spring fling! residence on neighborhood...

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LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM FOR ARCHIVE • GAMES • FEATURES • E-EDITION • POLLS & MORE Gallipolis, Ohio Vol. 121, No. 59 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 2013 50 cents daily INSIDE STORY Aftershock 4-H holds meeting .... Page 5 SPORTS Local diamond action .... Page 6 OBITUARIES Beverly P. Amos, 76 Randall A. Fletcher, Jr., 46 Thomas L. Goett, 74 Clarence W. Patterson, Sr., 80 Sharon K. Sheline, 64 WEATHER Partly sunny. High near 85. Low of 61......... Page 2 Spring Fling! Submitted photos The Gallipolis Junior Women’s Club will present their annual Spring Fling ‘A Black and White Affair’ Saturday, April 13 at the Gallipolis Elks Lodge. Doors open at 7 p.m. Presale tickets are $20 per couple or $15 per individual, which bumps to $25 and $20 respectively at the door. Attire is casual and must be 21 or older to attend. For every non- perishable canned food item brought, guests will receive a ticket for a chance to win door prizes. The more items brought, the more chances to win. All canned food items will go to Grace United Methodist Church Food Pantry. All proceeds from the Spring Fling will go back into the community in the form of upcoming Junior Women’s Club projects. Pictured are scenes from the 2012 Annual Spring Fling including line dancing and a fun game of adult musical chairs. Bidwell woman chosen as ambassador for Walk MS Staff Report [email protected] GALLIPOLIS — Jami Jo Cox has been named Ambassador of Walk MS: Gallipolis, 2013. Walk MS: Gallipolis is slated for 10 a.m. April 20 at Haskins Memo- rial Park. Funds raised during the event will benefit the Ohio Valley Chapter of the National MS Soci- ety. Multiple Sclerosis, or “MS”, interrupts the flow of informa- tion between the brain and the body and it stops people from moving. Every hour in the Unit- ed States, someone is newly diagnosed with MS, an unpre- dictable, often disabling disease of the central nervous system. Symptoms range from numb- ness and tingling to blindness and paralysis. The progress, severity and specific symptoms of MS in any one person cannot yet be predicted, but advances in research and treatment are moving us closer to a world free of MS. Most people with MS are diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 50, with more than twice as many women as men being diagnosed with the disease. MS affects more than 400,000 peo- ple in the U.S. and 2.5 million worldwide. Cox, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2003, will serve as the Walk MS team cap- tain. “MS makes some activities slightly more difficult for me,” says Cox. “I have to limit physical activity during summer months as heat and humidity make my symp- toms flare-up.” Ms. Cox says she began par- ticipating in Walk MS, “because it is a great way to meet and sup- port others with MS, and raise money to help find a cure.” Cox also believes Walk MS is a, “way to educate the community and involve the Gallipolis area in the movement to create a world free of multiple sclerosis.” The Ohio Valley Chapter of the National MS Society, founded in 1952, serves more than 6,000 people with multiple sclerosis and their families in 24 Ohio coun- ties and the three northern Ken- tucky counties of Boone, Kenton and Campbell. The organization is committed to ensuring that people living with MS across our chapter territory have the infor- mation and quality care they need to live healthy, productive and independent lives. To meet these needs, a variety of programs and services that span a spectrum of needs are provided. To learn more about multiple sclerosis or the Ohio Valley Chap- ter, visit www.fightMStoday.org. To register for Walk MS: Galli- polis, visit www.WalkMSOhioVal- ley.org or call (800) 344-4867. Investigation ensues following fires at Hively property Staff Report [email protected] CROWN CITY — Local law en- forcement and area fire departments responded to an early morning fire Tuesday on Elliott Road not far from where a local student was gunned down last week. According to the Gal- lia County Sheriff’s Office, property belonging to the man accused of shoot- ing Charles Addis was ablaze Tuesday morning at his Elliott Road address. Gallia County Sheriff Joe Brown- ing told the Gallipolis Daily Tribune that local law enforcement and area fire departments were dispatched to Bruce A. Hively’s property on Elliott Road at approximately 5:30 a.m. af- ter reports of fire. Witnesses on the scene said that there were several fires, claiming at least one storage building and what appear to be junked vehicles around the property. Witnesses said the mo- bile home Hively previously used as a part-time residence was not burned. The Ohio State Fire Marshal’s Of- fice is leading the investigation into the fire. Hively, 56, was recently arrested following the shooting death of Ad- dis, 18, at approximately 6:12 p.m. last Thursday evening. He has been charged with murder and aggravated murder in the case. The shooting reportedly occurred at the intersection of Hannan Trace Road and Elliott Road in Harrison Township in the vicinity of Dickey Chapel Church. The factual statements attached to the complaints explain a scene whereby Hively, who reportedly had an ongoing dispute with the victim, drove past Addis, as well as Antho- ny Knepper and Aaron Addis at the intersection of Elliott and Hannan Trace Roads, and then turned around and came back to where they were. Hively reportedly exited his vehi- cle where a confrontation ensued be- tween himself and the victim, Knep- per and Aaron Addis. This confrontation reportedly lead to Hively shooting and killing Charles Addis, and, according to the complaint, Hively “shot Charles Ad- dis twice while he was standing and twice while he lay on the ground.” Shortly thereafter, deputies with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office ar- rived on scene and Hively was taken into custoy wihtout incident. Agents with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investi- gation (BCI) were later called to the scene to aid in the investigation of the shooting. The victim, who was reportedly a student at Buckeye Hills Career Cen- ter, had a listed address on Hannan Trace Road. Court documents list Hively’s ad- dress as 510 Elliott Road, however, according to Browning, while the suspect does own property on Elliott Road, he had been residing in Point Pleasant, W.Va, prior to his arrest. During Monday’s hearing before Municipal Court Judge Margaret Ev- ans, Hively was charged with murder and aggravated murder. His bond has been set at $1 million, 10 percent. A preliminary hearing has been set for 9 a.m. on April 15 in the municipal courtroom. Following the preliminary hear- ing, it is expected that this case will be bound over to the Gallia County Common Pleas Court where it will be heard by a grand jury. Hively is currently being held in the Gallia County Jail. He has re- tained defense attorney Charles Knight as counsel. Submitted photos Local law enforcement and area fire departments responded Tues- day morning to a series of fires on the property of Bruce Hively, who was recently charged with the murder of Charles Addis, 18. The Ohio State Fire Marshal’s Office will now be responsible for the investigation. Amber Gillenwater [email protected] GALLIPOLIS — A residence on Neighborhood Road was struck by a motorist who lost control of his vehicle and left the roadway on Monday afternoon. According to the crash report filed with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office, the 2003 Ford Explorer being driven by Harold R. Barcus, 61, of 3119 Neighborhood Road — the sole passenger in the vehicle — was travel- ing southbound on Neighborhood Road when the vehicle traveled off the right side of the roadway in the vicinity of 3482 Neighborhood Road. The vehicle reportedly slid through the driveway at the residence, struck a yard fence and rolled over on its top when it struck the residence, coming to rest on the front porch. The driver, who was trapped inside the vehicle follow- ing the crash, was quickly extracted by first responders and was transported to Holzer Medical Center by Gallia County EMS with non-incapacitating injuries. According to the police report, roadway adjacent to the the residence at 3482 Neighborhood is a graded curve. Further, the report stated that neither alcohol nor drugs played a factor in the crash. Barcus was cited for operating a vehicle without reason- able control. No other injuries were reported. The vehicle was towed from the scene and insurance information was given to the property owner, according to the report. Motorist strikes residence on Neighborhood Rd. Photo courtesy of the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office Deputies with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office responded to a rollover crash with entrapment on Monday afternoon on Neighborhood Road. Reportedly, the SUV traveled off the roadway, slid through a driveway and struck a house. The driver of the vehicle was transported to Holzer Medical Cen- ter with non-incapacitating injuries. No other injuries were reported.

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Page 1: Spring Fling! residence on Neighborhood Rd.matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/494/assets/F668_04... · tucky counties of Boone, Kenton and Campbell. The organization is

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log onto www.mydailytribune.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls & more

Gallipolis, Ohio

Vol. 121, No. 59 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 2013 50 cents daily

INSIDE STORY

aftershock 4-h holds meeting .... Page 5

SPORTS

local diamond action .... Page 6

OBITUARIESbeverly p. amos, 76randall a. fletcher, Jr., 46thomas l. goett, 74clarence w. patterson, sr., 80sharon K. sheline, 64

WEATHER

partly sunny. high near 85. low of 61......... Page 2

Spring Fling!

submitted photosThe Gallipolis Junior Women’s Club will present their annual Spring Fling ‘A Black and White Affair’ Saturday, April 13 at the Gallipolis Elks Lodge. Doors open at 7 p.m. Presale tickets are $20 per couple or $15 per individual, which bumps to $25 and $20 respectively at the door. Attire is casual and must be 21 or older to attend. For every non-perishable canned food item brought, guests will receive a ticket for a chance to win door prizes. The more items brought, the more chances to win. All canned food items will go to Grace United Methodist Church Food Pantry. All proceeds from the Spring Fling will go back into the community in the form of upcoming Junior Women’s Club projects. Pictured are scenes from the 2012 Annual Spring Fling including line dancing and a fun game of adult musical chairs.

Bidwell woman chosen as ambassador for Walk MSStaff [email protected]

GALLIPOLIS — Jami Jo Cox has been named Ambassador of Walk MS: Gallipolis, 2013. Walk MS: Gallipolis is slated for 10 a.m. April 20 at Haskins Memo-rial Park. Funds raised during the event will benefit the Ohio Valley Chapter of the National MS Soci-ety.

Multiple Sclerosis, or “MS”, interrupts the flow of informa-tion between the brain and the body and it stops people from

moving. Every hour in the Unit-ed States, someone is newly diagnosed with MS, an unpre-dictable, often disabling disease of the central nervous system. Symptoms range from numb-ness and tingling to blindness and paralysis. The progress, severity and specific symptoms of MS in any one person cannot yet be predicted, but advances in research and treatment are moving us closer to a world free of MS. Most people with MS are diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 50, with more than twice

as many women as men being diagnosed with the disease. MS affects more than 400,000 peo-ple in the U.S. and 2.5 million worldwide.

Cox, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2003, will serve as the Walk MS team cap-tain.

“MS makes some activities slightly more difficult for me,” says Cox. “I have to limit physical activity during summer months as heat and humidity make my symp-toms flare-up.”

Ms. Cox says she began par-

ticipating in Walk MS, “because it is a great way to meet and sup-port others with MS, and raise money to help find a cure.” Cox also believes Walk MS is a, “way to educate the community and involve the Gallipolis area in the movement to create a world free of multiple sclerosis.”

The Ohio Valley Chapter of the National MS Society, founded in 1952, serves more than 6,000 people with multiple sclerosis and their families in 24 Ohio coun-ties and the three northern Ken-tucky counties of Boone, Kenton

and Campbell. The organization is committed to ensuring that people living with MS across our chapter territory have the infor-mation and quality care they need to live healthy, productive and independent lives. To meet these needs, a variety of programs and services that span a spectrum of needs are provided.

To learn more about multiple sclerosis or the Ohio Valley Chap-ter, visit www.fightMStoday.org.

To register for Walk MS: Galli-polis, visit www.WalkMSOhioVal-ley.org or call (800) 344-4867.

Investigation ensues following fires at Hively propertyStaff [email protected]

CROWN CITY — Local law en-forcement and area fire departments responded to an early morning fire Tuesday on Elliott Road not far from where a local student was gunned down last week. According to the Gal-lia County Sheriff’s Office, property belonging to the man accused of shoot-ing Charles Addis was ablaze Tuesday morning at his Elliott Road address.

Gallia County Sheriff Joe Brown-ing told the Gallipolis Daily Tribune that local law enforcement and area fire departments were dispatched to Bruce A. Hively’s property on Elliott Road at approximately 5:30 a.m. af-ter reports of fire.

Witnesses on the scene said that there were several fires, claiming at least one storage building and what appear to be junked vehicles around the property. Witnesses said the mo-bile home Hively previously used as a part-time residence was not burned.

The Ohio State Fire Marshal’s Of-fice is leading the investigation into the fire.

Hively, 56, was recently arrested following the shooting death of Ad-

dis, 18, at approximately 6:12 p.m. last Thursday evening. He has been charged with murder and aggravated murder in the case.

The shooting reportedly occurred at the intersection of Hannan Trace Road and Elliott Road in Harrison Township in the vicinity of Dickey Chapel Church.

The factual statements attached to the complaints explain a scene whereby Hively, who reportedly had an ongoing dispute with the victim, drove past Addis, as well as Antho-ny Knepper and Aaron Addis at the intersection of Elliott and Hannan Trace Roads, and then turned around and came back to where they were.

Hively reportedly exited his vehi-cle where a confrontation ensued be-tween himself and the victim, Knep-per and Aaron Addis.

This confrontation reportedly lead to Hively shooting and killing Charles Addis, and, according to the complaint, Hively “shot Charles Ad-dis twice while he was standing and twice while he lay on the ground.”

Shortly thereafter, deputies with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office ar-rived on scene and Hively was taken into custoy wihtout incident.

Agents with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investi-gation (BCI) were later called to the scene to aid in the investigation of the shooting.

The victim, who was reportedly a student at Buckeye Hills Career Cen-ter, had a listed address on Hannan Trace Road.

Court documents list Hively’s ad-dress as 510 Elliott Road, however, according to Browning, while the suspect does own property on Elliott Road, he had been residing in Point Pleasant, W.Va, prior to his arrest.

During Monday’s hearing before Municipal Court Judge Margaret Ev-ans, Hively was charged with murder and aggravated murder. His bond has been set at $1 million, 10 percent. A preliminary hearing has been set for 9 a.m. on April 15 in the municipal courtroom.

Following the preliminary hear-ing, it is expected that this case will be bound over to the Gallia County Common Pleas Court where it will be heard by a grand jury.

Hively is currently being held in the Gallia County Jail. He has re-tained defense attorney Charles Knight as counsel.

submitted photosLocal law enforcement and area fire departments responded Tues-day morning to a series of fires on the property of Bruce Hively, who was recently charged with the murder of Charles Addis, 18.

The Ohio State Fire Marshal’s Office will now be responsible for the investigation.

Amber [email protected]

GALLIPOLIS — A residence on Neighborhood Road was struck by a motorist who lost control of his vehicle and left the roadway on Monday afternoon.

According to the crash report filed with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office, the 2003 Ford Explorer being driven by Harold R. Barcus, 61, of 3119 Neighborhood Road — the sole passenger in the vehicle — was travel-ing southbound on Neighborhood Road when the vehicle traveled off the right side of the roadway in the vicinity of 3482 Neighborhood Road.

The vehicle reportedly slid through the driveway at the residence, struck a yard fence and rolled over on its top when it struck the residence, coming to rest on the front porch.

The driver, who was trapped inside the vehicle follow-ing the crash, was quickly extracted by first responders and was transported to Holzer Medical Center by Gallia County EMS with non-incapacitating injuries.

According to the police report, roadway adjacent to the the residence at 3482 Neighborhood is a graded curve. Further, the report stated that neither alcohol nor drugs played a factor in the crash.

Barcus was cited for operating a vehicle without reason-able control. No other injuries were reported. The vehicle was towed from the scene and insurance information was given to the property owner, according to the report.

Motorist strikes residence on Neighborhood Rd.

photo courtesy of the gallia county sheriff’s officeDeputies with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office responded to a rollover crash with entrapment on Monday afternoon on Neighborhood Road. Reportedly, the SUV traveled off the roadway, slid through a driveway and struck a house. The driver of the vehicle was transported to Holzer Medical Cen-ter with non-incapacitating injuries. No other injuries were reported.

Page 2: Spring Fling! residence on Neighborhood Rd.matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/494/assets/F668_04... · tucky counties of Boone, Kenton and Campbell. The organization is

60407957

We walked together, you and IA mother and her son.With hopes and dreams of tomorrowBut tomorrow did not come.We walked together, you and IWe talked, we laughed, we lovedWe shared so many happy timesAnd for that, I thank God above.We walked together, you and IBut only for a timeFor all too soon it endedLeaving broken hearts behind.And even though I miss youMuch more than words can say,I thank God I got to walk with youEvery moment of each day….

In Loving Memory of Adam K. Scott11-12-81 to 4-10-08

Sadly missed and deeply loved byMom, and her family. Linda M. Reese

60407420

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013 www.mydailytribune.com Gallipolis Daily Tribune•Page2

Local stocksAEP (NYSE) — 49.00Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.30Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 76.32Big Lots (NYSE) — 35.31Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 41.53BorgWarner (NYSE) — 72.54Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 7.54Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.14City Holding (NASDAQ) — 37.94Collins (NYSE) — 62.72DuPont (NYSE) — 49.23US Bank (NYSE) — 33.69Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.06Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 51.16JP Morgan (NYSE) — 48.68Kroger (NYSE) — 32.06Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 47.40Norfolk So (NYSE) — 74.38OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.58BBT (NYSE) — 30.90

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.89Pepsico (NYSE) — 79.21Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.25Rockwell (NYSE) — 87.57Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.00Royal Dutch Shell — 64.26Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 50.63Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 78.12Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.52WesBanco (NYSE) — 23.26Worthington (NYSE) — 31.65Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for April 9, 2013, 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.

Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 85. South-west wind 6 to 15 mph.

Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 61. South wind 3 to 8 mph.

Thursday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, then showers and possibly a thunderstorm after 3 p.m. Some of the storms could produce small hail and gusty winds. High near 75. Breezy, with a southeast wind 7 to 12 mph increasing to 15 to 20 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.

Thursday Night: Showers and possibly a thunder-storm. Some of the storms could produce small hail and gusty winds. Low around 49. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Friday: A chance of showers before 11 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 54. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 36.Saturday: Partly sunny, with a high near 53.Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 35.

Ohio Valley Forecast

Community CalendarEvents

Thursday, April 11GALLIPOLIS — Gallia Soil and Water Conservation

District board meeting, 7 p.m., C.H. McKenzie Ag Cen-ter.

RIO GRANDE — Rio Grande Neighborhood Watch meeting, 7 p.m., Rio Grande Village Building. Guest speaker will be Gallipolis Municipal Court Judge Marga-ret Evans. Community members are welcome to attend.

Saturday, May 4BIDWELL — Yard sale fundraiser, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., old

Mount Carmel Baptist Church and parking lot, Ohio 554, Bidwell. The fundraiser is being sponsored by the Mount Carmel Baptist Church Walkers in Faith Relay for Life team. All proceeds will go to the American Cancer Society.

Gallia County BriefsLibrary to undergo com-

puter upgradeGALLIPOLIS —

Bossard Library will un-dergo a computer system upgrade on Thursday, April 11. Public Internet access, computer use, and access to the Ohio E-books Project will be unavailable until the upgrade is com-plete. Patrons may borrow items provided they pres-ent their library card in good-standing. The library staff thanks their patrons for their understanding. For more information call the library at (740) 446-7323.

Autism Awareness Day event to be held

RIO GRANDE — April is Autism Awareness Month and on Saturday, April 13 at the Bob Ev-ans Shelterhouse II in Rio Grande, many will come together to help raise au-tism awareness and sup-port those affected by the disorder. The annual Au-tism Awareness Day event will feature fun activities for all who attend. Some of those activities include, face painting, lead horse rides, carriage rides and hay rides by Rio Valley Stables, a multi- sensory station, bounce house in-flatables and a 5K walk. The fundraising event will be from 12-3 p.m. Those wanting to participate in the 5K walk will need to register at 12 p.m. with the walk beginning at 12:30 p.m. Food and drinks will also be available. The event is free and is being sponsored by H.O.P.E. Intervention, a local non-profit organization that serves as a resource for families and educators in Southeast Ohio affected by autism spectrum disorder. All proceeds raised dur-ing the event will benefit H.O.P.E. Intervention. If you would like more in-formation about the event or H.O.P.E. Intervention, visit www.hopeinterven-tion.org or facebook.com/hopeintervention Contri-butions can be made at the event or can be sent to to

HOPE Intervention, P.O. Box 727, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Look Good Feel Better slated

GALLIPOLIS — Look Good Feel Better, spon-sored by the American Cancer Society, will be held at 6 p.m. on Monday, April 15 at the Cancer Resource Center in the Holzer Center for Cancer Care, 170 Jackson Pike. This free program is for women with cancer who are dealing with radiation and/or chemotherapy treat-ments. They will be given advice on how to care for their skin and other tips to give them self confidence. Please call (740) 441-3909 for an appointment before noon on Monday.

Summer hours for highway departmentGALLIA COUNTY —

Gallia County Engineer, Brett A. Boothe, recently announced that beginning Monday, April 15, the Gallia County Highway Department will begin working 6 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Thurs-day. This schedule will be in effect throughout the summer construction sea-son. During weeks when holidays occur, the high-way department will work four eight hour days, 6 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Kindergarten registration

GALLIPOLIS — Kinder-garten registration for the 2013-2014 academic year in the Gallia County Lo-cal School District will be held at the Gallia County Health Department on the following dates and times: April 15, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; April 16, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; April 17, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; April 18, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Parents will need to call the Gallia County Local Schools administrative of-fice at 446-7917 to make an appointment. All entering kindergarten students must participate in a screening. Parents will need to bring their child’s social security number, shot records, birth certificate, TB skin test card and custody agree-ment (if applicable). The registration and screening process will take approxi-mately one hour. To be eligible for kindergarten, children must be five years of age on or before August 1, 2013. A child must at-tend school if he or she is six years of age on or before August 1, 2013.

Gallia-Vinton ESC announces meetingsRIO GRANDE — The

Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Center (ESC) Business Advisory Coun-cil will meet at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16 in the Davis University Cen-ter, Conference Room C, on the University of Rio Grande campus. ESC gov-erning board members will join the business advisory council for dinner at 4:45 p.m. Following dinner, the governing board will hold its regular monthly board meeting at 5:15 p.m. at the Gallia-Vinton ESC office located in room 131, Wood Hall. The ESC Records Commission will meet at 5:30 p.m.

Library board meetingGALLIPOLIS — The

Gallia County District Library Board of Trust-ees will meet at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16 at Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memo-rial Library for their regu-lar monthly meeting.

Gallia 911 Center re-dedication to be held

GALLIPOLIS — A re-dedication ceremony of the Gallia County 911 Center will be held at 2 p.m. on Thursday, April 18 at the Gallia County 911 Center, 1191 Ohio 160, in celebration of National Public Safety Telecom-munications Week, which is April 14-20. In honor and memory of past Gallia County 911 Director, the center will be renamed the “Stephen L. Wilson 911 Center.”

Ohio AFSCME Retirees to meet and elect

trusteeBIDWELL — Ohio

AFSCME Retirees, Gal-lia and Jackson Counties, Sub-chapter 102 will hold their next meeting at 11 a.m. on Friday, April 19, at 4629 Ohio 850, Rodney Pike, Bidwell, in Spring-field Township. Nomina-tions and the election of one trustee will occur. The sub-chapter is seek-ing new members in the two-county area. AF-SCME (Ohio Council 8, OCSEA, and OAPSE), OPERS and SERS pub-lic employee retirees and their spouses are invited to attend the next meet-ing. Non-AFSCME mem-bers are also welcome. We also encourage public employees who plan to retire in the near future to attend. The group meets on the third Friday of each

month. For more informa-tion, interested retirees may call : (740) 245-0093.

Community Christmas Project meeting

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Community Christmas Project will hold a planning meeting at 6:30 p.m. on April 30 at the New Life Lutheran Church, located at 900 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. The group is trying to get more churches, busi-nesses and organizations involved in the project. Please feel free to invite any person or organiza-tion that may be inter-ested in getting involved. For more information call (740) 388-8050 or email the Body of Christ Out-reach Ministries at [email protected].

Hot lunches being served

VINTON — Harvest-ime Worship Center at 222 Main Street in Vinton will begin serving hot lunches (free to everyone) every Tuesday from 12-3 p.m. If you live in the Village of Vinton and need them delivered to you, due to sickness or homebound, please call Sandy at (740) 645-4710.

Gallia County Farm Bureau 2012 LE

Collectors Baskets still available

GALLIA COUNTY — Local family and friends of the Gallia County Farm Bureau can show their support by purchasing the 2012, 3rd in a series of four stackable, collec-tor baskets. Profits from the basket sales will go to support youth scholarships and activities.

The Farm Bureau is of-fering the “Large Bowl” basket as their 2012 Lim-ited Edition Collector Basket. These hard maple baskets are handmade by American Traditions Bas-ket Company in Canal Ful-ton, Ohio.

The basket features a commemorative brass tag, cranberry and white “Colo-nial/Century” weave, plas-tic protector, and a cloth liner. The basket measures 8.5” x 4”. These baskets are available in the Farm Bureau office at 231 Broad-way Street, Jackson, Ohio 45640. The baskets can be shipped to you for an addi-tional charge.

For more information, please contact the Farm Bureau Office at 800-777-9226.

Gallia County Church CalendarRevivals

April 15-20, Dickey Cha-pel Church, 7 p.m. nightly, Preacher Truman Johnson, Special singers nightly, for information call 740-256-9358 or 740-645-6118.

April 19-20, Jesus in the Hills Camp meeting reviv-al, 7 p.m. nightly, South-side Community Center. Evangelist Bill Greene will be preaching on Friday and Pastor J.R. Vance will be preaching on Saturday.

EventsWednesday, April 10GALLIPOLIS — Bible

study, 7 p.m., Mina Mis-sionary Baptist Church on Neighborhood Road, with Pastor Ralph Workman preaching.

Thursday, April 11GALLIPOLIS — David

Timms preaching and sing-

ing, 7 p.m., Faith Valley Community Church, Bu-laville Pike, Gallipolis. For more information, call Pas-tor Junior Preston at (740) 446-7851.

Saturday, April 13MIDDLEPORT — Spe-

cial singing and guest speaker Bernard Ferrell, 6 p.m., Old Bethel Freewill Baptist Church.

Sunday, April 14CROWN CITY — Spe-

cial preaching by Bernard Ferrell, 10 a.m., King’s Chapel Church. Everyone is welcome.

RIO GRANDE — Spe-cial singing and guest speaker Bernard Ferrell, 1 p.m., Centerpoint Free-will Baptist Church. A fel-lowship dinner will follow the service. For more in-formation call Clyde Fer-

rell at (740) 388-8075.GALLIPOLIS — Sun-

day school, 10 a.m.; eve-ning service, 7 p.m., Mina Missionary Baptist Church on Neighborhood Road, with Pastor Ralph Work-man preaching.

Wednesday, April 17ADDISON — Business

meeting and family night, 7 p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist Church.

GALLIPOLIS — Bible study, 7 p.m., Mina Mis-sionary Baptist Church on Neighborhood Road, with Pastor Ralph Workman preaching.

Sunday, April 21ADDISON — Sunday

school, 10 a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist Church, with Pastor Rick Barcus preaching.

Wednesday, April 24ADDISON — Prayer

meeting, 7 p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist Church, with Rev. Matt Smith preaching.

GALLIPOLIS — Bible study, 7 p.m., Mina Mis-sionary Baptist Church on Neighborhood Road, with Pastor Ralph Workman preaching.

Sunday, April 28ADDISON — Sunday

school, 10 a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist Church, with Pastor Rick Barcus preaching.

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60408007

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Walmart Location740-441-9880

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A3

Wednesday, April 10, 2013 www.mydailytribune.com Gallipolis Daily Tribune•Page3

Beverly P. AmosBeverly P. Amos, 76, of

Gallipolis, passed away on Tuesday, April 9, 2013, at Holzer Medical Center.

She was born Novem-ber 27, 1936, in Waverly, West Virginia, daughter of the late Elmer and Beulah Curtis Lighty. She married Melvin Arthurs and Alva Amos, and they both pre-ceded her in death. Beverly was a restaurant cook.

Surviving are her five children, Brian (Loretta) Arthurs and Mark (Mary) Arthurs, both of Gallipolis, Melvin Wayne Arthurs of Columbus, Ohio, Rebecca (Dave) Ritterbeck of Zanesville, Ohio, Rita Faye Arthurs of Cambridge, Ohio; 16 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; a sister, Betty White of Cambridge, Ohio.

Beverly was preceded in death by her parents; her two husbands, Melvin Arthurs and Alva Amos; and two daughters, Yvonne Annette Arthurs Case and

Cynthia Darlene Arthurs McGuire.Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, April 12,

2013, at Willis Funeral Home with Rev. Darrell Johnson officiating. Burial will follow in Poplar Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 12-1 p.m. prior to the service on Friday.

Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail condolences.

Thomas Leo GoettThomas Leo Goett, age 74, of Cheshire, died Monday

April 8, 2013, at Holzer Medical Center. Born September 9, 1938, in Pomeroy, he was the son of the late John Ste-phen and Cecilia Marie Whipple Goett. In addition to his parents, Tom was preceded by his father-in-law, Charles Stewart, and by a special cousin, Hoberta Roach.

Tom was a 1957 graduate of Pomeroy High School. He was a Political Consultant, and owned several businesses through the years. He was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Point Pleasant and a member of the Knights of Columbus.

He is survived by his wife, Margaret Stewart Goett of Cheshire; a daughter, Cecilia Goett of Gallipolis; special nieces and nephews, Matthew, Travis and Tamra Tim-

mons of Pomeroy, Katlyn Lawson of Long Bottom, and Connie Stewart of Cheshire; mother-in-law, Edna Stew-art of Pomeroy; sister-in-law, Susan (Albert) Lawson of Long Bottom; brothers-in-law, Charles (Vera) Stewart of Middleport, and Carl (Carol) Stewart of Cheshire; special cousins, Dick Roach, Gary (Annie) Roach, Jeff (Leigh Ann) Roach, Maggie, Nicholas, Benjamin and Jessica Roach, Hannah Roach and Phil Hollingshead, all of Gallipolis. He also survived by several other nieces, nephews, cousins and many friends.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at noon on Thursday April 11, 2013, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 2222 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasant, with Father Josh Ste-vens officiating. Burial will follow in Sacred Heart Catho-lic Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends may call at the church on Thursday from 10 a.m. until the time of the service.

Pallbearers will be Gary Roach, Jeff Roach, Ben Roach, Nick Roach, Phil Hollingshead and Charles Stewart. Honorary pallbearer will be Dick Roach.

Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home is assisting the family.

An online guest registry is available at waugh-halley-wood.com.

Obituaries

FletcherRandall Allen Fletcher,

Jr., 46, of Henderson, W.Va., died Monday, April 8, 2013 at St. Mary’s Medi-cal Center.

At his request, there will be no service or visitation. Burial will be at the conve-nience of the family. Deal Funeral home is serving the family.

PattersonClarence William Pat-

terson Sr., 80, of Gallipolis

Ferry, W.Va., died April 9, 2013 at Holzer Medical Center.

Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, April 12, 2013, at the Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., with Pas-tor Ron Swiney officiating. Burial will follow in the Patterson Clonch Cem-etery in Gallipolis Ferry. Friends may visit the fam-ily at the funeral home on Thursday evening, April 11, 2013, from 6-8 p.m.

ShelineSharon Kay Sheline, 64,

of Gallipolis Ferry, West Virginia, died April 8, 2013.

Funeral services will be heldat noon on Saturday, April 13, 2013, at the An-derson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, Ohio. Burial will follow at the Weethee Family Ceme-tery. Visiting time will be from 11 a.m. to noon on Saturdayn at the funeral home.

Death Notices

W.Va. county vows to continue drug crackdown

WILLIAMSON, W.Va. (AP) — The crackdown on drug dealers in Mingo County will continue, the head of a task force says, with the slaying of Sheriff Eu-gene Crum only fueling the desire to root out those making it a dangerous place to live.

“You have awakened the sleeping gi-ant, and we will find you,” vowed Davie Rockel, Williamson’s police chief and com-mander of the Mingo County Drug Task Force. “We will arrest you, we will convict you and you will go to jail.”

Rockel told media outlets the shooting of Crum last week was an unthinkable, senseless act, but drug dealers shouldn’t doubt the county’s resolve: Operation Zero Tolerance will continue as a legacy to the 59-year-old sheriff.

“No stone will go unturned, no tip will be ignored,” Rockel said, quoting his fallen friend by adding, “If you’re dealing drugs, we will be knocking on your door.”

Crum had been in office just three months, making good on a campaign pledge to help rid the southern coalfields of the illegal prescription drug trade blamed for thousands of addictions and

overdoses. He was killed in the spot where he parked his vehicle for lunch most days, keeping an eye on a place that had been shut down for illegally dispensing pre-scription drugs.

Authorities have charged Tennis May-nard, 37, with first-degree murder and with attempted murder for allegedly pull-ing a gun on a deputy who chased him after the shooting. The deputy shot May-nard, who remained hospitalized in Hun-tington on Tuesday.

State Police say Maynard is up and mov-ing but still considered in critical condi-tion because of a gunshot wound to the liver.

Authorities have refused to comment on a possible motive or say whether Maynard has an attorney. Maynard’s father has said his son was mentally disturbed.

Crum had received threats since launch-ing his drug-busting initiative, but Rockel said his team is undeterred.

“Did they hurt us? Definitely. Are we suffering? Without a doubt,” he said. “Are we going to throw in the towel and say that they have won because someone took Eugene’s life? Absolutely not!”

Admiral says US ready if North Korea strikes

WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. defenses could in-tercept a ballistic missile launched by North Korea if it decides to strike, the top American military commander in the Pacific said Tuesday, as the rela-tionship between the West and the communist gov-ernment hit its lowest ebb since the end of the Korean War.

Amid increasingly combative rhetoric from Pyongyang, Adm. Samuel Locklear, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, said North Korea’s pur-suit of nuclear weapons and long-range ballistic missiles represents a clear threat to the United States and its allies in the region.

