<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="326" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/326?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T05:39:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="2747">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9ea801b0c3ec4520337c2193c942adf4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3f2474d038bf12fb730bacbc966785c0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="703">
                  <text>EHS Class
of ‘59
reunion

Pomeroy
Sternwheel
Regatta

Tornadoes
wallop
Wahama

NEWS s 7A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 37, Volume 53

Sunday, September 15, 2019 s $2

Bringing home ‘the bridge’

Construction
permit granted
for Mason
County coal to
liquids facility
Staff Report

Bryan Walters | OVP

The Gallia Academy Blue Devils football team took home more than a victory on Friday night after defeating the Point Pleasant High School Big Blacks, 14-13 at
Memorial Field. The Blue Devils were presented the newly constructed Rotary trophy in a game dubbed the Battle of the Bridge. The trophy, commissioned by Pleasant
Valley Hospital and donated to both the Point Pleasant and Gallipolis Rotary clubs, is constructed to resemble the Silver Memorial Bridge and will rest at Gallia
Academy, until the next “Battle.” More on the game inside this edition and online at www.mydailytribune.com.

Remember the missing
POW, MIA Day
to return to
City Park

the Gallia County Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter #709
and VFW Post 4464. All are
welcome to attend the special
service.
An empty table has traditionally been set at the ceremony
in City Park. Presenters of the
ceremony often explain the
signiﬁcance of the POW MIA
Empty Chair Ceremony then
Staff Report
followed with a reading of Gallia’s lost and missing veterans.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia CounThe table symbolizes the frailty
ty veterans, family and friends
of an isolated prisoner. The
will be gathering in the Gallipotablecloth is white and symlis City Park beside the Spirit
bolic of the purity of the indiof the American Doughboy VetDean Wright | OVP
vidual’s intentions to respond
eran Memorial, Friday, SeptemVisitors in Gallipolis City Park stand for the National Anthem during the annual
ber 20, at 10 a.m. to recognize
National Prisoners of War and Missing in Action Recognition Day ceremony in to their country’s call to arms.
A single rose in a vase signiﬁes
those lost but not forgotten who September 2018.
the blood shed in sacriﬁce for
served their country.
country. The ribbon on vase
be presenting vocal selections
those missing in action of all
The third Friday of Septemwith Gary Fenderbosch sharing represents the ribbons worn
previous armed conﬂicts. John
ber is traditionally recognized
on lapels of the thousands who
his recent travel to Normandy,
Jackson will be the speaker for
as National Prisoners of War
demand a proper accounting of
France, to attend the 75th
and Missing in Action Recogni- the ceremony, with VFW Post
observance of D-Day. This cer4464 Honor Guard presenting
tion Day. It is an annual obserSee MISSING | 5A
emony is a combined effort of
the colors. Jenny Henchey will
vance of prisoners of war and

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Classifieds: 5B
Comics: 6B

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

Staff Report

COLUMBUS — Ohio Attorney
General Dave Yost, Columbus Division of Police Interim Chief Thomas
Quinlan and Central Ohio Human
Trafﬁcking Task Force Director Sgt.
Mark Rapp announced Friday the
culmination of a human trafﬁcking
operation.
A partnership of over 30 law
enforcement agencies and social service organizations yielded 104 total

See COAL | 5A

Job shadowing
program
to benefit
business,
education
communities
Staff Report

arrests, including 53 felony charges,
in an operation named “Fourth and
Goal.”
Among those facing charges is Wesley Howard, 48, of Pomeroy. Howard
is charged in Franklin County Municipal Court with soliciting, a thirddegree misdemeanor. In a separate
case ﬁling, Howard is also charged
with improper handling of a ﬁrearm
in a motor vehicle, a fourth-degree
felony. Both charges were ﬁled by the
Dublin Police Department according to court records. Howard was
arraigned on Thursday and has been

MEIGS COUNTY
— More than 50 representatives from local
businesses, schools, and
workforce development
agencies recently met to
discuss plans for a job
shadowing program that
will involve high school
students from all three of
the county’s public school
districts. The meeting
was hosted by Farmers Bank and the Meigs
County Economic Development ofﬁce.
Job shadowing involves
giving students a chance
to observe or “shadow”
someone at a job in which
they think they may be
interested. It allows students to explore careers
on a ﬁrsthand basis.
“This will be a great
opportunity for our students. It will deﬁnitely
help them make more
informed decisions about
their future career paths,”
said Abby Harris, Meigs
High School guidance
counselor.
During the meeting,
attendees heard from
a panel of ﬁve Meigs
High School students
who participated in job
shadowing assignments
during the 2018-2019
school year. The teens
spoke about the details
of their assignments and
how such an experience
helped them to determine
a career plan.
Participants then

See ARRESTED | 5A

See JOB | 5A

104 arrested in Operation
‘Fourth and Goal’
Meigs man among
those arrested

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— West Virginia environmental ofﬁcials have
issued a construction permit for a state-of-the-art
coal to liquids facility to
be built near Point Pleasant in Mason County.
The state Department
of Environmental Protection issued the permit for
Domestic Synthetic Fuels
following a public comment period and public
meetings on the project,
which will turn West
Virginia coal and natural
gas into ultra-low sulfur
diesel fuel, aviation fuel,
gasoline and other valueadded products.
“I’d like to thank not
just the DEP, but the
community for coming
out and supporting this
project,” said Kevin Whited, Domestic Synthetic
Fuels lead developer.
“They live here. They
turned out, and a lot of
them spoke in favor of
the facility.”
The Domestic Synthetic Fuels facility will create
130 direct jobs on site,

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, September 15, 2019

Shamblins celebrate
75th anniversary

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
CHARLES P. WILLIAMS
CATLETTSBURG
— Charles P. Williams
passed away unexpectedly Sunday, Sept.
1, 2019, at his home.
Charles was born Dec.
27, 1948, in Ashland,
Ky., to Asa and Helen
(Smith) Williams. He
was a graduate of Paul
G. Blazer High School in
Ashland, Ky., and earned
a Bachelors degree in
Electrical Engineering
from University of Kentucky. Charlie retired
from American Electric

Power after 38 years,
and continued to do
consulting work after
retirement.
He was an avid UK
Wildcats fan, a lifelong
NRA member, a Mason
of Poage Lodge #325
F&amp;AM, a member of
American Legion Post
#140 in New Haven,
W.Va., and a loving husband, father and grandfather.
He is preceded in
death by his parents,
his ﬁrst wife, Beverly

(Haley) Williams, and
his nephew, Jeff Williams.
He is survived by his
wife, Bonnie (Roush)
Williams; his son, Phillip (Corey) Williams;
his daughter, Amy Biehl
(Mike Caldwell); his
stepsons, Gary Freeman
(Debbie Oliver), Brian
(Lucinda) Freeman;
stepdaughter, Deanna
Freeman; and 7 grandchildren.
A memorial service
will be held Saturday,

Sept. 14 at 2 p.m.,
with visitation 12-2
p.m., prior to the ceremony, at Neal Funeral
Home, 2409 Center St.,
Catlettsburg Ky., with a
reception for friends and
family to follow.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
donations can be made
to the American Cancer
Society ( www.cancer.
org) or to the Cornelia DeLang Syndrome
Foundation (302 W
Main St #100, Avon,
CT, 06001).

Courtesy photo

BUSH
OAK HILL — Charles William Bush, age
72, of Oak Hill, died unexpectedly on Friday,
August 16, 2019.
Services were conducted by Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home and Bill was laid to rest
on August 20, 2019 at the Pine Street Cemetery in Gallipolis.

Don and Grace Shamblin, 1944

FULKS
CROWN CITY — Orpha Eldonna Fulks, 79
of Crown City, died Thursday September 12,
2019 at St. Mary’s Medical Center. Funeral service will be held 11 a.m., Monday September
16, 2019 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory
in Proctorville. Burial will follow at Miller
Memorial Gardens in Miller. Visitation will be
6 to 8 p.m., Sunday, September 15, 2019 at the
funeral home. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory assisted the family with arrangements.

Don and Grace Shamblin, of Alexandria, Va., recently celebrated
their 75th wedding anniversary. They were married on August
20, 1944 in Cheshire, when Grace was 18 and Don was 19. They
attended Cheshire High School and were married right after
Grace’s graduation in 1944. Don worked as a crewman on dredging
boats on the Ohio River. Later, he was a crane operator on the
construction of the Kyger Creek Power Plant. He worked as a
heavy equipment operator in Cincinnati before moving his family
to Alexandria in 1959. Don worked in the booming construction
industry in the Washington, D.C. area and Grace later worked at
a bank in Old Town Alexandria. They moved into Sunrise Assisted
Living Facility in Alexandria two years ago. They are longtime
members of Virginia Hills Baptist Church in Alexandria. The
couple have three children, nine granddaughters and 11 great
grandchildren, many of whom live nearby in the Alexandria area.

DENNEY
BIDWELL — Randall Lonnie “Randy” Denney, 70,
Bidwell, died on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019 at his residence.
Friends and Family may call at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home on Monday, Sept. 16, 2019, 6-8, Military Honors
Rites by American Legion Post 161, Ewington, will follow
and prayer by Rev. Ted Russell. Cremation will then follow.
The McCoy-Moore Funeral Home is serving the Denney
Family.
DEXTER
PROCTORVILLE — Sharon Kay Dexter, 74, of Proctorville, died on Friday, Sept. 13, 2019 at St. Mary’s Medical
Center, Huntington, W.Va.
A graveside service will be held 11 a.m., Tuesday, Sept.
17, 2019 at Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. No visitation
will be held.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
assisting the family with arrangements.

Young mom sentenced to 3 years of probation for corpse abuse
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
— A young Ohio woman
acquitted of killing and
burying her newborn in
the backyard was sentenced Friday to three
years’ probation on a
corpse abuse charge.
Brooke Skylar Richardson, 20, apologized
before a Warren County

judge told her she
showed a “grotesque disregard for life.” Richardson buried her newborn
daughter in her family’s
backyard in 2017. Her
defense said the baby she
called “Annabelle” was
stillborn.
“Life is precious, and
it should be protected,”

Judge Donald E. Oda II
said. “I know in my heart
that if you would have
made different decisions
in this case, Annabelle
would be here today.”
Oda warned Richardson, a ﬁrst-time offender,
that he can send her to
prison for up to a year if
she violates probation.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Sternwheel
Regatta Lunches
POMEROY — Trinity Congregational
Church, corner of Second and Lynn
Streets, will be serving lunch during the
Sternwheel Regatta on Thursday, Sept.
19 and Friday, Sept. 20, from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Menu will include homemade
chicken and noodles, sloppy joes, hot
dogs, selection of sides and homemade
desserts.

Tuesday, The Pomeroys on Wednesday,
Family Ties on Thursday, David and
Sheila Bowen on Friday, and Valorie Higginbotham on Saturday.

Holley to preach
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Revival,
Evangelist George Holley will be preaching at Point of Faith Church, Ripley Road
(across from Roosevelt School). Sept.
15-18. Sunday at 6 p.m. Monday through
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Pastor Mark Mayes
invites all.

prizes and more. For more information
contact Alyssa Fitch at 740-516-7605 or
Tammi Goeglein at 740-541-3706.

Meeting Change
POMEROY — All future meetings of
DAV #53, beginning with the meeting at
7 p.m. on Oct. 14, will be held at Farmers
Bank, 640 East Main Street in Pomeroy.

Road Closures

POMEROY — Meigs County Road 53,
Wipple Road, will be closed beginning
Tuesday, Sept. 10, to allow county forces
to replace several large culverts between
RACINE — Southern High School
County Road 34, Pine Grove Road, and
will be hosting a craft show on Saturday,
LETART, W.Va. — The Guiding Star
Oct. 19 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Interested
Church located on Tumbleson Run Road State Route 7. This closing will be in
effect for approximately one month.
vendors and crafters may contact Alan
off Route 62 in Letart will be having a
MEIGS COUNTY — State Route 124
at 740-444-3309 to get an application or
revival beginning on Sept. 16-20, 7 p.m.
will close on Monday, Sept. 9 to allow
visit southernlocalmeigs.org and click
each night.
crews to replace a culvert that carries the
forms and links.
route over Forked Run.The closure will
be between the entrance to Forked Run
ROCKSPRINGS — A spaghetti dinner State Park and Curtis Hollow Road. During the work, trafﬁc will be detoured via
beneﬁt is planned for Oct. 6 with the
proceeds to beneﬁt Olivia Wood and her SR-248, SR-7, and SR-681. The project is
scheduled for completion in mid-NovemLEON, W.Va. — The 23rd annual reviv- family following her recent surgery and
ber, weather permitting.
long recovery. The dinner will be held
al at Shiloh Community Church in Leon
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middlebeginning at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 6 at
with Sampy Hart preaching kicked off
the Meigs County Fairgrounds in the new port Hill” is closed due to a slip until
this Monday at 7 p.m. and will continue
throughout the week with special singing Rutland Bottle Gas Building. The dinner further notice. Tickets will be issued to
those who drive through the closed porwill go until 5 p.m. or until the food is
by Riley and Kadyn with Rollins Family
tion of the road.
on Monday, Toney and Margie Miller on gone. There will be split the pot, door

Craft Show

Church Revival

Shiloh Community
Church revival

Benefit Dinner

The Go Go Scare Show
Presents “The Brother’s Grimm and Other Twisted Fairy Tales”
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

Sept 20 &amp; 21
Sept 27th &amp; 28th
October every
Friday &amp; Saturday
Nov 1st &amp; 2nd
&amp; Halloween

(USPS 436-840)

LIVESTOCK
REPORT
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The latest livestock
report from United Producers, Inc., 357 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio,
740-446-9696.
Date of Sale: Sept. 11
Total Headage: 425
Feeder Cattle (#1 Cattle)
Yearling Steers 600700 pounds: $108.00
- $117.50; 700-800
pounds: $100.00-$120.00;
Yearling Heifers 600700 pounds: $90.00$110.00; 700-800 pounds:
$104.00 - $112.00; Steer
Calves 300-400 pounds:
$100.00 - $150.00; 400500 pounds: $110.00 $145.00; 500-600 pounds:
$110.00 - $145.00; Heifer
Calves 300-500 pounds:
$110.00 - $143.00; 500600 pounds: $100.00$129.00; Feeder Bulls
250-400 pounds: $110.00$133.00; 400-600 pounds:
$120.00-$135.00; 600-800
pounds: $103.00-$113.00;
#2 &amp; #2 Feeders: $30.00$100.00
Cows &amp; Fat Cattle
Comm &amp; Utility:
$30.00 - $60.00; Canner/
Cutter: $5.00 - $30.00;
Bred Cows: $400.00
$735.00; Cow Calf Pairs:
$500.00 - $730.00; Fed
Cattle: $93.00 - $98.00

Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

108 Academy Dr, Ripley, WV * $13

Hauntingly
Delicious
I Scream, Shakes,
&amp; Floats!
516 W Main St
Ripley WV
Where it is
Halloween 7 days
a Week!
OH-70148011

“I just wanted to say
how sorry I was,” Richardson told the judge
before he sentenced her.
She said she can “sometimes be selﬁsh,” and
she knows she hurt “so
many” people.
“I’m forever sorry, I’m
so sorry; I’m really, really
sorry,” she said.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@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

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Bulls
By Weight: $77.50$86.00
Small Animals
Aged Sheep: $85.00;
Aged Goats: $10.00;
Hogs: $28.00 - $40.00;
Sows: $15.00 - $35.00;
Feeder Pigs: $26.00 $35.00
Announcements:
Small Animal Sale
(including boxed lots) –
Oct. 12 at 11 a.m.
Farm Machinery &amp;
Equipment Sale – Oct. 12
at 10 a.m.
Horse &amp; Tack Sale –
Oct. 12 at 5 p.m. (Horses, tack sells before)

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 15, 2019 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

