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                  <text>Race on
the River,
Page 2

Prep track &amp; field:
RVHS girls win
OVC, B1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 78

Office closed
POMEROY
— The
Meigs County Board of
Elections will be closed
Friday, May 20 to allow
employees to attend a district meeting. The office
will reopen at 8 a.m.,
Monday, May 23.

Indoor camp
meeting
announced
POMEROY — An
indoor camp meeting is
being held Tuesday and
Wednesday at the Laural
Cliff Free Methodist
Church, 7 p.m. each
evening. The church is
located on Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomeroy. There will
be preaching and singing
by Harold Massey.

PHS Alumni
banquet
tickets on
sale
POMEROY — Tickets
for the Pomeroy High
School Alumni banquet to
be held May 28 at 6:30
p.m. in the Meigs High
School cafeteria are now
on sale. They may be purchased at Swisher and
Lohse or Francis Florist in
Pomeroy. Deadline for
purchasing tickets is
Friday, May 20.

Pet nuisance
law reminder
SYRACUSE
—
Syracuse Village Officials
and Police Chief Garry
Freed are stressing to all
residents that the village is
instituting a zero tolerance
policy for violations of the
pet leash and nuisance pet
ordinances, including the
cleanup of animal waste.

OBITUARIES
Page 5
• Everett Michael
• Jim Derrow
• Lilly M. Hatfield,
• Annabell McDaniel

WEATHER

www.mydailysentinel.com

BCI&amp;I to open new Athens office to aid local law
tect the public,” DeWine
said. “It was evident that
southeastern Ohio was
really in need of help
closer to home.”
State Rep. Debbie
Phillips, D-Athens, said
the office is a benefit to
local agencies because of
their budget issues and
staff limitations.
“Given the budgetary
challenges that our local
law enforcement officers
face, this new regional
BCI office will increase

efficiency and expand the
capabilities of those who
protect our citizens and
our communities. The
office will provide local
access to crime scene
processing and investigative equipment which
will save time and ease
the burden of low staffing
levels,” Phillips said.
“This new regional
office will be a welcomed addition for local

Seniors observe their day

Middleport to
have three mayor
candidates, four
for council

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS
— The
agency collecting and
analyzing evidence in
major crimes has moved
closer to Meigs County,
with the announcement
the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification
and Investigation’s opening of a regional office in
Athens.
Ohio Attorney General
Michael DeWine, who

oversees the Ohio
BCI&amp;I, made the
announcement Monday
that a regional office will be
located on Columbus
Road. The office is being
established to assist law
enforcement agencies in
southeastern
Ohio,
including Meigs.
Many small counties
rely heavily on the state
investigative agency to
assist in murder investigations, drug cases and
other crimes. Sheriff

Robert Beegle, for examples, asks the BCI&amp;I to
assist in the investigations of murder cases and
other suspicious deaths,
because his department is
not adequately staffed or
equipped for the complex
process.
“The opening of the
Athens is office is part of
our effort to provide
more timely, better and
more effective service to
law enforcement so they
can do their job and pro-

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — Good
food, lively games, and
recognition of seniors for
outstanding contributions
to the Meigs County
Council
on
Aging
(MCCOA) programming
were features of the local
observance of Tuesday’s
Senior Citizens Day.
Beth Shaver, executive
director, welcomed the
hundred or so seniors who
turned out to celebrate
their day. Presented the
MCCOA Associate Award
was Ed Zatta of Swisher
and Lohse Drug Store, in
appreciation for monthly
contributions for activities
and his availability to help
with special projects such
as the March for Meals as
a partner and sponsor.
Maxine and Bill Little
received the MCCOA
Participant Awards. Both
have been participating in
the Wellness Center activities since it opened. She
has been on the Advisory
Board for the Center, as
well as active on the
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program Board, is a citizen’s core member and
helps with the Seniors in
School program. Mr.
Little helps with the delivery of Friday lunches and

BY BRIAN J. REED

Charlene Hoefich/photo

Service to seniors was recognized during the Senior Citizens Day observance at
the Meigs Center. Receiving special awards from Beth Shaver, executive director,
fourth from left, were from the left, Ed Zatta, the associate award, Bill Little and
Maxine Little, participants awards, and right, Dorothy Anthony, volunteer award.
Robert Smith was not present to accept his volunteer award.

leads the Bible study on
Wednesdays.
Recipients of the MCCOA
Volunteer Awards were
Robert Smith and Dorothy
Anthony. Smith is a member of the Advisory Board,
assists with Friday meals,
the bakery route, and performs volunteer chores in
the community like his
recent assistance in mov-

ing the thrift store.
Anthony helps with the
Friday lunches, works at
Yesteryear, assists the
Middleport Fiscal Director
as a community volunteer,
and is always offering a
helping hand at the
Center.
Also recognized and
presented
certificates
were 25 seniors over 80

years old attending the
celebration. A special
guest at the celebration
was Danielle Nameth,
regional representative
for Ohio Senator Sherrod
Brown.
Games of bingo and
cornhole toss were
enjoyed before the group
had a sing-along to conclude the program.

Tornadoes to receive diplomas Sunday
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE — Southern
High School’s Class of
2011 will receive diplomas during a graduation
ceremony held at 8 p.m.,
Sunday, May 22 inside
the Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium.
This year’s graduating
class is small in number
(around 34 - last year’s
graduating class numbered around 50) but big
on academic achievement.
This year’s valedictorian is Trevor Mark Flint of

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

7-8
6
4
9-10

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY — “We’re
here to help,” said Max
Cale, Meigs County’s
Veterans Service officer who has an office
in the Meigs County
Courthouse Annex on
Mulberry Heights in
Pomeroy.
Cale was talking specifically about Ohio’s
Veterans Bonus Program
and Meigs County veterans who served in the
Persian Gulf War or the
wars in Afghanistan and

See BCI Athens, A5

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Racine, son of Mark and
Angela Flint. Trevor will
be
attending
Ohio
University and plans on
studying
geography.
Trevor’s vice-president
of the National Honor
Society, is active in Quiz
Bowl and participated in
the Farmers Bank Jr.
Board of Directors.
This year’s salutatorian
is
Zachary
Brewer
Manuel of Racine, son of
Lester Manuel and the
late Carol Manuel.
Zachary will also be
attending
Ohio
University where he
plans on studying physi-

Manuel

Flint

cal therapy. While at
Southern, Zachary has
participated in basketball, football, cross-country, track, baseball,
Spanish Club, MEAN
Club, is president of the
National Honor Society
and participated in
Farmers Bank Jr. Board
of Directors.

Both Flint and Manuel,
along with their classmates, will learn of any
academic scholarships
they’ve received at
Southern’s
Senior
Awards Day on Friday
morning.
Also graduating with
honors from the Class of
2011 are (in no particular
order): Eric Cundiff of
Racine, son of Larry and
Debbie Cundiff; Charles
Pyles of Racine, son of
Randy and Aime Pyles;
Braxton
Thorla
of
Racine, son of Brian and

See Graduation, A5

Ohio Veterans Bonus rewards war service
Eligible veterans can apply locally

High: 65
Low: 48

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 2011

Iraq who have not yet
applied for the bonus to
which they are entitled.
“We can do it right here
on line for those who
need help, or we can
explain the process, give
them an application and
they can take care of it,”
explained Cale who said
many have applied but
that he’s sure there are
several other Meigs veterans or their widows who
haven’t applied.
Statistics
statewide
show that an estimated
200,000 veterans and

See Veterans, A5

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

Meigs Countyʼs Veterans Service Officer Max Cale is
available to assist eligible veterans in applying for the
Ohio Veterans Bonus.

MIDDLEPORT
—
This year’s local election
is nearly six months
away, but candidates
have met a May deadline
to file for races. Two candidates have filed petitions for Middleport
mayor’s race, and at least
one other, a former
mayor, has announced
her intention to run as a
write-in candidate.
Four others, including
two incumbents, have
filed with the board of
elections as candidates
for village council, and
their names will also
appear on that village’s
general election ballot.
Mayor Michael Gerlach
and Julia Houston, who now
serves as a member of council, have filed their petitions as mayoral candidates. Gerlach is now in
the last year of his first
four-year term.
Council members and a
mayor will be elected in
Meigs County’s villages
in November’s general
election. The filing deadline for those candidates
has passed, according to
Deputy Director Becky

See Middleport, A5

Candidates file
for Pomeroy
mayor, council
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
—
Candidates have filed for
mayor and the two
open council seats in
Pomeroy, according to
the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
Current President of
Pomeroy Village Council
Jackie Welker has filed a
petition to be placed on the
Nov. 8 ballot in the race for
mayor. Welker has severed
on council for several
years, is owner of the
Court Street Grill in
Pomeroy and is involved
with the Pomeroy Blues
and Jazz Society which
produces one of the village’s largest summer festivals, the Big Bend Blues
Bash.
Welker will square off
on the ballot against former Pomeroy Council
woman Mary McAngus.
McAngus also served on
Pomeroy Village Council
for several years and wishes to step out of retirement
to run for the top spot in
village government. Back
in January, McAngus submitted a request to be
appointed to the council
seat vacated by former
Councilman
George

See Election, A5

�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Plans set for summer’s Race on the River
BY JIM FREEMAN
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE/SYRACUSE
— If there’s a whole lot of
running, biking and
swimming going on, it
can only mean one thing:
the Race on the River is
returning.
The Race on the River
Triathlon returns to the
bend area this summer
with competitors running,
biking and swimming
Saturday, July 30, 2011
beginning at 8 a.m. at Star
Mill Park in Racine and
ending at London Pool in
Syracuse. There will also
be a separate 5K run/walk
for those who don’t want
to tackle all three events.
This marks the second
Race on the River
Triathlon, which is billed
as
a
sprint-length,
reverse-order triathlon. A
triathlon is a distance race
involving three different
disciplines conducted in
continuous
sequence:
swimming, bicycling and
running, usually in that
order. Triathlons range
from “sprint” length to
marathon-length
“Ironman” triathlons.
The distances of the run
and bicycle segments will
be 5 kilometers and 20
kilometers (3.1 and 12.4
miles), respectively; those

are “official” sprintlength triathlon distances.
The
swim
remains
unchanged at 200 meters.
“Reverse order” means
the sequence of events in
this triathlon are run in
reverse.
Traditionally
triathlons begin with the
swim, followed by the
bicycle and run portions,
but are often “reversed” if
there is only a pool available as is the case with the
Race on the River,
explained event organizer
Junie Maynard.
Molina Healthcare has
partnered in this event.
Racers will start at Star
Mill Park, run to the end
of Yellowbush Road,
return and complete one
loop around the walking
path, before mounting
their bicycles and pedaling up the river toward
Letart
Falls.
Approximately four miles
later, they will turn
around at Plants Road and
race back through Racine
ending at London Pool in
Syracuse with the 200meter swim.
Last year’s event featured 29 individuals and
four teams, and was
slightly longer with a
4.25-mile run and 14-mile
bike ride. The new course
has official sprint-length
distances in the run and

Submitted photo

Submitted photo

This yearʼs Race on the River Triathlon gets kicked off
with a five-kilometer (3.1-mile) run starting and ending
at Racineʼs Star Mill Park. A separate 5K run/walk will
also be held at the same time. Runners are shown
here crossing the run finish line in last yearʼs race.
Proceeds from this yearʼs event benefit the Southern
Fitness Center.

After completing the run, Race on the River Triathlon
participants will enter the transition area, mount their
bicycles and head off on a 20-kilometer (12.4-mile)
course along state Route 124 and the Ohio River
toward Letart Falls and back to Syracuse ending at
London Pool for the final portion of the event, the
swim.

bicycle portions and
should have less traffic
during the run, Maynard
said. Spectators will have
a better viewing opportunity as racers circle the
park at the end of the run.
“This race is geared
toward all participants
and is perfect for the
beginner
triathlete,”
Maynard said. “There is
still plenty of time to condition and get ready for
this race.
“It’s not just for the seasoned runners, bikers or
swimmers,” she said.

