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                  <text>STANDING WITH UKRAINE
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SUPPORT
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support their freedom and
UKRAINE
sovereignty.
www.aimmediacares.com
Please visit
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working to help the Ukrainian people in
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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 123, Volume 76

Historic courthouse hosts mock trial

Thursday, June 23, 2022 s 50¢

Commission
approves
agreements
Staff Report

Photos by Linda Blosser | Courtesy

Students from Gallipolis and Ashland, Ky. recently participated in a Mock Trial at the Old Meigs County Courthouse/Chester Courthouse, in Chester.

Students from three area schools participate
By Lorna Hart
lhart@aimmediamidwest.com

CHESTER — Students
from Gallipolis and Ashland,
Ky., recently participated in
a mock trial at the Old Meigs
County Courthouse/Chester
Courthouse, in Chester. The
two groups of homeschooled
students competed with each
other in a mock case involving
a property owner whose tower
fell and killed two people who
were trespassing on private
property.
The honorable Judge Scott
Powell made time in his schedule to attend the the trial. Judge
Powell currently presides over
both the Probate and Juvenile
Divisions of the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas. As
part of his responsibilities, the
Juvenile Court operates and
maintains a probation department that provides numerous
services. He also serves as
Clerk of Courts for both divisions and maintains court
records as far back as 1820s.
During the mock trial, students were divided into three
teams, each presenting the
same case. A jury of adults
judged the teams, and gave each
points on their presentations.
The ﬁnal verdicts for the property owner were two guilty and
one not guilty decisions.
The Old Meigs Courthouse in
Chester saw many court cases
after its completion in 1823.

Judge Scott Powell generously made time in his schedule to preside over a Mock Trial for students held at the Old Meigs
County Courthouse/Chester Courthouse.

Chester remained the seat of
Meigs County government until
the designation of Pomeroy
1841. The courthouse, Ohio’s
oldest extant building that was
constructed as a courthouse, is
now a museum operated by the
Chester-Shade Historical Association. Guests can tour the

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building that was brought back
to it’s original appearance after
a complete renovation. The
Courthouse and adjacent Academy were listed together on the
National Register of Historic
Places in 1975.
For information on events
at the courthouse, or how to

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
All content © 2022 The Daily Sentinel, an edition
of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. All rights reserved.
No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any form without
permission from the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

Lorna Hart is a staff writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing.

Ohio Valley Bank warns of email scam
6682. As always, if you receive suspiMessage claims
cious calls, texts or emails regarding
banking, please report it by
recipient has won prize your
calling the bank or visiting your local

Prices are subject to change at any time.

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH

reserve the facilities for one of
your own, call 740-985-9822 or
visit their Facebook page: ChesterShadeHistorialAssociation.
© 2022 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights reserved.

OHIO VALLEY — Ohio Valley
Bank advises customers to be mindful of an email scam that has become
more prevalent.
The email in question is claiming
that the recipient has won a prize.
The email instructs individuals to
pay shipping costs in order to receive
their prize. This is a scam.
Anyone who receives this email or
one of similar nature, do not respond.
If you are unsure regarding the validity, please call the bank at 800-468-

branch.
Ohio Valley Bank, which operates
16 ofﬁces and was established in
1872, is a FDIC-insured community
bank based in Gallipolis, Ohio, and is
a state member bank of the Federal
Reserve. Common stock for the bank’s
parent company, Ohio Valley Bank
Corp., is traded on The NASDAQ
Global Market under the symbol
OVBC. More information can be
found at Ohio Valley Bank’s website at
www.ovbc.com.
Submitted by Ohio Valley Bank.

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners met last week in
regular session, where
they approved an agreement for an adult education program.
Present during the
meeting were President Jimmy Will, Vice
President Shannon
Miller, Commissioner
Tim Ihle and Clerk Tonya
Edwards. Also present
were Job and Family
Services (JFS) Director
Theresa Lavender, commission candidate Zach
Manuel, and Middleport
Building Inspector Mike
Hendrickson.
Commissioners
approved a motion to
extend the subgrant
agreement with Buckeye
Hills Career Center to
provide services of a dean
of expansion to assist
in establishing an Adult
Education Program in
Meigs County through
the Beneﬁt Bridge Program.
Commissioners
accepted last week’s minutes and the week’s bills
in the total amount of
$508,005.81.
Commissioners
approved to appropriate
$2,500 into B054B01 to
pay the contract with the
hardware supplier for probate computer fees.
An appropriation was
also approved for $60,000
into line item A004B14
for the commissioners’
ofﬁce.
The contract with
Washington County Jail
was approved for $83 per
person per day.
Commissioners
approved the following
subgrant agreements with
the Meigs County Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce of James K.
Stanley: for the purpose
of providing a full-time
investigator; to provide a
full-time attorney to JFS;
and to provide a full-time
fraud investigator to the
JFS.
Commissioners
approved to authorize the
Director of JFS to purchase three Chevy Equinox from Mark Porter for
$27,690 each, for a total
of $83,070.
Hendrickson, with the
Village of Middleport,
presented the commissioners with Ordinance
144-22, a purchase agreement for the Middleport
property. The commissioners will seek legal
council to prepare the
deed and to prepare closing on the Middleport
See AGREEMENTS | 8

MIDDLEPORT
COUNCIL
CORRECTION
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman informed The
Daily Sentinel an error
was made in the submitted story in regards to
the information on the
hiring of Shannon Smith
part time. No decision
was made by council on
this matter.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, June 23, 2022

DEATH NOTICE
HERSHBERGER
PATRIOT — Linda R. Hershberger, 17, of Patriot, died Sunday, June 19, 2022 in Lawrenceburg,
Tenn.
Services will be held at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday,
June 25, at the Hershberger family residence, 3828
Hannan Trace Road, Patriot. Her burial will follow
in Yoder Cemetery. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
MILLER
PATRIOT — Emma R. Miller, 18, of Patriot,
died Sunday, June 19, 2022 in Lawrenceburg,
Tenn.
Services will be held at 9:30 a.m. on Friday, June
24, at the Miller family residence, 404 Pioneer
Trail Road, Patriot. Her burial will follow in Troyer
Cemetery. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the
family.

