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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

54°

77°

73°

A t-storm today. Overcast in the evening
followed by clearing tonight. High 83° / Low 50°

Today’s
weather
forecast

I’m not
sure I
agree

Rio shuts
down
Cougars

WEATHER s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 64, Volume 73

Tuesday, April 23, 2019 s 50¢

TPVFD hosts egg hunt

Jury
selection to
continue in
Tucker case
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Kayla Hawthorne | Photo

Kids of all ages were on the hunt for the perfect Easter Egg on Saturday at the annual Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire Department Easter Egg Hunt. The hunt was held
at the Tuppers Plains Ballfields. Kids found candy filled eggs, as well as receiving some larger prizes after the hunt. The Easter Bunny, dressed in partial fire gear, even
joined in on the hunt. For more photos from Saturday’s hunt see inside today’s edition.

Two arrested on drug charges
Staff Report

PORTLAND — Two individuals were taken into custody
last week following the execution of a search warrant at a
residence in Portland.
Meigs County Sheriff Keith
Wood reports that on Tuesday,
April 16, his ofﬁce executed a
search warrant at 31165 Ross
Road in Portland. The search
warrant stems from an ongoing
investigation by Deputy Campbell and K9 Cheri into alleged
drug trafﬁcking coming from
the residence.
Upon execution of the search
warrant deputies took multiple
subjects into custody in the
front yard of the residence. One
of the subjects who was identiﬁed as Randall Gale Nichols
II, 33, of Portland allegedly
attempted to throw multiple
plastic baggies containing methamphetamine that were recovered by deputies after securing
the individuals. The plastic baggies were reportedly numbered
and packaged for distribution.
Nichols was placed under arrest
at that time for possession of
methamphetamine, trafﬁcking

POMEROY — Jury
selection will continue
into a second day in the
trial of a former corrections and probation
ofﬁcer.
Larry Tucker, 56, of
Pomeroy, is charged with
31 felony charges and
one misdemeanor charge
from two cases which
were indicted in 2018 and
2019.
Dozens of people
packed the Meigs County
Common Pleas Courtroom early Monday
morning as jury selection
was to begin in the case.
By 10:20 a.m., jurors were
told to take an early lunch
and return at 12:30 p.m.
Once returning for the
afternoon, the voir dire
process began with the
ﬁrst 12 possible jurors
taking questions from
Judge Linton Lewis, Prosecutor Angela Canepa
and Public Defender Kirk
McVay.
Four potential jurors
See JURY | 2

FOR THE RECORD
Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office
Day Shift
Feb. 25
Deputies drove to
South Carolina to pick
up a prisoner that was
arrested on an indictment
out of the Common Pleas
Court.
Feb. 27
One inmate was transported from prison to
court for a hearing and
back to prison.

K9 Cheri is pictured with items located
during a search of a residence in
Portland.

in methamphetamine, and tampering with evidence.
Deputies then turned their
attention to another male
subject that was standing with
Nichols when deputies arrived
on scene. Upon a search of the
male, deputies allegedly located
a plastic baggy also containing
methamphetamine. The baggy
was also numbered in the same
manner as the baggies Randall
Nichols reportedly threw on
the ground. Deputies took Jeremiah J. Roush, 25, of Reedsville
into custody for possession
of methamphetamine. Upon
a search of Roush’s vehicle,

Courtesy photos

Cash, drugs and other items were reportedly found during a search warrant at a
residence in Portland.

deputies reportedly located a
plastic baggy containing 13
Oxycodone pills. Roush was
also charged for aggravated
possession of drugs.
After continuing a search
of the property and residence,
deputies located approximately 20 glass pipes, syringes,
digital scales, and other drug
paraphernalia in the residence
along with a small amount of
cash. The Sheriff’s Ofﬁce will
consult with the Meigs County
Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce regarding

charges on other individuals located at the residence.
Randall Nichols and Jeremiah
Roush are being housed at the
Middleport Jail awaiting their
initial appearance in court.
“This is yet another example
of the hard work by my deputies to get this poison off of our
streets” stated Sheriff Wood.
“We will continue our mission
here at the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
and continue to ﬁght for the
citizens of this community to
make it a safer place”.

March 4
Deputies transported
one male inmate from
SEORJ to court and back
See RECORD | 5

Death
being
examined
in Point
By Beth Sergent

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Finding the Golden Egg
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.
Courtesy photo

It was a team effort to find The Daily Sentinel’s 2019 Golden Egg. Around 6 a.m. on Thursday
(the first day of their spring break), members of the Meigs High School Baseball team went on
the hunt for the golden egg. After searching village entrances around the county, team member
Matt Gilkey located the egg at one of the entrances to Middleport, hidden in a bush on Thursday
afternoon. Team members are pictured at Thursday’s game with Gilkey in the front row holding
the egg.

bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT —
An investigation is underway following the death of
a woman who was reportedly found with a gunshot
wound to the head in a
home in the 2300-block of
Jefferson Avenue, according to Lt. Matt Taylor
with the Point Pleasant
Police Department.
A male suspect has
been taken into custody
regarding the incident,
Taylor added.
The Point PD was notiﬁed by Mason County
911 in reference to
reports of a gunshot in
the area around 1:20 p.m.
See DEATH | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, April 23, 2019

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

DONAHUE

MARY JANE (KRACKOMBERGER) PELLEGRINO

FRAZIERS BOTTOM — Jackie Donahue, 77, of
Fraziers Bottom, died Saturday, April 20, 2019 at his
Johnson. She had home.
CHESTER
three sisters-inVisitation will be held at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
— Mary Jane
law, Phyllis Krack- Home on Wednesday, April 24 from 11:30 a.m.-1:30
(Krackomberger)
omberger, Sandra p.m. with a graveside service at 2 p.m. at the Donahue
Pellegrino, 69, of
Long, and Viola
family cemetery with burial to follow.
Chester, went to
Long; and many
be with her Heavnephews and
SCHROCK
enly Father on
nieces. She had
Sunday, April 21,
many special friends and
2019.
THURMAN — Esther Edna Schrock, 85, of Thursisters in Christ includShe was born March
man, died Easter Sunday, April 21, 2019 at 6:15 p.m.
28, 1950, at St. Joseph’s ing Linda Well, Mary
Funeral services will be held at Valley View MennoHospital in Parkersburg, Huffman, Judy Kennedy, nite Church on Thursday, April 25, 2019 at 10 a.m. in
and cousins Rick and
W.Va. She lived in New
Patriot, where she was a member. Burial will be in the
Mickie Hollon.
Jersey for many years
Valley View Mennonite Cemetery. Friends may call
Mary is preceded in
where she graduated
from 3-7 p.m. on Wednesday, April 24, 2019 at Valley
death by her parents,
from Woodbridge High
View Mennonite Church.
School. She moved back William and Goldie
Krackomberger; brothto Ohio in 1982, where
COSSIN
she lived the remainder ers, Elson Long, Eugene
Long, William Krackomof her life. She worked
LEON — Virginia Lee Cossin, 96, of Leon, died
berger, and John Krack- Saturday, April 20, 2019.
at Ohio University as
omberger; and sister, Iva
a receptionist for 10
In accordance with her wishes, her body was crePearl Rayburn.
years and at Applebee’s
mated, and no services are scheduled at this time.
There will be a viewin Vienna, W.Va. for 10
Burial will take place in Leon Cemetery at a later
years. She spent the last ing at Bethel Worship
date.
Center on Wednesday,
year as janitorial superRaynes Funeral Home, Buffalo is in charge of her
visor for Bethel Worship April 24 from 6-8 p.m.
arrangements.
Center where she was an There will also be a
Celebration of Life serMUNDELL
active church member
vice at Bethel Worship
for 37 years.
Center on Thursday,
Mary is survived by
MILTON, W.Va. — Gregory Alan Mundell, 60,
her husband of 20 years, April 25 at 11 a.m. with of Milton, W.Va. died Friday, April 19, 2019 at St.
fellowship to follow.
James Pellegrino; her
Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va.
Mary loved taking
son, Adam (Andrea)
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Tuesday,
care of people and cook- April 23, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Wolfe; and her daughing for her family and
ters, Melissa (Victor)
Pleasant, W.Va. with Pastor David Radcliff ofﬁciatVan Meter, Gina (Chris) friends. She was known ing. Burial will follow at Harmony Cemetery in
for her joyful personality Southside, W.Va. The family will receive friends two
Pines, Maria (James)
and love for everyone
Leamond. She had ﬁve
hours prior to the funeral service, Tuesday at the
she knew. In lieu of ﬂow- funeral home.
grandchildren, Emily
ers, feel free to make
and Carson Van Meter,
donations to Bethel Wor- YODER
Nathan Leamond,
ship Center’s BenevoAdam Pines, and Alex
lence Fund which helps
Johnson; and one great
BIDWELL — Alvin Wayne Yoder, 79, Bidwell, died
those in need.
granddaughter, Tifa
Monday, April 15, 2019.
Visitation will be held 11 a.m. to noon Wednesday,
April 24, 2019 in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
HALSTEAD
Vinton Chapel.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Helen Louise (Zuspan) Hal- SEYLER JR.
stead, of New Haven, W.Va. died on April 20, 2019.
MASON — Douglas Arthur Seyler Jr., 55, of
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, April 24
at Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va. Visi- Mason, died April 19, 2019 at his home.
There will be no services held at this time.
tation will be from 11 a.m. until time of service at the
Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home has been entrusted
funeral home. Helen will be laid to rest at Suncrest
with the arrangements.
Cemetery in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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

Road closures
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is open but restricted to one lane. Portable trafﬁc
controllers are installed near the area of the slip.
Please obey all signs and lights.
CHESTER — A bridge rehabilitation project
begins on March 25 on State Route 248 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place between
Bashan Road and Locust Grove Road. One lane
will be closed in this area and temporary trafﬁc
signals will be in place. The estimated completion
date is June 15, 2019.
MEIGS COUNTY — A tree trimming project
begins on April 29 on State Route 143 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place between
Blackwood Road (Township Road 455) and Farmers Road (Township Road 638). The road will be
closed in sections from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. until May 31.

