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                  <text>Rita Kay’s
opens in
Mason

Today
in
History

Education
on Helmet
Rule

BUSINESS s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 127, Volume 72

Thursday, August 9, 2018 s 50¢

Promoting Throwback Thursday: Meigs County Fair
a healthy
workplace
Fitness equipment
available for
county employees
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

POMEROY — In
an effort to promote a
healthier workplace, ﬁtness equipment is now
available for use by all
Meigs County employees.
During their regular
meeting last week, the
Meigs County Commissioners approved a
shared use agreement,
along with Meigs
County EMS Director Robbie Jacks and
Creating Healthy Communities Director Ciara
Martin, to allow the use
of the equipment by all
county employees.
The Creating Healthy
Communities program
that is funded through
the Ohio Department
of Health purchased
exercise equipment to
be housed at the Meigs
County EMS facility,
explained Martin.
This exercise equipment is to be used
by all Meigs County
employees.
“Utilization rates are
being tracked, and a
satisfaction survey will
be conducted to determine the effectiveness
of the project,” said

Martin.
The ﬁtness equipment is the newest part
of the plan to improve
the health and wellness
of the employees of all
county ofﬁces.
The commissioners
also recently approved
allowing for county
employees to take an
extra 30 minutes on
their lunch break, up to
three times per week,
if the time is used for
walking or other ﬁtness
activity.
In other business,
the commissioners conducted a bid opening
for the 2018 County
Resurfacing Project,
parts 1, 2 and 3, which
will include the paving of several roads,
including portions of
Portland Road, Rocksprings Road, Leading
Creek Road (the short
side toward Middleport), Storys Run and
Pomeroy Pike. The lone
bid was in the amount
of $1,384,813.22 from
Shelly Company of
Thornville, Ohio. The
bid and accompanying information was
referred to the Meigs
County Engineer for
review.
A resolution for the
engineer’s ofﬁce was
also approved for the
annual pavement marking project.
A bereavement policy
See HEALTHY | 5

Courtesy photo

Fitness equipment is now available at Meigs County EMS for
use by county employees.

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
TV listings: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Meigs County Historical Society and The Daily Sentinel archives

The 155th Meigs County Fair holds true to its
roots with activities planned at the historic
Grandstand. Built in 1890, the Grandstand is
an unusual structure that has been built to
match the curve in the racetrack. Designed as
a half-moon on the first turn in the mid-1880s
by Lore Davis, it is the only structure of its
type at a fairground in the state of Ohio and
is listed on the National Registry of Historic
Places. The undated photo shows activities at
the Grandstand during the fair. Another piece
of history on the Fairgrounds is the FosterJenkinson Log Cabin which was relocated to the
fairgrounds and reconstructed for the 1987 Fair.
The cabin dates back to 1829 when it was built
by Edward Foster and James Jenkinson at at top
of Jenkinson Hill, north of the former Salisbury
School. The cabin is overseen by the Meigs
County Historical Society who will have displays
and activities in the building during fair week.

Ready for the Fair

Junior Fair
Board works
to prepare

barn spaces, fair passes
for 4-H clubs, FFA members and others, cleaning
in the barns and buildings, setup of the arena,
painting, clean-up of trash
and debris, preparing ribbons and awards for the
numerous shows, parade
and opening ceremony
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
preparations, and other
event planning.
One new feature this
ROCKSPRINGS —
year for the livestock
With the fair quickly
events will be Old Timer
approaching members of
Showmanship. The conthe Meigs County Junior
test for those 19 years of
Fair Board spent time last
age and older will be held
week preparing for the
Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
following the hog, sheep,
week-long event.
Junior Fair Board members spent time last week working at the
The 22 Junior Fair
Meigs County Fairgrounds to prepare for the 155th Meigs County goat, chicken, rabbit, beef
and horse shows. Dairy
Board Members, along
Fair.
has their own event.
with coordinator Jenna
The cost to enter is $5,
pleted were buyer letters
the arena and a little bit
Meeks and others,
worked to prepare every- of everything in between. for the Livestock Sale,
See FAIR | 5
Among the items com- stall cards for each of the
thing from the barns to

Court: State can base funding on data
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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com and visit us on
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thoughts.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Ohio had authority to calculate a
giant online charter school’s funding using student participation
data rather than only enrollment,
the state Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday in the latest blow to
the now-dismantled e-school.
The Electronic Classroom of
Tomorrow, which had been among
the nation’s largest virtual schools,
closed to its roughly 12,000 students in January but remains of
interest to prosecutors reviewing
audit ﬁndings and politicians raising accountability issues in a midterm election year.
The Associated Press reported
in April allegations by a former
ECOT employee that the school

intentionally inﬂated attendance
data in order to draw more state
money, a claim largely validated in
state audit ﬁndings that have been
referred to criminal investigators.
ECOT had argued in court that
Ohio’s Department of Education
overstepped its authority when
it used student learning time to
determine the school owed the
state a $60 million refund from
the 2015-16 school year. But justices sided with the state in a 4-2
decision afﬁrming a lower court’s
ruling, concluding the department
acted within its authority under
Ohio law.
“We determine that (the law) is
unambiguous and authorizes ODE
to require an e-school to provide

data of the duration of a student’s
participation to substantiate that
school’s funding,” Justice Patrick
Fischer wrote for the majority.
ECOT attorney Marion Little
said the school was disappointed
but would continue to pursue its
administrative challenges to the
Education Department in lower
courts.
“The two dissenting opinions
extensively detail why ECOT
should have prevailed and why
ECOT, the auditor’s ofﬁce, even
ODE, had always applied an enrollment methodology,” he said.
The department had argued that
ECOT was interpreting state law
See SCHOOL | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, August 9, 2018

RICHARD OLIN KNAPP II

OBITUARIES
ROGER F. DILLARD

Courtesy photo

New TOPS officers are (left to right) MaryBeth Morrison, Cindy
Hyde, Pat Snedden, Mary Bush and Roberta Henderson.

TOPS installs
new officers

The Tuppers Plains Chapter of TOPS met at the
St. Paul’s United Methodist Church. The meeting was called to order with the TOPS (Taking
Pounds off Sensibly) and KOPS (Keeping Off
Pounds Sensibly) pledges; as well as the Pledge of
Allegiance.
There were 12 present with Caroline Triplett
being the Top Loser. MaryBeth Morrison was top
loser for the month of July.
The evening was ﬁlled with excitement as
the installation ceremony for newly elected and
appointed ofﬁcers was held. Connie Rankin ofﬁciated over the candle lighting ceremony. The theme
was, “Spicing it Up,” representing how each ofﬁcer, in her own way, adds ﬂavor to the group.
The ofﬁcers for the upcoming year are: Leader,
Pat Snedden; Co-leader, Cindy Hyde; Secretary,
MaryBeth Morrison; Treasurer, Mary Bush and
Weight Recorder, Roberta Henderson.
Veggie BINGO was enjoyed before the meeting
concluded.
For more information about TOPS or to join the
Tuppers Plains’ Chapter support meetings, call Pat
Snedden at 740-541-9696. Weekly meetings are
Mondays at 6 p.m.

Submitted by Mary F Bush

POMEROY — Roger F.
Dillard, age 84, of Pomeroy, Ohio, passed away
peacefully on Sunday,
Aug. 5, 2018. He was
born Nov. 12, 1933, in
Middleport, Ohio, to the
late John and Irma Hulbert Dillard.
Roger graduated from
Middleport High School
in 1951 and attended
Ohio University. He married Charlotte Knight in
1954, then enlisted in
the US Army where they
were stationed in Heidelberg, Germany. After
serving, Roger and his
wife resided in Pomeroy
to raise their family.
He worked in Pomeroy and Gallipolis in the
automobile business and
enjoyed cards, golﬁng,
the gun club, F.O.E. and

Daily Sentinel

spending time in his later
years enjoying his family
and reminiscing.
Roger was preceded in
death by his wife, Charlotte and his oldest son,
Jon Dillard.
He is survived by
sons, Mark (Mary)
Dillard, Roger (Vicky)
Dillard, Jr., Matthew
Dillard, David Dillard
and daughters Marcia
(Allen) Siers, Melanie
(Steve) Needens and
Daphne (Rasce) Engelhardt, along with 18
grandchildren and 14
great-grandchildren.
Roger’s family is honoring his wishes of no
public service. A registry is available at www.
andersonmcdaniel.com,
any memories would be
welcome.

DUNN
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Wanda Lou Dunn, 77, of
Huntington, W.Va., died on Sunday, Aug. 5, 2018, at
her residence surrounded by her children.
A celebration of her life and God’s promise will be
conducted by Tracy Call, at 11 a.m. at Barton Chapel
Church, Friday, Aug. 10, 2018. Burial will follow the
service at Barton Cemetery. The family will receive
visitors at the church from 10-11 a.m. prior to the
service.
Deal Funeral Home of Point Pleasant is in charge of
arrangements.
HUDSON
CROWN CITY — Robert O. “Bob” Hudson, 64, of
Crown City, died on August 8, 2018 at his residence.
The funeral service will be conducted at 1 p.m. on
Saturday, August 11, 2018 at Willis Funeral Home
with Pastor Randy Carnes and Pastor Alfred Holley
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Providence Cemetery.
Friends may call from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturday,
August 11, 2018 at the funeral home.