September is National Food Safety Education Month
tact with raw meats, or if
you are preparing foods
for someone that is on
the highly susceptible list
above. Sanitizing can be
accomplished at home by
adding about a teaspoon
of unscented bleach to
about one and half gallons of water. After dishes
and utensils are washed
and rinsed, they should
be placed into the bleach
water for 7 seconds, then
placed upside down on a
clean surface to air dry.
Dishes and surfaces
aren’t the only thing we
need to keep clean in
the kitchen. Be sure to
thoroughly rinse produce
before prepping. It is no
longer necessary to rinse
raw meats before cooking.
However, if you do rinse
Be Clean
The ﬁrst step in prepar- your raw meats; be aware
ing food is to thoroughly that when water splashes
off the meat onto surfaces
wash your hands with
around and in your sink,
soap and warm water,
germs are spreading to
then dry them on a
those areas. Be sure to
disposable paper towel.
wash rinse and sanitize
Hand sanitizers never
those areas to kill the
take the place of proper
germs. If using a bleach
hand washing (we can
solution to wipe surfaces,
get into why later in the
it should be twice as
article). Next, ensure all
strong as for sanitizing
surfaces that are going
dishes. Read the labels of
to touch foods are also
your cleaning products
clean. This includes
carefully. If the product
knives, cutting boards,
doesn’t speciﬁcally say it
counter tops, dishes etc.
kills germs, then it does
In a restaurant setting,
they also sanitize the food not kill germs. I’m talking
contact surfaces. Sanitiz- to you Fabuloso. To kill
food germs, like salmoneling all the dishes is not
necessary at home, but it la, e coli, and norovirus
is a good idea for surfaces you need an actual disinfectant. Bleach is cheap,
that have come into conAccording to the CDC,
every year, an estimated
1 in 6 Americans (or 48
million people) get sick,
128,000 are hospitalized,
and 3,000 die from eating contaminated food.
Those most likely to get
sick are:
· Children younger than
5
· Adults aged 65 and
older
· People with health
problems or who take
medicines that lower the
body’s ability to ﬁght
germs and sickness
· Pregnant women
Here are some things
you can do to protect
yourself and your family
from food born illness:

readily available,
not stored above
effective and at the
other foods. If you
correct concentracarry a plate of
tion, safe to use on
raw burgers out to
food contact surthe grill, you must
faces. Just be sure
get a clean plate to
to follow direccarry the cooked
tions on the label. Dawn
burgers back to the
(Never mix bleach
kitchen.
Keller
with ammonia.)
Contributing
Cook
columnist
Separate
In this part of
the country, rural
Raw meat, poulAppalachia, it is customtry, seafood, and eggs
can spread germs. Avoid ary to cook foods well
beyond the required temcross contamination by
peratures for food safety.
separating them from
However, if you are trycooked foods and fresh
ing to imitate something
produce. This is just as
important at home as it
you saw a professional
is in a restaurant. When
do on the food network,
you are grocery shopping, you will need a food
keep the raw meat items
thermometer. The trick
separate in your cart.
here is to ﬁnd the sweet
Keep them separate when spot between juicy and
placing on the conveyor
delicious and hot enough
belt at checkout. You
to kill the germs. Whole
don’t want raw meats to
muscle cuts, such as pork
chops, steaks and cuts of
end up in the same bag
ﬁsh need to reach at least
as fruits, or anything
that would not be cooked 145 degrees. Ground
meats like burgers, saubefore being consumed.
sages and brats need
Once you get home,
cooked a little longer
place the raw meats in
to 155. Poultry such as
the bottom drawers of
the fridge. This will keep chicken, turkey and duck,
as well as anything that
any blood or nasty from
is stuffed, need to reach
dripping down onto the
165. When foods are not
foods below. When it’s
cooked to these temperatime for prepping foods,
do the fruits and veggies tures, the potential for
food borne illness from
before raw meats. This
bacteria exists. As with
way there is no need to
any food borne illness,
wash rinse and sanitize
the utensils and surfaces those listed above, in the
high-risk categories are
in between tasks. Once
most likely to become ill.
prepped, keep the raw
This is why steaks aren’t
meats away from, and

be used within 5 days of
thawing.
Finally, the long-awaited note on hand sanitizer…Hand sanitizers are
marketed as “antibacteChill
rial” because bacteria are
When it comes to
what they kill. Hepatitis
harmful bacteria in
A and Norovirus, two of
foods, restaurants know
the most contagious food
to worry about the temborne illnesses, are virusperature danger zone
es. Since they are virus(41-135). Bacteria will
multiply when food tem- es, they are not killed by
hand sanitizer. That is
peratures are between
why in a restaurant set41 and 135 degrees. If
foods remain in the dan- ting, hand sanitizer never
takes the place of hand
ger zone long enough,
washing. Hand washing,
the bacteria will reach
unsafe levels. Refrigerate along with purchasing
perishable foods as soon foods from safe sources,
as possible. It may mean and excluding employees
that are sick, are how resdragging along a cooler
taurants avoid the spread
to keep foods cold if
your ride home from the of viral illnesses.
If you are clean about
grocery store takes lonyour processes, ensure
ger than an hour or so.
Monitor your refrigerator foods are kept chilled,
separate raw meats from
to ensure it is keeping
ready to eat items and
foods at 41 degrees or
below. Leftovers need to cook raw meats to a hot
be placed under refrigera- enough temperature, you
can avoid adding yourself
tion within two hours,
or within one hour if the or your family to the 48
ambient air temperature million experiencing a
food born illness this
is above 90°F. Also,
year. Basic food safety
since some bacteria
classes are offered at the
can multiply at cooler
Health Department for
temperatures, discard
$10. If you are interested
leftovers after 7 days in
in a class for yourself or
refrigeration. Left overs
your group, contact me
can be frozen to extend
at 740-992-6626 or dawn.
their life beyond the
keller@meigs-health.
7-day window. The gencom.
eral rule for freezing is
that: freezing stops time,
it doesn’t restart it. So, if Dawn Keller is a registered
sanitarian at the Meigs County
you freeze your leftovers Health Department.
on day 2, they need to

served rare and eggs
aren’t sunny side up in
nursing homes and hospitals.

OHIO BRIEFS

Biles’ brother
denies charge
CLEVELAND (AP) —
The brother of Olympic
gymnastics champion
Simone Biles has pleaded
not guilty to murder and
other charges in a shoot-

ing that left three men
dead at a 2018 New Year’s
Eve party in Cleveland.
Attorney Joseph
Patituce (PAT’-eh-toos)
entered the pleas for
24-year-old Tevin BilesThomas during a video
arraignment Friday in
Cuyahoga (ky-uh-HOH’-

guh) County. BilesThomas was indicted
last month on charges
of murder, voluntary
manslaughter, felonious
assault and perjury. Bond
was set at $1 million.
Authorities say gunﬁre
broke out when a group
of men arrived uninvited

to the party.

Inmate may
be drug boss
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Federal authorities say a
Mexican citizen incarcerated at a privately run

Ohio prison used a smuggled cellphone to run an
international drug ring
that brought opioid pills,
heroin, cocaine and other
drugs to Cleveland from
Mexico. The U.S. Attorney’s Ofﬁce in Cleveland
on Thursday said 41-yearold Jose Lozano-Leon

and nine others have been
indicted on a charge of
conspiracy to distribute
controlled substances.
Prosecutors say Lozano-Leon is serving an
18-month sentence at the
Youngstown prison for
illegally re-entering the
U.S.

k
c
PHOTO CONTEST
a
B
to
l
o
o
Sch
Win $100 for OVERALL VOTE WINNER

$50 for THE
FUNNIEST

$50 for MOST
$50 for
VOTES IN THE
MIDDLE TO
GRADE SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL
CATEGORY
VOTE WINNER

Submissions begin
Sept 1 through Sept 12
Voting begins
Sept 13 through Sept 19

OH-70144467

Winners will be
announced Sept 20

Jon Parrack II 304-675-4132

Ty Somerville 304-675-4030

�Opinion
4A Sunday, September 15, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Sensible solutions
to protect our
environment
Even in these partisan times, and even on topics like the environment and energy that are so
caught up in politics, there are some promising
areas where progress can be made. One is energy
efﬁciency. Done right, more efﬁcient use of
energy reduces greenhouse gas emissions, grows
the economy and reduces costs for taxpayers. It
makes sense.
That’s why, since 2011, I’ve worked with Sen.
Jeanne Shaheen to promote bipartisan energy
efﬁciency legislation that will do just that. Such
legislation passed the Senate a few years ago but
was mostly stopped in the House. What did get
through is already making a difference, including provisions that are resulting in more energy
efﬁciency in 4.5 million square feet in leased
building space through our Tenant Star program
at EPA and an estimated $29 million per year in energy savings from
water heaters, which reduce energy
consumption during peak hours and
lower household energy costs.
There is room to do so much
more. That’s why, in July, Sen. Shaheen and I introduced the Energy
Sen. Rob Savings and Industrial CompetiPortman tiveness Act (ESIC). It improves
Contributing energy efﬁciency in residential and
columnist
commercial buildings, the federal
government and the manufacturing
sector.
With buildings accounting for 40 percent of
our nation’s energy use and the federal government being the single largest consumer of energy
in the country — and countless inefﬁciencies
in both sectors — there is great potential to cut
down on energy consumption and save taxpayers
money.
Just one provision of ESIC will reduce energy
consumption in federal government buildings by
2.5 percent per year compared to 2018 consumption levels. Elsewhere, improving building codes
through incentives will save consumers nearly
$13 billion per year in energy costs and reduce
emissions by the equivalent of taking 11 million
cars off the road by 2040. Another bipartisan
ESIC reform to the federal mortgage underwriting process will encourage energy efﬁciency and
reduce emissions by the equivalent of 1.5 million
cars by 2040.
For our factories, ESIC provisions promoting
energy efﬁcient technology will both lower emissions and make our businesses and economy
more efﬁcient, more productive and more competitive. This will create more jobs and lead to
more U.S. innovation and R&amp;D in energy efﬁcient technology.
In addition to ESIC, I’m working with Sen.
Michael Bennet to pass effective carbon capture
legislation. Carbon capture is a common-sense
solution that will allow America to use its natural resources while protecting the environment
at the same time. Our bill, the Carbon Capture
Improvement Act, would allow businesses to use
private activity bonds (PABs) issued by local
or state governments to ﬁnance a carbon capture project. PABs have been used for decades
to ﬁnance pollution control equipment at U.S.
power and industrial facilities — capturing
carbon dioxide is a logical next step. Business
groups, energy groups and environmental groups
all support this bipartisan measure. It is a great
example of how a policy change can result in
both more jobs and a signiﬁcant reduction in carbon emissions.
The bipartisan Tropical Forests Conservation
Act, which I authored 21 years ago and reauthorized with Sen. Tom Udall last year, is designed
to provide resources to protect and preserve forests that are being threatened around the world.
It uses market forces to incentivize countries to
protect their forests in exchange for reductions in
the debt they owe the U.S. These debt-for-nature
swaps have protected more than 67 million acres
of tropical forests over the past two decades,
including more than 1.1 million acres in Brazil
when they had foreign debt owed to us. This
progress was made at minimal cost to taxpayers
and without losing a single job. Such forest burning destroys important biodiversity, and protecting our forests is a leading way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions worldwide through sequestration. Now, we must look at different ways to
use market forces to incentivize countries like
Brazil that no longer have foreign debt with us.
If we step back from politics, we can ﬁgure out
ways to improve the environment while creating
more economic opportunities. The bipartisan
legislative initiatives outlined above with Sens.
Shaheen, Bennett and Udall are good examples.
These bills harness the power of America’s markets to spur innovation in the ﬁelds of energy
efﬁciency and carbon capture, and I look forward
to getting them across the ﬁnish line. We owe it
to our children, our grandchildren and all Americans to come together to keep our environment
clean and our economy strong.
Rob Portman is a United States Senator from Ohio.

THEIR VIEW

Let kids be kids
As a child therapist, I
am noticing an increase
in young children with
worry, anxiety, and
panic. An anxious child
will become an anxious
adult without intervention. I am noticing more
children with perfectionism and fear of failure.
I am noticing more children with interrupted
sleep cycles and psychological stomach aches.
Erika Christakis is the
author of the best-selling
book “The Importance of
Being Little: What Young
Children Really Need
From Grownups.”
Christakis was interviewed for a 2019 article
on the website www.
edutopia.org. “Adultiﬁcation is the failure to see
the world from a child’s
perspective…We all
basically know this is a
problem, but it’s hard to
break the cycle. We need
to step back and see the
world from a child’s point
of view. We see their
development through
an adult’s eyes, imagining that we couldn’t
possibly learn anything
from an hour digging in
a container of mud, so
it must be time to whip
out the math worksheet!
It boggles the mind how
little outdoor time and
gross motor play many
young children have in
their days.”
Rush-rush-rush. Parents, caregivers, and
teachers need to slow
down and allow children
the time to enjoy the
moment and experiential
activities. “Hurry up! It’s

passing National
time to go. We’ll
Curriculum Tests
be late!” shout par(SATs). (letthekents. Life becomes
idsbekids.worda hectic routine of
press.com.)
go-go-go.
“Screaming at
Activities.
children over their
Sports, dance
grades, especially
lessons, music
Melissa
to the point of the
instruction and
Martin
other learning and Contributing child’s tears, is
child abuse, pure
creative opportuni- columnist
and simple. It’s
ties expand the
not funny and it’s
mind and body.
not good parenting. It
However, too many
activities put pressure on is a crushing, scarring,
disastrous experience for
a developing brain and
the child. It isn’t the least
body. “The Busy Life of
bit funny,” is a quote by
Ernestine Buckmeister”
Ben Stein.
is a book (age group:
Play. “Today, many
4-8) by Linda Lodding.
children do not have
Her well-meaning, busy
enough play opportuniparents have packed her
ties at home because of
after-school hours, turnTV, videos, and the coming Ernestine into the
puter. They interact with
over-scheduled poster
toys that are not conduchild of today.
cive to building imagiHomework. For chilnation and interesting
dren prone to anxiety,
dramatic play themes. In
too much homework
many instances, pretend
produces more worry
and anxiety. For children play with siblings and
neighborhood children is
prone to perfectionism,
not available. There are
too much homework
more adult-organized and
leads to procrastination
or fear of failure. After an directed activities than in
the past. They tend to be
8-hour day of school, do
in groups of children of
kids beneﬁt homework?
the same age rather than
Do school systems need
in mixed-age groups,
to balance and limit the
which would include
amount of homework?
older children who could
Do parents need to verbalize concerns to school act as “play mentors.”…
There is a growing body
boards about too much
of research that shows a
homework?
link between play and the
Let Our Kids Be Kids
development of cognitive
was launched in 2016
and social skills that are
by parents who’ve had
prerequisites for learning
enough… enough of
more complex concepts
endless testing, enough
as children get older.
of teachers not being
trusted to teach, enough (www.scholastic.com.)
Play reduces stress.
of driven, dull, dry curMoving the body, prericulum aimed solely at

tending, and being
creative are outlets for
stress. Have you ever met
a child that didn’t want
to play?
Outdoor play. “Ollie
Outside: Screen-Free
Fun” is a book (ages
4-8) for kids by Michael
Oberschneider. Too much
screen time! How can
Ollie get his family to
shut off their gadgets and
play together outside?
Technology is taking a
toll on family communication and togetherness.
Limit screen-time for
kids and for parents.
Nature. “Never before
in history have children
been so plugged in-and
so out of touch with
the natural world,” proclaims Richard Louv,
author of “Last Child in
the Woods.” His book
presents cutting-edge
research showing that
direct exposure to nature
is essential for healthy
childhood development:
physical, emotional, and
spiritual.
Fun and laughter.
Kids need time to be
silly, carefree, and funny.
“There’s nothing more
contagious than the
laughter of young children; it doesn’t even have
to matter what they’re
laughing about,” says
Criss Jami.
The takeaway from this
column is for adults to
slow down in this busy
world we’ve made and let
kids be kids.
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author,
columnist, educator, and therapist.
She lives in Wheelersburg in
Southern Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

World War II Battle of
Britain, the tide turned
as the Royal Air Force
inﬂicted heavy losses
upon the Luftwaffe.
In 1950, during the
— Dame Agatha Christie
Korean conﬂict, United
(1890-1976).
Nations forces landed at
Incheon in the south and
began their drive toward
the 100th anniversary of Seoul.
In 1959, Nikita
the Constitution of the
Khrushchev became the
United States.
ﬁrst Soviet head of state
In 1935, the Nuremto visit the United States
berg Laws deprived
as he arrived at Andrews
German Jews of their
Air Force Base outside
citizenship.
Washington.
In 1940, during the

Today is Sunday, Sept. Thought for Today: “It is a curious thought,
15, the 258th day of 2019. but it is only when you see people looking
There are 107 days left in ridiculous that you realise just how much you
the year.

love them.”

