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

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY
Victory Baptist
Church hosts
Mother-Daughter
Banquet .... 3

WEATHER

SPORTS

Mostly sunny
today. High near
73. Low, 51 ........2

Point Pleasant
falls to
Huskies, 7-1 ....6

OBITUARIES
Elizabeth K. Bailey, 92
Loyd L. Brinker, 78
Myrtle M. Donahue, 98
Raymond E. Heffner, 79
Joan M. Lewis, 87

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 97

Robert G. Rhodes, 82
Beula C. Seamon, 98
Jean D. Somerville
Clyde W. White Jr., 71
Margaret I. Yost, 96

Summer meal program for Meigs children begins

Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@heartlandpublications.com

POMEROY — A free
summer food program for
Meigs County children,
funded by the Ohio Department of Education,
began Monday.
The program is being
handled by the Meigs
County Council on Aging
with noon meals being prepared in the Senior Center
kitchen and served in the
dining area at the Center
from noon to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Other meals for children

to be served off-site will
be transported to selected
places in the agency’s hotshot trucks. The provision
of meals for children out of
school for the summer is
a new program for Meigs
County and is being handled by the Council on Aging without any detriment
to the regular delivery of
meals to seniors confined
to their homes, according
to Beth Shaver, executive
director.
While the bulk of the
money to finance the program is coming from the
Ohio Department of Edu-

cation with contributions
from the Department of
Agriculture, some start-up
money has been received
from the Sisters of Saint
Joseph’s Charitable Fund
through the Children’s
Hunger Alliance. The
summer food program
will continue until school
starts in the fall.
Meigs County is one
of a number of counties
where a free summer food
program is being started
this year. One basis of
selection for funding is
family income. In Meigs
County a high percentage

of school children qualify
for free or reduced charge
for school luncheons on
the basis of family income.
The free summer noontime meals will be made
available each weekday to
all children 18 years of age
and under or persons over
18 who are determined
by a state or local public educational agency to
be mentally or physically
disabled. The meals will
be served at the Senior
Center in the Meigs Multipurpose Building, 112 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
In addition to those

served at the Senior Center, the agency has been
approved
for
serving
lunches on Wednesdays at
the Pomeroy Library, and
on Mondays at the Racine
Library Branch.
However, the library
sites where serving will
take place are considered
“closed sites” which means
that participation in the
food program is only open
to children enrolled in the
summer reading programs
of the two libraries.
Shaver said that for
this first year the Council on Aging is limited by

the Ohio Department of
Education to three sites
for funding. However, she
added that plans are being made to begin serving lunches at the Eastern
School Library, another
closed site, with other
funding.
As for menu items, Shaver said to facilitate preparation, they will be about
the same for the children
and senior citizens who
eat lunch at the Center or
have it home delivered or
taken to one of the off-site
serving centers.

Southern Board
opens second
round of bids
Sarah Hawley
shawley@heartlandpublications.com

Donna Price of Charleston, W.Va., left, and Diana Johnson of Pomeroy, look over the 46 entries in the Art in the Park contest.

GW&amp;R Fest provides weekend of fun
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — All’s well that ends
well, and while Friday’s rain necessitated
some cancellation of the Gold Wings &amp;
Ribs Festival’s scheduled events, Saturday’s sunshine more than made up for
what was lost.
The motorcycles, delayed because of
Friday’s rain, came in early Saturday and
filled Court Street and one section of the
parking lot. The concessionaires opened
a little early to lines of people waiting for
a barbecued sandwich, some fried vegetables, a blooming onion, or a sugared
waffle, and the kids gathered around to
register for a variety of contests including the Buckeye State pedal pull contest, a first for Meigs County, the cookie
stacking contest, a balloon toss, a stick
pony rodeo game, and a pickle spitting
contest.
Forty-six pieces of art in a variety of
mediums, including the new multi-media class, where colorful sequins, beads
of all sizes, puffs of colored fabric, and
even straw, were used to accent a painted
design, made up the Art in the Park display in the Court Street mini-park. Viewers voted on the entries they liked best
and the ones in each category getting the
most points won cash prizes.
See FEST ‌| 5

RACINE — The Southern Local School Board
opened bids for the second
time on Thursday for the
high school addition.
After all bids during the
first round of bidding, which
ended on March 29, came in
more that 10 percent over
budget, the district chose to
rebid, with a higher budget
for the project allowed by
the state.
The budget for the project was increased by $1.5
million dollars, with 25 percent of the funds required
to come from the school
district and 75 percent from
the state.
The low bid on the rebid
of the New High School Addition was Kinsale Corporation, of Pomeroy, with a bid
of $10,522,806, for a total of
$22,806 over the estimate.
The only other bid received was from R.W. Setterlin Building Company, of
Columbus, in the amount of
$10,735,000, for a total of
$235,000 over budget.

In addition to the base
bid, there are several alternate bids the two contractors submitted bids for. The
decision on which of the alternates, if any, will be completed would require a decision of the school board.
A decision will be made
in the coming days on the
status of the project and if
the district will but in the
additional funds as required
with the increased budget.
The final decision will be
made by the Southern Local
Board of Education.
The early site work bid
for the project was awarded
in late March to Eclipse
Company, LLC. Eclipse
Company submitted the
low bid in the amount of
$776,433.57, with the base
bid of $723,120.88.
The early site work includes ground work, drainage and utilities.
The next board meeting
is set for 8 p.m. on June
25 in the Southern High
School Media Center.

MLEF receives
$5,000 donation

Sarah Hawley/photo

Motorcycles lined Court Street which was closed to traffic. Here Rex Cumings prepares to head out for a ride.

Tina Rees, right, of Peoples Bank presents a $5,000 donation to
Michael Bartrum and Cathy Crow representatives of the Meigs
Local Enrichment Foundation. This is the fourth installment of
the donation which will total $25,000.

Bend Area Gospel Jubilee under way
Nathan Jeffers

njeffers@heartlandpublications.com

COTTAGEVILLE — The 22nd
Bend Area Gospel Jubilee is under way at the Jackson County
Fairgrounds and will continue
through the rest of the week.
Beginning on Monday evening
with a potluck supper, the Bend
Area Gospel Jubilee has no doubt
become a favorite among locals.
With free admission on a nightly
basis, musical performances will
begin at 5 p.m., with the exception of Saturday June 9, when it

will begin at 3 p.m.
On Tuesday, June 5, There will
be performances from the following groups and individuals:
Borrowed Time, Wade Spencer, New Southern Harmony, Samaritans, John and Wilma Kid,
New Generation, and a special
session of singing and musical
instruments presented by Arlings Barnes and Friends, Golden
Street Singers and Tignors.
On Wednesday, June 6, there
will be performances and presentations from the following: Adam
Roush, Arling Barnes Quartet,

Truth and Life Ministry Singers,
Paul and Mary Nichols, Williams
Family, David Bowen Family, New
Song, New Covenant and Ron
Shamblin.
Also on Tuesday and Wednesday evening, there will be “Tag
Preaching,” which consists of various area preachers who will each
share a 10 minute sermon, beginning around 6:45 p.m. each night.
Those participating in the “Tag
Preaching” will be Darren Ellis,
Jimmy Jordan, Junior Conger,
Randy Parson, Mike Finnicum,
Leland Vanmeter, Marco Pitt, Hul-

ing Green, Jordan Decker, John
Dolly, Ron Shamblin and Charlie
Cundiff.
On Thursday, June 7, there will
be performances and presentations from the following: Miller
Family, Rollins Family, Taylor
Brothers, Christ Unlimited, New
City Singers, Roush Family, Day
Spring, Tommy Griffith, The
Browders, John and Shirley Cramer, Huffman Family and the
Builders.
On Friday, June 8, there will
be performances and presentations from the following: Randy

Carbaugh, Borrowed Time, Violet Maynard Family, Covered By
Love, Anointed, Browders, Roush
Family, Narrow Way Primitive
Quartet, New Calvary Echoes,
Light of Grace and Dave Seratty.
On Saturday, June 9, there will
be performances and presentations from the following: Youth in
Gospel Music, Nancy Jo and Larry Kidd, Forever Blessed, Jacobs
Ladder, Billy Fields, Anointed,
Mike Upright and The Browders.
Also on Saturday night, there will
See JUBILEE |‌ 3

�Page 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Ohio Valley Forecast Loss of religion makes her feel bad

Tuesday: A chance of showers, mainly between 2 p.m.
and 3 p.m. Mostly sunny, with a high near 73. North wind
around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Tuesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 51.
North wind between 3 and 5 mph.
Wednesday: A slight chance of showers after 1 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 73. Chance of precipitation
is 20 percent.
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 53.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 79.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 54.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 81.
Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 56.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 85.

Meigs County
Local Briefs

Benefit Sing planned
CHESTER — A benefit
sing for the Fall Harvest will
be held at 6 p.m. Sunday at the
Nazarene Church, Chester.
Featured singers will be John
and Velma Dolly, Brian and
Family Connections, Jerry
and Diana Frederick, Angela
Gibson, and Everett Grant.
Firemen to hold benefit
barbecue
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Fire Department
will hold a benefit fundraiser
chicken barbecue dinner on
Saturday at the fire station
with serving to begin at 11
a.m. All of the money raised
will go to benefit the James
Cancer Center through contributions to the Pelotonia bike
ride which will take place on
August 11. The bike ride will
be 102 miles from Columbus
to Gambier.
Forked Run Riversweep
REEDSVILLE — Riversweep at Forked Run will take
place at 6 p.m. on Friday, June
15. There will be free t-shirts,
food and beverages for everyone who comes to help pick
up trash. The first shelter
house at Forked Run Park is
where the gathering of participants will take place. For further information contact Todd
Bissell at 740-444-1388
Annual election and
board meeting
POINT PLEASANT —

The West Virginia State Farm
Museum annual election and
board meeting will be at 7
p.m. on June 12, 2012, at the
farm museum. Al dues must
be paid. For more information, contact the museum at
304-675-5737.
Vacation Bible School
POMEROY — The churches of Pomeroy will host a community wide Vacation Bible
School at Trinity Church on
the corner of Second and
Lynn streets in Pomeroy. The
theme is Sky. VBS will run
from June 4-8 from 6:30-8:30
p.m. each evening. Youth ages
preschool to sixth grade are
invited to attend. Activities
will include games, music,
bible stories, and crafts. For
more information contact Jill
Johnson at 992-2947.
Water Aerobics
POMEROY — A water
aerobics class will be held
from 6:30-7:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday at Kountry
Resort. For more information
call Devan Soulsby at 9926728.
Free Lunch
POMEROY — A free lunch
for downtown merchants
will be provided by the First
Southern Baptist Church the
first Thursday of every month
from June 7 to Sept. 6 with
serving from 11:30 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. on the stage area on
the Pomeroy parking lot.

Local stocks

AEP (NYSE) — 38.42
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 15.08
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 60.98
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.12
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 40.02
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 64.78
Century Alum (NASDAQ) —
7.15
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.53
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ)
— 7.33
City Holding (NASDAQ) —
31.07
Collins (NYSE) — 49.09
DuPont (NYSE) — 47.02
US Bank (NYSE) — 28.79
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 18.15
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) —
46.00
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 31.00
Kroger (NYSE) — 21.91
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 42.28
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 63.69

OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.18
BBT (NYSE) — 27.64
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 17.93
Pepsico (NYSE) — 67.48
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.30
Rockwell (NYSE) — 66.92
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —
12.98
Royal Dutch Shell — 61.34
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) —
47.90
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 65.99
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.51
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.98
Worthington (NYSE) — 15.98
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for June 4, 2012, 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.

