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                  <text>On this
day in
history

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

70°

77°

76°

A thunderstorm or two today. A stray
thunderstorm tonight. High 82° / Low 67°

NEWS s 2

Today’s
weather
forecast

Teams win
sectional
crowns

WEATHER s 3

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehj��Fec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 113, Volume 75

FOR THE RECORD
Middleport Police
Department
May 8
5:11 p.m. — An
unknown male contacted our department
in reference to a male
walking by Mitch’s
Produce that was wearing a backpack and a
black hoodie. The male
was attempting to gain
entry to moving vehicles, vehicles parked
along the roadway,
as well as businesses.
The male appeared to
be intoxicated. The
Middleport Police
Department, along with
assistance from the
Pomeroy Police Department apprehended
Samuel Stout. After
being searched, allegedly “located on Stout’s
person was numerous
hypodermic needles,
a bent spoon, a glass
pipe, numerous baggies
for the packaging and
distribution of narcotics, a large golf ball
sized bulk amount of
Fentanyl, and a small
baggy of what was
believed to be methamphetamines.”
May 15
4:13 a.m. — Ofﬁcers
reported that they were
out with a female subject who stole makeup
from Family Dollar
earlier in the evening.
Ofﬁcers recovered the
stolen items from the
female and alleged
large, bulk amount
sheets of acid.
May 16
2:20 a.m. — Ofﬁcers
were called to behind
the old Dairy Queen
building on a homeless
male, that was extremely intoxicated and
suicidal. After being
searched drugs and a
crack pipe were located
on the male. The male
was taken to HMC ER
and treated.
5:45 p.m. — A
female contacted the
Middleport Police
Department about
domestic abuse from
her grandson. Pomeroy
Police Department
along with units from
the Middleport Police
Department, arrived at
235 South 4th Avenue.
Upon speaking with
the female, she stated
that she has custody
of her grandson and
that he assaulted her
while driving down the
road. The juvenile also
allegedly grabbed her
keys to her truck, and
attempted to take the
truck. The Middleport

Police Department is
currently working with
Juvenile Court on this
situation.

Wednesday, June 9, 2021 s 50¢

Kickin’ Summer Bash set

May 17
3:34 a.m. — Ofﬁcers
came upon the scene
of the same male from
the previous day behind
Dairy Queen, camping
in the cemetery. While
the subject was being
searched, he was found
with drugs, and several
crack pipes. The male
was suicidal and was
taken back to HMC ER
and treated.
May 19
3:44 p.m. — Chief
Wood was dispatched to
the area of Park Street
and Beech Street on a
male that was reported
to be under the inﬂuence. The subject was
at the residence weed
eating the yard, but
stated he didn’t know
where he got the weed
eater, but advised that
he owed someone $20.
The subject, Samuel
Stout was alleged to
have taken a Hitachi
reciprocating saw out
of a truck on Custer
Street. Stout was
also alleged to have
unlawfully entered
the residence at 189
Ash Street. An ofﬁcer
located Stout later that
evening at a residence
on South 2nd Avenue.
Stout was taken into
custody and charged
with petty theft, and
burglary. Stout was read
his Miranda Right’s
and transported to the
Middleport Jail. The
property was located
and returned to the
rightful owners.
8:30 p.m. —
Unknown male contacted the Middleport
Police Department and
advised that there is
a male running down
the street, in and out of
trafﬁc, on Main Street
and South 2nd Avenue,
wearing pants, no shirt,
and carrying a red cup,
cursing himself, and hitting himself in the face.
When ofﬁcers arrived
on scene, they came
into contact with Travis
McAllister, who was
arrested and charged
with disorderly conduct.
1:52 a.m. — Ofﬁcers
observed a maroon
Chevy truck sitting
along the roadway. The
Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce had been
attempting to locate the
vehicle in reference
See RECORD | 8

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permission from the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

Kickin’ Summer Bash | Courtesy photo

Generation Gap, pictured, will perform at this month’s Kickin’ Summer Bash along with several other performers.

