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                  <text>Today
in history
featured

Storms,
high of 87,
low of 69

Rebels beat
Wahama,
Eastern

EDITORIAL s5A

WEATHER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 132, Volume 69

Wednesday, August 19, 2015 s 50¢

‘National Aviation Day’ today

Meigs Fair
continues
Wednesday
with shows
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Dean Wright | Ohio Valley Newspapers

A small plane prepares to land at the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport.

Celebrate birthday of Orville Wright, history of flight
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Aug. 19 is
National Aviation Day. Designated by President Franklin D.
Roosevelt in 1939, the date is
the birthday of Orville Wright,
one of the legendary Wright
Brothers who were the inventors of the airplane.
Since the Wright Brothers
were from Dayton, the date
should have special signiﬁcance
to Ohioans.
Orville was still living when
FDR proclaimed the holiday. It
had been 36 years since their
historic ﬂight in 1903 when
the two did something most
thought couldn’t be done. As
long as humans could remember, there had been attempts at
ﬂying.
Flying seemed elusive, something that perhaps would never
be accomplished. Many said
“man” was not meant to ﬂy.
So Dec. 17, 1903, is perhaps
a day more signiﬁcant than any
other in history. Although the
telegraph and telephone connect the world through communication, aviation connected the

world physically, and faster than
any other method of travel.
When FDR brought aviation
into the national conscience
with the special day, citizens
were encouraged to observe
the day with activities promoting interest in aviation. Federal
buildings and installations were
to ﬂy the U.S. ﬂag in honor of
the holiday.
So General Aviation News
asks,” How will you be a good
citizen and observe the day as
indicated by the President?”
A suggestion from NASA is to
“spread your wings” by having
your picture taken stretching
out your arms like the wings
of an airplane and posting
your photo to social media.
Tag it with #SpreadYourWings
or #NationalAviationDay and
your photo could be selected
and highlighted at NASA.gov/
aeronautics. Extra points will be
given if hands are used to make
winglets, one of NASA’s contributions to aviation. (The invention of winglets was important
as they reduce drag and in their
nearly 15 years of use, have
saved fuel and reduced aircraft
noise. )

Another way to celebrate the
holiday is by visiting a science
museum or NASA visitor
center. The National Museum
of the U.S. Air Force and the
Dayton Air Show held annually
in July can be found right
here in Ohio. Some of NASA’s
centers are Langley Research
Center in Va., Glenn Research
Center in Lewis Field, Ohio,
Ames Research Center and
Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Ala., to name a few.
The Smithsonian Air and Space
Museum, located on the Mall
in Washington, D.C., is a place
where many people visit to
learn about the history of ﬂight.
Classic aviation-themed movies including Jimmy Stewart’s
“The Spirit of St. Louis,” Disney’s “Planes,” and the recent
National Geographic IMAX
spectacle “Living in the Age of
Airplanes” can be enjoyed by
the entire family.
An introductory ﬂight lesson
may be something that appeals
to some as well. Flight schools
are found at most general aviation airports and many offer an
introductory ﬂight lesson. For
those less enthusiastic about

leaving the ground, computer
desktop ﬂight simulators are
popular choices for virtual ﬂying.
Building a model of a
historic aircraft can be fun
and educational. It is a good
opportunity to learn the history
of the plane and a variety of
styles can be found at hobby
stores. LEGO bricks can be
used to build your own design
or make a paper airplane and
see how far it can ﬂy.
Try to remember your ﬁrst
ﬂight or the ﬁrst time you saw
an airplane. Ask yourself what
kind of airplane it was and if
you were traveling, where were
you going. Was it exciting,
thrilling or did you have some
interpretation?
And don’t forget to check out
the library for aviation-themed
books. There are plenty to
choose from in all reading levels
and genres.
Next time you see an airplane, remember it has been
just over 100 year since ﬂying
became a reality.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155
Ext. 2551

Christmas in August

A NEWS
Obituary: 2A
Editorial: 5A
Weather: 6A

Market prepares 50,000
pots of poinsettias

B SPORTS
Golf: 1B
Football: 1B
Soccer: 1B, 4B
Classifieds: 2-4B
Comics: 5B
Puzzles: 6B

By Mindy Kearns
For Ohio Valley Newspapers

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

MASON, W.Va. — Heat and humidity, county fairs, back-to-school and
football.
These are the things most people
think about when you mention
August. But what about Christmas?
At Bob’s Market and Greenhouses
in Mason, more than 50,000 pots of
poinsettias have been planted this
week and last, according to Scott
Barnitz, vice president.
See CHRISTMAS | 6A

Mindy Kearns | Ohio Valley Publishing

Employees at Bob’s Market and Greenhouses in
Mason are pictured as they unload poinsettia
pots from carts and place them in the
greenhouse. All of the plants pictured in the
background are a part of the 50,000 containers
planted this week and last.

POMEROY — It’s hard
to believe Fair Week is
half over. But half over
doesn’t mean completely
ﬁnished, and Wednesday
is looking as actionpacked as ever.
As always, fair gates
open at 7 a.m. and close
at 11 p.m. A junior fair
market hog show will
be at 8 a.m. at the RL
Arena.
Barn Games will take
place in the Horse Arena
at 10 a.m.
Kids can also enjoy
Clover Clues at 3 p.m.
starting in the RL Arena.
Kiddie Tractor Pull
will continue at 4 p.m.
in the Small Arena, and
at the same time Brian
&amp; Family Connection
will take the Hill Stage
and Pinewood Derby
will begin at the Small
Animal Arena. More fun
continues at 5 p.m. with
Corn Hole at RL Arena.
Come celebrate
graduating Cloverbuds
at the RL Arena at 6
p.m., or, at the same
time, attend the Open
Horse Show at the Horse
Arena.
Brian &amp; Family
Connection will once
again return to the
Hill Stage at 7 p.m.
with Draft Horse Pull
beginning the Pull Track
at 7:30 p.m. The main
entertainment of the fair,
Earl Dibbles Jr./Granger
Smith will take place at
the Grandstand at 8 p.m.
Earl Dibbles Jr. is
Granger’s “country
boy” alter ego who has
scored millions of fans
across the country music
community and is the
encore performance at
every Granger Smith
show. Earl has several of
his own songs including
“The Country Boy
Song,” “Country Boy
Love,” and most recently
“City Boy Stuck.”
Granger’s EP, 4X4, was
recently released on May
4 to the No. 2 position
on iTunes Country
Chart, No. 6 on iTunes
All Genres and No. 6
on Billboard’s Country
Albums Chart.
The EP is co-produced
by Granger and awardwinning producer Frank
Rogers, whose credits
include Brad Paisley,
Darius Rucker and Josh
Turner. The EP’s lead
single, “Backroad Song,”
released to the No. 2
position on the iTunes
Country chart, No. 1
on the iTunes Country
Chart in Canada, and No.
4 on Billboard’s Digital
Singles Country Chart.
It was also featured in
a recent episode of ABC
Nashville.
Granger and Frank are
currently in the studio
prepping a full length
album, slated for release
this fall.
Also taking the Hill
Stage at 8 p.m. will be
the band 4 This Cause.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

�LOCAL

2A Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Raccoon-Rabies vaccination begins Aug. 20

DEATH NOTICES
JORDAN

LEON, W.Va. — Herman Jordan, 91, of Leon,
passed away Aug. 18, 2015. Arrangements are
incomplete, and a full obituary will appear in the
Thursday edition of the Point Pleasant Register.
Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., is
serving the family.

Staff report

MANNING

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Rama Norene Manning, 82, of Proctorville, passed away Monday,
Aug. 17, 2015, at Mt. Carmel East, Columbus,
Ohio. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in charge of arrangements.

NICHOLS

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — Samuel Lucas Nichols III, 60, of Myrtle Beach, and formerly of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Aug. 3, 2015. A
family memorial service will be held at Hastings
Funeral Home, 153 Spruce St., Morgantown, with
a committal service to follow at East Oak Grove
Cemetery.

SLAYTON

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.— Marshall Slayton,
84, of Point Pleasant, died Monday, Aug. 17, 2015,
at Holzer Assisted Living, Gallipolis. A funeral
service will be 1 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21, 2015, at
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Burial
will follow at Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
Visitation will be two hours prior to the service
Friday at the funeral home.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The
Meigs Community Calendar will only list event
information that is open
to the public.
Friday, Aug. 21
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School
Class of 1959 will be
holding their third Friday lunch at Fox Pizza
at noon.

meeting at 10 a.m.
at 1927 Fairground
Road.
Wednesday, Aug. 26
POMEROY — Meigs
Local School District
begins their ﬁrst day of
school.
Thursday, Aug. 27
REEDSVILLE —
Eastern Local School
District begins their
ﬁrst day of school.
RACINE — Southern
Local School District
begins their ﬁrst day of
school.

Monday, Aug. 24
MASON, W.Va. —
Mason County Solid
Waste Authority will
hold their monthly

COLUMBUS — The
Ohio Department of
Health and the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, in partnership
with the U.S. Department
of Agriculture and local
health departments will
begin fall oral rabies vaccination operations this
month in 12 northeast
and eastern Ohio counties.
Weather permitting,
baiting will begin Thursday, Aug. 20 and will
cover 3,741 square miles
of the state’s northeastern
and eastern border. Bait
distribution should be
complete by Sept. 11.
Rabies is a viral disease that affects mammals, including people.
It is almost always fatal.
Rabies vaccine baiting
operations are intended
to immunize raccoons
that are at greatest risk
of being exposed to raccoon rabies coming into
the state. This will then
create an “immune barrier” along the Ohio state
line that can prevent the
spread of raccoon-rabies
variant into the rest of
the state.
As in past years, bait
distribution with the oral
rabies vaccine Raboral
V-RG will take place in all
of Columbiana, Jefferson
and Mahoning counties
and parts of Ashtabula,
Belmont, Carroll, Harrison Monroe and Trumbull counties. In addition,
for the third year in a
row, a new oral rabies

vaccine called ONRAB
will be ﬁeld-tested in
parts of Ashtabula, Lake,
Geauga Portage and
Trumbull counties as part
of a national trial involving ﬁve states.
Baits will be distributed by various methods
in each county, including ﬁxed-wing aircraft,
helicopter and vehicles
staffed by USDA and
local health departments.
Residents in the areas to
be baited should be aware
of low-ﬂying aircraft and
should keep children
and pets away from the
baits. Dogs in particular
are attracted to the baits
and will occasionally eat
them. The baits are not
harmful to pets. Please
keep the following information in mind:
�Adem�m^Wj�j^[�XW_ji�
look like. The coated
sachet, which will be
distributed by aircraft, is
about the size of a ketchup packet. It is white
and rolled in a brown
ﬁshmeal glaze. In urban
areas, where baits will be
distributed by vehicle,
the sachet will be inside
a hard, brown ﬁshmeal
block, that is about 2 by
2-inches. The ONRAB
blister pack, which will
be distributed by aircraft
and by vehicle in Lake,
Portage, Geauga, Summit, and Cuyahoga counties only, is about 1 by
2 inches and has a darkgreen coloring and sweetsmelling waxy coating.
�?dijhkYj�Y^_bZh[d�je�
leave the baits alone.
�J^[�XW_ji�Wh[�dej�

Carleton School
preschool screenings

(USPS 436-840)

SYRACUSE —Carleton School will be conducting preschool screenings for children ages 3 and 4
on Aug. 28. If you have concerns about your child’s
development, call 740-992-6681 to schedule an
appointment.

Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

Meigs Cleanup Day

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Meigs Cleanup Day will be Sept.
12 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Meigs County Fairgrounds, 1850. Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy. This
event is open to Meigs County residents only and
proof is required, such as a drivers license or utility bill. Industrial or commercial customers are not
eligible. For more information on what items can be
recycled, visit www.gjmvrecycle.com or call 1-800544-1853.

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

1975 Meigs High
School Reunion

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

rabies cases are available
on the ODH website.
The rabies virus is
found in the saliva of
affected animals, most
often raccoons, skunks
and bats, and is spread
when saliva from an
infected animal gets into
a wound or mucous membrane (such as the eye
or mouth). Animal bites
are the most common
route of exposure. Bats,
raccoons and skunks pose
the greatest risk of rabies
in Ohio. To protect your
family against this stilldeadly disease:
�7le_Z�YedjWYj�m_j^�
wild animals and animals
you do not know.
�LWYY_dWj[�oekh�f[ji�
against rabies and keep
them current on their
shots.
�?\�X_jj[d"�YWbb�oekh�
doctor. If your pet has
contact with a wild animal, call your veterinarian.
�Fej[dj_Wb�hWX_[i�
exposures should also
be reported to your local
health department.
Ohio’s partners in the
multistate baiting are
Pennsylvania, and West
Virginia, and the threestate effort will involve
distribution of about 1.5
million baits and cover
more than 6,400 square
miles by ﬁxed wing
aircraft, helicopter, and
ground/vehicle baiting.
ODH has participated
in the program since
1997 and almost 15
million baits have been
distributed in Ohio over
that time.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Local Briefs will only list
event information that is free and open to the public.

Civitas Media, LLC

harmful to pets. Once
your area is baited, keep
dogs and cats inside or
on leashes for up to ﬁve
days. Most baits disappear within 24 hours;
however, it is important
raccoons have every
opportunity to eat them.
�:e�dej�Wjj[cfj�je�
take bait away from your
pet; you may be bitten.
�7doed[�^WdZb_d]�
baits should wear gloves.
If baits are found in areas
frequented by pets or
children, toss them into
deeper cover. Damaged
baits can be disposed of
in the trash.
�?\�W�f[hied�_i�
exposed to the vaccine
(liquid) within the bait,
thoroughly wash any
areas of the skin that
came into contact with
the vaccine with soap and
water.
�?\�iec[ed[�^Wi�X[[d�
exposed to the vaccine
or has questions about
the baiting, call the
ORV Information line
at 888-RABIES1 (7224371) or your local health
department.
During 2014, ﬁve animals were conﬁrmed to
be infected with raccoonrabies variant virus in
Ohio, including two raccoons from Mahoning
County, two raccoons
from Trumbull County
and one skunk from
Columbiana County. So
far in 2015, two raccoons
in Mahoning County and
three raccoons in Trumbull County have tested
positive for raccoonrabies variant. Details of

POMEROY — The 1975 graduating class of Meigs
High School will be celebrating their 40th reunion at
2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 19 at the Gavin Recreational

Building on St. Rt. 554 in Cheshire, Ohio. The class
is currently seeking classmates addresses they have
been unable to locate which, includes but are not limited to:Robert Michael Allen, Gail Patsy Bailey, David
Eugene Christian, Lois April Fraser (Frasier), Linda
Anne Gerard, Cheryl Dian Haning, David Dewayne
@ed[i"�;_b[[d�7dd�A[dd[Zo"�Heo�;$�BWmied"�@h$�"?h[d[�
Malone, Charles M. Miller, Christopher J. Miller,
Debra Diane Mowery, Virginia Viola McCune, PatriY_W�Bek�:Whij�Ic_j^"�A_cX[hbo�;b_pWX[j^�Ij[l[hi"�
Thomas Stevers, Daniel E. Taylor, Susan L. Tillis,
Alisa Walker, George Reino Ward, Tery Ray Warner,
Gerald Wayne White and Linda Diane Williams. Anyone who may know addresses for the aforementioned
classmates or for questions about the reunion contact
Cynthia Manley Hartenbach at 740-992-2775 or email
chartenbach57@gmail.com or Scherry Lane Spears at
740-645-2244.

