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New gas line
being laid, A6

4-H'ers plant
a tree,A3

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

O BITUARIES
Page AS

• Wilma Nadine Hill
• Eugene R. Smith

AEP plans
power outage
. COOLVILLE - AEP
Ohio will implement a
three-hour power outage
·ts Coolville substation
m 7 to I 0 a m. on
•
Saturday. May 8.
The planned power
outage will affect 3 ,360
customers in an area
generally \\ ithin the borders of State Rome 144
on
the
north,
Hockingpo11 on the east,
one-half mile south of
• Texas Road near Chester
on the south, and
Bethany Ridge Road to
the west. Affected commumtJes
include
Coolville, Hockingport,
Torch, and Tuppers
Plains.
The outage is required
to enable the company
· to safely make repairs to
the substation. If there
is
ram
or
other
inclement weather, the
outage will take place at
the same time on
Sunday, May 9.
Customers who have
stions or concerns
ut the outage may call
P Ohio's 24-hour
Customer
Solutions
Center toll-free at 1-800' 277-2177.

Church fund
raiser
MIDDLEPORT - A
rummage and bake sale,
along with fabrics and
collectables will be
included in a fund raiser
being held Friday and
Saturday by the Heath
United
Methodist
Church, 339 S. Third
Ave., 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Friday and Saturday. The
bake sale will only be
held on Friday, it was
reported.

•

EATHER

D.,

~

Contract with Ohio Public Defender's office up
B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners met with representatives with the Ohio Public
Defender's office Wednesday to
discuss changes to the county's
upcoming contract with the
agency which provides legal,
indigent defense services for
residents of Meigs County.
First of all, the bottom line is
the annual cost of the contract is
$60.296, which is $728 more
than last year's contract.
John Alge and Herman Carson
of the OPD 's office, told Meigs
County Commissioners Mike
Bartrum, Tom Anderson and
Mick Davenport, budget cuts

and the increase in caseloads
have caused more changes to the
proposed contract. Local attorney Chris Tenoglia is not renewing his contract with the OPD's
office and Athens attorneys
David Baer and Richard Hedges
have been hired. Carson said the
contract was offered to a local
Meigs County attorney but the
growing caseload caused that
attorney to pass.
Alge said caseloads c;:ontinue
to outpace the capacity of the
present staff and contract attorneys, especially with regard to
felony indictments. Carson said
the previous contract had no
limit and was open-ended in
terms of how many clients the
office can service. The new con-

tract would limit this caseload to
130 cases for Baer and 35 for
Hedges and the Athens office of
OPD is accepting no more than
three felony cases. The contract
also limits the kinds of felonies
the Athens Office attorneys will
accept. The acceptable cases
include more serious offenses
such as aggravated murder without death penalty specifications
as indicted, murder. and first and
second degree felonies .
In all, this new contract provides a total of 168 felony
cases,
including
serious
felonies. If the county exceeds
this number, the court may use
the appointed counsel system
provided under the Ohio
Revised Code to provide and

pay for attorneys, and for the
county to be reimbursed by the
state for a portion of the costs.
Also, due to budget cuts and
declining state revenue, the
county will only be reimbursed
32 percent of its costs expended
during felony cases involving
the OPD 's office as opposed ro
last year's rate of 35 percent.
Commissioners referred tM
contract to Meigs CountY.
Prosecuting Attorney Colleen S .
Williams for review.

In other business:
Commissioners
tabled
approving the bid of the Build
It Group for $16,894 to replace
the Meigs County Museum's

Please see Contrad, AS

Judge discusseS estate planning Primary
election
by the
numbers·
B Y C HARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The
importance of estate
planning and what it
involves in the way of
documents
was
the
emphasis of a retirement
seminar held last week at
the Meigs Senior Center.
The theme ''Taking
Care of Business" was
discussed by Meigs
County Judge Scott
Powell who gave a presentation on the importance of estate planning.
He provided information
on wills, living wills,
financial power of attorney and durable health
care power of attorney,
- something everyone
and especially seniors
need to know about.
He also spoke on the
probate process and steps
individuals and families
can take to make handling an estate easier.
Also speaking at the
seminar
was
Steve
Musser of Downing\
Childs, Musser Insurance
Agency. His emphasis
was on annuities and
other investment instruments which can contribute to financial security after retirement.
Cathy Ash and Darlene
VanDine of the Area
Agency on Aging along
with Meigs Deputy Scott
Tru-ssell demonstrated
Project Lifesaver.
They talked about the
importance of using the
free service f9r people
who tend to wander and
may become lost. They

Low county,
state-wide turnout
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAIL'/sENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The
Ohio Secretary of State's
office
reported
VVednesday that only
22.3 percent of registered
voters in Ohio cast ballots during Tuesday's primary election which
means voter turnout in
Meigs County was below
the state average.
According
to
the
Meigs County Board of
Elections, only 18.84
percent of registered
voters cast ballots in the
pnmary. This week's
voter turnout paled in
comparison to voter
turnout in the March
2008 primary which saw
50.67 percent of voters
casting
ballots.
Of
Submitted photo
course, in March 2008, a
Meigs County Judge Scott Powell talks on the importance of estate planning.
hotly contested race for
the Democratic nominee
emphasized that most Program and the Meigs Aging which sponsored for president brought
the seminar, said plans many to the polls and
people can be found Wellness Center.
within 30 minutes if they
Refreshments were are being made to offer brought Hillary Clinton
are wearing a Project provided
by
the similar educational ses- a win in Meigs County.
MCCoA Close to Home sions on a quarterly During that March 2008
Lifesaver device.
Booths were set up Catering service at the basis. As for topics of primary. Meigs County
discussion, Shaver said exceeded the state's
with displays and infor- seminar.
Beth Shaver, executive she is inviting sugges- average which was
mation on MCCoA's
Benefit Bank, Retired 'director of the Meigs tions from seniors or othPlease see Eledion, AS
Senior
Volunteer County
Council on ers on topics of interest.

New Civil War book Home National Bank makes donation
includes Meigs' role
High: 76.
Low: 51.

Local historian Keith Ashley contributes
B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX
2 St.CUOJ\S -

12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
.

mics
Editorials
Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.

•

8

POMEROY
In
1865, the Union forces
under Gen. Ulysses S,
Grant were bringing the
Civil War to a conclusion
with the fall of Petersburg
and Richmond, Va ..
The
attack
on
Petersburg, a railroad
hub for the Confederacy,
had been under siege by
Union forces. but one
fort stood in the way of
the fall of Petersburg.
That was Ft. Gregg.
One of the units in that
battle was the I I 6th
Ohio Volunteer Infantry
of the 24th Corps.
Companies A and B of
that regiment were from
Meigs County, according
to local historian and
genealogist.
Keith

Ashley. He assisted the
author in writing the
book by providing information on the Meigs
County v~terans of the
!16th Ohio and is so
credited in the book by
author John J. Fox III.
The book on the fall of
Ft. Gregg is titled "The
Confederate Alamo Bloodbath
at
Petersburg's Ft. Gregg on
April 2, 1865." It details
the assault on the fo1t and
its fall. Fifty-seven rebels
and 122 Union soldiers
died in that battle.
Fourteen Congressional
Medals of Honor were
given to Union soldiers.
The book includes
comments
made by
Ransom Griffin of Meigs
County on the battle and

Please see Book, AS

Submitted photo

The 1-lome National Bank recently donated $3,000 to six area volunteer fire
departments. Here Bill Nease, presi.dent, cente.r, displays a check for t~e money
which was distributed to representatives of the f1re departments, left to nght, front,
Harry Spencer for Bashan and Jamie Jones for Racme: center row, Jeff N e~ell for
Tuppers Plains and Josh Ridenour for Chester, and back, Shannon Smtth for
Syracuse and Russ Carson for Olive Township.

-

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Page~

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 6,

2010

DNA tests vindicate Ohio·
.man convicted of '81 rape·
BY THOMAS

J.

by Dl'{A in U.S. histot1.
The longest was a man
freed in Florida in
December after serving
~
35 .years. according to~
proJect.
Towler was arre
three weeks after tl
crime when a park
ranger who had stopped
him on a traffic violation
noticed a resemblance
with a suspect s
..
The victim and witnesses identified him from a
photo. police said.
Carrie Wood. a staff
attorney with the project,
said the identifications
were questionable.
The latest technolo~
allowed separate DN
testing of a semen samp
and other genetic material, possibly skin cell~.
she said.
"That was the test
result that we got this
week and it excluded
Mr. Towler," she said.
"Because Mr. Towler's
conviction was in 'Sl,
the technology did not
exist to do the kind of
DNA testing that we .
do now."
Attorneys with the project at the University of
Cincinnati · have been
working on the· Towler
case since 2004, and
Towler said that and h~
faith had given him hope'.
"That's how I've been
living these last year~
I've just been keepi
hope,'' Towler said as re
atives and friends crowded around him after the
court session, some
whooping, "Alleluia."
Clarence Elkins, who
was freed in 2005 in
Akron on the basis of
DNA. evidence after serv:
ing seven years in the
rape and murder of his
mother-in-law and the
rape of a 6-year-old relative, watched from a rear
courtroom seat.
1
. "Today is a great ~
a .
Once again, justice ·
served a little late,
better late than never,
said. ''Almost 30 years ts
a very long time. One
day is too long."
Elkins, 47, won .a
$1.075 million settlement
from the state for wrong:
ful conviction and said he
would recommend that
Towler get counseling
and take his new freedom
day by day.
"It's like being reboil)
again, a whole new life,"
Elkins said.
Prosecutor Bill Mason
said his staff would test
crime-scene evidence to
try to identify the attacker.

SHEERAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Submitted photo

Thelma Filson, bottom center, was recently named the Pleasant Valley Hospital Volunteer of the Year 2009.
Filson, a member of the PVH Auxiliary since 1987, was selected by her peers for her dedication and outstanding service to the not-for-profit facility. Shown with Filson are her co-workers and friends, back row left to
right, Jean Roush, Lillian Chapman , Blanche Siders and Margaret Greenlee. For more information about vol'unteering at Pleasant Valley Hospital please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1100.

Filson named PVH
Volunteer of the Year
PO£NT PLEASANT,
W.Va.
For years
Thelma Filson worked in
the former Marietta Plant
cafeteria serving food to
hundreds of laborers.
Once the plant closed,
she took a position in
Dietary
Services
at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
where she was a ''jack of
all trades."
After 18 years of dedicated service. she retired
in 1987 a~ the head cook.
Her attention to exemplary customer service
paid off when Filson was
recently named Pleasant
Valley
.
Hospital
Volunteer of the Year.
"I
was absolutely
shocked when my name
v..as
announced."
explained Filson. ''I just
love working with my
group at the Pleasant
Valley
Nursing
&amp;
Rehabilitation
Center
and wasn't expecting
such an honor." she
humbly continued.

Filson is no stranger to
hard work. Born in 1926
in Hartford. WV, she was
the daughter of Burley
and Matilda Board.
Burley was a coalminer
and Matilda was a homemaker who raised eight
children.
'·Living through the
Great Depression made
me appreciate the little
things in life." explained
Filson. "I saw the tough
times people were going
through and just wanted
to do anything to help. I
still believe in giving
back to the community.''
Filson has been an
active member of the
PVH Auxiliary since her
retirefnent. Lon~-time
volunteer and triend.
Jean Roush, encouraged
Filson to become a member of the "pink ladies,''
as they were affectionately called.
''Thelma deserved this
recognition.''
praised
Roush. "She is depend-

able, truthful. honest and
a Christian."
Filson has been volunteering at the Pleasant
Valley
Nursing
&amp;
Rehabilitation Center for
over 20 years. Initially,
she started out sewing lap
robes for the residents.
These handmade covers
kept the patients warm
and offered them a little
bit of homespun comfort.
Now. Filson. and a regular crew that consists of
Roush. Lillian Chapman,
Blanche Siders and
Margaret Greenlee. complete a multitude of tasks
including creating tray
favors, holding special
events for the residents
and assisting staff.
"I ·truly enjoy volunteering and have built
some lasting relationships with other members
of the Auxiliarv," said
Filson. "The PVNRC has
been wonderful, as well.
Not only is the staff professional and caring. but I

also have gotten to know
many of the residents."
During her spare time,
Filson enjoys going to
church and working in
her garden. She and her
late husband. William.
who was the owner of the
Marietta Plant cafeteria
when the couple met,
have two grown children,
Gary Filson (Gallipolis,
OH) and Debora Carey
(Athens,
OH).
two
grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
"Volunteering is one of
the best decisions I have
ever made," said Filson.
"I highly encourage
everyone to volunteer in
some way or another. It is
truly rewarding.''
"We are so proud of
Thelma and her many
accomplishments,"
praised Koneda Devrick,
President of the PVH
Auxiliary. "She has
always given unselfishly
of her time. She is welldeserving of this honor."

City National donates $1 ,000
to Community Foundation

CLEVELAND - An
Ohio man tasted freedom
for the first time in nearly
30
years
on
Wednesday after a judge
vacated his conviction
because DNA evidence
showed he did not rape
an 11-year-old girl.
"It finally happened,
I've been waiting."
Raymond Towler, 52,
said as he hugged sobbing family members in
the courtroom.
He walked from the
courthouse, arms around
his family members,
amid the smell of freshly
cut grass, blooming trees
and a brisk wind off Lake
Erie. He was headed to
an "everything on it"
pizza party.
Asked how he would
adjust, Towler responded: "Just take a deep
breath and just enjoy life
right now."
Towler had been serving a life sentence for the
rape of a girl in a
Cleveland park in 1981.
Prosecutors received the
test results Monday and
immediately asked the
court to free him.
Towler deflected a
question about demanding &amp;tn apology and said
he understood justice can
take time.
"I think it was just a
process, you know,· the
DNA," he said. "It just
took a couple of years to
get to it. We finally got to
it and the job was done."
In a brief, emotionally
charged
session,
Cuyahoga
County
Common · Pleas Court
Judge Eileen Gallagher
recapped the case. discussed
the
recently
processed DNA evidence
and threw out his conviction. She also told him
that he can sue over his
ordeal.
Towler smiled lightly,
nodded and kept his
intertwined fingers on
his lap.
"You're free,'' the
judge said, leaving the
bench to shake Towler's
hand at the defense table.
The judge choked back
tears as she offered
Towler a traditional Irish
blessing.
The Ohio Innocence
Project, an .organization
that uses DNA evidence
to clear people wrongfully convicted of crimes,
said Towler was among
the longest incarcerated
people to be exonerated

Donation honors community service award winner
CHARLESTON.
W.Va. - City National
Bank. headqua1tered in
Charleston, announced
today that regional manager Melissa Scarberry is
the bank's ''City Cares''
community
service
award winner for the
Ohio VaJley region.
Scarberry was nominated by her peers for her
involvement in various
community service activities,
including
the
Mason
County
Community Foundation.
As a City Cares winner,
she requested that City
National's $1.000 donatiOn in her name be made
to the Mason Count}
Community Foundation
Arts and Education Fund.
. "Missi
is actively
involved in various community service activities
that promote local area
revital iLation and charitable
giving,''
said
;Madison ·Sayre, Vice
·President,
Business
'Development, and a coworker of Scarberry's."
''There are many great
community volunteers at
City, and we ate pleased
to honor some of our
stars through the new
City Cares community
·service awards,'' said
'charles
"Skip''
Hageboeck.
president
and CEO. ··As a compa

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-

Submitted photo

Melissa Scarberry was this year's City National Bank's community service award
winner. A $1 ,000 donation was made in her name to the Mason ·county
Community Foundation Arts and Education Fund. With her here are Executive
Vice President Craig Stilwell, left, and Senior Vice President Tim Quinlan.

