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                  <text>Donating to food
pantry, Page 2

Sports on page 9

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 82

Horse show set

PORTLAND — The
Portland
Community
Center will sponsor a
competitive horse show at
11 a.m., Monday, May 30
at the show ring.
Refreshments available
and all proceeds go to
maintaining the show
ring. Call 590-9936 or
843-5216 for more information.

Office closed

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will be
closed on Memorial Day.

Free dinner

POMEROY — Free
community dinner, 4:306 p.m., Wednesday, May
25 at New Beginnings
United Methodist Church
with baked steak, dinner
and dessert.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mayor: Council memberʼs claims ʻnot factualʼ
Houston challenges anti-tampering policy in letter
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
—
Middleport’s mayor disputed the claims of a
councilwoman
who
claims she was treated
unfairly by the village
public works department,
reading a statement prepared by the village attorney at Monday evening’s
regular council meeting.
Mayor
Michael
Gerlach read a prepared
statement on behalf of

council relating to a letter
to the editor of The Daily
Sentinel,
in
which
Councilwoman
Julia
Houston accused the village of a “power play.”
Houston was forced to
place a locking device on
her water meter after a
plumber repairing a leak
disconnected her water at
the meter — a violation
of a village ordinance.
Houston’s water service
was turned off without
notice on April 22, and

she claimed in her letter
the work involved in
placing the lock on the
meter would cost as
much as $1,200.
“A single $100 plumbing job is now costing us
about a thousand because
of a power play from the
powers that be,” Houston
said. At a recent meeting,
she suggested the village
form an arbitration committee to assist residents
facing similar action.
Gerlach
disputed

Houston’s claim she had
been “charged” with any
violation, and disputed
her cost estimates, as
well.
Gerlach said last week
he had met with Village
Solicitor Jennifer Sheets
about Houston’s claims,
printed in The Daily
Sentinel on May 15. He
said her account of what
happened was not true,
and that her claims have
become a legal issue for
the village.

BURLINGHAM —
Burlingham
Modern
Woodmen will hold a
fundraising dinner from
11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
hall, with proceeds to
benefit repairs at the
Burlingham church.
Donations will be
accepted for the meal,
dessert
and
drink.
Carryout is available.
Anyone who would like
to purchase a whole pie
the day of the dinner may
call 992-7770 to order.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Annual sale

Refuse
collection

MIDDLEPORT
—
Rumpke waste removal
and recycling collection
service will not take place
on
Memorial
Day.
Service will be delayed
for one day during the
week
following
Memorial Day.

Serious play
Brian J. Reed/photos
Kids weren't the only ones enjoying one
of this spring's few sunny days. After
enduring days of rainy weather, these
men took to a vacant lot on Mechanic
Street Monday afternoon for some serious tackle football, sunshine and exercise.

Homestead exemption deadline June 6
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Ruth Ellen Jewell
• Helen L. Norris
• Ronald R. Reuter

WEATHER

POMEROY
—
Applications for the
Homestead
Tax
Exemption Program are
currently being accepted
in the Meigs County
Auditor’s Office with the
deadline for applying set
for June 6.
Any homeowner who
is or will be 65 years of
age in 2011 or older or
those who are permanently disabled regardless of income may
apply.
The
exemption,

which takes the form of
a tax credit on property
tax bills, allows qualifying homeowners of real
estate and manufactured
homes
to
exempt
$25,000 of the market
value of their homes
from property taxes.
Those who are on the
program do not need to
reapply.
Application
forms are available online
at:
www.meigscountyauditor.org or in the auditors
office. Also, those interested can call 992-2698
and request an application be mailed.

According to the
Ohio Department of
Taxation, in 2007, state
leaders expanded the
homestead exemption to
make property tax relief
available to more than a
half million additional
senior citizens and permanently and totally disabled Ohioans.
The
homestead
exemption dates back to
1971 and has long
offered those who qualify the chance to shield
part of their “homestead” — a dwelling and
up to one acre — from
property taxation. But

for years, most senior
citizens and disabled
Ohioans were excluded
because of income tests.
The
redesigned
exemption offers all
eligible homeowners,
regardless of income,
the opportunity to
shield up to $25,000 of
the market value of
their homestead from
property taxation. That
means a home valued
at $100,000 will generally be taxed as if it
was valued at $75,000.
On average, those who
qualify are saving $400
per year.

Three levies likely on Middleport ballot
BY BRIAN J. REED
High: 84
Low: 63

INDEX
1 SECTION — 1O PAGES

Classifieds
A7
Comics
A6
Editorials
A4
Sports
B Section
© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

See MAYOR, Page 5

Pomeroy
receives
$2 million
in grants

Fundraising
dinner

COOLVILLE
—
Grace Brethren Church
will hold its annual rummage sale from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. on June 3, to support church camp expenses for children in the
church. It is located at
26180 Rock St.

“We want to thank
Councilwoman Houston
for the positive comments she made about the
efforts the public works
department has made for
the village. They have
done a wonderful job of
upgrading the water and
sewer infrastructure at no
cost to the village.”
“However
Council
woman Houston clearly
violated a village ordinance, and everyone has

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
—
Middleport
Village
Council approved placement of a replacement
tax levy for current
expenses and a new levy
for street lights at
Monday’s regular meeting.
At council’s meeting
Monday
evening,
Fiscal Officer Susan
Baker was authorized
to place a new two-mill
levy on the November
ballot, to help pay the
cost of street lights. A

second,
three-mill
levy, will also appear
with proceeds going to
the general fund operation.
Council also asked
Baker to seek from the
county auditor projected
revenue from a two-mill
levy up for renewal in
November, as well. That
levy’s proceeds are earmarked for fire protection.
Other business
Ronald
Vance,
Pomeroy, requested permission of council to
reside in a camper trailer on his property on

Park Street, until he is
able to finish construction of a new residence
there. His request was
denied,
because,
Gerlach said, Federal
E m e r g e n c y
Management Agency
would not allow him to
place the vehicle in the
flood plain, and living in
such a home is against
village ordinances.
Councilman
Craig
Wehrung noted enforcement of dog-curbing and
cleanup ordinances in
Syracuse, and suggested
that the village consider
doing the same.

Council also:
• Approved an annual
agreement
with
Overbrook Center, in
which the village agrees
to provide potable water
to the facility in the
event of a service interruption or emergency.
• Approved renewal
of the village’s liability
insurance policy, at an
annual cost of $30,830.
• Approved
the
mayor’s report of fees
and fines collected in
April, $6,469.50.
• Approved payment
of bills in the amount of
$16,795.15.

POMEROY — Some
refreshingly good financial news came out of
Pomeroy this week when
village council learned
$2 million had been
secured for upgrades to
the sewage system.
Mayor John Musser
and Village Administrator
Paul Hellman announced
the village had been
approved for $1.2 million
in loan forgiveness from
the Ohio Public Works
Commission, $500,000 in
Community Development
Block Grant money and
$250,000
from
the
Appalachian Regional
Commission.
Hellman said all these
funds will go toward
upgrading
antiquated
Combined
Sewer
Overflows (which is
mandated by the US
Environmental Protection
Agency) and Ohio EPA
mandated upgrades at the
sewage treatment plant.
Hellman guessed the total
price tag on upgrades to
CSO’s and the sewage
treatment plant was
around $4 million.
Pomeroy
received
even more good news
when Hellman said it was
approved for $101,760
from the OPWC in emergency funds to repair the
slip on Liberty Lane. The
village will have to kick
in $25,440 as a match
though Musser said this
will be done not with
funds but with in-kind
labor and equipment.
Council also voted to
request certification from
the county auditor’s
office on two renewal
levies which run out this
year. One of the levies is
a one mill street light levy
and the other is a two mill
fire protection levy.
Council also transferred $5,000 from the
general to the street fund.
Police Chief Mark E.
Proffitt said there would
be parking meters placed
at all downtown parking
spaces which are handicapped. He said there
have been problems with
some motorists parking
their vehicles all day in
the spots.
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy
Hysell asked for new
inventory lists from village supervisors for
insurance purposes.
Council members at
the meeting were Jackie
Welker, Jim Sisson, Pete
Barnhart, Ruth Spaun
and Phil Ohlinger.

�Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Community Calendar

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gallipolis native appears on Wheel of Fortune
BY AMBER GILLENWATER

Community meetings
Thursday, May 26
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers Plains VFW
Post 9053, 6:30 p.m., at hall.
Church events
Wednesday, May 25
POMEROY — Free community dinner, 4:30-6
p.m., Wednesday, May 25 at New Beginnings
United Methodist Church with baked steak, dinner
and dessert.
Sunday, May 29
CARPENTER — Ray Family Singers, West
Virginia, to sing at 6:30 p.m., Mt. Union Baptist
Church.

RCP auditioning
for “Camelot”
MIDDLEPORT – Auditions for the River City
Players’ Labor Day production of Camelot will be
held on Saturday, June 11 from 1 a.m. to noon and 2
to 4 p.m. and Sunday, June 12 from 2 to 5 p.m. at the
RCP’s headquarters on the T in Middleport.
Both male and female adults and teenagers are welcome to audition for all character roles as well as the
chorus. Individuals coming to the audition are asked
to be prepared to read for roles and perform a musical
selection of their choice. Accompaniment will not be
provided.
Information about the show and audition forms are
available on the River City Players’ website,
www.rcplayers.net. Additional information is available at 992-6759.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS — A
Gallipolis native will be
a guest contestant on
Wheel of Fortune on
Thursday.
Susan
ThomasLocke, a physician and
Arlington, Tenn., resident, is a 1991 graduate
of Gallia Academy
High School and will
appear on Wheel of
Fortune along with her
adoptive
daughter,
Ashley Locke for the
family week competition.
“My granddaughter is
good at the game and
thought it would be fun
and, possibly, beneficial
financially,” Dr. Bill

Thomas, an optometrist
and Susan ThomasLocke’s father who
resides in Gallipolis,
said. “So, they were
picked among 500
applicants to audition to
become a contestant
late in January.”
The taping of the
show took place on
March 11 at Sony
Studios in Culver City,
California, an event that
Thomas and his family
flew out to see.
“Just the fact that a
Gallipolis native is
going to appear on a
show as popular as that
is pretty good,” Thomas
said.
In addition to Thomas
who
resides
in
Gallipolis,
Thomas-

Susan Thomas-Locke

Locke’s grandmother,
Marcella Baker is also a
Gallipolis
resident.
Thomas-Locke’s mother, Frances Peterson and
step-father,
Dean
Peterson, reside in
Russell, Ky.

Although, according
to Thomas, the audience
members and contestants of the show are not
prohibited from discussing the outcome of
the games, he is keeping
the results a secret and
is hopeful that everyone
will tune in to see a
Gallipolis native on the
popular, national game
show.
“I’ve told everybody I
know but I can’t come
in contact with as many
people and there are a
lot of people that know
me and know Susan,”
Thomas said. “I think
people would really be
interested in seeing it.”
Wheel of Fortune airs
nightly at 7 p.m. on
local television stations.

Donating to food pantry

Ohio River Live
invades Cliffside

Amber Gillenwater/photo

Music fans packed the Cliffside Golf Course clubhouse on Friday night to listen to the tunes of Point
Pleasant native Paul Doeffinger. The event was sponsored by Ohio River Live and was a fundraising event
for the organization. Ohio River Live was formed by a
group of Gallia County residents dedicated to promoting tourism and economic growth in Gallipolis and
Gallia County through live music. The group is currently organizing an all-day music festival set for
Saturday, Sept. 3, in Gallipolis. Ohio River Live will
again be hosting a fundraising music event at 9 p.m.,
June 18, at the Down Under in Gallipolis with Valley
Road performing. For more information visit Ohio
River Liveʼs facebook page or call the Down Under at
(740) 446-7885.

Radio host says worldʼs end
actually coming in October
ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND, Calif. —
As crestfallen followers
of a California preacher
who foresaw the world's
end strained to find meaning in their lives, Harold
Camping revised his
apocalyptic
prophecy
Monday, saying he was
off by five months and the
Earth actually will be
obliterated on Oct. 21.
Camping, who predicted that 200 million
Christians would be taken
to heaven Saturday before
global cataclysm struck
the planet, said he felt so
terrible when his doomsday message did not come
true that he left home and
took refuge in a motel
with his wife. His independent ministry, Family
Radio International, spent
millions — some of it
from donations made by
followers — on more than
5,000 billboards and 20

RVs plastered with the
Judgment Day message.
Follower Jeff Hopkins
also spent a good deal of
his own retirement savings on gas money to
power his car so people
would see its ominous
lighted sign showcasing
Camping's May 21 warning. As the appointed day
drew nearer, Hopkins
started making the 100mile round trip from Long
Island to New York City
twice a day, spending at
least $15 on gas each trip.
"I've been mocked and
scoffed and cursed at and
I've been through a lot
with this lighted sign on
top of my car," said
Hopkins, 52, a former
television producer who
lives in Great River, NY.
"I was doing what I've
been instructed to do
through the Bible, but
now I've been stymied.
It's like getting slapped in
the face."

Charlene Hoeflich/photo
David P. Casci, Sr., representing the Knights of Columbus Council 1664 of Sacred Heart Parish, Pomeroy,
presents a check to Teresa Carr of Rejoicing Life Church to help with food and supplies for the churchʼs
food pantry. The pantry is open to the public on Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. It is located at the
church, 500 North Second Av., Middleport. The pantry operates by donations only.

Ohio man denies killing woman found in septic tank
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOGAN — The
father-in-law
of
a
woman found dead in a
septic tank in southeast
Ohio has pleaded not
guilty
to
murder
charges.
Fo r t y - s eve n - y e a rold William Inman

entered the pleas in
Hocking County on
Tuesday to two counts
of aggravated murder
and one count each of
murder, kidnapping,
tampering with evidence and gross abuse
of a corpse. He could
face the death penalty
if convicted.

Summer Inman was
found strangled March
29 in neighboring
Athens County.
Her estranged husband,
26-year-old
William Inman II,
pleaded not guilty on
Monday to the same
charges
and
also
could face the death

penalty.
A jury indicted the
men Friday. Both men
have been in jail since
they were indicted earlier on charges of kidnapping the woman.
They are each being
held on $1 million
bond.

�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar

Page A3
A S K D R . B RO T H E R S

Carpet &amp; Flooring Sale

Dettwiller Lumber

Dr. Joyce Brothers

STIHL HomeScaper Series

With New Beginnings

100’s of styles to choose from!

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of old carpet

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FS55R Trimmer

$219.95

Built to match the job, the
heavy-duty straight shaft FS 55
R STIHL HomeScaper Series ™
trimmer is lightweight and compact. With a loop handle design,
this string trimmer is great when you
need to maneuver the cutting head
around obstacles in your landscape.

106 E. Main Street • Pomeroy, OH

740-992-3671

F545 Trimmer

$149.95

This value-priced grass and
weed trimmer is perfect for a
homeowner's yard trimming tasks.
The FS 45, the lightest weight model
in the STIHL HomeScaper Series ™,
has a curved shaft for trimming around
shrubs or fences. It's no wonder this is
one of the most popular string trimmers in the STIHL lineup.

