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                  <text>Scenes
from the
Ox Roast

US Women
win 4th
World Cup

LOCAL s 4

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

71°

83°

84°

Ohio
Valley
forecast

Mostly sunny today. Clear and humid tonight.
High 89° / Low 69°

WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 107, Volume 73

Tuesday, July 9, 2019 s 50¢

Tucker’s defense argues for minimum sentence
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — The newly
retained counsel for former
probation and correction ofﬁcer Larry Tucker has ﬁled his
sentencing recommendation in
the case.
Larry Tucker, 56, of Pomeroy, was convicted in may on
24 of the 25 charges considered by the jury in the case
against him.
William L. Burton, of Marietta, who is now representing
Tucker, ﬁled his sentencing
memorandum on Friday in the
case.
Burton argues for a three
year sentence for Tucker, the

minimum possible sentence
on one ﬁrst-degree felony
kidnapping charge. Tucker
was convicted on six counts
of kidnapping, ﬁrst-degree
felonies; ﬁve counts of sexual
battery, third-degree felonies;
ﬁve counts of attempted sexual
battery, fourth-degree felonies;
four counts of gross sexual
imposition, fourth-degree felonies; one count of attempted
compelling prostitution, a
fourth-degree felony; one
count of soliciting, a thirddegree misdemeanor; and one
count of theft in ofﬁce, a ﬁfthdegree felony.
“If the Court follows the
State’s recommendation, Mr.
Tucker will receive 96 years

in prison, and that is if he is
found not guilty of the ‘sexually violent predator’ speciﬁcation still pending before
this Court,” stated Burton.
If convicted of the speciﬁcation, Tucker would receive a
life sentence if following the
state recommendation. “As Mr.
Tucker is 56 years old, there
is no meaningful difference
between the two sentences,
Mr. Tucker would die in
prison.”
Burton added, “The Defense
is concerned that, because
of the nature of the offenses
and the State’s argument,
this Court might be swayed
to deviate from the sentencing provisions of the Revised

Code. It is important to note
that what the people of Pomeroy think does not matter; nor
do the personal opinions of
the Court, the State, or the
Defense. Mr. Tucker needs to
be sentenced pursuant to the
law. We have presented the
law.”
In the ﬁling, Burton
addressed the remaining sexually violent predator speciﬁcations which are still to be
determined by the court, as
well as the issue of minimum
versus maximum sentence
and consecutive or concurrent
sentences.
Regarding the remaining
sex “sexually violent predator” speciﬁcations, Tucker’s

attorney states that there are
six factors to be considered as
outlined in the Ohio Revised
Code. Those factors are (1)
A person has been convicted
two or more times, in separate
criminal actions, of a sexually
oriented offense or a child-victim oriented offense. For the
purposes of this division, convictions that result from or are
connected with the same act
or result from offenses committed at the same time are one
conviction, and a conviction
set aside pursuant to law is not
a conviction; (2) The person
has a documented history from
childhood, into the juvenile
See DEFENSE | 3

Two arraigned on
alleged securities
violations
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmedimidwest.com

POMEROY — The Mason, Ohio, man
accused of taking more than $2 million from
two Meigs County victims in an alleged securities scam appeared in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court last week to face the 11 count
indictment against him.
Aaron S. Pitman, 31, is charged in an
11-count indictment with crimes against two
alleged victims from Meigs County. Charges
include:Two counts of Securities Prohibited
Acts (making false representations for the purpose of selling securities), felonies of the ﬁrst
degree;
Two counts of Securities Prohibited Acts
(engaging in fraudulent activity in selling securities), felonies of the ﬁrst degree;
One count of Securities Prohibited Acts (sale
of securities without a license), a felony of the
ﬁrst degree;
Two counts of Theft, felonies of the second
degree;
Four counts of Commercial Transactions Prohibited Activity (money laundering), felonies of
the third degree.
Pitman appeared alongside attorneys Steven
Goodin and Kellie Kulka of Cincinnati and local
attorney Lindsey Price.
Judge Linda Warner set bond for Pitman
at $500,000 with 10 percent permitted and
required GPS monitoring. Pitman posted bond
following the hearing and was released with the
ankle monitor. Pitman was also ordered to have
no contact with the victims in the case, and
should contact be necessary for business purposes it is to be handled through attorneys.
In court, Prosecutor James K. Stanley argued
for a $500,000 bond, stating that in Pitman had
been avoiding arrest and that he had access to
large amounts of cash and cyber currency.
Pitman’s council disputed that he had tried to
avoid arrest, stating they had been in contact
and scheduled the arraignment to turn him self
in rather than having him be arrested.
See VIOLATIONS | 3

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Local: 4-5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds:8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy photo

American Legion Post 39 prepares for the flag raising and National Anthem at the Rutland Ox Roast.

Rutland hosts Ox Roast
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

RUTLAND — Community members celebrated Independence
Day in the heat during
Rutland’s annual Ox
Roast on Saturday. The
event is hosted by the
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department and Ladies
Auxiliary.
Danny Davis, assistant
chief with the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Depart-

ment (RVFD), said the
Ox Roast has been an
annual event for July 4
since around 1950. Davis
said some families have
third and fourth generations volunteering for the
Ox Roast.
The day started with
a parade in the morning
featuring local ball teams,
churches, ﬁre departments, the Meigs High
School Marching Band,
The Rutland Volunteer Fire Department, along with the Ladies

See RUTLAND | 3 Auxiliary, organizes the annual event.

Community Band performs

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

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Meigs
County
Community
Band,
under the
direction
of Toney
Dingess,
recently
performed
a concert
at the
Syracuse
Community
Center in
conjunction
with the
Community
Center’s
Ice Cream
Social.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, July 9, 2019

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

SUSAN F. MCCLURE
RACINE — Susan F.
McClure, 69, of Racine,
passed away, on Saturday, July 6, 2019, at her
residence. Born March
28, 1950, in Westerville,
Ohio, she was the daughter of the late Ethel Russell and Orlie Lambert.
She was a homemaker
and she along with her
late husband were the former owners of Red Rose
Greenhouse in Racine.
Susan is survived by
her daughters, Sheila
(Greg King) Eblin, and
Michelle (Steve Fussnecker) Shuster, both of
Racine; nine grandchildren, Amber Burton,
Kelsey (Shane) Milhoan, Mark Eblin, Ashley
(Ricky) Raleigh, Stephanie Fulton, Tyler Fulton,
Paige Fulton, Dannyce
Shuster, and Kiersten
Shuster; 17 great-grandchildren and two on the
way; two sisters, Janet
Norman, of Syracuse, and
Cindy Lambert, of Vinton
County; two brothers,

Donald Lambert and
Ronnie Lambert, both of
Gallipolis; and numerous
nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she is preceded in
death by her husband,
Jesse McClure; a son,
Kenneth R. “Kenny”
Shuster; a grandson,
Kenny Ray Shuster, Jr.;
sisters, Terry and Kathy
Lambert; and brothers,
Irvin, Ivan, Clifford, Stanley, Harvey, Glenn, Curt,
and Thomas Lambert.
Funeral services will
be held at 11 a.m. on
Wednesday, July 10,
2019, in the CremeensKing Funeral Home,
Racine. Pastor Anthony
Morris will ofﬁciate and
interment will follow in
the Radcliff Cemetery in
Vinton County. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m.
on Tuesday at the funeral
home.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensking.com.

MILLS
MARION — Stacy D. Mills, 36, of Marion, formerly
of Gallipolis, passed away on July 4, 2019 at Marion
General Hospital Emergency Room. The funeral service for Stacy will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, July
11, 2019 at Willis Funeral Home. Burial will follow in
Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m.
on Wednesday, July 10, 2019 at the funeral home. A
complete obituary will be published at a later date.
PEARSON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Bonnie J. Pearson,
84, of Point Pleasant, died on July 6, 2019 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday,
July 10, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant with Pastor Steve Nibert ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at the Austin-Hope-McLeod Cemetery in
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. The family will receive friends
one hour prior to the funeral service, Wednesday at
the funeral home.
EASTER
POINT PLEASANT — Carol Lee (Sleeth) Easter,
69, of Point Pleasant, formerly of Mason, died on July
7, 2019 at home, following an extended illness.
Per Carol’s wishes, there will be no services at this
time.
Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason, has been
entrusted with the arrangements.
MILLER
COLUMBUS — Vicky Bea Miller, 72, of Columbus
and formerly of Gallipolis and Fremont, died on Tuesday, July 2.
A celebration of Vicky’s life will be held on Saturday, July 27 from 1-4 p.m. at Mezzo Restaurant and
Bar in Dublin. There will be an opportunity to share
thoughts or stories remembering Vicky for those who
would like to do so.
ROBERTS
RIPLEY — Nancy Mae Roberts, 71, of Ripley,
died on June 6, 2019 in CAMC Memorial Hospital,
Charleston.
The memorial service will be held on 6 p.m., Thursday, July 11, 2019 at Casto Funeral Home, Evans.
Casto Funeral Home, Evans, has been entrusted
with the arrangements.

CORRECTION
MIDDLEPORT — The grand marshals this year’s
Middleport Fourth of July parade were Texanna Wehrung Linda Myers, and Ron Miller, all former members of the Middleport Community Association. One
of the members was misidentiﬁed in the article and
photo cutline which appeared in the Sunday TimesSentinel. The Daily Sentinel apologizes for the error.

