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

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Bashan VFD to hold
event for K-9
program... Page 2

Showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy. High near 82.
Low around 71......... Page 2

Tony Stewart
breaks leg
in crash,....
Page 6

Marion Eva Huley Ford, 89
Penny K. (Long) Haner, 67
Dicie Mable Hobson, 84
Richard J. Kruzel, 85
Bobbie Gene Spaulding, 81

50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 126

SRO to have presence in local schools
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY —
Protecting, serving and
teaching the youth of
Meigs County will be some
of the important roles filled
by Meigs County Sheriff’s
Deputy Mark Griffin as he
takes on the position of
School Resource Officer in
the coming weeks.
Griffin — a seven-year
veteran of the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office — was
selected by Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood to
serve in the position.
Duties of the School
Resource Officer include

drug prevention education, school safety and security and traffic control.
Griffin will work in the
Meigs and Eastern school
districts on multiple programs for the upcoming
year.
Project ALERT and the
SAVE (Students Against
Violence
Everywhere)
program are two of the
programs Griffin will be
launching in the schools
this year to help with those
goals.
Project ALERT is an
age-appropriate substance
abuse prevention curriculum proven effective in
reducing experimentation

among teens and in reducing usage among teens
who experiment.
The program is geared
toward seventh and eighth
grades students.
Lessons taught through
the program focus on alcohol, tobacco, marijuana
and inhalants.
A letter that will be sent
home to parents of students involved in the program reads in part, “Both
school districts are committed to providing the
Sarah Hawley| Sentinel
most effective approaches Meigs County Sheriff’s Deputy Mark Griffin, back second from right, will serve as the school
to preventing the use of resource officer through the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office. Pictured are (front from left) Tom
alcohol, tobacco and other Sutton of Rio Grande Community College Meigs Branch, Sandy Philson and Kay Davis of Car-

leton School, (back) Eastern Local Schools Superintendent Scot Gheen, Sheriff Keith Wood,

See SRO | 5 Griffin, and Meigs Local Schools Superintendent Rusty Bookman.

Meth-making
materials found
in stolen truck
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Sarah Hawley| Sentinel

Officers conduct a controlled lithium burn during Saturday’s methamphetamine training in Middleport. Sparks are
visible coming from the bucket just seconds after lithium was dropped into the water.

Knowledge is power …
Local officers, officials
attend meth training
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — Most people would agree that there is a
drug problem in this area — more
specifically, a methamphetamine
problem. But, would you know if a
meth lab was right in front of you?
While you may think so, that is
not always the case. Meth labs can
be contained in various shapes
and sizes, making it difficult to
know for sure what may be in
front of you.
During a live training on Saturday morning, officials ranging
from local law enforcement, EMS,
fire departments, children services and the courts learned not
only how meth is made and neutralized, but what other items to
look for that may indicate a lab is
close by.

RACINE — One person has been arrested after chemicals used in the manufacture of methamphetamine were
found in a stolen vehicle.
Meigs County Sheriff Keith O. Wood reports the recovery of a stolen 1994 Dodge truck
Monday evening. The vehicle was
reported stolen Saturday in Middleport.
Wood reports the vehicle was located in the Village of Racine and was
found to contain several chemicals
used to manufacture methamphetamine. Within minutes Tannar Diehl,
19, of Syracuse was arrested in Racine without incident.
Tannar Diehl
Diehl is charged with illegally possessing chemicals for the manufacturing of a controlled
substance, a felony of the third degree, and receiving
stolen property for having possession of the stolen truck.
Additional charges are pending in the case according to
the Sheriff.
Diehl was released on his own recognizance following
an appearance in Meigs County Court Tuesday. Attorney
Charles Knight was appointed to represent Diehl, with a
preliminary hearing set for 11:30 a.m. Thursday.

August is National
Immunization
Awareness Month
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY — August is National Immunization
Awareness Month.
The goal is to increase awareness about immunizations
across the lifespan, from infants to the elderly.
While many people are routinely immunized, there are
still tens of thousands of deaths around the world that
are caused by vaccine preventable diseases. Most parents
realize the importance of vaccines for their pre-school
age children, but many people do not know that children
Detective Rick Smith shows those in attendance a tester which detects the
and adults need immunizations throughout their life
level of ammonia toxicity, something that is produced during the cooking of
span. The Southern Local Schools Wellness Center has
See METH | 5 a methamphetamine lab.
vaccines available for people of all ages and offers state
funded programs to cover the cost for those without insurance.
Examine your child’s “immunization record” closely, it
is also important to make sure pre-teens and teens are
caught up on other vaccinations they may have missed
when they were younger, such as Varicella (chickenpox),
MMR (protects against measles, mumps and rubella) and
Charlene Hoeflich
butions to the University
the inactivated poliovirus vaccine. Some adolescents may
choeflich@civitasmedia.com
of Rio Grande scholarship
need additional shots to protect against Hepatitis A, Hepprograms, to assisting seatitis B, influenza and pneumococcal disease.
MIDDLEPORT — “En- nior citizens through the
Teens entering the seventh are required to have an adgage Rotarians, Change Meals on Wheels program,
ditional vaccine before the 2013-2014 school year begins
Lives.”
to giving to the Mulberry
— Tdap. Tdap is a vaccine that protects against three seriThat was 2013-14 mes- Community Center for
ous diseases: tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (whoopsage that Bart Mahoney, programs which assist dising cough).
Rotary District 6690 Gov- advantaged families, and
Pre-teens and teens are also recommended to receive
ernor, brought this week on the national level, to dothe HPV vaccine. Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines
to members of the Middle- nating to Polio Plus which
help protect both girls and boys from HPV infection and
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club is a program aimed at elimcancer caused by HPV. HPV vaccine protects girls from
from International Rotary inating polio worldwide.
the types of HPV that cause most cervical cancer. HPV
President Ron D. Burton.
vaccines are given to preteens as three shots over six
The Middleport Rotary
His message spoke to the Club has a long history of
months when they are 11 or 12 years old. Preteens and
role of Rotarians in their service. It was chartered in
teens need to get all three shots for full protection. PreSubmitted photo teens and teens that haven’t gotten all three HPV shots
communities and around 1929, but it was a number
the world.
of years later that the club Rotary District 6690 Governor Bart Mahoney, left, joins should ask the doctor or nurse about getting them now.
Locally, the Rotarians changed its name to the Brian Howard, Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary president; and
It is best to check with you primary care physician to
Shawna Stump, assistant District 6690 Governor, at Monare geared to changing
See ROTARIANS | 5 day’s meeting.
See AUGUST | 5
lives through their contri-

Rotarians reaching out, changing lives

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Local Briefs

Bashan VFD to hold
event to benefit K-9 unit
BASHAN — The Bashan Volunteer Fire Department will hold a car wash and bake sale beginning
at 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 10.
All proceeds will go to the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office to assist with the acquisition of a new dog for
the K-9 program.
Sheriff Keith Wood and Deputy Brandy King will
be on hand to answer questions and give information on the program. The fire department is located
on County Road 28 in Bashan.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 45.79
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.07
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 88.10
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.24
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 50.47
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 95.86
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.05
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.312
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.37
Collins (NYSE) — 74.13
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.20
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.61
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.31
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 58.71
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.49
Kroger (NYSE) — 39.29
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 56.96
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 73.93
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.55
BBT (NYSE) — 36.08

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 22.42
Pepsico (NYSE) — 85.05
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.61
Rockwell (NYSE) — 99.39
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.13
Royal Dutch Shell — 64.30
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.33
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.87
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 7.43
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.69
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.71
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for August 6, 2013, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac
Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

Health Department closed
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will be closed
from noon-1 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 9.
Normal hours will resume at 1 p.m.

dren must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but not required.

Hydrant flushing
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs announced
that fire hydrants in the village
will be flushed Aug. 5-9, weather
permitting.

Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 10 (Carpenter Hill Road)
will be closed for approximately one
month beginning July 29. County
forces will be replacing a culvert with
a new bridge on County Road 10 at
a site approximately 2,000 feet north
of County Road 17 (Cotterill Road).
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 por-

Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Chil-

Meigs County Church Calendar
Long Bottom Church Sing
LONG BOTTOM — The Faithful Gospel Church located at Long Bottom on Ohio 124, will have a song service
at 7 p.m. on Friday. The Peace Makers will be singing.
Vacation Bible School
MIDDLEPORT — Mega Sports Camp Vacation Bible
School will be held from 6-8 p.m., Aug. 5-9 at the Middleport Nazarene Church.
Community Dinner
POMEROY — A free community dinner of hamburg-

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ers, hot dogs, pasta salads, desserts and drinks will be
served from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church
on Thursday, August 8. The public is invited to attend.
Clothing Give-away
ALBANY — Albany Baptist Church will hold its annual clothing giveaway on Saturday, August 17. It will be
held at the church located at 5331 State Street in Albany
from 9 a.m. to noon. There will be clothing for children
of all ages and adults, shoes of all sizes, house ware items
and miscellaneous items. For more information call (740)
698-3163 or 1-877-MYCHURCH.

6th Ohioan dies
in Legionnaires’
disease outbreak

Ohio Valley Forecast
Wednesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 2 p.m., then showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m.,
then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3
p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 82. South wind
6 to 8 mph. 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: Showers likely and possibly
a thunderstorm before midnight, then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind around
6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New
rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an
inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely,
mainly after 5 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near
87. Southwest wind around 7 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: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a low around 70. South
wind 3 to 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of
an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms
before 1 p.m., then showers likely and possibly a
thunderstorm between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m., then showers and thunderstorms likely after 2 p.m. Cloudy,
with a high near 82. Chance of precipitation is 60
percent. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and
quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible
in thunderstorms.
Friday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely
before 9 p.m., then showers likely and possibly a
thunderstorm between 9 p.m. and 11 p.m., then a
chance of showers and thunderstorms after 11 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 84. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 64.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
60.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.
Monday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around
64.
Tuesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 82.

table 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.
MEIGS COUNTY — Ohio 124
(located 0.4 miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced to one
lane 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 reopen August
31, 2013.

Don and Mary Hill

Hills observe
50th anniversary
RACINE — An open house to honor Don and
Mary Hill on their 50th wedding anniversary will be
held from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 10, at the Racine American Legion hall.
The couple were married on Aug. 9, 1963 at the
Racine United Methodist Church.
Family and friends are all welcome to attend the
observance.

COLUMBUS (AP) — A
sixth death was confirmed
Tuesday in Ohio’s largest
outbreak of Legionnaires’
disease as the affected
retirement complex took
steps to prevent further
illness and health officials
tried to determine what
caused a second outbreak
about 80 miles away.
Thirty-nine people, including eight visitors and
one employee, have been
sickened at Wesley Ridge
Retirement Community in
Reynoldsburg, just east of
Columbus.
The disease, a rare type
of pneumonia, isn’t contagious. People contract it by
breathing in water droplets
contaminated with bacteria that are found naturally
in water and sometimes
multiply in large or complex man-made water systems, such as plumbing
in large buildings. Most
people exposed to the
bacteria don’t become ill,
but those who are older
or have weakened immune
systems are at higher risk.
Those affected at Wesley
Ridge ranged in age from
63 to 99. The six who died
were residents.
The bacteria were found
in a cooling tower and
the water system at the

complex, which used high
heat and chlorine to try to
destroy the bacteria after
a few of the roughly 225
residents first became sick
last month. The retirement
community is testing water, installing special filtering shower heads and planning to create long-term
testing and maintenance
plans to ensure no one else
becomes ill, said Margaret
Carmany, CEO of Wesley
Ridge’s parent company,
Methodist ElderCare Services.
“I’m doing everything in
my power to make sure we
get rid of this bacteria and
we keep it out of our system,” Carmany said. She
said the complex had met
or exceeded regulators’ water safety standards prior
to the outbreak.
Once the outbreak is fully addressed, the Ohio Department of Health plans
discussions about whether
pretreating water systems
would be a cost-effective
way to reduce the risk at
facilities like hospitals and
nursing homes, which have
complex water systems
and patrons with increased
vulnerability to disease,
department spokeswoman
Tessie Pollock said.

Post-Romney, some in GOP reject advice to moderate
WASHINGTON (AP)
— After Mitt Romney’s
2012 loss, many senior
Republicans
concluded
the party must moderate
its image on issues such as
immigration and reproductive rights.
But some GOP lawmakers have done the opposite.
They imposed new restrictions on abortion in
several states. They are
strongly resisting a broad
immigration bill in the U.S.
House. They’re waging a
steady assault on “Obamacare,” with some House
and Senate Republicans

60438690

In Loving Memory of

Ramona E. “Mona” Roush
on her birthday Aug. 7, 1937

If I could visit heaven and be with
you today, maybe for a moment the
pain would go away. I would put
my arms around you and whisper
words so true, that living life
without you is so very hard to do.
Sadly missed by husband Manning

vowing to shut down the
government if that’s what
it takes to choke off the
health care law Congress
enacted in 2010.
These trends worry establishment Republicans.
And they expose a growing
split in the GOP, which is
driven more by campaign
strategy than ideology.
One side focuses chiefly
on presidential elections,
saying that Republicans
must change course to
compete in 2016 and beyond after having lost the
popular vote in five of the
last six contests.
The other side is a congressional wing, driven
largely by House conservatives focused on their own
elections, and determined
to avoid primary challenges from the right.

