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                  <text>More from
Meigs
Homecoming

Lady
Eagles top
Belpre

LOCAL s 4

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

51°

67°

66°

Sunshine and nice today. Mostly cloudy
tonight. High 75° / Low 52°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 160, Volume 73

Wednesday, October 9, 2019 s 50¢

Meigs Museum
levy set to
be presented
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MEIGS COUNTY
— The Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical
Society is asking voters
to consider approval of
a 0.5 mill tax levy on
the upcoming November ballot.
The levy request is
the ﬁrst to be presented
to the voters by the
organization.
The ballot language
for the levy reads as
follows:
An additional tax
for the beneﬁt of Meigs
County for the purpose
of maintenance and
operation of a free public museum of art, science or history at a rate
not exceeding one-half
(0.5) mill for each one
dollar of property valuation, which amounts
to ﬁve cents for each
one hundred dollars

of valuation, for ﬁve
years, commencing in
2019, ﬁrst due in calendar year 2020.
Historical and Pioneer Society Board
Member Vicki Hanson
explained that the nonproﬁt organization is
currently funded by
donations, sale of items
in the gift shop and a
small annual stipend
provided by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
The levy, if approved,
would provide a consistent funding source for
the Historical Society
as it maintains and
operates the Meigs
Museum and works to
promote and preserve
200 years of Meigs
County History, said
Hanson.
Since 1971, the
Meigs County Museum
See MUSEUM | 2

Coleman crowned
MHS Queen

FFA members and chaperone/alumni recently attended the 2019 Farm Science Review.

Courtesy photo

FFA Chapter visits Farm Science Review
By Rachel Jackson
Special to the Sentinel

RACINE — On Tuesday, Sept. 17, fifteen
members of the Racine
Southern FFA traveled
to London, Ohio, for
the 57th annual Farm
Science Review at the
Molly Caren Agricultural Center.
Farm Science Review
is an annual event
showcasing the latest
and most innovative

farming equipment
and technology. Students were able to walk
around and see all that
the event had to offer
while also hearing the
latest ideas from different speakers. The 2019
Farm Science Review
features at a glance
included the following:
Hundreds of demonstration plots and several
million dollars worth
of machinery; Thirtieth year of inductions

into the Farm Science
Review Hall of Fame;
OSU Central, featuring demonstrations
and displays from OSU
colleges and departments; Lots of farm
safety, home safety and
health information;
Comprehensive field
demonstrations each
day of the show; And
expanded programs on
conservation practices
in the Gwynne Conservation Area.

One member, Ethan
Mullen, stated that, “I
always enjoy going to
Farm Science Review.
It’s always cool to see
the hundreds of thousands of dollars in
farming equipment on
display.”
Many of the members
that attended this trip
plan to attend next year.
Article written and submitted by
Rachel Jackson, 2019-2020 Racine
Southern FFA Historian.

Southern receives Purple Star Award

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Kassandra Coleman was crowned the 2019 Meigs High School
Homecoming Queen on Friday evening in a ceremony held
before the Marauders’ football game. Coleman was escorted
by Dawson Justice. Pictured with Coleman and Justice are
Flower Girl Myla Shipe and Crown Bearer Solomon Jones.
Additional photos from the Meigs Homecoming and Reunion
on the River activities appear inside today’s edition and online
at mydailysentinel.com.

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

LOGAN — Southern
Junior/Senior High
School and Southern
Elementary School were
recognized with the Ohio
Department of Education’s Purple Star Award
at the Ohio School
Boards Association’s
Southeast Region Fall
Conference.
The conference took
place at Logan High
School in Logan on Sept.
26.
The Ohio Department
of Education established
the Purple Star Award
for military-friendly
public schools and recognizes those schools
that show a major commitment to students and
families connected to our
nation’s military.
Across the state, 51
schools received the

Courtesy photo

Southern Local Supt. Tony Deem and K-6 Principal Tricia McNickle accepted the Purple Star Award on
behalf of the district during the recent OSBA regional conference.

award in Round 5 for a
period from 2019-2021.
Of the 51 schools, nine
are from the Southeast
Region. The Southeast
Region is comprised of
18 counties representing
84 school districts.

For more information,
contact OSBA or your
local school district. In its
64th year, the Ohio School
Boards Association leads
the way to educational
excellence by serving
Ohio’s public school board

members and the diverse
districts they represent
through superior service,
unwavering advocacy and
creative solutions.
Information provided by Southern
Local School District.

Bob Evans Farm Festival returns Friday
Staff Report

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

RIO GRANDE — Nearly 30,000
visitors are expected to attend
the 49th annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival from Friday, October 11
through Sunday, October 13, at the
Bob Evans Farm in Rio Grande,
Ohio.
This year’s festival will offer the
Eyes of Freedom military memorial, live musical performances, free,
on-site camping and much more.
“We’re thrilled to host the Farm
Festival for the 49th year. We
always look forward to welcoming families to Bob Evans Farm
for a weekend of fall family fun on
the farm – the event is really an

File photo

See FESTIVAL | 3

Cooking in iron kettles has long been a southeastern Ohio tradition, whether cooking up
a bean dinner or other Appalachian food fare.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, October 9, 2019

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

SHAWN ALAN BELL
RACINE — Shawn
Alan Bell, age 57, passed
away on Oct. 1, 2019, at
home in Racine. Born in
Pomeroy at Meigs General Hospital on April
23, 1962, to Paul (Jim)
and Betty Bell. Graduated from Southern High
School, then graduated
from Cass Water Treatment School in Ozark,
Ark. He lived in Richmond, Va., for over 10

years and was commercial painter by trade.
He is survived by his
parents; daughter, Stephanie Bell; son, Joshua
Bell of Richmond, Va.;
brothers, Douglas Bell
of Racine, Terry Bell
of Middleport; sister,
Sherri (John) Erchak of
Columbus; three grandchildren, all of Richmond; several nieces and
nephews.

LAYNE
GALLIPOLIS — Lois K. Layne, 84, of Gallipolis
died Thursday, September 26, 2019 at Holzer Medical
Center.
A memorial service for Lois will be held at 3 p.m.
on Saturday, October 12, 2019 at Willis Funeral Home
with Keith Bartimus ofﬁciating. Friends may call prior
to the service from 2-3 p.m. at the funeral home.
HAGER, JR.
GALLIPOLIS — Ronald Hager, Jr., 69, of Gallipolis, died Monday, September 30, 2019 in Gallipolis. A
memorial service for Ronald will be held at 1 p.m. on
Saturday, October 12, 2019 at Providence Missionary
Baptist Church. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the
family.
SMITH
COTTAGEVILLE — Beverly Ann (Burch) Smith,
71, of Cottageville, Evergreen Hills Community, died
on Oct. 7, 2019 at her home, following an extended
illness.
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Saturday, Oct. 12,
2019 at Casto Funeral Home, Evans, with Pastor
Mark Price ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Jackson County Memory Gardens, Cottageville. Visitation
will be from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m., Friday at the funeral
home.

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

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

Wednesday,
Oct. 9

Friday,
Oct. 11
POMEROY — Inspirational Book Club will
discuss “Dangerous
Illusions” by Irene Hannon. Pomeroy Library at
10:30 a.m.
POMEROY — Family Movie Night, 5 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library. Toy
Story 4 will be shown.

Sunday,
Oct. 13
POMEROY — The
Carleton Church, located
on Kingsbury Road, will
celebrate Homecoming.
Sunday School is held
at 9:30 a.m. with church
at 10:45 a.m. Lunch will
be held at noon and the
afternoon service will be
at 1:30 p.m. Everyone
welcome.

SCIPIO TWP. —
Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting at 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Fire
House.
SUTTON TWP. —
The Board of Trustees
of Sutton Township
will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7
p.m. in the Racine Village Hall Council ChamMEIGS COUNTY —
bers.
All Meigs Library locations will be in observance of Columbus Day.
BEDFORD TWP. —
The Bedford Township
trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the Bedford
WELLSTON — The
GJMV Solid Waste Man- Town Hall.
POMEROY — Meigs
agement District Board
of Directors will meet at County Health Dept.
will be closed in obser3:30 p.m. at the district
vance of Columbus Day.
ofﬁce in Wellston.

Monday,
Oct. 14

Thursday,
Oct. 10

MEIGS COUNTY —The delivery route in the
Chester/Tuppers Plains/Reedsville/Long Bottom
areas is currently in need of a carrier. Anyone interested in ﬁlling the vacancy should contact Derrick
Morrison at dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com or by
phone at 740-578-4835.

Coin exhibition
POMEROY — OH-Kan Coin Club will be having
their Coin Exhibition on Nov. 1 from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
in the Farmers Bank Community Room, 640 E. Main
St., Pomeroy. There will be local coin, currency, postcards, and photos. Meigs County tokens from Pomeroy National &amp; Citizens from the 1800’s will be on
display. Come by and see a part of Meigs County history (not for sale). Free evaluations will be offered if
you have old coins. There will also be an actual Lazy
Duce on display.