•

ny, City is cpmmitted to Charleston. Cit)' National
the communities where wi 11 donate $1.000 in
we work and live. Our honor of each of the nine
employees live thia com· ~i~ ~a reaw~WU w.iftmitmcnt every day . by ne~. "phi'S' $2,500 m
donating their time and honor of the Cit) Cares
expertise. Missi exempli- "volunteer of the year"
award winner.
fies this giving spirit."
City National Bank
Scarberry and eight
diversified
other City Cares winners provides
were recogni.t:ed at the financial products and
bank's annual meeting services to consumers
held on April 28.2010 in and local businesses.

Through its 67 banking
offices in West Virginia,
Eastern
and

Sou-.
pro\olaes
and investment
services to its customers.
City National Bank also
operates City Insurance
Professionals. an insurance agency offering a
full range of insurance
products and services.

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�""-"-------------~-~~-.----~~------------ --

The Daily

--- ·-- --

PageA3

Sentin~l

Thursday, May 6,

2010

'

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Dad is strict and aunt
wants to help the kids

4-H'ers plant a tree

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
blem is my brother-in. He's always been a
good provider for my sister and her two kids, bllt
Tecently he lost his job,
and has taken on the task
~f being the house-husband. My sister has gone
to work, and in her place is
this drill-sergeant father!
He makes the kids, who
il!e girls. 7 and 9. do all
sorts of household chores - - - - - - - - and homework. There
never is time left for any fun. Should I say something
helpful to him? I don't want my sister to have to
worry. - S.G.
Dear S.G.: It must be very frightening for your
brother-in-law to go from being the main wage earner
in the family to being a house-husband, if that wasn't
his idea. Although it can be very rewarding to stay
home and take care of children - whether mother or
father - you have to assume that a large chunk of his
ego was tied up in providing for his family. It sounds
to me as though he is very concerned about his changing image, and wants to make sure his wife and daughters still respect and look up to him. Unfmtunately, the
way he has gone about it - becoming a stern taskmas}er, which may have worked just fine for him at his job
isn't an appropriate way to approach his daughters
how them he's still a big man.
rom where you sit, there's probably little you can
do other than take whatever time you may have to
pick up the slack with the girls. I'm sure they'd enjoy
spending time with their aunt, especially if it doesn't
.involve a strict work regimen! When you're with
.them. you can explain that their dad may not know
_what kinds of thmgs they enjoy doing when their
chores are finished - and see if you can help them
suggest some fun father-daughter activities. The girls
probably are having a bit of a hard time adjusting to
their mom being out of the house, too, so it would be
great if you could step in to help make these temporary transitions a bit easier for all.

•

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: My husband and I have been
married for two years, and we are the parents of an
.adorable baby girl, who is 7 months old. She is great,
put I am beginning to worry about the different parenting styles my husband and I have. He likes to measure and time everything, and set up lots of guidelines
.and rules, and I just want her to be able to explore her
world as a free little person. We never seem to agree
on anything having to do with her. How do we raise
this child?- NJ.
Dear NJ.: You two must have been a good example
of the adage that "opposites attract." You may not have
known how opposite you were in temperament, since
ng a child wasn't something either of you had any
rience with. You may not even have known what
parenting style was going to be until you had the
baby and started finding out how you felt about different aspects of life as a mother and father. It's in par.enthood that we sometimes dredge up all the forgotten
~xperiences of our own childhood, and vow either
never to repeat them or to do everything in our power
to make sure our kids have the same kind of upbringing we had. Or something in the middle.
So, now is a great time for you to sit down. with your
husband (while the baby is asleep) and have a serious
chat about what some of the major difficulties have
.been and how you can avoid them in the future by trying to chart a clearer course for your daughter as she
grows. Knowing what to expect of her at each stage will
be helpful, because then you can anticipate what is com1ng and how you want to approach it. This gives you an
opportunity to discuss where you're both coming from,
explore some alternatives and try to come to some reasonable compromises for the sake of your family. It's
11ever too soon to start working on a united front.

.e

. (c) 2010 by King Features Syndicate

Harrisonville alutnni
re·u nion planned
.
ARRISONVILLE - The 81 st annual dinner of
the Harrisionville Alumni Association will be held
May 29 at the High School Alumni Center located on
the Graham farm at 36008 St Rt 143, one-half mile
east of Harrisonville.
A business meeting and entertainment will follow
the dinner. The classes to be honored are 1920 (9
seniors), 1930 (5 seniors), 1940 (J 5 seniors), I 950 (9
seniors) and 1960 (16 seniors).
· Reservations are to be made with to Joy Wiseman
Clark at P.O. Box 706, Syracuse, OH 45779 (740992:3690) or to Harold D. Graham at 36008 State Route
· 143, Pomeroy. OH 45769 (740-7423033) no later than
May 20. The dinner is $12 for adults. For children
:under 12 the charge is $8. Annual dues are $2 in addition to the dinner price. Alumni unable to attend are
asked to send in their dues. Conributions are also being
accepted for the scholarship fund. All checks are to be
made payable to the High School Alumni Association.
This year's alumni officers are Gary L. Gibson,
president with Harold D. Graham, assistant; Mary
Wyant Haning, vice president; Dorothy Arnold
.Underwood, secretary with Martha Arnold
'Cunningham, assistant; and Joy Wiseman Clark, treasurer, with Larry Clark, assistant.

. ea student wins state contest
: POMEROY - Sara N. Richardson, daughter of
Robert and Becky Richardson of Albany, won the
state oration contest sponsored by the State Society,
Sons of the American Revolution.
. The state oration contest was held at the Comfort
Inn in Chillicothe. Sara was one of four contestants.
.Her topic was Nancy Morgan Hart, a patriot who
:unleashed her fury on the British Tories during the
American Revolution.
She will now travel to Cleveland, in late June for
the national contest which will be held at the national
meeting of the Sons of the American Revolution,
according to James Lochary of the local Ewings
Chapter SAR.

Submitted photo

In observance of Earth Day the Pioneeers 4-H Club planted a dogwood tree at the Chester Courthouse, built
in the 1820s and the oldest standing courthouse in the state of Ohio. It was a part of reaching out into the community which is an important segment of club work. The members attending dug the hole and planted the tree
and then enjoyed a picnic afterwards. The tree was donated by Hupps Landscaping.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Friday, May 7
TUPPERS PLAINS Special meeting of the
Tuppers Plains Sewer
District Board, 8:30 a.m.
to elect officers, pay bills
and conduct other essential business.
RACINE
Meigs
County Pomona Grange,
7:30 p.m., at the Grange
Hall.
Tuesday, May 11
POMEROY- Bedford
Township Trustees, 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY
Township
Salisbury
Trustees, 6:30 p.m.,
home of Manning Roush.

Evangelist Pastor Todd
Hoskins from Vandalia
Christian Center. Special
singing and dramas each
evening. Public welcome.

Youth events
Monday, May 1 0
CHAUNCEY - Area
14 Youth Council meeting
9 a.m. at the Athens
CDJFS in Chauncey.
Sunday, May 16
POMEROY - Recital

by the piano students of
June VanVranken, 2 p.m.
at the New Beginnings
United Methodist Church
in Pomeroy. Twenty-five
students will participate
in the recital. A reception
will be held.

Birthdays
Monday, May 17
REEDSVILLE ~ Melvin
C. Reed will celebrate his
80th birthday on May 17.

Cards may be sent to him
at 68111 S.R. 124,
Reedsville, Ohio 43772 .
POMEROY ~ Charles
Blakeslee,
longtime
Meigs County Extension
Agent, now residing in
Rockport, Ind. with his
daughter, will celebrate
his 1OOth birthday on
May 17. Cards may be
sent to h1m c/o Jennifer
Butcher,
3400
W.
Ridgewood
Drive,
Rockport, Ind. 47635.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, May 6
CHESTER - Chester
Shade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS The Tuppers Plains VFW
Ladies Auxiliary, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the hall.
Monday, May 1 0
POMEROY
Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club, regular meeting,
7:30 p.m.,
Mulberry
Community Center.
Tuesday, May 11
POMEROY - Meigs
County Chamber of
Commerce,
businessminded luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy Library, Bun's
Party Barn catering,
Ohio
speaker
from
Department
of
Transportation,
RSVP
992-5005.
Thursday, May 13
CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m.
at
the
hall.
Refreshments following
meeting.

Church events
Saturday, May 8
SYRACUSE - A benefit sing for D. J.
McClellan will be held at
7 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community
Church.
Singers will be "Two for
Jesus:, Sandra Wise,
Truly Saved, Joe and
Naomi Gwinn.
Monday, May 10
MIDDLEPORT
Revival at the Old Bethel
Free Will Baptist Church,
Route 7 and Story's Run
Road, May 10-14. 7 p.m.
nightly, Norman Taylor
evangelist. Special singing.
Ralph Butcher, pastor.
GALLIPOLIS - New
Life Church of God, 576
SA 7, Gallipolis, revival,
May 10 and 11, 7 p.m.,

National
Nurse's Week
May 6 -12th
Being a nurse is more than a profession.
It is a way of life. It is a decision in which
you have dedicated yourself to provide
care to anyone who may .need it.
It is because of this that we salute all
nurses in every walk of life.
Thank you for all you d o

-

{)j'f A(r /l(r I' (!{{I' ' llr&amp;~f}' Jl({ J~Jf-J
100 Jacl:son Pike - Gallipolis, OH - 1.740.446.5(XX) - www.holzer.org

�,.,·--·-------~- --- -

- ~

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

~hursday,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street · Pomeroy, Ohio ·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Director

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'The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

. 'f()11AY IN HISTORY
. Today is Thursday, May 6, the 126th day of 2010.
There are 239 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History·
• On May 6, 1910, Britain's Edwardian era came to
an end upon the death of King Edward VII; he was
' succeeded by George V.
. On this date:
In 1859, Georgia miner John H. Gregory discov.ered a lode of gold in Colorado.
• In 1861, Arkansas seceded from the Union.
In '1889, the Paris Exposition formally opened,
featunng the just-completed Eiffel Tower.
• In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed
an executive order creating the Works Progress
Admmistration.
· In 1937, the hydrogen-filled German airship
Hindenburg burned and crashed in Lakehurst, N.J.,
killing 35 of the 97 people on board and a Navy
crewman on the ground.
. . In 1942, during World War II some 15,000
. Amencans and Filipinos on Corregidor surrendered to the Japanese.
In 1954, medical sttJdent Roger Bannister broke
the four-minute mile during a track meet in Oxford,
England, in three minutes, 59.4 seconds..
In 1960, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed
the Civil Rights Act of 1960. Britain's Princess
' Margaret married Antony Armstrong-Jones, a commoner, at Westminster Abbey. (They divorced in
'1978.)
In 1994, Bntain's Queen Elizabeth II and Fn'!nch
,President Francois Mitterrand (frahn-SWAH' meeteh-RAHN') formally opened the Channel Tunnel
between their countries.
In 2002. right-wing Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn
was shot and killed in Hilversum, Netherlands.
(Volkert van der Graaf was later convicted of killing
Fortuyn and was sentenced to 18 years in prison.)
• Ten years ago: Jack Mazzan, who'd spent 20
years on death row for the murder of a judge's son,
was released on bail. three months after the
Nevada Supreme Court reversed his conviction.
(Before he could be tried aga1n, Mazzan pleaded
.guilty to killing Richard Minor Jr. and received a life
·sentence; Mazz~n has since sought parole, unsuc·cessfully.) Fusaichi Pegasus became the first
favorite to win the Kentucky Derby since
'Spectacular Bid in 1979.
Five years ago· President George W. Bush
arrived in Riga. Latv1a, as he opened a fast-paced,
four-country journ_ey to mark the 60th anniversary
.of the defeat of Nazi Germany. British Prime
·Minister Tony Blair unveiled his Cabinet, changing
~eadersn p m defense and health but keeping most•,ly fam1har faces after a third term victory dampened
• by a reduced majority in Parliament.
Thought for Today: "The people no longer
belteve In principles, but will probably periodi·
cal/y believe in saviours." - Jacob Christoph
Burckhardt, Swiss historian (1818·1897).

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Letters to the eaitor should be 11m1ted to 300 words. All letters

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telephone number No unsigned letters will be publ shed.
Letters should be good taste, address1ng ISsues, not person·
alit1es Thank You letters will not be accepted for publication.

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error 1n a story. call the newsroom
al (740} 992-2156.

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..

2010

Consumers (took a breather) in April
Bv ANNE D'INNOCENZIO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

May 6,

Consumers
bought
less
clothing and footwear in April
than they did in the same
month last year but opened
their \\allcts for electronics,
major appliances and status
goods. purcha&lt;,e data released
Wcdnesda) sho\v.
The month's rainy weather
contnbuted to mixed results.
including a sharp increase in
online sales. accorcltng to the
latest
numbers
from
MasterCard
Advisors'
SpcndingPulse.
It was the ninth-straight
month that onltne sales r~se
compared with a )Car earlier.
The figurl.!s, which indude
transactions in' all forms
including ~.:ash. signal that
spending is recovering but
remained sensith e in April to
one-time factors.
Another factor dampening
April's sales \\-as a drop in
tourism resulting from travel
restrictions after Iceland's
\Oicanic
eruption.
said
Michael
McNamara, vice
president of research and
analysis for SpendingPulsc.
He said spending is stabiliLing and there wasn't any
broad-ba..,ed hca\'y discounting. In clothing. the average
transaction amount rose 1.5
percent from a year ago.
"(April) was lumpy." said
McNamara. adding that it was
"OK" combined with March.
Because an early Easter like this year's on April 4 can boost March ·s results and
depress April's, analy-,ts combine the two months when trying to gauge consumer bchav-

ior.
April figures benefited from
relativel)' easy compansons
to Apri I 2009, when con
sumcrs also cut their '&gt;pend
ing
Consumer-.· confidence tn
the economy rose 111 April
20 I 0, but the Conference
Board business group's index
remains below the leYcl that·..,
considered
healthy.
And
unemployment remained high.
Here are SpendingPulse'-.
figures comparing sales April
4 through May I ,., ith the
same period a year earlier. by
product category.
• Clothing: Sales fell 3.9
percent from April 2009. and
sales that month were 8.2 percent beiO\'Y April 2008. The
Jip includes a 4.1 percent
drop in women's fashions and
a 0.5 percent decline in
men's.
• Footwear: Sales in this
more resilient category fell
1.7 percent.
• Luxury: Excluding jc•velry, sales rose 15.5 percent
from April 2009, when they
dropped J 8. J percent from the
year before.
•
Appliances:
Enjoying
increases since September
2009, this category rose 3
percent for April. possibly
reflecting the benefit of the
housing tax credit and the
federal~ appliance rebate program.
• Electronics: Sale..; rose 9.7
percent from a year earlier,
he I ped in part by product
launches, including Apple
Inc.'s iPad tablet computer on
April 3 .
• Online sales '&gt;oar~d 15.6
percent.

