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                  <text>Students
assist
Meigs vets

Spotty
storms. High
78, low 60

Blue
Devils oust
Vinton Co.

LOCAL s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 75, Volume 70

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 s 50¢

Auto Fair to return this weekend
By Mindy Kearns

Special to Ohio Valley Publishing

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The 2016 West
Virginia Auto Fair, hosted
by the New Haven Road
Angels car club, is set
to take place May 13-14
at the Mason County
Fairgrounds.
New to the event this
year will be a music
showcase, set for Friday
from 6 to 10 p.m.,
according to Ed Carson, a
Road Angels member.
The car club hosts
the
auto fair yearly, and
Courtesy photo
proceeds
from the event
Pictured is a scene from last year’s West Virginia Auto Fair, sponsored by the New Haven Road Angels
car club. The 2016 event is scheduled to take place May 13 and 14 at the Mason County Fairgrounds. go to beneﬁt local schools
The fair will include a swap meet, car show, car corral and, new this year, a music showcase.
and charities. The event

WEST VA. AUTO FAIR
May 13-14 at the Mason County Fairgrounds. General
admission is $5 at the gate; free for children 12 years
and younger. For more information, call 304-675-0975
or 304-593-9665.

consists of a swap meet,
car show and car corral.
The swap meet and car
corral will be held Friday
from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Indoor and outdoor
spaces are available to
buy, sell or trade anything
automotive. In the past,
Carson said there have
been parts for hot rods,
muscle cars, classics,

trucks, drag and dirt
track vehicles. The cost
of the swap meet and
car corral is $25 for the
weekend.
Friday evening’s
music showcase will
offer selections from
eight different groups
and individuals. They
include Brent Patterson
and Friends, of Pomeroy,
See FAIR | 5

Courtesy photos
Courtesy photo

Tuppers Plains VFW POST 9053 Quartermaster Randy Reiber
and Commander Charlie Mugrage presented JoAnne Newsome
with a special plaque for her work and dedication with Honor
Flight.

Eastern elementary and high school students: Seated: Emma Edwards, Dillon Howard, Emma Davis, Emma Epling, Augustus Kennedy,
Michael Letson; Standing: Elayna Bissell, Morgain Little, Megan Douglas, Holly Johnson, Elisha Martindale, Emily Sinclair.

Academic banquet
honors students

VFW post
honors members
and volunteers
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Drew Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion in Pomeroy had a busy month.
Their activities included installation of their
2016-2017 ofﬁcers, recognition of members and a
volunteer.
Mick Williams, Guy Guinther and Don Hunnell
were recognized for 60 years of membership with
a certiﬁcate of recognition from the Department of
Ohio American Legion.
JoAnne Newsome is an active member of the
American Legion Auxiliary, most notably for
her involvement with Honor Flight Dayton. She
was presented with a plaque by Tuppers Plains
VFW POST 9053 Quartermaster Randy Reiber
See VFW | 5

By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

ABOVE, Southern elementary and high school students: Seated:
Kaiden Michael, Brayden Otto, Tanner Lisle, Isaac McCarty, Phoenix
Cleland, Baylee Wolfe; Standing: Sydney Cleland, Austin McKibben,
Holly Cochran, Kalynn Seymour, Elizabeth Wolfe, Jansen Wolfe.
BELOW, Meigs High School students: Seated: Cole Hoffman,
Bradley Logan, Gregory Sheets, Bryce Swatzel, Brennan Bell, Tyler
Fields; Standing: Sadie Fox, Miranda Gillilan, Colton Lilly, Jaxon
Meadows, Lara Perrin, Kelsie Powell.

POMEROY — Students from Meigs, Eastern
and Southern were recognized for their academic
achievements during the 32nd annual Meigs
County Academic Excellence banquet May 5 at the
Meigs High School cafeteria.
Students in grades four, six, eight, 10 and 12
were honored at the event, which was sponsored
by the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center.
Their mission is to “work in partnership with the
community to improve student achievement, build
capacity, and raise expectations for all individuals
in our service region.”
Meigs student Lara Perrin received the Franklin B. Walter All-Scholastic Award for inspiring
students with her speech about the importance
and privilege of education. The award was established in 1989 by Ohio’s County Superintendents
to recognize student achievement and promote
academic accomplishment. One senior from each
of Ohio’s 88 counties receives the honor each year
by virtue of their academic achievement, personal
accomplishments, and community service.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-882-2155 Ext. 2551

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Baseball: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 8
Comics: 9
Television: 10

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

AT LEFT, Lara Perrin, the Franklin B. Walter award recipient, receives her award from Steve Ohlinger, Meigs High School Principal. Lara
inspired students with her speech about the importance and privilege of education. AT RIGHT, Meigs Intermediate and Middle School
students: Seated: Mallory Adams, Elizabeth Anderson, Josie Durst, Emilee Lively, Ty Bartrum, Coulter Cleland; Standing: Cameron Davis,
Alexis Medley, Cole Arnott, Austin Mahr, Bobby Musser.

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Wednesday, May 11, 2016

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

DALE EDGAR MILLER
MIDDLEPORT —
Dale Edgar Miller, 74,
born July 29, 1941, in
Middleport, died May 2,
2016. He was the son of
the late James Doyle Miller and the late Gertrude
(Russell) Miller.
He was preceded in
death by brother James
(Virginia) Miller, of
Columbus, brother
Eugene (Della) Miller, of
Tucson, Ariz., and sister
Mary (Lewis) Smith, of
Columbus.
He is survived by
sister Dorothy (Carl)
Roach, of Middleport;
brother Elmer (Paula)
Miller, of La Grange,
Ga.; brother Willard
(Judy) Miller, of Wooster;
brother Ronald Miller,
of Middleport; special
friends Sandy Bonar and
Julianne (Scott) Hitch,
of Maryville, Tenn.;
Brian (Tammy) Bonar, of
Danville, Va; and numer-

ous nieces, nephews and
friends.
Dale was a Boy Scout
and achieved the rank of
Eagle Scout. He is a 1959
graduate of Middleport
High School and attended
Ohio University. Dale is
a U.S. Navy veteran and
was a professional roller
skating teacher for many
years. Dale dedicated a
large portion of his life in
Mexico, starting schools,
helping children and their
families by improving
their way of living and
funding their education.
No funeral service will
be held, however the family is planning a celebration of life gathering at a
later date.
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Middleport is in charge of Mr.
Miller’s arrangements.
A registry is available
at www.anderaonmcdaniel.com.

DEATH NOTICES
HARDY
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio, — Horace “Crazy Horse”
Hardy, 79, formerly of New London, Conn., passed
away May 8, 2016, in Gallipolis. Memorial services
will be conducted at 6 p.m. Friday, May 20, 2016, at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis. Family will receive friends at the funeral
home between 5-6 p.m. Friday.
HURLOW
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Leonard L. Hurlow, 68, of
Crown City, died Sunday, May 8, 2016, at the Holzer
Medical Center Emergency Room. Services will be
11 a.m. Friday, May 13, 2016, at the Willis Funeral
Home. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral home between 6-8 p.m.
Thursday.
MILLER
WATERLOO, Ohio — Evelyn Ruth Lyall Miller,
79, of Waterloo, died Monday, May 9, 2016. Funeral
services will be 1 p.m. Saturday , May 14, 2016, at
McDaniel Crossroads Pentecostal Church, Patriot,
Ohio. Burial will follow at Flagsprings Cemetery.
Visitation is 5-8 p.m. Friday, May 13, 2016, at Willis
Funeral Home, Gallipolis, Ohio
STEPHENS
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio — Marie Stephens, 96,
passed away Saturday May 7, 2016, at home in Circleville. Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Friday, May
13, 2016, at Pine Street Cemetery, in Gallipolis, with
Eugene Zopp ofﬁciating.
WOLFORD
VINTON, Ohio — Lacey Wolford Jr., 66, Vinton,
passed away Monday, May 9, 2016, at St. Mary’s
Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Friends may call
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel, between
10-11 a.m. Thursday, May 12, 2016. Graveside services will follow in Brush Cemetery, Vinton.

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

10-13. The evangelist will be Tim Chenault, “Restoring the Message of Pentecost.”