Free Resources available
from Coad4Kids
E&gt;?E�L7BB;O�Å�9eWZ*A_Zi�_i�W�YeWb_j_ed�e\�'-�
Community Action Agencies serving Appalachian
Ohio. Free resource materials are available to help
child care providers plan fun learning experiences for
children. Information on becoming a child care provider, advice and guidelines on what to look for in a
child care provider and a list of providers in your area
are available upon request. For more information go
online to www.coad4kids.or or call 740-354-6527 or
800-577-2276.

VISIT US ONLINE AT WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 19, 2015 3A

‘End of Summer’ events planned
Mindy Kearns

For Ohio Valley Publishing

BEND AREA — Churches
throughout the Bend Area
have joined to host an “End of
Summer Weekend Celebration”
for high school and college
students this weekend.
Organized by Pastor Donnie
Dye of Fairview Bible Church,
the events will begin Friday
evening with an Outdoor
Movie Night.
“God’s Not Dead” will be the
movie shown on the banks of
the Ohio River, on land owned
by William and Jane Bird in

New Haven.
The free movie will begin at
dark.
Prior to the movie, beginning
at 7:30 p.m., Noah Searls will
be speaking to the youth. Hot
dogs, drinks and homemade
desserts will be served.
Signs will be placed in
New Haven to lead the way
to the event on Layne Street.
According to Joyce Dye, Pastor
Dye’s wife, if it is raining or
extremely wet from an earlier
rain, the movie night will
be held at the New Haven
Community Building.
On Saturday evening, the

youth are invited to the Night
of Worship, or “N.O.W.”
concert, on the grounds of
Soul Harvest Church, 500
Adamsville Road in Mason.
Set to begin at 6 p.m., the Soul
Harvest Band will take the
outdoor stage, next to Dollar
General Store, for a concert.
Ryan Hill, youth leader
at Soul Harvest, said along
with the concert, there will
be games, as well as free
hamburgers and hot dogs.
Chris Wallis will be the guest
speaker.
In the event of rain Saturday,
the event will be inside Soul

Harvest Church. Even though
the event is geared for the
youth, all ages are invited to
attend the N.O.W. service.
The weekend will end
with a special youth service
Sunday evening at 7 p.m. at
the Fairview Bible Church,
located in the area known as
Gibbstown, near Letart. Guest
speaker for the service will be
Joey Cunningham.
Those attending the Friday
and Saturday outdoor events
are encouraged to bring chairs
or blankets to sit on.
In addition to those
hosting events, Joyce Dye

Exec pleads guilty in chemical spill
By Jonathan Mattise

In January 2014, a
rundown Freedom tank
in Charleston leaked
CHARLESTON,
coal-cleaning chemicals
W.Va. — One of the last
into the water supply for
executives charged in a
nine counties. The spill
chemical spill that left
spurred a ban on using
300,000 West Virginians tap water across nine
without clean tap water
counties for four to 10
for days pleaded guilty
days.
to federal pollution
Farrell and Southviolations Tuesday.
ern were the only two
Former Freedom Indus- charged to plead not
tries executive Dennis
guilty initially.
Farrell entered his guilty
U.S. Attorney Booth
plea in federal court
Goodwin’s ofﬁce sought
Monday in Charleston,
guilty pleas after Judge
joining the bankrupt com- Thomas Johnston refused
pany itself and four other to take Goodwin’s ofﬁce
former Freedom ofﬁcials off the case. Southern
who have already pleaded and Farrell had said
guilty. The deal calls for
some prosecutors had
a sentence of 30 days
been affected by the spill
to two years in prison,
and should have been
as well as a maximum
removed.
$200,000 ﬁne.
Southern could be dealt
Former company Presi- the harshest sentence.
dent Gary Southern, the He faces federal pollution
ﬁnal and highest-proﬁle
and bankruptcy charges,
executive targeted for
which say he lied to prothe spill, is expected to
tect his worth from legal
follow with a guilty plea
action after the spill. He
Wednesday.
faces up to 93 years in

Associated Press

prison.
Five sentencing hearings are already scheduled for December.
Businesses and
residents who struggled
without clean water last
year are closely watching
several ongoing court
cases that will dictate if
they are paid back for
their hardships.
A class-action lawsuit
is ongoing against the
chemical’s producer, Eastman Chemical, and West
Virginia American Water,
the utility whose water
supply became laced with
chemicals.
A ﬁnal bankruptcy deal
still hasn’t been struck, as
businesses and residents
compete with other creditors for the little cash
remaining in defunct
Freedom Industries. The
company had proposed
paying out $2.7 million
to spill victims in a larger
bankruptcy plan, but a
federal bankruptcy judge
rejected the proposal over

concerns about paying to
clean up Freedom’s contaminated headquarters.
And in the criminal
case, a community group
is pushing for restitution
for victims.
In a letter to the judge,
Maya Naye, executive
director of People Concerned About Chemical
Safety, suggested an
award of at least $45.6
million — $1 per person
affected over the ﬁve
months that the main
spilled chemical was
traceable, albeit at very
low levels, in the water
company’s ﬁlters. The
letter says $109.5 million
would be the appropriate
amount.
Naye said any award
should fund programs
related to chemical disaster prevention, water
quality and infrastructure improvement, and
development of long-term
health data and prevention strategies related to
the spill.

Koch cash backs fight with Strickland
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Americans for Prosperity,
one of the biggest outside
groups backed by billionaire conservative donors
Charles and David Koch,
this week begins a $1.4
million television advertising campaign against
former Ohio Gov. Ted
Strickland, now a leading
Democratic candidate for
Senate.
“We had such devastation and job loss in
the state of Ohio when
Ted Strickland was our
governor,” a man identiﬁed as Bruce says in the
30-second spot, which
will air in all of the state’s
major media markets.
“I’ve never seen him solve
Ohio’s problems.”
The ad concludes with
text on the screen saying:
“Vote against Ted Strickland. He’s failed Ohio’s
families.” Republican
Sen. Rob Portman is up
for re-election next year.
The anti-Strickland
spot is a rare overtly
political message from
a group that typically
refrains from express
advocacy even as it
encourages voters to
back Republicans. Not
since 2012 when it asked
voters to reject President Barack Obama has
Americans for Prosperity
made this kind of ballotbox appeal.
That’s because as
a nonproﬁt advocacy
group, it is limited in
how much purely political work it can do. In
exchange, it can keep its
donors private. The difference in messaging can
be slight — and lost on
viewers.
For example, earlier
this month Americans for

AP photo

One of the biggest outside
groups backed by billionaire
conservative donors Charles
and David Koch is spending $1.4
million to attack Democratic
Ohio Senate candidate Ted
Strickland
in
television
advertisements. The ads
against Strickland are paid for
by Americans for Prosperity, a
nonprofit group that doesn’t
disclose its donors.

Prosperity began airing
$1.2 million worth of ads
against New Hampshire
Gov. Maggie Hassan, a
Democrat who is weighing whether to run
against Republican Sen.
Kelly Ayotte next year.
Those spots criticize
Hassan’s veto of lower
taxes as harmful to small
businesses. But instead
of saying to vote against
Hassan, the spot concludes by asking viewers
to “tell Maggie Hassan
we can’t afford her tax
hikes.”
Democratic groups said
they aren’t surprised that
outside money is quickly
moving into the Ohio
Senate race. Strickland
has high name recognition, potentially posing a
threat to Portman.
“Washington special
interests are lining up
to buy this race for Rob
Portman so they can keep
him in the Senate to do
their bidding,” said Jennifer Donohue, a spokes-

woman for the Ohio
Democratic Party.
Bridge Project, a Washington-based nonproﬁt
aligned with Democrats,
said it will soon release a
report detailing how policies backed by the Kochs
are bad for Ohio.
“The Koch brothers
know that Rob Portman
backs their reckless
economic agenda that
enriches billionaires like
themselves while hurting
Ohio’s middle class
and working families,”
said Regan Page, a
spokeswoman for the
group.
These August ad buys
put Americans for Prosperity — it expects to
spend at least $225 million this year and next
— on early offense in two
states that will be important for both the presidential contest and in
helping Republicans hold
the Senate. Americans for
Prosperity has its annual
activist summit this
week in Columbus, Ohio;
former Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush and Texas Sen. Ted
Cruz are among the GOP
presidential candidates
scheduled to address the
crowd.
The Koch brothers
founded the group about
a decade ago. It advocates for less government
spending, fewer regulations and lower taxes
through advertising and
voter canvassing across
the country. Tim Phillips,
president of Americans
for Prosperity, said the
anti-Strickland ad, which
will be on air throughout August, is meant to
“make sure Ohio citizens
remember just how badly
people were hurt by his
policies.”
The ad says Bruce is
a former employee of

DHL, a delivery company
that closed operations in
Ohio. He’s one of 400,000
Ohioans who lost jobs
during Strickland’s term,
the ad says, citing a
Labor Department statistic. That same number
was in heavy rotation in
ads during Strickland’s
2010 re-election bid,
which he lost to Republican Gov. John Kasich,
now a presidential candidate.
Those job losses came
as the country was in the
midst of a national recession. As a major manufacturing state, Ohio was hit
particularly hard.

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

FSA takes conservation
program requests
Contributed article

tion structures.
The county ofﬁce
GALLIPOLIS — The will be accepting
Gallia-Lawrence-Meigs
applications until Sept.
County Farm Service
30. Land eligibility
Agency Committee is
based on a farm visit
accepting cost share
inspection of damage,
requests for the Emertaking into account
gency Conservation
the type and extent of
Program. While FSA
damage.
has been approved to
The damage must be
implement this program, so costly to rehabilitate
there are no funds avail- that federal assistance
able to allocate at this
is or will be needed to
time. Once funds are
return the land to proavailable, they can productive use, unusual in
vide up to 75 percent
nature and would not
cost share to restore
recur frequently, and
those farms that were
affects the productive
damaged by the ﬂoods
capacity of the land.
that occurred in July.
For more information
The following practic- about this program,
es are offered:Removing contact the Gallia-Lawdebris from farmland;
rence-Meigs FSA ofﬁce
Grading, shaping,
at 740-446-8687 or toll
re-leveling, or similar
free at 800-391-6638.
measures;
More information is also
Restoring permanent available on FSA’s website at: http://www.fsa.
fences;
usda.gov.
Restoring conserva-

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 58.27
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.75
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) —
115.16
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.34
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —
45.92
BorgWarner (NYSE) —
47.15
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
— 5.32
Champion (NASDAQ) —
0.350
City Holding (NASDAQ) —
48.25
Collins (NYSE) —87.28
DuPont (NYSE) — 53.90
US Bank (NYSE) — 45.76
Gen Electric (NYSE) —
26.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
— 59.79
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 68.21
Kroger (NYSE) — 38.60
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 81.35
Norfolk So (NYSE) —82.35

OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.96
BBT (NYSE) —40.10
Peoples (NASDAQ) —
21.66
Pepsico (NYSE) — 99.77
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.74
Rockwell (NYSE) — 115.68
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
— 17.78
Royal Dutch Shell — 55.74
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
— 24.08
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 69.49
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.78
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.25
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.42
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions Aug. 18,
2015, 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.

60576582

By Julie Bykowicz

said many other churches are
participating in the weekend by
providing food and other items.
“Everyone was really
receptive when Donnie
approached them with the
idea,” said the pastor’s wife.
“We just want to emphasize
that it is a community thing,
and not a one-church thing.”
For more information, check
the Fairview Bible Church
Facebook page or call 740-4161872.

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

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

Let’s Talk
About Your

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740-992-2136

�NEWS

4A Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Feds investigate foreign worker visa use
By Dan Sewell

that sometime between
two and ﬁve years ago
not every employee sponCINCINNATI — A
sored by the school under
state university in south- H-1B work visas was
west Ohio has announced actually working for the
that its foreign-worker
school.
visa program is under fed“That would violate federal investigation.
eral law, and it concerns
Wright State University us greatly,” said the joint
near Dayton says it has
statement from university
disciplined three adminis- president David Hopkins
trators, including its pro- and Michael Bridges,
vost, in connection with
chairman of the board of
the investigation.
trustees.
School leaders say in
The H-1B visas are for
a statement ﬁrst issued
foreign workers in speMonday that they were
cialty occupations such
informed earlier this year as computer science,
of “credible evidence”
engineering and biotech-

Associated Press

nology. The school says it
usually sponsored fewer
than 50 of the visas each
year.
The university could
face suspension of its ability to sponsor H-1B visas,
and also ﬁnes and legal
fees. The school says it is
cooperating with federal
investigators who are trying to determine whether
criminal statutes were
violated.
The school ofﬁcials say
they have been working
with the Ohio attorney
general’s ofﬁce to uncover
the facts, coordinate with
federal authorities, and

make sure the school is in
compliance.
“We are taking strong
actions to solve these
problems,” their statement said. “We expect
to take more actions in
the near future and will
announce them as soon as
conditions permit.”
Wright State said that
Sundaram Narayanan
has been demoted from
provost, while retaining
his faculty status. Two
university vice presidents
will take over the provost’s duties. The school
had placed him on paid
leave in May.

