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                  <text>Tale of
Halloween
past

A
Halloween
tradition

Locals on
district
golf team

EDITORIAL s 4A

ALONG THE
RIVER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 43, Volume 51

Hay bales,
equipment
lost in fire

Sunday, October 29, 2017 s $2

A trip down memory lane

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

FIVE POINTS — Approximately 400 large
round hay bales, two feed trucks and other equipment were lost or damaged in a seven-alarm ﬁre
early Saturday morning.
Chester Volunteer Fire Department was alerted
just after 2 a.m. to a ﬁre at Holter’s Dairy Farm in
the Five Points area, with mutual aid coming from
Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland, Tuppers Plains,
Olive Twp. and Bashan Volunteer Fire Departments. Meigs EMS was also on scene in case of
any injuries.
Chester Chief Dave Edwards said that there
were approximately 50 ﬁreﬁghters on the scene
See FIRE | 7A

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Dick and Charlotte Wamsley are pictured with Clark’s Jewelry owner Susan Clark on Friday morning outside the store on Court Street.
Forty-five years ago, the Wamsleys purchased their wedding rings at the store, then Goessler’s, arriving in the same 1966 Corvette they
drove on Friday.

Couple retraces
their past
Dave Harris | Photo

Firefighters from around the county were on scene throughout
the early morning hours on Saturday.

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — A lot can change
in 45 years, but for one Meigs

County couple, a lot has remained
the same.
As Dick and Charlotte Wamsley
prepared to celebrate 45 years of
marriage on Saturday (Oct. 28),
the couple made a stop in Pomeroy
on Friday morning.
Pulling up in front of what is
now Clark’s Jewelry Store on Court
Street, Dick Wamsley explained
that 45 years ago he and his bride
purchased their wedding rings at

what was then Goessler’s Jewelry, a
business which was in Pomeroy for
100 years before being purchased
by Clark’s in 1980.
Dick Wamsley recalled purchasing their rings just a few days
before getting married in 1972.
Rings still worn today.
The wedding rings for the couple
remain the same ones purchased
See MEMORY | 7A

Gallia
Preparing for Christmas in Gallipolis
candidates for
November ballot
Staff Report

By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — As the Nov. 7 election draws
nearer, here is the list of candidates expected to
appear on the ballot this fall.
Early voting ends ends Nov. 6.
According to information provided by the Gallia Board of Elections, for Gallipolis City Commission, Cody Caldwell, Beau Sang and Albert
“Tony” Gallagher are running for a position to
govern Gallipolis. Robert Terry, Virginia Daniels,
Brian Waugh and Gene Allen Hall are running for
positions on Centerville’s council. Cory Camden
is running for a position on Rio Grande’s council.
Denver Bates is also running for a spot on the Vinton Council. Carol Porter is running for a position
as part of the Gallia-Vinton Educational Services
Center.
Eric Mulford sits as the sole candidate running
for Gallipolis Municipal Court judge. Joe Foster
See BALLOT | 7A

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Along the River: 6A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Sports: 1B-5B, 7B
Comics: 6B
Classifieds: 7B

GALLIPOLIS —The
Gallia County Convention and Visitors Bureau
has begun preparations
for this year’s Christmas
Parade, slated for Dec. 2
at 1 p.m.
The theme this year is
“The Night Before Christmas” which participants
are encouraged to dress
and decorate their ﬂoat
accordingly.
Registration is free to
anyone who desires to
participate, forms are
available at the GCCVB
ofﬁce at 441 Second
Avenue during normal
business hours: 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Monday - Friday. Registration is also
available online at www.
visitgallia.com. They can
be reached by phone and
email at 740-446-6882
and info@visitgallia.com.
The deadline to submit a
registration form is Friday, November 17, 2017.
Due to time constraints,

Dean Wright | OVP

Santa Claus waves from a Gallipolis Fire Department ladder truck as he passes by during last year’s
annual Gallipolis Christmas Parade.

entries will not be accepted after this date.
“We hope that everyone
enjoys this year’s parade.

There are a lot of holiday
events and activities
scheduled throughout
the month of December

in Gallipolis and Gallia
County for locals and
See CHRISTMAS | 7A

Historical Society holds annual meeting
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

POMEROY — The
Megis County Pioneer
and Historical Society
held its 142nd annual
meeting last week, updating members on accomplishments throughout
the year and selecting
new board members.
The make up of the

board, which had consisted of 16 members,
was cut to 12 members
upon the approval of the
change in the bylaws by
members at the annual
meeting. Board members
noted that the change
was due to the number
of members in the society, which better suits a
12-member board.
At the time of the meet-

ing there were only 10
members on the board,
two of whom had their
seats up for re-election.
Board members Debbie
Pratt and Shannon Scott
were both re-elected to
three-year terms on the
board, while Molly Arms
and Debbie Bullington —
both of whom are already
volunteers for the organization — were newly

elected to three-year
terms.
Historical Society
Board of Trustees members include, Shannon
Scott, James K. Stanley,
Susan Clark-Dingess,
Jay Russell, Mary Grace
Cowdery, Patty Grossnickle, Vicki Hanson,
Chloris Gaul-McQuaid,
See MEETING | 7A

�OBITUARIES/TELEVISION

2A Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
WILLIAM R. TODD

BRENDA (BAILEY) HYSELL
POMEROY —
Brenda (Bailey)
Hysell, 71, a native
and long time resident of Pomeroy
went to be with the
Lord on Thursday
October 19th at
The Arbors Nursing Facility due to complications
following a hip fracture.
Brenda grew up in
Pomeroy, Ohio, where
she spent her early adult
years lovingly raising
her children. After they
grew up, she went back
to college to get a nursing degree and spent the
remainder of her career
caring for people in various nursing homes in
the Nelsonville, Ohio,
area.
Her greatest loves were
her children, her family, and her many dogs
she had throughout her
lifetime. She liked mov-

ies, beaches, and
laughing. Never
a wallﬂower, she
liked bright colors
and sassy jokes,
and she was never
afraid to say what
was on her mind.
She is survived by sons,
Scott (Christina) and
Todd Hysell; siblings,
Debi (Wes) Withrow and
Keith (Peggy) Bailey;
grandchildren, Amanda
and Alex Hysell; nephews, Ian and Rob Mullen;
and great-niece, Londynn
Mullen.
She is preceded in
death by parents, Harry
and Margaret Bailey;
brother, William Bailey;
and long time companion
Chuck Woodson.
Memorial services will
be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 4, at the First
Baptist Church in Pomeroy, Ohio.

TOMMIE EARL ‘SPIDER’ SPIRES
HOLGATE —
Tommie Earl “Spider” Spires, age
65, passed away
peacefully Thursday afternoon, Oct.
26, 2017, in his
Holgate home.
Tommie was born
April 19, 1952, the son of
Ted Earl and Mary Ellen
(Smith) Spires in Mason,
W.Va. He graduated from
Ayersville high School
in 1970 and joined the
National Guard. Tommie was an iron pourer
at General Motors for 30
years. On June 18, 1994,
he had a bikers wedding
and married Estella Blanca “Yaya” Salaz.
He is survived by his
loving wife Estella of
23 years; children, Brett
Earl Spires, Osceola,
Wis., Dana Reuben (Sara
Ghast) Yocco, Napoleon
and Daniel Klingshirn,

Napoleon; grandchildren, Tomas,
Jonathan, Kayla,
Josie, Kylie,
Sophia, Jacob and
Edaevion; and
great-grandchildren, Jace and
Amelia.
Tommie was preceded
in death by a grandson
Ethan David Spires; his
father, Ted Earl Spires;
and sister, Jill Ellen
Spires.
Services will be private. Memorial contributions should be made to
the Ronald McDonald
House in memory of
Ethan David Spires.
The Zachrich Funeral
Home and Cremation
Services of Holgate have
been entrusted with the
services. Please visit
ZachrichFuneralHome.
com to leave online condolences.

DEBRA K. NORRIS
MIDDLEPORT —
Debra K. Norris, 60,
Middleport, Ohio, passed
away Wednesday, Oct. 25,
2017, in Cabell-Huntington Hospital, Huntington,
West Virginia. She was
born Oct. 24, 1957, to
the late Kenneth Lee and
Doris (Liter) Haley. She
married Oliver Wendell
Norris June 2, 1984, at
Bidwell, Ohio and he survives.
Debra leaves behind
to cherish her memory
her children, Amy Davis,
Middleport, Ohio,
Timothy M. Norris,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Dennis
Lee Norris, Middleport,
Ohio and Beth Ann Norris, Middleport, Ohio;
grandchildren, Jadyn
and Madison Floyd; and
sisters, Kimberly Haley,

Gallipolis, Ohio; Tammy
(Steve) James, Gallipolis, Ohio and Christie
Barcus, Chillicothe,
Ohio.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her brother, Jeff
Haley.
Funeral services will be
conducted at noon, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017, in the
McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, Ohio with
Pastor Jamie Fortner
ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in the Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens, Gallipolis. Friends and family
may call from 5-8 p.m.,
Monday at the funeral
home.
Online registry is
available via www.mccoymoore.com.

SEE MORE OBITUARIES ON PAGE 8A

GALLIPOLIS — William R. Todd, 80, Gallipolis, Ohio passed away
Wednesday evening,
October 25, 2017 with
his daughters at his side.
Born March 10, 1937 at
Coalwood, West Virginia,
he was the son of the
late Ray and Ada Todd.
A 1955 graduate of Big
Creek High School and
graduate from Marshall
University in 1962, the
majority of Bill’s career
was spent in manufacturing management. He
retired from Rockwell
Automation in 2001, after
more than thirty years.
After his retirement, Bill
was an active member of
the Ernie Nestor Chapter
of Trout Unlimited where
he passionately participated in the conservation
of rivers and streams in
West Virginia. He became
an avid ﬁsherman and
enjoyed ﬁshing in West
Virginia and the Yellowstone region.
Bill was married to his
wife, Phillis, for 48 years

GALLIPOLIS — Mary
Margaret Baker Willis,
90, of Gallipolis passed
away at Holzer Senior
Care Nursing Home in
Bidwell on Friday afternoon, October 20, 2017.
Born March 30, 1927
in Gallipolis she was the
eldest child of the late C.
Vance and Elaine Pitchford
Baker. She was preceded in
death by her sister, Betty
Lou Marchi, and her brother, Carl Lewis Baker.
Mary Margaret married her high school
sweetheart, Raymond L.
Willis, on May 22, 1948,
who also precedes her
in death. To this union
were born one son and
three daughters: Russ
Edward (Ginny) Willis,
Susan Elaine Willis, and
Carla Ann Willis, all of
Gallipolis, OH and Mary
Elizabeth “Libby” (John)
Koetz of Columbus.
Nine grandchildren
survive: Amy Willis of
Vienna, WV; Matthew S.
Willis of Gallipolis; Mark

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Ohio. Bill’s daughters
would also like to express
their deepest gratitude to
their father’s dear friends
and neighbors, Mike and
Waverly Hively.
Funeral services to
celebrate Bills life will be
conducted noon, Monday,
October 30, 2017 at the
Grace United Methodist
Church, 600 2nd Ave,
Gallipolis, Ohio with Pastor Bob Powell ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Mound Hill Cemetery,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Friends
and family may call at the
church Monday 11:00
a.m. to the time of service. The McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, is honored to
serve the Todd Family.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
please consider a memorial donation in Bill’s
memory to: The Ernie
Nester Chapter of Trout
Unlimited P O Box 8801
South Charleston, WV
25303. Online registry is
available via www.mccoymoore.com

and she was the advisor
of the Wide Awake 4-H
Club for many years.
Her many memberships
over the years include:
Ohio Chapel Church,
Grace United Methodist
Church, United Methodist Women, Mary
of Bethany Circle, the
Grand Chapter Order of
the Eastern Star, Ladies
Oriental Shrine, The
Philomathian Book Club,
the Supreme Emblem
Club, The French Art
Colony, Cliffside Ladies
Golf Association, Gallipolis Investment Club,
Gallia County Genealogical Society, First
Families of Gallia County,
Settlers and Builders
of Gallia County, Civil
War Families of Gallia
County, Century Families
of Gallia County, Gallia
County Council of Aging,
and was on the Board of
Trustees of Clay Chapel
Cemetery.
Mary Margaret loved
her family, friends,

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church, and community.
She appreciated her children and grandchildren’s
accomplishments, especially their musical abilities. She adored hosting
parties and valued having
friends in her home. She
enjoyed golf, travel and
was an avid reader.
Calling hours are Saturday, November 18, from
noon until 3 p.m. in the
chapel at Grace United
Methodist Church, followed by a private family graveside burial on
Mound Hill in Gallipolis.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family requests donations
be made to Clay Chapel
Cemetery, Attn: Clara
Haner, 11756 State Route
7 South, Gallipolis. OH,
45631, or to Grace United Methodist Church,
600 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631, and
designated as a memorial
to Mary Margaret Willis.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

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Telephone: 740-446-2342

(Shelly) Willis of Pickerington; David (Abbey)
Russell and Jeremy Russell of Gallipolis; Joshua
and Nicholas Koetz of
Columbus; Emily EvansHoeker (Gregory) of Roanoke, VA; and Jennifer
Harrison of Bidwell.
Fourteen great-grandchildren also survive:
Chance Davis of Gallipolis; Aidan and Aaron Willis of Rio Grande; Isaac
Willis and step-grandchildren Brooke and Joe
Fuller, all of Pickerington;
Alexis, Gabriel, and
Samantha Russell, all of
Gallipolis; Jacob Russell
of Liberty, Mo; Eva and
Elias Hoeker of Roanoke,
Va; and McKenna Harrison and Daxtyn Ramey
of Bidwell.
Mary Margaret graduated from Gallia Academy
High School in 1945. She
was active in her community, particularly with
the Gallia County Junior
Fair where she initiated
the Queen’s Pageant,

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children and grandchildren: Theresa and Terry
Wilt, Erin Wilt and Hannah Wilt, all of Galena,
Ohio; Sarah and Ken
Hodge, Megan Hodge
and Will Hodge, all of
Louisville, Kentucky;
David Todd his children
with Megan Jude, Jenna
and Lincoln. He also is
survived by a brother,
Raymond Todd, Jacksonville, Florida and sister,
Carol DeHaven, Coalwood, West Virginia as
well as several wonderful
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents and wife, he was
preceded in death by a
grandson, Christopher
Matthew Hodge.
His daughters would
like to extend their
gratitude to the staff at
Capital City Hospice –
especially Cindy Gay,
Rebecca Crabbe and Jenneh Kpaka – for the loving and gentle care and
comfort provided during
their dad’s time at Parkside Village, Westerville,

MARY MARGARET BAKER WILLIS

27 (LIFE)

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

before her passing in
June 2011. Together, they
had a passion for travel
and have marveled at the
beauty and wonder of
the world. By 1988, they
had seen the splendor of
the East coast. The subsequent summers were
spent traveling to see
many National Parks west
of the Mississippi River
and visiting 49 states.
They also traveled to six
continents. They spent
several enjoyable summers working in Yellowstone National Park.
After Phillis’ passing,
Bill continued to travel
around the world and
visited China, Egypt,
Morocco, India, Australia, Galapagos, Brazil,
Peru, Easter Island, Tanzania and more. He was
also a member of Grace
United Methodist Church
in Gallipolis since 1973,
active in a weekly men’s
Bible Study and Sunday
School.
He leaves behind to
cherish his memory his

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9:30

10 PM

Wanted (‘08, (:55) Split (2016, Horror) Anya Taylor-Joy, Betty Buckley, The Deuce "My Name Is
(:10) Curb
Enthusiasm
Act) Morgan Freeman, James James McAvoy. Three teenagers are kidnapped by a man Ruby" (N)
McAvoy. TVMA
with 24 personalities warring inside his mind. TV14
(N)
(:10)
The Last Boy Scout (‘91, Act) Damon Wayans,
Bad Boys II (2003, Action) Will Smith, Jordi Mollà, Martin Lawrence.
Chelsea Field, Bruce Willis. A cynical ex-secret agent and a Narcotics detectives pursue men who are flooding the streets with lethal
former quarterback team up to solve a murder case. TVMA doses of ecstasy. TVM
Active Shooter: America
Ray Donovan "Time Takes a White
Ray Donovan "Bob the
Ray Donovan "Michael"
Builder"
Ray searches for Frank
Under Fire "Orlando,
Cigarette" (SF) (N)
Famous
Barnes to help free Bridget. Florida"
"Appetites"
(5:00)

10:30
(:45) VicePri.

