is at a crossroads. The dream of future
generations freed from epidemic is running up against
an era of economic recovery
and harsh budget cuts.
The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief grew out of an unlikely
partnership between President George W. Bush and
lawmakers led by the Congressional Black Caucus.
It has come to represent
what Washington can do
when it puts politics aside
— and what America can
do to make the world a
better place.
President
Barack
Obama, speaking at the
recent dedication of Bush’s
presidential library, praised
the compassion Bush
showed in “helping to save
millions of lives and reminding people in some of
the poorest corners of the
globe that America cares.”
House Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi said of Bush
in a statement that “while
many events may distinguish his presidency, his
devotion to combatting the
scourge of HIV/AIDS will
certainly define his legacy.”
The AIDS program’s
future, however, is uncertain. Obama has upped
the stakes, speaking in his
State of the Union address
this year of “realizing the
promise of an AIDS-free
generation.” But funding
for the relief plan’s bilateral
efforts has dipped in recent
years and it’s doubtful that
Congress, in its current
budget-cutting mood, will
reverse that trend when the

current five-year program
expires later this year.
The AIDS program is
also trying to find a balance between its goals
of reaching more people
with its prevention and
treatment programs and
turning over more responsibility to the host nations
where it operates.
“This has been an incredible achievement,” said Rep.
Barbara Lee, D-Calif., a senior Congressional Black
Caucus member who played
major roles both in passing
the original 2003 act and its
2008 renewal that significantly increased funding for
AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis treatment in Africa and
other areas of the developing world. She spoke of the
more than 5 million people
now receiving life-saving
antiretroviral treatment and
11 million pregnant women
who received HIV testing
and counseling last year.
“But I’m worried that
with any type of levelfunding or cuts we’ll go
backward,” she said.
The 2008 act more than
tripled funding from the
2003 measure, approving
$48 billion over five years
for bilateral and global
AIDS programs, malaria
and tuberculosis. It also
ended U.S. policy making
it almost impossible for
HIV-positive people to get
visas to enter the country.
The AIDS program was
the largest commitment
ever by a nation to combat
a single disease internationally. According to the U.N.’s
UNAIDS and the Kaiser
Family Foundation, in 2011
the United States provided
nearly 60 percent of all international AIDS assistance.
A decade ago, almost no
one in sub-Saharan Africa
was receiving antiretrovi-

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ral treatment. By 2008, the
AIDS program had boosted that number to 1.7 million. As of last year it was
5.1 million.
The State Department
says the program last year
also helped provide treatment to some 750,000
HIV-positive
pregnant
women, allowing about
230,000 infants to be born
HIV-free, supported 2 million male circumcisions
and directly supported
HIV testing and counseling for 46.5 million.
“This is a remarkable story that the American people
should know about,” Kimberly Scott of the Institute
of Medicine, which recently
completed an evaluation of
the AIDS program, said at
a forum sponsored by the
Kaiser Family Foundation
and the CSIS Global Health
Policy Center.
According to UNAIDS,
the number of people living with HIV has leveled
off, standing at about 34
million at the end of 2011.
New infections that year
reached 2.5 million, down
20 percent from 2001.
AIDS-related deaths were
1.7 million, down from 2.3
million in 2005.
Jennifer Kates, director
of global health and HIV
policy at Kaiser, said most
countries where the program operates have yet to
reach the “tipping point,”
where new infections occurring in a year are less
than the increase in people
receiving treatment. Among
the success stories were
Ethiopia, where the 40,000
going on treatment in 2011
was almost four times the
new infections. Still with a
long way to go was Nigeria,
which that year had 270,000
new HIV infections and a
57,000 increase in those getting treatment.

Memorial Day is a wonderful constant.
Every year, it never ceases to touch me.
My family attends an annual parade in
Mercer, Pennsylvania. It’s terrific—total
old-school. The flags, the courthouse, the
kids, the snow-cone stand, the marching
bands, and, most of all, the troops from
different wars—that is, the survivors who
remain with us.
Speaking of whom, Memorial Day always brings another constant, a sad one:
each new Memorial Day brings less World
War II veterans. They are leaving us at
a rapid clip. Anyone who entered World
War II at age 18 in 1945—the final stretch
when someone could have joined the war
effort—would now be 86 years old. Anyone who entered the war at age 18 in 1941
is 90. There aren’t as many now as there
were 10 years ago, and 10 years from now
… well, do the math.
A colleague of mine was reminded of
this universal reality just a few weeks
ago. His name is Glenn Marsch. He
teaches with me at Grove City College
in Grove City, Pennsylvania. As a professor of physics, Glenn understands
something about constants and universal laws. This Memorial Day will be his
first without the constant of his father.
He lost his dad in March.
Glenn’s dad became a soldier in October 1944, shipping off to the Pacific. He
was an army construction engineer, often
a dangerous job. He had fellow troops—
friends of his—who were killed. He personally incurred a serious wartime injury.
Because he didn’t talk about the injury (or
the war), Glenn didn’t learn the full extent
of it until the funeral. “My oldest brother
revealed that Dad had been burned over
much of his body,” says Glenn. “He recovered and went back to active duty, but I
never saw him on a beach without a shirt
and long shorts. Upon smelling something
disgusting, he would say, ‘smells like human flesh burning.’”
Think about that: Glenn never caught
his dad without a shirt and pants or long
shorts—not even at the beach in the summer. His father stoically concealed his
wounds. Never talked about them.
Glenn’s dad instead quietly came home
from combat and served his country in another way—as a good, God-fearing American who held a job, loved his wife, raised
his kids, and made a better culture and
country. And there were millions like him.
Another was John Shrode. Born in Rock-

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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

port, Indiana, August 11, 1925, just four
days after the birth of the girl (Martha) he
would marry and take care of for 67 years,
John landed on Omaha Beach at 7:35 a.m.
on June 6, 1944—D-Day. He was literally
among the first Allied troops to storm the
beaches of Normandy. The French government awarded him the Croix de Guerre
for rescuing France from the Nazis.
“He will forever be my hero,” says his
daughter-in-law, Kendra Shrode. Kendra’s husband, who was John’s first-born
child, died in 1989 without ever really
knowing about John’s service. “He had
not yet reached the point of talking
about it,” remembers Kendra. “With
my children he did, and I am so grateful
they had that opportunity.”
John’s life wasn’t easy. He grew up in
a broken home, had only an eighth-grade
education, and lost a child. Later in life,
he developed three types of cancer, atop
other illnesses. He struggled to take care
of his wife as she came down with Alzheimer’s. Nonetheless, says Kendra, “He
was the most well-read ‘uneducated’ man
I have ever known. And his life code was
integrity…. The strength of this man lives
on in his children and grandchildren.”
A dairy and grain farmer, John went
on to work for Caterpillar Tractor Company for 31 years. He loved his wife,
raised his kids, and made a better culture and country.
For Kendra and the many Shrode children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren, this will be a Memorial Day without
“Papa John.” John Denzil Shrode, 8th Platoon, Company C, 6th Naval Beach Battalion, died November 5, 2011.
John’s final resting place is quintessentially American. It sits aside a tombstone awaiting his beloved wife and
across from the baseball field in smalltown America where he played and
coached his children for years.
“As I stood looking at the flag tributes
and glanced over at the fields,” says Kendra of a recent visit to John’s grave, “I realized he will be forever with us all.”
For all of those veterans who didn’t
make it to Memorial Day this year, I say
thank you. You remain constants—forever
with us all.
Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of political science at Grove
City College, executive director of The Center for Vision &amp; Values, and author of the book, “The Communist: Frank Marshall Davis, The Untold Story of Barack
Obama’s Mentor.” His other books include “The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism” and
“Dupes: How America’s Adversaries Have Manipulated
Progressives for a Century.”

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
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Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
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Sammy M. Lopez
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slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Wednesday, May 22, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

Death Notices
Barnett

Levi Curtis Barnett, infant son of Paul and Jill
Barnett of West Columbia,
W.Va., was born Sunday,
May 19, 2013 at CAMC
Women and Children’s
Hospital in Charleston,
W.Va. Shortly after birth
our little angel passed
peacefully into the arms of
Jesus.
Graveside services will
be held at the Hoffman
Cemetery, Friday, May 24
at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers
memorial donations may
be sent to Anderson Funeral Home, PO Box 270,
New Haven, WV.

Hoffman

Donna

J.

Hoffman

(nee Straight), died May
19,2013.
A memorial service
will be held at the familyowned Ruck Towson Funeral Home,Inc. 1050 York
Rd. (beltway exit 26) on
Saturday at 1 p.m. Interment will be private.

Morrow

Betty Jane (Forbus)
Mitchell Morrow, 82, of
Lafayette, Louisiana and
formerly of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., died Monday, May
20, 2013 at Cornerstone
Village in Lafayette.
A funeral service will
be held at 2 p.m., Saturday, May 25, 2013 at the
Trinity United Methodist
Church in Point Pleasant

with Pastor Jim Kelly officiating. Burial will follow
at Suncrest Cemetery in
Point Pleasant. Visitations
will be held from 6-8 p.m.,
Friday, and Saturday from
10:00-11:30 a.m. at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home.

Raike

Luella “Bill” Raike, 94,
of Gallipolis, died Tuesday
morning, May 21, 2013, at
Abbyshire Place.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Saturday, May 25,
2013, at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
Burial will follow in Swan
Creek Cemetery. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m. on
Friday at the funeral home.

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Alan Holter and Kila Frank, pictured, display wreaths at the Civil War monument for their respective patriotic organizations. Dale Colburn who represented the Military Order of the Loyal
Legion of the United States, also placed a wreath.

Observance
From Page 1
those who fought alive.”
Jean Hilton emceed the
program opening with
a musical salute to the
military. Kila Frank of the
Daniel McCook Circle
1804 of the Ladies of the
Grand Army of the Republic read “The Voice of
Memorial Day,” a story of
the life and death of a soldier fighting for freedom
and his wish to be remembered not as a hero but as a
champion of freedom and

democracy for the greatest
nation on earth. He called
for Americans to never
forget the sacrifices made
and to do as so many others have “always defend
democracy.” The material
was written by Charles E.
Morris of Oklahoma who
served in Vietnam.
Wreaths were placed at
the monument by Frank,
Alan Holter of BrooksGrant Camp of the Sons of
Union Soldiers , and Dale
Colburn of the Military
Order of the Loyal Legion

of the United States. Hilton related a story of Irene
Triplett, the elderly wife of
a Civil War veteran who,
she said, still receives a
government pension for
his service.
Under the leadership
of the visiting reenactors,
the group sang the Battle
Hymn of the Republic to
close the Memorial Day
service.
A luncheon at the Meigs
County Historical Society
was served following the
observance.

Grants
From Page 1
ing projects forward can pursue this funding through the 18th Public Works District.
Consideration for funding is not
made on a per capita basis, it was reported, nor does any particular community have an entitlement to the
funds, it was reported in a new release
on the program.

Any agency with a qualifying project interested in making application
is encouraged to be represented at the
training session.
RSVP by Friday, May 31, to Jenny Myers at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District by phone at
(740) 376-1026 of intent to attend. For
more information on the SCIP program,
contact Michelle Hyer at (740) 376-1025.