To an extent not mirrored among Democrats,
these two GOP wings
sometimes work against
each other. For instance,
a Republican Party- sanctioned study of Romney’s
loss concluded the party
must embrace “comprehensive immigration reform”
to stem losses among Hispanic voters nationwide.
The Senate has passed
such a bill, which would
create a pathway to citizenship for millions of
immigrants living here illegally. But dozens of House
Republicans oppose it,
because their conservative
supporters dislike what
they consider “amnesty”
for law breakers.
In tone, if not always
in substance, a number of
elected Republicans seem

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Funeral Home
Since 1913
740-992-2121
60437666

Kevin Schwarzel Mike Putman
Owners

to be edging farther right
— and toward greater
combativeness with President Barack Obama — on
numerous issues.
For nearly two decades,
Republicans shunned the
idea of shutting down
the federal government
in budget disputes with
Democratic
presidents.
They recalled the two partial shutdowns in the mid1990s that angered many
Americans, who in turn
blamed Republicans more
than President Bill Clinton
and his fellow Democrats.
Now, however, prominent Republicans are urging colleagues to close the
government temporarily
this fall — by refusing to
fund federal operations beyond Sept. 30 — if that’s
the only way to cut off
money for Obama’s health
care law.
Ted Cruz of Texas, one
of the dozen Republican
senators who signed a
letter to that effect, says
the mid-1990s experience wasn’t so bad. The
predicted “parade of horribles,” Cruz said in a recent Senate speech, “did
not occur. Social Security
checks continued to flow.
The military continued to
be funded….Planes didn’t
fall out of the sky.”

�Wednesday, August 7, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obama pitches mortgage overhaul as housing rallies
PHOENIX (AP) — Buoyed
by an improving housing market, President Barack Obama on
Tuesday proposed a broad overhaul of the nation’s mortgage finance system, including winding
down government-backed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. He
declared that taxpayers should
never again be left “holding the
bag” for the mortgage giants’
bad bets.
Obama outlined his proposals
in Phoenix, the once foreclosureriddled city at the epicenter of
the nation’s housing crisis. The
housing market in Phoenix, as

well as in many other parts of the
country, has rebounded robustly,
with prices in the southwestern
city up 66 percent from the low
point in 2011.
Despite the nationwide gains,
the president said sweeping
housing reforms are still needed
to ensure that a rejuvenated market doesn’t simply “re-inflate the
housing bubble.” The cornerstone of that effort is winding
down Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, a proposal with bipartisan
support in the Senate.
“For too long, these companies were allowed to make big

profits buying mortgages, knowing that if their bets went bad,
taxpayers would be left holding
the bag,” Obama told a crowd of
more than 2,000 at an area high
school.
He spoke following a tour of a
construction company that has
been able to hire hundreds of
new workers as a result of the region’s housing comeback.
While the president has previously endorsed overhauling
Fannie and Freddie, his remarks
Tuesday marked the first time he
outlined his specific priorities
for doing so.

For the Record
911
Aug. 5
9:18 a.m., Texas Road, chest pain; 2:20
p.m., White Oak Road, fall; 2:36 p.m.,
East Memorial Drive, ATV accident; 3:00
p.m., Beech Street, abdominal pain; 4:06
p.m., Rocksprings Road, police call; 4:36
p.m., Bashan Road, chest pain; 5:11 p.m.,
Fourth Street, allergic reaction; 5:55 p.m.,
Mill Street, chest pain; 6:00 p.m., Pearl
Street, head injury; 6:44 p.m., East Memorial Drive, laceration; 8:15 p.m., Briar
Ridge Road, chest pain.
Land Transfers
POMEROY — The following land transfers were recently recorded with the Meigs
County Recorder’s Office, Deutsche Bank
National Trust Company, Novastar Mortgage Funding, Novastar Home Equity,
Ocwen Loan Service LLC to EH Pooled,
deed, Orange; EH Pooled to James Roberts Osborne, Connie Laticia Osborne,
deed, Orange; Amy L. Young, Amy Lynn
Young to Farmers Bank and Savings Company, sheriff deed, Racine Village/Sutton; Bracy A. Korn, Shannon J. Korn to
Federal National Mortgage,sheriffs deed,
Salisbury/Pomeroy Village; Bracy A. Korn
to Four Brothers Properties, sheriffs deed,
Pomeroy Village;
Carl B. Heil, Erin Heil to Carl B. Heil,
Erin A. Heil, deed, Salem; Alison M. Honert to Geoffrey G. Honert, deed, Olive;
Kathy L. Sabo to Bryan R. Sabo, deed,
Columbia; Peter K. Connolly, Tracie
Connolly to Alex K. Gardner, Carrie L.
Gardner, deed, Chester; Bank of America
to Secretary of Housing, deed, Pomeroy;
Four Brothers Properties to Mary Jane
Murray, Mary A. Kelley, deed, Pomeroy
Village; John T. Williams to Ryan B. Williams, Jane Ann Williams, deed, Sutton;
John T. Williams to Ryan B. Williams,
Jane Ann Williams, deed, Middleport
Village; Brian Eugene Bass, deceased, to
Bethany Ellen Marie Oxyer, certificate of
transfer, Lebanon;
Cheryl A. Smith to Justin Jeffers, deed,
Rutland; Timothy A. Bissell to David L.
Weber, Deborah S. Weber, deed, Orange;
Franklin T. Cremeans, deceased, to Edward Elton Sigler, deed, Rutland; Neal D.
Bonecutter to Wells fargo Bank, sheriffs
deed, Chester; Robert Rozell, Julia Rozell
to Tuppers Plains Chester Water District,
right of way; Olive; Richard E. McDonald, Carolyn Bookman, Gary F. Bookman
to Richard E. McDonald, deed, Bedford;
Richard E. McDonald, Carolyn Bookman,
Gary F. Bookman to Christine L. McDonald, deed, Bedford; Richard E. McDonald,
Carolyn Bookman to Carolyn Bookman,
Gary F. Bookman, deed, Bedford;
Vicki A. Hanson to Christian Apostolic
Church Pentecostal, deed, Pomeroy Village; Elizabeth Duffy to Tyler R. Andrews,
deed, Pomeroy Village; Bethany Ellen Marie Oxyer, Bethany E. M. Oxyer, Matthew
David Oxyer to James Hayman, deed, Lebanon; Scott D. Carsey, Donielle R. Carsey
to Scott D. Carsey, Donielle R. Carsey,
deed, Sutton; Larry E. Hoffman, Leverna
M. Hoffman to Wendell L. Eblin, Nancy L.
Norris, deed, Middleport Village; Larry
Lemley, Cheryl Lemly, Cheryl Lemley to
Wanda L. Morris, Leigh A. Morris, deed,
Rutland Village; Jeffrey S. Darnell, Tonya
R. Darnell to Tonya R. Darnell, Jeffrey S.
Darnell, deed, Salisbury;
Charles W. Sampson, Nicole Celeste
McDaniel, Nicole Celeste Sampson to
Deborah D. Clay, deed, Syracuse Village;
LMH Real Estate to Peter Connolly,
Tracie Connolly, deed, Pomeroy Village;
Kathleen Ila Dalton, deceased, Kathy
Dalton, deceased, to Curtis Dalton, affidavit, Scipio; Julie Sheridan, Shannon A.
Sheridan to Morgan Hager, deed, Scipio;
Traci L. Ervin, William G. Ervin to Morgan Hager, deed, Scipio; Morgan Hager
to Shannon A. Sheridan, Julie Sheridan,
deed, Scipio; Julie Sheridan, Shannon A.
Sheridan to William G. Ervin, Traci L. Ervin, deed, Scipio;
Linda K. Patterson, deceased, to John
T. Patterson, affidavit, Pomeroy Village;
John T. Patterson to Tyler R. Andrews,
deed, Pomeroy Village; Terry A. Gordon,
Julie A. Gordon to Facemyer Lumber
Company, deed, Olive; Facemyer and

Salmons Lumber Company Inc., Facemyer
Lumber Incorporated to Terry A. Gordon,
deed, Olive; Richard A. Hagerty, Dorothy
G. Hagerty, Richard Hagerty, Dorothy
Hagerty to Hagerty Convertible Investment Property Trust, Ronald Hagerty,
deed, Salem; Tammy Little, Mark Little,
Eric Little to Zachary T. Little, deed, Olive;
Thomas L. Dorst, deceased, to Robin
Dorst, certificate of transfer, Orange;
Stanley E. Dorst, Robin Dorst to Sammie
W. Brown, Loretta A. Brown, deed, Orange; Thompson Revocable Living Trust,
Louella Roush to Matt Stewart, Kelsey
Stewart, deed, Chester; Edward L. Savage, Donna K. Savage to Ashley Clary,
deed, Scipio; Lester L. Parker II to Lester
L. Parker II, Sherri D. Sisson, deed, Chester; Carol Manley, Phyllis Manley to Scott
Taylor, deed, Salisbury;
Pauline Swisher Thompson, Ruth
Thompson Swisher, Robert Thompson,
Jon P. Thompson, Tamara Thompson,
Dwight D. Thompson, Darla Thompson,
Emmet Roy Thompson, Pamela J. Thompson, Teresa Lee Thompson Davis, Wilma
L. Parker, April Gayle Lewis, Todd Lewis, Aaron H. Parker, Patricia E. Parker,
Lora Maxine Little, Maxine Little, Billy
W. Little, Connie Little, Keith R. Little,
Carol Little, Peggy A. Thomas, Charles
Todd Thomas, Polenia Thomas, Shawn
P. Thomas, Janet Thomas, Marvin Davis,
Douglas W. Little to Rolling Hills Generating LLC, easement, Salisbury;
Mary H. Stewart, Jerry A. Stewart, Linda J. Pleasants to Catherine J. Matthews,
deed, Syracuse Village; Debbie K. Duvall
to Charles P. Parker, Robyn L. Parker,
deed, Meigs; Timothy Bissell to Brenda
Sue Montoney, deed, Chester; Sandra J.
Alexander, Gerald B. Alexander to Gerald
B. Alexander, Sandra J. Alexander, deed,
Sutton; Ray A. Rowe to Roy A. Rowe Revocable Living Trust, Roy A. Rowe, deed,
Letart; Dorothy Clatworthy to Henry
Clatworthy, deed, Middleport Village;
Robin Dawn Reedy to Richard D. Reeve,
deed, Columbia;
Paul E. Hoffman to Stephen E. Hoffman, Barbara L. Hoffman, deed, Chester;
Earl Eugene Phelps, deceased to Sharon
M. Phelps, certificate of transfer; Timothy
Bissell, Lea Wandling, Lea Bissell, Joshua
Wandling to Timothy Bissell, deed, Olive;
Sycamore Way LLC to Horizon Telcom
Inc., Horizon View Cable Inc., easement,
Sutton; Franklin Real Estate Company to
Southern Ohio Coal Company, easement,
Rutland and Salem; Cecil Lee Stacy, deceased, Cecil L. Stacy, deceased, Cecil
L. Stacey, deceased, to Bobby Ray Stacy,
James Allen Stacy, certificate of transfer,
Salem and Scipio;
Robert P. Meier, Marilyn S. Meier
to Richard P. Ohms, Nicole R. Ohms,
deed, Salisbury; Ruth Anne Balderson,
deceased, Lyle Balderson, deceased, to
Kay E. Long, affidavit, Olive; R. Craig
Mathews, Sandra S. mathews to Sandra S.
Mathews, Sandra S. mathews Revocable
Trust, deed, Bedford; Diana R. McCune,
Paul H. Baer Trust to William Kautz,
deed, Chester; Charles I. Mugrare, Evelyn M. Mugrage to Charles I. Mugrage,
Evelyn M. Mugrage, Mugrage Family Living Trust, deed, Sutton; Walter J. Robb III
to Eagle Rose Corporation, right of way,
Columbia;
Henry M. Hoppe, Mary L. Hoppe to
Robert J. Kowalski, deed, Olive; Alice
Hawthorne to Rodney Tripp, Jeni Tripp,
deed, Orange; George Franklin Stewart
Sr., deceased, George F. Stewart, deceased, to Carolyn Stewart, Carolyn S.
Stewart, affidavit, Middleport Village;
Donna Lynn Gorslene, deceased, Donna
Gorslene, deceased, to Wesley Gorslene,
affidavit, Rutland; Wesley Gorslene to
Carl L. Wolfe, Carolyn Wolfe, deed, Rutland; Doris Vukson, deceased, to Paula
Vukson, affidavit, Middleport Village; Sharon Lawrence, Howard Lawrence to JD
Drilling Company, affidavit, Meigs.

60438955

The president wants to replace
Fannie and Freddie with a system
that would put the private sector,
not the government, primarily at
risk for loans. The government
would still be involved, both in
oversight and as a last-resort
loan guarantor.
Obama is also seeking guarantees that a private sector-led
mortgage finance system would
still ensure wide homeowner
access to popular 30-year mortgages at fixed rates.
Making light of criticism from
Republicans who have cast him
as a big-spending liberal, Obama

joked that his calls for deeper private sector involvement “must
sound confusing to the folks who
call me a socialist.”
Obama’s mortgage reform priorities are largely in line with a
Senate measure shepherded by
Republican Sen. Bob Corker of
Tennessee and Democratic Sen.
Mark Warner of Virginia. That
legislation would wind down
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
within five years.
Once flourishing, Fannie and
Freddie were bailed out in 2008
by a $187 billion taxpayer-backed
bailout.

