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                  <text>Crow receives
scholarship on
page 2

All Southeast
District Softball
Teams, A9

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 91

Smorgasbord
dinner
LONG BOTTOM —
Long Bottom Community
Building will host a
Smorgasbord dinner at 5
p.m. on Saturday. The cost
is $7, all included, and $3
for children.

Lodge project
HARRISONVILLE —
Members of the
Harrisonville
Masonic
Lodge will pick up litter
along
its
Adopt-AHighway sections at 6 p.m.
on Thursday. Members are
to meet at the lodge hall.

Kids fishing
derby
The Meigs County Fish
and Game Association’s
Annual Kids Fishing
Derby will take place from
8 a.m. - noon, Saturday,
June 11. The derby takes
place (from Pomeroy) by
going on Ohio 7 North,
turn left on Texas Road and
follow the derby signs.
Kids must be 15 years or
younger and accompanied
by an adult. One rod and
reel per child. Bait is limited to night crawlers and
chicken liver - no minnows
or live bait. Prizes, free
food and drinks available.

Oasis has new
meeting place
POMEROY– The congregatoin of the Oasis
Church is now meeting at
212 West Main Street, in
Pomeroy.

Praise band,
drama team
performing
POMEROY — The Soul
Explosion Prayer Task
Force will welcome the
Sanctify Drama Team and
the Soul Harvest Praise
Band for an event from 7-8
p.m., Friday, June 10 on the
Pomeroy parking lot. Cops
for Christ will be providing
food, drinks and free
Bibles.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Sarah Ramsey
• Viola Tucker

WEATHER

THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Panthers for sale? Bids being taken for old PHS
feasibility study on the old
high school but determined
the cost to bring the building up to current building
codes was more than it was
worth. According to Mayor
John Musser back in
October, the Jerry Goff
Architectural Firm, which
was hired to do that feasibility study, said the cost to
meet current building codes
was estimated at $3.4 million.
The CIC then reportedly

gave the building back to
Pomeroy, though it appears
the CIC did not have the
legal right to do this at the
time due to a stipulation
that it revert back to the
Meigs Local School
District if the village vacated it. The district passed the
deed back to the village earlier this spring.
This spring when
Council voted to place the

Cook your catch, or not, on a new grill

Lodging tax
again under
consideration

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — Though
Pomeroy Village Council
voted to sell the former
Pomeroy High School/
municipal building earlier
this spring, a due date for
bids has finally been set.
Bids on the building will
be opened and read aloud at
noon on July 8 at village
hall. The minimum acceptable bid for the building and

lot is $80,000. Bids should
be sealed and delivered to
Kathy Hysell, village clerk,
prior to the bid opening.
The old PHS was built in
1914 and closed its doors as
a school when the Meigs
Local School District consolidated in the early 1970s.
The building was then
deeded to the Village of
Pomeroy which turned it
into
the
Pomeroy
Municipal Building —
home to water offices, the

police department, and
other administrative offices.
The village also rented
space on the second floor
and used the third floor for
storage. The lot is considered by some to be a prime
piece of riverfront real
estate.
Last year the Community
Improvement Corporation,
which believed it owned the
deed as part of the sale of
the former Millennium
building to the village, did a

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY – Visitors
to Pomeroy’s Mulberry
Pond, whether there to
fish in the freshly stocked
lake or to picnic in the
park area, will find a
brand new fire pit and grill
on which to cook.
Improvements continue to be made at the village pond where with
Nature Works funding
175-foot boardwalks, one
being handicapped accessible, have been constructed on either side of the
lake.
Plans are now being
made to create a gravel
walking path from the
boardwalks around the
lake with a bridge at the
back where there is a cave
and waterfall.
The newest improvement to the park area has
been the addition of the
large fire pit and grill
made by the welding class
of Meigs High School
under the direction of
teacher Richard Fetty.
A 500-gallon propane
tank donated by Rutland
Bottle Gas was shaped by
the senior welding stu-

MHS welding instructor Richard Fetty and his senior students created and donated a fire pit
and grill for the Mulberry Pond park area. Here Jim Smith, pond restoration chairman, left,
joins Fetty and his students, from the left, Quentez Garnes, Justin Jacks, Cody Weaver, Tyson
Morris, Anthony Rowe, Harley Young and Shawn Bare.

See Pond, A5

Canadian geese tarried at the pondʼs edge as the Meigs students put the fire pit and grill in place.

(Charlene Hoeflich/photos)

Fundraising underway for Middleport July 4 celebration
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Community
Association has begun
fundraising efforts for the
upcoming July 4 celebration. Fireworks and
entertainment are expected to cost over $8,000,
and the association hopes
to raise at least $2,500
between now and the holiday to finance the party.
The association has
begun sales of a new
Middleport t-shirt, which
includes a caricaturestyle drawing of the
freight depot in Diles

Park and a freight train.
The design was based on
a historical photo showing a freight train at the
station in its heyday.
President
Debbie
Gerlach said the shirts
are available in children’s
sizes, for $14, adult sizes
for $16 and larger sizes
for $18.
Proceeds from the shirt
sale will go directly to
the July 4 celebration,
and to other association
activities
after
Independence Day. The
association has also
begun to place collection

See Fundraising, A5

Debbie Gerlach and Kathy Mullins of the Middleport
Community Association display t-shirts now on sale to help
finance the villageʼs July 4 celebration. Collection canisters
have been placed in local businesses as well, to help raise
an additional $2,500. (Brian J. Reed/pohto)

Meigs Relay For Life this weekend
BY BETH SERGENT
High: 91
Low: 67

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

A7-8
A6
A4
A9-10

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ROCK SPRINGS —
One of the largest
fundraisers in Meigs
County happens this
weekend and benefits the
fight against cancer — it
also has a new twist this
year.
The new twist comes
in the form of a car show
and cornhole tournament.
Registration for the car
show is $10, and registration for the cornhole tournament is $10 per team,
according to Sherry
Kinnan, chairperson of
this year’s Relay. Kinnan

See Bids, A5

said eight Relay teams
have officially joined the
roster, though the event is
open to the public, as
well. Admission into
Relay is free.
The Meigs County
Relay For Life begins at
9:30 a.m. on Saturday,
June 11, and ends at 6
a.m. Sunday, June 12, at
the Meigs County Fair
Grounds. Relay benefits
the American Cancer
Society’s efforts to fund
cancer research as well
as local outreach programs and more.
This year’s Relay is
packed with events and
Saturday’s itinerary is as

follows: 9:30-11:30 a.m.
— car show registration;
11:30 a.m.- noon — survivor registration; noon
— welcome ceremony
and car show begins;
noon - 3 p.m. — kids
carnival games begin;
12:30 p.m. — survivor
and caregiver lap; 1 p.m.
— parade of teams and
sponsorships; 2 p.m. —
Gallia/Meigs Performing
Arts dancers; 2:30 p.m.
— car show results; 3
p.m. — survivors’ reception, entertainment by
River Blend Quartet, Ida
and Frank Martin in the
commercial building;
3:30 p.m. — Cindi

Kimes and Courtni
Shuler perform; 4 p.m.
— Still Standing performs; 4:30-5:30 p.m. —
Ohio River Boys perform; 5 p.m. — cornhole
tournament in the advertising building; 5:306:30 p.m. — Gospel
Bluegrass Gentlemen; 7
p.m. — River Bend
Cloggers; 7:30 p.m. —
luminary
ceremony,
Brenda Phalin performs,
lap in silence; 8-10 p.m.
— Rockin’ Reggie; 10
p.m. — Nick Michaels;
11 p.m. - 5:30 a.m.
Sunday, June 12 —music
and team games; 5-6 a.m.
— closing ceremony.

POMEROY — County
Commissioners will reconsider placing a one-percent
lodging tax on overnight
guest accomodations. The
measure was approved by
a previous board, but never
put into place.
With proposed cuts in
federal funding to the state
through
Temporary
Assistance to Needy
Families that might affect
funding of economic
development and tourism
promotion programs, the
county may have to rely on
other sources of revenue to
support promoting itself as
a visitors’ destination.
County Commissioners
approved the one-percent
tax in 2008, but later voted
to delay the collection of
the tax to allow them to
work out collection details
with the county auditor
and to establish the
Convention and Visitors
Bureau, which will receive
the tax proceeds.
Board President Michael
Bartrum said the current
commissioners have begun
to review a proposal from
the original passage of the
tax and will examine how
much it would generate
based on current lodging
facilities and when collections might begin — if
they do.
The CVB would replace
a tourism board that now
oversees the promotion of
he county as a tourist destination.
The CVB must be a nonprofit agency under
Section 501(C)(3) of the
tax code, and has not yet
been
finalized.
The
tourism board now operating as an arm of the county
economic development
office will continue to
oversee tourism promotion.
The tax will affect those
who stay in any lodging
facility, motel, or bed and
breakfast, with five beds or
more. Now, that might
include only the Meigs
Motel, and perhaps the
Carpenter Inn, but commissioners expect other
motels to be built in years
to come.
Proceeds from the tax
will go toward promoting
tourism in the county, and
if enough is collected,
could be allocated to the
committees organizing
various festivals in the
county.
When
first
approved, it was expected
to generate between
$2,000 and $3,000 in its
first year or two.
Meigs County is one of
very few, or perhaps the
only county, not now collecting the lodging or
“bed” tax.

�Thursday, June 9, 2011

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

Crow awarded
New mom questions scholarship

grandmaʼs advice
Dear Dr. Brothers:
I'm having my first baby
in a few months, and I
feel particularly unprepared in one regard. I'll
be a single mom, and my
grandmother is helping
me out, which is great.
She's pretty old-school,
though, when it comes to
kids, and she keeps
telling me that when the
baby cries, I should just
let him keep crying so I
don't spoil him by
indulging his every
whim. To me, this just
seems
cruel.
Will
responding to my crying
baby really make him
spoiled? -- C.K.
Dear C.K.: Even as an
expectant mother, your
intuition is leading you in
the right direction. There
are plenty of people out
there -- including your
grandmother -- who still
adhere to the "let them cry
it out" school of thought
when it comes to babies.
Unfortunately,
this
method is outdated and
may end up creating
unnatural
distance
between you and your
child. A newborn who is
crying is attempting to
communicate with you,
his caregiver. When you
ignore him, you essentially tell him that his communication strategy doesn't work and that his
needs will not be fulfilled.
The fact is, babies have
neither the ability nor the

Dr. Joyce Brothers
desire to cry just to spite
you. If your baby wakes
up in the middle of the
night hungry, he can't
understand why you don't
respond to him then the
same way you did in the
middle of the afternoon. If
instead you respond to
your baby's cries, you
only enhance your ability
to communicate. You'll
eventually be able to
anticipate his needs, and
you may even preclude
crying by feeding him just
as he's getting hungry or
picking him up when he's
ready to move. This creates a secure bond
between you and your
baby, and increases his
trust in you as a provider.
Simply attending to your
child's needs will not
make him spoiled or
clingy, but instead will
allow him to grow and
develop to his natural
potential.
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, June 14
POMEROY —
Bedford Township
Trustees, 7 p.m., town
hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS
— Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer
District Board, 7 p.m.,
board office.

Community
meetings
Thursday, June 9
POMEROY —
Caring and Sharing
Cancer Survivor
Support Group meeting, 6 p.m., Mulberry
Community Center,
call Courtney Midkiff,
992-6626 for more
information.
TUPPERS PLAINS –
VFW 9053, 6:30 p.m.
at the Tuppers Plains
hall preceded by a 6
p.m. meal.
CHESTER – Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.

Refreshments after
meeting.
SYRACUSE – The
Wildwood Garden Club
will meet at 6:30 p.m.
at the Syracuse
Community Center.
The meeting where
Dale Harrison will
speak on ginseng is
open to the public.