The data conll.'' a day bcfnrl'
-.clecteJ major retailers report
on -.ales at their stores that
ha\ e been open at least a ) car.
considered a ke) indicatot
because it excludes result
from stlHCs that open M cl
during the year.
sunqcd
b)
Anal)st::Thomson Reuters predict .1
1.6 percent tncrcasc for Apnl,
follov.. Jng a 9 .I percent gain
in March . The estimate for
March and April combined is
5.4 percent. That would be the
eighth straight increase.
Ken Perkins. president ot
RetailMctril's. a n:search
firm. c&gt;..pcch sales rose 2 per
cent fot April, folio\\ tng nn
8 7 percent increase in \lan:h.
He estimated the early [•aster
boo~tcd sales up to 3 percent
age points in March and
depressed them m \pril b)
the same amount. Both firms
use different methoclohH~\.
Pcrktns said he expec·t~ the
biggest winners to he dis
counters and certain mallbased clothing stores like
AnnTa) lor anJ Chtco 's FAS
Inc., both of which arc s~:cin••
a rebound in sales because &lt;•
dramatically revamped fashions. Teen retailers likl'
Abercrombie &amp; Htch contin
ued to struggle. though. he
said.
"Consumers
took
a
breather"
compared
V\ ith
February and March. Perkins
said.
But he said the figures don't
stgnal a pullback in the recovery.
"The recovery isn't rohust ,"
Perkins suid. "It is just chugging along."

Stocks decline on European _debt worries
BY STEPHEN BERNARD
AND TIM PARADIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The stock market extended
its slide Wednesday after
investots couldn't shake
their
concerns
about
European countries' big debt
loads.
Th'e Dow Jones industrial
average ended with a lo ss of
60 points to put ih two-da)
drop at 285 points. The Dow
halved its loss by the close
but finished off its highs.
Treasury prices rose and
pushed down interest rates
in the bond market for a -.econd da).
A drop in the euro and a
rise in the dollar continued
to ram markets around the
world. The stronger dollar
hurts U.S. stocks by cutting
into profits of U.S. companies that do busine~s abroad.
A higher dollar also hurts
commodity prices by reducing demand from foreign
buyers.
...
In\ estor.., arc concerned
that aS 144 hill ion aid packare for Greece won't be adequate to keep debt problems
in Europe from spreading.
There were also questions
about whether the bailout
would amount to more than
a short-term fix for Greece.
which has the smallest econ
omy in the European Union.
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel
on
Wednes...day
encouraged lawmakers in
Berlin to rush the approval
of Germany's $29.3 billion
share of the Greek rescue
program by Friday. Analysts
say delay.., could bring more
upheaval to globa l markets.
Investors fear that if a
tourniquet
for
Greece's
nnancial problems doesn't
hold, it would be harder to
help larg er countries like
Spain and Portugal that also
face big deficits. Moody's
Investors Service warned on
Wednesday .that it cpu ld cut
Portugal's credit rating two
notches in the next three
months.
Adam Gould. senior portfolio manager at Direxion
Funds in New York, said the
lack of clarity about , what
will happen in Europe is
keeping
investors
from
wanting to buy dips in the
market the way they have
for most of th!.! market·~ 14month recovery.
''This is really. a story that

has the market spooked." he
said. "First it was Greece.
Now
it's
Spain
and
Portugal."
Fixing Greece's financial
problems won't be easy.
Riots erupted in Athens on
Wednesday over tax hikes
and go,·ernment spending
cuts that the international
Monctar) Pund and other
European nations are rc&lt;.juiring as part of the bailout.
Tens of thousands of people
took to the streets and three
people "'ere killed in the
protests.
The problems of heavy
government debts arc a big
test for the euro. Sixteen
countries usc the common
currcnc). The euro fell
against the dollar, hitting its
lowest level in 14 months in
morning trading .
S"' ings in global stock
markets 'h&lt;ne intensified in
the past week. Wednesday
was the sixth time in seven
days the Dow moved by
more
than
J00
points.
lnve~tors
have questions
ahout Greece but they're
,dso a\\aiting the government's April ~jobs re~port on
Friday
and
monitoring
Washington's overhaul of
the rules that govern financial companies.
According to preliminary
calculations. the Dow fell
59.94, or 0.6 percent. to
l 0,866.83. It had been up as
much as 20 points and down
nearly 112 points.
The Dow is down 2.6 per
cent in two days. its steepest
back-to-back drop in three
months.
The broader Standard &amp;
Poor's 500 index fell 9.42,
or 0.8 percent. to 1.164.18,
while the N asd aq c'Om posi te
index fell 24.14. or I per
cent, to 2.400.11.
Bond prices rose. The
yield on the benchmark I 0year Treasury note fell to
3.56 percent from 3.60 percent late Tuesday.
Gold rose. Crude oil fell
$2.77 to $79.97 per barrel
on the New York Mercantile
Exchange.
Kevin Mahn. chief investment officer at Hennion &amp;
Walsh in Parsippany. N .J •
'&gt;aid the debt problems are
severe but not new. He said
investors had been looking
for an excuse to sell stocks
after the market's steep 14month climb. Mahn expects
the
big
back-and-forth

moves will continue.
''I think it's f.!Oing to be
more or an ext~n&lt;.k~l
than a correction."
said.
The drop in commodit
prices hurt encrg.) and materials stod.. s. Retaikrs also
fell ahead o1 Apt i I revenue
reports on Thursday.
Occ idcntal
Pet ro·lcu m
Corp. fell $3.66 or 4.2 percent, to $82.88 while Best
Buy Co. fell $1.65. or 3.7
percent, to $42.90.
ln\estors lookinn for con·
tinued signs or a~ domestic
rcco\ ery received another
encouraging
sign
on
emplo) ment
Wednesda).
Payroll company ADP said
private employl!rs addeJ
12,000 jobs last month. That
was slightly abo\e expccta
tions.
The ADP report is seen an
earl) indica tor of t be go\'·
ernment's closet) watched
month!) cmplo) ment report.
though therl' an' nftcn V\ ide
variations because the ADP
only acco.unts for privat··
sec tot jobs.
The Labor Department is
expected to report on Friday
that the uncmplo) ment rate
was unchanged at 9.7 percent
last
month
\\ hile
employers added 200.000
JObs Unemplo) ment is considereJ the main obstacle to
a sustained recover~ of the
U.S. economy.
A trade group said that
senlces industries expanded
in April at a siO\\ er pace
than economist" expected.
The Institute for Suppty
Management said its service
sector index was unchanged
at 55.4 in April from March.
Analysts
expected
an
increase. Still. a reading
above 50 indicates growth.
About fout stocks fell tor
every one that rose on the
Ne"' York Stock. Exchange,
where volume came to I .5
billion shares. in line \\ i
Tuesday.
The Rus sell 2000 index ol
smaller
companies
fell
11.12. or 1.6 percent, to
698.58.
Britain 's FI'Sl· 100 fell
I .3
percent.
Germany·
DAX index dropped 0.8 per
cent. and France ·s CAC-40
fell 1.4 percent. In Greece,
the main stock index fell 3.9
.percent. Portugal's PSI 20
lost I .5 percent and Spain's
main tndt.x fell 2.2 percent.

�........___llll"''l....,._..........__..__

----------...,....,--.,_.~---~----~-. -- · -- - - - --- - ----- ·- ·- --~~--'"7-~-~~r-

Thursday, May 6,

2010

www .mydailyscntinel.com

PO L ITI CS

Obituaries
Eugene R. Smith

Tea par·ty comes up
short in early primaries

Eugene R l;)mith, 92, of Pmncro). died :\londa).
May 3. 2009 at the home of his sister. Carol) n Smith
on High Street in Pomeroy.
Born on March 7. 191 X. he wa:-. the son of Rorence
Russell and David E. Smith. He is survived by sisters.
Carolyn Smith and Ethel Bauer.
Bv D AVID ESPO
As a teenager. Mr. Smith worked at the family mill
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A, Chester and later \\'Cilt to work at a mill in
~innesota. From there he went to Seattle, Wash. with
WA~HINUTON
his sister and brother-in-law. served for a time in the
National Guard, and worked for the Forestry Division Mark the first round down,
at a lookout tower. He later went to art school in New shakily, for Republican
incumbents and party
York to expand his talent in drawing and painting.
establishment
fa\ oritcs.
Mr. Smith was knowledgeable about the Civil War
With one race in Ohio
as well as the history of Meigs County c:nd the
Chester community. He has donated items to both the yet to be settled. tea
Meigs County Museum and the Chester Shade party-backed chalkngers
and other out-.idcrs \\ere
Historical Association.
Memorial graveside sen ices \\ill be held at the shut out in competithe
Chester Cerneter) at I p.rn. on Monday. .Ma) I0. House and Senate priThere will be no calling hour:-.. Anderson McDaniel maries across three states
on Tuesda), the busiest
Funeral Home is handling arrangements.
night so far in an clec~ion
season of optunism for
Republicans.
\\ hile some ofTuesday
night's Republican primar) \\ inners struggled
to prevail - forml!r
Indiana Sen. Dan Coats'
comeback bid advanced
Wilma Nadine Hill. 81, of Mason, W. Va. died with 40 percent of the
Tuesday, May 4, 20 I0 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital. vote in a five-way race
Funeral services will be held at I 1 a.m. on Saturday
the results renewed a
at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home. Burial will debate about the clout of
be in Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Friends may cal1 at the Insurgents in the
e funeral home Friday from 6 to 8 p.m.
remaining primaries and
Send e-mail condolences to foglesongtucker@veri- on elections this fall.
•
zon.net.
Primaries
aside.
Republicans
cheered
Wednesdav
when
Wisconsin· Rep. Da\ id
Obey. a leading liberal &lt;tnd
chaim1an of the [&gt;0\\ ert"ul
House
Appr9priations
Committee. announced he
WASHP\GTON (.\P) - The -;tate of Illinois and would retire. GOP offiObama adrninistratton officials sa) they are re'lewmg cials said the departure
testing to help determine what needs to be done to opens the way for them to
win a seat he has held
keep Asian carp out of the Great Lakes.
Many experts predict a multibillion-dollar ecosystem since 1969. and claimed
the veteran lawmaker had
disaster for the region if the invasive fish take hold.
The announcement Wednesday came as a bipartisan been pushed to the exits by
group of about a do1en lawmakers from Michigan, the prospect of possible
Minnesota and Wisconsin continued to mount pres- defeat this fall.
Obey was characteristisure for quick action on a proposal to close a Chicagoarea Jock and dam. The closing of the T.J. O'Brien cally blunt in reply: "I've
Lock and Darn and the Chicago Controlling Works won 25 elections. Docs
anybody think l don't
are opposed by most Illinois politicians .
The new testing plan involves using a poison, know how to win another
rotenone, upstream of the electric barriers near the one'!"
Six months before the
lock and dam to find out whether any Asian carp
midterm
elections. and
exist there.
\\ ith the country trying to
shake otT the etfects of a

Deaths

Wilma Nadine Hill

New testing planned for
Chicago-area Asian carp

Contract from Page At
roof until County Grants Administrator Jean Trussell
could be at the meeting. Trussell recommended cornmissioners accept the bid and consider the Build It
Group for sidewalk repairs in Syracuse.
Commissioners also tabled the Syracuse discussion
until Trussell's return.
Commissioners advanced $20.000 to the Workforce
Investment Act fund as requested by Meigs County
Department of Job and ramily Services to close April
2010 in the black. The county will be reimbursed for
these funds when MCDJFS receives them from the
appropriate funding agency.
Commissioners also increased the county general
fund's appropriations by $1 .113.50 and approved the
second half appropriations for 20 I0 into the soil and
water fund in the amount of $44.122.50.
Bills were approved in the amount of $124.913.19.
leaving the county general fund at $37.807.04.

Election from Page At

r

reportedly 44.5 percent, a record turnout in Ohio.
Other numbers of interest to local voters. as
• ported by the Meigs County Board of Elections.
are as follows:
There were 2.987 votes cast in Tuesday's election.
of which 973 were from the Democratic party 1,956
were from the Republican party. three were from the
Constitution party, one was for the Green party, three
were from the Libertarian party and 51 were nonpartisan. This means 25.34 percent of the votes were
Democrats, 46.49 percent of the votes were
Republican, .65 percent of the vote were nonpartisan.
There were 7.811 ballots cast in the March 2008
primary and 6.765 cast in the November 2009 general election in Meigs County. Also, every election
since the March 2008 primary has seen an increase in
registered voters in the county. according to figures
provided by the Meigs County Board of Elections 15.414 registered for March 2008 primary: 15.723
registered for November 2009 general election:
15.857 re2istered for this week's primary.
There are 15 provisional ballots yet to be counted
and included in Tuesday's election results.

Book from Page AI
lists Lt. William H. Bush, Sg~. fred Humphrey, Set.
R. Hitchcock, and Cpl. Martin Hysell all of
~igs County as dying in the battle.
The Civil War veterans post at Racine was named
after Lt. Bush., according to Ashley who listed those
eigs Countians wounded in the battle as John P.
bble, Otis P. Henry, Benjamin F. McLane, and
ilip Feigcr.. These are all given in the book. along
tth information on Joseph Van Meter of Middleport
• who won the Congressional Medal of Honor for his
. ·
heroism in this battle.
Ashley said the book is available through the publisher Angle Valley Press, P.O. Box 4098. Wincnester.
Va .. 22604 anti costs ::&gt;34.95 plus shipping. Orders can
also be placed by calling 800-246-6553 or on line at
www.Anglc Valle) Press .com.
~yron

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

deep r~ccssion. polls
show a disaffected electorate, angry at incumbents and highly skeptical
of government's ability to
solve their problems. As a
result, even Democrats
concede Republicans are
in line to make gains this
fall. when 36 seats in the
Senate and all 435 in the
How..e are on the ballot.
"The big question is
whether the tea party is a
tempest in a teapot. Do
they ha\·e the organizational capabilities to cornpete
v. ith
the
Republicans?'" said John
rechery, who advised former House Speaker
Dennis Hastert. R-Ill., and
is a Republican strategist.
"They· re not organized
and it's unclear to me
whether they are going to
be a force that is going to
challenge the more establishment Republicans in
primaries," he added.
.
In the Senate, both parties seemed eager to
begm the fall campaign.
Sen. John Cornyn of
Texas. who chairs the
Republican
campaign
committee. sought to shift
the focus from Coats·
modest triumph over primary rivals. The race in the
fall "\\ill not be about Dan
Coats," he said. "It ,... ill be
about Brad Ellsworth. who
voted for a health care program that 65 percent of
Hoosier" are against."
Eilsworth will be on
the ballot as Coats'
Democratic rival.
The
Democratic
Senatorial
Campaign
Committee announced
the arrival of the fall campaign with a video that
Jumped Coats with former Bush administration
official Rob Portman.
who won the Republican
Senate pnmaf) in Ohio

and will run al!,tinst Lt. generally had Jess of a
Gov. Lee Fishet.
fall-off than Democrats.
"President Obama ·und
"We got the candidates
Democrats 111 Congress that we wanted." Sessions
are fighting for compre- said. For the voters who
hensive financial reform. backed losing chalMeanwhile, what did the lengers,
he
said
Republicans do? They Republicans "will continnominated a Wall Street ue to offer a message that
lobbyist and one of the is well within their wheel· biggest Wull Street house.'' including calls to
cheerleaders they could rein in federal spending.
find ... the \ideo "ays.
Democrats viewed the
Republicans recruited same primary results difCoats. a fonner lobbyist. to ferently.
mn months ago. when the)
"On~ message was loud
were looking for ~ chal- and clear last night. The
lenger to lXmocrattc Sen. DC
establishment
E\an Bayh. Ba}h later Republican candidates
announced his retirement. faced intense opposition.,"
Coats· nearest primary ... aid Rep. Chris Van
rival. Marl in Stutzman. Hollen of Maryland, who
was a tea party favorite heads the Democratic
who also gained support campaign committee.
from a political or!!aniza"They
may
have
tion run by South Carolina emerged but they emerged
'sen. Jim DeMint.
by the skin of their teeth
"Senator DeMint is a and in many cases with
conservative Republican lots of battle scars."
senator. I'm a conservaAmong those Van
tive Republican senator Hollen cited were Jim
and proud of it." Cornyn Renacci, backed by party
said. "But I also recog- officials as their favorite to
nize that people as con- challenge
first-term
servative as I am may not Democratic Rep. John
be elected in some parts Boccieri of Ohio in the faJI.
of the countr) :· he added. He won with 49 percent of
De:\lint also has' taken the vote in a four-way race.
Another Republican
sides in a competiti' e
primary in Kentucky, as embraced by Republican
well as other states.
leaders. Bob Gibbs. is
In
the
House. ahead of his leading rivaL
Republican leaders were Fred Dailey. by 160 votes.
quick to praise the \ otcn, and a recount is expected.
who backed the losers in The winner will take on
Tuesday's primaries, and Ohio Democratic Rep.
-.aid they would work for Zach Space, whom
their support in the fall.
Republican officials long
''They were a b1g factor ago identified as a target
last night in Ohio and for the fall.
Indiana, and they helped
Among
incumbents
swell our vote" totab. fending off challengers,
said Rep. Pete Sessions Republican Reps. Dan
of Texas. who chairs the Burton and Mark Souder
!\ ational
Republican of Indiana: Howard Coble
Campaign Commiue~. of North Carolinq. and
Turnout was modest 111 Democratic Rep. Larry ·
most cases. although it Kissel of North Carolina
appeared RcpublTcans won renomination.

