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                  <text>What
happened to
former play

Meigs
County
Fair

Locals at
Waterford
Invitational

OPINION s 4A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 32, Volume 52

Sunday, August 12, 2018 s $2

Gallia
August
indictments
released
Staff Report

Courtesy of Randi Gheen Suzu Fukutomi rides a horse while spending time with the Gheen family as part

Suzu Fukutomi, right, and Kylie Gheen are pictured during a recent hike.

of a 4-H Exchange program.

Experiencing 4-H: From Japan to Meigs County
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to OVP

MEIGS COUNTY —
A Meigs County 4-H
family is hosting an
international exchange
student from Japan for
one month this summer.
Kylie Gheen, who is
a member of the Where
the Blacktop Stops 4-H
Club, became good
friends with a foreign
exchange student that
attended Eastern High
School last year. When
her family received an
email from the county
4-H educator that included information about a
month-long international
exchange program, she
knew she wanted to participate.
The process to get

involved was relatively
easy. The Gheens had
to apply to the program,
pass background and
home checks, and attend
an orientation meeting.
The program matches
4-H members with a student from Japan of the
same gender and around
the same age. On June
6, the family could begin
communicating with the
student as it was ofﬁcial
that they were going to
be hosting a 14-year-old
girl from Japan named
Suzu Fukutomi from July
23 through August 17.
Fukutomi is from
Osaka, which is the third
largest city in Japan,
following Tokyo and
Yokohama. In Osaka, she
lives in an apartment
with her family and their

pet goldﬁsh. The host
family described her
initial reaction when she
arrived on their farm
and saw horses, cows, a
donkey and large dogs.
It was quite the difference from what she was
used to.
In Japan, Fukutomi
is a member of Labo,
which is an organization
that teaches Japanese
children about Western
culture. They learn
about currency, how to
tell stories, sing songs,
the English language,
and traditions. Fukutomi joined Labo when
she was ﬁve years old,
although the ofﬁcial ages
to be a member are three
to 18.
See 4-H | 5

See GALLIA | 5

Leon man
facing felony
child abuse
charge
By Erin Perkins
Suzu Fukutomi and Kylie Gheen wash a cow as they prepare for
the fair. Fukutomi plans to show a calf in the open show.

deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia
Board of Elections representatives went before the Gallia
Commissioners during their
regular Thursday morning
meeting to discuss how the
county wanted to replace aging
voting machines.
The state is offering
$427,000 to assist with the
effort. The county currently

utilizes touch-based electronic
voting machines that were purchased reportedly with federal
dollars back in 2005. According
to Gallia Board of Elections
Deputy Director Chris Burnett,
the machines previously purchased were intended to have a
lifespan of around 10 years.
Gallia Commissioners along
with board ofﬁcials are anticipated to view a variety of polling machines in the coming
weeks to determine what is

Unopposed on the November ballot are Tim Ihle for county commissioner, Mary Byer-Hill for auditor
and Linda Warner for common pleas
judge.
As for levies and issues, electric
aggregation will be on the ballot in
both the county and Pomeroy. A
vote for aggregation would allow for
the village or county (depending on
the issue) to negotiate electric rate
for customers in their covered area.
Should it be approved, residents
would have the option to “opt-out”
individually if they do not wish to be
part of it.
In Pomeroy, voters will also be
asked to consider a 2 mill additional
levy for police protection and a 3 mill
renewal for ﬁre protection.

B SPORTS
Comics: 5B
Classifieds: 6B

See ELECTION | 5

See ABUSE | 5

the best ﬁt for Gallia’s upcoming elections. Burnett said the
board had narrowed choices
down to two companies during
the meeting.
Choices are as varied as
paper ballots to be utilized as a
potential option for Gallia’s voting process to implement while
another electronic “hybrid”
type of machine, Burnett
described, could also be considered. Paper ballots would be
put through a scan system. The

hybrid machine would utilize a
touch screen, print the voter’s
results and then be scanned
into another machine, reportedly. Estimated options cost
between $350,000 to $600,000.
Discussion in the meeting
said the state seemed to be
trending towards legislating
residents to using paper ballots.
“Our goal is to get them
See VOTING | 5

Candidates, levies nearly set for Nov. election

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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com and visit us on
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thoughts.

MEIGS COUNTY — The November General Election ballot is nearly
set after this week’s ﬁling deadline.
Four county-wide ofﬁces are up for
election in November, one of which
may be contested. Several villages,
townships and two school districts
will be voting on tax levies, while
electric aggregation will be on the
ballot in Pomeroy and county-wide.
There may be one contested judge
seat on the November ballot. Trenton
Cleland and Michael “Mick” Barr
have both ﬁled for the County Court
Judge seat which was held by the late
Steve Story. Cleland’s petition has
been certiﬁed; Barr’s petition is likely
to be considered at the Board of Elections meeting on Tuesday morning.

eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

LEON — A Leon man
is facing a felony charge
of child abuse resulting
in injury after allegedly
injuring his eight-year-old
son.
The warrant was issued
on Saturday, Aug. 4 for
Kevin Franklin Durst, 39,
of Leon. The alleged incident took place at 1898
Evans Road.
In the criminal complaint, Deputy Justin L.
Cavender reported on
the aforementioned date
Kevin Franklin Durst, did
smack his son, identiﬁed
as HAD, who is eight
years old.
Cavender stated in
the report, “Mr. Durst
smacked his son in the
face multiple times causing contusions to his face.
Mr. Durst also smacked
his son on the left side
of his torso. It appeared
HAD had a contusion on
his side consistent with
a hand print. HAD also
had contusions on both of
his ears where Mr. Durst
had smacked him and
grabbed him.”
Cavender reported
while he was observing the victim, HAD, he
reportedly found contusions on the victim’s legs
and arms as well.
The mother of the
victim, brought the boy
into the Mason County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce to ﬁle the

Board of Elections looks to replace voting machines
By Dean Wright

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia Prosecuting Attorney Jason D. Holdren
announces that the Gallia
County Grand Jury met
in August and returned
indictments for the following individuals:
Timber M. Goelling,
28, of Gallipolis, one
count of Complicity to
Theft, a felony of the
Fifth-Degree. Randall A.
Ashworth Jr., 29, of Gallipolis, one count of Theft,
a felony of the FifthDegree. Cole Bartrum,
46, of Gallipolis, one
count of Receiving Stolen
Property, a felony of the
Fifth-Degree. Michael L.
Bender, 41, of Thurman,
one count of Tampering
with Evidence, a felony
of the Third-Degree.
Christine A. Gates, 50,
of Thurman, one count
of Aggravated Robbery, a
felony of the First-Degree.
Aaron O. Moseley, 39,
of Reynoldsburg, one
count of Receiving Stolen
Property, a felony of the
Fifth-Degree. Jeaneen L.
Casey, 49, of Bidwell, one
count of Burglary, a felony of the Fourth-Degree.
Christopher T. Dray,

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, August 12, 2018

Cornells celebrate
50 years

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
PHILLIP R. LANE
PICKERINGTON —
Phillip (Phil) Raymond
Lane, 68, Pickerington,
Ohio, and formerly of
Gallipolis, passed away at
9:34 p.m., Tuesday, Aug.
7, 2018, at his residence
surrounded by his loved
ones.
Born Jan. 2, 1950, in
Gallipolis, he was the
son of the late Raymond
and Pauline Phillips
Lane. Phillip retired
from American Electric
Power in 2010 with 38
years of service. He was
a 1968 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School,
attended the University
of Rio Grande and was
a graduate of the Gallipolis Business College.

He attended the First
Baptist Church in Gallipolis and was a member
of the Ohio Genealogical
Society, Gallia County
Genealogical Society and
the First Families of Gallia County.
Phillip was the devoted
husband of Pamela S.
Terry Lane since Oct.
14, 1973, and the loving father, who became
greatly involved in the
lives and activities of
their three daughters. He
participated, coached and
sponsored their sports,
band, fundraisers and
other activities. This
love and involvement
continued with his granddaughters. His personal

interests included coin
and stamp collecting,
gardening, woodworking,
genealogy and all things
relating to computers.
Phillip is survived by
his wife, Pamela; his
daughters, Valerie (Mike)
Riggs, of London, Ohio,
Suzann Lane, of Canal
Winchester, Ohio and
Melissa (Karl) Boczek,
of Sudbury, Ontario,
Canada; granddaughters,
Jessica Riggs, Makayla
Whitmyre and Evelyn
Boczek; and his extended
family as well as a cousin,
Glenna Sprague, of Skokie, Illinois. This gentle
giant will be missed by
many. In addition to his
parents he was preceded

LOIS JEAN MUGRAGE

DALE ADAMS
Submitted photo

Karen and Dan Cornell will be celebrating 50 years of marriage
on Aug. 18 from 2 to 5 p.m. at Crown City Community Church,
86 Main Street, Crown City. Contact lorie.cornell@arbor.edu
or 517-745-7872.

Cordray says GOP
ads in governor
race are false

REEDSVILLE —
Dale Adams, 79, of
Reedsville, passed away
Thursday, Aug. 9, 2018,
at Camden Clark Medical Center in Parkersburg.
He was born June
6, 1939, in Reedsville,
Ohio, son of the late
Bernard and Eva Mae
Barringer Adams.
Dale is survived by
his wife, Bonnie Riggs
Adams; a son, Charles
and Cathy Adams;
a daughter, Delores
Adams; three grandchildren, Jason Adams,
Jessica Adams and Sara

Richards; a brother, Clifford and Judy Adams;
and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by six brothers
and sisters.
Dale’s wishes were to
be cremated and there
will be no visitation or
funeral service.
Arrangements have
been entrusted to WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, Ohio.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

By Julie Carr Smyth

can President Donald
Trump. The agency was
championed by Democrats and it is reviled by
COLUMBUS,
some Republicans.
Ohio — Lawyers for
The ads, paid for by
Democratic gubernatothe RGA Right Direcrial candidate Richard
tion PAC, say Cordray
Cordray demanded on
“secretly collected perFriday that Ohio telesonal information from
vision stations pull a
hundreds of millions
Republican Governors
of accounts” and didn’t
Association ad alleging a consumer agency protect it. They also
claim the consumer
Cordray led secretly
bureau was “hacked
collected and left vulnerable Americans’ per- over 200 times,” presumably under Corsonal ﬁnancial data.
dray’s watch though
A cease and desist
letter to station manag- that’s not directly
stated.
ers from the Perkins
Cordray’s lawyers
Coie law ﬁrm alleges
wrote station managers
the ad, titled “Cordray
that the claims are not
Failed,” contains false
true.
statements that the
“The advertisement
Republican governors’
contains statements
group cannot back up.
for which RGA publicly
Spokesman Jon
concedes there is no
Thompson said, “We
factual backup; and
stand by the ad.”
it makes other false
Cordray and Repubassertions that are conlican Ohio Attorney
tradicted by evidence
General Mike DeWine
are in a high stakes race in the public record,”
according to the letter.
this November to sucThe letter notes
ceed Republican Ohio
Gov. John Kasich, who’s that Cordray’s successor, Mick Mulvaney,
term-limited.
ordered a review of the
Among Cordray’s
bureau’s “externally
signature accomplishfacing” systems when
ments in appealing to
he took over in May
voters is his time as
and concluded they
director of the Consumer Financial Protec- were well secured and
tion Bureau, ﬁrst under ordered data collection
to continue. The letter
Democratic President
says the bureau was
Barack Obama and
never “hacked.”
then under Republi-

Associated Press

ROBERT WAYNE ROBERTS
GALLIPOLIS — Robert Wayne Roberts, 48,
of Gallipolis, passed
away unexpectedly, at
4:46 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 8, 2018, in the
Holzer Medical Center,
Emergency Department.
Born July 19, 1970, in
Gallipolis, he was the son
of the late James Howard
Roberts and Susan Lee
Loftis (Charles) Greer,
who survives in Gallipolis. He was a mechanic
and also did body work
on vehicles as well.
In addition to his

in death by his aunt,
Mabel Phillips.
Friends may call
from 5-7 p.m., Monday,
Aug. 13, 2018, in the
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. Interment will be in the Vinton
Memorial Park at the convenience of the family. In
lieu of ﬂowers, memorials
may be made in Phillip’s
memory to the Gallia
County Genealogical
Society, P.O. Box 1007,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

mother, he is survived by
his son, Kyle Roberts, of
Gallipolis; a step-sister,
Shelby Jones, of Fort
Mill, South Carolina;
a step-brother, Chuck
Greer, of Dallas, North
Carolina; several cousins,
and numerous nieces and
nephews.
A memorial service
will be held at the convenience of the family
at a later time and date.
The Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, Gallipolis,
is entrusted with the
arrangements.

WOODSFIELD
— Lois Jean
Mugrage, age 88,
of Woodsﬁeld,
Ohio formerly
of Racine, Ohio,
passed away Tuesday, Aug. 7, 2018,
at Wheeling Hospital
Wheeling, West Virginia.
She was born in Reedsville, Ohio, Dec. 24, 1929,
a daughter of the late
John Ervin Barnhart and
Anna Matilde Buetler
Barnhart.
She was a cook for
the Southern District at
Racine, Ohio and a member of the VFW Auxiliary
at Woodsﬁeld.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
Charles “Mick” Lovell

Mugrage; daughter, Dianna Renee’
Mugrage; grandson, Clint Beaver;
and eight brothers
and sisters.
She is survived
by her children,
Chuck (Peach) Mugrage
of Racine, Ohio, Jennifer
Mugrage of Lancaster,
Ohio, Mickey Mugrage
of Loraine, Ohio and
Todd Mugrage of Woodsﬁeld; six grandchildren;
16 great grandchildren;
and three great-great
grandchildren.
There will be no
visitation. Arrangements by Bauer-Turner
Funeral Home, 100 S.
Paul Street, Woodsﬁeld,
Ohio. www.bauerturner.
com.

WALTERS
GALLIPOLIS — William Stephen “Steve” Walters,
73, of Gallipolis, died on Aug. 8, 2018, at his residence.
As per William Stephen “Steve” Walters’ request,
there will be no services. Willis Funeral Home is
assisting the family with arrangements.
WHITE
SUMMERVILLE, S.C. — Barbara Ann Callicoat
White, 69, of Summerville, S.C., formerly of Crown
City, Ohio, died Tuesday, Aug. 7, 2018, at home.
Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m. Monday,
Aug. 13, 2018, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory.
Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller,
Ohio. Visitation will be held 6-8 p.m., Sunday, Aug.
12, 2018, at the funeral home.

OHIO BRIEFS

Family sues
gun retailer
WOOSTER, Ohio (AP) — The
family of a man fatally shot with
a black-powder revolver has sued
the retailer that sold the weapon
saying the killer’s violent past
should have precluded the sale.
The Wooster Daily Record
reports the estate of 21-year-old
Bryan Galliher ﬁled the lawsuit
against Cabela’s and its parent
company, Bass Pro Group LLC,
on Tuesday in northeast Ohio’s
Wayne County.
The lawsuit claims that Cabela’s
should never have sold the replica
of an antique ﬁrearm to Paul Claren, who used it to kill his Orrville
neighbor in August 2016.

Galliher testiﬁed at trial that
the shooting was an accident. He
was convicted of aggravated murder last August.
A detective testiﬁed that purchases of black powder guns
don’t require federal background
checks.
Bass Pro Group didn’t respond
to messages seeking comment.

Man shot by
cops acquitted
AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Felony
charges have been dropped
against one man while a jury has
acquitted his brother of similar
charges ﬁled after an Ohio police
ofﬁcer shot them multiple times
from behind on a busy city street.

WKYC-TV reports that authorities accused 24-year-old Jamon
Pruiett and Latrent Redrick of
threatening nightclub patrons and
police last October before Akron
ofﬁcer John Turnure shot each
man six times. Defense attorney Terry Gilbert disputes that
account, saying surveillance camera footage doesn’t show them
threatening anyone.
Prosecutors dropped felonious
assault charges against Redrick
before trial last week. He pleaded
no contest to misdemeanor inducing panic at trial.
Pruiett, who ﬁred one round
after being shot, was acquitted
Thursday of felonious assault.
Akron Police Chief Kenneth
Ball said in a statement that Pruiett should have been convicted.