POMEROY
— Richard Olin
Knapp II, 70, of
Pomeroy, Ohio,
passed away on
Aug. 5, 2018.
He was born on
Aug. 25, 1947, in
Mason, West Virginia son
of the late Richard Olin
Knapp and Daisy Ruth
Burris Knapp.
It is with great sadness
that the family of Richard
Knapp announces his
passing.
Richard graduated from
Wahama High School.
He worked and managed
Imperial Electric for 24
years. He worked as a
supervisor at OAmes
Plant in Parkersburg,
W.Va., and also worked
for Brown Services as
a safety coordinator on
construction for various
AEP jobs.
Richard liked to ﬁsh
and hunt and he enjoyed
time outside. He was
witty and fun loving to
all. He would help anyone
that needed it.
Richard was a long
time member of the
Shade River Masonic
Lodge #453. He was a
faithful and loving family

man to his wife of
45 years, Pennee
and to his daughter and grandchildren.
He is survived
by his wife, Pennee; a daughter,
Courtney (Craig) Collins; granddaughter,
Kaloni Collins; grandson,
Keyon Collins; brother,
James (Carolyn) Knapp;
nieces, Stephanie (Keith)
Hart, Jessica (Travis)
Edwards; many nieces
and nephews; special
friends, Ray Keefer,
Randy Burke, Dave and
Katie Wright; Mike, Jody,
Brandon and Bradley
Goeglein; and many
great friends that he
loved like family at Let’s
Dock Campground in
Syracuse, Ohio.
Funeral services will be
held on Friday, Aug. 10,
2018, at 11 a.m. at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with
Pastor Tom Curtis ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at
Meigs Memory Gardens.
Visiting hours will be on
Thursday from 5-8 p.m.
at the funeral home with
Masonic services at 7:45
p.m.

COWDERY
REEDSVILLE — James Cowdery, 78, of Reedsville,
Ohio, died Wednesday, Aug. 8, 2018.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, Ohio.
LANE
PICKERINGTON — Phillip R. Lane, 68, Pickerington, formerly of Gallipolis, died Tuesday evening,
August 7, 2018, at his residence. Arrangements will
be announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Gallipolis.

Congressman charged with insider trading

IN BRIEF

Prosecutor
ousted

contest all but assures
Bell of victory in
November. The Republicans have not put up a
candidate.
FERGUSON, Mo.
“People did not think
(AP) — Four years
it could be done,” the
after the deadly police
shooting that triggered 43-year-old Bell said in
an interview Wednesracial unrest in Ferguday. “The message
son and helped give
rise to the Black Lives we would tell people
is, ‘You don’t have to
Matter movement, a
believe it, yet, just supblack city councilman
port it.’”
scored an election
Bell said what resoupset and ousted the
white prosecutor criti- nated with voters was
cized over his handling his platform of reforms
such as holding police
of the case.
Wesley Bell’s stunning more accountable, revisdefeat of seven-term St. ing the cash bail system
and ending prosecuLouis County prosecution of low-level drug
tor Bob McCulloch in
crimes.
Tuesday’s Democratic

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Revival
OAK HILL — A
revival will be held at
Camp Canaan, 6 miles
north of Oak Hill on
State Route 93, from
Aug. 6-12. Services will
be held at 10 a.m. and 7

p.m. daily, with the ﬁnal
day of services (Aug.
12) to have services at
10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Evangelists are Rev.
Billy McCoy of Mt.
Gilead, Ohio, and Rev.
Ronald Carlson of Tennessee.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@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.

By Tom Hays

news came out.
Collins, 68, is a
staunch supporter of
President Donald Trump
NEW YORK —
who was among the ﬁrst
Republican U.S. Rep.
two sitting members of
Christopher Collins of
Congress to endorse his
western New York state
was arrested Wednesday candidacy for the White
House.
on charges he fed inside
He pleaded not guilty
information he gleaned
from sitting on the board to an indictment unsealed
in Manhattan federal
of a biotechnology comcourt. The indictment
pany to his son, helping
family and friends dodge charges Collins, the conhundreds of thousands of gressman’s son and the
dollars in losses when bad father of the son’s ﬁancee

Associated Press

with conspiracy, securities fraud, wire fraud and
making false statements
to the FBI.
Prosecutors said the
charges stem from Collins’ decision to share
with his son insider
information about Innate
Immunotherapeutics
Limited, a biotechnology
company headquartered
in Sydney, Australia, with
ofﬁces in Auckland, New
Zealand. Collins was the
company’s largest share-

holder, with nearly 17
percent of its shares, and
sat on its board.
According to the
indictment, Collins was
attending the Congressional Picnic at the
White House on June
22, 2017, when he
received an email from
the company’s chief
executive saying that a
trial of a drug the company developed to treat
multiple sclerosis was a
clinical failure.

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.

conduct an Immunization Clinic
on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m., at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $30.00 donation
is appreciated for immunization
MEIGS COUNTY — Delivery
routes for The Daily Sentinel have administration; however, no one
been adjusted in an effort to better will be denied services because of
serve our readers. Please be patient an inability to pay an administration fee for state-funded childhood
during this transition. If you have
vaccines. Please bring medical
questions or concerns please call
cards and/or commercial insurCarol at 740-444-4292 or Derrick
ance cards, if applicable. Shingles
at 740-446-2342 ext. 2097.
and pneumonia vaccines are also
available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit
our website at www.meigs-health.
com to see a list of accepted comHARRISONVILLE — Harrison- mercial insurances and Medicaid
for adults.
ville Presbyterian Church, State
The Ohio Department of Health
Route 143, Harrisonville, Ohio,
(ODH) does NOT recommended
will hold its 10th annual school
supply giveaway, Saturday, Aug. 11, for routine Hepatitis A vaccination
from 11 a.m.-1 p.m., featuring free of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the Advisory Committee on
school supplies (backpacks, pens,
Immunization Practices (ACIP)
pencils, crayons, paper, etc.), free
does NOT recommend routine
food, games, face painting, some
Hepatitis A vaccination for Food
clothing, and $25 shoe coupons
(redeemable at Shoe Show, Mason, Workers. Currently, ODH is strongly recommending the following
W.Va. for school shoes or boots
only). Coupons are limited and will groups to get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who have sex with men,
be given out on a ﬁrst-come, ﬁrstpersons who inject drugs and perserved basis.
son who use illegal non-injection
RUTLAND — The Friends of
Rutland will host a Back-to-School drugs. These are the highest risk
Bash on Monday, Aug. 20 from 5-7 groups for transmission of Hepatitis A. Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine
p.m. at Rutland Fireman’s Park.
availability.
Activities will include inﬂatables,
face painting, emergency vehicle
tours, music, school supply giveaways and refreshments.

Delivery Route
Changes

School Supply
Giveaway

Immunization
Clinic Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department will

noon. Each class will be $10 with
all materials furnished. For more
info call Wendy at 740-416-4015.

Road Closures
and Restrictions

BURLINGHAM — A culvert
replacement project starts on Aug.
6, on State Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking
place between Burlingham Road
(County Road 40) and Gold Ridge
Road (Township Road 130). The
road will be closed in this area.
ODOT’s detour is State Route 681
to US 50 to US 33. The estimated
completion date is August 17,
2018.
RACINE — Meigs County Road
28, Bashan Road, will be closed
between C-31, Bald Knobs-Stiversville Road, and T-109, Carmel
Road, for approximately 4 weeks
beginning Monday, July 23. County
forces will be repairing a slip in
this area.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert
replacement project begins on July
27, on State Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place
between US 33 and Markham Road
(Township Road 652). One lane
will be closed in this area. Temporary trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot
width restriction will be in place.
The estimated completion date is
Aug. 31, 2018.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert
replacement project begins on July
30 on State Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place
between Fredrick Road (Township Road 618) and Haning Ridge
MIDDLEPORT — Wendy Miller Road(Township Road 233). The
road will be closed in this area.
will be offering Children’s Art
Classes at Riverbend Arts Council, ODOT’s detour is SR 681 to US 50
to US 33. The estimated comple290 N. 2nd, Middleport, on Monday, August 20, from 10:30 a.m. to tion date is Aug. 10, 2018.

Art Classes for
Kids at Riverbend

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 9, 2018 3

A ‘sweet’ new addition in Mason
Concern in Arkansas town
highlights trade fears in US states
mism has been giving
way to concern in recent
months amid President
Donald Trump’s escalating trade dispute with
China.
The threat of a fullblown trade war has
delayed the project further and prompted the
state’s governor to send
his top economic development ofﬁcial to China
to make sure it stays on
track. It also has caused
other Chinese companies
considering investing
in Arkansas to put their
plans on hold.
“It’s like a dark cloud
hanging over the future

Bill Clinton’s debut
novel is a million seller

Twitter CEO
defends
decision not to
ban Alex Jones

NEW YORK (AP) — Bill Clinton is a now a
million-selling novelist.
“The President is Missing,” a thriller co-written
with James Patterson, has more than 1 million
combined hardcover, e-book and audio sales in
North America alone since coming out June 4.
The book is Clinton’s ﬁrst of work of ﬁction, but in
Patterson he had one of the world’s most proliﬁc
and successful novelists for a collaborator. Reviews
were mixed, but Barnes &amp; Noble ﬁction buyer
Sessalee Hensley said in a statement released
Wednesday by co-publishers Alfred A. Knopf and
Little Brown and Co. that “The President is Missing” had beneﬁted from “very strong” word of
mouth.
“In a summer marked by nonﬁction successes,
this novel has proven to have remarkable legs,”
Hensley said.
The book’s subject has also proved timely: a
potentially devastating cyberattack, which intelligence experts have called a leading concern.
Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats said
in mid-July that “the warning lights are blinking
red” about a possible attack and called Russia the
“most aggressive foreign actor, no question.”
The Clinton-Patterson novel has dominated ﬁction charts. According to NPD BookScan, which
tracks around 85 percent of the hardcover and
paperback market, “The President is Missing”
is by far the year’s biggest ﬁction seller and the
only ﬁction work to crack the top 10 of the bestsellers overall for 2018. Nonﬁction releases such
as Michael Wolff’s “Fire and Fury” and James
Comey’s “A Higher Loyalty” have been attracting
the most sales.
Clinton, whose previous books include the memoir “My Life,” is now the rare author to have million sellers in ﬁction and nonﬁction.

