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                  <text>Different
ways to
Thanksgiving

Gallipolis
in
lights

Super 25
football
team

EDITORIAL s 4A

ALONG THE
RIVER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 46, Volume 51

Gallia County
warrant sweep
gathers 7

Gov. candidate visits Meigs
By Lorna Hart

See SWEEP | 5A

Valentine

Sinclair

We need accountability and
transparency in our government
and to be creating relationships
and advocating for things that
POMEROY — “We need
are important to people.”
someone who will stand up for
Schiavoni (D-Boardman) has
working people, for the environment, for common sense issues, represented District 33 since his
but you have to work ﬁrst,” 2018 appointment to the vacant seat
gubernatorial candidate Joe Schi- in 2008. He was elected to a full,
four-year term in 2010, reelected
avoni told the crowd gathered
in 2014, and has been Demoat a Meigs County Democratic
cratic Leader of the Senate since
Party meeting Thursday.
2013.
“People want to see someone
Schiavoni is a Youngstown
doing something to get the
native who now resides with his
job done, rather than throwing
family in Boardman, and he said
grenades at the opposition all
the concerns facing residents in
day, which doesn’t get the work
his district, that include Appaladone.”
chian counties Columbiana and
He continued, “We need leadMahoning, are similar to those
ers that want to do something,
leaders who listen and bring
people’s voices to the Statehouse.
See CANDIDATE | 5A

Special to OVP

Staff Report

GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Sheriff
Matt Champlin has announced that a warrant
sweep was conducted by the Gallia County
Sheriff’s Office working in conjunction with the
U.S. Marshals Service, the Ohio State Highway Patrol, the Gallipolis Police Department,
the Mason County Sheriff ’s Department and
the Point Pleasant Police Department, Friday
morning, resulting in the arrest of seven individuals.
Taken into custody based on recent indictments
handed down by the Gallia County Grand Jury
were Brittany Miller, 31, for Theft and Receiving

Sunday, November 19, 2017 s $2

Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Governor candidate Joe Schiavoni and State
Rep. candidate Taylor Sappington spoke to the
Meigs County Democrats on Thursday evening.

Flemings

Three Gallia
residents
headed to prison
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County Prosecuting
Attorney Jason Holdren announced the recent sentencings of three individuals in the Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
The following individuals were sentenced to
prison terms by Judge Margaret Evans of the Gallia County Common Pleas Court. Cody L. Sinclair,
27, of Rio Grande, was recently sentenced to three

Morgan McKinniss|OVP

Students from Washington Elementary helped load the food they collected for Grace United Methodist Church’s food pantry, which will
in turn be given away to those in need.

See PRISON | 5A

Washington Wildcats give back
Columbus man
convicted on
charges at jury trial
Staff Report

POMEROY — A Columbus man was convicted
on a pair of charges during a one-day jury trial in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court on Thursday.
Andrew Robinson, 38, was found guilty of vandalism, a ﬁfth-degree felony, and failure to appear,
See CONVICTED | 5A

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Television: 5A
Along the River: 6A
Weather: 8A

By Morgan McKinniss

fruits.
The school was able
to ﬁll up an entire truck
bed with food that was
picked up Friday mornGALLIPOLIS —
ing by church members.
Washington Elementary
students are giving back Washington has been givto the community by sup- ing food to local organizations like Grace for over
porting the food pantry
at Grace United Method- ten years, and supporting
GUMC for the last ﬁve.
ist Church.
“Ann Sickels used to
For the past week classwork here and she was a
es have been competing
to collect non-perishable big part of our school,”
said Megan Neal, teacher
food items that will help
at Washington. “She went
GUMC help the comto their church too.”
munity. Each day was
The annual donations
themed differently so that
by Washington students
students would bring in
have helped support
a variety of food items;
Grace in their mission to
green day for green
feed the hungry and help
vegetables, orange day
had students bringing in the needy. Their pantry
started 15 years ago servorange food items and

mmckinniss@aimmediamidwest.
com

ing Gallia County residents. They started with
just a few jars of baby
food, and the youth group
went around town with a
shopping cart going door
to door asking for donations.
“We could not do
this without the community support,” said
Linda Sager, a member
at Grace. “Our church is
good about giving donations but it is the community that donates and
brings in the food.”
While the church seeks
to help those in need,
the students learn an
important lesson by giving back.
“It helps them to realize that other people

aren’t as fortunate as you
are, be thankful for what
you have,” said Neal. “We
talk about how others
aren’t as fortunate and do
not have a Thanksgiving
dinner.”
The GUMC food pantry is open every Monday
and Tuesday from 10
a.m. until noon. People
seeking help are required
to bring in some form of
proof of address, which is
the only qualiﬁcation.
To learn more about
Grace and its outreach,
call them at 740-4460555. Grace is located at
600 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Reach Morgan McKinniss at 740446-2342 ext 2108.

Middleport council discusses sewer project

B SPORTS
Sports: 1B-5B, 7B
Comics: 6B
Classifieds: 7B

By Erin Perkins

awareness to the cost
of repaving Main Street
in brick after the sewer
is replaced. The sewer
MIDDLEPORT —
project itself costs $2.3
Community members
million, with the cost of
living on Main Street in
brick being $460,440.
Middleport expressed
Woodall suggested using
their concerns involving
pavement, so they could
phase one of the sewer
not only pave the streets
project to the village at
Middleport’s recent coun- effected by the project,
but surrounding streets
cil meeting.
as well. Mayor Sandy
Village AdministraIannarelli and Solicitor
tor Joe Woodall raised

eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

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CONVERSATION
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Richard Hedges informed
Woodall if new brick is
not used to replace the
old brick, then the ordinance will be in violation
as it currently states the
streets will be redone in
their original form. The
council will deliberate
this motion further as a
change to the ordinance
will be needed to replace
brick with pavement.
Residents spoke out

about not having an
adequate amount of
information, such as the
process of developing the
contract and a step-bystep plan of the project’s
duration provided to
them. One complaint
regarded the construction going later than 6
p.m. Woodall assured the
resident the construction
See SEWER | 5A

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2A Sunday, November 19, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
BETTY JO FENT
CROWN CITY —
Betty Jo Fent, 67, of
Crown City, passed away
on Friday November 17,
2017 at her residence.
Born August 9, 1950
in Gallia County, she
was the daughter of the
late Lawrence and Hazel
McClure Henry. In addition to her parents she
was preceded by her
husband; Ronald E. Fent;
by three brothers; Danny,
Earl, and Ray Henry; and
by one sister; Peggy Ford.
Betty was a homemaker
and a member of the
Providence Missionary
Baptist Church.
She is survived by
three brothers; Kenny
Henry of Crown City,
Steve (Linda) Henry of
Crown City, and James
(Judy) Henry of Florida;
one sister; Vickie (Ken-

THOMAS CHILDS

neth) Ward of Crown
City; two special nieces;
Lori Lykins of Springﬁeld
and Kayelynn Williams
of Crown City and by
several other nieces and
nephews. She is also survived by her beloved dog
“Baby.”
Funeral services will
be at noon on Monday,
November 20, 2017 at
Providence Missionary
Baptist Church with Pastor Troy Delaney ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Providence Cemetery.
In lieu of ﬂowers please
make contributions to the
Providence Missionary
Baptist Church in Betty’s
memory. Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home is
assisting the family. An
online guest registry is
available at www.waughhalley-wood.com.

DEATH NOTICES

WEST ALEXANDRIA
— Thomas R. Childs,
72, of West Alexandria,
died Friday morning,
November 17, 2017 at his
residence.
Born on September 4,
1945 in Akron, the son
of the late Frederick T.
&amp; Ruth C. (Ross) Childs,
he was a 1963 graduate
of Buchtel High School
in Akron. Tom graduated
from the University of
Akron in 1968 with two
majors, Labor Economics and Labor Relations.
He was a member of
Phi Kappa Fraternity;
Treasurer of Omecron
Delta Epsilon, National
Economics Honorary;
Distinguished ROTC
student in 1967 and a
Distinguished Military
Graduate in 1968. He
was commissioned as an
ofﬁcer in the U.S. Army
serving with the Medical

KRAMARCZYK
GALLIPOLIS — Wilma Kramarczyk, 61, Gallipolis,
died Friday morning, Nov. 17, 2017, in the Arbors at
Gallipolis. In keeping with her wishes there are no
calling hours or funeral services.
Cremation services are by the Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

Services Corps during
1968 to 1971. He served
at Triplar Army Medical Center in Honolulu,
Hawaii, receiving the
Army Commendation
Medal for service as a
captain.
In 1973, Tom received
his Master’s degree in
Health Services Administration from The Ohio
State University. From
1979 to 1983, he was the
administrative assistant
and assistant executive director at Grant
Hospital. From 1983 to
1985, the independent
consultant and accessor
to Ohio Hospital Association in Columbus. From
1985 to 2008, assistant
executive director/chief
operating ofﬁcer, Holzer
Medical Center; System
Vice President of Holzer
Health System.
He was a member,

diplomat, fellow and
life fellow to American
College of Health Care
Executives and had
received Reagents Award
for distinguished service.
He served as president of
Church Counsel at New
Life Lutheran Church in
Gallipolis and as a current
member of Grace Lutheran Church in Eaton. He
had served as president
of board for the American
Red Cross, chairman of
board for FACTS; Zoning
Commission, all in Gallipolis ; chairman of board
for Foundation of Healthy
Communities at Ohio
Hospital Association of
Columbus.
He is survived by his
wife of 21 years: Nancy
Brubaker Lathey Childs;
daughter: Kelly (Andrew)
Pyles; granddaughter:
Chelsea (Eric) Brooks
and great-grandson: Car-

son Brooks; sister and
brother-in-law: Joanne
and Curt Cowles of
Canada Lakes, Mich., and
many friends and neighbors.
Family will receive
friends from5 to 7 p.m.,
Monday, November 20,
2017, at Barnes Funeral,
Home 220 East Main
Street Eaton, Ohio.
A Celebration of Life
Service will be 11 a.m.
Tuesday, November
21, 2017 at the Grace
Lutheran Church 111
Lutheran Drive Eaton,
OH with Pastor John
Jackson ofﬁciating. Private Interment will be
in Fairview Cemetery in
Gratis. A memorial service will be held at New
Life Lutheran Church in
Gallipolis at a later date.
Condolences may be sent
via www.barnesfuneralhome.com.

Eagles donates to Pomeroy FD

HILES
MARYSVILLE — Betty Lou Hiles, 83, Marysville,
Ohio died Saturday morning, Nov. 18, 2017, in the
Urbana Health Care Center, Urbana, Ohio. Funeral
arrangements will be announced by the CremeensKing Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
MILLER
POMEROY — Bonita Miller, 68, Pomeroy, died
Friday evening, Nov. 17, 2017, in the Meigs Emergency Department, Pomeroy, Arrangements will be
announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

The Meigs Aerie
No 2171 of the
Fraternal Order
of Eagles recently
made a donation
of over $750 to
the Pomeroy Fire
Department. The
organization has
given out over
$86,000 to various
charities the last
four years. Pictured
is President John
Lehew and Pomeroy
Fire Department
member Steve
Hartenbach.

HATTEN
BIDWELL — Garnet E. Hatten, 94 of Bidwell,
Ohio, died Saturday Nov. 18, 2017, at Holzer Senior
Care, Bidwell. Arrangements will be announced by
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis.
KEMPER
BIDWELL — Everett L. Kemper, 87, of Bidwell,
Ohio, died at Holzer Senior Care, Bidwell, Ohio, Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017.
Friends and family may call at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017,
from 10 a.m. until 11 a.m. Graveside Services will
be held at the Morgan Center Cemetery near Vinton
immediately following visitation.

For the best local news coverage, visit
MyDailySentinel.com

Story Law Ofﬁce
Steven L. Story Attorney at Law
Licensed in OH, WV, and KY
www.storylawofﬁce.net
216 East Main Street, Suite 200
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Fax 740-992-4249

Photo by Dave Harris

OHIO NEWS BRIEFS

Ohio court justice deletes
Facebook post on sexual history

Justice William O’Neill tells The Associated Press
on Saturday he agreed with a commenter who said he
was being “insensitive.”
He initially edited the post Friday to remove details
CLEVELAND (AP) — An Ohio Supreme Court jusabout the women before deleting it altogether. He tells
tice and Democratic gubernatorial candidate says he
people to “lighten up” in a new post.
deleted a Facebook post outlining his sexual history
The initial post caused a furor, leading to condemafter being criticized in part for potentially identifying
nation by members of both parties and the court’s
some of the women.
chief justice.
O’Neill’s post said he was speaking out while “the
dogs of war” were calling for Democratic U.S. Sen. Al
Franken to resign after groping accusations.
Social media commenters say he was trivializing
sexual assault.
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

OH-70009386

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-446-2342

LARGE FARM AUCTION

A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

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Prices are subject to change at any time.

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TERMS: CASH, GOOD CHECK. BANK LETTER
OF CREDIT REQUIRED GUARANTEEING
CHECK FUNDS TO AUCTIONEER BY NOV.
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AUCTIONEER: Herbert Erwin
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CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@aimmediamidwest.com

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — A young camel named
Scooby is back at home after going on a 90-minute
jaunt that blocked trafﬁc and provided an uncommon
photo opportunity for motorists in northwest Ohio.
The Blade reports 1-year-old Scooby escaped from
his fenced-in home in Springﬁeld Township on Friday
afternoon and began walking along township streets,
prompting wide-eyed reaction.
A neighbor of the owner who was on her way home
from work alerted the Lucas County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
Owner Nabil Shaheen was then contacted and led
Scooby safely home.
Shaheen said he bought Scooby as a baby and is
glad no one was hurt.

Police: 2 killed, 1 wounded in
Ohio during argument at home

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police say two men
have killed each other during an argument and a third
man is critically wounded in Ohio’s capital city of
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
Columbus.
Columbus police have identiﬁed the men fatally
shot late Friday as 26-year-old Calvin Carmichael and
30-year-old James Willis III. Twenty-eight-year-old
Anthony Sparkes is hospitalized in critical condition.
It’s unclear who shot him.
Police say the shootings occurred after Willis went
to
Carmichael’s home. Witnesses reported hearing an
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argument
near the front porch of the home followed
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by
several
gunshots.
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Police say Willis tried to drive himself to a hospital
but didn’t get far and was taken by medics to Grant
&lt;RXU�VXSSRUW�RI�6XWWRQ�7RZQVKLS�
Medical Center in Columbus where he was proLV�JUHDWO\�DSSUHFLDWHG�
nounced dead. Carmichael was pronounced dead at
the same hospital.

THANK YOU

OH-70015297

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

Scooby the camel returned to
Ohio owners after getting loose

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 19, 2017 3A

GALLIA, MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday,
Nov. 19

Tuesday,
Nov. 21

HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
Church will hold service
at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m.,
Sunday School at 10
a.m., Worship service at
10:30 a.m.,Pastor Bob
Hood, Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Road. 740-4467495 or 740-709-6107. All
welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — Worship Service in Family Life Center 9 a.m.,
Sunday School, 9:30
a.m., Morning Worship
Service, 10:45 a.m. All
church Thanksgiving
Dinner noon, no evening
worship, First Church of
the Nazarene.
ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church
Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evening service 6 p.m.

POMEROY — The
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Ladies Auxiliary will hold a bake sale
beginning at 10 a.m. at
Powell’s Foodfair.
GALLIPOLIS — Christian Care Circle Ladies
meeting, 10:30 a.m. Bob
Evans at Rio Grande.
Studying “women of
the Old Testament.” All
ladies welcome.

Wednesday,
Nov. 22
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
Church will hold service
at 7 p.m.
ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
Thanksgiving service 7
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS —
Church of the Nazarene,

740-446-7495 or 740709-6107. All welcome.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill Baptist
Church Sunday School
10 a.m., Evening service
6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — First
GALLIPOLIS — WorBaptist Church will hold
a free lunch at noon. Hap- ship Service in Family Life Center 9 a.m.,
pens fourth Saturday of
Sunday School, 9:30
every month.
a.m., Morning Worship
Service, 10:45 a.m. All
church Thanksgiving
Dinner noon, no evening
worship, First Church of
the Nazarene.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
Church will hold service
at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS —
Coffee Klatch at 9:45
a.m., Sunday School
HARRISON TOWNat 10 a.m., Worship
SHIP — Dickey Chapel
service at 10:30 a.m.
Church will hold service
Birthday and anniat 7 p.m.
versary celebration
ADDISON — Addison
following,Pastor Bob
Freewill Baptist Church,
Hood, Bulaville Chrisprayer meeting 7 p.m.
tian Church, 2337
GALLIPOLIS — ChilJohnson Ridge Road.
dren’s Ministry 6:45 p.m.,

no services.