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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
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Submitted photos

The Gallipolis Rotary Club of Rotary District 6690 recently had
as their guest speaker Thomas Carlisi, Rotaract District Chair,
from the Rotary Club of Columbus. He shared with the club the
vision of Rotary District 6690 was that every club in our District
would sponsor or co-sponsor a dynamic Rotaract Club which
are Rotary sponsored service clubs for young men and women recommended ages, 18-30 years.

From left to right, AG Greg Ervin, President AJ Stack of the
Gallipolis Rotary Club, Rotaract District Chair Thomas Carlisi.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 12, 2018 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Gallia Rural Water
boil order lifted

Breastfeeding Awareness Month

who inject drugs and person who use
illegal non-injection drugs. These are
the highest risk groups for transmission of Hepatitis A. Call 740-992-6626
for vaccine availability.

A boil order has been lifted for County Road 210, Cedar Wood Lane and
Private Drive.

tion. There are
With Breasthealth beneﬁts
feeding Awareto consider, too.
ness Month
Research sug(BAM) upon us,
gests that breastMeigs County
fed babies have
WIC is supportstrengthened
ing this year’s
immune systems
World Alliance
and decreased
for Breastfeeding Sherry
Eagle
risk of ear infecAction (WABA)
Contributing tions and of develtheme: “Breastoping childhood
feeding, Founda- columnist
obesity.
tion of Life”.
While breastThis theme
focuses on breastfeeding feeding is natural, it’s
not always easy. You
as a key to preventing
may struggle with gethunger and malnutriting your baby to latch,
tion by ensuring food
you may feel like you
security for babies. By
are making too little (or
decreasing the burden
too much) milk, and
on household income,
you may feel tired or
breastfeeding provides
completely exhausted,
a low-cost way to feed
and all too often, you
babies, which contribmay feel like you don’t
utes to poverty reduc-

Grande Chorale
begins with ‘Messiah’

Meeting Change
Announced
GALLIPOLIS — The Aug. 20 and
Sept. 17, 2018 meetings of the GalliaJackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services
have been cancelled. The Board will
hold a Special Meeting on Aug. 27,
2018 at 6 p.m. The Board typically
meets on the third Monday of each
month at the Board Ofﬁce (53 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis) at 6 p.m.

School Supply
Giveaway
RUTLAND — The Friends of Rutland will host a Back-to-School Bash
on Monday, Aug. 20 from 5-7 p.m. at
Rutland Fireman’s Park. Activities will
include inﬂatables, face painting, emergency vehicle tours, music, school supply giveaways and refreshments.

RIO GRANDE — The University
of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College Masterworks Chorale,
which is open to community members, will begin rehearsals for its fall
performance of Handel’s Messiah
Monday, August 20 from 7 p.m. to 9
p.m. There is no audition process to
join the chorale. The regional chorus
performs standard works from the
choral repertoire, including larger
works such as Haydn’s Lord Nelson
Mass (Mass No. 11 in D Minor) and
smaller collections of pieces, like traditional spirituals and musical theater
compilation. All who love to sing are
welcome to join the Masterworks
Chorale and rehearsals will be each
Monday of the semester. For more
information, contact Dr. Sarin Williams at williamss@rio.edu

POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
Immunization Clinic on Tuesday,
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m., at 112 E.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring child(ren)’s shot records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian.
A $30.00 donation is appreciated
for immunization administration;
however, no one will be denied services because of an inability to pay
an administration fee for state-funded
childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance cards, if
applicable. Shingles and pneumonia
vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability
or visit our website at www.meigshealth.com to see a list of accepted
commercial insurances and Medicaid
for adults.
The Ohio Department of Health
(ODH) does NOT recommended for
routine Hepatitis A vaccination of
Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the
Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis A vaccination
for Food Workers. Currently, ODH is
strongly recommending the following
groups to get the Hepatitis A vaccine:
men who have sex with men, persons

GALLIPOLIS — The 2018 Hot Summer Nights concert series continues.
This weekly concert series will continue
every Thursday night, throughout June,
July and August, with local musicians
appearing as live entertainment. Gates
open at the French Art Colony at 6
p.m., with food available for a donation,
along with legal beverages for purchase.
Music will begin at 6:30 p.m. Admission
is $5 per person for non-members, and
French Art Colony members attend free,
as a member beneﬁt. For additional
information call the FAC at 740-4463834.

County engineer
announcements
Submitted photo

Gallia County Engineer, Brett A.
Boothe, announces that Farmview Road
is closed at the bridge until further
notice. Local trafﬁc will need to use
other County roads as a detour.

Gallipolis First Church of the Nazarene Mission Dept is gearing up for our 6th Annual Hunger
Bag Ministry made possible by five local churches in our community that fill the bags with nonperishable items. Nazarene First, Elizabeth Chapel, Church of Christ &amp; Christian Union, River City
Fellowship, and Vinton Baptist. The goal is to get ten churches involved. These items go into the
county and city school systems for children at Thanksgiving. If there are other church that want
to participate they can call Sharon Harmon at 425-306-7438.

Art Classes for Kids

The Vaughan Agency
invites you to our seminar

MIDDLEPORT — Wendy Miller
will be offering Children’s Art Classes
at Riverbend Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd,
Middleport, on Monday, August 20,
from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Each class will
be $10 with all materials furnished. For
more info call Wendy at 740-416-4015.

SMART ALTERNATIVES
TO OBAMACARE

REAL ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 2018 AT 11:00 A.M.
99.5 +/- ACRES
HELD AT MASON CO. 4-H CAMP SHELTER
POND BRANCH ROAD, SOUTHSIDE, WV

Tuesday- August 21st 6-7pm at the
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99.5 acres by assessment. Mostly wooded hillside property with abundant
hardwood species. Contains an estimated 2 acres of cleared bottomland
perfectly suited for food plots. Identiﬁed as Tax Map No. 425, Parcels 4 and 5.1.
Being the same property conveyed to Rod and Irene Brand by Deeds of record at
DB 266/185 and DB 243/266. Located 2.7 miles from U.S. Route 35 just off of
Pond Branch Road – Look for signs!!
Ideal for hunting, hiking, trapping, 4-wheeling, timber speculation, investment
purpose, etc.
DON’T MISS THIS CHANCE!
For pictures, registration info., terms of sale, etc., visit www.auctionzip.com
Auction conducted by:

and

Drop Tine Properties, LLC
R. F. Stein, WV Lic. No. 1510
Gallipolis Ferry, WV
304-593-5280

Licensed and Bonded in WV

70th Wedding Anniversary
Mr &amp; Mrs William Ray Hayman Jr.
of Racine recently celebrated their
70th Wedding Anniversary &amp; also Mr
Hayman's 90th birthday. They celebrated
at their home with family and friends.
Bill &amp; Lillian were married July 17th
1948 on Bill's birth date July 17th
1928. The couple has a son, three
grandchildren &amp; six great-grandchildren.
Mr &amp; Mrs Hayman &amp; family would
like to thank everyone who called,
visited &amp; sent cards in remembrance
of their special day.
OH-70069618

OH-70070506

OH-70070482

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Rick Pearson, WV Lic. No. 66
Mason, WV
www.auctionzip.com for pics
304-593-5118

Sherry Eagle, CLC, BFOC, is the
Meigs County WIC Director.

Hunger Bag Ministry

Hot Summer
Nights Thursday

Immunization Clinic

have the support needed
to breastfeed your new
bundle of joy.
How you choose to
feed your baby is a personal choice, and what
works for you may not
work for another mom.
And that’s OK. But if
you’re thinking about
breastfeeding your
baby, the Meigs County
WIC staff would like to
extend an open invitation to all Meigs County
moms and dads to contact us at 740-992-0392,
with any breastfeeding
questions or concerns.
Hours of operation
are: Monday-Friday 8
a.m. to noon and 1-4
p.m.

Light refreshments will be served
Raffles &amp; prize giveaways including
local business gift certificates

RSVP through
our FB event or
call our office at

740-992-9784

�Opinion
4A Sunday, August 12, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

American
cars and
American jobs
Earlier this summer, on the very
same day GM laid off workers at its
historic plant in Lordstown, we got
word that GM plans to build its new
Chevy Blazer in Mexico — the company is bypassing American workers and
sending more jobs to Mexico.
In 2010, we worked hard to save the
American auto industry, including GM,
because we knew what these plants
and this industry means to communities in Ohio and across the country.
But announcements like this one are
proof that we need to do more to keep
auto jobs in the U.S. and stop rewarding companies that send jobs overseas.
That’s why I introduced legislation
to help us level the playing ﬁeld with
foreign competition, by
making it more affordSen.
able for Americans to buy
Sherrod
American-made cars and
Brown
trucks, and revoking a
Contributing special GOP tax cut for
columnist
auto companies that send
jobs overseas.My bill, the
American Cars, American Jobs Act,
has two simple parts:
First, customers who buy cars that
are made in the U.S. get $3,500 off.
The discount would apply to nearly
100 cars,
trucks, and
SUVs, includ- In their tax
ing all passen- giveaway to
ger vehicles
corporations last
assembled in year, Republicans
Ohio.
in Congress gave
Second,
auto compa- companies new tax
nies that cut incentives to close
the number
auto plants here
of American
in the U.S. and
jobs they had
ship those jobs to
on the day
the GOP tax Mexico or other
bill passed
foreign countries.
and add those
jobs overseas,
lose a special tax break they get on
their overseas proﬁts.
In their tax giveaway to corporations
last year, Republicans in Congress gave
companies new tax incentives to close
auto plants here in the U.S. and ship
those jobs to Mexico or other foreign
countries.
This happened because their tax bill
allowed companies to pay just 10.5 percent in taxes on some of their overseas
proﬁts, instead of the full 21 percent
corporate rate.
That’s like handing out 50 percent
off coupons to companies that send
jobs overseas.
This bill puts a stop to that. It says
that if you choose to send jobs overseas, you lose that coupon and pay the
full 21 percent. On the other hand, if
you keep jobs in the U.S., you keep
your discount.
The world was reminded eight years
ago to never bet against the American
auto industry and the workers who
are the engine behind it. We invested
in saving this industry, yet we have a
trade and tax policy set up to undermine it.
This legislation will work to change
that, leveling the playing ﬁeld for
American cars and American workers.
Sherrod Brown (D) is a Senator from Ohio.

THEIR VIEW

So what happened to ‘Gallia Country’?
My curiosity has been
piqued over time about an
outdoor play titled “Gallia
Country” performed for several summers in the 1970s
at the Bob Evans Farm
in Rio Grande. The work
appeared to be an intertwining of historical incidents
and personages both in
Gallia County and Gallipolis
since 1790 when the French
500 ﬁrst arrived on the
banks of the Ohio River to
establish a town and a new
life for themselves.
This much is recalled
from viewing part of a videotaped presentation that
aired on WOUB-TV in the
summer of 1979, by which
time I understand “Gallia
Country” was no longer performed at the farm. WOUB
didn’t do the taping; it was
apparently accomplished
by a team from a Cincinnati-area public television
station whose call letters
escape memory. I did not
ﬁnish watching the show,
broadcast late on a Saturday
night during my internship at the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, partly because its
ﬁxed-camera position looking straight at the stage
grew a bit tiresome.
But as I think back on
places and activities that
formed my experiences
here, I’m intrigued about
what the rest of “Gallia
Country” was like outside
of the portion that introduced O.O. “Odd” McIntyre
as a youth living in Gallipolis during the late 19th
Century.
That wasn’t the only
thing I remembered as
the cast, introduced in the
opening credits, included

tributor to The Glade, the
some local folks I had met
that summer. That included historical society’s quarterly
newsletter, my goal is
at least one Gallia
to put together an articountian and Ohio
cle on the history of
University student
“Gallia Country.” Some
whom I normally
individuals with whom
saw walking to and
I’ve shared this brainfrom classes from
storm of mine have
our residence halls
been dismissive, seemon the East Green.
ing to think it’s a waste
So I’ve been curious Kevin
of time and effort,
about “Gallia Coun- Kelly
try” and its fate.
Contributing better off remaining
either forgotten or lost
However, a Google columnist
in the mists of shaky
search of the topic
memory.
reveals nothing.
Well, they may have
I realize a stop at the
their point, but I have to
Gallia County Historical
disagree. It appears to
Society could answer my
have been something that
questions about “Gallia
involved a lot of people
Country,” but I’ve yet to
make that trip in to its new and deserves some kind of
quarters on the 300 block of recognition as part of the
local culture. “Gallia CounSecond Avenue. Still, now
try” debuted around the
is as good a time as any
time the elaborate outdoor
to shout out a thank you
drama “Tecumseh!” near
to Amy Noble Summers,
Chillicothe burst upon the
formerly of the Bob Evans
scene, and perhaps there
Farm ofﬁce staff, who did
was some thought “Galcheck its ﬁles for anything
lia Country” could beneﬁt
on the play for me. All
from that kind of interest in
she found was a brochure
advertising the production, historical pageantry. I really
can’t say if there was such
which presented an impora goal in mind, but it’s an
tant clue. “Gallia Country”
was ﬁrst staged at the farm interesting idea on which to
speculate.
in 1973, providing me, a la
I’ll let you know what
“History Detectives,” with a
kind of progress is made.
starting date.
***
Don’t know when the proIn a related vein, the time
duction had its last hurrah,
although in that summer of period in which “Gallia
‘79 people were still talking Country” was produced was
of it even if it wasn’t sched- a watershed for outdoor
presentations. As noted,
uled. The date of the pre“Tecumseh!” had been
miere also narrowed down
launched and celebrates its
how to begin researching
46th season entertaining
its background through
audiences this year.
microﬁlmed newspaper
As America approached
ﬁles, which I will hopefully
its 200th birthday in 1976,
do sometime in the near
there was more reﬂection
future.
on our heritage that yielded
As an occasional con-

fascinating facts about
everything from the split
with England to the lives of
the Founding Fathers. The
outdoor drama, utilizing
an area’s link to historic
events, brought recognition
of this nation’s origins, its
subsequent struggles and
eventual triumphs to life
not only to entertain but
educate in a venue beyond
the classroom.
Some of these presentations have ceased gracing
a stage under the stars, but
enough remain to continue
the mission of making history immediate and vital.
Today, the Siege of Fort
Randolph and Battle Days
in Point Pleasant remind
us of the area’s foothold in
the past, not to mention the
re-creation of the Battle of
Bufﬁngton Island at Portland.
Given that, it’s interesting
to see, thanks to a photo
on page 102 of the 2017
history of the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College by
Jacob L. Bapst and Dr. Ivan
M. Tribe, that in the spring
of 1977 the idea of living
history inspired a campus
reenactment of Pickett’s
Charge from the Battle of
Gettysburg.
The event was located on
the hill behind Lyne Center
under the direction of history professor C. Robert
Leith. Presumably, a good
time was had by all (we
hope), to utilize an old (and
practically ancient) newspaper catchphrase.
Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated with
Ohio Valley Publishing for 21 years,
resides in Vinton, Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

In 1898, ﬁghting in the
Spanish-American War
Today is Sunday, Aug.
came to an end.
12, the 224th day of
In 1909, the India2018. There are 141 days
napolis Motor Speedway,
left in the year.
home to the Indianapolis
500, ﬁrst opened.
Today’s Highlight in
In 1937, President
History:
Franklin D. Roosevelt
On August 12, 1981,
nominated Hugo Black to
IBM introduced its ﬁrst
the U.S. Supreme Court.
personal computer, the
In 1944, during World
model 5150, at a press
conference in New York. War II, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., eldest son of
Joseph and Rose FitzgerOn this date:
In 1859, poet and Eng- ald Kennedy, was killed
lish professor Katharine with his co-pilot when
Lee Bates, who wrote the their explosives-laden
Navy plane blew up over
words to “America the
England.
Beautiful,” was born in
In 1953, the Soviet
Falmouth, Mass.

people. (Four people survived.)
In 1992, after 14
months of negotiations, the United States,
— Rene Descartes, Mexico and Canada
French philosopher (1596-1650) announced in Washington that they had
concluded the North
American Free Trade
Union conducted a secret its ﬁrst solo ﬂight test
test of its ﬁrst hydrogen by taking off atop a Boe- Agreement. Avant-garde
ing 747, separating, then composer John Cage
bomb.
died in New York at age
touching down in CaliIn 1962, one day
79.
fornia’s Mojave Desert.
after launching Andrian
In 2000, the Russian
In 1985, the world’s
Nikolayev into orbit,
nuclear submarine Kursk
worst single-aircraft
the Soviet Union also
and its 118-man crew
sent up cosmonaut Pavel disaster occurred as a
were lost during naval
crippled Japan Airlines
Popovich; both men
Boeing 747 on a domes- exercises in the Barents
landed safely Aug. 15.
Sea.
tic ﬂight crashed into a
In 1977, the space
In 2004, New Jershuttle Enterprise passed mountain, killing 520

Thought for Today: “If you would be a real
seeker after truth, it is necessary that at
least once in your life you doubt, as far as
possible, all things.”

sey Gov. James E.
McGreevey announced
his resignation and
acknowledged that he’d
had an extramarital affair
with another man.
Ten years ago: Declaring “the aggressor has
been punished,” the
Kremlin ordered a halt
to Russia’s devastating assault on Georgia
— ﬁve days of air and
ground attacks that
left homes in smoldering ruins and uprooted
100,000 people. Michael
Phelps won the 200meter freestyle for his
third gold medal at the
Beijing Games.