The admiral said Kim Jong Un, the country’s young and still relatively untested new leader, re-mains unpredictable after using the past year to con-solidate his power.

But Locklear told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he was confident that the U.S. mil-itary can thwart North Ko-rea if it chooses to act. He made clear that any U.S. decision would be contin-gent on where the missile is headed, information that

the U.S. could ascertain fairly quickly.

“Do we have the capabil-ity to intercept a missile if the North Koreans launch within the next several days?” Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., asked the admiral.

“We do,” Locklear an-swered.

He said North Korea is keeping a large percentage of its combat forces along

the demilitarized zone with South Korea, a posi-tion that allows the North to threaten U.S. and South Korean civilian and mili-tary personnel.

McCain said the saber-rattling of today struck him as the greatest tension be-tween North Korea, South Korea and the U.S. since the end of the Korean War in the early 1950s.

GAHS announces honor rollCENTENARY — Gallia Academy High

School Principal Tim Massie recognizes the following students for achieving honor roll for the second grading period. The fol-lowing students have achieved at least a 3.00 grade point average or above:

Ninth grade — Kaci Ager, Brittany Angel, Kylie Angel, Hunter Arthur, Mat-thew Bailey, Makenzie Barr, Alexis Be-van, Noah Blain, Brandon Blazer, Andrew Bokal, Jaeleigh Brawley, Jamie Canfield, Kirk Carmouche Jr., Logan Carpenter, Emily Carroll, Ezakeal Carter, Koleton Carter, Eric Chapman, Whitney Clagg, Josiah Cox, Pooja Dayal, Peyton Eastman, Lishea Eddy, Leonie Fernholz, Ashley Fet-ter, Keri Foster, Mackenzie Frum, Eric Gillespie, Dares Hamid, Dathan Hawkins, Devin Henry, Brett Hively, Anna Hol-ley, Isaiah Holley, Jemeia Hope, Zachary Johnson, Tigerlily Labello, Emily Manion, Kalie Masters, Dekota Metzler, Marcus Moore, Samantha Morrissey, Dovel(TJ) Myers, Shelby O’Dell, Marina Carras-cal Ortego, Aleena Peck, Hayley Petrie, Logan Pratt, Justin Reynolds, Bradley Ritchie, Pitchaya(Ploy)Rojanajirakun, Sydney Rose, Micah Saunders, Benjamin Saylor, Cassidy Sickels, John Sipple, Clay Smith, Paisley Smith, Shawna Stanley, Sa-mantha Staton, Ryan Terry, Varna Thay-aparan, G Alex Valadez, Michael Vallee, Jordan Walker, Eric Ward, Adriana Wil-coxon,

Tenth grade — Kathleen Allen, Kendra Barnes, Jenna Bays, Chelcii Brawley, Mad-ison Burns, Josie Carr, Sahvanna Chaf-fins, Connor Christian, Jacob Click, Kyla Coburn, Alexia Combs, Michael Corbin, Micah Curfman, Alison Davis, Kyle Derenberger, Dylan Erit, Aaron Fairchild, Anthony Fairchild, Kimberly Faro, Isaiah Franklin, Sarah Hannon, Jessica Harold, Rebecca Houck, Andrew Howes, Lonnie Johnson, Isaiah Leonard, Abbey Loveday, Emma Lyles, Allison McClure, Meghan McDaniel, Nichlas McQuaid, Hannah Meek, Kaylee Merry, Darian Miller, Elisjsha Miller, Katelyn Mitchem, Evan Moore, Bruce Moreaux, Kaylei Muncy, Jessica Neal, Cassandra Orosz, Andrew Owens, Nathaniel Phillips, Kelsey Pur-dum, Michael Putney, Olivia Rees, Jared Riffle, Logan Rosier, Sean Saltzgaber, Akeisha Saunders, Dylan Saunders, Var-um Sharma, Eric Sheets, Tyler Sheets, Maddison Siders, Luke Skinner, Chelsy Slone, Cole Spurlin, Erica Spurlin, Colton Steger, Rylee Stevens, Alisha Thomas,

Tristan Vance, Kourtney Viars, Aliza War-ner, Alexander White, David Williams, Blake Wilson, Olivia Woodward, Maken-zie Wright, Jerica Young.

Eleventh grade — Taylor Allen, Logan Allison, Tianna Angel, Seth Atkins, Traci Blair, Michaelyn Brace, Alexandrea Brum-field, Morgan Brumfield, Colby Caldwell, Haleigh Caldwell, Joshua Calvert, L Chayse Casto, Gage Childers, Maggie Clagg, Reid Eastman, Jacob Elberfeld, Samantha Graham, Alex Greer, Evan Hamilton, Samuel Hemphill, Elizabeth Holley, Madison Holley, Thomas Holley, Andrea Houck, Angela Hunt, Kimberly Hurt, Natasha Jamison, Micah Janey, D Wade Jarrell, Kyle Jordan, Taylor Leslie, Grace Martyn, Quenton McKinnis, Owen Moore, Elizabeth Ours, Violet Pelphrey, William Powers, Taylor Queen, Brooke Rider, Benjamin Roach, Hannah Roach, Jessica Roach, Jose Roberts, Alivia Ruck-er, Ashlee Saunders, Bryce Saxon, Kassie Shriver, Morgan Siders, Griffin Stanley, Kierstin Stanley, Tyler Stewart, Caleb Supple, Jacob Turner, Tyler Warnimont, Hannah Watts, Maggie Westfall, Seth Woodward.

Twelfth grade — Bethany Adamson, Mark Allen, Cierra Atherton, Thomas Austin-Braxton, Justin Bailey, Nicole Baker, Halley Barnes, Jordyn Benson, Abraham Blain, Maggie Bostic, Micaela Bryan, Jessica Burger, Ben Bush, Cody Call, Caleb Campbell, Robert Canady, Jimmy Clagg, Nicholas Clagg, Megan Cochran, Daniel Corbin, Joel Craft, Stormie Crews, Caleb Curry, Samantha Denbow, Madelynn Dennison, Bobby Dunlap, Andrea Edelmann, Christopher Elliott, Niles Elliott, Mackenzie Erwin, Justin Ferrell, Morgan Foster, Kyle Gil-lispie, Christopher Gordon, Cody Haner, Mykal Haner, Shaniqwa Hope, Aaron Jackson, Carly Jackson, Michelle Las-seter, Charlotte Lively, Shaylin Logan, Hannah Loveday, Taylor Loveday, Gloria Manygoats, Rebecca Matthew, Courtney Morrison, Riley Nibert, Rachel Nor-thup, Christopher Oiler, Kevin Pullins, Joshua Radvanyi, Grace Rogers, Caleb Rote, Cody Russell, Justin Schartiger, Jaiden Shadwick, Jacob Shockey, Briggs Shoemaker, Katherine Simpson, Zach-ary Stewart, Kymberley Stover, Bradlee Swisher, Brianna Wachs, Scottie Warren, Rachel Willet, Alicia Williams, Jeremy Wilson, Abby Wiseman, Nathan Wise-man, Courtnee Woodyard.

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Dropouts: Discouraged Americans leave labor forceJesse WashingtonPaul WisemanThe Associated Press Writers

WASHINGTON — Af-ter a full year of fruitless job hunting, Natasha Bae-bler just gave up.

She’d already abandoned hope of getting work in her field, counseling the disabled. But she couldn’t land anything else, either — not even a job interview at a telephone call center.

Until she feels confi-dent enough to send out resumes again, she’ll get by on food stamps and dis-ability checks from Social Security and live with her parents in St. Louis.

“I’m not proud of it,” says Baebler, who is in her mid-30s and is blind. “The only way I’m able to sus-tain any semblance of self-preservation is to rely on government programs that I have no desire to be on.”

Baebler’s frustrating ex-perience has become all too common nearly four years after the Great Recession ended: Many Americans are still so discouraged that they’ve given up on the job market.

Older Americans have retired early. Younger ones have enrolled in school. Others have suspended their job hunt until the employment landscape brightens. Some, like Bae-bler, are collecting disabil-ity checks.

It isn’t supposed to be this way. After a recession, an improving economy is supposed to bring people back into the job market.

Instead, the number of Americans in the labor force — those who have a job or are looking for one — fell by nearly half a mil-lion people from February to March, the government said Friday. And the per-centage of working-age adults in the labor force — what’s called the partici-pation rate — fell to 63.3 percent last month. It’s the lowest such figure since May 1979.

The falling participation rate tarnished the only ap-parent good news in the jobs report the Labor De-partment released Friday: The unemployment rate dropped to a four-year low of 7.6 percent in March from 7.7 in February.

People without a job who stop looking for one are no longer counted as unemployed. That’s why the U.S. unemployment rate dropped in March de-spite weak hiring. If the 496,000 who left the labor force last month had still been looking for jobs, the unemployment rate would have risen to 7.9 percent in March.

“Unemployment dropped for all the wrong reasons,” says Craig Alexander, chief economist with TD Bank Fi-nancial Group. “It dropped because more workers stopped looking for jobs. It signaled less confidence and optimism that there are jobs out there.”

The participation rate peaked at 67.3 percent in 2000, reflecting an influx of women into the work force. It’s been falling steadily ever since.

Part of the drop reflects the baby boom generation’s gradual move into retire-ment. But such demograph-ics aren’t the whole answer.

Even Americans of prime working age — 25 to 54 years old — are dropping out of the workforce. Their participation rate fell to 81.1 percent last month, tied with November for the low-est since December 1984.

“It’s the lack of job op-portunities — the lack of demand for workers — that is keeping these workers from working or seeking work,” says Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute. The Labor Department says there are still more than three unem-ployed people for every job opening.

Cynthia Marriott gave up her job search after an interview in October for

a position as a hotel con-cierge.

“They never said no,” she says. “They just never called me back.”

Her husband hasn’t worked full time since 2006. She cashed out her 401(k) after being laid off from a job at a Los Angeles entertain-ment publicity firm in 2009. The couple owes thousands in taxes for that withdrawal. They have no health insur-ance.

She got the maximum 99 weeks’ of unemployment benefits then allowed in California and then moved to Atlanta.

Now she is looking to re-ceive federal disability bene-fits for a lung condition that she said leaves her weak and unable to work a full day. The application is pending a medical review.

“I feel like I have no choice,” says Marriott, 47. “It’s just really sad and frightening”

During the peak of her job search, Marriott was filling out 10 applications a day. She applied for jobs she felt overqualified for, such as those at Home Depot and Petco but never heard back. Eventually, the disappoint-ment and fatigue got to her.

“I just wanted a job,” she says. “I couldn’t really go on anymore looking for a job.”

Young people are leaving the job market, too. The participation rate for Ameri-cans ages 20 to 24 hit a 41-year low 69.6 percent last year before bouncing back a bit. Many young people have enrolled in community colleges and universities. That’s one reason a record 63 percent of adults ages 25 to 29 have spent at least some time in college, ac-cording to the Pew Research Center.

Older Americans are returning to school, too. Doug Damato, who lives in Asheville, N.C., lost his job as an installer at a utility company in February 2012. He stopped looking for work last fall, when he began tak-ing classes in mechanical engineering at Asheville-Buncombe Technical Com-munity College.

Mood tense on anniversary of riotJulie Carr SmythThe Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — It’s been two de-cades this month since the longest deadly prison riot in U.S. history broke out in southern Ohio and there’s trepidation in the air.

A prisons chief in Colorado and a dis-trict attorney in Texas and his wife have been slain.

The ratio of inmates to guards inside Ohio’s prisons has crept up again after a dip that followed the 11-day siege at Lu-casville’s Southern Ohio Correctional Fa-cility in 1993.

Double-bunking inmates, a trigger in the uprising that left one corrections of-ficer and nine inmates dead, is back in use at a prison in Toledo. Serious assaults requiring outside medical attention have jumped from an average of three per year to 16 last year, and gang membership, while down slightly, stands at 16 percent.

Paul Goldberg, past executive direc-tor of the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association, which represents unionized corrections officers, said “the red flags are there” that existed in 1993 but were ignored.

“It wasn’t until we actually had the death of (Corrections Officer) Bobby Val-landingham and the riot in Lucasville that people understood that we’d been seri-ous and what we’d been saying was real,” Goldberg said. “I fear the same circum-stances are emerging today.”

Vallandingham was among 12 staff members taken hostage on April 11, 1993, when inmates overtook the prison that sits 10 miles north of the Ohio River. They were exiting the recreation yard on an Easter Sunday when it happened. Val-landingham was killed on the fourth day of the occupation, after his inmate captors had flown a bed sheet out the windows threatening to kill a hostage if certain de-mands weren’t met.

Rioting inmates wanted to have single cells rather than be doubled up and want-ed more classes and visitation. Muslim prisoners wanted an exemption from a mandatory tuberculosis test that they said violated their religion and an end to forced racial integration.

Historian-lawyers Staughton and Al-ice Lynd, a husband-and-wife team who have spent the past 20 years investigat-ing circumstances surrounding the riot, are marking the anniversary with lectures around the state focusing on the five in-mates sentenced to death for their roles in the riot.

Media access has never been allowed to the “Lucasville Five”: Siddique Abdul-lah Hasan (formerly Carlos Sanders), Ja-son Robb, George Skatzes, Namir Abdul Mateen (formerly James Were) and Keith

LaMar. The Associated Press’ request to speak to them ahead of the Lucasville an-niversary was denied.

Staughton Lynd, who has written a book asserting none of the five is Valland-ingham’s killer, said the state has yet to ac-cept its share of the responsibility in the uprising so that justice can be served and conditions improved.

The Lynds arranged for LaMar to speak by phone to about 60 participants at an April 3 event at Youngstown State Univer-sity revisiting the riot. LaMar, who was convicted of having a role in the slaying of prisoner informants during the riot, dis-cussed being held in solitary confinement for 17 years, Lynd said.

Ohio prisons director Gary Mohr au-thored a voluminous report on the causes of the Lucasville riot as director of then-Gov. George Voinovich’s Office of Crimi-nal Justice. He said there’s no question safety and security have improved since then.

Mohr can tick off a laundry list of target-ed programs, legislative efforts and infra-structure upgrades in the past 20 years — and even the past two — that are making prison conditions better and guards safer.

He said all maximum-security inmates are housed in single cells. Through tech-nology, staff are in better communica-tion and are able to manage inmates with minimal physical contact that can bring violence, he said. The state has installed 4,000 new security cameras and assem-bled special-response teams across the state trained to handle disturbances.

And the administration plans a bill step-ping up sanctions against inmates who throw bodily fluids at guards, Mohr said.

Christopher Knecht, a former inmate at Lucasville who served time both during the riot and some years afterward, said the two eras can’t compare.

“The conditions now are nothing like they were,” he said. “The only complaints now would be issues dealing with guard-prisoner relationship, classification, prop-erty, food, visits and things of that nature — typical complaints found at all prisons.”

Yet the anniversary arrives as the na-tional mood within the corrections profes-sion is apprehensive.

Mohr considered slain Colorado pris-ons director Tom Clements a professional and personal friend. The two had talked a day before Clements was shot at his front door last month.

“Worrying is a sin, but I still worry,” said Mohr, who’s headed the Ohio Depart-ment of Rehabilitation and Correction since January 2011. “I think every direc-tor in this country is concerned about the safety and operations of the staff. We need to be. Just since I’ve been director, there have been seven corrections employees around the country that have lost their lives in the line of duty.”

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Page 4Wednesday, April 10, 2013OpiniOnGallipolis Daily Tribune

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013 www.mydailytribune.com Gallipolis Daily Tribune•Page5

WASHINGTON (AP) — Feder-al accident investigators said Tues-day that texting by the pilot of a medical helicopter contributed to a crash that killed four people, and they issued a safety alert caution-ing pilots against use of cellphones and other distracting advices during “safety-critical” opera-

tions on the ground and in flight.The five-member National

Transportation Safety Board unanimously agreed that the crash was caused by a distracted and fa-tigued pilot who skipped preflight safety checks that would have re-vealed the helicopter was low on fuel and then, after discovering his

situation, decided to proceed with the fatal last leg of the flight.

The case “juxtaposes old is-sues of pilot decision making with a 21st century twist: dis-tractions from portable elec-tronic devices,” said National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman.

The helicopter crashed into a farm field on Aug. 26, 2011, near Mosby, Mo., a little over a mile short of an airport where the pilot planned to refuel. The pilot, a pa-tient being transported from one hospital to another, a flight nurse and a flight paramedic were killed.

The case is the first fatal com-

mercial aircraft accident inves-tigated by the board in which texting has been implicated. It underscores the board’s worries that cellphones and other dis-tracting devices are a growing fac-tor in incidents across all modes of transportation — planes, trains, cars, trucks and ships.

BHCC SkillsUSA continue the award winning tradition

RIO GRANDE — Buckeye Hills Ca-reer Center is proud to announce that 12 students placed in the SkillsUSA South Central Competitions held March 2, 2013. These competitions were held at the Sci-oto County Career Technical Center. Stu-dents competed in Technical Skills events as well as leadership events.