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

Carleton College
Scholarships
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2022-2023
Carleton College Scholarships for higher education are available for legal residents of the Village
of Syracuse. Applications can be picked up from
Gordon Fisher, 1402 Dusky St., Syracuse, and must
be returned by June 24. Legal residents of Syracuse
can qualify for the scholarship awards for a maximum of two years.

Road closures
GALLIPOLIS — The ramp located between the
Holzer Hospital entrance and Shawnee Lane will
be closed from June 6-Aug. 12. Detour will be SR
160 South to the Jackson Pike intersection to SR
160 to U.S. 35.

Storytime at the library
MEIGS COUNTY — Story Time is held at each
Meigs Library location weekly. Bring preschoolers
for stories and crafts. Mondays at 1 p.m. at Racine
Library; Tuesdays at 1 p.m. at Eastern Library;
Wednesdays at 1 p.m. at Pomeroy Library; and
Thursdays at 1 p.m. at Middleport Library.

Ohio Valley Publishing

Writers Guild holds June meetings
POINT PLEASANT — Each ﬁrst and
third Wednesday of the
month ﬁnds members of
the Point Pleasant Writers Guild meeting at the
Mason County Library
on Viand Street to share
their short stories,
excerpts from their latest books, poems, and,
yes, even sonnets.
The last mentioned
began actually as William Shakespeare’s
110th Sonnet, but
Woody Moore changed
it just a bit and made it
his own. In fact, just to
pass the time one day,
he prepared all of The
Bard’s sonnets as parodies. The deﬁnition of
“parody” as a noun is a
literary or musical work
in which the style of an
author or work is closely
imitated for comic
effect. Woody entitled
his version of the 110th
Sonnet, “Vo-Mad-ulary?”

In short: “If life is to be
lived, without the ‘v,’
Then, yes, I have lived
and lied and lied more…
So, keep in the ‘v,’ live
life so thrilled, By playing with your vocabulary
— Leaving words to be
less blab-ulary!”
Raine Fielder, proving that stories can be
taken from real life, took
an account from “True
Crime” and wrote about
ﬁve murders that took
place in 1946 Texarkana,
Texas, “The town that
dreaded sundown.”
Will Jeffers shared his
narrative, “Counting
Obvious Blessings,” in
which he pays honor and
tribute to his son, Sam,
who recently celebrated
both his 18th birthday
and high school graduation, two very important
milestones for a young
man and his family.
Marilyn Clarke departed from her usual genre,

romance novels, and
read an excerpt from her
newest venture: Dystopian Fiction, describing
how a new civilization
emerges after an apocalyptic event. In Marilyn’s
imagination, energy and
food are in short supply,
and every night people
die from exposure to a
fatal fog that threatens
the survival of the human
race.
April Pyles read her
poem entitled “A Summer Memory,” written
in memory of her friend,
Harriet McGufﬁn, who
introduced her to a day
of baling hay on her family’s farm.
Phil Heck read his
expose on the gradual
loss of our liberties
thanks to government
laws and regulations
involving seat belts, TSA
inspections, COVID
restrictions, etc. He also
asked for comments on

a particular section of a
book he’s writing.
Patrecia Gray shared a
portion of her “Father’s
Day” radio broadcast in
which a father provides
protection to his child,
much in the way that our
Heavenly Father does for
us. Gray’s program, “Just
Thinking,” can be heard
on WEMM Radio-FM,
107.9, Saturdays from
9-9:15 a.m.
Also attending the
meeting were Carol Newberry, Sue Underwood,
and Paula Gregory.
To contact the Point
Pleasant Writers Guild,
email ppwritersguild@
yahoo.com and visit our
blog: ppwritersguild.
blogspot.com. All who
are interested in writing
are welcome to attend
our meetings, held on the
ﬁrst and third Wednesdays of the month.
Submitted by April
Pyles.

Returns pile up at IRS, phone delays worsen
By Fatima Hussein

dent watchdog within
the IRS, also said taxpayers are experiencing
WASHINGTON — It’s longer wait times on the
telephone, and delays in
Groundhog Day at the
processing paper returns
IRS.
After digging out of a have been running six
months to one year.
daunting backlog from
The report on taxpayer
2021, the agency has
challenges, which must be
an even bigger backup
submitted twice a year to
for this tax season than
Congress, comes one day
it did a year ago and
after the Internal Revenue
its pace for processing
Service announced that
paper returns is slowit is on track to eliminate
ing down, according
its 2021 backlog of tax
to a watchdog report
returns this week.
released Wednesday.
The Objectives Report
The National Taxpayer
to Congress contains proAdvocate, an indepen-

Associated Press

posals for lawmakers to
consider going forward.
“When I released my
Annual Report to Congress six months ago, I
wrote that ‘Paper is the
IRS’s Kryptonite, and the
agency is still buried in
it,’” National Taxpayer
Advocate Erin Collins
wrote in the report. “Fast
forward to this Objectives
Report: It’s Groundhog
Day.”
She added: “At the end
of May, the IRS had a
larger backlog of paper
tax returns than it did
a year ago, and its pace

of processing paper tax
returns was slowing.”
Collins, who serves as
an IRS ombudsman, said
of the agency’s problems:
“The math is daunting.”
According to the
report, at the end of May
the agency had a backlog
of 21.3 million unprocessed paper tax returns,
an increase of 1.3 million over the same time
last year. The agency fell
short on its goal to bring
on 5,473 new employees
to process returns, with
just 2,056 employees
hired.