�NEWS

Sunday, August 12, 2018 5A

Election

CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday, Aug. 12
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch
at 9:45 AM; Sunday School at
10:00; AM worship service at
10:30; Pastor Bob Hood; Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495 or 740709-6107. Everyone is welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
Dickey Chapel Church will hold
service at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — First Light
Worship Service in the Family Life
Center, 9am; Sunday School, 9:3
0am; Morning Worship Service,
10:45 am; Youth “The Resistance”
in the FLC, 6 pm; Evening Worship Service 6pm; First Church of
the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave. with
Pastor Douglas Downs.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, Sunday School 10
a.m., evening service 6 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS — Bible Study; 6
PM; Pastor Bob Hood; Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Rd.; (740-446-7495 or 740709-6107). Everyone is welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —

4-H
From page 1A

Labo partners with
the 4-H organization in
the United States. The
Labo members who wish
to participate in the
exchange program stay
with 4-H families around
the U.S.
Fukutomi has only
taken one year of English so far. Although
there is a language gap
in their communication,
her host family said
she learned several new
words since arriving.

GALLIPOLIS — First Light
Worship Service in the Family
Life Center, 9am; Sunday School,
9:3 0am; Morning Worship Service, 10:45 am; Youth “The Resistance” in the FLC, 6 pm; Evening
Worship Service 6pm; First
Church of the Nazarene, 1110
First Ave. with Pastor Douglas
Downs.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, Sunday School
10 a.m., evening service 6 p.m.

Dickey Chapel Church will hold
service at 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s
Ministry, 6:45 pm; Youth “REFUEL” in the FLC, 7pm; Prayer &amp;
Praise in the Sanctuary, 7 pm;
First Church of the Nazarene,
1110 First Ave.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, business meeting
and Bible Study, 7 p.m.

Friday, Aug. 17

Tuesday, Aug. 21

GALLIPOLIS — Gospel in the
Park, Victory River, Neal Family,
Sheltons, 7 p.m.
BIDWELL — Aug. 17-18,
clothing giveaway, Church of
Christ, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., 14840
S.R. 554 in Bidwell

GALLIOPLIS — Christian
Care Circle Ladies meeting;
10:30 AM at Bob Evans; Rio
Grande; we are studying “Women
of the Old Testament”. All ladies
are welcome to attend.

Sunday, Aug. 19

Wednesday,
Aug. 22

GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch
at 9:45 AM; Sunday School
at 10:00; AM worship service
at 10:30; Pastor Bob Hood;
Bulaville Christian Church, 2337
Johnson Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495
or 740-709-6107. Everyone is
welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
Dickey Chapel Church will hold
service at 6 p.m.

Wednesday,
Aug. 15

Fukutomi has been
enjoying the American
cuisine. Her favorite
foods so far include
steak, ketchup, and Goldﬁsh Crackers.
In a few years, Fukutomi could be eligible to
come back to the U.S. as
a chaperone for the Labo
program. A chaperone
is assigned to four or
ﬁve younger students,
but they don’t stay with
those students. These
older members are there
in case of an emergency
and to check up on the
younger members. Often
times the chaperone
stays with their original

counties have already
made their decisions.”
Commissioner David
Smith said, of the
options, he already felt
there were two clear
choices he would choose.
Smith and Commis-

sioner Brent Saunders
joked one never wanted
to be ﬁrst in line when
testing new technology
or last with old technology.
In 2017, the board
purchased electronic

From page 1A

(the companies) in here
and narrow it down,”
said Burnett. “Some

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6

PM

6:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly
3 (N)
News (N)
WTAP News NBC Nightly
at Six (N)
News (N)
ABC 6 News ABC World
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Globe Trekker "Tough
Trains: The Transcontinental
Railroad, USA"
Eyewitness ABC World
News (N)
News (N)
(2:00) Golf PGA
Championship (L)
Paid
Paid
Program
Program
PBS
Washington
NewsHour
Week
Weekend (N)
(2:00) Golf PGA
Championship (L)

6

PM

6:30

Abuse

on Kevin Franklin Durst
for child abuse resulting
in injury, W.Va. Code 61 From page 1A
8D- 3(a) which states, “If
any parent, guardian, or
alleged abuse complaint. custodian shall abuse a
Upon questioning the child and by such abuse
victim, Cavender report- cause such child bodily
injury as such term is
ed the victim stated the
deﬁned in section one,
abuse occurred because
article eight-b of this
he would not eat the
chapter, then such partoppings on his pizza,
wherein his father, Kevin ent, guardian, or custoFranklin Durst, dragged dian shall be guilty of a
felony and, upon convichim into the bathroom
tion thereof, shall be
by his arm. The victim
ﬁned not less than $100
continued, once in the
nor more than $1,000
bathroom, his father
started striking him with and imprisoned in a
state correctional facility
his hand, the complaint
for not less than one nor
states.
more than ﬁve years, or
Cavender reported
the mother of the victim in the discretion of the
gave a written statement court, be conﬁned in jail
for not more than one
of the occurrence. Cavyear.”
ender stated based on
written statement and
Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
the visible injuries on
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach her
the victim he requested
at (304) 675-1333, extension 1992.
a warrant to be issued

host family. Fukutomi
said she would like to
come back to the U.S.
and the Gheens said they
would love to have her
come back as a chaperone.
“I asked her four or
ﬁve days in if she was
homesick and she said,
‘no, this is my home,’”
said Randi Gheen, who is
Kylie’s mom.
Fukutomi will be leaving the Friday of fair
week, but she hopes to
be able to show one of
the family’s calves in the
open show.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing.

tablet-like devices to help
log election results as
opposed to entering data
into a computer manually.

Gallia
From page 1A

Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

editor of The Daily Sentinel.

GALLIPOLIS — Bible Study; 6
PM; Pastor Bob Hood; Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Rd.; (740-446-7495 or 740709-6107). Everyone is welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
Dickey Chapel Church will hold
service at 7 p.m.

The Labo program
encourages host families
to let the students experience the average life of
an American teenager.
Kylie and Fukutomi have
been enjoying their time
together going hiking,
ﬁshing, berry picking,
cooking, swimming, and
so much more. Fukutomi
said her favorite activity so far was horseback
riding. The family likes
to play card and board
games, which Fukutomi
has picked up on easily.
Kylie said that since they
taught Fukutomi how to
play the games, she beats
them all every time.

Voting

follows:
Salem — .5 mill additional for providing and
maintaining vehicles,
From page 1A
etc.;
Rutland — 1 mill
In Middleport, voters
will be asked to consider renewal for ﬁre protection;
a 2 mill additional levy
Letart — 1 mill renewfor police protection.
In Rutland Village, vot- al for ﬁre protection;
Orange — 2 mill addiers will be asked to consider a 2 mill additional tional for road maintenance;
levy for general operatBedford — .5 mill
ing expenses.
Southern Local voters renewal for ﬁre protection and other emergenwill consider a 4 mill
renewal levy for current cy services;
Lebanon — 1 mill
expenses.
replacement for ﬁre proVoters in Alexander
tection;
Local will once again
Sutton — 1 mill addihave the option to
tional for ﬁre protection.
approve a 1 percent
All levies and issues
income tax for current
operating expenses. This must be approved by
the Secretary of State’s
is the fourth attempt
Ofﬁce for ballot placefor an income tax levy
ment.
in recent years by the
district.
Township levies are as Sarah Hawley is the managing

34, of Gallipolis, three
counts of Aggravated
Possession of Drugs,
felonies of the FifthDegree. Robert M.
Waugh, 29, of Gallipolis, two counts of
Forgery, felonies of the
Fifth-Degree. Sarah
Jane Ramey, 37, of Gallipolis, one count of
Burglary, a felony of
the Second-Degree; and
two counts of Breaking
and Entering, felonies
of the Fifth-Degree.
Melissa I. Sibley, 29,
of Vinton, one count of
Aggravated Possession
of Drugs, a felony of the
Fifth-Degree; and two
counts of Possession of
Drugs, felonies of the
Fifth-Degree. Joseph E.
Williams, 39, of Dayton,
one count of Failure to
Appear, a felony of the
Fourth-Degree. Christopher S. McAvena, 21, of
Gallipolis, one count of
Failure to Appear, a felony of the Fourth-Degree.
Thomas L. Ball, 37, of

SUNDAY, AUGUST 12
7

PM

7:30

Little Big Shots "Little Miss
Sunshine"
Little Big Shots "Little Miss
Sunshine"
America's Funniest Home
Videos
Masterpiece Classic
"Downton Abbey Season 4:
Part Three"
America's Funniest Home
Videos
60 Minutes

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts Four" Contestants
have a final chance to impress the judges.
America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts Four" Contestants
have a final chance to impress the judges.
Celebrity Family Feud (N) The $100,000 Pyramid (N)
Masterpiece Classic
"Poldark" The wars tempt
Ross and Dwight.
Celebrity Family Feud (N)

10

PM

10:30

Shades of Blue "Goodnight,
Sweet Prince" (N)
Shades of Blue "Goodnight,
Sweet Prince" (N)
To Tell the Truth (N)

Masterpiece Mystery! "Sherlock: The Lying Detective"
Sherlock squares off with Culverton Smith, a chilling enemy
with a very dark secret.
The $100,000 Pyramid (N) To Tell the Truth (N)

NCIS: Los Angeles "Plain
Elementary "How to Get a
Sight"
Head" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Bob's
TheSimpsons Teen Choice Awards Celebrating teen icons. (N)
Burgers
"King Leer"
p.m. (N)
Masterpiece Classic
Masterpiece Mystery! "Sherlock: The Lying Detective"
Masterpiece Classic
"Downton Abbey Season 4: "Poldark" The wars tempt Sherlock squares off with Culverton Smith, a chilling enemy
Part Three"
Ross and Dwight.
with a very dark secret.
60 Minutes
Big Brother (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "Plain
Elementary "How to Get a
Sight"
Head" (N)

7

PM

7:30

Big Brother (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) BlueB. "Whistleblowers"
24 (ROOT) (4:00) MLB Baseball (L)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) E:60

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

6

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Three
Murder on the Orient Express ('17, Cri) Daisy Ridley,
Sharp Objects "Cherry" (N) Ballers (SP) Insecure
(N)
"Better-Like"
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Kenneth Branagh. A renowned detective investigates a
(SP) (N)
Missouri
murder while aboard a luxury passenger train.
Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life ('03,
Get Out A black man is invited to (:45)
Secret Window A strange man
Adv) Angelina Jolie. An adventurer races to find Pandora's his white girlfriend's family estate, but finds accuses a writer of plagiarism then hunts
Box before it falls into the hands of a crime boss. TV14
himself trapped. TVMA
him down to exact his revenge. TV14
(5:30) 4th
Cartoon "The Who Is
Who Is
Who Is
The Affair A hopeful
The Affair Ben finally
Cartoon "The
Est. "Matters America?
epiphany leads Cole to a
Senior Vote" America?
confesses the truth to Alison. America? (N) Wall" (N)
horrific discovery.
(N)
of Fact"
(5:00)

Toddler Tech Childcare Center is honored
to invite the community to our 40th
Anniversary Alumni Celebration.
Open House Saturday September 8,2018
from 12-4 with a program from 1:00-1:30pm
You can tour the center and view updated rooms
Appetizers and cake will be served
Please bring your family and join us in celebrating what God
has done through this ministry of Faith Baptist Church.

OH-70070077

27 (LIFE)

Blue Bloods
BlueB. "Personal Business" Blue Bloods "Confessions" BlueB. "Unbearable Loss"
Postgame
Pirates Ball Focused
Spotlight
In Depth
Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
Baseball Tonight
MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at Chicago Cubs Site: Wrigley Field (L)
WNBA Basketball Los Angeles vs Phoenix (L)
Championship Drive
GameDay "Featured"
Fiancé Killer (2018, Drama) Felisha Cooper, Kari Wuhrer. Babysitter's Nightmare (2018, Drama) Reagan Pasternak, (:05) The Bachelor Next
TVPG
Sean Whalen, Brittany Underwood.
Door Haylie Duff. TV14
(5:10)
Beauty and
(:15)
Cinderella Lily James. A mistreated young woman's life is
(:50)
Mulan (1998, Animated) Eddie
the Beast TVPG
changed when she receives help from a fairy godmother. TVPG
Murphy, BD Wong, Ming-Na Wen. TVG
Bar Rescue "Blowing Royal Bar Rescue "Corking the
Bar Rescue "Scoreboard to Bar Rescue "Chase Lounge" Bar Res. "Back to the Bar:
Smoke"
Hole"
Death"
The Tradewinds of Change"
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water TVG
Full House
Full House
SVU "Father Dearest"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Impulsive"
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Selfish" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Savior" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Behave"
(4:30) We're the Millers
Intelligence ('05, Cri) Klea Scott, Ian Tracey. TVPG Hercules ('14, Adv) John Hurt, Dwayne Johnson. TV14
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
2000s "The Financial Crisis" 2000s "Yes We Can" (N)
Comedy "In It Together" (N)
Avengers: Age of Ultron ('15, Act) Scarlett Johansson, Robert Downey Jr.. TV14 Claws "Breezy"
Claws "Breezy"
(5:45) Fear
(:50) Fear the Walking Dead (:50) Fear the Walking Dead "Bonus
Fear the Walking Dead
(:05) Preacher "The Tom/
the Dead
Edition" (N)
"People Like Us" (N)
Brady" (N)
To Be Announced
Naked/Afraid "Blindsided" Naked "Eaten Alive" (N)
Naked "Fire and Fury" (N) Ninja "Over the Edge"
Ancient Aliens "The
Ancient Aliens "Aliens,
Ancient Aliens "Strange
Ancient Aliens "Beyond
Ancient Aliens "Secrets of
Doomsday Prophecies"
Gods and Heroes"
Abductions"
Nazca"
the Tombs"
Woods Law "Long Shot"
Woods Law "Into Thin Air" North Woods Law
North Woods Law (N)
I Was Prey (N)
Snapped "Denise Frei"
Buried in the Backyard
The Disappearance of Crystal Rogers "Vanishing Point" Snapped "Denise Frei"
"Hog Trail Murders" (SF) (N) A series of killings haunts the residents of a town.
Monk
Monk
Monk
Monk
Monk
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians (N)
Very Cavallari (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Hitler's Last Stand "Panzer Wicked Tuna: Outer "The Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Sharks Attack "World's
Fury"
Meat is Here" (N)
"Epic Fish Fights" (N)
"No Pain, No Gain" (N)
Deadliest Beach" (N)
NASCAR Victory Lap (L)
Racing Roots Glory Road Glory Road Mecum10
Mecum10
Caf./ Octane Caf./ Octane Glory Road
DFL Soccer Supercup Bayern Munich at Frankfurt
MLS Soccer Orlando City SC at D.C. United (L)
MLS Soccer Dal/Sea (L)
The Last Pope? Ancient prophecies say Pope Francis is the
American Pickers "Sgt.
American Pickers "Hot Rod American Pickers: Bonus
Picker's Lonely Hearts Club" Hero"
Buys "One of Everything"
last pope. (N)
Housewives Potomac
Housewives Potomac
Housewives Potomac (N)
Housewives Potomac
Housewives Atlanta
(5:00)
Waiting to Exhale Whitney Houston. TVM
Whitney: Can I Be Me ('17, Doc) Bobbi Kristina Brown, Whitney Houston. TVMA
Fixer "The Flipper Upper"
Fixer Upper
Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Life (N)
Life (N)
IslndLif (N) IslndLif (N)
Planet of the Sharks (2016, Sci-Fi) Brandon Auret, Mark Deep Blue Sea 2 (2018, Horror) Rob Mayes, Michael
Deep Blue Sea 2 ('18, Hor)
Atkins, Stephanie Beran. TV14
Beach, Danielle Savre. TVMA
Danielle Savre. TVMA

Rio Grande, one count
of Failure to Appear,
a felony of the FourthDegree.
Mark E. Simms, 36, of
Crown City, one count
of Failure to Appear,
a felony of the FourthDegree. Zachary A.
Henry, 27, of Gallipolis
Ferry, West Virginia,
one count of Failure to
Appear, a felony of the
Fourth-Degree. Matthew C. Cook, 27, of
Milton, West Virginia,
one count of Failure to
Appear, a felony of the
Fourth-Degree. Jessica
N. Clendenen, 34, of
New Haven, West Virginia, one count of Failure to Appear, a felony
of the Fourth-Degree.
Tiffany E. Glover, 34,
of Columbus, one count
of Failure to Appear,
a felony of the FourthDegree. Melissa M.
McCarty, 35, of Gallipolis, one count of Failure
to Appear, a felony of
the Fourth-Degree.
The cases against
those indicted will
proceed in the Gallia
County Common Pleas
Court.