Yemen again at forefront
of fight against terror
SANAA, Yemen (AP)
— Yemen was thrust back
into the forefront of the
international fight against
terrorism Tuesday when
the U.S. and Britain evacuated embassy staff due to
a threatened attack, a suspected U.S. drone killed
four alleged members of
al-Qaida, and militants
shot down a Yemeni army
helicopter.
As Westerners flew out
of the country, Yemeni authorities launched a wide
investigation into the alQaida threat to multiple
potential targets in the
impoverished Arab nation. Security officials said
they believed the terror
network was seeking retaliation for a U.S.-backed
military offensive that has
dealt serious setbacks to
the terror network’s most
active branch, including the death of its No. 2
leader in a January drone
strike.
The Yemeni army, meanwhile, surrounded foreign
installations, government
offices and the airport
with tanks and troops in
the nation’s capital, Sanaa,
as well as the strategic Bab
al-Mandeb straits at the
entrance to the Red Sea
in the southern Arabian
Peninsula, drawing parallels with security measures
following the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in
Aden harbor that killed 17
American sailors.
Authorities also set up
checkpoints across Sanaa,
searching cars and individuals, especially after night

fell. Top government officials, along with military
and security commanders,
were told to stay vigilant
and limit their movements.
Although the immediate threat seemed to be
focused on Yemen, the U.S.
has temporarily shut down
19 diplomatic posts in the
Middle East and Africa.
A U.S. intelligence official
and a Mideast diplomat
told The Associated Press
that the closures were
triggered by the interception of a secret message
between al-Qaida chief
Ayman al-Zawahri and
Nasser al-Wahishi, the
leader of the Yemen-based
al-Qaida in the Arabian
Peninsula, about plans for
a major terror attack. The
officials spoke on condition of anonymity because
they were not authorized
to discuss the matter publicly. Zawahri also made a
public statement on July
30 that exhorted Muslims
to kill Americans “in every
spot on Earth.”
Yemeni
investigators
looking into the threat said
they believe the motive of
the attack was retaliation
for the killing of Saudiborn Saeed al-Shihri, who
was released from the U.S.
prison in Guantanamo Bay
after nearly six years and
later became the No. 2 alQaida leader in Yemen. AlShihri was later killed in
a November drone strike,
the militant group acknowledged.
The terror network has
suffered a series of setbacks
after the military launched

an offensive in June with
the help of U.S. forces that
has succeeded in uprooting it from strongholds in
the south. The group had
taken advantage of the
instability after the Arab
Spring wave of revolutions
that led to the resignation
of Yemen’s longtime leader,
Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Yemen’s current president, Abdo Rabby Mansour Hadi, met with U.S.
President Barack Obama
at the White House last
week, where both leaders
cited strong counterterrorism cooperation.
Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said the
U.S. Air Force transported
State Department personnel out of Sanaa early
Tuesday. The department
said in a travel warning
that it had ordered the departure of non-emergency
U.S. government personnel “due to the continued
potential for terrorist attacks,” adding that U.S.
citizens should leave immediately because of an
“extremely high” security
threat level.
A senior defense official
said that between 50 and
100 diplomatic personnel
were flown from Sanaa
in a military transport to
Ramstein Air Base in Germany. The official was not
authorized to discuss the
information publicly and
spoke on condition of anonymity. The official said
dozens of military troops
remain in Yemen, including those providing security at the embassy and others training Yemeni troops.

Manning’s max possible
sentence cut to 90 years
FORT MEADE, Md.
(AP) — Army Pfc. Bradley
Manning’s possible sentence for disclosing classified information through
WikiLeaks was trimmed
from 136 years to 90 years
Tuesday by a military
judge who said some of
his offenses were closely
related.
The ruling was largely a
victory for defense attorneys, who had argued for
an 80-year maximum. Still,
the 25-year-old soldier
could spend most, if not
all, of his remaining years
inside a prison at Fort
Leavenworth, Kansas.
The sentencing phase
of
Manning’s
courtmartial is in its second
week. He was convicted
last week of 20 counts,
including six Espionage
Act violations, five federal
theft counts and a federal
computer fraud charge
for leaking more than
700,000 documents from
a classified government
computer network while
working as an intelligence
analyst in Iraq in 2010.
Manning
says
he
leaked the material to

60438232

expose wrongdoing by
the military and U.S.
diplomats. He contends
he selectively leaked
material that wouldn’t
harm service members or
national security.
At his sentencing hearing, prosecutors are presenting evidence that the
leaks damaged U.S. interests. They have focused
mainly on the impact of
more than 250,000 State
Department diplomatic
cables that WikiLeaks began publishing in November 2010.
Maj. Gen. Michael Nagata testified for the prosecution Tuesday that the
leaked cables had an impact on U.S. military operations in Pakistan, where he
was deputy commander of
a defense office within the
U.S. embassy in Islamabad.
Nagata saved the details
of the impact for a closed
court session to protect
classified information.
The leaked cables publicly revealed a closer U.S.Pakistani military relationship than Pakistan had
publicly
acknowledged.
The cables also disclosed

U.S. concerns Islamist
militants could get their
hands on Pakistani nuclear
material to make an illicit
weapon.
One leaked cable revealed that instructors at
a prestigious Pakistani defense institution were giving anti-American lessons
to senior officers.
U.S. officials said in 2010
the leaked cables may have
endangered
operatives
inside Afghanistan and
Pakistan who had worked
against the Taliban or alQaida. However, Pentagon
spokesman Geoff Morrell
said at the time that cables
implying some Pakistani
intelligence officials were
aiding insurgents were
“clearly out of step with
where this relationship is
now, and has been heading
for some time.”
Prosecutors also have
presented evidence the
disclosures
damaged
America’s military and diplomatic relationships with
some foreign governments
and endangered the lives
of foreign citizens who had
confided in diplomats.

60438703

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Why not just abolish the NSA? Obama likely to miss goal
Jacob G. Hornberger
Notice that all the public discussion about the
NSA’s supersecret, massive surveillance scheme
assumes that the NSA has
become a permanent part
of American life. The debate revolves around what
restrictions, if any, should
be placed on the NSA’s authority to spy on people.
But the real question
that Americans should be
debating is, Why not simply abolish the NSA?
The NSA was brought
into existence as part of
the national-security state
apparatus that was grafted
onto our constitutional order to fight the Cold War
against America’s World
War II partner and ally, the
Soviet Union. This apparatus brought a fundamental
change in our constitutional order, and it was created without even the semblance of a constitutional
amendment.
But the Cold War is
over. It ended more than
two decades ago. Why do
we need a gigantic, supersecret, Cold War–era spy
agency in our midst?
NSA proponents say that
despite the end of the Cold
War, the NSA is still necessary to “keep us safe.”
Really? Safe from what?
Safe from the dangers that
the two other major components of the national-security state — the military
and the CIA — produce
through their policies and
programs overseas! At the
risk of belaboring the obvious, that’s quite a racket.
Recall that immediately
after the 9/11 attacks, the
first thing that nationalsecurity officials said was
that the terrorists were
motivated by hatred for
America’s “freedom and
values.”
That was palpable nonsense. The real motive
was rooted in anger and
hatred over the horrific
things that the U.S. government had been doing to
people in the Middle East,
especially since the end of
the Cold War, when the
national-security state lost

NSA proponents say that despite
the end of the Cold War, the NSA
is still necessary to ‘keep us safe’.
Really? Safe from what? Safe from
the dangers that the two other
major components of the nationalsecurity state — the military and
the CIA — produce through their
policies and programs overseas! At
the risk of belaboring the obvious,
that’s quite a racket.
its official enemy — Communism — the enemy that
had been used to justify the
existence and expansion of
the national-security state
for some 40 years.
The anger and hatred
that was inducing foreigners to join the terrorist
ranks was the last thing
that U.S. officials wanted
Americans to focus on. If
Americans figured out that
it was U.S. foreign policy at
the hands of the nationalsecurity state that was responsible for the constant
threat of terrorism, then
they might begin asking
critical questions: Why not
end foreign aid and foreign
interventionism? Why not
dismantle America’s vast
military empire, the military-industrial-congressional complex, and the CIA,
along with the NSA? Why
not limit the U.S. government to defending of the
country, much like the
Swiss government does for
Switzerland?
The most important
question that Americans
need to be asking themselves is, Does the national-security state have any
role in a free society?
The Founding Fathers
certainly didn’t think so.
Their deep antipathy to
standing armies was, in
fact, based on the grave
threat to freedom and prosperity that standing armies
present. Moreover, given
their fervent opposition
to meddling in the affairs

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of other countries, they
would never have countenanced a supersecret
paramilitary organization
like the CIA. And given
their ardent commitment
to liberty and privacy, our
Founding Fathers certainly
would never have permitted a supersecret spy agency like the NSA to exist in
our country.
Anyway, what good does
the NSA do at this point?
How can it honestly purport to “keep us safe” with
a massive surveillance
scheme that everyone concedes isn’t going to catch
any terrorists, given that
terrorists are not going to
be using emails and cell
phones to organize their
plans. All that the NSA
is left with is a massive
surveillance scheme that
keeps track of the American people, but not terrorists.
When the Cold War ended, Americans had a grand
opportunity to bring an
end to the Cold War national-security state apparatus.
Now that the United States
has ended its occupation of
Iraq and is ending its occupation of Afghanistan, that
opportunity is once again
presenting itself. What better time to seize the opportunity, in order to restore a
peaceful, harmonious, free,
and prosperous society to
our land?
Jacob G. Hornberger is president of
The Future of Freedom Foundation
in Fairfax, Va. (www.fff.org).

of doubling exports

Tom Raum

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Back in January
2010, President Barack Obama set a lofty
goal of doubling U.S. exports in five years.
With just 18 months to go to 2015, that
target seems to be slipping beyond reach
and has vanished from White House talking points.
Blame tepid U.S. manufacturing growth,
the lingering weak global economy, and a
stronger U.S. dollar, which makes it harder to sell American goods and services
overseas.
Monthly export numbers have been
mostly stagnant this year. And only a scant
6,000 manufacturing jobs were added last
month, according to Labor Department
jobs statistics released Friday.
“The goal of doubling exports keeps
getting harder to achieve, not easier,” said
Alan Tonelson, research fellow at the U.S.
Business and Industry Council, which represents about 2,000 mostly family owned
manufacturing companies. “We’re actually
backsliding, not making progress.”
Obama and administration officials
counter by asserting that 7.2 million jobs
— 500,000 of them in manufacturing
— have been added since job losses bottomed in March 2010, two months after
Obama set his doubling-exports goal.
“Over the past four years, for the first
time since the 1990s, the number of manufacturing jobs hasn’t gone down. It’s gone
up. Now we have to build on that progress,” Obama said this week in Chattanooga, Tenn., after similar stops in Illinois,
Missouri and Florida the week before.
Actually, the number of overall manufacturing jobs has changed little over the
past 12 months.
Those 500,000 “new” manufacturing
jobs have been cited before by Obama, going back to his acceptance speech at the
Democratic National Convention last September. The lack of a significant progress
since then underscores how hard it will be
to reach his goal of doubling U.S. exports
by the end of next year.
Obama’s boasts of job gains also ignores
the millions of jobs, including hundreds of
thousands manufacturing ones, that were
lost in the early months of his presidency
and in the final year that George W. Bush
was president. Obama cherry-picked his
starting point, making it the 2010 employment trough.
He is proposing lowering the corporate
tax from 35 percent to 28 percent. As a
special incentive for manufacturers, he
would set a rate of 25 percent for companies “that bring jobs back to America.” In
exchange, he wants to pair changes in tax
laws with new domestic spending.
Republicans balked at those strings attached.
The worst recession since the Depres-

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.

sion began in December 2007 and officially ended in June 2009, although the
unemployment rate continued to rise for
six more months. It hit 10 percent in late
2009 before a slow descent to 7.4 percent
last month.
“We applaud the president’s discussion
about manufacturing. I think the president never misses a chance to talk about
the importance of manufacturing,” said
Chad Moutray, chief economist at the National Association of Manufacturers. He
also praised the administration’s efforts
to push two new free-trade pact negotiations, one with Europe and the other with
Asian trading partners.
But, Moutray added, “We’ve had really
disappointing numbers so far this year.
Hopefully, they’ll start to turn around as
we move into the second half. … Next
year, it’s going to be almost impossible for
us to meet the president’s goal of doubling
exports.”
A new industry report on the level of
manufacturing activity showed an expansion in July. But the improvement
likely won’t move the needle much toward
Obama’s export target.
“The more products we make and sell
to other countries, the more jobs we support right here in America,” Obama said
on Jan. 27, 2010, in his State of the Union
address. “So tonight, we set a new goal:
We will double our exports over the next
five years, an increase that will support 2
million jobs in America.”
For all of 2009, U.S. exports totaled
$1.6 trillion. Doubling that would suggest
reaching a level of $3.2 trillion exports for
all of 2014.
U.S. exports did rise to $2.2 trillion in
2012. But then came slowdowns in Europe, China and Brazil.
In May, the most recent trade figures
available, monthly U.S. exports slipped
0.3 percent, to $187.1 billion. New trade
numbers are out next week.
White House officials agree trend lines
don’t look good. But they emphasize bigpicture improvements.
“You can look at the export slowdown
in one or two ways. You can say, ‘Well, job
growth hasn’t been as good in the last 12
months.’ But what I would say is that we
haven’t created 500,000 (manufacturing)
jobs like this since the ’90s,” said White
House economic adviser Gene Sperling,
using that familiar job-creation number.
“I feel like the wind is at our backs. Like
a lot of things in life, good things happen
when you seize opportunity, when you
have a trend going your way and you seize
and expand on it,” Sperling said.
Treasury Secretary Jack Lew suggests
economics is “kind of collective psychology. When people feel better about the
future, they act better and the economy
picks up. When people worry, it also has
an effect on the economy.”

