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                  <text>'uzpuuz

Hey Baby!

Youth fishing derby
set for Saturday, A3

Meigs County Babies, As

e

. . . ,. ._.,..,.,.,..,..,_ti
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

~~~~~--------------~--~--------------------

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Henry 'Bill' Johnson

Loose
fiber cable
snags·traffic
SENTINEL STAFF
. MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

HESHIRE - Traffic
g Ohio 7 North near
Cheshire was backed up
for more than an hour on
Tuesday when a fiberoptic cable fell across the
roadway.
When first reported,
the nature of the cable
was unknown, prompting
emergency officials to
close Ohio 7 at the junction with Little Kyger
Road. Troopers from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Ohio State Highway
Patrol were dispatched to
the scene at 3:30 p.m.
and held traffic until it
was determined that the
cable was a fiber-optic
line owned by AT&amp;T,
and not an electrical wire
and posed no threat to the
public.
An OSHP dispatch'er
said AT&amp;T sent a crew to
the scene to deal with the
cable. Troopers
ed the scene and
wed traffic to resume
•
nonnal pace at 4:35p.m.,
according to the OSHP
dispatcher.
No
injuries
were
reported.
•

SPORTS .
• Piniella retiring after
season. See Page 81

WEATHER

---------------~~

Rizer insurance proceeds subject of civil suit
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - State
Farm Life Insurance Co.
has filed suit in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court in order to determine who will benefit
from Kenneth Rizer, Sr.'s
life insurance policy.
Rizer was murdered in
March 2009, by his wife,
Paula, and she is now in
the Ohio Reformatory for
Women in Marysville. In
January. during a second
trial on a murder charge,

she was convicted of
murdering her husband.
Her appeal in the Fourth
Distric:t G:ourt of Appeals
is pending.
According to the complaint filed Monday, the
convicted murderess has
not disclaimed the proceeds of her late husband's insurance policy,
for which she was
named the primary beneficiary in 1996.
Probate/Juvenile Judge
L. Scott Powell, in
Rizer's
estate
case.
issued an entry finding

that Paula Rizer was
unable to benefit from
her late husband's estate
under Ohio law. because
she had been found to
have caused his death.
·Rizer's sons James,
Michael and Kenneth.
Jr., now claim to be the
rightful beneficiaries of
their father's life insurance policy. and State
Fann is asking the cou11
to determine who has
rightful claim to the policy's proceeds.
Testimony during both
of Paula Rizer's jury trials

revealed a $20.000 policy.
but the Rizers had borrowed against it, and the
value of the policy was.
placed at nearly $8,000.
"Each of the defenpants appears to have a
possible claim upon the
proceeds of the party,"
according to the civil
complaint filed Monday.
"By reason of these conflicting
claims
and
because Paula Rizer has
appealed or intends to
appeal her conviction,
and has not disclaimed
coverage under the poli-

Unempl~ymen~:

June figures
increase in
~ri-county area
BY ANDREW CARTER
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

UNDATED- Unemployment
rates for Meigs. Gallia and Mason
counties increased in June,
according to reports released by
the Ohio Department of Job and
Family Services and WorkForc.e
West Virginia.
ODJFS reported that Meigs
County exprienced a 0.4 percent
increase in its jobless rate in June .
The current unemployment figure
is 15 percent, up from J4.6 percent in May. ODJFS estimates
indicate that 1.500 residents out
of Meigs County's labor force qf
9.500 residents are currently
without jobs.
Gallia County's jobless rate
also jumped 0.4 percent in June to
10.5 percent. The May rate was
10.1 percent. The June report
indicated that about 1.500 Gallia
County residents are currently out
of work. The total estimated labor
force is 14,300.
Overall. Ohio's unemployment
rate dropped slightly in June to
10.5 percent. It was 10.7 percent
in May.
Geauga County reported the
lo'NeSt unemployment rate in

'Finest'
recognized
at Chester

Please see Rates, AS

"Meigs County's Finest," the two most senior
attendees at last weekend's Chester-Shade
Days, were honored. John Bailey, 96, and
Eleanor Knight, 93, shared some memories
of days gone by w1th those attending. Mr.
Bailey has been honored with the title before,
but it was the first time for Mrs. Knight, a longtime favorite teacher in the Chester community. She was also recognized by ChesterShade Historic~! Association for her volunteer work on behalf of the organization and
the Chester Courthouse museum. Jerry
Frederick, association president, presented
her with a plaque acknowledging her work.

Gatling permit
still under review:
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

pe1manent fix is on the way
when it comes to maldng even
more milk and moola that poths
back into Meigs County.
Directly related to this ability
to increase milk production is
an
Appalachian
Regional
Commission Grant the creamery has been approved for to
assist in paying for the installation of three-phase electrical
power at the plant. Taylor said
the project is estimated to cost
$65 .000 of which the creamei)'
will put up $13.000 in matching
funds whtle the ARC will pay
the remaining $52.000. Taylor
hopes the project will be done
by Labor Day.
Taylor said he met Bauer
through mutual friends and
she's visited the creamery
which has its milk supplied by
grass grazed cows raised on
dairy farms in •Meigs County.
"We're all in the food movement together,'' Taylor said.
explaining both he and Bauer
have been chosen as delegates

RACINE Gatling, Ohio
LLC's permit to expand mining
operations in the Racine area is
still under review b) the Ohio
Depa1tment of Natural Resources
which also reports no revised map
has been submitted. yet. showing
the company '-"ill not mine within
:he corporation limits of Racine.:
Brent Heavilin. pennitting manager with ODNR. said the fact
Gatling hasn't filed this revised
map yet is not unusual and if it's
going to be done. the new map
would likely be filed after the permit is sent back to the company
for revisions. Re' is ions in mining
oermits are common. particularly
when it comes to maps, and
Gatling has yet to receive its first
revision from ODNR.
When Gatling originally filed
the permit in February. it contained a map which showed the
compan) intended to mine within
the Racine Village corporation
limits. This map was in contrast to
a gentleman's agreement made
between the village and Gatling
when the company began its origmal permitting process to open its
Yellowbush Mine currently in
operation. The gentleman's agreement basically said Gatling would
not mine within the Village of
Racine after village officials
\ oiced their concerns about minmg taking place beneath village

Please see Creamery, AS

Please see Gatling, AS

Brian J. Reed/photos

Co.lumbus-creamery connection
Tlze scoop on popular ice creanz
High: 87.
Low: 70.

INDEX
2 SEcriONS- 12 PAGES

Comics
Editorials
B Section

Sports

© 2610 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

li.IJij ,I !I!1.!I!II
.

li

'"·

cy proceeds. State Fa1m
is in doubt as to which of
the defendants is entitled
to be paid the amount qf
the policy."
"A controversy exists
regarding payment of the
proceeds of the policy."
Rizer's appeal has been
delayed to allow additional time for preparation of
trial transcripts. The deaqline for completing those
transcripts is next month,
after which the state and
defense will prepare and
file appeal briefs setting
forth case law.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS - Often when
the words "Columbus connection" appear m a newspaper
it's not a good thing though
there are exceptions, particu
larly when it involves ice
cream, which is most always a
good thing.
When the words "Columbuscreamery connection" appear in
this newspaper, it's about the
connection between the popular
Jeni 's Splendid Ice Creams in
the Columbus area and Meigs
County's Snowville Creamery
in Columbia Township.
Warren Taylor, who owns
Snowville Creamery with wife
Victoria, said it was a "privilege" to start supplying Jeni 's
with the cream to make her
famous ice cream back in
November. Warren said this
spring the two entities signed a

contract and the marriage has
been ''terrific for us."
In
yesterday's
"The
Columbus Dispatch,'' Jeni
Britton Bauer was interviewed
about her ice cream enterprise
which will open two new stores
in September - one on North
High Street in Clintonville and
the other in Powell. In the article Bauer said the company's
growth was at least partly
dependent
on
Snowville
Creamery's ability to increase
milk production in order to sell
more cream to Jeni's.
Taylor said this is absolutely
a challenge Snowville can take
on. Since supplying Jeni's. the
creamery has purchased a
diesel generator to supply
enough power to increase production and then this spring it
rented an even larger generator
not just for supplying Jeni 's but
for increasing milk volume in
general. StilL an even more

".

�............

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 21,

2010

Harrisonville OES Unemployment benefits extension clears hurdle
presents scholarships
BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HARRISONVILLE- Tv.o scholarships were presented by HatTisonville Chapter 255. Order of the
Eastern Star. at a recent meeting.
.
Patricia Arnold and Twila Childs of the scholarship
committee made the presentations of $500 scholarships to Amanda Jeffers. daughter of John Jeffers and
granddaughter of Mildred Jeffars. and to Traci Casto
\vho is a member of the Chapter. daughter of Deputy
Grand Matron Darlene Casto. mother of Ashley, and
cousin of Sharon Jewell.
Prior to the meeting a picnic dinner was furnished by
Avanell George and Matjorie Rice with a Fomth of July
theme t? the 17 members and four gut;sts attending.
Conme Bales. worthy matron and Ralph Bales. worthy patron, provided a decorated ice cream cake honoring Darlene Casto. secretary. and Clara Mae Hysell.
treasurer. for their years of dedication to the chapter.
The charter was draped in memory of Gertrude
Pullen. a 57 year member, who died July 5. The group
sang "Happy Birthday" to Dana Hoffman who celebrated his birthday on July l. Betty Lowery, conductress. was reported ill, but home from the hospital.
Il v. as announced that Grand Chapter of OhiQ will
be held Sept. 23-26 at the Dayton Convention Center
in Da) ton with the district hospitality room open at
the Davton Marriott from 6 to 9 p.m. the first evening
to honor the Grand appointments in the district. An
approaching dinner to be served was discussed as
well as replenishing the stock of Rada Cutlery.
It was noted that HatTisonville Chapter won an
attendance award for having the most in attendance at
the 2010 inspections. Casto, deputy grand matron,
presented them with a certificate and made a donation
to the Rehab Unit of the O.E.S. Home in Mount
Vernon in the Chapter's name.

WASHINGTON
Legislation to restore
unemployment benefits
to millions who have
been out of work for
more than six months
broke free of Senate
Republican delaying tactics on Tuesday.
Senators voted 60-40
to move ahead on the
bill, clearing the way for
a final Senate vote later
on Tuesday. The measure
would restore jobless
checks for 2.5 million
people whose benefits
stmted running out seven
weeks ago in a stubbornly jobless economic
recovery.
The vote was a modest
victory for President
Barack Obama and
Democrats, whose more
ambitious hopes for a
jobs agenda have mostly
fizzled in the face of

Families sue over
abuse of corpses
CINCINNATI (AP) - The families of three
female murder victims whose corpses were sexually
abused in a morgue haye filed a federal lawsuit in
1
Cincinnati.
The lawsuit says Kenneth Douglas, a former
morgue attendant serving six years in prison for violating the corpses in 1982 and 1991, regularly drank
and used drugs while on duty.
The families seek unspecified damages from
Hamilton County. a former county coroner and a former supervisor in his office. The lawsuit accuses them
of negligence and of violating the civil rights of the
family members. Survivors of the three women say
they have suffered emotional distress.
.
County Administrator Patrick Thompson sa1d
Tuesday that commissioners will decide how tp
respond to the lawsuit after conferring with attorneys.

Treatment ordered for
accused car shooter
CLEVELAND (AP) - A man accused of randomly shooting at five vehicles in Cleveland suburbs has
been ruled mentally incompetent to stand trial.
In a court ruling last month, 65-year-old Paul
Hausmann of Strongsville was ordered to undergo
mental treatment. He 'II remain in mental health facility up to a year while doctors determine whether they
can restore his competency.
Hausmann has pleaded not guilty to 36 counts,
including felonious assault and weapons charges. No
one was hurt in last year's gunfire.
.
Po lice said he apparently fired randomly at mov~ng
c~rs from hi' vehicle in Rerea and Strongsville
between last August and December.

voted to end the filibuster.
Ben Nelson of Nebraska
was the lone Democrat to
break with his pa1ty and
vote to sustain it.
. After a final Senate
vote. the House is
expected to approve the
legislation and send it to
President Barack Obama
on Wednesday.
The measure would be
the eighth extension of
unemployment benefits
since July 2008, at a total
cost to taxpayers of more
than $120 billion. The
economy added 882,000
jobs so far this year but many of those were
only temporary positions
as the federal government geared up to conduct the U.S. Census.
Economists said it will
take at least until the
middle of this decade to
recoup those losses and
drive down the nation's
unemployment rate, now
at 9.5 percent, to a more

normal 5.5 percent or 6
percent.
About 2.5 million people would receive jobless
benefits
retroactively,
injecting almost S3 billion into the econo~
once they're paid o
Millions of others w
continue to receive payments that would help
prop
up
consumer
demand to the tune of
about $30 billion more
over the coming year.
"This bill is about jobs
because unemployment
insurance goes to people
who will spend it immediately," said Sen. Max
Baucus, D-Mont. "That
would increase economic
demand. And that would
help support our fragile
economic recovery."
But Republicans say
that while they support
the benefits extension it ·
should be paid for with
cuts elsewhere in the $3.7
trillion federal budget.

Judiciary panel OKs Kagan for Supreme Court
Bv JuuE
HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
ASSOCIATeD PRESS

Around Ohio

GOP opposition in the
Senate. A battle ha~ raged
for months over whether
jobless benefits should
be financed with additional federal debt as
Democrats
want
or
through cuts to other
government programs as
most Republicans insist.
The
vo~
came
moments after Carte
Goodwin was sworn in as
a successor to West
Virginia
Democrat
Robert Byrd. who died
last month at the age of
92·. Goodwin was the
crucial 60th senator to
defeat a Republican filibuster that has led to a
lapse in benefits for 2.5
million people. The
Senate
gallery
was
packed with Goodwin
supporters. who broke
into applause as he cast
his "aye" vote.
Two
Republicans,
Olympia Snowe and
Susan Collins of Maine,

WASHINGTON
Pushing toward an election-year Supreme Court
confirmation vote, a
polarized
Senate
Judiciary
Committee
Tuesday approved Elena
Kagan to be the fourth
female justice.
Just one Republican
joined Democrats to
approve Kagan's nomination and send it to the
full Senate. where she's
expected to win confirmation within weeks.
"Elena Kagan will be
confirmed," predicted
Sen. Patrick Leahv, DVt., the Judiciary chairman. "She will go on the
U.S. Supreme Court."
Sen. Lindsey Graham,
R-S.C., broke with his
party to cast the sole GOP
''yes" vote on President
Obama 's nominee to succeed Justice John Paul
Stevens. who retired in
June. The vote was 13-6.
"What's
in
Elena
Kagan's heart is that of a
good person who adopts a
philosophy I disagree
with," Graham said. "She
will serve this nation honorably, and it would not
have been someone I
would have chosen. but
the person who did
choose. President Obama.
I think chose wisely."

At the White House.
Obama hailed the vote as
a ''bipartisan affirmation
of her strong performance" in confirmation
hearings. and said Kagan
would be "a fair and
impartial'' justice who
understands the impact
of Supreme Court decisions on everyday people's lives.
He called on the
Senate to confirm her
before Congress takes a
monthlong
summer
break starting August 7
- a deadline Majority
Leader Harry Reid, DNev.. said he looks forward to meeting.
Strategists on both
sides expect a few more
Republicans to back
Kagan in the full Senate,
where Democrats have
more than enough votes
to confirm her.
Several Republicans
believed to be potential
supporters of l(agan ·s
said in brief interviews
Tuesday that they had yet
to decide whether to .back
her. They include · Sens.
Scott
Brown
of
Massachusetts,
Judd
Gregg
of
New
Hampshire and Olympia
Snowe of Maine.
But Kagan is likely to
win fewer GOP supporters than Obama 's first
high court pick, Justice
Sonia Sotomayor. in part
because of the height-

ened political pressures
facing senators little