Ky. gay couples win, but still lose
MOREHEAD, Ky.
(AP) — Two same-sex
couples in this small
eastern Kentucky county
got everything they
wanted in a ruling from
a federal judge Monday,
except for one sentence.
U.S. District Judge
David Bunning denied
Rowan County Clerk
Kim Davis' request to
delay his ruling from last
week ordering her to
issue marriage licenses
to gay and lesbian
couples. That ruling followed the U.S. Supreme
Court's decision in June
legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide. But
Bunning then delayed his
own decision, effectively
granting Davis' request
while also denying it.
"If the Court decided
to delay enforcement of
its Order while Davis
pursues an unpromising appeal, it would
essentially give Plaintiffs
a favorable legal ruling
with no teeth and prolong the likely violation
of their constitutional

rights," Bunning wrote.
But Bunning acknowledged that "emotions
are running high on both
sides of this debate"
and said he would delay
his ruling while Davis
appeals to the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals.
Attorneys on both
sides disagreed about
the implications. Dan
Canon, representing
the gay couples, said
Davis remains under the
judge's original order.
But Mat Staver, who represents Davis and is the
founder of Florida-based
Liberty Counsel, said the
convoluted order essentially grants her request
for more time.
What is clear is that
Davis will continue
refusing to issue marriage licenses to anyone
in this county of about
23,000 people, home to
Morehead State University in the Appalachian
foothills of eastern
Kentucky. Until the case
is resolved, no new wedding can be legally recog-

nized in Rowan County
unless the couple obtain
a marriage license somewhere else.
"This is not something
I decided because of
this decision that came
down," Davis testiﬁed in
federal court last month.
"It was thought-out and,
you know, I sought God
on it."
The U.S. Supreme
Court's decision in June
legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. But it
also "ensures that religious organizations and
persons are given proper
protection as they seek
to teach the principles
that are so fulﬁlling and
so central to their lives
and faiths."
Bunning, and now the
court of appeals, are left
with the narrow issue
of whether that ruling infringes on a local
elected ofﬁcial's religious
beliefs.
Bunning says no, arguing that Davis is "free to
believe that marriage is a
union between one man

and one woman, as many
Americans do."
"However, her religious convictions cannot
excuse her from performing the duties that she
took an oath to perform
as Rowan County Clerk,"
he wrote last week.
Davis' lawyers compare her to other religious objectors, such as
a nurse being forced to
perform an abortion, a
noncombatant ordered
to ﬁre on an enemy soldier, or a state ofﬁcial
forced to participate in
a convicted prisoner's
execution.
Clerking has been a
family business in Rowan
County. Davis worked for
her mother for 27 years
before replacing her in
the elected post this year,
and her son Nathan now
works for her. He personally turned away a gay
couple last week.
Around the U.S., most
opponents of gay and
lesbian marriage rights
are complying with the
high court.

ORTHOPAEDIC CARE
at Pleasant Valley Hospital

JUST GOT BETTER.

Narayanan didn’t
respond immediately
Tuesday to an email seeking comment.
Another ofﬁcial was
demoted, and a third
ofﬁcial’s employment
has been terminated, the
school said.
The school said the
fact-ﬁnding process at a
university of more than
20,000 students, faculty
and staff total is complex
and time-consuming, but
the ofﬁcials pledged to
“get this right” and said
that those who failed to
comply with the law “must
be held accountable.”

A school spokesman
declined any further comment Tuesday, citing the
ongoing federal investigation. He declined to say
which federal agencies
were investigating.
“As a matter of policy,
U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement
can neither conﬁrm nor
deny the existence of
an investigation unless
or until an enforcement
action is pursued,” said
Khaalid Walls, an ICE
spokesman.
An FBI spokesman said
he wasn’t aware of any
bureau involvement.

State officials admit
‘errors’ in $7.6M
lottery project bid
CHARLESTON
(AP) — After spending months defending a
decision to award a $7.6
million West Virginia
Lottery building renovation project to a contractor that didn’t submit the
lowest bid, state ofﬁcials
now say they made serious errors.
Senior Deputy
Attorney General Kelli
Talbott, a lawyer for the
Lottery Commission,
recently told the West
Virginia Supreme Court
that the documents state
ofﬁcials had released
for the construction
companies were ﬂawed
and had been confusing,
the Charleston GazetteMail reports.
Among the criticized
elements of the bid
application was the
fact that the Lottery
Commission asked
contractors to list three
references but failed to
attach a required form
on which to include
them. Maynard C.
Smith Construction of
Charleston, the lowest
bidder, was disqualiﬁed
for not listing references.
The Lottery
Commission is now
asking the Supreme
Court to uphold
Kanawha Circuit Judge

Jennifer Bailey’s decision
in June to award the
contract to Maynard.
For months, the
Lottery had argued that
Wiseman Construction,
the second-lowest bidder,
should get the contract.
But after Bailey sided
with Maynard — and
the commission signed
a contract with the
company in late July —
Talbott said it’s too late
to go back and award the
contract to Wiseman.
“The taxpayers of the
state of West Virginia are
best served by allowing
the circuit court’s ﬁnal
order to stand,” Talbott
wrote in her ﬁling.
In response, Wiseman
Construction’s lawyer,
Jim Cagle, skewered state
ofﬁcials, accusing them
of being “timid” and
“throwing in the towel.”
Cagle said state ofﬁcials
created and released
the bid documents and
Wiseman shouldn’t
be punished for those
mistakes.
“Wiseman adhered
(to the project’s requirements), Maynard did
not,” Cagle wrote.
The Lottery plans
to spend $7.6 million
to renovate its parking
garage and three ﬂoors of
ofﬁce space.

Sen. announces W.Va.
ag commissioner bid
MARSHALL ORTHOPAEDICS SURGEON JOHN CROMPTON, MD,
JOINS PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL ORTHOPAEDICS
Orthopaedic patients in the Point Pleasant
area have long been able to depend on
Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) for quality
orthopaedic services. And now, PVH’s
partnership with Cabell Huntington Hospital
and Marshall Health is proving that
advanced orthopaedic care can be better,
faster, and right here in our community.
Pleasant Valley Hospital is pleased to
welcome John Crompton, MD, fellowshiptrained Marshall Orthopaedics Surgeon to
their orthopaedic team. Dr. Crompton is now
seeing patients with all types of orthopaedic
concerns Monday through Friday at PVH.
From simple sprains to orthopaedic
trauma, from reconstructive surgery to
total joint replacement, patients with
orthopaedic concerns now have access to
comprehensive, highly specialized care.
Because health happens here in the
community we love.

Introducing…
JOHN
CROMPTON, MD
“The Marshall School
of Medicine has made
it a priority to stay at
the forefront of the
field of orthopaedics,
which has grown
exponentially in recent years,” said
Dr. Crompton. “Marshall Orthopaedics
has expanded its specialties to include
services like pediatric orthopaedics,
orthopaedic traumatology and orthopaedic
oncology – services that weren’t available
anywhere in the state of West Virginia just
10 years ago. Now, with the partnership
between Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
Marshall School of Medicine, we are able
to provide immediate access to those
services to residents of Point Pleasant and
surrounding areas. It’s an exciting time
in the field of orthopaedics, and it’s an
exciting time at Pleasant Valley Hospital.”

60603604

For more information or to schedule an
appointment, call 304.675.2781.

CHARLESTON (AP)
— Republican state
Sen. Kent Leonhardt on
Monday announced he
will make another run for
West Virginia agriculture
commissioner.
The bid will be Leonhardt’s second-straight
against Democratic Agriculture Commissioner
Walt Helmick.
In 2012, Leonhardt
lost the statewide race
to Helmick, who won
his ﬁrst term as commissioner in that election.
Helmick won by about
3 percent of the vote, or
19,500 votes.
Leonhardt won his
Senate seat last year.
Because his Senate term
lasts four years, he can
keep that job even if he
loses the agriculture commissioner race.
Leonhardt is a Monongalia County farmer and
a retired U.S. Marine
Corps member.
There are no term
limits for the agriculture
commissioner job.
In the upcoming presidential election year, six
partisan statewide ofﬁces
will be on West Virginia’s
ballot: governor, secretary of state, treasurer,
auditor, agriculture commissioner and attorney
general.

Democrats currently
ﬁll all of those seats,
except for attorney general. After last year’s
elections, Republicans
control of both chambers
of the Legislature for the
ﬁrst time in more than
eight decades.
Senate President Bill
Cole is the GOP’s lead
candidate for governor.
Billionaire Jim Justice
and Senate Minority
Leader Jeff Kessler are
running on the Democratic side.
Republican Attorney
General Patrick Morrisey
is seeking re-election and
doesn’t have a Democratic challenger yet.
GOP Del. JB McCuskey is challenging
Democratic Auditor Glen
Gainer.
Republican Supreme
Court Justice Brent Benjamin is also vying for
re-election. But a change
in state law this year will
make judicial and magistrate races nonpartisan.
Those elections will be
held during the May
2016 primary.
Beth Walker, a Morgantown attorney who lost
in a 2008 Supreme Court
run as a Republican, has
announced a bid against
Benjamin.

�Editorial
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 19, 2015 5A

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, August 19, the 231st day
of 2015. There are 134 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On August 19, 1955, torrential rains caused by
Hurricane Diane resulted in severe ﬂooding in the
northeastern U.S., claiming some 200 lives.
On this date:
In A.D. 14, Caesar Augustus, Rome’s ﬁrst
emperor, died at age 76 after a reign lasting four
decades; he was succeeded by his stepson Tiberius.
In 1812, the USS Constitution defeated the British frigate HMS Guerriere off Nova Scotia during
the War of 1812, earning the nickname “Old Ironsides.”
In 1814, during the War of 1812, British forces
landed at Benedict, Maryland, with the objective
of capturing Washington D.C.
In 1918, “Yip! Yip! Yaphank,” a musical revue by
Irving Berlin featuring Army recruits from Camp
Upton in Yaphank, New York, opened on Broadway.
In 1934, a plebiscite in Germany approved the
vesting of sole executive power in Adolf Hitler.
In 1936, the ﬁrst of a series of show trials
orchestrated by Soviet leader Josef Stalin began
in Moscow as 16 defendants faced charges of conspiring against the government (all were convicted
and executed).
In 1942, during World War II, about 6,000 Canadian and British soldiers launched a disastrous
raid against the Germans at Dieppe, France, suffering more than 50-percent casualties.
In 1964, The Beatles opened their ﬁrst fullﬂedged U.S. tour as they performed at San Francisco’s Cow Palace.
In 1974, U.S. Ambassador Rodger P. Davies was
fatally wounded by a bullet that penetrated the
American embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus, during a
protest by Greek Cypriots.
In 1976, President Gerald R. Ford won the
Republican presidential nomination at the party’s
convention in Kansas City.
In 1980, 301 people aboard a Saudi Arabian
L-1011 died as the jetliner made a ﬁery emergency
return to the Riyadh airport.
In 1991, Soviet hard-liners made the stunning
announcement that President Mikhail S. Gorbachev had been removed from power. (The coup
attempt collapsed two days later.)
Ten years ago: A Texas jury found pharmaceutical giant Merck and Co. liable for the death
of a man who’d taken the once-popular painkiller Vioxx, awarding his widow $253.4 million
in damages. (Texas caps on punitive damages
reduced that ﬁgure to about $26 million; a Texas
court overturned the verdict in May 2008, but
the widow has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to
hear her case.) Attackers ﬁring Katyusha rockets
narrowly missed a U.S. amphibious assault ship
docked at the Red Sea resort of Aqaba, but killed
a Jordanian soldier. Britain’s former Northern
Ireland chief, Mo Mowlam, died in Canterbury,
England; she was 55.
Five years ago: The last American combat
brigade exited Iraq, seven years and ﬁve months
after the U.S.-led invasion began. A federal grand
jury in Washington indicted seven-time Cy Young
Award winner Roger Clemens for allegedly lying
to Congress about steroid use. (However, Clemens’ trial in 2011 ended in a mistrial when the jury
was shown inadmissible evidence by prosecutors;
Clemens was acquitted in a retrial in 2012.)
One year ago: A video released by Islamic
State militants purported to show the beheading
of American journalist James Foley as retribution
for U.S. airstrikes in Iraq. The New York Islanders
announced the team had been sold to a former
Washington Capitals co-owner Jon Ledecky and
London-based investor Scott Malkin.
Today’s Birthdays: Actor L.Q. Jones is 88.
Actress Debra Paget is 82. USTA Eastern Tennis Hall of Famer Renee Richards is 81. Former
MLB All-Star Bobby Richardson is 80. Actress
Diana Muldaur is 77. Rock musician Ginger
Baker (Cream, Blind Faith) is 76. Singer Johnny
Nash is 75. Actress Jill St. John is 75. Actor and
former U.S. senator Fred Thompson is 73. Singer
Billy J. Kramer is 72. Country singer-songwriter
Eddy Raven is 71. Rock singer Ian Gillan (Deep
Purple) is 70. Former President Bill Clinton is 69.
Actor Gerald McRaney is 68. Tipper Gore, wife
of former Vice President Al Gore, is 67. Actor
Jim Carter is 67. Rock musician John Deacon
(Queen) is 64. Actor-director Jonathan Frakes is
63. Political consultant Mary Matalin is 62. Actor
Peter Gallagher is 60. Actor Adam Arkin is 59.
Singer-songwriter Gary Chapman is 58. Actor
Martin Donovan is 58. Pro Football Hall-of-Famer
Anthony Munoz is 57. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Ivan Neville is 56. Actor Eric Lutes is 53. Actor
John Stamos is 52. Actress Kyra Sedgwick is 50.
Actor Kevin Dillon is 50. Country singer Lee Ann
Womack is 49. TV reporter Tabitha Soren is 48.
Country singer-songwriter Mark McGuinn is 47.
Actor Matthew Perry is 46. Country singer Clay
Walker is 46. Rapper Fat Joe is 45. Olympic gold
medal tennis player Mary Joe Fernandez is 44.
Actress Tracie Thoms is 40. Actor Callum Blue
is 38. Country singer Rissi Palmer is 34. Actress
Erika Christensen is 33. Actress Melissa Fumero
is 33. Pop singer Missy Higgins is 32. Actor Peter
Mooney is 32. Actress Tammin Sursok is 32.
Country singer Karli Osborn is 31. Olympic silver
medal snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis is 30. Actor
J. Evan Bonifant is 30. Rapper Romeo is 26.