SYRACUSE
–
Frederick (Wil) Crow IV
of Syracuse and son of
Fred W Crow III and
Cathy Crow was recently
awarded
a
$19,000
Enrichment Scholarship
from Gonzaga University
in Spokane, Wash.
The scholarship was
awarded in recognition
of Wil's "distinguished
academic achievement."
Wil began taking college Frederick (Wil) Crow IV
classes at the Meigs
Branch of Rio Grande College while he was a
sophomore at Meigs High School. He then continued his college education at North Idaho College
while earning the remainder of his high school
credits.
Wil then graduated last fall with an Honors
Diploma from Idaho and also received his diploma
from Meigs High School this spring. He will enter
Gonzaga University this fall as a junior and plans
to continue his studies in psychology as he pursues
his PhD in psychology.

Senate votes to let Fed
trim debit card swipe fees
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate voted
Wednesday to let the Federal Reserve slice the fees
that stores must pay banks each time a customer
swipes a debit card, handing merchants a victory over
banks in a lobbying battle over billions in revenue.
Senators supporting the financial institutions'
efforts to head off the proposal fell six voters short of
the 60 needed to prevail. The vote was 54-45.
The tally also was a triumph Sen. Richard Durbin of
Illinois, the No. 2 Democratic leader who had muscled a provision into last year's financial overhaul law
requiring the Fed to offer a plan for limiting the fees.
Those charges now average 44 cents per transaction
and mean $16 billion annually for banks and credit
card companies, according to Federal Reserve data.
The Fed has proposed holding those fees to a maximum of 12 cents per swipe. By law a final rule must
take effect on July 21. While it might still be changed,
few expect it to differ dramatically from the current
proposal.
Thirty-five Democrats and 19 Republicans voted to
delay the Fed's plan.Voting to let the rules take effect
were 32 Democrats, a Democratic-leaning independent and 12 Republicans. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, IConn., did not vote.

Meigs County Forecast
fall amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an
inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
65. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New rainfall
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch,
except higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Saturday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with
a high near 88. 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%.

Thursday: A slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms after 9am.
Mostly sunny, with a high
near 91. Calm wind
becoming west between 7
and 10 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 20%.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
67. Northwest wind
around 5 mph becoming
calm. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New rainfall amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an
inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 86. Calm
wind. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New rain-

Local Stocks
RACO donates to food parish

Raises funds for Class of 2012
RACINE — The Racine Area Community
Organization recently donated $100 to the spring
food drive for the Meigs Cooperative Parish and
has begun raising scholarship funds for the Class of
2012.
The donation and scholarship funds, along with
other business, was discussed at RACO’s most
recent meeting with President Kathryn Hart presiding and member Libby Fisher saying the prayer
over the potluck meal.
Also discussed: RACO sponsored a basket for
the basket games held for the Joyce Sisson benefit
held last month. RACO also raised enough funds
from its yard sales to sponsor the following scholarships for graduating, Southern High School
seniors from the Class of 2011: six RACO scholarships, three Edison Brace Memorial, Jim Adams
Memorial, Clarence Frank Memorial, Frank
Cleland Memorial, Clarence and Ruth Bradford
Memorial, Leo and Helen Hill Memorial, David B.
Sayre Memorial scholarships. RACO also presented to SHS seniors, Racine’s Party in the Park
Scholarship (sponsored by SHS Class of 1975) and
five Cruisin’ Saturday Night Car Show scholarships
(sponsored by Hill’s Classic Cars, Home National
Bank and Gatling, Ohio, LLC) at SHS’ senior
awards day. RACO has already held its spring yard
sale which will go towards funding scholarships for
the class of 2012. RACO recently held a dinner at
the Christian Outreach Center to award the scholarships to students.
The secretary and treasurer’s reports were given,
David Zirkle led in the Pledge of Allegiance and
closed the meeting. New members are welcome.

Church events
Friday, June 10
LONG BOTTOM —
Peacemakers will sing
at 7 p.m., Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long
Bottom.
POMEROY —
Sanctify Drama Team,
Soul Harvest Praise
Band, performing 7-8
p.m., Pomeroy parking
lot, Cops for Christ
providing food, drinks
and free Bibles.
COOLVILLE — Youth
revival, 7 p.m., starting
today through Sunday,
Faith Harvest Church,
speakers Jacob
Parker, Jay Helgesen,
Sam Hudnell.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Louisiana Red to perform
POMEROY — The Fur Peace Ranch has
announced a cancellation of one of its performers
for their Saturday, June 11 concert. Honeyboy
Edwards was to perform at this show along with
Stefan Grossman, however, due to ill health he is
unable to travel. Honeyboy has recommended and
the Ranch has booked Louisiana Red.
Red was born in Alabama in 1932 and he not only
plays the blues, but has lived it. Red was active during the formative years of Blues music and has been
performing for over 60 years. During this time he
has played with about every major Blues figure and
released over 50 albums. He was heavily influenced
by Muddy Waters, Elmore James and Lightnin
Hopkins and played with all of these greats as
well. His music goes back to the original Delta
Blues and even further back to West-African griot
bards. He recorded for Chess Records in 1949 and
spent several years in the early 1950's playing with
John Lee Hooker in Detroit. His first album
"Lowdown Back Porch Blues" was released in
1963. Louisiana Red is a real treasure for Blues
lovers and one of the few remaining bluesmen that
play authentic country style blues.
Sharing the show with Red will be acoustic blues
great, Stefan Grossman. Both will be performing
solo sets. Beginning in his teens, Stefan Grossman
was a student of the legendary Rev.Gary Davis.
After studying with Davis for eight years in high
school and college, he learned and studied with
other country blues guitarists: Mississippi John
Hurt, Son House, Skip James, Mance Lipscomb,
and Fred McDowell.
Gates open at 7 p.m., show starts at 8 p.m. on
June 11 at the Ranch. Call 992-6228 or visit
www.furpeaceranch.com for more information.

Jeff Warner

Agent
Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

On Your Side®

113 West 2nd. Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Tel 740-992-5479
Fax 740-992-6911
warnerj1@nationwide.com

The Pomeroy
Merchants
Association

proudly presents

The Duck Derby

at this years
Sternwheeler Festival.
Keep tuned in for more details about
the great prizes we have planned.

BBT (NYSE) — 25.60
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 11.02
Pepsico (NYSE) — 68.84
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.27
Rockwell (NYSE) — 79.25
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.00
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.29
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 66.45
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 53.69
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.55
WesBanco (NYSE) — 18.57
Worthington (NYSE) — 19.99

AEP (NYSE) — 37.66
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 69.93
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 61.80
Big Lots (NYSE) — 32.01
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 32.91
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 67.33
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 14.30
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.54
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) — 3.93
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 31.01
Collins (NYSE) — 59.21
DuPont (NYSE) — 49.74
US Bank (NYSE) — 23.97
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 18.51
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 35.91
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 40.39
Kroger (NYSE) — 23.62
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 35.75
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 70.53
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.61

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
June 8, 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.

For The Record
Common Pleas
Civil
• Foreclosure action FILED by Premier Bank, Inc., against Janet
Krider, and others.
• Foreclosure action FILED by Jerry Kyle Swain against Karen
Adams, and others.
• Foreclosure GRANTED to Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
against Gloria J. VanReeth, and others.
• Foreclosure GRANTED to Home National Bank aagainst Janet
A. Krider, and others.
Criminal
• Ronald E. Morris SENTENCED to two and a half years, motion
to revoke probation.
• Brandon Cremeans ARRAIGNED on indictment charging burglary. Public defender appointed, $1,000 personal recognizance
bond, surety bond, appearance bond. Trial set for Aug. 4.
• Bruce Felming SENTENCED to six months, failure of sex
offender to register change of address.
• Brittany Miller SENTENCED to two years on motion to revoke
probation, breaking and entering.
Domestic
• Action for dissolution of marriage FILED by Rowena G. Blain
and James R. Blain.
• Dissolution GRANTED to Bruce, Melodie Bissell.
• Divorce GRANTED to Tamara W. Shumaker from Brent E.
Shoemaker.

Recorder
POMEROY — Recorder Kay Hill reported these transfers of real
estate:
• Yvonne C. Brickles to David A. Brickles, Danny A. Brickles,
Duane K. Brickes, Mary K. Pallone, Dale F. Brickles, deed,
Bedford; Charles W. Bryant, Sue Bryant, to Tamara L. Matson,
deed, Village of Middleport; Danny D. Gingerich, Ann N.
Gingerich, to Harold D. Graham, Janet K. Graham, deed, Scipio.
• Ralph Cundiff to Leading Creek Conservancy District, right of
way, Columbia; Cathy L. Shoultis, to LCCD, right of way,
Columbia; Bonnie G. Scott to LCCD, right of way, Salem; Daniel
C. Leonard to LCCD, right of way, Salisbury; Jeff Belcher to
LCCD, right of way, Salem; James W. Stewart, Kathy I. Stewart, to
LCCD, right of way, Salem; James A. Friery to LCCD, right of way,
Rutland; Jeremy Hartson to LCCD, right of way, Salisbury.

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�Thursday, June 9, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Fed survey: Economy
Police expand search for
falters in several regions Indiana college student
WASHINGTON (AP)
— For the first time this
year, the economy has
slowed in several U.S.
regions, burdened by high
gas prices that have
weakened
consumer
spending and crises in
Japan that reduced manufacturing output.
All 12 of the Federal
Reserve's bank regions
grew this spring. But four
of the regions suffered
slower growth in April
and May from earlier this
year, according to a Fed
survey
released
Wednesday.
It was the weakest survey since fall, when the
Fed said two regions
failed to grow at all. And
it confirmed a slew of
data that portray a national
economy
whose
growth has faltered.
Hiring has slowed, orders
to factories have declined
and home prices have
fallen.
Fed banks in New York,
Philadelphia, Atlanta and
Chicago said growth
weakened
in
those
regions. By contrast, the
Fed regions in Boston,
Cleveland, Richmond, St.
Louis,
Minneapolis,
Kansas City and San
Francisco said growth
there remained steady.
The Dallas region was
the only one to report
accelerating growth. That
was mostly because of
higher oil prices, which
benefited the region's
energy industry.
The report, known as
the "Beige Book," is
based on anecdotal information gathered by offi-

cials at the Fed regional
banks. It is released eight
times a year and provides
a more in-the-trenches
review of the economy
than government statistics do. Wednesday's
report covered the roughly seven weeks between
April 5 and May 27.
Manufacturing output
grew more slowly in five
districts. Japan's March
11 earthquake and tsunami have disrupted auto
production and sales.
Many factories in the
U.S. owned by Japanese
automakers, including
Toyota and Honda, rely
on Japanese suppliers for
electronic components
and other parts. They've
had to cut output because
of shortages of those supplies.
Such production cuts,
in turn, have reduced the
flow of cars to dealers,
the Fed report said. Auto
sales in the New York,
Philadelphia
and
Cleveland districts have
declined.
Looking ahead, several
districts are less optimistic about manufacturing growth. Boston said
some of its manufacturers
expect sales to slow in
coming months. The
Cleveland Fed said some
companies are delaying
large-scale projects.
But the Chicago and
Atlanta banks said factories in their districts
expect to boost output in
the second half of this
year, partly because of a
likely rebound in auto
production.
Retail sales declined in

the
Richmond
and
Boston districts, the
report said, and grew
more slowly in New York,
Atlanta, Chicago, St.
Louis and San Francisco.
High gas prices were the
main reason.
The New York Fed said
a major retail chain and a
large mall in upstate New
York reported slower
sales in May, after robust
sales in April. Gas prices
nationwide
averaged
nearly $4 a gallon in early
May, before falling back.
Farmers were hit hard
by flooding along the
Mississippi River last
month, which put millions of acres of cropland
under water. And in the
Dallas region, a drought
harmed the wheat crop.
Agricultural conditions
were unfavorable across
much of the nation, the
report said
Overall, the report is
consistent with Fed
Chairman
Ben
Bernanke's
remarks
Tuesday. He noted that
the economy has weakened in recent weeks. But
he suggested that the
slowdown from high gas
prices and Japan's crises
is temporary and that
growth should pick up
later this year.
Despite the slowdown
reflected in Wednesday's
report, it still pointed to
an economy stronger than
it was at times in 2010.
Several Beige Books last
year
indicated
that
growth in some regions
had slowed or even
stalled.Copyright 2011
The Associated Press.