We Now Have Continuous Gutters
5” and 6”
White in Stock – 10 Special Order Colors

Dear Dr. Brothers: I was
raised in a religious home,
and it was pretty much assumed that I would follow
the rest of my family into
a life centered around the
church and Christianity.
But since I’ve been away at
college, I’ve been exposed
to a lot of different people
who don’t believe as we did,
or they don’t have any religion at all. I’ve come to see
my family as very narrowminded and somewhat hypocritical. I don’t want to be
any religion, but now I sort
of feel like a loser. — B.P.
Dear B.P.: Giving up
your lifelong religion probably has been traumatic to
you, even though you feel
you came to the decision in
a rational way. Your loss —
and that’s what it really is
— can be mourned, just as
any other major life change
might be. You should give
yourself some time to
grieve about losing the
closeness with your family and church community
that this move on your part
probably will entail, and be
prepared to take some heat
and to have to repair some
relationships. By coming to

the conclusion
***
that your famDear
Dr.
ily members and
Brothers: I am
church friends
becoming frightmay not be folened about my
lowing the tefeelings for my
nets of the faith
husband,
and
as you underI would like to
stand them, you
know if this is
are discovering
normal. Here’s
for the first time
the
situation:
their “feet of
We have been
clay,” and that
married
for
has to be un17 years, all
comfortable for
of them pretty
you.
Dr. Joyce Brothers happy. It used
As for feeling
to be that when
Syndicated
he went on a
like a loser, you
Columnist
business trip, I
literally
have
missed him terlost something.
ribly
and
couldn’t
wait until
Right now you are in a sort
of limbo, believing in no his return. Now I find myreligion, and that may con- self having fun being alone.
tinue, or you may regroup I take bubble baths, leave
and find a new approach the bed unmade and stay
to spirituality that works up late watching TV. When
better for you. You should he comes home, I almost resent it. Help! — T.L.
be proud of yourself for not
Dear T.L.: There is no
blindly accepting what you reason to panic, and I have
have been spoon-fed, but to think that you are one of
also realize that it will take many women who act out
some strength to become the old saying “When the
an individual who has cat’s away, the mice will
self-respect when others play.” The fact that you
may be trying to criticize are not waiting until your
your independence.
husband leaves town to

go visit a lover or take up
residence on the nearest
barstool makes me think
that yours is just a typical
example of someone who
is happily married but tied
to a routine with her spouse
that just isn’t much fun. You
are enjoying his absences
for the simple reason that it
gives you a break from the
daily schedule to do what
you want — all of them perfectly harmless activities.
The fact that you continue to enjoy your little minibreaks tells me that they are
serving a purpose in your
marriage and in your life.
The question is, How do
you really feel about your
relationship and your husband? Being disappointed
when he returns can be a
red flag. It speaks as much
to how he makes you feel as
it does to whether you have
a right to play hooky when
he’s away. If you find that
you are consistently happier when he is gone than
when he’s with you, that’s a
problem. A break from routine might help, or it may
go deeper.
(c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate

Navy marks Battle of Midway’s 70th anniversary
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP) — Six months
after the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor,
Japan sent four aircraft
carriers to the tiny Pacific
atoll of Midway to draw
out and destroy what remained of the U.S. Pacific
Fleet.
But this time the U.S.
knew about Japan’s plans.
U.S. cryptologists had
cracked Japanese communications codes, giving
Fleet Commander Adm.
Chester Nimitz notice of
where Japan would strike,
the day and time of the attack, and what ships the
enemy would bring to the
fight.
The U.S. was badly outnumbered and its pilots
less experienced than Japan’s. Even so, it sank four
Japanese aircraft carriers
the first day of the threeday battle and put Japan
on the defensive, greatly
diminishing its ability to
project air power as it had
in the attack on Hawaii.
On Monday, current
Pacific Fleet commander,
Adm. Cecil Haney and
other officials will fly
1,300 miles northwest
from Oahu to Midway to
market the 70th anniversary of the pivotal battle
that changed the course of
the Pacific war.
“After the battle of
Midway we always maintained the initiative and
for the remaining three
years of the war, the Japanese reacted to us,” said
Vice Adm. Michael Rogers, commander of the
U.S. Fleet Cyber Command, told a crowd gathered outside Nimitz’s old
office at Pearl Harbor on
Friday to commemorate
the role naval intelligence
played in the events of Jun
4-7, 1942.

“It all started really
in May of 1942 with station Hypo (the Combat
Intelligence Unit at Pearl
Harbor) and the work of
some great people working together to try to understand what were the
Japanese thinking, what
were they going to do,”
Rogers said Friday.
Intelligence wasn’t the
only reason for U.S. victory.
The brave heroics by
dive bomber pilots, Japanese mistakes and luck all
played a role. But Nimitz
himself observed it was
critical to the outcome,
said retired Rear Adm.
Mac Showers, the last
surviving member of the
intelligence team that deciphered Japanese messages.
“His statement a few
days later was ‘had it not
been for the excellent intelligence that was provided, we would have read
about the capture of Midway in the morning newspaper,’” said Showers said
in an interview.
Japan’s vessels outnumbered U.S. ships 4-to-1,
Japan’s aviators had more
experience, and its Zero
fighter planes could easily outmaneuver U.S. aircraft.
But Japan, unlike the
U.S., had little knowledge
of what its enemy was doing.
Japanese commanders
believed a U.S. task force
was far away in the Solomon Islands. Then, as
June 4 neared and Nimitz
prepared his troops, Japanese commanders failed
to recognize signs of increased military activity around Hawaii as an
indication the U.S. had
uncovered their plans to
attack Midway, the site of

a small U.S. base.
The U.S. lost one carrier, 145 planes and 307
men. Japan lost four aircraft carriers, a heavy
cruiser, 291 planes and
4,800 men, according to
the U.S. Navy and to an
account by former Japanese naval officers in
“Midway: The Battle That
Doomed Japan, the Japanese Navy’s Story.”
The defeat was so overwhelming that the Japanese navy kept the details
a closely guarded secret
and most Japanese never
heard of the battle until
after the war.
Nimitz got his intelligence from Showers and
a few dozen others relentlessly analyzing Japanese
code in the basement of a
Pearl Harbor administrative building.
Japanese messages were
written using 45,000 fivedigit numbers representing phrases and words.
The
cryptographers
had to figure out what the
numbers said without the
aid of computers.
“In order to read the
messages, we had to recover the meaning of each
one of those code groups.
The main story of our
work was recovering code
group meanings one-bypainful-one,”
Showers
said.
At the time of the Dec.
7, 1941 attack on Pearl
Harbor, they understood
a small fraction of the
messages. By May 1942,
they could make educated
guesses.
A key breakthrough
came when they determined Japan was using
the letters “AF” to refer to
Midway.
Showers said Cmdr.
Joseph Rochefort, the
team’s leader, and Nimitz

were confident the letters
referred to the atoll. But
Adm. Ernest King, the
Navy’s top commander,
wanted to be sure before
he allowed Nimitz to send
the precious few U.S. aircraft carriers out to battle.
So Nimitz had the patrol base at Midway send
a message to Oahu saying the island’s distillation plant was down, and
it urgently needed fresh
water. Soon after, both
an intelligence team in
Australia and Rochefort’s
unit picked up a Japanese
message saying “AF” had
a water shortage.
Showers was an ensign
in the office, having just
joined the Navy. He analyzed code deciphered by
cryptographers, plotted
ships on maps of the Pacific, and filed information.
Now 92 and living in
Arlington, Va., the Iowa
City, Iowa native went on
to a career in intelligence.
He served on Nimitz’s
staff on Guam toward the
end of the war, and returned later to Pearl Harbor for stints leading the
Pacific Fleet’s intelligence
effort. After the Navy, he
worked for the Central Intelligence Agency.
Showers said commanders weren’t always as open
to using intelligence to
plan their course of attack
the way Nimitz was. Some
were suspicious of it.
But Midway changed
that.
“It used to be a lot of
people thought intelligence was something mysterious and they didn’t believe in it and they didn’t
have to pay attention to it.
Admiral Nimitz was fortunately what we call intelligence-friendly,” Showers
said.

Meigs County Community Calendar
Alligator Jack’s Flea Market
St. Rt. 7, Pomeroy
Open All Year!
Friday 10-5
Sat &amp; Sun 9-5

740-416-4650

Thursday, June 7
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical Association, 7 p.m. adt the Chester
Academy.
Friday, June 8
LONG BOTTOM — Faith Full Gospel Church, Route 124, Long Bottom,
special service, 7 p.m., with the Peace
Makers singers.
Tuesday, June 12
POMEROY — Bedford Township
Trustees, regular monthly, at 7:00 p.m. at

the town hall.
Thursday, June 14
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge 453
will hold its monthly meeting at 7:30
p.m. Refreshments will be served after.
Birthday
LONG BOTTOM — Ruth Stethem,
of Canton, formerly of Long Bottom, will
turn 109 on June 14. Cards may be sent
to her at 5911 Lake O Springs NW, Canton, Ohio 44718.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

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July 6 Johnny Rawls
July 13 The Gas House Gorillas
July 20 Clarence Spady
August 3 Gizzae
August 10 Grady Champion

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Wednesday, June 6
RACINE — Special meeting of the
Southern Local Board of Education, 6
p.m. Wednesday, in the high school media center, for the purpose of discussing
the high school building project.
POMEROY — Meigs County Fair
Board will hold its regular June meeting,
7:30 pm at the fairgrounds.
HARRISONVILLE — Scipio Township Trustees monthly meeting, 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville fire house.

�Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Victory Baptist Church hosts Mother-Daughter Banquet
The Victory Baptist Church Ladies Missionary Fellowship had their mother-daughter banquet on May 5. The theme was
“pamper me with chocolate.”
Mary Rathburn was the Mother of the
Year.
Diner was served in the gym with the
men serving. The program was in the

church. Dawn Ray Bos was the speaker.
Readings included “The meanest mother
in the world,” read by Donna Richmond,
“When I’m and old lady,” read by Lola Hubbard, and “When God made moms,” read
by Stephanie Wiechmann.
Names were drawn for hanging baskets
and necklaces were given to the children.

Children received necklaces at the banquet. Pictured are (from left) Edeynne Wiechmann, Paige Mary Rathburn, seated, was selected as the Mother of the Year. She is pictured with (from left)
Lola Hubbard, Dawn Ray Bos and Linda Keesee.
Buffington, Immerie Wiechmann and Chloe Runyon.

High school grads heading to military get a salute
VOORHEES, N.J. (AP) — It struck Christine Zinser a year ago, as her son Philipp
was finishing high school and heading into
the Marine Corps: At all the season’s award
banquets, while there were honors for those
heading to military academies and college
ROTC programs, the graduates who were
enlisting were not recognized.
“I don’t think anyone ever thought about
the perception or the difference,” Zinser
said.
But she did.
And before long, the mother of four in
Fairfax County, Va., found Ken Hartman,
a former school board member in Cherry
Hill, N.J., who had launched Our Community Salutes in 2009 after noticing something
similar in his school district in a well-off
Philadelphia suburb. The group holds ceremonies around the country to honor the
high school graduates who are joining the
military.
The efforts have expanded from a single
ceremony in New Jersey in 2009 to 22
around the country this year — including
one Zinser orchestrated for students in
northern Virginia and others as far-flung
as Portland, Ore., and Jackson, Miss. The
group expects to recognize about 4,700
students this year. More events are already

being planned for 2013.
“It’s critical that these kids feel like their
community is supportive of them,” said
Hartman, who runs the online learning program at Philadelphia’s Drexel University.
“If they’re deployed and they’re in a strange
town in Afghanistan, they need to know
they have their community’s support. We’re
the first to say, ‘Thank you.’”
For military-bound grads, this is not exactly the Vietnam era, when support was
tepid.
They say their decisions to enlist may
have surprised friends and family — but
they hear about pride, not anger concerning their choice.
“They don’t think it was weird. I guess
they thought it was kind of out of the blue,”
said John Sabatino, of Somerdale, N.J., a
17-year-old who is heading to the Army’s
Fort Benning for basic training later this
month after he graduates from Sterling
High School. “They’re nervous for me. My
girlfriend’s nervous for me.”
Sabatino, who has been working out
and studying Army protocol to prepare
for basic training, joined in part because his stepfather is a recently retired
soldier and he sees how much respect
he gets for serving when strangers have

shaken his hand and thanked him.
But Sabatino hasn’t been honored formally in school for his choice.
Like Sabatino, Joshua Molinas, an Overbrook High School senior from Pine Hill,
N.J., was among about 40 students to attend the Our Community Salutes banquet
last week for Camden County recruits, held
at a catering hall in Voorhees.
Among the 400 guests were several
military officers. Music was from an Army
Reserve jazz combo. A local television reporter was the master of ceremonies, and
Vince Papale, the former Philadelphia Eagles player whose life story was the subject
of the movie “Invincible,” spoke. The enlistees all received certificates showing that
they’d been recognized by state and federal
lawmakers.
Molinas said he decided the military
would be a good path to his goal of becoming a New Jersey state trooper and getting
an education paid for.
His mother, Jean Henriquez, was happy
to have the event and the reassurance it
brings with it. “It’s good to have because
it shows me that they want him to be safe
and it will help a lot with his future,” she
said.
Some of the speakers at the event were

Clinton: Romney would be ‘calamitous’ for US
NEW YORK (AP) — Former
President Bill Clinton warned Monday that a Mitt Romney presidency
would be “calamitous” for the nation
and the world, going further than
even President Barack Obama in
depicting the consequences of a return to Republican rule of the White
House.
With Obama standing thoughtfully to one side, Clinton slammed
Romney by name, an apparent rebuttal to his own comments last
week that were widely seen as flattering to Romney’s background in
business.
Clinton said Obama had earned a
second term because of his steering
of the economy through a “miserable situation” and “the alternative
would be, in my opinion, calamitous
for our country and the world.”
Clinton’s take came as he helped
raise at least $3.6 million for Obama
at three New York fundraisers. The
two have patched over a personal
rift from the 2008 campaign when

Obama defeated Hillary Rodham
Clinton in a bitter Democratic primary. But Clinton caused some
heartburn in Obama’s campaign last
week by remarking that Romney had
a “sterling” business record — an
assertion that undercut Democrats’
criticism of Romney’s decisions at
the private equity firm Bain Capital.
For his part, Obama said the economy had been difficult for so many
voters that some could reach the
point that “you’re willing to try just
about anything, even if you’ve seen
it before.”
Clinton’s larger point was that
Obama is the better choice to steer
the economy, and the White House
denied that Clinton “made news.”
Still, the televised remark gave Republicans campaign gold just as the
government released a disappointing report saying the United States
created far fewer new jobs in May
than expected — a big political
blow for Obama.
Obama and Clinton also are on

opposite sides of a close Democratic congressional primary contest
in New Jersey. Clinton also campaigned last week for Wisconsin
Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Tom Barrett. Barrett faces Republican Gov. Scott Walker in a special
recall election contest on Tuesday
but has seen little backing from the
Democratic Party or Obama.
Still, Clinton’s ability to deliver
campaign dollars and his record as
a sound campaign strategist make
him an asset to the Obama campaign that apparently outweighs any
drawbacks.
Obama campaign bundler and billionaire investor Marc Lasry held an
exclusive reception Monday night,
followed by a gala at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. The evening was to conclude with an event dubbed “Barack
on Broadway” at the New Amsterdam Theatre. Obama will return to
Manhattan next week for a fundraiser at the home of “Sex and the City”
actress Sarah Jessica Parker.

