<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3109" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3109?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-24T03:08:45+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13021">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/20a669ef34090ceadac07e4c508abb76.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2589290c1a82e308d4bab81906aace78</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11311">
                  <text>Southern grad
named Green Band
Director, 3

Smoking cessation
classes offered, 3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 118

WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Adam Crabb
concert

Found: Remains identified as 2 of 3 missing

POMEROY — Adam
Crabb will appear in
concert at 7 p.m.,
Friday, July 29 at
Hillside Baptist Church
in
Pomeroy.
Free
admission and concessions will be sold. Call
416-3884 for more
information.

William “Jeff” Crawfordʼs whereabouts still a mystery

ʻPartyʼ plans
RACINE — Racine
Party in the Park organizers are looking for
parade entries as well as
food and craft vendors
who might want to set
up at the free festival in
September. Call the
Racine
Municipal
Building for more
details at 949-2296.

Gospel concert
RACINE — Gospel
sing featuring Tim
Lovelace, Mark Lanier,
Randi &amp; Sherri Miller
at 7 p.m., Friday, Aug. 5
at Star Mill Park. The
free concert is sponsored by First Southern
Baptist Church, Pomeroy. For more information call 591-0003.

Free church
community
dinner
MIDDLEPORT – A
free community dinner
will be served Friday
evening
at
the
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life
Center and everyone is
welcome to come eat
and enjoy the fellowship.
The
menu
includes meat loaf,
macaroni and cheese,
baked bens, applesauce
and a dessert.

BY STEPHANIE FILSON
SFILSON@HEARTLAND
PUBLICATIONS.COM

GALLIPOLIS FERRY,
W.Va. — After two days
of careful excavation surrounding the area where
human remains were
found in Mason Co.,
W.Va., over the weekend,
investigators with the
West Virginia State
Police Crime Scene
Team have confirmed
that two bodies were
found on site and have
been identified as Tonda

Page A5
• Carl B. Bryant
• Tim Brian Wolf

WEATHER

Starcher
reported
Sunday that the human
remains of at least one
person had been found
that evening, around 8:30
p.m., just off of Duncan
Creek Road in Gallipolis
Ferry. From that time,
until the early morning
arrival of forensic specialists on Tuesday, the
West Virginia State
Police Crime Scene
Team closed the road to
traffic and secured the
site of the shallow grave
that had been discovered
by a group of people

A ‘banner’ year
BY CHARLENE
HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

P O M E ROY
– Pomeroy is
becoming
a
little more colorful
this
week as one
set of new
banners purchased by the
P o m e r o y
Merchants
Association
are hung on the downtown period lamp posts along Main, Court and
Lynn Streets.
The banners in a variety of colors are designed with a large “P.”
A second set to complement them will feature three different
designs – women shopping, something musical, and diners – to be
selectively placed around town. They, too, will be in bright multicolors, according to Susan Clark-Dingess, banner chairman.
Funding to purchase the two sets of 28 banners is coming from
various fund raisers held throughout the year, including the duck
derby to be held at the Sternwheel Riverfest in September.

ATHENS — Students
with a second alcohol or
marijuana violation at
Ohio University will still
face mandatory suspension though for a small,
committed few, there
may be an alternative.
The university’s new

Alternative Suspension
Program begins this year
and will amount to a second chance for students
who meet the program’s
serious criteria and are
approved by a review
board, according to Ryan
Lombardi, dean of students at OU.
Lombardi
guessed
only one to three students

dren when he said, "Let
the children come to me.”
The Middleport Church
of the Nazarene has been a

See BUS, A5

See POMEROY, A5

Left, Susan Clark-Dingess displays
the colorful banners being hung on
lamp posts in downtown Pomeroy.
(Charlene Hoeflich/photo)
Above, Gary Simpson places one of
the new, downtown banners on
Court Street. (Beth Sergent/photo)

a year who have two
alcohol or marijuana violations would meet the
select criteria for the
Alternative Suspension
Program - a program
meant to reach students
with second offenses
who “finally get it.”
Students who are
approved for and commit
to the program will be

required to complete 20
hours of community service, remain on probation
through the remainder of
their student career as
well as live on campus
and attend weekly meetings with a mentor,
among other criteria.
Lombardi said the uni-

See OU, A5

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

High: 91
Low: 64

INDEX
1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

Classifieds

7-9

Comics

6

Sports

10

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Stuff this bus with school supplies. (submitted photo)

your next trip to WalMart,” said Pastor L. J.
Powell. “I am reminded
of Proverbs 21:13 ‘He
who shuts his ears to the
cries of the poor will be

Pomeroy
discusses
underspeed
vehicles
POMEROY
—
Pomeroy may be following Middleport’s lead
when it comes to allowing underspeed vehicles
on village streets.
The topic has come up
at Pomeroy Council
meetings for a few weeks
and this week it was
referred to an ordinance
committee for further
discussion. During the
meeting Police Chief
Mark E. Proffitt was
asked how he felt about
underspeed
vehicles,
such as golf carts, being
on the road. Proffitt said
he would be in support of
underspeed vehicles in
Pomeroy as long as they
adhered to any regulations council would draft
into an ordinance.
Proffitt said he felt the
vehicles should have
windshields, working
head and taillights and
there should be a restriction on the age of the driver - for example, no
children would be permitted to drive the vehicle. A discussion also
came up about the speed
of the vehicles and if they
would impede traffic in
the 35 mph speed zone in
the upper end of
Pomeroy. All discussions
were, again, referred to
an ordinance committee.
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy
Hysell also reported
employees were filling
out new health insurance
forms for local insurance
broker The Vaughan
Agency which is attempting to find the best and
hopefully most costeffective plan for the village. The health insurance renewal period is
quickly approaching in
September and Hysell
said she was told the village’s current provider,
Anthem, was proposing a
33 percent increase over
last year’s premium.
As for the two-lane
access road which will be
built into the Monkey
Run area, Mayor John
Musser said if the environmental review is completed by Aug. 1, the village would immediately
put out bids to get the
road under construction
ASAP.
Councilman
Victor
Young, III, conveyed his

Help us stuff the bus!
MIDDLEPORT – In
the current economy
where many parents
sometimes have barely
enough money to buy
shoes, let alone all the
required back to school
supplies, the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene
is lending a hand.
But the Church needs
help in order to “stuff the
bus” parked on its front
lawn and are asking the
community to help by
providing basic school
supplies for children as
they begin the new
school year.
“When you look at it
as investing in Meigs
County's future it doesn’t
seem so difficult to throw
another pack of pencils
or notebook in the cart on

See REMAINS, A5

BY BETH SERGENT

New program may save a committed few
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

“suspicious” fire in the
early hours of June 17. A
few days later, family
members reported the
couple missing, and
Nelson was reported
missing shortly afterward
— she was said to have
been last seen with
Ashley around June 16.
The Crawfords’ vehicle,
which was reportedly
located in Mason County
by investigators, has been
impounded by the sheriff’s office.
Investigators had considered various scenarios

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OU: ʻTwo strikes and youʼre still outʼ
BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES

(McCarty) Nelson and
Ashley
(Baird)
Crawford. According to
officials, the two women,
along with Crawford’s
husband William “Jeff”
Crawford, have been
missing since June 17,
2011. Mr. Crawford’s
whereabouts are still
unknown.
“We are now dealing
with a homicide investigation,” said Sgt. E.B.
Starcher of the Mason
County Detachment of
the West Virginia State
Police.

walking through the
woods.
Forensic specialists
from the Smithsonian
Institute in Washington,
D.C., arrived on site
Tuesday morning to help
state police process the
scene.
Mystery has shrouded
the case since the trio’s
disappearance,
and
known details seem to
only lead to more questions. The Crawfords’
mobile home located on
Jeffers
Ridge
in
Southside, W.Va. was
destroyed
by
what
investigators called a

ignored in his own time
of need.’”
He went on to explain
that Jesus showed the
greatest example of how
we should react to chil-

�Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Calif. borrowing $5B ahead of possible debt crisis
SACRAMENTO,
Calif. (AP) — California
borrowed $5.4 billion
from private investors
Tuesday as a hedge
against a possible default
by the federal government.
State Treasurer Bill
Lockyer secured the
package of short-term
loans from a group of
banks, credit unions and
investment funds so the
state can avoid a potential cash shortage if the
federal government fails
to extend its debt ceiling.
If that happens, the government could shortchange
states on health care and
education funding.
The treasurer said he

took the step as a precaution if the federal government can't meet all its
obligations.
"California had to
obtain
this
interim
financing to protect the
state from the immediate,
drastic consequences of a
failure by Washington to
resolve the debt ceiling
impasse by the Aug. 2
deadline," Lockyer, a
Democrat, said in a statement. "I'm hopeful
Congress and the president will do the responsible thing, solve the problem before it's too late,
and not risk pushing the
country into a financial
and economic abyss."
California typically

borrows money in the
late summer to pay operating expenses until most
income tax receipts
arrive in the spring.
Lockyer secured the
so-called bridge loan
because it's unclear
whether
California
would be able to borrow
that much money if the
credit markets are thrown
into turmoil.
Democrats and Republicans in Washington are
clashing over plans to
slash spending and raise
the debt ceiling ahead of
the Aug. 2 deadline —
the day the White House
said the federal government will exhaust its
ability to borrow and

meet all its obligations.
That could force the
federal government to
default on loan obligations or prioritize payments to conserve cash
and avoid a default.
Payments could be halted
to states for Medicare,
Medicaid and some public school programs.
Medicaid, the federalstate health program for
low-income families, is
known in California as
Medi-Cal. Medicare is
the health insurance program for seniors and the
disabled.
California
received
loans from eight banks
and private investment
firms. Goldman Sachs

and Wells Fargo &amp; Co.
provided the largest
amounts, at more than
$1.4 billion each.
The state, which currently has the lowest
credit rating among the
50 states at A-, plans to
repay the loans later this
summer through routine
borrowing notes to be
issued in late August.
Lockyer appeared to
obtain a good interest
rate based on the state
changing the way it calculates how much money
it has in reserve this year.
The treasurer's office
said the yield on the
notes is 0.237 percent,
compared with 1.4 percent the state paid for

short-term borrowing in
2010. The latest notes
mature on Nov. 22, but
the state could pay them
off ahead of time.
The treasurer also
warned that a default
would trigger a downgrade of the federal government's triple-A bond
rating. It would not only
raise interest rates but
negatively affect state
and local government
borrowing costs because
some states' rates are
linked to Treasury rates.
"The ripple effects on
state and local finance for
the whole country are
very
substantial,"
Lockyer said earlier this
month.

Ga. mom is spared prison in son's jaywalking death
MARIETTA,
Ga.
(AP) — A woman who
was arrested after her 4year-old son was struck
and killed by a van as
they were jaywalking
across a busy street was
spared a prison sentence Tuesday following an outcry over her
arrest.
Raquel Nelson, 30,
was convicted by a jury
earlier this month of
vehicular homicide and
other charges for not
using a crosswalk and
could have gotten three
years behind bars — far
more than the six
months the hit-and-run
driver served.
Instead,
without
explanation,
Judge
Kathryn Tanksley gave
the suburban Atlanta
mother a year's probation, ordered 40 hours
of community service,
and took the unusual
step of offering her a
new trial — an offer
Nelson is considering.
A crowd of supporters
broke out in applause.

"I'm ready to go
home," a relieved-looking Nelson said. "I'm
walking out of here. I
don't feel like I can be
more satisfied."
Prosecutors' extremely rare decision to bring
charges against the
grieving mother had
created a furor, with
Nelson's
supporters
calling the move cruel
and heartless.
More than 125,000
people
joined
an
online petition campaign
asking
for
mercy. The Georgia
branch of the NAACP
called the case against
the single black mother a "grave miscarriage of justice." And
the judge said her
office had been flooded with letters and
emails from around
the country.
The accident happened in April 2010
along a busy five-lane
street.
Nelson and her three
children had just gotten

off a bus after a long
day, and she was eager
to return home because
it was getting dark, said
her
lawyer,
David
Savoy. Instead of walking to a crosswalk
three-tenths of a mile
away, she led her children to a median.
According to testimony,
her daughter darted
across the street and son
A.J. followed.
She chased after them
and was struck and
injured.
The driver, Jerry Guy,
pleaded guilty to hitand-run. According to
court records, he had
been drinking earlier in
the day while taking
pain medication, was
partially blind in one
eye, and had two previous hit-and-run convictions from 1997.
As for the decision
to charge Nelson, too,
"these cases are inherently difficult because
they are unintentional,"
prosecutor
Annamarie
Baltz

explained. "But the
state is bound to
uphold the law."
Nevertheless, Baltz
asked for probation for
Nelson and said prosecutors never intended to
send her to prison.
In an appearance on
NBC's "Today" show
Monday, Nelson said:
"I think to come after
me so much harder
than they did after him
is a slap in the face.
This will never end for
me."
Savoy argued that his
client has already suffered enough for her
mistake. He said prosecutors would never
charge a parent who
accidentally left open a
pool gate if a child
drowned, or a parent
who fed a hot dog to a
youngster who choked
on it.
"Do not make A.J.'s
death an act that washes
over this family like a
tidal wave," he said.
"There's no legitimate
basis to make this fami-

ly continue to suffer."
Inside the courthouse,
Nelson's
supporters
gathered in the halls for
a prayer vigil and urged
the judge not to punish
her any further.
"Every day she gets
up, she pays her debt,"
said Beverly Word, who
was A.J.'s preschool
teacher.
Advocates seized on
the case as evidence
that the car-choked
Atlanta metropolitan
area needs better crosswalks.
"It's really cruel and
a big waste of taxpayer money" to prosecute Nelson, said Sally
Flocks, founder of
PEDS, an Atlanta
pedestrian advocacy
group. "What is anybody going to learn
from this? Raquel lost
her precious son. The
lesson she learned
already is quit using
transit and buy a car to
get around. It's too
dangerous to cross the
streets here."

The case has been the
talk of Georgia legal
circles.
J. Tom Morgan, a
former DeKalb County
district attorney who
specialized in the
prosecution of crimes
against children, said
he was surprised prosecutors
targeted
Nelson.
"She wasn't out drinking," he said. "In a case
like this where the
mother suffered the
tragic loss of a child,
and there's no gross
negligence, I wouldn't
have involved the criminal justice system."
And W. Scott Smith,
a defense attorney,
said he has never
heard of a similar
prosecution in his 11
years in practice.
"It's one of those
things that if you're
the state, you've got to
use common sense.
The person is going to
live with themselves
the rest of their lives,"
he said.