Courtesy

Rita Cadle has recently opened her doors to her shop Rita Kays Sweets &amp; Treats and This &amp; That.
The store is comprised of several sorts of items and snacks. The shop is open Tuesday - Thursday,
10 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. Rita Kays Sweets &amp; Treats and This &amp; That is
located at 1619 2nd Street in Mason. For questions or concerns, contact Cadle at (304) 773-2503.

Amazon? Mysterious ‘Project
Rocket’ advances outside Atlanta
LAWRENCEVILLE,
Ga. (AP) — A mysterious economic development project codenamed “Project Rocket”
is advancing in Atlanta’s
suburbs.
The Atlanta JournalConstitution reports
that the identity of the
company seeking the
massive distribution
facility remains shroud-

OVP STOCK REPORT

ed in secrecy. The story
notes that e-commerce
giant Amazon has
reportedly been seeking
an Atlanta-area site for a
new fulﬁllment center.
Gwinnett County
Planning Commission
Chairman Chuck Warbington said he doesn’t
know who the tenant
would be, but voted to
recommend a special use

permit anyway, calling
it “an absolute gamechanger for new investment.”
Plans for “Project
Rocket” include more
than 1,800 employee
parking spaces outside
a 2.5-million-square-foot
facility with an 80-foottall (24-meter) building,
65 loading docks and 200
truck parking spaces.

Holzer welcomes
Leslie Patch, MD, FACS,
Board Certiﬁed
Ophthalmologist,
to our locations
in Jackson
and Gallipolis!

Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
$17.26
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
$90.05
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
$47.41
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
$43.66
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
$113.49
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
$36.15
Kroger Co(NYSE)
$30.61
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
$52.01
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
$80.43
American Electric Power(NYSE)
$70.93
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
$49.80
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
$12.02
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$30.00
Apple(NASDAQ)
$207.25
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
$46.15
Post Holdings
$96.10
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE)
$32.20
McDonald’s(NYSE)
$158.92
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions
on Aug. 8, 2018.

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

113 West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Tel 740-992-5479
Fax 740-992-6911

Dr. Patch specializes in:

warnerj1@nationwide.com

$ Oculoplastics:
» Eyelid surgery
» Lacrimal surgery
» Botox®

OH-70068551

For Sale by Owner:
26+ ACRE RURAL HOBBY FARM
WITH BUILDINGS

$ Cataract Surgery

2 older barns. 1-48’x120’ and 1-24’x50’ with horse stalls,
cattle managers, and frost free water trough. 1-16’x32’
pole barn. 1-newer 36’x60’ garage type building with
docks. 1-24’x60’, 2 bedroom - 1 bath shophouse with
partial basement. Newer ½ acre pond. Gallia Rural water to
most buildings. Fenced pasture in 6 different lots. Approximately 15 acres tillable currently in vegetables, corn and
hay. 2 greenhouses optional for additional price.

Ammon Troyers
62 Village St.
Patriot, OH 45658

$
$
$
$

Anterior Segment
Laser Surgery
Diabetic Retinopathy
Age-related Macular
Degeneration

Dr. Patch received her Doctor of Medicine at Warren Alpert Medical School of
Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. She completed her residency in
Ophthalmology at University of Colorado Eye Center, University of Colorado
School of Medicine in Aurora, Colorado. Dr. Patch completed an ASOPRS
approved fellowship in Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the
University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wisconsin. She is Board Certiﬁed by the
American Board of Ophthalmology.

$180,000
OH-70067926

LONDON (AP) —
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey
defended his company’s
decision not to ban
right-wing conspiracy
theorist Alex Jones and
his “Infowars” show, as
many other social media
platforms have done, saying he did not break any
rules.
Facebook, Apple, YouTube and Spotify took
down over the past week
material published by
Jones, reﬂecting more
aggressive enforcement
of their hate speech
policies after rising online
backlash and raising pressure on Twitter to do the
same.
Jones’ Facebook
account has also been
suspended for 30 days
but he still has a “veriﬁed” Twitter account. A
separate Twitter account
for “Infowars” is also still
running.
“We didn’t suspend
Alex Jones or Infowars
yesterday,” Dorsey said
in a series of tweets late
Tuesday . “We know
that’s hard for many but
the reason is simple: he
hasn’t violated our rules.
We’ll enforce if he does.”
Dorsey said Twitter did
not want to take “one-off
actions to make us feel
good in the short term,
and adding fuel to new
conspiracy theories.”
He said he wanted the
company to avoid succumbing to outside pressure but instead impartially enforce straightforward principles “regardless of political viewpoints.” He also linked to
a blog post Tuesday by
the company’s vice president for trust and safety,
Del Harvey, outlining the
company’s policies.
“Twitter is reﬂective of
real conversations happening in the world and
that sometimes includes
perspectives that may be
offensive, controversial,
and/or bigoted,” she
said. “While we welcome
everyone to express themselves on our service, we
prohibit targeted behavior
that harasses, threatens,
or uses fear to silence the
voices of others.”
Jones, who has 858,000
followers on Twitter, has
built up his proﬁle while
promulgating conspiracy
theories, including the
claim that the 9/11 terror
attacks were carried out
by the government. He
is perhaps most notorious for claiming that the
2012 Sandy Hook mass
school shooting, which
left 26 children and adults
dead, was a hoax and that
the surviving relatives
are paid actors. Family
members of some of the
victims are suing Jones
for defamation.

of the project,” Stephen
Bell, the president and
chief executive ofﬁcer
of the Arkadelphia Area
Chamber of Commerce.
“Right now, the clouds
are off on the horizon.
But I think no one knows
where the trade situation
is going right now.”
The uncertainty in
Arkansas, where voters
overwhelmingly supported Trump in the 2016
president election, highlights how U.S. states
are trying to ease the
sting of the president’s
threatened trade war
by appealing directly to
Chinese companies.

OH-70064432

ARKADELPHIA,
Ark. (AP) — A Chinese
company’s announcement two years ago that
it would spend more
than $1 billion and hire
hundreds of workers
for a paper mill on the
outskirts of this rural
college town was seen as
a much-needed shot in
the arm for the region’s
economy.
A web video promoting Arkadelphia — “It’s
a great place to call
home!” — continues to
tout the Sun Paper project and its potential to
generate jobs and boost
development. But opti-

Call 1.855.4HOLZER (1.855.446.5937)
to schedule an appointment!

www.holzer.org

�Opinion
4 Thursday, August 9, 2018

Daily Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

Today is Thursday, Aug. 9, the 221st day of
2018. There are 144 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On August 9, 1974, Vice President Gerald R.
Ford became the nation’s 38th chief executive as
President Richard Nixon’s resignation took effect.
On this date:
In 1854, Henry David Thoreau’s “Walden,”
which described Thoreau’s experiences while living near Walden Pond in Massachusetts, was ﬁrst
published.
In 1902, Edward VII was
THOUGHT
crowned king of Britain
FOR TODAY
following the death of his
mother, Queen Victoria.
“The truth is lived,
In 1936, Jesse Owens
not taught.”
won his fourth gold medal
— Hermann Hesse,
German-born Swiss
at the Berlin Olympics as
poet and author
the United States took
(born 1877, died this
ﬁrst place in the 400-meter
date in 1962).
relay.
In 1944, 258 AfricanAmerican sailors based at Port Chicago, California, refused to load a munitions ship following a
cargo vessel explosion that killed 320 men, many
of them black. (Fifty of the sailors were convicted
of mutiny, ﬁned and imprisoned.)
In 1945, three days after the atomic bombing of
Hiroshima, Japan, a U.S. B-29 Superfortress codenamed Bockscar dropped a nuclear device (“Fat
Man”) over Nagasaki, killing an estimated 74,000
people.
In 1969, actress Sharon Tate and four other people were found brutally slain at Tate’s Los Angeles
home; cult leader Charles Manson and a group of
his followers were later convicted of the crime.
In 1982, a federal judge in Washington ordered
John W. Hinckley Jr., who’d been acquitted of
shooting President Ronald Reagan and three others by reason of insanity, committed to a mental
hospital.
In 1992, closing ceremonies were held for the
Barcelona Summer Olympics, with the Uniﬁed
Team of former Soviet republics winning 112 medals, the United States 108.
In 1995, Jerry Garcia, lead singer of the Grateful
Dead, died in Forest Knolls, California, of a heart
attack at age 53.
In 1997, Haitian immigrant Abner Louima was
brutalized in a Brooklyn, New York, stationhouse
by Ofﬁcer Justin Volpe, who raped him with a broken broomstick. (Volpe was later sentenced to 30
years in prison.) An Amtrak train with more than
300 people aboard derailed on a bridge near Kingman, Arizona; 183 people were injured.
In 2004, Oklahoma City bombing conspirator
Terry Nichols, addressing a court for the ﬁrst
time, asked victims of the blast for forgiveness
as a judge sentenced him to 161 consecutive life
sentences.
In 2014, Michael Brown Jr., an unarmed
18-year-old black man, was shot to death by a
police ofﬁcer following an altercation in Ferguson,
Missouri; Brown’s death led to sometimes-violent
protests in Ferguson and other U.S. cities.
Ten years ago:
Todd Bachman, the father of 2004 volleyball
Olympian Elisabeth “Wiz” Bachman, was stabbed
to death by a Chinese man in Beijing in an apparently random attack just hours after the start of
the Olympic Games. (The assailant took his own
life.)

