-
http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/25fac89594d0e52ce2230f8ec47d1be7.pdf
705b973d5c90ed1c5d652da5ad0e3fea
PDF Text
Text
Honoring
local
veterans
Lady Knights
headed
to state
LOCAL s 2
SPORTS s 6
8 AM
2 PM
8 PM
16°
30°
26°
Very cold today with clouds and sun. Cloudy
tonight. High 36° / Low 20°
Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10
C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e
Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
Issue 180, Volume 73
Wednesday, November 13, 2019 s 50¢
Holzer ER celebrates 5th anniversary
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Holzer staff and administrators were on hand Tuesday for the 5th anniversary
celebration of the Holzer Meigs Emergency Department. Pictured (from left)
are Holzer CEO Brent Saunders, manager Angee Arnold, Misty Bissell, Jessica
Williams, Barb Triplett, Carli Johnson, physician Jay Rorrer, Kim Follrod, Chief
Nursing Officer Lisa Detty, Jimmy Will and Brady Smith.
ROCKSPRINGS — In
November 2014, Holzer
Health System opened its
standalone emergency department in Meigs County,
where it has been serving the
residents of the area since that
time.
On Tuesday, Holzer hosted a
5th anniversary celebration at
the facility.
Angee Arnold, who is the
manager of the location, said
that a total of 65,969 patients
have been seen at the emergency departments since it opened
its doors on Nov. 12, 2014.
That is an average of more
than 13,000 patients each year.
Of those treated in the Holzer Meigs Emergency Department, there have been four
births and 4,815 people admitted to Holzer Hospital from
the emergency department.
Holzer has partnered with
Meigs County EMS to handle
those transports, Holzer paying the agency for transports,
keeping money in the county.
Holzer Meigs Emergency
Department is a free-standing
Emergency Care facility located in the Meigs County Health
Care Campus near the inter-
section of U.S. 33 and State
Route 7 in Rocksprings.
The facility features a
24-hour staffed emergency
department, equipped with
state-of-the-art equipment and
a helipad. Other health-related
agencies located at the campus include Hopewell Health
Centers, MedFlight, Meigs
County EMS and the Robert
E. Byer Emergency Operations
Center.
Emergency care services
include x-ray and CT scan,
laboratory, respiratory therapy,
and support services.
See HOLZER | 5
Travel Expo
returns
in March
Staff Report
GALLIPOLIS — The 11th annual Discover
Appalachia Travel Expo will take place on March
14, 2020 at Gallia Academy Middle School in Gallipolis.
The event is open for all ages, the expo gives
exhibitors the opportunity to showcase travel, historic and business destinations from all over the
region and connect one-on-one with the general
public.
Gallia County Convention and Visitors Bureau
Executive Director Amanda Crouse said the Discover Appalachia Travel Expo is beneficial to both
Gallia County and the surrounding region.
“It’s a great networking opportunity that gives
the exhibitors the opportunity to market themselves and magnify their exposure to the public.
By working with surrounding communities, Southeastern Ohio is stronger as a whole, which directly
benefits our individual counties,” said Crouse. “It
also educates the community members about what
their area has to offer, not only in their backyard,
but all across the region.
The registration deadline for the event is Friday,
Feb. 14, 2020 with limited space available, so if
See EXPO | 5
Gallia Convention and Visitors Bureau | Courtesy Photo
The coming Discover Appalachia Travel Expo looks to celebrate
southeastern Ohio activities, attractions and culture.
INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9
Weather: 10
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Master Sgt. Wheeler addresses the crowd during Monday’s ceremony.
Veterans Day ceremony held in Pomeroy
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
POMEROY — Veterans, along with local residents and the Southern
Local Marching Band,
attended a Veterans Day
ceremony at the Pomeroy
Levee on Monday, honoring all of those who have
served in the United
States military.
The guest speaker for
the event was Master
Sgt. Wheeler.
Wheeler has served
his country at many locations around the world
since originally enlisting
in the U.S. Army in 1967.
“We are here today to
honor our service mem-
American Legion Post 39 members conducted a gun salute at the end of the ceremony on Veterans
Day.
bers and remember the
sacrifices they have made
and the courage it takes
to defend our country,”
said Wheeler.
“President George
Washington said ‘The
See CEREMONY | 5
Honoring our veterans
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.
Carleton School and
Meigs Industries joined
together for a Veterans
Day celebration on
Monday, honoring those
who have served in the
branches of the United
States military. The
veterans held a small
ceremony around the
flagpole and shared
their service dates and
assignments. Students
sang “You’re a Grand
Old Flag”. Pictured are
Carleton Preschool
students who presented
the veterans with
handmade cards and a
Courtesy photo small gift.
�OBITUARIES/NEWS
2 Wednesday, November 13, 2019
OBITUARIES
MARGARET E. FOLLROD
NAPLES, Fla. — Margaret E. Follrod passed
away peacefully at her
winter home in Naples,
Florida, Friday, Nov. 8,
2019, from complications
after a recent fall at the
age of 90.
Margaret was born at
Alfred, Ohio, to Clarence
Lee and Osie Elizabeth
Carr Henderson. She
graduated from Olive
Orange High School,
May 1946, and Bliss
Business College in
Columbus, Ohio, May
1947. She was employed
as a secretary for Bexley
High School, a court
reporter, secretary for
Manning Webster, Attorney at Law, and a bookkeeper for the RC Follrod
Company. Margaret
enjoyed her family, longtime friends, taking care
of her yard, playing golf,
and traveling.
Margaret is survived by
her son, Chuck Follrod;
granddaughters, Kristyn
(Tim Butorac) Follrod,
Megan Follrod, Ashley
(Kevin) Mott; step grand-
son, Shawn (Ashley)
Murphy; great-grandchildren Mira, Charlie,
Peyton, Embrey and
Corie; several nieces and
nephews; and a special
neighbor, John Musser.
She was preceded in
death by her husband,
Richard Follrod; her parents; and brothers Clarence Henderson, Sherman Henderson, Ralph
Henderson, Harold Lee
Henderson.
Visitation will be held
on Saturday, Nov. 16,
2019, from noon-2 p.m.,
with the funeral to follow
at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Paul Reed
officiating. Burial will follow at the Beech Grove
Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made
in Mrs. Follrod’s name
to the Brandi Thomas
Memorial Scholarship
Fund, P.O. Box 536, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
A registry is available
to www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
HARVEY W. ‘SAM’ VANMATRE
MIDDLEPORT —
Harvey W. “Sam” VanMatre, of Middleport,
passed away on Nov.
11, 2019 at the Adena
Regional Medical Center.
He was born on Aug. 5,
1946, in West Columbia,
W.Va., to the late Harvey
and Goldie (Marr) VanMatre. Sam was a truck
driver for most of his life.
He served our country in
the United States Marine
Corps. He was a member
of the Drew Webster
American Legion Post
39, a life member of the
NRA, and he attended
the Bradford Church of
Christ.
He is survived by his
wife of 47 years, Betty
VanMatre; sons, Ken
(Bridget) VanMatre,
Clark (Kristen) VanMatre; grandchildren,
Kenna, Rhanda, Brayden,
Brier and Bennett; brother, Ray VanMatre; sister,
Sue (George) Mora and
Mary (Fred) Chapman;
nieces and nephews,
Beth (Dave) Gaul, Brandon (Amanda) Floyd,
Robin Winnans and Kristen (Steven) Ramsdale.
He is preceded in
death by his parents.
Funeral services will
be held on Friday, Nov.
15, 2019, at 1 p.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Justin
Roush officiating. Burial
will follow at the Miles
Cemetery. Visitation will
be held from 6-8 p.m. on
Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019,
at the funeral home.
Military honors will
be presented by the
Drew Webster American
Legion Post 39, Pomeroy,
Ohio, and the VFW post
from Mason, W.Va.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
Daily Sentinel
Recognition of service
Veterans Day
observed
By Mindy Kearns
Special to OVP
BEND AREA — Two
Bend Area veterans were
given special recognition
Monday evening when
the Smith-Capehart
American Legion Post
140 of New Haven, W.Va.
and the Stewart-Johnson
V.F.W. Post 9926 of
Mason, W.Va. held their
annual joint Veterans
Day service.
U.S. Air Force Veteran
Eugene Fields and U.S.
Army Veteran Richard
Carl Harmon, both of the
Korean War era, received
American Flags encased
in special wooden displays, provided by the
Town of New Haven.
The flags were presented
by Kenneth Vickers of
American Legion Post
140 to Harmon and Pat
Fields, who accepted on
behalf of his father.
Fields served in the
Air Force from 1947
through 1967, and was
a technical sergeant. He
entered the service when
the Army Air Corps
became the U.S. Air
Force. Fields completed
assignments to Korea,
France, Germany, Okinawa, and a year-long
assignment to a remote
radar site on the Aleutian Islands of Alaska.
He was also in the group
that became the first
non-stop transatlantic
flight to carry more than
100 service members in
November 1949 aboard
the C-74 Globe Master
airplane.
Harmon was a corpo-
Photos by Mindy Kearns | Courtesy
A gun salute was presented by members of American Legion Post 140 and V.F.W. Post 9926 during
the Veterans Day service Monday evening.
ral in the Army, entering
the service on April 16,
1953, and being released
on April 15, 1955. He
was assigned to the
106th Tank Battalion.
Harmon received orders
to deploy to Korea, but
due to the war coming to
an end, the deployment
was cancelled.
The service began
with prayer by Kelsyn
Spencer, and ended with
prayer by Brynn Owens.
Both are students in the
Wahama High School
public speaking class.
The ceremony was led by
Legion Post Commander
Larry Burns, and Carl
Sayre played “Taps.”
V.F.W. Post Commander Ray Varian presented
the Prisoner of War/
Missing in Action table
ceremony, and Kenneth
Vickers served as speaker. Vickers told of the
history of Veterans Day,
saying it began in 1919,
when President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed
Ken Vickers, a member of the Smith-Capehart American Legion
Post 140 of New Haven, W.Va. served as guest speaker at the
Veterans Day ceremony held Monday in New Haven. The service
was hosted by the Legion, Stewart-Johnson V.F.W. Post 9926 of
Mason, W.Va. and the Town of New Haven.
Nov. 11 as Armistice Day
to remind Americans of
the tragedies of war. In
1954, Congress changed
the name to Veterans
Day to honor all U.S. veterans, he added.
Vickers said not all
veterans have the distinction of being heroes,
but all have sacrificed
in many ways during
their service, often keeping those sacrifices to
themselves. He closed by
quoting Father Dennis
Edward O’Brien of the
U.S. Marine Corps:
“It is the soldier, not
the reporter, who has
given us freedom of the
press. It is the soldier,
not the poet, who has
given us freedom of
speech. It is the soldier,
not the organizer, who
gave us the freedom to
demonstrate. It is the
soldier who salutes the
flag, who serves beneath
the flag and whose coffin is draped by the flag,
who allows the protester
to burn the flag.”