with greatness, was
released by Paramount
Pictures.
In 1995, Dr. Jonas Salk,
the medical pioneer who
developed the ﬁrst vaccine to halt the crippling
rampage of polio, died
in La Jolla (HOY’-ah),
California, at age 80.
In 2016, Britain voted
to leave the European
Union after a bitterly
divisive referendum campaign, toppling Prime
Minister David Cameron,
who had led the campaign to keep Britain in
the EU.
In 2020, the Louisville
police department ﬁred
an ofﬁcer involved in the
fatal shooting of Breonna
Taylor more than three
months earlier, saying
Brett Hankison had
shown “extreme indifference to the value of
human life” when he ﬁred
ten rounds into Taylor’s
apartment. (A second
ofﬁcer was also ﬁred;
Hankison was found not
guilty on charges that he
endangered neighbors.)
Ten years ago: Syria
and Turkey desperately
sought to ease tensions
following an incident in
which Syria shot down a
Turkish reconnaissance
plane, saying the plane
had entered its airspace.
Ashton Eaton broke
the world record in the
decathlon, ﬁnishing with
9,039 points at the U.S.
Olympic trials in Eugene,
Oregon. (Eaton later
surpassed his own record
with 9,045 points at the
2015 Beijing world championships.)
Five years ago:
President Donald Trump
signed a bill making it
easier for the Department
of Veterans Affairs to ﬁre
employees, part of a push
to overhaul an agency
struggling to serve millions of military vets.
California Gov. Jerry
Brown blocked parole
for Charles Manson fol-

lower and convicted killer
Bruce Davis.
One year ago: A
49-year-old Indiana grandmother became the ﬁrst
person to be sentenced
in the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol;
Anna Morgan Lloyd was
sentenced to probation
and community service
and had to pay $500 in
restitution after pleading
guilty to a single misdemeanor charge. A member of the Oath Keepers
extremist group, Graydon
Young, pleaded guilty in a
conspiracy case stemming
from the Jan. 6 attack,
and agreed to cooperate
with prosecutors. After
13 years of near silence in
the conservatorship that
controlled her life and
money, pop star Britney
Spears told a judge in Los
Angeles that the conservatorship controlled by
her father and others had
made her feel demoralized and enslaved, and
that it should come to an
end. (The judge would
agree to that request in
November 2021.)

Needlework Network
POMEROY — Join the Needlework Network on
Wednesday mornings at 10 a.m. in the Riverview
Room at the Pomeroy Library. Socialize and craft
with experienced fabric artists. Bring your work in
progress to share with the group. Beginners welcome.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR
OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel and Gallipolis
Daily Tribune appreciate 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
or GDTnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Thursday, June 23
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at noon at the district ofﬁce on Memorial Drive.

Friday, June 24
MIDDLEPORT — The monthly free community
dinner at the Middleport Church of Christ Family
Life Center will be at 5 p.m. The menu includes
grilled hot dogs, baked beans, coleslaw, chips and
dessert.

Monday, June 27
CHESTER TWP. — The Meigs County Ikes
Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the clubhouse on Sugar
Run Road.
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the Meigs
County Public Library Board will be held at 1 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Library.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Associated Press

Today is Thursday,
June 23, the 174th day
of 2022. There are 191
days left in the year.
Today’s highlights in
history
On June 23, 1888,
abolitionist Frederick
Douglass received one
vote from the Kentucky
delegation at the
Republican convention
in Chicago, effectively
making him the ﬁrst
Black candidate to have
his name placed in nomination for U.S. president.
(The nomination went to
Benjamin Harrison.)
On this date
In 1860, a congressional resolution authorized
creation of the United
States Government
Printing Ofﬁce, which
opened the following
year.
In 1931, aviators
Wiley Post and Harold
Gatty took off from New
York on a round-theworld ﬂight that lasted
eight days and 15 hours.
In 1947, the Senate
joined the House in
overriding President
Harry S. Truman’s veto
of the Taft-Hartley Act,
designed to limit the
power of organized
labor.
In 1956, Gamal Abdel

Nasser was elected president of Egypt.
In 1967, President
Lyndon B. Johnson,
Soviet Premier Alexei
Kosygin (ah-LEK’-say
koh-SEE’-gihn) opened
a three-day summit at
Glassboro State College
in New Jersey.
In 1969, Warren E.
Burger was sworn in as
chief justice of the United
States by the man he was
succeeding, Earl Warren.
In 1972, President
Richard Nixon signed
Title IX barring discrimination on the basis
of sex for “any education program or activity
receiving federal ﬁnancial
assistance.” (On the same
day, Nixon and White
House chief of staff H.R.
Haldeman discussed
using the CIA to obstruct
the FBI’s Watergate investigation. Revelation of the
tape recording of this conversation sparked Nixon’s
resignation in 1974.)
In 1985, all 329 people
aboard an Air India
Boeing 747 were killed
when the plane crashed
into the Atlantic Ocean
near Ireland because of a
bomb authorities believe
was planted by Sikh separatists.
In 1994, the movie
“Forrest Gump,” starring
Tom Hanks as a simple
yet kindhearted soul and
his serendipitous brushes

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permitted by U.S. copyright law.

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Today’s Birthdays:
Singer Diana Trask is
82. Actor Ted Shackelford
is 76. Actor Bryan
Brown is 75. Supreme
Court Justice Clarence
Thomas is 74. Actor Jim
Metzler is 71. “American
Idol” ex-judge Randy
Jackson is 66. Actor
Frances McDormand is
65. Rock musician Steve
Shelley (Sonic Youth) is
60. Writer-director Joss
Whedon is 58. R&amp;B singer Chico DeBarge is 52.
Actor Selma Blair is 50.
Actor Joel Edgerton is 48.
Rock singer KT Tunstall
is 47. Actor Emmanuelle
Vaugier is 46. Singersongwriter Jason Mraz is
45. Football Hall of Famer
LaDainian Tomlinson is
43. Actor Melissa Rauch
is 42. Rock singer Duffy
is 38. Country singer
Katie Armiger is 31.

