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                  <text>Raiders
pull past
Meigs

ALONG THE
RIVER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Sponsored by
NOE &amp; SAUNDERS
LAW OFFICE

Gallia Auto
19 Locust St., Gallipolis, OH

OH-70018392
OH-70018409

50
years
later

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740-446-9356

Merry
from
DaveAndy
&amp; Dustin
Mink
MerryChristmas
Christmas
from
&amp; Brynn!!

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 50, Volume 51

First Meigs
candidate files
for 2018 primary

60695310

Sunday, December 17, 2017 s $2

50 years since disaster

Tim Ihle running for reelection
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MEIGS COUNTY — It will soon be election
time again, with the ﬁrst candidate for county
ofﬁce already submitting his petition.
Commissioner Tim Ihle ﬁled his petition for
reelection last week to run as a Republican in
the May 2018 primary election. Ihle is currently
serving his second term as one of Meigs County’s
three commissioners.
In addition to Ihle’s commissioner seat, countywide positions up for election in 2018 are Auditor,
Common Pleas Judge and County Court Judge.
The positions are currently held by Mary Byer-Hill
(Auditor), Carson Crow (Common Pleas Judge)
and Steve Story (County Court Judge).
The ﬁling deadline for partisan candidate for
commissioner, auditor and common pleas judge is
4 p.m. on Feb. 7. According to the board of elections, the ﬁling deadline for county court judge is
Aug. 8 at 4 p.m.
Feb. 7 is also the deadline for all local levies and
issues for the May ballot.
Central committee seats will also be voted on in
the primary election in 2018.
Statewide races in the 2018 primary include
the U.S. Senate seat held by Sherrod Brown, U.S.
Representative, Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, Treasurer and Auditor. State Representative will also be voted on in the primary.
Petitions can be ﬁled anytime up until the deadlines.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Marsy’s Law
changes go into
effect Feb. 5
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

OHIO VALLEY — Ohio voters overwhelmingly
approved state issue one, Marsy’s Law, during the
November election, but what impact with the measure have on the criminal justice system.
Known as the crime victim’s rights amendment
to the constitution, Marsy’s Law provides that
victims of crime receive the same rights as the
individuals accused of committing the crimes.
Effective Feb. 5, 2018, victims of crime in the
state of Ohio will have the following rights:
�Je�\W_h�WdZ�h[if[Yj\kb�jh[Wjc[dj�e\�j^[�l_Yj_cÉi�
safety, dignity and privacy;
�Je�X[�dej_Ò[Z�e\"�WdZ�j^[�h_]^j�je�X[�fh[i[dj�
at, all public proceedings involving the criminal or
delinquent conduct against the victim;
�Je�X[�^[WhZ�_d�Wdo�fkXb_Y�fheY[[Z_d]�_dlebling the release/bond, plea, sentencing, disposition
or parole, or in which the victim’s rights are implicated. During the bond and arraignment hearings,
the victim will have the right to address the court;
See LAW | 4A

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Along the River: 6A
Weather: 8A
Television: 8A
B SPORTS
JOIN THE
Sports: 1B-2B, 4B, 6B-7B CONVERSATION
Comics: 5B
What’s your take on
Classifieds: 7B
today’s news? Go to
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www.mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
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thoughts.

Dean Wright | OVP

Members of the audience hold lights as they listen to the names of the Silver Bridge Collapse victims read at Bossard Memorial Library.

Gallia remembers Silver Bridge collapse
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
com

GALLPOLIS — Gallia
spent the evening Friday
remembering the 46 victims of the Silver Bridge
Collapse at Bossard
Memorial Library during

a special memorial event
mourning a disaster that
happened 50 years prior.
“Our communities in
Gallipolis, Ohio, and
Point Pleasant, West
Virginia, were forever
changed when the Silver
Bridge collapsed,” said
Gallia Convention and

Visitors Bureau Assistant
Director Kaitlyn Halley
during the ceremony’s
opening statements.
“Tonight, we join together to remember the 46
who were lost that night.”
While being in Gallia, Halley said she had
crossed the current

incarnation of the bridge
countless times.
“It wasn’t until this
anniversary that I truly
began to wrap my mind
around what happened
that night,” said Halley.
“The Silver Bridge
See DISASTER | 4A

A day of remembrance for ‘the 46’
Hundreds gather
to observe
Silver Bridge
anniversary
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Friday morning,
hundreds gathered inside
a tent which sat in the
very lanes of trafﬁc which
used to lead to the Silver
Bridge. Those hundreds
gathered to pay their
respects on the 50th anniversary of the tragedy
which took 46 lives.
The event was organized by the West Virginia Department of Transportation, along with the

Beth Sergent | OVP

Gina Cocklereece, at left, visits with William Edmondson, a survivor
of the Silver Bridge disaster. Edmondson was driving a truck with
Cocklereece’s father, Harold Cundiff asleep in the truck when the
bridge fell. Cundiff did not survive. Cocklereece and Edmondson
attended the memorial ceremony on Thursday in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. Both are from North Carolina.

City of Point Pleasant,
the Mason County Commission and a host of
volunteers.
Attending and giving
remarks were Mike Hall,
chief of staff to Governor

Jim Justice, who gave the
invocation; U.S. Senators
Joe Manchin, III, and
Shelley Moore Capito;
Micheal Chirico, deputy
chief of staff for U.S. Congressman Evan Jenkins;

Mayor Brian Billings;
WVDOT Secretary Tom
Smith; Acting Administrator of the Federal
Highway Administration
(FHWA) Brandye Hendrickson who was introduced by West Virginia
Division Administrator
for FHWA Edward Stephen; Randy Damron of
WVDOT was also helped
organize the event.
Manchin addressed
those in the audience,
speciﬁcally the family
members and loved ones
of the 46 victims saying
“our hearts are still with
you and we’ve never forgotten and we never will.”
Manchin relayed he
remembered ﬁrst hearing
of the tragedy while a
junior at WVU.
“I couldn’t believe
See BRIDGE | 4A

Search of home leads to arrest of Cheshire man
Staff Report

custody
on Friday
was HanCHESHIRE — A man
nah Overhas been arrested and
street, 22,
suspected methamphetCheshire,
amine seized after the
for allegedGallia County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce conducted a search ly violating G. Overstreet
of a home along with the her parole,
according to the sheriff’s
Gallia County Common
ofﬁce.
Pleas Court Probation
Gallia Sheriff Matt
Department.
Champlin released the
Gage Overstreet,
following statement about
20, Cheshire, has been
arrested and booked into the arrest made Friday
based upon that search
the Gallia County Jail,
of a Cheshire Township
charged with an alleged
residence.
probation violation. In
“At approximately 8:37
addition, taken into

a.m. on
December
15, 2017,
the Gallia
County
Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce
H. Overstreet responded
to a residence on Roush Lane in
Cheshire Township at
the request of the Gallia
County Common Pleas
Court Probation Department in an effort to locate
a male who resides there
and is on community
control with the court,”
Champlin said. “Based

upon some evasive
behaviors by the occupants of the residence,
the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce was
joined at the residence
by a representative of the
Common Pleas Court
Probation Department
and subsequently a search
of the residence was conducted by the probation
ofﬁcer. As a result of that
search, a white powdery
substance believed to be
methamphetamine along
with cash and drug paraphernalia were seized.
See ARREST | 2A

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2A Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BUCKEYE
STATE NEWS

OBITUARIES
JUDITH F. POTTER
OAK HILL — She fought
the good ﬁght, she kept the
faith, and on Friday, December
15, 2017, Judith F. Potter, 66
of Oak Hill ﬁnished the race
and found comfort in the arms
of Jesus, whom she loved and
served. Judy was married to
Elwin Potter for 47 years, and
in addition to Elwin, she is
survived by their three children,
Sherri Metzger of Ironton, Kelli
(Bo) Kurtovic of Chapel Hill,
NC, and Jason (Ashley) Potter
of Oak Hill.
She is also survived by their
four grandchildren, Kylee

Metzger, Adriana and
Mariah Kurtovic, and
Rylie Hughes; sisters,
Verna Mae Rowland,
Ruth Diana Truman, and
Rita Jane (Tim) Silvey;
brothers, Robert Frederick (Sharon) Miller
and Ralph Daniel (Marilyn)
Miller, as well as her father,
Leslie Miller. She was preceded
in death by her mother, Dora
Bernice Miller, and stepmother,
Opal Miller, and her parents-inlaw, Jimmie and Martha Potter.
In addition, she was loved very
much by her many sisters and

DAVID ARTHUR (SONNY) KNIGHT
KERRVILLE, Texas – David
Arthur (Sonny) Knight, 84,
of San Antonio, Texas passed
from this life at a local care
center in Kerrville, Texas on
Thursday, December 7, 2017.
He was born May 10, 1933,
in Nitro, West Virginia, one of
nine children of the late Kenna
and Lura (Mitchell) Knight.
Sonny graduated from Bidwell
Porter School in 1951 and
immediately entered service
in the United States Navy,
specializing in construction
as a Seabee. Following his
naval service he enlisted in the
United States Air Force where
he served for the next 22 years
at duty stations around the
world before retiring in 1979
after 27 years of active military service. Sonny continued
to work in civil service brieﬂy
for the U.S. Postal Service
and then with the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers where he
enjoyed applying his interest
in building and construction
as a construction representative, working on major water
distribution, drainage and construction projects throughout
Texas and New Mexico. He
left civil service and began a
well-deserved full time retirement in 1998.
Sonny married Connie
Christine McConnell on June

brothers-in-law and her
church family.
Judy was a 1969
graduate of Jackson High
School and later graduated from the University
of Rio Grande where she
also worked for many
years. She retired from Buckeye
Hills Career Center and spent
her free time with her family and tending to her ﬂower
gardens. She was a member of
the Jackson Church of Christ
and attended Gallipolis Central
Christian Church.
Friends may call at the Lewis

Gillum Funeral Home in Oak
Hill on Monday, December 18,
2017 from 5-8 p.m. The funeral
service will be held 11 a.m.
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
with Minister Derek Stump
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Union Cemetery on Gallipolis
Road, Oak Hill. In lieu of ﬂowers, Judy requested that donations be made to the Growing
Oaks Food Program, which
provides food to over 300
students on a monthly basis.
Donations can be sent to Oaks
United, P.O. Box 152, Oak Hill,
OH 45656.

THELMA CADLE BANKS BELCHER

1, 1956 in Kanawha County,
West Virginia, and is survived
by her as well sons, David J.
Knight and Barry D. Knight;
his devoted daughter, Chris M.
Brown, as well as many grandchildren and great grandchildren; brothers, Kenneth Knight
and Jack Knight; sisters, Mary
Ann Arthur, Shirley Saunders,
Becky Denney and Tommie
Sue Staton, and brother in
law, John Kenneth Russell. He
will be greatly missed by his
extended family and far too
many friends who consider
themselves family to list.
In addition to his parents,
he is preceded in death by
a son, Dennis Allen Knight;
brother, James Knight; sisters,
Glenna Long, Norma Cable,
Maxine Russell, Rosalee Russell and Rosemary Skidmore.
Sonny will be laid to rest
in Bidwell, Ohio with other
members of his family at a
later date to be announced.
The family invites you to
leave a message or memory at
www.kerrvillefuneralhometx.
com select obituaries, select
“sign guestbook” at the top of
the individual memorial.
Arrangements are under the
direction and personal care of
the professionals at Kerrville
Funeral Home, (830)-8955111.

