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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
Issue 4, Volume 73
Tuesday, January 8, 2019 s 50¢
Snowville Creamery holds steady
Local FFA
member
competes
at state
By Natalie Porter
Special to the Sentinel
Photos by Dorothy J. Countryman| Rural Life
Melody Holler Farm’s A2 Guernseys enjoying a respite from the rain.
Struggling dairy market
poses challenges
RACINE — Austin
Rose, a member of the
Racine Southern FFA,
recently competed in the
state job interview competition.
The District 10 FFA
Job Interview CDE’s
were held on the 17th
of November 2018 at
Symmes Valley High
School.
What is a Job Interview CDE you may ask?
The Job Interview CDE
is an interview consisting of a conversation
between a job applicant
and a representative
of an employer which
is conducted to assess
whether the applicant
should be hired. The
Job Interview Career
Development Event is
designed for FFA members to develop, practice and demonstrate
skills needed in seeking
employment in the agricultural industry. Each
See FFA | 5
By Dorothy J. Countryman
by Lin and Eric Karcher, who
have been at this location since
2015.
The creamery is one of the
POMEROY — Even though
largest employers in Meigs
the domestic dairy market
County with about 30 staff
is shrinking and prices are
members, including the pickdepressed, Snowville Creamup and delivery drivers. It is
ery’s niche marketing strategy
“bursting at the seams,” accordhas made the 11-year-old busiing to Heather Fuston, who
ness a success. Located near
serves as public relations directhe Meigs-Athens county line
tor and community educator for
on a steep and winding state
highway, the brainchild of War- the company. Snowville continues to operate with the Taylors’
ren and Victoria Taylor sends
minimally processed dairy prod- set of values: pay the farmers a
sustainable wage, keep the cows
ucts to the state’s four major
metropolitan areas as well as to as healthy as possible, focus on
the taste. Even though Warren
Indianapolis, Washington, DC
is engaged in other projects
and New Jersey.
these days, Virginia is a visible
It began as the Taylors were
and regular presence at the cenrearing their children in the
ter of operations. The creamery
area. They were thrilled with
is not a cooperative. Fuston said
the taste of milk produced by
that two other farmers—one
their neighbors at The Red
in Ohio and one in Mason,
Brick Dairy. Warren, a dairy
WV—are currently part of the
technician and dairy design
production group. After a threeengineer by trade, was so
year transition period that has
intrigued he decided to find a
just ended, all of the cows in the
way to share that milk with as
many consumers as possible. He operation are A2/A2 cows.
The secret behind the taste
purchased an acre in the middle
is a combination of factors:
of the farm, and began to plan
the cows are primarily grass
and then design a new creamery. Today, Snowville is still on and forage fed; over the past
three years the herds that comits original site. The property
prise the creamery’s base have
surrounding the creamery is
Melody Holler Farm, and is run become solely A2/A2 cows, and
dcountryman@aimmediamidwest.com
INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Smith falls
short in
Speaker
bid
Staff Report
address on State Route 143 for a
well-being check. Deputies contacted
the individual in question and was
advised that everything was okay. No
further action.
Deputy Leggett was dispatched to
the 124 Mart due to a report of possible drug activity. Upon investigation
the report was unfounded. No further
action.
Deputies Leggett and Campbell
responded to an address on Pageville
Road for a report of a possible domestic disturbance. It was discovered that
there had been an argument, but no
violence, however both parties agreed
to separate. No further action.
Deputies Leggett and Campbell
responded to a complaint of a vehicle
COLUMBUS, Ohio —
A divided Ohio House
has chosen state Rep.
Larry
Householder as
speaker,
ending a
monthslong, contentious
Smith
fight over
the leadership position.
Householder was
elected House speaker
Monday for the second
time in his career. The
Republican from Perry
County received 52 votes
to edge out GOP state
Rep. Ryan Smith, of Gallia County. A 50-vote
majority was needed for
election. Smith received
45 votes in the initial voting on Monday.
Smith was selected in
June to fill the leadership
position left vacant in
the last legislative session when Speaker Cliff
Rosenberger resigned
in March amid an FBI
probe.
In nominating Smith
for the continued speakership, Rep. Sarah Latourette (R-Bainbridge
Twp.) said Smith has
earned the respect of his
peers by his work in the
house.
She added that when
not working in Columbus
he is back home spending
time with his family.
See RECORD | 3
See SMITH | 5
Snowville’s processing plant is located in the center of Melody Holler farm.
the milk is processed at the
lowest temperatures possible
to keep it nutrient-dense. “This
is the real stuff,” Fuston said.
“We’re trying to maintain milk
as it should be.”
Even this time of year, the
cows are out foraging. Their
diet is supplemented with a
minimal amount of non-GMO
grain. “We try to keep that at
about 10 percent of their diet,
but we want them to be as
healthy as possible,” Fuston
noted, and added that the farmers who manage the three herds
make feed decisions based on
conditions at their own farms.
See CREAMERY | 3
FOR THE RECORD
Staff Report
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thoughts.
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
Day Shift
Dec. 3
Deputies served papers to six
addresses in Middleport, Pomeroy,
and Racine.
Deputy Leggett responded to an
address on Nichols Road due to a
report of yelling. Upon investigating,
this was unfounded as the residents
of the address in question were not
home. No further action.
A deputy responded to Main Street
in Rutland for a death investigation.
It was found to be natural causes. No
further action was taken
Dec. 4
Deputies were dispatched to an
�OBITUARIES/NEWS
2 Tuesday, January 8, 2019
OBITUARIES
ALICE E. WISE
MIDDLEPORT —
Alice E. Wise, 81, of
Middleport, Ohio, was
called home to be with
her Lord, Monday, Jan. 7,
2019, at Abbyshire Place,
Bidwell, Ohio.
Born Aug. 1, 1937, at
Glouster, Ohio, to the
late Marion and Jessie
Rutter, she was a homemaker to her family and
attended the Independent
Holiness Church, Rutland, Ohio.
She is survived by her
husband William C. Wise;
children, William Junior
(Stephanie) Wise, Brenda
(Greg) Burnem, John
(Melissa Wise) Wise,
and Tommy Wise; sisters, Maxine Hammond,
Freda Hammond, and
Linda Hammond; three
grandchildren; three
great grandchildren; several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by
brothers and sisters.
Services are Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2019, at 1
p.m., at Independent
Holiness Church, Rutland, Ohio. Burial to follow at Rutland Cemetery,
Rutland, Ohio. Family
will receive friends from
noon till time of services
Wednesday at the church.
The family ask that
instead of flowers donations be made to Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, Ohio, to help with
Alice’s expenses.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchfieldfuneralhome.com.
ROUSH
MILLWOOD — Paul Eugene Roush, 71, of Millwood, died Jan. 4, in Camden Clark Medical Center,
Parkersburg.
The service will be at 11 a.m., Friday, Jan. 11 in the
Casto Funeral Home, Evans. Entombment will follow
in Jackson County Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Cottageville. Visitation will be Thursday from 5-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.
GRAY
POINT PLEASANT — Reginald “Reg” E. Gray, 87,
of Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Jan. 6.
Services will be held at Deal Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, Tuesday, Jan. 8 at 1 p.m. with Pastors Fred
Sparks and Jonathon Pinson officiating. Burial will
follow in Forest Hills Cemetery in Letart. Friends may
visit the family at the funeral home from noon-1 p.m.,
prior to the service.
BALES, SR.
WELLSTON — Marvin Lee Bales, Sr., age 91, of
Wellston, passed away Saturday, January 5, 2019 at
the V.A. Medical Center in Chillicothe.
Calling hours will be Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. at
the McWilliams Funeral Home in Wellston. Funeral
service will be Friday at 11 a.m. at the McWilliams
Funeral Home with Pastor Barry Benson officiating.
Burial will follow in the Salem Cemetery.
NITZ
MIDDLEPORT — Shannon Lee Nitz, 43, of
Middleport, Ohio, died Jan. 2, in Holzer-Meigs E.R.,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The service will be at 11 a.m., Wednesday, Jan. 9
at the Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason. Burial
will follow in the Union Cemetery, Letart. Visitation
will be from 10 a.m. until the time of service at the
funeral home.
IN BRIEF
3 arrested in
triple killing
news conference.
Shots rang out at Gable
House Bowl in the city of
Torrance on Friday night.
Video showed groups of
TORRANCE, Calif.
people involved in a fight
(AP) — Police say
as the shooting broke out.
they’ve made an arrest
Officers responding
following a shooting that
to 911 calls found seven
killed three men and
people with gunshot
injured four others durwounds. Three men were
ing a brawl at a popular
Los Angeles-area bowling pronounced dead at the
scene.
alley and karaoke bar.
Police haven’t released
Torrance police Sgt.
Ronald Harris confirmed details about what led
to the shooting but witan arrest Monday but
declined to release further nesses say it stemmed
details until a 4 p.m. PST from the fight.
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Daily Sentinel
Ginsburg misses arguments
By Mark Sherman
tering Cancer Center
in New York. The court
said in a release issued
the day of the surgery
WASHINGTON —
that doctors found “no
Justice Ruth Bader
evidence of any remainGinsburg is missing
ing disease” and scans
arguments for the first
taken before the surgery
time in more than 25
showed no cancerous
years as she recuperates
growths elsewhere in
from cancer surgery last
her body. No additional
month, the Supreme
treatment is currently
Court said.
planned, the court said.
Ginsburg was not on
Appointed by Presithe bench as the court
dent Bill Clinton in
met Monday to hear
arguments. It was not
J. Scott Applewhite | AP 1993, Ginsburg rebuffed
clear when she would
Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, nominated by President suggestions from some
Bill Clinton, sits with fellow Supreme Court justices for a group liberals that she should
return to the court,
portrait Nov. 30 at the Supreme Court Building in Washington. step down in the first
which will hear more
The Supreme Court says Ginsburg is missing arguments for the two years of President
cases Tuesday and
first time in more than 25 years as she recuperates from cancer
Barack Obama’s second
Wednesday, and again
surgery last month.
term, when Democrats
next week.
controlled the Senate
tively quickly. In 2009,
transcripts of oral arguCourt spokeswoman
and would have been
she was at the court for
ments.”
Kathy Arberg said the
likely to confirm her sucarguments on Feb. 23,
Ginsburg had two
85-year-old justice is
18 days after surgery for cessor.
earlier cancer surgeries
continuing to recuperShe already has hired
pancreatic cancer.
ate and work from home in 1999 and 2009 that
clerks for the term that
Weeks after her fall
did not cause her to miss
after doctors removed
extends into 2020, indicourt sessions. She also in November, Ginsburg
two cancerous growths
cating she has no plans
was asking questions at
has broken ribs on at
from her left lung on
to retire.
high court arguments,
least two occasions.
Dec. 21.