Michele Garretson Musser - Owner/Artist
Custom made
Hand painted
wood

Personalized
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Funeral or
all occasion
lanterns

Wood worker
in house

122 W. Main Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

634 E. Main Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5500

1-740-444-5900

*see store for details

Make a Difference In Our Community!
Spread the Word – Shop Local!
Make a decision to find and patronize a locally owned
business, wherever possible. For every $100 spent in
independently-owned stores, $68 comes back to the
community through taxes, payroll, and other expenditures.
If you spend that same $100 in a national chain, only $43
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�OPINION

Page A4
Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Drinking linked to problems
Army tries new brain
scans to hunt blast effects in the ballpark stands
BY KRISTIN M. HALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

FORT CAMPBELL,
Ky. (AP) — After a mortar
exploded next to Spc.
James Saylor last year in
Afghanistan, he underwent a series of scans to
see how the explosion
affected
his
brain.
Standard
CT
scans
showed no obvious signs
of damage, but his symptoms were impossible to
ignore.
The 31-year-old father
of two was quick to anger
and had vivid nightmares
and short-term memory
loss. So his doctors at the
Army’s Fort Campbell
tried a brain imaging procedure more commonly
used to study dementia
and found decreased levels of blood flow in some
areas of his brain.
“What’s
interesting
here is that we are seeing
things here that we can’t
see in their standard CT
scan,” said Maj. Andrew
Fong, chief of radiology
at the post’s Blanchfield
Army
Community
Hospital. “We also can’t
see it on a traditional
MRI.”
The scan, called singlephoton emission computerized tomography or
SPECT, produces data
about the level of perfusion, or blood flow inside
the brain, which is rendered in colors from red
and white to blue and
grey. The results helped
doctors confirm their
diagnosis of a brain
injury and determine
treatment.
Since 2000, the military estimates more than
200,000 soldiers have
mild traumatic brain
injuries, or concussions,
which has become the
signature wound from
extended guerrilla wars.
But the military is finding
these wounds created by
improvised
explosive
devices can be as hard to
catch as they are to treat.
While normal CT scans
can find contusions and
brain bruising, more

sophisticated technology
is needed to help radiologists and neurologists
determine more subtle
changes to the brain,
Fong said.
Fong said while the
SPECT scan has been
used to study dementia
and Alzheimer’s, it’s
underused in the military.
Fort Campbell is one of
only two military installations to use the scan to
study traumatic head
injuries and concussions
caused by war, he said.
“We’re basically looking at soldier’s brain
function and we are
noticing a decline in brain
function in certain areas
of the brain,” Fong said.
“Standard equipment and
standard software shows
no abnormality most of
the time.”
In the scans, colors correspond to the level of
blood flow, with white
and red showing areas of
high perfusion and darker
areas showing low perfusion. Some more active
areas of the brain naturally are “hotter” than other
parts and age can also
slow down blood flow,
Fong said.
“When
you
are
younger, like a lot of our
soldiers are, you expect a
lot of perfusion — a lot of
activity because their
brains are fresh,” he said.
But as Fong started
looking at soldiers who
were coming back from
war with brain injuries, he
saw large areas of their
brains that were less active
than normal. “We are seeing in these guys with
decreased perfusion and
they are in their 20s,” Fong
said.
Pointing to a dark area
in one image, he notes
they’ve been seeing several soldiers who have less
blood flow in the temporal
lobes. Once he started discussing the scans with Dr.
David Twillie, director of
Fort Campbell’s brain
injury center, they wondered whether the scans
were showing them the
effects of a blast injury.

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Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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The temporal lobes sit
behind the eye sockets on
either side of the brain and
are in the path of the
shockwaves produced by
blasts, Fong explains. “We
are thinking maybe that is
related,” Fong said.
In addition to his brain
injury, Saylor was also
diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He’s
been taking medications
for his nightmares, which
were at times vivid enough
that his wife, Tiffany, had
to wake him up because he
was fighting in his sleep.
“You relieve what
you’ve been through, over
and over,” he said. “You
see other things that could
have happened. It’s a constant battle.”
Twillie said that the
scans can also illustrate
areas of the brain that are
overactive, which can be
associated with symptoms
of PTSD.
“Some patients have
both TBI and PTSD,
which in our population,
about half have a dual
diagnosis,” he said. “Dr.
Fong will alert us to areas
of increased blood flow in
the places where emotions
are controlled. It will help
us confirm the diagnosis
that we are seeing clinically.”
In the beginning, Saylor,
like a lot of soldiers, wasn’t entirely convinced that
a concussion could be
causing his symptoms.
“When I first came in, I
was like, ‘Why am I going
through this program?’” he
said. “I’ve had a concussion
before when I was younger,
playing football.”
But as his doctors started
to show him how the injury
affected his mood and function, he said he now has a
better understanding of
how to control his emotions. His wife, who has
been supporting him
through the rehabilitation,
said the scans were an eyeopener.
“You can see what is
wrong,” Tiffany said. “It’s
set down in front of you in
black, blue, orange and
yellow.”

BY EDDIE PELLS
AP NATIONAL WRITER

It was “College Night”
at the Brewers game and
season ticket holder Aaron
Gross knew what that
meant.
Cheap tickets for sale.
Cheap beer at the tailgate
parties. Plenty of boozefueled trash talk inside the
stadium. And, eventually,
some
alcohol-induced
insults leading to sudssoaked fisticuffs.
“I have no problem with
heckling people, that’s
part of the game. But they
were crossing lines,” said
Gross, who found himself
— along with his wife —
caught near a brawl on a
night when college students got in for half price.
“It got unpleasant to the
point where we left the
game. The whole section
was completely drunk and
obnoxious. We left in the
fourth inning, just said,
‘That’s enough.’”
At eight stadiums across
the country — Miller Park
in Milwaukee, Coors
Field in Denver, Busch
Stadium in St. Louis
among them — fans told
The Associated Press similar stories in recent
weeks, reinforcing a fact
of life at American stadiums: Alcohol is as big a
part of going to a baseball
game as peanuts and
Cracker Jacks.
And while much of the
boorish, and even criminal, behavior at the ballpark involves alcohol,
expect the suds to keep on
flowing. The business
partnership between beer
and baseball is as intertwined as the bond
between pitcher and
catcher.
From the 1970s-era
debacles of 10-cent Beer
Night in Cleveland and
Disco Demolition Night
in Chicago to this season’s
most disturbing moment
— the coma-inducing
attack on a Giants fan at
Dodgers Stadium —
there’s an alcohol-related
slant to many incidents
involving unruly fans at

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

baseball parks.
Last weekend, authorities arrested 31-year-old
Giovanni Ramirez, the
man they say was the
main aggressor in the
beating of Giants fan
Bryan Stow in the parking
lot at Dodgers Stadium
following the season
opener. In the days after
the beating, Los Angeles
canceled six half-price
beer nights scheduled for
2011. Witnesses said the
people who attacked Stow
were apparently drunk.
“When at least a certain
portion of folks go to
venues, they’re there to
have a good time and part
of the good time is they’re
going to have a few cocktails before they go and a
few more when they’re in
the stadium,” said Robert
Pandina, the director of
the Center of Alcohol
Studies
at
Rutgers
University.
“What’s alarming is the
increased risk, because
you have so many people
in the stadium who are
becoming intoxicated. A
lot of them are young
men. It becomes kind of a
tinderbox for aggression.”
At the University of
Minnesota, researchers
became interested in the
topic of drunkenness at
games after seeing a
steady stream of small
news items involving
assaults, car accidents and
rowdy behavior by drunken fans. Among the findings from the school’s
studies since 2005:
— Alcohol laws and
guidelines at stadiums are
poorly
enforced:
Researchers said 74 percent of people pretending
to be drunk were served
and they were three times
more likely to buy it from
a vendor working the
stands than a concession
booth.
— Thousands of fans
leaving games and getting
into their cars are drunk:
Researchers took breathalyzer tests of 362 fans at
13 baseball and three NFL
games and found 8 percent of them — 1 in 12 —

were legally drunk, while
40 percent of them had at
least something to drink.
That 8 percent, when multiplied by the thosands of
people attending games
nationwide, leads to a
staggering number.
“I hear from people
who’d been going to
games their entire life,
they say, ‘I don’t go to
games anymore,’” said
Darin Erickson, who
worked on the University
of Minnesota studies.
“They tell stories about
people swearing blatantly,
throwing things and
fights. It’s not always
actual assaults, but some
of the people I talk to just
aren’t comfortable with
the environment. And it
seems that they’re often
saying it’s attributable to
general drunkenness.”
Coors Field usher
Travis Wilson saw a lot of
that sort of behavior play
out last season from his
perch above centerfield,
looking up into the rowdy
Rockpile, where the tickets cost only $4 and
there’s plenty of extra
cash for fans to spend on
the ballpark’s namesake
beer.
“Pretty common,” said
Wilson, who works the
Colorado Rockies games
in Denver, when asked
how often fights broke out
in the cheap seats.
“Sometimes, it depends
on the rivalry in town, if
it’s a team we have a history with. It doesn’t
always have to do with
alcohol, but a lot of times,
it’s a contributing factor.”
Wilson said he never
kept count of how many
people got dragged off by
police, some of them to
the holding cells at the
stadium. But, he said, it
was hardly a rare event.
AP reporters asked
eight teams, including
Colorado, for arrest statistics at their ballparks and
none of the teams provided answers. All, however,
said they were working
aggressively to curb alcohol-related problems in
the stands.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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Advertising Director

�Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Obituaries
Helen Louise
Haggy Fields
Norris

Helen Louise Haggy
Fields Norris, 73, went
home to be with the Lord
on May 22, 2011, at
Spartanburg
Regional
Medical
Center,
Spartanburg, SC.
She was born on March
26,
1938,
in
Summersville,
W.Va.,
daughter of the late Jessie
Haggy and Madeline
Bostic Haggy McClung.
She was a graduate of the
West Virginia School of
Banking.
She
was
employed by Citizens
National Bank as a Vice
President and Loan
Officer. She was a member of the Middleport
Church of Christ. She
attended the First Baptist
Church in Spartanburg.
She loved spending time
with family, friends and
especially her grandchildren.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
by: husbands, Raymond
Fields and Carroll Norris.
She is survived by:
son, Rev. Myron Fields,
Tazwell, Va; daughters,
Melanie
(Marcus)
Alverson, Spartanburg,
SC; step daughter, Eileen
(Jerry)
Harter,
Circleville;
brothers:
Steve (Brenda) Haggy,
Pomeroy;
Danny
(Twilla)
Haggy,
Columbus;
sisters,
Margaret
(Rodney)
Spencer, Sebring, Fla.;
Linda Larson, Altamonte
Springs, Fla.; Pat Barton,
Pomeroy; Betty (Ray)
Cook, Pomeroy; Carol
(Samson)
Hall,
Pomeroy; grandchildren,
Kelsey Hamlin, Brianna
Hamlin, Carter Hamlin,
Mallory Alverson; sisterin-law, Eileen Clark
Fields of New Haven,
W.Va.; and many nieces
and nephews.

Funeral service will
be at 11 a.m., Friday,
May 27, 2011, at
Anderson Funeral Home
in New Haven, W.Va.
Officiating will be
Pastor Al Hartson.
Burial will be in
Graham
Station
Cemetery. Friends may
call on Thursday, May
26, from 6-8 p.m. at the
funeral home. In Lieu of
flowers memorials may
be made to Middleport
Church
of
Christ,
Middleport.
An on-line registry is
available at www.andersonfh.com

Ruth Ellen
(Brickles)
Jewell

Ruth Ellen (Brickles)
Jewell, 84, a native of
Meigs County, passed
away Monday, May 23,
2011 at her home in Coal
Grove.
She was preceded in
death by her husband,
Raymond L. (Jack)
Jewell, also of Meigs
County, and is survived
by their three children;
Nedra Kearns and Kathy
Truesdell of South Point;
and Jeff Jewell of
Delaware; eight grandchildren; several greatgrandchildren, and a host
of nieces, nephews and
other family members,
including Leonard and
Norma Louise Jewell of
Pomeroy.
She was born April
22, 1927 in Pomeroy to
the late Eugene and Ethel
(Courtney) Brickles and
was a 1945 graduate of
Pomeroy High School.
In addition to her parents,
Mrs. Jewell was preceded
in death by two brothers;
Robert and Max, and two
sisters;
Olive
and
Alberta.
Mrs. Jewell had been
a resident of Goal Grove
for over 60 years, during
which time she was
blessed with the friendship of Mrs. Gail (Wilds)
Colley who survives her
in Goal Grove.
Graveside
services
will be held at Highland
Memorial Gardens in
South
Point
on
Thursday, May 26, 2011
at 11 a.m. In lieu of
flowers, memorials may
be made to Community
Hospice, 1538 Central
Avenue, Ashland, KY
41101.

Deaths
Ronald (Ron) R. Reuter
Ronald (Ron) R. Reuter, 59, of Denver, Colo. and formerly of Pomeroy, recently passed away.
A memorial service will be announced at a later date.

Storms slam
Midwest
ASSOCIATED PRESS
JOPLIN, Mo. —
Crews busted holes in
concrete slabs and
sifted through strewn
home goods Tuesday
as rescuers focused on
crumpled
big-box
stores and apartment
complexes in Joplin in
a frantic search for
survivors of the deadliest single U.S. tornado in about 60 years.
One team poked
through the remains of
a Home Depot store,
while others searched a
Walmart and wrecked
apartments as the clock
ticked down on another
round of severe storms.
A hunt through the
rubble using searchand-rescue dogs was
planned, and officials
expected to test the
city's nine warning
sirens while the sun
was still shining.
The
Storm
Prediction Center in
Norman,
Okla.,
warned of a moderate risk of severe
weather
later
Tuesday in central
and southeast Kansas
and
southwestern
Missouri,
which
could include Joplin.
The center raised the
warning for severe
weather in central
Oklahoma, southern
Kansas and north
Texas to high risk,
indicating that tornadoes will hit in those
areas.
The
Storm
Prediction Center also
issued a high-risk
warning before a tornado outbreak in the
South in April that
killed more than 300
people.
"This is a very serious situation brewing," center director
Russell
Schneider
said.
The massive tornado that ripped through
the heart of the bluecollar
southwest
Missouri city of
50,000 people on
Sunday was the deadliest on record in nearly six decades.
Sam Murphey, a
spokesman for Gov.
Jay Nixon's office,
said Tuesday that
117 bodies had been
found but he didn't
know
when
or
where the latest one
was discovered. Fire
chief Mitch Randles
said he knew of
only 116 bodies
found.

Mayor
From Page A1
to obey the law, especially council members. The
ordinance in question
contains the standard
language used by the
Ohio Revised Code and
is referred to in the Ohio
Administrative Code.”
“It was first introduced in Middleport by
the Board of Public
Affairs. They restated
the policy in 1994. It
became an ordinance of
council in 1998. When
the current council
again approved the
ordinance in 2008,
(Houston) voted for the
ordinance along with all
the members of council.”
“In the incident
involving
Houston,
there were no charges
filed against her and
she paid no fines. She

was, as set forth in the
ordinance, required to
place a locking device
on her meter. The village provided this at
no cost and the cost to
the Houstons to have
a plumber install the
locking device was
less than $100 — not
the $700 to $1,200
she reported in her
letter.”
“The timelines and
quotes Councilwoman
Houston attributed to village employees are not
factual.”
During the meeting’s
open discussion period, Houston responded
to the statement with
references to the Ohio
Revised Code, but
Gerlach said the statement was issued only
as
a
result
of

Houston’s letter in the
newspaper, and said
the matter was closed
for discussion.
“This has become a
legal issue, and if you
want to dispute it, you
have recourse,” Gerlach
said. “You voted for it,
and if you did not read
it before you did so, we
cannot help that.”
Gerlach said while a
plumber disconnected
the water service at the
meter, the responsibility
remains
with
the
Houstons, who are the
property owners. At least
24 other residents have
had to install the meter
locks because of tampering, Gerlach said, and
they, also have legal
recourse.

