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                  <text>Eastman
named to
local boards

Storms.
High of 71,
low of 45

Lady Knights
double up
Sissonville

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 48, Volume 70

Thursday, March 24, 2016 s 50¢

Persons charged with aggravated arson
By Lorna Hart

Long Bottom. After arriving on
scene, the department notiﬁed
the sheriff’s ofﬁce.
POMEROY — During a
Bashan, Chester and Tuppers
bond hearing last week, the
Plains ﬁre departments also
Meigs Municipal Court grand
responded to assist the Olive
jury found probable cause in
Township Fire Department
the case against Dennis Person,
who was arrested on suspicion in the early morning ﬁre that
destroyed the residence.
of arson earlier this month.
During their investigation,
Persons, 56, of Long Bottom, was taken into custody on Deputies received information
March 3 after the Olive Town- that Persons had allegedly set
ship Fire Department respond- ﬁre to his residence when other
people were inside. One person
ed to a call of a house ﬁre on
who was inside the trailer at
50810 Bigley Ridge Road in

lhart@civitasmedia.com

the time the ﬁre was
the ﬁre. Wood and Prosallegedly set sustained
ecuting Attorney Colburns and was transleen Williams meet with
ported by Meigs County
the state ﬁre marshal
EMS to Holzer Meigs
ofﬁcials to determine
Emergency Department.
possible charges in this
Another person inside
investigation.
Persons
the trailer at the time
The Ohio State Bar
was able to escape and
Association explains the
had no injuries, the sheriff’s
difference between an arson
ofﬁce said.
charge as opposed to an aggraAccording to Sheriff Keith
vated arson charge. In the case
Wood, Persons gave a stateof an arson charge, it is the
ment to deputies on scene that intentional burning of a buildhe was the one who had started ing. A charge of aggravated

Local businesses
sponsor egg hunt
lhart@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS COUNTY — The hunt continues for the
Golden Egg hidden somewhere in Meigs County, just
waiting to be found.
The Golden Egg Hunt is sponsored by area businesses who have generously provided a $250 prize
to the person who ﬁnds the egg. Whoever ﬁnds the
plastic golden-colored egg should follow the instructions inside to receive their prize.
There are a total of three clues as to the Golden
Egg’s whereabouts in The Daily Sentinel. Two have
already been published and the ﬁnal clue will appear
Thursday, March 24.
Please remember to follow the rules so that everyone can enjoy the hunt and to respect other people’s
property when searching for the egg.
The rules are: The egg is not in a place of business
The egg is not in a private residence or on residential property.
The egg is not inside a man-made object.
You will not need to dig or climb to ﬁnd the egg.

By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

Clues will not be given out over the phone.

The winner will be published in The Daily Sentinel and on Facebook and Twitter.

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551

Commissioners
approve hirings
By Lorna Hart

lhart@civitasmedia.com

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Baseball: 6
Softball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook or twitter to
share your thoughts.

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext.
2551

Missing
Southside,
W.Va. girl
found
unharmed

By Lorna Hart

as county prevention
specialists to the Southeast Ohio Regional PrePOMEROY — New
vention Council, each
hirings dominated the
for a two-year term
March 17 meeting
beginning March 7.
of the Meigs County
The department also
Board of Commissionrecommended three
ers.
candidates following
Chris Shank, of the
interviews. For the
Department of Job and
income maintenance
Family Services, brought division, the commisthe majority of the day’s sioners authorized Britbusiness before the com- tany Preast and Julie
missioners.
Tillis as eligibility referVia the Ohio Chilral specialists. In the
dren’s Trust Fund, he
child support enforcesubmitted documentament division, Melissa
tion conﬁrming Brooke
Pauley and Terri Ingels
See HIRINGS | 5

arson means the individual
who set the ﬁre not only intentionally started it to burn a
building, but that doing so created a substantial risk of serious physical harm to a person
other than the arsonist.
As a result of the grand jury’s
decision, Person was charged with
three counts of aggravated arson
and bond was set at $10,000. He
will remain in jail until 10 percent,
or $1,000, is posted.

Courtesy photo

Janice Martin achieves virtuosity as a violinist, pianist, guitarist, soprano and perhaps
most impressively, boasts the title as the world’s only aerial violinist.

Ariel ‘String Into Spring’
Staff Report

with Cirque de la Symphonie, an
“orchestrated aerial dance specGALLIPOLIS — Is there no
tacular,” and is a headline act in
better season for dancing than
Branson, Mo.
spring?
For her accomplishments, the
Janice Martin will put a spring
Stradivari Society awarded her the
in your step when she joins forces honorary use of the 1708 Burstwith The Ohio Valley Symphony
ein/Bagshawe Stradivarius violin.
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the ArielMartin and the OVS will perAnn Carson Dater Performing
form the Tchaikovsky Piano ConArts Centre in downtown Gallipo- certo, Sarasate’s violin showpiece,
lis. Led by Maestro Ray Fowler,
Carmen Fantasy, and vocal selecthe OVS and Martin will present a tions from Die Fledermaus, La
variety of virtuosic music for the
Traviata, Les Miserables, Sound of
audience.
Music, West Side Story and more.
Martin achieves virtuosity
Join Steven Huang, director of
as a violinist, pianist, guitarist,
orchestras at Ohio University and
soprano and boasts the title as
OVS program annotator, for a prethe world’s only aerial violinist.
concert chat to hear more about
Janice’s multi-dimensional artistry the music and the musicians. Held
has disarmed classical, popular
in the third-ﬂoor Ariel Chamber
and jazz audiences alike while
Theatre, the pre-concert talks
creating ardent fans who span a
are free, interactive, informal and
broad demographic.
begin at 6:45 p.m. Stick around
In 2009, she wowed millions
for a post concert reception to
of viewers on the popular NBC
meet the musicians and have some
series “America’s Got Talent” with treats.
her aerial violin and vocal perforTickets for The Ohio Valley
mance, and her playing has been
Symphony’s concerts are $24 for
featured on television projects for adults, $22 seniors and $12 for
the Discovery and History chanstudents. The price includes the
nels, as well on the big screen in
pre-concert chat, the concert and
the Miramax ﬁlm “Paperclips.”
She is a frequent guest performer
See SPRING | 5

SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — A
Southside girl who went missing
Tuesday evening emerged
unharmed Wednesday morning,
according to the Mason County
Sheriff’s Department.
Sheriff Greg Powers said his
department was notiﬁed about
a missing child around 9 p.m.
Tuesday in the area of Jeffers
Ridge Road in Southside.
Powers said 7-year old Deliah
Clark, of 2030 Jeffers Ridge
Road, went missing around 7:45
p.m. Tuesday. She reportedly left
her family’s home with her two
dogs to see her great-grandfather
who lives nearby. Her greatgrandfather reported she did
visit and left but never returned
home. At ﬁrst, family and friends
began the search before calling
law enforcement at around 9
p.m., Powers said.
Powers explained the effort to
ﬁnd Clark did not just consist
of his department, but was
an effort involving multiple
agencies as well as volunteers.
Powers said troopers with the
Mason County Detachment of
the West Virginia State Police,
as well as troopers from other
detachments were on scene with
a bloodhound and with a special
helicopter equipped to pick up
body heat on the ground. In
addition, ﬁreﬁghters from the
Point Pleasant Fire Department,
as well as dogs from the Point
Pleasant Police Department and
Barboursville Police Department
were on scene to assist. Law
enforcement went door to door,
checking homes and in the
woods looking for the girl as
well.
The search was halted about
5 a.m. Wednesday morning to
reassess and review what else
could be done to ﬁnd the child.
Powers said he and his deputies
met to discuss a timeline of
events, to go over interviews
and resources before heading
back out for the day. There were
arrangements to bring the WVSP
helicopter back to do more
ﬂyovers and to have divers from
Jackson County search a pond on
a farm.
Then, around 8 a.m.
Wednesday, Clark emerged
with her two dogs, spotted
by a member of the sheriff’s
See GIRL | 5

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Thursday, March 24, 2016

OBITUARY
RANDALL RACE MOORE
SYRACUSE — Randall
Race “Amos” Moore, 60,
of Syracuse, passed away
Tuesday, March 22, 2016.
He was born April 19,
1955, in Mason, W.Va.,
son of Bob Moore, of
Syracuse, and the late
Louella Ihle Moore.
Amos was a 1973 graduate of Southern High
School. He was a veteran
of the U.S. Air Force and
he was a truck driver and
a union carpenter.
He is survived by his
wife, DiAnne Moore;
son Randy Moore; sister
Bobbie (John) Randolph;
nieces and nephews
Becky (Brian) Birt,
Robby (Christina) Moore,
Alan Moore, Christina Mather, John (Lori)
Randolph, Billy Davis
and Angie (Jerry) Day;
great-nieces and greatnephews Taylor and Jordan Hardwick, Tyler Birt,
Courtney Mather, Brittany and Adam Lavender,
Sarah, Emily and John
III Randolph, Jordan and
Matthew Davis, Chris and
Kayla Davis, Dami and
Lukas Jones, Nathan and

Stephanie Moss, and Tiffany Oiler; mother-in-law
Brenda (Henry) Doerfer;
father-in-law Ralph Jones;
brothers and sisters-inlaw Denise Oiler (Mark
Edge), Denessa (Tyler)
Stewart, Dennis (Miriah)
Jones and Bill Davis;
and aunts Margie Cunningham and Lora Ann
Russell.
In addition to his mother, Louella Moore, he was
preceded in death by his
brother and sister-in-law,
Terry and Linda Moore;
and his sister Corky
Davis.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Saturday, March
26, 2016, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor
Mike Thompson ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at
Gilmore Cemetery, where
military honors will be
presented by the American Legion. Visiting
hours will be 6-8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Daily Sentinel

Easter Sunrise Cantata planned

Courtesy photo

The Tuppers Plains St.Paul United Methodist Church Choir will present a Cantata titled “The Day He Wore My Crown” during the
6:30 a.m. Easter sunrise service this Sunday. Breakfast will follow the mornings service. Pictured, from left, are choir members Barb
Roush, Sherrie Zigler, Pastor Judy Adams and Betty Chevalier. Second row: Karen Bishop and Judy Kennedy. Third row: John Rice,
Fred Adams, Gary Johnson and Larry Thomas. Connie Rankin was absent for the picture.