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shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

The power of you
The power of you.
Did you know that all
you need in life is right
within your reach? It
is actually within yourself. We have all heard
time and time again
the phrase “believe in
yourself.” Seems simple
enough? Three small
words. We can set and
read them over and
over on replay and they
will still be absolutely
meaningless unless we
harvest their power.
Within these simple
words we ﬁnd the key
to our own happiness,
but exactly how do we
locate that key? Frustrating isn’t it?
I am sure some of you
become quite agitated
at others’ ability to
stay positive and push
forward when it seems
your own life is crashing down around you.
Some may even argue
that you need way
more than the belief

form negative habin yourself
its that inhibit our
because fact
freedoms. When
check – I can
you start replacsay I believe
ing the negative
in myself three
thought process
times and
with positive ones
click my magic
you start to harvest
red slippers
Letha
that power like a
just like DorJones
thy and I am
Contributing windmill harvests
the wind to conduct
still going to
columnist
electricity. You will
be in the same
begin to grow in
place I was
ways you never thought
before. I can even take
possible. I encourage
the cynical side a little
farther and say life isn’t you everyday to replace
one negative thought
all rainbows and glitwith one positive
ter so stop trying to
thought. You will see
act like it is. Does that
how this will generate
sound about right? I
just enough wind to
can absolutely understand your thought pat- slightly turn that sail.
Now add in a positive
tern because honestly
its exactly as I just said comment to a neighbor,
coworker etc. Every day
- you have not learned
make sure you say one
how to harvest your
own abilities.Believing encouraging remark –
the sail will turn a little
in yourself will be the
freedom that you seek. more and soon before
you know it the windWhen we lack the
mill that is you will be
ability to believe in
full circle on course and
ourselves we usually

conducting electricity
within your own life.
The power of YOU.
During this process
of transformation
remember that any negative thought or action
brought against you,
are not your’s. Those
thoughts and actions
belong to someone
else and have no direct
affect on your own
windmill. Your windmill is harvested by the
power of self – and can
conduct as much energy
as you put into it. The
results are amazing.
Imagine the endless
possibilities. One just
has to believe in the
power of you. You are
all you need. Let me
repeat that again - you
are all you need. Now
take a deep breath and
smile.
Letha Jones is a certified Life
Coach who can be reached
at 304-266-1185 or at www.
onlythebestyou.com.

Crown City shooting under investigation
male who had been shot and
had then walked to a neighbor’s
residence,” said Champlin in
CROWN CITY — Gallia
a statement. “Upon the arrival
County Sheriff Matt Chamof deputies and Gallia County
plin has released a statement
EMS, the victim, Michael Millin regards to an early Moner, age 44, of Crown City, Ohio,
day morning shooting which
occurred in the Village of Crown was found to be suffering from
a gunshot wound and was transCity where one man was taken
ported to a Huntington area
into custody.
trauma center by Gallia County
“The Gallia County SherEMS. Through our investigaiff’s Office received a call at
tion, we have determined that
approximately 3:06 a.m. of a
Staff Report

the gunshot wound was the
result of a domestic-related
situation at the home where
the victim resides. At this time,
one male has been taken into
custody. That male is identified
as Zachariah Jones, age 34, of
Crown City, Ohio.”
At this time, this investigation is ongoing and charges are
pending consultation with Gallia Prosecuting Attorney Jason
Holdren’s Office.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Tuesday, July
9, the 190th day of 2019.
There are 175 days left
in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On July 9, 1850, the
12th president of the
United States, Zachary
Taylor, died after serving
only 16 months of his
term. (He was succeeded
by Millard Fillmore.)
On this date
In 1755, British General Edward Braddock
was mortally wounded
as his troops suffered a
massive defeat during
the French and Indian
War (he died four days
later).
In 1776, the Declaration of Independence
was read aloud to Gen.
George Washington’s
troops in New York.
In 1816, Argentina
declared independence
from Spain.
In 1918, 101 people
were killed in a train
collision in Nashville,
Tennessee. The Distinguished Service Cross
was established by an
Act of Congress.
In 1937, a ﬁre at 20th
Century Fox’s ﬁlm storage facility in Little
Ferry, New Jersey,
destroyed most of the
studio’s silent ﬁlms.
In 1947, the engagement of Britain’s Princess Elizabeth to Lt.
Philip Mountbatten was
announced.
In 1962, pop artist
Andy Warhol’s exhibit
of 32 paintings of
Campbell’s soup cans
opened at the Ferus
Gallery in Los Angeles.
In 1974, former U.S.
Chief Justice Earl Warren died in Washington

at age 83.
In 1982, Pan Am
Flight 759, a Boeing
727, crashed in Kenner, Louisiana, shortly
after takeoff from New
Orleans International
Airport, killing all 145
people aboard and eight
people on the ground.
In 1992, Democrat
Bill Clinton tapped Tennessee Sen. Al Gore to
be his running mate.
Former CBS News commentator Eric Sevareid
died in Washington at
age 79.
In 1995, Jerry Garcia
performed for the ﬁnal
time as frontman of the
Grateful Dead during
a concert at Chicago’s
Soldier Field (Garcia
died a month later).
In 2001, a divided
court in Chile ruled
that Gen. Augusto
Pinochet could not be
tried on human rights
charges because of his
deteriorating health
and mental condition,
a ruling that effectively
brought the 85-year-old
former dictator’s legal
troubles to an end.
Ten years ago:
The Group of Eight
industrialized nations
opened their summit in
L’Aquila, Italy, to Group
of Five developing
countries Brazil, China,
India, Mexico and
South Africa, as well
as Egypt. The Dutch
government turned
over dozens of antiquities stolen from Iraq to
Baghdad’s ambassador.
Michael Phelps broke
the then-world record
in the 100-meter butterﬂy at the U.S. national
championships in Indianapolis, swimming the
two-lap ﬁnal in 50.22
seconds.
Five years ago: Presi-

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“If writers were good business men, they’d
have too much sense to be writers.”
— Irvin S. Cobb
American humorist (1876-1944)

dent Barack Obama
began a two-day visit
to Texas, where he met
with state ofﬁcials,
including Gov. Rick
Perry, to discuss the
inﬂux of unaccompanied children at the
U.S.-Mexico border.
Modeling agency founder Eileen Ford, 92, died
in Morristown, New
Jersey.
One year ago: President Donald Trump
chose Brett Kavanaugh,
a solidly conservative,
politically connected
federal appeals court
judge, for the Supreme
Court to ﬁll the seat
left vacant by the
retirement of Justice
Anthony Kennedy.
(Kavanaugh would be
conﬁrmed in October
after a contentious
nomination ﬁght.)
Starbucks announced
that it would eliminate
plastic straws from all
of its locations within
two years, citing the
environmental threat to
oceans. Former movie
mogul Harvey Weinstein pleaded not guilty
to new sexual assault
charges involving a
third woman.

(The Crystals) is 74.
Author Dean Koontz
is 74. Football Hall of
Famer O.J. Simpson is
72. Actor Chris Cooper
is 68. TV personality
John Tesh is 67. Country singer David Ball is
66. Business executive/
TV personality Kevin
O’Leary (TV: “Shark
Tank”) is 65. Rhythmand-blues singer Debbie
Sledge (Sister Sledge)
is 65. Actor Jimmy
Smits is 64. Actress
Lisa Banes is 64. Actor
Tom Hanks is 63. Singer Marc Almond is 62.
Actress Kelly McGillis
is 62. Rock singer Jim
Kerr (Simple Minds) is
60. Actress-rock singer
Courtney Love is 55.
Rock musician Frank
Bello (Anthrax) is 54.
Actor David O’Hara
is 54. Actress Pamela
Adlon is 53. Rock musician Xavier Muriel is
51. Actor Scott Grimes
is 48. Actor Enrique
Murciano is 46. Rock
singer-musician Isaac
Brock (Modest Mouse)
is 44. Musician/producer Jack White is
44. Rock musician Dan
Estrin (Hoobastank) is
43. Actor-director Fred
Savage is 43. Country
musician Pat Allingham
Today’s Birthdays
Actor-singer Ed Ames is 41. Actress Linda
Park is 41. Actress
is 92. Former Defense
Megan Parlen is 39.
Secretary Donald H.
Rhythm-and-blues singRumsfeld is 87. Actor
er Kiely Williams (3lw)
James Hampton is 83.
is 33. Actor Mitchel
Actor Brian Dennehy
(cq) Musso is 28.
is 81. Actor Richard
Roundtree is 77. Singer Actress Georgie Henley
is 24.
Dee Dee Kenniebrew

�Daily Sentinel

Violations
From page 1

Pitman’s alleged co-defendant George Hammons,
78, appeared in Meigs County Common Pleas Court
earlier in the week, being released on his own recognizance in the case. Hammons is charged with four
counts of Commercial Transactions Prohibited Activity (money laundering), felonies of the third degree
and two counts of receiving stolen property, felonies
of the ﬁfth degree.
Both men were ordered to surrender their passports
as part of their bond.
According to Stanley, Pitman, who allegedly does
not have a license to sell securities in the State of
Ohio, is alleged to have made false representations to
the victims regarding multiple business ventures and
investment opportunities in order to induce the victims to invest a total of nearly $2,000,000. Pitman is
alleged to have laundered the invested money through
Hammons who allegedly received the money, kept a
percentage, and then funneled the remaining money
back to Pitman. Pitman is alleged to have failed to
invest most of the money as promised and instead
kept the money for his own personal gain.
The total losses to the Meigs County victims were
just more than $2 million, said Stanley. According
to the indictment, the crimes occurred in 2013 and
2014. There are suspected victims in other jurisdictions, both in Ohio and out of state, said Stanley.
The case was investigated by the Department of
Commerce, a forensic accountant with the Attorney
General’s Ofﬁce, the Bureau of Criminal Investigation
and Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
An initial pretrial for Pitman is scheduled for Aug.
13, with a ﬁnal pretrial on Sept. 3, motions hearing
on Oct. 1 and jury trial on Oct. 31.
Hammons is scheduled for an initial pretrial on
Aug. 1, a ﬁnal pretrial on Sept. 5, a motions hearing
on Oct. 3 and a jury trial on Oct. 22.