THEIR VIEW

Beware of bogus bargains
One way to save money
is to buy used stuff. But
avoid being burnt by
being aware of bogus
bargains, deceptive duds,
and painted pigs.
“There are over 5,000
ﬂea market type operations in North America,
of which at least 1,000
are considered semipermanent. These markets
are also referred to as
swap meets, trash and
treasure, boot sales, and
outdoor markets.” www.
losspreventionmedia.
com/.
Watch out for new
paint on old items at
yard sales, ﬂea markets,
auctions, and Craigslist.
Heads up on a fantastic
deal that’s just too good
to be true. Pay attention
to the long-winded sale’s
pitch.
I bought an outdoor
wooden bench at a ﬂea
market. I knew it was
older, but I didn’t know it
was rotten. Within a year
when the paint started
peeling, I spied the decaying lumber.

clothes, shoes, and
Same thing
handbags. Just
happened when I
say, “NO.” FYI on
purchased a used
bootleg toys. Fake
concrete water
is not fair. Phony is
fountain. The shiny
baloney.
paint job fooled
And some items
me. The followMelissa
are a real steal
ing summer the
(pun intended).
crumbling concrete Martin
was revealed as the Contributing Stolen items can
columnist
be found anyweather wore off
where people
the paint.
buy and sell and
The next item
was a small trailer. Duped wheel and deal. Thieves
with drug addictions
again. As the gray paint
take from the rich and
peeled the rotting wood
poor and unload at outbecome apparent.
door markets and pawn
Sometimes decent
people go through tough shops. Some customand tight times and bam- ers think buying stolen
boozle for a buck. Desper- goods is okay because
they didn’t personally
ate people do desperate
ﬁlch the stuff. And look
things.
out for porch privates
Others have a ‘God
bless us two and not you’ (package thieves). Summentality and sell strang- mer is a prime-time for
crime.
ers a pig with lipstick.
Let the buyer beware.
They wouldn’t dare sell a
dud to friends, neighbors, “When a sale is subject
to this warning the purand acquaintances.
chaser assumes the risk
And knockoffs are out
there — a copy that looks that the product might be
either defective or unsuitlike the original. The
copycat economy thrives. able to his or her needs…
Knockout the counterfeit It merely summarizes the

concept that a purchaser
must examine, judge, and
test a product considered
for purchase himself or
herself,” according to the
legal dictionary.
“Sold!” Sometimes a
shopper goes into a frenzy and plops down the
pesos too soon. Step back
and turn on the logical
part of your brain. Turn
off greed, instant gratiﬁcation, and emotional
ecstasy.
However, I’ve also
bought quality used items
over the years from trustworthy vendors, hardworking dealers, and fun
ﬂea-marketers. Shop local
and shop Ohio.
Remember, the deal
of the century may be
the dud of the decade. A
bogus bargain is a bummer. A painted pig is still
a pig. Shop, swap, and
save, but let the buyer
beware.
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author,
columnist, educator, and therapist.
She resides in southern Ohio. www.
melissamartinchildrensauthor.com.

THEIR VIEW

Bill Gates knows technology, not education
Since its inception
less than a decade ago,
I have been on a rant
against Ohio’s state mandated teacher evaluation
system, which dictated
that as much as half of a
teacher’s appraisal was
to be tied to student test
scores. I have been on
my rant because there
is not an iota of reliable
research that supports
this concept, and because
I view this law as yet
another example of a
poorly-conceived concept
that was enacted based
on political and personal
agendas instead of sound
educational research.
More often than not,
when educators like me
have complained about
foolish political mandates
like this one, we are
branded by the people
who have created them
(our politicians) as being
whiny little babies who
are afraid of being held
accountable for our work.
I have found that when

some of them have nothing of substance to say,
speaking derisively of
those who dare question
them seems to be their
fallback position.
It will be interesting
to see how the political
establishment responds
to the 526-page report
released last month by
the RAND Corporation
that agrees with what
has been my position all
along; that such an evaluation system has failed
in its efforts to give all
children an equal opportunity to succeed despite
spending over a half a
billion dollars on the
project. They certainly
can’t blame this report on
whiny educators like me.
Since we haven’t heard
much about it in the
month since its release, I
assume the political PR
machine is working overtime to bury the story as
deeply as possible so that
you and I are unaware
that our tax dollars have

involved. This
been so badly
qualiﬁed on both
wasted (again).
counts.
But, let’s not let
In a nutshell,
them off the hook
Mr. Gates was
that easily.
convinced that by
To be fair,
using student test
Ohio’s weren’t the
scores, the most
only politicians
Tom
effective teachin America who
Dunn
blindly signed on
Contributing ers in improving
student academic
to this concept.
columnist
achievement could
Those in other
be identiﬁed and
states were just as
the less effective ones
gullible once billionaire
could be eliminated from
Bill Gates decided to
the profession; leaving
pump over $212 million
of his own money into his only the best teachers to
ﬂock to work with the
pet project in 2009 and
students who need them
once President Obama
committed federal funds most; that being those
who live in poverty. Of
to it via his Race to the
Top initiative. Since poli- course, none of that hapticians have no expertise pened.
Students with teachers
in education, they did
who were saddled by the
what they always do;
cumbersome, bureauthey played “follow the
cratic evaluation process
leader” with no regard
lawmakers created perto the validity of the
concept, especially if the formed no better than
concept was given a cute students of teachers who
were spared the torture,
little name like “Race
and it certainly didn’t
to the Top” and especially if there was money impact where teachers

chose to teach.
While there is nothing
wrong with a billionaire wasting money on
his hobby, it didn’t end
there, of course, once the
project took on a political tone, as over $350
million of yours and my
federal, state, and local
tax dollars helped fund
this ﬂawed concept. Yes,
the taxpayers of America
were once again ﬂeeced
on a project that had no
hope of success.
While the RAND
report does classify this
experiment as a failure, it
stops short of answering
the question of why it
didn’t work. Please allow
me to take a stab at that
one.
Bill Gates made the
same mistake that policymakers have been making for decades in that
he confused the notion
that a teacher is the most
impactful person to a
child when he/she is in
school as compared to

being the most impactful
person in a child’s life.
There is a big difference.
His teacher evaluation experiment failed
because there are many
factors more important
than the teacher in a
child’s life that determines his or her success,
so focusing his attention
on a false assumption
that the teacher is THE
determining factor
doomed his experiment
to fail. It really goes no
deeper than that.
The most frustrating
aspect of this failure was
that it didn’t need to happen, if only Mr. Gates and
our leaders would have
listened to experts in the
ﬁeld who tried to warn
them that using data in
this manner was invalid.
But, they didn’t listen,
and that is why they
failed (again).
Tom Dunn is the superintendent
of the Miami County Educational
Service Center.

�Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 9,2018 5

NEWS/WEATHER

EMS Supplies line item was
approved. The funds come from
the EMS certified funds line
item for the purchase of a new
From page 1
ambulance. This is the third
was adopted for county employ­ ambulance purchase in as many
ees to clarify the current policy. years without having to take out
a loan to make the purchase.
The updated policy allows for
A check for $430 was depos­
employees to take three days
bereavement leave for an imme­ ited into the house arrest line
item for common pleas court as
diate family member and one
reimbursement for GPS moni­
day for other family members.
toring for Charles Roush.
Employees may also use up to
The commissioners meet
three additional sick days.
Fund transfers and appropria­ each Thursday at 11 a.m. in
tion adjustments were approved their office on the third floor of
as requested by the auditor and the Meigs County Courthouse.
sheriff’s office.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The
A request from EMS to
Daily Sentinel.
appropriate $106,129 into the

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel

Healthy

employment of personnel.
The meeting was originally
announced for Aug. 7, but
BEDFORD TWP. — The
was moved to Aug. 9.
Bedford Township Trustees
WELLSTON — The GJMV will hold their regular month­
Solid Waste Management
ly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
District Board of Directors
Bedford Town Hall.
will meet at 3:30 p.m. at the
district office in Wellston.

Monday, Aug. 13

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@

Tuesday, Aug. 14

aimmediamidwest.com.