THEIR VIEW

Protecting Ohio’s Drinking Water
Around this time last
year, 500,000 Ohioans
in the Toledo area were
forced to go without
safe drinking water.
They were warned
they couldn’t drink the
tap water in their own
homes.
This is something no
family should have to
go through, and should
not be happening in our
state.
Cities and towns
across Ohio need to have
the best, most up-to-date
information on how to
keep their drinking water
safe. That’s why I’m
proud that this month
the president signed
our bipartisan Drinking
Water Protection Act.
Toxic algal blooms on
Lake Erie threaten Ohio’s
drinking water, and this
July the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration predicted the

Erie basin from these
second-largest bloom in
harmful blooms and to
recent history.
improve water quality.
Our bill will ﬁnally
Last month I sent a letrequire the Environmenter to Secretary Vilsack,
tal Protection Agency to
and last week
develop a strategic
the Department
plan within 90
of Agriculture
days for evaluating
released an addiand treating water
tional $5 million
impacted by these
in EQIP funds for
blooms.
farmers to plant
We know that
cover crops that
public water
reduce phosphorus
systems get conSherrod
runoff.
taminated by algal Brown
We know that
toxins. We need to US Senator
agricultural and
be evaluating the
urban runoff is one
health risk when
this happens, and assess- of the biggest contributors to dangerous algal
ing treatment options.
That’s what this plan will blooms. After months
of signiﬁcant rain this
do.
spring and summer,
I’m also grateful that
cover crops could not be
Agriculture Secretary
planted on tens of thouTom Vilsack heeded my
sands of acres. With the
call to release additional
additional funding, more
Environmental Qualfarmers can use EQIP
ity Incentive Program
funding to plant cover
funding to help procrops, helping reduce
tect the western Lake

harmful runoff.
This new funding
comes on top of $14
million in EPA funding
recently made available
to Ohio communities
through the Great Lakes
Restoration Initiative.
All of this investment
will allow state and local
governments, universities, and non-proﬁt organizations to better work
to prevent runoff in the
future. We need to stop
runoff before it starts.
By targeting harmful
algal blooms, we can
ensure that communities
are prepared to deal with
threats to their drinking
water systems. Ohioans
deserve the peace of
mind that the water coming out of their faucet is
safe for their families to
drink.
Sherrod Brown is a Democratic
U.S. senator from Ohio.

THEIR VIEW

The drill is gone, but not forgotten
GOP hopefuls are
paying close attention
to energy policy even if
they’re mum about it.
When Barack Obama
won the 2008 presidential election, the GOP’s
battle cry from that race
also prevailed. Remember “drill, baby, drill?”
This country produced
3.2 billion barrels of
oil last year, up 75 percent from 1.8 billion in
2008. The boom helps
explain why, as the 2016
Republican presidential
candidates sparred in
their ﬁrst ofﬁcial debates
without saying much
about energy, barrels of
our black gold were on
the verge of striking a
six-year low of $43.
When supply spiked,
demand lagged. As the
laws of economics dictate, oil prices plunged.
With the coal industry
reeling and natural gas
prices receding, fossil
fuels are in their biggest
freefall since, well, the
2008 electoral cycle.
Big Oil’s proﬁts are
plunging. Some 150,000
oil workers have lost
their jobs. The population of Williston, North
Dakota — the drill, baby,
drill capital — is shrinking. No wonder the GOP
candidates don’t want
to discuss their energy
policies.
Members of the clima-

terati also groused about Rick Perry $6 million.
the hopefuls’ general
The Wilks family, which
silence on global warmfounded a huge fracking
ing. Here’s all the cancompany, has injected
didates said in the main
$15 million into Ted
event and the “kiddie
Cruz’s war chest. Biltable” warmup debate:
lionaire coal baron Chris
Sen. Lindsey Graham
Cline handed Jeb Bush’s
of South Carolina,
campaign $1 milthe most climatelion. A few other
conscious Repubdonors whose cash
lican in the race,
comes from natural
supports the polgas, and power
lution-generating
generation also cut
Keystone XL pipechecks that size for
line’s construction
the former Florida
Emily
anyway. So does
governor.
Schwartz
Jeb Bush.
Those donations
Greco
Scott Walker
are chump change
and Bush embrace Guest
next to the $900
Columnist
Obama’s all-ofmillion Charles
the-above energy
and David Koch
policy, which ramps up
say they’ll spend through
both North American
their own oily political
fossil-fuel production
network on candidates
and greener alternatives. and other political efforts
Carly Fiorina dislikes the during the 2016 election
Obama administration’s
cycle. As reﬁneries and
Clean Power Plan.
petrochemicals are two
Many pertinent
big moneymakers for the
terms and words went
rich brothers’ privately
unspoken, including
held conglomerate, saving
global warming, carbon,
dirty-energy’s dominion
wind, solar, coal, Koch
is a big priority for them.
Brothers, Clean Power
Although Obama’s
Plan, renewable, arctic,
climate record doesn’t
and drill. Yet many of
match his forceful rhetothe GOP hopefuls’ top
ric about global warmdonors made fortunes in
ing, a Republican victory
these industries. There’s
in 2016 could slow US
no denying that fossil
progress toward a fossilfuels are on their minds.
free future. But with
Donald Trump refusing
Kelcy L. Warren, who
to cry in his caviar if he
runs natural gas and
propane company Energy loses, how is that even
possible? The Donald
Transfer Partners, gave

intends to run as an
independent unless he
becomes the nominee or
he likes the nominee and
feels — irony alert —
that he’s being “treated
with respect.”
Trump has alienated
too many big constituencies, including people of
color and women, to win
if he headlines the GOP
ticket. If he runs as an
independent, he would
surely siphon off enough
angry and alienated voters to guarantee a Democratic Party victory.
Progressives determined to see decisive
climate action and other
non-Republicans can
probably skip the rest
of the GOP’s debates
aside from the fun factor. Witnessing former
Arkansas Governor Mike
Huckabee call for raising
taxes on “prostitutes,
pimps, and drug dealers”
or hearing him declare
that the “the purpose
of the military is to kill
people and break things”
is entertaining if you like
that kind of thing.
Besides, you never
know when someone
will blurt something out
as telling as “drill, baby,
drill.”
Emily Schwartz Greco is the
managing editor of OtherWords, a
non-profit national editorial service
run by the Institute for Policy
Studies www.OtherWords.org.

�WEATHER/NEWS

6A Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Approval of Arctic
drilling comes just
before Obama’s visit

Christmas
From page 1A

Mindy Kearns | Ohio Valley Publishing

James Pauley is pictured as he sorts through poinsettia cuttings to transplant into pots
at Bob’s Market and Greenhouses in Mason. More than 50,000 pots of the Christmas
flower were planted this week and last. The poinsettia cuttings come from as far away
as Kenya, Africa.

grown at Bob’s will be red, which
Barnitz said remains the customer
favorite.
“Red is the standard color,”
said Barnitz. “It’s how it occurs
in nature. All of the rest have
been manipulated to achieve their
color.”
Bob’s will also have the two

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

70°

2 PM

81°

78°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

79°
68°
86°
64°
97° in 1988
51° in 1943

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.17
1.09
2.26
34.69
28.77

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:45 a.m.
8:18 p.m.
11:20 a.m.
10:51 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Aug 22 Aug 29

Last

Sep 5

Sep 13

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

Major
Today 3:36a
Thu. 4:24a
Fri.
5:12a
Sat.
5:59a
Sun. 6:47a
Mon. 7:36a
Tue. 8:24a

Minor
9:47a
10:35a
11:23a
12:11p
12:36a
1:23a
2:11a

High

Very High

Lucasville
87/68

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 928
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
86/68

Major
3:58p
4:46p
5:35p
6:23p
7:12p
8:02p
8:52p

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
10:09p
10:57p
11:46p
---1:00p
1:49p
2:38p

WEATHER HISTORY
After dumping 2.6 inches of rain
on Cape Hatteras, N.C., the day
before, Hurricane Bob moved northnortheastward on Aug. 19, 1991. The
storm ripped through eastern New
England during the afternoon.

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.58 -0.48
Marietta
34 15.84 +0.11
Parkersburg
36 21.07 -0.13
Belleville
35 12.32 -0.30
Racine
41 13.41 -0.14
Point Pleasant
40 25.48 +0.42
Gallipolis
50 13.42 +0.29
Huntington
50 25.61 +0.03
Ashland
52 34.71 -0.03
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.09 -0.03
Portsmouth
50 16.00 +0.40
Maysville
50 34.50 +0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 13.30 -0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

86°
61°
Partly sunny and
pleasant

TUESDAY

84°
59°

Mostly sunny and
delightful

82°
58°

Partly sunny with a
t-storm possible

Marietta
86/69

Murray City
85/67
Belpre
87/69

Athens
85/67

St. Marys
87/69

Parkersburg
87/68

Coolville
86/68

Elizabeth
87/69

Spencer
86/66

Buffalo
86/69
Milton
86/70

Clendenin
87/70

St. Albans
87/71

Huntington
84/68

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
88/59
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
74/61
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
80/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
98/70
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

Plenty of sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
86/69

Ashland
85/68
Grayson
85/69

And we've got to stop
giving the rest of the
world license to go
exploring by permitting
Shell to do it."
The administration
previously allowed Shell
to begin drilling only
the top sections of two
wells in the Chukchi
Sea because key equipment, called a capping
stack, was stuck on
a vessel that needed
repair in Portland, Oregon. Now, Shell is free
to drill into oil-bearing
rock, estimated at 8,000
feet below the ocean
ﬂoor.
The U.S. Geological
Survey estimates that
U.S. Arctic waters hold
26 billion barrels of
recoverable oil. Shell
is eager to explore in
a basin that company
ofﬁcials say could be
a "game changer" for
domestic production.
Obama, who is scheduled to visit Alaska later
this month, says he is
mindful of the dangers
of offshore drilling, particularly given the 2010
Deepwater Horizon oil
spill.
"When it can be done
safely and appropriately,
U.S. production of
oil and natural gas is
important," he said
at a news conference
earlier this year. "I
would rather us, with
all the safeguards and
standards that we have,
be producing our oil
and gas, rather than
importing it, which
is bad for our people,
but is also potentially
purchased from
places that have much
lower environmental
standards than we do."

88°
65°

Wilkesville
85/66
POMEROY
Jackson
86/68
86/68
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
87/69
86/69
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
83/64
GALLIPOLIS
87/69
87/69
86/69

South Shore Greenup
86/69
86/67

58
300

Logan
85/66

McArthur
85/67

Waverly
86/66

Pollen: 18

0 50 100 150 200

New

Partly sunny and nice

Chillicothe
86/66

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Low

MOON PHASES

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Adelphi
85/66

Primary: cladosporium

Thu.
6:46 a.m.
8:17 p.m.
12:15 p.m.
11:24 p.m.

82°
58°

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

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

Moderate

FRIDAY

80°
59°

4

Low

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

THURSDAY

A thunderstorm today. Showers and a heavier
thunderstorm tonight. High 87° / Low 69°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

remaining traditional colors of
pink and white, and will feature
many specialty varieties this year
including “Ice Punch,” “Red Glitter,” and new on the scene, “Jingle
Bell Rock.”

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

WASHINGTON (AP)
— The Obama administration's approval of the
ﬁnal permit to drill for
oil in the Arctic Ocean
clashes with the message President Barack
Obama will deliver
when he visits Alaska
to emphasize the dangers of climate change,
some environmental
groups say.
As much as the
groups praise Obama
for his overall body of
work — from stricter
fuel-efﬁciency standards
to regulations aimed at
reducing greenhouse
gas emissions from
power plants — they
consider the approval
of exploratory drilling
in the Arctic a stain
on his environmental
legacy that will send
a mixed message to
other countries about
the seriousness of
confronting global
warming.
The burning of fossil fuels causes more
greenhouse gases to
build up in the atmosphere. Some groups
would prefer leaving the
oil in the ground and
not tempting the harsh
environmental conditions that could hinder
the response to any
potential spill.
"It sends a terrible
signal to the rest of the
world for the United
States to be using public resources to promote
that development,"
said Niel Lawrence of
the Natural Resources
Defense Council. "We
have to make clear to
the rest of the world
that we are all in on a
clean energy future.

Charleston
86/70

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

Winnipeg
72/46
Billings
77/55

Montreal
88/71

Toronto
83/67
Minneapolis
63/55
Chicago
78/58

Denver
72/52

New York
84/74

Detroit
86/64

Kansas City
72/55

Washington
87/76

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
89/62/s
69/50/s
85/72/t
83/74/pc
86/71/t
77/55/s
91/63/s
86/68/pc
86/70/t
88/72/t
69/46/pc
78/58/t
82/62/t
88/65/t
86/65/t
87/65/t
72/52/pc
70/56/pc
86/64/t
89/78/sh
93/76/t
82/60/t
72/55/pc
107/78/s
87/64/t
80/65/pc
83/67/t
91/79/t
63/55/r
83/68/t
89/77/t
84/74/pc
70/53/t
92/75/t
89/74/t
106/84/s
85/68/t
83/65/pc
86/72/t
83/73/t
75/61/t
88/64/s
74/61/pc
88/59/pc
87/76/t

Hi/Lo/W
92/62/pc
68/53/s
85/72/t
82/73/pc
84/65/t
87/57/pc
93/62/s
82/68/pc
79/59/t
90/71/pc
80/52/pc
77/59/s
77/56/sh
75/57/sh
77/56/sh
82/72/pc
87/57/pc
80/65/s
77/58/s
91/78/pc
86/76/t
77/57/s
80/61/s
105/77/s
76/65/t
81/67/pc
80/61/sh
92/78/t
73/61/s
77/63/t
89/78/t
83/74/pc
80/63/pc
92/75/t
83/72/c
105/87/s
79/56/t
77/63/pc
89/71/pc
88/70/pc
81/65/s
92/68/s
73/61/pc
72/58/pc
89/73/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
85/72

High
Low

105° in El Centro, CA
28° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
Chihuahua
91/61

High
123° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -1° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
93/76
Monterrey
100/73

GOALS

Miami
91/79

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

Poinsettias, the traditional ﬂower of Christmas, arrive at Bob’s as
unrooted cuttings, coming from
El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico,
and as far away as Kenya, Africa.
Barnitz said the cuttings are delivered by Fed Ex and arrive in cold
storage.
The cuttings are then placed in
foam wedges that allow roots to
grow. After about four weeks on
the wedge, there are enough roots
established to put into containers.
Barnitz said while the same
number of pots are being planted
this year as there were last,
because the sizes of the pots were
reconﬁgured, more plants were
needed this year. Bob’s offers
three sizes of poinsettia containers: 6 1/2-inches, which contains
one plant; 8-inches, holding three
plants; and 10-inches, which has
four plants.
“Bigger ones have been in more
demand,” Barnitz said.
Since the greenhouse has cut
back on the one-plant pots and
increased the two larger ones,
more than 100,000 plants were
used to ﬁll the 50,000 containers.
Now that they are in their ﬁnal
pots, Barnitz said they will allow
the plants to grow a few more
weeks before the next step in the
process.
To provide the nice canopy
of ﬂowers people desire in their
poinsettias, the plants are trimmed
to allow lateral branching.
Barnitz stated this will provide
up to six or more blooms from
each plant.
There also comes a point in time
when the poinsettias can have no
artiﬁcial light at night. This is to
allow the poinsettias to turn their
brilliant color.
Eighty percent of the poinsettias

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 19, 2015 s B

Rebels beat Wahama, Eastern
By Donald Lambert

elambert@civitasmedia.com

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

South Gallia senior Cuyler Mills chipping the ball on the green on the 10th at
Cliffside Golf Course. Mills shot a 41 in a winning effort at Riverside Golf Course
on Monday in Mason, W.Va.