NEWS

Tuesday, July 9, 2019 3

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

p.m. The Meigs Library’s Summer
Reading Program continues with
this Australian music program.
SCIPIO TWP. — Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Fire House with
the budget hearing meeting following.

Thursday, July 11

CHESTER — Chester Shade
Historical Association will be
having its regular monthly board
OLIVE TWP. — Olive Twp. will meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the Chester Court House. Everyone is
hold regular meeting at 6:30 p.m.
at township garage on Joppa Road. invited to attend.
WELLSTON — The GJMV
POMEROY — The Meigs
Solid Waste Management DisCounty Board of Health meeting
trict Board of Directors meeting,
will take place at 5 p.m. in the
3:30 p.m. at the district ofﬁce in
conference room of the Meigs
Wellston.
County Health Department,
which is located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Community Center Board of
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library
Directors will meet at 7 p.m.
11 a.m.-8 p.m., Star Wars Retro
SUTTON TWP. — The
Movie Marathon. Episode IV-VI
monthly meeting of the Board
will be shown back-to-back.
of Trustees of Sutton Township
will be held beginning at 7 p.m.
in the Racine Village Hall Council
Chambers.
SALEM CENTER — Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will meet with
potluck at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m. All members
POMEROY — Didgeridoo
Down Under, Pomeroy Library, 2 and interested persons are invited

Tuesday, July 9

Friday, July 12

Saturday, July 13

Wednesday, July 10

and urged to attend.

Thursday, July 18
RACINE — Summer Reading
Bubble Bash, Racine Library,
5-7 p.m. Celebrate the end of the
Summer Reading Program with
an inﬂatable water slide, a foam
machine, bubbles, games, prizes,
and more.

Friday, July 19
POMEROY — A Kids Summer Fun Day fundraiser will be
hosted by BASE (Battle All-Stars
Elite) beginning at 11 a.m. The
event will include outdoor games,
dunking booth, bounce houses
and much more. The event will
be held at 398 Mechanic Street in
Pomeroy. For more information
call 304-761-0638.

Saturday, July 20
MIDDLEPORT — A Chicken
BBQ will be held at the Middleport Fire Department. Serving
begins at 11 a.m. at the BBQ pit.

Monday, July 29
MIDDLEPORT —The Meigs
County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at the
ofﬁce located at 97 North Second
Avenue in Middleport.

Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily Sentinel.

MEIGS BRIEFS

Rutland

ﬁre department’s biggest
fundraiser of the year and
they cover the cost on
their own, according to
From page 1
Davis.
Following the parade,
horses, motorcycles and
the Meigs High School
more. Festivities continued in the Firemen’s Park Marching Band performed the National
with entertainment on
Anthem while the ﬂag
the stage, bingo, games,
was raised by the Amerivendors and food. The
night concluded with ﬁre- can Legion Post 39. The
stage entertainment
works, launched a little
early due to the approach- included River Side
Cloggers, DJ Rockin’
ing storm.
Reggie, Top Notch, and
The RVFD sells their
“famous” roast beef sand- Next Level. RVFD set off
the ﬁreworks to end the
wiches during the day.
night.
Davis said they make
around 1,000 pounds of
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
beef for one day.
writer for The Daily Sentinel.
The Ox Roast is the

Defense

being a violent predator.”
Burton continues, “The
sexually violent predator
speciﬁcation is concerned
From page 1
only with whether “it is
likely that the person will
development years, that
exhibits sexually deviant engage, in the future, in
one or more sexually viobehavior; (3) Available
lent offenses.”
information or evidence
Regarding the sentence
suggests that the person
on each of the counts,
chronically commits
Burton states that “Mr.
offenses with a sexual
Tucker should be senmotivation; (4) The pertenced to minimum
son has committed one
or more offenses in which sentences for all counts,
as the sentencing factors
the person has tortured
weigh heavily in favor
or engaged in ritualistic
of Mr. Tucker’s conduct
acts with one or more
being less severe than
victims; (5) The person
normal and a remarkably
has committed one or
low risk of reoffending.”
more offenses in which
While the state repone or more victims were
physically harmed to the resents that the factors
degree that the particular are present tho make
the crimes more serious,
victim’s life was in jeop“this characterization is
ardy; (6) Any other reldangerously misleading”
evant evidence.
states Burton.
“Mr. Tucker simply
The factors to be condoes not ﬁt the deﬁnisidered regarding the
tion of ‘sexually violent
seriousness of the offense
predator’ as deﬁned by
the Revised Code,” states are to be used to determine if “what Mr. Tucker
Burton.
Burton goes on to state did was worse than the
that in the state’s sentenc- average offender when
the average offender coming recommendation, it
only has one sentence as mits the average version
to why Tucker should be of each of Mr. Tucker’s
crimes,” stated Burton.
convicted of the speciThe state, in their senﬁcation. That sentence
states, “It has been shown tencing memorandum,
that Defendant chronical- argued that “the 11 vicly commits offenses with tims for which Defendant
was convicted of kidnapa sexual motivation, and
ping and sexually assaultthis is a sexually violent
ing suffered serious physipredator as set forth in
cal and psychological
the speciﬁcation in R.C.
harm.”
2941.124.”
“That assertion, by
He argues that the
itself, is not probative
sentence is a “woefully
inadequate simpliﬁcation of whether Mr. Tucker’s
of the speciﬁcation.” The conduct was more serious
state, argues Burton, only than conduct normally
constituting the offense.
mentions the one factor
… Instead, the what must
which must be weighed
and ignore the other ﬁve be ascertained is whether
Mr. Tucker’s victims suffactors which he states
fered serious physical
“weigh heavily in Mr.
and psychological harm
Tucker’s favor of not

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 Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is closed due to a slip until further notice. Tickets
will be issued to those who drive through the closed
portion of the road.
POMEROY — Meigs County Road 18, Kingsbury
Road, west of State Route 33 will be closed for
approximately 2 months beginning Tuesday, May
28, in order to complete a bridge replacement project. This bridge is located just west of the intersection of County Road 19, Peach Fork Road.

Vacation Bible School
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers Plains St. Paul
UMC will be having VBS titled “Shipwrecked” July
8-11, from 6-8:30 p.m. nightly.
ANTIQUITY — Antiquity Baptist Church, 47860

that would indicate that
Mr. Tucker’s conduct was
more serious than conduct normally constituting kidnapping and sexual
battery offenses,” argues
Burton. “Mr. Tucker’s
conduct as to the kidnapping convictions pales in
comparison to other kidnapping cases, which are
commonly more violent,
contain more animus, and
in which the victims are
transported much further
distances.”
“The sexual batteries
for which Mr. Tucker
was convicted were only
criminal conduct because
Mr. Tucker had supervisory authority over the
victims as the time of the
sexual conduct. This is a
far cry from kidnapping
with the object of raping
the victim, and as such
Mr. Tucker’s conduct cannot be said to be more
serious than these commonplace kidnapping
offenses,” stated Burton.
“Another of Mr. Tucker’s convictions that concerns conduct that falls
drastically short of the
average is Mr. Tucker’s
theft in ofﬁce conviction,”
stated Burton. He states
that Tucker is convicted
of stealing the equivalent
of “some $70 dollars”
and that the conduct is
“laughable” compared to
the average theft in ofﬁce
conviction in Ohio. He
cites two cases, one with
theft of over $3,000 and
one with $313,976.91.
Burton goes on to
state that Tucker has no
prior criminal history,
that he led a law-abiding
life prior to the current
offenses, and that the circumstances under which
the crimes occurred
are not likely to happen
again.

As a convicted felon,
Burton states that Tucker
will never hold positions
like probation ofﬁcer or
corrections ofﬁcer again,
making it unlikely he
could commit the offenses again, as the convictions relate to his work in
those roles.
Burton does not
address the ﬁfth factor to
be considered which is
that the defendant shows
genuine remorse.
“The defense asks that
this Court sentence Mr.
Tucker to the minimum
allowed by law for each
of his convictions,” states
Burton. “It offends the
defense that the State
asked for maximum consecutive sentences across
all Mr. Tucker’s convictions, as Mr. Tucker’s
conduct for each of his
offenses was extremely
benign compared to
many other respective
offenses in this state.”
“Were this Court to
sentence Mr. Tucker to
concurrent maximum
sentences, Mr. Tucker
would receive a prison
sentence of 96 years. 96
years is grossly disproportionate to every one
of Mr. Tucker’s offenses,
even taken in aggregate,
and offends even the
most draconian notions
of retributive punishment
theory,” states Burton.
He also argues that
consecutive sentences are
not appropriate in this
case as the situation and
conduct do not satisfy
the factors required for
consecutive sentences.
“Consecutive sentences
are not required to protect the public, as the
public is in no danger of
Mr. Tucker reoffending.
Consecutive sentences
are not required to pun-

State Route 124, Racine, will host “The Incredible
Race” Vacation Bible School July 8-12 from 6-8 p.m.
Supper is served at 5 p.m. Ages 4-12.
POMEROY — The First Southern Baptist Church
of Pomeroy will be having a VBS July 14-17, from
6-9 p.m. each night.