Plat books available
POMEROY — The start of hunting season is a
great time to get a Plat Book. The Meigs County
4-H Committee has Plat Books for sale for $25. The
books were printed in fall of 2018. Funds support the
4-H program in the county by providing for supplies,
camp and college scholarships, learning opportunities
and more. To purchase a Plat Book, you can stop by
the Extension Ofﬁce at 113 East Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy on Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. You
could also mail $30 (for book, shipping &amp; handling)
to Meigs County 4-H Committee, 113 East Memorial Drive, Suite E, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit the
Meigs County Recorder’s Ofﬁce in the Court House
to obtain a copy. Please contact us at 740-992-6696 if
you have any questions.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

Tuesday,
Oct. 15
RACINE — Grazing Management and
Pollution Abatement
Workshop at the Lee
Farm (Keith &amp; Becky
Bentz), Racine. No cost
to attend. Call 740-9924282 to register by Oct.
9. Dinner and refreshments provided.

Thursday,
Oct. 17

Meigs Chapter NSDAR
will meet at 1 p.m. We
are traveling to the site
of the George Washington plaque in Long
Bottom, Ohio. We will
be celebrating the refurbishing of the site by
Eagle Scout applicant
James Wilcoxen. During the celebration we
will rededicate the site.
Members are asked to
bring a chair, snack and
drink.

Sunday,
Oct. 20

RACINE — Morning
Star United Methodist
Church Homecoming.
POMEROY — Pump- Lunch at 12:30 p.m.,
service of singing at 1:30
kin Painting, 6 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library. All p.m. Community welcome.
materials are supplied.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers chapter of the
ORTA will meet at noon
at the Meigs Senior
Center. Guests are
POMEROY — Acouswelcome. Call in lunch
tic Night at the Pomeroy
reservations to 740Library, 6 p.m. All skill
992-3214 by Oct. 15. A levels and listeners
representative from the are welcome. Bring an
senior center will disinstrument and play
cuss the new Blakeslee
along!
Center presently under
ﬁnal renovation in Middleport.

Tuesday,
Oct. 22

Monday,
Oct. 28

Friday,
Oct. 18
LONG BOTTOM —
The Return Jonathan

POMEROY — Book
Club “Rabbit Cake” by
Anne Hartnett will be
discussed. Pomeroy
Library at 6 p.m.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday, Oct. 9, the
282nd day of 2019. There are 83
days left in the year.

Paper delivery

Normal business hours
resume at 8 a.m. on Oct.
15.

Today’s Highlight in History
On Oct. 9, 1967, Marxist
revolutionary guerrilla leader
Che Guevara, 39, was summarily
executed by the Bolivian army a
day after his capture.
On this date
In 1776, a group of Spanish
missionaries settled in presentday San Francisco.
In 1910, a coal dust explosion
at the Starkville Mine in Colorado
left 56 miners dead.
In 1914, the Belgian city of Antwerp fell to German forces during
World War I.
In 1930, Laura Ingalls became
the ﬁrst woman to ﬂy across the
United States as she completed a
nine-stop journey from Roosevelt
Field, N.Y., to Glendale, Calif.
In 1936, the ﬁrst generator
at Boulder (later Hoover) Dam
began transmitting electricity to
Los Angeles.
In 1940, rock-and-roll legend
John Lennon was born in Liverpool, England. (On this date in
1975, his son, Sean, was born in
New York.)
In 1958, Pope Pius XII died at
age 82, ending a 19-year papacy.
(He was succeeded by Pope John
XXIII.)
In 1974, businessman Oskar
Schindler, credited with saving
about 1,200 Jews during the
Holocaust, died in Frankfurt,
West Germany (at his request, he
was buried in Jerusalem).
In 1985, the hijackers of the
Achille Lauro (ah-KEE’-leh LOW’roh) cruise liner surrendered two
days after seizing the vessel in the
Mediterranean. (Passenger Leon
Klinghoffer was killed by the
hijackers during the standoff.)
In 2001, in the ﬁrst daylight

raids since the start of U.S.-led
attacks on Afghanistan, jets
bombed the Taliban stronghold of
Kandahar. Letters postmarked in
Trenton, N.J., were sent to Sens.
Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy;
the letters later tested positive for
anthrax.
In 2006, North Korea faced a
barrage of condemnation and calls
for retaliation after it announced
that it had set off a small atomic
weapon underground; President
Bush said, “The international
community will respond.” Google
Inc. announced it was snapping
up YouTube Inc. for $1.65 billion
in a stock deal.
In 2012, former Penn State
assistant football coach Jerry
Sandusky was sentenced to 30 to
60 years in prison following his
conviction on 45 counts of sexual
abuse of boys.
Ten years ago: President Barack
Obama won the 2009 Nobel Peace
Prize for what the Norwegian
Nobel Committee called “his
extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and
cooperation between peoples.”
Five years ago: Six U.S. military
planes arrived in the Ebola hot
zone with more Marines as West
African leaders pleaded for the
world’s help in dealing with what
Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai
Koroma described as “a tragedy
unforeseen in modern times.”
French novelist Patrick Modiano
was named the recipient of the
Nobel Prize in literature. Pulitzer
Prize-winning poet Carolyn Kizer,
89, died in Sonoma, California.
One year ago: President
Donald Trump and U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley announced
that Haley would be leaving the
administration at the end of the
year; no reason was given for her
departure. Brett Kavanaugh took
the bench for the ﬁrst time as a
Supreme Court justice in a jovial
atmosphere that was at odds with
the rancor that surrounded his

conﬁrmation. After starting the
week with a rare political post on
social media. Taylor Swift captured four honors at the American Music Awards to become
the most decorated woman in
the show’s history. Police at the
Orlando, Florida airport removed
a passenger who refused to get off
a ﬂight to Cleveland after she was
found carrying a squirrel she had
described as an emotional support animal.
Today’s Birthdays
Retired MLB All-Star Joe Pepitone is 79. Former Sen. Trent Lott,
R-Miss., is 78. C-SPAN founder
Brian Lamb is 78. Rhythm-andblues singer Nona Hendryx is
75. Singer Jackson Browne is 71.
Nobel Peace laureate Jody Williams is 69. Actor Gary Frank
is 69. Actor Richard Chaves is
68. Actor Robert Wuhl is 68.
Actress-TV personality Sharon
Osbourne is 67. Actor Tony Shalhoub is 66. Actor Scott Bakula
is 65. Musician James Fearnley
(The Pogues) is 65. Actor John
O’Hurley is 65. Writer-producerdirector-actor Linwood Boomer
is 64. Pro and College Football
Hall of Famer Mike Singletary
is 61. Actor Michael Pare is 61.
Jazz musician Kenny Garrett is
59. Rock singer-musician Kurt
Neumann (The BoDeans) is 58.
Country singer Gary Bennett is
55. Movie director Guillermo del
Toro is 55. Former British Prime
Minister David Cameron is 53.
Singer P.J. Harvey is 50. Movie
director Steve McQueen (Film:
“12 Years a Slave”) is 50. World
Golf Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam is 49. Actress Cocoa Brown is
47. Country singer Tommy Shane
Steiner is 46. Actor Steve Burns
is 46. Rock singer Sean Lennon
is 44. Actor Randy Spelling is 41.
Christian hip-hop artist Lecrae is
40. Actor Brandon Routh is 40.
Actor Zachery Ty Bryan is 38.
Actress Spencer Grammer is 36.

Prices are subject to change at any time.

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

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

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

Museum
From page 1

has been able to sustain operations and
maintenance through
donations, craft shows,
dinners, sales from gift
shop items and many
hours of volunteer
help, according to the
Historical Society.
Hanson explained
that fund generated by
the levy would allow

for the museum to
continue to be open to
the public with local
historical items being
preserved and on display for those of the
area to view.
The Meigs Museum
recently opened in
its new Middleport
location of the Meigs
Museum, which is in
one of three buildings donated to the
Historical Society on
South Third Avenue in
Middleport. The build-

ing allow for expanded
display area and much
more.
Hanson explained
that while the buildings and property were
donated to the organization, there is upkeep
and maintenance to
be done, as well as
the initial renovations
that are needed on the
buildings. Roof work is
needed on each of the
buildings, as well as
brick work on the 1872
furniture factory build-

ing on the back of the
property.
The Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical
Society annual meeting
will be held at 2 p.m.
on Sunday, Oct. 13 at
the new museum location in Middleport.
More on the new
Meigs Museum location will appear in an
upcoming edition of
The Daily Sentinel.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 9, 2019 3