Boy shaken as a baby dies
Child spent 12 years on life support

DEATH NOTICES
MCCOY
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Ruth Frances (Legg)
McCoy, age 73, of Point Pleasant, died Saturday,
March 12, 2016, at Cabell-Huntington Hospital, in
Huntington, W.Va. Services will be 1 p.m., Saturday,
March 26, 2016, at First Church of God, 2401 Jefferson Ave., in Point Pleasant. Interment will be private.
Crow Hussell Funeral Home is assisting the family.
NEWELL
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Dorothy Virginia Newell,
100, of Southside, passed away Tuesday, March 22,
2016, at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Arrangements will
be announced Friday by Deal Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
C. WATSON
SCOTTOWN, Ohio — The Rev. Cleo Watson,
89, of Scottown, passed away Tuesday, March 22,
2016, at The Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House,
Huntington, W.Va. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements,
which are incomplete.
M. WATSON
REYNOLDSBURG, Ohio — Myron Dale Watson,
83, of Reynoldsburg, passed away Wednesday, March
23, 2016, in his home. Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, March 26, 2016, at Willis Funeral Home. Burial
will follow at Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call
the funeral home between 5-8 p.m. Friday.

dren’s hospital in Akron diagnosed Aiden with a traumatic
brain injury that he said was
CLEVELAND (AP) — A
eight years in prison despite his consistent with child abuse.
The Akron hospital’s ethics
12-year-old boy who was shaken assertions that he never injured
committee recommended that a
as a baby and remained in a
his son.
guardian be appointed to overvegetative state for the rest of
Subsequent motions for a
see his care because of suspihis life has died, authorities
new trial, including one from
cions about Stein and Heimlich’s
said Wednesday.
2013, were denied by appellate
support for him. The panel also
Aiden Stein died Sunday at
courts.
recommended that Aiden be
a Columbus hospital. The case
Richland County Prosecutor
removed from life support.
drew national attention when
Bambi Couch Page told The
Three doctors testiﬁed at a
his parents waged a successful
Associated Press on WednesSummit County Probate Court
legal fight to prevent a courtday that it was “unlikely” she’d hearing in April 2004 that Aiden
appointed guardian from having pursue further charges against
was in a permanent vegetative
him removed from life support. Stein.
state and that his injuries were
Three doctors had testified that
“I would have to look at the
consistent with being shaken. A
Aiden would never recover.
reason (Aiden) died,” Couch
doctor representing Aiden’s parThe Ohio Supreme Court
Page said. “But there would
ents said it would be inapproprieventually ruled that a probate
probably be a stretch in jurors’
ate to withdraw that care.
court lacked the authority to
minds that he died as the result
The judge hearing the case
allow a guardian to stop the
of what the dad did.”
appointed a guardian and
care keeping Aiden alive when
It’s unclear if a cause of death gave her authority to stop lifehis parents hadn’t permanently has been determined. Messages sustaining medical treatment.
lost their parenting rights.
left with the Franklin County
An appellate court upheld that
Four-month-old Aiden was
coroner weren’t immediately
ruling, which the Ohio Supreme
rushed to a Mansfield hospital
returned Wednesday.
Court overturned in December
in March 2004 after his father,
Aiden’s mother, Arica Heim2004.
21-year-old Matthew Stein,
lich, joined her fiance in fightNeither Stein nor Heimlich
reported the baby had lost con- ing Aiden’s removal from life
have publicly listed telephone
sciousness. Stein was later con- support and told authorities
numbers. They couldn’t be
victed of felonious assault and
she didn’t believe Stein injured reached for comment Wedneschild endangerment and spent
their son. A doctor at a childay.

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

Museum apologizes to
breastfeeding woman
CLEVELAND (AP) — An Ohio museum is encouraging breastfeeding after a Pennsylvania mother’s
Facebook post drew a ﬂurry of responses.
Emily Locke, of Beaver Falls, said Monday that she
was breastfeeding her 9-month-old at the Cleveland
History Center over the weekend when an employee
told her it violated the museum’s policy. When Locke
refused to move, another employee approached her
and told her she had to move to a private area.

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Center Director Angie Lowrie told cleveland.com
on Tuesday that the museum doesn’t prohibit breastfeeding and that the employees have been disciplined.
The museum has contacted the Ohio Breastfeeding
Alliance, Lowrie said, and they plan to train staff on
how to address breastfeeding in public spaces.

medical record of her father following his death after
surgery.
At issue were cardiac-monitoring strips that were
printed after the fact at the direction of the hospital’s
risk-management department.
Justice Sharon Kennedy said the physical location
of data isn’t relevant to the question of whether it’s a
medical record.

Judge denies ex-band director
access to Ohio State PR advice Imprisoned politician
COLUMBUS (AP) — A federal judge has upheld
moved to WVa facility
Ohio State University’s request to shield its communications with professional public relations consultants
from former band director Jonathan Waters.
In an order Wednesday, District Judge James Graham upheld a magistrate’s earlier decision denying
Waters copies of the documents.
Waters’ attorneys argued the records are public and
may support Waters’ assertion that Ohio State had
gender-related motives in terminating him in July
2014.
Graham said his private review of the records found
advice for spinning the situation in the university’s
favor, but no hint that the school sought to scapegoat
Waters or use his ﬁring to appease federal civil-rights
investigators probing Ohio State’s handling of sexual
harassment claims.
Waters has denied allegations that he ignored a
“sexualized culture” inside the celebrated band. His
suit seeks reinstatement.

CLEVELAND (AP) — A former Cleveland-area
politician imprisoned in a corruption probe has been
moved to a prison in West Virginia after spending two
years in a California prison.
Former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Jimmy
Dimora is serving 28 years in prison for corruptionand bribery-related charges. Cleveland.com reports
the 60-year-old Dimora was recently moved to the
Beckley federal correctional institution in Beaver,
West Virginia. The prison has a medium-security facility with an adjacent minimum-security camp.
Dimora had been housed at a prison in California’s
Mojave Desert since 2014. A spokesman for the Federal Bureau of Prisons said in an email that Dimora
was moved recently, but he refused to give any reason
for the move.
A message left for Dimora’s attorney wasn’t immediately returned.
Dimora has maintained his innocence.

Court requires release of all
Authorities: Human remains
Ohio patient’s medical records
discovered near Ohio highway
COLUMBUS (AP) — The Ohio Supreme Court
says a health care provider can’t limit the release of
medical records based solely on where the provider
stores the information.
The court ruled 5-2 Wednesday that providers must
release all medical records generated in the process of
a patient’s treatment that pertain to medical history,
diagnosis, prognosis or condition.
The court sided with a woman who sued after a
Canton hospital declined to provide the complete

WELLINGTON (AP) — Authorities say human
remains have been discovered near an Ohio highway.
The Lorain County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce says a landowner found the remains in Huntington Township
on Tuesday. Authorities say the skeletal remains are
those of an adult human but the person hasn’t been
identiﬁed.
It’s unclear how the person died or how long the
remains were there before they were found.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 24, 2016 3

Eastman elected to OVBC, Ohio Valley Bank boards
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Ohio Valley Banc Corp./Ohio Valley
Bank Chairman Jeffrey E.
Smith has announced that
Brent R. Eastman has been
elected to serve on the boards
of directors for the ﬁnancial
holding company, Ohio Valley
Banc Corp, and its subsidiary,
Ohio Valley Bank.
The election was made during the March Board of Direc-

tors meeting and is effective
April 1.
“I speak for the entire board
of directors when saying that
we ﬁrmly believe Mr. Eastman’s
35-plus years of retail experience
and in-depth knowledge of Ohio
Valley Banc Corp.’s market area
make him an excellent addition
to our boards,” Smith said.
Eastman began his career as
a clerk at Ohio Valley Supermarkets in 1980, moving up

through the ranks to
eventually become
president and coowner in 2005. He
is also a partner and
co-owner of Eastman
Enterprises, a land and Eastman
development company
established in 1996.
Ohio Valley Supermarkets operates 11 retail store locations
with 300 employees in southeastern Ohio and western West

Virginia. Eastman has
served as a director of
the Gallia County Agricultural Society for 15
years and a member of
the Gallia County Board
of Health for seven years.
Ohio Valley Banc Corp.
owns two subsidiaries,
Ohio Valley Bank and Loan
Central. Ohio Valley Bank,
established in 1872, operates
14 ofﬁces throughout southern

Ohio and western West Virginia. Loan Central, a consumer
ﬁnance company specializing in
tax refund loans and tax preparation, operates seven ofﬁces
in southern Ohio. Ohio Valley
Banc Corp. stock is traded on
The NASDAQ Global Market
under the symbol OVBC. The
company’s websites are www.
ovbc.com and www.myloancentral.com.