Jubilee
From Page 1
be a memorial service to
honor William (Bunt) Arthur, a singer for the Builders Quartet who recently
passed away, as well as a
spiritual jamming and singing to close out the jubilee.
Also on June 9, there will
be an auction beginning at
10 a.m. Attendees may donate items to be auctioned
off, and the proceeds will go
to help support the Jubilee.
It was reported this ministry began in 1983 with bimonthly sings and now has
grown to a full week long

event, the first jubilee taking place in 1990. Prior to
holding the event in Cottageville, it was also reported
the Jubilee took place at the
Mason County Fairgrounds,
as well as the West Virginia
State Farm Museum.
“Following the call on my
life has brought so much
joy as well as meeting some
of the finest people on this
great planet,” said event
promoter Evelyn Roush.
Roush went on to say
the year leading up to the
jubilee takes a lot prayer,
and a great amount of work

and hard work by those involved.
The Jackson County Fairground have been reported
as the best place for the Jubilee in recent years due to
the campground facilities
and the shelter arrangements to protect spectators
from any inclement weather. The camping spaces
are available for $15 a day,
and are on a first come
first serve basis. There
will also be concessions
provided by the Gospel
Lighthouse Church from
Point Pleasant.

Starbucks buys bakery to
improve food offerings
NEW YORK (AP) — Starbucks Corp. is looking to
offer a more tempting menu, with a $100 million cash
deal to buy a small bakery chain.
The Seattle-based coffee shop chain says baked goods
from La Boulange will start replacing its current lineup
early next year, starting with French pastries such as
the croissant. Products will start appearing in Bay Area
stores first then roll out nationally.
Starbucks also says it plans to make the San Francisco-area bakery into a national presence in the years
ahead.
“We’ll take it one store at a time, starting in metropolitan areas around the U.S. where there’s demand,”
said Cliff Burrows, president of Starbucks Americas.
Food has become an important part of Starbucks’
revenue stream in recent years, with the segment now
generating $1.5 billion a year. About a third of the purchases in its U.S. locations include a food item.

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reserving all of the performing artists by telephone and
hand written invitations.
Roush also stated the event
wouldn’t be what it is today
without the numerous volunteers who help out with
the jubilee.
“During the year, fundraising events are held
such as spaghetti suppers,
pancake breakfasts, hot
dog, soup and homemade
noodle sales, along with
groups donating their time
in benefit gospel sings and
other events,” Roush said.
“It all requires dedication

addressing worried parents as much as the
recruits.
One, Army Maj. Gen. David L. Mann,
oversees recruiting for the Army and talked
about the sound qualifications of military
recruits.
“They are better than most of their
peers,” he said in his speech, “not in an arrogant way, but because they chose a harder path.”
Even if the graduates are not hungry for
recognition, it can be helpful to their parents, Zinser said.
“You can be proud with other people of
what your child has decided to do,” she
said.
Toni Stinson, who organized this week’s
inaugural Our Community Salutes event in
Fredericksburg, Va., got involved with the
all-volunteer group after her request to have
military-bound graduates in her son’s class
wear special cords at graduation was rejected.
She said the value is bigger than making
parents feel comfortable. As the wife of a
career Marine and a mother of a recruit, she
knows plenty about military life — and has
been to plenty of military funerals.
“The community may not get another opportunity to thank these kids,” she said. “Half
of them will be in Afghanistan within a year.”

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�Opinion

Page 4
Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Daily Sentinel

Is texting ruining the After gory incidents, online ‘zombie’ talk grows
art of conversation?
Tamara Lush
Vicki Smith,
Associated Press

Martha Irvine,
AP National Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — Anna
Schiferl hadn’t even rolled
out of bed when she reached
for her cell phone and typed
a text to her mom, one recent
Saturday. Mom was right
downstairs in the kitchen.
The text? Anna wanted cinnamon rolls for breakfast.
Soon after, the 13-year-old
could hear mom’s voice echoing through the house.
“Anna,” Joanna Schiferl
called, “if you want to talk to
me, you come downstairs and
see me!”
Anna laughs about it now.
“I was kind of being lazy,”
the teen from suburban Chicago concedes. “I know that
sounds horrible.”
Well, maybe not horrible,
but certainly increasingly
typical.
Statistics from the Pew
Internet &amp; American Life
Project show that, these days,
many people with cell phones
prefer texting over a phone
call. It’s not always young people, though the data indicate
that the younger you are, the
more likely you are to prefer
texting.
And that’s creating a communication divide, of sorts —
the talkers vs. the texters.
Some would argue that it’s
no big deal. What difference
should it make how we communicate, as long as we do so?
But many experts say the
most successful communicators will, of course, have the
ability to do both, talk or text,
and know the most appropriate times to use those skills.
And they fear that more of us
are losing our ability to have
— or at least are avoiding
— the traditional face-to-face
conversations that are vital in
the workplace and personal
relationships.
“It is an art that’s becoming as valuable as good writing,” says Janet Sternberg, a
professor of communication
and media studies at Fordham
University in New York who is
also a linguist.
In the most extreme cases,
she’s noticed that more students don’t look her in the eye
and have trouble with the basics of direct conversation —
habits that, she says, will not

serve them well as they enter
a world where many of their
elders still expect an in-person
conversation, or at the very
least a phone call.
On today’s college campuses, the dynamic is often different. Forget about things like
“office hours,” for instance.
Many professors say they
rarely see students outside of
class.
“I sit in my office hours
lonely now because if students have a question, they
email, often late at night,” says
Renee Houston, an associate
professor of communication
studies at the University of
Puget Sound in Washington
state.
“And they never call, ever.”
She recalls overhearing students chuckling about the way
people older than them communicate.
“My parents left me a
VOICEMAIL. Can you believe it?” one said, as if voicemail had gone the way of the
dinosaurs.
This doesn’t sound surprising or particularly troublesome to Lisa Auster-Gussman, who’ll be a senior this fall
at the University of Richmond
in Virginia. For her, there are
simply particular tools she
uses to communicate, depending on the recipient.
Email is for professors, yes.
Phone calls and maybe the occasional text are for parents, if
the parents know how to do
the latter.
“But I don’t communicate
much with older people. So
much of my life is set up over
text,” says Auster-Gussman,
who sends and receives an
average of about 6,000 text
messages a month.
Many are done as “group
texts,” sharing messages
among eight college friends
who live in the same building.
The interactions are nothing more than you’d say in a
casual conversation, AusterGussman says — but they
are constant when they’re not
together.
Recently, for instance, she
went to a movie and came out
to find 50 text messages waiting for her on her phone.
Meanwhile, last summer,
when she was away from
her boyfriend, she went days
without talking to him on the

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phone, but texted with him
several times a day.
“You’re not even really talking to him,” she remembers
her perplexed father saying.
“But I felt like I was talking to him all day, every day,”
Auster-Gussman says.
Is there some aversion to
talking on the phone? Not really, she says. It’s just a preference. In this day and age, it’s
just what you do.
Experts say there is, of
course, nothing wrong with
casual conversation and fun
between friends. One could
argue that the constant banter
— scores of texts each day —
keep people more connected.
The problem, some communication experts say, is that the
conversation isn’t particularly
deep — and therein lies the
problem, says Joseph Grenny,
co-author of the book “Crucial
Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes are High.”
“The core problem has
existed since we’ve had telephones — probably since the
time of a telegraph,” Grenny
says. “We loathe having crucial conversations. We are
paralyzed and do what we can
to avoid them.”
That applies to any generation, he says. Texting is just
the latest way to do that.
Though they may not
always be so good at deep
conversations
themselves,
Grenny suggests that parents
model the behavior for their
children and put down their
own mobile devices. He says
they also should set limits, as
Anna’s mom did when she enforced the “no texting to people under the same roof” rule.
A bit of self-awareness
helps, too.
Mary Ann Allison, an assistant professor of media
studies at Hofstra University,
has her students keep a log
of their own communication
habits.
“By paying attention to it,
they say, ‘Wow, it’s a really
different conversation when
you’re talking with someone
and listening to them,” Allison says. They key in on body
language, facial expressions
and tone of voice — all cues
that you lose when you can’t
see or hear someone, or when
you’re distracted, even in person, by a gadget.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) —
First came Miami: the case
of a naked man eating most
of another man’s face.
Then Maryland, a college
student telling police he
killed a man, then ate his
heart and part of his brain.
It was different in New
Jersey, where a man
stabbed himself 50 times
and threw bits of his own
intestines at police. They
pepper-sprayed him, but he
was not easily subdued.
He was, people started
saying, acting like a zombie. And the whole discussion just kept growing,
becoming a topic that the
Internet couldn’t seem to
stop talking about.
The actual incidents are
horrifying — and, if how
people are talking about
them is any indication,
fascinating. In an America
where zombie imagery is
used to peddle everything
from tools and weapons
to garden gnomes, they all
but beg the comparison.
Violence, we’re used to.
Cannibalism and people
who should fall down but
don’t? That feels like something else entirely.
So many strange things
have made headlines in
recent days that The Daily
Beast assembled a Google
Map tracking “instances
that may be the precursor
to a zombie apocalypse.”
And the federal agency that
tracks diseases weighed in
as well, insisting it had no
evidence that any zombielinked health crisis was unfolding.
The cases themselves
are anything but funny.
Each involved real people
either suspected of committing unspeakable acts
or having those acts visited upon them for reasons
that have yet to be figured
out. Maybe it’s nothing
new, either; people do horrible things to each other
on a daily basis.
But what, then, made
search terms like “zombie
apocalypse” trend day after day last week in multiple corners of the Internet,
fueled by discussions and
postings that were often
framed as humor?
“They’ve heard of these

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zombie movies, and they
make a joke about it,” says
Lou Manza, a psychology
professor at Lebanon Valley College in Pennsylvania, who learned about the
whole thing at the breakfast table Friday morning
when his 18-year-old son
quipped that a “zombie
apocalypse” was imminent.
Symbolic of both infection and evil, zombies are
terrifying in a way that
other horror-movie iconography isn’t, says Elizabeth
Bird, an anthropologist at
the University of South
Florida.
Zombies, after all, look
like us. But they aren’t.
They are some baser form
of us — slowly rotting and
shambling along, intent
on “surviving” and creating more of their kind, but
with no emotional core, no
conscience, no limits.
“Vampires have kind
of a romantic appeal, but
zombies are doomed,”
Bird says. “Zombies can
never really become human again. There’s no going back.
“That resonates in today’s world, with people
feeling like we’re moving
toward an ending,” she
says. “Ultimately they are
much more of a depressing
figure.”
The “moving toward an
ending” part is especially
potent. For some, the news
stories fuel a lurking fear
that, ultimately, humanity
is doomed.
Speculation varies. It
could be a virus that escapes from some secret
government lab, or one
that mutates on its own.
Or maybe it’ll be the result
of a deliberate combination and weaponization of
pathogens, parasites and
disease.
It will, many believe, be
something we’ve created
— and therefore brought
upon ourselves.
Zombies
represent
America’s fears of bioterrorism, a fear that
strengthened after the
9/11 attacks, says Patrick
Hamilton, an English professor at Misericordia University in Dallas, Pa., who
studies how we process
comic-book narratives.
Economic
anxiety
around the planet doesn’t

help matters, either, with
Greece, Italy and Spain
edging closer to crisis every day. Consider some of
the terms that those fears
produce: zombie banks,
zombie economies, zombie
governments.
When people are unsettled about things beyond
their control — be it the
loss of a job, the high cost
of housing or the depletion
of a retirement account —
they look to metaphors like
the zombie.
“They’re
mindless
drones following basic
needs to eat,” Hamilton
says. “Those economic issues speak to our own lack
of control.”
They’re also effective
messengers. The Centers
for Disease Control got in
on the zombie action last
year, using the “apocalypse” as the teaser for its
emergency preparedness
blog. It worked, attracting
younger people who might
not otherwise have read
the agency’s guidance on
planning evacuation routes
and storing water and
food.
On Friday, a different
message emerged. Chatter
had become so rampant
that CDC spokesman David Daigle sent an email
to the Huffington Post,
answering questions about
the possibility of the undead walking among us.
“CDC does not know of
a virus or condition that
would reanimate the dead,”
he wrote, adding: “(or one
that would present zombie-like symptoms.)”
Zombies have been
around in our culture at
least since Mary Shelley’s
“Frankenstein” was published in 1818, though they
really took off after George
Romero’s
nightmarish,
black-and-white
classic
“Night of the Living Dead”
hit the screen in 1968.
In the past several years,
they have become both
wildly popular and big
business. Last fall, the financial website 24/7 Wall
Street estimated that zombies pumped $5 billion
into the U.S. economy.
“And if you think the financial tab has been high
so far, by the end of 2012
the tab is going to be far
larger,” the October report read.

