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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business
BUSINESS s 3

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

55°

62°

67°

Rain becoming heavier, a t-storm late today; fog
in the morning. Rain tonight. High 70° / Low 34°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Eagles
edge
Wahama

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 22, Volume 73

One arrested
after incident
in Racine
Charges
pending against
second person
Staff Report

RACINE — An
incident in Racine on
Monday led to the
arrest of one person on
outstanding warrants
and pending charges
against another individual.
Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood stated in
a news release, that
on Monday, Feb. 4,
his ofﬁce received a
call that Travis Klein,
age 29, appeared to be
under the inﬂuence of
drugs on Third Street
in Racine and was
believed to have possession of a ﬁrearm. The
caller stated that they
received a message

Thursday, February 7, 2019 s 50¢

Throwback Thursday: Then and Now

that Klein had a hand
gun and was holding
a female hostage in a
residence located on
Third Street.
Deputy Tylun Campbell with K9 Cheri,
Deputy Josiah Leggett,
Deputy Matt Martin,
Deputy Clint Patterson,
Sgt. Rick Patterson
and Sheriff Keith Wood
responded and was able
to locate Klein while
crossing Third Street
and attempting to enter
a residence.
During the apprehension Klein appeared to
be under the inﬂuence
of drugs. He was then
treated by Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services for a potential
overdose and was transported to Holzer Emergency Room.
Deputies attempted
See INCIDENT | 5
Top photo from the collection of Carl DeLong; Bottom photo by Sarah Hawley

Holzer provider
delivers 1000th baby

Downtown Pomeroy can be seen from the Mason boat ramp area in these two photos. The top photo appears on a post card from
the collection of Carl DeLong and is undated. In the photo the ferry can be seen docked in Mason to take people to Pomeroy. Many
businesses can be seen along Main Street, as well as the dome of the Courthouse and the top of the steeple of the Catholic Church.
Noticeably different is the riverfront area with the absence of the current Pomeroy Parking Lot. The bottom photo, taken approximately
two weeks ago, shows downtown as work is taking place on the parking lot. Also visible is the dome of the Courthouse, as well as the
steeple of the Catholic Church.

AS THE OLD OHIO FLOWS….

The life of James McHenry Jones
By Jordan Pickens

1889: Biographical
Sketch” was printed
in the The Cleveland
February is recognized Gazette on Jan. 26, 1889.
James McHenry Jones
as Black History Month.
was born in Gallipolis
In the book about early
African American educa- August 28, 1858. His
early life was passed in
tion in West Virginia by
New Richmond, Pomeroy,
Carter G. Woodson, it
and on his grandmothstates, “There came J.
er’s farm in Lawrence
McHenry Jones, J. E.
County, O., where he
Campbell, C. E. Jones,
E. L. Morton, Bertha M. constantly gave evidence
Morton, Benjamin Starks, of qualities that would in
years to come develop into
Mary Wilson Johnson,
manly and progressive
Fleming B. Jones, Harry
natural qualiﬁcations.
D. Hazelwood, Fred B.
Smith, L. O. Wilson, and Being a strong, well
developed boy he was put
J. R. Jefferson from the
to a trade, that of cooper;
Pomeroy High School.”
Over this month, I plan to working evenings and
spotlight the above men- mornings and attended
school during the day. In
tioned to give them the
recognition they deserve. this manner he obtained
a common school educa“J. McHenry Jones:

Special to OVP

Holzer | Courtesy

Jeri Kitchen, CNM, Holzer OB/GYN Department, shown
standing in the photo, recently delivered her 1000th baby.
Colbie Blake Smith was born Jan. 31 to parents, Josh and
Cassie Smith of Long Bottom, Ohio in Meigs County. She is
welcomed home by big brothers Colin and Carter. Kitchen
is Board Certified by the American Midwifery Certification
Board and sees patients at Holzer locations in Pomeroy and
Gallipolis. “It is a privilege to provide the best care possible for
our patients,” Kitchen said.

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 8
TV listings: 9

James McHenry Jones

tion, and at the age of
sixteen he began his present vocation as a teacher.
After teaching two
terms in the district
schools of Meigs County,
Ohio, he entered the
Pomeroy High School,
which he attended for
four years, and graduated standing ﬁrst in a

class of seven, the average percent being 94. Mr.
Jones was the ﬁrst pupil
of Negro descent to graduate from the above named
school. Many have since
followed.
He was elected principal of the Wheeling
schools prior to his graduation, having passed the
examination in April,
and the commencement
being in June. He was
the successful competitor of six applicants for
the position. At the suggestion of Mr. Jones, the
school has since been
named the Lincoln Grammar School.
Much of its progress
and prosperity is due
See LIFE | 2

The latest river crest predictions
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

Beth Sergent | OVP

OHIO VALLEY — The latest river
crest predictions from the National
Weather Service in Charleston, W.Va.
are slightly lower than what was
predicted on Tuesday, though a ﬂood
watch remains issued for the area.
As of press time Wednesday, the
NWS was no longer predicting ﬂood
stage at any stops along Ohio Valley
Publishing’s readership area - from
Belleville to R.C. Byrd Locks and
Dam.
At Belleville, the latest crest prediction is 33.1 on Sunday. Flood
stage at Belleville is 35 feet. At the

Fog settles in on Wednesday evening, obscuring the Ohio River from view. Pictured is
the Silver Memorial Bridge as seen from Riverfront Park in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

See RIVER | 5

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

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, February 7, 2019

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS BRIEFS

HARDYMAN
BIDWELL — Timothy E. ‘Tim’ Hardyman, 56,
of Bidwell passed away Monday February 4, 2019
at Ohio State University Medical Center in Columbus.
Services will be 1 p.m., Saturday, February 9,
2019, at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
beginning with the Elks Memorial Service and followed by the funeral with Pastors Rick Barcus and
Jack Parsons ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 11 a.m. until the time of
service.

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

JAMES
PROCTORVILLE — Rick James, 72, of Proctorville, passed away Tuesday, February 5, 2019 at
the VAMC, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be held 11 a.m. Saturday,
February 9, 2019 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,. Burial will follow in Miller
Memorial Gardens, Miller. Visitation will be held
9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, February 9, 2019 at the
funeral home.
BURGESS
GALLIPOLIS — Nora Wooten Burgess, 96, of
Gallipolis, passed away on Tuesday, February 5,
2019 at Abbyshire Place of Gallipolis.
The funeral service for Nora Wooten Burgess
will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, February 9,
2019 at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Jim
Chapman and Pastor Alfred Holley ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call prior to the funeral service from
11 a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturday at the funeral home.
LUCKEYDOO
POINT PLEASANT — Karen Elizabeth Luckeydoo, 78, of Point Pleasant, died Feb. 6, 2019, while
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant will
announce the arrangements at a later date.
BOGGS
JACKSON, Tenn. — Bernard Eugene Boggs,
79, born in Mason County, W.Va., died February 3,
2019 in Jackson, Tenn.
Visitation will be held on Thursday, February 7,
2019 from noon until services at 3 p.m., all held at
Shackelford Funeral Directors in Selmer, Tenn

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

Wednesday,
Feb. 6
HARRISONVILLE —
Everyone is welcome to
attend the free community dinner at the Scipio
Township Fire Department in Harrisonville,
State Route 684. The
dinner will feature BBQ
chicken legs and thighs,
mashed potatoes, buttered corn, rolls and butter, red velvet cake and
beverages. Dinner will
be served from 5-6 p.m.

Inspirational Book
Club. Read and discuss
“When the Heart Cries”
by Cindy Woodsmall
with us. Light refreshments are served.
MIDDLEPORT —
Snack &amp; Canvas with
Michele Musser will
be held at 6 p.m., 290
North 2nd Ave., Middleport. Your choice of
Ohio or West Virginia
cut outs. All supplies
furnished. Call Michele
at 740-416-0879 or
Donna at 740-992-5123
to reserve a spot.

Saturday,
Feb. 9
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 1 p.m., Intro
to Essential Oils: learn
ways to incorporate oils
into your daily life. Free
and open to all.

Friday, Feb. 8 Monday,
POMEROY — Pome- Feb. 11
roy Library, 5 p.m.,
Family Movie Night:
The House with a Clock
in its Walls. Popcorn
and lemonade will be
served.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 10:30 a.m.,

POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 3 p.m. Family Support Group. Help
for family members
dealing with addiction
in loved ones. Hosted
by Hopewell Health.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Volunteers to install free
smoke alarms in Syracuse
SYRACUSE — Volunteers from the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department and American Red Cross
will be offering free smoke alarms and ﬁre safety
information in Syracuse on Saturday, Feb. 9. The
free smoke alarm are installed by the volunteers. The
alarms and key information on avoiding house ﬁres
and making evacuation plans are services of your
local ﬁre department and the American Red Cross.
The volunteers will be visiting homes beginning at
10 a.m. on Saturday. For more information call the
American Red Cross of Southeast Ohio at 740-5935273.

Officers elected at
organizational meeting
RUTLAND — Leading Creek Conservancy District
held their organizational board meeting on Jan. 22,
2019, with Collin Roush elected president and Steve
Lambert as vice president. Regular board meetings
will be held the 4th Tuesday of each month at 4 p.m.

