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                  <text>God doesn’t
have double
standards

Partly
cloudy. High
83, low 65

Ehman signs
with Rio
Grande hoops

FEATURES s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 8

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 89, Volume 70

Friday, June 3, 2016 s 50¢

Gold Wings, ribs invade Pomeroy
By Lorna Hart

dors selling food and displaying their wares — all set up
overlooking the Ohio River.
POMEROY — The annual
The festival takes place
Gold Wings and Ribs Festival in the parking lot on Main
arrives Friday on the PomeStreet in Pomeroy, with the
roy Parking Lot.
Ohio River just the other
Vendors spent hours Thurs- side of the planned activities.
day night setting up venues
With this view, festival-goers
for the two-day festival that
will enjoy free admission and
wraps up Saturday night.
entertainment as they make
Early Friday, motorcycles
their way through motorwill roll into town for the
cycles, parades, vendors and
weekend event that will feaactivities for all ages. For the
ture
plenty
of
entertainment,
art lover, the festival includes
Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel
contests
for
both
adults
and
Art in the Park.
Gold Wing motorcycles will roll into town for the weekend and gather in the Pomeroy
parking lot.
children, and plenty of venThe People’s Choice ballotlhart@civitasmedia.com

ing returns, as well as a panel
of judges to determine the
winner of the title of “Ohio’s
Best Ribs” and “Ohio’s Best
Wings.”
Friday’s activities begin
when vendors open at 11
a.m. From noon to 5 p.m. is
the Spikes Karaoke, followed
by the Soul Harvest Church
Band. At 6 p.m., there will be
a ﬁre truck parade, and from
7-10 p.m. is Open Rail.
Saturday brings the Rally
on the River 5k that begins

Commissioners
discuss agenda

CICADA FACTS

By Michael Hart
for the Daily Sentinel

POMEROY — The May 2 meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners was in a word,
swift.
Agenda items consisted entirely of disbursements and a single leasing agreement.
Bills were paid in the amount of $25,358.54
from of a total $195,751.77.
Three Now and Thens were approved. Ohio
Water Development Authority (E001E01) was
given $10,847.34 as part of Rutland Water
and Sewer operations. Okayed was $10,140.00
to remunerate Dean Heating and Cooling (B044B01). Lastly, the Middleport Jail
(A106A04) received $16,440.00.
The Sheriff Department requested and was
granted a budgetary adjustment, moving
$10,000 from the Gas/Oil fund (A106A05) to
Housing (A106A04).
The former site of the Emergency Medical
Services at 119 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy will be rented to New Era Broadband,
LLC.
The Board will lease the building monthly to
the telecommunications company, a business
with a growing investment in Meigs County.
According to Commissioner Ihle, the internet provider “has been expanding their work
in this area, and were looking to relocate their
ofﬁces from outside the county lines.” The
company’s ofﬁces are currently located farther
away, near Tuppers Plains.
The Commissioners offered an update on
county agency moves from the Annex to the
one-time O’Blenness building on Mulberry
Ave. Ihle said the process is “on schedule,
and they should be able to move over next
week,”pending success transfering phone service to the new location.
Minister Del Pullins offered the opening
prayer, which included mention of the multiple
Meigs denominations, whose congregations
undergoing changes in status and pastorship.
The minimal pressing business allowed a
relaxed moment of discussion pertaining to
the United States Flag Code. Pullins’s knowledge of the advisory regulations may result in
some ofﬁce furniture rearrangement.
Given the reprieve from typically full sessions, the board adjourned. The next regular
meeting of the Meigs County Commissions
will be Thursday, June 9, at 11:00 a.m. at the
Courthouse.

Courtesy photo

This cicada was spotted on a tree in East Letart early Thursday morning.

— SPORTS
Basketball: 8
Schedule: 8
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 10
Comics: 11

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share your thoughts.

Cicadas are often
incorrectly called
locusts; locusts are
migratory grasshoppers
that often travel in vast
swarms. Periodical
cicadas are found only
in the United States
east of the Great Plains.
The 17-year cicadas
are found mainly in the
northern, eastern and
western part of their
range. The appearance
of cicadas in large
numbers apparently
caused the early
European settlers
in North America to
equate them with
the plague of locusts
mentioned in the
Bible. Each brood of
17-year cicadas actually
consists of three
different species that
look different from
one another but which
emerge together. Only
male cicadas “sing”
and each of the three
broods has its own
“song.”

Cicadas a cause concern for pet owners
By Lorna Hart

from their underground
home once every 17
years, transform into
POMEROY — It seems adults, reproduce, and
like only yesterday, but
then die.
the cicadas are back.
Cicadas are considered
The largest group
a delicacy by many peoof periodical cicadas,
ple around the world and
the 17-year variety, has
are low in fat, high in
already invaded the east- protein and gluten free.
ern U.S.
According to experts,
The insects spend most the best way to eat cicaof their lives as nymphs
das is to collect them in
burrowed underground.
the middle of the night
Their nourishment comes as they emerge from
from sucking sap from
their burrows and before
tree roots. They emerge
their skins harden and

lhart@civitasmedia.com

boil for about a minute.
National Geographic
stated the animal world
beneﬁts from the cicadas’
arrival. Songbirds and
their young appreciate
the plentifully and nutritious insects. Moles
thrive on the fully grown
nymphs in the weeks
prior to the cicadas emergence, and they are also
a treat for snakes and
spiders.
Annoyingly loud and
constant, they won’t be
around for long, but in

the meantime there are
questions as to whether
it is harmful for your dog
or cat to eat one — or
several.
“We have had several
calls asking us if cicadas
are toxic to animals,”
said Meigs County Dog
Warden Colleen MurphySmith, prompting Assistant Dog Warden Dee
Cummings to post some
information on their website.
See CICADAS | 3

‘Charlie’s Angels’ golf event starts Saturday
By Mindy Kearns
Special to Ohio Valley Publishing

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Faith &amp; Family: 4
Weather: 5

See WINGS | 3

MASON — Golfers will take
to the greens Saturday when
the annual Charlie’s Angels
Golf Beneﬁt commences at the
Riverside Golf Course in Mason.
The beneﬁt is held in memory of
Charlie Lilly. In 2015, it was also
named in memory of Dixie Lilly,
Charlie’s mom, who was a vital
part of the Charlie’s Angels Relay
for Life team and the golf outing.
This year for the ﬁrst time, the
golf contest will also be held in
honor of Team Holdyn Keefer.
Fifty percent of the proceeds will
go to the family of Holdyn in his
ﬁght against leukemia. Holdyn is
the ﬁve-year-old son of Travis and
Sarah Keefer of Point Pleasant.

WORTHY CAUSES
Over the past eight years, the
event has raised more than
$140,000 for the American
Cancer Society, as well as the
Angela “Charlie” Lilly Memorial
Scholarship Foundation Fund.

Over the past eight years, the
event has raised over $140,000 for
the American Cancer Society, as
well as the Angela “Charlie” Lilly
Memorial Scholarship Foundation
Fund. Each year a scholarship is
provided through the fund to one
Mason County senior. The cancer
society and the foundation will
each receive 25 percent of the golf
beneﬁt proceeds this year.
There will be two tee off times at

the beneﬁt. Registration will begin
at 6:45 a.m. for the 7:30 a.m. tee
off, and at 1:15 p.m. for the 2 p.m.
tee off. The four-person scramble
will have a shotgun start, and a
minimum handicap of 40 per team.
Several businesses sponsored
teams for the event, as well as
purchasing hole sponsorships and
signs on tee boxes. In addition,
sponsors also provided door prizes,
consisting of a dozen golf balls.
For more information on the
beneﬁt, contact Ashley Cossin at
304-812-7190; Jenny Shirley, 304674-5355; Shaya Jarrell, 304-5936508; Rob Jarrell, 304-633-4018;
R.F. Stein, 304-593-5280; or Mike
Barton, 304-675-3736.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing who lives in Mason County.

�LOCAL/STATE/NATION

2 Friday, June 3, 2016

Zoo to re-open gorilla exhibit

OBITUARY
CLARA SAYRE
MERRITT ISLAND,
Fla. — Clara Sayre, 95,
of Merritt Island, passed
away Sunday, May 29,
2016. She was born May
6, 1921, in Pomeroy,
to the late William and
Clara Eichinger. She was
a member of the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by her
sons Donald and Sandra Sayre, and William
“Bill” Sayre; grandchildren Traci Sayre, Terry
Sayre, Tammi Stover,
Jeff Sayre, Jessica Sayre
and Jaclyn Ricci; nine
great-grandchildren;
two great-great-grandchildren; and several

By Dan Sewell

into the parents of the boy, who
fell some 15 feet Saturday into
a shallow moat after apparently
CINCINNATI — The Cincinclimbing over the barrier. A spenati Zoo said Thursday it will re- cial response team shot and killed
open its gorilla exhibit next week a gorilla, 17-year-old Harambe,
with a higher, reinforced barrier
after concluding the boy’s life was
after a 3-year-old boy got into
at stake.
the enclosure, leading to the fatal
Friday is “the earliest” Hamilshooting of a male gorilla.
ton County Prosecutor Joe Deters
Zoo spokeswoman Michelle
will make a decision on charges,
Curley said the outer barrier will
spokesman Trifﬁn Callos said.
now be 42 inches high — a half
Legal experts have told The Assofoot taller than before — with
ciated Press that a prosecution in
solid wood beams on top and at
the bottom, plus knotted rope net- the case seems unlikely.
A Cincinnati police report
ting at the bottom.
identiﬁes
the boy’s mother as
The zoo said there had been no
Michelle
Gregg,
32, who works at
earlier breaches in Gorilla World’s
a
preschool
near
Cincinnati. The
38-year history and that the previchild’s
father
isn’t
named in the
ous barrier had passed multiple
report,
and
it’s
not
clear whether
inspections by the Association
he
was
at
the
zoo
Saturday.
of Zoos and Aquariums, which
The boy’s family has said he is
accredits zoos.
doing well at home after being
“Our exhibit goes above and
treated at a hospital Saturday evebeyond standard safety requirening. Police said he had scrapes
ments, but in light of what hapon his head and knee.
pened, we have modiﬁed the
“The child was alert and talkouter public barrier to make entry
ing,”
the police report stated.
even more difﬁcult,” zoo director
A
spokeswoman
said the family
Thane Maynard said in a staterequests privacy and has no comment.
Meanwhile, a prosecutor was
ment on the investigation.
reviewing the police investigation
University of Dayton law

Associated Press

nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in
death by her parents; husband Charles E. “Chock”
Sayre; a son, Charles
“Fritz” Sayre; and nine
brothers and sisters.
Funeral services will
be 2 p.m. Sunday, June
5, 2016, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor
Jim Corbitt ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in the
Rock Springs Cemetery.
Visitation for friends and
family will be 6-8 p.m.
Saturday, June 4, 2016, at
the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

DEATH NOTICES
CASTO
BIDWELL, Ohio — Carroll C. Casto, 90, of
Bidwell, died Thursday, June 2, 2016. Funeral services
will be 2 p.m. Sunday, June 5, 2016, at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Gallipolis, Ohio. Burial will follow in
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire, Ohio. Visitation at the
funeral home is one hour prior to service Sunday.

