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                  <text>Enjoy
some
face time

Storms
possible. High
87, low 69

Junior, Piazza
inducted into
baseball hall

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 118, Volume 70

Two dead in
shooting at
Fla. nightclub
By Terry Spencer
Associated Press

Editor’s note:
The shooting which
occurred Monday morning at a teen night
club in Ft. Myers, Fla.,
leaving two dead, has
a local connection. Dr.
Greg Adkins is superintendent of schools in
Lee County, Fla., where
Ft. Myers is located.
Adkins is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High
School. Adkins, who
has served Lee County
Schools for
28 years, was
unanimously
chosen by the
school board as
its superintendent in October
2015 with a
Adkins
three-year contract. The two
teenagers killed were
students in Lee County
Schools.
FORT MYERS, Fla.
— Gunﬁre erupted at
a nightclub hosting a
swimsuit-themed party
for teens in Florida,
leaving two teens dead
and at least 17 other
people wounded, ofﬁcials said Monday.
It was not immediately clear what triggered the violence,
but authorities said
the shooting was not
an act of terror. Police
detained three people
and were searching for
others, interim Police
Chief Dennis Eads said.
The slain teens
were 14-year-old Sean
Archilles and 18-yearold Stef’an Strawder,
police said. Archilles
lived about a mile from
the nightclub, and loved
to play football and basketball, said his father,
Jean Archilles.
“He liked to make
people laugh. He’s a
funny kid. He’s always
joking,” Jean Archilles
said.
Strawder starred on
the basketball team for
Lehigh High School,
averaging more than
15 points a game as a
junior, according to The
News-Press.
“Everyone was afraid
to play against him
because he was so good.
He would guide you

and give you advice on
how to step up your
game and how to guard
him and things like
that,” said 16-year-old
Peyton Hebon, who
started playing against
Strawder in travel basketball leagues in sixth
grade.
Strawder was always
positive and energetic
and was unstoppable on
the court, Hebon said.
Four people were in
the hospital. Two were
in critical condition and
two in fair condition,
said Lisa Sgarlata, the chief
administrative
ofﬁcer at Lee
Memorial Health
System.
All of the
other patients
were treated and
released. The
victims ranged in ages
from 12 to 27.
“It’s horrible when
these things happen,”
Gov. Rick Scott said at
an afternoon news conference. He noted that
the state is currently
seeing a 45-year low in
the crime rate.
There were two
active crime scenes —
the club and a street
in the area, which also
remained closed as
police investigated.
The club is in a strip
mall that includes a
daycare center and is
across the street from
a large apartment complex. The shooting happened about 12:30 a.m.
Monday, just as the club
was closing and parents
were arriving to pick up
their children.
Dr. Greg Adkins,
superintendent of the
Lee County School
District and a Gallia
Academy High School
graduate, spoke at Monday’s press conference.
Lauren Stillwell, director of communications
for the school district,
provided Ohio Valley
Publishing with Adkins’
comments:
“It is with great sadness that I tell you two
of our beloved students,
Sean Archilles and
Ste’fan Strawder, were
killed in last night’s
senseless tragedy. In
See SHOOTING | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
NASCAR: 6
MLB: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

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

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 s 50¢

Biker Sunday rolls into area
Event returns to Bend Area, hundreds of bikes expected
By Mindy Kearns
Special to OVP

Courtesy photo

Biker games and inflatables for the kids are a part of the Biker Sunday and Community Outreach at
Soul Harvest Church in Mason. This year’s event, the fifth annual, will be held July 31.

MASON, W.Va. —
The roar of hundreds of
motorcycles will be heard
July 31 as the ﬁfth annual
Biker Sunday and Community Outreach is held
at Soul Harvest Church in
Mason.
“It’s all about the salvation of souls and reaching
out to the biker community,” said Bill Davis, one
of the organizers and a
member of the Heaven’s
Saints Motorcycle Ministry, West Virginia Chapter.
“All are invited, you
don’t have to be a biker to
attend,” Davis continued.
“It’s an opportunity for
bikers to hear the Word,
and it might be their only
opportunity to hear it all
year long.”
Last year, bikers came
from as far as Myrtle
Beach, S.C. The event
drew hundreds of local
residents, as well.
This year’s event will
start at 9 a.m. with breakfast and fellowship at the
church, located at 500
Adamsville Road. At 10
a.m., a church service will
be held with Pastor Jason
Simpkins bringing the
message.
The bike parade and
ride will begin after the
service, and upon the
bikers’ return, the community outreach will be
held.
Lunch will be served
including Kiser’s Barbecue, side dishes, desserts,
and drinks, as well as
treats from SnoBiz. There
will be inﬂatables to
entertain the youngsters.
See EVENT | 5

Peck Fest heats up concert stage
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

LEON, W.Va. — “I think we’ve
got something really big started
here,” Garry Peck, organizer of
Peck Fest said Monday afternoon.
Peck was speaking about this
past weekend’s musical festival at
his Kanawha River Campground.
“It was 10 times better than
last year and a lot of local people
came out and supported it,” Peck
said about last weekend’s crowd.
“Now there’s a lot of local sponsors
wanting in on next year’s concert,
too.”
Peck said he hopes to “keep this
rolling” into 2017 for the third
Peck Fest concert.
“If I didn’t, a lot of people
in Mason County may be
disappointed,” Peck laughed
when joking about the pressure of
continuing the festival.
The idea behind the festival
was to bring people to Mason
County for a concert experience
typically found only near larger
cities. The gamble appears to have
paid off, with local hotels being
booked, gas stations running out
of ice and camping lots full for the
entire weekend at Kanawha River
Campground.
Peck said one fan of Saturday’s
headliner Kane Brown even drove
seven hours to be at the concert

Photo courtesy of Gayla Hammack

Chris Janson, was the headliner on Friday at Peck Fest. Janson donated 100 percent of his
merchandise sales from that night to flood relief efforts in West Virginia.

and there was just no way of
calculating where everyone else
was from, though a lot of familiar
faces from across the tri-county
area were in the crowd.
Despite the intense
temperatures, people did not stay
away from the festival, where there
were plenty of beverages, water
and snow cones to help those of all
ages cool off.
“We had fans everywhere we
could get them,” Peck added.

As for the entire festival, Peck
surmised, “it went really smooth,”
adding, it wouldn’t have been that
way without all the help from Peck
Fest staff members, committee/
board members, volunteers and
sponsors who make the event
successful.
Also, chipping in to help those
affected by the ﬂooding in West
Virginia was Friday’s headliner
Chris Janson, who donated
See FEST | 5

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

OBITUARIES

BAIRD
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Charles Lee Baird, 89, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, July 22, 2016. A
funeral service will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, July 26, 2016,
at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Burial will
follow at Hambrick Cemetery in Southside. Visitation
will be from 6-8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.

Gallipolis Ferry. Services will be 8 p.m. Friday, July 29,
2016, at Deal Funeral Home, in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Burial will be at the convenience of the family. Friends
may visit the family between 6-8 p.m. Friday at the
funeral home.

CONLEY
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Harlan Brooks “Chick”
Conley, 76, of Gallipolis, passed away Saturday, July
23, 2016, at his residence. Funeral services will be 10
a.m. Thursday, July 28, 2016, at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. Friends may call the funeral home
Wednesday between 5-8 p.m.

Proctorville, passed away Monday, July 25, 2016 at
home. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
is assisting the family with arrangements, which are
incomplete.

THELMA DANNER
GALLIPOLIS — Thelma “Jean” Danner, 78,
of Gallipolis, went to be
with the Lord on Sunday,
July 24, 2016, surrounded
by her family.
She was born Oct. 1,
1938, in Gallipolis, to the
late William Jacob and
Sarah Margaret (Farley)
Wise. Jean was retired
from Gallipolis Developmental Center and
enjoyed spending time
with her family along
with crafts and decorating.
She was preceded in
death by her parents; children Rodney Allen Lee
(infant), Randy Joe Lee;
ﬁrst husband Charles
Edward Lee; and a sister
Hilda McDaniel.
Jean, as she was
affectionately known, is
survived by her husband,

MULLINS
GALLIPOLIS — Thelma Louise Mullins, 90, of
BLAKE
Gallipolis, passed away Monday, July 25, 2016 at her
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Jerry Dale Blake, 47, of
daughter’s home. Services will be noon Thursday, July
Huntington, died Wednesday, July 20, 2016. Funeral
28, 2016, at Willis Funeral Home. Burial will follow
service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday, July 27, 2016, at Hall in Pine Grove Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial home between 11 a.m. and noon Thursday.
will follow in Woodmere Memorial Park, Huntington.
Visitation will be one hour prior to the service at the
WALLACE
funeral home.
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Maxine Wallace, of

WAMSLEY
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.— Betty Jo Wamsley, 86,
of Point Pleasant, passed away Saturday, July 23, 2016.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, July 29, 2016, at
Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Burial will follow
in the New Lone Oak Cemetery. Friends may visit the
family at the funeral home between 6-8 p.m. Thursday.

CUMMINS
POMEROY, Ohio — James B. Cummins, of Pomeroy, passed away Monday, July 25, 2016 at Arbors of
Pomeroy. Arrangements are incomplete and will be
announced by Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.

WILSON
CINCINNATI — Raymond Eugene Wilson, 56, of
Cincinnati, formerly of Lawrence County, Ohio, passed
away Saturday, July 23, 2016. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

HILL
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — John Franklin Hill,
42, of Gallipolis Ferry, passed away July 24, 2016, in

DORIS VIRGINIA SAYRE

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel
appreciates your input to the community calendar. To make sure items can
receive proper attention, all information should be received by the newspaper at least ﬁve business days prior to
an event. All coming events print on a
space-available basis and in chronological order. Events can be emailed
to:TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

Meigs Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy. Jimmy Stewart, Meigs Board of
Elections,will speak on the topic of the
Home Rule Initiative; Meigs County
Commissioner Randy Smith, issues
associated with the TB Levy; Loralee
Carmichael and Kevin Dennis, information on Field of Hope Community
Campus drug treatment facility. Everyone is welcome to attend.