Students first had to win the local com-petitions that were held on the Buckeye Hills campus during the months of Janu-ary and February. Students placing at the first, second and third at regional competi-tion will advance to the state competition. The Ohio SkillsUSA state competition will be held in Columbus April 23 and 24.

Students receiving third place: Lexy

Michell (River Valley) Basic Health Care; Justin Hunt (Gallia Academy) Electrical Construction Wiring; Brett Thomas (Vinton County) Nurse Assist-ing. Students receiving second place: Sheena Newsom (Wellston) Automo-tive Refinishing; Makayla Wheeler (Wellston) Extemporaneous Speaking; Casey Gregg (Jackson), First Aid/CPR; Lacey Dempsey (Oak Hill) Medical Ter-minology; Alisha Ellis (Oak Hill) Nail Care; Kendra Tolliver (Jackson) Nurse Assisting. Students receiving first place: Austin Perkins (Wellston) Basic Health Care; Cayla Spaun (River Valley) Cos-metology; Michael Ferrell (Oak Hill) Job Skill Demo Open.

Submitted photoBuckeye Hills Career Center recently had 12 students place in the SkillsUSA South Central Competitions held March 2 at the Scioto County Career Technical Center. These students will advance to the state competition that will be held later this month in Columbus. Pictured are, from left: Sheena Newsom, Justin Hunt, Austin Perkins, Lexy Mitchell, Makayla Wheeler, Michael Ferrell, Lacey Dempsey, Kendra Tolliver, Cayla Spaun, and Alisha Ellis. Not pictured: Brett Thomas and Casey Gregg.

Aftershock 4-H holds meeting

Submitted photoAftershock 4-H club held a meeting on March 22, 2013. The members of the horse club discussed t-shirts for the fair, worming the horses for the spring, fundraisers, Equine Affair and began getting ideas for the fair. The members worked on showman-ship skills led by President Madison Scott. The members used hula hoops to simu-late the correct way of doing the showmanship walk around with the judge. Members practiced hand positions and used adult volunteers as “stand in horses” inside their hoops to have a focal point for practice. Members also worked on proper footing when doing the movement portion of showmanship. The members partnered up and worked on using the proper foot when walking a horse through the pattern. The final exercise in the education portion of the meeting was practicing their new skills on a horse in the ring. Members did great with an unfamiliar horse and left with skills they could practice at home even in the front yard. Nine members were present for this meeting along with three advisors and other parent volunteers. The club plans for additional meetings of hands on exercises for the members to prepare for horse shows and the fair.

NTSB: Pilot’s texting contributed to copter crash

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Rock Hill rallies past Lady Raiders, 4-3Bryan [email protected]

PEDRO, Ohio — The River Valley softball team suffered its first loss of the 2013 season in heartbreak-ing fashion Monday night following a 4-3 setback to host Rock Hill in the Ohio

Valley Conference opener for both teams in Law-rence County.

The visiting Lady Raid-ers (2-1, 0-1 OVC) jumped out to an early 3-0 advan-tage through three innings of play, but the Redwomen (1-0, 1-0) rallied with three runs over the next two

frames to knot things up at three-all headed into the sixth.

The score remained that way until the bottom of the seventh when Sami Nixon started the inning with a leadoff single. Sami Dillon followed with a single that advanced courtesy runner

Emmalee Ellis to third, then Jenna Layne brought Ellis home with the game-winning run with a single — allowing RHHS to com-plete its rally bid for the one-run decision.

Sami Nixon was the win-ning pitcher of record after allowing three runs, four

hits and zero walks over seven innings while strik-ing out nine. Noel Mer-shon took the tough-luck loss after surrendering four runs, 11 hits and zero walks over seven innings while fanning four.

Ashley Cheesebrew led the guests with two hits

and an RBI, followed by Chelsea Copley and Alexis Hurt with a double each. RVHS committed one er-ror in the contest, com-pared to four by the hosts.

Sami Dillon, Jenna Layne and Sami Nixon each had two hits apiece for the victors.

Iannetta’s hit in 13thsends Angels over Reds 3-1

CINCINNATI (AP) — In a game so long that ev-erything became blurred, catcher Chris Iannetta had one thing clearly in mind when he dug in for his final at-bat.

Don’t strike out again.He didn’t. Iannetta sin-

gled with the bases loaded in the 13th inning Monday, sending the Los Angeles Angels to a 3-1 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in an opener that set a few records and emptied both bullpens and benches.

“Not what you script for the first day going on,” said Iannetta, who caught all 13 innings.

The first interleague sea-son opener in major league history showed what hap-pens when first games are played in Ohio. Last year, the Blue Jays beat the In-dians 7-4 in 16 innings in Cleveland, the longest opener in major league his-tory.

This one was a fitting follow-up at the other end of the state. And Iannetta was in the middle of it.

He hit a solo homer in the third inning off Johnny Cueto, then grounded out and struck out three times, including with the bases loaded in the seventh in-ning to keep it tied at 1.

“It was a long day at that point,” Iannetta said. “I’d

had some pretty forget-table at-bats. I was just try-ing not to strike out.”

Hoover walked two and hit Hank Conger — the Angels’ final position play-er — to load the bases with two outs. Iannetta worked the count full, fouled off a couple pitches, then sin-gled to left.

With that, the Reds were headed to a loss in their longest season opening game since 1975, when they beat the Dodgers 2-1 in 14 innings.

“That was a heck of an opening day game,” Hoover said. “It would have been better if we’d have come out on top.”

Mark Lowe pitched two innings for the win. Er-nesto Frieri, the Angels’ seventh pitcher, completed an impressive showing by the Angels’ bullpen, which allowed only one hit over the final seven innings.

A team that sunk $125 million into acquiring out-fielder Josh Hamilton to upgrade its offense pulled this one out with a bullpen that has a few questions to start the season.

“I’ve been hearing some mixed stories about wheth-er that’s going to be our weak point,” said starter Jered Weaver, who allowed two hits in six innings and gave up a run on a wild

pitch. “That’s what it’s go-ing to take to win some key games.”

Angels pitchers fanned 13 in all, their highest total on opening day.

Shin-Soo Choo had a sol-id debut at the Reds’ lead-off hitter, reaching three times. He doubled in the third and came around on a ground out and Weaver’s wild pitch.

The Reds also suffered their first injury of the sea-son on the run-producing play. Left fielder Ryan Lud-wick dislocated his right shoulder while sliding headfirst into third base on Weaver’s wild pitch. He’ll have an MRI on Tuesday to determine the severity.

“The ground was a little wet, and when I hit the ground my hand stopped,” Ludwick said. “Normally, it slides with you. My shoulder popped out. This wasn’t the best opening day.”

The bulllpens decided an opener between two teams that think they can contend for the playoffs right from the first pitch — which was a 92 mph fastball by Cueto for a called strike.

The Angels’ biggest off-season move was signing Hamilton, who had a nos-talgic start to the season. He started his comeback in Cincinnati on opening day 2007 after years of drug abuse.

MLB teams honor Newtown victims before openers

NEW YORK (AP) — The names, written in script, streamed slowly down on the video board in center field at Yankee Stadium, of the 20 children and six educators who died last December during the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Fans in the sellout crowd of nearly 50,000 were on their feet, silent, as were the players on the field.

“It was tough seeing all those names scroll through,” Red Sox cen-ter fielder Jacoby Ellsbury said.

Before their season opener against the Boston Red Sox on Monday, the New York Yankees held a tribute to the victims of the Newtown school shootings and honored first respond-ers who rushed to the Connecticut school on Dec. 14.

During the moment of silence, the honor guard included members of Newtown police and firefighters.

Major League Baseball asked all teams to wear patches on their uni-forms during openers to honor the dead and those affected by the shoot-ing. Each patch includes the New-town seal, a black memorial ribbon and 26 small stars.

Washington general manager Mike Rizzo attached a patch to a lapel on his pinstriped charcoal suit.

“It’s so we don’t forget about the people in Newtown,” Rizzo said, tapping the patch with his hand. “It honors them and keeps them in our thoughts.”

Two of the first responders, Det.

Daniel McAnaspie and Det. Jason Frank, spoke to reporters before the game at Yankee Stadium. The reper-cussions of the shooting still are felt by the police, many in therapy and some not able to work.

“We’re getting each other through the days. We’re getting each other through the weeks,” the 41-year-old Frank said. “I can tell you within my 17-year career, I’ve probably spent more time the last couple months with individual guys than I have in my entire career, just for the listen-ing, the laughing, the crying.”

Both wanted to thank others for the support given to their department and to their community.

“It was overwhelming at times,” said McAnaspie, 35. “We had police departments as far away as New Zea-land sending gifts, teddy bears for our kids because we weren’t home for our own families. … It was humbling to see that that many people would come together for our town.”

McAnaspie and Frank said they are fans of the Yankees, who are inviting about 3,000 children, families and others in the Newtown community to their July 7 game against Baltimore.

“It means that we can try to bring a little bit of comfort to them,” Yan-kees reliever Mariano Rivera said. “We cannot change … what happened. That was a tragedy that shocked the United States and the whole world. We just want to give them something so they can get a bit of respite.”

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A6

Lady Eagles, Tornadoes lead the way at Rocky Brands InviteBryan [email protected]

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — The Eastern girls and Southern boys proved to be the best that Ohio Valley Publishing area had to of-fer Saturday at the 2013 Rocky Brands Track and Field Invita-tional held at Nelsonville-York High School in Athens County.

The Lady Eagles finished second out of 22 scoring teams in the girls division, while the Tornadoes placed 13th out of 22 scoring teams on the boys side. Logan won both team titles, as the Chieftains and Lady Chief-tains scored 116 points and 94 points, respectively.

The Lady Eagles finished in the top-eight in 13 different events, which included one event

champion and three runners-up.Maddie Rigsby had the lone

championship in the high jump event by setting a new Rocky Brands record with a cleared height of 5 feet, 4 inches. Rigsby was also sixth in the 400m dash with a time of 1:06.00.

The quartet of Rigsby, Keri Lawrence, Savannah Hawley and Taylor Palmer picked up a pair of second-place efforts in the 4x800m (10:33.19) and 4x400m (4:24.87) relay events. Cassidy Cleland was also second in the discus with a heave of 110 feet, 9 inches.

Lawrence placed third in the 300m hurdles (50.67) and was fourth in the 100m hurdles (17.65). Asia Michael was fourth overall in the 3200m run with a time of 12:38.97, while Jordan

Parker placed fourth in the 200m dash (29.21) and seventh in the 100m dash (14.39).

Palmer was seventh in the 1600m run with a time of 5:56.75, while Katie Keller was seventh in the shot put event with a throw of 31 feet, 7.5 inches. Hawley rounded out Eastern’s top-eight efforts with an eighth-place fin-ish in the 400m dash (1:06.79).

River Valley placed 20th over-all in the girls competition with six points. Rylie Hollingsworth was seventh in the long jump (14-8) and Randi Wray was seventh in the 300m hurdles (53.93). The Lady Raiders were also seventh in the 4x400m relay, as the quartet of Hollingsworth, Wray, Keyana Ward and Carli Dillon posted a time of 4:40.35.

Meigs finished 21st overall as a team with two points, as Mer-cadies George finished seventh in the 100m hurdles with a time of 18.13 seconds.

The Southern quartet of Hal-ley Wilson, Brittany Cogar, Shelby Pickens and Angie Eynon placed eighth in the 4x100m re-lay event with a mark of 57.29 seconds, earning the Lady Tor-nadoes one team point for 22nd place overall.

The Southern boys had one event champion and three top-eight finishes overall, as Kody Wolfe won the 3200m run with a time of 9:47.76. Jeremiah War-den was sixth in the discus event with a heave of 122 feet, 1 inch, while the quartet of Wolfe, Justin Hettinger, Bradley McCoy and

Joseph Morris placed fourth in the 4x800m relay with a mark of 9:09.87.

Eastern placed 19th overall with four team points. Daschle Facemyer was seventh in the long jump with a leap of 18 feet, 5 inch-es, then joined Alex Amos, Zack Browning and Tanner Palmer in finishing seventh in the 4x400m relay with a time of 3:53.10.

River Valley managed only one-third of a point to place 22nd overall after Justin Mabe finished in a three-way tie for eighth in the high jump (5-4). Meigs did not score a team point in the boys competition.

Complete results of the 2013 Rocky Brands Invitational are available on the web at baum-spage.com

Wednesday, April 10BaseballGallia Academy at Jack-

son, 5 p.m.Eastern at Wahama, 5

p.m.Coal Grove at River Val-

ley, 5 p.m.Point Pleasant at Roane

County, 5 p.m.Federal Hocking at

Southern, 5 p.m.Trimble at South Gallia,

5 p.m.SoftballGallia Academy at Jack-

son, 5 p.m.Federal Hocking at

Southern, 5 p.m.Trimble at South Gallia,

5 p.m.Coal Grove at River Val-

ley, 5 p.m.Eastern at Wahama, 5

p.m.

Track and FieldMeigs, Southern at Nel-

sonville-York relays, 4 p.m.TennisLogan at Gallia Acad-

emy, 4:30Point Pleasant at Hurri-

cane, 4 p.m.

Thursday, April 11BaseballMeigs at Wellston, 5 p.m.Point Pleasant at Win-

field, 7 p.m.Teays Valley Christian at

Hannan (DH) 5 p.m.SoftballMeigs at Wellston, 5 p.m.South Gallia at Eastern,

5 p.m.Chapmanville at Point

Pleasant, 5:30TennisMarietta at Gallia Acad-

emy, 4:30

OVP Sports Schedule

Alex [email protected]

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio— It’s not always how you finish, sometimes it’s how you start that’s important.

The Southern baseball team marked four runs in the top of the first inning en route to a 4-1 victory over Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division host Eastern Mon-day night.

The Tornadoes (7-1, 4-0 TVC Hocking) manufactured four runs off of three hits and a walk in the top of the first frame. The Eagles (5-2, 1-2) cracked the scoreboard for the first time in the bottom of the sixth inning with one run but EHS couldn’t complete the comeback and the Purple and Gold claimed the 4-1 triumph.

Danny Ramthun earned the victory for Southern after throwing a complete game in which he gave up one run on six hits. Ramthun struck out seven without walking a batter.

Timothy Elam suffered the loss for Eastern after giving up four runs on five hits and three walks. Elam struck out nine in a complete game effort.

The SHS offense was led by Trenton Deem with a double, while Hunter Johnson, Colten Walters, Brandon Moodispaugh and Adam Pape each had a single.

Pape finished with a game-high two runs batted in, fol-lowed by Moodispaugh and Walters with one each. John-son, Ramthun, Walters and Moodispaugh each scored one run.

Ethan Nottingham, Joey Scowden, Brandon Coleman, Josh Shook, Christian Speelman and Elam each had a sin-gle for EHS. Nottingham had the Eagles’ lone RBI, while Elam scored the lone run.

The Tornadoes finished with four runs, five hits and one error, while Eastern had one run, six hits and no er-rors.

Southern had just two base runners after the first in-ning.

These teams will meet again on May 10th in Racine at Star Mill Park.

Tornadoes outlast Eastern, 4-1

Alex Hawley | Daily TribuneSouthern senior Danny Ramthun (24) pitches during the Tor-nadoes 4-1 victory at Eastern Monday night.

Point Pleasant pounds White Falcons, 14-0Alex [email protected]

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Back from the beach without missing a beat.

The Point Pleasant baseball team defeated visiting Wahama 14-0 Mon-day night in the Big Blacks first game since returning from Pawleys Island, South Carolina.

The Big Blacks (6-6) turned two hits into a pair of runs in the open-ing inning and proceeded to add six more in the second frame. Point Pleasant marked four runs in the third inning and two in the fourth to seal the 14-0 triumph.

Evan Potter threw a complete game shutout and earned the win for Point Pleasant. Potter gave up four hits, while striking out six and walk-ing one in the contest.

Wahama (3-3) junior Hunter Brad-ley suffered the loss after pitching three innings in which he gave up 12 runs, nine earned, on 10 hits and three walks. Dakota Sisk pitched one frame in relief for the White Falcons and he gave up two unearned runs on one hit and two walks. Sisl struck out two batters.

The Big Blacks offense was led by Alex Somerville with three hits, fol-lowed by Gage Buskirk and Tylun Campbell with two apiece. Potter, Levi Russell, Kodi Stranahan and Stevie Porter each had one hit in the game.Buskirk’s triple in the first in-ning was the game’s lone extra-base hit, while Potter executed the game’s only sacrifice.

Campbell scored a trio of runs to lead PPHS, followed by Somerville, Buskirk, Stranahan and Porter with two each. Russell, Jacob Gardner

and Nick Templeton each marked one run in the game. Somerville and Campbell each had four runs batted in, while Potter had two and Stra-nahan finished with one. Somerville and Campbell each had a stolen base in the victory.