Scholars
From Page 1
Pomeroy, was recently
recognized as an outstanding female student of the
Southeast Region of Ohio
by the Ohio School Boards
Association. She was the
recipient of the Franklin B.
Walter Scholarship Award,
and received the $100,000
Jewell Cutler Scholarship
to Ohio University
At the high school Emma
has been field commander
of the Marauder Marching
Band, president of the Drama Club, treasurer of her
class, a member of the National Honor Society, a two
year letter winner in cross
country, a three year varsity letter winner in track
and field, a member of the
Farmers Bank Junior Board
of Directors, on the prom
committee, and yearbook
staff, a participant at Regional Scholars Leadership
Camp, and involved with
organizations
including
People to People, the Ohio
Association of Student
Councils, and the I Believe
Foundation. She will be attending Ohio University
where she plans to major in
broadcast journalism.
Megan is the daughter
of Bill Dyer of Middleport
and Kathy Dyer of Pomeroy. During her years at
Meigs High School she has
been a part of the marching, concert and pep band,
served on student council

for two years, a member
of the National Honor Society currently serving as
vice president. She has
been involved in MHS
spring musicals, was on
the varsity track and field
team, competed with the
archery team, involved in
hiking and photography
club, and serves as a member of the Farmers Bank
Junior Board of Directors.
Outside of high school
she has been active in
4-H and Grange, plays
with the Big Bend Community Band, and attends
the Bradford Church of
Christ. She is also involved
in the AKC licenses beagle
field trial for many years.
Interested in community
service, Megan has been a
volunteer at the local food
pantry, assisted in local
blood drives, visited the
elderly in nursing homes
and was a student mentor
at Meigs Middle School.
To develop her leadership
skills, she attending the
OASC Leadership Camp
and the Regional Scholars
Leadership Camp. Megan
was selected as a People
to People Student Ambassador for summer 2012
which gave her the privilege of visiting six European countries.
As for plans after high
school, she will be attending Ohio State University
to pursue a bachelor’s degree in radiologic sciences

and therapy. After that she
plans to attend medical
school to obtain a degree
in radiology. She has received an Ohio University
Landgrant scholarship of
over $40,000.
Alyssa, daughter Tom
and Amy Cremeans of
Pomeroy, plans to attend
Alderson-Broaddus College in Phillippi,W. Va.
where she plans to study
special education for kindergarten through sixth
grade with a minor in art.
she has been awarded several scholarships including
one for $48,000 from Alderson-Broaddus Trustees.
In high school she has
played varsity golf for
four years and was a part
of the first girls golf team
at MHS. In that sport she
has received three All TVC
Academic Awards and two
All Conference Honorable
Mention Awards. She has
been a member of the color
guard for the MHS band
for the past two years, and
played clarinet in the concert band two years. She
was one of the organizers
of Animal Rights Club,
participated in school
plays, and currently serves
as secretary of the National
Honor Society. She has volunteered as a food pantry
worker and helped with
the school’s blood drives.
and she was selected as a
regional scholar.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Power of Moore tornado
dwarfs Hiroshima bomb
WASHINGTON (AP) — Everything had to come together just perfectly to create the killer tornado in
Moore, Okla.: wind speed, moisture
in the air, temperature and timing.
And when they did, the awesome energy released over that city dwarfed
the power of the atomic bomb that
leveled Hiroshima.
On Tuesday, the National Weather
Service gave it the top-of-the-scale
rating of EF5 for wind speed and
breadth, and severity of damage.
Wind speeds were estimated at between 200 and 210 mph. The death
count is 24 so far, including at least
nine children. The United States averages about one EF5 a year, but this
was the first in nearly two years.
To get such an uncommon storm
to form is “a bit of a Goldilocks problem,” said Pennsylvania State University meteorology professor Paul
Markowski. “Everything has to be
just right.”
For example, there must be humidity for a tornado to form, but too
much can cut the storm off. The same
goes with the cold air in a downdraft:
Too much can be a storm-killer.
But when the ideal conditions
do occur, watch out. The power of
nature beats out anything man can
create.
“Everything was ready for explosive development yesterday,” said
Colorado State University meteorology professor Russ Schumacher,
who was in Oklahoma launching
airborne devices that measured the
energy, moisture and wind speeds
on Monday. “It all just unleashed on
that one area.”
Several meteorologists contacted
by The Associated Press used real
time measurements, some made by
Schumacher, to calculate the energy
released during the storm’s 40-minute life span. Their estimates ranged
from 8 times to more than 600 times
the power of the Hiroshima bomb,
with more experts at the high end.
Their calculations were based on
energy measured in the air and then
multiplied over the size and duration of the storm.
An EF5 tornado has the most violent winds on Earth, more powerful
than a hurricane. The strongest
winds ever measured were the 302
mph reading, measured by radar,
during the EF5 tornado that struck
Moore on May 3, 1999, according to
Jeff Masters, meteorology director at
the Weather Underground.
Still, when it comes to weather
events, scientists usually know more
about and can better predict hurricanes, winter storms, heat waves and
other big events.
That’s because even though a tornado like the one that struck Moore
was 1.3 miles wide, with a path of 17
miles long, in meteorological terms
it was small, hard to track, rare and
even harder to study. So tornadoes
are still more of a mystery than their
hurricane cousins, even though tropical storms form over ocean areas
where no one is, while this tornado
formed only miles from the very National Weather Service office that
specializes in tornadoes.
“This phenomenon can be so
deadly you would think that something that catastrophic, that severe
would lend itself to understanding,”
said Adam Houston, meteorology
professor at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. “But we’re fighting
the inherent unpredictability of these
small-scale phenomena.”
Unlike hurricanes, which forecasters can fly through in planes and
monitor with buoys and weather stations, usually over a period of days,
tornadoes form quickly and normally
last only a matter of minutes. While
meteorologists and television hosts
chase tornadoes and try to get readings, it’s not usually enough. This
storm lasted 40 minutes — long for
a regular tornado but not too unusual
for such a violent one, said research
meteorologist Harold Brooks at the
National Severe Storms Laboratory
in Norman, Okla.
Still, the conditions needed to
form such a violent and devastating
tornado were there and forecasters
knew it, warning five days in advance that something big could happen, Brooks said.
By Monday morning, forecasters at
the National Weather Center, home
of the storm lab and storm prediction

center, knew “that any storm that
formed in that environment had the
potential to be a strong to violent tornado,” he said.
“This is a pretty classic setup,”
Brooks said.
Tornadoes have two main ingredients: moist energy in the atmosphere
and wind shear. Wind shear is the
difference between wind at high altitudes and wind near the surface. The
more moist energy and the greater
the wind shear, the better the chances for tornadoes.
But just because the conditions are
right doesn’t mean a violent tornado
will form, and scientists still don’t
know why they occur in certain spots
in a storm and not others, and why at
certain times and not others.
On Monday, the moist energy
came up from the Gulf of Mexico, the
wind shear from the jet stream plunging from Canada. “Where they met is
where the Moore storm got started,”
Brooks said.
With the third strong storm hitting Moore in 14 years — and following roughly the same path as an
EF5 that killed 40 people in 1999
and an EF4 that injured 45 others in
2003 — some people are wondering
why Moore?
It’s a combination of geography,
meteorology and lots of bad luck, experts said.
If you look at the climate history of
tornadoes in May, you will see they
cluster in a spot, maybe 100 miles
wide, in central Oklahoma, Houston
said. That’s where the weather conditions of warm, moist air and strong
wind shear needed for tornadoes
combine, in just the right balance.
“Central Oklahoma is a hot spot
and there’s a good reason for it,”
Houston said. “There’s this perfect
combination where the jet stream is
strong, the instability is large and
the typical position for this juxtaposition climatologically is central
Oklahoma.”
And the timing has to be perfect. Earlier in the year, there’s not
enough warm moist air, but the
jet stream is stronger. Later, the
jet stream is weaker but the air is
moister and warmer.
The hot spot is more than just the
city of Moore. Several meteorologists
offer the same explanation for why
that Oklahoma City suburb seemed
to be hit repeatedly by violent tornadoes: Bad luck.
Of the 60 EF5 tornadoes since
1950, Oklahoma and Alabama have
been struck the most, seven times
each. More than half of these topof-the-scale twisters are in just five
states: Oklahoma, Alabama, Texas,
Kansas, and Iowa. Less than 1 percent of all U .S. tornadoes are this
violent — only about 10 a year,
Brooks said.
The United States’ Great Plains
is the “best place on Earth” for the
formation of violent tornadoes because of geography, Markowski said.
You need the low pressure systems
coming down off the Rocky Mountains colliding with the warm moist
unstable air coming north from the
Gulf of Mexico.
Scientists know the key ingredients
that go into a devastating tornado.
But they are struggling to figure out
why they develop in some big storms
and not others. They also are still trying to determine what effects, if any,
global warming has on tornadoes.
The jet stream can shift to cause a
record number of tornadoes — or an
unusually low number of them.
Early research, much of it by
Brooks, predicts that as the world
warms, the moist energy — or instability — will increase, and the U.S.
will have more thunderstorms. But
at the same time, the needed wind
shear — the difference between wind
speed and direction at different altitudes — will likely decrease.
The two factors go in different directions and it’s hard to tell which
will win out. Brooks and others think
that eventually there may be more
thunderstorms and fewer days with
tornadoes, but more tornadoes on
those days when twisters do strike.
“Tornadoes are perhaps the most
difficult things to connect to climate
change of any extreme,” said NASA
climate scientist Tony Del Genio.
“Because we still don’t understand all
the factors required to get a tornado.”

Standoff
From Page 1
threatening Deputy Smith.
No one was injured as part of the standoff which began just after noon on Monday.
Officers with the Athens, Gallia, and Washington County Emergency Response Units,
the Washington County Sheriff and Ohio
State Highway Patrol were on scene throughout the situation to assist local officers.
In addition, Sheriff Wood noted that

Doug Lavender and Bob Byer from Meigs
EMS, the Chester and Bashan Volunteer
Fire Departments and the Ohio Department of Transportation have assisted his
office throughout the incident.
Ohio 248 was closed in both directions
during the standoff.
Charges against Ritchie are pending. It
is unclear at press time when he will be
charged in Meigs County Court.

�The Daily Sentinel

WEDNESDAY,
MAY 22, 2013

Sports

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Blue Angels win SEOAL, Devils take third
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
— The Blue Angels win
the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League for the
first time since 2009.
The Gallia Academy girls
track and field team took
top spot Saturday at Portsmouth High School with
129 points, followed by
Chillicothe with 116, Logan
with 111, Warren with 110
and Jackson with 56. Portsmouth rounded out the six
team field with one point.
The GAHS 4x200m relay team of Breanna West,
Haleigh Caldwell, Taylor
Queen and Abby Wiseman finished first with a
time of 1:51.2, while the
4x100m relay team of
Queen, Andrea Edelmann,
Kathleen Allen and Wise-

man took second (52.2).
The 4x400m relay team of
West, Wiseman, Naomi Sebastian and Hannah Watts
finished second (4:23.2).
Watts took first place in
the 4oom dash with a time
of 59.6 and the 800m run
with a time of 2:21.6, while
taking second in the 100m
dash (13.4). Madison Holley won the 1600m run
with a time of 5:37.6 and
the 3200m run with a time
of 12:54.5. Abby Wiseman
took second in the 200m
dash (27.6), Naomi Sebastian was third in the 800m
run (2:33.2), while Kathleen Allen took third in the
100m hurdles (17.3).
Hannah Loveday finished second in the discus throw (106-9) and the
shotput (35-1.5), while
Breanna West was runnerup in the long jump (15-5).

The Chieftans won the
boys competition with
198 points, followed by
Warren with 128, Gallia Academy with 63.5
and Chillicothe with 56
points. Jackson was fifth
with 40 points, while
Portsmouth rounded out
the field with 37.5 points.
The GAHS 4x100m relay team of Shaylin Logan,
Wade Jarrell, Jacob Click
and Jeremy Wilson finished second with a time
of 45.3, while Click won
the 110m hurdles with a
time of 15.6. Logan Allison
finished third in the high
jump (6-0) and the long
jump (20-6.5), while Wilson was third in the 100m
dash (12.0).
Complete results of the
2013 SEOAL track meet
can be found online at
www.baumspage.com

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Pictured above are members of the 2013 Gallia Academy varsity girls track and field team. Sitting in front, from left, are Sam Morrissey, Breanna West, Taylor Queen, Kathleen Allen, Hannah Watts, Elizabeth Holley, Madelynn Dennison, Brittany Angel and Cassidy Sickels. Sitting
in the second row are Morgan Foster, Haleigh Caldwell, Kylie Angel, Kati Saunders, Maddie Syders, Varna Thayaparan, Rylee Stevens, Madison Holley and Andrea Edelmann. Sitting in third
row are Sydney Rose, Kim Faro, Alexis Combs, Hannah Loveday, Ashley Huffman, Brooke Rider
and Jennifer Loscar. Sitting in back row are GAHS coaches Paul Close, Nate Hall and Todd May.
Absent from the photo were Abby Loveday, Naomi Sebastian and Aliza Warner.

Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Wahama senior Austin Cole slides into second base under
Charleston Catholic second baseman Thad Jameson during the Irish’s 6-2 victory Monday night in the regional
semifinal at Point Pleasant.

Charleston Catholic ends
White Falcons season, 6-2
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The green on Charleston
Catholic’s uniforms might as well be kryptonite.
For the fourth consecutive year the Wahama baseball
team had its season ended by the Irish in the regional
tournament. Monday night the White Falcons fell to
Charleston Catholic by a score of 6-2 in the WVSSAC
Class A regional semifinal.
The Irish (26-9) marked a pair of runs in the top of the
first frame, on two hit and two errors. Three hits, a walk
and two errors led to four more CCHS runs in the top of
the second inning. The White Falcons (18-12) got on the
scoreboard in the sixth inning when sophomore Demitrius
Serevicz doubled home Wyatt Zuspan and Garrett Miller.
The losing pitcher of record was WHS junior Hunter
Bradley, who gave up six runs, three earned, on six hits
and four walks. Bradley struck out five batters in a complete game effort.
Andy Hoyer earned the win for Charleston Catholic
after giving up two runs on five hits and a walk in six
innings. Kiefer Hovorka pitched the seventh inning and
didn’t allow a base runner. Hoyer struck out 10 batters,
while Hovorka fanned two.
The White Falcons were paced by Serevicz with a pair
of doubles, while Zuspan, Miller and Austin Cole each
had a single in the game. Zuspan and Miller both scored a
run, while Serevicz had two runs batted in. Cole stole the
lone base for Wahama.
The Irish were led by Rocco Wilcox and Sam McKown
with two hits, while Hager and Nelson McKown each marked
on hit. Wilcox scored twice, Hovorka, Russell Miller, Conner
Golden and Thad Jameson each scored one run in the game.
Golden stole two bases, while Hovorka swiped one.
The Irish finished with six runs, six hits, two errors and
eight runners left on base, while Wahama had two runs,
five hits, five errors and five runners left on base.
The Irish also defeated Wahama on March 28th in the
capital city by a count of 12-2 and on April 30th in Mason
by a count of 24-3.
Charleston Catholic has now won five consecutive
games, while Wahama had its own five game winning
streak snapped with the loss.
This marks the final game for Wahama seniors Dakota
Sisk Austin Cole, Collin Hill and Louis Mene.

OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, May 22
Baseball
Gallia Academy vs. Waverly at Ohio University, 5
p.m.
Eastern at Southern, 5
p.m.
Track and Field
Division III districts at
Oak Hill, 3 p.m.
Thursday, May 23
Baseball
Meigs vs. Rock Hill at

Paint Stadium, 7 p.m.
Softball
Eastern vs. Leesburg
Fairfield at Minford, 6 p.m.
Saturday, May 25
Softball
Southern vs. Fed HockClay winner at Minford
HS, 11 a.m.
Track and Field
Division III districts at
Oak Hill, 9:30 a.m.
Division II districts at
Oak Hill, 3 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Southern shortstop Colten Walters, left, lunges to apply a tag to Valley junior Ethan Clark-Holbrook (3) during a stolen base attempt in the first inning of Tuesday night’s D-4 district final at V.A. Memorial Stadium in Chillicothe, Ohio.

Tornadoes win
7th straight
district crown
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — Just like clockwork.
The Southern baseball team posted its 14th consecutive district triumph while also earning its seventh
straight regional appearance Monday night following
a 6-1 victory over Lucasville Valley in a Division IV district final at V.A. Memorial Stadium in Ross County.
The top-seeded Tornadoes (24-5) never trailed in
the contest and outhit the second-seeded Indians by
a 10-7 overall margin, as the hosts jumped out to an
early 2-0 lead after one inning of play.
Valley (17-12) countered with a run in the fourth
to cut its deficit in half at 2-1, but SHS plated a run in
the fifth and added three more scores in the sixth to
secure a commanding 6-1 edge through six complete.
Danny Ramthun — who was making his fourth
career start for Southern in a district championship
game — retired the side in order in the seventh, allowing the Tornadoes to earn yet another repeat trip
to Beavers Field in Lancaster.
Ramthun — who worked three innings of relief Southern’s Danny Ramthun, middle, is joined by senior
and got the win in a 10-inning victory over Fairfield teammates Cole Graham, left, and Adam Pape in hoisting
on Saturday — was just as impressive Monday, as the the D-4 Southeast District championship trophy follow-

ing a 6-1 win over Lucasville Valley Tuesday night at V.A.

See CROWN ‌| 9 Memorial Stadium in Chillicothe, Ohio.

Blue Devils beat FUHS, advance to district final
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ATHENS, Ohio — And here the
Blue Devils go again.
The Gallia Academy baseball team
earned its second straight district final
appearance Monday night following an
11-3 clubbing of fifth-seeded Fairfield
Union in a Division II district semifinal
matchup at Bob Wren Stadium on the
campus of Ohio University.
The top-seeded Blue Devils (25-3)
trailed 2-0 after a half-inning of play,
but the hosts rallied with 11 consecutive runs between the second and
fourth frames to secure a comfortable
11-2 cushion through four complete.
The Falcons (14-14) — who were

outhit by an 11-6 overall margin —
mustered a run in the fifth to close
their deficit down to eight, but never came closer the rest of the way.
FUHS also committed all six errors
in the contest.
The Blue Devils — who have never
won a district title in program history — will face third-seeded Waverly
in the D-2 championship game at 5
p.m. Wednesday at Bob Wren Stadium. The Tigers defeated Logan Elm
by a 4-3 margin to secure its place in
the district final.
Chad Burge started the game with
a walk, then Tyler Hill walked and
Zach Bowers singled to load the bases with one out. C.J. Alford bunted
home Burge for a 1-0 edge, then was

issued a bases-loaded walk that plated Hill for a 2-0 Fairfield Union lead
after a half-inning of play.
GAHS made its big charge of the
night in the second frame, as the Devils plated five runs on four hits and
an error. Gustin Graham started the
frame by reaching safely on an error
and later scored on a one-out double
by John Faro, making it a 2-1 deficit.
Cody Russell singled to put runners on the corners, then Bobby
Dunlap singled home Faro to tie the
contest at two. Russell was forced
out at third after Brady Curry hit into
a fielder’s choice for the second out,
by Ty Warnimont slammed a firstSee FINAL ‌| 9

�Wednesday, May 22, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

AP Sports Briefs
Ex-player latest
hire on Ohio State
women’s staff
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Former Buckeyes
co-captain Beth Howe has
been hired as Ohio State’s
director of women’s basketball operations, new
coach Kevin McGuff has
announced.
Howe, a member of the
2004-05 Big Ten championship team, has worked in
the Ohio State ticket office
since January 2009.
The Jackson, Ohio, native graduated from Ohio
State in 2005 with a degree
in human ecology before
earning her Master’s degree in sports administration from Belmont in 2007.
While in Nashville, Tenn.,
she worked with the NFL’s
Tennessee Titans as an internet and publications intern. She also has worked
with the Big Ten Network
as a color analysis for Ohio
State women’s basketball
games since 2010.
McGuff has filled his
staff except for one assistant and a video coordinator.
Klein, Cheek on
McGuff’s Ohio
State women’s staff
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— New Ohio State women’s basketball head coach
Kevin McGuff has announced the hiring of Patrick Klein and Joy Cheek
as assistant coaches.
Klein begins his third
year as an assistant after
working under the fired
Jim Foster. He also served
as an assistant at Illinois
2007-09.
Cheek comes to Ohio
State after spending the
past two seasons as an assistant coach at her alma
mater, Duke. She was one
of two recruiting coordinators for the Blue Devils, in
addition to also overseeing
the perimeter players.
The hiring of Klein and
Cheek leaves one more assistant position open on
McGuff’s staff.

WR Ivan McCartney
returns to West Virginia
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) — Wide receiver
Ivan McCartney is returning to West Virginia’s roster six months after leaving the team.
West Virginia football
spokesman Mike Montoro
on Monday confirmed McCartney’s return.
McCartney left for personal reasons last November after making just nine
catches for 112 yards in his
junior season. McCartney
was third on the team in
2011 with 49 catches for
585 yards.
He quit a week after
freshman wide receiver
Travares Copeland left the
team. Both had struggled
to get playing time behind
Tavon Austin, Stedman
Bailey and J.D. Woods.
Austin and Bailey were
selected in April’s NFL
draft by the St. Louis Rams
while Woods signed a free
agent contract with the
Pittsburgh Steelers, leaving Jordan Thompson as
the Mountaineers’ leading
returning receiver with 13
receptions for 85 yards in
2012.
Other receivers who will
try to make a mark with
West Virginia this fall are
sophomore K.J. Myers, junior-college transfer Kevin
White, redshirt freshman
Devonte Mathis and freshman Daikiel Shorts.
The 6-foot-2 McCartney
was a teammate of former
WVU quarterback Geno
Smith at Miramar (Fla.)
High School. Three quarterbacks will be battling
for Smith’s starting job in
August.
Big 12 delays
baseball tournament
after tornado
OKLAHOMA
CITY
(AP) — The Big 12 is delaying the start of its baseball tournament in Oklahoma City after this week’s
deadly tornado.
The league announced
Tuesday that the tourna-

ment will change from a
double-elimination
format to pool play and start
on Thursday instead of
Wednesday.
Conference spokesman
Bob Burda says Oklahoma
City leaders asked the Big
12 not to cancel the tournament and allow it to show
“the strong Oklahoma spirit and to the resiliency of
the Oklahoma people.”
One pool will feature
regular-season champion
Kansas State, No. 4 seed
Oklahoma, No. 5 seed Baylor and No. 8 seed Texas
Tech. The other will feature second-seeded Oklahoma State, No. 3 seed
West Virginia, No. 6 seed
Kansas and No. 7 seed
TCU. The championship is
Sunday.
Michael Jordan:
Bobcats changing
name to Hornets
CHARLOTTE,
N.C.
(AP) — Bobcats owner
Michael Jordan says he’s
changing his team’s name
to the Charlotte Hornets.
Jordan said at a Tuesday
press conference he has
informed the league of his
decision and is optimistic
the NBA board of governors will approve the name
change when they convene
in July.
Charlotte will remain the
Bobcats next season, but if
all goes as planned Jordan
anticipates his team will
become the Hornets for
the start of the 2014-15
season.
Jordan says the team
listened to the fans and
“the fans wanted the name
back.”
NBA deputy commissioner and COO Adam
Silver previously said
it would take about 18
months for the Bobcats to
change their name.
The Hornets resided in
Charlotte from 1988-2002
before then-owner George
Shinn relocated the team
to New Orleans.