Pie Contest
CHESTER — The Ohio’s Best Pie Contest &amp; Auction will be held during the Meigs Heritage Festival
on July 20, on the Chester Commons, Chester, Ohio.
Bring your pies between 9-11 a.m., judging by three
of Meigs’ ﬁnest pie eaters will take place at 11:30
a.m., winners will be announced just before the uncut
wining pie being auctioned off at 1 p.m. Makers of
the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place pies will receive gifts, cash
prizes and the thrill of seeing their pie being sold to
the highest bidder. All pie makers are encouraged to
donate their favorite pie to the Festival to help feed
the hungry and raise funds for the Chester Shade Historical Assoc. that maintains the Chester Academy
and Historical Courthouse.

ish Mr. Tucker, as the
kidnapping charges alone
are more than sufﬁcient
to punish Mr. Tucker
if all his sentences are
served concurrently.
Moreover, consecutive
sentences would be
grossly disproportionate
to Mr. Tucker’s conduct
as well as grossly disproportionate to Mr. Tucker’s risk to the public,
as Mr. Tucker poses no
further risk to the public
after release,” stated Burton regarding consecutive sentences.
Burton stated, “The
State claims that Mr.
Tucker is a dangerous
offender that will reoffend upon his release.
What the State does not
mention, however, is that
it offered Mr. Tucker four

years and eleven months
if he would plead guilty
before trial. Four years
and eleven months is
how serious the State
thought Mr. Tucker’s conduct was.”
“After Mr. Tucker
declined, and insisted
on going to trial, the
State suddenly claims
a 96-year sentence is
appropriate for him. This
direct evidence that the
State is indulging in a
personal vendetta against
Mr. Tucker’s conduct or
sentencing norms, but
is a ridiculous, medieval
boilerplate sentencing
recommendation that
is completely detached
from reality,” concluded
Burton.
A sentencing date in
the case has not been set.

Restoration Body Man Needed
A position is now available at Hill’s Classic
Cars (Racine, OH) for a full time welder
&amp; body man, speciﬁcally in the paint &amp;
body shop. A thirty-ﬁve year old company,
Hill’s has an international customer base
with a local small town feel.
This position includes, but is not limited
to, paint &amp; body work on antique cars
(1950-1975). A qualiﬁed applicant must
have a basic knowledge of automotive
parts, a background in paint &amp; body work,
welding, fabrication, and a willingness to
learn the restoration process for antique
cars. A valid driver’s license is also
required for this position.
All interested applicants please call M-F
8am-5pm 740-949-2217; evenings until
8pm 740-416-2241; or email tbird1957@
frontier.com to schedule an appointment.
OH-70135686

�LOCAL

4 Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Rutland Ox Roast 2019

American Legion Post 39 conducted the flag raising following the
parade.

The Hysell Run Community Church was among the participants in the parade on Saturday in Rutland.

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne

Horses and riders carrying American Flags were part of the parade
in Rutland.

The Meigs Marching Band took part in the Rutland parade, as well
as performing the National Anthem following the parade.
The Meigs Marching Band took part in the Rutland parade, as well
as performing the National Anthem following the parade.

Tractors were part of the parade in Rutland on Saturday.

The American Legion carries the flag through the parade.

Meigs County Fair royalty, including Fair King Austin Rose, Little
Miss Meigs County Morgan Durst and Little Mister Meigs County
Reece Davis, took part in the parade.
Youth sports teams were among the parade participants in
Rutland.

The Meigs Marching Band took part in the Rutland parade, as well as performing the National Anthem following the parade.

The Middleport Fire Department was among many parade entries
carrying signs supporting “Go Team Colten” and stating “We Got
Your Six.” The signs support Colten Walters who was seriously
injured in a motorcycle crash last week.

Racine Independence Day 2019

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Racine Volunteer Fire Department led the fire trucks through the parade, as well as hosting the
Participants in B.A.S.E. (Battle All-Star Elite) gymnastics in Pomeroy took part in the parade.
always popular chicken BBQ and selling homemade ice cream.

Cookie Salser, Tonja Hunter and Easton Hunter rode the John Deere
Gator in the parade.
A few children rode their bicycles in the parade.

Participants in B.A.S.E. (Battle All-Star Elite) gymnastics in
Pomeroy took part in the parade.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 9, 2019 5

Scenes from Middleport Fourth of July Celebration

Photos by Erin (Perkins) Johnson | OVP

A Middleport firetruck from the Middleport Fourth of July parade.

Members of the drumline in the Meigs Marauder Marching Band during the Middleport Fourth of July parade.

Representatives of the Roar Vacation Bible School for the Rutland
Nazarene Church during the Middleport Fourth of July parade.

The Meigs Marauder Marching Band played a patriotic tune for spectators enjoying the Middleport Fourth of July parade.

Members of the Middleport American Legion Feeney-Bennett Post
128 leading the flag raising ceremony following the Middleport
Fourth of July Parade at the Blakeslee Center’s front lawn.

State Representative Jay Edwards mingling with parade goers
during the Middleport Fourth of July parade.
The Middleport Fourth of July parade had several participants.

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�Sports
6 Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Allen leads Indians to 11-1 romp over Reds

Gary Landers | AP

Cleveland Indians’ Greg Allen knocks a two-run home run off Cincinnati Reds
relief pitcher Jimmy Herget during the eighth inning Sunday in Cincinnati.

CINCINNATI (AP) — Greg
Allen needed just two games in
his latest tour with the Cleveland Indians to make a huge
impact.
Recalled from Triple-A
Columbus on Saturday for the
third time this season, Allen
homered and tripled among his
career-high four hits and made
a circus catch behind Trevor
Bauer, who pitched seven solid
innings, as the Cleveland Indians remained baseball’s hottest
team with an 11-1 rout of the
Cincinnati Reds on Sunday.
“It wasn’t too bad,” said
Allen, who made a leaping
backhand catch of Jose Iglesias’s drive to the warning
track in left-center ﬁeld before
bouncing into a bullpen fence
in the second inning. “It was

nice to get a win.”
“Boy, did he impact the
game,” Cleveland manager
Terry Francona said. “A great
catch, four hits — it’s nice for
the whole organization.”
Jake Bauers hit a two-run
homer and Tyler Naquin and
Jason Kipnis added solo shots,
helping Cleveland to a seasonhigh sixth straight win — the
longest current streak in the
majors.
The Indians’ tied their singlegame season highs with 18 hits
and nine extra-base hits while
completing a two-game sweep
in which they outscored the
Reds by a combined 18-3
“It was just two games,”
Reds manager David Bell said.
“They were big games for us,
but two games doesn’t take

away what we did, which was
give us a chance and set us up
for the second half. What helps
us is our ability to bounce back.
The team that bounces back
the best is the team that will
win this division.”
Bauer (8-6) improved to 4-0
with a 2.90 earned-run average over his last six starts. He
allowed one hit through the
ﬁrst four innings before Jose
Peraza singled to lead off the
ﬁfth and scored on Josh VanMeter’s pinch-hit double. Bauer
bounced back to slip called
third strikes past the potential
tying runs, Joey Votto and
Eugenio Suarez.
“He battled his rear end off,”
Francona said. “For four hits
See ALLEN | 7

Big rain and big
wreck lead to Haley’s
1st career Cup win
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Teeth chattering, hands shaking, stomach churning, Justin
Haley anxiously waited for NASCAR to pull the
plug on a rain-wrecked weekend at Daytona International Speedway.
A 500-1 longshot making just his third career
Cup start, Haley won the rain-postponed, rainshortened race at Daytona on Sunday. He inherited the lead after a 17-car accident decimated
the ﬁeld and a lightning strike forced NASCAR to
stop the race.
Haley waited out the delay in a conference room
inside the historic speedway, admittedly too nervous to do more than pray for the skies to open
and the race to be called once and for all.
The wait of 2 hours, 12 minutes was well worth
it for the 20-year-old Indiana native driving for
ﬁrst-year team Spire Motorsports. They celebrated
in a makeshift indoor victory lane and were warmly greeted by manufacturer Chevrolet, which has
now won two straight races after a miserable start
to the season.
“I had no expectation to win this race,” said
Haley, admitting he’d have quickly been passed for
the lead if the race resumed.
“We were just trying to keep the fenders on it.
That was the whole goal of the race, to ﬁnish with
no scratches. Yes, I really did pray for rain.”
The race — the last surrounding the July Fourth
holiday at Daytona since the event began in 1959
— was scheduled for Saturday night but forced
into Sunday afternoon because of persistent rain
and lightning that washed out most of this ﬁnal
Independence Day party at NASCAR’s birthplace.
The race is being moved next year to August as
the regular-season ﬁnale.
As the clouds darkened over the track at the
start of the third and ﬁnal stage, drivers picked
up the intensity and started racing as if the event
would end at the ﬁrst drop of rain.
Clint Bowyer pulled out of line and tried to pass
Austin Dillon for the lead, but Dillon would not
relinquish the spot. His Chevrolet wiggled, Bowyer hit him from behind in his Ford, and because
they were at the front of the ﬁeld, it caused a huge
wreck.
“I guess he didn’t want me to pass him,” Bowyer
said. “I got under him and he blocked and he just
ﬁnally wrecked us all.”
Dillon, a former Daytona 500 winner, defended
his racing.
“I really thought it was kind of urgent because of
the lightning and rain coming,” he said. “It’s part
of this kind of racing. I was being aggressive and
trying to keep the lead.” As he spoke, lightning
crackled above his head, “and there’s a lightning
strike right there.”
With that, NASCAR had to stop the race and
bring the remaining cars to pit road as a safety
precaution. The move came just minutes after
Kurt Busch, who had slid through the massive
accident to take the lead, made a quick pit stop.
Busch relinquished the lead because he thought
the race was one lap away from resuming, and
Xﬁnity Series regular Haley cycled into the lead.
He was making his third Cup start for Spire, which
started in NASCAR as an agency representing
drivers and sponsors but last year purchased one
of the charters Furniture Row Racing left behind
when the team folded at the end of last season.
See HALEY | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, July 10
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs. Athens at
Athens HS (DH), 5 p.m.
Friday, July 12
Legion Baseball

Post 39 vs. CeredoKenova at Point Pleasant
HS (DH), 6 p.m.
Saturday, July 13
Post 39 vs. Utica at Meigs
HS (DH), 11 a.m.