Kane Roush, Wyatt Zuspan, Wes-ley Harrison and Austin Cole each had a hit for the White Falcons.

Point Pleasant finished with 14 runs, 11 hits and one error, while WHS had no runs, four hits and five errors. The Big Blacks stranded four runners, only one of which was left in scoring position, while Wahama left five runners on base, three of which were in scoring position.

Point Pleasant has now won three straight games, while the loss snaps the White Falcons three game win-ning streak.

Photos by Alex Hawley | Daily TribuneEastern freshman Sabra Bailey (10) drops down a bunt off of Southern pitcher Jordan Huddleston (12) in front of catcher Darien Diddle during the Lady Eagles 1-0 victory Monday night in Tuppers Plains.

Lady Eagles edge Southern, 1-0Alex [email protected]

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio— A pitcher’s duel until the very end.

The Eastern and Southern softball teams didn’t allowed a run through the first seven innings of Monday night’s Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Divi-sion matchup. Lady Eagles’ pitcher Grace Edwards helped her own cause by driving in Paige Cline in the bottom of the eighth which gave the Lady Eagles the 1-0 walk-off victory.

The Lady Eagles (4-3, 3-0 TVC Hocking) had lost back-to-back games coming into play, while Southern (3-3, 2-2) had won three of its last four.

Edwards was the winning pitcher as she threw eight shutout innings and gave up five hits and a walk. Edwards struck out seven batters on the night.

Jordan Huddleston suffered the loss for the Lady Tornadoes after giving up one unearned run in eight innings of work. Huddleston gave up four hits and walked one, while striking out two.

Tori Goble and Kiki Osborne each hit a double to pace EHS, followed by Cline and Amber Moodis-paugh who each singled.

Maggie Cummins had two singles to led SHS, while Ali Deem, Halley Hill and Jordan Huddleston each singled.

The Lady Eagles finished with one run, four hits, six errors and six runners left on base, while South-ern finished with no runs, five hits, two errors and four runners left on base.

This marks Eastern’s second shutout of the year and its first one run game. Southern is 0-2 in one run games this season.

These teams will meet again on May 10th at Star Mill Park in Racine.

Eastern sophomore Jourdan Griffin (12) beats Southern senior Maggie Cummins (4) to second base during the Lady Eagles 1-0 victory Monday night in Tuppers Plains.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

WEDNESDAY,APRIL 10, 2013 SportS [email protected]

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BLONDIE Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY Mort Walker

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE Chris Browne

HI & LOIS Brian and Greg Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN Tom Batiuk

MUTTS Patrick McDonnell

THE FAMILY CIRCUS Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum

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CONCEPTIS SUDOKUby Dave Green

Wednesday, april 10, 2013 ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

Today’s Answers

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, April 10, 2013:

This year, you experience a new beginning in a significant area of your life. To others, you will seem as if you have endless energy and creativity, and they will be right. Take advantage of this special year; use it well, but do not step on others’ feet. If you are sin-gle, you might choose a relationship in which someone puts you on a pedes-tal. Be careful — there is only one way to go, and that is down. Go for a more realistic bond. If you are attached, make sure that you share the limelight and/or dote on your sweetie, or he or she might become very uncomfortable and difficult. TAURUS knows how to spend his or her money, and maybe even yours, too!

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-DifficultARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH A new beginning becomes

very possible. Express your enthusi-asm for a project and for the direction in which you are heading. Once you are behind something, it becomes a reality. Share some of your ideas with friends and loved ones. Tonight: Find a reason for celebration.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH You have a lot going on. Take

your time deciphering your feelings, as they could change rapidly. Rather than act aggressively or get into a fight, stop to see what is happening within yourself. Once you can discuss this reaction, you will feel much better. Tonight: Not to be found.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH A friendship could take a

sudden new twist or turn. You have worked so hard to get to a certain point that you hardly have had any time to relax. Stop and look around. Your feelings very likely will float to the surface, so take some time to deal with them. Tonight: Greet a change positively. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Pressure builds. You might be

on the verge of a professional change, or perhaps you are heading in a new direction with a relationship where you look up to the person. Visualize more of what you want, and express your desires openly. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Keep reaching out to

someone you care about who is not easily accessible. You have an oppor-tunity for a new beginning here. You might want to rethink what has hap-pened and what you want to happen.

With clarity, success is more likely. Tonight: Let your imagination play out.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Work with an associate

or a dear friend as a duo — you might feel more empowered that way. This person often seems to share and act on the same feelings that you experi-ence. Work on communication in order to strengthen your bond. Tonight: Chat over a lengthy dinner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Defer to someone else.

You might feel like you have little choice right now. Your sense of humor makes others feel more relaxed, but sometimes you have to honor your needs. Others can be touchy. Know that it might have little to do with you. Tonight: Choose from many options.SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH You might want to have

a long-overdue discussion with an associate or someone who could be instrumental in your day-to-day life. You don’t always have the control you desire. Count on this person’s under-standing; he or she has good advice to offer. Tonight: Choose a stressbuster.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH Answers come forward

once you focus. Be open to brain-storming. Though you might vent some anger, you also will see the way around a hassle. Others share opin-ions more than new ideas, but their different perspectives still are helpful. Tonight: Take a long-overdue break.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You are open to change

and are willing to let go of a need to have certain matters go your way. In any case, a family member might be on the warpath. To calm down the situation, you might want to let go of being right. Make and return important calls. Tonight: At home.AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You speak your mind, and

others stop to listen. You might have a tone that comes off as angry when expressing your feelings to someone. Choose your words with care. Take responsibility for your side of an issue; you’ll feel better as a result. Tonight: Invite friends over.PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Be aware of what you are

offering. You might be overspending. Avoid taking a financial risk, no matter how logical it might seem. Be care-ful when swallowing your anger, as it could encourage spending or some other self-destructive habit. Tonight: Balance your checkbook first.

Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internetat www.jacquelinebigar.com.

zITS Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

THE LOCKHORNS William Hoest

A7

Wednesday, April 10, 2013 www.mydailytribune.com Gallipolis Daily Tribune•Page7

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April 23rd - May 4th

LEGALS

NOTICE OF SALE UNDERJUDGMENT OF FORECLOS-UREOF LIEN FOR UNPAID JUDG-MENTIN THE COURT OF COM-MON PLEAS OF GALLIACOUNTY, OHIOGENERAL DIVISIONBUDDY J. FOWLER, et al.,Case No. 12 CV 169Plaintiffs,-vs-BOBBY CHAPMAN, et al.,Defendants.WHEREAS, judgment hasbeen rendered against BobbyChapman and others, foreclos-ing a judgment lien on certainreal property as follows:PARCEL NO: 012-002-093-00TOWNSHIP: GuyanDESCRIPTION: Lot No. Ten(10) as shown on the originalplat of Crown City VillageADDRESS: 134 Main Street,Crown City, Ohio 45623DEED: Volume 295, Page 323,and Volume 308, Page 83A more complete descriptionmay be found in the GalliaCounty Recorder’s Office.WHEREAS, such judgment or-ders such real property to besold by the undersigned to sat-isfy the total amount of suchjudgment;NOW, THEREFORE, publicnotice is hereby given that I,Joseph R. Browning, Sheriff ofGallia County, Ohio, will sellsuch real property at publicauction, for cash to the highestbidder, starting at 10:00 a.m.on Friday, May 3, 2013 in thesecond floor meeting room inthe Gallia County Courthouse.Property appraised at $45,000and cannot be sold for lessthan two-thirds (2/3) of thatamount.Terms of sale: Cash or check.10% of the purchase price dueat the time of the sale to the of-ficer conducting the sale, withthe balance due to the sheriffwithin thirty days of the date ofthe sale.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENTHAT SUCH REAL PROP-ERTY TO BE SOLD AT PUB-LIC AUCTION MAY BE SUB-JECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LI-EN OR ANY OTHER LIENSOR ENCUMBRANCES THATMAY NOT BE EXTIN-GUISHED BY THE SALE.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffMulford & Wiseman, LLC, EricR. Mulford (#0077719), Attor-ney for Plaintiffs4/3/13, 4/10/13, 4/17/13

LEGALS

NOTICE OF SALE UNDERJUDGMENT OF FORECLOS-UREOF LIEN FOR UNPAID JUDG-MENTIN THE COURT OF COM-MON PLEAS OF GALLIACOUNTY, OHIOGENERAL DIVISIONBUDDY J. FOWLER, et al.,Case No. 12 CV 169Plaintiffs,-vs-BOBBY CHAPMAN, et al.,Defendants.WHEREAS, judgment hasbeen rendered against BobbyChapman and others, foreclos-ing a judgment lien on certainreal property as follows:PARCEL NO: 012-002-093-00TOWNSHIP: GuyanDESCRIPTION: Lot No. Ten(10) as shown on the originalplat of Crown City VillageADDRESS: 134 Main Street,Crown City, Ohio 45623DEED: Volume 295, Page 323,and Volume 308, Page 83A more complete descriptionmay be found in the GalliaCounty Recorder’s Office.WHEREAS, such judgment or-ders such real property to besold by the undersigned to sat-isfy the total amount of suchjudgment;NOW, THEREFORE, publicnotice is hereby given that I,Joseph R. Browning, Sheriff ofGallia County, Ohio, will sellsuch real property at publicauction, for cash to the highestbidder, starting at 10:00 a.m.on Friday, May 3, 2013 in thesecond floor meeting room inthe Gallia County Courthouse.Property appraised at $45,000and cannot be sold for lessthan two-thirds (2/3) of thatamount.Terms of sale: Cash or check.10% of the purchase price dueat the time of the sale to the of-ficer conducting the sale, withthe balance due to the sheriffwithin thirty days of the date ofthe sale.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENTHAT SUCH REAL PROP-ERTY TO BE SOLD AT PUB-LIC AUCTION MAY BE SUB-JECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LI-EN OR ANY OTHER LIENSOR ENCUMBRANCES THATMAY NOT BE EXTIN-GUISHED BY THE SALE.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffMulford & Wiseman, LLC, EricR. Mulford (#0077719), Attor-ney for Plaintiffs4/3/13, 4/10/13, 4/17/13

LEGALS

NOTICE OF SALE UNDERJUDGMENT OF FORECLOS-UREOF LIEN FOR UNPAID JUDG-MENTIN THE COURT OF COM-MON PLEAS OF GALLIACOUNTY, OHIOGENERAL DIVISIONBUDDY J. FOWLER, et al.,Case No. 12 CV 169Plaintiffs,-vs-BOBBY CHAPMAN, et al.,Defendants.WHEREAS, judgment hasbeen rendered against BobbyChapman and others, foreclos-ing a judgment lien on certainreal property as follows:PARCEL NO: 012-002-093-00TOWNSHIP: GuyanDESCRIPTION: Lot No. Ten(10) as shown on the originalplat of Crown City VillageADDRESS: 134 Main Street,Crown City, Ohio 45623DEED: Volume 295, Page 323,and Volume 308, Page 83A more complete descriptionmay be found in the GalliaCounty Recorder’s Office.WHEREAS, such judgment or-ders such real property to besold by the undersigned to sat-isfy the total amount of suchjudgment;NOW, THEREFORE, publicnotice is hereby given that I,Joseph R. Browning, Sheriff ofGallia County, Ohio, will sellsuch real property at publicauction, for cash to the highestbidder, starting at 10:00 a.m.on Friday, May 3, 2013 in thesecond floor meeting room inthe Gallia County Courthouse.Property appraised at $45,000and cannot be sold for lessthan two-thirds (2/3) of thatamount.Terms of sale: Cash or check.10% of the purchase price dueat the time of the sale to the of-ficer conducting the sale, withthe balance due to the sheriffwithin thirty days of the date ofthe sale.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENTHAT SUCH REAL PROP-ERTY TO BE SOLD AT PUB-LIC AUCTION MAY BE SUB-JECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LI-EN OR ANY OTHER LIENSOR ENCUMBRANCES THATMAY NOT BE EXTIN-GUISHED BY THE SALE.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffMulford & Wiseman, LLC, EricR. Mulford (#0077719), Attor-ney for Plaintiffs4/3/13, 4/10/13, 4/17/13The following is a summarizedversion of legislation adoptedat the April 2, 2013, regularmeeting of the Gallipolis CityCommission:• RESOLUTION NO. R2013-02:A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZ-ING COOPERATIVE AGREE-MENT FOR DESIGN OF THEWATER POLLUTION CON-TROL FACILITY IMPROVE-MENTS PROJECT BETWEENTHE CITY OF GALLIPOLISAND THE OHIO WATER DE-VELOPMENT AUTHORITYAND PROVIDING ASSUR-ANCE TO THE OHIO WATERDEVELOPMENT AUTHOR-ITY OF A SOURCE OF LOC-AL FUNDS FOR SEWER IM-PROVEMENTS IN THE CITYOF GALLIPOLIS AND DE-CLARING AN EMERGENCY.For a loan for the headworksproject. (Adopted as an emer-gency.)Notice: The complete text ofeach of the above ordinancesmay be obtained or viewed atthe office of the City Clerk, theBossard Public Library, or onthe City’s website at www.city-ofgallipolis.com.4/10

LEGALS

Sheriff’s Sale of PropertyState of Ohio, Gallia CountyGary Moderalli Excavating, Inc.PlaintiffVTrimat Construction, Inc. et alDefendant12CJ376A public auction for the GalliaCounty Sheriff’s Office will beheld at 12 p.m. Friday, April26, 2013 at Red’s Rollen Gar-age, 14727 State Route 554,Bidwell. The property is loc-ated at 14 Midway St., Bidwell.The following will be sold:Military Dump Truck KaiserJeep Corp VIN 050-98370-C124-12233Military Dump Truck 1967Kaiser Jeep Corp VIN 9527-11713Mustang Skidsteer/loaderModel #2060Catepillar Excavator 2004Model 330 CLInterested parties can inspectproperty on the sale day from10:30 a.m. -11:30 a.m.This information is also loc-ated on our website www.galli-asheriff.org. All purchases over$1000 paid by personal checkmust be accompanied by a let-ter of credit from a banking in-stitution, no exceptions. Allitems are sold as is and allsales are final. Items must beremoved from the propertywithin 24 hours of receiving thetitle. Titles will be by court or-der, therefore, it may take 2-3weeks to receive. The GalliaCounty Sheriff reserves theright to reject any bid.4/10 4/17 4/24

Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateThe State of Ohio, GalliaCounty.WWR #10092327IN THE COURT OF COM-MON PLEASGALLIA COUNTY, OHIOU.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSO-CIATION NDCASE NO. 12CV000047(Foreclosure)Plaintiffvs.LOUIS J. MANYAK, et al.DefendantsIn pursuance of an Order ofSale in the above entitled ac-tion, I will offer for sale at pub-lic auction, the Gallia CountyCourthouse, in the abovenamed County, on Friday, the10th day of May, 2013, at10:00 a.m., the following de-scribed real estate to-wit:Situated in Section 5, Range15, Green Township, Town 5,Gallia County, Ohio, said realestate originally being part of atract of land owned by RobertL. Evans, Volume 179, Page561, of the Gallia County DeedRecords;Beginning at a point in thecenterline of Bob McCormickRoad, said point being theNortheasterly corner of theCaldwell Property as de-scribed in the Gallia CountyDeed Records, Volume 238,Page 875. This point beingmarked with a P-K nail; thencebounding the property with thefollowing calls: Following theNorth line of the Caldwell prop-erty North 73 degrees 33minutes West 236.5 feet to aniron pin; thence along theNorthwest property line of theCaldwell property, but continu-ing past a property cornerSouth 42 degrees 59 minutes18 seconds West 292.93 feetto an iron pin; North 70 de-grees 53 minutes 10 secondsWest 173.72 feet to an ironpin; thence North 29 degrees27 minutes 30 seconds East564.00 feet to a P.K. nail in thecenterline of Bob McCormickRoad; thence continuing alongthe centerline of Bob Mc-Cormick Road; South 32 de-grees 03 minutes 20 secondsEast 114.80 feet to a P.K. nail;South 63 degrees 22 minutes20 seconds East 114.20 feet toa P.K. nail; South 59 degrees11' East 103.75 feet to a P.K.nail; South 31 degrees 35minutes 10 seconds East99.75 feet to a P.K. nail; South59 degrees 11 minutes East103.75 feet to a P.K. nail;South 04 degrees 38 minutes50 seconds East 114.15 feet toa P.K. nail which is the point ofbeginning, containing 3.250acres, more or less.PPN: 00800131300Said Premises located at 962Mccormick Road, Gallipolis,OH 45631Said Premises appraised at$18,000.00 and cannot be soldfor less than two-thirds thatamount.Terms of sale: 10% of the pur-chase price down the date ofsale with the remaining bal-ance to be paid within thirtydays from the date of sale.Anne M. Smith (0042139)Attorney for the Plaintiff4/10/13, 4/17/13, 4/24/13