Trump shifts tone on Turkey in effort to halt Syria invasion
By Robert Burns, Matthew
Lee and Deb Riechmann

the Kurds, who stand to
be destroyed if Turkey
Associated Press
follows through with its
planned invasion. The
Kurds lead a group of
WASHINGTON —
Syria ﬁghters who have
In a span of 24 hours,
President Donald Trump been steadfast and effective American allies in
moved from threatening
combating the Islamic
to obliterate Turkey’s
State in Syria. Turkey,
economy if it invades
Syria to inviting its presi- however, sees the Kurds
as terrorists and a border
dent to visit the White
threat.
House.
Joseph Votel, a retired
But Trump did not back
away Tuesday from a plan Army general who headed
Central Command’s milito withdraw American
tary operations in Syria
troops from Syria as he
tried to persuade Turkey until last spring, wrote
not to invade the country on The Atlantic website
and attack the U.S.-allied Tuesday that mutual trust
Kurds — a needle-thread- was a key ingredient in
the U.S. partnership with
ing strategy that has
the Kurds.
angered Republican and
“The sudden policy
Democratic lawmakers
change this week breaks
and confused U.S. allies.
that trust at the most cru“This is really dangercial juncture and leaves
ous,” House Speaker
our partners with very
Nancy Pelosi said.
limited options,” Votel
Trump tweeted that
wrote.
while U.S. forces “may
Jonathan Schanzer, a
be” leaving Syria, the
Syria scholar at the FounU.S. has not abandoned

dation for the Defense of
Democracies, said even a
limited Turkish incursion
into northern Syria could
quickly escalate.
“The president is
doubling down on this
— seems to be reversing
course,” Schanzer said.
“He’s trying to convey to
the American people that
he’s made the right decision. Of course, (Turkish
President Recep Tayyip)
Erdogan is going to see
this as a green light.”
The confusion began
Sunday when the White
House issued a late-night
statement saying U.S.
forces in northeastern
Syria would step aside for
what it called an imminent Turkish invasion.
The statement made no
mention of U.S. efforts
to forestall the invasion,
leading many to conclude
that Trump was, in effect,
turning a blind eye to a
slaughter of Kurds.
On Monday, amid

criticism from some of
his staunchest Republican
supporters, including
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, Trump
suggested he was washing his hands of the Syria
conﬂict, saying in a tweet
that “it is time now for
others in the region ...
to protect their own
territory.” But he also
threatened to “totally
destroy and obliterate the
Economy of Turkey” if its
military action in Syria
went too far.
Administration ofﬁcials argue that Trump
is employing strategy in
response to Erdogan’s
insistence during a phone
call Sunday with Trump
that he was moving ahead
with a military incursion into Syria. Erdogan
seemed to have rejected
a joint U.S.-Turkish plan,
already being carried out,
to create a buffer zone
on the Syrian side of the
border to address Tur-

Festival

Valor will be presented to
a deserving veteran from
Gallia County each day at
3 p.m.
Guests can enjoy live
performances throughout
the weekend from bluegrass and country musical
acts, including Special
Consensus, Jason Michael
Carroll, former Voice
contestant Cody Wickline, the Cleverlys, and
long-time Farm Festival
performers, The Rarely
Herd, among others.
Back for another year,
the festival will include
amusement park rides
for all ages. All-day ride
wristbands can be purchased for $10 for adults
ages 13 and up and $5 for
children 12 and under.
Individual ride tickets can
also be purchased for $1
each. A Kids’ Farmyard

Fun area will feature face
painting, a hay bale maze,
game tent, kiddie train
rides, and a corn pile.
Performances from
lumberjacks, chainsaw
carvers, an opportunity to
interact with Columbus
Zoo animals, and farm
demonstrations, including
sheep shearing by Stanley Strode, cow milking
with the Laurel Valley
Creamery and pig races,
will also be a part of the
festival. More than 60
artisans will be in attendance to showcase and
sell their work during
the festival. Additionally,
skydivers from Team Fastrax will provide a live
performance at 2 p.m.
on Saturday, October 12,
weather permitting. The
stunt dogs from Team
Zoom Border Collies will

OH-70146972

In addition to the buffet, visitors can enjoy
a wide variety of food
options from local venFrom page 1
dors throughout the festival including fall favorites
embodiment of Bob’s
such as cider slushies,
legacy and everything
apple dumplings, kettle
this brand stands for,”
corn, Ohio-made cheeses,
said Chris Williams,
bean soup and much
farm manager for Bob
more.
Evans Farm. “In addiBob Evans presents
tion to the live musical
for the second year in a
performances, amusement park rides and farm row the Eyes of Freedom
military memorial. The
demonstrations, we are
pleased to welcome back nationally touring exhibition honors the service
the inspirational Eyes of
Freedom military memo- and sacriﬁce of all who
have served and are currial this year.”
rently serving our nation.
For the third year, the
Life-size murals of the 23
Bob Evans Farm Festifallen members of Columval will include a buffet
option, offering unlimited bus-based Lima Company,
Bob Evans signature dish- painted by acclaimed artist, Anita Miller, will be
es for $12 for attendees
on display all weekend.
ages 13 and up, and $6
for children 12 and under. Additionally, a Quilt of

Burhan Ozbilici | AP

A Turkish man holds a placard that reads “Trump, you can only
destroy the USA!” during a protest Tuesday near the U.S. embassy
in Ankara, Turkey. Turkey’s vice president Fuat Oktay says his
country won’t bow to threats in an apparent response to U.S.
President Donald Trump’s warning to Ankara about the scope of its
planned military incursion into Syria.

key’s security concerns.
some Kurdish defensive
The execution of that
positions on the Syrian
plan included dismantling side of the border.

also give live demonstrations at 10 a.m., 12:30
p.m. and 3 p.m. every
day. Fireworks will round
out the night on Saturday
with the colorful display
provided by the Village
of Rio Grande starting at
9:30 p.m.
Bob Evans welcomes
families to camp on the
farm for free from Tuesday, October 8 through
Sunday, October 13 to
enjoy all of the festival
activities that weekend.
Potable water, porta-john
restrooms, a dump station and 24-hour security
are provided. Spots are
available on a ﬁrst come,
ﬁrst served basis and no
reservations are necessary.
“We’re honored to be
able to share the love
of farm with our com-

Mark Porter
Chrysler Dodge
Jeep and Ram

we make car dreams come true

munity for almost ﬁve
decades now,” said Williams. “Farm Festival has
become a tradition for
so many families and we
look forward to another
great year of celebrating
together down on the
farm.”
The Bob Evans Farm
is located on State Route
588 just off U.S. Route
35. Festival hours are 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets
can be purchased at the
entrance gate and are $5
for adults and free for
children ﬁve and under.
On Friday, October 11,
all school and chartered
buses will receive free
admission.
For more information
and to view a full entertainment schedule, visit
https://www.bobevans.
com/farm-festival.

�4 Wednesday, October 9, 2019

LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Scenes from Meigs Homecoming 2019

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The 2019 Meigs High School Homecoming Court included (front) Flower Girl Myla Shipe and Crown Bearer Solomon Jones; (middle)
Queen candidates Breanna Zirkle, Karington Brinker, Queen Kassandra Coleman, Maci Hood and Taylor Bass; (back) candidate escorts
Bobby Musser, Austin Mahr, Dawson Justice, Briar Wolfe and Weston Baer.

The 2019 Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Kassandra
Coleman is pictured with 2018 Meigs High School Homecoming
Queen Taylor Swartz and Flower Girl Myla Shipe.

The Meigs Marauders take to the field to begin Friday evening’s Homecoming game.

The 2019 Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Kassandra Coleman (second from left in back) is
pictured with (front) Flower Girl Myla Shipe, Crown Bearer Solomon Jones, (back, from left) Principal
Travis Abbott, escort Dawson Justice and 2018 Queen Taylor Swartz.

The Meigs High School football team was among the participants in the parade on Saturday.

The Meigs High School Class of 1989 celebrated their 30th class reunion.

The Meigs High School Class of 1969 celebrated their 50th class reunion.

Distinguished Service Award recipients Gary and Karen Walker ride
in the parade on Saturday.

The Meigs Alumni Band joined the current Marauder Marching Band for the parade on Saturday, as well as a performance the game on The Distinguished Alumni award winners were among those in the
Friday evening.
parade on Saturday.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 9, 2019 5

Scenes from Meigs Homecoming 2019

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The 2019 Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Kassandra
Coleman is pictured with 2018 Meigs High School Homecoming
Dave Harris | Courtesy
Queen Taylor Swartz.
The Meigs Alumni Band and current band make their way down Main Street during Saturday’s parade in Pomeroy.

The Meigs High School Class of 1979 celebrated their 40th class reunion.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Kenny Napper carries the school colors near the front of the parade on Saturday.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The maroon and gold flags served as a walkway for the Homecoming candidates during Friday’s
pregame ceremony.
Howard Mullen leads the parade through town.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Queen candidates and their escorts stand on the field as they await the announcement of the 2019 Homecoming Queen.