3615 Jackson Pike Gallipolis Ohio

What a Blessing!!

OH-70069231

Sunday Times-Sentinel

We want to thank our many friends for the cards,
calls, flowers &amp; monetary gifts that we received for
our 70th anniversary celebration.
Thanks to our children, Carl &amp; Sue Shenefield &amp; Roy
&amp; Linda Vaughan for a day we will always remember.
Rex &amp; Catherine Shenefield

�A long the River
6A Sunday, August 12, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

The 155th Meigs County Fair
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS —
The rides, the animals,
the fair food and much,
much more make their
return for the 155th
Meigs County Fair this
week.
Whether you enjoy the
demo derby, horse racing, live music, animal
shows, or a funnel cakes,
the Meigs County Fair
includes something for
everyone.
Fair festivities kick-off
on Sunday evening with
the Junior Fair Parade
and crowning of the fair
royalty.
The fair will then run
Monday, Aug. 13 through
Saturday, Aug. 18 with
gates opening at 7 a.m.
and closing at 11 p.m.
each day. The carnival
rides will run from 1-4:30
p.m. and 6-11 p.m., Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, and from
noon-5 p.m. and 6-11
p.m. on Tuesday and Saturday. Rides are free with
the $8 general admission
to the fair. Pass holders
may purchase daily ride
tickets for $5. Season
passes are available for
$17 or $19 for membership tickets.
Senior Citizen Day will
be held on Thursday, with
all senior citizens admitted free with a Golden
Buckeye Card until 2 p.m.
On Tuesday, kids 12 and
under are admitted free
until noon.
One new contest this
year has to do with animal showmanship.
While livestock shows
and showmanship competitions are one of the
highlights of fair week for
those with animal projects, there will be a new
twist this week with the
Old Timers Showmanship competition. At the
conclusion of the market
animal shows (lamb,
goat, hog, etc.), in addition to Pee Wee Showmanship for the younger
ones, there will be the
Old Timers Showmanship
for those 19 years of age
and older. There is a $5
for the Old Timers competition with the winner
receiving half the money
and the rest beneﬁting
the Junior Fair Board.
Featured entertainment as part of the fair
will include Wayland on
Wednesday evening, and
Citizen Way and Unspoken on Tuesday evening.
The Tuesday evening
performances are part of
the ﬁrst Drug Prevention
Awareness event held in
conjunction with Kid’s
Day at the fair.
As is tradition, the fair
will feature a full slate of
activities.
Monday’s activities
include the Junior Fair
Horse Show, Little Miss
and Mister Contest, Pretty Baby contest, Junior
Fair Dairy Show, Flower
Show, Open Class Dairy
Show, Hay Show and
Horticulture Judging. The
afternoon will feature a
Junior Fair Board Service
Auction and Sheep Show.
The evening’s entertainment will be a performance by Belles and
Beaus, ATV Drag Racing
and a Demo Derby.
Tuesday is Kid’s Day
and Drug Prevention
Awareness Day at the
Fair and begins with the

File photos

Harness racing will be held on both Thursday and Friday afternoons.

Rides will line the midway of the Meigs County Fairgrounds beginning on Monday.

Flower shows are scheduled to take place on Monday and Thursday
as part of the 155th Meigs County Fair.

The 2017 Meigs County Fair Royalty were Livestock Princess Rachel Jackson, Livestock Prince Cooper
Schagel, Queen Michaela Holter, First Runner Up Katelin Ferguson. The 2018 royalty will be crowned
on Sunday evening.

Mutual Betting, Ladies
Baking Contest, Cloverbud Graduation and
the Riverside Cloggers.
and events include the
On the pull track and at
Junior Fair Market Hog
the grandstand will be
Show, Junior Fair Horse
OMTPA and Tractor Pull,
Fun Show, and the Marwith Motor Cross at the
ket Goat Show. Also on
Grandstand.
Wednesday will be CloFriday morning begins
ver Clues, a Corn Hole
Tournament, Lazy J High with the Junior Fair Pet
Show and Kiddie TracStakes Karaoke and evetor Pull of Champions.
ning musical entertainThe Junior Fair Awards
ment by Wayland.
program will be held at
Thursday is Senior
1 p.m., as well as Meigs
Citizen Day and begins
with the Junior Fair Rab- County’s Got Talent at
3 p.m. Harness Racing
bit Show. At 10:30 a.m.
with Para Mutual Betting
there will be Bingo in
will taking place in the
the Grange Hall Annex.
afternoon, followed by the
The day’s schedule also
truck and semi pulls in
includes Pigeon Racing,
the evening. The ShowFlower Show Judging,
Harness Racing with Para man of Showman contest
Artist website photo

Unspoken

Junior Fair Poultry Show.
Drug Prevention day
events will take place at
noon and 2 p.m. on the
Hill Stage. The afternoon
includes the Open Class
Beef Show and Open
Class Poultry Show. The
evening is ﬁlled with the
Junior Fair Dairy Steer
and Dairy Feeder Shows,
and Beef Feeder and Market Steer Shows. Citizen
Way and Unspoken will
perform at the Grandstand in the evening. Also
on Tuesday evening will
be the Antique Tractor
Pull and the Open Horse
Show.
Wednesday activities

will be held at 6 p.m.,
with Hill Stage entertainment for the evening to
feature Amix. The horse
pull will also take place
on Friday evening at the
Grandstand.
Saturday is the ﬁnal
day of the 2018 Meigs
County Fair. Roll Call
for all Market Livestock
Members is at 8 a.m.,
with the Livestock Sale to
start at 10 a.m. The day
includes Dairy Sweepstakes. The Pull Track
will be busy with ATV
Pulls, Youth Tractor Pulls,
Tough Track Contest and
the “Hot” Garden Tractor
Pull. Karaoke with Kip
will take place on the Hill
Stage, with ﬁreworks to
close out the fair.

Daily activities include
programs by Animal
Enterprises (pig races and
petting zoo) which will be
held in the front gate area;
the Kiddie Tractor Pull
which is held MondayThursday at 4 p.m., with
the Pull of Champions
on Friday at 11 a.m.; and
World Champion Wood
Carver Dennis Beach with
three to four daily shows.
Additional information
about the 155th Meigs
County Fair can be found
at mydailysentinel.com
and in the Meigs County
Fair Preview special section in the Aug. 10 edition
of The Daily Sentinel.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Staying safe
at the Fair

THE 155TH MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE
Sunday, Aug. 12
7:30 p.m. — Jr. Fair
Parade, Race Track
Followed by Opening Ceremonies and the
Meigs County Fair Royalty Crowning
*****************
Monday, Aug. 13
Baum Lumber and
Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling Day
7 a.m. — Gates Open
9 a.m. — Jr. Fair Horse
Show, Horse Arena
10 a.m. — Open Class
and Jr. Fair Dairy Show,
RL Arena
11 a.m. — Little Miss
and Mister Contest, Hill
Stage
File photos
Noon — Flower Show
Laura Pullins and Kylie Gheen compete in the 2017 Showman of Showman contest.
Judging, TR Building
7 p.m. — 4-H Game
1 p.m. — Pretty Baby
Night, RL Arena
Contest, Hill Stage
8 p.m. — Riverside
1 p.m. — Hay Show,
Cloggers, Hill Stage
Soil and Water Booth,
11 p.m. — Gates Close
Grange Building
*****************
1:30 p.m. — Horticulture Judging, Coon
Hunter’s Building.
Friday, Aug. 17
4 p.m. — Kiddie TracThe Simmons Insurtor Pull, Small Arena
ance Group Day
4:30 p.m. — Jr. Fair
7 a.m. — Gates Open
Board Service Auction,
9 a.m. — Jr. Fair Pet
RL Arena
Show, Small Arena
7 p.m. — Jr. Fair Sheep
11 a.m. — Kiddie TracShow, RL Arena
tor Pull of Champions,
7 p.m. — Belles and
Small Arena
Beaus, Hill Stage
1 p.m. — Harness Rac7 p.m. — ATV Drag
ing with Para Mutual
Racing, Pull Track
Betting
7:30 p.m. — Demo
1 p.m. — Jr. Fair
Derby, Grandstand
Awards Program, RL
11 p.m. — Gates Close
Arena
*****************
3 p.m. — Meigs County’s Got Talent, Hill Stage
6 p.m. — Showman
Tuesday, Aug. 14
of Showman, Livestock
Swisher &amp; Lohse PharArena
macy Day
Brenen Rowe holds a rabbit during Pee Wee Showmanship.
6 p.m. — Truck and
Kid’s Day
6:30 p.m. — Citizen
Semi Pulls, Pull Track
7 a.m. — Gates Open
Thursday, Aug. 16
8 p.m. — Amix, Hill
8 a.m. — Jr. Fair Poul- Way, Grandstand
Ridenour Gas Service
8 p.m. — Unspoken,
Stage
try Show, RL Arena
Day
8 p.m. — Horse Pull,
Noon — Drug Preven- Grandstand
Senior Day
11 p.m. — Gates Close
Grandstand
tion Event (Round 1),
7 a.m. — Gates Open
*****************
11 p.m. — Gates Close
Hill Stage
8 a.m. — Jr. Fair Rab*****************
1 p.m. — Open Class
bit Show, RL Arena
Beef Show, followed by
10:30 a.m. — BINGO,
Wednesday, Aug. 15
Jr. Fair Beef Breeding, RL
Grange Annex
Harmon Services Day
Saturday, Aug. 18
Arena
11 a.m. — Ladies Day
7 a.m. — Gates Open
Ridenour Gas Service
1 p.m. — Open Class
Baking Contest, Hill
8 a.m. — Jr. Fair Hog
Day
Poultry Show, Small
Stage
Show, RL Arena
7 a.m. — Gates Open
Arena
Noon — Flower Show
10 a.m. — Jr. Fair
8 a.m. — Roll Call for
2 p.m. — Drug Preven- Horse Fun Show
Judging, TR Building
all Market Livestock
tion Event (Round 2),
12:45 p.m. — Pigeon
1 p.m. — Clover Clues,
Members
Hill Stage
Racing, Race Track
RL Arena
10 a.m. — Livestock
4 p.m. — Kiddie Trac1 p.m. — Harness Rac- Sale, RL Arena
2 p.m. — Lady J High
tor Pull, Small Arena
ing with Para Mutual
Stakes Karaoke, Hill
Noon — Dairy Sweep5 p.m. — Jr. Fair Dairy Stage
Betting
stakes, RL Arena
Steer Show, RL Arena
1 p.m. — Lady J High
4 p.m. — Kiddie TracNoon — ATV Pulls,
5:15 p.m. — Jr. Fair
Stakes Karaoke
tor Pull, Small Arena
Pull Track
Dairy Feeder Show, RL
4 p.m. — Kiddie Trac5 p.m. — Corn Hole
3 p.m. — Youth Tractor
Arena
tor Pull, Small Animal
Tournament, RL Arena
Pull, Pull Track
5:30 p.m. — Jr. Fair
7 p.m. — Market Goat Arena
7 p.m. — Tough Track
Beef Feeder Show, RL
6 p.m. — Cloverbud
Show, Livestock Arena
Contest, Grandstand
Arena
7 p.m. — Opening Act Graduation, RL Arena
7 p.m. — Karaoke with
6 p.m. — Jr. Fair Mar6 p.m. — OMTPA and Kip, Hill Stage
for Wayland, Grandstand
ket Steer Show, RL Arena
Tractor Pulls, Pull Track
7 p.m. — “Hot’ Garden
8 p.m. — Wayland,
6 p.m. — Antique Trac- Grandstand
6:30 p.m. — Riverside Tractor Pull, Pull Track
tor Pull, Pull Track
9:30 p.m. — Fireworks
11 p.m. — Gates Close Cloggers, Hill Stage
6 p.m. — Open Horse
7 p.m. — Motor Cross,
*****************
11 p.m. — Gates Close
Show, Horse Show Arena
Grand Stand

OVRDC receives Auditor of State Award
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — A
recent ﬁnancial audit
of Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission (OVRDC) by the
Auditor of State Dave
Yost’s ofﬁce has returned
a clean audit report
for the period ending
December 31, 2017.
OVRDC’s record keeping has earned it the
Auditor of State Award
for the sixth year in a
row. The Ohio Valley
Regional Development
Commission is a public
regional planning commission established by
agreement among its
members pursuant to

Section 713.21 of the
Ohio Revised Code, as
amended. Acting in the
capacity of a Regional
Planning Commission,
OVRDC coordinates
federal, state and local
resources to encourage development in 12
southern Ohio counties:
Adams, Brown, Clermont, Fayette, Gallia,
Highland, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vinton.
OVRDC works with
local communities and
organizations to secure
Appalachian Regional
Commission (ARC),
US Department of
Commerce, Economic

Development Administration (EDA), and
Ohio Public Works
Commission (OPWC)
funding. OVRDC is also
designated by t he Ohio
Department of Transportation as a Regional
Transportation Planning
Organization.
The Auditor of State
Award is presented to
local governments and
school districts upon the
completion of a ﬁnancial audit. Entities that
receive the award meet
the following criteria of a
“clean” audit report: The
entity must ﬁle timely
ﬁnancial reports with the
Auditor of State’s ofﬁce

in accordance with GAAP
(Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles);
The audit report does not
contain any ﬁndings for
recovery, material citations, material weaknesses, signiﬁcant deﬁciencies, Single audit ﬁndings
or questioned costs; The
entity’s management
letter contains no comments related to: Ethics
referrals, Questioned
costs less than $10,000,
Lack of timely report submission, Reconciliation,
Failure to obtain a timely
Single Audit, Findings for
recovery less than $100,
Public meetings or public
records.

