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                  <text>High School
football kicks off
in 16 days, B1

Tree closes road
on page 3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 126

Drama team
performing at fair
POMEROY – The
Santify Drama Team and
the Bethel Worship Team,
Core Drama Team, and
Abundance Dance Team
will be performing from
7:30 to 9 p.m. Monday
night at the Meigs County
Fair on the hillside stage.
Bibles and water will be
provided.

Benefit set for
Saturday
POMEROY – A benefit for the Meigs Prayer
Taskforce will be held at
the Mulberry Community
Center, 260 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, Saturday
evening. A chicken barbecue dinner will be served
beginning at 5 p.m. The
dinners are $7.
During the evening
there will also be a
Christian variety show by
the Middleport Church of
Christ youth. A love offering will be taken for the
benefit of the Taskforce.

Gospel concert
RUTLAND —Gospel
Harmony Boys from
Charleston, W.Va. will
headline a gospel concert
at 7 p.m., Aug. 13 at
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church. Concert is free
though a love offering
will be taken.

Gallia County
Health Department
to hold Back to
School Fair
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Health
Department will hold a
Back to School Fair from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on
Saturday, Aug. 13, at the
health department office
located at 499 Jackson
Pike, Suite D, Gallipolis.
In addition to providing
annual immunizations and
finger printing, the health
department will host pony
rides, face painting, treats,
and more. School supplies
will also be on hand. All
children should have a
current immunization
record and be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian. Contact the
health department for
more information: (740)
441-2950.

WEATHER

INDEX
1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

A7-8
A6
A4
A9-10

© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Officials view construction site of healthcare center
Completion set for late January
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY – In observance of National Health
Center
Week, Sixth
District Congressman Bill
Johnson and a delegation
of county officials, joined
Mike Bridenbaugh, chief
executive officer of
Family Healthcare, Inc.,
Tuesday for a visit to the
construction site of the
new facility at Rock
Springs.
Prior to going there, the
group met at the Family
Healthcare offices in
Middleport where there is

a current patient load of
3,000, for a walk-through
and general discussion on
primary healthcare and its
availability to Meigs
Countians.
“Everybody
needs
access to health care,” said
Johnson who commended
Family Healthcare on
moving forward with a
new building where medical and dental care will be
consolidated with access
to everyone.
“We’re filling in holes
in medical care here,” said
Bridenbaugh noting that
of the patients served 40
percent are uninsured and

are charged on a sliding
fee basis, 20 percent are
on Medicaid, and 20 percent are on Medicare. He
added that similar facilities are operated by
Family Healthcare, Inc. in
five other counties handling a caseload of about
25,000 patients.
Bridenbaugh confirmed
that completion of the new
building at Rock Springs
is scheduled for late
January. The new facility
will be over 10,000 square
feet with 11 medical exam
rooms, a procedure room,

See Center, A5

(photos by Charlene Hoeflich)

Mike Bridenbaugh, CEO of Family Healthcare, front, was joined
by Congressman Bill Johnson, and Meigs County
Commissioners Tim Ihle, Tom Anderson, and Mike Bartrum, for
a visit to the Family Healthcare construction site at Rock
Springs.

SOLES FOR SOULS:

Providing new shoes for kids

Old PHS
comes down
in price

BY BETH SERGENT

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — These
days, walking a mile in
another’s shoes results in
the knowledge many are
going without - this is why
the Pomeroy Cluster of the
Meigs Cooperative Parish
is offering local children
$20 gift cards to the Shoe
Show in Mason, W.Va.
This is the third year for
the “Soles for Souls” giveaway which was begun by
Grace Episcopal Church.
The church eventually
joined forces with the
Pomeroy Cluster - this has
resulted in $6,000 worth of
gift cards being purchased
for the giveaway which
will be held from noon - 2
p.m., Saturday, Aug. 13 at
Grace Episcopal Church
on East Main Street in
Pomeroy.
There are no income
guidelines for the giveaway - the gift cards are
there for all local children
who show up and children
must be present to receive
the $20 card. Cards will
not be given to adults
unless children are present
- no exceptions. Cards can
only be used at the Shoe
Show in Mason. Free
refreshments will be
offered at Saturday’s giveaway.
Don Shaffer, of Grace
Episcopal, said the idea for

POMEROY — Like a
used car that’s sat on the
lot too long, the Pomeroy
High School has come
down in price - from
$80,000 to $60,000.
At Monday’s regular
meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council, when the
ordinance to place the
building up for sale had its
first reading, the reduction
in price was announced.
Council members Ruth
Spaun and Phil Ohlinger
both asked why the price
was reduced - the answer
to this question wasn’t
known because council
adjourned into executive
session to discuss it. Under
the Sunshine Law, council
does have the right to
adjourn into executive session to discuss the sale of
property.
However, Resident Dan
Morris
questioned
whether council had the
right to do so, citing the
Sunshine Law’s clause: “A
public body may also
adjourn into executive session to consider the sale of
property by competitive
bid (real or personal property) if disclosure of the
information would result
in a competitive advantage
to the other side.” Morris
questioned whether the
discussion in executive
session about why the
price was lowered would
fall under the Sunshine
Law’s stipulation about
providing a competitive
advantage? Mayor John
Musser said he would
check with the village
solicitor about this question.
Once the ordinance to
place PHS, also the old
Pomeroy
Municipal
Building, up for sale passes its three required readings, it will be advertised
in The Daily Sentinel for
five weeks. Again, the village will not accept any
bids lower than $60,000.
Council also discussed
allowing underspeed vehicles in Pomeroy much like
Middleport has done
though the discussion fell
flat. Councilman Jim
Sisson presented council
with
a
copy
of
Middleport’s ordinance
and a discussion ensued
with Ohlinger asking
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
about his opinion on
allowing these vehicles,
usually golf carts, in
Pomeroy. Proffitt said one
of the key differences

(Beth Sergent/photo)

This Saturday the Pomeroy Cluster of the Meigs Cooperative Parish will be giving away $20
gift cards for the purchase of new shoes for local children. The giveaway is from noon - 2
p.m. at Grace Episcopal Church. Pictured are (from left) Linda Gilkey from Grace
Episcopal, Susie Sorden from St. Paul Lutheran Church, Ashley Dickie from the Shoe
Show, Father Tim Kozak from Sacred Heart Church, Rita Matthews from Grace Episcopal
and Dolores Will from New Beginnings United Methodist Church. The Pomeroy Cluster collected $6,000 towards the purchase of the gift cards.

the gift cards came from
seeing a child at the Meigs
Cooperative Parish who
had on a pair of shoes
which were the wrong
size, giving the child blisters. The first giveaway
passed out $2,500 worth of
gift cards and gradually
grew to $6,000, allowing
all children who’ve come
to the giveaways to not go

Jump Start Program
results in new jobs
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

High: 82
Low: 57

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2011

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Jump Start
Revolving Loan Program
recently assisted three
locally owned businesses
in its’ first round of
revolving loan fund
awards - the funds resulted in creating 12 new
jobs.
The Jump Start program is designed to provide gap financing to
business in cooperation
with other private and
public funding sources.
As these loans are repaid,
the funds will be available to lend to other entities in the community.
The program was able
to assist:
T and A Firearms,
which is renovating a
vacant
building
on
Mulberry Avenue in
Pomeroy, and will specialize in outdoor and
hunting equipment. They

opened the business earlier this month.
Ohio Valley Animal
Clinic, which is renovating a vacant building at
the intersection of Ohio 7
and Union Avenue, and
will be a full service veterinary clinic. They will
open this fall.
New Era Broadband,
this gap financing will
expedite their build out of
broadband service in the
community. They plan to
install infrastructure at
additional
locations
throughout the county in
the next 60 days and
rapidly expand their service area.
The Jump Start program is a collaborative
effort between the Meigs
County
Economic
Development Office, the
Ohio Rural Community
Assistance Program, and
WSOS, Inc. in order to
promote the start up and
expansion of small, locally owned businesses.

away empty-handed or
barefoot, so to speak.
Rita Matthews, also of
Grace Episcopal, said she
felt providing a child with
a new pair of shoes, particularly for back to school,
was also providing them
with confidence to start the
school year.
Another benefit of the
giveaway is it keeps local

money in the local, Bend
Area economy at a time
when every dollar counts.
Again, there is no
screening process for the
“Soles for Souls” giveaway - in short, the only
requirement is a child in
need who must be present
to receive the gift card. The
cards can also be used for
the purchase of socks.