Immunization clinic hours
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic
on Tuesday, April 23, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-6 p.m.
at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring child(ren)’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $30
donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no one will be denied services
because of an inability to pay an administration fee
for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards,
if applicable. Those who are insured via commercial insurance are responsible for any balance their
commercial insurance does not cover for vaccinations. Pneumonia vaccines are also available as
well as ﬂu shots. Call for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our website at www.meigshealth.com to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

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

Tuesday, April 23

Friends of Rutland fundraiser planned

OH-70120606

RUTLAND — Friends
of Rutland will be hosting a community spaghetti dinner as a fundraiser for the organization in the fellowship
hall of Rutland Church
of the Nazarene, located
at 464 Main Street in
Rutland on Saturday,

May 4, 2019, beginning
at 4 p.m. and ending at
6 p.m.
For a monetary donation, you will receive a
meal, including spaghetti with sauce topped
with optional Parmesan
cheese, garlic bread, a
side salad with Italian

The family of Tom Boso would like to
thank the following individuals for
their generosity. We truly appreciate
the dinner that was held in Tom’s honor.
Gary Holter, Fay Westfall, Donald
Raines, Tina Hawley, Greg Johnson,
Marilyn Cooper, Chuck Evans, Evelyn
Foreman, Lisa Smith, Sue Smith, Sherry
Wagner, Donna Ihle, Karen Werry,
Sharon Hupp, Jamie Hupp Smith,
Becky Dudding, Marty Meadows,
Tyson Evans, Debbie Roush, Courtney
Leachman &amp; the Morning Star Church

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

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

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

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

or ranch dressing, a
chocolate brownie and a
drink. Enjoy this dinner
by carry out or inside
dining. Proceeds to benefit the administrative
and operative costs of
Friends of Rutland and
community service programs in Rutland.
Friends of Rutland
Committee on Community Improvement is
a non-profit community

Jury

service organization
incorporated to facilitate partnerships, programs and services that
contribute to the betterment of the village of
Rutland, Ohio.
Questions about the
dinner can be directed
to Donna Jenkins, VicePresident by telephone
at (740) 742 2957 or by
email at djenkins.friendsofrutland@gmail.com.

kidnapping, ﬁrst-degree
felonies, along with
fourth-degree felony
charges of gross sexual
From page 1
imposition and attemptwere dismissed through- ed sexual battery.
As previously reported,
out the day, with all others set to return on Tues- Tucker is accused of
day morning at 9 a.m. as sexually assaulting or
attempting to sexuthe process continues.
ally assault 12 different
Tucker, who was corinmates and/or probationrections ofﬁcer at the
ers while working as a
Middleport Jail and a
corrections ofﬁcer at the
probation ofﬁcer and
Middleport Jail and as a
bailiff for Meigs County
Meigs County Common
Common Pleas Court,
Pleas Court probation
was initially indicted by
ofﬁcer. The incidents are
a Meigs County Grand
alleged to have occurred
Jury on May 3, 2018.
between January 2011
Charges in the initial
and November 2017.
indictment include: six
Each sexual battery
counts of Sexual Battery,
third-degree felonies; six charge and kidnapping
charge carries a sexual
counts of Kidnapping,
ﬁrst-degree felonies; ﬁve violent predator speciﬁcation. The six kidnapcounts of Gross Sexual
Imposition, fourth-degree ping charges also carry
speciﬁcations alleging
felonies; ﬁve counts
that the crimes were
of Attempted Sexual
committed with sexual
Battery, fourth-degree
motivation.
felonies; four counts of
The two separate cases
Attempted Compelling
were joined together folProstitution, fourthlowing a motion by the
degree felonies; one
count of Theft in Ofﬁce, prosecution following
the ﬁling of the second
a ﬁfth-degree felony;
indictment.
one count of Soliciting,
Tucker has pleaded
a third-degree misdeinnocent to all charges in
meanor.
the case.
A second indictment
followed on Jan. 9, 2019.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
The second indictment
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
was for two counts of

POMEROY — Acoustic Night, 6 p.m., Pomeroy
Library. Join the group for an informal jam session. Singers and listeners are welcome.
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend Arts Council, 290
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Ohio, will present “Poets
Night Out” from 7-9 p.m. in honor of National
Poetry Month. Read your own original poem or
your favorite poem or come and listen to poetry.
Light refreshments will be served. Donations welcome. Open to the public.

Thursday, April 25
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired
Teachers group will meet at noon at Wild Horse
Cafe for lunch and a program. Speaking on history tales of Meigs County in connection with the
Bicentennial will be local historian and former
teacher Mike Gerlach. Guests are always welcome
to attend. Members are asked to remember donations toward the Habitat for Humanity house to be
built in Middleport.
CHESTER — The weekly Meigs County Commissioner meeting will be held at 11 a.m. at the
Chester Courthouse.
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet at 6 p.m. at the Carleton School in Syracuse, Ohio. Everyone is welcome. Please come and join us in discussing how
we can make money to support our local candidates. We will welcome any and all input.

Friday, April 26
POMEROY — Meigs County Health Dept. will
host an Open House from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. The
public is invited to help us celebrate the 100th
Anniversary of Public Health and Meigs County’s
Bicentennial. Refreshments, guided tours and
promotion of health services offered to all Meigs
County residents will be provided. The MCHD is
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. For
more information, call 740-992-6626.
MIDDLEPORT — The monthly Free Community Dinner at the Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center at 5 p.m. This month they
are serving sweet and sour meatballs, mashed
potatoes and gravy, corn, and dessert. Everyone is
welcome.

Saturday, April 27
ROCKSPRINGS — Virginia Wears will be
celebrating her 100th birthday from 2-4 p.m. at
American Legion Post 39 (old Salisbury School).
No gifts please, cards appreciated.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Fire Department
will hold a ﬁsh fry at ﬁre station with serving to
begin at 11 a.m.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 23, 2019 3

Tuppers Plains Fire Department Egg Hunt

Eggs were scattered in the grass around the baseball fields.

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne | Daily Sentinel

Kids of all ages were on the hunt Saturday at the annual Tuppers
Plains Volunteer Fire Department Easter Egg Hunt.

The younger children were assisted by their parents on the hunt
for eggs.

Approximately 1,200 eggs were scattered for children to find on
Saturday.

The younger children were assisted by their parents on the hunt
for eggs.
Kids gathered dozens of candy-filled eggs during the hunt.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

8 PM

After a cloudy start,
sunshine returns

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.

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

0.00
1.93
2.46
13.17
12.40

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:42 a.m.
8:13 p.m.
none
9:50 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Apr 26

New

First

Full

May 4 May 11 May 18

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

Major
Today 3:39a
Wed. 4:37a
Thu. 5:32a
Fri.
6:24a
Sat.
7:12a
Sun. 7:56a
Mon. 8:37a

Minor
9:52a
10:50a
11:45a
12:10a
1:00a
1:45a
2:26a

Major
4:06p
5:03p
5:57p
6:48p
7:35p
8:18p
8:59p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

Minor
10:19p
11:16p
---12:36p
1:23p
2:07p
2:48p

WEATHER HISTORY
A record chill gripped northern
Florida on April 23, 1993. Tallahassee
plunged to 31 degrees. The previous
record of 41 was set in 1940. This
was also the latest freeze recorded
there last century.

AIR QUALITY
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. Mon.

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.89 +0.80
Marietta
34 22.56 +2.21
Parkersburg
36 24.33 +0.80
Belleville
35 12.82 -0.22
Racine
41 12.91 none
Point Pleasant
40 27.84 +1.25
Gallipolis
50 12.09 -0.41
Huntington
50 31.20 +2.64
Ashland
52 36.94 +1.70
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.20 +0.12
Portsmouth
50 32.10 +4.90
Maysville
50 36.20 +1.10
Meldahl Dam
51 30.60 +0.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Ashland
83/53
Grayson
82/53

Partly sunny and
pleasant

Sunny to partly cloudy
and warm

76°
56°
Partly sunny with
t-storms possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
80/49

St. Marys
80/49

Parkersburg
79/51

Coolville
79/48

Elizabeth
81/49

Spencer
81/50

Buffalo
83/52

Ironton
83/52

MONDAY

78°
54°

Marietta
79/49

Wilkesville
80/48
POMEROY
Jackson
82/49
79/47
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/50
81/49
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
70/44
GALLIPOLIS
83/50
83/51
82/50

South Shore Greenup
82/51
80/49

43
300

Portsmouth
80/49

SUNDAY

74°
54°

Murray City
76/45
Athens
78/46

McArthur
77/45

Lucasville
80/48

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
75/45

Very High

Primary: oak, mulberry, other
Mold: 655

Logan
75/45

Adelphi
75/44

Waverly
78/46

Pollen: 1457

Low

MOON PHASES

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

2

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:40 a.m.
8:14 p.m.
12:51 a.m.
10:39 a.m.

SATURDAY

Partly sunny, a
Cloudy, a shower and
54°
77°
73°
A t-storm today. Overcast in the evening followed shower; not as warm
t-storm around
by clearing tonight. High 83° / Low 50°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

FRIDAY

73°
41°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

THURSDAY

72°
53°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

69°
40°
70°
46°
91° in 1920
31° in 1943

WEDNESDAY

71°
43°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

Kids looked for the perfect egg to fill their buckets.

Milton
83/53
Huntington
81/56

St. Albans
84/53

NATIONAL FORECAST

Clendenin
84/54
Charleston
83/56

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

110s
100s
Seattle
Winnipeg
60/46
90s
65/48
80s
70s
Billings
60s
75/51
Minneapolis
50s
65/48
Detroit
40s
69/39
30s
Chicago
20s
San Francisco
60/41
Denver
10s
77/53
66/44
0s
Kansas City
-0s
66/47
-10s
Los Angeles
82/58
T-storms
Rain
El Paso
Showers
77/55
Snow
Flurries
Houston
Chihuahua
Ice
79/64
86/51
Cold Front
Monterrey
Warm Front
86/68
Stationary Front

Montreal
61/41
Toronto
62/37
New York
76/57
Washington
84/62

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

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
61/45/t
39/27/pc
84/62/s
67/57/s
83/62/s
75/51/pc
75/52/pc
55/46/c
83/56/s
85/59/s
63/41/pc
60/41/sh
74/47/c
69/43/t
73/45/t
76/62/t
66/44/c
68/45/s
69/39/t
84/70/sh
79/64/pc
69/43/c
66/47/c
87/68/s
81/59/pc
82/58/s
79/55/pc
82/67/s
65/48/s
81/56/s
80/63/pc
76/57/s
62/50/r
86/59/s
81/61/s
86/67/pc
74/45/t
51/40/c
82/60/s
82/62/s
69/52/c
68/49/pc
77/53/s
60/46/c
84/62/s

Hi/Lo/W
71/50/pc
43/29/pc
83/61/s
69/50/pc
76/50/pc
69/45/pc
74/50/pc
62/44/sh
72/54/pc
85/60/pc
67/41/pc
65/49/s
68/51/c
59/45/s
67/49/pc
72/59/r
72/45/s
73/51/s
65/46/s
83/70/pc
80/66/c
67/51/r
72/51/pc
91/71/s
76/60/r
78/57/s
72/58/t
81/68/pc
73/51/pc
80/60/t
81/65/pc
71/52/s
64/52/pc
87/62/s
73/52/pc
94/71/s
65/45/s
55/38/sh
82/57/pc
82/56/pc
71/55/sh
71/53/pc
73/52/s
61/44/s
77/55/pc

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
84/62

High
Low

89° in Presidio, TX
21° in Leadville, CO

Global
High
115° in Jacobabad, Pakistan
Low -42° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
82/67