Saturday,
Nov. 25

Sunday,
Nov. 26

Wednesday,
Nov. 29

Teen and young adult
Bible Study in the Teen
Room, 7 p.m., Prayer and
Praise in the Sanctuary
, 7 p.m., Choir Practice
6:45 p.m., First Church of
the Nazarene.

Friday,
Dec. 1
GALLIPOLIS —
Prayer Force, Harman
Chapel, 8:45 a.m., First
Church of the Nazarene.

Sunday,
Dec. 3

Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Road. 740-4467495 or 740-709-6107.
All welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — Worship Service in Family Life Center 9 a.m.,
Sunday School, 9:30
a.m., Morning Worship
Service, 10:45 a.m. All
church Thanksgiving
Dinner noon, no evening
worship, First Church of
the Nazarene.

Wednesday,
Dec. 6

GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m.,
Sunday School at 10
a.m., Worship service
at 10:30 a.m. Thanksgiving/ Christmas
dinner following by
reservation with special
singing by Bobby Gordon., Pastor Bob Hood,

HEMLCOK GROVE
— The Coolville Community Choir, under the
direction of Martha Sue
Matheny will present
“It’s Christmas Time”
at 7 p.m. at Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.
Light refreshments will
be served following the
concert.

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis Neighborhood
Watch is seeking new
members to assist in its
constant surveillance of
the community for suspicious activity. Those looking to become involved

can join the meetings at
the Gallipolis Justice Center building on Second
Avenue across the street
from the Gallia County
Courthouse. The meetings
are at 1:30 p.m. the ﬁrst
Monday of every Month.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Card Showers
Janice Church Layne
will have a birthday Dec.
1. She will be 90. Cards
can be sent to 4542
Maughn Drive, Dayton,
OH 45431 or 633 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH,
45631.

Monday,
Nov. 20
LETART TWP. — The
regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m.
at the Letart Township
Building.
ROCKSPRINGS —
The next meeting of the
Meigs County Agricultural Society (Senior
Fairboard) will be at 7
p.m. at the fairgrounds.
All meetings are open to
the public.
BIDWELL — The
American Red Cross
will hold a blood drive at
River Valley High School
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Thursday,
Nov. 23

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia Veterans Service
Ofﬁce will be closed
Thursday and Friday.

WV and beyond over the
age of six. Phone 4460021.

Friday, Dec. 1

POMEROY — Meigs
County Public Employee
Retirement Inc., Chapter
74 will meet at the Mulberry Community Center,
located at 156 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. A ChristMIDDLEPORT —
mas lunch will be served
Snack and Canvas with
at noon, followed by the
Michele Musser will
regular business meeting.
be held at 6 p.m. at the
PERI District 7 RepresenRiverbend Art Council,
tative Gregory Ervin will
290 North 2nd Avenue,
be present and provide
Middleport, Ohio. For
updates on statewide
more information and
issues. A $5 gift exchange
to reserve a space call
Michele at 740-416-0879 will be held for those who
or Donna at 740-992-5123 wish to participate.

Monday,
Nov. 27

Wednesday,
Nov. 29

Saturday,
Dec. 2

LEBANON TWP. —
The Lebanon Township
Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 4 p.m. at the township
garage.

NEW HAVEN — The
New Haven Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary
Christmas Craft Show
will be held from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the New
Haven Fire Station. The
Christmas Parade will be
held at 11 a.. with Santa
at the Fire Station after
the parade.
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Community
Association Christmas
Celebration will be held
with the Christmas market from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m., carriage rides from
1:30-4 p.m., Community
Band performance at 4
p.m. and parade at 4:30
p.m.

Thursday,
Nov. 30

POMEROY — The
10th annual holiday program titled “Oh Hol(l)y
Night” will be held at the
Meigs County Extension
Ofﬁce, 113 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Classes
will be held from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.
Pre-registration and
pre-payment ($25) are
required. For more information call 740-992-6696.
GALLIPOLIS — The
French 500 Free Clinic
will be open for those
who do not have medical
insurance or are underinsured from 1 – 3 p.m.
on Thursday, October 26
at 258 Pinecrest Drive in
the old Hillcrest Clinic
MERCERVILLE —
Free Thanksgiving dinner off of Jackson Pike in Galat Hannan Trace Elemen- lipolis (Spring Valley),
tary from 4 to 8 p.m. For next to the Arbors Nursmore information contact ing Home. No appointment is necessary. The
Cheryl, 740-256-1362.
volunteer medical doctors
POMEROY — Meigs
and nurses are happy to
County Commissionserve free of charge the
ers will meet at 11 a.m.
residents of Southeastern
for their regular weekly
Ohio and Mason County,
meeting.

Wednesday,
Nov. 22

presented to the veteran’s
service commission board
one ﬁnal time for the
year. Emergency grants
can still be submitted
after this date but will not
be reviewed until January
2018.

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Monday,
Dec. 4
MIDDLEPORT —
The next meeting of the
Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will
be held at 9 a.m. at the
ofﬁce located at 97 N.
2nd Avenue in Middleport. Due to the end of
the year budget closing,
the organization will
not be having the regularly scheduled November
meeting and will instead
combine November with
Decembers meeting for
all emergency grants to be

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FREE oil changes for a year!
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OH-70015439

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

All offers only valid on 11/24/2017

For more local
news coverage,
visit us online at
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4A Sunday, November 19, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Different
ways to
Thanksgiving
Is Thanksgiving still celebrated in the same
manner as depicted by Norman Rockwell? I like to
think so, especially if you have a large family that
gathers at a relative’s home, seated at the dinner
table and anticipating the arrival of that baked
golden image of nutritional delight known as a
turkey, fresh out of the oven. Nowadays, you need to add the sights and
sounds of football on television, a
cacophony of voices and laughter as
a dozen separate conversations are
held at once, and that inescapable
but precious sensation of belonging.
In times much different than those
Kevin
celebrated by the great Rockwell’s
Kelly
magazine covers, it’s unsurprising
Contributing that Thanksgiving is observed in
columnist
different ways. Some individuals
will bypass it for whatever reasons
they have for doing so, but even
those people separated from family or friends by
distance, work demands or because of relations
scattered all over the country, still try to work
something of the holiday into their lives.
Since the day revolves around the traditional
meal, even Food Network chefs recommend
options if only you and someone special are having
dinner together. Turkey can still be a part of the
celebratory feast, only in a smaller format. Others have suggested that if turkey doesn’t appeal
to you or you don’t want all of the leftovers, then
roast a chicken and minimize the portions of sides
to what you know you can handle. The point is,
eat something on a day designed for those with
healthy appetites.
Given my immediate family is fewer in number — and I’m not as voracious an eater as I was
once notorious for doing — we have been exploring other menu items for Thanksgiving. Turkey
remains the centerpiece of the dinner, but my wife
buys a breast or two of white meat rather than the
whole bird. One year we even tried turkey club
sandwiches that were rather pleasing, but having
a part of a turkey on which to nosh for a few days
satisﬁes the need. That also eliminates the requirement for stufﬁng, but we’re still debating mashed
potatoes and gravy or nothing in its place.
Vegetables are of primary importance with
sweet potatoes topping the list. Not likely to make
such list, though, is green bean casserole topped
with French onions — not a big favorite with my
wife and her mom, and not so desirable for me
that I’ll ﬁght for its inclusion. Trying something
else is ﬁne with me. Dessert, you ask? Pumpkin
pie or roll and coffee make my day.
When not eating, we tend to catch something of
the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on the tube,
followed by the dog show. Although our attention
is focused on the screen, it is something that we
do together, as are the games of chance and battle
for supremacy in board entertainment we play
across the card table that doubles as a work site
for my wife’s craft projects.
That’s when we remember Thanksgivings past
and the people we spent them with, prompting
a modicum of melancholy because some of them
aren’t with us anymore, but also a lot of memories
of good times, and how those fun-ﬁlled occasions
are still there, not simply a fond memory.
As for Black Friday? We forget it. Sure, it can
save you a lot of money on those big ticket items
that have been marked down for that day only as
long as the supply lasts. But for us the sense of
belonging I referred to earlier means a lot more,
and who wants to be up early so you can be among
the ﬁrst to stream into the stores without the beneﬁt of daylight? Hardier souls will disagree, but if
you’re lucky enough to have the day after Thanksgiving off from work or school, why not enjoy it
and sleep off all of that turkey you had?
That’s one way to celebrate Thanksgiving. Others probably have more active schedules to pursue
during the holiday, but we take a less strenuous
path. Whatever you do, though, be safe and have
fun. That’s the best way to observe a time when
we all count our blessings and share some of our
good fortune during this more joyous part of the
year.
***
The death of premier gossip columnist Liz
Smith at 94 on Nov. 12 occurred the day after I
ﬁnished reading R. Scott Williams’ richly-detailed
biography of Oscar Odd McIntyre, “An Odd Book:
How the First Modern Pop Culture Reporter
Conquered New York.” Comparing the journalist
who grew up in Gallipolis to the work of Smith is
an apples-and-oranges exercise in that Ms. Smith
reported on a world of entertainment and celebrity
far different than the one McIntyre ﬁrst presented
to the people back home and throughout America
starting in the post-World War I era.
The freshness of such reporting in a practically
untouched ﬁeld of newspaper and periodical journalism helped make McIntyre the most popular
and highly-paid columnist of his time. With few or
See KELLY | 5A

THEIR VIEW

Uranium One was one bad deal
It’s here again. The Uranium One scandal is in
our faces again as President Donald Trump and
not a few other Republicans are calling for a special counsel to investigate
it. Attorney General Jeff
Sessions seems to be
saying, hmmm, probably
not, and a good part of
the press says the whole
thing is bosh. It is not
bosh. It is corruption writ
large.
What this scandal
is about is the Clinton
involvement in a Canadian company selling
Russia its vast uranium
holdings, including 20
percent of U.S. uranium
resources. Before, during
and after the deal, the
Clinton Foundation got
something like $145 million from people associated with that company,
and the deal had to be
OK’d by agencies including the State Department
then headed by Hillary
Clinton. A consequence
was to give Russia a huge
strategic advantage over
the United States, not
so much on the issue of
weaponry as on the issue
of energy.
“Do we want (Russian President Vladimir) Putin to have a

later became Uranimonopoly on this,”
Jay
um One to KazakhMike McFaul, an
ambassador to Rus- Ambrose stan. As related
Contributing by the Times, the
sia under Clinton
columnist
ﬁnancier, Frank
is quoted by The
Giustra, wanted to
New York Times as
obtain an interest
asking. “Of course
in some money-gushing,
we don’t,” he answers,
and any number of other big time uranium mines
experts absolutely agree. there, and Clinton lent a
mighty hand.
Our uranium satisﬁes
At a dinner with the
only about a ﬁfth of our
country’s rights-abusing,
annual needs in nuclear
plants, and we have to go dictatorial president,
he gave support for this
out to a foreign market
guy being in charge of an
now dominated by Rusinternational group that
sia.
monitors elections. This
Clinton defenders say
was contrary to American
there is no evidence that
foreign policy at the time
Clinton as secretary
and in contrast to what
of state had a word to
Hillary Clinton as a senasay about ratifying the
tor had said about this
deal. And let’s assume
leader, the Times reportlegal innocence even
ed. It obviously pleased
as we note that when
the autocrat, though, and
an ex-president, a senapretty soon the country’s
tor, then a secretary of
uranium agency had
state and possible presisigned a deal with Giusdential candiate have a
tra. A few months later,
foundation getting lots
the Clinton Foundation
of money from foreign
received $31.3 million
governments, there is a
donation from Giustra.
problem. There is a conWhat you see here
ﬂict-of-interest problem,
is the power of an exa corruption problem, a
president to inﬂuence
problem of putting personal interests over one’s events, not least of all
when his wife is a senator
country.
or a secretary of state or
Look, for instance, at
when she is running for
how Bill Clinton accompresident. Does anyone
panied a ﬁnancier of a
truly believe that some
Canadian company that

of the corrupt regimes
sending the foundation
gobs of money were truly
doing it to help people in
distress?
Here is something we
do know.
Early on, when Hillary Clinton ﬁrst became
secretary of state, it was
agreed that the foundation would publicly
announce all donations
from foreign governments. It in fact did not
disclose early millions
in donations from the
chairman of Uranium
One until the Times dug
up the information in
Canada.
The Clintons got some
personal dough out of
all of this, too. A Russian bank involved in the
Uranium One transaction
gave him $500,000 for a
20-minute speech after
which Putin is said to
have thanked him. Consider that it would take a
median-income worker in
the United States more
than 15 years to earn that
much without a thank
you from Putin. Some
rules just don’t apply to
everyone.

Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist
for Tribune News Service. Readers
may email him at speaktojay@aol.
com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
miered in New York.
In 1936, Germany and
Italy recognized the Spanish government of Francisco Franco.
In 1959, “Ben-Hur,”
Today’s Highlight in History:
the Biblical-era spectacle
On Nov. 18, 1942,
“The Skin of Our Teeth,” starring Charlton Heston,
had its world premiere in
Thornton Wilder’s PulitNew York.
zer Prize-winning alleIn 1966, U.S. Roman
gory about the history of
Catholic bishops issued
humankind, opened on
a Pastoral Statement on
Broadway.
Penance and Abstinence,
which did away with the
On this date:
rule against eating meat
In 1883, the United
States and Canada adopt- on Fridays outside of
Lent.
ed a system of Standard
In 1976, Spain’s parliaTime zones.
In 1886, the 21st presi- ment approved a bill to
dent of the United States, establish a democracy
after 37 years of dictatorChester A. Arthur, died
ship.
in New York.
In 1978, U.S. Rep. Leo
In 1916, the World War
I Battle of the Somme pit- J. Ryan, D-Calif., and
four others were killed in
ting British and French
Jonestown, Guyana, by
forces against German
members of the Peoples
troops ended inconclusively after 4 1/2 months Temple; the killings were
followed by a night of
of bloodshed.
In 1928, Walt Disney’s mass murder and suicide
ﬁrst sound-synchronized by more than 900 cult
members.
animated cartoon,
In 1987, the congres“Steamboat Willie” starring Mickey Mouse, pre- sional Iran-Contra comToday is Saturday, Nov.
18, the 322nd day of
2017. There are 43 days
left in the year.

Thought for Today:
“If an historian were to relate truthfully all
the crimes, weaknesses and disorders of
mankind, his readers would take his work for
satire rather than for history.”
— Pierre Bayle (bayl),
French philosopher and critic (born this date in 1647, died
1706).

mittees issued their ﬁnal
report, saying President
Ronald Reagan bore “ultimate responsibility” for
wrongdoing by his aides.
A ﬁre at London King’s
Cross railway station
claimed 31 lives.
In 1991, Shiite (SHEE’eyet) Muslim kidnappers in Lebanon freed
Anglican Church envoy
Terry Waite and Thomas
Sutherland, the American
dean of agriculture at the
American University of
Beirut.
In 2000, actors Michael
Douglas and Catherine
Zeta-Jones were married
in an extravagant wedding at The Plaza hotel in
New York City.
Ten years ago: Paki-

stani President Gen.
Pervez Musharraf’s
(pur-VEHZ’ moo-SHAH’ruhvz) government dismissed a last-ditch U.S.
call to end emergency
rule, a day after a visit
by Deputy Secretary of
State John Negroponte
(neh-groh-PAHN’-tee).
A methane blast ripped
through a coal mine in
eastern Ukraine, killing 101 miners. Chris
Daughtry’s band won
favorite pop-rock album
for “Daughtry,” as well
as breakthrough artist
and adult contemporary
artist at the American
Music Awards. MTV
Arabia, an Arab version
See HISTORY | 5A

�LOCAL/EDITORIAL/TELEVISION

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sweep
From page 1A

Stolen Property, Jennifer R. Richards, 29,
Possession of Heroin,
Frederick A. Bennett, 50,
Aggravated Possession of
Drugs and Identiﬁcation
Fraud, Terry R. Waugh,
33, Possession of Heroin,
Aggravated Possession
of Drugs, Aggravated
Trafﬁcking in Drugs,
Aggravated Trafﬁcking in
Heroin and Possession of
Heroin, Joey D. Russell,
29, two counts of Endangering Children, Sarita
Sheets, 29, Theft, and
Nicholas Price, 30, Registered Sex Offender who
failed to notify change
of address. All of these
indictments served are
for felony offenses.