Partnership brings cats into businesses Tennant reminds
business owners to
file annual reports
play with the cats or just stand
outside the window,” she said. “It’s
just been really great.”
ELKINS, W.Va. — An Elkins
Shabby Avenue was the next to
animal shelter is collaborating with offer space for fostering services to
businesses in the region to provide the RCHS. Shupp said Cowboy, a
temporary homes for resident cats, friendly orange tabby with special
with hopes to increase adoption
needs, roams the Elkins business
rates in the county.
and has been delighting shop
The Randolph County Humane
patrons ever since.
Society is currently partnering
“Cowboy has been so popular
with Fancy Paws, Shabby Avenue
with the public that people have
and Triangle Heating and Cooling stopped by just to meet him,”
to foster shelter cats within their
Shupp said.
respective businesses.
Store owner Jamie Rush said
Shelter ofﬁcials hope to expand
when she heard about the program
the program to include more
and learned that RCHS hoped to
partners in the region. Program
expand it, she “thought it was a
organizer and shelter volunteer
wonderful idea,” and decided to
Carrie Shupp said ﬁve other local
participate.
businesses have expressed interest
“Being an animal lover myself, I
in the program.
expressed to (Shupp) that I would
Shupp said the program took
be willing to help with getting
root in December, when Fancy
their program started and would
Paws owner Ann Kreps-Weber
consider fostering a cat at Shabby
offered to groom RCHS cats in
Avenue,” she said.
preparation for Christmas so store
Rush noted, at ﬁrst, she wasn’t
employees could obtain certiﬁcasure if Cowboy, who had been
tion as cat groomers to meet a
returned to the shelter twice
growing demand.
because of a feline illness condition
“(Kreps-Weber) mentioned they and was in need of immediate temwere considering a shop cat and
porary placement, was going to be
the idea transformed into Fancy
a good ﬁt with her business. Rush
Paws becoming the ﬁrst RCHS Off added she initially wondered what
Site Partner location,” she said.
she had gotten herself into, but the
“Our ﬁrst adoption was Dec. 23,
cat has proven to be a welcome
only a week after initiating the
guest at the shop.
project.”
“I can honestly say that I am
Shupp noted there have been 15 very glad that I did agree (to foster
adoptions from Fancy Paws since
Cowboy),” she said. “He has been
the program was initiated, which
a well-behaved and gracious guest
she attributes to an increased visduring his stay at the shop and my
ibility of the cats and a successful
customers love him.”
adoption event hosted by the shop.
Shupp said the most recent partAs of March 11, there were two
nership — with Triangle Heating
cats - Bijou and Meatball - featured and Cooling — was also initiated
in the store’s front window for all
by the business owner. Emerald, a
passerby to see, although they are
16-month-old female with special
free to roam behind the counter
needs because of an injured left
after business hours.
foot, was introduced at the busiKreps-Weber said the arrangeness Monday. She was adopted
ment is mutually beneﬁcial because days later.
the cats bring business in, but they
Business owner Kristie Stalnaker
also free up space at the shelter.
said she wanted to participate in
“It’s just a really good feeling to
the program because “cats don’t
have people who work downtown
always get a fair chance when
stop by on their lunch breaks to
they’re at the shelter.”
come in and talk to the kittens,
“We wanted to bring her in, just

Associated Press

so more people could see her,” she
said. “I think it’s a great program
they’ve got going on and I’m happy
to help.”
Each of the participating shop
owners have opted to supply food
for their foster cats, although this
is not a requirement. Shupp said
the RCHS is committed to supplying basic needs for foster pets.
Shop owners also beneﬁt from
having a cat on site, Shupp said.
“Having a cat creates a warm and
welcoming atmosphere,” she said.
“Let’s face it, animal lovers stick
together. Given a choice, Elkins
residents who are animal lovers
will give business to a shop that
demonstrates their love for animals, too.”
Shupp added shops also beneﬁt
from the partnership because the
RCHS promotes participating businesses. She noted these arrangements are good for the community
because they foster awareness and
increase public exposure to adoptable pets.
“This allows us, at RCHS, to
make room for other homeless animals and prepare them to be adopted. As long as we are at capacity,
we can’t take in others,” she said.
Freeing up shelter space allows
shelter ofﬁcials to more actively
pursue the Trap Neuter Release
program, which Shupp said, in the
long run, will reduce the number of
free-roaming community cats.
“I am sure the public is familiar
with ‘it takes a village.’ It is the
same in animal welfare,” she said.
“Instead of focusing on homeless
animals as an issue, we should see
this as a community challenge.
That challenge is to reduce the
number of homeless, unwanted
animals and see higher adoptions,
more TNR support and a responsive community to be a component
of change.”
Anyone interested in providing a forever home to a pet at the
RCHS is encouraged to contact the
shelter at 304-636-7844 or acquaint
themselves with the shelter’s many
residents by visiting the group’s
website at www.rchswv.org.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention,
all information should be
received by the newspaper
at least ﬁve business days
prior to an event. All
coming events print on a
space-available basis and
in chronological order.
Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@civitasmedia.
com.
Friday, March 25
MIDDLEPORT —
Everyone is welcome to
the monthly free community dinner at the
Middleport Church of
Christ. Doors open at
4:30 p.m., meal served at
5 p.m. This month’s menu
will be meatballs in gravy,
mashed potatoes, green
beans and dessert.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP — The Lebanon
Township Trustees will
meet at 6 p.m. at the
township garage.
Monday, March 28
POMEROY — The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County Library
Board will be 3:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library.

Friday, April 1
POMEROY —Meigs
County Public Employee
Retirees Inc. will meet
at 1 p.m. at the the Mulberry Community Center,
156 Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy. Guest speaker
Laura Cleland, helath
education with the Meigs
Health Department, and
Carolyn Waddell, PERI

District 7 representative, will give updates.
All retired Meigs County
public employees are
urged to attend.

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

Staff Report

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Secretary of State
Natalie E. Tennant is reminding businesses that
it’s time to ﬁle annual reports with the Secretary
of State’s Ofﬁce.
More than 93,000 business owners will ﬁle
annual reports with the ofﬁce over the next several months, with the vast majority taking advantage
of online ﬁling. The ﬁling period began on Jan. 1
and ends at midnight July 1.
Over the course of the last eight years, online
annual report ﬁling has increased from approximately 11 percent in 2008 to 87 percent in 2015.
“With 87 percent of businesses ﬁling online, it’s
clear that the process is easy and user-friendly,”
Tennant said. “As a small business owner with my
husband, Erik, I know that every minute of the
day counts. I encourage business owners across
the state to ﬁle online any time — 24 hours a day,
seven days a week — through the end of the ﬁling
period.”
Businesses ﬁling annual reports with the Secretary of State’s Ofﬁce include corporations,
nonproﬁts, limited partnerships, voluntary associations, business trusts and limited liability companies. Sole proprietorships do not ﬁle with this
Ofﬁce.
The Secretary of State’s Ofﬁce notiﬁed business
owners through e-mail or postcard, informing
them of the ﬁling period and encouraging them
to ﬁle their annual reports online. The Ofﬁce continues to work to improve the online ﬁling experience.
Valuable information about ﬁling annual reports
can be found on the Secretary of State’s website
at: www.sos.wv.gov/business-licensing/AnnualReports/Pages/default.aspx.
Any business owner having questions about
their annual report or the process should contact
the Ofﬁce’s Business &amp; Licensing division at
either business@wvsos.com, 304-558-8000 or
1-877-826-2954. The ofﬁce also offers a chat feature through the website at www.wvsos.com.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

Thursday, April 5
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
— The Olive Township
Trustees will meet at 6:30
pm at the township building on Joppa Road.

60576582

By Chris Lee

Check out the ﬁve-day forecast
on the weather page or online at

Mydailytribune.com
Mydailyregister.com
Mydailysentinel.com
brought to you by

Let’s Talk
About Your

GOALS

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, March 24, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Jean, Gerry and
an Irish stew
Gerry Adams was in an Irish stew — meaning
he was stewing in anger and frustration over being
denied entry into the White House for a pre-St.
Patrick’s Day bash with President Obama.
The long-time leader of the Irish Republican
Army’s political wing was indignant over being
relegated, in his words, to “the back of the bus.”
It seems that Mr. Adams’ past precedes him
wherever he goes — his past of having people
thrown under the bus.
Exhibit A continues to be Jean
McConville, the West Belfast mother
of 10 who, with her 6-year-old twins
clinging to her legs, was dragged out
of her ﬂat by a goon squad of eight
abductors. A few hours later, a bullet
was put into the back of her head,
and Jean was secretly buried on a
James
remote beach south of the border.
F. Burns
Thus Jean McConville became one
Contributing
of Northern Ireland’s “disappeared,”
Columnist
vanishing into thin air for allegedly
offending the IRA.
But as Adams — widely rumored as having
ordered her abduction — sat silently stewing at
the White House waiting for a Secret Service
clearance that never came, he might have imagined the following conversation with Jean. A
murdered mother makes a great Jacob Marley of
Terrorist Past.
“Gerry … Gerry, why’d you have me murdered?
Why, Gerry, why?”
“Awww, Jean, don’t take it so hard. I mean, your
younger kids, Billy and Jimmy and all, were put
in orphanages, you know. And, after all, Jean, this
was war, war with the Brits, and some there at St.
Jude’s Walk said you sympathized with that British soldier who got shot on your doorstep, even
putting a pillow under his head as he lay there
bleeding and all.”
“Jeesh, Gerry, have you no heart, no feelings for
a mum like you yourself had?”
“No, not for a Brit-lover, Jean. Sorry, but you
had to go.”
“But, Gerry, I haven’t gone away, you know.”
Jean’s last line in this imaginary exchange is
a parody of Gerry Adams’ now-famous reply to
someone in a crowd asking for him to bring back
the IRA — “They haven’t gone away, you know.”
It’s the type of shadowy wink-and-nod suggestion
— or threat — that violence is always lurking just
around the corner in Northern Ireland, having
soaked into the sod centuries ago when Prods and
Papists were cudgeling each other with cruder
weapons than high-powered riﬂes and modern
explosives. One of my northern Irish family letters
of 1796 says so:
“We have had troublesome times between
protestants … and papists, severals killed in their
various scuffels … Great Troubles here between
Orangemen and papists and some of both parties
executed.”
My ﬁrst of eight trips to Belfast brought me face
to face with a mother’s fear. I was driving up the
Malone Road when a government ofﬁce was ﬁredbombed. Even after a mother I was later visiting
with was assured that her daughter’s school next
door to the terrorist attack had been safely evacuated, her voice and hands trembled as she told me
of how her daughter even ﬂung herself onto the
ﬂoor of their car when a passing car backﬁred.
Any loud sharp sound triggered a reaction.
The bombs have been mostly silenced in Belfast,
the guns largely (but not entirely, you know) deactivated. And the Cooley Peninsula just below the
border where my family and I stayed several times
— and where someone discovered a fragment of
cloth and human bone on the beach after a 2003
storm — is very tranquil.
Yes, Jean McConville had been found.
Jean’s son, Michael, 11 at the time of her abduction, saw several familiar faces — of the ones not
covered with a nylon stocking or balaclava mask
— as his mother was being dragged away. But he
won’t talk, knowing the likely consequences for his
own children.
Gerry Adams is now a man of peace and commands respect in many places.
But not all.
James F. Burns, an Ohio native, is a professor emeritus at the
University of Florida.