Post office closing 1 in 10 outlets
WASHINGTON (AP) —
The Postal Service is considering closing more than 1 in
10 of its retail outlets.
The financially troubled
agency announced Tuesday
that it will study 3,653 local
offices, branches and stations
for possible closing. But
many of those may be
replaced by what the service
is calling Village Post Offices
in which postal services are
offered in local stores,
libraries or government
offices.
"It's no secret that the Postal
Service is looking to change
the way we do a lot of things,"
Postmaster General Patrick
Donahoe said at a briefing.
"We do feel that we are still
relevant to the American public and the economy, but we
have to make some tough
choices."
Currently the post office
operates 31,871 retail outlets
across the country, down
from 38,000 a decade ago,
but in recent years business
has declined sharply as firstclass mail moved to the
Internet. In addition, the
recession resulted in a decline
in advertising mail, and the
agency lost $8 billion last
year.
Most of the offices that face
review are in rural areas and
have low volumes of business. As many as 3,000 post
offices have only two hours of

business a day even though
they are open longer, said
postal vice president Dean
Granholm.
Coming under review
doesn't necessarily mean an
office will close. The post
office announced in January it
was reviewing 1,400 offices
for possible closing. So far
280 have been closed and 200
have finished the review
process and will remain open.
Once an office is selected
for a review, people served by
that office will have 60 days
to file their comments. If an
office is to be closed, they will
be able to appeal to the independent Postal Regulatory
Commission.
"Today's announcement is
a step in the right direction.
There are, however, many
difficult decisions ahead that
must be made to improve
operations, reduce costs, and
return the Postal Service to
financial solvency," commented Rep. Darrell Issa,
R-Calif., chairman of the
House Oversight and
Government
Reform
Committee, which has jurisdiction over the Postal
Service.
The post office "must consolidate facilities and streamline operations in the way that
countless private sector companies have done to remain
viable in the face of new markets, new technology and

changing customer needs,"
said Issa.
Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del.,
who heads the Senate subcommittee that oversees the
post office, added that the
"announcement underscores
the serious nature of the
Postal Service's financial situation ... Closing a significant
number of post offices that
are losing money or are no
longer necessary to meet the
current demand for Postal
Service products and services
is a difficult but necessary
step in the broader effort to
save the Postal Service from
total collapse."
Others agreed change is
needed.
"This is bitter medicine,
but changed times call for a
changed Postal Service.
With mail volumes declining at a dizzying rate, we
need a Postal Service that is
leaner, more efficient and
less expensive," said Art
Sackler, chairman of the
Coalition for a 21st Century
Postal Service, a mailing
industry group. "The closure of a post office can be
difficult, but these avenues
must be explored to ensure
that the Postal Service and
the 8 million private sector
jobs that rely on it are able
to survive, and that the
economy as a whole doesn't
take yet another disruptive
blow."

Gen Electric (NYSE) — 18.56
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 45.51
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 41.44
Kroger (NYSE) — 24.93
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 38.28
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 75.55
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.03
BBT (NYSE) — 26.32
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 11.80
Pepsico (NYSE) — 64.07
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.24
Rockwell (NYSE) — 80.66
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —
12.77
Royal Dutch Shell — 75.14

Sears Holding (NASDAQ) —
72.21
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 53.59
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.41
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.13
Worthington (NYSE) — 22.13

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all
of your financial needs, but small enough to know
your first name. Since all of our loan decisions are
made locally we can close a loan quickly. Please
come see us for all your banking needs, we promise
to make you feel right at home.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 37.70
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 60.84
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 64.19
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.34
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 36.30
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 74.19
Century Alum (NASDAQ) —
14.01
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.45
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) —
4.48
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 32.10
Collins (NYSE) — 56.97
DuPont (NYSE) — 53.69
US Bank (NYSE) — 26.74

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for July 26, 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.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m

RACINE
740-949-2210

SYRACUSE
740-992-6333

�The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

Page A3
Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Smoking cessation classes offered Southern grad goes ʻGreenʼ

POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department, Meigs County Cancer
Imitative, Creating Healthy Communities and American Cancer Society are all collaborating to offer Fresh Start Tobacco Cessation Classes. Classes will be offered
based on demand. Pictured are Jill Johnson and Andrew Brumfield whoʼve been
trained as Fresh Start Facilitators and will facilitate the classes. A limited number
of nicotine replacement therapies will be offered. Clients will need a doctorʼs referral to receive the nicotine replacement therapies. Contact Brumfield for information and to register for the class at 992-6626. (Submitted photo)

Community Calendar

ALBANY – Wellspring
Retreat &amp; Resource Center
is celebrating 25 years of service Aug. 5-7, and will host
an open house of the facility
with special activities
planned for the entire weekend.
Friday, Aug. 5, 2011 there
will be a Freedom Film
Festival with a showing of
Paradise Recovered at Arts
West, 132 W. State St.,
Athens, at 7 p.m. Paradise
Recovered was an official
selection of the Austin Film
Festival, Heartland Film
Festival, and various other
film festivals across the
United States. Tickets will be
available at the door and proceeds will be donated to
Wellspring’s victim’s assistance fund. More information about the movie is available online www.paradiserecovered.com.
On Saturday Aug. 6,
2011 there will be a conference on cults at the Ohio
University Inn, 331 Richland
Ave., in Athens. Doors open
at 8 a.m. for registration.
There will be several speakers including Gregory
Sammons M.Ed., Dr. Jim
Bjornstad, and Dr. Yegan
Pillay, to name a few.
There will be a cult survivor panel, a history of
Wellspring compliments of
Barb Martin, a co-founder of
Wellspring, and various
other topics. There will also
be a prime rib dinner and art
auction. This event will last
the entire day. Continuing
education credits for mental
health professionals will be
available to those attending
the conference. Registration
is required for the conference.
Sunday Aug. 7, 2011 we
will be hosting a freedom
festival from 3-6 p.m at
beautiful Lake Snowden’s
675 acre recreational park on
State Route 50 near Albany.
Musical guests include
Hook &amp; Strings from
Nelsonville and Otis
Crockron. This event is free
and open to the public.
If you would like further
information about our 25th
anniversary, or would like to
be added to our mailing list,
please contact our office at
740-698-6277, visit our
website www.wellspringretreat.org, or email vanessa@wellspringretreat.org.

will have a potluck picnic
at the Syracuse Community Center shelter
house at noon.
CHESTER – Shade
River Lodge 453, special
meeting, 9 a.m. for the
purpose of conferring the
entered apprentice degree
on
one
candidate.
Breakfast will be served
at 8 a.m. to all Masons
attending.
Reunions
Sunday, July 31
RUTLAND
—
VanMeter
Family
Reunion, 1 p.m., Rutland
park, potluck.
Church Events
Monday, Aug. 1
POMEROY –
Carleton Church on
Kingsbury
Road,
Vacation Bible School,
Aug. 1 through Aug. 5,
6:30 to 8:30 pm. Theme
is Big Jungle Adventure.

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: Areas of
dense fog before 9am.
Otherwise,
cloudy
through mid morning,
then clearing, with a high
near 91. North wind
between 3 and 5 mph.
Wednesday
Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 64. Light and
variable wind.
Thursday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
95. Calm wind becoming
southwest around 5 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 71.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 91.
Friday Night: A chance
of showers and thunder-

storms. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 70.
Chance of precipitation
is 30%.
Saturday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 84.
Chance of precipitation
is 50%. Saturday Night:
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 68. Chance of
precipitation is 40%.
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 90.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 70.
Monday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 90.

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Meigs County intends to apply to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture, Rural Development (Section 533
Housing Preservation Grant Program), for grant funds
to aid in the preservation of housing stock occupied by
very low income homeowners in Meigs County.
Rural Housing Preservation Grant funds will be provided
to eligible households through a grant program and may
be used for the cost of repair and rehabilitation, to
remove or correct health or safety hazards, and for
improving accessibility by handicapped persons.
The USDA Rural Development requires Meigs County
to provide the public with an opportunity for comments
on the proposed project to assure that the proposed
Housing Preservation Grant program is beneficial and
does not duplicate current activities and to make
available for public review, the Statement of Activities,
which outlines the planned proposed program to be
submitted to USDA Rural Development for
consideration for funding. The Meigs County Rural
Development Housing Preservation Statement of
Activities is available and may be reviewed at the Meigs
County Annex, Grants Office, 117 East Memorial Drive,
Suite 7, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, during normal business
hours of 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M., Monday thru Friday.
A fifteen (15) day comment period is required to allow
for public review of the proposed program. Comments
may be submitted prior to August 22, 2011 to the Meigs
County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 during normal business hours of
8:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. Should the public have any
questions as to this notice, they may contact Jean
Trussell, Meigs County Grants Administrator at
740-992-7908.

Mike Bartrum, President
Meigs County Commissioners

7/27/2011

Dr. Clark is trained in all aspects
of foot an ankle care.
His areas of expertise include:
• Foot and Ankle Surgery
• Traumatic Injuries of the Foot and Ankle
• Advanced Wound Care Modalities
• Complex Revision Surgery
• General Podiatric Conditions

For more information or to
schedule an appointment,
please call:

60226443

Wellspring
celebrating
25th year

Lebanon Township
Trustees, regular meeting, 6 p.m., township
building.
Monday, Aug. 1
SYRACUSE — Sutton
Township Trustees, regular meeting, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall.
Tuesday, Aug. 2
CHESTER — Chester
Township Trustees, regular meeting, 7 p.m.,
Chester Town Hall.
Wednesday, Aug. 3
MIDDLEPORT
—
G a l l i a - M e i g s
Community
Action
Agency, public meeting
to elect board member to
represent the low income
sector of the Board of
Directors, 10 a.m.,
GMCAA office, 122
Second Ave.
Community meetings
Saturday, July 30
SYRACUSE – The
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority

60226680

Public meetings
Friday, July 26
RUTLAND — Rutland
Township Trustees, 5
p.m., Rutland fire station.
Thursday, July 28
POMEROY - The
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District,
regular session, 11:30
a.m. at the district office
at 33101 Hiland Road.
Friday, July 29
MARIETTA – The
Regional
Advisory
Council for the Area
Agency on Aging , 10
a.m. at the Knights of
Columbus Hall, 312
Franklin Ave., Marietta.
LETART FALLS —

Adam Phillips, a 2007
graduate of Southern
High School and 2011
graduate of Marshall
University, has been
named band director for
Green High School in
Franklin
Furnace.
Phillips began his job as
band director this month
and is currently preparing his students for their
first competition at
Hilliard Darby High
School in September.
“Green has a strong history of success so my
goal is to help foster
that success again this
year,” Phillips said.
Phillips is the son of Kim
Romine of Pomeroy and
Gary
Phillips
of
Gallipolis. Adam, pictured here with his new
band students, graduated with a Bachelor
of
Arts
in
Music
and Math Education
from Marshall.
(Submitted photos)

�OPINION

War is a racket
BY AMY GOODMAN
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

"War is a racket,"
wrote retired U.S.
Marine
Maj.
Gen.
Smedley D. Butler, in
1935. That statement,
which is also the title of
his short book on war
profiteering, rings true
today. One courageous
civil servant just won a
battle to hold war profiteers accountable. Her
name is Bunnatine
"Bunny" Greenhouse.
She blew the whistle
when her employer, the
U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, gave a nobid $7 billion contract
to the Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown
and Root (KBR) as the
U.S. was about to
invade Iraq. She was
doing her job, trying to
ensure a competitive
bidding process would
save the U.S. government money. For that,
she was forced out of
her senior position,
demoted and harassed.
Just this week, after
waging a legal battle for
more than half a decade,
Bunny
Greenhouse
won. The U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers settled with Greenhouse
for $970,000, representing full restitution for
lost wages, compensatory damages and attorneys' fees.
Her "offense" was to
challenge the KBR contract. It was weeks
before the expected
invasion of Iraq, in
2003, and Bush military
planners
predicted
Saddam Hussein would
blow up Iraqi oilfields,
as happened with the
U.S. invasion in 1991.
The project, dubbed
"Restore Iraqi Oil," or
RIO, was created so that
oilfield fires would
be extinguished. KBR
was owned then by
Halliburton,
whose
CEO until 2000 was
none other than thenVice President Dick
Cheney. KBR was the
only company invited to

bid.
Bunny Greenhouse
told her superiors that
the process was illegal.
She was overridden. She
said the decision to
grant the contract to
KBR came from the
Office of the Secretary
of Defense, run by VP
Cheney's close friend,
Donald Rumsfeld.
As Bunny Greenhouse
told a congressional
committee,
"I
can
unequivocally state that
the abuse related to contracts awarded to KBR
represents the most blatant and improper contract abuse I have witnessed
during
the
course of my professional career."
The oilfields were not
set
ablaze.
Nevertheless, KBR was
allowed to retool its $7
billion no-bid contract,
to provide gasoline and
other logistical support
to
the
occupation
forces. The contract was
so-called
cost-plus,
which means KBR was
not on the hook to provide services at a set
price. Rather, it could
charge its cost, plus a
fixed percentage as
profit. The more KBR
charged, the more profit
it made.
As the chief procurement
officer,
Greenhouse's signature
was required on all contracts valued at more
than $10 million. Soon
after testifying about
the egregious RIO contract, she was demoted,
stripped of her topsecret clearance and
began receiving the
lowest performance ratings. Before blowing
the whistle, she had
received the highest ratings. Ultimately, she left
work, facing an unbearably hostile workplace.
After years of litigation, attorney Michael
Kohn, president of the
N a t i o n a l
Whistleblowers Center,
brought the case to a
settlement. He said:
"Bunny
Greenhouse

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 145-966)

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Subscription Rates

By carrier or motor route
4 weeks . . . . . . . . . . .$11.30
Advertising
52 weeks . . . . . . . . .$128.85
Advertising Director: Pam Daily . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50¢
Caldwell, 740-446-2342, Ext. 17
Subscribers should remit in advance
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
direct to The Daily Sentinel. No subRetail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
scription by mail permitted in areas
Class./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10 where home carrier service is avail-

Circulation
Circulation Manager: 740-4462342, Ext. 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

risked her job and
career when she objected to the gross waste of
federal taxpayer dollars
and illegal contracting
practices at the Army
Corps of Engineers. She
had the courage to stand
alone and challenge
powerful special interests. She exposed a corrupt contracting environment where casual
and clubby contracting
practices were the norm.
Her courage led to
sweeping legal reforms
that will forever halt the
gross abuse she had the
courage to expose."
The
National
Whistleblowers Center's
executive
director,
Stephen Kohn (brother
of Michael Kohn) told
me: "Federal employees
have a very, very hard
time blowing the whistle. ... I hope it's a turning point. The case was
hard-fought. It should
never have had to been
filed. Bunny did the
right thing."
According to Nobel
Prize-winning economist Joe Stiglitz, the
cost of the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan alone
will exceed $5 billion.
With a cost like this,
why isn't war central to
the debate over the
national debt?
T w o - t i m e
Congressional Medal of
Honor winner Maj. Gen.
Smedley Butler had it
right 75 years ago when
he said of war: "It is
possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable,
surely the most vicious
[racket]. ... It is the only
one in which the profits
are reckoned in dollars
and the losses in lives ...
It is conducted for the
benefit of the very few,
at the expense of the
very many."
As President Barack
Obama and Congress
claim it is Medicare,
Medicaid and Social
Security that are breaking the budget, people
should demand that they
stop paying for war.