OHIO BRIEFS
Lawyers say they represent even more men
who aren’t listed plaintiffs, taking the number
of accusers above 300.
COLUMBUS, Ohio
The latest accusers
(AP) — More men are
to identify themselves
stepping forward with
allegations about sexual publicly include former
misconduct by a former lacrosse player Mike
Ohio State sports doctor Avery, a news anchor in
now accused of abusing Grand Rapids, Michigan.
students from 1979 to
He told NBC News
1997.
that Strauss fondled him
The addition of two
during several physical
lawsuits filed late last
exams.
week means a total of
The school says about
about 200 men are suing
1,500 instances of
the university over its
decades-old sexual misfailure to stop the late
conduct by Strauss have
Dr. Richard Strauss,
despite employees know- been reported since last
year.
ing about concerns.

2 injured in
rail collision
HAMILTON, Ohio
(AP) — Two trains
collided in Ohio leaving two crew members
with minor injuries and
derailing three train
cars.
Ofﬁcials say one train
rear-ended another as it
was slowing down causing a derailment early
Tuesday in Hamilton.
A spokeswoman for
Norfolk Southern Corp.
says the three rear cars
that derailed contained
one load of pulpwood
and two loads of butane.

Ofﬁcials say there
were no leaks or ﬁres
reported.
The Hamilton-Middletown Journal-News
reports the cause of
the derailment is under
investigation.

he will be in Columbus
on Oct. 31. No other
details were released
immediately.
Biden and rivals for
the Democratic nomination will be at Otterbein University near

Biden plans
return to Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Democratic
presidential candidate
Joe Biden plans to make
a return visit to Ohio
two weeks after he’s in
the state for a debate.
Biden’s campaign
announced Tuesday that

Columbus for an Oct. 15
debate .
Republican Donald
Trump carried Ohio
decisively in 2016 and
the state has been trending Republican in statewide elections.

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�Sports
6 Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles top Belpre, 3-1
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Eastern junior Jonna Epple (center) digs the ball up in between teammates
Kylie Gheen (left) and Olivia Barber (right), during the Lady Eagles’ 3-1 win over
Belpre on Monday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
Starting the ﬁnal week of the
regular season with a win.
The Eastern volleyball team
began its push for the postseason at ‘The Nest’ on Monday
evening, with the hosts picking
up a 3-1 victory over Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
guest Belpre.
The host Lady Eagles (119, 8-6 TVC Hocking) breezed
through the opening game,
trailing just once, at 1-0, on
their way to a 25-11 win.
Belpre (5-15, 2-12) — which
fell to EHS in straight games

on Sept. 10 in Washington
County — answered with a
wire-to-wire 25-21 victory in
the second game, tying the
match at a game apiece.
There were nine lead changes through the ﬁrst 30 points of
the third game and the teams
were knotted up at 15. EHS
tied it at 16, 17 and 18 before
ﬁnally regaining the edge and
going ahead 20-18. The guests
tied it at 20, but the Green and
White claimed the next ﬁve
points and won the third by a
25-20 count.
Eastern scored the ﬁrst six
points of the fourth, but Belpre
battled back to tie it at nine.
EHS stretched its lead as high

as eight, at 24-16, and held on
for the match-clinching 25-23
win.
Leading the EHS service
attack, Jenna Chadwell posted
19 points and four aces, while
Olivia Barber ended with 17
points and seven aces. Brielle
Newland contributed eight
points and two aces to the winning cause, while Sydney Sanders and Kylie Gheen had three
points apiece, with an ace by
Sanders. Haley Burton capped
off the team’s service with two
points.
Barber paced the Green and
White at the net with 11 kills
See EAGLES | 7

Tornadoes
storm past
Falcons
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

HEMLOCK, Ohio — Revenge at its ﬁnest.
The Southern volleyball team — which fell to
Miller by a 3-1 count on Sept. 10 in Racine —
avenged that setback on Monday in Perry County,
with the Lady Tornadoes taking a straight games
victory over the Lady Falcons in Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division play.
Southern (13-6, 11-3 TVC Hocking) took its
ﬁrst lead of the night at 4-3 in the opener, fought
off ties at four, ﬁve and 15, and eventually winning
by a 25-22 count.
The Lady Tornadoes took an early lead in Game
2, but Miller was in front at 7-6. SHS brieﬂy
regained the edge at 12-11, but surrendered six
of the next seven points and trailed 17-13. The
Purple and Gold claimed the next eight points,
however, never trailing again on the way to the
25-20 win.
The Lady Falcons began the third with a 4-0
run, but gave up six of the next seven markers.
Miller regained the edge at 10-9, but the guests
were back in front at 14-13. MHS tied the game at
14, but Southern took the next seven points and
didn’t look back on its way to the match-clinching
25-20 win.
Leading the Lady Tornado service attack, Sydney Adams posted 15 points, including ﬁve aces.
Baylee Wolfe and Phoenix Cleland earned nine
points and an ace apiece, Cassidy Roderus came
up with eight service points, Jordan Hardwick
chipped in with three markers, while Kassie Barton added one point.
Hardwick paced the guests at the net with a
dozen kills and one block. Roderus was next with
ﬁve kills, followed by Wolfe with four. Cleland and
Kayla Evans contributed two kills apiece to the
winning cause, while Adams chipped in with one
kill.
After hosting Federal Hocking on Tuesday,
Southern will head to Eastern to wrap up the regular season on Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Oct. 10

at Jackson, 5 p.m.

Volleyball
Southern at Eastern,
6 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs,
6 p.m.
Ross County at Ohio
Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Miller, 6
p.m.
South Gallia at
Waterford, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at
Poca, 5:30

Friday, Oct. 11

Soccer
Gallia Academy boys

Football
Coal Grove at Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m.
Montcalm at Hannan,
7 p.m.
Ravenswood at
Southern, 7:30
Linsly at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Waterford at Wahama, 7:30
Alexander at River
Valley, 7:30
Meigs at Athens, 7:30
South Gallia at Belpre, 7:30

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Savannah Reese (475) hits full stride at the 2019 Skyline Lanes Invitational held on Sept. 4 at River Valley High School
in Bidwell, Ohio.

Locals compete at CC meets
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Four different area
schools were involved in
a pair of cross country
meets on Saturday.
River Valley, Gallia
Academy and Southern
were at the Unioto Invitational, while Point Pleasant participated at the
7th annual Wirt County
Wetlands Invitational.
Here’s how each of
those programs fared at
those respective events.
Unioto Invitational
Both Gallia Academy
and River Valley competed as teams in both
varsity events at UHS,
while Southern had only
one competitor in the
girls race.
A total of 13 teams and
149 runners took part in
the girls race, with Ciara
Colwell of Leesburg Fairﬁeld coming away with
top individual honors
with a time of 19:42.10.
The Unioto girls captured the team championship with 61 points,
ﬁnishing well ahead of
runner-up Teays Valley
(117). The Lady Raiders
ended up third overall
with 133 points, while
the Blue Angels placed
13th with 325 points.
Lauren Twyman was
the area’s top placer and
led RVHS with a third
place effort 20:10.25.
Savannah Reese
(22:17.37) and Ruth

Rickett (23:41.30) were
next for River Valley
with respective ﬁnishes
of 19th and 37th.
Emma Lucas
(23:51.14) and Kate Nutter (24:07.50) completed
the team score by placing
42nd and 48th. Nakeisha
Shriver (26:08.02) and
Sydney Blouir (26:39.04)
were also 94th and 103rd
overall.
Krystal Davison paced
GAHS by placing 34th
with a mark of 23:26.75,
followed by Kristen
Jamora (26:08.59)
and Taylor Facemire
(26:52.47) with respective ﬁnishes of 95th and
106th.
Eliza Davies
(27:22.14) and Calista
Barnes (29:29.15) completed the Blue Angel
tally by placing 109th
and 127th overall. Chloe
Rogers (29:42.78) and
Abby Harvey (31:20.84)
also ﬁnished 132nd and
140th.
Sydney Roush ended
up 18th overall for the
Lady Tornadoes with a
time of 22:14.21.
A total of 17 teams and
197 runners took part
in the boys race, with
Robert Immell of Unioto
coming away with top
individual honors with a
time of 19:42.10.
The Shermans captured the team championship with 21 points,
ﬁnishing well ahead
of runner-up Leesburg
Fairﬁeld (70). The Blue

Gallia Academy junior Tristan Crisenbery (290) hits full stride at
the 2019 Skyline Bowling Invitational held on Sept. 3 at Gallia
Academy High School in Centenary, Ohio.