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
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, August 7, 2013

August
From Page 1
determine what is best for
your child.
If you are over the age of
60, please consult your primary care provider about
the Shingles, T-Dap, Hepatitis A and B, Pneumonia
and seasonal flu vaccinations.
Locally, immunizations
are available at the Southern Local Schools Wellness Center and the Meigs
County Health Department. For information and
schedules contact the Wellness Center at (740) 9492536 or the Health Department at (740) 992-6626.

Meth
From Page 1
Detective Rick Smith
with the Middleport Police
Department, who is a certified meth tech, said that
while people are exposed to
training, it is limited. Smith
stated that he, along with
others, conduct an in-service training to show what
happens at a meth lab. The
training was previously just
for law enforcement, but
is now held for fire departments and others who are
often on scene when a lab
is located.
This is the second training of its kind that Smith
has taken part in, with the
first one having been held
in Gallia County.
In addition to Smith, certified meth techs Chris Gill
(Gallia County Sheriff’s Office), Jim Heater (Athens
County Sheriff’s Office)
and Adam Holcomb (Gallipolis Police Department)
presented the training for
approximately 50 individuals Saturday. Certified
meth techs are trained in
meth dismantling, neutralizing the hazardous material and disposing of it, along
with the cleanup work that
follows.
The training consisted
of constructing a one-pot
lab, cooking it, producing
the methamphetamine and
neutralizing the chemical.
They also demonstrated
a controlled lithium burn
to show how flammable
lithium can be. According
to Smith, lithium can ignite
when it comes in contact
with moisture of any kind,
even as little as a drop of
sweat or moisture in a bag.
Those in attendance were
able to see first hand the
chemicals and items which
go into the making of meth
and some of the things that
may be at a location where
meth is or has been made.
One item Smith noted is
cold packs, such as freezer
packs that are purchased at
stores. Smith said that components of the cold packs
can be used, resulting in
the remnants left laying at
the scene.
Chief Bruce Swift of the
Middleport Police Department stated that the training was developed to teach
those who are in emergency
response and law enforcement the associated safety
hazards and what can happen when coming in contact with a meth lab.

The Daily Sentinel s Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary
Richard J. Kruzel

Richard J. Kruzel, 85, of Rutland, formerly
from Cleveland, passed away Wednesday, July
31, 2013, at his residence.
Born September 22, 1927, in Cleveland,
he was the son of the late Joseph and Bertha Wirkus Kruzel. He was a Navy veteran of
WWII, and served on the USS Hancock. He
had worked as a welder/electrician being last
employed at Van Dorn.

He was also a business owner 30 years of
Ambergram Boutique.
Richard is survived by his wife of 61 years,
Mary LaSelva Kruzel; a daughter, Gina Kruzel;
grandson, Logan Day Kruzel; and brothers,
Robert and Joseph Kruzel.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by a daughter, Alice Kruzel; and siblings, Eleanor, Jean, Teresa, Ceil and Dan.
A memorial service will be held at 7:30 p.m.,

Friday August 9, 2013, at Wisteria Event Site
at 39835 SR 684 Pomeroy, Ohio, with a meal
to follow.
Additional services in the Cleveland area
will be from 6-9 p.m., Wednesday, August 14,
2013, with a service at 7 p.m. at Days Inn and
Suites, 4742 Brecksville Road, Richfield Ohio.
You may sign the register book at www.bigonyjordanfuneralhome.com.

Death Notices
Ford

Marion Eva Huley Ford,
89, formerly of Gallipolis,
died on May 27, 2013, in
Jacksonville, Fla., after a
brief illness.
A
memorial
mass
honoring and celebrating
Marion’s life will be held
at 10 a.m. on Saturday,
August 10, 2013, at Saint
Louis Catholic Church.
A reception will follow
on the church grounds.
A
memorial
concert
featuring Marion’s former
students will be held
Saturday evening at 8
p.m. at the Ariel-Ann

Carson Dater Performing
Arts Centre.
In lieu of flowers, the
family requests that donations be made in Marion’s
honor to the following organizations: The Marion
Ford Memorial Fund for
the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre
where donations can be
made by visiting arieltheatre.org. Donations can
also be made to the Community Hospice of Northeast Florida, 4266 Sunbeam Road, Jacksonville,
Florida 32257.

Haner

Penny K. (Long) Haner, 67, of Gallipolis, died
Monday, August 5, 2013,
at Holzer Medical Center.
Services will be 1 p.m.
on Friday, August 9, 2013,
at the First Church of God.
Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m. on
Thursday, August 8, 2013,
at the First Church of God.

Hobson

Dicie Mable Hobson,
age 84, of Delaware and
formerly of Mt. Gilead,

died Sunday, August 4,
2013, at Columbus Colony.
Friends may call from 11
a.m. until noon on Thursday at the DeVore-Snyder
Funeral Home, SR’s 3 at
61, Sunbury, where services will follow at noon. Burial in Oak Grove Memorial
Park near Lexington. Memorial contributions to
Kentucky School for the
Deaf Charitable Foundation, P.O. Box 27, Danville,
KY, 40423-0027.

Spaulding

1st Sgt. (Ret.) Bobbie

Gene Spaulding, 81, of the
Cow Run community, Cottageville, W.Va., died August 5, 2013, at his home.
A service will be 11 a.m.
Thursday, August 8, 2013,
at Casto Funeral Home
Chapel, Evans, W.Va. with
the Rev. Gerald B. Sayre
officiating. Burial will follow in the Cherry Grove
Cemetery, Cottageville,
with military honors by
American Legion Post
#107, Ripley, and the
United States Army. Visitation will be one hour
prior to time of service.

Meigs County Community Calendar
Wednesday, Aug. 7
HARRISONVILLE — The
Scipio Township Trustees will
hold the regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire
House.
Thursday, Aug. 8
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet
in special session to finalize hiring
for the upcoming school year. The
meeting will be held at 7:30 a.m. in
the K-8 Library.
Saturday Aug. 10
BURLINGHAM — The Modern Woodmen will met at 6:30
p.m. Saturday at the hall. There
will be a potluck dinner.
Sunday, Aug. 11
RACINE — The Deem Family
reunion will be held at 11 a.m. at
the Carmel Church Annex on Car-

mel Road. All friends and family
are welcome. For more information contact Jim Deem at 9492388.
Tuesday, Aug. 13
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Health meeting
will be held at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs County
Health Department.
Thursday, Aug. 15
WELLSTON — The GJMV
Solid Waste Management District Board of Directors will meet
at 3:30 p.m. at the district office,
1056 S. New Hampshire Avenue,
Wellston. The meeting had been
scheduled for Aug. 8.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Cancer Initiative, Inc.,
Meigs County Health Department, Ohio State University, and

Appalachian Community Cancer
Network will bring the Super Colon to the Meigs County Fair on
Senior Day as part of the Blue Star
Healthy Colon Initiative. Stop by
for a guided tour and to find out
more about early detection and
prevention.
Saturday, Aug. 24
BASHAN — The Bashan Volunteer Fire Department will hold
its annual Ice Cream Social at the
Bashan Fire House on County
Road 28 in Bashan. The menu will
include hot dogs, sausages with
onions and peppers, baked beans,
coleslaw different homemade desserts along with homemade ice
cream. Flavors will include chocolate, vanilla, strawberry, pineapple,
black walnut, peaches ‘n cream,
and possibly other flavors.

Sunday, Sept. 8
REEDSVILLE — The Reedsville Neighborhood Community
Picnic will be held at the Belleville
Locks and Dam Shelter House.
The Belleville Locks and Dam
is located on State Route 124 in
Reedville Ohio. There will be a
free dinner and drinks provided.
Along with music provided by
George Hall. The picnic starts at
1 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend this free event. Come out and
enjoy great food, great music with
your neighbors.
Saturday, Sept. 21
POMEROY — The Veterans
Memorial Hospital employees will
have their annual reunion from 1
to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Community
Center. Joyce Redman and Barbara Fry are in charge of this year’s
reunion.

OU Development Center offers free business classes
POMEROY — The Ohio University Small Business Development Center will hold a “Basis of a
Successful Start” (BOSS) Class in
Meigs County on Aug. 27.
The class will be from 2 to 4
p.m. at the Meigs County Senior
Center, 1312 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.
BOSS will cover topics includ-

ing types of ownership, licensing, tax requirements, sources of
financing and how to market a
product or service. The program
is offered free of charge and is
sponsored by the Ohio University
Small Business Development Center. To register for the program or
for additional information contact

Trenia Twyman at 740-597-1460
or twyman@ohio.edu.
The program in Meigs County is
one of the four classes to be held.
From 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 6-8
p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 13, it will
be offered at the Ohio University
Voinovich School of Leadership
and Public Affairs at The Ridges,

Building 19, Room 102.
Other sessions will be held in
Perry County, the Holland Center,
116 West Main Street, Corning,
Aug. 22, 9-11 a.m. and 2-4 p.m.
and in Logan at the Logan-Hocking Chamber of Commerce, 140
East Main Street, Logan Aug. 28,
9-11 a.m. and 2-4 p.m.

came and talked to the group
about the aims and objectives of
Rotary.
However, it wasn’t until the
fourth meeting of the Athens Rotarians with the Middleport men
that a letter from Rotary International was read stating that the
Middleport club “has been formally elected to membership in
Rotary International.”
The first officers of the new club
were J. H. Grate, president; Tom
May, vice president; Paul E. Bean,

secretary, and John Downing,
treasurer. C.F. Rathburn, Ralph
Howell and Bart Rawlings were
named to the board of directors.
From the beginning, the emphasis of the club has been on carrying out the real spirit of Rotary
— that of enjoying the fellowship
of other members and generating
a spirit of helpfulness for the community and the rest of the world.
The first 50 years were marked
with growth and service. It was
1979 when John Rice was presi-

dent of Rotary that the golden
anniversary was celebrated. At
that time he gave a challenge to
the members to “reach out to our
fellow members and our communities and strive to make Meigs
County an even better place to
live.”
Rice said that the best way to
do that was to live by the four-way
test of Rotary — Is it the truth?
Is it fair to all concerned? Will it
build good will and better friendship? Will it be beneficial to all
concerned?

Rotarians
From Page 1
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club,
a move to make the group more
inclusive.
The organization got its start on
a cold winter night in December
1928. Three Rotarians from the
Athens Club traveled to Middleport to meet at the Cozy Corner
with a group of men who were
interested in organizing a Rotary
Club. Don Peden of the Athens
Club was one of the three who

From Page 1
drugs in our schools and
communities. We know
that prevention of drug use
and abuse is most effective
when it is a partnership between the community, the
home and the school.”
The second program,
SAVE, focuses on violence
and bullying in schools.
SAVE is a non-profit organization that is dedicated to providing students
with the information and

resources necessary to
make a positive difference
in safety efforts in schools
and communities.
The program engages
students in meaningful
violence prevention efforts within their school
and community; empowers youth with the knowledge and skills necessary
to provide service to their
community and school; encourages positive peer influences within the school
and community through

violence prevention efforts; and educates students about the effects and
consequences of violence
as well as safe activities for
students, parents and the
community.
“If you see something,
say something,” is a motto
which Griffin has set forth
as the School Resource
Officer. He stated that he
wanted the students to be
able to tell him if there is
something going on that

may require attention.
Plans are being made to
set up a drop box or email
specifically for that purpose.
He went on to say that
the schools have some issues with bullying and
school violence.
“Top priority is safety
of the kids, faculty and administration,” said Griffin.
When school is not in
session during the summer, Griffin is planning to

offer some summer programs.
Griffin also added that
plans are in place to be at
the Meigs County Fair this
year to promote safety for
kids and provide information on the upcoming programs in the schools.
The School Resource Officer position is partially
funded through a grant
from the Ohio Attorney
General’s Office, with the
school district also paying

a portion of the cost.
In addition to the School
Resource Officer, the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office is partnering with Carleton School, Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Branch and Meigs Primary/Intermediate School
for a part-time officer (approximately 30 hours per
week) to provide services
at the locations.
At this time, Southern
Local has opted to not be
part of the programs.

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�Page 6

The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

WEDNESDAY,
AUGUST 7, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Meyer: ‘Candy’ time for Buckeyes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Urban
Meyer doesn’t know what to make of
his current crop of Buckeyes yet.
He believes he’ll have a better
handle on them when practices get
harder. A lot harder.
“It’s the first day in pads. So right
now this is all candy,” he said, flashing a wicked grin. “Come back in
about a week and there’s going to be
people asleep on the mattresses (by
noon). It’s hard. Camp is terrible.
But we’re not in camp yet. This is
just practice.”
That phrase — “just” practice —
must sound ominous to the players
already sweating through early workouts at Ohio State.
Asked if he preferred the weather be a little hotter instead of so
temperate, Meyer added, “Just see
what goes on next week at AckerSee MEYER | 8

Kyle Robertson | Columbus Dispatch | MCT photo

Ohio State Buckeyes head coach Urban Meyer and Ohio State quarterback Braxton
Miller (5) celebrate a 17-16 win over Michigan State Spartans, while singing Carmen
Ohio, at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan, Saturday, Sept. 29, 2012.