Rhythm to
wrap up Friday

This yearʼs Rhythm on the River Concert Series will
wrap up this Friday with a performance by Biscuit and
the Mix at 8 p.m. in the Pomeroy Amphitheatre.
Pictured is last weekʼs performer Eden Brent who
made her return to the popular, free concert series.
(Sarah Hawley/photo)

See PHS, A5

�Wednesday, August 10, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Polygamist leader gets life
Obama calls for fuel
standards for big vehicles in prison for assaults
reduction in fuel consumption and greenhouse
gas emissions for work
trucks, which include
everything from fire
trucks and concrete mixers to garbage trucks and
buses.
In a statement, Obama
said the new standards
had the support of companies that build, buy and
drive medium and heavyduty trucks.
The president had
planned to unveil the
standards at a trucking
business in Virginia, a
state crucial to his reelection hopes, but the
White House canceled
the trip Tuesday morning
without
explanation.
Instead, the president he
met privately at the
White House with industry officials to discuss
the initiative.
The White House projected savings of 530
million barrels of oil and
$50 billion in fuel costs
over the expected lives of
the vehicles covered by
the new standards, along
with improved air quality
and public health.
The administration

released no miles-pergallon equivalent for the
new standards, saying
that doing so would be
confusing given the different categories of vehicles, the different types
of vehicles in each category and the varying
payloads that each one
carries.
Officials did stress
that the costs of making
the trucks more fuel-efficient — ranging from
hundreds to thousands of
dollars per vehicle —
will be recouped through
reduced fuel costs over
the lifetime of the vehicles.
It's the second round
of
fuel
efficiency
standards in the past
month.
Last month, Obama
announced a deal with
automakers to double
overall fuel economy to
54.5 mpg by 2025, starting in model year 2017.
Cars and light trucks now
on the road average 27
mpg.
That followed a 2009
deal committing cars and
trucks to averaging 35.5
mpg by model year 2016.

British police face public
anger as riots rage
LONDON (AP) —
Britons swept up, patched
up and feared further violence Tuesday, demanding
police do more to protect
them after three nights of
rioting left looted stores,
torched cars and blackened
buildings across London
and several other U.K.
cities.
Police said they were
working full-tilt, but found
themselves under attack —
from rioters roaming the
streets, from a scared and
worried public, and from
politicians whose cost-cutting is squeezing police
numbers ahead of next
year's Olympic Games.
London's Metropolitan
Police force vowed an
unprecedented operation
to stop more rioting, flooding the streets Tuesday
with 16,000 officers, nearly three times Monday's
total.
Although the riots started Saturday with a protest
over a police shooting,
they have morphed into a
general lawlessness that
police have struggled to
halt with ordinary tactics.
Police in Britain generally
avoid tear gas, water cannons or other strong-arm
riot measures. Many shops
targeted by looters had
goods that youths would
want anyway — sneakers,
bikes, electronics, leather
goods — while other
buildings were torched
apparently just for the fun
of seeing something burn.
Police said plastic bullets were "one of the tactics" being considered to
stop the looting. The bullets were common in
Northern Ireland durings
its years of unrest but have
never before been used in
mainland Britain.
But police acknowledged they could not guarantee there would be no
more violence. Stores,
offices and nursery schools
in several parts of London
closed early amid fears of
fresh rioting Tuesday night.
"We have lots of information to suggest that there
may be similar disturbances
tonight,"
Commander Simon Foy
told the BBC. "That's
exactly the reason why the
Met (police force) has chosen to now actually really
'up the game' and put a significant number of officers
on the streets."
The riots and looting
caused heartache for
Londoners whose businesses and homes were
torched or looted, and a crisis for police and politicians already staggering
from a spluttering economy and a scandal over illegal phone hacking by a
tabloid newspaper that has

dragged in senior politicians and police.
"The public wanted to
see tough action. They
wanted to see it sooner and
there is a degree of frustration," said Andrew Silke,
head of criminology at the
University of East London.
London's beleaguered
police force called the violence the worst in memory,
noting they received more
than 20,000 emergency
calls on Monday — four
times the normal number.
Scotland Yard has called in

reinforcements
from
around the country and
asked all volunteer special
constables to report for
duty.
Police launched a murder inquiry after a man
found with a gunshot
wound during riots in the
south London suburb of
Croydon died of his
injuries Tuesday. Police
said 44 officers and 14
members of the public
were hurt, including a man
in his 60s with life-threatening injuries.

SAN ANGELO, Texas
(AP) — Polygamist
leader Warren Jeffs was
sentenced to life in prison
on Tuesday for sexually
assaulting two underage
followers he took as
brides in what his church
deemed "spiritual marriages."
The head of the
Fundamentalist Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints stood quietly
as the decision of the
Texas jury was read. He
received the maximum
sentence on both counts.
Prosecutors had asked
the jury for the life sentence after presenting
their painstaking and
sometimes graphic case,
and rejected Jeffs' contention that he was being
persecuted for his religious beliefs.
"The evidence in this
case shows that this isn't a
prosecution of a people,"
Prosecutor Eric Nichols
said in his closing argument. "This is a prosecution to protect people."
During the trial, prosecutors used DNA evidence to show Jeffs
fathered a child with a
15-year-old and played
an audio recording of
what they said was him
sexually assaulting a 12year-old.
The 55-year-old Jeffs,
who had insisted on acting as his own attorney
during the earlier part of
the trial, was convicted
Thursday,
He asked to be excused
under protest during the
sentencing phase, which
ended Tuesday with him
refusing to answer when
the judge asked if he
wanted to make a closing
statement. A defense
attorney told the judge
Jeffs had instructed his

attorneys not to speak for
him.
Jurors deliberated less
than half an hour.
During the trial, prosecutors played other tapes
in which Jeffs was heard
instructing as many as a
dozen of his young wives
on how to please him sexually — and thus, he told
them, please God.
"If the world knew
what I was doing, they
would hang me from the
highest tree," Jeffs wrote
in 2005, according to one
of thousands of pages of
notes seized along with
the audio recordings from
his Texas ranch.
Nichols referred to that
in his closing.
"No, Mr. Jeffs, unlike
what you wrote in your
priesthood records ... we
don't hang convicts anymore from the highest
tree. Not even child
molesters," Nichols said.
Jeffs claimed his religious rights were being
violated. Representing
himself after burning
through seven high-powered attorneys, he routinely interrupted the proceedings and chose to
stand silently in front of
jurors for nearly half an
hour during his closing
arguments. He called just
one defense witness, a
church elder who read
from Mormon scripture.
The Fundamentalist
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints, a radical offshoot of mainstream Mormonism that
believes polygamy brings
exaltation in heaven, has
more than 10,000 followers who consider Jeffs to
be God's spokesman on
Earth.
He spent years evading
arrest — crisscrossing
the country as a fugitive

who eventually made the
FBI's Ten Most Wanted
list before his capture in
2006, said lead prosecutor Eric Nichols.
Several former members of the church have
testified that Jeffs ruled
the group with a heavy
and abusive hand. Jeffs
also allegedly excommunicated 60 church members he saw as a threat to
his leadership, breaking
up 300 families while
stripping them of property and "reassigning"
wives and children.
In an audiotape played
during the sentencing
phase, Jeffs was heard
softly telling five young
girls to "set aside all your
inhibitions" as he gave
them instructions on how
to please him sexually.
Jeffs is heard telling the
girls that what "the five
of you are about to do is
important."
Prosecutors suggested
that the polygamist
leader told the girls they
needed to have sex with
him — in what Jeffs
called "heavenly" or
"celestial" sessions — in
order to atone for sins in
his community. Several
times in his journals,
Jeffs wrote of God telling
him to take more and
more young girls as
brides "who can be
worked with and easily
taught."
FBI
agent
John
Broadway testified that
fathers who gave their
young daughters to Jeffs
were rewarded with
young brides of their
own. Girls who proved
reluctant to have sex with
Jeffs were sent away,
according to excerpts
from Jeffs' journals that
prosecutors showed to the
jury.

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WASHINGTON (AP)
— Fire trucks and concrete mixers, semis,
heavy-duty pickups and
all trucks in between
will, for the first time,
have to trim fuel consumption and emissions
of heat-trapping gases
under new efficiency
standards
announced
Tuesday by President
Barack Obama.
The White House said
the standards will save
businesses billions of
dollars in fuel costs, help
reduce oil consumption
and cut air pollution. The
standards apply to vehicle model years 2014 to
2018.
The new targets affect
three categories of vehicles. Big rigs or semis
will have to slash fuel
consumption and production of heat-trapping
gases by up to 23 percent. Gasoline-powered
heavy-duty pickups and
vans will have to cut consumption by 10 percent,
or by 15 percent if the
vehicles run on diesel
fuel.
The standards also
prescribe a 9 percent

�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

2011 Mason Co. Fair officially underway
By Hope Roush
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Mason
County Fair has finally
arrived.
Despite the rain, the
fair kicked off on
Saturday with the annual
parade, which featured
members of the 1092nd
Engineer Battalion as
grand marshals.
On Monday, fair fun
officially got underway
with the Youth 4-H Horse
Show. The carnival,
which drew a large crowd,
also opened. Monday’s
activities featured the first
day of Mason County Idol
eliminations as well.
Other events that took
place were the Market
Hog Showmanship and
Market Hog Show; Jason
Eades
Memorial
Scholarship Award presentation; Little Mister &amp;
Miss Mason County
Pageant; Riding Lawn
Mower
Demolition
Derby; and the fair dedication ceremony. The

Fair Queen Pageant also
took place (pageant photos
will
be
in
Wednesday’s edition of
the
Point
Pleasant
Register).
Monday’s
activities closed with the
Greasy Pig Contest.
Several fair events
were on tap for Tuesday
as well. All seniors ages
60 and up were admitted
to the fairgrounds free of
charge as yesterday was
Senior Citizens’ Day.
Tuesday was also designated as “Gospel Day” at
the fair. Starting at 4
p.m., fairgoers were
treated to a variety of
gospel music. Kicking
things off were the Bo
Rickard Youth in Gospel
Music, followed by the
Harry Rhodes Gospel
Sing at 5:30 p.m. At 8
p.m., the popular Gospel
Showcase Spotlight took
place. This year’s showcase featured the musical
talents
of
Jimmie
McKnight,
Randy
Parsons, Rick Towe and

Bob Patterson. At the conclusion of the showcase,
the gospel group, The
Whisnants, took the main
stage at 9 p.m.
Other events scheduled
for Tuesday included: Pet
Parade, 9:15 a.m.; Junior
Dairy Goat Show and
Market Goat Show, 11
a.m.; Egg Toss, noon;
CEOS Salsa Making
Demonstration, 1 p.m.;
CEOS
Sewing
Demonstration, 3 p.m.;
Mason County Idol eliminations, 3 p.m.; Point
Pleasant High School
Band Concert, 5:45 p.m.;
Antique Tractor Pull, 6
p.m.; and Market Lamb
Show and Special Lamb
Show, 6 p.m. The carnival
also opened at 1 p.m.
Closing out Tuesday’s
activities was the Banana
Eating Contest, slated for
9 p.m.
For a complete schedule of fair events, go to
www.masoncountyfairwv.org or call 304-6755463.