Senate votes to let Fed
trim debit card swipe fees
WASHINGTON (AP)
— The Senate voted
Wednesday to let the
Federal Reserve slice the
fees that stores must pay
banks each time a customer swipes a debit
card, handing merchants
a victory over banks in a
lobbying battle over billions in revenue.
Senators supporting
the financial institutions'
efforts to head off the
proposal fell six voters
short of the 60 needed to
prevail. The vote was
54-45.

The tally also was a triumph Sen. Richard
Durbin of Illinois, the
No. 2 Democratic leader
who had muscled a provision into last year's
financial overhaul law
requiring the Fed to offer
a plan for limiting the
fees.
Those charges now
average 44 cents per
transaction and mean $16
billion annually for
banks and credit card
companies, according to
Federal Reserve data.
The Fed has proposed

holding those fees to a
maximum of 12 cents per
swipe. By law a final rule
must take effect on July
21. While it might still be
changed, few expect it to
differ dramatically from
the current proposal.
Thirty-five Democrats
and 19 Republicans voted
to delay the Fed's
plan.Voting to let the rules
take effect were 32
Democrats, a Democratic
-leaning independent and
12 Republicans. Sen.
Joseph Lieberman, IConn., did not vote.

BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
(AP)
—
Authorities are extending the police search
for
a
20-year-old
Indiana University student beyond the city
limits of Bloomington
five days after she was
last seen walking back
to her apartment after
a night out with
friends.
Bloomington police
Lt. Bill Parker said
Wednesday that the
whole city has been
searched at least once,
and some areas near
the
apartment
of
Lauren Spierer have
been scoured for clues
several
times.
Hundreds of volunteers
have joined in search
efforts
this
week,
including
family
friends from out of
state and other Indiana
parents who have experienced the nightmare
of a missing child.
The National Center
for
Missing
&amp;
Exploited Children is
now
helping
Bloomington officers
organize
expanded
searches looking for
Spierer, a petite blonde
from Greenburgh, N.Y.,
who just finished her
sophomore year at IU.
Parker said searches of
the city will also continue.
Robert Spierer told
reporters Wednesday
that the family appreciates the hundreds of
volunteers who have
combed the college
town since searches for
his daughter began
over the weekend. His
wife, Charlene Spierer,
wore an "IU Mom" Tshirt,
and
Lauren
Spierer's sister, Rebecca
Spierer, stood nearby at
the news conference as
her father asked for
more volunteers.
"We certainly need
all the help we can
get," he said. "We will

be working and doing
whatever we have to do
to find Lauren and
bring her home."
Police say Lauren
Spierer went to a
sports bar near her
apartment with friends
Thursday
night,
stopped back at her
apartment building for
a brief time and then
went to a friend's
apartment. She left the
friend's apartment to
walk home at about
4:30
a.m.
Friday.
Authorities say her
friend watched Spierer
walk to a corner near
his apartment, but no
one has seen her since.
Parker said investigators reviewing surveillance
video
from
Spierer's
apartment
building have found no
signs of her being
coerced or being made
to do anything against
her will. Police served
a
search
warrant
Tuesday evening to
obtain the footage.
Parker said police had
already viewed the
images but needed to
get
the
original
footage as evidence.
Police believe foul
play is likely involved,
but have no suspects in
the case. Authorities
are following up leads
and have urged anyone
with information to
call police tip lines.
Indianapolis Colts
owner Jim Irsay said
on the social networking site Twitter that he
is offering a $10,000
reward for serious
information that solves
the case. Celebrities
have also been using
social media to help
spread word of the
case. Television host
Ryan Seacrest tweeted
a photo of Spierer and
wrote, "Let's help find
missing 20 yr old
Lauren Spierer, last
seen at Indiana U." A
Facebook page titled

"Help Find Lauren
Spierer - Missing from
Indiana
University"
had more than 22,000
supporters Wednesday,
many of whom wrote
short prayers and well
wishes.
Investigators have
Spierer's purse and
some keys, which were
found along the route
to her friend's apartment. Parker has said
they
aren't
sure
whether Spierer left
them on her way to or
from
her
friend's
home. She left her
cellphone and shoes in
the bar, and Parker
said her friends have
told police she had
been drinking that
evening.
Fliers with Spierer's
photograph and a physical description of her
are plastered around
the
40,000-student
Indiana
University
campus and the city of
Bloomington, about 50
miles
south
of
Indianapolis.
Eric Behrman, whose
19-year-old daughter
Jill disappeared in May
2000 while on a bike
ride near Bloomington,
joined search parties
on
Tuesday.
Jill
Behrman's
skeletal
remains were discovered three years later
in a remote field about
15 miles from the city,
and John R. Myers II
was sentenced to 65
years in prison in her
death.
Ron and Vicki
Weiner, of New York,
flew to Indiana to help
their family friends in
the search for Spierer.
They joined search
parties
Wednesday
after hugging Robert
and Charlene Spierer,
whom they've known
for more than 25 years.
"We're here to do
whatever it is we can
do to be helpful," Ron
Weiner said.

Soaring temps wilt East
Coast, shorten school days
WASHINGTON (AP)
— The official start of
summer is still two
weeks away, but much
of the nation is sweating through near-record
temperatures, with heat
advisories and warnings issued across the
Northeast,
midAtlantic and upper
Midwest
on
Wednesday.
Get used to it: A new
study from Stanford
University offers the
latest forecast that
global climate change
will lead to a permanent shift to unusually
hot summers in the
coming years.
The
National
Weather Service predicted
temperatures
nearing 100 degrees
along parts of the East
Coast and in the South,
and forecasters said it
would feel even hotter
with high humidity.
The ridge of high pressure that brought the
heat will remain parked
over the area through
Thursday.
By
2
p.m.,
Washington had tied
the record high for the
date of 98 degrees, set
in 1999, according to
preliminary National
Weather Service data.
The normal high is
about 82. Philadelphia
was at 94, one degree
shy of the record.

The deaths of five
elderly
people
in
Tennessee, Maryland
and Wisconsin have
been attributed to high
temperatures in recent
days,
and
public
schools in Philadelphia
and parts of New
Jersey cut their school
days short Wednesday
to limit the amount of
time students spent in
buildings with no air
conditioning.
In downtown Wilmington,
Del., Fred McIntyre said
the noon lunch hour business at his hot dog stand
was slow, but he was
hoping the flavored water
ice he scoops out of
orange plastic coole r s wo u l d a t t r a c t
attention.
"Once they notice it,
they start to come,"
said McIntyre, who
was doing his best to
stay cool himself, mopping his brow with a
white shirt and circling
his face with a batterypowered green plastic
fan.
This could be just the
beginning. The six-to10 day outlook from
the federal Climate
Prediction Center calls
for continued aboveaverage readings centered on the MidSouth,
including
Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama, and
extending as far as the

Great Lakes and New
York and New Jersey.
That is likely to continue in the coming
month, with the hot
weather extending west
into New Mexico and
Arizona. The threemonth outlook shows
the center of excessive
heat
focused
on
Arizona and extending
east along the Gulf
Coast, but not north of
Georgia. Cooler-thannormal readings are
forecast
from
Tennessee into the
Great Lakes states.
At Stanford, Noah S.
Diffenbaugh
and
Martin Scherer analyzed global climate
computer models and
concluded that by midcentury large areas
could face unprecedented
heat.
The
effects are likely to be
first felt in the tropics
but will extend to parts
of the United States,
Europe and China, they
report in a paper scheduled to be published in
the journal Climatic
Change Letters.
The
Centers
for
Disease Control and
Prevention reports that
each year more people
in the United States die
from extreme heat than
from hurricanes, lightning, tornadoes, floods
and earthquakes combined.

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OPINION

Senate showdown over battling
a limit on debit card fees
BY ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
—
Lawmakers on both sides
of a battle over debit card
fees used populist-style
appeals on Wednesday as
the Senate neared a vote
on whether to block a
Federal Reserve plan to
lower the fees that stores
must pay banks each
time a shopper swipes a
debit card.
Financial institutions
and their supporters on
Capitol Hill have been
fighting a Fed proposal
to cap, at 12 cents, the
fee stores must pay the
banks each of the 38 billion times that shoppers
use debit cards every
year.
Those fees currently
average about 44 cents
per swipe, transactions
that earn banks and credit card companies $16
billion a year, the Fed
says.
The battle has pitted
banks against merchants,
two industries that lawmakers hate to cross
because of their influence back home and
their campaign contributions.
With a showdown
voted slated for later
Wednesday, the Senate’s
chief proponent of lowering the swipe fees,
Sen. Richard Durbin, DIll., said that taxpayers
had helped banks “in
their darkest hour,” a reference to the $700 billion financial industry
bailout of 2008. He said
banks showed their gratitude by showering huge
bonuses on their executives.
“Honestly, are we
going to stand here and
say we can’t protect
small businesses across
America struggling to
survive?” said Durbin,
the Senate’s No. 2
Democratic leader.
Responding later, a
leader of the drive to prevent the Fed from capping the fees also sought
to appeal to everyday
Americans, saying he
was fighting for small
community banks and
credit unions, not the

nation’s biggest financial
institutions.
“These small guys who
had nothing to do with
the financial crisis do not
have that same flexibility
the Wall Street banks
have” to make up for lost
debit card fees by finding
revenue elsewhere, said
Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont.
“and these are the banks
in Montana. These are
the folks that I want to
make sure have a fair
shake.”
Last year’s financial
overhaul law ordered the
Fed to issue a rule on
debit card fees that will
take effect on July 21.
The Senate vote will be
on an effort to delay the
regulations for a year and
order the Fed and three
other agencies to study
whether the proposal is
fair — and rewrite it if at
least two agencies decide
it is not.
Each side was claiming to have consumers’
interests
at
heart.
Merchants said today’s
fees, typically 1 percent
to 2 percent of the purchase, push their prices
higher and make it
tougher to hire new
workers. Banks say the
Fed proposal discounts
overhead costs like preventing fraud and argue
that slicing the fee would
force them to find other
sources of revenue such
as raising their charges
for checking accounts.
The fight over socalled interchange fees
for debit cards crosses
party
lines.
While
Durbin is the chief supporter of the Fed’s proposal, the main foes are
Tester and Bob Corker,
R-Tenn.
The provision requiring the Fed to set fair
debit card fees was
included in last year’s
financial overhaul law
by a 64-33 Senate vote
and was written by
Durbin. There was no
separate House vote on
the issue. President
Barack Obama signed
the overall law after
Congress passed it over
solid Republican opposition.
Durbin, using Senate