OHIO BRIEFS

Babe found
inside toilet
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP)
— Police say a newborn found
inside a toilet at an Ohio Burger
King is expected to survive.
The Chillicothe Gazette
reports authorities found the
baby boy while responding to

a report about a 26-year-old
man passed out in a vehicle at
a Burger King in the southern
Ohio city of Chillicothe last
week.
The caller said a woman who
was with the man had gone into
the restaurant’s bathroom.
Police say they found the
26-year-old woman sitting
on the toilet with a baggie of

Sunday, August 12, 2018 7A

suspected heroin on the ﬂoor
beside her.
A medic who responded to the
call looked inside the toilet and
found the baby.
The woman told investigators
she thought she’d miscarried.
The baby was taken to a hospital.
Both the man and woman face
criminal charges.

By Meigs EMA
Special to OVP

ROCKSPRINGS —
As the 155th Meigs
County Fair approaches
the Meigs County
Emergency Management Agency would like
to remind you of a few
fair safety tips before
you head to the fairgrounds:
Child Safety:
* Carefully watch
your children.
* If you become separated from your child
contact law enforcement immediately.
* Take a picture of
your child so if you
become separated you
can show law enforcement what they look
like and what they are
wearing.
* Place a piece of
paper in children’s
pockets with a parent’s
name and phone number in case you become
separated. This makes
it easier for law enforcement to contact you if
your child is located.
* Have a meeting area
for children who are old
enough to walk with a
friend and meet there at
scheduled times.
* If children are old
enough to be on their
own have a buddy to

walk with while enjoying the fair.
Your Personal Health
and Safety:
* Stay hydrated by
drinking lots of water.
* Wear sunscreen
during daytime hours
* Wear the appropriate clothing for
weather conditions
and always wear closed
toe shoes.
* Wash your hands
before eating and after
touching the animals
and using restroom
facilities.
* Follow all posted
signs at buildings and
barns.
Ride Safety:
* Walk don’t run to
and around the rides.
* Always remain in
your seat and use safety devices properly.
* Follow the posted
ride heights and
requirements.
* Keep body parts
inside the rides at all
times.
* Always listen to
the instructions of the
ride operator.
The Meigs County
Emergency Management Agency would
like to wish all the
competitor’s good luck
and we hope everyone
enjoys the 155th Meigs
County Fair.

Homeless advocates
oppose county-wide
encampment ban
By Angie Wang

Mead said the lawsuit
doesn’t name the homeless people it affects
most, denying them a
CINCINNATI
chance to be heard in
— Criminalizing
court.
homelessness by banCounty Commisning encampments
throughout a southwest sioner Todd Portune
also criticized County
Ohio county is not the
Prosecutor Joe Deters
answer, advocates for
, who ﬁled the lawsuit
the homeless said Friagainst the City of Cinday.
cinnati. Portune said
Civil rights lawyer
Friday he is working
Joe Mead described as
with advocates for the
“troubling” the scope
homeless to ﬁnd a new
of an Ohio judge’s
location for the encamporder that prohibits
ment, and that Deters’
homeless people from
actions don’t align with
establishing tent citthe county’s policy.
ies in all of Hamilton
Josh Spring, director
County. Mead, of the
ACLU of Ohio, said he’s of the Greater Cincinnanever heard of a county ti Homeless Coalition,
prosecutor arguing that said homeless people
have since relocated to
homeless people are a
private land in a quickly
nuisance in all public
gentrifying community,
spaces.
County Judge Robert where residents who
have withstood those
Ruehlman has twice
extended his initial ban changes welcomed
them and offered to
on encampments in
bring food, water and
downtown Cincinnati
near high-proﬁle enter- blankets.
Cities across the
tainment and sports
venues. When homeless country are zeroing in
on homeless camps,
camps moved just outside the restricted area, said Megan Hustings,
president of the NationRuehlman amended
al Coalition for the
the order, ﬁrst covering more of Cincinnati, Homeless. On Friday,
local ofﬁcials ordered
and then the entirety
of Hamilton County. In about 20 people to
his Thursday ruling, he leave an encampment
said anyone who stands in northern Massachusetts, citing health
in the way could be
and safety concerns.
arrested.
Hustings said many
The county prospeople don’t like being
ecutor’s ofﬁce said the
confronted with visamendment — the
ible poverty. Nearly all
latest development in
of Hamilton County’s
a weekslong sweep of
homeless population
Cincinnati’s tent cities
already lives in shelters,
— is enforceable only
as long as there is room Finn said. Others live
in shelters for the home- on the streets because
less. Area shelters have Hamilton County
doesn’t have shelters
ﬁlled their permanent
that accommodate pets
beds but continue to
accept individuals who or couples without chilcan sleep on spare mat- dren, and people who
tresses, said Kevin Finn, experience paranoia or
president of Cincinnati- anxiety from mental illbased Strategies to End nesses often can’t stay
among upward of 200
Homelessness. No one
strangers.
has been turned away.

Associated Press

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, August 12, 2018

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

AEP Ohio reminds public to always call 811 before digging

Road Closures
and Restrictions

Card Shower

Monday, Aug. 13

GPS Address: 10321 State Route 141,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Location: Take S.R. 141 approximately 10 miles
west of Gallipolis or 40 miles east of Ironton
From Rio Grande, Ohio, take S.R. 325 South 6
miles, turn left on S.R.141, go 1 Mile to Gage School

Hog Roast &amp; Haystack Lunch
Homemade Ice Cream
Pie &amp; Cold Drinks

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Health meeting
will take place at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs County

2 PM

79°

77°

A shower or thunderstorm in spots this
afternoon. Clear tonight. High 86° / Low 64°

OH-70068129

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

(in inches)

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

0.00
1.37
1.27
33.16
27.78

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:39 a.m.
8:27 p.m.
7:56 a.m.
9:36 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Aug 18 Aug 26

Last

Sep 2

New

Sep 9

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

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

Major
12:53a
1:54a
2:54a
3:51a
4:45a
5:36a
6:24a

Minor
7:07a
8:08a
9:07a
10:03a
10:57a
11:48a
12:12a

Major
1:22p
2:21p
3:19p
4:16p
5:09p
6:00p
6:48p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
85/63

Moderate

High

Very High

Minor
7:36p
8:35p
9:32p
10:28p
11:21p
---12:36p

WEATHER HISTORY
The temperature reached 90 degrees
for the 19th consecutive day in
Washington, D.C., on Aug. 12, 1980.
This broke the record of 18 straight
days of 90 or higher, set in 1872.

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. Fri.

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

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

Level
13.27
16.18
21.63
12.86
12.77
25.23
13.16
25.98
34.60
13.19
16.50
34.30
15.60

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.26
-0.05
-0.19
-0.18
-0.03
-0.17
+0.24
-0.01
+0.05
+0.20
+0.10
-0.50
none

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Intervals of clouds
and sun

Cloudy, a
thunderstorm
possible; humid

Marietta
84/62
Belpre
84/62

Athens
84/61

87°
67°
Chance for rain in the
afternoon

Today

St. Marys
84/62

Parkersburg
84/61

Coolville
84/62

Elizabeth
85/63

Spencer
83/62

Buffalo
84/63
Milton
85/63

Clendenin
84/61

St. Albans
84/63

Huntington
84/63

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
78/59
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
67/52
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
85/67
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

87°
66°

Clouds and sun,
humid; a p.m. t-storm

Murray City
83/61

Ironton
85/64

Ashland
85/63
Grayson
85/64

FRIDAY

84°
68°

Wilkesville
84/62
POMEROY
Jackson
85/62
84/62
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
85/63
85/63
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
85/64
GALLIPOLIS
86/64
85/62
85/63

South Shore Greenup
85/64
85/63

58
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
85/64

PERRY TOWNSHIP — O.O.
McIntyre Park at 12:30 p.m., Shelterhouse 4, Bluebird, Jeffers Family
Reunion.

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
84/61

Very High

Primary: ragweed, grass/other
Mold: 2559

Logan
83/61

Sunday, Aug. 19

THURSDAY

86°
68°

Variably cloudy with
showers

Adelphi
84/60
Chillicothe
85/62

WEDNESDAY

85°
65°

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

Waverly
85/62

Pollen: 17

Low

MOON PHASES

TUESDAY

Clouds and sun with a
thundershower

0

Primary: cladosporium

Mon.
6:40 a.m.
8:26 p.m.
9:08 a.m.
10:13 p.m.

MONDAY

85°
64°

Statistics for Friday

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
85°
65°
86°
65°
98° in 1944
50° in 1972

CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board
meeting at 10 a.m. at 27 West Second Street, Suite 202, Chillicothe,
Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are held the ﬁrst Thursday of
the month. For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.
GALLIPOLIS — Red Cross
Blood Drive, St. Peter’s Episcopal
Church, 12:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board
meeting on Thursday, August 16
, 2018 at 10 a.m. at 27 West Second Street, Suite 202, Chillicothe,
Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are held the ﬁrst Thursday of

Tuesday, Aug. 14

Silent Auction &amp; Bake Sale
All items are Donated

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

GALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME
Retirees, Gallia and Jackson Counties, Sub-chapter 102, will hold
their next meeting on Friday,
August 17 at 2:00 PM at the Gallia
County Senior Resource Center,
1165 State Route 160, in Gallipolis. The sub-chapter is seeking
new members in the two-county
area. AFSCME (Ohio Council 8,
OCSEA, and OAPSE), OPERS and
SERS public employee retirees and
their spouses are invited to attend
the next meeting. Non-AFSCME
members, who retired from the
city, county, state or school district, are also welcome to attend.
We also encourage public employees who plan to retire in the near
future to attend. Issues that are
important to retirees are discussed
each month. The group meets on
the third Friday of each month.
Subchapter 102 also plans to have
an informational booth at the Community Yard sale at the City Park
on Saturday, August 18. For more
information, interested retirees
may call: 740-245-0093 or 740-2455255.

Thursday, Aug. 16

BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township Trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.
GALLIPOLIS — Citizens for
Prevention and Recovery of Drug
Addiction will meet at noon in the
French 500 Room in Holzer Medical Center on Jackson Pike. Those
interested in community efforts to
combat the area’s drug problems
are invited to attend. Meetings
held the second Monday of every
month.

Donations
Appreciated

66°

Friday, Aug. 17

Sunday, Aug. 12

Saturday, August 18, 2018

WEATHER

the month. For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.

Health Department, which is
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy, Ohio.
GALLIPOLIS —The Gallipolis
City Schools will be holding their
wellness policy meeting at Gallia
Academy Middle School in the
library at 9 a.m. The Wellness Policy Committee is inviting the public
to participate and bring ideas or
RACINE — The Charles and
concerns regarding the current
Alma Snyder family reunion will
be held at Star Mill Park in Racine. wellness policy. The current policy
Bring a covered dish. Lunch will be can be found by navigating to the
Gallipolis City Schools’ website
served at noon.
PERRY TOWNSHIP — Watson under board policies.
GALLIPOLIS — The Dr. Samuel
and McComas Reunion. 10 a.m. to
L Bossard Memorial Library trust3 p.m. Raccoon Creek Park, Shelees will have their regular monthly
terhouse 2. Lunch at 12:30 p.m.
meeting 5 p.m. at the library.
Alvin “Gene” Blake will be
celebrating his 90th birthday on
August 14. Cards may be sent to
587 Johnson Rd, Gallipolis, OH
45631.

Gallia County Amish
Ed School Beneﬁt
Special

8 AM

surfaces and previous
digging projects. Utility
lines need to be properly marked because even
when digging just a few
inches, the risk of striking
an underground utility
line still exists. Always
know what’s below by
calling 811 before you
dig. For more safety
tips and resources, visit
AEPOhio.com/Safety and
Call811.com.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

TODAY

From building a deck
to planting a tree, every
project that involves
digging warrants a call
to 811 at least two days
before breaking ground.
After you call, a professional will come to your
home and mark the location of any utility lines —
free of charge. The depth
of utility lines can vary
for a number of reasons,
such as erosion, uneven

of these lines while digging can cause serious or
fatal injuries, outages and
costly repairs.
“Following these simple
steps will help ensure
your next home improvement project is a success
while keeping you, your
family and your neighbors
safe throughout the process,” said Jim Goodnite,
manager of safety and
health for AEP Ohio.

GAHANNA, Ohio —
AEP Ohio, an American
Electric Power (NYSE:
AEP) company, is using
the 8/11 date to remind
the public to stay safe by
calling 811 before they
dig to have underground
utility lines marked.
Electric, gas, water,
sewer and cable utilities
rely on underground lines
to deliver services to
customers. Hitting one

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 KnobsStiversville 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.

Lunch
Served
12:00 - 3:00
by Donation

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Charleston
82/62

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

Winnipeg
98/66

Billings
96/62

N w York
80/72

Detroit
85/66

Chicago
88/67
Denver
91/58

Montreal
84/66

Toronto
84/64

Minneapolis
91/70

Kansas City
92/66

Washingt n
86/74

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
85/62/s 89/67/pc
64/55/r 58/53/sh
91/70/pc 90/68/pc
82/75/t
84/73/t
85/71/t
82/67/t
96/62/s 80/57/pc
91/62/pc 95/63/pc
78/71/sh 77/70/sh
82/62/c
82/64/t
90/68/t 88/66/pc
87/51/pc 84/54/pc
88/67/pc 89/69/s
85/63/pc 85/65/pc
83/66/pc
81/67/t
84/64/c
84/66/t
85/72/t
87/73/t
91/58/pc 90/58/pc
93/66/s 93/71/s
85/66/pc 86/66/pc
88/76/pc 90/77/sh
93/75/t 93/74/pc
87/66/s 85/66/s
92/66/pc 87/69/pc
105/85/s 105/84/s
89/73/pc 89/72/pc
85/67/s 83/65/s
88/69/c 88/70/s
89/78/pc 90/78/pc
91/70/s 92/72/s
89/68/c 92/68/pc
91/78/pc 92/78/sh
80/72/t
80/72/t
82/69/t
77/66/r
89/73/t 90/72/pc
85/73/t
83/71/t
104/82/s 105/82/pc
81/63/t
80/63/t
74/65/pc 76/67/c
88/70/t 85/68/pc
87/71/t
83/68/t
90/69/s 92/71/s
96/68/pc 93/68/pc
67/52/pc 66/53/pc
78/59/s 85/60/s
86/74/t
85/71/t

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
91/70

High
Low

El Paso
85/66
Chihuahua
79/61

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

119° in Death Valley, CA
31° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
119° in Death Valley, USA
Low 19° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
93/75
Monterrey
93/72

Miami
89/78

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
OH-70030880

OH-70003248

Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 12, 2018 s Section B

Burdette to play in Poland

Tornadoes
win at
Cliffside
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy Photo

Jenna Burdette — a 2014 graduate of Eastern High School and a 2018 graduate of the University of Dayton — agreed to terms with Towarzystwo Sportowe Ostrovia in
Ostrów Wielkopolski, Poland, marking the official start of her professional basketball career in the Basket Liga Kobiet.

Blue Angels win Waterford Invitational
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

WATERFORD, Ohio —
Another day, another championship.
One day after winning the
Logan Invitational at Hocking
Hills Golf Course, the Blue
Angels followed it up by winning the Waterford Invitational
at Lakeside Golf Course on
Wednesday in Washington
County.
In the play ﬁve, count four
format, Gallia Academy — one
of four local schools competing
in the invitational — won the
girls title with a score of 370,
16 strokes ahead of runner-up
Logan.
Molly Fitzwater led the
champion Blue Angels with an
84, one stroke ahead of teammate Hunter Copley. Bailey
Meadows was next with an
87, while Carley Johnson and
Avery Minton each scored 114.
The Lady Marauders — who
totalled a 402 — were led
by freshman Shelbe Cochran
with a 98. Caitlin Cotterill and

Courtesy photo

Members of the Gallia Academy girls golf team accept the championship trophy
after the 2018 Waterford Invitational on Wednesday at Lakeside Golf Course.