POMEROY — Thelma Cadle
Banks Belcher, 93, of Pomeroy,
Ohio, went to be with the Lord
on December 15, 2017.
She was born on February 9,
1924, at Cabin Creek, West Virginia, daughter of the late Albert
V. Cadle and Lettie Detamore
Cadle. She was a loving and
devoted wife, mother and grandmother; and she will be missed
by everyone. She was a homemaker and attended The River of
Life Church.
Thelma is survived by her
husband of 20 years, Conard
Belcher; by her children, Linda
Marie Rapp, of Racine, Ohio;
Alice (Jack) Elliott of Colonial
Beach, Virginia; Sharon (Butch)
Dean of Pomeroy, Ohio; Bonnie
(Butch) Lightfoot of Pomeroy,
Ohio; Larry Wayne (Jane) Banks
of Syracuse, Ohio; and Albert
(Sandy) Banks of Pomeroy,
Ohio. She is also survived by her
stepchildren, Tommie (Mary)
Belcher of Mocksville, North

Carolina, and Jane (Tom) Vanness of Middleburg, Florida. She
is also survived by two foster
children, Michael Mowery and
Kevin Criner. Also surviving is a
very special friend and caregiver,
Addie Hubbard, of Pomeroy,
Ohio; 14 grandchildren, 25 greatgrandchildren, and 8 great-greatgrandchildren.
In addition to her parents,
Thelma was preceded in death
by her ﬁrst husband, Homer H.
Banks, on December 17, 1981;
and by her brother, Richard
Cadle.
Funeral services will be held
on Tuesday, December 19, 2017,
at 11 a.m. with Pastor Sam
Buckley ofﬁciating at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home. Burial
will follow at Meigs Memory
Gardens. Visiting hours will be
on Monday, December 18, 2017
from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
An online registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

RUBY FRANCES SORRELL
RADCLIFF — Ruby Frances
Sorrell, 93 of Radcliff, Ohio
passed away Thursday, December 14, 2017 at her home.
She was born in Jackson County, Ohio September 15, 1924 to
the late David and Mary Libby
Sorrell.

Graveside services will be
held at noon Monday, December 18, 2017 at Vinton Memorial Park, Vinton, Ohio with
Reverend Heath Jenkins ofﬁciating. Condolences can be sent
to the family a www.mccoymoore.com.

Drug
companies
spend $57M
to defeat issue
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Campaign ﬁnance
records show that pharmaceutical companies spent
nearly $57 million in their
successful effort to defeat
a ballot issue on drug pricing in Ohio.
The Columbus Dispatch
reports that campaign
ﬁnance records ﬁled
Friday show that supporters of the issue seeking
to cap the price of drugs
bought by the state were
outspent more than 3-to-1
at just over $17 million.
The drug plan opposition
set a record for campaign
spending on a single
statewide ballot issue.

Incarcerated
dads record
holiday books
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Young fathers
who are incarcerated in
Ohio’s youth prison system have recorded videos
of themselves reading to
their children as holiday
gifts.
DVDs produced by the
Department of Youth Services feature the men and
boys reading copies of the
Dr. Seuss book “One Fish
Two Fish Three Four Five
Fish.”
Copies of the DVD, the
nursery book and notes
from the dads have been
sent to children and their
caregivers this week.
Youth Services says 35
inmates recorded the videos. About 500 boys and
men are housed in three
state juvenile detention
facilities and a youth center in Ross county.

DEATH NOTICES
BURNETTE
GALLIPOLIS — Sara Elizabeth DeLong Burnette,
29, of Gallipolis, Ohio died December 14, 2017 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Funeral Services will be 1 p.m. Monday at Providence
Missionary Baptist Church with burial following in
Providence Cemetery. Friends may call at the church
on Monday from noon until the time of the services.
Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.

Celebrating 100th birthday
Erma Janice
Hampton will be
celebrating her
100th birthday on
Dec. 24. For those
who wish to send
cards, they may
do so at: Jenkins
Assistant Living
Center, c/o Erma
Janice Hampton,
142 Jenkins
Memorial Blvd.
Wellston, Ohio
45692.

CLARK
GALLIPOLIS — Jean Clark, 93, Gallipolis, died
early Saturday morning, December 16, 2017 in her
First Avenue home. Funeral arrangements will be
announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home.
ROUSH
LETART, W.Va. — Elizabeth Ann Roush, 64, of
Letart, W.Va., died December 14, 2017.
Funeral services will be held at Anderson Funeral
Home in New Haven, W.Va. on Monday, December 18,
2017 at noon with Pastor John Bumgarner ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow at Hoffman Cemetery. Visiting hours
will be on Monday from 11 a.m. to noon at the funeral
home.

Courtesy

Arrest

added: “This is yet
another ﬁne example
of how individuals are
From page 1A
being held accountable
for the choices they
make while on comBased upon the investigation the male, Gage munity control, not only
by law enforcement but
Overstreet, age 20 of
by the courts and their
Cheshire, was taken
staffs. Mr. Overstreet
into custody at the
scene. In addition, Han- was offered the opportunity to rehabilitate himnah Overstreet, age 22
self by the State and has
of Cheshire, was taken
into custody at the resi- thumbed his nose at that
dence as well for a viola- opportunity and will
now be held accountable
tion of parole.”
for those choices.”
Sheriff Champlin

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-446-2342

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�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, December 17, 2017 3A

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1117PRT04

�LOCAL

4A Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Law

Beth Sergent | OVP

The close of Friday’s remembrance ceremony in Point Pleasant which was hosted by the West Virginia Department of Transportation.

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IN REMEMBRANCE
Adler, E. Albert “Bert”, Jr.
Bennett, Julius Oliver “J. O.”
Blackman, Leo H.
Boggs, Kristy Ann
Boggs, Marjorie S.
Byus, Catherine Lucille
“Cathy”
Byus, Hilda Gertrude
Byus, Kimberly Lynn
Cantrell, Melvin Aaron
Cantrell, Thomas Allen
Casey, Donna Jean
Counts, Cecil Clyde
Cremeans, Horace
“Donald”
Cundiff, Harold D.
Darst, Alonzo “Lonnie”

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Duff, Alma L.
Hawkins, James W.
Head, Bobby Lee
Higley, Forrest Raymond
Lane, Alva Bernard “Bud”
Lee, Thomas Howard “Bus”
Mabe, Gene Harold
Maxwell, James Richard
“Dicky”
Mayes, Darlene K.
McManus, Gerald
Meadows, James F.
Meadows, James Timothy
“Timmy”
Miller, Frederick “Dean”
Moore, Ronnie Gene
Nibert, Nora Isabelle

Northup, Darius E.
Pullen, James Otto
Sanders, Leo Otto “Doc”
Sims, Ronald R.
Smith, Charles Thomas
Smith, Oma Letha
Sturgeon, Maxine Ellen
Taylor, Denzil
Taylor, Glenna Mae
Towe, Robert Eugene
Turner, Victor William “Vic”
Turner, Maxine
Wamsley, Marvin L.
Wedge, Lillian Eleanor
Wedge, Paul D.
White, James Alfred

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Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio
Valley Publishing.

“Following this tragic accident, the National
Bridge Inspection program was created and
its taken our country to a whole new level of
safety and saved lives. While this memory
is also difficult to relive, it’s important for
future generations to understand the impact
this event has had on our area and how it
helped shaped our communities for decades
to come.”
— Rep. Ryan Smith (R-Bidwell),
Ohio’s 93rd District

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Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342 and the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune Facebook page.

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A portion of information provided by the
Meigs County Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce and Victim
Assistance Ofﬁce.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MEIGS HEALTH
MATTERS

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel appreciate 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 spaceavailable basis and in chronological order. Events can be
emailed to: GDTnews@aimmediamidwest.com or TDSnews@
aimmediamidwest.com.

The health
of the
community

Wednesday,
Dec. 20
MIDDLEPORT — Leading
Creek Conservancy District’s
regular board meeting has been
rescheduled for 4 p.m., due to
the holiday season.

Thursday, Dec. 21

RACINE — Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge 164 will hold its meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The Decem- and installation of ofﬁcers with
a meal and fellowship at 6:30
ber 18, 2017 and January 15,
p.m., followed by the meeting
2018 meetings of the Galliaand installation at 7:30 p.m. All
Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental master masons are encouraged
Health Services have been can- to attend.
celled. A Special Board Meeting
will be held on February 5, 2018
instead. The Board typically
meets on the third Monday
GALLIPOLIS — Area Viet-

Friday, Dec. 22

nam veterans are invited to a
dinner at Golden Corral at 3
p.m. as part of an event organized by area chapters of the
Vietnam Veterans of America.
Ofﬁcers will discuss veterans
issues and concerns and the
beneﬁts of belonging to a veteran organization. Vets and
their spouses will be treated to
a free dinner. Veterans are asked
to bring a copy of their DD-214
form to apply for potential
membership. Eligibility requirements recognize veterans in
active duty between Feb. 28,
1961 and May 7, 1975.

Sunday, Dec. 24
GALLIPOLIS — In observance of the Christmas Holiday,
Bossard Memorial Library will
be closed, Sunday, December
24,2017 and Monday, December 25, 2017. Normal hours of
operation will resume, Tuesday,
December 26. 2017. Bossard

Memorial Library will be closed
Monday, January 1, 2018, in
observance of the New Year Holiday. Normal hours will resume
Tuesday, January 2, 2018.

Wednesday,
Dec. 27
LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the Letart Township Trustees will be held at
3 p.m. at the Letart Township
Building. The Letart Township
Organizational Meeting will be
immediately following the regular meeting.

Card Shower
Erma Hampton will be celebrating her 100th birthday on
Dec. 24. Send Birthday cards
to: Jenkins Assistant Living
Center, c/o Erma Janice Hampton, 142 Jenkins Memorial
Blvd. Wellston, Ohio 45692

GALLIA, MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday,
Dec. 17
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
will hold service at 6
p.m.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, Sunday
School 10 a.m., evening service and
Christmas Play at 6
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 AM;
Sunday School at 10
a.m., AM worship service at 10:30 a.m.; Pastor Bob Hood; Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337
Johnson Ridge Rd.;
740-446-7495 or 740709-6107. Everyone is
welcome
GALLIPOLIS —
Morning Worship
service, presentation
of Christmas Musical “I’ll be Home for
Christmas,” 10:45 a.m.,

Evening Worship also
presents musical, 6
p.m., First Church of
the Nazarene, 1110
First Avenue.
MIDDLEPORT
— Youth Christmas
Program, “The NotSo-Wise Men,” will be
presented at Ash Street
Church, 398 Ash Street,
Middleport, Ohio, at
6:30 p.m. Everyone is
invited to come enjoy
the fun presentation
that shares the message
of Jesus.
MIDDLEPORT —
Old Bethel Free Will
Baptist Church will be
having a Christmas program at 6 p.m. All are
welcome.
LONG BOTTOM —
The Long Bottom United Methodist Church
Christmas program will
be held at 6 p.m. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY — Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
will have a Christmas

program “The Lost
Lamb” at 6:30 p.m. at the
church located on State
Route 143 in Pomeroy.
Pastor Mark Nix invites
the pubic.

will hold service at 7 p.m.
ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
business meeting and
Bible study 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s ministry, 6:45 p.m.,
teen Bible study in teen
room, 7 p.m., prayer and
praise in sanctuary 7
p.m., choir practice 6:45
RUTLAND — The Rut- p.m., First Church of
land Community Church the Nazarene 1110 First
Avenue.
Christmas Program “In
God’s Time” will be held
at 7 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center.

Monday,
Dec. 18

Wednesday,
Dec. 20
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel

Thursday,
Dec. 21

ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
ladies meeting at 6:30
p.m.

Saturday,
Dec. 23
GALLIPOLIS — First
Baptist Church will hold
a free lunch at noon. Happens fourth Saturday of
every month.
RUTLAND — The
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will be presenting
a Christmas program at
6 p.m. The children will
have their own poems to
say and the adults will
have a play called “The
Christmas Friend.” Pastor Ed Barney invites the
public.