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procedures, is forcing
Tester and Corker to
gather support from 60
of the 100 senators to
win. Though aides and
lobbyists on both sides
say Tester could be close
to prevailing, they concede it will be tough to
defeat
the
veteran
Durbin, who wields considerable influence as a
party leader.
Even so, Durbin faced
some challenges. Six
senators — including
five Democrats — who
voted for his amendment
last year are no longer in
the Senate. And at least
two senators who supported him a year ago —
Kay Hagan, D-N.C., and
Mike Crapo, R-Idaho —
are backing Tester’s
effort to delay the Fed
rules.
On Tuesday, Durbin
recalled the $700 billion
bailout passed in late
2008 as the financial
industry teetered on the
brink of catastrophe —
followed by the widely
unpopular bonuses that
many financial firms
awarded executives. He
said the largest banks
were “fighting viciously” to block the Fed rule
because they have the
most to lose.
“Are we going to be
shaken down a second
time?” he asked. “That’s
what this debate is all
about.”
Tester, a first-term
senator facing re-election next year in a GOPleaning state, said he
was not championing big
banks.
“No one needs to shed
a tear for them,” he said
on the Senate floor.
Instead, he said he was
on the side of small
banks and credit unions
that dot his rural state,
which he said could vanish if their revenues collapse.
“Fewer
banking
options in rural America
is a death knell for rural
America,” Tester said.
“But that is where we
are headed.”
“To call this a Wall
Street bailout is beyond
demagoguery,” Corker
told reporters.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Weinerʼs no Longfellow
BY AMY GOODMAN
“The troubled sky
reveals The grief it feels.”
These two lines were
written
by
Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow in
his poem “Snow-Flakes,”
published in a volume in
1863 alongside his epic
and better-known “The
Midnight Ride of Paul
Revere.” Much of the news
chatter this week has been
about Sarah Palin’s flubbing of the history of
Revere’s famous ride in
April 1775. Revere was on
a late-night, clandestine
mission to alert American
revolutionaries of an
impending British attack.
Palin’s incorrect version
had Revere loudly ringing
a bell and shooting a gun
on horseback as a warning
to the British to back off.
Pathetically, as well,
the media has been
awash with New York
Congressmember Anthony
Weiner’s string of electronic sexual peccadillos.
Punctuating the sensationalism, and between the TV
commercials from the oil,
gas, coal and nuclear
industries, are story after
story of extreme weather
events. Herein lies the real
scandal: Why aren’t the
TV meteorologists, with
each story, following the
words “extreme weather”
with another two, “climate
change”? We need modern-day eco-Paul (or
Paula) Revere’s to rouse
the populace to this imminent threat.
If anyone fits that role,
it’s Bill McKibben. He’s
been speaking, writing and
organizing globally to stop
climate change for more
than two decades. I recently asked him about the
extreme weather/climate
change connection:
“We’re making the Earth
a more dynamic and violent place. ... We’re trapping more of the sun’s
energy in this narrow envelope of atmosphere, and
that’s now expressing itself
in many ways. We don’t
know for sure that any particular tornado comes from
climate change. There
have always been tornadoes. We do know that
we’re seeing epic levels of
thunderstorm activity, of

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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

Amy Goodman
flooding, of drought, of all
the things that climatologists have been warning us
about.”
McKibben, founder of
the grass-roots climateaction
organization
350.org, critiques media
coverage of the disasters:
“You didn’t see ... pictures
from Sri Lanka, from
Vietnam,
from
the
Philippines, from Brazil
northeast of Rio, where
they’ve had similar kinds
of megafloods, now
Colombia.”
When McKibben speaks
of a “more dynamic and
violent place,” he’s talking
about the climate. But climate change, increasingly,
can cause actual political
violence. This week in
Oslo, people gathered for
the Nansen Conference
on Climate Change and
Displacement, to work
on the growing problem
of climate refugees. The
United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees,
Antonio Guterres, warned of
two threats: slow onset disasters like drought and desertification that lead to “a tipping point at which people’s lives and livelihoods
come under such serious
threat that they have no
choice but to leave their
homes,” and “natural disasters (that) uproot large
numbers of people in a
matter of hours.”
A principal concern is
that these millions, even
billions, who are or will be
displaced will be denied
safe haven. As Naomi
Klein, a true Paula Revere,
warned recently, “This crisis will be exploited to militarize our societies, to create fortress continents.”
UNHCR’s
Guterres
notes that most of the climate refugees will be inter-

nally displaced within their
home country. And you
needn’t look as far away as
Pakistan to see evidence of
that. Just this week in the
United States, people have
been forced to flee tornadoes
in
western
Massachusetts, flooding in
Iowa and Colorado, and
wildfires in Arizona.
Record-breaking heat levels in Washington, D.C.,
and Texas are threatening
lives, with the hottest summer months yet to come.
Not far from Oslo, in
Bonn, Germany, more
than 3,000 participants
from some 180 countries
are gathered to plan for
this December’s U.N. climate talks in Durban,
South Africa. Addressing
the meeting, Tove Ryding
of Greenpeace said, “What
we are talking about here
is actually millions of
green jobs, to transform
our societies to energy systems that are safe, that are
stable and that are based
on renewable energy and
energy efficiency.”
That move, away from
fossil fuels and nuclear
toward renewable energy,
is being embraced now by
more and more countries,
especially
after
the
Fukushima disaster. Japan
just revealed that there
were three full nuclear
meltdowns at Fukushima.
Switzerland and Germany
have announced that they
will be phasing out
nuclear power. China,
Germany and Japan, three
of the world’s top five
economies, are charging
ahead on renewable-energy research and deployment.
The Obama administration’s paltry funding for
renewable-energy research
pales in comparison with
the tens of billions in subsidies for the oil, coal and
nuclear industries.
The global climate is
changing, and humans are
the principal cause. Will
we in the U.S., the world’s
historically largest polluter, heed the warnings of
our
environmental
Reveres, or will the troubled sky, as Longfellow
wrote, increasingly reveal
the grief it feels?
(c) 2011 Amy Goodman

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�Thursday, June 9, 2011

Obituaries
Sarah Ramsey
Sarah Lynn Ramsey, resident of the Five Points
community, passed away at her residence Wednesday
morning surrounded by her family following an
extended illness.
She was born Jan. 30, 1951 in Columbus,daughter
of James Bare and the late Donna Church Bare.
Donna was a homemaker and retired as a housekeeper in the hotel/motel industry. She attended the
Pentecostal Church.
Surviving are her husband of 42 years, Ernest Lee
Ramsey; sons: Kenny, George Curtis and Matt
Ramsey, all of Pomeroy; Daughter, Annette Bare of
Pomeroy; brothers, Jim Raver and Steve Bare; sisters,
Judy Markham and Beverly Markham.
In addition to her mother, she was preceded in death
by a son, Ernest Lee Ramsey Jr.
Funeral will be Friday, June 10 at Waybright
Funeral Home, Ripley, W,Va., with Pastor Herman
Robinson officiating. Interment will follow at the
Morgan Cemetery, Ripley.
Friends may call two hours prior to the service at
the funeral home.

Viola Tucker
Viola Maxine Tucker, Pomeroy, passed away on
Tuesday, June 7, 2011.
She was born Dec. 30, 1925 in New Haven, W.Va.,
to the late Samuel and Ella Mae (Blake) Reitmire. She
was a bookkeeper for most of her life and she attended the Hillside Baptist Church.
She is survived by her daughter, Claudia Wolfe, and
son, Jon Grim; grandchildren: Amy and Terry
Michael, Paul and Missie Wolfe, Allyson and Mark
McBenge, Daymond and Rachel Wolfe, William
Wolfe, Angel and Emmanuel Cundiff, Tabby Grimm
and Darrin, and Jon and Latasha Grimm, Jr.; 17 great
grandchildren; a sister. Leota Roush, a special friend,
Wesley Herrick;brother-in-law, John Bailey; sister-inlaw, Thelma Reitmire; and several nieces and
nephews.
She is preceded in death by her parents; brothers,
Stanley Herman Reitmire, and John Thomas
Reitmire; a sister, Henrietta Bailey; and a great grandson, Frank McBenge.
Service will be held on Saturday, June 11 at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy with
the Rev. James Acree officiating. Burial will follow
in the Graham Cemetery in New Haven, WV.
Visitation will be held from 6-8 p.m. on Friday at the
funeral home.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Pond
From Page A1
dents into a fire pit with a swivel grill on top. Taking
many hours to create, the steel fire pit, so heavy it takes
four men to lift it, will be chained down to a concrete
pad.
Earlier through the efforts of Jim Smith, project
restoration chairman, two large picnic tables were built
by members of the Carpenters Union 650 and donated
for the park area. They were set on concrete pads created with the material provided by Forest Run Ready Mix
and finished by Pat Mullens who donated his time. The
chains and locks to secure the tables to the concrete
pads were donated by King Hardware.
Smith’s efforts now are directed toward getting donations with which to purchase heavy benches for use by
those who come to relax as they fish, soak up some sun,
or just enjoy the outdoor scenery.
Meanwhile, Pomeroy Mayor John Musser continues
his efforts to secure another Nature Works grant so the
path and bridge projects can move forward. But, as he
pointed out, “ everything depends on getting more
grants or donations.”

www.mydailysentinel.com

Law You Can Use
What You Should Consider
When Granting an Oil and
Gas Lease on Your Land

Q: What does it mean
when a driller asks for an
oil and gas lease on my
property?
A: The driller is asking
you to let him come on
your land to drill for oil
and/or gas so that it can be
extracted and sold.
Q: What exactly is an
oil and gas lease?
A: A lease is a document you sign to give the
driller the right to use the
surface of your land to
choose a well site in
order to drill underneath
your property and extract
the oil and/or natural gas
located there. Once you've
signed the lease and a site
is selected, the driller must
get a permit from the State
of Ohio, bring in a drilling
rig, set it up and drill for
oil and gas.
Q: If the driller finds oil
andlor gas on my property, what happens next?
A: If the driller finds
the oil and gas, he will
complete the well and
extract the oil and/or natural gas through the well
hole that was dug and sell
it. If it is gas, the driller
will build a small gas sales
line to transport the gas to
a transmission pipeline. If
it is oil, the driller will put
storage tanks on your land
to store the oil until a truck
can pick it up. Other
equipment also may be
required.

Q: Does the state regulate drillers?
A: Yes. All drilling
operators we regulated by
the Ohio Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management.
Q: Assuming gas
and/or oil are found
underneath my property,
hat can I expect to
receive?
A: For the present standard lease in Ohio, you
can expect a small cash
bonus payment and, normally, 12.5 percent of
what the driller receives
from sales. The costs of
producing a well on your
property are not deducted
from this percentage, but
severance taxes are
deducted from your share
of the sales.
Usually, you can also
receive up to 3 00 mcf s of
"free gas" for use in your
home. However, you are
responsible for installing
and maintaining the gas
line to your home, There
are both advantages and
risks fro. taking free gas
from a well located on
your property for use in
your home. You should
discuss the pros and cons
of accepting free gas with
an informed advisor.
Q: How long does the
oil and gas lease last?
A: Normally, the first
term lasts from one to five
years to provide time for
drilling. If a well is found
and produces oil and/or
natural gas, that producing

COLUMBUS — For
his dedicated service as
Ohio’s 68th Governor,
nearly 600 family, friends,
former staff members and
supporters gathered yesterday at the Ohio
Statehouse to recognize
the public service of former
Governor
Ted
Strickland and to unveil
his official gubernatorial
portrait.
Prior to serving as governor, Strickland represented Meigs and other
other southern Ohio counties in the U.S. House of
Representatives.
“Ohio is a beautiful state
and the people of Ohio
reflect the best of
America,” said Strickland. “I
came from the hills of southern Ohio and began my education in a one room school
house. And yet, I’ve had the
honor to serve as Ohio’s
governor. That was only
possible because of the
myriads of people who
cared for me: my wife
Frances, my family, my

From Page A1
lot up for sale, Council discussed the fact that the lot sits in
a flood plain, but it determined that it could be raised, possibly four to five feet, to remedy the situation.
Councilman Vic Young also requested a stipulation be
placed in the sale agreement stating the purchaser has to
develop the property and cannot let the old building sit and
deteriorate into an eyesore.