more than 100 days out
from midterm election
contests.
Most Republicans are
against Kagan, arguing
that she would put her
political views ahead of
the law. They point to
what they call her liberal
agenda and on such issues
as abottion and gun rights.
and have chastised her for
the decision as dean of
Harvard Law School to
bar militat") recruiters
from the campus career

services office because.
the policy against ope
gay soldiers.
"She has deeply held
libenil,
progressive
views," said Sen. Jeff
Sessions of Alabama, the
top Republican on the
Judiciary panel. As a justice, he said, Kagan ·'will
not be the objective,
impartial arbiter and settler of disputes, but
someone who would use
the opportunity to redefine words to advance an
agenda that's not in the
comt's role to advance."

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Murder suspect
fights extradition
PONTIAC. Mich. (AP) - A convicted murderer is
fig htino Oakland County's eff01ts to return him to
Michig~n on a charge related to a 41-year-old slaying.
Pros~ecutor Jessica Cooper says Tuesday that 67year-old Nolan Ray George won't willingly lea_ve an
Ohio jail to face a first-degree murder warrant 111 the
1968 death of Gwendolyn Perry.
The 22-year-old Perry was strangled with pantyhose in Pontiac.
George is being held in the Butler County Jail outside Cincinnati.
Cooper said she will seek a governor's warrant for
George's return.
Geon.!e spent a dozen years in Michigan prisons
after a second-degree murder conviction in the 1968
death of a Lake Orion woman.
After his Michigan prison release, George relocat~d
to Ohio where he was convicted of manslaughter 111
the 1982 death of another woman.

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Ranges - Washer - Dryer
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,,

v

�The Daily

Page A.'J

Se~tinel

W e dnesday, July

21,2010

30th annual Miller Youth fishing derby set for Saturday
fanrily reunion held
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

!\IIDDLf:.PORT T he
30th annual reunion of
the famil) f the late
D u ) le
and
James
Gertrude Russell ~1illcr
held re~.:entl) at the
•
er h01neplace 111
Middlep&lt;'It.
After the f&lt; m:h circle.
\\clcom ~
and
the
announcements b) Dale
l\1 iller and the Lord's
Prayer. a potluck dinner
preceded the actn ities
for the day. which \\as
spent reminiscing. phl)ing games and an auction,~ with trophies presented and swimming.
Willard. Ronnie ~and
Dale Miller led the day's
actinlles. Six h1rths were
a
great
announced:
granddauohter to the
lack r..1iDer family. a
oreal oranodUUPhter tO
the
Dorothy e Miller
Roach famil) and four
grear granddaughters to
the Ronnie Miller family.
The deaths of Edna
Searles, sister of Della
Miller,
and
Judy
Nelson.
mother of
ela Roach. were
rded.
•
Laura Fields and Jacob
Roush have entered the
military
Mary Smith won the
door pnze.
Winning trophies were:
\Villard Miller. oldest
male. Marjorie Miller.
oldest temale, Jerrod
Cobb. youngest boy.
Madison
Eskew.
youngest girl: Willard
Miller. oldest 1.\liller,
Johnnie Miller. youngest
Miller.
D.alc .Miller. traveled
the furthest; Johnnie
Miller and Brooklyn
Ro:ss, biggest bub.ble;
l'on Dunkin and BJ ..
egg· toss gold; Michael
McCormick and Kasey
Eskew, egg toss silver;
Raymond Roach and

Ja.:ob Roltch, egg tu~s
bronLc; Til:rra Tillis and
Jaden Litchfield. best
cartwhcd; Mike and
Debbie Gerlach. most
appreciated.
Attending \\ere: Mary
Pam
Miller
Smith.
Smith.
and
Wanda
Abshire. John. Mary.
Joey.
Josh,
Jamie,
Jonathan and Jerrod
Gobb. Dan. Danielle.
Hayden and Bry-;on
Glick. Johnnie Miller.
Tiffany Cox. Brandon
Compwn.
Brooklyn
Ross. Jaden Litchfield.
Jordan Litchfield. Kara
Dmrger. Justin Goslene,
Sandy Blazer. Justin
Davis. Jacob Tredell.
Columbus.
Michael and Trudy
McCormic. New Albanv:
Marjorie
Miller
Vanderhoof and Peggy
Gruber.
Delaware:
Ashley Lallemann. Canal
Winchester:
Ronda
Miller and Nick and
Charlie Smith. Pataskala:
Dale Miller. Maryville.
Tenn.; Willard Miller.
Wooster: Sahara and
Cameron
Harmon.
S) racuse.
Dustin and Corey
Duncan.
J.R.
and
Randall. New Haven.
W.Va.: Raymond and
Pam Roach, Charla and
Austin Little and Tierra·
Tillis. Darren. Angela
and
Jacob
Roach.
Pomeroy: Mike . and
Debbie Gerlach, Ronnie
Miller. Bill Demoskey.
Paul Smith. Tom Roach.
Sharon Beaver, Randy
Roach, Lany, Tina Miller
and Chelsea Breuer. and
Matt. Kasey. Madison.
and
Logan
Eskew,
Dorothy Miller Roach.
Middleport.
The 2011 reunion will
be held the second
Sunday in July at the
family home.

POMEROY - A fishing derb} for young people will be held Saturday
at the Mulberry Pond
located on Mulberry
Avenue m Pomcrov at
the bottom of the Holzer
Clinic hill.
The derby is open to all
youth who fish or want to
learn. It will begin at 9
a.m. and continue until
noon at which time a
cookout will be held.
Jim Smith, who actively works with Pomeroy
village officials on funding for improvmg facilities at the site, has
planned the derby with
assbtance from Dec M.
Rader. coordinator of
Ministries God's N.E.T.
The event, free to
youth of the community,
will include the awarding
of prizes contributed by
local businesses. groups.
organizations and individuals.
There is no registration
to participate. "Just show
up and fish." said Smith .
Smith's interest in
improvements to the
pond and the area around
it stems from happy days
as a youth fishing there.
After having worked in
Columbus for many
years. he returned to
Pomeroy when he retired
and began fishmg again
at the pond.
His interest led him to
Pomeroy Mayor John

Public
meetings
Wednesday, July '21
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education. public hearing
on the re-employment of
retired teachers, 6 p.m.,
library conference room,
Eastern
Elementary
School.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education, regular session, 6'30 p.m., library
conference
room,
Eastern Elementary.
Thursday, July 22
POMEROY - Meigs
and
Water
Soil
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors,
regular session, 11 :30
Cit the district office
101 Hiland Road.
•
Friday, July 23
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees will
hold their August meeting
on July 23·at 5 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station.
Monday, July 26
RACINE - Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
Southam Hiqh sc.:,ool,
media center.
POMEROY
Veterans
Service
Commission, 9 a.m. , 117
Memorial Drive.

POMEROY- Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, Ohio
143,
VBS
through
Friday, 6-8 p.m. Rev.
Charles McKenzie, 9922952.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, July 22
MIDDLEPORT
Rescheduled meeting of
Alpha Iota Masters, 6
p.m., at the home Julia
Houston, on Second
Avenue.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club,
family picnic, 6:30p.m. at
the Reedsville Church of
.
Chnst.
~
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053· 7 p.m.,
at the hall.
Monday, July 26
RACINE _ Southern
Local
Campaign
·
Committee, 6 p.m., e 1ementary schcJI cafeteria,
discuss Aug. 3 levy, all
residents encouraged to
attend.
Wednesday, July 28
RACINE - Southern
High School Athletic
Bo0s•ers, regular meeting, 6 p.m.' Southern
Community
Fitness
Center at SHS all parents of athlete~ encouraged to attend.

Church events

Other events

Wednesday, July 21
MIDDLEPORT- Bible
School will be held at the
Middleport Church of
Christ, 237 Main St.,
Middleport, through July
23, 6 to 8;03 p.m. Classes
for 3 years through high
ol. Theme, "No
ary Man"
•

Monday, July 26
POMEROY- Rally for
Life, sponsored by Meigs
County Right to Life, 8:30
p.m.,
Riverfront
Amphitheater. Collection
of baby supplies for
infants to three months,
presentations, candlelight prayer service.

Musser who began the Nature Works grants from two boardwalks. and the
process of obtaining the Ohio Department of construction of a bridge
funds to make the pond Natural Resources sup- near the far end where
and sutTounding area a plemented by Pomeroy there is a cave and waterfall from Reech Grow
good place to fish. Smith Village funds.
Musser advises that he Cemetery.
was appointed by the
A blacktop parking
mayor as co-chairman of has applied for 550.000
the
state ·s area. restrooms. and
the project and has through
relentlessly worked to Capital budget program · development' of a picnic
get funding improve- this year to continue the area are on the a!!enda
also once additional
work.
ments.
The number of those funding becomes availThis spring a 175-foot
handicapped accessible fishing at the pond or just able.
Saturday's event is a
boardwalk was built on enjoying a walk on the
the cemetery side of the new boardwalks contin- step toward introducing
Mulberry Pond. It com- ues to grow as improve- young people to the joy
plements a shorter one ments continue to be of fishing an&lt;J to the
built last year on the other made. Plans now call for Mulberry Pond a conveside. Both boardwalks a dirt \\alkway around nient place for thro\\ ing
have been built with the pond connecting the in a line.

AS K DR . BROTHERS

How proud is proud enough?
Dear Dr. Brothers:
This past Memorial Day.
my neighbor went all out
Four giant American
flags raised on each corner of his porch. a bald
eagle

Calendar

Charlene Hoefllch/phot6

Matt Lavender enjoys a catch during his afternoon of fishing at the Mulberry Pond.

with

its

wings

splayed over his door. He
even sprayed the ~tars
and stripes onto his lawn.
When I went for my
paper that morning. he
asked where all my decorations were and if I wasn't planning on honoring
our troops. I looked at
my house. and I had
nothing. I thought he was
going too far, and it raises the question. Can one
be too proud? - E.H.
Dear E.H.: I wouldn't
confuse a penchant for
overdecorating with being
~
too proud. So the short
answer I would give in
this case is no- one cannot be too proud of honoring fallen soldiers on
Memorial Day. But your
question does raise all
sorts of underlying issues.
Is it correct to equate
putting up or not putting
A
.
fl
'th
up mencan ags WI
your level of patriotism?
How did it make )'OU feel
when your neighbor questioned yours? He was
making just as superficial
a judgment as you were.
The tlag as a symbol of
our country has. from time
to time. been claimed by
various -_groups who have
a particular
point of view.
It is. unfortunate!)·. sometimes seen as a political
symbol t.hat divides ~s . ,
. Ideal~}. the, tlag ·'' ~!1 be
1 (hspla) ed accordm., to
proper procedures: not
allowed to touch th~
¥round. replaced when It
1s tattered and so fOith. But
more impoitantly. it is a
svmbol of our countn that
ctm be flown b) all
Americans at times other
than on just two or three
holidays a year. If }OU are
wonied about your neighbor being too proud, you
might want to consider
what harm his display is
doing - it makes him and

Dr. Joyce Brothers
others feel good. especially the military families.
whose sacrifice and suffering is all too often ignored.
But you needn't be defensive about having no decorations of your own perhaps you show your
pride in your own way.

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
don't know how other
people do it. I sec them
have no trouble whatsoe\er making small talk with
cashiers at stores. mailmen
and co-\vorkers. I. on the
other hand. feel like ~ome
kind of caveman as I stammer out a "Good morning··
or a "Thanks." That's all I
c;m spit out! Huw in Goo's
name do people seem to
have this talent for being
friendly to complete and
utter strangers. when the
last thmg (would want to
do is make conversation
with them?- L.R.
Dear L.R.: You obviously find your lack of a .,.
glib personal style to be a
major failing. It isn't, but
since it is causing you so
much distress. it would be
a good idea for you to take
some steps to remedy this
situation. Once the art of
making
small
talk
becomes second nature to
you -and I believe that if
you work at it for a while.
you'll master it - you
may even find your life
changing for the better.
How? By possibly turning
some of those small conversatiOns into bigger
ones. and bigger ones into
relationships. and rcla-

m
v ~q Q~]ITYCOLLEGE
UNIVERSITY OF

Your FUTURE within REACH
MEIGS CENTER
www.rio.cdu

42377 Charles Chancey Drive • Pomeroy, OH
. 740-992-1880

,

tionships into meaningful
friendships or romances.
'As of right now. that's
very unlikely to happen.
So let's get to work.
One way to make yourself much less self con
scious and awkward is to
focus your attention on
the other person. It's hard
to have meanin!!ful conversation::; based~on small
talk. but you ma) actually know a lot about the
people in your life •vho
you see regularly but so
far haven't talked with
much. Comment on a
story in the newspaper
they read. Ask them how
they like their new car.
Take the emphas1s off
yourself and your sh)ness. and put it on getting
to know them a bit.
There's nothing wrong
\\.ith starting: \\ ith a sim':.
pie "How~-; your da)
going?" And be read) to
listen to the answer. As

~leigs

others respond to ) our
efforts. you'll begin to
get the knack of talking
to strangers. Take it at
your own pace. and I'll '
bet your social cirdc·will
start to expand .
(c)

2010

by

King

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily

Wednesday, July 21,

2010 ·

Sentin~l

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make 110 law respecting att
e_stablishme11t of religion, or prohihiti11g the free
exercise tlw·eof; or abridging the ..freedom of
speeclr, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govemment for ct redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 21, 1930. President Herbert Hoover
signed an executive order establishing the
Veterans Administration (later the U.S. Department
of Veterans Affairs).
On this date:
In 1861, the first Battle of Bull Run was fought at
Manassas, Va., resulting in·a Co,nfederate victory.
In 1925, the so-called "Monkey Trial" ended in
Dayton, Tenn., with John T. Scopes convicted of
violating state law for teaching Darwin's Theory of
Evolution. (The conviction was later overturned on
a technicality.)
In 1944, American forces landed on Guam during World War II.
. Jn 1949. the U.S. Senate ratified the North
Atlantic Treaty.
In 1959, the NS Savannah, the first nuclear-powered merchant ship, was christened by first lady
Mamie Eisenhower at Camden, N.J.
In 1960, Sirimavo Bandaranaike became the
world's first fem.ale prime minister as she was
sworn in to head the government of Ceylon (now
Sri Lanka).
,
In 1961, Capt. Virgil "Gus" Grissom became the
s·econd American to rocket into a sub-orbital pattern
around the Earth, flying aboard the Liberty Bell 7.
In 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong
and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin blasted off from the moon
aboard the ascent stage of the lunar module for
docking with the command module.
In 1980, draft registration began in the United
States for 19- and 20-year-old men.
: In 1994, Britain's Labor Party elected Tony Blair
its new leader, succeeding the late John Smith.
: :ren years ago: Special Counsel John C. Danforth

concluded ''with 100 percent certainty'' that the federal government was innocent of wrongdoing in the
siege that killed 80 members of the Branch
Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, in 1993
- Five years ago: The House voted to extend the
USA Patriot Act. Two weeks after the deadly
Landon terror bombings, small explosions struck
the Underground and a bus, but no deaths result·
ed. Two Algerian diplomats and their driver were
abducted in Baghdad; ai-Qaida later announced it
had killed the diplomats. Sudanese security offi- ·
cers roughed up members of Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice's entourage; Rice demanded
and got an apology.
One year ago: The Senate voted to terminate further production of the Air Force's topline F-22 fighter jets. Prosecutors in Cambridge, Mass. dropped
a disorderly conduct charge against promin~nt
black scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., who was
'mested by a whit~ officer at his home near
!-iarvard University after a report of a break-in.
• Thought for Today: "There is no bigotry like
that of 'free thought' run to seed." - Horace
Greeley, American journalist (1811-1872).

-

: {,ETTERS TO THE EDITOR
: ' letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
·are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
~etters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not person·
alities. 'Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publicaticn.

.

The Daily Sentinel
R---' ~r

~b vices

Three neglected economic
lessons ftom American history•
In most, if not all. states. pupils
must pass a course in American
history to receive a high-school
diploma. Unfortunately, when it
comes to our country's economic
history. most students are poorly
taught, perhaps wrongly taught.
Mythology and error prevail
where facts and truth should
reign.
Some economists ana historians
have made excellent contributions
to correcting the historical record.
Dominick Armentano 's Antitrust
and Monopoly sets the record
straight on the "monopoly"
bogeyman. Burt Folsom's The
Myth of the Robber Barons and
New Deal or Raw Deal? demolish
numerous fairy tales. Much work.
though. remains to be done.
Here are three of the most vitally important lessons from