Scott Terna | Cal Sport Media | Zuma Press | MCT photo

Texas A&amp;M quarterback Johnny Manziel poses with the Heisman Trophy Saturday, Dec. 8, 2012, in New York, New York.

Newton talks to Manziel
about college limelight
SPARTANBURG, S.C.
(AP) — Cam Newton
can relate to what Texas
A&amp;M’s Johnny Manziel is
going through.
And the Panthers quarterback said Tuesday he’s
spoken to Manziel a few
times this offseason about
coping with the pressures
of being a Heisman Trophy
winning quarterback living
college life in the limelight.
Newton wouldn’t discuss
the specifics of the conversations, saying they are
personal, just between him
and Manziel.
But he said Manziel
“has to go through these
types of situations to know
how to handle them in the
future. When somebody
comes up to you and asks
for your autograph, you
don’t know if they’re going
to do it for good or bad”
purposes.
Like Manziel, Newton
was under media scrutiny
at Auburn during an NCAA
investigation into pay-forplay allegations. Newton
was not found to have committed any wrongdoing
and wasn’t suspended from
any games.
“For any college athlete you are vulnerable to
so many things,” Newton
said. “You think everybody
loves you for who you are.”
Newton said that was a
tough lesson to learn while
he was at Auburn.
“When I was there at

college so many people
wanted from me and I
wanted to give so much,”
Newton said. “Like I would
sign this and give my time
and this, this and that. And
nobody was looking at it
through my (eyes). If you
say no to this particular
person you are going to be
a (jerk). You are going to
be the person that people
look at as, ‘What’s up? We
came out here and supported you and cheered for you
and you can’t sign an autograph?’ Never mind that
you signed 300 other autographs before. But that’s
the nature of the beast.”
Manziel has struggled to
stay out of the news since
leading Texas A&amp;M to an
11-2 record and an upset
win over No. 1 Alabama en
route to becoming the first
freshman to win the Heisman. The latest potential
problem involves an ESPN
report that the NCAA is investigating whether he was
paid for signing hundreds
of autographs last January.
If it is found that Manziel
was paid for his autograph
on memorabilia it could
potentially violate NCAA
amateurism rules and put
his eligibility in risk.
Newton said he hopes
“that everything works
out in the best for him so
he can get back to what he
likes to do and that’s playing football.”

OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, August 7
Golf
South Gallia, Scott,
Point Pleasant at Wahama,
10 a.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 10 a.m.
Thursday, August 8
Golf

Wahama, South Gallia at
Eastern, 4 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Warren, 1 p.m.
Friday, August 9
Golf
Point Pleasant at South
Gallia, 4 p.m.

Stephen M. Dowell | Orlando Sentinel | MCT photo

Tony Stewart celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the Coke Zero 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida, Saturday, July 7, 2012.

Stewart breaks right leg in Iowa crash
KANNAPOLIS, N.C. (AP) —
Tony Stewart told anyone who
would listen why he continued
racing anywhere, anytime, regardless of purse or crowd or car.
Even after he flipped five times
last week, Stewart was quick to
offer a stout defense for his shorttrack weeknight racing while
some questioned if his extracurricular racing was putting his
championship chances in NASCAR at risk.
Well, his championship chances
are officially over for this season.
The three-time NASCAR champion broke his right leg Monday
night at Southern Iowa Speedway
in Oskaloosa, where he flipped his
360 winged sprint car while leading with five laps remaining in
the 30-lap feature. He had surgery
Tuesday on the upper and lower
parts of his leg, and Stewart-Haas
Racing said he’ll need a second
surgery.
He remained hospitalized and
there was no timetable for his
return to racing. Max Papis was
tabbed to replace Stewart this
weekend in the No. 14 Chevrolet
at Watkins Glen, where Stewart is
a five-time winner and his streak
of 521 consecutive starts will end.
“I told someone to go get my

‘He ain’t no prima
donna and life is
short, and we don’t
know how we are
going to die or what’s
going to happen.’
— AJ Foyt
4-time Indy 500 winner
phone or else I was going to get
up and get it myself,” Stewart said
Tuesday in a Facebook post. “Finally got reconnected to the world
and just want to say thank you for
all the prayers and well wishes.
My team will remain strong and I
will be back.”
The 42-year-old Stewart has
wrecked three times in the last
month in extracurricular racing,
and the latest came a day after
he finished ninth at Pocono in a
NASCAR event to position himself 11th in the Sprint Cup standings with five races remaining to
set the Chase for the championship field.

But Stewart had long refused
to slow down his sprint car racing schedule, and passionately
defended it following the June
death of friend Jason Leffler in an
accident at Bridgeport Speedway
in Swedesboro, N.J.
He was just as impassioned
last Friday at Pocono when asked
about his accident last week in
Canada in which Stewart flipped
a sprint car five times.
His childhood hero, four-time
Indianapolis 500 winner A.J.
Foyt, defended Stewart on Tuesday for sticking to his passion and
being a true “racer.”
“He ain’t no prima donna and
life is short, and we don’t know
how we are going to die or what’s
going to happen,” Foyt said in a
telephone interview with The
Associated Press. “I just hate to
see anybody badmouth Tony for
anything he’s doing, and if they
are, they are just jealous. People
saying he’s putting his businesses
at risk? I had three dealerships,
people respected me.”
“If they are worrying about
their jobs and him getting hurt,
what’s to say he won’t have a
heart attack tomorrow and die?”
See STEWART | 8

OVP Sports Briefs
Eastern Fall
Season Passes on Sale
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
Eastern High School now has
season passes on sale for all
2013-14 fall athletic events, and
the passes are available for purchase at the main office at EHS
from 8:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. The following is a list of the passes that are
available for purchase.
— Senior Citizen Fall Passes:
A pass must be purchased for the
2013 fall sports season for $20.
You must have a Golden Buckeye
Card to purchase this pass and
you must be a resident of the
Eastern Local School District.
The pass is good for Junior High
and High School Volleyball and
Football games at home.
— Adult All Passes: An adult
pass may be purchased for the

2013 fall sports season for $65.
You must be a resident of the
Eastern Local School District to
purchase this pass. The pass is
good for Junior High and High
School Volleyball and Football
home games.
— Student Fall Passes: A student pass may be purchased for
the 2013 fall sports season for
$30. The pass is good for all
Junior High and High School
volleyball and football games at
home. You must be a student of
the Eastern Local School District to purchase this pass.
— Adult Volleyball Fall Passes:
An adult pass may be purchased
for the 2013 volleyball season for
$35. The pass is good for all Junior High and High School home
volleyball games at home. You
must be a resident of the Eastern
Local Scholl District.

— Adult Football Passes: An
adult pass may be purchased for
the 2013 football season for $30.
The pass is good for all Junior
High and High School football
games at home. You must be a
resident of the Eastern Local
Scholl District.
Southern
cross country practice
Racine, Ohio — Southern
High School and Southern Junior High School will begin
cross country practice at 7 p.m.
Wednesday, August 7. Athletes
will meet in the Southern Junior
High gymnasium. For more information, contact Joe Cornell at
(740) 416-9913.
PPHS reserved
seating/season passes
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.

— Reserved seating for the upcoming Point Pleasant football
season will go on sale Monday,
Aug. 5. The cost for reserve seating is $50 and there are seven
home games this season. These
seats are located in front of the
pressbox. People who bought
these tickets last year have until
Thursday, Aug. 22 to purchase
tickets to keep their same seats
as last year.
Also, all-sport passes will go
on sale for $85 apiece and there
is a $60 fee for student and senior passes. This will get you in
all sporting events at the high
school for the 2013-2014 school
year, with the exception of playoffs or tournaments.
For more information, contact
James Higginbotham or Kent
Price.

RVHS Fall Sports Parent/
Athlete meeting
BIDWELL, Ohio — River
Valley High School and River
Valley Middle School will be having their Fall Sports Parent and
Athlete meeting at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, August 6 at the RVHS
gymnasium.
Any student participating in
any fall sport must attend with at
least one parent or guardian. If
you have any questions you may
call River Valley High School at
(740) 446-2926.
RVHS Little Lady Raiders
basketball camp
BIDWELL, Ohio — River
Valley Little Lady Raiders Basketball Camp will be held from
8 a.m. until 10:30 a.m. August
See BRIEFS | 8