Today’s Highlight in History:
On Sept. 15, 1963, four
black girls were killed
when a bomb went off
during Sunday services
at the 16th Street Baptist
Church in Birmingham,
Alabama. (Three Ku Klux
Klansmen were eventually convicted for their
roles in the blast.)

On this date:
In 1776, British forces
occupied New York City
during the American
Revolution.
In 1887, the city of
Philadelphia launched a
three-day celebration of

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

federal and state law. Synthetic
fuels derived from coal are
cleaner and more ecologically
friendly than fuels derived from
From page 1A
petroleum.
Once up and running,
plus 130 new coal mining jobs
Domestic Synthetic Fuels will
to supply the facility with
take 2,500 tons of coal a day,
raw materials. Thousands of
combine it under heat and
construction workers will be
needed to build the facility, and pressure with a catalyst and
local ofﬁcials expect Domestic hydrogen derived from natural gas to produce more than
Synthetic Fuels to boost the
10,000 barrels of fuel a day.
local and regional economies
The self-contained process also
and help create spinoff jobs in
will produce other value-added
the area.
products that can be sold.
“This will have a tremenWhited said he started
dous economic impact on
Domestic Synthetic Fuels
our county,” said John Musto help revive the Mountain
grave, executive director of
State’s ﬂagging coal industry.
the Mason County Economic
“You can look around and
Development Authority. “This
see the decimation that’s gone
will bring jobs and growth to
on in the coal industry,” WhitMason County and the sured said. “We can’t go back and
rounding region.”
change the past, but we can
DEP ofﬁcials approved the
Domestic Synthetic Fuels facil- make the future better.
“This permit really solidiity as a minor source of emissions, meaning emissions from ﬁes the birth of this project,
to create a new path forward
the facility are minimal under

Coal

Sunday, September 15, 2019 5A

Fuels, the facility will use the
cleanest, most efﬁcient technology available, and has been
proven in similar facilities
overseas.
Chris Hamilton, chairman
of the West Virginia Business
&amp; Industry Council, has seen
identical technology being
used to turn coal into fuels
in China. “It’s truly state-ofthe-art,” he said. “To be able
to turn coal into fuel here in
West Virginia can go a long
way towards establishing U.S.
energy independence and
expanding our state’s reliance
on instate coal supplies.”
Whited said the permit
Courtesy allows work on Domestic
The coal to liquids facility will be locatd north of Point Pleasant.
Synthetic Fuels to begin in
Whited said. “You need ﬂour. earnest. He expects to break
for West Virginia,” Whited
ground on the project this
You need yeast. But one is
said.
fall, begin taking applications
not more important than the
Just as important as coal,
other. You can’t leave one out. for jobs at the facility early in
however, is the project’s
“Natural gas is an essential 2020 and start hiring during
potential for the state’s natuthe second quarter of 2020.
ingredient,” Whited said.
ral gas industry.
“Expect the best from West
According to a press release
“If you’re baking a cake, you
Virginia,” Whited said.
from Domestic Synthetic
need certain ingredients,”

OHIO BRIEFS

Job

Truck attack kills 1, hurts 2

From page 1A

Courtesy photo

Representatives from the business and education communities recently met to discuss the job
shadowing program.

College, Meigs Center,
from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
to ﬁnalize the details for
implementation of such a
program. Local business-

seeking to engage in sexual activity with whom
they believed to be minor
children. This portion of
From page 1A
the operation arrested 24
individuals for importunreleased after posting
ing and attempted unlawbond.
ful sexual conduct with
In the news release
a minor. One individual
announcing the results
faces additional charges
of the operation, Attorof attempted rape and one
ney General Yost stated,
individual faces an addi“You don’t know when
tional charge of dissemia man buys sex whether
nating matter harmful for
it’s genuine consent or,
rather, the victim is being juveniles. All charges are
felonies.
forced with a baseball
The arrested individubat, a knife or the next
als are:
hit of heroin. When you
Timothy Coffey, 52,
hear a man talking about
buying sex, he never says, Columbus
Joshua Love, 27,
‘I’m buying a woman.’
He talks about a whore, a Columbus
Jose Montoya, 22,
slut, a piece – and that’s
Columbus
because saying what is
Christian Bryant, 30,
really happening is too
Columbus
close to the truth for
Michael Sweeney, 39,
them to handle. People
Columbus
who think and talk like
Steven Weakley, 20,
that know in their heart
Grove City
of hearts – it’s slavery.”
Austin Kosier,31,
“The Division of Police
Columbus
has been, and continues
John Shimizu, 28,
to be, grateful to work
Dublin
with the Ohio Attorney
Steven Wilson , 36,
General’s Ofﬁce on multiple projects including this Columbus
Alex Kim, 22, Dublin
recent operation, ‘Fourth
Steven Barcus,45,
and Goal,’” Quinlan said.
Westerville
“By fostering partnerRick Birman, 59,
ships with the Ohio
Attorney General’s Ofﬁce Columbus
Mark Fitzgerald II, 32,
and other local organizaPortsmouth
tions, we look forward
Scott Fierro, 38, Marysto future progress as our
ville
PACT team addresses
Daniel Clingman, 38,
issues which affect quality of life throughout this Pataskala
Jonas Wernick, 20,
great city.”
Upper Arlington
“This operation demDavid Bond, 48,
onstrates the varying
Columbus
dynamics of sex trafNeil Bond, 28,
ﬁcking operating within
Methuen, Mass.
our community,” Rapp
James Good, 33,
said. “Street prostitution
Marysville
is only a small part of a
Brian Basil, 28, Grove
much larger complex sex
City
trafﬁcking issue. This
Logan Detty , 21,
operation was a collaboChillicothe
ration of over 30 local,
Cesar Lopez, 22,
state and federal agencies
Columbus
and ofﬁces working to
Christian Gibson, 26,
address the many hidden
Groveport
crimes within Ohio.”
Cody Conn, 22, ReynA portion of the initiaoldsburg
tive focused on those

Arrested

CANAL WINCHESTER, Ohio (AP) — One
person has died after a truck crashed into an Ohio
medical facility in what authorities are investigating as an intentional attack.
The Fairﬁeld County sheriff says the person
killed Friday at Diley Ridge Medical Center was an
employee.
Sheriff Dave Phalen told The Columbus Dispatch two others were injured. One was in critical
condition. Victims’ names weren’t immediately
released. All were standing at the front desk when
the truck struck.
Phalen identiﬁed the driver as 45-year-old Raymond Leinendeck, of Fairﬁeld County. There was
no sign Leinendeck applied pressure to the brakes
before the crash, so Phalen said it may have been
intentional.
Leinendeck was upset by a psychological evaluation he’d just undergone at the hospital, the sheriff
said.
Diley Ridge is an afﬁliate of the Mount Carmel
Health System.

es who want to become
involved are encouraged
to contact Meigs High
School Principal Travis
Abbott or Meigs County

Economic Development
Director Perry Varnadoe.
Information and photos
provided by Amy Perrin
of Meigs High School.

The following individuals were arrested on solicitation charges, some of
which are misdemeanors:
Javier Justinia, 39,
Hilliard
Adrian Guglielmetti,
54, Westerville
Miguel Vasquez-Reyes,
20, Independence, La.
Matthew Savage, 48,
Lewis Center
Vincent Rhoden, 40,
Lewis Center
Kevin Albanese, 50,
Powell
Marc Coughanour, 36,
Clarkesville
Jaya Ponaka, 29, Powell
Brian Deck, 52, Lewis
Center
Jesus Gonzalez Avila,
unknown
Abshir Omar, unknown
Gary Jr. Childers, 39,
Newark
Samuel Chitison, 22,
Pickerington
Wesley Howard, 48,
Pomeroy
Jonathan Otavalo, 23,
Columbus
Dominic Hodge,
unknown
Corbin Dotson,
unknown
Lamont Brown,
unknown
Vyacheslav Panasovich,
Galloway
Earl Miller, 41, Waverly
Gregory Wilson, 62,
Iroquis, Can.
Luis Alicea, 42, Columbus
Mohamed Mohamed,
29, Columbus
Michael Wilson,
unknown
Christopher Davis, 34,
Columbus
Quayjuan English, 25,
Columbus
Michael Wilson, 46,
Hilliard
Casey Barnes, 22, Newark
Virgil Caldwell, 53,
Lockbourne
Joseph Friedman, 61,
Canton
Emory Legge, 51, Bellefointaine
Miguel Tellez-Flores,
32, Columbus

Mark Williams, 66,
Irwin
Darwin Menjivar, 31,
Richmond Heights
Jarkay Jackson, 23,
Cheyenne, Wyo.
Mouhmed Sene, 28,
Columbus
Additionally, 43 women
were provided with social
services and referred to
CATCH Court.
Agencies and social
service organizations
involved in the operation
include: the Ohio Attorney General’s Bureau of
Criminal Investigation,
Ohio Organized Crime
Investigations Commission, Mahoning County
Human Trafﬁcking Task
Force, Mahoning County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, Dublin
Police Department,
Hilliard Police Department, Austintown Police
District, Franklin County
CATCH Court, Grove
City Police Department,
Delaware County Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce, Powell
Police Department,
Independence Police
Department, Southeast
Mental Health Addiction Services, Salvation
Army, Columbus Public Health, Cuyahoga
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
Franklin County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, Delaware County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, Fairﬁeld
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
Ohio Investigative Unit,
Cuyahoga Regional
Human Trafﬁcking Task
Force, Columbus Division
of Police, Central Ohio
Human Trafﬁcking Task
Force, Columbus City
Attorney, U.S. Attorney
for Southern Ohio, Franklin County ICAC Task
Force, Franklin County
HOPE Task Force, Franklin County Prosecutor’s
Ofﬁce, Fairﬁeld County
Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce, U.S.
Department of Homeland
Security, Federal Bureau
of Investigation.
Information provided
by the Ohio Attorney
General’s Ofﬁce.

Benefit to aid tragedy fund
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia
will play an exhibition men’s basketball game to
beneﬁt the victims and families affected by a mass
shooting in Dayton, Ohio.
The Mountaineers will host Duquesne in Morgantown on Nov. 1. Proceeds will beneﬁt the Dayton Oregon District Tragedy Fund.
The nonproﬁt Dayton Foundation is overseeing
the fund. The Aug. 4 mass shooting in Dayton’s
Oregon District left nine people dead and dozens
injured. The NCAA allows a team to use one of its
two possible exhibition games against a Division
I opponent for raising funds for a catastrophic
event.

Missing
From page 1A

comrades not among
the public. The slice
of lemon on a plate
reminds others of the
bitter fate of the missing. The salt on the
plate reminds others
of the tears shed as
families wait for their
loved ones return. The
inverted glass is to
remind others of those
who cannot toast with
their family and friends

at the current time. The
candles remind others
of the light of hope that
a soldier will return
home. The American
Flag reminds others
that many may never
return and reminds
others of the pain and
sacriﬁce to ensure freedom. Flags of the various military branches
stand for those who
served in their respective branches. The
empty chair serves as
the largest reminder
of those who are still
missing.

COBLENTZ BENEFIT AUCTION
LOCATION: Joseph Coblentz residence 231
Dodrill Rd. Vinton, OH 45686
Directions: From Gallipolis take Rt. 160 North 16 miles
&amp; turn Left on Dodrill Road &amp; go 1/4 mile to Auction. Or
from Rio Grand take 325 North 7 miles &amp; turn left on Rt.
160 &amp; Go 1 1/2 miles &amp; turn left on Dodrill road &amp; Go 1/4
mile to Auction.

FRIDAY SEPT. 20, 2019 @ 3:00 PM
ALL DONATED ITEMS: horses, ponies, furniture,
lawn &amp; garden items, Quilts, tools, &amp; lots more items not
listed, anything may turn up. Donations are welcome.
TERMS: Cash or check w/ID
LUNCH:Lots of good food&amp; Bake Sale.
AUCTION STAFF NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS.

OH-70146129

engaged in small-group
discussions about the values, barriers, and vision
of a structured job shadowing program for all
Meigs County high school
students. It was noted
that the beneﬁts of such
a program extend beyond
the student population.
According to Eastern
Local Superintendent
Steve Ohlinger, “The program is exciting not only
for the students but for
the business partners of
Meigs County. By collaborating, we can strengthen
the workforce of our
county by reinforcing the
needed skills to be a successful employee.”
The group will meet
again on Dec. 3 at the
Rio Grande Community

FOR MORE INFO OR
AUCTIONEERS:
SEND ITEMS TO:
ANDY RABER AUCTIONS LLC.
JONTHAN MAST
5165 TR 118
13922 St. Rt. 160
Baltic, OH 43804
Vinton, OH 45686
330-893-2604
PROCEEDS TO
Sale day Phone 330-473-3994
BENEFIT
DAN WEAVER
Emanuel &amp; Martha Coblentz's
330-231-8865
APPRENTICE
Doctor &amp; Hospital Bills
JOSEPH YODER
330-893-2604

�A long the River
6A Sunday, September 15, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta returns Sept. 19-21
Music, parade,
other activities
planned
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — The
Pomeroy Sternwheel
Regatta returns to the
downtown riverfront
this week, with events
planned Sept. 19-21.
Hosted by the Pomeroy Eagles Aerie 2171,
with support from the
Pomeroy Fire Department and the Pomeroy
Merchant’s Association,
the event includes three
days of music, games,
and events for those of
all ages.
The weekend’s activities kick-off with the Jim
Sisson Memorial Fire
Truck Parade at 6 p.m.
on Thursday. In addition
to dozens of ﬁre trucks
and ﬁrst responder
vehicles, the Meigs High
School Marching Band
will take part in the
parade.
The parade will be led
by Grand Marshals Carson and Barb Crow.
Following the parade
will be the opening ceremonies at the riverfront,
with the Meigs Marching Band performing the
National Anthem. Pomeroy American Legion
Post 39 Honor Guard
will conduct the ﬂag
raising for the event,
with a welcome and
prayer by Randy Smith.
The band Red Sky
Down will perform from
8-11 p.m. on Thursday
evening.
According to their
Facebook page, Red Sky
Down is a blues rock
band based out of Southeast Ohio. The band is
made up of four veteran
musicians with a unique
ability to capture the
soul of a song and make
it their own. Tee Gillis
plays bass and handles
most of the lead vocals;
Howard Stephens plays
guitar and picks up
some lead vocals; Bob
Grossnickle play keys
and sings; and Mike
McGuire plays drums
and sings.
Friday at the Regatta
will feature a full day of
events, beginning with
Historic Walks through
Pomeroy. The walks will
be hosted by Gary Coleman and are sponsored
by the Meigs County
Historical Society. Coleman is a lifelong resident of Meigs County
who enjoys the Ohio
River and local history.
He enjoys showing the
world his slice of Appalachia through his photography. The walks will
take place from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m.
Also on Friday will be
the Road Angels CruiseIn from 2-10 p.m. on the
lower parking lot.
Country and rock
band Double Shot will
perform from 6-8 p.m.
on Friday evening, followed by Southern Five
Band from 8-11 p.m.
Carriage rides will be
available on Friday and
Saturday evening.
Saturday will include
the River Rat 5K run/
walk, the chili cook-off,
and a poker walk in
downtown Pomeroy. For
those with a competitive
side, kayak races will be
held in the afternoon,

File photo

Sternwheelers and smaller boats lined the Pomeroy riverfront as part of the 2018 Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta.

2019 POMEROY
STERNWHEEL
REGATTA

The Pomeroy Fire Department led the line of emergency vehicles
through the downtown area for the Jim Sisson Memorial Fire Truck
Parade at the 2018 Sternwheel Regatta.

Carl Acuff Jr. will return to the Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta on
Saturday evening.

Sternwheelers are pictured during the 2018 Sternwheel Regatta.

The Riverside Cloggers will perform on Saturday of the Pomeroy
Sternwheel Regatta.
Sternwheelers will once again line the Pomeroy riverfront area
when the Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta returns this weekend.