Feds to appeal release of Mich. militia members
DETROIT (AP)
Federal prosecutors said
Wednesday the) will
appeal a judge's decision
to release until trial nine
jailed members of a
Michigan militia accused
of plotting to overthrow
the government.
Prosecutors nted a onepage notice and said they
would follow it with a
detailed legal brief that
U.S. District Judge
Victoria Roberts wants
before
she
decides
whether to keep the nine
locked up during an
appeal.
The members of the
southern Michican militia. called Hutaree. arc
charged '" ith conspirac)
to commit sedition. or
rebellion. against the
governrpent and the
of
attempted
use
weapons
of
mass
destruction.
Authorities have said
the group planned to kill
a pol ice officer and then
bomb a subsequent
funeral.
Prosecutors claim the
suspects arc too danger
ous to be released from
jail. But Roberts on
Monday ruled they could
go home until trial under
strict conditions. including electronic monitoring. She suspended her
rulnf to gh e the gO\ ernment time to consider
appealing her decision.
Roberts now must
decide whether the suspects should be released
or whether they should
continue to be detained
pending the outcome of
the appeal.
Defense
attorney
Michael Rataj saiJ his

Visit us
online at
www.mydailysentinel.com

Your online
source for news

client. 44-vear-old Tina
Stone of Clayton. Mich .. is
"anxious for a !!ood shower and nmmal ~food" after
nearl) six weeks in jail.
An undercover agent
infiltrated the group and
secretly recorded some
members talking about
killing police and fearing
a "New World Order."
Defense attorneys have
said it was nothing more
than hateful talk.
Roberts opined that it
was "offensive and hatefilled speech" but it did
not signal a conspiracy
to levy war against the

go\·ernment.
judge abuse her discre- It's rare for a federal tion? Those are the quesappeals court to even be tions the appellate court
asked to review a ruling \\ill need to answer.''
on pretrial detention. The
6th U.S . Circuit Court of
Appeals in Cincinnati
could decline to hear the
government\ appeal.
"Judge Roberts did her
homework and doesn't
want to be reversed.
That's why her ruling is
36 pages long," said
Lloyd Meyer of Chicago.
a fonner terrorism prosecutor. "Is this a ntling
that no reasonable judge
could issue'? Did the

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213 l East State Street

740-589-3100

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__ ,.._

__..___

-"""T

.,. - -

- -

Pap A6

The Daily $entinel

Thursday, Ma} 6,

Holzer celebrates
Better Hearing Month
GALLIPOLIS - Hearing loss currently affects
more than 36 million Americans today. Although
hearing problems are commonly associated with the
normal aging process, more than half of all hearingimpaired persons arc younger than 65.
With the increased usc of personal music players
(MP3s)' and earbuds, the number of Americans experiencing hearing loss at a younger age. is growing.
On average, most Americans consider hearing loss
a condition that is simply associated with aging, and
don't know how to recogmzc the condition or who is
qualified t6 diagnose and treat the condition.
In an effort to raise public awareness for the growing number of Americans suffering from hearing loss.
Holzer Clinic in conjunction with the American
Academy of Audiology is celebrating Better Hearing
Month this May. As part of Better Hearing Month.
Holzer Clinic is encouraging consumers to be more
aware of their hearing health.
·
"Hearing loss can be caused by exposure to loud noises; ear infections. trauma. or car disca-;e; harm to the
inner ear and ear drum; illness or certain medications:
and deterioration due to nom1nl aging proccs~ ... explain~
Roxanne Groff. MA. Audiologist at Holzer Clinic.
An audiologist is a highly educated and clinically
experienced health-care professional who specialile in
evaluating, diagnosing. and treating people with hearing loss and balance disorders. Hearing loss can affect
patients of all ages -- newborns, infants. babies. toddlers, children, teens. adults, and the elderly.
You may have a problem with your hearing and need
to see an audiologtst. if you have trouble hearing conversation in a noisy environment such as a restaurant.
are unable to hear people talk to you without looking
at them, or have a constant ringing or pain in your ears.
The first step in treatment of a hearing problem is a
hearing evaluation by an audiologist. Holzer Clinic's
audiologists have a variety of specialties to include, but
not limited to performing; hearing evaluations on newborns and infants; prescribing and fitting hearing aids:
assisting with cochlear implant programs: performing
ear or hearing-related surgical n}onitoring: designing
and implementing hearing conservation programs and
newborn hearing screening programs: providing hearing rehabilitation training such as auditory training.
speech reading. listening skills improYement.
Although most hearing loss is permanent, an audiologist can determine the best treatment. which may
include hearing aids, assistivc listening devices. and
hearing rehabilitation. On staff for hearing evaluations are Kimberly Jenkins, MS. CCC-A (Gallipolis):
Loretta Lauder. MA. CCC-A (Gallipolis &amp; Jackson);
Roxanne Groff, MA (Athens &amp; Jackson); Kimberly
Smith, MS (Liberty Circle - Proctorville).

MUSIC NEWS

New gas line
being laid
Traffic is one-way on Mulberry Aven
in Pomeroy these days as the contractor for Columbia Gas lays new pipeline.
The project includes putting about 800
feet of new line in a deep trench
between the McCullough property on
Mulberry to the Union Avenue intersection. It is expected to be completed
next week. Contractor on the job is
R&amp;R Pipeline of Newark who was in
Pomeroy last year replacing other gas
lines. Before the contractor leaves town
this time some additional repair will be
made to streets dug up during last
year's line replacement project, particularly on Mulberry between the old
Sugar Run Mill and Second Street.
There will also be some corrective work
done to repair storm sewer drain damage incurred earlier, according to
Pomeroy Mayor John Musser.
Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

•
I

Your Mother Deserves the
Best...So Come On OVer to BobJs...
10'' Flowering
Hanging Baskets
&amp; Regular Bedding Fla

zJszsoo
* St~lc

Prices in effect Thur~da): 5,6 Lhru Sunda) 5 9

Beautiful
''Extra Large''
Hanging
Baskets

4 112 inch pots

$298 each or

·

Open Rail band hits the
road for bluegrass show

$2200
Flat of8
(Mix or Match)

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAJLYSENTINEL COM

MILTON, W.Va. - Local bluegrass artists will travel to West Virgmta this weekend to compete in the 24th
Annual Bill Morris Bluegrass Band Competition.
Open Rail, formerly know as Shoal Creek. won second place in the 2009 competition that hosts bluegrass
bands from all over the region.
Covering a wide range of music styles from original
material and old standards to bluegrass gospel and
familiar songs done bluegrass style, Open Rail consists of Roger "Pup'' Harrison. Vinton; John Cardwell.
Mercerville; Brinn lson, Beaver: Perry Cardwell.
Gallipolis, and Don Titus, Ravenswood, W.Va.
The show will start at 7:30p.m .. Saturday, May 8 at
the Mountaineer Opry House, Milton, W.Va. The opry
house is located on exit 28 of 1-64.
For more information on the competition. visit
www.mountaineeropry.com.
Contact Open Rail at (740) 835~7221 or follow
them on Facebook.

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday...Mostly sunn). with a high near 76.
West northwest wind between 5 and 9 mph .
Thursday night. ..Mostly clear. with a low around
51. North wind at 5 mph becoming east.
Friday.•.A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 10 a:m. Partly cloudy. with a high near
87. East southeast wind 5 to 8 mph becoming south
southwest between 13 and 16 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
· Friday night...A chance of showers and thunderstorms before lam, then showers likely and possibly
a thunderstorm between lam and 4 a.m.: then a
chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4 a.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 52. West southwest
wind between I 0 and 13 mph. Chance of precipitation
is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Saturday.•.A slight chance of showers before 8
a.m. Partly cloudy. with a high near 60. Chance of
precipitation is I 0 percent.
Saturday night...Partly cloudy, with a low around 41.
Sunday...Mostly sunny, with a high near 63.

2010

Full Selection of locally
grown and clilnatized
• Trees
• Shrubs

Blooming Tropical
Potted Plants
• Hibiscus
• Manaevilla
• 0/eanc:ter

Remember Bob's for all
our gardening needs
• Bulk Seed
• Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets
• Large Single
Potted Vegetable
Plants

Stop by to win ...
a hanging basket given away
each hour all day Saturday
and the Gand Prize
of$100 Cash!
Drawing Saturday, il1ay 8th

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:
2400 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis. OH
(740) 446-1711

l/4 Mile North
Bridge of Honor
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5323

�...