MASON, W.Va. — A close
victory for the Rebels.
The South Gallia golf team
came out on top over Eastern
and host Wahama on Monday
at Riverside Golf Course in
Mason County. The Rebels
collectively shot a 204, while
Wahama shot a 211 and Eastern shot a 214.
Senior Cuyler Mills led the
Red and Gold with a 41, followed by Curtis Haner with
a 47. Tristin Davis ﬁred a 52

for the match. Josh and Kaleb
Henry each shot a 64 and 65
respectively. Illyssa Saunders’
70 also contributed to South
Gallia’s ﬁnal score.
The White Falcons were led
Nathan Redman’s 38, followed
by Mason Hicks with a 44.
Bekah Groves ﬁred a 64 and
newcomers Anthony Ortiz and
Chad Smith each shot a 65
for the Red and White. Logan
Bissell was disqualiﬁed and
her score wasn’t added into
Wahama’s ﬁnal tally.
Ty Bissell led the Eagles
with a 50, followed closely

behind by Jasiah Brewer with
a 51. Freshman Ryan Harbour
ﬁred a 53. Dillion Swatzel shot
a 60, while Garrett Rees and
Jacob Brewer shot a 61 and 63
respectively for the Green and
Gold.
South Gallia’s next match
will take place at Cliffside Golf
Course, while Eastern will be
heading home to face Southern
and Belpre.
Both matches will take place
on Thursday, Aug. 20.

Donald Lambert can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

RedStorm named
preseason favorite
in KIAC soccer
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

FLORENCE, Ky. – The University of Rio
Grande was named the preseason favorite in the
2015 Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Men’s Soccer Preseason Coaches’ Poll released
Friday by the conference ofﬁce.
The RedStorm has many of its top players
returning from last year’s team which ﬁnished
16-2-2 (3-1 KIAC), won the KIAC Tournament
and spent much of the season ranked No. 1 in the
NAIA Top 25.
Head coach Scott Morrissey’s club received ﬁve
of the seven ﬁrst-place votes and totaled 35 points
in the poll.
Point Park (Pa.) University was picked second
after garnering 31 points in the poll and the other
two remaining ﬁrst-place votes.
The Pioneers went 15-3 overall last year and
captured the KIAC Regular Season championship
with a 4-0 KIAC record. They lost to Rio Grande,
3-2, in the KIAC Tournament ﬁnals in a game
played at Asbury (Ky.).
West Virginia Tech is a new KIAC member
this year and is picked third with 26 points. The
Golden Bears were 17-1-1 last year and the won
their second-consecutive national championship in
the USCAA.
WVU Tech was formerly an NAIA independent
institution before this year.
Asbury (Ky.) University was picked fourth this
preseason and is coming off a nine-win season and
a trip to the KIAC Tournament semiﬁnals in 2014.
The Eagles earned 22 points in the voting.
The rest of the preseason poll had Cincinnati
Christian (8-11 in 2014) in ﬁfth place with 12
points, conference newcomer Ohio Christian (149) in sixth with 11 points and Brescia (Ky.) (4-14)
in seventh with 10 points.
Ohio Christian is new to the NAIA but is
coming off a national runner-up season in the
NCCAA last year.
The 2015 KIAC men’s soccer season begins
Aug. 22. Every KIAC team plays each other once
in the regular season, and the top six teams in the
standings qualify for the KIAC Tournament Nov.
7-14.
The higher seed in each playoff matchup will
serve as the host team for each game all the way
through to the ﬁnals.
The KIAC Tournament champion will receive
the conference’s automatic bid to the NAIA
Men’s Soccer National Championship beginning
Nov. 21 with the Opening Round and continuing
with the ﬁnal site Nov. 30-Dec. 5 at Delray
Beach, Fla.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director for the University of
Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, August 18
Golf
River Valley/Meigs at Alexander, 4:30
Gallia Academy at Warren, 2 p.m.
Eastern Girls at Meigs Girls, 3:15
Wednesday, August 19
Golf
Wahama/Waterford at Miller/Trimble, 4 p.m.
Thursday, August 20
Golf
River Valley/South Gallia at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Southern/Belpre at Eastern, 4 p.m.
Saturday, August 22
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Capital, 2 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Capital, noon

Don Speck | Civitas Media

Ohio State’s Ezekiel Elliott (15) heads to the endzone as the Michigan defense trails at Ohio Stadium November 29, 2014.

Elliott hopes to lead title run
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ezekiel Elliott
and the Ohio State
offensive line could make
most quarterbacks look
good.
For all the headlines
generated by the Buckeyes’ ability to replace
a star quarterback with
another star quarterback
last season, the development of the running
game was every bit as
important to Ohio State’s
national championship
season.
No matter if J.T.
Barrett or Cardale Jones
takes snaps for the
Buckeyes this season,
Elliott could be the focal
point of Ohio State’s
offense. The junior ran
for 1,878 yards and 18
touchdowns last year
and enters this season
on pretty much every
list of Heisman Trophy
hopefuls.
At the start of last season, Elliott and an offensive line breaking in four
new starters struggled to
get rolling. In a September home loss to Virginia
Tech, Elliott ran eight
times for 32 yards. But
when Ohio State turned
it on down the stretch,
Elliott and the offensive
line were dominant.
“Zeke was the exact
same player all year, but
then the people around
him just needed to play
better in order for him to
really show what he was
capable of,” tackle Taylor

Decker said.
Elliott had 153 yards
and two scores at Michigan State, then had three
200-yard games in the
postseason. Against
Wisconsin, Alabama
and Oregon, Elliott ran
for 698 yards and eight
touchdowns.
“The key with Zeke
is if you can get him to
the second level, his skill
set at the second level
is unbelievable,” offensive line coach and cooffensive coordinator Ed
Warinner said.
The offensive line now
returns four starters,
including Decker, who
considered entering the
NFL draft early before
deciding to return to
Columbus, and guard
Pat Elﬂein. There might
not be a better group of
blockers in the country.
“I think we’re deﬁnitely farther along than
we were last year at this
point, especially from
a chemistry standpoint
and an experience standpoint,” Decker said.
“But I think it would be
dangerous to sit there
and believe that we’re the
best.”
Elliott does not shy
away from praising the
guys who make his life
easier.
“I think they’re going
to be the best group on
the team because after
last year and the experience they gained and
how tough they are and

how hard they work, I
don’t see anyone outworking them or anyone
being better than them,”
Elliott said.
The Buckeyes are a
safe bet to start the season No. 1 in The Associated Press Top 25, which
will be released Sunday.
Here are some things
to know about the team
that will try to give coach
Urban Meyer his fourth
national championship:
ABOUT THOSE QBs
Barrett was the Big
Ten player of the year
last season, setting a
conference record by
accounting for 45 touchdowns.
Jones took over when
Barrett broke his right
ankle against Michigan,
leading the Buckeyes to
wins against Wisconsin,
Alabama and Oregon. He
passed for 742 yards and
ﬁve touchdowns in that
remarkable three-game
run.
Meyer has said he
won’t reveal his starter
until the Buckeyes take
the ﬁeld Labor Night at
Virginia Tech, but it certainly seems as if he can’t
go wrong.
MEYER’S STREAKS
Meyer is the only
coach in major college
history to have three winning streaks of at least 20
games.
His Florida teams won
22 in one stretch. He

won 20 straight from the
end of his time in Utah
to his ﬁrst season at Florida. He added a 25-game
streak that started his
last season at Florida and
ended during his second
season at Ohio State.
The Buckeyes enter this
season on a 13-game winning streak.
SUSPENSIONS
Ohio State will play
Virginia Tech without
All-American end Joey
Bosa and three receivers: Jalin Marshall,
Corey Smith and Dontre
Wilson. All were suspended for a game for an
unspeciﬁed violation of
team rules, making one
of the toughest games on
a schedule that is light on
marquee matchups even
more difﬁcult for the
Buckeyes.
MILLER ON THE MOVE
Former Big Ten player
of the year Braxton Miller is moving from quarterback to receiver after
two shoulder surgeries.
Miller will be used as a
an H-Back, a role that
will have him lining up
all over the ﬁeld and getting the ball on all kinds
of pitches, handoffs and
passes.
“Just having fun out
there,” Miller said. “You
catch the ball and you’re
already in the second or
third level. All you got to
do is make one guy miss
and it’s off to the races.”

�CLASSIFIEDS

2B Wednesday, August 19, 2015

LEGALS
Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 14-CV-100
Wells Fargo Financial Ohio 1,
Inc.
Vs
Sharlene Mae Brooks aka
Sharlene Mae Wears aka
Sharlene Brooks aka Sherry
Brooks, et al.
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of
sale to me directed from said
court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at
public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs County
Court House on Friday August
28, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following described
real estate:
FIRST TRACT: Being in Fraction 33, Section 27, Town 2,
Range 13, Ohio Companyҋs
Purchase, bounded and described as follows: Beginning
at the point of intersection
between the south line of fraction 33 and the center of the
cement road leading from Union Avenue bridge over
Thomas Fork of Leading Creek
to Harrisonville, Ohio; chance
north along the center line of
said cement road, 1418.1 feet,
more or less, so the south line
of the Nathan Vale farm;
thence went along said south
line 1801.8 feet to the east line
of land now owned by the
grantors herein; thence south
935.5 feet to the north line of
the right-of-way conveyed by
M.C.Kern and Anna Kern to
the Athens &amp; Pomeroy Coal &amp;
Land Company by deed dated
July 18, 1914, recorded in Vol.
115 page 137 Meigs County
Deed Records; thence centerly
and southeasterly along the
north side of said right-of way,
2068.2 feet, more or less, to
the point of intersection
between the north line of said
right-of-way, 2068.2 feet, more
or less, to the point of intersection between the north line of
said right-of-way and the south
line of Fraction 33; thence east
about 85 feet to the place of
beginning containing 36.23
acres, more or less, being part
of premises conveyed to grantor by deed recorded in Vol.
134 pg. 602 Meigs County
Deed Records, and Vol. 106
page 192 Meigs County Deed
Records.
SECOND TRACT: A part of
Fraction 33, Section 27, Town
2, Range 13 Ohio Companyҋs
Purchase; beginning at a stake
in the south line of waid Fraction, which is south 85 degrees 15 minutes east 361.7
feet from the southwest corner
of said Fraction; thence north 4
deg. 45ҋ east 276.7 feet to an
iron pin; thence north 81 deg.
5ҋ cast 476.6 feet to an iron
pin; thence north 84 deg. 30ҋ
east 158 feet to an iron pin
which is 22.5 feet south of the
middle line of The Athens &amp;
Pomeroy Coal &amp; Land Com-

LEGALS
panyҋs tract, or railroad wxtension of the Middleport &amp; Northeastern Railway Companyҋs
tract at Station No. 170 of said
tract; thence easterly and
southeasterly on a curve with
the radius of 1251.1 feet and
22 ½ feet south and southwesterly from the middle line of
said Athens &amp; Pomeroy Coal &amp;
Land Companyҋs railroad tract
to the intersection of said
curved line with the south line
of said Fraction; thence north
85 degrees 15ҋ west along the
south line of said Fraction to
the place of beginning, containing 13.87 acres, more or
less, being part of premises
conveyed to grantor by deed
recorded Vol. 134 page 602
Meigs County Deed Records.
THIRD TRACTS: Being in
Fraction 33, Town 2, Range 13
Ohio Companyҋs Purchase and
bounded and described as follows: beginning at the southwest corner of said Fraction 33ҋ
thence north 4deg. 45ҋ east
361.7 feet to an iron pin;
thence south 85 deg. 45ҋ east
361.7 feet to an iron pin, and
the same being the beginning
corner of the premises hereby
conveyed; thence south 85
deg. 45ҋ east 281.8 feet to an
iron pin at the southeast corner
of a 15 acre lot; thence north 4
deg. 45ҋ east 60 feet to an iron
pin; thence north 89 deg. East
740 feet to an iron pin; thence
south 43 deg. 17ҋ east 215.7
feet to an iron pin 22.5 feet
northeast of and at right angles
to Station pin No. 162 in the
middle of the tract of the railroad of said The Athens &amp;
Pomeroy Coal &amp; Land Company as it is now located
thence following a curved line
of a radius of 1296.1 feet parallel and 22.5 feet distant from
the middle line of said railroad
tract as now located to the
south line of said Fraction 33;
thence west along the south
line of said Fraction to a point
in said line which is 22.5 feet
southwesterly of the nearest
point of the middle line of said
tract; thence following northwesterly, westerly and southwesterly a curved line of a radius 125.1 feet and parallel to
the middle line of said railroad
tract and 22.5 feet distant
therefrom, to a point 22.5 feet
south of Station point No. 170
in the middle line of said rail
road tract; thence south 84 degrees 30ҋ west 158 feet to an
iron; thence south 81 deg. 5ҋ
west 476.6 feet to an iron pin;
thence north 87 deg. 17ҋ west
282 feet to an iron pin in the
east line of a tree acre 10ҋ
thence north 4 deg. 45ҋ east to
the place of beginning containing 3.82 acres, more or less,
being same premises conveyed to grantors by deed recorded Vol. 115 page 137
Meigs County Deed Records.