The first of the sternwheelers to arrive at the 2018 Pomeroy
Sternwheel Regatta are pictured at sunset.

as well as a cornhole
tournament, children
and adult hula hoop and
dance contests.
Saturday evening will
see the return of the
Duck Derby and a performance by the Riverside Cloggers.
The Carl Acuff Jr.
Show will round out
event on Saturday evening with a performance
from 8-11 p.m.
According to his website, “since 1992, the
Carl Acuff Jr. Variety

Show Band has become
and American institution. The 2018 tours
proves to be no exception to the rule with a
dynamite show, great
costuming, music and
comedy. The 2018 show
contains all the things
that have made Carl
and his band so popular
over the last 25 years.
We have new and old
country, gospel, comedy,
nostalgic rock n roll,
Motown, Do Wop, disco,
audience participation,

The stained glass sternwheel picture will be raffled off at the
Sternwheel Regatta.

impersonations, and of
course a salute to all of
our men and women in
uniform from past, present and future that is
sure to have you on your
feet.”
Rafﬂe tickets for
items will be available
throughout the weekend, as well as split the
pot tickets. Among the
items to be rafﬂed off
is a 24 inch by 20 inch

stained glass Sternwheel
picture made by Debbie McKinney. Tickets
are $5 each and can be
purchased from festival
committee members, at
Clark’s Jewelry and Vicki
Hanson, Meigs County
Historical Society. Tickers will be available at
the Regatta as well.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Thursday, Sept. 19
4-11:30 p.m. — Food and
craft vendors open on
the parking lot
6 p.m — The Jim Sisson
Memorial Fire Truck
Parade
6-11 p.m. Beer Tent and
T-Shirts open
7 p.m. — Opening
Ceremonies at the
Riverfront
8-11 p.m. — Music by Red
Sky Down Band
Friday, Sept. 20
All day — Downtown
Merchant Sidewalk
Sales
10 a.m.-1 p.m. — Historic
Walks through Pomeroy
(Sponsored by the
Meigs Historical Society
and hosted by Gary
Coleman)
10 a.m.-11:30 p.m. — Food
and Craft Vendors open
2-10 p.m. — Road Angels
Cruise In (lower parking
lot)
5-9 p.m. — Horse Carriage
Rides
6-8 p.m. — Music by
Double Shot
8-11 p.m. — Music by
Southern Five Band
Saturday, Sept. 21
8-8:45 a.m. — Registration
for the River Rat 5K
9 a.m. — River Rat 5K run/
walk
9-11 a.m. — Breakfast at
the Pomeroy Eagles
Registration for the Poker
Walk
9 a.m.-1 p.m. — Chili Cookoff on the parking lot
10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. —
Downtown Pomeroy
Poker Walk
Noon-4 p.m. — Cornhole
Tournament on the
parking lot
1 p.m. — Kayak races
1-5 p.m. — Children’s
Inflatables
2-8 p.m. — Music with DJ
Kip Grueser
3 p.m. — Children’s Hula
Hoop Contest
3:30 p.m. — Adult Hula
Hoop Contest
4 p.m. — Children Dance
Contest
5-6 p.m. — Duck Derby
5-6 p.m. — Riverside
Cloggers at the parking
lot gazebo
5-9 p.m. — Horse Carriage
Rides
6:30-7:30 p.m. — Captain
and First Mate Cookout
7 p.m. — Adult Dance
Contest
9 p.m. — Raffles winners
announced
8-11 p.m. — Carl Acuff Jr.
Show
10 p.m. — Fireworks

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 15, 2019 7A

Emblem Club Scholarship recipients

Fundraising Chair:
Danielle Fowler
Info and Donations:
(740) 245-5441

Submitted Gallipolis Emblem Club

Rio Grande. Kimberly is
working towards becomGALLIPOLIS — The
ing a small business
Gallipolis Emblem Club
owner. Her goal is to own
#199 announces the
her own travel agency.
recipients of the 2019
Eric Gillespie will be a
supreme, state, and local
senior this coming year
Emblem Club scholarM. Edelmann
Edgar
K. Edelmann
Crothers
at Ohio University. His
ships.
major is Information
Mikayla Edelmann
and Telecommunication
received a $2,000 scholarSystems. His plans are to
ship from the Supreme
become a system develEmblem Club. Mikayla is
oper. Allison McGhee will
a junior at the University
be entering her junior
of Rio Grande where she
year studying biological
is majoring in the early
Rees
Charnock
Gillespie
McGhee
sciences at Marshall Unichildhood and special
versity. After receiving
intervention teaching
her pre-med degree, she
ing towards becoming a
ney Crothers, Kimberly
program.
is planning to apply to
Edelmann, Eric Gillespie, surgical nurse. Crothers
Thomas W. Edgar
will be a freshman at Cap- chiropractic school. Olivia
Allison McGhee, and
received a $500 scholarRees will be a fourthship from the Ohio State Olivia Rees each received ital University. Crother’s
year student at Ohio
a $500 college scholarship scholarship money will
Association of Emblem
University this coming
be used towards becomClub. Edgar, a sophomore from the local Gallipolis
fall. She is studying Civil
at Marshall University, is Emblem Club #199. Char- ing a ﬁlm and television
Engineering and her goal
director or producer.
working towards becom- noch is a junior in the
is to become a Licensed
nursing program at Ohio Kimberly Edelmann is a
ing a psychologist.
junior at the University of Professional Engineer.
Sydney Charnoch, Syd- University. She is work-

Eastern Class of 1959 holds reunion

To Whom It May Concern:
The Alumni of Alpha Mu Beta, from the University
of Rio Grande, are organizing a 5K Foxtrot Family
Walk/Run again this year.
On September 25, 2013 our sister and Executive
Director of the Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce, Lorie Neal, unexpectedly passed away.
Many of Gallia County and surrounding areas knew
Lorie through her tireless commitment to helping
businesses and the Gallia communities grow to their
fullest potential.
Lorie was also an active and strong member of
our AMB Alumni Organization, helping maintain
its legacy of sisterhood. The AMB Lorie Neal
Scholarship fund was established to honor our
sister and support those who place high value on
high scholastic achievement while remembering the
importance of supporting your community.
We are looking for sponsors to donate funds or
other needed materials to help make our event a
success. All Proceeds from the event go to our
scholarship fund. To show our appreciation for your
donation sponsors logos will be placed on the 5K
shirts as well as our banner located at registration.
If you are interested in donating to our cause, please
feel free to contact us at any time! Please see the
sponsorship options in a separate document.
The Fox Trot will be held at the University
of Rio Grande on October 12th, 2019 at 8:00
AM, registration begins at 7:00 AM. If you are
interested in participating you may register at www.
amb5kfoxtrot.com or www.tristateracer.com.
Please join us October 12th, 2019 and help this
scholarship ﬂourish, emphasizing the importance
of community, and be a part of the core that is the
University of Rio Grande. Please let us know of
your interest in supporting this worthwhile cause by
September 17th, 2019.
OH-70148028

Thank you,
The Sisters of Alpha Mu Beta

Legislative
Town Hall
Pictured are attendees at the Eastern Class of 1959 reunion (front) Norman Hysell;
(second row) Donna (Frecker) Ihle, Janice (Caldwell) Weber, Yvonne (Damewood) Stover,
Ina (Mays) VanMeter, Sharon (Summerfield) Donahue, Janice (Hayma) Young, Janet
(Vineyard) Gilland; (back row) Nat Carpenter, John Hill, Homer Cole, Bill Pooler, Carl Baker
and Bob Burke.

VanMeter of Tuppers Plains; Norman and Patty Hysell and Yvonne
(Damewood) Stover of Middleport;
Nat and Marlene Carpenter of Rutland; John and Mary Hill of Chester; Robert and Gay Ann Burke and

Sharon (Summerﬁeld) Donahue of
Coolville; and Janet (Vineyard) Gilland of Lucas. Guests were Nancy
and Ray Reamer and Kila Frank.
Information and photo submitted
by Janice Weber.

Friday, October 11th at 9:00 AM
OH-70148019

The Eastern High School Class
of 1959 recently held its 60th class
reunion at the party room of Bob
and Rena Valer at Coolville.
The room was decorated in green
and white, the class colors. There
was a memorial table in honor of
the deceased classmates and another table of memorabilia brought by
classmates.
There were 39 members in the
class of 1959. Thirteen of them
are now deceased and 14 attended
the reunion. Deceased members
are Larry Ritchie, Eleanor (Evans)
Lawson, Sharon (Ritchie) Hartung, Janet (Knight) Pennell,
Beverly (Millhone) Collins, Ruth
Ann (Wyers) Scarbrough, Margaret
(Hayman) Bachler, Janet (Koehler)
Connolly, Paul Boring and Nan
(Haning) Morris.
Attending were Carl Baker
of North Canton; Janice (Hayman) and Ray Young, Homer and
Mary Cole of Reedsville; Janice
(Caldwell) and Steve Weber, Donna
(Frecker) Ihle or Racine; Bill and
Debbie Pooler and Ina (Mays)

AMB Alumni PO Box 330
Rio Grande, OH 45674

Davis Family Conference Rooms
ABC at Holzer Medical Center
For More Information Call: 740-446-0596

Breaking news at
mydailytribune.com
Join us October 12, 2019 for a run, walk,
stroll or trot around gorgeous University of
Rio Grande &amp; Rio Grande, Ohio. This year
the 5K will be held during the annual Bob
Evans Farm Festival Weekend with lots
of events going on all weekend including
Rocketoberfest a beer garden followed by the best
ﬁreworks show you’ll ever see - Rockets
Over Rio!

You won’t want to miss the fun!
DATE: Saturday October 12, 2019
5K / 1 Mile Walk Start: 8:00 AM
Kit Dash: After the Race
Registration Begins: 7:00 AM
Location: University of Rio GrandeBob Evans Farm Hall Parking lot (near soccer ﬁelds)

Must register by OCTOBER 2nd
to be guaranteed a T-shirt

$100 cash award
to overall top male and female 5k runners,

$50 cash prizes

Founded in 1965, the sisters of Alpha Mu Beta have been
active members of the Rio Grande family for nearly 55 years.
As AMB Alumni, we continue to support the active members
in their scholastic and philanthropic endeavors.
On September 25, 2013 our sister and Executive Director
of the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce unexpectedly
passed away. Many of Gallia County and surrounding areas
knew Lorie Neal through her tireless commitment to helping
businesses and the Gallia community grow to their fullest
potential.
Lorie was also an active and strong member of our AMB
Alumni Organization, helping maintain it’s legacy of sisterhood. The AMB Alumni Lorie Neal Scholarship was established to honor our sister and support those who place high
value on high scholastic achievement while remembering the
importance to support your community. We award 2 scholarships annually. All proceeds from this event beneﬁt the fund.

OH-70148247

for 2nd place overall male and female runners.

Register: www.tristateracer.com

Hello, neighbor!
Please stop by and say, “Hi!”
I’m looking forward to serving your
needs for insurance and ﬁnancial
services. Here to help life go right.®
CALL ME TODAY

Robin H Fowler, Agent
11504 State Route 588
Bidwell, OH 45614
740-245-5441
robin.fowler.pitch@statefarm.com

OH-70148242

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, September 15, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sheriff seeks reported
Cheshire theft information

Pleasant Valley Hospital
would like to invite all community members
to a

Meet &amp; Greet

The Gallia Sheriff’s
Office is asking for your
assistance to identify
this suspect and vehicle
which are the subject
of a theft investigation
at a Cheshire area
business. If you have
any information which
could lead to the
identification, please
call the anonymous tip
line at 740-446-6555.

with

Jeff Noblin, FACHE

Pleasant Valley Hospital Chief Executive Officer

Vehicle driven by suspect.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Card Shower

be held at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township
Building.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Village Council will hold an emergency
meeting at 6 p.m. with regard to Phase
3 of the sewer project.
GALLIPOLIS — American Legion
Post #27, the ladies auxiliary and the
Sons of the American Legion, joint
E-Board meeting at 5 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — American Legion
Lafayette Post #27 meeting, 6 p.m.,
post home.

Rex Summerﬁeld will turn 98 on
Sept. 24. Cards may be sent to him at
38550 East Shade Road, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772.
Helen Kaylor will be celebrating her
90th birthday on Sept. 19. Cards may
be sent to her at 42539 Kaylor Road,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

7XHVGD\��6HSWHPEHU���WK��������������S�P�

Sunday, Sept. 15

Pleasant Valley Hospital Wellness Center

POINT PLEASANT — Revival, Evangelist George Holley will be preaching at Point of Faith Church, Ripley
Road (across from Roosevelt School).
GALLIPOLIS — American Legion
Sept. 15-18. Sunday at 6 p.m. Monday
Auxiliary meeting, 6 p.m., post home on
through Wednesday at 7 p.m. Pastor
McCormick Road.
Mark Mayes invites all.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis City
Commission to hold special meeting
at 6 p.m., 333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Municipal Building. Meeting room can
LETART TWP. — The regular meet- be accessed through side entrance door
ing of the Letart Township Trustees will by 2 1/2 Alley.

�����9DOOH\�'ULYH��3RLQW�3OHDVDQW��:9

Tuesday, Sept. 17

OH-70148370

Monday, Sept. 16
TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

57°

77°

74°

Sunny to partly cloudy and very warm today.
Partly cloudy tonight. High 85° / Low 59°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

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.

96°
68°
80°
58°
96° in 2019
39° in 1902

Precipitation

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
Trace
1.29
34.46
31.54

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:10 a.m.
7:37 p.m.
8:44 p.m.
8:18 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

Sep 21 Sep 28

First

Oct 5

Full

Oct 13

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

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
12:49a
1:34a
2:20a
3:07a
3:57a
4:49a
5:42a

Minor
7:00a
7:44a
8:30a
9:18a
10:09a
11:01a
11:55a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
1:10p
1:54p
2:41p
3:29p
4:20p
5:14p
6:09p

Minor
7:20p
8:05p
8:51p
9:40p
10:32p
11:26p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 15, 1991, a northerly wind
brought 5 inches of snow to Rand,
Colo., while Cleveland, Ohio, passed
90 degrees. When the jet stream has
great undulations north and south,
weather extremes are expected.

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

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
85/61

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
13.36
16.20
21.83
13.28
13.18
24.88
13.20
26.04
34.84
13.30
16.20
34.20
14.10

Portsmouth
86/60

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.65
-0.14
+0.24
+0.18
-0.06
-0.09
+0.49
+0.53
+0.53
+0.42
+1.10
+0.60
+0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Partly sunny and
pleasant

84°
62°

Sunny and warm

Sunny

Marietta
85/60

Murray City
83/59
Belpre
85/59

Athens
84/58

St. Marys
85/60

Parkersburg
85/61

Coolville
84/59

Elizabeth
86/59

Spencer
86/57

Buffalo
86/58
Milton
87/58

St. Albans
88/58

Huntington
86/58

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
65/54
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
74/63
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
90/67
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

92°
66°
Mostly sunny and hot

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
87/60

Ashland
87/60
Grayson
86/60

FRIDAY

86°
61°

Wilkesville
84/58
POMEROY
Jackson
85/58
84/59
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
86/58
85/59
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
86/66
GALLIPOLIS
85/59
87/58
85/59

South Shore Greenup
87/60
85/60

23

Logan
83/60

THURSDAY

86°
59°

Partly sunny and
beautiful

McArthur
84/59

Very High

Primary: ragweed, elm, grass
Mold: 3158
Moderate

Chillicothe
84/61

WEDNESDAY

85°
60°

Adelphi
83/60

Waverly
84/60

Pollen: 92

Low

MOON PHASES

TUESDAY

Mostly sunny, warm
and humid

0

Primary: cladosporium
Mon.
7:10 a.m.
7:36 p.m.
9:10 p.m.
9:15 a.m.