Competition opens for
Bengals backup QB job
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Josh Johnson replaced his
tiger-striped helmet with
a Bengals stocking cap
after practice on a sunny,
82-degree afternoon. The
fifth-year quarterback was
the only player looking for
a little extra warmth.
No, he’s not from around
here. Nor are the two others
trying out for the same job.
The competition for Cincinnati’s backup quarterback job has started with
the team’s first offseason
organized workouts. The
Bengals are looking for
someone to replace Bruce
Gradkowski, who was
Andy Dalton’s backup the
last two seasons before
leaving for Pittsburgh.
Rather than get one guy
to take the job, the Bengals
signed Johnson — a former Tampa Bay starter —
and claimed John Skelton
off waivers from Arizona
to compete with inexperienced Zac Robinson.
The Bengals want to see
which one develops a knack
for making the most out of
very limiting chances during OTA workouts, minicamp and training camp.
“We’re going to have to
see the efficiency of it and
the ability to handle the
football team,” coach Marvin Lewis said after the
workout on Tuesday. “To
play unnerved and to play
where we have confidence.”
So far, the Bengals
haven’t
needed
their
backup quarterback much.
Dalton has started all 34
games during his two seasons, including a pair of
first-round playoff losses to
Houston.
Gradkowski was needed
only once. Dalton hurt
his throwing wrist during
the first half of the season
opener in Cleveland during
his rookie season. Gradkowski played the second
half and threw a 41-yard
touchdown pass to A.J.
Green, who was uncovered
because the Browns were

slow leaving their defensive huddle.
Otherwise, Gradkowski’s
biggest contribution was
helping Dalton adjust to the
NFL and Cincinnati’s new
West Coast offense.
“He’d been in the league
for a while and he understood the game,” Dalton
said on Tuesday. “To come
to the sideline and talk to
him about things of what
he saw and talk through
some of those things, it
was good to have Bruce
here. I think he definitely
helped me out.”
There’s no clear-cut favorite to become his successor.
Johnson has a connection to the coaching staff.
He was Tampa Bay’s fifthround pick in 2008 and
played in 26 games, starting
five of them, from 2008-11.
He became familiar with
Bengals offensive coordinator Jay Gruden in Florida.
Johnson was released by
San Francisco before last
season. With no NFL team
interested, he signed with
Sacramento of the United
Football League. The injury-depleted Browns needed
a quarterback for their final
game of the season and
signed Johnson, who then
became a free agent again.
Cincinnati represents a
chance to get his NFL career back on firm footing.
“I would rather be doing nothing else,” Johnson
said. “I was out of the game
— well, not the game completely. I was in the UFL,
but that was only for four
games. But just to be back
on the grass (fields), once
you have it taken away from
you, you really understand
how much you appreciate
it. So I’m just excited to be
back out here.”
Gruden was an assistant
coach at Tampa Bay during
Johnson’s rookie season,
so there’s some familiarity with the way he likes
things done.
“I spent a good year with

Jay,” Johnson said. “He
would interact with the quarterbacks a lot, even though
he wasn’t our quarterbacks
coach. And then with (former Oakland and Tampa
Bay coach) Jon (Gruden)
being his brother, I learned a
lot from him as well.
“To walk into this situation, it’s good to have that
comfortability.”
Skelton is looking for
a return to stability after a very strange year in
Arizona. The Cardinals
signed Kevin Kolb before
deciding to hold a competition for the job last season.
Kolb was injured during
the Hall of Fame game in
Canton, Ohio, and Skelton
won the starting job. But
he suffered an ankle injury
during the closing minute
of the season opener, and
Kolb became the starter.
The Cardinals lost nine in
a row and used three different starters — rookie Ryan
Lindley received a chance,
too — during the slump.
“It was just a roller
coaster the whole season,”
Skelton said. “We never
got any stability. And you
have those seasons sometimes in the NFL, and a lot
of it is how you come back
and how you respond from
a season like that.”
Unlike Johnson, Skelton
has little familiarity with
Cincinnati’s offense.
“It’s a completely new offense for me, the first time
I’ve been in any West Coast
system,” he said. “The terminology (is) a little different, but the freedom
that the quarterback gets
to play with is enormous
in this offense. Once you
learn everything and learn
the ins-and-outs of the offense, it’s very user-friendly for a quarterback and for
the offense as a whole.”
Robinson was New England’s seventh-round pick
in 2010. He has been with
Seattle, Detroit and Cincinnati, but has yet to appear in a game.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Lady Marauders close season
with win over Nelsonville-York
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — Ending the
season on a high note.
The Meigs softball team ended its season Monday night with a 4-0 victory over
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division host
Nelsonville-York.
Brook Andrus scored in the top of the
first on a Tess Phelps RBI to put Meigs
(15-8, 7-3 TVC Ohio) up 1-0. Phelps
drove in Andrus again in the third frame
and later scored, along with Harley Fox
on Allyson Davis hit. The Lady Buckeyes (7-13, 3-6) failed to score and MHS
took the 4-0 victory.
The winning pitcher of record was
Destinee Blackwell, who pitched seven
shutout innings and gave up five hits
and a walk, while striking out nine. Nelsonville-York’s Kelley suffered the loss
after giving up four runs on seven hits

and two walks, while striking out three.
Andrus and Harley Fox each marked
two hits in the game, while Phelps, Davis and Liddy Fish each had one. Andrus
scored twice to pace the Lady Marauders,
followed by Phelps and Harley Fox with
one run scored each. Phelps and Davis
each drove in two runs.
Kelley and Phillips each had a pair of
hits for the Lady Buckeyes, while Garza
marked one.
This is the fifth shutout in favor of
Meigs this season. The Lady Marauders
also defeated NYHS on April 8th in Rocksprings by a count of 11-9. Meigs has won
its last three league contests and finishes
runner-up to Athens in the TVC Ohio. The
Lady Buckeyes still have one league game
remaining against Alexander.
This marks the final game for MHS seniors Tess Phelps, Liddy Fish Allyson Davis, Harley Fox, Haley English, Kim Casci
and Kayla Graham.

Steelers ready to work
after bumpy offseason
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Troy Polamalu
walked off the Pittsburgh Steelers’ practice field on Tuesday with rookie safety
Shamarko Thomas hanging on the veteran
safety’s every word.
To be honest, Polamalu admits it’s still
a little strange to think that in the last decade he’s morphed from precocious talent
into respected leader. Yet he knows being
a mentor is part of his job description
these days, and for a team in the midst of
startling change, it’s a role he’ll eagerly fill.
“The great thing about the people that
we have here is that all we are going to do
is give knowledge,” Polamalu said. “There
is no hesitation. It’s not like we think this
guy is going to replace someone, like other teams.”
Maybe, but there is little doubt that
the Steelers expect Thomas to one day
take over for the 32-year-old Polamalu or
33-year-old Ryan Clark.
Just not quite yet. For as all the tumult
Pittsburgh experienced in the offseason,
there was a sense of normalcy during
the first day of organized team activities.
While locker room fixtures James Harrison, Mike Wallace and Rashard Mendenhall are all gone, a host of veterans remain
to help an 8-8 team rebuild on the fly.
“It feels new and different every year at
this time,” coach Mike Tomlin said. “We’re
working with 90 guys and every year 40
or so of them, minimum, are new guys.
From that standpoint, it’s the same. We’re
always excited and energized to work with
the new faces.”
So long as the old ones know that needs
to be fixed.
The Steelers slid to their worst record
of Tomlin’s six-year tenure in 2012 as injuries and uncharacteristic mistakes sent
Pittsburgh tumbling out of the playoffs.
General manager Kevin Colbert refused
to call the Steelers a team in transition
during the offseason but allowed changes
needed to be made for Pittsburgh to get
back to its usual spot among the NFL’s
elite.
Part of the plan was trimming some
salary cap fat in cutting Harrison and veteran offensive lineman Willie Colon. Part
of it was adding youth like top draft pick
linebacker Jarvis Jones and second-round
running back Le’Veon Bell. And part of it
was relying on players like Polamalu and
quarterback Ben Roethlsiberger to assert
themselves in the locker room.
Roethlisberger has spent the majority
of his career as the youngest player in the
quarterback room. Now he’s the oldest
after the team jettisoned Byron Leftwich

and Charlie Batch in the offseason and
brought in Bruce Gradkowski, John Parker Wilson and fourth-round pick Landry
Jones.
“I’m going to do everything I can to help
those guys get ready to play because I’m
here to win games,” Roethlisberger said.
“We’ve had other guys step up and play
and win games for us in the past. I’m excited to help these guys be ready to go if
need be.”
The quarterback brushed off offseason chatter from several players — some
anonymously — that the dynamics of the
locker room changed last year. He called
the suggestions “confusing” and said the
team is eager to move on.
So is cornerback Ike Taylor. The very
un-Steelerlike end to last season left a
“sour taste” in the veteran’s mouth.
“That’s something we pride ourselves
on is making the playoffs, having the opportunity to go to a championship game
and we came up short,” Taylor said.
When asked if missing the playoffs for
only the third time since 2004 is that big a
deal, Taylor didn’t hesitate.
“It is,” Taylor said. “When you put all
that effort in, training camp, minicamp,
going along into the season and have opportunities to make it and you don’t make
it, it’s frustrating.”
And hopefully, a lesson learned.
Polamalu missed more than half the season with a calf injury, the first one of his
10-year career he says “could have been
avoided.” The 2010 NFL Defensive Player
of the Year declined to get into specifics
on how he could have kept the calf healthy
but says his offseason regimen continues
to change as he matures.
“Time is not stale,” Polamalu said. “You
have to continue to evolve as time evolves,
your career evolves and your body evolves.
I think when you become stale in that way,
then it’s just kind of a redundant thing.”
Like, say, harping on last season. The
Steelers aren’t used to missing the playoffs in consecutive years. They went three
seasons without a postseason appearance
from 1998-2000, but that’s long before the
likes of Polamalu, Roethlisberger and Taylor came along.
Nevertheless, all have endured bumps
in the road throughout their careers. And
all have found a way to respond almost immediately.
They see no reason it can’t happen
again.
“I think it’s like coach (Tomlin) says,”
Taylor said. “‘Less talk and more work.’”

Browns sign RB Jackson
and rookie S Slaughter
CLEVELAND (AP) — The Browns
signed running back Brandon Jackson to
a 1-year contract, bringing him back after two seasons in which he never got to
showcase his versatility.
Jackson, who only played in two games
last season, was re-signed by the club on
Tuesday, among a flurry of moves as the
Browns began their second week of OTAs
(organized team activities) under coach
Rob Chudzinski.
The team also signed rookie safety
Jamoris Slaughter to a 4-year contract
and released safety Eric Hagg, a seventhround pick in 2011.
Also, the Browns signed undrafted free
agent wide receiver Michael Edwards
and defensive back Kenronte Walker, and
waived linebacker Ryan Rau and running
backs Robbie Rouse Jamaine Cook. They
were awarded running back Miguel Maysonet off waivers from Philadelphia.
The Browns expected big things from
Jackson when they signed him as an unrestricted free agent from Green Bay in
2011. However, the 5-foot-10, 216-pounder missed the entire 2011 season with a
toe injury. Last season, Jackson appeared
in only two games and finished with 54
yards on eight carries.

Jackson could be a nice fit in Chudzinski’s offense, which incorporates underneath passes to the running backs. Before
he joined the Browns the first time, Jackson set career-highs in rushing attempts
(190), yards (703), touchdowns (3), receptions (43) and receiving yards (844)
while helping the Green Bay Packer win
the Super Bowl.
Slaughter — selected out of Notre
Dame in the sixth round — is the first
member of the 2013 rookie class to sign
with the Browns. He started the first three
games for the Fighting Irish last season
before injuring his Achilles. He missed the
remainder of the year, but the Browns feel
he’s close to returning or they wouldn’t
have let go of Hagg.
Hagg started the Browns’ first two
games last season before he was benched.
He finished with 22 tackles and broke up
one pass. With Hagg out of the mix, second-year safety Tashaun Gipson appears
to be the frontrunner to start alongside
T.J. Ward.
The 5-foot-10, 210-pound Maysonet
signed with the Eagles following April’s
draft. He rushed for 1,964 yards and 21
touchdowns as a senior at Stony Brook.