Devils placed 11th with
298 points, while the
Raiders were 12th with
306 points.
Todd Elliott led GAHS
with a 29th place time
of 18:04.58, followed
by Ian Hill (19:41.27)
and Logan Nicholas
(20:08.26) with respective ﬁnishes of 62nd and
86th.
Tristan Crisenbery
(20:20.27) and Maddux
Camden (20:44.57) completed the team score by
placing 92nd and 103rd
overall. Grant Smith

(20:58.04) and Garytt
Schwall (21:04.14) were
also 106th and 112th for
Gallia Academy.
Dylan Fulks paced
RVHS with a 17th place
mark of 17:37.87, followed by Cody Wooten
(18:07.52) and Ryan
Snyder (20:56.76) with
respective ﬁnishes of
32nd and 105th.
Nathan Young
(21:02.49) and Ryan Lollathin (21:33.19) completed the team score by
See CC | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 9, 2019 7

Sectional volleyball tournaments set in Ohio
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

The high school postseason is just around the
corner, but the tournament roads were paved
Sunday afternoon during
the 2019 OHSAA Southeast District volleyball
tournament selection
process.
Six area schools —
Gallia Academy, Meigs,
River Valley, Southern,
South Gallia and Eastern — now know where
their opening games will
be and who they will be
facing in their respective
sectional matchups.
Two of the six local
teams are scheduled to
host a postseason match

at the start of the tournament, and half of the programs can also advance to
the district round with a
single victory.
Starting in Division II,
Gallia Academy earned a
share of the Ohio Valley
Publishing area’s highest
ranking with a two seed.
The Blue Angels (17-2)
will host the winner of
the Athens-Meigs contest
at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct.
16, in a sectional semiﬁnal. The winner advances
to sectional ﬁnal at 4 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 19.
Meigs (3-16) came
away with the 10 seed
and will travel to seventh
seeded Athens (9-10) for
a sectional quarterﬁnal
at 6 p.m. Monday, Oct.

14. The winner plays at
GAHS in the semiﬁnal.
River Valley (6-11)
came away with the nine
seed in D-2 and travels
to eighth seeded Warren
(7-10) for a sectional
quarterﬁnal at 6 p.m.
Monday, Oct. 14. The
winner plays at top seeded Vinton County (17-1)
in a sectional semiﬁnal at
6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct.
16.
The D-2 district tournament will be held
Wednesday, Oct. 23,
and Saturday, Oct. 26,
at Southeastern High
School in Londonderry.
The Lady Tornadoes
(12-5) came away with
a two seed in the Division IV bracket and will

host the winner of the
Symmes Valley-Ironton
St. Joe match at 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 17, in a
sectional ﬁnal.
South Gallia also starts
the D-4 tournament in
a sectional ﬁnal as the
sixth seeded Lady Rebels
(4-12) travel to Waterford for a 6 p.m. contest
against the third seeded
Lady Cats on Thursday,
Oct. 17.
The D-4 district tournament will feature semiﬁnal rounds on Wednesday
and Thursday (Oct.
23-24), as well as two district ﬁnals on Saturday,
Oct. 26, at Jackson High
School in the Apple City.
Eastern serves as
the area’s lone Division

III program. The Lady
Eagles (10-8) secured
the six seed and travel to
third seeded Zane Trace
(11-7) for a sectional ﬁnal
at 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
19.
The D-3 district tournament will feature semiﬁnal rounds from Tuesday
through Thursday (Oct.
22-24), plus a trio of
sectional ﬁnal matches
on Saturday, Oct. 26, at
Waverly High School in
Waverly.
Visit ohsaa.org for
complete pairings of the
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
2019 OHSAA Southeast
Meigs junior Hannah Durst (11)
District volleyball tourna- passes the ball during the Lady
ments.
Marauders setback to Logan on
Sept. 18 at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium in Rocksprings,
Ohio.

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

Lady Rebels
GA soccer faces tough tests
fall to Trimble
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

The Gallia Academy
soccer teams now know
their postseason fates
following Sunday’s 2019
Division II Southeast
District tournament
drawings for both boys
and girls.
The Blue Devils (8-31) came away with a
seven seed and will host
10th seeded Portsmouth
West (0-13-0) in a sectional quarterﬁnal at 5
p.m. Monday, Oct. 14, at
Lester Field. The winner
advances to face second
seeded Alexander (9-30) in a sectional semiﬁnal at 5 p.m. Thursday,
Oct. 17.
The sectional ﬁnal
round is slated for 11
a.m. Saturday, Oct. 19.
The D-2 boys district
tournament will be
played on Wednesday,
Oct. 23 and Saturday,
Oct. 26, at Logan High
School.
The Blue Angels (7-51) earned a seven seed
and will travel to second
seeded Warren (10-1-3)

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio — Just can’t tame those
Lady Tomcats.
The South Gallia volleyball team — which fell
in straight games at Trimble on Sept 10 — were
swept by the Lady Tomcats again in Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division action on Monday in
Gallia County.
South Gallia (5-14, 3-12 TVC Hocking) tied Monday’s opening game at four, but never led and eventually fell by a 25-11 count.
Trimble (12-8, 11-4) followed it up with a wireto-wire win in the second, moving up 2-0 in the
match with a 25-17 triumph.
The Lady Tomcats also went wire-to-wire in the
ﬁnale, leading by as many as seven, before settling
for the 25-19 match-sealing win.
Christine Grifﬁth had nine service points, including a pair of aces, to lead the Red and Gold. Alyssa
Cremeens and Isabella Cochran came up with four
points apiece, with Cremeens earning an ace, while
Kiley Stapleton ended with one point in the setback.
At the net, Grifﬁth and Jessie Rutt both claimed
two kills for the hosts, with Grifﬁth picking up a
block. Stapleton, Katie Blowing and Olivia Johnson
had a kill apiece, with three blocks by Stapleton
and one by Bowling. Amaya Howell had a pair of
assists to lead the SGHS ball-handling.
After its home ﬁnale against Ohio Valley Christian on Tuesday, the Lady Rebels will head to
Waterford to ﬁnish the regular season on Thursday.
SGHS will also head to Waterford on Oct. 17 for its
tournament opener.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Eagles

team’s 43 digs.
Allie Lemon and
Lindsie Johnson led the
Orange and Black with
From page 6
a dozen points apiece.
Savannah Knotts was
and one block. Layna
next with six points, folCatlett claimed four
kills and three blocks for lowed by Hannah McDaniels with three. Makaylee
Eastern, Gheen chipped
in with four kills and one Deaton, Halee Williams
block, while Chadwell and and Alyssa Hutchinson
collected one service
Megan Maxon ﬁnished
point each for Belpre.
with three kills apiece,
After Tuesday’s trip
with Chadwell also pickto Wahama, Eastern will
ing up a block.
wrap up the regular seaBurton and Newland
tied for a team-high with son at home on Thursday
against Southern.
13 assists apiece, while
Sanders — who had
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740one kill — led the EHS
446-2342, ext. 2100.
defense with 18 of the

CC

Hector Castillo led
the Black Knights with
a 19th place effort of
21:02.20, followed by
From page 6
Ethan Scott (21:59.52)
and Isaac Daniels
placing 111th and 126th
(23:47.57) with respecoverall. Kade Alderman
also ﬁnished 141st with a tive ﬁnishes of 24th and
37th.
time of 22:31.81.
Kent Bee defeated the
50-competitor boys ﬁeld
Wirt County Wetlands
with a winning time of
Point Pleasant had a
total of four competitors 17:36.13. Bee also guided Ritchie County to the
— three boys and one
team title with 16 points.
girl — at Wirt County
Visit baumspage.com
High School on Saturday.
and runwv.com for comIsabella Sang placed
plete results from the
13th out of 23 runners
Unioto Invitational and
for the Lady Knights
Wirt County Wetlands
with a time of 27:20.41.
Invitational held SaturOlivia Cress won the
girls race with a mark of day.
21:24, helping Ritchie
Bryan Walters can be reached at
County also claim the
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
team title with 19 points.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

GAHS freshman Maddux Camden (13) passes the ball, during the Blue Devils’ OVC win over South
Point on Sept. 26 at Lester Field in Centenary, Ohio.

for a sectional semiﬁnal
at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct.
15.
The GAHS girls need
a win to advance to the
sectional ﬁnal, where the
winner of the WaverlyJackson contest awaits.

The sectional ﬁnal will
be played at 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 19.
The D-2 girls district
tournament will be
played on Thursday, Oct.
24 and Saturday, Oct. 26,
at Logan High School.

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

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9

6 PM

6 PM

Visit ohsaa.org for
complete pairings of the
2019 OHSAA Southeast
District Division II boys
and girls soccer tournaments.