MONDAY

87°
63°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Clendenin
89/59
Charleston
88/55

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
78/59

Montreal
68/48

Billings
94/59
Minneapolis
79/64

Toronto
68/58
Chicago
79/64

Denver
91/58

Detroit
78/66

Washington
86/67

Kansas City
89/71

Chihuahua
82/63

Mon.
Hi/Lo/W
81/62/c
60/47/c
95/72/s
83/68/s
91/66/s
92/59/pc
77/48/pc
71/55/pc
90/63/s
91/69/pc
82/57/pc
80/64/c
89/65/pc
79/59/pc
85/63/pc
96/76/s
87/57/pc
92/70/pc
78/61/c
89/79/pc
93/76/t
88/67/pc
90/70/s
96/69/pc
94/69/s
83/62/pc
95/70/s
93/79/t
87/71/pc
96/69/s
94/77/t
81/58/pc
90/68/s
92/75/pc
88/63/s
98/80/s
81/57/pc
69/49/pc
90/68/pc
92/67/pc
93/74/s
86/55/pc
74/59/t
68/55/sh
91/69/s

National for the 48 contiguous states
HUMBERTO

High
Low

113° in Death Valley, CA
11° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
114° in Failaka Island, Kuwait
Low -32° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
96/76
Monterrey
89/69

Today
Hi/Lo/W
77/62/pc
57/51/r
93/72/s
80/67/sh
86/64/pc
94/59/s
92/59/pc
80/61/pc
88/55/s
89/70/s
87/53/s
79/64/t
86/65/s
83/66/pc
85/66/s
97/76/s
91/58/pc
86/69/pc
78/66/pc
91/77/t
96/76/pc
85/69/s
89/71/s
100/76/s
94/69/s
90/67/pc
92/66/s
92/78/t
79/64/pc
95/66/s
92/77/s
80/65/pc
91/68/s
89/76/t
83/65/pc
96/81/pc
79/61/s
75/52/pc
87/68/s
86/66/pc
92/74/s
91/68/s
74/63/pc
65/54/r
86/67/pc

EXTREMES FRIDAY
Atlanta
93/72

El Paso
86/69

New York
80/65

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

Miami
92/78

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

OH-70107875

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

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM�#/:&gt;/7,/&lt;�� M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

Tornadoes wallop Wahama, 58-22
By Alex Hawley

Shuler intercepting a White
Falcon pass and returning it to
the WHS 27.
On a second down from the
RACINE, Ohio — The mid27, Shuler found Will Wickine
dle made the difference.
across the middle for a touchThe Southern football team
down with eight minutes left in
outscored Tri-Valley Conferthe ﬁrst quarter. Trey McNickle
ence Hocking Division guest
ran in the two-point conversion
Wahama 36-to-0 in the middle
to give the hosts an 8-0 edge.
two quarters on Friday at
Wahama answered on its
Roger Lee Adams Memorial
Field in Meigs County, leading next offensive snap, as Trevor
the Purple and Gold to a 58-22 Hunt broke a 65-yard run
with 7:04 left in the period.
victory.
The Tornadoes (3-0, 2-0 TVC The WHS two-point run was
stuffed, however, leaving the
Hocking) — who still trail
Tornadoes on top by a 8-6 clip.
Wahama (1-2, 1-1) by a 32-6
Southern needed just three
count in the all-time series,
plays to get back in the end
but have won ﬁve straight —
forced a turnover on the game’s zone, with Shuler starting the
drive with a nine-yard run,
opening drive, with Gage

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Southern’s Chase Bailey (3) hauls in a touchdown reception over Wahama’s
Hunter Board (6), during the Tornadoes’ 58-22 victory on Friday in Racine, Ohio.

McNickle following with a
35-yard scamper, and Chase
Bailey capping it off with a
seven-yard touchdown reception from Shuler. McNickle
again ran in the two-point conversion, giving SHS a 16-6 lead
with 5:39 left in the ﬁrst.
Wahama’s offense had
another answer, this time with
a 63-yard yard drive consisting
of nine straight run plays. The
ﬁnal carry of the possession
had Abram Pauley rushing ﬁve
yards for six points. Pauley
then ran in for two points,
cutting Southern’s advantage
to 16-14 with 1:39 left in the
opening stanza.
See TORNADOES | 3B

Rebels
rout Federal
Hocking, 44-0
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio — Full of ﬁrsts on this
Friday the 13th.
The South Gallia football team posted its ﬁrst
shutout at home since Week 6 of the 2011 campaign while handing ﬁrst-year coach Vance Fellure
his ﬁrst varsity victory on Friday night with a
44-0 decision over Federal Hocking in a Week 3
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division contest in
Gallia County.
The host Rebels (1-2, 1-1 TVC Hocking) produced two touchdowns apiece in each of the ﬁrst
three quarters, which ultimately led to the ﬁrstever home shutout at the new SGHS football facility.
Tristan Saber threw ﬁve touchdown passes to
four different receivers, plus Kyle Northup had
both a rushing touchdown and a receiving touchdown.
The Lancers (1-2, 0-2) dropped their 35th consecutive TVC Hocking contest and have now lost
seven straight decisions to the Red and Gold. Fed
Hock’s last league win came in Week 9 of 2014
with a 16-14 decision over visiting Waterford.
Northup started the rout with a 14-yard run
early in the ﬁrst, with Saber adding a successful
2-point conversion run for an 8-0 cushion. Saber
followed with a 44-yard scoring pass to Jared
Ward for a 14-0 advantage after one quarter of
play.
Ward hauled in his second TD pass from Saber
in the second canto, this time from 25 yards out,
and Northup added a successful 2-point PAT run
for a 22-point lead.
Kenny Siders caught a 53-yard TD pass from
Saber, and Northup tacked on a 2-point conversion run for a commanding 30-0 advantage at the
See REBELS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday, Sept. 16
Volleyball
Meigs at Southern, 6 p.m.
Belpre at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Golf
TVC Ohio at Athens, 4:30
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 4:30
Wahama at South Gallia, 4:30
Gallia Academy boys at Lancaster Invite, 2 p.m.

Tuesday, Sept. 17
Volleyball
South Gallia at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p.m.
Capital at Point Pleasant 5:30
River Valley at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Ross County, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy boys, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant boys at Huntington St. Joseph, 6
p.m.
Point Pleasant girls at Sissonville, 6 p.m.
Golf
Wahama, Meigs at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Gallia Academy at Warren, 4 p.m.

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Cade Roberts (34) brings down Point Pleasant’s Zane Wamsley during the first half of Friday night’s Week 3
football contest at Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Blue Devils outlast Point Pleasant, 14-13
By Bryan Walters

Blacks marched 77 yards
in 13 plays, with Adkins
capping things with a
2-yard run at the 5:10
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
mark of the ﬁrst. Point’s
— What is … and what
2-point conversion pass
might have been.
was incomplete, making
Senior tailback Brady
it a 6-0 contest.
Adkins helped visiting
Gallia Academy folPoint Pleasant storm out
lowed by marching the
to a 13-point lead early
ball down to the PPHS
in the second before
29, but ultimately turned
being sidelined with an
the ball over on downs
injury, then Gallia Acadafter failing to convert a
emy answered with 14
unanswered points before fourth-and-eight.
Point Pleasant respondhalftime and ultimately
ed with a 12-play, 71-yard
held on for a thrilling
14-13 victory in a Week 3 drive that results in a
non-conference matchup 13-point advantage as
Hunter Bush plunged in
at Memorial Field.
from two yards out. EliThe Blue Devils (3-0)
cia Wood converted the
were making their home
extra-point kick with 8:21
debut against a Big
remaining in the half.
Blacks (0-1) squad that
One play before Bush’s
was competing in its
season opener, and it was score, however, Adkins
the ﬁrst contest between stayed down after a rushing attempt placed the
these two programs in
ball at the GAHS 2-yard
three years. The 83rd
overall meeting — which line. Adkins — who had
82 yards on 10 touches
GAHS now leads 41-37to that point — never
5 — was also the latest
returned to the game.
installment of the Battle
The Blue and White,
of the Bridge, complete
with a newly-constructed coincidentally, looked to
trophy that was presented their tailback to help get
things on track … and
by both communities’
junior James Armstrong
Rotary organizations.
didn’t disappoint.
Despite making its
Armstrong broke a
season debut, PPHS
appeared to be in midsea- 52-yard run to paydirt
at the 7:31 mark of the
son form early on as the
second frame, capping a
Red and Black allowed
only 29 yards defensively 2-play, 68-yard drive that
in the ﬁrst quarter while allowed the hosts to close
also stringing together a back to within 13-7.
The Big Blacks folpair of impressive offenlowed with a quick
sive drives.
After a quick three-and- three-and-out that led to
a punt, then Armstrong
out on the Blue Devils’
broke a 50-yard scamper
opening drive, the Big

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

to the house. The 2-play,
50-yard drive — as well
as Andrew Toler’s second
consecutive successful
PAT kick — ultimately
gave Gallia Academy a
permanent lead of 14-13
with 5:02 left in the ﬁrst
half.
From there, both
defenses got tougher —
and the hitting became
harder — as neither
team was able to produce
another point.
Both teams had legitimate chances, including
late in the second quarter.
Logan Southall picked
off a Noah Vanco pass
at the Point Pleasant
40 with just over three
minutes left in the half,
but was stripped of the
ball before being brought
to the ground. Ben Cox
recovered the fumble for
GAHS at the Point 42
with 3:10 remaining in
the half.
The Blue Devils
marched the ball down
to the 24 and elected
to try a ﬁeld goal while
facing a fourth-and-nine,
but Toler pushed the ball
wide right — allowing
the guests to take over
on downs at their own 24
with seven seconds left
until halftime.
The ﬁrst four drives of
the second half resulted
in punts, which gave the
Big Blacks the ball at
their own 13.
Lane Rollins made a
strong run with a push
from a pile of teammates
out to around the 25, but
Brant Rocchi stripped the

ball out before the whistle
blew. Rocchi fell on the
fumble at the 26, giving
the hosts possession with
2:12 remaining in the
third.
Point Pleasant, however, tightened up its
defense and forced a loss
of downs at the 17-yard
line with just 37.4 seconds remaining in the
canto.
Both teams traded
punts at the start of the
fourth, and the Big Blacks
seemed to have some
forward momentum after
taking over possession at
the GAHS 42 with 3:24
remaining.
Facing a pivotal thirdand-eight, Zack Hemby
recorded a sack that
pushed Point back to
midﬁeld — followed by
a false start that left the
guests looking at a fourthand-22 situation at their
own 45.
Bush delivered a
perfect strike down the
middle of the ﬁeld to a
wide open receiver, but
the pass was dropped —
which resulted in a loss
of downs with 1:24 left in
regulation.
The Blue Devils followed with a pair of kneel
downs that ran the clock
to triple zeroes, giving
the hosts their ﬁrst 3-0
start to a season in since
the 2010 campaign. It
was also the ﬁrst time
since 2008 that GAHS
defeated Point Pleasant
on the gridiron, snapping
See DEVILS | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, September 15, 2019

Rebels
From page 1B

break. Northup caught his
ﬁrst TD pass from 43 yards
out early in the third, and
Greg Davis added a successful 2-point conversion
run for a 38-0 lead. Justin
Butler completed the scoring with a 16-yard TD grab
late in the third for the ﬁnal
44-point margin.
Northup led the ground
attack with 35 yards on four
carries, followed by Butler
with 14 yards on three
totes.
Saber completed 8-of-11
passes for 204 yards, throwing ﬁve touchdowns and
one interception. Northup
led the receivers with three
catches for 59 yards, while
Ward hauled in two passes
for 69 yards.
South Gallia returns to
TVC Hocking action next
Friday when it travels to
Trimble for a 7:30 p.m.
kickoff.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.

Lady Eagles sweep Waterford
By Alex Hawley

start the second game,
but the Lady Eagles
scored eight of the next
nine points and never
TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — And then there trailed again. EHS
moved ahead 2-0 in the
were none.
The Eastern volleyball match with a 25-17 win
team handed defending in the second.
Eastern led initially in
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division cham- the third, stretching the
advantage to as many as
pion Waterford its ﬁrst
league loss of the season ﬁve points, at 11-6. The
Lady Wildcats clawed
in straight games on
Thursday at ‘The Nest’, back to take a lead at
leaving no team with an 16-15, but the hosts
unbeaten TVC Hocking claimed the next two
markers and didn’t trail
record.
Eastern (6-4, 4-1 TVC again. WHS tied it up at
17 and 22, but couldn’t
Hocking) led wire-toavoid the sweep, eventuwire in the opening
ally falling by a 25-23
game of the evening,
stretching the advantage tally.
Olivia Barber led
to as many as 13 points,
the Lady Eagle service
at 22-9, before settling
attack with 16 points,
for the 25-19 victory.
including six aces. BriWaterford (4-6, 4-1)
elle Newland and Jenna
had its ﬁrst lead of the
night with a 5-1 spurt to Chadwell had eight

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

“When I grow up...
I want to be a

Scientist! ”

Your children have dreams as big as their imaginations.
We know the care they receive today will help them
achieve those dreams tomorrow. In affiliation with
Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Holzer helps keep your
children healthy with specialized care so they can become
more than they could ever imagine.

Schedule an appointment!

1-855-4HOLZER
(1-855-446-5937)

www.holzer.org/pediatrics

OH-70146481

Sunday Times-Sentinel

in
affiliation
with

eon added six, while
Marissa Neader and
Alayna Jones had four
points apiece, with
Neader earning a a pair
of aces.
Taylor — who led
the Waterford defense
with nine of the team’s
46 digs — ﬁnished
with four kills, a block
and 13 assists at the
net. Riley Schweikert
and Lily Roberts also
had four kills apiece,
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports with Schweikert pickEHS sophomore Megan Maxon (14) spikes the ball past a WHS
ing up a pair of blocks.
defender, during the Lady Eagles’ sweep on Thursday in Tuppers
Harmon had three kills
Plains, Ohio.
and four blocks in the
points apiece, with two win, Gheen added three setback, Mackenzie
Suprano added three
kills and three blocks,
aces by Newland and
one by Chadwell, while while Layna Catlett had kills, while Maggie
Huffman ﬁnished with
one kill and one block.
Kylie Gheen ﬁnished
one kill and one block.
Newland claimed one
with six points and an
Eastern will look for
kill for the hosts, Tessa
ace. Sydney Sanders
Rockhold came up with a similar result when
contributed ﬁve points
these teams meet in
a block, while Sanders
and an ace to the winWashington County on
ning cause, while Haley led the team’s defense
Sept. 30.
Burton chipped in with with 10 of the 27 digs.
Next for the Lady
Kaylea Harmon led
four markers.
Eagles, a trip to Federal
Waterford with 10 serBarber also paced
Hocking on Monday.
vice points, including
EHS at the net with
two aces. Cara Taylor
six kills and a block.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
ended with seven
Chadwell earned four
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
points, Olivia McCutchkills and a block in the

Devils
From page 1B

a 3-game losing skid in
the process.
Gallia Academy has
now won 10 consecutive
regular season contests
and will begin defense
of its 2018 Ohio Valley
Conference championship
next week against visiting
Chesapeake.
In the moment, however, GAHS coach Alex
Penrod felt that this victory really helps set the
table for the rest of the
season — particularly
in knocking off a storied
rival that knows a thing
or two about winning
football games.
“Tonight was something that this program,
these kids and this coaching staff needed. A lot of
these kids haven’t experienced the feeling of what
a full football night really
is. And to be honest,
Point Pleasant had us on
the ropes a little bit until
early on in the second
quarter,” Penrod said.
“With that said, these
guys rose to the occasion
when that time came
and they believed in one
another that we could win
this game. We stepped
up when we had to have
it, and that’s what makes
this win such a proud
moment for this program.
“This is a great send-off
as we head into conference play because week
in and week out we
are going to be taking
everyone’s best shot and
there’s going to be some

chess matches over the
next seven weeks. It was
just nice to see everyone
contribute and how they
handled their roles for the
greater good of the team.
We made just enough
plays to get out of here
with a win, and I really
think we have some conﬁdence headed into league
play. Now we just have to
get ready to do it again
next week.”
On the ﬂip side of
things, PPHS coach
David Darst could only
reﬂect on what might
have been had Adkins —
the team’s top returning
skill player — had been
around for four quarters.
The 13th-year mentor
gave credit where it was
due, but he also felt the
outcome could have been
different with his main
playmaker on the ﬁeld.
“I’m just so disappointed for Brady because he
has worked so hard to get
ready for his senior season and he put together
a pretty good night in
our ﬁrst two drives, but
our offensive dynamics
changed when we lost
him in the second quarter,” Darst said. “We were
left to change some things
up and do some different
things with the kids we
had out there, and with
all respect … those kids
just can’t do the things
that Brady does.
“I thought our defense
played well and we had
some kids step up all
over the ﬁeld, but we also
played a really good football team too. Gallipolis
has a really good football

