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                  <text>Today in
history
EDITORIAL s 4

Cloudy,
High 50,
Low 36

Eagles
outlast
Meigs

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 10, Volume 71

Wednesday, January 18, 2017 s 50¢

Ohio EMA now
accepting safe
room applications
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS — The
Ohio Safe Room Rebate
Program is once again
accepting applications.
The program provides a
rebate for the purchase
and construction/installation of tornado safe
rooms for Ohio homeowners selected for the
program.
“The entire state of
Ohio is at risk of an
EF5 tornado, which
produces 250 mile per
hour winds capable
of destroying most
structures,” said Steve
Ferryman, Ohio EMA
mitigation branch chief.
“A safe room is built to
withstand these winds
and resulting airborne
debris and provides
near absolute protection for occupants.”
A safe room is an
extreme-wind shelter or
space that provides protection to people during a tornado. It can be
constructed/installed
in one of several places
in the home: in the
basement, beneath a
concrete slab-on-grade
foundation or garage
ﬂoor, or in an interior

room on the ﬁrst ﬂoor.
A safe room may also
be buried in the yard or
be a stand-alone structure near your home.
Residents selected
for the program are eligible for a rebate up to
75 percent of the cost
to install or construct
a safe room — up to a
maximum of $4,875.
To apply for the Ohio
Safe Room Rebate
Program, homeowners
have until 5 p.m. March
10, to register on the
Ohio EMA website:
https://ohiosharpp.
ema.state.oh.us/SafeRoom2016/2017.aspx.
The Ohio Safe Room
Rebate Program will
use a computerized random selection process
to select applicants. A
priority list of applicants will be created
from the selected applicants. Chosen homeowners will be notiﬁed
by e-mail of their position on the priority list
on or after March 13.
Ohio EMA anticipates
grant funding will
become available this
year and having a list of
participants who meet
See EMA | 5

Search warrant
results in three arrests
Staff Report

Columbus, on a charge
of trafﬁcking in narcotGALLIPOLIS — The ics, Michelle Myers, 42,
Gallia County Sheriff’s
of Bidwell, arrested for
Ofﬁce executed a search an active warrant, and
warrant at 1096 Ohio
Marci Reynolds, 50, of
141 near the intersecGallipolis, arrested for
tion of Sanders Drive
two active warrants.
in Gallia County, early
“They can’t say I
Tuesday morning, and
didn’t warn them this
arrested three.
was coming. This
Deputies, assisted
investigation is still
by the Gallipolis City
ongoing and our ofﬁce
Police Department and is consulting with Galthe Ohio State Highway lia County Prosecuting
Patrol, seized drugs,
Attorney Jason Holdren
drug paraphernalia and regarding additional
approximately $3,700
charges,” said Chamin cash.
plin.
“Some drug dealers
Champlin encourages
got to feel what it was
the public to keep feedlike to have the hands of ing his ofﬁce tips either
justice laid upon them
through his deputies
(Tuesday) morning,”
or by leaving an anonysaid Gallia Sheriff Matt mous message on the
Champlin.
Gallia County Sheriff’s
Arrested were Oscar Ofﬁce Tip Line at 740Simmons, Jr., 26, of
446-6555.

Courtesy photos

Meigs County Board of Elections members attended the winter conference last week in Columbus. Pictured (from left) are board
member Jimmy Stewart, Director Tammy Cline, Deputy Director Angie Robson, and Chairman Charles Williams. (At right) Director
Tammy Cline and Deputy Director Angie Robson.

Cline named Board of Elections Director
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board
of Elections has a new
director.
Tammy Cline was
hired for the position
on Jan. 10 and hit the
ground running, spending the following two
days at the winter conference in Columbus.
Cline is no stranger to
many in Meigs County,
with she and her family being owners of the
TNT Pit Stop locations

in Meigs County for the
past 20 years.
Asked why now was
the right time to pursue
a position outside of the
business, Cline said that
things have worked out
to where her husband
could take over the
duties she had with the
business, which led to
her being able to look
for a new career opportunity.
Cline said that she has
had an interest in the
political process and is
excited to get started in
her new role.

Cline will replace
Meghan Lee who had
served as director for a
little under a year. Lee’s
ﬁnal day with the board
of elections was Dec. 30.
She left the ofﬁce to pursue another opportunity.
Cline has been a resident of Meigs County for
22 years, having always
lived in the area. She and
her husband Marty have
two adult children.
Angie Robson remains
with the board as the
deputy director.
Members of the Board
of Elections are Demo-

crats Charlie Williams
(Chairman) and Rita
Slavin and Republicans
Jimmy Stewart and
David Fox.
There were 14 applicants for the position.
According to the job
posting for the position,
the director is a full-time
position, with the applicants for the position
required to be afﬁliated
with the Republican
Party.
The Board of Elections
is located at 113 East
Memorial Drive, Suite A,
in Pomeroy.

Tucker, Mahr named Meigs Board President, VP
Staff Report

days of each month at
6:30 p.m. at the district’s
central ofﬁce. Board
ROCKSPRINGS —
members are to
Larry Tucker was
be paid $125 per
named President
meeting attended.
of the Meigs Local
Board member
Board of Education
Todd Snowden
and Ryan Mahr
was named at
as Vice President
the Ohio School
during the recent
Boards legislative
organizational
liaison for 2017.
Tucker
meeting of the
Board member
board.
Heather Hawley
In addition to the
was named the student
selection of president
achievement liaison.
and vice president, the
Also during the orgaboard established meetnizational meeting the
ing dates and times, as
board approved a list of
well as pay for board
standard authorizations
members.
for Supt. Scot Gheen and
Regular board meetChief Financial Ofﬁcer/
ings are to be held the
Treasurer Roy Johnson
second and fourth Tuesso that the business of

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

the district may be done
expediently.
Bricker &amp; Eckler LLC
was approved as
the district’s legal
counsel. The Daily
Sentinel and/or
Ohio Auditor of
State website and/
or the Meigs Local
School District
website were des- Mahr
ignated as the ofﬁcial resources for
the publication of notices
for the district.
During the regular
meeting, which immediately followed the organizational meeting, the
board approved numerous agenda items.
Jennifer Bartrum was
hired as the head middle

school track and ﬁeld
coach. Debra Gerard was
approved as an assistant
coach for middle
school track and
ﬁeld. Jared Vlastuin was approved
as an assistant
high school track
and ﬁeld coach.
Brent Bissell was
hired as the varsity
baseball coach.
Shane Donohue
was hired as a personal
assistant at Meigs High
School not to exceed 29
hours per week.
Matthew Parry and
Rick Yost were approved
as substitute custodians.
Tanisha McKinney, Amy
See BOARD | 5

Annual Meigs SWCD tree sale underway

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
News: 3
Editorial: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 9

Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

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

POMEROY — The annual
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Tree Sale is underway
with prices unchanged from last
year, and with new offerings for
homeowners and wildlife lovers.
New this year is a Native Edibles
Packet and an Urban Evergreen
Packet, as well as a Birds and Bees
Packet.
The Native Edibles Packet
contains two each of Persimmon,
American Elderberry, Butternut,
PawPaw, and American Chestnut
for $10, while the Urban Evergreen Packet consists of two each
of three-year-old Colorado Blue
Spruce and Canadian Hemlock for

$15.
The Birds and the Bees Packet
contains shrubs and trees that are
not only good for nesting birds,
but also serve as pollinating trees
for bees and other pollinating
insects. It consists of two each
of Eastern Redbud, Red Osier
Dogwood, Shadblow Serviceberry,
American Hazelnut, and Sourwood, and sells for $15.
This year’s individual hardwood
offerings include Black Walnut,
White Oak, Northern Red Oak,
Sugar Maple and Black Cherry in
packets of 25 seedlings for $17.
Also available are Norway
Spruce, Canadian Hemlock, Bald
Cypress, Scotch Pine, and Eastern
White Pine, in packets of 25 for
$15, and a packet of Colorado Blue

Spruce, 25 for $17.
Other offerings include Bing/
Black Tartarian Cherry trees in
packets of two seedlings each
for $18; Shiitake Mushroom kits
(consisting of 200 plugs) for $25;
English Ivy, and Pachysandra trays
of 100 plants for $27.
For smaller spaces where trees
are not practical, there is a Wildﬂower and Grass mix, one ounce
for $6, and the Bird and Butterﬂy
Seed Mix, one ounce for $5. Other
seed mixes include erosion control
(two pounds for $15), and wildlife
food plot mixes (25 pounds for
$40)
Also available are bluebird boxes
and bat boxes ($18 each), marking
See SWCD | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, January 18, 2017

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

NANCY BLAETTNAR LEE

FRANCES M. THOMAS
WAVERLY — Frances M. Thomas, age 64,
entered into the presence of her Lord and
Savior Saturday, Jan. 14,
2017. She passed away
peacefully at her home in
Waverly, surrounded by
her family. She was
born on Jan. 21,
1952, to Chester
and Dorothy Wells.
She is a beloved
wife, grandmother,
mother, sister, aunt
and friend.
She is survived
by her husband Paul
“Buck” Thomas; sons,
Mike (Sheryl) Thomas
and Jeremy (Courtni)
Thomas-Shuler; granddaughters, Sophie and
Lydia Thomas; brothers,
Ralph (Diane) Wells,
Ross (Juanita) Wells, Jack
(Nancy) Wells, James
Wells; sisters, Donna Jean
Taylor, Connie (Steve)
Semelsberger, Barbara
(Greg) Peck, Sarah Wells,
Leslie (Buddy) McClanahan, Doris Henry, JoEllen
(Loren) Corrigan; and
many nieces and nephews.
She was an active member of the Middleport
United Methodist Church
for many years until she
moved to Waverly to be

closer to her granddaughters. She last attended
Huntington Chapel Christian Union where she
enjoyed singing, fellowship, and worship with
her new Christian family.
God and family were
the center of her
life and she loved
spending time with
both. She will be
dearly missed by
everyone that was
close to her.
Make a joyful
noise to the Lord,
all the Earth! Serve the
Lord with gladness!
Come into his presence
with singing! Psalm
100:1,2.
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, Jan.
19, 2017, at 2 p.m., with
Pastor Marlin Kellough
ofﬁciating at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Middleport.
Burial will follow at Heiney Cemetery. Visiting
hours will be on Thursday
from noon to 2 p.m. at
the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
In lieu of ﬂowers, a
donation in memory of
Frances can be made to a
Hospice of your choice.

GHEEN

COLUMBUS — Nancy
Blaettnar Lee, beloved
mother and grandmother,
passed away on Jan. 14,
2017, age 79. She died
peacefully in the arms
of her daughters. Nancy
was born in Pomeroy,
Ohio, on April 17, 1937,
to Margaret and Fred
Blaettnar. She grew up in
an exceptionally loving
family, which instilled
faith, unconditional love, respect
and generosity.
Nancy excelled in
school, played the
clarinet to a state
competition and
was a formidable
athlete. She graduated from Pomeroy High
School in 1955 and Ohio
University in 1959 with
a Bachelor of Science
Degree in Education. She
loved being a teacher and
was a strong advocate
for children with special
needs. She was a member
of the Alpha Delta Pi
Sorority and remained
a faithful and connected
member throughout her
adult life. She married
James Lee and they had
two daughters, Wendy
and Tracy. Her daughters
were the loves of her life.
As a mother, she was
involved in the PTA
and also played tennis
competitively, eventually
becoming the president
of the Greater Columbus
Tennis Association. She
was a long-time active
member of Upper Arlington Lutheran Church and
more recently a member
of St. James Episcopal
Church. Caring for the
impoverished and mis-

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Arthur Worley
Gheen, age 82 of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away
Friday, January 13, 2017 at Pleasant Valley Hospital
in Point Pleasant.
Arrangements are under the care of Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home and will be Wednesday January 18,
2017. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. to noon, with the
funeral beginning at noon with Pastor Bob Patterson
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
POWERS

PEARCE
BIDWELL — David Duane Pearce, 67, Bidwell,
passed away Tuesday, January 17, 2017 in St. Mary’s
Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Graveside services will be conducted 1 p.m. Saturday, January 21, 2017 in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call Friday 5-8 p.m. in the Vinton Baptist
Church.

RUTHERFORD
GALLIPOLIS — David Lee Rutherford, 73, of Gallipolis, passed away on Monday, January 16, 2017 at
the Holzer Medical Center.
In accordance with his wishes there will not be any
services and burial will be at the convenience of the
family. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.