�60432536

60435986

JUDGE CROW
LEGAL NOTICE
The Heirs, Executors, Devisees, Administrators, Personal Representatives or Assigns
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
www.mydailysentinel.com
of Doris Ewing, if any, theirThe
names and residences being
unknown and which cannot
with reasonable diligence be
ascertained, will take notice
that on June
26, 2013 the
LEGALS
Plaintiffs Peggy S. Yost, Meigs
County Treasurer filed a Complaint against Ben Ewing, et.
al., as Defendants in the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
County,Ohio, being Case No.
130L003 in said Court, demanding that the Court issue a
foreclosure order for unpaid
taxes on the following described real estate, and for other proper legal and equitable
relief. The real estate is described as follows: Situated in
the County of Meigs, State of
Ohio, and Village of Pomeroy,
and bounded and described as
follows:
TRACT I. The following real
estate situated in the County of
Meigs, in the State of Ohio,
and in the Village of Pomeroy
and bounded and described as
follows: Forty feet off of the
Southeast side of Lot
Numbered One Hundred and
Sixty-Four (164) in the said Village, fronting on Mulberry
Street and extending back at
the width of Forty (40) feet to
Mechanic's Street; and being
the same premises conveyed
to William M. Shannon by T.
Mallory by deed dated NovemPUBLIC NOTICE
ber 14, 1890, and recorded in
NOTICE: is hereby given that
Deed Book No. 67, Page 530,
on Thursday, August 8, 2013
at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will Records of Meigs County,
Ohio; and by the said Wm. M.
be held at 211 W. Second St.
Shannon conveyed to W.N.
Pomeroy OH. The Farmers
Davis by deed dated
Bank
and
Savings
Company
is
LEGALS
LEGALS
August 8, 1906, and recorded
Miscellaneous
Drivers &amp; Delivery
selling for cash in hand or certified check the following collat- in Volume 95, Page 359-360 of
Drivers: CDLA Teams &amp;
the Meigs County Record of
PUBLIC NOTICE
eral:
"A Place to Call Home"
Singles. Owner Operators &amp;
Deeds.
NOTICE:
is
hereby
given
that
2007
Chevy
Silverado
4x4
FOSTER PARENTS
Company Drivers Wanted.
Reference Deeds: Cert. of
on Monday, August 12, 2013
Quad Cab LT Vin #:
$1000 Sign On Bonus for O/O
NEEDED
Transfer from Philip Sommer
at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will 2GCEK13C971557760
Dedicated Lanes. Great Home be held at 211 W. Second St.
to Anna Louise Harbrecht,
IN YOUR COUNTY!!!
The Farmers Bank and SavTime, Safety Bonus Program,
Volume 171, Page 659;
Pomeroy OH. The Farmers
ings Company, Pomeroy,
$25-$45 a day for the care
Benefits available after 90
Volume 165, Page 38 Deed
Bank and Savings Company is Ohio, reserves the right to bid
of a child in your home.
days. 6mo verifiable exp.
Records, Meigs County, Ohio.
selling
for
cash
in
hand
or
cerat
this
sale,
and
to
withdraw
Can be single or married
Call 502-664-1433
Reference Deed: Volume 298,
tified check the following collat- the above collateral prior to
Page 725, Meigs County Deed
Call Oasis to help a child
eral:
sale. Further, The Farmers
Help Wanted General
Records.
find a place to call home.
2003 Dodge Truck Vin #:
Bank and Savings Company
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 161D7HU18N73S194750
reserves the right to reject any
TRAINING BEGINS
Full-time/Part-time
00744.000
The Farmers Bank and Savor all bids submitted.
August 3 at Albany.
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s
TRACT II. The following real
ings Company, Pomeroy,
The above described collaterestate situate in the Village of
Call 740-698-0340 for
Experienced Preferred
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
al will be sold “as is-where is”,
Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
more information or to
But Training Available
at this sale, and to withdraw
with no expressed or implied
and State of Ohio: Being Lot
the above collateral prior to
warranty given.
Interested Candidates can
register for training.
351 in V. B. Horton's Second
sale. Further, The Farmers
For further information, or for
Call 304-273-9482 or
Addition to Pomeroy, Ohio, as
Bank and Savings Company
an appointment to inspect colCome in and fill out an
EMPLOYMENT
shown by the Meigs County
reserves the right to reject any
lateral, prior to sale date conPlat Records on file in the
Application
or all bids submitted.
tract Randy Hays at 740-992Meigs County Recorder's OfRavenswood Care Center
The
above
described
collater4048.
Drivers &amp; Delivery
fice. Reference Deed: Volume
al will be sold “as is-where is”,
8/7, 8/8, 8/9
1113Washington St.
247, Page 979, Meigs County
with
no
expressed
or
implied
Ravenswood,
WV
26164
Drivers:
Deed Records.
OFFICIAL NOTICE
warranty
given.
CDL-A, Home Weekly!
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16Pursuant to Title IV of the SurFor
further
information,
or
for
Medical / Health
Avg 60k year!
00506.000
face Mining Control and Rean
appointment
to
inspect
col$1000 Sign-On bonus!
TRACT III. Being Lot Number
clamation Act of 1977, 30
lateral,
prior
to
sale
date
conMust qualify for tank
Three Hundred Thirty Five
U.S.C. 1201 et seq., the Ohio
tract
Randy
Hays
at
740-992and hazmat endorsement.
(335) on the west side of
Department of Natural Re4048
www.RandRtruck.com,
Mechanic Street between 4th
sources, Division of Mineral
Dr.
Kelly
K.
Jones,
D.C.
8/7,
8/8,
8/9
1-866-204-8006
and 5th Streets in said Village
Resources Management,
PUBLIC NOTICE
of Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
hereby gives notice of the
NOTICE: is hereby given that
State of Ohio.
availability of a FINDING OF
on Thursday, August 8, 2013
NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT for Also three (3) feet off the North
Most Insurances Accepted
at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will an environmental assessment
side of Lot No. 336 in said Vilbe held at 211 W. Second St.
lage of Pomeroy, and abutting
which concerns an AbanM-W-F
Sameday
Pomeroy OH. The Farmers
on the South side of Lot No.
doned Mined Land reclama9-5
Care
Bank and Savings Company is tion project in the State of
335. Reference Deed: Volume
1-304-273-5321
selling for cash in hand or cer275, Page 369, Meigs County
Ohio. The State of Ohio has
316 Washington St. - Ravenswood, WV
tified check the following collat- prepared, and the Office of
Deed Records.
eral:
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NOS.:
Surface Mining Reclamation
Miscellaneous
2007 Chevy Silverado 4x4
16-02101.000 and 16and Enforcement, United
Quad Cab LT Vin #:
00505.000
States Department of the In2GCEK13C971557760
TRACT IV. Situated in the Vilterior has approved, the envirThe Farmers Bank and Savlage of Pomeroy, County of
onmental assessment for this
ings Company, Pomeroy,
project which was submitted by Meigs, and State of Ohio:
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
the State in application for Title The following described tract
at this sale, and to withdraw
lying in 160 Acre Lot No. 1224,
IV financial assistance in rethe above collateral prior to
Town 2, and Range 13,
claiming and restoring land
sale. Further, The Farmers
bounded and described as foland water resources adBank and Savings Company
lows: Beginning 47 feet South
versely affected by past minreserves the right to reject any
ing. A copy of the environment- 20 1/2 degrees West from the
or all bids submitted.
most Southerly
al assessment is available
The above described collatercomer of the 69/100 acre tract
from the Ohio Department of
al will be sold “as is-where is”,
of real estate described in
Natural Resources, Division of
with no expressed or implied
Volume 212, Page 477, of the
Mineral Resources ManageAre You Still Paying Too Much
warranty given.
Meigs County Deed Records;
ment, 280 East State Street,
Make
the
Switch
to
Dish
For Your Medications?
For further information, or for
thence South 20 1/2 degrees
Athens, Ohio 45701.
appointment
inspect colToday an
and
Save up toto50%
The project covered by this ac- West to the old road 150 feet;
You can save up to 90% when you fill your
prescriptions at our Canadian and
lateral, prior to sale date conthence South 84
tion is titled “Jennifer Lyons
International Pharmacy Service.
tract Randy Hays at 740-992degrees East 115 feet; thence
Landslide” (MG-Rt-20) and is
rice
P
r
u
O
located northwest of Rutland in South 63 degrees East 81 feet;
Get An Extra $10 Off
Promotio4048.
Celecoxib*
na
l
8/7, 8/8, 8/9
thence South 44 1/2 degrees
PREMIUM MOVIE
section 23, Rutland Township,
Packages
&amp; Free Shipping On
starting at
CHANNELS*
East 77 feet; thence North 7
$58.00
Meigs County, Ohio. Water
Your 1st Order!
only ...
Call the number below and save an
degrees East 360 feet; thence
seeping through unreclaimed
Generic equivalent
additional $10 plus get free shipping
of CelebrexTM.
South 63 1/2 degrees West
strip mine spoil caused a landon your first prescription order with
Generic price for
slide to develop upslope from a 256 feet to the place
Canada Drug Center. Expires March
200mg x 100
31, 2013. Offer is valid for prescription
of beginning, containing 1mo.
home. The landslide area will
orders only and can not be used in
compared to
21/100 acres. The tract debe offloaded and be used to
conjunction with any other offers.
CelebrexTM $437.58 Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
scribed in this deed is divided
backfill
the
pit
and
highwall
For 3 months.
Typical US brand price
Use code 10FREE to receive
from the 69/100 acre tract by a
upslope to provide positive
for 200mg x 100
this special offer.
street 33 feet wide, lying
drainage and stabilize the
Call
Now
and
Ask
How!
Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
between the lines bearing
slope. Underdrains and rock
prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.
North 63 1/2 degrees East,
channels will be built to capCall Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398
SAVING and EXCEPTING
ture and convey water to an
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
*Offer subject to change based on premium channel availablity
from this conveyance all the
existing culvert. All disturbed
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
coal and other minerals in the
areas will be graded and revesame; and the right to mine the
getated. This project is 100%
same without incumbrance to
federally funded. If you have
the surface; and all ways and
any questions or concerns
rights of way along any minerabout the project, please contact Mr. Jim Bishop at the Divi- al seam therein. Reference
We’ll Repair Your Computer
Deed: Volume 264, Page 247,
sion's address listed above or
Through The Internet!
Meigs County Deed Records.
at (614) 265-1094
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 168/7
Solutions For:
00514.000
Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
IN
THE
COURT
OF
COMOver $10,000 in credit card bills?
Spyware &amp; Viruses • Bad Internet Connections
TRACT V. Situated in the VilCan’t make the minimum payments?
MON PLEAS MEIGS
lage of Pomeroy, Meigs
COUNTY, OHIO
County, Ohio. Being Lot No.
Affordable Rates
✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY
Peggy S. Yost
337 as delineated on the Plat
For Home
✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
Meigs County Treasurer,
of said lots, excepting 6 feet off
Plaintiff,
✔ WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY
&amp; Business
the Westerly side of said lot,
vs.
which 6 feet parcel was sold by
Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
Ben H. Ewing aka Benjamin H. deed recorded in Volume 142,
Call Now For Immediate Help
consumer credit counseling programs
Ewing, et al
Page 34, Meigs County Deed
CREDIT CARD RELIEF
Defendants.
Records.
for your FREE consultation CALL
Case No. 130L003
Reference Deed: Volume 255,
877-465-0321
Off
Service
00
$
JUDGE CROW
Page 199, Meigs County Deed
We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Mention Code: MB
Not available in all states
LEGAL NOTICE
Records.
The Heirs, Executors, DeAUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 16visees, Administrators, Person- 00513.000
al Representatives or Assigns
You are required to answer the
of Doris Ewing, if any, their
Complaint on or before
names and residences being
September 18, 2013. You are
unknown and which cannot
also required to serve a copy
with reasonable diligence be
of your Answer upon C. David
ascertained, will take notice
Warren, Special Meigs County
that on June 26, 2013 the
Prosecutor, 117 W. Second
Plaintiffs Peggy S. Yost, Meigs Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
County Treasurer filed a ComDiane Lynch
plaint against Ben Ewing, et.
Clerk
of Court of Common
Wanted
General
al., as Defendants in Help
the Court
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio
of Common Pleas of Meigs
7/10, 7/17, 7/24, 7/31, 8/,7
County,Ohio, being Case No.
8/14,
130L003 in said Court, demanding that the Court issue a
foreclosure order for unpaid Posting
taxes on the following described real estate, and for other proper legal and equitable
relief. The real estate is described as follows: Situated in
the County of Meigs, 40
State
of
Hours
Per Week
Ohio, and Village of Pomeroy,
and
bounded
and
described
as
Supervision of all office staff, administrative and
Your insurance may pay for your diabetic
follows:
management duties, must be computer literate,
supplies with li"le to no cost to you.
TRACT
I. The following
processes
veterans real
benefits and claims. The candidate
estate
the County
of
will situated
promotein service
offered
by the Veterans Service
Call NOW to make sure
Meigs,
in
the
State
of
Ohio,
Offi
ce
of
Meigs
County
in coordination with the Veterans
you are ge"ing
and
in
the
Village
of
Pomeroy
Service
Commission.
the best deal on your
and bounded and described as
Diabetic Supplies!
follows:
Forty
feet off
of the
Qualifi
cations:
Honorable
discharged veteran; DD Form
monitoring
starting aro
Southeast
sidereside
of Lot in Meigs County; high school graduate
und
214; must
!!!!YOU!MAY!QUALIFY!FOR"
Numbered
Hundred and
(collegeOne
preferred);
ability to type claims, written
• A glucose meter upgrade
Sixty-Four
(164) in theonsaid
Vilcommunications
computer
utilizing VIMS software;
• Free prescription delivery
per week
lage,
fronting
on Mulberry
active
Veterans
Service Officer Certification Required
• Great deals on products
*with $99 customer
ation charge and
purchase of alarm install
monitoring services.
Street
and18
extending
at required.
within
months;back
travel
&amp; services
the width of Forty (40) feet to
• And FREE gi!s
Ability toStreet;
deal and
with
difficult situations; flexible work
Mechanic's
being
Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!
AMERICA’S!DIABETIC!
required;
valid Ohio Driver's License required;
theschedule
same premises
conveyed
SAVINGS!CLUB
resumeM.
required;
salary
to William
Shannon
by T. negotiable with experience.
Mallory by deed dated Novemsubmission
CALL!NOW!!!#$$-&amp;$'-&amp;'($
berDeadline
14, 1890,for
and
recorded inof resume is close of business
��� ���� ����������� ��� ���������� ����� ���������
August
Resume
Deed
Book9,
No.2013.
67, Page
530, mailed of dropped off at the
MeigsofCounty
Veterans Service Office, 117 E. Memorial
Records
Meigs County,
Dr.,
Ste.
Pomeroy,
OH
45769 (740-992-2820 or Fax:
Ohio; and by the said Wm. M.
60438247
740-992-1398).
Shannon
conveyed to W.N.
Davis by deed dated
August 8, 1906, and recorded
in Volume 95, Page 359-360 of
the Meigs County Record of
Deeds.
Reference Deeds: Cert. of

Reference Deed: Volume 255,
Page 199, Meigs County Deed
Records.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 1600513.000
Daily
s Page
You areSentinel
required to answer
the 7
Complaint on or before
September 18, 2013. You are
also required to serve a copy
of your Answer upon C. David
Warren, Special
Meigs County
LEGALS
Prosecutor, 117 W. Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Diane Lynch
Clerk of Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio
7/10, 7/17, 7/24, 7/31, 8/,7
8/14,
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
3 Family YS Fri &amp; Sat, 8-4. Indoor &amp; Outdoor furniture, window AC's. Carpets and much
more. 410 3rd Ave. Gallipolis
5- FAMILY Aug. 8th, 9th, &amp;
10th Behind the Masonic
Lodge (Racine,Oh). Kids to
Adults Clothing, love seat, Kitchen Table &amp; Chairs, Stands,
Home Interior, Twin Bed Set,
Hutch, DVD's
Longenberger,much misc.
5-family HUGE GARAGE
SALE Aug 8,9,10 @ 841
Shoestring Ridge Rd. - Down
Rt 7 to Clipper Mills Follow
signs - 9am to 5pm - Little Bit
of everything - Furniture, 2008
convertible Mustang, Baby Bed
&amp; Clothes,Men's women's,children &amp; jr's. Books,VHS Disney,
Saxaphone, Car dvd player,
pressure canner.
Huge Yard Sale Friday August
9th 8am- 12pm @ 277 Country Lane-Just off 160 (2-miles
past hospital). Name brand &amp;
baby boy clothes,toys,kitchen
items,holidays, Almost
everything $1.00

Ravenswood Chiropractic Center

Huge yard sale, 8/9, The
Grates, 2 miles from Tuppers
Plains on Rt 7. Blow out sale.
Don't miss it.

ALL NEW PATIENTS RECEIVE
A FREE MASSAGE

Re-Location sale @ 619 2nd
Ave Aug 8,9,10 - 9am to 4pm.
Antiques,Baby furniture,clothing, Toys, Misc items.
SERVICES

60436025

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

for 12 month

s

1-888-721-0871

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?

Fix Your
Computer Now!