Keeping Meigs County informed

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe • 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Nixon has said 17
survivors have been
found, but Randles
said he knew of only
seven.
"We're getting sporadic calls of cries for
help from rubble piles
... most of those are
turning out to be
false," Randles said.
Rescuers found one
person alive at the
Home Depot on
Monday, but they also
discovered seven bodies under a concrete
slab, officials said.
Search-and-rescue
team leader Doug
Westhoff said team
members
have
searched as much of
the store's interior as
they can and are now
focused on what is
under collapsed concrete slabs that once
helped hold up the
store. After the holes
are drilled, dogs will
be brought in to try to
detect any human
scent.
Randles said teams
were taking advantage
of the best weather
they'd had in two days
to go through every
damaged
and
destroyed building.
After seven people
were pulled from rubble Monday, he and
others said they hoped
to find more survivors.
"It's really incredible the fact that we're
still finding people,"
Randles said.
Westhoff
also
expressed hope, but
said the outlook at the
Home Depot was
bleak because of the
size of the slabs and
magnitude of the collapse.
Until this week, the
deadliest single tornado
on record with the
National
Weather
Service in the past six
decades was a twister
that killed 116 people
in Flint, Mich., in 1953.
More deaths have
resulted from outbreaks of multiple tornadoes. On April 27, a
pack of twisters
roared across six
Southern
states,
killing 314 people,
more than two-thirds
of them in Alabama.
That was the single
deadliest day for tornadoes since the
National
Weather
Service began keeping
such records in 1950.

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 10am. Partly sunny, with a high
near 84. Calm wind becoming south between 5 and 8
mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New rainfall
amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms. Wednesday
Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63.
South wind around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is
30%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Partly sunny, with a high near 84. South wind
between 6 and 14 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph.
Chance of precipitation is 30%. New rainfall amounts
between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms. Thursday Night:
Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 10pm.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts between a
quarter and half of an inch possible.
Friday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Cloudy,
with a high near 75. Chance of precipitation is 70%.
Friday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 59. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 78. Chance of precipitation is 40%. Saturday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 62. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Partly sunny, with a high near 80. Chance of precipitation is 40%. Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 61.
Memorial Day: Partly sunny, with a high near 79.
Monday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 79.

Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 38.85
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 69.48
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 60.07
Big Lots (NYSE) — 33.09
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 30.66
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 66.29
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 15.36
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.39
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) — 3.89
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 31.51
Collins (NYSE) — 60.09
DuPont (NYSE) — 51.25
US Bank (NYSE) — 24.96
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 19.10
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 36.21
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 42.34
Kroger (NYSE) — 24.47
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 39.07
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 71.18
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.72
BBT (NYSE) — 26.21
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 12.04

Pepsico (NYSE) — 70.98
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.25
Rockwell (NYSE) — 80.96
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.05
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.68
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 70.04
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 54.78
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.92
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.08
Worthington (NYSE) — 20.63

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions
for May 24, 2011, provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac
Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero
in
Point
Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Expert: Ohio generally doesnʼt see worst tornadoes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Forecasters say Ohio generally does not see tornadoes
as powerful as the ones that
have killed scores of people in
Anderson McDaniel
Missouri and Alabama.
Funeral Home
National Weather Service
Adam McDaniel
meteorologist Mike Gallagher
&amp; James Anderson
tells The Columbus Dispatch
DIRECTORS
that tornadoes that hit Ohio
are typically at the low end of
the scale, with wind speeds up
to 110 mph.
Pre-Arrangement Planning
Gallagher
thinks
the
Middleport Pomeroy
increase stems from better
992-5141 992-5444
tornado detection.
www.andersonmcdaniel.com

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Wednesday, May 25, 2011

200

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 Dog Last seen 1/2 mile below
Lakin Hospital area, White Great
Pyranease answers to the name of
Sassy - No Collar-Reward is offered
for Return Ph 740-444-5097

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.
Donations for the up keep for
Ridgelawn Cemetery can be sent
to: Lona Houck 2286 St. Rt 218 Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

Services
Lawn Service

Alex's Lawncare Services
Honor student mowing for college
funds Quality Reliable Services w/
reasonable rates FREE Estimates
740-379-2615

Other Services

Pets

Trucks

VONAGE

Giveaway: 2 young female black
labs. Located on Redmond Ridge.
Call 304-675-3598

'92 Dodge Dakota 6 cyl, auto, full
size bed, power, cruise, rough but
reliable, runs great 446-7215 or
645-3341

No Annual contract!
No commitment!
Free Activation!
Only pay $14.99/month for
home phone servicefor the
first 3 months, then pay only
$25.99/month.
Call today! 1-888-903-3749
Professional Services

Security

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

600

Animals

Free 8 week old Part border collie
puppies Ph: 740-256-1233

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

Agriculture

165 Hay Mag disc mower 6ft cut
$3000. John Deer rake 9ft call for
price 367-0641

Pet Cremations. Call 740-446-3745

DISH NETWORK

700

Farm Equipment

Pets

DIRECTV

Giveaway-Gorgeous
Cuddly
Longed Haired Orange &amp; White
male kittens, Litter Trained 8weeks
old Ph 740-591-8973 Leave Message

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

Other Services

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

FREE KITTENS to good home. Tailless and mitten paws. Leave message 740-709-0008
Register ABCA pups. Imported
blood lines, 1st shots &amp; wormed
740-379-9110 or 740-441-2554
Free
Kittens-All
Colors-Litter
Trained-Cute &amp; Fluffy Ph 304-8127971

900

Merchandise

Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk Cars, call 740388-0884
Oiler's Towing. Now buying junk
cars w/motors or w/out. 740-3880011 or 740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.

3000

For Sale By Owner
'70 Model Lakeview Mobile Home,
good condition w/ underpinning.
Must be moved 740-388-0011

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
30 feet Cherry Kitchen Cabinets including base and wall units, also
available is a formica counter top
Ph:304-674-0541

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

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 Challenger camper 32 ft slide
out room awning. Ready to go
camping, Very clean 441-9531 or
441-5239
Prime river lot for rent, beautiful
beach, plenty of shade, for info, call
740-992-5782

2000

Automotive

Giveaway 4 yr old Male Boxer
Ph:304-675-2561 or 304-674-0564.

Autos

GIVEAWAY: male wired-hair terrier.
Call 304-812-7334

'79 Chevy Corvette L82 T-top AT,
TS, TW show condition $10,000
FIRM 740-388-0011

Real Estate
Sales

Houses For Sale
New home built on your land. $0
down for landowners. 740-4463570
135 acre farm, 1700 ft frontage on
Oh River, house, 2 barns, garage.
304-372-5419 or 304-532-2684
Home for Sale in the Stoney brook
estates Shown by Appt only. 304675-5364 or 304-674-5932
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

Land (Acreage)
2.8 acres in Syracuse on Roy
Jones Rd., Syracuse water &amp;
sewage, asking $6,800.00 614404-1381

Lots
Unimproved lots on Ohio River,
Long Bottom, rent $40 per mo.,
304-372-5419

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Apartments/
Townhouses
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
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
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.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom house &amp; apartments
for rent. No Pets, 740-992-2218
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
For Sale or Rent 2BR, all electric. S
on Rt 7. toward Crown City call 4411917 or 740-339-0820
Sm. 2bd house for rent $375 w/
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740-388-1100
GREAT BUY House in Patriot at a
bargain price call 740-379-2241 before 7pm for more details.

Lease
Apartments/
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2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting list for HUD
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4000

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Trailer for Rent Newly Remoulded 3
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Sales
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6000

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery
R &amp; J Trucking in Marietta, OH is
hiring CDL A Drivers for local
&amp;
Regional Routes. Applicants must
be at least 23 yrs have min of 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.
Education
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.
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

Food Services
Kentucky Fried Chicken is
accepting applications for
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that
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We offer a fun filled work environment as well as a competitive
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insurance opportunities. If
you are ready for a career,
please apply in person at our
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Upper River Rd.

Help Wanted - General
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
Now accepting resumes for part
time at Acquisitions 151 2nd ave
Gallipollis OH 45631 No Phone
Calls please.