Page A4
Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Leadership by default
BY RICH LOWRY
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

They used to say that
Richard Nixon had a
"secret plan" in the 1968
presidential campaign to
end the Vietnam War.
President Barack Obama
outdid Nixon with a
secret plan to control the
deficit.
He kept telling us of all
the virtues of his plan. It
was balanced, responsible, courageous and fair.
It was just very, very
secret.
Obama favored a $4
trillion "grand bargain"
that now looks dead. It
allegedly contained $3
trillion in cuts and $1 trillion in new revenues over
10 years. But no one
could learn with any certainty what the specific
new cuts were, or the
specific new revenues.
They were the great mystery at the heart of the
debt-limit debate.
How extraordinary is
the spectacle of the president of a country beset
with a debt crisis who
claims to have a big,
game-changing plan to
alleviate it -- that he
keeps all to himself. He'd
whisper it in the ear of
House Speaker John
Boehner behind closed
doors in the White
House, but the erstwhile
champion of transparency didn't dare make it
public.
Why was the president
who rode into the White
House on a wave of overexposure, who wrote two
memoirs and is constantly on TV, so shy and retiring about this one matter?
Few things would be
more galvanizing in the

nation's budgetary politics than a liberal
Democrat breaking ranks
on entitlements. It would
make possible changes
heretofore unthinkable
and
partly
redeem
Obama's promise of postpartisan government.
Surely the cuts Obama
bragged about in the
abstract wouldn't have
quite materialized in the
particular. If they had,
he'd have faced an intraparty revolt. If you're the
president at a time of
massive red ink and you
want to be an effective
leader, you either need to
be the head of a party that
cares about the debt, or
you need to be brave.
Obama is neither.
He offered a dead-onarrival budget this year,
then revised it with a
gauzy speech impossible
for the Congressional
Budget Office to evaluate. A few months ago,
he demanded that the
debt limit be increased
with no spending reductions whatsoever. Senate
Democrats
famously
have passed no budget
for more than two years.
The Democrats are a selfstyled governing party
that can't truly govern
because their predilections are so unsuited to
the new era.
Obama and his team
have warned repeatedly
during the past few
weeks that a failure to
increase the debt limit
could lead to a disastrous
downgrade of our debt by
the rating agencies.
That's only half the story.
The ratings agencies are
warning that failing to do
something serious about
the underlying debt will

itself bring a downgrade.
For almost three years,
Obama made worse the
very problem that will
lead to a version of his
disaster scenario.
Even if he thought
deficit spending was necessary to fight the recession he inherited, he
could have simultaneously taken action to address
the long-term debt.
Instead, he added a couple more unsustainable
health-care entitlements.
In the cause of fighting
for additional government programs, he identified and fought for $500
billion in Medicare cuts.
Then he was relatively
specific and inarguably
bold. Now he has the
plan that dare not speak
its name.
Appropriately enough,
the locus of the negotiations over the debt limit
have passed from the
White House to Capitol
Hill,
where
House
Republicans have produced a plan for matching spending cuts to an
increase in the debt limit.
It is only their adamantine insistence on beginning to deal with the debt
that made Obama's initial
preference for no cuts
whatsoever a non-starter.
If there are substantial
cuts without a tax
increase, it will be a tribute to their notorious
"inflexibility."
Of course, the cuts will
fall short of the $6 trillion
over 10 years that
Republicans voted for in
the
Ryan
budget.
Obama's specific counter
to that budget is ...
nonexistent. On the debt,
he's an expert at letting
others lead by default.

Keeping Meigs County informed

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today 740-992-2156

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

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

Letters to the Editor

able.

Mail Subscription
Inside
12 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Meigs County
. . . . . . . . . .$35.26
. . . . . . . . . .$70.70
. . . . . . . . .$140.11

Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .$56.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . .$113.60
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . .$227.21

Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will
not be accepted for publication.

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

�Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Obituaries

Smoke Alarm Advisory Task Force created

Tim Brian Wolf
Tim Brian Wolf, 59 of Long Bottom, passed away
at the Camden Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
on July 26, 2011.
Tim was born Aug. 20, 1951 in Pomeroy, to Lorena
June (Pigott) Wolf and the late Clarence Wolf,
Jr. Tim worked as a carpenter for most of his life.
He is survived by his wife of 38 years, Donna Marie
Coe-Wolf; daughter, Sherri Dawn Wolf-Woods; son,
Thomas Brian and Jessica Wolf; grandchildren,
Robert Brian Dillon, Kylie Marie Dillon and Braden
Chase Wolf; mother, Lorena Wolf; sister, Penny and
Robert Koren; brothers, Randy and Pam Wolf,
Matthew Wolf, James and Jennifer Wolf, David Wolf;
sister, Angela Wilson
He is preceded in death by his Father
At the request of Mr. Wolf there will be no services.
An on line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

Carl B. Bryant
Carl B. Bryant, 84 of Pomeroy passed away on July
26, 2011 at the Overbrook Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center.
Mr. Bryant was born on March 11, 1927 in
Pikeville, Ky. to the late Fred and Ressie (Maynard)
Bryant. Mr. Bryant was employed as a custodian at
Bowling Green Ohio City Schools untill retirement.
He then relocated to Pomeroy. He was a member of
the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel. An avid fisherman and
hunter, he made many friends in the area with his
sense of humor and laughter.
He is survived by his children, Marianna and Bradly
Schmul, Salem, Martha Maynard, Salem, and
Rebecca and Robert Delong, Pomeroy; grandchildren, Buddy Schmul, Melissa and Aaron Gardner,
Heidi, Holly, Bobbi Jo and Bryan DeLong, Melanie
Bryant, Karla and Abby Maynard; great grandchildren, Jace Gardner and Michael Skocich; brothers,
Benny and Linda Bryant and Fred "Pee Wee" and
Marion Bryant; and several nieces and nephews.
He is preceded in death by his parents and two
brothers, Chester Bryant and Ralph Bryant
Services will be held on Saturday, July 30, 2011 at
11 am at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Charles McKenzie officiating. Burial will follow in the Rocksprings
Cemetery. Visitation will be held on Friday, July 29,
2011 from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
An on line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

COLUMBUS — State
Fire Marshal Larry
Flowers has announced
the creation of the
Division of State Fire
Marshal’s Smoke Alarm
Advisory Task Force.
The task force will
make a recommendation to the Division of
State Fire Marshal on
how citizens can best
protect themselves and
their property through
available smoke alarm
technologies.
The Smoke Alarm
Advisory Task Force
will examine the various research, recommendations and opinions regarding the use
and placement of photoelectric and ionization smoke alarms in
residential properties.

Meigs 911
July 22:
Chest pain, Union Ave., Pomeroy; unknown emergency, Racine; diabetic emergency, Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy; anxiety/panic attack, Middleport.
July 23:
Nausea/vomiting, Second Ave., Middleport; anxiety/panic attack, Fourth Ave., Middleport;
seizure/convulsions, Walnut St., Middleport; pain
general, Greenwood Cemetery Rd., Racine; chest
pain, Flatwoods Rd., Pomeroy; stroke/cva, Third
Ave., Middleport; pain general, Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy; chest pain, Second Ave., Middleport; chest
pain, Elm St., Racine.
July 24:
Heat related emergency, Pearl St., Middleport; difficulty breathing, Dusky St., Syracuse; fractured body
part, Page St., Middleport; unknown emergency,
Mudfork Rd., Pomeroy; allergic reaction, Apple
Grove Dorcas Rd., Racine; unknown emergency,
Albany; heat related emergency, Third St., Racine.
July 25:
Unconscious/unknown reason, Lovett Rd.,
Portland; dehydration, Fourth Ave., Middleport; chest
pain, Rocksprings Rd., Pomeroy; assault/fight,
Second St., Pomeroy.

From Page A1
before Sunday’s grim
discovery and Tuesday’s
confirmed identification
of Crawford and Nelson,
including the trio hiding
out from some unknown
danger or the trio starting
a new life, based on initial reports from family
and friends who say the
Crawfords had expressed
a desire to leave the area
and move south, possibly
to South Carolina or
Alabama. It is now
known that foul play was
certainly involved in the
disappearances;
what
isn’t known is the whereabouts of the third missing individual — William
“Jeff”
Crawford.
Investigators report that
no cell phone or bank

activity has been detected
since the three vanished.
The family of Jeff
Crawford, whose 29th
birthday was June 29, has
been
circulating
a
Facebook post asking
that anyone with information on Jeff contact
them anonymously with
their information or tips
at P.O. Box 73, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., 25550.
The Mason County
Sheriff’s Office has been
the lead investigative
body on the missing persons cases, but the homicide investigations will
be led by the West
Virginia State Police.
Anyone with information
about this case can contact the Mason County
Sheriff’s Department at
(304) 675-3838 or the
West Virginia State
Police at (304) 675-0850.

Keeping
Meigs County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
740-992-2156

“The members of the
task force were specifically selected for their
experience in analyzing
and evaluating technical
information,” said State
Fire Marshal Flowers.
“Their interest in the
issue of home, fire and
public safety, along
with their high integrity
and widely accepted
credibility, will provide
us with a recommendation of smoke alarm
protection for Ohio’s
homes.”
The task force will be
chaired
by
Robert
Rielage, former Ohio
State Fire Marshal and
current fire chief for the
City of Wyoming, near
Cincinnati. The members
of the task force include:

Ohio
Representative
Joseph Uecker; Dr. Gary
Smith, the Director of the
Center
for
Injury
Research and Policy at
Nationwide Children’s
Hospital; Dr. Lindy
Dejarme, a research scientist with Battelle
Laboratories;
Gregg
Costas, a criminal and
fire investigator with the
Bureau of Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation;
Dennis
Kovach, an fire protection
engineer
with
American
Electric
Power; and Jay Troy, a
member of the Society
for
Fire
Protection
Engineers.
Recent statistics show
that as many as 90 percent of Ohio’s fires with

fatalities or injuries
occur in homes with no
smoke alarms, no working smoke alarms or
smoke alarms that may
not have activated.
Additionally, new recommendations by some
organizations have suggested the use of one
smoke alarm detection
technology over the
other.
Anyone interested in
scheduling testimony or
providing data, information or research to the
task force should contact
the Division of State Fire
Marshal at 614-7528818.
Follow the State Fire
Marshal on Twitter at
www.twitter.com/OhioFire

Carleton College trustees elect officers

Awards scholarships
SYRACUSE – Board
members were named,
officers elected and
scholarships awarded
during the 147th annual
meeting of the Carleton
College
Board
of
Trustees held at the
Syracuse Community
Center.
The Carleton Board
elected Cathy Crow,
Gordon Fisher, June
Lee, James Lawrence,
Bill Roush, Rita Slaven,

and Milton Varian to
three year terms on the
Board.
Remembrance was
given
for
Dana
Winebrenner,
who
passed away this past
year. Dana had served
on the Carleton Board
for 43 years beginning
in 1967. Cathy Moore
was elected to the
Carleton Board as a
new member to replace
her
Uncle
Dana

Winebrenner.
Officers elected were
Gordon Fisher, president; Larry Ebersbach,
vice-president; Joyce
Sisson, secretary; and
Cathy Crow, treasurer.
Approved
for
Carleton Scholarships
were Catherine Woods,
Amanda Roush, Colby
Roseberry, and Kyle
Johnson.
Present at the meeting
were members Carol

Marauders perform
in Parkersburg

For the Record

Remains

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sixteen Meigs Marauder Band students participated in the recent Burger King
Band which performed at the Battle Against Cystic Fibrosis Football Classic 2011
held recently at the Parkersburg Stadium Field. Students qualify to participate in
try-outs. Meigs students have taken part in the benefit game band for several
years. This yearʼs students participating were, from the left. front, Olivia Bevan,
Wade Harrision, Lindsay Hysell and Jennifer Robinson, and back, Jessi Meadows,
Emma Perrin, Brady Bisell, Taylor Jones, Robbie Dillon, Megan Dyer, Johnathan
Michael, Karlie Hall, Nate Gilkey, MaKenzie Green, Caroyann Stewart, and
Heather Stewart. (Submitted.)

Pomeroy
From Page A1
dismay over the appearance of not only downtown
but other areas in the village which he feels are not
being cared for to the
extent they were being
cared for in the past. Young
said since the former street
and water departments
were consolidated into the

Bus
From Page A1
part of Middleport for
more than 82 years and the
denomination over 100
years. It is founded on
bringing the gospel to and
helping the downtrodden,
said Pastor Powell.
Donations to help “stuff

Pomeroy Public Works
Department, it seemed like
less was getting done in
terms of general maintenance on roads and mowing/weedeating.
“This place is going to
the dogs,” Young told
council, pointing out the
poor state of Wills Hill
road, various weeds in the
village and overgrown
curbs, particularly for visitors entering Pomeroy
from “the Beacon” on

Ohio 833.
Young also asked if the
village had collected any
taxes from local billboards
with Hysell saying she didn’t believe that had happened yet. Young asked
Hysell to ask Tax
Administrator Jean Durst
about the situation.
(Editor’s note: This is the
first of two stories on this
week’s
meeting
of
Pomeroy Village Council.)

the bus” can be left through
Aug. 5 at the bus or in the
church. Children can register to receive school supplies from 1 a.m. to noon
every day through Aug. 5 at
the church
For more information call
the church at 740-9923191; Brenda and Keith
Phalin @ 992-6745 or
email
middleportnaz@

frontier.com .
Children ages 4 to 12 are
invited to attend Bible
school at the church, Aug.
8-11. Classes will be held
6-8:30 p.m. and again at 6
p.m. Friday Aug. 12, when
a family cook out and VBS
Fair will take place. There
will be games, a petting zoo,
with miniature horses and
llamas.

Adams, John Bentley,
Cathy Crow, Rick Crow,
Bob Deemer, Larry
Fields, Gordon Fisher,
Emogene Hamilton, Don
Houdashelt,
James
Lawrence, June Lee,
Rita Slaven and Milton
Varian.
After the meeting,
Board members enjoyed
homemade ice cream
provided
by
the
Syracuse Community
Center.

OU
From Page A1
versity’s process for handling second drug and
alcohol violations hasn’t
changed but for a limited
number of students under a
limited amount of circumstances, a reprieve could be
granted, though that
reprieve is not guaranteed
and is dependent on the
student’s commitment for
following all stipulations
set forth in the Alternative
Suspension Program.
As for why the new
program was put in
place, Lombardi said the
university does recognize
some students make bad
choices given unforeseen
circumstances in their
lives and for those students who truly learn
from those bad choices
and commit to the program, a second chance
could be an option.
After years of seeing a
decrease in alcohol and
marijuana violations, the
university saw a spike
last year but Lombardi
said according to a recent
anonymous survey taken
by students, over the
course of the last four
years there was an eight
percent drop in high risk
drinking behavior reported by students.
Last year OU was
named the number two
party school by the
Princeton Review which
creates a reputation OU
administration are well
aware of but not necessarily sold on.
“It doesn’t reflect accurately on our culture here,”
Lombardi said of the
“party school reputation.”
Lombardi guessed the
large events held in
Athens may give the university
unwarranted
notoriety but added the
majority of people who
are arrested at those
events are not students,
though he didn’t deny
some were, just as he
didn’t deny there are
some situations where a
second chance for second
offenders is warranted
via
the Alternative
Suspension Program.

Jeff Warner
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

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

�Wednesday, July 27, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

�Wednesday, July 27, 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

200

Announcements

400

Notices

Money To Lend

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

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

Garden &amp; Produce

Yard Sale

For sale tomatoes, peppers, and
squash. Rowe Farm Racine 740247-4292

Yard Sale @ 1.7 mile out St Rt 218
July 29 &amp; 30. 8am-5pm Household
items,
Pictures,Lamps,mirrors,
small appliances,linens, etc.

Financial

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

600

Animals

Plant your fall mums and asters
now for a better chance to come
back. More colors and varieties this
year. NO SUN. Sales. Yoder's
Greenhouse 10 miles west of Gallipolis on St. Rt. 141

Other Services
Pet Cremations. Call 740-446-3745
Small Home Repair and Yard Services 30 yrs EXP. References Available Call 446-3682
Will pick up unwanted Appliances&amp;
yard sale items also Will haul or
buy Auto's &amp; Scrap metal Ph. 4463698 ask for Robert.