American economic histot)' that
are widely neglected today: (1)
the history of our money. (2) the
C:oQslitntion's hnilt-in hnlwark
against runaway government
spending. and (3) government's
counterproductive responses to
economic recessions.
(I) Sound money.
Few contemporary students are
familiar with the phrase "Not
worth a continental." The continental dollar was the paper currency issued by the Continental
Congress from 1776 to 1780 to
finar'lce the War of lndependen~e.
The continental currency met
the fate of all paper currencies not
backed by gold or silver. The
Congress, desperate for more purchasing power. printed vast sums
of continentals. The resulting
hyperinflation rendered the bills
nearly worthless: hence "not
worth a continental."
This fiasco wrought devastation. Soldiers, farmers. merchants, and even financiers. were
wiped
out,
impoverished.
Because of this ruinous experience, the founders drafted a
Constitution designed to avoid the
pitfalls of paper~ money. One of
Congress' enumerated responsibilities is to "coin money" (in
contrast to "print currency"). The
Constitution also stipulates that
states settle all their financial
obligations in gold or silver.
Having suffered the ravages of
paper money. the founders sought
to spare us from similar grief, but

Mark
Hendrickson

alas. subsequent generations of
leaders have steered us awm from
constitutional monev. Inste~td, we
use unbacked Fed-eral Rese1\·e
Notes. which are destined to suffer the same dismal fate as the
continental currency and. all fiat
money.
(2) Spending restraint.
There is an instructive incident
recorded about the life of the
famous
frontiersman.
Dav\
Crockett. When "running for reelection to Congress from his district in Tennessee, Crockett
encountered one Horatio Bunce. a
farmer who informed Crockett
that he would not vote for him
because he disregarded the
Constitution. 'J his led to a fruitful
dialogue during which Bunce
tutored
Crockett
on
the
Constitution. explaining that
Congress had no authority to give
economic charity, especially with
other people's money. Crockett
henceforth was a born-again constitutionalist. (This account is
mailable at \\WW.fee.org. Search:
"Not Yours to Give.")
\not her historical \ ignette of
similar import was President
Grover Cleveland's frequent use
of the presidential veto. Cleveland
might have been the last true constittttionalist in the White House.
repeatedly refusing to apprm e of
congressional attempts to expand
government spending beyond its
constitutional limits.
,
"Big Government" cheerleaders
today dismissive!) tell us that
18th and 19th century practices
are passe and that the role of government must change. Yes. of
course. George Washington and
the other founders understood that
change was inevitable. and they
provided for change.
In his Farewell Address.
Washington ad\ ised us to alter the
Constitution "by an amendment
in the way which the Constitution
designates." and later added. "But

(UsPs '213-960)

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Published Tuesday through Friday.
111 Court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio
Newspaper
• Our main number is
Association.
(7 40) 992-2156.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
O~partment extensions are: nons to The Da11y Sentinel, PO.
Box 729, Pomeroy. Ohio 457€9.

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

'I&amp;Jtclt nte ride
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to victory in

No'Tember'

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et there be no change by usu·rpattOn" (either by tortured constitutional reinterpretations or by ~•m
ply ignoring the Constitutiou
·w·hen it became incol1\ enient).
The founders knew that a govern
ment that would slip the chains o f
the Constitution would begin to
redistribute wealth and ultitnatch
bankrupt the country. Now, ha•:. ing ignored Washington's wise
counsel. we face the prospect o t
bankruptcy that he and the other
. ounclers ,s ought to spare us.
(3) Government's ineffectual
response to recessions.
Americans deserve a historical
ly accurate account of the ineffec
tiveness of ~overnment interven tion during economic downturns.
The current teaching about reces
'ions. and particularly the Great
Depression. is riddled with error's .
For example.' Herbett Hoow1
was not a laissez-faire president.
government "stimulus" spendi.
does not cure recessions ; t
Federal Reserve can not rcsto.
prosperitv b\ IO\\crin!.'. interest
rates amflor -inflating the mone)
'upply.
In fact. Hoover scorned free
markets. He 'eJ1gaged in so much
~overnment intervention that
Roosevelt accused him of reck les-. over-spending and socialio.;tic
tendencies.
The most effective anti-reces
sion policy of the 20th centlll)
\\as President \Varren Harding's
anti-stimulus polic; of slashfi1g
federal spending ncar!) in half.
More monev is not the cure for
depression .... as can be seen by
contrasting the depression of
1920-21 with the early 1930s. The
money suppl) contracted to a
comparable degree both times .
but in the '20s prices and wage"
were more flexible (that is, free of
government interwntion). so that
they could adJUSt and bring supply and demand into balance. rn
;;hort. markets work if govern
ment stays out of the way.~
•
On economic io.;sues. t
founder-.; had it right. We can
spare ourselve~ a lot of pain 1f we
heed the lessons of our O\~ n
national historv.
(Dr. Mark l\~ Hendrickson is an
ru(Junc1 }acuiTy memba. ecmw-

mi,·t, and contributing scholar
with The Center for \'ision &amp;
Values at Gron• City College.)

�Wednesday, July

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

21, 2010

Obituaries

Honda factory hits milestone 10M cars

Henry ·aill' Johnson
Henry "Bill" Johnson, ~H, of Pomeroy passed away
on Thursday. Jul) 15, 2010 at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolb .
He was horn on Aug. 15, 1928. in Beards Fork,
W.Va .. son of the late Trov and Lavada Johnson. He
was raised in Gallagher. W.Va. He retired from the
. Air Force after serving 22 years.
•
addition to hi~ parents, he was preceded by his
wife. Diane: sisters. Margaret Giles. Dorothy Ellis,
and a brother. Dickie Johnson.
He is survived hy his ~isters. Ruby Marshall of
Pomeroy and with whom he made his home: Frances
Melvin, Milford. !\1ich.; Judy (Richard) Kaercher.
Elkhart. lndi .; brothers, Larry Johnson, Pomeroy:
Jack (Dolorl!s) Johnson. Gallagher, W.Va.: J .C.
(Roberta) Johnson , Ale.x, Va.: several nieces and
nephews: and many fril!nds.
The family will have a private memorial sen ice.
Arrangcmenb were handled by Anderson
~1cDanicl Funeral Home in Pomerov.
An online registry is available h) logging onto
www.andcrsonmcdan ie l.com.

Local Briefs
Rally for Life
POMEROY - The Ohio River will be the setting for
the Meigs County Right to Life's Rally for Life, to be
held July 26 at the Riverfront Amphitheater in Pomeroy.
The annual rally promoting the pro-life message
will also allow contributions to the Pregnancy
ource Center in Athens. including diapers and
• er needs for babies through three months old.
The 40-minute service will begin at 8:30 p.m., and
will include presentations from the Right to Life
chapter and brief individual presentations. and will
conclude with a candlelight prayer service. The public is in\'ited to attend the evening rally.

Creamery rrom Page At
to the Terra ~1adre food conference in October in
Torino. Italy.
Terra Madre describes itself as internatiOnal network of food producers. cooks. educators and stu
dents from 150 countries who arc united by a common goal of global sustainability in food. The "food
communities" ot'Terra Madre come together biennially to share innovative solutions and time-honored tra·
ditions for keeping small-scale agriculture and sustainable food production alive and well.
So. next time you're driving by a Jeni's location in
Central Ohio. you 'rc also driving past a little piece of
Meigs County, in a cone.

.\1ARYSVILLE (AP)
- A Honda Motor Co.
factorx in Ohio has made
its 10 ·millionth vehicle,
the first !Ianda plant outside Japan to reach that
milestone.

Ohio at 7.3 percont for
June. Clinton County had
the highest rate at 16.8
percent.
11ason County's unemployment rate jumped
from 13.4 percent in May
to 13.7 percent in June,
an increase of 0.3 percent. WorkForce West
Virginia estimates that
I .370 members of Ma:.on
Count}·~ labor force of
9.970 residents arc currently out of work.
According
to
WorkForce West Virginia.
Mason County currently
has the second highest
unemployement rate in
the Mountain State. Clay
County has the highest at
13.8 percent. Hancock
County\ cutTcnt jobless
rate is 13 percent, third
highest in the state.
Monongalia County

well fields; well fields
\\hich had recently updated: well fields which are
within a Source Water
Protection Area located at
Star "'till Park.
At a Racine Council
meeting back in June, a
representative for Gatling
said the permit to expand
mining operations mistakenly did not take into
account this verbal agreement but the co111Pany
intended to honor it. At
the council meeting, the
spokesperson presented
village officials with a
revised map of the pro-

•&lt;/{/fi'IY;\'
{&gt;

•

&lt;V'tll

I'

l'-''

j,'
/J /
coif.-( r.we

enjoys the lowest jobless
rate in West Virginia at
5.9 percent.
West Virginia's unemployment rate increased
by 0.1 percent in June to
8.6 percent. It stood at
R.5 percent in May.
Following is a list of
countie:s ~ neighboring
Gallia and Meigs with
the June and ~lay unemployment figures:
• Adams - June. 14.3
percent; May. 13.6 percent
• Athens - June. 9.8
percent: May. 9.1 percent
• Hocking - June, 11
percent: May, 11.1 percent
• Jackson - June. 11.3
I}Crcent; May. 10.8 percent
• Lawrence - June,
8.8 percent: May, 8 percent
• Morgan - June. 14.1

percent; May, 13.9 percent
• Perry - June. 12.6
percent; May, 12.7 percent
• Pike - June , 14.5 percent: May, 14.2 percent
• Ross- June 11.8 percent: May. 11.5 percent
• Scioto - June, 13.4
percent: May. 12.7 percent
• Vinton - June, 12.7
percent: May, 12.6 percent
• Washington - June,
8.9 percent: May, 8.5
percent
Following is a list of
counties
neighboring
Mason \Vith the June and
May unemployment figures:
• Cabell - June. 7.5
percent: May. 7.7 percent
• Calhoun - June.
12.4 percent: May. 13.3
percent
• Clay- June, 13.8 percent; May. 13.6 percent
• Jackson -June. 11.8

percent: May. 11.9 percent
• Kanawha - June, 7.4
percent: May. 7.4 percent
• Pleasants - June.
10.4 percent: May. 11.1
percent
.
• Putnam - June, 7.6
percent; .\lay. 7.4 percent
• Ritchie - June. 9.2
percent; ,~\fay. 9.2 percent
• Roane - June. 12.8
percent; May. 13.3 percent
• Wtrt - June. 11.6 percent: .\1ay. 11.8 percent
• Wood - June. 9.4
percent; Ma). 9.3 percent
The U.S. unemployment rate for June was
9.5 percent. down from
9.7 percent in May.
(On the Internet: Ohio
Dept. of Job and Family
Ser\'ices. jfs.ohio.gov;
WorkForce West Virginia,
www.workforcewv.org .)

posed mining expansion Yellowbush Mine for
which showed mining around 2.500 acres. This
operations outside the vil- extension is for underlage with a buffer zone of ground. room-and-pillar
a few hundred feet out- mining. Heavilin said
side the corporation lim- ODNR has seen an
its. Council. which had increase in underground
considered requesting a mmmg permits state
public hearing on the wide, estimating there
expansion permit, decid- are 70 percent of undered it was satisfied with the ground permits filed
presentation but requested compared to 30 percent
the verbal agreement be of surface permits filed.
Heavilin said Gatling's
put in writing.
The permit currently permit to expand operaunder consideration by tions has been reviewed by
ODNR requests extend- two reviewers though four
ing mining operations reviewers have yet to add
comments.
adjacent to Gatling's their

Re\ iewers for underground mining permits
commonly include personnel from the Mine Safety
and Health Administration.
ODKR 's Oil and Gas
Division as well as other
internal OD:'\TR staff specializing in engineering.
hydrology. etc. He guessed
in another month Gatling
may receive its first permit
re\ ision. starting a process
of back-and-forth between
the company and ODNR
that may not end until the
permtt is approved possiT
bly in spring 2011. if
approved.

flblee- 'l(yaH-

• 1/afJc:{VJ/t -f/.~le
(t5hm)

.f/11/'(W/.\'.'

Today. the factory also
builds the Acura TL
sedan and the Acura
RDX crossover. Near!)
all Accords sold in
North America are built
in Marysville.

Gatling from Page At

f;i~n\')

l!J'ffll{f;a/'('/1/N:

The factory opened in
1982 and is Honda's oldest auto plant in the
United States. The first
vehicle produced there
also wn:-; an Accord
sedan.

Rates from Page At

~-rak

f/Jt'a/1 ~.&lt;:.. • {/lootit

Honda savs the vehicle
- an Accord sedan rolled off the assembly
line
Tuesday
in
Marysville. about 30
miles
northwest of
Columbus.

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-2144

•

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 21,

2010

Stolen Property Recovered

For the Record
911
POMEROY
Meigs County 911 dispatched the
following emergency calls:
Monday
8:52a.m .. East Memorial Drive. Pomeroy. laceration~ 12:10 p.m .. East Memorial Drive. Pomeroy.
dehydration; 12:20 p.m .. Mulberry Avenue.
assault.
2:54 p.m .. Laurel Cliff Road. Pomeroy, pain: 3:15
p.m .. Ohio 7/U.S. 33 underpass, Pomeroy. motor
vehicle accident; 6:3Y p.m., Vine Street. Racine, chest
pain; 7:06 p.m., North Third Avenue, Middleport.
weakness~ 3:59 p.m .. Riebel Road. Long Bottom,
nausea.

Common Pleas
POMEROY - The records of Clerk of Courts
Diane Lynch included the following:
Foreclosure
• Action for foreclosure filed by Citimortgage
against Sharon C. Russell, Portland. and others . .

Trial
POMEROY - A jury was deliberating late
Tuesday in the trial of Charles Edwards in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court. Edwards is charged
with escape and receiving stolen propert).

Probate
POMEROY - Maniage license applications granted by Judge L. Scott Powell:
• Jeremy James Pierce and Jessica Renee Schuler. ·
'26, Rut~nd, July 8.
• Shaun Michael Long, Stacey Michelle Price, 31,
Reedsville, July 9.
·
• George Curtis Ramsey. 36. Euva Jeanette Stumbo.
27, Pomeroy, July 13.
• Charles Bocook, Jr., 25, Ashley Nicole Bell. 19,
Pomeroy, July 16.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill 1=eported these
transactions:
Ruth L. Mourning, deceased. to Mary A. Grover. Jo
Ann Gillogly, certificate of transfer, Village of
Middleport~ Mary Ann Grover. Jo Ann Gillogly. to
Mary F. Price, Steven L. Story. Patrick R. Story.
James David Stor), Margaret Story Sch'"ab, deed.
Village of Middleport.
Gina Thomas. Cindy Thqmpson. Lois M.
Thompson, JohnS. Thomas. to Rebecca L. Hudnall.
deed, Salisbury; Thomas Oren Stewart. deceased. to
Joan M. Stewart, affidavit, Rutland: Deleah L.
Marshall, David L. Marshall. to Larry P.
Shindledecker, deed. Olive; Michael D. Grippa.
deceased, to Laren Grippa. affidavit. Bedford: Donald
W. Felts, Crystal L. Felts. Jamie D. Birchfield. deed.
Village of Middleport.
Raymond Roach. Pamela Roach. Todd Hysell. to
Todd Hysell. Jerome Howard, right of way.
Salisbury; James R. Boyer, Deborah S. Boyer. to
Linda L. McDade, Donald McDade. deed.
SaJisbury: Georga E. Homan and Ruth Homan to
Anthony T. Wolfe, Carrie A. Wolfe. deed.
Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Jerome Howard to Mary Lou Stone White. Barbara
Stone, Mary Lou White Stone. James E. Stone. Jr..
deed, Salisbury; Andrea Clegg, Joshua Clegg, to
Natasha A. Stewart, deed. Chester: Brenda M. Hysell,
Keith T. Bailey. deed, Chester (2): R&amp;FFarm. LLC,
to Darin J. Roush. deed. Sutton; R&amp;F Farm. LLC. to
JeffreyS. Frank. deed. Sutton.
Luke E. Pickens, Cathy Pickens, to Joseph J. Layne.
Stephanie A. Wood, deed. Village of Racine: Ruth
Eileen Powers, deceased. to Franklin Forrest Powers.
affidavit, Salisbury: Franklin Forrest Powers to
Robert Powers, Deborah Jones. Pamela Ka)
Marshall, deed, Salisbury.

News of Local Scholars
.. OU grads

Brian J. Reed/ph.

Sgt. Dan Leonard. of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department is pictured with a Coleman gas generator ·a
Master 150,000 BTU turbo heater recently recovered. Leonard said the items relate to a pending investigation,
and the department is seeking the owner or owners of the items. Two brass headstone urns are also part of
the recovery. Leonard asked the owner to contact 992-3371 .

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: Showers
likely and 'possibly a
thunderstorm before 9
a.m .. then showers aqd
thunderstorms
likely
after 9 a.m. Some of the
storms could produce
heavy
rain.
Mostly
cloudy. with a high near
87. West wind between 7
and 14 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 70 percent.
.New
ramfall
amounts between a half
and three quarters of an
inch possible.
Wednesday
Night:
Showers and thunderstorms like!). mainly
before 10 p.m. Some of
the storms could produ~e

heavy
rain.
Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 70. West wind
bet\veen 3 and 7 mph.
Chance of precipitation
is 60 percent. New rainfall amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an
higher
inch. except
amounts possible in
thunderstonns·
Thursday:
Partly
sunny. with a high near
89. Calm wind becoming
west around 5 mph.
Thursday
Night:
Mostly cloudy. with a