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IN THE
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�Help Wanted - General
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
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medical,dental and paid time off.
Apply at Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis Oh 45631
740-446-2342
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
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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
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Medical
LPN for PRN please call 740-4463808
Certified nursing assistants for fulltime and temporary (90 day) work
in a 114-bed long term care State
facility. Must have current WV CNA
certification to work in West Virginia
and must possess either a GED or
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background check and drug/alcohol
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Part-Time/Temporaries
Part-Time position for a library clerk
at the Mason/New Haven Public Libraries. 16 hours per week .Applications can be picked up at any of
the libraries and dropped off at the
Mason Library,Brown Street,Mason
WV or New Haven public
library.Main Street,New Haven WV.
This position requires computer
skills, and involves working with
people,clerical duties,and occasionally children's programming. Must
be 18 years old to apply. Mason
County Public Library System is an
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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
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100

Legals

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
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

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Auctioneer Rick Pearson #66
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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
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

100

Not Affliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

Legals

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 PURCHASERS 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
PROBATE
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIOL. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGEIN RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF TADD JACOB KITTLETO: TADD JACOB RILEY
CASE NO. 20116026 NOTICE OF
HEARING ON CHANGE OF NAME
OF ADULTThe applicant has filed
an Application for Change of Name
in the Probate Court of Meigs
County , Ohio, requesting the
change of name of Tadd Jacob Kittle to Tadd Jacob Riley.The hearing
on the application will be held on
the 27th day of June, 2011, at at
1:30 o’clock p.m. in the Probate
Court of Meigs County, located on
the 2nd floor, Courthouse, 100 East
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Tadd J. Kittle46511 SR
248Chester, OH 45720
(5) 25, 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 required 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

100

Legals

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED UNTIL 12:00 NOON ON
MONDAY, JUNE 6TH, 2011. BIDS
MAY BE SENT TO THE MEIGS
COUNTY BOARD OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES . PLEASE
SEND SEALED BIDS TO 1310
CARLETON STREET, BOX 307,
SYRACUSE, OHIO 45779.1995
CHEVROLET SCHOOL BUS VIN
1GBL7T1JXRJ1100325 DIESEL
17 PASSENGER WITH WHEELCHAIR LIFT 1998 SCHOOL BUS
VIN
1HVBBAAN8WH542406
DIESEL 26 PASSENGER WITH
WHEELCHAIR LIFT2002 DODGE
VAN VIN 2B7KB31Z82K134922
V-8 14 PASSENGERVEHICLES
ARE SOLD AS IN CONDITION.
MAY BE SEEN AT CARLETON
SCHOOL BY CALLING 1-740-9926681.
THE MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD OF DEVELOPMENTAL
DISABILITIES AND MEIGS INDUSTRIES INC. RESERVES THE
RIGHT TO REJECT ANY OR ALL
BIDS SUBMITTED. (5) 22, 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

FIND A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

100

60201720

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Legals

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE: is
hereby given that on Friday May 27
at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will be
held at 1389 Brumfield Rd., Crown
City, Ohio. The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is selling for
cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral: 1987 Redman
Mobile Home 11229745
The
Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company reserves the
right to reject any or all bids submitted. The above described collateral
will be sold “as is-where is”, with no
expressed or implied warranty
given. For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contact Cyndie or Ken at 992-2136. (5) 24, 25,
26, 2011
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.
FINAL ISSUANCE OF PERMIT TO INSTALL
GATLING OHIO, LLC
OFF
STATE ROUTE 124, EAST OF
RACINE
SUTTON TWP.
OH ACTION DATE : 05/13/2011
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: WASTEWATER
IDENTIFICATION NO.
: 713115
THIS FINAL ACTION
NOT PRECEDED BY PROPOSED
ACTION AND IS APPEALABLE
TO ERAC. YELLOWBUSH MINE AS BUILT PLANS FOR EXISTING
TREATMENT
PONDS 002,
005A, 007, 007A, 007B,AND 008
PREVIOUSLY
APPROVED
12/10/2008 UNDER PTI #598525
(CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE)
COUNTY : MEIGS
DRAFT
NPDES PERMIT - SUBJECT TO
REVISION
YELLOWBUSH
MINE
STATE RTE 124
RACINE
OH ACTION DATE : 05/25/2011
RECEIVING WATERS: UNNAMED
TRIBUTARY TO WOLF RUN
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: COAL
WASHER
IDENTIFICATION
NO. : 0IL00150*AD
ANTIDEG
YELLOWBUSH MINE - BOWMAN
PORTAL
2 MILES NW OF
RACINE
RACINE
OH ACTION DATE : 05/25/2011
RECEIVING WATERS: UNNAMED
TRIBUTARY TO BOWMAN'S RUN
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: COAL
WASHER
IDENTIFICATION
NO. : 0IL00151*AD
ANTIDEG
(5) 25, 2011

�Wednesday, May 25, 2011

LOCAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY — A schedule of upcoming
high school varsity sporting events in the
Ohio Valley Publishing coverage area
involving teams from Mason, Gallia and
Meigs counties.

Wednesday, May 25
D-3 Regional Track and Field
at Fairfield Union H.S. (Lancaster), 4
p.m.
Thursday, May 26
D-4 Baseball Regional Semifinal
at Beavers Field
(5) Eastern vs. (1) Southern, 5 p.m.
D-2 Regional Track and Field
at Meadowbrook High School
(Byesville), 4 p.m.
Class AA Regional Final
PPHS-Ritchie Co. winner at Oak
Glen-Magnolia winner, 6 p.m.
Friday, May 27
D-3 Regional Track and Field
at Fairfield Union H.S. (Lancaster), 4
p.m.
Saturday, May 28
D-2 Regional Track and Field
at Meadowbrook High School
(Byesville), 11:30 a.m.

Sports Briefs
WAHAMA HALL OF
FAME NOMINATIONS
MASON, W.Va. — A
reminder that nominations for the 2011
Wahama High School
Athletic Hall of Fame
will close on June 1.
Anyone wishing to nominate a candidate for the
second class of the WHS
Hall of Fame to be
inducted this fall must
complete the nomination
form and get it to the
Wahama High School
office by the June 1
deadline.
Nomination
forms
may be obtained from a
WHS Hall of Fame
Board of Trustee member, at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason, at
Wahama High School or
they may be printed
from the link on the
Wahama High School
website. Once on the
WHS website go to
forms or sports to find
the H.O.F. nomination
form.
18TH ANNUAL MEIGS
FOOTBALL GOLF
TOURNAMENT
MASON, W.Va. —
The 18th Annual Meigs
Football
Golf
Tournament will be held
on Saturday, June 4 at
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va.
For more information
contact head coach Mike
Chancey at 740-5918644.
RVHS BOYS
BASKETBALL CAMP
BIDWELL, Ohio —
The River Valley basketball program will hold
its annual youth camp
from June 13 to 16 for
boys grades 3-8. The
camp will be held at
River
Valley
High
School from 8:30 a.m. to
noon each day. Coaches
and players will serves
as instructors for the
camp. Teaching aspects
include team stations,
individual work stations,
three-on-three, knockout, dribble tag and
guest speakers.
For more information
contact head coach
Jordan Hill at 740-4462926 or by email at
gl_jhill@seovec.org
2ND ANNUAL BLUE
DEVIL GOLF SHOOTOUT
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The 2nd annual Blue
Devil Golf Shootout will
be held on Saturday,
June 25 at Cliffside Golf
Course in Gallipolis,
Ohio. The event will
begin at 9 a.m. with a
shotgun start. Threeman teams are to entry
with the fourth player
selected by blind draw
of current and former
GAHS golfers and
coaches.
For more
information
contact
Coach Corey Luce at
740-709-6227
or
corey.luce@gmail.com
SHAWN BAKER
MEMORIAL GOLF
TOURNAMENT
The first 9 and 9 For
Shrine, Shawn Baker
Memorial
Golf
Tournament will be held
Saturday, June 25, at the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va.
The
deadline for entry is
May 31. For information and questions contact 740-645-0753 or
e
m
a
i
l
9and9forshrine@gmail.c
om

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tennis season ends at districts for GAHS duo
TRIBUNE STAFF
MDTSPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ATHENS, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy duo of
Cody Billings and Bryce
Amos saw their tennis
season come to an end on
Saturday in the district
tournament at Ohio
University.
Billings and Amos
defeated the Chillicothe
pair of Dallin Patino and
Ben Buchanan in the
opening round by scores
of 4-6, 6-2, 7-6 (7-4).
In the quarterfinals,
Billings and Amos faced
the top seeded in the
East, twin brothers Cody
and Connor Engstrom of
Cambridge.
The
Engstrom
brothers
defeated Billings and
Amos 6-2, 6-2.
Cody and Connor
Engstrom advanced to
the state tennis tournament,
along
with
Minford’s Logan Conkey
and Noah Thiel from the
East/Southeast District.