Sewer

“I am thankful for the
working relationships
that we have with our
fellow law enforcement
agencies which are proving successful in sending
a message that if you
violate the law, we will
ﬁnd you and bring you
to justice,” said Champlin. “Today’s operation
is just another example
of how we are taking the
ﬁght to criminals to hold
them accountable for the
offenses they’ve committed against our citizens.
I would like to thank
Prosecuting Attorney
Jason Holdren and his
staff who have worked
tirelessly to present
these cases to the grand
jury so that together we
can take these offenders
into custody and provide
closure to these investigations.”

Prison

ficking in Cocaine, Possession of Heroin, Tampering with Evidence
From page 1A
and Failure to Appear.
Jess Flemings, 27, of
years in prison for his
convictions of Failure to Vinton, was recently
sentenced to 18 months
Comply with an Order
in prison for violating
or Signal of an Officer
the terms of his commuand Receiving Stolen
nity control. Flemings
Property, a firearm.
was originally placed on
Melvin S. Valentine,
community control for
41, of Gallipolis, was
his conviction of Theft
recently sentenced to
three years in prison for of a Motor Vehicle in
June of 2017.
his convictions of Traf-

Convicted
From page 1A

a fourth-degree felony.
According to a release
by Meigs County
Prosecutor James K.
Stanley, the vandalism
conviction stems from
an incident that occurred
on Feb. 27, 2017, while
Robinson was an inmate
at the Middleport Jail.
Robinson had repeatedly
kicked the holding cell
door until the door
handle and locking
mechanism broke and
dislodged from the door.
The door could not be
ﬁxed for approximately
two weeks, and the

from the rest of the pack,
Liz Smith, dubbed the
“Grand Dame of Dish,”
From page 4A
being one of them. Most
of them considered themselves to be reporters,
no rivals when he began
and that’s not hard to
producing what became
known as “New York Day- accept because they did
trod the light fantastic in
by-Day,” one can ﬁnd an
explanation for his legacy search of news presented
in a more personal and
as one of the most-read
freewheeling fashion than
writers of his day. When
what you saw on the front
others entered the ﬁeld,
they pursued other topics page.
Among them was
or focused narrowly on
what was once called cafe Walter Winchell, whom
Williams found to occasociety, the stage, radio
sionally refer to Odd as
or movies.
“O.O. McIntyresome.”
McIntyre did all of
Winchell always sought
that and more, humanizing such zooming stars validation and respect
as a true newsman but
as screen idol Rudolph
never quite earned either
Valentino or humorist
due to his showy and
Will Rogers to the point
his readers believed they vindictive nature. Instead,
the reporter designation
too knew them personally. Beyond the column, is truly owned by Odd
McIntyre, who not only
McIntyre’s human interhad the experience to
est pieces and proﬁles
back up the claim but the
for such publications as
Cosmopolitan made him balance to report on the
good and bad that made
a household name for
up life on the Great White
almost two full decades.
The gossip columnists Way that so utterly captiwho followed in the wake vated him.
of McIntyre’s passing on
Valentine’s Day 1938 had Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated with
Ohio Valley Publishing for 21 years,
their signature styles to
resides in Vinton, Ohio.
distinguish themselves

For more local news
coverage, visit us online
at MyDailySentinel.com

Marina. Council member
Doug Dixon suggested
dedicating the marina
to William Aldridge,
From page 1A
who, according to Dixon
was a prominent man of
team came against an
Middleport. Iannarelli
emergency and could
will look into the process
not leave the situation
until morning. Residents of renaming and dedicatare not pleased with the ing a location.
Woodall informed the
state of their driveways
council the cost of the
and some are unable to
repair for the sidewalk at
access their garages.
the Masonic temple will
Woodall assured them
be around $1,000 for the
a 304 mix will be used
concrete. He asked the
until the workers can
lay asphalt in spring and council for a Christmas
will aide in giving them bonus this year for his
workers. Council memaccess to their garages.
ber Emerson Heighton
Woodall shared with
the council a letter from maked a motion for
the Ohio Department of approval and the council
Natural Resources grant- agreed.
Assistant Chief and
ing them $34,000. The
jail administrator Mony
village plans on using
the funds to renovate the Wood reported on park-

ing violations around the
village. Wood is in need
of a speciﬁc ordinance
to assist him in making
residents mind parking restrictions such as
the number of vehicles
they have occupying the
streets and the parking
of trailers and boats on
the streets. Iannarelli
and the council will be in
search of such ordinances for Wood and will
report back to him.
Fiscal Ofﬁcer Sue
Baker discussed an ordinance for the cafeteria
(Section 1-25) plan in
which the IRS needs an
updated resolution for
their insurance plans
starting Dec.1, 2017 and
ending Dec. 30, 2018.
Council member George
Hoffman maked a

motion for approval and
the council agreed.
Jay Edwards was
in attendance of the
meeting and spoke to
the council and guests
of how he appreciates
visiting Middleport.
He wants a relationship
with the residents of
the village by making
himself available to them
personally to learn their
concerns. Iannarelli
regards Edwards as a
truthful man who speaks
from his heart, according to statements at the
meeting.
Edwards gave the village access to his personal cell phone number and
encouraged residents to
reach out to him.

Candidate

the needs of urban and
rural residents of Ohio
given recent budget cuts
that have had a negative
impact on local governments.
“It is unfair, there is
an easy way to run government, and that is to
just take a pot of money
and split it up and tell
everyone what they get
when it comes to school
and local government
funding.”
He said the preponderance of local levies
and taxes are occurring
because “we have woefully underfunded local
governments, particularly in poor rural areas. We
need to shift the priorities, and invest in local
governments by closing
tax loopholes and ﬁnding alternative sources of
revenue streams.”
In a bipartisan attempt
to expand broadband
internet access across
Ohio, Schiavoni and
John Eklund (R-Munson
Township) have reintro-

duced SB 225.
The measure would
not raise taxes and
instead use funds from
the Ohio Third Frontier,
a state initiative created
in 2002 to encourage the
growth of technologybased, companies, industries and jobs in Ohio.
Schiavoni was joined
by Taylor Sappington,
(D-Nelsonville) candidate for State Representative Ohio House
District 94 in 2018.
Sappington said his
interest in politics began
when he attended a state
leadership conference in
2006 addressed by Jon
Husted, then Speaker of
the House of Representatives.
“My mom was a single
parent and money was
tight. I had to fundraise
to attend the conference. She was in nursing school and we just
needed a little help for a
couple of years.”
After hearing Husted’s
views on people receiv-

ing beneﬁts and the
proposed legislation that
would have forced his
mother to take a job and
abandon her education,
Sappington said he felt
Husted did not understand how beneﬁts were
helping his family, and
others like his, in their
efforts to become self
sufﬁcient.
“Today, my mother is
a nurse, helping people
every day, making a
positive contribution to
the community. She just
needed a little temporary
assistance.”
“I learned at that
conference what I still
believe today, what has
motivated me to run for
ofﬁce; instead of working for us, legislators
often work for wealthy
corporations, and I
didn’t want to be a part
of that, I wanted people
like my family to have a
voice.”

an Israeli missile ripped
through a two-story
home in a residential
From page 4A
area of Gaza City. Justin
of the pop-culture chan- Bieber dominated the
nel, began broadcasting. American Music Awards
in Los Angeles, winning
Five years ago: In the
deadliest single attack in three trophies, including
Israel’s offensive against artist of the year.
One year ago: PresiIslamic militants, 12
people were killed when dent-elect Donald Trump

signaled a sharp policy
shift to the right by picking Alabama Sen. Jeff
Sessions as attorney general, Kansas Rep. Mike
Pompeo to head the CIA
and Michael Flynn as his
national security adviser.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Brenda Vaccaro is 78. Author-poet

From page 1A

in Meigs, and that what
is needed are “leaders
who will listen to the
people and bring their
voices to the Statehouse.”
“We in government
need to create relationships with the people,
and advocate for things
that are important to
them.” he said, “instead
of letting large corporations direct the agenda.”
As governor, Schiavoni said he would
continue pushing his
agenda of job creation
and investment in communities, as well as support of education and
affordable health care,
“all, I believe to be, vital
components to solving
the problems facing
Appalachian Ohio.”
Schiavoni was asked
by The Daily Sentinel
how he would balance

Middleport Jail could
not use the holding cell
during that period of
time.
The failure to appear
conviction stems from
Robinson’s failure to
appear in court for his
ﬁnal pretrial conference
scheduled for Aug. 10,
2017, after previously
being released on his own
recognizance.
Sentencing is scheduled for Monday, Nov.
20 before Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas
Judge I. Carson Crow .
The maximum penalty for
the vandalism charge is
12 months in prison while
the maximum penalty
for the failure to appear
charge is 18 months.

Kelly

Sunday, November 19, 2017 5A

History

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

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7

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8

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

6

PM

Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

Margaret Atwood is 78.
Actress Linda Evans
is 75. Actress Susan
Sullivan is 75. Country
singer Jacky Ward is 71.
Actor Jameson Parker
is 70. Actress-singer
Andrea Marcovicci is 69.
Rock musician Herman
Rarebell is 68. Singer
Graham Parker is 67.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19

6:30

7

PM

7:30

(3:00) NASCAR Auto Racing Football Night in America

Ford EcoBoost 400 (L)

Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing.

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

(:20) NFL Football Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys Site: AT&amp;T Stadium --

(L)

Arlington, Texas (L)
(:20) NFL Football Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys Site: AT&amp;T Stadium -Ford EcoBoost 400 (L)
(L)
Arlington, Texas (L)
ABC 6 News ABC World
The 45th Annual American Music Awards Stars gather to honor the best of the music
The Toy Box (SF) (N)
at 6pm (N)
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2nd Opinion America's
Masterpiece Classic "The
Antiques Roadshow "Junk Masterpiece "The Durrells Masterpiece "Poldark"
"Crohn's
Heartland
in the Trunk: Seven"
in Corfu" Louisa, Leslie, and Demelza and Lt. Armitage
Collection" (N)
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Spiro come to the rescue. (N) reveal their true feelings. (N)
News at 6
ABC World
The 45th Annual American Music Awards Stars gather to honor the best of the music
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(4:25) NFL Football Cincinnati Bengals at
60 Minutes
Wisdom of the Crowd
NCIS: Los Angeles "This Is Madam
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Be True"
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PBS
Masterpiece Classic "The
Washington Globe Trekker "Food Hour: Masterpiece "The Durrells Masterpiece "Poldark"
NewsHour
Week
The Story of Chocolate"
in Corfu" Louisa, Leslie, and Demelza and Lt. Armitage
Collection" (N)
Spiro come to the rescue. (N) reveal their true feelings. (N)
Weekend (N)
(4:25) NFL Football Cincinnati Bengals at
60 Minutes
Wisdom of the Crowd
NCIS: Los Angeles "This Is Madam
Denver Broncos (L)
"Denial of Service" (N)
What We Do" (N)
Secretary (N)
(3:00) NASCAR Auto Racing Football Night in America

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

BlueBlood "Unsung Heroes" Blue Bloods "Hold Outs"
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Backstabbers" BlueB. "Rush to Judgement" Blue Bloods
In Depth
Poker Night Poker Heartland Nationals
24 (ROOT) NCAA Football Georgia Tech at Duke Site: Wallace Wade Stadium -- Durham, N.C.
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter (N)
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) NCAA Basketball
NCAA Basketball Puerto Rico Tip-Off Championship (L)
NCAA Basketball Charleston Classic (L)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

The Wrong Mother (2017, Thriller) Brooke Nevin, Vanessa I Am Elizabeth Smart (2017, Crime Story) Jazmine
The Wrong Neighbor ('17,
Marcil. TV14
Campanale, Peter Graham-Gaudreau, Alana Boden. TV14 Thril) Michael Madsen. TV14
(5:10)
Home Alone ('90, Com) Joe
(:40)
Inside Out (2015, Animated) Amy Poehler, (:45)
Elf (2003, Comedy) James
Pesci, Daniel Stern, Macaulay Culkin. TVPG Bill Hader, Kaitlyn Dias. TVPG
Caan, Bob Newhart, Will Ferrell. TVPG
(3:00) Pirates
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides ('11, Act) Johnny Depp. Jack Sparrow
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of
of the Car... learns both he and Blackbeard are looking for the fountain of youth. TV14
Ricky Bobby ('06, Com) Will Ferrell. TV14
H.Danger
Thunder
Paradise Run Paradise Run Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends
Friends
SVU "Deadly Ambition"
SVU "Poisoned Motive"
SVU "Pattern Seventeen"
SVU "Transgender Bridge" SVU "Great Expectations"
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Search (N)
Search (N)
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Seattle" (N)
This Is Life "Lost Vegas" (N)
(5:00) The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, ...
Now You See Me ('13, Cri) Common, Jesse Eisenberg. TVPG
Good Behavior
The Walking Dead "The
The Walking Dead
The Walking Dead "Some The Walking Dead "The Big (:15) Talking Dead "805"
Damned"
"Monsters"
Guy"
Scary U" (N)
(N)
Alaska: The Last Frontier
Alaska: The Last Frontier
Alaska: Exposed (N)
Alaska/Frontier (N)
EdgeAla. "Barnstorm" (N)
(5:00)
The Next Three Days (2010, Drama)
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben Affleck, Bruce Willis. A drill rigger
Elizabeth Banks, Liam Neeson, Russell Crowe. TV14
and his crew embark on a mission to blow up an asteroid heading for Earth. TV14
Monsters Inside Me
Monsters Inside Me
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Intruders (N)
Snapped "Emma Raine"
Criminal Confessions
Snapped "Danielle Parker" Snapped "Emma Raine"
Snapped: Killer Couples
"Eunice" (N)
"Sandy Murphy/Rick Tabish"
CSI: Miami "Meltdown"
CSI "Die by the Sword"
CSI: Miami "In the Wind"
CSI: Miami
CSI: Miami "L.A."
E! Live/Red Carpet "The 2017 American Music Awards" Kardash "Beauty Queen"
The Kardashians (N)
WAGS L.A.
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Mom
Mom
The Story of Us "The March The Story of Us "The Fight Eyewitness War "Deadliest Hell on Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of ISIS
of Freedom"
for Peace"
Weapon"
Syria's descent led to the rise of the Islamic State.
(3:00) NASCAR Hot Pass
Post-race "Homestead" (L) NASCAR Victory Lap (L)
Shotgun
Caf./ Octane ISU FigSkate
(4:30) Basket. TUF "Make It a Fight"
UFC Fight Night Featuring UFC match-ups. Preliminaries Victory (N)
CFB Predictions (N)
Ancient Aliens "The
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island: Digging Deeper "Forever Family: Extended" Peril strikes
Pharaohs' Curse"
"The Journey So Far"
during a dive as Rick and Marty Lagina try to locate the original Money Pit. (N)
Housewives Atlanta
Atlanta Social (N)
Housewives Atlanta
Xscape: Still Kickin' It! (N) Married to Medicine
(4:30)
Life Eddie Murphy. TV14
Boyz 'N the Hood ('91, Dra) Laurence Fishburne. TVM
Martin 2/3
Martin 3/3
House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
Hunters (N) Hunters (N) IslndLif (N)
IslndLif (N)
(4:30) The
John Wick (2014, Action) Adrianne Palicki,
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra ('09, Act) Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje.
Cabin in t... Bridget Moynahan, Keanu Reeves. TVMA
An elite military unit known as G.I. Joe battle an evil organization. TVPG

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Three Billboards /(:15)
Fast and Furious ('09, Act)
Paul Walker, Vin Diesel. Dom returns to America, when
Letty is killed, to find her killer and settle the score. TV14
(:55)
Notorious ('09, Bio) Mohamed Dione, Derek
Luke, Jamal Woolard. The life and death of Notorious
B.I.G., whose life ended early on his way to the top. TVMA
Shameless "Where's My
White
SMILF
Meth?"
Famous
"Wolves"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

(:10) The Great Wall (2016, Action) Tian Jing, Pedro

10

PM

10:30

Curb "Never (:35) Tracey
Pascal, Matt Damon. A mercenary warrior fights an endless Wait for
Ullman's
horde of monsters trying to get past The Great Wall. TV14 Seconds" (N) Show
The Divergent Series: Allegiant (2016, Adventure) Theo (:05)
The Postman
James, Zoë Kravitz, Shailene Woodley. Tris must escape
('97, Dra) Will Patton, Larenz
with Four beyond the wall the encircles Chicago. TV14
Tate, Kevin Costner. TVMA
Active Shooter: America
White
Shameless "God Bless Her SMILF (N)
Under Fire "Columbine,
Rotting Soul" (N)
Famous
Colorado"
"Duality" (N)

�A long the River
6A Sunday, November 19, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

File photos

This scene welcomes all people visiting the park from the corner of Second Avenue and Court Street.