low around 71 . South
wind between 3 and 5
mph.

Frida): Prutly

\vith a high near 91
Friday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a IO\\
arQund 72.
Saturday: A chance of
sho'"' ers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy.
with a high near 92.
Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
Saturday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Most!)

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AEP (NYSE) - 35.92
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 55.70
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 47.69
Big Lots (NYSE) - 34.08
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 24.87
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 42.23
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.52
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.65
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-3.98
City Holding {NASDAQ) 27.99
Collins {NYSE) - 54.60
DuPont (NYSE)- 36.81
US Bank (NYSE) - 23,15
Gen Electric (NYSE)- 14.94
Harley-Davidson {NYSEI 26.83
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.63
Kroger {NYSE) - 20.49
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 24.42
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 53.99
Ohio Valley Bane Corp (NAS-

cloud). with a low
around 69. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Sunday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy.
with a high near 87.
Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy. with a low
around 67.

1•877•487•7796 [CODE 47110l
DAQ)- 16.99
BBT {NYSE) - 26.55
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 15.06
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.73
Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.79
Rockwell {NYSE) - 51.74
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 6.60
Royal Dutch Shell - 54.81
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 64.80
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 50.88
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.10
WesBanco {NYSE)- 15.53
Worthington {NYSE) 13.89
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 20, 2010,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at {740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at {304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

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ATHENS -The following were graduates of Ohio
University at the end of the spring quarter: Laura
Kelley, Cheshire; Rita Morrison, Long Bottom:
Patrick Dowell. Middleport~ Taryn Lentes,
Middleport; Nathan Jeffers, Middleport; Courtney
Kennedy, Pomeroy.
William Young. Pomeroy~ Jacob Venoy. Pomeroy:
Shana Snyder, Pomeroy; Jon Dillard. Reedsville:
Kimberly Ewing, Reedsville~ Brent Hanson.
Rutland: Lauren Logan, Rutland; Heather Wolfe.
Syracuse.
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Dean's List
POMEROY - Named to the dean's list at Ohio
University for the spring quarter: Can·ie Bamhouse,
Coolville; Katherine Schmittauer, Coolville: Cara
Lawless. Middleport; Morgan Lentcs. Middleport:
Terry Ellis, Pomeroy: John Krawsctyn. Pomeroy:
Calee Reeves, Pomeroy.
Steven Stewart, Pomeroy~ Lyra Neff. Pomeroy:
Kerri Van Reeth. Pomeroy: Katlyn Sau\'age.
Pomeroy; Crockett Crow. Pomeroy: Ryan Davis.
Pomeroy; Courtney Ginther, Portland: Justine
Dowler, Racine; Stephanie Cundiff. Racine: Lindsey
Buzzard, Racine~ Emma Hunter. Racine: tvlorgan
Brown. Racine; Sarah El-Dabaja. Racine: John Bentz.
Racine; Christopher Dewhurst, Rutland; Adam
McCarty, Shade.

~ummer-

Call 740-992-3381 or visit
www.downing-childs.com

(Jt.~musser
I~M1116f..!

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Ber-nar-d V. l=ultz Conterl=or- 1-1 ighar- (;ducqtion
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�r-

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Armstrong battles in Tour de France. Page B2

Bl

Finch to retire from softball, Page B6

"''ednesday, July 21, 2010

'Football at Fenway' will
keep ballpark buzzing
BOSTON (AP) - It's
just past noon. and fans
arc lining up along
Yaw key Way to get into
renway Park. First
pitch is seven hours
away. but that's not
really an issue because
thi:. Boston Red Sox
game. like the 597
before it. is sold out.
These fans are waiting to tour the ballpark.
paying S 12 apiece to
see the Green Monster
without Ted Williams or
Yaz or even Dllniel
Nava patrolling the
grass in front. In all,
almost 350.000 people

3rd annual
Eagle Sk road
race tQ be
held Aug. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS.
Ohio - The third annual
Eagle 5k Road Race and
Walk and the one mile
fun tun will be held on
Saturday. Aug. 7, beginning at 8:30 a.m. at the
St.
Paul
United
Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

will pass through the
turnstiles this year
without se~.:ing a baseball game.
The oldest ballpurk in
the major leagues,
Fenway is approaching
1ts IOOth birthday with
what could be its
busiest vear ever, starting on Ne\\ Year's Day
with the NHL Winter
Classic and continuing
op Wednesday night
,&gt;$ith
"Football
at
Fenway." a soccer
match
between
European
clubs
Glasgow Celtic and

Please see Fenway, Bl

MCT Direct file photo

This 1999 file photo, shows Fenway Park in Boston, Mass., as it hosted the 1999
MLB All-itar Game. Fenway Park will host a soccer game between European
teams Glasgow Celtic and Sporting Libson on Wednesday.

.

!o1~:~·£~:~~~!i~~~ I Cubs manager Piniella retiring after season

tion beginning at _7 a.m.
a_t the Tupper~ Pla,tns ba_l~
ftelds. The cntr) fcc ts
S 12 before Aug· 4 or S 15
on the day of !he rae~.
The race wtll begt~ at
the St: Paul Umted
~1.ethodlst C_hurch and
\VIII ~ run m the surroundmg streets . and
r&lt;?ads . Awards w11l be
g1ven to the top three
n:ta~c and female overall
fmtshers and the top
thr~e ma.le and fem~le
fimshers tn ~h~ ~ne.1mle
f~n run. T-s~trts w~ll ~)e
given to the ftrst 75 1eg1s•tran~s: .
.
01V1s1ons for both ma.le
and female runners w11l
be by age. 14 and under.
15- 18. 19-25. 26-35, 3649. and 50 an~ over.. .
For ~?re mfo~,lllon
~ register contact Josh
. ..e at 740-667-9730.

CHICAGO (AP) ...,....----- -..---...----.----,--__, •E.['Il~:::::;;::;:---:-----,-r---..--"'""'!"--::~_,_""""'l'_..--:~::-.~~:--1
Chicago Cubs manager
Lou Piniella announced
Tuesday that he will retire
at the end of the season.
ending a storied and often
colorful career that included 18 years in the majors
as a player and another 22
as a manager.
The
66-year-old
Piniella, who made five
trips to the World Series in
his career and has three
championship rings, said
he was looking forward to
spending more time with
his family. He didn't rule
out consulting for the
Cubs or another team. but
made it clear he was oetting out of the daily grlnd.
"It's been a wonderful
experience." he said ..
"There's no wa) thar I
won't cherish the memories here."
But, he added: ·-rve
been awav from home
since 1962. That's about
50 years ."
General manager Jim
Hendl)' said former Cubs
Hall of Famer Ryne
Sandberg, now a minor
POINT PLEASANT. league manager in Des
W.Va. - On Saturday. Moines, will be a candiJuly 24, the West Virginia date for the job. He said
replacement
Black Bears will host the Piniella 's
be
hired
before the
won't
Kentuckey Warnors in a
semi-pro football contest end of the season.
"It's not going to be a
at 7 p.m. at the Point
process,"
two-week
Pleasant High School
Hendry said.
Athletic Complex.
Sandberg, who spent
The two teams ·are
members
of
the several seasons as a spring
Heartland
Football training instructor with the
Scott Strazzante/Chlcago Trlbune/MCT
League. This is the sec- Cubs after retiring in In this June 2. 2007, file photo, Chicago Cubs' Lou Piniella (41) kicks his hat as umpire Brian Runge watches
ond year the Black Bears 1997. said he is interested during Piniella's tirade in eighth inning during their 5-3 loss to Atlanta Braves at Wrigley Field in Chicago.
have held a game in Point
Please see Retire, Bl
Piniella announced on Tuesday that he will retire following the 2010 season.
Pleasant.
1

PPHS to host
semi-pro
football game

Cleveland fans dumping
LeBron gear '

GAHS Hall
of Fame to
induct 7
CENTENARY, Ohio
- Seven individuals
,.,.·ere nominated for
Gallia Academy High
School\ ninth athletic
hall of fame athletic
class durin~ a July 13
HOF meetmg held in
new
Gallia
de'!ly High School
eten a.
The 20 I 0 honore~.:s
are: Lori Hamilton
Strieter, 1990. Gary
Harrison, 1987. And~
Howard, 1987. Tina
Nibert Jury. 1978. Torn
Prose. 1971. David
Tawney. 1962, and
Kristi
Thomas
Charbonneau, 1990.
The nominees will he

Please see GAHS, 86

CLEVELAND (AP)
-They're taking the jerseys off their backs for
LeBron James. Then
tossing them away - for
a good cause.
Stung by the NBA
superstar's decision to
leave Cleveland and play
for Miami. Cavaliers fans
have been unloading
their unwanted No. 23
jerseys. T-shirts and other
clothing items bearing
James' name at locations
around
the
city.
Organizers are stuppmg
the discarded James gear
to homeless shelters m
South Florida.
''It's like an) breakup,"
said Beau Miller. who
began the campaign with
three friends. "You want
to give all your stuff
back."
Por the past week.
Cleveland fans have been
dropping
off
their
LeBron-related items at
Yours Trul) Restaurants
in Northeast Ohio. Miller
said he and his friends
wanted to turn a negative
situation into a positive
and that the response has
been "extraordinary."
"'Nc wanted something
good to come out of

this." lie said. "We didn't
want another · I hate
campaign.·
LeBron
There's enough of that
going around."
Doug Libelich. manager of the Yours Truly
location
in
Shaker
Heights. Ohio. said there
has been a steady now or
fans - mostly young
ones - ridding themselves of LeBron-relatcd
clothing. including the
iconic 23 jer:-.eys. which
were wildly popular during James' sC\'Cn seasom.
whh the Cavalier:-..
"It\ been picking up in
the last few days," he
said ... All kinds of stuff,''
James' mess) ~epara­
tion with Cb.eland has
caused a negative backlash against the 25-yearold. who announced his
decis1on to leave the
Cavs as a free agent during a one-hour TV special on July ~· )"iollowing
his announcement. some
fans burned James· jersey
in protest.
While appreciating the
pain
James
caused
Cleveland fans, Miller,
along with friends Chris

Please see Fans, Bl

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon JournaVMCT

Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James looks downward late ·in the fourth quarter
against the Boston Celtics in Game 5 of the NBA Eastern Conference Semifinals
at Quicken Loans Arena on Tuesday, May 11 , in Cleveland, Ohio. The Celtics hammered the Cavaliers, 120-88, to take a 3-2 series lead.

•

�~------- ,---

____

_.,..__

- --

~

....-·-.. . . .1.

-

···---·~~~-__,..~-'-'!"!""--4----·-~--·---q~-.

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, July 21,2010

Retire

Armstrong shows grit in bid for win in Pyrenees
PAt.;. France (AP) In his final day of his
final Tour de France,
Lance
Armstrong
showed some of the old
fire.
The sc\ en-time champion, knowing full well
he no longer stands
abow all others in his
sport. fought from beginning to end in the hopt..!s
of going out with a stage
victory high · in the
Pyrenees.
lr- was not to he.
Armc;trong fim~hcd sixth
after breakmg a\\ a) curly
m the 16th stage and
holding his own through
four major climbs of the
Tour's most demanding
leg. But he lost in a final
sprint, \Hth Frenchman
Pterrick Fedri~o \\inning
the 124-mtle nde.
Alberto Contador \\as
almost se\ en minutes
beh.ind. his Astana team
a:-.serting control over the
field. The defenchng
cha.mp1on from Spain
kept the ovcndl lead,
eight seconds ahead of
Andy
Schlcck
of
Luxembourg.
The
two
':&lt;
rode a day after Contador
apologi1ed forth~ way in
~\ hich he took the yellow
Jer:-;ey.
On
Tuesday.
Armstrong. broke a\\ a)
on his own at one point
befOre he was caught b)
a 5mall group of riders.
All of\\ hich was a bit of
a change for the 38-yearold Texan.
''It was harder than 1
expected.
lt"s
been
awhile since I sprinted,''
he said. "Just not quick
enough I'm not the be~t
guy in the race but I still
have the spirit of a fightcr... I wasn't fast enough
in the end. Fcdrigo is
ver} fast and he deserves
the win."
The Tour ends in Paris
on
Sunday.
and
acknov.lArmstrong
cdged his carl!er was
nearing the linish.
"lance Annstrong is
over in about four days,"
he said.

Fenway
from Page BJ
Sporting Li::.bon.
''We think Fenwa)
Park is a great place to
go in tht..! summer v. ith
the kids." satd Sam
Kennedy, th~.: Red Sox
executhc vice president
and chief opt..!rating
officer. ''We· rc in the
business of selling the
hrand of baseball. but
the soccer crowd is an
'opportunity for 30,000
new people to experience Fenway Park."
Officials from the
-.occer clubs exchanged
Jerseys on Tucsda)
night and posed for pictures '' ith the 2004 and
'07 World Series trophles. Behind them. a
soccer pitch was laid
out over the baseball
diamond, with the goals
atong the third.basc
line and in front of the
baseball hullpens in
right field, sod had
been placed over the
infield dirt and where
the pitcher's mound
would be.
"For me. personally,
it's a dream to be at
Fen way Park,'' said
Celtic
commercial
director Adrian Filby,
who in a thick Scottish
accent rattled off references
to
Teddy
Ballgame and the Curse
of the Bambino. "l'\e
been telling them all
about fen\\ ny. These
guys get it. When they
walked in they could
sec the h1c;tor) of the
park. The) could see
ho~· .special this place

......
IS.

Fans
from Page Bl
Jungjohann, Andre\\ De
Crane and Tim Zeller.
'aw his departure as an
opportunity•to help tho e
less fortunate. Along

•

from Page Bl

son first. a baseball player
second.
From Cincinnati it was
on to a long run in Seattle,
where Piniella's teams
won at least 90 games
four times. The Mariners
went 116-46 in 200 I . but
lost in the ALCS to the
Yankees. His 1995 and
2000 Mariners teams also
fell in the league championship series.
•
Pimella won 93 ga
his final season with t1i
Mariners in 2002 before
heading home to his
native Tampa but had a
difference of opinion with
ownership. questioning
the Devil Rays' commitment to winning before
they bou~ht out the fmal
year of h1s four-year contract.
In Chicago. Piniella 's
arrival was part of a major
overhaul that sent expectations soaring after a dismal 2006 season.
Chief executive officer
Andy MacPhail resigned
after the Cubs won just 66
games, ending a 12-year
run that mcluded only two
postseason appearances.
A day later, the Cubs
announced they were not
renewing manager Dusty
Baker's contract, and
Hendry went shopping.
First, he picked out
Piniella. who left the
booth for a three"')'e
contract worth nearly $10
million, with an option for
a fourth year. Then.
Hendry committed about
$300 million for players.
The Cuhs re-signed
third baseman Aramis
Ramirez for five years and
$75 million and lured
Alfonso Sonano with an
eight-)ear $136 million
deaL the fifth largest in
major league history.
They also added Ted Lilly
to the starting rotation. but
for all the big moves. the
results were awfully
familiar at ftrst.
The low point came in a
senes against Atlanta in '
early June.
Pitcher
Carlos
Zambrano got .into an
altercation with former
catcher Michael Barrett
that started in the dugout
and resumed in the cl~
house. resulting in fin
for both players. The nex
day. Piniella got ejected
for a dirt-kicking tirade
against umpire ~1ark
Wegner durin£ a loss that
left- the Cub~ at 22-31.
resulting in a suspension.
From there. though. the
Cubs
turned
things
around.
They went on a run that
led to the playoffs and
kept it going the following
year, going 97-64 - the
most wins for the franchise since 1945.
Things have not been as
good· for Piniella and the
Cubs since then. The team
missed the playoffs last
year and through Monday
was 10 1/2 games out of
first place -in the :\'L
Central and 10 games
under .500. Zambrano. the
one-time ace. ''as m, the
minors after another tira.
inYoh ing his teammates
Reds manager Dust)
Baker. '" ho was replaced
in Chicago b) Piniella.
said he was surprised by
the
timing of the
announcement.
"There ·s a time for us
all," he said. "It's bard to
keep that pace without
ha\ ing a heart attack."
Owner Tom Ricketts
said Hendry will be the
GM. at least for next year.
"We had a good offseason.
no
question:·
Ricketts said. ··1 think the
second thing J'ye seen the
last eight -months that
gives me confidence in
Jim is that we haYe a good
organization:·
-

in the job.
"I need to focus on what
I'm doing here in Des
Moines \\ ith these players
and what my job i~ right
now," he said. "If the time
came, if I was cons dcred
for that job in Chicago. I
think that's be a terrific
thing ju~t to be considered. The who II.! goal of
any minor leaguer is to get
to the major leagues. and I
think that includes coaches and managers like
myself.''
One of the Cub:-., slug!!er Derrek Lee, said he
\vas surptised by the timing and that Piniella will
be~ mbsed.
''He docsn 't like to lo~e .
He takes the !os:-.es
extremclv hard." Lee said.
1 "He's had a great career,
put a lot of time into this
Jose Luis Vlllegas/Sacramento Bee/MCT
game:·
In thts May 16, file photo, Lance Armstrong looks out at the fans pnor to the star~
Announcing his retireof the 2010 Amgen Tour of California in Nevada City. Armstrong is currently com- ment now. Piniclla .said.