Q: What happens when
the well no longer produces?
A: If the well is no
longer producing and no
other well is included in
the lease, the driller will
plug and abandon the
well, and you will own the
mineral rights again.
Q: What is the chance
that a driller might find a
well on my Ohio property?
A: If you have been
asked for a lease on your
property, the driller probably knows there is a reasonably good possibility
of locating oil and/or natural gas on your property.
Q: Wnat else should I
know before a driller asks
me to sign a lease?
A: Recently, drillers
have come into Ohio to
explore for much deeper
and bigger wells than in
the past. These large wells
are known as the
Marcellus or Utica shale
wells because they are
drilled to the Marcellus or
Utica shale formations.
The companies drilling
wells to these formations
are typically large companies, and can offer larger
signing bonuses than have
previously been offered to
Ohioans. You should be
aware, however, that the

risks associated with
drilling deeper wells are
different from those associated with drilling shallower wells (such as the
"Clinton formation" wells
that have been drilled in
Ohio in past years).
Q: Who should I contact for more information
regarding Ohio's regulation of oil and gas wells?
A: Whenever you consider leasing your property to a driller, regardless of
the well type, you should
contact a lawyer who
is familiar with oil and
gas leases. Contact the
Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, the
Division of Mineral
Resource Management
at 614-265-6633 or visit
www.dnr.state.oh.us/mineral/index.html. You can
also contact the
Ohio Farm Bureau at
614-249-2400.
This "Law You Can Use "
column was provided by the
Ohio State Bar Association
(OSBA). It was prepared by
Ronald K Lembright and
Anne Marie Christ, attorneys
with the Akron firm of
Roderick Linton Betfance,
LLP; and William Taylor, an
attorney with the Zanesville
firm, of Kincaid, Taylor &amp;
Geyer. The column offers
general information about
the law. Seek an attorney's
advice before applying this
information to a legal problem. For more information
on a variety of legal topics,
visit the OSBA's website at
www. ohiobar. org.

friends, my teachers, my
hardworking staff and the
thousands of Ohioans
who joined me in working
to strengthen our State in
difficult times. To them,
and to all the people of
Ohio, I am very grateful.”
Portraits
of
Ohio
Governors are traditionally painted at the end of a
Governor’s term or shortly thereafter. Former Ohio
Governor Rutherford B.
Hayes, who served from
1868 to 1872 and again
from 1876 to 1877, is
attributed with beginning
the collection of portraits. In 1867, Governor
Rutherford B. Hayes
decided to form a permanent and proper collection of Ohio Governor's
portraits to hang in what
was a new Capitol building. His vision was to
ensure that the history of
Ohio and its leaders was
not lost. Prior to 1867,
only a few of the past
governors had been
painted.

From Page A1

Bids

well will automatically
extend the lease until the
well is no longer producing. A well sometimes
produces for many years.

Official Strickland portrait unveiled at Statehouse

Fundraising

(Charlene Hoeflich/photos)
Richard Fetty, welding instructor at Meigs, was joined by
Tyson Morris, to demonstrate to Smith how the grill top
can be swung out and even removed so that the fire pit
can be used for other purposes, like a marshmallow roast.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

jars in area businesses to collect for the fireworks and
entertainment, and ask anyone who would like to
make a donation by mail to do so at P.O. Box 9.
The shirts come in a number of colors, including
traditional Middleport orange, green, yellow, and
blue. They will be available for sale at the monthly
Wednesday Lunch Along the River fundraisers, or
from association members. They will also be for sale
at the July 4 celebration.
That event begins at 3 p.m., when inflatables will be
open for free play, and popcorn and hot dogs and
other refreshments will be served. The parade will
line up at 4:30 p.m. at the Dairy Queen and travel
downtown at 5 p.m.

Middleport Community
Association
HUMP DAY

Lunch Day
1st Wednesday
of every month
11 - 1
Dave Diles Park
$5.00 donation

JULY 4th
Activities
Dave Diles Park
3-?
Fireworks
9:30

A flagraising ceremony will be cnoducted, and will
be followed by music by K&amp;D Karaoke of Rutland,
and a 7 p.m. karaoke show.
The band Elixir will perform at 8 p.m., and the fireworks display is scheduled for 9:30.
Why Not MOW with the BEST
MADE IN THE USA?
Gravely #1 Since 1916

FLIP - MANNING - BUTCH
proud to have sold Gravely
Equipment for 34 years

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service

204 Condor Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
SALES - SERVICE - PARTS - PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY

740-992-2975 • 740-508-1936

Summertime is a great time to schedule
Annual Exams and Sports Physicals.

To schedule an appointment, call

(740) 949-2683
Hunter Family Practice
����'JGUI�4U��t�3BDJOF

Meigs Wellness Center
Treadmills, Recumbent Bikes, Rowing Machines, Elliptical
Trainers, Free Weights &amp; Weight Machines.
Personal Training, Zumba and Spin Classes
Hours: Mon. - Thur. 7am - 7pm
Fri. 7am - 4pm • Sat. 8am - 12pm

Contact Number: 992-2161
Check us out on Facebook at Meigs Wellness Center
A program offered by the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.

Excavation work includes: Driveways, Land
Clearing, Ponds, Trenching, Reclamation, &amp;
Much More! Call today for a FREE ESTIMATE
1-740-949-0405
Manuel - 740-590-3700
Danny - 740-590-9255
Mike - 740-590-3701

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 9, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Thursday, June 9, 2011

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

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.

Read your
newspaper and learn
something today!

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

100

Legals

Notification is given that Home National Bank, 209 Third Street,
Racine, OH 45771 has file an application with Comptroller of the
Currency on May 27, 2011, as
specified in 12 CFR 5 for permission to relocate their main office to
502 Elm Street, Racine, OH. Any
person wishing to comment on this
application may file comments in
writing with the Director for District
Licensing, One Financial Place,
Suite 2700 440 South LaSalle
Street Chicago, IL 60605 or CE.Licensing@occ.treas.gov within 15
days of the date of this publication
(6) 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15,
16, 17, 19, 21, 2011
NOTICE TO ESTABLISH A NEW
BRANCH (for Ohio Division of Financial Institutions and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation)
Farmers Bank and Savings Company, located at 211 West 2nd
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, has
filed notice/application of a proposed new banking office with the
Superintendent of the Ohio Division
of Financial Institutions, 77 South
High Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215-6120 and with Mr. Anthony
Lowe, Regional Director, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 500
West Monroe Street, Suite 3500,
Chicago, Illinois 60661, to establish
a new banking office at 640 East
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
Meigs County. Any person who
wishes to comment on the proposed banking office must do so in
writing to the Division within fourteen days after the date of this publication and in writing to the FDIC
within fifteen days after the date of
this publication. The non-confidential portions of the FDIC application
are on file in the appropriate FDIC
office and are available for public inspection during regular business
hours; photocopies of the non-confidential portion of the FDIC application file will be made available
upon request. (6) 9, 16, 2011

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

200

Other Services

Announcements

600

Animals

DISH NETWORK
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
Found small blue eyed cat, call to
ID, 740-992-7566

It's Finally FREE!
Free intallation with DVR in up
to six rooms and
Free HD DVR upgrade for
Only $24.99/month*
Local channels included!
*conditions apply, promo code
MB0611
Call Dish Network Now 1888-476-0098

Notices

VONAGE

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.

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

Middleport Legion
BINGO
Every Saturday Night
Starting at 7:00pm
Doors open at 5:30pm

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

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

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

several kittens to give away.740)
245-5371
KITTENS 7wks old 740-578-6610
Found- miniature Pincher like dog,
call to ID 740-742-2743

900

Merchandise

ADT

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

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

Yard Sale
Big Yard Sale Fri &amp; Sat 9am-? 843
Rt 7 N - Tools, Household Items,
Lots of Everything Size 18-20
Huge Yard Sale Fri. June 10 &amp; 11 @
2260 Fairfield Centenary Rd. Gallipolis
Huge Yard Sale June 10th &amp; 11th 9am to ? Alfred Dunner clothes,
and much more, Rt 7 above Meigs
/Gallia County line Behind pines on
right.
Moving Sale June 11 &amp; 12 @ 49
Chris Lane Furniture ClothingMen's Women's teen girl's,
dishes,framed pictures, camping
equipment,
cd's,dvd's,
video
games,and consoles, board games
and books.
6 Family Yard Sale Lots of Stuff for
Everyone! June 9-10th Rodney
Community Building 8-5pm
Huge Family Yard Sale 6/9-6/10 95pm @ 14813 St Rt 554 Bidwell
Baby
Furniture+Clothes+Toys,
Mens+ Womens Clothing, Exercise
Many more items.

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

Ladies diamond dinner ring. 36 diamonds tw. 2.50. In yellow 14 ct wt
gold mounting. Value $3500 in 1988
asking $750 Size 6 (740) 612-2161
or 446-9118

400

Huge Whitetail Deer Shoulder
Mount, Ohio Big Bucks,should see,
this one will sell Quick, Don't delay
$350 Ph 740-533-3870

2- family Yard Sale Fri 10th &amp; Sat
11th 9am to 4pm @ 558 Homewood Drive Bidwell, Oh 1 mile off Rt
160.

gas counter cook top like new
$150.00
304)576-2890

Yard Sale @ 3791 Addison Pike
Gallipolis-June 10th &amp; 11th - 9am2pm

FIND A JOB
OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

YARD SALE'S June 10th &amp; 11th @
2.5 miles out Addison Pike.
Tools,Furniture,Movies, and more
9am-5pm.

Financial

Other Services

DIRECTV

1 female pup-Chihuahua, 1 adult
dog part Chihuahua, 1 male cat
(fixed), 1 female inside cat (declawed and fixed cat), 1 female inside cat. Serious calls only. (740)
245-0070

Miscellaneous

Money To Lend

Pet Cremations. Call 740-446-3745

Giveaway- Tiny female yorkie
Spaded nice Lap dog under 4 lbs
10yrs old also a Tiny teacup female
chihuahua (White) spaded 10yrs
old Nice dogs Ph: 614-890-8606 or
740-645-6987

Security

Lawn Service
Wanted: experienced lawnmower
mechanic. Good pay for right person. Call 304-675-3600

Pets

Want To Buy

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)

Yard Sale June 6,7,8, and 9th
Clothes, Knicknacks,Lamps, Etc @
199 Hemlock Road off of Evergreen.

Yard Sale @ 1421 Jackson Pike Fri
&amp; Sat 8am -3pm
Bicycle, Bench Grinder, Computer
Monitors,Shovels
work
bench,Longaberger baskets, Many
other household items.
Yard Sale- Sat. June 11, St. John
Lutheran Church on Pine Grove Rd,
10-2:00

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Thursday, June 9, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A8

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briefs
Friend records first ace of the
season at Kountry Hills
POMEROY, Ohio — Mike Friend recorded the first
hole-in-one of the 2011 golf season at Kountry Hills
Golf Course on Sunday, June 5. The ace was hit on the
par 3 fifth hole.

Riverside Amateur still has
openings of 2011 tournament
MASON, W.Va. — There are still several openings in
the 2011 Riverside amateur Golf Tournament. The tournament had to change he original date due to the W.Va.
Amateur falling back to the July 4th week. June 11-12
will be the dates for the 2011 tournament.
You may sign up for the championship flight or you
can be flighted by your official 2011 handicap. You may
enter by calling the clubhouse at 304-773-5354 or stopping by the course.

Church Softball League
POMEROY, Ohio — Any church interested in pllaying in the co-ed fall softball league, which will begin
August 6, should contact Mike Stewart at 992-7196 or
Bryan and Melissa Colwell at 992-0565 or 416-5663.

5th Annual Southern “Hustlin’
Tornado” Basketball Camp
RACINE, Ohio — Southern High School will be hosting its annual basketball camp June 13-16. The camp
will run from 9 a.m. to noon for boys and girls entering

grades 2-6 and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. for boys entering
grades 7-9. The camp will be conducted by Head
Basketball Coach Jeff Caldwell, with members of the
coaching staff and players — former and current —
assisting.
Fundamentals will be stressed with award being given
for 3 on 3, horse and free throw competitions.
For more information contact Coach Caldwell at 9493129.

4th Annual Southern Basketball
Golf Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern Basketball team
will holds its 4th annual golf scramble on Saturday, July
9, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va. Play will
begin at 8:30 a.m. A four person team should have a
handicap of no less than 40, with no more than one player under an eight handicap.
Prizes will be awarded to the top three teams, as well
as for the longest drive, closest to the pin and longest
putt.
To register or for more information contact Jeff
Caldwell at 740-949-3129.