GARNES
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Harold Leroy Garnes, age
101, Columbus, Ohio and formerly of Gallia County, Ohio, died November 7, 2019.
Celebration of Life 7 p.m. Thursday, November
14, 2019 at the Resurrection Missionary Baptist
Church, 258 Hosack St., Columbus, where family will receive friends from 5 p.m. until time of
service. Dr. John S. Little, Eulogist. Harold will be
laid to rest 10 a.m. Friday, November 15, 2019 in
Evergreen Cemetery. Arrangements entrusted to
Diehl-Whittaker Funeral Service, 720 E. Long St.,
Columbus.
Two Bend Area Korean War era veterans were given special
recognition during the Veterans Day ceremony in New Haven,
W.Va. Monday evening. Richard Carl Harmon, right, and Eugene
Fields (represented by his son, Pat Fields, pictured), received
American Flags encased in special wooden displays.
The Prisoner of War/Missing in Action table ceremony was
conducted by V.F.W. Post 9926 Commander Ray Varian during
Monday evening’s Veterans Day service in New Haven, W.Va.
M-G-M Detachment celebrates USMC birthday
Staff Report
WILSON
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — John Franklin Wilson,
78, of Proctorville, Ohio, died Saturday, November 2,
2019 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
No services will be held. Burial will be in Crown City
Cemetery, Crown City, Ohio. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, is assisting the family with
arrangements.
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC
(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.
CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Marine Corps
League, Mason-GalliaMeigs Detachment 1180,
recently observed the
244th Birthday of the
United States Marine
Corps with a birthday
ball.
The event took place
at the American Legion
Post 23 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., where organizers report, “After a
delicious dinner there
was the traditional ‘Cake
Cutting Ceremony.’” The
cake is cut with a USMC
sword and the first piece
is given to the oldest
Marine, then the youngest Marine signifying the
passing of experience
and knowledge from the
old to the young of the
Corps.
According to a press
release about the
event from the M-G-M
Detachment, “During
the American Revolution, many important
political discussions took
place in the inns and
taverns of Philadelphia,
including the founding
of the Marine Corps.
A committee of the
Continental Congress
met at Tun Tavern to
draft a resolution call-
Chief of Staff Cheryl
Wroblewski from the Marine
Corps League, Mason-GalliaMeigs Detachment 1180, plays
the trumpet at the recent
birthday ball.
ing for two battalions of
Marines able to fight for
independence at sea and
on shore. The resolution was approved on
November 10, 1775, officially forming the Continental Marines. As the
first order of business,
Samuel Nicholas became
Commandant of the
newly formed Marines.
Tun Tavern’s owner and
popular patriot, Robert
Mullan, became his first
captain and recruiter.
They began gathering support and were
ready for action by early
1776. The rest is in the
glorious history of the
Marine Corps.”
The speaker for the
evening’s 244th Birth-
Courtesy photos
The traditional “Cake Cutting Ceremony” where the cake is cut
with a USMC sword and the first piece is given to the oldest
Marine, then the youngest Marine.
day Ball was Ron Wroblewski, a resident of
Gallipolis, Ohio and a
Vietnam combat veteran
in the United States
Marine Corps.
MGM Detachment
1180 Officers are:
Commandant - Marine
Jim Doss. Senior Vice
Commandant - Marine
Jerry Bain. Junior Vice
Commandant - Marine
Roger Martin. Chief of
Staff - Cheryl Wroblews-
ki. Adjutant - Marine
Pati Leib. Paymaster Marine Susan Paulson.
Judge Advocate - Marine
Bret Tabor. Sergeantat-Arms - Martha Collins. Chaplain - Marine
Chuck Cooper. Historian
- Virginia Taylor. Public
Relations - Marine Ron
Wroblewski.
Submitted on behalf of the Marine
Corps League, Mason-Gallia-Meigs
Detachment 1180.
�NEWS
Daily Sentinel
Dems, GOP to vie for narrative — on TV
By Mary Clare Jalonick and Zeke
Miller
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Impeachable or not?
Both Democrats and Republicans see the televised impeachment hearings starting this week
as their first and best opportunity
to shape public opinion about
President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukraine.
Democrats believe the testimony will paint a vivid picture of
presidential misconduct. Republicans say it will demonstrate just
how lacking the evidence is for
impeachment.
The stakes are high, and historic. Trump faces the prospect
of being just the third American
president impeached by the
House of Representatives, a dubious distinction for a commander
in chief facing reelection. Yet
Democrats are privately uncertain
about how the public will view
the proceedings, particularly if
Trump is impeached along party
lines.
In the hearings beginning
Wednesday, Democrats plan a narrow focus and a narrative retelling
of Trump’s pressure on Ukraine
to investigate Democrats as his
administration withheld military
aid to an Eastern European ally
on Russia’s border.
All three witnesses this week
— top Ukraine diplomat William
Taylor, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent and former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine
Marie Yovanovitch — expressed
concerns about Trump’s efforts
in closed-door depositions last
month.
This time they’ll be on live TV
— and newscasts for days afterward — for all Americans to see
and hear.
The Democrats see all three as
highly credible, detail oriented
and well positioned to tell that
story to the American people.
“This is a very simple, straightforward act,” said California Rep.
Jackie Speier, a member of the
House intelligence committee,
which is conducting the hearings.
“The president broke the law. He
went on a telephone call with the
president of Ukraine and said I
have a favor, though, and then
proceeded to ask for an investigation of his rival.”
Democrats say their best
evidence isn’t even from the
witnesses themselves, but from
the rough transcript of that July
call between Trump himself and
Ukraine President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy.
Trump asked for the “favor” of
the investigations as Zelenskiy
mentioned the military aid.
The witnesses have added
detail on the circumstances of the
call and have told investigators
of concerns swirling in different
corners of the administration
as Trump and his lawyer, Rudy
Giuliani, pushed for the probes
into Democratic rival Joe Biden
and his family and into a possible
Ukraine role in the 2016 U.S.
How an impeachment process might proceed
The Constitution gives the House of Representatives the power to impeach U.S.
officials and the Senate the power to remove them from office, including the
president. Just how that might unfold remains unknown.
INQUIRY
Three committees
lead the probe;
1. Intelligence,
2. Foreign Relations
3. Government Reform
and Oversight
• Impeachment
investigation
ARTICLES
APPROVED
• Formal articles of
impeachment
written and approved
House Judiciary
Committee
VOTES
• Articles sent on to
the full House for a vote
U.S. House of
Representatives
SWORN IN
TRIAL and
DELIBERATION
• “Managers” are appointed to prosecute the case
• Chief Justice John Roberts presides.
• Roberts in turn will swear in the 100 senators that
act as jurors
• Managers try to persuade senators to vote for the
president’s removal in opening and closing arguments,
• Senators will question managers and maybe witnesses.
Lawyers for the president will rebut the charges.
• Senators then will deliberate in private or publicly.
VOTE
• Two-thirds of the Senators
vote to convict and
remove the president
from office.
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, Nov. 13
HARRISONVILLE — Scipio Township Trustees
regular monthly meeting, 7 p.m., Harrisonville Fire
House.
Friday, Nov. 15
MIDDLEPORT — Snack & canvas with Michele
Musser will be held at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Art
Council 290 North Second Ave., Middleport. This
months project will be a lamp post with a snowman.
All materials are furnished by Michele. For more
information and to reserve a spot call Michele at 740416-o879 or Donna at 740-992-5123.
POMEROY — The PHS Class of 1959 will be
having their 3rd Friday Lunch at Fox Pizza at noon.
Come join us!
Saturday, Nov. 16
ROCKSPRINGS — Meigs County Trade Days
Craft Bazaar will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the
Rutland Bottle Gas Building at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. For more information contact Wendi at
740-416-4015 or Tara at 740-416-5506.
POMEROY — The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
NSDAR will meet at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
Members are encouraged to bring items for the Chapter Service to America projects: items for the Military
boxes and school supplies. A $5 table will be utilized
to provide postage for the Military boxes. Program
will be related to Veterans Day and ancestor William
Bierce. All members are encouraged to attend.
Sunday, Nov. 17
• Less than 2/3 vote
to convict.
MIDDLEPORT — Rev. Dennis Karp will be speaking at Ash Street Church, Middleport, Ohio, in the
10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. services. ‘Anchor Holds’ will
be singing in the 6:30 p.m. service.
• The president
remains in office.
MEIGS BRIEFS
OUTCOME
• Vice President Mike Pence
becomes president.
presidential election.
Taylor and Kent will testify
on Wednesday, Yovanovitch on
Friday. Yovanovitch plays a central role in the inquiry, as her
ouster at Trump and Giuliani’s
direction in May raised questions
throughout the U.S. diplomatic
community. Taylor was brought
in to replace her and navigated
Trump’s demands throughout the
summer as the president brought
his requests directly to Zelenskiy.
Kent is a senior State Department official overseeing Ukraine
who told investigators that he
understood, as other witnesses
did, the military aid to be in
exchange for the investigations
— the quid pro quo that is at the
heart of the Democratic probe.
Trump — who will surely be
watching at the White House —
has strongly denied any quid pro
quo, and has bashed the diplomats by saying that none of them
had firsthand knowledge of his
thinking.
“It seems that nobody has any
firsthand knowledge,” the president said last week.
Republican questioning of
the witnesses at the hearings is
expected to turn on that point.
None of the witnesses has testified to relevant conversations that
they had with Trump himself, and
several of the accounts involve
conversations they heard about
from other people. While closeddoor testimony from multiple witnesses has largely reinforced the
same story, Republicans say that
the Democrats don’t have enough
direct evidence.
GOP lawmakers are also expected to defend the president’s words
on the July call, which Trump
has repeatedly called “perfect.”
They argue that those words don’t
explicitly show a quid pro quo.
The GOP grilling is expected
to veer into other arguments as
well. A proposed witness list from
House Republicans includes some
figures from former special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation — a possible attempt by
California Rep. Devin Nunes, the
top Republican on the intelligence
panel, to turn the narrative to
GOP concerns that officials at
the Department of Justice were
biased against Trump.
Record cold follows early snowstorm
By Carolyn Thompson
Wednesday, November 13, 2019 3
for the time of year, weather
Associated Press
service records show. Areas of
Vermont and Maine saw similar totals as a wintry mix also
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Snow and
closed or delayed hundreds of
cold records fell as an arctic
schools in northern New Engairmass that started in Siberia
land.
spilled over a big chunk of the
“This is an air mass that’s
eastern half of the U.S., including the normally mild South, on more typical for the middle of
January than mid-November,”
Tuesday.
The mid-autumn taste of win- National Weather Service meteorologist Kevin Birk said in Chicater brought record single-digit
go, where Tuesday morning’s low
temperatures to Chicago and
environs; set snowfall records in of 7 degrees (minus 13 Celsius)
Buffalo and Detroit; dusted cars broke the previous record of 8
with snow in Memphis, Tennes- (minus 13 Celsius), set in 1986.
“It is pretty much about the coldsee; and froze lakes in Minneest we can be this time of year
sota weeks earlier than usual.