Tuesday, July 26

Wednesday, July 27

POMEROY — Meigs Tea Party
Meeting will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the

MIDDLEPORT — Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m.

at Jobs and Family Service, 175 Race
St., Third Floor, Middleport.
Thursday, July 28

SALEM CENTER — American
Red Cross Blood Drive sponsored by
Star Grange, 1-6:30 p.m. at the Grange
Hall on County Road 1, north of Salem
Center. Bring donor card or photo
ID. To make an appointment contact
Linda at 740-669-4245 or 1-800-REDCROSS or visit redcross.org. Walk-ins
are welcome. Homemade food will be
provided to all donors.

MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION
LUNCH ALONG THE RIVER
July 13th-August 3rd-September 7th,
11-1 Delivery Available
740-591-6095 or 740-416-2247
Dave Diles Park

60667436

TUESDAY EVENING
6 PM

6:30

8
10
11
12
13

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
(WOUB)
events.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(WCHS)
ent Tonight
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
(WBNS)
at 6 p.m.
News
Fortune
2 Broke Girls Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
(WVAH)
News 6:30 Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing inBBC World Nightly
Business
depth analysis of current
(WVPB) News:
America
Report (N)
events.
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
(WOWK)
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

WSAZ News
3 (WSAZ)
3
WTAP News
4 (WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
6 (WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Nature Cat
7

TUESDAY, JULY 26
7 PM

CABLE

6 PM

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Rick Steves'
Europe

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

America's Got Talent "Live Show 1" Twelve acts
compete. (N)
America's Got Talent "Live Show 1" Twelve acts
compete. (N)
The Bachelorette "The Men Tell All" (N)

2016 Democratic
Convention (L)
2016 Democratic
Convention (L)
2016 Democratic
Convention (L)
PBS Convention Coverage "Democratic Convention" Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff
anchor complete live coverage of the Democratic convention. (L)
The Bachelorette "The Men Tell All" (N)

2016 Democratic
Convention (L)
NCIS "Blood Brothers"
Zoo "Sex, Lies and Jellyfish" 2016 Democratic
(N)
Convention (L)
Hotel Hell "Landoll's
Coupled "Laws of
Eyewitness News at 10
Mohican Castle" (SF) (N)
Attraction" (N)
p.m.
PBS Convention Coverage "Democratic Convention" Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff
anchor complete live coverage of the Democratic convention. (L)
NCIS "Blood Brothers"

8 PM

8:30

Zoo "Sex, Lies and Jellyfish" 2016 Democratic
(N)
Convention (L)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Walk the Line (‘05, Bio) Reese Witherspoon, Joaquin Phoenix. TV14
18 (WGN) BlueB. "The Blue Templar"
MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L)
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Chicago White Sox Site: U.S. Cellular Field (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption SportsCenter
ISKA Karate U.S. Open
Arm Wrestling
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Met Mother Met Mother
Postgame
Pirates Ball
Baseball Tonight (L)
SportsCenter
Fun With Dick and Jane (2005, Comedy) Téa Leoni,
Friends With Benefits (‘11, Com) Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis. Two Sugar
Alec Baldwin, Jim Carrey. TV14
friends learn that having sex does complicate their friendship. TVMA
Daddies
(5:40) Dead
(:45) Dead of Summer "Mix (:55) Dead of Summer "Modern Love"
Dead of Summer "How to Guilt "A Simple Plan"
of Summer Tape"
Stay Alive in the Woods" (N)
(3:30)
The Dark
The Dark Knight Rises (2012, Action) Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway. Batman makes his return to
Knight Christian Bale. TV14 Gotham when the city is threatened. TVPG
H.Danger
H.Danger
Crashlet (N) Thunder
Nicky
GShakers
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "Safe Harbor"
Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Smackdown!
The Fast &amp; the Furious: T...
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Wrecked (N) The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
America's Choice 2016
America's Choice 2016
Divergent (2014, Action) Kate Winslet, Miles Teller, Shailene Woodley. TV14
Animal King "Man In" (N) Animal Kingdom "Man In"
(4:00)
G.I. Jane (‘97,
Jaws (1975, Horror) Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Roy Scheider. A great white Feed the Beast "Be My
Baby" (N)
Dra) Demi Moore. TV14
shark attacks and terrorizes the residents of a Long Island beach town. TV14
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch "The Widowmaker" 1/2 (N)
The First 48 "Marked for
The First 48 "Jacked/ Fallen Married1st- (:45) Married at First Sight "Wedding
Born This Way "Game of
Death"
Idol"
Preparations" (N)
Love" (N)
Sight (N)
Wild Russia "Arctic"
Wild Russia "Urals"
Hello World! Hello World! Hello World! Hello World! Hello World! Hello World!
Sisterhood of Hip Hop "U- Sisterhood of Hip Hop
Sisterhood Hip Hop "Can’t Sisterhood of Hip Hop
Sisterhood of Hip Hop
N-I-T-Y"
"Beats, Rhymes, and Life" Nobody Hold Me Down"
"Start From Scratch"
"Start From Scratch" (N)
Law &amp; Order "Silence"
Law&amp;O. "The Working Stiff" Law &amp; Order "Skin Deep" Law &amp; Order "Conspiracy" Law &amp; Order "Forgiveness"
Botched
E! News (N)
Botched
Botched
Famously Single (N)
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Lopez
(:50) Lopez
(:25) Ray "Jazz Records"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
The Final
The Final
Eyewitness War "Deadliest Locked Up Abroad
No Man Left Behind "The No Man Left Behind
"Stealth Fighter Down" (N) Report
Weapon"
"Jamaica"
One That Got Away"
Report
NASCAR America (L)
Whelen (N) NA: The List Poker After Dark
Poker After Dark
Poker After Dark
Speak for Yourself
MLB Whiparound (L)
MLB Best (N) Insider
UFC Fight Night
Counting
(:05) Big Easy (:35) Big Easy
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars (N)
Cars (N)
Motors (N) Motors (N)
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
(:15) Below Deck
Obsessed (2009, Thriller) Idris Elba, Ali Larter, Beyoncé Knowles. TV14
Music Moguls "Family" (N) Fabulous (N) MusicMo.
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
House Hunt. House
(5:00) Lake Placid: The Final Zombie Shark (2015, Sci-Fi) Cassie Steele, Jason London. Ice Sharks (2016, Sci-Fi) TV14
Chapter
TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

The Second Best The Night Of "A Dark

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (‘15, Act/Com) Armie
Hammer, Henry Cavill. A CIA agent and KGB operative join
Com/Dra) Dev Patel. TVPG
forces against a mysterious criminal organization. TV14
(5:10)
(:45) Insidious: Chapter 3 (2015, Horror) Stefanie Scott,
(:25)
Jeepers Creepers Two college
450 (MAX) Beetlejuice Dermot Mulroney, Lin Shaye. A teen is targeted by a
students struggle to escape from an
TV14
malevolent spirit, and a gifted psychic must save her. TV14 unstoppable supernatural creature. TVMA
Ray Donovan "Get Even
(5:00)
The Royal
Southpaw (2015, Drama) Rachel McAdams, Forest
500 (SHOW) Tenenbaums (‘01, Com/Dra) Before Leavin'"
Whitaker, Jake Gyllenhaal. A boxer at the top of his game
Gene Hackman. TVMA
suffers a downward spiral after his wife is killed. TVMA
(4:50)

400 (HBO) Exotic Marigold Hotel (‘15, Crate"

FORT MYERS,
Fla. — Doris
Virginia Sayre,
90, of Fort Myers,
passed away Saturday, July 23, 2016.
Doris was born
Oct. 10, 1925, in
Nellis, Boone County,
W.Va., daughter of Roy
Otis and Mayme Neal
Harless. She and her
husband, Layton Sayre,
owned Whispering Pines
Night Club for many
years before retiring to
Florida.
In 1974, her family
moved from Pomeroy to
Lehigh Acres, Fla. She
worked for the Lehigh
Corp. for 17 years and
retired to Fort Myers.
She is survived by
her children, Sharon
Koerper, Michael Harless (Helena), Ava Sayre,

and Autumn
Roy(William),
all of Fort Myers;
grandchildren
Steve Shaw, of
Port Charlotte,
Fla., Jill Copland,
of Columbus,
Stephany Gardner, Ft.
Myers, Tiffany Hoffman,
of Middleport, Heather
Kyle, of Fort Myers, Jennifer Hobaugh, of Fort
Myers, and Jessica Stanley, of Lake Worth, Fla.;
and brother Bob Harless
(Peggy), of Mason, W.Va.
She was preceded in
death by her parents;
brother William Harless,
of Fort Myers; and sisters
Kathryn Harless Ward,
of Elizabeth, W.Va., and
Phyllis Harless Robertson, of Mechanicsville,
Va.

