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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

66°

83°

78°

A thunderstorm in spots this afternoon;
breezy. Cloudy tonight. High 89° / Low 62°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Coffee
grounds for
the garden

Lady Eagles
blank
Southern

WEATHER s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 69, Volume 73

Wednesday, May 1, 2019 s 50¢

MHS Prom candidates announced

Testimony
continues
in Tucker
case
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy of Meigs High School

The 2019 Meigs High School Prom will be held on Saturday, May 4, with the King and Queen to be crowned that evening. Queen candidates (front, from left) are Marissa
Noble, Kassidy Betzing, Shalynn Mitchell, Jenna Marshall, Hayley Lathey, Taylor Swartz. King candidates (back, from left) are Zachary Bartrum, Ezra Briles, Brody
Reynolds, Cole Durst, and Evan Hennington.

POMEROY — The
state continued presenting witnesses on Tuesday
in the case against former
corrections and probation
ofﬁcer Larry Tucker.
That brings the total to
23 witnesses for the prosecution during the seven
day, to this point, trial.
The ﬁrst day-and-a-half
was jury selection, with
the ﬁrst witness taking to
the stand in the late afternoon of day two.
Tucker, 56, is facing 31
felony charges and one
misdemeanor charge as
part of two indictments
in 2018 and 2019. Tucker
is accused of sexually
assaulting or attempting
to sexually assault 12 different inmates and/or probationers while working
as a corrections ofﬁcer at
the Middleport Jail and as
a Meigs County Common
Pleas Court probation
ofﬁcer. The incidents are
See TUCKER | 5

‘Township Tales and Tidbits’ at CSHA banquet
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — A Civil War
themed dinner, followed by
“Township Tales and Tidbits”,
was a well-received kickoff for
the Meigs County Bicentennial
Celebration last Friday evening
at Meigs High School.
The annual banquet, hosted
by the Chester Shade Historical Association, was a tribute
to the 12 townships that make
up Meigs County. CSHA
President Dan Will opened the
evening by welcoming guests,
including Bicentennial Ambassadors Cooper Schagel, Mattison Finlaw, Brielle Newland,
and Grant Adams, then lead
the Pledge of Allegiance and
offered a prayer before dinner.
The evening’s atmosphere
was enhanced by Civil War
reenactors and CSHA members
in period attire interspersed
with guests and speakers.
Meigs County Commissioner
Randy Smith introduced the
program by saying, “What
makes each township unique,
whether the geography or the
people who settled there, is

Volunteers
needed for
Habitat
house
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

Courtesy photo

“Township Tales and Tidbits” presenters were (back row, from left) Kim Romine, Bedford; Jordan Pickens, Lebanon and
Scipio; Mary Wingo, Columbia; Bob Beegle, Sutton; James K. Stanley, Olive; (front row, from left) Donna Jenkins, Rutland;
Opal Grueser, Salisbury; Ray Midkiff, Salem; Brielle Newland, Orange; and Lorna Hart, Letart. Not pictured is presenter Alan
Holter.

what makes our county strong.”
Smith invited listeners to
imagine what it was like for
our ancestors, and to value and

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9-10

acknowledge their contributions.
“With the telling of ‘Township Tales and Tidbits’, you

will hear pieces of history from
each, that together make up
See CSHA | 3

Bridging the gap
Staff Report

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

POMEROY — Teachers and
administrators from the Meigs Local
School District, local business owners, and community members met
with the purpose of creating a partnership to bridge the gap between
education and employment.
The meeting was hosted by Farmers Bank and facilitated by Meigs
High School Principal Travis Abbott,
Farmers Bank President Paul Reed,
and Meigs County Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe.
The meeting attendees participated
in roundtable discussions regarding the fundamental work skills that

employers are looking for in employees and how students can be better
prepared for the workforce.
“I believe that schools can drive
positive, meaningful change in our
community and for our community to
thrive our students must be engaged
in their education and have the ability to see themselves being successful
here at home,” stated Abbott. He
went on to share a vision of every
student graduating with a viable plan
for their future and seeing an opportunity for success in Meigs County
and its surrounding communities.
Varnadoe shared the most recent
See GAP | 3

MIDDLEPORT —
Habitat for Humanity of
Southeast Ohio is looking for volunteers for
the upcoming house
build starting May 3
on Brownell Avenue in
Middleport.
Seven volunteers are
still needed for Saturday’s
Blitz Build, but multiple
volunteers are needed for
the 12 weeks following
this weekend.
According to Habitat
for Humanity of SEO’s
Director of Volunteer and
Youth Engagement, Barry
Unger, volunteers on
Friday and Saturday will
be framing interior and
exterior walls, working on
the crawlspace, putting
in windows and doors,
and completing the siding
and shingles. Volunteers
throughout the summer
will be helping to build
decks, handrails, hang
drywall, ﬁnish drywall,
as well as sanding and
painting.
“We need their help to
make these changes in the
community,” Unger said.
“So as many hands as we
can get is helpful to us
and helpful to the family
we’re trying to serve.”
If you would like to volunteer, there are options
to sign up. Go to www.
habitatseo.org and click
on the ‘Get Involved’ tab,
email volunteer@habitatseo.org, or call 740-5920032 ext. 104.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, May 1, 2019

DEATH NOTICES
PATTERSON
GALLIPOLIS — Betty Patterson, 84, of Gallipolis,
died April 27, 2019 at Commonwealth of Kentucky, in
Ashland.
Funeral services will be held Thursday, May 2,
2019, at 1 p.m., at Wyoma Church in Gallipolis Ferry,
with Pastor Gene Harmon ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in the Patterson-Clonch Cemetery, Gallipolis
Ferry. Friends may visit with the family at the church
from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. prior to the service. Deal Funeral Home is assisting the family.
COPLEY
DEBARY, Fla. — Betty Swain Copley, 85, of Debary,
Fla., formerly of Gallia County, Ohio, died Wednesday,
April 24, 2019 at her residence.
The funeral service for Betty will be held at 11 a.m.
on Saturday, May 4, 2019 at Willis Funeral Home with
Pastor Bob Powell ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call from
6-8 p.m. on Friday, May 3, 2019 at the funeral home.
BLAKE
GLENWOOD — Edward Keith Blake, 82, of Glenwood, died Saturday, April 27, 2019, at Heritage Center in Huntington.
There will be no public services. Burial will be in
the Ball’s Chapel Cemetery in Ashton. Arrangements
are under the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant.
LEWIS
WEST COLUMBIA — Mary Jewell (McDaniel)
Lewis, 54, of West Columbia, died April 29, 2019 in
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, following a
sudden illness.
Service will be 1 p.m., Friday, May 3, 2019 in the
Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason. Burial will
follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant.
Visitation will be from 11 a.m. until time of service
Friday at the funeral home.
JONES
CROWN CITY — Clara Chaney Jones, age 80, of
Crown City, Ohio, died April 27, 2019.
She had committed her body for medical research.
There will be no funeral services.
DURFEE
POINT PLEASANT — Anne L. Durfee, 94 of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, April 26, 2019 at Arbors
at Gallipolis.
Anne requested her body be donated to science and
no services be held.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Wednesday, May 1
HARRISONVILLE — A free dinner will be held at
the Scipio Township Fire Department in Harrisonville, State Route 684, featuring roast pork, stufﬁng
and gravy, seasoned green beans, rolls and butter,
chocolate cake and beverages. Dinner will be served
from 5-6 p.m.

Thursday, May 2
OLIVE TWP. — The Olive Township Trustees will
hold their regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. at the township garage on Joppa Road.
ORANGE TWP. — The next regular meeting of
Orange Township Trustees, 7 p.m., Tuppers Plains
Fire Department.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical Association meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse.

May 2-4
POMEROY — Friends of the Library Book Sale:
May 2, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; May 3, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; May 4, 9
a.m.- 1 p.m. Items are not pre-priced; donations are
accepted for all material. New books available each
day.

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.

Daily Sentinel

Attacker had 50 unfired rounds
By Elliot Spagat
and Julie Watson
Associated Press

POWAY, Calif. — The
man accused of attacking a Southern California synagogue ﬁred
only eight to 10 of the
roughly 60 cartridges he
had before his weapon
jammed, prosecutors
said Tuesday.
John T. Earnest, 19,
pleaded not guilty to
charges of murder and
attempted murder in
the shooting that happened Saturday during a
Passover service at the
Chabad of Poway synagogue. One woman was
killed and three people
wounded, including the
rabbi.
Earnest was arrested
shortly after the attack
with 50 unﬁred rounds,
a tactical vest and helmet, prosecutors said
during his arraignment.
At the hearing, a
bespectacled Earnest
stood behind a glass
panel, wearing blue jail
clothes and showing no
apparent emotion. He
uttered only one word
— “yes” — to waive his
right to a speedy preliminary hearing.
The judge scheduled a
status hearing for May
30 and denied bail, calling Earnest an extreme
threat to public safety.
Earnest was an
accomplished student,
athlete and musician
whose embrace of white
supremacy and antiSemitism has dumbfounded his family and
others who thought
they knew him well.
He made the dean’s
list both semesters last
year as a nursing student at California State
University, San Marcos.
In high school, he had
stellar grades, swam on
the varsity team and
basked in the applause
of classmates for his
piano solos at talent
shows.
Earnest apparently
became radicalized
sometime over the last
two years. He is also
charged with arson in
connection with an
attack last month on
a mosque in nearby
Escondido.
Owen Cruise, 20, saw
Earnest every day dur-

Nelvin C. Cepeda | The San Diego Union-Tribune via AP, pool

John T. Earnest appears for his arraignment hearing Tuesday in San Diego. Earnest faces charges
of murder and attempted murder in the April 27 assault on the Chabad of Poway synagogue, which
killed one woman and injured three people, including the rabbi.