If she did step down,
The court said doctors speaking at a naturalizaGinsburg was disPresident Donald Trump
tion ceremony for new
charged from a New York found the growths on
citizens and being inter- would have another
Ginsburg’s lung when
hospital on Dec. 25.
opportunity to move a
viewed at screenings of
she was being treated
Chief Justice John
the new movie about her, conservative court even
for fractured ribs she
Roberts said in the
more to the right. On
“On the Basis of Sex.”
suffered in a fall at her
courtroom Monday
the day she had surgery,
Her latest surgery
office on Nov. 7.
that Ginsburg would
Trump tweeted his wishwas a procedure called
After past health
participate in deciding
es for Ginsburg’s “full
a pulmonary lobectomy
the argued cases “on the scares, Ginsburg has
and speedy recovery!”
come back to work rela- at Memorial Sloan Ketbasis of the briefs and
Associated Press
Trump plans border visit as shutdown continues
By Catherine Lucey
and Lisa Mascaro
Associated Press
WASHINGTON —
With no breakthrough in
sight to end the partial
government shutdown,
President Donald Trump
plans a Tuesday night
address to the nation
and a Thursday visit the
U.S.-Mexico border to
highlight his demands
for a border wall. Newly
empowered House Democrats — and at least a
few Republican senators
— are stepping up pressure on Trump and GOP
lawmakers to reopen the
government.
Trump said he would
discuss the “Humanitarian and National
Security crisis on our
Southern Border” at 9
p.m. EST. He maintains
that more than $5 billion
for a wall is necessary to
secure the border. White
House press secretary
Sarah Huckabee Sanders
tweeted Monday that
Trump will use the visit
to “meet with those on
the front lines of the
national security and
humanitarian crisis.”
As the shutdown
lurched into a third
week, many Republicans
watched nervously from
the sidelines as hundreds
of thousands of federal
workers went without
pay and government disruptions hit the lives of
ordinary Americans.
Trump has offered
to build the barrier
with steel rather than
concrete, billing that as
a concession to Democrats’ objections to a
solid wall. They “don’t
like concrete, so we’ll
give them steel,” he has
said.
But the Democrats
have made clear they
see a wall as immoral
and ineffective and
prefer other types of
border security funded
at already agreed-upon
levels.
White House officials
affirmed Trump’s funding request in a letter to
Capitol Hill after a meeting Sunday with senior
congressional aides led
by Vice President Mike
Pence at the White
House complex yielded
little progress. The letter
from Office of Manage-
Mark Lennihan | AP
A TSA agent, center, directs passengers through a security checkpoint Monday at New York’s
John F. Kennedy International Airport. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., suggested
Sunday that the partial government shutdown is disrupting Transportation Security Administration
operations.
ment and Budget Acting
Director Russell Vought
sought funding for a
“steel barrier on the
Southwest border.”
The White House
said the letter, as well as
details provided during
the meeting, sought to
answer Democrats’ questions about the funding
request. Democrats,
though, said the administration still failed to
provide a full budget of
how it would spend the
billions requested for
the wall from Congress.
Trump campaigned on
a promise that Mexico
would pay for the wall,
but Mexico has refused.
The administration
letter includes a request
for $800 million for
“urgent humanitarian
needs,” a reflection of
the growing anxiety
over migrants traveling
to the border — which
the White House said
Democrats raised in the
meetings. And it repeats
some existing funding
requests for detention
beds and security officers, which have already
been panned by Congress and would likely
find resistance among
House Democrats.
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi intends to begin
passing individual bills
to reopen agencies in
the coming days, starting with the Treasury
Department to ensure
Americans receive their
tax refunds. That effort
is designed to squeeze
Senate Republicans,
some of whom are growing increasingly anxious
about the extended shutdown.
Among the Republicans expressing concern
was Sen. Susan Collins,
R-Maine, who said Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell should
take up bills from the
Democratic-led House.
“Let’s get those
reopened while the negotiations continue,” Collins said on NBC’s “Meet
the Press.”
Adding to concerns,
federal workers might
miss this week’s paychecks. Acting chief of
staff Mick Mulvaney
said on NBC’s “Meet
the Press” that if the
shutdown continues into
Tuesday, “then payroll
will not go out as originally planned on Friday
night.”
Over the weekend,
the federal agency
tasked with guaranteeing U.S. airport security acknowledged an
increase in the number
of its employees calling
off work. But Trump
and the Department
of Homeland Security
pushed back on any
suggestion that the
call-outs represented a
“sickout” that was having a significant effect
on U.S. air travel.
At the White House,
on Monday, spokeswoman Mercedes
Schlapp complained
that Democratic leaders
have yet to define what
they mean when they
say they are for enhancing border security.
“Democrats want
to secure the border?
Great. Come to the
table,” she said. “We
are willing to come to a
deal to reopen the government.”
Trump reaffirmed
that he would consider
declaring a national
emergency to circumvent Congress and
spend money as he saw
fit. Such a move would
seem certain to draw
legal challenges.
Incoming House
Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam
Smith, D-Wash., said on
ABC’s “This Week” that
the executive power has
been used to build military facilities in Iraq
and Afghanistan but
would likely be “wide
open” to a court challenge for a border wall.
Speaking on CNN’s
“State of the Union,”
Intelligence Committee
Chairman Adam Schiff
called the idea a “nonstarter.”
Trump asserted that
he could relate to the
plight of the hundreds
of thousands of federal
workers who aren’t getting paid, though he
acknowledged they will
have to “make adjustments” to deal with the
shutdown shortfall.
�NEWS
Daily Sentinel
Creamery
cream,” Fuston added, and
demand for whipping cream
is high year round. “We see
opportunities especially
From page 1
with A2 as people become
more aware of the health
The cows at Melody Holbenefits” it has. Right now
ler are rotated to different
pasture after each milking, she notes that their “niche
about 12 hours apart, which is a safe place to be” but
it is not invulnerable. Two
helps sustain the grass as
other Northern Ohio comlong as possible.
panies are competing with
The A2/A2 designathem now.
tion is determined by the
Whole Foods distributes
genetics of the individual
products from Snowville in
cows and means that the
the East, and uses them in
cow has the A2 genetic
their in-store bakeries. The
factor on both sides of
creamery produces, on averher family tree. Guernsey
age, 15,500 cartons of milk
and Jersey cows are typically A2, which means that each week. They run production five days a week.
their milk is consistently
“We’re committed to staynutrient-rich, dense with
ing local,” Fuston noted,
beta-casein protein, and
less likely to cause stomach adding that it would be
discomfort in humans. The hard to move the product
much farther east or west
A2 Milk Company origithan it’s going right now. A
nated in New Zealand and
lot of what happens in milk
has been responsible for
bringing this aspect of milk marketing has to do with
the shelf-stable dates that
to light. Fuston says that
are allowable. “We have a
company has invested in
short” shelf-life “since we’re
advertising and education
minimally pasteurized.”
programs world-wide that
Snowville is delivered twice
a small creamery, such as
Snowville, could not afford. a week to stores in ColumThe typical Holstein cow— bus, Cincinnati, Dayton and
those black and white ones Cleveland.
Although the future is
most often associated with
always a gamble, Snowville
dairy products—does not
plans to stay in Meigs
have the A2 gene.
Although Snowville is not County. “We have a commitment to this place and
organically certified, “our
standards are even cleaner, to these people,” Warren
says in one of the compaeven better for the cows
ny’s videos. They’re going
and for” consumers than
to go on doing their best to
organic requires, Fuston
bring consumers, “the best
said. This allows them to
milk ever.”
get to a premium price
For more information
point for not only milk,
about Snoville Creamery
but yogurt, half and half,
visit: www.snowvillecreamand cream. “It’s always a
ery.com
struggle to make enough
Record
Tuesday, January 8, 2019 3
Troopers seize $12,000 worth of drugs
Staff Report
ATHENS – Ohio
State Highway Patrol
troopers filed felony
drug charges against an
Ohio man after a traffic
stop in Athens County.
During the traffic
stop, troopers reportedly seized 84 grams of
methamphetamine, 27
grams of cocaine and
11 grams of marijuana
worth approximately
$12,000.
On Dec. 31, at
9:37 p.m., troopers
stopped a 2000 Ford
Crown Victoria with
Courtesy photo
Drugs reportedly seized from a traffic stop in Athens County.
Kentucky registration
for a marked lanes
violation on U.S. 33.
Criminal indicators
were observed and an
Athens County Sher-
iff’s Office drug-sniffing
canine alerted to the
vehicle. A probable
cause search revealed
the contraband.
The driver, Lashawn
Walker, 43, of Columbus, was incarcerated
in the Southeastern
Ohio Regional Jail and
charged with trafficking in drugs, a seconddegree felony.
If convicted, he could
face up to eight years
in prison and up to a
$15,000 fine.
Information from the Ohio State
Highway Patrol.
MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciates
your input to the community calendar. To make
sure items can receive proper attention, all information should be received by the newspaper at
least five business days prior to an event. All coming events print on a space-available basis and
in chronological order. Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.
Wednesday, Jan. 9
Tuesday, Jan. 8
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council
of Governments (SOCOG) will hold its board
meeting at 10 a.m. at 27 West Second Street,
Suite 202, Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are held the first Thursday of the
month. For more information, call 740-775-5030,
ext. 103.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of
Health meeting will take place at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs County Health
Department, which is located at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.
SUTTON TWP. — The regular monthly meeting of the Board of Trustees of Sutton Township
will be held beginning at 6 p.m. in the Racine Village Hall Council Chambers.
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Community Center Board of Directors will meet at 7 p.m.
to a residential alarm on Hysell
Run Road. Upon investigation
the home was not found to
have any signs of burglary. No
further action.
A deputy responded to Beech
Grove Road for a death investigation. It was found to be natural causes. No further action
was taken.
action.
Deputy Martin was dispatched to the report of a twovehicle crash in the parking
From page 1
lot of Meigs High School. One
vehicle was pulling into a parkin the roadway at Reibel
ing spot, while a parked vehiRoad and State Route 248.
cle’s passenger opened the door
While the deputies were in
and the door was struck. Both
route to the location, Sheriff
vehicles sustained minor damWood arrived at the scene and
age, no injuries were reported.
advised that a male individual
A deputy responded to Shethad walked up stating that
Dec. 8
he had ran out of gas there.