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

THEIR VIEW

Exercise and de-clutter this spring
and painted on the pavement.
Spring has sprung and,
Make sure your cycle is in
even though temperatures
good shape as well. If you
aren’t quite sweltering
don’t do that kind of stuff,
yet, it’s time to get off that
take it in for professional
couch and get moving.
maintenance. Nothing’s worse
No more excuses. You
than being stranded from a
can do it! It’s time to get
Deer in poorly maintained chain or
things done and here are
two ideas to help.
Headlines crank.
Gery L.
Another thing that’s great
If your goal is to get
Deer
about this time of year is the
into a new outdoor workfresh start it brings. So how
out routine, it’s best to get
about those of you for whom
started sooner than later.
a spring goal is to clear out the
I can’t help you much on running
or some of the other athletics, but, garage, basement or storage rental. It’s good for the living space
for our would-be bicyclists out
and great exercise.
there, here are some suggestions
My friend Tami Doling is the
from my own experience.
owner of Silver Lining Organizers,
Growing up where I did, a bike
LLC, and a fellow contributor to
was a necessity. Early on, I had to
the WDTN-TV2 Living Dayton
learn the rules of the road, long
program, as well as Dayton Parbefore there were “bike paths,” or
ent Magazine. She has some great
lanes anywhere around our farm.
advice on her website and blog on
So, my ﬁrst recommendation for
how to clear out the clutter, but it
would be cyclers, do your homeall begins with list of some pretty
work.
tough questions.
Before you hit the road, be sure
In her “ask the organizer” blog
that you know the available routes
at Dayton Parenting Magazine,
and trails and understand the
Tami offers the following “test”
rules. Hit up the local parks and
you can take to decide whether to
recreation websites to learn about
keep something or not.
off-road, public trails and streetBegin by asking yourself the
based bike routes.
following: do you love it? Would
Take extra care to plan out your
route with each excursion and take you buy it again? Is it broken? Is it
worth cleaning and storing? Can
a friend. It’s best not to ride alone
on back roads or on isolated trails. someone else use it?
I’d probably expand on the
Use the buddy system to stay safe.
“cleaning and storing” question
Since many bike paths replaced
a bit further. For example, if you
former railroad lines, some of
haven’t properly maintained an
them go through small towns and
item, that is, you didn’t keep it
take you onto sidewalks and thorwell cleaned or stored, why would
oughfares. Be sure to watch for
you start now? Probably time to
directional signs, both at eye level

chuck it.
But possibly my favorite of
Tami’s advice is her 60 second
rule. “If it takes you more than 60
seconds to decide to keep it,” she
writes, “you probably don’t need
it.” She also suggests that you try
not to do too much at once. You
could get blindsided by a sense of
being a bit overwhelmed.
“Just start, and start small,”
Tami says. “Pick a closet or drawer. Empty it and get rid of anything that you no longer need or
use. Enjoy the clutter free area and
use that feeling to motivate you as
you tackle the next area.”
For the last several months,
I’ve been in a state of consistent
de-cluttering at home. I’ve thrown
away things I didn’t even remember keeping, or why they were still
there. Broken lamps, old VCRs,
TV remotes — why did I keep old
TV remotes?
This spring, I’m using the good
weather to clear out a great many
other areas too, and you can do
the same. You can ﬁnd more of
Tami Doling’s articles, TV spots
and great ideas about organizing
and de-cluttering at silverliningorganizers.com.
Whether you’re starting a new
exercise routine or getting some
long overdue items checked off of
that “honey do” list, the onset of
spring is a great opportunity to
start. Get up and get moving and
I’ll see you outside!
Gery L. Deer is an independent columnist and
business writer. Deer In Headlines is distributed
by GLD Enterprises Communications, Ltd. More
at deerinheadlines.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
March 24, the 84th day of
2016. There are 282 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On March 24, 2015,
Germanwings Flight
9525, an Airbus A320,
crashed into the French
Alps, killing all 150 people on board; investigators said the jetliner was
deliberately downed by
the 27-year-old co-pilot,
Andreas Lubitz, who had
a history of depression
and mental illness.
On this date:
In 1765, Britain
enacted the Quartering
Act, requiring American
colonists to provide temporary housing to British
soldiers.
In 1832, a mob in
Hiram, Ohio, attacked,
tarred and feathered Mormon leaders Joseph Smith
Jr. and Sidney Rigdon.
In 1913, New York’s
Palace Theatre, the legendary home of vaude-

ville, opened on Broadway.
In 1934, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
signed a bill granting
future independence to
the Philippines.
In 1944, in occupied
Rome, the Nazis executed
more than 300 civilians in
reprisal for an attack by
Italian partisans the day
before that had killed 32
German soldiers.
In 1955, the Tennessee
Williams play “Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof” opened on
Broadway.
In 1958, rock-and-roll
singer Elvis Presley was
inducted into the Army in
Memphis, Tennessee.
In 1975, Muhammad
Ali defeated Chuck
Wepner with a technical knockout in the 15th
round of a ﬁght in Richﬁeld, Ohio. (Wepner, a
journeyman known as
the “Bayonne Bleeder,”
inspired Sylvester Stallone to make his “Rocky”
ﬁlms.)

In 1976, the president
of Argentina, Isabel
Peron, was deposed by
her country’s military.
British war hero Field
Marshal Viscount Montgomery, 88, died in Alton,
Hampshire, England.
Today’s Birthdays:
Poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti is 97. Actor William
Smith is 83. Fashion and
costume designer Bob
Mackie is 77. Actor R.
Lee Ermey is 72. Movie
director Curtis Hanson is
71. Former Washington
Gov. Christine Gregoire
is 69. Rock musician Lee
Oskar is 68. Singer Nick
Lowe is 67. Rock musician Dougie Thomson
(Supertramp) is 65.
Fashion designer Tommy
Hilﬁger is 65. Comedian
Louie Anderson is 63.
Actress Donna Pescow
is 62. Actor Robert Carradine is 62. Microsoft
CEO Steve Ballmer is 60.
Actress Kelly LeBrock
is 56. Rhythm-and-blues
DJ Rodney “Kool Kollie”

Terry (Ghostown DJs) is
55. TV personality Star
Jones is 54. Country-rock
musician Patterson Hood
(Drive-By Truckers) is
52. Actor Peter Jacobson
is 51. Rock singer-musician Sharon Corr (The
Corrs) is 46. Actress Lauren Bowles is 46. Actress
Lara Flynn Boyle is 46.
Rapper Maceo (AKA P.A.
Pasemaster Mase) is 46.
Actress Megyn Price is
45. Actor Jim Parsons is
43. Christian rock musician Chad Butler (Switchfoot) is 42. Actress
Alyson Hannigan is 42.
NFL quarterback Peyton
Manning is 40. Actress
Olivia Burnette is 39.
Actress Jessica Chastain
is 39. Actor Amir Arison
is 38. Actress Lake Bell is
37. Rock musician Benj
Gershman (O.A.R.) is
36. Neo-soul musician
Jesse Phillips (St. Paul &amp;
the Broken Bones) is 36.
Actress Keisha CastleHughes is 26.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 24, 2016 5

Girl

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

From Page 1

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list event
Williams’ ofﬁce will recognize National Crime Victims’
information that is open to the public and will be printed Rights Week with two events. Meigs has has received
a grant of $1,010.87 for purposes of raising commuon a space-available basis.
nity awareness. The ﬁrst will be 7 p.m. April 12 in the
Farmer’s Bank Banquet Room, 640 E. Maint St., Pomeroy, where a representative from Woodlands will speak
REEDSVILLE — Children being enrolled for kindergarten
on “Recovery and Healing from a Traumatic Event.” The
in the Eastern Local School District must turn 5 years old on
second will be a memorial display along the River Wall
or before Aug. 1, 2016. Kindergarten screening and registraand pavilion from April 8-15. The public is invited to
tion will be 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. March 28-29. All children to be
write on “luminary bags” and light a battery operated tea
enrolled should be screened and registered at this time. Call
light/candle.
to schedule an appointment at 740-985-3304 beginning March
1. On the day of screening and registration the child must be
present and accompanied by his or her parent/legal guardian.
POMEROY — The Meigs County 4-H Committee
The parent/legal guardian will need to produce veriﬁcation of
residency, identiﬁcation, the child’s legal registered birth certif- has Plat Books for sale for $25.The books were printed
in 2015. Funds support the 4-H program in the county
icate (not the hospital birth record), up to date immunization
record and, if applicable, custody documents. Acceptable docu- by providing for supplies, camp and college scholarments for veriﬁcation of residency are utility receipts, property ships, learning opportunities and more. Purchases of
tax document, real estate contract, rental lease, driver’s license the Plat Book can be made by mailing $30 (for book,
with current address; all documents must be in the name of the shipping &amp; handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee, PO Box 32, Pomeroy, OH 45769, in person at the
parent/legal guardian.
Extension Ofﬁce at 117 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy on Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m to 4:30
p.m., or by visiting Soil &amp; Water Conservation or the
Meigs County Recorder’s Ofﬁce in the Meigs County
Court House to obtain a copy. For questions, call 740992-6696.
POMEROY — Meigs County Prosecutor Collleen

department walking on Jeffers Ridge Road,
Powers said. The girl was placed into a
squad car and later taken to a local hospital
for an examination and she appeared to be
unharmed, Powers said.
The sheriff added Clark was interviewed
by a specialist trained to interview children
and her story was consistent — that story
being she chased after a dog who went
running into the woods Tuesday night,
apparently got lost and fell asleep.
“We have no reason to believe any foul
play was involved,” Powers said, adding the
case appears to be closed at this point.
The incident triggered a massive
deployment of resources to ﬁnd the missing
child and the response was warranted,
according to Powers, who gave praise to
this group effort which included not only
his department but other agencies and
volunteers.
“When a child goes missing, we’re going
to do whatever we’ve got to do to ﬁnd
them,” he said.