LEGALS

Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateThe State of Ohio, GalliaCounty.WWR #10092327IN THE COURT OF COM-MON PLEASGALLIA COUNTY, OHIOU.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSO-CIATION NDCASE NO. 12CV000047(Foreclosure)Plaintiffvs.LOUIS J. MANYAK, et al.DefendantsIn pursuance of an Order ofSale in the above entitled ac-tion, I will offer for sale at pub-lic auction, the Gallia CountyCourthouse, in the abovenamed County, on Friday, the10th day of May, 2013, at10:00 a.m., the following de-scribed real estate to-wit:Situated in Section 5, Range15, Green Township, Town 5,Gallia County, Ohio, said realestate originally being part of atract of land owned by RobertL. Evans, Volume 179, Page561, of the Gallia County DeedRecords;Beginning at a point in thecenterline of Bob McCormickRoad, said point being theNortheasterly corner of theCaldwell Property as de-scribed in the Gallia CountyDeed Records, Volume 238,Page 875. This point beingmarked with a P-K nail; thencebounding the property with thefollowing calls: Following theNorth line of the Caldwell prop-erty North 73 degrees 33minutes West 236.5 feet to aniron pin; thence along theNorthwest property line of theCaldwell property, but continu-ing past a property cornerSouth 42 degrees 59 minutes18 seconds West 292.93 feetto an iron pin; North 70 de-grees 53 minutes 10 secondsWest 173.72 feet to an ironpin; thence North 29 degrees27 minutes 30 seconds East564.00 feet to a P.K. nail in thecenterline of Bob McCormickRoad; thence continuing alongthe centerline of Bob Mc-Cormick Road; South 32 de-grees 03 minutes 20 secondsEast 114.80 feet to a P.K. nail;South 63 degrees 22 minutes20 seconds East 114.20 feet toa P.K. nail; South 59 degrees11' East 103.75 feet to a P.K.nail; South 31 degrees 35minutes 10 seconds East99.75 feet to a P.K. nail; South59 degrees 11 minutes East103.75 feet to a P.K. nail;South 04 degrees 38 minutes50 seconds East 114.15 feet toa P.K. nail which is the point ofbeginning, containing 3.250acres, more or less.PPN: 00800131300Said Premises located at 962Mccormick Road, Gallipolis,OH 45631Said Premises appraised at$18,000.00 and cannot be soldfor less than two-thirds thatamount.Terms of sale: 10% of the pur-chase price down the date ofsale with the remaining bal-ance to be paid within thirtydays from the date of sale.Anne M. Smith (0042139)Attorney for the Plaintiff4/10/13, 4/17/13, 4/24/13

SHERIFF’S SALE OF REALESTATESTATE OF OHIO, GALLIACOUNTYBank of America, N.A., Suc-cessor by Merger to BACHome Loans Servicing, LPFKA Countrywide Home LoansServicing, LPPLAINTIFFvsJanet L. Brown, DEFENDANTCASE NUMBER: 12CV000140In pursuance to an alias orderof sale (with appraisal) direc-ted to me in the above entitledaction, I will offer for sale atpublic auction, in the secondfloor meeting room of theCourthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio,in the above name county, onFriday, May 3, 2013 at 10:00A.M. A more complete descrip-tion on the above named realmay be found in the GalliaCounty Recorder’s Office.Address: 71 Burnett Road,Gallipolis OH 45631Parcel: 00600407200Said real estate appraised at$15,000.00 and cannot be soldfor less than two-thirds of theappraised value.Terms of SaleThe successful purchaser, assoon as his bid is accepted,shall be required deposit onthe day of the sale, in cash orby check payable to the sheriff,10% of the amount of such ac-cepted bid but in no event lessthan $1,000.00. The balance ofthe purchase price shall bedue and payable to the sheriffwithin thirty (30) days from thedate of confirmation of sale.The purchaser shall be re-quired to pay interest on saidunpaid balance at 10% per an-num from the date of confirma-tion of the sale to the date ofpayment of the balance unlessthe balance is made withineight (8) days from the date ofsale. “2327.02 (C) requiressuccessful bidders pay record-ing and conveyance fees to thesheriff at the time of sale.”Joseph R. Browning GalliaCounty SheriffTHE LAW OFFICES OFJOHN D. CLUNK, CO., LPAJohn D. Clunk #0005376Ted A. Humbert #0022307Timothy R. Billick #0010390Robert R. Hoose #0074544Charles V. Gasior #0075946Attorneys for Plaintiff4/3 4/10 4/17

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013 www.mydailytribune.com Gallipolis Daily Tribune•Page8

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LEGALS

SHERIFF’S SALE OF REALESTATESTATE OF OHIO, GALLIACOUNTYBank of America, N.A., Suc-cessor by Merger to BACHome Loans Servicing, LPFKA Countrywide Home LoansServicing, LPPLAINTIFFvsJanet L. Brown, DEFENDANTCASE NUMBER: 12CV000140In pursuance to an alias orderof sale (with appraisal) direc-ted to me in the above entitledaction, I will offer for sale atpublic auction, in the secondfloor meeting room of theCourthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio,in the above name county, onFriday, May 3, 2013 at 10:00A.M. A more complete descrip-tion on the above named realmay be found in the GalliaCounty Recorder’s Office.Address: 71 Burnett Road,Gallipolis OH 45631Parcel: 00600407200Said real estate appraised at$15,000.00 and cannot be soldfor less than two-thirds of theappraised value.Terms of SaleThe successful purchaser, assoon as his bid is accepted,shall be required deposit onthe day of the sale, in cash orby check payable to the sheriff,10% of the amount of such ac-cepted bid but in no event lessthan $1,000.00. The balance ofthe purchase price shall bedue and payable to the sheriffwithin thirty (30) days from thedate of confirmation of sale.The purchaser shall be re-quired to pay interest on saidunpaid balance at 10% per an-num from the date of confirma-tion of the sale to the date ofpayment of the balance unlessthe balance is made withineight (8) days from the date ofsale. “2327.02 (C) requiressuccessful bidders pay record-ing and conveyance fees to thesheriff at the time of sale.”Joseph R. Browning GalliaCounty SheriffTHE LAW OFFICES OFJOHN D. CLUNK, CO., LPAJohn D. Clunk #0005376Ted A. Humbert #0022307Timothy R. Billick #0010390Robert R. Hoose #0074544Charles V. Gasior #0075946Attorneys for Plaintiff4/3 4/10 4/17Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateState of Ohio, Gallia CountyThe Ohio Valley Bank Com-panyVs.Jeffrey L. Rathburn, et alCase No. 12 CV 66In pursuant to an Order of Saledirected to me in the above en-titled action, I will offer for saleat public auction, in the secondfloor meeting room of theCourthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio,in the above name county onFriday, May 3, 2013 at 10:00a.m. The real estate to be soldis more particularly describedas follows:Situate in Section 30, Range15, Township 5, Green Town-ship, Gallia County, Ohio, andlocated on Vanco Road andbeing more particularly de-scribed as follows: Beginningfor reference purposes only, atthe intersection of the center-lines of Wilson Bostic Roadand Vanco Road; thence fromsaid beginning, leaving WilsonBostic Road and with the ap-proximate centerline of VancoRoad the following coursesand distances: North 49° 04'44" West 268.68 feet; North49° 49' 57" West 143.56 feet;North 52° 18' 34” West 148.30feet; North 50° 13' 23" West137.86 feet; North 48° 08' 30"West 252.37 feet; North 44°18' 49" West 211.43 feet;North 48° 09' 37" West 190.44feet; North 53° 38' 38" West61.34 feet; North 64° 46' 03"West 80.76 feet; North 74° 05'33" West 68.45 feet; North 78°36' 23" West 72.87 feet to a "P-K" nail set in the said center-line and being the true place ofbeginning for this description;thence from said true place ofbeginning, continuing with saidcenterline of Vanco Road,North 78° 36' 24" West 60.08feet to a "P-K" nail set in saidroad; thence leaving said road,North 08° 37' 05" East 623.39feet to a metal pipe found bythis survey; thence continuingNorth 81° 35' 14" West 298.49feet to a metal pipe found bythis survey; thence North 08°42' 41" East 872.25 feet to ametal pipe found by this sur-vey in the Southerly line ofRuth Vanco as described inDeed Volume 149, Page 326;thence with Vanco, South 81°11' 58" East 562.76 feet tofence post in the existing fencecorner; thence continuing withVanco, South 08° 35' 37” West490.64 feet to a metal pipefound in the existing fencecorner; thence still with Vanco,South 78° 28' 01" East 88.35feet to a fence corner; thencewith Vanco, South 08° 35' 37"West 372.97 feet to a metalpipe found by this survey;thence leaving Vanco, North81° 35' 14" West 294.29 feet toa metal pipe found by this sur-vey; thence South 08° 37' 05"West 626.52 feet to the placeof beginning, containing12.883 acres, more or less.The above property surveyedand description furnished byWalter A. Lambert, RS# 278.SUBJECT to all legal ease-ments and leases.SUBJECT to restrictive coven-ants of record.Parcel I.D. No. 008-001-158-10Address: 2266 Vanco Road,Gallipolis, OH 45631Said real estate was ap-praised at $250,000.00 andcannot be sold for less thantwo-thirds of the appraisedvalue.Terms of SaleThe successful purchased, assoon as his bid is accepted,shall be required to deposit onthe day of the sale, in cash orby check payable to the sheriff,10% of the amount of such ac-cepted bid but in no event lessthan $1,000.00. The balance ofthe purchase price shall bedue and payable to the Sheriffwithin thirty (30) days from thedate of confirmation of sale.The purchaser shall be re-quired to pay interest on saidunpaid balance at 10% per an-num from the date of confirma-tion of the sale to the date ofpayment of the balance unlessthe balance is made withineight (8) days from the date ofsale. “Ohio Revised Code Sec-tion 2327.02(C) requires suc-cessful bidders pay recordingand conveyance fees to thesheriff at the time of sale”.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffBrent A. Saunders, Attorneyfor Plaintiff04/03/13, 04/10/13, 04/17/03Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateState of Ohio, Gallia CountyDavid L. Ball, et alVs.Jason Ball, et alCase No. 12 CV 84In pursuant to an Order of Saledirected to me in the above en-titled action, I will offer for saleat public auction, in the secondfloor meeting room of theCourthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio,in the above name county onFriday, May 3, 2013 at 10:00a.m. The real estate to be soldis more particularly describedas follows:Tract 1:The following described realestate situated in Gallia Countyand State of Ohio, and in OhioTownship, and bounded anddescribed as follows: Begin-ning at a point 20 feet East ofthe West line of 100 acre LotNo. 591: thence Northwestcourse about 6 rods to a stake:thence a Northeast course toSoutheast comer of landsowned by Lillie M. Mooney;thence with Lillie M. Mooney'sline to the Northeast comer ofsaid Lillie M. Mooney's land toa stake; thence a Northwestcourse to the King Road at apoint about 12½ rods North-east of Lillie M. Mooney'sNorthwest comer; thence fol-lowing the King Road and aNortheast course across 100acre Lots Nos. 591 and 590 tothe top of the King Hill to anagreed line between saidCharles Campbell and DavidA. Nolan; thence East with saidline to the East side of 100acre. Lot No. 589; thenceSouth with said East line of LotNo. 589 to the Hannan TraceRoad; thence West along saidHannan Trace Road to a stakein said Hannan Trace Road,the West line of Lot No. 591;thence East to the place of be-ginning (about 20 feet) andcontaining 38 acres, more orless.Tract 2:The following real estate situ-ated in the County of Gallia,State of Ohio, and in the Town-ship of Ohio, Section No. 33,OCP, and bounded and de-scribed as follows: Beginningat a stake in the Northern sideof Hannan Trace Road, theEast line of Lot No. 592;thence Southeast to a privateroad connecting with said Han-nan Trace Road. about 20 feetfrom said stake; thence aNorthwest course about 6rods; thence a Northeastcourse to the Southeast comerof land formerly owned by Lil-lie M. Mooney; thence with theLillie M. Mooney land to astake, the Northeast comer ofLillie M. Mooney's land: thencea Northwest course to the KingRoad at a point about 12½rods Northeast of Lillie M.Mooney's Northwest comer;thence with the King Road aSouthwest course to the Han-nan Trace Road; thence alongthe North side of said HannanTrace Road about 15 to theplace of beginning, containing2 acres, more or less, and be-ing the same land as reservedby B. V. Mooney in conveyinglands to Harry Henry and in-cluding the 1 acre conveyed toLillie M. Mooney by George R.White, about 1½ acres Westside of Lot 591 and about ½acre East side of Lot 592.ALSO, the following land ad-joining the above on the West,viz: Beginning in the middle ofthe King Road at its junctionwith the Hannan Trace Roadrunning a Westerly coursealong the Hannan Trace Roadrunning a Westerly coursealong the Hannan Trace Roadabout 8 rods to a stake; thencea Northeast course about 23½rods to a stake; thence anEasterly course about 35 feetto a stake, the lot line betweenLots Nos. 591 and 592, theWest side of King Road:thence a Southwest coursewith the King Road to the placeof beginning, and containingabout 3/4 of an acre; being thesame more or less, all beingout of the South ends of Lots591 and 592 North of the Han-nan Trace Road, County ofGallia, State of Ohio.Tract 3:The following real estate Situ-ate in Gallia County, Ohio, andin Ohio Township, andbounded and described as fol-lows: Beginning at the North-east comer of lands owned byDavid A. Nolan on the East lineof 100 acre Lot No. 589, on theSouth Side of said road knownas "The King Road", thencefollowing the East line of LotNo. 589, South 700 feet to ablack oak 12 inches in diamet-er, an agreed comer; thenceWest 200 feet to a pine 6inches in diameter, on theSouth side of said "KingRoad", thence the South sideof said King Road, a North-easterly course about 750 feetto the place of beginning, andcontaining 1.6 acres, more orless.Tract 4:The following described realestate Situate in the County ofGallia, and State of Ohio, anddescribed as follows: Begin-ning in the East line of 100acre lot (No. 588) at MathewMooney's Southeast comer inSection (33) in Tract No.1,Range 14, of said county;thence West across said lot tothe West line; thence South tothe Hannan Trace Road;thence East to the East line ofsaid Lot No. 588; thence Northto the place of beginning, con-taining 20 acres, more or less.ALSO, the following describedreal estate situate in GalliaCounty, and State of Ohio, to-wit: Being a part of 100 acre lotNos. 588, 589, 590, and 591,and in Section 33, Range 14,Town 1, lying South of landsconveyed to Andrew J. John-son and North of the CountyRoad known as The King Roadand being a part of lands con-veyed to Lewis Lane by JohnT. Mooney and Mary R.Mooney by Deed bearing dateof December 18, A.D. 1885,recorded in Volume 55, Page414 and 415, and more fullydescribed as follows: Begin-ning at a stake in the South-east comer of lands owned byAndrew J. Johnson; thenceSouth to the County Road;thence West to a stake in theline between Lots 588-589;thence South to the CountyRoad; thence with said CountyRoad to the lands owned byJohn T. Mooney; thence Northwith John T. Mooney land to astake on the South side ofSwan Creek; thence on anagreed line across the abovementioned lots to a stake in theEast line of Lot No. 588, theplace of beginning, containing25 acres, more ,or less.ALSO, 2 acres from the road tothe road. The same being re-served by said Alfred W.Waugh in a Deed made toPerry Lambert.ALL THE FOREGOINGTRACTS and parcels of realestate in combination as asingle and undivided tract ofland situated in Ohio Town-ship is bounded and describedas follows: Beginning in themiddle of the King Road at itsjunction with the Hannan TraceRoad the same point de-scribed as the beginning pointfor a 3/4 of an acre parcel de-scribed in Deed recorded inVolume 119; Page 443, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio, and in Deed recorded inVolume 162, Page 639, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio; thence following theHannan Trace Road in aNorthwesterly direction for 150feet to a point: thence in aNortheasterly direction alongthe line fence bordering theGrace Shafer property for 290feet to a comer post; thencecontinuing along same saidline fence 140 feet to a 24 inchwhite oak tree; thence Northalong line fences 2.350 feet tothe center of Little SwanCreek; thence with the mean-derings of said Little SwanCreek 940 feet to a point;thence leaving the center ofLittle Swan Creek and continu-ing along a fence line in aSoutheasterly direction 730feet to the center of the CountyRoad known as The KingRoad: thence bearing in aSoutherly direction from saidpoint in "The King Road" to acorner post at the edge of saidroad; thence following the me-anderings of the line fencecommencing at the aforesaidcomer post in a Southerly dir-ection through 18 inch twin linetrees beside an unnamedstream and continuing to apoint on the East line of 100acre Lot No. 588, said line alsobeing the East line of SectionNo. 33, and being located2,585 feet South of the afore-said center of ''The King Road"and being the same point pre-viously described as theSoutheast comer of the 20acre Tract NO.4; thence West300 feet to the Hannan TraceRoad; thence West along saidHannan Trace Road 1550 feetto the place of beginning, andcontaining 87.65 acres, moreor less.EXCEPTING THEREOUTAND THEREFROM 9.609acres conveyed to David W.Campbell. a single man, inVolume 357, Page 102, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio.FURTHER EXCEPTINGTHEREOUT AND THERE-FROM 42.337 acres hereto-fore conveyed to JacobSanders and Christina M.Sanders, husband and wife, bydeed of record in Volume 378,page 808, Deed Records ofGallia County, Ohio.SUBJECT to all legal ease-ments and leases.Parcel I.D. # 020-001-535-00Address: King Chapel Road,Crown City, OH 45623Said real estate was ap-praised at $21,000.00 and can-not be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraised value.Terms of SaleThe successful purchased, assoon as his bid is accepted,shall be required to deposit onthe day of the sale, in cash orby check payable to the sheriff,10% of the amount of such ac-cepted bid but in no event lessthan $1,000.00. The balance ofthe purchase price shall bedue and payable to the Sheriffwithin thirty (30) days from thedate of confirmation of sale.The purchaser shall be re-quired to pay interest on saidunpaid balance at 10% per an-num from the date of confirma-tion of the sale to the date ofpayment of the balance unlessthe balance is made withineight (8) days from the date ofsale. “Ohio Revised Code Sec-tion 2327.02(C) requires suc-cessful bidders pay recordingand conveyance fees to thesheriff at the time of sale”.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffBrent A. Saunders, Attorneyfor Plaintiffs04/03/13, 04/10/13, 04/17/03