ing senior year at Mt.
Carmel High School in
San Diego when the two
were in calculus and
physics together. They
were also both in the
school’s amateur radio
club.
Earnest’s piano performances drew audiences to their feet.
His father, John A.
Earnest, is a popular
physics teacher at Mt.
Carmel, where he has
worked for 31 years.
“The way John T.
acted is not representative at all of the way
he was raised,” Cruise
said. “They are an outstanding family. Some
of the ﬁnest people I’ve
ever met.”
The suspect’s parents
said their son and ﬁve
siblings were raised in
a family that “rejected
hate and taught that
love must be the motive
for everything we do.”
“To our great shame,
he is now part of the
history of evil that
has been perpetrated
on Jewish people for
centuries,” the parents
said Monday in their
ﬁrst public comments.
“Our son’s actions were
informed by people we
do not know, and ideas
we do not hold.”
The parents, who
are cooperating with
investigators, refused to
provide legal representation to their son, and
he was represented by a
public defender.
Earnest burst into
the synagogue on the
last day of Passover, a
major Jewish holiday

that celebrates freedom,
and opened ﬁre with an
assault-style riﬂe on the
crowd of about 100.
He ﬂed when the riﬂe
jammed, according to
authorities and witnesses, avoiding an Army
combat veteran and an
off-duty Border Patrol
agent who pursued him.
He called 911 to report
the shooting and surrendered a short time later.
Lori Kaye , a founding
member of the congregation, was killed.
Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein
was shot in the hands,
while Noya Dahan, 8,
and her uncle Almog
Peretz suffered shrapnel
wounds.
Kaye, 60, was remembered for her kindness
Monday at a memorial
service at the packed
synagogue in Poway, a
well-to-do suburb north
of San Diego.
An online writing
by a person identifying himself as John
Earnest and published
shortly before the attack
spewed hatred toward
Jews and praised the
perpetrators of attacks
on mosques in New
Zealand that killed 50
people last month and
at Pittsburgh’s Tree of
Life synagogue that
killed 11 on Oct. 27.
Earnest frequented
8chan, a dark corner
of the web where those
disaffected by mainstream social media
sites often post extremist, racist and violent
views.
“I’ve only been lurking here for a year

ANTI-SEMITIC
VIOLENCE
DOUBLES
Associated Press

Violent attacks
against the Jewish
community in the
United States doubled
last year, while overall
attacks that also
include vandalism and
harassment remained
near record-high levels,
the Anti-Defamation
League reported
Tuesday.
The Jewish civil
rights group released
its annual census of
anti-Semitic incidents
three days after a
gunman opened fire at
a Southern California
synagogue, killing a
woman and wounding a
rabbi and two others.
The New York-based
group counted 1,879
anti-Semitic incidents
— either harassment,
vandalism or physical
assault — in 2018. That
is a 5% decrease from
the 1,986 incidents
reported in 2017, but
the third-highest
total since ADL began
tracking the data in
the 1970s. The 2017
number marked a 57%
increase over 2016 and
was the highest tally
ADL had counted in
more than two decades.

and half, yet what I’ve
learned here is priceless. It’s been an honor,”
he wrote.
Earnest, who evidently intended to
livestream the attack,
said he had planned the
attack for four weeks.

MEIGS BRIEFS
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
throughout area
RACINE — Meigs County
Road 29, Bowmans Run Road,
will be closed Wednesday, May
1, and Thursday, May 2, for a
culvert replacement. The culvert
is located approximately 200
yards west of T-19, Salser Road.
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.

RACO Scholarship
yard sale May 7-9
RACINE — The Spring RACO
Scholarship Yard Sale will be
held May 7-9 at Star Mill Park in
Racine. Times are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
on Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Wednesday and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on Thursday.

Benefit yard sale to
be held May 2-4
RUTLAND — The Rutland
United Methodist Church will
hold a yard sale May 2-4, from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. Food will
be available.

Friends of Rutland
Fundraiser
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 or ranch dressing, a chocolate brownie and a
drink. Questions about the dinner
can be directed to Donna Jenkins,
Vice-President by telephone at
(740) 742 2957 or by email at
djenkins.friendsofrutland@gmail.
com.

Immunization
clinic Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department will
conduct an Immunization Clinic
on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $30 donation
is appreciated for immunization
administration; however, no one
will be denied services because
of an inability to pay an administration fee for state-funded
childhood vaccines. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable.
Those who are insured via commercial insurance are responsible
for any balance their commercial
insurance does not cover for vaccinations. Pneumonia vaccines are
also available as well as ﬂu shots.
Call for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our website at www.meigs-health.com to
see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for
adults.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 1, 2019 3

Cooperative Parish accepting
scholarship applications

Courtesy photos

Teachers, administrators, business representatives and many others recently came together for a
meeting about bridging the gap for students.

CSHA
From page 1

Gap
From page 1

population and employment data that shows
Meigs County gaining in
both areas. “If you begin
in Ashtabula County and
travel south and then follow the Ohio River, you
won’t ﬁnd a county that
has gained in population
until you reach Meigs
County.” Varnadoe also
noted that Meigs County
is one of two counties

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

66°

83°

78°

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.

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.86
3.44
14.10
13.38

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:31 a.m.
8:21 p.m.
5:13 a.m.
5:11 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

First

Full

Last

May 4 May 11 May 18 May 26

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
9:53a
10:30a
11:10a
11:53a
12:16a
1:08a
2:05a

Minor
3:42a
4:20a
4:59a
5:41a
6:28a
7:21a
8:18a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
10:14p
10:52p
11:32p
---12:12p
1:34p
2:32p

Minor
4:03p
4:41p
5:21p
6:04p
6:53p
7:47p
8:46p

WEATHER HISTORY
Hartford, Conn., had its worst ﬂood
of the 19th century on May 1, 1854.
After 66 hours of steady rain, the
ﬂood crested at 28.9 feet. This height
was not eclipsed until the great ﬂood
of March 1936.

Adelphi
83/63

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
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. Tue.

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
12.25
21.18
24.20
12.42
13.11
26.38
11.98
31.91
37.59
12.94
32.00
37.50
33.70

Portsmouth
86/65

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.32
-0.96
-1.21
-0.59
+0.17
-1.20
+0.02
-1.02
-0.68
+0.02
-2.00
-0.70
-1.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Marietta
86/63

Murray City
84/60
Belpre
87/63

Athens
85/61

St. Marys
87/63

Parkersburg
85/61

Coolville
86/62

Wilkesville
86/60
POMEROY
Jackson
88/60
85/62
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/62
87/63
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
80/64
GALLIPOLIS
89/62
89/63
88/63

Milton
89/65

St. Albans
90/64

Huntington
87/63

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
63/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
69/49
20s
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
69/53
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Elizabeth
88/62

Spencer
88/63

Buffalo
88/63

Ironton
88/64

Ashland
88/64
Grayson
87/65

TUESDAY

76°
60°
A blend of sun and
clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
84/60

South Shore Greenup
87/64
84/63

62
0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
83/63

Lucasville
85/63
Very High

Logan
83/61

73°
52°

MONDAY

Warm with more
sunshine than clouds

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

79°
57°

SUNDAY

Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

A shower and
Cloudy, a shower and Cloudy with a passing Nice with clouds and
thunderstorm around
t-storm around
shower
sun

Very High

Primary: mulberry, oak, other
Mold: 549

SATURDAY

Romine illustrated Bedford’s history through its
many post ofﬁces; and
Mary Wingo stressed
the importance of coal
mining in Columbia.
The evening wrapped
up with the drawing of
rafﬂe and door prizes
winners, and a cannon
salute by the Civil War
reactors.
Katie Daily, an Eastern student from the
Meigs High School
Audio-Video Productions program ﬁlmed the
evening, and a video will
be available later this
summer.
More on the Bicentennial Weekend Celebration will appear in
upcoming editions of
The Daily Sentinel.
Editor’s Note: The
“Township Tales and
Tidbits” from Friday’s
celebration will be
expanded in articles by
Lorna Hart and published in the The Daily
Sentinel each Wednesday beginning May 8.

80°
53°

Waverly
83/63

Pollen: 637

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

on the accomplishments
of those who went
before.”
Speakers then took
the stage, giving brief
histories of their township, along with some
interesting stories and
personal recollections.
Alan Holter spoke of
the life of a farmer in
the early 1800’s; Bob
Beegle recounted stories
of Racine’s early days;
Opal Grueser focused on
Rock Springs’ strategic
importance in the settlement of the county;
Lorna Hart presented
several theories and
legends on the name
Letart; Donna Jenkins
emphasized Rutland’s
contributions to education; James Stanley and
Brielle Newland read
history and interesting
facts about Olive and
Orange respectively; Jordan Pickens subject was
Lebanon, rich in Civil
War history, and the site
of the Bufﬁngton Island
Memorial; Ray Midkiff
entertained with several stories of the Salem
water system; Kim

75°
51°

1

Primary: ascospores, unk.
Thu.
6:30 a.m.
8:22 p.m.
5:40 a.m.
6:10 p.m.

THURSDAY

A thunderstorm in spots this afternoon; breezy.
Cloudy tonight. High 89° / Low 62°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

83°
61°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

82°
59°
72°
49°
92° in 1942
30° in 2008

Submitted by Meigs High School
Principal Travis Abbott.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

stories of a county rich
in natural resources,
and a people who came
west to an undeveloped
wilderness. Despite
the odds, these early
pioneers survived,
clearing land to build
roads, homes, churches,
schools, and communities. They encountered
wild animals, river
ﬂooding, disease, and
often hostile indigenous
people to form communities and establish
farms and businesses.
What they lacked in
‘modern convinces’, was
compensated by hard
work and dedication.”
He said that while the
county has struggles, it
has much to be proud
of and residents should
not allow themselves
to become apathetic or
negative, instead, “As
we celebrate our Bicentennial, let us move
forward with a renewed
sense of purpose built

employers no matter
what they choose as
their next step,” Reed
explained “and we want
them to have the opportunity to lead successful
lives here in our community.”
The group will meet
again in May to continue
identifying ways they can
create a lasting partnership to beneﬁt the future
of our students and community.

in our region that has
gained in jobs between
2009 and 2018, with
Vinton County being the
other.
Reed discussed the
importance of having
students prepared to
enter the workforce after
graduation.
“When students graduate they go to college,
to the military, or to
the workforce. We want
our graduates to have
the job ready skills that
will allow them to meet
the needs of our local

and provide a copy of their transcript.
Scholarships will be awarded in the
amount of $500 as money is available.
Awards will be given solely on the
basis of the application. An interview
may be requested.
The deadline for donations to the
scholarship fund is June 2. All applications must be returned to the church
pastor by June 4, with the pastor to
submit applications to the Cooperative Parish Ofﬁce by June 11.
Scholarships will be awarded at the
volunteer banquet at 6 p.m. on July
15.
Applications are available at the
Meigs Cooperative Parish Ofﬁce at
the Mulberry Community Center or
from your church ofﬁce.