Outreach Center in dire
need of new roof
Board seeking donations for repair work estimated
to cost $30,000 or more
BY ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS — A Gallia County
organization that has helped thousands
of people throughout its existence is
once again in need of the public’s assistance.
Officials with the Outreach Center in
Gallipolis say the facility is in danger of
being shut down by the State of Ohio
due to major leaks in the roof of the
building located at 275 State Street.
While the entire roof is in disrepair, officials said an inspector from the Ohio
Department of Agriculture told them
that he is most concerned about the
leaks above the food pantry.
Gary Fenderbosch, president of the
Outreach Center board, said the state
has set a deadline of June 23 for the roof
— at least the portion over the food
pantry — to be repaired or replaced or

Andrew Carter/photo

Employees at the Outreach Center in
Gallipolis are using buckets and totes to
catch rain water falling through the facilityʼs leaky roof. The Ohio Department of
Agriculture has given Outreach Center
officials until June 23 to have the roof
repaired or the center will be closed until
repairs are made. The centerʼs board is
asking the community for donations to
help pay for the roof repair.

the facility will have to close until work
is completed. He said bids received to
repair the roof have come in as high as
approximately $33,000.
“Area churches, businesses and individuals have donated food and monies
for our food pantry, but we do not have
the funds to address this critical capital
expenditure,” Fenderbosch said in reference to the badly needed roof repair
work.
Outreach Center employees and volunteers have been doing their best to
combat the leaky roof, utilizing buckets,
totes and other containers to catch water
dripping from the ceiling and constantly
mopping up wet spots. However, especially given the extremely rainy spring
the Mid-Ohio Valley is experiencing,
they are fighting a losing battle.
“We can’t keep operating like that with
all the water coming in and buckets all
along the walls to collect the rain, and
using shop vacs,” Fenderbosch said.
“It’s just not a healthy thing for employees or for people shopping. The gentleman from the Department of
Agriculture, in his finding, said we
made a valiant attempt to repair it, but in
order to store food back in there like we
do, everything has to be totally sealed;
no water coming in whatsoever.”
Officials said that in 2010 the
Outreach Center provided food for
1,099 children, 2,118 adults and 352
seniors. Additionally, the center provided clothing, household goods and other
items for local residents in need through
its shop on State Street.
Fenderbosch said local residents and
organizations have stepped up throughout the years to help keep the Outreach
Center open and able to serve the community. Last fall, area residents met the
center’s need by donating enough food
to fill 200 Thanksgiving baskets and
another 150 or more Christmas baskets.
“It is the ongoing generosity of the
communities that allows us to continue
our ministry,” he stated. “Specifically,
the Outreach Center is assisted by donations from churches, United Way, county commissioners, city government,
organizations, businesses, schools and
individuals. We also derive funding
from donated items sold at the store.”
Anyone interested in making a donation to the Outreach Center’s roof repair
effort can contact Fenderbosch at (740)
446-8657; board member Tom Gooch at
(740) 446-7438; or board treasurer
Joyce Anderson at (740) 446-4428.

Vaughan graduates with
youth ministry degree
POMEROY – Donald Edward Vaughan, Jr. graduated Saturday, May 14, from
Huntington University in Huntington, Ind. with a master’s degree in youth ministry leadership.
The graduation ceremony included a hooding service followed by baccalaureate
and commencement.
Attending were his wife, Brooke and children, Trey and Ella June, his parents,
Don and Pam Vaughan, and his grandparents, Dick and Ruby Vaughan.

Visit us online at

mydailysentinel.com

“Some people just want
the satisfaction of saying
they
completed
a
triathlon.”
Triathlon registration is
open for individuals and
three-member
teams.
Registration for individual athletes is $30 in
advance or $40 on race
day; teams are $60 in
advance and $70 on race
day.
A separate 5K run/walk
will also be held the
morning of the triathlon
using the same running
route as the triathletes.

Registration for that event
is $15 in advance and $20
the day of the race, using
the same registration form
as the triathletes. Awards
will be given for overall
winners in both classes
and age group winners.
Registration/packet
pick-up will begin July
30 at 7 a.m. at Star Mill
Park with all races beginning rain or shine at 8
a.m. Awards for overall
winners and age groups
will follow at London
Pool.
Proceeds from all

events will benefit the
Southern Fitness Center,
which is located at
Southern High School
and is open to the public.
Registration
forms,
rules and maps of the
route can be viewed at
www.mapmyrun.com or
at the event website at
www.raceontheriver.net
For more information
contact Junie Maynard at
Southern
Elementary
School at 949-4222 ext.
1129 or e-mail at
junie.maynard@southernlocal.net

Teen institute members meet
Teen Institute students
from Eastern, Meigs
and Southern Middle
Schools tie dyed Tshirts at their last meetings. The T-shirts will
be worn during the
Meigs County Teen
Institute Team’s final
community service project for the school year.
The project will be on

June 11 where the TI
Team will be helping to
set up for the Relay for
Life event happening at
the
Meigs
County
Fairgrounds.
The Meigs County TI
Team consists of sixth,
seventh and eighth
grade students that participate in the Teen
Institute groups at their

Submitted photo

home schools. These
groups work on supporting and educating the
students on being drug
and alcohol free, as well
as promoting leadership
skills and community
stewardship.
Health
Recovery
Services,
Division of Community
Services in Athens hosts
the groups.

Submitted photo

Teen Institute students from Meigs Teen Institute students from Eastern
Middle School.
Middle School.

Teen Institute students from
Southern Middle
School.

Submitted photo

Well graduates with distinction
MIDDLEPORT — Elizabeth Alexandra Well graduated with distinction
Sunday, May 15, from Ohio Northern University at Ada, Ohio with a juris doctorate degree.
Attending her graduation were her Zandra and Jeff Courtney, Brian Well, Dick
and Ruby Vaughan, Don and Pam Vaughan. Donald and Brooke Vaughan and children, Jacob Well, Beth and John Schneider, all family members, and a friend,
Mariel Zaun.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, May 23
POMEROY —
Pomeroy Village
Council meets for public training session, 5
p.m. with regular
council meeting to follow at 7 p.m., municipal building.

Community
meetings
Wednesday, May 18
CHESTER — Meigs
County Firefighters
Association, 7:30 p.m.,
Chester firehouse.
Thursday, May 19
POMEROY – The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers noon luncheon at Trinity church
downstairs meeting
room. Speaker, John

Milhoan of Gallipolis,
former ORA president.
POMEROY — Meigs
County American
Cancer Society
Advisory
Board/Survivorship
Taskforce meeting,
noon, Mulberry
Community Center.
REEDSVILLE –
Riverview Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. at the
Reedsville United
Methodist Church.
The roll call will be to
name your plans for
the summer. Final
plans will be made for
the groupʼs June outing.

Church events
Thursday, May 19
MIDDLEPORT —
Heath United
Methodist Church, free

community dinner,
4:30-6 p.m., Dave
Diles Park, hot dogs,
hamburgers, potato
salad, desserts and
drinks.

Birthdays
Thursday, May 19
WEST COLUMBIA,
W.Va. — May 19 is
Vernal Johnson, Sr.ʼs
85th birthday. Cards
may be sent to 1739
Woodland Road, West
Columbia, W.Va.
25287.
Sunday, May 22
POMEROY – Nellie
Brown will observe
her 89th birthday on
May 22. Cards may
be sent to her at
Room 309 Edgewood
Manor, 1330 Fuilton
St., Port Clinton, Ohio
43452.

�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

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�OPINION

Amid chaos and change,
Obama seeks Mideast imprint
BY BEN FELLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

President
Barack
Obama is confronting the
wrenching change in the
Middle East in a burst of
diplomacy, hoping to save
a crumbling peace process
and addressing the Arab
revolt country-by-country
in a world now free of the
menace of Osama bin
Laden.
Opening a week-long
focus on the Mideast,
Obama on Tuesday urged
Israelis and Palestinians
back to the bargaining
table against growing
odds. His broader narrative will be delivered in a
speech Thursday, when he
will make his pitch that a
region long defined by
division now has its
moment of opportunity
because its people are rising up and risking their
lives for change.
Speaking
alongside
Jordan’s King Abdullah II
on Tuesday, Obama
declared, “We both share
the view that despite the
many changes — or perhaps because of the many
changes — that are taking
place in the region, it’s
more vital than ever that
both
Israelis
and
Palestinians find a way to
get back to the table and
begin
negotiating
a
process whereby they can
create two states that are
living side by side in peace
and security.”
Yet his upbeat approach
is being undermined by
daily violence and by
hardened positions that, in
many ways, seem as
unmovable as ever.
For the first time since
uprisings began roaring
across North Africa and
the Middle East months
ago, Obama will try to
thread them together in
way that’s relevant at
home and supportive of
those seeking freedom
abroad. He will do so amid
questions about his consistency toward brutally
repressive governments.
Put together, Obama’s
events this week show a
president seeking to seize
command of a Mideast

agenda. He met with
Abdullah on Tuesday,
readied for Thursday’s
Mideast speech, looked to
host Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin
Netanyahu
Friday and planned to
address a prominent proIsrael group on Sunday.
The speech will present
Obama’s impressions of
changes that, as his
spokesman Jay Carney put
it, have been more remarkable in the past five
months than the past 50
years. Egypt and Tunisia
overturned their leaders.
Bahrain and Syria have
used overwhelming force
to crush protesters. Libya’s
move to destroy a rebel
movement has drawn the
United States into a conflict with no clear end in
sight. And in the midst of
it all, the U.S. launched a
mission in Pakistan to
take down bin Laden, the
man behind the worst terrorist attacks on U.S. soil.
Yet the timing for the
speech is problematic.
Even though the tracking down and killing of
bin Laden offers context
— the president is likely
to frame al-Qaida ideology as the bankrupt past
and the Arab push for
rights as the future — the
latest reality is a Mideast
peace process in deep
trouble.
In a dramatic new
expression of frustration
on Sunday, Palestinians
marched and tried to
breach Israel’s borders
from the West Bank,
Gaza, Syria, Lebanon and
Jordan on Sunday, leading to deadly clashes. The
White House singled out
Syria, where a government crackdown on protesters is growing ever
more dire.
It was Obama who had
declared that Palestinians
and Israelis could reach a
peace deal by September.
Instead,
negotiations
have stalled again, and
Palestinian
President
Mahmoud Abbas is pushing for the United
Nations to recognize an
independent Palestinian
state over U.S. and Israeli
objections.

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Page 4
Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Muslim Outreach 2.0
BY FRANK GAFFNEY, JR.
CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

On
Thursday,
President Obama will
“reach out” yet again to
what he insists on calling “the Muslim world.”
Think of it as the 2.0
version of his much-ballyhooed, but seriously
deficient, 2009 speech at
Al-Azhar University in
Cairo.
His message this time,
we are told, will be that
the death of Osama bin
Laden and the outpouring of support for democratic change across the
Middle East and North
Africa opens a new
dawn for Muslims —
and even greater opportunities for expanded
relations with the United
States than he promised
two years ago. But will
they?
The answer would
appear to depend on who
actually benefits most
from these developments. As things stand
now, the answer seems
likely to be the Muslim
Brotherhood (MB or, in
Arabic, Ikwan). If the
Brotherhood
does
indeed come to power in
Egypt, Syria, Jordan,
“Palestine” (through its
local franchise, Hamas)
and/or others of the
roughly 13 countries in
North Africa and the
Middle East currently in
play, there is no chance
that U.S. interests will be
served — no matter how
much Mr. Obama tries to
reach out to Muslims in
those regions.
That reality is rooted in
the jihadist nature of the
Ikhwan and its goals.
While
some
have
claimed the organization
is non-violent and, in the
words of Director of
National
Intelligence
James Clapper, even
“largely secular” — the
most cursory examination of the Muslim
Brotherhood’s
own
words makes clear that
such assertions are
unfounded, and danger-

ously so.
Consider the MB’s
creed: “Allah is our
objective. The Prophet is
our leader. The Qur’an is
our law. Jihad is our way.
Dying in the way of
Allah is our highest
hope.” Not much nonviolent or secular about
that.
Then, there is a pregnant quote from a 1991
document entitled the
Ikhwan’s “Explanatory
Memorandum on the
General Strategic Goals
of the Group.” The
memo was found in a
concealed archive in
Annandale, Va., in 2004.
It was introduced into
evidence in the successful 2008 prosecution of
the first group of defendants in the Holy Land
Foundation conspiracy,
the largest terrorismfinancing prosecution in
the nation’s history.
This strategic plan
describes the MB’s mission in America as “a
kind of grand jihad in
eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within, sabotaging its miserable
house with their [i.e.,
Americans’] hands and
the hands of the believers
so that it is eliminated
and God’s religion is
made victorious over all
other religions.” Secular?
Non-violent?
The federal government also has made public another, undated
Brotherhood document
called, “Phases of the
World
Underground
Movement Plan.” It
describes precisely how
the MB’s mission statement is being operationalized within the
United States, and provides a progress report
(in italics). Highlights of
its key passages make
for chilling reading
given the prospect of an
even-more-aggressive
Obama outreach campaign to Muslims, one
that would inevitably
entail parlaying with the
Ikhwan:

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

Phase One: Discreet
and secret establishment
of leadership.
Phase Two: Phase of
gradual appearance on
the public scene and
exercising and utilizing
various public activities.
[The Brotherhood has]
greatly succeeded in
implementing this stage.
It also succeeded in
achieving a great deal of
its important goals, such
as infiltrating various
sectors
of
the
Government.
Phase
Three:
Escalation phase, prior
to conflict and confrontation with the
rulers, through utilizing
mass media. Currently in
progress.
Phase Four: Open public confrontation with
the Government through
exercising the political
pressure approach. It is
aggressively implementing the above-mentioned
approach. Training on
the use of weapons
domestically and overseas in anticipation of
zero-hour. It has noticeable activities in this
regard.
Phase Five: Seizing
power to establish their
Islamic Nation under
which all parties and
Islamic groups are united.
President Obama can
try to promote the illusion that the Muslim
Brotherhood does not
really intend to act on
these ambitions. But the
rest of us cannot safely
ignore what those ambitions are, or the abundant
evidence that the Ikhwan
is, indeed, intent on realizing them — and disciplined, organized and
ruthless enough to try to
achieve them.
Finally, there is the
strategic alignment of
jihadist forces that led up
and assuredly contributed to the so-called
“Arab Spring.” Two coauthors of the Center for
Security Policy’s new
book, Shariah: The
Threat to America (at

Shariahthethreat.com),
former Joint Chiefs of
Staff advisor Stephen
Coughlin and former
FBI special agent John
Guandolo, have been
warning for months
about the following
developments:
In July 2010, al Qaeda
used its new, Englishlanguage Inspire magazine to challenge the
Muslim Brotherhood to
move from the “Meccan
phase” (i.e., stealthy
forms of jihad) to the
“Medinan phase” (i.e.,
violent jihad). In October
2010, the MB’s recently
elected Supreme Guide,
Mohammed
Badie,
issued what amounted to
a declaration of war
against Israel, the United
States and the West. And
in January 2011, AlAzhar University issued
a fatwah affirming that
offensive operations are
a legitimate part of
“defensive jihad.”
Team Obama missed
these ominous developments. In all likelihood
its Outreach 1.0 and
other missteps actually
encouraged them, even
before the President
called for the immediate
removal of one of
America’s relatively reliable
Arab
allies,
Egyptian dictator Hosni
Mubarak.
Now, Mr. Obama seems
intent on compounding
his earlier errors by further embracing Muslim
Brotherhood operatives
overseas and front organizations here at home.
Redoubling such efforts
now will only serve to
embolden our foes,
undermine our friends
and endanger our country.
Enough already.
(Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.
is President of the
Center for Security
Policy
[www.SecureFreedom.or
g], a columnist for the
Washington Times and
host of the nationally
syndicated program,
Secure Freedom Radio.)