LEGALS
burgh No. 8 vein, and the use
of said grantee, his heirs and
assigns forever.
EXCEPTING FROM THE
ABOVE THREE TRACTS THE
FOLLOWING PARCELS OF
REAL ESTATE SOLD AND
CONVETED BY OREN C.
WEARS.
7/23/65 .50 acre to John A &amp;
Harriett J. Curry Vol. 224 pg.
673
9/8/65 1.00 acre to Pomeroy
Lower Light House Church Vol.
225 pg 249
3/18/70 .9 acre to John A. &amp;
Harriett Curry Vol. 242 pg 251
4/25/70 8/9 acre to Millard M.
Swarts Vol. 242 pg. 669
8/22/70 1-1/3 acre to Juelt Earl
&amp; Ethel Belle Hossler Vol. 242
pg. 763
8/12/70 1.45 acre to Glen E. &amp;
Jean Beebe Vol. 247 pg. 237
9/13/71 1 1/6 acre, Glen Edwards Beebe Vol. 247 pg. 613
10/4/71 1.83 acre to John E. &amp;
Sylvia Blake Vol. 247 pg. 949
10/16/71 1.83 to Glen Edward
Beebe Vol. 249 pg. 619
Parcel Number: 1401545000,
1401546000, 1401547000 and
1401548000
Property Located at: 39649
State Route 143
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Prior Deed Reference: Volume
No. 240, Page 195
Property Appraised at:
65.000.00
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down on
day of sale, case or certified
check, balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal does not include an interior examination
of the house.
Keith O. Wood, Meigs County
Sheriff
Jennifer Schaeffer
Ohio Supreme Court Reg.
#0084893
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480 Cincinnati, OH
45202-4007 (513) 241-3100
08/05/15, 08/12/15, 08/19/15

Reserved and accepted in Favor of The Athens &amp; Pomeroy
Coal &amp; Land Company all the
coallying beneath the PittsLEGALS

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 14-cv-002
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
Vs
Justin B. Robson, et al.
Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of sale to me directed from said court in the above entitled action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the front steps of the Meigs County Court House on Friday August 28, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. of said day, the following described real estate:
Situated in the State of Ohio, County of Meigs and in the Township of Salisbury.
Situate in Section 29, Town 1, Range 13 and being part of One Hundred Acre Lot Number 157.
Salisbury Township, Meigs County, State of Ohio, described as follows:
Commencing at a point in the northwest corner of Lot Number 77 of Pomeroy and Bosworthҋs Addition to Lower Pomeroy as recorded in Plat Book 2, Page 12 in the records of the Meigs County Recorderҋs Office, said point also being on the existing easterly right way line of Pearl Street (Walnut
Street), thence north 0 deg. 00ҋ 00” east along the existing easterly right of way line of Pearl Street
(Walnut Street), 133.25 feet to an iron pin in the Grantorҋs southwest property corner and the real
point of beginning for the land herein described; thence north 0 deg. 0ҋ 00” east continuing along
the existing easterly right of way line of Pearl Street and the Grantorҋs west property line 52.00 feet
to an iron pin in the Grantorҋs northwest property corner; thence north 90 deg. 00ҋ 00” east along
the Grantorҋs north property line 120.00 feet to an iron pin in the Grantorҋs northeast property
corner and the east line of said 100 acre lot number 157; thence South 0 deg. 00ҋ 00” West along
the Grantorҋs East property line and the east line of said 100 Acre Lot Number 157, 52.00 feet to
an iron pin in the Grantorҋs south property line, 120.00 feet to the point of beginning and containing
6240 square feet. description for the above described tract being the results of a survey made by
Richard C. Glasgow, R.S. No. 5161 Parcel Number: 15-00319-000 and 15-00318-000
Property Located at: 500 Pearl Street Middleport, OH 45760 Prior Deed Reference: Book No. 302,
page 338 Property Appraised at: 45000.00
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down on day of
sale, case or certified check, balance due on confirmation of sale. The appraisal does not include
an interior examination of the house.
Keith O. Wood, Meigs County Sheriff
Sara M. Petersmann
Ohio Supreme Court Reg. #0055402
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480 Cincinnati, OH 45202-4007 (513) 241-3100
8/05/15, 8/12/15, 8/19/15

Daily Sentinel

LEGALS

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 13 CV 075
Peoples Bank, National Association
Vs
Jason B. Ridenour, et al.
Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of sale to me directed from said court in the above entitled action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the front steps of the Meigs County Court House on Friday August 28, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. of said day, the following described real estate: Situated in the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs and in the Township of Orange, and being a part of Section 3, Town 4 North
and Range 12 West of the Ohio Companyҋs Purchase, more fully described as follows: PARCEL
ONE: Beginning at a point N. 31 degrees 15ҋ W. 32ҋ from the Westerly corner of Lot No. 8 of RIGGSCREST MANOR, as recorded in Plat Book 4, page 44, Meigs County Plat Records: said point of
reference and said point of beginning being marked by concrete markers; thence N. 49 degrees 10ҋ
E. 47ҋ to a concrete marker; thence N. 60 degrees 30ҋ W. 88.5ҋ to an iron stake; thence S. 65 degrees 40ҋ W. 72ҋ to an iron stake; thence N 88 degrees 55ҋ W. 38.5 to an iron stake; thence S 35
degrees 55ҋ E. 160.5ҋ to a concrete marker on the Northwesterly side of Tower Lane, a 31ҋ wide
street; thence N. 31 degrees 30ҋ E 998.5ҋ along the Northwesterly side of Tower Lane to the point
of beginning, containing 0.302 acre, more or less. PARCEL TWO: Beginning at a point N, 31 degrees 15ҋ W. 32ҋ and N 49 degrees 10ҋ E. 47ҋ from the Westerly corner of Lot No. 8 of Riggscrest
Manor as recorded in Plat Book 4, page 44 of the meigs County Plat Records, said point of reference and said point of beginning being marked by concrete marker; thence N. 49 degrees 10ҋ E.
23.8ҋ to a concrete marker; thence N. 39 degrees 24ҋ W. 55.6ҋ to an iron stake; thence S. 74 degrees 48ҋ W. 63.1ҋ to an iron stake; thence S. 60 degrees 30ҋ E. 88.5ҋ to the point of beginning containing 2607 square feet (0.06 acre), more or less. PARCEL THREE: Beginning at the NW corner
of RIGGSCREST MANOR SUBDIVISION as recorded in Plat Book 4, page 44, of the Plat Records of Meigs County; thence N. 31 degrees 15ҋ W. a distance of 32.0; thence the following the
Northern right of way line of Tower Lane the following two courses; S. 31 degrees 30ҋ W. a distance of 989.5ҋ to the true place of beginning which marks the NE corner of a 0.434 acre tract;
thence S. 33 degrees 15ҋ W. a distance of 2.6ҋ to the Northern edge of concrete monument; thence
N. 56 degrees 45ҋ W. a distance of 108.6ҋ to an iron pin; thence N. 2 degrees 00ҋ W. a distance of
72.0 to the center of a concrete monument; thence S. 36 degrees 13ҋ E. 160.25 to a point on the
Northerly right of way line of Tower Lane and the true place of beginning; said tract containin
0.078.Parcel Number:1000753000 &amp; 1000754000 Property Located at: 48968 Township Road
1059 Reedsville, OH 45772 Prior Deed Reference: Book 337, page 530 Property Appraised at:
100,000.00 Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down
on day of sale, case or certified check, balance due on confirmation of sale. The appraisal does not
include an interior examination of the house.
Keith O. Wood, Meigs County Sheriff
Bethany L. Suttinger
Ohio Supreme Court Reg. #0085068
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480 Cincinnati, OH 45202-4007 (513) 241-3100
8/5/15, 8/12/15, 8/19/15
LEGALS

12-12849
SHERIFFҋS SALE OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 13-CV-032
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, As Trustee For Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust 2004-2
Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2004-2
, Plaintiff
-vsTara Fryar, et al., Defendants
Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction in
the above county on the 28th day of August, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. at the door of the courthouse,
the following described real estate:
SEE LEGAL DESCRIPTION ATTACHED HERETO AS EXHIBIT “A” Said premises also known as:
2440 Union Alley, Syracuse OH 45779 PPN: 2000520000 Appraised at: $32,500.00 and cannot be
sold for less than two-thirds (2/3) of that amount. Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold for less than twothirds of the appraised value, 10% down on the day of sale, cash or certified check, balance due on
confirmation of sale. The appraisal (did or did not) include an interior examination of the house.
Keith Wood ________
Sheriff of Meigs County
THE LAW OFFICES OF
JOHN D. CLUNK, CO., LPA
_____________________________
Charles V. Gasior #0075946
4500 Courthouse Blvd, #400
Stow OH 44224
PH: 330-436-0300
FAX: 330-436-0301
Publication dates: 8/5, 8/12, 8/19
12-12849
Exhibit A
THE LAND REFERRED TO IN THIS POLICY IS DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: SITUATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE COUNTY OF MEIGS, AND STATE OF OHIO; ALL OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE SITUATED IN 100 ACRE LOT NO. 295, TOWN NO.2, RANGE
NO. 12 OF THE OHIO. COMPANYҋS PURCHASE, AND IN SUTTON TOWNSHIP, BOUNDED
AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A STAKE TWO FEET FROM AN ELM TREE,
197 FEET EAST OF THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF 0. N. BRIDGMANҋS LOT WHERE HE
FORMERLY RESIDED; THENCE NORTH 125 FEET TO A POINT PARALLEL WITH THE CENTER OF 4TH STREET; THENCE EAST ALONG SAID LINE FOLLOWING A WIRE FENCE TO
THE EAST LINE OF LOT NO. 295; THENCE SOUTH 125 FEET TO THE ALLEY; THENCE WEST
ALONG SAID ALLEY TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING ONE AND 1/3 ACRES OF
LAND, BE THE SAME MORE OR LESS, THE BEGINNING STAKE REFERRED TO ABOVE
NEAR THE ELM TREE IS JUST ACROSS THE ALLEY FROM LOT NO. 4 OF BRIDGMANҋS ADDITION TO SYRACUSE, FORMERLY OWENED BY W.T. A. LALLANCE, EXCEPTING AND RESERVING THE COAL AND THE RIGHT TO MINE THE SAME, ATC., WHICH RIGHT WAS RESERVED TO ON. BRIDGMAN AND JESSIE BRIDGMAN IN THE DEED MADE BY THEM TO
DELFLAH MATHEWS, HEREINAFTER NAMED OR MENTIONED, AND BEING THE SAME REAL
ESTATE THAT WAS CONVEYED TO DELILAH MATHEWS, IN HER LIFETIME BY 0. N. BRIDGMEN AND JESSIE BRIDGMAN, HIS WIFE, BY DEED HEARING DATE JANUARY 15,1909,ANDRECORDED IN THE RECORDS OF THE RECORDERҋS OFFICE MEIGE COUNTY, OHIO,
DEED BOOK 100, PAGE 139, DEED REFERENCE; BEGING SECOND LOT DESCRIBED IN
DEED RECORDED IN VOLUME 252, PAGE 145, MEIGS COUNTY DEED RECORDS. SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF MEIGS IN THE STATE OF OHIO AND IN THE TOWNSHIP OF SUTTON IN 100 ACRE LOT NO.295 TOWN 2, RANGE 18, OHIO COMPANYҋS AND BOUNDED AND
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS BEGINNING AT A POINT ON THE NORTH SIDE OF THE ALLEY
WHICH IS DIRECTLY NORTH OF 3RD STREET IN THE VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE, OHIO
(WHICH STARTING POINT IS LOCATED AT THE PLACE WHERE THE PROJECTED LINE OF
THE WESTERN BOUNDARY LINE OF LOT NO. 7 IN BRIDGEMANҋS ADDITION IN THE VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE, OHIO, IF EXTENDED WOULD INTERSECT THE NORTH SIDE OF SAID
ALLEY); THENCE WEST ALONG THE NORTH SIDE OF SAID ALLEY 200 FEET TO A POINT
WHERE THE WESTERN BOUNDAY OF LOT NO. 4 IN BRIDGEMANҋS ADDITION IF PROJECTED, WOULD INTERSECT THE NORTH SAID OF SAID ALLEY; THENCE NORTH 125 FEET;
THENCE EAST 200 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 125 FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING ONE-HALF ACRE MORE OR LESS. EXCEPTING AND RESERVING THE COAL AND
THE RIGHT TO MILE THE SAME, AND FOR A COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF SAID COAL AND
MINING RIGHTS, REFERENCE IS HAD TO VOL, 100 PAGE 139 OF THE DEED RECORDS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. THE ABOVE DESCRIBEDS PARCEL OF REAL ESTATE BEING A
PORTION OF THE SECOND LOT CONVEYED BY DUCKWORTH SCHNEIDER AND GEORGE
H. SCHNEIDER TO ALBERT C. DUCKWORTH BY DEED DATED SEPTEMBER 4, 1946, AND
RECORDED IN VOL 155, PAGE 362 OF THE DEED RECORDS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. Said
premises also known as:
2440 Union Alley, Syracuse, OH 45779
PPN: 2000520000
8/5/15-8/12/15-8/19/15

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 19, 2015 3B

Miscellaneous

Notices

Help Wanted General

For Sale By Owner

Houses For Rent

Help Wanted General

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.

Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring full time STNAҋs and
offering a 600.00 Sign on
Bonus. Must have Certificate
of Completion or State
Certification in Ohio.
Background check and drug
screen required. Please apply
in person at 170 Pinecrest
Drive in Gallipolis.

Mobile Home for sale
Proctorville, Ohio area
2002 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1 bath furnished excellent
condition 17,000
813-767-9922

House for Rent-3 Bedroom, 2
Story, No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101

Automotive

$$$$$$$$$

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

2002 Dodge Ram 3500 Van
9 passenger with wheelchair
lift ac works good new rear
shocks good tires
740-446-3232 or
740-645-0203
asking $4500
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

$$$$$$$$$

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Serving Gallia,
Meigs Co.
and
Mason Wv.
Ron Evans
Jackson,Oh
1-800-537-9528
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

3BR 2BA
$33,900
740-446-3570

Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring a part time
ACTIVITIES ASSISTANT
for weekend shift. Must submit to background check and
drug screen. Please apply in
person at 170 Pinecrest Drive
in Gallipolis.

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Arbors at Pomeroy
is NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time
Cook/Dietary Aid Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606

Apartments available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven,
WV. Now accepting applicatons for HUD-subsidized,
One bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Arbors at Pomeroy
NOW HIRING
Full Time &amp; Part Time STNAs
or CNAs, Part Time &amp; PRN
LPNs. Apply Within.
Call 740-992-6606
Diesel Mechanic needed
at local business.
Salary negotiable depending
on experience.
Mon-Fri, 7:30am- 4:00pm.
Send resumes to:
Blind Box 15
825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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

Employment Opportunity
Local manufacturing company seeking to hire skilled
welders and painters.
Looking for experienced individuals who are detail and
job oriented. Benefits
Available. Apply in person at
2150 Eastern Avenue,
Gallipolis, Oh

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Laundry &amp; Housekeeping Supervisor II position for work in a
114 bed Long Term Care Facility. Salary is commensurate
with experience. To apply go to
www,personnel.wv.gov. Lakin
Hospital is an EEO/AA Employer.