By Catherine Lucey

ed on her likely presidential election opponent,
counting down reasons
SAN DIEGO — In
he is not qualiﬁed —
a full-throated general
from his aggressive
election attack, Hillary
Twitter attacks to his
Clinton lambasted Don- emotional outbursts.
ald Trump’s foreign pol“He is not just unpreicy vision Thursday as
pared; he is temperaone of war, international mentally unﬁt,” she told
turmoil and economic
several hundred people
crisis. She contrasted
gathered in a ballroom.
that with what she por“We cannot let him roll
trayed as her optimistic, the dice with America.”
inclusive and diplomatic
She predicted dire
view of the world, born
consequences if he is
from her long experience elected, saying a Trump
in public life.
presidency could lead
There was noththe U.S. into war abroad,
ing diplomatic in her
spark nuclear conﬂicts
remarks, a clear indicaand ignite economic
tion of how she’ll take
catastrophe at home.
Trump on. Electing him,
“There’s no risk of
she said, would be “a his- people losing their
lives if you blow up a
toric mistake.”
golf course deal, but it
During a speech in
doesn’t work like that in
San Diego, the former
secretary of state unload- world affairs,” Clinton
Associated Press

MCCOY
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Lonnie Allen McCoy, 59,
of Gallipolis, died Wednesday, June 1, 2016. Services
will be 1 p.m. Saturday, June 4, 2016, at Willis Funeral
Home , Gallipolis. Burial will follow in Rife Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral home between 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m. prior to the service Saturday.
MCQUAID
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Hunter Chance McQuaid,
son of Cody Massingo and Tieanna McQuaid of Gallipolis, was stillborn on Thursday, June 2, 2016, at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, June 4, 2016, at
Providence Cemetery. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.

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professor Lori Shaw said child
endangering cases are complicated and fact-speciﬁc. She said Ohio
law requires that the defendant
be found “reckless” and to have
exposed a child to “substantial
risk,” or a strong possibility of
harm.
Police released 911 tapes on
Wednesday highlighting the confusion and panic in the moments
when the boy plunged into the
gorilla exhibit.
“He’s dragging my son! I can’t
watch this!” a woman says in
the 911 call on Saturday. As she
pleads for help, she shouts at her
son repeatedly: “Be calm!”
A record of police calls shows
nine minutes passed between the
ﬁrst emergency call about the
boy falling into the enclosure and
when the child was safe.
The police report states that
witnesses said the gorilla initially
appeared to be protecting the
child, but after onlookers began
screaming, he became “agitated
and scared” and began dragging
the child.
The boy’s family has expressed
gratitude to the zoo for protecting
his life.

Trump as president would endanger USA

FOX
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. — Juanita E. Fox, 88, of
Henderonville, died June 1, 2016. A graveside service
will be Sunday, June 5, 2016, at the Sheppard Family
Cemetery. There will be no visitation. Deal Funeral
Home is serving the family.

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said. “The stakes in global statecraft are inﬁnitely
higher and more complex than in the world of
luxury hotels.
She mocked Trump’s
Twitter blasts and predicted he was preparing
more as she spoke. As
if on cue, he tweeted
immediately after she
ﬁnished: “Bad performance by Crooked
Hillary Clinton! Reading poorly from the
telepromter! She doesn’t
even look presidential!”
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on Trump also was widely carried on television,
a change for the leading
Democratic candidate
who’s frequently struggled to break through
coverage of Trump.
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the presumptive Republican nominee and trying
to quell concerns within
her own party that she
doesn’t have a plan of
attack for the general
election. Clinton’s campaign wants to show she
is ready to take the ﬁght
to Trump. Supporters
have spent the past week
assailing him on housing
and veterans’ issues.
In Thursday’s speech,
she sought to prove that
she is ready to rumble
with the famously
combative Trump. She
offered a number of
aggressive new attack
lines, at times baiting Trump to respond
by calling him “thin
skinned.”
She hit Trump for his
reality television past,
for his snarky Twitter

feed, for his hotelier
experience.
She ran down a list of
people he has insulted,
including the pope.
And she assailed
Trump over many past
statements, criticizing
him for seeking to ban
Muslims from entering
the country, for talking
about leaving NATO
and for suggesting Japan
could one day acquire
nuclear weapons.
“He has the gall to
say prisoners of war
like John McCain aren’t
heroes,” Clinton said.
“He says he has foreign policy experience
because he ran the Miss
Universe pageant.”
Emphasizing her
experience as ﬁrst lady,
senator and secretary of
state, Clinton said she
would provide the steady
diplomacy the country
needs. She said that
unlike Trump, she knew
how to negotiate complex deals, understood
world affairs and recognized what it means to
deploy American troops.
Clinton and Trump
offer starkly different
visions of U.S. foreign
policy. Clinton’s detailoriented proposals
reﬂect the traditional
approach of both major
parties. Despite differences on some issues,
such as the Iraq war and
Iran, Democratic and
Republican presidents
have been generally consistent on policies affecting China, Russia, North
Korea, nuclear proliferation, trade, alliances and
many other issues.

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�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

DOG OF THE WEEK
Contributed Article

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Canine
Rescue and Adoption
Center, is located at 33133
Hiland Road in Pomeroy. The adoption fee is
$90 for adult dogs and
includes ﬁrst shot, rabies
vaccine, spay/neuter and
dog license. The fee for
puppy adoptions is $100
and includes the spay/
neuter fee; a contact is
required for puppies not
old enough to undergo the
procedure at the time of
adoption. When the puppy
is old enough, they can be
taken to the shelter’s local
vet. First shot, rabies and
dog license are included in
the adoption fee. There is
a $10 fee per dog to cover
the cost of initial vaccine
and wormer.

Friday, June 3, 2016 3

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
The Meigs County
Health Department, 112
E. Memorial Dr. in Pomeroy, is hosting a Rabies
Vaccination Clinic on
Saturday, June 11, from 9
a.m. to 12 p.m. for dogs
and cats. Each rabies
vaccination will cost
$5.00. For more information contact the Health
Department at 740-9926626 or visit www.meigshealth.com.
Dog Warden is Colleen
MurphySmith, and Assistant Dee Cummins can
be contacted at 740-9923779. Leave a message if
no one answers, they are
often away on rescue missions. You can also visit
their Facebook page at
Meigs County Dog Shelter and leave a message
there.

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, June 3
POMEROY — The regular meeting of Meigs
County Public Employee Retirement Inc. Chapter
74 will be 1 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center, 156 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. All Meigs County Public Employee retirees are urged to attend.
SYRACUSE — Syracuse community-wide yard
sale today through Saturday from 9 a.m to 5 p.m.
Saturday, June 4
SUTTON TOWNSHIP — The Trustees of
Sutton Township will hold their regular monthly
meeting at 1 p.m. at the Racine Municipal Building, 405 Main St., Racine.
Frank is a 3-year-old Brendal/Boxer mix. Someone left this dog in
the drop kennel. He loves to interact and turns into a puppy when
he plays “fetch.” With this one, looks can be deceiving; sometimes
he looks a bit fierce, but he really is just a softy who looks tough.

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

2 accused of chaining girl in
basement plead not guilty
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Two Ohio men accused
of chaining a teenage girl in a basement as punishment have pleaded not guilty to kidnapping and child
endangering.
Fifty-three-year-old Timothy Ciboro entered his
plea Thursday, a day after his 27-year-old son, Esten
Ciboro, also pleaded not guilty.
Timothy Ciboro has said the girl, a relative, wasn’t
mistreated. His attorney said he hopes that the public
will give Ciboro the presumption of innocence.
A message was left for Esten Ciboro’s attorney.
The men were arrested last month after the teen
ran from their Toledo home and told police she used a
spare key to unlock herself.
The girl and two other children from the home are
now in foster care.

Michigan through Chicago-area waterways.
Grass carp can harm ﬁsh and waterfowl habitat by
gobbling up aquatic plants. But unlike bighead and
silver carp, they don’t compete with native ﬁsh or
threaten to disrupt food chains.

Christian rock star Trey
Pearson comes out as gay

Scientists: Invasive grass carp
spawn in Lake Erie tributary

Lawsuit blames death on Dole
plant salad, listeria outbreak

Monday, June 6
LETART TOWNSHIP — The regular meeting
of the Letart Township Trustees will be 5 p.m. at
the Letart Township Building.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP — The Lebanon Township Trustees will have a special meeting at 8 a.m.
at the Township garage to open sealed bids and
discuss other township business.
Tuesday, June 7
OLIVE TOWNSHIP — Olive Township Trustees will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the township building
on Joppa Road.
Friday, June 10
POMEROY — Meigs County Chamber of Commerce annual golf scramble at the Meigs County
Golf Course in Pomeroy. Registration is from
5:30-6:15 p.m., tee off at 6:30 p.m. Reservations
required. For more information contact Whitney
Thoene at 740-992-5005.
O

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Christian rock star
Trey Pearson has come out as gay in a magazine interview.
Pearson is the lead singer of Everyday Sunday. In a
letter published online by Ohio-based (614) Magazine
, Pearson writes that he has come to be able to admit
to himself and his family that he’s gay even though he
“never wanted to be.”
Commenting on the letter to the magazine, Pearson
calls his announcement “freeing,” but adds that he
has lost some of the closest people in his life. He says
some “church people” act like the worst people he has
ever experienced. He says he’s starting over in many
ways, “but it’s also starting out lonely.”
Pearson also praises his wife for her support. The
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Scientists say there’s proof couple has two children together.
that one type of invasive Asian carp is spawning in a
Great Lakes tributary.
A graduate student at the University of Toledo in
Ohio discovered grass carp eggs last summer in the
Sandusky River, which ﬂows into Lake Erie.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) — A new wrongful
Holly Embke’s ﬁndings have been published in the
death lawsuit alleges a central Ohio woman died
Journal of Great Lakes Research.
because she ate salad processed at a Dole plant linked
The U.S. Geological Survey previously reported
to a listeria outbreak.
that four young grass carp taken from the river had
The Springﬁeld News-Sun reports the suit says a
resulted from natural reproduction.
Grass carp are not as big an environmental threat as 79-year-old Franklin County woman died in February
Asian bighead and silver carp, which could reach Lake after eating salad from Dole’s Springﬁeld plant.

Sunday, June 5
RACINE —Racine American Legion Post 609
will hold their ﬁnal dinner before their summer
break beginning at 11 a.m. at the Legion Hall.
There is no charge for the appreciation dinner,
but donations are accepted. The menu is a “Surprise.”
RACINE — The George Holter, Jr. family
reunion will be held at 1 p.m. at the home of
Karen Holter Werry, Court St. Rd., Morning
Star area, Racine. BBQ chicken and ham will be
provided. All family and friends are invited. For
more information call 740-949-1056.
RACINE — All family members and friends are
invited to attend the annual Martin and Emma
Sayre family reunion at Star Mill Park, Racine,
with a potluck dinner starting at 1 p.m.

Spaghetti dinner fundraiser is Saturday
Staff Report

POMEROY — The Pomeroy
Firemen’s Association will be having a spaghetti dinner fundraiser
on Saturday from noon to 4 p.m.
The dinner will be hosted by the

Pomeroy Eagle’s Club 2171, located at
224 E. Main St. in Pomeroy. Dinners
will consist of spaghetti, salad and
bread. Dine in and carryout is available with a delivery option to locations purchasing ﬁve or more dinners.

Pre sale tickets are available but
are not necessary. Everyone is welcome on the day of the dinner.
For more information or to order
dinners, contact Derek Miller at
740-416-1830.

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at 10 a.m. Vendors open
at 11 a.m., and from noon
to 3 p.m., Rockin Reggie
will be there during Kids’
Games that include cookie stacking, pickle spittin’,
and BBQ Hog Callin’.
From 6-8 p.m., Amix will
entertain audiences with
a break before Blitzkrieg
takes the stage.
Two days of free entertainment on the Riverfront Amphitheatre, shopping, along with “Ohio’s
Best Ribs” and “Ohio’s
Best Wings” make for a
weekend jump-start to
Pomeroy’s 2016 summer
season.

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plus taxes &amp; fees

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According to festival promoters, since not everyone likes ribs, there is plenty of other food vendors Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992available, from roast beef to Italian sausage.
2155, Ext. 2551.