PORTLAND — The next quarterly meeting of the
Bufﬁngton Island Battleﬁeld Preservation Foundation is scheduled for Saturday, May 14, at 10 a.m. at
the Portland Community Center, 56896 State Route
124, Portland, OH, 45770. The meeting will conclude by 12:30 p.m. One of the main discussion topics will be the proposed 5-year business plan for the
Foundation. Also on the agenda is the recent progress on the Morgan’s Raid documentary ﬁlm project;
professional assistance has been secured and the
Foundation can move forward with fundraising. For
more information visit bufﬁngtonisland@gmail.com
or www.facebook.com/bufﬁngton.island.

Street in Pomeroy will host a free Basis of a Successful Starts class from 2-4 p.m. May 18. The two-hour
class will focus on types of ownership, licensing,
tax requirements, sources of ﬁnancing, identifying
a customer and how to market a product or service.
Registration for this class closes May 17.

Farmers Bank
Buffington Island Battlefield
to host free BOSS class
Preservation Foundation
POMEROY — Farmers Bank, 640 East Main

POMEROY — The annual Pomeroy High School
Alumni Banquet for alumni and guests will be May
28 in the Meigs High School cafeteria. Social hour
begins at 5:30 p.m. with the banquet being served
at 6:30 p.m. Anniversary years will be 1936, 1941,
1946, 1951, 1956, 1961 and 1966. Tickets may be
obtained at either Francis Florist or Swisher and
RACINE —Mt. Moriah Church of God, 26291
Mile Hill in Racine, will have a revival at 7 p.m. May Lohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy.

Mt. Moriah
Church of God revival

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

K. Hart at 740-949-2656.
POMEROY — No nursing
services will be available at the
Meigs County Health Department. Both public health nurses
will be attending a seminar in
Columbus. We apologize for the
inconvenience.

Thursday, May 12
ORANGE TOWNSHIP —
There will be a special meeting of
the Orange Township Trustees at
Wednesday, May 11
6 p.m. at the township building.
RACINE — Racine Area ComRACINE — Final day of the
munity Organization (RACO)
Racine Area Community OrgaScholarship Spring Yard Sale from nization (RACO) Scholarship
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Star Mill Park Spring Yard Sale from 9 a.m. to 4
in Racine.For questions or to
p.m. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
donate items for the sale, contact For questions or to donate items

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CONTACT US
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Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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

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

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

for the sale, contact K. Hart at
740-949-2656.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
Metropolitan Housing Authority Board of Directors will have
a special meeting at 11 a.m. to
discuss returning ownership of six
properties to Meigs County Board
of Developmental Disabilities.
The meeting will be held in the
conference room of the Housing
Authority located at 441 General
Hartinger Parkway, Middleport.
Monday, May 16
LETART TOWNSHIP — The
regular meeting of the Letart
Township Trustees will be held
at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township
Building.

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

Police seek video recorded
near Pike County shootings
PIKETON (AP) — Authorities investigating the
slayings of eight members of one family in southern
Ohio are asking nearby residents and businesses to
share any video they have that might be relevant to
the case.
Seven adults and a 16-year-old boy were found
shot April 22 at four homes near Piketon.
Ohio’s attorney general and Pike County’s sheriff
are asking that anyone who recorded video nearby
on April 21 or 22 to contact their ofﬁces. Investigators also ask that anyone with information that
might help solve the shootings call the state Bureau
of Criminal Investigation tip line at 1-855-BCIOHIO.
Investigators say they’ve received more than 500
tips and done over 130 interviews as they try to
determine who targeted the Rhoden family and why.

Committee OKs bill to allow
online voter registration
Civitas Media, LLC

Pomeroy High School
Alumni Banquet

COLUMBUS (AP) — A proposal to let Ohioans
register to vote online next year has cleared a legislative hurdle.
The House Government Accountability and
Oversight Committee recently pushed back the bill’s
effective date until 2017, after the November presidential election.
The committee also scrapped a provision allowing
Ohioans to declare their political party afﬁliation
when registering to vote or updating their addresses. Voters currently are considered afﬁliated with
the party whose ballot they last cast in a primary.
The Republican-led panel tabled an amendment
that would have made the measure effective this
year before approving the bill on Tuesday.
Secretary of State Jon Husted (HYOO’-sted) says
the bill is long overdue and will beneﬁt voters and
taxpayers.
The National Conference of State Legislatures
says at least 31 states offer online voter registration.

Men live-streamed threat
over Periscope app
COLUMBUS (AP) — A prosecutor says two men
livestreamed a threat to shoot up their Ohio neighborhood if their video feed exceeded 100 viewers.
A Franklin County grand jury on Tuesday indicted
20-year-old Yusuf Suliman Conteh and 20-year-old
Damon Andrew Rosmond on charges including
endangering children, weapons offenses and tampering with evidence.
Prosecutor Ron O’Brien says the men indicated over their Periscope app in February they
would empty an AR-15 clip in Columbus if the
stream reached 100 viewers. O’Brien says the
men also handed the gun to a toddler during the
video.
Authorities say a concerned viewer in another
state contacted police, who used the live stream to
ﬁnd the men.

It was unclear if attorneys had yet been assigned
to the defendants.

Proposal to legalize medical
marijuana clears Ohio House
COLUMBUS (AP) — The Ohio House has passed
a proposal to legalize medical marijuana in the state.
The fast-tracked bill would bar patients from
smoking the substance but allow them to use it in
vapor form. They couldn’t grow it at home.
Under the legislation, a nine-member Medical
Marijuana Control Commission would set rules for
cultivating, distributing and licensing cannabis.
Communities could opt out of hosting dispensaries.
Employers who want to maintain drug-free workplaces would be protected from liability.
The bill passed on a 71-26 vote Tuesday. The Senate plans to begin hearings on the measure Wednesday.
House leaders said they expect the legislation to
reach to the governor’s desk by the end of May.
Lawmakers are seeking to head off a proposed
November ballot issue supported by the national
medical marijuana movement.

Ohio couple pleads guilty to
keeping adopted kids captive
JEFFERSON (AP) — A couple has pleaded guilty
to child endangering and felonious assault for physically abusing their adopted children and keeping
them virtual prisoners in a northeast Ohio home.
The (Ashtabula) Star Beacon reports a 66-yearold woman and her 60-year-old husband entered the
pleas Monday in Ashtabula County. The Associated
Press isn’t naming the couple because the husband
initially was charged with sex crimes involving two
adopted teen girls. Those charges were dropped in a
plea deal.
Their attorneys declined to comment.
Authorities learned of the abuse after the girls
picked a lock on their bedroom door and crashed
the family’s van in 2013. The girls and a developmentally disabled man were removed from the
home.
Prosecutors say the children were malnourished
and had been beaten repeatedly with a paddle.

5 public universities to join
Ohio’s online checkbook
COLUMBUS (AP) — Ohio’s state treasurer says
ﬁve of Ohio’s public universities are putting their
spending information on his online checkbook website.
Republican Josh Mandel made the announcement
Tuesday. He was joined by Inter-University Council President Bruce Johnson and presidents from
several of the participating universities: Bowling
Green, Central State, Miami, Wright State and Ohio
universities.
Mandel said it’s the ﬁrst time students, faculty
and others will be able to see detailed university
operational expenditures. The data is expected to go
online over the course of this year.

�LOCAL/STATE/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Prosecutor to
probe death
FREMONT (AP) —
The case of a northern
Ohio man who was
crushed to death after
passing out in a trash
bin more than 15 years
ago will be investigated
by a special prosecutor.
Sandusky County
Prosecutor Tom Stierwalt said recently that
Derek DeVine, a Seneca
County prosecutor, will
oversee the case and
decide whether it will
be sent to a grand jury
to determine if Lee
Naus’ death was accidental.
Authorities said
Naus, 21, was crushed
to death when the bin
he was sleeping in was
unloaded into a garbage
truck in 1999.
Toxicology tests
showed the Fremont
man was drunk at the
time, and Sandusky
County Coroner John
Wukie ruled that his
death was accidental.
The latest investigation comes in the wake
of an anonymous tip
received by the Sandusky Register newspa-

per in April 2015 and
reviewed by police.
The caller named
two men who allegedly
threw Naus into the bin
behind Bud’s Tavern. A
barmaid who worked
at the tavern and saw
Naus the night of his
death didn’t mention
the men when questioned by police.
Fremont police
reports from the 1999
investigation showed
that police had received
the same tip regarding
the two men mentioned
in the 2015 call.
The Sandusky Register received a voicemail
with new information
about Naus’ death in
August. The paper
turned it over to the
police department for
review.
Detective Capt. Sean
O’Connell with the Sandusky County sheriff’s
ofﬁce handled the 1999
investigation and said
there are no suspects in
the case.
DeVine’s ofﬁce said
it doesn’t comment on
ongoing investigations.