POMEROY — Applications are currently being accepted for the 2019-20
Meigs Cooperative Parish Scholarships.
David Ridgeway, Chairman of the
Meigs Cooperative Parish Scholarship
Committee, reports that applications
must be returned by June 4.
Applicants must attend a participating church afﬁliated with the Meigs
Cooperative Parish and the church
supports the scholarship endowment.
Applicants must complete a written application. Applicants must have
completed one year of higher education after high school, with priority
given to students 21 years of age or
older. Applicants must maintain a
minimum grade point average of 2.5

Clendenin
90/63
Charleston
89/62

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
47/35

Billings
52/38

Minneapolis
53/43
Chicago
64/44

Montreal
44/35
Toronto
49/43
Detroit
74/56

Denver
51/30

New York
56/52
Washington
75/66

Kansas City
66/52

Chihuahua
88/55

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
74/47/s
54/41/pc
86/66/pc
59/56/c
68/59/c
52/38/pc
61/41/pc
56/45/pc
89/62/pc
87/65/pc
44/26/r
64/44/r
81/63/c
80/61/c
82/63/c
78/68/t
51/30/c
61/48/c
74/56/t
83/70/s
85/73/pc
74/62/t
66/52/c
76/58/pc
80/65/c
69/53/pc
84/66/c
84/76/sh
53/43/r
86/66/c
85/71/c
56/52/sh
77/55/c
87/71/pc
60/55/sh
87/66/s
82/62/pc
53/40/c
87/62/pc
87/67/pc
76/65/t
54/39/pc
69/49/s
63/46/s
75/66/c

Hi/Lo/W
75/49/s
50/40/r
85/66/pc
74/58/c
86/64/pc
58/39/pc
66/40/pc
49/43/r
84/61/t
86/66/pc
54/31/s
58/42/r
78/60/t
71/60/r
78/62/t
81/66/t
61/34/pc
64/41/c
70/53/r
83/69/sh
86/71/t
72/54/t
64/45/sh
83/63/s
75/60/t
71/55/pc
82/63/t
85/76/t
57/42/r
85/62/c
84/70/sh
71/50/sh
66/56/t
85/71/t
85/57/t
91/69/s
77/63/t
47/39/r
85/64/pc
90/66/pc
72/54/t
63/44/pc
68/49/pc
60/45/pc
88/70/pc

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
86/66
El Paso
85/59

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

High
Low

93° in Venice, FL
11° in Ryegate, MT

Global
High
117° in Banda, India
Low -22° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
85/73
Monterrey
100/72

Miami
84/76

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
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Is Dogwood
the superior
flowering tree?
Dogwood trees are universally popular, and it’s
no wonder. At this time of year they put on a spectacular show, their brilliant white blooms lighting
up the spring landscape, but they can
be a challenge to grow successfully.
The fact is that really ﬁne, healthy
dogwoods in home landscapes are
actually somewhat rare. Dogwoods
don’t naturally thrive in full sun out
in the middle of front lawns.
Dogwood seeds sprout in the semiSteve
shade and rich loamy soil at the edge
of woods, with protection from other
Boehme
Contributing plants. As the forest canopy grows,
columnist
young dogwoods typically reach for
the sun, becoming one-sided. If you
look closely at a mature dogwood
in its natural setting you’ll see it’s in pretty rough
shape, crooked and unbalanced. The perfect specimens you see in suburban landscapes have been
planted there, and only one out of ten dogwood
transplants survives very long.
The most common cause of dogwood death
in landscapes is drowning from being planted
too deep in heavy soil and then over-watered.
Dogwoods really need to dry out between waterings. Bark borers and many types of fungus prey
on dogwoods. A serious disease called Dogwood
anthracnose has been killing dogwood trees in this
region for several years now, and is spreading fast.
Dogwoods are very vulnerable to bark damage
from weed-eaters and lawn mowers; ﬂesh wounds
in their tender bark are entry points for borers,
and bark scarring restricts the ﬂow of water and
food up the trunk.
There are ﬂowering trees that are much more
likely to survive. If you’re looking for a showy
ﬂowering tree that’s not too large but grows fast,
consider the Magnolia. There are some gorgeous
Magnolia hybrids that work well in clay soil,
making Magnolias a better choice for most landscapes than Dogwoods, which prefer well-drained
soils. We like the family of compact hybrids with
women’s names like Jane, Susan, Betty and Anne
(we call them “the girls”). They make ideal lawn
trees, big enough to walk under when they grow
up. Many of them re-bloom lightly during the summer and fall.
Another great spring-ﬂowering tree is the Winter King Hawthorn, a shapely lawn tree that grows
faster than dogwood, has white ﬂowers in spring
and shiny red berries all winter. Hawthorn is a
“xeriscape” tree, meaning it can get by with very
little water. It can also survive in bad soil.
Like dogwood, Serviceberry is a native in southern Ohio woodlands. Known for sweet fruit that
attracts robins and cedar waxwings in late spring,
serviceberry also has showy fall foliage. Redbuds
are another clump-form tree native to this area,
and very pretty during early spring.
Modern-day crabapple varieties have been
hybridized to minimize messy fruit drop, and
many spectacular colors and sizes have been
developed that make spectacular lawn trees. We
particularly like “Tina”, a dwarf variety of crabapple that grows to only eight feet tall and wide, covered with billows of light pink blooms in spring.
“Purple Prince” crabapples have dark bronze foliage all season and bloom deep pink. “Snowdrift”
has pure white blooms and a tidy wide oval shape.
“Red Jewel” is covered with shiny red berries all
winter long. “Indian Magic” with its striking crimson blooms is another favorite.
We’ve had to replace so many dogwoods under
our one-year warranty over the years that we
rarely use them in our landscape designs. A strong
suggestion is to be realistic about the growing
conditions you have and consider different ﬂowering trees that are more suitable. There are lots of
small-to-medium sized ornamental trees to choose
from. We like Hawthorn, serviceberry, white fringetree, crabapple, tree lilac, ornamental cherry
and ornamental pear. All these trees are easier to
grow than dogwood.
Steve Boehme is a landscape designer/installer specializing in
landscape “makeovers.” “Let’s Grow” is published weekly; column
archives are on the “Garden Advice” page at www.goodseedfarm.com.
For more information is available at www.goodseedfarm.com or call
GoodSeed Farm Landscapes at (937) 587-7021.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Singer Judy Collins is 80. Actor Stephen Macht
is 77. Singer Rita Coolidge is 74. Pop singer Nick
Fortuna (The Buckinghams) is 73. Actor-director
Douglas Barr is 70. Actor Dann Florek is 68. Singer-songwriter Ray Parker Jr. is 65. Actor Byron
Stewart is 63. Hall of Fame jockey Steve Cauthen
is 59. Actress Maia Morgenstern is 57. Actor
Scott Coffey is 55. Country singer Wayne Hancock is 54. Actor Charlie Schlatter is 53. Country
singer Tim McGraw is 52. Rock musician Johnny
Colt is 51. Rock musician D’Arcy is 51. Movie
director Wes Anderson is 50. Actress Julie Benz is
47. Actor Bailey Chase is 47. Country singer Cory
Morrow is 47.

THEIR VIEW

Coffee grounds for the garden
In the spring, we enjoy
sitting on the deck in
the morning, drinking
our coffee, watching the
wildlife and listening to
the birds.
There’s nothing quite
like a good cup of coffee
in the morning before
getting started out in
the garden. It warms the
body, energizes the disposition and brings the
world into sharp focus.
If you enjoy a daily cup
of coffee, your ﬁrst stop
for tending to the garden
is at your ﬁngertips. Coffee grounds usually ﬁnd
their way into the trash,
but we have a much
better use for that daily
grind.
Coffee isn’t normally
appreciated for its nutritional value, but the
organic matter found
in that coffee ﬁlter is a
notable source of nitrogen, potassium, phosphorous, magnesium and
copper and can be used
to bolster the health of
plants without investing
in costly commercial soil
amendments.

will avoid coffee
Even the cafgrounds sprinkled
feine, coffee lovers
on the soil surface
ﬁnd the extra puraround plants. Cofpose for the frugal
fee grounds are
gardener.We use
also a good deterwet or dry coffee
rent when ﬁre ants
ﬁlters as liners in
containers when
Charlene are a problem.
Unlike
planting annuals.
Thornhill
By adding a coffee Contributing slugs,earth
worms love coffee
ﬁlter between the columnist
grounds. Using
plants dirt and the
grounds in garden
pots drainage hole
soil or in worm compostkeeps dirt from leaking
ing bins not only helps
out.
enrich the soil, worm
It’s always a good idea
productivity skyrockets,
to add coffee grounds to
aerating soil and improvcompost, but mixing it
ing drainage. You can
directly into the soil can
help balance alkaline soil sprinkle fresh unwashed
or give a boost of acidity coffee grounds around
for plants like hydrangeas acid-loving plants like
azaleas, hydrangeas,
or rhododendrons.
blueberries, and lilBrew up a weak coffee
“tea” using spent grounds ies. Many vegetables
like slightly acidic soil
to water plants or add
with the exception of
coffee grounds directly
tomatoes – they do not
to the soil in planters.
respond well to the addiAs coffee grounds break
down, they release nutri- tion of coffee grounds.
Root crops like radishtion in the form of nitroes and carrots like coffee
gen, potassium, magnegrounds, especially when
sium and other minerals
mixed with the soil at
into the soil.
planting time. Sprinkling
Caffeine is toxic to
slugs and snails and they dry, fresh coffee grounds

around plants and on top
of soil helps deter some
pests. While it does not
fully eliminate them, it
does seem to help with
keeping cats, rabbits and
slugs at bay minimizing their damage in the
garden.
If you don’t indulge
in a morning cup many
coffee shops often give
coffee grounds away free
to gardeners as they are
a waste product they
would normally have to
pay to dispose of.
Coffee grounds and
gardening go together
naturally. Whether you
are composting with
coffee grounds or using
used coffee grounds
around the yard, you will
ﬁnd that coffee can give
your garden as much of
a pick up as it does for
you.
Charlene Thornhill is a volunteer
citizen columnist, who serves
readers weekly with her community
column Along the Garden Path.
She can be reached at char.donn.
thornhill@gmail.com. Viewpoints
expressed in the article are the
work of the author.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday,
May 1, the 121st day of
2019. There are 244 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On May 1, 1707, the
Kingdom of Great Britain
was created as a treaty
merging England and
Scotland took effect.
On this date
In 1786, Mozart’s opera
“The Marriage of Figaro”
premiered in Vienna.
In 1931, New York’s
102-story Empire State
Building was dedicated.
Singer Kate Smith made
her debut on CBS Radio
on her 24th birthday.
In 1941, the Orson
Welles motion picture
“Citizen Kane” premiered
in New York.
In 1945, a day after
Adolf Hitler took his own
life, Admiral Karl Doenitz
effectively became sole
leader of the Third Reich
with the suicide of Hitler’s propaganda minister,
Josef Goebbels.
In 1960, the Soviet
Union shot down an
American U-2 recon-

naissance plane over
Sverdlovsk and captured
its pilot, Francis Gary
Powers.
In 1964, the computer
programming language
BASIC (Beginner’s
All-Purpose Symbolic
Instruction Code) was
created by Dartmouth
College professors John
G. Kemeny and Thomas
E. Kurtz.
In 1967, Elvis Presley
married Priscilla Beaulieu at the Aladdin Hotel
in Las Vegas. (They
divorced in 1973.) Anastasio Somoza Debayle
became president of Nicaragua.
In 1971, the intercity
passenger rail service
Amtrak went into operation.
In 1975, Hank Aaron of
the Milwaukee Brewers
broke baseball’s all-time
RBI record previously
held by Babe Ruth during a game against the
Detroit Tigers (Milwaukee won, 17-3).
In 1982, the World’s
Fair in Knoxville, Tennessee, was opened by President Ronald Reagan.
In 1992, on the third
day of the Los Angeles

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Any man who has the brains to think and
the nerve to act for the benefit of the people
of the country is considered a radical by
those who are content with stagnation and
willing to endure disaster.”
— William Randolph Hearst
American newspaper publisher (1863-1951)

riots, a visibly shaken
Rodney King appeared in
public to appeal for calm,
pleading, “Can we all get
along?”
In 2011, President Barack Obama
announced the death of
Osama bin Laden during
a U.S. commando operation (because of the time
difference, it was early
May 2 in Pakistan, where
the al-Qaida leader met
his end).
Ten years ago: Supreme
Court Justice David
Souter announced his
retirement effective at the
end of the court’s term
in late June. (President
Barack Obama chose
federal judge Sonia Sotomayor to succeed him.)
Singer-actor-impressionist
Danny Gans, one of Las

Vegas’ most popular entertainers, died at age 52.
Five years ago: Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel
called a 50-percent jump
in reports by members
of the military of sexual
assaults the previous
year a “clear threat” to
both male and female service members’ lives and
well-being, and said he’d
ordered Pentagon ofﬁcials to increase efforts to
get male victims to report
abuse.
One year ago: Entering
the State Department
headquarters for the
ﬁrst time as America’s
top diplomat, Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo
vowed to reinvigorate
American diplomacy and
help the United States
get “back our swagger.”