(and) it could break records all
Wisconsin farmer Bob Grove
over the region.”
still has soybeans in the field,
At least six cities in Kansas
20 miles south of Milwaukee,
set new record lows Tuesday, led
but said he can’t harvest them
by Garden City, which dropped
because the snow will clog the
to minus 1 (minus 18 Celsius),
machinery.
breaking the record of 7 (minus
“Normally, you don’t see this
14 Celsius) set just last year.
kind of weather to well into
Records also fell in Wichita,
December,” Grove said. “It’s
Salina, Russell, Dodge City and
caught us off guard, as far as
Medicine Lodge.
getting crops harvested. Doing
In St. Louis, the mercury
what we can in between snow,
dipped to 11 degrees, breaking a
rain, mud.”
The roughly 10 inches of snow record for the date that had stood
since 1911.
in Buffalo and Detroit by TuesWarming shelters in Memphis
day morning was a record depth
offered relief from a reading of 21
degrees (minus 6 Celsius), also a
record low for the date.
Schools and businesses as far
south as the Gulf Coast states
opened late or closed Tuesday
because of the unusual cold.
About 20 school systems
delayed opening across north
Alabama under the threat of
wintry precipitation, including
all the public schools around
Huntsville.
Even more opened late or
closed in Tennessee, and a handful of businesses and schools
opened late in Georgia.
Forecasters said daytime temperatures would remain in the
30s across a wide area of the
South. Freeze warnings reached
from eastern Texas to coastal
South Carolina, with overnight
lows predicted in the 20s.
The dip to 8 degrees (minus
13 Celsius) in Indianapolis gave
the city its earliest recorded fall
temperature in the single digits.
The closest similar reading was
11 degrees (minus 11 Celsius)
recorded on Nov. 3, 1951.
Farther north, heavy lake-effect
snow piled more than 10 inches
high near Goshen.
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event information that is open to the public and will be printed
on a space-available basis.
Straw available
The Meigs County Humane Society will be providing straw for animal bedding during the months of
November, December, January, and February. Vouchers may be picked up at the Humane Society Thrift
Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport, Ohio, for
a fee of $2 per bail. Vouchers are to be redeemed at
Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For more information
call 992-6064.
Road closures
MEIGS COUNTY — State Route 124 will close on
Monday, Sept. 9 to allow crews to replace a culvert
that carries the route over Forked Run.The closure
will be between the entrance to Forked Run State
Park and Curtis Hollow Road. During the work, traffic
will be detoured via SR-248, SR-7, and SR-681. The
project is scheduled for completion in mid-November,
weather permitting.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill” is
closed due to a slip until further notice. Tickets will
be issued to those who drive through the closed portion of the road.
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 3, New
Lima Road, will be closed beginning Monday, Oct.
28, to allow county forces to repair a slip just north
of T-369A, McMurray Road. This closing will be in
effect for approximately three weeks.
IN BRIEF
St. Louis area
spots meteor
the American Meteor
Society, said the organization received about
200 reports of sightings
Tuesday morning. Most
ST. LOUIS (AP) —
came from Missouri but
Residents in the St.
people saw the meteor
Louis area were treated
up to 350 miles away in
to a sparkling display
Oklahoma and Wisconas an apparent meteor
sin, The St. Louis Poststreaked across the sky.
The National Weather Dispatch reported .
Hankey said the
Service posted a video of
meteor was somewhat
the flashing light flying
across the area Monday unusual because it was
large enough to be
night. It was taken by a
volunteer storm spotter uncommonly bright and
it created a boom after
in the St. Louis suburb
falling within 38 miles
of O’Fallon. Other vidof the Earth’s surface,
eos showed the meteor
while most meteors burn
streaking by the Gateup before getting that
way Arch in St. Louis.
close.
Mike Hankey, with
TO THE PEOPLE OF LETART TOWNSHIP
Thank you for your continued support
during the recent election
Zachary B. Manuel
paid for by the candidate
OH-70158128
�Opinion
4 Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Daily Sentinel
THEIR VIEW
A valuable
lesson on
impeachment
Democrats in the House of Representatives
seem determined to impeach President Donald
Trump. That makes this a good time to refresh our
memories about impeachment.
First of all, impeachment doesn’t
mean the president will get the boot
– it’s just a list of charges compiled
by members of the House, kind of
like a criminal indictment. The Senate then gets to decide if the president is guilty.
David
There have been two presidents
Lindeman in American history who were
Contributing impeached and one who avoided it
columnist
by getting out of town in the nick of
time. Here’s a quick rundown.
Andrew Johnson. Johnson was from Tennessee,
and was the only Southern senator who stuck with
the Union during the Civil War. He was a Democrat, and Abraham Lincoln picked him to be his
running mate in 1864 on a unity ticket, which just
goes to show Honest Abe might not have been as
smart about everything as we thought.
When Abe got shot, Johnson took over. He
was squarely against civil rights, which made the
radical Republicans mad at him. The Republicans
passed a law called the Tenure of Office act that
said the president couldn’t fire anyone unless the
Senate approved it. When Johnson fired Secretary
of War Edwin Stanton, who is quite a story himself, Congress impeached Johnson.
The official charges were violation of the Tenure
of Office Act and bringing into “disgrace, ridicule,
hatred, contempt, and reproach the Congress of
the United States.” This seems rather ironic, since
Congress has proved time and time again it is perfectly capable of inspiring contempt and reproach
all by itself.
It takes a 2/3 vote of the Senate to find a president guilty. Johnson survived by a single vote. It
was all very dramatic and ruined the little bit of
Johnson’s political future that he hadn’t already
ruined on his own.
Richard Nixon. Articles of impeachment for
Richard Nixon had been drawn up when Nixon
ruined everyone’s fun by quitting and getting out
of Dodge. It all started with the Watergate breakin and eventually led to charges of abuse of power
and contempt of Congress (those people in Congress sure seem touchy about their reputations).
Nixon hoped his friends would see him through,
but when Barry Goldwater, Hugh Scott and John
Rhodes visited the White House and told him
that, well, he didn’t really have any friends left,
Nixon decided to leave town. Gerald Ford moved
in as president and everyone immediately nodded
off to sleep.
The worst part of the whole thing was that for
decades any scandal that popped up became a
“Gate.” There was Irangate and Contragate and,
if you’re an Ohio State fan, Tattoogate. Journalists
show a startling lack of creativity sometimes.
Bill Clinton. I know, you’re thinking Monica
Lewinsky but it really wasn’t what Bill and Monica
did that caused the problem – after all, if you can
impeach presidents for fooling around you’d end
up with a pretty long list. It was that Bill lied
about Monica and Paula Jones, too. So Congress
charged him with lying under oath and obstruction of justice, things I think many members of
Congress might know a lot about.
It really wasn’t close. Remember, you need 2/3
of the senators to show thumbs down, which
would be 67. There were two counts of impeachment, and there were 45 votes for conviction on
one count and 50 votes on the other. Monica and
Paula, alas, didn’t get to vote.
So what will happen to Donald Trump? A
president can be impeached for “high crimes and
misdemeanors.” The authors of the Constitution
dropped that little phrase into the Constitution
and left it for future generations to figure out. No
one ever really has figured it out and people have
been fighting about what it means ever since. That
covers a lot of ground. I imagine most of us could
be impeached for something that falls in that category.
It seems unlikely there will be 67 senators who
would vote to remove the president from office,
but you never know. At the very least, this will
keep Congress busy and away from causing other
problems for a long time, which is something.
And one other good thing: no one has yet starting calling this “Ukrainegate.” We’ve finally moved
on. Maybe there’s hope for us yet.
David Lindeman is a Troy, Ohio resident and former editor at the Troy
Daily News. He can be reached at lindy@woh.rr.com. This column
shared through the AIM Media Midwest network of newspapers.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Journalist-author Peter Arnett is 85. Actor
Jimmy Hawkins is 78. Blues singer John Hammond is 77. Country singer-songwriter Ray Wylie
Hubbard is 73. Actor Joe Mantegna is 72. Actress
Sheila Frazier is 71.
THEIR VIEW
A lesson in capitalism
It seems to me that
with all the whoop-de-do
about socialism and what
it is or isn’t, I figured an
object lesson in capitalism might be appropriate.
To allay any possible
concerns that this is some
highbrow academic lecture, please be assured it
is not. Nope, it’s a very
simple case study of capitalism at work.
This situation came
about in the summer
between my fifth and
sixth grades. I decided
I wanted a bicycle and
knew I would somehow
have to earn the money
because we, like most
families at the tail end
of the Great Depression,
couldn’t afford such
frivolities. I had heard
that the local newspaper
offered “newsboys” the
opportunity to purchase
the daily newspapers for
three cents each and then
sell them for five cents
thus making a profit of
two cents a paper.
When I told Dad about
this he wanted to know
how I planned to work
this scheme. I explained
that I had saved twentyfive cents with which
I would buy as many
papers as I could and
then sell them. We talked
for a while, then he suggested a more formal
approach. He offered to
lend me another twentyfive cents giving me a
total of fifty cents to
work with so I could buy
ten papers while keeping an additional four
nickels for change in case
a customer paid with
a dime or quarter and
the newspapers
thus I wouldn’t
I bought daily
lose a sale. I also
were of no value
would put away
after that day. Yep,
all my daily profits
although my busiseparately and
ness of buying
wouldn’t touch
at wholesale and
them because they
selling at retail
were for my bicy- Bill
was very small, it
cle. I agreed and
Taylor
went to work.
Contributing incorporated the
essentials of any
Okay so what
columnist
well-planned busidoes this have to
ness venture.
do with capitalWell, my business went
ism? Everything! You
along quite nicely as I
see, I was taking on the
learned how to peddle
role an entrepreneur (“a
my papers on the street,
person who organizes
and in bars, restaurants,
and manages a business
“hamburger joints” and
undertaking, assuming
bowling alleys. I almost
the risk for the sake of
always sold out so I was
the profit” - Webster) –
and entrepreneurship is a usually making twenty
fundamental principle of cents a day on my fifty
capitalism. With the help cent capitalization - that’s
40% return on my investof Dad, I had developed
ment a day! How about
a “business plan” with a
specific objective in mind. them apples! I quickly
The plan included invest- repaid my loan from Dad
and my bicycle “sinking
ing my own “venture
fund” was growing. But
capital” and Dad’s “risk
capital” which is defined then disaster struck.