"Spring
Break" (N)
The Legend
of Tarzan
TVPG
White
Famous
"Appetites"

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 29, 2017 3A

OH-70001852
60734666

�E ditorial
4A Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

THEIR VIEW

The Protestant
Reformation:
500th anniversary

Spooked! A tale of Halloween past

On Oct. 31, 1517, Martin Luther, a priest and
theological professor nailed 95 Theses (statements) on the church door in Wittenberg, Germany. His main point was to protest the practice
of indulgences which had degenerated to buying
the forgiveness of sins. One signiﬁcant point is
theses #62: “The treasure of the church is the
Holy Gospel of the glory and the grace of God.”
Luther’s main teaching can be summed up by this
statement, “A person is justiﬁed
and saved by God’s grace alone,
John
though faith alone, in and because
Jackson,
Ann Moody, of Christ alone, as found in the
Aaron Young Scriptures alone, to the glory of
God alone.” Luther’s protests
Contributing
sought to reform the church.
columnists
However, the established church
rejected his teachings.
The main thing of anything is to keep the main
thing the main thing. The church of the Dark
Ages, though, had allowed other things to eclipse
main things. The Biblical teaching of the Protestant Reformation is summarized by the ﬁve solas,
which is Latin for “alone” or “only:” sola Scriptura
(Scripture alone), solus Christus (Christ alone),
sola ﬁde (faith alone), sola gratia (grace alone)
and soli Deo gloria (glory to God alone). Some
matters of theology and church government are
debatable, but a church without these convictions,
has ceased to be a true church, whatever else it
may be.
1. Scripture Alone. Biblical passages such as
Psalms 19 &amp; 119, 2 Timothy 3:13-17 and 2 Peter
1:2-4 teach that the Bible alone is our ultimate
authority, not a church leader, not the church, not
the traditions of the church or church councils,
nor personal subjective feelings or leadings. Other
sources of authority may have an important role
to play in afﬁrming the Bible’s teaching, but if any
authorities depart from the Bible’s teaching, they
are to be judged by the Bible and rejected. The
Bible is inspired (from God Himself), inerrant
(without error in the original manuscripts), infallible (will not fail those who follow its teaching),
authoritative (is the sole authority for belief and
behavior), and sufﬁcient (all that we need to do all
our necessary spiritual work). We do not need to
supplement the Bible with man-made techniques,
devices nor pomp.
2. Christ Alone. Biblical passages such as
Hebrews 9:27, 28; 1 Peter 1:18, 19 and Revelation 1:5, 6 teach that salvation is entirely by Jesus’
righteous life, atoning death on the cross and
victorious resurrections, and any “gospel” that
fails to acknowledge this will save no one (Galatians 1:6-9). Anything added to the work of Christ
declares that His sacriﬁce was not sufﬁcient and
that somehow human effort makes up for His deﬁcient work (and God’s faulty plan). But the church
of the Dark Ages in speaking about Jesus, added
many human achievements to Jesus’ work. Jesus
was a major part, but salvation was won by human
merit. The church of the Dark Ages taught that
salvation was the work of God plus the work of
man: Jesus’ righteousness plus our own righteousness.
3. Faith Alone. Romans 3:19-4:10 clearly teaches
that a person is declared right (saved) in God’s
sight by faith alone, not by faith plus my works
of righteousness. Luther said that justiﬁcation
by faith alone is the article by which the church
stands or falls; Calvin said that it is “the main
hinge on which salvation turns;” James I. Packer
says that it is the Atlas upon whose shoulders all
other Bible doctrines rest, so that if Atlas shrugs,
all other Biblical teaching topples into ruin.
4. Grace Alone. Ephesians 2:1-10 teaches that
human beings have no claim on God. God owes
mankind nothing except justly deserved punishment for our many willful sins. Apart from God’s
grace, no one would be saved, since in our lost
condition human beings are not capable of earning
or winning God’s grace. Human merit can never
bring anyone to faith, neither can human merit
combined with God’s grace: it is by grace alone.
Grace plus anything else is no longer grace.
5. Glory to God Alone. Romans 11:36 and 1
Corinthians 10:31 teach that the credit, glory and
honor of salvation goes to God alone, not to any
human being or organization. The church of the
Dark Ages had much false credit go to man or to
the church.
Luther’s teachings garnered a following, and the
Protestant Church was born. The word “Protestant” actually comes from the concept of the “protests.” These truths apply to our day. Many today
rely upon their own thinking or tradition for spiritual instruction instead of Scripture. Many look to
human achievements of righteous merit with God
instead of God’s grace alone through faith alone
in and because of Jesus’ work alone. Many desire
the pomp, applause, and credit instead of desiring
the glory of God alone. The result of these errors
is that many churches become obsessed with tradition or the culture, adopt a consumer mentality,
and recast the gospel in worldly terms to appeal to
unbelievers. These Scriptural truths are as applicable to us as ever.
See PROTESTANT | 5A

It was a cool Monday
night at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio
— according to some
sources, one of the most
haunted spots in the
United States, let alone
the world. The date was
Oct. 30, 1978. The annual
Halloween street party
that Athens was known
for, attracting hundreds of
students, townies and visitors, had taken place the
previous Saturday, but the
spirit of ghosts and ghoulies remained since the
actual All Hallows’ Eve
was approaching. There
were to be other celebrations, and not all of them
within the conﬁnes of the
town and campus.
It was still on campus
that evening, everyone
seemingly recovering
from the weekend’s revels, gathering up energy
for another round of
partying before the harsh
reality of fall quarter
ﬁnals arrived in about
three weeks. On the
fourth ﬂoor of Gamertsfelder Hall, an East Green
residence dormitory, my
roommate David Witmer
and I, along with a few of
our friends — Bill Bruce,
Mike Massa and David
McLean — gathered to
listen to a re-broadcast
of Orson Welles and the
Mercury Theater of the
Air’s infamous radio version of THE WAR OF
THE WORLDS; in fact, it
was the 40th anniversary
of the show that unintentionally caused a national
panic.
We didn’t drink
(much), have girlfriends
(not for lack of trying)
or hang out in the TV
lounge watching Monday night football, but
we were interested in
pieces of history like the
WAR OF THE WORLDS
broadcast and the tantalizing knowledge that
Athens was a place where
hauntings had occurred
and for all we knew, were
still occurring. As we
started listening to the
radio show, airing over
the campus-based NPR
station, a notion took
hold of us and we little
realized then where it
would soon lead us.
Like I said, it was a
dull night, Halloween
was in the air and our
imaginations were ﬁred
by the fact that one of
the reasons Athens was a

blackness. So it’s
magnet for hauntout in the middle
ings was due to it
of nowhere. Big
being surrounded
deal. But someby ﬁve cemeteries.
how, it felt pretty
By itself, not too
lonesome all of a
signiﬁcant a fact,
sudden, and we
but it happened
soon came to a
that if you drew a
Kevin
stop after passing a
line on a map of
Kelly
the city showing
Contributing mobile home. The
road dead-ended,
the locations of
columnist
no pun intended,
the cemeteries, the
at what had once
line formed a penbeen the cemetery
tagram. You know, that
entrance.
ﬁve-pointed star indicatAs a cemetery, Peach
ing the supernatural and
spooky things, the image Ridge was no longer in
use. Why, we didn’t know,
that always sent Lon
but it was obvious the
Chaney Jr. into a panic
just before he became the hilly landscape surrounding the site was taking
Wolf Man in the movies.
The information about it back. We clumped
Athens being hag-ridden through tall grass turned
tawny by the change of
with ghosts may have
season. This we could
been somewhat suspect,
see despite the darkness.
and it could have been
There may have been a
some massive coincimoon, but I don’t rememdence about the pentagram, but it kind of drew ber. For a short distance,
nothing impressive preyou in, just as the WAR
OF THE WORLDS did to sented itself to us. In the
us as we listened. On the distance, we could hear
map, reproduced in some trafﬁc on nearby U.S.
33, and that was a good
of the local publications,
thing, one of our party
the northern point was
observed: “If we hear
well within distance of
the campus, and that was nothing, we’re in trouble.”
But from what, though?
Peach Ridge Cemetery,
Well, it was the ’70s
which had some kind of
and all kinds of real,
foreboding reputation as
half-baked and twicethe most haunted of the
baked stories about
bunch.
devil worship cults and
It was also a site that
witches’ covens meetwas usually invaded by
Halloween partiers on the ing in isolated spots like
the one we happened to
actual night to ﬁnd out
be in had ﬂown around
for themselves if ghosts
the ether for more than
and things that go bump
in the night were abroad. a decade. They were the
kind of yarns that invaded
That wouldn’t happen
campﬁre storytelling
until the next night; for
all we knew, Peach Ridge rites along with tales of
was deserted at that very headless horsemen, missing arms and a hook for
moment.
a hand. The setting sent
So I don’t recall who
suggested, “Let’s check it your mind to wondering
about the validity of such
out,” or if we all agreed
stories and, well, colat once to travel out
there, but the next thing lege campuses do attract
unusual people, don’t
we knew, we were pilthey?
ing into my roomate’s
We pressed on slowly,
Oldsmobile four-door
coming to an outcropping
and heading out East
from a hill. An ancient
State Street, hanging a
tree stood atop the rise,
left and traveling up a
steep hill to a residential and Bill, our expert on
Peach Ridge, told us that
section built along the
the cemetery doubled
ridge. Before we knew
as a site for hanging
it, we took a right fork
criminals, or someone
in the road onto Peach
had once ended their
Ridge.
Not that we were afraid life there, something
or anything, nothing like along those lines. How
that, no sir, but I have to convenient, I thought.
Execution and burial
confess our jolly spirits
began slipping away after all in the same spot. It
was at this location we
we passed the lights of
saw the remains of a few
the last house and the
road stretched ahead into headstones, and the chill

that started spreading up
our backs became more
pronounced.
At the same time, there
was a feeling this was all
a major waste of effort,
so the urge to leave this
black hole was strong.
The image of us being
back in our rooms at the
dorm, with people and
lights and sounds around
us, was more and more
appealing. So we picked
up our feet more willingly
and trudged back through
the brush to where we’d
left the car.
We were nearly there
when we stopped dead
in our tracks. A car was
traveling down the lane
toward the entrance, its
lights on high beam and
nearly picking up our
presence. As if we weren’t
now jumpy enough, this
had to be the topper: who
could it possibly be? We
all crouched down in the
brush, hoping the driver
and his (or her) passengers, if any, weren’t intent
on something unsavory.
When the car stopped,
the driver left the lights
on and engine running. A
door was heard opening
and closing, and footsteps crunched the gravel
surface. We held our
breaths and stayed quiet
until the footfalls made
an apparent return to the
car, the driver’s side door
opened and closed, and
the car backed away, turning around to head back
toward town.
As soon as the coast
was clear, the ﬁve of
us got up and hurried
toward the Olds. Who
had been the visitor? I
concluded — more accurately, hoped — it was a
sheriff’s deputy answering a call from some nearby resident complaining
about the old cemetery
being invaded by those
gold-dang college students. If it was an ofﬁcer,
he perhaps checked the
registration and university parking permit on
my roomie’s car, found
no mischief at hand and
went on his way. At
least that’s what I told
myself as I dealt with the
momentary interruption
of our getting the blazes
out of there.
I really didn’t want to
think about the other
possibilities; not there in
See SPOOKED | 5A

THEIR VIEW

AAA7 available with Medicare enrollment
Are you a Medicare
beneﬁciary? Are you
aware that open enrollment for some Medicare
beneﬁts ends Dec 7?
Open enrollment is the
time of the year when
changes can be made in
the plans and providers
you’ve chosen for your
Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage and/
or Medicare Advantage
option. If you wish to
make changes, you can
only do so between October 15th and December
7th. Open enrollment is
also a good time to run
drug comparisons to
make sure the Medicare
Part D plan you are on is
still your best option as
Medicare Part D plans do
change from year to year.
Individuals who receive

Security disability
the Low Income
for two years, and
Subsidy (LIS)
be a US resident or
can change their
legal citizen for at
plans anytime of
least ﬁve years.
the year. Even if
Original Mediyou are receiving
care, sometimes
help through LIS,
it is a good idea to Pamela K. referred to as Part
A and Part B, helps
check your plans
Matura
to make sure all of Contributing with hospital,
doctor and outyour medications
columnist
patient services.
will be covered on
More than likely, a
your current plan
Medicare supplement is
for 2018.
needed in order to cover
The Area Agency on
Aging District 7 (AAA7) the costs not covered
by Part A and Part B.
is a local resource you
can utilize for assistance Medicare Advantage, or
Part C, combines Part A,
with the open enrollment process and can be B and D in to one plan.
reached by calling 1-800- During open enrollment,
beneﬁciaries have the
582-7277.
To be eligible for Medi- opportunity to make
changes to these plans
care health insurance
that provides better supplans, you must be at
port for their health and
least 65, or be on Social

well-being. It’s a time to
change what doesn’t work
and keep what does.
More information
about Medicare plans
and options is available at
www.medicare.gov.
Locally, the AAA7 is
available as a resource to
those in its ten-county
district who would like
assistance with Medicare or open enrollment.
Counties covered by the
AAA7 include Adams,
Brown, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and
Vinton. For questions or
assistance, call toll-free
at 1-800-582-7277, extension 250.
Pamela K. Matura is executive
director, Area Agency on Aging
District 7.