Gallia man arraigned after alleged assault at Ohio 141 residence
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
GALLIPOLIS — A Gallipolis man was recently arraigned in the Gallipolis
Municipal Court after he allegedly broke into a residence located on Ohio 141 and
assaulted the resident.
Aaron R. Garrett, 23, was arrested by deputies with the Gallia County Sheriff’s
Office during the early morning hours of Aug. 3.
The victim in this case reportedly called emergency officials at approximately
3 a.m. on Aug. 3 after Garrett, a nearby resident and an acquaintance of the victim, had allegedly broken into her home and, once inside, had attempted to choke
her while she was sleeping.
According to the police report, when a second resident of the home found
Garrett in the victim’s bedroom, the suspect ran from the residence.
Deputies, as well as troopers with the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol later looked for the suspect at his residence and the surrounding area and
later, at approximately 5:30 a.m., arrested the suspect at his home.
The victim reported that the suspect did not have permission to be inside the
residence at the time of the alleged offenses.
Garrett was later charged in the municipal court on one count of assault, a first
degree misdemeanor, and one count of aggravated burglary, a first degree felony,
in regard to the incident. He is scheduled to appear on Aug. 10 in the municipal
court for a pre-trial hearing. Garrett was further ordered not to be within 100 yards
of, or in anyway contact, the victim in this case.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, Aug. 10
WELSTON – The
GJMV Solid Waste
Management District
Policy Committee will at
2 p.m. at the district
office, 1056 S. New
Hampshire Ave.,
Wellston.
Thursday, Aug. 11
WELLSTON – The
GJMV Solid Waste
Management District
Board of Directors will
meet at 3:30 p.m. at the
district office, 1056 S.
New Hampshire Ave.,
Wellston.

Community meetings
Thursday, Aug. 11
CHESTER – Shade
River Lodge 453. 7 p.m.
for regular meeting and
to confer Master Mason
Degree on the candidate. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS –
VFW 9053 will meet at
6:30 p.m. Meal will be
served at 6 p.m.

Reunions
Sunday Aug. 4
POMEROY – The
104th annual Curtis family reunion will be held at
the Wildwood Park, 799
W. Broadway St.,
Granville. There will be a
basket dinner.
Saturday, Aug. 13
POMEROY –
Johnson-Russell
reunion, noon potluck, at
the Zion Church of
Christ. Door prizes, displays, group photos.
Ham and all table service provided.
Sunday, Aug. 14
RACINE — Charles
and Alma Snyder
Reunion, picnic at noon,
Star Mill Park.

Church Events
Friday, Aug. 12
LONG BOTTOM –
There will be a hymn
sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long
Bottom, 7 p.m.

Birthdays
Friday, Aug. 12
POMEROY – Ola St.

Clair will be celebrating
her 91st birthday on
Aug. 12. Cards may be

sent to her at 39481 St.
Clair Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

COMING SOON!
OHIO VALLEY
ANIMAL HOSPITAL
Corner of Union Ave &amp; Rt. 7, Pomeroy Ohio

1-740-444-3830

Tenative Opening Day: Sept. 1st

Dr. Josh Ervin
Graduate of Ohio State University
College of Veterinary Medicine
We are currently accepting new clients,
Large or Small, for House/Farm Calls

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August 15 - 20
Mon., Aug. 15 ................... Demo Derby
Tues., Aug. 16 ....... Open Horse Show
Wed., Aug. 17 .................. Randy Houser
Thurs., Aug. 18 ..... Motorcross/ Tractor Pull
Fri., Aug. 19 .............................. Truck Pull
Sat., Aug. 20 ......................... Tough Track

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Page A3
Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Downed tree closes road

(Kastle Balser/photo)

POMEROY — This weekendʼs heavy rains likely contributed to a large tree falling
from the hillside along Ohio 833 between McDonalds and Pomeroy Marathon. The
road was closed for around 45 minutes with traffic rerouted through gravel parking
lot next to McDonalds. Power was out from Pomeroy Exxon to the Bridge of Honor
for about three hours. The Pomeroy Police Department, Pomeroy Fire Department,
Middleport Police Department and Meigs County Sheriffʼs Office responded, as did
crews from American Electric Power and Asplundh tree removal.

Ohio woman falls into recycling bin, dies inside
TOLEDO (AP) — A
woman who died after falling
face-first into a recycling bin
and wasn't noticed until her
husband came from work had
gotten stuck in a position in
which she couldn't breathe, a
coroner said.
Sheila Decoster, 62, was
likely inside the bin for several
hours before she was found
Friday, said Lucas County
Deputy Coroner Diane Barnett.
The woman's husband saw her
legs sticking out of the 64-gallon container that sits alongside
their porch.
"I just happened to look to
the left and, honestly, thought it
was a dummy," Richard
Decoster told The Blade newspaper of Toledo. "I shook her
leg and called her name, and I
knew she was gone."
The couple, married for 43
years, kept their recycling and
trash bins next to their porch,
which does not have a railing.
Investigators said it looked like

Sheila Decoster was standing
on her porch when she leaned
over, lifted the lid on the bin
and fell inside.
Decoster died from positional asphyxia, which means
she couldn't breathe because of
the way she stuck, Barnett said.
Her husband said she had
several medical issues, including dizzy spells and an
aneurism on her brain, which
could explain why she fell. She
also had back problems and a

recent
knee-replacement
surgery.
There were many complaints about the large recycling bins when they were distributed two years ago.
Residents said they were too
big and difficult to move, especially for older and disabled
people.
"It's tragic, but I think it's
definitely an extreme example," said city spokeswoman
Jen Sorgenfrei.

Meigs County WIC
Come see us at the Breastfeeding
and Diaper-Changing Booth
during the Meigs County Fair!
Open Monday - Friday, 3-8
In the Health Department Mobile Unit
on the Hilltop
60232520

�OPINION

Page A4
Wednesday, August 10, 2011

“Chicken Soup for the Soul: For flash mobsters, crowd size a tempting cover
B ERIC TUCKER &amp; safety. “They can commu- order or subpoena to share younger community memJust for Teenagers”
nicate and congregate at a non-public information bers and friended some of
Y

“Gratitude is the best
attitude.” — Author
Unknown
A girl goes on a bike ride to
the park with her family.

“A perfect summer evening
lost to a bike ride,” I thought
crossly as I pedaled halfheartedly down the busted sidewalk.
A family bike ride to the
local park. Basically, the equivalent of social suicide if I was
caught riding my floral bicycle
in a line of family members, just
like ducks.
Finally, we arrived at our destination. After parking our various bikes, my younger siblings
dashed away to glide across,
climb upon and dangle on their
beloved playground equipment.
I silently craved the innocence
of a child again -- where the
world was all just one immense
playground and the perils of
high school were not anything
to be concerned with yet. I
trudged over to the swing set in
the center of the enormous park.
I did my best to appear reluctant, but secretly I still loved the
sensation of slicing through the
air, defying gravity and soaring
through the sky. But there was
always a point when you had to
fly back down. That was how
my teenage life felt lately. For
every high point there was a low
to follow it. This thought flooded my mind with recent memories and I was left sitting
solemnly and still on the swing.
Suddenly, I become aware of
a presence. I glanced to my left
and saw a small child on the
swing beside me. The little girl
looked up at me, her almond
eyes shining in the bright sun.
“Will you push me?” she
asked innocently.
I followed her obvious gaze
to my mother propelling my sister up in the sky. There were
families off in the distance, and
I wondered which was hers.
Didn’t she have a loving mother
to push her on the swings, too?
And I didn’t want this girl’s parents to think I was trying to
abduct her or anything. But how
could I refuse her sweet smile,
revealing two tidy rows of baby
teeth?
“Sure,” I replied with a grin.
I had attempted to match her
smile’s own sweetness, but my
metal-mouth grin most likely
fell short. I hopped off my
swing and began to push her.
“What’s your name?” she
asked gingerly as she flew
backward.
“Claudia,” I grunted, pushing
her forward.
“My name is Chloe,” she
informed me as her golden hair
danced in the steamy air.
I nodded and continued to