LANE SR.
EVANS, W.Va. — Harold Ray Lane Sr., 72, of Evans,
W.Va., passed away January 16, 2017, at his home following an illness.
Service will be Thursday, January 19, 2017 at 1
p.m. at the Casto Funeral Home Chapel, Evans, with
the Pastor Donald Keefer ofﬁciating. Visitation will be
from 11 a.m. until time of service. Burial will follow in
the Pine Grove Cemetery, Leon, W.Va.

PLANTS

PROCTORVILLE — Eva Powers, 92, of Proctorville, passed away Sunday, January 15, 2017 at home.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Thursday,
January 19, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery,
Proctorville.Visitation will be held 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
Thursday, January 19, 2017 at the funeral home.

COOPER
RACINE — Gary R. Cooper, 63, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2017, at his residence.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the
Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Racine.
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ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
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bsergent@civitasmedia.com

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MANAGING EDITOR
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shawley@civitasmedia.com

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Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Bedford Township
re-organizational meeting held
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township held their re-organizational meeting
Dec. 30. Shawn Hawley, President; John
Dean, Vice President; Tim Hall, Trustee.
Meetings in 2017 will be on the second Monday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Bedford
Town Hall.

Financial report
available
BEDFORD TWP. — The 2016 ﬁnancial report
for Bedford Township is completed and submitted
to the State Auditor. The report is available for
viewing upon request by calling Kathy J. Romine,
Fiscal Ofﬁcer, at 740-992-2112.

Meigs Museum
Open House
POMEROY — The Meigs County Museum
kicks off 2017 with its open house on Friday,
Jan. 27 from 5-8 p.m. They are also taking
memberships for the 2017 year. Normal hours
resume on Jan. 18. Hours of operation are
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 1-5
p.m., and Saturday from noon-4 p.m. For
more information call (740) 992-3810, or
email info@meigschs.org

Road
Closure
LONG BOTTOM — One lane of State Route
124 in Meigs County is closed 0.5 miles north of
Township Road 402 (Barr Hollow) for an emergency landslide repair. Temporary trafﬁc signals
are in place. The estimated completion date is
June 30, 2017.

Animal Bedding
Available
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County
Humane Society will be providing straw for
animal bedding during the months of December, January and February. Vouchers may be
picked up at the Humane Society Thrift Shop
located at 253 N. Second Street in Middleport. To receive a voucher you must provide
proof of income and pay a $2 fee for a bale
of straw. For more information contact the
Humane Society Thrift Shop at 740-992-6064
from 10 a.m to 4 p.m., Monday through Saturday.

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

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APPLE GROVE, W.Va. — Melissa Jo Plants, 37, of
Apple Grove, W.Va., passed away Friday, January 13,
2017, in Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 11 a.m. Saturday, January 21, 2017, at the Barton Chapel Church in Apple
Grove, with Rev. Mike Plants and Rev. Joe Plants
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at the Barton Chapel
Cemetery. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Friday at
the Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

treated, she gave faithfully to Faith Mission, as
well as other local charities. She was also an avid
Ohio State Buckeye fan.
Nancy was preceded
in death by her loving
parents and her brother,
John William.
She will be greatly
missed by her family.
Survivors include her
loving daughters, Wendy
(Lee) Tatlock and
Tracy Lee. Grandchildren include
Ben and Freddie
Tatlock (Arlington,
Ma.) and Anna
Lee (Columbus,
Ohio). She loved
playing cards,
watching movies, reading books and eating
chocolate cupcakes with
her grandchildren. She is
also survived by numerous nieces, nephews and
cousins. Nancy will be
most remembered for
her devotion as a mother,
determination, caring and
faith.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family suggests memorial
contributions be made in
Nancy’s name to Alpha
Delta Pi sorority, Saint
James Episcopal Church
or Faith Mission.
Family will receive
friends Thursday, Jan.
19, 2017, from noon until
time of service at 1 p.m.
at St. James’ Episcopal
Church, 3400 Calumet St.
Columbus, Ohio 43214. A
graveside service will be
held on Friday at noon at
Beech Grove Cemetery in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Visit www.schoedinger.
com to share a favorite
memory of Nancy.

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My Cat From Hell
My Cat From Hell
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene "Chaos
CSI: Crime "Bully for You" CSI: Crime Scene "Scuba
Investigation "Burked"
Theory"
Investigation "Overload"
A class clown is murdered. Doobie-Doo"
CSI "Wet Foot/ Dry Foot"
CSI: Miami "Just One Kiss" CSI: Miami "Losing Face" CSI "Ashes to Ashes"
CSI: Miami "Broken"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Divas "Pain in the Neck"
Total Divas (N)
Total Divas
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Griffith (:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Prodigal Son"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
To Catch a Smuggler
Drugs, Inc. "Stashville,
Drugs, Inc. "Shooting Up
Drugs, Inc. "X-Rated High" Drugs, Inc. "Dope-landia"
"Cavity Courier"
Tennessee"
Suburbia"
NHL Top 10 NHL Top 10 NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Boston Bruins at Detroit Red Wings Site: Joe Louis Arena (L) NHL Hockey
MonsterJ. "Salt Lake City" UFC Unleashed
UFC Tonight (N)
UFC UFC Fight Night
American Pickers "The
American Pickers "Catch- Vikings "The Great Army" Vikings "Revenge" (N)
Six "Pilot" (P) (N)
Superfan"
32"
First Family of Hip Hop
Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Girlfriends' Guide (N)
The Browns The Browns Being "Getting Naked"
(:05)
I Can Do Bad All by Myself (‘09, Com/Dra) Taraji P. Henson, Tyler Perry. TV14
Buying "Time to Move On" Buying and Selling
Property Brothers
Property Brothers (N)
House Hunt. House
(4:00)
The Core (‘03,
Skyfall (2012, Action) Helen McCrory, Ralph Fiennes, Daniel Craig. James Bond Incorporated "Operational
Realignment" (N)
Sci-Fi) Hilary Swank. TV14
is faced with another mission involving his fateful connection to M. TVPG

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6:30

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10:30

Beautiful Creatures A young
Cold Mountain (2003, Romance) Jude Law, Renée Zellweger, Nicole (:35) The
Vice News
Tonight
man and a mysterious girl discover dark
Kidman. A wounded Civil War soldier heads for North Carolina to reunite Young Pope
secrets about their respective families. TV14
with the woman he loves. TVMA
(4:45) The
(:35)
The X-Files: I Want to Believe
(:20)
Tron (1982, Sci-Fi) Bruce Boxleitner, David
Transformers:
Hitchhiker's An agent is kidnapped and a priest claims Warner, Jeff Bridges. Two brilliant computer experts battle Revenge of the Fallen (‘09,
Guide to th... he has visions of the crime. TV14
against one another as videogame warriors. TVPG
Act) Shia LaBeouf. TV14
(5:00) School (:45)
The Hurt Locker (2009, Thriller) Anthony Mackie, Guy Pearce, Homeland "Fair Game"
Bridge of Spies (‘15, Thril)
Carrie returns home; briefing Mark Rylance, Austin
for
Jeremy Renner. A new Army sergeant places his elite team of bomb
the President-elect.
Scoundrels technicians in a dangerous Iraqi city. TVMA
Stowell, Tom Hanks. TV14
(5:25)

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 18, 2017 3

3 men arrested for fugitive warrants
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Three
men were arrested Saturday as
part of a joint venture between the
Mason County Sheriff’s Department, Gallia-Meigs Major Crimes
VanHorn
Jordan
Thomas
Task Force and the Gallipolis Police
contacted GPD as they were lookDepartment.
ing for the three men with active
The three men were considered
warrants in West Virginia. GPD
fugitives from justice, according to
ascertained through their investigaGPD reports.
tion the three were staying in a pair
Tevon Vanhorn, 22, of Columof rooms at the motel. GPD then
bus, Ohio, Carrille Jordan, 22, of
consulted with Gallia County ProseDetroit, Mich. and Devin Thomas,
cutor Jason Holdren in applying for
25, of Detroit, Mich. were eventusearch warrants on both rooms. As
ally arrested at the Super 8 Motel
the men were attempting to checkon Eastern Avenue in Gallipolis
out, ofﬁcers located Thomas in the
where law enforcement enacted
lobby of the business.
search warrants for a pair of rooms
Ofﬁcers also observed the other
the men were using.
two men in question leaving the
According to reports, on Jan. 14,
Mason County Sheriff’s Department rooms accompanied by two women.

All individuals were then detained
and patted down in the lobby area.
Law enforcement checked the
rooms for any additional persons
and for ofﬁcer safety, when they
came across another woman. She
was also taken back to the lobby.
GPD and task force agents processed the rooms as part of search
warrants served. GPD received
communication from the Mason
County 911 Center that the three
men had warrants for their arrest
for possession of drugs crimes from
the Mason County Sheriff’s Department. The three men were then
arrested for fugitive from justice
warrants in Gallia County and then
taken to Gallia County Jail and are
expected to be extradited back to
West Virginia.
Dean Wright can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2103.

Courtesy photo

A presentation on depression era glassware was given at a
recent meeting of the DAR.

DAR hears
presentation on
Depression Era Glass
Staff Report

The Return Jonathan Meigs Daughters of American Revolution met in November at the Pomeroy
Public Library.
After a business meeting was held a program on
Depression Era Glassware was given by collector,
Lorna Hart. Hart has an extensive collection of
the glassware and was very knowledgeable on collecting and preserving it.
It was the ﬁrst glassware made totally by
machine and was of poor quality at mass production. She noted it came in a variety of colors,
including: green pink, amber, yellow, cobalt, teal.
ruby, light blue, black, mozac, creamax, custard
white, jadeite, and delphite. None of the patterns
are exactly the same. It came in oatmeal boxes,
and detergent boxes. There were seven major
glass companies. They were all closed by the
1980’s. The only one left today is the Blenko Glass
Company. She brought some of her collection to
display, and each member brought a piece of their
own Depression Glass which she gave comments
on it. She encouraged the members to use and
enjoy their glass and not keep it locked away in a
cabinet.
The next meeting of the DAR will be Jan. 21 at
1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. The program will
be given by the Meigs County Veterans Service.
Submitted by Linda Russell of Return Jonathan Meigs Daughters of
American Revolution.

Kyger Creek Plant
employees recognized
Staff Report

The Ohio Valley Electric Corporation, Kyger
Creek Plant, celebrated the service and award
anniversaries of employees during the fourth quarter service. The following received a certiﬁcate, a
gift award and will be invited to a celebratory luncheon hosted by Plant Manager G. Annette Hope.
Five years of service-C.Garrett Watterson, Vickie
F. Baxter, Tony T. Tulloh, and Christopher J.
Brown. 10 years of service- Richard W. Cheney,
Jason T. Knight, and David C. Murrary. 30 years
of service-Charles W. Powell. 35 years of serviceDawn M. Gillespie, and Tony R. Grimm.

Staff Report

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The world’s ﬁrst
gorilla born in a zoo, a
female named Colo who
became the oldest known
living gorilla in the
U.S., has died at age 60,
the Columbus Zoo and
Aquarium said Tuesday.
Colo died in her sleep
overnight, less than a
month after her birthday,
the zoo announced. She
surpassed the usual life
expectancy of captive
gorillas by two decades.
“Colo touched the
hearts of generations of
people who came to see
her and those that cared
for her over her long lifetime,” zoo president Tom
Stalf said in a statement.
“She was an ambassador
for gorillas and inspired
people to learn more
about the critically endangered species and motivated them to protect
gorillas in their native
habitat.”
Colo had been on
exhibit in view of visitors
on Monday, when the zoo
offered free admission
for Martin Luther King
Jr. Day. Fond of baseball
caps, the gorilla was seen
in her enclosure toting
around a yellow cap with
a gorilla on it, given to
her by the zoo team car-

Ty Wright | AP

Colo, the nation’s oldest living gorilla, has died at the age of 60.
In this photo, she sat inside of her enclosure during her 60th
birthday party at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium on Dec. 22, 2016
in Columbus, Ohio. Colo was the first gorilla in the world born in a
zoo and surpassed the usual life expectancy of captive gorillas by
two decades.

ing for her.
The zoo said the gorilla’s body will be cremated
and the ashes will be
buried at an undisclosed
location at the zoo.
Colo was born at the
zoo on Dec. 22, 1956.
She eventually became a
mother of three, grandmother of 16, greatgrandmother of 12 and
great-great-grandmother
of three.
Hundreds of people had
gathered at the zoo last
month to see Colo for her
birthday, when the zoo
decorated her enclosure
with multicolored construction paper chains

and cakes of squash and
beet and cornbread with
mashed potato parsley
frosting.
Zoo ofﬁcials said a
post-mortem examination
was planned to determine
Colo’s cause of death. The
median life expectancy
for female gorillas in
human care is 37.5 years.
Veterinarians recently
removed a malignant
tumor from Colo, but
the zoo had said she was
doing well. The necropsy
could help show whether
the cancer contributed to
her death, but the results
aren’t anticipated for several weeks.