888-781-3386

25

HELP WANTED

Meigs County Veterans
Service Officer

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

1-888-718-8142

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

FINANCIAL SERVICES
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

EMPLOYMENT
Clerical
OPTOMETRIC ASSISTANT
NEEDED ASAP
Part-time, 20-25 hours a week.
Computer experience required.
Starting pay $8hr. Please send
resume to PO Box 177, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550. Deadline is Aug 15, 2013.
Education
Teacher for Special Education
Class needed. Must have current ODE licensure and have
or be willing to obtain Intervention Specialist validation. Send
resume by August 7th to address below.
Program substitutes also
needed - bus and van drivers,
teachers, assistants, and fiscal/clerical support staff.
Send application or resume to
Carleton School
1310 Carleton Street
P.O. Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779
The Meigs County Board of
Developmental Disabilities is
an EEO.
Help Wanted General
2 Sales People Needed. Great
pay plan with 5 day work week.
Call Tom King I-77 Chevy in
Ripley, WV. 304-514-7077.
3-5 Part-Time Temporary
Workers needed Immediately
in various areas of dealership
and farming operations. References &amp; resumes required
Send them to Motorsports
Warehouse Inc. 4367 St St
160 Gallipolis,Ohio 45631.
IMMEDIATE OPENING
HOMEMAKER
No experience req. Pt Pleasant Area. Apply at www.rescare.com or (304)733-9678
JOIN THE TEAM
Become an H &amp; R Block Tax
Professional Classes begin
September 2013 Contact: HRB
Pomeroy 740-992-6674 HRB
Ravenswood 304-273-9800
Medical / Health
Wanted Part-time worker
needed to assist individuals
with developmental disabilities
in Gallipolis 15hrs/wk. High
School degree/GED, Valid
driver's license and a three
years good driving experience
required. $9.25/hr after training. Send resume to: Buckeye
Community Services, PO Box
604, Jackson, Oh 45640 or
email:beyecserv@yahoo.com
Deadline for Applicants:
8/8/13. Pre-employment drug
testing. Equal Opportunity Employer. For more information:
buckeye
communityservices.org.
EDUCATION

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Stewart
From Page 6

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Briefs
From Page 6

Gallia Academy all-comer meet
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia
Academy High School will be hosting an all-comer track meet that will
be open to all ages and is scheduled
for 11 a.m. Saturday, August 10, with
registration beginning at 9 a.m.

There is a fee for competitors and
spectators and volunteers are still
needed. Heats will be combined if
needed, but winners will be determined by age groups. Competitors
must check in with the clerk at the
second call prior to their event start.
Competitors must have your own
implements for shot and discus and
must have experience throwing the
discus or on the pole vault. We will
not allow the novice vaulters or disc
thrower to throw or jump for safety
reasons. Parents please supervise
your kids, you are the coach for the
day and please ensure they make it
to their events on time.
We will not enforce limits on the
number of events you may enter, but
please monitor number for the smaller kids.To volunteer, for more information or if you have any questions
please call (740) 645-7316 or email
ff1023@att.net

Of major concern is a lack of depth
at both the linebacker and offensive
line positions.
“They just don’t look Ohio
Stateish,” he said of the backups.
“Other positions, you can see three
guys that are all good-looking players. The O-line and linebackers are
not where we need to be.”
Moreover, Meyer said the problem
probably cannot be fixed with the
people on hand.
“(Maybe) with another recruiting
class,” he said. “Yeah, we’re going to
have to hang in there for this fall and
not get guys hurt. Because we have
depth issues there.”
— He is not concerned about the
quarterback spot, where Braxton
Miller is coming back for his third
year as the starter.
Miller has grown into the position.
He was thrown into a bad spot, learning on the job as a freshman during
the tumultuous 2011 season when
NCAA investigators were on campus, Luke Fickell was filling in for the
deposed Jim Tressel as head coach
and there was confusion everywhere.
The Buckeyes went 6-7.

As a sophomore, Miller carried
the team with his running ability for
much of the first half of the season,
then reverted more to passing in the
second half as the Buckeyes pulled a
12-0 record out of the hat. Still, he
had his highs and his lows. There
was and is room for improvement,
even for a quarterback who ran for
1,271 yards and 13 scores and passed
for 2,039 yards and 15 touchdowns
with only six interceptions.
Ed Warinner, Ohio State’s cooffensive coordinator and offensive
line coach, said there are several
things that jump out when you look
at Miller now.
“In terms of his technique, it’s his
footwork and all his techniques, his
mannerisms, running the offense
but setting his feet, throwing, making his reads, keeping the ball in
the right position, his footwork on
runs and meshing with the running
backs,” Warinner said. “Technically,
he’s a better player and he’s much
more confident and he’s much more
of a leader and really has a much better understanding the big picture of
what’s going on.”

All questions can be directed to
Sarah Evans-Moore at (740) 4411616 or sarah@evans-moore.com

Foyt said. “He might die
and it might not be from
racing. I had business and
I still raced. I always said I
am going to continue racing until I don’t want to
race anymore and he’s the
same way.”
Stewart took responsibility for triggering a roughly
10-car accident at Canandaigua (N.Y.) Motorsports
Park on July 16 in which
19-year-old Alysha Ruggles
injured her back.
Last week, in a sprint car
race at Ohsweken Speedway in Ontario, Stewart
rolled his car five times but
walked away. He stayed at
the track to compete in the
World of Outlaws race the
next night and bristled at
the NASCAR event at Pocono Raceway when asked
about his harrowing incident in Canada.
“You mortals have got
to learn, you guys need
to watch more sprint car
videos and stuff,” he said
Friday. “It was not a big
deal. It’s starting to get
annoying this week about
that. That was just an average sprint car wreck. When
they wreck, they get upside
down like that.”
Following
Leffler’s
death, Stewart defended
track and sprint car safety.
“I’d be grateful if you
guys would understand
that what happened this
week wasn’t because somebody didn’t do something
right with the race track. It
was an accident. Just like
if you go out and there’s a
car crash. It’s an accident,”
Stewart said days after Leffler’s death. “Nobody as a
track owner wants to go
through what happened,
but it’s not due to a lack of
effort on their part to try to
make their facilities as safe
as possible under the conditions they have.”
On Sunday, veteran
sprint car driver Kramer
Williamson died from injuries suffered during a

qualifying race at Lincoln
Speedway in central Pennsylvania. Williamson, 63,
was pronounced dead at
York Hospital from serious
injuries suffered in a crash
that occurred Saturday
night during the United
Racing Company 358/360
Sprint Car Challenge.
Although it sounds cliche, Foyt believes racers
want to go out doing what
they love.
“Tony is a true racer,”
Foyt said. “That’s one thing
I respect about him. A lot
of them people go to NASCAR and become a kingpin in one type of car. Jeff
Gordon and Kasey Kahne,
they all were sprint car and
midget cars drivers first,
like Tony, and Tony still is
a sprint car driver and it’s
a shame he got hurt. But I
don’t see where someone
can condemn him for it.”
Gordon said it became
too difficult for him to juggle various series when he
went full-time NASCAR in
1991.
“I was racing Nationwide and Silver Crown and
midget sprint cars and it
was cool and exciting and
fun and everything, but
when I got full-time in the
Nationwide Series, I just
wanted to focus on that,”
Gordon said. “I tried to
do Nationwide and Cup a
couple times and I didn’t
really enjoy going back and
forth, but my hats off to the
guys that do that and enjoy
it and do well with it.
“Sprint cars are to me
some of the most exciting
and fun race cars there are
to drive. Anything that you
do, you could put yourself
at risk, so I think that he
knows the risks versus the
rewards and chooses to do
that and I think that’s awesome and he certainly is
very impressive when he
gets in them how competitive he is. I certainly look
up to him in that way because I raced those guys in
sprint cars and know how
difficult that is.”

Business &amp; Trade School

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses

Apartments/Townhouses

Apartments/Townhouses

Middleport - 1 &amp; 2 Bdrm Apts.
some with utilities Pd. Deposit
&amp; reference, NO PETS, 740992-0165.

Three bedroom, unfurnished,
2nd floor townhouse, on Court
Street. Condition Excellent. NO
PETS, Lease Application, with
references and Security deposit, required. $650 per
month. Call 441-7875, 4463936 or 446-4425.

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES
For Sale By Owner
FOR SALE OR LEASE:
2409 Jackson Ave, Pt Pleasant, 1750 sq ft, professional office or commercial space
304-675-0633
Houses For Sale
1 Acre lot Near Portland, 3
Bdrm 1 bath, living Rm, Family Rm/dining, kitchen,laundry
Rm, Sorry NO Rentals or Land
Contracts Call 992-2472 Leave
Message with name &amp; number.
Nice 3BR House. Fenced yard,
garage, basement $35,000
304-882-3959
Land (Acreage)
55.75 acres of Land located on
Lower 9 Mile off Crab Creek
Rd. asking $60k. 304-5763129

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1-BR upstairs Apt. 720 Sec.
Ave (Gallipolis) $395 mo. /
$395 dep. includes
Water,Sewer,Trash,AC, W &amp;
D. No Smoking &amp; No Pets Call
740-645-2192
2 Bdrm 2nd floor Apt. Air, W/D
hook-up No Utilities, Pets $500
mo. $500 deposit. 740-3393063
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

7-9 for girls in grades 3-5 and from
11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. for girls in
grades 6-8. New RVHS head coach
Sarah Evans-Moore will be hosting
the camp along with the River Valley
assistant coaches and players.
Coach Evans-Moore is a former
college basketball player at Stanford
University and former Head Coach of
the Marshall University Thundering
Herd Women’s Basketball team. She
led Marshall University to a Southern Conference Championship and a
NCAA Tournament appearance.
Campers will receive a t-shirt and
quality instruction in the areas of ball
handling, passing, proper shooting
form, offensive moves, defense and
rebounding. Campers will leave camp
with a personal workout plan. Call to
reserve your spot today! There is a
cost for the camp.

Meyer
From Page 6
man Field. It’s awful.”
The Buckeyes went through only
their third practice on Tuesday.
There’s a lot that’s unknown about
the 2013 team. But Meyer said he already has a pretty good feel when it
comes to several major items.
— Concerning star players Bradley
Roby and running back Carlos Hyde,
both in the doghouse after recent
legal problems, both are practicing
with the team. Roby is awaiting the
next step in the process after being
charged with misdemeanor battery
after an incident at a Bloomington,
Ind., bar this summer.
“We’re just still waiting to find out
all the information,” Meyer said.
Police called Hyde a person of interest in an alleged assault against a
woman. The alleged victim declined
to pursue charges, with police ending the investigation. But Hyde was
suspended for the first three games
by Meyer.
— Meyer said he likes the players
he has. He just wishes he had more of
them in spots.

These newly
renovated 1 and
2 BR units. All
vacant units but
will be offered
to qualified applicants. Rental assistance
through Rural Development
may be available for qualified
applicants. Section 8 Housing
Vouchers are accepted. Call
Manager Lacie Skeen at (740)
245-9170 for more information
and applications.
"This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer"

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Gallia County Youth
Football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia
County Youth Football League will
be having a football camp for all players in grades 4-6 from Saturday, August 10 through Sunday, August 11
at the Gallipolis Elks Farm on State
Route 588.
The camp will begin at 6 p.m. and
all players are required to attend on
Saturday.

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.

Houses For Rent
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331
3-bedroom 1 bath, laundry
room, garage. @ Graham
Street, Rodney Village II,
$650.00 per/mo, plus Deposit
740-645-4834

Miscellaneous

RESORT PROPERTY

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

ANIMALS

Want To Buy

Pets
FREE: to good home. Several
adult cats &amp; 6, 3mos old, litter
trained. Loving..inside or outside. 304-675-8901
AGRICULTURE

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

AUTOMOTIVE
Trucks/SUVs/Vans

Handyman

FOR RENT
2 HOUSES, Good location &amp;
cond $400 $475 Homestead
Realty Broker. Nancy 304-6754024, 304-675-0799.

1995 Ford F-150 4x4 asking
$3,400.00 Ph 1-740-367-7507

Very nice 1BR home in
Pomeroy, great neighborhood,
large yard, ideal for 1 or 2
people, new appliances. No
indoor pets, No smoking. 740992-9784

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Miscellaneous

Carpeting

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

Sale-Carpet and Vinyl Direct
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304-882-3959

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Entertainment

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WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Jeopardy!
America-Talent A recap of America's Got Talent (L)
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�Wednesday, August 7, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 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,
Aug. 7, 2013:
This year you could be unusually optimistic and forward-looking.
Sometimes you want to radically
change your life in some key way.
Other times, you might want to keep
the status quo, as you know how to
make various parts of your life run in
sync together. If single, you are able to
meet many people. It is likely that you
could meet and be attracted to someone who might be emotionally unavailable. Resist jumping in before you
really know this person. If attached,
the two of you will benefit from taking some romantic weekends alone.
LEO is always friendly. Look past that
behavior when dealing with one.
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)
++++ You could feel challenged
by a boss or parent you respect a lot,
but who can become very controlling.
It seems to be this person’s way or the
highway. Meanwhile, your emotions
might flow into your personal life. You
will be doing a juggling act of sorts.
Tonight: Relax.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++++ Your perspective could
change radically after a discussion
forces your hand. You might wonder
how you are going to be able to cover
all the ground you need to cover.
Listen to news from a friend. You might
want to chat with this person more
openly. Tonight: As you like it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
+++ Use extreme caution with your
finances. You could be juggling more
than you normally would like. Your ability to get past problems is well known.
You have an extraordinary amount of
resilience, but why push it? A partner
clearly wants what he or she wants.
Tonight: Your treat.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
+++++ You might be in a positive,
buoyant mood, but a friend could be in
the mood to play power games. Use
caution with your word choice. The
only way to win a power play is not to
play; don’t give this person any type of
reaction. Tonight: Do what makes you
happy.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
+++ You might want to express
your dismay at everything that is happening. You will want to take your
time and sort out how much you are
projecting into the situation, as well as
how much is directed at you. Tonight:
Do what you can, and don’t put any

unnecessary pressure on yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
++++ You might want to consider
taking a different approach or finding a
new way of dealing with a rebellious —
and sometimes vindictive — loved one.
You certainly do not seem to be getting
the results you desire. Tonight: Hang
with people who have positive vibes.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
++++ You might want to try a new
approach and avoid having to deal
with a very grumpy associate. You
could find that you are overwhelmed by
everything you have to do. Try to take
care of any errands or work that you
can, then complete the rest. Tonight:
Head home first.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
++++ You understand people
who are controlling better than they
understand themselves — possibly
because you have the same trait. If
you detach, you could find this situation
amusing. The smart move is not to get
tangled up in this web, no matter what.
Tonight: Chat the night away.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++ You could feel as if you are
right about a money venture and
everyone else is wrong. Truth be told,
you are your best and biggest supporter, so follow your instincts. If you care
about your relationships, try to see the
validity in what others share. Tonight:
Till the wee hours.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
+++ You could be pushing people
away left and right with your authoritarian attitude. Try to minimize this
behavior, even if you are the boss. If
you do, others will demonstrate more
resilience. Think before you speak.
Tonight: Accept a dear friend’s or loved
one’s offer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
+++ You might want to try something else or do something differently.
You might witness, or perhaps even
participate, in the clash of wills around
you. Sometimes it is difficult for you to
pull away from such intensity. It would
serve you well to do so now. Tonight:
With a favorite person.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
++++ Your plans could go up in
smoke because one person wants
things one way and someone else
wants it his or her way. You might
need to use your unusual resourcefulness in order to find a resolution.
Everyone will be happier as a result.
Tonight: Work till the wee hours.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Reds expect RH Broxton back on Wednesday
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
Reds expect to have three injured players back by the end of
the week, giving them a boost as
they try to get back into the thick
of the NL Central race.
Cincinnati plans to activate
right-handed reliever Jonathan
Broxton off the disabled list before the final game of its short series against Oakland on Wednesday. Broxton, the team’s primary
setup man, has been sidelined by
a sore right elbow since June 15.