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

OSHP announces
upcoming checkpoint
Staff Report

Wednesday, May 1, 2019 5

‘We are with you!’ US says of uprising
By Matthew Lee
and Ben Fox
Associated Press

GALLIPOLIS — The Ohio State Highway Patrol
announced recently that troopers will operate an OVI
checkpoint to deter and intercept impaired drivers
this week.
The county where the checkpoint will take place
will be announced the day prior to the checkpoint,
and the location will be announced the morning of the
checkpoint.
If you plan to consume alcohol, designate a driver
or make travel arrangements before drinking. Troopers say don’t let other lives be lost for the “senseless
and selﬁsh act of getting behind the wheel impaired.”
Operation support for the sobriety checkpoint will
be provided by local law enforcement agencies.

Tucker
From page 1

alleged to have occurred
between January 2011
and November 2017.
Charges against Tucker
include six counts of Sexual Battery, third-degree
felonies; eight counts of
Kidnapping, ﬁrst-degree
felonies; six counts of
Gross Sexual Imposition,
fourth-degree felonies; six
counts of Attempted Sexual Battery, fourth-degree
felonies; four counts of
Attempted Compelling
Prostitution, fourthdegree felonies; one count
of Theft in Ofﬁce, a ﬁfthdegree felony; one count
of Soliciting, a thirddegree misdemeanor.
The ﬁrst person to testify on Tuesday was the
12th alleged victim in the
case.
The woman stated
she was supervised by
Tucker while on diversion in a breaking and
entering case. As part of
that supervision she had
to check in monthly and
complete 40 community
service hours during the
one year of supervision.
She stated initially her
interactions with Tucker
were ﬁne, but that later
changed.
The woman testiﬁed
that Tucker would comment about what she was
wearing, as well as asking
if her breasts were real.
On two separate occasions when she was with
Tucker in his vehicle, she
alleged that he touched
her breast, asking if they
were real.
She also testiﬁed that
on her ﬁnal meeting with
Tucker he allegedly took
her into the jury room,
closed the door and
exposed himself to her.
“I said a few choice
words, left as fast as I
could and never came
back,” said the woman
as to what she did in
response to the alleged
incident.
She stated that she was
terminated from diversion
and sent to prison for
failing to report following
the alleged incident.
Following her testimony was Meigs County
Sheriff’s Sgt. Frank
Stewart. Stewart, who
was previously the GalliaMeigs Major Crimes
Task Force representative
from Middleport Police
Department, stated that
he had worked with a
conﬁdential informant
who had made allegations
against Tucker.
Stewart, working along
with Sgt. Bill Gilkey,
helped to set up a controlled call between the
victim and Tucker, as well
as a meeting between the
two. Relaying the information on to Sheriff Keith
Wood, Stewart stated that
they were put in contact
with a BCI agent and
took the victim to meet
with the agent.
Common Pleas Court
Administrator and Bailiff
Steve Jagers was the ﬁnal
witness of the morning,
testifying about his role
in supervising Tucker and
concerns he had.
Jagers testiﬁed that

he was concerned that
Tucker was “too friendly”
with some of the female
probationers and that the
probation ofﬁcer is not
supposed to be a friend
to the probationer, but
rather to supervise the
person.
Jagers further testiﬁed
that he had several conversations with Tucker
regarding his interactions
with female probationers and being alone with
them.
The possible overlap
of Tucker’s work hours
between the Middleport
Jail and Common Pleas
Court was also testiﬁed
to by Jagers.
Jagers stated that he
located a schedule which
showed Tucker was to
work 3-11 p.m. at the jail,
while he was working 8
a.m.-4 p.m. for the court.
He stated that there were
times Tucker would state
he was going to home
visits around 3 p.m. Jagers stated that on two
occasions he drove by
the police department in
Middleport and Tucker’s
vehicle was there between
the 3-4 p.m. time. The
defense questioned if as a
probation ofﬁcer Tucker
would have worked a
ﬂexible schedule as he
was sometimes called out
or worked on weekends.
Jagers stated that Tucker
was to report that to him
if it was the case.
Jagers also testiﬁed to
the duties of a probation
ofﬁcer and the general
rules that they are to follow, although there is no
written policy manual.
On Tuesday afternoon,
Middleport Assistant
Chief and Jail Administrator Mony Wood took the
stand.
Wood was Tucker’s
supervisor at the jail and
hired him in December
2014. Wood said Tucker
often picked up extra
shifts, working more than
he was scheduled.
Addressing the layout
of the jail, policies and
camera locations, Wood
said that inmates are not
to be in the supply room
or the corrections ofﬁcer
ofﬁce. There are signs
on the doors stating that
inmates are not permitted.
Reviewing video footage from one of the
alleged incidents, Wood
stated that the video
showed an inmate in both
the supply closet and the
corrections ofﬁce with
Tucker. Wood stated that
was against the rules.
Wood also testiﬁed to
the fact that all happenings in the jail, including
inmates being out of the
cell, are to be noted on
the journal for that shift.
On the date of Nov. 1,
2017, the date of the
video played and the
alleged offenses involving
one of the victims, there
was no acknowledgement
of the inmate having been
out of the cell listed on
the report.
Court is scheduled
to resume at 9 a.m. on
Wednesday with the state
calling additional witnesses.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

WASHINGTON —
The Trump administration declared quick and
enthusiastic support
Tuesday for the Venezuelan opposition effort to
spark a military uprising against embattled
President Nicolas Maduro, hoping for decisive
action in the political crisis that has engulfed the
South American nation.
President Donald
Trump and senior foreign policy ﬁgures in
his administration all
weighed in, casting the
effort headed by opposition leaders Juan Guaido
and Leopoldo Lopez as a
move to restore democracy, not an attempted
coup like the short-lived
effort to oust thenPresident Hugo Chavez
in 2002 that seemed to
have U.S. support.
“We are with you!”
Vice President Mike
Pence tweeted to the
opposition. Pence, who
has had a lead role in the
administration’s effort to
persuade Maduro to give
up power, told the opposition group, “America
will stand with you until
freedom &amp;amp; democracy are restored.”
National Security
Adviser John Bolton said
it was a “very delicate
moment” for Venezuela.
“If this effort fails, they
will sink into a dictatorship from which there
are very few possible
alternatives,” he said at
the White House.
The wholehearted
embrace of the rebellion reﬂects the goals of
an administration that
from its earliest days has
sought the removal of
Maduro. But it was also
an unusually full-throated endorsement by any
government for a mass
protest that was turning
violent.

Boris Vergara | AP

An opponent to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro carrying a Venezuelan flag covers his face
amid tear gas fired by soldiers loyal to Maduro during an attempted military uprising to oust
Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, on Tuesday. Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó and jailed
opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez took to the streets with a small contingent of armed troops
early Tuesday in a call for the military to rise up and oust Maduro.

“It’s more than cheerleading. They are very
actively collaborating,”
said Mark Weisbrot,
who is co-director of the
Center for Economic and
Policy Research in Washington and has called for
a negotiated end to the
political crisis.
The U.S. and about 50
other nations take the
position that Maduro’s
re-election last year was
irrevocably marred by
fraud and he is not the
legitimate president
of Venezuela, a once
prosperous nation that
has the world’s largest
proven oil reserves.
In January, the
administration took
the unusual step of recognizing Guaido, the
opposition leader of the
National Assembly, as
interim president. It also
imposed punishing sanctions on the country’s
oil sector, deepening
the country’s economic
crisis.
Despite these and
other measures, Maduro,
the hand-picked successor to Chavez, has
retained his hold on the
country and the support
of the security services.

That support seemed
to crack Tuesday with
the launch of what the
opposition was calling
“Operation Freedom,”
which began with the
early-morning release of
a short video of Guaido
and Lopez alongside
a few dozen national
guardsmen urging
people to “take to the
streets.”
Lopez, the country’s
most prominent opposition activist, had been
under house arrest, and
his sudden appearance
would seem to have
required the cooperation
of troops who guard him.
“What we are seeing
today in Venezuela is
the will of the people to
peacefully change the
course of their country
from one of despair
to one of freedom and
democracy,” Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo
tweeted in an early reaction. “The U.S. stands
with them.”
Still, the Trump
administration was
caught slightly off-guard
by Guaido’s decision to
launch the campaign on
Tuesday. Elliott Abrams,
the special representa-

tive for Venezuela, said
the administration had
expected major marches
and protests to take
place on Wednesday for
the May Day holiday.
At some point after
that, Abrams said, U.S.
ofﬁcials had been led
to believe that the head
of Venezuela’s Supreme
Court, the defense minister and the chief of the
presidential guard would
declare their support
for the constitution and,
by extension, renounce
Maduro’s leadership.
Abrams said U.S. ofﬁcials believed such a step
would galvanize public
support for Guaido.
“What was going to
happen, we were told,
was that they would
announce their support
for the constitution,”
he told reporters at the
State Department.
That did not occur
and Abrams said “the
situation on the ground
remains confused.”
Nonetheless, Abrams
said he had been in contact with Guaido by text
message at midafternoon
and Guaido seemed
“buoyant and determined.”

Mississippi River is set
to reach record or nearrecord crests in Iowa,
Illinois and northern
Missouri.

in the nation to enforce
the older protocol.
Under the new FDA
label, a smaller dose of
mifepristone can be used
up to 70 days after the
beginning of the last
menstrual period instead
of the 49-day limit in
effect under the old label
rule.

the opioid crisis.