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The Daily

Inside

--

Bl

~entinel

GARS tennis wins, Page B2

•

Reds win in 10 innings, Page B6

Thursday, May 6, 2010

•

•

~~~~~

high school varsity sport1ng events
invotv1ng teams from Meigs. Mason, and
Galha count1es
Thursday.~

Baseball
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 5:30
p.m.
Softball
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy.
5:30p.m.
Track
Hannan, South Gallia at Buffalo
Invitational, 4 p.m.
Cardinal Conference
Championshtps at Point Pleasant

Eds:l.av....M.aa.
Baseball
Eastern at Meigs, 5 p.m.
St. Mary's at Wahama 5 p.m.
SoftbAll
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Track
Gallia Academy at Circleville
Invitational, 4:30 p.m.

White Falcons hold off ·Roane County Eastern
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNECOM

MASON. W.Va. The Wahama White
Falcons earned win number 19 on the season
Wednesday with a 5-4
victory
over Roane
County.
Wahama starting pitcher Tyler Kitchen picked
up the win, improving to
4-1 on the year. Kitchen
pitched a complete game,
allowing six hits and four
runs, striking out eight.
and walking four. Roane
County's Quentin Corbitt
took the loss.

Kitchen

Grimm

The visiting Raiders
(15-8) to the early lead,
going up 1-0 after the top
of the first inning.
Wahama tied it at one in
the bottom half, before
adding two more runs in

the second innings. The
White Falcons added one
in the bottom of the
fourth to take a 4-1 lead.
Roane County scored
three runs in the fifth
inning to tie the game at
four. Wahama scored its
final run of the game in
the bottom of the fifth,
taking a 5-4 lead and the
eventual win.
Kitchen also led the
Red and White at the
plate with three hits,
mcluding a double, and
an RBI. Andy Grimm
had two hits and two
RBis, while Terry Henry,
Ethan McGrew, Zack

Warth, and Tyler Roush
each had one hit.
McGrew and Roush
scored one run each, with
McGrew adding an RBI.
Josh Jones led the visitors in hit, going 2-2.
Wahama travels to face
Mason County opponent
Point Pleasant at 5:30
p.m. on Thursday.
WAHAMA 5,
ROANE COUNTY

4

Roane
100 030 0
- 4 G1
Wahama 120110 x -590
ROANE COUNTY (15·8): Quentin
Corbitt and Alex Mace.
WAHAMA (19·4): Tyler Kitchen and
Terry Henry.
WP- Kitchen; LP -Corbitt.

Local Briefs
Wahama Hall of
Fame Golf
• Scramble
MASON. W.Va.
Plans have been finalized
for
this
Saturday's
Wahama Athletic Hall of
Fame Golf Scramble at
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason. The tourney will
be a scramble format
beginning at 8:30 a.m.
Hole sponsors are available at $100.00 with the
cost of golf participation
being $75 .00 per player or
$400.00
per
team.
Riverside Golf Club
members can enter the
tourney for $55.00 with
the fee being $43.00 if·
using their own personal
golf cart.
Golfers and hole sponsors are urged to have
their entries, fees and
information into the
Riverside Clubhouse by
Thursday May 6, 2010 in
order for tournament offi. ls to prepare for
rday's links outing.
•
oceeds from the
Wahama Athletic Hall of
Fame golf outing will be
used to cover expenses
pertaining to the inaugural
Hall of Fame class scheduled to be inducted this
fall at the Bend Area
school. Nominations are
still being accepted until
June 1, 2010 at the high
school or on-line at
http://whs.maso.k12.wv.u
s. Anyone may nominate
a
former Wahama
Athlete, Coach or Booster
and a nomination form
must be in the WHS office
prior to June 1, 2010
before a person can be
considered for induction.

Co-ed Softball
Tournament
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
- The Middleport Youth
gue will be hosting a
ed softball tournament
May 15 and 16. Each
team needs to have five
guys and five girls.
For more information
contact Dave Boyd at
740-590-0438.

f

River Valley
Golf Scramble
GALLIPOLIS. OhioThe River Valley High
School and Middle School
~olf program will be hostmg a four person golf
scramble on Saturday,
May 15, at Cliffside Golf
Course in Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Registration will begin
at 8 a.m. with a 9 a.m. shot
gun start. This will be
bring your own team, and
each team may have one
palyer under an eight
handicap and must have at
ast a 40 handicap total.
he cost ts $60 for
•
ffside members and
$70 for non-members.
Cost includes breakfast,
lunch, skins. mulligans.
~ill prizes. and raffle
• ckets. Payout based on
number of teams participating. Last year, three
places were paid.
You may register at the
Cliffside clubhouse or
contact Gene Layton at
740-245-5753 or by email
at gl_glayton@seovec.org

blanks
Trimble
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER, Ohio The Eastern Lady Eagles
shut out
t
h
e
Trimble
L a d y
Tomcats
o
n
Wednesd a y
evening,
picking
up
win
number
19 on the
seaso n ,
a n d
improving to 8-1
in
the

r:------

T V C

Bryan Walters/photo

The Gallia Academy softball team won their second consecutive SEOAL Day of Champions title game on
Wednesday evening, defeating Warren 3-1 in eight innings.

Blue Angels win ·SEOAL Day of Champions
BY KEVIN PIERSON
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

VINCENT, Ohio Two outs away from
celebrating a championship the Warren Lady
Warriors saw their title
dreams dashed by a
clutch hit into left field.
Two outs away from
making the trek back
down Ohio 7 with their
third loss in four tries at
the league Day of
Champions. the Gallia
Academy Blue Angels
found their salvation in
clutch hits that sent the
game to an extra inning.
Such is what champions are made of.
''On these kind of
games there's just nothing you can say. The
girls on both sides
played for a championship," said Warren
softball coach Lynn
Laing.

Please see Angels, Bl

Photo courtesy on Kevin Pierson, Marietta Times

Hocking.
Eastern
pitcher
Kasey
Turley
Gillian
pitched a
complete
game, striking out 15 of
the 24 batters she faced.
Turley walked zero and
allowed two hits in the
game.
The Lady Eagles started the first inning with a
lead off walk to Hayley
Gillian that led to the first
run of the game following an RBI single by
Allie Rawson. Eastern
added four runs in the
fourth
inning,
with
Britney Morrison getting
things started with a lead
off single.
Sami
Cummins reached on an
error, before Gillian hit a
two RBI single, and
Brenna Holter added an
RBI. Brooke Johnson
had a single, while
Turley added a double.
Morrison,
Commins,
Gillian. and Holter each
scored in the inning.
The Lady Eagles added
two runs in the seventh
inning with Rawson
leading off with a double
and Turley hitting a two
run homerun.
Trimble had a hit in the
third and one in the
fourth.
Eastern was led at the
plate by Turley with a
double and homerun,
Rawson with a single and
double, and Johnson with
a pair of singles. Gillian,
Tori Goble, Morrison.
and Cummins each had a
single.
Gillian and Turley each
had two RBis. with
Gillian also scoring two
IUDS.

Gallia Academy first baseman Morgan Leslie attempts to pick off Warren base runner Madison Stauffer (12) during Wednesday evening's SEOAL Day of Champions
title game at Warren High School.

Please see Eastern, Bl

Warren burns Blue
Devils in final at-bat,
wins SEOAL title
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

VINCENT, Ohio Two baseball teams playing for their first
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League championship
since
2006
squared off Wednesday
night in the final SEOAL
Day of Champions title
game at Warren High
School, as the host
Warriors rallied to score
twice in their final at-bat
to claim the 20 I 0 crown
with a hard-fought 6-5
decision over the Blue
Devils in Washington
County.
In a game that literally
featured a lit bit of everything, it was the SEOAL
North champion Warriors
(18-3) who ultimately
prevailed thanks to some
timely late-inning heroics.

WHS, which trailed 54 headed into the bottom
of the seventh, received a
leadoff single from Tyler
Proctor. then senior Zach
Heath delivered an RBI
double - allowing the
hosts to knot the game up
at five apiece.
GAHS ( 13-7) replaced
starter John Troester at
that point after the senior
righthander had been
effective of the course of
his previous six innings
of work, with Chuck
Calvert coming in for
relief duties. Calvert
threw only two pitches to
Scott Pettit, both of
which ended up getting
past Devils' catcher Terry
Smith.
The errant throws
allowed
Heath
to
advance to both third and
homeward with the win-

Please see Devils, B6

'l==·
·~

,.,...,,..-~r,

Galli a
Academy
leftfielder
Tyler
Eastman,
left, and center1ielder
Kyle
Dingess,
right, both
make
a play
on a fly ball
during the
fourth inning
of
Wednesday
night's contest against
Warren in
the championship baseball game of
the SEOAL
Day of
Champions
at Warren
High School
in Vincent,
Ohio.
Bryan
Walters/photo

'

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Buck wild:
2 rogue
deer run
amok in
ale house

Blue Devils
defeat Logan 4-1

Eastern remains tied
with Waterford for the
lead in the TVC
Hocking. with one game
remaining for each team.
Waterford travels to
Trimble on Thursday,
while Eastern has a make
up
game
against
Southern tentatively set
for Monday.
EASTERN

7, TRIMBLE 0

Eastern 100 400 2
- 7 10 1
Trimble 000 000 0
- 024
EASTERN (19·4. 8-1 TVC Hocking):
Kasey Turley and Allie Rawson.
TRIMBLE (12-9, 5·4 TVC Hocking)·
K. Downs and S. Lenigar
WP - Turley; LP - Downs.
HR- E: Turley (71h 1nning, one on ,
nobody out) .

..

2010

Gallia
Academy's
Bryce
Amos
slams the
ball over
the net
during the_
Blue
Devils
match
the
Memorial
Field
tennis
courts on
Tuesday
evening.
Amos'
doubles
partner
Chris
Oiler, left,
is also pictured.
Amos and
Oiler
defeated
Logan's
Eric
Vaughn
and Joe
Phelps in
straight
sets.

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Angels

fromPageBl

Thursday, May 6,

GAHS Tennis wins final home match ~

G \LLIPOLIS, Oh1o
- The Gallia Academ)
tennis team won its
Mil WAUKEE ( \P) ftnal match at the
The Milwc1ukee Memorial Field Tcnn1s
Courts on Tuesday
Bucks' rallying en
"fear the deer·· - turned C\ening, \Vith a 4-1 vicover
'isiting
into a punchliue Sunday tot')
afternoon when two deer Logan.
With the win. the
burst through the glass
doors of a Menomonie Blue Devils arc I 1-4 on
restaurant as patrons the sea:--.on . All fi\ e
watched a Bucks playoff matches went two sets.
Gallia Academy won
game.
The first deer appar~ all three ~inglcs matchJosh Jackson
ently hurt itself. bloody- es.
ing its snout and becom- defeated Sean Clay 6-0.
ing dazed, said Jav 6- 1. Jordan Cornwell
Ouellette, general mm~­ t.ld\.:att:d
Taylor
ager of th~e Stout Ale Ricchin!! 6-0, 6-1. and
H~ouse. Two customers Kelle Craft defeated
were able to safely wreS'- John Shauben 6-1. 6-3.
tle it to .the ground.
The Blue Devils and
The other deer fled Logan split the doubles
mto a private room. matches, with Gallia
Cornered deer can be Academy\ BI')Ce Amos
dangerous because they and Chris Oiler defeatkid. and bite. but a ing Eric Vaughn and Joe
restaurant worker man- Phelps
6-4.
6 4.
aged to wrestle that ani ~ Logan's Joe Dennis and
mal down as well. Ku~·t Geiger defeated
Ouellette said.
Cody Billings and
"I could tell it was Mollie Blake 6~1. 6-2.
starting to get a little
anxious:·
he
said.
"There -was definitely
the possibility of injury."
The incident happened
about 12:20 p.m. from Page Bl
shortly after the Bucks
started Game 7 of their
Leading for all but
playoff series against two outs over the
1\ tlanta. There were course of seven innings
about 30 customers in the Lady Warriors saw
the restaurant at the Gallia tally five hits in
time. many watching the the seventh and eighth
game,
innmgs after managing
Buch fans chant "fear just four through the
the deer'' in support of first six frames as the '
their team. After the deer Blue Angels picked up
broke in. customers a 3-1 win to claim the
joked that the cry had a SEOAL title at Warren
new meaning to them.
School
'They were still kind High
Wednesday night.
of in disbelief. but
It marks the second
everyone was having a
straight
league title for
good time with it,"
Gallia
Academy,
and
Ouellette said.
the
fourth
time
the
Blue
Things could have
been w~or)e for one man Angels have been playwho narrowly ' avoided ing for a title on the
being hit by the charging D~y of Champions.
None of those hits
deer.
were
bigger than Alii
VIdeo
Surveillance
Saunders
RBI single in
shows the man pausing
the
seventh
off Warren
in the Jobby · before
pitcher
Taylor
Dennis
walking outside and
closing the door behind to tie the game with one
him. Moments later he out. staving off the
jumps out of the way as Lady Warriors' celebrathe two bucks slam into tion and sending the
the doors. tearing them game to an extra inning.
"We were able to
off their hinges and
spraying a shower of
glass.
Replacing the doors
was expected to cost
several thousand dollars.
said David But·g. the
restaurant's vice presi~
dent of operations ..
lnsurance· was expected
to cover most of the cost.
he said.
Ouellette said its the
first time since the
restaurant opened in
2006 that it's had a problem with deer. There's a
golf course nearby that
deer often visit but they
never cross the large
parking lot to the restaurant's front door. he said.
"I think they just lost
their bearings and got
startled," he said. "I've
seen this happen on TV
before. but I 1never
thought it would happen
around here. It was pret~
ty amvsing."

Eastern

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bryan

Waite.
phot

make
a
comeback not walking a batter as
against a strong team,'' the right bander record
said Gallia Academy od her 50th career varsoftball coach Jim sity win.
Niday.
"Amy. she's been our
That extra inning rock for four years.
proved to be all the dif~ She'-, probably going to
ference in the world as go down as the best
for the first time the softball player in our
Blue Angels bats were school history," Niday
able to make solid con- said.
tact against Warren
The only blemish on
pitching after being Noe 's line came in the
thwarted for six~plus third 111ning when the
innings
by
Lady Lady Warriors plated
Warrior starter Molly what they hoped would
Powell.
be the only run they'd
Powell kept the Blue need in the game.
Angel bats quiet, giving
Warren center fielder
up just five hits in her Madison Stauffer led
6.1 innings of v.-ork, but off the third with a bunt
it was the last hit that hit on the first pitch
chased her from the Noe tossed to home
mound as for the first plate in the inning.
time a Gallia hitter Stauffer came around to
made solid contact as score when Warren
Heather Ward doubled senior second baseman
to deep center field.
Taylor Dolak ripped a
Of course. while hard RBI double down
Powell was keeping the the third baseline with
Blue Angels offense in two outs to put the Lady
check, GaiJin Academy Warriors in front.
"They played their
senior Amy Noe was
matching her pitch for hearts out. heart and
pitch. Noe tossed eight soul. I couldn't be more
innings of one run ball. proud of them," Laing
striking out eight and said.

Plating that one run
was all the Lady
' Warriors appeared to
need as Powell effectively mowed through
the Gallia lineup.
Staked to the 1-0
lead, Powell gave up
just one hit in the sixth
inning, a two out single
to Courtney Shriver,
before the pivotal sev~
enth. After Ward doubled with one out,
Laing made the decision to bring in the
harder throwing Dennis
in the hope of changing
the approach to the
plate the Gallia hitters
were seeing.
Instead, the first batter that Dennis faced
was Saunders who
responded with the single just past shortstop
and into center field.
Stauffer's ru~hed throw
home in a desperate
attempt to catch Ward at
the plate sailed high
over catcher Hannah
Zimmerman, allowing .
Saunders to get to third
base, where she was
stranded as Dennis
induced two laly infield

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www.mydailysentine !.com

pop ups.
Dennis recorded two
quick outs in the eighth.
but then the Blue Angels
strung together three
straight
hits
with
Morgan Leslie's sing !~
just under the out~
stretched
glove
of
Warren left fielder Ally
Spence plating the final
two runs of the game
and drawing raucou~
cheers and sad moans
from the large crowd of
Warren and Gallia fans~
The Lady Warriors
went quietly in the home
half of the eighth as Noe
retired the side in order
to give Gallia its second
straight and third overan
SEOAL championsh,.
''I'll give our kid,
the credit. we've
great kids," Niday said.
Kevin Pierson is a
sports writer at the
Marietta
Times
in
Marietta, Ohio.
GALLIA ACADEMY
WARREN 1
Gallia

000 000 12 -

3,

391

Warren 001 000 00 15 1 :
WP - Amy Noe; LP - Tayl_,
Dennis.

t

�.-

a

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 6, 201 0

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500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To
Home)
Call Todayl 740·446·
4367
1·80Q-214·0452
gallipohscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member
Accred1~ng

Council for

lndependGnt Colleges and
Schools 12748

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out
our used invenlory al
www.CAREO.com.
Cannichael Equipmenl
740.446-2412

p
on

SAVINGS

Farm Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

1000

RecreaMnal
Veh1cles

Campers (RVs &amp;
Trailers
RV
Service
at
Cannichael
Trailers
740-446-3825

Free Home
Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from AOT
Security Services.
Call1-888-274-3888

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/AccessO'ries ....................................1015
Camper!RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ...............................................1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVL.ease.....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessor1es ..................................2025
Sports Utlllty..............................................2030
Trucks......................................................~.2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ..........................................3005
Commercial ................................................3010
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..,..................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
land (Acreage) ........................•................. 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial................................................351 0
Condominlums ................................: ......... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng •............................ 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers...................................... t ••••••••••••••••• 4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment. ..............................................6000
Accounting!Financlal ................................6002
Administrative/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical .............•......................................... 6010
Conatructlon ............•.................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon...................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertalnment............................................ 6022
Food Sl!rvlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs ...............•.... 6026
Help anted· General. ................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs..................................................6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Musical ..............•........................................ 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
SaiM...........................................................6048
Technical Tradea ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment
740-446·2412
Garden &amp; Produce

Caldwell
Greenhouses- · For
vegetable
AMERICAN TAX Sale
plants.
ferns,
BELIEF
hanging baskets, all
Settle IRS Taxes for flats
flowers
&amp;
a fraction of what vegetables, 1 mile
you owe. If you owe south of Tuppers
over $15,000 in
Plains. Oh on St. At.
back taxes call now 7
for a free
consultation. 1-877- Troyer's
258-5142
Greenhouse- flowers
&amp; vegetable plants,
hanging
400
Financial variety
baskets, large potted
tomato plants, $2,
Financial Services
ea.
Closed
on
Sundays
Tax/ Accounting

CREDIT CARE
BELIEF

"The Proclorville
~~=~~=~~~;;;;~;;~~~:-;;;;;;;~;;;;~
Difference"
:
$1 and a deed is all
Other Services
Wanted
you need to own y~r 200 Announcements
dream home. Call Now!
GREEN
LAWN Pel Cremations. Call
Freedom Homes
Mowing
304-675· 740-446-3745
lost &amp; Found
888·565-0167
1610 or 304-593-

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

700

AtiT

RV
Service al Cannichael
Trailers
740-446·3825
MAX
EQUIPMENT - - - - - - TRAILERS,
CARGO
Real Estate
EXPRESS
&amp; 3500
Rentals
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSIO
N TRAILERS. B+W
Apartments/
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
$3999.
Townhouses
VIEW OUR ENTIRE •2B•R=w-/d=ho;;;;o;;;;k;;;;up=ap;;;;p;;;;l.
TRAILER INVENTORY furnished, close to Rio
AT
WWW.CARMICHAELT Grande. 286-5789 or
RAILERS.COM
740· •44
• 1••3•7•0•2 _ _ __
446-3825
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom
Apls.
at
Village Manor and
900
Merchandise Riverside
Apls.
in
Middleport. 740·9925064. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
This
WantTo Buy
institulion Is an equal
Absolule Top Dollar • opportunity
provider
silver/gold coins. any ..,.an""'d""'e""'m""'p""'lo""'y""'e.r""'......,...,.....,
1OK/14K/18K
gold
Manufactu~ed
jewelry, dental gold, pre 4000
Housmg
1935 US currency,
proof/mint
sels, ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
diamonds, MTS Coin
Sales
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue, = = = = = = =
Gallipolis. 446-2842

legals...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Annlversary..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
APIPUance Servlce ....................................... 302
................................................. 304
....................................... 306
...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ......................................•...........316
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnancial .......................................................322
Health ...........................................................326
Heating &amp; Cooling .............:......................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ...............................•............... 334
Muslc/Oance/Drama ...........•.••••...•............... 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumbing/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Professional Servicea.................................342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Securtty•......................................................• 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352
Flnanclal .......................................................400
Financial Serv1ces .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trainlng................................. 51 0
lessons........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Suppllea .......................................... 605
Horses ..........................................................610
llvestock......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
~rir,.tltollrl• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 700
t:.qiJip~nent ............................................ 705
Produce.......................................710
Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appliance .....................................................910
Auctions .......................................................915
Bargain Baaement.......................................920
Collectibles ..................................................925
Computers .............•....•................................ 930
Equlpment/Supplies.....................•.............. 935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oli Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...........................................•.......... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Security

DIRECTV
Foundgray
cat 1960 No job too big
For the best TV
or
small!
w/collar on Crew Rd.
experience,
Pomeroy, call to ID, - - - - - - upgrade from cable
740-992-0392
300
Services
to
DirecTV today!
• Packages start at
Notices
Child / Elderly Care
$29.99
1-866-541-0834
NOTICE
OHIO Darst Adult Group

VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do business with
people you know, and
N01 to send money
lhrough !he mail unlil
you have invesligating
the offering.

AUCTION: Modular
House at 12:00 Noon
on May 8, 2010.
Buckeye Hiils Career
Center, Rio Grande,
Ohio.
(740) 2455334.

Wanted
J &amp;
J
Painting
Interior/exterior
power
washing
homes garages bam.
Free Est. have ref.
304-812-7689

Money To Lend

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Conlact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
lnstilulions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or oblam a
BEWARE of
loan.
requesls for any large
advance payments of
Home has openings
fees or insurance. Call
.rusH
for new residence at
!he Office of Consumer
this time, please call
NETWORK
Affiars loll free at 1·
740-992-5023
Save up to 40% off 866-278-0003 10 learn
your cable bill! Call 1f the mortgage broker
General Repairs
or lender is properly
dish Network
licensed. (This is a
today! 1-877-274- public
Spring Special
service
2471
1. Driveway Seal.
announcement from lhe
Coating &amp; Repair.
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)
2. Gutter's cleaned ,
Life lock
repaired &amp; installed
Are You Protected?
3. Painting &amp; yard
600
Animals
An
Identity is stolen
worl&lt; &amp; misc. odd
every
3
seconds.
jobs.
Call Lifelock now to
Livestock
Sen1or discount,
protect your family
licensed &amp; bonded.
free for 30-daysl1· 2 1/2 yr. old Polled
Home ph. 304-882Hereford Bull. 446·
877-481-4882
3959
2109 or 446-7116.
Promocode:
Cell ph. 304-812·
10
3004

FREE 6-room DISH
Network
Satellite
System! FREE H-D
DVR!$19.99/mo,
Home Improvements
120+Digital
Basement
Channels (for 1 year)
Waterproofing
Call
Now$400
Sig1up BONUSi 1- Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
877·223-7921
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446·0870.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

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

Buried In Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877-264-8031

John's Construction
30 yrs. exp, Insured,
Siding, Roofing,
Remodeling. Call
740-367-0437 or
740-339-9593
lawn Service

VONAGE

Unlimited local
.and long
distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.
Get reliable phone
service from
Vonage.
Call Today!
1-877-673-3136

Homegrown
Strawberries
available
at
McKean's
Farm,
Centenary. Gallipolis.
446-9442
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain
Seasoned
cow ·
manure dirt for sale,
ground ear corn. $7
a hundred, 740-9922623. 740-992-2783
Horse Bedding
Pine Shavings
delivered bulk
513-218-1918
------900

Merchandise

Equipment /
Supplies
===;i;;;i;;===
Large
2
door
commercial
cooler
wtcompressor,
1
open wall cooler
wtcomprassor, 1 hot
dog steamer 740·
949-9004
Miscellaneous
"Great Buy"- 483
Silver Half Dollars &amp;
Quarters, Common
Dates, Half Dollars
$7.00 &amp; Quarters
$3.50 ea; Also have
a gold coin. 740-533·
3870

Registered Charolais
Yearling Bull bo'rn
10/27/08
Med.
Framed Polled &amp;
well muscled animal.
(good temperment)
$1200.00 Call Tony Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
Leport 304·675-3105
rebuilt In stock. Call
leave a message
Ron Evans 1·800537-9528

Found young triWant To Buy
colored male hound ======..;.=
Oiler's Towing. Now
dog w/collar no name buying junk cars
At. 87 &amp; 2 area 304· w/motors or w/out.
895 "3911 ·
740-388·0011
or
Profeuional Services
740-441-7870.

FREE 7 week old
Yard Sale
puppies,
Sheltie/Biack
Lab 2 different fam1iy
mix··Must go. Call yard sales. Fri-Sat.
740·446·8567
7th &amp; 8th. 8-?. Rt. 7
off Georges Creek.
1.25 mi out
J&amp;M
Lawncare
Free Kittens to good
Service.
Free
home, 10 Kittens. 2nd house behind
PUMPING 388-9331 .
estimates. Call (304) SEPTIC
Laurel Cliff Church,
Gallia Co. OH and
444-7911.
Thurs. &amp; Fn, May
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH Free to good home, 6th, 7th, grandfather
Music / Dance /
800-537-9528
Collie Mix, F, 8 mo., clock, lots of misc.
Drama
all shots &amp; spayed.
Garage sale- Top of
Free classes, M~y
Call740-709-9158.
Minersville Hill, Sat.
17th &amp; 24th, 7pm, Professional sewing
May 8th. high cha1r.
window
Mulberry Community servtces,
rldmg
bridal, Giveaway dogs for Pac-N·Piay.
Center,
Belles
&amp; treatments,
toys,
g1rls
clothing.
Chickens.
Sandhill
formal,
alterations
Beaus, pa1d classes
misc.. 9·?
Rd. 304·675-5354.
740·949-2202
begin June 7th.
Exp.
Lawn
Care
Service.
Free
Estimates,
call
anytime.
ask
for
Jacob 740-256-1500.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Wm!
1·888·582-3345

.;}

•

1

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com
~~~~~~~
Yard Sole