NFL owners
pass player
safety
amendments

Bryan Walters/file photo

Gallia Academy senior Cody Billings, left, serves the ball as teammate Bryce
Amos watches on during this March file photo of a tennis match held at Gallia
Academy High School in Centenary, Ohio.

Woods, on crutches, expects to play in US Open
N E W T O W N
SQUARE, Pa. (AP) —
Tiger Woods says he’ll
be ready to go for the
U.S. Open.
Good thing for Woods
there’s time to get
healthy.
The golfing great hasn’t hit a ball in about two
weeks. Woods needs
crutches and a walking
boot for relief on his
aching left leg. He won’t
even start leg training
until the end of next
week.
But Woods expects to
tee off at the U.S. Open
June
16-19
at
Congressional Country
Club in Bethesda, Md.
“You just play through
these things,” Woods
said. “There’s a difference between being in
pain and being injured.”
That’s why Woods has
shut himself down to prepare for the major.
Woods is bothered by
pain in his left knee, left
Achilles’ tendon, tightening in his calf, and has a
sore lower back. He says
doctors have not mentioned leg surgery. But he
doubts he’ll play the
Memorial next week in
Dublin, Ohio.
Woods said he’ll start
training by the end of
next week. How his leg
responds will determine
when he can start hitting
balls again — all but ruling out the Memorial.
“I’ve had four surgeries on it,” Woods said.
“Obviously, it’s not what
it was when I was little.”
That means Woods
would go to the U.S.
Open with little competition, although this is
nothing new for him. In
2008, he had arthroscopic surgery after the
Masters and didn’t play
again until the U.S.
Open. Doctors discovered a double stress fracture in his left tibia in the
weeks before the major.
Going against his doctor’s advice, Woods not
only played the U.S.
Open, he won it at Torrey
Pines in a 19-hole playoff.
Now, he says his left
leg is not nearly as bad as
it was then.
His golf, however, is a
different story.
In the 11 tournaments
Woods played before the
U.S. Open, he won eight
times, was runner-up

Jeff Siner/Charlotte Observer/MCT

Tiger Woods reacts to his shot from the 11th fairway during the final round of the
2011 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia, on Sunday, April
10.

twice and didn’t finish
out of the top five. In the
11 tournaments before
this U.S. Open, he has
only five finishes in the
top 10.
Woods said he was
more worried about his
health in 2008.
“I’m a lot better off,”
Woods said. “I feel that
in the next week or so, I
can start getting back
toward that and start
practicing pain free.
That’s where I’m at.
Woods spoke Tuesday
at Aronimink Golf Club
to promote the upcoming
AT&amp;T National.
Woods withdrew after
only nine holes this
month at The Players
Championship. He also
fell out of the top 10

rankings for the first time
in 14 years.
He has been No. 1 for
623 weeks in his career,
by far the longest of any
golfer since the rankings
began in 1986. He had
been No. 1 from June
2005 until Lee Westwood
of England supplanted
him last November.
“I haven’t played. It’s
one of the reasons I’ve
fallen as far as I have,”
Woods said. “When I did
play, I haven’t played
well. Winning takes care
of all of that.”
He acknowledged he
did come back too early
for
The
Players
Championship. He hurt
himself on the opening
tee shot at Sawgrass.
Woods’ status was bor-

derline for the tournament to begin with, but
he pressed on and did
further damage. He
won’t risk additional
injury to the leg.
“It’d certainly be nice
to come up here and play
practice rounds,” he said,
“and do all the other prep
I do for the majors.”
Not a chance this
week, even on a gorgeous Tuesday.
Woods posted on
Twitter that he would
donate $1 million to his
foundation if no reporters
asked him about his leg.
There was no chance of
that on the very first
question. Woods later
posted on Twitter he
would donate the money
anyway.

MLB Sports Briefs
INDIANS OF SIZEMORE TESTS KNEE WITH SPRINTS
CLEVELAND (AP) — Indians outfielder Grady
Sizemore ran harder than he has since injuring his right
knee while sliding and is close to returning to
Cleveland’s lineup.
Sizemore went on the disabled list last week with a
bruised kneecap. He ran sprints in the outfield at close
to full speed on Tuesday before the Indians hosted
Boston. Trainer Lonnie Soloff supervised Sizemore as
he went through drills.
Soloff reported Sizemore "looked good." Manager
Manny Acta said Sizemore will run the bases on
Wednesday, and as long as he doesn’t have a setback,
it’s likely the three-time All-Star will be activated on
Thursday, which an off-day for the Indians. They will
play at Tampa Bay this weekend.

Sizemore is batting .282 with six home runs and 11
RBIs in 18 games.
REDS RECALL RHP FISHER, OPTION INF/OF FRAZIER
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The Cincinnati Reds have
recalled right-hander Carlos Fisher from Triple-A
Louisville and sent down utilityman Todd Frazier.
Fisher didn’t allow a run in three relief appearances
earlier this season with the Reds. He was 1-0 with a 3.86
ERA and six saves for Louisville.
Frazier made his major league debut as a pinch-hitter
in Monday night’s loss to Philadelphia. On his first
swing, the bat flew out of his hands and landed in the
front row of the stands all the way down the left-field
line. Frazier struck out.
Frazier was optioned to Triple-A.

INDIANAPOLIS
(AP) — NFL owners got
their major on-field
business out of the way
quickly Tuesday, leaving them plenty of time
to discuss labor strategy.
The 32 owners voted
unanimously to approve
rules amendments for
player
safety
that
include eliminating a
player launching himself into a defenseless
opponent. A 15-yard
penalty will result for
anyone who leaves both
feet before contact to
spring forward and
upward into an opponent and delivers a blow
to the helmet with any
part of his helmet.
Such tackles will also
be subject to fines. The
NFL cracked down on
flagrant
hits
last
October, ratcheting up
the amount of fines and
threatening suspensions.
No players were suspended in 2010 for such
hits, but Ray Anderson,
the league’s primary disciplinarian, has said suspensions will be considered for egregious hits
this season.
The definition of a
defenseless receiver has
been extended. Now, a
receiver who has not
had time to protect himself or has not clearly
become a runner even if
both feet are on the
ground is considered
defenseless.
Defenseless players
cannot be hit in the head
or neck area with the
helmet, facemask, forearm or shoulder. The
definition of such players now includes those
throwing
a
pass;
attempting or completing a catch without having time to ward off or
avoid contact; a runner
whose forward progress
has been stopped by a
tackler; kickoff or punt
returners while the ball
is in the air; kickers or
punters during a kick or
a return; a quarterback
during a change of possession; a player who
receives a blindside
block from a blocker
moving toward his own
end zone.
Also, hits to the head
of a passer that are not
considered “forcible”
blows will not be penalized.
Penalized players are
subject to being ejected
for flagrant fouls.
“Rulewise, I think the
competition committee
is clear that we are not
trying to change rules,
but change the emphasis, and that message has
been delivered loud and
clear to the players,”
said committee cochairman Rich McKay,
president of the Atlanta
Falcons. “I was encouraged as a committee
member who watched
all the video at the end
of last year to look at
injuries, and I thought
the players did a good
job of understanding the
message and adapting to
it.”