The Daily Sentinel
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Publishing Co.
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Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
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Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Tuesday, June 5, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Obituaries
Loyd Leroy Brinker

Loyd Leroy Brinker, 78, Greenwood, South Carolina,
passed away Friday afternoon, June 1, 2012, in the Hospice House in Greenwood as a result of complication from
surgery. His daughter, Christina and his son, Brian, were
with him when he departed. Born September 1, 1933, in
Findlay, Ohio, he was the son of the late Jesse Mehr and
Pauline Lemons Brinker.
Mr. Brinker’s interest included music, aviation, carpentry, genealogy and horsemanship.
A long-time family friend of Mr. Brinker said he was
once “the finest horseman in Georgia,” where in his
younger years he trained horses, was a foreman of a cattle
ranch and competed in rodeo events.
After suffering a serious injury, Mr. Brinker moved
his family from south Georgia to the Atlanta area. There
he studied mechanical drawing and became a draftsman
with Lockheed Aeronautics in Marietta, GA. With Lockheed, Mr. Brinker advanced far beyond his level of education over his 30-year career to lead electronic system
design teams for the C-5, F-117 and the C-130J. He was
much admired for his gentle but authoritative demeanor.
He is survived by three daughters, a son and grandchildren.
A family graveside service will be conducted Saturday, June 9, 2012, in the Carmel Cemetery near Racine.
There are no calling hours. Funeral arrangements have
been entrusted to the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Robert Gene Rhodes

Robert Gene Rhodes, 82, Racine, passed away at 11:52
a.m. Saturday, June 2, 2012, in the Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
Born June 18, 1929 in Letart Falls he was the son of
the late Roy and Inez Farra Rhodes. He was a retired
maintenance supervisor from the AEP’s Phillip Sporn
Plant. He was a member of the Pentecostal Assembly at
Racine and was a Army veteran of the Korean Conflict.
He served as a Presidential Honor Guard at the Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C.. He was a
member of the Racine Post #602, American Legion.
Surviving is his wife, Lucille Butcher Rhodes, whom
he married April 16, 1954 in Basham; daughter, Karen
Hill, Racine and son, Robert M. (Sharon) Rhodes, Logan, Ohio; grandchildren, Nicole (David) Koren, Racine
and Jeremy (Angela Greegor) Hill, Massillon, Ohio;
great-granddaughters, Zoey Jane Hill and soon to arrive
in July, Lily Daile Koren; sisters, Dorothy (Paul) Forbes,
Vinton, Ohio and Irene Thompson, Freemont, Ohio;
brothers, Wayne (Linda) Rhodes, Shade, Ohio and Norman (Janet) Rhodes, Glendale, West Virginia; sisters-inlaw, Leona Rhodes, Mansfield, OH and Irene Rhodes,
Reedsville, OH; and brother-in-law, James Satterfield,
Racine.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by sisters, Margie Rowe and Yoland Satterfield; brothers, Charlie Rhodes, Ronald Rhodes and Blain Rhodes;

son-in-law, Dale Wallace Hill, II; and brothers-in-law, Boe
Rowe and Guy Thompson.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday, June
7, 2012, in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating will be Rev. Dave Dailey assisted by Dave Kucsma.
Interment will be in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.
Military graveside services will be conducted by Racine
American Legion Post 602, Tupper Plains Post 9053 of
Veterans of Foreign Wars and Feeney Bennett Post 128 of
the American Legion, Middleport.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Margaret Isabel Yost

Margaret Isabel Yost, 96, passed away peacefully on
May 29, 2012.
She was born on May 25, 1916, the daughter of Fred
and Mable Marshall. She resided most of her life in
Meigs County, Ohio, with her husband David Yost, who
preceded her in death. She then retired to Davis, North
Carolina.
Margaret was of the Baptist faith, a member of The
American Legion Auxiliary, and The Eastern Stars. She
was a devoted homemaker, seamstress, cook, gardener,
musician, mother and friend.
Margaret is survived by her children, Johnny (Melissa)
Yost, Linda (Dan) McTurner and Krista (Jim) White.
Her grandchildren are Carmen McTurner-Clifford, Meg
McTurner-Craighead, Marlo (Jeff) Hood, James (Angie) White, Jeff (Kay) Yost and Amy Middleton. She is
survived by her nine great-grandchildren and two greatgreat-grandchildren. Her cousins live in Middleport and
Ravenswood. She has a sister-in-law, Mary Kay Yost, and
many precious nieces and nephews.
Her memorial service was held in Davis, North Carolina, and there will be a private graveside service in Ohio,
according to her wishes.
Margaret’s creative spirit and joy touched everyone she
encountered, and she will be truly missed. She has left a
special place in each of our hearts.

Elizabeth K. Bailey

Elizabeth K. Bailey, 92, passed away at her residence
in Gallipolis, Ohio on Sunday, June 3, 2012, following a
brief illness.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday, June
6, 2012, in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis, Ohio, with Pastor Steve Little officiating. Burial will follow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire, Ohio. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations made
to Cheshire Baptist Church, 8057 S R 7 N, Cheshire, OH
45620.

Myrtle Marie Donahue

Myrtle Marie Donahue, 98, of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
died June 3, 2012, at Holzer Medical Center with her

family at her side.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, June
8, 2012, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
with the Rev. Mathew Dotson officiating. Burial will follow in Beale Chapel Cemetery in Apple Grove, W.Va.
Friends may visit the family from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday
evening at the funeral home.

Raymond E. Heffner

Raymond E. Heffner, 79, of Ironton, Ohio died Sunday,
June 3, 2012, at home after a long illness.
Funeral service will be conducted 1 p.m. Wednesday,
June 6, 2012 at Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio.
Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville, Ohio.
Proctorville V.F.W. Post 6878 will conduct military graveside rites. Visitation will be held 12 to 1 p.m. Wednesday,
June 6, 2012, at Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio.

Joan Mackenzie Layne Lewis

Joan Mackenzie Layne Lewis died on June 1, 2012, at
the Wexner Heritage Center in Columbus Ohio.
A memorial service was held on Sunday, June 3, 2012.
Donations in remembrance of Joan may be directed to
the Alzheimer’s Association, Central Ohio Chapter, 1379
Dublin Road, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Arrangements are under the care of Evans Funeral
Home, 4171 E. Livingston Ave.

Beulah C. (Young) Seamon

Beulah C. (Young) Seamon, 98, formerly of Triadelphia, West Virginia, died on Saturday, June 2, 2012,
in Bishop Joseph H. Hodges Continuous Care Center,
Wheeling.
Friends will be received from 5 until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, June 5, 2012, at the Kepner Funeral Home, 166 Kruger St, Wheeling (304-242-2311) where services will be
held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, June 6, 2012. Interment
will follow in Park View Memorial Gardens, Wheeling.
Memorial contributions may be made to St Mark Evangelical Lutheran Church, 141 Kruger St, Wheeling, WV
26003.

Jean D. Oliver Somerville

Jean D. Oliver Somerville, of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
passed away on Sunday, June 3, 2012, at St. Mary’s Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., following a recent stroke.
Jean’s life will be celebrated at 2 p.m., Wednesday, June
6, 2012, at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church, with Rev. Neil
Cadle officiating. Friends may visit one hour prior to the
service, at the church. Burial will be conducted privately.
Jean’s care has been entrusted to Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home.

Clyde Wesley White

Clyde Wesley White, Jr., 71, Hartford, W.Va., died
Monday, June 4, 2012, in the Holzer Senior Care Center,
Bidwell.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Fest
From Page 1
As for the amphitheatre
entertainment, there was
everything from bluegrass
by Lonesome Meadow, to
classic rock by Titus Canbe, to country by Rhythm
Station, to a trip back into
music of the sixties by
The Fads who closed out
the festival Saturday night
with a 9 p.m. concert
just after the motorcycles
set out on a light parade
around the Bend area.
Contest winners were
recognized in an awards
program chaired by Bill
Quickel, festival chairman, who recognized the
winners and distributed
cash prizes. Winning the
2012 Ohio’s Best Wings
Plaque was Tom Christy
of The Plains, with Diane Coulston of Carey,
Ohio, taking the 2012
Ohio’s Best Ribs Plaque.
Christy has had a concession stand at the festival
for several years. It was
Coulston’s first time here.
Quickel presented cash
prizes of $50 each for the
winning entries in each
category in the Art in the
Park show as selected by a
vote of the viewers. They
were Bobbi DeLong, oils;
Rhojean McClure, acrylics; Sharon Dean, photography; Shirley Berkley,
mixed media, and Mike
Cogar, other.
First place contest winners in their respective
age categories were announced and presented
prizes. In the pickle spitting contest the winners
were Brooklynn Walter, 5
to 9 years; Dawnette Davis, 10 to 15 years old,
and Bill Harris, 16 and

up. Dawnette Davis and
Madison Davis won the
balloon toss prize, Josh
Bodimer, the stick pony
race, and Brooklyn Walter, the cookie stacking
contest. Sonia Young was
the winner of the motor
cycle Poker Run.
Winners in the Buckeye
State Pedal Pull were Wyatt Smith, 4, of Racine;
Uriah Ruark, 5, of Mason,
W. Va.; Shanna Scott, 6, of
Middleport; Jonny Scott,
7, of Middleport; Cassandra Heed, 9, of Howard,
Ohio, and Brayden Ervin,
10, of Middleport,
Given special recognition by Quickel were Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Keaton of
Illinois who have helped
with arrangements for the
Gold Wings &amp; Rib Festival since it was started 10
years ago. He also recognized Allen K. Graham for
his contributions to the
festival over the years.
The Gold Wings &amp; Ribs
Festival kicked off the
summer festival season
in Meigs County. Kickin’
Summer Bash will be held
June 15 and 16 which includes kayak races, carnival games, a local talent
show, entertainment in
the amphitheater, and a
river rescue demonstration by firemen.
The first of the free Friday night Rhythm on the
River concerts will be
held on June 29 and will
continue through Aug. 10,
with the Big Bend Blues
Bash on the last weekend
in July, all staged by the
Pomeroy Blues &amp; Jazz Society.

Middleport Community Association
Lunch Along
The River
1ST WEDNESDAY
OF EACH MONTH
(excluding July)

11am-1pm
April-Oct.
Dave Diles Park
$5.00/donation

July 4th
Celebration
3pm - 10pm
Entertainment
Parade - 5 pm
Fireworks
Dave Diles Park

IInfo
f 74
740.992.5877
40 992 5877

Brayden Ervin, 10, of Middleport took first in his age category in
the Buckeye State Pedal Pull contest.
Diana Coulston of Carey, Ohio took home the plaque for “2012
Ohio’s Best Ribs” presented by the festival chairman, Bill Quickel.

The “2012 Ohio’s Best Wings” plaque went to Tom Christy of The
Plains. Festival chairman Bill Quickel made the presentation.

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TUESDAY,
JUNE 5, 2012

Sports

mdssports@heartlandpublications.com

Two Buckeyes starters suspended after being arrested
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Two expected starters
for Urban Meyer’s first
Ohio State team have been
suspended from the team.
Ohio State issued a statement Monday saying that
Meyer had suspended senior tight end Jake Stoneburner and junior offensive
tackle Jack Mewhort after
they were arrested by po-

lice on a misdemeanor
charge of obstructing official business. The school
said it had no further comment.
Stoneburner and Mewhort
were
arrested
around 2:30 a.m. Saturday
by police in Shawnee Hills,
northwest of Columbus,
near Muirfield Village Golf
Club, where the Memo-

rial Tournament was being
held.
No details about the misdemeanor counts against
the pair were immediately
available from police. The
village office said the report on the incident would
be released Tuesday.
On a two-deep chart released after the Buckeyes’
spring practice period end-

ed, Stoneburner was listed
as the starter at tight end
and Mewhort at left tackle.
Stoneburner caught 14
passes a year ago, seven for
touchdowns.
During
the
spring,
Meyer said Stoneburner,
a 6-foot-5, 245-pounder
whose family lives on the
Muirfield course, is one of
the top playmakers on a

team in dire need of players
who can make big plays.
“Jake Stoneburner has
done a very good job,”
Meyer said then. “We’re
moving him around, doing
a lot of things with him.”
He also had high praise
for Mewhort, saying he
was developing into a team
leader up front.
“He’s probably our best

and most consistent lineman,” he said midway
through the spring.
WBNS-TV first reported
Stoneburner, Mewhort and
a third man not affiliated
with the football program
were arrested near Muirfield Village.
A message was left Monday for a defense attorney.

Point Pleasant senior Eric Roberts pitches during the
Big Blacks’ 7-1 loss to Herbert Hoover in the state
semifinal at in Charleston Saturday afternoon.