Thursday,
Aug. 9

Sunday, Aug. 12

RACINE — The special
meeting of the Southern
Local Board of Education
will be held at 6:30 p.m. The
purpose of the meeting is

School
From page 1

as though it could receive full
public funding for students
without providing documen­
tation to prove they were
being educated. An attorney
representing the department
during arguments at the court
in February likened the situa­
tion to the Internal Revenue
Service accepting a person’s
expenses at face value for
years and later asking them
for receipts as documenta­
tion.
“Ultimately, this is what’s
best for students and tax­
payers alike,” said Brittany
Halpin, the department’s
spokeswoman. “We’re pleased
the Ohio Supreme Court
agreed with the department’s
interpretation of the law and
we remain committed to
ensuring that all community
schools receive their correct
funding.”
The high court concluded
that when lawmakers stated
each student could receive no
more than 10 hours of credit
per school day, they set up
a need for documentation of
students’ activities.
“This calculation can be
made only by referring to
records that contain evidence
of the duration of a student’s

RACINE — The Charles
and Alma Snyder family
reunion will be held at Star
Mill Park in Racine. Bring a
covered dish. Lunch will be
served at noon.

POMEROY —The Meigs
County Board of Health meet­
ing will take place at 5 p.m.
in the conference room of the
Meigs County Health Depart­
ment, which is located at 112
E. Memorial Drive in Pome­
roy, Ohio.

participation in learning
opportunities,” Fischer
wrote.
Justices Terrence O’Donnell
and Sharon Kennedy dissent­
ed, arguing their colleagues
were misinterpreting the
10-hour limit. They urged the
Legislature to clarify the law.
Justice Pat De Wine, whose
father is the Republican nomi­
nee for governor, recused
himself in the case.
Little, ECOT’s lawyer, said
Wednesday’s ruling leaves
Ohio’s e-schools without any
specific standard or rule to
follow in order to receive
state dollars.
“There’s nothing that
informs an e-school as to the
standard that must be met to
receive funding, nor, given
that the school funding is to
‘follow the child,’ is there any
answer from ODE as to what
happens to the state-mandated funding for an e-school stu­
dent who, for example, misses
a day of school because of
illness,” he said.
Democrats who have
argued for transparency and
accountability at ECOT for
years immediately jumped on
the ruling as a victory.
“Senate Democrats have
been saying for years that
ECOT and other publicly
funded online charter schools
need to be held accountable,
and the Supreme Court’s deci-

sion today confirms that we
were right,” said state Sen.
Joe Schiavoni, a Youngstownarea Democrat.
The state had determined
that ECOT should repay
about $60 million in unsub­
stantiated funding from
2015-16 and $19 million more
from the following year. The
cash-strapped school shut
down after the state started
recouping money, which left
students scrambling for other
options mid-school-year.
Noting that many students
turned to ECOT because ill­
nesses, disabilities, bullying
or other circumstances made
traditional school environ­
ments challenging for them,
some of the students refused
to return to brick-and-mortar
public schools and instead
enrolled at other e-schools or
tried homeschooling.
ODE has said thousands of
ECOT students switched to
other schools.
Some of them expressed
hope of returning to ECOT
if it could reopen, but the
lengthy legal battle and the
auctioning of ECOT’s equip­
ment and other property and
sale of its building seem to
have sunk those prospects.
Ahead of the auction, the
state auditor took steps to
preserve data from ECOT’s
administrative computers in
case a criminal case arises.

TODAY
2 PM

8 PM

FRIDAY

70° 80° 79°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The
AccuWeather.com
Asthma
Index combines the effects of cur­
rent 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.

85°
69°
86°
65°
100° in 1930
48° in 1989

Precipitation (in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.37
1.37
1.02
33.16
27.53

Today Fri.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

6:37 a.m. 6:38 a.m.
8:31p.m.
8:30
p.m.
4:21a.m.
5:30
a.m.
7:16 p.m. 8:09 p.m.

New

First

Full

Last

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major Minor Major

65°

An afternoon
thunderstorm in spots

Minor

4:08a
10:55p 4:40p
5:06a
11:53p 5:38p
6:07a
12:52p 6:37p
7:07a
1:22p 7:36p
8:08a 2:21 p 8:35p
9:32p
9:07a 3:19p
10:03a 4:16p 10:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
Thunderstorms roared from Iowa to
West Virginia on Aug. 9,1979. Flash
floods at Mason City, Iowa, sent the
Winnebago River 2 feet above the
flood stage. Waters over 6 feet deep
moved through Clarksburg, W.Va.

Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The
Daily Sentinel.

84/65

j.

TUESDAY

65°

85°
70»

Mostly cloudy with a
shower or t-storm

A couple of showers
possible

Some sun; rain and
t-storms at night

0^o

Cloudy with a shower
or thunderstorm

NATIONAL CITIES

o
Murray

Today

City
City

84/66

9

Athens O

Chillicothe

84/66

McArthurc

85/67

84/66

Waverly
85/67

Wilkesville

|r.

0

84/65

o

T

U

Jackson

Low Moderate High Very High
Primary: unspecified causes

Lucasville

Mold: 3346

86/67

Centerville

High

Portsmouth

POMEROY,

Elizabeth

86/66

85/66

i

Rio Grande

o

POINT

86/68

85/66

Ravenswood

86/66

86/67

PLEASANT

87/67

n.

,

oR'Pey

o

86/66

86/67

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

Spencer

o

84/65

AIR QUALITY

Buffalo
85/66

55

0 50 100150200 300
Primary pollutant: Particulates

Clendenin

Milton

500

Ashland ^
85/66

Grayson
o 85/67

NATIONAL FORECAST

85/66

Huntington
85/64

a

84/65 o

St. Albans
85/67

o

Charleston
o 83/66
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

J 110s

OHIO RIVER

100s

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Location

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

Flood
Stage

Level

24-hr.
Chg.

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

13.36
16.20
21.51
12.82
13.04
25.56
12.98
25.55
34.17
12.88
16.00
34.00
14.60

+0.50
+0.40
-0.07
+0.32
+0.25
+0.57
+0.09
-0.77
-0.51
-0.13
-1.00
-0.10
-2.10

WEDNESDAY

v 86°
65°

830

85/66

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Very

MONDAY
84°

Clouds and sun with a
t-storm; humid

9

Pollen: 2

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Today 10:24a
Fri.
11:22a
Sat.
12:22p
Sun.
12:53a
Mon
1:54a
Tue.
2:54a
Wed
3:51a

^ 66°

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

I 1^

SUNDAY

^ 83°

Adelphi

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.

Aug 11 Aug 18 Aug 26 Sep 2

with the champion receiving
half of the money and the other
half going to the Junior Fair
Board. Participants in the con­
test must secure their own ani­
mal, wear proper clothing and
have the required equipment.
Closed-toe shoes are required.
Also new this year will be
the addition of dairy cattle
and horses to the Showman of
Showman competition as a trial
for this year, noted Meeks.
Junior Fair Board members

SATURDAY

m f iii

MOON PHASES

From page 1

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

a

Low Moderate High
Primary: ascospores, unk.

SUN &amp; MOON

will also be busy during fair
week, with responsibilities and
duties in conjunction with many
of the events. From helping with
the parade and opening ceremo­
nies to announcing at the live­
stock shows and clean-up in the
arena, the teens help to make
the Fair a success, in addition to
the work with their respective
projects and/or animals.
Junior Fair Board members
are age 14 to 18 and are mem­
bers of 4-H, FFA, Girl Scouts,
Boy Scouts, FCCLA or Grange
in Meigs County.

Fair

'iL 86°

~F i Afa

Humid today with plenty of sunshine. Mainly
clear and humid tonight. High 87° / Low 67°

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Fairgrounds to prepare for the 155th Meigs County Fair.

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Junior Fair Board members spent time last week working at the Meigs County

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Albuquerque
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Atlantic City
87/71/pc 87/73/pc
Baltimore
89/68/pc 89/70/pc
Billings
95/61/s
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Boise
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Boston
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Charleston, WV
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Charlotte
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Cheyenne
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Chicago
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Cleveland
85/67/s
82/63/t
Columbus
85/67/s
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Dallas
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Denver
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Des Moines
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Detroit
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Honolulu
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Houston
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Indianapolis
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Daily Sentinel

Indians unveil logo for ’19 All-Star Game

Tony Dejak | AP

The 2019 All-Star Game logo is displayed on the concourse at Progressive Field on Tuesday
in Cleveland. Indians took the rock ‘n’ roll route with a logo for the 2019 All-Star Game that
won’t offend anyone. The Indians are hosting the event for the sixth time, and next year’s
game coincides with the 25th anniversary of Progressive Field.

CLEVELAND (AP) —
Cleveland’s rock ‘n’ roll roots
will be on display for the
2019 All-Star Game.
Inspired by the city’s deep
musical history, the team
unveiled the logo for next
year’s game — a red-whiteand-blue guitar with a body
bordered with baseball
stitching.
The blending of baseball
and music is a not-so-subtle
reminder to the rest of the
country that Cleveland
rocks.
The Indians are hosting
the annual mid-season event
on July 9 for a record sixth
time. And next year’s game
coincides with the 25th

anniversary of Progressive
Field, which was known as
Jacobs Field when it hosted
the 1997 game.
Owner Paul Dolan, MLB
Deputy Commissioner Tony
Petitti, Cleveland Mayor
Frank Jackson and Indians
manager Terry Francona,
All-Star shortstop Francisco
Lindor and ﬁrst-base coach
Sandy Alomar, who hit the
game-winning home run
for the American League in
‘97, attended Tuesday’s ceremony that ofﬁcially begins
the countdown to next year’s
game.
Plans for the logo began
shortly after the team was
awarded the game.