GLADYS E. WELCH

WE HAVE CAT'S MEOWS OF MIDDLEPORT LANDMARKS!
THESE MAKE GREAT GIFTS!
Library-Post Office-Pool
Middleport High/Jr. High-Meigs High School
$20@
740-992-5877
60664284

BROADCAST

Richard Danner; children
Vicky Sue (Chris) Burris, Kelvin Lee, Shelia
“Dee Dee” (Dave) Grant;
daughter-in-law, Deatra
“Dee” Lee; sister Carol
(Sid) Hayman; brother
Roland (Joanne) Wise;
special friend Kim
George; six grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Thursday, July
28, 2016, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport. Burial will
follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire. Visitation for family and friends
will be two hours prior to
the service.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

10 PM

10:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel (N)
The Green Inferno (2014,
Horror) Ariel Levy, Daryl
Sabara, Lorenza Izzo. TVMA
(:05) Roadies "Friends and
Family"

ALBANY — Gladys
E. Welch, 74, of Albany,
passed away Sunday,
July 24, 2016, at her
residence, surrounded by
family, after an extended
illiness.
Born Oct. 25, 1941, in
Meigs County, she was
the daughter of the late
Elden and Neva Stanley
Markins. Gladys was a
former waitress for over
20 years at the Country
Harvest House. She had
also worked as a waitress
for Country Junction for
two years, and had been
employed by Porters Dry
Cleaning of Circleville.
She is survived by her
husband, Gary Welch;
daughter Lori Jean (Bill)
Burbridge; son Jeffrey
(Penny) Welch; former
daughter-in-law Dawnette
Welch; grandchildren
Hollie (Daniel) Young,
Ashley (Micheal) Smith,
Travis Burbridge, Aus-

tin Welch, Casey Sayre,
and Christian Cox;
great-granddaughter
Izzy Smith; sisters and
brothers Arlene (Kenny)
Williams, of Arizona,
Linda Bramlitt, of Albany,
Bruce (Karen) Markins,
of Carpenter, Rob (Judy)
Markins, of Langsville,
and Lisa Markins and
Angela Markins, both of
Albany; and many nieces
and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by a grandson,
Curtis Welch.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, July 27,
2016, at Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery. Visitation will be
6-8 p.m.Tuesday at the
funeral home.
You may sign her register book at www.bigonyjordanfuneralhome.

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�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 3

Eastern local board prepares for school year
By Lorna Hart

volunteer assistant varsity
boys basketball coach; Matt
Simpson, assistant varsity
REEDSVILLE — As the
boys basketball coach; and Tim
beginning of the 2016-17
Simpson, assistant boys junior
school year approaches,
varsity basketball coach.
the Eastern Local Board of
The board approved several
Education is in full preparation staff member resignations:
mode.
Intervention specialists David
First on the board’s agenda
Waters and Robyn Howard,
last week was approval of the
effective the end of the 2015-16
June regular meeting minutes
school year; and Tina Kelley,
and the submitted ﬁnancial
elementary intervention
reports.
specialist, effective Aug. 19.
The board certiﬁed
The board gave the go-ahead
additional revenue to the
to
hire Archie Rose as a
Meigs County Auditor,
substitute
bus driver, Mandy
along with forgiving advance
Bush
as
a
substitute
cook, and
repayments to the general fund.
Amendments to the temporary Cheryl Lyons as a substitute
appropriation resolution (from custodian for the 2016-17
school year, pending proper
a prior meeting) were passed.
certiﬁcation.
They then moved to hirings
The following
and resignations.
paraprofessionals
received one
A supplemental contract was
year
contracts
for
the 2016-17
approved for Jeremy Hill, head
school
year
pending
proper
golf coach.
certiﬁcation:
Kathy
Barrett,
Pupil activity contracts
Paula Buckley, Janet Hoffman,
were given to Daniel Buckley,
volunteer assistant junior high Lori Mugrage and Romayne
Martindale.
football coach; Ethan Steger,
Rachel Marten was hired
volunteer assistant junior high
football coach; Greg Lloyd,
as the district coordinator

lhart@civitasmedia.com

Dem convention
roiled by emails,
chairwoman

for special education, federal
programs and curriculum on a
202-day contract.
A two-year administrative
contract was awarded to Robin
Burrow as elementary school
principal grades K-4.
Receiving one-year contracts
for the 2016-17 school year
were Charles Robinson, middle
school health and physical
education teacher; Dezere
Martin, middle school language
arts teacher; Melissa Roush,
high school intervention
specialist, Nathan Jeffers, high
school English/language arts
reacher; and Terry Reed, cross
categorical/ED intervention
specialist.
Twenty extended days of
service for the 2016-17 school
year were approved for the
following staff: Sara Will,
elementary/middle school
guidance counselor; Sheryl
Roush, high school guidance
counselor; Chad Grifﬁth,
library media specialist. Macyn
Baylor, speech pathologist, was
approved for ﬁve days.
Student accident insurance

from Reed and Baur Insurance
Agency was renewed and a
resolution adopting a calamity
day alternative make-up plan
was passed.
The board moved Eastern
Local School District to
participate in state and
federal grants as determined
appropriate by the district’s
superintendent and treasurer.
An agreement was made
with MedBen to provide third
party claims services for dental
claims for the period of Oct. 1,
through Sept. 30, 2017. Family
coverage will be self-funded
at $66 per month and single
coverage at $26 per month.
Regular student lunch prices
will increase by 10 cents for the
upcoming school year, making
the cost of lunch $2.20 per
student. The Ohio Department
of Education Equity in
School Lunch Policy, Section
205 of the Child Nutrition
Authorization Act, mandated
the increase.
Student fees for the 201617 school year were set and
a resolution of intent not

to provide career-technical
education in grades seven and
eight for the 2016-17 school
year passed.
Quotes for tire/tubes by
Malone Warehouse Tire;
petroleum products by
Engleﬁeld Oil Company; and
Dairy Products from Broughton
Foods, LLC were accepted.
A purchase service
agreement for $221,900 with
the Athens-Meigs ESC was
approved. The agreement
provides supervisory and
educational support services at
a cost of $0.00.
A memorandum of
understanding between Meigs
County Health Department and
Eastern Local School District for
the administration of the head
lice program three times annually
was signed by the board.
The next regular meeting
of the Eastern Local Board
of Education is scheduled for
Wednesday, August 10, at 6:30
p.m.in the elementary library
conference room.
Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155, Ext.
2551

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
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.

Meigs High School
Class of 1972 plans reunion

By Ken Thomas
As Sanders spoke,
and Kathleen Hennessey Wasserman Schultz

POMEROY — The Meigs High School Class of
1972 will have a reunion/dinner from 5:30-8:30 p.m.
Sept. 24, at Wolfe Mountain Entertainment (the old
Pomeroy High School) on Main St., Pomeroy. Cost
is $23 per person. Visit mhsclass1972.org to register
online and for all the details. Deadline for registration
is Aug. 19. People must pre-register — no registration
will be taken at the door.

Associated Press

number for information regarding Pink with Purpose
programs.

ODOT to hold realignment
public meeting Wednesday
POMEROY — The Ohio Department of Transportation will be hosting a public meeting on the
upcoming Meigs County SR 7/SR 143 realignment
project at 6:30 p.m. July 27 at the Meigs Multi-Purpose Senior Center, 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Construction is slated to begin next summer on
the estimated $2 million project that includes widening and realignment of the intersection of SR 7/SR
143, including left turn lanes. For more information,
contact David Rose, ODOT communications, at
(614) 387-0435 or email david.rose@dot.ohio.gov.

announced she would
not gavel in the convenPHILADELPHIA
tion, recognition that
— Seeking to avoid
her presence onstage
a televised display of
would only showcase
disunity, Bernie SandDemocrats’ deep diviers on Monday urged
sions. The Florida
supporters to line up
congresswoman was
behind Democrat Hillgreeted with boos
ary Clinton and claimed Monday morning by
victory in deposing and delegates who would
sidelining a top party
certainly have repeated
ofﬁcial.
the spectacle.
TUPPERS PLAINS — “Ocean Commotion” is
Some of his supportFor Democrats who
the
theme of Vacation Bible School on July 26-29,
ers jeered in disapprov- spent last week throwSALEM CENTER — Star Grange will hold an
at
Bethel
Worship Center, 39782 St. Rt. 7, Tuppers
al, indicating turmoil at ing stones at RepubliAmerican
Red Cross Blood Drive between 1-6:30 p.m.
Plains. Cool snacks will be provided and even cooler
this week’s Democratic cans’ troubled convenJuly
28
at
the
Grange Hall on County Rd. 1, north of
games, crafts, and lessons. Doors open at 6:15 p.m.,
National Convention
tion in Cleveland, the
Salem
Center.
Bring donor card or photo ID. To make
VBS from 6:30-8:45 p.m. each night.
won’t end with the
scene was a painful
an appointment contact Linda at 740-669-4245 or
departure of the party
reminder of their own
1-800-REDCROSS or visit redcross.org. Walk-ins are
chairman, Rep. Debbie glass house. On the
also welcome. Homemade food will be provided to all
Wasserman Schultz of
eve of the four-day
donors.
Florida.
spectacle, the 19,000
Speaking to his conhacked emails published
RUTLAND — “Barnyard Roundup” is the theme
vention delegates, just
by WikiLeaks appeared
at Rutland Freewill Baptist Church Vacation Bible
hours before the Demo- to show top ofﬁcials at
School on July 26-29 from 6-8:30 p.m. A week of fun,
crats opened a conventhe supposedly neutral
fellowship, and learning about Jesus is planned. There
tion to nominate his pri- Democratic National
OHIO VALLEY — The Southern Ohio Council
will be a drawing for a bicycle for those with perfect
mary rival, the Vermont Committee working to
of
Governments will hold its next board meeting
attendance: two for each class, one boy and one girl.
senator tried to settle
on
Thursday, July 28, at 10 a.m. at the Ross County
tip the scales toward
Mothers are welcome to stay with their children. A
roiling tensions between Clinton. Wasserman
Service
Center, 475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe,
pickup and return can also be arranged within a cerhis supporters and the
45601.
SOCOG
provides administrative support for
Schultz denied the accutain radius from the church by calling 740-742-2790
party rank-and-ﬁle lining sation, but was forced
the
County
Boards
of Developmental Disabilities
or 740-742-4503.
up behind Clinton.
in Adams, Athens, Brown, Clinton, Fayette, Gallia,
out as chief Sunday.
A fresh email conHighland, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway, Pike,
The FBI issued a
troversy, appearing
Ross, Scioto and Vinton counties. It’s primary focus
statement Monday sayto show bias by party
is quality assurance, provider compliance, investigaing it is investigating
ofﬁcials against Sandtive services and residential administration of waivers
the hack.
ers, has made that
POMEROY — Pink with Purpose has moved to
and supportive living in order to provide individual“A compromise of this
task harder just as the
113 East Memorial Drive, Ste. C, Pomeroy. They are ized, personal support to people with developmental
nature is something we
national spotlight turns take very seriously, and
disabilities and is a government entity created under
located in the same building with the Meigs County
to the Democrats’ rally the FBI will continue
Board of Elections and OSU County Extension Ofﬁce. Chapter 167 of the Ohio Revised Code, representing
behind Clinton.
to investigate and hold
15 county boards of development disabilities. Board
Carolyn Grueser became breast screening coordina“Brothers and sisters, accountable those who
tor in March 2016; Heidi Rittenour is no longer with meetings usually are held the ﬁrst Thursday of the
this is the real world
pose a threat in cybermonth. The next meeting will be Sept. 1. For more
the program. The phone number is still the same,
that we live in,” Sanders space,” it said.
information, call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.
740-992-5469, and Grueser can be contacted at that
told his audience, raising his hand in an effort
to quiet them. Republican nominee Donald
Trump is “a bully and
demagogue,” he said,
who must not win the
White House.
The remarks were
®
met with boos and
grumbling from supporters clearly not
ready to give up the
555 Park Street, Middleport, OH 45760
ﬁght for what he calls
(740) 992-6611 Toll Free 800-733-3334 Fax (740) 992-2709
his “political revolution.” Sanders tried to
persuade them they had
SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY SINCE 1903
already won by helping
to create what he called
820 East Main St., Pomeroy
the “most progressive
740-992-3600
Democratic platform
in the history of the
www.reedbaur.com
party.” And he, too,
omig.com
celebrated the ouster
We care about
of Wasserman Schultz
after the email hack.
what matters
“Her resignation
opens up the possibility
most to you.
of new leaders at the
Ohio Mutual
top of the Democratic
Insurance Group
Party that will stand
FARM HOME AUTO BUSINESS
with working people,”
he said.