Point Pleasant falls
to Huskies, 7-1
Alex Hawley
ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— No charm on the third
time.
The Point Pleasant baseball team faced Cardinal
Conference foe Herbert
Hoover for the third time
this season in the WVSSAC
Class AA State Semifinal,
but for the first time this
season the Big Blacks were
not victorious over the
Huskies.
Herbert Hoover held
Point Pleasant hit less
through the first five innings en route to a 7-1 victory at Appalachian Power
Park Saturday afternoon.
The Huskies (27-8) plated two runs in the top of
the first on the strength of
two hits and two walks, and
they never looked back.
Everything that touched
Point Pleasant’s bats in the
first three innings had two
things in common, they
were hit hard and they ended up in the gloves of the
Hoover defense.
Leading 2-0 the Huskies
added three more runs in
the top of the fourth to
extend their lead to 5-0.
An error in the home half
of the fourth by Hoover’s
shortstop gave the Big
Blacks their first base runner of the game, however
the Huskies escaped unscathed.
HHHS padded it’s lead
in the top of the fifth inning scoring two more runs
and pushing the lead to
7-0. Alex Somerville broke
through in the bottom of
the sixth to put the Big
Blacks into the hit column
for the first time. Hoover’s
Tristan Fields bounced
back to retire the next batter and maintain the shutout through six innings.
A lead off single by Jason
Stouffer to start the home
half of the seventh followed

by a single By Eric Roberts
put courtesy runner Joshua
Hudson in scoring position. Designated hitter Tylun Campbell hit a long fly
ball that found the center
fielder’s glove but brought
Hudson into score for the
Big Blacks. Fields sat the
next batter down on strikes
to end the game and give
Hoover the 7-1 victory.
Austen Toler was credited with the loss for PPHS,
as he gave up five runs on
seven hits and four walks
while striking out one in
four innings of work. Eric
Roberts pitched three innings in relief, in which
he gave up two runs, one
earned, on two hits and a
walk while striking out one.
Fields earned the victory for HHHS after giving
up just one run on three
hits and two walks. Fields
struck out five batters in a
complete game effort.
Alex Somerville, Eric
Roberts, and Jason Stouffer
each finished with one
hit for PPHS, while Tylun
Campbell had the lone run
batted in. Joshua Hudson
scored Point Pleasant’s
only run in the game.
Ryan Shamblin and
Cody Bowen led Hoover
with two hits apiece in the
game, while Shamblin had
a game-high two RBI.
“They’re a good team,”
said Point Pleasant head
coach James Higginbotham
after the game. “We’re familiar with each other, and
they were the better team
today.”
The Big Blacks were
victorious over Hoover in
their two league meetings
this season, winning 13-4
in Mason County on April
24th, and winning 4-1 in
Kanawha County on May
first.
“(Hoover) took advantage of our walks and a
couple of bloop hits, and

Adkins ends GAHS career on podium
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Eight was
enough, but just barely.
In finishing eighth for the second
consecutive year in the 1600m run,
recent Gallia Academy graduate
Peyton Adkins added another podium finish to her storied running
career Saturday at the 2012 OHSAA
Track and Field Championships held
at Jesse Owens Stadium on the campus of the Ohio State University.
More importantly, Adkins’ final
effort as a member of the Blue Angels kept one very impressive streak
intact. The GAHS girls have now
scored at least one point at the Division II state meet for the last 16
seasons, dating back to the 1997
campaign.
Adkins — a four-time state qualifier in both track and cross country
— earned the second podium finish
of her career in the 1600m event
with a mark of 5:14.12, which was
about one second slower than last

year’s eighth-place time of 5:13.09.
Adkins — a 10-time SEOAL
champion in track and the 2012
SEOAL Athlete of the Year as the
high-point scorer — is headed to
Ohio University to continue her
running career in the fall.
Gallia Academy sophomore Hannah Watts also competed in a Saturday final, but ultimately missed
out on a podium finish following a
ninth-place effort of 59.38 seconds
in the 400m dash.
The Blue Angels — with one
point — tied with 10 other teams
for 63rd place out of 72 scoring
teams in Division II. Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary won the D-2 girls title
with 55 team points.
Southern’s Kody Wolfe was the
lone local athlete to compete in
Division III on Saturday, as the junior pulled double-duty in both the
1600m and 3200m runs.
Wolfe — who competed in the

3200m final last spring (10:08.42)
— finished 11th overall for the second straight year after posting a
time of 10:04.10. Wolfe also finished
10th in the 1600m run with a mark
of 4:31.89.
Columbus Academy won the Division III boys title with 64 points.
Eastern — thanks to five points
from senior Tyler Cline in the discus event Friday — finished tied for
41st with 10 other teams out of the
73 schools that scored.
Cline — who finished fourth in
the D-3 discus final for a second
straight spring — became the first
Eagle to finish on the podium in
multiple years at state and also
extended the Eastern boys’ state
scoring streak to three consecutive
seasons.
Complete results of the 2012
OHSAA Track and Field Championships are available on the web at
ohsaa.org

NFL wins arbitration ruling in bounty case

NEW YORK (AP) — An arbitrator ruled Monday that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has the authorSee HUSKIES |‌ 10 ity to discipline New Orleans Saints
players for their role in a bounty system.
The NFL Players Association challenged Goodell’s power to impose
penalties for what the league says
was a three-year bounty program
that targeted specific players. Stebefore dropping in for a 50- phen Burbank, a University of Pennfoot birdie that tied him for sylvania law professor, took only five
the lead at the Memorial days to determine that Goodell has
Tournament on Sunday.
the power to punish the players unIf that birdie served no- der the collective bargaining agreetice, then another on a ment reached last August to end the
sneaky-fast 10-foot downhill lockout.
putt at the 18th assured him
Goodell suspended Saints lineof his fifth victory at the backer Jonathan Vilma for the entournament that Jack Nick- tire 2012 season and teammate Will
laus built.
Smith for four games. Former Saints
So, Tiger was asked, do defensive end Anthony Hargrove,
you think you’re back?
now with Green Bay, was suspended
“I won,” he joked with for eight games, while linebacker
a wide smile. “I’m sure by Scott Fujita, now with Cleveland,
Tuesday I’ll be retired and was docked three games.
done, and then by the time I
Those players have appealed the
tee it up at the U.S. Open (at suspensions. And the players’ union
Olympic Club in San Fran- later Monday said it will appeal Burcisco in 11 days) it might be bank’s decision because it believes
something different. But I’ll salary cap violations are involved in
See WOODS ‌| 10 the payment. That would give Bur-

Woods quiets doubters
with a flick of his wrists
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP)
— For those who thought
Tiger Woods’ run as the
world’s best golfer was over,
the 747-sized roar that emanated from the 16th green
at Muirfield Village likely
shocked them to their senses.
With one flick of his
wrists, Woods reminded
everyone of who he was and
what he has done.
Woods slid a 60-degree
sand wedge under a ball
hidden by tall grass behind
the 16th green, popped the
ball straight up into the air
where it seemed to hang
for an instant, and then
watched as it rolled ever
so slowly toward the cup

Paul Boggs photo/Jackson County Times-Journal

Gallia Academy senior Peyton Adkins, right, leads the pack early on in the Division II 1600m final Saturday
at Jesse Owens Stadium in Columbus, Ohio.

bank the authority to rule on penalizing any players involved.
Burbank did, however, retain temporary jurisdiction on Hargrove’s
role and asked Goodell for more
information on Hargrove’s “alleged
participation.”
Burbank “invited the commissioner to clarify the precise basis for
his discipline of Mr. Hargrove who,
among other things, was found to
have lied to the league’s investigators
and obstructed their investigation,”
the NFL said in a statement.
The union said in a statement it
“believes that the players are entitled
to neutral arbitration of these issues
under the CBA and will continue to
fight for that principle and to protect the fair due process rights of all
players.” The NFLPA noted Burbank
wrote that “nothing in this opinion is
intended to convey a view about the
underlying facts or the appropriateness of the discipline imposed.”
The union filed another grievance
with a different arbitrator, Shyam
Das, contending the new CBA prohibits Goodell from punishing players for any conduct before the CBA
was signed. The league’s investigation showed the bounty program ran
from 2009-11.

Das has yet to rule on that grievance, which also seeks to have player
appeals heard by Art Shell and Ted
Cottrell, who are jointly appointed
by the league and union to review
discipline handed out for on-field
conduct.
The league and union have spent
plenty of time before arbitrators and
judges this offseason, with two other
major cases pending.
Vilma has sued Goodell for defamation in a U.S. District Court in New
Orleans and Goodell has been given
until July 5 to respond to the action.
The players also have sued the
league in U.S. District Court in Minnesota, saying the owners colluded
in the uncapped 2010 season to have
a secret salary cap. NFLPA executive
director DeMaurice Smith has said
such collusion could have cost players $1 billion in wages.
That lawsuit stems, in part, from
the NFL stripping the Washington
Redskins and Dallas Cowboys of salary cap room in 2012 and ‘13.
The Redskins had their cap re duced $36 million over the two
years and the Cowboys lost $10
million in cap space.
Both teams filed a grievance
and lost.

�Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
GMAC Mortgage, LLC
Plaintiff
vs.
10CV104
Emily Wolfe, et al.

Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
GMAC Mortgage, LLC
Plaintiff
vs.

No.
12-CV-015
James H. Schoolcraft, et al.

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Miscellaneous

Legals
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
Fannie Mae ("Federal National
Mortgage Association")
Plaintiff
vs.
11-CV-074
Joseph N. Ryan, et al.

No.

Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Courthouse located at 100 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 in the
above named county, on Friday, the 22nd day of June,
2012 at 10:00AM the following
described real estate, situate
in the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and Township of
Pomeroy, to wit:
Situate in the Township of Columbia, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio:
Being Lots No. 10, 11, and 12
in the Village of Dyesville,
Ohio.
Said Premises Located at
30283 Dyesville Road,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Parcel Number 0500650000,
0500649000 and 0500647000
Said Premises Appraised at
$40,000.00
and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% deposit
Thomas G. Widman
Attorney
Robert E. Beegle
Sheriff
Meigs
County, Ohio
*In Cities or Villages, GIVE
STREET and NUMBER if any.
If no such Number exists,
GIVE STREET or ROAD on
which located and also the
names of the intersecting
Streets or Roads immediately
North and South or East and
West of such lands and tenements. Sec. 11678.
6/1 6/8 6/15/12
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
GMAC Mortgage, LLC
Plaintiff
vs.

No.
12-CV-015
James H. Schoolcraft, et al.

60309812

Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Courthouse located at 100 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 in the
above named county, on Friday, the 22nd day of June,
2012 at 10:00AM the following
described real estate, situate
in the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and Township of
Langsville, to wit:
Situated in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs and in the
Township of Salem.
Being in Section 24, Town 7
North, Range 15 West of the
Ohio Company's Purchase
and being described as follows:
Beginning at a point in the
centerline of State Route 325,
said point being South 71 degrees 25' 20" West 401.00 feet
from the centerline intersection
of said State Route 325 and
the East line of Section 24,

Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Courthouse located at 100 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 in the
above named county, on Friday, the 22nd day of June,
2012 at 10:00AM the following
described real estate, situate
in the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and Township of
Langsville, to wit:
Situated in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs and in the
Township of Salem.
Being in Section 24, Town 7
North, Range 15 West of the
Ohio Company's Purchase
and being described as follows:
Legals
Beginning at a point in the
centerline of State Route 325,
said point being South 71 degrees 25' 20" West 401.00 feet
from the centerline intersection
of said State Route 325 and
the East line of Section 24,
said intersection being South
about 2,860 feet from the
Northeast corner of Section
24; thence South 71 degrees
25' 20" West 271.00 feet along
the centerline of said State
Route 325 to a point; thence
North 21 degrees 29' 02" West
322.00 feet to an iron rod;
passing a 24 inch maple tree
at 33 feet for reference; thence
North 71 degrees 25' 20" East
271.00 feet to an iron rod;
thence South 21 degrees 29'
02" East 322.00 feet to the
point of beginning, passing an
iron rod at 288.30 feet for reference, containing 2.00 acres,
more or less, excepting all legal easements and rights of
way.
Said Premises Located at
30745 State Route 325,
Langsville, OH 45741
Parcel Number 1300661001
Said Premises Appraised at
$75,000.00
and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% deposit
David F. Hanson
Attorney
Robert E. Beegle
Sheriff
Meigs
County, Ohio
*In Cities or Villages, GIVE
STREET and NUMBER if any.
If no such Number exists,
GIVE STREET or ROAD on
which located and also the
names of the intersecting
Streets or Roads immediately
North and South or East and
West of such lands and tenements. Sec. 11678.
6/1 6/8 6/15/12
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
GMAC Mortgage, LLC
Plaintiff
vs.
10CV104
Emily Wolfe, et al.

No.

Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Courthouse located at 100 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 in the
above named county, on Friday, the 22nd day of June,
2012 at 10:00AM the following
described real estate, situate
in the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and Township of
Rutland, to wit:
Situated in the Township of
Rutland, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio
Beginning at the Northwest
corner of Section 16, Town 6,
Range 14 Ohio Company's
Purchase;
Thence East 185 rods and 3
links;
Thence South 44 rods;
Thence North 86&amp;frac12; degrees East 28 rods;
Thence North 76 degrees East
50 rods;
Thence North 37 degrees East
36 rods and 15 links;
Thence East 21 rods and 6
links to the Northwest corner
of lands formerly owned by
A.J. Giles;
Thence South 54 rods;
Thence West 6 rods and 2
links to an Ash Tree;
Thence South 47&amp;frac14; degree West 15 rods and 12
links to a Locust Tree;
Thence South 60&amp;frac12; degrees West 32 rods to an Oak
Tree;
Thence South 46&amp;frac12; degrees West 19 rods and 5 links
to a Hickory Tree;
Thence 58&amp;frac12; degrees
West 6 rods;
Thence South 69 deg. West 5
rods and 11 links to a Hickory
Tree;
Thence South 73 degrees
West 34 rods to the center of
the road;
Thence North 19&amp;frac12; degrees West 24 rods along said
road;
Thence North 10&amp;frac12; degrees West along the road 38
rods and 12 links;
Thence South 83 3/4 degrees

No.

Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Courthouse located at 100 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 in the
above named county, on Friday, the 22nd day of June,
2012 at 10:00AM the following
described real estate, situate
in the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, and Township of
Rutland, to wit:
Situated in the Township of
Rutland, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio
Beginning at the Northwest
corner of Section 16, Town 6,
Range 14 Ohio Company's
Purchase;
Thence East 185 rods and 3
links;
Thence South 44 rods;
Thence North 86&amp;frac12; degrees East 28 rods;
Thence North 76 degrees East
50 rods;
Thence North 37 degrees East
36 rods and 15 links;
Thence East 21 rods and 6
links to the Northwest corner
of lands formerly owned by
A.J. Giles;
Thence South 54 rods;
Thence West 6 rods and 2
links to an Ash Tree;
Thence South 47&amp;frac14; degree West 15 rods and 12
links to a Locust Tree;
Thence South 60&amp;frac12; degrees West 32 rods to an Oak
Tree;
Thence South 46&amp;frac12; degrees West 19 rods and 5 links
to a Hickory Tree;
Thence 58&amp;frac12; degrees
West 6 rods;
Thence South 69 deg. West 5
rods and 11 links to a Hickory
Tree;
Thence South 73 degrees
West 34 rods to the center of
the road;
Legals
Thence North
19&amp;frac12; degrees West 24 rods along said
road;
Thence North 10&amp;frac12; degrees West along the road 38
rods and 12 links;
Thence South 83 3/4 degrees
West 56 rods and 24 links;
Thence North 23 rods and 20
links;
Thence West 11 rods;
Thence North 53 rods to the
place of beginning, containing
123 acres, more or less.
Save and except 40 acres sold
to James M. Oliver, by Deed
recorded in Volume 231 Page
845 Meigs County Deed Records.
Situated in the Township of
Rutland, county of Meigs and
State of Ohio:
Situated in Section 16, Town
6, Range 14, Ohio Company's
Purchase.
Beginning at the Northwest
corner of said Section 16;
thence East approximately 125
rods to the center of the public
road; thence South along the
center of the public road to the
Northeast corner of the Arthur
Miller property described in
Volume 198, Page 95, Meigs
County Deed Records; thence
West along the North line of
the Arthur Miller property;
thence South 83 degrees 45
minutes West 1690 feet to the
Northwest corner of the said
Arthur Miller property; thence
North along the East line of
40-acre tract of real estate to
the Northeast corner thereof;
thence West along the North
line of said 40-acre tract to the
West line of Section 16;
thence North 54 rods to the
place of beginning, containing
45 acres, more or less.
Save and except the coal and
mining rights, which were conveyed to Manning D. Webster
and Sam N. Arnold, by Deed
recorded in Volume 188 Page
571 Meigs County Deed Record, which mining rights include the right to remove coal
by strip mining methods.
It is the intention of the Grantor, by this deed, to convey
that portion of the 123 acre
tract of real estate
described in Volume 176 Page
39 Meigs County Deed Records which lies East of the
Township Road.
Save and except the following
Three Parcels;
.83 acres deeded to Robert G.
&amp; Ruth Ann Graham June 1,
1971 recorded in Volume 246
Page 409 Meigs County Deed
Records.
Situated in the Township of
Rutland, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:
The following Real Estate Located in Rutland Township,
Meigs County, and being in
Section 16, Town 6, Range 14,
of the Ohio Company Purchase and beginning 1436.1
feet East and 941.2 feet South
from the Northwest corner of
Section 16, at a P.K. nail in the
centerline of Township Road
No. 58 which point is also is
North 17° 15' West 202.0 feet
from a permanent gas line
marker and is the true place of
beginning and the Northwest
corner of the tract of land
herein described; thence North
76° 44' East 164.83 feet to a
1'' metal pipe, which is to be a
permanent point; thence South
18° 17' East 202.67 feet to a
1'' metal pipe, which is to be a
permanent point;
thence South 76° 44' West
192.00 feet to a P.K. nail in the
centerline of Township Road
58; thence following centerline
of said Township Road 58;
North 10° 36' West 202.092
feet to the place of beginning,
containing 0.83 of an acre,
more or less.
All bearings are magnetic
readings.
Being Part of the real estate
described in Volume 237,
Page 771, Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio.
1.4446 acres deeded to Carl L.
&amp; Brenda S. Wolfe, July 26,
1975 recorded in Volume 261
Page 307 Meigs County Deed
Records.
Situated in the Rutland Township, Meigs County, Ohio,
Section 16, Town 6, Range 14,
and being more
particularly described as follows:
Beginning at a railroad spike in
the centerline of Township
Road No. 58 and on the North

�Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
www.mydailysentinel.com
GMAC Mortgage,
LLC
Plaintiff
vs.
No.
SERVICES
Legals
12-CV-003
Rhonda J. Zirkle, et al.
Professional Services
Defendant
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
In pursuance of an Order of OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Sale in the above entitled ac- E v a n s
Jackson,
OH
tion, I will offer for sale at pub- 800-537-9528
lic auction, in the second floor
J &amp; C TREE SERVICE
lobby of the Courthouse lo30 yrs experience
cated at 100 East 2nd Street
insured
Pomeroy, OH 45769 in the
No job too big or small.
above named county, on Fri304-675-2213
day, the 22nd day of June,
2012 at 10:00AM the following
Repairs
described real estate, situate
in the County of Meigs and Joe's TV Repair on most
State of Ohio, and Village of makes &amp; Models. House Calls
Middleport, to wit:
304-675-1724
Situated in the Village of Middleport, Meigs County, and
FINANCIAL
State of Ohio:
Being part of Lot No. 2 in Middleport described as follows:
Money To Lend
Beginning at a point on the
East line of Lot No. 2 said NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
point being 30 feet South of the Ohio Division of Financial Inthe Northeast corner of said stitutions Office of Consumer AfLot No. 2 (Also the Southeast fairs BEFORE you refinance your
corner of a 30 feet 71' parcel home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
conveyed to Owen S. and of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Jean Bratton by grantor Call
the Office of Consumer Affiherein); thence in a Westerly ars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
direction with the Bratton line learn if the mortgage broker or
71 feet; thence in a Southerly lender is properly licensed. (This
direction, parallel with the East is a public service announcement
line of Lot No. 2 a distance of from the Ohio Valley Publishing
36 feet and to the South line of Company)
Lot No. 2, thence in an East300
SERVICES
erly direction with South line of
Lot No. 2, 71 feet to East line
of said Lot; thence Northerly
following East line of said Lot
Business &amp; Trade School
36 feet to place of beginning.
Gallipolis Career
College
Being part of real estate de(Careers Close To Home)
scribed in Volume 167, Page
Call Today! 740-446-4367
410, Volume 233, Page 883
1-800-214-0452
and 885, Deed Records,
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
Meigs County, Ohio.
for Independent Colleges and Schools
Being 71 feet off the East end
1274B
of Lot No. 1. Situated on the
ANIMALS
corner of New and Front
Streets in said Village.
For a further description, referPets
ence is here made to the records of deeds in Vol. 68,
FREE KITTENS
Page 19, being the same propwhite w/gray spots-2 female
erty conveyed by George Tiblack-2 male
tus, Sheriff, to Darius Reed.
Rescue kittens, eating on own,
Being part of Lot No. 2 in Midliter trained.
dleport, described as follows:
740-949-3408
Beginning on South First
between 8 AM-8 PM
Street at the Northeast corner
Leave message if
of Lot No. 2, said point also
no answer
being the Southeast corner of
AGRICULTURE
Lot No. 1; thence in a Westerly
direction following the North
line of Lot No. 2 a distance of
MERCHANDISE
71 feet to the Southwest corner of land now owed by Owen
Fuel / Oil / Coal / Wood / Gas
S. Bratton and Jean Bratton;
thence in a Southerly direction
Eliminate
your heating bills.
and parallel with the Easterly
line of Lot No. 2 a distance of OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE
30 feet; thence in an Easterly from Central Boiler. Altizer
direction and parallel with the Farm Supply 740-245-5193
North line of Lot No. 2, 71 feet
Miscellaneous
to the East line of said Lot No.
2; thence Northerly following
Jet Aeration Motors
said East line a distance of 30 repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
feet to the place of beginning.
The same being a parcel of Sale Berber Carpet $5.95 yd.
land fronting 30 feet on South Vinyl $5.95 yd. Mollohan CarFirst Street and extending pet 317 St Rt 7N Gallipolis,
back at an even width a dis- OH 740-446-7444
tance of 71 feet, in the NorthSale Carpet 25% off New
east part of Lot No. 2.
Being part of the real estate Shipment Mollohan Carpet
conveyed to Grace Luman and 317 St Rt 7 N Gallipolis OH
Raymond Luman by deed re- 740-446-7444
corded in Deed Book 167,
Want To Buy
Page 410, of the Meigs County
Deed Records.
Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
Said Premises Located at coins, pre 1935 US currency.
111 South Front Avenue, Mid- proof/mint sets, diamonds,
dleport, OH 45760
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Parcel Number 1500204000, Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
1500205000 and 1500203000
Said Premises Appraised at Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
$80,000.00
and cannot be sold for less Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewthan two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% de- elry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency,
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
posit
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
David F. Hanson
Gallipolis. 446-2842
Attorney
Robert E. Beegle
Yard Sale
Sheriff
Meigs
County, Ohio
6/7 6/8 6/9 9-4 Fry Res*In Cities or Villages, GIVE idence-41717 Pomeroy Pike,
STREET and NUMBER if any. Pomeroy. HH items, misc.
If no such Number exists,
GIVE STREET or ROAD on 81 &amp; 177 Deenie Dr. June 8 &amp;
which located and also the 9, Fr. 8-4, Sat 8-1. Porch
names of the intersecting Swing &amp; Chairs, toys, boys
Streets or Roads immediately clothes, Misc
North and South or East and SUN 6/3 8-? Large: lots of
West of such lands and tene- misc, some furniture, clothes.
ments. Sec. 11678.
500 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy
6/1 6/8 6/15/12
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SERVICES
FINANCIAL
300

SERVICES
ANIMALS
AGRICULTURE

REAL ESTATE SALES
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
MANUFACTURED HOUSRESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE / BUSINESS
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Trucks
Limited Edition F-150 Lightning
1994, Ex. cond. 44,120 miles.
super chip, Rhino bedliner.
$12,600 740-446-0122
Want To Buy
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00
388-0011
or
441-7870
REAL ESTATE SALES
Lots
Trailer lot for rent. Bailey Run
Rd 175.00 per month includes
water. 252-333-6474
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses

LOST-Three yr old male
beagle wearing a faded orange collar, with a tag saying
Colgate Woods Vet, has ID &amp;
phone number and answers to
Flea, has white tip on tail.
REWARD $250. Lost near
Hoback Rd, Racine. 740-9492368 Mike Codner

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

Notices

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.

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Upstairs Apt. on Viand St.
$400 + Deposit. Call for details
304-812-4350.
Houses For Rent
1 BR &amp; 4 BR, NO PETS, Syracuse, OH. 304-675-5332 or
740-591-0265
2 Bedroom
438 Burkhart Ln., Gallipolis
$550/month No Pets.
3 BR, 2 BA, Family room, $500
mo plus $500 dep. Ref req.
614-284-2100
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Rentals
16x80 4BR/2B Trailer, clean,
Bidwell area, on 1 acre land,
Firm-No Pets, $450 Mon/$450
Dep 740-645-8972, 740-3888066
Affordable Office Space,
across from the Gallia Co.
Courthouse, 23 Locust Street
740-256-6190.
Small 2 bedroom House in
Middleport, $350 rent, $350
dep, 1yr lease, no pets, no
calls after 9pm, 740-992-5097
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Drivers &amp; Delivery
R &amp; J Trucking in Marietta, OH
is hiring CDL A Drivers for local
&amp; Regional Routes. Applicants must be at least 23 yrs
have min of 2
yr of commercial driving exp. Clean
MVR, Haz-mat Cert. Excellent
health &amp; dental insurance,
401(K),
Vacation, Bonus
pays and
safety awards.
Contact
Kenton
at
1-800-462-9365 E.O.E.
Help Wanted- General
Delivery/Warehouse person
needed, full time, immediate
opening, must have good driving record. Apply - Lifestyle
Furniture 856 Third Ave. Gallipolis, 10-5. No Phone Calls

Motorcycles
2002 HD Ultra Classic
Shriner's Addition. Blue, Super
Trapp, Extra Chrome, 11,480
miles, $10,400 740-446-0122

Lost &amp; Found

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 investigating the offering.

RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail. Rent plus dep
&amp; elec. Minorities encouraged
to apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268

Prime river lot for rent,
beautiful beach, plenty of
shade, for info, call 740-9925782

AUTOMOTIVE

AUTOMOTIVE

Apartments/Townhouses

Campers / RVs &amp; Trailers

MERCHANDISE
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$475 month
740-446-3481

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Clean 2Br, Central Heat/Cool,
Basement/Attached Garage.
Country Club Edition, References/Deposit, No Pets 304675-5162
Nice 2 bdrm apt, Gallipolis. Walkin closets, W/D &amp; w/s/g incl. $575
NO PETS 740-591-5174

One
Bedroom
740-446-0390

Apt.

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.