Kylee Robinson both carded
99s, while Mikayla Radcliffe
capped off the team score with
a 98.
The boys’ small school division was won by Barnsville
with a 334, taking the ﬁfthscore tie-breaker over New
Lexington. Southern was third
with a 350, 11 strokes ahead of

fourth-place Eastern.
The Tornadoes were led
by Jarrett Hupp, who ﬁred a
9-over par round of 79, good
enough eighth place overall.
Jensen Anderson was next for
Southern with a 89, followed
by Joey Weaver with an 89.
Landen Hill’s 94 rounded out
the Tornado total, with Ryan

Acree’s 101 serving as a potential tie breaker.
Eastern was led by Ryan
Harbour with an 83, and Jasiah
Brewer with an 88. Kylee Tolliver’s 92 and Nick Durst’s 98
rounded out the team total,
with Ethan Short’s 113 as the
potential tie breaker.
Coshocton won the big
school division with a score of
293, 36 strokes ahead of second place Warren.
The MHS ‘A’ team —
recording a 375 — was led by
senior Wyatt Nicholson with a
10-over par 80. Bobby Musser
was next with a 91, followed
by Cole Arnott with a 101 and
Trenton Peacock with a 103.
Brayden Ervin ﬁred the noncounting round of 109.
The Marauder ‘B’ team was
led by the duo of Bailey Jones
and Gus Kennedy, who posted
matching 106s. Dawson Justice’s 109 and Austin Mahr’s
118 rounded out the team
score of 439.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

Jim France staying quiet as NASCAR’s interim head
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) — Jim France
seems to be choosing to stay in the shadows, declining to let the public hear from
him as the interim chairman and CEO of
NASCAR.
France is not expected to be available for
interviews as NASCAR prepares to run its
ﬁrst race, at Michigan International Speedway, since chairman Brian France took an
indeﬁnite leave from the company his family owns.
Brian France was arrested on charges
of driving while intoxicated and criminal
possession of oxycodone Sunday night
in New York’s Hamptons. His uncle, Jim,
was picked the next day to take over on an
interim basis. He was vice chairman and
executive vice president of NASCAR.
It is not the news, or the moves, the
series wanted as it struggles to cope with
dropping attendance, TV ratings and major
sponsorship deals.
And, it might be a long wait if anyone
is hoping Jim France, who is quiet even
behind the scenes, will become face and
voice of the sport.
“I just hope that whoever is in that posi-

tion takes it serious and does a good job
with it because there are so many people in
this industry that want to see it succeed,”
said Kyle Larson, who drives the No. 42
Chevrolet. “I hope this is a good step to
have a good change for us and get some
good momentum back for our series.”
Brian France is the grandson of NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. and replaced
his father, Bill France Jr., as head of NASCAR 15 years ago.
Now, it’s Jim France’s turn to take the
wheel.
And, the relatively few people who know
the Vietnam veteran well are expressing
full conﬁdence in his ability to lead during
a potentially pivotal time for the series.
Jim France has worked for the family
business since 1959, serving in a slew of
roles. He founded Grand-AM in 1999 and
help to orchestrate a merger with American Le Mans Series to form IMSA in 2014.
He was also a key player in NASCAR’s purchase of ARCA.
“We’ve known Jim France since the
1970s and he’s given respect when he
walks in a room,” said Len Wood, co-

owner of the No. 21 Ford. “He’s earned
respect. He’s always been the quiet guy in
the background that did way more than
you knew. He’s the kind of jeans-andﬂannel guy, who you can bounce ideas off
of anytime.
“We have the utmost conﬁdence in
him.”
Rick Hendrick does, too.
“He’s going to be awesome in that role,”
the team owner said an interview on
Sirius. “I’ve watched what he’s done with
IMSA and how he’s brought all these different manufacturers to the table and how
that sport has grown with the 24 hour and
everything else.
“A lot of people don’t know Jim because
he never has been out front a lot, but
there is a great leader and a great racer
and NASCAR is in awesome hands.”
Hendrick, meanwhile, is hoping Brian
France gets the help he needs to come
back.
“Brian France is a good friend, a great
guy,” Hendrick said. “I’m not sure we
have a TV deal if it wasn’t for him. I pray
for him and I want him to get better.”

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— A solid start for the
defending champions.
Southern opened the
2018 league golf season
in style on Thursday with
a 15-stroke victory over
the ﬁeld in a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division match held at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia
County.
The Tornadoes —
who won the 2017 TVC
Hocking title outright
— picked up right where
they left off after posting four of the top eight
scores in the ﬁve-school
event, allowing the Purple and Gold to roll to a
winning tally of 174.
Waterford was the runner-up with a 189, while
Miller was third with a
208. Both Trimble and
host South Gallia also
competed at the event,
but neither squad had
enough golfers to ﬁnish
the day with a ﬁnal team
tally.
Wesley Jenkins of
Waterford claimed medalist honors with a 5-over
par round of 41. Four
players ﬁnished second
with identical rounds of
42, one shot off the mark
of Jenkins.
Southern had half of
those runner-up efforts
as both Jarrett Hupp and
Ryan Acree paced the
Tornadoes with matching
42s. Jensen Anderson and
Joey Weaver completed
the winning SHS tally
with a pair of 45s.
Landon Hill and Tanner
Lisle also ﬁred respective
efforts of 52 and 60 for
Southern.
See TORNADOES | 2B

Pridemore
widens lead
in Riverside
senior league
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. —
Kenny Pridemore, of
Point Pleasant, has
extended his lead of the
2018 Senior Men’s Golf
League at Riverside Golf
Club.
With seven weeks left
in the regular season,
Pridemore has a season
total of 213 points, 7.5
points ahead of current
runner-up Bobby Watson.
A total of 61 players
were on hand Tuesday,
making 13 four-man
teams and four trios.
The low score of the
day was a 13-under par
57, ﬁred by the team of
Pridemore, Dewey Smith,
Dave Biggs and Gene
Thomas.
Two shots behind the
winning group, there was
a tie for second place
between the team of
Harry Queen, Bob Humphreys and Larry Legg,
and the team of Charlie
Hargraves, Mike Wolfe,
Dave Bodkin and Bob
Hill
The closest to the pin
winners were Phil Burgess on the ninth hole
and Roger Putney on No.
14.
The current top-10
See PRIDEMORE | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, August 12, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Jones, Dobbs lead Steelers over Eagles 31-14
PHILADELPHIA (AP) —
Malcolm Jenkins went back
to raising his ﬁst during the
national anthem and Chris
Long again put his arm around
him as the teammates continue
trying to raise awareness about
racial inequality, social injustices and systematic oppression.
Landry Jones and Josh
Dobbs each tossed touchdown
passes and the Pittsburgh
Steelers beat the Philadelphia
Eagles 31-14 Thursday night in
the preseason opener.
But Jenkins’ decision to
resume his demonstration after
stopping last December drew
most of the attention as the
defending Super Bowl champions returned to the ﬁeld.
“Everybody is waiting for
what the league is going to do,”
Jenkins said. “We won’t let it
stop what we stand for. I was
very encouraged last year with
the direction and that obviously took a different turn.
“I think it’s important to
utilize the platform as we can
because for whatever reason,
we have framed this demonstration in a negative light and
often players have to defend
why we feel the need to ﬁght
for everyday Americans and in
actuality we’re doing the right
thing.”
The league and the players’
union have yet to announce a

Rasul Douglas at the 33 and
ran untouched to the end zone.
Fitzgerald Toussaint had a
3-yard TD run and a 2-point
conversion to give Pittsburgh
a 15-8 lead. Dobbs threw a
29-yard TD pass to Damoun
Patterson late in the second
quarter.
“We moved the ball successfully,” Dobbs said. “It felt good
to be out there.”
Sudfeld threw a perfect strike
for a 63-yard TD to Shelton
Gibson and ﬁred a 15-yard TD
pass to rookie Dallas Goedert.
He ﬁnished 10 of 14 for 140
yards.
“I just ran my route and
when I looked back, Nate
stepped up and scrambled to
my side and was able to hit
me,” Goedert said. “A great
play by him.”
Wentz still hasn’t been
Michael Perez | AP
cleared
for contact after havPittsburgh Steelers’ Landry Jones throws a pass during the first half of the team’s preseason game against the
Philadelphia Eagles, on Thursday in Philadelphia. Jones and fellow rookie QBs Josh Dobbs and Mason Rudolph combined ing surgery to repair two torn
ligaments in his left knee last
for an impressive 20 completions for 252 yards and two scores.
December. Foles, the Super
Bowl MVP, has missed a few
touchdown passes and two
the tunnel and walked toward
policy for this season regardpractices with muscle spasms
interceptions. Ben Roethlising demonstrations during the the bench while it played. It
appeared all the Steelers stood. berger and Antonio Brown sat in his neck and shoulder.
anthem after the league iniMason Rudolph, a thirdfor the Steelers and Le’Veon
“Malcolm is always a guy
tially ordered everyone to stand
Bell still hasn’t signed his fran- round pick competing with
on the sideline when “The Star- who is doing the work in the
Jones and Dobbs for the backchise tender. Jones completed
Spangled Banner” is played, or community, backing up whatup job to Roethlisberger, was 7
all four of his passes for 83
ever he’s doing,” Long said.
remain in the locker room.
of 12 for 101 yards.
yards, including a 71-yard TD
The Eagles rested several
Cornerback De’Vante Bausby
“He did a solid job in all
starters, including quarterbacks pass to JuJu Smith-Schuster in
also raised his ﬁst during the
areas,” Steelers coach Mike
the ﬁrst quarter. Smith-SchusCarson Wentz and Nick Foles.
anthem, and defensive end
Tomlin said.
ter made a leaping catch over
Michael Bennett walked out of Nate Sudfeld threw a pair of

Tornadoes
topple
field at OU
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.
com

paced SHS while securing medalist honors
with an 8-over par
round of 43. Teammates
ATHENS, Ohio —
Another championship Jarrett Hupp and Joey
Weaver ﬁnished as coperformance by the
runners-up with matchreigning champions.
ing rounds of 44, while
For the second time
in 24 hours, the South- Ryan Acree completed
the winning score with
ern golf team came
a 45.
away with top honors
Landon Hill and Will
following a 12-stroke
Wickline also ﬁred
victory over the ﬁeld
on Friday in a Tri-Valley respective efforts of 48
and 62 for the TornaConference Hocking
does.
Division match at the
Ethan Mitchell led
Ohio University Golf
Wahama with a 49, with
Course in Athens
Maddi Ohlinger followCounty.
ing with a 61. Kyher
The Tornadoes postBush and Jillian Love
ed four of the top ﬁve
individual efforts on the completed the White
day, allowing the Purple Falcon tally with identiand Gold to ﬁnish with cal 63s, while Casey
Greer also ﬁred a 65.
a stellar team tally of
Maddie Roby paced
176.
Belpre was the overall the Golden Eagles with
a 45, while the duo of
runner-up with a 188,
Mitchell Roush and Colwhile Federal Hocking
(223) beat out Wahama lin Jarvis led Federal
(236) for third place in Hocking with matching scores of 51. Zach
the standings. Trimble
Bragg led Trimble with
— the host school —
a 58.
had only two golfers
and did not record a
Bryan Walters can be reached at
team score.
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
Jensen Anderson

Mayfield, Barkley show the goods, Browns beat Giants
EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) — If ﬁrst indications are accurate, the
Cleveland Browns and
New York Giants hit it
right in taking Baker
Mayﬁeld and Saquon
Barkley with the top two
picks in the NFL draft.
Mayﬁeld threw two
touchdowns in two-plus
quarters and Barkley
ripped off a dazzling
39-yard run on the opening play from scrimmage
as the Browns beat the
Giants 20-10 on Thursday
night.
“I’m aware that it was
the ﬁrst game and in that
respect, it’s not so bad,”
Mayﬁeld said after showing why the Browns made
him the top pick.
Replacing starting
quarterback Tyrod Taylor
late in the ﬁrst quarter,
Mayﬁeld hit 11 of 20
passes for 212 yards,
didn’t turn the ball over
and converted two fourthdown plays with his feet.
“I thought he did some
good things out there,”
Cleveland coach Hue
Jackson said. “I’m honestly not surprised by anything Baker does. This
was his ﬁrst opportunity
and he’ll grow from it.”
The Heisman Trophy
winner from Oklahoma
found tight end David
Njoku on a 10-yard TD
pass to cap a 14-play,
72-yard drive on his sec-

ond series. He ﬁnished
his debut with a completion on a 54-yard slant
and run to fellow rookie
Antonio Callaway .
Taylor, expected to be
coach Jackson’s starter
as Mayﬁeld learns this
season, hit all ﬁve of
his passes in two series,
including a 36-yard
touchdown pass to Njoku
, a New Jersey native.
Barkley electriﬁed the
fans at MetLife Stadium,
taking a handoff from
Eli Manning on his ﬁrst
NFL touch and turning
on the jets on a 39-yard
jaunt down the sideline
in front of the Giants’
bench. It set up a 42-yard
ﬁeld goal by Aldrick
Rosas.
“I loved his ﬁrst run,”
Giants coach Pat Shurmur said of the Penn
State halfback. “If only
they all could be like
that. You could see, it
wasn’t too big for him.”
Barkley scoffed at the
idea he made something
out of nothing on the
play. There was a hole,
he said.
“Everybody talks about
the speed difference in
the NFL, but to see you
still have that burst and
you can get to that line of
scrimmage like that and
create space; I just have
to ﬁnd a way to gain
even more yards than
that,” said Barkley, who

ﬁnished with 43 yards on
ﬁve carries.
Jalen Simmons scored
on 5-yard third-quarter
run for the Giants’ other
score. It came three plays
after C.J. Board fumbled
a punt return and Zak
DeOssie recovered at the
Browns 16.
Manning played two
series and hit 4 of 7
passes for 26 yards. Star
receiver Odell Beckham
Jr., returning from major
ankle surgery, dressed
but was held out by Pat
Shurmur, who is trying to
rebuild the Giants after a
3-13 season.
The Browns went 0-16
last season after winning their four preseason
games.

during the anthem last
season, each stood.
Dez bryant
The Browns have had
interest in free agent
receiver Dez Bryant,
and the former Cowboy
tweeted during the game
he was coming to visit
GM John Dorsey. The
Browns may not need
him. Free agent signee
Jarvis Landry had two
catches for 36 yards in
very limited action. Callaway added 87 yards and
third-year pro Rashard
Higgins looked good with
four receptions for 66
yards.

Giants woes
This looked a lot like
the Giants of last year.
Except for the opening
Callaway
play, the offensive line
The troubled fourthround pick played despite struggled, particularly
being cited for marijuana protecting the quarterbacks, although the run
possession and drivgame generated 134 yards
ing with a suspended
license. Police also found on 23 carries. … The
new 3-4 defense stopped
bullets and a gun part
the run but gave up too
in his car this week. He
many big passing plays. …
had three catches for 87
yards, including a diving Second-string QB Davis
24-yarder that the Browns Webb struggled, going 9
of 22 for 70 yards. “He
successfully challenged
was a little too amped,”
after it was ruled incomShurmur said.
plete on the ﬁeld.
National anthem
Next up
There were no demonBrowns: Host Buffalo
strations. Giants DE Oliv- Bills on Aug. 16.
ier Vernon and S Michael
Giants: At Detroit
Thomas, who both knelt
Lions on Aug. 16.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tornadoes
From page 1B

The host Rebels were
led by Noah Spurlock
with a 68, followed by
Nolan Stanley with a
71 and Sam Cudd with
a 72.
Brooks Soprano followed Jenkins with a
42, while Matt Semen
and Will Huck completed the Wildcat tally

Pridemore
From page 1B

standings are as follows: Kenny Pridemore
(213.0), Bobby Watson
(205.5), Charlie Har-

with respective rounds
of 50 and 56.
Hunter Dutiel paced
the Falcons with a 42,
with Blaine Needham
and Trey Hettich both
adding identical efforts
of 55. Brody Dutiel
completed the MHS
score with a 56.
Zach Bragg and
MaKala Losey shot 62
and 72, respectively, for
the Tomcats.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

graves (202.5), Dewey
Smith (183.0), Albert
Durst (180.0), Carl
Stone (177.0), Fred
Pyles (159.0), Paul
Maynard (157.5), Bob
Humphreys (154.5)
and John Williams
(152.5).