Ocean Commotion theme of
Bethel Worship Center VBS

Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church VBS starts Tuesday

American Red Cross
blood drive is Thursday

SOCG board
to meet Thursday

Pink with Purpose moves
to Memorial Drive

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

In need of
some face time
There was a time when going to the grocery
store was an all-day event that happened every few
weeks, and if your pantry was bare of an item you
needed, dropping into the quick mart wasn’t an
option.
If you ran out of sugar in the midst of pie-baking, you borrowed a cup from your neighbor —
yes, literally. I was the oldest and was usually the
one sent to fetch the grains of charity.
There wasn’t a gourmet coffee
shop on every corner, either. Grownups plunked a quarter on the table
for their freshly brewed mug at the
diner where the townsfolks gathered
to indulge when the purse strings
weren’t too tight or if the lady of the
house was tired of cooking.
Michele
The pies were thick and the lines
Z. Marcum were short. A steady trickle of visiContributing tors pranced through ordering this
Columnist
and pointing out that. The counters
weren’t swarmed with sweating,
pacing zombies swiping their cell
phones. The individuals in line chatted about their
plans for the day or their menu choice. The topic
didn’t matter. The conversation did. Folks valued
the actual presence of the person to their right or
to their left more than the remote embodiment of
intimacy many ﬁnd on their cellphones today.
In simpler times, we didn’t have instant access
to what was happening to a dear friend across the
state or to a stranger half-way around the world.
Time seemed to glide like the news did then —
slowly, winding through the community instead of
zooming past like a satellite signal. We digested
the events and let the facts settle in. We had time
to connect to whatever feelings were stirred from
the announcements. Joy and commiseration were
shared at an arm’s length, not over the distance of
airwaves.
But I wonder how I’d stay connected without
my cellphone’s capability to email and text. Would
I be able to function without the techie convenience? Perhaps, I could. Maybe the trick to enjoying the app-driven society is to balance my digital
teeter-totter with a bit of old-time face time.
After all, what’s the worst that could happen
without my navigation app? I’d have to stop and
ask a stranger for directions?
I don’t mind querying random people when I
visit a new destination. I so enjoy talking with
other travelers, hearing the local scoop on cool
places that are a must to check out. Why is it that
I’m able to talk for 20 minutes with someone in
a foreign land that I don’t even know; yet, I can’t
seem to ﬁnd ﬁve to touch base with my neighbor?
If familiarity breeds contempt, it breeds contentment as well, and I’m ﬁnding I don’t really want
to be content — not if it means I have to be on a
formal vacation to relax and appreciate the waning
decadence of personal conversation.
Back in the day, neighbors shared their vacation
plans with each other and exchanged the chores of
watering the ﬂowers in the porch boxes and fetching letters from the mailbox for safe-keeping.
Of course, all neighbors aren’t trustworthy. We
don’t live in the shelter of the likes of Mayberry
anymore, but I’m willing to take a chance and satisfy my own craving for some good old-fashioned
face time. Think I’ll go next door and borrow a
K-cup — I’m plumb out of coffee and in the mood
to stretch my communication boundaries.
Let the “Howdy, neighbors” begin!
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County and an author. Her
column appears each Tuesday.

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about what’s going on in their world. We encourage you to
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THEIR VIEW

Growing our shrinking middle class
Today, Americans are
pact in this country that
working longer hours for
promised if you worked
less pay. Protections and
hard, played by the rules,
beneﬁts that were once
and put in the hours, you
guaranteed by the governcould get ahead. You could
ment or bargained for by
make enough to put dinner
unions have eroded. Workon the table, take the kids
ers are holding up their end Sherrod
to the movies, send your
Brown
of the bargain, but seeing
daughters to college, and
Contributing save for retirement.
little in return.
Columnist
And new numbers illusBut over the past several
trate the reality Ohio workdecades, as you can see
ers face. Oxfam and the
from these numbers, the
Economic Policy Institute released value of work has eroded. Ohio
a new report last week revealing
workers aren’t looking for a handthe staggering number of workers
out — they’re just looking to be
in Ohio and across the country
paid what they’re worth. We need
that are trying to support their
to do more to ensure that their
families on low wages that don’t
hard work is rewarded.
reﬂect the value of work they are
That means raising the national
putting in.
minimum wage to $15. It means
Nearly a third of the Ohio workguaranteeing paid sick leave and
force — above the national averpaid family leave. It means ensurage — earns less than $12 an hour. ing equal pay for equal work. It
And nearly half of Ohio workers
means ending workplace abuses
earn less than $15 an hour.
that steal from workers’ paychecks
These aren’t teenagers working
by misclassifying them as “indesummer jobs for pizza money —
pendent contractors,” or by forcthe vast majority of these Ohio
ing them to work off the clock.
workers are over 25 and many
And it means rewarding work
are supporting families. There
through the tax code.
are 4.6 million Ohioans living in
One of the best things we did
households that are supported by
in Congress last year was to pass
a worker making $15 an hour or
my bill to permanently expand
less.
the Earned Income Tax Credit,
This isn’t how you build a strong or EITC — and we got it done
middle class.
as part of a bipartisan deal. The
We used to have a social comEITC is one of the most important

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday,
July 26, the 208th day
of 2016. There are 158
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On July 26, 1775, the
Continental Congress
established a Post Ofﬁce
and appointed Benjamin
Franklin its PostmasterGeneral.
On this date:
In 1788, New York
became the 11th state to
ratify the U.S. Constitution.
In 1882, the Richard
Wagner opera “Parsifal”
premiered in Bayreuth,
Germany.
In 1908, U.S. Attorney General Charles J.
Bonaparte ordered creation of a force of special
agents that was a forerunner of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
In 1925, ﬁve days after
the end of the Scopes
Trial in Dayton, Tennessee, prosecutor William
Jennings Bryan died at
age 65. (Although Bryan
had won a conviction
against John T. Scopes
for teaching Darwin’s
Theory of Evolution, the

verdict was later overturned.)
In 1945, the Potsdam
Declaration warned
Imperial Japan to unconditionally surrender, or
face “prompt and utter
destruction.” The same
day, Winston Churchill
resigned as Britain’s
prime minister after
his Conservatives were
soundly defeated by the
Labour Party; Clement
Attlee succeeded him.
In 1952, Argentina’s
ﬁrst lady, Eva Peron,
died in Buenos Aires at
age 33. King Farouk I of
Egypt abdicated in the
wake of a coup led by
Gamal Abdel Nasser.
In 1956, Egyptian
President Gamal Abdel
Nasser nationalized the
Suez Canal.
In 1965, the Maldives
became independent of
Britain.
In 1971, Apollo 15
was launched from Cape
Kennedy on America’s
fourth successful
manned mission to the
moon.
In 1986, Islamic
radicals in Lebanon
released the Rev. Law-

tools we have. President Reagan
called it “the best anti-poverty
measure to come out of Congress.”
We need to build on our success
with EITC, and expand it to cover
all low-income workers.
We also took an important step
last month. Vice President Biden,
Labor Secretary Perez, and I ﬂew
to Columbus to announce a new
overtime rule that will give millions of American workers a raise.
Right now, before the rule
change takes effect, millions of
American workers are classiﬁed
as managers. But they are making
just $30,000 or $40,000, and working 50 and 60 hour weeks, without
getting paid a cent — let alone
time-and-a-half — for their extra
hours.
As the Vice President said in
the announcement, “when the
middle class does well, the rich do
very, very well, and the poor have
hope.”
A healthy economy invests in its
workforce, and when hard work
pays off, we get more productive
workers, more successful businesses, and stronger families.
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown is a Democrat
who represents Ohio in the U.S. Senate in
Washington, D.C. Contact Sen. Sherrod Brown:
Constituents may call (888) 896-6446 (toll-free
in Ohio) or (202) 224-2315 at his Washington,
D.C. office. He can also be reached electronically
at www.brown.senate.gov/contact. Facebook:
www.facebook.com/sherrod; and Twitter @
SenSherrodBrown.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“One brave deed makes no hero.” — John Greenleaf
Whittier, American poet and essayist (1807-1892).