Trucks

Garage sale Fn 8-4
~ Sat 8·2 DenniS
Wo fe s res1denco on
Ye lowbush Road 1n
~acne
Scrub
Wl forms.
a1r
oond1t10ner
cash
reg star
holloweon
11Pms D&amp;B purse
keyboard
qutltod
bed spreads, large
electnc gnll + other
miSC. 740-949-2010

1999 Dodge 3500
Dually
ex1ended
cab 4x4 5-sp Man.
Gooseneck
and
Reese hitch. 4462109 or 441-7116
Real Estate
Sales

3000

~~~~~~~
For Sale By Owner
106 Mabelline Dr.
Gallipolis. 2BR, 1BA,
Full
Basement.
Remodeled kitchen.
1 Car Garage. Cent.
a1r All app. stay.
$89.900
740-6457965.

Huge carport saleT-he treasures of
E;dward Stiles, Dec,
918 S 3rd Avo,
Middleport, Oh w111
be sold: May 5.6.7,8.
9-4
toots, banks. 12
Unit
Apt.
bottles belt buckles, Complex. S316,000.
shelves Chnstmas &amp; 446-0390.
Nliscellaneous Items
Houses For Sale
Sat May Bth 9 3 Dr
Marg e
Lawson s 2006 3BR 2 SBA
Off1ce 106 Tyree Groen Twp. Livmg
Blvd
Rae ne Oh Room w/F~re Place
malum ty
clothes
clothes baby tams
t~ys, ant1ques, old
advertiSing
s1gns,
table &amp; cha1rs &amp;
much more.
Thur~-Fn,

6th·7th, 8·
ctoth1ng,
household
300
~pnng Ave. bnck
home

5,

4 Family Yard Sale.
Some Fum. Lots of
everylh1ng May 5, 6
7 6372 Jim H1ll Ad

Famt y

Room,
Se~o~arate
Duung
Room
Spacious
Kitchen
w/GranJte
Countcrtop &amp; Island
1n the Middle &amp;
Hardwood Cabinets,
Laundry
Room
72'x27' w/ 27'x50'
Attached Garage 3.5
Car. Beautiful View 1n
Country
w/2.38
Acres. Pnced to sell
$152,900 740-3392780 Must see to
apprec1ate.
No
realtors and no land
contracts.
Senous
callers only.

¥ard Sale May 6th,
7th &amp; Bth 8 • 5 1863
Land (Acreage)
prospect Church Ad 5 35 acres m Meigs
YARD
SALE, 1 5
miles from Holzer
Route 160 N Sat
~ay6th &amp; 7th
1 000

Recreational
Vehicles

County, Ohio on New
Crew Ad, septiC
approved and all
utlht,es
available,
ask1ng $20,000 or
OBO, call 740-9854300

Apartments/
Townhouses
-;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Twm RIV6rs Tower IS
accepting applicatiOns
lor walling hst for HUD
subsidiZed,
l-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly d1sabled,
call
675-6679

42' 2005 P1lgram
travel trailer $16 500
080, (740)992·3465
Motorcycles
06 Suzukt 800CC
CrUiser, Loaded w1th
opt1ons
Excellent
cond1t1on
$4850
740·794-0067

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel
BULLETIN BOARD

BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2
BR APTS., Jackson
Estates,
S2
Westwood Dr., 740446-2568.
Equal
Hous1ng Opportumty.
ThiS 1nstitution IS an

Houses For Rent
3BR, rancn home.
Sanders
Dr.
Available June ·1st.
$600 rent, $600 dep.
Call 446-3644 tor

;.a0:;.:P;;,;;Ii;;ca;;.;IT;;;;0;.;;n·~-----­
4000

Manufattu~ed

Housmg
Lots

Trailer Lot for Rent Addison
Pike
$150/mo. sec dep
same. Call446-3644
for application.
Rentals

=======
2 br., 2 bath, in
Syracuse. $475 plus
utilities &amp; deposit, No
Pets, 740-992-7680
for application.

SUNSET CONSTRUCTION
Roofs, Remodeling, Garages,
Pole Buildings, Siding,
Decks, Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free Estimates

740-742-3411
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addition~. Remodeling, \1ctal &amp;
Shmgle Rook :\e\\ Homes. Sidmg. D~!cb.
Bathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; ln~ured
Rick Price- 17 )rs. E\perience
WVI040954 Cell740-416-2960 740-992-0730

Eagles Aerie 2171
224 E Mau1 St. Pomeroy

ONUNf
01\l.Y
Rtl.n"
Phh

~0 d;~~ s
ltdd

Ph~Mu

$100

OnlY*10

U-SEU IT
tiM' prtvota

SUPBI
SAVER

FOr IU"hhate -IY
merc-. 1

pel'ty
,.,.. private partJ
miiJ'CIUmiMn, 1 merc:lw-. 1
lt.at per ad laaa
n ... UIBII 11008800
QOt-sl.4
7
4
.........
,.
-,ll..,.
1 b Q , 11eta
1

-per .. -1100

2.99

Members and Guests
come and have fun!!
8:00pm

14.99

'20.99

~
CHEVROlET

Syracuse, Ohio
740.992-5776
No'' Open 9-5 daily Sunday Closed

4" · 6" · 8"- 10,, pots a\ailable
All Flats $8.00

I!OBI:Ill BISSI:LL
CONSTI!UCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

SEAMLESS GUTTERS

BtST DEAlS IN NEW &amp;USED

Vin) I siding, Home
1\laintenance, Power
\V sh·n - &amp; C tte Clean·n -•
Bonded &amp; Insured

=

"'

Maintenance /
Domestic
Room Attendant @
The Holiday Inn.
Gallipolis, OH. Apply
in person, no phone
calls please.
Medical
Home Health Aides,
Certified
Nurse
Assistant
STNA
Galha
County
Counal on Aging
(Sen1or
Resource
Center) IS currently
accepting
applications for part
time and/or full time
(25_39
hours)
Certified
Home
Health A1d and/or
Cert1f1ed
Nursing
Assistant. Applicants
must
have
own
transportation
and
w1lling to travel 1n
Gallia County. Job
description
and
applications available
at
the
Senior
Resource
Center,
SA
160
1167
Gallipolis, OH. from

Medical
8:00 am to 4:00 PM
Monday
through
Fnday,
Positions
available
immediately.
An
Equal
Opportunity/AH1rmat1
ve Action Employer
9000

~

Concrete

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:
All types Masonry,
brick, block, stone,
concrete,
Free
Estimate
304·5936421, 304· 773-9550
.--..,.-...,....,,......,...--...,

4--•·

'45.99 ,_'ll I3A.99
~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Free Estimates
304-812-4795

=;;;;;;;;;;;;

care, T.-tu,
I I - ,..r •
!IVa,
81001 tiiOOO ftc. 1 - - 1111
4-e.14tlaya 4-.46f111Y11

'29.99

CONTINUOUS GUTTERS

Service I Bus.
01rectory

SMART BUY DEALS ON
fOI' 11rtvate ~~""'Y
WHEB.Z
mere-. 1

RIVERSIDE

250 Columbus Rd.
Athens, Ohio
~=====~ -======~

The Daily Sentinel
\.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Stop &amp; Compare

Do-it-y0urself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online options
7 great packages to choose from

SEU. IT
NOW

o\otuffihalt'ClOiilh \h~r \brcum Koolin= &amp; Knnodflingl

uooaa

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

.,
.,
.,
.,
.,

in,urcd

2S+ ~ear' experience

.740-992-1671

com •
Construction
workers, expenence
preferred, local work, - - - - - - 740•992 •7953· 740 • Matenal Coord1nator:
416-1436, 740·591· Cheshire)
-4~64~1=====~ .mmed1ate opemng
....
for team ong1nated
Drivers &amp; Delivery tndiv1dual Must have
excellent bas1c Math
Dr,·vers NeededSkillS, prOfiCient In
Professional
Excel and Word.
Transportation, Inc.
Highly
mot1vated,
1s seeking local
drivers for 7Willing to learn.prev.
. .
material purchas1ng
passenger m1m·vans
in the Hobson area.
a plus. Training
D
d.
prov1ded.
Some
rug screen, nv1ng overtime
OT
record and cnmmal
required.
Require
background check
very
good
work
reqwred. 1"800 ' 471 ' ethics
and
2440, Reference 178
willingness to team
Help Wanted.
Start1ng pay S15hr +
General
Holidays pa1d. Fax
resume 1mmed. w1th
Enthus1ast1c person Mat.Coord."
on
or couple to ass1st cover page to (614)
wtth ent1re operatiOn 716-2272. Excellent
of modem da1ry. company' EOE
Must
have
eq01;&gt;ment
expenence
and - - - - - - enjoy cattle Hous1ng
Satellite Installers
can be part of Become part of our
package
Fax hstallat1on team for
complete
resume 01sh Network FfT
with 3 work ref. 304- benefitS, tra1n1ng. co.
675-5074
truck
&amp;
work
supplied.
Strong
work
ethic
&amp;
-A-V..
O_N_!_A_II_A_r-ea_s_l..,l-'o
willingness to learn is
Buy or Sell Shirley req'd,
Background
Spears
304-675- check &amp; drug test
1429
req.,
must
have
clean driving record.
,.
D-ie-s-el_ m_e-ch-1-tr-ac-to_r_s Call
800-893-1991
send resume PO Box Option 8. Or apply
online
787 R1pley WV
www.safe7.com.

Full~

Frt"C cstimatt'' ·

SEASON SPECIAl 10" FERNS $6.00

1\ Do-it-yourself classified ads

Upcomtng Bands at the

Country Roads

I

Jje/rJ

740-446-3484

May 8th

• \n~ptl'd h) \llln,mnnn"'
• \II \\ "'"' ( .u.tnmtu-&lt;1
• I OCHII~ 0\1 nt'&lt;l &amp; Opt nll('d

l

The Karat Patch

740-992·1171

• lluuw \\ indcm Rt·plannH"nl
• \hn-or. Cut 111 Or&lt;ltr • \lnhll~ Sc:n itt.,

Classifleds

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Just recetved over 400
NEW Sterling Stiver Charms.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:

Gat11a
County
Farmers MarketPart
Time
Market
Manager Now hinng
a seasonal, part·t1me
Market
Manager
ThiS contract pos1t1on
w111 have the pnmary
respons1b1htlos be1ng
the
day-to-day
operation
of
the

a

equal
opportumty
provider
and
For sale nver lot in employer.
Hartford WV, 0 274 Modern 1BR apt.
acres, 138 ft. of nver Call 740-446-0390
frontage, $12,00000
New 2 BR, 1.5 BA, in
or
304·593-2176
.pot1
·s area. Call
Galll
304·675-8957.
for application 740Real Estate 645-5785.
3500
Rentals
Spnng Valley G reen
~~~~~~~ Apartments 1 BR at
:
$395+2 BR at $470
Apartments/
Townhouses
Month. 446·1599.