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

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

Want To Buy

Hay For Sale Ph:740-388-9011

Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most makes &amp;
Models. House Calls 304-675-1724

Merchandise

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

3000

5 free white female pom mix, and 2
brown and gray pom mix 740-3889839
2 female 8wk old lab mix puppies
first shots and worming 352-2015211
8-mixed lab puppies 740-446-0419
AKC Min Dashounds all colors and
dapples $300.00 and up. 740-2561498
CKC Maltese puppy $400.00 740256-1498
Free Kittens Indoor Only Litter
trained Ph: 446-3897
or 446-1282
Pekingnese Puppies $100 ph 740256-1664

700

Autos
2008 Ford Taurus $13,700. Currently under 32,000 miles, located
at Clifton, WV 304-593-0504

Pets

Services

Agriculture

Miscellaneous
15' above ground pool, new liner, filter and motor, 25' deck treated 2x6
lumber, T1-11 siding, $2000 OBO
304-675-1602
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins any 10K/14K/18K gold jewerly, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency. proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call 740388-0884

Yard Sale
Farm Equipment
Satoh Beaver Tractor 4x4 front end
loader and plow $1,800 740-4464922

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Automotive

CANNING TOMATOES- U pick,
Letart Falls, make a left just before
Racine Locks &amp; Dam on Hill Rd. go
about half mile on right, Open 8-4
July 27-30 ONLY

900
300

2000

Estate / Yard Sale Saturday July
30th 8am-? located @ 610 1st Ave.
Antiques,furniture,household items,
collectibles.
Garage Sale @ 1165 St Rt 588 July
28th 8am-3pm,July 29,10am-3pm,
July 30th 8am-3pm.
Inside Sale Fri/Sat 9am-? @ 21
Central Ave, Suite B, Side Street
beside Jackson Hewett, Gallipolis.
Kids &amp; Plus Sz. Women's clothes,
Home Int. Retired 31 Bags,
Longaberger, misc household
items.

Real Estate
Sales
Cemetery Plots

ATTENTION: 2 burial plots available
at Mound Hill Cemetery $900 ea.
136 1/2 Leaper Addition/Ecker Hatfield Section. Call 840-456-7763

Houses For Sale
For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex in town,
$475/mo. Dep+ref. No pets. Quiet
place. 446-1271.
Clean 2 Bedroom House, conveniently located, Ref &amp; Dep required,
NO PETS 304-675-5162
House for rent 3br on 554. $650.00
a month or consider selling on land
contract with 10,000 down
740-645-8660

Land (Acreage)
13 Acres for Sale SR 325 Gallia
/Meigs Line. Timber Ph. 740-4461801
4-Sale by Owner 36 acres "Wooded
Area" 2-Good Home Sites-Close to
water &amp; Electric, Ph 256-6444

Real Estate
Rentals

3500

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

Pretty 1 or 2 BR, Downtown Gallipolis, Pref. Female, Utilities included $550 mth. $550 Deposit
Must have excellent references No
pets or smoking Kelly 645-9096
1bd upstairs apartment AC, range,
refrigerator and garage Dep+ref required 136 1st Ave 740-446-2561
Modern 1br apt 740) 446-0390
Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5 BA,
back patio, pool, playground. $450
mth 740-645-8599
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
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR townhouse apartments, also renting 2 &amp;
3BR houses. Call 441-1111.
NICE
Furnished
Apts
Racine,Ohio
rent incl.W/S/G No Pets 740-5915174
1 BR-Close to Hospital and a 2 BR
close to Rio Grande, Washer &amp;
Dryer Hook-ups-Appliances furnished. Ph 740-441-3702 or 740286-5789
1 br. apt, $325 per mo. plus utilities
&amp; deposit, 3rd St, Racine, 740-2474292
Middleport, 2 bedroom furnished
apartment, No pets, deposit &amp; references, 740-992-0165
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1
BR at $400+2 BR at $475 Month.
446-1599.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

New Condo! 2 bedroom &amp; den, or 3
bedroom's,
stove-frig-ac-patio,
wood floor's, Racine, Oh, $675 per
mo. &amp; electric, 740-247-3008

Commercial
2500 sq ft building for rent w/ office,
display area and garage or shop
area plus lots of parking. Best location in town beside new Hampton
Inn. lease neg. 740-441-5150 or
740379-2923

Houses For Rent
3 &amp; 4 br houses for rent Syracuse,
no pets, 740-591-0265 or 304-6755332
Nice 2br mobile home, complete remodeled, all electric w/ca. sr rt 160
4 miles from Holzer, no pets. 740441-5141 or 740-446-6865
Beautiful 3 BR House in Country,
New appliances, New flooring,
Freshly painted, Central Air, Laundry Rm, Water Pd. $550 mth. Ph
740-645-5953 or 614-595-7773
2 bedroom house, $350 month
$350 deposit, years lease, No pets,
740-992-5097

Lease
The Gallia Co. Board of DD has a
Commercial / Retail Building is
equipped with loading dock area,
two large work bay areas,locked
tool storage, wired for high voltage
equipment use, office space, Large
break/lunch area, Large yard with
picnic area, and meets all fire and
state regulations. To inquire please
contact Superintendent, Rosalie
Durbin, at 740-446-6902 or e-mail
rosaliedurbin@galliadd.com.

4000

Manufactured
Housing
Rentals

For rent a 2 bedroom mobile home
$425.00 a month, $ 425.00 deposit
plus utilities. no pets 740-441-2707
3-BR Trailer on 1 acre of land-3
buildings $525 mth &amp; $525 Deposit
NO PETS Ph: 740)367-0641 or
740)367-7272
2 BR Mobile Home with
Air,Water,Sewer,Trash Paid, NO
PETS, located @ Johnson's Mobile
Home Park Ph. 446-3160
2-BR Trailer for Rent-washer &amp;
dryer-central air @ Apple Grove
Area. $400 mth &amp;350 dep. Ref. Required Call 740-645-3115 after 4pm

A Celebration Of Life......
Overbrook Center, Located at 333
Page Street, Middleport, Ohio Is
Pleased To Announce We Are Accepting Applicatins For Full Time
And Part Time RN's And LPN's, To
Join Our Friendly And Dedicated
Staff. Applicant's Must Be Dependable; Team Players With Positive Attitudes To Join Us In Providing
Outstanding, Quality Care To Our
Residents. Stop By And Fill Out An
Application M-F 8am-4:30pm Or
Contact Susie Drehel, Staff Development Coordinator @ 740-9926472. E.O.E. &amp; A Participant Of The
Drug-Free Workplace Program
Local Dental Office seeking applications for enthusiastic and motivated individuals to train as dental
assistants. Send resumes to PO
Box 704, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

6000

9000

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

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery

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

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

and

Supply

Horses - Ponies - Mules
Alligator Jack’s Flea Market
St. Rt. 7 • Pomeroy
740-992-3008
740-591-6593

Fenton

Stanley Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

~ Available at ~

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

Beaut iful Fenton Glass Beads
These beads will fit All Bracelet Brands

Hartwell House

100 E. Main Street, Pomeroy Ohio
740.992.7696

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

Shop the
Classifieds!

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD

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

Marshall University
Mid Ohio Valley Center
OPEN HOUSE
July 28th 5:00 - 7:00pm

Learn from the best. Take the H&amp;R
Block Income Tax Course. Possible
employment, Call 740-992-6674

740-985-3302

MANTIS TILLERS - TROY BILT TILLERS - HITACHI TRIMMERS SAWS - BLOWERS - TANAKA - WINCH CABLES - CHOKERS
SERVICING ALL BRANDS
PICK UP &amp; DELIVERY

All your equine supplies &amp; needs
New Shipment of tack
We take trade-ins

Direct Supervision employees to
oversee male youth in a staff secure residential environment. Must
pass physical training requirement.
Pay based on experience. Call 740379-9083 M-F from 8-4

Bookkeeper/Receptionist needed
for Local Accounting Firm. Send
Resume to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune PO Box 469 Gallipolis,Oh
45631 C/O KC 720

Baum Lumber

POWER EQUIPMENT SALES &amp; SERVICE

C&amp;M

Tack

Start your college career!

Someone to work on trash route,
Requirements are but not limited to:
read and follow directions 25yrs or
older, clean driving record, maintenance work history. Send resumes
to PO Box 21 Bidwell OH 45614 or
call 740-388-8978 for info

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

• Commerciall &amp; Residentiall • Generall Remodeling

Help Wanted - General

The Ohio Valley Transloading Company, Located on the right decending bank of the Ohio River at Mile
Post 110.8 is accepting resumes for
the position of pilot. Candidates
must possess current license. Excellent wage and benefit program
available. For consideration, please
e-mail your resume in confidence
to:
careers@coalsource.com

Count on it.

and General Contracting
Mikee W.. Marcumm - Owner

Service / Bus.
Directory

1-Driver Position Robertsburg : Valley Brook Concrete. Requirements;
CDL, experience preferred, dependable, willing to work 6 days a
week. Extra skills such as welding, building etc. preferred. Benefits
after waiting period. 304-7735519 for interviews (Need Driver
Immediately).
R &amp; J Trucking in Marietta, OH is
hiring CDL A Drivers for local
&amp;
Regional Routes. Applicants must
be at least 23 yrs have min of 1
yr of commercial driving exp. Clean
MVR, Haz-mat Cert. Excellent
health &amp; dental insurance, 401(K),
Vacation, Bonus pays and safety
awards. Contact Kenton at 1-800462-9365 E.O.E.

Marcum Construction

Wanted Full-time employment in
your own home as a Home Services Worker with Buckeye Community Services. Home must be in
Gallia County. We provide salary
plus benefits and a daily room and
board rate. You provide a
home,guidance and friendship in a
family atmosphere. Requires ability
to teach personal living skills and a
commitment to the growth and development of an individual with developmental
disabilities.
If
interested contact Cecilia at 1-800531-2302 or (740) 286-5039. Preemployment Drug testing. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

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

Sales

To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155

Medical

Overbrook Center is now accepting
resumes for the position of Director
of Housekeeping and Laundry. The
qualified candidate must possess
strong verbal and written communication skills, prior management experience, excellent organizational
skills, working knowledge of long
term care rules and regulations and
must have solid knowledge base of
industrial/commercial
cleaning
equipment, products, techniques
and MSDS. Qualified candidates
may send resumes to Charla
Brown-McGuire, RN, LNHA, Administrator, 333 Page Street, Middleport, Oh 45760. E.O.E. &amp;
Participant of the Drug Free Workplace Program

2-BR Trailer for rent, Washer &amp;
Dryer, Central Air, @ the Apple
Grove Area. $400 mth $350 dep.
Ref. Required. Call 740-645-3115
after 4pm

Services Offered

Help Wanted - General
Overbrook Center is currently seeking a beautician to work in the facility's beauty salon. Candidates
should possess a valid Ohio managing cosmetologist license. Salary
is based on commission. Interested
candidates should contact the administrator at 740-992-6472. EOE
Overbrook Center participates in
the Druig Free Workplace Program.
WVDA needs assistance in the dayto-day operations at the Lakin Farm
in Mason County. Duties include
routine manual labor and general
farm work using currently accepted
agricultural practices and applications of new technologies. Work is
performed in all weather conditions
and schedule will vary dependent
upon weather conditions. Requirements: High School graduate or
equivalent, one year experience in
farming operation. Salary: $21K
Visit: www.wvagriculture.org/application.html; or contact Connie at
ctolley@wvda.us or 304-558-2210.
Submit application and resume to
Connie Tolley, WV Dept of Agriculture, 1900 Kanawha Blvd E,
Charleston, WV 25305 or fax to
558-2270. Closing Date: until filled.
EOE

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

60214657

Apartments/
Townhouses

www.mydailysentinel.com

Visit with representatives
from Huntington and South
Charleston Campus
Call
304-674-7200
for more information

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

Cell

Please leave message

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
100

740-591-8044

Legals

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 11
CV 015, FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF,
VS. GLORIA J. VAN REETH AKA
GLORIA VAN REETH AKA GLORIA JEAN VAN REETH, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO.
By virtue of an
Order of Sale issued out of said
Court in the above action, Robert E.
Beegle, the Sheriff of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to sell at public action on the front steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, August 19, 2011, at 10:00 a.m., the
following lands and tenements: Situated in Chester Township, Meigs
County, State of Ohio and being in
Fraction 4,Town 2 North, Range 13
West of the Ohio Company’s Purchase and being described as follows: Beginning at an iron pin set at
an agreed upon point between Baer
and White, said point being the
southwest corner of Baers’ parcel
as described in the Meigs County
Deed Records, Volume 310, Page
489; Thence N. 71˚ 00' 32" E., a distance of 258.61' along an agreed
property line between Baer and
White to an iron pin set; Thence N.
78˚ 44' 10" E., a distance of 189.16'
along a fenceline, said fenceline
also being an agreed property line
between Baer and White to an iron
pin set; Thence N. 15˚ 58' 31" W., a
distance of 200.66' along a fenceline, said fenceline also being an
agreed property line between Baer
and White to a point in the centerline of Township Road 79, passing
an iron pin set at 170.66' for reference; Thence the following nine (9)
calls along the centerline of said
Township Road 79; N. 66˚ 33' 30"
E., a distance of 57.05';S. 89˚ 34'
13" E., a distance of 22.85';S. 74˚
14' 30" E., a distance of 42.95';S.
55˚ 39' 31" E., a distance of
51.92';S. 34˚ 24' 12" E., a distance
of 60.46';S. 20˚ 03' 46" E., a distance of 42.82';S. 9˚ 02' 52" W., a
distance of 41.62';S. 19˚ 44' 10" W.,
a distance of 100.00';S. 25˚ 56' 10"
W., a distance of 50.00'; Thence S.
41˚ 14' 10" W., a distance of 50.00'
to a point; Thence S. 62˚ 27' 10" W.,
a distance of 198.00' to a point;
Thence S. 74˚ 09' 10" W., a distance of 148.20' to a point; Thence
N. 85˚ 45' 50" W., a distance of
98.70' to a point;Thence N. 36˚ 26'
50" W., a distance of 99.40' to a
point; Thence N. 57˚ 10' 50" W., a
distance of 50.00' to an iron pin set;
Thence N. 44˚ 42' 10" E., a distance
of 42.20' to the POINT OF BEGINNING; said described tract containing 2.846 Acres, more or less,
excepting all legal utility easements
and rights of way. Bearings are assumed and are for angle measurement only. The above description is
based on a survey in April, 2001, by
E &amp; E Borderline Surveying, Robert
R. Eason, Ohio P. S. No. 7033.
Also previously described before
above survey as follows: Situate in
Chester Township, Meigs County,
State of Ohio, and being in Fraction
4,Section 10, Town 2 North, Range
13 West of the Ohio Company’s
Purchase and being described as
follows: Beginning at a point South
82 deg. 35' East 2027.45 feet and
South 7 deg. 25' West 119 feet from
the Northwest corner of said Fraction 4, said point of beginning being
in the centerline of a 35 foot wide
roadway; thence South 67 deg. 25'
West 98 feet to an iron pipe; thence
South 10 deg. 17' East 199 feet to
an iron pipe; thence South 83 deg.
40' West 189.5 feet to an iron pipe;
thence South 74 deg. 50' West 259
feet to an iron pipe; thence South
49 deg. 38' West 42.2 feet to the
centerline of a 35 foot wide roadway; thence following the centerline
of said roadway along the following
bearings and distances: South 52
deg. 15' East 50 feet; South 31 deg.
31' East 99.4 feet; South 80 deg. 50'
East 98.7 feet; North 79 deg. 05'
East 148.2 feet; North 67 deg. 23'
East 198 feet; North 46 deg. 10'
East 50 feet; North 30 deg. 52' East
50 feet; North 24 deg. 40' East 100
feet; North 15 deg. 40' East 50 feet;
North 17 deg. 38' West 50 feet;
North 32 deg. 17' West 49.2 feet
and North 43 deg. 50' West 97.2
feet to the point of beginning, containing 3.268 acres, more or less,
excepting all legal rights of way. The
bearings in the above description
are magnetic as of July 28, 1973.
All minerals underlying the above
described property being excepted