�Situate in Section #16, Town
lic action on the front steps of
#2, Range #12, Township of
the Meigs County Courthouse
Sutton, Village of Racine,
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, on Friday, May 31, 2013,
Ohio and more particularly deat 10:00 a.m., the following
scribed as follows:
Beginning
lands and tenements:
www.mydailysentinel.com
Wednesday,
May
22, 2013
Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel
at the Southeast corner of a
Situated in the County of
28/100 acre tract now owned
Meigs, State of Ohio, and
by Fannie Miller Sayre and C.
Township of Salisbury, and
E. Sayre; thence North with
bounded and described as folsaid Sayreʼs East line a dislows:
tance of 180 feet to the North
Situated in 100 Acre Lot No.
line of original lot #21 at a dis370, Section 34, Town 1,
tance of 70 feet to the NorthwRange 12 of the Ohio Comest corner of Marlin Young and
panyʼs Purchase.
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
Elva Young 20/100 acre tract
Beginning at an iron pin at the
12 CV 107, FARMERS BANK
of land; thence South on
Southwest corner of Grace
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
Youngʼs West line a distance
Mulfordʼs land; thence North
PLAINTIFF, VS. AMY L.
of 70 feet to the place of begin14 deg. 41' East 116 feet to the
YOUNG AKA AMY LYNN
ning, containing 28/100 acres,
Southeast corner of the Harry
YOUNG, ET AL., DEFENDmore or less.
Mohler lot; thence South 86ANTS, COURT OF COMMON
Reserving to the State of Ohio
1/2 deg. West 187 feet to
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
all oil, gas coal and other minMohlerʼs Southwest corner;
OHIO.
erals with all of the rights apthence South 16 deg. West
By virtue of an Order of Sale
pertaining thereto as provided
200 feet; thence South 86-1/4
issued out of said Court in the
by the laws of Ohio.
deg. East 201 feet; thence
above action, Keith O. Wood,
FIRST EXCEPTION: ExceptNorth 14 deg. 41' East 84 feet
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
to the place of beginning, conOhio, will expose to sell at pub- ing and reserving to the grantors 25 feet off the West side of
taining 0.87 acre, more or less.
lic action on the front steps of
the above described real esSave and except a right of way
the Meigs County Courthouse
tate.
16 feet wide running Northerly
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
and Southerly through the East
Ohio, on Friday, May 31, 2013, SECOND EXCEPTION: Excepting and reserving to the
half of said 0.87 acre for
at 10:00 a.m., the following
grantors 60 feet off the North
egress and ingress to the lots
lands and tenements:
side of the above described
adjoining on the North.
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
PARCEL NO. 1:
real estate.
Also save and except a right of
12 CV 091, PEOPLES BANK,
Situated in the Village of RaThe real estate conveyed by
way 16 feet wide running
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
cine, County of Meigs and
this deed fronts 55 feet on Vine
Westerly from the first excepPLAINTIFF, VS. THOMAS P.
State of Ohio:
Street and extends Northerly
tion to the land adjoining on
BROOKS, ET AL., DEFENDSituate in Section #16, Town
120 feet.
the West reserved to the
ANTS, COURT OF COMMON
#2, Range #12, Township of
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19Grantor. This conveyance subPLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
Sutton, Village of Racine,
00219.001
ject to right of way for power
OHIO.
County of Meigs and State of
PARCEL NO. 2:
line heretofore given.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
Ohio and more particularly deSituate in the Township of SutReference Deed: Volume 150,
scribed as follows: Beginning
issued out of said Court in the
ton, Village of Racine, County
Page 719, Meigs County Offiat the Southeast corner of a
above action, Keith O. Wood,
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
cial Records.
28/100 acre tract now owned
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
and more particularly deby Fannie Miller Sayre and C.
Ohio, will expose to sell at pub- Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 14scribed as follows: Being with00287.000
E. Sayre; thence North with
lic action on the front steps of
in Section 16, Town 2, Range
Also a 2003 Clayton Worthingsaid Sayreʼs East line a disthe Meigs County Courthouse
12 and Lot 2, and beginning at
ton manufactured home, Seritance of 180 feet to the North
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
the Southeast corner of Williline of original lot #21 at a disOhio, on Friday, May 31, 2013, al No. CLH028203TNAB, Ohio
am Sniderʼs lot or what was
Certificate of Title
tance of 70 feet to the Northwat 10:00 a.m., the following
#5300158606.
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
est corner of Marlin Young and same located on the North side
lands and tenements:
of a twenty foot street North 89
The above described real es12 CV 107, FARMERS BANK
Elva Young 20/100 acre tract
Situated in the County of
degrees East a distance of 706
tate and manufactured home
AND SAVINGS COMPANY,
of land; thence South on
Meigs, State of Ohio, and
feet from the intersection of
are sold “as is” without warPLAINTIFF, VS. AMY L.
Youngʼs West line a distance
Township of Salisbury, and
ranties or covenants.
YOUNG AKA AMY LYNN
of 70 feet to the place of begin- Vine Street and Broadway, or
bounded and described as folwhat was commonly known as
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
YOUNG, ET AL., DEFENDning, containing 28/100 acres,
lows:
Seventh Street, the intersec28042 State Route 7,
ANTS, COURT OF COMMON
more or less.
Situated in 100 Acre Lot No.
tion being the North side of
Cheshire, OH 45620.
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
Reserving to the State of Ohio
370, Section 34, Town 1,
Vine with the
center of SevCURRENTLEGALS
OWNER: Dorothy
OHIO.
all oil, gas coal
and other minRange 12 of
the Ohio ComLEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
enth; thence North a distance
Jane Brooks and Thomas P.
erals with all of the rights appanyʼs Purchase.
By virtue of an Order of Sale
of 177 feet to the North side of
Brooks (real estate); Thomas
pertaining thereto as provided
Beginning at an iron pin at the
issued out of said Court in the
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
Lot 2; thence North 89 deP. Brooks (manufactured
by the laws of Ohio.
Southwest corner of Grace
above action, Keith O. Wood,
ESTATE
grees, 19' East a distance of
home).
Mulfordʼs land; thence North
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
FIRST EXCEPTION: ExceptTHE STATE OF OHIO, MEIGS 14 deg. 41' East 116 feet to the REAL ESTATE AND MANU50 feet to the Northwest corner
Ohio, will expose to sell at pub- ing and reserving to the grantCOUNTY.
FACTURED HOME APSoutheast corner of the Harry
lic action on the front steps of
ors 25 feet off the West side of of what was Laura Bakerʼs lot
GLENN STOUT :
and is now the Mason SpenPRAISED AT: $20,000.00. The the Meigs County Courthouse
Mohler lot; thence South 86the above described real esPlaintiff : CASE NO. 12 CIV
cer real estate; thence South a
real estate and manufactured
1/2 deg. West 187 feet to
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
tate.
104
distance of 178 feet to the
home cannot be sold for less
Mohlerʼs Southwest corner;
Ohio, on Friday, May 31, 2013, SECOND EXCEPTION: Exvs. :
North side of aforesaid Vine
than 2/3rds the appraised
thence South 16 deg. West
at 10:00 a.m., the following
cepting and reserving to the
MELODY DOTSON, et al. :
Street; thence along the North
value. The appraisal does not
200 feet; thence South 86-1/4
lands and tenements:
grantors 60 feet off the North
Defendants. :
side of said Vine Street South
include an interior examination PARCEL NO. 1:
deg. East 201 feet; thence
side of the above described
In pursuance of an Order of
898 degrees 15' West a disof any structures, if any, on the Situated in the Village of RaNorth 14 deg. 41' East 84 feet
real estate.
Sale dated April 23, 2013, in
tance of 50 feet to the place of
real estate.
to the place of beginning, concine, County of Meigs and
The real estate conveyed by
the above entitled action, I will
taining 0.87 acre, more or less. TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
State of Ohio:
this deed fronts 55 feet on Vine beginning, containing twenty
offer for sale at public auction,
hundredthʼs acre (0.20), more
Save and except a right of way only) down on day of sale, bal- Situate in Section #16, Town
Street and extends Northerly
at the front door of the Court
or less. EXCEPT the minerals
ance (cash or certified check
16 feet wide running Northerly
#2, Range #12, Township of
120 feet.
House, in Pomeroy, Ohio, in
reserved by the State of Ohio.
and Southerly through the East only) due on confirmation of
Sutton, Village of Racine,
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19the above named County, on
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19sale. ORC 2327.02(C) rehalf of said 0.87 acre for
County of Meigs and State of
00219.001
Friday, the 31st day of May,
00343.000
quires successful bidders to
egress and ingress to the lots
Ohio and more particularly dePARCEL NO. 2:
2013 at 10:00 o'clock A. M.,
pay recording fees and associ- scribed as follows: Beginning
adjoining on the North.
Situate in the Township of Sut- Subject to all legal highways,
the following described real es- Also save and except a right of ated costs to the Sheriff.
easements, rights of ways,
at the Southeast corner of a
ton, Village of Racine, County
tate, situate in the County of
zoning ordinances, restrictions
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPway 16 feet wide running
28/100 acre tract now owned
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
Meigs, and State of Ohio, toand conditions of record.
ERATE UNDER THE DOCWesterly from the first excepby Fannie Miller Sayre and C.
and more particularly dewit:
Reference Deed: Volume 288,
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. E. Sayre; thence North with
tion to the land adjoining on
scribed as follows: Being withSituate in the Township of
Page 44, Meigs County OffiPROSPECTIVE PURthe West reserved to the
said Sayreʼs East line a disin Section 16, Town 2, Range
Bedford in the County of Meigs Grantor. This conveyance sub- CHASERS ARE URGED TO
tance of 180 feet to the North
12 and Lot 2, and beginning at cial Records.
and State of Ohio: Beginning
The above described real esCHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
ject to right of way for power
line of original lot #21 at a disthe Southeast corner of Willi80 rods south of the northeast
tate is sold “as is” without warPUBLIC RECORDS OF
line heretofore given.
tance of 70 feet to the Northwam Sniderʼs lot or what was
corner of Section 25, Town 3,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
Reference Deed: Volume 150,
est corner of Marlin Young and same located on the North side ranties or covenants.
Range 13 of the Ohio ComATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Page 719, Meigs County OffiElva Young 20/100 acre tract
of a twenty foot street North 89 PROPERTY ADDRESS: 811
panyʼs Purchase and running
Jennifer L. Sheets, LITTLE,
cial Records.
of land; thence South on
degrees East a distance of 706 Vine Street, Racine, OH
west 160 rods; thence south
45771.
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 14Youngʼs West line a distance
feet from the intersection of
80 rods; thence east 160 rods; 00287.000
CURRENT OWNER: Amy L.
213 E. Second Street,
of 70 feet to the place of begin- Vine Street and Broadway, or
thence north 80 rods to the
Also a 2003 Clayton Worthing- Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telening, containing 28/100 acres,
what was commonly known as Young.
place of beginning, containing
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
phone: (740) 992-6689
ton manufactured home, Serimore or less.
Seventh Street, the intersec80 acres, more or less. SAVE
AT: $49,000.00. The real esal No. CLH028203TNAB, Ohio (5) 8, 15, 22
Reserving to the State of Ohio
tion being the North side of
and EXCEPT 20 acres deeded Certificate of Title
tate cannot be sold for less
all oil, gas coal and other minVine with the center of Sevby J.S. Epple and Eliza Epple
than 2/3rds the appraised
#5300158606.
erals with all of the rights apenth; thence North a distance
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
to William and Ella May Reuvalue. The appraisal does not
The above described real espertaining
thereto
as
provided
of
177
feet
to
the
North
side
of
12 CV 107, FARMERS BANK
ter off the west end of the
include an interior examination
tate and manufactured home
by the laws of Ohio.
Lot 2; thence North 89 deAND SAVINGS COMPANY,
Miscellaneous
above described tract, leaving
of any structures, if any, on the
are sold “as is” without warFIRST EXCEPTION: Exceptgrees, 19'
East a distance of
PLAINTIFF, VS. AMY L.
60 acres, more or less. Also, a ranties or covenants.
ing and reserving to the grant50 feet to the Northwest corner real estate.
YOUNG AKA AMY LYNN
private road through the 20TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
ors 25 feet off the West side of of what was Laura Bakerʼs lot
YOUNG, ET AL., DEFENDacre tract of William and Ella
only) down on day of sale, bal28042 State Route 7,
the above described real esand is now the Mason SpenANTS, COURT OF COMMON
May Reuter, described as folCheshire, OH 45620.
tate.
cer real estate; thence South a ance (cash or certified check
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
lows: Beginning at a pair of
only) due on confirmation of
CURRENT OWNER: Dorothy
SECOND EXCEPTION: Exdistance of 178 feet to the
OHIO.
bars and running in a westerly
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) reJane Brooks and Thomas P.
cepting and reserving to the
North side of aforesaid Vine
By virtue of an Order of Sale
direction to near a well to the
quires successful bidders to
Brooks (real estate); Thomas
grantors 60 feet off the North
Street; thence along the North
issued out of said Court in the
public road.
pay recording fees and associP. Brooks (manufactured
side of the above described
side of said Vine Street South
above action, Keith O. Wood,
Auctions
Also the following described
ated costs to the Sheriff.
home).
real estate.
898 degrees 15' West a disthe Sheriff of Meigs County,
real estate in the same County, REAL ESTATE AND MANUALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPtance of 50 feet to the place of
Ohio, will expose to sell at pub- The real estate conveyed by
Are
You
Still
Paying
Too
Much
Township and State: BeginERATE
UNDER
DOCFACTURED
HOME APthis deed fronts 55 feet on Vine beginning, containing twenty
lic action on the front steps of
ESTATE
AUCTION
Make
the Switch
toTHE
Dish
YourNortherly
Medications?
ning at a stake 9.18 rods north PRAISED AT: $20,000.00. The the Meigs County Courthouse
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
Street andFor
extends
hundredthʼs acre (0.20), more
TodayPROSPECTIVE
and Save upPURto 50%
of the southwest corner of Aureal estate
and manufactured
120 feet.
or fill
less.
EXCEPT the minerals
You can save up to 90% when you
your
HOME
&amp; CONTENTS
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
prescriptions
at our Canadian
and
gust Hartungʼs 40-acre lot in
CHASERS ARE URGED TO
home cannot be sold for less
No.: 19reserved
by the State of Ohio.
Ohio, on Friday, May 31, 2013, Auditorʼs Parcel