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Cicadas
From Page 1

The answer is, cicadas are not
toxic, but they have a hard shell
that gets “crunched” into pieces
when a dog or cat puts one in their
mouth. When swallowed, the shell

material is just churning around
inside their stomach lining and it’s
likely to cause some upset stomach.
Eating too many may cause difﬁculty in digesting the cicada skins
and there have been reported cases
of dogs’ digestive tracts becoming
blocked by eating too many.
Some signs of overindulgence

are vomiting, diarrhea and lethargy. If your cat or dog presents
these symptoms, you are urged to
contact your veterinarian.
By the middle to the end of June,
the cicadas are gone, and for some
dog and cat owners — and many
humans — it can’t be soon enough.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.

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�FAITH &amp; FAMILY

4 Friday, June 3, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Only the Lord can fill that hole in your heart
I have heard it said that
there is in every human heart
a missing piece. This piece has
a peculiar shape. It’s neither a
square nor a circle. It’s not even
a triangle. It cannot be described
as a star or a diamond shape and
it most certainly isn’t an uneven
parallelogram. Its shape deﬁes
description.
When that piece ﬁnds its
home in the center of your being,
it brings to you a satisfaction
and fulﬁllment with which nothing else can compete. But when
that spot in your heart for which
that missing piece is designed
remains unﬁlled, it presents the
dilemma of an aching vacuum, a
bottomless yearning that leaves
you heartsick, thirsting and hungering for something more.
But it is a more mundane
thirst that drives a certain village woman to a well in the dry
and dusty heat of the middle of
the day. When she arrives at the
lonely well, she ﬁnds only one
other person there … waiting for
her here in a divinely appointed
encounter is the only One Who
can ﬁll an insatiable longing hidden deeply within her life.
For years she has been looking
to men to ﬁt the empty and aching void in her heart. But they

can’t do it. The hole in
that heavy jar all the way
her life isn’t man-shaped.
to the well and then all the
From one relationship to
way back home. No longer
another she’s run, never
would she have to endure
ﬁnding happiness…
the venom of the cold and
never ﬁnding completebaleful stares of the other
ness. But today is differwomen in the village or
ent. Today she’s met the
A Hunger pretend to not notice the
Savior.
For More mocking sideways leers of
“There came a woman
the men she passes in the
Thom
of Samaria to draw
street.
Mollohan
water. Jesus said to
“…Sir, give me this
her, ‘Give me a drink.’
water so that I won’t get
…. Jesus answered her, ‘If you
thirsty and have to keep coming
knew the gift of God, and Who
here to draw water” (John 4:15
it is that is saying to you, “Give
ESV).
me a drink,” you would have
The tender Savior looks upon
asked Him, and He would have
her and sees how she has lived.
given you living water…. Who
He discerns the choices she’s
drinks of this (well) water will be made and knows the emptiness
thirsty again, but whoever drinks that still leaves her hurting. In
of the water that I will give him
tenderness, He lovingly moves
will never be thirsty forever. The to lay bare all the fruitlessness of
water that I will give him will
her past pursuits so that her eyebecome in him a spring of water sight might be cleared enough to
welling up to eternal life’” (John let her see real hope before her.
4:7,10,13-14 ESV).
“Jesus said to her, ‘Go, call
Of course, she really doesn’t
your husband, and come here.’
have any idea what in the world The woman answered Him, ‘I
He’s talking about. “Ask You for have no husband.’ Jesus said
a drink?” she must think. “I’m
to her, ‘You are right in saying,
the one with the water jar! But
“I have no husband”; for you
hey! If You COULD give me that have had ﬁve husbands, and the
water, I wouldn’t have to come
one you now have is not your
back to the well anymore.” No
husband. What you have said is
longer would she have to carry
true’” (John 4:16-18 ESV).

Imagine her bewilderment
when it ﬁnally begins to hit
home that something divine is
happening. The dawn of God’s
mercy begins to pierce the night
of her confusion and despair and
the music of His grace breaks
through the deafness of her
mundane sensibilities. “Oh, I get
it. You’re a prophet, right?” she
seems to say in verse 19. And
while she doesn’t quite perceive
the enormity of the moment in
that God Himself is speaking
with her, she knows something
unusual is going on. “The
woman said to Him, ‘I know that
Messiah is coming (He Who is
called Christ). When He comes,
He will tell us all things.’ Jesus
said to her, ‘I who speak to you
am he’” (John 4:25-26 ESV).
Suddenly the lights come on in
the woman’s heart. Suddenly she
knows that she has found what
she’s been missing her entire life.
Not acceptance from a man. Not
physical pleasure. Not ﬁnancial
security. The hole in her life is
God-shaped therefore only one
thing may ﬁll it. All the things
in her past to which she’s looked
for meaning and purpose are
illuminated in the revealing light
of truth. All those seem plastic
and temporary now. All seem

Jesus is the real Transformer
My grandsons have lots of
Saul answered, “Who are
Transformer toys. They can
you, Lord?”
change them from one thing
Jesus replied, “I am Jesus
into a crime ﬁghter with the
whom you are persecuting.
right turns and twists.
I have appeared to appoint
Today, we are talking
you as my servant and to be
about another kind of
a witness for Me.”
transformer — one that can God’s Kids
After that meeting with
transform you whole life
Korner
Jesus, Saul’s life was transAnn Moody formed. In fact, he even got a
forever. Our Bible lesson
today is from the book of
new name. From that day on, he
Galatians, Chapter 1, Verses
became known as Paul, and instead of
11-24.
trying to destroy the Church, he went
One day, a Pharisee named Saul from town to town preaching and teachwas traveling to the city of Damas- ing in the name of Jesus.
cus to hunt for Christians, so that
The people were amazed at the
he could have them thrown into
change that took place in Paul’s life.
prison. On the way to Damascus,
Wherever he went, people said of
a bright light appeared and Saul
him, “The man who once persecuted
heard the voice of Jesus saying,
us is now preaching the faith he once
“Saul, Saul, why are you persecuttried to destroy.” In fact, Paul became
ing me?”
one of the most famous apostles of all

time. He may have written as many
as 14 out of the 27 books of the New
Testament in the Bible. Jesus changed
his whole life that day.
That is what the transforming
power of Jesus can do. Wouldn’t
you like to let Jesus change your
life? He can do that for you just like
He did for Paul. All you must do
is accept Him as your Savior and
ask Him to forgive you when you
do wrong. He will help you to be a
good and kind person who shows
His love to those around you.
Let’s say a prayer. Father, thank
You for being the real transformer of
lives. You changed Paul completely,
and we know you can do that for us
too. Please come into our lives and
transform us into Your children. In
Jesus’ name. Amen.
Ann Moody is pastor of Wilkesville First
Presbyterian Church.

God doesn’t have double standards
Maya Dillard Smith,
interim director of the
Georgia chapter of the
ACLU, resigned recently
over that group’s stance
on who could use the
women’s bathroom.
She is the mother of
young daughters who
have experienced ﬁrsthand the trauma of men
barging into the girl’s
bathrooms. Mrs. Smith
thought the position to
be a bridge too far. She
was ﬁne promoting the
ACLU’s many progressive battles until they
ﬁnally picked a battle that
stepped on her toes.
One recalls stories of
a preacher of the gospel
who preached for many
years on the biblical
stance on marriage and
divorce, upholding the
words of Jesus in Matthew 19 that it was a sin
to divorce and remarry,
except in cases of adultery. Then his own child
divorced and remarried
and then, suddenly, his
views on the subject
became more “modern.”
He was ﬁne supporting the position until it
stepped on his familial
toes. And then he wasn’t.
There’s an old saying,
what’s good for the goose
is good for the gander.
That is, what’s good for

one person is
dards to other
people that one
good for another.
is unable to, or
The way you want
unwilling to, live
others treated
up to. If you’re
is a fair way to
going to make it a
treat you and you
habit of stepping
should not seek to
Search the on other people’s
apply a standard
to others that you
Scripture toes, make sure
you are willing to
don’t want to live
Jonathan
step on your own.
up to yourself.
McAnulty
If you are going to
Jesus said
encourage others
something very
to
have
high standards,
similar. “Judge not, that
be
willing
to have them
you be not judged. For
yourself.
with what judgment you
Jesus would, in a
judge, you will be judged;
and with the measure you similar vein, criticize the
scribes and the Pharisees
use, it will be measured
back to you. And why do for not being willing to
live according to the
you look at the speck in
your brother’s eye, but do standards they expected
not consider the plank in of others. He would say,
your own eye?” (Matthew “The scribes and the
Pharisees sit in Moses’
7:1-3; NKJV)
seat. Therefore, whatever
This is not, as some
they tell you to observe,
presuppose, a blanket
that observe and do, but
condemnation of all
do not do according to
judgment at all times.
their works; for they say,
Elsewhere Jesus also said,
and do not do. For they
“judge with a righteous
bind heavy burdens, hard
judgment,” (John 7:24)
to bear, and lay them
and in the same context
on men’s shoulders; but
as Matthew 7:1, Jesus
they themselves will not
tells His followers not to
move them with one of
cast their pearls before
their ﬁngers.” (Matthew
swine, a deﬁnite com23:2-4; NKJV) It was
mand requiring a judgbecause of such behavior
ment of character (cf.
that Jesus judged them,
Matthew 7:6)
and denounced them, for
What Jesus was meanbeing hypocrites
ing was that one should
We might notice that
not seek to apply stanJesus did not expect His
followers to live down
to their lowest expectations of others. Quite the
contrary. Note that Jesus
did not tell His disciples
to learn to be content
with their planks and
specks, He expected them
to progress to a place

Visit a church or
synagogue of your
choice this Sunday!

where they would be able
to remove specks from
eyes. Likewise, He did not
criticize the Pharisees and
the Scribes for what they
were teaching; He told the
people to make sure and
obey Moses’ Law when it
was taught. Rather, Jesus
wanted people to be willing to apply standards to
themselves before applying them to others.
God does not have
double standards. What
is good for the goose
is good for the gander.
He applies the same
standards of high moral
conduct to all men, and
expects men to do the
same. (cf. Acts 10:34-35,
17:30) There is not one
standard for preachers
and another for nonpreachers. There is not
one standard for believers
and another for nonbelievers. There is not
one standard for people
related to us, and another
standard for those who
aren’t. God judges all men
equally.
Our duty as the Creation is to learn the standards of God and then
apply them to ourselves,
and to others, regardless
of how they step on our
toes. Or maybe, especially when they step on our
own toes.
If you would like to
learn what standards God
expects of us, the church
of Christ invites you to
come study and worship
with us, at 234 Chapel
Drive, Gallipolis.
Jonathan McAnulty is minister of
Chapel Hill Church of Christ.

artiﬁcial or at least superﬁcial.
Here on a day that is otherwise
like any other, she ﬁnds God
reaching out to her, ready to ﬁll
the void.
And still ready today to ﬁll
the empty space in our hearts,
He reaches out to you and me
with the one, all-important missing piece: His love. As we turn
to Him in faith and confess our
sin and repent of going our own
way, we can know that as He
met with tenderness the guilty
yet hurting woman at the well in
John chapter 4, He also will meet
us at whatever place we ﬁnd ourselves. He is ready to do a work
of grace in your heart today.
He is ready to lay bare plastic
dreams and synthetic ambitions,
but only so that He can give to
you living water that will spring
up into a fountain of eternal life!
“The LORD will guide you
continually and satisfy your
desire in scorched places and
make your bones strong; and you
shall be like a watered garden,
like a spring of water, whose
waters do not fail” (Isaiah 58:11
ESV).
Pastor Thom Mollohan leads Pathway
Community Church and may be reached
for comments or questions by email at
pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com.