Zoo ofﬁcials said they
also planned to take
blood and tissue samples
to assist with zoologists’
efforts to learn more
about western lowland
gorillas.
Colo is the second zoo
gorilla to die in Ohio
this month. Cleveland
Metroparks Zoo said
one of its two male western lowland gorillas, a
32-year-old named Bebac,
died Jan. 6.
Zoo experts say animals in human care are
living longer than ever
as early diagnosis and
improvements in medical
care extend their lives.
The oldest known living
male gorilla, Ozzie, is 55
years old and lives at the
Atlanta Zoo, which has a
geriatric gorilla specialty.
Packy, an Asian elephant at the Oregon Zoo,
is now 54 and the oldest
male of his species in
North America.
Nikko, a 33-year-old
snow monkey at the Minnesota Zoo, is the oldest
male snow monkey in
North America. Zulie, a
30-year-old Black Howler
monkey at the Beardsley
Zoo in Bridgeport, Connecticut, is the oldest
living female Howler
monkey in captivity.

McConnell introduces bill to fund miner health plans
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell
on Tuesday introduced
legislation to maintain
health beneﬁts for
retired union coal miners whose companies
have declared bankruptcy in recent years.
McConnell was
among those who successfully worked last
year to provide a fourmonth extension of
health beneﬁts that protected 16,000 miners
whose beneﬁts would
otherwise have been cut
off on Jan. 1. Democrats
made a major push as
well, as the government
neared a shutdown last
December.
President-elect Donald Trump supports the
effort to permanently
address the issue,
according to Sen. Joe
Manchin, D-W.Va., who
discussed the issue with
Manchin last week. The
problem dates to a government promise made

Residential Undergraduate Program Dean’s
MARIETTA — Terry List at Ohio Christian
Farley of Gallipolis,
University for the Fall
Ohio, has been named
2016 Semester. Emily
to the Fall 2016 Dean’s Carman of Gallipolis,
List at Marietta ColKaitlin Kazee of Thurlege. Farley is majoring man and Elisha Marin Broadcasting and is
tindale of Reedsville,
scheduled to graduate
all received the honor.
in May of 2018. Farley
To be eligible for the
is a graduate of River
Dean’s List, a student
Valley High School.
must achieve a semester
MARIETTA — Molly GPA of 3.5 or better
Dunlap of Tuppers
and be enrolled in at
Plains, Ohio, has been
least 12 semester hours.
named to the Fall 2016
Dean’s High Honors
List at Marietta College. Dunlap is majoring in Land and Energy
KARL KEBLER III, CPA
Management and MarIndividual &amp; Business
keting and is scheduled
to graduate in May of
Income Tax Preparation
2018. Dunlap is a graduate of Eastern Local
111 West 2nd Street
High School.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
CIRCLEVILLE —
Three area students
740-992-7270
were named to the

in 1946 for lifetime
health care and pension
beneﬁts for unionized
miners and their families.
Later Tuesday, a
bipartisan group of
senators, led by Manchin and his home-state
Republican colleague,
Shelley Moore Capito,
reintroduced a broader
measure that would not
only address the health
care shortfall but also

the more expensive pension issue.
House Republicans
have resisted the effort
but Trump’s support
greatly increases the
odds for a permanent
ﬁx for the problem.
Trump rolled up huge
margins in coal country, including in swing
states like Pennsylvania and Ohio. He’s
promised to revive the
industry, which has lan-

guished from competition from new domestic
sources of natural gas,
much of it released by a
technique called fracking.
McConnell and
other advocates for the
industry say President
Barack Obama’s administration has conducted
a “war on coal” with
regulations such as new
clean air and water
standards.

Application for Dog/Kennel License
Deadline for purchase of 2017 dog license is January 31, 2017
Please circle your choice for purchase.
1 year dog tag $12.00 each
3 year dog tag $ 36.00 each
Permanent dog tag $120.00 each

Kennel Tags $60.00 for 5 tags each
Additional kennel tag $1.00

Owner of Dog _______________________________________________________
Address ____________________________________________________________
Telephone (Day time)__________________________________________________
Age
Years

Sex
M/F

Color

Hair
long/short

Breed

Fees
Paid

KEBLER FINANCIAL

60699276

To obtain license by mail, complete and return application along with a self-addressed,
stamped envelope and a check for the price of the license to:
Mary T. Byer-Hill, Auditor, 100 E. Second St. Rm 201 Pomeroy, OH 45769
NOTICE: License must be obtained no later than January 31, 2017 to avoid paying
penalty. Please call us at 740-992-2698 or stop by the office if you have any questions.

60693692

COLLEGE NEWS

60-year-old gorilla dies in Ohio

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Trump’s good
qualities can
carry the day
By Daniel Pipes
Contributing Columnist

Many conservatives
who once found Donald
Trump unpalatable have
come around to accept
him. Most famously, Mitt
Romney once excoriated Trump as dishonest,
“a phony, a fraud,” and
condemned his bullying,
greed, showing off and
misogyny. After the presidential election, however,
Romney praised Trump
(“I look forward to the
coming administration”)
and hoped to work for
him.
This change of heart
has not been limited to job
applicants. The presidentelect’s many qualities that
conservatives once condemned have disappeared
down a memory hole, to
the point that recalling
them is akin to making
rude noises during a
prayer service.
Instead, Republicans are
in a mood of optimism,
even ecstasy, celebrating
Trump’s unconventionality
and holding him up as the
only candidate who could
have defeated the despised
Hillary Clinton. As House
Speaker Paul Ryan put it,
“Trump heard a voice out
in this country that no one
else heard,” enabling him
to accomplish the “most
incredible political feat”
Ryan has ever witnessed.
Since the election, I am
glad to see Trump has
recognized that, as an
outsider to Washington,
he needs cabinet members
(with the inexplicable
exception of the secretary
of state) who know the
ropes. I am even more
pleased with Trump’s
many appointees ready
to forward a conservative
agenda, especially ones
ready to disagree with the
boss.
James Mattis will end
social experimentation
with the military and
return to its war-making
mission. Jeff Sessions will
consistently apply the rule
of law. Steven Mnuchin
will simplify the tax code.
Tom Price will undo
Obamacare. Betsy DeVos
will focus on the interests
of students rather than of
teachers and bureaucrats.
Andy Puzder will prune
back regulations obstructing job growth. John Kelly
will secure the borders.
David Friedman will
revive U.S.-Israel relations.
But two giant caveats
remain, both pertaining to
character.
First, what Trump
gives, he can take away.
As an egomaniac with
enormous political
latitude and no consistent
ideology, he could, for any
or no reason, sack these
worthy cabinet members
and replace them with
technocrats. Worse, he can
freely discard his current
conservative orientation.
His chief strategist,
Steve Bannon, once
boasted that “we’re going
to build an entirely new
political movement. It’s
everything related to jobs.
The conservatives are
going to go crazy.” Trump
himself has warned that
nothing he has speciﬁed so far commits him:
“Anything I say right now

“The presidentelect’s many
qualities that
conservatives once
condemned have
disappeared down a
memory hole, to the
point that recalling
them is akin to
making rude noises
during a prayer
service.”
—Daniel Pipes

— I’m not the president
— everything is a suggestion. … I’m always ﬂexible
on issues.”
Second, much depends
on whether the ofﬁce
of the presidency tames
Trump or he continues
with his old ways. Colin
Dueck of George Mason
University suggests that
Trump has the bravado
of a real-estate developer
who adopts maximalist
rhetorical positions but
“is not actually about to
implement every off-thecuff statement.” Maybe.
But the qualities that
appalled so many Americans remain and, indeed,
have been massively vindicated. Trump reached
the ultimate prize by staying true to himself; also,
70-year-olds tend not to
change much. It’s entirely
possible he will continue
to attack individuals and
companies, obsess over
grievances, insult the
press, make ﬂamboyantly
reckless or false statements, display deﬁant
ignorance, engage in dubious business practices,
resort to bravado litigiousness and pursue wildly
inconsistent policies.
At best, Trump will be
to Barack Obama what
Ronald Reagan was to
Jimmy Carter, the leader
of a national renewal of
optimism and strength.
At worst, his personal
ﬂaws will lead to social
tensions, domestic disturbances, economic
upheavals and war. I am
agnostic, having no clue
where the country is heading. For me, America now
resembles a monarchy
whose incompetent but
predictable king has died,
and a rowdy, volatile son
takes over.
As Trump becomes
president, I wish him
the best, for his sake and
ours. I shall applaud when
he does well (conversing with the president of
Taiwan, thereby breaking
with decades of moldy
precedent) and condemn
when he does badly (his
“reckless and bizarre” conversation with the prime
minister of Pakistan). I
will aid his administration
as best I can while keeping my distance from it,
neither being part of it nor
ever apologizing for it.
Trump’s appointments
have earned him a conservative’s good will, but his
character ﬂaws prompt
skepticism and worry. Let
him now prove that he is
worthy of the extraordinary position he soon will
occupy.
Daniel Pipes is a historian who
has served in five presidential
administrations since 1982. He
wrote this for the Philadelphia
Inquirer.

THEIR VIEW

Lewis shouldn’t turn his back on system
By Christine Flowers
Contributing Columnist

My father seldom
talked about his time in
Mississippi. It was as
if he had gone there in
a different lifetime, different from the one he
inhabited as a father, a
high-powered civil litigator and a guy who liked
to watch the Philadelphia
Eagles with a Rolling
Rock in his hand on Sunday afternoons.
That summer of 1967
was as much a part of
him as any vital organ,
pumping blood through
his veins and shaping the
way his cerebral cortex
processed information. It
turned him from a smart
kid from a tough neighborhood in West Philly
who loved his young
family and had illusions
of grandeur at that big
law ﬁrm he’d just joined
into a man who saw reality from a very different
perspective.
Daddy lived in Baltimore for a year in 196061, and he was familiar
with the vestiges of separate but equal, including “colored” drinking
fountains and bathrooms. But the young
man from Philadelphia
didn’t know about water
hoses trained on college
students like him, or ﬁre
bombings or beatings
on bridges. That type of
education wasn’t available to young white men,
even those who came
from a rapidly changing
city up north.

In 1967, Daddy saw
little white children spit
on elderly black men trying to register to vote.
He saw white judges
in their robes ignore
the innocence of men
brought before them and
impose sentences based
on melanin, not guilt.
He crossed paths
with people who, in the
daylight, were upstanding citizens but who, at
night, hid their identities
under white sheets and
cowardice. He met Medgar Evers’ brother and
saw ﬁrsthand the damning effects of bigotry.
Most of all, he gained an
appreciation for the right
to vote, which is the only
true weapon of change in
a terrifyingly imperfect
society.
So while he rarely
spoke of his time in
Mississippi, registering
voters and representing
black men in court, it
never left him. I would
never say he was perfect.
Too many things take
that off the table. But he
saw the depths of imperfection and saw that the
only way to change it
was through the law. Protests were ﬁne, as long
as they were peaceful.
But the real agents for
change weren’t the ones
screaming in the streets,
but, rather, the Thurgood
Marshalls in their tailored suits arguing at the
bar, or the Martin Luther
Kings marching peacefully, and forcefully, arm
in arm with people who
didn’t look like him.