�EDITORIAL/LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 29, 2017 5A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

October is Blindness Awareness Month
Did you know that children
can have any number of vision
diagnosis including; Glaucoma,
Cataracts, Ptosis (droopy
eyelid), Amblyopia and even
Histoplasmosis related issues.
That’s not including typical
childhood viral infections such
as pink eye (conjunctivitis) and
other accidental injuries. As the
Children with Medical Handicaps (CMH) nurse at the Meigs
County Health Department, I
see children with various vision
issues. The reality is that if a
disorder persists without diagnosis/treatment, blindness can
be a result.
October is blindness awareness month and I would like us
to “open our eyes” to Amblyopia. Amblyopia is one of the
most common vision disorders
(aside from common refraction
correction or ‘needing glasses’)
that affects 2-3 out of every 100
people in the United States,
according to the American
Academy of Ophthalmology.
The complexity of our brains
and vision centers are phenomenal in that each eye inputs a
different image and the brain
puts those images together to
create binocular vision, depth
perception, and helps to see
3-dimensional images. It’s difﬁcult for those of us that see all
dimensions to think about what
the world looks like to someone
who does not have that capability. Imagine a snow fall with
all the ﬂakes falling in differing
spaces ﬂoating down near and
far away. Now image all those
ﬂakes in 2- dimension vision;
it would be a wall of ﬂoating
ﬂakes coming down in a single
layer. When binocular vision
isn’t functioning appropriately
one eye tends to dominate the
vision while the other becomes
“weak.” The age old “if you
don’t use it, you lose it” saying is true and because of that,
Amblyopia is one of the leading
causes of vision impairment in
children and the most common
cause of monocular (one eye)
vision impairment in young and
middle aged adults, according
to the National Eye Institute.
Causes of Amblyopia fall into
three main categories: refraction difference between the
eyes (refractive anisometropia),
muscle imbalance (Strabismus),
or deprivation (one eye non-

Spooked
From page 4A

the dark, anyway. As
we piled in and David
started the motor, I honestly said, “If somebody’s
standing there when you
turn on the lights, don’t
stop!”
Within minutes, we
were back in our rooms,
laughing a bit nervously,
but struck by the dawning realization that
suggestion, under the
right circumstances, is a

a car with his current
functional due to birth
vision. This news was
defect, injury or other
certainly disheartening.
disorder). A child may
As parents we were even
exhibit symptoms such
more dedicated about
as an eye turning in or
the prescribed patching,
out, problems with depth
convincing ourselves
perception or head tiltthat it would help his
ing or squinting. Also
Angella
progress. By age 10, Alex
the disorder can present Rosler
as a learning disability
Contributing had improved some, but
not enough. We began
or even attention deﬁcits columnist
searching for additional
since the child’s visual
resources and found an
acuity is lacking and corAthens optometrist that was
rection alone may not be adetrained in “vision therapy.”
quate to prevent falling grades
We met with Dr. Crawford,
or behavioral issues. RegardOD, and learned more about
less of the causative factor,
Amblyopia and the new “vision
Amblyopia is due to the eyes
therapy” that was effective for
not working properly together
treating the disorder. Unfortualso referred to as “binocular
nately, she was unable to provision.”
vide the therapy and there were
Correcting Amblyopia is
no providers in the area. She
very individualized. There are
offered a referral when we were
several ways including patching or creating blurry vision in able to ﬁnd a provider.
The following year was full
the strong eye to help the “lazy
of research and phone calls
eye” gain strength and acuity
to better match the strong eye. about vision therapy, available
In cases of strabismus, surgery providers and Amblyopia. The
may correct the disorder. Vision Ohio State College of Optometry Clinic in Columbus was
therapy may also be indicated
just beginning a vision therapy
to help the brain and eyes to
clinic near the University. We
relearn by forcing your eyes to
move and focus on objects, and proceeded in the formalities
of referrals and Alex attended
can help the brain and vision
his ﬁrst vision therapy appointcenters to communicate more
ment at age 12. At the time, we
efﬁciently.
were told that Alex was almost
As a mother, I have expetoo old for the therapy to be
rienced Amblyopia with my
effective, but he still qualiﬁed.
second son, Alex. His vision
Upon his initial visit, Dr.
issue and “lazy eye” was apparent in early childhood when his Mattson, OD, began an in depth
exam with students looking on
left eye began to turn toward
and participating in the exam
his nose. My mother, as an
room. Alex began with foundaoptician, knew the urgency of
tional exercises and the ‘brock
the disorder and helped us to
string’. Alex would place the
navigate appropriate care. We
beaded string to his nose and
began treatment with a local
move the beads and focus his
Ophthalmologist and obtained
eyes to make an “X” on each
glasses and initiated patching
bead. This exercise was contintherapy. As you can imagine
patching was a daily battle with ued daily at home during homework time.
a four year old. In an attempt
As the weeks, years and folto lessen the daily struggles,
Atropine drops were initiated to low up visits progressed, Alex’s
replace the patching by causing condition gradually improved
and additional exercises were
a blur in the strong eye. This
therapy proved more traumatic added. Dr. Buckland, ODMS,
than the patching and was short began to get acquainted with
lived. With assistance from fam- Alex and connected with him
to teach him about his eyes and
ily members we were able to
convince him that pirates were the importance of his therapies.
‘cool’ to assist in his daily com- Visits became less frequent as
his condition improved.
pliance.
As parents, my husband and
At age seven, we were
I were happy with Alex’s proginformed that Alex’s condiress and the dedication to his
tion was not improving and
therapy. We did not, however,
he would not qualify to drive

powerful thing. Looking
back, there was really
nothing out at Peach
Ridge Cemetery that was
especially scary. There
were no ghosts, not even
the friendly one called
Casper, no hooded practitioners of the black arts
doing their stuff or even
weird sounds, except for
a dog barking off in the
distance. (Remember,
that was a good thing!)
But given it was mostly
quiet, for the most part
deserted, our imaginations running riot after
listening to the WAR OF

THE WORLDS broadcast, the stage was set
for us to get the jitters,
if not be utterly frightened. I’d seen too many
horror movies even then
not to liken our little
visit as a bad set-up for
some zombie holocaust.
We’d all seen NIGHT OF
THE LIVING DEAD and
its unnerving opening,
which also happened to
take place in a cemetery.
The morning after the
actual Halloween we discovered that our experience, as silly as it turned
out to be, was unique to

October is blindness
awareness month and I
would like us to “open
our eyes” to Amblyopia.
Amblyopia is one of the
most common vision
disorders (aside from
common refraction
correction or ‘needing
glasses’) that affects
2-3 out of every 100
people in the United
States, according to the
American Academy of
Ophthalmology.

grasp the changes that our son
was experiencing in his daily
vision until we decided to go to
a family movie. Per the normal
at that time, we purchased 3D
tickets. Proceeding into the theater, glasses were distributed.
Although this was not the ﬁrst
3D movie we had attended as
a family, Alex began reaching
out to the objects he was seeing
with his new vision perspective.
We realized that this WAS the
ﬁrst time Alex was seeing a 3D
movie! All the reading, talking
and education on binocular
vision and the effects of the
therapy ﬁnally hit us! Alex was
never able to see like us. Until
this moment, the snowﬂakes
fell in “walls” for him. Vision
therapy opened a whole new
world for my son!
Alex eventually graduated to
an interactive computer therapy
called HTS at age 14, and was
discharged in 2016 at age 15.
He continues to wear contacts
and his refractive anisometropia
continues between his prescription strengths in his contact
lenses. Alex is currently 16, has
a Driver’s permit and will soon
have a driver’s license.
Alex was one of the ﬁrst OSU
Vision Therapy Clinic patients
in 2012. I am told that Alex
provided the needed experience
for students and physicians in
the OSU clinic, which has now
grown to serve several hundred
children every year. Our family
is beyond grateful and incredibly blessed to have found the
See BLINDNESS | 7A

us. Bill found out from a
friend that Peach Ridge
Cemetery became nothing more than a Field
of Screams-type event
the night after we were
there, with costumed and
masked “beings” jumping out of the darkness
to frighten anyone who
dared to come out, and
there were many who did.
(Wonder if anyone called
the police. Or wait, was it
the police?)
Bill’s friend said that
because the site was so
crowded any sense of
being spooked in that

pleasant Halloween sort
of way evaporated like
ectoplasm as soon as
people arrived. In other
words, it wasn’t the mix
of thrill and mild scares
my friends and I had
experienced just 30 hours
or so prior.
Perhaps that’s why this
incident in a fair-sized list
of harmless good times in
college stands out in my
memory, why on so many
autumn nights since then
my mind wanders back to
that time when we didn’t
ﬁnd the otherworldly
inhabiting that lonely

Protestant
From page 4A

There were far-reaching implications for the
Protestant Reformation that included not
only religious but also
economic, cultural, and
political consequences. It
ended a monopoly on the
Christian faith and led
to other denominations
being formed such the
Baptist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Methodist, ect.
The Reformation allowed
ordinary people to read
scripture in their own
language (not just Latin),
and with the invention of
the printing press, Bibles
and books became much
more available to people.
Literacy was required to
read these Bibles which
inﬂuenced partially our
ideas of compulsory,
public education. Positive repercussions can be
seen in intellectual and
cultural inﬂuences and
a strengthened quest for
learning through colleges
and universities. With
more representation and
participation of laity in
the church came the idea
of a more representative
form of government as
well. In fact, our own
United States Constitution was inﬂuenced by
some of these ideas, and
John Wetherspoon, a
Presbyterian minister
and college president,
signed the Declaration
of Independence. The
Protestant Reformation
molded our beliefs and
values in ways most of us
do not realize.
Throughout history and
culture, society has had
many crises. These crises
were solved through a
spiritual awakening. A
spiritual awakening is the
only thing that will solve
America’s many problems,
including the addiction
dilemma.
The preceding article is the work
of several local pastors. They
encourage the community to
celebrate the 500th Anniversary
of the Protestant Reformation by
worshipping in the church of their
choice on Reformation Sunday, Oct.
Submitted by Pastor John Jackson,
New Life Lutheran Church, Pastor
Ann Moody, Wilkesville Presbyterian
Church, Pastor Aaron Young, First
Baptist Church.

spot, but felt a good chill
up and down our spines.
The crooked, crumbling
headstones and alleged
hanging tree we found in
Peach Ridge Cemetery
were nothing really sinister. Not by themselves.
It was something in our
minds that gave us those
shudders when we spied
those landmarks in the
gloom of that October
night — that something
known as the spirit of
Halloween.
Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated with
Ohio Valley Publishing for 21 years,
resides in Vinton, Ohio.

The New

Help Keep Guiding Hand School Open

Wayne’s Place
Help Us Make Wayne’s Place, Your Place

Because of the support of Gallia County voters, the
Gallia County Board of Developmental Disabilities
has been able to provide life changing services for 50
years in Gallia County to people with developmental
disabilities and their families. GCBDD provides services
not only to students and their families but we continue
to provide services throughout the person’s lifetime!
We help with housing, job coaching, day services,
transportation, and many other life challenges. GCBDD
also brings funds into Gallia County from the state and
federal government. For each 40 cents that GCBDD
spends to provide services to Gallia Citizens, the state
and federal government provide 60 cents as a match
that is spent right here in Gallia County! Due to cuts in
state funding, the November levy must pass in order
to keep Guiding Hand School past this school year.
Because of your support to those who are often the
most vulnerable in a community we can provide these
needed services. Because of you we can!

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Starting Thursday November 2nd, 2017

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or Give Us a Call (740) 691-5136

�ALONG THE RIVER

6A Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

A Halloween tradition
Scarberry retires
her title as head
party planner
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT —
“I love Halloween.”
This is the simple and
sincere explanation as to
why Denise Scarberry has
organized the annual Halloween Block Party for
the last 20 years in Point
Pleasant, an event which
has grown from a handful of trick-or-treaters, to
hundreds jamming into
Riverfront Park. However, like all good things,
they must come to an
end…though the block
party will hopefully continue. For Scarberry, it’s
time to pass the tradition
on to a new leader.
“It’s sad but I think it’s
time for me to move on
and somebody else to
come in and take it over,”
she said.
Scarberry said she
begins working on the
next year’s block party
the day after the last one
is over.
“It’s a lot of work,” she
said dur“It’s a lot ing her
interview
bigger
for this
than I ever story; an
dreamed. interview
which took
It’s a fun
place at
event
the block
and I’ve
party while
enjoyed
she ﬁxed
it… I hope tray after
someone tray of hot
dogs.
will
The idea
continue
for the
the
block party
madness.” was start— Denise ed by the
Scarberry, local junior
Block Party women’s
planner club and
then Scarberry and
her volunteers stepped in
to keep it going, seeing
the potential for the event
which provided a safe
space for children from
every socioeconomic
background. That space
would provide not only
candy but a free meal,
free games, prizes, inﬂatables and memories.
Scarberry said the
party couldn’t happen
without the businesses,
organizations and a core
group of volunteers who
help her put it on.
“I have a lot of businesses that set up, plus
my faithful volunteers,”
she said.
Ironically, Scarberry
almost missed her last
block party. The night
before it was set to happen, she was in Nashville
at a once-in-a-lifetime
concert at Bridgestone
Arena, attending the “All
In For The Gambler:
Kenny Rogers’ Farewell
Concert Celebration”
featuring a slew of celebrities like Dolly Parton,
Lionel Ritchie and the
Gambler himself.
The day of the block
party, Scarberry was
returning home from
Nashville when a piece of
metal ended up in her tire
in God’s country. A tire
shop was ﬁnally located
and despite the detour,
she got back on the road.
She said she was on the
phone with her volunteers the whole way. Still,
it was cutting it close.
“I didn’t know if I was
going to make it,” she
laughed. “I thought I was
retiring early.”
“Denise has been doing
this 20 years and we at
the City of Point Pleas-

Beth Sergent | OVP

Wouldn’t you look too if the person next to you had wings at the
Halloween Block Party?