Jesus always
cheers the trustful
At 7:30, she took him from my arms. He laid his chin
on her shoulder, and looked back at me. His eyes were
misty, and his brow was furrowed. I felt my own heart
ripping and my nostrils ﬂaring as I choked down the
emotion.
It was a long hallway, but I watched
till the lady in the blue uniform turned
into the room where our son Jeshua was
to have surgery.
He was ﬁve years old at the time.
And, it was not a serious surgery at all.
But, you know how it makes you feel
when your kids have health problems
Ron
that require more than just a teaspoon of
Branch
cough medicine.
Pastor
Jeshua was very nervous about the
surgery, too. I comforted him with
encouraging words. I said, “Son, I know you are afraid,
and that is all right. If you want to cry, that is all right,
too. But, this is a time I want you to be brave. Being
brave means that sometimes you are scared, too, when
you have to do things. I know you will be brave.” I told
him about needing to be brave several times.
Later in the day, as he gradually revived from the
anesthetics, he looked up at me, and his ﬁrst words
were, “I was brave, wasn’t I, Daddy?” I nearly choked all
over my words, “Yes, Son, you were very brave. You did
good. I am proud of you.”
In that moment, I understood how important it had
been for me to tell my son to be brave. Those were words
he held on to as he dealt with his ﬁrst crisis in life.
But, Jeshua’s question really opened my eyes to
something that is repeated often in God’s Word. Has it
ever occurred to you how often God encourages us to
be brave?
Check out those passages that repeatedly encourage
us to be strong and of good courage. Take for example
those the cheer that Jesus gives those who are trustful
of Him. Jesus said, “Be of good cheer; it is I; be not
afraid.”
Do you remember as a kid how encouraging it was to
have a person of authority present with us in the dark?
My Grandpaw Lineberry used to tease me when I spent
the night at their house. “The Boogeyman stays around
this house at night, Ronnie. Why don’t you go out and
chase him away!” he would say.
I never would go out by myself. I was too afraid.
But, I would go if Grandpaw went with me. He
would take me by the hand, and we would walk
together into the backyard and around the house
to chase the ole Boogeyman away. I would do it
because I had a person of authority with me.
The reason that Christians need not be intimidated by the adversities of life is because we have
The Person of Authority, Jesus Christ, with us. Jesus
said, “Be of good cheer: I have overcome the world.”
We well know that there are many problems in life.
But, Jesus experienced what we do, and overcame
them all. We well know that there are evils and temptations everywhere. But, Jesus was confronted with
the same as we are, and overcame them all.
Jesus never let someone else ruin His life. He
never let Satan back Him down. He was never
deterred from His redemptive goals. People opposed
Him. Satan opposed Him. The forces of Hell
opposed Him. But, He overcame them all! And, bless
God, through Jesus Christ and because of Jesus
Christ, we can overcome them all, too.
So often we run from difﬁculties. We crumble
in the times of adversity. We feel like crawling in
a hole to hide. But, God tells us to be brave, to be
courageous, for Christian courage reﬂects trust and
dependency on God. According to Apostle Paul, we
are always victorious when we trust God.
Some Heavenly day we may ask, “I was brave,
wasn’t I, Father?” And, the Father will answer, “Yes,
indeed, you were very brave. You did good. I am
proud of you.”
It makes me smile to think about it.
The Rev. Ron Branch is pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Mason, W.Va.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

TODAY IN HISTORY...

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

11 a.m.-noon. For more information about
the local programs, contact Chrissy Musser, food service director, Meigs Local
School District at 740-992-6171.

Card Showers

Summer Feeding and
Reading program
POMEROY —Children ages 3-18 are
invited to Mulberry Community Center
in Pomeroy to pick up a free peanut butter and jelly sack lunch (other options
available for those with peanut allergies) or stay and enjoy a story every
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,
June 7 through Aug. 11 from noon to 1
p.m.

ODOT public meeting
SYRACUSE — The Ohio Department
of Transportation (ODOT) District 10 will
host a public meeting in partnership with
the Village of Syracuse to update residents
on Phase 2 of the proposed walkway. Village ofﬁcials along with the design consultant will be available to answer questions
regarding the walkway on Tuesday, June
14 from 6 to 7:00 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center 2244 Seventh Street,
Syracuse. The environmental review, consultation, and other actions required by
applicable Federal environmental laws for
this project are being, or have been, carried-out by ODOT pursuant to 23 U.S.C.
327 and a Memorandum of Understanding
dated December 11, 2015, and executed
by FHWA and ODOT. For more information contact David Rose, Communications
Manager, at 614- 387-0435 or email david.
rose@dot.state.oh.us.

Association
to host workshop
POMEROY — The Alzheimer’s Association, West Virginia Chapter is offering
The Basics: Memory Loss, Dementia, &amp;
Alzheimer’s Disease, a free community
workshop for caregivers and others interested in information regarding Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. The one-hour
workshop will be at Meigs County Senior
Center, located at 112 E. Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy on Monday, June 6, at 12:15
p.m. The workshop is open to the public
and community members are encouraged
to attend. For more information regarding Alzheimer’s disease, or to connect to
information and support through the free
24/7 Helpline, contact the Alzheimer’s
Association at 800-272-3900.

Children’s Summer
Food Service Program
POMEROY — The Meigs Local School
District is participating in the Summer
Food Service Program. Meals will be
provided to all children without charge
and there will be no discrimination in the
course of the meal service. Meals are the
same for all children regardless of race,
color, national origin, sex, age or disability, and will be provided at the sites
and times as follows: Tuppers Plains Ball
Fields, 49999 Arpaugh Rd. Reedsville,
Mondays and Thursdays 10:45 – 11:30
a.m.; Star Mill Park, Racine, Mondays
and Thursdays 12:15-1 p.m.; Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant St. Middleport,
Tuesdays, 10:30-11 a.m.; Emi’s Place
Park, 326 E Main St. Pomeroy, Tuesdays
12:15-1 p.m.; Meigs Elementary, 36871
SR 124, Middleport, every other Wednesday beginning June 15, 11 a.m.-noon.
Mulberry Community Center, restricted
program-must be enrolled, Mondays and
Wednesdays noon-2 p.m. and Thursdays

TODAY
8 AM

Immunization clinic

2 PM

68°

78°

76°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

81°
67°
79°
58°
95° in 1951
41° in 1966

Precipitation

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.15
0.15
0.31
19.79
18.50

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:04 a.m.
8:49 p.m.
5:07 a.m.
7:12 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jun 4

First

Full

Last

Jun 12 Jun 20 Jun 27

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

Today
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.

Major
10:41a
11:36a
12:06a
1:07a
2:10a
3:12a
4:11a

Minor
4:26a
5:21a
6:20a
7:21a
8:24a
9:26a
10:24a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Major
11:10p
---1:04p
1:36p
2:38p
3:39p
4:36p

Minor
4:55p
5:51p
6:50p
7:51p
8:52p
9:52p
10:49p

WEATHER HISTORY
Charlotte, N.C., was swamped by
3.78 inches of rain on June 3, 1909
-- the greatest amount recorded
there in one day for decades. The
storm represented almost a month’s
worth of rain for Charlotte.

Variable clouds, a
t-storm in the p.m.

Some sun with a
thunderstorm in spots

Pleasant with some
sun

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

Moderate

High

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.62 -0.37
Marietta
34 16.30 +0.73
Parkersburg
36 20.91 -0.12
Belleville
35 12.29 -0.11
Racine
41 13.38 +0.20
Point Pleasant
40 24.92 +0.07
Gallipolis
50 13.17 +0.29
Huntington
50 24.95 -0.19
Ashland
52 33.75 -0.09
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.25 -0.05
Portsmouth
50 16.20 -0.20
Maysville
50 33.60 +0.40
Meldahl Dam
51 14.90 -0.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Ashland
82/65
Grayson
82/64

77°
54°

Pleasant with clouds
and sun

83°
63°
Brilliant sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES
Murray City
80/61
Belpre
81/63

St. Marys
82/62

Parkersburg
81/63

Coolville
81/63

Elizabeth
82/63

Spencer
80/64

Buffalo
82/65

Ironton
83/64

THURSDAY

77°
55°

Partly sunny and
beautiful

Wilkesville
81/63
POMEROY
Jackson
82/64
82/62
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/65
82/64
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
81/63
GALLIPOLIS
83/65
82/65
81/65

South Shore Greenup
83/63
81/64

56
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
82/64

WEDNESDAY

Marietta
81/61

Athens
81/63

McArthur
80/61

Lucasville
82/64
Very High

Logan
80/62

Adelphi
81/62
Chillicothe
82/63

Eddie Holman is 70.
Actor Tristan Rogers
is 70. Musician Too
Slim (Riders in the
Sky) is 68. Rock musician Richard Moore is
67. Singer Suzi Quatro
is 66. Singer Deneice
Williams is 65. Singer
Dan Hill is 62. Actress
Suzie Plakson is 58.
Actor Scott Valentine
is 58. Rock musician
Kerry King (Slayer) is
52. Actor James Purefoy is 52. Rock singermusician Mike Gordon
is 51. TV host Anderson
Cooper is 49. Country
singer Jamie O’Neal
is 48. Writer-director
Tate Taylor (Film: “The
Help”) is 37. Singers
Gabriel and Ariel Hernandez (No Mercy) are
45. Actor Vik Sahay is
45. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Lyfe Jennings
is 43. Actress Arianne
Zucker is 42. Actress
Nikki M. James is 35.
Tennis player Rafael
Nadal is 30. Actor Josh
Segarra is 30. Actresssinger Lalaine is 29.
Actor Sean Berdy is 23.

BBT (NYSE) - 36.93
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 21.8
Pepsico (NYSE) - 102
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.22
Rockwell (NYSE) - 117.47
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 11.41
Royal Dutch Shell - 48.85
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 13.44
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 70.95
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 10.42
WesBanco (NYSE) - 32.47
Worthington (NYSE) - 38.19
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
June 2, 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.

TUESDAY

77°
59°

Very High

Primary: walnut, grass, other
Mold: 3924

MONDAY

76°
59°

Waverly
82/63

Pollen: 127

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

SUNDAY

80°
66°

3

Primary: ascospores
Sat.
6:04 a.m.
8:50 p.m.
5:55 a.m.
8:21 p.m.

SATURDAY

Partly sunny today. Increasing amounts of
clouds tonight. High 83° / Low 65°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AEP (NYSE) - 64.68
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 23.17
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 114.53
Big Lots (NYSE) - 52.35
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 45
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 34.4
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 6.45
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.17
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 49.47
Collins (NYSE) - 88.46
DuPont (NYSE) - 68.1
US Bank (NYSE) - 43.06
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 30.03
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 46.15
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 65.8
Kroger (NYSE) - 36.44
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 71.33
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 83.17
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 21.72

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

reﬂecting Hale Telescope at the Palomar
Mountain Observatory
in California was dedicated.
In 1955, convicted
murderer Barbara Graham, 31, was executed
in the gas chamber
at San Quentin State
Prison in California, as
were Jack Santo and
Emmett Perkins, for the
1953 slaying of Mabel
Monahan.
In 1963, Pope John
XXIII died at age 81; he
was succeeded by Pope
Paul VI.
In 1965, astronaut
Edward H. White
became the ﬁrst American to “walk” in space
during the ﬂight of
Gemini 4.
Today’s Birthdays:
TV producer Chuck
Barris is 87. The president of Cuba, Raul Castro, is 85. Actress Irma
P. Hall is 81. Author
Larry McMurtry is 80.
Rock singer Ian Hunter
(Mott The Hoople) is
77. Actress Penelope
Wilton is 70. Singer

LOCAL STOCKS

POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
Immunization Clinic on Tuesday, June 7,
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children must
be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $10.00 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however,
no one will be denied services because
of an inability to pay an administration
fee for state-funded childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable.
Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia are also
available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a list
of accepted commercial insurances and
Medicaid for adults.