2006 Honda Shadow
750 CC garage kept
1 700 m1
S5 500
OBO
1_28 R &amp; 1_4BR Apt
for rent + elec. &amp;
p -o;.--r;(
,..
2000 ·
AUtomotive dep No pets. App.
Immediately
turn
avail. Please call
Autos
(304) 610-0776 or
(304) 674-0023
01 Explorer 4-Door,
2
BR Rodney area,
4WD, 2nd Owner All
Records, Very Clean WID, rot, stove 1nc.
Ask1ng $4500. 256- No- pets, dep &amp; ret.
req'd. Call 740-4466936
1271 or 740·709·
1998 Ford Contour .16
_5_7_. - - - - SVT Blk 1n color v6 2BR APT Close to
w/5speed very good Holzor Hosp1tal on SR
cond. $3500 00 obo 160 CIA (740) 441·
304-675-4596
0194
CONVENIENTLY
98 Ftreb~rd, Black, T- LOCATED
&amp;
Top $2500 080 79 AFFORDABLE!
4x4
SWB Townhouse
F-150
and/or
Blue/S ver
$7000 apartments
small
houses
for
rent
OBO Call 740-339·
Call 740-441-1111 for
0004
applicaton
&amp;
tnformaton
Autos
for
safe, - - - - - - Chevy, Ford Vans, Free Rent Special
SUVs &amp; Trucks all
!II
Pnced to sell 446- 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up Central All W D
7278
hookup 1enant pays
electnc Call between
Ouahty
Cars
&amp; the hours of 8A-BP
Trucks w/warranty all
EHO
pnced to sell 15 yrs.
Ellm View Apts.
1n business. Cook __c;..3_04.;.)B_B_2_-3_o_17__
Motors, 328 Jackson Newly decorated
Pike
bedroom
ref.and
Gall1pohs. OH 740- deposit req. no pets
446·0103.
304·675·5162

2 BR Very Cloon, No
pets,
Near
Clay
School.
S400/mo +dep.
Water &amp; Trash Inc
740·256-1664

Help WantedGeneral

Small 2 br. mobile
home in Rac1ne,
5225 a mo., $225
dep., 1 yr lease. no
pets, no calls after
Beaut1ful
1BR
fanners'
market,
9pm, 740-992·5097
apartment
in
the
1nctudmg an on-s1te
country freshly painted _ _....,____ presence
at
the
very clean WID hook Nice 2 BR on Bailey market, as well as
up nice country sett1ng Run
Rd.,
$425 oH-site work during
only 10 mins
from mo/$425 Dep. No non-market
hours.
town. Must see to pets, ref. req. Call Duties 1nclude acting
appreciate. Water pd. 740-367-7025
as lead contact for
$375/mo 614-595-7773
the Galha County
or 740-645-5953
I
Sa es
Farmers'
Market.
1 BR and bath. f1rst
recrUJtmg vendors to
16x80
Mobile
Home
&amp;
part1c1pate 1n the
months
rent
depos1t
references 1998 3BA,' 2 Full market over see the
Bath.
Excellent
reqUired, No Pets
set up, operat1on and
and clean. 740-441- Cond w Storage shut-down of the
0245
Bldg 2 car port ·5 mArket on market
~--~~~~ acre Lot on McCully da s
at fed
1 br apt, $325 plus Ad. 740-446-1137.
Y·
u 11
ulilltles &amp; dep: 3 br.
applications
would
house, 5425 a mo.
possess
excellent
16x80 Interpersonal
and
plus utilities &amp; 5400 Beautiful
dep., on 3 rd St., mob1le
home
in customer
serv~ce
Racme,
Country skills,
be
self
740 _247_ Bradbury.
living
&amp;
only
5
motivated
and
4292
monutes from town extremely
reliable.
2
bedroom Close to 1 acre, 1 car Agricultural
apartment,
1 full garage, 2 covered expenence a plus.
bath,
$400
per decks, ramp on back Salary IS negotiable.
month,
740-416- deck, central alf, heat Interested applicants
3036
pump, new shingled should
submit
Middleport. 1 &amp; 2 br. roof.
Mov!i
to
1n resume
apts. dep. &amp; ref .. No condition. Photos at galliafarmersmarket
pets, 740-992·0165
www.2487Now.lnfo
@yahoo.com or mail
or call 740·367-0577, to 18 Locust St., Am
1268, Gallipolis, OH
Pt. Pleasant 4th St. Pnce $50,000
1 bed. apt. all elec.
45631 no later than
water fum . depJno
\tlay 14th.
Job
smoking no pets
posting can also be
304-675-3788 after
/iewed
at
Sp.m.
Construction
NWWohlomeanstobs.

Lots

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

Rentals

PUBLIC
NOTICES
Public Notice
Gatling Ohio, LLC.,
430 Harper Park
Drive,
Beckley,
West VIrginia, 25801
has submitted an
Underground Coal
Mining and Reclamation Permit numbered D-2317-4 to
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
Mineral Resources
Management.
The proposed coal
mining and recta·
mation operations
will be in
Lots 276, 277, 278,
279, 834, 1204,
1205, 1206, 1207,
1208. 1209. 1210,
1215, 1216 &amp;Sections 8,10 &amp; 16 Sutton
Township,
Township 2, Range
12,
Lots 266, 267, 268,
269, 270, 271' 272:
273, 1167, 1211,
1212, 1213, 1214,
1221 &amp;
Section 8 Letart
Township, Township 2, Range 12
Lots 214, 215, 216
Township,
Letart
Township 1, Range
11 ,
Lots 1193 &amp; 1194
Letart
Township,
Township 2, Range
11 , &amp; Lots 222, 223,
&amp; 224 Letart Township, Township 1,
Range 12 Meigs
County, Ohio .
The area ls located
on the New Haven &amp;
Ravenswood 7 1/2
minute
U.S.G.S.
Quadrangle maps .
The permit being located within the
corporation limits
and on the east and
south
side
of
Racine, Ohio. The
proposed area to be
undermined encompasses
2498.0
acres.
This coal mining application will remove coal using the
undergrCX~nd minIng
methods,
specifically
the
room and pillar
method.
This application is
on file at the Me1gs
County
Court·
houstt, Recorder's

Office, 100 West
2nd
Street.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769 for public inspection. Written
comments, objections or requests
for an informal conference may be sent
to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of
Mineral Resou~ces
Management, 2045
Morse Road, Building
H-3. ColumOhio
bus,
43229-6693, within
(30} thirty days of
the last date of pu.
licatlon of this n
tice.
(4) 29, 5/6, 13, 20
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE:is hereby
given that on Saturday, May 8. 2010 at
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at
43519 State Route
124, Racine, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company Is selling for
cash in hand or certified check the following collateral:
1994 John Deere
540
E
Skidder
5W540EC546764
The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale. and to with·
draw the above collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers Bank and SavIngs
Company
reserves the right.
reject any or all bi
submitted.
deThe
above
scribed collateral
will be sold "as Is·
where is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty
given.
For further mtt.rm::!l·
tion, or for an
pointment
inspect collateral,
prior to sale date
contact Cyndle or
Ken at 992-2136.
(5) 5, 6, 7

�Thursday, May 6, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
44 Stop1 Big name
watch
in auto
button
racing ·
6 Chip dip
DOWN
11 Scout's
1 Acting
nder
teacher
12 Wise
Hagen
say1ng
2 S1lent
13 Decorate
okay
14 Friend of
3 Arctic
Wilma
17 Furious
masses
15 United
4 To be, in 18 Plain silly
17 Gloss
20 Students'
Paris
carriers
target
5 Kind of
19 It's north
21 Invited
poem
of Afr.
22 Agreeable
6 Cavalry
answers
20 Port spot
weapon
23 Stuck
24 Roast
7 F1red
beef au 25 Job for
8 Drunk
Holmes
25 Paint buy
9 Drunk
27 California
26 Seals. in 10 Smger
observaa way
Grant
tory
28 Print
16 Refuse to
31 Whitesupplies
talk
29 New York
hd'rse's
player

Tom Batiuk

river

33 Showed
up
34 Road
d1v1sion
35 M1neo
of
movtes
36 Boxtng
legend
37 Painter
Vermeer
39 Hearty
brew
40 Drenched

30 Motnes

31 Deborah's 1-,-,-+----1:._-1--- + -

.AGAR THE HORRIBLE
/.IJQ/( f '\'( I WoNPER. Jlo~ LONf-J
A

~WI/'J6

..The King
and I"
co-star
32 Places for
some
Sgts.
33 Small
dome
35 Wheel
tender
38 Bright
parrot
41 Texas
landmark
42 Tibia's end
43 Sheet
stuff

Chris Browne

11~ eGEN ~Nee I'Ve

BEEN ON ONf OF

.'

1'11~66 '?!

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
DID )IOU !&lt;NOW
111AT" 6tRr?G ARc
~eL..A;feP

IO

DIN05AI.l~~?

«

ZITS

'

SHELTER

To THEM.

)

.&gt;&lt;

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

4

1

1
6

'

6 8
-·

9

5

s

3

!

I ~&lt;

6

&lt;I'

5
1
1

DENNIS THE MENACE

- t-

6 3
1

9
Difficulty I.C\'CI

5

51
2 I
4
4 r2 1 - 6

***

I~

i

It
~

I

I

4 2
4

"I left my shirt untucked so I
don't need a napkin."

Hank Ketchum

I

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

DONT LISTEN

SToRIES

•

"MAYBE YOU WON'T FEEL SO BAD IF YOU REMEMBER
SHE'S GETTING PAID t250.000 AN EPISODE."

Patrick McDonnell

UTTS

:.
IE
:::
~

!

~
1:...
~

7

"

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~ L 9 9

Gt 8 8 6
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HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for thul'Sl1ay, Mav 6, 2UIU:
1nis year, \ ou iind a i»;~ or someone }ou look up
to to be contusing at worst and mspmng at besL
\\'orking together in a partnership rould take more
th,m JUSt} our effort. In frustration.. some ol) ou
could deode to head m) our own eli reel ion IJ you
are s111gk you mme in a new dn-edion .1nd .ue JiJ,.ely lo m~el wmeone a! a rommunily e1 ~nl who is
wry diiferenl. Be c1ware oi putting this person, llf
,mvone, on a pedestal. Ti you ,ue att,1ch~d, sh,m•
rnore of )'lJUr frustralion with the oul&gt;ide world
AQUARIUS can demand ,,lot.
llzc Stars Slzcnt• the Kmd of D11'oj ),11171 HlllX 5
Dvuamrc; 4 Posrlr oc 3-A~rasc: 2 So-~(l, 1 DiffiC11ll
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
'****'* If) ou enrounter a stressful Situation
with an associ.1te, think back to\\ hen this IS:.'Ue
nught ha1 e ocrurred before. You nught ha1 e thouAht
1 our message got lhrough- 11 didn'l Attrmpt to
1erb&lt;~hle what you think clearly. Tonight: Cakh up
on,, lril·nd'~ news. ,
rAU.RUS (Aprii20-May 20)
**** Pressure builds in ,munpl\'('l'dented manrn?l. You n1uld feel a bil oul of sync'' ith ,, situ,ltion
thai c1·oh t'S. A brainstorming .;ession hdps relea~
r.our rreat11 ily, a~ you muld be rather still;;.i.
romght: Could be a lale night.
G£:~111'; 1 (M.1y 21-June 20)
***** 'wu nught llclll! to rethink a lll&lt;ltter that
1111 olves others dlld takes) ou to ne1~ height'
lm estigale options as they appe.u: 'rou'll fmd th.1t by
focusing on the positiw, a situation thdt often drag.') ou d011 n Wlll Opt'TI up. Tomght· Take 111 new 1 ista....
CANCER Qune 2l·Jul) 22)
*****Your ability to mo1e fon1c1rd depends
on your negoli,ltion style. Con ...ider all Ihl' m,1n}
upti&lt;~ns Ih,ll might head your w.n. Cons1dt.'r wh.1t is
h.1ppening behind the scenes 1\'llh someone. A con
~t•rsalion is Milled. Tonight. T,1lk a""'Y·
l[O Ouly 2.3-Aug. 22)
** ** Others often point to where} ou rould
lead or play a b1gger role. You m1ght be less inclined
to spread } ours~lf thin, though the dcasion IS ulti
mateln ours 'e1~ begmrung~ come from diSCUsSIOns Usten more Bra®torm more Torughl. Just
don't be alone
\'IRGO (Aug. 2.3-Sepl. 22}

•

'*'** You rould be bred and pu,hed be} ond your
normal linuls. \\'c~tch a tendency to cl~ do11n rather
than s.l) 'no." Others make tTd!lge JUdgment.&lt;; if
they JU&gt;t notire attitudes. Yourcreatility emerges
when ) ou detach. Tonight Put }our ft't't up.
LIBRA &lt;Sept. 23-0.:1. 22)
**** You rould be out of kilter per...onall); but
once you toss your"l'lf into 1 our work or c1 projed.
you tlre A-OK Don't''""" pres~ure irom a partnt&gt;r
to push you one'''') l'r .U'Illther with a key bsue.
Tonight Acting like tht're ~~no tomorrow.
SCORPIO (Oct 2'll'\ol. 21)
*'** You ruuld be more runnecte..i and interested
in a personal matler. Perhaps you need to take '&gt;Orne
peNlnal time off. fallgue marks your deosions right
now. A meeting could be "weud." Don't :nake all)
decisions )et Tonight· Happil) going home.
SAGIITARIUS Cl'\01 22 Dec 21)
**** 'rou neart kn011 11 hat is going to happt&gt;n
before 1t does. You h,~, e ,, ~nse of being Ol'erwhelmed. You keep pu~hing lei) h,mi to acromplish your goals. A boss or someone you nee..i to
respond lo prm es ln bt! most dJslr.\Cting. Tonight:
Dinner with frit.&gt;nds.
CAPRICOR..\1 tDec 22-),m 19)
***You easil) could be gelling a partial per::.~1\ e. Certain f,1cts m1ght be lt'ft out The smart •
Goal 1\ ill detach and ,,tte.'l'lpllo see what might be •
off. Certitinlv, many of }OU WJ!I feel th.tt a ,jtu,,tionJ~
too good lobe true. Torught Treat ltme.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-reb. lS)
**** You feel that a pdrtnership b holding }UU
back, as il did se~t•ral )Cars .1go 'too might wonder
1\'hich j, the best 1\ •'} to procwd. Only }oo can
de..ide. Dic;cussions l'OU!d h.11e ,lJl off-tht.&gt;·\\'illlquclh'
!)' lo them. TOU ft'&lt;.'l pres.surt•d. romght: Your night to
howl.
PISCES (reb. 19 \l,uth 20)
*** Di"&lt;'U'i"JOns might be diiticull, to S&lt;l)' the
1 ery Jea~t. As ) ou ,,!tempt to dear out a mi~under­
starlding. 1ou gain a ne11 &lt;~ppreoahon for the
dynamics trut you are de,,lmg '' ith You don't
ah1 a)' ha1 e the nght arum er. Torughl. Take some
thinking time

�......