rence Martin Jenco, an
American hostage held
for nearly 19 months.
American statesman W.
Averell Harriman died in
Yorktown Heights, New
York, at age 94.
In 1990, President
George H.W. Bush
signed the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
In 1996, swimmer
Amy Van Dyken became
the ﬁrst American
woman to win four gold
medals at a single Olympics as she captured the
50-meter freestyle in
Atlanta.
Today’s Birthdays:
Jackson Five patriarch Joe
Jackson is 88. Actor Robert Colbert is 85. Actresssinger Darlene Love is 75.
Singer Brenton Wood is
75. Rock star Mick Jagger
is 73. Movie director Peter
Hyams is 73. Actress
Helen Mirren is 71. Rock
musician Roger Taylor
(Queen) is 67. Actress
Susan George is 66.
Olympic gold medal ﬁgure
skater Dorothy Hamill is

60. Actor Kevin Spacey
is 57. Rock singer Gary
Cherone (sher-OWN’) is
55. Actress Sandra Bullock is 52. Actor-comedian
Danny Woodburn is 52.
Rock singer Jim Lindberg
(Pennywise) is 51. Actor
Jeremy Piven is 51. Rapper-reggae singer Wayne
Wonder is 50. Actor Jason
Statham (STAY’-thum) is
49. Actor Cress Williams
is 46. TV host Chris Harrison is 45. Actress Kate
Beckinsale is 43. Actor
Gary Owen is 43. Rock
musician Dan Konopka
(OK Go) is 42. Gospel/
Contemporary Christian
singer Rebecca St. James
is 39. Actress Monica Raymund is 30. Actress Caitlin Gerard is 28. Actress
Francia Raisa is 28. Christian rock musician Jamie
Sharpe (Rush of Fools) is
27. Actress Bianca Santos
is 26. Actress-singer Taylor Momsen is 23. Actress
Elizabeth Gillies (TV:
“Sex&amp;Drugs&amp;Rock&amp;Roll”)
is 23.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 5

Fest

into it,” Peck said.
No word yet on the numbers in terms
of attendance and proﬁt, but Peck
From Page 1
said the Peck Fest committee will be
meeting soon to put all that together
100 percent of his merchandise sales
and to decide which community
that night to ﬂood relief.
organization it would like to donate
Janson also created one of Peck’s
some of the concert’s proceeds toward.
favorite moments of the festival when
This festival donation is a new addition
he pulled children onstage, including
and is meant to beneﬁt the community
Peck’s children, to sing one of his songs.
as Peck Fest grows.
Peck was also onstage ﬁlming the
As for next year’s concert, Peck said,
moment.
people are already asking about it and
“When I was videoing that, looking
“what’s next?”
back at the crowd, there were so
many cell phones (lit up), they
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@civitasmedia.com or
looked like stars and the fans were
on Twitter @BSergentWrites.

From Page 1

addition to the deaths
of Sean and Ste’fan, several of our students were
injured during this heartbreaking incident.
“I extend my deepest
sympathies and condolences to the families and
friends of these students
as well as to their teachers and administrators.
It deeply saddens me to
think we will not see the
faces of Ste’fan and Sean
when we welcome students back to school in a
few weeks.”
Syreeta Gary told
WFTX-TV her daughter
ran to avoid being shot.
Her daughter was OK,
but her daughter’s friend
“got hit in the leg and
luckily it’s just her leg,”
she said.
“Her dodging bullets
and running, dropping in
between cars, it’s ridiculous that these kids have
to go through this,” Gary
said. “They can’t enjoy
themselves because you
have other people that
have criminalistic minds
and they just want to terrorize things.”
Club owner Cheryl
Filardi, who said she
was in the back room
when the shots rang out,

said at least 10 security
guards were hired for the
party — two in the parking lot, one or two at the
door and the rest ﬂoating
inside.
She said the club has
had four or ﬁve teen
parties over the past halfdozen years, and this was
the second one this summer. She said the parties
are something positive for
a rough and often-violent
neighborhood.
“To be honest with
you, every day someone’s
getting shot in this area.
These days in Lee County, somebody’s always
shooting,” Filardi said.
“If we do teen parties, we
always have a ton of security and we’ve never had
a problem.”
Law enforcement
removed some of police
tape by Monday morning,
allowing the media and
public to get closer to the
entrance to Club Blu.
There were bullet holes
in concrete planters and
wooden support beams.
Sheriff’s evidence markers were still afﬁxed to
the holes. The letter “A”
was attached near a post,
while nearby “L,” ”M,”
”N” and “O” were marked
near a planter ﬁlled with
scraggly foliage.
Tasha Grant said
her son grew up with
Strawder and that the

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

74°

84°

81°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
3.44
3.65
30.33
25.72

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:25 a.m.
8:45 p.m.
12:24 a.m.
1:37 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Jul 26

New

First

Full

Aug 2 Aug 10 Aug 18

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
5:53a
6:46a
7:38a
8:29a
9:19a
10:10a
11:01a

Minor
12:07p
12:36a
1:24a
2:15a
3:05a
3:56a
4:47a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
6:20p
7:13p
8:06p
8:57p
9:48p
10:38p
11:29p

Minor
---1:00p
1:52p
2:43p
3:33p
4:24p
5:15p

WEATHER HISTORY
A 30-minute cloudburst on Pittsburgh’s north side on July 26, 1872,
caused ﬂash ﬂooding along Butcher’s
Run and Wood’s Run, drowning 133
people.

AEP (NYSE) - 69.77
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 21.03
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 121.37
Big Lots (NYSE) - 53.81
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 37.43
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 33.26
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 6.72
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.120
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 46.23
Collins (NYSE) - 84.08
DuPont (NYSE) - 68.88
US Bank (NYSE) - 41.97
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 31.64
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 49.99
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 63.87
Kroger (NYSE) - 35.79
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 74.12
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 91.96
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 22.09

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
87/69

Primary: unspeciﬁed causes
Mold: 1547
Moderate

High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.05
16.21
21.30
4.60
13.32
25.08
13.32
25.02
33.91
12.51
15.50
34.40
13.80

Portsmouth
87/69

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.17
+0.41
+0.18
-7.70
+0.29
-0.18
+0.16
+0.45
+0.41
+0.41
+0.80
+0.50
+0.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Logan
89/63

SATURDAY

84°
69°

SUNDAY

85°
67°

MONDAY

88°
67°

A couple of showers Clouds and sun with a Mostly cloudy with a
and a thunderstorm
t-storm; humid
t-storm possible

Marietta
89/66

Murray City
88/64
Belpre
89/67

Athens
88/66

85°
68°
Partly sunny

Today

St. Marys
90/66

Parkersburg
88/67

Coolville
88/65

Elizabeth
89/67

Spencer
87/67

Buffalo
86/69
Milton
87/68

St. Albans
87/68

Huntington
84/70

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
79/60
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
77/56
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
86/66
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer
for Ohio Valley Publishing who
lives in Mason County.

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
86/69

Ashland
86/71
Grayson
86/70

to hold the events.
Past Biker Sundays
at the Mason church
have drawn nearly 1,000
people. While the majority of bikers come from
Mason, Meigs and Gallia counties, many are
expected this year from
northern Ohio, Davis
said.

BBT (NYSE) - 36.79
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 22.19
Pepsico (NYSE) - 109.02
Premier (NASDAQ) - 17.60
Rockwell (NYSE) - 118.18
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 12.57
Royal Dutch Shell - 53.55
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 15.63
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 73.75
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 10.14
WesBanco (NYSE) - 30.92
Worthington (NYSE) - 43.54
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
July 25, 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.

Wilkesville
86/67
POMEROY
Jackson
87/67
87/66
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/69
87/68
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
87/66
GALLIPOLIS
87/69
88/69
86/69

South Shore Greenup
86/68
86/68

62

Humid with times of
clouds and sun

McArthur
88/64

Very High

FRIDAY

88°
71°

Adelphi
89/65
Chillicothe
88/66

ﬁeld between the church
and Dollar General
Store. Those attending
are asked to bring lawn
chairs or blankets for
seating.
Both Davis and his
wife Cathy were saved
at a Biker Sunday,
which makes the day
an important one for
him. Davis said Soul
Harvest is one of few
churches that continues

LOCAL STOCKS

THURSDAY

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

Waverly
87/66

Pollen: 8

Low

MOON PHASES

Humid with clouds
and sunshine

4

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:25 a.m.
8:44 p.m.
1:02 a.m.
2:44 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

— Bill Davis,
Heaven’s Saints Motorcycle Ministry-West Virginia chapter

A bike show will be
held with ﬁrst-, secondand third-place trophies
awarded in three categories. Winners will
be chosen by popular
vote. Motorcycle games
will be held throughout
the afternoon, which
promise some old favorites, as well as a few
new ones, according to
Davis.
The bike show,
inﬂatables and games
will all be held in the

EXTENDED FORECAST

Humid today with times of clouds and sun.
Partly cloudy tonight. High 87° / Low 69°

HEALTH TODAY

“All are invited, you don’t have to be a biker
to attend.”