�OH-70287233

Ohio Valley Publishing

Thursday, June 23, 2022 3

�COMICS

Ohio Valley Publishing

OH-70290685

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BLONDIE

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

BABY BLUES

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

By John Hambrock

Today’s answer

ZITS

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

By Hilary Price

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

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Thursday, June 23, 2022 5

Magic on the clock with No. 1 NBA draft pick
By Brian Mahoney
AP Basketball Writer

NEW YORK — Paolo
Banchero thinks he should
be No. 1. Jabari Smith Jr.
is sure he won’t go beyond
No. 2. Chet Holmgren
would be happy with
either.
The freshmen have been
considered the top three
players available, in some
order, in the NBA draft.
The Orlando Magic will
determine who goes first
on Thursday night, with
the Oklahoma City Thunder and Houston Rockets
slated to follow.
Marcio Jose Sanchez | AP file
Smith, who led Auburn
Gonzaga center Chet Holmgren (34) reacts as he walks to the bench after fouling out against
to
its first No. 1 ranking,
Arkansas in the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA tournament on March 24 in San Francisco. Gonzaga’s
gives
a slight edge to himChet Holmgren was wrapping up a multi-day visit Friday with the Orlando Magic, who hold the No.
self but is impressed by all
1 pick in next week’s NBA draft.

Toronto forward Scottie
Barnes. They could have
players such as Purdue
guard Jaden Ivey and Iowa
forward Keegan Murray
to choose among, though
it’s unclear which way the
Kings might be leaning —
or even if they will make
the pick at all instead of
trading it.
Ivey, an athletic guard
who tries to pattern his
game like Ja Morant and
Russell Westbrook, said
he hasn’t spoken with the
Kings and doesn’t sound as
if he’d be overly enthused
with a conversation.
“If I got drafted there,
it wouldn’t be the worst
option,” Ivey said. “I can’t

three.
“I think I’m perfect
because just my ability to
affect both sides of the ball
and my ability to knock
down shots and affect
winning at such an early
age and early part of my
game,” Smith said. “So I
feel like that’s why I’m the
No. 1 pick. Those guys are
great watching them all
season, just how unselfish
they are and how much
they contributed to their
teams so early.”
Assuming they are gone
in the top three spots,
that’s when the mystery
could start up.
The Sacramento Kings
hold the No. 4 pick, a spot
that produced last season’s Rookie of the Year in

See draft | 6

IN BRIEF

Steelers add DL Ogunjobi
with 1-year contract
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Steelers
signed veteran defensive end Larry Ogunjobi to a
one-year deal on Tuesday, shoring up a position of
need following Stephon Tuitt’s retirement earlier
this month.
The 28-year-old Ogunjobi spent last season with
the Cincinnati Bengals and had planned to sign a
three-year contract with Chicago in March before
he failed a physical, nullifying the deal.
Ogunjobi injured his right foot during the Bengals’ wild-card victory over the Las Vegas Raiders
and was lost for the remainder of the playoffs. The
injury required surgery, and the lack of progress
during his rehab led to the failed physical.
The Steelers are banking on Ogunjobi being
good to go as they try to shore up a defensive line
that finished dead last in the NFL against the run
in 2022. Ogunjobi was productive last year for
Cincinnati, posting career highs in sacks (7) and
tackles for loss (12).
Pittsburgh was hoping Tuitt would return after
he sat out all of 2021 following the death of his
younger brother last June, combined with a knee
injury. The Steelers did little during the offseason
to address the defensive line, re-signing tackle
Montravius Adams and taking Demarvin Leal in
the third round of the draft.
Ogunjobi gives Pittsburgh veteran depth even
if he has a spotty history with the Steelers. Playing for Cleveland in 2019, Ogunjobi blindsided
Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph during a
scuffle that included Browns defensive end Myles
Garrett tearing off Rudolph’s helmet and then
swinging it at him. Ogunjobi was suspended for
one game for his role in the melee, though a fine
was later rescinded.

Ravens linebacker Jaylon
Ferguson dies at age 26
Associated Press

Baltimore Ravens linebacker Jaylon Ferguson
has died at age 26.
Ferguson, nicknamed “Sack Daddy,” played
three NFL seasons, all with Baltimore. He set the
career sacks record in the college Football Bowl
Subdivision (45) when he played at Louisiana
Tech.
Police said the cause of death is
still to be determined.
“On June 21, 2022, at approximately 11:25 p.m., Northern District
patrol officers responded to a home
in the 400 block of Ilchester Avenue
for a report of a questionable death,”
Baltimore police said. “Once there,
Ferguson
officers located 26-year-old Jaylon
Ferguson, unresponsive, being treated by medics. Ferguson never regained consciousness and was pronounced dead on the scene by
medics. No signs of trauma was found or foul play
suspected at this time.”
Ferguson was drafted by the Ravens in the third
round in 2019, and played in 38 games as a pro
with 4 1/2 sacks.
“We are profoundly saddened by the tragic
passing of Jaylon Ferguson,” the Ravens said in
a statement. “He was a kind, respectful young
man with a big smile and infectious personality.
We express our heartfelt condolences to Jaylon’s
family and friends as we mourn a life lost much
too soon.”
Born Dec. 14, 1995, in St. Francisville, Louisiana, Ferguson played high school football and basketball at West Feliciana. At Louisiana Tech, his
45 sacks were one better than another Ravens linebacker, Terrell Suggs, achieved at Arizona State.
Ferguson was a third-team AP All-American in
2018.

Frank Gunn | The Canadian Press via AP

Rory McIlroy, front right, shakes hands with PGA Commissioner Jay Monahan after winning the Canadian Open golf tournament June
12 in Toronto.