IN BRIEF

Mississippi
crest feared

OMAHA, Neb. (AP)
— Communities in
several states along the
Mississippi River are
watching the skies this
week as rainfall will
likely determine whether
the river reaches record
crests and how much it
will raise ﬂoodwaters.
The National Weather
Service had issued
ﬂood warnings for areas
directly on either side
of the river in 10 states,
from Minnesota and
Wisconsin south to Louisiana and Mississippi.
“It’s pretty much the
entire river, all the way
to the Gulf of Mexico,”
Mike McClure, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in
Davenport, Iowa, said
Tuesday.
In Iowa, some cities
on the river’s banks —
including Davenport and
Muscatine — have shut
down low-lying streets
and erected ﬂood walls
and sandbag barriers.
Flooding also led ofﬁcials to close some roads
along the river, including
Iowa Highway 22 from
Davenport downstream
to Muscatine and US
Highway 67 north of
LeClaire, Iowa.
Flood watches have
been issued for larger
tracts around in the river
in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri, as well as sections
of Kansas, Oklahoma
and Arkansas, as heavy
rain that began in some
places Monday was set
to continue into today.
The rain comes as the

Court halts
abortion law

Protesters
occupy frat

Student protesters
at Swarthmore College
occupied an on-campus
fraternity house Monday
following the leak of
OKLAHOMA CITY
documents purportedly
(AP) — The Oklahoma
describing some memSupreme Court ruled
bers’ derogatory comTuesday that a state law
ments and sexual assault
restricting access to
jokes.
drug-induced abortions
The demonstration is
is unconstitutional, the
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
aimed at shutting down
latest decision by the
(AP) — Hospitals in
state’s highest court
West Virginia have band- the Phi Psi chapter at
striking down restriced together to sue some the private liberal arts
school in suburban Philations on abortions adopt- of the country’s largest
ed by the Republicanopioid companies, saying delphia. On Monday
controlled Legislature.
they ﬂooded Appalachia morning, about 30 students were sitting at the
with powerful painkillThe court overturned
college-owned building,
ers and forced medical
a 2014 state law that
which is mainly used
centers to deal with the
banned “off-label” use
for Phi Psi parties and
ﬁnancial repercussions.
of mifepristone, a mediNearly 30 West Virgin- other social activities.
cation used for aboria hospitals and 10 afﬁli- As many as 100 protesttions, sometimes called
ers were there over the
ates in Kentucky have
RU-486. The New Yorkweekend.
based Center for Repro- signed on to the suit
“We’re trying to force
ﬁled Monday in Marshall
ductive Rights, which
the college to make the
County, West Virginia.
challenged the law on
right decision on this,”
The hospitals’ lawyer
behalf of the Oklahoma
senior Morgin Goldberg,
said the case is the ﬁrst
Coalition for Reproduc22, said.
tive Justice, complained time a large group of
Earlier this month,
that it would force physi- hospitals in a state has
two campus publications,
teamed up to take legal
cians to treat women
The Phoenix and Voices,
action against opioid
seeking medication
ﬁrms. The hospitals are released internal Phi Psi
abortion with an obsodocuments from 2012 to
seeking monetary damlete regimen that had
2016 that they say were
been rejected by medical ages to cover the costs
anonymously leaked.
experts and the Food and of treating people with
The redacted documents
opioid addictions.
Drug Administration.
The suit is just the lat- included jokes about
The statute required
sexual assault; derogaest legal action against
physicians to comply
opioid companies. There tory comments about
with the FDA’s 2000
women, minorities and
are about 2,000 such
label protocol for medisuits across the country the LGBT community;
cally terminated pregvideos and photos of
ﬁled by state and local
nancies rather than an
governments, American sexual encounters where
updated protocol introall parties may not have
duced in 2016. The abor- Indian tribes, unions,
known they were being
hospitals and others
tion-rights group maintained that the law made seeking to hold the drug recorded — and even
Oklahoma the only state industry responsible for referenced a “rape attic.”

Hospitals sue
opioid makers

�Sports
6 Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles blank Southern, 10-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern sophomore Kelsey Roberts (center) steps on home plate for a force
out, in front of Southern junior Sydney Adams (11), during the Lady Eagles’ 10-0
victory on Monday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
A thorough sweep.
The Eastern softball team —
which defeated Southern by a
15-1 count on April 9 in Racine
— claimed a 10-0 victory over
the Lady Tornadoes on Monday at Don Jackson Field, with
the Lady Eagles outhitting
their guest by a 12-to-1 count.
Eastern (10-6, 10-4 TVC
Hocking) scored the go-ahead
run with two outs in the bottom of the ﬁrst, as Ally Barber
singled home Cera Grueser.
The Lady Eagles added four
more runs in the opening
frame, three of which came on
a pair of errors.

Another error by the Lady
Tornadoes (6-14, 4-12)
increased Eastern’s lead to 6-0
in the bottom of the second
inning. Southern reached scoring position for the ﬁrst and
only time in the top of the
third, but had a runner thrown
out at the plate and stranded
another on third.
The Lady Eagles capped off
the 10-0 mercy rule, as Tessa
Rockhold hit an RBI double in
the third and a three-run triple
in the ﬁfth.
Pitching a complete game,
EHS senior Alexus Metheney
was the winning pitcher of
record with a one-hit shut out,
in which she struck out three
batters and walked one.
Abby Cummins also pitched

a complete game and took the
loss for SHS, striking out one
and walking one, while giving
up nine runs, six earned, on a
dozen hits.
Leading EHS at the plate,
Tessa Rockhold was 2-for-2
with a triple, a double and four
runs batted in, Kelsey Casto
was 2-for-3 with two runs
scored, while Grueser and Mollie Maxon both went 2-for-3
and scored a run apiece.
Metheney singled once and
scored twice in the win, while
Barber and Emmalea Durst
both earned a single, a run and
an RBI. Kelsey Roberts singled
once and scored once, while
Kennadi Rockhold came up
See EAGLES | 7

Marauders
knock off
NYHS, 11-1
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — Back in the win column in a big way.
The Meigs baseball team earned its ﬁrst mercy
rule victory of the season on Monday in Athens
County, as the Marauders snapped a four-game
skid and topped Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division host Nelsonville-York by an 11-1 tally in six
innings.
Meigs (8-10, 5-5 TVC Ohio) — which also
defeated NYHS by a 10-3 count on April 10 in
Rocksprings — was held scoreless in the opening
frame of Monday’s game, but took a 2-0 lead as
Michael Kesterson and Wyatt Hoover scored on a
two-out error in the top of the second.
The Marauders were up 4-0 after Kesterson
and Hoover scored on another Buckeye error in
the top of the fourth. MHS added two more runs
in the ﬁfth, as Matt Gilkey scored on an Andrew
Dodson double, and Briar Wolfe came home on a
grounder from Hoover.
The Marauders were ahead 11-0 after combining four hits and three walks for a ﬁve-run sixth
inning, highlighted by a two-run double from
Gilkey.
NYHS broke up the shut out in the bottom of
the sixth, but couldn’t avoid the 11-1 mercy rule
loss.
Gilkey was the winning pitcher of record in ﬁve
shut out innings for the guests, striking out eight
batters and walking two, while giving up two hits.
Dodson pitched the ﬁnal frame for Meigs, striking
out one and walking two, while surrendering one
earned run on one hit.
Robson took the loss in three innings of work
for NYHS, giving up two unearned runs on one hit
and two walks, while striking out two. Kasler and
Hall combined to ﬁnished the game for the Buckeyes, giving up nine runs, seven earned, on nine
hits and two walks, while striking out three.
Leading Meigs at the plate, Gilkey and Dodson
both went 2-for-4 with a double and two RBIs,
with Gilkey also scoring two runs. Hoover went
2-for-3 with two runs and two RBIs for the victors,
while Wolfe went 2-for-3 and scored once.
Wesley Smith singled once, scored once and
drove in two runs for the guests, Kesterson added
See MARAUDERS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, May 1
Baseball
Ironton St. Joseph at
South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at
Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Southern at Vinton
County, 5 p.m.
Softball
Ironton St. Joseph at
South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Williamstown-Wirt Co.
winner at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Poca-Winfield winner at
Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Southern at Vinton

County, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
TVC Hocking
Championships at Meigs,
4 p.m.
Thursday, May 2
Baseball
Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Nitro, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at
Parkersburg South, 7 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
TVC Ohio Championships
at River Valley, 4 p.m.

Courtesy photos

Eastern sophomore Blake Newland throws to first base for the final out of the fifth inning, during the Eagles’ 4-1 victory over Southern
on Monday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Eastern turns back Tornadoes
Eagles clinch at least a share of second
straight TVC Hocking baseball title
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — A championship
defended with a whole lot
of defense.
The Eastern baseball
team clinched at least
a share of its second
straight Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
title on Monday at its
home ﬁeld, as the Eagles
defeated archrival Southern by a 4-1 count, making the seventh time this
season EHS has held a
league opponent to oneor-fewer runs.
Eastern (16-0 13-0 TVC
Hocking) — which left
two runners in scoring
position in the opening
inning — broke the scoreless tie in the bottom of
the third, as Isaiah Fish
doubled home Bruce
Hawley.
Next, Blake Newland
scored on a wild pitch to
give EHS a 2-0 lead, and
then back-to-back bases
loaded walks pushed the
Eagle advantage to 4-0
by the end of the inning.
The victors didn’t score
again in the contest,
however, having a trio of
runners thrown out at the
plate over the ﬁnal three
frames.
Southern (11-5, 11-5)
— which didn’t reach
scoring position or the hit
column until the top of
the ﬁfth inning — ended
the shut out with Billy
Harmon scoring on a
Ryan Acree sac-ﬂy in the

seventh. The Tornadoes
loaded the bases with one
gone in the inning, but a
strikeout and a grounder
sealed the Eagles’ 4-1
triumph.
Following the titleclinching win, 19th-year
Eastern head coach Brian
Bowen talked about what
it meant to his club to be
able to repeat as champions after graduating 11
players from last year’s
team.
“It’s always good for the
kids,” Bowen said. “They
had such a great commitment, they work so hard
and invest so much into
it, so it’s good for them to
get some sort of recognition for that. Every year
is a new year. That senior
class last year, that was
their team, and this is
these guys’ team. I think
they wanted to get one on
their own.
“I’m really proud of
them, I’m a little bit
shocked at what they
were able to accomplish,
we just have so many new
kids. They came in with
tremendous attitudes.
We have great assistant
coaches that sacriﬁce a
lot and do a tremendous
job coaching the kids. It’s
the kids and the assistant coaches, I’m really
impressed with them.
We’re still trying to get
better, we’re so inexperienced that we have plenty
of room to get better and
we have opportunities to
get better every day.”
Fourth-year SHS head