PPHS Meet the
Teams night
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
Point Pleasant Junior-Senior High
School will be holding a Meet the
Teams night at approximately 6:30
p.m. Monday, Aug. 13, at Ohio
Valley Bank Track and Field in
Mason County. The event is free
and open to the public, and all
levels of fall sports at PPJSHS will
be introduced at the event. Meet
the Teams night will also follow
the open house being held at the
campus for new students in those
buildings.

GAHS Meet the
Teams night
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy High School will be
holding a Meet the Teams night
at approximately 6 p.m. Tuesday,
Aug. 14, at Memorial Field in Gallia County. The event is free and

open to the public, and all varsity
and junior high sports at GAHS
will be introduced at the event.

RVHS Meet the
Teams night

will be introduced at the event.

SGHS Athletic
Dept. golf outing

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
South Gallia Athletic DepartBIDWELL, Ohio — River Valley ment is hosting a four-person golf
High School will be holding a Meet scramble on Saturday, Aug. 18, at
Cliffside Golf Course.
the Teams night at approximately
Registration begins at 8 a.m.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 14, at
and the scramble will tee off at
Raider Stadium in Gallia County.
approximately 8:30 a.m.
The event is free and open to the
Cost is $60 per individual or
public, and all varsity sports at
$240 per team. Please make
RVHS will be introduced at the
checks payable to the South Galevent.
lia Athletic Department.
Skill prizes and door prizes will
be awarded throughout the event.
Food and beverages will also be
provided, with prizes going to the
MASON, W.Va. — Wahama High top three teams.
For more information or to
School will be holding a Meet the
register a team, contact SGHS
Teams night at approximately 6
Athletic Director Kent Wolfe by
p.m. Friday, Aug. 17, at Bachtel
email at gl_kwolfe@seovec.org
Stadium in Mason County. The
or contact by phone at 740-444event is free and open to the pub9334.
lic, and all varsity sports at WHS

Wahama Meet the
Teams night

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 12, 2018 3B

Dalton sharp in new offense
Bengals beat Bears 30-27
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Andy Dalton made the
Bengals’ new offense look
like a comfortable ﬁt.
Working out of Cincinnati’s reconﬁgured
playbook, Dalton threw a
pair of touchdown passes
during a 30-27 victory
over the Chicago Bears
on Thursday night at
half-empty Paul Brown
Stadium.
The Bengals (1-0)
were last in the league on
offense last season, the
worst ﬁnish in franchise
history. They overhauled
their leaky offensive
line, and coordinator
Bill Lazor injected more
diversity into the playbook. It showed the ﬁrst
time out.
“That’s what we wanted to do,” Dalton said. “If
we go out and play like
we’re supposed to play, it
can look like that.”
Dalton went 6 of 8 for
103 yards, completing
four passes of at least
20 yards. He also had an
interception that wasn’t
his fault — John Ross
fell on his route and Kyle
Fuller returned the pickoff 47 yards to the end
zone.
The Bengals are hop-

ing that Ross and running back Joe Mixon —
their top two picks last
season — emerge in the
redesigned offense during their second seasons.
Ross had a 20-yard
catch. Mixon — moved
into the starring role
with Jeremy Hill gone
— made the game’s
most impressive play. He
caught a short pass, stiffarmed one defender and
spun away from another
for a 24-yard touchdown .
The Bears (0-2) rested
most of their starters
during a 17-16 loss to
the Ravens in the Hall
of Fame Game, including quarterback Mitchell
Trubisky . His preseason
debut Thursday didn’t go
very well.
“We expect to be better,” Trubisky said. “We
were sloppy and that’s
not how we want to
play.”
Trubisky was in for two
series that netted minus1 yard on eight plays.
The Bears’ only ﬁrst
down on those series
came on Carlos Dunlap’s
penalty for roughing the
quarterback, a late hit
on Trubisky. He missed
on a deep sideline pass

to Kevin White on his
opening throw and ﬁnished 2 of 4 for 4 yards.
“There was nothing
extraordinary, but nothing bad,” ﬁrst-year coach
Matt Nagy said. “This
is so early for him right
now. It’ll be fun to get
him more snaps and get
him into a rhythm.”
Empty seats
Attendance was
35,633, slightly more
than half-capacity at the
65,535-seat stadium.
Last year, the Bengals
drew 44,495 for their
ﬁrst home preseason
game. They’re coming
off two straight losing
seasons.
Looking good
Tyler Bray had a
56-yard completion to
Daniel Brown during a
92-yard touchdown drive
that put the Bears ahead
in the fourth quarter.
Bray ﬁnished 18 of 27
for 219 yards. The Bears
signed him from Kansas
City, where he was familiar with Nagy’s offense.
Interesting choice
Nagy decided to try
for a tying ﬁeld goal
with 45 seconds left.
Cody Parkey missed a
52-yard try.

National anthem
There were no protests. Bears players,
coaches and staff stood
with arms linked for the
anthem. Bengals players
stood by themselves on
the sideline.
Preseason trickery
The Bengals pulled off
a fake punt in the second
quarter, with safety Clayton Fejedelem going 49
yards after a direct snap.
He ﬁnished as Cincinnati’s leading rusher with
the one run.
Heads up
Chicago’s Demarcus
Ayers and Fejedelem
drew personal fouls for
lowering their heads during tackles.
Injuries
Bears: LB Josh Woods
suffered a hand injury in
the ﬁrst half and didn’t
return.
Bengals: LB Vincent
Rey hurt his right ankle
while blocking on a punt
return and was helped off
the ﬁeld in the ﬁrst quarter. He didn’t return.
Next up
Bears: Play at Denver
on Saturday, Aug. 18.
Bengals: Play at Dallas
on Saturday, Aug. 18.

Parents of man
killed by punch say
condolences ‘too late’
NEW YORK (AP) —
The parents of a Florida man who died after
he was punched by an
assistant basketball
coach at Wake Forest
University said Friday
they don’t accept the
coach’s condolences.
Bob and Donna Kent
told NBC’s “Today”
show that the coach,
Jamill Jones, should
have tried to save their
son Sandor Szabo’s
life after punching him
early Sunday.
“If you’re this good
father, son, husband,
why not try to take
him to the hospital and
see if you could save
his life?” Bob Kent
said.
Police say Szabo
banged on Jones’ SUV
window, apparently
thinking the vehicle
was his Uber ride.
A person familiar
with the investigation
told The Associated
Press that Szabo may
have been drunkenly
knocking on car windows before Jones
allegedly confronted
him. The person spoke
on the condition of
anonymity because
the person was not
allowed to speak publicly.
Police say Jones got
out, punched Szabo
and sped off. Szabo
fell and hit his head.
He never regained
consciousness and was
taken off life support
Tuesday.
The city medical

examiner’s ofﬁce said
Friday that Szabo’s
death was a homicide
caused by blunt impact
to his head.
Jones, 35, of Kernersville, North Carolina,
turned himself in to
police Thursday and
was arraigned on a
misdemeanor assault
charge. His next court
appearance is scheduled for Oct. 2.
Jones, lawyer, Alain
Massena, told the AP
that the death was “a
tragic accident, and
Mr. Jones and his family send their deepest
condolences and their
thoughts and prayers
to the Szabo family.”
Donna Kent told
“Today,” ”I’m sorry,
your condolences are a
little bit too late.”
Szabo, also 35, was
visiting from Boca
Raton, Florida, where
he lived with his
brother.
Szabo was vice president for sales at What
If Media Group, a
digital media company
based in Fort Lee, New
Jersey.
“He was always
upbeat, positive, kind
and caring,” the company said in a Facebook post. “He was fun
to be with, interesting,
and always interested.
He was a really good
person.”
Wake Forest said
in a statement that it
would comment further once it gathered
more information.

Maryland says staffers
placed on leave after
player death

Wilfredo Lee | AP

Miami Dolphins defensive end Robert Quinn (94) raises his right fist during the singing of the national anthem before the team’s
preseason game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Thursday, in Miami Gardens, Fla. President Donald Trump said Friday players who
refuse to stand “proudly” for the anthem should be suspended without pay.

NFL players emphasize reasons for anthem demonstrations
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
— While the NFL continues discussions with the
players’ union regarding
a national anthem policy,
players who demonstrate
are emphasizing they are
protesting social injustice, racial inequality and
systematic oppression.
They are not against
the country, military, ﬂag
or “The Star-Spangled
Banner” itself.
President Donald
Trump wants players
to “ﬁnd another way to
protest” and contended
“most of them are unable
to deﬁne” what they’re
demonstrating against.
Players, however, have
made clear their position
numerous times.
“I think part of the
problem is that when you
continue the rhetoric that
this is controversial or
this is somehow a negative thing, people treat
it as such,” Philadelphia
Eagles safety Malcolm
Jenkins said after resuming his demonstration
before Thursday night’s
game. “But we’ve seen
in other leagues when
they’ve decided to amplify the voices of their players to also emphasize the
importance of the issues

that we’re raising, and
change the narrative away
from the anthem, that not
only is it more acceptable, the fan base gets
educated on what we’re
talking about, and we can
actually make some movement.”
Jenkins stopped his
demonstration last season
after the NFL committed
$90 million over the next
seven years to social justice causes in a three-segment plan that involves
league players.
Jenkins and a few
teammates wore a T-shirt
before the game that
read on the front: “More
than 60 percent of prison
populations are people
of color.” On the back, it
said: “Nearly 5,000 kids
are in adult prisons and
jails. #SchoolsNotPrisons.”
The league and the
NFLPA have yet to
announce a policy for
this season regarding
demonstrations during
the anthem after the
league initially ordered
everyone to stand on the
sideline when the anthem
is played, or remain in the
locker room.
League spokesman
Brian McCarthy declined

comment Friday and
reiterated his statement
Thursday night, saying
“constructive” discussions are ongoing with
the union.
“I understand that it’s a
business and you want to
protect your bottom line
and all of that, but at the
end of the day, I think the
smartest thing right now
is to not have a rule and
provide a better option,”
Jenkins said.
Teammate Chris Long
showed his support for
Jenkins, as he did last
season, by putting his
arm around him.
“Malcolm is taking
action and he can always
sleep good at night knowing that he’s not being a
fraud,” Long said. “He’s
(demonstrating) and he’s
working in the community, like a lot of these guys
are doing.”
On Friday night, Oakland Raiders running
back Marshawn Lynch
sat during the national
anthem before the exhibition opener against the
Detroit Lions. Lynch also
sat for the anthem all of
last season, but never
gave a reason for his decision. In Miami, Dolphins
receivers Kenny Stills and

Albert Wilson kneeled
behind teammates lined
up standing along the
sideline. Defensive end
Robert Quinn stood and
raised his right ﬁst.
“If you continue to
misinterpret what we’re
doing, reach out to me,
take a look at my website,
take a look at my Twitter, all my social media
platforms,” Stills said. “I
think you’ll get a better
idea of why we’re doing
what we’re doing and
maybe you can come to
the other side and start
supporting us.”
Stills said “it would
take a lot” for him to stop
protesting.
“A good ﬁrst step for
us as a league would be
acknowledging what
they’re doing to Colin
Kaepernick and Eric
Reid,” Stills said. “You
can’t say as a league
you support the players
and their protests and
then blackball the players who initially started
the protests. To come to
the drawing board and
talk about solutions, we
need to start there as a
league, and then we can
start drawing up other
solutions to some of these
other problems.”

COLLEGE PARK,
Md. (AP) — Members
of the University of
Maryland athletic staff
have been placed on
administrative leave,
pending the outcome of
a review of the death of
football player Jordan
McNair in June.
The statement Friday night comes after
an ESPN story, citing
unidentiﬁed sources,
described a program led
by head coach DJ Durkin and strength and
conditioning coach Rick
Court rife with verbal
abuse and humiliation
of players.
In a statement to
ESPN, Maryland said
the alleged behavior
of Durkin and Court
were “troubling and
not consistent with our
approach to coaching
and development of our
student of our student
athletes.”
The school said it was
committed to “examining and addressing
any such reports when
they are brought to our
attention.”
The school is awaiting the result of schoolcommissioned external
review of the procedures and protocols
surrounding athletes’
health and safety.
McNair was hospitalized May 29 after an

organized team workout and died on June
13. Attorney for the
McNair family, Billy
Murphy, criticized how
Maryland athletic staff
responded to McNair
falling ill and told ESPN
a lawsuit was likely.
Maryland athletic
director Damon Evans
said it was around 80
degrees out when the
workouts began and
that the players were
told to run 10 110-yard
sprints.
Evans said 6-foot-4,
325-pound McNair
completed the entire
workout but had trouble breathing after he
was done. After he was
taken to the football
team house, paramedics were called.
After his death, the
school launched an
external review.
The later statement
released by the school
on Friday said: “Pending the ﬁnal outcome
of this review, the
university has placed
members of the Athletics staff on administrative leave. We will be
able to speak in greater
detail when the review
is complete and shared
with the public. Our
thoughts remain with
Jordan McNair’s family, friends and teammates.”

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

113 West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Tel 740-992-5479
Fax 740-992-6911
warnerj1@nationwide.com
OH-70068551

�4B Sunday, August 12, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

2018
READER’S CHOICE
BEST OF THE BEST TRI-COUNTY
VOTES MUST BE SUBMITTED BY AUGUST 21TH.
ALL WINNERS ANNOUNCED ON SEPTEMBER 14TH.
*No scanned copies will be accepted*
Mail or Drop off ballots to:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
C/O Reader’s Choice
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
C/O Reader’s Choice
109 West Second St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Point Pleasant Register
C/O Reader’s Choice
510 Main St.
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES IN THE TRI-COUNTY!!
1. Best Furniture/Home Decor:
2. Best Grocery Store:
3. Best Hardware Store:
4. Best Jewelry Store:

27. Best Funeral Home
in Gallia County:
in Meigs County:
in Mason County:
28. Best Gas/Propane Service:

5. Best New Car/Truck Dealer:
29. Best Golf Course:
6. Best Used Truck/Car Dealer:

30. Best Hair Salon:

7. Best Pharmacy:

31. Best Health/Fitness Center:

8. Best Shoe Store:

32. Best Home Care:

9. Best Tire Store:

33. Best Nursing Home/Rehab:

10. Best Thrift/Consignment Shop:
11. Best Garden Center:

34. Best Insurance Agency
in Gallia County:
in Meigs County:

12. Best Antiques:
in Mason County:
13. Best Motorcycle/ATV Center:

35. Best Manufactured Home Dealer:

14. Best Swimming Pool/Spa Provider:

36. Best Auto Repair/Collision Repair:

15. Best Tattoo Parlor:

37. Best Towing Service:

16. Best Catering:

38. Best Heating &amp; Cooling:

17. Best Florist:
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39. Best Chiropractic Ofﬁce:
40. Best Chinese Restaurant:
41. Best Mexican Restaurant:

19. Best Dentist:
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43. Best Wings:

21. Best Medical Doctor:

44. Best Burger:

22. Best Pediatric Doctor:

45. Best Pizza:

23. Best Medical Clinic:

46. Best Steak:

24. Best CNP Clinic:
25. Best Realtor

47. Best Ice Cream:
48. Best Auctioneer:
49. Best Bank

in Gallia County:
50. Best Hospital
in Meigs County:
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26. Best Veterinarian:

51. Best Occupational/Physical Therapy
52. Best Massage Therapy
53. Best Winery/Brewery

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�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, August 12, 2018 5B

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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�CLASSIFIEDS

6B Sunday, August 12, 2018

Rentals

AUTOS
Autos For Sale

Ohio Valley Bank
will take bids
on the following:

Medical/Health
Taking Applications For
LPN's &amp; Nursing Assistants
Apply Within or On
Indeed.com
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164
REAL ESTATE
Land (Acreage)
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Apartments/Townhouses
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Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh
740-446-2342 ext 2097

Sealed proposals for the CDBG Gallipolis City Airport Road
Paving Project will be received by the Gallia County Commissioners at their office, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292, Gallipolis,
Ohio, until 11:30 AM Thursday, August 23, 2018, and then at
11:30 AM at said office opened and read aloud.