Obama to visit
Hiroshima
By Nancy Benac
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Eager to heal old wounds and
galvanize new generations, President Barack Obama
this month will become the ﬁrst sitting American
president to visit Hiroshima, where seven decades
ago the U.S. dropped the devastating atomic bomb
that ushered in the nuclear age.
By visiting the peace park near the epicenter of
the 1945 attack, the president hopes to reinvigorate
efforts worldwide to eliminate nuclear weapons. But
in a sign of the extraordinary political sensitivities
attached to the gesture, the White House is going
out of its way to stress Obama will not come bearing an apology.
Deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said
ﬂatly: “He will not revisit the decision to use the
atomic bomb at the end of World War II.” Instead,
Rhodes said in a statement, Obama will spotlight
the toll of war and offer a “forward-looking vision”
of a non-nuclear world.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who will
accompany Obama on the visit, said no apology is
expected — or necessary.
“The prime minister of the world’s only nation to
have suffered atomic attacks, and the leader of the
world’s only nation to have used the atomic weapons
at war will together pay respects for the victims,”
Abe told reporters. “I believe that would be a way to
respond to the victims of the atomic bombings and
the survivors who are still in pain.”
The U.S. attack on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945,
killed 140,000 people. A second bomb, dropped on
Nagasaki three days later, killed 70,000. The bombings scarred generations of Japanese, both physically and mentally, but many Americans believe
they hastened the end of World War II and saved
countless other lives. Japan announced it would surrender on Aug. 15.
As for Obama’s visit, the Japanese people are
ready for this moment, seven decades in the making.
In a NHK television poll this month, 70 percent of
Japanese respondents said they wanted Obama to
visit, compared to 2 percent against it.
Survivors, especially, have long been waiting. The
number of survivors who are recognized as “hibakusha” and entitled to medical assistance from the
Japanese government was more than 183,000 as of
March. Their average age is now over 80.
“The day has ﬁnally come,” said 91-year-old
Sunao Tsuboi, a survivor of the bombing and head
of a survivors group in the western Japanese city.
“We are not asking for an apology,” Tsuboi told
NHK. “All we want is to see him lay ﬂowers at
the peace park and lower his head in silence. This
would be a ﬁrst step toward abolishing nuclear
weapons.”
The president’s visit, at the end of a previously
announced trip to Japan and Vietnam, has been
widely anticipated since Secretary of State John
Kerry went to the Hiroshima memorial in April.
Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui praised
Obama’s plan as a “bold decision based on conscience and rationality” and said he hopes the
president will listen to survivors’ stories. Nagasaki
Mayor Tomihisa Taue said the president would
“send a powerful message, in his own words, toward
achieving a world without nuclear weapons.”
Obama’s call for a nuclear-free world echoes the
message delivered by former President Jimmy Carter when he visited Hiroshima in 1984 and pledged
to work as a private citizen “to eliminate nuclear
weapons from the face of the earth.”

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 3

URG assists Meigs veterans

Courtesy photo

The social work student council of the University of Rio Grande gave back to the community recently by giving donations to the Meigs
County Veterans Outreach Center in Pomeroy, The council also gave donations to in Gallia County for Bridges Day program; Vinton
County for Help Me Grow; and in Jackson County for the Oak Hill Pantry. Pictured, from left, are Chelsia Brown and Candice Jeffers of the
Student Council, Larry Churchheus, of the Meigs County Venter Outreach Center, and council members Trinity Kimes and Jessica Fisher.

Veteran will become new leader
By John Seewer

lakes and rivers tainted
by toxic algae around the
state.
TOLEDO — The new
An algae bloom that
head of Ohio’s largest and spread across Lake Erie
most inﬂuential agricullast summer was the
ture organization says
largest on record, while
farmers can’t rely just on
government incentives to another one stretched
cover the cost of slowing more than 600 miles
along the Ohio River.
down fertilizer runoff
Algae outbreaks continue
that feeds harmful algae
to be a problem in the
in Lake Erie and the
state’s largest inland lake
state’s rivers.
Paying for cover crops in western Ohio.
While there are a numthat ﬁlter nutrients and
ber of factors contributnew drainage systems
that hold back the runoff
must be a part of farmers’ business plan, said
Adam Sharp, who was
announced Tuesday
to lead the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation.
“The key is making
sure what you’re investing in is going to work,”
he said.
Sharp knows the issue
well, along with all of the
other challenges facing
the state’s agriculture
industry. He’s been with
the Ohio Farm Bureau
since 2004, most recently
as its top lobbyist in
Columbus.
He’ll take over as executive vice president in
July, replacing longtime
farm bureau leader Jack
Fisher.
One of his goals is to
involve and engage more
people in the process of
food production.
That means making
sure more Ohioans have
a chance to visit a farm
and pick apples or see
ice cream being made, he
said.
“There’s this other
growing interest about
knowing where your food
comes from,” Sharp said.
Finding out where beef
is raised and vegetables
are grown will help
people around the state
understand that they’re
supporting their neighbors, he said.
Farmers also are under
scrutiny for their role
in the rising number of

Associated Press

ing to the problem, most
researchers say it won’t
improve until farmers
reduce the amount of
phosphorus ﬂowing into
the water from livestock
manure and commercial
fertilizers.
Ohio has taken some
steps to help during the
past two years, such as
limiting when farmers
can spread fertilizer and
manure on ﬁelds and
requiring training for
applying fertilizer.

The farm bureau and
the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s Natural
Resources Conservation Service recently
announced plans to use
three farms in northwestern Ohio as demonstration sites to show farmers
how they can reduce
runoff.
“We can’t do it alone.
We know there are other
contributors,” Sharp said.
“We know we’re dedicated to doing our part.”

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Say it, don’t
spray it
A cultural divide in farming communities
squelches conversation about hot-button issues
like pesticides.
A friend of mine is a farmer out in Montana.
She’s also eight months pregnant
with her ﬁrst child.
Recently she looked out her window and saw a worker spraying
pesticides on her neighbor’s farm.
Concerned for the health of her
baby, she called the neighbor about
the spraying. “Oh,” the neighbor
asked, “do you want him to spray
Jill
Richardson your land too?”
She remained polite on the phone
Contributing
but was internally panicked. What
Columnist
had he sprayed, and how would it
affect her child?
In the day that followed, she faced dilemmas like
whether to take the dog in the car and walk him
somewhere else, or even not to walk him at all.
Was the land around her poisoned? Could she
walk anywhere without endangering her child?
She became a virtual prisoner in her home.
She’s not the only one I know who lives in the
country and faces issues like this.
Another friend deals with her neighbor’s cow
manure, which runs off into her stream. The
neighbor in this case is a nice guy, she says, but
there’s a cultural divide between her and the farmers who surround her. She doesn’t see a way to
approach them about issues like these to achieve
any kind of good results.
Thanks to this divide, what could be a matter of
common courtesy — neighbors having a reasonable conversation to keep from imposing on one
another — feels impossible.
The question of “organic vs. pesticides” or “local
food vs. industrial food” (or however else you
want to frame it) hasn’t been a rational debate for
a long time. It’s ideological. To the farmers in the
two anecdotes above, it’s likely an identity issue.
That is, in farming communities, one’s stance
on pesticides or so-called factory farms becomes a
part of one’s identity. Anyone who disagrees with
you isn’t just engaging in a reasonable disagreement — they’re attacking your very identity.
How do we shift the discourse? How can neighbors learn to have reasonable — and honest —
discussions about hot-button food issues?
It can be done. I’ve done it.
I’ve also not done it.
That is, with some people, I’ve been able to have
a frank conversation in which each of us is honest.
We spoke as human beings, despite some fundamental disagreements.
But in other cases, we couldn’t get past talking
points and slogans. Some people, for example,
claimed that anyone who takes issue with pesticides or any other agricultural practice is “antifarmer.” When that’s the case, talking to one
another is a pure waste of time.
Right now, we stand at a point in history when
most Americans are separated from the production of their food, but also when more and more of
us are concerned about where it comes from.
Sometimes that enthusiasm gets ahead of our
knowledge of farming, but that’s not a reason to
dismiss anyone. It’s a reason for dialogue. Each
side has something to learn and something to contribute.
We can go in two directions. Either each side
can become more polarized and more entrenched
in their positions, or each side can open up to discussion. Let’s take the high road.