The newspaper raised
as “funds invested specuthe price from five to
latively in a business,
typically a startup.” Sixty seven cents a copy meaning I now had to pay five
percent of my overall
cents per paper. My opercapitalization was alloating expenses jumped
cated to the “operating
by 66% so I could buy
expenses” of purchasing
the newspapers while the only six papers a day and
my anticipated profit
remaining forty percent
dropped 40%. In addiwas “capital reserves.”
tion, I had to add fifteen
Furthermore I estabcents in pennies - from
lished a “sinking fund”
my sinking fund - to
which is defined as “a
my capital reserves so I
fund established by an
could make change for
economic entity by setting aside revenue over a a customer offering ten
cents.
period of time to fund a
All this reduced my
future expense, or repayrate of return by over
ment of a debt” - and
half and my contribumy “sinking fund” was
tion to the sinking fund
designed to do both. I
by 40%.But that’s not
also assumed the risk
all. Customers balked
of “spoilage” because
at paying the higher
price - coughing up a
nickel was fairly easy,
but fishing around for
the extra two cents was
not. Furthermore, since
they were used to paying
only five cents I often
had to show the price
displayed on the newspaper to prove the increase.
I started encountering
“spoilage” problems and
sometimes had to resort
to an “inventory reduction sale” by “dumping”
my papers at cost just to
avoid a total loss.
It didn’t take long for
me to realize my business plan was in tatters
and so I, as do many
other startups, went out
of business - seemingly
a failure. This venture
was, however, was actually a success because my
“sinking fund” was sufficiently healthy enough
to get me a bike so my
original objective was
achieved.
Well, there you have
it - a real life case study
in the fundamentals of
capitalism complete
with entrepreneurship, a
business plan, obtaining
venture and risk capital,
allocating operating and
reserve capital, establishing and maintaining a
sinking fund, and meeting the business objective. You know, maybe
this example should find
its way into a business
course. At least that’s
how it seems to me.
Bill Taylor is a regular contributing
columnist to the Greene County
Daily in Ohio. This column shared
through the AIM Media Midwest
group of newspapers.
TODAY IN HISTORY
certain, except death and
taxes.”
In 1911, the U.S.
Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 13, the 317th day of Supreme Court ruled that
an unauthorized motion
2019. There are 48 days
picture adaptation of
left in the year.
the novel “Ben-Hur” by
Today’s Highlight in History General Lew Wallace
infringed on the book’s
On Nov. 13, 1956, the
copyright.
Supreme Court struck
In 1940, the Walt
down laws calling for
racial segregation on pub- Disney film “Fantasia,”
featuring animated seglic buses.
ments set to classical
music, had its world preOn this date
miere in New York.
In 1312, England’s
In 1942, President
King Edward III was
Franklin D. Roosevelt
born at Windsor Castle.
signed a measure lowerIn 1789, Benjamin
Franklin wrote in a letter ing the minimum draft
to a friend, Jean-Baptiste age from 21 to 18.
In 1969, speaking in
Leroy: “In this world
nothing can be said to be Des Moines, Iowa, Vice
The Associated Press
President Spiro T. Agnew
accused network television news departments of
bias and distortion, and
urged viewers to lodge
complaints.
In 1974, Karen Silkwood, a 28-year-old technician and union activist at the Kerr-McGee
Cimarron plutonium
plant near Crescent,
Oklahoma, died in a car
crash while on her way to
meet a reporter.
In 1982, the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial was
dedicated on the National
Mall in Washington, D.C.
In 1985, some 23,000
residents of Armero,
Colombia, died when a
volcanic mudslide buried
the city.
In 2000, lawyers for
George W. Bush failed
to win a court order barring manual recounts
of ballots in Florida.
Florida Secretary of
State Katherine Harris
announced she would
end the recounting at 5
p.m. Eastern time the
next day — prompting
an immediate appeal by
lawyers for Al Gore.
In 2001, President George W. Bush
approved the use of a
special military tribunal
that could put accused
terrorists on trial faster
and in greater secrecy
than an ordinary criminal
court.
�NEWS
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 13, 2019 5
Ceremony
From page 1
willingness with which
our young people are
likely to serve in any
war, no matter how justified, shall be directly
proportional to how they
perceive the veterans of
earlier wars were treated
and appreciated by their
nation,’” said Wheeler.
“We are here today
to honor our heroes, to
remember their achievements, their courage
and their dedication
and to say thank you for
their sacrifices,” added
Wheeler. “We stand in
the midst of patriots and
the family and friends
of those who have nobly
served.”
Wheeler recognizes
those who have served,
saying, “Thank you for
answering the call to
duty. You have made our
armed forces the most
respected in the world.”
He then asked the
family members of those
who served to stand,
and thanked them for
what they had done as
well.
“The service members
we honor today came
from all walks of life
but they shared several
fundamental qualities.
They possessed courage,
pride, determination,
selflessness, dedication
to duty and integrity. All
the qualities needed to
serve a cause larger than
ones self,” said Wheeler.
“They didn’t go to war
because they loved fighting. They were called
to be part of something
bigger than themselves.
They were ordinary
people who responded
in extraordinary ways
in extreme times. They
rose to the nations call
because they wanted to
protect a nation which
has given them, us, so
much.”
Wheeler graduated
from Point Pleasant
High School in 1966. He
served in the U.S. Army
from 1967 to 1970.
Wheeler was assigned
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
The Southern Local Marching Band performed during the Veterans Day ceremony in Pomeroy.
The colors were presented by American Legion Post 39.
Jerry Fredrick read the Old Ragged Flag during the ceremony.
to Fort Monmouth
Military Signal School
for electronics training.
He graduated a a dial
central officer repairman
and received accelerated
advancement to specialist E4 rank. Wheeler
then went to Fort Hood,
Texas, and was assigned
to artillery in 1968 and
1969.
In January 1970,
Wheeler went to Pinder
Barracks, Zirndorf, Germany, and was assigned
artillery, D Battery. In
April, Wheeler was
promoted to Sergeant
E5 rank and moved to
the position of gun commander. Wheeler was
discharged from the U.S.
Army at Ft. Dix, New
Jersey, in November
1970.
In 1978, Wheeler
enlisted in the West
Virginia Air National
Guard 130th Airlift
Wing in Charleston,
W.Va. Wheeler attended
a physiological training
at Wright Patterson Air
Force Base (AFB) in
Ohio in 1979. Due to a
change in employment,
Wheeler moved to Florida in 1980 and joined
the Air Force Reserve in
Charleston, South Carolina. He attended a Flight
Engineer School at Altus
AFB in Altus, Oklahoma
in 1981.
In 1984, Wheeler
moved again due to a job
relocation. He joined the
Kentucky Air National
Guard in Louisville, Ken-
tucky. Wheeler served as
a crew chief on RF 4C
aircrafts. Wheeler moved
to Wisconsin in 1993
and enlisted in the 115th
Fighter Wing of the
Wisconsin Air National
Guard. In March 1997,
Wheeler deployed to
Incirlink AFB in Adana,
Turkey in the support
of Operation Northern
Watch.
Wheeler went to support Operation Southern
Watch in October 1998
at Prince Sultan AFB in
Saudi Arabia. Wheeler
returned to the United
States in November 201
when he deployed to
Langley AFB in Virginia
in support of Operation
Noble Eagle. In August
2004, he deployed to
Joanne Newsome read Flanders Field during the ceremony at the
Pomeroy Levee.
according to Commander
Hood.
Additionally, Joanne
Newsome, President of
the Post 39 Ladies Auxiliary read Flanders Field
in memory of Gladys
Cumings and Chaplain
Jerry Fredrick read the
Old Ragged Flag.
The Southern Local
Marching Band performed the National
Anthem and other patriotic songs as part of the
program, with Silas Nero
playing Taps following
the gun salute by members of Post 39.
Al Udeid AFB in Qatar
for Operation Enduring
Freedom.
Wheeler then went to
Balad AFB in southeaster
Iraq for Operation Iraqi
Freedom in April 2006.
In his final deployment, Wheeler went to
Davis-Monthan AFB in
Tucson, Arizona in January 2007 for Operation
Jump Start. Wheeler was
honorably discharged
from the Wisconsin Air
National Guard in August
2007.
Wheeler continues to
work with the military,
leaving later in the day
on Monday for Camp
Dawson for a training,
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
Holzer
From page 1
Cake was served during the celebration, as well as a staff luncheon
to celebrate the milestone earlier in the day.
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Holzer CEO Brent Saunders speaks during the 5th anniversary celebration on Tuesday.
had been without an
emergency room since
the closing of Veterans
Memorial Hospital more
than a decade earlier.
Saunders said he is
proud of the service provided at the emergency
department and the
staff.
He added that Holzer
remains committed to
Meigs County with the
hope to expand services
and be in Meigs County
for a long time to come.
In addition to providing medical services,
Arnold said, the staff of
the Meigs Emergency
Department takes part
in many community
service activities and
projects. Among those
are the wellness trailer at
the Meigs County Fair,
Treat Street at Holzer in
Gallipolis and in downtown Pomeroy, and a
coat drive as part of the
anniversary celebration,
among other things.
Coats will be donated
(740-446-0596) for
additional information.
Those exhibitors who
have participated in the
From page 1
past will receive a 50
any are interested in par- percent discount on registration while registraticipating, registration
tion for new exhibitors
can be done online at
www.discoverappalachia- will be $25.
The past four years
travelexpo.com or conthe bureau has been
tact the Gallia County
Convention and Visitors working to revamp the
event, making some
Bureau (740-446-6882)
changes to increase
or the Gallia County
guest attendance and
Chamber of Commerce
even made a name
change. The bureau is
also looking to bring
some new activities
for adults and children
throughout the day.
“We are excited to be
a part of this event. We
wholeheartedly believe
it will be a great opportunity for our local and
regional businesses to
promote themselves
to potential customers. We hope to see the
expo grow and expand
in the coming years,”
said Chamber Executive
Director Elisha Orsbon.
The Discover Appalachia Travel Expo will
take place Saturday,
March 14, 2020 from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Gallia
Academy Middle School,
340 Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Admission is free and
open to everyone to
attend.
Expo
with the Flintstone’s
themed costumes.
The Holzer Meigs
Emergency Department
is open 24 hours a day,
seven days a week at
41861 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
to the local schools and
daycare facility.
Saunders added that
the Meigs Emergency
Department staff has
won the Treat Street
contest four of its five
years, including this year
Q=^FJ�n`�uR^�=�¿�PROn�F=kH�n`�8=\]=kn
<28�$5(
�,19,7('�
72�&203/(7(�$�
7(/(+($/7+�
6859(<
�
7DNH�WKH�WHOHKHDOWK�VXUYH\�RQOLQH�RU�DW�
\RXU�ORFDO�KHDOWK�GHSDUWPHQW����(QWHU�
DQRQ\PRXV�GUDZLQJ�IRU�D�FKDQFH�WR�ZLQ�
D������JLáW�FDUG�WR�:DOPDUW
IUUQT���XXX�TNBSUTVSWFZ�DP�VL�T�/+*"6�
,kJh=kJH�Ew��",�lnoHJ^n�=n�$nnJkEJR^�2^RtJklRnw�O`k�
kJlJ=kFQ�hk`YJFn
OH-70157237
The facility was made
possible through a collaboration between
Holzer Health System
and Meigs County Community Improvement
Corporation (CIC). The
building is approximately
13,000-square feet and
features eight treatment
rooms, one double trauma, two triage stations,
laboratory, pharmacy,
general radiation and CT
suite, along with public
staff support areas.