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Today is Friday, June
3, the 155th day of 2016.
There are 211 days left
in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On June 3, 1916,
President Woodrow Wilson signed the National
Defense Act of 1916,
which, among other
things, created the Army
Reserve Ofﬁcers’ Training Corps (ROTC).
On this date:
In 1808, Confederate President Jefferson
Davis was born in Christian County, Kentucky.
In 1888, the poem
“Casey at the Bat” by
Ernest Lawrence Thayer
was ﬁrst published in
the San Francisco Daily
Examiner.
In 1924, author Franz
Kafka, 40, died near
Vienna.
In 1937, Edward,
The Duke of Windsor,
who had abdicated the
British throne, married
Wallis Warﬁeld Simpson
in a private ceremony in
Monts, France.
In 1948, the 200-inch

Milton
83/64
Huntington
81/65

St. Albans
82/65

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
Winnipeg
78/59
90s
70/50
80s
70s
60s
Billings
50s
81/51
Minneapolis
40s
77/60
30s
Chicago
20s
81/60
San Francisco
Denver
10s
80/56
Kansas City
80/52
0s
82/63
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
85/59
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
96/70
Flurries
Houston
Ice
78/67
Chihuahua
Cold Front
90/63
Warm Front
Monterrey
Stationary Front
86/66

Clendenin
79/64
Charleston
82/64

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

Montreal
81/60
Toronto
78/60
Detroit
82/61

New York
72/65
Washington
82/69
BONNIE

Atlanta
91/72

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

Sat.

Hi/Lo/W
92/64/s
60/51/c
91/72/pc
67/65/t
82/66/t
81/51/s
87/60/s
68/60/t
82/64/t
90/70/t
74/46/s
81/60/s
81/65/pc
80/60/s
81/61/pc
76/66/t
80/52/s
85/64/s
82/61/s
83/68/pc
78/67/t
83/65/pc
82/63/pc
108/81/s
77/68/t
85/59/pc
82/68/t
89/79/pc
77/60/t
84/68/t
86/75/pc
72/65/t
80/63/t
93/74/t
78/66/t
113/82/s
82/61/pc
62/54/c
90/70/t
86/68/t
84/67/c
87/62/s
80/56/s
78/59/pc
82/69/t

Hi/Lo/W
89/64/s
62/53/c
87/71/t
75/66/pc
81/68/pc
82/55/s
93/62/s
74/61/pc
81/64/t
91/71/t
71/44/s
81/59/c
75/62/t
81/64/pc
75/62/t
83/66/t
75/51/s
80/58/pc
82/62/c
83/72/pc
83/66/t
75/63/t
81/58/pc
109/81/s
81/65/t
85/58/s
77/66/t
89/79/t
70/57/sh
82/67/t
86/74/t
82/66/pc
85/60/c
91/75/t
84/68/pc
115/84/s
79/64/pc
73/54/pc
91/72/t
86/70/t
80/64/pc
89/63/s
76/55/pc
82/61/s
82/70/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

106° in Needles, CA
25° in Gould, CO

Global
High
116° in Siwa Oasis, Egypt
Low -14° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
89/79

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

60647073

OHIO VALLEY — Donna Halsey Watson Brooks will be celebrating her 86th
birthday on June 10. Cards can be mailed
to 2100 Hill St., Apt. H, Belpre, OH 45714

WEATHER

Friday, June 3, 2016 5

�6 Friday, June 3, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 3, 2016 7

Hometown Spotlight
Hometown roots are paramount to any description of George Wright,
born in 1928 in a house on the corner of Mulberry and Union, George has
lived his life right here in the town that he loves. A 1946 graduate of Pomeroy

George Wright

High School, George has not lived quietly in the shadows but serving his
community selﬂessly. As a young man he had a paper route, delivering the
Columbus Dispatch until a more serious job came along at Evans Grocery
Store summers and weekends. After high school, he worked in his father’s
Sugar Run Service Station and for his Grandfather as an Apprentice Stone
Mason, working on much of the stonework that is so prominent in Pomeroy
today. In the early 50’s, he went to work for Phillip Sporn, later moving to
The John Amos Plant from which he retired in 1990. During his years with the power plant, he was equally busy
raising a family and pursuing a lifelong passion of conservation through reclamation. He and his wife, Nelle,
bought a 110 acre farm on Leading Creek that a portion had been strip mined and over 58 years have planted
50,000 trees and turned an eyesore into a beautiful forest, working with seedlings and testing new varieties of
plants and trees.
A scout leader for over a quarter of a century, George led many of the young men of the area into adulthood
by his example of strong morals, hands-on crafts and exciting adventures such as camping, canoeing and hiking.
On March 15, 1991, he was awarded the prestigious Silver Beaver Award for his many years of dedicated service
to scouting. Serving as a councilman for 12 years, he helped guide the Village of Pomeroy and was always just
a phone call away for his constituents; for years George and Nelle were Mr. and Mrs. Christmas in Pomeroy,
transforming the downtown into a Victorian Holiday scene. A man of faith, George has attended the New
Beginnings United Methodist Church since his childhood, serving as a youth leader and Sunday school teacher.
George’s true love and passion was serving summers at the Methodist Church Camp in Rio Grande. George
has been a long time volunteer with Meigs Local School ﬁrst with the welding program at Meigs High School,
serving as a tutor and as a judge for welding competitions then as as Storyteller, a historian and as a Puppeteer
with the drug prevention program. Even with all this George has had some adventures of his own, traveling solo
to Australia, enjoying bowling leagues, a local motorcycle club, working on his Model A and of course tinkering
in his machine shop. Now at 88, George and Nelle, his wife of 63 years, still enjoy volunteering for the Pomeroy
Merchants Association in the beautiﬁcation and decorating of the Village, and the conservation of their farm.

Across from the Courthouse

8F�4UPDL

114 Court Street

740-992-6677

60660500

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106 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
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502 Elm Street
Racine, OH 45771
740-949-3138

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-3381

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60659320

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 3, 2016 s Page 8

Since downturn,
NASCAR
fighting for fans
RICHMOND, Va.
(AP) — At the zenith of
its popularity a decade
or so ago, many NASCAR tracks could count
on sellout crowds for
every Sprint Cup Series
race. It seemed like the
only real effort they had
to make was simply to
open the gates.
That has changed
dramatically during the
economic downturn,
and put track presidents
and other administrators back in the position
of promoters trying to
ﬁll seats that once sold
themselves.
Martinsville Speedway President Clay
Campbell equated the
present challenge of
attracting fans to NASCAR’s formative years.
“You promoted your
event and did things
to attract crowds and
then it got to the point
where I think a lot of us
were guilty of slacking
off because things were
going really well,” he
said. “Now we’re back
in that day where we do
things to entice people
to come to our events.”
The results have been
great for fans who show
up to ﬁnd free concerts
and other amenities.
But the enthusiasm
hasn’t led to packed
houses. Many tracks
have removed sections
of grandstands, and
they still don’t look
full on race day, and
there has been a drop
in television ratings,
too. Overnight ratings
are down by double
digits for seven of the
13 Sprint Cup races so
far this year, and six hit
a multi-year low. Still,
the Coca-Cola 600 was
the third-most watched
sporting event last
weekend behind the
Indianapolis 500 and
Game 7 of the NBA
Western Conference
ﬁnals despite an 11
percent decline in viewership.
Some wonder if
NASCAR’s day in the
sun has passed. Track
ofﬁcials instead see a
changing, younger fan
base that needs to be
enticed to watch live
racing — and spend
money.
Dover International
Speedway President
Mike Tatoian said the
trend is not as alarming

as one might think.
“I think it’s hard to
pinpoint one thing that’s
caused this attendance
decline,” Tatoian said.
“I don’t think it was
realistic for everyone
to think it was going to
continue on that meteoric rise or stay at that
level. I always say our
level of wellness has just
been adjusting.”
At Richmond International Raceway, ticket
requests numbered
upward of 160,000 in
the late 1990s and 33
races in a row in the
top series sold out over
more than 16 years.
Since then, the track
has reduced the capacity of its grandstand
from more than 112,000
seats to about 60,000 —
and still can’t sell out.
That despite free parking, the ability for fans
to bring their own food
and drinks, and initiatives that allow them to
walk on the track until
nearly race time.
“We have to get back
to putting fans into
those unique experiences,” track President
Dennis Bickmeier said.
Despite the economy,
the Virginia track says,
fan surveys don’t suggest an issue with the
tickets.
“One of the things
that really jumped out
to us in the data was
that people weren’t
complaining about the
price of their ticket,
but what they asked
for was more value for
their ticket,” Bickmeier
said. The track’s ﬁrst
race of the season on
April 24 drew far less
than a capacity crowd
despite ideal weather,
an afternoon start time
and expectations of
great racing. “So then
we were able to go back
and ask, what’s more
value. They wanted
more to see and do.”
Among the changes:
A new family-friendly
seating area in Turn 4
where no alcohol is sold
and ushers work to keep
the atmosphere OK for
young children.
As for the main
attraction, rules changes
have helped produce
some of the best racing
the Sprint Cup series
has ever seen, including
See NASCAR | 9

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, June 3
Baseball
Class A semiﬁnals at Power Park
Wheeling Central vs. Pendleton County, 10 a.m.
Wahama vs. Man, 50 min after Game 1
Class AAA semiﬁnals at Power Park
Wheeling Park vs. Jefferson, 5 p.m.
Ripley vs. Nitro, 50 min after Game 1
Track and Field
OHSAA State Meet at Jesse Owens Memorial
Stadium, 9 a.m.
Saturday, June 4
Track and Field
OHSAA State Meet at Jesse Owens Memorial
Stadium, 9 a.m.
Baseball
WVSSAC state ﬁnals at Appalachian Power
Park
Class AA ﬁnal, 10 a.m.
Class A ﬁnal, 45 min after AA trophy presentation
Class AAA ﬁnal, 45 min after A trophy presentation

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

South Gallia senior Joseph Ehman, seated center, will be continuing his basketball career after signing a letter of intent with the
University of Rio Grande. Seated with Joseph at the table, from left, are Cliff Chapman (cousin), Jennifer Ehman (mother), Diane Ehman
(grandmother) and Caitlyn VanScoy (girlfriend). Standing in back are Lisa EHman-Chapman (aunt), SGHS athletic director Jacob Attar,
SGHS basketball coach Larry Howell and SGHS Principal Bray Shamblin.