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Disparage
not the lowly
mascots
The NCAA men’s basketball tournament may or
may not be over. I’m obviously not exactly a slave
to athletic schedules. This will become increasingly apparent as you read on.
Even with my limited knowledge/
interest/involvement of/in/with the
tournament, the terms “ﬁnal four”
and “brackets” are not foreign to
me. For example, I realize much is
made of ﬁlling in those “brackets” to
determine the “ﬁnal four.” To some
Marla
people, this activity approaches the
Boone
importance of terms like “oxygen”
Contributing and “cardiac function.” I am not one
columnist
of those people. In the tiny print
to the far left and far right of the
“brackets” are the names of schools of which I
have never heard. These mystery schools include
Farley Dickinson and St. Marys. I thought St.
Marys was an all-women’s college in Indiana which
speaks legions about either my familiarity with
higher education or the competitiveness of Hoosier females.
The folks who do take this seriously have all
sorts of elaborate methods for determining who
to pick to win in each match-up. They examine
in minute detail the talents and shortcomings of
various players. They look at the schedule already
played and the successes and failures there-in.
They look at the coaching staffs and injury lists
and three-pointer percentages.
Then there are the rest of us. We do not, to
belabor the painfully apparent, really care who
wins or loses or makes the cut or sits at home and
pouts. It’s (gasp) just a game to us. Still, some
of the uncaring do go to the trouble of ﬁlling out
all those little lines because we have some unexplained need to be part of a group. To be part of
a group in ﬁlling out the little lines, a system is
required. I have discussed the casual bracket-ﬁller
mindset with several people. Listed below are my
favorite methods of picking winners as reported
by them.
Method No.1. Colors. Before starting, each possible color must be assigned a value. For instance,
red is ﬁve, blue is four, yellow is three, orange is
two, and black is one. Purple gets zero because
not even 7 feet 2 inches impossibly toned athletes
look good in purple. White also gets zero points
because of lack of imagination in choosing a color.
So, if team No. 1’s school colors are blue and yellow, that team has a color value of seven. If team
No. 2’s colors are red and white, that team has a
color value of ﬁve. Therefore, team No. 1 is picked
as the winner. Any team with the colors purple
and white is doomed before tip-off.
Another highly scientiﬁc way to choose winners is the mascot method. Again, animals must
be assigned a relative worth. Bulldogs might be
better than huskies. Bobcats might be superior
to tigers except in actual face-to-face four-legged
combat. Mustangs are wonderful creatures.
Horned toads are not. Terrapins, hoyas, and other
obscure animals are purples.
Some people make gross generalizations such as
cats are always better than dogs which is patently
crazy. Eventually, in using this system, one is
forced to assign a value to dozens of human-like
creatures. Nitro the Knight is clearly a person,
as is a pirate. More often than makes sense, you
come across a team with a very odd mascot name.
There were at least two teams in the tournament
with Big Blue as a nickname to which I say, a Big
Blue what? Balloon? Blouse? Tennis shoes? Or, in
the case of Boise State, big blue ugly football turf.
As with anything this vital and life-changing,
there ought to be an opportunity for extra credit.
So I say the University of California-Irving mascot — Peter the Anteater — and the Delta State
Fighting Okra deserve not only the pity vote
(think of the poor cheerleaders … what rhymes
with okra? And how hard can okra really be
expected to ﬁght?), but also extra consideration
when pondering the winner of a game. James Naismith, the inventor of basketball for whom ironically no team is named, would thank you.
Marla Boone resides in Covington and writes for Miami Valley Today.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Actor Alan Oppenheimer is 89. Actor David
Birney is 80. Actor Lee Majors is 80. Hockey
Hall of Famer Tony Esposito is 76. Irish nationalist Bernadette Devlin McAliskey is 72. Actress
Blair Brown is 72. Writer-director Paul Brickman is 70. Actress Joyce DeWitt is 70. Actor
James Russo is 66. Filmmaker-author Michael
Moore is 65. Actress Judy Davis is 64. Actress
Valerie Bertinelli is 59. Actor Craig Sheffer is 59.
Actor-comedian-talk show host George Lopez is
58. U.S. Olympic gold medal skier Donna Weinbrecht is 54. Actress Melina Kanakaredes (kahnah-KAH’-ree-deez) is 52. Rock musician Stan
Frazier (Sugar Ray) is 51.

THEIR VIEW

I’m not sure I agree
There are so many
choices for news and
information these days
that it is rather confusing
what to believe and what
not to believe.
I heard an ad for a
news service recently in
which the actor stated
that he used to listen only
to “news that he agreed
with.” This made me
wonder if this is what I
was doing, and if so, how
far away from reality is
my understanding as to
what is going on in my
world.
With this in mind,
I decided to research
the slants the networks
put on the same story,
and what I found was
astonishingly sad. First,
I discovered that I didn’t
always recognize the
same story as I made
comparisons between
the channels. Next, I
found that the tone of the
same story varied among
networks from gushing
approval to rabid hatred
and down-right meanspirited commentary.
As my exhaustive sampling of reporting from
CNN, Fox News Channel,
MSNBC, HLN and others began, it made me

become an agenda
wonder how long
extension for
this metamorphoeither the left or
sis of “news” feedthe right — usuing has been going
ally the left — and
on.
leave precious little
I went to Youtime for entertainTube and pulled
ment.
up some of the old Herb
Sitcoms even
Huntley-Brinkley
Day
depart
from
news shows from
Contributing
comedy
so often
NBC from back
columnist
to make politiin the ’60s, some
cal statements.
of the Walter
This, too, is not a new
Cronkite Evening News
reports, ABC’s news cov- phenomenon. If you take
another look at Archie
erage from the old proBunker in the old “All In
grams with Harry Reasoner, Sam Donaldson or The Family” shows from
Peter Jennings and found the ’70s, political statethat even though the sto- ments were being made
ries between the channels and issues of the day
were dealt with in each
resembled one another
more closely than they do episode.
Perhaps what makes
today, each had its own
the shovel-feeding of
spin, more often than
slant and opinion pushnot, in the tone of the
ing news reporting of
reporting.
Back in the days of old today most difﬁcult to
it seems that there was at stomach is the fact that
least an attempt to deliv- I am being told what
er only the facts without to believe, and then
informed that if I don’t
interjection of opinion.
These days, anchors and believe it in the way they
are reporting it, I lack
reporters can’t make
intelligence, I am insensitheir “mark” without an
opinionated spin. I ﬁnd it tive, a bigot or worse.
The evolution of the
tragic that the late-night
way news is presented to
talk shows, whose value
us resembles the old fable
originally was intended
of the frog in the pot of
for entertainment have

water on the stove who
doesn’t realize until it is
too late that he is being
boiled.
I’m not certain that I
ever received “just the
facts” about what was
going on in Washington,
and anyplace else in the
world for that matter.
I spoke recently with a
man who spent considerable time in Israel, and
he stated that the view of
the United States from
Israeli television is much
different than we see
here. In fact, he went on
to say that day to day life
in Israel is much different
than what we see on the
news here in the states.
What’s true reality and
what is the reality that
some faction or group
wants me to see and
believe? You and I may
never know. What is really the news I agree with,
and why should there be
a difference between that
and the truth? I’m not
sure I agree with any of
the news reporting anymore. How about you?
Herb Day is a longtime local radio
personality and singer-musician.
You can email him at HEKAMedia@
yahoo.com and follow his work at
www.HerbDayVoices.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
which responded in kind
two days later.
In 1943, U.S. Navy Lt.
Today is Tuesday, April
(jg) John F. Kennedy
23, the 113th day of
2019. There are 252 days assumed command of
PT-109, a motor torpedo
left in the year.
boat, in the Solomon
Islands during World
Today’s Highlights
War II. (On Aug. 2, 1943,
in History
PT-109 was rammed
On April 23, 1954,
and sunk by a Japanese
Hank Aaron of the Mildestroyer, killing two
waukee Braves hit the
crew members; Kennedy
ﬁrst of his 755 majorand 10 others survived.)
league home runs in a
In 1968, student progame against the St.
testers began occupying
Louis Cardinals. (The
buildings on the campus
Braves won, 7-5.)
of Columbia University
in New York; police put
On this date
down the protests a week
In 1616 (Old Style
later. The Methodist
calendar), English poet
Church and the Evanand dramatist William
Shakespeare died in Strat- gelical United Brethren
Church merged to form
ford-upon-Avon on what
the United Methodist
has traditionally been
Church.
regarded as the 52nd
In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan
anniversary of his birth
was sentenced to death
in 1564.
In 1789, President-elect for assassinating New
York Sen. Robert F. KenGeorge Washington and
nedy. (The sentence
his wife, Martha, moved
was later reduced to life
into the ﬁrst executive
imprisonment.)
mansion, the Franklin
In 1971, hundreds of
House, in New York.
In 1898, Spain declared Vietnam War veterans
war on the United States, opposed to the conﬂict
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“In the future everyone will be world-famous
for 15 minutes.”
— Andy Warhol
American pop artist (1928-1987)

protested by tossing their
medals and ribbons over
a wire fence in front of
the U.S. Capitol.
In 1987, 28 construction workers were killed
when an apartment
complex being built in
Bridgeport, Connecticut,
suddenly collapsed.
In 1988, a federal
ban on smoking during
domestic airline ﬂights
of two hours or less went
into effect.
In 1995, sportscaster
Howard Cosell died in
New York at age 77.
In 1998, James Earl
Ray, who confessed to
assassinating the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr.
and then insisted he’d
been framed, died at a
Nashville, Tennessee, hospital at age 70.
In 2005, the recently

created video-sharing
website YouTube uploaded its ﬁrst clip, “Me at the
Zoo,” which showed YouTube co-founder Jawed
Karim standing in front
of an elephant enclosure
at the San Diego Zoo.
Ten years ago: President Barack Obama met
privately with leading
executives of credit-card
issuing companies; afterward, the president said
he was determined to get
a credit-card law passed
that eliminated the tricky
ﬁne print, sudden rate
increases and late fees.
Five years ago: Georgia
Gov. Nathan Deal signed a
law allowing legally owned
guns in bars without
restriction and in some
churches, schools and government buildings under
certain circumstances.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

From page 1

on Monday. When arriving
at the home on Jefferson
Avenue, an unidentified
female was reportedly found
with a gunshot wound to
the head, Taylor said. The
woman was later taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
where she was pronounced