OH-70145986

Banks Construction Company

34070 SR #7 Pomeroy, Ohio banksconstruction.co

team and we wish them
nothing but the best of
luck. We just have to put
this one behind us and
get ready for the next
one. If we don’t, we’re
going to lose the next one
too.”
The ﬁnal stats were
as close as the ﬁnal outcome as Gallia Academy
produced a slim 239-237
advantage in total yards
of offense, as well as a
148-143 edge in rushing
yards. Point Pleasant did
claim a 13-9 lead in ﬁrst
downs, but also ﬁnished
minus-1 in turnover differential.
Both teams were
ﬂagged six times in the
contest, with the hosts
having 39 yards marched
off against them while
Point was moved back for
50 yards.
Armstrong paced
GAHS with 159 rushing
yards on 21 carries and
Michael Beasy also added
four yards on four totes.
Vanco completed 10-of19 passes for 91 yards,
including an interception.
Briar Williams hauled in
four passes for nine yards.
Adkins led Point Pleasant with 51 rushing yards
on seven carries and
Nick Parsons added 38
yards on six attempts.
Bush completed 10-of-15
passes for 94 yards, with
six of those going to Zane
Wamsley for 56 yards.
Point Pleasant travels
to Lincoln County on
Friday for a 7:30 p.m.
kickoff.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Warriors wallop
Meigs, 66-28
By Dave Harris

The Maroon and
Gold regained the lead
when Coulter Cleland
dumped a pass to Abe
VINCENT, Ohio —
Lundy over the middle,
Junior quarterback
Lundy slipped a tackle
Kurt Taylor threw for
near midﬁeld and took
469 yards and seven
touchdowns leading the it 81 yards for the
score. Burnem added
Warren Local Warriors
the extra points for a
to a 66-28 win over the
Meigs Marauders Friday 14-13 lead, which is
how the ﬁrst period
night at Vincent.
The junior completed ended.
After Brayden Gerber
23-of-32 passes in the
added a Warrior score,
air, as the Warriors
Jake McElroy gave
exploded for 33 points
in the second period — Meigs their ﬁnal lead
of the night at 21-20,
and 658 total yards for
with a 10 yard run with
the game.
8:54 left in the half.
The Marauders
But Taylor followed
jumped out on top ﬁrst,
with touchdown passes
as Landon Acree took
of 28, 32, and 29 yards
the opening kickoff at
with a one-yard run by
10 yard line and went
the distance 90 yards for Shoup sandwiched in
the score. Caleb Burnem between to open up a
46-21 Warrior advanadded the extra points
and just 14 seconds into tage at the half.
It was more of the
the contest the Maraudsame in the third periers were on top 7-0.
od, as on the ﬁrst play
After an exchange of
Taylor hit Joshua Welch
punts, Taylor hit Branfor a 62 yard scoring
don Simoniette from
toss and a 52-21 War41 yards a score to pull
rior lead.
the hosts to within 7-6.
McElroy added a one
Warren Local took a
yard run for Meigs with
13-7 advantage when
John Shoup scored from 8:47 left in the third
period to pull Meigs
14 yards out, Derek
McAfee added the extra to within 52-28. But
points for a 13-7 Warrior Taylor ended the night
lead at the 3:46 mark of with scoring passes of
27 and 91 yards to end
the period.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

the game with a 66-28
Warrior win.
Cleland was 11-of-23
in the air to lead the
Marauders with 206
yards. Wyatt Hoover
caught four passes
for 65 yards, McElroy
two for 30, Lundy one
for 81. Noah Metzger
led Marauders on the
ground with 47 yards
in nine carries, while
McElroy added 26 in 13
tries and Cleland nine
carries for 21.
Warren Local rolled
up 658 yards, with
Taylor completing 23-of32 for his 469 yards.
Simoniette led the Warriors with eight catches
for 123 yards and two
scores. Welch added
three catches for 123
yards, all touchdowns,
and Evan Gandee caught
six for 48 and a score.
Gerber led the ground
attack with 91 yards in
12 carries for Warren
Local.
Warren improves to
2-1 on the season. Meigs
falls to 1-2 on the year
and returns home to
battle Vinton County
next Friday in the TVC
Ohio opener for both
programs.
Dave Harris is a sports
correspondent for Ohio Valley
Publishing.

went 99 yards in 10 plays
and went up 58-14, with
McNickle scoring on a
21-yard with 7:01 left in
From page 1B
regulation.
The Red and White
SHS fumbled the ensuoffense ended the night
ing kickoff, with Wesley
Peters recovering for the on a high note, with
Kase Stewart breaking a
guests at the SHS 39.
30-yard touchdown run
Wahama came up short
on fourth down, however, and Hunt rushing in the
giving the Tornadoes pos- two-point conversion.
Following the 58-22 vicsession with 66 yards to
tory, Southern head coach
paydirt.
Cassady Willford talked
It took the hosts
about his club’s execution
seven plays and 3:41 to
and the extra motivation
cover the distance, with
McNickle ﬁnding the end they had coming into
their ﬁrst home game, as
zone on a ﬁve-yard run
and Shuler running in the well as what the 3-0 start
means to his squad.
two-point conversion.
“Our guys were ﬁred
Wahama made it to the
up for this game, some
Tornadoes side of the
little things happened
ﬁeld in four plays on its
last year,” Willford said.
next drive, but fumbled
the ball away on the ﬁrst “It was a great effort
from our guys across the
play from that side, with
Coltin Parker recovering board. Offensively, I think
we were clicking tonight,
for the hosts.
and it’s ﬁnally the ﬁrst
After a three-and-out
by each team, Southern’s week we’ve been clicking.
Defensively though, you
offense took over with
keep creating turnovers
2:43 left in the half and
like this and the games
56 yards in front of it.
going to end up like this.
SHS took 2:30 off the
Coach Olexa and Coach
clock and went up 32-14
Dailey have these guys
headed into halftime,
balling out and they’re
with McNickle ﬁnding
playing great defense
the end zone on a threeright now.
yard run and Shuler
“We were here last
running in the two-point
year, we have to keep
conversion.
the momentum going
The Purple and Gold
through the season. Yes,
scored on the opening
3-0 is a great feeling, but
drive of the second half,
as a coach the feeling
going 52 yards in six
lasts about eight hours.
plays, capped off by a
We get back to the draw19-yard touchdown run
ing board to get ready to
by Bailey and an extrago next week. Our guys
point kick by McNickle.
will enjoy it a little bit
Wahama fumbled the
longer than us.”
ball away three plays
For the White Falcons,
into its ﬁrst drive of the
second half, with Dristan head coach James Toth
noted the second quarter
Lamm recovering for
momentum swing, and
SHS at the WHS 41.
addressed what he’ll be
The Tornadoes were
looking for headed into
ahead 46-14 on the very
Week 4.
next play, as Shuler
“I felt like maybe in the
tossed a 41-yard scoring
second quarter we lost
pass to Cole Steele, and
McNickle made the point- a little momentum on a
couple of big plays they
after kick.
had offensively,” Toth
Steele was back in the
said. “We just have to
end zone for the Tornaplay better defensively
does after intercepting
in order to beat anybody.
a White Falcon pass and
returning it 43 yards with Our offensive moved the
ball pretty well tonight
5:33 left in the third.
from sideline-to-sideline,
Wahama’s next drive
went 74 yards, but ended we just couldn’t get in as
many times as we wanta yard short of the goal,
with SHS coming up with ed. (McNickle) is a pretty
good running back.
back-to-back defensive
“We have Belpre at
stands.
Belpre, we’re 1-1 in the
The Purple and Gold

Tornadoes

conference now and we’re
just trying to get better every week, same as
everybody else is.”
For the game, SHS
held a 15-to-11 advantage
in ﬁrst downs, with a
408-to-302 advantage in
total offense. The White
Falcons gained all-302 of
their yards on the ground,
while Southern rushed
for 284 and threw for the
other 124. Both teams
ended with seven penalties, SHS for 85 yards
and WHS for 70. The Red
and White turned the

Sunday, September 15, 2019 3B

Trimble shuts
out Eagles, 48-0
By Alex Hawley

hooked up again with
3:20 left in the half, giving the hosts a 20-0 edge.
The Tomcats added eight
GLOUSTER, Ohio —
The third time wasn’t the more points and led 28-0
with 22 seconds left in
charm.
the half, as Kittle broke a
The Eastern football
22-yard scoring run and
team became was the
Todd Fouts followed with
third team in as many
the two-point run.
weeks to fail to score
The hosts found paydirt
against Trimble, as the
once in the third quarter,
host Tomcats claimed a
48-0 victory over the pre- as Conner Wright scored
on a 26-yard run and
viously unbeaten Eagles
Blake Guffey followed
in Tri-Valley Conference
with the point-after kick.
Hocking Division action
Just over a minute into
on Friday in Athens
the ﬁnal stanza, Wright
County.
was in the end zone
Eastern (2-1, 0-1 TVC
again, giving THS a 42-0
Hocking) held the Tomlead after Guffey’s kick.
cats (3-0, 2-0) off the
The cherry on top of the
board for the ﬁrst eight
48-0 win for Trimble was
minutes, with Sawyer
Koons ending the tie with a two-yard scoring run by
a 14-yard touchdown run Ronald Mafﬁn with 1:19
left.
at the 3:36 mark of the
The Tomcats earned
ﬁrst quarter.
Trimble’s second score a 15-to-4 advantage in
ﬁrst downs in the tricame in the form of a
umph. Trimble carried
fourth down conversion,
the ball for 242 of its 378
with Cameron Kittle
total yards, while EHS
completing a 19-yard
touchdown pass to Austin gained 81 of its 94 on
the ground. Both teams
Wisor with 9:05 left in
had an interception, with
the half. Tabor Lackey
caught the two-point pass Eastern also fumbling
the ball away once. The
from Kittle to give the
Eagles were penalized
hosts a 14-0 edge.
three times for 18 yards,
Kittle and Wisor

while Trimble was sent
back 40 yards on ﬁve
ﬂags.
Blake Newland led
Eastern on the ground
with 79 yards on 15 carries. Steve Fitzgerald was
next with 19 yards on ﬁve
tries, while Daniel Harris had one yard on two
carries. EHS freshman
Brady Yonker completed
1-of-6 pass attempts, with
Mason Dishong getting
the 13-yard reception.
Wright led the hosts
on the ground with 78
yards and two touchdowns on 13 attempts.
Kittle — who ran nine
times for 61 yards and a
score — was 5-of-7 passing for 136 yards and
two touchdowns. Wisor
led all-receivers with two
grabs for 61 yards and
two touchdowns.
Eastern has now
dropped 20 straight in
the head-to-head series
with the Tomcats, including four consecutive shut
outs.
The Eagles will be
back at East Shade River
Stadium in Week 4, with
Waterford visiting.

two carries for 19, while
Bailey ended with one
carry for a 19-yard touchdown and one reception
for a seven-yard touchdown.
Shuler, Steele, Parker
and Lamm each had a
takeaway for the Tornado
defense.
Hunt led the White Falcons on the ground with
13 carries for 132 yards
and one touchdown.
Brayden Davenport —
who was 0-4 passing with
a pair of interceptions —
carries the ball 17 times

for 85 yards.
Pauley had seven carries for 57 yards and a
touchdown in the setback, Stewart added 26
yards and a touchdown
on a pair of tries, while
Nick Brewer earned four
yards over two carries.
Peters claimed the lone
takeaway for the WHS
defense.
In Week 4, Southern
visits Miller and Wahama
travels to Belpre.

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ball over four times and
forced just one turnover
from the hosts.
Shuler — who was 7-of9 passing for 124 yards
and three touchdowns —
carried the ball 11 times
for 102 yards in the win.
McNickle led all-rushers
with 153 yards and three
touchdowns on 16 carries
to go with one four-yard
reception.
Steele caught two
passes for 66 yards and
a touchdown in the win,
Jonah Diddle had two
catches for 20 yard sand

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

6:30

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15
7 PM

7:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Football Night in America
3 (N)
News (N)
(L)
WTAP News NBC Nightly Football Night in America
(N)
News (N)
(L)
ABC 6 News ABC World Home Videos Catch funny
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
and unusual sneezes.
Barnegie
Bluegrass
Masterpiece Classic
Hall "Billy
Underground "Downton Abbey, Season
Dean"
Five"
Eyewitness ABC World Home Videos Catch funny
News (N)
News (N)
and unusual sneezes.
Weekend
10TV News 60 Minutes
News (N)
Sunday
(4:00) NFL Football New Orleans Saints at The OT (L)
Los Angeles Rams (L)
PBS
Washington Masterpiece Classic
NewsHour
Week
"Downton Abbey, Season
Five"
Weekend (N)
13 News
Weekend
60 Minutes
Weekend (N) News (N)

6 PM

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

(:20) NFL Football Philadelphia Eagles at Atlanta Falcons Site: Mercedes-Benz Stadium --

Atlanta, Ga. (L)
(:20) NFL Football Philadelphia Eagles at Atlanta Falcons Site: Mercedes-Benz Stadium -Atlanta, Ga. (L)
Celebrity Family Feud (N) The $100,000 Pyramid (N) To Tell the Truth (N)
Country Music "The Rub (Beginnings -1933)" Learn how
so-called 'hillbilly music' reaches new listeners. (P) (N)

Country Music "The Rub
(Beginnings -1933)"

Celebrity Family Feud (N)

To Tell the Truth (N)

The $100,000 Pyramid (N)

Big Brother (N)

NCIS: Los Angeles "The
Guardian"
The Masked Singer: Super Simp. "Woo- Family Guy
Sneak Peek (N)
Hoo Dunnit"
Country Music "The Rub (Beginnings -1933)" Learn how
so-called 'hillbilly music' reaches new listeners. (P) (N)

NCIS: New Orleans "The
River Styx, Part I" 1/2
Eyewitness News at 10:00
p.m. (N)
Country Music "The Rub
(Beginnings -1933)"

Big Brother (N)

NCIS: New Orleans "The
River Styx, Part I" 1/2

8 PM

NCIS: Los Angeles "The
Guardian"

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Last Man St. Last Man St.
24 (ROOT) Red Bull Signature Series
25 (ESPN) Baseball Tonight
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) WNBA 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