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 740-446-2926 or by email at gl_jhill@seovec.org

RVHS Girls Basketball Camp
BIDWELL, Ohio — The River Valley Lady Raiders
will host the Rollin’ on the River basketball camp July 58 at the high school. The Camp which is for girls in
grades 3-8 will run from 9 a.m. to noon each day.
Campers will develop their basketball abilities through
drill work, skill games and competitive team play, with
coaching by the girls basketball coaching staff and players.
Registration can be mailed to River Valley High
School, Renee Gilmore Head Basketball Coach, 8785
St. Rt. 160, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
For more information contact Head Coach Renee
Gilmore at 740-794-0592.

OHSAA Volleyball
Officials Class
Any one interested in obtaining a OHSAA Volleyball
Officials License for the 2011 season should contact
Mike Rouse at 740-286-2482 or 740-710-9511 or by
email at mrouse@makeyourcall.com
For more information visit www.makeyourcall.com

Wahama Athletic Boosters Golf
Tournament
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama High School
Athletic Boosters will host a golf tournament on
Saturday, June 18, at Riverside Golf Course.
For more information contact Mike Wolfe at 304-5932512 or Riverside Golf Course at 304-773-5354.

Tribune - Sentinel - Register
C L A S S I F I E D MARKETPLACE
2 fam yard sale Fri 6/10 8-4 and Sat
6/11 8-1 100 Head Rd Vinton SR
160 approx 3 miles past intersection at SR 554 turn (R) on Thompson Rd first (L) is Head Rd, !st
driveway on (R). Signs posted from
4 way stop at 554 and 160.
Boys/girls clothes, toys little to teen,
lots of household misc, "Cars" twin
bedding and decor
June 10-11 at Rose residence on
CR 28 1 mile from Racine, Antique
drop leaf table, riding toys, Christmas, angels, toys, household, primitives, clothes (AE, Polo, Gap, A&amp;F,
Aeropostle, Gymboree, 77 Kids) 5
families, Rain or shine
Ebay Store Sale! Girls clothing size
NB - 14/16, Brand new with tagslimited too, Justice, carters, and
more. Baby items new in box. Car
seat/stroller,
Basinette,
bouncerss,bottles,diapers,crib bedding and more. Winterberry dishes
new. Much much more! most items
priced $4 and up @ 377 Georges
Creek Rd. (close to Bulaville Pike)
Fri 6/10 and Sat 6/11 from 8am4pm

1000

Recreational
Vehicles

Boats / Accessories
2000 Sylvan Fishing Boat with Trail
&amp; Troll motor all gear $3,800
Ph:740-446-7485

Motorcycles
93 Harley Davidson Wide Glide,
25,000 miles. Nice.$7,500
2004 Harley Davidson Wide Glide
12,000 miles, Nice $10,000.
304)593-4741

2000

Automotive

Apartments/
Townhouses
1 BR upstairs unfurnished apt
@136 1st Ave. rear, 740)446-2561
Dep and ref required
BEAUTIFUL 1,400 SQ FT 2 BED
RM. APT- RENT INCL. W/S/G &amp;
WASHER / DRYER/ NO PETS
GALLIPOLIS CITY- OFF STREET
PARKING $650.00 MO 740-5915174
CLEAN 1 &amp; 2 BR APTS
Racine,Ohio Furnished
RENT incl.W/S/G No Pets 740591-5174
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR townhouse apartments, also renting 2 &amp;
3BR houses. Call 441-1111.
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
Middleport, 2 br furnished &amp; unfurnished, dep &amp; ref, No Pets, 740992-0165
3 br apt, $450, 1 br apt, $325 plus
deposit &amp; utilities, Racine, Oh, 3rd
St., 740-247-4292
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1
BR at $400+2 BR at $475 Month.
446-1599.

Condominiums
Myrtle Beach- 2 bedroom Condo
Ocean Front, $1,100 per week,
available June 4-June 24, Call
Steve 304-593-3336

Want To Buy

Houses For Rent

Want to buy Junk Cars, call 740388-0884

GREAT BUY House in Patriot at a
bargain price call 740-379-2241 before 7pm for more details.

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

3000

Real Estate
Sales

Nice 1 BR House Furnished With
Furniture and Water only. 446-1759
Rent $450 Sec. Dep. $300
Good renter needs a 3 br house in
Meigs County please call 740-4163626 or 740-992-7059

Houses For Sale
New home built on your land. $0
down for landowners. 740-4463570
2-BR, LR,FR,Kitchen, Dining Rm,
Car Port, Central Air- Plus Appliances, on 2.8 acres Ph: 740-4285003
7 Third St, Mason, WV, 1.5 story
w/3 bedrooms, 1 bath, detached
garage w/bathroom, outbuilding &amp;
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HOUSE FOR SALE: 2BR, 2BTH,
LR, DR, FR, eat in kitchen, office,
1300 sq feet $59,900. Call 304-3774396

Land (Acreage)
2.8 acres in Syracuse on Roy
Jones Rd., Syracuse water &amp;
sewage, asking $6,200.00 614404-1381

3500

Real Estate
Rentals
Apartments/
Townhouses

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
subsidized, 1-BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 675-6679

Lease
For Lease: Spacious 2nd floor apt
overlooking Gallipolis city park &amp;
river. LR, den, large kitchen-dining
area. New appliances &amp; cupboards.
3 br, 2 baths, washer dryer. $900
month. Call 446-4425 or 446-2325
FOR RENT: 3 BR, 2BTH, remodeled, all electric, $600mo/$600 dep.
Call 740-973-8999

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

Medical

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.

Overbrook Center is currently accepting applications for STATE
TESTED Nursing Assistants. Full
Time an Part Time positions available. Interested applicants can pick
up an application or contact Susie
Drehel, RN, Staff Development Coordinator @ 740-992-6472 M-F 8a4:30p at 333 Page St., Middleport,
Oh EOE &amp; a participant of the
Drug-Free Workplace Program.

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

Help Wanted - General

Manufactured
Housing
Rentals

14x70 2 BR 2Bath $450 mo. &amp; Dep
Swan Creek off of St Rt 7 Crown
City Ph 740-645-6390
2 BR Mobile Home with Central
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Now taking applications for Nice 2
bedroom Mobile Homes NO PETS
740-446-7309
For rent- 3 br trailer, total electric,
$400, 740-742-2714

Sales

6000

Employment
Construction

FT position to fill quickly, Pomeroy
Area, need help in construction field
preferably w/experience with windows, doors, &amp; siding, to apply 1800-291-5600

Service / Bus.
Directory

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

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.

Miscellaneous

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

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

Auction

Shop the
Classifieds!
Auction

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.

Medical
Seeking Medical Asst. Immediately
for a busy family practice's. Must
travel to Gallia &amp; Wellston officesSubmit resume Ph 441-9800 or
384-6600

Services Offered
To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155

Seeking House with small farm to
Rent 25-50 acres Ph 740-418-5168

4000

9000

Auction

Want to Rent

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on manufactured homes. Call while
funds last! 740-446-3570
Beautiful 1BR apartment in the
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only 10 mins. from town. Must see
to
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$375/mo 614-595-7773 or 740645-5953

Education

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60201720

Yard Sale

�Thursday, June 9, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

Ailing Nowitzki lifts
Indians fall to Twins 3-2 in 10 innings
(AP)
Revere had three hits gle and Brantley singled
Mavericks, NBA finals tied —CLEVELAND
Their home-field
and Justin Morneau had him to third. But Pavano
DALLAS (AP) —
Dirk Nowitzki and the
Dallas Mavericks have
pulled off another stunning comeback, tying
the NBA finals at two
games each.
And
this
time,
Nowitzki did it while
battling the flu.
Nowitzki shook off
three poor quarters to
score 10 of his 21
points in the final period as the Mavericks
outscored the Miami
Heat 21-9 over the final
10:12 for an 86-83 victory in a memorable
Game 4 on Tuesday
night.
The Mavs avoided
going down 3-1, a
deficit no team has ever
overcome in the finals,
and guaranteed the
series will return to
Miami for a Game 6 on
Sunday night. Game 5
is Thursday in Dallas.
“We just played with
incredible heart and
passion,” Dallas center
Tyson Chandler said.
Dwyane Wade scored
32 points, but fumbled
an inbounds pass with
6.7 seconds left. He
knocked the ball back
to Mike Miller for a
potential tying 3-pointer, but it wasn’t even
close to hitting the rim.
Chris Bosh scored 24
points for Miami, but
the Heat got a stunningly unproductive game
from their biggest star,
LeBron James. He
scored
only
eight
points, making just 3 of
11 shots. He contributed nine rebounds
and seven assists, but
his lack of scoring
sticks out because of
the loss.
Nowitzki opened the
game looking just fine,
making his first three
shots. But then he
missed 10 of 11, and
missed a free throw for
the first time since
Game 4 of the conference finals. By then,
word spread of his illness.
With the game — and
likely the series — on
the line, Nowitzki
found a way to come
through. He made only
2 of 6 shots, but that
included a terrific layup
with 14.4 seconds left;
he made all six of his
free throws.
Hey, if he could win
Game 2 with a lefthanded layup two days
after tearing a tendon in
the tip of his middle
finger, what’s a little
temperature?
“We all seen him go
through walkthroughs,”
Chandler said. “Every
time he started to talk
he started coughing. He
was wheezing.”
Miami was poised to
take a commanding lead
in the series when
Udonis Haslem hit a
jumper that made it 7465 early in the fourth
quarter. It was the
Heat’s biggest lead and
the way Nowitzki was
playing, the Mavericks
didn’t seem capable of
pulling off another rally
like the 22-5 finish that
won Game 2.
Yet Jason Terry —
who kick-started that
comeback with six
straight points — made
consecutive
baskets,
and the surge was on.
Terry ended up capping
it with two free throws
with 6.7 seconds left
that forced Miami to
need a 3-pointer.
Dallas finally got the
balanced scoring attack
it wanted.
Terry had 17, Shawn
Marion
16
and
Chandler had 13 points
and 16 rebounds.
DeShawn Stevenson,
who moved to the
bench so J.J. Barea
could join the starting
lineup,
scored
11

points.
Miami, as usual, got
little beyond its three
superstars.
Miller
scored six points, Mario
Chalmers had five and
Haslem
and
Joel
Anthony each scored
four points.
The series is up for
grabs now. Both teams
are 1-1 at home, so all
those stats about who
wins under various circumstances seem pretty
moot.
The bottom line is,
it’s a best-of-three
series now.
It was an electric
night from the start,
with 20,430 fans again
clad in their blue “The
Time Is Now” giveaway
T-shirts standing and
screaming from the
time Kelly Clarkson
finished the national
anthem.
The score was tight
most of the night. Each
team had its share of
runs, but there also
were long stretches of
trading baskets.
The Mavs made half
their shots in the first
quarter, but gave up so
many
offensive
rebounds — nine in the
first 10 minutes, matching Miami’s total for
Game 3 — that the Heat
tied it after one period
despite shooting only
29 percent.
Miami got going in
the second quarter,
putting together a 12-2
spurt.
Soon
after
Haslem went to the
bench with three fouls,
Dallas went back ahead
being a 9-0 run fueled
by defense: a travel, a
charge, a shot-clock
violation
and
two
turnovers. Then it was
Wade’s turn.
He made two tough
shots, then somehow
got a shot to fall after
being hit in the body
and arms while driving
to the rim. That threepoint play started a 7-2
jag that left Miami up
47-45 at halftime.
Both teams sensed the
game and series was on
the line at the start of
the third quarter. The
action became more
physical and both teams
were up for the challenge, putting together
six lead changes and
five ties in the first
6:11.
In one flurry, Bosh hit
a jumper with a man in
his face, Barea darted to
the rim and somehow
got up a shot that then
spun off the backboard
and rim before falling,
followed by Wade making a jumper over
Marion as the shot
clock was running out.
Marion walked away
shaking
his
head,
smirking and saying, “I
don’t know, I don’t
know.” Then Marion
came back and banked
in a hook shot over
James.
NOTES: Stevenson
scored in double figures
for the first time since
Feb. 2. ... Marion’s first
break this game was
longer than he sat out
all the previous games.
... Finals jitters? Bosh
and Terry each missed
their first two free
throws. Both were making 81 percent of their
foul shots this series. ...
Mavs
coach
Rick
Carlisle got a technical
foul late in the first
quarter for questioning
what looked like a
questionable call. All
Carlisle appeared to say
was, “C’mon, Monty,”
with his hands up and a
smirk on his face. ...
The elderly fan who
appeared shaken up
when two players flew
into him during the second quarter of Game 3
was back in his usual
courtside seat.