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�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Obituaries

www.mydailysentinel.com

BCI Athens

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Meigs County Forecast

From Page A1
Everett “Petie” Michael of Bradbury, left his family
and friends on Tuesday, May 17, 2011, after a battle
with esophageal cancer.
Born March 8, 1944, in Bradbury, he was the son of
the late Everett “Pete” Michael and the late Mabel
Sisson Michael. Petie was retired from Ohio Valley
Electric Company, Cheshire, after 35 years of service.
He was known as a hard worker, who outside of work
enjoyed fishing, frogging, camping and the occasional cold beer with friends, and more than anything
spending time with his family. Petie served in the U.S.
Army National Guard, Point Pleasant, W.Va. and was
a member of the VFW Post 9926, Mason, W.Va.,
where in the last several years he enjoyed breakfast
prepared by Chef Mike Brewer. Petie’s fish fries in
the 90’s were some of his favorite life memories as it
was a time for friends and family to gather.
Petie leaves behind children, Lori and Trent Nash,
Greg and Pam Michael and Tricia Michael all of
Pomeroy; Grandkids, Dustin and Andrew Nash,
Johnathan Michael and Nathaniel Gilkey all of
Pomeroy; and sisters, Pat (Dan) Arnold and Paula
(Roger) Gaul; sister-in-law, Debbie Michael of
Martinsburg, W.Va.; Aunt, Virginia Michael; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, Petie’s heart was broken March
29 when his younger brother, John Michael of
Martinsburg, left us.
In his last days Petie had accepted the Lord as his
eternal savior and the family would like to thank
Justin Roush and Bob Caruthers of the Bradbury
Church of Christ for their assistance. Petie had many
friends and family all of whom he enjoyed visiting
with. The family would like to say thank you to his
cousin, Walter Morris, who was like a brother to him
for being there in his final few hours. The children
would like to thank their mother Terri Michael for
being there for them and their father during his illness. They would also like to thank the many friends
who stopped by and called to ask about him during his
illness.
Funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday,
May 21, 2011, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. Justin Roush.
Military Honors will be presented by VFW Post 9926,
Mason, W.Va. Friends may call on Saturday from 11
a.m. until time of service at 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers,
the family requests that donations be made in memory of Petie to the VFW Post 9926 Cancer Fund.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Deaths
Jim Derrow
Jim Derrow, 52, Wellston, Ohio, died Monday, May
16, 2011. The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m.,
Saturday, May 21, 2011, at the Wellston High School
gymnasium. Burial will follow at Ridgewood
Cemetery in Wellston. Visitation will be held from
noon-8 p.m., Friday, May 20, 2011, at McWilliams
Funeral Home in Wellston. In lieu of flowers, donations may be to the Coach Jim Derrow Scholarship
Fund, Wellston City Schools, 1 East Broadway Street,
Wellston, OH 45692.

Lilly M. Hatfield
Lilly M. Hatfield, 72, Jacksonville, Fla., formerly of
the Patriot community, died Monday, May 16, 2011,
in the Life Care Center of Jacksonville, Jacksonville,
Fla. Funeral arrangements will be announced by
Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

Annabell McDaniel
Annabell McDaniel, 75, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
May 16, 2011, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehab
Center. There will be no visitation and funeral services will be at the convenience of the family. Deal
Funeral Home is serving the family.

law enforcement. It will continue to improve the high
quality of service these departments provide for our
district.”
The BCI is based in London, and operates regional
branches in Richfield and Bowling Green. DeWine
said the BCI&amp;I’s work is “particularly important” in
smaller areas of the state, where there is serious crime
to investigate and fewer resources to do so.
The agency is home to the state’s fingerprint identification system, sex offender registration and a DNA
index system. It also inventories and analyzes evidence collected by local law enforcement agencies in
major crimes. One benefit of the local BCI&amp;I office
will be the added convenience and shorter travel time
when evidence is transported to the state agency for
analysis.

Middleport
From Page A1
Johnston of the Meigs County Board of Elections.
Four council seats are up for election in November,
those now held by Rice and Houston. Rice has filed
for re-election. Roger Manley and Jean Craig, who
have served on council in the past, have filed their
petitions for council seats, as has Penny Hysell Burge.
Houston filed as a mayoral candidate. Sandy
Iannarelli, who served two terms as village mayor,
has filed with the board her intention to seek the
mayor’s position as a write-in candidate, Johnston
said.
Iannarelli was first elected as a write-in 12 years
ago.
This year, voters will also elect members of their
local boards of township trustees and school boards.
The filing deadline for those non-partisan races is
August 10.
Candidates had until May 2 to file their petitions in
Middleport and Pomeroy. (See related story.) That is
the day before that of the primary, but Meigs County
had no partisan candidates file for office and so now
primary was held this year.

Graduation
From Page A1
Shelly Thorla; Bobbi Harris of Racine, daughter of
Paul and Kristine Harris; Eric Buzzard of Racine, son
of Rick Buzzard and Marcia Weaver; Sara Reitmire of
Minersville, daughter of Paul and Mary Reitmire;
Dakota Imboden of Racine, son of Tim Imboden and
Joy Spaun; Joseph Forester of Racine, son of Mary
and Melvin Forester.
The graduation program, which was still being
assembled at press time, will include a welcome by
Stephanie Michelle Berryman; the Pledge of
Allegiance led by Braxton Joseph Thorla; the class
change of tassels led by Berryman, who is also the
president of Class of 2011. There will be speeches
given by both Valedictorian Flint and Salutatorian
Manuel, as well as remarks from SHS Principal
Daniel Otto and Superintendent Anthony Deem. The
Southern Band will be performing Adrenaline
Engines for their special number.
A tentative list of graduating seniors is as follows:
Stephanie Michelle Berryman, David Justin Brown,
Eric Franklin Buzzard, Jesse James Cope, Cody
Anthony Counts, Vadamae Schranda Counts,
Lawrence Eric Cundiff, Jr., Tiffany Nicole Cundiff,
Kayla Danielle Dowell, Timothy James Eynon,
Merrissa Brooke Fisher, Trevor Mark Flint, Joseph
Lee Forester, Tyler Johnathan Goble, Jack William
Goode, Bobbi Leeann Harris, John Alva Holsinger, II,
Lee-Anna Lynn Cook, Dakota Isaac Imboden, Dalton
Garrett Jenkins, Cari Nichole Justis, Zachary Brewer
Manuel, Melissa Kay Myers, Rebekah Michelle Ours,
Charles Keith Pyles, Brian Eric Durham, Sara Marie
Reitmire, Alisha Dawn Sinclair, Anthony Ray
Sturgeon, Braxton Joseph Thorla, Cody Aaron
Tucker, Adam James Warden, Cody Derek Williams,
Timothy William Willis, Jr., Tyler Ryan Wolfe.

Election
From Page A1

Veterans
From Page A1
their families may be eligible for the bonus, that 63,000
have submitted applications, and that 28,000 have been
approved with an approved payout totaling more
than $21 million. That shows there are many more
eligible who either don’t know about the bonus or
have decided not to apply. Cale says probably
some reside in Meigs County.
He explained that Ohio voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing the state to sell
$200,000,000 worth of bonds to pay bonuses to
those men and women who served or are currently
serving in the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan and Iraq.
The Ohio Veterans Bonus is available to veterans
who served more than 90 days active duty, not for
training, during the periods of the Persian Gulf
from Aug. 2, 1990 through March 3, 1991; for
Afghanistan from Oct. 7, 2001 through a date to be
determined by the president, and for Iraq from
March 19, 2003 , also through a to-be-determined
date.
Veterans may receive $100 for each month of
active duty service in any of the locations up to a
maximum $1000 bonus. Eligible veterans who
were medically discharged or medically retired
from service due to combat-related disabilities
sustained during their service in those areas can
apply for a $1000 bonus, regardless of their length
of service.
Family members of deceased veterans may be
eligible for a benefit of $5,000 if the service member lost his or her life as a result of injury or illness
sustained in their Persian Gulf, Afghanistan or Iraq
service, plus whatever bonus the veteran had
earned per month up to a maximum total bonus of
$6,500, Cale reported.
For more information visit www.veteransbonus.ohio.gov or contact Meigs County’s
Veterans Service office for assistance.
The Ohio Veterans Bonus continues a tradition
of bonuses to reward Ohio veterans that dates back
to the Civil War.

Wednesday: Showers
likely. Cloudy, with a
high near 65. Calm wind
becoming south around
6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
New rainfall amounts
between a tenth and
quarter of an inch possible.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers.
Cloudy, with a low
around 48. Light south
wind. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New
rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an
inch possible.
Thursday: A chance
of showers. Cloudy, with
a high near 69. Calm
wind. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent. New
rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an
inch possible.
Thursday Night: A
slight chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 50. Chance
of precipitation is 20
percent.

Friday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny,
with a high near 71.
Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Friday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 55.
Saturday: Partly
sunny, with a high near
78.
Saturday Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 59.
Sunday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny,
with a high near 79.
Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Sunday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 61. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny,
with a high near 80.
Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 38.85
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 72.10
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 60.46
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.86
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 31.41
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 70.59
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 15.74
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.28
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) — 4.15
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 32.63
Collins (NYSE) — 61.23
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.30
US Bank (NYSE) — 25.59
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 19.59
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 36.83
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 43.81
Kroger (NYSE) — 25.31
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 41.62
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 70.85
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.05

BBT (NYSE) — 27.09
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 13.49
Pepsico (NYSE) — 71.11
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.50
Rockwell (NYSE) — 80.45
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.15
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.43
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 75.20
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 55.54
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.83
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.76
Worthington (NYSE) — 21.01

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
May 16, 2011, 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.

Local Briefs
21-mile yard sale
coming up
HARRISONVILLE — The second annual 21-mile
yard sale on Route 143 and fund raisers of the Scipio
Volunteer Fire Department of Harrisonville and the
Columbia Township Fire Department will be held
Saturday, June 4, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Those living on Route 143 are encouraged to take
part in the yard sale.
Others who want to participate can rent space at
either of the fire stations.
The Scipio volunteers
will have a pancake breakfast before beginning a
sale of hot dogs dring the
rest of the day. Food will
also be avaiable at the
Columbia firehouse where
rest rooms will also be
available.
For more informaton
call Dave or Paula Carr at
742-4002 or either fire station for rental space, Rusty
Cheadle, 740-591-6086 or
Dan or Rhea Lantz, 7422819.