“John Lewis is a great man. But he has done
something unworthy of his great life.”
—Christine Flowers

It was the process, and
the process needed to
be respected, so that it
could work.
I thought of these
things when I heard
the words of Rep.
John Lewis, saying he
wouldn’t attend Donald
Trump’s inauguration.
I thought of my father’s
anger, expressed in written notes during the year
he spent dying of cancer,
that little children could
be infected with racism.
I thought of his conviction that the way to
change them was to do
it through the peaceful,
legal process, mind by
mind, soul by soul.
And while I recognized
the epic heroism of a
man who almost lost his
life on Bloody Sunday, I
had an internal conversation with my father.
Daddy, I said, I wish
you were here, so I could
ask whether you agree
with the acts of the
great civil rights hero. I
wonder whether Medgar
Evers’ brother, whom
you so admired, would
have done the same. I
wish I knew how to reconcile my awareness of
Lewis’ anger — the same
anger you must have felt
years ago — with your
conviction that the thing
that matters more than
anything else is respect
for the law.
Having lived with him

for two decades, I think I
know how he would have
answered, if he could
have answered. Reticent
as he was about the past,
Teddy Flowers would
have told me that, with
all due respect to the
hero of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, there is nothing noble in rejecting the
legitimacy of an elected
president.
There is nothing good
in continuing to undermine his authority, not
because of the man but
because of the system he
represents.
I know it would cut
him to the core, this
need to criticize a giant
of the struggle. But my
father, who was, in his
own way, a giant, understood what happens
when the law is ignored.
He saw it in the face of
white judges, a hatred
and bias that blinded
them to the innocence of
vulnerable men. And it
made him promise he’d
work to make sure it
stopped happening.
John Lewis is a great
man. But he has done
something unworthy of
his great life.
I hope he reconsiders
and honors the system
that made his legacy possible.
Christine Flowers is a lawyer and
a columnist for the Philadelphia
Daily News. Readers may email her
at cflowers1961@gmail.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
Jan. 18, the 18th day of
2017. There are 347 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Jan. 18, 1967,
Albert DeSalvo, who
claimed to be the “Boston Strangler,” was
convicted in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, of armed
robbery, assault and sex
offenses. (Sentenced to
life, DeSalvo was killed
in prison in 1973.)
On this date:
In 1778, English
navigator Captain
James Cook reached the
present-day Hawaiian
Islands, which he named

the “Sandwich Islands.”
In 1862, the tenth
president of the United
States, John Tyler, died
in Richmond, Virginia,
at age 71, shortly before
he could take his seat as
an elected member of the
Confederate Congress.
In 1892, comedian
Oliver Hardy was born in
Harlem, Georgia.
In 1911, the ﬁrst landing of an aircraft on a
ship took place as pilot
Eugene B. Ely brought
his Curtiss biplane in
for a safe landing on
the deck of the armored
cruiser USS Pennsylvania in San Francisco
Harbor.
In 1919, the Paris
Peace Conference, held

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Life is a great big canvas, and you should
throw all the paint you can on it.”
— Danny Kaye,
American entertainer (born this date in 1913, died 1986)

to negotiate peace treaties ending the First
World War, opened in
Versailles (vehr-SY’),
France.
In 1936, Nobel Prizewinning author Rudyard
Kipling, 70, died in London.
In 1943, during World
War II, Jewish insurgents in the Warsaw
Ghetto launched their
initial armed resistance
against Nazi troops, who

eventually succeeded
in crushing the rebellion. A U.S. ban on the
sale of pre-sliced bread
— aimed at reducing
bakeries’ demand for
metal replacement parts
— went into effect.
In 1957, a trio of B-52’s
completed the ﬁrst nonstop, round-the-world
ﬂight by jet planes, landing at March Air Force
Base in California after
more than 45 hours aloft.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

STOCKS

Wednesday, January 18, 2017 5

CORRECTION

AEP (NYSE) - 63.81
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 21.68
Big Lots (NYSE) - 50.20
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 47.91
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 39.79
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 11.51
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 63.77
Collins (NYSE) - 89.71
DuPont (NYSE) - 72.97
US Bank (NYSE) - 50.31
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 31.27
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 58.95
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 83.55

Kroger (NYSE) - 34.84
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 61.14
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 108.90
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 27.20
BBT (NYSE) - 45.56
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 30.99
Pepsico (NYSE) - 102.19
Premier (NASDAQ) - 18.84
Rockwell (NYSE) - 139.64
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) 12.35
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 8.92

Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 68.42
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 13.44
WesBanco (NYSE) - 41.22
Worthington (NYSE) - 46.12
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions Jan. 17, 2017,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

The name of an individual alleged to
have been involved in a vehicle pursuit
was incorrectly provided to the Sentinel.
The information should have read as
follows,
Vehicle Pursuit: Deputy Babb attempted to stop a suspicious vehicle on Route
684 between Pageville and Harrisonville.
The driver ﬁnally went into a driveway

at 39270 State Route 684. At which time
the driver jumped out of the vehicle
and ran into the woods. The passenger,
Michael King, age 26, from Pomeroy
was arrested and he advised the male
that took off on foot was a Matthew
Older. The vehicle was towed from the
scene and a warrant for Matthew Older
was issued.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

From page 1

program requirements
will expedite the rebate
process.
Funding for the rebate
program is through a partnership with the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency’s (FEMA) Hazard
Mitigation Assistance
(HMA) grant programs.

Board
From page 1

Wilson, Asa Garland, Gary
Kapp and Julia Moncrief
were approved as substitute teachers.
The board accepted the
letter of separation from
employment for Catherine
Woods Ash as assistant to
the treasurer effective on
Feb. 28. Gheen stated that
the reason for the separa-

SWCD
From page 1

ﬂags ($.10 each) and
Plantskyydd deer and rabbit repellant available in
ready-to-spray quart bottles ($22) or in a powder
concentrate (2.2 pounds
for $39).

Reach Sarah Hawley at 740-9922155 ext. 2555 or on Twitter @
SarahHawleyNews.

tion from employment was
for Ash to pursue her goal
of teaching.
The renewal of membership in the Ohio School
Boards Association was
approved at a cost of
$6,182. The board also
approved the renewal of
membership with the Ohio
Education Policy Institute
at a cost of $1,000.
A $1,000 grant was
accepted from WSAZ Children’s Charities for after

school programming.
It was approved to
obtain a board president
position bond from Reed
and Baur Insurance in the
amount of $20,000.
The board approved
waiving the ﬁling of a tax
budget and hearings. The
waiver is granted by the
Meigs County Budget
Commission.
The ﬁnancial report and
bills for December 2016
were approved.

The deadline for ordering trees or seed packets
from the Meigs SWCD
is Friday, Feb. 17 with
trees being available for
pickup around the second
week in April. Tree and
shrub seedlings should be
between six and 18 inches
tall depending on the species, and should be planted
within ﬁve days after pick-

up and watered regularly.
For an order form or for
more information, contact
the Meigs SWCD at 740992-4282 or stop in during
regular business hours, 8
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite
D, Pomeroy. Order forms
are also available at www.
meigsswcd.com.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

45°

47°

44°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

Precipitation

67°/49°
42°/25°
74° in 1932
-14° in 1982

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.59
Month to date/normal
2.92/1.62
Year to date/normal
2.92/1.62

Snowfall

(in inches)

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

1

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
2.3/3.5
Season to date/normal
4.1/8.1

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: What is the lowest temperature ever
recorded in Florida?

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:44 a.m.
5:35 p.m.
12:15 a.m.
11:57 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Jan 19 Jan 27

First

Feb 3

Full

Feb 10

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

Major
Today 4:23a
Thu. 5:09a
Fri.
5:52a
Sat.
6:33a
Sun. 7:14a
Mon. 7:55a
Tue. 8:38a

Minor
10:34a
11:19a
12:03p
12:44p
1:03a
1:44a
2:25a

Major
4:45p
5:30p
6:13p
6:55p
7:37p
8:19p
9:02p

Minor
10:56p
11:41p
------1:26p
2:07p
2:50p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Jan. 18, 1978, the weight of
snow and ice caved in the roof of the
Hartford Civic Center. In winters with
excessive snowfall, loads on roofs
increase dramatically.

61°
47°

Mild with clouds and
sun

Mild; morning rain,
then a shower

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

Lucasville
47/35
Portsmouth
49/35

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

64°
48°

AIR QUALITY

Mostly cloudy and
warm

0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Belpre
48/36

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

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

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

Level
12.23
24.39
26.76
12.51
12.73
30.76
14.90
38.00
42.14
14.18
40.10
41.20
40.70

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.02
-1.14
-0.98
+0.16
+0.14
-2.62
-2.34
-1.02
-0.61
-0.11
-1.10
+0.20
+0.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

TUESDAY

53°
32°
A couple of showers
possible; cooler

Today

St. Marys
47/37

Parkersburg
48/35

Coolville
47/35

Elizabeth
48/36

Spencer
48/37

Buffalo
50/36
Milton
50/36

Clendenin
48/36

St. Albans
49/37

Huntington
50/36

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
53/44
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
56/49
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
60/51
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mild with periods
of rain

Marietta
47/36

Athens
46/34

Ironton
49/37

Ashland
49/38
Grayson
50/37

the Sunday and Wednesday evening services at 7
p.m. at 211 S. 6th Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio. If you
have questions, please
call 740-992-2755 and
leave a message.

57°
37°

Warm with periods
of rain

Wilkesville
48/33
POMEROY
Jackson
49/36
48/33
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
49/36
49/34
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
44/34
GALLIPOLIS
50/36
49/37
50/35

South Shore Greenup
50/37
48/33

46

Monday, Feb. 13
BEDFORD TWP. —
The Bedford Township
Trustees will hold their
regular business meeting at the Bedford Town
Hall at 7 p.m.

MONDAY

63°
51°

Murray City
45/33

McArthur
46/33

Waverly
45/34

Friday, Feb. 3
POMEROY — The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County PERI
Chapter 74 will be held
at 1 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center,
located at 156 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Guest
speaker will be a representative from the Ohio
State Patrol. All retired
Meigs County Public
Employees are urged to
attend.

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
45/34

Adelphi
45/34
Chillicothe
45/34

one welcome.
MIDDLEPORT —
Pastor Billy Zuspan of
the First Baptist Church
of Middleport has begun
an in-depth Bible study
of The Revelation during

A: -2F at Tallahassee. Feb. 13, 1899.

Today
7:44 a.m.
5:34 p.m.
none
11:27 a.m.

54°
43°

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

Ongoing Events
PORTLAND — A
Bible study will be held
on Thursday evenings
at 7 p.m. at the Portland
Community Center with
Rev. Tom Curtis. Every-

FRIDAY

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

Friday, Jan. 27
MARIETTA — The
Regional Advisory
Council for the Area
Agency on Aging will
meet at 10 a.m. in the
Buckeye Hills-HVRDD
Area Agency on Aging
ofﬁce at 1400 Pike
Street, Marietta.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

THURSDAY

Mild today with clouds breaking. Cloudy most of
the time tonight. High 50° / Low 36°

ALMANAC

Saturday, Jan. 21
POMEROY — The
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the DAR will
meet to hear from the
Meigs County Veterans
Service Ofﬁce about
Meigs Counties Veterans. The meeting will be
at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Interested
parties are invited to
attend.
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
Wednesday, Jan. 18
will hold their Fun Night
OLIVE TWP. — The
Olive Township Trustees and Potluck Supper on
will hold their organiza- with supper at 6:30 p.m.
tional meeting at 6 p.m. followed by fun and
games. If you are interat the township garage
ested in Grange this is a
on Joppa Road.
good time to come and
see what happens.
Thursday, Jan. 19
POMEROY — The
Meigs County DemoThursday, Jan. 26
crats will meet at 7 p.m.
MARIETTA — The
at the Carpenter Hall in Buckeye Hills Regional
Pomeroy.
Transportation Planning
Organization (RTPO)
Technical Advisory and
Friday, Jan. 20
Citizens Advisory ComPOMEROY — The
PHS Class of ‘59 will be mittee has been reschedhaving their third Friday uled to meet at 10 a.m.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

at 1400 Pike Street,
Marietta, Ohio.

lunch at Fox Pizza at
noon.

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

plans to offer this rebate
program on an annual
basis. When and if HMA
funding becomes available,
the amount of funding will
determine the number of
rebates.
If, after visiting the Ohio
EMA website, interested
people have questions,
they should call Jacob
Hoover at 614-799-3538.