See CHURCH | 8A

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For more local
news, visit
MyDaily
Sentinel.com
or MyDaily
Tribune.com

Monday, Dec. 18

of each month at 6:00 p.m. at
the Board Ofﬁce (53 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis).

OH-70020229

The Community Health
Worker(CHW) Program
in Meigs county is well
under way via the Meigs
County Health Department. Our County is
privileged to be a part
of this growing addition
to diabetes healthcare.
Community Health
Workers
were ﬁrst
introduced
in Alaska.
Because
many health
centers are
Laura
far away
Grueser
Contributing from the
rural comcolumnist
munities in
Alaska, they
implemented the CHW
programs to be a liaison
between health care providers and their patients.
When I’m asked to
describe what I do, the
answer can sometimes
be indepth. I perform
duties of a diabetes educator, a social worker, a
cheerleader, and a friend.
When my patients have
a medical question concerning their diabetes, I
answer it the best I can.
Sometimes that involves
having a conference with
our Director of Nursing at
the Meigs County Health
Department or contacting
the patient’s Care Manager. If my patients have
prescription needs, I call
their pharmacist to sort it
out. If they need community help, I am able to get
in contact with services
and/or people who can
assist them. I educate my
patients on proper eating
and exercise habits and
use visual and exercise
aids. I make sure they
remember doctor appointments and I cheer them
on toward reaching their
goals.
I am a CHW for all of
Meigs County. In addition to patient referrals, I
also take phone calls from
diabetic residents. Many
times, I can answer a
question or put someone
in contact with help.
In November, the Meigs
County Health Department, along with the
Appalachian Regional
Commission Power
Grant, the Sisters Health
Foundation and Marshall
University sponsored a
National Diabetes Awareness Month Community
Open House at Farmer’s
Bank in Pomeroy. We
welcomed speakers from
Meigs and Athens Counties and 37 participants
beneﬁted from their
knowledge. The event
was a big success for
our program and we will
be offering more learning opportunities in the
future.
Holzer Health System has been referring
patients to our program
since fall. We are pleased
to be partnering with
Hopewell Health Centers
for patient referrals in the
coming year.
If you have any questions about the CHW
program, please call me at
the Meigs County Health
Department at 740-9926626 Ext. 1035.

Sunday, December 17, 2017 5A

2400 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis OH
740-446-1711

1/4 Mile North
Pomery/Mason Bridge
Mason WV
304-773-5437

�A long the River
6A Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Silver Bridge: Gallia remembers

Photos by Dean Wright | OVP

Angelique Toler shared a rendition of “Amazing Grace.”

Visitors to the Gallipolis Bossard Library Bridge Memorial event listen to an original recording of a radio news broadcast form the day
of the Silver Bridge Collapse.

State Representative Ryan Smith, event speaker at left, shares
some words with members of the audience.

Marianne Campbell, left, and Debbie Saunders, right, read the
names of the victims who passed in the Silver Bridge Collapse.

Members of the audience turn on candle lights for the reading of
the names of the Silver Bridge Collapse victims.

The Silver Bridge: In remembrance in Point Pleasant

Beth Sergent | OVP

A closer look at the proposed flood wall mural.

Erin Perkins | OVP

Members of the West Virginia National Guard band play The National Anthem.

Erin Perkins | OVP

Members of the West Virginia National Guard at the event.

Beth Sergent | OVP

At Friday’s remembrance event, Mason County Commission
Beth Sergent | OVP
Beth Sergent | OVP
President Tracy Doolittle and Point Pleasant Mayor Brian Billings
unveil an artistic rendering of a flood wall mural which will be Brandye Hendrickson, the acting administrator for the Federal Ruth and Martha Fout ring a bell as the names of each victim lost
placed on the flood wall panel where the Silver Bridge entered at Highway Administration, speaks on highway safety in Point in the Silver Bridge Disaster is read by Mayor Brian Billings and
Pleasant at the bridge remembrance event.
displayed on the video monitors.
6th Street.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, December 17, 2017 7A

THEIR VIEW

Get into the spirit of the thing
Okay, so what do you
do with a cat that climbs
your Christmas tree?
Patches, the Calico
we obtained from a
well-known local feline
rescuer some months
back, is experiencing her
ﬁrst Christmas season
in a house where the
holiday and all of its trappings are, for my wife
Beth, literally the most
wonderful time of the
year. She puts her heart
into the season’s sights
and sounds, but did wait
until the ﬁrst week of
December to put up the
tree and all of its decorations. Looking at the tree
and its lights at night
and on some gloomy
afternoons goes a long
way to placing us in the
spirit of the thing.
It carries some signiﬁcance with myself
because my family’s tradition was to trim the tree
on Christmas Eve and
take it down on Twelfth
Night. But now I like it
being in place early and
being there for a little
while, so much so that
one year I don’t believe
we took it apart until,
well, maybe March. What
can I say? It looked good

in the corner that it occupied.
So with the effort put
into the tree, it was a
tad disconcerting the
other night to hear the
branches shaking and
the ornaments jangling. I
came back into the living
room to ﬁnd the multicolored furball now a part
of our household picking her way cautiously
among the branches, having crawled up from the
base to the center. With
visions dancing in my
head of the whole magilla
going down in front of
me, I tried to catch on to
Patches and lift her out of
her lofty perch.
That mission, of course,
was aborted when I
decided the disaster I
sought to avoid could
happen with my help by
clutching at an uncooperative cat. After a few
minutes, Patches became
bored with the whole
scene, removed herself
gingerly from her situation and resumed roaming the house in search
of, with apologies to
Charlie Chan, whatever
amusements permitted
themselves the luxury of
occurring. Uttering a sigh

their enthusiasm
of relief, I concludmighty far. If you’re
ed we were either
into pop culture, it
lucky or the tree
comes as soon as
is a lot sturdier
the holiday tunes
than we thought.
hit the airwaves
(Our other cat,
or CD players. In
a Bengal named
that particular subKitty, is content
Kevin
group, you know
to traipse across
it’s time when telethe keyboard when Kelly
I’m trying to write, Contributing vision schedules
columnist
any movie adaptalike right at this
tion of “A Christmoment).
Actually, it was kind of mas Carol” (the 1951
British version starring
cute to observe Patches
Alistair Sim is my favorslide past the fronds and
ite) or “The Grinch Who
plastic icicles, a scene
Stole Christmas.”
worthy of Rockwell and
I think the greatest
his depictions of an oldwonder of the season
fashioned Christmas.
That is, until the tree and is that experienced by
all of its adornments start children, especially those
of school age who look
rattling like the exhaust
forward to the break
on the ‘73 Oldsmobile I
from classes to enjoy the
once owned. But so far,
holiday. Mixed with the
so good.
anticipation that greets
It is interesting to
reﬂect on when and how every Dec. 25, either
the pull of yuletide cheer spiritually or by the joy of
giving and receiving, kids
takes hold of different
come out the winners.
people. For some, it
That’s why we need to
begins just as the last of
the Thanksgiving feast is support and congratulate
the organizations and
put away and Black Friindividuals who ensure
day has dawned. Others
the younger ones among
see it in the Christmas
us whose families are in
tree they stand up and
difﬁcult ﬁnancial straits
make pretty, although
those who do so prior to will ﬁnd something under
the tree. Because the
Turkey Day are taking

In a story Dec. 15, 2017, about the
Gallipolis City Park Santa, the tradition
of the Santa House and Santa sitting in
City Park was not started by the Gallia
Junior Women’s Club but they continue
to maintain it. Ohio Valley Publishing
apologizes for the error and strives for
accuracy.

NA and AA meetings
at St. Peter’s
Meetings for AA are held Tuesday,
Wednesday and Friday at 8 p.m. and
Thursday meetings at noon at Saint
Peter’s Episcopal Church. Narcotics
Anonymous meetings are held Thursday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Saint
Peter’s Episcopal Church as well. 541
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

2018 Family and
Children First Council
meetings announced
The Gallia County Family and Children First Council will be holding
regular business meetings at 10 a.m.
on the second Tuesday of the following months: January, March, May, July,
September and November. The council
will hold these meetings at the Gallia
County Service Center located at 499
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. The Gallia
County Family and Children First

Council will be holding Intersystem
Collaborative Meetings at 10 a.m. on
the ﬁrst Wednesday of the following
months: February, April, June, August,
October and December at the GalliaJackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services
ofﬁce located at 53 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
For additional information, contact
Lora Jenkins/Intersystem Coordinator
at (740) 446-3022.

POMEROY — The Meigs County
Clerk of Courts Ofﬁces (title and legal)
will close at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Dec.
21. They will also be closed on Dec. 25
and 26 and Jan. 1.

Dale and Hazel Workman celebrated their 90th birthdays with a surprise party Dec. 10 hosted by
their daughter Linda and granddaughter Kelly. They received a lot of cards, from nieces, nephews,
one sister-in-law, and friends. Hazel was 90 on Dec. 13 and Dale will be on Dec. 18. They have two
children, Jim (Linda) Workman, Linda (Mike) Reese, six grandchildren, two step-grandchildren, 11
great-grandchildren, four step great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.

Middleport toy
drive until Dec. 18

You didn’t work this
hard to worry about
the unexpected.

MIDDLEPORT — Middleport
Village and Police Department are
conducting a toy drive to beneﬁt the
Department of Job and Family Services Angel Tree program. New toys may
be dropped off at Middleport Village
Hall until Dec. 18. There is a wrapped
box in the lobby where toys may be
placed.

���-���-����
XXX�TBVOEFSTJOT�DPN

Santa Claus to visit
Middleport Dec. 20
MIDDLEPORT — Santa will make
an appearance at Middleport Village
Hall from 6:30-8 p.m. on Dec. 20 and
21.

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TODAY IN HISTORY

Today’s Highlight in History:
On Dec. 17, 1967, Australian Prime
Minister Harold Holt, 59, disappeared
while swimming in the ocean off Cheviot Beach in Victoria state; despite an
extensive search, his body was never
found (Holt was succeeded as premier
by John McEwen).

sale ends 12/30/17
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THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
“A fool and his money are soon
parted, but you never call him a
fool till the money is gone.”
— Author unknown

cessful manned powered-airplane ﬂights
near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, using
their experimental craft, the Wright
Flyer.
In 1925, Col. William “Billy” MitchOn this date:
In 1777, France recognized American ell was convicted at his court-martial
in Washington of insubordination
independence.
In 1865, Franz Schubert’s Symphony for accusing senior military ofﬁcials
of incompetence and criminal negliNo. 8, known as the “Unﬁnished”
because only two movements had been gence; he was suspended from active
completed, was ﬁrst performed publicly duty.
In 1939, the German pocket battlein Vienna 37 years after the composer’s
ship Admiral Graf Spee was scuttled by
death.
In 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright of its crew, ending the World War II Battle
of the River Plate off Uruguay.
Dayton, Ohio, conducted the ﬁrst suc-

Tope’s

Furniture Galleries
OH-70020540

Today is Sunday, Dec. 17, the 351st
day of 2017. There are 14 days left in
the year.

Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated with
Ohio Valley Publishing for 21 years,
resides in Vinton, Ohio.

Holiday office
closures announced

OH-70020114

Correction

For adults, that’s one
of the gifts Christmas
provides, by offering
the best kind of time
possible for immediate
family, relatives, friends
and even co-workers. I
have always thought that
Christmas parties and
gatherings should be
scheduled closer to the
actual date, rather than
two or sometimes three
weeks prior because the
mood can soon dissipate
with the passage of time.
But the workaday world
and other demands dictate that we spend as
many moments as possible with loved ones in
those last days leading
up to the holiday, and
there’s nothing wrong
with that.
So enjoy the glad tidings that the season creates. Let them overcome
the disappointments
the last 12 months have
produced and allow the
good feelings to take you
into the new year with
a more optimistic viewpoint. Enjoy this time of
the year and all the best
it offers.