Estate
of:
Franklin
(Ted)
International
Pharmacy
Service.
Section 19; thence north 98.55 than 2/3rds the appraised
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
00219.001
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19at 10:00 a.m., the following
rice
Our P
rods to a stone; thence west
RECORDS OF
value.
appraisal does
not
PARCEL
NO. 2:
lands
Get An Extra00343.000
$10 Off
T. The
Cremeans
- Meigs
Co. and tenements:
PromotPUBLIC
ional
Celecoxib*
86.6 rods to Joseph Willʼs land; include an interior examination PARCEL NO. 1:
COUNTY,
OHIO.
Situate in the Township
of SutSubject
PREMIUM
MOVIE
&amp; Free
Shipping
On to all legal highways,PackagMEIGS
es
st
ar
CHANNELS*
Case
# 20121106
thence south to the center of
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
of any structures, if any,
on the
ton, Village
of Racine,Your
County
easements, rights of ways, ting atATTORNEY
Situated in the Village of Ra$58.00
1st Order!
only ...
the county road; thence follow- real estate.
of Meigs
and
State ofCall
Ohio,
zoning
ordinances,
restrictions Michael L. Barr, LITTLE,
the number below
and save
an
cine, County of Meigs and
Generic
equivalent
SAT.10%MAY
10:00
AM
TM
additional
freeconditions
shipping
.
of Celebrex
ing the center of the county
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211TERMS OF SALE:
(cash 25State
and more
particularly
de- $10 plus get
and
of record.
of Ohio:
on your ﬁrst prescription order with
Generic price for
road to the place of beginning,
213 E. Second Street,
only) down on day
of sale,
bal-Hollow
scribed as
follows:
Being
Reference
Situate in
Section #16, Town
3456
Corn
Road,
CanadawithDrug Center.
Expires March Deed: Volume 288,
200mg
x 100
31,
2013.
Oﬀer
is
valid
for
prescription
containing 36 acres, more or
Pomeroy,
OH 45769, Teleance (cash or certified check
in Section 16, Town 2, Range
Page 44, Meigs County Offi#2, Range #12, Township of
mo.
orders only and can not be used in
compared
to
Rutland
OH.
45775
less.
phone: (740) 992-6689
only) due on confirmation of
12 and Lot 2, and beginning
at cial Records.
Sutton, Village of Racine,
conjunction with any other oﬀers.
TM
Celebrex
$437.58
Also, the following described
(5)8,
15,
22
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) rethe
Southeast
corner
of
WilliThe
above
described
real
esCounty of Meigs and State of
Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
For 3 months.
Typical US brand
real estate in the same County, quires successful bidders toDirections:
am Sniderʼs
lotprice
or what
is sold “as is” without warOhio and more particularly deUsewas
code 10FREEtate
to receive
for 200mg x 100
this special
offer.ranties or covenants.
Township and State: Being in
pay
recording
fees
and
associsame
located
on
the
North
side
scribed
as
follows:
Beginning
Located at 3456 Corn Hollow Rd, Rutland, OH., Corn Hollow Rd is located Approx. 1 mile
Call Now
Town 3, Range 13 and Secated costs to the Sheriff.
of a twenty
foot
street
North
89substances
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
811 and Ask How!
at the Southeast corner of a
Please note
that we
do not carry
controlled
and a valid
for all prescription medication orders.
West of RutlandSALES
off Rt. 124OPW., turn right.
Check site
for speciﬁ
directions:
tion 25 in the Ohio Companyʼs
ALL SHERIFFʼS
degreesprescription
East ais required
distance
of 706 Vine Street, Racine, OH
28/100
acre
tractc now
owned
http://goo.gl/maps/kDVvB
Callintersection
Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
Purchase. Beginning in the
ERATE UNDER THE DOCfeet from the
of
45771.
by Fannie Miller Sayre and C.
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
Use and
of theseBroadway,
services is subject toor
the Terms of
Use and
east line of said Section 25
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. E. Sayre; thence North with
Vine Street
CURRENT
OWNER:
Amy
L.to change based on premium channel availablity
*Oﬀer
subject
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
160 rods south of the northPROSPECTIVE PUR- REAL ESTATE
what was commonly known as Young.
said Sayreʼs East line a diseast corner of said section and CHASERS
ARE URGED
TOfamily, single
Seventh Street, the intersecREAL ESTATE APPRAISED
tance
180sits
feet
to the1.43
North
Sells First! 2 Bedroom,
1 bath, single
storyofhome
on approx,
acres
running west 160 rods; thence
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
tion being the North side of
AT: $49,000.00. The real esline of original lot #21 at a disof
land
(parcel
ID#’s
110023M00
&amp;
1100188000)
with
two
additional
tracts
of
land
(parcel
south 80 rods; thence east 160 PUBLIC RECORDS OF
Vine with the center of Sevtate cannot be sold for less
tance of 70 feet to the NorthwID# 1100189000
@ approx.
1.37 acres &amp; parcelest
ID#corner
1100156000
@ approx.
1.31 acres).
rods; thence north 80 rods to
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
than 2/3rds the appraised
of Marlin
Young
and enth; thence North a distance
Total approx. acreage
4.11 acres combined.The
home
has several
outbuildings
the place of beginning, conATTORNEY
FORis PLAINTIFF:
of 177 feet to the North side of
value. The appraisal does not
Elva
Young
20/100
acre (largest
tract
We’ll Repair Your Computer
taining 80 acres, more or less.
Jennifer
LITTLE,
Lot 2; thence North 89 deinclude an interior examination
of out
land;
thence
South
onvideo of
is a three L.
car Sheets,
garage). Great
opportunity! Check
the link
for a short
YouTube
EXCEPT 40 acres off the west SHEETS
grees, 19' East a distance of
of any structures, if any, on the
Youngʼs West line a distance
Through The Internet!
this property:&amp; BARR, LLP, 211end of said 80-acre tract; the
213 E. Second Street,
of 70 feet to the place of begin- 50 feet to the Northwest corner real estate.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dz7DjJhPjUU&amp;feature=share&amp;list=UUO4McKiuDwMw
Solutions For:
part hereby conveyed being
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Teleof what was Laura Bakerʼs lot
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
ning, containing 28/100 acres,
Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
XljgkB8rIgQ
the east half of said 80-acre
phone:
(740) 992-6689
andOver
is now
the Mason
Spenonly) down on day of sale,Spyware
bal- &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections
more or less.
$10,000
in credit
card bills?
tract, and containing 40 acres,
make the
minimum
(5) 8, 15, 22
cer Can’t
real estate;
thence
Southpayments?
a ance (cash or certified check
Reserving to the State of Ohio
more or less.
distance of 178 feet to the
only) due on confirmation of
all oil, gas coal and other minCONTENTS
Affordable Rates
✔ WEof
CAN
GET YOU OUT
OF DEBT QUICKLY
Parcel No.: 0100778000;
North side
aforesaid
Vine
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) reerals
with all
of the
rights
apFURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES: Sanyo Flat Screen
TV; chests;
Longore
Chest
&amp; Wardrobe;
For Home
✔
WE CAN along
SAVE YOU
THOUSANDS
OFquires
DOLLARSsuccessful bidders to
0100776000; 0100777000
Street;
thence
the
North
pertaining
thereto
as
provided
Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer; Bassett Chest &amp; Dresser; Oak Roll Top Desk; Cedar Chest; Cherry
Said premises appraised at
side of✔said
Vine
Street
South
pay recording fees and associby the laws of Ohio.
WE CAN
HELP
YOU AVOID
BANKRUPTCY
&amp; Business
Grandfather
Clock;
Toshiba
Big
Screen
TV;
Lg.
2
Pc.
China
Cabinet;
Estate
30"
Range;
Seventy Thousand Dollars
898 degrees 15' West a disated costs to the Sheriff.
FIRST EXCEPTION: ExceptNot
high-priced
one SHERIFFʼS
of those
Kenmore Upright Freezer; Westinghouse Chest ing
Freezer;
patio
Furniture; plus
more.grant($70,000.00) and cannot be
tance
ofa 50
feet to consolidation
the place ofloan orALL
SALESCall
OP-Now For Immediate Help
and
reserving
to the
consumer credit counseling programs
sold for less than two-thirds of
ERATE UNDER THE DOCLARGE SCALE AIRPLANES &amp; NEW PARTS:Sors
ev. 25
Largefeet
Scaleoff
Airplanes
Complete;
withof beginning, containing twenty
the West
side
CREDIT
CARD
RELIEF
said amount;
hundredthʼs acre (0.20), more
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
the91above
es- &amp;
Brand New Motors: 40 LA, 46 AX, 120 AX, 61 EX,
FX, 61 FX,described
91 FX &amp; Saitoreal
120 SGK,
for your FREE consultation CALL
TERMS OF SALE: Ten per
or less. EXCEPT
the minerals
PROSPECTIVE PURAssorted New Lg Scale Airplane Parts, Must See.tate.
877-465-0321
Service
cent (10%) cash in hand on
reserved by the
State of Ohio.
CHASERS ARE URGED
$ TO 00 Off
SECOND EXCEPTION: ExWe’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Misc.: Royal Staffordshire China Set; Lg. Amount
of Quilts;
Fenton;
other Dishes;
Sentry
Mention Code: MB
day of sale with balance to be
Auditorʼs
Parcel No.:
19- in all states CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
cepting
and
reserving
to the
Not available
Safe; Sev. New Items; GPS, Nikon Camera; Heaters;
Cookware;
Air Puriﬁ
er; Oil
paid upon delivery of deed.
00343.000
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
grantors
60Camcorder;
feet off the
North
Lamp; Old Wooden Ships; Plus much more!!! side of the above described
THIS SHERIFF'S SALE OPSubject to all legal highways,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ERATES UNDER THE DOCeasements, rights of ways,
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
estate.
TRACTORS &amp; EQUIPMENT: SELL AT NOON!!real
Kubota
B 3200 w/Belly Mower, 4-Wheel
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
zoning ordinances, restrictions Michael L. Barr, LITTLE,
The real
estate
conveyed
Drive w/3Pt. Hydraulics, only 98 Hrs. (Like New)!!!
Gravely
20 G, 60"
Deck, 398 by
Hrs.;
THE MEIGS COUNTY SHERSHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211this deed fronts 55 feet on Vine and conditions of record.
Keenkutter Blade.
IFF MAKES NO GUARANTEE
Reference Deed: Volume 288,
213 E. Second Street,
Street and extends Northerly
GUNS &amp; KNIVES: Eastern Arms 12 Ga. DB; Rem.
Model
514 22 riﬂe; Win. Model 67, 22 LR;
AS TO STATUS OF TITLE
Page 44, Meigs County OffiPomeroy, OH 45769, Tele120
feet.
Revelation Model 350 H, 16 Ga. Shot Gun; SKS 762
x 39; H &amp; RParcel
Model 88No.:
- 410 19Shotgun; RG
PRIOR TO SALE.
cial Records.
phone: (740) 992-6689
Auditorʼs
KEITH WOOD, SHERIFF
The above described real es(5)8, 15, 22
00219.001
17, 38 Darringer; RG Model 66, 22 Pistol; 45 Cal.
Black Powder Pistol; Several Brand New:
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
tate is sold “as is” without warBowie; Texas bowie; Alamo; Buck &amp; Others PARCEL NO. 2:
REBECCA D. LOUKS
ranties or covenants.
Situate
in the
of SutTOOLS: Sev. Craftsman Power tools; Valu Craft
10" Table
Saw; Township
Craftsman Digital
Drill
OTHS, HEISER &amp; MILLER,
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 811
ton, Village of Racine, County
Press;
Digital
Caliper;
Air
Tools;
Battery
Chargers;
Chain
Saws;
Binders;
Husquavarna
Weed
LLC
Vine Street, Racine, OH
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
Eater; Yard Tools; Craftsman Mitre Saw; T Posts;
Ft. Werner
Step Ladder;deAlum. Ext.
Attorney for Plaintiff
45771.
and12more
particularly
5/8 5/15 5/22
CURRENT OWNER: Amy L.
scribed as follows: Being withLadder; and more.
Young.
in Section 16, Town 2, Range
12TERMS:
and Lot 2, and beginning at REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
SHERIFFʼS SALE, CASE NO.
REAL ESTATE
AT: $49,000.00. The real esthe Southeast corner of Willi12 CV 091, PEOPLES BANK,
10% non-refundable deposit due on sale day balance
within 45 days.
OPEN
HOUSES
tate cannot be sold for less
am Sniderʼs
lot or
what
wasSUN.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
May
19,
2-4
PM
and/or
1
hour
prior
to
auction
on
sale
day.
A
5%
buyer’s
fee
added
to
ﬁ
nal
same located on the North side than 2/3rds the appraised
PLAINTIFF, VS. THOMAS P.
bid to generate sales contract price. Any inspections
must be made
to bidding.
of a twenty
foot prior
street
NorthSee
89 value. The appraisal does not
BROOKS, ET AL., DEFENDdegrees
website for pics, video
&amp; details!East a distance of 706 include an interior examination
ANTS, COURT OF COMMON
of any structures, if any, on the
feet from the intersection of
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
real estate.
Vine Street and Broadway, or
OHIO.
CONTENTSwhat
TERMS:
was commonly known as TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
By virtue of an Order of Sale
Cash or Check with Valid ID or bank letterSeventh
of credit if Street,
unknown tothe
Auction
Co.
only) down on day of sale, balintersecissued out of said Court in the
ance
(cash
or certified
tion being the North side of
above action, Keith O. Wood,
Your
insurance
maycheck
pay for your diabetic
only) due on confirmation of
Vine with the center of Sevthe Sheriff of Meigs County,
Real Estate Auctioneer:
supplies
with li�le to
no cost to you.
sale.
ORC
2327.02(C)
reenth;
thence
North
a
distance
Ohio, will expose to sell at pubquires successful bidders
toNOW to make sure
of 177 feet to
North side of
Call
FIRST QUALITY AUCTION
&amp; the
REALTY
lic action on the front steps of
pay recording fees and you
associLot 2; thence North 89 deare ge�ing
the Meigs County Courthouse
MARK WALTON, BROKER/AUCTIONEER
ated costs to the Sheriff.the best deal on your
grees, 19' East a distance of
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
OP- Supplies!
50 feet to the Northwest corner ALL SHERIFFʼS SALESDiabetic
Ohio, on Friday, May 31, 2013,
330-607-3689
ERATE UNDER THE DOCof what was Laura Bakerʼs lot
monitoring
at 10:00 a.m., the following
starting aro
und
����YOU�MAY�QUALIFY�FOR�
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
and is now the Mason Spenwww.waltonauctionsite.com
lands and tenements:
• A glucose meter upgrade
PROSPECTIVE
PURcer
real
estate;
thence
South
a
Situated in the County of
• Free
CHASERS ARE URGED
TO prescription delivery
distance of 178 feet to the
Meigs, State of Ohio, and
per week
Great deals on products
CHECK FOR LIENS IN •THE
North side of aforesaid Vine
*with $99 customer
Township of Salisbury, and
ation e and
Contents Auctioneer:
purchase of alarm install
monitoring charg
services.
&amp; services
PUBLIC
RECORDS
OF
Street;
thence
along
the
North
bounded and described as fol• And FREE gi�s
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
side of said
Vine
Street South
Rick Pearson Auction
Co.
#66
lows:
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
degrees 15' West a disSituated in 100 Acre Lot No.
Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!
Rick Pearson898
Auctioneer
Michael L. Barr, LITTLE, AMERICA’S�DIABETIC�
tance
of 50 feet to the place of
370, Section 34, Town 1,
SAVINGS�CLUB
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211containing twenty
Range 12 of the Ohio Com304-773-5447 ORbeginning,
304-593-5118
213 E. Second Street,
hundredthʼs acre (0.20), more
panyʼs Purchase.
CALL�NOW!�����-���-����
ADM TO ESTATE - SHIRLEY
SIMMONS
Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST
Pomeroy,
OH 45769, Teleor less. EXCEPT
the minerals
Beginning at an iron pin at the
phone: (740) 992-6689
reserved by the State of Ohio.
Southwest corner of Grace
(5)8, 15, 22
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 19Mulfordʼs land; thence North
00343.000
14 deg. 41' East 116 feet to the
Subject to all legal highways,
Southeast corner of the Harry
easements, rights of ways,
Mohler lot; thence South 86-