Record

dead.
Taylor confirmed both
the woman and man were
residents of the home. No
further details were given on
their relationship. The name
of the woman is being withheld while family is notified.
The male had not been identified as of press time.
Assisting the Point PD
at the scene are the Mason
County Sheriff’s Department
and the West Virginia State

juveniles involved in the
disturbance. Harris went
on to state in addition to
using profane language
From page 1
at the bus driver one of
the students refused to
to SEORJ.
Deputies registered one exit the bus when told to
do so by himself. Deputy
sex offender.
Martin removed both
juveniles, took them to
March 5
the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, parDeputies arrested
ents were notiﬁed, and
one subject on a County
charges were ﬁled with
Court warrant.
juvenile court.
Deputies responded
Deputies registered two
to Pine Grove Road in
Racine due to a complaint sex offenders.
of a protection order violation. The caller advised March 15
that his wife had been
Deputies were disarrested for domestic vio- patched to State Route 7
lence the previous week
near State Route 143 to
and had been released on remove debris from the
bond. After speaking with roadway.
the caller, it was deterDeputies were dismined that there was no
patched to State Route 7
protection order in placer. near Bradbury Road to
However, the court had
put down an injured deer.
imposed a no contact
order as a condition of
March 18
the bond. Therefore, this
Deputies transported
incident was recorded
one male inmate from
and reported to the pros- Noble Correctional to
ecuting attorney’s ofﬁce
court and back to Noble
for further action.
Correctional.
Deputies responded
to Hutton Road due to
March 6
reports of an individual
Deputies transported
threatening to harm himone male inmate from
self. On arrival deputies
Noble Correctional
were able to speak with
Institution to the Meigs
County Jail for court and the subject and ensure
that this report was
then back to Noble Corunfounded. No further
rectional.
action.
March 7
Deputies responded
March 19
to a report of a disabled
Deputies attempted to
vehicle blocking the
serve three subpoenas.
roadway on State Route
Deputies acting on the
124. Deputies deployed
request of the U.S. Marﬂares and remained at
shal service, responded
the scene until a service
to an address on State
truck arrived to assist the Route 124 in Reedsville
disabled vehicle.
to attempt to locate an
Deputies attempted
offender at large. Howevto serve papers at three
er, deputies were unable
separate addresses.
to locate the suspect.
Deputies located a subDeputies processed 16
ject with a warrant out of applications for concealed
Athens County. Deputy
carry permits.
Leggett then transported
Deputies registered one
the subject to the county sex offender.
line and the prisoner was
transferred to the custody March 20
of OSP.
Deputies transported
one female from the Monroe County Jail, one male
March 11
from the Noble County
Deputies responded
Jail, and one male from
to Meigs High School
the Washington County
at the request of the
Jail to court.
administration in referDeputies responded
ence to an unruly juvenile
along with Emergency
at in-school suspension.
Medical Service personDeputies removed the
juvenile, he was taken to nel, to an address on
Rowe Road in Racine due
the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, parto a medical alert. This
ents were notiﬁed, and
report was discovered to
charges were ﬁled with
be unfounded, likely due
juvenile court.
to a malfunction with the
Deputies registered
medical alert equipment.
three sex offenders.
Acting on a tip called
into the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
March 12
deputies, with the assisDeputies conducted
tance of Rutland PD Mida trafﬁc stop on State
Route 7 near the Sunoco dleport PD and OSHP,
responded to the area of
station. The vehicle had
stalled, he was able to get State Route 7 near the
TNT gas station at Stothe vehicle running and
ry’s Run Road. The caller
back on the road.
stated that they had witDeputies conducted
nessed a green Chevrolet
a trafﬁc stop on State
pick-up truck at the TNT
Route 7 near Eastern
gas station with what
Local. The vehicle had
run out of fuel. The oper- appeared to be a corpse
in the bed of the truck.
ator contacted a family
member to bring her gas. After a thorough search
of the area deputies were
Deputy Martin assisted
her getting the vehicle off unable to locate any vehicle matching that descripthe roadway until they
tion. Deputies then
could arrive.
reviewed camera footage
at the TNT gas station,
March 14
Deputy Martin received however, were unable
a call from Meigs Middle to identify any vehicles
matching this description
School Assistant Princion camera footage. This
pal Dave Deem in refercase remains under invesence to unruly juveniles
tigation.
on a bus on State Route
Deputies registered two
124 near Langsville. Once
on scene, Deputy Martin sex offenders.
was advised by Transportation Director Dean
March 21
Harris there were two
Deputies responded to

Police. As of 5:30 p.m. on
Monday, law enforcement
officers had secured the
scene and were awaiting the
arrival of the WVSP Crime
Lab.
More information will be
released as it becomes available, according to the Point
PD.
Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio Valley
Publishing.

a call for assistance at
the Arbors of Pomeroy
due to a male patient
with an altered mental status displaying
combative behavior.
Upon arrival the patient
agreed to cooperate and
was transported to by
Meigs EMS. No further
action.
Acting on an anonymous tip, deputies with
the assistance of Pomeroy PD, responded to an
address on Point Lane in
Pomeroy. The caller stated that a known offender
at large, Michael Runyon, was staying at this
address. Deputies were
ultimately able to take
Runyon into custody
without incident.
Deputies located a
vehicle that had been
reported stolen from
West Virginia at the
park and ride near the
Meigs County High
school. The vehicle was
recovered and towed.
This case remains under
investigation.
Deputies conducted a
trafﬁc stop on a vehicle
on US 33 at the rest
area. The operator was
repairing the vehicle and
the vehicle was off the
roadway.
Deputies received a
call from Meigs Middle
School advising a student was reported not
getting off his school bus
at home by his mother.
The bus driver was contacted, it was veriﬁed
the student did not get
on the bus after school.
All local law enforcement agencies began
looking for the missing
juvenile while doing so
the juvenile’s mother
contacted the Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce to advise the juvenile arrived home safely.
Deputies followed up
with the juvenile and his
mother at their home,
the juvenile was counseled on his behavior.

April 3
Deputies transported
one female and two male
inmates to the Crawford
County Jail.
April 4
Deputies transported
one female inmate from
the Monroe County Jail
to court.
Deputies transported
one male inmate from the
Middleport jail to court
and back to the Middleport Jail.
Deputies were dispatched to North 3rd
Street, Racine in reference to a possible domestic dispute involving
a mother and her two
adult daughters. After
on scene, this report was
taken by Racine Police
Department.

call 740-992-3371.
Deputies took in two
applications for concealed carry permits.
Deputies transported
one male inmate from the
Washington County Jail
to the Meigs County Jail.
Deputies responded
to the TNT Pit stop on
State Route 7 due to a
complaint of a vehicle
parked blocking the air
compressor with a male
inside the vehicle sleeping. On arrival Deputy
Leggett contacted the
individual who gave
consent to search the
vehicle. However, no contraband was located, and
the individual was asked
to park elsewhere. No
further action.

ment. He was placed in
custody and transported
to the Meigs County
Jail.
Deputies conducted a
trafﬁc stop on a vehicle
on US 33 at State Route
681. The vehicle operator was given a verbal
warning for speed.
Deputies conducted a
trafﬁc stop on a vehicle
on US 33 just north of
State Route 681. The
vehicle operator was
given a verbal warning
on yielding to emergency vehicles.

April 10
Deputies transported
two females from jail to
court and back again.
Deputies also transported
three other females and
three males from different
April 9
jails and returned them
Deputies assisted
Vinton County Children after their court hearings.
Deputies responded
Services with locating
to a residence on Bigley
an individual.
Ridge after receiving
Deputies stopped a
April 8
a call about a man and
vehicle near the interDeputies registered
woman outside arguing.
section of Story’s Run
four sex offenders and
When units arrived, the
Road and State Route
one arsonist.
male had already left
Deputies are investigat- 7 for failure to signal.
The driver, Corbit Ratliff the residence and the
ing a report of a breakwas found to be driving female said it was just an
ing and entering at a
on a suspended license. argument, nothing physiresidence on Woodyard
Ratliff was cited for driv- cal. No further action
Road. Several antique
required.
items such as pictures of ing under suspension.
Deputies registered one
No further action.
past Presidents, an old
sex offender.
While on Story’s Run
chest, vases and dinnerDeputies took in two
Road deputies noticed
ware, and various other
application for concealed
an individual riding a
items were reported
carry permits.
bicycle who was known
missing. Anyone with
Deputies served ﬁve
to have an outstanding
any information about
court papers.
warrant on an indictthis incident is asked to

March 22
Deputies conducted a
trafﬁc stop on a vehicle
on Charles Chancey
Road, a verbal warning
for speed in a school zone
was issued.
Deputies transported
a juvenile from Southern
High School to O’Bleness
for a mental evaluation.
April 1
Deputies transported
one male inmate from
Noble Correctional to
court and back.
Meigs County Deputy
was dispatched to Go
Mart in Tuppers Plains
due to a call from EMS
advising they were in
route to a report of a
possible overdose. Upon
arrival the Deputy spoke
with the individual
after emergency personnel evaluated him. The
subject gave permission
to search the vehicle
resulting in the discovery
of multiple drug abuse
instruments. This case
remains under investigation.
A Meigs County Deputy was dispatched to Go
Mart in Tuppers Plains
for a report of shoplifting.
This case remains under
investigation.
April 2
Deputies transported
two male inmates from
Belmont Correctional to
court and back.
Deputies transported
one male inmate from the

Beth Sergent | Register

Law enforcement secured this home on Monday afternoon after a woman was found
with a reported gunshot wound to the head. A male has been taken into custoday in
regards to this incident, according to the Point Pleasant Police Department.

Meigs County Jail to the
Middleport Jail.

OH-70119963

Death

Tuesday, April 23, 2019 5

�Sports
6 Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Harvey, Rio shut down Cougars
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande senior right-hander Zach Harvey became the school’s all-time leader
in shutouts and set a new career-high with 14 strikeouts in a 1-0 win over Indiana
University-Kokomo, Saturday night, at Kokomo Municipal Stadium. The shutout
was the seventh of Harvey’s career.