Deputies were dispatched to land Road in reference to a
protection order violation. It
The vehicle had no registraa residence on Zuspan Hollow
was found out it was possibly a
tion plate and it was found
Road in Middleport in refercontempt of court charge and
that the individual driving
ence to a domestic violence
the victim was advised to condid not have a valid driver’s
incident. Deputies arrived on
license. Deputies then arrived the scene and spoke with both tact the court or an attorney.
on scene and K-9 Cheri was
parties involved and found that No further action was taken
Sgt. Patterson is investigatutilized to conduct an exterior no physical violence took place
sniff of the vehicle, leading
and no threats were made. The ing a breaking and entering
to an indication at the driver
call was cleared, and no further at an office trailer across from
Racine Dam. Several items
door. Deputies then searched
action was taken.
the vehicle, allegedly finding
Deputies were dispatched to were reported missing includmarijuana, paraphernalia, and State Route 833 in reference to ing tools and wire. Anyone
with any information about this
a clear crystalized substance.
an elderly female with demenincident is asked to call Meigs
The vehicle was then towed
tia. Deputies arrived on scene
from the scene and the driver
along with Meigs County EMS County Sheriff’s Office at 740992-3371.
placed in custody. This case
and the patient was transport
Sgt. Patterson and Deputy
remains under investigation.
to Holzer Meigs ER.
Campbell responded to a
A deputy responded to
Deputies processed three
Welchtown Hill in reference
applications for concealed carry residence on Wolfe Pen after
dispatch received a call about
to a wellness check. The caller weapon permits and served
had not been able to reach a
several subpoenas as well as an a male subject there causing
problems. Deputies arrived
male. The deputy contacted
eviction.
and spoke with the victim who
the male’s wife and it was
reported the elderly male, who
found he was okay, just not
Dec. 9
had already left the scene, was
at the residence. No further
The Meigs County Sheriff’s
at the residence making threats
action was taken.
Office assisted the Pomeroy
and Middleport Police Depart- and causing a disturbance.
The elderly male had caused
ments with a subject that had
Dec. 5
problems on a prior occasion
Deputies Leggett and Myers fled from officers to the area
and had been told to stay off
of Pleasant Ridge. Deputies
responded to State Route 124
arrived on scene and talked the their property. Charges filed for
due to a female calling and
male out of the residence. The criminal trespass.
requesting an officer. The
subject was taken into custody
female seemed distressed on
without incident.
the phone, although dispatch
Dec. 11
Deputies took a report in
was unable to obtain much
Deputies transported eight
reference to a stolen vehicle.
information over the phone.
inmates to court/jail.
The vehicle has been entered
Upon investigation, it was
Deputies responded to a
into the nationwide database
found that there had been no
domestic complaint on State
as stolen and the deputies are
criminal activity, the female
Route 681 near Alfred. Upon
continuing the search for the
had been asked to leave the
investigation David McCorresidence she was at due to her vehicle. This case is currently
mick was arrested for domestic
under investigation.
acting unstable. The female
violence and transported to the
Deputies attempted to serve Meigs County Jail.
ultimately agreed to be transported to the Emergency Room 18 different papers issued by
the court. The papers included Dec. 12
for a psychological evaluation.
subpoenas, arrest warrants,
No further action.
Deputies took a report of
and eviction notices.
Deputies took a report of
vandalism on Bowles Road.
theft at an address on Portland
This case remains under invesRoad. A man advised that
tigation.
Dec. 10
sometime in the last 30 days
An inmate was transported
Deputies transported four
someone had stolen his tractor male inmates from various
from Middleport Jail to a dochowever, due to him living out jails/prisons to court and then
tor appointment and then back
of town, he was not aware until returned them to the perspecto the Middleport Jail.
recently due to his neighbor
tive facilities.
noticing his gate gone and
Deputy Leggett took a report Dec. 13
called to let him know. This
of a male individual harassing
Deputy Leggett transported
case remains under investigaa female. Deputies Leggett and one male inmate from the Montion.
Campbell later contacted that
roe County Jail to the Meigs
Deputies took a report of a
male individual who made a
County Jail and two female
drive off from the 124 Mart.
written statement in which he
inmates from the Meigs County
This case remains under inves- detailed his encounter with the Jail to the Middleport Jail.
tigation.
female. The report was ultiDeputy Martin was contactDeputy Leggett responded
mately unfounded, no further
ed by Meigs High School in ref-
RUTLAND TWP. — Calendar - The Rutland
Township Trustees will hold their January meeting at 7:30 a.m. at the Township Garage.
Thursday, Jan. 10
Monday, Jan. 14
RACINE — The Organizational Meeting of
the Southern Local Board of Education has been
scheduled for 6:15 p.m. located in the Kathryn
Hart Community Center. The regular board meeting will follow at 6:30 p.m.
erence to a suspicious vehicle
in the parking lot. Deputy Martin met with the driver who
was there to pick up a student
early from school.
Dec. 14
Deputies were dispatched to
Bigley Ridge Road in reference
to a domestic violence incident. Deputies arrived in the
area and spoke with the male
and female that were allegedly involved. Both subjects
concurred that no physical violence took place and no threats
of violence were made. The
call was cleared an no further
action was taken.
Deputies processed several
applications for concealed carry
weapon permits.
Dec. 15
Deputies were on standby
for an extended period of time
at the Ravenswood Bridge and
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge due
to West Virginia authorities
being in pursuit of a vehicle.
The suspect vehicle never
came into Ohio. Deputies
cleared the area and no action
was taken.
Deputies responded to the
area of Gibson Road near
State Route 681 in reference
to a suspicious vehicle with
two subjects inside. Deputies
arrived on scene and spoke
with the subjects who stated
they were just kicked out of
the residence they were staying at and were just getting
some rest in their vehicle. The
individuals had other places to
go and were asked to leave the
area at that time.
Deputies assisted the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources on a call in Tuppers
Plains. A firearm was seized
from the suspect and several
citations were issued.
Dec. 16
Deputies attempted service
of 10 papers that ranged from
summons to appear to forcible
detention notices.
Deputies responded to the
Syracuse Boat Ramp in reference to shots being fired and
possible violation of a protection order. Deputies arrived on
the scene and took one male
into custody after confirming
that he violated his protection order. Deputies were
assisted by the Ohio Division
of Wildlife, who ran K9 Mattis in the area where the gun
was allegedly located. K9 Mattis located the firearm which
the suspect confirmed he had
placed on the riverbank. The
suspect, Truitt Bell, age 49,
was charged with violation of
a protection order and tampering with evidence.
Dec. 20
Deputy Kirby handled a
report of theft in Portland.
Deputies have obtained a lead
in this case and it is currently
under investigation.
Deputies drove a total of 364
miles transporting prisoners to
other jails.
Dec. 21
Deputies participated in the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
“Shop with a Cop” program.
Over 70 children were bought
Christmas presents at Walmart
in Mason, W.Va. The children
were also served breakfast and
got to meet Santa Claus.
Deputies recovered a stolen
welder along with welding rods
and a helmet that was previously taken from a business in
the Portland area.
Dec. 22
The Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office received a call, in reference to a 911 hang-up that
came by cell phone from the
rest area on Route 33. Deputies patrolled the area and were
unable to make contact with
anyone at the eastbound or
westbound rest stops. The call
was cleared, and no further
action was taken.
Deputies were dispatched
to State Route 124 in Reedsville in reference to a male
who stated that his neighbors
were outside in lawn chairs
and watching him through the
windows. The male further
stated that the neighbors had
their own cops and he wanted
his own. Deputies arrived on
the scene and spoke with the
male and determined that he
was not taking his medications
correctly. The subjects case
worker showed up on scene
and advised they would take
care of the patient.
Deputies registered one sex
offender.
Dec. 23
Deputies were dispatched
to the Darst Nursing Home in
reference to a male trespassing on the property. Deputies
arrived on the scene and took
the male into custody. The
male had been previously
advised by deputies that he
was not to be back on the
property. The male, Jason
Quivey, age 37, was arrested
and served a warrant for criminal trespassing.
�Opinion
4 Tuesday, January 8, 2019
Daily Sentinel
THEIR VIEW
Vacation is
not all that it’s
cracked up to be
Here is the problem with going on vacation: You
can take a vacation from work and you can take a
vacation from school … but you can’t take a vacation away from your loved ones.
Trust me, I’ve tried.
I was able to close out 2018 by taking some time off from work. I had
my entire vacation schedule lined up,
most of which consisted of important chores such as the following:
sleep in late, wake up, eat Ramen
David
noodles, watch football and “King of
Fong
the Hill” reruns (most underappreciContributing ated show in television history) and
columnist
fall asleep wherever I happened to be
lying down at 3 a.m.
Much like when I had the great
idea to have a urinal installed in our home restroom; however, my wife had other plans.
For starters, she had actual chores she wanted
me to accomplish, most of which were, technically
speaking, beyond my “skill set.” She wanted me
to do such high-level tasks as: laundry, dishes and
something she described as “picking things up off
the floor and putting them back where they actually belong.”
Apparently, she must have thought I would have
a team of NASA scientists, the 2008 graduating
class of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and MacGyver at my disposal.
Furthermore, my wife was not on vacation during much of my vacation, which meant I was to
accomplish all of these tasks by myself.
In my infinite wisdom, I said the following:
“Can’t I just sit around my house in my underwear
like you do when you go on vacation and I have to
work?”
It’s funny, I’ve often heard the phrase “steam
coming out of someone’s ears,” before, but up
until that moment, I always kind of figured it was
just some sort of colorful metaphor. It’s not. I am
pretty sure I literally saw steam coming out of her
ears. It’s statements such as that one, I’ve come to
find out, that have me sleeping on the couch more
often than not.
Not only was I charged with accomplishing
my wife’s seemingly endless list of back-breaking
chores (She wanted me to run the vacuum, for
crying out loud!), but I would also spend large portions of my vacation with the unenviable task of
keeping two human beings alive.
Since my kids were out of school for a large portion of my vacation, it would be my responsibility
to make sure they did things like “eat” and “sleep”
and “not play with flamethrowers.” Apparently,
my wife had forgotten whom she married 17 years
ago. Fortunately, my kids are at ages (11 and 14)
where they have become largely self-sufficient.
They know how to use a microwave (sort of), how
to call 9-1-1 and how not to run while carrying
scissors. Once we went over those ground rules, I
figured I could take a lengthy nap while the warm
glow of the television watched over my two precious children.
It’s this type of thinking that likely will win me a
Father of the Year award at some point. No sense
in coddling the little tykes. It’s important to teach
self-reliance. I hope my kids are ready to move out
into their own apartment by the time they graduate.
Other than those delights, however, I suppose
my vacation was largely uneventful. Both of my
children lived through the week under my care, I
didn’t manage to set the dishwasher on fire and
I managed to get a delicious dinner on the table
for my wonderful wife every night when she came
home from work. (For all of my general sloth,
cooking is the one chore I actually enjoy.)
I can’t wait until I go on my next vacation. I
hope when I take my time off from work, I’ll be
able to travel to someplace exotic.
And I hope my family stays at home with their
chore lists while I’m gone.
David Fong writes for the Troy Daily News, a division of AIM Media
Midwest.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Actor-comedian Larry Storch is 96. Broadcast
journalist Sander Vanocur is 91. CBS newsman
Charles Osgood is 86. Singer Shirley Bassey is
82. Game show host Bob Eubanks is 81. Countrygospel singer Cristy Lane is 79. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Anthony Gourdine (Little Anthony and the
Imperials) is 78. Actress Yvette Mimieux is 77.