Community Health
Assessment Focus Group
POMEROY — A focus group session for the 2019
Community Health Assessment will be held at 5:30
pm. on Thursday, Feb. 7 at the Pomeroy Library.
The session will last one hour with participants then
answering a few questions about health in the county.
For those unable to attend the ﬁrst session, an alternative time has been set up for 2:30 p.m. on Monday,

Life
From page 1

to the untiring efforts
and energy of its present
principal. He enjoys the
distinction of having ﬁrst
graduated colored scholars in the same class,
at the same time and
from the same stage with
the whites in the public
schools south of Mason
and Dixon’s line. As an
educator he ranks among
the best and his ever
apparent good natured
qualiﬁcations wins the
friendship of pupil and
observer.
The subject of our
sketch joined the Odd
Fellows at the age of
eighteen years [with] the
committee in charge of
affairs having obtained
the assent of his father.
He passed through the
various gradations of
ofﬁce, and was honored
with the Subordinate
Lodge’s honorary title. In
1880 when the District
Lodge was formed he represented his lodge in the
convention, and it never
had a better representative. In this convention,
though stormy and he so
young, he made a step
forward that have ever
since been a[n] impetus
to its onward course.
Ohio District Lodge was
formed, and from its birth
in Columbus in 1880, to
the present time, his voice
and counsel has been
heard.
He was elected District
Deputy Master in Springﬁeld, in 1882; District
Master in Columbus, in
1883; and re-elected at
Dayton in 1884. At the
next session at Ironton, in
1885, having succeeded in
obtaining the sanction of
the District Lodge to his
idea of systematic government and the advanced
idea, he declined part of
[the] honors. The District
Lodge by a rising vote
tendered him their thanks
for excellent management and the faithful
performance of duties and
honored him with a gold
medal.
At the eighth annual
session held at Zanesville
last August, the representatives there assembled
by acclamation again
called him to assume the
leadership of the Order
in District No. 24, which
comprises Ohio, West
Virginia and Michigan.
Mr. Jones was the author
of the “Ohio idea” relative to District Lodges.
His pungent paragraphs

on the inconsistency of
the present policy and
his strong advocacy of an
imperial Grand Lodge,
State Grand Lodges and
State representatives
to the National Grand
Lodge which some day
must be the policy of the
Order, will cause him
to be remembered and
endeared.
He is a lover of his race
and never fails to lend
his voice and pen in their
behalf. While not a hater
of the Independent Order
of Odd Fellows he cannot
feel toward them friendly
because of their adoption
of a law that prohibits
them from practicing
friendship, love and truth
with the Negro. Many
journals have copied his
utterances upon this subject.
In political faith he
is a strong advocate for
Republican principles.
In the late campaign he
visited at the invitation
of the West Virginia State
Executive Committee,
the principle cities of the
State, was received with
high honors and won
through his oratorical
powers the praises of the
masses wherever assembled.
On December 27, 1888,
he was united in marriage to Miss Carrie M.
Harrison, of Harmar,
who for three years was
assistant principal of Lincoln school, of Wheeling.
In 1896 McHenry was
asked to address the State
of West Virginia’s Republican Convention held in
Parkersburg, West Virginia. This speech served
to second the nomination
of George W. Atkinson for
Governor of West Virginia. The speech was later
published in The Wheeling Daily Intelligencer on
July 31, 1896.
On the ﬁeld of Gettysburg, it is said, that
the soldiers wearing the
blue and the gray, were
buried after the battle in
long trenches, one upon
another. A traveler who
passed over that immortal
battle ground a few days
afterward, declared that
the earth over which these
soldiers so gloriously died
and under which they
were so ignominious[ly]
covered, swayed up and
down. This may be fact
or ﬁction, but he who
observes the signs of the
times must be cognizant
of the tremors from an
irresistible ground-swell
which began at St. Louis
and will not cease until it
rolls incompetent Democracy out of the white

Daily Sentinel

Feb. 11 at the University of Rio Grande Meigs Branch.
For more information call 740-992-2161.

Joseph Lupo Art Exhibit at
Esther Allen Greer Museum
RIO GRANDE – The University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College School of Arts and
Letters is presenting a new art exhibit by Joseph Lupo
at the Esther Allen Greer Museum Gallery on Rio’s
main campus through Friday, Feb. 8. The exhibit “Be
Chance” features laser cut intaglios and relief prints.
There will be an artist’s reception Wednesday, Jan. 30
from 5-7 p.m. Open Hours for the Greer Museum are
Tuesday-Friday from 1-5 p.m. For more information,
contact the ﬁne arts ofﬁce at 740-145-7364.

Meigs County Health Dept.
immunization clinic Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday from 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 $30 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. Those who are insured
via commercial insurance are responsible for any balance their commercial insurance does not cover for
vaccinations. Pneumonia vaccines are also available as
well as ﬂu shots. 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.

house.
I misinterpret the spirit
and intelligence of the
American people, if by
their permission, that
herd of wild-eyed fanatics
which broke loose at Chicago, ever heads toward
the national capital.
The Republican party
is confronted today, as it
has been in the past, with
wild speculations and
untenable theories; but
true to its traditions, it
fearlessly faces the blatant
slogan of error with the
gleaming torch of demonstrated truth.
The history of our party
is simply a record of the
triumphs of right. We
were right in 1856, at the
birth of Republicanism.
Right in 1860, under the
leadership of the immortal Lincoln, right in ‘61,
when it was determined
that one ﬂag should wave
over an undivided country and liberty should not
perish from the face of
the earth. Doubly right in
1863, when it was ﬁnally
concluded that the life
of the nation demanded
the freedom of the slave.
Right under the peerless
leadership of that matchless soldier, Grant; right
in the resumption of
specie (coin money rather
than noes) payment under
Hayes, right under Garﬁeld, right under Harrison, eternally right when
under James G. Blaine
and William McKinley,
were welded in a common
chain protection and reciprocity.
We are right today,
when against the tumult
and above the roar of the
babel of populism, we
reassert our intention to
defend to the last ditch
the national honor, and
preserve inviolate and
untarnished the institutions transmitted to us
from our forefathers. And
the grand old party will
be right in November
when it wrings from the
red mouth of populistic
Democracy, the black, the
hissing tongue of anarchy.
West Virginia is naturally Republican. The
candidate named was
born within her borders.
It will not be necessary to
look into the misty record
of the forgotten past, to
extract his name from
the cobwebs of oblivion.
He is known from where
the rugged Alleghenies
lift their giant shoulders
up into the trackless
blue, to where the fretful
Kanawha unites with
the muddy Ohio, on her
restless mission to the
sea, from the eastern

panhandle to the southern
extremity of the state,
the name of and fame of
George W. Atkinson is a
by-word in the mouths of
an admiring people.
The logical candidate,
his is a ﬁtting name with
which to close the century.
The nineteenth century
grows apace. Already the
fading glow of approaching twilight throws its
lengthening shadows
around us. Soon the rosy
morn of a new century,
fresh fallen from the ﬁnger tips of God, will dawn
upon a waiting world.
As the purple curtain
of the new born century
is slowly lifted, and the
God of day, his ruddy
face dripping with golden
perspiration, sends his
ﬁrst ﬁerce gleam athwart
the oceans of time, may
he discover the union’s
ﬂeet of states, after a
three years’ battle with
contending forces, moving steadily, majestically
forward. The ﬂagship of
McKinley, the harbinger,
the advance agent of a
better day, far in the
lead. The twin relics of
free trade and free silver
deeply buried beneath the
rolling wave. Conﬁdence
after four years wandering in the dismal swamp
of Democratic delusion,
returned to ﬁll her accustomed place in the company of her friends, while
Hope, her sister, dips her
golden pencil in the rainbow hues of heaven and
writes upon the emblazoned, the imperishable
records of the republic —
prosperity, protection and
patriotism.
The good ship West Virginia cut loose from Democratic moorings, must be
directed by a helmsman
trained to the sea, a pilot
with a cool head, discerning eye, pure life, strong
arm, open hand and
patriotic heart.
Ohio County believes
that these qualiﬁcations
are transcendently developed in the superb statesman, erudite scholar, far
seeing party leader and
Christian gentleman,
the Hon. George Wesley
Atkinson.
Therefore, in the name
of the Republicans of Ohio
County, whose idol he is,
in the name of the unconditional Republicans of
West Virginia, who love
him as their friend, I
heartily second the nomination of the next governor of West Virginia.
As the old Ohio ﬂows….
Jordan Pickens is a local historian
and educator.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 7, 2019 3

‘Poppy’s’ celebrates ribbon cutting

Russell attends
‘10X Growth Con’
Submitted

Gallia Chamber | Courtesy

Poppy’s Coffee, Tea &amp; Remedies at 46 Court Street in Gallipolis, officially opened for business on Jan. 2 with a ribbon cutting taking
place on Jan. 19, which was also “Poppy’s” birthday. Owner Greg Hall, pictured at center along with grandchildren McKenzie and Blake
Skidmore, said he wanted to celebrate the ribbon cutting on his birthday so he would never forget it. Poppy’s is described as a coffee
shop complete with pastries, smoothie and juice bar and gift shop. Gallia Chamber of Commerce Board Members present for the ribbon
cutting were Meagan Wood (Superior Marine Ways), Jenni Dovyak-Lewis (Area Agency on Aging, District 7), Amanda Ehman (Rio Grande
Community College), Rick Jackson (The Wiseman Agency), Nick Dobbs (River Town Electric) and Chamber staff, Executive Director Elisha
Orsbon, Associate Director Paige James. In addition, Poppy’s delivers pastries and drinks in the downtown area. Call 740-446-9050 for
more information.

Rathburn earns certification
TREVOSE, Pa. — The
Advertising Specialty
Institute has awarded
Chris Rathburn of BCMR
in Gallipolis, Ohio with a
Bachelor of Advertising
Specialty Information
(BASI) certiﬁcation – the
industry equivalent of a
bachelor’s degree.
According to information provided by BCMR,
BASI holders are recognized as industry experts
who have the knowledge
they need to thoroughly
understand and navigate
the promotional products marketplace proﬁtably and develop solid
relationships with their
colleagues that will help
them prosper in the
industry.
To date, more than

ing Specialty Institute
Certiﬁcation Program,”
said ASI President and
Chief Executive Ofﬁcer
Timothy M. Andrews.
To date, over 30,000
industry professionals
have registered for classes
needed to obtain an ASI
certiﬁcation. Each year,
ASI invests $1.3 million
to educate its members.
The Advertising Specialty Institute CertiﬁCourtesy
Pictured are Chris Rathburn cation Program is the
of BCMR, at left, and Norman industry’s only certiﬁcation program, created
Cohn, ASI chairman.
on a user-friendly digital
platform. All courses are
1,600 graduates of the
tracked automatically
Advertising Specialty
via a digital campus, so
Institute Certiﬁcation
participants can easily
Program have received
access their transcripts
their certiﬁcations.
“We are so proud of the and remaining course
graduates of the Advertis- requirements. Candidates

must complete certiﬁcation within three years of
beginning the program.
Following deﬁned guidelines, courses taken at a
past ASI Show, on the
ASI Education Online
Learning Center, or completed at major industry
events, such as the PPAI
Expo or regional association conferences, are
eligible for transfer.