gi\es tpe team time to find
peting in the Tour de France.
Armstrong's coach, were almost 35 minutes main climb. Contador a replacement.
"I'm proud of our
surged ahead but later
Johan Bruyneel, said the behind.
accomplishments
during
course was not ideal for
It was the third....,ucces- apologized in a YouTube
sive French victory in video. On Tuesday, the my time here and th1s will
Armstrong to prevail.
"You really have to be this year's race and the two· shook hands on be a perfect way for me to
end my career." he said.
French television.
very. ,·cry strong to ride sixth in all.
"But
let me make one
"We
are
fine
now:·
away:• he said. '·And
"It was my day.
perfectly
clear: our
thing
there's al\\ ays going to Everything smiled on Schleck said. "The Tour work IS far from
over. I
be one or two guys with me:' said Fedrigo. who de France isn't going to want to keep the momenhim, who are equally also won a stage in 2009 be won by eight seconds. tum going more than anystrong m the sprint:· he and 2006 and has regu- and there's going to be a thing else and win as
larly been part of brc~k­ big race between him and many games as \\ e can to
said.
Contador
lauded a\\avs in this vear's race. me the day after tomor- get back rn this pennant
Arm..,trong's effort.
"Thl:- ~hows that it isn't row.''
race ...
Wednesdav is a rest
"I believe he reall) only the great leaders
Entering
Tue:-day's
wanted to go for that who can \\in on the Tour day. On Thursday. the game against Houston.
stage today;' he said. de France. it's also the field turns around and Piniella ·;; overall record
rides the P) renees in the was I .826-1 .691 I .519)
"For myself, I \\Ould general riders."
Schleck was unable to other direction. ending and he trails only Tony La
have been really happy if
he had won that stage get away from Contador on the top of the Col du Russa. Bobby Cox and
because
he
really and make up the time he Tourmalet.
Joe Torre in victories
de::.en·ed it;· he said.
desperately needs to
"It's a ver). very hard among active manasers.
• Second place went to regain the yellow jersey stage and I think we can The Cubs said Pi111clla
will retire as the 14th-winFrance's Sandy Casar. and build a buffer for have very big gaps \\Jth Spam·s Ruben Plaza Saturday's time trial. probably more thall in the ningest manager in major
where
Contador
is time trial:· Con tad or league history.
third.
His record with the
said.
The stage featured two expected to excel.
Tuesday was a good Cubs was 307-271, and he
Schleck had been furiclimbs that are so difficult they aren't even clas- ous with Contador after day for Norway's Thor is in the fourth and final
sified by cycling's gov- Monday's stage. He felt Hushovd. who finished year of his contract. After
erning body. The leading the Spaniard should have in I Oth place and picked leading the Cubs to congroup finished the race in waited while Schleck up enough points to secutive NL Central titles
5 hours, 31 minutes. 43 dealt with a mechanical retake the green jersey in 2007-08. Piniella and
seconds. The stragglers problem during the da) 's v. orn by the top sprinter. his team missed the playoft's last ) ear and have
struggled again this seaSporting
football Fenwa) Sports Group rant that has been butlt son with a new owner in
director
Francisco "We have the luxur) of inside the ballpark's charge. The Cubs have
.
gone 102 years without a
Costa said he knew lit- looking at new opportu- walls.
World Series title.
tle
about
baseball nities because our core
This 'ear's Red Sox
A right-handed outfieldbefore
arriving
in business is so strong. :-chcdule left Fenwav er, Piniclla was the AL
But we ne'er take our empty for most of Jul). Rookie of the Year in
Boston.
"It's impressive," he focus away from the including a 10-game 1969 afterbattin!! 282. II
West Coast road trip home runs and -68 RBls
said. "You feel some core business ."
They have held con- that the ballclub began with the Royab. He was
kind of mag1c here."
Since the ownership certs, starting with on :-.1onday night in traded to the Yankees in
Kennedy 1973 and ended his playgroup led by John Bruce Springsteen in Oakland.
Henry. Tom Werner and 2003 and also including ~ent much of the ing career with New York
Larry Lucchino bought groups like The Rolling spring trying to woo top in 1984.
In all. Piniella played 18
the team in 2002. the Stones and. next month, Eu1:opcan soccer teams
Rt..!d Sox have given Aerosmith. They have to Boston. hoping to years in the majon.. - II
Fenway
a
total brought in their minor capitalize on an antici- with the Yankees - and
makeover. putting seats league affiliates for a pated World Cup bump was a career .291 hitter.
He began managing in
atop the Green Monster. "Ft'iturcs at Fenway" in interest.
He
eventually
landed
1986
"ith the Ynnkecs
turning Yawke) Way date. hosted the Cape
Sporting
and
Celtic
for
and
lasted
three years.
into a plaza on game Cod League All-Star
the
th
soccer
game
including
a
stint
as generGame
and
turned
the
19
days and modernizing
on
the
Fenv.
av
al
manager.
He
managed
layed
the ballpark in hundreds field over to the local p .; the Reds from 1990-92.
of other ways from colleges in the Baseball field - the first since leading them to a World
waterproofing to wheel- Bean pot.
Pelc brought Brazil's Series- championship in
chair accesstbilitv.
Things took off with Santo~ in l968 to pla_v h.1s fi1rst season. He a1so
During that span, the the Winter Clas~ic, the Boston Beacons of got national attention for a
wrestling
ballclub has also won which used Fenway as a the !':orth American clubhouse
match '" ith reliever Rob
two World Series and picturesque backdrop Soccer League.
More than 30.000 Dibble.
reached the playoffs in for the outdoor game
Dibble, part of the
all but two seasons bet\\ cen the Boston tickets have been sold
and
the for Wednesday night's "Nast) Boys" bullpen.
while selling out every Bruins
Flyers. match. helped by the said Piniella "was one of
game since May 15, Philadelphia
2003
a record streat&lt;. The Red Sox added a strong draw from the us." He downplaycd their
that reached 600 on college hockey game Portuguese community I992 tussle as overblown.
"We butted heads once.
between
archrivals around New England.
Sunday.
The success on and Boston College and Corporate sponsorships It's way more famous than
have also been strong. it should be. We've been
off the field left them Boston University Kennedy
said.
family ever since." Dibble
the
two
most
recent
looking for other ways
"It was a bif! risk: said. "During batting
to expand their busi- NCAA champ10ns; the
~
practice even.• da)'. Lou
·.; guy just
ness. And they quickly rink was also opened up Soccer is not Bruce would go to every
realized that the most for public skating and Springsteen: it's not the to sec hm\ vou were
underutilized asset the) rented out to local Winter Classic." he doing - not as a player.
had \\as the "lyric little teams.
said. '·F~om ~n ~rtistic but as a person. I'll always
"Pulling off that event pcrspcctrve. ob\ 1ously respect him for that. I
bandbox of a ballpark"
that was christened the gave uc; the courage to a sellout crowd would ahva)s thought that was
same \\eek in 1912 that talk about other non- be. great. But not every- 1 one of .the best qualities
thtng need:-. to be a se II- about lum, that he alwnv:-.
baseball
C\ cnts,"
the Tttanic sank.
cared about you as a per"Immediately after Kenned) said recent!) out to be a success:·
we got here, we recog- over lunch in a rcstaumted that there was this
great facility sltttng
here year-round that we
controlled and operat·cd," said Kennedy. who
NOW IS THE TIME FOR
also serves as president
STOCKING!
of the bus111ess spinoff

T
.

FISH DAY!

with donatmg the clothtng, thl! group began
brcaku pwi thlebron .com.
\\here they arc selling Tshirts \l,'ith the slogan
"It's Not Us. It's You ...
on the front.
Proceeds from the S 15
shirts arc going to the
Cleveland City Mission.

• Channel Cat1N1* l.urgcmouth Bass" Redear • Koi
• Blucgil (Rrcnm) • Minnows t Black Crappie (ifavaill
• Grass Carp

WecJ.nesday, July 28,2010
Bid11 ell Hard11 arl' Shade Rh cr .\G Sen ice
In 8id11ell, OH
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�Wednesay, July 21, 2010

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

----~--------------------------------------------~
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Pets
Free
puppy
1/2
p1tbull &amp; 1/2 lab 6
wks f11mal9. 740245·5986 or 740·
274·5121
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.
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740·446·3160
700
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1·888·688·5943
5000 Resort Property
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,
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t'
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Employment
Unlimited local 6.75 pro package.
Want To Buy
electric start. battery
and long
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distance
poly bed, auto dump,
s lver fl d cotrs, el"y
General
calling for only 1 yr old, $1800· 20+
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gold = = = = = = Rhode Island Red
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74()..742·3109
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sets. app: cations for Aides
Get reliable phone
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on
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446-2842
1ntemet
at
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Ava• able
at
Call Today!
v.y.rw,oy!Jh org or phone
~:~~~~ :Q~pment
. : 740·441-1393
1·877-673-3136
1~Recrea~onal
Vehicles : Compet1t1ve wages and
b nel1ts
:tcludmg
Security
Merchandise
M eage ...:1d healtt&gt; ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-=;;;;;;;;;;;;; 900
1nsurance.
ADT
'2000
Alltomotive .
Free Home
Servic~ I Bus.
Miscellaneous
9000
Security
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Real Estate
S850 Value
Ladies
diamond
3000
Sales
with purchase of cluster ring with 7
alarm monitoring diamonds. TW 1ct.
200 Announcements
:
.
services from ADT retails $895. asking
Security Services. $750. 740·612·2161
Real Estate
3500
Call1-888·274·3888
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diamond
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OHIO 400
Financial dinner ring w1th 36
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diamonds
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Apartments/
CO. •ecoiT'Mends lhat
2.50/100 cts. reta1;:;
Townhouses
you do bus1ness w1th Financial Services
$3500.
asking
people you know and
$1500.
740-612·
NOT
to
send
morey
Second floor 1 B A
.CREDIT CARD 2161
apartment overlooking thrOt.gh the ma1 1.mtd
RELIEF
yot..
have
•nvesllgallng
Galltpol s C1ty Park,
Yard Sale
lhe offenng
Burled In Credit
L R..Kitct'en/d nmng
Card Debt?
area. batt'l washer &amp;
40944 Laurel Chff
-pictures thaf
Call Credit Card •
dryer 5400 00 mo cr.:l
Rd. July 23 &amp;24, lots
have
been
740.446-4425 or 740.
Relief for your free
of
.50 items ra n or
446·2325
consultation.
placed in ads at
sh1ne
1-877-264-8031
the Gallipolis
600

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POLICIES· Ohio "'!ley PubU;hl!liiMWVetltle right 10 edit. reJtct, or ca~llf'fl' edIt any lime f!rrou mua1 be reponed on the llrtt Cia~ or l)ltllk:IIIO!'IIIIId lhe
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any bss or PS*I10 11101 rOGUJttlrom the publlca!lon or omiiiSIOn or*" eavertoument CorTK~ton 11111 be maeltln the nl'llt ava~~ble edtllon • Box num~r lids
a" uiWiye oonlldenti:IL • Cwrent rille ca111 eppuu • All re~~l estate ldYertieementa are .aubjed to thO Ftderll Fa!r Housing Act oi1Q68 • This newqllllef
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r-r.ooking For-,

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Spring Valley Area,
3BA, 1112 BA, no
pete, no cmoking
$650/mo +dep. 740645·3836

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1960 No job too big
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on
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Oh10 740·446·9340

2BA 886 Garfield
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740·645-1646
the way-We need to
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nice quite area. but models. Don t miss
close to town, nice out on these pnces.
yard, avatlable Aug. French City Builders
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1, rent' $400 you pay 3rd
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2·BR house in New
Haven $325 mo.
$325 deposit No
pets. 304·674·5525

[~~~~~il==1!:==-··~~ ~~===~W.-J
~~M~o~t~or~cy~c~l~es~~ ~~~Ap~a~rtm~e~nts~/~~ .~~H~ou~s~e~s~Fo~r~R~e~n~t~
1996
Goldwing
Aspencade,
low
m1:es.
excellent
condition
$7800.
call 740·441·5582

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5000 Resort Properiw

House for rent in
New
Haven.
1
Accounting /
possible 2 BR. $300
Financial
rent &amp; $300 dep. No - = = = = == •
pets. 304-674-3181
Experienced
Tax
Professional needed
4000 Manufactured in Meigs County
Housing Extra mcome flex•llle
hours,
helpmg
others, poss ble full·
• ._._._._._.__
Rentols
t1me.
ongomg
tra•ntng.
Send
Nice 16x80, lor rent,
resumes
or
3 Bedroom 2 bath,
•ndicat•ons of .,terest
Country
setttng.
to:
Dally Sent.:1el,
740·339·3366 740·
PO Box 729·17,
367·0266.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 .

House for renl 3Br 1
Ba chillicothe rd.
$475 mo plus dep &amp;
utilities.
Apartment
lor rent 1Br 1BA
Springvalley
area.
$389 mon plus dep. 2 br. mob1le home 1n
740·339-3046
or Racine. $325 a mo.,
$325 dep., 1 yr
740-645·7661
lease. No pets, No
calls aft9r 9pm, 740·
Newly
remodeled, 992·5097
4BR. 80 Lucus! St.
2000
Automot1ve 2BR
apt.
Clean Gallipolis, no pets.
FIND A JOB
renovated downtown, Kim
740·441-1201
new
appl
lam or June 304-674·
IN THE
Trucks
floonng,
3170
CLASSIFIEDS
1991 Ford F150 4x4 water/sewerttrash
lor sale 302 motor rncl. $475/mo 740credit
$1600 OBO 74().. 709-1 690
441-&lt;l918
check

Attractive.
unfurnished,
one
bedroom apt.
2nd
floor, corner Second
and Pine. No pets,
Want To Buy
References required.
~;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;:;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;
Security
deposit,
Oilers now buying
JUnk vehicles 740· $325 per month,
388·0011 or 740· water included. call
740 446 4425
or
441·7870
740·446·3936.

1993 Ford F-150 Ext
cab 4.6 Tnton V-8.
blue, 2 wheel dnve,
cloth tntenor, very
ex. cond.,
Yard sale 822 Johns clean
Ad. (Phyllis Glasgo 740·24 7 ·2475,
res•dence) Rac1ne, asking $5,500 OBO
July 23, 24. 9·4
Real Estate
3000
Recreational
.
Sales
1000
Vehicles

Read your
newspaper and team
something today!

Renovated spacious
2 BR apt overlooking
city park. S575/mo
water/sewerltrash
rncl.
740-709·1890
credit checK

EffiCiency apartment
for rent
162A
Animals
Chatham Ave. (rear)
no pets. no st~irs, 1
or 2 people only
Horses
(inc.
For Sale By Owner $500/mo
water, sewer,
2 Horses for sale
Campers I RVs &amp;
158 000
6
garbage.
gas
&amp;
min.slud. red. older ;;.-;;;:;;T;;;;r;;;;a;;;;ile;;;;r;;;;s;;;:;;;;;;;;;; rent
apts
$
·mo. 740·
$2030
electric)
740·446·
red mare. 740-256·
2005 Jayco Eagle 446-0390
4234 or 740·2081336
Gooseneck
Hitch ~~Ho~u~s~e~s~Fo~r~S~a~l~e~ 7861
·
Pets
sleeps stx. Excellent
Immaculate 2 BA
= = = = = = - condition.
Asking For
Sale
12x60
apt. in coun\ry, new
See mob le home. very
2 English Bulldog $19,900.
carpet and cabniets.
puppies for adoption, photos
at good cond. 2Br 1BA
painted.
current 1n all shots. wwwcarm1c
· haeftrr
a le new roof, Sldtng, Freshly
appliances,
WID
.male/female, AKC ~
740·446· kttchen
cabinets,
hook-ups,
for more info contact 2412
cape!, front porch &amp;
water/trash
paid.
JOhn731 @live.com.
carJ:Ort 3.14 acre Htll
Beautiful
country
2002 Homet
32D St. Hartford 'NV 74Qonly
10
Found young female, supershde, overs zed 4 5.5951 or 304· settmg,
1
minutes from town.
looks like Rotwiller. Quad
Bunkhouse, 882. 3761
Must
see
to
D1ck1e sleeps
around
10
great
• Real Estate appreciate S425,mo
Chapel.
74Q-256· cond1t1on 446·4473
3500
1336
Rentals 614-595-7773
645·0623 after 4
or740·645·5953
Free
fu!i·blooded ·o-7- -B
"'"r-e-c k_e_n_rr-dg
-o
Middleport.
Beech
chocolate Lab. 2yrs Park mobile camper,
Apartments/
St, 2 bf. furnished
old, Dalmation 1yr 3 slide outs, full size --;;;;;;;;;T;;;ow=nh;;;o;;;u;;;s;;:es-=;;;;;
apt. uti!. pd, no pets.
old Lovable. 740· bath, kitchen. slid1ng •
BR. stove &amp; ref. deposiVreferences,
388·9839
doors.
2
silting
!urn
2nd fl. AJC, 740·992·0165
rooms,
phone
&amp; 258
State
St.
Free Kittens 10 to 12
setup,
24' $400/mo $400 dep. Racine area, 2 br, 1
wks
old.
white, cable
bath
apartment ..
calico, &amp; blklwht 740· anwning country blue 740-446·3667
$400
mo.:
$200
&amp; cream color, extra
645·1816
740-416·
clean, extra nice. 1 BR effc. apt. deposit.
740·247· $375./mo wate/tmsh 3036
Free puppies, they $25,900,
cred1t
included.
will be small. 740· 2475
Houses For Rent
check
74()..709·
256·1233
2006 Salem LE·25 1690
2BR, nice.PP area
8 week old F. Jack ft.-Excellent
$465-Homestead
Sprng
Valley
Green
Russell
Terriers, Condition. See at
Reality Ask for Nancy
parents on Premises. French City Homes, Apartments 1 BA at 304·675·0799or 675·
vet/ck
S150.each Gallipolis. Ohio. 74().. $395+2 BR ,ol $470
5540
Month. 446-1599
446·9340
74()-446-4 706.