thrust her forward, looking
down at the pink polka-dotted
dress she was wearing, tag
sticking out.
“I like your dress, Chloe,” I
said.
“Thank you,” she answered
considerately. A silly grin began
to cross Chloe’s round face. “I
love swings. We don’t have
swings, only a slide.”
“I like swings, too,” I agreed.
“They’ve always been my
favorite.”
Chloe began to ask me questions that I would normally not
answer with a total stranger.
Questions about my family,
friends, where I lived, and others. Answering, I became
amazed at the pleasant conversation I was having with this
child.
After a long while pushing
Chloe on the swings, I glanced
around the park. There were
still no parents around claiming
her.
“Chloe,” I inquired. “Where
are your parents?”
Chloe looked me in the eyes
gravely. It was an odd way for a
small child, who shouldn’t have
a care in the world, to look.
“They’re
gone,”
she
answered timidly. “My grandma’s here, but my parents are
gone. I miss them.”
I continued pushing Chloe,
my heart shattering inside my
chest for her. I wasn’t sure what
“gone” meant exactly, but it
didn’t sound like she was saying they dropped her off to be
babysat for a while. I looked at
my family farther down the
park. What must it be like to
have no parents to push you on
the swings or help you finish
your homework or simply be
there for every stage of your
life? Yet, Chloe was happy. The
sweet, silly smile of hers
returned and she was happy.
Eventually, our conversation
was interrupted. I had to leave
the park. Chloe’s smile vanished for only a second when I
told her I had to go.
“Bye,” she chirped, rewarding me with one last flash of
baby teeth.
She skipped off to be with
her grandmother all the way
across the park. I made sure
they were reunited before I left.
Riding my bike home with my
family surrounding me, I couldn’t stop thinking about Chloe.
How sweet and joyful she was,
even though she knew her parents were no longer with her.
How she looked past the pain in
her life, to be grateful for the little blessings, like going on the
swings. I knew right then that I
wanted to be more like the little
girl in the polka-dotted dress.

www.chickensoup.com.

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THOMAS WATKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The July 4 fireworks display in the Cleveland suburb of Shaker Heights was
anything but a family
affair.
As many as 1,000
teenagers,
mobilized
through social networking
sites, turned out and soon
started fighting and disrupting the event.
Thanks to social networks like Twitter and
Facebook, more and more
so-called flash mobs are
materializing across the
globe, leaving police
scrambling to keep tabs on
the spontaneous assemblies.
“They’re gathering with
an intent behind it — not
just to enjoy the event,”
Shaker Heights Police
Chief D. Scott Lee said.
“All too often, some of the
intent is malicious.”
Flash mobs started off in
2003 as peaceful and often
humorous acts of public
performance, such as mass
dance routines or street pillow fights. But in recent
years, the term has taken a
darker twist as criminals
exploit the anonymity of
crowds, using social networking to coordinate
everything from robberies
to fights to general chaos.
In London, recent rioting
and looting has been
blamed in part on groups of
youths using Twitter,
mobile phone text messages and instant messaging on BlackBerry to organize and keep a step ahead
of police. Blackberry’s
manufacturer, Research in
Motion, later issued a statement offering empathy for
the rioting victims.
“We have engaged with
the authorities to assist in
any way we can,” the statement said.
And
Sunday
in
Philadelphia,
Mayor
Michael Nutter condemned
the behavior of teenagers
involved in flash mobs that
have left several people
injured in recent weeks.
“What is making this
unique today is the social
media aspect,” said Everett
Gillison, Philadelphia’s
deputy mayor for public

moment’s notice. That can
overwhelm any municipality.”
A Philadelphia man was
assaulted by a group of
about 30 people who were
believed to have gotten
together through Twitter. In
2009, crowds swelled
along the trendy South
Street shopping district and
assaulted several people.
On June 23, a couple
dozen youths arrived via
subway in Upper Darby,
outside Philadelphia, and
looted several hundred dollars of sneakers, socks and
wrist watches from a Sears
store. Their haul wasn’t
especially impressive but
the sheer size of the group
and the speed of the roughly five-minute operation
made them all but impossible to stop.
“The good thing is there
were no weapons and
nobody tried to stop them,
either,” Upper Darby
Police Chief Michael
Chitwood said. “The only
people that tried to stop
them were the police when
they rounded them up.”
Dubbed “flash mob robberies,” the thefts are
bedeviling both police and
retailers, who say some of
the heists were orchestrated or at least boasted about
afterward on social networking sites.
In recognition of the
problem, the National
Retail Federation issued a
report last week recommending steps stores can
take to ward off the robberies. There have even
been legislative efforts to
criminalize flash mobs.
The Cleveland City
Council passed a bill to
make it illegal to use social
media to organize a violent
and disorderly flash mob,
though the mayor vetoed
the measure after the
ACLU of Ohio promised it
would be unconstitutional.
The bill was at least partly
inspired by the Shaker
Heights disturbances on
July 4.
Social networking and
technology
companies
often have policies for
coordinating with law
enforcement authorities.
Twitter, for example,
says it requires a court

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

about its users with law
enforcement — including
protected tweets. But company officials also warn
they can’t review the more
than 200 million tweets
sent daily on the website
and that some of the information may be inaccurate
if a user has created a fake
or anonymous profile.
Jonathan Taplin, director
of the innovation lab at the
University of Southern
California’s
Annenberg
School for Communication,
said he was not surprised to
see people using social
media for organizing flash
mob robberies.
“You are essentially having a world where you have
25 million people who are
underemployed and 2 percent of the population
doing better than they ever
have,” Taplin said. “Why
wouldn’t that lead to some
sort of social unrest? Why
wouldn’t people use the
latest technologies to effect
that?”
In Los Angeles last
month, thousands of ravers
forced rush-hour street closures when they descended
on a Hollywood cinema
after a DJ tweeted he was
holding a free block party.
The sudden crowd dispersed only after police
fired bean-bag bullets at
the restive revelers and
arrested three.
And in April, a man was
shot when hundreds of
rival gang members congregated along the Los
Angeles seafront in Venice,
sparking pandemonium as
people scattered for cover.
The group had gathered
after some of them posted
on Twitter and police were
still strategizing their
response to the huge crowd
when shots rang out.
Los Angeles police Capt.
Jon Peters said law enforcement’s challenge is to try to
sift the ocean of tweets and
Facebook updates for signs
of trouble.
“We need to be able to
get better on the intelligence side to pick up on
communications that are
going on,” he said.
Gillison, the deputy
mayor from Philadelphia,
said the police department
there has reached out to

them on Facebook. This
enables officers to monitor
the traffic that could generate flash mobs and some
have been prevented, he
said.
In April, about 20
teenagers entered G-Star
Raw, a high-end men’s
clothing store in the
Dupont Circle neighborhood of the District of
Columbia, and stole about
$20,000 worth of merchandise despite employees’
efforts to grab the apparel
back, store manager Greg
Lennon said. D.C. police
have investigated leads but
have not made arrests in
the case.
Lennon said he later saw
Twitter postings, apparently written after the robbery,
that referenced the theft,
with one person describing
having been in the store
and making plans to come
back.
The National Retail
Federation said 10 percent
of 106 companies it surveyed reported being targeted in the last year by
groups of thieves using
flash mob tactics.
“Retailers are raising red
flags about criminal flash
mobs, which are wreaking
havoc on their business,
causing concerns about the
safety of their customers
and employees, and directly impacting their bottom
line,” the federation said in
a report, which advises
retailers to monitor social
media networks and report
planned heists to the
police.
That’s exactly what
Lennon does. He says he
checks
his
store’s
Facebook page to see
who’s visiting, and monitors Twitter for any reference to his store and its
merchandise.
Gillison and others
blame at least part of the
problem on bad parenting.
“They’re 12 years old
and not around the corner
from their home. Where’s
their
parents?”
said
Chitwood, the Upper
Darby police chief. “If
they’re out doing flash
mob thefts when they’re
12, what the hell are they
going to be doing when
they’re 16?”

The Daily Sentinel
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Publishing Co.
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�Wednesday, August 10, 2011

PHS
From Page A1
between Pomeroy and
Middleport concerning
this issue is Pomeroy has a
state highway running
through it which receives a
lot of traffic, traffic which
travels in a 35 mph zone in
at least part of town under speed vehicles can
only travel a maximum of
25 mph. With traffic which
parks on both sides of the
highway, less residential
areas than Middleport and
no shoulder room, like in
Mason, W.Va., Proffitt said
it could be dangerous for
these vehicles to be in regular traffic - for example,
what if an underspeed
vehicle pulled out into
traffic in front of a faster

moving car in a blind
spot?
Spaun asked about what
had been done to replace
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy
Hysell who is retiring this
month? Musser said the
village had received 10-12
applications and those
applications would be
copied and given to council members to decide on
at the next meeting.
Hysell also reminded
council the village’s health
insurance premium, due
next month, is expected to
increase 38.5 percent from
$6,700 a month to $9,500.
Local insurance broker
Donald Vaughan has
requested a meeting with
council about its options
concerning renewal or
using a different company.
Council passed a resolution establishing a resident

inflow and infiltration
enforcement policy. This
policy deals with the
sewage system and Village
Administrator
Paul
Hellman said it’s required
by the US Environmental
Protection Agency and is
in direct relation to
Pomeroy’s ability to
receive grant money to
assist in replacing its
Combined
Sewer
Overflows in the village.
The
previously
approved three percent,
annual increase in water
bills is expected to be
placed on November bills
unless council amends the
ordinance.
Council approved the
transfer of $4,000 from the
general fund to the public
works fund.
Councilman
Victor
Young, III, praised the

workers of the Pomeroy
Public Works for weedeating and grass cutting
throughout the village
since the last meeting.
Ohlinger acknowledged
the village’s help during
the Big Bend Blues Bash.
The Mayor’s Report for
Aug. 8 was approved with
fines and forfeitures collected in the amount of
$11,126; there were 82
parking tickets issued,
$1,847.87 collected from
parking meters, $283 collected in tickets, $370 collected in parking permits
for a total of $2,500.87
collected
by
Meter
Enforcement
Officer
Sandra Thorla.
(Editor’s note: This is
the first of two stories on
this week’s meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council.)