7 PM

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10:30

Chicago P.D. "Familia" (N)
Chicago P.D. "Familia" (N)
Stumptown "Rip City Dicks"
(N)
Wild Metropolis
"Commuters" (N)
Stumptown "Rip City Dicks"
(N)
S.W.A.T. "Bad Faith" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10:00
p.m. (N)
Wild Metropolis
"Commuters" (N)
S.W.A.T. "Bad Faith" (N)

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt.
24 (ROOT) (5:00) DFL Soccer Dor./Frei.
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Daily Wager (L)
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

Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt. Dog's Most "Parent'hood'" Dog's "Saving Jamie" (N)
Dog's Most "Saving Jamie"
NCAA Soccer Virginia vs. North Carolina State (L)
The Dan Patrick Show (N) NCAA Volleyball
NBA Countdown (L)
NBA Basketball Pre-season New Orleans Pelicans at Chicago Bulls (L)
SportsC. (N)
ESPN FC (N) C. Football NCAA Football Appalachian State at Louisiana-Lafayette Site: Cajun Field (L)
The King of The King of The King of The King of Tyler Perry's Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage
(:05) Toni Braxton: Unbreak
Counselor (‘13, Dra) Jurnee Smollett. TV14
My Heart TVPG
Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
The
The
The
The
The
(4:55)
Iron Man (2008, Action) Gwyneth Paltrow, The
Jeff Bridges, Robert Downey Jr.. TVPG
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994, Comedy)
The Waterboy (‘98,
Courteney Cox, Sean Young, Jim Carrey. TV14
Com) Adam Sandler. TV14
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Loud House Loud House H.Danger
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island TVPG
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Ridicule" Law&amp;O: SVU "Monogamy" WWE NXT (N)
Temptatn "Casting Special"
Family Guy Family Guy MLB on Deck
MLB Baseball National League Division Series Game 9 (L)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:00) Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 Chris Pratt.
All Elite The AEW Tag Team Championship begins. (N)
All Elite Wrestling
(5:00)
The Lost World: Jurassic Park (‘97, Adventure)
Jaws (1975, Horror) Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Roy Scheider. A great white
Julianne Moore, Pete Postlethwaite, Jeff Goldblum. TV14 shark attacks and terrorizes the residents of a Long Island beach town. TV14
Expedition Unknown
Exp.Unk. "Plummer's Gold" Expedition Unknown (N)
Expedition Unknown (N)
Building Off the Grid
The First 48 "Dark Waters" Ghost Hunters "There's
Ghost Hunters "Eastern
Ghost Hunters "Dancing
Ghost "There's Something in
Something in the Seminary" State Penitentiary" (N)
With the Dead" (N)
the Seminary" (N)
I Prey "One Wrong Step"
I Was Prey "Night Terror" I Prey "Paradise Lost" (N)
I Was Prey (N)
Prey "Deadly Decision" (N)
NCIS "The Tie That Binds" NCIS "Willoughby"
NCIS "Off the Grid"
NCIS "Keep Going"
NCIS "Nonstop"

Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order "Possession" Law&amp;O. "Formerly Famous"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Freaky Friday (‘03, Com) Jamie Lee Curtis. TVPG
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Life Below Zero "Alone in Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero "Girl
Life Below Zero "The Freeze
the Dark"
"Emergency Cache"
Power"
Up"
GloryRd. (N) NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey New Jersey Devils at Philadelphia Flyers (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
NCAA Soccer Kentucky at Indiana (L)
NFL Films (N) NFLTP (N)
Forged in Fire "The Pipe
Forged in Fire "Barbarian Forged in Fire "Genghis
Forged in Fire "Sword of
Tomahawks"
Sword"
Khan's Sword"
Perseus" (N)
Below "Au Revoir, Sirocco" Below Deck "Man Down!" Real Wives Dallas
Real Wives Dallas (N)
(4:30) Poetic Justice TV14
(:55)
You Got Served (‘04, Dra) Omarion. TVPG
BET Hip Hop Awards
Buying and Selling
Buying and Selling
Property "Nutty and Proud" Property Brothers (N)
Blair Witch (2016, Horror) Valorie Curry, Callie
Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters (2013, Action) Gemma
Hernandez, James Allen McCune. TVMA
Arterton, Famke Janssen, Jeremy Renner. TVMA

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

(:15) Kin (2018, Action) Myles Truitt, James Franco, Jack

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Law &amp; Order
10 Things I Hate About Y...
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Life Below Zero "Alone"
NHL Hockey L.A./Van. (L)
Boxing Classics
(:05) Forged in Fire: Epic
"Strongest Blades" (N)
The Real Housewives
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Wrong Turn
Desmond Harrington. TVMA

10 PM

10:30

Cold Pursuit (2019, Action) Emmy Rossum, Laura Dern,
24/7 College Football
Reynor. Two estranged brothers become fugitives after
Liam Neeson. A snowplow driver and family man turns into "Penn State Nittany Lions"
(N)
they discover a deadly alien weapon. TV14
a vengeful killer following his son's death.
(:10) Replicas (2018, Crime Story) Alice Eve, Emily Alyn
Collision (‘13, Thril) Frank Grillo. A couple (:45)
Game Night Jason Bateman. A
Lind, Keanu Reeves. After they're killed in a horrific
finds themselves stranded in the middle of a murder mystery party attended by a group
accident, a scientist clones his dead wife and kids. TV14
remote desert in Morocco. TV14
of friends turns into a real kidnapping. TV14
(5:30)
Cruel Intentions (:15) On Becoming a God in
Unforgiven (‘92, West) Gene Hackman, Clint
(:15)
Dirty Harry
Central Florida "Birthday
(‘99, Dra) Ryan Phillippe,
Eastwood. A retired assassin hunts down renegade
(‘71, Act) Harry Guardino,
Sarah Michelle Gellar. TV14 Party"
cowboys to avenge the brutal rape of a prostitute. TVMA Clint Eastwood. TVMA

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, October 9, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily 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

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 9, 2019 9

Jay Gruden fired by Redskins after 0-5 start
ASHBURN, Va. (AP) —
Owner Dan Snyder and President Bruce Allen summoned
coach Jay Gruden to the Washington Redskins’ facility before
dawn Monday to tell him he
was being ﬁred.
“It was a brief conversation,”
Allen said.
Now comes a longer conversation about the status of the
ﬂoundering franchise that has
won just two playoff games in
Snyder’s two decades of owner-

ship and zero during Allen’s
tenure. Gruden is out after an
0-5 start to his sixth season
and is the latest in a long line
of Redskins coaches to take
the fall for signiﬁcant organizational shortcomings.
“To make a decision like
this is difﬁcult, but it was
necessary,” Allen said during
a 13-minute news conference.
“Our 0-5 start is not just disappointing. We had much different expectations for the begin-

ning of the season. We owe it
to our fans, … the organization,
the players, the coaches and
their families to do everything
we can to win.”
The Redskins haven’t won
much lately, going 35-49-1
overall under Gruden with one
playoff appearance in the 2015
season. A popular coach among
players and a smart offensive
mind, Gruden struggled in preparing his teams: Washington
went 1-5 in season openers and

lost a win-and-get-in game in
Week 17 in 2016 against the
New York Giants, who had
nothing to play for.
Despite never before being
a head coach in the NFL, and
despite never winning more
than nine games in a season,
Gruden managed to stick
around longer than anyone
else who’s held that job during
Snyder’s unsuccessful stint as
owner.
Asked why Snyder wasn’t

addressing fans, Allen said,
“Because I am.” Snyder was
not made available to reporters
Monday.
None of the six coaches hired
since Snyder bought the team
has a winning record, including
Hall of Famer Joe Gibbs and
two-time Super Bowl champion
Mike Shanahan. Offensive line
coach Bill Callahan becomes
the seventh after he was selected to replace Gruden on an
interim basis.

Kansas apologizes for risque Snoop Dogg show at hoops event
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) —
The University of Kansas apologized for its risque Late Night
at the Phog event in which
rapper Snoop Dogg performed,
stripper poles were wheeled
onto the Allen Fieldhouse
ﬂoor and fake money was shot
over the heads of prospective
recruits.
Athletic director Jeff Long
said Friday night “we expected
a clean version of the show.”
The Jayhawks instead got an
R-rated performance for their
annual basketball kickoff and
another big headache as they
deal with a high-level NCAA

infractions case tied to recruiting.
“We made it clear to the
entertainers’ managers that we
expected a clean version of the
show and took additional steps
to communicate to our fans,
including moving the artist
to the ﬁnal act of the evening,
to ensure that no basketball
activities would be missed if
anyone did not want to stay for
his show,” Long said in a statement. “I take full responsibility
for not thoroughly vetting all
the details of the performance
and offer my personal apology
to those who were offended.

“We strive to create a family
atmosphere at Kansas and fell
short of that this evening.”
Kansas has been putting on
Late Night for 35 years, but
what began as a scrimmage to
celebrate the start of basketball
practices has turned into a
night of skits, music and entertainment.
That’s included big-name
rappers in recent years, such
as Tech N9ne, Lil Yaghty and 2
Chainz.
None of them brought the
cache of Snoop, though. The
47-year-old rapper and wellknown sports fan was expected

to take the minds of players,
fans and recruits off the specter
of the NCAA investigation and
turn attention fully to a season
in which the Jayhawks are
expected to be title contenders.
The school even promoted
his appearance with a social
media video of Hall of Fame
coach Bill Self wearing a gaudy
chain and Adidas shirt — the
focus of the NCAA inquiry has
been on the apparel company’s
dealings with recruits, including whether ofﬁcials paid them
to steer them to its schools.
Wearing a No. 20 jersey
with “Snoop” on the back,

the artist performed for about
35 minutes to a full house
that included the men’s and
women’s basketball teams. But
he wound up singing unedited
versions of several hits, such
as “Gin and Juice” and “Drop
It Like It’s Hot,” as pole dancers performed and fake $100
bills featuring the rapper’s face
were shot over players and
recruits.
Self said he wasn’t feeling
well and spent most of the performance in the locker room.
He later told The Kansas City
Star he expected a “radio edited” version of the songs.