100

Legals

and reserved. It is further a condition of this deed that no mobile
home and no modular or double
wide mobile home may be placed,
constructed or maintained on the
above described real estate or any
part thereof. The above description
was furnished by Robert M. Eason,
Ohio P. E. No. E-32187, Ohio S. I. T.
No. 1034, per survey of July 28,
1973. Further reserving unto the
grantors, their heirs and assigns,
and to such others as they may
grant the privilege, an easement on
the property above conveyed, and
reserving unto the grantors, their
heirs and assigns, the right to dedicate the roadway hereinafter described as a public highway, for a 35
foot roadway, 17&amp;frac12; feet of
which lies within the property above
described and the center line of
which is described as follows: Commencing at the extreme Northwest
corner of the above described
3.268 acre tract; thence South 52
deg. 15' East 50 feet; South 31 deg.
31' East 99.4 feet; South 80 deg. 50'
East 98.7 feet; North 79 deg. 05'
East 148.2 feet; North 67 deg. 23'
East 198 feet; North 46 deg. 10'
East 50 feet; North 30 deg. 52' East
50 feet; North 24 deg. 40' East 100
feet; North 15 deg. 40' East 50 feet;
North 17 deg. 38' West 50 feet;
North 32 deg. 17' West 49.2 feet
and North 43 deg. 50' West 97.2
feet and granting unto the grantees,
their heirs and assigns, the right to
use the 35 foot roadway as a
means of ingress and egress in
common with the grantors, their
heirs and assigns. Auditor’s Parcel
Number: 04-00101.000. Reference
Deed: Volume 123, Page 607,
Meigs County Official Records.
The above described real estate is
sold “as is” without warranties or
covenants.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 34660 Crew Road,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 CURRENT
OWNER: Gloria J. Van Reeth.
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED AT:
$75,000.00. The real estate cannot
be sold for less than 2/3rds the appraised value. The appraisal does
not include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the real
e
s
t
a
t
e
.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash only)
down on day of sale, balance (cash
or certified check only) due on confirmation of sale. ALL SHERIFF’S
SALES OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. ATTORNEY FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, 211-213 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(7) 27; (8) 3, 10
LEGAL NOTICE SHERIFF’S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE GENERAL
CODE SEC. 11681 REVISED
CODE SEC. 2329.26 THE STATE
OF OHIO, MEIGS COUNTY:
ACEnet
Ventures,
Inc.,
Case No. 09CV140
Plaintiff,
Judge Crow
Vs. Hupp Auto Center, LLC, et al.
Defendants. IN PURSUANCE OF
AN ORDER OF SALE IN THE
ABOVE TITLED ACTION, I WILL
OFFER FOR SALE AT PUBLIC
AUCTION, AT THE FRONT DOOR
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE, 104 EAST 2ND
STREET, POMEROY, OHIO 45769,
IN THE ABOVE NAMED COUNTY
ON 19th DAY OF AUGUST, 2011
AT 10:00 A.M. THE FOLLOWING
REAL ESTATE: Parcel 1: Tract 1:
Being part of Lots #7 and 8 as
shown on the plat of the Village of
Martinsville, in Section 6, Township
4 and Range 12 of the Ohio Company’s Purchase in Orange Township, Meigs County, Ohio and
otherwise described as follows:Beginning at the southeast corner of
said Lot #7; thence south 89&amp;deg;
west 264 feet to the southwest corner of said Lot #7, thence north
6&amp;deg; west 165 feet along the
west line of said lots to the northwest corner of said Lot #8 on the
south side of an alley, thence north
89&amp;deg; east 174 feet along the
north line of said Lot #8, thence
south 6&amp;deg; east 124 feet, thence
north 89&amp;deg; east 90 feet to the
place of beginning containing .73
acre; also a part of Lot #9 as shown
on the Plat of said Village of Martinsville and described as follows:
Beginning at the southwest corner
of said Lot #9 on the north side of
an alley, thence north 6&amp;deg; west
48.5 feet, thence north 89&amp;deg;
east 174 feet, thence south 6&amp;deg;
east 48.5 feet to the south line of

100

Legals

said Lot #9, thence south 78&amp;deg;
west 174 feet to the place of beginning, containing .19 acre; and in all
.92 acre. Reference Deed: Volume
226, Page 235 and Volume 157,
Page 591, Meigs County Deed
Records. Tract 2:
Situated in Orange Township, Meigs County,
Ohio, southeast quarter Section #6,
Town 4, Range 12, bounded and
described as follows: Being Lot #6
on a plat of Tuppers Plains made by
John Heit. Beginning at the northeast corner of Lot #5; thence west
16 rods; thence north 5&amp;deg; west
5 rods; thence east 16 rods; thence
south 5&amp;deg; east 5 rods, containing 80 square rods, more or less.
Reference is made to deed
recorded in Volume 155, Page 49,
Meigs County Deed Records. Excepting the real estate more fully
described in deed recorded in Volume 190, Page 597, of the Meigs
County Deed Records. Reference
Deed: Volume 281, Page 615,
Meigs County Deed Records. Tract
3:
Alley between Lots 8 and 9 in
Orange Township, in the unincorporated Village of Martinsville
bounded on the west by property
owned by William H. Chapman and
Patricia Chapman and on the east
by State Route #7. Excepting that
part on the east end vacated and
now owned by adjoining land owners Roger Hawk, which is more fully
described in instrument recorded in
Volume 308, Page 535, Meigs
County Deed Records.
THE
ABOVE PROPERTY BEING DESCRIBED BY NEW SURVEY AS
FOLLOWS: Situate in the Village of
Tuppers Plains, Meigs County,
State of Ohio and being in Orange
Township, Town 4 North, Range 12
West of the Ohio Company’s Purchase, and being a part of the Town
of Martinsville as recorded in Plat
Book 2, Page 40 of the Meigs
County Plat records, and being described as follows: Beginning at an
iron pin set North 2&amp;deg;01'00"
West 199.70 feet from an old fence
post by a stone found at the Southwest corner of Lot No. 4 of the said
Town of Martinsville, said iron pin
being at the Northwest corner of
Conkel’s parcel as described in
Meigs County Deed Records: Volume 257, page 497, said iron pin
also being on the East line of Chapman’s 10.59 Acre parcel as described in Meigs County Deed
Records: Volume 281, Page 615,
Tract No. 3; Thence North
2&amp;deg;01'00" West 291.00 feet
along the East line of the said
Chapman 10.59 Acre parcel and
along the West line of the North
44.50 feet of Lot #6 of said Martinsville and along the west line of
Lots 7 and 8 and along the west line
of the South 48.50 feet of Lot No. 9
to an iron pin set at a Southwest
Corner of Hawk’s Parcels as described in Meigs County Deed
Records: Volume _____, Page
______; Thence East 171.85 feet
along a south line of the said Hawk
Parcels to a point;Thence South
3&amp;deg;00'00" East 205.50 feet
along a West line of the said Hawk
Parcels to a point, passing through
part of Lot 9, all of Lot 8 and part of
Lot 7 of said Martinsville to a southwest corner of the said Hawk
Parcels;Thence West 87.17 feet
along the south line of the said
Hawk Parcels to an iron pin set at
the Southeast Corner of the said
Hawk Parcels, said iron pin also
being on the West Right-of-Way line
of State Route 7; Thence South
3&amp;deg;00'00" East 85.50 feet
through parts of Lots 7 and 6 of
said Martinsville and along the
West Right-of-Way line of said
State Route 7 to an iron pin set at
the Northeast Corner of the said
Conkel Parcel as described in
Meigs County Deed Records: Volume 257, Page 497; Thence West
264.00 feet along the North line of
the said Conkel to the point of beginning, excepting all legal easements and rights-of-way.It is the
intent of the above description to
describe all of the parts of Lot 6, 7,
8 and 9 and the abandoned alley
owned by Chapman and described
in Meigs County Deed Records:
Volume 328, Page 505, that lies
within the Town of Martinsville as
shown in Meigs County Plat
Records: Book 2, Page 40;
Bounded on the west by Chapman’s 10.59 Acre Parcel, on the
North by Hawk’s Parcels, on the
East by State Route 7 and Hawk’s
Parcels, and on the South by
Conkels Parcel. The above description was prepared from an actual
survey by Robert R. Eason, Registered Surveyor No. 7033, December, 1990. REFERENCE: Official

�Wednesday, July 27, 2011
100

Legals

Records Volume 328, Page 667,
Meigs County Recorder’s Office.
Parcel Identification Nos.:
1001024.000; 10-00166.000; 1000167.000;
10-00168.000;
10-00170.000 and 10-01025.000
Parcel 2: Situate in the Township of
Orange, Meigs County, Ohio.Being
the southeast part of Lot No. 9 as
shown on the plat of the Village of
Martinsville in Section 6, Township
4, Range 12, Ohio Company’s Purchase, described as follows: Beginning at the southeast corner of said
Lot No. 9; thence North 6&amp;deg;00'
West 48.5 feet; thence South
89&amp;deg;00' West 90 feet; thence
South 6&amp;deg; East 48.5 feet to the
south line of said Lot No. 9 on the
north line of an alley; thence North
89&amp;deg;00' East 90 feet along the
south line of said Lot No. 9 to the
place of beginning containing 0.1
acre.Also, a part of Lots Nos. 7 and
8, as shown on the plat of said Village of Martinsville, described as
follows: Beginning at the northeast
corner of said Lot No. 8 on the
south side of an alley; thence South
89&amp;deg;00' West 90 feet along the
north side of said Lot No. 8 on the
south line of an alley; thence South
6&amp;deg;00' East 124 feet; thence
North 89&amp;deg;00' East 90 feet to
the east line of said lots; thence
North 6&amp;deg;00' West 124 feet to
the place of beginning, containing
0.25 acre, and in all, 0.35 acre.
REFERENCE: Official Records Volume 158, Page 73, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office.Parcel Identification No.: 10-00774.000 Parcel 3:
Being the vacated alley between
Lots 8 and 9, in Orange Township,
in the unincorporated Village of
Martinsville, not already conveyed
in Parcel One above. REFERENCE: Official Records Volume
174, Page 709, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office. Property Address: 42391 S. R. 7, Tuppers
Plains,
Ohio
45783
SAID
PREMISES
APPRAISED
AT
$100,000.00 AND CANNOT BE
SOLD FOR LESS THAN TWO
THIRDS OF THAT AMOUNT. THIS
APPRAISAL MAY NOT INCLUDE
THE INTERIOR OF ANY STRUCTURES ON THE PREMISES. ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE
UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT
EMPTOR.
THE
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS
ARE URGED TO CHECK FOR
LIENS IN THE OFFICE OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER.
THE MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE. TERMS OF SALE: 10%
CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK BY
2:00 P.M. ON DAY OF SALE. BALANCE DUE UPON DELIVERY OF
DEED,
APPROXIMATELY
30
DAYS. 7/27, 8/3 and 8/10, 2011
ROBERT
E.
BEEGLE
MEIGS COUNY SHERIFF
IN THE COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
WESBANCO BANK, INC .
Case No. 10-CV-137
Plaintiff
-vs- JOSEPH N. RYAN, ET
AL.
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF'S SALE
Defendants
OF REAL ESTATE
Pursuant to Order of Sale entered
in this cause, I, Robert E. Beegle,
Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio, will
offer for sale at public auction at the
front door of the Courthouse in
Pomeroy, Ohio, on the 19th day of
August, 2011, at 10:00 o'clock a.m.,
the following described real property: Situated in Meigs County of
the State of Ohio:PARCEL A Situated in the Southeast Quarter of
the Southwest Quarter of Sec. 8,
T.9, R.15, Columbia Township,
Meigs County, Ohio and being
more particularly described as follows: Beginning at an iron pin at
the Northeast corner of Lot No. 19
in the Village of Dyesville, Ohio;
thence East (passing an iron pin at
111.86 feet) for a total distance of
264.98 feet to an iron pin 18 feet
west of the north and south middle
line of said Sec. No. 8; thence south
225.00 feet to an iron pin, 25 feet
north of the south line of said Sec.
No. 8; thence west (passing an iron
pin at 169.15 feet) for a total distance of 364.98 feet to an iron pin;
thence north 25.00 feet to a spike
at the southwest corner of Lot No.
16 in the Village of Dyesville; thence
along the south line of said lot east
100.00 feet to the southeast corner
of said lot; thence along the east
line of Lots 16, 17, 18 and 19, in
said Village north 200.00 feet to the
point of beginning; containing
1.4261 acres, and being part of a
35 acre tract described as Parcel
Two in Vol. 254, Page 479 of the
Meigs County Deed Records.
Also Lots 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 in
the Village Dyesville, as platted,
and recorded in Plat Book No. 2,
Page 44, in the Meigs County Deed
Records containing 0.5739 acres.
REFERENCE: Official Records Volume 228, Page 839, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office. Parcel Identification Numbers: 05-00539.000
(1.43 ac.) 05-00543.000 (Lot 16)
05-00544.000 (Lot 17) 0500545.000 (Lot 18) 05-00546.000
(Lot 19) 05-00547.000 (Lot 20)
Property Address: 30430 Harmon
Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769PARCEL
B Situated in the County of Meigs,
State of Ohio and in the Township
of Columbia and bounded and described as follows: Parcel One:
Situated in the Township of Columbia, County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, being the south half of the
southwest quarter of the southeast
quarter of Section 8, containing 20
acres, more or less.
REFERENCE: Official Records Volume
228, page 835, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office. Parcel Identification Numbers: 05-00709.000
(20.00 Ac.)
Property Address:
30430 Harmon Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769PARCEL C Situated in
the County of Meigs, State of Ohio
and in the Township of Columbia
and bounded and described as follows: Tract 1: Situated in Section
8, T.9, R.15: Beginning at a point in
County Road 11, said point being
North 01 Degrees 03 Minutes 37
Seconds East, 1136.85 feet from
the Southeast corner of the Southwest Quarter of Section 8; thence,
along said County Road 11, North
54 Degrees 10 Minutes 19 Seconds
East, 94.01 feet to a point; thence,
North 49 Degrees 25 Minutes 50
Seconds East, 127.24 feet; thence,
North 33 Degrees 07 Minutes East,
85.21 feet to a point; thence, leaving County Road 11 and along an
old road, South 23 Degrees 14 Minutes 38 Seconds West 193.42 feet
to an iron pin; thence, South 28 Degrees 50 Minutes 47 Seconds
West, 120.87 feet to an iron pin;
thence, South 21 Degrees 11 Minutes 23 Seconds West, 121.78 feet
to an iron pin; thence, South 15 Degrees 30 Minutes 58 Seconds
West, 101.42 feet to an iron pin;
thence, South 05 Degrees 10 Minutes 44 Seconds East, 179.57 feet
to a point, passing an iron pin at
150.14 feet; thence, South 89 Degrees 02 Minutes 49 Seconds
West, 38.46 feet; thence, North 01
Degrees 03 Minutes 37 Seconds
East, 465.27 feet to the point of beginning and containing 0.77 acres.
The above description is a revision
of a 1.06 acre tract as recorded in
Vol. 308 page 787. Tract 2: Situated in Section 8, T.9, R.15: Beginning at the South-east corner of the
South-west Quarter of Section 8,
thence, North 01 Degrees 03 Minutes 37 Seconds East, 1136.85 feet
to a point in County Road 11;