David Vincent | AP

United States’ Megan Rapinoe scores her side’s opening goal from a penalty shot during the Women’s World Cup final soccer match
Sunday between US and The Netherlands at the Stade de Lyon in Decines, outside Lyon, France.

US Women win 4th World Cup title
LYON, France (AP)
— After every goal
celebration and all the
conﬁdent posturing, the
U.S. national team backed
up its swagger at the
Women’s World Cup by
winning it all.
The Americans also
took a swipe at gender
inequity, too.
The United States won
its record fourth Women’s
World Cup title and second in a row, beating the
Netherlands 2-0 Sunday
night when Megan Rapinoe converted a tiebreaking penalty kick in the
second half. Rose Lavelle
added a goal to seal it.
Afterward, Rapinoe
looked out on the sea of
reporters and said, “I’ve
got a party to get to,
y’all.”
Rapinoe scored in the
61st minute after a video
review determined Stefanie van der Gragt had
fouled Alex Morgan with
a kick to the shoulder
while competing for a
deﬂected pass in the penalty area.
Two days past her
34th birthday, Rapinoe
slotted the ball past Sari
van Veenendaal for her
sixth goal of the tournament. She became the
oldest player to score in a
Women’s World Cup ﬁnal,
and earned the Golden
Boot for the tournament’s
top scorer and the Golden
Ball as the top player.
Her preferred goal celebration in France, with
her outstretched arms in
victory, was already on
T-shirts.
“I feel like it’s kind of
iconic of everything that

we have gone through
and we continue to go
through, and yet we put
this beautiful product out
on the pitch,” she said.
Lavelle, at 24 the team’s
up-and-coming star,
added her third goal of
the tournament on an
18-yard left-footed shot in
the 69th after a solo run
from the center circle.
The monthlong journey
isn’t over quite yet for
players who captured the
hearts of a nation. New
York City Mayor Bill de
Blasio needed just a few
seconds after the match
to invite the team to a
ticker-tape parade up
the Canyon of Heroes in
Manhattan on Wednesday.
Fans, many dressed
in red, white and blue,
chanted “Equal Pay!”
at the ﬁnal whistle , a
reminder players sued the
U.S. Soccer Federation in
March claiming gender
discrimination. The sides
have agreed to mediate
the lawsuit.
Rapinoe drew the ire of
President Donald Trump
by saying she would
refuse to visit the White
House. Trump called
out Rapinoe on Twitter,
saying she should never
“disrespect our Country,
the White House, or our
Flag, especially since so
much has been done for
her &amp; the team.” He said
he would invite the team
win or lose.
But shortly after
the title game, Trump
tweeted: “Congratulations to the U.S. Women’s
Soccer Team on winning
the World Cup! Great and

exciting play. America is
proud of you all!”
Always outspoken,
Rapinoe also called out
FIFA on the eve of the
championship, suggesting
soccer’s governing body
was not doing enough to
grow the women’s game,
pointing to unequal prize
money and the scheduling
of the ﬁnal on the same
day as the championships
of the CONCACAF Gold
Cup in Chicago and the
Copa America ﬁnal in
Brazil.
The Americans never
trailed at the tournament
and set records with
26 goals and a 12-game
World Cup winning
streak dating to 2015.
Jill Ellis became the ﬁrst
coach to lead a team to
two Women’s World Cup
titles, and the U.S. joined
Germany in 2003 and
2007 as the only repeat
champions. While the
U.S. has four titles, Germany is the only other
nation with even two.
“Getting to play at the
highest level of the World
Cup with the team we
have is just ridiculous.
But to be able to couple
that with everything on
the ﬁeld and to back up
all of those words with
performances and to back
up all of those performances with words, it’s
just incredible,” Rapinoe
said. “I feel like this team
is in the midst of changing the world around us
as we live, and it’s just an
incredible feeling.”
With conﬁdence that
some called arrogance,
this American team established a standard that

exceeded the U.S. champions of 1991, 1999 and
2015, becoming a goal
for all others to match.
Mia Hamm and Brandi
Chastain were among the
former American players
who joined the current
generation for the postgame celebration.
Alyssa Naeher, the
31-year-old who succeeded Hope Solo in goal,
faced repeated questions
entering the tournament
but allowed just three
goals and ﬁnished with
her fourth shutout.
The U.S. had scored
within the ﬁrst 12 minutes of its previous six
matches but the European champions sat back
to keep their defensive
shape and kept the score
0-0 through the ﬁrst half.
Rapinoe, who missed
Tuesday’s semiﬁnal win
over England with a hamstring injury, became the
ﬁrst woman to score on
a penalty kick during a
Women’s World Cup ﬁnal,
her 50th goal in 158 international appearances. She
ended the Netherlands’
317-minute scoreless
streak and matched Morgan and England’s Ellen
White for most goals in
the tournament, winning
the Golden Ball based on
fewer minutes.
She was given a standing ovation when she
was substituted in the
79th minute. The crowd
of 57,900 at Stade de
Lyon for Le Grand Finale
included France President
Emmanuel Macron.
Rebounding from a loss
See CUP | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 9, 2019 7

ASG set to trot out free runners

Cup

pinkie outstretched.
Now, after all the memorable drama, they will
have a fourth star above
From page 6
the crest on the team’s
jerseys and a higher
to Sweden on penalty
kicks in the quarterﬁnals platform to advance their
cause.
of the 2016 Olympics,
“It’s something that
the Americans opened
we’ve worked so hard for.
the World Cup with a
record 13-0 rout of lowly All of us, individually,
have just faced so much
Thailand, triggering
adversity through this
debate over whether the
whole journey,” Morgan
celebrations after each
goal were excessive. Carli said. “We’ve been tested
Lloyd responded the next individually and colmatch by following a goal lectively so much. So to
see, four years ago, us
with a polite golf clap.
go from two to three,
Then Morgan stirred it
up again when she scored and now three to four,
against England and cel- it’s really a dream come
ebrated as if sipping tea, true.”

CLEVELAND (AP) — Picture
this, baseball fans.
All-Star Game tied 4-all Tuesday night at Progressive Field,
ﬂamethrower Aroldis Chapman
set to face rookie sensation Pete
Alonso to start the top of the
10th inning.
But, wait! Before the ﬁrst pitch,
Kris Bryant casually trots from
the National League dugout to
take a lead off second base.
“Kind of weird,” offered Jeff
McNeil, the majors’ top hitter
this year.
Already employed in the
minors, the World Baseball Classic and Olympic softball, a new
rule takes effect this week in
front of a major league audience:
Every extra inning in All-Star
play — top half and bottom —
begins with an automatic runner
at second.
“Oh, they are doing it?” asked
Atlanta manager Brian Snitker,
an NL coach.
Yes, they are.
The crowd in Cleveland got a
glimpse of the future, maybe, on
Sunday night when the Futures
Game used the rule for an inning.
No one scored, and the showcase
for young talent wound up in a
tie.
Could be timely in the bigs,
too. The last two All-Star Games
both went extras — Robinson
Cano hit a leadoff homer in the
10th at Miami in 2017, Alex
Bregman did the same last year
in Washington.
Plus, there was the 15-inning

Haley

continue to be the ‘Little
Engine That Could’ and
build this thing as best
we can and go from
From page 6
there.”
KESELOWSKI
Team co-owners T.J.
CRASH: Brad Keselowski
Puchyr and Jeff Dickerson took out a $6 million has crashed out of ﬁve of
bank loan for the charter, his last six Cup races at
Daytona. His latest incihoping the value of it
dent occurred in the secwould repay the note
while helping them transi- ond stage when his Ford
tion into a true race team. turned right into the wall
after Kevin Harvick gave
They needed the huge
him a strong push from
accident, Busch’s decibehind.
sion to pit and then yet
It was Keselowski
another heavy rainstorm
who set the tone for the
to become winners in
racing earlier this week
their 17th Cup race.
when he refused to lift
“It’s obviously a huge,
during a Thursday prachuge moment to win
tice session when Wilat the pinnacle of our
sport, at Daytona no less. liam Byron tried to block
him. Byron wrecked and
This is it. This is the
World Center of Racing,” Keselowski admitted he
was sending a message
Puchyr said. “We just
that he’s not giving an
want to be in control of
inch when drivers block
our own destiny. We’ve
on the track.
put a lot of money in a
He was asked after
lot of people’s pockets in
Sunday’s crash if his incithis garage. There’s a lot
dent was caused by Kesof people out there that
elowski blocking or Harthink we’re doing this as
vick pushing too hard.
a cash grab the way the
“That would feel really
charter system works.
good for some people on
“Quite frankly, that’s
Twitter,” he said. “Nah,
not true. Jeff Dickerson
it looked like Kevin was
said, ‘We believe in this
trying to give me a really
sport. We believe in the
good push and just didn’t
platform that NASCAR
have enough grip and I
provides.’ This is the
American dream. We did lost it.”
UP NEXT: NASCAR
it early, and it’s not lost
goes to Kentucky Speedon me that luck was on
way on Saturday night,
our side today. But I’m
where Martin Truex Jr.
not going to feel bad
about at all. I’m going to routed the ﬁeld last season.
love it. We’re going to