KOKOMO, Ind. — As things
turned out, the University of
Rio Grande baseball team’s
long-awaited start to an important River States Conference
series with Indiana UniversityKokomo was worth the wait.
Senior right-hander Zach
Harvey struck out a careerhigh 14 batters and became the
school’s all-time leader in shutouts as the RedStorm posted
a 1-0 win over the Cougars,
Saturday night, at Kokomo
Municipal Stadium.
Rio Grande improved to
31-16 overall and 15-7 in conference play with the victory.
IU Kokomo dropped to 29-14

overall and 15-7 in the RSC
with its ﬁrst home loss in 18
outings this season.
The series opener, which was
originally planned for Friday,
was pushed back to Saturday
due to inclement weather and
then was bumped another 2-1/2
hours from its scheduled late
afternoon start before ﬁnally
getting underway.
Harvey, a native of Kenova,
W.Va., authored the seventh
shutout of his career, breaking
the school record of six that he
equaled earlier this season and
shared with Desmond Sullivan,
who originally set the mark
over the course of his career
from 2008-2011.
Harvey, who retired 14 of the
ﬁnal 15 batters he faced, also

fanned 14 to surpass his previous career-best mark of 11 set
last year against Ohio Christian
and equaled earlier this season
in a win over Cincinnati Christian on March 15.
Harvey also moved within
ﬁve strikeouts of equaling Sullivan’s single-season school
record of 107 set in 2011, while
also earning his 11th win of
the season - a mark which ties
him with Colton Williams of
Science &amp; Arts (Okla.) for the
most wins in all of NAIA.
From the outset, Harvey was
locked in a pitcher’s duel with
IUK starter Owen Callaghan,
who allowed just four hits and
three walks - while recording
See COUGARS | 7

EHS girls 1st,
boys 3rd at South
Webster Invite
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SOUTH WEBSTER, Ohio — Now that’s a productive week.
The Eastern track and ﬁeld team — which
won the girls title at the Vinton County Open on
Wednesday — followed it up with the Lady Eagles
winning the South Webster Invitational and the
EHS boys claiming third on Saturday in Scioto
County.
The Lady Eagles’ winning score of 162 was 76
ahead of Pike Eastern and South Webster in a tie
for second. Oak Hill was fourth with 54, followed
by Minford with 45, and Portsmouth West with
44. Clay and Green tied for seven with 34 apiece,
with Manchester rounded out the nine-team ﬁeld
with six.
The EHS girls won eight events, including all-4
relays, while recording 10 other top-4 ﬁnishes.
The 4x800m team of Ally Durst, Ashton Guthrie, Rhiannon Morris and Lexa Hayes set a winning pace of 11:37.49, while the 4x400m team of
Guthrie, Morris, Ally Durst and Whitney Durst
posted a time of 5:03.74.
The Lady Eagle quartet of Guthrie, Jaymie
Basham, Katlin Fick and Sydney Sanders recorded
a time of 2:08.52 in the 4x200m, while the team of
Sanders, Basham, Fick and Caterina Miecchi ran
the 4x100m in 56.73.
Basham won the 100m dash with a time of
14.14, while taking second in the 200m dash at
30.29. Miecchi — who was fourth in the 100m
dash at 14.47 — won the discus throw at 113-6,
and took second in the shot put at 31-5.25. Layna
Catlett was ﬁrst in the shot put and second in the
discus throw with respective distances of 32-5.5
and 109-8.
Morris earned the Lady Eagles’ other gold
medal, setting a pace of 13:16.11 in the 3200m
run.
Katlin Fick was second in the 100m hurdles with
a time of 18.02 and third in the 300m hurdles at
55.35, while Ally Durst was second in the 1600m
run at 5:51.21 and third in the 800m run with a
time of 2:50.41.
See EHS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, April 23
Baseball
Ironton SJ at River Valley,
5 p.m.
Southern at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Meigs at Marietta, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan,
5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Spring
Valley, 7 p.m.
Softball
Southern at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Nitro at Point Pleasant,
5:30
Meigs at Marietta, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan,
5 p.m.
Hannan at Ironton SJ,
5:30
Track and Field
Eastern, OVCS, Wahama
at River Valley Open, 4:30
Tennis
Gallia Academy at
Marietta, 4:30
Lincoln County at Point
Pleasant, 4:30

Wednesday, April 24
Baseball
Trimble at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 5
p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 5 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Ironton St.
Joseph, 5 p.m.
Softball
Trimble at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 5
p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 5 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Ironton St.
Joseph, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
South Gallia, Southern at
Athens, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at
Ravenswood, 4:30

Photos by Alex Hawley | Sentinel

GAHS senior Jacob Campbell tackles Licking Valley’s Connor McLaughlin (22), during the Region 15 postseason opener on Nov. 3, 2018,
in Jackson, Ohio.

Blue Devils ready for All-Star Classic
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio —
Blue and White take to
the big stage.
Gallia Academy head
football coach Alex Penrod, and GAHS senior
Jacob Campbell will represent the Blue Devils at
the 74th OHSFCA NorthSouth All-Star Classic on
April 27 at Washington
High School’s Paul Brown
Tiger Stadium in Massillon.
Coach Penrod — the
2018 Ohio Prep Sports
Writers Association Division IV Coach of the
Year, who led the Blue
Devils to a 9-2 mark and
an outright Ohio Valley
Conference championship — will be one of ﬁve
assistant coaches on the
Division 4-7 South squad,
with Franklin Furnace
Green’s Ted Newsome
serving as head coach.
Campbell — a ﬁrst
team All-Ohioan and the
all-district Defensive
Player of the Year this
past fall — is one of four
linebackers on the Division 4-7 south squad.
Coach Penrod has thus
far enjoyed the NorthSouth experience, and
noted that being selected
to participate in the
nation’s longest-running
high school all-star game
was not only an honor
for him, but for the Blue
Devil community as a
whole.
“It’s really just an
honor, not only for
myself, but really for our
coaching staff, for our
players, our school dis-

Second-year GAHS head football coach Alex Penrod talks with
members of his team, during a break in the action of Gallia
Academy’s league title-clinching 36-33 victory on Oct. 19, 2018,
in Ironton, Ohio.

trict and our area,” Penrod said. “I’m very honored for being nominated
and being able to coach
in this game. It’s neat
really, because you see
some of the kids you’ve
played against during
the year. To really watch
a lot of football and see
those kids, to see what
other programs do, and
then to be able to interact
with them, it’s been a fun
process.
“It’ll be neat to be in
the spring time and actually get to coach football.
Not just talk about football and work on things,
but actually coach football and get that blood
ﬂowing a little bit sooner
than you normally do for

the regular season.”
Coach Penrod also talked about Campbell getting to represent the Blue
Devils one ﬁnal time.
“He’s one of those true
football players,” Penrod
said. “You have a lot of
kids that play football,
play basketball, run track,
those things, but he’s
solely a football kid and
he has that football mindset. To see him put those
shoulder pads and that
Oval-G helmet on again,
it’s really an honor for
him and all the hard work
he’s spent doing what he’s
loved. To be honored in
that way, to represent the
Oval-G one more time, it’s
been special.”
Campbell — who made

82 tackles, including 15
for loss, and forced a pair
of fumbles as a senior —
talked about what playing
in the North-South game
means to him, as well as
some of what he’s looking
forward to.
“It’s a real honor,”
Campbell said. “It just
shows the work I’ve put
in to get here, and how
much my coaches have
helped me along the way.
I’m looking forward to
going out and getting
to play football one last
time. We’re going to get
to go to the Pro Football
Hall of Fame and I haven’t
been there before, so
I’m pretty excited about
that.”
While visiting the Pro
Football Hall of Fame is a
bonus to the trip, Coach
Penrod also talked about
the value of the attraction.
“It’s the signiﬁcance of
what football is,” Penrod
said. “I’ve been to the
Hall of Fame one time, it
was 4-or-5 years ago. It’s
a very cool thing to see
all of those statues, to be
able to walk in there and
see Fawcett Stadium.”
The Division 4-7 team
held its ﬁrst practice in
Chillicothe on April 7,
and will be using the
indoor facility at Massillon High School once
they arrive in Stark County on Wednesday.
Campbell — who also
excelled on offense as a
senior, rushing for 630
yards and 18 touchdowns
on 105 carries — noted
that he hit it off with the
See DEVILS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 23, 2019 7

Lady Falcons rip Roane County

Wahama
competes in
Erickson Invite

By Bryan Walters

out to four runs.
The Lady Raiders countered
with a solo homer from Allie
Mace in the bottom of the fourth
SPENCER, W.Va. — Kept on
to close back to within 4-1, but
keeping on.
Wahama responded by sending
The Wahama softball team led
eight batters to the plate in the
wire-to-wire while notching its
17th consecutive victory on Satur- top of the ﬁfth.
Gibbs started the frame with
day with an 11-2 non-conference
victory over host Roane County in a single and stole second, then
Maddy VanMatre walked to put a
six innings.
pair on. Both Gibbs and VanMaThe visiting Lady Falcons (21tre used a pair of wild pitches to
1) secured their 15th mercy-rule
come around and score, making it
triumph of the spring by blasta 6-1 contest.
ing two homers through three
King and Lauren Noble also
innings, which led to a quick 4-0
ended up scoring on a Hannah
cushion.
Hannah Rose started the game Billups sacriﬁce bunt and a wild
pitch, respectively, while pushing
with a leadoff triple and scored
the lead out to 8-1.
one batter later on a groundout
Katie Gaughan delivered a twoby Emma Gibbs, then Tanner
King followed with a two-out solo out single to right that allowed
homer to center that gave the Red Kaydence Steele to score, cutting
the deﬁcit down to 8-2 through
and White a a 2-0 edge through
ﬁve complete.
one inning.
Noble doubled home Maddy
Maddy VanMatre delivered
VanMatre for a seven-run edge,
a two-run homer to left-center
then Billups received a baseswith two away in the third. Rose
loaded walk that allowed King
scored from second on the fourto come in for a 10-2 lead. Noble
bagger, doubling the WHS lead

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — The Wahama track
and ﬁeld team took part in the Erickson Invitational
hosted by Parkersburg South on Friday, with the Lady
Falcons taking ninth, and the WHS boys coming in
11th.
Winﬁeld won the girls team title with a score of
169.5, 75.5 ahead of the host Lady Patriots in second.
Marietta was third with 74, followed by Warren with
69.5, Parkersburg with 56, and John Marshall with 48.
Parkersburg Catholic took seventh with 24, Robert
C. Byrd was eighth with 18, while Wahama was ninth
with nine. Wirt County rounded out the 10-team ﬁeld
with ﬁve.
Leading the Lady Falcons, Abbie Lieving claimed
third in the high jump by clearing 5-00. MacKenzie
Barr cleared 7-6 and was sixth in the pole vault, while
the relay team of Karli Stewart, Harley Roush, Mary
Roush and Emma Tomlinson was ﬁfth in the 4x800m
with a time of 13:24.75.
Parkersburg and Warren were tied atop the boys
standings with 114 apiece. Parkersburg South was
third with 75, followed by Winﬁeld with 70, Ravenswood with 55.5 and Marietta with 40.5. John Marshall was seventh at 25, Wirt County was eighth at 23,
Robert C. Byrd took ninth at 21, Belpre claimed 10th
with 18, while Wahama and Parkersburg Catholic
scored one apiece to tie for 11th.
Josh Frye was the White Falcons’ top-ﬁnisher, placing sixth in the 400m dash with a time of 53.75.
Visit www.runwv.com for complete results of the
2019 Erickson Invitational.

also scored after Victoria VanMatre was hit by a pitch with the
bases loaded.
The Lady Falcons outhit the
hosts by an 8-5 overall margin
and both teams played an errorfree game. The guests left seven
runners on base, while RCHS
stranded three on the bags.
Rose was the winning pitcher of
record after allowing two earned
runs, ﬁve hits and one walk over
six innings while striking out two.
Mace took the loss after surrendering four earned runs, four hits
and two walks over 2.2 frames
while fanning one.
Rose, Noble and Maddy VanMatre led WHS with two hits apiece,
followed by Gibbs and King with
a safety apiece. VanMatre and
Billups each drove in two RBIs,
while King and VanMatre scored
three runs apiece.
Mace paced Roane County with
two hits, with Gaughan, Steele
and Ashlyn Spears also producing
a safety each.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

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

Stone leads Riverside
Senior League
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — Carl Stone, of Spencer, has taken
the early in the 2019 Senior Men’s Golf League at Riverside Golf Club, through three weeks of play.
Stone’s point total of 34.5 is three full point ahead
of second place Charlie Hargraves. Chuck Stanley
Sr. and Cliff Rice are currently tied for third with 31
apiece.
On Tuesday, a total of 52 players were divided into
13 four-man teams.
The winning foursome, ﬁring a nine-under par 61,
was the team of Willis Korb, Larry Davis, Steve Safford and Chuck Stanley Sr. Three shots back, there
was a ﬁve-way tie for second place.
The closest to the pin winners were Randall Kinzell
on the ninth hole and Jimmy Joe Hemsley on No. 14.