PGA in ‘arms race’ of dollars, leaning on loyalty
The tour, however,
appears to be trying to
keep up. Monahan said an
increase in prize money
CROMWELL, Conn.
was in the works from its
— Commissioner Jay
latest media rights deal
Monahan says the PGA
it signed in 2020, noting
Tour can’t win an “arms
the threat of LIV Golf
race” against Saudiaccelerated some of those
funded LIV Golf when
plans.
the weapon is money.
He announced a
His response Wednesday
was to boost prize money streamlined schedule —
January to August startin eight elite events and
rely on loyalty and legacy ing in 2024 — with seven
tournaments worth $20
among his players.
million or more and fewer
Monahan delivered
spots available for its
another round of stingpostseason. The top 125
ing criticism against
qualify for the FedEx Cup
Greg Norman and his
rival league. LIV Golf has playoffs. Next year, only
snagged players who have the top 70 will be eligible.
The fall would be for
combined to win nine
the players who finished
majors in the last five
outside the top 70 to
years, including Dustin
Johnson, Brooks Koepka secure cards for the following year, and to give
and Bryson DeChamthem a chance to move
beau.
into the top 50 — or try
The latest to sign was
Koepka, whose deal with to stay there — to secure
LIV Golf was announced spots in some of the elite
$20 million tournaments.
just as Monahan began
Also planned are three
his first press conference
international events in
in three months at the
Travelers Championship. the fall for only the top 50
“I am not naive,” Mona- in FedEx Cup points from
the previous season.
han said. “If this is an
Monahan cited Masters
arms race and if the only
champion Scottie Schefweapons here are dollar
bills, the PGA Tour can’t fler, who earlier Wednescompete. The PGA Tour, day was unusually vocal
an American institution, in his support of the PGA
Tour. Scheffler had not
can’t compete with a
won on the PGA Tour
foreign monarchy that is
until February, and then
spending billions of dollars in attempt to buy the he won four times in two
months to reach No. 1 in
game of golf.
the world.
“We welcome good,
He already has set a
healthy competition. The
PGA Tour record for
LIV Saudi golf league is
season earnings at nearly
not that,” he said. “It’s
$12.9 million.
an irrational threat, one
“If you’re good enough,
not concerned with the
you will rise to the top,”
return on investment or
true growth of the game.” Monahan said. “And if

By Doug Ferguson
AP Golf Writer

you don’t continue to
earn that top spot, someone else as hungry and as
talented is right there to
take your place. Again,
that’s the unique beauty
of what the tour has and
always will offer to fans.
“It’s damn good and it’s
worth fighting for.”
Koepka was among
the LIV newcomers
announced for the field in
Oregon next week, and he
was as big of a surprise as
Johnson was for the inaugural London event.
Monahan was at his
Koepka’s wedding on
June 5 in the Turks and
Caicos Islands. Koepka
was part of a group of at
a Rolex outing a week
ago in which he joined
top players — Scheffler,
Jordan Spieth, Justin
Thomas among them —
in discussing in strong
terms support for the
tour.
A week later, he was
signed and headed to LIV
Golf.
“That was definitely
a surprise for me,” said
Scheffler, who has the
same manager as Koepka.
“I was at a function with
him last week and definitely wasn’t what he had
in mind. We were focused
on building the PGA Tour
and getting the guys that
are staying here together
and kind of just having
talks and figuring out
what how we can help
benefit the Tour. So to
see Brooks leave was definitely a surprise for us.”
The tour will nearly
double the prize money
for the winner-only Sentry Tournament of Cham-

pions at Kapalua to $15
million. The invitation
events at Riviera, Bay
Hill and Muirfield Village
increase by $8 million
to $20 million. The two
FedEx Cup playoff events
increase by $5 million
to $20 million. And The
Players Championship
goes up $5 million to $25
million.
That’s an increase of
just over $50 million in
prize money, or roughly
what Johnson reportedly
received annually as a
signing fee for the LIV
Golf series, and that’s
before he and others compete for $25 million prize
funds at each event.
That’s the arms race
Monahan and the PGA
Tour is facing, though it
still has the top 15 players
in the world ranking on
its side, a core group who
are speaking out more
forcefully.
Still, some may have a
price.
Koepka apparently did,
and McIlroy cited him
as another player who
went back on his word.
Two years ago, Koepka
was second to McIlroy in
denouncing the concept
of a 48-man league.
“Am I surprised? Yes,
because of what he said
previously,” McIlroy said.
“I think that’s why I’m
surprised at a lot of these
guys because they say
one thing and then they
do another. I don’t know
if that’s for legal reasons
or if they can’t ... I have
no idea. But it’s pretty
duplicitous on their part
to say one thing and then
do another thing.”

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

6 Thursday, June 23, 2022

Ohio Valley Publishing

Tony Siragusa, former NFL
lineman, broadcaster, dies at 55

Draft

By Noah Trister

pick, I’m not the GM
who picks the guys, so
I’m kind of just trying to
just enjoy this process
and whatever happens
on draft night, I’m just
going to stick with it.”
Murray has a much
more favorable view of
going to play for new
coach Mike Brown on a
team that hasn’t made
the playoffs since 2006,
the worst drought in
NBA history.
“I think for me, being
a King, I’d want to be a
part of that, that culture,
and be a part of the
group that can turn that
franchise around and get
to the playoffs,” Murray
said.
Before whatever the
Kings do, the Magic will
make the No. 1 pick for
the fourth time. They’ve
done well with big men
before, having drafted
Shaquille O’Neal and
Dwight Howard ﬁrst,
and if they decide to go
that way again, Smith or
Holmgren would be the
call.
The 6-foot-10 Smith
doesn’t have quite the
size of them but has the
shooting touch most
bigs never will, hitting
42% of his 3-pointers
in his one season at
Auburn. He also averShorter than normal
aged 7.4 rebounds and
This year’s draft will
believes he could defend include only 58 picks

ones.”
Siragusa, known as
“the Goose,” played
seven seasons with the
Tony Siragusa, the
Indianapolis Colts and
charismatic defensive
tackle who helped lead a ﬁve with the Ravens. Baltimore’s 2000 team won
stout Baltimore defense
to a Super Bowl title, has the Super Bowl behind
a defense that included
died. He was 55.
Siragusa, Ray Lewis and
Siragusa’s broadcast
Sam Adams.
agent, Jim Ornstein,
Siragusa was popular
conﬁrmed the death
Wednesday. The cause of with fans because of his
fun-loving personality,
death was not immediwhich also helped him
ately available.
transition quickly to
“This is a really sad
day,” he said. “Tony was broadcasting after his
way more than my client, playing career.
Siragusa came to Balhe was family. My heart
goes out to Tony’s loved timore as a free agent in