‘The Voice’ contestant to perform

By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY, Ohio —
After a year in which
most, if not all festivals
and events were cancelled, there will be a
return to normal on June
18 and 19 as summer
along the river begins

with the Kickin’ Summer
Bash.
The Kickin’ Summer
Bash brings two evenings
of live music to the downtown Pomeroy riverfront,
including Gallia County
native and “The Voice”
contestant Conner Christian on Friday evening.
The musical line up

includes:

Friday, June 18
Brent Patterson from
6-7:15 p.m.;
Generation Gap from
7:30-8:45 p.m.;
Connor Christian from
9-11 p.m.
See SUMMER | 3 Laurie Mae Hoover

Meigs art students ‘paint the village’
Staff Report

POMEROY — The
Christmas Carolers
which are on display
each holiday season in
the Village of Pomeroy
recently received some
fresh paint thanks to
local art students.
Students at Meigs
Middle School, under the
direction of Art Teacher
Melanie Quillen, painted
the village carolers as
part of a project for the
class. The project, completed in collaboration
with the Village of Pomeroy, helped to brighten
Courtesy photo some of the holiday decoMeigs Middle School art students, from left, Val Fuller, Xavier Armstrong, Natalie Gomez, Mina
rations.
Burleson and Emma McClure, are pictured with the carolers they recently painted.

River Sweep 2021 set for Saturday
Staff Report

sweeps this creates great volunteer
opportunities for your 4-H group
or family. If this is something that
MEIGS COUNTY — Volunyou would be interested in, you
teers are needed for River Sweep
can contact Meigs SWCD at 7402021, scheduled for Saturday,
992-4282 and they will provide
June 12 along the shoreline of
you with gloves and bags for you
the Ohio River. The River Sweep
encompasses the Ohio, Allegheny, to clean. If you collect it, they will
come and pick it up and take care
Monongahela, Beaver, Kanawha,
Tennessee and Kentucky rivers and of it,” stated a news release.
“River Sweep is very important
other tributaries.
because for a few hours on one
Volunteers will receive an Ohio
day volunteers can help make a difRiver Sweep t-shirt for their
ference in the appearance of this
efforts.
This year, Meigs Soil and Water great natural resource. The Sweep
has grown so much in the past few
Conservation District is hosting
years, we’ve been able to expand
mini-sweeps due to the pandemic
the project to tributaries and feedthat has occurred this year.
er streams of the Ohio River,” the
“We are only going to be holding one location on the Ohio River release further stated.
The Ohio River Valley Water
Star Mill Park in Racine with work
Sanitation Commission (ORSANfrom 9 a.m. to noon hosted by the
CO), in partnership with various
Meigs SWCD. With these mini-

industries throughout the Ohio
River Valley, sponsors the Ohio
River Sweep. Other sponsoring
agencies are the West Virginia
Make It Shine Program, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection, Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Illinois EPA,
Kentucky Environmental and Public Protection Cabinet, and Kentucky River Authority. ORSANCO
is the water pollution control
agency for the Ohio River and its
tributaries.
There are many entities that
make the River Sweep work. Governmental agencies, industries,
and private citizens in the Ohio
River Valley play an important role
in this great environmental event.
Not only do they provide
See RIVER | 8

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, June 9, 2021

OBITUARY
CHARLES RICHARD GRUESER
A precious soul left
this earth on June 6,
2021, to join his family
and friends that had
loved him so much.
Charles Richard Grueser was born on May
28, 1940 to Richard and
Jessie (Barrett) Grueser
in Rutland, Ohio. He
lived most of his life
in that small town and
as he grew older, he
enjoyed telling stories
about the people and
events that he so vividly
remembered.
He was a kind and
caring person. He
never seemed to meet
a stranger and his
beautiful blue eyes
were the ﬁrst thing that
everyone noticed. His
smile and his laughter
were unforgettable. His
love and many happy
memories will live on in
the hearts of his niece,
Teresa Houdashelt and
her husband Randy.
Charles had a special
place in his heart for his
friends, Angie Patterson
and Randi King. He felt
their love and compassion as they assisted
him with his daily life.
Others left behind are

a nephew, two great
nephews, cousins and
friends. He has joined
his grandparents, parents, infant brother
Carroll, infant sister
Carolyn and his much
beloved and devoted
sister and brother-in-law
Barbara and Purl Van
Meter.
To continue Charles’
kind and caring spirit,
please consider donating to Holzer Hospice,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, on
his behalf and please
remember to perform
acts of kindness and
love towards others.
Services to remember Charles with his
loved ones will be held
at Birchﬁeld Funeral
Home in Rutland, Ohio.
There will be visitation
on Thursday, June 10,
2021 from 6 to 8 p.m.
And one hour prior to
his memorial service
on Friday, June 11,
2021, at 11 a.m. His
resting place will be at
Riverview Cemetery,
Middleport, Ohio.
Online condolences @
birchﬁeldfuneralhome.
com