~~~~~~~

\il

Need a
lob Done?_.~

Sban

fb['

Classi ieds ~

--.J..~~t

�- - -- -- T - --

Page 84

-

- -- - -· - - --- -· - - -- - -- - - - -

o

•

24 4

The Daily Sentinel

Accounting /
Financial

Help Wanted·
General

Seasonal
Tax
Professional needed
tn Meigs County.
Earn extra income,
find a new career,
become
full-time
associate. We will
train. Send resume
or indications
of
interest to:
Daily
Sentinel, PO Box
729·5, Pomeroy. Oh
45769

Representative
for
charity.
Operate
scheduled
fundraising events at
grocery/department
stores outside thetr
exits greeting the
public. Reps hand
.
out help tnfo and
offer
patriotic
merchandise for a
donation. Mst have
car. Be willing to
traveI..
Camp/Expenses
paid.
Seniors
weclcomed!. email
resume
to
Jely@ veteransoutrea
ch.com or call 866·
212·5592

Child/Elderly Care
Full-time
non
smoking babysitter
needed in my Mason
Co. home 304-6333682

"

Misellaneous
Jones Tree Service
complete tree care,
stump grindtn£, bucket
truck &amp; cra1e Ins·
Worker Comp. 740·
367-0266,
740·339·
3366
....- - - - - Remodel work. small
jobs, fence painting,
odd JObs. concrete.
304·593·6569. ask tor
Matthew.

w~~re '~~ ~0~
fi~~ t~~ ~~rf~'t ~~a

Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding,
Decks, Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

It anyone can prov1de
Information about the
shooting of :ats on
Greer Rd. i1 Point
Pleasant, call 304·675·
6083.