Singer Juanita Cowart Motley (The Marvelettes)
is 75. Actress Kathleen Noone is 74. Rock musician Robby Krieger (The Doors) is 73. Movie
director John McTiernan is 68. Actress Harriet
Sansom Harris is 64. Education Secretary Betsy
DeVos is 61. Singer-songwriter Ron Sexsmith is
55. Actress Michelle Forbes is 54. Actress Maria
Pitillo (pih-TIHL’-loh) is 53. Singer R. Kelly is
52. Rock musician Jeff Abercrombie (Fuel) is 50.
Actress Ami Dolenz is 50. Reggae singer Sean
Paul is 46. Actor Donnell Turner is 46. Country
singer Tift Merritt is 44.
THEIR VIEW
Tips for finding the perfect pet sitter
Pet sitters can do much
more than just feed your
pet and provide water.
A great pet sitter will
spend quality time with
your pet and give it
the required amount of
exercise daily. Finding a
reliable pet sitter to take
care of your pet can be a
challenge.
Why would someone
hire a pet sitter? For
some pets, a boarding
facility is too traumatic.
A pet sitter allows your
pet to stay in a familiar
environment, avoid being
surrounded by other
unfamiliar pets and gives
personal attention.
Over the last year, BBB
recorded almost 41,000
inquiries about pet sitters
across North America.
Locally, BBB received
about 250 inquiries about
this industry.
Here are some tips on
searching for a pet sitter:
- Ask friends, family,
veterinarian or humane
sary medications
society if they
or emergency first
recommend a pet
aid.
sitter.
-Give detailed
- Inquire about
instructions. This
the pet sitter’s
could include
training.
emergency con- Meet in person
tact, feeding
and see how the pet John
schedule, vet inforsitter interacts with North
your pet.
Contributing mation, as well as
request to bring in
- Do a backcolumnist
mail, water plants,
ground check. A
etc.
reputable sitter
- Will the pet sitter prowon’t object to a backvide notes about his or
ground check.
her visits with your pet?
- Have a list of ques- Know how he or she
tions to ask the pet sitter,
will communicate with
such as how many times
you while your away.
he or she will visit, are
- Inquire how your pet
they willing to stay oversitter make sure that you
night and if anyone else
have returned home?
would be involved in the
- Look for someone
care of the pet.
who is insured and
-Compare prices and
services to ensure you’re bonded.
- Ask if he or she
getting the best deal.
-Get references and call belongs to organizations
like the National Assothem.
ciation of Professional
- Find out what services will be provided and Pet Sitters or Pet Sitters
whether they are trained International. These organizations offer accredito administer any neces-
tation to those who
demonstrate professional
experience, complete
pet-care-related home
study courses, attend
conferences and abide by
a code of ethics set by the
organization.
- Pay with a credit card
in case you need to dispute a charge.
- Get everything in writing. Make sure you read
and understand everything in the contract.
Ask the pet sitter if he
or she has a back-up plan
if he or she becomes sick.
BBB can also help you
find a trustworthy pet sitter. Contact BBB at bbb.
org or call 937-222-5825
or 800-776-5301. BBB
can provide you with a
list of BBB Accredited
pet sitters and Business
Profiles on ones you’re
considering.
John North is the Better Business
Bureau Dayton President & CEO
and guest columnist.
TODAY IN HISTORY
ratify the 18th Amendment to the Constitution,
Today is Tuesday, Jan. which established Prohi8, the eighth day of 2019. bition.
In 1935, rock-and-roll
There are 357 days left in
legend Elvis Presley was
the year.
born in Tupelo, MissisToday’s Highlight in History sippi.
In 1968, the Otis RedOn Jan. 8, 2011, U.S.
ding single “(Sittin’ On)
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords,
The Dock of the Bay” was
D-Ariz., was shot and
critically wounded when released on the Volt label
almost a month after the
a gunman opened fire
singer’s death in a plane
as the congresswoman
met with constituents in crash.
In 1975, Judge John J.
Tucson; six people were
Sirica ordered the early
killed, 12 others also
release from prison of
injured. (Gunman Jared
Watergate figures John
Lee Loughner (LAWF’W. Dean III, Herbert W.
nur) was sentenced in
November 2012 to seven Kalmbach and Jeb Stuart
Magruder. Democrat Ella
consecutive life sentencGrasso was sworn in as
es, plus 140 years.)
Connecticut’s first female
governor.
On this date
In 1976, Chinese preIn 1815, the last major
engagement of the War of mier Zhou Enlai, 77, died
in Beijing.
1812 came to an end as
In 1982, American
U.S. forces defeated the
Telephone and Telegraph
British in the Battle of
New Orleans, not having settled the Justice Department’s antitrust lawsuit
gotten word of the signagainst it by agreeing to
ing of a peace treaty.
divest itself of the 22 Bell
In 1912, the African
System companies.
National Congress was
In 1987, for the first
founded in Bloemfontein,
time, the Dow Jones
South Africa.
industrial average closed
In 1918, President
above 2,000, ending the
Woodrow Wilson outlined his Fourteen Points day at 2,002.25.
In 1998, Ramzi Yousef
for lasting peace after
World War I. Mississippi (RAHM’-zee YOO’-sef),
the mastermind of the
became the first state to
The Associated Press
THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Contempt for happiness is usually contempt
for other people’s happiness, and is an
elegant disguise for hatred of the human
race.”
— Bertrand Russell
English philosopher and mathematician (1872-1970)
1993 World Trade Center
bombing, was sentenced
in New York to life in
prison without the possibility of parole.
In 2004, A U.S. Black
Hawk medivac helicopter
crashed near Fallujah,
Iraq, killing all nine soldiers aboard.
In 2008, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
powered to victory in
New Hampshire’s 2008
Democratic primary in a
startling upset, defeating
Sen. Barack Obama and
resurrecting her bid for
the White House; Sen.
John McCain defeated his
Republican rivals to move
back into contention for
the GOP nomination.
Ten years ago: President-elect Barack Obama
urged lawmakers to
work with him “day and
night, on weekends if
necessary” to approve the
largest taxpayer-funded
stimulus ever. Obama
named Virginia Gov. Tim
Kaine the next Democratic National Committee
chairman. The U.N. Security Council called for an
immediate cease-fire in
Gaza by a 14-0 vote, with
the United States abstaining. No. 1 Florida beat
No. 2 Oklahoma 24-14
for the BCS national title.
Cornelia Wallace, former
wife of Alabama Gov.
George Wallace, died in
Sebring, Fla. at age 69.
Five years ago: Emails
and text messages
obtained by The Associated Press and other
news organizations suggested that one of New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s top aides engineered
traffic jams in Fort Lee in
Sept. 2013 to punish its
mayor for not endorsing
Christie for re-election;
Christie responded by
saying he’d been misled by the aide, and he
denied involvement in
the apparent act of political payback.
�NEWS/WEATHER
Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, January 8, 2019 5
MEIGS BRIEFS
Kevin Spacey pleads
not guilty to groping
young man at bar
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event infor- the second Monday each month at 7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.
mation that is open to the public and will be printed
on a space-available basis.
Immunization clinic to
be conducted Tuesday
Rutland Twp. Trustees hold
organizational meeting
By Alanna Durkin Richer
Associated Press
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $30.00 donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no
one will be denied services because of an inability
to pay an administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or
commercial insurance cards, if applicable. Those
who are insured via commercial insurance are
responsible for any balance their commercial insurance does not cover for vaccinations. Shingles and
pneumonia and vaccines are also available as well
as flu shots. Call for eligibility determination and
availability or visit www.meigs-health.com to see a
list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.
RUTLAND TWP. — Joe Bolin was elected President and Steve Lambert was elected Vice President
of the Rutland Township Trustees at their recent
reorganizational meeting for 2019. David Davis is the
third trustee. Regular meetings were set for the first
Monday of each month at 7:30 a.m. at the Township
Garage.
Bedford Twp. Trustees hold
organizational meeting
BEDFORD TWP. — On Dec. 31, 2018 the trustees
of Bedford Township held their re-organizational
meeting. Officer elected as following: John Dean,
President; Leon Sauters, Vice President; Robert
Jones, Fire Officer. Meetings for 2019 will be held on
NANTUCKET, Mass.
— Kevin Spacey pleaded not guilty Monday
to groping an 18-yearold busboy in 2016 in
the first criminal case
brought against the disgraced actor following
a string of sexual misconduct allegations that
crippled his career.
Spacey’s court
appearance came more
than a year after former Boston TV anchor
Smith
person for Speaker of
the House. Rep. Jay
Edwards (R-Nelsonville), who represents
From page 1
Meigs County as part
“His love for his wife of the 94th District,
Vicki, his four children voted for Householder.
Smith began his
and his community
career in politics after
shines through in all
the work he does here,” running for the Gallipolis City School
said Latourette.
Board in 2007. In
In seconding the
nomination, Rep. Timo- 2011, Representative
John Carey resigned
thy Ginther (R-Salem)
added that Ryan Smith before Smith would
“is the person who can announce his candidacy for the 2012
and should lead this
election. Smith would
House in the 133rd
win the 2012 election
General Assembly.”
and again in 2014 and
Householder was
elected on the first day 2016. Smith was elected the Ohio Speaker of
of the new two-year
the House in June of
legislative session.
this year and re-electRepublicans hold
ed as a representative
majorities in Ohio’s
in November 2018.
House and Senate.
Republican Larry
Householder was
Obhof, of Medina, easnominated by Rep.
ily won re-election as
Scott Oelslager
president of the Senate
(R-North Canton),
on Monday.
with a second from
Rep. James Butler
The Associated Press, The Daily
(R-Oakwood).
Sentinel Managing Editor Sarah
Each representative, Hawley and Gallipolis Daily
99 in total, is asked to Tribune reporter Dean Wright
cast their vote for one contributed to this report.
STATE BRIEFS
Court sides
with Ohio
WASHINGTON
(AP) — The Supreme
Court is ordering a
federal appeals court to
re-examine the case of a
convicted killer in Ohio
FFA
From page 1
part of the event simulates “real world” activities that will be used by
real world employers.
Participants are asked
to create/complete a
cover letter, resume, job
application, interview
and a follow up letter as
part of their score.
Only one FFA member from each grade
whose death sentence
was thrown out after he
was found to be mentally
disabled.
In an unsigned opinion
Monday, the justices said
that the federal appeals
court in Cincinnati
applied the wrong standard when it concluded
that inmate Danny Hill
was ineligible to be
executed.
The high court said the
appellate judges wrongly
relied on a recent
Supreme Court decision,
but should have instead
based their decision on
rulings that were in effect
level is allowed to compete.