Ehman signs with URG basketball
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE — Some would
consider it the best kind of early
gift to get on graduation day. For
South Gallia senior Joseph Ehman,
signing his name to paper signaled
a lifelong goal ﬁnally reached.
Before receiving his diploma
later that evening, Ehman extended his basketball career on Friday,
May 29, after signing a letter of
intent with the University of Rio
Grande in the high school gymnasium at SGHS.
Ehman — a 6-foot-1 guard —
turned into a one-man wrecking
crew during his senior campaign,
averaging 20.1 points per game
while guiding the Rebels to an 18-6
overall mark and a second district
tournament appearance in three
years.
Ehman — a four-year letterwinner for the SGHS basketball program — also set the school record
for points in a game after netting
40 markers against visiting Eastern
in a 74-59 victory back on January
5, 2016.
For his efforts last winter,
Ehman became the only South Gallia player to ever win Player of the
Year honors within the TVC Hocking Division — which the Rebels
have been members of since the fall
of 2010.
Ehman, though it was a late
addition, also participated in the
OHSBCA North-South Basketball
Game this past spring. Ehman was
also the 2016 District 13 Player
of the Year in Division IV and garnered an All-Ohio selection during
his ﬁnal prep campaign.
A two-time AP all-district and
District 13 selection, Ehman ﬁnished his prep career with 967
points — with roughly half of
those coming this past winter. The
2015-16 season also marked the
only time that Ehman ever earned
All-TVC Hocking honors in his
career.
After working so long and
ﬁnally having the hard work pay
off, Ehman couldn’t help but feel
humbled in having another chance
to play the game he loves.
“This is honestly a blessing, having the chance to play basketball
a little longer after high school,”
Ehman said. “I really just want to
thank the coaches at Rio Grande
for providing this opportunity to
me and for having the faith in me
to play for them. I also want to
thank Coach (Larry) Howell for
all that he has done in helping me
reach this point.
“It’s deﬁnitely a dream come
true because I’ve always wanted to
play college basketball since I was
little. It’s been a long journey, but
I do feel blessed that this has happened.”
Larry Howell — who has coached
Ehman during all four years of his
time at SGHS — notes that Joseph
has always been willing to do whatever was needed for the Rebels to

South Gallia senior Joseph Ehman (12) dribbles past a Wahama defender during a January
8, 2016, TVC Hocking boys basketball contest in Mason, W.Va.

have a shot at winning — regardless
of which side of the court he was
asked to contribute more on.
Howell believes that Joseph’s
willingness to succeed, as well as
his work ethic, is what will really
set him apart over the next four
years with the RedStorm.
“I’m absolutely thrilled for
Joseph to get this opportunity,
mainly because he’s been so coachable over the years,” Howell said.
“There were a lot of times that he
had to play Robin with someone
else starring as Batman early in
his career, but he wasn’t afraid to
take the big defensive assignment
and surrender points. It was more
about giving us the best chance to
win.
“This year, though, he literally
elevated his game and elevated
that team at the same time. A good
portion of what we accomplished
this year was due to how much
better of a player he became, and
everyone beneﬁted from it. That is
the type of player that Rio Grande
is getting, a guy that makes people
around him better … one way or
another.”
And, as Ehman mentioned during his interview process, the decision to choose Rio Grande wasn’t
a hard one to make. In fact, it was
one decision that he quite enjoyed
for several reasons.
“It’s deﬁnitely familiar to me
because I kind of grew up there,”
Ehman said. “My mom graduated
from Rio Grande and pretty much
my whole family has graduated
from Rio Grande. The feeling to
know that I’ll be playing for a pro-

gram that I’ve been around so long,
it’s just really great.”
Besides basketball, Ehman also
lettered twice in football at South
Gallia while also earning a letter
apiece in both cross country and
track.
Ehman missed out on the Rebels
playoff run in 2015 as he focused
on getting in shape for basketball
while participating in cross country. Needless to say, that decision
paid off nicely — as did most
things about his ﬁnal year with the
Red and Gold.
As Ehman put it, his senior
campaign couldn’t have gone much
smoother. He’s also hoping for
more of the same over the next
four years.
“Honestly, there isn’t much that I
would change about the way things
went during my senior season at
South Gallia,” Ehman said. “I truly
think that this past year will be one
of the best memories I’ll ever have,
and there are a lot of people to
thank for that. With that said, I’m
looking forward to the new challenges ahead at Rio Grande and
I hope that there are some more
lifelong memories waiting to be
made.”
As Coach Howell watches this
signing unfold, he can’t help but
wear an ear-to-ear grin in thinking
of how far Ehman has come in a
relatively short span of time. He
acknowledges that Ehman’s story
will be used as inspiration in his
days ahead, but he is also proud
of seeing his point guard receive
some a great opportunity.
See EHMAN | 9

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 3, 2016 9

Penguins take lead in Stanley Cup Final

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The schedule for
the 2016 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Monday, June 13, at
the Hidden Valley Golf Course in Point Pleasant.
Age groups for both young ladies and young men
are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and dates
of play are as follows: Monday, June 20, at Meigs
County Golf Course in Pomeroy; Monday, June 27,
at Riverside Golf Course in Mason; Wednesday,
July 6, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis; and
Monday, July 11, at Meigs County Golf Course in
Pomeroy
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play each week. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at
9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at 740-256-6160,
Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304675-6135 if you can contribute or have questions
concerning the tour.

Gallipolis Lions
golf scramble
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Lions
Club will hold its 18th annual golf outing on
Saturday, June 11, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia County. The event will be held in a four-man
scramble format and will have a shotgun start
time of 8:30 a.m. Individual golfers will be paired
together based on A-B-C-D handicap.
The inidvidual cost of the event is $50 for a
Cliffside member and $60 for a non-member. Cost
includes green fees, cart, lunch and beverages.
There will be prizes for the top-three teams, as
well as a skills game or hole-in-one. There will also
be an auction at the conclusion of the event.
For more information, contact Rick Howell at
740-446-4624 or at 740-645-9036.

Eastern golf scramble
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern golf team will
hold a golf scramble on Saturday, July 30, at the
Meigs County Golf Course. The format will be a
four-man scramble with a 9 a.m. shotgun start,
with a limit of 10 teams allowed in the event.
Registration is scheduled for 8 a.m. on the day
of the event and the cost is $40 per player, which
includes 18 holes of golf, a cart and lunch.
There will be a skins game ($20 per team) and
mulligans are available for $10 each. There will
also be prizes for closest to the pin, longest drive,
and hitting the green on par 3s to double your
money.
Again, the ﬁeld is limited to the ﬁrst 10 teams
to register and pay. Contact EHS golf coach Nick
Dettwiller for more information or to register at
740-416-0344 or by email at nickdettwiller@gmail.
com
All proceeds from the tournament will go directly to the boys and girls golf teams at Eastern High
School.

PITTSBURGH (AP) —
Sidney Crosby enters the
faceoff circle with a plan
every time, well aware it
will almost certainly evaporate once the puck smacks
the ice.
That doesn’t stop the
Pittsburgh superstar from
doing it, because every
once in a while the idea
in his head morphs into
reality. Times like Wednesday night, when Crosby’s
improvisation helped move
the Penguins within two
victories of the Stanley
Cup.
Crosby’s faceoff win
helped set up Conor
Sheary’s perfectly placed
wrist shot 2:35 into overtime, one that lifted the
Penguins to a 2-1 victory
over the San Jose Sharks
and a 2-0 lead in the bestof-seven series.
“I call 25 faceoffs a
night,” Crosby said with
a laugh. “I got 24 wrong
tonight.”
It’s the one Crosby got
right that will live on if
the Penguins ﬁnd a way to
close out their fourth championship. Just before heading to the dot to the right
of San Jose goalie Martin
Jones, Crosby told Sheary
to line up on the wall and
then look for a soft spot in
the San Jose defense.
Crosby won the draw
and dropped it to defenseman Kris Letang, who
feigned a shot then slipped
it to Sheary. The 23-yearold rookie zipped it over
Jones’ outstretched glove
for his fourth goal of the
playoffs and second of the
series.
“It’s pretty surreal,” said
Sheary, who began the season in the minor leagues.
Game 3 is Saturday night
in San Jose.
Sharks defenseman
Justin Braun tied it with
4:05 left in regulation, but
San Jose fell to 0-4 when
pushed to overtime in the
playoffs after getting largely
outplayed for much of the
night by the quicker, more
nimble Penguins.
Phil Kessel scored his
10th goal of the postseason

Gene J. Puskar | AP

Pittsburgh Penguins’ Nick Bonino (13) passes the puck to Phil
Kessel, right, who scored a goal against San Jose Sharks goalie
Martin Jones (31) during the second period in Game 2 of the NHL
Stanley Cup Finals on Wednesday in Pittsburgh.

for Pittsburgh, and Matt
Murray made 21 stops. The
Penguins have not trailed
at any point while reeling
off four straight playoff victories after falling behind
in the Eastern Conference
ﬁnal against Tampa Bay.
“Game 1 was decided in
last two minutes, tonight
was decided in overtime,”
Sharks coach Peter DeBoer
said. “We’ll hold off on the
funeral.”
Maybe, but time is running out. Only ﬁve teams
in NHL history have come
back from a 2-0 deﬁcit in
the ﬁnal to win the Cup, a
hole the Sharks ﬁnd themselves in despite Braun’s
second career playoff goal
and 28 stops by Martin
Jones.
“We know that if we play
this way we’re not going to
win games, so we need to
be better,” San Jose center
Logan Couture said.
The Sharks blamed themselves for their shaky start
in Game 1, with defenseman Brent Burns admitting
the spectacle of playing the
franchise’s ﬁrst Finals led
to spending a large portion
of the ﬁrst period standing
around and watching the
Penguins take an early lead
on the way to an eventual
3-2 victory.

Burns and his teammates
promised repeatedly they
would be sharper and more
focused faced with the prospect of heading home in a
massive hole, pointing to
their 5-1 record this postseason in games immediately following a loss as
proof of their resilience.
While the Sharks were
better Wednesday, the
sustained push the Penguins were expecting
from the Western Conference champions failed to
materialize until it was
nearly too late. Pittsburgh
did the two things that
have been the club’s hallmark since coach Mike
Sullivan took over for
Mike Johnston in midDecember, controlling the
puck and forcing the San
Jose to go a full 200 feet to
create chances.
“I think that’s the identity
of our team,” Sheary said
after becoming the ﬁfth
rookie to score in overtime
in a Cup ﬁnal.
Pittsburgh’s forecheck
made San Jose labor just to
get the puck in the offensive zone and once there,
the Penguins kept throwing
black-and-gold glad bodies
in the way.
Still, it took time for
Pittsburgh’s heady and

hectic play to translate into
a goal, with the group that’s
been Pittsburgh’s best line
for the last three months
ﬁnally breaking through
against Jones just before
the midway point.
Thrust together as an
experiment when Evgeni
Malkin went out with a left
elbow injury in mid-February, the trio of Kessel, Carl
Hagelin and Nick Bonino
have rapidly evolved into
Pittsburgh’s most dangerous line. They began the
night with 90 combined
points in 34 games, and
added to it during another
typically aggressive shift
when Hagelin stripped it
from San Jose defenseman
Roman Polak and slipped it
to Bonino in the slot.
Bonino, who put in the
Game 1 winner with 2:33
remaining from a similar
spot, slipped it to Kessel on
the door step. The pass was
heading for the net but Kessel nudged it in anyway just
to be sure.
“They’re feeling it right
now,” Sullivan said about
the line dubbed ‘HBK.’
“They have that chemistry.”
It appeared as if it would
be enough to wrap things
up in regulation until Braun
found a moment of joy
in the midst of a difﬁcult
time for his family. Braun’s
father-in-law, former Flames
and Blackhawks center
Tom Lysiak, passed away
on Monday following a
lengthy ﬁght with leukemia.
Braun remained with
the team, pledging to pay
his respects to Lysiak
before Game 3. His ﬁrst
goal of these playoffs — a
shot from just outside the
top of the right circle that
made its way under Murray’s glove and off the post
before crossing the line —
gave the Sharks a needed
jolt with their chances at a
ﬁrst championships teetering.

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How a Chicago Doctor Shook Up the Hearing
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Ehman
From Page 8

“From where he was at the end of
his junior year to where he is now, it’s
just phenomenal. It’s a story that I’ll be
able to share for a long time with the
younger guys that I coach,” Howell said.
“If you work hard and you are dedicated
to being both a good player and a good

teammate, you can get to other places. I
wish him nothing but the best, and I’m
proud of him.”
Ehman carried a 3.0 grade-point
average at South Gallia and plans to
major in Sports Medicine Science while
attending URG.
Ehman is the son of Jennifer Ehman
of Crown City, Ohio.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2101.