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�side of the above described
real estate.
The real estate conveyed by
this deed fronts 55 feet on Vine
Street and extends Northerly
120 feet.
Wednesday,
May 22, 2013
www.mydailysentinel.com
The Daily Sentinel • Page 9
Auditorʼs Parcel No.: 1900219.001
PARCEL NO. 2:
Situate in the Township of Sutton, Village of Racine, County
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
and more particularly described
From
Pageas6follows: Being with- Bailey later scored on an fourth, then both came strike and later scored on for the Falcons after sur- RBIs, followed by Graham
in Section 16, Town 2, Range
around to score after Gra- a one-out single by Trent rendering four runs (one and Faro with two apiece.
12 and Lot 2, and beginning at RBI sacrifice fly by Ruspitch
the
left- sell and Faro scored on an ham delivered a one-out Johns, wrapping up the earned) and three hits over Graham scored three
the offering
Southeastover
corner
of William Sniderʼs
lot or
was
centerfield
wall
forwhat
a threeerror that allowed Curry triple that made it a 10-2 scoring at its 11-3 outcome. 1.2 frames of work.
times, while Warnimont
located on the North side
runsame
homer
—
giving
Gallia
advantage. Graham later
Graham was the winning
Graham, Bailey, Faro and Faro each scored twice
of a twenty foot street North 89 to reach safely, giving the
Academy
5-2aadvantage.
degrees a
East
distance of 706 hosts a sizable 8-2 lead
scored on a FUHS error to pitcher of record after allow- and Dunlap each had two in the triumph.
feet from the and
intersection
of
Graham
Justin
through
three
complete.
make it an 11-2 cushion af- ing three runs (two earned), hits for the victors, folAlford paced Fairfield
Vine Street and Broadway, or
Bailey
started
the known
thirdas An error and a bunt ter four full frames.
three hits and eight walks lowed by Warnimont, Union with two hits, folwhat was
commonly
with
consecutive
Seventh
Street, the one-out
intersec- single allowed Warnimont
Alex Bowers started the over four innings while Childers and Russell with lowed by Burge, Johns,
tionthen
being Faro
the North
side ofin
hits,
singled
and Gage Childers to both fifth inning by reaching striking out seven. Thomas a safety apiece. Warnimont Zach Bowers and Alec
Vine with the center of SevGraham
for North
a 6-2a distance
edge. reach safely to start the safely on a dropped third Green suffered the setback drove in a team-high three Febes with one safety each.
enth; thence
of 177 feet to the North side of
Lot 2; thence North 89 degrees, 19' East a distance of
50 feet to the Northwest corner
of what was Laura Bakerʼs lot
and is now the Mason SpenFrom
6
Nathan Arnett suffered the
Afterward, 11th-year SHS base- by reaching safely on a dropped that gave the hosts a 3-1 cushion
cer Page
real estate;
thence South a
distance of 178 feet to the
loss for VHS after surrendering
ball coach Ryan Lemley spoke third strike, then Damthun sin- after five complete.
Northmoved
side of aforesaid
Vine as a
senior
to 3-0 alltime
The Tornadoes put things six runs, 10 hits and one walk
about how this accomplishment gled to put runners on the corStreet; thence along the North
starter
in
district
finals
after al- never gets old, especially after ners with one out.
away with three runs in the bot- over six frames while fanning
side of said Vine Street South
lowing
one unearned
898 degrees
15' West arun,
dis- seven dodging a 10-inning bullet SaturAdam Pape singled home John- tom half of the sixth. Back-to- six. Drew Wolford paced the
50 feet
to the
place
of inhitstance
andoftwo
walks
over
seven
son for a 1-0 advantage, then back singles by Cole Graham and Indians with two hits, followed
day against Leesburg Fairfield.
beginning,
twenty
nings
while containing
striking out
11.
“We felt fornuate to be here after Ramthun came plateward after Zac Beegle turned into a pair of by Arnett, Burk, Ethan Clinehundredthʼs acre (0.20), more
Southern’s
lonetheerror
in the we snuck out of here Saturday with Colten Walters reached safely on scores following a one-out single Holbrook, Alex Loop and Blake
or less. EXCEPT
minerals
reserved
by the
State of
Ohio.score,
game
led to
Valley’s
only
a win, so we just wanted to go out an error — giving the Tornadoes by Trenton Deem that gave SHS Howard with a safety apiece.
Auditorʼs
Parcel No.:
19while
the Indians
committed
three and get it tonight,” Lemley said. a 2-0 lead after one complete.
As thrilling a night as it turned
a 5-1 lead. Deem later scored
00343.000
errors
that
led
to
three
SHS
scores.
out
to be for the Tornadoes,
on
a
two-out
wild
pitch,
which
The
score
stayed
that
way
“We
limited
our
mistakes,
played
Subject to all legal highways,
Valley
also hadrights
onlyofthree
easements,
ways,baserunLemley noted that this season is
good defense, threw strikes and we until the fourth, as C.J. Burk de- wrapped up the 6-1 outcome.
zoning
restrictions
ners
overordinances,
the final three
frames and scored runs. That’s a good recipe livered a single and later scored
Deem, Pape and Beegle each not complete by just earning anand conditions of record.
stranded
seven
overall,
while
the
had
two hits for the victors, fol- other trip back to Beavers Field.
on
a
two-out
error
that
allowed
for
success
for
us,
or
any
team
for
Reference Deed: Volume 288,
hosts
also
seven
on the
“We’ll enjoy this for now, but we
that matter. I’m just happy for the Jonah Garrett to reach safely — lowed by Ramthun, Walters, GraPage
44,left
Meigs
County
Offi-bags.
cial Records.
The
Tornadoes will now face kids, we got it done again.”
making it a 2-1 contest through ham and Chandler Drummer with have a lot more work to do,” Lemabove described real estheThe
winner
Newark
a safety apiece. Walters and Deem ley said. “We have bigger goals to
After a 1-2-3 top-half of the four full frames.
tate
is sold of
“asthe
is” without
war-Catholic-Worthington
Christian con- first, Southern broke into the
Pape came through with a one- each drove in two RBIs and Pape reach than making it to regionals.
ranties or covenants.
811
testPROPERTY
at BeaversADDRESS:
Field in Lancaster
scoring column first with two out double to start the fifth, then also had an RBI, while Johnson, We have our sights set on ColumStreet,
Racine, OH
at Vine
5
p.m.
Thursday,
May
30,
in
a
runs in the bottom of the inning. Walters singled home Kevin Per- Deem, Ramthun, Perry, Graham bus, and anything short of that will
45771.
leave us disappointed.”
Hunter Johnson led things off ry — a pinch-runner for Pape — and Beegle each scored a run.
D-4CURRENT
regional OWNER:
semifinal.
Amy L.
Young.
1995 Ford F150, 4x4, Extra
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
Cab. Body rough but drivable.
AT: $49,000.00. The real esNewer
8 cylinder engine with
tate cannotLEGALS
be sold for less
MANUFACTURED
Trucks/SUVs/Vans
Repairs
Help Wanted General
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
low miles. Good transmission.
than 2/3rds the appraised
HOUSING
Bed liner and fiberglass topper.
Part-Time Administrative Assistant.
Joe's TV Repair on most
value. The appraisal does not
Needs to be proficient in Excel and
$900 Also 1995 Subaru Outinclude an interior examination makes &amp; Models. House Calls
Word. Outlook is a plus. Casual atApartments/Townhouses
back Wagon. All Wheel Drive.
of any structures, if any, on the 304-675-1724
Rentals
mosphere. Send resumes to:
Decent shape $1500 740-379real estate.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
Office
2615
2 - Bdrm Mobile Home with
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
PO
Box
309
h
o
u
s
e
s
,
N
o
p
e
t
s
,
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Double Garage, 740-367-7553
Mason, WV 25260
only) down on day of sale, bal740-992-2218
ance (cash or certified check
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
only) due on confirmation of
3-BR
2
story
home
in
Bidwell,
Money
To
Lend
$400
+
dep.
Some
utilities
pd.
Medical / Health
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) re2-BR duplexes McCormick
740-418-7504 or 740-988quires successful bidders to
Miscellaneous
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact Medical Billing-If you are seekRoad. Applications available at
6130
pay recording fees and associ- the Ohio Division of Financial In- ing full-time employment and
Wiseman Real Estate. Call 446
Jet
Aeration Motors
ated costs to the Sheriff.
stitutions Office of Consumer Af- possess these skills: Strong
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR -3644 for more info.
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
fairs BEFORE you refinance your Organizational and follow up
ALL SHERIFFʼS SALES OPtownhouse apartments, also
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
ERATE UNDER THE DOCskills, Excellent communicarenting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
3.53 acres w/3BR, 2BA,
TRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. of requests for any large advance tion,problem solving-analytical, 441-1111.
DISH NETWORK.
payments of fees or insurance.
Double Wide, permanent
PROSPECTIVE PURStarting at $19.99/month (for
computer and microsoft office
Call
the
Office
of
Consumer
AffiFIRST MONTH FREE
foundation, black top driveway.
CHASERS ARE URGED TO
12 mos.) &amp; High Speed Interars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to software, ability to change and
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
8x24 sun porch, 8x16 covered
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
net starting at $14.95/month
learn if the mortgage broker or adapt. Send resume to : Fam$425 mo &amp; up
back deck, 24x24 detached
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
(where available.) SAVE! Ask
lender is properly licensed. (This ily Oxygen Attn : Medical
sec dep $300 &amp; up
vinyl siding garage, 30x24 pole about SAME DAY Installation!
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
is a public service announcement Billing 70 pine street
AC, W/D hook-up
barn, w/small lean to. EvenATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
from the Ohio Valley Publishing Gallipolis,Oh 45631 NO
CALL Now! 1-888-476-0098
tenant pays elec
ings 740-446-6689 or 740-441Michael L. Barr, LITTLE,
Company)
PHONE CALLS.
EHO
Want To Buy
7488
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211Ellm View Apts
213 E. Second Street,
EMPLOYMENT
Absolute
Top Dollar - silver/gold
EDUCATION
304-882-3017
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telecoins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewGarage apt for rent: Nice and
phone: (740) 992-6689
elry, dental gold, pre 1935 US curLg 2 BR apt in Pt Pleasant.
clean, I bdrm. Non-smoking,
(5)8, 15, 22
rency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
Newly
painted,
kit
appl,
gas
ref,
dep,
no
pets.
304-675Drivers &amp; Delivery
Business &amp; Trade School
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
heat/AC, W/D hook-up. $375
5162
Gallipolis. 446-2842
ANNOUNCEMENTS
2-drivers needed , OTR Flatmo plus $200 dep. 804-677Gallipolis Career
College
bed, 2yrs experience required
(Careers Close To Home)
8621.
SERVICE / BUSINESS
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Call 740-286-3558
Call Today! 740-446-4367
DIRECTORY
1-800-214-0452
Middleport, OH, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts, Area / $400mo. Call 304-238gallipoliscareercollege.edu
no
pets,
dep
&amp;
ref.
5127
Help Wanted General
Notices
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
740-992-0165
Miscellaneous
for Independent Colleges and Schools
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill is now
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
1274B
Pleasant
Valley
Apartments
is
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFMobile
Home
Lot
for
Rent
accepting applications for all
PUBLISHING CO.
now taking applications for 2,
$130 Month, plus Deposit 740- ING. Unconditional Lifetime
positions including Servers,
Recommends that you do
REAL ESTATE SALES
Guarantee. Local references.
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsid367-7995
Bussers, Dishwashers, Bar
Business with People you
Established in 1975. Call
ized Apartments. Applications
know, and NOT to send Money Staff and Kitchen Staff. Applic24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
are taken Monday through
Sales
through the Mail until you have ants must be customer service
Basement Waterproofing
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. OfCommercial
oriented, have an excellent atInvestigated the Offering.
fice is located at 1151 EverRepo's
Available
Call
titude and present themselves
Commercial Bldg in downtown
740)446-3570
green Drive, Point Pleasant,
HONDA
in a professional manner. To
Middleport, 3 apts and 2 store
Pictures that have been
WV. (304) 675-5806.
apply, stop in the restaurant or fronts, $70,000. Call
1988
GL1500
placed in ads at the
go to www.courtsidebarand740-985-3646
ANIMALS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
grill.com and click the employMOTORBIKE
must be picked within
ment link for an on line applicaFOR SALE: Ambrosia Ma30 days. Any pictures
tion. Courtside is an equal opFOR FREE
chine Inc. Point Pleasant, WV.
Pets
portunity employer.
that are not picked up
Complete manual machine
will be
discarded.
FREE RESCUE KITTENS to
shop, weld shop and fabricaIF INTERESTED
Help Wanted:Employee
good homes only. 740-949tion. 9 acres on Kanawha
Spring Valley Green ApartCONTACT:
needed
to
help
install
manu3408
between
5pm-8pm.
River.
Call
304-675-1722
or
ments 1 BR at $425 Month.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
factured housing. Must have
304-675-4144 ask for Marvin
yahieltammy@hotmail.com
446-1599.
YARD SALE
work experience of this type.
60418383
Bing.
FREE to a good home 1/2
Apply at French City Homes,
Houses For Rent
Australian Shepherds 2-feSERVICES
Gallipolis, Oh. 740-446-9340
For Sale By Owner
3-Bdrm - 1 1/2 bath -2 car gar- male and 2-male Black &amp;
Stanley
age near Holzer Hospital. No
White - Call 441-7894
97 Skyline, 2BR, 1BA, 16x80
Professional Services
Tree
Trimming
Local Heating and Cooling
Pets &amp; No Smoking $670/mo.
Single Wide, heat pump inCompany needing a Service
&amp; Removal
Utilities &amp; deposit 645-3836
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
cluded,
Must
Be
Moved
$4,000
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron Technician. Mail Resume :
AUTOMOTIVE
• Prompt and Quality Work
740-709-0146
Lg - 4 Bdrm / 2bath Country
Evans
Jackson,
O H Heating &amp; Cooling 1011 Mill
• Reasonable Rates
Creek Road Gallipolis,Ohio
Home with attached 2-car gar800-537-9528
• Insured • Experienced
Houses For Sale
45631.
age, $700mo Ref &amp; Dep. req.
Trucks/SUVs/Vans
• References Available
Call 740-649-0541
2001 16 x 70 2 BR, 2 BA moPOWER WASHING
Gary Stanley
1995
Ford
F150,
4x4,
Extra
Now
hiring
exp
carpenters
in
bile
home
on
2.6
acres,
with
a
Remodeling Done - Ready to
AND
Cab.
Body
rough
but
drivable.
740-591-8044
roofing,
rafters
&amp;
framing.
cabin.
50810
Bigley
Ridge
Rd,
move in.Lg. 3 Bdrm - Village
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR
Newer 8 cylinder engine with
Send resumes to: P.O. Box
Long Bottom, OH. $39,500
of Patriot NO PETS 379-2540
PAINTING 304-895-3981
Please leave a message
low miles. Good transmission.
1124, Gallipolis, OH 45631
OBO 252-564-4805
Bed liner and fiberglass topper.
Entertainment
$900 Also 1995 Subaru Outback Wagon. All Wheel Drive.
Decent shape $1500 740-3792615