Eastern kindergarten registration

Meigs County Plat Books for sale

Meigs honors National Crime
Victims’ Rights Week

Spring
the reception immediately following.
Tickets are available on the website at

TODAY
8 AM

2 PM

55°

67°

61°

Rain and a thunderstorm today. A touch of rain
this evening. High 71° / Low 45°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

68°/55°
59°/37°
87° in 1907
21° in 2004

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.00
Month to date/normal
1.92/2.91
Year to date/normal
9.38/9.06

Snowfall

(in inches)

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Primary: hackberry, oak, pine
Mold: 141

SUN &amp; MOON

Primary: ascospores

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Low

Fri.
7:24 a.m.
7:46 p.m.
9:56 p.m.
8:36 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Mar 31

Apr 7

First

Full

Apr 13 Apr 22

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Minor
6:52a
7:38a
8:25a
9:15a
10:05a
10:57a
11:49a

Major
1:03p
1:48p
2:36p
3:26p
4:17p
5:09p
6:01p

Minor
7:13p
7:59p
8:47p
9:37p
10:29p
11:21p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
Kansas City, Mo., already knows the
danger of severe spring thunderstorms and tornadoes. However, on
March 24, 1912, 25 inches of snow
accumulated in 24 hours.

High

Lucasville
67/42

Very High

Portsmouth
70/43

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

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

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

Level
12.50
17.15
22.11
12.88
13.09
25.00
12.49
26.42
34.53
12.49
19.90
34.10
20.10

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.18
-0.24
+0.22
+0.30
+0.01
+0.40
+0.27
-0.26
+0.06
+0.08
-1.00
-0.70
-0.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Let’s Talk
About Your

MONDAY

Mostly cloudy

WEDNESDAY

63°
44°

Cloudy and cooler

Partly sunny

Marietta
72/45

Murray City
68/41
Belpre
72/45

Athens
69/43

St. Marys
73/46

Parkersburg
73/44

Coolville
70/44

Elizabeth
74/46

Spencer
74/46

Buffalo
73/45
Milton
73/46

Clendenin
76/47

St. Albans
76/47

Huntington
72/45

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
51/41
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
65/51
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
79/54
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

67°
46°
Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
73/45

Ashland
73/45
Grayson
72/44

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551.

60°
43°

Wilkesville
69/42
POMEROY
Jackson
72/45
69/42
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
73/46
71/44
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
62/38
GALLIPOLIS
71/45
74/46
71/44

South Shore Greenup
73/44
69/42

52
0 50 100 150 200

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major
12:41a
1:27a
2:14a
3:03a
3:54a
4:45a
5:37a

Moderate

Logan
67/40

McArthur
67/41

Waverly
67/41

Pollen: 255

meet in the Pomeroy
Court House each Thursday at 11 a.m.

BBT (NYSE) —34.14
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 18.80
Pepsico (NYSE) —100.81
Premier (NASDAQ) —15.28
Rockwell (NYSE) — 113.05
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —12.65
Royal Dutch Shell — 47.70
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 14.96
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 67.47
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.36
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.63
Worthington (NYSE) —35.24
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
March 23, 2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

73°
53°

Mostly sunny and
warmer

Adelphi
66/41
Chillicothe
67/41

SUNDAY

66°
42°

Cooler with a blend of
sun and clouds

4

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
3.0/3.1
Season to date/normal
24.2/22.2

Today
7:25 a.m.
7:45 p.m.
9:01 p.m.
8:05 a.m.

SATURDAY

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

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

(in inches)

FRIDAY

52°
33°

ALMANAC
High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

AEP (NYSE) — 65.08
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.13
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 107.35
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.78
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —45.23
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 36.74
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 6.67
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.230
City Holding (NASDAQ) —46.36
Collins (NYSE) —91.67
DuPont (NYSE) — 63.74
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.19
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 31.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 48.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.94
Kroger (NYSE) —37.59
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 85.30
Norfolk So (NYSE) —82.86
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.38

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

agent interviews.
The swift and orderly
meeting was adjourned
after 25 minutes; Meigs
County Commissioners

LOCAL STOCKS

arieltheatre.org or ohiovalleysymphony.
org or at the box ofﬁce at 428 Second
Ave.
Funding for The Ohio Valley Symphony is provided in part by the Gallia
County Medical Society and the Ann
Carson Dater Endowment.

From Page 1

WEATHER

Commissioner Randy
Smith was not present
and excused in order to
attend the Ohio State
University agricultural

for this change in order
for the project to move
forward.
Financial matters
included motions passed
to pay bills of $47,416.57,
as well as Now &amp; Thens
in the amount $19,400
and $25,000 to Baer
Contracting LLC and
DataPath Card Services,
respectively.
The commissioners
authorized an advance
totaling $2,207.81 from
County General into the
Animal Shelter fund, and
a new line item for the
Animal Shelter Mortgage
Fund, with funds to be
used for said mortgage.

the commissioners were
approached by Middleport Village Council with
From Page 1
a request to use grant
money for a “splash park”
Johnson was authorized
instead of the originally
as a child support case
purposed “skate park.”
manager.
The commissioners
A resolution was
advised the council that
adopted at the request of in order to re-purpose
the county’s Department the grant money, it would
of Job and Family Servic- be necessary for council
es to fulﬁll responsibilito formally approve the
ties of Chapter 5153 of
change.
the Ohio Revised Code;
Village Council Clerk
the board approved
Sue Baker relayed that
entering a Title IV-E
the council approved the
foster care contract with change during Thursday’s
Health Recovery Services meeting. The commisBassett House.
sioners intend to have
the grant’s ofﬁce petition
In a previous meeting,

Charleston
76/45

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
44/26

Minneapolis
42/24

Billings
54/34

Denver
47/26

Chicago
49/29

Montreal
29/27
Toronto
37/33
New York
56/54
Detroit
61/32
Washington
75/61

Kansas City
50/26

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

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
64/34/s
46/36/pc
74/52/t
65/54/pc
75/60/s
54/34/c
54/37/c
43/40/sh
76/45/c
77/58/pc
43/27/pc
49/29/r
62/36/t
63/39/r
64/39/r
66/42/s
47/26/pc
39/25/sn
61/32/r
82/70/pc
68/44/pc
62/33/r
50/26/s
75/54/s
61/37/pc
79/54/s
65/39/t
81/73/t
42/24/pc
68/40/t
77/55/t
56/54/c
61/35/s
86/67/pc
72/60/pc
81/54/s
71/47/c
35/33/i
79/60/s
77/59/s
58/34/c
56/38/pc
65/51/s
51/41/r
75/61/s

Hi/Lo/W
68/39/s
46/34/sh
68/47/s
64/41/sh
67/41/pc
43/23/sn
48/28/sn
61/38/r
55/35/pc
74/48/pc
39/16/sn
47/34/s
51/34/pc
40/31/pc
47/32/pc
71/50/s
43/22/pc
54/41/pc
46/31/pc
81/69/sh
71/49/s
51/34/s
59/44/pc
79/55/s
63/40/s
76/53/s
56/37/s
86/74/c
44/34/pc
59/38/s
71/55/s
67/41/sh
71/49/s
84/68/t
69/42/pc
85/56/s
48/31/pc
50/34/r
74/47/sh
72/41/pc
56/40/s
49/32/r
65/52/s
54/38/c
68/42/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
70/42
Chihuahua
75/41

High
Low

Atlanta
74/52

Global

Houston
68/44

Monterrey
81/54

GOALS

88° in McAllen, TX
5° in Ely, MN

High
112° in Diffa, Niger
Low -43° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
81/73

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Hirings

Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@civitasmedia.com or on
Twitter @BSergentWrites.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 24 2016 s Page 6