Gage Stover placed
fifth in the Freshman
division, Kristin McKay
placed fourth in the
Sophomore division,
Raeven Reedy placed
fifth in the Junior division and Austin Rose
placed first in the first
year Jr/Sr division.
Rose qualified to
move on to the State to
represent District 10
FFA. The State contest
was held on a Saturday;
December 1, 2018 at
The Ohio State University. Rose competed at
the state contest and he
placed ninth in his division.
The chapter is already
planning on improving, practicing and
implementing new skills
learned through this
years contest to come
back stronger at the
2019 contest.
TODAY
8 AM
WEATHER
2 PM
53°
60°
Temperature
The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.
Snowfall
(in inches)
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.
1
24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.0/1.4
Season to date/normal
1.6/6.0
WEATHER TRIVIA™
SUN & MOON
Q: What name is given to a storm that
tracks up the East Coast of the U.S.?
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset
Wed.
7:47 a.m.
5:24 p.m.
10:06 a.m.
8:51 p.m.
MOON PHASES
First
Full
Last
Jan 14 Jan 21 Jan 27
New
Feb 4
SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for fish and game.
Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Major
12:55a
1:46a
2:36a
3:24a
4:10a
4:55a
5:39a
Minor
7:06a
7:57a
8:47a
9:35a
10:21a
11:06a
11:50a
Major
1:18p
2:08p
2:57p
3:45p
4:31p
5:16p
6:01p
Minor
7:30p
8:20p
9:08p
9:56p
10:42p
11:27p
----
WEATHER HISTORY
The temperature stayed below zero
in New York City for an entire day
only once--on Jan. 8, 1859. During
the same cold snap, Toronto had its
coldest January temperature ever
with a low of 27 degrees below zero.
THURSDAY
0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme
34°
18°
Cold with times of
clouds and sun
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Logan
58/28
Adelphi
58/27
Chillicothe
59/27
Lucasville
60/29
Portsmouth
61/31
SATURDAY
36°
23°
AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200
300
500
Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services
OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.96 +0.65
Marietta
34 20.96 -0.60
Parkersburg
36 24.56 +0.20
Belleville
35 13.07 +0.20
Racine
41 12.90 -0.08
Point Pleasant
40 27.24 +0.27
Gallipolis
50 12.33 +0.18
Huntington
50 31.84 +0.77
Ashland
52 37.44 +0.55
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.64 +0.67
Portsmouth
50 32.80 -0.60
Maysville
50 37.30 -0.50
Meldahl Dam
51 34.00 -1.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
Mostly cloudy and
chilly
Marietta
59/30
Belpre
61/30
Athens
59/29
St. Marys
59/31
Parkersburg
60/33
Coolville
60/30
Elizabeth
61/31
Spencer
61/32
Buffalo
62/33
Milton
62/34
St. Albans
63/34
Huntington
61/34
NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
45/41
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
61/55
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
69/50
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front
43°
27°
Mostly sunny
NATIONAL CITIES
Ironton
62/33
Ashland
62/32
Grayson
62/32
MONDAY
38°
22°
Increasing cloudiness Cloudy, snow tapering
and chilly
off; chilly
Wilkesville
59/31
POMEROY
Jackson
61/32
60/30
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
62/32
61/32
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
56/25
GALLIPOLIS
62/32
62/32
61/32
South Shore Greenup
62/32
60/30
43
SUNDAY
38°
29°
Murray City
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Mostly cloudy, a
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�Sports
6 Tuesday, January 8, 2019
Daily Sentinel
Raiders lead OVP teams at Steve Yinger Invite
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
NELSONVILLE, Ohio —
Starting 2019 with a true test.
The River Valley, Gallia
Academy, Eastern and Meigs
wrestling teams kicked off 2019
on Saturday at the Steve Yinger
Memorial Invitational hosted
by Nelsonville-York.
Steubenville won the 23-team
event with a score 300. Next
was Caledonia River Valley at
209.5, followed by West Jefferson with a 190. The Raiders
led the four local teams in the
event with a fourth place finish
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports and a score of 189. The Blue
River Valley senior Eric Weber, left, gains control of an opponent’s wrist during a Devils were 10th with a 121,
182-pound match at the Skyline Bowling Invitational hosted by Gallia Academy the Eagles were 19th with a 64,
High School on Dec. 29, 2018, in Centenary, Ohio.
while the Marauders took 21st
with a total of 22.
The Raiders had two runnerup finishes in the event, with
Nathan Cadle and Eric Weber
turning in 4-1 records for
second place in the 138 and
182 weight classes respectively. Also with 4-1 records
for RVHS, Joseph Burns was
third at 113 pounds, and Jacob
Edwards was fifth at 120.
River Valley had a pair of
sixth-place finishers, with Will
Hash going 3-2 at 145 pounds,
and Seth Bowman ending at
2-3 in the 132 class. RVHS
220-pounder Ryan Weber was
seventh with a 3-2 record,
while Levi Roberts was eighth
at 106 pounds with a 2-3 mark.
The Blue Devils were led
by Logan Griffith with a third
place finish in the 220-pound
weight class, after posting a
4-1 record. GAHS 106-pounder
Garytt Schwall was fourth with
a 2-2 mark, Lane Pullins was
seventh with a 3-2 record at
182 pounds, while Grant Bryan
was seventh with a 2-3 record
at 132 pounds.
Gallia Academy had a trio
of eighth-place finishers, with
Bronson Carter going 2-3 at
152 pounds, Jason Stroud
going 2-3 at 120 pounds, and
Kenton Ramsey ending at 1-4
in the 113 weight class.
Eastern was led by
152-pounder Dillon Aekier,
who took second in the weight
class with a 3-2 mark. Steven
See RAIDERS | 7
RedStorm
women rally
past Grenadiers
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio
Grande managed to maintain its perfect home
record against Indiana University Southeast on
Saturday afternoon.
However, the RedStorm’s 10th win inside the
Newt Oliver Arena certainly didn’t come as easy
as the previous nine did.
Head coach David Smalley’s club squandered
a 10-point second quarter lead, but mounted a
fourth quarter rally en route to a 68-61 win over
the Grenadiers in River States Conference women’s basketball action.
Rio Grande, ranked 20th in NAIA Division II,
ran its record to 13-4 overall and 4-1 in the RSC
with the victory in a game featuring six ties and
eight lead changes.
IU Southeast suffered a third straight loss, falling to 8-7 overall and 3-2 in league play.
The Grenadiers, who blew a 16-point first half
lead at home against the RedStorm last season,
appeared primed to play role reversal on Saturday
by using an 18-3 run to transform a 25-15 deficit
early in the second quarter into a 33-28 lead just
before halftime.
Southeast maintained a three-point advantage,
53-50, following a layup by Kelsi Scott with 6:41
left in the game, but Rio Grande scored 14 of the
game’s next 18 points to take a lead it would never
relinquish.
Freshman Avery Harper (Seaman, OH) scored
the first four points in the run, while junior Megan
Duduit (Minford, OH) capped the scoring spurt
with a left wing three-pointer to give the RedStorm a 64-57 edge with 2:32 remaining.
The Grenadiers got no closer than five points
the rest of the way.
Sophomore Jimi Howell (Barberton, OH) led
Rio Grande with her second straight double-double effort of 20 points and 12 rebounds.
Junior Sydney Holden (Wheelersburg, OH)
had a double-double of her own and nearly finished with a triple-double, totaling 11 points, 10
rebounds and a eight assists. She also had a gamehigh five steals.
Harper and senior Jaida Carter (New Philadelphia, OH) added 11 points each in the winning
See REDSTORM | 7
OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Jan. 8
Boys Basketball
Eastern at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at
Meigs, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p.m.
Belpre at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Vinton
County, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Federal
Hocking, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Teays Valley Christian, 6:30
Girls Basketball
Hannan at Teays Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 9
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at
Ashland, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at
Waterford, 5:30
Thursday, Jan. 10
Girls Basketball
Chesapeake at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Winfield at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Southern at Federal
Hocking, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 6
p.m.
River Valley at Athens, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo,
6 p.m.
Hannan at Ironton St.
Joseph, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Eastern at Fairland,
6 p.m.
Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Gallia Academy senior Blaine Carter, left, applies pressure to Point Pleasant’s Braxton Yates (24) during the first half of Saturday night’s
boys basketball contest in Centenary, Ohio.
Blue Devils top Point, 67-39
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
CENTENARY, Ohio —
Glad to be surrounded by
blue.
After a one-month
absence, the Gallia Academy boys basketball team
made a triumphant return
home on Saturday night
with a wire-to-wire 67-39
victory over visiting
Point Pleasant in a nonconference matchup of
Ohio River rivals in Gallia
County.
The Blue Devils (5-3)
— playing in only their
second home contest of
the year, and first since
hosting Rock Hill on Dec.
4, 2018 — found some
comfort in the friendly
confines of home as the
Blue and White stormed
out to a 15-0 lead and
ultimately never looked
back.
The Big Blacks (1-6)
had seven turnovers and
just as many missed shot
attempts on their first 14
offensive possessions, but
Hunter Bush managed
to bank in a trifecta just
before the first quarter
buzzer — allowing GAHS
to secure a 15-3 edge
through eight minutes of
play.
Bush opened the second frame with a field
goal 26 seconds as the
Red and Black pulled to
within 10 points, but the
guests were never closer
as the Blue Devils reeled
off a 12-7 spurt over the
next five minutes for a
27-12 cushion.
Gallia Academy fol-
lowed with another 15-0
run to close out the final
2:09 of the first half while
building a 42-12 advantage.
PPHS managed to outscore the hosts by a slim
27-25 margin after the
break, but the Big Blacks
were ultimately never
closer than 22 points as
Braxton Yates cut the deficit down to 45-23 with a
bucket at the 4:50 mark of
the third.
The Blue Devils closed
the period with a 9-0
run that extended their
advantage out to 54-23
headed into the finale. It
was also the largest lead
of the entire game.
A pair of successful free
throws from Yates saw
the guests whittle the
deficit down to 61-37 at
the 3:23 mark, but Gallia Academy answered
with a 6-2 run over the
final three-plus minutes
to wrap up the 28-point
triumph.
The Blue and White
— who match a seasonhigh with their second
straight victory — shot
50 percent from the field
and also forced 16 Point
Pleasant turnovers while
claiming a 19-6 edge on
the glass … all in the first
half.
The Blue Devils also
had 10 players reach the
scoring column and shot
46 percent for the game
while remaining unbeaten
at home.
Though it was far from
a perfect night, GAHS
coach Gary Harrison
acknowledged that his
Gallia Academy seniors Justin McClelland (10) and Cory Call (22)
double-team Point Pleasant’s Hunter Bush during the second half
of Saturday night’s boys basketball contest in Centenary, Ohio.
troops were really glad
to be home after a month
away. With six of their
next eight games also
scheduled at home, Harrison also felt that this was
the start of something
better for his road-weary
squad.