THEIR VIEW

Voter turnout key to progress

better minority representaThe most important decition as well.
sions in government are
In response to low turnmade at the local and state
out for a recent midterm
levels, with supporting
election - when his party
legislation in congress. But,
took a proverbial beating
with everyone’s attention
- President Obama tried
focused on Trump and Clinton, it seems everyone’s forDeer in to sell the idea of “mandagotten one very basic rule
Headlines tory voting” to increase the
odds. Mandatory or compulof democracy – all politics
Gery L.
sory voting requires every
is local.
Deer
citizen to vote or face a
Most voters have no idea
penalty, which could include
what local and state races
ﬁnes, jail time or community serare currently in play for Novemvice.
ber. In Ohio, for example, all 99
It’s unlikely compulsory votseats in the Ohio House of Repreing will be adopted in the U.S.
sentatives are up for election. As
anytime in the near future, but
of May 2016, Democrats hold 34
something should be done to eduof them and 65 are Republican.
cate people on how important it is
But all are up for grabs this year.
to cast a ballot for local and state
Along with a lack of awareness
races. One option is to schedule
on issues and candidates for local
and state races comes the problem local elections to coincide with
national ones. Some experts
of low voter turnout. Yes, it can
impact a presidential election, but estimate that this would increase
voter turn out by as much as 30
its greatest effect is on the local
percent, strongly inﬂuencing the
and state levels.
outcome of virtually any local race.
As the blustering between DonSomething that also seems to be
ald Trump and his Republican
a problem is getting easy, unfetopponents continues to fracture
tered access to detail and unbiased
the party, some voters are simply
information on candidates and
planning to stay home in Novemissues well in advance of the elecber and not vote at all. But a low
turnout can be devastating to local tion. Local board of elections websites are pretty terrible, offering
issues and government seats.
limited and disjoined information.
Uneven turnout can result in
All ballot details should be puba mathematically induced bias.
licized and made available in every
If, because of the Trump issue,
electronic and manual version posRepublicans stay home, for examsible. Each and every voter should
ple, a larger Democratic turnout
be able to read the details of all
will skew the numbers before
local candidates and issues, someanyone pulls a lever or punches a
thing that is routinely difﬁcult in
chad. The math has already been
some communities.
pushed towards the Left. At the
Newspapers are one potential
local level, cities and towns with
resource. But, while proclaiming
higher voter turnout tend to have

objectivity, they inevitably endorse
one candidate over another, ﬂushing any credibility to that effect.
They might do a feature story with
snippets and quotes from local
candidates, but readers can always
discern a level of “spin” to the
material and whom the editors or
publishers prefer to support.
Apathy seems to be another
issue contributing to the turnout
problem. People who believe their
vote doesn’t count will simply stay
home. No doubt many Americans
have become polarized and jaded
by the entire process over the
years, this time probably being
the worst in decades, avoiding the
political process isn’t the answer.
Making a difference is generally
about numbers, the more people
who vote the better the opportunity for positive change. And, while
it is probably accurate to say votes
are meaningless in the presidential
primaries, since the parties will
choose whomever they want as the
nominee anyway, they do count
closer to home.
In the end, most good is done
at home. Local governments make
the decisions that directly and
immediately impact the lives of
their constituents. It’s far more
important for voters to focus on
those who keep the streetlights lit
and the water ﬂowing in homes
than who has the most quoted gaff
on the evening news. Every voter
should take time to ﬁnd out everything possible about the upcoming
local candidates and issues.
Gery L. Deer is an independent columnist and
business writer. Deer in Headlines is distributed
by GLD Enterprises Communications Ltd.

OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for
America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It.

TODAY IN HISTORY...

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Today is Wednesday,
May 11, the 132nd day of
2016. There are 234 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On May 11, 1946, the
ﬁrst CARE packages, sent
by a consortium of American charities to provide
relief to the hungry of
postwar Europe, arrived
at Le Havre, France.
On this date:
In 1647, Peter Stuyvesant arrived in New
Amsterdam to become
governor of New Netherland.
In 1816, the American
Bible Society was founded in New York.
In 1858, Minnesota
became the 32nd state of
the Union.
In 1927, the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences was founded during a banquet at

the Biltmore Hotel in
Los Angeles.
In 1935, the Rural
Electriﬁcation Administration was created as
one of President Franklin
D. Roosevelt’s New Deal
programs.
In 1945, the aircraft
carrier USS Bunker
Hill was attacked and
severely damaged by two
kamikaze aircraft off Okinawa; according to the
U.S. Navy’s website, 346
men were killed, 43 were
left missing, and 264
were wounded.
In 1953, a tornado
devastated Waco, Texas,
claiming 114 lives.
In 1960, Israeli agents
captured Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in
Buenos Aires, Argentina.
In 1973, the espionage
trial of Daniel Ellsberg
and Anthony Russo in
the “Pentagon Papers”

case came to an end as
Judge William M. Byrne
dismissed all charges,
citing government misconduct.
In 1996, an Atlantabound ValuJet DC-9
caught ﬁre shortly after
takeoff from Miami and
crashed into the Florida
Everglades, killing all
110 people on board.
Five years ago: Former hedge fund titan Raj
Rajaratnam was convicted
by a federal jury in New
York in an insider-trading
case of ﬁve counts of
conspiracy and nine of
securities fraud. (Rajaratnam was sentenced to
11 years in prison.) Two
earthquakes struck southern Spain in quick succession, killing at least nine
people, injuring dozens
and causing major damage to buildings.
Today’s Birthdays:

Comedian Mort Sahl is
89. Nation of Islam leader
Louis Farrakhan is 83.
Jazz keyboardist Carla
Bley is 80. Rock singer
Eric Burdon (The Animals; War) is 75. Actress
Shohreh Aghdashloo
is 64. Actress Frances
Fisher is 64. Actor Boyd
Gaines is 63. Country
musician Mark Herndon
(Alabama) is 61. Actress
Martha Quinn is 57.
Country singer-musician
Tim Raybon (The Raybon
Brothers) is 53. Actor
Tim Blake Nelson is 52.
Actor Jeffrey Donovan
is 48. Country musician
Keith West (Heartland)
is 48. Actor Nicky Katt is
46. Actor Coby Bell is 41.
Cellist Perttu Kivilaakso
is 38. Actor-singer Jonathan Jackson is 34. Rapper Ace Hood is 28. Musician Howard Lawrence
(Disclosure) is 22.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 5

Courtesy photos

AT LEFT, the Department of the Ohio American Legion recognized Mick Williams for 60 years as a member. He is pictured with Commander John Hood receiving his certificate of recognition. AT RIGHT,
Commander John Hood presented Guy Guinther with a certificate of recognition from the Department of Ohio American Legion for 60 years as a member of the organization. Don Hunnell also received
recognition, but was absent for the photos.

VFW
From Page 1

ported solely through donawhich includes airfare, bus
transportation while in D.C., tions and run by volunteers.
meals, t-shirts and disposable Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992cameras. The trips are sup2155 Ext. 2551.

Fair
Ohio; the Levi Westfall Band, of Marietta,
Ohio; Matt Metheney, of Pomeroy; Dwight
Holsopple Jr. of Tornado, W.Va.; Don
Stamper and Jerry Spradling, of New
Haven; Keith McGrath, of Albany, Ohio;
Jake Dunn and the Blackbirds, of Marietta;
and Mason Dixon and the Backwoods
Brotherhood, of Point Pleasant.
A car show will be featured Saturday.
Registration is from 9 a.m. to noon, with
awards at 3 p.m. There will be a cash prize
and trophy to the Best of Show, with over

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

63°

71°

71°

A shower or thunderstorm in spots today and
tonight. High 78° / Low 60°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

Trace
2.48
1.44
16.85
14.93

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:20 a.m.
8:31 p.m.
11:05 a.m.
12:36 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Last

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

New

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

SOLUNAR TABLE

OHIO RIVER

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

Major
4:40a
5:37a
6:29a
7:16a
7:58a
8:37a
9:14a

Minor
10:54a
11:50a
12:15a
1:04a
1:47a
2:26a
3:04a

Major
5:07p
6:03p
6:53p
7:38p
8:20p
8:58p
9:35p

Minor
11:20p
---12:41p
1:27p
2:09p
2:48p
3:25p

WEATHER HISTORY
A deadly tornado swept through
Waco, Texas, on May 11, 1953. The
twister killed 114 people and caused
$200 million in damage. May 11,
1951, marks the latest springtime
snowfall in Baltimore.