Stewart though Councilman Phil Ohlinger was ultimately appointed to that position to serve out Stewart’s fouryear term. Before retiring, McAngus worked in the local
banking industry. Current Mayor John Musser is not
seeking reelection.
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun has also filed a petition to
run for reelection. Spaun’s
four-year term is up at the
The Meigs County Council on Aging would like to thank those who helped make
end of this year. Resident
the 10th Annual March for Meals Fundraiser a success. Your support helped us raise
Sherman Mills has filed a
petition to run for the counclose to $11,000 for our Meals on Wheels Program.
cil seat currently held by
Councilman Pete Barnhart We want to thank those who contributed to the Paper Plate Pin-ups and bought
Barnhart did not file a petitickets to the dinner. We also want to thank the Following people.
tion for reelection, according to the Meigs County
Board
of
Elections.
La Cheeasha Bogarlus
Barnhart was elected to a
Event Sponsors
Cake Judges
Sheila Carsey
council seat for several
Rose's Excavation
Colleen Williams
Amanda Saxon
Holzer Medical Center/
Jenny Smith
years and then appointed to
Sue Lightfoot
Community Health &amp; Wellness
Rae Moore
Pat Smith
the seat he currently holds.
Home National Bank
Roma Sayre
This seat was won by forRocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Susan Dingess
Tina Rees
mer Councilman Shawn
Cake Purchasers
Bill Quickel
Arnott who resigned in
Mary McAngus
Mark Porter
Table Sponsors
2008; former Councilman
Mark Porter
Rick and Cathy Crow
Ohio Valley Home Health
Theresa Porter
Nancy Ervin
Dave Deem then was
Racine Optometric Clinic
Home National Bank
Karr
Audiology
and
Hearing
Aids
appointed to the seat until
Joe Bolin
Cake Bakers
King ACE Hardware
later
resigning;
then
Gerald McClung
Jeff Warner Insurance Agency
Tammy Cremeans
Keith Aeiker
Barnhart was appointed to
Kim Fife
Forest Run Ready Mix. LLC
Powell's Food Fair
Chandra Shrader
J.D. Drilling Company
Deem’s seat to serve out the
Jack Ritchie
Teresa Burton
Margie J. Lawson, DDS
four-year term which ends
Chase Porter
Karen Circle
Rose's Excavation
Carson Crow
on Dec. 31, 2011.
Sara Eakins
Insurance Plus Agencies, Inc.
Brenda Haggy
Rhonda Rathburn
Hunter Family Practice
Candidates had until May
Bill Quickel
Hannah Hawley
D.V. Weber Construction. Inc
2 to file their petitions in
Greg Shader
Betty Vincent
Beth Shaver
Pomeroy and Middleport.
Nondus Hendricks
Dale and Marlene Harrison
Jean
Powell
(See related story.) That is
Door Prizes Donated
Barbara Gheen
Melody Lawrence
the day before that of the
Mary Hill
By:
Ann Werry
Alice Wolfe
primary, but Meigs County
Ohio Valley Home Health
Connie Quivey
Randy Hawley Jr.
Montgomery Trailer Sales
Lily Kloes
had no partisan candidates
Colleen Williams
Unique Antiques and Gift Shop
Linda
King
file for office and so no priSusan Dingness
Family HealthCare, Inc.
Shawn Hawley
Jane Ann Aanestad
mary was held this year.
Clark's Jewelry Store
Sherry Ritchie
Shawn Hawley
Ohio Valley Bank
This year, voters will also
Lynn Ramage
Fred Johnson
Baum Lumber
Tiffany
Morrow
elect members of their local
Bob Byer
Ruth Green
Donna Byer
boards of township trustees
Roslie Johnson
Auctioneer Rick Pearson
Bridget Heldreth
and school boards. The filMildred Zeigler
Rosalie Story
ing deadline for those nonJune Kloes
partisan races is August 10.

60168444

Everett “Petie” Michael

�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Security

ADT
Free Home Security System
with $99 installation and purchase of alarm monitoring
services from ADT Security
Services
Call 1-888-459-0976

Need a
Job Done?

400

Financial
Money To Lend

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

Shop
The

600

Animals

POLICIES
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
¾Errors
Must
Be
Reported on the first
day of publication
and
the TribuneSentinel-Register will
be responsible for no
more than the cost of
the space occupied
by the error and only
the first insertion. We
shall not be liable for
any loss or expense
that results from the
publication
or
omission
of
an
advertisement.
Corrections will be
made
in the first
available edition.
¾Box number ads are
always confidential.
¾Current
applies.

rate

card

Pets
Free dog to giveaway to a good
home 256-1233

¾All
Real
Estate
advertisements
are
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of
1968.
¾This
newspaper
accepts only help
wanted ads meeting
EOE standards.
¾We
will
not
knowingly accept any
advertisement
in
violation of the law.

Announcements
Lost &amp; Found

Lost- Sammy male indoor cat, dark
gray w/some striping, face is lighter,
belly white, 15-20#, across from
Meigs Elementary School, Reward
$100, 740-742-2524
Lost- female Great Pirenees, no
collar, all white w/slightly tan ears,
substantial Reward, answers to
Sassie call 740-444-5097
Lost- camera of sentimental value,
if found return to Eastern High
School office or Daily Sentinel, no
questions asked.

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
business with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mail until you have investigating the
offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
300

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

Yard Sale
Multi family furniture, household, all
sizes good clothing everything
priced cheap 444 Lariot Dr. Fri 20 &amp;
21 8-?

Services
Other Services

DIRECTV
Limited Time Offer! Access
over 120 Channels for only
$29.99 per month. No Equipment to Buy - No Start Up
Costs. Call Today 1-866-9650536

DISH NETWORK
It's Finally FREE!
Free HD for Life* and over
120 channels only
$24.99/month.*
*Conditions apply, promo code
MB410
Call Dish Network Now
1-877-464-3619

700

Agriculture

Garden &amp; Produce
Home grown Strawberries, Asparagus, &amp; Rhubarb @ McKean Farm
Centenary Rd 446-9942

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
First cutting Alfalfa square bales in
field. If interested call 304)675-5972
&amp; Leave Message

Recreational
Vehicles

1000

Campers / RVs &amp; Trailers
1994 27' Winnebago motor home.
Chevy v8 only 19K miles. Great
condition microwave, shower,
loaded. $5,900. 304-675-5913

2000

Automotive

Beautiful 1BR apartment in the
country freshly painted very clean
W/D hook up nice country setting
only 10 mins. from town. Must see
to appreciate. Water/Trash pd.
$375/mo 614-595-7773 or 740645-5953
Immaculate 2 BR apt. in country,
new carpet and cabinets. Freshly
painted, appliances, W/D hook-ups,
water/trash paid. Beautiful country
setting, only 10 minutes from town.
Must see to appreciate $425/mo
614-595-7773 or740-645-5953
1 BR apt furnished includes w/s/g
$425.00 mo No Pets Racine OH
740-591-5174
Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5 BA,
back patio, pool, playground. $450
mth 740-645-8599
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR townhouse apartments, also renting 2 &amp;
3BR houses. Call 441-1111.

1995 2BR 14x70 Mobile (Clayton)
$7500 must be moved 709-1657 or
446-1271.

6000

Employment

Child/Elderly Care
Babysitter needed in our HomeMust be dependable Ph: 304-8125088

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 1 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 1-800462-9365 E.O.E.

Tractor trailer Driver needed.
Must have Hazmat. Send resume to Human Resources Po
Box 705 Pomeroy Oh 45769.

2 &amp; 3 BR APTS. $385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300 &amp; up,
A/C, W/D hook-up, tenant pays electric, EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

Liquid Asphalt Drivers in Point
Pleasant Area Needed, Must be 21
years old or older. Must have Class
A CDL with Hazmat Endorsment
and TWIC Card. Good MVR. Local
Trips. Call 1-800-598-6122 for more
information.

Want To Buy

1 &amp; 2 bedroom house &amp; apartments
for rent. No Pets, 740-992-2218

Education

Want to buy Junk Cars, call 740388-0884

1 BR Apt. Utilities paid HUD accepted near down town Pt Pleasant
304)360-0163

Oiler's Towing. Now buying junk
cars w/motors or w/out. 740-3880011 or 740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.

Nice 1br. Appliances, furnished,
$375 + deposit, near, PPHS 304675-3100 or 304-675-5509

Help Wanted Medical instructors for
terminology, billing &amp; coding, and
transcription. A minimum of associate degree in a medically related
field required. Email cover letter &amp;
resume to bshirey@gallipoliscareercollege.edu.

Autos
BIG SALE : Vans,Trucks,SUV and
small economy cars All Pricedto
sell. Ph 446-7278

Free horse to giveaway. 256-1652

6 month male Yorkie Pup $350 4410522

200

Lg Cherry curio cabinet w/4 shelves
$300, tanning canopy $300. Both in
new condition 446-7166

3000

Horses

Classifieds

Furniture

2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

Sales

Real Estate
Sales
Houses For Sale

740-949-9023, 2 bedroom, livingroom, diningroom, family room
w/gas fireplace, full basement, 2 car
attached garage, 24x20 outbuilding,
7 1/2 acres of woods, 2 miles outside of Pomeroy.
2-BR House with Basment &amp;
Garage-lFurnished, Room for Garden-Good Location Located in the
town of New Haven. asking $45,000
Ph 304-882-3959

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Clean 1BR garage apt. Ref + dep.
No Pets! 304-675-5162
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1
BR at $395+2 BR at $470 Month.
446-1599.

Houses For Rent
5-6 BR house, pool, garage. Neighborhood Rd. Gallipollis 740-6455058
3BR-1 1/2 Bth, 1 Car Garage,
Newly remoulded $750 mth plus
Deposit. Close to G.A.H.S Ph 4460073
2 BR, Rodney area, W/D, ref 4
stove inc, NO pets, dep &amp; ref. req.
call 446-1271 or 709-1657.
Cute riverview log cabin in Syracuse, $500 plus deposit &amp; utilities.,
740-416-7703, 740-992-7680

4000
Apartments/
Townhouses
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting list for HUD
subsidized, 1-BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 675-6679

Manufactured
Housing
Rentals

2 and 3 bedroom rentals w/air
$325-$365 per month. Call Ray at
740-508-0248
3 bedroom trailer, 2 bath on Wolf
Pen Rd, $550 a mo. 740-992-4129

Help Wanted Business instructors
for accounting, business administration, computer, and office administration programs. A minimum of
associate degree in a business related field required. Email cover letter
&amp;
resume
to
bshirey@gallipoliscareercollege.ed
u

VACANCY: H.S COUNSELOR.
Valid Ohio School Counselor required. Career-Technical experience preferred. CONTACT :
G a l l i a - Ja ck s o n - V i n t o n - J V S D
(740)245-5334 Ext 256 Email:
mrankin@buckeyehills.net. EEO
VACANCY; H.S. CAREER-TECHNICAL PUBLIC SAFETY INSTRUCTOR. Associate Degree in
Criminal Justice or Criminal/Forensic Science. OPOTA Peace Officer
certified. Prefer Detective/Investigation experience. CONTACT : GalliaJackson-Vinton
JVSD
(740)245-5334 Ext 256. Email:
mrankin@buckeyehills.net.EEO
VACANCY: H.S. CAREER-TECHNICAL MATH INSTRUCTOR. Valid
Ohio Math license required. Contact
: Gallia -Jackson-Vinton JVSD(740)
245-5334
Ext
256
E-mail:
mrankin@buckeyehills.net EEO

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

Services Offered

BULLETIN BOARD

To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9:00 AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

R.L. Hollon Trucking

Middleport Legion

Bingo

REFRESHMENTS

DISTRICT SALES MANAGER
Circulation Department
The Circulation district sales manager must successfully manage
the distribution of home-delivered
products and newsstand copies to
ensure customer satisfaction. The
CSM is responsible for our paid
newspaper and works closely with
our newspaper carrier force. This
is a key position that plays a pivotal role in the success of our circulation department and works
with other departments.
This position requires three to five
years experience managing and
developing employees; previous
experience in sales, marketing and
circulation; basic accounting
knowledge and familiarity with Microsoft Office programs; excellent
organizational skills; excellent written and verbal communication
skills. This position is a full-time
opportunity offering a compensation package including
medical,dental and paid time off.
Apply at Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis Oh 45631
740-446-2342

Now accepting resumes for part
time at Acquisitions 151 2nd ave
Gallipollis OH 45631 No Phone
Calls please.
The Daily Tribune is seeking an experienced press operator. This position will involve the operation of
an eight unit Goss Urbanite and
other related support equipment.
The ideal candidate will have experience in a fast-paced work environment and will be able to work
flexible hours. This is a night shift
position and it will require some
weekend shifts, excluding Sundays. We offer full time benefits,
paid vacation, paid sic k leave and
401k. Interested applicants can
send a resume by email to gweatherbee@heatlandpublications.com,
or by mail to The Daily Tribune,
attn; Greg Weatherbee, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis OH 45631

Gallipolis Developmental Center
is currently seeking Intermittent TPW’s. TPW’s must have
a High School Diploma/GED
and a valid driver’s license. Interested persons should submit
an Ohio Civil Service Application. You can submit on line at
careers.ohio.gov, YOU CAN
ALSO APPLY AT Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, 848 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis OH 45631, MondayThursday 7:00 a.m. – 5:00
p.m. Gallipolis Developmental
Center Attention: Human Resource Department 2500 Ohio
Avenue Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone: (740) 446-1642 Fax:
(740) 446-2625The Gallipolis Developmental Center is an Equal Opportunity
Employer

Harris Steakhouse now accepting
applications Ph:304-675-9726
Secretary for the WVU Extension
Service Office. Must have typing
skills,computer skills and interpersonal skills in dealing with the public. Applications available at the
Extension Office located at 525
Viand Street in the Mason County
Courthouse Annex. Applications
close on May 31,2011 at 4:00pm.
An equal opportunity employer.