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
DFL Soccer Borussia Mönchengladbach at Köln
In Depth
Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Mets Site: Citi Field (L)
SportsCenter (N)
ESPN FC (N) Football Is Us "The College Game"
Amer. Game "The Culture" Saturdays in/ South
The Secret Lives of Cheerleaders (2019, Thriller)
Undercover Cheerleader (2019, Thriller) Maddie Phillips, (:05) The Cheerleader
Savannah May, Denise Richards. TVPG
Andre Anthony, Kayla Wallace.
Escort TV14
(4:55)
Zootopia (‘16, Ani) Voices of (:25)
Toy Story (1995, Animated) Voices of Tim
(:25)
Finding Dory (‘16, Ani) Albert
Jason Bateman, Ginnifer Goodwin. TVPG
Allen, Don Rickles, Tom Hanks. TVG
Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres. TVPG
(:05) Bar Rescue "Don't Cry (:05) Bar Rescue "Craving
Bar Rescue "Dalia's
Bar Rescue "The Sound of The Comedy Central Roast
for Me Jon Taffer"
In"
Inferno"
Failing Music" (N)
"Alec Baldwin" (N)
The Smurfs 2 (2013, Animated) TVG
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
To Be Announced
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
(5:00) Wrath of the Titans
Man of Steel (2013, Action) Amy Adams, Michael Shannon, Henry Cavill. TV14
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Special Report (N)
The Nineties
Central Intelligence (‘16, Com) Dwayne Johnson. TV14
San Andreas (‘15, Act) Carla Gugino, Dwayne Johnson. TV14
Movie
(3:55)
The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse, (:55) Fear the Walking Dead Fear the Walking Dead
(:05) Preacher "Fear of the
Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks. TV14
"Leave What You Don't"
"Today and Tomorrow" (N) Lord"
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan "The Big Push" (N) Alaskan Bush People (N)
Wild "In Hines Sight" (N)
(5:00)
National Treasure (2004, Adventure) Diane
Godzilla (‘14, Act) Elizabeth Olsen. Godzilla has awoken once again The
Kruger, Justin Bartha, Nicolas Cage. TVPG
to regain the balance of nature offset by humanity. TV14
Expendabl...
North Woods Law
Woods Law "Hit and Run" Woods Law "On the Loose" North Woods Law (N)
Woods Law "Wild Winter"
Snapped "Nancy Khan" (N) Killer Motive "A Hateful
A Lie to Die For "The
Snapped "Nancy Khan"
Killer Motive "A Hateful
Crime" (N)
Ungrateful Killer" (N)
Crime"
Law &amp; Order "Cut"
Law &amp; Order "Gov Love"
Law &amp; Order "Cry Wolf"
Law&amp;O. "All in the Family" Law &amp; Order "Enemy"
Kardashians "Treachery"
Kardashians "Aftershock" The Kardashians
The Kardashians (N)
Flip It Like Disick (N)
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Comedy Central Roast (N)
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks America's National Parks
"No Backing Down"
"Miracle Fish"
or Bust "Home Stretch" (N) "Storm Troopers" (N)
"Great Smoky Mountains"
(5:00) NASCAR Countdown NASCAR Auto Racing South Point 400 Monster Energy Cup Series Site: Las Vegas Motor Speedway (L) Post-race
Boxing Premier Champions NHRA Drag Racing Mopar Express Lane Nationals Site: Maple Grove Raceway
MLS Soccer K.C./LA (L)
American Pickers "The
American Pickers "High
American Pickers "Tick
American Pickers "Freaky (:05) American Pickers
Jersey Jaguar"
Flying Pick"
Tock Frank"
Florida"
"Knucklehead Frank"
Medic. "Open and Honest" Housew. "Mom's the Word" Housewives Potomac (N)
Married to Medicine (N)
Watch (N)
Chrisley
(4:50) Think Like a Man (‘12, Com) Chris Brown. TVPG
Young, Gifted (N)
Daddy's Little Girls (‘07, Rom) Gabrielle Union. TVPG
House Hunt. House
House Hunt. House Hunt. Beach Hunters (N)
Caribbean Life (N)
Hawaii Hunters (N)
Captain America: The Winter Soldier (‘14, Act) Chris Evans. Captain America
Power Rangers (2017, Action) RJ Cyler, Naomi Scott,
faces a new and powerful enemy as he struggles to unravel a conspiracy. TV14
Dacre Montgomery. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

(4:40) Bohemian Rhapsody

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Welcome to Marwen (‘18, Bio) Diane
Righteous
(:40) Ballers
Succession (N)
Gemstones (N)
(‘18, Bio) Joseph Mazzello, Kruger, Steve Carell. A broken man with no memories
Rami Malek. TV14
builds a miniature village to help him cope with his ordeal.
(N)
(5:45)
Van Helsing (‘04, Act) Kate Beckinsale, Hugh Unfriended Heather Sossaman. A group of (:25)
Down a Dark Hall A teenager is
Jackman. A famed monster hunter must battle Count
friends is tormented over Skype by what
compelled to enroll at an exclusive boarding
Dracula, the Wolf Man and Frankenstein's Monster. TV14 appears to be their dead classmate. TVMA school with evil forces in play. TVPG
(:15) The Affair
(:15) On Becoming a God in Couples
On Becoming a God in
Couples
The Affair Noah tries to
Central Florida "Manifest Therapy
Therapy
sabotage Helen and Sasha's Central Florida "Many
relationship. (N)
Destinee"
Masters" (N)
(:55)

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, September 15, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lady Rebels fall at Federal Hocking
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

STEWART, Ohio — Two
teams having much different
weeks.
The South Gallia volleyball
team fell to 0-3 on the week, all
in road matches, as the Lady
Rebels fell in straight games to
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division host Federal Hocking
on Thursday, moving the Lady
Lancers to 3-0 in league bouts
over the last four days.
Federal Hocking (6-6, 4-2

TVC Hocking) never trailed in
the opening game of the night,
scoring the ﬁrst ﬁve points
and stretching the early edge
to 16-6. South Gallia (2-8, 0-5)
rallied to within two points, but
surrendered the next nine and
fell by a 25-14 count.
The Lady Rebels earned their
ﬁrst lead with back-to-back
points to start the second set,
but FHHS claimed the next
three points and the edge. The
Red and Gold regained the lead
brieﬂy, at 4-3, but the Lady
Lancers scored the next two

Lady Vikings
sail past Meigs
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

McARTHUR, Ohio —
Not a bad start, not a bad
ﬁnish either.
The Meigs volleyball
team dropped a straightgames decision to TriValley Conference Ohio
Division host Vinton
County — ranked 19th
in the opening OHSVCA
Division II Coaches Poll
— on Thursday, falling by
counts of 25-18, 25-12 and
25-17.
Meigs (2-8, 1-4 TVC
Ohio) never led in the
opening game, falling
behind by as many as 10
points, before a 6-1 run
brought the guests within
ﬁve at 20-15. The Lady
Vikings, however, ﬁnished
the ﬁrst with a 5-3 run for
the 25-18 win.
The Lady Marauders’
ﬁrst lead came at the start
of Game 2, and was as
high as three, at 5-2. From
there, VCHS reeled off
seven points in a row and
never looked back, moving ahead 2-0 in the match
with the 25-12 win.

points and never trailed again
on the way to the 25-17 win.
South Gallia opened its largest lead of the evening, at 8-4,
to start the third game, but the
Maroon and Gold answered
with a 6-0 run for the 10-8 lead.
The Lady Rebels took the edge
back at 11-10, but surrendered
the next four markers and
never led again, falling by a
25-18 clip in the ﬁnale.
Leading the Lady Rebels,
Amaya Howell had 10 service
points, including one ace. Jessie Rutt, Christine Grifﬁth,

Olivia Johnson and Alyssa Cremeens had three points apiece
for SGHS, while Ellen Weaver
and Kiley Stapleton both
claimed one point, with Weaver
earning an ace.
Grifﬁth paced the SGHS net
attack with ﬁve kills and two
blocks. Stapleton was next with
four kills and a block, followed
by Rutt and Katie Bowling with
a kill apiece.
FHHS libero Abby Jackson
led the victors with a dozen
service points. Brennah Jarvis
and Mariah Pickering ﬁnished

By Bryan Walters

Game 3, but the Purple
and Gold countered
with 12 of the next 16
points while securing a
MASON, W.Va. —
14-11 advantage.
One found it pretty
WHS managed to
smooth. The other
close the deﬁcit down
found it pretty rough.
to 18-17, but the guests
The Southern volleyreeled off seven of the
ball team never trailed
by more than ﬁve points ﬁnal eight points to
wrap up the 3-0 match
over the course of the
outcome.
evening and rolled to a
SHS stormed out
25-16, 25-15, 25-18 victory over host Wahama to a quick 5-0 edge in
the opener and were
on Thursday in a TriValley Conference Hock- up 16-7 before the Red
and White rallied with
ing Division matchup
ﬁve consecutive points
at Gary Clark Court in
to close back to within
Mason County.
16-12. The hosts manThe visiting Toraged to pull to within
nadoes (5-5, 3-2 TVC
17-14 before the Lady
Hocking) snapped a
two-match losing skid in Tornadoes rallied with
eight of the ﬁnal 10
rather impressive fashpoints en route to a
ion after leading all of
Game 1 and never trail- 9-point win and a 1-0
match lead.
ing by more than two
Wahama took its ﬁrst
points in Game 2.
lead of the night at 5-4
The Lady Falcons
and ended up with an
(0-5, 0-5) stormed out
to lead of 4-1 and 7-2 in 8-6 lead before Southern

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

The hosts ﬁnished off
the 3-0 win with a wire-towire 25-17 victory in the
third.
Hannah Durst led the
Lady Marauder service
with ﬁve points, followed
by Mallory Hawley and
Kylee Mitch with three
each. Baylee Tracy claimed
two points in the setback,
while Bre Zirkle ﬁnished
with one. Hawley, Zirkle
and Maci Hood each had
perfect serve percentages
for the guests.
Hawley led the Maroon
and Gold at the net with a
dozen kills and one block.
Next was Durst with six
kills and one block, followed by Mitch with a trio
of kills. Hood and Jewels
Conley claimed two kills
each for Meigs, while
Zirkle dished out a teambest 19 assists.
The Lady Marauders
will try to ﬂip the script
when they host VCHS on
Oct. 3.
Next, Meigs is slated for
a non-conference match at
Southern on Monday.

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

shot the Red and White
by a 14-8 overall margin,
which included a 9-3
advantage in the ﬁrst 40
CENTENARY, Ohio
minutes of play.
— Halfway home.
Brooklyn Hill made
The Gallia Academy
eight saves in net for
girls soccer team picked
Gallia Academy while
up its third consecutive
posting her third shutvictory and remained
out of the season. The
unbeaten in league play
Blue and White have
following a 2-0 victory
also allowed only one
over visiting Rock Hill
goal in their last three
on Thursday night in
outings, as well as outan Ohio Valley Conferscoring OVC opponents
ence match in Lawrence
by a sizable 11-4 margin
County.
in four contests.
The Blue Angels (5-3,
Rock Hill (5-1-1)
4-0 OVC) are now 12-0
now sits alone in secall-time in OVC play and
ond place in the OVC
are currently atop the
standings at 3-1. Grace
league standings all by
Stevens made a dozen
themselves at the midsaves in net during the
way point of the schedRobert Stevens|Ironton Gold Studio
setback. Gallia Acadule. GAHS also won the Gallia Academy juniorCourtesy
Kaylie Clark (13) chases down a loose
league championship in ball during Thursday night’s OVC girls soccer match against emy returns to action
Wednesday when it
its ﬁrst varsity season
Rock Hill in Centenary, Ohio.
travels to Piketon for a
last fall with an unblempass from Preslee Reed McKean made it a 2-goal non-conference contest
ished 8-0 mark.
at 5:30 p.m.
advantage after netting
The Blue Angels wast- in the 11th minute,
a pass from Reed, this
ed little time getting the giving the hosts a 1-0
cushion headed into the time in the 61st minute. Bryan Walters can be reached at
upper-hand as senior
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
The Blue Angels outBrooke Johnson netted a break. Freshman Cori

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

serve percentage and a
16.4 side-out percentage.
Leading the GAHS
service attack, Maddie
CENTENARY, Ohio —
Wright had six aces.
Turning 50 and 70 all in
Maddy Petro, Alex Barnes
one night.
and Bailey Barnette
The Gallia Academy
ﬁnished with ﬁve aces
volleyball team won its
apiece, while MaKenna
50th straight Ohio Valley
Caldwell and Peri Martin
Conference match — as
each had two aces.
well as its 70th consecuAt the net, Petro paced
tive OVC game — as the
Gallia Academy with a
Blue Angels breezed past
dozen kills. Wright ﬁnOVC guest Rock Hill on
ished with seven kills and
Thursday night in Gallia
four blocks in the win,
County.
Barnette added ﬁve kills,
The Blue Angels (9-1,
while Barnes and Callie
7-0 OVC) — who’ve now
Wilson had three kills
faced every league team
each. Caldwell claimed
once this fall — didn’t
allow a service point in the two kills in the win, Abby
Hammons had two blocks,
opening game, winning
while Martin ended with
25-5.
one kill, one block and a
GAHS won 88 percent
of its serves in the second match-best 29 assists.
Barnes led the Blue
game and went up 2-0 in
Angel defense with six of
the match with another
the team’s 25 digs.
25-5 win.
These teams will face
Gallia Academy had
each other again on Oct.
another perfect side-out
10 in Pedro.
percentage in the ﬁnale,
After visiting Chillicothe
cruising to the sweep with
on Saturday, GAHS will be
a 25-4 victory.
back at home against JackIn the match the Blue
son on Monday.
and White had a 94.5
serve percentage and an
Alex Hawley can be reached at 74087.5 side-out percentage,
446-2342, ext. 2100.
while Rock Hill had a 93.8

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Blue Devils turn back Rock Hill, 5-2
By Alex Hawley

Blue Devils knocked off
visiting Rock Hill by a
5-2 count on Thursday
at Lester Field.
CENTENARY, Ohio
Gallia Academy (4-3— That ﬁrst place feel1, 4-0 OVC) went ahead
ing.
1-0 with 33:28 left in
The Gallia Academy
boys soccer team moved the ﬁrst half, as Keagen
to 4-0 in the Ohio Valley Daniels found the back
of the net on an assist
Conference and stayed
all by itself on top of the from Maddux Camden.
The Blue Devil lead
league standings, as the

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Retirement
Sale
60-70% OFF ALL Inventory

For your many
sides, there’s
.

5,000 in Stock!

JOHNSONS
LAMPSHOP
LAMPS • FIXTURES • SHADES
8518 East National Road (US 40) • 8 Miles East of Springfield

(937) 568-4551

AUTO | HOME | BUSINESS | LIFE
OH-70145994

OH-70146593

Hardwick led the SHS
net attack with seven
kills, followed by Wolfe
with six kills and one
block. Roderus added
two kills and Cleland
also recorded a kill for
the victors.
Harley Roush paced
the Wahama service
attack with 10 points,
followed by Emma
Young with four points
and Emma Gibbs with
three points. Bailee
Bumgarner and Gracie
VanMeter also had a
point each in the setback.
Southern returns to
action Monday when it
hosts Meigs in a nonconference matchup at
6 p.m.
Wahama will travel to
Waterford on Monday
for a TVC Hocking contest at 6 p.m.

By Bryan Walters

By Alex Hawley

�0LEASE BRING YOUR LAMP "!3% FOR PROPER FITTING OF 3HADES
7%$.%3$!9 &amp;2)$!9 �� � s 3!452$!9 �� �

reeled off ﬁve straight
points for a permanent
lead of 11-8. The hosts
were never closer than
two points as the guests
scored 14 of the ﬁnal 20
points for a 10-point win
and a 2-0 match advantage.
Sydney Adams and
Phoenix Cleland led
Southern with 11
service points apiece,
followed by Cassidy
Roderus and Jordan
Hardwick with six
points each.
Kassie Barton was
next with ﬁve points,
while Kayla Evans and
Baylee Wolfe respectively added four and
two points. Abby Rizer
also produced a single
with the ﬁnal serve of
the match.
Adams and Hardwick
each recorded four service aces, with Wolfe
and Evans also posting
two aces and one ace.

Blue Angels blank Rock Hill, 2-0

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

www.JohnsonsLampShop.com
facebook.com/johnsonslampshop

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

Lady Tornadoes topple Wahama

Blue Angels roll
past Rock Hill

LAMP SHADES

with seven markers apiece,
Seirra Stover added six, while
Chloe McCune came up with
ﬁve. MaKayla Bowen and
Mikinzi Ollom rounded out
the Lady Lancer service attack
with four points each.
These teams are slated for a
rematch on Sept. 20 in Mercerville.
Next for the Red and Gold, a
home match against Belpre on
Monday.