Center

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: A slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms before
noon. Mostly sunny,
with a high near 82.
West wind between 6
and 14 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 20%.
Wednesday Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 57. West wind
between 5 and 8 mph
becoming calm.
Thursday: Sunny,
with a high near 78.
Calm wind becoming
north between 4 and 7
mph.
Thursday Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 56.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 81.
Friday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low

around 60.
Saturday: Showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 82. Chance of
precipitation is 60%.
Saturday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 64. Chance of
precipitation is 40%.
Sunday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny,
with a high near 79.
Chance of precipitation
is 30%.
Sunday Night: A
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 59. Chance
of precipitation is 30%.
Monday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
80.

Local Stocks

From Page A1
and five dental stations.
The
Appalachian
Dental Clinic which has
operated in Middleport for
several years under sponsorship of the Meigs
County
Health
Department will become
a part of Family
Healthcare, Inc. and be
located in one end of the
new building, according
to Bridenbaugh.
The new building is
located on a three-acre
section of land near the
intersection of U.S. 33
and S.R. 7, purchased
from a 13-acre tract
owned by the Community
I m p r o v e m e n t
Corporation.
As for use of the
remaining 10 acres, the
CIC’s intent is for development of other health
facilities, like an emergency treatment center.
Senator Johnson reported during his visit that he
is “looking at O’Bleness

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Family Healthcare, Inc. CEO Mike Bridenbaugh, left, and Sixth District
Congressman Bill Johnson discuss primary healthcare and its availability to Meigs
Countians.

as a prospect” of providing that for Meigs
County.
Financing for the $2.4
million dollar construc-

tion of the new Family
Healthcare facility has
been provided through a
Health Resources and
Services Administration

(HRSA)
grant
of
$1,019,265 and a USDA
Rural Development community facility loan in the
amount of $1,323,000.

Ohio Briefs
Mechanic killed in Ohio
coal mine accident
BEALLSVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A
coal mine mechanic has died from an
accident at an underground mine in
eastern Ohio.
American Energy Corporation says
Keith A. Baker was fatally injured
while working alone early Monday at
the Century Mine in Beallsville, about
105 miles east of Columbus.
The news release did not provide
other details of the accident but said
that it’s being investigated by the company and federal and state regulators.
American Energy says no other
employees were injured.
Baker was from Jacobsburg in
Monroe County and had worked at the
mine 10 years.
American Energy is part of Murray
Energy Corp., based in the Cleveland
suburb of Pepper Pike. Murray’s website says 450 people are employed at
the Century Mine.

Ohio see little impact from
US debt downgrade
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — State officials don’t think Ohio’s public pension
funds will have to dump U.S. government bonds, despite the Standard and
Poor’s downgrade of U.S. debt.
Pension fund officials also tell the
Dayton Daily News they’d been rejiggering their portfolios over the last
few months to better weather market
gyrations such as Monday’s sell-off.
State Teachers Retirement System
spokesman Nick Treneff says that
fund has been selling off some assets
and holding more cash, a strategy that
lessened the impact from S&amp;P’s
announcement and the ensuing slide
on Wall Street.
Spokesman Seth Unger with the
Ohio Treasurer’s office says the U.S.
debt downgrade shouldn’t have a ripple effect on Ohio debt. He tells the
Daily News it was recently upgraded
by S&amp;P.

W.Va. work release inmate
captured in Ohio
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) — An
inmate who escaped from the

Huntington Work Release Center has
been captured in Ohio.
The Herald-Dispatch reports that
25-year-old Jeffrey Lewis was arrested in Medina County, Ohio, on
Saturday following a traffic stop.
The work release center says Lewis
didn’t return after he left on a work
pass Friday to find a job.
He was serving time for grand larceny and burglary in Tyler, Wetzel and
Pleasants counties.
Lewis is the fifth inmate to flee the
work release center since May. One is
still at large and the others have been
captured.

Ohio State Fair attendance
highest in 7 years
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio
State Fair officials say attendance was
up 2.5 percent from last year, despite
heat advisories and heavy rain on two
of the evenings.
Fair organizers say in a news release
that more than 833,000 people went
through the gates over the 12-day run
of the fair, which ended Sunday. The
attendance was the highest since 2004.
The fair says this year’s visitor numbers were bolstered by a couple of big
concerts and the reintroduction of
nightly fireworks.
Next year’s fair is scheduled for
July 25-August 5 at the fairgrounds in
Columbus.

Senator: Ohio paying twice
for same building

Chris Widener, who sits on the board,
pointed out the state gave the nonprofit association $1.6 million to help
build the building in the first place.
He says the state is essentially paying
for the building twice.
Widener was the only no vote.
Widener voted against five requests
for funding by universities, including
$14,000 Ohio University sought to
buy property that touches its golf
course. He says universities have
requested $47 million for land purchases since 2009.

NC-based Marine from
Ohio dies in Afghanistan
CANTON,
Ohio
(AP)
—
Authorities say a Camp Lejeune,
N.C.-based Marine from Ohio has
died while conducting combat operations in Afghanistan.
The Pentagon on Monday said 26year-old Sgt. Daniel Patron of
Canton died Saturday in Helmand
province.
His parents tell The Repository
newspaper in Canton that Patron was
“selfless, brave and gutsy.” Mother
Kathy Patron calls him “my hero.”
She says his military service was
inspired by the Sept. 11, 2001 terror
attacks, and was to end in July, but
he decided to extend his deployment.
He also served in Iraq in 2005 and
2009.
Patron was assigned to 8th
Engineer Support Battalion, 2nd
Marine Logistics Group, II Marine
Expeditionary Force.
The newspaper reports he was a
2003 Perry High School graduate
who had been married nearly two
years.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio
may be paying $6.3 million to purchase a building that it helped pay to
construct.
That’s
the
amount Cuyahoga
Great Gift Ideas
Community
Cat's Meow's
College requested
Middleport/Meigs
Jr. Hi
Monday from a
Meigs High School
state legislative
Hump Day
panel to buy a
$
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Middleport T-Shirts
1st Wed. of every month 11-1
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Call 992-5877 - 992-1121
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Dave Diles Park
Except Senate
992-7278 or 304-773-6090
Finance Chairman
MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION

Meigs Wellness Center
Treadmills, Recumbent Bikes, Rowing Machines,
Elliptical Trainers, Free weights &amp; weight Machines.
Personal Training, Zumba and Spin Classes
Hours: Mon. - Thur. 7am - 7pm
Fri. 7am - 4pm • Sat. 8am - 12pm
RATES: 18-59 - $22 Monthly • Couples - $32
60 + Up - $12 Monthly • Couples - $17
Contact Number: 992-2681
CLASSES IN PILATES &amp; MATTER OF BALANCE COMING SOON!!
Check us out on Facebook at Meigs Wellness Center
A program offered by the Meigs County Council on Aging,Inc.

AEP (NYSE) — 35.06
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 52.52
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 52.00
Big Lots (NYSE) — 30.49
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 31.39
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 66.74
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.17
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.32
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 3.21
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 31.38
Collins (NYSE) — 48.37
DuPont (NYSE) — 46.71
US Bank (NYSE) — 23.37
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.96
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 37.32
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 36.40
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.56
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 33.84
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 67.88
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 16.89

BBT (NYSE) — 22.23
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 12.90
Pepsico (NYSE) — 63.09
Premier (NASDAQ) — 5.96
Rockwell (NYSE) — 60.89
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.00
Royal Dutch Shell — 63.93
SearsHolding(NASDAQ)— 64.70
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 50.82
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.76
WesBanco (NYSE) — 18.97
Worthington (NYSE) — 17.34
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
August 9, 2011, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

For the Record
Meigs 911
Aug. 5:
MVC, Ohio 124, Racine; laceration, West Main
Street, Pomeroy; seizure / convulsions, Ohio 7,
Cheshire; pain general, Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy;
difficulty breathing, Mill St., Middleport.
Aug. 6:
Unconscious/unknown reason, Dead Manʼs Curve,
Pomeroy; MVC, no address given, Pomeroy; chest
pain, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; fractured body part,
Ohio 124, Reedsville; unconscious, Nelson St.,
Rutland; pain general, Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport; seizure/convulsions, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Aug. 7:
Laceration, Apple Grove Dorcas, Racine; missing
person/child, Eagle Ridge, Long Bottom; laceration,
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy; MVC, Ohio 684, Pomeroy;
nausea/vomitting, Ohio 684, Pomeroy; MVC,
Leading Creek Rd., Middleport; abdominal pain,
Keebaugh-Follrod Rd., Pomeroy; stroke/CVA, Ohio
681, Pomeroy; unknown emergency, Rocksprings
Rd., Pomeroy.
Aug. 8:
Nausea/vomitting, Mill St., Middleport; allergic
reaction, Ohio 124, Reedsville; difficulty breathing,
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.