Let there be light in the park
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis
in Lights will once more blaze
forth for its ﬁfth year in Gallipolis City Park the night before
Thanksgiving, this Wednesday,
with lighting festivities beginning at 5:30 p.m. and the lighting ceremony beginning at 7
p.m.
“We’ve been setting up for a
while now,” said GIL Chairperson Shari Rocchi. “We’ve been
setting up since before Halloween. We’ve got around 1,300
lighting balls this year and

we’ve mostly maintained what
we’ve had. We have a few new
surprises though coming.”
Rocchi said over 150 organizations and individuals have
signed up with GIL to take part
in the organization’s Tree Walk
to place a custom Christmas
tree along the pathways in City
Park.
Miss Gallipolis in Lights
Alexis Wothe is anticipated
to “throw the switch.” State
Representative Ryan Smith is
anticipated to also be part of
the evening’s activities.
Tractor and wagon rides will
be available around the park

during the event and Santa
Claus is anticipated to be there
to speak with families.
“We’re adding some greenery to the light poles so everything looks a lot more beautiful during the day and we’ll
have our a rain light tree,” said
Rocchi.
Gallipolis in Lights has been
continually putting light balls
in City Park since the 2013
holiday season. Rocchi and
Lance Clifford were credited
with starting the lighting event
through discussions over social
media with the community in
order to gauge regional inter-

est. Group members were
then gathered and volunteers
started to create light balls
out of chicken wire. The idea
originated with a community
in Greensboro, N.C. Volunteers
make light balls out of chicken
wire by cutting a certain length
of wire and rolling it. The balls
are then fastened together with
zip-ties to shape a globe. Lights
are then strung through a ball
with typically 50 lights in each
ball.
In May of past years, GIL has
hosted an Electric Walk and
Run with participants dressing
in neon colors and clothing

light displays.
According to the Gallia Convention and Visitors Bureau
through a partnership with the
Gallipolis in Lights Committee, the groups have developed
a new group package for tour
bus operators and group leaders throughout the region. The
bureau is reaching out to these
bus operators and inviting
them to experience Gallipolis
in Lights displays this holiday
season. The groups aim to not
only bring visitors for the lights
displays, but also to discover
downtown activity opportunities.

Christmas Tree Walk has become a popular part of Gallipolis in LIghts

The lighted manger scene made a return appearance at
Gallipolis in Lights.

This “Merry Christmas” lighted sign is displayed
across from City Park along First Avenue overlooking
the Ohio River.

The iconic Gallipolis City Park bandstand all decked out in Christmas lights and other
decorations.

Santa’s House awaits its main resident in Gallipolis
City Park.

One of the 1,000 lighted balls that hang throughout Gallipolis City Park. The lights are
attached to a ball of chicken wire.

AT LEFT: One of more than a dozen Christmas trees
on display, thanks to sponsorships provided by local
businesses and residents.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Courtesy

Pictured front row, from left, Brooklyn Gibson and Levi Stout; back row, front left, Jonathan Saxton,
Ella Elliott, Harley hale, Braxton Crews.

Fall festival royalty
PATRIOT — Southwestern Elementary held its annual Fall Festival
fundraiser Saturday, Nov. 4. Students
were given the opportunity to run for
fall festival royalty by selling tickets
for a $100 Walmart gift card. The top
raising boy and girl from grades 3-5
were crowned king and queen, the
top raising boy and girl from k-2 were

crowned prince and princess, and
the top raising boy and girl from preschool were crowned little mister and
little miss.
Royalty included King Braxton
Crews, Queen Harley Hale, Prince Jonathon Saxton, Princess Ella Elliott, Little
Miss Brooklyn Gibson, Little Mister
Levi Stout.

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Reducing stress
during the holidays
tion. Make sure your goals or
For some the holidays can
planned accomplishments are
be an exciting, fun time, but
speciﬁc and time bound.
for others the holidays may
Acknowledge how you feel. If
feel stressful and isolating. The
there’s been a recent tragedy or
Mayo Clinic suggests these ﬁve
loss in your family, allow yourtips to reduce stress and enjoy
self to acknowledge those emothe holidays.
tions. You aren’t obligated to be
Plan Ahead. Whether it be
Laura
happy because it is the holiday’s.
traveling, purchasing gifts or
Cleland
If you need to cry or mourn take
cooking, planning can help
Contributing
the time to do so.
alleviate unforeseen stressors.
columnist
Reach out. Seek out holiday
Prior planning can also provide
events or social gatherings if you
additional time to remedy those
are struggling with the holiday blues.
stressors that may arise before the
Volunteering can also provide a sense
holiday.
of hopefulness and can help lift your
Stick to Healthy Habits. When it
spirits while making new friends.
comes to food moderation is key. Try
If you are seeking to get involved and
to avoid over eating or eating too much
of one thing. Also, do not skip exercis- don’t know how, contact Laura Cleland,
Creating Healthy Communities Project
ing. Regular exercising can actually
decrease stress hormones in the brain, Director at the Meigs County Health
Department via Laura.cleland@meigsand cause you to feel more relaxed.
health.com or (740) 992-6626.
Be Realistic. There is only so much
one can do, so don’t put added stress
Laura Cleland is a health educator for the Meigs
on yourself with unrealistic expectaCounty Health Department.

HELPING YOU AGE BETTER

caregiver participants learn to
National Family Caregiver
minimize the potentially negative
Month is celebrated each year in
impacts of caregiving through
November. In what better month
discussions and classroom work
could we express our gratitude
that emphasize self-care and
for the over 90 million family
empowerment. The program is
caregivers nationwide who prooffered several times through
vide countless hours of care to
the year in our ten-county distheir loved ones?
Pamela
trict area. If you are interested
The Area Agency on Aging
District 7 (AAA7) would like to K. Matura in learning more or would like
thank all family caregivers for the Contributing to add your name to the list for
when a class comes near you,
selﬂess acts you do each day. We columnist
please call the AAA7 at 1-800encourage you to make caregiv582-7277.
ing for yourself a priority as a
The AAA7 also has available help
caregiver.
through the Caregiver Support Program
Did you know our Agency has a
which is designed to assist caregivers
special program available to help famwith ﬁnding answers about how their
ily caregivers in their caregiving role?
caregiving role impacts their life and
Powerful Tools for Caregivers is a sixwhere to ﬁnd resources and services
week program that provides caregivto decrease caregiver stress. Caregivers with a wealth of self-care tools to:
reduce personal stress; change negative ers may be caring for an older adult,
their adult child with a disability, or the
self-talk; communicate their needs to
caregiver may be a grandparent caring
family members and healthcare or service providers; communicate effectively for their grandchildren or non-relative
child. Services include assessments,
in challenging situations; recognize
training, information and assistance,
the messages in their emotions; deal
supplemental services, respite, as well
with difﬁcult feelings; and make tough
as answers and counseling. For more
caregiver decisions. Class participants
information about the Caregiver Supalso receive a copy of The Caregiver
Handbook that has been developed spe- port Program through the Area Agency
on Aging District 7, please call 1-800ciﬁcally for the class.
582-7277.
Powerful Tools for Caregivers is an
evidence-based, self-care educational
Pamela K. Matura is executive director, Area Agency on
program for family caregivers that has
Aging District 7.
proven to be highly effective, helping

OH-70015358

Caregiver Month
observed in November

Sunday, November 19, 2017 7A

�LOCAL/WEATHER

8A Sunday, November 19, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

POMEROY — Meigs County Health
Department will be closed on Nov. 23:
Thanksgiving Day and Nov. 24. Normal
business hours will resume at 8 a.m. on
Nov. 27.

however, no one will be denied services
because of an inability to pay an administration fee for state-funded childhood
vaccines. Please bring medical cards
and/or commercial insurance cards, if
applicable. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia and inﬂuenza vaccines are also
available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a list
of accepted commercial insurances and
Medicaid for adults.

of need,” stated a news release from the
clinic. Nominations are being accepted
from now until Dec. 15. All nominations
need to be hand delivered in a sealed
envelope or mailed to Ohio Valley Animal Clinic, 39350 Union Ave., Pomeroy,
OH 45769. Nominations can be submitted anonymously. The submissions
should include the following: Child/
Children’s ﬁrst and last name; Address of
Family; Age; Gender; Interests; Clothing
size; Reasoning for being nominated.

Immunization
clinic

Nominations for
Christmas assistance

Middleport Christmas
celebration

POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
Immunization Clinic on Tuesday from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian. A $15.00 donation is appreciated for immunization administration;

OHIO VALLEY — Each location of
The Ohio Valley Animal Clinic would
like to give back to the community this
Christmas by supporting a child or children of a deserving family in need. “We
are asking our community’s assistance
for nominating this family. This family
will be chosen based upon a combination of sincerity of nomination and level

MIDDLEPORT — Vendors are still
needed for the Christmas Market on
Dec. 2 as part of the Middleport Christmas Celebration. The annual Christmas
Market is held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
in the Riverbend Arts Council building. Tables will be provided for your
displays. The cost is $20 fee per 8 foot
table, $10 for an additional table. The

Holiday office closure

Feeder Cattle
Yearling Steers: 600-700
pounds, $127-$148.50;
700-800 pounds, $125$137. Yearling Heifers:
600-700 pounds, $115$140; 700-800 pounds,
$118-$130. Steer calves:
300-400 pounds, $120$170; 400-500, $122.50$159; 500-600, $127.50$148.50. Heifer Calves:
300-400, $120-$146.50;
400-500, $85-$140;
500-600, $115-$132.50.

Feeder bulls: 250-400
pounds, $130-$169; 400600, $114-$159; 600-800,
$99-$137.

Bulls
All bulls, $67-$95.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $400$900; Feeder Pigs,
$5-$15; Boars, $3; Sows,
$27; Hogs, $10-$37;
Goats, $115 (Meat), $20$140 (Aged).

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

42°

36°

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.

53°
31°
56°
37°
83° in 1958
16° in 1959
(in inches)

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

0.00
1.91
1.90
42.83
37.74

Today
7:16 a.m.
5:12 p.m.
8:04 a.m.
6:24 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:17 a.m.
5:11 p.m.
8:58 a.m.
7:06 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Nov 26

Full

Dec 3

Last

New

Dec 10 Dec 18

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

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

Major
11:20a
12:10p
1:05a
1:58a
2:51a
3:43a
4:33a

Minor
5:36a
6:25a
7:17a
8:10a
9:03a
9:55a
10:45a

Major
---12:37p
1:29p
2:22p
3:15p
4:07p
4:57p

Minor
5:59p
6:49p
7:41p
8:34p
9:27p
10:18p
11:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
Copious amounts of snow fell in
the mountains of Arizona on Nov.
19, 1993. Mt. Lenunon received 24
inches of snow. Up to 17 inches accumulated in Red River.

Mostly sunny and
chilly

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™

Logan
40/24

Waverly
40/25
Lucasville
41/25

Mostly sunny and
chilly

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.28
16.64
21.34
12.35
12.64
24.79
12.79
26.02
34.49
12.82
16.40
34.50
17.30

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.63
+0.20
-0.61
-0.39
-0.34
-0.09
+0.17
-0.60
-0.29
-0.04
-1.70
+0.70
-1.30

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Partly sunny

Marietta
41/27
Belpre
42/27

Athens
41/25

St. Marys
41/27

Parkersburg
41/26

Coolville
41/26

Elizabeth
42/27

Spencer
42/26

Buffalo
43/27
Milton
43/27

Clendenin
42/23

St. Albans
43/27

Huntington
43/26

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
50/44
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
62/52
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
77/57
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

49°
32°

Mostly cloudy and
chilly

Murray City
40/24

Ironton
42/27

Ashland
42/27
Grayson
42/26

FRIDAY

45°
27°

Wilkesville
41/25
POMEROY
Jackson
42/27
41/25
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
43/27
43/26
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
38/26
GALLIPOLIS
43/27
43/27
43/27

South Shore Greenup
42/26
41/25

39
300

ATHENS —Dr. Mathews and staff
at 530 W. Union St., Suite A, Athens,
will be conducting their annual holiday
food drive beginning Nov. 1. Donations
of non-perishable food items maybe
dropped off from Nov. 1 through Dec.
21. The ofﬁce will match all donations.

54°
28°
Cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
40/24

Portsmouth
42/26

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

Holiday food drive

THURSDAY

46°
28°

Breezy with clouds
and sun

Adelphi
40/25
Chillicothe
41/26

WEDNESDAY

59°
33°

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

2

Q: What causes lake-effect snow?

SUN &amp; MOON

TUESDAY

A: Cold air moving over warm water.

Precipitation

MONDAY

Breezy and much colder today with a ﬂurry or
two. Clear tonight. High 43° / Low 27°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

49°
31°
39°

RACINE — Meigs County Road 29,
Bowmans Run Road, will be closed for a
slip repair beginning Monday, Nov. 13.
It will remain closed for approximately
2 weeks until work is completed. The
slip is located 0.4 mile west of C-28,
Bashan Road.

Members of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Daughters of the American Revolution
recently cleaned debris from around the
George Washington Marker located on
State Route 124 near Long Bottom. The
marker was installed there in 1932 by the
Daughters of the American Revolution.
George Washington made the trip down the
Ohio River in 1770, he was accompanied
on this trip by his friend and Indian Guide,
Kiashuta. The two leaders and their parties
camped overnight near the mouth of the
Shade River in Meigs County. The Marker
is located a short distance from the Mouth
of the River. In 1932 at the observance, the
D.A.R and the Red Men’s Lodge enacted
the drama of the landing of flatboats
with members of the Red Men’s Lodge
portraying the Indians. There were nearly
2,000 people in the audience. During the
bicentennial of 1976 another rededication
Courtesy photo
of the site was held by the D.A.R.

Cows
Comm &amp; Utility, $54$66; Canner/Cutter, $47$52.

TODAY

Road closure

DAR clears history marker area

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock report of sales from
Nov. 15.

Middleport Fire Department Auxiliary
will sell concessions. If you are interested or have questions, please call 740992-5877 or 740-992-1121. Electricity is
available upon request. Spaces are limited so please call as soon as possible.