Medical
LPN for PRN please call 740-4463808

Sales
Parts sales associates position
available. Experience necessary.
Average to good computer skills
needed. Competitive pay and benefits. Fax resume to 740-446-9104 or
email to jlc@careq.com

9000

Service / Bus.
Directory
Cleaning

Will pick up unwanted Appliances&amp;
yard sale items also Will haul or buy
Auto's &amp; Scrap metal Ph. 446-3698
ask for Robert.

Home Improvement
J &amp; J Painting Interior/Exterior Power
Washing
Homes
&amp;
Garages,Barns Free est. Have References Ph 304-812-4946

Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee
Local references furnished and established in 1975
Call 24 hrs 740)446-0870
Rogers Basement Waterproofing

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Syracuse, Ohio

Flats
of
Flowers

Hours:
Daily 9–5

Legals

COUNTY
:
MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE The following applications and/or verified complaints
were received, and the following
draft, proposed and final actions
were issued, by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (OEPA)
last week. "Actions" include the
adoption, modification, or repeal of
orders (other than emergency orders); the issuance, denial, modification or revocation of licenses,
permits, leases, variances, or certificates; and the approval or disapproval of plans and specifications.
"Draft actions" are written statements of the Director of Environmental Protection’s (Director’s)
intent with respect to the issuance,
denial, etc. of a permit, license,
order, etc. Interested persons may
submit written comments or request
a public meeting regarding draft actions. Comments or public meeting
requests must be submitted within
30 days of notice of the draft action.
"Proposed actions" are written
statements of the Director’s intent
with respect to the issuance, denial,
modification, revocation, or renewal
of a permit, license or variance.
Written comments and requests for
a public meeting regarding a proposed action may be submitted
within 30 days of notice of the proposed action. An adjudication hearing may be held on a proposed
action if a hearing request or objection is received by the OEPA within
30 days of issuance of the proposed action. Written comments,
requests for public meetings and
adjudication hearing requests must
be sent to: Hearing Clerk, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, P.O.
Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 432161049 (Telephone: 614-644-2129).
"Final actions" are actions of the Director which are effective upon issuance or a stated effective date.
Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745.04, a final action may
be appealed to the Environmental
Review
Appeals Commission
(ERAC) by a person who was a
party to a proceeding before the Director by filing an appeal within 30
days of notice of the final action.
Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745.07, a final action issuing, denying, modifying, revoking or
renewing a permit, license or variance which is not preceded by a
proposed action, may be appealed
to the ERAC by filing an appeal
within 30 days of the issuance of
the final action. ERAC appeals accompanied by a $70.00 filing fee
which the Commission in its discretion may reduce if by affidavit the
appellant demonstrates that payment of the full amount of the fee
would cause extreme hardship,
must be filed with: Environmental
Review Appeals Commission, 309
South Fourth Street, Room 222,
Columbus, Ohio 43215. A copy of
the appeal must be served on the
Director within 3 days after filing the
appeal with ERAC.
DRAFT
NPDES PERMIT - SUBJECT TO
REVISION
GATLING OHIO
LLC
P.O. BOX 960
NEW
HAVEN, WV
OH ACTION DATE : 05/25/2011
RECEIVING WATERS: UT TO WOLF
RUN
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: WASTEWATER
IDENTIFICATION
NO. : 765614
ANTIDEGRADATION PROJECT
AS DEFINED BY OAC 3745-1-05 AN EXCLUSION
OR
WAIVER IS NOT APPLICABLE.
REQUESTS TO BE ON THE INTERESTED
PARTIES MAILING
LIST
SHOULD
BE
SUBMITTED WITHIN 30 DAYS TO
OHIO
EPA-DIVISION OF
SURFACE WATER, ATTENTION:
PERMITS PROCESSING UNIT,
50 WEST TOWN STREET, P.O.
BOX 1049, COLUMBUS, OHIO
43216-1049.
(CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE)
COUNTY : MEIGS DRAFT PERMIT TO INSTALL - SUBJECT TO
REVISION
GATLING OHIO
LLC
P.O. BOX 960
NEW
HAVEN, WV 25265
OH ACTION DATE : 05/25/2011
RECEIVING WATERS: UT TO
BOWMAN RUN
FACILITY DESCRIPTION:
WASTEWATER
IDENTIFICATION NO. : 767801
ANTIDEGRADATION PROJECT
AS DEFINED BY OAC 3745-1-05 AN EXCLUSION
OR
WAIVER IS NOT APPLICABLE.
REQUESTS TO BE ON THE INTERESTED
PARTIES MAILING
LIST
SHOULD
BE
SUBMITTED WITHIN 30 DAYS TO
OHIO
EPA-DIVISION OF
SURFACE WATER, ATTENTION:
PERMITS PROCESSING UNIT,
50 WEST TOWN STREET, P.O.
BOX 1049, COLUMBUS, OHIO
43216-1049. (5) 18, 2011
SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 10
CV 124, FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF,
VS. JOSEPH P. RODERUS AND
AMBER D. RODERUS, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of an Order of Sale
issued out of said Court in the
above action, Robert E. Beegle, the
Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio, will
expose to sell at public action on
the front steps of the Meigs County
Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio, on Friday, June 3,
2011, at 10:00 a.m., the following
lands and tenements: Situated in
the Township of Sutton, County of
Meigs and State of Ohio: Being a
part of a tract of land transferred to

100

Legals

David A. and Terry L. Carsey as
recorded in official records Volume
33 at Page 797, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office, Meigs County,
Ohio, also being a part of 100 acre
Lots 291 and 292, Township-2North, Range-12-West, Sutton
Township, Meigs County, State of
Ohio, and more particularly described as follows: Beginning at an
existing stone found which is assumed to bear South 00 deg. 00
min. 00 sec. East, a distance of
603.90 feet from the assumed
Northwest corner of 100 acre Lot
291 Township 2, Range 12; Thence
along the assumed West line of
said 100 acre Lot 291 South 00
deg. 00 min. 00 sec. East, a distance of 69.25 feet to a 5/8" iron pin
with I.D. cap set; Thence leaving
said West line South 89 deg. 20
min. 12 sec. East, a distance of
343.38 feet to a 5/8" iron pin with
I.D. cap set; Thence South 00 deg.
00 min. 00 sec. East, a distance of
1038.37 feet to a 5/8" iron pin with
I.D. cap set; Thence South 89 deg.
38 min. 23 sec. West passing
through a 5/8" iron pin with I.D. cap
set at a distance of 808.87 feet and
going a total distance of 832.08 feet
to a point in the centerline of an existing creek; Thence along the centerline of said creek the following six
courses:1. North 18 deg. 12 min.
52 sec. East a distance of 121.11
feet to a point;2. North 03 deg. 08
min. 06 sec. East a distance of
284.04 feet to a point;3. North 23
deg. 30 min. 43 sec. East a distance
of 182.82 feet to a point;4. North 15
deg. 07 min. 55 sec. West a distance of 112.63 feet to a point;5.
North 28 deg. 26 min. 30 sec. East
a distance of 159.53 feet to a
point;6. North 11 deg. 28 min. 11
sec. East a distance of 315.01 feet
to a point on the assumed North
line of the Grantor; Thence leaving
said centerline and along said
North line South 88 deg. 22 min. 28
sec. East passing through a 5/8"
iron pin with I.D. cap set at a distance of 30.00 feet and going a total
distance of 233.26 feet to the principal point of beginning, containing
8.209 acres, more or less, in said
100 acre Lot 291 and 9.719 acres,
more or less, in said 100 acre Lot
292 for a total of 17.928 acres,
more or less. Subject to all legal
easements and rights of way. Bearings are assumed and are for the
determination of angles only. All
iron pins set are 5/8" x 30" rebar
with plastic I.D. cap stamped "CTS6844". ALSO GRANTING unto the
grantees herein, a 30 foot right-ofway the centerline of which is described as follows: Being a part of a
tract of land transferred to David A.
and Terry L. Carsey as recorded in
official records Volume 33, Page
797, Meigs County Recorder’s Office, Meigs County, Ohio, also being
a part of 100 acre Lot 291, Township-2-North, Range-12-West, Sutton Township, Meigs County, State
of Ohio and more particularly described as follows: Beginning at a
point on the South line of a 17.928
acre, more or less, tract and bears
North 89 deg. 38 min. 23 sec. East,
a distance of 722.62 feet the Northeast corner of a tract recorded in
Deed Book 319 at Page 633;
Thence leaving said South line and
along the centerline of a 30.00 foot
easement the following five
courses:1. South 29 deg. 09 min.
05 sec. West a distance of 97.44
feet to a point;2. South 20 deg. 02
min. 48 sec. West a distance of
140.47 feet to a point;3. South 28
deg. 39 min. 51 sec. West a distance of 98.11 feet to a point;4.
South 12 deg. 31 min. 05 sec. West
a distance of 131.51 feet to a
point;5. South 14 deg. 02 min. 02
sec. East a distance of 84.85 feet to
a point in the centerline of County
Road 122 Roy Jones Road, being
the terminus of said 30 foot easement. Bearings are assumed and
are for the determination of angles
only. The above description was
prepared from an actual survey
made on the 12th day of January,
2005, by C. Thomas Smith, Ohio
Professional Surveyor #6844. Description approved by Meigs County
Engineer/Tax Map Office on January 19, 2005. Reference Deed: Volume 210, Page 847, Meigs County
Official Records. Auditor’s Parcel
Nos.: 18-01084.001 and 1801085.001
Excepting
1.023 acres, more or less, conveyed to John P. Roderus, by deed
recorded on September 14, 2006,
in Volume 241, Page 209, Meigs
County Official Records. The above
described real estate is sold “as is”
without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 30637
Roy Jones Road, Racine, OH
45771
CURRENT OWNER:
Joseph P. Roderus and Amber D.
Roderus.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED AT: $50,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised value. The appraisal does not include an interior
examination of any structures, if
any,
on
the
real
estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash only)
down on day of sale, balance (cash
or certified check only) due on confirmation of sale. ALL SHERIFF’S
SALES OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PUR-

Miscellaneous

ng

i
Hang

Blooming
&amp;
Foliage
All Flats
$9.95

100

Stanley Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

ets

Bask

Closed Sundays

740-992-5776
100

PRIZE DRAWINGS

SATURDAY, MAY 14th • 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
SPECIAL GRAND OPENING DEALS!!

Hubbards Greenhouse
Large
Selection
of
Shrubbery
6”–14”

740-985-3302

GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION

Now Open for Season

HIRING SECURITY OFFICERS
Open Interviews
May19, 2011
9am-3:30pm
One Stop Career Center
848 Third Ave. Gallipolis, Oh
www.securityamerica.com
1-888-832-6732 ext 109

BAUM LUMBER

POWER EQUIPMENT SALES &amp; SERVICE

Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422
740-856-2609 cell

Doors open at 5:30pm
No Checks

EXPERIENCED DIESEL TECH
AND EXPERIENCED HEAVYDUTY PARTS SALESPERSON
apps available at www.redstruckcenter.com email or fax to
admin@redstruckcenter.com
or
740-994-3500

Located on St. Rt. 7 in Chester at the Intersection of Pomeroy Pike

• Lime Stone • Gravel • Dirt
• Sand • Driveway Grading

Every
Saturday Night
Starting at 7:00pm

Help Wanted - General

Count on it.