Grand Opening
J &amp; J Industries is

LPN/Medical
Assistant Leon WV
lax resume 304·
586·9312
~M~e~di-ca~l~R~e-c-ep-t~io~ni-st
Leon wv. fax 304586-9312
- - - - - -......- Now Hiring STNA,s
Scenic Hills 311
Buck
Ridge
Rd.
Bidwell. OH 45614
www.vrablehealthcar
e.com EOE
Social
worker
needed for Point
Pleasant
dialysis
facility.
Master's
degree required. Fax
resume to 304-6751505.

relocating it maJor
medical
devtce
facility to Gallia Co.
.10 to 15 full time
positions
'4 day work week
·5 hr shifts
' $14.25 to start
Clerical,
Customer
serv1ce, Repair
Must be neat in
appearance. Must be
over 18 yrs old. Call
or
740-446-3057
304-709-0016
$350 sign on bonus
Dont
miss
opportunity!!
9000

Operations Manager
wanted to supervise
all aspects of an
industrial processtng
facility located in
New Haven, WV
Plase respond to
Green Global, 1050
Avenue.
Ohio
Glasssport,
PA
15045. Attn: Human
Resources,
Salary
commensurate with
experience.

Servic_e I Bus.
Dtrectory

Home Improvement
Tankless Hotwater
Heaters. For 3BR. 1
or 2 BA. Hms.
starting @ $300.
HAS REPAIR 740·
992-3061

Formerly Robies Construction

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERA
33 Years Experience

304-773-5441
01' 304-593-8458

Rick Price • 17 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740·416-2960
740-992-0730

Medical
Help Wanted·
General

PSI CONSTRUCTION

HRS Repaj.l-740-992-3061
u 20+ yrsexp
Services Mo-;t Heating &amp;
Cooling S\stem
. (indu~ling
Heatpumps) and Controls

NOMArrfR
WHAT YOUR

~

~

Tankless Hot Water Heater
Change-outs/ Replacements.

STYlE. ..

Owner: Sam Smith. Ma~on, W\'

·

YOUNG'S
- .

CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• :'lie\\ Gar·ages • Elcc:trkal &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
o \'in) I Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
Porch Decks

Whole House Water Purifiers

~

992-6215 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

•·!at 45.00 hrl) Rate+ 10.00 Trip Chrg.

teJ

* Prompt and Quality Work

... THf

* Reasonable Rates
* Insured * Experienced

NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

J

V.C. YOUNG Ill

(helps against C8 intake)

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

WV 036725

ROB[Rl BISS[LL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

References A\·ailable!
Call Gar)' Stanley

740-992-1671

Ceu740-591-8044

Stop &amp; Compare

Please leave message

RAVENSWOOD

LEWIS

CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

New.spapers

If we mn't help you n e will
find you the help you need
Auto Accidenl~ • Work
Injuries • :\eck &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder. Arm, Hip &amp; Lc!(
Pain • Headaches • :\lassa!(e
Therap) • Acupuncture
\I'll f. 11ended lro11r.\. ,lr/-1-,
J&gt;r. Kelly K.
Sal. &amp; enninR·' &lt;'IIWI'!it'/lnet .Iones. D.C.
M tI
A
t d

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal and Replacement

All Types Of Concrete Work

30 Years Experience

David Lewis

.

740-992-6971

304-273-5321
316 Washington St. • Ravenswood

·

W'/04:?182

Insured
Free Estimate~

(3aft Marcum construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
Room additions • Roofing o Garagl!s
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns o \in) I &amp; \\ ood Fencing
foundations
o

NOTICE
BY
more
fully
PUBLICATION:
described in deed
recorded
in
IN THE COMMON
Volume 204, Page
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
899, Meigs County
OHIO
Official Records,
Home
National
and costs of this
Bank, Plaintiff, vs.
action; that the
mortgage
be
Sara Jordan, et al.,
Defendants, Case foreclosed
and
No.10 cv 065
that
the
liens
To: The Unknown
and/or interests in
or
on
said
Heirs, Next of l&lt;in,
property, if any, be
Devisees,
marshalled
and
Legatees,
the real estate title
Administrators,
quieted and said
Executors,
Successors
and
real property sold
Assigns of Gary A.
in the foreclosure
Jordar aka Gary action
all
and
amounts
due
Jordan, deceased,
and the Estate of Plaintiff be paid
from the proceeds
Gary A. Jordan
of the sale.
aka Gary Jordan,
y.rhose names and
You are required
answer the
addresses
are to
Complaint within
unknown.
You are hereby twenty-eight (28)
days after the last
notified that you
have been named
publication of this
Notice, which will
Defendants In the
action
entitled
be published once
Home
National
each week for
three
(3)
Bank, Plaintiff, vs.
successive weeks.
Gary A. Jordan
The
last
aka Gary Jordan,
publication will be
et al., Defendants.
This action has made on the 4th
day of August,
been
assigned
Case No. 10 CV 2010, · and
the
065,
and
is twenty-eight . (28)
days for answer
pending In the
Court of Common
will commence on
Pleas of Meigs that date. In the
County, Ohio. The
of
your
case
object
of
the failure to answer
Complaint
or
otherwise
demands
respond
as
requested by the
judgment against
the
Defendants,
Ohio Rules of Civil
~ara
Jordan,
Procedure,
Samantha Jordan, judgment
by
default will be
and The Unknown
rendered against
Heirs, Next of Kin,
you and for the
Devisees,
relief demanded in
Legatees,
the Complaint.
Administrators,
Executors,
Attorney
for
Successors
and
Plaintiff: Douglas
Assigns of Gary A.
W. Little, P.O. Box
Jordan aka Gary• 686, Pomeroy, OH
Jordan, deceased
45769, Telephone:
and the Estate of (740) 992-6689
Gary A. Jordan (7) 21. 28, (8) 4
aka Gary Jordan.
for purposes of
Public Notice
foreclosing
on
Plaintiff's security,
in the sum of NOTI~E
TO
$23,923.01
with
BIDDERS
interest thereon at The Meigs Local
the rate of $7.3555
of
Board
per day, until fully
Education wishes
paid, plus and
to receive bids for
costs
advanced
the following:
for fees accrued,
Bread/Bakery and
order
to ·Milk/Dairy
in
foreclose upon a products.
ntortgage
upon
All bids shall be
real estate located received in, and
at 53594 Number bid specifications
may be obtained
Nlne
Road,
OH
from,
Reedsville,
45772, (Auditor's
TREASURER'S
Parcel Nos. 09· OFFICE,
41765
01266.007 and 09·
Pomeroy
Pike,
OH
01266.009), in the
Pomeroy,
45769,
on
or
Tewnship of Olive,
Meigs
County,
before 10:00 A.M.,
Ohio, which is
Tuesday, August

3, 2010.
The Meigs Local
Board
of
Education
reserves the right
to reject any and
all bids, and the
submitting of any
bid shall impose
no
liability
or
obligation
upon
the said Board.
All
envelopes
must be CLEARLY
MARKED
according to the ·
type of bid.
Mark
E.
Rhonemus,
Treasurer/CFO
MEIGS
LOCAL
BOARD
OF
EDUCATION
Pomeroy
41765
Pike
Pomeroy,
OH
45769
PH(740) 992·5650
(7)21,25

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985-4141
740-416·1834
Fully insured

Free estimates · 25+) ears experience
(\ot affiliatoo "ilh \like \larcum

®allipolis ~ailp [;ribune

Roofing.~

Rcmodcltng)

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint

.laleasant ~egister

fiND IT Al.L
in t.he

(304) 675-1333

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
.

\

�Wednesday, July 21, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Trill
1 S pide r's
7 Monkey's
home ·
uncles
2 Chopping
11 Banished
tool
12 Church
3 Equip
part
4 Amor13 "Scat!"
phous
14 Got
masses
bigger
5 Letterman
1'5 Witty
rival
18 - -garde 35 Storybook
remark
6 Genesis
19Chicag o
monster
17 Track
site
suburb
36
Bird
on a
7 Sweater
trips
21 Shark's
Canadian
20 Quive r
yarn
home
dollar
item
8 BobCovets
37
Com22
23 G ardner
w hite's
24Army
pletely
of "M ocousin
transports 38 S tage
gambo"
9 Time o f
p rompt
24 Kingsto n's
planning 25 Museum
stuff
40Road goo
ISland
1 0 St1tch
30Spears
41 Before, to
26 Spoil
16 Half of a
Byrof1
27 Pitcher's
'60s group 33 Breadmaking
42 Potato
17 Tibeta n
stat
need
part
28 Comfy
monks
room
NEW CR
_O
_S
~S-W
_
O_
R_
D_BOOKI Send $4 /5 (checklm o.) to
29 Low
Thomas Joseph Book 1, PO. Box 536475, Orlando, R 32853·6475
10
socks
31 Gang11
star's g un
32 Bra part
33 Longings
34Sneaker
feature
37 Electrically flexible
39Chin
cover
4301ympics
sled
44 Prayer
bead s
45Sediment
46Main
d ish
7-21

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg W alker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

•

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

" IT'-5 MULTI-TA-5 KING, LORETTA ... I CAN EN~OY
THE GAME WHILE YOU BERATE ME."

COlT'

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Bo rgman
NOM- VNT FRGf

RMNDM~ I HAVE.

2

Bt&gt;NDPI&lt;CTC

1llUR~6:3Q

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
I

by

Dav~

Green

7 5
7 9 3 8
1
8 3 4
3 9
5 1 7
9 5
5 2 3
7
8 4
2
3
2 1 6 8
Diillculty Le\cl * * *
... .{Jj:UiJJ!Q
....... f.H:YJ
s v 8 6 L B 9 ~ G
c
6 L B ~ 9 G 9 v 8
G 9 ~ 9 8 v B 6 L
-.,. v 6 9 B ~ L 8 G 9
- 8~8 G 9 v 9 6 L ~
..- L I ~ 9 G 6 8 v B 9
~ G v 8 B 9 L 9 6
f-- B 8 6 L 9 ~ G 9 v
9 9 L v G 6 ~ 8 B

.

" But I CAN'T go to the bathroom
mys elf - this isn 't our hous e! "

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

1/ll

Ill~_

0

-;

~

~

~

MR~ W ILSON 5A'/S YotJ Hf.VE:. A fROG IN '{OUR
~ROAT. Cout.P 1 5EE" IF ITS ~~ ON 6 1 LO~T~"

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday,
July 21. 2010:
This year, you walk throus;, a new
door and open up to unusual profes..-ional possibilities. A parent .tlso could
berome quite unpredictable. You might
feel weighed down by a domestic i-.sue
or even your o~TI home. Toss yourself
100 percent into your work If you are
~ingle, date all you want. You h.:we at
least one interesting suitor coming
toward you. Avoid .my live-in situ.1lions this year. If you are att."'cht&gt;d, the
two of you might nt!ed to renegotiate
your boundaries. Remain nurturing.
SAGmARIUS works well ~ith you.
The Stars Shaw the Kir~d ofDa-:t You 11
Hauc: 5-Dyluunic; 4-Posrlivt:; 3-Azrnlge; 2So-so; 1-Difficllll
ARIES (March 21-April19)
Key a-.~h?S or a partner
regains a seriousness that you had
hoped had passed. Be open to hi~ or
her ideas, as well as new ones. Express
a willingness to talk and give your support. Caring abound~. Tonight: feed
your mind.
TAURUS (April20-May 21)
**"K* A key per.;on in your life
neeas your time and attention. Fmances
could be tied up in this :.ituation. let
your imagination flow when discussing
an issue. You will disro\'er that nnswers
are forthcoming. Don't forget to schedule a doctor's &lt;1ppointmcnL lonight: Go
v.1th another ~·s !';uggcstion.
GEMiNI (May 22-June 20)
Others' sugg~tions will be
beneficial. A consen'ius aniwd ,,t during ,, meeting could be difficult U&gt;
negate. '!nough you might be more
&lt;"Oncemed than you let on. su~s will
be the mo:-.t Jikel\' oulmme. Ttmight
Indulge a famili member or roommate
Don't fo%et th.it the cat need.; hugs,

*****

*****

too.

CANCER Oune 21-Julv 22}

*** You could feel a·bit uptight

about a personal situation. By throwing
yourself into work or a project. the feelmg will lessen. A p.ll\•nt or superdsor
oi some type could help you if you
ollow him or her to. Tonight: ("':t&gt;t.1 c.\1\l
or ll)kt'l'l of appredallon on the \\".\)'
home.
LEO Quly 21-Aug. 22)
As the day pru~-ses,
you become more and more energiled.
Rethink a matter in\ oh mg a neighbor
or information rea!ived, as well as dio;·
sem.in.1ted. Optimi"!n "urrounds ,, new
idea or new~. Tonight: Jump on the
b,,ndwagon with ,, ''ves."
VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-'Sept. 22)

*****

***

You know well the \'irtues of
sugar rather than vinegar, and you display that abilit) right now. How you
handle someone could make a big difference in the outcome. Deal \\ith a
petSOO.tl m.ltter as soon as J'O'"ible.
Tonight: Home is where the heart is.
LmRA (Sept. 23-Ckt. 22)
You might feel a familiar
heaviness or St!riouc;ncss. You have
been there before and om~ more can
handle wh.1tever burdens might head
your war For nO\\; expre-&lt;s your
enthusia-.m with J&gt;&lt;lrt.ners. those who
seek you out .1nd a loved one. Tonight
Meet a friend for mwu:hies and swap
news.
SCORPIO (CA."t. 23-i'..:O\'. 21)
Details could pre\ ent your
succes.-.. Stay focused, ~pecially on
matters invo)\'ing finances and your
budget. A friend me,1J1!i well but mis;,t
not fuwe the best idea. F&lt;xu;; at work.
Through concentrating, you'll level ou!.
Tonight: Don't bre,\k your budget.
SAGITIARIUS (r\ov. 22·Dec. 21)
Olhe~ find you strangely
enticing and unu-.u,11ly creati\ e. Still,
maintain your imc1ge m a key meeting.
A change right now might not sen·e
you well. A !&gt;-upen isor, boss or parent
e&gt;.:pres*&gt; hi.. or her approval. Be gracious. Tonight. \\'hate\ er knock.... your
socks off.
CAPRlCOR:-.i (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
The lt'SS said. the better. You
absorb an enormou~ clmount of infor·
mc1tion. not &lt;~I way~ thmugh words, but
gestures .md expression&lt;;. A bos-;, or
perhaps Yl1U, oould be &lt;werly stem.
Ghe you !"elf time to thmk. Someone
at oJ 'distance reaches out to you.
Toright: Let your emotions lead.
AQUARIUS Uan. 2!)-Feb. IS)
Take the lead ,,;th an
dS-.&lt;.oeiate. The hvQ of you could manifest exactly what~ ou want. )ou might
be surpri......._&gt;d by the sunplicity of thi-&gt;
adion. Be careful about news heading
in. It might be ofi. You ha' e yet to get
the whole slol)'. T\)mght: Any ex~-use
for a celebration works.
PISCES (Feb. I'~ March 20)
Others dem.md vour ,,uen
tion, .tnd you h,l\ e little choice. One
per;on in partirular io; unu~ually open
and authentic. Enpy this transformation, a~ he or she has bt'l'n a runnudg
eon late!)~ For once, 1t L.; wonderful to
be wrong. Tonight: Use &lt;'are with) our
fin.mces.