Charleston
43/26

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
20/13

Billings
48/35

Montreal
38/20
Toronto
38/27

Minneapolis
39/28
Chicago
34/28

Denver
61/34

Detroit
39/28

New York
56/36
Washington
54/36

Kansas City
52/38

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
54/31/s
25/18/sn
54/32/s
58/38/pc
53/31/pc
48/35/pc
49/38/pc
59/33/r
43/26/c
58/29/s
55/34/s
34/28/s
38/25/pc
40/28/c
40/26/pc
64/42/s
61/34/s
47/34/s
39/28/c
83/65/s
68/44/s
37/26/pc
52/38/s
65/44/s
57/33/s
77/57/pc
42/29/pc
85/68/s
39/28/s
48/27/s
64/45/s
56/36/pc
60/37/s
79/50/pc
55/36/pc
80/53/s
40/26/sf
56/26/r
58/31/s
58/32/s
45/33/s
49/33/s
62/52/pc
50/44/r
54/36/pc

Hi/Lo/W
59/39/pc
23/10/s
59/41/pc
49/42/s
48/32/s
49/26/sn
49/39/sh
42/35/s
47/32/s
56/35/s
56/34/pc
48/39/pc
47/33/s
47/37/s
46/33/s
67/48/s
62/33/pc
56/38/s
46/34/s
83/68/pc
70/52/s
48/35/pc
57/40/s
69/52/c
59/36/pc
76/60/pc
51/36/pc
81/70/pc
48/28/s
54/36/s
64/54/pc
46/38/s
62/42/s
74/59/pc
47/34/s
80/56/pc
43/33/s
36/28/pc
55/34/s
52/35/s
59/40/pc
51/39/c
66/57/r
51/40/pc
52/37/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
54/32

High
Low

El Paso
65/38
Chihuahua
68/39

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

94° in Altus, OK
-1° in Opheim, MT

Global
High
Low

Houston
68/44
Monterrey
66/46

Miami
85/68

105° in Gaya, Niger
-50° in Kerbo, Russia

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
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Editor’s Note: The Meigs and Gallia
Briefs will only list event information
that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Truex still
favorite at
NASCAR’s
media day
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) —
NASCAR’s four championship contenders were seated elbow-to-elbow
previewing their upcoming title
race when they were asked to give
one word to describe the season.
“Amazing,” said Martin Truex Jr.
Brad Keselowski and Kevin
Harvick both said the season was
“long,” while Kyle Busch went with
“trying.” But Truex? Well, he’s got
nothing to complain about after a
truly dominating season.
Truex goes into Sunday’s ﬁnale
at Homestead-Miami Speedway as
the clear favorite to win the title.
He has a series best seven wins
and six were at 1.5-mile tracks.
Homestead is a 1.5-mile track.
He leads the series in nearly
every meaningful statistic, and
if the points earned all season
weren’t reset
for Sunday’s
“If it wasn’t set
ﬁnale, he’d
back at zero, we’d have already
probably all be
won his ﬁrst
Cup title.
congratulating
“If it wasn’t
Martin (Truex)
set back at
right now. But it zero, we’d
is.”
probably all
— Brad Keselowski, be congratuNASCAR driver lating Martin
right now,”
said Keselowski. “But it is.”
So it’s winner-take-all race, and
everything Truex has built this season is on the line. He faces three
former series champions, each of
them looking for their second title.
For Harvick, it would be the ﬁrst
in Stewart-Haas Racing’s new partnership with Ford. If Harvick wins,
it will be SHR’s third championship since 2011, second since the
elimination format was introduced
in 2014 and ﬁrst for a team in a
ﬁrst-year relationship with a manufacturer since Cale Yarborough in
1978.
Keselowski is seeking a crown to
go with his 2012 title, which was
not won under this format. He had
to beat Jimmie Johnson that day on
points, and pulled it off. He will try
to give team owner Roger Penske
two major championships this year.
Penske won the IndyCar title with
Josef Newgarden earlier this year.
If either Harvick or Keselowski
wins, it would be the ﬁrst title for
Ford since 2004.
They are up against a pair of Toyotas, the dominant manufacturer
this season.
Busch is seeking a repeat of
his 2015 title, which some have
marked with an asterisk. Busch
missed the ﬁrst third of the season
with injuries suffered in a seasonopening race at Daytona, but still
raced himself into title contention
on a shortened schedule.
And he’s chasing Truex, who has
taken his Furniture Row Racing
team to a level beyond the alliance it has with Joe Gibbs Racing.
Busch has been good this season,
but he’s not had anything close to
the year that Truex has put together. With Truex such the clear favorite, it made for quiet media day for
the championship competitors. —
except when Busch and Keselowski
were asked why they have never
squashed their rivalry.
Keselowski tried to downplay a
feud. Busch didn’t mince words.
“Sometimes you just don’t like a
guy, fact of the matter,” Busch said.
“I never ran into Matt Kenseth, I
don’t think Matt Kenseth ever ran
into me, so there is a respect factor
out there on the race track and you
certainly do a better job sometimes
when you’re around some of those
guys that you may or may not necessarily like. But as once a wise
man told me, I think it was Chase
Elliott, I race those like they race
me.”
Elliott used that line last week
to address his aggressive racing
See TRUEX | 7B

Another
re-start for
Coleman
SPORTS s 3B
Sunday, November 19, 2017 s Section B

OVP Super 25

Photos by Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Point Pleasant junior quarterback Cason Payne (7) avoids a Philip Barbour defender while looking downfield for an open receiver during the first half of
a Nov. 11 Class AA opening round playoff game at OVB Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point leads way with 9 picks, sweeps special honors
By Bryan Walters

2017 OVP
SUPER 25
FOOTBALL TEAM

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Another season of high
school football. Another season of passing out accolades
to the Big Blacks.
Point Pleasant once again
dominated the selection
process while landing an
area-best nine choices on the
2017 Ohio Valley Publishing
Super 25 Football Team, as
voted on by the sports writers for the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel publications.
The OVP Super 25 team
consists of only players on
programs within Gallia,
Mason and Meigs counties,
and the selection process
was based on overall contributions to each individual’s
team — whether it be on
offense, defense or special
teams.
This area “all-star” squad
was also assembled to
reward and acknowledge
some of our ﬁnest local
athletes for another memorable season of high school
football.
There were 11 offensive
players and 11 defensive
players chosen, as well as
three all-purpose choices for
players that did a little bit of
everything well. A spot was
also reserved for a special
teams player, rather it be a
placekicker or a punter.
A player of the year was
chosen on each of side of the
ball and a coach of the year
was also honored by OVP.
In all, the overall goal for
the selection committee
was to come away with the
tri-county’s 25 best football
players. There were also several very good football players who did not make this
list, though all were given
consideration.
We’ll start this list, however, by announcing that 11thyear Point Pleasant football
coach Dave Darst won OVP
Super 25 Coach of the Year
honors for a third consecutive season.
Darst guided PPHS to its

Offense
QB: Cason Payne (PP)
RB: Riley Roush (SHS)
and Justin Brumﬁeld
(PP)
WR: Josh Wamsley
(PP) and Weston Baer
(MHS)
OL: Christopher Hesson (WHS), Nathan
Mitchell (GA), Wyatt
Bissell (EHS), Austin
Arnold (SHS) and Alex
Gibbs (PP)

Point Pleasant senior linebacker Tucker Mayes (42) rushes in on Meigs
quarterback Zach Helton (10) during an Oct. 13 non-conference football
game at OVB Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

10th consecutive postseason
appearance while putting
together an area-best 8-2
overall record.
In fact, the Big Blacks
were one of only two programs in the nine-team area
that put together a winning
season — with Southern
(7-3) being the other.
Gallia Academy and
Wahama ﬁnished even with
identical 5-5 marks, while
Meigs (4-6) and River Valley (3-7) came in just ahead
of both South Gallia (2-8)
and Hannan (2-8) in the win
column.
The selections mimicked
those ﬁnal records, with
PPHS and the Tornadoes
accounting for a dozen of
the 25 spots on the 2017
squad.
The Blue Devils, Marauders and White Falcons were
next with three selections
apiece, while the Eagles and
Rebels each earned one spot
on the list. The Wildcats
were the only local program
not to have a selection.
On the offensive side of

the ball, PPHS junior quarterback Cason Payne was
again named the Offensive
Player of the Year.
After becoming the ﬁrst
QB in Point history to rush
and pass for 1,000 yards in
the same season as a sophomore, the southpaw signalcaller followed up with an
impressive junior campaign
that resulted in almost 2,600
yards of total offense.
Payne set a school record
for passing yards in a season
by completing 119-of-181
passes for 1,653 yards,
which led to 18 TD tosses
and just one interception.
Payne also ran for 925 yards
and 16 TDs on 118 carries.
The offensive line selections included four seniors
in Wahama’s Christopher
Hesson, Nathan Mitchell of
Gallia Academy, Eastern’s
Wyatt Bissell and Point’s
Alex Gibbs. Southern junior
Austin Arnold completed
the ﬁve-man front.
A pair of seniors landed
in the starting backﬁeld,
with Southern’s Riley Roush

Defense
DL: Cameron Nott
(PP), Sean Myers (SHS)
and Nate Barth (PP)
LB: Johnnie Board
(WHS), Jacob Campbell
(GA), Tucker Mayes
(PP), Lane Cullums
(MHS) and Cole Young
(RV)
DB: Alec Smith (PP),
Patrick Brown (RV) and
Dylan Smith (SHS)
All-Purpose
Christian Thomas
(WHS), Zach Bartrum
(MHS) and Justin
McClelland (GA)
Special Teams
Sviatoslav ‘Savat’ Hryhorenko (SG)
Offensive Player of the Year
Cason Payne (PP)
Co-Defensive Players of the
Year
Tucker Mayes (PP)
Coach of the Year
Dave Darst (PP)
and Point Pleasant’s Justin
Brumﬁeld earning those coveted spots.
Brumﬁeld amassed 1,234
rushing yards and 16 TDs
on 127 carries in the regular
season, while Roush had
See SUPER 25 | 7B

�2B Sunday, November 19, 2017

SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Astros’ Altuve, Marlins’ Stanton named MVPs
NEW YORK (AP)
— Jose Altuve and the
Houston Astros have
grown together, enduring an arduous rebuild
and coming out the other
side among baseball’s
best.
These days, nobody is
standing taller.
Altuve won the American League MVP award
Thursday, towering over
New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge by a
wide margin and capping
Houston’s championship
season with another
piece of hardware.
Giancarlo Stanton won
the NL MVP, edging
Joey Votto of the Cincinnati Reds in the closest
vote since 1979.
The 5-foot-6 Altuve
drew 27 of the 30 ﬁrstplace votes in balloting
by members of the Baseball Writers’ Association
of America.
“I was surprised that
I won it,” Altuve said. “I
wasn’t expecting this.”
It was a landslide long
in the making. Altuve
has been in Houston
since general manager Jeff Luhnow took a
scorched earth approach
to developing a winner.
The Astros lost 100-plus
games in each of Altuve’s
ﬁrst three seasons,
beginning in 2011.
Houston won its ﬁrst
World Series earlier this
month, and it needed its
longest-tenured player to
get there. Altuve batted a
major league-best .346 in
the regular season, hit 24
home runs with 81 RBIs,
scored 112 times, stole
32 bases and showed a
sharp glove at second
base. Voting for these
honors was completed
before the postseason
began.
It’s been over a decade
since Altuve signed with
Houston from Venezuela

OVP SPORTS
BRIEFS

Wahama
alumni
basketball game
MASON, W.Va. — The
Wahama girls basketball
program will be sponsoring an Alumni Basketball
Game on Saturday, Nov.
25, at the high school
gymnasium.
All former White
Falcon players — male
or female — are encouraged to participate in the
event, but there is a $10
fee per player.
The games will begin at
7 p.m., with registration
for the event opening up
at 6 p.m.
Contact WHS girls basketball coach John Arnott
at 304-674-5956 for more
information.

Carolyn Kaster | AP file

Miami Marlins’ Giancarlo Stanton won the National League MVP award, barely edging Joey Votto of the Cincinnati Reds in the closest
MVP vote since 1979. Stanton is only the sixth player to win from a losing team.

— only after he was sent
home from one tryout
and told he was too
short.
“They told me not to
come back,” Altuve said.
“It was something me
and my dad, he went
with me that day, we
were like, ‘We have to
go again. We have to try
again.’”
“It’s not a rule that you
have to be 6-foot or you
have to be really strong
to play baseball and
become a good player,”
he added.
Altuve beat out a player who couldn’t be more
different. The 6-7 Judge
won the AL Rookie of
the Year award Monday
after setting a rookie
record with 52 home
runs. Judge’s moonshot
homers dominated the
highlights, and his No.

99 jersey was the top
seller in baseball. Even
Altuve has said he would
have voted for Judge.
Judge had 8.2 wins
above replacement
compared to Altuve’s
7.5, per Fangraphs,
while baseball-reference.
com’s WAR metric
preferred Altuve 8.3 to
8.1. Yet Judge got only
two ﬁrst-place votes,
with the other going to
third-place ﬁnisher Jose
Ramirez of the Indians.
Altuve was the second
Houston player to win
an MVP — Jeff Bagwell
earned the 1994 NL
award.
While Altuve is set to
defend his title in Houston, Stanton may be
taking a piece of Marlins
history elsewhere. He
earned the franchise’s
ﬁrst MVP in the same

week new team executive Derek Jeter said the
club is listening to trade
offers for Stanton. The
28-year-old outﬁelder
is owed $295 million
over the ﬁnal decade of
his record $325 million,
13-year contract.
“It’s an interesting
feeling and situation for
me,” Stanton said.
Stanton would prefer
to stick around and
wants the team’s pitching situation “to be
thoroughly addressed,
not just somewhat
addressed.” He’s not convinced the Marlins are
ready to do that.
“I’m not entirely sure,
to be honest,” he said.
“I know all teams have
plenty of money.”
The 6-6 Stanton led
the big leagues with 59
home runs, most in the

majors since 2001, when
Barry Bonds hit a record
73 and Sammy Sosa had
64.
Stanton got 10 ﬁrstplace votes and 302
points. Votto, who led
the majors with a .454
on-base percentage, also
got 10 ﬁrsts and had 300
points. Arizona’s Paul
Goldschmidt was third.
“I felt like it was going
to be so close and I felt
like I had a legitimate
shot,” Votto said. “It
just feels like it’s exactly
kind of how I thought it
would play out.”
The last time an MVP
race was so close, Willie
Stargell and Keith Hernandez tied for the NL
prize in 1979.
Stanton became only
the seventh player to win
from a losing team. The
Marlins were 77-85.

Meigs youth
holiday
tournament
RUTLAND, Ohio —
The Pomeroy and Middleport youth leagues will
be holding there annual
holiday youth basketball
tournament at the Rutland Civic Center from
Dec. 19-23 and will then
resume Dec. 26-30.
The tournament will
be separated by divisions
for both boys and girls
in grades 4-6. For more
information, call Ken at
740-416-8901 or Dave at
740-590-0438.

For more local
sports coverage,
visit us online at
MyDaily
Sentinel.com

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to meet the patient’s specific needs.
NOTE: Compounded medications are personalized for
individual patients. The Federal government has approved
the use of compounded medications for individuals who
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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 19, 2017 3B

2017-18 MASON COUNTY WINTER SPORTS SCHEDULES
Hannan winter schedules
Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 1 vs. Fairview
Dec. 5 vs. Calvary Baptist
Dec. 7 vs. Scott
Dec. 11 at Rose Hill Christian
Dec. 20 at Ironton St. Joseph
Dec. 28 vs. Green
Dec. 29 at Wahama
Jan. 3 at Buffalo
Jan. 8 at Covenant Christian
Jan. 12 vs. Ohio Valley Christian
Jan. 15 vs. Wahama
Jan. 16 at Calvary Baptist
Jan. 23 vs. Grace Christian
Jan. 25 vs. Sherman
Jan. 26 vs. Rose Hill Christian
Jan. 29 at Scott
Feb. 2 vs. Covenant Christian
Feb. 5 at Fairview
Feb. 7 vs. Ironton St. Joseph
Feb. 12 at Sherman
Feb. 13 at Ohio Valley Christian
Feb. 15 vs. Buffalo

Time
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.

Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Time
Dec. 5 vs. Calvary Baptist
7:30
Dec. 12 vs. Jamie Darren Christian 6 p.m.
Dec. 14 at Elk Valley Christian
7 p.m.
Dec. 15 at WVSU Hoops Classic
noon
Dec. 19 vs. Mountain State
Christian
7 p.m.
Dec. 21 vs. Wayne
7 p.m.
Dec. 29 at Wahama
7 p.m.
Jan. 3 at Buffalo
7:30
Jan. 8 at Covenant Christian
7:30
Jan. 12 vs. Ohio Valley Christian
7:30
Jan. 16 at Calvary Baptist
7:30
Jan. 20 at Williamson Hatfield
McCoy Shootout
11 a.m.
Jan. 23 vs. Grace Christian
7:30
Jan. 26 vs. Rose Hill Christian
7:30
Jan. 30 at Jamie Darren Christian 6 p.m.
Feb. 2 vs. Covenant Christian
7:30
Feb. 5 vs. Elk Valley Christian
7 p.m.
Feb. 6 at Mountain State Christian 7 p.m.

Feb. 9
Feb. 13
Feb. 15
Feb. 20

vs. Point Pleasant
at Ohio Valley Christian
vs. Buffalo
at Meadow Bridge

7:30
7:30
7:30
7 p.m.