Workmans’ 90th birthdays

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs and Gallia
Briefs will only list event information
that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

older we get, the more
pleasure we derive from
giving to others.
At least it is for me,
ever since the Christmas
in junior high when I
replaced the large glass
jar my father used for his
spare change. That jar,
whose clear walls were
copper-like from all of
the pennies it contained,
took on a special meaning
when he brought it out
of his and Mom’s room
and placed it on the table
to provide the stakes for
playing pinochle with my
grandparents when they
visited in the summer.
The jar had since been
damaged and I found
one like it at the local
pharmacy while doing my
Christmas shopping with
the few bucks I’d somehow saved.
When Dad unwrapped
it and gave it the onceover with a smile, his
next statement stayed
with me ever since: “I
can clean off my dresser
twice with this!” With
that stamp of approval, I
started to appreciate that
giving a gift and the joy
it creates in the recipient
is more important and
fulﬁlling than getting.

Find us on FB

151 2nd Ave, Gallipolis, OH 45631
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�LOCAL/WEATHER/TELEVISION

8A Sunday, December 17, 2017

From page 5A

Sunday,
Dec. 24
POMEROY — Trinity
Church, at the corner of
2nd and Lynn Streets,
Pomeroy, will present
its annual Christmas
Eve Cantata, “Come to
the Manger.” Music will
begin at 7 p.m. with the
cantata at 7:30 p.m.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
will hold service at 6 p.m
ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
Sunday School 10 a.m.,
evening service 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 AM;

Sunday School at 10:00;
special Christmas Eve
AM worship service with
communion at 10:30; Pastor Bob Hood; Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337
Johnson Ridge Rd.;
740-446-7495 or 740709-6107. Everyone is
welcome
POMEROY — St.
Paul Lutheran Church of
Pomeroy will celebrate
the coming of the Christ
Child on Christmas Eve
at 7 p.m. with a candlelight service, a tradition
at St. Paul Church, which
is always a high point of
the church year. The public is invited to attend.
RACINE — A Christmas Eve Candlelight Service will be held at 8:30
p.m. at St. John Lutheran
Church, Pine Grove Road,
Racine, Ohio.

SUNDAY EVENING
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4

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6

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7

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8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)

6 PM

27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;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)

Sadly missed by Shirley,
Sister Dotty &amp; family,
children, grandchildren,
great-grand children,
a special friend Kenny
and many more

74 (SYFY)

OH-70020514

2 PM

32°

43°

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.

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

0.0
Trace/1.4
0.1/2.2

Today
7:41 a.m.
5:08 p.m.
6:53 a.m.
5:04 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:42 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
7:45 a.m.
5:48 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

First

Dec 18 Dec 26

Full

Jan 1

Last

Jan 8

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
10:31a
11:18a
11:39a
12:34a
1:26a
2:19a
3:10a

Minor
4:19a
5:06a
5:55a
6:46a
7:38a
8:30a
9:22a

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: What is the warmest it has been in
Antarctica?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
10:54p
11:41p
---12:58p
1:50p
2:42p
3:33p

Minor
4:42p
5:29p
6:19p
7:10p
8:02p
8:54p
9:45p

WEATHER HISTORY
An ice storm in Illinois on Dec. 17,
1924, caused more than $21 million
in damage. Ice accumulation was
almost 2 inches. Wires snapped and
trees cracked. The ice stayed on the
ground until Jan. 4.

AIR QUALITY

7 PM

8 PM

7:30

9 PM

8:30

8 PM

9:30

9 PM

8:30

0 50 100 150 200

300

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. Fri.

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.33
16.75
21.81
13.09
13.21
25.08
13.00
25.76
34.35
12.92
14.30
34.40
14.70

24-hr.
Chg.
+1.35
+0.97
+0.57
+0.42
+0.27
+0.19
+0.43
+0.27
+0.11
+0.22
+0.30
none
none

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Logan
44/33

Adelphi
44/34

9:30

9 PM

Waverly
43/35
Lucasville
44/36
Portsmouth
46/37

THURSDAY

9:30

10 PM

10 PM

10 PM

52°
39°

50°
28°

Sunny; cooler; rain,
then ice at night

Some sunshine giving
way to clouds

Occasional rain and
drizzle

10:30

10:30

10:30

Belpre
44/35

Athens
44/34

St. Marys
45/35

Parkersburg
45/35

Coolville
44/34

Elizabeth
45/35

Spencer
45/35

Buffalo
46/37

Ironton
45/38

Milton
46/38

St. Albans
47/38

Huntington
46/37

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
49/44
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
61/44
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
71/50
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

44°
30°
Sun followed by
increasing clouds

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
44/34

Wilkesville
43/34
POMEROY
Jackson
45/35
44/35
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
45/36
45/36
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
41/36
GALLIPOLIS
46/36
46/37
46/36

Ashland
45/39
Grayson
46/38

FRIDAY

45°
26°

Murray City
44/33

McArthur
44/33

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

57°
32°

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Chillicothe
44/35

WEDNESDAY

Mostly cloudy and
mild

South Shore Greenup
45/38
45/36

69

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

7:30

TUESDAY

Cloudy

0

A: 59(F) at Vanda Station on Jan. 5,
1974.

Snowfall

Friday
Month to date/normal
Season to date/normal

6:30

MONDAY

39°

Temperature

Trace
0.61/1.66
43.76/40.94

6 PM

A little rain this afternoon. Cloudy tonight with
sprinkles. High 46° / Low 36°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Friday
Month to date/normal
Year to date/normal

7 PM

50°
43°

HEALTH TODAY

(in inches)

6:30

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics for Friday

Precipitation

8:30

The Fast and the Furious An
(:50)
Two Fast Two Furious A former
400 (HBO) Travis Fimmel. The peaceful realm of Azeroth is invaded by undercover police officer infiltrates an L.A. police officer is recruited to infiltrate an
an army of orcs fleeing their dying world. TV14
street gang to crack a hijacking ring. TV14 illegal Miami street racing circuit. TV14
(5:50)
Good Will Hunting ('97, Dra) Ben Affleck,
Independence Day: Resurgence ('16, Act) Liam
Strange Days ('95,
450 (MAX) Matt Damon. A math genius gets therapy in order to
Hemsworth. Twenty years after the original invasion, a
Sci-Fi) Angela Bassett, Ralph
overcome his past and realize his full potential. TV14
large army of aliens arrives to destroy Earth. TV14
Fiennes. TVM
(4:50)
Bad Ill Behaviour Shameless "Icarus Fell and White "Zero SMILF
Shameless "Occupy Fiona" SMILF (N)
SMILF
500 (SHOW) Moms Mila
Rusty Ate Him"
F**ks Given"
Ian tests Fiona's patience
and resolve. (N)
Kunis. TVMA

ALMANAC
34°/23°
45°/29°
73° in 1971
-4° in 1917

8 PM

(:55) Warcraft (2016, Action) Paula Patton, Ben Foster,

8 AM

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

7:30

Blue Bloods "Re-Do"
Blue Bloods "After Hours" Blue Bloods "Little Fish"
Blue Bloods "Family Ties"
NCAA Basketball Exhibition Game WJU/W.Va.
In Depth
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter (N)
Rd.2 CF
Rd.2 CF
Rd.2 CF
Rd.2 CF
Poker World Series (L)
Poker World Series (L)
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
The Flight Before Christmas (2015, Drama) Ryan
A Perfect Christmas List (2014, Family) Marion Ross,
Wish Upon a Christmas
McPartlin, Reginald VelJohnson, Mayim Bialik. TVPG
Aaron Hill, Ellen Hollman. TVPG
Aaron Ashmore. TVPG
(5:35)
How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000,
(:15)
Frozen ('13, Fam) Kristen Bell. A princess sets out to end an (:45) National
Fantasy) Taylor Momsen, Jeffrey Tambor, Jim Carrey. TVPG icy spell accidentally cast by her sister, the Queen. TVG
...
(5:00)
The Shawshank Redemption Tim Robbins. A banker is
Forrest Gump ('94, Com/Dra) Tom Hanks. A simple man finds
wrongly convicted of a double murder and is sent to prison for life. TV14 himself in extraordinary situations throughout the course of his life. TV14
Santa Hunters Benjamin Flores Jr.. TVG
Nicky
Full House Full House Full House Full House Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Zebras" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Solitary" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Turmoil" Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Gray" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Smoked"
(5:00)
Get Hard TVMA The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Search Party Search Party
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Heroes: An All Star Tribute (L)
CNN Heroes
(4:15) Star Wars: Episode...
Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi ('83, Adv) Mark Hamill. TV14
Good Behavior
Happy Feet Two (2011, Family) Robin Williams,
Scrooged (1988, Fantasy) Karen Allen, Carol Kane,
Scrooged ('88, Fant)
Pink, Elijah Wood. TVPG
Bill Murray. TV14
Bill Murray. TV14
Alaska: The Last Frontier Cash Cab
Cash Cab
Alaska/Frontier (N)
Alaska/Frontier (N)
Cash Cab (N) (:35) Cash Cab
(5:00)
The Next Three Days (2010, Drama)
The Rock (1996, Action) Nicolas Cage, Ed Harris, Sean Connery. A former spy and
Elizabeth Banks, Liam Neeson, Russell Crowe. TV14
an FBI agent must break into Alcatraz prison to foil a deadly plot. TVMA
Monsters Inside Me
Monsters Inside Me
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Monsters Inside Me
Snapped "Tameshia
Criminal Confessions
Homicide for the Holidays Snapped "Tameshia
Snapped "Rebecca Fenton"
Shelton" (N)
"Ascension" (N)
"New Year's Evil"
Shelton"
CSI "Murder in a Flash"
CSI "Under the Influence" CSI: Miami "Legal"
CSI: Miami "Hell Night"
CSI: Miami "Lost Son"
Kardash "Close to Home" Kardashians "Dog Tired"
The Kardashians
Kardash "Press Pass" (N)
WAGS L.A. (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Mom
Mom
Eyewitness War "Brothers in War"
24 Hours After Hiroshima North Korea Lisa Ling goes Putin Takes Control: Russia
undercover in North Korea. and the West
FIS Alpine Skiing
FIL Luge
NASCAR Xfinity Series Award Show (N)
(4:30) Basket. Soccer Kick in for Houston
Herd for the Holidays (N) UFC UFC Fight Night
American Pickers "Twin at American Pickers "Slim
American Pickers: Bonus Buys "Picking Star Wars Memorabilia" Mike and Frank use
all Costs"
Pickings"
the force to uncover a secret Star Wars stash in California. (N)
Atlanta "Petty Party"
Atlanta Social (N)
Housewives Atlanta (N)
Married to Medicine
Housewives Atlanta
(3:00) To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Flip-Flop
Flip-Flop
Flip-Flop
Flip-Flop
Hawaii (N) Hawaii (N) Hawaii (N) Hawaii (N) Bargain (N) Bargain (N)
(4:00) Dawn
Battle Los Angeles Aaron Eckhart. A retired marine sergeant returns Jeepers Creepers 3 (2017, Horror) Meg Foster, Jonathan
of the Dead to duty to reclaim Los Angeles from an alien invasion. TV14
Breck.