Holzer CEO Brent
Saunders said during the
celebration on Tuesday,
that approximately eight
years ago Holzer began
meetings with the CIC,
Chamber, commissioners and board member
Paul Reed about bringing
needed services to Meigs
County, which at the time
was only one of two counties in the state without
an emergency room. At
the time of the facility
opening, Meigs County
�Sports
6 Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Daily Sentinel
Lady Knights land 5 on all-region team
By Alex Hawley
Henderson, and sophomore
midfielder Elicia Wood.
Brian Griggs of Poca was
named Coach of the Year in
The West Virginia High
the region, while Ava Hall,
School Soccer Coaches Association has released its 2019 all- junior midfielder from Winregion teams, with a quintet of field, earned Player of the Year
players from Point Pleasant on honors.
the Class AA/A Region IV list.
Point Pleasant — finishing
2019 WVHSSCA AA/A
the season at 10-8-3 — had a
Region IV Girls
First Team
pair of representatives on the
first team, and three on the sec- F — Cadence Adkins, Lincoln
County, So.
ond team.
Lady Knights senior Monica F — Angelina Musilli, Nitro, So.
Cook was 1-of-2 first team goal F — Katie Farley, Poca, Fr.
F — Hannah Runions, Poca, Jr.
keepers in the region. Cook
F — Abbi Hugh, Huntington St.
was joined on the first team by Joseph, Sr.
sophomore midfielder Kady
F — Abby Lee, Huntington St.
Hughes.
Joseph, Sr.
On second team for PPHS
F — Anna Gregor, Sissonville, So.
F — Lilly McMullen, Williamstown,
are senior defender Ashley
Sr.
Staats, junior defender Kira
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
PPHS sophomore Kady Hughes (13) heads toward the goal, during the Lady
Knights win over Gallia Academy on Sept. 3 in Centenary, Ohio.
F — Julianne Pauley, Winfield, Sr.
M — Kady Hughes, Point Pleasant,
So.
M — Mina Smith, Huntington St.
Joseph, Sr.
M — Ellen McMullen, Williamstown,
So.
M — Ava Hall, Winfield, Jr.
D — Camryn Iwvin, Williamstown,
Jr.
D — Emily Bryant, Winfield, Sr.
D — Mara McGrew, Winfield, Sr.
GK — Monica Cook, Point Pleasant,
Sr.
GK — Mara Rinehart, Williamstown,
Sr.
Player of the Year: Ava Hall,
Winfield.
Coach of the Year: Brian Griggs,
Poca.
Second Team
F — Abbie Myers, Chapmanville,
So.
See KNIGHTS | 7
Alonso, Álvarez
named Rookies
of the Year
NEW YORK (AP) — Young sluggers known for
their prodigious power, Pete Alonso and Yordan
Álvarez knocked the Rookie of the Year voting out
of the park.
In a rarity for the major league home run leader,
Alonso didn’t land the biggest blow.
Alonso, a star first baseman with the New York
Mets, got 29 of 30 first-place votes for NL Rookie
of the Year. Braves right-hander Mike Soroka got
the other first-place vote and finished second in
balloting by the Baseball Writers’ Association of
America revealed Monday night.
“To just win the award, doesn’t matter if it’s
unanimous or not,” Alonso said. “It’s still such a
blessing.”
Álvarez, a hulking designated hitter from the
Houston Astros, earned all 30 first-place votes to
become the 24th unanimous selection since the
award was introduced in 1949.
“I was really not expecting it,” Álvarez said
through a translator.
The 24-year-old Alonso led the majors with 53
homers, one better than Yankees slugger Aaron
Judge’s rookie record from 2017. “Polar Bear” Pete
became the face of baseball in Flushing, beloved
for his power, personality and philanthropy. He’s
the sixth Met to win the award and first since
teammate Jacob deGrom in 2014.
Padres shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr. was third
in NL balloting. The only voter to place Soroka
ahead of Alonso was Andrew Baggarly of The
Athletic. Alonso was the only NL player named on
every ballot.
Álvarez, a 22-year-old from Cuba, played 87
games after debuting in June, fewest by any position player to win AL Rookie of the Year. He hit 27
homers, batted .313, drove in 78 and had a 1.067
OPS for the pennant-winning Astros. He struggled
at times in the postseason, but that was after voting had concluded.
“My whole family was telling me I would be the
winner of the award,” Álvarez said. “And once I
was selected as the winner, I was very excited.”
He’s the third Houston player to win, following teammate Carlos Correa in 2015 and Hall of
Famer Jeff Bagwell in 1991.
Álvarez easily beat out the other AL finalists,
with Orioles left-hander John Means second and
Rays infielder Brandon Lowe third.
The Mets agitated their fans by stashing Alonso
at Triple-A through the end of the 2018 season,
citing his inadequate defense at first base. He went
to spring training this year battling with buddy
Dominic Smith for the starting job, and Alonso
wasn’t even certain to crack the opening-day roster until being declared New York’s primary first
baseman a day before the regular season.
Alonso said he was challenged by first-year general manager Brodie Van Wagenen to “show up in
shape and earn your spot.”
“I felt like I answered the bell,” Alonso said.
The former Florida Gator became an instant
star in the Mets’ blue and orange. Wielding his
hefty 34-inch, 32-ounce birch bat, Alonso hit .292
See ROOKIES | 7
OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Nov. 15
College Football
La. Tech at Marshall, 7
p.m.
WVSSAC Volleyball
(5) Point Pleasant vs. (4)
Bridgeport at Charleston,
8:30 a.m.
PPHS-BHS winner vs. Oak
Glen-Independence winner
at Charleston, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 16
WVSSAC Volleyball
Class AAA final at
Charleston, 9:30 a.m.
Class AA final at
Charleston, 11 a.m.
Class A final at
Charleston, 12:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Point Pleasant volleyball coach Marla Cottrill, middle, talks with her team during a timeout in an Oct. 17 volleyball match against Winfield
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Lady Knights headed to state
Point volleyball falls to Winfield in Region IV championship
By Bryan Walters
title match, the Red and
Black simply had nothing
left in the tank as WHS
cruised to a 25-11, 25-21,
MAN, W.Va. — No
25-17 decision for the
championship and no
Region IV crown.
more streak, but still
The Lady Knights had
quite impressive nonethea program-best 25-match
less.
The Point Pleasant vol- winning streak come to
leyball program is headed an end after suffering
their first setback since
to the Class AA state
Sept. 28 at the Greenbrier
tournament for the first
East Tournament, a 2-0
time in school history
after finishing as the over- loss to George Washingall runner-up Saturday at ton.
Winfield became the
the Region IV championfirst program to sweep
ships held at Man High
PPHS in a best-of-5 forSchool.
The Lady Knights (33- mat all season long.
Point Pleasant enters
3-2) — who captured the
the 8-team Class AA state
program’s first-ever Secbracket ranked as a five
tion 1 title earlier in the
seed and will play 8:30
week — stumbled a bit
a.m. Friday against fourth
in their semifinal match
before eventually cruising seeded Bridgeport at the
Charleston Coliseum and
to a 24-26, 25-8, 25-14,
Convention Center.
25-14 victory over SecThe winner advances
tion 2 runner-up Chapto the semifinal round
manville.
match at 6:30 p.m. FriThat win ultimately
day night. The Class AA
locked up Point’s initial
state berth while advanc- championship is slated for
Saturday, approximately
ing the squad to the
30 minutes after the conregional championship
clusion of the Class AAA
match against Winfield,
who knocked off Section match at 9:30 a.m.
Other Class AA quar2 champion Scott in the
terfinal matches include
other semifinal.
top seeded Oak Glen
After defeating the
against eighth seeded
Lady Generals (38-15Independence, Shady
3) twice in the regular
Spring against Robert
season and again in four
C. Byrd in a 2-7 contest,
games in the Region 1
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
and sixth seeded Winfield
faces third seeded Philip
Barbour.
Chapmanville stormed
out to early leads of 7-2
and 9-4 in Game 1 before
Point rallied back to knot
things up at nine. CHS
reeled off 10 of the next
15 points and again led
by five at 19-14.
The Lady Knights
managed to tie things up
again at 24-all, but the
Lady Tigers reeled off the
final two points for a 1-0
match edge.
Point Pleasant never
trailed by more than two
points the rest of the
way, including a wire-towire win in Game 3 that
pushed the PPHS match
lead out to 2-1. The Lady
Knights completed the
3-1 match decision —
and secured a state berth
— by claiming their third
straight double-digit win
against CHS.
Olivia Dotson led the
Point Pleasant service
attack with 25 points,
followed by Haley Milhoan with 17 points and
Peyton Jordan with 16
points.
Addy Cottrill was next
with five points, while
Brooke Warner and Katelynn Smith respectively
added three and two
points.
Milhoan produced a
team-best five service
aces and Dotson followed
with four aces.
Tristan Wilson led the
net attack with 17 kills
and four blocks. Milhoan
was next with 14 kills,
while Cottrill added
10 kills to the winning
cause.
Dotson dished out a
team-high 40 assists.
Jordan came up with a
team-best 20 digs, with
Warner close behind
with 17 digs.
Point Pleasant held
leads in all three games
against Winfield, but
none of those advantages
ended up being by more
than three points — and
all were early on.
Cottrill paced the
service attack with five
points and two aces, followed by Dotson with
four points and an ace.
Jordan and Warner were
next with three points
apiece, while Milhoan
added two points.
Wilson led PPHS
with seven kills and two
blocks, followed by Dotson with four kills and
a team-high 12 assists.
Jordan led the Red and
Black with nine digs.
Dotson and Warner both
made eight digs each in
the setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
�SPORTS
Daily Sentinel
Brannen gets 1st
win at Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP) —
John Brannen’s first win
at Cincinnati was no big
deal.
The Bearcats had a
low-key celebration in the
locker room after their
81-59 victory over Drake
on Monday night that
displayed their new uptempo offense under their
first-year head coach.
“We clapped it up,
that’s about it,” center
Chris Vogt said. “Nothing
too crazy.”
Fitzpatrick leads Steelers’ turnaround
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— The ball left Jared
Goff’s hands and fluttered to the ground.
And for a split second,
everyone around Minkah
Fitzpatrick eased up .
Not Fitzpatrick. Easing
up isn’t really his thing.
Instinctively, the Pittsburgh Steelers safety
at the epicenter of his
team’s remarkable turnaround reached down,
picked it up and took
off. Four seconds and 43
yards later, he was in the
end zone. The Steelers
were in the lead. And
Fitzpatrick’s growing
legend added another
remarkable chapter.
Asked why he reacted
so quickly while those
around him temporarily
froze — hard to blame
them, considering by
all accounts it appeared
to be a forward pass
— Fitzpatrick pointed
to the coaching staff
at Alabama. Whenever
there was a loose ball in
practice, Crimson Tide
defensive players were
instructed to pounce
on it and start running
regardless of the circumstances.