Information submitted on behalf of
Rathburn by BCMR.

sales, marketing, and
personal development
Local online marketer conferences in hisand entrepreneur, Curry tory.”
Also, reportedly more
Russell of Mason Counthan $1 million was
ty, recently attended
raised for multiple charwhat is being called
the largest sales confer- ities around the United
ence in the world - 10X States including cancer
research and more.
Growth Con 2019 in
On top of the money
Miami, Fla.
raised for charity, this
Russell is a Point
event due to travel,
Pleasant area native,
and was gifted tickets hotel, food, local transportation and more,
by his wife Jenn for
Christmas. This year’s reportedly brought the
lineup included speak- city of Miami, more
than $150 million in
ers, Steve Harvey,
John Maxwell, Damon sales revenue in a threeday period, according to
John, Elena Cardone,
Russell.
Russell Brunson, and
“Immersing yourself
more.
in a thriving environGrant Cardone,
ment to network, share,
author of the “10X
rule, Sell or Be Sold,” and develop into a
and more, has put this much more advanced
marketer is a powerful
event on for two prething. I highly recomvious years, and this
mend anyone who
year’s event was held
is in sales, car sales,
at the Marlins Stadium, in Miami. Accord- insurance, banking, or
anyone running a home
ing to Russell, this
based business, to never
year the crowds were
miss these events,” Rusﬁlling a stadium with
over 34,000 marketers sell said.
Also at the event,
and sales professionSnoop Dogg and Lil
als gathering for one
John.
of the most “amazing

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
$17.63
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
$95.64
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
$31.98
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
$36.40
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
$113.05
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
$32.16
Kroger Co(NYSE)
$28.29
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
$48.53
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
$74.15
American Electric Power(NYSE)
$79.21
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
$36.68
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
$9.04
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$26.05
Apple(NASDAQ)
$174.24
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
$49.26
Post Holdings
$97.10
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE)
$29.70
McDonald’s(NYSE)
$176.18
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions
on Feb. 6

2019 Faith &amp; Family
Faith and Family is a project designed to reach out to
people in need and at the same time reach out to the
community with a message of hope. We want to form
a stronger alliance with the church community and do
more meaningful job of helping local churches spread
their message to people who are looking for answers and
inspiration. We need your help to do this.

Social Security and self employment
By Marcus Geiger
Special to OVP

We will publish an inspirational full color magazine that we have entitled Faith and Family. This publication,
with your help, will list all our churches and carry a message of hope. As your local newspaper we want
to use our resources to help get your message to those in need. The magazine will carry profiles of local
churches and testimonials from local readers who have experienced a change in life as the result of their
faith and beliefs. These stories can be a powerful influence in raising the consonances of the reader looking
for answers and in need of a church to help heal. This publication will also increase the strength and unity
among the local church community.

Courtesy photo

CCaallllyyo
r
lo
reepprreesouurrlo
seennttaa ccaall
ive
TTOODDAA ttiv
YY!! e

If you’re self-employed, the process is a little different.

Schedule SE, in addition
to other tax forms you
must ﬁle.
Net earnings for Social
Security are your gross
earnings from your trade
or business, minus your
allowable business deductions and depreciation.
Some income doesn’t
count for Social Security
and shouldn’t be included
in ﬁguring your net earn-

ings.
You must have worked
and paid Social Security
taxes for a certain length
of time to get Social Security beneﬁts. The amount
of time you need to work
depends on your date of
birth, but no one needs
more than 10 years of
work.

Deadline: Feb. 12th, 2019

Marcus Geiger is the Social Security
District Manager in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Pomeroy
Daily Sentinel

740-446-2342

740-992-2155

www.mydailytribune.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

740-446-0800

OH-70104303

Point Pleasant
Register
OH-70105742

If you are not selfemployed, Social Security
taxes are typically taken
out of your paycheck automatically. You and your
employer each pay a 6.2
percent Social Security
tax on up to $132,900 of
your earnings and a 1.45
percent Medicare tax on
all earnings in 2019. You
don’t have to do anything
extra for the coverage
you will one day receive
because your employers
handle the deduction as
well as matching that contribution. Then they send
the taxes to the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS)
and report your wages to
Social Security.
If you’re self-employed,
the process is a little
different. You report
your earnings for Social
Security and pay your
taxes directly to the IRS
when you ﬁle your federal
income tax return. You
pay the combined employee and employer amount,
which is a 12.4 percent
Social Security tax on up
to $132,900 of your net
earnings and a 2.9 percent Medicare tax on your
entire net earnings in
2019. You are considered
self-employed if you operate a trade, business or
profession, either by yourself or as a partner. If your
net earnings are $400 or
more in a year, you must
report your earnings on

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

�Opinion
4 Thursday, February 7, 2019

Daily Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Thursday, Feb. 7, the 38th day of 2019.
There are 327 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Feb. 7, 1962, President John F. Kennedy
imposed a full trade embargo on Cuba.
On this date:
In 1795, the 11th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, dealing with states’ sovereign immunity,
was ratiﬁed.
In 1812, author
THOUGHT
Charles Dickens was
born in Landport, Ports- FOR TODAY
mouth, England.
“No one is useless
In 1817, America’s
in this world… who
lightens the burden of
ﬁrst public gas street
it for any one else.”
lamp was lighted in
— From “Our Mutual
Baltimore at the corner
Friend” by Charles
of Market and Lemon
Dickens (born this date
streets (now East Balin 1812, died in 1870).
timore and Holliday
streets).
In 1904, a ﬁre began
in Baltimore that raged for about 30 hours and
destroyed more than 1,500 buildings.
In 1943, the government abruptly announced
that wartime rationing of shoes made of leather
would go into effect in two days, limiting consumers to buying three pairs per person per year.
(Rationing was lifted in October 1945.)
In 1948, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower resigned
as U.S. Army chief of staff; he was succeeded by
Gen. Omar Bradley.
In 1964, The Beatles arrived at New York’s John
F. Kennedy International Airport to begin their
ﬁrst American tour.
In 1971, women in Switzerland gained the right
to vote through a national referendum, 12 years
after a previous attempt failed.
In 1984, space shuttle Challenger astronauts
Bruce McCandless II and Robert L. Stewart went
on the ﬁrst untethered spacewalk, which lasted
nearly six hours.
In 1986, the Philippines held a presidential election marred by charges of fraud against the incumbent, Ferdinand E. Marcos. Haitian President-forLife Jean-Claude Duvalier (doo-VAHL-yay’) ﬂed
his country, ending 28 years of his family’s rule.
In 1998, the Winter Olympic Games were
opened in Nagano, Japan, by Emperor Akihito.
In 1999, Jordan’s King Hussein died of cancer at
age 63; he was succeeded by his eldest son, Abdullah.
Ten years ago:
A miles-wide section of ice in Lake Erie broke
away from the Ohio shoreline, trapping about 135
ﬁshermen, some for as long as four hours before
they could be rescued (one man fell into the water
and later died of an apparent heart attack). Walls
of ﬂame roared across southeastern Australia,
leveling scores of homes, forests and farmland in
the country’s worst wildﬁre disaster in a quarter
century. Bolivia’s new constitution took effect.
Death claimed jazz singer Blossom Dearie at age
84, country singer Molly Bee at age 69, and Jack
Cover, inventor of the Taser stun gun, at age 88.

THEIR VIEW

Valentine’s Day gift for gardener
Valentine’s Day is next
week so it is time to
decide what the gardener
in your life might enjoy.
It really depends on what
your favorite gardener’s
likes are so you might
need to do some thinking.
Almost anyone would
like spending time
together without the
usual distractions – so a
get-away weekend would
be appreciated. So think
of doing something special together that the gardener would genuinely
appreciate.
If a get-away is out of
the question, surprise
the Green Thumb person
in your life with a gift
chosen with love and
watch their feelings blossom before your eyes!
This year, skip the
chocolates and give them
what they really want.
A very practical gardener is not going to

dle point holder,
appreciate someor new container;
thing silly they
even a repurposed
don’t need or
or recycled gem
want. The romanwould work.
tic gardener might
For the hortijust love an extravcultural person,
agant gift that only
you would know
Charlene there is so much
to offer in live
what that is.
Thornhil
The practical
Contributing plants. Remember,
succulents are the
gardener might
columnist
new roses and any
appreciate a gift
gardener would
card or certiﬁappreciate receiving a
cate from their favorite
pot of succulents either
garden center. Maybe
from the garden center
plants for this coming
or a container you might
spring, gloves, garden
art, seeds, tools, a kit for have potted up just for
them. A ﬂoral wreath,
raised beds or outdoor
orchid, or potted plants
furniture.
will brighten up a room.
Helpful gardening
Green plants add so
books or a magazine
much to the home décor
featuring a favorite area
plus they last for a longer
of the garden or yard is
period of time. Another
welcomed. It might be
thought is herbs. An herb
a book specializing on
subjects such as annuals, of basil, parsley, lavender
perennials, tree, shrubs, or thyme makes a great
gift!
lawn care, and more.
A garden T-shirt,
Floral arrangers would
welcome oasis foam, nee- apron, boots, or hoodie

is appreciated by most
gardeners. Gardening
tools are always needed
so you can’t go wrong
there. An outdoor pillow for a chair or lounge
would add color and
interest.
A veggie gardener
would enjoy a meal at
a local restaurant. The
practical gardener would
rather go to dinner on a
quiet day, not Valentine’s
Day when the place is
packed.
If all else fails give the
chocolates. But does the
gardener want milk or
dark chocolates? Decisions, decisions!
Happy Valentine’s Day
and to the Rosarian celebrating 55 years of marriage, happy anniversary!
Charlene Thornhill is a volunteer
citizen columnist. She can be
reached at char.donn.thornhill@
gmail.com. Viewpoints expressed
in the article are the work of the
author.