-....,~--,......---~~---~~

Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Thursday. May 6,

2010

LinCI homers in 9th to give Jays sweep of Indians Cabrera homers in 10th
as Reds beat Mets 5·4

CLEVELAND (AP) Manny Acta endured plenty of losses \\ ith the
Washin!!ton ~ation.tl . IIi-.
time with the Cleveland
Indians hasn't been much
better.
··The Indians were onc
out a\\&lt;1) Vvh.lncsda) ftotlt
endmg a losing streak and
salvaging a game agamst
the Toronto Blue Jays
Then his backup shortstop
made an en·or&lt;md his closer left a fa... tball out over

the plate.
\\hen \dam Lmd's
ninth inning t\\o-run
homer landed m the
ble.1chcr; in lett. the Blue
Jays h&lt;1d a 5-4 v ictol) and
the Indians "ere dealt
another stinging loss. But it
'""'I 't the "urst of Act;.t's
~.·ate

1.

"I guess ) ou don't knov\
my track record." Acta
said. "I've had some tough
ones."
W1:dnesuay's loss \\ill

make the list.
Tnbe do er Clms Perez
(0 2). tf'\ in.-• to get li' e
outs for Ius tn1&gt;t ,1\c smce
April 18. retired the fit t
t\\ o hitters in the mnth.
FollllWing a !·red I C\\ is
dnublc. hi third hit of the
game, Aaron Hill hil a
slo\\ roll~: li to shqtt th·lt
trickkd lx:t\\l..'~n the: leg~
of Luis Valhuena.
Lind's hln-.t on a 1.:2
pitch followed and 'limmto
had a four-game "inning

streak and its first threegame ~weep m Cleveland
since Sept Q II. 2002.
Tra' 1s Hafner homered
and ~cored tv. ke. but his
solo ~hot in the fourth "a.-.
JUSt his third of the sea...,on
and first smce Apnl 20.
Sc\ en eh. Ia) players.
including H.tfner and forml'r
\11-Star
Grad)
S!Zl'morc. ttre hatting .220
or worse. Top prosp!.!t:l
1\1att I a Porta has \ et to
homct and has one RBI.

I

Devils

Gallia
Academy
head coach
Rich
Corvin,
middle,

from Page Bl
ning
run.
allO\\ ing
Warren to capture its tihh
SEOAL baseball title in
school history. The
Warriors
also
''on
SEOAL championships
in 1999. 2004. 2005 and

gets in a

few wor
with th
umptres
shortly after
being ejected in the
sixth jnning
of
Wednesday
night's title
game of the

2006.

Both WHS and Gallia
Academy shared the
2006 crown with matching 8-2 marks, which ironically
was the
final season before the
Day of Champions ofTicially began.
For WHS hcad coach
Mark Farr. Wednesday's
outcome was beautiful
thing to see - g1vcn it
was a primary goal for
this club back when the
season started six weeks
ago. He also acknu\\ 1edged that there was
nothing easy about
accomplishing that mission.
"That v\·as our first goal
this year. That's the only
thmg we wanted to concentrate on wa:-. winning
this title and restoring the
tradition of this program
back to where it used to
be," Farr commented.
"These kids arc fighters
and we never got down
on ourselves. not tonight
or at any other point of
this season. I'm just really happy for our kids for
never giving up. I couldn't be more proud of my
team.
"I also have to give a
lot of credit to Gallia
Academy tonight. They
really fought just like we
did tonight and pla~·ed
well enough to \\in
tonight. I admired their
effort and wish them the
best in the tournament."
But perhaps the biggest
justice. according to Farr.
was the way his lone
upperclassman (Heath)
rose to the occasion
when it mattered most.
"Overall, we' rc a
young group We only
have one senior. but for
him to battle the way he
did tonight was impressive," Farr said. 'Tm just
really happy for him,
especially to get that
game-tying single and
then score the winning
run. That's senior leadership."
Heath. before producing the game-tying hit
and scoring the winning
run. threw 6.1 solid
innings on the mound.
Heath was in a position
to be the winning pitcher.
but Gallia Academy
scored three times in the
top of the seventh potentially making I Ieath
the losing hurler in the
contest before the late
'
rally.
There were also plenty
of fireworks leading up
to that final at-bat.
The Blue Dev: ils struck
first blood in the top of
the first as Kyle Dingess
and Jim Clagg produced
back-to-back
singles,
giving the guests a 1-0
advantage after one complete.
The score remained
that way until the bottom
of the second. when the
hosts rallied with a run to
knot things up at one
apiece. Landon Kern
doubled to leadoff the
inning. then Kern scored
one batter later when
Jace Knoss reached safely on an error.
The score stayed tied at
one until the fourth,
when Gallia Academy's
Casey Denbow delivered
a one-out opposite field
homer over the Blue
Monster - giving the
Devils their second lead
of the night at 2-1 .
The hosts, however:

CI~CINNATJ (AP) The v. ind latched onto
Orlando Cabrera's long
drh c and ~ta11ed shm ing
it toward the foul pole.
providing a ltttlc exttd
dramc~ m a ~eric~ that
knew nothmg ebL',
C.1hn:rn led off thl.! lOth
inning \\ ith a homl'r that
hit the yclkm sctwn just
in~itle ihe lelt lkld jiolc.
gi\ ing the Cincinnati {ed-.
a 5-4 v. in mer the ~ev.
York ~lets on WL"dnesda&gt;
and providing an appropnatc finish to a ;;cries lull of
all-ot-nothingS\\ mgs.
''When I lut it. I nC\CJ'
thou~ht it "ould hit the
pole,· Cabrera aid. "l \\,Is
thinking. 'Clear!). that's
fair.' It \\as close."
Cabrl'rrt · filth gameending hom~.:r cam\: off
Pedro I·eliciano ( 1-1) .mel
gave the Red&lt;; their second
~tst- \\in~ 'ictor) in .1
"ild sen~~. The team~
combined for II homers in
the tim."~.: gunK's - all solo
shot....
I Citll'lll!Wti showl'd Jt \
much more atk-pt at dra·
m;.ttic endinss. Nine of tht:
Reds' 14 \\ ms ha\e come
in their lmal at-hat
Cincinnati i~ 4-0 in extr,l
inning-..
"This "as some .;;cries,"
Red
manager Dusty
Baker s.tid. "We're not
doing it c.tsy, but the main
thing j., \\e're doing it.''
;\licah 0\\ings (3-0)
pttchcd one perfect inning
after Franctsco Cordero
blew a one-run Je.1d in the
ninth. t) ing it at 4. Cordero
ga\ e up a"pair of hits and
Jefl hnncoeur·~ sacnlic~:
n). his senmd blo\\ n sa\ c
in II chance~.
Brandon Phillips and
.Jonn) Gome~ also homered for the Rl'ds. Da\ id
Wright had a solo shot for
!he Mets, giving him a
nine-game hitting -.trcak
that includes li.mrhm1ct-s.
No surprise that the
Mets came up ju-.t -shott
again. Ne\\ York is 1-4 in
I extra inning::. nnd 3-6 in
one·nm games.
"Most of the game.-;
have
been
close.''
Feliciano said.
All three in the ~cries
,.,ere decided in the ninth
inning
or
later.
Cincinnati's Laynce Ntx
ended the opener with a
pmch-hit hornet in the
lith. and Ne\\ York's Rod
Bamjas decided the mid
die game \\ ith a ninth
innin~ drive.
On"il "mm, v, ind) afternoon.they went at it agmn.
The :Vlcts \\ere last in
the league with a .234
tcnm hutting av~o:rugc. The
Red&lt;.. were fout1h-v\·or.. t at
.237 . Thdr he~t chance
was to get one up in the

SEOAL
Day of
Champions
at Warren
High
School in
Vincent,

Ohio
Bryan
Walters/photo

retaliated in their half of
the fourth. as Kern led
the rail) off with a \\alk.
Knoss followed with a
single to give WHS two
on and nobod) out, but
the Devils retired the
two
batters
next
unscathed.
Austin Henthorn hit a
grounu ball to GAHS
third
baseman .. Ben
Saunder.... but the ball
went right under hi~
glov c -~ allo\\ ing both
Kern and Knoss to score
on the error for \\ arren 's
fir~t lead of the night at
3-2 after four complete.
The Warriors added to
that cushion in the sixth.
but onl) after some v. ild
theatrics broke out in the
contest.
Kern led off the inning
with a single and was
replaced by ~pinch-runner
Mitch Tabler. then Knoss
hit a 11y ball to left field.
The ball was caught for
an· instance. but then hit
the ground during the
transition from glove to
hand. And that's when
things went haywire.
The field umpire called
Knoss out. but the home
plate umpire signaled
safe - creating quite a
dilemma on the playing
field. Tabler, hearin~ safe
from the home ~plate
umpire, adV"anced to second base on the drop then went to third on a
throwing error. GAHS.
howeV"er. picked off
Knoss at second as he
also tried to adv a nee on
the error.
As time in the field was
called. GAHS coach
Rich Corvin came out to
argue that the field
umpire had signaled an
out on the catch. If that
was the case. then Kern
could have also been
called out at first after
not tagging on the catch.
After the umpires
deliberated. the home
plate umpire ~ who
serves as the head umpire
- called the play a catch
and abo called Kern out
at third for not ta~2in2.
Coach Farr then~began

We pia) eu our hest and I
cannot give enough
props to our guy ... .''
Pt\lCtor went on to he
the "inning pitcher of
record. striking out tV\iO
in t\\o-third~ 'of an
inning. Heath allowed
Ii\ e runs and nine hits in
the no-decision over 6.1
innings. striking out fi&gt;e
and
walking
three.
Troester took the toughluck loss for the 1!UC~ts.
allowing ~ix runs (two
earned) and eight hits
mer six-plus innings
while fanning two and
"nlking one.
Gallia Academv commined four error~ in the
contest. while Warren
had half that total \\ ith
t\\o. GAHS left nine on
the bases. compared to
the Waniors leaving six
on the bags.
Dinges~ and Denbo\\
each Jed GAHS with two
hits,
followed
by
Warnimont. Eastman.
Clagg. Saunders and
Brandon l'avlor with one
safet} apiece. Proctor.
}Ieath and Kern paced
sev~nth.
GAllS as istant coach WHS with two hits each.
Core) Lucc spoke about followed bv Knoss and
what that rally meant Giffin with ·one apiece.
r-.tarietta
defeated
ahout his kids' character
after the sixth inning. Port mouth 4-0 for third
even though it \\as n place. while Logan
topped Ironton for fifth
tough loss to swallow
"I give WmTen a lot of \\ ith a n-3 decision.
credit. they did a great Jack on was the lone
job. Tile) fielded u fan- ShOAL South team to
tastic team and the kids \\in after pulling off a 14- .
victorv
over
played \\ ith class," 11
GAJ IS as!'.istant coach Chillicothe for se\etHh
Corev Lucc said after- place.
ward~ "With that s.1id. I
WARREN 6,
cannot talk enough about
our team's heart. Coach
GALLIA ACADEMY 5
100 100 3 - 59 4
Corvin did a gn:at job Gallia
preparing us and it hurt a Warren 010 201 2 - 6 8 2
little bit when we lost GAHS (13·7) John Troester Chuck
(7) and Terry Smith.
him. hut \\e rallied Calvert
WHS (18·3) Zach Heath Tyler
around that and used 1t to Proctor (7) and Landon Kern
our.advantage.
WP - Proctor LP -Troester
''We harnessed that and HRGA Casey Denbow (fourth
our kids didn't ghc up. nn rg &lt;lObody on, one out)
to left, gi' ing Warren n 42 cushion headed into the
finale.
Galli.1 Acadenl) found
ne" life aftct Con in was
ejected. as the 13luc
Devib rallied to .;;core
three times in the seventh .
for their third and linal
lead of the game nt 5-4.
Saunders led the inning
off \\ ith a single. then
Caleb \\'arnimont \\as h1t
by a pitch and 'I) ler
Eastman laid down a per
feet bunt single to lo.td
the ba es with nobod)
out.
Dingess. folhmed with
a t\\O-RBI double. \\hich
allov. ed Saunders and
\\amimont to score for a
tic game. Denbow then
drove in Eastman on a
one·out single. gh ing the
Devils thetr final lend of
the night.
Proctor took m rr on
the mound from there
and struck out both
GAllS batters he lacl·d
while leaving the b.t~1.·s
loaded. And then Warren
went to the plate in the

breeze.
Both teams failed to ~et
much out of ba..cs-loaJed
early.
oppoqunitic:-.
Johnn) Cueto \\ alked
Angel Pagan with the
base~ loaded to force in a
run in the third, but J
Reyes hit .1 \\cak f1)
and J.tson Bay hit a rout
lly to end it. Bay also
stranded runners in scoring po~ition "ith strikenuts in the filth and se\'enth.
B:t) got d $66 million.
deal
in
four-yeat
December. but has .!&gt;trugglcd mighlll) a-. the
cle.mup hitter "ith just
one homer and nine RBI....
"I'm ure he·~ been
through ... omething like
this before:· manaeer
Jem ~lanuel s.ud. "1"he
p10blem JS. l'\e never
seen it fit~thand. \\'e'rc
'CI) confident he 'II come
out or it."
C'mcmnat• .tbo \\a ted
an opportunit) for a big
inning, this time in the
fourth. Cabrera singled
'' tth the ba~es loaded to
drive in t~nc run oil
Jonathon Niese. but
Ramon llcrnandez \\as
easily out at the plate t.
ing to s..:ore from sect
on the pl:ty.
Phillips. \\ ho wa-. chastised by Baker for failing
to nm hard on his double
the
pre\ ious
night.
snapped a 2-all tie \Vith his
fourth homer. \\ hich bareh cleared the "all in right
f'ield. Phillip rabcd ni..
right ann In celebration
and' rounded the bases
qutckly.
~OTES: There was a
moment of ~ilence before
the game for longtime
Tiger-. broudcuster Ernie
llamcll. who died on
l'uc~day.
...
Gary
t-.hllthews Jr. sinclcd in his
tir-.t at-bat, ending an 0l(ll'-15 slide. Since April7.
he's ~ for J9 with 16
strikeouts. ... i'.lets RH
~1ike Pelfrey threw in the
bullpen\\ ithout a problem
and "ill start Fridav
aoainst the Giants a;
pf:um~d. P~lfrcy had tigh ness 111 hr~ -.boulder
In t time out. "Felt.
he said ... Baker
Phtllips could have
a
triple instead of settling for
a double on hi dri\C off
the \\all 'Juesdav night in
1'\Y's 5-4 win. Phillips has
a htstot) of casing up at •
times. Baker compared it
to an A-caliber ~tudent settling for &lt;I B. "We talk to
Brandon quite often,"
Baker said. "I guess he\
bl..'ttl'l' than he used to be.
We're still trying to get
him to the point he\ a big
difference-maker every
da\ lx·cause he's ccJtainly
got that skill and ability."

r;;::==================:::;,

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arguing the call with the

umpires, stating the
home plate umpire had
signaled safe - meaning
the ball was live and in
play. The umpires deliberated
again.
and
reversed their reversal allowing Tabler to stay at
third base with one out in
the inning.
Corvin, upon the reversal. again v. ent to argue
with the umpires·:.... but
was ejected shortly after
his complaint began for a
~econd time.
When the dust finally
settled. Tripp Giffin followed with an RBI ~ingle

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