magic has disappeared,
vanishing almost as
unexpectedly
as
it
arrived. The timely, twoout hits are dropping for
the other guys now.
For two months, the
Cleveland Indians were
baseball’s biggest surprise.
Now, they’re shocked.
“What comes around
goes around,” Indians
manager Manny Acta
said.
Cleveland lost for the
sixth time in seven games
on Wednesday as Ben
Revere’s two-out RBI
single in the 10th inning
off closer Chris Perez
gave the coming-to-life
Minnesota Twins a 3-2
win over the slumping
Indians, who can’t seem
to shake free of their June
swoon.
The Indians, who were
once 14-2 at Progressive
Field, went 1-6 on their
homestand, losing four
straight to Texas and two
of three to Minnesota,
which has the majors’
worst record.
“Everything that could
have gone wrong went
wrong,” Acta said.
After Drew Butera
doubled with two outs off
Perez (2-2), Revere
flared his base hit into
shallow left. Butera
scored sliding ahead of
outfielder
Michael
Brantley’s one-hop throw
that skipped past catcher
Lou Marson, helping the
last-place Twins take the
series and win for the
sixth time in seven
games.
Matt Capps (2-3) got
the win after giving up
Jack Hannahan’s tying,

two-out homer in the
ninth — a shot that
briefly had the Indians
believing they would win
again. But after Carlos
Santana hit a two-out
double in the 10th, Phil
Dumatrait retired ShinSoo Choo on a comebacker for his first career
save.
Grady Sizemore homered for Cleveland, which
has lost eight of nine at
home and is 2-6 overall
this month. The Indians,
who are missing DH
Travis Hafner, are 1 for
40 since June 2 with runners in scoring position.
“We’re not getting the
big hits. It’s not a secret,”
Brantley said. “I’ve got
to do a better job of getting big hits and so does
everybody. We have to
put some hits together at
the same time. We’re getting hits sporadically, but
you have to put them
together.”
The road isn’t going to
get easier. The Indians
play four in New York
against the Yankees
before visiting secondplace Detroit.
“We knew we were
going to hit a rough
stretch,” said starter
Justin Masterson, who
went eight innings but
remains winless since
April 26. “It’s quite all
right. You just have to
continue to fight. Guy’s
minds are in a good
spot.”

an RBI single for the
Twins, who started the
month 20 games under
.500 and have been ravaged by injuries.
Minnesota manager
Ron Gardenhire has had
to juggle his lineup on an
everyday basis. He used
his 57th different one in
61 games on Wednesday.
The Twins have had to
use 39 players and have
eight on the disabled list,
including superstar Joe
Mauer and designated
hitter Jim Thome.
They’re so far back,
the Twins can’t think
about winning a third
straight AL Central title.
“We’re just trying to
win a ballgame each
day,” Gardenhire said.
“That’s all we’re doing.”
Minnesota starter Carl
Pavano wound up with a
no-decision, and probably deserved better.
The
right-hander
allowed just one run in
seven strong innings.
Pavano gave up seven
hits and never let an
Indians lineup that has
been struggling for several weeks get anything
going.
Pavano, who pitched
his first complete game
since 2010 his previous
start, carried a four-hit
shutout into the sixth
inning, when Sizemore
led off with his seventh
homer, an opposite-field
shot over the wall in left.
Sizemore’s
homer
brought the Indians within 2-1.
They had Pavano in his
only real jam with two
outs in the seventh, when
Marson snapped an 0for-23 slump with a sin-

got Asdrubal Cabrera to
hit a routine grounder to
first for the final out.
With their offense sputtering, the Indians promoted infielder Cord
Phelps from Triple-A
Columbus before the
game and immediately
threw him in the starting
lineup.
Playing second and
batting seventh, Phelps
didn’t provide a spark
with his bat during his
major league debut,
going 0 for 4. But the
rookie made a nice diving catch on Luke
Hughes’ soft liner in the
seventh.
Notes: The Twins have
played just 21 home
games, but will have 30
of their next 40 at home.
... Twins 1B Hughes
made a diving stab at first
to rob Sizemore of a hit
in the eighth. ... SS
Francisco Lindor, the
Indians’ first-round draft
pick, gave no indication
if he’ll sign with the club.
Lindor, who batted .528
as a senior at Montverde
(Fla.) Academy, has a
scholarship offer to
Florida State. ... Twins
RHP Nick Blackburn,
who left his last start
against Kansas City on
Saturday with a stiff
back, will pitch Thursday
against Texas. “He says
he’s fine but I’m a little
worried about him,”
Gardenhire said. ... Twins
OF
Denard
Span
returned to Minnesota to
have his sore neck examined. He played Monday
after missing two games,
but felt light-headed. ...
Revere has hit safely in
11 straight games.

Reds miss sweep in 4-1 loss to Cubs
CINCINNATI (AP) —
The Reds are slowly getting their rotation back in
shape. Still, they proved
in a 4-1 loss to the
Chicago
Cubs
on
Wednesday that they
have little room for error.
Carlos
Pena
and
Aramis Ramirez hit
homers on consecutive
pitches after shortstop
Paul Janish’s error in the
fourth inning, costing the
Reds their shot at a threegame sweep.
Right-handed reliever
Jose Arredondo also
committed a run-scoring
balk that manager Dusty
Baker said was the result
of a miscommunication.
“We’ve got to tighten
up our game,” Baker said
before the Reds headed
west on a six-game trip to
San Francisco and Los
Angeles. “We’re real
close.”
Ryan Dempster (5-5)
went six innings for his
fourth win in his last five
decisions this season and
first win in five decisions
as a visitor at the ballpark
he used to call home.
The right-hander, who
pitched for the Reds in
2002 and 2003, allowed
three hits and one run
with one walk and eight
strikeouts to break a tie
with Kirk McCaskill for
the second-most major
league wins by a

Canadian-born pitcher.
Dempster has 107,
behind only Hall of
Famer and former Cubs
ace Ferguson Jenkins
(284).
Kerry Wood and Sean
Marshall each pitched a
scoreless inning before
Carlos Marmol pitched
the ninth for his 11th
save.
Reds starter Bronson
Arroyo (4-6) lasted 6 1-3
innings on the sunny,
steamy afternoon, giving
up eight hits and four
runs — three earned —
with one walk and three
strikeouts as the Reds
finished a nine-game
homestand with five
wins.
The game-time temperature was 90 degrees.
Arroyo’s solid start
was the third straight for
the Reds, leaving him
feeling as if the Reds
blew a golden opportunity.
“It’s definitely disappointing,” he said. “The
way we’re playing lately,
we can’t afford to let
close games get away.”

The Reds led 1-0 when
Blake DeWitt, bumped
up to the third spot in the
batting order for the first
time this season, reached
on Janish’s error with one
out in the fourth inning.
Pena followed with a
443-foot home run into
the right field seats, his
ninth of the season.
DeWitt was 6 for 8 in
the first two games of the
series.
Ramirez hit the next
pitch 342 feet into the left
field seats for his third
homer of the season and
27th of his career against
Cincinnati.
The Cubs added a run
in the seventh when, with
Kosuke Fukudome on
third and Pena on first
with two outs, Arredondo
whirled and faked a
throw toward an uncovered first base. First baseman Joey Votto was playing off the bag with
Ramirez
batting.
Arredondo was called for
a
balk,
allowing
Fukudome to score and
Pena to go to second.
“Somebody’s got to tell
him (nobody was covering),” Baker said. “We’re
trying to cover the hole
there. I’ve seen Ramirez
hit too many balls
through that hole. You’ve
got to communicate.”
The Reds loaded the
bases with one out in the

first
inning,
but
Dempster coaxed Miguel
Cairo — who hit a grandslam Tuesday night —
into a popup before Fred
Lewis grounded out to
the end the threat.
They took a 1-0 lead in
the third. Drew Stubbs
led off with a soft liner to
center for a single, stole
second and moved to
third
on
Brandon
Phillips’ groundout to
second. Votto struck out,
but Jay Bruce lined a 3-2
pitch to right field for an
RBI single.
NOTES: Two Cubs on
the disabled list, OF
Reed Johnson and IF Jeff
Baker, are scheduled to
start rehab assignments
Friday with Triple-A
Iowa, and OF Alfonso
Soriano is due to join
them Sunday, manager
Mike Quade said. ... Reds
RHP Jared Burton, who
hasn’t pitched this season
while dealing with shoulder inflammation that
required surgery, will
report to Cincinnati’s
Goodyear, Ariz., complex on June 12, manager
Dusty Baker said. “It’s
like spring training all
over again for him,”
Baker said. ... Reds 3B
Scott Rolen missed his
fourth consecutive start
with a viral infection in
his throat and not strep
throat, Baker said, quoting a team doctor.

Fans try to beat heat while Cubs beat Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) —
While the Cubs were
beating the Reds, baseball fans just wanted to
beat the heat Wednesday.
Kathryn Burke, of
Pikeville, Ky., wore a
straw hat, brought two
bottles of frozen water,
and a portable mister.
“And I brought the
knowledge to leave when
I’ve had enough of the
heat,” she said. “That
happened at a game
before.”
Temperatures topped
90 as the afternoon game
began at Great American
Ball Park. The Cincinnati
health commissioner had
declared a heat emergency for the city.
“Sunblock, water, and
shades, then enjoy the
game,” said Brad Daniels

of his heat defenses. He
and his brother Keith are
Cubs fans from Green
Bay, Wis., where they left
behind temperatures 30
degrees cooler.
“That’s a big change,”
Keith said.
Brad said, as Cubs fans,
they’re used to going to
afternoon games on hot
days in Chicago.
“Hey, it’s baseball.
We’re here to see the
boys of summer,” he said.
The Reds set up large
fans blowing water mists
around the park, offered
free sunscreen and cups
of ice and opened “cool
rooms” where fans could
watch the game on TV in
air-conditioned comfort.
Pattie
and
Kevin
Henderson of Cincinnati

planned to take their children, 4-year-old Macey
and 6-year-old Casey, to
the misting fans, and give
them plenty of water —
and some ice cream.
“We might move (seating) around some to stay
in the shade,” he said.
Reds starting pitcher
Bronson Arroyo wasn’t
worried about temperatures that were higher
than the radar-gun reading numbers for many of
his fastballs.
“It’s not a problem for
me,” said the Florida
native. “Being from Key
West, and my father and
uncle were both roofers. I
spent a few summers
helping them. My father
would say, ‘This isn’t
hot.’ They don’t even
have air conditioning.”

Catcher Ryan Hanigan
said before the game he
would change T-shirts as
they became soaked.
“The T-shirts can weigh
you down. I’ll do that and
change jerseys. That can
help a little bit,” he said.
Shortstop Paul Janish
was glad the Reds’ current stadium doesn’t have
artificial turf like the previous one did, which
tended to make the field
much hotter than the outdoor temperature.
“I remember watching
on TV and you could see
the heat waves,” Janish
said. “(Former Red)
Chris Sabo was my hitting coach my first two
years, and he said they
used to have to pour
water on their shoes.”
The Cubs won, 4-1.