DEATH NOTICE
MASTERS
GALLIPOLIS — Charles E. Masters Sr. 82, Gallipolis, Ohio, died Friday, June 4, 2021 in the Holzer Medical Center. Graveside services were conducted Tuesday, June 8, 2021, in the Pine Street
Cemetery. Pastor Ron Bynum ofﬁciated. There
were no calling hours. Cremeens-King Funeral
Home serving the family.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel and Gallipolis Daily Tribune
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: TDSnews@
aimmediamidwest.com
or GDTnews@aimmediamidwest.com.
Card showers
Mabel Halley will be
celebrating her 91st
birthday on June 10,
cards may be sent to
254 Lanes Branch Road,
Crown City, OH 45623.
Wednesday, June 9
SCIPIO TWP. —
Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting is scheduled at
7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire House.
Thursday, June 10
WELLSTON — The
GJMV Solid Waste
Management District
Board of Directors will
meet at 3:30 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce in
Wellston.

Board ofﬁce at the Gallia County Courthouse,
18 Locust St.
Monday, June 14
BEDFORD TWP.
— Bedford Township
trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the Bedford townhall.
Tuesday, June 15
VINTON — The regular monthly meeting of
the Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Center
(GVESC) Governing
Board will be held at 5
p.m. at 44918 Newsom
Road.
Friday, June 18
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County District
Library Board of Trustees will hold a special
meeting at 2 p.m. at the
Library, for the purpose
of a community focus
group session with
architectural ﬁrm SHP.
GALLIPOLIS
— Ohio AFSCME
Retirees, Subchapter
102, Gallia &amp; Jackson
counties, meets 2 p.m.,
Gallia County Senior
Resource Center, 1165
State Route 160, Gallipolis, members asked to
wear a mask and follow
all CDC guidelines.

Saturday, June 26
MIDDLEPORT —
Middleport Fire DepartFriday, June 11
GALLIPOLIS — Reg- ment will be hosting a
ﬁsh fry at ﬁre station.
ular Board meeting of
the O. O. McIntyre Park Serving starts at 11
a.m.
District, 11 a.m., Park

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
All content © 2021 Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel
edition. All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be
reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except as
permitted by U.S. copyright law.

REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

Ohio Valley Publishing

Governor urges vaccination
as 200K doses set to expire
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine tried to
persuade residents to get vaccinated as the state rushes to administer around 200,000 doses of the
Johnson&amp;Johnson vaccine that is
set to expire in two weeks.
DeWine on Monday attempted
to appeal to the millions of unvaccinated state residents.
“For Ohioans who have been
waiting to get their vaccine, I urge
you to take action now,” he said
in a statement. “There are many
opportunities throughout the state
to get a vaccine.”
The Republican governor, like
his counterparts across the coun-

try, is facing a roadblock in vaccination rates as health ofﬁcials say
the majority of individuals who
wanted the vaccine have already
received it and the rest are either
vaccine-hesitant or unwilling to
receive it.
The state is also working against
the clock to push the one-shot
Johnson &amp; Johnson to vaccine providers and asking them to distribute as many doses as possible, as
quickly as possible. The doses are
set to expire on June 23.
While Biden pledged in May
to send 20 million doses of the
COVID-19 vaccine overseas this
month, DeWine said Ohio and

other states do not have legal
options for sending the vaccine
elsewhere, either to other states or
other countries.
As of Tuesday, more than 5.4
million Ohioans have received at
least one dose of the vaccine, and
more than 4.8 million are fully
vaccinated. The state reached its
goal benchmark last week when
the health department reported
there were fewer than 50 cases per
100,000 residents.
“Getting vaccinated is the quickest way out of the pandemic and
the fastest way for us to return to
the lives we remember,” DeWine
said.