Beth Sergent | OVP

Denise Scarberry, pictured, longtime organizer of the Halloween Block Party in Point Pleasant, is
stepping down and passing the torch. Here she works her last block party with the hope someone
will fill her shoes.

Beth Sergent | OVP

Denise Scarberry takes a break to give a hug to one of the young
attendees, Hadleigh Cossin.

Ed Lowe | Courtesy

Denise Scarberry credits her many volunteers with the success of the Halloween Block Party.

Beth Sergent | OVP

Jenny Shirley and Jacob Hill volunteer their time popping popcorn
at the Halloween Block Party.

Beth Sergent | OVP

Beth Sergent | OVP

The Halloween Block Party offered free candy, inflatables, food and games to families visiting Even Super Mario has to wait in line but free candy and prizes are
Riverfront Park.
worth it.

Beth Sergent | OVP

People begin to fill Riverfront Park at sunset for the Halloween Block Party.

ant, are very fortunate to
have had her leadership,”
Mayor Brian Billings
said. “We’re going to miss
her and we’ve got to ﬁnd
someone to ﬁll her shoes.
We’re indebted to her and
what she’s done.”

When Scarberry looks
back on the early days of
the party, she said maybe
50 kids would show up
but now, that number is
in the hundreds and not
just from Mason County.
Visitors come from across

the area.
“It’s a lot bigger than
I ever dreamed,” she
said. “It’s a fun event
and I’ve enjoyed it but I
don’t really get to see the
costumes (the kids wear)
because I’m always work-

ing. I love to see the little
kids (dressed up) and
playing our homemade
games.”
Scarberry herself hasn’t
got to dress up and celebrate trick-or-treat since
she took over the block

party.
“I hope someone will
continue the madness,”
Scarberry said with a
smile.
Beth Sergent is editor
of Ohio Valley Publishing.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 29, 2017 7A

Meeting
From page 1A

Amanda Faulk-Windon,
Debbie Pratt, Molly Arms
and Debbie Bullington.
Vicki Hanson, museum
co-director, provided the
board and members of
the historical society with
a list of accomplishments
for 2017.
Among those
mentioned were the
following:A well-attended
second open house;
Lecture on Pomeroy’s
First Ward by Society
President Shannon Scott;
Lecture on Meigs
County Schools by Tyler
Eblin;
Monthly kid’s day with
trustee Debbie Pratt and
volunteer Betsy Jones;
Hosted children from
Carleton School and
Hysell Run Church;
Met with Commissioner Randy Smith and State
Rep. Jay Edwards on
two occasions to discuss
potential funding for the
new Middleport location;
Hosted the cabin at the
Meigs County Fair with

The Board of Trustees meet for their annual meeting on Sunday
afternoon at the museum in Pomeroy.

will work from 8 a.m. to
noon on items such as
The Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society Board of Trustees
painting and replacing
doors on the building to
there are no paid employ- prepare it for winter.
new displays and worked Thomas Do It Center
The buildings were
ees.
buildings;
the fair gates as a fundgiven to the Historical
Current membership
Attended meeting on
raiser;
Society by the Hall Famin the society is over
Held a successful rafﬂe the proposed walking
ily.
200 members. Memberpath in Syracuse;
fundraiser and particiUpcoming events at
ships are currently being
Attended the regional
pated in craft shows and
the Museum in Pomeroy
Ohio History Connection accepted which would
downtown activities;
run through the 2018 cal- include Kid’s Day from
meeting at Rio Grande,
Remodeled two bathnoon-4 p.m. on Nov. 18;
meeting with several peo- endar year.
rooms at the museum;
Small Business Saturday
Looking toward the
Replaced two ﬂat roofs ple from other museums
from noon-4 p.m. on Nov.
future, a work day is
in the old museum build- in the region;
25; Santa’s visit to the
This is the second year planned on Nov. 4 at
ing;
museum from noon-4
Painted the railings, gas in a row that the museum the future home of the
museum on Third Avenue p.m. on Dec. 16.
meter, lamp post and bell; has operated with all
The museum has sevin Middleport. Volunteer
volunteer staff, meaning
Started work at the
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Fire

Edwards said that while
there may be a smell of
smoke and burning hay,
From page 1A
it is not toxic.
An insurance company
representative was also
at one point during the
on the scene soon after
night.
daybreak on Saturday
When crews arrived
morning to assess the
on the scene a portion
situation.
of the roof had collapsed
Edwards and Assistant
onto the hay bales
Chief Roy Lee Bailey
inside the 32-by-224
praised the work of the
foot structure. Edwards
ﬁreﬁghters on the scene.
explained that the crew
The other departpulled away the walls of
Sarah Hawley | Sentinel ments are always there
the structure and cleared
Hay bales continued to burn on Saturday morning after an early to help when the call
as much of the metal
morning fire at Holter’s Dairy Farm.
comes, noted Edwards.
as was possible. They
“It is a brotherhood.
sprayed water on the
this winter, the best hay They are there to offer
structure for a while, but center of the building
support when needed,”
hay bales are difﬁcult to where the hay bales were they keep on the farm.
said Edwards. “It’s a
Additionally, the two
located. He estimated
extinguish.
good family to be part
trucks were those that
that the bales were
The far end of the
of,” added Bailey.
were used to transport
stacked approximately
building where the
“It takes a special
feed from the storage
12 feet high inside the
equipment was located
breed of person to be a
locations to the cattle.
building.
was able to be partially
volunteer ﬁreﬁghter,”
Holter said Pomeroy
While the cause is
saved, with four bays
said Edwards, adding
unknown, Edwards said was the ﬁrst to arrive
remaining. The building held two feed trucks the ﬁre is not suspicious. at the scene and helped that not everyone is willto save the four bays on ing to get up in the midThere were no signs of
and a combine, both of
the far end of the build- dle of the night when the
any entry into the area
which were destroyed,
tones go off.
ing.
and the location where
with damage to other
McDonald’s of Pome“This was my ﬁrst hay
equipment. Some equip- the ﬁre began would not
roy provided the ﬁreﬁre. It hit hard,” said
have been easily accesment was able to be
ﬁghters with food, coffee
Holter.
pulled from the building sible.
and tea during the night
Now, ﬁre crews will
There were no injubefore being impacted
as they worked to conremain to monitor the
ries.
by the ﬁre, said Ed
tain the ﬁre.
bales which remain
Holter described
Holter.
burning to make sure
the hay that was in the
Edwards said it
Sarah Hawley is the managing
building as the “prime” that it does not spread
appears the ﬁre may
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
have started around the hay for their milk cows beyond the current area.

Ballot

spot on the Educational
Service Center District
4 Board of Education.
Martin Appleton, Gary
From page 1A
Sowards, Jr., and Matt
seeks a position as Green Ward are running for
a seat on the Fairland
Township ﬁscal ofﬁcer.
Local Schools Board
Ruby Stanley, Shelby
Davidson and Lisa Shaf- of Education. Tammie
fer seek a spot as Walnut Meyers, Hope Rowe,
John Sharp, Tommy
Township ﬁscal ofﬁcer.
Lynn Angell and Troy Shepherd, Chris Webb
and Derek Wilson are
Miller are running for
running for spots on the
a seat on the Gallipolis
Symmes Valley Schools
City Schools Board of
Board of Education.
Education. Stephanie
Fred Burnett and RobMulford, Brent Schultz
ert Rothgeb are running
and Jeff Halley are runfor positions as Addison
ning for seats on the
Township trustees.
Gallia County Local
Schools Board of Educa- Both James Taylor and
Mike Conkle seek to
tion. Stephen Saunders
claim seats as Cheshire
is running for a spot on
the Educational Service Township trustees.
Center District 6 Board David Kerns and Tammy
Gray run for a seat as
of Education. Douglas
township trustee with
Pugh is running for a

Clay Township. Harry
Dean Brownell and C.
Ronnie Carmichael are
both running for a seat
as Gallipolis Township
trustee. Seth Montgomery and David Graham
are running for a seat as
Green Township trustee.
Charles Chambers, Jr.,
Hayden Hammond and
Roy McCarty are running for seats as a Greenﬁeld Township trustee.
John Cardwell and Scott
Ferguson are running for
a seat as Guyan Township trustee. Margaret
Adkins and Bobby Angel
are running for a seat
as Harrison Township
trustee. Billy Oiler,
Jeffrey Oiler, Roger
Shadwick, Tad Browning and Bryce Taylor are
all running for a seat as
Huntington Township

trustee. John Manley,
William Hash, Jr., and
Jeff Ferrell are all running for a seat as Morgan Township trustee.
Robert McGuire, James
Waugh and Samp Johnson are running for Ohio
Township trustee.
For Perry Township
trustee spots, Bradley
Davies, T. Mark Hager
and Jeffrey Pope are running. Matthew Roberts
is running for a position
as a Raccoon Township
trustee. Vaughn Taylor
and Scott Howell are
running for a position as
a Springﬁeld Township
trustee. Doug Elliot,
Richard Ingles and Steven Owens are running
for a position as a Walnut Township trustee.
Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

Memory
From page 1A

45 years ago, but that is
not the only thing that
remains the same.
A few years before
marrying Charlotte, Dick
purchased his brand new
1966 Chevrolet Corvette.
It was that vehicle they
brought to town in 1972
to purchase their rings
and that vehicle they
brought back to town on
Friday as they were preparing the celebrate 45
years of marriage.
The Corvette, which is

eral items available for
Christmas gifts, including
Cat’s Meow buildings,
shirts and history books.
The museum is open
Wednesday-Friday from
1-5 p.m. and Saturday
from noon-4 p.m. now
through Dec. 17, with
the exception of Thanksgiving week when it is
closed Wednesday-Friday.
The museum will be
closed from Dec. 17 to
Jan. 17 to allow for displays and items to be prepared for the new year.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

garage kept, is brought
out for special occasions
and is included in car
shows in the area.
“It is rare to see things
stay the same for 45
years,” explained Wamsley, who has been the
only owner of the vehicle
which is in like new condition.
For the Wamsleys, who
reside in Racine, it was
like a trip down memory
lane as they rolled into
town in their Corvette,
before making their way
into the jewelry store
— this time to discuss
potential Christmas
gifts.

Christmas

free to the community
because of this fundraiser.
The Gallipolis City
From page 1A
Park Lighting Ceremony
is on Wednesday, Nov. 22.
guests alike to enjoy,”
The festivities begin at
stated Amanda Crouse,
5:30 p.m. and the actual
executive director
lighting will be at 7 p.m.
GCCVB.
There will be entertainTo make the parade
ment along with hot
“extra special this year”
the Gallipolis Jr. Women’s chocolate and cookies.
The Gallipolis in Lights
Club is selling tickets to
committee is selling
give individuals ages 18
t-shirts as a fundraiser
and under the chance to
for the upcoming lights
win a ride with Santa in
season. The t-shirts honor
the Christmas Parade.
Tickets are $1 each or six Mike Polcyn, a long time
Santa Clause in Gallipofor $5. Tickets are availlis. Polcyn spent many
able at the GCCVB and
the Gallia County Cham- December’s in character
visiting schools, riding in
ber of Commerce.
“It’s something that our the parade, and many evecommunity looks forward nings in the park talking
with kids.
to and a great thing for
“Gallipolis in Lights
the season,” said Brittany
Beman, president of Gal- beneﬁts our whole community. It gives us pride,
lipolis Junior Women’s
spirit, and makes us
Club. “We want to make
sure this tradition contin- proud to be a part of our
community,” said Shari
ues and our community
Rocchi. “That’s our goal,
can enjoy.”
to bring the community
Funds raised from
together.”
the tickets go towards
Santa in the park durMorgan McKinniss contributed to
ing December, which is
this article.

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Blindness

disorder. For most disorders there
is a narrow window of opportunity
to correct the issue before it may
From page 5A
become permanent.
If you know a child who is strugappropriate clinic and physicians to gling with their vision or would
like more information, please conassist in Alex’s recovery!
tact Angie Rosler, Meigs County’s
In conclusion, I hope that by
CMH Public Health Nurse at (740)
sharing my experience I might
992-6626 ext: 1075. CMH can
raise awareness to a parent, carehelp with diagnostic services and
giver, or teacher of a child that
assist in navigating area resources
may be struggling with a vision

for patients under age 21. The
Meigs County Health Department
also offers programs to assist in
transportation for children’s vision
appointments and information on
the Ohio Amblyopia Registry and
Prevent Blindness Ohio for those
that may not qualify for other programs.
Angella Rosler is an RN at the Meigs County
Health Department

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OH-70009386

�LOCAL/WEATHER

8A Sunday, October 29, 2017

Searching for inmate

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
ONA WHITE FULLER
Surviving are three
sons, Randal C. White
of Gallipolis, David Lee
White of Point Pleasant,
W.Va. and Carl Bodie
(Renee) White of Gallipolis; one daughter,
Janie Sue Francis of
Gallipolis; 14 Grandchildren; and 6 Great Grandchildren.
In addition to her
parents and husband,
R. Frank Fuller, Ona
was preceded in death
by three sisters, Yvonne

BIDWELL — Ona
White Fuller, 81, of
Bidwell, passed away on
Thursday, October 26,
2017 at Holzer Senior
Care Center.
She was born September 5, 1936 in Point
Pleasant, West Virginia,
daughter of the late Wurley and Mary M. Henry
Birchﬁeld. She was married to R. Frank Fuller
and he preceded her in
death in 2000. Ona was a
homemaker.