PREMIUM

TODAY

WEATHER

7 PM

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Football Night in America (:20) NFL Football Dallas Cowboys at Oakland Raiders Site: Oakland Alameda Coliseum 3 (N)
News (N)
(L)
- Oakland, Calif. (L)
WTAP News NBC Nightly Football Night in America (:20) NFL Football Dallas Cowboys at Oakland Raiders Site: Oakland Alameda Coliseum at Six (N)
News (N)
(L)
- Oakland, Calif. (L)
ABC 6 News ABC World
The Sound of Music (1965, Musical) Christopher Plummer, Eleanor Parker, Julie Andrews. A woman leaves an
at 6pm (N) News (N)
Austrian convent to become a governess to a widower's seven children. TVPG
2nd Opinion Christmas on Antiques Roadshow
Last Tango in Halifax
Masterpiece Classic "Victoria: Doll 123" The young
"Hospital
the Danube "Anaheim (Hour Three)"
"Holiday Special" (N)
Victoria struggles to take charge amid plots to manipulate
Delirium"
her.
News at 6
ABC World
The Sound of Music (1965, Musical) Christopher Plummer, Eleanor Parker, Julie Andrews. A woman leaves an
(N)
News (N)
Austrian convent to become a governess to a widower's seven children. TVPG
(4:25) NFL Football New England Patriots at 60 Minutes
Wisdom of the Crowd
NCIS: Los Angeles "All Is
Madam
Pittsburgh Steelers Site: Heinz Field (L)
"Alpha Test" (N)
Bright" (N)
Secretary (N)
Rizzoli &amp; Isles "You Can't A Christmas Story Live! Follows nine-year-old Ralphie Parker, who wants a very specific Eyewitness News at 10
Stand the Heat"
gift for Christmas. (L)
p.m. (N)
PBS
Masterpiece Classic "Victoria: Doll 123" The young
Washington Chef's Life Holiday Modern Last Tango in Halifax
NewsHour
Week
inerpretations of family food "Holiday Special" (N)
Victoria struggles to take charge amid plots to manipulate
traditions.
her.
Weekend (N)
(4:25) NFL Football New England Patriots at 60 Minutes
Wisdom of the Crowd
NCIS: Los Angeles "All Is
Madam
Pittsburgh Steelers Site: Heinz Field (L)
"Alpha Test" (N)
Bright" (N)
Secretary (N)

CABLE

39

Love you always,

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17

6:30

18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Chinatown"
24 (ROOT) (5:00) DFL Soccer Sch./Fran.
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Basketball

31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)

In Loving Memory of
Marvin “Neil” McMahon
April 29,1938 - December 16, 2016
It’s been a year since you went to your
heavenly home. It was much too soon but now
you are at peace. We will be with you someday
soon. You are missed so much, I miss your
smiles, your laughs, your warm hugs, and your
sweet kisses. The joys of being with you are the
things that made our life so wonderful.

6 PM

BROADCAST

Clendenin
47/36
Charleston
46/37

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
27/21

Billings
39/30

Denver
43/26

Toronto
23/22

Minneapolis
31/21

Kansas City
52/32

Chicago
43/34

Detroit
37/32

Montreal
10/6
New York
36/33

Washington
50/39

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
50/30/pc
27/14/c
56/49/sh
45/38/pc
47/33/pc
39/30/pc
33/28/pc
30/23/pc
46/37/r
58/42/c
40/27/s
43/34/c
44/35/r
41/34/c
42/36/r
62/44/pc
43/26/c
42/26/c
37/32/c
82/69/pc
69/55/pc
44/36/r
52/32/r
59/38/pc
57/41/c
71/50/s
48/39/r
81/69/s
31/21/c
50/43/r
73/62/r
36/33/pc
54/32/c
79/59/s
41/35/pc
67/48/sh
43/35/r
26/14/pc
56/40/pc
53/39/pc
50/42/r
35/23/s
61/44/s
49/44/r
50/39/pc

Hi/Lo/W
50/27/s
19/14/s
63/51/c
50/42/c
51/39/c
48/27/sn
36/27/c
37/32/sn
53/44/sh
65/43/c
49/32/pc
45/37/pc
49/41/r
44/38/r
47/40/sh
64/55/pc
57/28/c
52/34/pc
41/35/c
82/68/pc
69/61/sh
50/39/c
54/35/s
60/40/pc
64/49/c
71/49/s
54/45/c
83/67/pc
39/26/c
58/45/c
74/61/sh
44/39/c
62/45/pc
82/59/pc
47/41/c
68/45/s
44/41/c
29/22/sf
63/41/c
61/42/pc
58/43/pc
40/27/pc
61/43/s
49/44/r
55/44/c

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
56/49

High
Low

El Paso
56/40
Chihuahua
66/37

85° in Woodland Hills, CA
-16° in Morrisville, VT

Global
High
Low

Houston
69/55
Monterrey
66/54

Miami
81/69

113° in Marble Bar, Australia
-59° in Verkhoyansk, Russia

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
OH-70004384

Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
www.homenatlbank.com
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Church

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs
roughs up
RV, 70-24
SPORTS s 2B
#?8.+CM��/-/7,/&lt;���M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

Lady Tornadoes topple Wahama, 52-44
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

The Southern duo of Shelbi Dailey (23) and Jaiden Roberts trap Wahama’s Hannah
Rose during the first half of Thursday night’s TVC Hocking girls basketball contest
in Mason, W.Va.

MASON, W.Va. — The difference came down to execution.
Visiting Southern made a
27-19 run over the ﬁnal 13:18
of regulation and claimed its
ﬁrst win of the season Thursday night following a 52-44
decision over the Wahama
girls basketball team in a TriValley Conference Hocking
Division matchup at Gary
Clark Court in Mason County.
The Lady Tornadoes (1-4,
1-3 TVC Hocking) and Lady
Falcons (1-3, 0-3) battled
through eight ties and seven
lead changes through three
quarters of play, but the

guests never trailed in the
second half after taking a slim
25-23 cushion into the break.
The Red and White opened
the third quarter with a Harley Roush basket that knotted
the game up at 25-all with
5:31 remaining, but Phoenix
Cleland converted an oldfashioned three-point play
13 seconds later — and the
Purple and Gold never trailed
again.
In fact, Cleland’s goal
sparked a 9-4 run and the
hosts committed 13 turnovers
while producing only six shot
attempts as Southern took a
34-29 edge into the ﬁnale.
Roush again scored the
opening bucket of the fourth
to whittle the lead down to a

single possession with 7:04
left in regulation, but the Lady
‘Does shot 50 percent from
the ﬁeld down the stretch and
led by as many as a dozen
points (52-40) with 25 seconds remaining.
Wahama reeled off four
straight points over the ﬁnal
13 seconds to wrap up the
eight-point outcome.
Southern outscored the
Lady Falcons in each of the
four quarters, but never led
by more than two possessions
until the ﬁnal period of play.
Wahama outrebounded the
Lady Tornadoes by a slim
33-30 overall margin, but the
guests claimed a 14-12 edge
See WAHAMA | 2B

Blue Devils
dominate
Ironton, 70-46
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio — Keeping a good thing
going.
The Gallia Academy boys basketball team
had nine players reach the scoring column and
remained unbeaten this season following a convincing 70-46 victory over visiting Ironton on
Friday night in an Ohio Valley Conference contest
in Gallia County.
The Blue Devils (5-0, 2-0 OVC) were dominant
from the opening tip-off, as the hosts stormed out
to a 15-8 ﬁrst quarter advantage and ultimately
never looked back.
The Blue and White received ﬁve points from
Cory Call and also got four points apiece from
both Zach Loveday and Evan Wiseman in the
opening frame while building a seven-point cushion, but the Fighting Tigers (1-3, 0-2) answered
with seven points from Ethan Wilson during a
small 9-7 second period run to enter the break
trailing 22-17.
From there, it was all Blue Devils — as the hosts
put together a pair of 24-point quarters down the
stretch while scoring more points after halftime
than IHS managed in the entire contest.
Justin McClelland tallied nine points in the third
canto as GAHS had six different players score as
part of a 24-8 surge, giving Gallia Academy a comfortable 46-25 cushion headed into the ﬁnale.
Loveday hit 7-of-8 free throw attempts and had
11 points down the stretch as the Blue Devils
closed regulation on a 24-21 run to wrap up the
24-point outcome.
The Blue and White hit 22 total ﬁeld goals —
including ﬁve three-pointers — and also went
21-of-29 at the free throw line for 72 percent.
Loveday led the hosts with 19 points, followed
by McClelland with 11 points and Call with 10
markers. Wiseman was next with nine points and
Caleb Henry added seven markers to the winning
cause.
Gage Harrison chipped in six points and Justin
Peck had four points, while Kaden Thomas and
Logan Blouir completed the winning tally with
two points apiece.
See DOMINATE | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Monday, Dec. 18
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Belpre at South Gallia, 7:30
River Valley at Athens, 7:30
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30
Tuesday, Dec. 19
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30
Miller at Southern, 7:30
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30
Mountian State Christian at Hannan, 7 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 7:30
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Rose Hill Christian, 7
p.m.
Rio Grande Athletics
Men’s Basketball vs OU-Lancaster, 12:15

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

River Valley junior Layne Fitch connects on a three-pointer to start the game, during the Raiders’ 46-45 victory on Friday in Bidwell, Ohio.

Fitch lifts Raiders past Meigs
River Valley
junior drains
3-point shot for
46-45 win

layups missed. Congratulations to them for winning their ﬁrst.”
River Valley outrebounded the Maroon
and Gold by a 27-22 clip,
including 6-to-5 on the
offensive end. Meigs won
— Bryan Drummond, the turnover battle by a
RVHS head coach 17-15 tally, and held a
11-to-9 edge in steals.
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
RVHS claimed an advanpoints — sank the three- tage of 11-to-8 in assists,
one point at the start of
while both teams blocked
BIDWELL, Ohio — He the fourth, the Marauders pointer, giving the hosts
two shots.
the 46-45 win.
ﬁnished what he started. extended their lead to
“We’re doing good
“The kids just execut41-36 with 4:30 to play.
River Valley senior
things, we’re moving in
ed,” said RVHS head
The Raiders made it a
Layne Fitch — who hit
one-possession, at 41-39, coach Bryan Drummond. the right direction, we
a three-pointer for the
just have to have fewer
“We had an option for a
ﬁrst points of Friday’s Tri- with 4:25 left, but didn’t
mental mistakes,” said
score for over three min- two and an option for a
Valley Conference Ohio
Drummond. “We’ve had
utes. Meigs managed only three, and the three was
Division boys basketball
a couple opportunities
open. It took them all,
two free throws during
contest in Gallia County
to get this, we just have
it took all-9 that we had
the RVHS drought, and
— also scored the ﬁnal
to build now. We have to
the Raiders cut their deﬁ- here tonight to get that
points of the game, hitcomeback in here tomorcit back to two points, at one. It relieves so much
ting his sixth trifecta as
row night for an in-coun43-41, with 30 seconds to pressure when you get
time expired to give the
ty game and it’s not going
one like that.”
play.
Raiders a 46-45 victory
to be easy. I’m just happy
The Raiders shot
On the ensuing
over visiting Meigs.
to win.”
18-of-45 (40 percent)
inbound play, RVHS
The Raiders (1-5, 1-2
Following Fitch in the
from the ﬁeld, including
senior Patrick Brown
TVC Ohio) led 13-10
scoring column for the
8-of-21 (38.1 percent)
picked off a Marauders’
after the ﬁrst quarter of
Raiders were McCarley
from beyond the arc,
pass, dished the ball to
play, and extended their
and Barber with nine
while MHS was 13-of-37
Fitch, who found Dustin
lead to six points early
points apiece. Brown
(35.1 percent) from the
Barber underneath for a
in the second quarter.
ﬁeld, including 4-of-8 (50 scored four for the
Meigs (0-7, 0-2) ﬁnished the game-tying bucket.
Meigs junior Zach Bar- percent) from beyond the Silver and Black, Rory
the ﬁrst half with a 16-7
Twyman chipped in
trum brought the ball up arc. From the free throw
run, however, giving the
with three points, while
line, River Valley was
guests a 26-23 lead at the the ﬂoor and, with four
2-of-7 (28.6 percent) and Chase Caldwell had two
seconds left in regulabreak.
and Matthew Mollohan
River Valley started the tion, hit a contested jump Meigs was 15-of-25 (60
marked one.
shot from the lane, giving percent).
second half with a 11-2
McCarley and Brown
“We didn’t do anything
MHS a 45-43 advantage.
run and led 34-28 with
tied for a game-high with
we were supposed to
After a timeout, the
3:37 left in the third periseven rebounds apiece,
do all night,” Maraudod. RVHS was held score- Raiders had the length
with McCarley also
of the ﬂoor to cover with ers head coach Ed Fry
less for the remainder of
picking up a game-best
said. “We were supthree seconds on the
the stanza, however, as
posed to foul there when ﬁve assists. Brown and
the Marauders rattled off clock. Brown inbounded
Barber led the Raider
they threw it inbounds,
the ball to Jarret McCarnine straight points and
defense with two steals
ley near midcourt, and he because we had one foul
headed into the ﬁnaleto give. It shouldn’t have each, while Brown and
found Fitch in the right
with a 37-34 lead.
come down to that with
corner. Fitch — who ﬁnAfter the Silver and
See FITCH | 2B
all the free throws and
ished with team-high 18
Black cut the margin to