Houses For Rent
3BR, 2BA, on Farm,
$750 per month
540-729-1331

Business &amp; Trade School

House for Rent near Holzer
hospital 3 bedrooms,
kitchen,dining room, utility
closet. 1 and 1/2 bathrooms,
2 car garage, no pets or
smoking, gas heat and air.
$685 month plus utilities and
deposit phone 740-645-3836

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

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GUN SHOW
MARIETTA
Washington Co. Fairgrounds
Aug 22 &amp; 23
922 Front Street
Adm$5 6ҋ Tbls $35
740-667-0412

FOR SALE OR LEASE
Medical / Professional
office building
close to Holzer Hospital.
Two suites (one rented)
priced to sale
call 740-709-1221
Rentals
Completely Furnished
2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport overlooking
Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$650.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Dig
Up
Buried
Treasure
In
Classified

Call

Pets
Free 6 wk old black kitten
ready to go to a good home.
304-675-2071
Trucks/SUVs/Vans
For Sale a 1996 Ford Econoline work van with some
shelving - needs a little work
as is $2,000 OBO 740-4411236 Leave message
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

When it
comes to
bargains,
“C” marks
the spot.
What will
you find
in the
classified?
Bicycle,
dogs, coats,
cars, etc.

Help Wanted General

WANTED: Emergency Relief (Substitute) Workers needed to
assist individuals with developmental disabilities in Meigs
County. Evening/weekend/overnight hours. High school
degree/GED, valid driverҋs license and three years good driving
experience required. $9.75/hr after training. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640; or email: beyecserv@yahoo.com . Equal Opportunity
Employer.

LEGALS

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that on Saturday, August 22, 2015, at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 211 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
is selling for cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral:
2010 Chevy Impala VIN: 2G1WB5EK0A1257282
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”, with
no expressed or implied warranty given.
For further information, or for an appointment to inspect
collateral, prior to sale date contract Randy Hays
at 740-992-4048.
8/19/15,8/20/15,8/21/15
LEGALS

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LEGALS

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that on Saturday, August 22, 2015, at
10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 211 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769. The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
is selling for cash in hand or certified check the
following collateral:
2005 Hyundai Elantra VIN: KMHDN46D05U082649
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”, with
no expressed or implied warranty given. For further information,
or for an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date
contract Randy Hays at 740-992-4048.
8/19/15, 8/20/15, 8/21/15
LEGALS

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Case No. 13-CV-103
State of Ohio
Meigs County
U.S. Bank National Association

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Plaintiff

-vs.Melissa G Carr aka Melissa Gail Roush aka Melissa G. Roush ,
et al.
Defendants
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction to be held on the first floor corridor of the Courthouse on the 28th day of August, 2015 at
10:00a.m, the following described real estate, to wit:
Parcel No. 1 Situate in the Village of Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohio:
Being a parcel of land 11 feet by 34 feet out of the Southwest
corner of the real estate conveyed by Maidie Russell to Bethel
Coleman and Alice Coleman, being more particularly described
as follows: Beginning at a point 90 feet South of Lincoln Street at
the point where the Southwest corner of the lot owned by Bethel
Coleman and Alice Coleman joins the Southeast corner of the lot
formerly owned by Ethel Tuckerman; thence East along the
South line of the Coleman lot, 11 feet; thence North 34 feet;
thence West 11 feet to the Tuckerman line; thence in a Southerly direction following the Tuckerman line 34 feet to the place of
beginning. Subject to all leases, easements, restrictions and
rights of way of record. Parcel No. 15-00658.001
Parcel No. 2 Situated in the Village of Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohio: Beginning at a point in the South side of Lincoln Street, 30
feet East of where the East line of Fourth Street intersects Lincoln Street, and being the Northeast corner of the Rue Tuckerman Store lot; thence East following the South line of Lincoln
Street, 76 feet to the West line of lots formerly owned by Edgar
Ervin and now owned by Gail Miller; thence in a Southerly direction following the lands of Gail Miller on the West line thereof 90
feet; thence West 76 feet to a point 30 feet East of the East line
of 4th Street; thence North parallel with 4th Street 90 feet to the
place of beginning. Subject to all leases, easements, restrictions
and rights of way of record. Parcel No. 15-00418.000
Permanent Parcel No. 15-00658.001 &amp; 15-00418.000 Premises
commonly known as: 277 Lincoln Street, Middleport, OH 45760
8/5/15-8/12/15-8/19/15

LEGALS

14-02655
SHERIFFҋS SALE OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 14-CV-046
The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York as successor trustee for JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Trustee for
the benefit of the Certificateholders of Popular ABS, Inc. Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2005-3, Plaintiff
-vsClara M. Ellis, et al., Defendants
Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio
In pursuance of an Alias Order of Sale Without Reappraisal in
the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction in
the above county on the 28th day of August, 2015 at 10:00
a.m. at the door of the courthouse, the following described real
estate:
SEE LEGAL DESCRIPTION ATTACHED HERETO AS EXHIBIT
“A”
Said premises also known as 343 College Ave, Rutland OH
45775-5003 PPN: 1200096000
Appraised at: $15,000.00 and cannot be sold for less than twothirds (2/3) of that amount.
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraised value, 10% down on the day of sale, cash or certified
check, balance due on confirmation of sale. The appraisal (did or
did not) include an interior examination of the house.
Keith Wood ________
Sheriff of Meigs County
THE LAW OFFICES OF
JOHN D. CLUNK, CO., LPA
_____________________________
Charles V. Gasior #0075946
4500 Courthouse Blvd, #400
Stow OH 44224
PH: 330-436-0300
FAX: 330-436-0301
Publication dates: 8/5, 8/12, 8/19
14-02655
Exhibit A
SITUATED IN VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, STATE OF OHIO AND
COUNTY OF MEIGS, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEING THE SOUTH HALF OF LOT NO. ONE (1) OF RATHBURNҋS ADDITION TO THE VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, OHIO.
ALSO, ALL OF LOT NO. 2 OF RATHBURNҋS ADDITION TO
THE VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, OHIO. THIS DEED IS EXECUTED, DELIVERED AND ACCEPTED SUBJECT TO THE
CONDITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS, IF ANY, RECITED IN
PREVIOUS INSTRUMENTS OF RECORD AFFECTING THE
ABOVE DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE. EXCEPTING FROM THE
ABOVE PREMISES, A PARCEL SOLD AND CONVEYED TO
DWIGHT MUTCHLER AND MARVEL MUTCHLER FROM THE
SOUTH ONE HALF OF LOT NO. 1, A STRIP OFF THE NORTH
PORTION OF SAID SOUTH ONE HALF, BEING 125 FEET IN
LENGTH AND 10 FEET IN WIDTH ON THE EAST END AND 14
FEET IN WIDTH ON THE WEST END, AS SHOWN BY DEED
RECORDED IN VOLUME 162, PAGE 595, MEIGS COUNTY
DEED RECORDS.
Said premises also known as:
343 College Ave
Rutland, OH 45775-5003
PPN: 1200096000
8/5/15-8/12/15-8/19/15

Sheriffҋs Sale of Real Estate, Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Meigs County.
Case No. 14CV087
Vanderbilt Mortgage &amp; Finance, Inc., Plaintiff
vs.
Robert K. Young, et al., Defendants
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of Courts of
Common Pleas of Meigs County in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, at the front door of the courthouse, 100 E. 2nd Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, in the above named
County, on the 28th day of August, 2015, at 10:00 oҋclock a.m.,
the following described real estate, situate in the County of
Meigs, State of Ohio, to-wit:Situated in the State of Ohio, County
of Meigs, City of Middleport:
Being a part of a tract of land transferred to Robert K. and Sharon N. Young as recorded in Official Records Volume 220 at Page
17, Meigs County Recorder's Office, Meigs County, Ohio, also
being a part of Fraction 3, T-6-N, R-14-W, Rutland Townshlp,
Meigs County, State of Ohio and more particularly described as
follows: Beginning at a point in the centerline of County Road
174, Happy Hollow Road, which bears North 83° 53' 07" West, a
distance of 1078.48 feet and North 06° 06' 53" East, a distance
of 43. 76 feet from the assumed SE earner of said Fraction 3, T6, R-14; Thence leaving said centerline and along the grantor's
boundary, the following two courses;
1. North 84° 05' 34" West, passing thru an existing Iron pin at a
distance of 15.73 feet and going a total distance of 565.16 feet to
an existing Iron pin;
2. North 05° 50' 01" East, passing thru an existing Iron pin at a
distance of 363.96 feet and going a total distance of 382.07 feet
to a point In the centerline of said County Road 174;
Thence along said centerline, the following four courses;
1. South 82° 43' 17" East, a distance of 60.88 feet to a point;
2. South 78° 02' 49" East, a distance of 55.40 feet to a point;
3. South 68° 56' 37" East, a distance of 69.11 feet to a point;
4. South 55° 50' 47" East, a distance of 66.94 feet to a point on
the boundary of a 0.5617 acre tract recorded in Official Records
Volume 233 at Page 733;
Thence leaving said centerline and along the boundary of said
0.5617 acre tract, the following five courses;
1. South 24° 52' 49" West, passing thru an existing Iron pin at a
distance of 31.25 feet and going a total distance of 106.60 feet to
an existing Iron pin;
2. South 08° 07' 21" East, a distance of 44.15 feet to an existing
Iron pin;
3. South 25° 37' 30" East, a distance of 42.44 feet to an existing
Iron pin;
4. South 72° 37' 56" East, a distance of 63.19 feet to an existing
iron pin;
5. North 85° 35' 51" East, passing thru an existing iron pin at a
distance of 79.27 feet and going a total distance of 129.05 feet ta
a point in the centerline of said County Road 174;
Thence leaving said boundary and along said centerline, the following three courses;
1. South 38° 48' 00" East, a distance of 69.76 feet to a point;
2. South 36° 16' 22" East, a distance of 61.38 feet to a point;
3. South 31° 35' 58” East, a distance of 76.52 feet to the principal point of beginning containing 2.8213 acres, more or less, subject to a 30 foot easement recorded in Official Records Volume
233 at Page 733 and to all legal easements and rights of way.
Bearings are assumed and are far the determination of angles
only. All Iron pins set are 5/8”x30” rebar with plastic ID cap
stamped "CTS-6844". The above description was prepared from
an actual survey made on the 2nd day of August, 2007, by C.
Thomas Smith, Ohio Professional Surveyor, No. 6844.
Property Address: 33041 Happy Hollow Road, Middleport, Ohio
45760 Permanent Parcel No.: 1100300003 Prior Deed Reference: Instrument No. 200600001345 Said Premises appraised at
$40,000.00, and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of that
amount. All Sheriffҋs sales operate under the doctrine of caveat
emptor. Prospective purchasers are urged to check for liens in
the Meigs County Recorderҋs Office. The Meigs County Sheriff
makes no guaranty as to the status of title prior to sale. TERMS
OF SALE: 10% Certified Check (cash and personal checks not
accepted) is due at the time of sale. Balance due upon delivery
of Deed, approximately 30 days.
Keith O. Wood, Meigs County Sheriff
Robert K. Hogan, Attorney for Plaintiff
Javitch, Block LLC.
700 Walnut Street, Ste. 300
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 744-9600
8/5/15-8/12/15-8/19/15

�CLASSIFIEDS/SPORTS

4B Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Daily Sentinel

URG women’s soccer
named preseason
KIAC favorite

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS Meet the Teams night
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy High
School will be holding a Meet the Teams night
at approximately 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20,
at Memorial Field in Gallia County. The event
is free and open to the public, and all levels of
fall sports at GAHS and GAMS will be introduced at the event.

PPHS Meet the Teams night
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Point Pleasant Junior-Senior High School will be holding
a Meet the Teams night at approximately 6:30
p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19, at Ohio Valley Bank
Track and Field in Mason County. The event
is free and open to the public, and all levels of
fall sports at PPJSHS will be introduced at the
event. Meet the Teams night will also follow
the open house being held at the campus for
new students in those buildings.

ketball program will be hosting a beneﬁt golf
scramble at the Riverside Golf Club on Saturday, August 29, at 9 a.m. The cost is $60 per
player with skill prizes on every hole and food
and beverages served throughout the round.
Prizes will be awarded to the top three teams.
For more information contact Lady Tornadoes
head coach Kent Wolfe at (740)949-4222 ext.
1212 or at (740)444-9334.

By Randy Payton

coming off a KIAC semiﬁnals
performance.
Carlow (9-6 in 2014) and
FLORENCE, Ky. – The
KIAC newcomer West VirUniversity of Rio Grande is
ginia Tech (4-9-4) are tied for
predicted as the Kentucky
fourth in the preseason poll
Intercollegiate Athletic Conwith 35 points each. After that
ference’s top team with the
is Cincinnati Christian (4-13release of the 2015 Women’s
1) in sixth with 27 points
Soccer Preseason Coaches’
followed by the other KIAC
Poll by the KIAC ofﬁce on
newcomer, Ohio Christian
Friday.
(12-9-1), in seventh with 25
The RedStorm earned seven points.
of the nine ﬁrst-place votes
Midway (Ky.) (7-8) came in
and totaled 63 points in the
at eighth place with 19 points,
poll. The RedStorm are comand Brescia (1-15) was ninth
ing off a 2014 season with a
with 13 points.
12-6 overall record and a perThe 2015 KIAC women’s
fect 6-0 mark in the KIAC.
soccer season begins Aug. 21.
Rio Grande also won
Every KIAC team plays each
the KIAC Tournament and
other once during the regular
advanced to the NAIA Nation- season, and the top six teams
al Championship Opening
in the standings qualify for
Round for the ﬁrst time in
the KIAC Tournament Nov.
school history.
7-14. The higher seed in each
Head coach Callum Morris’s playoff matchup will serve as
squad is bolstered this fall by the host team for each game
the return of 2014 KIAC Play- all the way through to the
er of the Year Kasey Crow.
ﬁnals.
Asbury (Ky.) University.
The KIAC Tournament
which fell to Rio in last year’s champion will receive the
KIAC tourney ﬁnals, is picked conference’s automatic bid to
second in the preseason poll
the NAIA Women’s Soccer
with 54 points. The Eagles
National Championship
were 11-8 overall and 4-2 in
beginning Nov. 21 with
the KIAC last year.
the Opening Round and
Point Park (Pa.) University continuing with the ﬁnal site
is right behind Asbury in
Nov. 30-Dec. 5 at Orange
the poll with 53 points. The
Beach, Ala.
Pioneers (10-9, 5-1 KIAC
in 2014) received the other
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director for the University of Rio Grande.
two ﬁrst-place votes and are

For Ohio Valley Publishing

NFL Punt, Pass,
and Kick Competition

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Recreation Department will be hosting a local
competition of the NFL Punt, Pass, and Kick
Competition. The competition will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday, Sept. 13, at Memorial Field. Preregistration will begin at 1:30 p.m.
The event is free and open to boys and girls
ages 6-15 years old. The age will be determined
as of Dec. 31, 2015. Boys and girls will compete
in separate divisions. Players must have tennis
shoes. No cleats (rubber or metal) or bare feet
are allowed.
Combined scores of distance and accuracy for
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — Meigs High School
one
punt, one pass, and one kick will determine
will be hosting a Meet the Marauders night at 7
the
overall
winner. Participants must bring a
p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 26, at Farmers Bank Stabirth
certiﬁcate
and can only compete in one
dium Holzer Field. Players from all teams will
local
event.
Local
winners will compete at a
be introduced to the public and the Marauder
sectional
event.
band will also take part in the festivities.
The winners of the sectional events will have
Admission to the event is free.
their score tallied against other state winners
to determine if they compete before a Bengals’
NFL Football game.
For more information, contact Brett Bostic
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern girls basat 740-441-6022.