Staff Report

hat, black pants and red shoes when
he left a worksite he was assigned to
by the community-based corNELSONVILLE — Gallia
rectional facility. Flemings is
County Sheriff Matt Champlin
described as 5’ 9” tall, weighs
has announced that his ofﬁce
approximately 165 pounds
has received notiﬁcation of the
and has blonde hair and blue
escape of an inmate which was
eyes.
committed to the SEPTA CorIf anyone has any informarectional Facility in Nelsonville
tion as to the whereabouts
from Gallia County.
of Flemings, they are urged
Jess Flemings, 27, of 2999 Flemings
to contact the Gallia County
Bulaville Pike, was reportedly last seen wearing a grey hoodie Sheriff’s Ofﬁce immediately at 740446-1221.
sweatshirt, a white t-shirt, a grey

Buck, Nancy Jean Thomas and Elanore Austin
and a brother, Lawrence
Patterson.
Services will be 7:30
p.m., Monday, October
30, 2017 at the Willis
Funeral Home with Pastor Marc Sarrett ofﬁciating. Friends may call from
6– 7:30 p.m. prior to
the funeral at the funeral
home.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

PHYLLIS E. WHOBREY

For the best local news coverage,
visit MyDailySentinel.com

GALLIPOLIS — Phyllis E. Whobrey, 86, of Gallipolis, Ohio passed away
on Friday, October 27,
2017 at her residence surrounded by her family.
She was born on October 16, 1931 in Gallipolis,
daughter of the late Frank
and Jessie Barcus Goddard. She was married
to Larry “HL” Whobrey
on September 18, 1980
in Ft. Pierce, Fla. and he
preceded her in death on
January 27, 2016. Phyllis
had worked at the Holzer
Medical Center and with
her husband at Larry’s
Painting Company.
She was a member of
Cheshire Baptist Church
and Eastern Star.

Why UFOs Matter
presented by

Chris Parsons
Mutual UFO Network Ohio
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WEATHER

2 PM

36°

43°

42°

Mainly cloudy and chilly today. Clear to partly
cloudy tonight. High 47° / Low 33°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

74°
40°
65°
42°
86° in 1940
16° in 1962
(in inches)

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

0.00
4.41
2.41
40.54
35.44

Today
7:52 a.m.
6:31 p.m.
3:38 p.m.
1:40 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:54 a.m.
6:30 p.m.
4:13 p.m.
2:39 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

Full

Nov 4

New

First

Nov 10 Nov 18 Nov 26

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

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

Major
7:38a
8:22a
9:05a
9:48a
10:32a
11:21a
12:14p

Minor
1:26a
2:10a
2:53a
3:36a
4:20a
5:07a
6:00a

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
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.

3

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: Late-night fog requires what type of
sky condition before forming?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
8:02p
8:46p
9:29p
10:13p
10:58p
11:47p
----

Minor
1:50p
2:34p
3:17p
4:00p
4:45p
5:34p
6:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 29, 1991, a storm dumped
up to a foot of snow in Utah. Another
storm dropped nearly 5 inches of rain
on Little Rock, Ark. A third storm sank
boats along the Massachusetts coast.

TUESDAY

Sun followed by
increasing clouds

Cool with sunshine
and patchy clouds

Logan
46/30

Adelphi
47/31
Chillicothe
47/31

Lucasville
46/31
Portsmouth
47/32

THURSDAY

52°
47°
Cool with periods
of rain

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.44 -1.03
Marietta
34 16.02 -0.49
Parkersburg
36 21.61 -0.63
Belleville
35 12.96 -0.40
Racine
41 12.72 -0.11
Point Pleasant
40 24.55 -0.83
Gallipolis
50 12.65 -0.36
Huntington
50 26.52 -0.57
Ashland
52 35.01 -0.21
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.15 -0.07
Portsmouth
50 16.50 -2.50
Maysville
50 34.50 -0.40
Meldahl Dam
51 18.30 -1.70
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

62°
39°

66°
48°

A shower possible in
the afternoon

Increasing cloudiness

Marietta
46/33
Belpre
46/34

Athens
46/30

St. Marys
45/34

Parkersburg
45/32

Coolville
46/32

Elizabeth
46/33

Spencer
45/33

Buffalo
45/33
Milton
45/32

St. Albans
46/32

Huntington
45/32

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
62/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
65/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
80/61
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
46/32

Ashland
45/32
Grayson
46/32

FRIDAY

Mostly cloudy,
warmer; a p.m.
t-storm

Wilkesville
46/29
POMEROY
Jackson
46/31
46/31
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
46/34
47/32
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
45/31
GALLIPOLIS
47/33
46/34
46/33

South Shore Greenup
46/32
46/32

39

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Oct. 27, 2017.

67°
53°

Murray City
46/29

McArthur
46/29

Waverly
45/31

WEDNESDAY

55°
33°

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

0

Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 17.80
Royal Dutch Shell - 61.27
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 5.75
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 88.17
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 15.10
WesBanco (NYSE) - 41.34
Worthington (NYSE) - 46.43

A: A clear sky.

Precipitation

MONDAY

57°
39°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 47.84
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 101.77
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.57
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 44.71
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 133.65
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 36.45
BBT (NYSE) - 48.74
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 34.15
Pepsico (NYSE) - 110.60
Premier (NASDAQ) - 20.90
Rockwell (NYSE) - 188.78

Clendenin
44/28
Charleston
45/31

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
40/28

Billings
45/27

Minneapolis
46/33

Chicago
47/37
Denver
69/28

Kansas City
61/41

Montreal
59/53

Toronto
50/41
Detroit
50/35

New York
68/54

Washington
65/45

Monterrey
70/47

Mon.
Hi/Lo/W
65/39/pc
50/38/c
64/44/s
60/50/s
59/40/s
40/26/pc
59/33/pc
61/47/r
58/36/pc
61/39/s
34/17/pc
49/31/pc
53/37/c
52/36/pc
52/33/c
79/49/s
36/25/sn
49/28/pc
49/35/pc
85/73/pc
79/58/s
50/31/pc
51/28/pc
84/60/pc
71/39/s
71/61/pc
57/39/c
73/60/s
41/27/c
65/36/s
73/52/s
57/48/r
61/38/s
68/48/s
58/46/r
87/62/pc
51/35/pc
60/41/r
60/39/s
59/43/s
52/34/c
62/36/pc
62/51/s
62/39/s
59/45/s

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

101° in Death Valley, CA
3° in Walden, CO

Global

Houston
70/46

Chihuahua
79/50

Today
Hi/Lo/W
69/44/s
45/41/r
52/37/pc
69/51/r
65/41/r
45/27/r
67/42/s
65/58/r
45/31/sn
58/33/c
61/22/s
47/37/pc
46/30/c
49/37/r
48/33/c
77/50/s
69/28/s
56/37/pc
50/35/c
85/70/pc
70/46/s
46/33/c
61/41/s
85/62/s
61/40/s
80/61/pc
48/36/c
81/55/pc
46/33/pc
51/34/pc
63/45/s
68/54/r
72/43/s
69/45/pc
69/47/r
91/63/s
46/36/sh
60/54/c
67/36/r
67/41/r
55/42/pc
70/43/s
65/53/s
62/46/pc
65/45/r

EXTREMES FRIDAY
Atlanta
52/37

El Paso
75/51

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

High
Low
Miami
81/55

111° in Linguere, Senegal
-26° in Ilirney, Russia

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

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8 AM

Monday, October 30,
2017 at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Bob
Hood ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home
prior the services from 11
am until the time of the
services. Her Grandsons
will be her pallbearers.
In lieu of ﬂowers please
consider and donation
in Phyllis’s name to
Cheshire Baptist Church
Cheshire, OH 45620 and
or to Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Road, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

STOCKS

Free &amp; Open to the Public

TODAY

She is survived by
seven children, Larry
(Jean) Whobrey of
Pomeroy, Rick (Charla)
Whobrey, Cheryl Dickinson, and Keith Hill all
of Gallipolis, Mike Roberts of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
Mark (Esther) Roberts
of Vinton, Bobbie (John)
Rocchi of Gallipolis, 10
Grandchildren, 12 great
grandchildren and 1 great
great grandchild; one
sister Shirley Jones of
Groveport. Phyllis was
preceded in death by her
parents, husband Larry,
and a granddaughter
Sarah Lyle and by two
sisters Jean Hendren and
Nancy Snouffer.
Services will be 1 pm

�S ports

Raiders
fall at
Waverly
SPORTS s 2B

Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM��-&gt;9,/&lt;� �M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

Marauders conquer Spartans, 40-0
By Dave Harris

Marauder coach Mike
Bartrum substituted freely
throughout the contest, a several new players saw action
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
early in the ﬁrst period.
The host Meigs Marauders
The Marauders won the
opened up a 28-0 ﬁrst half
lead and coasted to a 40-0 win toss and received the opening
kickoff, Meigs put together a
over the Alexander Spartans
12-play, 93-yard drive that was
Friday night at Holzer Field/
capped off when Lane CulFarmers Bank Stadium.
lums blasted over from seven
Eleven seniors closed out
yards out at the 7:03 mark of
their careers in the maroon
the period.
and gold in triumphant fashMeigs forced a four-and-out
ion as Elijah Smith, Zach
and took over at their own 40.
Helton, Christian Maddox,
On ﬁrst down, quarterback
Bailey Caruthers, Lane CulZach Helton scrambled for 26
lums, Mathew Brown, Wayyards to the Spartan 34. Zach
land Ramage, Riley Ogdin,
Bartrum then took it the ﬁnal
Andrew Douglas, Trenton
34 yards for the score. Helton
Durst and Jimmy Porter celhit Bailey Caruthers for the
ebrated one last night on the
extra points and with 4:27 left
gridiron.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Meigs junior Zach Bartrum (1) strolls into the end zone for a touchdown during
the first quarter of Friday night’s TVC Ohio football contest against Alexander in
Rocksprings, Ohio.

in the ﬁrst period Meigs was
on top 14-0.
A pass from Helton to
Bartrum on third down and
10 went for 35 yards and set
up the third Marauder score
of the night. Bartrum scored
from ﬁve yards out to cap off
the drive.
Late in the ﬁrst half, the
Spartans drove to the Meigs
16. On fourth and seven,
Marcus Spauding came on to
attempt a 23-yard ﬁeld goal.
Cole Adams blocked
the attempt and the junior
scooped up the loose ball and
took it 77 yards for the score
with 1:08 left in the half. Bartrum added the extra points
See MARAUDERS | 2B

Favorite deer
cartridge going
strong at 144
Although Ohio’s deer hunters are new to using
straight-walled cartridge riﬂes, the most popular
cartridge among those same hunters is 144 years
old.
This November marks the fourth year that
Ohio’s deer hunters can use riﬂes chambered in
straight-walled cartridges during the youth gun,
and regular and bonus deer gun seasons.
A straight-walled cartridge (SWC) is a cartridge
that, as the name suggests, has a straight wall. An
SWC could be described as a simple brass cylinder
with a rim at one end, a bullet in the other, with
gunpowder in between.
SWCs hearken back to the days
when centerﬁre cartridges were in
their infancy – originally loaded with
black powder, and ﬁring big bullets
at slow velocity.
According to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources-Division of
Wildlife about 15 percent of Ohio’s
In The deer gun hunters opted for hunting
with straight-walled cartridge riﬂes,
Open
and half of those 15 percent (or 7.5
Jim
percent of the total) are opting to
Freeman
use riﬂes chambered in the venerable
.45-70 Springﬁeld.
It’s amazing to think that the most popular deer
riﬂe cartridge in Ohio was initially rolled out the
same year that President Ulysses S. Grant started
his second term. The .45-70 was developed for the
single-shot Springﬁeld Model 1873, commonly
called the “Trapdoor” Springﬁeld, and was called
the .45-70 because it used a 45-caliber bullet and
70 grains of black powder.
The .45-70 and the carbine version of the trapdoor riﬂe, along with the Colt Single Action Army
revolver chambered in .45 Colt (which was developed a year before the .45-70), were the ﬁrearms
carried by the U.S. Army in the ill-fated Custer’s
Last Stand on June 25, 1876. The .45 Colt is still
going strong as well, and is also a legal deer hunting cartridge in Ohio.
The .44 Remington Magnum, .444 Marlin and
.357 Smith &amp; Wesson Magnum account for most
of the other half of popular Ohio riﬂe calibers,
with some of the more obscure or proprietary
offerings making up the remaining nine percent.
Gone this year is the “list” of permitted SWCs,
replaced simply by “straight-walled cartridge riﬂes
with a minimum caliber of .357 to a maximum
caliber of .50 are permitted.”
For more information, consult the Ohio Trapping and Hunting Regulations 2017-2018.
Considering that the .45-70 was developed 144
years ago, and was once largely absent from the
sporting scene (the .444 Marlin was designed to
ﬁll the .45-70’s niche back in the 1960s), it says
See DEER | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Monday, Oct. 30
Class A Volleyball
Hannan at Buffalo HS, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic HS, 6 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 31
Class AA Volleyball
Nitro at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Class A Volleyball
Hannan at Buffalo HS, TBA
Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic HS, TBA
College Football
Miami (OH) at Ohio, 8 p.m.

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Levi Chapman watches a tee shot take flight during an Aug. 7 match at Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va.