Final

60402051

Crown

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Wednesday, May 22, 2013:
This year you become very aware
of your social interactions. You want
more from your relationships, and
you approach life with a greater
understanding and lightness. Your
lack of intensity might be a relief to
many people. If you are single, you’ll
meet someone who could become
very special to you. If you are
attached, you are likely to fulfill one
of your goals together. You will enjoy
the process as much as you enjoy
the outcome. SCORPIO has a lot of
your qualities, but he or she is quieter
about it.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH More options could appear
than you’d thought possible. Consider
having a long-overdue conversation with a trusted adviser or friend.
You will gain a new perspective as
a result. Both of you will see the
negatives as well as the positives.
Tonight: Continue a conversation
over dinner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH You might not be sure
about an offer that seems nearly too
good to be true. Give yourself time
and space. Do what you must, but
call a trusted loved one for a talk later
in the day. Together, you make great
decisions. Tonight: Make it easy to
get together with friends.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Use the first part of the day
for anything that depends on your
ingenuity. Sometimes you go overboard without intending to, especially
financially. Avoid taking a risk for
now. Later, when you have an opportunity to weigh the pros and cons, do.
Tonight: Get some R and R.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH Getting going might be nearly impossible. Why not take the day
off? You might need some space in
order to see a situation more clearly.
Also, stop and consider what you
want from this circumstance. You will
come up with an effective solution.
Tonight: Take a midweek break.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH Answer calls, and arrange
an impromptu meeting later in the
day. By late afternoon, you will want
to slow down and do a bit of reflecting. You also might want to complete
some quiet work. Rethink a personal
situation involving a loved one at a
distance. Tonight: At home.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH You might want to do
something very differently from
how you have in the past. Do some
research, or at least bounce several
of your ideas off someone. You will
be able to determine which way to
go after having this conversation.
Tonight: Hang out with a friend.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH You have extra charisma
this morning, especially if you make
decisions from the perspective of the
greater good of the whole. Be sure
to keep an eye on the ramifications
of a financial decision. Avoid a risk,
no matter how dreamy it might seem.
Tonight: Treat yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HH Gather much-needed research
in order to confirm in your own mind
which path is right for you. Listen to
powerful feedback from a friend and/
or an adviser. This person has your
best interests in mind. Later today, let
others know how you feel. Tonight:
Where the action is.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You might not believe the
good will that surrounds you this
morning. You don’t often get sunny
weather with the wind pushing you
in the direction you want. Network,
make calls and say “yes” to a sudden
meeting. Tonight: Take some personal time; you have a lot on your plate.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Assume the lead, but know
that you could get some flak for your
decisions. Be aware of your boundaries. The afternoon presents you with
a positive response and a brainstorming session. You’ll get to share your
dreams with others, and they with
you. Tonight: Take a break.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH By all means, get ahead
of a problem by finding the solution. Though many might not understand how you got there, they will
be relieved to discover that you got
to that point. Accept a last-minute
request to fill in for a boss or supervisor. Tonight: Consider being freer.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Respond in kind to a
partner who is making sure that you
are on the same page. Unity might
be more important than you realize.
Look to plan a trip or getaway for a
few days. It is time for you to indulge
in a long-term desire. Tonight: Look
beyond the obvious.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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