Jeff Warner
113 West 2nd Street . Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-5479 . warnerj1@nationwide.com

was doubled less than
12 minutes later, as
Dalton Vanco scored
on an assist from Brody
Wilt with 21:42 left in
the half. The hosts took
a three-goal lead with
21 seconds left in the
ﬁrst half, with Camden
assisting Daniels for
his second score of the
match.
The Redmen (4-4,
2-2) — who headed
into the week tied with
GAHS at the top of the
league standings —
ended the shut out at
the 23:55 mark of the
second half, as Sam
Simpson scored on a
header off of a corner
kick. An own goal by
the Blue Devils trimmed
their lead to 3-2 with
around 16 minutes to

play. GAHS gained some
breathing room down
the stretch, however, as
Vanco scored on assist
from Wilt with six minutes to play, and then
Wilt found the back
of the net on an assist
from Ian Hill with 1:12
remaining.
In the 5-2 victory,
GAHS held a 23-to-5
advantage in shots.
Bryson Miller claimed a
quartet of saves in goal
for the victors.
The Blue Devils will
go for the season sweep
of RHHS on Sept. 23 in
Pedro.
Next, Gallia Academy
is slated to host Portsmouth on Tuesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Belpre wins match
at Oxbow golf course
By Bryan Walters

up effort of 177, which
was one shot better than
Waterford (178). The
BELPRE, Ohio — The Wildcats entered Thursday’s match just one win
Golden Eagles helped
behind BHS in the seatheir own cause … and
son standings.
the Tornadoes provided
Federal Hocking was
some breathing room
fourth overall with a 187,
too.
while South Gallia had
Host Belpre tripled
just one competitor and
its lead in the season
standings with a 7-stroke did not have a ﬁnal team
victory over the ﬁeld on tally.
Brooks Suprano of
Thursday night during
Waterford claimed
a Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division match medalist honors with
a 2-over par round of
held at Oxbow Golf
37, while Landen Hill
Course in Washington
of SHS was the overall
County.
runner-up with a 39.
The Golden Eagles
Those two efforts were
produced only one of
the only sub-40 rounds
the top four individual
on the day.
rounds at the 5-team
David Shaver followed
event, but the Orange
Hill with a 40 and Joey
and Black did record
Weaver added a 43 for
four of the top nine
scores overall — helping the Tornadoes, while
Jacob Milliron completed
them to a winning tally
the team score with a 46.
of 170.
Southern was the next Tanner Lisle and Grant
Smith also ﬁred respecgroup in with a runner-

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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

Professional Services

0RELOH 3RZHU
:DVKLQJ
7UHH 6HUYLFH
/DZQ /DQGVFDSH
������������

Best Deal New &amp; Used
OH-70136454

MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

3UHIHUUHG 3DLQWHUV
5HVLGHQWLDO
&amp;RPPHUFLDO
������������
5(&lt;12/'6
&amp;RPSOHWH 7UHH 6HUYLFH
������������

Amy Carter
Product Specialist
�� ���� �������!�������������� ��
���� ��� ��!� ��� � � ��
����� ���� � �

OH-70004516

www.markporterauto.com

amycarter@markporterauto.com

MAINTENANCE PERSONNEL NEEDED

OH-70147122

for Syracuse water department, with intent for
applicant to get a water operators license
Resume to be submitted before
October 1st, 2019
Syracuse Board of Public Affairs
PO Box 266 Syracuse, Ohio 45779
740-992-7777
ROGERS BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee
Established 1975
%DVHPHQW :DOOV %UDFHG
+XQGUHGV 2I /RFDO 5HIHUHQFHV
/LFHQVHG� %RQGHG ,QVXUHG

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Rio Grande named 5-Star
Champions of Character institution
By Randy Payton

KANSAS CITY, Mo.
— The University of
Rio Grande is one of
180 National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics (NAIA)
member schools to be
recognized as a Champions of Character
Five-Star Institution.
The announcement
was made by the
national ofﬁce Wednesday morning.
The NAIA tracks the
progress of its member
institutions and conferences in pursuing
character education
and recognizes the
achievements in training, promotion and
conduct in competition.
The Champions of
Character Scorecard
measures commitment
in the initiative’s ﬁve
core areas and has a
possible 100 points.
Three levels of recognition are awarded
- Gold (90-100 points),
Silver (75-89 points)

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

EMPLOYMENT

and Bronze levels (6074).
“We’re so proud of
our Athletic Department for the accomplishment of being
named a Silver Champions of Character
Five-Star Institution,”
said University of
Rio Grande athletic
director Jeff Lanham.
“The Live-5 initiative
provides training for
student-athletes and
professional development for coaches and
staff. The core values
of integrity, respect,
responsibility, sportsmanship and servant
leadership are put into
play and accounted for
by our athletic department.”
Lanham said that
Rio Grande conducts
training throughout
the year as individuals,
teams, coaches and
administrators to promote the department’s
development in more
than just wins and
losses.
“Our goal is to
develop our student/

For Ohio Valley Publishing

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

Professional Services

SERVICES

tive efforts of 49 and 61
for the Purple and Gold.
Noah Spurlock carded
a 64 as the lone participant for the Rebels.
Jacob Ferrier led
Belpre with a 40, with
Eric Dotson and Connor
Copeland posting identical rounds of 43. Matt
Deems completed the
BHS tally with a 44.
Ryan Hendershot followed Suprano with a
46, while Braxton Leister and Will Huck completed the Wildcat score
with respective efforts of
47 and 48.
Mason Jackson paced
the Lancers with a
41 and Collin Jarvis
followed with a 44.
Brandon Bond and Wes
Carpenter chipped in
respective rounds of 49
and 53 to complete the
FHHS team tally.

Sunday, September 15, 2019 5B

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

Land (Acreage)
*DOOLD &amp;R� � DFUHV RQ
'DYLV 5G� RU 65��� �
ZZZ�EUXQHUODQG�FRP
RU FDOO �������������
ZH ILQDQFH�

Land (Acreage)

3DUW WLPH JHQHUDO IDUP
ZRUNHU FDOO ������������

Check
out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV�
for
bargains!

72 Acres QHDU LQ 0DVRQ
&amp;RXQW\ QHDU /HWDUW RII
6DQGKLOO 5G� %HDXWLIXOO\
ZRRGHG ZLWK SOHQW\ RI OHYHO
JURXQG IRU EXLOGLQJ� :DWHU�
HOHFWULF� JUHDW KXQWLQJ� HDV\
DFFHVV DORQJ D TXLHW FRXQWU\
JUDYHO URDG� �������� 2ZQHU
ILQDQFLQJ ZLWK ������ GRZQ
�����PWK [ �� \UV� &amp;DOO IRU
PDSV� ��� ���������
brunerland.com

0HLJV &amp;R� �� DFUHV ��������
*DOOLD &amp;R� � DFUH ORWV
������� �XS ± PRUH #
ZZZ�EUXQHUODQG�FRP
RU FDOO �������������
ZH ILQDQFH�

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Houses For Rent
Rentals Available
applications can be picked
up at Wiseman Real Estate
500 2nd Ave.
Call 740-446-3644
for more info.
MERCHANDISE
Cemetery Plots/Lots
)RU 6DOH &amp;HPHWDU\ 3ORWV
6XQFUHVW &amp;HPHWDU\�3RLQW
3OHDVDQW�������������

LAWSON BISON RANCH
PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
Saturday, Sept. 21, 2019 @ 10:00 a.m.

Want To Buy

42761 Lawson Lane, Albany, OH
Directions: Rt. 32 past Albany. Turn right onto Columbia Twp. Rd. 1. Take first right onto Lawson Lane.
VEHICLES: BARN FIND: 1950 Chevrolet 3100 5-Window Pickup (6 cyl., 3 speed, 67,000 original miles)
Sells With Reasonable Reserve. 1993 Ford Club Wagon Econoline Van (111,770 miles). UTILITY VEHICLES:
Polaris Ranger XP 700 Twin w/ winch (521 hrs.), Cub Cadet Big Country 6 x 4 (295 hrs.). TRACTORS
&amp; MOWERS: 8N Ford (good rubber), John Deere 346 Riding Mower, Husqvarna Riding Mower (23HP),
Troy Bilt Zero Turn (23HP). (2) Gravely Walk Behinds with Mower &amp; Tiller Attachment. ANTIQUES &amp;
COLLECTIBLES: Rare Rick Wisecarver Native American Hanging Lamp (signed Rick/Wihoa Art
Pottery), Wisecarver Native American Vase, (2) George Boutwell Gold Signature Prints, 30”x40” Nice Maple
Butcher Block, Sohio Hi Test Double Sided Porcelain Sign, Tobacco Basket marked Liberty Whse. (Maysville,
KY), Large Floor Safe. Milk Bottles: 3 pts. JM Brown &amp; Son, Logan, OH; 1 Imperial Qt. (6) Half Gallon Green
Canning Jars, Miller Beer Light, Crocks, Stoneware, Tins, Medicine Bottles, Buggy Jack, Hay Knife, Hay Fork,
75+ Apple Crates, Corn Sheller, (2) Iron Implement Wheels, (2) Vintage Westinghouse Refrigerators, Pine Bench,
Vintage Weber Grill, Glass King Washboard, Atlas Powder Box, Barn Lantern, Nice Small Cabinet, Beefeater
Yeoman London Dry Gin Ceramic Decanter 16” Empty Porcelain, Empty 1996 Dom Perignon Champaign Bottle,
Bison Skulls. KING SIZE OAK BED, HIGHLY CARVED, WITH ACORNS AND LEAVES, AND NIGHT
STAND. TOOLS: Lots of tools, shop is loaded! Megaforce 5 HP Air Compressor. Bostitch Air Nailers, Brad
Nailers, and Finish Nailers. Bostitch 6 Gal. Air Compressor. (10) Chain Saws (Stihl MS290, Stihl 031, Polands,
Craftsman, and more). Saw Horses. (2) Work Mate Benches. (2) Kerosene Heaters. King Craft 13HP Generator.
Circular Saws. Sawzalls, Nailers, Drills, 6” Jointer, (2) Bench Grinders, Jacks, Stand Lights, Belt Sanders, 10”
Compound Miter Saw, Tire Changer, Vises, Boxes of Nails, Buckets of Nuts &amp; Bolts, Floor Drill Press, Squeeze
Clamps, Rockwell Scroll Saw, Extension Cords, New Trash Pump, Powercraft Portable Gas Welder, Log Chains
&amp; Binders. FARM IMPLEMENTS: Gang Disk, Pull Type Brushhog, Bale Sphere, Befco Post Auger, Farm Star
Post Driver, 2-Axle Trailer Car Hauler, (2) Old Hay Wagons, Spike Harrow. OUTDOOR: Pontoon Boat &amp; Trailer,
(6) Dog Kennel Chain Link Panels, 5-Pc. Patio Set, Park Bench, Swing on Stand. LARGE QUANTITY OF
SCRAP METAL, OLD DUMP TRUCK, PIPE, AND MUCH MORE.
Auctioneers Note: Barns and Buildings are loaded. More to be found before auction day.

FREE ESTIMATES
24 Hours

Terms: Cash or Good Check Auction Day. No Buyers Fee! Food Available. Positive ID Required.

(740) 446-0870

AUCTIONEER: CHRIS COLLINS
Collins Auctions, LLC
8118 Rolling Hills Dr. Athens, OH 45701
740-591-5837 ccollins@collinsauctions.com

www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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

REAL ESTATE

Help Wanted General

athletes to compete in
life and be successful
as a friend, colleague,
parent and teammate,”
Lanham added.
“It’s a great honor.
It says a lot about our
student-athletes to be
selected as a Silver
Star Champions of
Character Institution,”
said Ken French, Rio
Grande’s Campus
Character Liaison. “In
the 20 years that I’ve
been here, this is one
of the best group of
student-athletes we’ve
had on our campus as
far as being involved
- not only in support
of one another, but in
the community as well.
They conduct themselves in the proper
manner, both on and
off the court or the
ﬁeld or whatever the
case might be. We’re
blessed with the group
we have and they’re
doing a lot of good
things.”

OH-70148013

Absolute Top Dollarsilver/gold coins, any
10k/14k/18k gold jewerly,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop 151
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446-2842

�COMICS

6B Sunday, September 15, 2019

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

%\�'DYH�*UHHQ

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

� �
�

�
� �

�

By Hilary Price

�
�
�

�

�
�

�
�
�

�
�

�
�

�

� �

�
� �

�
� � �

�

����

'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO

By Bil and Jeff Keane

����

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�����&amp;RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
�'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO

Hank Ketcham’s

�����&amp;RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�

� � �

see what’s brewing on the

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

jobmatchohio.com

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 15, 2019 7B

GM FINANCIAL &amp; ALLY LEASE VEHICLES

2147 Jackson Pike
Bidwell, OH 45614

(740) 446-0724
www.galliaautosales.com

OH-70148016

BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE

CALL DAVID OR DUSTIN
TODAY FOR LOWEST
PRICES
2019 CHRYSLER PACIFICA
TOURING L

Leather, FWD

$26,900

2013 HYUNDAI SONATA

2014 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE LT

2.4L

AWD 4DR SUV

Call for Price

2015 JEEP CHEROKEE LATITUDE 2016 BUICK ENCLAVE LEATHER

4x4 4DR SUV

$13,200

Call For Price

CARFAX AVAILABLE
ON ALL VEHICLES
FACTORY WARRANTY
ON MOST VEHICLES

2016 CHEVROLET EQUINOX LT

2016 CHEVROLET MALIBU LIMITED LT

AWD Leather 4DR Crossover

Only 40,000 Miles 4DR SUV

$15,400

Great Gas Mileage

$25,500

$12,900

2016 CHEVROLET MALIBU LIMITED LT

2016 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT
LEATHER SUNROOF

2016 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT

2016 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT

2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500 Lt
Leather

Only 28,000 Miles

Bose Sound, Only 25,000 Miles

Only 32,000 Miles Great Gas Mileage

Only 44,000 Miles 4DR Sedan Great Gas Mileage

4x4 Double Cab Only 28,000 Miles

$14,900

$17,800

$15,500

$13,900

$29,400

2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500 LT

2019 CHEVROLET COLORADO LT

2016 DODGE RAM PICKUP 1500 SLT

2016 HYUNDAI SANTA FE SPORT

2017 CHEVROLET CRUZE LT

4X4 4DR Crew Cab Only 26,000 Miles

2.4L AWD 4DR SUV

AUTO 4DR Sedan Great Gas Mileage

D
L
O

S
Low Miles 4x4 Double Cab 4x4

4x4 4DR Crew Cab

$27,900

$27,900

$27,500

$16,400

$14,400

2017 CHEVROLET EQUINOX LT

2017 DODGE JOURNEY SXT

2017 GMC YUKON SLT

2017 HYUNDAI SONATA

2017 KIA OPTIMA LX

Only 23,000 Miles 4DR SUV

AWD 4DR SUV Only 31,000 Miles

Only 44,000 Miles 4x4 4DR SUV

Great Gas Mileage, FWD

Only 43,000 Miles 4DR Sedan FWD

$17,800

$17,200

$39,900

$12,900

$13,900

2017 KIA SOUL +

2018 CADILLAC XT5

2018 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT
3 TO CHOOSE FROM

2018 HYUNDAI SANTA FE SPORT

2018 NISSAN ALTIMA

Only 33,000 Miles Good Gas Mileage 4DR Crossover

Only 17,000 Miles Premium Luxuary AWD

4DR Mini-Van FWD

2.4L AWD 4DR SUV

2.5 SL Good Gas Mileage 2.5 4DR Sedan FWD

$18,800

$15,800

2019 GMC ACADIA SLT-I
ONLY 16,000 MILES

2019 KIA SORENTO LX

4x4 4DR SUV

V6 AWD V6 4DR SUV 2 to Choose From

$13,900

2018 NISSAN FRONTIER S

4DR King Cab Automatic Only 15,000 Miles

$16,800

$38,900

$18,500

1996 Buick Roadmaster 80,000 Actual Miles Excellent
Condition Must See $5,900
2014 Buick Verono Convenience Package New Tires
$10,400
2016 Dodge Durango Limited AWD New Michelin Tires
NAV $24,900
2016 Buick Enclave AWD Leather Sunroof $25,500
2017 Buick Enclave AWD Leather Sunroof $26,900
2018 Kia Optima New Tires $15,800

$32,900

$21,900

BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE

BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE

BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE - BUY HERE - SAVE HERE

SAVINGS KICKOFF!!

�8B Sunday, September 15, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

O’Bleness Hospital

WE
BELIEVE IN

CHANGING
FOR GOOD

At OhioHealth, we’re committed to rising to the occasion, every occasion. As a part of
our growing family of experts across the state, Physician Group Heritage College and
O’Bleness Hospital have expanded and improved care. Our surgical, cancer, specialty
and primary care providers can offer you more than ever before. We believe in the
greatness of southeast Ohio, and we know you’re a believer, too.

OH-70146985

Visit OhioHealth.com/OBleness to see all the changes we’ve made for the good of our region.

© OhioHealth Inc. 2019. All rights reserved. FY20-190545. 09/19.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="31">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="330">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="704">
              <text>September 15, 2019</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="13">
      <name>bush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="99">
      <name>denney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="883">
      <name>dexter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="882">
      <name>fulks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="305">
      <name>williams</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