NASCAR

stretch seating in adverstruggle with empty seats.
tising banners.
He expects Bristol’s late
Like Caldwell, Camprace on Saturday night, Aug.
From Page 8
20, to be well attended.
bell said it’s important to
put things in perspective.
At Martinsville, a
the closest ﬁnish in Day“There for a while,
small town in southwest
tona 500 history. There
crowds were much larger
Virginia near the North
was a last-lap nudge and
Carolina line, the track
than they are now, but now
pass for the win for Carl
we can focus on providing
used
to
make
seats
on
its
Edwards at Richmond, too.
the people here a great expebackstretch
available
on
Bickmeier hopes the
rience,” he said. “I think in
race
day,
and
had
people
excitement of that ﬁnish
the long run, it’s working
camping
out
overnight
will be the start of someout. It’s not what we were
to
be
in
line
to
buy
them.
thing bigger. The track’s
used to in the late ’80s and
Since
pit
stalls
were
next race comes on Saturmoved
and
a
garage
was
early ’90s, but we’re still
day night, Sept. 10, and is
drawing pretty big crowds
built,
those
seats
are
no
the last chance for drivers
for a sporting event, much
longer
of
much
value
and
to make it into the Chase
larger than other sports.”
the
track
drapes
the
backfor the championship.
General manager Jerry
Caldwell of Bristol Motor
Speedway said NASCAR
crowds may be down but
are still huge.
The Tennessee track,
Community News
which once drew about
150,000 fans to races in
Sports Scores
the premier series, once
had a sellout streak of 55
Editorials
races. It does not release
attendance ﬁgures, but
Church Events
was about half full for its
event on April 17, despite
Breaking News
sunny, 72-degree weather.
Caldwell suggested it
might be time to stop looking at attendance ﬁgures
from the pre-recession
heyday and remember that
other sporting events also

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10 Friday, June 3, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Notices

Help Wanted General

Lease

Farm Equipment

Tree Service

Help Wanted General

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.

The Children's Center
of Ohio, LLC.
is seeking Direct Supervision
Employees for our boy's
facility and new girl's facility,
both located in Patriot, OH!!!
Applicant must possess a high
school diploma or equivalent,
be able to pass a background
check and drug test. Must be
21 years of age. Direct
supervision of delinquent
teenage boys &amp; girls. Full-time
hours. Benefits after 90 days.
Please apply in person at
55 Allison Road,
Patriot, OH 45658.
Call 740-379-9083
or 740-534-0923
for inquiries. Send resumes to
resumes.cco@gmail.com.
Positions available
immediately!!!

For Lease: one bedroom apt.,
water and trash included,
no pets, no smoking.
Security deposit
$450, rent $400 per mo.
Call 740-441-7875
or 740-446-4425.

REWARD: $500 for information leading to the return of a
stolen 5105 4x4 John Deer
Tractor and John Deer Bush
Hog. Stolen from Greenlee Rd
on or about May 23rd. Contact
Steve at: (304) 541-7779

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

For Lease: Three bedroom,
unfurnished, 2nd floor,
townhouse, on Court Street.
Condition excellent. No pets.
Lease application, with
references. $750 security
deposit, $700 per month.
No Smoking.
Call 740-441-7875
or 740-446-4425.

Miscellaneous

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.

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OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
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apply in person at
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Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

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Miscellaneous
Sale Carpet
5.95 yard free estimates.
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util, 3rd St, Racine, OH
740-247-4292

Community Yard Sale
Shady Waters Campground
9 miles South of Point on Rt 2
Saturday 8AM-2PM

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

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)

Help Wanted General
The Children's Center
of Ohio, LLC.
located at 55 Allison Road,
Patriot, OH is looking for a
full-time cook. Hours will vary
from 9-5p or 10-6p,
Wednesday-Sunday.
Benefits after 90 days. Must
be 21 years of age, able to
pass a background check &amp;
drug screening. Email
resumes to
resumes.cco@gmail.com.
Apply in person at 55 Allison
Road, Parriot, OH 45658.
Call 740-379-9083
for inquiries.

Miscellaneous

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

Apartments/Townhouses

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

Pool 18 ft. round
54 inch deep $600
deck $150 OBO
740-245-5038

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

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Garage Sale. In and Outside
40 yrs.of Household Furnishings and Goods. 6/3-6/4. 9-4
Chester SR 248 First House
on Left Past Church

Pools &amp; Spas

Want To Buy

Business &amp; Trade School
Carport Sale 6/4-6/5. Scrubs,
Washer&amp;Dryer, Kitchen Ware.
Lot's of Everything. 1668 Lincoln Heights Pomeroy, OH

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

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Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
For Rent: 3 Bed 1 1/2 Bath
On Jericho Road
$700/mo and $700 deposit
Call (304) 389- 8345
or (304) 807-1602
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For Lease: office or
commercial space,
first floor, Court Street,
approx. 1"600sq. ft., one
bathroom, carpeted, storage
area, street parking,
$650 per mo. negotiable,
security deposit
required, condition excellent.
Call 740-441-7875
or 740-446-4425.

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Auctions

Lieving Estate Auction 3

Win...No Award / No Fee

Selling the estate of the late Raymond C. Lieving

All Cases Considered

Saturday, June 4th @ 10 am

�Applications/Hearings/Appeals
�Immediate Access to

5225 Lieving Road | West Columbia, WV 25287

Experienced Personnel

DIRECTIONS: From Mason Take Rt. 62 South to West Columbia turn left onto Lieving Rd. Go 2.5 miles to sale site. Watch for signs!

�Free Consultation

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(800) 301-8203

Bill Gordon &amp; Associates is a nationwide practice limited to representing clients before the Social
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681 N. Church Street, Ripley, WV 25271
Bobby Cooper, Auctioneer, #1698�Ȉ�304-532-7749
E-mail: bobbycooper@century21.com
Robert Cooper, Auctioneer, #992 Ȉ�304-532-1301

94

Overcoming Your Credit Card Crisis

Photos and Personal Property Listing at www.auctionzip.com ID#6452
Auctioneer’s Note: This is the third auction we are having from this
amazing estate. We are selling the remainder of Mr. Lieving’s antique
collection from the house and barn. This is a very large auction with
much more than is listed to sell so we will be running two rings. Mr.
Lieving’s collection has been passed down for generations and dates
back into the 1800’s. Terms: Announcements made day of sale take
precedence over any ad. All items sell AS IS. Must have valid ID to
register. Cash or check day of sale.

�We Strive For Quick
Claim Approval

Guns Etc: J. Stevens Crack-Shot .22LR Single Shot; J. Stevens Stevens-Maynard Jr. .22LR
Single Shot; Daisey Red Ryder BB Gun; Daisey Gun Oiler; Colt Recurve Bow; Ammo
Boxes; Case Knife (NIB); Coal Mine: Mine Script; Baby Wolf Permissible Mine Lamps;
Assort. Wolf and Kohler Mine Lamps; Mine Supply Elevator; Atlas Blasting Machine
(Plunger Box); Dupont Dynamite Box; Oak &amp; Metal Mine Phones; Hard Leather Mine
Hats; Mine Lunch Box; Huge Assort. Carbide Lights; 2lb Can of Carbide; Carbide
Canteens; SCBA; USA Standard Testing Sieves; Coal Mine Pictures; Lg. Assort. WV Coal
&amp; Southern Ohio Coal Belt Buckles; Civil War: 2-Civil War Wooden Flutes; Cannon Ball;
Bayonets; Steam Whistles: Lg. Collection of Steam Whistles from 1”-8” in Diameter;
Steam Engine Oilers; Pop-Off Valves; Steam Gauges; Antiques: B&amp;O RR Lanterns; Buggy
Seat; Pot Belly Stove; Seth Thomas Eight Day Clock; Marsh Williams &amp; Co. Dayton,
OH Clock; Oak Wall Clock; #6 Stone Crock; Wagon Wheels; Whiskey Barrels; Old Ink
Printing Stamps; Sausage Press; Dinner Bell; Cast Iron Seats; Coal Buckets; Dovetail
Boxes; Corn Shellers; Ice Skates; Roller Skates; Draw Knives; Griswold Iron Skillets;
Iron Kettle w/ Spider Stand; Copper Kettle; Pepsi Clock; Starr Victrola; Kalliope Metal
Records &amp; Player; Diamond Match Company Box; Mason Co. Fair Books; Antique Type
Writers; Sistersville, WV Coke Bottle; Lead Babbitt; Camel Back Trunk; Gem Dandy
Elec. Churn Jar; Battery Jar; Stone Foot Warmer; US Mail Bag; Assort. Antique Lock &amp;
Keys; Brass &amp; Glass Washboards; Jumbo Peanut Butter Jar; Old Photo Album w/ Tin
Pictures; Howe Scales &amp; Other Old Scales; Wire Rim Glasses; Straight Razors; Speedo
Jar Opener; Appler Cider Press; Wooden Crank Butter Churn; Broad Axe; Cherry
Stoner; Horse Drawn Scoop; Rock Mason’s Trimming Axe; Assort. Meat Scales; Chicken
Feeders, Coupe &amp; Waterers; Books: Lg. Assort Ford Books; Snap-On Tool Book; The
WH Smith Hardware Co. Parkersburg, WV Since 1874; Huckleberry Finn (Excellent
Condition); Assort. Mason Co. History Books; Silver Bridge Disaster; History on Coal
Mining; Furniture: 4pc Full Bedroom Suite; 3 Drawer Chest; Coffee Table w/ Matching
End Tables; Table w/ 4 Chairs; Lg. Area Rugs; Oak Floor Mirror; Antique Loveseat &amp;
Chair; 4 Antique Chairs; Buffett; Household/ Misc: 26” Vizio Flatscreen; Whirlpool
Cabrio Platinum Washer; Roper Dryer; Lg. Assort Pots &amp; Pans &amp; Cookware; Tools: The
Green Fuel Economizer Co. Beacon, NY Vertical Hit &amp; Miss Engine; The Jaeger Machine
Co. Columbus, OH No. 3E Model A4H Hit &amp; Miss Engine; Assort. Kelley, True Temper &amp;
Stanley Tools; Stanley Wood Planes; Broad Axe; Craftsman Tool Cabinet; Oak Stack-On
Rolling Tool Cabinet; Ford Model A &amp; Model T Tools; Blacksmith Tools; Brace &amp; Bits;
Wooden Levels; Saw Blades; Tool Boxes; Assort Hand Tools: Scrap Metal: Lg. Scrap
Pile; Various other Scrap Metal;

49

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Friday, June 3, 2016 11

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

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�CHURCH DIRECTORY

12 Friday, June 3, 2016

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY CHURCH DIRECTORY
Fellowship Apostolic
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
Van Zandt and Ward Road. Pastor:
James Miller. Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.;
evening, 7:30 p.m.
The Refuge Church
7898 St. Rt. 7, Cheshire, Ohio. Sunday,
10:30 a.m. Pastor: The Rev. Jordan
Bradford.
Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle, Inc.
Loop Road off New Lima Road, Rutland.
Pastor: Marty R. Hutton. Sunday services,
10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Thursday, 7 p.m.

***
Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va. Pastor: Neil
Tennant. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7
p.m.