Lady Knights double up Sissonville, 4-2
By Paul Boggs

following Monday night’s
3-1 win over AA runner-up
Ritchie County.
SISSONVILLE, W.Va. —
Sissonville captured the
In a matter of two days, the Class AA state title last
Point Pleasant High School year.
softball squad has swept
But, it’s now all about
last season’s Class AA state this season — and the Lady
ﬁnalists.
Knights are 2-for-2 already
That’s because — on
this week.
Tuesday — the Lady
Both pitchers went the
Knights plated three runs
distance on Tuesday, as
through the opening three
Point Pleasant’s Karissa
innings, and took advantage Cochran — after Monday’s
of two early errors by host
16-strikeout effort against
Sissonville in crafting out a Ritchie County — came
4-2 visiting victory.
back with a four-hit, oneWith the win, the Lady
walk performance against
Knights’
second
in
as
many
the Lady Indians.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
games,
Point
Pleasant
She struck out three and
Point Pleasant sophomore Rachael Grimm, left, rounds second base and heads toward
allowed only one earned
third during a March 21 softball contest against Ritchie County in Point Pleasant, W.Va. raised its record to 2-1 —
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

run, which was a solo home
run by Sissonville’s Alexee
Haynes in the fourth inning.
The only other hits that
Cochran gave up were ﬁrst
and sixth-inning singles by
Taylor Casto, and a two-out
single by Karli Pinkerton in
the ﬁfth.
She retired the side 1-2-3
in innings two, three and
seven — and of her 83 total
pitches, exactly 60 went for
strikes.
Haynes had walked in
the ﬁrst and Casto singled,
but Cochran came back to
strike out Reagan Johnson
to end the inning.
See KNIGHTS | 7

Meyer thankful Point Pleasant falls to Redskins, 7-5
for returning
QB and center
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS (AP)
— With just three
returning starters on
his offense, Ohio State
coach Urban Meyer is
thankful two of them
happen to be quarterback J.T. Barrett and
veteran offensive lineman Pat Elﬂein, who
will start at center.
After losing most
of his offensive weapons — most notably
running back Ezekiel
Elliott, wide receivers Michael Thomas,
Braxton Miller and
Jalin Marshall — and
three offensive linemen,
Meyer will look to his
starting battery to lead
the inexperienced team.
Barrett and Elﬂein have
been named team captains for the 2016 season, along with middle
linebacker Raekwon
McMillan.
“If you were trying to break in a new
quarterback and a new
center, you probably
have no shot,” Meyer
said Tuesday after the
team’s third practice of

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — They saved their
best for last, but the Big
Blacks ultimately started
a little too late.
The Point Pleasant
baseball team plated
ﬁve runs with nobody
out in the bottom of the
seventh, but visiting Hurricane eventually handed
the Big Blacks their ﬁrst
loss of the 2016 season
Tuesday night following
a 7-5 decision in a nonconference contest in
Mason County.
Point Pleasant (3-1)
produced at least one
hit in each of its ﬁrst
four innings at the plate,
which resulted in the
hosts having ﬁve different
players get into scoring
position during that span.
The Redskins (2-0),
however, worked their
way out of each of those
situations while holding
PPHS scoreless through
six complete.
HHS also had little
trouble making the most
of its offensive chances
early on as the guests
led 5-0 through six full
frames, then tacked on
two all-important insurance runs in the top half
of the seventh for a 7-0
cushion.
The Big Blacks ﬁnally
found some magic during their ﬁnal at-bat as
the hosts came up three
straight singles and a
pair of walks before Cody
Sockwell drove in two
with a single, making it a
7-5 contest with nobody
out and the tying run
headed to the plate.
HHS brought in Aaron
Perry at that point, and
the hosts went down in
order the rest of the way
— allowing Hurricane to
escape with a 7-5 victory.
Garrett Litchﬁeld
opened the seventh
with a leadoff single and
advanced to third on a
single by Abe Stearns.
Justice Chapman followed with a single that
allowed Litchﬁeld to
score, making it a 7-1
contest.
Stearns, who advanced
to third on Chapman’s
safety, scored on a passed
ball with Jordan Cunningham at the plate.
Cunningham eventually
walked to put runners at
ﬁrst and second trailing
7-2.
A ﬁnal passed ball and
a walk to Chris Lush
loaded the bases for
PPHS while also marking the end of a brilliant

Point Pleasant senior Chris Lush (6) makes a relay throw to the infield during a March 21 baseball
contest against Wahama in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

See POINT | 7

the spring. “The fact
that these two guys are
back, we have a shot. I
think we have a decent
shot of being good on
offense, and it’s mostly
due to those two guys
coming back.”
Barrett enters
spring practice as the
undisputed starter at
quarterback for the
ﬁrst time. The redshirt junior, the only
QB on the roster with
any game experience,
became the starter in
early in 2014 when
Braxton Miller was
injured, and went 11-1
before he hurt his
ankle and yielded to
Cardale Jones, who
led the Buckeyes to
the national championship. Last year at this
time, Barrett and Jones
were locked in one of
the most intriguing
quarterback derbies in
the nation. Barrett took
over midseason last
year for Jones, who has
since left for the NFL
draft.
See MEYER | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, March 24
Baseball
Charleston Catholic at Point Pleasant, 5:30
Softball
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5:30
Track and Field
Point Pleasant at Parkerburg, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Capital Invitational at Laidley Field,
4:30
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley, 4:30
Friday, March 25
Baseball
Buffalo at Hannan, 5:30
College Baseball
IU-Southeast at URG (DH), 1 p.m.
Saturday, March 26
Baseball
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 1 p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 1 p.m.
Symmes Valley, Pike Eastern at River Valley, noon
Softball
Southern, Logan at Meigs, 1 p.m.
Symmes Valley, Pike Eastern at River Valley, noon
Huntington, John Marshall at Point Pleasant, noon
Green at Gallia Academy, noon
Hannan at Cross Lanes Christian (DH), noon
Track and Field
Eastern at Warren, 10 a.m.
College Baseball
IU-Southeast at URG (DH), 1 p.m.
College Softball
Ohio Christian at URG (DH), 1 p.m.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Rio’s Roder named POW

By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ariel
Roder of Rio Grande has been
named the NAIA National Softball
Player of the Week and Victoria
Decker of Campbellsville (KY) has
been named the NAIA National Softball Pitcher of the Week, the national
ofﬁce announced Tuesday.
Roder and Decker were selected
based on their performances from
March 14-20, and were chosen out
of a pool of conference, independent
and unafﬁliated group winners. This
is the ﬁrst NAIA National Softball
weekly award.
Roder, a senior from Parma
Heights, Ohio, went 13-for-18 at the
plate to lead Rio Grande to a 5-1
record on the week. She hit safely in
every game, had ﬁve multi-hit games
and two games with three hits.
Roder had two doubles, two home
runs, two walks six RBIs and scored
six runs on the week with a slugging
percentage was 1.167. She had a big
doubleheader versus IU Southeast
by going 5-for-6 with two doubles.
Roder currently ranks 22nd
nationally in slugging percentage
(.831).
Decker, a senior pitcher from
Leitchﬁeld, Ky., ﬁnished the week
with three wins, including a nohitter against Brescia (KY), 10-0

Knights
From Page 6

With Point Pleasant leading
3-1 in the fourth, and following
Haynes’ home run, Johnson
trimmed the deﬁcit to 3-2 after
reaching on an error and scoring on a wild pitch.
But Cochran retired the
next four Indians she faced,
before allowing Pinkerton’s

Photo courtesy of URG Athletics

University of Rio Grande senior Ariel Roder
(29) was named the NAIA National Player of
the Week on Tuesday after going 13-for-18 at
the plate while leading URG to a 5-1 record.

and two wins against then-No. 2
Lindsey Wilson (KY) (12-3 and 7-0).
She picked up her second save of
the season in the ﬁnal game against
Lindsey Wilson (4-3).
Decker pitched 17.2 innings, striking out 17 batters, while allowing
only three runs.
She currently ranks eighth in the
NAIA in saves (2), 17th in opponent
batting average (.260) and 18th in
wins (9).
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director
at the University of Rio Grande.

single in the fifth.
With the Lady Knights
ahead 4-2 in the sixth, Haynes
reached on Point Pleasant’s
other error — and Casto
singled again for runners at
second and third.
However, Cochran charged
back one more time to retire
the next three Indians, followed
by her 1-2-3 effort in the last.
Haynes battled Cochran in
the circle, also allowing four

Meyer

from last year’s 12-1
team. Curtis Samuel and
Dontre Wilson are expectFrom Page 6
ed to compete at H-Back.
Noah Brown and Corey
“His value is more than Smith are returning from
running and throwing,”
injuries at wide receiver,
Meyer said. “His value is, and Terry McLaurin, Parhe’s one of the best leadris Campbell, James Clark
ers we’ve ever had.”
and Johnnie Dixon are
Meyer has said redshirt expected to be in the mix.
freshman Joe Burrow, the
The Buckeyes’ defense
2014 Ohio Mr. Football,
will be inexperienced
entered spring practice as also. Besides McMillan,
Barrett’s backup.
only cornerback Gareon
On the offensive line,
Conley and defensive
Elﬂein and Billy Price,
end Tyquan Lewis return
a returning starter at
from among the 2015
guard, are the only playstarters. Immediate coners with game experience cerns include plugging

effort by Hurricane starter Garrett Gress. Beau
Adkins entered in relief and faced only two batters,
and Point Pleasant made the most of those two atbats.
Adkins walked Lush to load the bases, then another
passed ball allowed Chapman to score while the other
runners advanced during a 7-3 contest. Sockwell’s
two-RBI single to shallow right plated both Cunningham and Lush for a two-run contest with a runner on
ﬁrst and nobody out.
Perry entered, struck out the ﬁrst two batters he
faced and then induced a pop-up to shortstop to end
the threat and the contest.
Hurricane outhit the hosts by an 11-9 overall margin, with both teams committing an error apiece
while also stranding six runners each on base.
The Redskins scored a run in the ﬁrst, then erupted
for three runs in the third and added another in the
ﬁfth while building their early 5-0 advantage.
Gress was the winning pitcher of record after allowing four earned runs, eight hits and a walk over sixplus innings while fanning ﬁve.
Tristan Austin took the loss for Point Pleasant after
surrendering four runs (three earned), six hits and a
walk over four frames while striking out four.
Matt Richardson also allowed one earned run in
two innings of relief for the hosts, while Chapman
gave up two earned runs during the top of the seventh.
Sockwell and Stearns paced Point Pleasant with
two hits apiece, followed by Lush, Richardson,
Litchﬁeld, Chapman and Derek King with a safety
each. Sockwell drove in two RBIs and Chapman also
knocked in a run.
Chandler Kelly led Hurricane with three hits and
two RBIs, while Brawson Martin, Noah Birthisel and
Nate Durham each had two safeties.
Durham and Jake Allen also drove in two RBIs
apiece, while Martin and Perry each scored twice in
the win.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