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

Free meals for Gallia kids
BIDWELL — The Southeast Ohio Foodbank &amp;
Regional Kitchen is participating in the Summer
Food Service Program (SFSP). Free meals are provided to all children regardless of race, color, national
origin, sex, age or disability. Meals will be provided
at the site and time as follows: Gallia Metropolitan
Estates, 301 Buck Ridge Rd., Bidwell. Lunch, 10:30
a.m. – 11:30 a.m. on Thursdays beginning June 10,
and happening every Thursday through Aug. 13. No
identiﬁcation required.

leton College Scholarships for higher education are
available for legal residents of the Village of Syracuse.
Applications can be picked up from Gordon Fisher at
1402 Dusky Street in Syracuse. Applications must be
returned by July 1, 2021. Legal residents of Syracuse
can qualify for the scholarship awards for a maximum
of two years.

Road closures, construction

GALLIA COUNTY — A bridge deck replacement
project began on June 1 on SR 141, between Dan
Jones Road (County Road 28) and Redbud Hill Road
(Township Road 462). This section will be closed.
ODOT’s detour is SR 7 to SR 588 to SR 325 to SR
141. Estimated completion: Aug. 23.
MEIGS COUNTY — A tree trimming project is
taking place on SR 124, between U.S. 33 and Apple
Grove Dorcas Road (County Road 28). The road is
closed from 8 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday through Friday.
GALLIPOLIS — Hurl and Friends, featuring long
time Fur Peace Ranch manager, John Hurlbut, returns Estimated completion: June 11.
MEIGS COUNTY — U.S. 33/SR 833/SR 124
to the French Art Colony for a concert this Thursday,
June 10. Hurlbut plays guitar and handles lead vocals resurfacing. The project includes U.S. 33 near the
intersection of Rocksprings Road (County Road 20)
in the group. He is joined by Skott Brown on violin
and continues east to the SR 7 interchange. From
and mandolin, Mike McGannon on banjo and guitar
there, paving continues onto SR 833 south/124 east
and Scott Maruskin on upright bass. Gates open at
to the trafﬁc signal in Pomeroy, where SR 833 and
6:30 p.m. The show begins at 7 p.m. and ends at 9
124 diverge. One 12 foot lane will be maintained at all
p.m. There will be food available along with a cash
times using construction barrels on the four-lane secbar. Admission is $5 per person and is free for FAC
tion and ﬂaggers on the two-lane sections. Estimated
members, as a beneﬁt.
completion: July 15.
GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Engineer
Brett A. Boothe announces Scenic Drive (CR-127)
CLAY TWP. — The trustees of Clay Township will will be closed between State Route 160 and Summit Road, beginning at 8 a.m., Monday, April 26 for
be distributing COVID supplies June 19 from 9 a.m.
approximately two months for slip repair, weather
to noon, at their site on Teens Run Road, approxipermitting. Local trafﬁc will need to use other county
mately two tenths of a mile from Ohio 7, south of
Gallipolis. ID required as proof of residency (driver’s roads as a detour.
MEIGS COUNTY — A bridge replacement projlicense, utility bill, etc).
ect began on April 12 on State Route 143, between
Lee Road (Township Road 168) and Ball Run Road
(Township Road 20A). One lane will be closed. Temporary trafﬁc signals and a 10 foot width restriction
MASON, W.Va. — A free Father’s Day concert will
be held in Mason, hosted by the Mason Circuit of the will be in place. Estimated completion: Nov. 15.
United Methodist Church featuring Zack Shelton and
the band “64 to Grayson.” It will be held on June 13,
7 p.m., at the Stewart-Johnson V.F.W./Lottie Jenks
Memorial Park. In addition, she said Broken Bread
CROWN CITY — The Ohio Department of TransCatering will be on-site at 6 p.m. to offer food for pur- portation (ODOT) has announced a rehabilitation
chase.
project that began Monday, March 22 on State Route
7 in the Crown City area of Gallia County. The project will be between Westbranch Road (County Road
162) and Sunnyside Drive (County Road 158). The
project is estimated to be completed in June 2022.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mayor’s Night Out
ODOT states the road will be closed now through
at Riverfront Park returns for the summer of 2021 on
Dec. 1. The detour for motorists will be to take
June 11 and continues through Aug. 27. During Mayor’s Night Out, local bands playing different genres will State Route 7 to State Route 218 to State Route 553
perform free concerts at the Riverfront Park Amphithe- and back to State Route 7. Trucks will be detoured
from State Route 7 to U.S. 35 South to U.S. 64 West
ater. The performances are from 8-10 p.m. on Friday
into West Virginia and re-enter Ohio using U.S. 52
evenings throughout the summer. Opening the series
West. ODOT said those wishing to access the K.H.
on June 11 is Brent Patterson playing folk-rock, pop.
Butler Fishing Access must be coming from the
north. Northbound trafﬁc must take the detour, then
enter the parking area traveling southbound on State
Route 7.
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2021-22 Car-