THEIR VIEW

Get some rest, Mom, you’ve earned it
When the end came
calling for my mother,
she faced it just the same
way she had everything
else in her life: with her
head held high, fearless in
the face of adversity and
proud to the very end.
Last Friday, my beloved
mother’s life came to an
end. I had the honor of
being with her in her ﬁnal
moments.
My daughter Sophie
and I had gone over to
her house to pick her up
to come with us to one
of Sophie’s indoor track
and ﬁeld meets. There
were few things in her
life my mother enjoyed
more than watching her
children and grandchildren compete in sporting
events. After she put her
coat on, she quietly sat
down in her recliner and
stared off into the distance. When I asked her
if she was ready to go,
she simply looked up at
me and said, “I’m so tired
of this stuff,” then closed
her eyes and never woke
up again.
Except, of course, she
didn’t say “stuff.” My
mother used a different
word, one I’ll not repeat
here. Those were her

ﬁnal words on this planet.
That may be offensive to
some, but to those who
actually knew my mother,
there couldn’t possibly
have been a more perfect
ending.
She was in death as she
was in life — unapologetically Jean Fong.
My mother taught me
thousands of lessons in
her long and colorful life,
but perhaps the most
valuable ones I learned
from her were to maintain self-conﬁdence and
to always be proud of
who I am. Which is kind
of funny because for the
ﬁrst portion of her life,
that wasn’t at all who my
mother was.
Regina Dolores Posinski — the fact she would
later marry my father
and simply become Jean
Fong must have saved
her a lot of time signing
legal documents — was
born in the inner city of
Baltimore on Aug. 28,
1937, the sweet spot in
history right between
the Great Depression
and World War II. As she
would often tell us later,
likely in an attempt for us
to appreciate all we had
in life, she was born into

profane) voice
abject poverty.
and her backbone.
She was never
After graduatafraid of working
ing from college
to improve her
with her teaching
situation, however,
degree, she wanted
and would scrub
to see the world,
the marble steps
but couldn’t afford
along Baltimore’s
David
to do so. So she
row houses to
Fong
earn a dime, which Contributing took a job on a
U.S. Army base in
she would use to
columnist
Europe, where she
see a Saturday
would get a job
matinee and buy
teaching the children of
a box of Good ‘N Plenty
servicemen and women.
candies (which, it bears
It was around this time
mentioning, might be the
most vile candy I’ve ever my mother realized all
she had to give to the
tasted).
world and that what she
Still, though, my
said, and who she was,
mother knew she was
mattered. She came back
different from her peers.
Despite being born poor, conﬁdent and fearless.
She also came back with
my mother’s devout
the man who would
Catholic parents always
become her husband — a
managed to ﬁnd a way
Chinese-American man
to send all ﬁve of their
who was serving on the
children to parochial
same Army base at which
schools. She didn’t ﬁt in
she was teaching.
well with many of her
In a time and place
more well-heeled (literwhen people weren’t
ally … my mother often
would stuff newspapers in always accepting of
the bottoms of her shoes mixed-race marriages,
my mother married the
when she wore a hole in
the bottom of them) and man she loved and they
had ﬁve children. She
grew up shy and introheard the whispers and
verted.
endured the ignorant
It would take leaving
the country for my moth- questions about her
er to ﬁnd her (sometimes “adopting” ﬁve children;

I guess because people at
the time couldn’t fathom
her marrying an Asian
man.
All that did, however, was strengthen
her resolve. She and
my father taught their
children to be proud of
who they are, to always
hold their heads high
and do the right thing.
That wasn’t always easy,
particularly for this child.
I wasn’t always proud of
how I looked or who I
was. I was often scared.
For different reasons, I
was probably a lot like my
mother was when she was
growing up.
But when my faith in
myself wavered, my mother’s never did. She was
brave when I was scared
and strong when I was
weak. It took many years,
but eventually I grew
up into what my mother
wanted me to be. I found
my voice and haven’t
stopped using it since.
She would teach those
same lessons to hundreds of children who
came through her ﬁfthgrade class at St. Patrick
Elementary School. She
was quick to protect the
underdogs; I’m guessing

because she saw so much
of herself in them. No
one, and I mean no one,
got bullied in her classroom. She was demanding, but at the same time
caring. She knew when a
ﬁgurative kick in the rear
end or a literal pat on the
back were warranted, and
both were dispensed with
great frequency in her
classroom.
She loved her students like she loved her
children,which also just
happened to be how she
loved herself — with
great pride and bravery.
My mother may no longer be with us physically,
but I have no doubts her
ﬁghting spirit will live on
for many years to come
by all of those who loved
her … myself included, of
course. It was a life lived
in full. She laughed often
and loved constantly. She
never wasted a second of
any day.
In the bitter end, I
guess I can see why she
was so tired. Get some
rest, Mom, you’ve earned
it.
David Fong writes for Miami Valley
Today. Contact him at dfong@
aimmediamidwest.com; follow him
on Twitter @thefong

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 7,2019 5

Hanisonville Lodge to hold inspection
membership totals over 3 mil­
uty Grand Master of the 12th
Masonic District will inspect
lion members, 1.1 million of
the Lodge as the personal rep­
whom are in North America.
resentative of Jess N. Raines,
With 75,000 Masons and 450
who is the Grand Master of the local Lodges, Ohio has one of
nearly 500 Masonic Lodges in the largest Masonic member­
Ohio with a total statewideships of any state in the coun­
membership of around 75,000. try. As a fraternal organization,
The Grand Lodge of Ohio was Freemasonry unites men of
good character who, though
formed at the Old Statehouse
of different religious, ethnic
in Chillicothe on January 3, 4,
or social backgrounds, share
7 and 8,1808.
a belief in the fatherhood of
Freemasonry is the lead­
ing fraternal organization in
God and the brotherhood of
the world. Its origins are lost
mankind.
in the unrecorded history of
For more information, call
medieval times, but it formally
Jordan Pickens at (740) 9921384 or visit www.freemason.
organized in London, England,
in 1717. Current worldwide
com.

Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge No. 411 in Harrison­
ville, Ohio will have its annual
inspection in the second
degree on Friday, Feb. 8,
2019 at 7 p.m. Dinner will be
served at 6 p.m. by Harrison­
ville Chapter Order of The
Eastern Star #255.
Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge No. 411 is part of the
12th Masonic District, which
includes 18 lodges in Meigs,
Jackson, Gallia and Lawrence
counties. Harrisonville Mason­
ic Lodge #411 has 114 mem­
bers and is involved in various
ways within the community.
Steven E. Wallis, District Dep­

Photo Courtesy of Gary Coleman

Jordan Pickens, Master of Harrisonville
Masonic Lodge #411 and Jess N.
Raines, Grand Master of Masons of
the State of Ohio.

Political crisis engulfs Virginia’s top 3 officials
makeup and a wig in 1980 to
look like a rapper during a
party when he was a 19-yearold student at the University of
Virginia.
Herring — who had previ­
ously called on Northam to
resign and was planning to run
for governor himself in 2021
— apologized for his “callous”
behavior and said that the
days ahead “will make it clear
whether I can or should con­
tinue to serve.”
The 57-year-old Herring
came clean after rumors about
the existence of a blackface
photo of him began circulat­
ing at the Capitol, though he
made no mention of a picture
Wednesday.
Then, within hours, Vanessa
Tyson, the California woman

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) —
The political crisis in Virginia
spun out of control Wednes­
day when the state’s attorney
general confessed to putting
on blackface in the 1980s and
a woman went public with
detailed allegations of sexual
assault against the lieutenant
governor.
With Gov. Ralph Northam’s
career already hanging by a
thread over a racist photo in
his 1984 medical school year­
book, the day’s developments
threatened to take down all
three of Virginia’s top elected
officials, all of them Demo­
crats.
The twin blows began
with Attorney General Mark
Herring issuing a statement
acknowleding he wore brown

whose sexual assault allega­
tions against Lt. Gov. Justin
Fairfax surfaced earlier this
week, put out a detailed state­
ment saying Fairfax forced her
to perform oral sex on him in a
hotel room in 2004 during the
Democratic National Conven­
tion in Boston.
The Associated Press typi­
cally does not identify those
who say they were sexually
assaulted, but Tyson issued the
statement in her name.
Tyson, a 42-year-old political
scientist who is on a fellow­
ship at Stanford University and
specializes in the political dis­
course of sexual assault, said,
“I have no political motive. I
am a proud Democrat.”
“Mr. Fairfax has tried to
brand me as a liar to a national

of the residence unharmed. The female,
identified as Stephanie Shamblin, age 27,
was hiding under a sofa bed located in the
living room. Shamblin, who had outstand­
ing warrants out of the Meigs Common
Pleas Court, was taken into custody and
transported to the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office.
Deputies searched the residence after a
consent to search form was signed by the

Incident
From page 1

to make contact multiple times with any­
one inside the residence on Third Street
and when no response was received,
deputies made entry into the residence
and located a female in the living room

TODAY

resident. Deputies located a hand gun and
drug paraphernalia inside the residence.
Charges are pending against Klein at
this time.
At the time of the call Southern Local
School District was placed under a lock
down and was contacted after the scene
was cleared.

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Partly sunny and
cooler

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
O Index combines the effects of cur™ rent 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.