Or email

dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

Mileage: 35,717

VIN #224940

Bidding will close on
August 31, 2018 at 5:00 pm.
This item is available at the Ohio Valley Bank
Jackson Hilltop Branch, Jackson, OH. Sold to the
highest bidder “as-is, where-is” without expressed
or implied warranty &amp; may be seen by calling the
Managed Assets Department at 1-888-441-1038.
OVB reserves the right to accept / reject any and all
bids, and withdraw items from sale prior to sale.
Terms of sale: CASH OR CASHIER’S CHECK.

OHIO VALLEY BANK

®

1-888-441-1038
Member FDIC

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

Plans, Specifications, and Bid/Contract Forms may be secured
at the office of the Gallia County Commissioners, 18 Locust
Street, Room 1292, Gallia County Courthouse. All bidders
must furnish, as a part of their bid, all materials, tools, labor,
and equipment. This bid notice shall be located on the Gallia
County website (gallianet.net) from August 9, 2018 thru August
23, 2018.

The Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
is seeking a qualiﬁed
candidate to be appointed
to its Governing Board.
Prospective appointees must
be a resident of the local
school districts (At-Large)
served by AMESC. Letters of
interest detailing qualiﬁcations
should be received by noon,
Wednesday August 22, 2018
at the following e-mail:

Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an
amount of 100% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Gallia County or by certified check, cashiers
check or letter of credit upon a solvent bank in an amount of not
less than 10% of the bid amount in favor of the aforesaid Gallia
County. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority
of the official or agent signing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed and marked as "BID FOR CDBG GALLIPOLIS CITY AIRPORT ROAD PAVING PROJECT" and mailed
or delivered to: Gallia County Commissioners Office, 18 Locust
Street, Room 1292, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Attention of bidders is called to all of the requirements contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements, federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and performance bond of 100% of the contract price may be waived if
conditions set forth herein are met.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof. Gallia County reserves the
right to waive any informalities or reject any or all bids.

helen.douglas@athensmeigs.com

REAL ESTATE AUCTION
HOME OWNERS | INVESTORS
21 PROPERTIES SINGLE FAMILY AND MULTI FAMLIES
August 18, 2018 at 12 (noon)
Auction Location: Farmers Bank,
640 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
The following properties owned by the estate John E. Blake will
be offered at Public Auction. These properties range from single
family homes overlooking the Ohio River, single family homes on
lots, investment houses and multifamily homes:
130, 132 and 0 Mulberry, 39304 Bradbury and 2 lots, 299 Mulberry and 299 Wright St, 163 N. First Ave, 43 Coal St and 0 S.
Front St, 1669 Lincoln St, 1670 Lincoln St, 1620 Lincoln St ,131
S. Fourth Ave, 246 N. Fourth St, 102 Union St, 144 Mulberry St,
296 Walnut and 0 N. Fourth, 40 Custer and adjacent Lot, 736 S.
Third Ave, 361 S. Front St, 276 Sycamore St, 695 Oliver St aka
679 Oliver St G and H, 659 Oliver St vacant lot, 304 and 306
Sycamore St, 410 Beech St Lot only, 220 and 0 Union Ave.
Interested buyers can Schedule an appointment with Auctioneers
for viewing. The appointment must be scheduled before Aug 10,
2018 at 5pm the showings will take place Aug 12 between 1-4
PM. Please go to web site for full terms along with minimum bid required for each property. 10% non-refundable down payment day
sale with the balance on or before Oct. 2, 2018. All properties sell
in their Present AS-IS condition with no warranties and all faults.
Seller to provide Fiduciary Deed, pay taxes current, and County
conveyance seller to pay no other closing costs.
Owner: Estate of John E. Blake
Meigs County Probate # 20171007
John J. Blake, Executor Richard Lewis, Attorney
United Country Real Estate and Auction Services, LLC
Chip Carpenter Broker | Auctioneer 740-965-1208
Ryan M. Rogers Agent 614-893-3843
www.ucrealestateandauction.com

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Fax: 740-286-5728
Home of the Car Fairy
www.markporterauto.com
�� �� �#��"����$� ��������� ��� �� amycarter@markporterauto.com

MARK PORTER FORD

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

OH-70070285

SKILLED TRADE
SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS:
The Buckeye Hills Career
Center is accepting
applications for part-time,
as needed substitute
teachers in all
Career-Technical areas.
Qualifications: Minimum of
5 years work experience in
skilled trade area (carpentry,
mechanics, welding, HVAC,
Health, Cosmetology, Public
Safety) and obtainment of a
substitute teaching license
through the Ohio Department
of Education. If you are
from business and industry,
please contact the
Superintendent’s Office.
740-245-5334.
EEO

Color: Red

Amy Carter

Product Specialist

(PSOR\PHQW 2SSRUWXQLWLHV
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.

For more information and
application:

2015 Chevy Trax LT AWD
GENERAL EDUCATION
SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS:
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Best Deal New &amp; Used

Midnights, must be able to lift,
stand for periods of time,
sort and bundle papers according
to location

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OH-70070164

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

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

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

Part-Time Dock
Hand Needed

OH-70070651

Help Wanted General

REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT

OH-70070241

EMPLOYMENT

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

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

OH-70062000

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

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

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallia County adheres to all state policies pertaining to Handicapped Accessibility and Equal Employment Opportunities.
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
8/12/18
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the City
Manager, City of Gallipolis, 333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 until Noon on August 21, 2018 and will be opened and
read immediately thereafter for the:
Bandstand Renovation
Engineer's Opinion of Probable Cost: $50,000.00
Completion Date - 60 days from Notice to Proceed
This project consists of the renovation and painting of the
Bandstand located in the City Park.
Bids must be in accordance with specifications and on forms
available for review at the Gallipolis City Manager's Office at
333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 and can be obtained
at the office of the Gallipolis City Manager, 333 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal, a Bid Guaranty and Contract Bond in accordance with Section 153.54 of
the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form,
shall be issued by a Surety Company or corporation licensed
in the State of Ohio to provide said surety.
Each Proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties submitting the proposal and all persons interested therein.
Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on
projects of similar size and complexity.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project
will, to the extent practicable, use Ohio Products, materials,
services, and labor in the implementation of their project.
Additionally, contractor compliance with the equal employment
opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter
123, the Governor's Executive Order of 1972, and Governor's
Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates on Public
Improvements in Gallia County, Ohio as determined by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, Wage and Hour
Division.
City of Gallipolis reserves the right to waive irregularities and to
reject any or all bids.
BY ORDER OF
Eugene Greene, City Manager
City of Gallipolis, Ohio
7/29/18,8/5/18,8/12/18

SELL IT FAST in the Classifieds!

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 12, 2018 7B

No easy answers on heart check-ups for young athletes
WASHINGTON (AP) —
What kind of heart check-up do
young athletes need to make the
team? A large study of teenage
soccer players in England found
in-depth screening didn’t detect
signs of trouble in some athletes
who later died — yet allowed
others at risk to get treated and
back in the game.
At issue is cardiac arrest,
when the heart abruptly stops
beating. It is rare in young people, especially athletes thought
to be at the peak of health.
But sometimes the strenuous
exertion triggers an underlying heart problem and how to
ﬁnd the young athletes most at
risk before a collapse is hotly
debated: Do they need routine
EKGs added to their pre-sports
check-ups? The American Heart
Association doesn’t recommend
it, but European guidelines do.
British researchers tracked
how players fared in a costly

screening program — and
found no easy answers.
The English Football Association requires cardiac screening
for top teen soccer players
that includes both an EKG,
or electrocardiogram, which
measures the heart’s electrical
activity, and an echocardiogram that shows its structure.
Between 1996 and 2016, 11,168
athletes were tested around
age 16. Researchers examined
those medical records and then
tracked how many players who
stuck with the soccer organization have died so far.
As expected, the vast majority of the teen players were
healthy. But 1 in 266 were
found to have silent heart disorders that put them at risk of
sudden cardiac arrest, researchers reported Wednesday in
The New England Journal of
Medicine.
The good news: More than

two-thirds of the 42 high-risk
players had conditions that
were ﬁxed with surgery so they
could safely return to play, said
Dr. Sanjay Sharma, a cardiology professor at St. George’s
University of London, who led
the work.
But eight of the originally
screened players eventually
died of cardiac arrest, within an
average of about seven years.
And only two of those deaths
were players whose screenings
had identiﬁed them as at risk.
They refused to give up soccer.
For the other six, that one-time
screening found no signs of
trouble.
To Sharma, that’s no reason
to avoid EKGs. Most of the
deaths involved heart muscle
disorders that can develop over
time and there’s no magic age
when they appear. So, he said
the British soccer program will
start re-checking players’ hearts

at ages 18, 20 and 25.
The risk equates to 6.8 deaths
per 100,000 athletes, Sharma’s
team calculated.
The numbers may be small
but “it seems like if it’s potentially preventable, we should
probably be doing that,” said
University of Washington sports
medicine specialist Dr. Kimberly Harmon, who wasn’t involved
with the British research.
“I don’t want my athletes to
die on me. If they have something that makes them more
likely to die than the next guy, I
want to know about it,” added
Harmon, who has studied sudden cardiac arrest in NCAA
athletes and supports EKG
screening for both college and
high school players.
But extra screening can be
costly — more than $4 million
for the relatively small British program — and that helps
determine access.

Several games see players demonstrate during national anthem
NEW YORK (AP) —
Player demonstrations
took place during the
national anthem at several early NFL preseason
games Thursday night.
In Philadelphia, Eagles
safety Malcolm Jenkins
and cornerback De’Vante
Bausby raised their ﬁsts
during the anthem, and
defensive end Chris
Long placed his arm
around Jenkins’ shoulder. Jenkins had stopped
his demonstration last
December. Defensive end
Michael Bennett walked
out of the tunnel during
the anthem and walked
toward the bench while

it played. It appeared all
the Steelers stood.
“Everybody is waiting for what the league
is going to do,” Jenkins
said. “We won’t let it
stop what we stand for. I
was very encouraged last
year with the direction
and that obviously took a
different turn.
“I think it’s important
to utilize the platform
as we can because for
whatever reason, we
have framed this demonstration in a negative
light, and often players
have to defend why we
feel the need to ﬁght for
everyday Americans, and

in actuality we’re doing
the right thing.”
At Miami, Dolphins
receivers Kenny Stills
and Albert Wilson and
defensive end Robert
Quinn protested during the anthem. Stills
and Wilson kneeled
behind teammates lined
up standing along the
sideline. Quinn stood
and raised his right ﬁst.
There were no apparent
protests by the Buccaneers.
“As a black man in this
world, I’ve got an obligation to raise awareness,”
Quinn said. “If no one
wants to live in unity,

that’s why we’re in the
situation we’re in.”
Stills kneeled during
the anthem during the
2016-17 seasons and has
been vocal discussing
social injustice issues
that inspired the protest
movement by NFL players. Former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick, a
leader of the movement,
tweeted support for Stills
and Wilson.
“My brother kstills
continued his protest
of systemic oppression
tonight by taking a
knee,” the tweet said.
“Albert Wilson joined
him in protest. Stay

strong brothers!”
And in Seattle, three
Seahawks players ran
into the team’s locker
room prior to the playing
of “The Star-Spangled
Banner.”
Defensive linemen
Branden Jackson and
Quinton Jefferson, and
offensive lineman Duane
Brown left the ﬁeld following team introductions and before the start
of the anthem. They
returned to the sideline
immediately after it concluded. All three were
among a group of Seattle
players that sat during
the anthem last season.

Classifieds

NEW CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
All three publications Gallipolis Daily-Tribune,
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EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
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825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
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NCAA injury
debate pits
player privacy
vs. gambling
concerns
NEW YORK (AP) —
Indiana safety Jonathan
Crawford is very clear
about what he thinks of
colleges releasing information on player injuries.
“No,” he said. “Especially if I have no say in
it, I wouldn’t want my
personal business out
there.”
The U.S. Supreme
Court’s decision that
allows states to legalize sports gambling has
sparked a debate about
requiring injury reports
in college football, a sport
that hasn’t had uniﬁed
rules. NCAA leaders are
analyzing whether it’s
possible to have more
medical transparency to
prevent collusion and be
more consistent among
hundreds of teams
balancing the rules of
various universities, conferences and state and
federal laws.
No formal plans have
been proposed as legal
experts and compliance
ofﬁcers analyze an issue
that’s more complicated
for college football than
the NFL, which has a
mandated reporting system. A similar system of
regular in-depth reports
in the NCAA would have
the hurdle of privacy for
younger athletes. New
rules likely won’t come
soon — the new season
starts in three weeks
and just four states have
ofﬁcially legalized sports
gambling.
Privacy laws such as
the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and
the Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act
(FERPA) protect players against the release
of personal information
without the consent of
players or their parents
if the player is under 18.
HIPAA protects medical
records. FERPA protects
educational records,
along with medical
records if treatment is
given on behalf of a university.
At least some players
and coaches want that
privacy to stay in place.
“I coached in the NFL
for nine years and there
is a stark difference
between working with
professionals and working with college kids,”
Stanford coach David
Shaw said. “I do not feel
right giving out medical
information of a 19-yearold. I think it’s wrong in
any way, shape or form.”
Still, commissioners
from the Power Five conferences generally believe
some kind of uniform
injury reporting is inevitable, even if the details
still need to be worked
out.
Players consent to
NFL injury reports as a
condition of employment.
Three practice participation reports are required
every game week, along
with game status reports
and in-game updates.
Right now, there is no
standard in the NCAA for
discussing player injuries.
“My university’s attorney told me, ‘You cannot
be speciﬁc with any injuries. You can say upper
body. You can say lower
body,’” said Todd Berry,
who coached college
football for 34 years and
is now executive director
of the American Football
Coaches Association.
“Many times the media
would already know what
it was, but that’s all I
could reference.”
Some coaches are more
speciﬁc. Others are reluctant to share anything at
all.

�8B Sunday, August 12, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mark Porter
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1.6L EcoBoost I4 GTDi DOHC Turbocharged
VCT, 6-speed Auto, FWD, 123,339 miles

5.3L EcoTec3 V8, 8-speed Auto, 4WD,
13,450 miles

$21,391

$17,399

$17,298

$18,084

2016 Honda HR-V EX-L SUV,

2017 Hyundai Sante Fe Sport 2.4 Base SUV,

2016 Jeep Cherokee Latitude SUV,

2015 Jeep Cherokee Limited SUV,

1.8L I4 SOHC 16V i-VTEC, CVT, AWD,
19,597 miles

2.4L I4 DGI DOHC 16V, 6-speed Auto w/
Shiftronic, AWD, 43,492 miles

2.4L 4-Cyl SMPI SOHC, 9-speed 948TE Auto,
FWD, 17,267 miles

3.2L V6, 9-speed 948TE Auto, 4WD,
86,297 miles

$24,798

OH-70069642
OH-70068423

$41,667

$16,257

$18,922

$32,200

2017 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo SUV,

2015 Jeep Patriot High Altitude SUV,

2016 Jeep Renegade Trailhawk SUV,

2017 Jeep Wrangler Sahara SUV,

3.6L V6 24V VVT, 8-speed Auto, 4WD,
29,538 miles

2.4L I4 DOHC 16V Dual VVT, 6-speed Auto,
4WD, 32,033 miles

2.4L I4 MultiAir, 9-speed Auto, 4WD,
27,819 miles

3.6L V6 24V VVT, 5-speed Auto, 4WD,
9,824 miles

308 East Main Street Pomeroy, OH 45769
Sales: 877-580-1692 Service: 877-652-6990 Parts: 877-664-1226

Monday - Thursday
9am to 7 pm
Friday
9am - 6pm
Saturday
9am - 5pm
Closed on Sunday

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