Charleston
48/36

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
32/26

Billings
43/30

Minneapolis
39/30
Chicago
43/30

Denver
48/31

Montreal
35/31
Toronto
42/29

Detroit
43/31

Kansas City
49/33

New York
45/38
Washington
59/41

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
68/52

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
55/39
Chihuahua
64/34
Monterrey
70/54

Thu.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
49/29/pc 50/30/pc
Anchorage
-5/-17/pc -7/-14/pc
Atlanta
68/52/c 66/58/c
Atlantic City
53/39/sh 50/38/pc
Baltimore
57/37/c 54/35/pc
Billings
43/30/c 42/30/c
Boise
34/31/sn 35/23/c
Boston
41/35/r 46/32/c
Charleston, WV
48/36/c 54/45/pc
Charlotte
71/43/pc 62/50/pc
Cheyenne
53/27/s 53/29/s
Chicago
43/30/pc 46/38/c
Cincinnati
46/35/pc 51/44/c
Cleveland
43/35/c 47/36/c
Columbus
46/35/c 51/42/c
Dallas
56/43/sh 67/45/pc
Denver
48/31/s 51/26/s
Des Moines
45/30/pc 43/34/c
Detroit
43/31/pc 44/33/pc
Honolulu
83/70/s 83/69/s
Houston
73/59/r
72/55/r
Indianapolis
44/32/c 48/42/sh
Kansas City
49/33/pc 51/37/c
Las Vegas
57/45/s
53/38/r
Little Rock
50/44/r 56/47/c
Los Angeles
60/51/pc 59/50/sh
Louisville
51/39/c
54/51/r
Miami
83/64/s 82/65/s
Minneapolis
39/30/s 41/35/c
Nashville
55/49/pc
62/54/r
New Orleans
77/63/c
73/58/t
New York City
45/38/r 50/35/pc
Oklahoma City
53/38/pc 58/37/c
Orlando
83/57/s 81/59/s
Philadelphia
52/38/sh 54/36/pc
Phoenix
66/48/s 62/44/pc
Pittsburgh
44/35/c 48/36/c
Portland, ME
34/27/sn 39/26/c
Raleigh
67/40/pc 60/46/s
Richmond
61/38/pc 56/38/pc
St. Louis
51/39/pc 49/45/sh
Salt Lake City
33/21/pc 38/27/sn
San Francisco
56/49/r 57/49/c
Seattle
53/44/r
50/39/r
Washington, DC 59/41/pc 55/36/pc

86° in McAllen, TX
-24° in Randolph, UT

Global
Houston
73/59

High
115° in Wilcannia, Australia
Low -70° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
83/64

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

60647073

EMA

Ohio homeowners would
be responsible for 25 percent of the construction
costs and any additional
costs over the 75 percent
maximum rebate of $4,875.
Safe rooms must meet
FEMA requirements in
FEMA publications 320
and 361, and cannot be
constructed/installed prior
to the rebate drawing and
notiﬁcation from Ohio
EMA to proceed with
construction. Ohio EMA

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 18, 2017 s 6

Lady
Raiders
fall at
Belpre
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

BELPRE, Ohio —
Another slow start made
it more tough sledding
for the Lady Raiders.
Hindered by falling
behind 17-6 following the
opening quarter, visiting
River Valley could not
climb of that early hole —
and eventually lost 61-44
to the Belpre Golden
Eagles on Monday night
in a non-league girls basketball tilt.
After that initial jolt,
the Golden Eagles only
outscored the Lady Raiders 32-25 in the middle
two periods, pushing
ahead 32-19 at halftime
and 49-31 following three
frames.
It was River Valley’s
third loss in nine days
against Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
competition —which also
includes against Federal
Hocking on Jan. 7, and
at South Gallia in double
overtime on Saturday
(Jan. 14).
The loss left the Raiders at 2-13, while Belpre
raised its record to 11-4.
Unfortunately for River
Valley, it was another
sputter to a beginning
quarter.
The only Lady Raider
ﬁrst-period points were
on baskets by Erin Jackson and Jaden Neal —and
2-of-4 free throws by Beth
Gillman.
Jackson ﬁnished with a
team-high 20 points — on
eight total ﬁeld goals and
See RAIDERS | 10

RedStorm
men finish
2nd at
Otterbein
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

WESTERVILLE, Ohio
— Phil Colbert gave the
University of Rio Grande
its only individual championship, while teammates Nikola Andjelic
and Brandon Massey
each had a pair of top-ﬁve
ﬁnishes to lead the RedStorm men’s track and
ﬁeld team at Saturday’s
Otterbein Invitational.
Colbert, a sophomore
from North Philadelphia,
Pa., won the 1,000-meter
run in a time of 2:41.22
helping Rio to a second
place ﬁnish in the ﬁnal
team standings.
Andjelic, a sophomore
from Split, Croatia,
took second place in the
60-meter hurdles (8.59)
and was fourth in the
pole vault (4.05m), while
Massey — a sophomore
from Waxhaw, N.C. —
was fourth in the 200meter dash (23.15) and
ﬁfth in the 60-meter dash
(7.25).
Massey and Colbert
were also part of the
RedStorm’s 4x400 relay
unit, which also included
See REDSTORM | 10

Photos by Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern sophomore Jess Parker (20) drives past Meigs sophomore Madison Fields, during the Lady Eagles’ 50-43 win, on Monday at MHS.

Lady Eagles outlast Meigs, 50-43
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
One stretch can change the
course of an entire ball game.
The Eastern girls basketball
team held non-conference host
Meigs scoreless for over ﬁve
minutes in the second half, on
Monday night in Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium, as the Lady
Eagles rallied back to claim the
50-43 victory.
After a pair of early lead
changes, Eastern (12-2)
opened a 16-12 lead by the end
of the opening period. The
Lady Eagles were held to just
ﬁve points in the second quarter, however, as Meigs (6-6)
stormed back to take the 26-21
halftime lead.
The Lady Eagles began
the second half with a 10-3
run, giving the Green, White
and Gold a 31-29 lead. Meigs
regained the lead, at 36-33,
with 45 seconds left in the
third, but the Lady Marauders didn’t score again until the
3:08 mark of the fourth.
The Lady Eagles scored two
points in the ﬁnal 45 seconds
of the third quarter and added
ﬁve points in the ﬁrst four minutes of the fourth, giving the

guests a 40-35 advantage.
MHS sophomore Kassidy
Betzing broke the cold spell
with a two-pointer, cutting the
Lady Marauder deﬁcit to three
points with 3:08 left. However,
Eastern scored the next eight
points and led 48-37, with 57
seconds remaining.
After a MHS free throw, EHS
extended the lead to 12 points,
with 42 seconds left. Meigs
scored the ﬁnal ﬁve points of
the game, falling by a 50-43
count.
“We were just kind of ﬂoating through the ball game,”
said ﬁrst-year EHS head coach
Jacob Parker. “In the fourth
quarter, Meigs called a time
out and I just told the girls
‘hey, we have ﬁve minutes of
basketball left, let’s just absolutely play ball.’ It ﬁred them
up, maybe I should have done
that a little earlier. That Meigs
team is very good, they can
shoot the heck out of the basketball. We lost them a couple
of times, but the girls came
through and played hard.”
Both teams attempted 46
ﬁeld goals in the game, with
Eastern making 16 for 34.8
percent and Meigs making 17
for 37 percent. EHS was 5-of19 (26.3 percent) from three-

Meigs junior Devin Humphreys shoots a jump shot over Eastern sophomore Becca
Pullins (10), during the Lady Eagles’ 50-43 victory, on Monday in Rocksprings.

point range and 13-of-19 (68.4
percent) from the free throw
line, while the Lady Marauders were 7-of-21 (33.3 percent)
from beyond the arc and 2-of-4
(50 percent) from the charity
stripe. Before the fourth quarter, Meigs was shooting 42.9
percent from the ﬁeld.
“We’ve put stretches together where we’ve played pretty
well,” said ﬁrst-year MHS head
coach Jarrod Kasun. “That
ﬁrst half was probably the best
half of basketball that we’ve
played. Unfortunately, we’ve

played too many times where
we have four-or-ﬁve minute
stretches where we just go off
the cliff. Give credit to Eastern,
I thought they played very
well. They had a lot of energy,
we were hoping to wear them
down.”
Along with the dip shooting,
Meigs struggled to hold on
to the ball after the halftime
break. The Lady Marauders
had just ﬁve turnovers in the
ﬁrst half, but committed ﬁve in
See EAGLES | 10

Ironladies turn back Blue Angels
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — Unfortunately
for Gallia Academy, Monday night’s
non-league girls basketball tilt was a
four-quarter affair — instead of three.
That’s because the Blue Angels only
scored a single basket in the entire
second stanza, fell behind after staking
an early lead, and ultimately lost to the
Jackson Ironladies 51-34 at Jackson
High School.
With the loss, Gallia Academy (5-8)
—despite being more much competitive compared to the two teams’ initial
meeting on Dec. 22 —found itself on
the wrong end of an Ironlady sweep.
The Blue Angels amassed a 6-2
advantage on Monday night, but only
toted a single ﬁeld goal in the ﬁnal nine
minutes and 45 seconds of the ﬁrst half.
Paul Boggs/OVP Sports
Thus, the Ironladies (7-8) ended the
opening
half on an 18-2 run —as the
Gallia Academy senior Carly Shriver drives the baseline on
Jackson’s Olivia Carroll (21) during Monday night’s non- Blue Angels’ only points of the aforeleague girls basketball game at Jackson High School.
mentioned span was a Hunter Copley

basket off an Alex Barnes assist only 30
seconds into the second quarter.
The Ironladies ended the half with 15
unanswered points, taking a 20-8 lead
into the intermission —before outscoring the Blue Angels 31-26 in the second
16 minutes.
Jackson extended its lead to as large
as 14 in the third frame — as Gallia
Academy inched within nine points
twice at 21-12 (with six-and-a-half
minutes) and 28-19 (with two minutes
left).
Trailing 36-22 at the end of the third
quarter, the Blue Angels only got as
close as 15 (47-32) from there —on the
club’s only three-pointer by Copley with
2:07 to play.
The Ironladies’ largest lead of the
entire night was exactly 20 —at 44-24
with 4:45 to go.
Truth be told, the Blue Angels are
a young team trying to improve as
the season stretches into its second
See ANGELS | 10

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SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
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Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

SHERIFF'S SALE

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MARK PORTER FORD
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Amy Carter
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Serenity House has an opening
for an Assistant House Manager

LEGALS

MOTOR ROUTE

LEGAL NOTICE The Annual Financial Report
for Rutland Township is
complete and available for
review by contacting
Fiscal Officer Opal Dyer.
PO Box 203,
Rutland, Ohio 45775

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s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

Personals
Someone needed to sit with
elderly woman in her home
Most hours are overnight A few
evening hours available
day shift may be available if
interested text or call Kevin
740-645-9602
Wanted

60583312

Duties include supervise residents activities, instruct new
residents on the rules and regulations of shelter, monitor an
enforce rules and regulations of shelter, monitor security and
safety of residents, staff and shelter, keep a daily phone log,
maintain confidentiality regarding shelter activities and
conversations, perform other duties as assigned by supervisor.

Terms of Sale: Ten Percent (10%) day of sale, balance within 30
days
Keith O. Wood, Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has openings
for Medical Receptionists in our Physician Offices.
Physician office experience preferred.
Qualifications:
Must have a good understanding of physician office
procedures related to general office practices.
Apply at:
Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr., Pt.
Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to (304) 675-6975 or
apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/D/F/V
LEGALS

Nationstar Mortgage LLC Plaintiff

Julia Proctor, et al.
(Defendants)

60700443

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OH
The State of Ohio, Meigs County

No. 16-CV-026

Situated in the County of Meigs, in the State of Ohio, and in the
Village of Middleport and bounded and described as follows:
The Westerly half of Lot Number Fifty-eight (58) in the Village of
Middleport, Meigs, County, and State of Ohio, lying on the East
side of Second Street and fronting on said street sixty-six (66)
feet and extending back towards the Ohio River ninety-six (96)
feet and three (3) inches to the center of said lot.
Said Premises Located at: 528 South 2nd Avenue, Middleport,
OH 45760
Said Premises Appraised At: $46,500.00
** No employees of the Sheriff's Office or any of its affiliates
have access to the inside of said property **
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
Terms of Sale: Property cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of the appraisal value. Required deposit in cash or certified
funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or certified
check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor is purchaser, no deposit is required
Terms of 2nd Sale: Property to be sold without regard to minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and court
costs; deposit and payment requirements same as first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those cost, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of sale are
insufficient to cover.
Michael E. Carleton

Keith O. Wood
Sheriff

Manley Deas Kochalski LLC
Attorney

Meigs County, Ohio
1/11/2017, 1/18/2017, 1/25/2017

Stephen D. Miles, Attorney
Vincent A. Lewis, Attorney
18 West Monument Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45402
937-461-1900
1/18/17,1/25/17,2/1/17
LEGALS

SHERIFFҋS SALE, CASE NO. 16 CV 025, HOME NATIONAL
BANK, PLAINTIFF, VS. BRADLEY T. SEARLES, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, February 3, 2017, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following described real estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF RUTLAND, VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, COUNTY
OF MEIGS AND THE STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE
DESCRIPTION OF THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY
BE FOUND IN THE MEIGS COUNTY RECORDERҋS OFFICE,
VOLUME 307, PAGE 544, OFFICIAL RECORDS.
AUDITORҋS PARCEL NOS.: 12-00088.000 and 12-00089.000.