Portsmouth
79/61

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.02 +0.47
Marietta
34 17.79 -0.16
Parkersburg
36 21.93 -0.64
Belleville
35 12.16 -0.30
Racine
41 12.93 +0.10
Point Pleasant
40 25.03 -0.44
Gallipolis
50 12.03 -0.14
Huntington
50 28.14 -1.82
Ashland
52 35.13 -0.98
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.07 +0.09
Portsmouth
50 24.00 -3.50
Maysville
50 34.20 -1.00
Meldahl Dam
51 25.50 -2.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Cloudy and cooler
with a few showers

Logan
75/58

74°
52°

Rather cloudy and
cool

70°
51°

Warmer with
considerable
cloudiness

Marietta
75/58

Murray City
74/56
Belpre
76/59

Athens
75/56

St. Marys
75/59

Parkersburg
75/58

Coolville
75/58

Elizabeth
77/60

Spencer
77/61

Buffalo
78/60
Milton
79/61
Huntington
78/61

St. Albans
79/61

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
79/50
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
72/53
20s
10s
0s
Los Angeles
-0s
75/58
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

Mostly cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
80/63

Ashland
79/62
Grayson
80/63

MONDAY

64°
47°

Wilkesville
76/58
POMEROY
Jackson
77/58
77/58
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
78/60
77/60
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
76/61
GALLIPOLIS
78/60
78/61
77/59

South Shore Greenup
80/63
78/61

72

May 13 May 21 May 29 Jun 4

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Lucasville
79/60

Primary: mulberry/grass/other
Mold: 648

Beautiful with times
of clouds and sun

McArthur
75/57

Very High

SUNDAY

63°
39°

Adelphi
75/58
Chillicothe
75/60

SATURDAY

74°
51°

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

Waverly
76/60

Pollen: 26

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Couple of
thunderstorms

3

Primary: ascospores

Thu.
6:19 a.m.
8:32 p.m.
12:05 p.m.
1:22 a.m.

THURSDAY

82°
61°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

79°
56°
74°
51°
95° in 1936
27° in 1966

BBT (NYSE) - 34.38
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.94
Pepsico (NYSE) - 106.57
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.10
Rockwell (NYSE) - 113.80
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 11.89
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.62
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 13.47
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 68.79
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 11.18
WesBanco (NYSE) - 31.88
Worthington (NYSE) - 36.37
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
May 10, 2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer who lives in Mason
County.

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

AEP (NYSE) - 65.05
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 23.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 112.84
Big Lots (NYSE) - 45.98
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 46.66
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 34.24
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 6.93
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.150
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 48.32
Collins (NYSE) - 91.65
DuPont (NYSE) - 64.99
US Bank (NYSE) - 42.06
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 30.49
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 46.4
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 62.05
Kroger (NYSE) - 35.24
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 69.16
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 90.31
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 22.50

30 trophies for other winners.
The entry fee for the car show is $10,
which includes the driver’s entry to the
entire show. There is also a limited number
of indoor car display spaces for $25 that
allow the owner to leave the car inside, then
bring it out for the show.
Camping with full hookup is available
onsite. There will also be door prizes and
50/50 drawings.
General admission is $5 at the gate, and
free for children 12 years and under. For
more information, phone 304-675-0975 or
304-593-9665.

From Page 1

TODAY

LOCAL STOCKS

Clendenin
78/60
Charleston
78/61

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
66/43
Minneapolis
63/48

Billings
56/38

Chicago
68/55
Denver
59/38

Montreal
Toronto 66/43
66/47
New York
Detroit
73/55
67/54
Washington
66/58

Kansas City
75/53

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

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
77/51/pc
57/41/pc
87/66/pc
60/52/c
64/55/c
56/38/pc
71/51/s
64/50/s
78/61/pc
85/63/t
56/33/t
68/55/pc
77/63/t
67/57/c
73/58/pc
88/69/t
59/38/t
73/51/r
67/54/c
82/70/pc
86/73/pc
79/63/pc
75/53/t
88/66/s
89/67/pc
75/58/pc
82/69/t
86/73/pc
63/48/r
82/65/t
86/71/pc
73/55/pc
86/60/t
88/66/pc
69/54/c
94/71/s
70/58/c
66/43/s
84/63/t
73/58/c
84/66/t
63/45/s
72/53/pc
79/50/s
66/58/c

Hi/Lo/W
77/51/pc
61/43/pc
88/67/t
63/55/pc
69/57/c
67/37/pc
83/55/s
67/52/s
83/61/t
85/64/t
65/45/s
75/52/pc
78/55/t
79/57/t
79/58/t
78/62/t
69/45/s
68/47/pc
76/56/t
82/70/pc
86/68/c
75/54/t
70/49/pc
92/68/s
78/55/t
81/59/pc
81/59/t
85/72/pc
64/44/pc
85/59/t
86/71/pc
74/56/pc
77/53/sh
89/67/pc
74/58/pc
100/74/s
81/62/t
68/47/s
81/65/c
76/61/t
75/55/pc
74/54/s
70/53/pc
76/52/s
71/60/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
87/66

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
90/59

97° in Cotulla, TX
22° in Saranac Lake, NY

Global
High
Low

Houston
86/73

Chihuahua
90/57
Monterrey
97/72

Miami
86/73

116° in N’guigmi, Niger
2° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

60647073

and Commander Charlie
Mugrage, whose wives
France’s Reiber and Peach
Mugrage were also in attendance from the auxiliary to
honor Newsome.
Honor Flight Dayton’s
mission is to take veterans of
the World War II and Korean
and Vietnam wars to national
memorials in Washington,
D.C. Priority is given for
the trips to terminally ill
veterans from the three wars.
The trips are provided at no
cost to all qualiﬁed veterans

Pomeroy American
Legion Drew Webster
Post #39 recently
installed officers for
the 2016-2017 year.
Pictured from left to
right: Commander
John Hood, Steve
VanMeter, Ray Kloes,
Jerry Frederick, Sam
VanMatre, George
Harris, Jack Lewis, Wally
Hatfield, Bill Spaun,
Charles Yonker, Norm
Price and Ed Durst.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 s Page 6

Blue Devils oust Vinton County
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY — A promising
start to the ‘second season’.
The seventh seeded Gallia
Academy baseball team began
postseason play in style Monday
night, defeating 10-seed Vinton
County by a 10-0 ﬁnal in ﬁve
innings, at Eastman Ball Field.
The Blue Devils (16-9) went
ahead in the bottom of the ﬁrst
inning, as Kole Carter doubled
and then scored on a passed ball.
GAHS senior Matt Bailey — who
bunted for a hit, stole second
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Gallia Academy freshman Josh Faro pitched a complete game shutout base and then advanced to third
on Monday night, as the Blue Devils defeated Vinton County 10-0 on on the passed ball that scored
Eastman Ball Field.
Carter — stole home to give the

Blue and White a 2-0 lead with
one out.
The Blue Devil lead grew to 3-0
later in the ﬁrst inning, as Eric
Ward scored on a Jeremy Brumﬁeld ground-out.
Gallia Academy scored two
more runs in the bottom of the
second inning, as Braden Simms
scored on a single by Carter, who
then stole second, advanced to
third on an error and scored on a
sac-ﬂy by Bailey.
Vinton County (2-22) held
the hosts scoreless in the third
inning, but the Blue Devil offense
was back on track in the bottom
of the fourth. Carter led off the
fourth frame with a single, Bailey
then reached on an error, and

both runners eventually scored on
seprate passed balls.
Anthony Sipple — a GAHS
senior that walked with no outs
in the fourth — scored on the
Vikings’ second defensive mishap
of the frame. The Blue Devils
weren’t ﬁnished in the fourth
inning, however, as Ryan Terry
hit a sac-ﬂy that brought home
Eric Ward and pushed the lead
to 9-0.
GAHS junior Ty Howell drew
a base on ball to lead off the ﬁfth
inning, and the Blue Devils loaded the bases with back-to-back
one-out singles by Carter and
Bailey. Sipple came through with
See DEVILS | 7