Meet the Marauders Night

Basketball Golf Scramble

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, August 19, 2015 5B

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

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

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�PUZZLES

6B Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Daily Sentinel

There are STI support groups
person in this position.
Dear Annie: My nephew
Could you ask your
recently found out that he
readers to send in some
has genital herpes. He is
encouraging words or some
a fine young man and had
advice for him? It would
been dating the girl for a
mean so much to him to
while. When they parted
know he is not alone and
ways, neither of them
knew she had a sexually
Annie’s that there is hope for a
future with someone. -- A
transmitted disease.
Mailbox Concerned Aunt
Since finding this out,
my nephew has become so Kathy Mitchell Dear Aunt: We can
depressed. He is convinced &amp; Marcy Sugar assure you that your
nephew is not alone.
that no one will ever
Roughly 1 in 6 people ages
want him and that he will
14-49 in the U.S. have genital
spend the rest of his life alone.
herpes, and many are unaware of
We are worried about him and
it. While it is not curable, there
have looked around for support
is medication available to treat
groups, but could not find any.
I am sure he cannot be the only symptoms, control outbreaks and

reduce the risk of transmission to
a partner.
Please tell your nephew
to check the website of the
American Social Health
Association at ashasexualhealth.
org or their Herpes Hotline
at 1-888-411-4377. They offer
information, encouragement and
support, along with relationship
advice about how to tell one’s
potential sexual partners about
the infection.
Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell
and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann
Landers column. Please email your questions
to anniesmailbox@creators.com, or write to:
Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737
3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

HOROSCOPE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015:
This year you will be more
creative, communicative and
caring. Sometimes, because
of the broad circle of friends
you have, you discover
that you have less time for
in-depth conversations. For
that reason, a superficiality
might permeate the year.
You also could see a
financial opportunity open
up in the next 12 months.
If you are single, you will
remain so only by choice.
Don’t feel as if you have
to settle or even make a
decision until you are ready.
If you are attached, though
your popularity soars,
remember your sweetie.
Make him or her the major
centerpiece of your life.
LIBRA gravitates toward you,
and vice versa.
The Stars Show the Kind of
Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic;
4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-Soso; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
++++�A surprise
might toss you into some
thoughtful reflection. The
outcome of this will be
important. You will want to
simplify what is happening
around you. Open up to
some big changes that will
add to the excitement of
the moment. Tonight: Be
spontaneous.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
++ You might be stunned
by what is going on around

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
++++ You could be
exhausted from all the
recent activity. Know that
you have what it takes to
clear out and get through
what you must. Make this
an early day if you can.
You might need to slow
down some or pull out of a
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
commitment. Tonight: Full
++++ Your ability to
of fun.
see beyond the obvious
will make a considerable
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
difference in various
+++++ You will make a
situations. The unexpected
difference wherever you go.
could result in stronger
A partner, who sometimes
feelings and a clearer
is unpredictable, is likely to
sense of direction. Others
add a touch of vitality to the
will express their thoughts
day. You might notice that a
as long as they don’t feel
friend has an odd response
cornered. Tonight: All smiles. to a predictable situation.
Still, continue as you have
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
been. Tonight: Where the
++++ Listen to what
action is.
is shared. Otherwise, you
might not have a strong
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
sense of what is really
+++ You know what needs
being asked. Try not to
to happen. Before you make
overcommit yourself, and
any decisions, understand
don’t say that something
that a certain amount
is a good idea if you don’t
of unpredictability runs
believe it. You will feel as if
through your day. You’ll want
anything is possible. Tonight: to simplify the moment and
Make it fun.
do only what you want. Is
that a possibility? Tonight:
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Cocoon at home.
+++++ You’ll make an
effort to reach out to others SAGITTARIUS
despite a more interesting
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
and intriguing situation that ++++ You could be a little
lures you in. Sometimes you out of sorts, as a loved one
need to let go of demands
seems to be challenging
and change your schedule.
you. Understand that you
This might be an excellent
cannot control this person.
example of when this would You don’t need to reach out
be appropriate. Tonight:
to him or her, but you do
Make calls first.
need to detach in order to
you. You could gain a sudden
insight that will help you
deal with your day-today life. Try to see the big
picture, but don’t force
others to see that same
vision. Tonight: Take a brisk
walk or indulge in some
other form of exercise.

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3
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at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls
"Frog
Whisperers"
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
Report (N)
CBS Evening
News

Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6 PM

6:30

see the big picture. Tonight:
Think before you act.

CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
++++ You’ll feel
comfortable assuming a
leadership position right
now. You know how to handle
the voices of uncertainty
and discontentment better
than most. Soon others will
become more confident in
your abilities. Tonight: Your
actions do count.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++ Know when to say
less and observe more.
You could be stunned by
what happens, but remain
confident that you will
succeed no matter what.
Conversations will be
animated and powerful.
Take news with a grain of
salt; you might not have all
the facts. Tonight: Not to be
found.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
++++ You could be in a
position where you need to
get more done, as others
seem to have left some extra
work or details for you to
take care of. You will make it
your pleasure at this point,
but know that you don’t
have to accept this type
of responsibility too often.
Tonight: Do for you.
BORN TODAY
Fashion designer Coco
Chanel (1883), former U.S.
President Bill Clinton (1946),
drummer Ginger Baker
(1939)

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

America's Got Talent "Live
Results 2" (N)
America's Got Talent "Live
Results 2" (N)
The Middle The
Goldbergs
The Mystery of Matter:
Search for the Elements
"Out of Thin Air" (N)
The Middle The
Goldbergs
Big Brother

Mr.
Mr.
Robinson (N) Robinson (N)
Mr.
Mr.
Robinson (N) Robinson (N)
Modern Fam Black-ish
"Integrity"
The Mystery of Matter:
Search for the Elements
"Unruly Elements" (N)
Modern Fam Black-ish
"Integrity"
Extant "The Other Side" (N)

Last Comic Standing "The
Semifinals, Part 1" (N)
Last Comic Standing "The
Semifinals, Part 1" (N)
Wife Sw. "Tommy Davidson/
Corey Feldman" (N)
The Mystery of Matter:
Search for the Elements
"Into the Atom" (N)
Wife Sw. "Tommy Davidson/
Corey Feldman" (N)
Criminal Minds "Fate"

Masterchef "A Storm's a
Brewing" (N)
The Mystery of Matter:
Search for the Elements
"Out of Thin Air" (N)
Big Brother

Home Free "Holmes Sweet
Home" (N)
The Mystery of Matter:
Search for the Elements
"Unruly Elements" (N)
Extant "The Other Side" (N)

Eyewitness News at 10

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Mystery of Matter:
Search for the Elements
"Into the Atom" (N)
Criminal Minds "Fate"

10 PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Arizona Diamondbacks at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
24 (ROOT) In Depth
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
Baseball T. MLB Baseball Detroit Tigers at Chicago Cubs Site: Wrigley Field -- Chicago, Ill. (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption (:55) FIFA Soccer International Friendly C.R.C./USA (L)
Softball Little League World Series Championship (L)
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

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

Little Women: LA "LA
Little Women: LA "Big
Little Women: LA "Seattle Little Women: LA "A Group Terra Little Terra Little
Safari"
Secrets"
or Bust"
Divided" (N)
Family
Family
Despicable Me A criminal mastermind uses three Kevin From Young and Job or No Job "Nashville
Next Step Realty: NYC
orphans in his grand scheme to steal the moon. TVPG
Work (N)
Hungry (N) Event Planning" (N)
"The Blacklist"
Cops
Jail
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops "Liar
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Liar #2"
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Talia
Full House Full House Full House Full House Gaffigan (N) Impastor (N)
SVU "Criminal Hatred"
SVU "Deadly Ambition"
SVU "Funny Valentine"
Suits "Uninvited Guests" (N) Mr. Robot (N)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
A. Bourdain "Hawaii"
CNN Tonight
Castle "Suicide Squeeze"
Castle
Castle
Castle "Tick, Tick, Tick"
Castle "Boom!"
(5:00) The Shawshank Redemption A banker is wrongly
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben Affleck, Bruce Willis. A drill rigger
convicted of a double murder and is sent to prison for life. and his crew embark on a mission to blow up an asteroid heading for Earth. TV14
Edge of Alaska
Repo "Mid-air Repo"
Airplane Repo (N)
Repo "No Safe Harbour" (N) Land Rush (N)
Duck
Duck Dynasty "Glory is the Duck D. "The Duck Dyn.
Duck
Duck Dynasty "John Luke Wahlburgers Lachey's Bar
Dynasty
Dynasty
Reward of Mallard"
Ducket List" "Pit Perfect" Gets Hitched" (N)
(N)
(N)
North Woods Law
The Last Alaskans
Alaska "Will Winter Come?" Bush People "Home Alone" LakeReb. "Of Ice and Skins"
Boss Nails
(5:45) Tia and (:45) Tia and Tamera
(:45) Bad Girls Club "First
(:45) BadGirls It Takes a
E! Entertainment Special
"First Look" Sister
Tamera
"Twindividuals"
Look: Double Trouble"
"Nicki Minaj"
Law&amp;Order "Mother's Milk" Law &amp; Order "Panic"
Law &amp; Order "Entitled" 2/2 Law&amp;Order "Fools for Love" Law &amp; Order "Trade This"
I Am Cait
E! News (N)
Botched "Dolly'd Up"
Botched "Boob-Watch"
WAGS "The WAG Life"
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Gilligan
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Jim Gaffigan Impastor
Rocky Mountain Law
Southern Justice
Rocky Mountain Law
Rocky Mountain Law "The Southern Justice "Gun to
"Tactical Takedown"
"Appalachian Ambush"
"Tactical Takedown"
Hills Have Eyes" (N)
the Head" (N)
NASCAR America (L)
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More "Seattle"
Mobsteel
Mobsteel (N)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
NCWTS
NASCAR Auto Racing UNOH 200 (L)
Fox Sports Live
American Pickers "Texas
American Pickers "A Hard American Pickers
American Pickers "Law and (:05) The Woodsmen "The
Hold 'Em"
Rain's Gonna Fall"
"Daredevil Duffey"
Hoarder" (N)
Big Bang" (N)
Flipping Out
Flipping Out
Flipping Out
Flipping Out (N)
Million Listing SF (N)
(5:20)
All About the Benjamins Ice Cube. TV14
(:05)
What's Love Got to Do With It? ('93, Bio) Angela Bassett. TVM
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Buying and Selling (N)
House (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Gallowwalkers The Haunting in Connecticut 2: Ghosts of Georgia A family
Sinister While researching a murder for his novel,
Wesley Snipes. TVMA
quickly discovers they are not their house's only inhabitants.
an author finds a collection of snuff films. TV14

6 PM
(5:45) Hard

400 (HBO) Knocks '15

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30
(:45) The

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

(:15) Ride Along (2014, Action/Comedy) Kevin Hart, John

9 PM

9:30

Show Me a Hero

10 PM

10:30

Show Me a Hero

Brink

Leguizamo, Ice Cube. A detective brings his sister's
boyfriend on a 24-hour patrol designed to scare him. TV14
(5:25) Blended Adam Sandler. After an
(:25)
Turistas Three friends on vacation Strike Back
awful blind date, two single parents find
in Brazil end up drugged, robbed and
themselves stuck together at a resort. TV14 stranded in the jungle. TVMA
Delivery Man Vince Vaughn. A man, (:45) Need for Speed (2014, Action) Imogen Poots, Dominic Cooper,
who donated sperm in his youth, finds out Aaron Paul. A blue-collar mechanic joins a cross-country car race in the
that he has fathered 533 children. TVPG
hopes of exacting revenge. TV14

Riddick (2013, Sci-Fi) Karl
Urban, Katee Sackhoff, Vin
Diesel. TV14
Ray Donovan "Swing Vote"
Ray must ensure Verona's
Election Day victory.

Avocados done right!
Ohio.
Dear Heloise:
I’m writing to
I use many
ask about the
AVOCADOS
discoloration
but do not
on roast beef. It
like the brown
looks like an oil
bruised spots. I
slick -- iridescent.
buy some very
ﬁrm avocados,
Hints from When I reheated
the meat, it was
keeping them in
Heloise bright pink. All of
the refrigerator
Heloise
the meat wasn’t
for two or more
days.
like this. Is it
I wash and dry the
harmful to eat? -- A
Reader in Central Ohio
outside, cut it topNo, it’s not harmful
to-bottom down to
to eat. It may look
the seed and ﬁrmly,
using the knife, press
a little funny, but
you’re good for a go
it open. It’s easy to
on eating the “Wow,
peel off the skin,
leaving a beautiful half look at that cool
color!” This trusted
avocado. -- Margaret
L., Colorado Springs,
information is from
the U.S. Department
Colo.
of Agriculture, the
Ole! Being a Texas
go-to expert this expert
gal, I love guacamole
made from fresh,
relies on. -- Heloise
ripe avocados! When
shopping, do NOT buy Send a money-saving or timesaving
an avocado that has
hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000,
San Antonio, TX 78279-5000, or you
brown bruised spots.
can fax it to 1-210-HELOISE or email
It’s past its prime!
it to Heloise@Heloise.com.
If they are ripe and
ready to eat, into the
refrigerator is perfect.
However, if they are
TODAY’S
“very ﬁrm,” as you
ANSWERS
said, keeping them in
the refrigerator will
WORD SLEUTH:
STOP the ripening
process. It will come
out just the way it
went in -- not ripe.
Try this: Buy one
or two ready to eat
- these can go into
the fridge. Get a few
that are a little ﬁrm;
they will ripen when
set out. You are set!
-- Heloise
Iridescent roast beef
Dear Heloise: I read
your column in The
Delaware Gazette,
published in Delaware,

CRYPTOQUIP:

If a satirical comedy portrays
somebody getting hit, that
might be a slap in the farce.

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