VS.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 67 Depot Street, Middleport, OH 45760
(Village of Rutland)

Frank O. Wells Defendant

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.

Case No. 15-CV-063

Also a 2011 Giles manufactured home, Serial No.
SGI010710TNAP, Ohio Certificate of Title #2700411909.

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, inside the door of the County
Office Complex in the above named County, on FRIDAY, the
3RD Day of FEBRUARY , 2017, at 10 oҋclock A.M., the following described real estate:

Sold subject to accrued 2016 and 2017 real estate and mobile
home taxes and to any ongoing or uncertified special
assessments or delinquent charges.

LEGAL DESCRIPTION

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor lobby of
the Court House in the above named county, on Friday,
February 3, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. the below following described
real estate situate in the County of Meigs and State of Ohio, and
Village of Middleport, and if the property remains unsold after
the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction again on
Friday, February 10, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. to wit:

Parcel # 1500798000
Located at 637 Grant St., Middleport, OH 45760.
Current Owners: Timothy R. Priddy, Jr.

The appraisal is based upon a visual inspection of that part of
the premises to which access was readily available. The appraisal did not include an examination of the interior of the property. The appraisers assume no responsibility for, and give no
weight to, unknown legal matters, including, but not limited to,
concealed or latent defects, and/or the presence of harmful or
toxic chemicals, pollutants, or gases.

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Revised Code, Section 2329.25

vs.

Situated in the Village of Middleport, County of Meigs, and State
of Ohio and described as follows: Beginning at the Northwest
corner of Lot No. 460; Thence West 76 1/2 feet; Thence Southwest parallel with Grant Street 29 feet to a 20 foot alley; Thence
South along the West line of Lot 461, 87 feet to the Northwest
corner of a Lot owned by Paul M. Swisher and Iva Mae Swisher;
Thence East 100 feet along Swisher's North line to the East line
of Lot No. 461; Thence North 100 feet to the place of beginning.
Subject to all legal highways and easements of record.

To apply send your resume to: Serenity House, P.O. Box 454,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or email to:
Serenityhousemanager@yahoo.com

LEGALS

Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as Trustee for Lehman Mortgage Trust Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates,
Series 2007-5
(Plaintiff)

In pursuance of an order issued from Common Pleas Court,
within and for the County of Meigs, State of Ohio, and to me
directed, I will offer for sale at Public Auction, at on the
courthouse steps on February 3, 2017 at 10 a.m. of said day,
the following Real Estate, to-wit:

Said property has been appraised at $40,000 and cannot sell for
less than two-thirds of appraisement. If The property does not
sell on February 3, 2017 then a second sale is scheduled for
February 10, 2017 with no minimum bid.

Acquisitions Fine Jewelry is
NOW HIRING part time/full
time for jewelry sales position.
Previous experience helpful
but not required. Basic
computer skills needed. Apply
in person with resume at 151
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.

The State of Ohio, Meigs County

United States of America, acting through the Rural Housing Service, United States Department of Agriculture vs. Timothy R.
Priddy, Jr., et al.
Meigs County Common Pleas Case No. 16-CV-005.

Requires a high school diploma or GED and experience
working with people preferred. Ability to work with minimum
supervision, ability to interact with persons of varied
backgrounds, ability to keep accurate documentation.

Help Wanted General

OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH

$$$$$$$$$

Wednesday, January 18, 2017 7

BEING A LOT KNOWN AS THE J.W. HICKS LOT, BEING A PART OF
LOT NO.139, SECTION 24, TOWN 3, RANGE 11, OHIO COMPANY'S
PURCHASE BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: NORTH OF
THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF LOT NO.27 TO A STAKE AND FROM
THAT, NORTH 88 DEGREES EAST 11 RODS TO A SYCAMORE
STUMP, THE PLACE OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH 10 DEGREES
WEST 7 RODS AND 6 LINKS TO A STAKE; THENCE NORTH 59 DEGREES EAST 17 RODS AND 4 LINKS TO A POST; THENCE NORTH
43 DEGREES EAST 5 RODS AND l8 LINKS; THENCE SOUTH 39 DEGREES WEST 20 RODS TO THE PLACE BEGINNING, CONTAINING
1ACRE, MORE OR LESS.
ALSO, THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE IN OLIVE
TOWNSHIP, MEIGSCOUNTY, OHIO: BEING A PART OF SECTION 24,
TOWN3, RANGE 11, O. C. P.,BEGINNING 2 RODS NORTH OF THE
NQRTHEAST CORNER OF A PIECE OF LAND DEEDED BY JOHN
ROBERTS TO S.A. TIDD; THENCE 3 RODS AND 8 LINKS; THENCE
SOUTH 59 DEGREES WEST 17 RODS AND 18 LINKS; THENCE
SOUTH 17 EAST 5 RODS AND 18 LINKS; THENCE NORTH 2 RODS,
THENCE NORTH 59 DEGREES EAST TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING ONE-HALF ACRE, MORE OR LESS.
BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO FRANK O. WELLS
AND SHIRLEY L. WELLS, A JOINT LIFE ESTATE WITH REMAINDER
OVER IN FEE SIMPLE TO THE SURVIVOR OF THEM BY DEED FROM
JUANITA COZART WELLS AND STANLEY G. WELLS. HER HUSBAND
RECORDED 07/20/1979 IN DEED BOOK 275 PAGE 177, IN THE RECORDER'S OFFICE OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
TAX ID #09-01542

Said Premises Located at 52763 State Route 248, Long Bottom,
OH 45743
Said Premises Appraised at $40,000.00
And cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 5% of appraised value in cash or certified
check down at time of sale, remainder upon confirmation of sale.
In the event that the property remains unsold after the above
scheduled sale, this property shall be offered again at a second
sale and shall be sold to the highest bidder, without regard to
the minimum bid requirement in §2329.20, at the same place
and time on FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10TH, 2017.
Sheriff of Meigs County
Matthew Murtland, Shapiro, Van Ess, Phillips &amp; Barragate LLP
1/18/17, 1/25/17, 2/1/17

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.
Said premises appraised at $40,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes
determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are
insufficient to cover.
No employees of the Sheriffҋs Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaserҋs
possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered
for sale again on Friday, February 10, 2017, at the same time
and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum
bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those
costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the
proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of a
certified/cashierҋs check (cash and personal checks are not
accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.
All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
01/11/17, 01/18/17, 01/25/17

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Rio women place 3rd at Otterbein Invite

SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, January 18
Girls Basketball
Wirt County at Wahama, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 7 p.m.

By Randy Payton

in the 1,000-meter run with a
time of 3:29.45, while Rigsby
— a junior from Tuppers
WESTERVILLE, Ohio —
Plains, Ohio — was second in
Tyanna Petty captured one
the high jump (5-03.25m) and
ﬁrst-place ﬁnish and a pair of
third in the 500-meter dash
second-place showings, while
(1:22.50).
Emili Sannes added a ﬁrstPetty and Rigsby were also
place ﬁnish of her own and
members of the RedStorm’s
Maddie Rigsby had two top4x400 relay squad — junior
three outings to lead the UniAndrea Hunt and freshman
versity of Rio Grande women’s Marissa Commons completed
track and ﬁeld team at Saturthe quartet — which ﬁnished
day’s Otterbein Invitational.
second in a time of 4:16.80.
Petty, a junior from SomerRio Grande piled up 92
set, Ohio, took top honors in
points as a team and ﬁnished
the high jump with a leap of
third behind host Otterbein
5-03.25, while also ﬁnishing
University (158 pts.) and
second in the 60-meter hurdles Cuyahoga Community Col(9.87) and long jump (5.07m). lege (93 pts.) among the nine
Sannes, a junior from Carlschools in the team totals.
The RedStorm recorded
isle, Ohio, grabbed ﬁrst-place

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Thursday, January 19
Boys Basketball
Elk Valley Christian at
Hannan, 6:30
Girls Basketball
Hannan at Wahama, 6
p.m.
Belpre at South Gallia,
7:15
Jackson at Meigs, 7:30
Eastern at Federal
Hocking, 7:15
Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 7:30
Southern at Miller, 7:30
River Valley at
Wellston, 7:30

a dozen additional Top 10
showings during Saturday’s
competition, including a runner-up ﬁnish by senior Katie
Glover in the 1,000-meter
run (3:37.16) and third-place
performances by junior Katie
Browning in the pole vault
(3.55m) and senior Bre West
of Gallipolis in the long jump
(4.82m).
Other top-10 ﬁnishes for Rio
included freshman Reaghan
Haines who was fourth in the
1000-meter run with a time of
3:41.77; Hunt, who took sixth
place in the long jump with
a leap of 4.68m; junior Keri
Lawrence of Pomeroy, who
ﬁnished seventh in the 1-mile
run with a time of 5:49.78;
Commons, who was seventh in

the 500 with a time of 1:26.88;
junior Kylie Caudill, who was
eighth in the high jump with
an effort of 4-08.25m; junior
Aubrey Dunfee, who placed
eighth in the 3,000-meter run
with a time of 11:42.27; senior
McKenzie Coriell, who took
ninth place in the long jump
with a leap of 4.41m; junior
Marissa McConaha, who was
ninth in the 400-meter dash
with a time of 1:08.95; and
senior Clarissa Kosnich, who
was 10th in the 500 with a
time of 1:28.79.
Rio Grande returns to action
next Saturday at the Wake
Forest Invitational in WinstonSalem, N.C.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director for The University of Rio Grande

For Sale By Owner

Want To Buy

LEGALS

2 bedroom home for sale
133 Portsmouth Road in
Gallipolis 1,053 square ft
$24,500 740-794-0149

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Revised Code, Section 2329.25

Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

PASS
TIME IN
LINE.
READ
THE

Now Leasing
Jordan Landing Apartments
1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 Bdrms
$410-$610 Rent Mnthly
Sect. 8 Vouchers Accepted
EHO/ADA
For Info call: 304-674-0023

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

NEWSPAPER.

LEGALS

The State of Ohio, Meigs County

Situated in the Township of Sutton, County of Meigs and State
of Ohio:
Being a part of a tract of land transferred to Bobby Joe Adams,
Jr., recorded in Deed Book 303 at Page 333, Meigs County
Recorder's Office, Meigs County, Ohio, also being a part of 160
acre Lot No. 1201, Township-2-North, Range-12-West, Sutton
Township, Meigs County, State of Ohio and more particularly
described as follows:
Beginning at an existing iron pin being the Southeast corner of a
4.3244 acre, more or less, tract recorded in Official Records
Volume 91 at Page 209, which bears South 80 degrees 50
minutes 27 seconds East a distance of 1580.11 feet from the
Southwest corner of a tract recorded in Official Records at
Volume 69, Page 939;
Thence along the East line of said 4.3244 acre, more or less,
tract the following two courses:
1.) North 02 degrees 31 minutes 56 seconds East a distance of
103.41 feet to an existing iron pin;
2.) North 07 degrees 18 minutes 49 seconds East a distance of
594.93 feet to a 5/8" iron pin with i.d. cap set;
Thence leaving said East line South 81 degrees 32 minutes 48
seconds East a distance of 168.07 feet to a 5/8" iron pin with i.d.
cap set;
Thence South 05 degrees 18 minutes 21 seconds West a distance of 700.99 feet to a 5/8" iron pin with i.d. cap set on the
South line of said 160 acre Lot No. 1201;
Thence along said South line North 80 degrees 50 minutes 27
seconds West a distance of 184.07 feet to the principal point of
beginning, containing 2.882 acres, more or less, subject to all
legal easements and rights-of-way.
Bearings derived from magnetic taken October 5, 1981.
All iron pins 5/8" x 30" with plastic i.d. cap CTS-6844.
The above description was prepared from an actual survey
made on the 8th day of May, 2000, by C. Thomas Smith, Ohio
Professional Surveyor, #6844.
1/18/17

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

LEGALS

In Print. Online. In Touch.

LEGALS

Sheriffҋs Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Meigs County.

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Revised Code, Section 2329.25

M&amp;T Bank
Plaintiff

The State of Ohio, Meigs County
vs.

Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for
Argent Securities Inc., Asset-Backed Pass-Through
Certificates, Series 2006-M1
(Plaintiff)
vs.