Falcons hold
off Meigs, 4-3
By Alex Hawley

The Marauders broke
their four-inning dry
spell in the top of the
MINFORD — The
sixth inning, as Chase
tournament tune-up
Whitlatch singled and
didn’t exactly go as
later scored. However,
planned.
the hosts got the run
The Meigs baseball
right back in the bottom of the sixth, when
team — which begins
Aron Alley scored on an
postseason play on
error.
Thursday — fell by a
With two outs in
4-3 count to non-conferthe top of the seventh,
ence host Minford, on
Monday night in Scioto Meigs junior Cody
Bartrum singled home
County, in a game that
Christian Mattox to
was a late addition to
bring the Marauders
the schedule.
within one run. With
The Marauders (20the potential tying run
6) gained the early
on second base, the Faladvantage in the top
cons got the ﬂy-out they
of the ﬁrst inning, as
needed to secure the 4-3
Kaileb Sheets singled,
win.
advanced to second on
Powell tossed six
a passed ball, and then
innings
and earned the
scored on a Chase Whitpitching
victory for
latch single.
Minford,
allowing two
The Falcons took
runs, one earned, on
the lead in the bottom
ﬁve hits and three free
of the second, as Alex
passes. Matthew Gullett
Powell drove in Aron
was credited with the
Alley, and Hayden Scott
save, surrendering one
sacriﬁced home Michael run on three hits in one
Grasso.
inning of relief. Powell
Minford pushed its
struck out two batters,
lead to 3-1 in the botwhile Gullett fanned
tom of the fourth, as
one.
Jared Alley scored on a
Aron Alley single.
See FALCONS | 10

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, May 11
Baseball
River Valley at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Calhoun County vs. Wahama at Hannan HS,
5:30
Winﬁeld at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Softball
Marietta at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
AAA Regionals at Winﬁeld HS, 5 p.m.
College Track and Field
Rio Grande at Hillsdale College
Thursday, May 12
Baseball
Gallia Academy at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Calhoun County vs. Wahama at Hannan HS,
5:30
Winﬁeld at Point Pleasant* (if needed), 6:30
Softball
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Pike Eastern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
St. Albans at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Track and Field
A Regionals at Parkersburg HS, 5 p.m.
Friday, May 13
Softball
Southeastern at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Zane Trace, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
OVC Championships at Fairland HS, 7 p.m.
Saturday, May 14
Baseball
RV-FHS winner at Alexander, 11 a.m.
Track and Field
SEOAL Championships at Logan HS, 10 a.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Hannan senior Isaiah Burgess (20) releases a pitch during the fourth inning of Monday night’s Class A Region 4, Section 3 baseball
contest against Calhoun County in Ashton, W.Va.

Calhoun County claws past Wildcats
By Bryan Walters

pitch, then stole second and third
before scoring on a sacriﬁce ﬂy
to center — giving the Red and
ASHTON, W.Va. — They played White a 3-1 cushion after four comwell enough to win, but the Hanplete.
nan baseball team ultimately came
The score stayed that way until
up short Monday night following
the top of the sixth as back-to-back
a 5-4 setback to Calhoun County
two-out singles by Poore and Isain the opening game of the Class
iah Burgess gave Hannan baserunA Region 4, Section 3 tournament ners, then Hudnall followed with a
being held at the Craigo Athletic
two-RBI double that tied the conFacility in Mason County.
test at three.
The Wildcats (4-8-1) — who
CCHS, however, countered with
were the visitors on the scoreboard a run in the home half of the sixth
despite being the host school for
as Devan McKown led things off
the tournament — never led in the by being hit by a pitch and later
contest, but the guests overcame a scored on a groundout by Cole
pair of late deﬁcits by tying things Ritchie, giving the Red Devils a 4-3
up in the sixth and seventh frames. edge headed into the seventh.
The host Red Devils (6-11),
James Bledsoe provided the
however, received a walk-off single spark that Hannan needed in its
from Alan Matheny in the bottom
ﬁnal at-bat after leading off the sevof the seventh as Dylan Heiney
enth with a solo shot to left ﬁeld,
scored from third — giving CCHS tying the game at four.
the opening round one-run deciDustin Holcomb started the
sion.
Calhoun County half of the seventh
Calhoun County took an early
with a single, then Heiney entered
1-0 advantage as Seth Moore lifted as a pinch runner. Heiney went on
a sacriﬁce ﬂy to centerﬁeld that
to steal second and third base, then
allowed Matheny to score in the
Matheny blooped a single into shalbottom of the second. The hosts
low centerﬁeld with nobody out
followed with another run in the
— allowing Heiney to cross home
third as Matheny singled home
plate with the game-winning run.
Caden Hicks for a 2-0 lead.
With the setback, Hannan
HHS countered in the top half
returns to postseason action Tuesof the fourth as Cole Poore led
day when it faces the defending
the frame off with a double, then
Class A state champion Wahama
advanced to third on a wild pitch.
White Falcons at 5:30 p.m.
Corey Hudnall struck out for the
The Wildcats outhit CCHS by
second out in the inning, but Poore a slim 8-7 overall margin and also
appeared to think that it was the
committed the only error in the
third out of the innings and started contest. The Red Devils stranded
toward the dugout.
10 runners on base, while the
After realizing there were only
guests left two on the bags.
two outs in the inning, Poore husIt was a very tough night for
tled back to third base as a pickoff second-year HHS coach Tad Greatthrow got past the CCHS third
house, who watched his troops put
baseman. Poore sprinted home on together a pair of inspiring latethe errant throw and would have
inning rallies before ultimately havbeen out at the plate, but the ball
ing it amount to nothing.
trickled away from the catcher as
But, like any good coach can
he slid in safely for a 2-1 deﬁcit.
do, Greathouse also found a lot of
The Red Devils answered in
pride in the resiliency that his team
their half of the fourth as Moore
showed down to the ﬁnal pitch.
led the inning off by being hit by a
“You know, the boys fought hard

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

all game. We hit the ball well and
made plays when we had to, especially with that big home run late
in the seventh,” Greathouse said.
“Ultimately, the cards fell where
they did and we just happened to
be on the wrong side of the outcome. Nonetheless, I’m proud of
my boys and the effort that they
gave. I couldn’t have asked for
much more out of them than what I
got tonight.
“I know the next one won’t be
any easier against a great program
like Wahama, but I also think we
learned a little bit about ourselves
tonight. It’s never over until it’s
over and there are no givens in
baseball. Defending state champions or not, we’re coming out to
give them our best effort and play
our hearts out until the very end
— and we’ll let the cards fall how
they will.”
Hicks was the winning pitcher of
record after allowing four earned
runs and eight hits over seven
innings while striking out eight.
Burgess suffered the tough-luck
loss after surrendering ﬁve earned
runs, seven hits, six walks and
three hit batsmen over six-plus
frames while fanning six.
Poore led Hannan with three hits
and two runs scored, followed by
Bledsoe with two safeties. Burgess,
Hudnall and Junior Morehart also
had a hit apiece in the setback.
Hudnall led HHS with two RBIs
and Bledsoe also had one RBI.
Bledsoe and Burgess also scored a
run apiece for the Wildcats.
Matheny led Calhoun County
with three hits and two RBIs, while
McKown added two safeties to go
along with a RBI and a run scored.
Ritchie and Holcomb also had a hit
each for the victors.
Ritchie, Moore and McKown
each knocked in a run. Moore,
McKown, Hicks and Heiney also
scored a run apiece for the Red and
White.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 7

Eastern Eagles soar past Rebels in sectional
By Paul Boggs

was charged with 10 earned runs on
ﬁve hits and ﬁve walks.
Keirsten Howell started and tossed
BEAVER —The Pike Eastern
one inning, before Aaliyah Howell
Eagles ended the season for the South threw the next two and Olivia HornGallia High School softball squad on
sby the fourth.
Monday, winning 22-1 in a Division
Eastern outhit the Rebels 10-3, as
IV sectional semiﬁnal tilt at Eastern
South Gallia committed four errors to
High School.
the Eagles’ one.
The Rebels, which were the 11thThe Rebels scored their only run
seeded squad in the sectional, scored when Hornsby was hit by a pitch to
their only run in the fourth inning.
lead off the fourth, then moved to secEastern, the sixth seed, scored
ond on a groundout.
twice in the opening inning — before
Following a ﬂyout for the second
adding a pair of three-run spots in
out, Taylor Burnette singled to left
the next two frames for an early 8-0
— as Hornsby advanced to third
advantage.
and went home on the Eagles’ errant
After the Rebels’ run, the Eagles
throw.
exploded for 14 runs in the bottom of
Hornsby and Howell had the other
the fourth, making it 22-1.
hits for the Rebels, as both — along
The contest was called following
with Burnette — went 1-for-2.
the ﬁfth inning with the 10-run mercy
Savanna Garrison was the completePhoto courtesy of Julie Billings of The Pike County News-Watchman rule.
game winning pitcher for Eastern.
Four Rebels pitched in the game, as
South Gallia’s Erin Evans delivers a pitch to a Pike Eastern batter during Monday’s Division IV
sectional semifinal softball game at Pike Eastern High School.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106
Erin Evans worked the fourth — and
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Lady
Marauders
clip Falcons
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