7 locals named to boys district golf team
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

A total of seven
student-athletes from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
area were chosen to the
2017 all-district boys golf
team, as voted on by the
coaches within the southeast Ohio region.
Five of the six schools
from Gallia and Meigs
counties were represented with at least one selection, with River Valley
being the lone exception
in Division II.
Meigs senior Levi
Chapman was named to
the ﬁrst team in D-2 was
only one of two local golfers to earn a selection
higher than honorable
mention.
GAHS senior Kaden
Thomas was a D-2 honorable mention choice for
a second straight year,
while MHS junior Wyatt
Nicholson was also a D-2
honorable mention selection.
Rock Hill’s Logan Reed
was named the Division
II player of the year, while
Brian Oliver of Fairﬁeld
Union was the D-2 coach
of the year.
Southern junior Jensen
Anderson was a second
team selection in Division
III, while senior teammate was named to the
honorable mention list for
a second straight year.
South Gallia senior
Curtis Haner was also a
repeat honorable mention
choice in D-3, while Eastern junior Ryan Harbour
was ﬁrst-time honorable
mention selection.
Ammon Mitchell of

ren Buskirk, Circleville;
Evan Huffman, Logan
Elm; Noah Waddell,
Vinton County; Brady
Woodbridge, Zane Trace;
Wyatt Nicholson, Meigs;
Kaden Thomas, Gallia
Academy; Tyler Williams,
Adena; Jamie Clifford,
Piketon; William Sturgell,
Portsmouth; Max Rose,
Unioto.
Boys Division III
FIRST TEAM
Elijah McCarty, West
Union; Brock Jordan,
Western; Noah Lung,
North Adams; Eli Montgomery, Western; Trevor
Deere, Coal Grove; Bryant Lung, North Adams.
Player of the Year:
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Elijah McCarty, West
Southern junior Jensen Anderson putts on the third green at
Union.
Meigs County Golf Course, during a TVC Hocking match on Aug. 7
Coach of the Year:
in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ammon Mitchell,
North Adams.
North Adams was the D-3 Meigs; Jacob Calvin,
coach of the year. Elijah
Unioto.
SECOND TEAM
McCarty of West Union
Player of the Year:
Owen Carney, Crookswas the D-3 player of the
Logan Reed, Rock Hill. ville; Colt Shumaker,
year.
Coach of the Year:
North Adams; Brock
Warren’s Nick Ward
Brian Oliver, Fairﬁeld
White, Crooksville; Wes
and Marietta’s Gage Herb Union.
Jenkins, Waterford; Huntshared player of the year
er Dutiel, Miller; Jenson
honors in Division I.
Anderson, Southern.
SECOND TEAM
No schools from the
Talon Osborne, WaverOVP area were involved
ly; Cord Ebert, Logan
HONORABLE MENTION
in the Division I bracket. Elm; Korten Foraker,
Jeremiah Stitt, Belpre,
A list of the 2017 AllNew Lexington; Carson
Nathan Riley, Trimble;
Southeast District boys
Price, Fairﬁeld Union;
Ryan Harbour, Eastern;
golf team, as voted on by Trevor Newkirk, McClain; Garrett Holiday, Coal
the coaches.
Colton Blakeman, PikGrove; Eli Fuller, West
eton.
Union; Cole Haislop, Pike
Eastern; Curtis Haner,
Boys Division II
South Gallia; Jonah
HONORABLE MENTION
FIRST TEAM
James Carter, Ironton; Hoback, Southern; Blake
White, Crooksville; Caleb
Logan Reed, Rock Hill; Jay Haywood, Rock
Cline, Clay; Hunter HenHill; Trey Givens, New
Ty Schobelock, Unioto;
neberger, Huntington;
Connor Heffner, Waverly; Lexington; Kobe Penwell, McClain; Matthew
Brent Gulling, Fairﬁeld
See GOLF | 2B
Walker, Westfall; DarUnion; Levi Chapman,

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Marauders
From page 1B

Courtesy photo

River Valley sophomore Cole Young (24) stretches the ball for additional yardage during Friday night’s regular season finale against Waverly in Waverly, Ohio.

Raiders fall at Waverly, 45-14
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WAVERLY, Ohio — A tough
way to end the season.
The River Valley football
team fell behind 45-0 through
three quarters of play before
tacking on a pair of late scores
Friday night during a 45-14 setback to host Waverly in a Week
10 non-conference gridiron
tilt at Raidiger Field in Pike
County.
The visiting Raiders (3-7)
ended the 2017 campaign with
their third straight loss, while
the Tigers (7-3) appear to have
clinched the eighth and ﬁnal
postseason spot in their Division IV, Region 16 bracket following the 31-point triumph.
Both teams played an errorfree contest, but the Orange
and Black produced 21 points
in each of the ﬁrst two quarters while building a sizable
42-point advantage headed into
the break.
WHS scored its only points
of the second half on a 33-yard
ﬁeld goal by Kayne Jordan

with 48 seconds remaining in
the third, allowing the hosts to
secure their largest lead of the
night.
RVHS quarterback Jordan
Burns found Jared Reese on a
2-yard touchdown pass with
8:45 left in regulation for a 45-7
contest. Burns also hooked
up with Jarret McCarley on
a 5-yard TD strike with 2:03
remaining to complete the scoring at 45-14.
Drew Kritzwater gave Waverly a permanent lead with 8:19
left in the opening quarter after
an 8-yard run made 7-0. Clayton
Howell hit Easton Wolf on TD
passes of 25 and 12 yards over
the next six-plus minutes as the
hosts led 21-0 with 1:41 remaining in the ﬁrst canto.
Kritzwater added TD runs of
seven and 23 yards in the second frame for a 35-point cushion with 6:17 left, then Howell
found Kayne Jordan with a
14-yard scoring pass at the 1:27
mark for a 42-0 lead headed
into halftime.
The Tigers — winners of
two straight — claimed a 21-10

edge in ﬁrst downs and outgained the Silver and Black by a
sizable 425-222 margin in total
yards of offense.
The difference came on the
ground as WHS produced 267
rushing yards on 34 attempts,
an average of 7.9 yards per
carry. River Valley, conversely,
managed only 101 yards on 23
attempts for an average of 4.4
yards per try.
The Raiders were ﬂagged six
times for 41 yards, while the
hosts had ﬁve penalties for 48
yards.
It was the ﬁnal football game
for Ben Arrowood, Dustin Barber, Patrick Brown, Jay Combs,
Andrew Eleam, Lucas Fitch,
Zach Long, Jarret McCarley
and Gabe Stapleton in the Silver and Black.
Layne Fitch led the RVHS
ground attack with 68 yards on
two carries, followed by Cole
Young with 18 yards on nine
totes.
Jordan Burns had a dozen
rushing attempts for 15 yards
and also ﬁnished 12-of-18 passing for 121 yards, throwing two

touchdowns and zero interceptions.
McCarley led the wideouts
with ﬁve grabs for 64 yards,
while Fitch, Reese and Brandon
Call each had two catches for
28, 14 and 11 yards respectively. Brown was a perfect 2-for-2
on point-after kicks.
Kritzwater led Waverly with
147 rushing yards and three
scores on 13 carries, followed
by Jake Reed with 68 yards on
10 tries. Howell had 30 rushing
yards on three carries and was
also 11-of-18 passing for 158
yards and three scores.
Wolf hauled in a team-high
ﬁve passes for 69 yards, followed by Jordan with 38 yards
on three catches. Cobe Marquez
also had two grabs for 42 yards.
River Valley ﬁnished the
2017 campaign with a 1-5 mark
in Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division play, which was good
enough for sixth place.
Julie Billings of the Pike County News
Watchman contributed to this report.

advantage throughout the tourFor Ohio Valley Publishing
nament with a win over Asbury
University in its regular season
ﬁnale on Saturday night. The
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
Eagles currently trail the RedJust six days removed from a
52-shot onslaught in a win over Storm by one game in the RSC
standings.
Carlow University, the UniverRio ﬁnished with a 68-2 edge
sity of Rio Grande men’s soccer
in shots during Thursday’s win
team did itself one better.
over CCU, including a 34-1
Well, 16 better to be exact.
advantage in shots on goal. The
The RedStorm ﬁred off
RedStorm also had all of the
a school- and River States
Conference-record 68 shots in a game’s 10 corner kick chances.
Rio’s 68 shots are the second9-0 rout of Cincinnati Christian
highest total in the NAIA this
University, Thursday night, at
season, trailing only the 77
Evan E. Davis Field.
shots recorded by Waldorf
As a result of the win, head
(Iowa) in a 20-0 win over
coach Scott Morrissey’s club
clinched one of two quarterﬁnal Nebraksa Christian on Sept. 2.
Juniors Eduardo Zurita (Sant
round byes in the RSC Tournament, which begins next Satur- Boi de Llobregat, Spain) and
Spencer Reinford (McAlisteday.
rville, PA) scored two goals
Rio Grande (13-1-1, 7-0-1
each in the victory, while junior
RSC) can clinch home-ﬁeld

Deer

ammunition – which is
not safe to ﬁre in the
original guns.
Of course no matter
From page 1B
what you carry aﬁeld,
a lot that all major U.S. always follow the rules
ammunition makers still of safe gun handling:
always keep the muzzle
produce ammunition
pointed in a safe direcfor it.
tion, treat every gun
While most facwith the respect due a
tory ammo is loaded
loaded gun, be sure of
to levels that old riﬂes
your target and beyond,
can safely handle, it
and keep your ﬁnger
is probably wiser and
off of the trigger until
safer to leave those
ready to shoot.
antique guns in the
The majority of
rack. Newer riﬂes can
Ohio’s deer gun hunthandle substantially
ers will continue to
stouter loadings and
use shotguns. I don’t
shooters can exploit
have anything against
this by reloading their
own or purchasing “+P” shotguns; it is hard to

Omar Walcott (Kingston,
Jamaica) and sophomore Deri
Corfe (Chester, England) each
had a goal and a pair of assists.
Rio Grande scored what
proved to be the only goal it
would need just 14:25 into the
match when junior Harry Reilly
(Coventry, England) found the
back of the net off an assist by
Corfe.
Walcott, Zurita and Corfe
added one goal each to give
the RedStorm a 4-0 lead at the
intermission. Freshman Samuel
Pederson (Aldershot, England)
assisted on Zurita’s ﬁrst half
score.
Reinford scored his ﬁrst goal
off an assist from Corfe just
under 7-1/2 minutes into the
second half and Zurita added
his ﬁnal marker nine minutes
later to push the lead to 6-0.

match the versatility of
a shotgun – by switching out barrels, chokes,
and ammunition a
single shotgun can be
conﬁgured to hunt pretty much any wild game
species in the state.
If you were limited
to only one gun here
in Ohio, a 12-gauge
pump-action shotgun
would be the way to go,
but it is nice to have
choices.
So what is the beneﬁt
to using 1880s riﬂe
technology versus a
modern, riﬂed shotgun?
The answer is largely
subjective. Depending
on the cartridge, SWC

Dave Harris is a sports
correspondent for Ohio Valley
Publishing.

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

RedStorm men rout Cincinnati Christian
By Randy Payton

and Meigs went into the
locker room with a 28-0
lead. The score by Adams
on the blocked kick was
the junior’s fourth special
teams touchdown of the
season.
Meigs added a score
with 3:43 left in the third
period when Bartrum
took a snap in the wildcat
formation up the middle
35 yards for the score.
The Marauders scored
the game’s ﬁnal touchdown with 10:44 left in
the contest when Helton
hit senior classmate
Christian Maddox over
the middle from 11 yards
out and the score.
Maddox played for
the ﬁrst time since the
ﬁrst period of the opener
against Gallia Academy
when he suffered a serious knee injury. Christian
playing with a bulky brace
caught two passes for 25
yards in limited playing
time.
Bartrum led Meigs with
95 yards in only eight carries, Cullums added 50
in eight tries, and Helton
29 in six attempts. Helton
was 7-of-11 through the
air for 110 yards, while
Cory Cox was 1-of-1 passing for 31 yards.
Caruthers caught two
for 43, Bartrum two for
39, Maddox two for 25
and Helton on a throwback pass, one for 31.
Conner Kimbrough
led the Spartans with
75 yards in 13 attempts,
Bradley McCollister
added 13 carries for 44
yards. Kimbrough was
4-of-7 in the air for 33
yards, while Kaleb Easley
threw ﬁve passes and
failed to complete any.
Easley caught two passes
for 18 yards, Matthew
Brown added one for 13.
Meigs ﬁnishes the season 4-6 overall and 3-3 in
the TVC Ohio Division.
Alexander ends the year
1-9 overall and winless
(0-6) in league play.

Walcott assisted on goals
by freshman Benjamin Andoh
(Glasgow, Scotland) and senior
Isaiah Chapman (Cincinnati,
OH) over a span of 2:46 to push
the lead to 8-0 and Reinford
found the net via a feed from
freshman Callum Malanaphy
(Stourbridge, England) with
6:30 left to play to set the ﬁnal
score.
Freshman Luis Rodriguez
(San Jose, Costa Rica) recorded
one save for the RedStorm on
an otherwise quiet night in
goal.
Bryan McDowell had 25 saves
in a losing cause for the Eagles.
Kickoff for the RedStorm’s
showdown with Asbury on Saturday is set for 7 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director for the University of Rio Grande.

ammunition is generally
more affordable than
modern, saboted, slug
ammunition, and recoil
may be substantially
lower.
Although the .45-70
and .444 Marlin are no
shrinking violets in the
recoil category, their
ﬂinch-inducing kick is
still about half that of a
shotgun with magnum
slugs. The .44 Magnum
in a riﬂe is a pussycat
with low recoil energy
and recoil velocity.
As for me, I just
prefer the handling, balance and precision of a
cartridge riﬂe versus a
shotgun, and the clean-

liness and convenience
of modern smokeless
powder (in cartridge
form) versus an inline
muzzleloading riﬂe – to
each his own.
Incidentally there is
one American metallic cartridge still made
today that predates the
.45-70 and .45 Colt.
That cartridge? The
little 22 Short, introduced in 1857, four
years before the U.S.
Civil War.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife
specialist for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District. He
can be contacted weekdays at
740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

Golf
From page 1B

Donte Lightly, Western;
Blain Neetdham, Miller;
Carson Hall, North
Adams; Dylan Colvin,
Manchester; Travis Pottmeyer, Waterford; Zach
Harless, Whiteoak.
Boys Division I
FIRST TEAM
Nick Ward, Warren;
Gage Herb, Marietta;
Caleb Scharff, Marietta;
Heath Hill, Marietta;
Drew Zorn, Athens; Matthew Early, Marietta; Austin Barton, Warren.
Co-Players of the Year:
Nick Ward (Warren)
and Gage Herb (Marietta).
SECOND TEAM
Seth Dennis, Warren;
Justin Vogt, Logan; Preston Hoyes, Athens.
HONORABLE MENTION
Casey Rafferty, Warren;
Chance Weihl, Warren;
Jared Hollister, Marietta;
Luke Satterﬁeld, Marietta; Zach Mallett, Marietta; Jeremiah Martin,
Logan; Owen Campitelle,
Athens.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

For more local
sports, visit
MyDaily
Sentinel.com

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Rio women outlast Eagles
in double overtime

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By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Jenna Jones scored on
a penalty kick with 6:49
remaining in the second
overtime period to give
the University of Rio
Grande a 2-1 win over
Cincinnati Christian University, Thursday night, in
River States Conference
women’s soccer action at
Evan E. Davis Field.
The RedStorm, who
snapped a three-game
winless streak and a
two-game losing slide,
improved to 8-7-1 overall
and 5-2-1 in the RSC with
the victory.
Cincinnati Christian
slipped to 7-6-3 overall
and 3-2-2 in league play
with the loss.
Jones got the opportunity for her game-winner
after CCU’s Jodi Litzler
was whistled for a foul
against Rio sophomore
Daniella DeSousa (Cape
Town, South Africa) just
inside the upper left corner of the 18-yard box.
The Lancaster, Ohio
senior then blistered a
shot past Eagles’ net-

The RedStorm, who snapped a three-game
winless streak and a two-game losing slide,
improved to 8-7-1 overall and 5-2-1 in the RSC
with the victory.

minder Kendra Steepe
into the lower left side of
the goal for the win.
Jones’ goal culminated
a night full of missed
opportunities by both
teams.
Rio Grande ﬁnished
with a 30-16 edge in shots
- 17-5 in the second half
- and a 13-9 advantage in
shots on goal.
The RedStorm also had
a 9-3 cushion in corner
kick opportunities.
Yet Rio’s lone score
before the game-winner
came just 46 seconds into
the match when Steepe
slipped and fell while
trying to complete a goal
kick allowing RedStorm
sophomore Jenna Porter
(Chillicothe, OH) to
come up with the loose
ball and score against an
open net.
The Eagles came up
with the equalizer just

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over four minutes later
when Maren Hance
ﬁnished off a 2-on-1
situation by taking a
short crossing pass from
Mariah Petty and ﬁring
a shot which bounced off
the hands of Rio junior
keeper Kelsey Lee (West
Chester, OH).
That’s how things
stayed until the gamewinner by Jones.
Lee, who got the start
in goal for Rio thanks to
an injury which sidelined
regular starter Andrea
Vera (Quito, Ecuador),
ﬁnished with eight saves
in the winning effort.
Steepe had 11 saves in
the loss for CCU.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Saturday when
it hosts Asbury University for a 5 p.m. kickoff.