Point Pleasant winter schedules
Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 28 at Poca
Nov. 30 at Gallia Academy
Dec. 2 at Athens
Dec. 5 at Nitro
Dec. 6 at Hurricane
Dec. 9 at Winfield
Dec. 12 at Buffalo
Dec. 20 at Ripley
Dec. 22 at South Charleston
Jan. 2 vs. Gallia Academy
Jan. 3 at Sissonville
Jan. 10 vs. South Charleston
Jan. 13 vs. River Valley
Jan. 17 vs. Wahama
Jan. 20 vs. Symmes Valley
Jan. 24 vs. Wellston
Jan. 30 vs. Poca
Feb. 1 vs. Winfield
Feb. 6 vs. Wayne
Feb. 8 vs. Ripley
Feb. 13 vs. Sissonville
Feb. 20 vs. Hurricane

Time
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
1 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
2 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
6:30
1 p.m.
7 p.m.
1 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.

Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 5 vs. Poca
Dec. 9 vs. Oak Hill at Rio Grande
Dec. 19 at Poca
Dec. 20 at Nitro
Dec. 28 vs. Winfield
Jan. 2 at Calvary Baptist
Jan. 6 vs. Gallia Academy
Jan. 9 at River Valley
Jan. 12 at Lincoln County
Jan. 16 vs. Ripley
Jan. 19 vs. Ravenswood
Jan. 20 at South Point
Jan. 23 vs. Eastern
Jan. 30 at Meigs
Feb. 1 at Cabell Midland

Time
7:30
7 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Feb. 3
Feb. 9
Feb. 10
Feb. 13
Feb. 17
Feb. 19
Feb. 21

at Southern
at Hannan
vs. River Valley
vs. Nitro
at Gallia Academy
vs. Lincoln County
vs. Wahama

7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Wrestling
Date
Event
Dec. 2 at Lake Norman Duals
Dec. 6 vs. Huntington
Dec. 8-9 Jason Eades Memorial
Dec. 14 at Herbert Hoover
Dec. 21 at Wirt County
Dec. 28-29 at Wheeling Park Duals
Jan. 5-6 at Madeira Invitational
Jan. 11 vs. Athens
Jan. 13 at Fandetti-Richardson
Brawl
Jan. 19-20 at WSAZ Invitational
Jan. 24 at East Fairmont
Jan. 31 vs. Parkersburg
Feb. 2 at Ripley
Wahama winter schedules
Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 1 vs. Buffalo
Dec. 7 at Federal Hocking
Dec. 11 vs. Waterford
Dec. 14 vs. Southern
Dec. 16 at Miller
Dec. 18 at Eastern
Dec. 21 vs. Trimble
Dec. 29 vs. Hannan
Jan. 4 at Belpre
Jan. 8 at Wirt County
Jan. 11 vs. South Gallia
Jan. 15 at Hannan
Jan. 17 at Point Pleasant
Jan. 20 vs. Federal Hocking
Jan. 22 at Waterford
Jan. 25 vs. Miller
Jan. 27 at Southern
Jan. 29 vs. Eastern
Feb. 1 at Trimble

Time
9 a.m.
6 p.m.
TBA
6 p.m.
p.m.
TBA
TBA
6 p.m.
9 a.m.
TBA
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.

Time
6:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
6 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Feb. 5 vs. Belpre
Feb. 8 at South Gallia
Feb. 15 vs. Ohio Valley Christian

Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 8 at Buffalo
Dec. 12 at Belpre
Dec. 15 vs. Miller
Dec. 19 vs. Trimble
Dec. 22 at South Gallia
Dec. 27 at Wirt County
Tournament
Dec. 28 at Wirt County
Tournament
Dec. 29 vs. Hannan
Jan. 5 at Federal Hocking
Jan. 9 vs. Eastern
Jan. 12 vs. Southern
Jan. 16 at Waterford
Jan. 20 at Ravenswood
Jan. 23 vs. Belpre
Jan. 26 at Miller
Jan. 30 at Trimble
Feb. 2 vs. South Gallia
Feb. 6 at Eastern
Feb. 9 vs. Federal Hocking
Feb. 13 vs. Waterford
Feb. 16 at Southern
Feb. 21 at Point Pleasant

7:30
7:30
6:30

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Wrestling
Date
Event
Time
Dec. 2 at Hurricane
10 a.m.
Dec. 3-4 at Point Pleasant
Jason Eades Memorial
TBA
Dec. 16 Jackson County Invitational
at Millwood
10 a.m.
Dec. 20 at Belpre “Battle of the
Birds”
6 p.m.
Dec. 29-30 at Bishop Fenwick
Duals
TBA
Jan. 5-6 at Nitro
TBA
Jan. 13 at St. Mary’s
10 a.m.
Jan. 19-20 at WSAZ Invitational
TBA
Jan. 27 at Ritchie County
10 a.m.
Jan. 31 at Magnolia
6 p.m.
Feb. 17 at River Valley (TVC)
10 a.m.

Browns hoping for ‘jolt’ from healthy WR Coleman
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
— Corey Coleman has
endured the pain of
losing along with his
Browns teammates for
two months.
He gets to do something to stop it this
week.
The speedy former
ﬁrst-round draft pick
whose career has been
slowed by twice breaking his right hand, will
return to Cleveland’s
lineup on Sunday when
the Browns face the Jacksonville Jaguars.
It’s another re-start for
Coleman, the No. 15 overall pick in the 2016 draft.
He was sidelined for six
games last season with
a broken right hand and
then suffered an eerily
similar injury almost one
year to the day in September. Coleman leaped
to make a catch against
Baltimore, fell hard on his
right hand and broke a
different bone.
Now he’s physically healed and mentally
stronger than ever.
“Stuff’s not going to go
always as planned,” said
Coleman, who had six
catches for 62 yards and

Ron Schwane | AP file

After missing seven games with a broken right hand, Cleveland Browns wide receiver Corey Coleman
will play Sunday when the winless Browns host the Jacksonville Jaguars. It’s another fresh start for
Coleman, who missed six games as a rookie last year when he broke a different bone in the same hand.
Coleman’s speed should help Cleveland’s offense and especially rookie quarterback DeShone Kizer,
who has been lacking playmakers.

a touchdown in Cleveland’s ﬁrst two games.
“You’ve just got to
always be positive and
keep on rolling. Don’t
ever get discouraged
about something. If I
drop a pass, just keep

positive energy, and over
time, it’s going to work
out.”
Coleman gives the
Browns (0-9) a muchneeded offensive playmaker. Cleveland’s
receiving group has been

a major disappointment,
and Coleman’s speed will
surely help rookie quarterback DeShone Kizer
expand the ﬁeld.
“He’s a burner,” said
Kizer, who has cut down
on turnovers lately. “He

is going to allow us
to push the ball down
the ﬁeld vertically and
everyone knows that,
but just to add more
playmakers to this team
is never going to hurt
us. We were getting in
a little rhythm with the
guys that we had and to
add someone else to that
rhythm is going to be a
big beneﬁt for us.”
Coleman’s return is a
welcomed respite in a
season devoid of much
positive news for the
Browns.
“I love to see him
back,” left guard Joel
Bitonio said Thursday.
“I know he was disappointed he got banged up
earlier in the year. It’s an
unfortunate injury. And
he’s been practicing hard
and working hard and
you’ve seen him around
the building studying
and stuff. I think he’s
ready to come back and
make a name for himself.
“Anytime you bring
back someone like Corey,
it brings a little jolt to
the offense. And just
seeing him in the huddle
this week has got me
excited.”

Coleman still has to
prove to the Browns
that he can be durable
and consistent. After he
returned from his injury
last season, Coleman
made only 26 catches for
240 yards and a touchdown in his ﬁnal eight
games.
That’s not nearly
enough production for
a No. 1 wide receiver,
which is why coach Hue
Jackson challenged Coleman in the offseason to
do more.
The most recent injury
was a setback, but Coleman is determined to
make up for lost time.
“I’m trying to do as
much as I can to help us
get a win,” he said. “It’s
been a long wait. I’ve got
to go out there and make
plays and do my job.”
To Jackson, that’s helping Kizer.
“By making plays,
creating a little bit more
separation, go up and
make plays on the ball
when need be,” Jackson
said. “You have to make
some of those uncommon catches in games at
times. Hopefully, Corey
can provide that for us.”

Jacksonville can’t overlook winless Browns
CLEVELAND (AP)
— The Jacksonville Jaguars are talking big and
thinking bigger. This
week, there was discussion about division titles,
playoffs, and — get
this — even making the
Super Bowl.
But before they get too
far ahead of themselves
and before the rest of the
NFL takes them more
seriously as a title contender, the Jags have to
avoid stumbling against
the league’s only winless
team on Sunday.
The Browns are overdue.
Jacksonville, riding its
ﬁrst three-game winning
streak since 2013, hits
the road to take on the
Browns (0-9), who have
shown signs of improvement in recent weeks
and could be helped by a
forecast of frigid weather

conditions.
Boasting the league’s
stingiest defense and a
top-ranked run offense
that seems to do just
enough, the Jaguars
(6-3) are having a season few anticipated. By
overcoming injuries and
some self-inﬂicted mistakes, and with a seemingly favorable schedule
remaining, they’ve
positioned themselves
for their ﬁrst postseason
appearance since 2007.
It’s all lining up for
the Jags, which is why
coach Doug Marrone
didn’t allow his team to
overlook the struggling
Browns, who are 1-24
under coach Hue Jackson.
“I learned a long time
ago in this league everyone is a professional,”
said Marrone, who is in
his ﬁrst season in Jack-

sonville. “You can take
those records and throw
them out the window. We
are playing a good football team. We understand
that we are going to be
challenged. That is what
I try to keep the focus
on. We know that we are
going to get the best of
the Cleveland Browns.
They have been in a lot
of tight games.”
Four of Cleveland’s
losses have been by three
points, and last week the
Browns were tied with
Detroit in the fourth
quarter before their
defense collapsed.
The Browns are capable of springing an upset,
and although they don’t
need any extra motivation to avoid a 0-16
season, Jaguars safety
Tashaun Gipson gave
them some.
Gipson, who spent

four seasons in Cleveland, predicted the
Jaguars would “hang”
40 points on the Browns
and shut them out. Gipson also ripped Cleveland’s front ofﬁce for
not re-signing him, said
he sympathized with
his friends still playing
there, and predicted
his former team would
“probably go 0-16.”
While he regretted the
“0-16” comment, Gipson
stood by the others and
several Browns felt he
went too far.
“Anybody would be
disrespected from that,”
said Browns defensive
tackle Danny Shelton.
“So we just gotta go out
there and play our game,
be dominant.”
WEATHER WATCH:
Mother Nature could
give the Browns an
added edge. With tem-

peratures expected to be
in the low 30s and a 60
percent chance of rain or
snow, the warm-weather
Jaguars will have to deal
with some unfamiliar
external elements.
“You take a little hit
and it hurts,” said Jags
running back Leonard
Fournette, a Louisiana
native who has been
slowed by an ankle
injury. “I hate the cold,
period. I sleep in heat.
That’s just how I grew
up. Mentally, I’m trying
to get my mind ready.”
IN THE TRENCHES:
Jacksonville’s offensive
style is from a bygone
era: run ﬁrst, pass when
necessary. The Browns
are expecting a heavy
dose of Fournette.
“It’s like a Big 10
football game,” said
linebacker Joe Schobert,
who played at Wisconsin.

“This is the ﬁrst time
we’re gonna see 21 personnel (two backs in the
backﬁeld) this season.
They use their fullback.
It’s gonna be a lot of
smash-mouth football,
downhill runs.”
HUGE HELP: Jaguars
defensive tackle Marcell
Dareus has made a significant impact in just two
games. Jacksonville has
allowed 2.47 yards per
carry since acquiring the
340-pound run stopper
from the Bills last month.
Cincinnati ran 17 times
for 29 yards in Week
9, and the Los Angeles
Chargers ﬁnished with
87 yards on 30 carries
last week.
“He’s someone we’ve
got to keep working
to increase his snaps
because he’s a heck of a
football player,” Marrone
said.

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, November 19, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OHIO WINTER SPORTS SCHEDULES
Eastern Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 30 at Warren
Dec. 4 vs. South Gallia
Dec. 7 at Trimble
Dec. 11 at Jackson
Dec. 14 vs. Miller
Dec. 16 at Belpre
Dec. 18 vs. Wahama
Dec. 21 at Federal Hocking
Dec. 23 at Notre Dame
Jan. 4 vs. Southern
Jan. 6 at Oak Hill
Jan. 11 at Waterford
Jan. 15 vs. Meigs
Jan. 18 at South Gallia
Jan. 20 vs. Trimble
Jan. 22 vs. Parkersburg
Jan. 25 vs. Belpre
Jan. 27 at Miller
Jan. 29 at Wahama
Feb. 1 vs. Federal Hocking
Feb. 5 at Southern
Feb. 8 vs. Waterford

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
12:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
1 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
noon
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Eastern Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 1 at River Valley
Dec. 8 vs. Trimble
Dec. 15 at Waterford
Dec. 19 vs. South Gallia
Dec. 22 at Miller
Dec. 29 vs. Green
Jan. 3 vs. Nelsonville-York
Jan. 5 vs. Southern
Jan. 9 at Wahama
Jan. 12 at Belpre
Jan. 13 at Meigs
Jan. 16 vs. Federal Hocking
Jan. 19 at Trimble
Jan. 23 at Point Pleasant
Jan. 26 vs. Waterford
Jan. 30 at South Gallia
Feb. 2 vs. Miller
Feb. 3 vs. Ohio Valley Christian
Feb. 6 vs. Wahama
Feb. 9 at Southern
Feb. 13 at Federal Hocking
Feb. 16 vs. Belpre

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
6 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Eastern Wrestling
Date
Event
Dec. 2 at Fairland Dragon Duals
Dec. 9 at Chesapeake Phil Davis
Invitational
Dec. 20 at Belpre “Battle of the
Birds”
Dec. 30 at Gallia Academy
Invitational
Jan. 11 vs. Meigs, Fairland
Jan. 13 at Alexander Invitational
Jan. 17 vs. Waterford, Huntington,
South Gallia
Jan. 20 at Athens John Deno
Invitational
Jan. 22 at Wellston
Feb. 3 at Federal Hocking
Invitational
Gallia Academy Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 27 at River Valley
Nov. 30 vs. Point Pleasant
Dec. 2 vs. Wellston
Dec. 4 at Rock Hill
Dec. 7 vs. Ironton
Dec. 11 vs. Coal Grove
Dec. 14 at South Point
Dec. 18 vs. Jackson
Dec. 23 vs. Athens
Jan. 2 at Point Pleasant
Jan. 4 at Fairland
Jan. 8 vs. Portsmouth
Jan. 11 at Chesapeake
Jan. 15 vs. River Valley
Jan. 17 at Symmes Valley
Jan. 18 vs. Rock Hill
Jan. 22 at Ironton
Jan. 25 at Coal Grove
Jan. 29 vs. South Point
Feb. 1 vs. Fairland
Feb. 5 at Portsmouth
Feb. 8 vs. Chesapeake
Gallia Academy Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 1 vs. Athens
Dec. 5 vs. Meigs
Dec. 9 vs. Jackson
Dec. 12 at Rock Hill
Dec. 15 vs. Ironton
Dec. 19 at Fairland
Dec. 22 at River Valley
Jan. 5 vs. Coal Grove
Jan. 6 at Point Pleasant
Jan. 9 at South Point
Jan. 13 vs. Washington
Court House
Jan. 16 vs. Portsmouth
Jan. 19 at Chesapeake
Jan. 23 vs. Rock Hill
Jan. 26 at Ironton

Jan. 30
Feb. 2
Feb. 6
Feb. 9
Feb. 13
Feb. 16
Feb. 17

at Coal Grove
vs. South Point
vs. Fairland
at Portsmouth
at River Valley
vs. Chesapeake
vs. Point Pleasant

Jan. 5
Jan. 6
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Jan. 15
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
Feb. 5
Time
10 a.m. Feb. 6
Feb. 13
10 a.m. Feb. 15
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Gallia Academy Wrestling
Date
Event
Dec. 2 at Fairland Dragon Duals
Dec. 9 at Chesapeake Phil Davis
Invitational
Dec. 16 at Vinton County VFW
Post 5299 Invitational
9 a.m.
Dec. 20 vs. Jackson
6 p.m.
Dec. 30 Gallia Academy Invitational 10 a.m.
Jan. 6 at Nelsonville-York Steve
Yinger Invitational
9:30
Jan. 10 vs. River Valley, South Gallia 5 p.m.
Jan. 13 at Western Brown
9:30
Jan. 16 at Amanda-Clearcreek
6 p.m.
Jan. 20 at Athens John Deno
Invitational
10 a.m.
Feb. 7 at Meigs
6 p.m.
Feb. 10 at Fairland (OVC)
10 a.m.