CONTACT US
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fax — 1-740-446-3008
E-mail: mdssports@mydailysentinel.com

Sports Staff

Bryan Walters
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bwalters@mydailytribune.com

Sarah Hawley
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
shawley@mydailytribune.com

�Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A10

www.mydailysentinel.com

White Falcons fall short in regional semifinal against Charleston Catholic, 8-7
BY GARY CLARK
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— The Wahama White
Falcons comeback bid in
the Region IV semifinal
baseball contest against
Charleston
Catholic
Monday evening fell just
short as the top rated
White Falcons dropped an
8-7 post-season outing to
the Irish.
The diamond setback
concluded the Bend Area
teams history making season while third ranked
Charleston
Catholic
advances to the regional
finals for the second
straight year. Wahama,
and its four seniors consisting of Tyler Kitchen,
Anthony Bond, Brice
Clark and Matt Arnold,
finishes the spring with a
27-6 record. The Irish,
25-8, claimed its second
win in three decisions this
spring with the White
Falcons and moves on to
the Region IV finals on
Wednesday with a berth
in the 2011 Class A state
tournament at stake.
Charleston Catholic
banged out 10 hits during
the first three innings to
score eight runs before
holding off a late run by
Coach Tom Cullen’s
Bend Area nine. WHS
scored two runs in each of
the fifth and sixth frames
to cut its five run deficit to
a single run but that was
as close as the local nine
would get as Catholic
held on for the Region IV
triumph.
The Irish collected 12
hits overall with 10 of
those coming in the opening three frames when the
hosts tallied all eight of its
runs. Wahama totaled
eight hits on the day with
the White Falcons benefiting from six Charleston
Catholic errors. Those
six defensive mistakes led
to five unearned runs but

in the end it was the big
bats of the Irish during the
games opening minutes
that proved to be the difference.
The Bend Area team
gained an early 2-0
advantage in their opening offensive set after
Zack Warth singled and
later scored on an error.
Another Falcon run came
home to score when
Catholic starting pitcher,
Alex Bobinger, issued a
trio of bases on balls.
The Irish quickly erased
the early Wahama lead by
scoring three times in its
half of the first. CCHS
received two base hits
from Bo McKown, Alex
Bobinger and Nelson
McKown in the inning in
addition to getting an RBI
single by Andy Hoyer.
Charleston Catholic
added two more runs in
the second to extend its
edge to 5-2 before Matt
Stewart drove in a run for
Wahama in the third to
close the gap to 5-3.
The Irish increased its
lead to 8-3 with three
more runs in its half of the
third
after
Brody
Prudnick and Keifer
Hovorka delivered singles
sandwiched
around
another double by Hoyer.
Ian Lough capped off the
frame with a run producing single to give
Charleston Catholic a
seemingly comfortable 83 advantage.
WHS received a oneout double by Tyler
Roush in the fourth but
couldn’t get him around
but in the fifth the Falcons
began its come-frombehind quest. The Bend
Area team plated two runs
on two hits, a walk and an
error in the fifth to close
the gap to 8-5. Brice
Clark got things rolling
with a lead-off base on
balls before Matt Arnold
lined a single into right.
After a strikeout and an

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Wahama’s Brice Clark, right, hands the ball to pitcher Anthony Bond during a TVC Hocking contest at Eastern
High School earlier in the season. Seniors Clark and Bond along with Matt Arnold and Tyler Kitchen ended
their high school athletic careers on Monday evening with a regional semifinal loss to Charleston Catholic.

errant pickoff attempt
Clark scored on Wesley
Harrison’s grounder to
second with Arnold later
denting the plate on an
infield single by Wyatt
Zuspan.
Another two-run inning
followed for Wahama in
the sixth with Roush
beginning the rally with a
lead-off double to right.
Tyler Kitchen followed
by legging out an infield
hit with both runners
advancing on a throwing
error. Roush scored on a
sacrifice fly to center by
Bond with Kitchen later
scoring on a grounder to
second by Clark to pull
Wahama to within a run at
8-7 but that was as close
as the locals would get.
In the seventh the

White Falcons failed to
generate any further
excitement as Bobinger
retired the Bend Area
team in order to complete
the narrow, one-run Irish
victory.
Offensively
Tyler
Roush enjoyed a three hit
day for Wahama with a
pair of doubles and a single. Matt Stewart drove
in a couple of runs with a
single
while
Wyatt
Zuspan, Zack Warth,
Tyler Kitchen and Matt
Arnold added one safe
blow apiece for the White
Falcons.
Andy Hoyer had three
hits, two doubles and a
single, to lead the Irish
with Bobinger and Lough
collecting two hits each.
Bo McKown, Conner

Golden,
Nelson
McKown,
Brody
Prudnick and Keifer
Hovorka added one hit
each to the Charleston
Catholic cause. CCHS
blasted five two baggers
in the outing with Hoyer
socking two in addition to
Bo McKown. Nelson
McKown and Bobinger
with one double each.
Bobinger went the distance to record the pitching win to extend his
mound record to 9-3 on
the spring. The senior
right-hander gave up
seven runs, only two
earned, on eight hits with
nine strikeouts and four
walks.
Anthony Bond was
tagged with his first pitching setback of the year

Valley Lumber Anniversary Sale
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1/2 Glass Metal Clad
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36”x50’ (718432)
$23.99
50 lb Bag
BLACKTOP PATCH (60A)

$8.99

$4.99
each
2 1/4’ OC

16’ OH

2’X4’

8’
10’
12’
14’
16’

$2.29
$2.69
$3.29
$3.89
$4.69

2’X6’

$3.19
$3.99
$4.49
$5.69
$6.49

DYED MULCH

2’X8’

$4.19
$5.79
$7.59
$7.89
$8.99

COMPLETE
TOILET KIT
(490288)

80 lb. bag
READY MIX
CONCRETE (80C)

$3.99

SEWER &amp;
DRAIN
PIPE4x10
with Solid Bell
End - $4.89
or Perforated
Bell End - $4.99
BARN KITS ON SPECIAL
$599.00
8x8 (BK88P)
8x12 (BK812P)
$799.00
10x12 (BK1012P) $799.00
12X12 (BK1212P) $1,149.00

CHAS. CATHOLIC 8,
WAHAMA 7
Wahama
CC

201 022 0 — 7 8 0
323 000 x — 8 12 6

WAHAMA (27-6)Anthony Bond, Tyler
Roush (3) and Wesley Harrison.
CHARLESTON CATHOLIC (25-8):
Alex Bobinger and Brody Prudnick.
WP — Bobinger (9-3); LP — Bond
(7-1).
2BH — Hoyer (2), B. McKown,
Bobinger, N. McKown, Roush (2)

May 24
thru
May 29

40 lb. Bag of
GARDEN
MAGIC
TOP SOIL
(70611)

$1.49

BURY
HYDRANTS
3’(406484) $38.99
2’ (406475) $36.99

CYPRESS

(Your Choice)
MULCH
$2.69 a bag
Red (70805), Brown $2.19 a bag
(70817), Black (70843)

$74.99

1/2” 4x8 DRYWALL SHEETS
(128DW)

24’ TRUSS $34.99

#2 and BETTER
LUMBER

after getting chased from
the hill after just two
innings of work. Bond
allowed eight runs, all
earned, on 10 hits with no
strikeouts and one hit batter. Tyler Roush came on
in the third and slammed
the door on the Irish by
working four innings
without allowing a run on
just two hits. Roush
fanned five and issued
just one free pass.

PET KENNEL
6x8x4 (71103)

$149.99

10x10x6 (71105)

$229.00

R11
INSULATION
(50 sq ft)

$7.99

555 Park Street
Middleport, OH 45760

(740) 992-6611

ENTER TO
WIN
$1,000
Shopping
Spree
Free
Refreshments

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