“The kids just executed. We had an option
for a two and an option for a three, and the
three was open. It took them all, it took all-9
that we had here tonight to get that one. It
relieves so much pressure when you get one
like that.”

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lady Marauders rough up River Valley, 70-24
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— Momentum works
both ways.
The Meigs girls basketball team picked up
its third straight victory
on Thursday evening in
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium, defeating Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division guest River Valley by
a 70-24 count, giving the
Lady Raiders their sixth
straight setback.
The Lady Marauders (4-2, 3-0 TVC Ohio)
never trailed in the
game, with the only tie
of the night coming at
2-all. After back-to-back
three-pointers by MHS,
the Lady Raiders (0-6,
0-2) went on a 6-to-5 run
and trailed 13-8 with two
minutes left in the stanza.
However, the Maroon and
Gold ended the period
with eight unanswered
points and a 21-8 advantage.
RVHS scored the
opening basket of the
second quarter, but
Meigs claimed the next
17 points and led by 28
points with two minutes
left in the half. MHS
outscored its guest by a
4-2 count over the ﬁnal
two minutes of the period
and headed into the break
with a 42-12 advantage.
The Maroon and Gold
scored the ﬁrst nine
points of the second half
and ultimately led 56-14
at the conclusion of the
third quarter.
Over the ﬁnal eight
minutes, Meigs outscored
RVHS by a 14-to-10
count, with the hosts
sinking nine free throws
in the period to help seal
the 70-24 win.
“We came out a little
slow,” second-year MHS
head coach Jarrod Kasun
said. “I wasn’t very happy
with about the ﬁrst four
minutes of the game,
but then we settled in,

played our style and hit
some shots. It’s nice to
get some of the younger
kids some time, and they
played pretty well for us
tonight.”
For the game, Meigs
shot 21-of-60 (35 percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 9-of-25 (36
percent) from beyond the
arc. Meanwhile, River
Valley shot 10-of-41 (24.4
percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 0-of-9 from
three-point range. From
the free throw line, the
Lady Marauders were
19-of-33 (57.6 percent)
and the Lady Raiders
were 4-of-15 (26.7 percent).
“Our problem all year
has been conﬁdence,”
said RVHS head coach
Stephen Roderick, who is
also in his second season.
“Meigs is a fantastic ball
team, really sharp, but
we held with them for
as long as we could. I’m
happy with their effort,
but we have to get better at little things. We
hustled tonight, but we
didn’t necessarily do a lot
of things right.”
As a team, the Lady
Marauders claimed a
37-to-34 rebounding
edge, including 16-to-10
on the offensive glass.
MHS also held advantages of 16-to-5 in assists,
24-to-7 in steals and 3-to2 in blocked shots. The
hosts committed 12 turnovers, while RVHS gave
the ball away 30 times.
“We’ll get better, it’s
going to be a process,”
said Roderick. “They’re
not really used to getting open, so when they
do get an open look it’s
almost like panic sets
in. We just have to get
comfortable, because
in these ﬁrst few games
we’ve rushed and we’ve
been pushed so hard, that
we’ve never been under
control. Now they’re
getting better at some
things where they can get

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Meigs junior Kassidy Betzing (30) shoots a jump shot in between Lady Raiders Savannah Reese (15) and Kaylee Tucker (23), during the
first half of the Lady Marauders’ 70-24 victory on Thursday in Rocksprings, Ohio.

looks, but they panic and
they don’t shoot like they
know how to.
“Defensively we have to
get better and we will, I
know we will,” Roderick
added. “Right now we
have some girls lost on
key plays. I think the next
time we play them will be
different. I think its that
way with every team in
our league, the next time
we play them it will be a
lot better game.”
The Lady Marauders
were led by junior Kassidy Betzing with 20
points, 16 of which came
in the ﬁrst half. Marissa
Noble was next for MHS
with 11 points, followed
by Bre Lilly with 10, all of
which came in the ﬁnale.
Devin Humphreys scored
seven points in the win,
Alyssa Smith, Madison
Fields and Becca Pullins
added six points apiece,
while Jacynda Glover

marked three and Taylor
Swartz posted one.
Noble had a game-high
three trifectas for the
victors, Pullins and Humphreys both made a pair
of three-pointers, while
Lilly and Betzing both
made one from beyond
the arc.
Humphreys led the
hosts on the glass with
six rebounds, followed by
Fields and Jerrica Smith
with ﬁve each. Maddie
Hendricks dished out a
game-high four assists
for the Lady Marauders,
while Betzing and Pullins
came up with ﬁve steals
apiece. Noble, Humphreys and Pullins each
rejected a shot in the win.
RVHS sophomore
Kaylee Gillman had eight
points to lead the Silver
and Black. Next was
Savannah Reese with ﬁve
points and Beth Gillman
with four. Kelsey Brown,

Carly Gilmore and Jaden
Neal had two points
apiece in the setback,
while Kaylee Tucker had
one marker.
Hannah Jacks pulled
in a game-high nine
rebounds to lead the
guests on the glass, while
Brown came down with
seven boards. Beth Gillman recorded a team-best
two assists, Jacks led the
team with four steals,
while Beth Gillman and
Kaylee Gillman rejected
one shot each.
RVHS and Meigs will
face for the second time
this winter on Jan. 25 in
Bidwell.
The Lady Marauders
will continue their league
schedule on Monday at
Alexander.
“Next week is huge for
us,” Kasun said. “We’re
at Alexander and that’s
always a tough place. I
don’t know the last time

Wahama

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

MHS sophomore Bobby Musser (left) goes up for a shot over RVHS
senior Jarret McCarley (0), during the second half of River Valley’s
46-45 victory on Friday in Bidwell, Ohio.

Fitch

three assists.
Christian Mattox scored
four points for the guests,
while Bobby Musser
From page 1B
scored one point and
Mollohan both blocked one grabbed ﬁve boards. Baer
led the Marauder defense
shot.
with three steals, followed
“We didn’t trust our
training tonight,” said Fry. by Musser with two steals
and two blocks.
“We tried to create our
These teams won’t meet
own stuff out there on the
ﬂoor instead of doing what again until the regular
season ﬁnale on Feb. 16 at
we were supposed to do.
MHS.
That’s a lack of discipline
After hosting South Galand that’s probably my
lia on Saturday, River Valfault.”
ley will resume league play
Weston Baer led the
Marauders 22 points on 10 at Alexander on Tuesday.
The Marauders return to
free throws and ﬁve ﬁeld
the court on Tuesday at
goals, including a pair of
Vinton County, for their
three-pointers. Bartrum
ﬁnal of six straight games
and Cooper Darst both
away from Larry R. Morscored nine points in the
rison Gymnasium.
setback, with Darst pulling in a team-high six
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740rebounds and Bartrum
446-2342, ext. 2100.
dishing out a team-best

we beat Alexander, so
we’re going to go in there
hard, and focus on them
all weekend. After that
we have we have Vinton
County coming in on
Thursday, so it’s going to
be a tell-tale week for the
TVC Ohio Division.
“We’re playing well and
we’re starting to shoot
the ball better,” Kasun
said. “When we’re making
shots, we’re pretty good.
We’re going to go to Alex
and that’s a team that
likes to pressure. They
have two really good players in Richardson and
Rice, we’re going to ‘D’
them up and see what
happens.”
After hosting South
Gallia on Saturday, the
Silver and Black will get
back to TVC Ohio play on
Monday at Athens.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

(39-33) with 5:24 left.
And despite committing only
two turnovers in the fourth
From page 1B
quarter, the execution that was
needed down the stretch just
never came to fruition.
on the offensive glass and also
“We’re a young group and
had one less turnover (23) than
we made too many mistakes
the Red and White (24).
tonight, but we were in it until
In the end, however, it was
the end,” Arnott said. “The
the group effort that ultimately
game was there for us with four
allowed ﬁrst-year coach David
Kight to pick up his ﬁrst victory minutes to go, but Southern
made plays when they needed
at Southern.
them and we didn’t. That was
Following the game, Kight
— who formerly served as head the difference in the end.”
The Lady Falcons have now
boys basketball coach at both
Pike Western and Meigs — was dropped 72 consecutive TVC
Hocking contests, dating back to
pleased to see all of his troops’
a 53-48 home win over this same
hard work pay off in the end.
Southern program back on Jan.
“I told the girls in the locker
room that I am extremely proud 14, 2013.
The Lady Tornadoes never
of them. They have no idea how
trailed in the opening canto,
ecstatic I am for them to get
their ﬁrst win,” Kight said. “It’s although the game was tied on
been a process since day one to six different occasions over that
get to this point, and it will con- span before the guests claimed a
tinue to be a process throughout 16-15 edge.
Wahama led by one point on
the year … but we are seeing
three different instances in the
improvement every day.
“We put four quarters togeth- second frame, the last of which
er tonight and that was why we came at 21-20 following a pair of
got out of here with the victory. Hannah Rose free throws with
1:44 left in the half. SHS closed
I’m proud of them, especially
because it was a collective effort the quarter with a 5-2 run to
and we won it with our defense. take a two-point cushion into
the break.
We showed some real signs of
Southern connected on 19-ofgrowth tonight … and that’s the
50 ﬁeld goal attempts for 38
part of most proud of.”
Conversely, WHS coach John percent, including a 2-of-3 effort
from three-point range for 67
Arnott was disappointed with
percent. Both SHS trifectas
the way things turned out —
primarily because his squad was also came in the fourth quarter,
which included a pivotal dagger
facing a two-possession deﬁcit

from Paige VanMeter at the 1:46
mark that gave the guests their
ﬁrst double-digit lead of the
night at 46-36.
Lauren Lavender led the Lady
Tornadoes with a game-high 18
points, followed by Jaiden Roberts with 11 points and Cleland
with eight markers. VanMeter
was next with seven points and
Jordan Hardwick completed the
winning tally with two markers.
Baylee Wolfe hauled in a teamhigh eight rebounds and Shelbi
Dailey grabbed six boards for
SHS, which ﬁnished the night
12-of-23 at the free throw line
for 52 percent.
The Lady Falcons made 17-of49 shot attempts for 35 percent,
including misses on all four of
their tries from behind the arc.
The hosts were also 10-of-20 at
the charity stripe for 50 percent.
Emma Gibbs paced the Red
and White with a double-double
effort of 17 points and 13
rebounds, followed by Rose with
13 points and Roush with six
markers.
Elizabeth Mullins was next
with four points, while Maddy
VanMatre and Ashtyn Russell
rounded things out with two
points apiece. Russell also hauled
in nine boards in the setback.
Both teams return to TVC
Hocking action on Saturday
as Southern travels to Federal
Hocking and Wahama heads to
Miller.