AP Sports Writer

1997 and teamed up with
Adams to form an imposing defensive tackle
tandem. In the Ravens’
2000 championship
season, the 6-foot-3, 340pound Siragusa was sixth
among Baltimore defenders with 75 tackles.
He ﬁnished his career
with 22 sacks.
The news of Siragusa’s death came on what
was already a tragic
day for the Ravens.
The death of Jaylon
Ferguson, a linebacker
for Baltimore, at age 26
was announced earlier
in the day.

Ohio State gets approval to
trademark ‘The’ for merchandise
COLUMBUS (AP) —
Ohio State University has
won its ﬁght to trademark the word “The.”
The U.S. Patent
and Trademark Ofﬁce
approved the university’s
request Tuesday. The
school says it allows
Ohio State to control
use of “The” on branded
products associated with
and sold through athletics and collegiate channels, such as T-shirts,
baseball caps and hats.

“THE has been a rallying cry in the Ohio
State community for
many years, and Buckeye fans who purchase
ofﬁcial Ohio State gear
support student scholarships, libraries and other
university initiatives,”
said Ben Johnson, the
university’s senior director of media and public
relations. He noted the
university’s licensing and
trademark program generates over $12.5 million

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

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

a year in revenue, which
helps fund student scholarships and university
programs.
Ohio State started
pursuing a trademark
in August 2019 after
fashion retailer Marc
Jacobs had ﬁled an application for the word a
few months earlier. The
company and the university reached a deal in
August 2021 that allows
both parties to use the
branding.

all three frontcourt
spots.
Same with Holmgren,
the 7-footer from Gonzaga who has the mobility and shooting range
to play on the perimeter, but at 195 pounds
could use some more
bulk to mix it up inside
with NBA centers He’s
been in the weight
room, so that should
come, and in the meantime still has plenty to
offer.
So does Banchero,
who averaged 17.2
points while leading
Duke to the Final Four.
He’s been a little bored
by the predraft process,
which often features
individual workouts and
rarely game competition.
But some encouraging
words from Spurs guard
Dejounte Murray, a fellow Seattle product,
have him excited for
what’s ahead.
“He’s told me to enjoy
this draft day,” Banchero
said. “Live it up, you’ve
only got one draft week,
one draft night, but as
soon as that 24 hours is
over and you’re drafted,
that’s when the real
work starts and it’s no
mercy after that. It’s
a kill or be-killed type
of environment in the
NBA, so you’re going
to have to be locked in
from the jump.”

From page 5

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

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

School ties
Kentucky had six
players drafted in 2012
and ‘15, most for any
school since 1989. Mike
Krzyzewski thinks he
could have ﬁve alone in
the ﬁrst round from his
ﬁnal team at Duke, with
Banchero being joined
by Mark Williams, AJ
Grifﬁn, Wendell Moore
and Trevor Keels.
“The NBA doesn’t
just draft on who you
are now. They draft on
who you might be or
who they think you will
be. So a lot of the kids
who leave early from us,
we’ve developed them
up to a point where people see the potential that
they have,” Krzyzewski
said on his SiriusXM
radio show, “Basketball
and Beyond with Coach
K.”
Academy award
Australian Dyson Daniels and Canadian Bennedict Mathurin, who
played at Arizona, have
a chance to become the
second and third graduates of the NBA Academy to be drafted. Josh
Giddey of Australia went
sixth to the Thunder
last season and was a
second-team All-Rookie
selection.

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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LEGAL NOTICE

Statement of Activities Available for Viewing

The Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Administrators, and Executors of the Estate of Linda K. Montgomery aka
Linda Montgomery, whose place of residence is unknown, The
Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Administrators,
and Executors of the Estate of Robert Keith Montgomery aka
Robert Montgomery, whose place of residence is unknown,
and Unknown Spouse, if any, of Linda K. Montgomery aka
Linda Montgomery, whose last place of residence is known as
22668 Bucktown Road, Racine, OH 45771 but whose present
place of residence is unknown, will take notice that on April 26,
2022, PNC Bank, National Association, filed its Complaint in
Foreclosure in Case No. 22-CV-024 in the Court of Common
Pleas Meigs County, Ohio alleging that the Defendants, The
Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees, Administrators,
and Executors of the Estate of Linda K. Montgomery aka Linda
Montgomery; The Unknown Heirs at Law, Devisees, Legatees,
Administrators, and Executors of the Estate of Robert Keith
Montgomery aka Robert Montgomery; and Unknown Spouse,
if any, of Linda K. Montgomery aka Linda Montgomery, have
or claim to have an interest in the real estate located at 22668
Bucktown Road, Racine, OH 45771, PPN #0800458001.
A complete legal description may be obtained with the Meigs
County Auditor's Office located at 100 East Second Street,
Room 201, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner further alleges that by reason of default of the
Defendant(s) in the payment of a promissory note, according to
its tenor, the conditions of a concurrent mortgage deed given
to secure the payment of said note and conveying the premises described, have been broken, and the same has become
absolute.
The Petitioner prays that the Defendant(s) named above be
required to answer and set up their interest in said real estate
or be forever barred from asserting the same, for foreclosure
of said mortgage, the marshalling of any liens, and the sale of
said real estate, and the proceeds of said sale applied to the
payment of Petitioner's claim in the property order of its priority,
and for such other and further relief as is just and equitable.
THE DEFENDANT(S) NAMED ABOVE ARE REQUIRED TO
ANSWER ON OR BEFORE THE 21 DAY OF July, 2022.