“Coaches yell ‘Scoop’
after every single play,”
Fitzpatrick said after his
second touchdown in as
many weeks helped the
Steelers put together
an inelegant 17-12 victory that pushed their
winning streak to four.
“‘Scoop, Scoop, Scoop.’
If you don’t scoop, they’ll
throw the ball back out
there, you have to go
scoop it up again.”
It’s how Brannen wanted it after his first win in
the Bearcats’ arena.
“I was really appreciative of the players,” Brannen said. “Head coaches
get too much credit, probably too much blame at
the same time.”
Jarron Cumberland
scored all of his 11 points
in the first half as Cincinnati (1-1) took control
quickly, looking much
better the second time
around.
OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
GAHS basketball
reserved seats
CENTENARY, Ohio — Reserve seats for the 201920 Gallia Academy varsity basketball season will go
on sale on Tuesday, Nov. 12 for Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity basketball players and varsity cheerleaders will be able to purchase
reserve seats on Wednesday, Nov. 13.
Reserve seats for the general public will be available
on Thursday, Nov. 14.
The price will be $70 per ticket. Tickets may be
purchased in the Athletic Director’s office at Gallia
Academy High School between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters will be limited to six tickets purchased on the first day of sales.
After the first day, there will be no limit on the number of tickets that may be purchased.
Rookies
From page 6
with nine homers, 26
RBIs and a 1.024 OPS
over March and April,
claiming the first of
three NL Rookie of the
Month honors. He put
on a power-packed show
while winning the AllStar Home Run Derby,
and then cemented his
fan-favorite status by
donating $100,000 of his
$1 million derby prize
to charities supporting
injured soldiers and 9/11
workers.
“Pete kept the same
attitude that he came
in spring training with
through the entire season,” Van Wagenen said.
“He was a good teammate. He was a true professional. And obviously,
he was a lightning in a
bottle for all Mets fans.”
Alonso wore a hat
reading “100%” on the
broadcast while being
named the NL winner,
but his vote total didn’t
match. The upbeat slugger was all smiles as
usual — just like when
teammates ripped off his
jersey following a gameending walk in September.
“I’m not taking my
shirt off for this one,”
Alonso joked.
With a left-handed
swing reminiscent of
long-legged Hall of
Famer Willie McCovey
— another unanimous
Rookie of the Year pick
— Álvarez immediately
entrenched himself in
the middle of Houston’s
batting order. He hit
seven homers in his first
12 games, and his OPS
ranked fifth in the majors
after he debuted June 9.
Álvarez’s OPS was the
highest ever by a rookie,
surpassing Shoeless Joe
Jackson’s 1.058 mark in
1911.
“It’s a dream for every
player to get to the major
leagues,” Álvarez said. “I
was basically living my
dream.”
McCovey appeared in
52 games while winning
the NL award in 1959,
the only total lower than
Álvarez.
Álvarez is the fourth
Cuban-born Rookie of
the Year, joining José
Canseco (1986), José
Fernández (2013) and
Jose Abreu (2014).
He is the second consecutive DH to win the
AL prize, following twoway Angels star Shohei
Ohtani. Álvarez said he
is preparing to be an
outfielder in 2020 by
working in Florida on his
agility and speed.
Knights
No need to tell Fitzpatrick twice.
All the 23-year-old has
done in the seven games
since his arrival in a
trade with Miami — a
move in which the typically risk-averse Steelers
did something decidedly
un-Steelerlike by sending
a 2020 first-round pick to
the Dolphins — is pick
off five passes, recover a
fumble, score twice and
develop a reputation as a
player who never seems
to be out of position.
Ever.
Asked if Fitzpatrick
was the missing piece
the Steelers needed,
linebacker Bud Dupree
laughed.
“That’s what it looks
like, right?” Dupree said.
“Hell yeah. He’s an excellent player.”
One that’s become the
fulcrum around which
one of the NFL’s most
opportunistic defense
swings. The Steelers (5-4) have already
produced 26 turnovers
through nine games, 11
more than they managed
all of last season. Grabbing linebacker Devin
Bush in the first round of
the draft helped. So did
signing cornerback Steven Nelson to the richest
free-agent deal in team
history.
Yet Fitzpatrick’s
impact is unmistakable.
His five picks lead the
team. His eight passes
defensed are one behind
cornerback Joe Haden
though he’s played in
two fewer games. His
dash to the end zone —
complete with an escort
by defensive end Cameron Heyward — made
him the first Steelers
defensive player in 35
years to score in back-toback weeks.
“Every game Minkah
is making big plays on
the back end,” Dupree
said. “It makes us as
rushers and defensive
linemen up front, makes
it that much easier for us
to play.”
It certainly looks that
way. Pittsburgh heads
to Cleveland (3-6) on
Thursday holding the
second wild-card spot in
the AFC, heady territory
considering it lost quarterback Ben Roethlisberger in mid-September
and the Steelers were
1-4 a month ago following an overtime loss to
Baltimore. Somehow,
they’ve survived. The
defense that’s been long
on potential but short
on production in recent
years is playing with a
swagger that’s contagious.
“I think we’re slowly
becoming that scary
defense that nobody
wants to play,” Dupree
said.
What’s working
Offensive coordinator
Randy Fichtner walked
into the locker room on
Sunday evening, pointed
to quarterback Mason
Rudolph and told the
first-year starter “that’s
a step, that’s a big step”
after Rudolph completed
22 of 38 passes for 242
yards and a touchdown
with no interceptions.
Rudolph is just the
ninth player since the
1970 merger to throw
a touchdown in each
of his first seven career
appearances, a list that
includes Roethlisberger.
Challenged by Fichtner
to start throwing the ball
into tighter windows,
Rudolph responded by
threading the needle on
several occasions and
trusting his receivers to
go make plays. About
that …
What needs help
Confidently throwing into traffic is one
thing. Catching the
ball is quite another.
Rudolph’s numbers on
Sunday would have
been considerably better if not for a handful
of drops. No one was
immune. JuJu SmithSchuster, James Washington, tight end Vance
McDonald and running
back Jaylen Samuels
all let balls smack off
their hands and fall to
the turf. That needs to
change quickly unless
Fitzpatrick somehow
manages to start scoring week in and week
out.
“If you spend a lot
of time with your
receivers talking about
receiving, you’ve got
problems,” coach Mike
Tomlin said.
Key numbers
15-4-1: Pittsburgh’s
record in Cleveland since
the Browns returned in
1999.
Bengals joining ranks of franchise’s worst teams
CINCINNATI (AP) — These
Bengals are on the verge of joining the ranks of the franchise’s
worst teams — and that’s saying
something.
As bad as the Dave Shula
teams. As bad as Marvin Lewis’
worst team. In the same neighborhood as Dick LeBeau’s 2-14
team of 2002.
One more loss, and they quali-
fy for the list.
A 49-13 drubbing by the
Ravens left Cincinnati the only
winless team in the NFL. At 0-9,
the Bengals are one loss away
from matching the worst start
and the longest losing streak in
franchise history during a single
season. They can tie it Sunday
at Oakland.
Already, the season is about
WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST
3
(WSAZ)
4
(WTAP)
6
(WSYX)
7
(WOUB)
8
(WCHS)
10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE
6 PM
6:30
WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
(N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur
NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Columbus
Jeopardy!
(N)
Jeopardy!
(N)
Ent. Tonight
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
News (N)
News (N)
(N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
(N)
News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
America
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
Says
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
News:
Business
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition (N)
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
looking to next year — will they
stay in line for the No. 1 overall
draft pick? — while trying to
navigate depths seldom experienced in Bengals history.
“You just try to come to
work every day with a positive
attitude and encourage your
teammates, keep their spirits
up,” tight end Tyler Eifert said
Monday.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Chicago Med "Too Close to Chicago Fire "Seeing Is
Chicago P.D. "No Regrets"
the Sun" (N)
Believing" (N)
(N)
Chicago Med "Too Close to Chicago Fire "Seeing Is
Chicago P.D. "No Regrets"
the Sun" (N)
Believing" (N)
(N)
The 53rd Annual CMA Awards Celebrate the biggest artists in country music, live from
Nashville, Tennessee. (N)
Nature "Nature's Biggest
Nova "Decoding da Vinci" Life From Above "Changing
Beasts" (N)
Explores Leonardo da Vinci's Planet" Take a fresh look at
art versus his science. (N)
our fragile planet. (N)
The 53rd Annual CMA Awards Celebrate the biggest artists in country music, live from
Nashville, Tennessee. (N)
Survivor: Island of the Idols "We Made It to the Merge!" S.W.A.T. "Track" (N)
(N)
The Masked Singer
Eyewitness News at 10:00
Almost Family "Fake AF"
"Triumph Over Masks" (N) (N)
p.m. (N)
Nature "Nature's Biggest
Nova "Decoding da Vinci" Life From Above "Changing
Beasts" (N)
Explores Leonardo da Vinci's Planet" Take a fresh look at
art versus his science. (N)
our fragile planet. (N)
Survivor: Island of the Idols "We Made It to the Merge!" S.W.A.T. "Track" (N)
(N)
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
18 (WGN) Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt. Dog B.H. "Greed Is Good" Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt. Dog B.H. "The Tender Trap" Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt.
NCAA Basketball Colgate at Syracuse (L)
NCAA Basketball Florida Int. vs N.C. State (L)
24 (ROOT) (5:00) NCAA Basketball
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
Stephen
NBA Basketball Los Angeles Clippers at Houston Rockets (L)
NBA Basketb. G.S./L.A. L. (L)
26 (ESPN2) NCAA Basketball LSU vs VCU (L)
NCAA Football Northern Illinois at Toledo Site: Glass Bowl -- Toledo, Ohio (L)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
D — Lena Elkins, Nitro, So.
D — Zoey Williams, Poca, So.
D — Kira Henderson, Point
Pleasant, Jr.
From page 6
D — Ashley Staats, Point
Pleasant, Sr.
F — Kiaura Henderson,
D — Lindsey Blatt,
Lincoln County, Jr.
F — Peyton Ilderton, Logan, Huntington St. Joseph, Sr.
D — Chloe Hunter, Scott, So.
So.
F — Jon’C Atkinson, Scott, Fr. D — Sydney Beckett,
Sissonville, Jr.
M — Katie Long, Lincoln
GK — Mia Conner, Nitro, So.
County, Jr.
GK — Devin Ord, Poca, Jr.
M — Hannah Walz, Lincoln
GK — Jaden Elkins, Scott,
County, Sr.
M — Madison Mullins, Logan, So.
GK — Sydney Farmer,
So.
M — Alaina Maharias, Nitro, Sissonville, Jr.
So.
Honorable Mention
M — Kira Pilloud, Nitro, Fr.
Natalie Blankenship,
M — Estrella Hernandez,
Logan; Emma Weekley,
Poca, So.
Ravenswood; Ashley
M — Elicia Wood, Point
Wright, Ravenswood; Stevy
Pleasant, So.
Kirkland, Logan; Emily
M — Laney Whitmore,
Brown, Lincoln County;
Huntington St. Joseph, Jr.