* Prompt and Quality Work
* Reasonable Rates * Insured * Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley
Cell

All 10” Baskets
$7.95
Legals

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 10
CV 106, PEOPLES BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, PLAINTIFF, VS. CHRISTOPHER S.
RANSOM AKA CHRISTOPHER
SCOTT RANSOM, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of an Alias Order
of Sale issued out of said Court in
the above action, Robert E. Beegle,
the Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio,
will expose to sell at public action
on the front steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, June
3, 2011, at 10:00 a.m., the following
lands and tenements: Being in
Section Number 11, Town 1, Range
12, Letart Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. Beginning on the East side of
the public road North 62 rods and
West 117 rods and 17 links from the
south east corner of Section Number 11, at the south west corner of
Floyd Norris’ land; thence east
along Floyd Norris’ south line 513
feet; thence south 169.8 feet;
thence west 513 feet to the east
side of said public road; thence
north along the east side of road
169.8 feet to the place of beginning,
containing 2 acres. Reference
Deed: Volume 222, Page 703,
Meigs County Official Records. Auditor’s Parcel No.: 08-00699.000
The above described real estate is
sold “as is” without warranties or
covenants.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 23238 Hill Road, Racine,
OH 45771 CURRENT OWNER:
Christopher S. Ransom. REAL ESTATE VALUE SET BY COURT AT:
Minimum Bid Not Less Than
$20,000.00. No interior examination
has been made of any structures, if
any, on the real estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% (cash only) down on
day of sale, balance (cash or certified check only) due on confirmation of sale. ALL SHERIFF’S
SALES OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. ATTORNEY FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, 211-213 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(5)11, 18, 25, 2011
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the installation
of the Scipio Township Baseball
Concession Building Project in
Meigs County, Ohio, will be received by the Meigs County Commissioners at the Courthouse,
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1:00 P.M., Thursday,
June 9, 2011 and then at 1:15 P.M.,
at said office opened and read
aloud for the following: Scipio Township Baseball Concession Building
Project , Meigs County, Ohio- Specifications are provided in bid packet.
Specifications, and bid forms may
be secured at the office of the
Meigs County Commissioners ,
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769Phone # 740-992-2895. A deposit

60168836

Marcum Construction
and General Contracting
Mikee W.. Marcumm - Owner

CHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. ATTORNEY FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, 211-213 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(5)11, 18, 25, 2011
Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateRevised Code, Sec. 11681 Revised
Code Sec. 2329.26The State of
Ohio, Meigs County} OneWest
Bank, FSB
Plaintiff
- vs Roger A.
Balser, et al.
Defendant
Case No. 10CV021
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in
the above entitled action, I will offer
for sale at public auction, on the
front steps of the Meigs County
Courthouse, in Pomeroy, Ohio, on
Friday, the 3rd day of June, 2011 at
10:00 A.M. o’clock P.M., the following described real estate, towit:LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN
BE FOUND AT THE SHELBY
COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE.PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
42355 State Route 7, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio PROPERTY OWNER:
Roger A. Balser and Hazel BalserPRIOR DEED REFERENCE: OR
Book 259, Page 275 PP#:
1000190.000,
1000191.000,
1000192.000
and
1000193.000Said Premises Located at: 42355 State Route 7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio Said Premises
Appraised at $40,000.00
And
cannot be sold for less than twothirds of this amount.TERMS OF
SALE:
Cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds of the appraised value.
10% of purchase price down on day
of sale, cash or certified check, balance on confirmation of sale.
REIMER, ARNOVITZ, CHERNEK
&amp; JEFFREY CO., L.P.A.By:
Ronald
J.
Chernek
(Reg.
#0041431)
Douglas A. Haessig
(Reg. #0079200)Attorneys for
PlaintiffP.O. Box 968Twinsburg,
Ohio 44087Telephone: (330) 4254201, Ext. 152Fax: 330-4051 0 7 8 E m a i l :
rchernek@reimerlaw.comPUBLICATION DATES: 5/11/11, 5/18/11,
and 5/25/11
Robert Beegle, SheriffMeigs County, Ohio

740-591-8044
Please leave message

• Commerciall &amp; Residentiall • Generall Remodeling

• Room Additions • Roofing
• Garages
• Pole &amp; Horse Barns
• Foundations
• Home Repairs
740-985-4141 • 740-416-1834
Fully Insured – Free Estimates
30 Years Experience
Not Affliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

100

Legals

of O dollars will be required for
each set of plans and specifications, check made payable to
_______-_____________. The full
amount will be returned within thirty
( 30 ) days after receipts of bids.
Each bid must be accompanied by
either a bid bond in an amount of
100% of the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioners or by
certified check, cashiers check, or
letter of credit upon a solvent in the
amount of not less 10% of the bid
amount in favor of the Meigs
County Commissioners.
Bid
Bonds shall be accompanied by
Proof of Authority of the official or
agent signing the bond. Bids shall
be sealed and marked as Bid for
Racine Village Water Meter Purchase Project and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County
Commissioners
Courthouse,
Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Attention of
bidders is called to all of the requirements contained in this bid
packet, particularly to the Federal
Labor Standards Provisions and
Davis-Bacon Wages, various insurance requirements, various equal
opportunity provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond
within thirty (30) days after the actual date of the opening thereof.
The Meigs County Commissioners
reserve the right to reject any or all
bids. Mike Bartrum, President
Meigs County Commissioners
(5) 18, 26, (6) 1, 2011
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate (Ohio
Revised Code Sec. 2329.26) The
State of Ohio, Meigs County
CITY NATIONAL BANK OF WEST
V
I
R
G
I
N
I
A
Plaintiff
VS.
CASE NO. 10-CV-128 DAVID R.
STRICKLEN,
ET
AL
Defendants
In
pursuance of an Order of Sale in
the above entitled action, I will offer
for sale at public auction, on the
Courthouse steps in Pomeroy, in
the above named County, on Friday,
the 3rd day of June, 2011 at 10:00
o’clock A.M., the following described real estate, situated in the
Village of Pomeroy, County of
Meigs and State of Ohio, to wit:
PARCEL NO. 1: The following real
estate situated in the County of
Meigs, and in the Village of
Pomeroy, and part of Lot No. 439
and described as follows:Beginning
on the south side of Union Avenue
20 feet from the center thereof and
150 feet easterly from the northeast
corner of a lot conveyed to Dale
and Helen Wippel by deed recorded
in Deed Book No. 171, Page 11,
Meigs County Deed Records;
thence southerly parallel with
Goetts East line 100 feet; thence
easterly parallel with Union Avenue
74 feet; thence northeasterly parallel with Ray Evans west line 104
feet to the south side of Union Avenue 20 feet from the center of the
same; westerly along the south side
of Union Avenue 120 feet to the
place of beginning, containing .215
acres. SUBJECT to all legal easements and leases. Parcel No. 1601290 Last Source of Title: O.R.
275, Pg. 727, Office of the
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio.
PARCEL NO. 2: The following described real estate situated in the
Village of Pomeroy, County of
Meigs and State of Ohio; beginning
an the northeast corner of a .215
acre lot conveyed by Hart Stanberry
to Everett McKnight by deed
recorded in Vol. 178, Page 227,
Meigs County Deed Records;
thence southwesterly along the
east line of said .215 acre lot 104
feet to the southeast corner thereof;
thence easterly parallel with Union
Avenue 45 feet; thence northeasterly parallel with the east line of the
said .215 acre lot and 45 feet distant therefrom to Union Avenue;
and thence west along the south
line of Union Avenue 45 feet to the
place of beginning, containing .111
of an acre, more or less. SUBJECT
to all legal easements and leases.
Parcel No. 16-01291 Last Source of
Title: O.R. 275, Pg. 727, Office of
the Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio.
*Said Premises Located at: 213
Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Said Premises Appraised
at $30,000.00 and cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds of that
amount. “All buyers beware: The
appraised value may have been established based on an exterior view
only of any structures located on
the premises described herein.”
TERMS OF SALE: The purchaser
at the foreclosure sale shall be re-

100

60201720

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Legals

quired to deposit the sum of 10% of
the purchase price in the form of
cash or certified check. The balance is to be paid in full within thirty
(30) days after date of Sale. If the
purchaser fails to complete the
transaction within thirty (30) days,
the deposit shall be forfeited to
P l a i n t i f f .
ROBERT E. BEEGLE, Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio. Richard F.
Bentley, Attorney for Plaintiff, 425
Center St., Ironton, Ohio 45638,
(740)532-7000.
(5) 11, 18, 25, 2011
Sheriff Sale of Real Estate Case
Number 10-CV-041 Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A. Vs William A. Barley, et
al. Court of Common Pleas, Meigs
County, Ohio. In pursuance of an
order of sale to me directed from
said court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at public
auction on the front steps of the
Meigs County Court House on Friday June 03, 2011 at 10:00 a.m. of
said day, the following described
real estate: Legal Description: Real
property in the Township of Salem,
County of Meigs, State of Ohio, and
is described as follows: Being a part
of a 17 acre +1- tract transferred to
Edward D. Anderson records in Official Records Volume 1, at Page
485, Megis County Recorder's Office, Meigs County, Ohio, also being
a part of Section 4, Township-8North, Range-15-West, Salem
Township, Meigs County, State of
Ohio, and more particularly as follows: Beginning at 5/8' iron pin set
on the North line of said 17 acre +/tract which bears South 89 degrees
45' 52" East a distance of 61.73 feet
from an existing wooden post assumed to be the Northwest corner
of theSoutheast Quarter of said
Section 4, Township-8, Range-15;
Thence along said North line South
89 degrees 45' 52' East a distance
of 415.93 feet to a 5/9" iron pin set
at the base of a 30' oak tree;
Thence leaving said North line and
along the Westerly bank of Leading
Creek South ?l degrees 49' 35"
East a distance of 324.22 feet to a
point in the centerline of Township
Road #21 and the Southerly end of
abridge; Thence along said centerline the following nine courses: 1.
South 24 degrees 43' 4" West a distance of 46.73 feet to a point;2.
South 22 degrees 48' 02" West a
distance of 87.23 feet to a point;3.
South 32 degrees 52' 57" West a
distance of 47.00 feet to a point;4.
South 47 degrees 10' 03" West a
distance of 54.99 feet to a point;5.
South 63 degrees 58' 43" West a
distance of 59.3? feet to a point;6.
South 71 degrees 38' 00" West a
distance of 100.86 feet to a point;7.
South 71 degrees 59' 31" West a
distance of 323.10 feet to a point;8.
South 74 degrees 06' 52" West a
distance of 170.16 feet to a point;9.
South 74 degrees 27' 06" West a
distance of 96.66 feet to a point;
Thence leaving said centerline
North 1 degrees 48' 44" East passing thru a 5/8" iron pin set at a distance of 15.99 feet and going a total
distance of 153.70 feet to a 5/8' iron
pin set; Thence North 35 degrees
27' 45" East a distance of 154.42
feet to a 5/8' iron pin set; Thence
North 19 degrees 13' 19" East a
distance of 102.94 feet to a 5/8' iron
pin set; Thence North 11 degrees
15' 00" West a distance of 222.30
feet to the principal point of beginningcontaining 0.57 acres +/-. Bearings are set and are for the
determination of angles only. For Informational Purposes Only: The improvements thereon being known
as 31566 Parker Run Road,
Langsville, Ohio 45741.BEING all
and the same lot of ground which
by Deed dated March 30, 2007, and
recorded April 11,2007 among the
Land Records of Meigs County,
Ohio in Liber No. 251, folio 182, was
granted and conveyed by Thomas
Sill and Calitta Sill, unto William A.
Barley. Parcel Number: 13-00007001 Property Located at:
31566
Parker Run RoadLangsville, OH
45741 Prior Deed Reference: Book
251, Page 821 Property Appraised
at: $100,000. Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than 2/3rds for the
appraised value. 10% down on day
of sale, case or certified check, balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not include an interior examination of the house.
Robert E. Beegle, Meigs County
Sheriff S. Scott Martin Ohio
Supreme Court Reg. #0071423 Attorney for the Plaintiff Lerner,
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss P.O. Box
5480 Cincinnati, OH 45202-4007
(513) 241-3100 05/11/11, 05/18/11
&amp; 05/25/11

�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

OVC and SEOAL Track and Field Results
2011 OVC TRACK AND FIELD
CHAMPIONSHIPS
GIRLS
Team Scores: 1. River Valley 129, 2. Coal Grove 123, 3.
Fairland 113, 4. South Point 94, 5. Chesapeake 33, 6. Rock
Hill 28
100 meter dash: 1. Kayla Fletcher (SP) 12.7, 2. Fields (RV)
12.9, 3. Harrison (CG) 13.1, 4. Gore (SP) 13.1, 5. Pappas
(F) 13.3, 6. Short (CG) 13.4
200 meter dash: 1. Jessica Hager (RV) 26.5, 2. Fletcher
(SP) 27.5, 3. Harrison (CG) 27.6, 4. Gore (SP) 28.1, 5.
Short (CG) 28.5, 6. Sands (RV) 28.8
400 meter dash: 1. JaiNai Fields (RV) 1:00.5, 2. Fletcher
(SP) 1:03.6, 3. Johnson (CG) 1:04.9, 4. Montano (RH)
1:09.1, 5. Carrico (F) 1:10.4, 6. Ward (RV) 1:10.8
800 meter run: 1. Katie Blodgett (RV) 2:29, 2. Letchford
(SP) 2:36, 3. Pettit (F) 2:40, 4. Ashton (F) 2:42, 5. Montano
(RH) 2:44, 6. McGrath (RV) 2:47
1600 meter run: 1. Katie Blodgett (RV) 5:35, 2. Letchford
(SP) 5:53, 3. Pettit (F) 5:57, 4. Ashton (F) 6:01, 5. Brooks
(RV) 6:12, 6. Thibodaux (RH) 6:51
3200 meter run: 1. Katie Blodgett (RV) 12:13, 2. Letchford
(SP) 13:28, 3. Ashton (F) 13:39, 4. Clarkson (F) 14:29, 5.
Hollingsworth (RV) 16:31, 6. Stormes (CG) 17:02
100m hurdles: 1. Jessica Hager (RV) 15.7, 2. Pappas (F)
16.5, 3. McKnight (CG) 16.8, 4. Massie (RH) 18.3, 5. Goad
(CG) 19.5, 6. Eblin (RV) 21.8
300m hurdles: 1. Jessica Hager (RV) 46.7, 2. McKnight
(CG) 48.6, 3. Pappas (F) 51.1, 4. Massie (RH) 54.7, 5. Goad
(CG) 59.3, 6. Plymale (SP) 59.4
4x100m relay: 1. Coal Grove (McKnight, Short, Suitor,
Harrison) 52.9, 2. South Point 55.0, 3. Fairland 56.2, 4.
Chesapeake 57.9, 5. Rock Hill 58.0
4x200m relay: 1. Coal Grove (McKnight, Johnson, Erwin,
Harrison) 1:46, 2. River Valley 1:50, 3. Fairland 1:51, 4.
South Point 1:52, 5. Chesapeake 2:04
4x400m relay: 1. River Valley (Fields, Sands, McGrath,
Hager) 4:24, 2. Coal Grove 4:39, 3. Fairland 4:40, 4. South
Point 4:59, 5. Rock Hill 5:23
4x800m relay: 1. River Valley (Blodgett, McGrath, Ward,
Hollingsworth) 10:57, 2. Fairland 11:05, 3. Coal Grove
12:37, 4. South Point 13:24
Discus: 1. Kaitie Roberts (RV) 108-2, 2. Hankins (CG) 1041, 3. Gibson (F) 98-10, 4. Plybon (C) 83-5, 5. Taubenheim
81-4, 6. Butler (RH) 78-6
Shot Put: 1. Beth McWhorter (C) 36-11.75, 2. Winters (CG)
35-5, 3. Ferguson (CG) 34-2.5, 4. Morris (SP) 32-2, 5.
Roberts (RV) 30-7, 6. Miller (C) 27-11
Long Jump: 1. Kayla Fletcher (SP) 16-5, 2. Johnson (CG)
15-2, 3. Murphy (CG) 14-9, 4. Massie (RH) 14-4, 5. Ward
(RV) 13-10, 6. Neville (RV) 13-8
High Jump: 1. Amanda Ruffner (C) 5-2, 2. Bowman (F) 50, 3. Riley (F) 4-8, 4. Sites (RH) 4-6, 5. Erwin (CG) 4-4, 6.
Webb (CG) 4-4
Pole Vault: 1. Amber Pappas (F) 7-9, 2. Suitor (CG) 7-6, 2.
Shockley (F) 7-6, 4. Goad (CG) 7-0, 5. Meadows (C) 6-6
High Point Winner: Kayla Fletcher (South Point) 36
points
BOYS
Team Scores: 1. Coal Grove 172, 2. Fairland 162, 3. South
Point 62, 4. Chesapeake 59, 5. Rock Hill 31, 6. River Valley
29
100 meter dash: 1. Tre Campbell (SP) 11.2, 2. Martin (C)
11.4, 3. Wilds (RH) 11.4, 4. Mitchell (SP) 11.4, 5. Woods
(CG) 11.4, 6. Nance (CG) 11.4
200 meter dash: 1. Lucas Martin (C) 23.2, 2. Woods (CG)
23.5, 3. Campbell (SP) 23.6, 4. Williams (RV) 23.9, 5. Wilds
(RH) 24.1, 6. McDowell (F) 24.3
400 meter dash: 1. Raine Wireman (F) 53.8, 2. Mattie (F)
54.2, 3. Payne (SP) 54.4, 4. Jeweel (CG) 55.1, 5. Williams
(RV) 55.6, 6. Dalton (RH) 58.2
800 meter run: 1. Raine Wireman (F) 2:05, 2. Pauley (CG)
2:06, 3. Mattie (F) 2:07, 4. Steele (CG) 2:17, 5. Ashworth (C)
2:18, 6. Welch (C) 2:18
1600 meter run: 1. Jacob Pauley (CG) 4:50, 2. Rowe (F)
5:03, 3. Stewart (F) 5:07, 4. Beals (CG) 5:16, 5.
Hollingsworth (RV) 5:25, 6. Lively (C) 5:33
3200 meter run: 1. Tanner Mattie (F) 10:35, 2. Rowe (F)
10:42, 3. Pauley (CG) 11:16, 4. Archambault (SP) 11:36, 5.
Steele (CG) 11:51, 6. Stepney (RV) 11:55
110m hurdles: 1. Kenny Smith (F) 16.1, 2. Adkins (F) 16.7,
3. Estep (CG) 17.2, 4. Clagg (C) 17.4, 5. Morrison (CG)
17.8, 6. Brown (RV) 18.9
300m hurdles: 1. Kenny Smith (F) 42.5, 2. Adkins (F) 42.8,
3. Barrett (CG) 43.5, 4. Schultz (CG) 46.0, 5. Lucas (C)
46.2, 6. Eblin (RV) 49.3
4x100m relay: 1. Coal Grove (Bare, Woods, Nance,
Murphy) 45.1, 2. Chesapeake 46.8, 3. Fairland 47.9, 4.
River Valley 49.9
4x200m relay: 1. South Point (Mitchell, Payne, Barnes,
Saxton) 1:36, 2. Coal Grove 1:38, 3. River Valley 1:53
4x400m relay: 1. Coal Grove (Jewell, Bare, Barrett, Estep)
3:40, 2. Chesapeake 3:42, 3. Fairland 3:43, 4. South Point
3:54, 5. River Valley 4:01
4x800m relay: 1. Coal Grove (Beals, Steele, Jewell,
Pauley) 8:32, 2. Fairland 8:50, 3. Chesapeake 10:01, 4.
River Valley 10:08, 5. South Point 10:15
Discus: 1. Greg Bender (CG) 152-4, 2. Kirkpatrick (RH)
132-11, 3. Zirkle (F) 129-1, 4. Harper (RH) 115-7, 5. Lee (F)
110-9, 6. McCoy (C) 108-9
Shot Put: 1. Greg Bender (CG) 49-1, 2. Carey (RH) 47-9.5,
3. Pruitt (F) 45-8.5, 4. Burton (CG) 45-7.25, 5. Noble (C) 419.25, 6. Gad (F) 41-4.25
Long Jump: 1. Campbell (SP) 21-.5, 2. Smith (F) 20-3.5, 3.
Nance (CG) 19-6, 4. Woods (CG) 19-5, 5. Dalton (RH) 1810, 6. Nelson (F) 18-9
High Jump: 1. Bryan Steele (CG) 6-2, 2. Smith (F) 6-2, 3.
Barrett (CG) 5-8, 3. Bracken (SP) 5-8, 5. Mabe (RV) 5-4, 6.
McDowell (F) 5-4
Pole Vault: 1. Kyle Estep (CG) 11-6, 2. Murphy (CG) 11-6,
3. Workman (C) 11-0, 4. Nyland (F) 10-0, 5. Bishop (F) 9-6,
6. Lein (SP) 9-0
High Point Winner: Kenny Smith (Fairland) 36 points

2011 SEOAL TRACK AND FIELD
CHAMPIONSHIPS
BOYS
Team scores: 1, Logan (L) 170. 2, Gallia Academy (G)
128. 3, Marietta (M) 107. 4, Chillicothe (C) 82. 5, Warren (W)
72. 6, Jackson (J) 58. 7, Portsmouth (P) 40.
4x800: 1, Marietta (Alexander Wesel, Mitchell Grose,
Samuel Garrison, Dylan Schafer), 8:06.58. 2, Warren

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

www.mydailysentinel.com

8:15.73. 3, Chillicothe 8:20.75. 4, Logan 8:25.22. 5, Gallia
Academy 8:37.88. 6, Jackson 9:35.79.
110 hurdles: 1, Tyler Myers (L) 15.52. 2, Matt Mason (L)
15.60. 3, Johnathan Caldwell (G) 15.86. 4, Wesley Riley (M)
16.19. 5, Matthew Roberts (M) 16.83. 6, Dylan Osborne (C)
16.99.
100: 1, Austin Wilson (G) 11.14. 2, Jon Royster (P) 11.19.
3, Jared Rutter (L) 11.21. 4, Austin Osborne (J) 11.60. 5,
Donnie Stevens (L) 11.87. 6, Isaac Beverly (C) 11.98.
4x200: 1, Logan (Jared Rutter, Branson Sheets, Donnie
Stevens, Sean Wotring) 1:32.26. 2, Chillicothe 1:33.22. 3,
Jackson 1:33.28. 4, Marietta 1:34.06. 5, Gallia Academy
1:34.59. 6, Portsmouth 1:37.46.
1600: 1, Matt Watts (G) 4:29.17. 2, 105 Mitchell Grose (M)
4:33.75. 3, Bradley Ullman (W) 4:44.76. 4, Andrew
VanBibber (L) 4:45.47. 5, Colin Brooks (L) 4:50.84. 6,
Dalton Bettendorf (C) 4:53.08.
4x100: 1, Gallia Academy (Frank Goff, Ethan Moore, Tyler
Campbell, Austin Wilson) 44.12. 2, Logan 44.15. 3, Jackson
45.12. 4, Marietta 45.76. 5, Warren 47.21. 6, Portsmouth
47.29.
400: 1, Jon Royster (P) 49.94. 2, Isaac Beverly (C) 50.12.
3, Austin Wilson (G) 50.12. 4, Ethan Moore (G) 52.64. 5,
Jesse Randolph (L) 53.31. 6, Drew Ervin (J) 53.41.
300 hurdles: 1, Johnathan Caldwell (G) 40.16. 2, Dustin
Baker (M) 40.68. 3, Matt Mason (L) 40.78. 4, Tyler Myers (L)
41.82. 5, Matthew Roberts (M) 42.39. 6, Perry Henry (W)
44.55.
800: 1, Gage Freeman (W) 1:59.81. 2, Alexander Wesel (M)
2:00.94. 3, Dylan Schafer (M) 2:02.61. 4, Winston Wade (G)
2:06.46. 5, Austin Porter (P) 2:07.03. 6, Tyler McManaway
(L) 2:07.71.
200: 1, Austin Wilson (G) 22.79. 2, Jon Royster (P) 22.91.
3, Drew Ervin (J) 23.66. 4, Sean Wotring (L) 23.73. 5,
Branson Sheets (L) 23.99. 6, Tyler Campbell (G) 24.30.
3200: 1, Wes Cochran (W) 9:50.23. 2, Matt Watts (G)
10:11.15. 3, Samuel Garrison (M) 10:27.65. 4, Andrew
VanBibber (L) 10:38.66. 5, Dalton Bettendorf (C) 10:48.34.
6, Ben Haller (C) 10:48.80.
4x400: 1, Chillicothe (Isaac Beverly, Max Corcoran,
Cameron Lowe, Casey Oates) 3:29.68. 2, Marietta 3:34.07.
3, Logan 3:36.23. 4, Gallia Academy 3:39.97. 5, Warren
3:47.09. 6, Portsmouth 3:50.65.
Discus: 1, David Fouty (J) 146-7. 2, Josh Garrett (C) 1451. 3, Coy Blair (L) 141-8. 4, Jared Golden (G) 135-11. 5,
Blake Staley (W) 130-10. 6, Tyler Stivison (L) 120-0.
High jump: 1, Josh Fridley (L) 6-2. 2, Josh Vermillion (L) 60. 3, Wesley Riley (M) 6-0. 4, Tyler Campbell (G) 6-0. 5,
Jeremy Fivecoait (W) 5-10. 6, Marcus Dunn (C) 5-10.
Long jump: 1, Jared Rutter (L) 21-5?. 2, Tyler Campbell (G)
21-5. 3, Dylan Osborne (C) 21-5. 4, Elijah Parmiter (M) 205?. 5, Ethan Moore (G) 20-2. 6, Austin Osborne (J) 19-2.
Shot put: 1, Coy Blair (L) 56-2. 2, David Fouty (J) 46-3. 3,
Jesse Arnold (L) 46-0. 4, Brandon Gilliland (J) 42-9. 5,
Jayson Howard (C ) 42-5.5. 6, Blake Staley (W) 41-5.5.
Pole vault: 1, Matt Mason (L) 12-6. 2, Wesley Riley (M) 120. 3, Harry Cogswell, (M) 11-0. 4, Eli Duff (W) 10-6. 5,
Samuel Greenlee (W) 10-6. 6, Joel Craft (G) 10-0.
GIRLS
Team scores: 1, Chillicothe (C) 161.75. 2, Marietta (M)
145.75. 3, Warren (W) 97.75. 4, Gallia Academy (G) 86. 5,
Logan (L) 63.75. 6. Portsmouth (P) 55. 7, Jackson (J) 49.
4x800: 1, Warren (Halle Richards, Cassandra Thompson,
Kelsey Abbott, Megan Blevins) 9:57.56. 2, Marietta 9:58.61.
3, Chillicothe 11:08.36. 4, Logan 11:21.14. 5, Gallia
Academy 12:06.72. 6, Portsmouth 12:43.75.
100 hurdles: 1, Erica Dawson (M) 16.24. 2, Jessica Dicken
(L) 16.33. 3, Sarah Studenic (M) 17.37. 4, Raelyn Gardner
(W) 17.39. 5, Haley Angel (G) 17.63. 6, Elaini Jackson (P)
17.84.
100: 1, Megan Osborne (C) 12.48. 2, Karena Fulks (J)
12.87. 3, Daylon Smith (P) 13.24. 4, Alexis Walsh (M) 13.40.
5, Taylor Queen (G) 13.60. 6, Audra Metzler (C) 13.64.
4x200: 1, Marietta (Erica Dawson, Hillary Danford, Paige
Grosel, Alexis Walsh) 1:49.65. 2, Portsmouth 1:50.08. 3,
Chillicothe 1:50.22. 4, Warren 1:51.71. 5, Gallia Academy
1:51.74. 6, Logan 1:53.53.
1600: 1, Peyton Adkins (G) 5:14.9. 2, McKenna Warner (G)
5:19.22. 3, Halle Richards (W) 5:31.36. 4, Maegan Grosel
(M) 5:36.89. 5, Megan Blevins (W) 5:39.97. 6, Abby
Ketelsen (M) 5:43.35.
4x100: 1, Warren (Kylee Carl, Raelyn Gardner, Kasey
White, Meghan Zeller) 52.56. 2, Chillicothe 52.86. 3, Logan
53.20. 4, Marietta 53.89. 5, Gallia Academy 54.10. 6,
Portsmouth 54.74.
400: 1, Megan Osborne (C) 59.72. 2, Karena Fulks (J)
1:00.42. 3, Hannah Watts (G) 1:00.90. 4, Ashley McCort (L)
1:04.43. 5, Kailey Longpre (C) 1:04.66. 6, Sarah Studenic
(M) 1:04.80.
300 hurdles: 1, Erica Dawson (M) 47.36. 2, Audra Metzler
(C) 49.28. 3, Colleen Miracle (M) 49.65. 4, Elainie Wilson
(C) 49.98. 5, Elaini Jackson (P) 53.02. 6, Jill Switzer (L)
53.47.
800: 1, Samantha Barnes (G) 2:24.82. 2, Alyssa Mathis (C)
2:29.55. 3, Abby Ketelsen (M) 2:30.77. 4, Maegan Grosel
(M) 2:34.15. 5, Daesha Patterson (C) 2:36.45. 6, Elisha
Cordle (L) 2:36.65.
200: 1, Megan Osborne (C) 25.88. 2, Karena Fulks (J)
26.76. 3, Daylon Smith (P) 27.28. 4, Hannah Watts (G)
27.83. 5, Emilie Kemper (C) 28.35. 6, Paige Grosel (M)
28.44.
3200: 1, McKenna Warner (G) 11:43.95. 2, Megan Blevins
(W) 11:57.12. 3, Julie Fobes (M) 12:02.57. 4, Emily
Garrison (M) 12:32.98. 5, Madison Holley (G) 12:42.26. 6,
Haley Shank (J) 13:04.59.
4x400: 1, Marietta (Erica Dawson, Colleen Miracle, Katie
Miller, Paige Grosel) 4:13.76. 2, Chillicothe 4:20.97. 3, Gallia
Academy 4:25.28. 4, Logan 4:27.27. 5, Warren 4:27.28. 6,
Portsmouth 4:45.49.
Discus: 1, Emma Ryan (W) 127-11. 2, Jessica Pentecost
(C) 118-0. 3, Alyssa Oates (C) 100-5. 4, Shanice Rollins (P)
97-9. 5, Elizabeth Stoll (M) 96-8. 6, Jacqeline Norman (J)
93-3.
High jump: 1, Audra Metzler (C) 5-0. 2 (tie), Colleen
Miracle (M), Jessica Dicken (L), Kalli Ross (W) and Kylie
Bethal (C) 4-10. 6, 530 Natyra Green (J) 4-10.
Long jump: 1, Audra Metzler (C) 17-2. 2, Erin Barnes (C)
16-9. 3, Karena Fulks (J) 16-2.5. 4, Jessica Dicken (L) 159. 5, Colleen Miracle (M) 15-1. 6, Alexis Walsh (M) 14-9.
Shot put: 1, Shanice Rollins (P) 37-5.5. 2, Emma Ryan (W)
36-2. 3, Alyssa Oates (C) 35-11.5. 4, Elizabeth Stoll (M) 356. 5, Haley Bonar (M) 32-2.5. 6, Morgan Daniels (G) 31-7.
Pole vault: 1, Paige Grosel (M) 10-10 (new meet record;
previous record 10-8 set by Emma Schmeltzer of Logan in
2009). 2, Jill Switzer (L) 10-0. 3, Corinne Patino (C) 9-6. 4,
Breanna Duff (W) 9-0. 5, Taylor Foy (W) 8-6. 6, Claire
Corzine (C) 8-0.