Cliffside Senior Golf
League Opening Day

Point Pleasant Athletic
HOF nominations

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Men’s Senior
Golf League opens its 2019 season on Tuesday,
April 30, at Cliffside Golf Course. Registration will
begin weekly at 8:15 a.m. with a shotgun start at 9
a.m. There is a $5 fee for every competitor during
each week of play.
Players will be grouped in two or more ﬂights,
depending on the number of players for each week’s
play — with weekly pairing determined by a blind
draw.
The top three players from each ﬂight will receive
weekly prize money and each player will earn points
towards the overall league championship. Each
player uses their own ball and has to play in at least
10 of the 19 weeks of competition to be eligible for
end of season prize money.
For more information, contact the Cliffside Golf
Course at 740-446-4653.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant High School Athletic Hall of Fame committee is
reminding everyone that they are currently accepting
applications for the class of 2019. The deadline to
submit applications is Wednesday, May 1. Applications can be found on the Point Pleasant High School
website (pphs.maso.k12.wv.us), Farmers Bank and
Ohio Valley Bank in Point Pleasant, or at the River
Museum’s temporary ofﬁce on Main Street. Applications can also be picked up at the high school as well.
All applications will need to include a bio/list
of accomplishments at the time the application is
submitted or the application will be denied. Applications can be submitted to any HOF committee member or turned in to the Point Pleasant High School.
The date and time of this years festivities will be
announced soon.
Please contact Jim Tatterson at 407-470-0983 with
any questions.

Cougars
From page 6

11 strikeouts of his own - over
seven innings for just his second

loss in six decisions.
The only mistake by Callaghan,
who suffered just his second loss
in six decisions, was a leadoff
home run he served up to Rio
junior Dylan Shockley (Minford,
OH) in the sixth inning. Shockley

accounted for two of the RedStorm’s four hits.
Noah Darr had two of the Cougars’ four hits, while Jared Heard
added a double in a losing cause.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

TUESDAY EVENING

EHS

Browning, Colton Combs
and Jayden Evans won
the 4x200m and 4x400m
From page 6
with respective times
of 1:42.34 and 3:57.25.
Guthrie claimed second Meanwhile, the team
of Combs, Nick Brownin the 400m dash with
ing, Noah Browning and
a time of 1:14.61, while
Sanders was runner-up in Bryce Newland turned in
the long jump with a leap a winning time of 9:08.22
in the 4x800m.
of 14-5.25.
Noah Browning was
The host Jeeps won
champion of the 400m
the boys team title with
dash with a time of 53.21,
a 133, just two ahead of
while Mason Dishong
runner-up Minford. The
was runner-up in both the
Eagles scored 74, eight
shot put and discus throw
ahead of Oak Hill in
fourth. Pike Eastern was with respective distances
of 41-7.75 and 133-4.
ﬁfth with 64, followed
Nick Browning took
by Green with 62, Portsmouth West with 59, and third in the 800m run at
Clay with 18. Manchester 2:16.03, while Newland
tallied two and capped off was third in the 3200m
run at 11:33.18.
the nine-team ﬁeld.
Visit www.baumspage.
The Eagles won four
com for complete results
events, including three
of the 2019 South Webster
relays, while placing
Invitational.
second twice and third
twice.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740The EHS relay team
446-2342, ext. 2100.
of Nick Browning, Noah

BROADCAST

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39

From page 6

unlikeliest of his new
teammates.
“I’m making new
friends, I’ve met a few
teammates and I’ve gotten close with a few,”
Cambell said. “The kid
I’m closest with now is
Licking Valley’s running
back (Connor McLaughlin), who we played in
the playoffs. I’m going
to room with him in the
hotel. I was surprised
by that, I didn’t think
that we’d become friends

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)

when I got there.”
McLaughlin — ran for
250 yards and scored the
ﬁnal three touchdowns
of Licking Valley’s 36-12
Region 15 postseason win
over the Blue Devils —
who won’t be the only former foe turned teammate
for Campbell, as Fairland’s Joel Lambiotte is
one of two quarterbacks
on the squad.
The Division 4-7 game
is scheduled to kickoff at
noon, with the Division
1-3 game starting at 4
p.m.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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The Curse of Oak Island
Oak Island "Voyage to the Curse of Oak Island "The Drilling Down "The Secret (:05) Lost Gold of World
"The Paper Chase"
Bottom of the Cenote"
Truth Behind the Curse" (N) Weapons" (N)
War II "Nazi Concrete" (N)
Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Beverly "A Supreme Snub" Beverly Hills (N)
Mexican Dynasties (N)
(5:00) Good Deeds (‘12, Com/Dra) Tyler Perry. TV14
Being Mary Jane: Becoming Pauletta TV14
Games "Pilot" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Rehab "House of Horrors" Restored (N) Restored (N) H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
(:05)
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (‘02, Fam) Daniel Radcliffe. Harry
(‘01, Fant) Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe. TVPG
Potter returns to Hogwarts only to find the school plagued by mysterious attacks. TVPG

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

There's
The Making of /(:15)
Skyscraper (‘18, Act) Dwayne Real Sports With Bryant
Wyatt Cenac Vice News
Tonight (N) Johnson. A man tries to get into the world's tallest
Gumbel (N)
Something About Mary
(‘98, Com) Ben Stiller. TVMA
skyscraper to save his family from a fire. TV14
(5:50)
The Blind Side (‘09, Spt) Tim McGraw,
Gulliver's Travels A writer becomes (:25)
Cool Runnings An unlikely
Sandra Bullock. An affluent family takes in a homeless
shipwrecked on an island where he is much team of bobsledders from Jamaica is formed
teenager who becomes a star football player. TV14
taller than the tiny citizens. TVPG
to compete in the 1988 Olympics. TVPG
(4:50)
Mr. 3000 (2004, Comedy) Angela Bassett, Michael
(:25) The Catcher Was A Spy (2018,
The Chi "Past Due" Cruz
deals with blowback from
Swingers
Rispoli, Bernie Mac. A retired baseball player learns he is Drama) A Major League Baseball player
Ronnie's confession.
TV14
actually three hits short of his 3,000-hit record. TV14
lives a double life. TVMA
(5:00)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Daily Sentinel

AP/CP Survey: 48 percent of NHLPA reps favor playoff change
By Stephen Whyno

8, the structure that was
used from 1994-2013.
This is the sixth playoffs where each division’s
Hockey players are
conditioned to think that top three teams and a
wild card are bracketed
winning the Stanley Cup
means going through the together with no reseeding by round. A year ago,
best teams to be the best
Nashville and Winnipeg
team.
That doesn’t mean they ﬁnished ﬁrst and second
in the league in points and
are blind to some of the
met in the second round.
inequalities of the NHL’s
The same thing happened
current divisional playoff
with Washington and
format. An Associated
Press/Canadian Press sur- Pittsburgh in 2017.
“It’s kind of tough the
vey of NHLPA representafact that a lot of good
tives from all 31 teams
teams are going out
shows that almost half
favor changing the format ﬁrst or second rounds,”
— and most of those sup- Columbus defenseman
David Savard said. “I
port going back to seeding the Eastern and West- think maybe we need
ern conferences 1 through to look back at maybe 1
Associated Press

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

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or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
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second consecutive year,
while the Capitals and
Penguins met in the playoffs three times in a row
with each series going at
least six games.
“I think it’s good for the
rivalries,” said New Jersey
goaltender Cory Schneider, who supports the
current format. “I think
it’s good for the teams
seeing each other year
after year. You can cry
what’s fair or not fair, the
two best teams meeting in
the second round, but it’s
going to be great hockey
one way or another. I
think that’s the best part
about the playoffs is that
it’s a two-month gladiator
event where everyone just

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

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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
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against 8 and play that
format.”
Savard was among 15
player representatives
(48.4 who said the divisional format should be
changed. Seven (22.6%)
others said it should stay
the same and the other
nine (29%) were noncommittal. The players were
surveyed March 7-April 4,
before the playoff matchups for this year were fully
set.
The NHL went to back
to a divisional structure
similar to what it used
from 1982-93 in large part
to create or revive rivalries. Toronto and Boston
are going to a Game 7
in the ﬁrst round for the

beats the crap out of each
other.”
Presidents’ Trophy winner Tampa Bay losing in
the ﬁrst round to eighthseeded Columbus is more
of a Lightning problem
than a format problem. If
the Lightning had gotten
past the Blue Jackets, a
potential second-round
series against the Bruins
would have guaranteed to
knock out one of the top
three teams in the league
before the conference
ﬁnals.
Travel is the biggest
concern among players when it comes to a
playoff format, and it’s
much more of an issue
in the spread-out West.

Grouping by divisions is
designed to limit those
issues, but the wild-card
system means a team
like Nashville could face
a team from California,
Vancouver, Edmonton or
Calgary in the ﬁrst round
if it lines up that way.
“The biggest issue is
probably the travel for the
Western Conference,” said
Predators defenseman
Yannick Weber, who did
not indicate a preference
either way for changing
the format. “If we have
to go to California for
each round and Eastern
teams have a little bit of
an easier schedule, I think
that’s the only downside
from it.”