�Thursday, June 9, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A10

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tri-County
Junior
Golf starts
Monday

2011 ALL-SOUTHEAST DISTRICT SOFBALL TEAMS

Ward

Shriver

Cunningham

Lanham

Fish

Davis

Glass

Shuler

Rawson

Holter

Morrison

Johnson

Canaday

Ta. Duncan

Gilliland

Bostic

Cummins

Swann

Huddleston

Teaford

B Y F RANK C APEHART
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

School is over for the
Summer, so it’s time
for the 2011 TriCounty Junior Golf
Tour to swing into
action.
Nearly 30 years ago
the tour came into
being, all four local
courses joined together
to provide an affordable golf learning and
playing
experience
under competitive conditions. It is a fun time
to enjoy golf, fellowship, learn the game
and create friendships.
The tour begins on
Monday, June 13 at
Hidden Valley Golf
Course
in
Point
Pleasant, W.Va., then
continues with the second nine-hole round on
Monday, June 20, at
Riverside Golf Course
in Mason, W.Va. The
third outing will be
played at Kountry Hills
Golf Course (the former Pine Hills Golf
Course) in Pomeroy,
Ohio on Monday, June
27.
The fourth pointgaining round is slated
for Cliffside Golf
Course in Gallipolis,
Ohio, on Monday, July
11, with the final fun
and awards day taking
place on Monday, July
18, at Hidden Valley
Golf Course.
Youth competitors
play in age groups of
15-17, 13-14, 11-12
and
10-and-under.
Registration begins at
8:30
a.m.
each
Monday, with tee-off to
start at 9 a.m.
All area youth are
invited to play all the
events. For more information contact any of
the four local golf
courses.

Gallia, Meigs counties land 20 players,
one coach on all-district softball teams
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Gallia and Meigs counties were well represented
on the 2011 All-Southeast
District softball teams as
selected by the coaches.
Each county earned one
Player of the Year Award
winner, while Gallia
Academy’s Jim Niday
earned Coach of the Year
honors.
Eastern’s Allie Rawson
— who recently signed
with
the
Capital
University softball team
— was named Division
IV Player of the Year,
while Gallia Academy
junior Heather Ward
received Co-Player of the
Year honors in Division
II.
Five schools — Gallia
Academy,
Meigs,
Eastern, Southern and
South Gallia — were
each represented by four
selections, while River
Valley was unrepresented
on the Coach’s List.
For the Blue Angels,
Ward was joined on the
first team by Courtney
Shriver.
Hannah
Cunningham was named
second team for Gallia
Academy and Mattie
Lanham was an honorable mention selection on
the Division II team.
The Lady Marauders
had one first team, one

2011 Southeast District
Softball Teams
DIVISION I
FIRST TEAM
Bailey Topf
Olivia McBride

Logan
Logan

Sr.
Sr.

Bryan Walters/file photo

Gallia Academy softball coach Jim Niday, left, watches a play at third base during the Blue Angels final regular season game against Warren in Centenary, Ohio.

second team and two
honorable mention selections in Division II.
Delilah Fish was named
to first team, Allyson
Davis earned second
team honors, while
Emalee Glass and Kelsey
Shuler were honorable
mention selections.

Bethany King
Emalee Glass
Kelsey Shuler
Carly Strayer
Katey Taylor
Cheyanna Johnson
Brandi Douglas
Bree Seevers
Katie Depugh
Deven Riler
Hope Bondurant
Abby BLake
Marissa Webb

Jackson
Meigs
Meigs
Miami Tracce
Vinton County
Vinton County
Warren
Marietta
Wash. Court House
Wash. Court House
Fairfield Union
Fairfield Union
Chillicothe

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Fr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Jr.

SECOND TEAM
Jen Hoag
Brooke Simons

Logan
Logan

Sr.
Jr.

Coahc of the Year: Jim Niday
Co-Players of the Year: Erin Bane and Heather Ward

DIVISION III

Coach of the Year: Jim Huntsberger
Player of the Year: Bailey Topf

DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM
Erin Bane
Heather Ward
Courtney Porter
Hannah Zimmerman
Taylor Saxton
Emileigh Cooper
Courtney Hunna
Jenna Perie
Brooke Haskins
Tiarra Perkins
Kelsey Daniels
Megan Skinner
Courtney Shriver
Abby Pomento
Delilah Fish
Natalie Nuff
Mandy Grumbo
Danielle Puckett

Unioto
Gallia Academy
Circleville
Warren
Logan Elm
Jackson
Fairfield Union
Greenfield McClain
Waverly
Miami Trace
Wash. Court House
Sheridan
Gallia Academy
Athens
Meigs
Unioto
Logan Elm
Circleville

Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Fr.
Sr.

SECOND TEAM
Madison Stauffer
Kara Carpenter
Karol Ojeda
Donyel Castor
Megan Dettwiller
Bret Nutter
Hannah Cunningham
Sara Lentz
Rylee Bovillian
Ali Walls
Brittany Pontias
Allyson Davis
Jessica Apsley
Mattie Lanham
Charlotte Morris
Cierra Landrum
Sarah Stalter
Kayla Riffe

Warren
Marietta
Chillicothe
Vinton County
Greenfield McClain
Fairfield Union
Gallia Academy
Wash. Court House
Chillicothe
Waverly
Logan Elm
Meigs
Jackson
Gallia Academy
Miami Trace
Greenfield McClain
Marietta
Waverly

Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Fr.

HONORABLE MENTION
Nikki Grambo
Maggie Mancini
Jenna Grunden
Kari Jenkins

Logan Elm
Circleville
Circleville
Jackson

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.

FIRST TEAM
Braiden Dillow
Brytan Given
Kayla Flecther
Joann Saultz
Sarah Mayo
Lexey Kegley
Kayla Bailey
Jessica Humphries
Crystal Detty
Chelsea Harper
Hayleigh Swayne
Kelsey Conkey
Kara Redman
Amber McLaughlin
Lauren Dunn
Kelsey Jenkins
Sasha Burcham

Valley
Adena
South Point
Zane Trace
Chesapeake
Portsmouth West
Wheelersburg
Oak Hill
Adena
Rock Hill
Peebles
Minford
Westfall
Alexander
Valley
Wheelersburg
Fairland

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

SECOND TEAM
Brittini Hall
Maria Johnson
Amber Grooms
Ashley Alfman
Nicole Ozimolk
Karli Collins
Kayla Koch
Alissa Hook
Allyssa Dawson
Ally Foreman
Courtney Spriggs
Morgan Merritt
Brooke Jordan
Samantha Nixon
Shaylin McDaniels
Cheyanne White
Brooke Cooper
Andrea Kleinman

Wellston
Eastern Brown
Wst Union
Crooksville
New Lexington
Ironton
Valley
Nelsonville-York
Adena
New Lexington
Minford
Piketon
Northwest
Rock Hill
Peebles
Portsmouth West
Valley
South Point

Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Fr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.

HONORABLE MENTION
Devon Scarberry
Ashley Goodall
Alisha Swiney
Morgan Griesteno
Jessica Richards
Brianna Weese
Chelsey Potts
Maggie Davis
Sierra Sigman

Northwest
South Ppoint
Alexander
Alexander
Nelsonville-York
Southeastern
Southeastern
Zane Trace
Zane Trace

Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.

In Division IV, Eastern
earned two first team
selections,
while
Southern and South
Gallia each had one.
For the Lady Eagles,
Rawson and Brenna
Holter were named to the
first team, while Britney
Morrison and Brooke
Gina Rosshirt
Olivia Beavers
Sara Link
Emily Tatman
Brianna Finck
Shawea Long
Alex Kuha
Shelby Haynes
Kelsey Grove
Jamie Phillips
Stormie Spitzer
Chelsey Stanley
Morgan Sites
Katylin Murphy
Karless McMacklin
Andie Kratensburg
Stephanie Elswick
Myky Harmon
Sarah Rice
Baylee Allman
Brandi Brackett
Steph Smith
Jessica Pistol
Erika Blair
Alexandra Bowles
Natasha Barr
Samantha Taylor
Emily Fite
Ashley Taylor
Samantha Todd
Ashley DeBord
Macey Anders
Brittany Swingle
Sydney Wycinski
Brook Baker
Kelsey Grove
Shelby Haynes
T. Lonley
Devon Scarberry
Meranda Melvin
Tiffany Hale
Morgan Grinddstedd
Alisha Swiney
Kaylee Kokes
Autumn Griffith
Laura Fahrmann
Emily Tatman
Shelby Mullins
Kaylee Purdy
Jessica Richards
Rose Nerpovni
Ashley Goodall
Rachel Murnahan
Chelsea McManaway
Kelsey Storches
Logan Boundle
Brooke Hanshaw
Morgan Shug
Kelsey Dunkle
Hanna Green
Ciera Serman
Kelsey Kinzer
Addison Prater
Hannah Cremeans
Alex Rideout

Johnson earned second
team honors.
Chandra Canaday was
a first team selection for
the Lady Rebels, Tayler
Duncan and Morgan
Gilliland were each
named to the second team
and Ellie Bostic was an
honorable mention selec-

Westfall
Westfall
Westfall
Eastern Brown
Crooksville
Wellston
Oak Hill
Coal Grove
Coal Grove
Fairland
Fairland
Fairland
Coal Grove
Coal Grove
Ironton
Ironton
Ironton
Chesapeake
Chesapeake
Piketon
Piketon
Piketon
Wheelersburg
Wheelersburg
West Union
West Union
West Union
North Adams
North Adams
North Adams
North Adams
Crooksville
Crooksville
New Lexington
New Lexington
Coal Grove
Coal Grove
Northwest
Northwest
Oak Hill
Oak Hill
Alexander
Alexander
Alexander
Minford
Minford
Eastern Brown
Eastern Brown
Eastern Brown
Nelsonville-York
Nelsonville-York
South Point
South Point
Wellston
Wellston
Adena
Rock Hill
Rock Hill
Zane Trace
Peebles
Peebles
Southeastern
Southeastern
Portsmouth West
Portsmouth West

Fr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Fr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Fr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Fr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

FIRST TEAM
Allie Rawson
Katie Stevenson
Chandra Canaday
Kayla Ross
Brittany Swords
Taylor Mason
Gidget Timberman
Jordan Jenkins
Lauren Larrick
Meghan Williams
Tana Wallace
Rachel Staker
Natalie Perry
Maggie Cummins
Demi Moore
Holly Hempill
Brenna Holter
Kaci Messer

Eastern
Notre Dame
South Gallia
Symmes Valley
East
Belpre
Green
Clay
Fairfield
East
Waterford
Eastern Pike
Belpre
Southern
Trimble
Clay
Eastern
South Webster

Sr.
Fr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

SECOND TEAM
Kala Hall
Heather Huff
Madison Phillips
Megan Spergin
Tayler Duncan
Miranda Pauley
Katie Hill
Tiffany Kammer
Hannah Offenberger
Kyrie Swann
Morgan Gilliland
Haley Fisher
Britney Morrison
Tori Harr
Anna Marie Welch
Abby Thackston
Brooke Johnson
Marissa Messer

Western
Fairfield
Notre Dame
Miller
South Gallia
Notre Dame
Symmes Valley
East
Waterford
Southern
South Gallia
East
Eastern
Notre Dame
Waterford
Fairfield
Eastern
Clay

Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.

HONORABLE MENTION

Fr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Jr.
Jr.

Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Fr.

Coach of the Year: Montie Spriggs
Player of the Year: Braiden Dillow

DIVISION IV

tion.
For
the
Lady
Tornadoes,
Maggie
Cummins was named to
the first team, Kyrie
Swann was a second team
selection and Jordan
Huddleston and Hope
Teaford were named honorable mention.

Jenna Crawford
Kelsey Hinkle
Ellie Bostic
Deanna Tornes
Lyndsey Mader
Brittany McNabe
Regina Leftwich
Sammi Crisp
Brea Johnson
Jordan Huddleston
Hope Teaford
Aubrey Hand
Jordan McGill
Whitney Hannenkrat
Kelli Jenkins
Kelcie Hawk
Kearstin Carroll
Erin Homerosky
Emily Jordan
Ada Humphrey
Kari Brumbaugh

Green
Miller
South Gallia
Waterford
Clay
Belpre
Belpre
Green
Green
Southern
Southern
Miller
Miller
Fairfield
Western
Western
Western
South Webster
South Webster
Symmes Valley
Symmes Valley

Coach of the Year: Darrell Keller
Player of the Year: Allie Rawson

So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.

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