“Honestly, we’re just
glad to be home. It’s only
our second home game
and I was very pleased
with the effort, especially
following a tough one at
Coal Grove last night. We
really bounced back with
a great effort,” Harrison
said. “The other good
thing about tonight is
that we are finally going
to get back into a rhythm
of playing games. This
was our third game in
four weeks, so now we
can try to get back in a
flow as we start playing
some of our home schedule.”
The Big Blacks, on the
other hand, have played
six straight road contests
and were also returning
from a two-day tournament in Savannah, Ga.
Point also suffered its
See DEVILS | 7
�SPORTS
Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, January 8, 2019 7
Jones’ overtime goal
sends Blue Jackets
past Panthers, 4-3
SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Seth Jones scored 18
seconds into overtime and the Columbus Blue Jackets defeated the Florida Panthers 4-3 on Saturday
night.
Brandon Dubinsky, Josh Anderson and Anthony
Duclair also scored for the Blue Jackets. Sergei
Bobrovsky made 27 saves. The Blue Jackets have
won seven of their past nine games.
Aaron Ekblad, Mike Hoffman and Jonathan
Huberdeau scored for the Panthers. Keith Yandle
had two assists. James Reimer stopped 31 shots.
The Panthers are winless in their last seven games
against Columbus (0-5-2).
Pierre-Luc Dubois made a pass from his knees
from the left side to Jones in the right circle and
his shot beat Reimer on the glove side in the opening minute of the extra period.
With the score tied 2-all, the Blue Jackets took a
3-2 lead at 6:58 of the third. Dubinsky got the puck
away from a Panthers defenseman, skated in along
the boards, and got the puck by Reimer on a shot
from the right circle.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Point Pleasant sophomore Mitchell Freeman locks in a hold on a Saint Albans opponent during the 2018 Jason Eades Memorial Duals
held on Dec. 8 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Point wins Kearns Invite
RedStorm
Josie Hockman led
the Grenadiers with 14
points, seven rebounds
and four assists, while
From page 6
Baylee Krueger and Laueffort and Duduit’s nine- ren Lambdin finished
point effort represented with 11 points each.
Rio Grande returns
a career-best.
The RedStorm got the to action on Thursday
night when it hosts RSC
win despite shooting
just 31.9 percent overall East Division leader
West Virginia University(22-for-69) and a woeTech.
ful 52.8% from the free
The RedStorm curthrow line (19-for-36).
IU Southeast shot just rently trail the Golden
35.5 percent overall (22- Bears by one-half game
for-62), was out rebound- for the division lead.
Tipoff is set for 5:30
ed 55-40 and also comp.m.
mitted 20 turnovers.
By Bryan Walters
behind while claiming
the runner-up spot with
209 points, with Indian
Hill (180), Bethel Tate
MADEIRA, Ohio —
(152) and Batavia
There was no power
(74.5) rounding out
outage this year, parthe top five spots in the
ticularly for the Big
21-team field.
Blacks.
PPHS posted a
The Point Pleasant
combined 49-9 overall
wrestling team had
record in individual
eight individual champions and a dozen plac- contests, which included 26 pinfalls and three
ers while rolling to the
technical falls. The Red
2019 Bob Kearns Inviand Black also claimed
tational title this past
all eight of their titles in
weekend at Madeira
High School in the sub- weight classes that were
160 pounds or lighter.
urbs of Ohio’s Queen
Issac Short (106),
City.
Christopher Smith
The Big Blacks —
who won the 2017 title (112), Derek Raike
before having last year’s (120), Justin Bartee
(126), George Smith
tournament cancelled
(132), Mitchell Freeon the second day due
to a blown transformer man (138), Zac Samson
(152) and Logan Souththat robbed the event
all (160) all came away
of both electricity and
with identical 4-0 marks
heat — made a triumwhile winning their
phant return to the
northeastern Cincinnati respective divisions.
Southall was the only
area after having competitors in 10 of the 14 grappler to win all of
weight class finals while his matches by pinfall,
posting a winning tally while Raike, Freeman
and George Smith each
of 320.5 points.
scored a trio of pinfall
Blanchester was
wins. Freeman also won
well over triple digits
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
Devils
16-of-29 at the free throw
line for 55 percent.
Zach Loveday led
GAHS with a doubleFrom page 6
double effort of 15 points
and 11 rebounds in three
third straight setback
quarters of action, folin its closest thing to a
home game since actually lowed by Justin McClelland and Logan Blouir
opening the season at
with 11 markers apiece.
home on Dec. 11, 2018,
Cory Call also had 10
against River Valley.
points for the victors.
Afterwards, PPHS
Ben Cox was next with
coach Josh Williams mensix points and Bailey
tioned that Gallia AcadWalker added five markemy had a lot to do with
his team’s early struggles, ers, while Blaine Carter
contributed three points.
but he was also very
proud of the fight that his Cole Davis, Caleb Henry
troops displayed after fall- and Damon Cremeens
completed the winning
ing into that big hole.
tally with two points
“They got us in that
early hole with their pres- apiece.
Call followed Loveday
sure and we just strugwith six rebounds and
gled to get our offense
Blouir hauled in four
going. They took us out
caroms. Loveday also had
of everything offensively
three blocks for the hosts.
in that first quarter and
The Big Blacks made
we just never could catch
12-of-37 shot attempts for
up from there,” Wil32 percent, including a
liams said. “We know
5-of-15 effort from 3-point
we have a gritty bunch
range for 33 percent. The
that has flaws, but I was
guests were also 10-of-13
impressed with that way
at the charity stripe for
that the kids responded
77 percent.
in the second half. They
Bush paced Point Pleascontinued to battle and
ant with 15 points and
never gave up, and they
seven rebounds, followed
put a lot of effort in tryby Yates with nine points.
ing to get back in the
game. I’m really proud of Aiden Sang and Evan
the kids for the amount of Cobb were next with
heart they showed in that six markers each, while
Jovone Johnson completsecond half.”
ed the scoring with three
Gallia Academy outpoints. Sang and Johnson
rebounded the guests by
also followed Bush with
a 35-22 overall margin,
three boards apiece.
including a 13-4 edge on
Gallia Academy returns
the offensive glass. Point
to action Tuesday when
Pleasant also committed
it hosts South Point in an
28 turnovers, while the
Ohio Valley Conference
Blue Devils ended the
night with 19 miscues — contest at 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant returns
a dozen of which came
home on Friday to host
after the break.
Hannan in a battle of
The Blue Devils netMason County programs
ted 23-of-50 field goal
at 6 p.m.
attempts overall, including a 5-of-12 effort from
behind the arc for 42 per- Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
cent. The hosts were also
Raiders
From page 6
Fitzgerald picked up a
sixth-place finish with a
3-2 record at 195 pounds
for EHS, while Daniel
Harris was eighth in the
160-pound class with a
2-3 day.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.
place at 145 pounds.
Besides having every
competitor come away
with a non-losing individual record, the Big
Blacks also came away
with a top honor as
Raike — a freshman —
was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Wrestler.
Point Pleasant
claimed over half of the
weight class championships, but only Indian
Hill joined the Big
Blacks with multiple
titles with two crowns.
Deer Park, Blanchester,
Archbishop McNicholas
and the host Mustangs
also came away with an
individual title apiece.
Point Pleasant returns
to action next weekend
when it heads to Tennessee for the annual
Fandetti-Richardson
Brawl.
Visit baumspage.com
for complete results of
the 2019 Bob Kearns
Invitational hosted by
Madeira High School.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
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Black-ish (N) Splitting Up
Together (N)
FBI "Identity Crisis" (N)
10 PM
10:30
New Amsterdam "Six or
Seven Minutes" (N)
New Amsterdam "Six or
Seven Minutes" (N)
The Rookie "Standoff" (N)
USS Indianapolis
Philanthropist Paul G. Allen
finds the Indianapolis. (N)
The Rookie "Standoff" (N)
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Cops
Cops
Cops
Post-game Penguins
DPatrick (N)
NCAA Basketball (L)
NCAA Basketball Purdue at Michigan State (L)
Married at First Sight "Married at Second (:35) Married
Sight" (N)
"Out of Gas"
Beauty and the Beast (1991, Animated) Voices of
Richard White, Angela Lansbury, Paige O'Hara. TVPG
Bad Boys (1995, Action) Martin Lawrence, Téa
Leoni, Will Smith. TVMA
Loud House Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob The Office
The Office
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
London Has Fallen TVMA
Family Guy Family Guy Bob'sBurgers Bob'sBurgers The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
Shooter (‘07, Act) Mark Wahlberg. TVMA
Law Abiding Citizen (‘09, Cri) Jamie Foxx. TVMA
Sully TV14
(5:40)
Uncle Buck (1989, Comedy) Amy Madigan,
The Breakfast Club (1985, Drama) Emilio Estevez, (:15)
Sister Act Whoopi
Jean Louisa Kelly, John Candy. TVPG
Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson. TVMA
Goldberg. TVPG
Rehab "Speed Shop Chop" Rehab "Off-road Rehab"
Garage Rehab (N)
To Be Announced
Bad Chad Customs (N)
The First 48 "Bad Lick/ Red Remini: Scientology "Spies Remini: Scientology "Ideal Remini: Scientology "The 60 Days In "New Sheriff in
Dawn"
Like Us"
Orgs"
Collection Agency" (N)
Town"
Lone Star Law
L. Star Law "Submerged" Lone Star Law (N)
L. Star Law "Deceived" (N) L. Star Law "Crash Course"
Snapped: Killer "Donna and Snapped: Killer "Nancy Rish Snapped "Dawn Godman
Snapped: Killer "Diane
Snapped "Christina Marcum
Jason Slaughter"
and Danny Edwards"
and Jusin Helzer Contra"
Zamora and David Graham" and Jason Singleton"
Law&O. "Brilliant Disguise" Law & Order "Innocence" LawOrder "Four Cops Shot" Law & Order "Brazil"
Law & Order "Crashers"
(4:30) Monster-in-Law
E! News (N)
Botched
Big Daddy (‘99, Com) Adam Sandler. TVPG
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Life Below Zero "The
Live Free or Die: Down & Life Below Zero "Open
Life Below Zero
Port Protection "Mr. Fix It"
"Bloodlines"
Dirty "Try and Try Again"
Season"
Nightmare" (N)
(N)
Rally
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers at Washington Capitals (L)
(:15) NHL Overtime (L)
Big East
Tip-Off
NCAA Basketball St. John's vs. Villanova (L)
Boxing
Face to Face Inside PBC Boxing (N)
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island: Digging Deeper "Rock Solid" The Curse of Oak Island
Project Blue Book "The
"Precious Metal"
The team located a previously discovered artifact. (N)
Fuller Dogfight" (P) (N)
"Unearthed" (N)
BelowD. "Man Overboard" Below Deck
BelowD. "Check Yourself!" Below Deck (N)
BuyBlind "Jennifer and Eric"
I Can Do Bad All by Myself (‘09, Com/Dra) Taraji P. Henson, Tyler Perry. TVPG
Family "The Heat Is On" (N) TheFamily "The Heat Is On"
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Windy City Rehab (N)
H.Hunt (N) House (N)
(5:05)
Need for Speed (2014, Action) Imogen Poots,
47 Ronin (‘13, Act) Keanu Reeves. A dispossessed band of Ronin
Freddy vs.