The Vinton County Commissioners intend to apply to United
States Department of Agriculture, Rural Housing Services
(RHS) for grant funds to aid in the preservation of homes occupied by very low or low income homeowners in Vinton and
Gallia Counties. Rural Housing Preservation funds will be for
needed and critical repairs. The application will seek up to
$150,000 to address the property needs and maintain the
housing stock in rural Vinton and Gallia Counties. The USDA
Rural Housing Services requires Vinton County to provide the
public with an opportunity for comments on the proposed project to assure that the proposed Housing Preservation Grant
program is beneficial and does not duplicate current activities
and to make available for public review the Statement of Activities, which outlines the planned proposed program to be
submitted to the RHS for consideration for funding. Vinton
County Housing Preservation Statement of Activities is available and may be requested by calling the Vinton County Development Department at 740-596-3529 and leaving your name
and address for us to mail you a copy, or a copy may be requested by emailing dev.dept@vintonco.com. The file can
also be downloaded at
https://developvc.com/public-notices-notice-to-bidders/

BY: CLUNK, HOOSE CO., LPA
Ethan J. Clunk #0095546
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner
495 Wolf Ledges Pkwy
Akron, OH 44311
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
notice@clunkhoose.com
6/9/22,6/16/22,6/23/22

instead of the usual 60.
The Milwaukee Bucks
and Miami Heat have forfeited second-round picks
for talking to free agents
before allowed.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

A fifteen (15) day comment period is required to allow for public
review of the proposed program. Comments may be submitted
prior to July 7, 2022 to 205 S. Market St., McArthur, Ohio by
USPS or dropping into mail slot in the door. They may also be
submitted to dev.dept@vintonco.com
Should the public have any question as to this notice they may
contact Terri Fetherolf at 740-596-3529 or at
dev.dept@vintonco.com
Gallia County Commissioners
6/23/22

EMPLOYMENT

Notices

Help Wanted General

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, June 24, 2022
at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.

+HDWLQJ�&amp;RROLQJ &amp;RPSDQ\
KLULQJ IXOO�WLPH � SDUW�WLPH
KHOSHUV DQG LQVWDOOHUV�
([SHULHQFH KHOSIXO JRRG SD\�
FDOO ������������ LI QR
DQVZHU OHDYH PHVVDJH�

KNAFK4A6XF5315251
2015 Kia Forte LX

0LJ :HOGHUV 1HHGHG�
Please apply in person at
King Kutter II ,Inc. 2150
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Full time
employment .
1st Shift 7:00- 3:30 M-F.
Benefits include health,
dental and vision Insurance.
Paid vacation and paid holidays. Must pass physical
and drug screen.

Get the most

B
A
N
G
for your buck...
ADVER TISE!

�OH-70287238

Ohio Valley Publishing

Thursday, June 23, 2022 7

�NEWS/WEATHER

8 Thursday, June 23, 2022

Daily Sentinel

Biden calls for 3-month suspension of gas, diesel taxes
By Josh Boak
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
President Joe Biden on
Wednesday called on
Congress to suspend federal gasoline and diesel
taxes for three months
— an election-year move
meant to ease ﬁnancial
pressures that was greet-

Washington and in statehouses across the country
to actually bring relief to
consumers.
“It doesn’t reduce all
the pain but it will be
a big help,” Biden said,
using the bully pulpit
when his administration
believes it has run out of
direct levers to address
soaring gas prices. “I’m

ed with doubts by many
lawmakers.
The Democratic president also called on states
to suspend their own gas
taxes or provide similar
relief, and he delivered
a public critique of the
energy industry for prioritizing proﬁts over
production. It would take
action by lawmakers in

doing my part. I want
Congress, states and
industry to do their part
as well.”
At issue is the 18.4
cents-a-gallon federal
tax on gas and the 24.4
cents-a-gallon federal
tax on diesel fuel. If the
gas savings were fully
passed along to consumers, people would save
roughly 3.6% at the pump
when prices are averaging
about $5 a gallon nationwide.
Biden’s push faces
uphill odds in Congress,
which must act in order
to suspend the tax, and
where many lawmakers,
including some in his own
party, have expressed
reservations. Even many
economists view the idea
of a gas tax holiday with

skepticism.
Democratic House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi
offered a noncommittal
response to Biden’s proposal, saying she would
look to see if there was
support for it in Congress.
“We will see where the
consensus lies on a path
forward for the president’s proposal in the
House and the Senate,”
Pelosi said.
In his speech, Biden
tied higher energy
prices to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and said,
“defending freedom,
defending democracy was
not going to go without
cost for the American
people and the rest of
the free world.” The
president noted that law-

makers backed sanctions
against Russia and aiding
Ukraine despite the risks
of inﬂation from resulting
energy and food shortages.
Democrats, Republicans and independents
in Congress chose to
support Ukraine, “knowing full well the cost,” he
said.
“So for all those Republicans in Congress criticizing me today for high
gas prices in America:
Are you now saying you
were wrong to support
Ukraine?” Biden said.
“Are you saying that we
would rather have lower
gas prices in America
than (Russian President
Vladimir) Putin’s iron ﬁst
in Europe? I don’t believe
that. “

Boil advisory in parts of Meigs Co.