“We ask them what do
they want to do with their
mission and what they wanted to do was celebrate Cleveland as the birthplace and
spiritual home of rock and
roll,” said Anne Occi, MLB’s
vice president of design,
who has been involved in
creating All-Star logos for
28 years. “They wanted to
talk us through the game
and the experience and how
the idea of baseball and rock
and roll go together within
the central part of Cleveland
culture.”
Occi said one of the biggest challenges in designing
See LOGO | 7

Blue Angels
win Lady Chiefs
Invitational
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

LOGAN, Ohio — A solid start to the new year.
The Gallia Academy girls golf team came away
with a ﬁve-stroke victory over the ﬁeld on Tuesday
at the 2018 Lady Chiefs Invitational hosted by
Logan High School at Hocking Hills Golf Course
in Hocking County.
The Blue Angels posted four of the 13 lowest
scores at the seven-team, 18-hole event, which
enabled the Blue and White to secure the team
championship with a score of 409.
Host Logan was next with a ﬁnal tally of 414,
with Tri-Valley (428), Sheridan (467) and Warren
(483) rounding out the top ﬁve positions. Both
Waterford and John Marshall (WV) also participated in the event, but neither squad had enough
competitors for a ﬁnal team score.
Waterford’s Ashley Offenberger claimed medalist honors with a 5-over par effort of 76, while
Lexis Fickel of Logan was the overall runner-up
with an 87.
Hunter Copley paced the victorious Blue Angels
with a career-low 92, followed by Molly Fitzwater
and Bailey Meadows with respective efforts of 100
and 108.
Avery Minton turned in a career-low effort of
109 to complete the winning GAHS score, while
Lilly Rees and Macy Jones also ﬁred respective
rounds of 128 and 131.
Laine Welker led Tri-Valley with a round of 99,
Shauna White paced Sheridan with a 110 and Warren was led by Hannah Jankauskas with a 96. Lauren Tekely also ﬁred a 123 to pace John Marshall.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Hall of Famer Jim
Brown says he’d never
kneel during anthem
CLEVELAND (AP) — Jim Brown has spent
much of his post-NFL career ﬁghting for social
justice and change.
However, the Hall of Fame running back would
never kneel during the national anthem.
The 82-year-old Brown, who championed civil
rights during his playing career and became an
activist in retirement, said Tuesday night that he
respects players’ rights to do what they want but
his preference is they would stand during “The
Star-Spangled Banner.”
“I’ll never kneel and I will always respect the
ﬂag,” said Brown, who spoke before an HBO premiere of “Hard Knocks,” which is chronicling the
Cleveland Browns in training camp.
Brown was asked how he would resolve the
anthem issue, which has plagued the league for
two years.
“Well, if you take the bottom line, what are we
talking about? We’re talking about freedom to
express one’s self, and if you don’t break any rules
then you have that particular right,” he said.
“I am not going to denigrate my ﬂag and I’m
going to stand for the national anthem. I’m ﬁghting with all of my strength to make it a better
country, but I don’t think that’s the issue. Because
what is the top side? Are you not going to stand
up? This is our country, man.
“We work hard to make it better and that’s my
attitude, so I don’t relate to this issue because it’s
newsworthy because where are your superstars?
See ANTHEM | 7

Stephen B. Morton | AP file

Jacksonville Jaguars defensive end Yannick Ngakoue, right, draws a penalty by hitting Buffalo Bills quarterback Tyrod Taylor (5) with
helmet-to-helmet contact during the first half of a wild-card playoff football game Jan. 7 in Jacksonville, Fla. The NFL’s new rule making
it a penalty when a player leads with his helmet is generating plenty of grumbling about taking the football out of the sport, but more
practically it’s led to confusion about how it’ll be enforced.

Ex-NFL players seek to educate on rule
By Stephen Whyno
The Associated Press

Curtis Martin took
and dished out plenty of
helmet hits as he rushed
for more than 14,000
yards in his Hall of Fame
career.
He just wishes he
didn’t have to endure
that.
The retired running
back sees the NFL’s
enhanced rule penalizing
players for leading with
their helmets as a positive step for the sport.
As a member of the player safety advisory panel,
he’s part of a leaguewide
effort to educate the current generation on how
to stay on the right side
of the rule and reduce
injuries.
“Hopefully we can
extend careers and just
have less contact to
the head, which I just
think is beneﬁcial over
a long period of time,”
Martin said by phone
this week. “We’re really
focusing on getting the
head (contact) out of the
game. I wish it was like
that when I was playing.
I think it’s something
that’s very positive, and
I think it’s important as
we go forward and the
future of the game.”
Martin and former
linebackers Willie Lanier
, also a Hall of Famer,
and Willie McGinest taped minute-long
“NFL Way to Play”

helmet is for protection
instructional videos for
players stressing stance, and not to be used as a
projectile.
posture and technique.
“You don’t necessarily
For speciﬁc examples of
head-contact hits that are want to hurt anyone,”
now 15-yard penalties or Martin said. “As an offensive player, a lot of times,
possibly ejections, there
especially
are situationwhen you see
speciﬁc vid“Hopefully we
those times
eos narrated
can extend
when a player
by coaches
careers and
or whoever’s
Anthony Lynn
just have less
carrying the
of the Charball they’re
gers (ball car- contact to the
very close to
riers ), Doug
head, which I
the sidelines,
Marrone of the just think is
but before
Jaguars (offenbeneficial over they go out,
sive linemen
a long period of they decide
), Dan Quinn
they just want
of the Falcons time.”
(defensive
— Curtis Martin, to punish that
linemen ),
Retired NFL (defensive
Mike Vrabel
running back back). That’s
where you see
of the Titans
the helmet
(linebackers ),
used as a weapon, and
and Todd Bowles of the
you want to cut things
Jets (defensive backs ).
“I just had some things like that out of the game
because it’s unnecessary,
I wanted to try to share
being a former player and No. 1, and it just protects
the players better.”
having played that techBowles, who played
nique and coached that
defensive back for eight
technique,” Vrabel said.
NFL seasons, illustrated
“It’s what’s best for the
game, the fundamentals. in his video many of the
shoulder-to-shoulder
We always try to teach
the fundamentals that are hits that are legal and
expected. He contrasted
good: playing with your
knees bent, leading with them with some players
who made helmet-toyour hands and playing
helmet contact. Because
with your face up.”
the enhanced rule now
After watching those
makes helmet-to-anyvideos, Redskins coach
Jay Gruden said making where contact a penalty,
he knows it’s on coaches
sure players don’t use
their helmets as weapons to give players a refresher on the proper way to
is “a big thing we’re trytackle.
ing to get over.” That’s
“It’s really teaching
the NFL’s emphasis: a

football to be played the
right way,” Bowles said.
“There are going to be
hard collisions, but if the
helmet’s up, and you have
to keep the helmet out of
the way and hit with the
shoulder, which most of
the teams do all the time.
There’s an occasional
head-to-head when someone’s putting their head
down, but we don’t teach
it any differently.”
Martin fully understands the football mentality of pushing for the
extra yard and going for
the big hit, so he ﬁgures
it’ll take time for players to adjust. It’s his
hope the culture change
toward understanding
head injuries helps players accept the updated
rule for their own good.
“As former players, we
can sit back and see how
this rule would’ve been
very effective for us when
we were playing,” Martin
said. “But when you’re
in the midst of something, it’s like anything
— when you’re in the
midst of a problem, it’s
hard to see the beneﬁts
of (ﬁxing) that problem
or the outcome or the
potential positive things
that can come out of
that problem. Now that
we’re on the other side,
we can see that maybe a
little clearer than current
players can and as we’re
able to inform them and
teach, I think that they’ll
come around.”

�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 9, 2018 7

Steelers rookie QB Rudolph ready for preseason debut
LATROBE, Pa. (AP) —
Pittsburgh Steelers rookie
quarterback Mason Rudolph
exudes conﬁdence heading into
his ﬁrst NFL preseason game
Thursday against the Philadelphia Eagles.
Rudolph admitted that jitters
may be there as the Steelers
prepare to face the defending Super Bowl champions in
Philadelphia. But the Steelers’
third-round pick has settled
into a comfort zone two weeks
into training camp.
“It’s just football,” Rudolph
said. “I think everyone has a
little bit of nerves because it’s
going to be the ﬁrst one back.
But just like your debut in college, you get out there, you
make a completion and it starts
ﬂowing like football has always
been.”
Rudolph is in a ﬁght for
the backup quarterback spot
behind Ben Roethlisberger.

Keith Srakocic | AP

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph (2) looks to pass as defensive
back Nat Berhe pressures in a goal-line drill at training camp Tuesday in Latrobe,
Pa. Rookie quarterback Rudolph gets a chance to show how far he’s come since
being drafted in April when the Steelers open the preseason in Philadelphia on
Thursday. Rudolph is in a fight for a backup spot behind Ben Roethlisberger.