Dominate

three points and one point.
Gallia Academy returns to
action Tuesday when it travels to Proctorville for an OVC
matchup with Fairland.

From page 1B

Ironton netted 15 total ﬁeld
goals — including six trifectas
— and also went 10-of-17 at the

free throw line for 59 percent.
Wilson led the Tigers with a
game-high 23 points, followed
by Kyle Adkins with 15 points
and Reid Carrico with four
markers. Ayden Barnes and
Ryan Payne completed the scoring with respective efforts of

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

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�SPORTS

4B Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Rio women upend No. 12 IU East

Rio
Grande’s
Jasmine
Smith
scores
two of her
career-high
28 points
in Tuesday
night’s
82-76
triumph
over
12th-ranked
Indiana
University
East. Smith
also had
a gamehigh 12
rebounds in
the victory.

By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
Midway through the third
quarter of Tuesday night’s
River States Conference
battle at the Newt Oliver Arena, a win for the
University of Rio Grande
women’s basketball team
over 12th-ranked Indiana
University East appeared
to be a done deal.
As things turned out,
though, a win over the
Red Wolves was anything
but easy for head coach
David Smalley club.
The RedStorm saw a
commanding 21-point
lead whittled down to two
inside the ﬁnal two minutes, but held on to post
an 82-76 victory over their
RSC East Division rivals.
Rio, who found out just
before game time that
they received 27 points
and were part of a threeway tie for 27th in the
latest NAIA Coaches Top
25 poll, improved to 12-1
overall and 3-0 in league
play with its 10th straight
win.
IU East dropped to 8-3
overall and 1-1 inside the
RSC.
After a back-and-forth
affair over the ﬁrst 17
minutes of the contest,
Rio Grande parlayed a
19-2 run which bridged
the ﬁnal 2:52 of the ﬁrst
half and the ﬁrst 3:14 of
the third quarter into a
56-35 lead following a
jumper by junior Jasmine
Smith (Canal Winchester,
OH).
The Red Wolves closed
the gap to 12 points late
in the period and continued to methodically chip

Courtesy photo

away at the deﬁcit, pulling as close as 71-69 after
the second of consecutive
buckets by All-America
candidate Tia King with
1:34 remaining in the
contest.
The RedStorm
answered, though, getting
a three-pointer by sophomore Sydney Holden
(Wheelersburg, OH) on
its ensuing possession
and a layup by junior
Jaida Carter (New Philadelphia, OH) 26 seconds
later to push the lead
back to seven, 76-69, with
50 seconds left to play.
IU East got no closer
than ﬁve points the rest
of the way.
While Holden and Carter hit the shots which,
essentially, ended the
Red Wolves’ comeback
hopes for good, it was
Smith who fueled the ﬁre
of Rio’s winning effort

throughout the night.
Smith ﬁnished with a
career-high 28 points —
16 in the ﬁrst half and 12
after the break — to go
along with a game-high 12
rebounds. She hit her ﬁrst
eight ﬁeld goal attempts
in the game and ﬁnished
10-for-13 from the ﬁeld.
Holden had a strong
performance in her own
right, tallying 16 points,
eight rebounds and ﬁve
assists. Sophomore Abby
Wendel (Portland, IN)
also reached double ﬁgures for the RedStorm,
netting 12 points to
compliment a game- and
career-high six assists.
Rio Grande survived
23 turnovers and a cool
shooting touch in the
second half (11-for-27,
40.7%) by shooting just
under 56 percent in the
ﬁrst half (19-for-34) and
holding a 41-29 edge in

rebounding.
King, who was recently
featured in the “Faces in
the Crowd” portion of
Sports Illustrated’s Dec.
4 edition for her exploits
over the past four seasons, had a game-high
30 points — 21 of which
came in the second half
— in a losing cause for
IU East. She also had six
rebounds to go along with
a team-high four assists.
Kristen Miller added
16 points and a team-high
three steals for the Red
Wolves, while Mackenzie
Campbell had three steals
of her own in addition to
14 points and a team-high
eight rebounds.
Rio Grande returns to
action Friday afternoon at
Ohio Christian University. Tipoff is set for 3 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Lady Eagles
outlast Miller
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The Lady
Eagles saved their best
for last.
The Eastern girls
basketball team scored
22 points over the
ﬁnal eight minutes of
Thursday’s Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking
Division matchup in
Meigs County, capping
off a 51-42 victory over
visiting Miller.
The Lady Eagles (4-1,
3-0 TVC Hocking) —
winners of four straight
— hit ﬁve ﬁeld goals in
the opening period and
outscored the the Lady
Falcons (4-2, 2-2) by a
12-9 tally.
However, the EHS
offense was held to
just ﬁve points in the
second stanza, as Miller
battled back to tie the
game at 17 by halftime.
Eastern made just
three ﬁeld goals in the
third quarter, but hit
6-of-9 free throws in the
canto. The hosts outscored MHS by a 12-11
clip in the third and
took a 29-28 lead into
the ﬁnale.
In the fourth quarter,
Miller hit six ﬁeld goals,
including two threepointers, en route to 14
points. Meanwhile, the
Lady Eagles hit seven
ﬁeld goals, including
one triple, while going
7-of-12 from the line to
seal the 51-42 victory.
For the game, Eastern was 15-of-31 (48.4

percent) from the free
throw line, where Miller
was 5-of-12 (41.7 percent).
EHS junior Jess
Parker led the victors
with 14 points, eight
of which came from
the charity stripe.
Senior Elizabeth Collins marked 11 points
in the win, with seven
coming in the fourth
quarter. Fellow EHS
senior Madison Williams hit Eastern’s only
two three-pointers and
scored 10 points.
Lady Eagles junior
Alyson Bailey scored
six points on a trio of
ﬁeld goals, while Kelsey
Casto and Kennadi
Rockhold scored ﬁve
points apiece, both sinking two ﬁeld goals and
one free throw.
For Miller, Ashley
Spencer made a gamehigh three trifectas and
ﬁnished with 15 points.
Haille Joseph posted 12
points for the guests,
Josie Crabtree added
eight, while Lacey
Alexander scored four.
Sophia Compston and
Olivia Houk rounded
out the Lady Falcon
total with two points
and one point respectively.
Eastern will try to
sweep Miller on Jan.
27 when these meet in
Perry County. After a
trip to Belpre on Saturday, the Lady Eagles
will host Wahama on
Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Lady Defenders net first win

South Point slips past Blue Angels

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

minutes, OVCS outahawley@aimmediamidwest.com
scored its guest by an 8-2
count, sealing the 25-15
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — triumph.
For the game, Ohio
Defenders indeed.
The Ohio Valley Chris- Valley Christian shot
tian girls basketball team 9-of-46 (19.6 percent)
held visiting Parkersburg from the ﬁeld, including
3-of-15 (20 percent) from
Christian to just seven
beyond the arc. From the
ﬁeld goals on Friday in
free throw line, OVCS
Gallia County, as the
was 4-of-10 (40 percent).
Lady Defenders picked
Collectively, the Lady
up a 25-15 victory for
their ﬁrst win of the year. Defenders recorded 10
OVCS (1-5) trailed the defensive rebounds, 12
offensive rebounds, ﬁve
4-3 after eight minutes
assists and 21 steals.
of play, but the Lady
Knights were scoreless in OVCS only committed 11
turnovers in the win.
the second quarter. The
The Lady Defendhosts scored four points
in the second period and ers were led by Kristen
headed into the half with Durst with 10 points on
four ﬁeld goals, includa 7-4 lead.
ing two three-pointers.
Both offenses enjoyed
Emily Childers was next
their best quarter of the
with nine points on a
night in the third, with
the Blue and Gold claim- pair of two-pointers,
ing a 10-9 edge to extend- two free throws and one
trifecta. Olivia Neal and
ed their lead to 17-13
Makala Sizemore sank
headed into the ﬁnale.
a two-pointer apiece for
Over the ﬁnal eight

the hosts, while Lauren
Ragan and Cori Hutchison both ﬁnished with
one point.
Durst and Ragan tied
for a team-high with
six rebounds apiece,
Childers had a game-best
nine steals, while Ragan
dished out a team-best
three assists.
Taylor Marks had a
team-best ﬁve points for
the guests, while hitting
Parkersburg Christian’s
only three-pointer. Willow Walker and LouMasi
Lott contributed four
points apiece to the PCS
cause, while Kaeli Vannoy added two points.
OVCS will try to sweep
the Lady Knights on
Jan. 16 in Parkersburg.
The Blue and Gold will
be back in action on
Tuesday at Rose Hill
Christian.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

By Alex Hawley

SOUTH POINT, Ohio
— Thankfully, the week
is over.
The Gallia Academy
girls basketball team
dropped its third straight
game on Thursday
evening in Lawrence
County, as Ohio Valley
Conference host South
Point topped the Blue
Angels by a 56-42 tally.
In the opening quarter,
the Blue Angels (4-3,
1-3 OVC) hit four ﬁeld
goals, including one
three-pointer, en route
to nine points. The Lady
Pointers began the night
with their best offensive performance of the
night, however, scoring
21 points on the strength
of ﬁve trifectas in the
opening stanza.
With its best offensive
quarter of the night, Gallia Academy outscored its
host by a 14-12 clip in the

second, cutting the margin to 33-23 by halftime.
South Point got one of
those points back in the
third quarter, outscoring
the guests by a 10-9 count
to make the advantage
43-32 headed into the
ﬁnale. The Lady Pointers
capped off their 56-42 victory with a 13-to-10 fourth
quarter run.
From the free throw
line, GAHS shot 7-of-18
(38.9 percent) and SPHS
shot a perfect 8-of-8.
Gallia Academy sophomore Alex Barnes led
the guests with 15 points
on six ﬁeld goals and a
trio of foul shots. Ashton Webb sank the Blue
Angels lone three-pointer and ﬁnished with 11
points on ﬁve ﬁeld goals.
GAHS freshmen Maddy
Petro and Ryelee Sipple
scored ﬁve points apiece
in the setback, Arianna
Jordan contributed four
points to the Blue Angel
cause, while Macey Sid-

ers ﬁnished with two
markers.
SPHS senior Leah
Lawson led the victors
with 15 points, followed
by Emilee Whitt and
Madison Kearns with 14
apiece. Maddie Khounlavong had nine points
in the win, while Ashley
Perkey and Jaden Howard scored two points
apiece.
Kearns drained four
shots from beyond the
arc, Whitt made a pair of
trifectas, while Lawson
and Khounlavong made a
three-pointer apiece.
The Blue Angels will
aim to avenge this loss on
Jan. 29 when these teams
meet in Centenary.
Gallia Academy —
which won’t play another
league game until 2018
— returns to action at
home against Jackson on
Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

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�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, December 17, 2017 5B

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 &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