MINFORD — The game was added
late, but the Meigs High School softball
squad did all of its damage early against
the host Minford Falcons on Monday.
That’s because the Marauders scored
once in the opening inning and twice
more in the third, en route to fending off
the Falcons 3-1 in a non-league tilt.
With the win, Meigs moved to 19-5, as
the Maroon and Gold was playing in its
ﬁrst game in exactly one week.
In a well-played pitcher’s duel, both
teams had four hits, but the Marauders
managed to break a 1-1 tie with two runs
in the top of the third.
The 3-1 score held up the rest of the
way, as Alliyah Pullins pitched the opening ﬁve innings for Meigs and earned the
win.
She walked two and struck out two,
giving way to Maddison Woodyard in the
ﬁnal two stanzas, who gained the save.
Woodyard also struck out two, as Pullins retired the Falcons 1-2-3 in the second
and fourth frames, followed by Woodyard
doing the same in the ﬁfth and last.
In the remaining three innings, ﬁve
Falcons approached the plate each time,
but Minford stranded a runner at third
in the ﬁrst, left the bases loaded in the
third, and stranded two runners aboard
in the sixth.
Meigs scored in the initial at-bat when
Taylor Swartz reached on a ﬁelder’s
choice, then scored two batters later on a
Pullins RBI-groundout.
Minford managed its run in the bottom
of the ﬁrst, before the Marauders made
it 3-1.
Once again, Swartz reached on a ﬁelder’s choice, then scored on an RBI-single
by Sadie Fox.
Fox eventually scored as Pullins plated
a double.
Devyn Oliver added the other two hits
— singles in the ﬁrst and fourth frames.
Peyton Rowe walked in the third, as
Swartz drew a walk in the ﬁfth.
Aside from the ﬁrst and third, only
three Marauders saw the plate in the second, fourth and sixth stanzas — and only
four batters in the ﬁfth and seventh.
The Marauders, the top-seeded club
in the Division II sectional tournament,
play host to ninth-seeded Marietta in a
semiﬁnal today (Wednesday, May 11).
The Tigers doubled up Athens 10-5 in
Saturday’s quarterﬁnal bout.
First pitch is set for 5 p.m. at Meigs
High School’s Dreams Field.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2106

Devils
From Page 6

a single to deep right-center
ﬁeld, plating Howell and capping off the 10-0 mercy rule
victory.
“You just have to win and
advance,” GAHS head coach
Rich Corvin said. “We scrimmaged (Vinton County) early,
but you can’t really tell much in
a scrimmage. Records can be
deciving, everybody starts the
postseason with a clean slate.
With (Josh) Faro, our main
thing was just to stay around

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Southern football
golf scramble

The tournament will begin with a
shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. For more
information, contact Southern football
coach Mike Chancey at 740-591-8644.

MASON, W.Va. — The Southern
football team will hold a golf scramble
on Saturday, May 21, at the Riverside
Golf Course in Mason County. The format will be a four-man scramble, bring
your own team.
Each squad must have a team handicap of 40+ and only one player can be
under 10. Price is $60 per person and
includes golf, cart, lunch and beverages.
Prizes include club house credit for
the top three teams, among other cash
prizes.

Gallipolis Elks
Soccer Shoot

For more information, contact Wayne
Rose at 740-446-4627.

Cromley makes 1st
ace of ‘16 at Riverside

MASON, W.Va. — Bryan Cromley
of Point Pleasant has recorded the
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipo- first hole-in-one of the 2016 season
lis Elks Lodge #107 is sponsoring its
at Riverside Golf Course in Mason
annual Soccer Shoot on Saturday, May County. Cromley’s ace occurred on
14, at O.O. McIntyre Park from 9 a.m.
Thursday, May 5, after using a pitchuntil noon.
ing wedge on the fourth hole. It was
The event is free and is open to all
the first career hole-in-one for Cromboys and girls born after August 1, 2002. ley, and the shot was witnessed by
Winners of the competition will advance Trent Roush, Buck Powell and Lee
to the district level at a later date.
Powell.

OVCS Defenders tie for 5th at Fayetteville
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

FAYETTEVILLE, W.Va. — A
lengthy trip to Fayetteville for
Friday’s Fayetteville Lions Club
Invitational track and ﬁeld meet
paid off for both Point Pleasant and Ohio Valley Christian
School.
That’s because the Point
Pleasant boys placed third
and the Lady Knights fourth
among the many schools which
competed, as the OVCS girls —
which consist of two juniors —
tied for ﬁfth.
The Black Knights notched
55 points, trailing only Nicholas County’s 118 and Shady
Spring’s 100.
Point Pleasant pressed past
Pocohontas County (54 points)
and Pikeview (48 points) for
third.
For the Lady Knights, Shady
Spring was the only squad over
100 points — as it took home
the team championship with
106.5.
Charleston Catholic captured
second with 81, as Nicholas
County claimed third with
70 — followed by the Lady
Knights with 50.
OVCS tied for ﬁfth with
Greenbrier East at 38.
The Black Knights amassed
most of their 55 points in the
throwing events, ﬁnishing 1-2-3
for 24 total points in the shot
put — and ﬁrst and second in
the discus for another 18.
Point Pleasant’s Cody Mitchell swept the shot put and
discus, tossing 46-feet and eight
inches in the shot and 162-feet
and ﬁve inches in the disc.
Mitchell’s teammate, Tannor

the plate and throw strikes.”
GAHS freshman Josh Faro
tossed a complete game shutout for GAHS and earned the
pitching victory, allowing ﬁve
hits, while striking out eight
batters and walking zero.
The losing pitcher of record
was VCHS starter Austin Ward
— who struck out three batters
in three innings pitched —
while allowing eight runs, six
earned, on ﬁve hits, two walks
and two hit batters. Jeffery
Harper pitched the ﬁnal 1.1
innings in relief and he gave up
two runs, one earned, on three
hits and one walk.

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian School’s Katie Bradley competes in the girls shot put during the Gallia County track and
field meet on April 12.

Hill, was right behind Mitchell
in both events.
Hill hit 148-feet and four
inches in the discus, and heaved
43-feet and seven inches in the
shot put.
Joe Clark completed the
Knights’ trifecta for the shot
put — with a third-place toss
of 42-6.
The Black Knights were also
the runner-up in the 4x100m
relay, completing the one lap in
47.85 seconds.
They trailed only the foursome from Nicholas County,
which ran the relay in 45.57.
Point Pleasant’s quartet
consisted of Keyshawn Stover,
Sheb Harris, Grant Safford and
Cason Payne.
That exact same group ﬁnished sixth in the 4x200m relay
— in a minute and 42 seconds.
The Black Knights also
placed sixth (3:56) in the
4x400m relay, with the unit consisting of Safford, Harris, Payne

Carter led the victors at the
plate, going 4-for-4 with three
runs scored, one RBI and two
stolen bases. Bailey was 2-for-4
with two runs scored and three
stolen bases, Sipple doubled
once, scored once and drove in
one run, while Simms had one
single and one run scored. Eric
Ward scored twice and stole
two bases for GAHS, Howell
scored once, while Terry and
Brumﬁeld each had one RBI.
Austin Ward led the Vikings
with two hits, while Bailey Bartoe, Dakota Hashman and Donnie Stevens each singled once.
Gallia Academy had one

and Justin Brumﬁeld.
Harris was ﬁfth in the 400m
dash in 56.19 seconds, while
Payne placed sixth in the 200m
dash in 24.31.
On the girls side, Rachel
Sargent in four events and Katie
Bradley in the shot put combined for all 38 of Ohio Valley
Christian School’s points.
Sargent accounted for 32 of
those, winning the 400m dash
(1:01.88), placing second in the
200m dash (27.70), taking second in the long jump (14-feet,
6-1/2 inches), and ﬁnishing
third in the 100m dash (13.24).
Bradley was third in the shot
put with a toss of 31-feet and
seven inches.
Sweeping the throwing
events was Point Pleasant’s
Aislyn Hayman, who threw for
121-feet and six inches in the
discus — and 36-feet and one
inch in the shot.
Hayman’s teammate, Morgan
Roush, was sixth in the shot

error in the win, while VCHS
had ﬁve. Both teams left six
runners on base.
The Blue Devils advance to
Thursday’s sectional ﬁnal at
Meigs High School, where they
will take on the second-seeded
Marauders. Meigs and GAHS
met in Rocksprings on March
30, and the Maroon and Gold
claimed a 2-1, extra innings
victory.
“We’re trying to get runs
early and play with a lead,”
Corvin said. “(Meigs) has good
pitching and they make routine
plays in the ﬁeld. We’ll see
what they have.”