Southern junior Cole Steele (16) throws out a runner trying to
score, during the Tornadoes’ 4-1 setback on Monday in Tuppers
Plains, Ohio.

coach Kyle Wickline
gave credit to the Eagles
for their championship
season, and talked about
what’s left for the Tornadoes now that their
league slate is complete.
“Coach Bowen and
the coaching staff does
a great job with these
guys, they’ve had a great
season,” Wickline said.
“We just want to continue
to try and get better. The
league thing is over with
and it’s like we told the
kids, ‘it’s time to loosen
up a little bit and have
a little bit of fun’. We
have some non-league
games coming up to try

to prepare us for the
tournament, we’ll take it
one game at a time and
see what happens from
there.”
EHS sophomore Matthew Blanchard was the
winning pitcher of record
in a complete game, striking out six batters and
allowing one earned run
on four hits and a walk.
SHS freshman Will
Wickline took the loss
in three innings on the
mound, striking out six,
while giving up four
earned runs on one hit
and six walks. Jensen
See EASTERN | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 1, 2019 7

Blue Angels avenge Coal Grove

Meigs blasts
Lady Buckeyes

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio
— The kind of thrill ride
that the Blue Angels
would line up for again.
The Gallia Academy
softball team rallied back
from an early three-run
deﬁcit and ultimately
took a permanent lead in
the bottom of the sixth
before eventually holding on for a hard-fought
10-9 victory over visiting
Coal Grove in an Ohio
Valley Conference matchup Monday night at the
Eastman Athletic Complex in Gallia County.
The Blue Angels (8-11,
8-4 OVC) trailed 3-1 and
4-1 after each of the ﬁrst
two innings of play, but
the hosts produced a trio
of three-run outbursts
over the four frames
while building a 10-7
advantage headed into
the seventh.
The Lady Hornets
answered with a pair of
runs in the top half of
the frame and had runners at second and third
with two away, but a 1-3
groundout ended the
threat and allowed the
Blue and White to salvage a season split in the
head-to-head matchup.
The Red and Black
posted a 10-2 victory
in the ﬁrst contest at
CGHS back on April 18.
Rylee Harmon gave
the guests a quick 3-0
cushion in the top of
the ﬁrst after blasting a
three-run homer to leftcenter with one away.
GAHS countered with
an Abby Hammons single with two away that
allowed Bailie Young to
score from second while
closing the gap down to
two runs.
Katie Deeds singled
and eventually scored on
a wild pitch that made
it a 4-1 contest through
two complete, but Gallia
Academy answered with
three runs in the home
half of the third to knot
things up.
Alex Barnes and

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — It’s tough to tell which
had a better night, the Lady Marauders’ offense, or
their defense.
The Meigs softball team allowed Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division host Nelsonville-York to reach
base just three times on Monday in Athens County,
as the Lady Marauders rolled to a 15-0 victory on the
strength of 15 hits.
Meigs (10-15, 5-5 TVC Ohio) — snapping a threegame skid — took a 1-0 lead in the top of the ﬁrst
inning, as Breanna Zirkle singled home Taylor Swartz.
The Lady Marauders were up 3-0 following a twoout error in the next frame, and then the Maroon and
Gold scored three runs on a trio of passed balls in the
top of the third.
Meigs sent 11 batters to the plate and scored seven
runs on seven hits and an error in top of the fourth,
and then capped off the 15-0 win with two runs on
two hits and an error in the ﬁfth.
Zirkle was the winning pitcher of record in a complete game shut out for Meigs, striking out seven batters, walking one and allowing two hits.
Grifﬁn pitched the ﬁrst four frames, struck out one
batter and took the loss for NYHS, allowing 13 runs,
six earned, on 13 hits and two walks. Jones pitched
the ﬁnal frame, giving up two unearned runs on two
hits.
Jerrica Smith led the MHS offense, going 4-for-4
with a double, three runs scored and one run batted
in. Swartz was 3-for-4 with a double, three runs and
two RBIs in the win, while Katie Hawkins was 3-for-3
with two runs and two RBIs.
Zirkle was 2-for-4 with a double, two runs and two
RBIs for Meigs, Ciera Older was 2-for-3 with a run and
an RBI, while Mara Hall singled once, scored twice and
drove in one run. Alyssa Smith contributed a run and
an RBI to the winning cause, Bailey Swatzel chipped in
with an RBI, while Jadyn Floyd added a run.
Grifﬁn and McWilliams were responsible for the
two Lady Buckeye hits, each singling in the third
inning.
The Lady Buckeyes committed all-3 of the game’s
errors and stranded three runners on base.
This gives MHS the season sweep of the Orange
and Brown, as Meigs topped the Lady Buckeyes by a
6-1 count on April 10 in Rocksprings.
On Friday, Meigs will be back home to face Alexander.

Eastern

errors and four runners
stranded.
This marks the sixth
time the Eagles have won
From page 6
league championships
in back-to-back seasons,
Anderson pitched the
ﬁnal three frames in shut with their other titles
out fashion for the Torna- coming in 2018, 2010,
2009, 2008, 2002, 1991,
does, striking out three,
walking three and surren- 1987, 1986, 1981, 1980
and 1979. Of Eastern’s
dering a hit.
dozen league crowns,
Leading the Eagles at
Bowen has coached the
the plate, Fish doubled
squad for half, including
once, scored once and
all-6 as members of the
drove in a run, while
Blanchard added a single TVC Hocking.
The Eagles also ﬁnand a run. Brayden Smith
ished off their second
and Ryan Harbour both
straight season sweep of
had an RBI for the vicSouthern, as EHS won by
tors, while Newland and
a 3-1 count on April 9 in
Hawley scored a run
Racine.
apiece.
After Tuesday’s trip to
Harmon singled once
Miller, Eastern is schedand scored once for the
uled to visit Trimble on
guests, Anderson added
Thursday. Following their
a double, Wickline and
bout at Wellston on TuesCole Steele picked up a
single apiece, while Acree day, the Purple and Gold
will travel to Athens on
earned an RBI.
Friday.
Eastern committed
two errors and left nine
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740runners on base, while
446-2342, ext. 2100.
Southern had a trio of

BROADCAST

3
4
6
7
8
10
11
12
13

three runs in the home
half of the sixth for
what proved to be a
permanent advantage.
Barnes reached on
an error and eventually
scored the tying run on
an error, then Meadows
singled in Adams with
one away for a 9-7 lead.
Hammons followed
with an RBI double
that plated Meadows
while increasing the
advantage out to 10-7
through six complete.
Malone and Schwartz
used a one-out single
and a walk to reach
base, then Malone
scored on a wild pitch
and Schwartz came in
on an error that allowed
Deeds to reach safely.
Dillow followed with
a double that advanced
Deeds to third with two
away, but a ground ball
back to pitcher Hunter
Copley ultimately
resulted in the ﬁnal putout — wrapping up the
one-run triumph.
Gallia Academy outhit the guests by a slim
11-10 overall margin
and also committed
four of the seven errors
in the contest. CGHS
stranded eight runners
on base, while the hosts
left six on the bags.
Copley was the win-

ning pitcher of record
after allowing ﬁve
earned runs, 10 hits
and four walks over
seven innings while
striking out four. Murphy took the loss after
surrendering three runs
(two earned) and three
hits over two frames
of relief while fanning
three.
Hammons led the
Blue Angels with three
hits and four RBIs,
followed by Barnes,
Adams and Meadows
with two safeties
apiece. Young and
Unroe also had a hit
each in the victory, with
Young also scoring a
team-best three runs.
Dillow paced CGHS
with three hits, followed by Harmon with
two safeties and a teambest four RBIs. Deeds
also had two hits and
two runs scored in the
setback.
Gallia Academy returns to action
Wednesday when it
travels to Fairland for
an OVC contest at 5
p.m. The Blue Angels
will also head to Chesapeake on Thursday for
a 5 p.m. bout.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

6:30

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6

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7

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conceptualized. (N)
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30 for 30 "The Dominican Dream" (N)
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Enchanted (2007, Adventure) Amy Adams, Patrick
Me Before You ('16, Dra) Emilia Clarke. Louisa is determined to
(:35) Stalked
Dempsey, Julie Andrews. (P) TVPG
show Will, who is in a wheelchair, that life is worth living. TVPG
by My Mom
(5:00)
Mr. Deeds ('02, Family Guy Family Guy Pretty Little Liars "Dead
Space Jam (1996, Comedy) Danny DeVito, Wayne
Com) Adam Sandler. TV14
Knight, Michael Jordan. TVPG
"Petey IV"
Week" (N)
Mom
Mom
Mom
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21 Jump Street ('12, Act) Channing Tatum, Jonah Hill. Bumbling 21 Jump
cops are sent undercover to high school to take down a drug ring. TV14
Street TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House Dude Perfect
The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie TVPG
The Office
The Office
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Flight" SVU "Lost Reputation"
SVU "Above Suspicion"
SVU "Internal Affairs"
SVU "Wonderland Story"
Family Guy Family Guy Bob'sBurgers Bob'sBurgers The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey ('12, Fant) Martin Freeman. TVPG
NBA Basketball Playoffs Portland vs Denver (L)
(4:30)
The Departed (2006, Thriller) Matt Damon,
U.S. Marshals (1998, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Robert Downey Jr., Wesley Snipes.
Jack Nicholson, Leonardo DiCaprio. R
A framed covert C.I.A. agent becomes a fugitive on the run from a U.S. Marshal. TVPG
Expedition Unknown
LiberationHeroes (N)
Expedition Unknown (N)
Expedition Unknown (N)
Mummies Unwrapped (N)
Live PD Live access inside the country's busiest police
(5:00) Live PD
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forces. (L)
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Northwest Law: Uncuffed "Relocate &amp; Reunite" (N)
N.west "Bear Baiter Bust"
NCIS "Semper Fortis"
NCIS "Twenty Klicks"
NCIS "Kill the Messenger" NCIS "So It Goes"
NCIS "Choke Hold"

57

(OXY)

58
60
61

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(:55) MASH
M*A*S*H
(TVL) (:20) M*A*S*H
Drugs, Inc. "Cocaine"
Drugs, Inc. "Super Meth"
(WE)
(E!)