IN THECOMMON PLEAS COURT OF,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PEGGY YOST,
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER,
Plaintiff
100 East Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
CASE NO.19-DL-001
vs.
Parcels of land encumbered
with delinquent tax liens,
Defendants, to wit:
In the Matter of the Foreclosure of Liens for Delinquent
Land Taxes by Action in Rem Pursuant to Rev. Code §
5721.18(B)
XXX�NZEBJMZUSJCVOF�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

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

[Permanent Parcel Number: 16-01948.000 and 16-01949.000]
NOTICE OF FILING OF FORECLOSURE COMPLAINT
(R. C. 5721.181(B))
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that on the 18TH day of SEPTEMBER, 2019, Peggy Yost, Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio,
filed a complaint in the Common Pleas Court of Meigs County,
Ohio, at Pomeroy, Ohio, for the foreclosure of liens for delinquent taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and interest
against certain real property situated in such county, as described in that complaint.
The object of the action is to obtain from the court a judgment
foreclosing the tax liens against such real estate and ordering
the sale of such real estate for the satisfaction of
the tax liens on it.

AUCTIONS
Legals

In accordance with ORC,
Section 135.33, the Gallia,
Jackson, Meigs, Vinton Solid
Waste Management District
will accept applications from
eligible financial institutions
within the district to become
public depository of the active
monies of the district.
All applications should be
received by 12/9/19 and sent
to GJMV Solid Waste
Management District, 1056 S.
New Hampshire Avenue,
Wellston, OH 45692 to the
attention of Cindy Saltsman.
For further information call
740-384-2164.

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Equal Housing Opportunity

Garage/Yard Sale
collection of life, r.r. lock,
misc. furniture,whicker baby
carriage.fenton,oil lamps,
rocker,rocking chairs, glass
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MARK PORTER FORD

OH-70149531

LEGALS

Such action is brought against the real property only and no
personal judgment shall be entered in it. However, if pursuant
to the action the property is sold for an amount that is less than
the amount of the delinquent taxes, assessments, charges,
penalties, and interest against it, the court, in a separate order,
may enter a deficiency judgment against the owner of record of
a parcel for the amount of the difference; if that owner of record
is a corporation, the court may enter the deficiency judgment
against the stockholder holding a majority of the corporation's
stock.

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The permanent parcel number of each parcel included in such
action; the full street address of the parcel, if available; a description of the parcel as set forth in the associated delinquent
land tax certificate or master list of delinquent tracts; a statement of the amount of the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and interest due and unpaid on the parcel; the name and
address of the last known owner of the parcel as they appear
on the general tax list; and the names and addresses of each
lien holder and other person with an interest in the parcel identified in a statutorily required title search relating to the parcel; all
as more fully set forth in the complaint, are as follows:
Permanent Parcel Number: 16-01948.000 and 16-01949.000
Street Address: 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Tax List Description: 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, OH 45769
Last Known Owners, Lienholder, or Others with Interest in
Land:
Helen Townsend, subject to life estate reserved to Dora Wining
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, OH 45769
c/o Michelle Alikanana
6198 107th Ave. N., Pinellas Park, FL 33782
Bankers Trust Company of California
2000 Avenue of the Stars, San Diego, CA 92127
Amount Due and Unpaid:
$9,492.32 for 16-01948.000
$487.24 for 16-01949.000
$9,979.56 Total for both parcels
Complete Legal Description of the Parcel May Be Obtained:
Deed from Dora Wining, a widow and not re-married, to Helen
Townsend, signed September 23, 1996, received for records
October 18,1996, and recorded Volume 43 Page 553 of the Official Records of Meigs County, Ohio.
Any person owning or claiming any right, title, or interest in, or
lien upon, any parcel of real property above listed may file an
answer in such action setting forth the nature and amount of interest owned or claimed and any defense or objection to the
foreclosure. Such answer shall be filed in the office of the undersigned clerk of the court, and a copy of the answer shall be
served on the prosecuting attorney, on or before the 6th day of
November, 2019(twenty-eight days after the date of final publication of this notice).
If no answer is filed with respect to a parcel listed in the complaint, on or before the date specified as the last day for filing
an answer, a judgment of foreclosure will be taken by default as
to that parcel. Any parcel as to which a foreclosure is taken by
default shall be sold for the satisfaction of the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and interest, and the costs incurred
in the foreclosure proceeding, which are due and unpaid.
At any time prior to the filing of an entry of confirmation of sale,
any owner or lienholder of, or other person with an interest in, a
parcel listed in the complaint may redeem the parcel by tendering to the treasurer the amount of the taxes, assessments,
charges, penalties, and interest due and unpaid on the parcel,
together with all costs incurred in the proceeding instituted
against the parcel under section 5721.18 of the Revised Code.
Upon the filing of any entry of confirmation of sale, there shall
be no further equity of redemption. After the filing of any such
entry, any person claiming any right, title, or interest in, or lien
upon, any parcel shall be forever barred and foreclosed of any
such right, title, or interest in, lien upon, and any equity of redemption in, such parcel.
9/25/19, 10/2/19, 10/9/19

�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Mayfield, Browns bruised after blasting by 49ers
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Baker Mayﬁeld apparently offended Richard
Sherman and paid for
it. Mayﬁeld got hunted,
bear-hugged, sacked and
mocked by Nick Bosa
in front of a national TV
audience.
On a trip out west, the
Browns went south.
The 49ers utterly beat
them down.
Mayﬁeld was under
siege by San Francisco’s
ferocious defensive front
and played the worst
game of his young career
Monday night, and Cleveland’s lines were overpowered throughout a
31-3 loss to the 49ers that
has raised new questions
about the Browns’ quarterback, coach Freddie
Kitchens and the future.
After ﬁve games, the
Browns (2-3) are an
enigma. Good one week,
bad the next. This time,
brutally bad.
“The inconsistency
is killing us right now,”
said Mayﬁeld, not playing with nearly the con-

ﬁdence he showed as a
rookie.
The high expectations
placed on the Browns
during the preseason, a
rosy outlook based solely
on talent and potential,
not only seem unfounded
but unfeasible.
Against the well-rested
and underrated Niners,
Mayﬁeld threw two of his
league-high eight interceptions, got sacked four
times, ﬁnished with just
100 yards passing and a
13.4 rating.
He inadvertently set
the tone for the dismal
performance before kickoff, when Sherman said
the Browns’ brash QB
disrespected him by not
shaking his hand during
the coin toss. The slight
motivated the Niners.
“That’s some college
(stuff),” Sherman told
NFL Network. “It’s ridiculous. We’re all trying
to get psyched up, but
shaking hands with your
opponent — that’s NFL
etiquette. And when you
pull bush league stuff,

that’s disrespectful to the
game. And believe me,
that’s gonna get us ﬁred
up. … Respect the game.”
Sherman picked off
Mayﬁeld on Cleveland’s
second series.
One of Mayﬁeld’s college stunts also came
back to haunt him.
Bosa, the No. 2 overall
pick from Ohio State,
pressured Mayﬁeld into
an intentional grounding
call late in the ﬁrst half
and celebrated by pretending to wave and plant
a ﬂag. The gesture was
aimed at Mayﬁeld, who
in 2017 tried to impale an
Oklahoma ﬂag into the
turf at Ohio Stadium after
leading the Sooners to a
win over the Buckeyes.
“He had it coming,”
said Bosa.
There’s no denying
Mayﬁeld and the Browns,
who played a strong allaround game last week in
a win at Baltimore, have
become a target.
All the hype has made
them one of the league’s
top attractions — prob-

ably long before they
deserved to be. But it has
also built them up to be
pulled down as they’re
facing adversity and the
scrutiny that comes along
with being on magazine
covers and network commercials.
Mayﬁeld has brought
some of it on with his
attitude and antics — old
and new.
It all starts with him,
and until they start winning consistently, he and
the Browns will be under
attack.
“Once again, we’re not
hitting the panic button,”
Mayﬁeld said. “For us,
we know the problem. We
know we have to be better and do better. When
you play a great team,
you have to eliminate mistakes. You just have to.
We know exactly what we
need to do. We need to
play well.”

duction was curtailed by
a huge deﬁcit and Cleveland needing to throw to
catch up.
Chubb only had one
catch and Kitchens may
need to ﬁnd more ways
to get him involved in the
passing scheme.
What needs help
Mayﬁeld seems to
be regressing. He’s not
sensing pressure well
or stepping up in the
pocket to make throws.
For the second week in a
row, he only completed
two passes to star Odell
Beckham Jr., who has
been a good citizen and
teammate and hasn’t
publicly grumbled about
not getting the ball.
Not yet.
Kitchens was creative Monday night in
using Beckham in the
backﬁeld and having
him throw a pass, but
the Browns’ inability to
have Mayﬁeld complete
passes to the team’s best
offensive threat is alarming.