No. 3 Red Wolves pull away from Rio men
By Randy Payton

No. 3 in the latest NAIA
DII men’s Top 25 poll
released shortly before
game time, improved to
11-2 overall and 2-0 in
the RSC with the win
— their seventh in as
many meetings with Rio
Grande.
The RedStorm had a
modest two-game winning streak snapped, falling to 4-9 overall and 1-2
in league play.
Rio — as it had done in
each of its previous two
outings — got out of the
gate well by scoring 13 of
the game’s ﬁrst 17 points
and led 18-11 after a
three-point goal by senior
Will Hill (Worthington,
OH) with 10:45 left in the
ﬁrst half.
Hill was assessed a
technical foul, though, for,
allegedly, making a ges-

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— It’s funny how one
ofﬁcial’s call — midway
through the ﬁrst half —
can upset the ﬂow of a
game for one team.
Unfortunately, on Tuesday night, the University of Rio Grande men’s
basketball team was the
victim in just such a scenario.
Indiana University East
used late run before halftime to create a measure
of separation and another
spurt of the ﬁnal seven
minutes to pull away for
an 80-64 win over the
RedStorm in River States
Conference play at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
The Red Wolves, who
climbed from No. 6 to

grabbed a 21-19 lead after
a basket by Datrion Harper with 8:03 left in the
half capped a 10-1 run.
The RedStorm hung
tough in Hill’s absence
and led 26-25 after a
basket by senior Kenny
Council (Jacksonville,
FL) with 5:25 remaining
before the intermission,
but IUE ﬁnished the half
on a 14-4 run and enjoyed
a 39-30 edge at the break.
The Red Wolves
stretched their advantage
Courtesy photo
to as many as 12 points
Rio Grande senior Kenny Council had 17 points and 11 rebounds
in the RedStorm’s 80-64 loss to No. 12 Indiana University East, with just over 14 minutes to play in the game
Tuesday night, at the Newt Oliver Arena.
before Rio made things
interesting by closing to
added a bucket on the
ture toward the IU East
within ﬁve, 63-58, after a
ensuing possession after
bench which video later
the free throws to make it three-pointer by freshman
showed did not happen.
Trey Kelley (Minford,
18-15 and, after Hill was
Charles Peterson hit
OH) with 7:33 left in the
forced to the bench two
both of the technical
minutes later for another contest.
free throws for the Red
The RedStorm only
Wolves and Bishop Smith foul, IU East eventually

Eastman’s

managed six more points
the rest of the way, while
IU East widened the gap
to its ﬁnal margin behind
Aaron Thomas, who eight
of his 10 second half
points in the ﬁnal 5-1/2
minutes.
Harper led the Red
Wolves with 18 points,
while Thomas ﬁnished
with 12 and Lucas Huffman had 10 points — all
in the second half. Thomas also yanked down 10
rebounds for IUE, while
Jacoby Claypool had a
team-high ﬁve assists and
game-high three steals.
IU East, which has
reached the national quarterﬁnals twice and the
national semiﬁnals once
in the last three years,
shot 54.8 percent in the
See WOLVES | 7B

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, December 17, 2017 7B

Southern smacks Lancers, 76-35
By Bryan Walters

The Purple and Gold
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
stormed out of the gates
while establishing a 21-4 ﬁrst
quarter advantage, then made
STEWART, Ohio — Back
an 18-8 charge in the second
on track.
After falling at Trimble last canto to enter halftime with a
comfortable 39-12 cushion.
Tuesday, the Southern boys
SHS all but nailed the cofbasketball team got back to
ﬁn shut in the third frame
its winning ways on Friday
after making a substantial
night following a 76-35 vic22-7 surge for a 61-19 advantory over host Federal Hocking in a Tri-Valley Conference tage, but the Lancers (0-3,
Hocking Division matchup in 0-2) ended things on a positive note after winning the
Athens County.
fourth by a slim 16-15 margin
The Tornadoes (4-1, 2-1
to complete the 76-35 outTVC Hocking) made 11
come.
trifectas, shot 45 percent
The Tornadoes outreboundfrom the ﬁeld and had 11
ed FHHS by a 35-22 overall
different players reach the
scoring column while rolling margin and forced 25 turnovers while committing only
to a 41-point triumph — the
a dozen miscues.
guests’ second win of 40-orSouthern connected on
more points this season and
the fourth time they’ve scored 28-of-62 total ﬁeld goal
at least 73 points in a contest. attempts and went 11-of-23

Help Wanted General

including a 3-of-11 effort
from three-point range for 27
percent. The hosts were also
4-of-12 at the charity stripe
for 33 percent.
Brad Russell led Fed Hock
with nine points, followed by
Josh Rice and Terrell Mayle
with six markers apiece.
Quentin Basim was next with
ﬁve points, while Michael
Johns, Branden Gould, Collin
Jarvis and Gabe Fuller each
added two points.
Hunter Smith completed
the scoring with a single
point. Fuller also hauled in a
team-best six rebounds in the
setback.
Southern returns to action
Tuesday when it hosts Miller
in a TVC Hocking contest.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT

Legals

Houses For Rent

Rentals

Harrison Township is
accepting bids for a John
Deere Grader. Bids are to
be received on or before
26 December at 1270 Little
Bullskin Rd, Patriot,
Ohio 45658 (please
identify sealed bid on envelope). Bid opening will be at
the meeting 27 Dec starting
at 7:00pm. The township
reserves the right to accept
or reject any or all bids.
Questions can be addressed
to trustee Jack Slone at
740-256-6242.

Charming 4 bdrm. 2 bth.
River view victorian home.
Detached 2 car garage.
Gas heat, cntrl A/C
$1200.00 mo.
Call 740-446-3481.

SEEKING TENANTS
For 55+ Community
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VWRUHV DQG UHVWDXUDQWV�

TONI FORD
HARRISON TOWNSHIP
FISCAL OFFICER
12/17/17,12/24/17

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General

HELP WANTED

OIL AND GAS
COMPANY
LOOKING
FOR WELL
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OPERATOR

OH-70020669

FULL TIME
WITH
BENEFITS

1-440840-0478

REPORTER
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+8' IULHQGO\�
:HOO PDLQWDLQHG�
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Call (740) 578-4177
Extension #1

Self-motivated, investigative
reporter with a nose for
news &amp; a curiosity to know
more about...everything!
The Daily Times is looking
for an investigative reporter
to dig out meaningful
stories about the area.
Excellent journalism &amp;
writing skills are essential,
as well as basic
photography skills.
A technology leader providing
written news &amp; video to our
to our area with a proven
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REAL ESTATE
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Absolute Top Dollarsilver/gold coins, any
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Shop 151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842

From page 6B

ﬁrst half, 57.1 percent in
the second half and 55.9
percent for the game.
Hill — the reigning
RSC Player of the Week
— led Rio Grande with
20 points and had a
game-high six assists.
Council ﬁnished with
17 points and a gamebest 11 rebounds, while
sophomore Stanley
Christian (Norfolk, VA)
added 13 points in a
losing cause.
The RedStorm shot
just 36.2 percent (21for-58) for the game.
Rio Grande returns to
action Saturday afternoon at Ohio Christian
University. Tipoff is set
for 3 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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Rents starting at
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LEGALS

from behind the arc for 48
percent. The guests also
netted 9-of-15 free throw
attempts for 60 percent.
Jensen Anderson led SHS
with ﬁve triples and a gamehigh 17 points, followed by
Weston Thorla with 15 points
and Brayden Cunningham
with 13 markers.
Coltin Parker was next with
eight points, while Austin
Baker, Trey McNickle, Jason
Counts and Austin Vancooney
all contributed four points
apiece. McNickle also led the
guests with six rebounds and
seven assists.
Alex VanMeter was next
with three points, while
Dylan Smith and Larry Dunn
completed the winning tally
with two markers each.
The Lancers made 14-of-39
shot attempts for 36 percent,

Wolves

OH-70004516

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Amy Carter
Product Specialist
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Aim Media Midwest is looking for a Customer Service Specialist
with inside sales experience at the Point Pleasant location.
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Open Inspection 12/18 4:30pm to 5:30pm
Sells onsite@ 814 Page Street Middleport, Ohio 45760
Single family residence w/detached garage
that has additional living space

NO MINIMUM BID &amp; NO RESERVE
Tim Lile-Auctioneer 1-937-689-1846
OhioRealEstateAuctions.com
The Village of Pomeroy has adopted Ordinance 785-17 which
shall take effect on 1/1/18.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY:That section 1315.02 of the Revised Code of
General Ordinances of the Village of Pomeroy shall now be
titled Permit Fees, and That section 1315.02 of the Revised
Code of General Ordinances of the Village of Pomeroy shall be
amended to include the following: 1315.02 Permit fees pertain
to both commercial and residential property. The following permit fees are hereby established:
%XLOGLQJ 3HUPLWV�
Permit Fee $50.00
Per $1000.00 of total construction cost $1.50
Dumpster Fee per month $25.00
'HPROLWLRQ 3HUPLWV�
Equal or greater than 576 sq ft. $75.00
Less than 576 sq ft $35.00
/DQG 'HYHORSPHQW 3HUPLW�
Less than 1 acre $40.00
1-5 acres $60.00
Greater than 5 acres $105.00
5HQWDO 3HUPLWV�
Per unit or owner occupied unit keeping
Renters, up to 5 units in one building $40.00
Per unit, over 10 units $30.00
Non-registration of landlord fee $100.00
Re-inspection Fee $25.00
Inspection ‘no-show’ Fee $25.00
6LJQ 3HUPLWV�
Permanent $40.00
Temporary (other than political signs) initial $50.00
Refund when temp signs are picked up $25.00
Temporary Political signs initial $25.00
Refund when Political signs are picked up $25.00
6ROLFLWRU�3HGGOHU 3HUPLWV� $25.00
*DUEDJH +DXOLQJ &amp;ROOHFWLRQV 3HUPLW� annual $150.00
That the above permits should be applied for 10 days in
advance of beginning project and all permits be approved by
the village Building Inspector. That no project is to begin before
all plans are approved by the Building Inspector and a permit is
issued. That all permits have an expiration date of one year
from the date of permit approval. That the Building Inspector
should be called back at the completion of all projects for a final
inspection. That all builders be required to show documentation
of disposal of construction debris in an approved dump site.
12/8/17, 12/10/17, 12/15/17, 12/17/17

�8B Sunday, December 17, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mark Porter
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$18,980

2013 Dodge Challenger SXT
Coupe, 3.6L V6 24V VVT, 5
speed auto., RWD

2013 Dodge Challenger SXT
Coupe, 3.6L V6 24V VVT, 5
speed auto., RWD, 7,602 miles

$30,600

2017 Dodge Durango GT
SUV, 3.6L V6 24V VVT, 8
speed auto, AWD

$27,899

$23,499

2013 Jeep Wrangler Sports
SUV, 3.6L V6 24V VVT, 5
speed auto., 4WD, 17,457 miles

$14,091

2017 Kia Soul Plus
Hatchback, 2L I4, 6 speed
auto with Sportmatic, FWD

$27,631

2014 Chevrolet Silverado
1500 LT Truck, 5.3L EcoTec3 V8
Flex Fuel, 6 speed auto with OD

$16,734

2015 Chrysler 200 S Sedan,
2.4L 4 cyl SMPI SOHC, 9
speed 948TE auto, FWD

$38,076

2017 Dodge Charger R/T
Sedan, 6.4L SRT HEMI V8
MDS, 8 speed auto, 5,081 miles

$20,997

2014 Dodge Durango R/T
2017 Dodge Grand Caravan
SUV, 5.7L HEMI V8 Multi
GT Minivan/Van, 3.6L V6 24V
VVT, 6 speed auto, FWD
Displacement VVT 8 speed auto

308 East Main Street Pomeroy, OH 45769
Sales: 877-580-1692 Service: 877-652-6990 Parts: 877-664-1226

Monday - Thursday
9am to 7 pm
Friday
9am - 6pm
Saturday
9am - 5pm
Closed on Sunday

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