From Page 1

91°
68°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

92°
76°
86°
66°
104° in 1934
52° in 1947

two had been friends
since they were 5 and
they played on the city
football team together.
The talented athlete often
spent the night at her
house. He was a typical
teen boy, who was quiet
and loved pizza and was
being scouted by colleges,
she said.
“He was like a son to
me … Looking at it on
the news this morning it
just broke me. I’m really
hurt. It hurts so bad,” she
said, adding she had to
then break the news to
her son.
State records online
show the alcohol license
for Club Blu was revoked
June 7 because of an incident that occurred a year
ago, but there were no
additional details available, according to records
from the Department of
Business and Professional
Regulation. The same
records show that a complaint was ﬁled in 2014
for “criminal activity” and
that the club was given an
ofﬁcial notice.
The shooting comes
more than a month after
a nightclub shooting in
Orlando that was the
deadliest shooting in
modern U.S. history. The
shooting at the Pulse
nightclub on June 12 left
49 victims dead and 53
others wounded.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Event

Clendenin
87/68
Charleston
85/70

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
79/54

Billings
92/65

Montreal
83/63

Minneapolis
88/70
Chicago
87/67

Denver
95/61

Kansas City
87/70

Toronto
86/66
Detroit
89/68

New York
94/74
Washington
94/78

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
93/74

High
Low

El Paso
98/75
Chihuahua
93/63

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
89/68/t
95/70/t
Anchorage
65/57/c 66/59/c
Atlanta
93/74/s 92/73/s
Atlantic City
89/76/pc 87/74/pc
Baltimore
94/72/pc 94/72/pc
Billings
92/65/t
86/62/t
Boise
100/66/s 100/65/s
Boston
92/72/s 88/71/s
Charleston, WV
85/70/t
89/69/t
Charlotte
96/74/s
96/74/t
Cheyenne
91/60/t
85/56/t
Chicago
87/67/s 88/70/pc
Cincinnati
87/67/c 89/68/pc
Cleveland
85/64/s 89/68/s
Columbus
88/67/pc 89/68/s
Dallas
96/78/t
95/77/t
Denver
95/61/t
93/57/t
Des Moines
87/68/pc
85/69/t
Detroit
89/68/s 91/70/pc
Honolulu
89/74/s 88/77/s
Houston
90/76/t
91/78/t
Indianapolis
86/68/pc 87/71/pc
Kansas City
87/70/pc 87/70/pc
Las Vegas
111/88/s 112/90/s
Little Rock
96/77/t
92/74/t
Los Angeles
86/66/pc 85/66/pc
Louisville
88/75/c
91/75/t
Miami
91/79/pc 91/80/pc
Minneapolis
88/70/pc
83/67/t
Nashville
94/75/t
91/74/t
New Orleans
87/76/t
88/78/t
New York City
94/74/s 92/76/s
Oklahoma City
91/74/t
92/67/t
Orlando
94/76/t
94/76/t
Philadelphia
95/75/pc 95/75/s
Phoenix
109/90/pc 112/92/pc
Pittsburgh
89/64/s 89/66/s
Portland, ME
87/65/s 85/63/pc
Raleigh
97/75/pc 96/76/pc
Richmond
94/75/t
92/75/t
St. Louis
89/73/c
88/75/t
Salt Lake City 102/73/pc 101/72/s
San Francisco
77/56/pc 78/57/pc
Seattle
79/60/s 82/61/s
Washington, DC
94/78/t 94/77/pc

106° in Henderson, NV
32° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
Houston
90/76
Monterrey
97/71

Miami
91/79

High
117° in Gassim, Saudi Arabia
Low -3° in Summit Station, Greenland
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

60647073

Shooting

Courtesy photo

Hundreds of bikers are expected to attend the fifth annual Biker Sunday and Community
Outreach, set for July 31 at Soul Harvest Church, 500 Adamsville Road, in Mason. Pictured is a
scene from a past event.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 s Page 6

Busch turns weekend into clean sweep
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Kyle
Busch heard all about the potential to pull off a historic sweep at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
On Sunday, he accomplished
the feat.
Busch led a record 149 of 170
laps and beat teammate Matt
Kenseth to the ﬁnish line in
a second overtime to win his
second straight Brickyard 400.
Coupled with an Xﬁnity Series
victory a day earlier, Busch
became the ﬁrst NASCAR driver
to win both poles and both races
on the same weekend.
“I’ve never had a dominant
Michael Conroy | AP
car
like this,” Busch said after
Kyle Busch celebrates after winning the Brickyard 400 NASCAR auto race at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Sunday.
celebrating his fourth win of the

season with his wife and son.
“This is obviously a special day
and a special car.”
The impressive feat even overshadowed two other major story
lines — Jeff Gordon’s comeback
and Tony Stewart’s farewell.
Stewart ﬁnished 11th in his
ﬁnal race at Indianapolis, while
Gordon was 13th. Gordon came
out of retirement to replace Dale
Earnhardt Jr., who has battled
concussion-like symptoms and
has missed two consecutive
races and will also sit out next
week at Pocono. Gordon will
replace him there, as well.
Afterward the two drivers who
grew up in Indiana drove side-

by-side around the 2.5-mile oval
one last time.
“I have gained so much
respect and admiration for
Tony,” Gordon said. “I love this
guy. I have always respected his
talent.”
Everybody respected Busch’s
talent this weekend, too.
The reigning Sprint Cup
Series champion, who used last
year’s win at the Brickyard to
jumpstart his title campaign,
joined third-place ﬁnisher Jimmie Johnson as the only back-toback winners of NASCAR’s race
at Indy. Johnson won in 2008
and 2009.

See BUSCH | 7

Post 39 forfeits
final few games
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Tonight’s scheduled all-star showcase marks the ofﬁcial end to the 8th District
Legion League American Legion baseball season.
Unfortunately for the Pomeroy Post 39 club, its
season unofﬁcially ended way too premature.
That’s because Post 39 — due to a lack of players — forfeited its ﬁnal six games of the summer,
including its two contests last week in the 8th District Legion League tournament.
Post 39 won just two games the entire summer
— its season opener (9-0) on June 5 at Parkersburg Post 15 and actually its last on-the-ﬁeld affair
a month later (5-2 on July 6) against Lancaster
Post 11.
In between, the Meigs County squad lost 11 outcomes in a row.
After the win over Lancaster, however, Post 39
was forced to forfeit its four remaining league tilts
— all four of which were scheduled to be played at
home.
The quartet included against Jackson on July
12, against Athens on July 14, and against Pickerington in a doubleheader on July 16.
Post 39 — as a result — went 1-7 in the league,
losing 14-4 in the opener at Athens on June 9, 13-4
at Jackson on June 15, and ﬁnally 7-2 at Lancaster
on June 27.
Speaking of Lancaster, Lancaster’s Beavers Field
hosts the annual 8th District Legion League tournament — and all ﬁve district teams are automatically entered into the double-elimination event.
But Post 39 forfeited its winners’ bracket game
to Lancaster last Sunday (July 17), before doing
the same against Athens in a losers’ bracket bout
the next night.
The state Legion tournament is set for this
week at Lancaster’s Beavers Field.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

David Bradshaw
wins 8th West
Virginia Open
HURRICANE, W.Va.
(AP) — David Bradshaw won his eighth
West Virginia Open
on Friday, shooting an
even-par 71 for a fourstroke victory.
The Harpers Ferry
pro ﬁnished at 7-underpar over three rounds
at Sleepy Hollow Golf
Club in Hurricane.
First-round leader Tad
Tomblin of Alum Creek
shot 72 Friday and ﬁnished second at 3 under.
Tied for third at 2
under were Garland
Green of Tazewell,
Virginia, Scott Depot’s
Chris Williams and Sam
O’Dell of Hurricane.
Williams was 6 under
for the tournament
after 14 holes but made
bogey, double bogey
and bogey on his next
three holes.
David Bradshaw, Harpers

Ferry 70-65-71_206
Tad Tomblin, Hamlin 6672-72_210
Garland Green, Tazewell,
Va. 67-72-72_211
Chris Williams, Scott
Depot 68-69-74_211
Sam O’Dell, Hurricane 6770-74_211
Harold Payne, Hurricane
73-73-69_215
Philip Reale II, South
Charleston 72-71-72_215
Pat Carter, Huntington
72-73-72_217
Thadd Obecny II, Wheeling
72-73-72_217
Christian Brand, Scott
Depot 74-70-73_217
Scott Davis, Hurricane
73-71-74_218
Davey Jude, Kermit 72-7770_219
Jonathan Clark, Hurricane
77-69-73_219
Swanson Smith, Winfield
71-73-75_219
Alan Cooke, Vienna 74-7075_219
Logan Lagodich, Canton,
Ohio 74-71-75_220
See OPEN | 7

Mike Groll | AP

National Baseball Hall of Fame inductees Mike Piazza, left, and Ken Griffey Jr. hold their plaques for photos after the induction ceremony
at Clark Sports Center on Sunday in Cooperstown, N.Y.

Griffey Jr., Piazza inducted into Hall
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP)
— Two players who began their
careers at opposite ends of the
spectrum nearly three decades
ago ended up in the same place on
Sunday — with their names etched
on plaques at the Baseball Hall of
Fame.
For Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike
Piazza, the culmination of their
long journeys was tinged with
tears all around.
“I stand up here humbled and
overwhelmed,” Griffey said, staring out at his family and tens of
thousands of fans. “I can’t describe
how it feels.”
The two became a piece of history on their special day. Griffey,
the ﬁrst pick of the 1987 amateur
draft, became the highest pick ever
inducted. Piazza, a 62nd-round
pick the next year —No. 1,390 —
is the lowest pick to enter the Hall
of Fame.
Griffey played 22 big-league
seasons with the Mariners, Reds
and White Sox and was selected
on a record 99.32 percent of ballots
cast, an afﬁrmation of sorts for his
clean performance during baseball’s so-called Steroids Era.
A 13-time All-Star and 10-time
Gold Glove Award winner in
center ﬁeld, Griffey hit 630 home
runs, sixth all-time, and drove in
1,836 runs. He also was the American League MVP in 1997, drove in
at least 100 runs in eight seasons,
and won seven Silver Slugger
Awards.
Griffey, who fell just three votes
shy of being the ﬁrst unanimous
selection, hit 417 of his 630 homers and won all 10 of his Gold
Gloves with the Seattle Mariners.
He played the ﬁrst 11 seasons of
his career with the Mariners and
led them to the playoffs for the ﬁrst
two times in franchise history.
“Thirteen years with the Seattle
Mariners, from the day I got