100

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

www.mydailysentinel.com
Legals

thence, the following bearings and
distances along County Road 11;
South 54 Degrees 10 Minutes 19
Seconds West, 77.45 feet South
52 Degrees 14 Minutes West,
123.51 feet South 43 Degrees 49
Minutes 13 Seconds West, 118.81
feet South 41 Degrees 36 Minutes
33 Seconds West, 117.46 feet
South 31 Degrees 38 Minutes
West, 100.96 feet South 16 Degrees 52 Minutes 23 Seconds
West, 130.64 feet South 12 Degrees 15 Minutes 16 Seconds
West, 203.03 feet South 08 Degrees 01 Minutes 42 Seconds
West, 171.56 feet Thence, leaving said road, South 89 Degrees 53
Minutes 15 Seconds East, 442.80
feet to an iron pin found, passing an
iron pin found at 29.25 feet; thence,
South 00 Degrees 09 Minutes
West, 225.07 feet to an iron pin
found; thence, North 89 Degrees 50
Minutes 39 Seconds West, 363.89
feet to an iron pin found; thence,
South 00 Degrees 09 Minutes 10
Seconds west, 39.69 feet to a point;
thence, North 89 Degrees 44 Minutes East, 379.39 feet to the point
of beginning and containing 7.06
acres. The above description is a
revision of a 6.58 acre tract as
recorded in Volume 308, Page 787.
Both tracts are subject to all easements and rights of way of record
and/or any other exceptions. REFERENCES: Deed Book 308, Page
787, Official Records Volume 239,
Page 517, and Official Records Volume 241, Page 77, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office. Parcel Identification Numbers: 05-00234.001
(7.06 ac.) and 05-00232.001 (.77
ac.) Property Address: CarpenterDyesville Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769PARCEL D Situated in the
County of Meigs, State of Ohio and
in the Township of Columbia and
bounded and described as follows:
Being a 1.00 acre tract transferred
to Harold C. Oxley Jr., as recorded
in Deed Book 308 at page 785 and
a part of a 61.05 acre tract transferred to Harold C. Jr. and Charlyo
Oxley, as recorded in Deed Book
267 at page 805 Meigs County
Recorder’s Office, Meigs County,
Ohio, also being a part of Section 7,
Township-9-North, Range-15-West,
Columbia Township, Meigs County,
State of Ohio and more particularly
described as follows: Beginning at
an existing iron pin being the northeast corner of said 1.00 acre tract
and bears North 89&amp;deg; 54' 40"
West a distance of 2419.64 feet
from the assumed northeast corner
of said Section 7, T-9, R-15, said
iron pin also being a point on the
boundary of a 5.011 acre tract
recorded in Official Records Volume
133 at page 515; Thence along
the boundary of said 5.011 acre
tract the following three courses:
1. South 00&amp;deg; 17' 01" East a
distance of 212.83 feet to an existing iron pin; 2. North 88&amp;deg;
57' 50" West a distance of 211.80
feet to an existing iron pin;
3.
South 00&amp;deg; 13' 37" West passing thru an existing iron pin at a distance of 319.92 feet and going a
total distance of 338.01 feet to a
point in the centerline of Township
Road
405,
Harmon
Road;
Thence, leaving said boundary and
along said centerline the following
seven courses:
1.
South
77&amp;deg; 02' 01" West a distance of
310.29 feet to a point; 2. North
69&amp;deg; 50' 40" West a distance of
46.56 feet to a point; 3. North
35&amp;deg; 36' 45" West a distance of
109.99 feet to a point; 4. North
19&amp;deg; 34' 31" West a distance of
142.72 feet to a point; 5. North
02&amp;deg; 24' 11" West a distance of
81.36 feet to a point; 6. North
01&amp;deg; 06' 58" East a distance of
143.27 feet to a point; 7. North
00&amp;deg; 35' 11" East a distance of
153.21 feet to a point being the intersection of said centerline and the
assumed north line of said Section
7, T9, R-15; Thence leaving said
centerline and along said north line
South 89&amp;deg; 54' 40" East passing through a 5/8" iron pin set at a
distance of 20.24 feet and going a
total distance of 669.06 feet to the
principal point of beginning containing 7.006 acres more or less subject to all legal easements and
rights of way.
Bearings are assumed and are for determination of
angles only. All iron pins set are 5/8"
x 30" rebar with plastic ID cap
stamped “CTS-6844". The above
description was prepared from an
actual survey made on the 9th day
of December, 2005 by C. Thomas
Smith, Ohio Professional Surveyor,
No. 6844. EXCEPTING that portion of land conveyed to Official
Records Volume 231, Page 127,
bounded and described as follows,
to-wit:1) Being part of the real estate owned by Charles Hubert Butterworth, known as a 1.0 acre
parcel, and as recorded in Official
Record 228 at page 829 as a 7.006
acre tract (which totally encompasses said 1.0 are parcel), and
also recorded in Official Records
228 at page 837 as a 1.0 acre parcel, both in the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office, Meigs County,
Ohio, and, being part of the Northeast one-quarter (1/4) of Section 7,
and, being situate in Town-9-North,
Range-15-West, Columbia Township, Meigs County, State of Ohio,
USA, and being more particularly
described as follows:2)
COMMENCING at a point in the Northeast corner of said Section 7 as
specified in a December 2005 survey of 7.006 acres by C. Thomas
Smith, Ohio Professional Surveyor
No. 6844 (O.R. 228/Pg. 829);3)
Thence N 89&amp;deg; 54' 40" W along
the North line of said Section 7,
2,419.64 feet (by said 2005 C.T.S.7.006 ac. survey as per O.R.
228/Pg. 829) to an iron pin found
w/cap stamped “CLAUS-6456" in
the Grantor’s Northeast property
corners of said 1.0 acre parcel and
said 7.006 acre tract, and, the first
of three (3) of the Northwesterly
property corners of a 5.011 Acre
(by deed) Tract owned by the
Grantee herein, Carma Trout, as
recorded on O.R. 133 at Page 515
in said Recorder’s Office, said iron
pin w/cap found also being the real
POINT OF BEGINNING of the
“0.970 Acre - ADJOINING PROPERTY OWNER TRANSFER PARCEL” herein described:4) Thence
the following two (2) courses along
the East and South property lines of
the said 1.0 acre parcel and said
7.006 acre tract, both owned by the
Grantor herein, and the two Northwesterly property lines of the said
5.011 Acre (by deed) C. Trout Tract:
1) S 00&amp;deg; 18' 40" E, 212.58
feet to an iron pin found w/cap
stamped “CLAUS-6456", and; 2)
N 88&amp;deg; 52' 59" W, 211.85 feet to
an iron pin found w/cap stamped
“CLAUS-6456" in the Grantor’s
Southwest property corner of said
1.0 acre parcel, and an Easterly
property corner of said 7.006 acre
tract, and, the third of three (3) of
the Grantee’s Northwesterly property corners of said 5.011 Acre (by
deed) Tract;5) Thence N 00&amp;deg;
14' 12" E along the Grantor’s West
property line of said 1.0 acre parcel,
through the Grantor’s said 7.006
acre tract, 161.96 feet to an iron pin
w/cap set, said iron pin w/cap set
bearing: S 00&amp;deg; 14' 12" W,
46.81 feet FROM a point in the
Grantor’s Northwest property corner of said 1.0 acre parcel, passing
through an iron pin w/cap set for
reference at 53.08 feet;6) Thence
N 63&amp;deg; 10' 41" E along a new
line through the Grantor’s said 1.0
acre parcel, and through the

100

Legals

Grantor’s said 7.006 acre tract,
103.43 feet to an iron pin w/cap set
in the Grantor’s North property line
of said 1.0 acre parcel, the
Grantor’s North property line of said
7.006 acre parcel and the North line
of said Section 7 by said 2005
C.T.S.-7.006 ac. survey (O.R.
228/Pg. 829), said iron pin w/cap
set bearing: S 89&amp;deg; 54' 40" E,
92.11 feet FROM a point in the
Grantor’s Northwest property corner of said 1.0 acre parcel:7)
Thence S 89&amp;deg; 54' 40" E along
the North lines of the Grantor’s said
1.0 parcel and said 7.006 acre tract,
and the North line of said Section 7
by said 2005 C.T. S.-7.006 ac. survey (O.R. 228/Pg. 829), 117.68 feet
to the point of beginning, and, containing 0.970 acre.8) The above
described “0.970 Acre - ADJOINING PROPERTY OWNER TRANSFER PARCEL” IS TO BE HELD
CONTIGUOUS AND CONTINUOUS OWNERSHIP WITH THE ADJOINING 5.011 ACRE TRACT
OWNED BY THE GRANTEE
HEREIN.9) The above described
“0.970 Acre - ADJOINING PROPERTY OWNER TRANSFER PARCEL” is PART of what is currently
known as Auditor’s Parcel No.
0500233.000.10)
The bearings
used in the above descriptions are
based on the assumed North line of
Section 7, as bearing: N 89&amp;deg;
54' 40" W and are only for the determination of angles.11) Subject
to all legal highways and easements.12) All iron pins w/cap set
referred to in the description above
are ?" x 30" iron pins with a 1-3/8"
diameter plastic I.D. caps stamped
“BAYHA-P.S. 6139".13) The above
described “0.970 Acre - ADJOINING PROPERTY OWNER TRANSFER PARCEL” was surveyed by
Gerald W. Bayha, P.S., Ohio Registered Professional Surveyor No. S6139 (Job No. 0206-01), with the
field work being completed on February 22, 2006, and the “Plat of Survey” (Exhibit “B”) being last revised
on March 06, 2006, and, the “Legal
Description” (Exhibit A”), being
completed on March 06, 2006.
Reference to Exception: Official
Records Volume 231, Page 127,
Meigs County Recorder’s Office.
REFERENCE: Official Records Volume 228, page 829, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office. Parcel Identification Numbers: 05-00548.002
(7.006 Ac.) - Not available yet - See
Parent Parcels Below: Parent Parcel Identification Numbers: 0500548.000 (14.2 ac.) 05-00233.000
(.030 ac.)
Property Address:
30430 Harmon Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
Current Owners:
Joseph N. Ryan and Peggy J. Ryan.
These premises were appraised at
$42,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than 2/3rds of that amount. The
appraisal is from an exterior view
only. The terms of sale are 10%
cash in hand on day of sale, balance to be paid upon confirmation
of sale.
ROBERT
E. BEEGLE
Sheriff of Meigs County, OhioBarry L.
Smith Attorney for Plaintiff 740-2864649
THIS SHERIFF’S SALE
OPERATES UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF
MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF THE TITLE
PRIOR TO SALE. (7) 27, (8) 3, 10,
2011
SHERIFF'S SALE - REAL ESTATE
CASE NO. 10-CV-120 NATIONWIDE ADVANTAGE MORTGAGE
COMPANY
-VSWILLIAM
MICHAEL CADLE, ET AL.
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO In pursuance of an Order of Sale to me
directed from said Court in the
above entitled action, I will expose
to sale at public auction at the Courthouse on Friday, August 19, 2011,
at 10:00 A.M. of sale day, the following described real estate:Situated in
the State of Ohio, County of Meigs,
Township of Sutton and being part
of 1.34 acre &amp;plusmn; tract transferred to Paul D. and Janice I. Cardone as recorded in Deed Book
311, Page 209, Meigs County
Recorder’s Office, Meigs County,
Ohio, also being a part of the Village of Racine, 100 acre Lot No.
278, Township 2N, R12W, Sutton
Township, Meigs County, State of
Ohio and more particularly described as follows:Beginning at a
point in the centerline of St. Rt. 338,
being the southwest corner of said
1.34&amp;plusmn; acre tract and the
northwest corner of a 0.43 acre
&amp;plusmn; tract as recorded in Deed
Book 338, Page 735; thence along
said centerline N12˚11’57”W a distance of 109.75 feet to a point;
thence leaving said centerline
N88˚01’30”E passing through a 5/8”
iron pin set at a distance of 25.00
feet and going a total of 223.20 feet
to a 5/8” iron pin set; thence
S01˚58’30”E a distance of 116.46
feet to a 5/8” iron pin set on the
south line of said 1.34 acre
&amp;plusmn; tract; thence along said
south line N88˚36’00”W passing
through an existing iron pin at a distance of 178.89 feet and going a
total distance of 203.89 feet to the
principal point of beginning, containing 0.549 acre &amp;plusmn;.The
above description was prepared
from an actual survey made on the
9th day of March, 1996, by C.
Thomas Smith, Ohio Professional
Surveyor #6844.Known as 47432
St. Rt. 124, Racine, Ohio 45771Auditor’s
Parcel
No.
1900291.003Source of Title: Official
Record 232, Page 109Appraised at:
$45,000.00Terms of Sale: To be
sold for not less than two-thirds of
the appraised value. Ten Percent
(10%) of appraised value in the
form of money order or cashier's
check down at the time of sale. Balance in the form of money order or
cashier's check within thirty (30)
days after confirmation.Glenn F.
Alban, #0059482, Alban &amp; Alban,
LLP, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 7100 N.
High St., Suite 102, Worthington,
Ohio 43085; (614) 340-4044 (7) 27,
(8) 3, 10, 2011
SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 11
CV 005, FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF,
VS. JAMES A. EBLIN AKA JAMES
EBLIN DBA TONY’S PORTABLE
WELDING AND RADIATOR REPAIR, ET AL., DEFENDANTS,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued
out of said Court in the above action, Robert E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County, Ohio, will expose
to sell at public action on the front
steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on Friday, August 19, 2011, at
10:00 a.m., the following lands and
tenements: TRACT 1: The following real estate, situated in the
County of Meigs, in the State of
Ohio and in the Township of Rutland and bounded and described
as follows: Being a part of sixty-five
acres of land deeded by May Cook
or May Maud Cook by the Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio, in suit of partition and recorded in Volume 143,
Page 75 of the Meigs County Deed
Records, and bounded and described as follows: Being in Section
No. 1 and beginning at the Southeast corner of said sixty five acre
tract said corner being where said
sixty five acre tract corners with
Adolph Hysell’s land; thence
northerly along said May Maud
Cook’s line to the center of State