(28-9) and fourth in the disc
(99-feet).
In fact, half of the Lady
Knights’ points came from the
throws — with the other 25
piled up on the track.
The club’s 4x200m relay team
was the champion in that event,
running the two-lap sprint in a
minute and 56 seconds.
The four consisted of Carlee
Dabney, Madison Hatﬁeld, Teagan Hay and Kyla Scott.
That exact same squad then
ﬁnished third in the 4x100m in
55.87.
In the 4x400m, Hatﬁeld and
Hay teamed up with Allison
Henderson and Sydnee Moore
to place sixth in 4:48.
Hay and Hatﬁeld ﬁnished
fourth in the 100m dash and
400m dash respectively, with
Hay running 13.65 and Hatﬁeld
1:04.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

Vinton County’s postseason
run is over, but the Vikings still
have a regular season meeting
with Athens left on the schedule.
After Monday’s game, Gallia Academy honored seniors
Zach Graham, Anthony Sipple,
Eric Ward, Ryan Terry, Marcus
Moore, Matt Bailey and Kole
Carter, all of whom played their
ﬁnal game at Eastman Ball
Field. GAHS also paid tribute
to senior Micah Saunders,
who has served as an assistant
coach for the Blue Devils this
spring.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Professional Services

Auctions

NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
The personal property
and contents of the self
storage unit #66 will be
auctioned for sale to
satisfy lien of Manleys Self
Storage. The sale will be
held at the facility located
at 336 N. Second AVenue,
Middleport, Ohio on May
21st, 2016 at 10am
Mary McCoy address unknown

60654931

Help Wanted General

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
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Meigs Industries, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer

For more information please
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apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
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Customer Service Representative Needed
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District is accepting
applications for Office Clerk. The position qualifications include
a high degree of proficiency in letter writing, grammar, and
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Forms, Application for Employment. You can return the
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by email to tpcwater@windstream.net

Help Wanted General

Employment Opportunity
Civitas Media is looking for a Customer Service Specialist with
inside sales experience at the Gallipolis location.
This is part time hourly position. If interested-send resume to
Julia Schultz at jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
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 Prior customer service experience preferred
60583312

Notices
Coming Soon
"The Family Word Church"
When:Starting May 22, 2016
1:00pm Sunday
Where: Mason Co Library
Type: Non-denomiation
Rhema Word Church
606-585-3874
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Wanted
Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings. Must pass
background check
and drug test.
304-768-6309.

9.9 Mercury Motor 4 yrs old
ran 6 hours asking $950.00
call 740-208-6708

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740-446-9777
over 100 new tractors
in stock. New &amp; Used
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

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By Norm Feuti

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Southern ladies shut down River Valley, 6-0
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Better late
than never.
The Southern softball
team broke open a tightlycontested one-run game
with ﬁve scores over the
ﬁnal three innings Monday
night during a 6-0 victory
over visiting River Valley in

in the sixth before wrapping
up the shutout triumph.
Southern claimed its early
1-0 advantage as a two-out
single by Sydney Cleland
allowed Sabra Bailey to score
in the second. Katie Barton
followed with an RBI-single
that plated Savannah Bailey
in the fourth for a 2-0 edge.
Then in the ﬁfth, Hannah
Hill scored on a one-out

a non-conference matchup
at Star Mill Park in Meigs
County.
The Lady Tornadoes (147) took a 1-0 advantage in
the bottom of the second,
then plated a run apiece in
the fourth and ﬁfth frames
as the hosts claimed a 3-0
cushion through ﬁve complete. SHS then beneﬁted
from a trio of unearned runs

Brandy Porter single that
gave the Purple and Gold a
three-run cushion through
ﬁve complete.
Cleland started the sixth
with a one-out single, then
Lauren Lavender entered
as a courtesy runner and
later scored on an error that
allowed Haley Hill to reach
safely. Ali Deem followed
with a walk, then both Hill

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ing ﬁve hits and a walk over
seven frames while striking
out two. Ashley Gilmore took
the loss after surrendering six
runs (three earned), eight hits
and six walks over six innings
while fanning two.
Porter and Cleland led the
hosts with two hits apiece,
while Deem, VanMeter,
Barton and Sabra Bailey
added a safety apiece to the
triumph.
Roberts, Gilmore, Courtney Smith, Chloe Gee and
Isabella Mershon had a hit
each for the Lady Raiders.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Falcons
From Page 6

10:30

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Little Women: NY "New
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Little Women: NY "Agree
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Part 1"
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and Briana, Part One" (N)
to Disagree"
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Identical twins mischievously conspire to reunite their unhappily divorced parents. TVPG Garrett, Dane Cook. TVPG
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(4:00)
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(:45)
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The Yard "Rookie Mistakes" Southern Justice "Meth in
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Southern Justice "Huntin'
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the Mountains"
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Season" (N)
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Boxing Classics ‘15 Premier Champions
WPT Poker Alpha8
MLB Whiparound (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
TUF 23 "Who I Am"
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American Pickers "Bonnie, American Pickers
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(:05) Pawn
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Clyde and The King"
"Everything Must Go"
Colonel of Truth"
Tock Pick" (N)
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Stars
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The Real Housewives
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National Security (‘03, Com) Steve Zahn. TVPG Martin
(:40) Martin
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Buying "Chip and Danielle" Buying "Eric and Misty"
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called upon to help prevent an attack on the Vatican and solve a murder. TV14
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(4:10) Rock

400 (HBO)

6:30

and Deem scored on a twoout error that allowed Paige
VanMeter to reach safely for
a 6-0 contest.
The Lady Raiders (8-12)
got a leadoff single from
Cierra Roberts in the top of
the seventh, but the guests
followed with three consecutive outs to wrap up the sixrun outcome.
Southern outhit RVHS by
an 8-5 overall margin and
committed none of the two
errors in the contest. SHS
stranded eight runners on
base, while the Lady Raiders
left ﬁve on the bags.
Cleland was the winning
pitcher of record after allow-

10:30

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Lucy Scarlett Johansson. An unwilling
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custody of his children. TVPG

Whitlatch started on the mound and suffered the loss for
Meigs, allowing two earned runs on two hits and two walks,
in two innings. Mattox pitched the next two frames and
allowed one earned run on two hits, while Bartrum pitched
the ﬁnal two innings and allowed one unearned run on two
hits and one walk. Whitlatch had three strikeouts in the
setback, Bartrum added two, while Mattox struck out one
batter.
Whitlatch led Meigs at the plate, going 3-for-4 with one run
scored, one RBI and one stolen base. Sheets was 2-for-4 with
one run scored, Mattox singled once and scored once, Bartrum singled once and drove in one run, while Luke Musser
added a single to the Marauder cause.
Jared Alley led the Falcon offense with one double, one
single and one run scored, while Aron Alley singled once,
scored twice and drove in one run. Grasso singled once and
scored once, Powell added a single and an RBI, while Eli
Daniels had one hit and Scott had one RBI.
Each team committed one error in the contest. The last
time these teams met was in the 2015 Division II District
Final, a game which the Marauders won 6-3.
Meigs — which is seeded second in the Division II tournament — will return home to face seventh-seeded Gallia Academy in Thursday’s sectional ﬁnal.
Minford is the top-seed in the Division III tournament and
will begin postseason play at home, on Saturday, against the
winner of Portsmouth West and Huntington.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Congratulations to these ﬁne folks
on their recent promotions!

Lori Miller (Vice President)

Erin Krawsczyn (Senior Vice President)

Paul Reed (Chairman, Board of Directors)

Member FDIC
60656388

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