drafted, Seattle, Washington, has
been a big part of my life,” Griffey
said, punctuating the end of his
speech by putting a baseball cap on
backward as he did throughout his
career.
“I’m going to leave you with
one thing. In 22 years I learned
that one team will treat you the
best, and that’s your ﬁrst team. I’m
damn proud to be a Seattle Mariner.”
Dubbed “The Natural” for his
effortless excellence at the plate
and in center ﬁeld, Griffey avoided
the Hall of Fame until his special
weekend because he wanted his
ﬁrst walk through the front doors
of the stately building on Main
Street to be with his kids, whom
he singled out one by one in his
20-minute speech.
“There are two misconceptions
about me — I didn’t work hard and
everything I did I made look easy,”
Griffey said. “Just because I made
it look easy doesn’t mean that it
was. You don’t become a Hall of
Famer by not working, but working
day in and day out.”
Griffey’s mom, Birdie, and his
father, former Cincinnati Reds star
Ken Sr., both cancer survivors and
integral to his rise to stardom,
were front and center in the ﬁrst
row.
“To my dad, who taught me how
to play this game and to my mom,
the strongest woman I know,”
Junior said. “To have to be mom
and dad, she was our biggest fan
and our biggest critic. She’s the
only woman I know that lives in
one house and runs ﬁve others.”
Selected in the draft by the
Dodgers after Hall of Fame manager Tommy Lasorda, a close friend
of Piazza’a father, Vince, put in a
good word, Piazza struggled.
He brieﬂy quit the game while
in the minor leagues, returned and
persevered despite a heavy work-

load as he switched from ﬁrst base
to catcher and teammates criticized his erratic play.
Mom and dad were foremost on
his mind, too.
“Dad always dreamed of playing
in the major leagues,” said Piazza,
just the second Hall of Famer
depicted on his plaque wearing a
Mets cap, after Tom Seaver in 1992.
“He could not follow that dream
because of the realities of life. My
father’s faith in me, often greater
than my own, is the single most
important factor of me being
inducted into this Hall of Fame.
Thank you dad. We made it, dad.
The race is over. Now it’s time to
smell the roses.”
Piazza played 16 years with the
Dodgers, Marlins, Mets, Padres
and Athletics and hit 427 home
runs, including a major league
record 396 as a catcher. A 12-time
All-Star, Piazza won 10 Silver Slugger Awards and ﬁnished in the top
ﬁve of his league’s MVP voting
four times.
Perhaps even more impressive,
Piazza, a .308 career hitter, posted
six seasons with at least 30 home
runs, 100 RBIs and a .300 batting
average (all other catchers in baseball history combined have posted
nine such seasons).
Though the Dodgers gave him
his start, Piazza found a home in
New York when he was traded to
the Mets in May 1998.
Three years later, he became a
hero to the hometown fans with
perhaps the most notable home run
of his career. His two-run shot in
the eighth inning at Shea Stadium
lifted the Mets to a 3-2 victory
over the Atlanta Braves in the ﬁrst
sporting event played in New York
after the 9/11 terror attacks.
Piazza paid tribute to that
moment.
See HALL | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 7

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS offers reserved
parking for football

players, Gallia Academy Band Members, and Varsity and Junior Varsity Cheerleaders will be able to
purchase Reserve Seats on Tuesday, August 9.
Reserve Seats for the General Public will be
available
on Wednesday, August 10.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy AthThe
price
will be $30 per ticket. Tickets may be
letic Department is offering 40 reserved parking
purchased
in
the Athletic Director’s office at Gallia
spaces for the varsity football games at Memorial
Academy
High
School between the hours of 8 a.m.
Field.
and
3:00pm.
These reserved spots are located on the lower lot
Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters will be
on the softball field to provide an environment to
limited to 10 tickets purchased on the first day of
tailgate prior to the game.
The season-long pass costs $50 and your partici- sales. After the first day, there will be no limit on
pation supports all of the athletic programs at Gal- the number of tickets that may be purchased.
lipolis City Schools.
Reserved parking for the 2016 Gallia Academy
football season will go on sale on Monday, August
8, for Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity football
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Big Bend Youth
players, varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders and Football League will be holding signups from 11
Gallia Academy band members will be able to pur- a.m. until 1 p.m. on every Saturday in July at the
chase reserved parking on Tuesday, Aug. 9.
Middleport Stadium.
Reserved parking for the general public will be
The registration fee is $35 apiece.
available on Wednesday, August 10.
For more information, contact Sarah at (740)
These spaces will be first come, first serve until
444-1606 or Tony at (740) 416-3774.
all 40 spaces are sold.
For cheerleading questions, contact Angie at
(740) 444-1177.

BBYFL sign-ups
being held in July

Gallia Academy football
reserve seats on sale Aug. 8

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve Seats for the
2016 Gallia Academy football season will go on
sale on Monday, August 8 for Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
Parents of Varsity and Junior Varsity Football

Busch

Eastern golf
scramble set
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

WHO’S NOT: Hendrick Motorsports. Yes,
Johnson ended a fourrace streak with no topthrees but nobody else
ﬁnished in the top 10
and none of the four cars
was even in contention
for the lead.

crashes that delayed his
inevitable trip to victory
lane.
From Page 6
The crashes began
when Carl Edwards’ car
Busch surrendered the wiggled in the ﬁrst turn
lead for 14 laps after his on a restart with seven
ﬁrst pit stop, regained it
laps to go. His car slid
when Brad Keselowski
up the track, hitting
pitted, then gave it up
Keselowski, as well as
again for only ﬁve laps
Ryan Blaney, Ryan Newwhen he made his secman and Danica Patrick.
ond pit stop.
The wreck brought out a
Everyone else spent
their day chasing Busch. red ﬂag for almost eight
The Joe Gibbs Racing minutes.
On the ensuing
Toyota was so strong
restart,
with three to go,
that Roger Penske’s
Busch
again
pulled away
drivers started with a
only
to
have
a collision
strategy of trying stretch
between
Trevor
Bayne
their runs long enough
and
Clint
Bowyer
behind
to make one fewer pit
him
to
send
the
race
stop. It didn’t work —
into ﬁrst overtime.
Joey Logano ﬁnished
It happened again
seventh and Keselowski
when
Jamie McMurray
wound up 17th.
slid through the ﬁrst
The only real chalturn and into the wall
lenge for Busch came
with a series of late
on the next restart, but

Busch pulled away one
more time for a historic
win in a race that actually took 425 miles.
“I certainly didn’t
want one, let alone ﬁve
(overtimes) or however
many there were,” Busch
said. “We just wanted
the race to go green till
the end. We had a really
good long-run car till the
end, so I felt like we’d be
able to hold off all those
guys behind us and
then we had all those
restarts.”

Open

Ty Roush, Mason 77-72-79_228
Aaron Persily, Charleston 79-72-77_228
Chris Daniels, Beckley 78-75-76_229
Christopher Eckhardt, Morgantown 77-74-78_229
Joshua Arbaugh, Morgantown 77-74-78_229
Alex Schreckengost, Mineral Wells 80-76-74_230
Mitch Roush, Mason 74-77-79_230
Jeremy Vallet, Logan 75-76-79_230
Mike Stewart, Clarksburg 75-79-77_231
David Scragg, Poca 81-72-78_231
Tyler Hartzell, Fairmont 76-77-78_231
Chris Boyd, Charles Town 77-76-78_231
Isaiah Zaccheo, Beckley 80-71-80_231
Nick Dent, White Sulphur Springs 77-70-84_231
Christian McKisic, Buckhannon 80-76-76_232
Tim Mount, Huntington 79-77-76_232
Jay Woodward, Bridgeport 77-79-76_232
Ben Palmer, Parkersburg 77-77-78_232
John Kingora, Morgantown 76-76-80_232
Rick Ellison, Huntington 78-78-77_233
Jeremy Rogers, Buckhannon 77-76-80_233
Cole Hand, Wheeling 73-81-81_235
Winston Canada, Beckley 77-77-82_236
Chris Breed, Charleston 78-76-83_237
Ian Patrick Archer, Huntington 79-77-82_238
Kyle Long, Daniels 75-80-86_241
Matt Felber, Bradley 81-74-DQ_DQ&lt;

From Page 6
Sterling Chafin, Madison 74-74-73_221
Will Evans, Charleston 74-74-73_221
Aaron Gizzi, Morgantown 77-71-74_222
Craig Berner, Hurricane 76-75-72_223
Ian Hogue, Clarksburg 74-77-73_224
Steve Ross, Huntington 78-74-72_224
Trent Roush, Mason 73-77-74_224
Owen Elliott, Hedgesville 74-75-75_224
Cole Moore, Spencer 70-78-76_224
Kenneth Hess, Parkersburg 72-75-77_224
Mark Johnson, Morgantown 72-73-79_224
Jason Robinson, Charles Town 83-71-71_225
Michael Gervais, Bridgeport 79-74-72_225
Jess Ferrell, Fairmont 72-77-76_225
Mason Williams, Bridgeport 76-77-73_226
Ben Ramsey, Bluefield, Va. 76-77-73_226
Jeff McGraw, Princeton 76-70-80_226
Timothy Barto, Greensburg, Pa. 82-73-72_227
Chris Johnson, New Haven 76-79-72_227
Christian Casingal, Charleston 77-74-76_227
Thomas Frazier, Huntington 75-74-78_227

Hall
From Page 6

“To witness the darkest
evil of the human heart
… will be forever burned
in my soul,” Piazza said.
“But from tragedy and
sorrow came bravery,
love, compassion, character and eventual healing.
“Many of you give me
praise for the two-run
home run in the ﬁrst
game back on Sept.
21st, but the true praise
belongs to police, ﬁreﬁghters, ﬁrst responders
that knew that they were
going to die, but went
forward anyway. I pray
that we never forget their
sacriﬁce.”
Attendance was estimated at around 50,000
by the Hall of Fame, tying
1999 for second-most all
time.

WHO’S HOT: Joe
Gibbs Racing and Toyota. The team had three
cars ﬁnish in the top ﬁve
and heads to Pocono
with back-to-back victories. Toyota, meanwhile,
had three of its cars
place in the top four.