LEGALS

Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateState of Ohio, Gallia CountyDavid L. Ball, et alVs.Jason Ball, et alCase No. 12 CV 84In pursuant to an Order of Saledirected to me in the above en-titled action, I will offer for saleat public auction, in the secondfloor meeting room of theCourthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio,in the above name county onFriday, May 3, 2013 at 10:00a.m. The real estate to be soldis more particularly describedas follows:Tract 1:The following described realestate situated in Gallia Countyand State of Ohio, and in OhioTownship, and bounded anddescribed as follows: Begin-ning at a point 20 feet East ofthe West line of 100 acre LotNo. 591: thence Northwestcourse about 6 rods to a stake:thence a Northeast course toSoutheast comer of landsowned by Lillie M. Mooney;thence with Lillie M. Mooney'sline to the Northeast comer ofsaid Lillie M. Mooney's land toa stake; thence a Northwestcourse to the King Road at apoint about 12½ rods North-east of Lillie M. Mooney'sNorthwest comer; thence fol-lowing the King Road and aNortheast course across 100acre Lots Nos. 591 and 590 tothe top of the King Hill to anagreed line between saidCharles Campbell and DavidA. Nolan; thence East with saidline to the East side of 100acre. Lot No. 589; thenceSouth with said East line of LotNo. 589 to the Hannan TraceRoad; thence West along saidHannan Trace Road to a stakein said Hannan Trace Road,the West line of Lot No. 591;thence East to the place of be-ginning (about 20 feet) andcontaining 38 acres, more orless.Tract 2:The following real estate situ-ated in the County of Gallia,State of Ohio, and in the Town-ship of Ohio, Section No. 33,OCP, and bounded and de-scribed as follows: Beginningat a stake in the Northern sideof Hannan Trace Road, theEast line of Lot No. 592;thence Southeast to a privateroad connecting with said Han-nan Trace Road. about 20 feetfrom said stake; thence aNorthwest course about 6rods; thence a Northeastcourse to the Southeast comerof land formerly owned by Lil-lie M. Mooney; thence with theLillie M. Mooney land to astake, the Northeast comer ofLillie M. Mooney's land: thencea Northwest course to the KingRoad at a point about 12½rods Northeast of Lillie M.Mooney's Northwest comer;thence with the King Road aSouthwest course to the Han-nan Trace Road; thence alongthe North side of said HannanTrace Road about 15 to theplace of beginning, containing2 acres, more or less, and be-ing the same land as reservedby B. V. Mooney in conveyinglands to Harry Henry and in-cluding the 1 acre conveyed toLillie M. Mooney by George R.White, about 1½ acres Westside of Lot 591 and about ½acre East side of Lot 592.ALSO, the following land ad-joining the above on the West,viz: Beginning in the middle ofthe King Road at its junctionwith the Hannan Trace Roadrunning a Westerly coursealong the Hannan Trace Roadrunning a Westerly coursealong the Hannan Trace Roadabout 8 rods to a stake; thencea Northeast course about 23½rods to a stake; thence anEasterly course about 35 feetto a stake, the lot line betweenLots Nos. 591 and 592, theWest side of King Road:thence a Southwest coursewith the King Road to the placeof beginning, and containingabout 3/4 of an acre; being thesame more or less, all beingout of the South ends of Lots591 and 592 North of the Han-nan Trace Road, County ofGallia, State of Ohio.Tract 3:The following real estate Situ-ate in Gallia County, Ohio, andin Ohio Township, andbounded and described as fol-lows: Beginning at the North-east comer of lands owned byDavid A. Nolan on the East lineof 100 acre Lot No. 589, on theSouth Side of said road knownas "The King Road", thencefollowing the East line of LotNo. 589, South 700 feet to ablack oak 12 inches in diamet-er, an agreed comer; thenceWest 200 feet to a pine 6inches in diameter, on theSouth side of said "KingRoad", thence the South sideof said King Road, a North-easterly course about 750 feetto the place of beginning, andcontaining 1.6 acres, more orless.Tract 4:The following described realestate Situate in the County ofGallia, and State of Ohio, anddescribed as follows: Begin-ning in the East line of 100acre lot (No. 588) at MathewMooney's Southeast comer inSection (33) in Tract No.1,Range 14, of said county;thence West across said lot tothe West line; thence South tothe Hannan Trace Road;thence East to the East line ofsaid Lot No. 588; thence Northto the place of beginning, con-taining 20 acres, more or less.ALSO, the following describedreal estate situate in GalliaCounty, and State of Ohio, to-wit: Being a part of 100 acre lotNos. 588, 589, 590, and 591,and in Section 33, Range 14,Town 1, lying South of landsconveyed to Andrew J. John-son and North of the CountyRoad known as The King Roadand being a part of lands con-veyed to Lewis Lane by JohnT. Mooney and Mary R.Mooney by Deed bearing dateof December 18, A.D. 1885,recorded in Volume 55, Page414 and 415, and more fullydescribed as follows: Begin-ning at a stake in the South-east comer of lands owned byAndrew J. Johnson; thenceSouth to the County Road;thence West to a stake in theline between Lots 588-589;thence South to the CountyRoad; thence with said CountyRoad to the lands owned byJohn T. Mooney; thence Northwith John T. Mooney land to astake on the South side ofSwan Creek; thence on anagreed line across the abovementioned lots to a stake in theEast line of Lot No. 588, theplace of beginning, containing25 acres, more ,or less.ALSO, 2 acres from the road tothe road. The same being re-served by said Alfred W.Waugh in a Deed made toPerry Lambert.ALL THE FOREGOINGTRACTS and parcels of realestate in combination as asingle and undivided tract ofland situated in Ohio Town-ship is bounded and describedas follows: Beginning in themiddle of the King Road at itsjunction with the Hannan TraceRoad the same point de-scribed as the beginning pointfor a 3/4 of an acre parcel de-scribed in Deed recorded inVolume 119; Page 443, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio, and in Deed recorded inVolume 162, Page 639, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio; thence following theHannan Trace Road in aNorthwesterly direction for 150feet to a point: thence in aNortheasterly direction alongthe line fence bordering theGrace Shafer property for 290feet to a comer post; thencecontinuing along same saidline fence 140 feet to a 24 inchwhite oak tree; thence Northalong line fences 2.350 feet tothe center of Little SwanCreek; thence with the mean-derings of said Little SwanCreek 940 feet to a point;thence leaving the center ofLittle Swan Creek and continu-ing along a fence line in aSoutheasterly direction 730feet to the center of the CountyRoad known as The KingRoad: thence bearing in aSoutherly direction from saidpoint in "The King Road" to acorner post at the edge of saidroad; thence following the me-anderings of the line fencecommencing at the aforesaidcomer post in a Southerly dir-ection through 18 inch twin linetrees beside an unnamedstream and continuing to apoint on the East line of 100acre Lot No. 588, said line alsobeing the East line of SectionNo. 33, and being located2,585 feet South of the afore-said center of ''The King Road"and being the same point pre-viously described as theSoutheast comer of the 20acre Tract NO.4; thence West300 feet to the Hannan TraceRoad; thence West along saidHannan Trace Road 1550 feetto the place of beginning, andcontaining 87.65 acres, moreor less.EXCEPTING THEREOUTAND THEREFROM 9.609acres conveyed to David W.Campbell. a single man, inVolume 357, Page 102, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio.FURTHER EXCEPTINGTHEREOUT AND THERE-FROM 42.337 acres hereto-fore conveyed to JacobSanders and Christina M.Sanders, husband and wife, bydeed of record in Volume 378,page 808, Deed Records ofGallia County, Ohio.SUBJECT to all legal ease-ments and leases.Parcel I.D. # 020-001-535-00Address: King Chapel Road,Crown City, OH 45623Said real estate was ap-praised at $21,000.00 and can-not be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraised value.Terms of SaleThe successful purchased, assoon as his bid is accepted,shall be required to deposit onthe day of the sale, in cash orby check payable to the sheriff,10% of the amount of such ac-cepted bid but in no event lessthan $1,000.00. The balance ofthe purchase price shall bedue and payable to the Sheriffwithin thirty (30) days from thedate of confirmation of sale.The purchaser shall be re-quired to pay interest on saidunpaid balance at 10% per an-num from the date of confirma-tion of the sale to the date ofpayment of the balance unlessthe balance is made withineight (8) days from the date ofsale. “Ohio Revised Code Sec-tion 2327.02(C) requires suc-cessful bidders pay recordingand conveyance fees to thesheriff at the time of sale”.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffBrent A. Saunders, Attorneyfor Plaintiffs04/03/13, 04/10/13, 04/17/03

LEGALS

Sheriff’s Sale of Real EstateState of Ohio, Gallia CountyDavid L. Ball, et alVs.Jason Ball, et alCase No. 12 CV 84In pursuant to an Order of Saledirected to me in the above en-titled action, I will offer for saleat public auction, in the secondfloor meeting room of theCourthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio,in the above name county onFriday, May 3, 2013 at 10:00a.m. The real estate to be soldis more particularly describedas follows:Tract 1:The following described realestate situated in Gallia Countyand State of Ohio, and in OhioTownship, and bounded anddescribed as follows: Begin-ning at a point 20 feet East ofthe West line of 100 acre LotNo. 591: thence Northwestcourse about 6 rods to a stake:thence a Northeast course toSoutheast comer of landsowned by Lillie M. Mooney;thence with Lillie M. Mooney'sline to the Northeast comer ofsaid Lillie M. Mooney's land toa stake; thence a Northwestcourse to the King Road at apoint about 12½ rods North-east of Lillie M. Mooney'sNorthwest comer; thence fol-lowing the King Road and aNortheast course across 100acre Lots Nos. 591 and 590 tothe top of the King Hill to anagreed line between saidCharles Campbell and DavidA. Nolan; thence East with saidline to the East side of 100acre. Lot No. 589; thenceSouth with said East line of LotNo. 589 to the Hannan TraceRoad; thence West along saidHannan Trace Road to a stakein said Hannan Trace Road,the West line of Lot No. 591;thence East to the place of be-ginning (about 20 feet) andcontaining 38 acres, more orless.Tract 2:The following real estate situ-ated in the County of Gallia,State of Ohio, and in the Town-ship of Ohio, Section No. 33,OCP, and bounded and de-scribed as follows: Beginningat a stake in the Northern sideof Hannan Trace Road, theEast line of Lot No. 592;thence Southeast to a privateroad connecting with said Han-nan Trace Road. about 20 feetfrom said stake; thence aNorthwest course about 6rods; thence a Northeastcourse to the Southeast comerof land formerly owned by Lil-lie M. Mooney; thence with theLillie M. Mooney land to astake, the Northeast comer ofLillie M. Mooney's land: thencea Northwest course to the KingRoad at a point about 12½rods Northeast of Lillie M.Mooney's Northwest comer;thence with the King Road aSouthwest course to the Han-nan Trace Road; thence alongthe North side of said HannanTrace Road about 15 to theplace of beginning, containing2 acres, more or less, and be-ing the same land as reservedby B. V. Mooney in conveyinglands to Harry Henry and in-cluding the 1 acre conveyed toLillie M. Mooney by George R.White, about 1½ acres Westside of Lot 591 and about ½acre East side of Lot 592.ALSO, the following land ad-joining the above on the West,viz: Beginning in the middle ofthe King Road at its junctionwith the Hannan Trace Roadrunning a Westerly coursealong the Hannan Trace Roadrunning a Westerly coursealong the Hannan Trace Roadabout 8 rods to a stake; thencea Northeast course about 23½rods to a stake; thence anEasterly course about 35 feetto a stake, the lot line betweenLots Nos. 591 and 592, theWest side of King Road:thence a Southwest coursewith the King Road to the placeof beginning, and containingabout 3/4 of an acre; being thesame more or less, all beingout of the South ends of Lots591 and 592 North of the Han-nan Trace Road, County ofGallia, State of Ohio.Tract 3:The following real estate Situ-ate in Gallia County, Ohio, andin Ohio Township, andbounded and described as fol-lows: Beginning at the North-east comer of lands owned byDavid A. Nolan on the East lineof 100 acre Lot No. 589, on theSouth Side of said road knownas "The King Road", thencefollowing the East line of LotNo. 589, South 700 feet to ablack oak 12 inches in diamet-er, an agreed comer; thenceWest 200 feet to a pine 6inches in diameter, on theSouth side of said "KingRoad", thence the South sideof said King Road, a North-easterly course about 750 feetto the place of beginning, andcontaining 1.6 acres, more orless.Tract 4:The following described realestate Situate in the County ofGallia, and State of Ohio, anddescribed as follows: Begin-ning in the East line of 100acre lot (No. 588) at MathewMooney's Southeast comer inSection (33) in Tract No.1,Range 14, of said county;thence West across said lot tothe West line; thence South tothe Hannan Trace Road;thence East to the East line ofsaid Lot No. 588; thence Northto the place of beginning, con-taining 20 acres, more or less.ALSO, the following describedreal estate situate in GalliaCounty, and State of Ohio, to-wit: Being a part of 100 acre lotNos. 588, 589, 590, and 591,and in Section 33, Range 14,Town 1, lying South of landsconveyed to Andrew J. John-son and North of the CountyRoad known as The King Roadand being a part of lands con-veyed to Lewis Lane by JohnT. Mooney and Mary R.Mooney by Deed bearing dateof December 18, A.D. 1885,recorded in Volume 55, Page414 and 415, and more fullydescribed as follows: Begin-ning at a stake in the South-east comer of lands owned byAndrew J. Johnson; thenceSouth to the County Road;thence West to a stake in theline between Lots 588-589;thence South to the CountyRoad; thence with said CountyRoad to the lands owned byJohn T. Mooney; thence Northwith John T. Mooney land to astake on the South side ofSwan Creek; thence on anagreed line across the abovementioned lots to a stake in theEast line of Lot No. 588, theplace of beginning, containing25 acres, more ,or less.ALSO, 2 acres from the road tothe road. The same being re-served by said Alfred W.Waugh in a Deed made toPerry Lambert.ALL THE FOREGOINGTRACTS and parcels of realestate in combination as asingle and undivided tract ofland situated in Ohio Town-ship is bounded and describedas follows: Beginning in themiddle of the King Road at itsjunction with the Hannan TraceRoad the same point de-scribed as the beginning pointfor a 3/4 of an acre parcel de-scribed in Deed recorded inVolume 119; Page 443, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio, and in Deed recorded inVolume 162, Page 639, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio; thence following theHannan Trace Road in aNorthwesterly direction for 150feet to a point: thence in aNortheasterly direction alongthe line fence bordering theGrace Shafer property for 290feet to a comer post; thencecontinuing along same saidline fence 140 feet to a 24 inchwhite oak tree; thence Northalong line fences 2.350 feet tothe center of Little SwanCreek; thence with the mean-derings of said Little SwanCreek 940 feet to a point;thence leaving the center ofLittle Swan Creek and continu-ing along a fence line in aSoutheasterly direction 730feet to the center of the CountyRoad known as The KingRoad: thence bearing in aSoutherly direction from saidpoint in "The King Road" to acorner post at the edge of saidroad; thence following the me-anderings of the line fencecommencing at the aforesaidcomer post in a Southerly dir-ection through 18 inch twin linetrees beside an unnamedstream and continuing to apoint on the East line of 100acre Lot No. 588, said line alsobeing the East line of SectionNo. 33, and being located2,585 feet South of the afore-said center of ''The King Road"and being the same point pre-viously described as theSoutheast comer of the 20acre Tract NO.4; thence West300 feet to the Hannan TraceRoad; thence West along saidHannan Trace Road 1550 feetto the place of beginning, andcontaining 87.65 acres, moreor less.EXCEPTING THEREOUTAND THEREFROM 9.609acres conveyed to David W.Campbell. a single man, inVolume 357, Page 102, DeedRecords of Gallia County,Ohio.FURTHER EXCEPTINGTHEREOUT AND THERE-FROM 42.337 acres hereto-fore conveyed to JacobSanders and Christina M.Sanders, husband and wife, bydeed of record in Volume 378,page 808, Deed Records ofGallia County, Ohio.SUBJECT to all legal ease-ments and leases.Parcel I.D. # 020-001-535-00Address: King Chapel Road,Crown City, OH 45623Said real estate was ap-praised at $21,000.00 and can-not be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraised value.Terms of SaleThe successful purchased, assoon as his bid is accepted,shall be required to deposit onthe day of the sale, in cash orby check payable to the sheriff,10% of the amount of such ac-cepted bid but in no event lessthan $1,000.00. The balance ofthe purchase price shall bedue and payable to the Sheriffwithin thirty (30) days from thedate of confirmation of sale.The purchaser shall be re-quired to pay interest on saidunpaid balance at 10% per an-num from the date of confirma-tion of the sale to the date ofpayment of the balance unlessthe balance is made withineight (8) days from the date ofsale. “Ohio Revised Code Sec-tion 2327.02(C) requires suc-cessful bidders pay recordingand conveyance fees to thesheriff at the time of sale”.Joseph R. Browning, GalliaCounty SheriffBrent A. Saunders, Attorneyfor Plaintiffs04/03/13, 04/10/13, 04/17/03Notice to BiddersSealed proposals for the con-struction of a slip repair onShoal Creek Rd. will be re-ceived by Guyan TWP at thefiscal officer’s home, 1042Rocky Fork Rd. Crown City,Ohio 45623 until 4:00 pm.Monday, April 15th, 2013.Guyan TWP will hold a specialmeeting on April 15, 2013 at5:00 pm to open and readsealed bids.Plans, Specifications, andBid/Contract Forms may be se-cured from Wendy Halley,Fiscal Officer, 740-256-9083.All bidders must furnish, as apart of their bid, all materials,tools, labor, and equipment.Only ODOT prequalified con-tractors will be eligible to sub-mit bids. Each bid must be ac-companied by either a bidbond in an amount of 100% ofthe bid amount with a suretysatisfactory to the aforesaidGuyan TWP or by certifiedcheck, cashiers check or letterof credit upon a solvent bank inan amount of not less than10% of the bid amount in favorof the aforesaid Guyan TWP.Bid Bonds shall be accompan-ied by Proof of Authority of theofficial or agent signing thebond.“Domestic steel use require-ments as specified in section153.011 of the revised codeapply to this project. Copies ofthe section 153.011 of the re-vised code can be obtainedfrom any of the offices of thedepartment of administrativeservices.”Bids shall be sealed andmarked as “Bid for ShoalCreek Rd slip repair” andmailed or delivered to : GuyanTownship 1042 Rocky Fork RdCrown City, Ohio 45623.Attention of bidders is called toall of the requirements con-tained in the bid packet, vari-ous insurance requirements,State prevailing wage require-ments, various equal opportun-ity provisions, and the require-ment for a payment bond anperformance bond of 100% ofthe contract price.No bidder may withdraw hisbid within thirty (30) days afterthe actual date of the openingthereof. Guyan TWP reservesthe right to waive any informal-ities or reject any or all bids.Guyan TWP adheres to allstate policies pertaining toHandicapped Accessibility andEqual Employment Opportunit-ies.4/5 4/10