Manager Dusty Baker also
expects catcher Ryan Hanigan
and left fielder Ryan Ludwick
to come off the disabled list by
the end of the week. Hanigan has
been out since July 11 with an
injured left wrist. Ludwick tore
cartilage in his right shoulder
while sliding into third base on
opening day.
Heading into the opener of
their two-game interleague series on Tuesday night, the Reds
had lost seven of their last nine

games, leaving the defending NL
Central champions a season-high
6½ games out of first place.
“We’ve been operating with
less than our full team,” Baker
said. “The guys that have taken
their place have done a good job.
Now it’s time for the big boys to
come back.”
Ludwick, their cleanup hitter,
is only 2 of 28 on a rehab stint in
the minors. Under Major League
Baseball’s rules, his rehab stint
has to end on Sunday.

Ludwick couldn’t take batting
practice for three months after
his surgery. Baker has compared
his rehab stint to the start of
spring training. Ludwick got off
to a slow start last season, and
then was their top run producer
down the stretch with first baseman Joey Votto sidelined after
knee surgery.
It’ll be tricky for Baker to play
Ludwick if he’s still struggling
to regain his swing. The Reds’
pitching has been solid for most

of the season, but the offense has
been inconsistent.
The Reds don’t need another
slumping hitter. Ludwick doesn’t
want to come back and make
things worse.
“I talked to him yesterday,”
Baker said of Ludwick. “He’s a
little concerned about it.
“So we just have to keep our
eye on him and help him along
the way. Hopefully he’ll be very
good at the right time.”

Browns RB Richardson back in pads, practicing
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
— Browns running back
Trent Richardson returned
to practice Monday. However his status for the
team’s preseason opener
remains uncertain.
Richardson had been
held out of Cleveland’s two
previous training camp
sessions with a bruised
right shin.
The injury occurred
Thursday when the 5-foot9, 230-pounder was inadvertently kicked in the
lower leg by a teammate.
Though Richardson has
vowed to play in all four
preseason games, coach
Rob Chudzinski was noncommittal about his availability when the Browns
host the St. Louis Rams on
Thursday.
“It was good to have

him back out there, but I
have not decided anything
about Thursday night in
regard to Trent,” Chudzinski said. “Yes, we want to
work him back in, but we
are going to be smart with
him, just like we’ve been
saying all along.”
Richardson wore full
pads during the 2½-hour
practice at Cleveland’s
team headquarters, working in his usual spot on the
first-team offense. Dion
Lewis and Brandon Jackson served as his backups.
The third overall pick of
the 2012 draft did not participate in any two-minute
drills, but did log limited
repetitions on goal-line
plays behind quarterback
Brandon Weeden.
“That was what we
wanted to do today with

Trent because we have a
plan for him, in a general
sense, to try and keep him
healthy,” Chudzinski said.
“We want him to be able to
work to get better, and be
able to come out here on a
daily basis during training
camp.”
The Browns are being
extra careful with Richardson because he missed a
handful of offseason workouts and their entire June
minicamp with a strained
lower right shin.
The former Alabama
standout admitted being
frustrated with Chudzinski’s decision to rest him
over the weekend, saying
his latest shin problem
“ain’t nothing.”
Richardson started 15
games last season despite

suffering several broken
ribs and torn chest cartilage against Cincinnati
on Oct. 14. He sat out the
Browns’ season finale at
Pittsburgh on Dec. 30 with
an ankle injury.
Richardson rushed for
a team-high 950 yards
and caught 51 passes in
2012 — setting a Cleveland rookie record with
12 touchdowns — and is
expected to play an even
bigger role in the offense
this fall under coordinator
Norv Turner.
“Now that Trent is practicing again, we’ll go from
there,” Chudzinski said.
“We’ll see how he looks
tomorrow and WednesEd Suba Jr. | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT photo
day, then make a decision
about what we’re going to Cleveland running back Trent Richardson, right, breaks away
for a short third-quarter gain on Sunday, Sept. 23, 2012.
do against St. Louis.”

DeCastro settled in after frustrating rookie year
LATROBE, Pa. (AP) — David DeCastro can finally relax.
DeCastro, the Pittsburgh Steelers’ firstround pick in 2012, stayed mostly quiet
and kept to himself in training camp as a
rookie offensive lineman last year, but he
is beginning to come out of his shell during his second go-round at training camp.
“I definitely don’t feel like a rookie anymore,” DeCastro said. “I don’t have to get
up and sing in the dining hall and do stupid stuff like that, which is good. There
are no more surprises. It’s nice.”
DeCastro is certainly more comfortable this summer, not just when it comes
to football, but also living in the dorms
and navigating his way around campus

at Saint Vincent College. The change is
evident in media sessions too, where the
typically no-nonsense DeCastro is livelier
than ever, expanding on his often succinct, to-the point responses.
“I think I’m just a little quiet at first
once I get to know people,” DeCastro
said. “It’s just kind of how I am. I’m not
going to open up at first. I kind of want to
survey and get a feel for things. I’m still
not the most talkative, but I’m more talkative than I was.”
Even his teammates noticed a difference from a year ago when DeCastro first
carried his straightforward, workman-like
demeanor through training camp last
summer.

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“David was a quiet guy,” offensive lineman Ramon Foster said. “He didn’t say
much and the fact that he’s acting up with
us shows he’s getting comfortable and that
helps him do what he does best, which is
play football.”
That’s all the Steelers are concerned
about.
DeCastro, the No. 24 overall pick from
Stanford in 2012, cruised through a promising breakout training camp as a rookie
and was projected to start at right guard
until disaster struck during the first quarter of the team’s third preseason game at
Buffalo.
DeCastro suffered a torn medial collateral ligament, dislocated kneecap, and

partially torn patellar tendon in his right
knee, casting a black shadow on what appeared to be a bright rookie season.
“It’s tough mentally,” DeCastro said.
“It’s a lot of adversity to go through, but
you learn a lot about yourself. You’re still
able to make improvements and learn
techniques. It’s a different game in the
NFL and I learned a lot.”
Modified injured reserve rules implemented last season allowed the Steelers
to place DeCastro on an IR list that permitted him to return after eight weeks,
salvaging part of his rookie season.
DeCastro gradually worked his way
back on special teams in his NFL debut
against San Diego in December.

AP Sports Briefs
O’Dell pushes lead
to 4 at W.Va. Amateur
WHITE
SULPHUR
SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP) —
Hurricane’s Sam O’Dell
shot a 6-under-par 66
to push his lead to four
strokes after the second
round of the West Virginia
Amateur.
O’Dell had four birdies,
two eagles and two bogeys
Tuesday on the Greenbrier
Course layout in White
Sulphur Springs. He’s at 8
under midway through the
tournament.
The 35-year-old O’Dell is
searching for his first Amateur win. He finished second in the West Virginia
Open in June.
Vienna’s Alan Cooke
shot 67 and is in second
place at 4 under. He’s the
son of Matt Cooke, who
was the youngest-ever winner of the West Virginia
Open at age 20 in 1981.
Wheeling’s Thadd Obecny II is third at 1 under and
White Sulphur Springs’
David Dent is fourth at 2
over.
Locally Trent Roush
of Mason is tied for 10th
place at six over par for
the tournament, and Jason
King of New Haven is tied
for 33rd at 12 over par.
King will tee off at 8:27
a.m. Wednesday, while
Roush begins his third
round at 9:39 a.m.
Indians closer not
speaking to local media
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Indians manager Terry
Francona is downplaying
closer Chris Perez’s choice
not to speak with local reporters.
Perez ducked the media
following Monday’s night’s
4-2 loss to Detroit after he
gave up four runs in the
ninth inning. Francona
said “in a perfect world”
his players would speak
following games, but he
wasn’t concerned about
Perez’s media blackout

being a distraction to the
Indians.
Francona said Perez’s
decision not to talk is a
“personal choice, but I
think we try to foster an
environment where guys
are accountable.”
A two-time All-Star, Perez was arrested earlier this
season on misdemeanor
drug charges. Approached
before Tuesday’s game,
Perez said: “I’m not talking
the rest of the year. Quit
asking.”
Francona said Perez did
stop by his office after
Monday’s loss and said, “I
just blew the game.”
Cleveland RG Lauvao
skips Browns practice
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Browns right guard Shawn
Lauvao is not practicing
because of a left ankle injury.
Lauvao was taken off
the field on a cart Monday
after being injured at training camp. The fourth-year
pro was participating in a
one-on-one drill against
nose tackle Phil Taylor
when he appeared to roll
his ankle before falling to
the ground.
The 6-foot-3, 315-pound
Lauvao did not miss an
offensive snap last season
and has started 32 straight
games for Cleveland. Jason
Pinkston is working with
the first-team offense in his
absence.
Browns coach Rob
Chudzinski will update
Lauvao’s status after practice. He also is expected to
announce if running back
Trent Richardson will play
in Cleveland’s preseason
opener Thursday against
the St. Louis Rams.
A-Rod return boosts
YES Network ratings
NEW YORK (AP) —
Alex Rodriguez’s return
had an immediate impact
for the New York Yankees

— on the team’s television
network.
A-Rod’s first major
league game since October
drew the YES Network’s
highest rating this year
for a Yankees game, even
though New York lost 8-1
at the Chicago White Sox
on Monday night.
YES said Tuesday the
game had a 4.34 rating and
averaged 393,000 viewers.
The previous high was
4.16 rating for a 2-1 loss
at the New York Mets on
May 27.
The most viewers were
around the time of his
first at-bat, with the 8:30
to 8:45 p.m. EDT period
drawing an 8.22 rating and
756,000 viewers.
Earlier Monday, Rodriguez was given a 211game suspension through
the 2014 season by Major
League Baseball for violations of its drug agreement
and labor contract. The
ban starts Thursday, but
Rodriguez can play until
an arbitrator decides his
appeal.
Rodriguez, a three-time
AL MVP, was returning
from hip surgery in January.
The Yankees are averaging a 2.53 rating and
231,000 viewers on YES
this season, a 35 percent
drop in viewership from a
3.96 and 354,000 at a similar point last season.
Rodriguez, Derek Jeter,
Mark Teixeira and Curtis Granderson have been
injured for most of the
season. New York began
Tuesday in fourth place in
the AL East, 9 1-2 games
behind
division-leading
Boston.
Austin Hatch to finish
high school in Calif.
FORT WAYNE, Ind.
(AP) — An Indiana high
school basketball standout
who’s survived two deadly
plane crashes will spend

his final year of high school
in California.
The family of Austin
Hatch has released a statement saying he will attend
Loyola High School in
Los Angeles and will live
with family in Pasadena.
He formerly attended Fort
Wayne’s Canterbury High
School.
He suffered serious injuries in a 2011 Michigan
plane crash that killed his
father and stepmother. He
also survived a 2003 crash
that killed his mother, sister and brother.
Hatch’s father was piloting both planes.
The family’s statement
says Hatch plans to play
college basketball after finishing high school.
New award set for
small-college defensive
player
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.
(AP) — The Little Rock
Touchdown Club will honor the top small-college defensive player of the year at
the end of the season.
The Cliff Harris Award
was announced Tuesday
for players in the NCAA
Football
Championship
Subdivision, Division III
and the NAIA. Currently,
the Harlon Hill Award goes
to the top player in NCAA
FCS.
Harris played at Des Arc
High School and Ouachita
Baptist University. The
free safety was passed
over in the 1970 draft but
signed as a free agent with
the Dallas Cowboys and
played in five Super Bowls.
Harris said players from
small schools deserve
more recognition and that
he was happy to have his
name on the award.
The Little Rock Touchdown Club also sponsors
the Frank Broyles Award
for major-college assistant
coaches.

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