Meigs Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 30 at Southern
Dec. 4 at Warren
Dec. 7 at Athens
Dec. 11 vs. Wellston
Dec. 14 vs. River Valley
Dec. 18 at Alexander
Dec. 21 vs. Vinton County
Dec. 23 vs. Minford at Alexander
Dec. 29 vs. Shaw at Marietta
College
Dec. 30 vs. Marietta at Marietta
College
Jan. 4 at Jackson
Jan. 11 at Nelsonville-York
Jan. 15 at Eastern
Jan. 18 at Wellston
Jan. 20 vs. Wayne
Jan. 22 vs. Athens
Jan. 25 at River Valley
Jan. 29 at Vinton County
Feb. 1 vs. Alexander
Time
Feb. 5 vs. Nelsonville-York
10 a.m. Feb. 8 vs. Warren

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
1:30
4:30
11:15
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

10 a.m. Meigs Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Time
6 p.m. Dec. 1 at Jackson
8 p.m.
Dec. 2 vs. Southern
7:30
10 a.m. Dec. 5 at Gallia Academy
7:30
6 p.m. Dec. 8 at Warren
7:30
10 a.m. Dec. 9 vs. Ironton at Rio Grande TBA
Dec. 12 at Athens
7:30
6 p.m. Dec. 15 at River Valley
7:30
Dec. 19 at Vinton County
7:30
10 a.m. Dec. 22 vs. Wellston
7:30
6 p.m. Dec. 29 vs. Wood County Christian
at Marietta College
6:15
10 a.m. Dec. 30 vs. Marietta at Marietta
College
4:30
Jan. 5 at Alexander
7:30
Jan.
12
vs.
Nelsonville-York
7:30
Time
Jan.
13
vs.
Eastern
7:30
7:30
7:30
7 p.m. Jan. 19 vs. Athens
Jan.
23
at
Nelsonville-York
7:30
6 p.m.
Jan. 26 vs. Vinton County
7:30
7:30
Jan. 30 vs. Point Pleasant
7:30
7:30
Feb. 2 at Wellston
7:30
7:30
Feb. 6 vs. Alexander
7:30
7:30
Feb.
13
vs.
Chillicothe
7:30
7:30
Feb.
16
vs.
River
Valley
7:30
6:30
7:30
7:30
Meigs Wrestling
7:30
Date
Event
Time
7:30
Dec. 2 at Jackson American Legion
7:30
Post 81 Invitational
9 a.m.
7:30
Dec. 9 at Chesapeake Phil Davis
7:30
Invitational
10 a.m.
7:30
Dec. 16 at Vinton County VFW Post
7:30
5299 Invitational
10 a.m.
7:30
Dec. 30 at Gallia Academy
7:30
Invitational
10 a.m.
7:30
Jan. 6 at Nelsonville-York Steve
7:30
Yinger Invitational
9:30
Jan. 11 at Eastern
5 p.m.
Jan. 20 at Athens John Deno
Invitational
10 a.m.
Time
Jan. 27 at New Lexington Jimmy
7:30
Wood Memorial
10 a.m.
7:30
Feb. 7 vs. Gallia Academy
6 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
Ohio Valley Christian Girls Basketball
7:30
Opponent
Time
8 p.m. Date
Nov.
28
at
Covenant
Christian
6
p.m.
7:30
Dec.
1
at
Calvary
Christian
6
p.m.
7:30
Dec. 5 at Grace Christian
6 p.m.
7:30
Dec. 8 at Wood County Christian 6 p.m.
Dec. 12 vs. Wellston
6 p.m.
7:30
Dec.
15
vs.
Parkersburg
Christian
6 p.m.
7:30
Dec.
19
at
Rose
Hill
Christian
7
p.m.
7:30
Dec. 22 vs. Teays Valley Christian 6 p.m.
7:30
Dec. 29 at South Gallia
6 p.m.
7:30

vs. Ironton St. Joseph
at Pike Christian
vs. Wood County Christian
at Hannan
vs. South Gallia
at Parkersburg Christian
at Teays Valley Christian
vs. TBA
at Ironton St. Joseph
vs. Calvary Christian
at Covenant Christian
at Rose Hill Christian
vs. Hannan
at Wahama

6 p.m.
6 p.m.
5:30
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
5:30
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6:30

Ohio Valley Christian Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Time
Nov. 17 at Parkersburg Christian
Tournament
TBA
Nov. 18 at Parkersburg Christian
Tournament
TBA
Nov. 28 at Covenant Christian
7:30
Dec. 1 at Calvary Christian
7:30
Dec. 5 at Grace Christian
7:30
Dec. 8 at Wood County Christian 7:30
Dec. 12 vs. Wellston
7:30
Dec. 15 vs. Parkersburg Christian 7:30
Dec. 22 vs. Teays Valley Christian 7:30
Dec. 29 at South Gallia
7:30
Jan. 2 vs. Wayne
7 p.m.
Jan. 5 vs. Ironton St. Joseph
7:30
Jan. 6 at Pike Christian
6 p.m.
Jan. 9 vs. Wood County Christian 7 p.m.
Jan. 12 at Hannan
7:30
Jan. 15 vs. South Gallia
7:30
Jan. 16 at Parkersburg Christian 7:30
Jan. 19 at Teays Valley Christian
7:30
Jan. 26 vs. Pike Christian
7 p.m.
Jan. 30 at Ironton St. Joseph
7:30
Feb. 2 vs. Calvary Christian
7:30
Feb. 3 at Eastern
6 p.m.
Feb. 5 at Covenant Christian
7:30
Feb. 13 vs. Hannan
7:30
River Valley Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 27 vs. Gallia Academy
Nov. 30 at Coal Grove
Dec. 4 at Jackson
Dec. 7 vs. Belpre
Dec. 11 vs. Alexander
Dec. 14 at Meigs
Dec. 16 vs. South Gallia
Dec. 18 at Athens
Dec. 21 vs. Nelsonville-York
Dec. 28 vs. Oak Hill
Jan. 4 at Vinton County
Jan. 8 at Southern
Jan. 11 vs. Wellston
Jan. 13 vs. Point Pleasant
Jan. 15 at Gallia Academy
Jan. 18 at Alexander
Jan. 24 at South Gallia
Jan. 25 vs. Meigs
Jan. 29 at Nelsonville-York
Feb. 1 vs. Athens
Feb. 5 at Wellston
Feb. 8 vs. Vinton County

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
6 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
1 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

River Valley Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 1 vs. Eastern
Dec. 5 at Jackson
Dec. 8 at Athens
Dec. 9 vs. Southern
Dec. 12 vs. Vinton County
Dec. 15 vs. Meigs
Dec. 16 vs. South Gallia
Dec. 19 at Alexander
Dec. 22 at Gallia Academy
Dec. 29 at South Point
Jan. 5 at Nelsonville-York
Jan. 9 vs. Point Pleasant
Jan. 12 vs. Wellston
Jan. 19 at Vinton County
Jan. 23 at Wellston
Jan. 26 vs. Alexander
Jan. 30 at Oak Hill
Feb. 6 vs. Nelsonville-York
Feb. 9 vs. Athens
Feb. 10 at Point Pleasant
Feb. 13 vs. Gallia Academy
Feb. 16 at Meigs

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
8 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

River Valley Wrestling
Date
Event
Time
Dec. 2 at Jackson American Legion
Post 81 Invitational
9 a.m.
Dec. 9 at Warren
9:30
Dec. 20 at Nelsonville-York
6 p.m.
Dec. 30 at Gallia Academy
Invitational
10 a.m.
Jan. 6 at Nelsonville-York Steve
Yinger Invitational
9:30
Jan. 10 at Gallia Academy
10 a.m.
Jan. 30 vs. McClain
6 p.m.
Southern Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 30 vs. Meigs

Time
7:30

Dec. 4
Dec. 7
Dec. 11
Dec. 14
Dec. 16
Dec. 21
Dec. 28
Jan. 4
Jan. 6
Jan. 8
Jan. 11
Jan. 18
Jan. 20
Jan. 22
Jan. 25
Jan. 27
Jan. 29
Feb. 1
Feb. 5
Feb. 8
Feb. 10

at Miller
vs. Waterford
vs. Trimble
at Wahama
at Federal Hocking
vs. South Gallia
at East
at Eastern
at Clay
vs. River Valley
vs. Belpre
vs. Miller
at Waterford
at Trimble
vs. Federal Hocking
vs. Wahama
at Williamstown
at South Gallia
vs. Eastern
at Belpre
vs. Symmes Valley

7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
1 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

Southern Boys
Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 2 at Meigs
Dec. 8 vs. South Gallia
Dec. 9 at River Valley
Dec. 12 at Trimble
Dec. 15 at Federal Hocking
Dec. 19 vs. Miller
Dec. 22 vs. Waterford
Dec. 27 vs. Ravenswood
Dec. 29 at Nelsonville-York
Jan. 5 at Eastern
Jan. 12 at Wahama
Jan. 16 vs. Belpre
Jan. 19 at South Gallia
Jan. 23 vs. Trimble
Jan. 26 vs. Federal Hocking
Jan. 30 at Miller
Feb. 2 at Waterford
Feb. 3 vs. Point Pleasant
Feb. 9 vs. Eastern
Feb. 13 at Belpre
Feb. 16 vs. Wahama

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

South Gallia Girls Basketball
Date
Opponent
Nov. 28 at Symmes Valley
Dec. 4 at Eastern
Dec. 7 vs. Miller
Dec. 11 vs. Federal Hocking
Dec. 14 at Waterford
Dec. 16 at River Valley
Dec. 18 vs. Belpre
Dec. 21 at Southern
Dec. 29 vs. Ohio Valley Christian
Jan. 4 vs. Trimble
Jan. 11 at Wahama
Jan. 15 at Ohio Valley Christian
Jan. 18 vs. Eastern
Jan. 20 at Miller
Jan. 22 at Federal Hocking
Jan. 24 vs. River Valley
Jan. 27 vs. Waterford
Jan. 29 at Belpre
Jan. 31 vs. Symmes Valley
Feb. 1 vs. Southern
Feb. 5 at Trimble
Feb. 8 vs. Wahama

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
6 p.m.
7:30
7:30
6 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
3 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

South Gallia
Boys Basketball
Date
Opponent
Dec. 1 at Symmes Valley
Dec. 8 at Southern
Dec. 12 vs. Federal Hocking
Dec. 16 at River Valley
Dec. 19 at Eastern
Dec. 22 vs. Wahama
Dec. 29 vs. Ohio Valley Christian
Dec. 30 at Green
Jan. 5 at Belpre
Jan. 9 vs. Waterford
Jan. 12 at Miller
Jan. 15 at Ohio Valley Christian
Jan. 16 vs. Trimble
Jan. 19 vs. Southern
Jan. 23 at Federal Hocking
Jan. 27 vs. Symmes Valley
Jan. 30 vs. Eastern
Feb. 2 at Wahama
Feb. 6 at Waterford
Feb. 9 vs. Belpre
Feb. 13 at Trimble
Feb. 16 vs. Miller

Time
7:30
7:30
7:30
8 p.m.
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30

South Gallia Wrestling
Date
Event
Dec. 2 at Fairland Dragon Duals
Dec. 9 at Chesapeake Phil Davis
Invitational
Dec. 16 at Vinton County VFW
Post 5299 Invitational
Dec. 27 at Huntington
Jan. 10 at Gallia Academy
Jan. 17 at Eastern
Jan. 22 at Wellston
Feb. 13 vs. South Point, Federal
Hocking, Wellston

Time
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
9 a.m.
2 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.

Roethlisberger, Brown lead Steelers past Titans, 40-17
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Another uninspiring
half in the books in a
season littered with them
for a team that expects
to play deep into January
and beyond, Ben Roethlisberger decided he had
seen enough.
So the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback decided
it was time to speak up.
The defense had kept
the Tennessee Titans
and star Marcus Mariota in check, yet a game
that had the makings of
a blowout didn’t feel like
one mostly because the

offense kept squandering
chance after chance.
No more.
“He didn’t call anyone out, he called all of
us out,” guard David
DeCastro said. “Linemen.
Receivers. Himself. Running backs. Purely positive. It was a challenge.
He challenged us. The
guys responded.”
None better than the
35-year-old Roethlisberger. Running the nohuddle offense to near
perfection, Roethlisberger
threw for 299 yards and
four touchdowns, three

to Antonio Brown, as the
Steelers pulled away for a
40-17 victory.
“I don’t care if you’re
old or young, just someone has to step up and
make a play for this team
or else we are going
to keep relying on our
defense,” said Roethlisberger, who went 20 of 23
for 185 yards and three
touchdowns in the second
half. “It is time that we
step up and do something.”
Brown caught 10 passes for 144 yards and the
three scores, including an

acrobatic grab in the back
of the end zone in which
he pinned the ball to his
helmet before bringing it
in to put Pittsburgh up 20
in the fourth quarter as
the Steelers set a seasonhigh for points and margin of victory.
“We’ve talked so much
about having the potential in this room, but
we can still strive for
more,” said defensive end
Cam Heyward, who had
two of Pittsburgh’s ﬁve
sacks. “We’re a hungry
group that still has a lot
to prove. We’re chasing

ghosts. We’re trying to be
the best defense. That’s
what we strive for.”
For long stretches, the
Steelers (8-2) looked
the part while extending
their winning streak to
ﬁve.
Though Mariota ran for
a touchdown and threw
for another, he was also
picked off a career-high
four times as the Titans
(6-4) saw their four-game
winning streak come to
a crashing halt. Mariota
ﬁnished 22 of 33 for 306
yards but was under pressure much of the night.

“When you play teams
that are this caliber that
are contenders, that win
week in and week out,
that’s the blueprint,” Mariota said. “We’re going to
learn from it. We’re going
to get better from it and
hopefully we’ll see them
again.”
There’s plenty to work
on. Tennessee appeared
to be in it when Mariota
found Matthews with
a 75-yard touchdown
pass on the ﬁrst play of
the second half to get to
See STEELERS | 5B

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 19, 2017 5B

Bengals,
Broncos look to
end struggles
DENVER (AP) —
Domata Peko had no
idea when he left Cincinnati for Denver in
free agency that he was
trading one sad situation for another.
He’ll face his old
team Sunday when the
Broncos (3-6) try to
snap out of a ﬁve-week
funk against the Bengals (3-6).
“It’s a big one for
me,” Peko said. “When
you play your old team,
you want to go out
there and show them,
‘What the heck? Why
didn’t you keep me?’
I know it’s a business
and I was there for 11
seasons. I guess my
time was up there, and
that’s just how it goes.
Even Peyton had to
leave.”
Like Manning, Peko
has found rejuvenation
in Denver, where he’s
been everything the
Broncos were looking
for to plug a gaping
hole on defense.
“He’s probably the
most positive teammate that I’ve ever
been around,” linebacker Von Miller said.
“You look at him like,
‘Man, are you 24 or 23
years old?’ He’s one of
the oldest guys in the
locker room (32) and
he still has that energy
on the practice ﬁeld,
off the practice ﬁeld,
hot, cold, raining, loss,
win, he’s the same guy.
He’s been great. He’s
deﬁnitely been a shining star.”
In a dimming season
in Denver .
Thanks to Peko, the
Broncos are once again
a top-ﬁve team against
the run after slipping
to bottom-ﬁve last season — it’s everything
else that’s gone haywire
in Denver during a ﬁvegame funk in which the
Broncos have been outscored by nearly 100
points.
“I love it here,”
Peko said. “Hey, we’re
going through a rough
time but in this league
you’ve got to do it week
by week. So, now we’ve
got the Bengals ahead
of us. I’m going to be
really pumped for this
game against my old
team.”
This wasn’t what
Peko thought he had
signed up for after he
put his signature on a
two-year, $7.5 million

Darryl Graham | AP

Danica Patrick wipes away tears as she speaks with the media during a news conference before Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series auto race
at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Fla., on Friday. Patrick will end her full-time racing career after running in next year’s
Daytona 500 and Indianapolis 500.