White Falcons remain
perfect in TVC Hocking
BY GARY CLARK
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

STEWART, Ohio —
The Wahama White
Falcon baseball nine continued its quest for an
unbeaten season inside
the
Tri-Valley
Conference
Saturday
afternoon after gaining a
4-2 win over league foe
Federal Hocking.
Following its sectional
championship victory
over Buffalo on Friday
The Bend Area team
jumped back into TVC
Hocking Division play
with a Saturday afternoon make-up date with
the Lancers. Zack Warth
banged out three hits
while Anthony Bond and
Brice Clark added two
safeties apiece to lead a
nine hit offensive attack
for Wahama to back the
five hit complete game
pitching
of
Wyatt
Zuspan.
The conference win
extended the Falcons
league diamond record to
15-0 on the spring with a
final make-up date with
South Gallia scheduled
for Thursday. Overall
WHS set a school record
with its 26th win of the

Zuspan

Warth

season to surpass the previous high of 25 victories
recorded by the Falcons
1996
State
Championship
team.
The Bend Area team has
dropped four encounters
on the 2011 campaign.
Wahama scored three
times in the third before
adding another tally in
the fourth and that was
all Zuspan needed. The
freshman right-hander
yielded a run in the sixth
and another in the seventh to the Lancers while
striking out six and walking none in pushing his
mound record to 4-1 on
the year.
Warth collected three
singles with Bond adding
a double and a single and
Clark a pair of singles to
pace the WHS offense.
Tyler Kitchen and Isaac

Lee rounded out the
Falcon safeties with a
base knock each while
Wesley Harrison and
Kitchen drove in a run
each with sacrifice flies
to center.
Federal
Hocking
received a couple of singles from Isaac Stook in
addition to run producing
doubles from Wes Dixon
and Austin Russell.
Brad Church also came
up with a base knock for
the Lancers.
Wahama will try and
wrap up its first unbeaten
TVC title on Thursday
when the White Falcons
visit South Gallia before
jumping back into the
post-season
with
a
Region IV semifinal outing against Charleston
Catholic. The regional
affair with the Irish will
be a 6 p.m. outing on
Monday at Triana Field
on the campus of the
University of Charleston.
WAHAMA 4,
FEDERAL HOCKING 2
Wahama 003 100 0
Fed Hock 000 001 1

—490
—252

WAHAMA
(26-4,
15-0
TVC
Hocking): Wyatt Zuspan and Wesley
Harrison.
FEDERAL HOCKING (n/a): Hatfield
and Stook.
WP — Zuspan; LP — Hatfield.

Somerville, Cottrill finish season at state
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHARLESTON,
W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant duo of Taylor
Somerville and Claire
Cottrill had their respective seasons come to a
close Friday afternoon at
the 2011 WVSSAC Girls
Tennis Class AA-A
championships held at
Coonskin
Park
in
Kanawha County.
Both ladies came away
with at least one victory
at the two-day competition, but neither Lady
Knight advanced past
second-round of play on
Friday.
Somerville — who was

Somerville

Cottrill

the Class AA-A runnerup in No. 2 singles in
2010 — played in two
matches in the No.1 singles bracket this weekend while finishing with
a 1-1 overall mark.
Somerville defeated
Whitney Chaffin of
Wyoming East by an 8-4
margin in the opening

round, then dropped a 18 decision to Mary
Maddox of Charleston
Catholic in the second
round — which ended
the junior’s singles tournament.
Somerville and Cottrill
— a senior — also qualified for state in the No. 1
doubles division, where
the duo also posted a 1-1
record.
Cottrill and Somerville
earned an 8-6 victory
over the Independence
duo of Savannah Taylor
and Kaitlyn Spencer in
the opening round, but
lost in the second round
to Keyser’s Ashley
Elliott and Ana Luisa
Matta by a 6-8 margin.

Rio’s Mattia reaches National Meet
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm junior sprinter
Cassie Mattia had one last
chance to qualify for the
NAIA Outdoor National
Championship Meet in
the 800-meter event on
Saturday at the Louisville
Twilight Meet.
Mattia, a native of West

Chester, OH, had narrowly missed qualifying in
each of the last two meets
for the RedStorm and
needed to hit 2:16 to qualify for the “B” standard.
Mattia ran a strong second in the race with a time
of 2:15.40. After a double
check of the results it was
determined that the
orginally posted time of
2:17.40 was incorrect.

The
Rio
Grande
women’s team will represented by Mattia at the
NAIA Meet.
Senior
race-walker
Kyle Hively (Vinton, OH)
will compete in the 5,000meter race walk on the
men’s side.
The NAIA Outdoor
National Championships
are May 26-28 in Marian,
Ind.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Wednesday, May 18, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A10

River Valley’s Keyana Ward
2011 River Valley Lady Raiders — Ohio Valley Conference Track and Field Champions

Lady Raiders win first OVC Track title
B Y S ARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE..COM

COAL GROVE, Ohio
— The River Valley
Lady Raiders earned
the school’s first Ohio
Valley
Conference
Track and Field title on
Friday evening at Coal
Grove High School.
The Lady Raiders
won by a six point margin, 129-123, over host
Coal Grove. Two-time
defending champion
Fairland was third with
113 points.
“I’m really proud of
these girls,” said River
Valley girls track and
field
coach
Jacob

Nolan. “They had a
plan, a very difficult
plan, to win the meet,
and they all stepped up
and did their part. They
were exhausted and
spent by the end of the
night, but they all did
their part.”
The River Valley girls
team took top honors in
10 of the 17 events at
the meet.
Senior Jessica Hager
claimed the OVC title
in the 100 meter hurdles (15.7 seconds),
300 meter hurdles
(46.7) and 200 meter
dash (26.5). Katie
Blodgett also earned
three event champi-

onships, the 800 meter
run (2:29), the 1600
meter run (5:35) and
the 3200 meter run
(12:13).
Kaitie Roberts won
the discus title with a
throw of 108-2 and
JaiNai Fields took the
top spot in the 400
meter dash (1:00.5).
The girls 4x400 meter
relay team of Fields,
Kelsey Sands, Sheyan
McGrath and Hager
took first with a time of
4:24 and the 4x800
meter relay team of
Blodgett,
McGrath,
Keyana Ward and Rylie
Hollingsworth
won
with a time of 10:57.

The boys team placed
sixth in the six team
field with a total of 29
points.
Coal Grove
won its third straight
boys title with a score
of 172 points.
The top River Valley
boys finishers were the
4x200 meter relay team
in third (1:53), Patrick
Williams in fourth
place in the 200 meter
dash (23.9), the 4x800
relay team in fourth
(10:08) and the 4x100
meter relay team in
fourth (49.9).
Individual phots by
Kent Sanborn, southernohiosportsphotos.com

River Valley’s Kyle Brown

Devils finish 2nd at SEOAL meet; Angels place 4th
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
— The Logan boys and
Chillicothe girls proved
themselves as the undisputed kings and queens of
the conference Saturday
afternoon at the 2011
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League track and
field championships held
at Chillicothe High
School in Ross County.
Both the Chieftains and
the Lady Cavaliers won
their respective league
titles by at least doubledigits. Logan (170 points)
captured its third consecutive SEOAL crown by a
42-point margin over runner-up Gallia Academy,
while the Lady Cavs
(161.75) won their firstever SEOAL track title by
16 points over secondplace Marietta.
The Blue Devils tallied
128 team points in finishing second during the
boys competition, followed by Marietta (107),
Chillicothe (82) and
Warren (72) in the topfive. Jackson (58) and
Portsmouth (40) rounded
out the seven-team boys
field.
The Devils came away
with five championships
in 17 events, including a
pair of individual titles for
senior Austin Wilson.
Wilson captured first in
both the 100m (11.14)
and 200m (22.79) dashes
and was also part of a

third crown.
The quartet of Wilson,
Frank Goff, Ethan Moore
and Tyler Campbell came
away with top honors in
the 4x100m relay after
posting a winning mark of
44.12 seconds.
Senior Matt Watts won
the 1600m run with a time
of 4:29.17, while senior
Jonathon Caldwell captured gold in the 300m
hurdles event with a time
of 40.16 seconds.
Both Marietta (145.75)
and Warren (97.75) joined
Chillicothe in finishing
ahead of the Blue Angels,
who placed fourth overall
with 86 team points.
Logan
(63.75),
Portsmouth (55) and
Jackson (49) rounded out
the seven-team field.
The Angels came away
with only three league
titles in 17 events and also
failed to finish as one of
the top-three teams in the
SEOAL for the first time
since the turn of the millennium.
Senior
Samantha
Barnes captured the 800m
crown with a time of
2:24.82, while junior
Mckenna Warner took
first in the 3200m run
with a mark of 11:43.95.
Junior Peyton Adkins
won her third consecutive
1600m SEOAL title with
a time of 5:14.90.
Complete results of the
2011 SEOAL track and
field championships are
available on the web at
www.baumspage.com

Gallia Academy’s Matt Watts

Gallia Academy’s McKenna Warner

Gallia Academy’s Madison Holley

Photos Courtesy of Paul Boggs, Jackson County Times-Journal

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