100

Legals

Road No. 124; thence Westerly
along the center of said road to a
point where the N.Y.C. Railroad intersects said State Road; thence
Southeasterly with the meanderings of said N.Y.C. Railroad to the
land of Adolph Hysell; thence East
or Easterly along the line of May
Maud Cook to Adolph Hysell to the
place or beginning, save and except one acre heretofore sold to the
Board of Education of Rutland
Township, also save and except any
oil and gas lease should there be
any, on said premises. Also save
and except any right of way that the
Ohio Power Company may have on
said premises, and furthermore
said real estate is subject to all legal
highways. Excepting and reserving
therefrom the following real estate,
situated in the County of Meigs, in
the State of Ohio and in the Township of Rutland, and bounded and
described as follows: Being in Section No. 1, Town No. 6, Range No.
14 of the Ohio Company’s Purchase, and beginning at a point in
the South line of the Ebersbach
tract and the North line of the Dolph
Hysell tract, said point being 79.5
feet East of N.Y.C. Ry. Right of way;
thence North17-1/2 degrees East
170 feet to the Southwest corner of
school lot; thence South 80 degrees
East 209 feet; thence North 10 degrees East 209 feet to the Right of
Way of State Route 124; thence
Easterly along said right of way 620
feet; thence North 10 feet; thence
Easterly along right of way 117 feet;
thence South 267 feet to Dolph Hysell’s Northeast corner; thence west
1024 feet to place of beginning,
containing 5.5 acres, more or less.
Being the same real estate conveyed by the Koontz Coal Company, a corporation, to Clarence
Ebersbach and Edward Ebersbach
by deed recorded in Deed Book
168, Page 541, of the Meigs County
Deed Records. Subject to all
leases, easements and rights of
way of record.Said real estate also
described as follows: Situated in
Rutland Township, Meigs County,
State of Ohio and being in Section
1, Town 6 North, Range 14 West of
the Ohio Company’s Purchase and
being described as follows: Beginning at a point, said point being the
intersection of State Route 124 and
Township Road 174. Thence South
75 degrees 12' 15" East a distance
of 124.8691' along the centerline of
said State Route 124 to a point;
Thence South 75 degrees 09' 29"
East a distance of 219.7033' along
the centerline of said State Route
124 to a point; Thence South 75 degrees 22' 44" East, a distance of
212.4543' along the centerline of
said State Route 124 to a point;
Thence South 76 degrees 11' 35"
East, a distance of 106.5781' along
the centerline of State Route 124 to
a point; Thence South76 degrees
59' 23" East, a distance of
123.7320' along the centerline of
said State Route 124 to a point;
Thence South 12 degrees 13' 03"
West, a distance of 188.0002' to an
iron pin found, passing an iron pin
found at 30.00'; Thence South 13
degrees 48' 04" West, a distance of
21.0070' to an iron pin found;
Thence South 17 degrees 11' 58"
West, a distance of 168.6088' to an
iron pin found; Thence North 88 degrees 43' 55" West, a distance of
79.5000' to an iron pin found;
Thence along a curve to the left,
having a radius of 969.2750' a central angle of 44 degrees 17' 41" and
a chord of 730.8153' bearing North
45 degrees 34' 24" West, thence
along said curve, a distance of
749.3370' to an iron pin found;
Thence North 72 degrees 03' 34"
West, a distance of 57.2420' to a
point in the centerline of Township
Road 174; Thence North 22 degrees 37' 42" West, a distance of
31.7836' along the centerline of
said Township Road 174 to the
POINT OF BEGINNING, said described tract containing 3.0020
acres, more or less, excepting all
legal utility easements and rights of
way. Bearings are assumed and are
for angle measurement only. The
above description is based on a
survey in February, 1988, by E &amp; E
Borderline Surveying, Robert R.
Eason, P.S. No. 7033. Auditor’s Parcel No.: 11-01317.000 TRACT 2:
Situated in Rutland Township,
Meigs County, State of Ohio and
being in Section 1, Town 6 North,
Range 14 West of the Ohio Company’s Purchase and being described as follows: Beginning at a
point in the centerline of the Penn
Central Railroad parcel at assumed
valuation station 12487+89, said
point also being in the centerline of
Township Road 174; Thence North
23 degrees 25' 51" West 39.861
feet along the centerline of said
Township Road 174 to a point on
the North line of the Penn Central
Railroad; Thence South 72 degrees
03' 34" East 57.242 feet along the
said railroad parcel to an iron pin
set; Thence along a curve to the
right and along the said railroad,
chord = South 45 degrees 32' 8"
East 730.815 feet, Delta = 44 degrees 17' 41" radius = 969.275 feet,
length = 749.337 feet to an iron pin
set on the West line of Eblin’s parcel
as described in the Meigs County
Official Records, Volume 50, Page
331; Thence North 88 degrees 43'
55" West 66.506 feet to an iron pin
set on the said railroad line; Thence
along a curve to the left and along
the said railroad, chord = North 46
degrees 24' 27" West 659.762 feet,
Delta = 42 degrees 32' 38" radius =
909.275 feet, length = 675.166 feet
to a point in the centerline of said
Township Road 174; Thence North
23 degrees 25' 51" West 39.861
feet along the centerline of said
Township Road 174 feet to the point
of beginning, containing 1.021
acres, more or less, excepting all
legal easements and rights of way.
Bearings are assumed and are for
angle measurement only. The
above description is based on a
survey in December 1997 by
Robert R. Eason, Ohio P.S. No.
7033. RESERVING unto Former
Grantors permanent and perpetual
easements in gross, freely alienable and assignable by the Former
Grantors, for all existing wire and
pipe facilities or occupations
whether or not covered by license
or agreement between Former
Grantors and other parties, of
record or not of record, that in any
way encumber or affect the premises conveyed herein, and all
rentals, fees and consideration resulting from such occupations,
agreements and licenses and from
the assignment or conveyance of
such easements. RESERVING
unto Former Grantors, its successors and assigns, all oil, gas, natural
gas,
casing-head
gas,
condensates, related hydrocarbons
and all products produced therewith
or therefrom in or under the premises conveyed herein, with the right
to remove same by the use of the
usual or proper and convenient
methods, devises or appliances, but
excluding the right to enter upon the
surface of said land in any way; and
SUBJECT, however, to: (1) such
state of facts that an accurate survey or personal inspection of the
premises may disclose; and(2)
rights of the public in that portion of
the premises within the lines of any
public roads that cross the property
herein conveyed; and (3) any easements of record. GRANTEES acknowledge and agree that: (1)
should a claim adverse to the title
hereby quitclaimed be asserted

100

Legals

and/or proved, no recourse shall be
had against the Former Grantors;
and (2) Grantees will assume all
obligations with respect to ownership, maintenance, repair, renewal
or removal of the drainage structures, culverts and bridges located
on, over or under the premises conveyed herein that may be imposed
after the date of this Deed by any
governmental agency having jurisdiction thereover; and (3) No right
or means of access to or from the
aforesaid premises is included
herein, whether specifically or by
implication, across any adjacent
property of the Grantors or otherwise. Reference Deed: Volume
165, Page 157, Meigs County Official Records, and re-recorded in
Volume 167, Page 399, Meigs
County Official Records. Auditor’s
Parcel No.: 11-01357.008 The
above described real estate is sold
“as is” without warranties or
covenants.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 37433 SR 124, Middleport, OH
45760. CURRENT
OWNER: James A. Eblin. REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$62,500.00. The real estate cannot
be sold for less than 2/3rds the appraised value. The appraisal does
not include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the real
e
s
t
a
t
e
.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash only)
down on day of sale, balance (cash
or certified check only) due on confirmation of sale. ALL SHERIFF’S
SALES OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. ATTORNEY FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Douglas W. Little,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, 211-213 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(7) 27; (8) 3, 10

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 11
CV 023, HOME NATIONAL BANK,
PLAINTIFF, VS. JANET A. KRIDER,
ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
By
virtue of an Order of Sale issued
out of said Court in the above action, Robert E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County, Ohio, will expose
to sell at public action on the front
steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on Friday, August 19, 2011, at
10:00 a.m., the following lands and
tenements: Situated in the Village
of Racine, Graham Station Addition, Lot 71-100, as recorded in
Deed Book 7, Page 562 of the
Meigs County Recorder’s Office,
County of Meigs and State of Ohio:
Parcel 1: Being Lot No. 83 in the incorporated Village of Racine, Meigs
County, Ohio. Parcel 2: Lots Numbered Eighty-one (81) and Eightytwo (82) as described on the
recorded plats of said Village of
Racine, Ohio. However, this is excepted from the above described
real estate and that part which has
heretofore conveyed by Ralph H.
Hayman and wife to Ina Hoback by
Warranty Deed dated May 18,
1920, and recorded in Volume 120,
at Page 515, of the Records of
Deed of Meigs County, Ohio, and
described as follows: All that part of
Lot Number Eighty-one (81) except
7 feet off the West end, said Lot
Number 81 is bounded on the East
by Fifth Street. It is the intention and
purpose of this deed to convey all
of Lot Number 82 and 7 feet off of
the west end of Lot Number 81 of
said Village. Being the same premises conveyed by Ralph H. Hayman
to Margaret Hayman, his wife, by
deed dated the 28th day of February, 1950, and recorded in Volume
176, Page 547 of the Records of
Deeds of Meigs County, Ohio.
Being the same premises devised
by the Last Will and Testament of
Margaret Hayman to the said
Richard H. Hayman by her Will
dated May 31, 1956, and admitted
to probate on October 20, 1960,
and recorded in Volume 27, at Page
203, of the Records of Wills in said
County and transferred to the said
Richard H. Hayman by Affidavit for
Transfer, dated the 24th day of September, 1962, and recorded in Book
216, at Page 587, of the Deed
Records of said County. Auditor s
Parcel Numbers: 19-00331.000, 1900328.000 and 19-00330.000.
Reference Deed: Volume 243, Page
471, Meigs County Official
Records. The above described real
estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants. PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 209 E. 4th Street,
Racine, OH 45771. CURRENT
OWNER: Janet A. Krider. REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$60,000.00. The real estate cannot
be sold for less than 2/3rds the appraised value. The appraisal does
not include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the real
e
s
t
a
t
e
.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash only)
down on day of sale, balance (cash
or certified check only) due on confirmation of sale. ALL SHERIFF’S
SALES OPERATE UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. ATTORNEY FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, 211-213 E.
Second Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689
(7) 27; (8) 3, 10 2011

SHERIFF’S SALE, REAL ESTATE
CASE
NUMBER
11CV027
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Argent Securities
Inc.,Asset-Backed
Pass-Through Certificates, Series
2006-M1
Plaintiff -vs- Kevin
A. Taylor, et al.
Defendants
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an Order of Sale to me
directed from said court in the
above entitled action, I will expose
to sale on the steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse on Friday, August 19, 2011 at 10:00 A.M., the following described real estate:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE
OBTAINED AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
CURRENT OWNER: Kevin A. TaylorPROPERTY ADDRESS: 39360
Gold Ridge Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
PERMANENT PARCEL NUMBER:
0100021002PRIOR DEED REFERENCE: Book 232, Page 635APPRAISED
AT:
$50,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: CANNOT BE
SOLD FOR LESS THAN 2/3RDS
OF THE APPRAISED VALUE. 10%
OF PURCHASE PRICE DOWN ON
DAY OF SALE, CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK, BALANCE ON
CONFIRMATION OF SALE Special
Note,
if
any:
ROBERT E. BEEGLE, Sheriff
Meigs
County,
Ohio
____________________________
__REIMER,
ARNOVITZ,
CHERNEK &amp; JEFFREY CO.,
L.P.A.By: Peter L. Mehler (Reg.
#0075283) Douglas A. Haessig
(Reg. #0079200)Attorneys for
Plaintiff2450 Edison Blvd.P.O. Box
968Twinsburg, Ohio 44087(330)
425-4201, Ext. 135Fax: 330-4250 3 2 0 E m a i l :
pcostello@reimerlaw.com7/27/11,
8/3/11, and 8/10/11

100

Legals

SHERIFF’S SALE (Case No. 10CV-126 Century National Bank
Plaintiff Vs. Glen Ray Goins, Jr., et
al.
Defendants By virtue
of an Order of Sale issued from the
Court of Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio and to me directed in
a certain civil action therein pending wherein Century National Bank,
the Plaintiff, and Glen Ray Goins,
Jr., et al., the Defendants, I will offer
for sale on the steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Ohio, on Friday, August 19, 2011 At
10:00 o’clock A.M. the real estate
located at 39574 Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, being Auditor’s Parcel #05000024.001 as recorded in Official
Record Volume 257, Page 795 and
Volume 109, Page 519. A complete
legal description can be obtained at
the Meigs County Recorder’s Office.
APPRAISED
&amp;hellip;&amp;hellip;&amp;hellip;&amp;hellip;.$60,000.00 TO BE SOLD FOR
NOT LESS THANTWO-THIRDS
OF THE
APPRAISEDVALUE
TERMS OF SALE – 10% DOWN
DAY OF SALE ROBERT E. BEEGLE Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio
Scott D. Eickelberger, Attorney 50
N. Fourth Street Zanesville, OH
43702-1030 740-454-2591 (7) 27,
(8) 3, 10, 2011

NOTICE TO BIDDERS The Meigs
Local Board of Education wishes to
receive
bids
for
the
following:Bread/Bakery
and
Milk/Dairy products.All bids shall be
received in, and bid specifications
may be obtained from,TREASURER'S
OFFICE,
41765
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, OH
45769, on or before 10:00 A.M.,
Thursday, August 4, 2011.The
Meigs Local Board of Education reserves the right to reject any and all
bids, and the submitting of any bid
shall impose no liability or obligation
upon the said Board.All envelopes
must be CLEARLY MARKED according to the type of bid. Mark E.
Rhonemus, Treasurer/CFO MEIGS
LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION
41765 Pomeroy Pike Pomeroy, OH
45769 PH(740) 992-5650 (7) 21,
27, 2011

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE: is
hereby given that on Saturday July
30, 2011 at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211 W. Second ,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company is selling for
cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral: 2007 Hyundai
Sonata GL 5NPET46C97H201205
2007
Honda
MC
25R
JH2ME103X7K320659 The Farmers Bank and Savings Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to withdraw the
above collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings Company reserves the right to
reject any or all bids submitted. The
above described collateral will be
sold “as is-where is”, with no expressed or implied warranty given.
For further information, or for an appointment to inspect collateral, prior
to sale date contact Cyndie or Ken
at 992-2136. (7) 27, 28, 29, 2011