Lost & Found

FOUND: Bloodhound onThomas Ridge Rd 304-895-8763

Notices

NOTICE OHIO VALLEYPUBLISHING CO.

Recommends that you doBusiness with People you

know, and NOT to send Moneythrough the Mail until you have

Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have beenplaced in ads at the

Gallipolis Daily Tribunemust be picked within

30 days. Any picturesthat are not picked upwill be discarded.

AUCTION / ESTATE /YARD SALE

SERVICES

Lawn Service

Lawn Care Service, Mowing,Trimming, Free estimates. Call7 4 0 - 4 4 1 - 1 3 3 3 o r740-645-0546Lawn Mowing in Point Pleas-ant, mason, or New Havenarea. Call Jess Roush1(304)593-1886 or 304)882-3285McComas Mowing will Mow &Weed Eat in the Gallipolis &Point Pleasant Areas. Free Es-timates Call 740-446-6834 or740)339-3815

Professional Services

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.OH and Mason Co. WV. RonE v a n s J a c k s o n , O H800-537-9528

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Money To Lend

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contactthe Ohio Division of Financial In-stitutions Office of Consumer Af-fairs BEFORE you refinance yourhome or obtain a loan. BEWAREof requests for any large advancepayments of fees or insurance.Call the Office of Consumer Affi-ars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 tolearn if the mortgage broker orlender is properly licensed. (Thisis a public service announcementfrom the Ohio Valley PublishingCompany)

EMPLOYMENT

Drivers & Delivery

Immediate opening- Full-time,temp cargo van driver, occa-sional weekend days. Must beat least 21, have reliable trans-portation, valid driver’s licensewith minimal history of movingviolations, and clear back-ground check. $$10-12/hr.DOE. To apply go tohttps://jobs.tylertech.com andselect Driver/Gallipolis, OH.EOER & J Trucking in Marietta, OHis hiring Semi-Dump & BulkTank Drivers for new routesl .Applicants must be at least 23yrs perfer min of 2 yr of com-mercial driving exp. CleanMVR, Haz-mat Cert.with CDL-A Excellent health & dental in-surance, 401(K), Vacation, Bo-nus pays and safety awards.Contact Kenton at 1-800-462-9365 E.O.E.

Education

VACANCY: Director of Career-Technical Education. Master’sDegree in Administration. OhioAdministrative Licensure (Prin-cipal or Vocational Director).Career-Technical EducationAdministrative Experience De-sired. Adult Education Admin-istrative Experience Desired.CONTACT: Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD (740) 245-5334,Ext. 256. Email:[email protected]

Help Wanted General

Adm. AssistantMust Have Accounting-quick-books-computer experience-Apply in person-French CityHomes. 269 Upper River Rd.Gallipolis, Oh.

CUSTOMERSERVICE REP

WE HAVE ANOPENING FOR

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPIN OUR

POINT PLEASANT OFFICE

SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTMUST BE PEOPLE ORI-

ENTED, WITH PLEASANTTELEPHONE ETIQUETTE,

PROFESSIONAL ANDDEPENDABLE.

MUST HAVE EXPERIENCEWITH COMPUTERS AND

ENJOY WORKINGWITH NUMBERS.

FOR EMPLOYMENTCONSIDERATION,

PLEASE SEND RESUMETO:

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPGALLIPOLIS DAILY

TRIBUNE825 THIRD AVE

GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631OR EMAIL

[email protected] for a small construc-tion crew for residential re-pairs. Must have own truck &tools Call 1(740)534-2838

Mechanics

Ability to troubleshoot and re-pair diesel and gas engines.Knowledge of two and fourcycle engines. Knowledge ofhydraulics and 12 volt electric-al systems. Ability to performlight welding and fabrication.Self - motivated and work withlittle supervision. Must be ableto maintain proper records.Must maintain a clean and safework environment. Must havevalid driver's license. Send re-sume to P.O Box 416

EDUCATION

Business & Trade School

Gallipolis Career College(Careers Close To Home)Call Today! 740-446-4367

1-800-214-0452gallipoliscareercollege.edu

Accredited Member Accrediting Councilfor Independent Colleges and Schools

1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES

Houses For Sale

2001 16 x 70 2 BR, 2 BA mo-bile home on 2.6 acres, with acabin. 50810 Bigley Ridge Rd,Long Bottom, OH. $55,000OBO 252-564-48053BR, 2BA, Family Room, withfireplace, new flooring,$109,000. Tara Estates, Addis-on OH 740-339-3224Fixer Upper - @ Edgemont Dr,Gallipolis asking $50k Make usan offer Call 441-5509

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses

1 & 2 bedroom apartments &h o u s e s , N o p e t s ,740-992-22181 Bedroom Efficiency Apart-ment with Garage-BehindFarmers Bank $400 per monthPh: 740-645-57851 BR Apartment downtownGallipolis. $400 Month plusDeposit. No Pets 740-446-4383 or 740-256-66372 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.740-418-7504 or 740-988-61302 BR upstairs apt, Pomeroy,$525 mo, $525 dep, no pets,no smoking. M-Tu-W-Sa, 740-992-2815, Th & Fri, 992-5319RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BRtownhouse apartments, alsorenting 2 & 3BR houses. Call441-1111.Apartment available Now. Ri-verbend Apts. New HavenWva. Now accepting applica-tions for HUD -subsidized, Onebedroom Apts. Utilities in-cluded. Based on 30% of ad-justed income. Call 304-882-3121. Available for Senior andDisabled people.

FIRST MONTH FREE2 & 3 BR apts$425 mo & up

sec dep $300 & upAC, W/D hook-uptenant pays elec

EHOEllm View Apts304-882-3017

Pleasant Valley Apartments isnow taking applications for 2,3, & 4 Bedroom HUD Subsid-ized Apartments. Applications

are taken Monday throughThursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Of-

fice is located at 1151 Ever-green Drive, Point Pleasant,

WV. (304) 675-5806.

Spring Valley Green Apart-ments 1 BR at $425 Month.446-1599.

Houses For Rent

Lg house, share with retiredman, all utilites pd, $300 mo.740-853-2700

MANUFACTUREDHOUSING

Rentals

3-Bdrm Trailer for Rent on GunClub Rd, New Haven $450/moand $250/dep. Call304-882-3121 or 304-593-1547

Sales

R e p o ' s A v a i l a b l e C a l l740)446-3570

Repo doublewide on land easyfinancing 877-310-2577

RESORT PROPERTY

ANIMALS

Livestock

4-H Feeder Calves and Re-placement Heifers. $800304-675-4514

Pets

FREE to a Good Home 1/2Mastiff & 1/2 Boxer female,she is housebroke. 740)339-0947

Want To Buy

Oiler's Towing now buyingJunk Cars Paying $1.00 to$700.00 388-0011 or 441-7870

AGRICULTURE

AUTOMOTIVE

Miscellaneous

Poulan Riding Mower 42in cut.$400 304-675-4514

AUTOMOTIVEAFTER MARKET

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Miscellaneous

Jet Aeration Motorsrepaired, new & rebuilt in stock.Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

DISH NETWORK.Starting at $19.99/month (for12 mos.) & High Speed Inter-net starting at $14.95/month

(where available.) SAVE! Askabout SAME DAY Installation!CALL Now! 1-888-476-0098

Want To Buy

Want to buy Junk Cars, Call740-388-0884Absolute Top Dollar - silver/goldcoins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jew-elry, dental gold, pre 1935 US cur-rency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,Gallipolis. 446-2842

SERVICE / BUSINESSDIRECTORY

Garden Services/ Center

Tree Seedlings for Sale forspring planting. ClementsState Tree Nursery, WestColumbia, WV, 304-675-1820.www.wvforestry.com

Handyman

Retired man will mow lawn, doyard work, painting.740-853-2700

Miscellaneous

BASEMENT WATERPROOF-ING. Unconditional LifetimeGuarantee. Local references.Established in 1975. Call24hrs (740)446-0870. RogersBasement Waterproofing

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Meigs rallies past Lady Buckeyes, 11-9Bryan [email protected]

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The Meigs softball team rallied from a six-run deficit by scoring eight unanswered runs Monday night en route to an 11-9 victory over visiting Nelsonville-York in a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division matchup in Meigs County.

The Lady Marauders (6-2, 2-0 TVC Ohio) trailed 9-3 midway through the fourth inning, but the hosts plated a run in the bottom half of the fourth before erupting for six scores in the fifth — giving MHS its first lead of the night at 10-9. Meigs tacked on an insurance run in the bottom of the sixth, which ultimately wrapped up the scoring at its two-run outcome.

The Lady Marauders — with the triumph — picked up their fifth con-secutive victory of the season and also remained unbeaten in league play.

NYHS fell to 0-3 overall and 0-1 in TVC Ohio play with the setback.

The Lady Buckeyes sent nine batters to the plate in the second inning, which resulted in an early 4-0 edge. MHS countered with three runs in the bot-tom of the third to cut its deficit down to a run at 4-3 through three complete.

Nelsonville-York again sent nine bat-ters to the plate in the top of the fourth, which led to a five-run output and a 9-3 lead through three-and-a-half frames. Meigs followed with a run in its half of the fourth to close to within 9-4 after four frames.

The Lady Marauders made their big charge of the night in the bottom of the fifth, as the hosts sent 10 batters to the plate — which resulted in six runs on five hits and an error. That resurgence gave MHS a 10-9 edge through five complete.

An error, a wild pitch and a fielder’s choice allowed the hosts to tack on an

insurance run in the sixth for an 11-9 edge. NYHS left runners stranded on second and third in the seventh, and Meigs ultimately got out of that jam to hold for the two-run triumph.

The Lady Buckeyes outhit MHS by an 11-9 overall margin and committed two errors in the setback, compared to three errors by the Lady Marauders. Haley English was the winning pitcher of record, while Kelly took the tough-luck loss for the guests.

Tess Phelps and Harley Fox each led the hosts with two hits, followed by English, Liddy Fish, Allyson Davis, Ariel Ellis and Lindsey Patterson with a safety apiece. Fox drove in four RBIs for the victors, while Ellis scored three times for the Lady Marauders.

Kelly led NYHS with three hits, two RBIs and two runs scored, including a two-run homer in the top of the fourth. Phillips and Holley also had two hits apiece in the setback.

Lady Knights top Logan, 5-1Bryan [email protected]

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Now that’s a one-two punch.

Karissa Cochran and Madison Barker combined to allow just three hits and zero earned runs, and the Point Pleasant softball team picked up its second straight win following a 5-1 victory over visiting Logan in a non-conference match-up Monday night in Mason County.

The Lady Knights (7-5) were victimized by a walk and an error in the top of the first, which ultimately resulted in the Lady Wild-cats only score of the night. PPHS, however, countered by pounding out nine hits and five runs over the next five frames, which allowed the hosts to rally back and pick up the convincing four-run triumph.

Point Pleasant received four solid innings from starter Karissa Cochran, who allowed just two hits, two walks and an unearned run while fanning three in the winning decision. Barker surrendered zero runs, zero hits and two walks in three innings of relief work.

The Lady Knights out-hit Logan (5-5) by a siz-able 9-3 overall margin

and committed two of the three errors in the contest. The hosts stranded eight runners on base, while the Lady Wildcats left just four on the bags.

Toppings led the game off with a walk, then a two-out error allowed her to score — giving LHS its only lead of the night at 1-0. The score remained that way until the bot-tom of the second, when PPHS plated three runs to claim a 3-1 advantage.

Cochran led the inning off with a double and later scored on a single by Kaci Riffle, tying the game at one. Sarah Hussell re-ceived a bases-loaded walk that plated Megan Davis for a 2-1 edge, then Makinley Higginbotham singled home Riffle to make it a 3-1 contest through two complete.

Madison Barker singled home Davis in the third for a 4-1 edge, then Co-chran doubled in Hussell in the fourth to wrap up the 5-1 outcome.

Cochran led the hosts with three hits, followed by Higginbotham with two safeties. Riffle, Barker and Bekah Darst also added a hit apiece for the victors. Toppings led LHS with two hits and Hall also had a safety in the setback.

Meigs bashes Buckeyes, 8-2Alex [email protected]

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — K’s aplenty.The Meigs baseball team took an 8-2 victory over

Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division guest Nelson-ville-York, a game that featured 13 strikeouts by Ma-rauders pitching.

Meigs (4-5, 1-1 TVC Ohio) earned a back-to-back runs in the second inning on passed balls, giving the Marauders the 2-0 advantage in the second frame. MHS scored another run on a passed ball in the bottom of the third, and added two more runs in the fourth.

The Maroon and Gold scored three more runs in the home half of the sixth and the lead was 8-0. Nelsonville-York (0-4, 0-2) avoided the shut-out by scoring a pair of runs in the top of the seventh but it was too little, too late and Meigs claimed the 8-2 victory.

The Meigs offense was led by Treay McKin-ney with two hits, followed by Matt Casci, Tay-lor Rowe and Ray Johnson with one hit each. McKinney and Rowe each had two runs batted in, while Brandon McCraw had one RBI. McK-inney scored a game-high two runs, followed by Casci, Michael Davis, Bradley Helton, Ty Phelps, Wyatt King and Austin Paugh with one apiece. Davis and Rowe each had a stolen base in the triumph.

Young led the Buckeyes with two hits, fol-lowed by Walker and Seel with one each. Walker and Seel each scored a run for NYHS, while Dunn had the lone RBI.

Meigs will look to sweep the Buckeyes on April 25th when the Maroon and Gold travel to Nelsonville.