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to make sure your car is ready for the fall and winter weather to
keep you safe on the road! Our Expert technicians
will provide the following checks for FREE:
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Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director for the
University of Rio Grande.

BOGO
include the heights, weights, positions
played and grade of each nominee — as
well as an order of recommendation for
possible selections. Stats can include
anything related to offense, defense or
special teams for a nominee.
Submissions should be emailed OVP
sports editor Bryan Walters at bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com or sent
via fax to 740-446-3008.
All statistics and nominations must
be received before noon on Tuesday,
Oct. 31, for consideration.

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OH-70009625

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — All Ohio
varsity football coaches in Gallia and
Meigs counties are asked to submit
regular season statistics from their
respective teams to the Ohio Valley
Publishing sports department for
district considerations with the Ohio
Associated Press.
Along with the 10-game stats, please

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OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

2017 football
statistics needed

Sunday, October 29, 2017 3B

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�SPORTS

4B Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Point Pleasant rolls past Renegades, 75-14
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — A night for the
record books.
The Point Pleasant
football team celebrated
senior night in style on
Friday at Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field, setting a stadium record for
points by a single team,
as the Big Blacks rolled to
a 75-14 victory over visiting Westside.
The stadium mark
wasn’t the only record to
fall in the game, as Point
Pleasant (8-2) juniors
Cason Payne and Josh
Wamsley both etched
their names in the single
season record book.
Payne, the Big Blacks’
dual-threat quarterback,
surpassed the record of
2,512 all-purpose yards
in a regular season, set
by 2015 Kennedy Award
winner Cody Mitchell.
With 236 yards on 13-of20 passing and 38 yards
on 11 carries in the game,
Payne ﬁnished the year
with 2,578 all-purpose
yards.
With just under two
minutes remaining in the
ﬁrst half, Payne threw
his third and ﬁnal touchdown of the night, an
18-yard pass to Wamsley,
who surpassed Dirk Jackson for receiving yards
in a regular season with
the grab. Jackson had
669 yards in 1968, while
Wamsley ﬁnished with
732 yards after hauling
in a team-best seven
passes for 114 yards on
Friday.
On the same scoring
pass, Payne set a new
high-water mark for
career touchdown passes
at PPHS. The junior
signal caller now has 51
career passing touchdowns, surpassing 2015
graduate Aden Yates, who
ﬁnished with 50.
“I’m happy for the
kids,” PPHS head coach
Dave Darst said. “I
don’t pay attention to
the records that much,
but these kids, they
do. That’s why we have
those records, for them
to try do that. When
you’re playing this game
and a record comes up
and you get it, that’s
great.”
After the Big Black
defense forced a threeand-out to start the
game, the Point Pleasant
offense — which scored
on all-7 possessions in
the ﬁrst half — began its
ﬁrst drive at the WHS 49.
With 6:33 left in the ﬁrst
quarter, Payne scored on
a four-yard run that, with
Jacob Bryant’s ﬁrst of
nine straight successful
extra-point kicks, gave
the hosts a 7-0 lead.
The ensuing kickoff
was untouched by Westside (5-4) and Wamsley
made a heads-up play to
grab the ball for Point

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

PPHS senior Clayton Hill (88) drags down Westside senior Matt Blankenship near the line of scrimmage, during the Big Blacks’ 75-14 victory on Friday in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

Pleasant at the WHS
20-yard line.
On the very next play,
Payne connected with
Tucker Mayes for a touchdown pass and stretched
the lead to 14-0. For the
game, Mayes ﬁnished
with 57 yards on four
receptions.
The Big Black defense
came up with another
takeaway on the third
play of the Renegades’
next drive, as senior
Aaron Turner picked off
a pass and returned it to
the WHS 49.
On the second play of
the PPHS drive, senior
Justin Brumﬁeld broke a
42-yard scoring run, giving the hosts a 21-0 lead
with 4:49 left in the opening stanza. Brumﬁeld led
the Big Black rushing
attack with 139 yards
on 13 carries in the win,
while also catching a pass
for 32 yards.
Westside went threeand-out again on the its
next drive, and the Big
Blacks took over at thier
own 39-yard line. Point
Pleasant needed just
nine plays to cover the
61 yards, with Brumﬁeld
extending the lead to 28-0
with a three-yard run.
On the opening drive of
the second quarter, Westside earned its ﬁrst ﬁrst
down of the game, but
ultimately missed a ﬁeld
goal and surrendered the
ball to PPHS at its own
20.
After 10 plays, the Big
Blacks were faced with
a fourth-and-11 from the
WHS 21. On the fourth
down play, Payne found
Mayes for the duo’s second scoring connection,
pushing the lead to 35-0
with 6:27 left in the half.
The Renegades earned
a pair of ﬁrst downs
before failing on a fourth

Big Blacks’ sophomore Nick Parsons hauls in a pass during the
second half of Point Pleasant’s 75-14 win over Westside on Friday
at OVB Track and Field.

down try and giving the
ball back to the hosts at
their own 39.
On the ninth play of the
Big Blacks’ possession,
Payne found Wamsley
for the historic 18-yard
touchdown pass, which
gave the hosts a 42-point
lead with 1:48 until halftime.
PPHS wasn’t done in
the ﬁrst half, however,
as Westside fumbled the
ball on its ﬁrst play from
scrimmage and Mayes
recovered for the hosts.
On Point Pleasant’s
second play of the 23-yard
drive, Payne ran for his
second touchdown, an
11-yard scamper that gave
the hosts a 49-0 halftime
lead.
The Big Blacks scored
on the opening drive of
the second half, as Wyatt
Wilson — subbed in for
Payne at quarterback —
capped off a 64-yard drive
with a ﬁve-yard scoring
run. Wilson ﬁnished with
32 yards on 3-of-3 passing
with 41 yards on seven
carries.
After a loss of downs

by each team, Turner
came up with his second
interception for the PPHS
defense and the Big Black
offense took over the at
WHS 48.
On the fourth play of
the drive, Logan Southall
scored on an eight-yard
run, pushing the lead to
a game-high 63 points
with 1:58 left in the
third. Southall earned 44
yards on six carries in
the win.
Westside ended the
shut out on its ﬁrst play
of the fourth quarter,
as Travis Cook tossed a
22-yard touchdown pass
to Matt Blankenship.
Cook was 20-of-32 passing for 281 yards, while
Blankenship hauled in a
team-best seven passes
for 63 yards.
Wamsley returned
the ensuing kickoff 85
yards for the touchdown,
but the point-after kick
attempt failed.
PPHS pinned the Renegades back to their own
nine-yard line on the next
kickoff, but on the very
next play, Cook connect-

ed with Dwight Justus for
a 91-yard scoring pass.
Justus had a game-high
117 receiving yards on
four grabs. Colby Vargas
was 2-for-2 on point-after
kicks for the guests and
hauled in three passes for
68 yards.
Point Pleasant’s ﬁnal
offensive drive covered 70
yards and ran more than
seven minutes off the
clock. Wilson scored on
a 18-yard run with 1:03
to play, capping off the
75-14 victory.
“We were stroking on
all cylinders tonight,”
Darst said. “The defense
played lights out tonight,
offensively we threw the
ball well and we ran the
ball well, and our special
teams held them inside
the 25-yard line on just
about every kickoff.”
PPHS held a 530-toto-278 advantage in total
offense, including 344-to106 in the ﬁrst half. The
Big Blacks had 24 ﬁrst
downs, while allowing
just ﬁve. Point Pleasant
won the turnover battle
by a 4-0 count and didn’t
punt in the game. PPHS
rushed for 262 yards and
held the guests to minus3 yards on the ground.
Also for the PPHS
offense, Nick Parsons
hauled in two passes
for 32 yards, while Alec
Smith caught a 33-yard
pass.
Prior to the game,
Point Pleasant honored
its 16 seniors, Ryan Oliver, Aaron Turner, Justin
Brumﬁeld, Jacob Bryant,
Keshawn Stover, Alec
Smith, Tucker Mayes,
Cameron Nott, Andrew
Flowers, Wyatt Pearson,
Jason Chapman, Jesse
Gleason, Tre Craddock,
Alex Gibbs, Brian Gillespie and Clayton Hill.
“We drew it up great

for these seniors on
senior night,” Darst said.
“They’ve been outstanding, these guys are fouryear playoff guys. They’re
a hard-working bunch of
kids, there’s not a superstar in the group and I
think that’s what makes
it nice. They’ve all had to
work up through the program, they’re a product
of our program and every
one of these kids in this
senior class contributes
to the football team.”
With the win, Point
Pleasant secured its spot
in the Class AA playoffs
and the Big Blacks may
host an opening round
game.
“We’re probably going
to have a chance at a
home game in a couple of
weeks,” Darst said. “We
are a better football team
right now than we were
the ﬁrst week against
Mingo Central. Does that
mean we’re going to go
beat them? I don’t know.
All I’m saying is, we’re a
better football team right
now and I’m excited to go
to the playoffs.”
The Big Blacks entered
Week 10 as the eighth
ranked team in the Class
AA playoff ratings. PPHS
has an extra week to rest
before beginning its 10th
consecutive postseason,
as Week 11 is a bye week
for the Big Blacks.
NOTES: The previous
OVB Stadium record for
points by a single team
was 73, set by Wahama
in the second round of
the 2010 Class A playoffs
against East Hardy. Point
Pleasant’s previous record
for points in a home
game was 70, which came
against Lincoln County in
the 2013 opener.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Point Pleasant volleyball sweeps Lady Crusaders
By Bryan Walters

Early on, however, the
Lady Crusaders (4-12)
proved to be quite a
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. formidable foe as Game
1 featured 19 ties and
— A ﬁtting end.
six lead changes — and
The Point Pleasant
neither team led by more
volleyball team capped
than four points.
a historic regular season
PCHS — which has
in impressive fashion
now dropped ﬁve straight
Thursday night following a 27-25, 25-21, 25-16 decisions — led by a
victory over host Parkers- single point all the way
out to a nine-all tie, but
burg Catholic in a nonthe guests took their ﬁrst
conference matchup in
lead at 10-9.
Wood County.
The Lady Crusaders
The Lady Knights
(18-3) completed the pro- rallied to build a pair of
four-point leads at 19-15
gram’s best-ever regular
and 20-16, but the Red
season ﬁnish with their
sixth consecutive win, all and Black survived a
game point with two
of which have come in a
straight points for a 25-24
straight-game fashion.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

edge.
The hosts tied things
again at 25-all, but the
Lady Knights came up
with the ﬁnal two points
to secure the minimal
triumph and a 1-0 match
lead.
Point Pleasant never
trailed by more than a
single point the rest of
the way, though things
were never easy over the
ﬁnal two sets.
There were seven ties
and three lead changes
in Game 2, with PPHS
establishing its largest
lead of the game at 18-10.
The Lady Crusaders rallied with eight straight
points to tie the game,

but the guests eventually
broke away from a 20-all
tie with ﬁve of the ﬁnal
six points for a four-point
win and a 2-0 match cushion.
Parkersburg Catholic
built a 2-1 lead in the
ﬁnale, but the Lady
Knights answered with
ﬁve consecutive points
and led by as many as 10
points (23-13) en route to
the nine-point victory.
Point Pleasant collectively produced 31 kills
for a third consecutive
match this week, with six
different players contributing multiple successful spikes. The Red and
Black also claimed a sea-

son sweep of PCHS after
earning a 3-0 decision in
Mason County back on
Sept. 7.
Peyton Jordan led the
PPHS net attack with 12
points and three aces,
followed by Madison
Hatﬁeld with 10 kills and
three aces. Olivia Dotson
was next with six points,
while Brenna Dotson and
Gracie Cottrill respectively added ﬁve and four
points to the winning
cause.
Brenna Dotson led the
net attack with 11 kills
and ﬁve blocks, followed
by Lanea Cochran with
eight kills and Olivia Dotson with ﬁve kills to go

along with a team-best 16
assists.
Tristan Wilson was
next with three kills,
while Hatﬁeld and Cottrill each had two kills.
Jordan also produced a
team-high 24 digs in the
triumph.
Maria Tallman paced
PCHS with nine service
points and Madison Ross
added ﬁve points.
Point Pleasant will host
the Class AA Region IV,
Section 1 tournament
next week and opens
postseason play at 7 p.m.
Tuesday against Nitro.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 29, 2017 5B

6 locals named to girls district golf team
By Bryan Walters

Hart, Westfall.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

A total of six studentathletes from the Ohio
Valley Publishing area
were selected to the
2017 all-district girls golf
teams, as chosen by the
coaches within the southeast district of Ohio.
Each of the four schools
that offer girls golf were
represented on the Division II all district squad,
which included one second team choice and a
quintet of honorable mention selections.
The lone repeat selection from the OVP area
was Eastern sophomore
Kylee Tolliver, who was
named to the second
team in Division II.
Eastern senior Kaitlyn
Hawk, Gallia Academy
junior Molly Fitzwater,
Meigs freshman Kylee
Robinson, and the River
Valley duo of senior Hayley Cox and junior Chloe
Gee were all chosen as
honorable mention selections in Division II.
Waterford’s Chris Baker
was named the Division
II coach of the year, and
the Lady Cats had two of
the six ﬁrst team selections — which included
D-2 player of the year
Kenzie Dietz.