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate Case
Number 10-CV-041 Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A. Vs William A. Barley, et
al. Court of Common Pleas, Meigs
County, Ohio. In pursuance of an
order of sale to me directed from
said court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at public
auction on the front steps of the
Meigs County Court House on Friday, August 5, 2011 at 10:00 a.m.
of said day, the following described
real estate: Real property in the
Township of Salem, County of
Meigs, State of Ohio, and is described as follows: Being a part of a
17 acre +1- tract transferred to Edward D. Anderson records in Official
Records Volume1, at Page 485,
Megis County Recorder's Office,
Meigs County, Ohio, also being a
part of Section 4,Township-8-North,
Range-15-West, Salem Township,
Meigs County, State of Ohio, and
more particularlyas follows: Beginning at 5/8' iron pin set on the North
line of said 17 acre +/- tract which
bears South 89 degrees 45'52"
East a distance of 61.73 feet from
an existing wooden post assumed
to be the Northwest corner of theSoutheast Quarter of said Section
4, Township-8, Range-15; Thence
along said North line South 89 degrees 45' 52' East a distance of
415.93 feet to a 5/9" iron pin set
atthe base of a 30' oak tree; Thence
leaving said North line and along
the Westerly bank of Leading Creek
South ?l degrees 49' 35"East a distance of 324.22 feet to a point in the
centerline of Township Road #21
and the Southerly end of abridge;
Thence along said centerline the
following nine courses: 1. South 24
degrees 43' 4" West a distance of
46.73 feet to a point;2. South 22
degrees 48' 02" West a distance of
87.23 feet to a point;3. South 32
degrees 52' 57" West a distance of
47.00 feet to a point;4. South 47
degrees 10' 03" West a distance of
54.99 feet to a point;5. South 63
degrees 58' 43" West a distance of
59.3? feet to a point;6. South 71
degrees 38' 00" West a distance of
100.86 feet to a point;7. South 71
degrees 59' 31" West a distance of
323.10 feet to a point;8. South 74
degrees 06' 52" West a distance of
170.16 feet to a point;9. South 74
degrees 27' 06" West a distance of
96.66 feet to a point; Thence leaving said centerline North 1 degrees
48' 44" East passing thru a 5/8" iron
pin set at a distance of15.99 feet
and going a total distance of 153.70
feet to a 5/8' iron pin set; Thence
North 35 degrees 27' 45" East a
distance of 154.42 feet to a 5/8' iron
pin set; Thence North 19 degrees
13' 19" East a distance of 102.94
feet to a 5/8' iron pin set; Thence
North 11 degrees 15' 00" West a
distance of 222.30 feet to the principal point of beginningcontaining
0.57 acres +/-. Bearings are set and
are for the determination of angles
only. For Informational Purposes
Only: The improvements thereon
being known as 31566 Parker Run
Road, Langsville, Ohio 45741.
BEING all and the same lot of
ground which by Deed dated March
30, 2007, and recorded April
11,2007among the Land Records
of Meigs County, Ohio in Liber No.
251, folio 182, was granted and
conveyed byThomas Sill and Calitta
Sill, unto William A. Barley. Parcel
Number: 13-00007-001Property
Located at:
31566 Parker Run
RoadLangsville, OH 45741Prior
Deed Reference: Book 251, Page
821 Property Appraised at:
$100,000 Terms of Sale: Cannot be
sold for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down on day of
sale, case or certified check, balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not include an interior examination of the house.
Robert E. Beegle, Meigs County
Sheriff S. Scott MartinOhio
Supreme Court Reg. #0071423Attorney for the PlaintiffLerner, Sampson &amp; RothfussP.O. Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45202-4007 (513)
241-3100 Run Dates: 7/13/11,
7/21/11, 7/27/11

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

NFL players, owners end 18-week lockout
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Let’s talk Peyton
Manning
touchdown
passes, not antitrust lawsuits.
Let’s
talk
Troy
Polamalu interceptions,
not court interventions.
And let’s talk football,
not lockout.
Finally, 41⁄2 months
after the NFL’s first work
stoppage in 24 years,
Commissioner
Roger
Goodell could say the
words fans awaited:
“Football’s back.”
With a frenzy.
Goodell and NFL
Players Association head
DeMaurice Smith both
used that phrase Monday
while announcing their
agreement on a 10-year
deal to end the lockout
that began in March.
Players can report to
team
facilities
on
Tuesday for physicals,
meetings and to pick up
playbooks.
Training
camps
begin
on
Wednesday for 10 teams,
with the other 22 starting
workouts throughout the
rest of the week.
“As a fan of the game,
I’m pleased the two sides
have reached a deal and,
as a professional, I want
to get back to work,”
Manning said.
There’s tons of work to
do, including what
promises to be a wild
free agency period.
Teams can start negotiations with free agents on
Tuesday, but can’t sign
anyone until Friday.
“It’s going to be fast
and furious,” agent Joel
Segal said.
The negotiations to
end the lockout were
anything but. New
England Patriots owner
Robert Kraft took note of
that.
“I’d like, on behalf of
both sides, to apologize
to the fans,” Kraft said.
“For the last five, six
months we’ve been talking about the business of
football — and not what
goes on, on the field, and
building the teams in
each market,” Kraft said.
“But the end result is
we’ve been able to have
an agreement that I think
is going to allow this
sport to flourish over the
next decade.”
Then came what may
truly be the lasting image
of the dispute’s resolution: Indianapolis Colts
center Jeff Saturday
wrapped one of his burly
arms around Kraft and
enveloped him in a hug
— a gesture that symbolized the acrimony’s end
more than any statement
could.
When Saturday spoke
to reporters, he offered
an eloquent tribute to
Kraft, lauding him as “a
man who helped us save
football,” and to Kraft’s
wife, Myra, who died
Wednesday from cancer.
“A special thanks to
Myra Kraft, who even in

her weakest moment
allowed Mr. Kraft to
come and fight this out,”
Saturday said. “Without
him, this deal does not
get done.”
Owners can point to
victories, such as gaining
a higher percentage of all
revenue, one of the central issues — they get 53
percent, players 47 percent; the old deal was
closer to 50-50. There’s
also a new system that
will rein in spending on
contracts for first-round
draft picks.
Players, meanwhile,
persuaded teams to commit to spending nearly
all of their salary cap
space in cash and won
changes to offseason and
in-season practice rules
that should make the
game safer.
One important compromise
came
on
expanding the regular
season from 16 to 18
games, which owners
favored. That can be
revisited for the 2013
season, but players must
approve any change.
“Both parties were trying to stand their ground
— and rightfully so,”
said Vikings linebacker
Ben Leber, one of the 10
named plaintiffs in the
players’ antitrust suit
against the league that
will be dropped. “In the
end, against all the negativity that was out there
publicly, they took their
time and hammered out
what I think is going to
turn out to be one of the
best deals in the history
of sports.”
An interesting choice
of phrase, given that
Smith and some players
grew fond of calling the
owners’ last offer before
talks fell apart in March
“probably the worst deal
in sports history.”
Smith had changed
that tune Monday.
“We didn’t get everything that either side
wanted,” he said, “but
we did arrive at a deal
that we think is fair and
balanced.”
Activity over the next
few days might have
everyone’s heads spinning.
On Tuesday, 2011 draft
picks and rookie free
agents can be signed.
That will be followed by
camps opening, minimal
practices for the first few
days, and the wild free
agency period.
“Chaos,” said Jets fullback Tony Richardson, a
member of the NFLPA’s
executive committee —
and a free agent. “That’s
the best word for it.”
Only one exhibition
game was lost: the Hall
of Fame opener between
the Bears and Rams,
scheduled for Aug. 7 in
Canton, Ohio.
Otherwise, the entire
preseason and regularseason schedules remain
intact.

Page A10
Wednesday, July 27, 2011

OVP Sports Briefs
MYL Fall Ball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth
League will be holding Fall Ball signups for both
baseball and softball for boys and girls ages 5-16 at
the Middleport Ball Fields from noon until 4 p.m. on
the Saturdays of August 6 and August 13. For more
information, call Dave at (740) 590-0438, or Tanya at
(740) 992-5481.

Eagle 5k Road Race/Fun Run
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — The annual Eagle 5k
Road Race and Walk and 1 mile fun run will take
place on Saturday, August 6, in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
Registration will begin at 7 a.m. with the race starting
at 8:30 a.m. Registration will be at the Tuppers Plains
Ballfields and the race will begin and end at the St.
Paul United Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains,
Ohio. Registration forms are available online at
www.easternlocal.com. For more information contact
Eastern Cross Country and Track Coach Josh Fogle at
740-667-9730.

Biker Sunday Softball Tourney
Dave Eulitt/Kansas City Star/MCT

Green Bay Packers wide receiver Greg Jennings (85) hit
by Pittsburgh Steelers safety Troy Polamalu (43) but
scores the touchdown in Super Bowl XLV where the
Green Bay Packers face the Pittsburgh Steelers at
Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on Sunday, Feb. 6.

“Our players can’t be
more excited about
going back to doing the
thing they love the
most,” NFLPA president
Kevin Mawae said. “We
always said during this
process we would do a
deal when it’s right and
when it’s the right deal.
Our players did that. We
stuck it out to the end.”
Owners overwhelmingly approved a proposal to end the dispute
Thursday, but some
unresolved issues needed
to be reviewed to satisfy
players.
The
sides
worked through the
weekend and wrapped
up nearly every detail by
about 3 a.m. Monday on
a final pact that runs
through the 2020 season
and can’t be terminated
before then.
That’s
significant
because the old collective bargaining agreement contained an optout clause, and owners
exercised it in 2008. That
led to the contract expiring when talks broke
down March 11; hours
later, owners locked out
the players, creating the
NFL’s first work stoppage since 1987 — and
longest in league history.
“I know it has been a
very long process since
the day we stood here
that night in March,”
Smith said in a brief
appearance about 20
minutes before being
joined by Goodell and
three owners. “But our
guys stood together
when nobody thought we
would. And football is
back because of it.”
As he spoke, Smith
was surrounded by some
players, including Saints
quarterback Drew Brees,
one of 10 plaintiffs in the
antitrust lawsuit that
players filed against the
league March 11. Two

unanimous NFLPA leadership votes cleared the
way for that case to be
dropped and the lockout
to go away: first, to recommend to the plaintiffs
that they accept the settlement; second, to recommend that all 1,900
players re-establish the
union.
All players will take a
vote to re-certify the
union — it was dissolved
March 11, turning the
NFLPA into a trade association — and then one
more vote to approve the
final CBA. It all needs to
be wrapped up by Aug. 4
to make everything official, something everyone
involved believes will
happen without a hitch.
Only once it is back to
being a union can the
NFLPA finish the contract, covering remaining
items such as player discipline, drug testing, disability programs and
pensions.
The major economic
framework for the deal
was worked out more
than a week ago.
That included dividing
revenue; a per-club cap
of about $120 million for
salary and bonuses in
2011 — and at least that
in 2012 and 2013 — plus
about $22 million for
benefits; a salary system
to rein in spending on
first-round draft picks;
and unrestricted free
agency for most players
after four seasons.
Now, talk turns to the
field.
“It will be kind of
crazy,” said Bengals
offensive tackle Andrew
Whitworth, the team’s
player representative.
“Nobody’s been in these
waters before, with free
agency and so forth.
Things are going to open
up. It will be an interesting two weeks.”

SYRACUSE, Ohio — A softball tournament to
benefit the Bethel Worship Center’s Biker Sunday
will be held on July 30 and 31 at the Syracuse
Ballfields. Teams for the tournament should be made
up of five guys and five girls age 16 and up. The
deadline to enter is noon on Wednesday, July 27. For
more information contact church members Chuck
Mash at 740-444-3682 or Tammi Barber at 740-4165370, visit www.bethelwc.org or call the church at
740-667-6793.

Eastern Fall Sports Signups
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — All athletes who are
planning to play a fall sport — football, volleyball,
cross country, golf or cheerleading — should signup
and fill out informational packets in the Eastern High
School office. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
Monday-Friday.

BBYFL Signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Big Bend Youth
Football League will hold its final 2011 signup on
Saturday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. for all youth interested in participating in football or cheerleading. Ages
range from third grade to sixth grade. Signups will be
held at the Veterans Memorial Stadium in Middleport.
For questions call Sarah at 740-698-4054, Regina at
740-698-2804, Randy at 740-591-4203, Jim at 304674-3825, Bill at 740-416-8712 or Tony at 740-9924067.

OHSAA football officials
course set
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — A course is being offered
for any individual which is interested in obtaining an
Ohio High School Athletic Association football official’s license for the 2011 season. The class will begin
on Saturday, Aug. 6 at 2 p.m. at the University of Rio
Grande. Interested individuals should contact Tom
McNerlin at (740) 352-9535. McNerlin can also be
contacted by e-mail at tommcnerlin@yahoo.com.
Any individual which enrolls in and successfully
completes this course will be eligible to officiate any
OHSAA-sanctioned football game from the junior
varsity level and lower.

2011 RGYSL Fall Soccer
Registration
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The Rio Grande Youth
Soccer League (RGYSL) is a competitive travel soccer team. The goals of this Association will be to provide a challenging, skill appropriate training environment that allows for proper technical and tactical
development. Creating well-rounded soccer athletes
that are capable of competing at a higher standard if
they should make that decision. Registration is at the
Lyne Center at the University of Rio Grande on
Thursday, July 28, from 6-8 p.m., Saturday, July 30,
from noon to 3 p.m., and Tuesday, Aug. 2, from 6-8
p.m. More information will be made available and we
are also looking for volunteers to help with the
league. For more information please contact Tony
Daniels at (740) 645-0377 or by email at
tdaniels@rio.edu

Bengals won’t trade QB Carson Palmer

Gene Sweeney Jr/Baltimore Sun/MCT

Baltimore Ravens Terrell Suggs tackles Cincinnati
Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer as he released
the ball during fourth quarter action in an NFL game
at Paul Brown Stadium Cincinnati, Ohio, on
September 19, 2010.

CINCINNATI (AP) —
Bengals owner Mike
Brown
insisted
on
Tuesday that he won’t
trade quarterback Carson
Palmer, who wants to
leave one of the NFL’s
least-successful franchises.
Palmer, who has four
years left on his contract,
told the team in January
that he would retire if he’s
not traded. The Bengals
have only two winning
seasons in the last 20
years, one of the worst
stretches of futility in
league history.
Brown said the club will
move on without its franchise quarterback. The
Bengals plan to hold their
first training camp workout
Saturday
in
Georgetown, Ky.
“I honestly like Carson
Palmer,” Brown said. “He
was a splendid player for
us. He’s a good person. I
wish him well. And he is
retired. That is his choice.
... I’m not expecting him
to be back.”

Asked why he wouldn’t
trade Palmer and get some
draft picks in return,
Brown said it was a matter
of principle.
“Carson signed a contract. He made a commitment. He gave his word,”
Brown said. “We relied on
his word. We relied on his
commitment. We expected him to perform here.
He’s going to walk away
from his commitment. We
aren’t going to reward him
for doing it.”
Brown has traditionally
taken a hard line on players trying to leave.
Receiver Chad Ochocinco
unsuccessfully lobbied for
a trade three years ago, but
Brown
refused.
Ochocinco has one year
left on his deal, but is hoping to be released in the
next few weeks.
Brown and coach
Marvin Lewis declined to
say
anything
about
Ochocinco on Tuesday
other than that he’s under
contract. The Bengals
picked receiver A.J. Green

in the first round of the
draft, giving themselves
his eventual replacement.
The Bengals drafted
Andy Dalton in the second round last April.
Brown indicated on
Tuesday that he’ll be the
starter heading into camp,
even though he hasn’t
been able to work with
coaches because of the
NFL’s lockout. Jordan
Palmer — Carson’s
younger brother — is the
only experienced quarterback on the roster.
Brown said the team
will look for another veteran, but will give Dalton
a chance to win the job.
“We think he is promising for our future,” Brown
said. “Yes, he’ll have
teething problems. It
won’t be altogether easy
for him all the time. But
we’re going to put him in
there. If he can do it, we’re
going to go with him. And
I hope he can manage it.”
Dalton arrived at Paul
Brown Stadium in the
afternoon, accompanied

by an assistant coach, and
went inside for meetings.
The Bengals are coming
off a 4-12 season that
included 10 straight losses. Carson Palmer told the
team he wouldn’t be back
after Lewis decided to
return even though Brown
promised no significant
changes in how the organization is run.
The Bengals originally
planned to have players
report at Georgetown
College — a 90-mile
drive south of Cincinnati
— on Wednesday and
have their first practice a
day later. They pushed
the schedule back by
two days.
Players visited the stadium throughout the day,
getting playbooks and
meeting briefly with
coaches who were busy
trying to contact college
free agents. Cincinnati has
one of the NFL’s smallest
front offices, making a
hectic time even more
challenging.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="584">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10038">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="11313">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="11312">
              <text>July 27, 2011</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="85">
      <name>bryant</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="459">
      <name>wolf</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