***
Baptist
Carpenter Independent Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; preaching
service, 10:30 a.m.; evening service, 7
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor: Mel Mock.Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.; eveningservice,
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 6:30
p.m. Call: 740-367-7801.
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grant Street, Middleport. Pastor:
Gary Ellis. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m. and6 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main Street, Pomeroy. Pastor:
Jon Brocket. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: David
Brainard. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church
Sixth and Palmer Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Billy Zuspan. Sunday school, 9:15
a.m.; worship, 10:15 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:40 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; evening, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Union Baptist
Pastor: Randy Smith. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; evening, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 Ohio 7, Middleport. Pastor Everett
Caldwell. Sunday service, 10 a.m.;
Tuesday and Saturday services, 6 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
Ohio 143 just off of Ohio 7. Pastor:
Rev. James R. Acree, Sr. Sunday uniﬁed
service. Worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Victory Baptist Independent
525 North Second Street, Middleport.
Pastor: James E. Keesee. Worship, 10 a.m.
and 7 p.m.; Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad Street, Mason. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pomeroy. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11:30 a.m.
Mount Moriah Baptist
Fourth and Main Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Michael A. Thompson, Sr.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
a.m.; Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Salem Street, Rutland. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 11:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.; Youth meeting, Sunday, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood, W.Va. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church of Mason, W.Va.
W.Va. Route 652 and Anderson Street.
Pastor: Robert Grady. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; morning church, 11 a.m.; evening, 6
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.

***
Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev.
Tim Kozak. (740) 992-5898. Saturday
confessional 4:45-5:15 p.m.; mass, 5:30
p.m.; Sunday confessional, 8:45-9:15
a.m.; Sunday mass, 9:30 a.m.; daily mass,
8:30 a.m.

***
Church of Christ
Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children’s Home Road, Pomeroy.
(740) 992-3847. Sunday traditional
worship, 10 a.m.; Bible study following
worship; Contemporary Worship Service,
6 p.m.; Wednesday meeting, 6 p.m.; Bible
study, 7 p.m.

Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Pastor Diana Carsey Kinder, Church
school (all ages), 9:15 a.m.; church
service, 10 a.m.; Wednesday Bible study,
7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 West Main Street. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth and Main Street. Pastor: David
Hopkins.Youth
Minister
Mathew
Ferguson.Sunday school, 10 a.m.; blended
worship, 8:45 a.m.; contemporary
worship 11 a.m.; Sunday evening 6p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Pastor: Jeffrey Wallace. First and Third
Sunday. Worship, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
school, 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Harrisonville Road, Pomeroy. Pastor:
Russel Lowe. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Worship service, 9 a.m.; communion, 10
a.m.; Sunday school, 10:15 a.m.; youth,
5:50 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
39558 Bradbury Road, Middleport.
Minister: Justin Roush. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship and
communion, 10:30 a.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Ohio 124 and Bradbury Road. Minister:
Russ Moore. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
evening service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday adult
Bible study and youth meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Tuppers Plains. Pastor: Mike Moore. Bible
class, 9 a.m.; Sunday worship, 10 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible class, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colgrove. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship service, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 6:30 p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m.

***
Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ in Christian
Union
Hartford, W.Va. Pastor: Mike Puckett.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday services, 7
p.m.

***
Church of God
Mount Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Road, Racine. Pastor: James
Satterﬁeld. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
evening service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Larry Shrefﬂer. Sunday worship,
10 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday services,
7 p.m.
Syracuse First Church of God
Apple and Second Streets. Pastor: Rev.
David Russell. Sunday school and
worship, 10 a.m.; evening services, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.
Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Road off Ohio 160. Pastor:
P.J. Chapman. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday services, 7
p.m.

***
Congregational
Trinity Church
201 E. Second St., Pomeroy. Worship,
10:25 a.m.Pastor Randy Smith.

***
Episcopal
Grace Episcopal Church
326 East Main Street, Pomeroy. Holy
Eucharist, 11 a.m.

***
Holiness
Independent Holiness Church
626 Brick Street, Rutland. Sunday School,
9:30 a.m.; Worship Service, 10:30 a.m.;
Evening Service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Community Church
Main Street, Rutland. Pastor: Steve
Tomek. Sunday worship, 10 a.m.; Sunday
services, 7 p.m.
Danville Holiness Church
31057 Ohio 325, Langsville. Pastor:
Paul Eckert. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer service, 7 p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
State Route 143. Pastor: Mark Nix.
Sunday school, 10a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
and 6:30p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Road, Rutland. Pastor:
Rev. Dewey King. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday worship, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
One half mile off of Ohio 325. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and
6 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl Street, Middleport. Pastor: Matt
Phoenix. Sunday: worship service, 10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.740-691-5006.

***
Latter-Day Saints
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints
Ohio 160. (740) 446-6247 or (740) 4467486. Sunday school, 10:20-11 a.m.;
relief society/priesthood, 11:05 a.m.-12
p.m.;sacrament service, 9-10-15 a.m.;
homecoming meeting ﬁrst Thursday, 7
p.m.

***
Lutheran
Saint John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Pastor Linea Warmke.
Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Our Savior Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Streets, Ravenswood,
W.Va. Pastor: David Russell. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Corner of Sycamoreand Second streets,
Pomeroy. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.

***
United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Pastor: Richard Nease. Worship, 11 a.m.
Bechtel United Methodist
New Haven. Pastor: Richard Nease.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; Tuesday prayer
meeting and Bible study, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Olive United Methodist
Off of 124 behind Wilkesville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday school, 9:30a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Thursday
services, 7 p.m.
Alfred
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Worship, 9 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Worship, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.
Reedsville
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Worship, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.; ﬁrst
Sunday of the month, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Saint Paul
Pastor: Judy Adams.Sunday school, 9
a.m.; worship, 10:15 a.m.; Bible study,
Tuesday 10 a.m.
Asbury
Syracuse. Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7:30 p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 11:15 a.m.
Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.
Heath
339 S. 3rdAve., Middleport. Pastor:
Rebecca Zurcher. Sunday School, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
Asbury Syracuse
Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.;worship, 10:30 a.m.
New Beginnings
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Alethea
Botts.
Worship, 10 a.m.; Sunday school, 9:15
a.m.;eveningworship,
6p.m.worship
every fourth Sunday; Biblestudy,
7:15p.m.Wednesdays; DARE 2 Share
youth group, every Sunday morning
during worship.
Rocksprings
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Sunday school, 9
a.m.; worship, 8 and 10 a.m.
Rutland
Pastor: Mark Brookins. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.; Thursday
services, 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: John Chapman. Sunday school,
10:15 a.m.; worship, 9:15 a.m.; Bible
study, Monday 7 p.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.; Wednesday
services, 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel and Bashan Roads, Racine.
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday school, 9:45
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, noon.
Morning Star
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday school, 11
a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall. Sunday school,
9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.; First Sunday
evening service, 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Rev. William Marshall. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; Tuesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodist Church
Main and Fifth Street. Pastor: Helen
Kline. Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9
a.m.; Tuesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Road 468C. Pastor: Phillip Bell.
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.

Hockingport Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.
Torch Church
County Road 63. Sunday school, 9:30
am.; worship, 10:30 a.m.

***
Free Methodist
Laurel Cliff
Laurel Cliff Road. Pastor: Bill O’Brien.
Sunday school, 9:30; morning worship,
10:30; evening worship, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible Study, 7 p.m.

***
Nazarene
Point Rock Church of the Nazarene
Route 689 between Wilksville and Albany.
Pastor: Larry Cheesebrew. Sunday School,
10 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.; evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday service, 6p.m.
New Hope Church of the Nazarene
980
General
Hartinger
Parkway,
Middleport. Pastor Bill Justis and Pastor
Daniel Fulton. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
morning worship, 11 a.m.; evening
worship, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday evening
Bible study, 6:30 p.m.; men’s Bible study,
7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Pastor: Russell Carson. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Daniel Fulton. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m., worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday and
Sunday evenings, 7 p.m.
Chester Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Will Luckeydoo. Sunday School,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning service, 10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening service, 6 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Ann Forbes. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 6 p.m.

***
Non-Denominational
Christ Temple Fellowship Church
28382 State Route 143, Pomeroy. Services
are 6 p.m. Sunday with Pastor Dennis
Weaver. For information, call 740-6983411.
Common Ground Missions
Pastor: Dennis Moore and Rick Little.
Sunday, 10 a.m.
Team Jesus Ministries
333 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy. Pastor:
Eddie Baer. Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.
New Hope Church
Old American Legion Hall, Fourth Ave.,
Middleport. Sunday, 5 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church
2480 Second Street, Syracuse. Pastor:
Marco Pritt. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
Sunday evening, 6:30 p.m.
A New Beginning
(Full Gospel Church). Harrisonville.
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall. Thursday,
7 p.m.
Amazing Grace Community Church
Ohio 681, Tuppers Plains. Pastor: Wayne
Dunlap. Sunday worship, 10 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denominational
fellowship).
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
cafeteria. Pastor: Christ Stewart. Sunday,
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Road. Pastors: Dean
Holben, Janice Danner, and Denny Evans.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 Ohio 7 (two miles south of
Tuppers Plains). Pastor: Rob Barber;
praise and worship led by Otis and Ivy
Crockron; (740) 667-6793. Sunday 10
a.m.; Afﬁliated with SOMA Family of
Ministries, Chillicothe. Bethelwc.org.
Ash Street Church
398 Ash Street, Middleport. Pastor:
Mark Morrow. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
morning worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday service, 6:30 p.m.; youth
service, 6:30 p.m.
Agape Life Center
(Full Gospel church). 603 Second Ave.,
Mason. Pastors: John and Patty Wade.
(304) 773-5017. Sunday 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Abundant Grace
923 South Third Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Teresa Davis. Sunday service, 10
a.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Friday
fellowship service, 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday, 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl Street, Middleport. Pastor:
Sam Anderson. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday service,
7:30 p.m.
Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson. Sunday evening, 7 p.m.;
Thursday service, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1141 Bridgeman Street, Syracuse.
Sunday School, 10 a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Dyesville Community Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Worship, 5 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunday school, 10 a.m. and 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday evening, 7:30 p.m.
South Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge. Pastor: Linda Damewood.
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
Second and fourth Sundays; Bible study,
Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship service, 10:30 a.m.; evening
service, 6 p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
BaldKnob on County Road 31. Pastor:
Rev. Roger Willford. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va., Route 1. Pastor: Brian May.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens. Friday, 7
p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev. Blackwood. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and
7:30 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7:30 p.m.
Stiversville Community Church
Pastor: Bryan and Missy Dailey. Sunday
school, 11 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500 North Second Ave., Middleport.
Pastor: Mike Foreman. Pastor Emeritus:
Lawrence Foreman. Worship, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 7 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7
p.m.
Full Gospel Church of the Living Savior
Route 338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Saturday, 2 p.m.
Salem Community Church
Lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
(304) 675-2288. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening, 7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday 7 p.m.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats. Sunday worship, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
House of Healing Ministries
(Full Gospel) Ohio 124, Langsville.
Pastors: Robert and Roberta Musser.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7
p.m.
Hysell Run Community Church
33099 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy, Ohio;
Pastors Larry and Cheryl Lemley. Sunday
School 9:30 a.m.; morning worship 10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
Sunday night youth service, 7 p.m. ages
10 through high school; Thursday Bible
study, 7 p.m.; fourth Sunday night is
singing and communion.

Endtime House of Prayer
Ohio 681, Snowville; Pastor Robert Vance.
Sunday School 10 a.m., Worship 11 a.m.;
Bible Study, Thursday 6 p.m.

***
Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
Tornado Road, Racine. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.

***
Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner. Sunday
worship 9:30a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Jim Snyder. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m. Pastor Jim
Snyder.(740) 645-5034.

***
United Brethren
Eden United Brethren in Christ
Ohio 124, between Reedsville and
Hockingport. Pastor Peter Martindale.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
MountHermon United Brethren in
Christ Church
36411 Wickham Road, Pomeroy. Pastor:
Adam Will.Adult Sunday School -9:30
a.m.; Worship and Childrens Ministry
–10:30 a.m.; Wednesday Adult Bible
Study and Kingdom Seekers (grades 4-6)
6:30 p.m.www.mounthermonub.org.

***
Wesleyan
White’s Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road. Pastor: Rev. Charles
Martindale. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday service,
7 p.m.

60660391

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