PPGSL Registrations

football team will host a golf scramble on
Saturday, April 30, at the Riverside Golf
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point Course. Registration for the tournament
Pleasant Girls Softball League will be hold- will begin at 8 a.m. and a shot gun start
ing multiple registration sessions at a pair will take place at 9 a.m.
of locations.
The tournament will cost $240 per team,
Signups at the Point Pleasant Junior/
or $60 a player. Cost includes free food and
Senior High School Commons Area will be and beverages (Pepsi products and water).
held from 6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. on TuesEach team must have a handicap of at least
day, April 5; Thursday, April 7; Tuesday,
40 with only one player below 8.
April 12; Monday, April 18; Thursday,
Club house credit for the top-three
April 21; Monday, April 25; and Tuesday,
teams will be awarded, along with Closest
April 26.
to the Pin, Longest Drive and other cash
Signups will also be held at The Fields
prizes. Checks should be made payable to
from 10 a.m. until noon on the Saturdays
Meigs football.
of April 23 and April 30.
For more information, contact Tonya
Cox at 740-645-4479 or the Riverside Golf
Course at 304-773-5354.

MRF baseball,
softball signups

MASON, W.Va. — The Mason Recreation Foundation will be holding baseball
and softball signups for girls and boys ages
4-16 at the Mason Fire Department from
11 a.m. until 1 p.m. on Saturday, March
26.
There is a signup fee of $40 per child
and $65 per family. A copy of each participant’s birth certiﬁcate needs to be made
available at signups.
For more information, call Rick Kearns
at 304-674-3491 or Allen Staats at 304-5931255. Please leave a message if unavailable
at the time of call.

Football golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Meigs Marauder

hits, one walk and only one
earned run.
She retired the Lady Knights
1-2-3 in innings one, four, six
and seven.
She also struck out eight,
but two costly Indian errors led
directly to three unearned runs
which proved to be the difference.
In the second stanza, Point
Pleasant’s Kelsey Byus reached
on an error to lead off, as

Southern football
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football
team will hold a golf scramble on Saturday,
May 21, at the Riverside Golf Course in
Mason County. The format will be a fourman scramble, bring your own team.
Each squad must have a team handicap
of 40+ and only one player can be under
10. Price is $60 per person and includes
golf, cart, lunch and beverages. Prizes
include club house credit for the top three
teams, among other cash prizes.
The tournament will begin with a shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. For more information, contact Southern football coach Mike
Chancey at 740-591-8644.

Michaela Cottrill singled and
Tanner King reached on a
dropped third strike to load the
bases.
With two outs, Rachel
Grimm then doubled in Byus
and Cottrill for the early 2-0
advantage.
In the next frame, and again
with two outs, Megan Hammond had a double to drive in
Cochran, who reached on the
second Indian error.

Green, and there will be
a lot of unfamiliar names
in the starting lineup.
Practice will culminate
in the spring game April
16.
“There are some guys
who haven’t done a whole
lot who are going to play,
so the pressure is on
them now,” Meyer said.

BROADCAST

6 PM

11
12
13

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

tice at IMG Academy, and
in an interview Meyer
seemed to be considering
the idea. He downplayed
it on Tuesday. “We look
into everything, but we
wouldn’t take their free
time from them,” he said.
“I can’t see taking spring
break away from the players.”
THURSDAY, MARCH 24

7 PM

7:30

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10 PM

10:30

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13 News at CBS Evening NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament Sweet Sixteen (L)
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at Six
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Nature Cat

10

6:30

Leading 3-2 in the ﬁfth, Point
Pleasant added an insurance
marker when Cammy Hesson
singled to lead off, advanced to
third two batters later on a wild
pitch, and scored on a Byus
RBI-groundout.
The Lady Knights returned
to the road on Wednesday
when they traveled to Parkersburg South.

NO FLORIDA TRIP?:
Meyer said taking the
team to Florida to practice during spring break
is not something he’s
considering right now,
contrary to some media
reports. Questions arose
after Jim Harbaugh took
his Michigan team to Bradenton for a week of prac-

THURSDAY EVENING

8

From Page 6

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

the immense hole on the
defensive line left by the
departing Joey Bosa, and
accounting for the loss of
Eli Apple and Vonn Bell
in the secondary.
The only sure thing
is that the Buckeyes
have a lot more work
to do before the opener
Sept. 3 against Bowling

7

Point

Thursday, March 24, 2016 7

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Decepticons search for an ancient weapon, the Autobots have to stop them. TV14
vs. Jenna Dewan-Tatum"
Battle
Battle
Thunder
Thunder
Henry Danger
Open Season 3 Dana Syder. TVG
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Painless" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Bound" WWE Smackdown!
Rush Hour 3 TV14
NCAA Tip-Off (L)
(:15) NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament Sweet Sixteen (L)
(:45) NCAA Basketb. Division I Tournament
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle "I, Witness"
Castle "Resurrection" 1/2
The Dark Knight Rises (‘12, Act) Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway. TVPG
(5:00) Enemy of the State A successful lawyer is pursued
The Italian Job (‘03, Act) Mark Wahlberg. Thieves plan the heist of The Bourne
by a treacherous National Security Agency official. TVMA their lives by creating the largest traffic jam in L.A. history. TV14
Identity TV14
Naked "Hearts of Darkness" Naked "Garden of Evil"
Naked "Redemption Road" Naked "Lord of the Rats"
Naked "Frozen in Fear"
The First 48 "Cold Light of The First 48 "Dark Waters" The First 48: The Detective The First 48 "The Fighter/ 60 Days In "Fight Face" (N)
Day"
Speaks "Broken Home" (N) Final Ride" (N)
Finding Bigfoot: XL
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked RivMon "Canadian Horror" River Monsters: Unhooked
(5:00)
Sleeping With
Sleeping With the Enemy A woman tries to escape her
In Her Shoes Two estranged sisters bond after
the Enemy TVMA
abusive husband by staging her death and moving away. meeting the grandmother they never knew existed. TV14
Mary Mary
Mary Mary
Mary Mary
Mary Mary (N)
Sisters in Law (P) (N)
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Botched
Botched "The Serial Filler" Botched "Double Trouble"
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Loves Ray "Ally's F"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Big Fish, Texas "Hurricane Search for Noah's Ark
Killing Jesus A historical look at how Jesus' preachings led to his persecution by
Buddy"
conspirators.
(:10) Pro Football Talk (L)
USSA
FIS Alpine Skiing
Curling World Championship (L)
UFC Tonight
NCAA Baseball Oklahoma State at Kansas State Site: Tointon Stadium (L)
UFC Main Event
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn S. "Eye Pawn Stars Vikings "Promised"
Vikings "What Might Have
of the Tiger"
Been" (N)
Beverly Hills
Beverly "Lymes in the Sand" Vanderpump Rules
Atlanta "Reunion Part One" Recipe "In the Can" (SF) (N)
(:05) Payne
(:40) Payne
(:15) Payne
(:50) Payne
(:20) House of Payne
(:55) Payne
Martin 1/3
Martin 2/3
Martin 3/3
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop H.Hunt (N)
House
(5:00)
Superman II Three exiled alien villains come
Superman III (‘83, Sci-Fi) Richard Pryor, Christopher Reeve. Superman battles a
to Earth to seek out their archenemy, Superman. TVPG
criminally insane super computer genius working for a sinister tycoon. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Real Sports NBA reporter
Pitch Perfect 2 (‘15, Com) Rebel Wilson, Elizabeth
400 (HBO) Nora Ephron - Scripted and Craig Sager talks about his Banks, Anna Kendrick. The Bellas enter an international a
cancer scare.
Unscripted
capella competition that no American team has won. TV14
(5:40) The Good Lie An employment agency
A.I.: Artificial Intelligence (2001, Sci-Fi) Jude Law, Frances
450 (MAX) counselor helps a group of Sudanese
O'Connor, Haley Joel Osment. A robot boy longs to become human so that
refugees rebuild their lives. TV14
he can regain his human mother's love. TV14
(5:30) The Who: Live in Hyde Park
(:25) M. Jackson's Journey A look at
Billions "Where the F*ck Is
500 (SHOW) Featuring The Who's performance at Hyde Jackson's career from the beginning
Donnie?"
Park as part of their 50th anniversary tour. through the release of 'Off the Wall.'
(5:30) Everything Is Copy:

10 PM

10:30

Girls "Queen
Togetherfor Two
ness "Just
the Range" Days"
The Sixth Sense (‘99,
Thril) Haley Joel Osment,
Bruce Willis. TV14
Shameless "Paradise Lost"
Sean officially moves in;
Fiona plans a wedding.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, March 24, 2016

Help Wanted General

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Miscellaneous
For Sale Crypt with Accessories @ Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens - Eye Level - second
tier corner Call or text 386-8470991
Automotive
1967 Chevy II Nova
4 dr. Price reduced
Call 740-384-1542
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Child/Elderly Care
WANTED: Someone to sit with
elderly lady in Bidwell,Oh Call
Kevin 1-740-645-9602
60583312

LEGALS
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on
March 26, 2016 at 10:00 a.m.
a public sale will be held for
the purpose of satisfying a
landlordҋs lien on the contents
of self-service storage room.
The goods to be sold are described generally as miscellaneous personal &amp; household. The room will be opened
for viewing immediately prior
to solicitation of bids, no
cartons or containers are to be
opened. Unit will be sold at
one price for the entire unit.
Unit must be emptied and
cleaned by 4pm on day of the
sale, all garbage must be
removed from the grounds.
Bay #16
Name: Ruth Frank
Address:820 Main Street
City: Racine, OH 45771
Terms of the sale will be cash
or certified fund ONLY.
Hillҋs Self Storage
29625 Bashan Rd
Racine, OH 45771
3/23/16--3/24/16-3/25/16
LEGALS
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on
March 26, 2016 at 10:00 a.m.
a public sale will be held for
the purpose of satisfying a
landlordҋs lien on the contents
of self-service storage room.
The goods to be sold are described generally as miscellaneous personal &amp; household. The room will be opened
for viewing immediately prior
to solicitation of bids, no
cartons or containers are to be
opened. Unit will be sold at
one price for the entire unit.
Unit must be emptied and
cleaned by 4pm on day of the
sale, all garbage must be
removed from the grounds.