SUNDAY

33°
17°

■s* e
55° 62° 67°
Rain becoming heavier, a t-storm late today; fog
in the morning. Rain tonight. High 70° / Low 34°

Precipitation (in inches)

Snowfall (in inches)

MONDAY
^^42°

^43°
1 32°

Brilliant sunshine,
but cold

;j

A bit of snow and rain
in the p.m.

Q: How thick must a cloud be to
obscure the sun?

7:28 a.m.
5:58 p.m.
9:37 a.m.
9:36 p.m.

Rain possible, mixed
with snow early

65/24
9

Chillicothe

64/25

0

66/23
Elizabeth

69/36
TM

a Ripley

m

AIR QUALITY

a

Buffalo

71/35

64

500

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.

SOLUNAR TABLE 0HIO RIVER
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for fish and game.

Major

Minor

1:30p
2:17p
3:04p
3:51 p
4:40p
5:29p
6:20p

7:41 p
8:27 p
9:14p
10:02p
10:51p
11:41p
—

WEATHER HISTORY
On Feb. 7,1954, the temperature in
Los Angeles soared to 91 degrees.
On the same date in 1861, the tem­
perature plunged from 40 degrees
above zero to 30 below in 12 hours in
Hanover, N.H.

Clendenin

Milton

72/34

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

Feb 12 Feb 19 Feb 26 Mar 6

Spencer

70/36

183J OSMV

0 50 100150200
300
Primary pollutant: Particulates

First Full Last New

o

70/35

I

MOON PHASES

' Huntington
Grayson

0 71/31

NATIONAL FORECAST

72/35

o

71/39 o

St. Albans

74/36

o

Charleston

o 72/41
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

1110s
100s

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Wed.
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

24-hr.
Chg.

12.98
19.34
22.35
13.26
12.91
25.40
12.39
26.40
34.34
11.96
21.50
34.50
22.20

-0.25
+1.82
+0.52
+0.50
+0.48
+0.16
+0.07
-0.80
-0.57
-0.44
-0.60
-0.20
+0.70

29°
Times of clouds and
sun

NATIONAL CITIES

Today Fri.

Minor

Chilly with rain

a

Waverly

WEDNESDAY

S&lt;^47°
31°

1 33°

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

SUN &amp; MOON

1:09a 7:19a
1:56a 8:06a
2:43a 8:54a
3:30a 9:41a
4:17a 10:28a
5:05a 11:17a
5:54a 12:07 p

TUESDAY

Adelphi

a

WEATHER TRIVIA

Major

Beth Sergent is editor of the Ohio Valley
Publishing.

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

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demo­
graphic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Wed. 0.0
Month to date/normal
1.1/1.8
Season to date/normal 4.9/13.3

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

Information provided by NWS.

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Wed. 0.17
Month
to
date/normal
0.23/0.65
Year
to
date/normal
3.32/3.62

Sunrise 7:29 a.m.
Sunset 5:56 p.m.
Moonrise 9:09 a.m.
Moonset 8:39 p.m.

Racine Locks and Dam, the
crest is now predicted at 37.8
on Sunday, below flood stage
which is 41 feet. Though the
NWS has no water gauge at
Pomeroy, the river typically
crests about three feet higher
than Racine (depending on
fluctuating weather), which
puts the water at around
40-41 feet. Flood stage in
Pomeroy is 46 feet and river
crests at 42 feet put the
water in the low spot in the
parking lot near the boat
ramp.
In Point Pleasant, the crest
is now predicted at 36.8 on
Sunday, below flood stage
which is 40 feet. At R.C.
Byrd in Gallipolis Ferry and
Eureka, the crest is now
predicted at 42.6 on Sunday,
also below flood stage which
is 50 feet.
The flood watch, issued by
the NWS for Mason, Meigs
and Gallia counties, is in
effect until Thursday (today)
afternoon.
A flood watch means there
is a potential for flooding
based on current forecasts.
Be prepared for potential
closure of some roadways
along creeks and streams. As
previously reported, the com­
bination of several rounds of
moderate to heavy rain, and
already saturated soils may
cause flooding. Expect to see
rises on creeks, small streams
and eventually, rivers.
Also, a flood warning was
issued on Wednesday after­
noon for northern Meigs
County as well as north
central Gallia County. That
warning was set to expire at
7:15 p.m. on Wednesday.
These river crest predic­
tions, like the weather, are
subject to change and Ohio
Valley Publishing will con­
tinue to monitor any updates
for our readers.

Information from the Meigs County Sheriff's Office.

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audience, in service to his
political ambitions, and has
threatened litigation,” she said.
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Fairfax — who is in line to
become governor if Northam
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smear.
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neither during that encounter,
nor during the months fol­
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touch with me, nor the past
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6 Thursday, February 7, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Southern sweeps Rebels, 51-45
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Southern senior Weston Thorla (4) makes an outlet
pass to start a fast break attempt during the second
half of Tuesday night’s boys basketball contest against
South Gallia in Mercerville, Ohio.

MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— Opportunity knocked …
and the Tornadoes opened
the door.
A 15-7 fourth quarter
surge allowed the Southern
boys basketball team to pull
away Tuesday night for a
hard-fought 51-45 victory
over host South Gallia in a
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division contest in Gallia County.
The Tornadoes (10-8,
8-5 TVC Hocking) trailed
after each of the ﬁrst three

frames, but the guests
scored six straight points at
the start of the fourth and
ultimately led the ﬁnal 6:38
of regulation.
The Rebels (11-8, 6-7)
pulled to within a single
point after an Austin Day
free throw made it a 42-41
contest with 4:19 remaining, but the Red and Gold
were never closer.
Southern closed things
out with a 9-4 spurt —
which included a 7-of-10
effort from the free throw
line — that wrapped up the
two-possession outcome.
Both teams battled

through three ties and
six lead changes over the
course of the game, and
each squad led by as many
as six points. The hosts
were up six on four different occasions in the ﬁrst
half, while the Purple and
Gold took a single two-possession cushion in both the
third and fourth frames.
On a night in which
turnovers dominated the
landscape early on, it was
Southern’s ability to convert
down the stretch that ultimately allowed the guests
to sneak away with the
postseason-like triumph.

Afterwards, SHS coach
Jeff Caldwell noted that he
was not only proud of the
way his troops performed,
but also the way they shook
off Saturday night’s loss to
Point Pleasant to gut one
out in a hostile environment.
“That’s an example of
a grind-it-out win. Honestly, it was something we
needed, especially in having some kids step up in
the second half when we
needed it,” Caldwell said.
“I thought we played well
See SWEEP | 7

Meigs basketball
team tames
Tigers, 67-53
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The Marauders
charged out of the gates and never looked back.
The Meigs boys basketball team led non-conference guest Marietta by double digits within eight
minutes of play on Tuesday in a non-conference
bout inside Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium, and
the Maroon and Gold cruised to a 67-53 victory.
Meigs (10-9) drained 10 ﬁeld goals, including
a trio of three-pointers in the opening quarter, as
the Marauders opened a 25-8 lead.
The teams played evenly in the second stanza,
each scoring 16 points, and the hosts took a 41-24
lead into halftime.
The Marauders were outscored by an 11-to-10
edge in the third quarter, and headed to the fourth
with a 51-35 advantage. Marietta saved its best for
last, scoring 18 points in the ﬁnal eight minutes,
but Meigs came up with 16 and sealed the 67-53
win.
The victors shot 25-of-52 (48.1 percent) from
the ﬁeld, including 7-of-14 (50 percent) from
three-point range. At the free throw line, the
Marauders were 10-of-13 (76.9 percent) and the
Tigers were 11-of-21 (52.4 percent).
Collectively, the hosts had 24 defensive
rebounds, six offensive boards, 14 assists, six
steals and two blocked shots, while committing a
dozen turnovers.
Weston Baer — who led the Marauder defense
with two steals and a block — scored a game-high
21 points, featuring a pair of three-pointers. Ty
Bartrum hit a team-best three triples and ﬁnished
See MEIGS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Feb. 7
Boys Basketball
Teays Valley Christian at Hannan, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Southern, 6 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley Christian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Warren, 6 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 8
Boys Basketball
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Miller at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Grace Christian, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton St. Joseph, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Van, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton St. Joseph, 6
p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasant, Wahama at Region IV Championships, 5 p.m.
Eastern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 9
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Sharp Facemyer steals the ball in front of teammate Ryan Dill (right) and Wahama junior Abram Pauley (12), during the
Eagles’ 37-36 victory on Tuesday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Eagles edge Wahama, 37-36
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — Ultimately, the
Eagles ﬁnished what they
started.
The Eastern boys basketball team scored the
ﬁrst 18 points of Tuesday’s Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
bout at ‘The Nest’, but
visiting Wahama claimed
the next 20 markers.
After three more lead
changes, the ﬁnal of
which came with 12 seconds to play, the Eagles
corralled the rebound
on a missed free throw
with less than a second
remaining to seal the
37-36 victory.
Eastern (11-8, 8-5 TVC
Hocking) — coming off
back-to-back losses —
forced seven turnovers
and sank seven ﬁeld goals
on its way to a 14-0 lead
by the end of the ﬁrst
quarter.
EHS hit two more ﬁeld
goals in the opening 55
seconds of the second
period and led 18-0, but
didn’t score again for the
nine minutes.
Wahama (2-17, 2-12)
ended its own nine-minute drought with a free
throw at the 6:43 mark
of the second quarter.
After missing their ﬁrst
12 ﬁeld goal attempts
in the game, the White
Falcons sank six of their
next nine and trimmed
the Eagle lead to 18-15 by
halftime.
The Red and White
tied the game with a

Wahama senior Jonathan Frye (14) tries a two-pointer over
Eastern’s Ryan Dill (20), during the White Falcons’ one-point loss
on Tuesday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

trifecta in the opening
minute of the second
half, and then took their
ﬁrst lead of the game, at
20-18, with 6:25 left in
the third. Eastern broke
the cold spell and tied the
game at 20, before a 6-to2 White Falcon run. EHS
scored the last four points
in the third quarter, tying
the game at 26.
Eastern then scored
the ﬁrst four points of
the fourth period, but
Wahama claimed the next
four and tied it at 30.
The guests tied the game
again at 32 and 34 before
ﬁnally regaining the edge
at 36-34 with an Abram
Pauley two-pointer with
1:03 remaining.
A free throw by Colton