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eliminating the debt.
Luckily, there’s a way to find debt
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debts. Using certified credit
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TOUGH WEEK: Greg
Bifﬂe wanted this weekend to be a tribute for
his late father, who died
Tuesday. Instead, Bifﬂe’s
day ended early after he
crashed on Lap 52.
EMPTY SEATS: It’s
tough to ﬁll roughly
250,000 seats. But the
estimated crowd of
about 50,000 left plenty
of seats empty at a race
that has seen attendance
steadily dwindle over
the past eight years. The
lone exception came in

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.

‘Bob’ Willis Memorial
golf scramble is Aug. 20
JACKSON, Ohio — The sixth annual Robert
“Bob” Willis Memorial golf scramble will take
place on Saturday, Aug. 20 at Franklin Valley Golf
Club.
Registration is set for 7:30 a.m. with a shotgun
start at 8:30 a.m.
Cost is $200 per team or $50 per person.
There will be prizes for first, second and thirdplace as well as many door prizes.
For questions or to register, please contact
Steve Willis at (740) 286-5754 or via e-mail at willis0803@roadrunner.com.

2015 — in what was
supposed to be Gordon’s
“ﬁnal ride.”
HE SAID IT: When
Busch was asked whether his success over the
past two years at Indy
would prompt him to
follow in the footsteps
of his brother, Kurt,
and run in the India-

napolis 500, Kyle Busch
responded: “Well, I
won’t be following in his
footsteps, I’ll be doing
my own footsteps. It certainly may open up some
avenues, I’m not sure.”
UP NEXT: Pocono
Raceway, July 31. Kenseth is the defending race
winner.

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Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses

Houses For Rent

Pets

Help Wanted General

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)

1 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED
UPSTAIRS APARTMENT,
NO CHILDREN, NO PETS.
REFERENCES AND
DEPOSIT. 136 FIRST
AVENUE REAR.
740-446-7652 BETWEEN
4 PM TO 6 PM.

Recently Renovated Clean
2 Bdr. Conveniently located
Reference and Deposit,
No Pets, No Smoking
304-675-5162

4 Fml English Bulldog Puppies
Brindle w/ White Markings, 12
Wks, AKC Reg., Vet Checked,
Shots UTD $1800 (740) 6961085 or (740) 591-7097

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

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

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

RNҋs, LPNҋs, STNAҋs,
F/T and P/T
OVERBROOK CENTER,
LOCATED AT 333 PAGE
STREET, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO IS ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR THE
ABOVE POSITIONS. STOP
BY AND FILL OUT AN
APPLICATION
M-F 8:30AM-5:00PM OR
CONTACT SUSIE DREHEL,
RN, STAFF DEVELOPMENT
COORDINATOR@
740-992-6472.
EOE &amp; A PARTICIPANT
OF THE DRUG-FREE
WORKPLACE PROGRAM.

The Middleport
Police Department
is currently accepting
applications for a part-time
Corrections Officer.
Must apply in person.
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-688-9416
or 740-988-6130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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
Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

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

Home Improvements

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call 24 HRS 740-446-0870.
Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$
The Meigs County Health Department seeks a Full-time WIC
Director/Certifying Health Professional (RD, DTR, DT, or
RN—only these licenses/certifications qualify). See full job
description at www.meigs-health.com.
Salary
Starting Salary $18 per hour
Final Filing Date: 7/29/16 @ 4:00 PM
Date Available: Immediately
Minimum Qualifications
Education: Associates Degree; Bachelorҋs Degree preferred
Experience: WIC employment experience; good organizational
skills; excellent oral/written communication skills; grant writing;
management experience; community relations techniques.
*Must possess valid driverҋs license.
*Must Submit to Background check
Send Letter of Interest, Resume and
Three References electronically to:
courtney.midkiff@meigs-health.com.
USDA/MCHD is an equal opportunity employer and provider.

60583312

Help Wanted General

Lost &amp; Found

Production Manager

LOST or STOLEN
Last seen around Ohio Valley
Christian School on Thursday,
July 21st around 6 pm.
Neighbors seen a blonde
woman driving a maroon
colored car. Please call no
questions asked or if anyone
knows his where about
REWARD OFFERED
family pet
740-709-9473

Job Description
The primary role of this position is to oversee production
operations at the Gallipolis, Ohio plant of the Daily Tribune as a
working manager. This plant produces six daily newspapers, five
weekly newspapers, four total market coverage products and
various other supplements to support those newspapers. All of
these are inter-company publications.
Candidates will oversee efforts of a press and mailroom crew,
manage our vehicle fleet, coach and train our production teams.
As part of that coaching/training role candidates should expect
to be a working “hands on” leader. Our manager will have
overall responsibility for promoting safety following company and
OSHA guidelines. Our manager is also responsible for proper
scheduling of production work and high quality of each product
from prepress, press, mailroom and distribution. This requires
our manager to have a working knowledge of our equipment and
best practices to produce quality in an effective manner.
The position reports directly to our local publisher, is part of the
local management team and has two direct reports from
press and mailroom operations. In addition, the manager
communicates regularly with corporate production personnel
and publishers at “sister” newspapers.

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

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Miscellaneous
SALE Carpet $ 5.95 sq/yd &amp;
up, also new shipment nylons
great deals
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Requirements
Candidates should have 5+ years experience in newspaper
management, preferably in production or operations.
Experience in web offset printing is required. Mechanical ability,
goal-setting and planning experience should be shown as well.
The position requires a candidate to have above average verbal
and written skills, be well organized with good math and computer skills (competent knowledge of Excel and Microsoft Word).
Our next manager may be someone ready to move up and run
their own production facility. If thatҋs you we invite you to contact us to discuss the opportunity. If you know someone who
would be a good fit for this position we encourage you to tell
them about our opportunity.
Interested individuals should send a cover letter and resume to
Bruce Sample, Civitas Media, 4500 Lyons Road, Miamisburg,
Ohio 45342 or via email bsample@civitasmedia.com.
No phone calls please. The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is an equal
opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of
race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.

Livestock
Quality Angus Bulls
For Sale
Reasonably Priced
Will Deliver
Call 937-246-6374
or 937-209-0911

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

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

Miscellaneous

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

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�10 Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Democratic National Convention
NOTEBOOK

Ohio delegate, 20,
focuses on tuition
Ohio delegate Kelly Harrop, 20, said her primary
concerns this election are
the issues faced by women
and millennials.
“I’m very excited to hear
about women’s issues,” said
Harrop, a ﬁrst-time delegate
from Delaware County.
Harrop said she also is
looking forward to hearing
about college affordability.
Under Hillary Clinton’s
platform, the presidential
candidate promises free
tuition to every community
college, and no tuition for
four-year, in-state, public
colleges and universities for
families making $125,000 a
year or less.
Clinton also promises
to work to close the wage
gap and pass her “Paycheck
Fairness Act” to increase
the minimum wage across
the country and to combat
violence against women.

Hillary coming
to Pa. in August
The Democratic National
Convention was barely
underway Monday when
the Pennsylvania Delegation
heard a major announcement.
Hillary Clinton, who
this week will become the
party’s formal nominee for
president, will be in Scranton on Aug. 15 with current
vice president and Scranton
native Joe Biden.
The two were supposed
to be in Scranton earlier
this month, but the event
was canceled due to the
shootings that left ﬁve
police ofﬁcers dead in Dallas, Texas.
John Podesta, chairman
of Clinton’s campaign, made
the announcement at the
delegation’s breakfast Monday morning.
It was an afﬁrmation of
what has been said throughout the presidential campaign — Pennsylvania is a
key to winning the White
House.

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Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, appears on stage during a walk-through as he prepares for the 2016 Democratic National Convention on Monday in
Philadelphia.

ON THE ISSUES
Equal pay to health care
helping the middle class, and
equal rights for all.
“That’s what the Democratic Party is all about,” she
said.
Norton said the delegates
she has spoken with are eager
to hear what the scheduled
speakers have to say. And
they really want to hear Hillary Clinton explain her ideas
and plans for America.

Delegates from South Carolina and Louisiana are staying in the same hotel as the
Pennsylvania Delegates, and
the issues seem to be much
the same for the three delegations.
State Rep. Barbara Norton,
of Shreveport, Louisiana, said
the talks have centered on
ﬁve main issues: equal pay,
affordable health care, jobs,

Jobs
remain organized, be mobilized and stay energized.
“The key to prosperity for
America is to have fair wages
for everybody,” Trumka
said. “Working people need
to speak out with a strong
voice.”
Trumka said a key is to ﬁx
what he called “America’s
broken immigration system.”
He said working people “are
in the driver’s seat.”

Richard Trumka, president
of the AFL-CIO, addressed
the Pennsylvania Delegation
on Monday to talk about jobs,
equal pay and fair wages for
all American workers.
“Hillary will change America for the better,” Trumka
said.
The labor leader said workers need a strong voice on the
job and during the campaign.
He urged the delegates to

Security
TODAY
Tuesday’s council and caucus
meetings include:
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include:
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the wages for hard-working
Americans,” Casey said. “And
there is no one as prepared
to take on the threats to our
national security than Hillary
Clinton.”
Casey told the delegates
they have done much to get
Clinton this far, but a lot
remains to be accomplished.
“This will be a tough ﬁght
for Hillary,” Casey said.

U.S. Sen. Bob Casey,
D-Pennsylvania, said security
is a major issue in the race
for the White House — economic security and national
security.
Casey said there is a lot
at stake in the election, and
he urged the Pennsylvania
Delegation to be ready for the
task.
“Hillary Clinton will raise

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South Carolina delegates cheer during the first day of the convention on
Monday in Philadelphia.

GO FIGURE

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WHAT THEY’RE SAYING
“We are all committed to making
sure Donald Trump doesn’t end up
within a mile of the White House.”

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— Michael Smith, communications director for
the Georgia Democratic Party, on party unity
following the resignation of DNC Chair Debbie
Wasserman Schultz

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“Universal health care might be
the name of the game.”
— U.S. Rep. Garland Pierce, D-North Carolina, on
making health care accessible to all

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60670165

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