Steelers coach Mike Tomlin
said Tuesday that Rudolph
will see time under center

draft despite his checkered past. He was suspended last season for
involvement in a credit
card fraud case, and he
provided a diluted urine
sample at the NFL combine in February.
That offense caused
teams to stay away from
him, not the Browns.
In April, general manager John Dorsey said the
team had “done extensive
background” checks on
Callaway. At the time,
Dorsey, who joined the
Browns in December, felt
assured that Jackson and
receivers coach Adam
Henry would be able to
mold him and keep him
out of trouble.
“I’m still conﬁdent in
that,” Jackson said. “I
think what John said is
absolutely right and I
support him 100 percent.
We’ve been fortunate over
the last couple of years
where we haven’t had
things crop up.
“I truly believe in our
process and how we go
about it and how we
talk about things. So,
again, this is something
I’m glad is happening
now so we can deal with
it and move forward. I
think our locker room
understands how we
handle business. This
young man will deﬁnitely
understand how we handle business, too.”

PPHS Meet the
Teams night

scramble on Saturday, Aug. 18, at
Cliffside Golf Course.
Registration begins at 8 a.m.
and the scramble will tee off at
approximately 8:30 a.m.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
Cost is $60 per individual or
Point Pleasant Junior-Senior High
$240 per team. Please make
School will be holding a Meet
the Teams night at approximately checks payable to the South Gallia
Athletic Department.
6:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 13, at
Skill prizes and door prizes will
Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field
be awarded throughout the event.
in Mason County. The event is
Food and beverages will also be
free and open to the public, and
all levels of fall sports at PPJSHS provided, with prizes going to the
top three teams.
will be introduced at the event.
For more information or to regMeet the Teams night will also
follow the open house being held ister a team, contact SGHS Athat the campus for new students in letic Director Kent Wolfe by email
at gl_kwolfe@seovec.org or conthose buildings.
tact by phone at 740-444-9334.

SGHS Athletic
Dept. golf outing

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
South Gallia Athletic Department is hosting a four-person golf

Anthem
From page 6

And where are they at?
Aren’t they making com-

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Logo
From page 6

a logo that can be used
across a variety of platforms — from merchandise to uniform patches to
being painted on the ﬁeld.
She’s especially
proud of the 2019 logo,
which she described as
“unique.”
It’s certainly not divisive.
Under pressure from
MLB and others, the Indians will no longer wear
the contentious Chief
Wahoo on their caps
and jerseys starting next
season. And while there
has been speculation that
Cleveland conceded to
the move in order to host
the All-Star Game, the
team has insisted the timing was just coincidental.
Dolan said there was
no discussion about Chief
Wahoo in designing the
All-Star logo.
“That wasn’t even on
our radar,” he said. “One,
we did this a long time
ago. The typical All-Star
logo is the skyline of the

High School football season went
on sale starting on Tuesday, Aug.
7, for the Gallia Academy Athletic
Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior
varsity football players, Gallia Academy Marching Band
members, and varsity and junior
varsity cheerleaders will be able
to purchase reserve seats on
Wednesday, Aug. 8.
Reserve seats for the general
public will be available on Thursday, Aug. 9.
The price is $35 per ticket.
Tickets may be purchased in the
Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at Gallia
Academy High School between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super
Boosters are limited to 10 tickets purchased on the ﬁrst day of
sales.
After the ﬁrst day, there will be
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve no limit on the number of tickets
seats for the 2018 Gallia Academy which may be purchased.

GAHS football
reserve seats

ments?”
Protests during the
anthem have enveloped
the league since former
San Francisco quarterback Colin Kaepernick
took a knee to protest

social injustice.
The NFL modiﬁed its
anthem protocol in May,
prohibiting demonstrations for 2018, but allowing players to remain in
the locker room during

THURSDAY EVENING

12 (WVPB)

city, maybe with the ballpark in the background,
and we said we would
like to do something
different and we would
like to draw on music as
being a theme and that
was the extent of our
instruction.”
Cleveland, which also
hosted All-Star Games
in 1935, 1954, 1963 and
1981, has long been considered the birthplace
of rock after local disc
jockey Alan Freed coined
the term “rock and roll.”
The Rock &amp; Roll Hall of
Fame opened one year
after Jacobs Field, and the
two structures have been
linked to the city’s downtown rebirth.
The Indians and MLB
ofﬁcials have met with
the Rock Hall about being
incorporated into festivities around next year’s
game.
“You can see from
the logo what we think
the tie-in should be in
Cleveland,” Petitti said.
“We try to do something
unique in every market
we’re in, so music is what
you can expect to see in
2019.”

missed a couple center-quarterback exchanges after working
almost exclusively out of the
shotgun both in high school
and at Oklahoma State.
“We cleaned it up for the
most part,” Rudolph said. “I’m
just starting to feel a lot more
comfortable under center after
not doing it the last eight years
of my life.”
Rudolph also had an inauspicious start at training camp
when he ran a bootleg to the
right and fumbled his ﬁrst
pass attempt backward. That
gaffe is far from Rudolph’s
mind.
“I could (not) care less about
the ﬁrst pass,” Rudolph said.
“I have a lot of ﬁrst passes. I
had my ﬁrst pass in OTAs and
rookie minicamp. I’m thinking
about the next pass. If one play
goes bad, the next play can be
the one that wins it, or gets you
back in the game.”

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Browns rookie WR
Callaway cited for
marijuana possession
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Antonio Callaway didn’t
take long to run into
trouble with the Browns.
The fourth-round draft
pick and wide receiver
from Florida, who arrived
in Cleveland with a history of issues while in
college, was cited early
Sunday morning for
marijuana possession and
driving with a suspended
license.
According to a report
by police in Strongsville,
Ohio, Callaway was
pulled over in his car
after he failed to yield
to on oncoming trafﬁc.
Police found a “small
amount” of marijuana
and cited Callaway, who
was stopped on a day off
for Cleveland’s players at
training camp.
To make matters worse,
Callaway didn’t inform
the Browns of his legal
matter.
“I am surprised at this,”
coach Hue Jackson said
following Tuesday’s practice. “He has been great.
We have had no slipups,
no issues. This is a young
player, who obviously
made a bad decision or
bad choice. I have to ﬁnd
out. Believe me, when we
ﬁnd out more of the facts,
I will tell you straight out,
exactly what it is when I
know.”
The Browns selected
Callaway in this year’s

against the Eagles, along
with veteran Landry Jones
and Josh Dobbs, the Steelers’

fourth-round pick a year ago.
Tomlin is eager to see how
Rudolph can direct the offense
and maintain possession.
“Mason’s done a really good
job, but he hasn’t been hit,”
Tomlin said. “Ball security is
much more difﬁcult in-stadium
because a training camp environment is controlled in a lot
of ways. You don’t touch or get
close to the quarterback, so a
quarterback’s ability to secure
the football doesn’t get tested
until they play in-stadium preseason football.”
Rudolph will have an opportunity to show how far he’s
come since the Steelers traded
up to select the Oklahoma
State star with the 76th overall
pick, the highest the organization has taken a quarterback
since Roethlisberger was the
11th overall selection in 2004.
During spring practices,
Rudolph impressed, but he also

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the anthem.
The players’ union
ﬁled a grievance, and
the change has been
tabled while the NFL
and NFLPA work on a
resolution.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 9

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10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
UFC UFC Fight Night 102
24 (ROOT) UFC Classics
25 (ESPN) (5:00) Baseball
Baseball Little League World Series (L)
26 (ESPN2) (5:30) SportsCenter (N)
Rolling With Tide (N)
Championship Drive (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
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.
Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pit./S.F. (L)
Baseball Little League World Series (L)
30 for 30 "Kings Ransom" CFL Football Edm./BC (L)
Grey's Anatomy "Risk"
Grey's Anatomy "Where Do
Maid in Manhattan (2002, Comedy) Ralph Fiennes, (:05)
Made of Honor
Tyler Garcia Posey, Jennifer Lopez. TV14
Patrick Dempsey. TV14
We Go From Here"
(5:30)
Oz the Great and Powerful A magician is forced into a
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory A poor boy's dreams come true
struggle with three witches when he visits an enchanted land. TVPG
when he wins a tour of a wondrous chocolate factory. TVPG
American
(:25) Mom "Cotton Candy
Friends
Friends
Bad Teacher (2011, Comedy) Jason Segel, Justin
Bad
Timberlake, Cameron Diaz. TV14
and Blended Fish"
Woman (N) Teacher TV14
Sponge (N) Loud House Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
SpongeBob
The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie TVPG
SVU "Parole Violations"
SVU "Devastating Story"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Imposter"
Queen South "El Carro" (N) Shooter (N)
Family Guy Family Guy Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang Last O.G.
Joker's Wild
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(2:00) Golf PGA Championship (L)
Unknown (‘11, Myst) Diane Kruger, Liam Neeson. TV14
Movie
(3:30)
The Godfather II (1974, Drama) Robert De
Lethal Weapon (‘87, Act) Mel Gibson. An unstable police officer is Lethal
Niro, Robert Duvall, Al Pacino. TV14
partnered with a veteran detective to battle drug dealers. TVM
Weapon 2
Naked "Belize Breakdown" Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid "Barely Alive" (N)
The First 48 "Bloodline"
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
Live PD:
PD Cam (N) First
Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Police Patrol Patrol (N)
Patrol (N)
Responders
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law (N)
To Be Announced
Northwest Law (N)
NCIS "Twilight"
NCIS "Kill Ari, Part 1" 1/2
NCIS "Kill Ari, Part II" 2/2
NCIS "Mind Games"
NCIS "Silver War"
What's Love Got to Do With It? (‘93, Biography) Laurence Fishburne, Jenny Lewis, Angela Bassett. TVM Bossip (N)
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Cavallari "Back to the Hills"
(:25) M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
(:35) MASH
(:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Pat's Secret"
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
The Nile "Paradise Found" Wild Turkey (N)
Mystery Mummies of New Mummies: Frozen in Time Drain the Ocean "Ghost
Guinea
Cyronics and mummification. Ships of the Atlantic"
Dew Tour
Dew Tour
Mecum Auto Auctions
Mixed Martial Arts Professional Fighters League 5
(4:00) USGA Golf
MLB Best (N) UFC Top Ten UFC UFC 219 Site: T-Mobile Arena
Pawn Stars Pawn "Thar Mountain Men "Time and Mountain Men "Labor
Mountain Men "Fight or
(:05) Alone "Starvation's
She Pawns" Tide"
Pains"
Flight" (N)
Shadow" (N)
Below Deck
Below Deck
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset (N)
Shahs of Sunset
(3:55)
Set It Off TV14
ATL (2006, Comedy) Evan Ross, Lauren London, T.I.. TVPG
Grand "Us or Else" (N)
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005, Adventure) Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Daniel
Harry Potter and the Order of the
Radcliffe. Harry becomes a competitor in a tournament between three wizarding schools. TV14
Phoenix (‘07, Adv) Daniel Radcliffe. TVPG
(4:30)