*****

***

*****

***

*****

***

Jacq11dinc Bzg.tr L5 on the lnlmtd
illhttp://urwu&gt;.)'UIJIIclmcl,igar.com.

�,.......-----·- --------:-!"--

..--.......

-·....._--- - · - · ...,.-..--·-...-.~----~--:----!'"-----------

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.1nyd ailysentinel.com

Jennie Finch retiring from softball next month
OKLAH0~1A CITY
(AP) - Jennie Finch had
no trouble daZIIing
everyone.
:fhc striking blonde
with the unhittable stuff
was the most dominant
softball pitcher of her
time. giving her sport a
new face just as it was
starting to really catch on
in• the United States.
Finch won an NCAA
championship in record
setting fashion and added
Olympic gold as she
spread softball's popularity in America and
beyond.
But after I 0 years of
playing international I),
Finch is turning her focus
to her fami1)7 and her
desire to ha' e more chiidren. The 29-year-old
Finch
announced
)uesday that she'll pia)
one more week with the
U.S. team and retire from
the sport next month
when the National Pro
Fastpitch season is O\'Cr.
· "This whole career has
been way more than I
ever even imagined or
dreamed,'' Finch said in
an interview with The
Associated Press. "The
opportunities that I'd be
able to enjoy and appreciate and be a part of. it's
been incredible."
Finch won gold at the
2004 Olympics in Athens
and silver four years later
in Beijing. Earlier this
month, she helped the
U.S win its se\ cnth
stra1ght world championship.
Her final mtcmational
games will come in the
World Cup of Softball.
starting Thursday night
in Oklahoma City. Her
pro team. the Chicago
Bandits, is scheduled to
play its last regular-season game on Aug. 22 at
home in Elgin, Ill.
"You go anywhere and
you can say. ·Jennie
Finch.' and people know
who th&lt;1t is." U.S. sho11stop Natasha Watley said.
"You say you play softball. 'Oh, do you know
who Jennie Finch i~?'
Well. yeah. actually ~he's
tnY teammate.
•·Just what she's done
for this sport is amazing:·

David Eulitt/Kansas City Star/MCT

In this Aug. 18, 2008, file photo. Jennie Finch of the
United States closes out a 9-0 victory over Ch1na in
the games of the XXIX Olympiad tn Beijing, China.

The 6-foot-2 Finch was
much more than a pretty
face as she took OYer for
Lisa Fernandez as the
most recognized player
in a sp011 enjoying growing popularity.
She went 32-0 m her
junior year at Arizona.
leading the Wildcab to
Women's
the ~200 I
College World Series.
and would win an ~CAA
record 60 straight decisions in a span of nearly
two years. After that. she
combined with the likes
of Fernande1 and Cat
Osterman to make up the
world's best pitching
rotation through the early
part of the decade. ·
Coupled with her softball skills. Finch's beaut)
and chann landed her a
place in the mainstream.
She struck out some of.
the big leagues' best hitters in appearances on
''This Week in Baseball:·
competed on "Celebrity

Apprentice" and made
the round" on late-night
talk shO\VS.
"She set the standard
for softball in a ne\\ era
of being able to be feminine and pia) this sport,''
U.S. outfielder Jessica
~1endoza said. ''Not that
)OU have to be feminine
to play thi" sport, but I
see hundreds of thousands of little girb now
with "litter headbands
hot pink bats. makeup:
I'm not saying that e,·ery
girl has to do that but
w.hen I was growing up,
it wasn't like that.
"She has created a new
era of softball player, and
it's for those softball
players
those little
!!iris out there
that
want to be cutesy \\ ith
the bows and the glitter
and still be that dirt)
jock. Covered head to toe
in dirt but '&gt;he's got her
hair all peJi'ect ""ith a
bO\\ ."

Finch. who will tum 30
111 September, has a. 4ycar-old ~on. Ace. with
her hu~band Casev
Daigle. a pitcher who ha~&lt;&gt;
spht thi~ season between
the Houston Astros and
Triple-A Round Rock.
The couple have spent
about two weeks together
at their Arizona home
over the past year, Finch
said. and the world
in
championships
Vene;ucla meant 14 days
away from her family.
''I just feel like it gets
harder and harder every
year with Ace getting
6lder and time awav from
m) husband anl e\'en
fam1lv events such as·
birthdavs ,and friends·
weddings and things that
I've al~\a) . . just missed
out on because of softball," hnch said.
While manv of her veteran teammates walked
away from the game after
the U.S. lost to Japan in
the gold-medal game in
2008, Finch stuck around
and helped with an
unsuccessful bid to get
softball added back into
the Olympics. It won't be
played at the 2012 or
2016 games.
Fi'nch hopes that elimi• mtting trmel and training
will give her more time
to help spread the sport.
through her own camps
and pos!-&gt;ibly with a role
in USA Softball or as a
coach or team owner.
''I
hope to stay
Jmol\cd.'' she said. "Jt's
been such a big part of
m) life and I can't imagine my life without it."
E\ en now. Finch gets a
rush out of putting on the'
red, white and blue and
hearing a home crowd
chant "U-S-A" - something she 'II experience a
few final times at the
World Cup.
"Rioht now in my
career~ it's like I'm having more fun than I've
ever had. so it'!'&gt; kind of
like. ".\1an. I can't stop
now,"' she said. ''I'm
playing tirst base and
pitching and hitting. I
feel like I'm almost better than I've ever been.
It's like. 'You're goin!! to
\\ alk away like this?'::

Former Cavalier sounds off on LeBron
BY JOHN KAMP.F
JOURNAL REGISTER NEWS SERVICE

CONCORD, Ohio Ron Harper understands
the desire of LeBron
James to win NBA championships.
He just would have
handled the execution of
''The Decision" a tad different. starting \\;ith a
phone call.
The former Cleveland
Ca\'aliers star is playing
in the 87th annual Ohio
Open this week at Quail
Hollow.
After shooting a firstround score of 98 among
a field of 199, Harper
gave his take on James·
choice to sign with the
Miami Heat after spending the first !-&gt;CV~.:n yea1 s
of his NBA career \Vith
the Cavaliers.
"He was a free agent
and (leaving) is his
choice," Harper said. "I

GAHS
from Page Bl
honored prior to the
GAHS- Wellston football game on Friday.
Sept. 10. on Memorial
Field. On Saturday,
Sept. II. a banquet honoring the 20 I 0 nominees will be held in the
Gallia Academy High
School cafeteria in
Centenary at 6:3&lt;&gt;' p.m.
Tom Young will serve

think the first thing I
would have done if I was
LeBron James was to call
up the owner of the team
and tell him of the choice
I made.''
James. dming the hourlong special on ESP:\,
said the team he chose
(~tiami) had just been
told of his decision.!\one
of the other contending
teams for James· service;
including
the
Ca\aliers - kne\\ of his
choice
until
he
announced it moments
later.
"You play this game to
win an NBA championship.'' Harper said.
"But the first thing I
would have done was
as master of ceremonies
at this year's banquet.
In other matters at the
July
13
meeting,
President HOF Ru!-&gt;t\
Saunders
also
announced that due to
popular demand. a
change has been made
in ... the
Gallipolis
Athletic Boosters memberspip applications .
Begtnning this school
year.
the
GAHS
Boosters Club "ill
accept
membership
applications for $50.
The change means the

thank the owner anCl them.''
Harper said
thank the
fans of sharply.
Cleveland. I ""ould ha' c
He went on to win five
said. 'it\ been a great championsl)ip
rings.
seven years. but I plm three with the Chicago
the game to win a rhani'- Bulls ( 1996, 1997 and
pionship and I think I'm 1998) and a pair with the
choosing a team \\here I Los Angeles Lakers
can do that IHl\\. "'
(2000 and 200 I). "'lo\\
The 6-foot-6 guard residin•~
in Aurora
from .\1iami (Ohio) \\as Harpe/' said he ·alway~
the No. 8 overall pick in "10\ ed the city of
the 1986 &lt;Jraft by the Cleveland and the fanst
Ca\ aliers
the same of Cleveland.'' He also
vear Cle\ eland selected encoura!!ed the Cavalier
Brad Daugherty \\ ith the faithful to remain strong
No. I ptck. Howe,er. he through this tough transiwas traded to the Los tional period sans James.
"One thing the Ca\'s
Angeles Cltppers in
exchange for Reggie fans have to do:· he said,
Wtlliams and the nghts "is knO\\ they ha\ e a
to Dann) Fen) carl) in good coach (in Byron
Scott). There are goin!! to
the 1989-90 season be ~ome good ~players
one of the most sent
tonized
trades
in come here. It's tough to
lose a home-grown guy.
CavctlieQt' history.
"I
left
Cleveland but things must go on.
because the) traded me Basketball will live on
not because I traded ht.!rC.H
GAHS 200 Club has
been dissohed, hut the
new plan otTers the
same benefits ns the
200 Club memberships
offered.
The plan entitles one
'oting membership at
the GAHS Booster~
meetings. one free dinncr at the annu.tl banquet and members \\ill
be eligible to earn
pri;es tltn·ing home } arsitv football and ba~kct­
bail games. Member~

IIWI....-111111111.__

_

Wednesday, July 21,

Wahama Varsity Golf Meeting
MASON. W.Va.
An informational meeting for'
all candidates for the Wahama High School Varsity
GolfTeam will be held Tue. . cta),July 27,at 6 p.m.
at the Rher . . Jdc Golf Course picnic shelter area.
Practice will begin ~fonday. Aug. 2. at 8 a.m. at the
Riverside Golf Cour~e. Parents are welcome to
attend the information;!) meeting. All candida.
arc rernined that physical exams must be compl
ed before becoming a team member. Additional
information can be obtained by calling Bob
Ble-.sing at 304-675-6135.

MHS Golf Signups
ROCKSPRINGS. Ohio - Player~ ""ho wish to
sign up for the ~1eigs High School golf team can
contact coach Tom Cremeans at 304-675-0091 or
attend the first team meeting at 3 p.m. on July 26.
at ~feigs High School. Emergency and physical
fonns will be available at the meeting.

GAHS Football Reserve
Seats on sale Aug. 9
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
Reserve seats for the
2010 Gallia Academy Football season will go on
sale Aug. 9 for Super Boosters.
Parents of var~rty and reserve football players.
band members. and varsity and reserve cheerleaders will be able to purchase reserve seats on Aug.
10. Reserve scats for the general public will be
available on Wednesday, Aug. II.
The price W'lll be $30 per ticket and can be p~
chased at the principal's office at Gallia Acaderw
between the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Super Boosters will be limited to a I 0 ticket purchase on the first day of sales After the first day.
there will be no l-imit on the number of tickets
"hich may be purchased.

.

BBYFL signups
MIDDLEPORT. Oh10 - The Bi!! Bend Youth
Foo~ball League will be holding signups for the
2010 football season every Saturday in July from
II a.m. to I p.m. nt the Veterans Memorial Stadium
in Middleport. Oh1o. All mtcrested players and
cheerleaders arc encouraged to sign up. Players
will be fitted for equipment at that time.
Football and Chcerleading Camp will begin
,
August 2.
For more information contact Dave at 304-6745178. Sarah at 740-69R-4054, or Regina at 74069R-2804.

SHS Volleyball Camp
RACII'\E, Ohio - Southern High School will be
offering a 'ollcyball camp tbr girls going i' t
grades 3-8 from August 2-5. in the high sch
g) m. This learning experience will be a chance t
girls to interact with high school coaches and pla)ers and de' elop an understanding of \'Olleyball
mechanics and fundamentals through drills, matches, game&lt;;. and l'Ontesh. Each camper Will recei\'e
a free T-shirt and ha\ e the opportunit) to "in several other prb·e~.
. The camp will b) ~plit in to two groups. with
girls from 3rd to 5th grades from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
and girls 6th to 8th grades from I to 4 p.m. There
is a fee of $35 per camper or $60 for a family of
two. Campers arc asked to bring knee pads and a
\Vater bottle, and ure asked to arrive earlv on the
"
first day for registration.
To preregister call Coach Di~.:kson at 740-5252500

' Hannan Trace/ Southwestern
football signups
~1ERCERVILLE.
Trace/Southwe~tern

Ohio
Hannan
football is currently holding
signups . Groups will be divided into two teams. a
third and fourth grade team and a fifth and sixth
grade team. An) pla)Cr from an) . . chool is welcome . There will be t\\O practice:-. a week an....
games on Satunht) "· For dctaiJ.... or to sign up cw
Jim at 740-645-9590.

More Deere.
Less Dou ,h.

will also be eligible for
drawings at the
annual banquet. which
will be held shortlv
after the football season
ends.
Members attending
the July 13 session \\ere
Sarah Evans ~foore.
Jerry Frazier. Dann)
.\tink, Tom ~101·gan.
Rust\ Saunder!'&gt;. Ho~bart
WiJ....on, Jr.. Lori Young.
Tom Young. Jimmy
Noe. Jim Osborne. and
T11n Massie.

, MCGRATH TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR
I

39170 STATE ROUTE 681 ALBA~Y, OHIO 45710

mdssports@mydailysentinel.com

lVlCG RATH69@YAHOO.CO~'I

SPECIALIZING 1:\

FORD • MASSY • LONG
PAR·t SA \'Ail.ABLI: MOST MAKES &amp; l\tODLES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

(740)696-0358

2010

Local Sports Briefs

ca~h

E-mail us your
sports news
and photos!

. ..._._1111111111!

Call1-888-696-2341

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