affair at Yankee Stadium in 2008
and the dreaded 2002 game in
Milwaukee that was declared a
very unpopular tie after the 11th.
Naturally, in a sport where
change comes slowly, not everyone is thrilled with this experiment. To many, instant intentional walks, constant shifts and talk
about robot umpires has skewed
the game enough.
If it’s any consolation, commissioner Rob Manfred says there
are no foreseeable plans to put
free runners on base in the regular season.
“I know how people are against
it, especially players in the game.
Yeah, the tradition is big in this
sport, just like a lot of top-tier
sports,” Baltimore pitcher John
Means said.
An All-Star this year, Means
saw the test ﬁrsthand last year at
Triple-A. So did Tampa Bay AllStar outﬁelder Austin Meadows.
“I might have been a runner on
second, but I’ve deﬁnitely seen it
happen a lot,” Meadows said.
“I don’t think it’s a bad idea
at all. We’re going to play nine
innings and get on with the second half,” he said.
Some teams actually tried this
out during spring training, starting with ties in the ninth. San
Francisco manager Bruce Bochy
was the ﬁrst to give it a go —
mass confusion ensued, mostly
because he forgot to tell his players what was happening.
Oakland right-hander Liam
Hendriks realizes he could be on

the spot Tuesday night.
“It’s not an ideal scenario for
a reliever because we’re the ones
that get stuck with it,” he said.
“You’re coming into a situation
already with the guy on base in
a tie game, there’s so many possibilities that can happen.”
“I understand the reasoning
behind it, like in the All-Star
Game, to kind of shorten the
game up, theoretically,” he said.
“You don’t have as many pitchers in the game. You don’t have
a starter going ﬁve, six, seven,
eight innings.”
He’s willing to give it a try.
“For the All-Star Game, I
understand it. And now with
home-ﬁeld advantage not being
decided by it, I don’t think it’s
the worst thing in the world,” he
said.
The automatic runner will be
the player who made the last out
of the previous inning. But in a
caveat, players who have left the
All-Star Game can re-enter to
run.
For ofﬁcial scoring purposes,
if a freebie scores, it will count
as an unearned run. Meaning, in
theory, a team could pitch a perfect game and still lose.
As for strategy, what to do with
that runner? Deﬁnitely depends
on which team is up ﬁrst.
“There’s a lot of different ways
you can play it, too. I mean, you
can either bunt him over or swing
to get him over, or you can try to
hit. You’ve got to play for more
than one run there,” McNeil said.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament

Entry fee is $20 for players
12-and-under, and $30 for players 13-18. Clubhouse certificates and individual awards will
be presented to the top-three
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf Course will be hosting places in each division.
Cart and meal passes will be
the 11th annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside Golf Tournament for available for spectators to follow
junior golfers on Thursday, July kids for $15 apiece, so that they
18, starting at 10 a.m. Registra- may follow the tournament and
eat with the kids.
tion will be from 9 a.m. until
To enter please contact the
9:45.
Cliffside clubhouse at 740-446This is an individual stroke
4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245play tournament open to golfers ages 10-or-under to 18 years 5919 or 740-645-4381. Please
leave player’s name, age as of
old. The participants will be
July 18, 2019 and the school the
divided into four divisions,
individual is currently attend10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and
ing.
16-18.

GAHS youth
football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy football staff will
be conducting a youth football
camp for boys entering grades
1-8. The camp will be held from
July 22-23 from 6-8 p.m. each day
at Memorial Field. Camp participants will be instructed by both
staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $30 per
student and $20 apiece for two-ormore students. For questions or
to register, please contact Coach
Jared McClelland at 740-6455783.

TUESDAY EVENING

Allen
From page 6

and (three) walks, it seemed like there was a lot of
trafﬁc. He got two huge strikeouts. That allowed us to
add on.”
Bauer avoided damage again with two more strikeouts to end the sixth with runners on second and
third. He allowed four hits with three walks and nine
strikeouts. He also hit a batter. Four leadoff batters
reached base against him.
“That puts you behind the 8-ball, but I was able to
work out of it,” Bauer said. “I’m mostly happy to be
healthy. I’ve felt like myself for the last three starts.”
Right ﬁelder Yasiel Puig didn’t move as Naquin
launched an 0-1 Tyler Mahle splitter deep into the
right ﬁeld seats with two outs in the fourth inning for
a 1-0 Cleveland lead.
Jose Ramirez contributed a sacriﬁce ﬂy in the ﬁfth
before Bauers followed on the next pitch with his tworun shot off the batter’s eye in center ﬁeld.
Mahle (2-9) needed 84 pitches to get two batters
into the ﬁfth inning. He allowed six hits and three
runs with three walks and seven strikeouts.
Allen’s two-run blast and Kipnis’ homer both came
in Cleveland’s six-run eighth against right-hander
Jimmy Herget, who was making his major league
debut. Allen was the ﬁrst batter faced by Herget.
Mop
The Indians won the season series against the
Reds, 3-1, keeping the Ohio Cup for the ﬁfth straight
season. Bauer won the media voting for the series
Most Outstanding Player award, renamed this year in
honor of Baseball Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, who
played for both franchises and in 1975 with Cleveland
became baseball’s ﬁrst black manager. Bauer ﬁnished
1-0 with a 1.23 ERA in two starts against Cincinnati.
Guns out
The Reds on Sunday wore replica 1956 road uniforms, the eighth in a series of 15 throwback uniforms
they are wearing to celebrate the 150th anniversary
of baseball’s ﬁrst all-professional team. The outﬁts
included vest-type jerseys, and several players - including Puig and Votto - went without sleeves, showing off
their upper arms.
Forget it
Cleveland’s 18 hits were the most allowed by the
Reds this season. Eleven runs tied the season high. The
Indians eight hits and six runs in the eighth were the
most allowed by Cincinnati in one inning this season.

BROADCAST

3

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4

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11 (WVAH)
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7:30

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10:30

America's Got Talent "Auditions 6" The auditions
Bring the Funny "The Open
conclude. (N)
Mic 1" (P) (N)
America's Got Talent "Auditions 6" The auditions
Bring the Funny "The Open
conclude. (N)
Mic 1" (P) (N)
The Conners American
Modern
The
Modern
Black "FriDre
Housewife
Family
Goldbergs
Family
Night Lights"
American Experience
American Experience "Chasing the Moon" The thrilling
"Space Men"
era of the space race, from its earliest days to the 1969
moon landing. (N)
The Conners American
Modern
The
Modern
Black "FriDre
Housewife
Family
Goldbergs
Family
Night Lights"
The Big Bang BloodTreasre "The Shadow
Love Island Singles come together at a
stunning villa in Fiji. (P) (N)
Theory
of Project Athena" (N)
MLB Baseball All-Star Game National League vs. American League Site: Progressive Field
-- Cleveland, Ohio (L)
American Experience
American Experience "Chasing the Moon" The thrilling
era of the space race, from its earliest days to the 1969
"Space Men"
moon landing. (N)
Love Island Singles come together at a
The Big Bang BloodTreasre "The Shadow
stunning villa in Fiji. (P) (N)
Theory
of Project Athena" (N)