62 (NGEO)

64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)

from Hall.
The Marauders committed one error and left
From page 6
six runners stranded,
while NYHS had three
a single and a game-best
errors and ﬁve runners
three runs, while Cory
left on base.
Cox and Cole Arnott
Meigs will be back at
scored a run apiece.
Rutter doubled once for home on Friday against
the Buckeyes, Robson and Alexander.
Richards added a single
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740apiece, while Chafﬁn
446-2342, ext. 2100.
scored a run on an RBI

PM

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Burt Wolf
"The History
(WOUB)
of Water"
News at 6
ABC World
(WCHS)
(N)
News (N)
10TV News CBS Evening
(WBNS)
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Eyewitness
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TV (N)
News (N)
BBC World Nightly
Business
(WVPB) News:
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Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening
(WOWK)
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)

From page 6

Marauders

6

WSAZ News
(WSAZ)
3 (N)
WTAP News
(WTAP)
(N)
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

Eagles

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

Young led things off
with back-to-back
singles, then Chasity
Adams dropped a bunt
single down that allowed
Barnes to come home for
a 4-2 deﬁcit.
Bailey Meadows followed by grounding out
to third, which allowed
Young to come home for
a one-run contest. Hammons then grounded
into a ﬁelder’s choice
that allowed Adams to
come home for a four-all
tie through three complete.
The Lady Hornets
reclaimed the lead in
the top of the fourth as
Deeds scored on an error
and Harmon singled
home Kaleigh Murphy
for a 6-4 edge.
GAHS, however,
answered with three
runs in the home half of
the fourth as a passed
ball and wild pitch
brought home both
Aubrey Unroe and
Preslee Reed for a tie
game. Hammons then
delivered a two-out
single that plated Young
for a 7-6 edge.
Lauren Crum produced a two-out single
in the sixth that plated
Addi Dillow to tie the
game at seven, but the
hosts answered with

WEDNESDAY EVENING

27 (LIFE)

with a run in the triumph.
Sydney Adams had Southern’s lone hit, a single to
lead off the third.
EHS committed one error and left six runners on
base, while SHS ended with ﬁve errors and four runners stranded.
After traveling to Miller on Tuesday, Eastern will
visit Trimble on Thursday. Following their trip to
Wellston on Tuesday, the Lady Tornadoes will host to
Nelsonville-York on Wednesday.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy freshman Abby Hammons drops down a bunt that results in a RBI single during
the third inning of Monday night’s OVC softball contest against Coal Grove in Centenary, Ohio.

67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Sister Act ('92, Com) Maggie Smith, Whoopi Goldberg. TVPG
Movie
Sex and the City ('08, Com) Kim Cattrall, Sarah Jessica Parker. TVMA
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Drugs, Inc. "Hawaiian Ice" Drugs, Inc. "Cocaine Crisis" Drugs, Inc.: The Fix "Sex
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NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs N.Y. Islanders vs Carolina (L)
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(5:30)
Doom (2005, Sci-Fi) Dwayne Johnson,
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(:55)
Rosamund Pike, Karl Urban. TV14
Aaron Eckhart, Gerard Butler. TVMA
Doom TV14
(5:35)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Aspergers R Aspergers R
Meet the Fockers Mayhem
Vice News
Predators Adrien Brody. A group of (:50) Game of
400 (HBO) ensues when Greg introduces his eccentric Tonight (N) Us (N)
elite warriors are hunted by a merciless
Us (N)
Thrones
family to his straight-laced in-laws. TVPG
alien race through the jungle. TVMA
(:20)
Elektra ('05, Action) Goran Visnjic, Cary-Hiroyuki
Van Helsing ('04, Act) Kate Beckinsale, Hugh
(:15)
Resident Evil:
450 (MAX) Tagawa, Jennifer Garner. An assassin ends up protecting
Jackman. A famed monster hunter must battle Count
Apocalypse ('04, Sci-Fi)
the father and daughter she was sent to kill. TV14
Dracula, the Wolf Man and Frankenstein's Monster. TV14 Milla Jovovich. TVMA
(4:25) Mary
(:25)
The Firm (1993, Drama) Gene Hackman, Hal Holbrook, Tom
Eyes Wide Shut ('99, Thril) Nicole Kidman, Tom
500 (SHOW) Shelley TV14 Cruise. A law school graduate finds himself blackmailed by both the FBI
Cruise. A doctor discovers that his wife almost cheated on
and his own law firm. TVMA
him, leading him to sexual discovery. TVMA
(5:30)

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, May 1, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

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Today’s answer

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By Norm Feuti

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

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ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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jobmatchohio.com

�CLASSIFIEDS

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

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AUCTIONS

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

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Estate Sales

Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD

Automotive

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, May 03, 2019
at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.

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

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Help Wanted General

SERVICES

Auto Auction

Wednesday, May 1, 2019 9

Home of the Car Fairy

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JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
(Plaintiff)
vs.

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
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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
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Meigs County.
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
Plaintiff
vs.

No. 18-CV-017

Bradley Alan Collins aka Bradley A. Collins and Carissa
Lynn Collins aka Carissa L. Collins, et al
Defendant

In pursuance of an Alias Order of Sale directed to me in the
above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, on
the Meigs County Courthouse steps in the above named
county, on Friday, the 31st day of May , 2019, at 10:00 a.m. the
following described real estate, and if the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction
again on Friday, the 14th day of June, 2019, at 10:00 a.m:

MERCHANDISE

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
In the State of Ohio, Meigs County, Court of Common Pleas
First Guaranty Mortgage Corporation
(Plaintiff)
vs.

No. 18-CV-077

James E. Perdue, et al.
(Defendants)
In pursuance of an Alias Order of Sale directed to me in the
above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, on
the Meigs County Courthouse steps in the above named
county, on Friday, the 31st day of May , 2019, at 10:00 a.m. the
following described real estate, and if the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction
again on Friday, the 14th day of June, 2019, at 10:00 a.m.:
Parcel No 1: Situated in the Township of Salisbury, County of
Meigs and State Ohio and in Section 31, Town 2 and Range
13, and described as follows: Beginning at the southeast corner
of a tract of land containing 3/4 of an acre, which was conveyed
to Harry W. Hendricks by Eva Bailey, et al., by deed recorded
in volume 149, page 255 of the Meigs County deed records;
Thence south 225 feet to the center line of State Route No.
143; Thence north following the center line of State Route No.
143; 232 feet, to southwest corner of said Harry W. Hendricks'
property; Thence east following the south line of said Harry W.
Hendricks' property, 149 feet to the place of beginning, containing 2/3 of an acre, more or less. Subject to all legal highways,
and furthermore excepting the coal and certain surface rights
which have heretofore been reserved, as shown by the records
contained in the Meigs County recorder's office. Parcel No. 2:
Situated in the Township of Salisbury, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio and in Section 31 and described as follows: Beginning at the northeast corner of the two-thirds acre tract conveyed in deed book 206, page 497 of Meigs County deed records; Thence east 96 feet;
Thence south 290 feet to the north right of way line of State
route no. 143; Thence in a northwesterly direction following said
right of way line to the east line of the property conveyed to
Lovell Leroy Hite and Artie Wilma Hite, as aforesaid; Thence
north following the east line of said property 225 feet to the
place of beginning, containing one half an acre, more or less.
Excepting the coal and certain surface rights which have been
heretofore reserved from said real estate, as shown by the
Meigs County records.
Property Address: 38300 Bradbury Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, in the above named County,
on 5/31/2019 at 10:00 am, with a provisional sale date on
6/14/2019 at 10:00 am, on the steps of the courthouse, at the
following described real estate,
Copy of full legal description can be found at the Meigs County
Courthouse.
Parcel No: 2000790005
Prior Deed Reference: Volume 162, Page 763
Said Premises Located at 2064 West College Road, Syracuse,
OH 45779
Said Premises Appraised at $120,000.00 and cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% down at time of sale, balance due in 30
days
The purchaser shall be responsible for costs, allowances, and
taxes that the proceeds of sale are insufficient to cover.
Publication Dates: 5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/2019
Keith Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, OH

Parcel Number: 1401509000, 1401508000
Prior Instrument Reference: dated February 18, 2015, filed February 20, 2015, recorded as Official Records Volume 371, Page
182, Meigs County, Ohio records
Current Owners' Names: James E. Perdue and Ina D. Perdue
Said Premises Appraised At: $17,500.00.
The appraisal was completed based on an exterior view of the
property only. Neither the Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have
access to the inside of the property.
Terms of Sale: First Sale – to be sold for not less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Second Sale – if the property
does not sell at the first auction, a second sale of the property
will be held on June 14, 2019. The second sale shall be made
without regard to the minimum bid requirements in ORC §
2329.20.
A deposit in the amount of $5,000.00 is due by the close of bids
on the property. The balance is due within thirty days after confirmation of sale.
The purchaser shall be responsible for those costs, allowances,
and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
ORC § 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to pay recording
and conveyance fees at the time of sale.

Kerri N. Bruckner
Attorney
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
120 E. Fourth Street, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
attyemail@lsrlaw.com

Keith O. Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
Manley, Deas, Kochalski
Attorney
5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

No. 18-CV-057

William T. Kennedy, et al.
(Defendants)

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In the State of Ohio, Meigs County, Court of Common Pleas

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LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General

Amy Carter
Product Specialist

5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

The following described real estate situated in Chester Townships Meigs County, in the State of Ohio, in Fraction 36, Township 3N, Range 12W, of the Ohio Company Purchase, and being a parcel created out of the Mary Holter property and
bounded and described as follows: Beginning at the Northwest
corner of the Richard W. and Patsy A. Prater property (Volume
319,page 433, Meigs County Deed Records), said corner being
at the intersection of Singer Road and Eagle Ridge Road;
Thence along the West boundary of said Prater property in the
center of Singer Road South 02 degrees 53' 19" East 148.75
feet to the southwest corner thereof, said Southwest corner
also being the Northwest corner of property owned by Thomas
and Debra Drake (Volume 12, page 141, Meigs County Official
Records); Thence along Drake's Westerly boundary South 02
degrees 23' 16" West 1.38 feet to the North boundary of property owned by Thomas and Debra Drake (Volume 389, page
141, Meigs County Deeds Records); Thence along said North
boundary North 87 degrees 56' 59" West 1818.28 feet to an
iron pin set by this survey, passing an iron pin set by this survey at 10.00 feet; Thence along a new parcel boundary the following two courses; 1. North 8 degrees 33' 23" East 269,89 feet
to an iron pin set by this survey; 2. North 67 degrees 40' 41"
East 727.59 feet to the center of Eagle Ridge Road, passing an
iron pin set by this survey at 704.47 feet; Thence along the center of Eagle Ridge Road the following nine Courses: 1. South
31 degrees 12' 12" East 29.49 feet; 2. South 27 degrees 34' 52"
East 95.68 feet; 3. South 25 degrees 19' 15" East 108.16 feet;
4. South 25 degrees 43' 31" East 67.79 feet; 5. South 28 degrees 21' 52" East 56.18 feet; 6. South 35 degrees 7' 55" East
60.58 feet; 7. South 46 degrees 32' 56" East 47.88 feet; 8.
South 60 degrees 24' 28" East 42.58 feet; 9. South 73 degrees
36' 48" East 30.20 feet to the point of beginning, containing
8.727 acres. Subject to all legal easements. The above description was made in accordance with an actual survey conducted
by James Stewart, PS 7426, March 7, 10 and 14, 1995. Bearings are based on the Ohio State Plane Grid Direction as obtained by celestial observations.
Property Address: 47095 Eagle Ridge Road, Racine, OH 45771
Parcel Number: 0300586007
Prior Instrument Reference: dated July 24, 2013, filed August 5,
2013, recorded as Official Records Volume 350, Page 12,
Meigs County, Ohio records
Current Owners' Names: William J. Kennedy, as to a fee simple interest, and Carolyn S. Kennedy, as to a dower interest
Said Premises Appraised At: $55,000.00.
The appraisal was completed based on an exterior view of the
property only. Neither the Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have
access to the inside of the property.
Terms of Sale: First Sale – to be sold for not less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Second Sale – if the property
does not sell at the first auction, a second sale of the property
will be held on June 14, 2019. The second sale shall be made
without regard to the minimum bid requirements in ORC §
2329.20.
A deposit in the amount of $5,000.00 is due by the close of bids
on the property. The balance is due within thirty days after confirmation of sale.
The purchaser shall be responsible for those costs, allowances,
and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
ORC § 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to pay recording
and conveyance fees at the time of sale.
Keith O. Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
Manley, Deas, Kochakski
Attorney
5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