Dominic Cooper, Aaron Paul. TV14
seek out the help of an outcast in order to exact vengeance. TV14
Jason TVMA
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
Cops
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Ready Player One An idealistic Vice News
Icebox (‘18, Dra) Genesis Rodriguez. A
The Shape of Water While working
young man battles an evil corporation for Tonight (N) Honduran boy is interned within a U.S.
as a cleaner in a government lab, a lonely
control of a virtual world. TV14
immigration detention center. TV14
woman bonds with a monster. TVMA
(:05)
The Italian Job (‘03, Act) Charlize Theron, Mark
Working Girl (‘88, Rom) Harrison Ford, Sigourney (:55)
View From the
Wahlberg. Thieves plan the heist of their lives by creating Weaver, Melanie Griffith. A Wall Street secretary assumes Top (‘03, Com) Mike Myers,
the largest traffic jam in L.A. history. TVPG
her boss' persona in order to further her career. TVMA
Gwyneth Paltrow. TVPG
ALL ACCESS:
(4:30) The
Bull Durham (‘88, Com/Dra) Susan Sarandon, Tim Inside the NFL "2018
Ray Donovan "Never Gonna
UntouchaPacquiao vs. Robbins, Kevin Costner. A groupie teaches a minor-league Playoff Week 1" (N)
Give You Up"
bles TVMA
baseball pitcher about life, love and lingerie. TVMA
Broner
(5:10)
400 (HBO)
9 PM
NCIS: New Orleans
"Vindicta" (N)
Lethal Weapon "Dial M for The Gifted "meMento" (N) Eyewitness News at 10
Murtaugh" (N)
p.m. (N)
We'll Meet Again "The
Finding Your Roots
USS Indianapolis
"Grandparents and Other
Fight for Women's Rights" Philanthropist Paul G. Allen
Strangers" (SP) (N)
finds the Indianapolis. (N)
(N)
NCIS "Toil and Trouble" (N) FBI "Identity Crisis" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans
"Vindicta" (N)
18 (WGN) BlueB. "Heavy Is the Head"
Pre-game
24 (ROOT) PengPuls
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N)
67 (HIST)
The lone Marauder to
place in the top-8 was
Drake Hall, who was
eighth in the 195-pound
class with a 1-4 record.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for complete results
of the 2019 Steve Yinger
Memorial Invitational.
his championship with
an 18-3 technical fall.
Christopher Smith
had two pinfall wins,
while Short, Bartee and
Samson each scored a
single pinfall en route
to winning divisional
crowns. Samson also
scored a technical fall
victory.
Juan Marquez (182)
abd Wyatt Stanley (220)
both came away with
second place finishes
in their respective divisions. Marquez went
3-1 with two pinfalls,
while Stanley was 2-1
with two pinfalls.
Nazar Abbas was
third in the 170-pound
division with a 4-1 mark
that included two pinfalls, a technical fall and
a major decision. Jacob
Muncy was also fourth
in the heavyweight division with a 3-2 record
and a pinfall.
Nick Ball did not
place in the 195-pound
weight class, but finished the weekend with
a 3-2 mark. Riley Oliver also went 2-2 with
a pinfall, but did not
�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS
8 Tuesday, January 8, 2019
River Valley 3rd at meet
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
TEAYS VALLEY, W.Va.
— Back in the pool after a
bit of a break.
The River Valley swim
team — in action for the
first time since Dec. 21 —
claimed a third place overall, with the boys taking
second and the girls placing
fifth, in the first meet of
2019 on Saturday afternoon
in Putnam County.
The RVHS boys squad
entered two teams in each
of the three relays, claiming fourth and 10th in the
400-yard freestyle, fifth and
12th in the 200-yard medley, as well as 11th and 13th
in the 200 freestyle relay.
In singles competition,
the Silver and Black were
led by Cole Franklin, who
was fourth in the 100 butterfly and 10th in the 200
individual medley, and
Ryan Lollathin, who was
fourth in the 500 freestyle
and 18th in the 50 freestyle.
Ethan Cline picked up a
fifth place finish in the 500
freestyle, to go with his sev-
and 16th in the 200-yard
medley relay.
Elisabeth Moffett led
the RVHS girls with a
fifth place mark in the 500
freestyle and a sixth place
effort in the 200 freestyle.
Sophia Gee — who was
seventh in the 100 backstroke — took 18th in the
200 freestyle, while Julia
Nutter was eighth in the
100 butterfly and 10th in
the 100 backstroke. Bailey
Bennett picked up a ninth
place finish in the 100 butterfly, while taking 22nd in
the 100 backstroke.
Chloe Gee was 10th in
the 200 individual medley
and 17th in the 100 breaststroke, Brianna Bradbury
was 16th in the 100 breaststroke and 45th in the 100
freestyle, Kate Nutter was
18th in the 100 breaststroke and 20th in the
200 freestyle, while Hina
Horimoto claimed 13th in
the 50 freestyle.
The Raiders swim again
at home on Saturday.
enth place mark in the 200
individual medley.
Joel Brumfield was seventh in the 200 freestyle
and ninth in the 100 backstroke, Ian Eblin was ninth
in the 100 breaststroke and
10th in the 100 butterfly,
while Jake Mayes was 10th
in the 200 freestyle and
39th in the 100 freestyle.
Blaine Cline took 11th
in the 200 freestyle and
13th in the 100 backstroke,
Riley Wooldridge was 12th
in both the 100 backstroke
and 200 freestyle, while
Nathan Young was 12th in
the 200 individual medley
and 16th in the 100 breaststroke.
Ethan Browning claimed
13th in the 200 freestyle
and 41st in the 100 freestyle, Dalton Mershon was
14th in the 100 butterfly
and 15th in the 100 backstroke, while John Santos
took 24th in the 100 freestyle and 29th 50 freestyle.
The RVHS girls took
sixth in the 400-yard freestyle relay, and 20th in the
200-yard freestyle relay,
while claiming both eighth
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.
WVU hires Troy’s Brown for 6 years
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press
West Virginia hired Troy’s Neal Brown
on Saturday to coach the Mountaineers,
landing the youngest of six coaches in the
FBS who have won at least 10 games each
of the last three seasons.
The 38-year-old Brown signed a sixyear, $19.05 million contract and replaces
Dana Holgorsen, who left West Virginia to
become Houston’s coach.
(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Apartments/Townhouses
Case No. 18-CV-071
Judge D. Dean Evans
LEGAL NOTICE
Julie A. Gilkey, whose last known address is 34179 Laurel
Woods Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769, William R. Gilkey, whose
last known address is 34179 Laurel Woods Road, Pomeroy,
OH 45769, will take notice that on September 27, 2018, Wells
Fargo Bank, NA filed its Complaint in the Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio, Case No. 18-CV-071. The object
of, and demand for relief in, the Complaint is to foreclose the
lien of Plaintiff's mortgage recorded upon the real estate described below and in which Plaintiff alleges that the foregoing
defendant has or claims to have an interest:
Parcel number(s): 14-00498.003
Property address: 34179 Laurel Woods Road, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
The defendant named above is required to answer the Complaint within twenty-eight (28) days after the last publication of
this legal notice. This legal notice will be published once a
week for three successive weeks.
Melissa N. Hamble fka Melissa N. Meinhart
Manley Deas Kochalski LLC
P. O. Box 165028
Columbus, OH 43216-5028
614-220-5611
mnm@manleydeas.com
1/8/19, 1/15/19, 1/22/19
By Randy Payton
sion.
Rio Grande got no closer the
rest of the way and trailed by as
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — In terms many as 40 points, 85-45, after IU
Southeast’s Kerieon Douglas hit
of overall effort, University of Rio
one of two free throw attempts
Grande head coach Ken French
with 7:36 remaining in the concalled it his team’s worst perfortest.
mance of the season.
IU Southeast, which removed
The fact that it happened against
one of the top teams in the country its starters with just over 14 minutes left to play, had all but one
made things even uglier.
of its 14 players score at least two
Indiana University Southeast
points.
bolted to a 22-point halftime lead
Jamie Johnson had a game-high
and never looked back, cruising to
17 points, five assists and four
a 93-63 over the RedStorm, Satsteals to pace the winning effort,
urday afternoon, in River States
Conference men’s basketball action while Kerry Smith and Brandon
Johnson finished with 13 and 11
at the Newt Oliver Arena.
The Grenadiers, ranked No. 25 in points, respectively.
The Grenadiers shot 56.5 perthe latest NAIA DII coaches’ poll,
improved to 11-6 overall and 4-2 in cent overall (35-for-62) and 58.8
percent from three-point range
conference play with the victory.
Rio Grande dropped to 7-11 over- (10-for-17) in the win.
Rio Grande shot just 36 percent
all and 1-4 inside the RSC with a
overall (21-for-58) and committed
fifth straight loss.
17 turnovers which led directly to
The RedStorm trailed 8-0 out of
21 IUS points.
the gate, although they did absorb
Schreiter led the RedStorm with
the early blow and rallied to within
13 points in a losing cause, while
10-8 on a three-pointer by junior
Kelley netted 12 points and sophoCameron Schreiter (Mason, OH)
more Kyle Lamotte (Mason, OH)
with 15:24 remaining in the first
finished with 10 points.
half.
Senior Earl Russell (WarIU Southeast countered with a
rington, England) pulled down a
22-9 run of its own over the next
seven minutes to build a 15-point game-high 11 rebounds and tied
junior Hadith Tiggs (Mayfield
cushion and, from that point, the
Heights, OH) for team honors
rout was on.
Rio did manage to slice the defi- with three assists.
Rio Grande returns to action
cit to single digits when a threepointer by sophomore Trey Kelley next Thursday when 11th-ranked
West Virginia University-Tech vis(Minford, OH) made it 32-23
with 6:45 left before halftime, but its for a 7:30 p.m. tipoff.
the Grenadiers reeled off an 18-5
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director
run to close the half and build a
at the University of Rio Grande.
22-point cushion at the intermis-
For Ohio Valley Publishing
(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157
TDS
Ellm View Apts.
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Equal Housing Opportunity
(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234
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Apartments/Townhouses
Apartments/Townhouses
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AIM MEDIA MIDWEST NEWSPAPERS
Has an opening for a results oriented
Salesperson
Capable of developing multi-media campaigns for advertisers. You must
be a problem solver, goal oriented, have a positive attitude, and have the
ability to multi-task in a demanding, deadline-oriented environment. Must
have reliable transportation and clean driving record. We seek success
driven individuals looking to build a future with a growing organization with
publications in Gallipolis, OH, Pomeroy, OH and Point Pleasant, WV.