8 PM

8:30

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9:30

10 PM

10:30

Cops
Cops
Cops
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Cops
Disappear "Birthday Boy"
18 (WGN) JAG "Washington Holiday" Cops
Dan Patrick Show Dan Patrick's radio sports talk show.
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pirates Ball H.S. Baseball WVSSAC Tournament
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
Poker World Series (L)
26 (ESPN2) NBA Basketball Summer League Portland vs Utah (L)
NBA Basketball Summer League Denver vs Boston (L)
NBA Basketball
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Wife Swap "Boyd/ Milorey" Dance Moms "Queen of the Dance Chat (:50) Dance Dance Moms "Yolanda's
(:05) Cheerlea "Freshman
(N)
ALDC"
Party (N)
Back" (N)
vs. Freshman" (N)
Good Trouble "Unfiltered"
(5:30)
Ocean's Thirteen (2007, Comedy) Brad Pitt,
Mulan (1998, Animated) Eddie Murphy, BD Wong,
Matt Damon, George Clooney. TV14
Ming-Na Wen. TVG
(N)
Mom
Mom
Mom
21 Jump Street (‘12, Act) Channing Tatum, Jonah Hill. Bumbling Ink Master "The Art Stands
cops are sent undercover to high school to take down a drug ring. TV14
Alone" (N)
Loud House Loud House SpongeBob Dare (N)
Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked Jason Lee. TVG Friends
Friends
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Chrisley (N) Radkes (N)
Family Guy FamilyGuy
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Detour (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Movie
The Accountant (‘16, Cri) Anna Kendrick, Ben Affleck. TVMA
Animal Kingdom (N)
Animal "Know Thy Enemy"
(5:00)
American Sniper (2014, War) Sienna Miller,
Road House (‘89, Act) Patrick Swayze. A pro bouncer is hired to
(:35) G.I.
Luke Grimes, Bradley Cooper. TVMA
ensure that a rowdy bar is safer for the patrons and musicians. TVMA
Jane TV14
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch
Deadliest Catch (N)
D. Catch "Crane Wreck" (N) Moonshiners (N)
(5:00) Biography "Jeff
Biography "Chris Farley: Anything for a Laugh" Examines Biography "Farrah Fawcett Forever" Farrah Fawcett was a
Dunham: Talking Heads"
Farley's tragically short life.
model, actress and sculptor. (N)
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law
Star Law "Saving the Herd" Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law (N)
Chicago P.D. "Chasing
Chicago P.D. "Anthem"
Chicago P.D. "Sisterhood" Chicago P.D. "Profiles"
Chicago P.D. "Breaking
Monsters"
Point"
Criminal Minds
Criminal Mind "Plain Sight" C.Minds "Broken Mirror"
Criminal Minds "L.D.S.K." Criminal Minds "The Fox"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Relatively Nat &amp; Liv (N)
Monster-in-Law (‘05, Com) Jennifer Lopez. TVPG
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Ray "The Getaway"
(:55) 2½Men Two 1/2 Men
Journey to Europa
Challenger Disaster: The
MARS: Inside SpaceX
Apollo: Back to the Moon Apollo: Back to the Moon
Final Mission
"Impossible Challenge" (N) "Ultimate Mission" (N)
IMSA Auto Racing (N)
AMA Motocross
UCI Cycling Tour de France Stage 4 Reims - Nancy
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Pre-game
NHRA Drag Racing New England Nationals Site: New England Dragway -- Epping, N.H. NHRA 30
Counting
Counting Cars "Danny's
Counting Cars "Red, Hot
Counting
Live PD Presents: Top 10
(:05) Amer. Pickers "Mad
and Dangerous"
Cars
Cars
Detroit Special" (N)
Police Vehicles (N)
Mike and Furious Frank" (N)
Beverly Hills
Beverly "Thirst Impressions" Beverly Hills
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Housewives Potomac
(5:25) All Eyez on Me (‘17, Bio) Danai Gurira, Kat. Graham, Demetrius Shipp Jr.. TVMA
Tales "Slippery" (N)
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Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
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Good Bones (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
The Magnificent Seven (2016, Western) Chris
Resident Evil: Retribution (2012, Action) Sienna
(:05)
Underworld:
Pratt, Ethan Hawke, Denzel Washington. TV14
Guillory, Michelle Rodriguez, Milla Jovovich. TV14
Awakening TVMA

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

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6:30

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The Manchurian Los Espookys Vice News
(:05)
Rush Hour 2 (‘01,
ILU, Now Die This doc raises (:05) Euphoria
Tonight (N) questions about tech and
Candidate (‘04, Thril) Denzel
Action) Chris Tucker, Zhang
mental health. Pt. 1 of 2 (N)
Washington. TV14
Ziyi, Jackie Chan. TVPG
(:05) Father Figures (‘17, Com) Ed Helms, J.K. Simmons,
American Wedding Jason Biggs. After (:40)
One Fine Day Two busy single
Owen Wilson. Two brothers learn a shocking truth about proposing to Michelle, Jim enlists help from parents get to know each other over the
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his friends to prepare for the big day. TVMA course of a mishap-filled day. TV14
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Charlie's Angels Three female General Magic One of history's most
City on a Hill "The
The Loudest Voice "2001"
Roger begins pushing the
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Shall Be Upon Himself"
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�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, July 9, 2019

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

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Daily Sentinel

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

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PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 19-CV-036
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF NRZ
PASS-THROUGH TRUST XII
-VSUNKNOWN HEIRS, ASSIGNS, LEGATEES AND DEVISEES
OF CHARLES ESTEP AKA CHARLES DAVID ESTEP, DECEASED, ET AL. DEFENDANTS.
Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Charles
Estep aka Charles David Estep, Deceased, whose last known
address is: Unknown, and who cannot be served, will take
notice that on May 29, 2019, Plaintiff filed a Complaint for Foreclosure and other Equitable Relief in the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio, Case No. 19-CV-036,
against Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of
Charles Estep aka Charles David Estep, Deceased, and
others as Defendants, alleging that Charles Estep aka
Charles David Estep, Deceased, and Charlene Estep aka
Charlene Mignon Estep are in default for all payments from
September 25, 2018; that on October 25, 1999, Charles Estep
aka Charles David Estep, Deceased, and Charlene Estep aka
Charlene Mignon Estep, executed and delivered a certain Mortgage Deed in which said Defendants agreed, among other
things, to pay the Note and to comply with all of the terms of
the Mortgage Deed hereinafter described, which Mortgage
Deed was filed in the Recorder's Office of Meigs County, Ohio
on November 12, 1999, recorded in Volume 97, Page 825 of
the county recorder’s records and assigned to Plaintiff on
March 21, 2019, and recorded on March 26, 2019, in Volume
388, Page 3478 of the Meigs County Records, that, further, the
balance due on the Note is $52,341.40 with interest at the rate
of 10.3210% per annum from September 25, 2018; that to
secure the payment of the Note, executed and delivered a
certain Mortgage Deed to and thereby conveying, in fee simple,
the following described premises:
Situated in the State of Ohio, in the County of Meigs, and in the
Village of Syracuse:
Commonly known as: 2460 Oak Alley, Syracuse, OH 45779
and further alleging that the aforesaid Mortgage is a valid and
subsisting first and best lien upon said premises after the lien of
the Treasurer; that the Note is in default, whereby the conditions set forth in the Note and Mortgage have been broken, that
the Mortgage has become absolute and that Plaintiff is entitled,
therefore, to have the Mortgage foreclosed, the premises sold,
and the proceeds applied in payment of Plaintiff's claims; that
the Defendants, Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Charles Estep aka Charles David Estep, Deceased,
among others, may have or claim to have some interest in or
lien upon said premises; that all of the Defendants are required
to set forth any claim, lien or interest in or upon the premises
that he, she, or it may have or claim to have or be forever
barred therefrom; that Plaintiff's Mortgage be declared to be a
valid and subsisting first and best lien upon said premises after
the lien of the Treasurer, if any, that its Mortgage be foreclosed;
that all liens be marshaled; that the equity of redemption of all
Defendants be forever cut off, barred, and foreclosed; that upon
the sale of said premises the proceeds be paid to Plaintiff to
satisfy the amount of its existing lien and the interest, together
with its disbursements, advancements, and costs herein expended; and for such other and further relief to which is may be
entitled in equity or at law.
Defendants are further notified that they are required to answer
the Complaint on or before August 6, 2019, which includes
twenty-eight (28) days from the last publishing, or judgment
may be rendered as prayed for therein.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Apartments/Townhouses

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 9, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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10 Tuesday, July 9, 2019

All-Star Futures Game ends in 2-2 tie

US men fail to follow
women, lose Gold
Cup final to Mexico
CHICAGO (AP) —
The U.S. men’s soccer
players showed how far,
far behind they are the
women.
Hours after the
American women won
their fourth World Cup,
the men were outplayed
by Mexico in the CONCACAF Gold Cup ﬁnal.
Jonathan Dos Santos
scored in the 73rd minute to give the El Tri
a 1-0 victory Sunday
night.
Star Christian Pulisic
and captain Weston
McKennie both left
Soldier Field without
speaking to reporters
about the latest setback
to a program still trying to rebound from its
failure to qualify for last
year’s World Cup.
“Over the course of
90 minutes, Mexico was
the better team,” Gregg
Berhalter said after his
ﬁrst tournament as U.S.
coach. “What we lacked
was I think some of the
calmness, some of the
composure.”
Despite missing their
top three forwards, El
Tri had 58% possession,
outshot the U.S. 20-10
and won their eighth
Gold Cup title to six for
the U.S., which dropped
to 1-5 in Gold Cup
ﬁnals against its biggest
rival.
Days before he
reports to Chelsea,
Pulisic was by far the
best U.S. player, using
bursts of speed and
cutting ability to create chances, but he
rarely touched the ball
in the second half. The
20-year-old midﬁelder
was given the tournament’s best young play-

8 AM

WEATHER

CLEVELAND (AP) — On this
night, baseball’s future stayed
undecided.
Texas catching prospect Sam
Huff’s two-run homer in the
seventh inning rallied the American League to a 2-2 tie with the
National League on Sunday — and
provided the ﬁrst glimpse of an
All-Star tiebreaker — in a Futures
Game that promised to be different
and delivered.
This year’s format was changed
with the game shortened from nine
to seven innings, and Huff’s homer
off Colorado’s Ben Bowden forced
the game into the eighth — this
time, extras — and earned him
MVP honors.
Both teams began their at-bats
in the eighth with a runner at second, the same tiebreaking system
already being used in the minor
leagues. But after neither could
push a run across, the 21st game
featuring baseball’s up-and-coming
stars ended with a thud.
The same tiebreaker could come
into play in Tuesday’s All-Star
Game. Major League Baseball
plans to implement it after the past
two games went 10 innings.
“It was deﬁnitely unique, but in
a situation like this, it was necessary,” said Nationals shortstop
Carter Kieboom. “Guys need their
(All-Star) break, so you can’t play
forever and you only have so many
pitchers here.
“It deﬁnitely speeds up the game
in the minor leagues. I can’t really
predict the future. I don’t know if
the game of Major League Baseball
will allow it because of its history,
and it would be a drastic change.
Maybe teams would try harder to
score in the ninth inning if it happened.”
Beyond the other adjustments,
the biggest difference in this year’s
game was a lack of scoring. Last
year, the U.S. won 10-6 as Reds
prospect Taylor Trammell homered
and tripled.
Down to their ﬁnal two outs, and
blanked over six innings, the AL
tied it in the seventh on Huff’s shot
onto the pedestrian patio in left.
The 21-year-old connected on a
1-0 pitch from Bowden, who is for
20 for 20 in save opportunities in