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

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HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

/HJDO 1RWLFH
All parties shall take notice that the Village of Pomeroy has
filed an action to appropriate the following real property in the
Court of Common Pleas of Meigs County Ohio bearing &amp;DVH
1XPEHU �� &amp;9 ��: Situate in the Village of Pomeroy, County
of Meigs and State of Ohio and more specifically described as
follows:
Beginning at the southwest corner of Lot #8 as it appears in
Volume 8 Page 285 of Meigs County Plat Map on file in the office of the Meigs County Recorder, and running to a point with
coordinates -82.022936, 39.0298 and hereinafter referenced as
Point A; thence from Point A running in a straight line parallel
with the westernmost property line of said Lot #8 to the low
water mark of the Ohio River to a point, hereinafter referenced
as Point B; thence from Point B and running upriver along riverbank and following the low water mark of the Ohio River to another point at the intersection of the low water mark of the Ohio
River and a straight line running parallel with the easternmost
property line of Lot #12 as it appears in Volume 8 Page 285 of
Meigs County Plat Map on file in the office of the Meigs County
Recorder, hereinafter referenced as Point C; thence from Point
C in a straight line parallel to the easternmost property line of
Lot #12 to a point with coordinates -82.022242, 39.029894 and
hereinafter referenced as Point D; thence in a straight line parallel to the easternmost property line of Lot #12 from Point D to
the southeast corner of Lot #12; thence from the southeast corner of Lot #12 in a straight line along with the southernmost
property lines of Lot #12, Lot #11, Lot #10, Lot #9 and Lot#8 to
the place of beginning. 7KH ODVW GD\ WR DQVZHU VDLG DFWLRQ
IRU DSSURSULDWLRQ LV -XQH �UG� ����� DQG WKH ILQDO KHDULQJ LQ
WKLV PDWWHU LV VFKHGXOHG IRU -XO\ ��� ����.
Adam R Salisbury, Esq.
PO BOX 381
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6368
4/9/19, 4/16/19, 4/23/19, 4/30/19, 5/7/19, 5/14/19

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, April 23, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

By Bil and Jeff Keane

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By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

see what’s brewing on the

job market.
EURZVH�MREV��SRVW�\RXU�UHVXPH��JHW�DGYLFH

jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Raiders win Fairland Invitational
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio
— All of Gallia County
shined … but the Raiders
were the brightest.
The River Valley boys
and Fairland girls came
away with top honors Friday at the 2019 Riverside
Physical Therapy Dragons
Invitational hosted by Fairland High School.
Both competitions featured a dozen teams apiece,
with RVHS, Gallia Academy and South Gallia all
participating at the annual
track and ﬁeld event.
The Raiders won the
boys meet by double digits
and posted a winning tally
of 101 points, with Rock
Hill (90.5) and the Blue
Devils (75.5) rounding out
the top three positions.
The Rebels were 12th with
15 points.
The Raiders landed a trio
of event titles and eight top
three efforts, including a
pair of wins in relay events.
Eric Weber was the lone
individual champion after
winning the discus with a
throw of 135 feet, 3 inches.

The quartet of Rory
Twyman, Dylan Fulks,
Brandon Call and Cody
Wooten secured the
4x800m relay crown with a
time of 8:56.37, while Call,
Twyman, Caleb McKnight
and Trevor Simpson won
the 4x400m relay title with
a mark of 3:38.31.
Ty VanSickle was the
shot put runner-up with
a heave of 44 feet, 1 inch.
Dylan Fulks was also
second in the 3200m run
(11:10.25) and third in the
1600m run (5:05.66).
Cody Wooten was
third in the 3200m event
(11:25.78) and Nathan
Cadle was also third in the
pole vault (10-6).
The Blue Devils scored
a pair of event titles and a
quartet of top three ﬁnishes. Cory Call won the long
jump (19-3.25) and Ian
Hill was the 300m hurdles
champion with a mark of
42.23 seconds.
The quartet of Hill, Tristin Crisenbery, Jonathan
Grifﬁn and Ayden Roettker placed second in the
4x400m relay event with
a time of 3:44.44. Trevor
Simpson was also third in

the 400m dash with a mark
of 54.85 seconds.
Kyle Northup secured
the Rebels’ only event title
and top-three ﬁnish after
winning the high jump with
a cleared height of six feet
even.
The Lady Raiders were
second, only to Fairland
(126), with a ﬁnal tally of
108.5 points. Coal Grove
was third with 73 points,
while the Blue Angels
(68) and Lady Rebels
(8) respectively ﬁnishing
fourth and 11th overall.
Elisabeth Moffett
secured the lone event title
for the Silver and Black
after winning the discus
event with a throw of 98
feet even.
Lauren Twyman had a
pair of runner-up efforts in
the 100m dash (13.60) and
800m run (2:34.65), while
Savannah Reese was second in the 400m dash with
a time of 1:03.15.
Taylor Huck was the pole
vault runner-up with a mark
of 8 feet, 6 inches. Kelsey
Brown was also second in
the shot put with a heave of
33 feet, 2.25 inches.
Twyman, Reese, Kate

Nutter and Gabrielle Gibson teamed to ﬁnish second
in the 4x100m relay with
a time of 54.35 seconds.
Reese, Nutter, Twyman
and Rakia Penick was also
second in the 4x400m relay
with a mark of 4:30.42.
The Blue Angels landed
one championship in the
4x200m relay as the quartet of Alivia Lear, Gretchen
McConnell, Gabby McConnell and Zoe Smith posted
a time of 1:53.82.
Gabby McConnell was
third in the 300m hurdles
(53.36) and Smith was
also third in the 200m dash
(28.25). Maddie Wright
was third in the high jump
with a cleared height of 4
feet, 8 inches.
Jessica Luther had the
top ﬁnish for the Lady Rebels after placing fourth in
the 3200m run with a time
of 14:59.89.
Visit baumspage.com
for complete results of the
2019 Riverside Physical
Therapy Dragons Invitational hosted by Fairland
High School.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.

Hedges, Padres beat Reds 4-3 to end losing streak
SAN DIEGO (AP) — It had been
a week since the San Diego Padres
had a lead and slightly longer since
they’d won a game.
Austin Hedges homered and Wil
Myers hit a go-ahead, two-run double
in the four-run third inning for the
Padres, who beat the Cincinnati Reds
4-3 on Sunday to snap a six-game losing streak.
Myers’ double to left off Tyler
Mahle gave the Padres their ﬁrst lead
since April 14. They hadn’t led since
taking a 1-0 advantage in the ﬁrst
inning at Arizona in a game they’d
lose 8-4. They returned home and
lost two to Colorado before dropping
the ﬁrst three games of this series.
The losing streak dropped the
Padres from a three-game lead atop
the NL West to second place, 2½
games behind Los Angeles.
“It’s one of those things, the more
you know that you’re going to get out
of a situation, the quicker you get out
of it,” Myers said. “This is an offense
that however many games you lose,
we have an offense that can come out

and win 10 in a row. It’s one of those
things just knowing we’re good hitters, knowing that we’re going to get
out of it.”
San Diego scored only 13 runs during those six losses.
Left-hander Joey Lucchesi (3-2)
stopped the skid by holding the
Reds to one run and ﬁve hits in 5
2/3 innings. He struck out eight and
walked two. Kirby Yates pitched the
ninth for his 10th save in as many
chances.
Mahle (0-2) allowed four runs and
seven hits in six innings, struck out
nine and walked none.
The Reds jumped ahead for the
fourth straight game when Jose Iglesias’ inﬁeld single with one out in
the second brought in Matt Kemp,
aboard on a leadoff double to left.
Hedges tied it by homering to left
leading off the third, his third. Mahle
struck out Lucchesi but then allowed
ﬁve straight hits that led to three
more runs.
Rookie Fernando Tatis Jr. extended
his hitting streak to 10 games before

being thrown out trying to steal
second base. The Padres appealed,
but the call was upheld after a review
of 3 minutes, 12 seconds. Manuel
Margot and Manny Machado singled
ahead of Myers, who doubled to left
as Kemp slammed into the wall trying to make the catch. Kemp came
out of the game an inning later. Eric
Hosmer followed by doubling in
Myers for a 4-1 lead.
“It just takes one inning, takes one
swing,” Myers said. “You’re always
closer than you think. It was nice
today to get that inning going.”
The Reds pulled within one after
home runs by Kyle Farmer and
Eugenio Suarez in the seventh.
Farmer’s third came off Brad Wieck
and Suarez’s ﬁfth was off Craig
Stammen.
“It’s great to be close in games and
have opportunities to win,” Reds
manager David Bell said. “We had
opportunities today, we had base
runners and I think that’s what you’re
looking for, and I think it’s just a
matter of time.

Meigs
County
X County
2019 Unclaimed Funds
The following is a list of current or former county residents who had unclaimed funds worth $50 or more
reported to the Ohio Department of Commerce Division of Unclaimed Funds within the past year. Check your
name and your friends and families’ names in the list. Names are listed under the hometown of the last known
address reported to the division.
Safe deposit box items received within the past year are listed ﬁrst.
If you see a possible match, you can start the process to claim your money:
Visit the division’s website at com.ohio.gov/unfd. Follow the directions to print your claim form. Complete the
form and mail it with a copy of the required proof of address to the address listed below.
The Ohio Department of Commerce
Division of Unclaimed Funds
77 South High Street, 20th Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43215-6108
877-644-6823 (OHIO-UCF)
TTY/TDD: 800-750-0750
Remember: The accounts listed here are only those worth $50 or more received in the past year, so even if you
don’t see your name here, check the website annually.

CHESTER
Lebert Carole Anne,7645 Barret Rd
Lebert John L,7645 Barret Rd
Smith Jacqueline,PO Box 44
Wolf Wanda,PO Box 116
LANGSVILLE
Green Phylis,W14735
Haddox Nancy,35253 Buck Run
Haddox Richard,35253 Buck Run
Hall Hana S,30283 TR 395
Jacks Freda M,PO Box 21
Johnson Kristal M,73702 SR 124
Jones Rachel A,31640 Red Hill Rd
Kennedy Keith,32974 Dexter Rd
Vickers Gary,32069 Titus Rd
Wooten Marshall,28110 SR 124
LONG BOTTOM
Bissell Brady,49251 Bissell Rd
Brewer Paula E,38321 SR 7
Brown Beth A,33649 Bashan Rd
Caruthers Gladys,46661 SR 248
Chrysler Capital,33649 Bashan Rd
Durham Amanda,35485 Bashan Rd
Hill Kenda K,47680 Scout Camp Rd
Hunt Glenda K,48225 Taylor Rd
Knapp Carl Jr,50883 Bigley Ridge
Littler Scott A,36585 TR 275
Marks Doris,46661 SR 248
Markworth Amy,49630 Eagle Ridge
McMillan Phyllis R,51005 Bald
Knob Stiversville
Meigs Elementary Basketball,54157
Fellowship Rd
Murphy Tracy,61578 SR 124
Scyoc Troy,35131 Hensley Rd

Shreve Hannah R,51005 Bald Knob
Stiversville
White William,35430 White Lane
Whitlatch Keitha,48336 Taylor Rd
MIDDLEPORT
Adkins Teresa A,45 Riverview Pl
Adkins Victoria C,60 1/2 Cole St
Barley Kristin,35134 Leading Creek
Bing Linda C,630 Mill St
Bishop Robert E,36812 SR 124
Bodimer Elinor,175 S 2nd Ave
Brannan Carl,288 Main St
Brannon Jesse,288 Main St
Brasel &amp; Brasel,36843 Leading
Creek
Brinker Wilda L,488 S 4th Ave
Call Kayla B,55 S 3rd Ave
Calvert Ronnie L,12 Railroad St
Cooper Kristin L,305 N 3rd Av
Cundiff Larry,55 S 3rd Ave
Daugherty Ella M,569 S Front Ave
Ebersbach Ashley M,709 N 2nd Av
George Ellen,30726 Stewart Hollow
Haning Tabatha L,348 Lincoln St
Harrison Kristin,737 Beech St
Hayes Edna Ms,424 Dickerson
Howley Shawn,581 1/2 South 4th
Ave
Jackie R Welker Election Fund,c/o
David Deem
Jewell Leonard Z Estate,333 Page
St
King Randi,38057 Zuspan Hollow
Lambert Charles C,961 S 2nd Av
Lambert Vickie L,PO Box 261
Lambert William,208 S 2nd Ave