OH-70095179
Wells Fargo Bank, NA
Plaintiff,
vs.
Julie A. Gilkey, et al.
Defendants.
No. 25 IU Southeast
dumps Rio Grande men
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HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Daily Sentinel
Please email cover letter, resume and references to
Matt Rodgers E-mail address: mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
Wanted: Information
and/or Location of a
Model A Ford Coupe built
in the 50's or early 60's
by Raymond and Leonard
Fields from New Haven
WV. Hot Rod has a modified Ford Flathead V-8
Engine. Contact Thomas
Vance at 4 Main St, Pt
Pleasant WV.
304-674-6431
LEGALS
Legals
Sutton Township Trustees
held their organizational
meeting on December 31,
2018 and elected the following officers for the year 2019:
Larry C. Smith, President;
Charles I. Mugrage, Vice
President and Howard R.
Ervin, Jr., Trustee. Jo Ann
Crisp is Fiscal Officer for
Sutton Township.
The monthly meetings of the
Board of Trustees will be held
on the second Tuesday of
each month beginning at
6:00 p.m. in the Racine Village Hall Council Chambers.
�COMICS
Daily Sentinel
BLONDIE
Tuesday, January 8, 2019 9
By Dean Young and John Marshall
BEETLE BAILEY
By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer
RETAIL
By Norm Feuti
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
HI AND LOIS
By Chris Browne
Written By Brian & Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne
THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE
By John Hambrock
BABY BLUES
ZITS
By Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman
By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee
CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
"Y $AVE 'REEN
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jobmatchohio.com
�SPORTS
10 Tuesday, January 8,2019
Daily Sentinel
Pioneers sweep
Hannan, 60-43
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
ASHTON, W.Va. — If nothing else, the Wildcats
cut their deficit in half this time around.
The Hannan boys basketball team — which
closed 2018 with a 34-point setback at Wayne on
Dec. 21 — opened 2019 against the same Pioneers
on Friday in Mason County, this time falling by just
a 60-43 margin.
HHS (2-6) stormed out to a 15-7 lead eight min
utes into play, connecting on a pair of three-pointers in the opening quarter. However, Wayne (3-4)
— which has also been on a break since the Dec.
21 contest — poured in 25 points in the second
period, and headed into the half with a 32-22 edge.
The teams played evenly in the third canto, each
marking a dozen points to make the WHS advan
tage 44-34 with eight minutes to play. The Pioneers
sealed the 60-43 victory with a 16-to-9 run in the
finale.
Wayne won the rebounding edge by a 35-to-28
count, including 18-to-14 after the half.
HHS senior Andrew Gillispie hit five field goals
and led the hosts with 10 points. Next was Casey
Lowery with nine points, six of which came from
beyond the arc. Dalton Coleman finished with
seven points for the Wildcats, while Chase Nelson
and Chandler Starkey added six apiece. Rounding
out the scoring column for Hannan were Devrick
Burris with three points and Caleb Gussler with
two.
Wayne junior Nickolas Bryant led all-scorers with
15 points on the strength of seven field goals. Gun
ner Daniels and Bryan Sansom both sank a trio of
three-pointers and finished with 13 and 12 points
respectively in the triumph. Devin Hall and Colt
Adams contributed eight points apiece to the win
ning tally, while Jacob Merritt chipped in with four.
Hannan will be back in action on Tuesday at
Teays Valley Christian.
Alex Hawiey can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
Browns talk to Eberflus
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Matt Eberflus has a
past with the Browns.
Maybe he’ll have a future
as well.
One day after his
Indianapolis defense held
quarterback Deshaun
Watson and Houston’s
offense to just seven
points in an AFC wild
card win, Eberflus
became the sixth can
didate to interview for
Cleveland’s open coach
ing job.
The Colts’ dominant
performance helped
Eberflus boost a resume
that already included a
two-year stint (2009-10)
coaching the Browns
linebackers on Eric
Mangini’s staff.
NamY. Huh | AP
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Nick Foies (9) passes during the first half of an NFL wild-card playoff football game Sunday against
the Chicago Bears in Chicago.
Rivers v. Brady in divisional round
CHICAGO (AP) —
Philip Rivers has come
up empty against Tom
Brady every time.
He gets another shot
next weekend.
Rivers directed the
Los Angeles Chargers to
a 23-17 playoff victory
at Baltimore on Sun
day, setting up another
high-stakes matchup
with Brady and the New
England Patriots. For all
of Rivers’ success during
his 15 years in the NFL,
he is winless in seven
career starts against
Brady.
“To get an opportu
nity again to go against
them, 11 years after we
had the opportunity in
the 2007 season, yeah,
it’s awesome,” Rivers
said. “Looking forward
to it.”
The reigning Super
Bowl champions are still
in the mix after Nick
Foies threw a 2-yard
touchdown pass to Gold
en Tate on fourth down
with 56 seconds left,
now than we were then,
sending the Philadelphia
and you know, we’ve
Eagles to a 16-15 vic
just got to put a good
tory over the NFC North
plan together in all three
champion Chicago Bears
phases.”
on Sunday.
The Chargers (13-4)
Cody Parkey had
visit the Patriots (11-5)
a look at a potential
in the first divisional
winning field goal for
playoff game next Sun
Chicago, but his 43-yard
day, followed by the
try with 10 seconds
Eagles’ return to New
remaining went off the
left upright and then the
Orleans. Andrew Luck
and the Indianapolis
crossbar. Parkey bent
Colts (11-6) take on
over after the miss as the
Patrick Mahomes and
Eagles celebrated and
the Kansas City Chiefs
Bears coach Matt Nagy
(12-4) on Saturday, and
looked on in disbelief.
“That’s playoff football then Dak Prescott and
right there for you,” Tate Ezekiel Elliott lead the
Dallas Cowboys (11-6)
said. “That’s why we
play this game, for times into Los Angeles to take
like now once you get to on Todd Gurley and the
Rams (13-3).
January and February.”
Luck threw for 222
Next up for Foies and
yards and a touchdown
Philadelphia (10-7) is
and Marlon Mack
a trip to New Orleans
rushed for 148 yards in
to face Drew Brees and
the Colts’ 21-7 victory
the top-seeded Saints
at Houston on Saturday.
(13-3). The Eagles also
Prescott passed for a
visited the Big Easy on
TD and ran for another
Nov. 18 and struggled
score to help the Cow
mightily against Brees
boys top the Seattle
and company in a 48-7
Seahawks 24-22 in their
loss.
first-round matchup.
“It wasn’t very good
“It’s really just a
the first time,” coach
chance to keep going
Doug Pederson said.
“We’ll take a look at that on, simple as that,”
Prescott said. “Me and
film. We’ll take a look at
this whole team, we
this one. I think we’re a
want to win it all. You
different football team
can’t do that without
taking care of the first
one. A lot of excite
ment, but my goal is
bigger than just one
playoff win.”
The 37-year-old Riv
ers beat New England
in 2008, but that was
with Matt Cassel start
ing at quarterback for
the Patriots while Brady
was injured. Rivers went
up against New England
for the first time in the
playoffs after the 2006
season, tossing an inter
ception in a 24-21 loss
to the visiting Patriots.
The star QBs also
squared off in the post
season in 2008. Playing
with a torn knee liga
ment, Rivers threw two
more picks in a 21-12
loss at New England.
“Obviously, we’ve
got to worry about
that defense. It’s a Bill
Belichick-led team and
defense,” Rivers said.
“I’m not playing Tom
by any means. But is
it special to go to New
England against a Hall
of Fame coach and argu
ably the best quarter
back ever to play and
get another shot at ‘em?
Heck, yeah. Heck, yeah,
it is special.”
Lady Cats fall to Rose Hill, 53-37
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
Contact
Brenda or Sarah
at 740-992-2155
ASHTON, WVa. — In the end, it
came down to the start.
Visiting Rose Hill Christian estab
lished a 14-9 first quarter lead and
ultimately never looked back Friday
night while claiming a 53-37 victory
over the Hannan girls basketball
team in a non-conference matchup in
Mason County.
The host Lady Wildcats (3-5)
dropped their fourth consecutive deci
sion as the Lady Royals received 11
combined points from Bailey Trimble
and Bellamee Sparks in the opening
frame.
Bailey Coleman scored five points
for Hannan over that same span, but
RHCHS owned a five-point edge after
eight minutes of play.
Coleman added another five points
in the second frame, but the guests
countered with a 12-8 run that made
for a 26-17 contest at the break.
Both teams netted six points apiece
in the third stanza for a 32-23 score,
but the Lady Royals closed regulation
with a 21-14 surge — which included
a 7-of-10 effort at the free throw line
— that wrapped up the 16-point out
come.
The Lady Cats netted 11 total field
goals — including four 3-pointers —
and also went 8-of-13 at the free throw
line for 62 percent.
Coleman led the hosts with 18
points, followed by Julie Frazier with
11 points and Halie Johnson with four
markers. Rachel Ellis and Pammie
Ochs completed the scoring with two
points apiece.
Rose Hill Christian made 20 total
field goals — including a pair of trifectas — and also went 7-of-12 at the
charity stripe for 58 percent.
Sparks paced the guests with a
game-high 21 points and Trimble
followed with 16 markers. Jewelin
VanKevrin and Delaynee Sparks were
next with six points apiece, while
Ashleigh Riffle completed the winning
tally with four points.
Hannan returns to action Tuesday
when it travels to Teays Valley Chris
tian for a 5 p.m. contest.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2101.
Goodyear Blimp to be in Hall of Fame
The official tourism guide to Meigs County
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel and
Meigs Chamber of Commerce
CLEVELAND (AP) — One of the
new college football Hall of Famers
has an inflated ego — and more.
The Goodyear Blimp, which has
become a staple at major sports
events for more than 60 years, is being
inducted into the College Football
Hall of Fame as an honorary member
— the first nonplayer or coach to be
inducted.
As a nod to its influence and legacy
to the game, the iconic airship joins
a stellar class that will be enshrined
at the National Football Foundation’s
award banquet in December.
The blimp will soar into the hall
along with Texas quarterback Vince
Young, Notre Dame speedster Raghib
Ismail, Arkansas running back Dar
ren McFadden, Oklahoma defensive
back Rickey Dixon, John Carroll
linebacker London Fletcher, Texas
A&M defensive lineman Jacob Green,
North Carolina State receiver Torry
Holt, Arizona State quarterback Jake
Plummer, USC defensive back Troy
Polamalu, Wisconsin offensive tackle
Joe Thomas, Michigan State running
back Lorenzo White and Mississippi
linebacker Patrick Willis.
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