Medical
EAST is a private medical
transportation company offering emergency and non-emergency services to Adams, Athens, Brown, Clermont, Fayette, Greene, Highland, Montgomery, and Warren counties.
EAST is currently searching
for Part Time And Full Time
Paramedic's in Athens, Leesburg, and Georgetown. Please
forward resumes to
akimbrell@castle-hr.com
Part-time position available to
assist individuals with mental
retardation at a group home in
Bidwell. 35 hrs/wk: 3-10pm W;
2-10pm Th/F; 9a-7p Sat. Must
have high school
diploma/GED, valid driver's license and 3 years good
driving experience. $9.25/hr,
after training. Pre-employment
Drug Testing. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640; or email:
beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants:
6/15/12. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Manufactured Homes
2-BR 1 bath small mobile
home for rent. 1-2 persons
only. Water/Trash paid. NO
PETS! Great Location @
Johnsons Mobile Home Park!
Call 740-446-3160.
FOR RENT, 2 BR, $375 mo
plus $375 dep &amp; utilities.
740-742-7004
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

www.mydailysentinel.com

described in Volume 237, Excepting and reserving unto
Page 771, Deed Records of Marlin L. Wolfe, the right to
hunt on the above described
Meigs County, Ohio.
1.4446 acres deeded to Carl L. real estate for his lifetime.
&amp; Brenda S. Wolfe, July 26, Also excepting and reserving
1975 recorded in Volume 261 unto Martin L. Wolfe and Emily
Page
8 •Meigs
The County
DailyDeed
Sentinel
Wolfe, their heirs and assigns,
Page 307
Records.
the right to receive one-half
Situated in the Rutland Town- (1/2) of any rentals of royalties
ship, Meigs
County, Ohio, which are received
Legals
Legals as a result
Section 16, Town 6, Range 14, of any cellular or communicaand being more
tions tower constructed on the
particularly described as fol- above described real estate.
lows:
Further excepting and reservBeginning at a railroad spike in ing unto the Grantors, Marlin
the centerline of Township L. Wolfe and Emily Wolfe, their
Road No. 58 and on the North heirs and assigns, any and all
line of Section 16, East royalties which are associated
1962.49 feet from the North- with the existing oil and gas
west corner of Section 16; well located on a larger tract of
thence along the centerline of real estate of which the above
Township Road No. 58, South described real estate is a part.
34 deg. 53 min. East 99.26 The Grantees, Larry G. Johnfeet to a spike; thence South son and Don B. Tillis, their
26 deg. 11 min. East, 286.18 heirs and assigns, however,
shall be entitled to any oil and
feet to a spike;
thence leaving the highway, gas royalties which are associNorth 63 deg. 01 min. East ated with any new oil and gas
(passing an iron pin at 20 feet) well or wells located or drilled
for a total distance of 203.89 on the above described real
feet to an iron pin; thence estate.
North 32 deg. 05 min. 30 sec. Subject to the Boundary Line
West, 290.04 feet to an iron Agreement recorded in Volpin on the North line of Section ume 274, Page 1 of the Meigs
16; thence along the North line County Official Records.
of said section, West (passing Excepting Therefrom
an iron pin at 193.09 feet) for a Situated in Rutland Township,
total distance of 210.65 feet to County of Meigs, and State of
the point of beginning, contain- Ohio:
ing 1.4446 acres, and being Being a part of Section 16,
part of a 123 acre tract de- Township #6, and Range #14.
scribed in Volume 237, Page Beginning at point in the cen771 of the Meigs County Deed ter of T-58 White Hill Road.
Said point lies S. 64º 8' 56"
Records.
Surveyed June 3, 1975 by W., 3025.21 feet from a found
Harold D. Whaley, Reg. Sur- iron pin on the Northeast corner of Section 16, from which
veyor No. 4986.
1.5739 acres deeded to Benny a set capped pin on the NorthR. and Robin M. Wolfe April west corner of Section 16 lies
15, 1980 recorded in Volume S. 89º 45' 1" W., 5519.04 feet.
278 Page 397 Meigs County Thence N. 76º 40' 59" E.,
Deed Records.
213.54 feet to a set capped
The following described real pin, passing a set capped pin
estate is Situated in Rutland at 19.46 feet.
Township, Meigs County, Ohio Thence S. 19º 18' 29" E.,
Section 16, Town 6, Range 14. 439.83 feet to a set capped
Described by survey Bobby pin.
Hudson, Summitt, Ky., Thence S. 67º 59' 35" W.,
232.28 feet to the center of
LS1253.
Place of beginning is in the T-58 White Hill Road, passing
center line of Township Road a set capped pin at 205.89
58 and designated as 1962.49 feet.
feet from the Northwest corner Thence with Township Road
of Section 16 and 99.26 feet T-58, White Hill Road, N. 17º
from the railroad spike which 0' 51" W., 243.03 feet to the
designates the place of begin- Southwest corner of the David
ning of the 1.4446 acre parcel and Sara Eades property depreviously deeded to Carl L. scribed in Official Records VolWolfe and Brenda S. Wolfe by ume 50, Page 1149.
Kenneth J. Wolfe and Anna L. Thence with the David and
Wolfe; thence South 31 deg. Sara Eades property the fol43 min. East 303.0 feet to a lowing 3 courses and distances;
railroad spike; thence
North 71 deg. 6 min. East 1) N. 70º 35' 13" E., 191.95
210.65 feet to an iron pin; feet.
thence north 32 deg. 5 min. 2) N. 24º 26' 35" W., 202.67
West 368.25 feet to an iron feet.
pin; thence south 63 deg. 01 3) S. 70º 34' 57" W., 164.83
min. West 203.89 feet to place feet to the center of T-58.
of beginning, containing Thence with Township Road
1.5739 acres more or less, be- T-58, N. 17º 24' 28" W., 28.34
ing a part of a 123 acre tract feet to the point of beginning.
described in Volume 237, Containing 1.504 acres as surPage 771 Meigs County, Deed veyed by Stan McFarland,
March 18, 2008. All bearings
Records.
are referenced to an
Excepting Therefrom
Situated in Rutland Township, assumed North. All capped
County of Meigs, State of pins are 5/8" diameter rebar
rods with yellow plastic caps
Ohio:
Being a part of Section 16, labeled R.S. #6221.
NOW BEING DESCRIBED AS
Township #6, Range #14.
Beginning at a set capped pin 17.055 ACRES:
by a notched stone on the Situated in the Rutland TownNorth line of Section 16. Said ship, County of Meigs, State of
pin lies S 87º 49' 54'' West, Ohio.
490.4 feet from a found iron Being part of Section 16,
pin on the Northeast corner of Township #6, Range #14.
Section 16.
Beginning at point on the north
Thence with an existing fence line of Section 16. Said point
S. 2º 54' 49'' W., 805.52 feet to lies N 89º 50' 35" E 2293.95
a set capped pin at the top of a feet from a set capped pin on
spoil bank. Thence with the the Northwest corner of Secfence at the top of the spoil tion 16.
bank N. 81º 42' 51" E., 19.98 Thence with the North line of
feet to a set capped pin. Section 16 S 89º 53' 28" E
Thence with the fence S. 51º 478.07 feet to a set capped pin
3' 0" W., 241 feet to a set on Tyson Drummer's, V 170, P
capped pin on the North side 596 west line.
of a 30 inch Oak on the North Thence continuing with the
North line of Section 16 N 89º
bank of a small creek.
Thence with the existing fence 59' 48" E 332.41 feet to a
S. 54º 8' 26" W., 513.8 feet to fence corner just north of a 30
inch Oak tree.
a found CT Smith capped pin.
Thence S. 50º 7' 50" W., Thence with the fence line be219.66 feet to a CT Smith tween Wolfe &amp; Drummer S 1º
29' 37" W 720.54 feet to a set
capped pin.
Thence S. 48º 24' 5" W., capped pin at a fence corner,
362.79 feet to a CT Smith passing a set capped pin at
capped pin;
3.66 feet. The pin at the fence
Thence S. 61º 15' 58" W., corner lies 425.23 feet from
510.7 feet to an iron pin call;
Drummer's southeast corner.
Thence S. 73º 31' 21" W., Deed call distance for this line
503.82 feet to the center of is 396 feet.
T058 White Hill Road, passing Thence with Drummer's southa found CT Smith capped pin erly line N 86º 56' 42" E
at 483.3 feet;
134.22 feet to a set capped
Thence with Township Road pin.
T-58 N.20º 2' 24" W., 288.13 Thence S 28º 41' 59" E 453.98
feet to a point;
feet to a set capped pin.
Thence the following 3 Thence S 80º 11' 1" W 674.08
courses and distances through feet to the center of T-58
lands of Marlin Wolfe;
White Hill Road, passing a set
1) N. 67º 59' 35'' E., 232.28 capped pin at 656.89 feet.
feet to a set capped pin, pass- Thence the following 7
ing a set capped pin at 26.39 courses and distances:
feet;
1.) N 17º 9' 40"W 51.87 feet.
2) N. 19º 18' 29'' W., 439.83 2.) N 13º 12' 17"W 155.18
feet to a set capped pin;
feet.
3) S. 76º 40' 59'' W., 213.54 3.) N 18º 21' 3"W 102.7 feet.
feet to the center of T-58, 4.) N 26º 13' 35"W 76.69 feet.
passing a set capped pin at 5.) N 33º 5' 36"W 79.11 feet.
194.08 feet;
6.) N 40º 48' 27"W 83.46 feet.
Thence with Township Road 7.) N 46º 53' 35"W 154.72 feet
T-58 N. 17º 15' 15" W., 77.65 to the Southwest corner of the
feet;
Ernest Richmond property as
Thence N. 80º 11' 1'' E., described in Volume 292,
674.08 feet to a set capped Page 599.
pin, passing a set capped pin Thence with the Richmond
at 17.19 feet;
property N 71º 26' 17"E
Thence N 28º 41' 59" W., 205.24 feet to a set capped pin
453.98 feet to a set capped pin replacing an iron pin call.
in the fence line between Thence with Richmond propDrummer (OR 170, P. 595) erty N 31º 45' 13" W 658.26
feet to the point of beginning.
and Wolfe (V. 326, Page 99);
Thence with the existing fence Containing 17.055 Acres being
N. 87º 19' 46" E., 291.01 feet part of the Volume 326, Page
to a set capped pin at a fence 99 Surveyed by Stan McFarcorner common to Wolfe, land on the 18 March 2008. All
Drummer, and H. &amp; Debra bearings are referenced to an
assumed North. All Capped
Brown (V. 323, Page 547);
Thence with the existing fence pins are 5/8-inch diameter rebetween Wolfe &amp; Brown the bar rods with yellow plastic
following 4 courses and dis- caps labeled R.S. #6221.
Said Premises Located at
tances:
1)N. 68º 52' 26'' E., 338.62 34810 Whites Hill Road, Rutland, OH 45775
feet to a set capped pin;
Parcel Number 1101256000
2) N. 76º 51' 51'' E., 90.86 feet
Said Premises Appraised at
to a set capped pin;
3)N. 60º 3' 32" E., 732.33 feet $85,000.00
and cannot be sold for less
to a set capped pin;
4) N. 35º 46' 38'' E., 235.56 than two-thirds of that amount.
feet to a set capped pin on the TERMS OF SALE: 10% deposit
North line of Section 16.
Thence with the North line of Melissa N. Meinhart
Section 16 and an old fence N. Attorney
Robert E. Beegle
89º 56' 14" E., 341.92 feet to
the point of
Sheriff
Meigs
County, Ohio
beginning.
Containing 46.579 acres as *In Cities or Villages, GIVE
surveyed by Stan McFarland STREET and NUMBER if any.
on the 19 March, 2008. All If no such Number exists,
bearings are referenced to an GIVE STREET or ROAD on
assumed North. All capped which located and also the
pins are 5/8" diameter rebar names of the intersecting
rods with yellow plastic caps Streets or Roads immediately
labeled R. S. #6221 Prior North and South or East and
Deed description Volume 326, West of such lands and tenements. Sec. 11678.
Page 99.
Excepting and reserving unto 6/1 6/8 6/15/12
Marlin L. Wolfe, the right to Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
hunt on the above described Revised Code, Section
real estate for his lifetime.
2329.25
Also excepting and reserving The State of Ohio, Meigs
unto Martin L. Wolfe and Emily County
Wolfe, their heirs and assigns, GMAC Mortgage, LLC
the right to receive one-half Plaintiff
(1/2) of any rentals of royalties
which are received as a result vs.
No.
of any cellular or communications tower constructed on the 12-CV-003
Rhonda J. Zirkle, et al.
above described real estate.
Further excepting and reservDefendant
ing unto the Grantors, Marlin In pursuance of an Order of
L. Wolfe and Emily Wolfe, their Sale in the above entitled acheirs and assigns, any and all