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

It's Complicated A divorced Vice News
It (2017, Drama) Finn Wolfhard, Sophia Lillis, Bill
Sharp Objects "Closer"
couple rediscovers the spark they once had Tonight (N)
Skarsgård. A deadly monster that takes the form of a
while at their son's graduation. TVMA
clown terrorizes a small New England town. TVMA
(5:30)
Man on Fire (‘04, Act) Dakota Fanning,
The Wicker Man Nicolas Cage. A sheriff (:45)
Get Out A black man is
Denzel Washington. A disillusioned mercenary seeks
investigating a missing person case grows invited to his white girlfriend's family
vengeance when a girl in his care is kidnapped. TVMA
suspicious of the secretive community. TV14 estate, but finds himself trapped. TVMA
The Affair
Marshall (2017, Biography) Josh Gad, Sterling K. Brown, Patrick Melrose "Mother's Who Is
Who Is
Milk"
America?
America?
Chadwick Boseman. A future Supreme Court Justice
defends at trial a black man accused of sexual assault.
(5:25)

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, August 9, 2018

Daily Sentinel

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The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, August 10,
2018 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
VIN: 5LMFU28556LJ22542
2006 Lincoln Navigator
8/8/18,8/9/18,8/10/18

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General
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EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Administrative
Assistant needed.
Candidates must possess:
Associate Degree, Excellent
Oral and Written Communication Skills and Organizational
&amp; Computer Skills. Valid
driver's license and background check required.
Send Resume by August 13
to: Meigs County Board
of Developmental Disabilities
1310 Carleton Street
P.O. Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779

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Medical/Health

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Taking Applications For
LPN's &amp; Nursing Assistants
Apply Within or On
Indeed.com
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164

Apartments/Townhouses

MERCHANDISE
Machinery &amp; Equipment
Mayrath 33 ft. All purpose double chain farm conveyor pto
drive $3000 740-416-5088

NEW CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
All three publications Gallipolis Daily-Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register and Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
(includes weekend) $5.00 for each additional line.

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Yard Sale Aug 10- Aug. 11
time 8am-4pm glassware, bike
men &amp;women clothes much
more 473 St Rt 160 Gallipolis

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Substitute Instructors, Instructor Aides,Bus Drivers and Cook
are needed to work at Carleton School with children with
Developmental Disabilities. Qualifications depend on position
but at a minimum include a High School Diploma or OED and a
valid Ohio Driver's License. Submit application or resume by
August 13,2018 to: MeSDD. P.O.Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio
45779.

5 day run - Print and Online

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Total Cost $37.45

MOTOR ROUTE

10 day run - Print and Online
OH-70051356
OH-70045325

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Equal Housing Opportunity

Houses For Rent

Total Cost $43.45
Please call Patti Wamsley at 740-446-2342 ext 2093
to help with your advertising.

Turn Your Clutter

INTO CASH!
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Point Pleasant Register
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

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Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
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� Must provide your own substitute

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
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740-992-2155

OH-70047967

OH-70051355
OH-70045667

OVER 1 000
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, August 9, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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jobmatchohio.com

�10 Thursday, August 9, 2018

Daily Sentinel

WE MAKE CAR DREAMS COME TRUE!
$33,549

2016 Chevrolet Silverado
2500HD, Double Cab, Standard
Box, 4-wheel Drive Work Truck
#A18842A

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2005 Chevrolet Silverado
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#A18756A

$5,543

2009 Chevrolet Impala,
LT 1LT,
106,881 mi,
#A18733A

$15,290

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 157,799 mi,
#A18962A

$17,625

2013 Lexus ES 350,
4WD Sdn,
80,089,
#A18940A

$24,298

2014 Chevrolet Silverado
1500, Crew Cab, Standard Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT w/1LT,
88,174 mi, #A18928A

$14,899

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
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46,775 mi,
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$37,899

2018 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
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Z71, All Star Edition, 2,558 mi,
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$9,997

2007 Chevrolet Silverado 1500
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#A18811B

$11,054

2009 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Extended Cab, Standard Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 142,557 mi,
#A18170A

$17,399

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Extended Cab, Standard Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 120,477,
#A18931A

$11,990

2014 Chevrolet Cruze,
Sedan, 1LT auto,
32,908 mi,
#A18785A

$29,481

2016 GMC Acadia,
AWD, SLT-1,
26,345 mi,
#A18788A

$12,299

2008 Chevrolet Colorado,
4WD, Crew Cab, LT w/1LT,
144,507 mi,
#A18B00A

2017 RAM 3500,
Laramie 4x4 Crew Cab 6’4” box
30,239 mi,
#A18A51A

2009 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box, 4-Wheel
Drive LT, 121,145 mi,
#A18A26A

2017 Toyota Tacoma,
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4x4 AT (Natl), 19,695 mi,
#A18987A

$10,994

$11,628

2012 Chevrolet Traverse,
FWD LS,
96,838,
#A18345A

2011 Ford Ranger, 2WD
SuperCab 4 dr,
6 ft Box Sport,
#A18762B

2013 Chevrolet Equinox,
FWD 1LT,
82,467 mi,
#A18378A

$27,875

$11,999

$11,692

2006 Nissan Titan,
4WD Crew Cab XE FFV,
125,711 mi,
#A18348B

2015 Chevrolet Equinox,
AWD 1LT,
118,596 mi,
#A18215A

$29,600

$16,900

$14,999

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
1LT,
19,800 mi,
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2016 Nissan Pathfinder,
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30,296 mi,
#A18967A

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
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39,182 mi,
#A18806A

PRECISION
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WASH WITH
ALIGNMENT
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60,559 mi,
#A18787A

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$9,498

2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
4WD, Extended Cab,
Standard Box, Z71, 154,042 mi,
#A18A09A

$12,947

2008 Chevrolet Tahoe,
4WD, 4 dr, 1500 LTZ,
170,809 mi,
#A18781B

$12,986

$12,990

2011 Toyota Venza,
4dr Wgn V6 AWD (Natl),
91,238 mi,
#A18274A

2011 Chevrolet Equinox,
FWD, 4dr,
LTZ, 74,755 mi,
#A18541C

$12,994

$18,399

$32,717

$9,998

2014 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Standard Box 4-Wheel
Drive LT w/1LT, 63,536 mi,
#A18B10A

$18,643

$16,999

$22,799

2016 Honda CR-V,
EX AWD
19,330 mi,
#A18439A

2016 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
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$52,269

$40,998

2016 Chevrolet Silverdo
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Box, 4-Wheel Drive, Work Truck,
#A18715A

$27,125

2012 Chevrolet Equinox,
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73,356 mi,
#A18796A

$25,844

2013 Chevrolet Tahoe,
4WD, 1500 LT,
79,511 mi,
#A18A00A

$13,732

2014 Nissan Rogue,
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83,890 mi,
#A17769A

$30,776

2015 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
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#A18982A

2016 Jeep Cherokee,
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26,985 mi,
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2014 Chevrolet SS,
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8,122 mi,
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2015 Chevrolet Impala Limited,
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84,719 mi,
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66,401 mi,
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OH-70069638

42411 Charles Chancey Dr. Pomeroy,
��� � �� �(740) 444-4135
Although every reasonable effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained on this site, absolute
accuracy cannot be guaranteed. This site, and all information and materials appearing on it, are presented to the user “as
is” without warranty of any kind, either express or implied. All vehicles are subject to prior sale. Price does not include
applicable tax, title, license, processing and/or documentation fees, and destination charges. Vehicles shown at different
locations are not currently in our inventory (Not in Stock) but can be made available to you at our location within a
reasonable date from the time of your request, not to exceed one week.

OH-70067606

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