OH-70290891

MEIGS COUNTY
— Tuppers PlainsChester Water District
announced a boil advisory for June 22 through

4:30 p.m. June 24 for
the following townships:
Chester, Sutton, and
Salisbury.
Beginning at the
intersection of SR 7and
Eagle RidgeRoad. This
will include one address
on SR 7, 34718 SR 7.
Continuing South on
Eagle Ridge Road to the
address of 46520 Eagle
Ridge Road. Includes TR
67, Frecker Road, Pine
Grove Road, Young Road,
45026 Whipple Road,
Vinegar Street, Resort
Road to the address of
44826 Resort Road, Bailey Road, Court Street
Road. From the intersection of US 33 and Morning Star to the address
of 47065 Morning Star
Road, Salser Road, Wessel Road,intersection of
US 33 and Morning Starheading West on Morning Star, Roy Jones Road,

Snowball Hill Road,
Amberger Road, Yost
Road, Forest Run Road,
NeaseRoad, Minersville
Road, Dutchtown Road,
Welshtown Road.
This will affect 270
customers. The reason
for this boil advisory is
to repair a leak on the
water main. When a boil
advisory is in effect, we
ask all who are impacted
to boil their cooking and
drinking water for ﬁve
minutes before being
consumed. We apologize
for any inconvenience
this may cause.This boil
advisory will be in effectuntil 4:30 p.m. Friday,
June 24, unless notiﬁed
otherwise .
For more information
contact TuppersPlainsChester Water District,
39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville, by calling
740- 985-3315

Agreements

OH-70289168

employment, dismissal,
discipline, promotion,
demotion, or compensation of public employee
From page 1
or ofﬁcial. No action was
property. The cost of the taken upon returning to
property is $40,000. Com- regular session.
Miller mentioned
missioners approved the
the courthouse will be
purchase.
Commissioners entered closed Monday, June 20
in observance of Juneinto executive session to
teenth.
consider appointment,

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

71°

82°

79°

Sunshine and less humid today. Clear tonight.
High 87° / Low 59°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

93°
63°
85°
64°
98° in 1988
42° in 1992

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.00
3.08
23.88
22.13

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:04 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
2:40 a.m.
4:08 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Jun 28

First

Jul 6

Full

Jul 13

Last

Jul 20

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

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

Major
8:12a
8:50a
9:30a
10:11a
10:56a
11:44a
12:09a

Minor
2:01a
2:39a
3:18a
3:59a
4:44a
5:31a
6:22a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
8:33p
9:12p
9:53p
10:35p
11:21p
---1:00p

Minor
2:23p
3:01p
3:41p
4:23p
5:09p
5:57p
6:47p

WEATHER HISTORY
Sir Frances Drake encountered a
hurricane on June 23, 1586, that
caused ﬂoods and damaging wind
along the North Carolina and Virginia
shorelines.

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

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
85/57
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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. Wed.

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

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

Level
12.76
16.16
21.35
12.82
13.23
25.74
12.58
25.70
34.36
12.84
16.25
34.07
15.01

Portsmouth
85/58

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.45
+0.03
-0.36
-0.20
+0.45
-0.50
-0.46
+0.35
+0.52
+0.43
-0.59
+0.17
-1.12

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022

Logan
83/55

Ashland
85/60
Grayson
85/60

MONDAY

91°
65°

TUESDAY

81°
56°

Periods of sun, hot; a
p.m. t-storm

WEDNESDAY

80°
61°

Not as warm; a
shower in the
morning

86°
63°

Mostly sunny and
beautiful

Plenty of sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
83/56

Murray City
83/55
Belpre
84/57

Athens
84/56

St. Marys
85/58

Parkersburg
83/57

Coolville
84/57

Wilkesville
85/57
POMEROY
Jackson
87/58
85/57
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
85/60
86/58
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
85/58
GALLIPOLIS
87/59
86/60
87/58

South Shore Greenup
85/60
84/57

66

Hot with partial
sunshine

McArthur
84/56

Very High

Primary: pine, grasses, other
Mold: 1445
Moderate

Chillicothe
83/55

SUNDAY

94°
69°

Adelphi
83/55

Waverly
84/56

Pollen: 56

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

Very warm with plenty
of sunshine

2

Primary: basidiospores, other
Fri.
6:04 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
3:05 a.m.
5:10 p.m.

FRIDAY

89°
60°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Elizabeth
85/59

Spencer
84/59

Buffalo
85/59

Ironton
85/61

Milton
85/59

St. Albans
85/58

Huntington
85/60

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
69/50
80s
70s
Billings
60s
88/57
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
Denver
77/56
20s
89/60
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
87/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
93/72
Flurries
Ice
Chihuahua
91/67
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Clendenin
84/57
Charleston
84/58

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
84/65
Minneapolis
94/71

Montreal
67/61
Toronto
80/59
Detroit
83/60

Chicago
87/67
Kansas City
86/71

New York
73/63
Washington
73/64

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

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
84/64/t
73/58/pc
95/75/pc
73/63/sh
75/61/r
88/57/s
87/54/s
73/57/pc
84/58/pc
93/69/t
85/59/c
87/67/s
84/62/s
78/57/s
83/59/s
100/81/s
89/60/pc
89/68/pc
83/60/s
87/73/pc
100/77/s
86/64/s
86/71/c
99/80/s
94/73/s
87/65/s
89/67/s
89/76/s
94/71/s
93/68/s
98/80/s
73/63/sh
95/75/s
96/77/t
76/62/r
107/86/t
80/57/pc
69/54/pc
87/66/t
73/61/pc
91/73/s
91/65/s
77/56/pc
69/50/s
73/64/sh

Hi/Lo/W
85/65/t
69/56/pc
91/75/s
75/65/s
84/64/s
73/47/sh
82/52/s
74/61/pc
86/62/s
87/72/pc
82/52/t
90/70/pc
86/63/s
81/63/s
85/64/s
102/82/s
86/55/t
81/71/t
86/65/s
88/74/s
101/78/s
87/64/pc
91/78/s
102/82/s
96/76/s
86/65/s
90/70/s
91/77/s
88/71/t
95/72/s
99/82/s
80/68/s
100/76/s
96/76/t
83/67/s
107/85/t
82/62/s
71/55/c
86/65/s
83/63/s
89/75/pc
87/65/t
74/54/s
74/54/s
84/67/s

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

Atlanta
95/75

Global

Houston
100/77

Monterrey
94/70

103° in Macon, GA
28° in West Yellowstone, MT

High
Low
Miami
89/76

119° in Omidieh, Iran
9° in Maquinchao, Argentina

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

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