Kelly Taylor, Ravenswood;
M — Lilli Bias, Scott, Jr.
Jillian Throneberry,
M — Amelia Compston,
Ravenswood; Kennedy
Sissonville, So.
Jones, Sissonville; Emily
M — Natalie Chambers,
Ball, Logan; Skyler Varney,
Williamstown, So.
Ravenswood.
M — Peyton Frohnapfel,
Winfield, Sr.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740D — Baylie Holton,
446-2342, ext. 2100.
Chapmanville, Sr.
Wednesday, November 13, 2019 7
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39
(AMC)
40 (DISC)
42
(A&E)
52 (ANPL)
57
(OXY)
58
60
61
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM
A Christmas Proposal (2008, Comedy) Tom Arnold, David Christmas Reservations (2019, Romance) Markie Post,
(:05) The Flight Before
DeLuise, Nicole Eggert. TVPG
Ricardo Chavira, Melissa Joan Hart. TVPG
Christmas TVPG
(5:40)
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992,
(:20)
Pitch Perfect (2012, Comedy) Brittany Snow, Rebel Wilson, Anna Kendrick. A
Comedy) Joe Pesci, Daniel Stern, Macaulay Culkin. TVPG
freshman joins her university's all-girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TV14
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
Next Friday (‘00, Com) Mike Epps, Ice Cube. A streetwise man visits Friday After
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
his cousin and his uncle, who have recently won the lottery. TVMA
Next TV14
Loud House Casagrandes SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
SVU "Decaying Morality"
SVU "Intimidation Game" WWE NXT (N)
(:10) Fast and Furious
Family Guy Family Guy Bob'sBurgers Bob'sBurgers The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:00)
It (‘17, Dra) Bill Skarsgård. TVMA
All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite (N)
It TVMA
Forrest Gump (‘94, Comedy/Drama) Sally Field, Gary Sinise, Tom Hanks. A simple The Preppy Murder "Woman Down in Central Park/
Rough Sex" Robert Chambers suspect in murder. (SP) (N)
man finds himself in extraordinary situations throughout the course of his life. TV14
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown: Rediscovered "Rise and Fall" (N)
The First 48 "Run and Gun/ The First 48 "The Fighter/ The First 48 "Runner
The First 48 "1000 Cuts/
The First 48 "Cruel
Lonesome Highway"
Final Ride"
Runner"
Draw"
Summer"
Extinct or Alive
Extinct or Alive
Extinct-Alive-Eviden
Extinct or Alive (N)
Killer Whales: Hunt
Snapped "Teresa Kotomski" Snapped "Donna Cobb"
Snapped "Kathleen Wise" Snapped "Notorious:
Snapped "Notorious: Kristen
Gilbert"
Charles Cullen"
C.Minds "Brothers in Arms" Criminal Minds "Normal" Crim. Minds "Soul Mates" Criminal Minds "Bloodline" C.Minds "Cold Comfort"
Kardashians "Rumor Has It" E! News (N)
Pretty Woman (‘90, Rom) Julia Roberts, Richard Gere. TV14
Movie
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Notre Dame: Race Against America's Wild Spaces
Life Below Zero "Feast or Life Below Zero "Ahead of Running Wild "Joel McHale
the Inferno (N)
"Secret Yellowstone"
Famine"
the Game"
in Arizona Slot Canyons"
Caf./ Octane NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Washington Capitals at Philadelphia Flyers (L)
NHL Hockey Chi./V.G.K. (L)
Race Hub
Tip-Off
NCAA Basketball Villanova at Ohio State (L)
NCAA Basketball Purdue at Marquette (L)
Forged in Fire "Branch
Forged in Fire "Branch
Forged in Fire "The Tizona Forged in Fire "Military Tribute/ Revolutionary War
Battle: Navy"
Battle: Finals"
of El Cid" (N)
Spontoon" (N)
Housewives NJ "Reunion" Housewives/NewJersey
Housewives/NewJersey (N) Real Wives Dallas (N)
Housewives/NewJersey (N)
(:05)
Madea's Family Reunion (‘06, Com) Maya Angelou, Tyler Perry. TVPG
Tyler Perry's the Oval (N) Sistas "New Stories" (N)
Property Brothers
Property "Owning an Oasis" Property Brothers (N)
Property Brothers: F (N)
House (N)
H.Hunt (N)
(4:35)
Underworld
(:05)
Underworld: Awakening (2012, Action) India
Resident Evil: Afterlife (2010, Action) Wentworth
Kate Beckinsale. TVMA
Eisley, Michael Ealy. TVMA
Miller, Ali Larter, Milla Jovovich. TVMA
6 PM
6:30
(4:50) Glass (2019, Drama)
400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)
7 PM
7:30
His Dark Materials
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Robin Hood (2018, Action) Jamie Dornan, Jamie Foxx,
Catherine
Silicon
James McAvoy, Samuel L.
Taron Egerton. Robin Hood and his band of Merry Men
Valley
the Great
Jackson, Bruce Willis.
plan to rob the Sheriff of Nottingham's treasury. TV14
(5:50)
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (‘18, Act)
Super Troopers 2 The troopers set up a
(:40)
American Pie Chris Klein. A
Chris Pratt. A rescue operation is mounted to save
new station in a former French Canadian
group of high-school seniors enter a pact to
dinosaurs from a pending volcanic eruption. TV14
town after a border dispute. TVMA
lose their virginity before graduation. TVMA
(:55)
Absolute Power (‘97, Susp) Gene Hackman, Clint
Jarhead (‘05, Act) Scott MacDonald, Jake
(:05)
Sin City (‘05,
Eastwood. An aging master thief witnesses an assault and Gyllenhaal. Two snipers are shipped out to the Middle East Cri) Jessica Alba, Bruce
murder linked to the American President. TVMA
for the Gulf War and fight in Desert Storm. TVMA
Willis, Mickey Rourke. TVMA
�COMICS
8 Wednesday, November 13, 2019
BLONDIE
Daily Sentinel
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
%\�'DYH�*UHHQ
�
�
�
� � �
�'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO
Today’s Solution
THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane
�����
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�����&RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
DENNIS THE MENACE
THE LOCKHORNS
By Bunny Hoest & John Reiner
�����
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
Hank Ketcham’s
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
� �
�
� �
�
�
�
�
By Hilary Price
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
�'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO
RHYMES WITH ORANGE
�
�
�����&RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�
� � � � �
see what’s brewing on the
job market.
EURZVH�MREV��SRVW�\RXU�UHVXPH��JHW�DGYLFH
jobmatchohio.com
�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 13, 2019 9
Curry hopes to return from broken hand ‘in early spring’
second surgery on his
non-shooting hand, probably in early December,
to remove pins that were
inserted during the first
procedure Nov. 1 that
involved his hand and
index finger.
“(Managing the) swelling is something that’s
going to be of the utmost
priority early in the
rehab process,” Curry
said, “to get me a chance
to come back and get
my range of motion back
pretty quickly.”
The Warriors initially
(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
AUCTIONS
Auto Auction
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, November 15,
2019 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
VIN: 3GNDA23D36S515298
2006 Chevy HHR
said Curry would be reevaluated three months
after the surgery, which
would be early February.
Curry referred to
himself and injured teammate Klay Thompson
as “caged animals right
now, wanting to be
unleashed.”
Thompson, the
other part of Golden
State’s Splash Brothers
combo, is recovering
from surgery to repair
a torn anterior cruciate
ligament in his left knee.
The team hopes he can
return in the second half
of the season.
Curry said he experienced some minor nerve
irritation shortly after
he underwent his first
hand surgery, a common
byproduct of the procedure. That’s one thing
doctors will continue
to monitor throughout
his rehab process, and it
will impact when he can
return.
For now, Curry is
working out his lower
body and doing whatever
training is permitted by
the team’s medical staff,
saying he’s using this
three-month period without basketball as a “mini
offseason” to fine-tune
his body.
The Warriors’ longesttenured player had praise
for his teammates, who
took the court Monday
night against Utah with
a 2-8 record that was
tied with the New York
Knicks and New Orleans
Pelicans for the worst in
the NBA.
Curry described rookie
Eric Paschall’s energy
as contagious and said
the play of new guard
D’Angelo Russell has
been “unreal.” Asked
what the benefits would
be for he and Thompson
to return to the court
this season if it was only
for the final few weeks,
Curry had an answer.
“Just to understand the
chemistry with the young
guys,” he said. “We can
play around with rotations and just get a vibe
of what the following
season, when we’re all
healthy, looks like.”
(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157
(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Houses For Rent
MOTOR ROUTE
� %HGURRP KRXVH *DOOLSROLV
&LW\ ���� PRQWK SOXV XWLOLWLHV
12 3(76� ������������
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
Apartments/Townhouses
Ellm View Apts.
&DOO IRU DPHQLWLHV�
/DQGORUG SD\V :DWHU�
7UDVK� 6HZDJH�
5HQW� ���� 8S�
��� ��� ����
Equal Housing Opportunity
�
�
�
�
�
Be your own boss
5 Day Delivery
Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable
vehicle & provide proof of insurance
� Must provide your own substitute
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679
See Simon.
See Simon ride his bike.
See Simon leave his bike in
the driveway.
See Simon’s
dad drive over the bike.
See Simon cry.
Simon’s
mom is so smart.
She looks
through the classifieds.
Now Simon has a new bike.
See Simon smile.
See Simon
ride his new bike.
OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,
OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!
OH-70152802
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) — Golden State
Warriors star Stephen
Curry “definitely” plans
to return this season
from his broken left hand
and is hoping to be back
on the court at “some
point in early spring.”
When exactly the
two-time NBA MVP will
be able to play again
remains uncertain.
Curry addressed the
media Monday night
for the first time since
getting injured Oct.
30 and said he needs a
CALL TODAY!
�SPORTS/WEATHER
10 Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Daily Sentinel
Browns take step forward in unpredictable season
CLEVELAND (AP) —
When the Browns finally
reached the end zone
after so many embarrassing, empty trips inside
the red zone, they also
re-discovered Rashard
Higgins, their mysteriously lost wide receiver.
Perversely perfect.
This strange, unpredictable season had
another weird moment.
Desperate for a win,
the Browns found a way
and ended a four-game
skid on Sunday with a
19-16 win over the Buffalo Bills, a victory that
provided relief and perhaps a glimpse of Cleveland’s offensive future.
Higgins, who had inexplicably gone from quarterback Baker Mayfield’s
go-to guy last season
to coach Freddie Kitchens’ doghouse through
eight games, caught a
7-yard touchdown pass
with 1:44 left as the
Browns (3-6) temporarily stopped a season
that started with playoff
chatter and Super Bowl
talk from decaying into a
painful coaching search
and early discussion
about NFL draft positioning.
“It can be a great thing
for us,” said Mayfield,
who threw two TD passes and had his second
straight game without
an interception. “We still
didn’t play perfect by any
means. We can still learn
from the film, move forward and improve. Having a tight victory against
a great team is something
that we needed, especially at home. Kind of
getting the monkey off
our back with that one.