Reynolds trimmed the
Wahama lead to one point
with 27 seconds left, and
13 seconds later, EHS
junior Garrett Barringer
made back-to-back free
throws to give the Eagles
a 37-36 lead.
The White Falcons’
game-winning ﬁeld goal
attempt was knocked
out of bounds with 2.3
seconds to go, but the
guests kept possession.
Wahama went 0-of-2 at
the free throw line with .7
seconds left, and Barringer hauled in the rebound
to seal the Eagles’ 37-36
win.
Following the triumph,
EHS head coach David
Kight talked about the
turning point in the

game, and was commended his team for doing
what it took to pull out
the win.
“We came out really
well, came out on ﬁre,”
Kight said. “Wahama
didn’t quit, and we knew
they weren’t going to
quit, they’re well-coached,
they have some kids who
can do some good things,
they have a pretty good
combination of size and
skill. The turning point
that allowed them back
in the game was when we
quit boxing out and started allowing them second
chances.
“With the ups and
downs we’ve had in close
games, by the end, we
made plays when we
needed to make plays. We
got the rebound when we
needed it. They didn’t
have the look in their
eyes like ‘oh no, here
we go again,’ we settled
down, did what we had to
do and made plays at the
end to get the win.”
White Falcons head
coach Ron Bradley
acknowledged the slow
start, but was pleased
with his team’s effort to
ﬁght back and have a
chance to win.
“We were just struggling to get the ball in
the basket,” Bradley said.
“We got some pretty
good shots, missed a lot
of layups and wide open
looks early, we couldn’t
get anything to fall. Then,
some shots started the
fall, we kept playing
See EAGLES | 10

�Daily Sentinel

SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sweep

four minutes — answered with
a 5-of-7 effort that turned into
a 12-4 run while reclaiming
a 38-36 edge headed into the
ﬁnale.
Weston Thorla tied the game
with a basket 22 seconds into the
fourth, then Trey McNickle gave
SHS a permanent lead with two
free throws a minute later.
The Rebels were within a
possession twice in the ﬁnal 36
seconds, but ultimately never
managed to get over the hump.
Southern claimed a season
sweep after posting a 68-54 decision in Racine back on Jan. 15.
South Gallia outrebounded
the guests by a 34-30 overall
margin, including a 13-9 edge on
the offensive glass. The Rebels
also committed 21 turnovers in
the setback, six more than the
Tornadoes.
Southern netted 17-of-48 ﬁeld
goal attempts for 35 percent,
including a 3-of-15 effort from
behind the arc for 20 percent.
The Purple and Gold also went
14-of-24 at the free throw line for
58 percent.
Thorla paced SHS with a
game-high 15 points, followed by
Jensen Anderson with 11 points
and Cole Steele with eight markers.
Austin Baker was next with
seven points, while Arrow Drummer — who was held scoreless
in the ﬁrst half due to early foul
trouble — chipped in ﬁve points.

“Give them credit because
both teams were playing for a lot
tonight. This had the makings of
a tournament game, but we obviFrom page 6
ously have some more work to
do. These next three games are
in the ﬁrst half, except there
all about us getting ready for the
were just too many turnovers
and we missed shots in close that tournament.”
There were 17 turnovers alone
was should’ve made. We kind of
in the opening frame, but the
ended up taking care of those
Rebels hit ﬁve of their ﬁrst eight
things in the second half, and
shot attempts and never trailed
that was the difference.
“We’re really pleased with this while building an 11-5 cushion
midway through the ﬁrst. Both
one. We showed our worst Satteams traded four points apiece
urday night, but we came back
the rest of the way as the hosts
tonight and showed some real
led 15-9 through eight minutes
grit and some toughness. We’ll
need more of that against a tough of play.
SGHS missed its ﬁrst ﬁve
Trimble squad on Friday night.”
Conversely, SGHS coach Kent shot attempts of the second
period, and Southern reeled off
Wolfe noted that it was another
seven consecutive points as Cole
solid effort ruined only by the
Steele’s trifecta at the 4:18 mark
ﬁnal outcome. But, as he mengave the guests their ﬁrst lead of
tioned, there is still time to get
the night at 16-15.
things ﬁxed before the tournaEli Ellis recovered the lead for
ment rolls around.
South Gallia with a basket at the
“It’s another heartbreaker for
us, dropping our fourth straight. 3:58 mark, sparking a 9-4 charge
that resulted in a 24-20 cushion
We’ve been quite competitive
at the intermission.
in those contests, but it’s hard
After a sloppy ﬁrst half that
to beat anybody when you miss
resulted in a combined 26 turn14 shots inside six feet of the
overs, the Tornadoes established
basket,” Wolfe said. “I thought
momentum early in the third
our effort was tremendous and
after reeling off six straight
our heart was great, but we had
a tough time defending (Arrow) points as part of a 12-2 surge
that resulted in a 32-26 lead with
Drummer inside there in the
3:57 remaining.
second half. I know our ﬁeld
The Rebels — who mustered
goal percentage wasn’t very good
because we had a tough time ﬁn- just three shot attempts and
three turnovers in the opening
ishing tonight.

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

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(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices
The Ohio Township's 2018
Annual Financial Report is
complete and available to
view at the office of the
Fiscal Officer. Ohio
Township will hold their
2019 monthly meetings
on the second Friday of
each month at the Fire
Station on Waugh Road
at 8:00 P.M.
Raymond S. Gibson
Fiscal Officer Ohio Township

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will be available for public
sale on Friday, February 08,
2019 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
9,1� �&amp;�(/��;��1������
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2/6/19,2/7/19,2/8/19

Meigs

McNickle and Coltin Parker
completed the tally with respective efforts of three and two
points.
McNickle and Baker both
hauled in seven rebounds apiece
for the Tornadoes, while Anderson grabbed six caroms.
Southern was without the
services of starting big Brayden
Cunningham, who was out due
to an illness.
The Rebels made 18-of-51 shot
attempts for 35 percent, including a 3-of-19 effort from behind
the arc for 16 percent. The hosts
were also 6-of-9 at the charity
stripe for 67 percent.
C.J. Mayse led SGHS with
nine points and Jared Burdette
added eight points, followed by
Ellis, Kyle Northup and Nick
Hicks with six markers each.
Braxton Hardy was next with
four points, while Day and Garrett Saunders completed the
scoring with three points apiece.
Ellis paced the Red and Gold
with a game-high eight rebounds,
with Saunders and Northup each
hauling in ﬁve boards.
Southern returns to action
Friday when it hosts Trimble in a
TVC Hocking contest at 6 p.m.
South Gallia gets back on the
hardwood Saturday when it travels to Federal Hocking for a TVC
Hocking matchup at 6 p.m.

with 15 points, while
Coulter Cleland
and Nick Lilly both
scored nine points
and grabbed seven
rebounds, with Cleland dishing out a
team-best ﬁve assists.
Cole Betzing contributed six points to
the winning cause,
Zach Bartrum added
ﬁve, while Wyatt
Hoover chipped in
with two.
The guests were
led by Cyrus Rhodes
and Austin Witucky
with 18 and 16
points respectively.
Derek Duckworth
tallied seven points
in the setback, Adam
Coil added six,
Jackson Graham had
three, while Mark
Duckworth scored
two.
The Marauders get
back to work in the
Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division on Friday at Athens.

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

Alex Hawley can be reached
at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

From page 6

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

Ellm View Apts.
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DW WKH 'LVWULFW RIILFH ��� 0DLQ 6WUHHW 5DFLQH� 2+ GXULQJ QRUPDO
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Has an opening for a results oriented

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Capable of developing multi-media campaigns for advertisers. You must
be a problem solver, goal oriented, have a positive attitude, and have the
ability to multi-task in a demanding, deadline-oriented environment. Must
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driven individuals looking to build a future with a growing organization with
publications in Gallipolis, OH, Pomeroy, OH and Point Pleasant, WV.
OH-70095179

IN THE MATTER OF
ACCOUNTS,PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY
ACCOUNTS AND VOUCHERS OF THE FOLLOWING
HAVE BEEN FILED IN
PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FOR APPROVAL
CASE NO: 22462
THE SEVENTH ANNUAL
ACCOUNTING
Guardianship for Stephen E.
Titus, FILED BY Robert B.
Titus,Guardian. UNLESS
EXCEPTIONS ARE FILED,
SAID ACCOUNT
WILL BE SET FOR HEARING BEFORE SAID COURT
ON March 14TH AT 1:00 PM
AT WHICH TIME SAID
ACCOUNT WILL BE
CONTINUED FROM DAY
TO DAY UNTIL
FINALLY DISPOSED OF.
ANY PERSON INTERESTED
MAY FILE A WRITTEN
EXCEPTION TO SAID
ACCOUNT , NOT LESS
THAN FIVE DAYS PRIOR
TO HEARING
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE,
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
2/7/19

Thursday, February 7, 2019 7

Please email cover letter, resume and references to
Matt Rodgers E-mail address: mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