No. 15-CV-045

Kevin A. Taylor, AKA Kevin Taylor, et al.
(Defendants)
In pursuance of an Alias Order of Sale in the above entitled
action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Court House in the above named county, on Friday,
February 3, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. the below following described
real estate situate in the County of Meigs and State of Ohio, and
Township of Bedford, and if the property remains unsold after
the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction again on Friday, February 10, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. to wit:
Situated in Fraction 34, Section 28, Town 3, Range 13, Bedford
Township, Meigs County, Ohio and described as follows: Commencing at the Southeast corner of Fraction 24 in said Section
28; thence on an assumed bearing of North 48 deg. 55 min 24
sec West, a distance of 3667.75 feet to an iron pin, the true
point of beginning; thence South 87 deg. 30 min. 34 sec. West
(passing a set iron pin at 40.02 feet) for a total distance of 55.84
feet to a point in the center of Bedford Township Road 130;
thence along the center of said road North 4 deg. 36 min. 32
sec. West, a distance of 7.80 feet to a point; thence North 4 deg.
57 min. 36 sec. West a distance of 167.88 feet to a point; thence
North 14 deg. 33 min. 32 sec. West, a distance of 54.29 feet to a
point; thence North 27 deg. 54 min. 52 sec. West a distance of
43.41 feet to a point; thence North 39 deg. 24 min. 48 sec.
West, a distance of 45.70 feet to a point; thence North 45 deg.
05 min. 16 sec. West, a distance of 10.23 feet to a point; thence
leaving the said Bedford Township Road 130 North 47 deg. 13
min. 08 sec. East (passing a set iron pin at 13.26 feet) for a total
distance of 151.02 feet to a set iron pin; thence South 59 deg.
15 min. 14 sec. East, a distance of 109.38 feet to a set iron pin;
thence South 1 deg. 33 min. 49 sec. West a distance of 90.66
feet to a set iron pin; thence South 13 deg 08 min. 57 sec. West,
a distance of 269.12 feet to the point of beginning, and containing 1.0871 acres, and being a part of a 40.5 acre tract described in Volume 284, Page 1023, of the Meigs County Deed
Records. Be the same more or less, but subject to all legal
highways.
Said Premises Located at: 39360 Gold Ridge Road, Pomeroy,
OH 45769

No. 16-CV-024

Judith F. Smedley, et al.
Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, 31005 Lovett Road, Portland,
OH 45770 in the courthouse steps, in the above named County,
on February 3, 2017, at 10:00 am, the following described real
estate,
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:
Situated in the State of Ohio, County of Meigs, and in the
Township of Lebanon.
Parcel I. Being in Section 25, Township 3 North, Range 11 West
of the Ohio Companyҋs Purchase and being described as
follows: Beginning at a steel post at the southwest corner of said
Section :25; thence East 228.3 feet along South line of Section
25 to the Northwesterly side of Township Road T- 139 (Lovett
Road), passing an 18 inch oak tree at 196.5 feet for reference;
thence North 59° 53' East 79.4 feet and North 44° 47' East
198.9 feet along the Northwesterly side of Township Road T-139
to the end of a culvert; thence North 32" 28' West 158.5 feet up
a small run to where a fence crosses said run; thence North 74"
10' West 238.8 feet to an 18 inch oak on the Westerly side of
said run; thence North 57°35' West 144.8 feet to a 24 inch oak
on the West line of said Section 25; thence South 457.5 feet
along the West line of said Section 25 to the point of beginning,
containing 3.1 acres more or less.
PARCEL II. Situated in Lebanon Township, Meigs County, Ohio
and in Section 30, Township 2, Range 11 of the Ohio
Company's purchase, commencing at the northwest corner of
said Section 30: thence East along the North line of said section
to the point where it intersects the center line of Township Road
No. 139 as if exists on the date of this Deed; thence southwesterly following the centerline of said Township Road No. 139 to
the point where it intersects tile west line of said Section 30; and,
thence north along the west line of said Section 30 to the place
of beginning, containing one- third (1/3) of an acre, more or
less.Subject to conditions, restrictions and easements, if any,
contained in prior instruments of record.
Parcel No. 0700328000
Property Address: 31005 Lovett Road, Portland, OH 45770
Parcel No. 0700649002
Property Address: E Side TR 139 Lovett Road, Portland, OH
45770

Said Premises Appraised At: $40,000.00
**No employees of the Sheriff's Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property **

Terms of Sale: Property cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of the appraisal value. Required deposit in cash or certified
funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or certified
check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor is
purchaser, no deposit is required
Terms of 2nd Sale: Property to be sold without regard to minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and court
costs; deposit and payment requirements same as first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those cost, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of sale are
insufficient to cover.
Kyle E. Timken
Manley Deas Kochalski LLC
Attorney

Said Premises Appraised at $ 50000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount.
HOWEVER, IF SAID PROPERTY DOES NOT RECEIVE A BID
AT THE FIRST SALE, IT SHALL BE OFFERED FOR SALE AT
THE COURT HOUSE ON FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2017 AT
10:00 A.M.
THE PURCHASER SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR COST, ALLOWANCE, AND TAXES THAT THE PROCEEDS OF THE
SALE ARE INSUFFICIENT TO COVER.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% down at time of sale, balance due in 30
days

Keith O. Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
1/11/17, 1/18/17, 1/25/17

CLASSIFIEDS

vs.

No. 15-CV-059

Randy L. Fryar, et al.
(Defendants)
In pursuance of an Alias Order of Sale in the above entitled
action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
lobby of the Court House in the above named county, on Friday,
February 3, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. the below following described
real estate situate in the County of Meigs and State of Ohio, and
Township of Salisbury, and if the property remains unsold after
the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction again on
Friday, February 10, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. to wit:
Parcel 1: The following described piece or parcel of land, situated in the Township of Salisbury, County of Meigs and State of
Ohio. The surface of the following described real estate, being in
Fraction No. 1, Section No. 9, Town No. 2 and Range 13, Salisbury Township, County of Meigs and State of Ohio, and being
more fully described as follows: Beginning at the Northeast
corner of Wilbur Finlaw's land, said corner being a point in the
center of the Road, North 4 Deg. No minutes East 88.4 feet from
the Southeast corner of Section No. 9; thence with the Road
North 33 degrees and 11' East 288.5 feet to a point in the center of the Road; thence North 23 degrees and no minutes West
136.2 feet to a point in the center of the Road; thence South 50
degrees and 52' West 683.8 feet to the South line of Section 9;
thence with the South line of Section No. 9 South 86 degrees
and no minutes East 195.7 feet; thence North 53 degrees and
49' East 133.8 feet; thence South 85 degrees and 41 minutes
East 117.7 feet to the place of beginning, containing in all 2 and
14/100 acres, .62 acres being in Section No. 3 of Salisburg
Township, Meigs County, Ohio and 1.52 acres being in Section
No. 9. Parcel 2: The following real estate as shown by the
survey made on the Phillip F. Duerr farm April 16th, 1932 by
H.V. Carl, Situated in Salisbury Township, County of Megis,
State of Ohio.
Beginning at the S.W. Corner of Section No. 3 at a cross in the
Rock, being the N.E. Corner of Section No. 8 and the N.W.
Corner of Section No. 2; thence East 925 feet to Mary Williamson's S.W. Corner; thence North 47 degrees West 66 feet along
Mary Williamson's line; thence North 48 degrees E. 66 feet
along Mary Williamson's line; thence North 12 degrees East 224
feet along Mary Williamson's line to a double tree on top of the
Rocks; thence North 47 degrees and 15' West 198 feet near
head of Cave; thence North 2 degrees and 30' West 75 feet;
thence North 74 degrees West 334 feet; thence South 53 degrees and 45 minutes West 279 feet; thence South 49 degrees
and 45' West 250 feet to the center of private road; thence
South 2 degrees and 45' West 39 1/2 feet along the center of
said road; thence South 33 degrees and 15' West 315 feet along
center of Road; thence South 4 degrees West 38 feet to the
place of beginning, containing Thirteen and 66/100 acres, more
or less. It is the intention of the grantors to convey the surface
and all mineral rights, excepting coal. Being in Section 3, Town
2, Range 13. Excepting from the above described real estate,
0.8053 acres, more or less, conveyed to Michael C. Custer,
single, by James E. Hall and Edith Hall, by deed dated September 17, 1987 and recorded in Volume 307, Page 133 of the
Meigs County Deed Records. Parcel 3: Also, the following described real estate: All that certain lot or tract of land situate in
Sutton Township, in Section 2, Town 2, Range 13, bounded and
described as follows: Beginning at a point common to Section 9,
8, 3, and 2; thence Eastwardly along the line dividing Section 3
and 2, South Eight-five degrees Fifty-four minutes East (S. 85
deg. 54' E.) Eleven hundred Twenty-five (1125) feet to the point
at or near Chester Road; thence Southwestwardly along said
road, the following six courses and distances, viz; South Sixtysix degrees Fifty-five minutes West, (S. 66 deg. 55' W.) Five
hundred and Fifty-three hundredths (500.53) feet; South Eightone degrees Forty-four minutes West, (S. 81 deg. 44' W.) seventy (70) feet; North Eighty-three degrees Thirty-three minutes
West (N. 83 deg. 33' W.) One hundred and ninety (190) feet;
South Eighty-nine degrees Forty-five minutes West (S. 89 deg.
45' W.) One hundred ten (110) feet; South Eighty degrees Fiftyfour minutes west (S. 80 deg. 54' W.) One hundred twelve (112)
feet; South Seventy-four degrees six minutes west (S. 74 deg. 6'
W.) two hundred twenty (220) feet to a point on the dividing line
between Section 8 and 2; thence along the said dividing line
North four degrees forty-five minutes East (N. 4 deg. 45' E.)
three hundred forty-five (345) feet to the pint the place of beginning, having a surface area of 5.40 acres.
Except all coal underlying the surface with right to mine and
remove the same. This deed is given subject to the easements
and rights of ways as described in Volume 136,, pages 199-210
of the Meigs County Deed Records. Said rights of ways are also
to be used in common with the owners of the coal underlying the
surface. Excepting from the above described real estate, 1.47
acres, more or less, conveyed to Kenneth E. McLaughin and
Carole E. McLaughin, husband and wife, by James E. Hall and
Edith Hall, by deed dated October 1, 1976 and recorded in
Volume 265, Page 613 of the Meigs County Deed Records.
Said Premises Located at: 33020 Wills Hill Road, Pomeroy, OH
45769
Said Premises Appraised At: $69,000.00

Parcel No: 07-00328.00 and 07-00649.002
Prior Deed Reference: Volume 372, Page 931
*Said Premises Located at 31005 Lovett Road, Portland, OH
45770

Required Deposit: $5,000.00

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
(Plaintiff)

**No employees of the Sheriff's Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property **
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
Terms of Sale: Property cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of the appraisal value. Required deposit in cash or certified
funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or certified
check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor is purchaser, no deposit is required
Terms of 2nd Sale: Property to be sold without regard to minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and court
costs; deposit and payment requirements same as first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those cost, allowances and taxes
that the proceeds of sale are insufficient to cover.
Michael E. Carleton

Channing L. Ulbrich
Attorney

Sheriff Keith Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, OH
1/11/17, 1/18/17, 1/25/17

Manley Deas Kochalski LLC
Attorney

Keith O. Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
1/11/2017, 1/18/2017, 1/25/2017

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, January 18, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

3
9
5
4

6
1
8
7

6 1
3

5
3
8 5 6 4 2
1/18

Difficulty Level

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

1/18

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DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

2
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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

2
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2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

�10 Wednesday, January 18, 2017

SPORTS

Warriors rout Cavs

OAKLAND, Calif.
(AP) — Now, everybody can sit back for a
few months and envision the possibility of
another scintillating
NBA Finals between
Cleveland and Golden
State.
LeBron James vs.
Stephen Curry for
the third straight
time, complete with
the hard-nosed play
of Draymond Green,
dazzling dunks from
Kevin Durant and
sharp shooting from
Kyrie Irving.
This regular-season
round went to the
Warriors, who dominated from the start
on Monday — and
it wasn’t even close.
The defending champs
were dismantled on
the very ﬂoor where
they captured the franchise’s ﬁrst title last
June.
Curry and his
superstar supporting
cast certainly looked
ready to trade more
postseason blows with
Cleveland. The twotime reigning MVP hit
ﬁve 3-pointers on the
way to 20 points while
matching his season
best with 11 assists in
Golden State’s 126-91
rout of the Cavaliers.
“This is high-quality
basketball, at its highest level,” Curry said.
“These are the kinds
of atmospheres that
you live for. Whether
you win or lose, regular season, playoffs,
whatever, that you
can play in that kind
of environment that’s
always fun.”