10 Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Daily Sentinel

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

WVU 2019-20 non-league
schedule has 7 home dates

Dec. 14 against Nicholls State and the Big 12-SEC
Challenge against an undetermined opponent Jan.
25.
Other road games include Dec. 7 or 8 at St.
John’s, against Youngstown State at an off-campus
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia
site in Youngstown, Ohio, on Dec. 21, and a neuwill play seven men’s nonconference basketball
tral-site game against Ohio State in Cleveland on
games at home next season.
WVU announced the nonconference portion of its Dec. 29.
schedule Monday.
The Mountaineers open the 2019-20 season at
home against Akron on Nov. 8. After playing at
Pittsburgh Nov. 15, WVU will host Northern Colorado on Nov. 18 and Boston University on Nov. 22
as part of the Cancun Challenge before completing
the tournament with two more games in Mexico on
CLEVELAND (AP) — A person familiar with the
Nov. 26 and Nov. 27.
Cleveland Cavaliers’ coaching search tells The AssociOther nonconference home games are Dec. 1
ated Press the team is interviewing former Memphis
against Rhode Island, Dec. 12 against Austin Peay, coach J.B. Bickerstaff.

AP source: Cavs interview J.B.
Bickertstaff for coaching job

Bickerstaff is meeting with Cleveland ofﬁcials Tuesday, according to the person who spoke to the AP on
condition of anonymity because the Cavaliers aren’t
revealing their plans. Bickerstaff is the third known
candidate to meet with the Cavaliers, along with
Dallas assistant Jamahl Mosley and Miami assistant
Juwan Howard.
Bickerstaff was ﬁred by the Grizzlies earlier this
month. After a 12-5 start, Memphis struggled and
ﬁnished 33-49, prompting a shake-up that included
general manager Chris Wallace’s demotion to scout.
The 40-year-old Bickerstaff, whose father, Bernie,
is a longtime NBA coach, was named the Grizzlies’
interim coach in November 2017 to replace David
Fizdale.
Cleveland ﬁred coach Larry Drew following a 19-63
season. The Cavaliers let Tyronn Lue go in October
after six games.

Classifieds
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OH
The State of Ohio, Meigs County
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Plaintiff
VS.
James Yeauger Defendant
(Case No. l7-CV-093)

Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Meigs County.

Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC, Plaintiff
-vsMark Burson htta Mark Owen Burson and Jeanie Burson, et al.,
Defendants

Quicken Loans Inc.
Plaintiff
vs.

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, inside the door of the County
Office Complex in the above named County, on Friday, the
31 st day of May, 2019, at 10:00AM, the following described
real estate:
THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE SITUATE IN
THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY, COUNTY OF MEIGS, IN THE
STATE OF OHIO.A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDERS OFFICE, VOLUME28, PAGE
510 AND 511, OFFICAL RECORDS.
AUDITORS PARCEL NOS: 15-00496-000 &amp; 16-00495-000
Said Premises Located at 101 Prospect Hill, Pomeroy, OH
45769
Said Premises Appraised at $15,000.00
And cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of that amount.
In the event that the property remains unsold after the above
scheduled sale, this property shall be offered again at a second
sale without regard to the minimum bid requirement in
§2329.20 on June 14,2019 at the same place and time.
TERMS OF SALE: Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code §2329.211,
if the appraised value is less than or equal to $10,000.00 the
deposit shall be $2,000.00. If the appraised value of the property
is greater than $10,000.00 and less than or equal to
$200,000.00, the deposit shall be $5,000.00. If the appraised
value is greater than $200,000.00, the deposit shall be
$10,000.00 and shall be due the day of sale. The purchaser
shall be responsible for all costs, allowances and taxes that the
proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover. Ohio Revised
Code §2327.02 (c) requires successful bidders pay recording
and conveyance fees to the sheriff at the time of sale. The balance of the purchase price is due within 30 days of the confirmation of sale.
DISCLAIMER: The Meigs County Sheriffs Office is not responsible for the condition of the buildings or property and therefore
there are no guarantees. Neither the Sheriffs Office nor any
affiliates have access to the inside of said property. There
was not an inside inspection of the property and Sheriff is not liable for the condition of the property upon confirmation of the
sale. Property is sold as is/where is.
Keith Wood
Sheriff of Meigs County
Katherine A Simone
Shapiro, Van Ess, Phillips &amp; Barragate, LLP
Attorney
5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19
SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 18 CV 092, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, VS. ANDREW J.
HANING AKA ANDREW HANING, ET AL., DEFENDANTS,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, May 31, 2019, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following described real estate, to wit:

No. 18-CV-093

The Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees, Executors, Administrators, Spouses and Assigns and the Unknown
Guardians of Minor and/or Incompetent Heirs of Paul E.
Smith, et al., et al
Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, in the above named County,
on 5/31/2019 at 10:00 am, with a provisional sale date on
6/14/2019 at 10:00 am, on the steps of the courthouse, at the
following described real estate,
Copy of full legal description can be found at the Meigs County
Courthouse.
Parcel No: 1501290000
Prior Deed Reference: Volume 364, Page 106
Said Premises Located at 930 Logan Street, Middleport, OH
45760
Said Premises Appraised at $15,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% down at time of sale, balance due in 30
days
The purchaser shall be responsible for costs, allowances, and
taxes that the proceeds of sale are insufficient to cover.
Publication Dates: 5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/2019
Keith Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, OH
Kerri N. Bruckner
Attorney
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
120 E. Fourth Street, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
attyemail@lsrlaw.com

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
In the State of Ohio, Meigs County, Court of Common Pleas
Wells Fargo Bank, NA
(Plaintiff)
vs.

No. 17-CV-089

Kathryn T. Mitchell, et al.
(Defendants)
In pursuance of an Alias Order of Sale directed to me in the
above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, on
the Meigs County Courthouse steps in the above named
county, on Friday, the 31st day of May , 2019, at 10:00 a.m. the
following described real estate, and if the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction
again on Friday, the 14th day of June, 2019, at 10:00 a.m:

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 36185 McMurray Road, Rutland, OH
45775

Parcel Number: 1500618000, 1500619000

No employees of the Sheriff’s Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered for sale again on June 14, 2019, at the same time and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid.
In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those costs,
allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier’s check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.
All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

May 1, 2019, May 8, 2019, and May 15, 2019.
Per H.B. 390, if the above property is a NO BID on May 31,
2019, the second sale date is June 14, 2019 @10:00 a.m. This
will also have no minimum bid.
All Third-Party Purchasers Shall Make Sale Deposits As Follows:
&lt;/= $10,000 = Deposit of $2,000.00
&gt;$10,000&lt;/= $200,000 = Deposit of $5,000.00
$200,000 = Deposit of $10,000.00
Payment shall be made in the form of a certified/cashier’s
check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). No deposit
is required by the bank. All properties are as is and not to be
entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s possession.
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY SITUATED IN BEDFORD TOWNSHIP, MEIGS COUNTY, STATE OF OHIO. A
MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF THE ABOVE NAMED
REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE MEIGS COUNTY
RECORDER'S OFFICE , VOLUME 267, PAGE 609, OFFICIAL
RECORDS.

5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

Property Address: 484 Main Street, Middleport, OH 45760

Said premises appraised at $22,500.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

The THREE run dates for the ads in the Daily Sentinel are:

Terms of Sale: ALL THIRD PARTY PURCHASER’S
DEPOSIT(S) SHALL BE MADE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
GUIDELINES AS SET FORTH IN OHIO REVISED CODE
SECTION 2329.211

AUDITOR’S PARCEL NO.: 11-00402.001

The above described real estate is sold “asis”without
warranties or covenants.

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction in the above county on the
31st day of May, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. at the door of the courthouse steps. The property appraised for $30,000.00. The appraisers DID NOT gain entry to the house for appraisal. This
property IS NOT a mobile Home.

PPN: 0100066000, 0100067001

Situated in the Village of Middleport, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio: All those two lots or pieces of ground marked
and numbered 109 and 110 on a certain plan of Palmer's Addition to the Village of Sheffield, now incorporated in the Town of
Middleport, Meigs County, Ohio, and for a more definite description, reference may be had to the recorded plat of said Village of Middleport.

Sold subject to accrued 2019 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.

Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio

Said premises also known as 42702 Darwin Road, Shade OH
45776

THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF RUTLAND, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE, VOLUME 380,
PAGE 1348, OFFICIAL RECORDS.

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.

SHERIFF’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 18-CV-012

Prior Instrument Reference: dated December 30, 2005, filed
January 4, 2006, recorded as Official Records Volume 226,
Page 821, Meigs County, Ohio records
Current Owners' Names: Kathryn T. Mitchell
Said Premises Appraised At: $40,000.00.
The appraisal was completed based on an exterior view of the
property only. Neither the Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have
access to the inside of the property.
Terms of Sale: First Sale – to be sold for not less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Second Sale – if the property
does not sell at the first auction, a second sale of the property
will be held on June 14, 2019. The second sale shall be made
without regard to the minimum bid requirements in ORC §
2329.20.
A deposit in the amount of $5,000.00 is due by the close of
bids on the property. The balance is due within thirty days after
confirmation of sale.
The purchaser shall be responsible for those costs, allowances,
and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
ORC § 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to pay recording
and conveyance fees at the time of sale.
Keith O. Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
Manley, Deas, Kochalski
Attorney
5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

CLASSIFIEDS

Keith Wood
Sheriff of Meigs County
CLUNK, HOOSE CO., LPA
/s/ Robert R. Hoose
Robert R. Hoose #0074544
Attorneys for Plaintiff
4500 Courthouse Blvd., Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile notice@clunkhoose.com
File No. 18-00333
5/1/19, 5/8/19, 5/15/19

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