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100

Legals

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
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

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com
Legals

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
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,

100

Legals

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;
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 PROP-

100

Legals

ERTY 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
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

100

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
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

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
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
The Home National Bank will auction the following items on Saturday
August 13th, at 10:00 A.M. The
sale will be held in the bank's parking lot. 2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT
1G2WP52K9YF2691892005 VW
Beetle
GLS
Convertible
3VWCM31Y85M352221 The Home
National Bank reserves the right to
reject any and all bids. All vehicles
are sold, as is where is, with no
warranties expressed or implied.
Call Sheila at 740-949-2210 (8) 10,
11, 12, 2011

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Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Merchandise
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15' above ground pool, new liner, filter and motor, 25' deck treated 2x6
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304-675-1602

Remington Model 11-48 28 GA.,
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Yard Sale
Yard Sale 107 Colonial Dr. behind
Dollar General on Jackson Pike.
Name brand jeans girls and jrs.
clothes Am Eagle, hollister, Buckle,
scrubs, household and other various items 8/11 8/12 8/13/ 9 am to
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Yard Sale @ 4409 Bullaville Pike
8am-? Lots of Misc.
Aug 11,12 &amp; 13th.
Yard Sale @103 Lincoln Pike on
Aug 12 &amp; 13, 2011 9:00am to 4pm

2 family, August 12th &amp; 13th, 9-?,
David Weber's residence, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio, turn @ Hickory Hills
Church of Christ, variety of items including clothes, shoes, housing
decor, games &amp; more!
Moving sale- Fri &amp; Sat. Aug. 12th,
13th, Old Crew Rd, Pomeroy,
Whirpool side-by-side refrigerator,
TV's, washer/dryer, intertainment
center, couches, tables, computer
stand, Craftsmen riding lawn
mower, many other items, 740-5917607

2000

Automotive
Autos

2004 Ford Focus ZX5 4 Door , Automatic, Air Condition, 140,000
miles asking $2,800 Ph: 441-5418

Trucks
1998 Chevy 4x4 Ph 446-3243

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

Real Estate
Sales

3000

Houses For Sale
For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex in town,
$475/mo. Dep+ref. No pets. Quiet
place. 446-1271.

Real Estate
Rentals

3500

Apartments/
Townhouses
1 br, HUD accepted, all utilities pd,
near downtown Pt Pleasant 304360-0163

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Fickell puts OSU through paces for first time

Paterno in hospital after
player runs into him
STATE COLLEGE,
Pa. (AP) — Joe Paterno
was hospitalized and
undergoing tests on his
right arm and hip after a
player ran into the 84year-old coach during
practice.
Paterno was admitted
Sunday evening to
Mount Nittany Medical
Center after he walked
away from the collision
with a receiver, the
school said Monday.
Receiver Devon Smith
was running a drill on the
offensive side of the field
when he blindsided the
Hall of Fame coach, who
was
watching
the
defense.
“I expect to be back at
practice soon,” Paterno
said in a statement. “I’m
doing fine; tell everyone
not to worry about me.”
Dr.
Wayne
Sebastianelli, Penn State
director of athletic medicine, said it doesn’t
appear surgery will be
required. The school said
Paterno could be released
in the next 24 hours.
Doctors were evaluating his shoulder and
pelvis, and there was no
firm diagnosis yet on the
extent of the injuries,
said a person Monday
night familiar with the
team who requested
anonymity because no
one was authorized to
speak about his condition.
JoePa, notorious for his
stubbornness and pain

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

www.mydailysentinel.com

threshold, walked away
from the collision and
stayed on his feet for the
rest of the practice period
before being encouraged
to get checked out by a
doctor.
Paterno
conducted
Monday
morning’s
coaches meeting by
phone from the hospital,
according to Penn State.
Assistant coaches will be
running practice while
Paterno is gone and it
was unclear how long
that would be, athletic
department spokesman
Jeff Nelson said in an
email.
Practice
resumed
Monday as scheduled,
with the team in full pads
for the first time this
summer. Football media
day, originally scheduled
for Thursday, was postponed.
Paterno is entering his
46th season as Penn
State’s head coach and is
the winningest coach in
the history of major college football with 401
victories.
Speculation
about
when and if he will retire
has long been constant
around Happy Valley,
though Paterno himself
generally dismisses the
topic. But when health
issues come up, the chatter seems to intensify.
Paterno’s health has
been a frequent issue in
recent seasons.
In 2006, he broke his

leg in a sideline collision
during Penn State’s game
against Wisconsin at
Camp Randall Stadium.
A hip injury forced him
to spend much of the
2008 season coaching
from a seat near the press
box, where the offensive
coordinator usually sets
up.
He typically surveyed
practices that season
from a golf cart before
having hip surgery after
the season.
During the 2010 offseason, Paterno had to
scale back his personal
appearances because an
intestinal issue and an
adverse reaction to
antibiotics prescribed for
dental work. He also cut
back on in-season obligations and taped segments
instead of appearing live
on a weekly radio show.
But as the 2010 season
went on, Paterno’s health
seemed to be improving.
And at the recent Big Ten
media days in Chicago,
Paterno said he was feeling great and he looked
and sounded better than
he had at the same event
a year earlier.
Paterno signed a threeyear contract extension
in late 2008 that runs out
after this season, but
Paterno’s status at Penn
State hardly seems
reliant on a contract these
days. Penn State has no
public plans in place to
shift leadership of the
program.

COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Luke Fickell had
difficulty sleeping he was
so wired about his first
official practice as Ohio
State’s interim head coach.
“It’s been a long time
coming I guess you could
say — a couple of
months,” he said after
Monday’s workout. “The
biggest thing was the
excitement that at about
2:30 in the morning you’re
ready to go. Hopefully a
bunch of guys felt that
way.”
But he also knows it’s
just another mile marker
on what will likely be a
long, strange journey for
the Buckeyes this season.
“Will it be a little bit of
relief just to get that first
(practice) under your belt?
Yeah. For everybody,” he
said.
More than eight months
after a memorabilia-forcash scandal rocked the
program, and several
weeks after 10-year coach
Jim Tressel’s forced resignation and Ohio State’s
self-imposed sanctions,
the Buckeyes finally got
back to playing football on
Monday.
Just over 100 players
were on hand for the first
practice in comfortable,
80-degree temperatures.
They have been faced
with a mountain of
changes since this past
spring’s practices, let
alone their last game — a
31-26
victory
over
Arkansas in the Sugar
Bowl on Jan. 4.
Fickell, a defensive
assistant under Tressel the
last nine years, took over
after Ohio State officials
convinced Tressel to

resign on May 30 in the
midst of a lengthy NCAA
investigation. Tressel has
admitted he knew players
had accepted improper
benefits — money and
discounted tattoos — from
the owner of a Columbus
tattoo parlor who was the
subject of a federal drugtrafficking probe. But
Tressel, with a record of
106-22, did not tell his
superiors or the NCAA as
required by his contract
and NCAA bylaws.
Last December, five
players were suspended
for the first five games of
the 2011 season. They
included three-year starting quarterback Terrelle
Pryor, who has since given
up his senior season for a
shot at playing in the NFL,
along with starting wide
receiver DeVier Posey,
leading-rusher
Daniel
Herron, starting offensive
lineman Mike Adams and
backup defensive lineman
Solomon
Thomas.
Another,
linebacker
Jordan Whiting, was suspended for just the first
game. (A sixth player,
linebacker Dorian Bell,
has subsequently been
suspended for the first five
games but he is no longer
with the team.)
Ohio State goes before
the NCAA’s committee on
infractions Friday. The
university has vacated the
12-1 season in 2010,
including the bowl win, in
addition to self-imposing a
two-year NCAA probation. The committee can
add to those sanctions with
a bowl ban or by restricting Ohio State’s recruiting,
or it can accept the penalties the university has pro-

posed.
After months of unending scrutiny and a series of
embarrassing revelations
of possible violations, getting back on the field
served as a tonic for
Buckeyes fans and everyone on the team.
“It’s therapeutic for a lot
of us— as much for the
coaches as it is the players,” Fickell said.
The Buckeyes open the
season on Sept. 3 at home
against Akron.
Even in a typical year,
this would be a chaotic
month of practice. The
Buckeyes must replace
seven starters on defense
and three on offense —
and that doesn’t include
those who will miss
almost half of the season
due to suspensions.
Fickell and his staff will
be keeping a close watch
on four candidates to
replace
Pryor.
Joe
Bauserman, a 25-year-old
former minor-league baseball prospect who was
Pryor’s backup last season, has the most experience. The best passer
might be redshirt freshman Taylor Graham, the
son of former Buckeyes
signal-caller
Kent
Graham, who spent 11
years in the NFL. Perhaps
the best athlete is sophomore Kenny Guiton, capable of moving the chains
when running or passing.
And the wild card is freshman Braxton Miller, an
acclaimed recruit from
suburban Dayton, given
every chance during
spring ball to take the job.
Of the situation at quarterback, he said, “We’re
going to let it play out.”