LEGAL NOTICE
Unknown spouse, if any, of Ryan S. Crisp, whose last place of
residence is known as 7515 Blue Holly Drive, Lewis Center, OH
43215 but whose present place of residence is unknown and
The Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Executors and
Administrators of the Estate of Glen T. Crisp, whose last place
of residence is unknown, will take notice that on December 13,
2018, Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, filed its Amended Complaint
in Foreclosure in Case No. 18-CV-033 in the Court of Common
Pleas Meigs County, Ohio alleging that the Defendants, Unknown spouse, if any, of Ryan S. Crisp and The Unknown Heirs
at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Executors and Administrators of
the Estate of Glen T. Crisp, have or claim to have an interest in
the real
estate located at 32960 State Route 124, Langsville, OH
45741, PPN #1100623000. A complete legal description may
be obtained with the Meigs County Auditor’s Office located at
100 East Second Street, Room 201, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner further alleges that by reason of default of the
Defendant(s) in the payment of a promissory note, according to
its tenor, the conditions of a concurrent mortgage deed given to
secure the payment of said note and conveying the premises
described, have been broken, and the same has become absolute.
The Petitioner prays that the Defendant(s) named above be
required to answer and set up their interest in said real estate
or be forever barred from asserting the same, for foreclosure of
said mortgage, the marshalling of any liens, and the sale of
said real estate, and the proceeds of said sale applied to the
payment of Petitioner’s claim in the property order of its priority,
and for such other and further relief as is just and equitable.
THE DEFENDANT(S) NAMED ABOVE ARE REQUIRED TO
ANSWER ON OR BEFORE THE 21ST DAY OF MARCH,
2019.
BY: CLUNK, HOOSE CO., LPA
Ethan J. Clunk #0095546
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner
4500 Courthouse Blvd.
Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
notice@clunkhoose.com
2/7/19, 2/14/19, 2/21/19 TDS

�COMICS

8 Thursday, February 7, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

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By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

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�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 7, 2019 9

Raiders fall to Oak Hill, 45-23
By Bryan Walters

advantage.
From there, OHHS
went on consecutive 10-6
runs over the next two
BIDWELL, Ohio —
periods while extending
These Oaks stood their
their leads to 26-14 at
ground.
halftime and 36-20 enterThe River Valley boys
basketball team was held ing the ﬁnale.
The Silver and Black
to single digits in all four
mustered only one ﬁeld
quarters as visiting Oak
Hill shot 49 percent from goal over the ﬁnal eight
minutes as Oak Hill
the ﬁeld during a 49-23
closed regulation with a
decision on Tuesday
night in a non-conference 13-3 surge to wrap up the
matchup in Gallia County. 26-point outcome.
The Raiders outThe host Raiders (2-16)
rebounded the guests by
went just 3-of-13 from
a 26-13 overall margin,
the ﬂoor in the opening
frame, while the Oaks hit including a 9-3 edge on
the offensive glass. Both
7-of-14 tries while buildteams committed 13 turning a 16-8 ﬁrst quarter

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

overs in the contest.
RVHS netted 9-of-36
ﬁeld goal attempts for 25
percent, including a 4-of16 effort from behind the
arc for 25 percent. The
hosts were also 1-of-2 at
the free throw line for 50
percent.
Layne Fitch paced the
Raiders with 16 points,
all of which came through
three quarters of play.
Brandon Call was next
with four points, while
Jordan Lambert tacked
on all three of his markers
in the fourth.
The Red and Black
went 21-of-43 from the
ﬁeld overall, including a

3-of-13 effort from behind
the arc for 23 percent.
The guests also went 4-of8 at the charity stripe for
50 percent.
Chase Hammond led
Oak Hill with a gamehigh 26 points, followed
by Mason Darby with 21
points and Drew Hanning
with two markers.
River Valley hosted
Ironton Saint Joseph on
Wednesday night and
returns to action Friday
when it travels to Nelsonville-York for a TVC Ohio
contest at 6 p.m.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Joshua Anthony (4) defends the ball during Tuesday night’s 66-54 win over Point Park
University in Pittsburgh, Pa.

effort. He also had 10
rebounds and a gamehigh three assists.
Russell, a senior from
Warrington, England,
added 15 points and a
game-high 11 rebounds
for the RedStorm, while
junior Hadith Tiggs
(Mayﬁeld Heights, OH)
and sophomore Kyle
Lamotte (Mason, OH)
ﬁnished with 11 and 10
points, respectively.
Lamotte tied Schreiter
for game honors with
three assists.

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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Can Zac Taylor
take long-suffering
Bengals the next step?
CINCINNATI (AP) —
The Cincinnati Bengals
liked Zac Taylor the ﬁrst
time they talked to him,
but there was one overriding concern when they
discussed offering him
their head coaching job.
He’s 35 with only a few
games as a coordinator
on his NFL resume.
Would it be too much,
too soon, to make him a
head coach?
“Our big question was:
Is he ready for this opportunity?” player personnel
director Duke Tobin said.
Taylor convinced them
during their two meetings, and the Bengals
introduced him as their
10th head coach on Tuesday.
Having answered the
Bengals’ overriding question, Taylor now gets to
deal with another, more
persistent question that’s
confronted all of his predecessors: Can this head
coach get the Bengals to
a place that none of the
others could reach? Or
will he run into the same
walls?

In Cincinnati, it’s
always bigger than the
head coach. In a league
set up to help struggling
teams rise quickly, the
Bengals have managed
only seven winning seasons in the last 28 years,
a reﬂection on ownership.
Quarterback Carson
Palmer sensed the builtin walls and asked to be
traded after the 2010
season. During his 16 seasons in Cincinnati, coach
Marvin Lewis raised the
organization to a competitive level but couldn’t get
it any further.
Quarterbacks and
coaches have come and
gone, but the futility has
endured. Cincinnati’s
failure to win a playoff
game in 28 years matches
Washington for the ﬁfthlongest in league history.
Dave Shula, Bruce
Coslet, Dick LeBeau and
Lewis all came up short
during the streak of futility. Lewis ﬁnished 0-7,
the worst postseason
coaching record in NFL
history. Now, it’s Taylor’s
turn.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Daniel King had a
game-high 17 points in
the loss for Point Park,
which shot just 38.9
percent for the game (21for-54).
Kyle Carrington added
12 points for the Pioneers, who were also out
rebounded, 47-22.
Rio Grande’s Senior
Day meeting with Carlow
on Saturday is scheduled
for a 3 p.m. tipoff.

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

By Randy Payton

lead at the intermission.
Point Park (8-14, 5-9
RSC), which had tied the
game at 23-all in the ﬁrst
half, did the same again
at 46-46 after a bucket
by Mark Shehady with
9:18 left to play, but the
RedStorm responded
with a 9-0 run to grab
a 55-46 advantage after
a jumper in the lane by
freshman Joshua Anthony
(Newnan, GA) with 5:48
remaining in the contest.
The Pioneers scored
on their ensuing possession to draw within seven
points, but got no closer
the rest of the way.
The game’s ﬁnal margin
of victory provided Rio’s
largest lead of the night.
Schreiter, a junior from
Mason, Ohio, ﬁnished
with a team-high 16
points in the winning

By Randy Payton

PITTSBURGH, Pa. — Inevitably, bad nights
happen.
Tuesday night was one of those nights for the
University of Rio Grande women’s basketball
team.
The RedStorm suffered through its secondworst shooting performance of the season and
failed to connect on at least one three-point goal
for the ﬁrst time in more than ﬁve years during a
74-50 loss at Point Park University, Tuesday night,
in River States Conference action at the CCACAllegheny Gymnasium.
Rio Grande, which lost for the ninth time in 10
games, slipped to 14-13 overall and 5-10 in conference play.
The RedStorm maintained its game-and-a-half
lead over Carlow for the fourth and ﬁnal postseason berth from the league’s East Division. The
Celtics dropped a 69-65 decision to division leader
West Virginia Tech.
Point Park improved to 12-13 overall and 8-6
inside the RSC.
Rio Grande forged a pair of ties, but never led
in the game, connecting on just 20 of its 68 overall ﬁeld goal attempts for 29.4 percent shooting.
The only outing to produce a lower percentage
was a 73-63 loss at IU East on Nov. 28 (23-for-79,
29.1%).
Only eight of Rio’s 50 points came from outside
the paint or away from the free throw line.
The RedStorm also went 0-for-17 from threepoint range. The last time Rio went without a
three-pointer was in a 79-74 loss at Webber International (Fla.) on Dec. 21, 2014 - a stretch of 140
consecutive games.
Point Park outscored Rio in each of the ﬁrst
three quarters and led by as many 27 points early
in the ﬁnal stanza.
Michelle Burns had a team-high 19 points to
lead four double-digit scorers for the Pioneers. She
also ﬁnished with a game-high eight assists and
four steals.
Sam Weir added 16 points and a team-high 12
rebounds, while Kaitlyn Smith added 16 points of
her own and Baylee Look tossed in 10 points.
Senior Jaida Carter (New Philadelphia, OH) ﬁnished with a game-high 21 points in a losing cause
for Rio Grande. She also had nine rebounds and a
team-best four assists.
Freshman Avery Harper (Seaman, OH) also narrowly missed a double-double for Rio, ﬁnishing
with 12 points and nine rebounds.
Sophomore Jimi Howell (Barberton, OH) tallied 11 points, a game-high 17 rebounds and two
blocked shots for the RedStorm.
Rio Grande can clinch a post-season berth on
Saturday when it hosts Carlow for Senior Day at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
Tipoff is set for 1 p.m.