HONORABLE MENTION
Alexis Tompkins, Fairﬁeld; Molly Fitzwater,
Gallia Academy; Kendall
Pollard, McClain; Lindsey Daniel, West Union;
Allison Baughman,
Crooksville; Gracie Rowe,
Westfall; Abby Eichmiller,
Waterford; Zoe Miller,
Warren; Kylee Robinson,
Meigs; Chloe Gee, River
Valley; Belle Lambert,
Vinton County; Kaitlyn
Hawk, Eastern; Hayley
Cox, River Valley; Jayden
Lawson, Federal Hocking.
Girls Division I
FIRST TEAM
Kristin Jamieson,
Hillsboro; Emily Loudin,
Hillsboro; Lexis Fickel,
Logan.
HONORABLE MENTION
Larkin Parry, Hillsboro;
Bryan Walters| OVP Sports
Madison
Stratton, HillEastern junior Kylee Tolliver watches a tee shot on third hole of a TVC Hocking match played at Cliffside Golf Course on Tuesday, Aug.
sboro;
Lauren
Johnson,
29, in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Logan; Dreena Wiseman,
OVP area were involved
Hillsboro’s David
Kenzie Dietz, WaterLogan.
Kenzie Dietz, Waterin the Division I bracket. ford; Ashley Offenberger, ford.
Hilliard and Logan’s
Player of the Year:
A list of the 2017 AllRichard Aldridge were
Kristin Jamieson, HillWaterford; Alex Gillette,
both named the Division Southeast District girls
sboro.
Coal Grove; DeAnna Car- SECOND TEAM
golf team, as voted on by away, West Union; Lauren
I girls coach of the year.
Co-Coaches of the Year:
Kylee Tolliver, Eastern;
the coaches.
Hillsboro junior Kristin
Richard Aldridge
Ragland, Zane Trace; Ella Madalynn Roby, Belpre;
Jameson repeated as the
Seeley, Westfall.
Rachel Schüler, Fairﬁeld; (Logan) and Dave HillD-1 district player of the
iard (Hillsboro).
Coach of the Year:
Kendall Fee, Vinton
Girls Division II
year.
Chris Baker, Waterford. County; Bryn Karnes,
Bryan Walters can be reached at
No schools from the
Player of the Year:
Greenﬁeld McClain; Liz
FIRST TEAM
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Bison sweep Lady Wildcats on Senior night
By Paul Boggs

a 17-15 advantage —
its largest of the entire
match.
From there, however,
BUFFALO, W.Va. —
Give credit to Hannan for the Wildcats could not
hold an 18-17 lead — givhanging tough at least.
ing up eight of the ﬁnal
Unfortunately for the
10 points in the set and
Lady Wildcats, though,
falling 25-20.
the host Buffalo Bison
In the third game, Hanwere too much of a bully
nan held a brief 1-0 edge,
on Thursday.
but the Bison bolted for a
That’s because the
4-1 lead on four straight
Bison — on its Senior
service points by Rowen
Night —swept Hannan
for the second time in 10 Samms — and only
continued to expand its
days, defeating the Lady
Wildcats 25-19, 25-20 and advantage after leading
14-10.
25-15 in the rematch.
With the win, Buffalo
The contest also
marked the regular-season ended its regular campaign at 6-31, while the
ﬁnale for both clubs, as
Class A postseason tour- Wildcats conclude their
slate at 3-17.
nament play begins next
Hannan had wins over
week.
Huntington St. Joseph’s
While Hannan never
led in the opening game, junior varsity squad twice
and Van once, but Buffalo
it did rally from an early
swept the Lady Wildcats
5-0 deﬁcit to forge a 7-7
in straight games again.
tie — before Buffalo
In fact, Hannan had few
broke free for ﬁve more
points outside of Bison
points and the Wildcats
errors, as it only accountwere never closer than
ed for six total kills and
three points the remainﬁve aces.
der of the way.
In game one, Pammie
In game two, the Bison
Ochs and Josie McCoy
again raced out to a 5-0
lead, but once again Han- managed kills, as a
McCoy ace and a net vionan rallied for ties of
lation got the Wildcats to
10-10 and 13-13, before
within 17-14.
scoring four straight
Another net violapoints of its own to take

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

tion and a hitting error
trimmed their deﬁcit to
22-17, as Josie Cooper
served up a pair of aces to
make it 22-19.
But Buffalo senior Kaitlin Janda, who had three
consecutive aces to make
it 21-14, netted a kill —
before back-to-back aces
by Lindsey Russell ended
the game.
McCoy had another kill
in the second set, before
Halie Johnson’s back-toback aces had Hannan in
the lead for the ﬁrst time
at 16-15 —and again at
18-17 on her kill.
But Janda, after a Hannan service error tied the
game at 18-18, served for
ﬁve more points which
included a pair of aces.
A pair of errors allowed
the Wildcats to get within
23-20, but Hannan had
two errors of its own to
give the Bison the 2-0
lead.
In game three, the only
non-error Hannan points
were a Hailey White kill
that made it 14-10 —and
another Ochs kill that
made it 19-12.
The Bison got a sideout on a service error to
make it 24-15, then the
senior Samms served up
the match-clinching ace.

Buffalo’s Brooke Slaubaugh had a match-high
ﬁve kills, while Janda and
Janessa Harris had four
apiece with Janda amassing eight aces.
Brookelyn Painter posted three kills, as Russell
added another second-set
ace.

The Bison’s third senior
— Kaela Cobb — collected ﬁve second-set aces,
including four in a row as
part of ﬁve service points
to open that game.
In game one, she
opened with four service
points for the ﬁrst 5-0
advantage — after Buf-

DON’T BE LEFT
OUT IN THE

falo gained the served on
a sideout.
Hannan will return to
Buffalo High School on
Monday, when it begins
Region 4 Section 1 tournament action at 5 p.m.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

COLD

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to be

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Celebrating 65 years!!!

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going the
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20% off Custom made Draperies &amp;
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Rutland, OH

(740) 446-0332
151 2nd Ave, Gallipolis, OH 45631
www.topefurniture.com
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740.742.2511 or 1.800.837.8217

�COMICS

6B Sunday, October 29, 2017

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 29, 2017 7B

Holtmann tries to put Buckeyes back together
lock up some top recruits
for 2018-19.
Holtmann — and everyone else associated with
the team — acknowledged the Buckeyes are
in another rebuilding
year. Three of the four
top scorers and the top
rebounder from last year’s
17-15 team are gone.
Depth will be lacking and
injuries will be difﬁcult to
handle. The new players
will have to contribute
right away.
“Our season in many
ways is going to be determined by how we handle
what happens when their
expectations — whether
it’s playing time or how
the season is progressing
— gets met with reality,”
Holtmann said.
“There’s going to be a
lot of ups and downs,” he
added. “There’s going to
be some tough stretches,
and if we don’t handle
that the right way then

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The offseason
for the Ohio State basketball program was strange
and tumultuous.
First the Buckeyes
missed the NCAA Tournament for the second
straight season, ﬁnishing
7-11 in the Big Ten.
Center Trevor Thompson left early for the NBA
draft. One of the team’s
best players, JaQuan Lyle,
quit in April following an
arrest, and another player
was dismissed for “failure
to meet team expectations.”
Coach Thad Matta
was ﬁred in June, three
months after athletic
director Gene Smith had
issued a statement saying
he had job security. Butler coach Chris Holtmann
was hired a week later,
and he got to work piecing together a roster that
will be competitive this
season while rushing to

we’re going to struggle.”
Building blocks
The Buckeyes will rely
heavily on senior forward
Jae’Sean Tate, who led
the team in scoring with
a 14.3 average last season, and redshirt junior
forward Keita Bates-Diop,
who was lost for the season to a leg injury in early
January. Ohio State needs
a breakout year from a
now-healthy Bates-Diop,
who averaged nearly 10
points in the ﬁrst nine
games before the injury
last season.
Holtmann also puts
senior guard Kam Williams in that category
with Tate and Bates-Diop.
“I think we’ll go as our
fourth and ﬁfth-year guys
go,” he said. “Our season
will in large part be determined by them….Not just
in their play but in their
leadership and how they
direct the team. In a lot

AUCTION

of ways our season is in
their hands.”

Potter, who backed up
Thompson last year,
returns to start at center.
The 6-foot-9 sophomore
Thin at guard
C.J. Jackson returns at averaged about 14 minpoint guard, but the only utes per game, with 4.1
other point player on the points and 3.1 rebounds.
roster is Andrew Dakich, One of the only experia University of Michigan enced bigs on the roster,
graduate transfer seeking he’s going to have to be
more aggressive inside.
more playing time than
Toward that end, he
he got there.
gained strength and mus“It’s going to be a lot
cle mass in the off-season.
on him,” Holtmann said
“I’ve been working on
of Jackson as the primary
being able to handle the
ball-handler. “And he’s
going to be important for ball a little bit, be able
to be more than just a
us.”
catch-and-shoot guy,”
Williams will start at
the other guard spot, but Potter said. “I’ve tried to
develop myself to be able
the ranks are thin. The
only other guards on the to put it on the ﬂoor a litroster are Joey Lane, who tle bit and expand on my
played in four games last repertoire in the post.”
The Wesson brothseason, Air Force transfer
Danny Hummer, and true ers from the Columbus
suburb of Westerville —
freshman Musa Jallow.
sophomore Andre and
6-foot-9 freshman Kaleb
Big man and the wesson
— also will play in the
brothers
backcourt. Andre Wesson
Sophomore Micah

EMPLOYMENT

REAL ESTATE

Help Wanted General

Houses For Sale

Saturday, November 4th at 10:00 a.m.
We will be selling the personal property of Judy Thornton.
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Please Visit ǁǁǁ͘ĂƵĐƟŽŶǌŝƉ�ĐŽŵ for Item Pictures.

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Amy Carter

MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

OH-70004516

www.markporterauto.com

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Holtmann brings new vibe
The Buckeyes are may
be thin on talent, but
Holtmann has made sure
the espirit de corps is
strong.
That included entertaining players and
recruits at his house on
most every Saturday
night throughout the
summer. He hopes it
helped them develop the
camaraderie they’ll need
for the inevitable tough
times this season.
“That’s been a good tool
that we’ve used not only to
show the recruits a good
time but to get to know
each other,” Tate said.

REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT
Rentals
SEEKING TENANTS
For 55+ Community
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Rents starting at
$425 per month!
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bargains!

CLASSIFIEDS

ESTATE AUCTION

November 7, 2017
Please vote

LOCATED AT 608 THIRD ST., MASON, WV 25260. WE’LL BE SELLING THE ESTATE OF
THE LATE REX HARDING WHITE. TURN AT POOR BOYS TIRES AND FOLLOW SIGNS.

REAL ESTATE — SALES AT 12:00 NOON

Deed Book 243 Pg. 294 Mason Corp. Being Lot #58 on 3rd St., Above Center St. in the Town of Mason, North Half
of Lot 59 &amp; North Half #61 on Fourth St., above Center St., in Mason. Parcel #2 Lot #60 on South Side of Horton St.,
Mason, WV. Home has 4 Rooms &amp; Bath; 28 x 24 Garage, 2 Out Buildings; Gas Heat; Very Large Corner Lot.

BOAT, 4-WHEELER-CAMPER

“YES”

2007 8' Maverick Truck Camper, Nice, Electric, Jack's included; 2009 14' Starcraft Boat &amp; Trailer
w/25 HP Mercury Motor, Garage Kept.; 2005 Honda 450S, 4-Wheeler, Garage Kept; Utility Trailer.

TOOLS &amp; MISC.

Craftsman Band Saw; MTD 5HP Chipper Shredder; Poulan Chain Saw; B &amp; D 18V Weed Eater; Ex-Cell Power Washer;
3 Speed Drill Press; Campbell Hausfeld Air Compressor; 16" Feather Lite Weed Eater; Craftsman 19V
Drill-Light Combo; Propane Gas Weed Eater; Deer Feeder; Prowler Trolling Motor; Wen-All Saw;
Rods &amp; Reels; Fishing Tackle; Hand Tools; Humm Bird Fish Finder; plus much more.

HOUSEHOLD

Lg 49" Big Screen TV; Burgundy Recliner; Antique Round Oak Table &amp; Chairs; Small Glider; Blue Lift Chair; Sentry 24
Gun Safe; 5 Gal. Churn; 6 Place Setting of Blue Willow; 3 Pc. LR Suite; Set of McGuffys Readers; Poster Bed; plus more.

GUN'S

Marlin Mod 88 22L Auto Rifle; Antique Shotgun; RWS 177 Cal. Pellet Rifle w/Scope

FOOD

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON #66, RICKY PEARSON, JR, #1955

304-773-5447 or 304-593-5118 www.auctionzip.com for pictures

OPEN HOUSE-WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 1, 2017 FROM 4:00 PM TO 6:00 PM

OH-70007969

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID &amp; BANK LETTER OF CREDIT IF NOT KNOWN BY AUCTION CO.
TERMS FOR SALE OF REAL ESTATE: 10% DOWN NON-REFUNDABLE, DUE THE DAY OF AUCTION. BALANCE DUE IN 30 DAYS OR UPON
DELIVERY OF THE DEED. REAL ESTATE BEING SOLD AS IS. BEING SOLD W/LOW RESERVE. COME PREPARED TO PURCHASE.
OH-70009914

Houses For Rent

Product Specialist

SATURDAY, NOV. 4, 2017 @ 10:00 A.M.

EXECUTRIX: DEANNA STEWART

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Terms of Sale:
Cask &amp; Check
w/Proper I.D.

FSBO – 2BR, 1BA home
conveniently located on
Sanders Drive. Great starter
or rental, all appliances
included. Call 304-399-6453.

Land (Acreage)

played in 29 games off the
bench last year.
Kaleb Wesson and fellow freshman Kyle Young,
who had committed to
Butler but then followed
Holtmann to Ohio State,
are likely to play signiﬁcant minutes.

for the RENEWAL of the
Raccoon Township Fire Levy
This is NOT an increase!

�8B Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THANK YOU!

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ur
ct
Pi
ors.
d of Direct
of the Boar

Chairman

OH-70009877

Holzer Health System would like to thank
everyone who assisted in creating another
successful Treat Street for the children
within our local communities. This event
would not be possible without the support
and hard work of the Gallia County Junior
Fair Board, Holzer’s Event and Activities
Team, all participating departments, Holzer
Maintenance, the Gallia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
and most of all, our community members.
Thank you to all attendees for embracing this
event and making Treat Street a part of your
family’s Halloween tradition!

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