�Tuesday,
June
5, 2012
Tuesday
, June
5, 2012

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

www.mydailysentinel.com
ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

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 Tuesday,
June 5, 2012:
You express a great deal of kindness and understanding this year.
As a result, you draw many people
toward you. If you are single, your
status could change. In fact, you could
meet someone quite significant to your
life history. If you are attached, you
become a lot happier this year, which
makes a new beginning possible. This
year marks the start of a new 11-year
luck cycle for you. CAPRICORN might
be withdrawn, but he or she has a lot
of depth.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH People, including you,
need to put some order into a certain
situation. You have the exact skill set
needed. Your efforts will be greeted by
others’ appreciation and compliments.
Do not allow a vague insecurity or
sixth sense to distort the facts. Tonight:
A force to be reckoned with.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH What many lack is the
vision you have to clearly see the
events of the day. Be willing to take
a subtle approach. You might want
to ask a key question that could help
point you in the appropriate direction.
If you simply say what you perceive at
this point without asking, resentment
could build. Tonight: Relax with a preferred pastime.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH One-on-one relating
allows you greater give-and-take.
Listen carefully to news that comes in.
Understand what is needed to get past
a situation, and help all parties facilitate
just that. Someone clearly cares a lot
about you. Now what? Tonight: Dinner
for two.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Others want to understand
your actions and might keep asking
questions. Be patient and willing to
work with them. An unexpected surprise comes from a difficult person or
boss. Just go with the flow, as you
know how unpredictable this person
can be. Tonight: In the whirlwind of
living.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH All work and no play might
not be fun, but you gotta do what you
gotta do. Your sixth sense tells you
there is more going on than meets
the eye. Don’t try to diagnose what is
going on, just clear out what you must.
Tonight: Put your feet up.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHHH Your imagination feeds
nearly every conversation and situation that surrounds you. Try not to add
too much drama to any situation that
comes along. The unexpected occurs
and allows you to see yet another
path. Tonight: Rethink your plans.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH See what is happening
around a domestic or personal situation that means a lot to you. Consider
your options with care, especially
if they involve a loved one or dear
friend. You really are not walking on
eggshells, even if you feel like you are.
Tonight: Homeward bound.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH Keep conversations moving, and know full well that you and
others could be distorting information.
Continue asking questions, and listen
to what is not being said. With your
excellent ability to see past the obvious, you will discover what is going on.
Tonight: Ask and you shall receive.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You are on quite the rollercoaster ride, as many people in your
life change their tune. A creative
endeavor, probably involving a child or
loved one, suddenly could head in an
unforeseen direction. Go with the flow.
Stay nonreactive. Tonight: Keep your
spending under control.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHHH You beam and draw in
opportunities. You seem to have a premonition as to what will happen before
it does. How much you reveal is up to
you. If you need to handle a personal
issue, do so — and the sooner the
better. It can only get wilder and wilder.
Tonight: Choose something fun.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH Assume a more reticent position, and you will be much happier.
You cannot make everyone see the
glass as half-full. Look within yourself
for answers. The less said at the
moment, the fewer problems you could
be involved with. Tonight: Head home.
Get a good night’s sleep.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You have a way that often
gets you what you want. You might
think that that is occurring at the
moment, but a snafu could come up
where you least expect it. A friend also
could change his or her tune, which
only adds to the other issue. Tonight:
Out and about.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Huskies

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Woods

From Page 6
that does it,” said Higginbotham. “They had bloopers fall, we hit the ball hard
and they caught it but that’s
part of the game.”
There was just one extrabase hit in the contest, a
double coming off the bat
of Hoover lead off man Corey Bird.
This marks the fifth time
in the past six seasons that
PPHS has made the final

four, however in those five
trips the Big Blacks have
only advanced to the finals
twice and have never won
the championship.
“We’ve never gotten over
the hump to win the final,”
said Higginbotham, “but
we’ll keep trying. We’ve
got a good nucleus coming back next year, and we
move to Class AAA so we’ll
see how that goes.”
This marks the final

game for Point Pleasant
seniors Alex Potter, Brandon Toler, Layne Thompson, Jacob Gleason, Jason
Stouffer, and Eric Roberts.
The Big Blacks finished
the season 25-8 and won the
Cardinal Conference for the
second consecutive season.
Herbert Hoover went on
to fall to Wyoming East 1-0
in the championship game
on Sunday at Appalachian
Power Park.

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From Page 6
let you guys figure that out.”
Adding to the weight of
the moment, the win tied
Woods with Nicklaus —
the tournament founder
and host who handed him
the crystal trophy on the
18th green — with 73 tour
wins for second behind Sam
Snead’s record 82.
Woods said it was “awfully special” to tie Nicklaus
at the Golden Bear’s own
tournament.
“Well, he had to rub it in
my face right here, didn’t
he?” Nicklaus cracked.
Then he added, “The last
time he won here three years
ago, he came here struggling
a little bit and just absolutely
blitzed it. And he did it again
this week.”
Woods, four shots back
and in fourth place at the
start of the final round,
closed with a 67 to match
the best round of the day. He
also saved his best for last,
birdieing three of the final
four holes under pressure
conditions to make up a twoshot deficit as he teed off on
the 15th hole.
After a big drive, he hit
a 3-iron second shot on the
par-5 15th to 40 feet past
the flag. He two-putted for
birdie. At the 16th, he hit
an 8-iron that rode the wind
and bounced off the green
and about 15 feet into deep
grass. A little too soft a shot
and he would be left with a
treacherous, twisting putt
for par. Catch it a little thin
and the ball could easily
run all the way through the
green and into a pond.
The sonic boom that

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the 16th.
Woods striped a 3 wood
off the tee at the testy, uphill,
par-4 closing hole. Then he
carved an iron to the back of
the green and watched it follow the contour of the green
back to almost pin high. He
slid the ball in on the high
side for a 9-under 279.
Andres Romero also had
a 67 to pull into a tie with
Sabbatini (72) for second,
two shots back. Daniel
Summerhays shot a 69 and
was tied for fourth at 283
with 54-hole leader Spencer
Levin. Levin, just as he had
in losing a six-stroke lead
heading into the final round
at Phoenix, closed with a
disappointing 75.
Woods hadn’t won a fullfield event since 2009 before
taking the Arnold Palmer
Invitational in late March.
He had missed a cut and
finished tied for 40th in his
only two tournaments after
that, including the Masters.
The whispers about his professional demise were growing louder.
But then came the shot at
16, with Woods orchestrating the cheers with several
of his trademark fist pumps.
After he had accepted the
trophy from Nicklaus and
the $1.1 million that went
with it, and after he had
moved to No. 4 in the world
rankings, Woods was asked
if at 36 he still has enough
to play at the same level of
excellence from his earlier
days.
“Uh-huh,” he said.
What he had just done
did all the speaking for him.

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erupted when the ball fell
shook the whole course. The
rest of the field, those who
didn’t already know anyway,
were reminded that Woods
still can summon the thunder.
“Well, obviously, I knew
something was going on up
in front,” said Rory Sabbatini, who held a one-shot lead
until Woods’ chip-in.
Rickie Fowler, one of
the game’s most popular
young players, was paired
with Woods in a grouping that drew thousands of
spectators. Fowler suffered
through a miserable day that
would end with him shooting a career-worst 84. But
at the 16th, he knew he was
witnessing some magic he’d
seen before from Woods.
“It came out perfect,”
Fowler said of the shot. “It
landed right on the crown of
that ridge there — and the
rest is history.”
Nicklaus called it a shot
for the ages.
“I’ve seen a lot of shots in
golf,” he said during the presentation ceremony. “I don’t
think I’ve ever seen a better
one.”
Woods sounded as if even
he didn’t expect it to fall.
“The shot was obviously
difficult, but it wouldn’t
have been so bad if I had a
good lie,” Woods said. “The
lie was just a little marginal
where it brought the water
into play. That’s the reason
I took such a big cut at it. I
went for it, I pulled it off and
for it to land as soft as it did
was kind of a surprise.”
Still, he was only tied.
While he was parring the
17th hole, Sabbatini bogeyed

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to terms of applicable Promotional and Residential Customer agreements. Additional restrictions may apply. Offer ends 7/31/12. HBO®, Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. SHOWTIME
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Miscellaneous

TUESDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11

(WVAH)

12

(WPBY)

13

(WOWK)

18
24
25
26
27
29
30
31
34
35
37
38
39
40
42
52
57
58
60
61
62
64
65
67
68
72
73
74
400
450
500

(WGN)
(FXSP)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)
(LIFE)
(FAM)
(SPIKE)
(NICK)
(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)
(AMC)
(DISC)
(A&amp;E)
(ANPL)
(OXY)
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
(NGEO)
(NBCSN)
(SPEED)
(HIST)
(BRAVO)
(BET)
(HGTV)
(SYFY)
(HBO)
(MAX)
(SHOW)

PM

6:30

TUESDAY, JUNE 5
7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
America-Talent Auditions Love in the Wild Fourteen singles navigate the
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
News
Fortune
continue in Austin. (N)
Dominican Republic on their quest to find love. (SP) (N) Tonight
Show
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
America-Talent Auditions Love in the Wild Fourteen singles navigate the
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
at Six
News
Fortune
continue in Austin. (N)
Dominican Republic on their quest to find love. (SP) (N) at 11
Show
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
ABC 6 News (:35) News
Last Man
Last Man
Concert/ Queen Celebrating Her Majesty the Queen's
at 6
News
Standing
Standing
sixty year reign with today's recording artists. (N)
at 11
Nightline
ent Tonight Hollywood
Global 3000 Nightly
British Beat Travel to London and the United Kingdom The Secrets of Longevity Learn how to
British Beat
PBS NewsHour
Business
to the places where the British beat was born.
live a long happy life.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- Last Man
Eyewitness (:35) News
Last Man
Concert/ Queen Celebrating Her Majesty the Queen's
News at 6
News
Standing
sixty year reign with today's recording artists. (N)
News 11PM Nightline
ent Tonight Standing
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
NCIS: Los Angeles "The
48 Hours Mystery
10TV News (:35) LateS
NCIS "Need to Know"
HD
News
Fortune
Debt"
HD at 11
(N)
The Big
Masterchef "Auditions
Eyewitness News at 10
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
Hell's Kitchen "17 Chefs
The
Excused
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory Compete" (N)
#2" (N)
p.m.
Simpsons
BBC News
Hot Dog Program
Time Team See an expedition to Jamestown, where the Charlie Rose
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
America
Business
British planted the seeds for the United States.
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
NCIS: Los Angeles "The
48 Hours Mystery
13 News
(:35) LateS
NCIS "Need to Know"
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Debt"
(N)
30 Rock
30 Rock
Funniest Home Videos
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs vs. Milwaukee Brewers Site: Miller Park (L)
WGN News Scrubs
Cruise In
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Cincinnati Reds (L)
Post-game
Boys/ Hall
UFC Unleashed
SportsCenter
NBA Countdown (L)
NBA Basketball Playoffs Boston Celtics vs. Miami Heat (L)
SportsCenter
(1:00) ITF Tennis
SportsCenter Special
NCAA Softball Division I Tournament -- Oklahoma City, Okla. (L)
SportsCent. NFL Live (N)
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Dance Moms
Dance Moms (N)
Dance Moms
DDDiva "Welcome Back"
Pretty Little Liars
Pretty Liars "UnmAsked" Pretty Little Liars (N)
Jane by Design (N)
Pretty Little Liars
The 700 Club
(:10) Gangland
(:15) Gangland
(:20) Gangland "The Devil's Playground" Gangland
(:35) Gangland
Gangland
Victorious
Victorious
SpongeBob FREDShow
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Storm"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Selfish"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Impulsive" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Choice"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Bound"
CSI "Coming of Rage"
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Conan (N)
John King, USA
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli &amp; Isles (N)
Franklin &amp; Bash (N)
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
CSI "Target Specific"
CSI: Miami
+++ Awake (‘07, Thril) Hayden Christensen.
++ The Bodyguard (‘92, Susp) Whitney Houston.
Deadliest Catch
D. Catch "The Aftermath" Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch
The Devils Ride
Deadliest Catch
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage (N) Storage (N) Longmire "Pilot"
RivMon "Demon Fish"
Wild Serengeti
To Be Announced
Blue Planet "Deep"
Blue Planet "Tidal Seas"
Wild Japan
Next Top Model
Next Top Model
America's Got Talent
Glee Pro "The Final 14"
GleePro "Individuality" (N) (:15) The Glee Project
Bridezillas
Bridezillas
Bridezillas
Bridezillas
Kendra on Top (P) (N)
Kendra on Top
E! Investigates
E! News
The Kardashians
Mrs. Eastwood
Eastwood
Eastwood
C. Lately
E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Home Imp
Home Imp
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Meet the Hutterites
Alaska State Troopers
Amish "Change of Faith" Amish "Family Affairs"
Hutterites "The Shunning" Hutterites "The Shunning"
NBC Sports Talk
NBC Sports Talk
IndyCar 36 Costas Tonight
+++ Rudy (1993, Drama) Ned Beatty, Charles Dutton, Sean Astin.
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass Time
Pass Time
Dumbest
Dumbest
Hard Parts
Hard Parts
RideRule
RideRule
Dumbest
Dumbest
American Pickers
Pickers "Knuckleheads"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Swamp People
Stats "Time Flies" (N)
Mountain Men
WivesNJ
Real Housewives "A New New York"
Orange County Social (N) The Real Housewives (N) Pregnant in Heels (N)
The Real Housewives
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live
Together
Together
The Game
The Game
Game (N)
Together (N) The Game
Together
HGTV Design Star
House
House Hunt. At Home (N) Rooms (N)
HGTV Design Star (N)
HouseH (N) House (N)
HGTV Design Star (N)
Fact or Faked
Fact or Faked
Fact or Faked
Fact or Faked (N)
Hollywood Treasure (N)
Fact or Faked
++ Arthur (‘11, Com) Helen Mirren, Russell Brand.
Mr. Popper's Penguins Jim Carrey.
(:45) TrueB
24/7
Veep
Thrones "Valar Morghulis"
Movie
(:45) +++ Nick of Time Johnny Depp.
(:15) ++ American Wedding (‘03, Com) Jason Biggs.
+++ The Change-Up (‘11, Com) Jason Bateman.
Movie
++++ The Beaver Mel Gibson.
Borgias "Truth and Lies"
The Big C
Nurse Jackie Borgias "Truth and Lies"
The Big C
Nurse Jackie

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