Rio Grande men lock down Point Park
PITTSBURGH, Pa. —
After saving their collective post-season lives with
a win last Saturday, the
University of Rio Grande
men’s basketball team
moved one step closer to
nailing down a tournament berth on Tuesday
night.
The RedStorm got double-double outings from
Cameron Schreiter and
Earl Russell and led from
start to ﬁnish in a 66-54
River States Conference
triumph over Point Park
University at CCACAllegheny Gymnasium.
Head coach Ken
French’s squad, which
improved to 11-17 overall
and 5-10 in league play,
can ofﬁcially clinch a spot
in the upcoming RSC
Tournament with a win at
home on Saturday against
Carlow University.
A win on Saturday,
plus another Point Park
loss, could actually end
up giving Rio the No. 3
seed from the RSC East
Division.
Tuesday night’s win
marked the ﬁrst time the
RedStorm recorded consecutive victories where
the opposition scored
57 points or less since
Dec. 30, 2012 (a 78-49
triumph over CincinnatiClermont) and Jan. 3,
2013 (a 73-57 win over
Campbellsville).
Rio Grande jumped out
to a 9-2 lead over the Pioneers on Tuesday night
before settling for a 30-28

Pioneers pound
cold-shooting
RedStorm women

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, February 7, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Cats outlast Sherman
By Bryan Walters

away from the Tide (1-13)
over the next three frames
while rolling to their third
SETH, W.Va. — Making win in four outings.
Casey Lowery poured
the most of their time.
The Hannan boys basket- in six points during a 10-7
second period run that ultiball team overcame a onemately gave the Blue and
point ﬁrst quarter deﬁcit
with a 39-27 run the rest of White a permanent lead at
26-24 entering the break.
the way on Tuesday night
Lowery and Dalton Coleduring a 55-44 victory over
host Sherman in a non-con- man followed with ﬁve
ference matchup in Boone points apiece in the third
canto as HHS extended
County.
its lead out to 41-34 with
The Wildcats (6-10)
a 15-10 run, then ChanBryan Walters | OVP Sports found themselves in a
dler Starkey tacked on six
Hannan senior Chase Nelson (15) looks to make a pass 17-16 hole through eight
during a Jan. 11 boys basketball contest against Point minutes of play, but the
points as part of a 14-10
Pleasant in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
surge down the stretch that
guests gradually pulled
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

wrapped up the 11-point
outcome.
Sherman outrebounded
the guests by a 35-30
overall margin, but also
committed 17 of the 26
turnovers in the contest.
Lowery paced the Wildcats with a game-high 18
points, followed by Starkey
with 16 points —with 10
of those coming before
halftime.
Andrew Gillispie was
next with 10 points, while
Coleman and Chase Nelson
respectively completed
things with seven and four
markers.

Hendrick vows rebound from worst season
DAYTONA BEACH,
Fla. (AP) — Rick Hendrick worked too hard
building NASCAR’s top
organization to tolerate
mediocrity. If his teams
had simply been average
last season he might not
rate it as one of the worst
in team history.
The Hendrick cars
were pretty bad —seventime NASCAR champion
Jimmie Johnson failed
to win for the ﬁrst time
in his Cup career — and
it took 22 races for the
organization to get its
ﬁrst victory. The ﬁnal
tally showed just three
Chase Elliott victories
and the organization
with 12 Cup titles was
locked out of the championship-deciding ﬁnale
for the second consecutive year.
In a wide-ranging
interview with The Associated Press, Hendrick
guaranteed this year will

be much improved.
“Last year sucked. I
ain’t gonna do that no
more,” Hendrick said.
“I’m too competitive to
do that and our organization is too good to be
doing that.”
The season was not
entirely surprising considering the upheaval to
both the driver lineup
and the behind-thescenes operations. The
roster was stacked just
three years ago with
Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kasey Kahne
and Johnson but looks
dramatically different as
Hendrick begins its 36th
season in the Cup Series.
Gordon retired after
the 2015 season, Earnhardt was sidelined most
of 2016 because of concussion-related ailments
and he retired the next
year. Kahne was released
for underperforming and
Hendrick suddenly had

two high-proﬁle rides to
ﬁll. Elliott had already
replaced Gordon, and the
newest vacancies were
ﬁlled by William Byron,
a rookie last season, and
Alex Bowman, who had
bounced around looking
for a competitive ride
until he ﬁlled in for Earnhardt in 2016.
Bowman is 26, Elliott
is 23 and Byron celebrated his 21st birthday
during the offseason.
Johnson is entering his
18th fulltime Cup season
and turns 44 this September.
Johnson was surrounded by inexperienced newcomers at the same time
Chevrolet made a body
change to its Cup entrant
and switched to the
Camaro. Although Bowman won the Daytona
500 pole in the Camaro’s
debut, and Chevy driver
Austin Dillon won the
race, that was the lone

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highlight for most of the
season. Chevy didn’t win
again until Elliott’s ﬁrst
career victory in August
and Camaro drivers
totaled just four victories. Ford won 19 races
in its outgoing Fusion
and Toyota scored 13
wins in its Camry.
Hendrick completed
a massive restructuring
before the 2018 season
and its resources were
stretched thin as all four
teams were moved into
one shop for the ﬁrst
time. The teams had
previously been split in
pairs, and the consolidation put everyone in the
same building with the
crew chiefs working as a
quartet.
So much change at one
time had an impact on
performance.
“We really looked like
we were out to lunch
most of the year,” Hendrick said. “Until Chase
won, it didn’t even look
like we were in the
same ballpark. But we
started to close the big
gap toward the end of
the year and now we’ve
turned the page.”
Hendrick had built his
team from nothing and
weathered the tightest of
ﬁnancial situations. AllStar Racing barely made
it through the ﬁrst two
months of its inaugural
1984 season.
Hendrick had a
5,000-square-foot shop
with eight employees
and a legendary crew
chief in Harry Hyde.
But he didn’t have a
driver, a sponsor or solid
prospects. A deal with
Richard Petty to run
the Daytona 500 didn’t
materialize and the seat
was offered to Tim Richmond. Hendrick pulled
the offer when Geoff
Bodine stopped in the
shop one day and offered
to wait in the lobby until
Richmond made his decision.

Eagles

Chris Abbott led Sherman with 16 points, with
R.J. Cline and Brian Busby
respectively adding nine
and seven points. Dalton
Rollo was next with ﬁve
points, while Wyatt Kincaid and Parker Rollo completed things with four and
three markers.
Hannan returns to
action Thursday when it
hosts Teays Valley Christian as part of a varsity
boys-girls doubleheader at
7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.

Dragons outlast
Gallia Academy, 37-31
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — The start got the
Blue Devils in the end.
Host Fairland built a 7-0 ﬁrst quarter lead and
ultimately held on Tuesday night for a 37-31 victory over the Gallia Academy boys basketball team
in an Ohio Valley Conference matchup in Lawrence County.
The Dragons (15-4, 10-1 OVC) led wire-to-wire
and limited the Blue Devils (10-8, 6-5) to just
13 points through three quarters of play, but the
guests rallied back from an 11-point fourth quarter
deﬁcit and actually closed to within a single point
late in the ﬁnale.
FHS, however, came up with a 9-4 run over the
ﬁnal three minutes of regulation, which allowed
the Green and White to claim a season sweep with
the two-possession triumph. Fairland also posted a
69-44 decision in Centenary back on Jan. 11.
After building a seven-point cushion through
eight minutes, Fairland got a pair of trifectas from
Clayton Thomas as part of a 13-9 second period
push that extended the lead out to 20-9 at the
break.
Both teams produced four points apiece in the
third frame for a 24-13 contest, but the Blue and
White made a 14-4 surge to start the ﬁnale while
closing the gap down to 28-27 with under four
minutes left.
The Dragons outrebounded the guests by a
22-15 overall margin and also committed 13 of the
23 turnovers in the outing.
The Blue Devils netted 14-of-37 ﬁeld goal
attempts for 38 percent, including a 1-of-8 effort
from behind the arc for 13 percent. GAHS was
also 2-of-4 at the free throw line for 50 percent.
Cory Call paced Gallia Academy with 10 points,
followed by Justin McClelland with eight points
and Blaine Carter with seven markers. Caleb
Henry completed the scoring with six points.
Call and McClelland both led GAHS with four
rebounds, with McClelland also sharing teamhighs of three steals and two assists. Carter also
had three steals, while Henry produced a pair of
assists as well.
Fairland made 13-of-28 shot attempts for 46 percent, including a 4-of-9 performance from behind
the arc for 44 percent. The hosts also netted 7-of-8
charity tosses for 88 percent.
Jacob Polcyn paced FHS with a game-high 14
points, followed by Thomas with nine points and
Matt Mondlak with six markers.
Aiden Porter and Gavin Hunt were next with
three points apiece, while Tan Chinn completed
the winning tally with two points.
Porter hauled in a team-high seven rebounds,
while Brice Lemaster dished out ﬁve assists.
Gallia Academy returns to action Friday when it
hosts Portsmouth in an OVC contest at 6 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

free throw line, EHS was
5-of-11 (45.5 percent)
and WHS was 4-of-7
(57.1 percent).
From page 6
Both teams ﬁnished
defense and rebounding, with 30 rebounds, with
the Eagles claiming a
and we started chipping
17-to-13 edge in offenaway.
“We come in here with sive boards. The hosts
collected 11 assists,
two wins on the season,
seven steals and one
we get down 18-0, and I
blocked shot, while
think it’s a testament to
Wahama ended with nine
our kids’ character that
assists, eight steals and
they hung in there, batfour rejections.
tled back and made this
Barringer led the the
a ball game. They played
victors with a doublehard, battled back, did
double of 17 points and
what they had to do to
get down to the wire with 12 rebounds. Isaiah Fish
a chance to win. That’s all and Colton Reynolds had
eight points apiece, while
you can ask.”
Mason Dishong scored
For the game, Eastfour.
ern shot 16-of-49 (32.7
Blaise Facemyer had a
percent) from the ﬁeld,
team-high three assists
missing all-7 three-point
tries, while Wahama was for the hosts, Reynolds,
Sharp Facemyer and Ryan
15-of-39 (38.5 percent)
Dill each had two steals,
from the ﬁeld, including
2-of-7 (28.6 percent) from while Barringer blocked
a shot.
beyond the arc. At the

Dakota Belcher led
Wahama with 17 points
and six rebounds, followed by Pauley with 10
points and six boards.
Jacob Lloyd and Jacob
Warth rounded out the
WHS tally with ﬁve and
four points respectively,
with Warth also grabbing
six rebounds.
Jonathan Frye dished
out a game-best four
assists for the guests,
Lloyd and Pauley both
claimed three steals,
while Belcher blocked
four shots.
The season series
between these teams ﬁnishes tied at one, as the
White Falcons won 50-48
on Jan. 15 in Mason.
On Friday, the White
Falcons host Miller, while
the Eagles visit Waterford.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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