What’s working
Running back Nick
Chubb gained 87 yards
on 16 carries, but his pro-

Stock up
Rookie punter Jamie
Gillan continues to be a
bright spot. The AFC’s
top special teams player
in September averaged
56.7 yards on seven kicks,
one a 71-yarder. He also
pinned the Niners inside
their 20 four times.
Stock down
There are other factors
involved, but Mayﬁeld is
playing poorly. Period.
He’s got just four TD
passes in ﬁve games. He
seems hesitant at times,
panicky at others. He’s
sailing throws and locking in on receivers, a
habit that will be exposed
by pro defensive backs.
Mayﬁeld’s not making
plays with his legs, something he did so well in
college and last season.
Kitchens is accepting
some of the blame, contending he needs to put
his young QB in better
situations to succeed. But
ultimately it comes down
to Mayﬁeld making plays
and he’s not.

Texier scores in OT, Blue Jackets beat Sabres 4-3
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
With the game tied 3-3 in overtime, Nick Foligno stole the
puck from Buffalo’s Jack Eichel
at the back boards and passed
out to Alexandre Texier skating
free through the right circle.
The rookie sealed the ﬁrst win
of the season for the Columbus
Blue Jackets.
The 20-year-old Texier’s snap
shot past Linus Ullmark 2:08
into overtime lifted Columbus
to a 4-3 win over Buffalo on
Monday night. It also gave the
Blue Jackets a much-needed
shot of conﬁdence after losing
their ﬁrst two games by a combined score of 10-3.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

51°

67°

66°

Sunshine and nice today. Mostly cloudy tonight.
High 75° / Low 52°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

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.

67°
50°
71°
47°
93° in 2007
29° in 2000

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.01
2.78
0.70
37.25
33.73

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:32 a.m.
6:59 p.m.
5:27 p.m.
3:20 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

New

Oct 13 Oct 21 Oct 27

First

Nov 4

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

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

Major
9:14a
9:53a
10:31a
11:09a
11:48a
12:09a
12:54a

Minor
3:03a
3:42a
4:20a
4:59a
5:38a
6:20a
7:05a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
74/52

Moderate

High

Very High

Major
9:36p
10:14p
10:52p
11:29p
---12:30p
1:16p

Minor
3:25p
4:04p
4:41p
5:19p
5:59p
6:41p
7:27p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 9, 1804, a hurricane in New
England caused massive damage. Tropical moisture and cold air
combined in central New England;
2-3 feet of snow fell in the Berkshires
and Green Mountains.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
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. Tue.

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

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

Level
13.29
15.89
21.69
12.55
12.91
24.43
12.99
26.51
34.75
12.98
18.30
34.80
16.10

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.13
-0.89
+0.17
-0.40
-0.11
-0.84
-0.14
+0.95
+0.34
+0.10
+2.70
+0.70
+2.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Partly sunny

Marietta
74/49
Belpre
75/50

Athens
73/48

St. Marys
74/49

Parkersburg
75/50

Coolville
74/50

Elizabeth
75/51

Spencer
75/50

Buffalo
76/53
Milton
77/53

St. Albans
78/53

Huntington
77/52

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
54/36
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
72/55
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
75/59
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

70°
44°

Plenty of sunshine

Murray City
73/48

Ironton
77/54

Ashland
77/54
Grayson
76/54

MONDAY

65°
38°

Wilkesville
73/49
POMEROY
Jackson
74/51
74/50
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
75/52
75/51
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
74/53
GALLIPOLIS
75/52
76/52
75/52

South Shore Greenup
77/53
75/52

63
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
75/53

Mostly cloudy,
showers around;
cooler

play — scored from the bottom
of the right circle off a sharp
behind-the-net feed from Alexander Wennberg.
Early in the second period, it
was Buffalo’s turn to capitalize
on a power play. Johansson,
signed as an unrestricted free
agent in the summer, got his
ﬁrst goal with the Sabres on a
one-timer from the right circle
to cut Columbus’ lead to 2-1.
Skinner tied the score for
Buffalo later in the second
when he picked Ryan Murray’s
pocket in the defensive zone
on the Blue Jackets’ transition
and riﬂed a shot past Korpisalo
from 30 feet.

73°
47°
An afternoon shower
possible

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
73/48

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed cause
Mold: 881

Logan
73/48

SUNDAY

63°
37°

Warm with intervals
of clouds and sun

Adelphi
73/49
Chillicothe
74/50

SATURDAY

79°
56°

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

Waverly
73/51

Pollen: 1

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Warm with clouds
and sun

0

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
7:33 a.m.
6:58 p.m.
5:55 p.m.
4:17 a.m.

THURSDAY

78°
51°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

way, we struggled to ﬁnd our
game, especially in the ﬁrst
period,” coach Ralph Krueger
said. “Linus gave us a chance.
We still showed character
tonight to come back from two
down, thanks to Linus buying
us some time.”
Bjorkstrand, playing in his
200th NHL game, got his ﬁrst
goal of the season with 1:51 left
in the ﬁrst when he grabbed a
carom off the back boards and
shot from a sharp angle, bouncing the puck in off Ullmark’s
back.
The Blue Jackets struck
again quickly when Atkinson
— just 9 seconds into a power

Foligno, Oliver Bjorkstrand
and Cam Atkinson also scored
for the Blue Jackets, who outshot Buffalo 44-18. Joonas Korpisalo had 15 saves.
Marcus Johansson and Jeff
Skinner added goals for Buffalo, and Ullmark, making his
ﬁrst start of the season, had 40
saves.
“We’ve just got recharge, be
a little bit sour about the loss
today,” Ullmark said. “It’s going
to be a new day tomorrow.
There’s nothing else to it.”
It was the ﬁrst loss for Buffalo.
“After a couple of games
where everything went our

“(Foligno) came out with
the puck — he did a great job,”
Texier said. “I was alone in the
middle.”
After going up 2-0 in the
ﬁrst period, Columbus let the
Sabres climb back in. With the
Blue Jackets leading 3-2 late,
Buffalo pulled its goalie on a
power play to create a 6-on-4
advantage and got a goal from
Victor Olofsson to tie the score.
That set the stage for Texier’s heroics.
“Well deserved,” Columbus
coach John Tortorella said. “He
was probably our best forward,
our most consistent forward
tonight.”

Clendenin
77/50
Charleston
78/52

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
47/33
Montreal
60/42

Billings
29/17

Minneapolis
70/54

Toronto
62/45
Detroit
69/53

New York
59/52

Chicago
70/54

Denver
76/22

Washington
65/56

Kansas City
66/58

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
69/30/s
46/37/r
82/61/s
63/55/r
72/53/pc
28/10/pc
49/27/s
58/52/r
80/50/pc
80/57/pc
24/10/sn
74/62/pc
81/58/pc
73/54/pc
78/53/pc
91/53/pc
29/12/sn
68/41/sh
69/56/pc
88/76/t
90/73/s
79/62/pc
73/40/t
67/45/s
85/67/s
81/57/s
82/63/pc
87/78/t
64/45/r
84/64/pc
90/76/pc
59/54/r
77/37/t
87/72/pc
66/52/c
87/58/s
70/47/s
58/45/r
76/51/pc
74/51/pc
79/65/c
44/24/pc
77/54/s
59/39/s
73/56/pc

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

Monterrey
90/70

97° in Thermal, CA
8° in Antero Reservoir, CO

Global

Houston
87/72
Chihuahua
89/60

Today
Hi/Lo/W
78/49/s
52/42/r
80/63/pc
64/57/r
62/52/sh
29/17/sn
49/24/pc
61/52/sh
78/52/pc
77/54/c
65/12/pc
70/54/s
75/56/s
72/51/s
74/53/s
88/74/s
76/22/pc
69/57/pc
69/53/s
88/78/pc
87/72/pc
74/56/s
66/58/pc
89/52/s
80/60/pc
75/59/s
76/58/pc
87/76/t
70/54/pc
81/61/pc
90/74/pc
59/52/r
79/67/pc
85/73/t
59/53/r
95/66/s
69/47/s
60/45/c
72/54/c
69/52/c
75/60/s
49/29/pc
72/55/s
54/36/s
65/56/c

EXTREMES TUESDAY
Atlanta
80/63

El Paso
88/65

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

High
Low
Miami
87/76

110° in Rafha, Saudi Arabia
-28° in Ust-Omchug, Russia

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

OH-70107872

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