Mankin Betty F,39325 Bradbury Rd
Matson Norman S,862 Pearl St
Matson Tamara L,862 Pearl St
Meadows Zachariah,271 1/2 N
Second Ave
Neece Howard D,31121 Neece Rd
Plumm Misty D,42 Park St
Qualls Julia R,176 Beech St
Reitmire Tracy L,PO Box 148
Richmond Tiffany D,37655 Leading
Creek
Sargent Wilma,797 S Second Ave
Searles Mary E,333 Page St
Smith Kenneth,363 Barefoot Hollow
Rd
Storms Tabitha,60 1/2 S 3rd Ave
Superior Auto Body,105 Hudson St
Swift Angela,280 Broadway St
Swift Regina G,1338 Powell St
Teaford Mary J,825 Page St
Toops Eric,156 South Third Ave
Toth Robert D,476 Sycamore St
Waugh Cynthia,361 S Front Ave
Williams,36351 Paulins Hill
Wilson Randy,3 Peach Cir Dr
POMEROY
Alice J Kautz Rev Trust,35701 SR 7
Anderson Bernadette,242 Mulberry
Ave
Anthony Paul D,314 Condor St
Averion R A Md C&amp;J M,618 E
Main St
Big Timber Trails Outdoors
Prod,216 E Main St
Bowen Joyce,43220 SmithGeoglein Rd

Boyd Tami,32011 Welchtown Rd
Brown Harold D,210 W Main St
Buckley Brent,42557 Lovers Ln
Buckley Twila,42557 Lovers Ln
Campbell Debbie,31980 Hysell Run
Casteel Cynthia M,39448 Union Ave
Corliss Rose,41069 Starcher Rd
Cotterill Tina,35198 SR 143
Cremeans Annette N,42994 SR 124
Cundiff Paulette F,37228 SR 143
Dailey Annette D,42994 SR 124
Davis Allyson,138 Lincoln Hill
Davis Andrew E,215 Mulberry Ave
Day Derrick D,38998 Mudfork Rd
Day Ralph,209 Spring Ave
Day Retta,209 Spring Ave
Day Shane I,209 Spring Ave
Dill Charles R,1 1/2 Fisher St
Ebersbach Autumn,116 1/2 Main St
Elizabeth Reed Estate,141 Mulberry
Ave
Elliott William L,255 Mulberry AVE
Epple John,34256 Crew Rd
Evans James T,42725 Cook Rd
Ewing James,35640 Texas Rd
Facemyer Cheryl,37712
Rocksprings Rd
Fields Joseph,PO Box 67
Fields Paulien V,PO Box 67
Garnes Harry D Jr,PO Box 183
Gibson Mary V,35519 SR 143
H D Brown Dds Inc,PO Box 704
Halar Wendy C,42089 Cook Rd
Harper Lewis W Jr,39228 SR 143
Hubbard James W,115 Brick St
Imagine Pomeroy,109 W Second St
Jeffers Mary A,300 Mulberry Ave
Jewell Leonard Z,214 W Main St
John S Superior Auto Body Inc,115
Brick St
Jones David A,269 Lincoln Hl
Kauff Renee M,38501 W Shade Rd
Kautz Alice J,35701 SR 7
Kautz Alice J Trust,35701 SR 7
Kautz William,34286 Crew Rd
King Franklin,35608 King Ridge
Koenig Bonnie J,37268 SR 143
Lehew Margaret,299 Spring Ave
Lewis Nikita K,306 Spring Valley Ln
McKinney Wesley,38573 SR 124
Moon Catherine I,242 Condor St
Moore Karen S,38895 SR 143
Moore Kimberly S,300 Wright St
Morgan Zachary D,32995 Myers Rd
National Child Safety Council,104
E 2nd St
Newsome Heather M,350 Riverview
Dr
Paul M Reed President Of The
Farmers,211 W 2nd St
Peoples Insurance Agency Llc,115
Ct St
Phillips Eugene,1618 Lincolin Hts

Point track
fares well
at DCHS
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WEST UNION, W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant track and ﬁeld teams claimed
seven titles, 18 top-three ﬁnishes and
a pair of top-three team placements on
Friday at the 2019 Cline Stansberry Invitational hosted by Doddridge County.
The Lady Knights ﬁnished second,
only to Williamstown (162), with a
ﬁnal tally of 100 points. Ritchie County
was third in the nine-team ﬁeld with 92
points.
The Point girls had nine top-three
efforts and a pair of event titles, both of
which were claimed by Addy Cottrill in
the shot put (36-7.5) and discus (11911) competitions. Tristan Wilson was
also second in the discus with a throw of
99 feet, 7 inches.
Samantha Saunders was the pole vault
runner-up (9-6) and the quartet of Kady
Hughes, Elicia Wood, Sydnee Moore and
Madison Hatﬁeld were second in the
4x400m relay (4:32.38).
Moore, Hatﬁeld, Ashley Staats and
Teagan Hay combine for a second place
ﬁnish in the 4x200m relay (1:55.47)
and were also third in the 4x100m relay
(54.64).
Wood was third in the high jump (5-2)
and Kayla Butler was third in the shot
put (33-6.5).
The Black Knights came away with
ﬁve event titles and nine top-three
ﬁnishes en route to a third place effort
95 points. Doddridge County won the
eight-team boys meet with 109.5 points,
with Ritchie County (104.5) landing in
the runner-up spot.
The foursome of Preston Taylor, Brady
Adkins, Garrett Hatten and Jovone Johnson won the 4x100m relay with a time
of 45.97 seconds. Adkins, Nick Leport,
Kaydean Eta and Logan Southall also
claimed the 4x110m shuttles hurdles
relay crown with a mark of 1:01.54.
Eta won the 110m hurdles event
(15.63) and Taylor ran away with the
100m dash title (11.61). Luke Wilson was also ﬁrst in the 1600m run
(4:39.35) and second in the 3200m run
(10:29.54).
Trevon Franklin was the shot put
runner-up with a throw of 46 feet, onehalf inch. Hatten was third in the 100m
dash (11.83) and Johnson was also third
in the 200m dash (24.13).
Visit runwv.com for complete results
of the 2019 Cline Stansberry Invitational
hosted by Doddridge County.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2101.

Pomeroy Village Of,660 E Main St
Psi Construction Llc,41074 Baker
Rd
Rankin Eric,40225 SR 692
Rankin Rhonda,40225 SR 692
Reitano James,38420 Mt Union Rd
Richard Iva R,37613 Texas Rd
Rifﬂe Jennifer J,43100 Burke Rd
Rizer Franklin M,738 E Main St
Rizer Wanda M,738 E Main St
Robbins Gregory,41460 Starcher
Rd
Robie Kelli S,32654 Rosehill Rd
Rosler Angie,38676 Staneart Rd
Sayre Brady E,317 Wright St
Searles Amanda,38573 SR 143
Shaw Taylor,41890 SR
Simpson Mfg Co,33995 Thomas St
Smith Adam,160 W Locust St
Smith D Carolyn,112 High St
Smith Donald E,PO Box 204
Smith Eleanor R,112 High St
Smith Harrie Marie,242 Mulberry
Ave
Sun Ventures Inc,278 W Main St
Superior Auto Body,350 Riverview
Dr
Swisher Mina,258 W Main St
Taylor Kevin A,39360 Gold Ridge
Turner Codie R,124 Mulberry Ave
Watson Edith D,111 Ebenzer St
Watson Rick D Sr,144 Mulberry Ave
Weaver Carolyn,40064 Weaver Rd
Willis Tiffany N,300 Mulberry Av
Wilson Janine,2 Cave St
Zahran Liza J,19 Point Ln

Rees Terrie,45635 Eagle Ridge
Reinhart Barbara E,104 Fourth St
Ritchie Charles,PO Box 45
Ritchie Joyce,PO Box 9
Sellers Misty D,613 Elm St
Shain Laren,805 Main St
Smith Delbert,46305 Bowman Run
Wilson Ronald,49680 Manuel Rd
REEDSVILLE
Boswell Matthews W,67763 SR 124
Carter Jimmy L,51155 SR 681
Chevalier Victor L Sr,52250 Rye Rd
Collins Tabitha N,51818 Rice Run
Dillon Larry,55011 Hudson Rd
Durst Jeff N,51130 SR 681
Epling Eyette Y,69398 SR 124
Epling Robert,69398 SR 124
Gross Wanda K,66279 SR 124
Ice Newton,54455 SR 681
Jones Robert Heirs,53525 Number
Nine Rd
Keller Mary Jean,52189 Rye Rd
Shook Joshua L,50639 Lickskillet
Rd
Sprague Adam,40850 Vineyard Rd
Weddington Garry,67635 SR 124
Young Kathie,39490 Success Rd
RUTLAND
Arnold Walter,34425 New Lima Rd
Mc Donough Carol,32120
McCumber Rd
McClure John,35185 Cremeans Rd
Napper Bonnie L,33591 SR 143
Smith Terry,33756 New Lima Rd
Stewart Cody,36190 Cremeans Rd
Teachout Megan,167 N Main St

PORTLAND
McFall Patricia C,55755 SR 124
Profﬁtt James,54297 New Portland
Rd
RACINE
Anderson James,31255 Roy Jones
Rd
Barr Howard,32360 Amberger Rd
Burton Charles S,42890 Forest Run
Caldwell Christina,47799 Plants Rd
Daboni Jacques,29120 CR 28
Diddle James E,PO Box 369
Dunfee Diane E,703 South
Broadway St
First United Methodist Church,PO
Box 457
Fisher Sarah B,PO Box 146
Hess Tanya S,47466 TR 100
Laudermilt Bryce A,26963 Apple
Grove
Lee Adam,31305 Bashan Rd
Miller Kathy,47890 Greenwood
Cemetery
Profﬁtt Janetta R,26812 Mile Hill
Pyles Amiee D,PO Box 278

SYRACUSE
Arnott Stefanie,2270 Ash St
Counts Victor R,185 3rd &amp; Crooks
Fryar Tara,PO Box 731
Greer Grace,Box 231
Hubbard Angela,PO Box 98
Hudson Dencil,1118 College St
Hudson Dencil R,PO Box 9
Matthews Catherine,2210 Karr St
Runyon Noah,PO Box 726

OH-70119528

10 Tuesday, April 23, 2019

TUPPERS PLAINS
Chapman Maxine,PO Box 21
Church Morgan,PO Box 197
Dorst Howard K,17 Main St
Frieg Stephen J,PO Box 15
Grubb Nathan,P O Box 11
Helgesen John A II,PO Box 293
Helgesen John E,2a Lincoln Rd
Koenig Travis,PO Box 194
Marcinko Joseph,42255 E Main St
Taylor Douglas,PO Box 234
Zumbach Beulah M,PO Box 35

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