er award after scoring
three goals with three
assists.
“His contribution to
the team this tournament was fantastic,”
Berhalter said. “Both
sides of the ball. Off the
ﬁeld.”
McKennie, coming
off an excellent season
with Schalke in the
Bundesliga, was given
the captain’s arm band
for the ﬁrst time but
was largely ineffective.
“I’m not going to
comment on his individual performance,”
said Berhalter, who also
praised McKennie for
his play earlier in the
tournament.
While the crowd in
Lyon, France, was overwhelmingly pro-American as the U.S. beat the
Netherlands 2-0 earlier
in the day, El Tri supporters in green, white
and red in the crowd
of 62,493 made Solider
Field seem like Mexico
City’s Estadio Azteca.
Whenever American
Zack Steffen took a goal
kick, there were loud
chants of “puto,” an
anti-gay slur Mexican
fans repeatedly have
been admonished for.
CONCACAF general
secretary Philippe Moggio and spokesman
Alvaro Urrutia did not
respond to an email
seeking comment.
Mexico scored on a
move started by Dos
Santos, who plays in
Major League Soccer
for the LA Galaxy.
He passed the ball to
Rodolfo Pizarro, who
switched from the
left ﬂank to the right
in the second half.

TODAY

2 PM

83°

84°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

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.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

83°
70°
86°
65°
102° in 1988
50° in 1984

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.17
1.47
1.06
25.68
23.02

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:11 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
1:56 p.m.
1:17 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Jul 9

Full

Jul 16

Last

Jul 24

New

Jul 31

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
6:30a
7:18a
8:03a
8:47a
9:32a
10:18a
11:06a

Minor
12:17a
1:06a
1:51a
2:35a
3:19a
4:05a
4:53a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
6:55p
7:42p
8:28p
9:12p
9:58p
10:44p
11:32p

Minor
12:43p
1:30p
2:15p
3:00p
3:45p
4:31p
5:19p

WEATHER HISTORY
Thunderstorm downburst winds were
implicated in the demise of a Boeing
727 attempting takeoff from New
Orleans, La., on July 9, 1982. All 145
people aboard were killed.

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
88/69

Moderate

High

Very High

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. Mon.

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
12.57
19.96
23.28
12.59
13.06
25.53
12.20
27.64
34.90
12.34
25.10
34.50
23.50

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.75
-0.11
+1.60
-0.13
+0.21
+1.28
-0.20
+0.81
-0.16
-0.83
+3.90
-0.10
+3.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

85°
63°

Showing off
Indians prospect Daniel Johnson
looked like he was on the way to
the gym for a workout, choosing to
display his muscular arms by not
wearing a shirt under his sleeveless
jersey.
Teen sensation
Tampa Bay teenage sensation
Wander Franco went 1 for 2 and
was caught stealing. The 18-yearold shortstop was the game’s
youngest player.
Deivi’s day
Yankees right-hander Deivi Garcia started with a scoreless inning
shortly after New York announced
he would be promoted from Double-A to Triple-A. Garcia pitched
in a combined no-hitter and had
a 15-strikeout game in the past
month.

SUNDAY

MONDAY

90°
69°
Mostly sunny

Marietta
88/67
Belpre
89/67

Athens
86/67

St. Marys
89/67

Parkersburg
89/69

Coolville
87/67

Elizabeth
89/67

Spencer
88/67

Buffalo
89/69
Milton
89/68
Huntington
89/70

Clendenin
89/68

St. Albans
90/70

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
74/62
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/59
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
78/62
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Scary moment
Baltimore pitching prospect DL
Hall was hit in the lower left leg
by Miguel Amaya’s shattered bat
in the third inning. Hall couldn’t
avoid being struck, but after being
checked by a trainer, the righthander stayed in and ﬁnished the
inning.
“Of course they were accidental,
but the second one got me on the
left hand, so it stung a little bit,”
Craig said. “It’s OK. I’m a little bit
sore, but everything is ﬁne.”

Mostly sunny

Murray City
86/67

Ironton
89/69

Ashland
88/69
Grayson
89/70

Not once, twice
Pirates’ Triple-A ﬁrst baseman
Will Craig was hit by pitches in
both plate appearances. He did not
react after being plunked by Mariners right-hander Justin Dunn in
the second, but he angrily ﬂung his
bat after being struck in the fourth
by Manning.

90°
64°

Wilkesville
87/68
POMEROY
Jackson
88/68
88/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/68
89/69
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
89/70
GALLIPOLIS
89/69
89/68
88/69

South Shore Greenup
89/69
88/68

57
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
89/69

On the radar
Toronto minor leaguer Nate
Pearson brought the heat on a cool
evening.
He threw four pitches over 101
mph during a perfect ﬁfth, topping out at 101.7 against Dodgers’
Double-A shortstop Gavin Lux.

93°
74°
Some sun with a
thunderstorm possible

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
86/68

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 1625

Logan
87/67

Cleveland. “I mean, this is what
you dream about.”

SATURDAY

Partly sunny, a heavy Delightful with clouds
t-storm; humid
and sun

Adelphi
87/68
Chillicothe
87/69

FRIDAY

89°
67°

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

Waverly
87/69

Pollen: 12

Low

MOON PHASES

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

2

Primary: ascospores, unk.
Wed.
6:12 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
3:03 p.m.
1:49 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

Mostly sunny today. Clear and humid tonight.
High 89° / Low 69°

ALMANAC

Double-A and Triple-A this season.
After rounding the bases, Huff
was greeted at the dugout by the
entire AL squad, which spilled out
along with Hall of Fame slugger
Jim Thome, who managed the
youngsters.
“I didn’t think I was going to
look at them and smile, but I had
a little smirk on my face,” Huff
said. “I had to keep it serious when
I was rounding third, but when I
touched home I started to smile.”
Trammell hit an RBI single —
and probably should have been
credited for stealing home — and
was likely in line to win his second
straight MVP honors before the
AL rallied.
Held without a hit for three
innings, the NL ﬁnally broke
through in the fourth.
Trammell dropped a bloop RBI
single off Matt Manning, a Detroit
prospect, and Dylan Carlson had
a two-out, run-scoring hit off Kris
Bubic, a lefty in Kansas City’s system.
A former high school football
star, Trammell nearly made it
3-0 with a straight steal of home.
Bubic didn’t see him barreling down the line until the last
moment, but threw in time to nip
Trammel, who dived head ﬁrst
and was called out by umpire Jose
Navas.
TV replays appeared to show
Trammell slipped his hand under
catcher Jake Rogers’ tag, and
under normal circumstances
the play would have likely been
reviewed and overturned.
“I can say I’m safe all day and he
missed the call, but what matters
is what’s on the scoresheet,” Trammell said. “It said I was caught
stealing.”
For many of the minor leaguers,
the Futures Game provided their
ﬁrst experience at being inside
a major league clubhouse. Some
seemed awed at sharing the same
cubicles and spaces as players
they’ve grown up admiring.
“I think you’re always going to
be a little bit nervous for something like this,” said Indians inﬁeld
prospect Nolan Jones, hoping to
one day work his way up from
the Class A Lynchburg Hillcats to

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

91°
71°
71°

Daily Sentinel

Charleston
89/70

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

Winnipeg
73/61

Montreal
87/65

Minneapolis
82/69

Billings
73/55

Denver
88/56

Toronto
83/63
Detroit
87/66
New York
87/71

Chicago
86/71

Washington
87/69

Kansas City
87/74

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
91/63/s
75/58/s
90/74/t
83/71/s
89/67/s
73/55/t
88/65/s
86/70/s
89/70/pc
83/73/t
81/49/s
86/71/pc
89/71/s
86/70/s
88/71/s
98/77/pc
88/56/s
87/71/t
87/66/s
89/78/sh
95/77/pc
87/70/pc
87/74/t
102/80/s
95/75/pc
78/62/pc
92/73/pc
86/75/t
82/69/t
93/74/pc
97/78/pc
87/71/s
96/73/pc
90/74/t
89/70/s
106/84/s
86/68/pc
88/62/s
84/69/t
86/64/pc
91/76/t
89/67/s
71/59/pc
74/62/c
87/69/s

Hi/Lo/W
94/67/s
68/57/pc
89/73/c
84/73/s
91/69/s
87/64/pc
94/64/pc
87/72/s
90/72/t
88/74/pc
79/56/s
90/69/t
92/74/pc
91/74/t
91/74/t
99/77/s
85/63/s
85/63/s
89/72/pc
89/77/pc
96/78/s
88/70/t
88/65/s
106/83/s
97/75/pc
81/63/pc
94/76/pc
90/77/t
78/62/pc
93/76/pc
95/80/t
89/74/s
97/70/s
90/73/t
91/71/s
110/89/s
87/71/t
83/61/s
89/73/pc
89/71/s
92/70/t
97/72/s
73/58/pc
75/61/sh
90/72/s

EXTREMES MONDAY

Atlanta
90/74

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
100/73

101° in Laredo, TX
33° in Boca Reservoir, CA

Global
High
120° in Haima, Oman
Low 16° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
95/77

Chihuahua
93/68
Monterrey
102/73

Miami
86/75

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

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