“The first win at home
in Game 9 isn’t something that usually happens, but it can get us
going from here.”
Some missing pieces
the Pittsburgh Steelers
(5-4), who have shaken
off a slow start with four
straight wins.
defenders on a few runs.
A talented receiver, Hunt
also became a needed
check-down for Mayfield,
who didn’t force as many
throws to star receivers
Odell Beckham Jr. and
Jarvis Landry.
Kitchens has a full
offensive toolbox at his
disposal. There are no
more excuses, and now
it’s up to Kitchens — and
Mayfield — to use this
plethora of playmakers
wisely.
“Anytime you get two
backs in the game, it is
tough for defenses to
play differently,” Mayfield
said. “You have to bring
a guy down and you are
worried about the receivers on the outside.”
The two-back set could
become Cleveland’s bread
and butter going forward.
The Browns will get a
chance to test out their
new 1-2 punch on Thursday night when they host
emerged for the Browns,
namely Higgins and
running back Kareem
Hunt, who made his
debut following an eightgame NFL suspension
for two violent, physical
off-field altercations last
year. Hunt finished with
30 yards rushing and
44 receiving on seven
catches.
Higgins had been the
odd-man out, and he only
got more playing time
against the Bills because
Kitchens benched Antonio Callaway for an
unspecified disciplinary
infraction.
It wouldn’t be the
Browns without some
kind of drama.
Hunt’s addition to
Cleveland’s offense had
an immediate and dramatic effect. He perfectly
complemented Nick
Chubb, who ran for 116
yards on 20 carries and
buffaloed several Bills
Buffalo stopped Cleveland on eight consecutive
plays from inside the 2
in the first quarter and
on four more inside the
5 in the second quarter
What’s working
Chubb never batted an before Kitchens opted to
kick a field goal following
eye when Hunt’s return
a false start.
threatened to curtail his
Chubb was stoned by
touches. Against the Bills,
the second-year back sim- the Bills on five tries
ply made the most of his near the goal line.
Kitchens isn’t changchances.
He has at least 75 yards ing his approach in the
shadow of the uprights.
from scrimmage in eight
“I need to call better
consecutive games, the
plays when we get down
league’s longest active
there,” he said. “But
streak. Chubb has four
I am telling you right
100-yard rushing games
now, we are running the
this season and his 919
ball when we get down
yards rushing are the
there.”
sixth most by a Browns
player through nine
games. The top five all
Key number
belong to Hall of Famer
4 — A season low in
Jim Brown.
penalties for the Browns,
who averaged 10 infractions in their first seven
What needs help
The closer the Browns games but have been
flagged just nine times
get to the goal line, the
the past two weeks.
farther away they seem.
Spurs retire
Parker’s jersey
Gibbs walks fine line managing 3 title contenders
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
(AP) — Joe Gibbs is a
retired Hall of Fame NFL
coach with three Super
Bowl titles who changed
course in his early 50s to
wade into NASCAR and
see if he couldn’t build a
second career and a family business.
Gibbs not only developed a championshipwinning organization that
gave both of his sons leadership roles, but he also
turned Joe Gibbs Racing
into one of NASCAR’s
elite teams.
Gibbs is taking three
drivers to Sunday’s championship-deciding finale at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, where the Toyota
trio of Kyle Busch, Denny
Hamlin and Martin Truex
Jr. will race Ford driver
Kevin Harvick for the
title. The highest-finishing
driver wins the Cup.
Gibbs has an interesting
week ahead as he figures
out how to manage three
teammates racing for the
exact same thing.
The business model in
NASCAR can be messy
for multi-car teams and
those with alliances with
other teams. Each car has
its own sponsors to keep
happy, its own individual
team members and drivers laser focused on winning a title. Gibbs often
says that model makes
team-wide orders impossible, but there have been
instances that have raised
TODAY
8 AM
WEATHER
2 PM
16°
30°
26°
Very cold today with clouds and sun. Cloudy
tonight. High 36° / Low 20°
HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™
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.
(in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date
0.33
0.33
1.31
40.82
37.15
Today
7:08 a.m.
5:17 p.m.
6:19 p.m.
8:00 a.m.
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset
Thu.
7:09 a.m.
5:16 p.m.
7:01 p.m.
9:03 a.m.
MOON PHASES
Last
New
Nov 19 Nov 26
First
Dec 4
Full
Dec 11
SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for fish and game.
Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Major
11:44a
12:14a
1:09a
2:09a
3:12a
4:13a
5:12a
Minor
5:31a
6:25a
7:22a
8:24a
9:26a
10:27a
11:26a
AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
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
0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: Snow can be wet or dry; which is
hardest to shovel?
SUN & MOON
Major
---12:38p
1:36p
2:38p
3:40p
4:41p
5:39p
Minor
5:56p
6:51p
7:50p
8:52p
9:54p
10:55p
11:53p
WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 13, 1883, the Leonids Meteor
Shower put on a spectacular show
from midnight to dawn. Clear skies
favored viewing in many parts of the
country.
FRIDAY
Chilly with periods
of sun
AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200
300
Chillicothe
34/23
Waverly
35/22
Lucasville
36/23
Portsmouth
37/24
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. Tue.
Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.02 +0.53
Marietta
34 16.95 +0.19
Parkersburg
36 21.85 -0.15
Belleville
35 12.95 -0.22
Racine
41 13.07 +0.11
Point Pleasant
40 25.61 +0.11
Gallipolis
50 13.26 +0.57
Huntington
50 25.80 -0.07
Ashland
52 34.38 -0.13
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.67 -0.04
Portsmouth
50 16.80 -0.10
Maysville
50 34.00 -0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 16.20 -0.20
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
SUNDAY
44°
23°
Cold with brilliant
sunshine
58°
36°
Cool; partly sunny,
then rather cloudy
Sunny
NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
34/23
Belpre
35/22
Athens
34/21
St. Marys
35/22
Parkersburg
35/23
Coolville
34/21
Elizabeth
36/20
Spencer
36/21
Buffalo
37/19
Ironton
38/24
Milton
37/20
Clendenin
39/21
St. Albans
38/21
Huntington
37/26
NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
57/43
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
64/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
75/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front
TUESDAY
51°
36°
Partly sunny and
chilly
Wilkesville
35/20
POMEROY
Jackson
35/19
35/21
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
36/20
36/20
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
33/28
GALLIPOLIS
36/20
37/20
36/19
Ashland
38/24
Grayson
38/24
MONDAY
48°
31°
Murray City
34/21
McArthur
35/20
500
Primary pollutant: Particulates
Logan
33/21
Adelphi
33/22
South Shore Greenup
38/24
35/22
29
Mostly sunny and
chilly
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Boris Diaw was
rightly concerned about the well-being of a
scrawny 19-year-old kid moving to a new country and attempting to compete against the
game’s best in the NBA. One odd Christmas dinner that turned into an impromptu film session
helped Diaw realize his friend and French teammate, Tony Parker, was going to be just fine.
The seeds of that evening came to full fruition
as the San Antonio Spurs retired Parker’s No. 9
jersey on Monday night in a stirring ceremony.
The sting of a 113-109 loss to the Memphis
Grizzlies was quickly forgotten as a sell-out
crowd celebrated the career of San Antonio’s
mercurial point guard.
Accompanied by his wife, Axelle, and sons
Josh and Liam, Parker celebrated his career
with former teammates and coaches along with
the Spurs fans.
SATURDAY
46°
24°
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
0
A: Wet snow because it contains more
water
Precipitation
THURSDAY
47°
24°
Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.
33°
25°
59°
38°
79° in 1945
20° in 1950
EXTENDED FORECAST
8 PM
ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low
crankier as he’s gone 22
weeks without a Cup
Series victory, said he
would have passed Hamlin for the win if he could
have caught his teammate.
“I was racing for me at
that point,” Busch said. “I
couldn’t really get close
enough to (Hamlin).”
In the season finale a
year ago, Hamlin won the
pole and had first choice
of pit stall. But Hamlin
was not racing for the
title, Busch was, and the
team had Hamlin defer
so Busch could claim
the position. Hamlin
wasn’t happy about it but
understood the team decision to give Busch every
advantage possible to win
the title.
eyebrows, including Hamlin’s pivotal victory Sunday in Arizona.
Hamlin had to win to
make the final four and
a late restart put his
chances in jeopardy. He
lined up next to fellow
contender Ryan Blaney
for the three-lap shootout
to the finish, and once he
cleared Blaney to claim
the lead, Busch wedged
his car between Blaney
and Hamlin as a buffer
for Hamlin to drive to the
win.
Could Busch have
caught Hamlin and won
the race for himself? Or
did he ride it out in second for the greater good
of Gibbs and Toyota?
Busch, who has grown
Charleston
38/22
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
19/9
Billings
45/27
Montreal
22/14
Toronto
27/23
Minneapolis
30/16
Chicago
29/22 Detroit
27/23
New York
34/28
Denver
55/28
Washington
40/27
Kansas City
44/27
Today
Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
62/32/s
34/31/i
47/31/s
38/27/s
38/22/s
45/27/sf
58/35/pc
34/22/s
38/22/s
44/25/s
48/22/pc
29/22/c
37/29/pc
32/27/c
34/25/pc
53/37/pc
55/28/pc
35/20/c
27/23/pc
88/73/s
50/39/pc
34/26/pc
44/27/pc
76/52/s
46/25/s
75/56/pc
41/32/pc
82/74/sh
30/16/sn
46/30/s
51/45/pc
34/28/s
53/27/s
71/62/pc
36/25/s
80/54/s
33/23/pc
30/16/pc
42/23/s
41/21/s
40/28/pc
60/35/pc
64/53/pc
57/43/pc
40/27/s
Hi/Lo/W
59/35/s
36/31/sn
46/39/pc
51/38/pc
48/33/s
47/37/pc
59/36/pc
43/34/c
49/24/pc
45/36/pc
50/31/s
33/17/pc
44/24/pc
41/27/pc
42/25/pc
56/31/s
54/35/s
31/18/s
35/21/c
87/73/s
49/36/r
39/23/pc
40/21/s
75/51/c
52/25/pc
72/55/pc
47/27/pc
83/73/t
32/22/s
51/28/s
54/42/r
44/37/pc
51/27/s
82/69/t
47/35/pc
83/57/pc
44/23/pc
37/30/pc
50/39/pc
49/36/pc
39/21/pc
63/39/pc
61/50/pc
57/49/pc
48/35/pc
EXTREMES TUESDAY
Atlanta
47/31
El Paso
64/41
Chihuahua
58/41
City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low
88° in Hollywood, FL
-16° in Cotton, MN
Global
High
Low
Houston
50/39
Monterrey
47/41
Miami
82/74
112° in Marble Bar, Australia
-54° in Khabyardino, Russia
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
OH-70107872
You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.
w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
11. November
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
November 13, 2019
follrod
garnes
vanmatre
wilson