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Driver needed.
Must have Class B Hazmat.
Send resume to:
Human Resources Po Box
705 Pomeroy Oh 45769.
Driver needed.
Must have Class B Hazmat.
Send resume to:
Human Resources Po Box
705 Pomeroy Oh 45769.
Driver needed.
Must have Class B Hazmat.
Send resume to:
Human Resources Po Box
705 Pomeroy Oh 45769.

Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Houses For Rent

Civitas Media Newspapers
has an opening for a results
orientated salesperson
capable of developing
multi-media campaigns for
advertisers. You must be a
problem solver, goal oriented,
have a positive attitude, and
have the ability to multi-task
in a demanding,
deadline-oriented
environment. Must have
reliable transportation and
clean driving record. We seek
success driven individuals
looking to build a future with a
growing organization with publications in Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH and Point
Pleasant, WV. Please email
cover letter, resume and
references to Julia Schultz.
Email address:
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

Direct Supervision
Employee at The Children's
Center of Ohio.
Working with delinquent
youth. Must be able to pass
drug screening, background
check and have a high school
diploma or equivalent.
Must be at least
21 years of age.
Apply in person at
55 Allison Rd. Patriot, OH
45658 or call 740-379-9083
Mon - Fri 9-5.

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

2 bedroom 1 bathroom House
in Pomeroy. $300/month. 740444-3139

Business &amp; Trade School

Now Leasing
Jordan Landing Apartments
1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 Bdrms
$410-$610 Rent Mnthly
Sect. 8 Vouchers Accepted
EHO/ADA
For Info call: 304-674-0023
or 304-444-4268

Civitas Media Newspapers
has an opening for a results
orientated salesperson
capable of developing
multi-media campaigns for
advertisers. You must be a
problem solver, goal oriented,
have a positive attitude, and
have the ability to multi-task
in a demanding,
deadline-oriented
environment. Must have
reliable transportation and
clean driving record. We seek
success driven individuals
looking to build a future with a
growing organization with publications in Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH and Point
Pleasant, WV. Please email
cover letter, resume and
references to Julia Schultz.
Email address:
jschultz@civitasmedia.com
Civitas Media Newspapers
has an opening for a results
orientated salesperson
capable of developing
multi-media campaigns for
advertisers. You must be a
problem solver, goal oriented,
have a positive attitude, and
have the ability to multi-task
in a demanding,
deadline-oriented
environment. Must have
reliable transportation and
clean driving record. We seek
success driven individuals
looking to build a future with a
growing organization with publications in Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH and Point
Pleasant, WV. Please email
cover letter, resume and
references to Julia Schultz.
Email address:
jschultz@civitasmedia.com
NOW HIRING!!
Elite Home Nursing Services
is looking for a part-time RN
to perform drop-in and
supervisory visits, as well as
office work, 2-3 days/week.
Also hiring a part-time LPN.
For more information,
interested applicants may call
740-444-5098 Monday
through Friday 8am-4pm.

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Land (Acreage)
15 Acres in Mason County
off of Redmond Ridge. Some
level ground, all woods, great
hunting or camping, $23,000.
Financing with $2300 down &amp;
$273/mth for 10 yrs. Call for
maps, (740)989-0260.

Health Recovery Services, Inc. a provider of behavioral
healthcare services in Southeastern Ohio has a clinical vacancy
in Gallipolis Ohio. Experience providing direct services and
treatment to consumers with chemical dependency, mental
health and/or behavioral issues preferred. Bachelorҋs degree
required, Masterҋs Degree in social work or counseling preferred. Minimum of CDCA or Counselor Trainee required, LCDC,
PC or LSW licensure preferred. Applicant may qualify for the National Health Services Corps Loan Repayment Program.

The Meigs County Veteran Service Commission is looking to hire an Administrative
Assistant/Secretary in a part time position at the Meigs County Veteran Service Office.
Must be a Honorably discharged Meigs County Veteran to apply. Starting pay is $9.00/hr
Qualifications: Honorably Discharged Veteran; DD214, must live in Meigs County,
High School Graduate, Valid Driver’s License,experience in using Microsoft Word and
Microsoft Excel and a flexible work schedule. Must be able to work with the public
and deal with difficult situations from time to time. Resume Required.

Bay #52
Name: Amy Markworth
Address: 1907 Morecott Drive
City: Sissonville, WV 25320
Terms of the sale will be cash
or certified fund ONLY.

Deadline for submission of resume is close of business March 25, 2016. Resume must be
dropped off at the Veteran Service by the Veteran applying for the position.

Hillҋs Self Storage
29625 Bashan Rd
Racine, OH 45771
3/23/16-3/24/16-3/25/16

Meigs County Veteran Service Office,
117 East Memorial Dr. Suite 3 Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Phone # 740-992-2820

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Tree Service
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

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Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription
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Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

Finding Senior Housing can be
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SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY LAW
All Cases Considered

�Applications/Hearings/Appeals
�Immediate Access to
Experienced Personnel

�We Strive For Quick
Claim Approval
�Free Consultation

Bill Gordon &amp; Associates is a nationwide practice limited to representing clients before the Social
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attorneys at Bill Gordon &amp; Associates work for quick approval of every case. Results in your case will
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MEIGS COUNTY VETERAN SERVICE OFFICE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Miscellaneous

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

(800) 301-8203

HELP WANTED

Call

Miscellaneous

CALL TODAY FOR IMMEDIATE HELP!

Help Wanted General

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Win...No Award / No Fee

Competitive salary and outstanding benefit package. For
immediate consideration, forward letter of interest and resumeҋ
to Health Recovery Services: Attn: Nancy Dotson, P.O. Box 724
Athens, Ohio 45701, FAX (740) 592-6728 or email:
HYPERLINK "mailto:ndotson@hrs.org"_ndotson@hrs.org_ or
visit our website www.hrs.org. Drug Free Workplace Employer
E.O.E.

Sales

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

Call: (800) 953-5178

Help Wanted General

Rentals
2-2br trailers
available for rent in the
Spring Valley area.
Call 740-446-4400.

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2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins
2 (4 oz.) Boneless Pork Chops
4 Boneless Chicken Breasts (1 lb. pkg.)
4 (3 oz.) Kielbasa Sausages
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15 oz. pkg. All-Beef Meatballs
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, March 24, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &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

5

4
8

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

3

7

9
6

8 1
5
6
2
6
1
3
2
8 9

7

6
9

3

4

5

4
2

5

3/24

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

Hank Ketcham’s

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DR_16461_3x3.5

�10 Thursday, March 24, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Golden

W H OEV
ER
FI NDS
T H E EG
G
G ETS
$250.0
0

Rules are:
Eg g is n ot i n a pla c e of bus i ness
i n a pri vate res iden c e
i n s ide a ma n-made o bje ct
Yo u w i l l n ot need to dig o r c l i m b to f i nd the eg g .
CLUES WILL NOT BE GIVEN OUT OVER THE PHONE
S PON SOR E D B Y T H ES E B U S I N ES S ES
S H OP LO CA L!

60642270

The next clue is:
“You will ﬁnd the golden egg
in the shadows of the stacks....
along the curvy road”
Psalm 91:1

OVER
22
ACRES O

GREENH F
OUSES
1/4 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5323

60643315

2400 Eastern Ave. (Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

Thanks
for putting
Community First!

Your f inancial
future starts now.
Learn more at
f bsc.com
b
m

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

6WRU\�/DZ�2IÀFH

60644070

s (OME COOKED MEALS FRESH DAILY
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s #ATERING SERVICE AVAILABLE
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Steven L. Story, Attorney at Law
Licensed in OH, WV, and KY

216 East Main St., Suite 200

Open 7 days a week/6 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Turn at caution light on Co. Rd. 5

PO Box 72, Pomeroy, OH 45769

slstorylaw72@hotmail.com
740-992-6624

1-800-327-6050
Fax 740-992-4249

ZZZ�VWRU\ODZRIÀFHSRPHUR\RKLR�FRP
60644211

M i l l i e ’s R e s t a u r a n t
����� "RADBURY 2D� s -IDDLEPORT /(
740-992-7713

60644335

740-992-2955
636 EAST MAIN STREET POMEROY, OH 45769
www.ThePharmacy4u.com
60644073

Ridenour’s Gas Service
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60644339

®

Member FDIC

life happens. fast.

60643608

OHIO
VALLEY
BANK

When you put money in
our bank, you started a
chain reaction.
We made an auto loan.
A local dealer sold a car.
A salesman received
a commission.
His family bought
groceries.
The clerk at the
supermarket got a
paycheck.
YOU made that happen!

������ ��������࠮�7�6��)V_����࠮�*OLZ[LY��6/

POWER YOUR FUN or
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Banks Construction Company
34070 SR #7, Pomeroy, Ohio
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60645053

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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