Tribune - Sentinel - Register
C L A S S I F I E D MARKETPLACE
Manufactured
Housing

4000

9000

Service / Bus.
Directory

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

Lots

Miscellaneous

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

Trailer lots at Family Pride Mobile
Home Park in Gallipolis Ferry. Call
304-674-5264 or 304-675-0061

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

Rentals
16X80 2 brm, bath, Rt 2 N, country
setting. 304-895-3129 or 304-6757770

For Rent: 1 BR apt, excellent condition, 2 miles from Gallipolis on
Route 141, $420 mo. includes electric, water &amp; trash, Security deposit
and references required, Call 740446-3936 or 441-7875, 446-4425.
2 BR close to Rio Grande, Washer
&amp; Dryer Hook-ups-Appliances furnished. Ph 740-441-3702 or 740286-5789
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
NICE
Furnished
Apts
Racine,Ohio
rent incl.W/S/G No Pets 740-5915174
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR townhouse apartments, also renting 2 &amp;
3BR houses. Call 441-1111.
Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5 BA,
back patio, pool, playground. $450
mth 740-645-8599
2-BR Apt, Water &amp; Trash pd. in Centenary, Call (740)256-1135.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom house &amp; apartments
for rent. No Pets, 740-992-2218
Middleport 2 br. furnished apartments, some w/utilities paid, No
pets, deposit &amp; references, 740992-0165
New Condo! 2 bedroom &amp; den, or 3
bedroom's,
stove-frig-ac-patio,
wood floor's, Racine, Oh, $650 per
mo. &amp; electric, 740-247-3008
Furn 2 br in New Haven area, LR,
Kit, 1 bath, AC. $400 dep, $450 mo
304-882-2523. Leave a name &amp;
number if not home
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1
BR at $400+2 BR at $475 Month.
446-1599.

Houses For Rent
2 mobile homes at Family Pride
Mobile Home Park. Will be available
by 9/1. Call for app. 304-674-5264
or 304-675-0061
3 &amp; 4 br houses for rent Syracuse,
no pets, 740-591-0265 or 304-6755332
2-3 bd home, rural setting. No
smoking / no pets
HUD not accepted $500 a month
$500 deposit
740-645-2523
Trailer for rent. 2br, 2 bath, $450.00
month plus deposit 740-379-2842
4 Bedroom , 3 full bath, brick ranch
2 miles west of Holzer off Jackson
Pike , Full basement &amp; Sun room. 2
Car Garage. Washer &amp; Dryer &amp; Partially furnished. Rent to buy option.
Rent $950 + Deposit NO Pets Call
740-446-1299.

Lease
Downtown Office Space for rent
423 1/2 Sec. Ave Gallipolis Ohio
740-446-4383

2
BR
Mobile
Home
with
Air,Water,Sewer,Trash Paid, NO
PETS, located @ Johnson's Mobile
Home Park Ph. 446-3160
Small 2 br mobile home in Racine,
$225 per mo. $225 dep., years
lease, no pets, no calls after 9pm,
740-992-5097
3BR 2BA $575 mon+dep+utl.
1722B Chatham Ave 740-645-1646

Sales
1995 2BR 14x70 Mobile (Clayton)
$7500 or Best Offer must be moved
709-1657 or 446-1271.
WOW! Gov't program now available
on manufactured homes. Call while
funds last! 740-446-3570

6000

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Truck Driver Position-Log Hauler.
CDL's required Ph:740-352-0960

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

Fenton

Count on it.

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

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

100 E. Main Street, Pomeroy Ohio
740.992.7696

Medical
Female Care Giver needed- Experience and references required Ph:
645-6513
RN's needed at construction site in
Cheshire, Ohio for basic first-aid
and testing services. On-site training provided. Must have current RN
License/CPR certification. Please
call 888-269-6344 or fax resume to
740-266-6671.
RN's needed at construction site in
Cheshire OH for basic first aid and
testing services. On site training
provided. Must have current RN license/CPR certification. Please call
888-269-6344 or fax resume to
740-266-6671

Technical Trades
SERVICE TECH: Local business
seeking H.V.A.C Tech with a strong
back ground in Refrigeration. Job
description Repairing. Restaurant
equipment. mini marts and Deli's
experienced person need only
apply.
Send resume to: Service Tech P.O.
Box 24 Gallipolis,Ohio 45631

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Stanley Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

C&amp;M

Tack

and

Supply

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

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

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

Cell

Marcum Construction
and General Contracting

Sharpening Service

• Jointer &amp; Planer Knives
• Knives &amp; Scissors
• Router Bits
• Shaper Cutters

740-541-4119
CR 18 &amp; SR 33 North of Pomeroy, OH
Located Next To Quality Window Systems
altomm@hotmail.com

740-591-8044
Please leave message

AL'S SAW SHOP
• Chain Saws
• Hand Saws
• Carbide Circular Saw Blades
• Wood Chisels

Baum Lumber

POWER EQUIPMENT SALES &amp; SERVICE

740-985-3302

Hartwell House

Help Wanted - General
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

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

60231631

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

• Commercial &amp; Residential • General Remodeling

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

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

Dettwiller True Value Lumber

740-992-5500
634 E. Main • Pomeroy, OH

60231173

Apartments/
Townhouses

�Wednesday, August 10, 2011

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

Wednesday, August 10
Golf
Trimble at Eastern, 4:30 p.m.
Belpre at Southern, TBA
River Valley at Point Pleasant, 2
p.m.
Thursday, August 11
Golf
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth
Invitational, 9 a.m.
Eastern, Southern at Waterford
Tournament, 8 a.m.
Friday, August 12
Golf
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth
(SEOAL), 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Point Pleasant (Pine
Hills), 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, August 13
Soccer
Point Pleasant (boys) at Huntington
St. Joe, 5:30 p.m.

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 Saturday
August 13. The cost is
$35 per child or $45 per
family. For more information, call Dave at
(740) 590-0438, or Tanya
at (740) 992-5481.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A10

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rebels pick up first TVC
golf victory at Trimble
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER, Ohio —
In there first ever TVC
Hocking golf match the
South Gallia Rebels
picked up there first
TVC golf victory.
The Rebels inched out
a seven stroke victory
over Trimble on the
Tomcats home course
of Forest Hills.
South Gallia had only
four golfers compete on
Monday, meaning all
four scores counted,
while Trimble had six
players compete.
South Gallia sophomore Gus Slone took
medalist honors with a
five over par 39.
Trimble’s Colin Smith
was runner-up with a 43

for nine holes.
Following
Slone’s
round of 39 for the
Rebels were Ethan
Swain with a 44, Seth
Jarrell with a 45 and
David Michael with a
49. Both Swain and
Jarrell are sophomores,
while Michael in a
senior.
For the Tomcats, Kyle
Russell shot a 46, Nick
Smith aa 47 and
Michael Everett a 48 to
round out the scoring.
Also
playing
for
Trimble were Christian
Sikorski (54) and Jeff
Andrews (55).
South Gallia will host
Belpre at 4:30 p.m. on
Monday at Cliffside
Golf
Course
in
Gallipolis, Ohio.

Wahama
beats Miller,
Buffalo
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Sarah Hawley/file photo

South Gallia’s Gus Slone tees off at Hidden Valley
Golf Course in Mason County, W.Va. Slone took
medalist honors at Monday’s season opener.

Meigs Athletic
Meeting
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— Meigs High School
and Middle School will
be holding their mandatory OHSAA Athletic preseason fall meeting at 2
p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 14.
The meeting will take
place in the high school
gym. This meeting is for
parents and athletes in
regards to eligibility, athletic policies, code of
conduct, nutrition, sports
medicine, and necessary
paperwork for each parent to complete for their
child to participate in a
fall sport. Mandatory
OHSAA videos will be
shown and athletic paperwork for each athlete to
participate must be completed at this meeting.
For questions call MHS
at 992-2158 or MMS at
992-3058.

Wahama Hall of
Fame meeting
MASON, W.Va. — The
Wahama high School
Athletic Hall of Fame
Board of Trustees will be
conducting a meeting at 6
p.m. on Tuesday, August
16 at the high school. The
purpose of this meeting is
to finalize plans for the
2011 Hall of Fame induction ceremonies scheduled for September 23rd
and 24th. All Board of
Trustee members are
urged to attend along
with anyone wishing to
become involved in the
WHS Athletic Hall of
Fame selection process.

GAHS-MHS
Scrimmage
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be hosting a
football
scrimmage
against Meigs High
School on Friday, Aug.
19, at Memorial Field.
The admission price is $5
per person and a portion
of the proceeds will go to
the Holzer Cancer Center.
This game will serve as
preparation for the regular season, generate
excitement for the football season, and help a
worthy cause in our community. This preseason
event kicks off at 7:30
p.m.

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

Sports Staff

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

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

Submitted photo

The Gallia Academy golf team took first place in the season opening Ironton Invitational on Monday. Team
members are pictured here with their awards.