Klay Thompson
scored 26 points with
ﬁve 3s, and Green
produced his third
triple-double of the
season with 11 points,
13 rebounds and
11 assists. He also
equaled his career
best with ﬁve blocks
— and had another
confrontation with
King James in the process.
James had 20 points
on 6-of-18 shooting
and eight rebounds.
But he and Green
became the talk once
more as their relationship again turned
testy.
“I don’t think it’s a
rivalry,” James reiterated. “It’s two great
teams that have aspirations. I don’t believe
I’ve ever had a rivalry
in the NBA.”
Durant added 21
points, six rebounds,
ﬁve assists and three
blocks for the Warriors in a much-hyped
matchup merely weeks
after Golden State lost
109-108 in Cleveland
on Christmas.
The Warriors squandered a 14-point lead
that day in a loss that
fueled them going into
Monday. They relinquished a 3-1 advantage in the Finals
last year, a failure
that motivates them
to return to the big
stage. And the teams’
latest holiday game
marked the Cavs’ ﬁrst
trip back to Oracle
Arena since capturing
the title here seven
months ago.
Irving — who hit

game-winners against
Golden State in the
past two matchups,
including the championship clincher
— scored 17 points
on an uncharacteristic day for the Cavs
when they committed
15 turnovers to 11
assists.
“They did what
they were supposed
to do,” Irving said.
“Right from the start
they jumped on us and
never looked back.”
Cleveland shot just
35.2 percent (31 for
88) overall. Beyond
embarrassed, Cavs
players headed for the
tunnel before the ﬁnal
buzzer even sounded.
The latest altercation between Green
and James came with
6:55 left in the ﬁrst
half. Golden State led
52-35 when James
collided with Green
near midcourt, resulting in a ﬂagrant 1
foul on Golden State’s
emotional All-Star.
Green’s arm extended
across the upper body
of James, who went
down hard and lay
on the court. Green
reacted by appearing
to mock James for
ﬂopping.
After a long replay
review, a double technical was called on
Green and Richard
Jefferson.
After Curry’s pullup 3 moments before
halftime sent his team
into the break with a
78-49 lead, the star
guard did what looked
like a little celebratory
breakdancing move

on his behind at the
sideline.
You bet this one
felt like more than
just any game to the
Warriors, looking to
regain some swagger
in this rivalry after
Cleveland had won the
past four meetings,
including last year’s
NBA Finals.
“To me it was
because they beat us
four straight times
and that’s never fun
when a team has
your number for four
games, so it felt good
to redeem ourselves,”
Thompson said.
Durant, new to the
rivalry this season,
appeared downright
possessed. KD’s driving, emphatic tomahawk jam 1:43 before
halftime sent Oracle
Arena’s sellout crowd
into a frenzy.
Zaza Pachulia pulled
down 13 rebounds
as Golden State had
a 58-35 edge on the
boards. Andre Iguodala came off the bench
to make all ﬁve of his
ﬁeld goal attempts
for a season-high 14
points, and Shaun Livingston added 13.
With this one in the
books, these teams are
done with each other
— for the time being.
“It’s intense enough
for two matchups,”
Green said. “If you
want to play each
other again, try to get
to the NBA Finals.
The fact you only play
twice a year makes it
even more exciting
because you only have
two cracks at it.”

hard and getting better
every day. That was our
goal for this season as
we get ready for tournaFrom page 6
ment time.”
half —and they showed
Jackson junior
some signs of improve- Rebekah Green, who
ment on Monday night. almost outscored the
Still, however, they
Blue Angels by herself
need to cut down on
in the ﬁrst meeting
turnovers —which
with 30 points, garespecially plagued them nered a game-high 24
in the epic second-stan- on Monday — despite
za scoring drought.
playing with a badlyIn addition, Gallia
injured thumb.
Academy only shot
She scored seven
24-percent (13-of-54),
two-point goals over
including only Copley’s the ﬁnal three periods,
made three on eight
and sank 7-of-8 secondattempts.
half foul shots.
The Blue Angels
She also grabbed
endured a scoring
nine of Jackson’s 36
drought of exactly
rebounds — and dished
seven minutes and 50
out ﬁve assists while
seconds.
making off with four
“We’re getting to a
steals.
point right now where
Green canned the
we are competitive
Ironladies’ only threefor all four quarters. If
ball to make it 6-5, then
you take that second
scored eight straight
quarter away where
points and 10 out of 12
we missed several bun- in the second quarter to
nies and had some
give the Red and White
turnovers, then it’s a
the lead.
different ballgame,”
The only other Jacksaid GAHS coach Joe
son ﬁrst-half points
Justice. “We continued came on a pair of Marto battle in the second
ley Haynes ﬁrst-quarter
half, we got it down to
free throws, an Emily
11 or 12 a few times,
Brown steal and layup
but just didn’t get over that made it 15-8, and
the hump. We’re still a
an old-fashioned threeyoung team, but I think point play by Deb Hill.
As is often the Ironthe girls are playing

ladies’ case, they relied
heavily upon their
defense to jump-start
their offense.
They switched from
a 2-3 matchup zone in
the ﬁrst quarter to their
traditional man-to-man
pressure in the second.
“We held them to
eight points in two
quarters, and I thought
that was a compliment
to our defense,” said
Jackson coach Matt
Walburn. “We did
switch it up to man and
started to put more
pressure on them. I
think it helped us offensively to get started as
well. Shots started to
fall in that second quarter, Rebekah (Green)
got to the rim a few
times, and (Amelia)
Davis hit a few in the
second half. I thought
our defense and picking
up the pressure really
helped us get moving
offensively.”
The Ironladies
amassed a 17-12 advantage in total ﬁeld goals,
as both teams shot 21
free throws — with
Jackson draining 16
and Gallia Academy
only nine.
Amelia Davis dropped
in four ﬁeld goals and
2-of-2 free throws for 10
points, while Hill had

two buckets and 3-of-3
free throws for seven.
Brown bagged three
baskets for six points,
while Mariah Ridgeway
and Ally Irwin split a
pair of second-half freebies.
Copley paced the
Blue Angels with 14
points — on ﬁve total
ﬁeld goals and 3-of-6
tosses.
She scored six of
Gallia Academy’s eight
markers in the opening half —with Barnes
bucketing the other
two.
Adrienne Jenkins
added 10 points in the
second half — on three
ﬁeld goals and 4-of-6
foul shots.
Barnes with two ﬁeld
goals, Abby Cremeans
with a third-quarter
ﬁeld goal and free
throw, Carly Shriver
with a third-frame ﬁeld
goal, and Jenelle Stevens with a foul shot
rounded out the Blue
and White scoring.
The Blue Angels
return to the road, and
return to Ohio Valley
Conference action,
on Thursday night at
Chesapeake.

Angels

Eagles

our offense. If we can
do that as a team, we’re
going to set ourselves
in a lot better position
From page 6
down the road. I am
each of the ﬁnal two
very, very proud of the
quarters. Eastern comgirls.”
mitted just seven turnBoth teams ﬁnished
overs in the contest.
with 26 rebounds, with
“Our goal tonight was the Lady Eagles winto limit the turnovers,”
ning the offensive glass
Coach Parker said. “That by a 6-to-5 edge. Meigs
meant we were running held a 14-to-12 assists
our offenses, making the advantage, but Eastern
right passes and not let- claimed all six of the
ting the defense dictate
game’s steals.

Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

The Lady Eagles had
four players reach double-ﬁgures in scoring,
led by sophomore Becca
Pullins with 12 points.
Laura Pullins, Elizabeth
Collins and Jess Parker
each scored 10 points,
Alyson Bailey added six,
while Kelsey Casto ﬁnished with two markers.
Laura Pullins pulled in
a team-best 10 rebounds,
followed by Collins with
eight. Bailey dished out
ﬁve assists for EHS,

while Becca Pullins
added three. Becca Pullins also led the EHS
defense with three
steals, followed by Collins with two.
The Maroon and Gold
were led by Betzing with
15 points, followed by
Madison Fields with 10
and Devin Humphreys
with nine. Marissa
Noble scored ﬁve points
for the hosts, while
Danielle Morris and Alli
Hatﬁeld each had two

Daily Sentinel

Lady Wildcats
lose at Scott
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

MADISON, W. Va. — A three-point third quarter
was indeed Hannan’s downfall on Monday night.
That’s because the Lady Wildcats, in only trailing
19-18 at halftime at host Scott, were outscored 14-3 in
the decisive third period — and lost by a ﬁnal count
of 46-31.
The Lady Hawks held a slim 7-4 advantage after
the opening stanza, as the Wildcats won the second
quarter 14-12.
But Scott seized control of the contest from there,
and outscored the Lady Wildcats 27-13 in the second
half.
Hannan, which fell to 3-9 with the loss, couldn’t
recover from a 33-21 deﬁcit following the third.
Madison Staggs and Julie Frazier ﬁnished with 11
points apiece to pace the Wildcats, while Bailey Tolliver tallied eight and Cassidy Duffer a free throw.
Birchﬁeld paced the Hawks with a game-high 14
points.
Scott evened its record to 6-6.
The Lady Wildcats will return to the road on
Thursday — when they travel to Mason County rival
Wahama.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

RedStorm
From page 6

sophomore Daschle
Facemyer of Pomeroy
and freshman Keshawn
Jones, that finished
third in a time of
3:36.03.
Rio Grande tallied 89
points as a team and
finished behind host
Otterbein University
(177 pts.) in the team
totals.
Wilmington College
took third place among
the nine schools in the
team competition with
79 points.
The RedStorm
posted 15 other Top10 showings during
Saturday’s competition,
including runner-up
finishes by Jones in
the 1,000-meter run
(2:41.44), sophomore
Connor Messer in the
pole vault (4.20m) and
senior Alex Nichols in
the shot put (15.09m).
Other top-10 finishes
included sophomore
Ben Martinez, who
took third place in the
400-meter dash with a
time of 52.30; senior
Isaac Andrews, who
placed fourth in the
shot put with a heave of
14.18m; junior Clinton
Campbell, who was

Raiders
From page 6

2-of-3 third-quarter free
throws.
Jessica Steele, on a
fourth-quarter bucket and
9-of-14 free throws, added
11 points.
Neal netted two baskets
and 2-of-2 freebies for
seven points, as Jackson
drilled two threes while
Neal notched one.
Savannah Reese, on a
pair of second-half ﬁeld
goals, rounded out the
Silver and Black with four
points.
The Raiders did make
15-of-25 free throws,
but Belpre held a 21-14
advantage in total ﬁeld
goals —including an 8-3

points in the setback.
Betzing and Humphreys led Meigs on the
glass with six rebounds
apiece, while Noble and
Betzing led the Lady
Marauders with ﬁve and
four assists respectively.
“We gave a good effort
here, we have to keep
building of of this,”
Coach Kasun said. “It’s
not one quarter, or one
game, we just have to
keep going. I liked our
effort in the ﬁrst half, so

fifth in the 200-meter
dash with a time of
23.66 and eighth in the
60-meter dash after
crossing in 7.35; senior
Matt Engstrom, who
was fifth in the 1,000meter run in a time of
2:48.29; sophomore
Kameron Carpenter,
who finished sixth in
the 3,000-meter run
with a time of 9:04.51;
senior Blake Freed,
who was seventh in
the 3,000 after crossing in 9:05.65; senior
Aaron Evancho, who
was eighth in the 500meter dash in a time
of 1:14.01; freshman
Ethan Greenawalt, who
was eighth in the 1,000
with a time of 2:59.60;
sophomore Jacob Glick
of Gallipolis, who was
ninth in the 60-meter
dash by finishing in
7.39; senior Kyle Sanborn, who was ninth in
the 3,000 with a time
of 9:15.98; and senior
Tim Warner of Pomeroy, who placed 10th in
the 500 with a time of
1:16.46.
Rio Grande returns
to action next Saturday at the Wake Forest
Invitational in WinstonSalem, N.C.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director for The
University of Rio Grande

edge in treys.
Four of those triples
belonged to Cheyenne
Barker —who poured in
24 points on ﬁve total
ﬁeld goals and 10-of-12
free throws.
Abby Lefatch and Trinidy King canned three
buckets apiece for seven
points, with both knocking in a three-pointer.
Alexandria Williams,
with three deuces, and
Kyanna Ray —with two
trifectas —each scored
six.
The Lady Raiders
return to the road, and
return to TVC-Ohio Division action, on Thursday
night at Wellston.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

hopefully we can build
off of that and comeback
Thursday with a victory.”
Meigs continues its
non-league slate on
Thursday, when Jackson
visits Rocksprings.
Eastern resumes
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division play
on Thursday, at Federal
Hocking.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

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