Danica Patrick to end racing career
I think it’s a great idea.
The business-side of the
deal still has to work.”
Ganassi already has
Cup star Kyle Larson
in his camp practically
begging for a shot at the
Indy 500. Would he enter
one-off entries at Indy for
both Patrick and Larson?
“I’d have to talk to Larson about that,” Ganassi
smiled.
Larson and Patrick
are close friends, and he
posted on Twitter he was
happy for her following
her Friday announcement: “She’s done so
much for Motorsports.
I’m excited for her and
her future adventures!!
#Namaste.”
Patrick is the only
woman to have led laps
in both the Daytona 500
and the Indianapolis 500.
Patrick ran the Indy 500
from 2005 through 2011.
Her highest ﬁnish was
third in 2009, and she
was the ﬁrst woman to
lead laps in the race when
she paced the ﬁeld for 19
trips around the Brickyard as a rookie.
Patrick was highly
marketable early in her
career even though wins
were rare. She won the
pole for the Daytona 500
in 2013, but ﬁnished 24th
in the standings the last
two seasons. She won
her only IndyCar race in
2008, in Japan.
Sponsorship trouble
surfaced this year, too.
When no strong opportunities for next season
presented itself, Patrick
decided to call it a career
next Memorial Day weekend.
“I think it’s awesome
and it will make for a
huge month of May that
she’s back there,” said
Stewart, who spent half
of his career trying to win
the Indy 500. “It would
be really cool to see her
face on the Borg-Warner
Trophy, if she can pull

that off.”
Patrick had been adamant she would never
return to IndyCar or the
500, but changed her
mind as she realized her
competitive options were
dwindling.
“I know I always said
I’d never go back to Indy,
and I was always being
honest,” she said. “Well,
things change. I know
now you can never say
never. I’d been going
through this in my head
and kept asking myself,
‘How am I going to get
the words out and say
it’s over?’ And trust me,
I lost my (stuff) a few
times over that.
“But this seems right,
and this seems good.”
Patrick told AP she
had only informed about
10 people of her decision prior to Friday’s
announcement. Everyone had been extremely
happy with the path
she’s chosen. She said
longtime boyfriend Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. “has never
been more excited about
something about me in
his life.”
Stewart praised Patrick
for her time at SHR, and
said his team would never
have expanded to four
cars without her assistance. Kevin Harvick will
try to win a second championship in four years
for the organization on
Sunday, and Stewart said
Patrick has been a huge
part of the team’s success.
He was disappointed to
learn she’s ready to stop
driving.
“I am happy that she is
doing it on her terms, but
I am sad because I feel
like there are wins under
her belt that she can still
get,” Stewart told AP.
“I thought she’d go road
racing or back to IndyCar
or something along those
lines, because I think
that’s where she can be
successful.”

Steelers

lead as Roethlisberger
took advantage of a free
play and hit Brown with
a 41-yard rainbow. Mike
Hilton then returned
Mariota’s interception to
set up the ﬁrst of Chris
Boswell’s four ﬁeld goals
and the Steelers appeared
on the verge of another
prime-time blowout at
home.
The blowout did eventually arrive, just not
quickly.
The offense ground to
a halt for the rest of the
half, held in check by
former defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. The
Hall of Famer spent 12
years building a defense
that helped Pittsburgh to
two Super Bowl victories

before being ushered out
in favor of protege Keith
Butler in January 2015.
The 80-year-old is in
the middle of his latest
project with the steadily
improving Titans.
Yet the gap between
Tennessee and Pittsburgh
remains signiﬁcant.
The proof came after
Mathews’ long catch-andrun appeared to give the
Titans momentum.
The Steelers reeled off
three straight touchdown
drives. Roethlisberger
found a leaping Brown for
a 5-yard score restored a
nine-point lead, executed
a perfect play-action fake
at the goal line before
ﬂipping it to a wide-open
Jesse James for a 1-yard

strike and put the Titans
away with a lob to the
back corner of the end
zone that Brown somehow hauled in from 10
yards out that made it
37-17.
Pittsburgh rookie
JuJu Smith-Schuster
knelt down and bowed
to Brown during the
giddy celebration. Hard
to blame the 20-year-old.
For the ﬁrst time all season, the Steelers put it
all together and looked
every bit like a team with
a legitimate threat to live
up to its own hype.
The Steelers welcome
the Green Bay Packers
on Nov. 26, the second of
four straight prime-time
games for Pittsburgh.

From page 4B

16-14.
Then Roethlisberger
and the NFL’s highestpaid offense got going.
Finally. Roethlisberger
dropped some very not
subtle hints that he wanted the freedom provided
by the no-huddle after the
Steelers used it to pick
the Colts apart during the
winning drive last Sunday
in Indianapolis.
Offensive coordinator
Todd Haley appeared to
be listening.
Pittsburgh opened in
the no huddle and needed
just six plays to take the

November 24th and 25th

December 23rd, 26th, 27th,
28th, 29th, and 30th

40938055

The Associated Press
a few hours before her
announcement, Patrick
was giddy with excitement and thrilled at the
chance to take one more
spin around Indianapolis
Motor Speedway.
Patrick told AP it took
her many months to
come to the realization
her career is all but over.
Once she accepted it, she
began putting together
plans for “The Danica
Double” over the last several weeks.
“Nothing that was
being presented excited
me, then about three
weeks ago, I just blurted
out, ‘What about Indy?
Let’s end it with the Indy
500,’” she said. “This
ignites something in me.
But I am done after May.
Everyone needs to put
their mind there. My plan
is to be at Indy, and then
I’m done.”
Patrick would not
reveal who she will drive
for in either race next
year, but Chip Ganassi
Racing is the likely ride
at Indy. Ganassi has room
to ﬁeld additional cars —
he’s scaling down from
four full-time cars to two
next year — and would
give Patrick a car capable
of winning. Roger Penske
and Michael Andretti
both have full lineups
announced for next year’s
Indy 500.
Patrick will not be driving in the Daytona 500
for Stewart-Haas Racing,
team co-owner Tony
Stewart told AP. Patrick
moved from IndyCar to
NASCAR after the 2011
season, and has been
racing Cup cars for SHR
since 2012. She is being
replaced after Sunday’s
season ﬁnale at Homestead-Miami Speedway by
Aric Almirola.
“I met with her and
her agent once,” Ganassi
said. “I think it is a good
idea for her to do, in fact

OH-70013147

HOMESTEAD, Fla.
(AP) — She started in
go-karts when she was
10, and was a national
champion two years later.
By the time Danica Patrick turned 16, she was
on her own in Europe,
pursuing a racing career.
Patrick was a fearless
woman in a sport almost
exclusively comprised of
male drivers. She raced
hard, sparred with her
rivals off the track and
rarely ﬂinched while
becoming one of the most
recognizable athletes in
the world.
Her tough-girl persona
almost never cracked in
public.
When it came time to
announce her retirement,
with her mother, father,
sister, brother-in-law, boyfriend and support team
watching from the back
of a crowded room at
Homestead-Miami Speedway on Friday afternoon,
Patrick broke down in
tears.
“I feel like this is where
my life should be headed,
and sometimes we just
get kind of nudged there,”
she began. “Sometimes
it’s big nudges and sometimes it’s little.”
The 35-year-old Patrick
paused several times
to compose herself to
announce that she will
race only in the Daytona
500 and the Indianapolis
500 next year and then
she will walk away from a
sport where success was
elusive even as she grew
into a superstar with
multiple labels, not the
least of which was savvy
businesswoman.
Patrick has known for
at least a month that she
will end her career next
season at the Indianapolis
500, a decision that will
bring her full circle and
return her one last time
to the storied track that
made her famous. Discussing her decision with

deal in Denver last
March.
The Broncos had
been to two of the previous four Super Bowls
and the Bengals, who
haven’t won a playoff
game since the 1990
season, lost all six playoff games during Peko’s
11 seasons in Cincinnati.
“In Cincy, we’re
always talking about,
‘Oh, I want to win a
playoff game. I want
to win a playoff game.’
But over here, we’re
talking about winning
championships,” Peko
said when he signed.
“That’s why I’m here. I
want to win a championship.”
That again looks like
a pipe dream, but as
Miller said, any turnaround starts with a
single win.
Other subplots when
the Bengals try to snap
a 10-game losing streak
in Denver, where they
last won in 1975:
QUICK HOOK : The
Bengals need to keep
their cool. Their best
offensive and defensive players have been
ejected before halftime
of the past two games.
Receiver A.J. Green
was kicked out in Jacksonville for clobbering cornerback Jalen
Ramsey and in Tennessee, linebacker Vontaze
Burﬁct was ejected for
brushing aside an ofﬁcial’s arm as a sideline
scufﬂe wound down
two plays after he
bumped DeMarco Murray out of bounds.
“He does us no good
when he’s sitting in the
locker room for half
a ballgame,” Bengals
defensive coordinator
Paul Guenther said.
Burﬁct has at least
one fan in Denver.
Peko said neither
ﬂag should have been
thrown on his old
buddy, but Burﬁct
should realize he’s
“under the microscope
because of his history
of all those penalties”
and suspensions.
“I love Burf. I love
how he plays. He plays
hard. He plays with a
lot of emotion,” Peko
said. “He’s a great
player, man. You know
he’s going to give his
best. If you’re in a dark
alley, you want him on
your side. He’s a good
dude.”

�COMICS

6B Sunday, November 19, 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

"Y $AVE 'REEN

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Having A Yard Sale?
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to schedule your ad today!

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Super 25

the Marauders.
Wahama senior Christian Thomas, Gallia
Academy junior Justin
From page 1B
McClelland and Meigs
junior Zach Bartrum
1,170 yards and 23
were the three all-purscores on 174 attempts.
pose selections for their
Underclassmen ﬁlled
overall contributions
the two wideout spots
to their respective prochosen, with Meigs and
the Big Blacks each com- grams.
South Gallia junior
ing away with one choice
exchange student Sviatoapiece.
slav ‘Savat’ Hryhorenko
Junior Josh Wamsley
was the special teams
hauled in 49 passes for
honoree after success732 yards and seven
fully booting 13-of-15
touchdowns for Point
point-after tries and also
Pleasant, while sophoconverting four ﬁeld
more Weston Baer had
goals for the Rebels.
517 yards and seven
Payne, Bartrum, Roush
scores on 22 catches for

Truex

title. It was retaliation for
Hamlin wrecking Elliott
out of the lead at Martinsville earlier in the playoffs.
How aggressive can the
contenders be Sunday to
win the championship?

From page 1B

with Denny Hamlin that
cost Hamlin a shot at the

REAL ESTATE

Education

Land (Acreage)

GENERAL EDUCATION
SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS:
The Buckeye Hills Career
Center is accepting applications for part-time, as needed
substitute teachers in academic areas. Qualifications:
Bachelor’s Degree (need not
be in education). Contact:
Superintendent’s Office
740-245-5334.
EEO

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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Help Wanted General

HELP
WANTED

ﬁeld was made up of
Point Pleasant senior
Alec Smith, River Valley
senior Patrick Brown and
Southern senior Dylan
Smith.
Both Campbell and
Alec Smith were repeat
selections to the OVP
Super 25 defensive unit.
It was the third consecutive year that the
Big Blacks swept all of
the special player honors. Payne and Cody
Mitchell have served as
the last three offensive
players of the year, while
Mayes joins Grant Safford (2016) and the 2015
Point duo of Tanner Hill

and Cody McDaniel as
defensive players of the
year.
Darst was the 2016
outright coach of the
year and also shared the
honor with River Valley’s
Jerrod Sparling in 2015.
Excluding Coach
Darst, the Big Blacks
have still had 26 players
chosen for 75 of the OVP
Super 25 spots over the
last three years. The next
closest area programs are
Southern with 11, Meigs
with nine and River Valley with eight.

“I mean, I’m willing to
try to go win the race,”
said Keselowski. “When
it comes down to the end
of the race, I don’t think
anyone really knows that
answer until it’s right in

front of them.”
Truex knew what the
crowd wanted to hear.
“I’ll wreck any damn
one of these three,” he
joked.
Then he was serious.

“I’m going to race these
guys just like I do every
single week,” Truex said.
“I have not thought about
any desperation moves.
I don’t plan on being in
that position. I think a

perfect scenario is to go
out there and race them
heads up and beat them
fair and square. That’s
how I approach racing.
That’s how I plan on
doing it Sunday.”

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Amy Carter

Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

OH-70004516
OH-70012619

www.markporterauto.com

Product Specialist
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NOW HIRING

amycarter@markporterauto.com

The Village of Pomeroy is currently accepting
applications for a full-time position in the
water/wastewater department. Must be able
to work weekends and overtime, work outside
in inclement weather, possess a valid driver’s
license, have a high school diploma or GED
and pass a drug screen. Full beneﬁt package
included. Applications and resume may be
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REAL6290ESTATE
FOR SALE
Shelley Drive, Athens, OH
REAL ESTATE: Built in 1972 on large corner lot in
established neighborhood on top of hill, close to town
just short distance south of Rt. 50/32 west, perfect for
retired couple wanting to downsize or young first time
home buyers, ranch style, single family dwelling, 864
sq. ft. with 2 bedrooms, 1 full bath, eat-in kitchen, living
room, full unfinished basement, attached double car
garage, nice covered front porch and large deck on side
&amp; back of home, storage shed and fenced garden area.

OH-70015277

REAL ESTATE

AUCTION

Call for appointment to see this property.

Featuring The Late Ronald Miller Farm
years ago known as “The Gallia Walmart”
Tuesday November 28,2017 7:30 PM
Gallipolis AMVETS

REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB: www.ohiorealestateauctions.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

107 Liberty Ave., Gallipolis, OH 45631
Located in Wayne National Forest

OH-70015583
OH-70014271

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

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OH-70015573

Please call 1-440-840-0478

other player on the Point
roster … as well as a
21-point lead in the ﬁnal
defensive chart.
Mayes was joined at
the linebacker spot by
Wahama senior Johnnie Board, Meigs senior
Lane Cullums, Gallia
Academy junior Jacob
Campbell and River
Valley sophomore Cole
Young.
The defensive line
consisted of senior
Cameron Nott and
sophomore Nate Barth
of Point Pleasant, as well
as Southern junior Sean
Myers.
The defensive back-

Apartments/Townhouses

SKILLED TRADE
SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS:
The Buckeye Hills Career
Center is accepting applications for part-time, as needed
substitute teachers in all
Career-Technical areas.
Qualifications: Minimum of 5
years work experience in
skilled trade area, i.e.
carpentry, mechanics, welding,
HVAC, etc. Teaching license
or degrees are not required!
Contact: Superintendent’s
Office 740-245-5334.
EEO

Oil and gas
company
looking for well
tender/swab
truck operator,
full time,
benefits.

and Bissell were also
repeat selections to the
OVP Super 25 offensive
unit.
The defensive player of
the year award also went
to a Point Pleasant for
a third straight year as
senior linebacker Tucker
Mayes won the honor
this fall.
Mayes led the PPHS
defense in almost every
phase of its scoring
system, including big
plays and overall results.
Mayes had more than
twice as many points
from sacks, fumble
recoveries and interceptions this fall than any

Houses For Rent

EMPLOYMENT

Sunday, November 19, 2017 7B

Lots of possibilities here folks! If you are looking for something surrounded by Wayne National Forest, if you are looking for a site for
a deer camp, if you are looking for recreation away from all the
hustle and bustle of the city, a place for your dream cabin or house,
or a house that is already constructed than don’t miss this auction!
There are all the options above and more!!! For full terms and conditions and information packet of the auction information please
contact Josh Bodimer at Wiseman Real Estate at 740-446-3644 or
via mobile 740-645-6665 or email:bodimer@wisemanrealestate.com
also visit www.auctionzip.comauctioneerID#27081. David Wiseman, Broker Wiseman Real Estate &amp; Josh Bodimer, Auctioneer/Realtor. Prospects may call to set up an appointment to view the property or conduct their own tours seller, realtor, auctioneer, broker,
or any agents of the seller are not responsible for accidents. Seller:
Ronald A. Miller Estate Gallia County Probate Case #201h136

For more local sports coverage, visit us online at MyDailySentinel.com

�8B Sunday, November 19, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OH-70001852
60734666

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