Blue Devil golfers win Ironton Invite
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

IRONTON, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy golf
team started its 2011 season on a solid note
Monday afternoon after
capturing first place at the
nine-school
Ironton
Invitational held at the
Ironton Country Club in
Lawrence County.
The Blue Devils carded
a winning team score of
302, finishing nine shots
ahead of runner-up
Chesapeake (311) and the
rest of the field. West
Union (325), Coal Grove
(341) and Jackson (354)
rounded out the top-five
team spots, followed by
Portsmouth Clay (369),
Portsmouth (395) and
South Point (444).
Host Ironton did not
have a team score, as the
Fighting Tigers have only
one golfer — Josh Zornes
— who finished in the
top-10 individually with a
round of 77.
“The guys all played
within themselves and
played smart,” said

GAHS coach Corey Luce.
“We stuck to our gameplan and accomplished
one of our goals for this
season. I couldn’t be more
proud of these guys today.
It’s a great way to get our
season started.”
The Blue Devils were
led by senior Nick
Saunders, who earned
medalist honors at the
event with a 2-under par
effort of 68. Saunders’
low round consisted of a
32 and 36, which proved
to be three shots better
than the rest of the competition.
It was also the first varsity match for Saunders
— a two-time AllSEOAL performer — in
almost two years after
missing all of last season.
GAHS junior Rob
Canady
and
Nick
Duffield of Chesapeake
were co-runners-up after
posting matching rounds
of 71, followed by Seth
Waggoner and Drew
Oxley with matching 74s
for the Panthers.
Tanner Huntley of West
Union was sixth overall

with a 75, followed by the
Coal Grove duo of Conor
Markins
and
Brent
Morgan with matching
77s — joining Zornes in a
three-way tie for seventh.
GAHS senior Boeing
Smith also finished in a
three-way tie for the 10th
spot after carding a round
of 80.
Senior Corey Arthur
rounded out the winning
team tally with an 83,
while classmate Derrick
Gilmore also fired a 90
for the Blue Devils to finish up the winning effort.
2011 IRONTON
INVITATIONAL RESULTS
1. Gallia Academy
(302): Nick Saunders 68,
Rob Canady 71, Boeing
Smith 80, Corey Arthur
83, Derrick Gilmore 90.
2. Chesapeake (311):
Nick Duffield 71, Seth
Waggoner 74, Drew
Oxley 74, Eric Sias 92,
Andrew Saunders 92.
3. West Union (325):
Tanner Huntley 75, Trey
Gustin 80, Bobby Welch

85, Adam Politt 85,
Austin Kingsolver 100.
4. Coal Grove (341):
Brent Morgan 77, Conor
Markins
77,
Coty
Davidson 86, Brandon
Adkins 101, Jacob Myers
105.
5. Jackson (354): Evan
Massie 84, Alec Ray 87,
Tyler Williams 87, Cole
Massie 96, Katie Dobbins
102.
6. Portsmouth Clay
(369): Kole Murphy 80,
Jacob Crosier 93, Zach
Jackson
94,
Taylor
Swayne 102, Isaac Moore
103.
7. Portsmouth (395):
Drew Miller 90, Levi
Porter 94, Joey Amburgey
103, Jacob Call 108.
8. South Point (444):
Callie Taylor 100, Jordan
Lynd
109,
Austin
Wellman 114, Caleb
Jones 121, Barb Collins
145.
- Ironton: Josh Zornes
77.
Medalist:
Saunders,
Academy (68).

Nick
Gallia

MASON, W.Va. —
The Wahama High
School Varsity Golf
Team won
a tri-match
Monday
afternoon
at
the
Riverside
G o l f
Course in
Mason,
W
V
against
Back
their counterparts from Miller
Ohio High School and
Buffalo, WV High
School. The Miller and
Wahama contest was the
opening TVC match for
both
schools.
The
Wahama-Buffalo match
was an independent
match for both schools
as was the MillerBuffalo contest. The
format for the day was
play 6, count 4.
Wahama was the winner in both of their
matches posting a score
of 181 while Miller
came in with a total of
204 while Buffalo’s final
tally was a 225 on the
very warm and muggy
day. it should be noted
that Buffalo was missing
2 regular starters who
were on vacation with
their parents.
Wahama’s total score
was achieved with consistent scoring. A total of
only 6 strokes separated
the lowest score from
the highest. Kevin
Back’s score of 44 led
the White Falcons and
gave him medalist honors for the day. Morgan
Nottingham was just a
stroke behind with a 45
while Samuel Gordon
and Michael MacKnight
matched sores of 45 to
complete the scores that
counted for the winners.
Dakota Sisk’s total of 47
and Ben Foreman’s 50
were not included in the
final count.
Miller, playing a very
young and inexperienced team, was led by
Chris Gamble’s 45 followed by Dakota McGill
who posted a 52. Shaun
Hayes shot 53 while
Justin Hinkle followed
with a 54 to complete
the day’s total for Miller.
Brandon Davis and
Andy
Jeffers
also
played, but their scores
did not count in the final
tally.
Without their leading
scorers, the best score
for Buffalo was a pair of
50’s shot by Blaik
Caplinger and Drew
Patton. Tyler Sowards
added a 59 while Katie
Allen completed the
scoring for Buffalo with
a
66.
Anthony
Blankenship’s score was
not included in the final
count.

Browns’ Joe Haden making name for himself
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Bored and killing time during the NFL lockout,
Browns cornerback Joe
Haden was wandering
around a local shopping
mall when he decided to
see if some friends wanted
to meet for lunch.
So, he logged into his
Twitter account and Haden
told his followers — any
of the 50,000 who could
make it — to meet him at a
sushi restaurant.
“We took over the whole
place,”
Haden
said
Monday.
And, he picked up the
tab.
“Pretty hefty,” Haden
said without divulging the
bill. “I just wanted to give
back to the fans.”
Not bad for a guy who
prefers taking things away.
Haden, who intercepted
a team-high six passes as a
rookie for Cleveland last
year, has much bigger
plans for his second NFL
season. The former firstround pick whose Florida
teammates
nicknamed

“Rock Star” because of his
flamboyance and outgoing
personality, has his sights
on becoming one of the
league’s elite cornerbacks
— maybe even the best
one.
“I just want to lock down
one side of the field,” he
said while cooling down
under a tent following
another hazy-and-humid
practice. “That’s what I
came into the league trying
to do. My goal is just to be
one of the best corners in
the league.”
He’s well on his way,
and as Haden works to
improve, he’s building a
loyal legion of Browns
fans, who have quickly
embraced him as one of
their favorites.
Haden has become a
man of the people.
“Who, Mr. Cleveland?”
Browns tight end Evan
Moore joked when asked
about Haden. “Whenever I
opened any Cleveland
website this winter, he was
on the front of it.”
Sure enough, Haden
seemed to be all over town

during the offseason. An
avid basketball fan, Haden,
who set high school passing records as a quarterback and played guard on a
state title-winning hoop
team in Maryland, attended several Cavaliers games
this winter. But Haden didn’t just go to the NBA
games, he went dressed
from head to sneaker in the
Cavaliers’ wine-and-gold
uniforms.
For one game, he
dressed like Cavs guard
Baron Davis, rounding out
his look with Davis’ trademark headband and high
socks. For another game,
he mimicked Cavs forward
Anderson Varejao, even
wearing a wig to replicate
the Brazilian players’
frizzy locks. This spring,
Haden went to a Cleveland
Indians home game
dressed like relief pitcher
Tony Sipp and sat in the
bleachers, where he posed
for photos with fans.
It’s Haden’s way of
showing his gratitude. He
loves Cleveland, and
Cleveland loves him back.

“They just love how I’m
showing love for the city,”
Haden said of the fan reaction. “I could be in the
house, just hanging out
with my friends, but just
going out there and showing them that I really
appreciated them, that
shows a lot.”
It’s nothing new for
Haden.
“Nobody tells him to do
any of it,” said close friend
and business associate
Sean Cabble, who met
Haden at Florida. “Joe
does it all on his own. He
just loves people. He’d
rather be around 10,000
people than be by himself.
At school, he was the first
one on the dance floor and
the last one off. He doesn’t
stay still either. He’s been
that way his whole life.”
Haden began last season
as the club’s nickel back,
but it wasn’t long before he
was starting and making an
impact all over the field.
The 22-year-old Haden,
who skipped his senior
season in Gainesville to
turn pro, made his first

pick in Week 6 at
Pittsburgh, returning it 62
yards to set up a field goal.
He became the first
Browns rookie since 1959
to record an interception in
three straight games, and
Haden topped that a week
later, becoming the first
Cleveland player since
1968 to get an interception
in four consecutive games.
Haden’s
confidence
grew by the week, and
now that he’s got a season
under his belt, there’s no
telling what he can do.
“With his ball skills and
cover skills, and just a lot
of natural ability to play
the ball in the air, he can
play against the top
receivers in the league,”
Moore said. “If he just
keeps his mind right, the
sky is the limit for Joe.”
It hasn’t taken first-year
Browns
coach
Pat
Shurmur long to be
impressed by Haden. In
only the second week of
training camp, Haden has
already shown he’s a
unique talent.

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