Hot Summer Nights

COVID supplies giveaway

Father’s Day concert

Ohio 7 rehab project reminder

Mayor’s Night Out

Carleton College scholarships

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday, June 9, the
160th day of 2021. There are 205
days left in the year.
Today’s highlight in history:
On June 9, 1969, the Senate
conﬁrmed Warren Burger to be
the new chief justice of the United
States, succeeding Earl Warren.
On this date:
In 1588, construction began on
the present-day Rialto Bridge in
Venice, Italy, with the laying of the
ﬁrst stone; the structure was completed in 1591.
In 1870, author Charles Dickens
died in Gad’s Hill Place, England.
In 1940, during World War II,
Norway decided to surrender to
the Nazis, effective at midnight.
In 1943, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt signed the Current Tax
Payment Act of 1943, which reintroduced federal income tax with-

holding from paychecks.
In 1954, during the Senate
Army-McCarthy hearings, Army
special counsel Joseph N. Welch
berated Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy,
R-Wis., asking: “Have you no sense
of decency, sir? At long last, have
you left no sense of decency?”
In 1972, heavy rains triggered
record ﬂooding in the Black Hills
of South Dakota; the resulting
disaster left at least 238 people
dead and $164 million in damage.
In 1973, Secretariat won the
Belmont Stakes, becoming horse
racing’s ﬁrst Triple Crown winner
in 25 years.
In 1978, leaders of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
struck down a 148-year-old policy
of excluding black men from the
Mormon priesthood.
In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor
suffered almost fatal burns at his
San Fernando Valley, Calif., home
while freebasing cocaine.
In 1983, Britain’s Conservatives,

led by Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, won a decisive election
victory.
In 2004, the body of Ronald Reagan arrived in Washington to lie in
state in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda
before the 40th president’s funeral.
In 2008, retail gas prices rose
above $4 per gallon.
Ten years ago:
The entire top echelon of Newt
Gingrich’s presidential campaign
resigned in a mass exodus that
left his bid for the Republican
nomination in tatters; the former
House speaker vowed deﬁantly
to remain a candidate. (Gingrich
would remain in the race until May
2012.) Alabama passed a tough law
against illegal immigration, requiring schools to ﬁnd out if students
were in the country lawfully and
making it a crime to knowingly
give an illegal immigrant a ride.
(Federal courts later blocked parts
of the law.)

�NEWS/WEATHER

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, June 9, 2021 3

How will insurers cover a new Alzheimer’s drug?
By Tom Murphy

know:

destroying disease.

records and other paperwork justifying the treatment before they agree to
What does it do?
cover it.
It aims to help clear
Insurers also will likely
harmful clumps of a prorequire pre-approval for
tein called beta-amyloid
from the brain. The medi- brain scans needed
to determine that the
cation will be marketed
patient is a candidate for
as Aduhelm and is to be
given as an infusion every treatment, said Lance
Grady of Avalere Health
four weeks.
consultants.
He noted that some
What will it cost?
plans also may want to
Biogen said the drug
would cost approximately see the results of a scan
before they decide to
$56,000 for a typical
year’s worth of treatment, cover the next infusion,
which could delay treatand it said the price
ment.
would not be raised for
four years.
Is coverage guaranteed?
How will insurers cover it?
Medicare is widely
They will likely request expected to cover the
some documentation ﬁrst treatment. Insurers that
that the patient needs the offer private or commercial coverage also will
drug. Many plans will
require doctors to submit pay for care that doctors

AP Health Writer

Federal regulators have
approved the ﬁrst new
drug for Alzheimer’s disease in nearly 20 years,
leaving patients waiting
to see how insurers will
handle the pricey new
treatment.
Health care experts
expect broad coverage
of the drug, which was
approved Monday. But
what that means for
patients will vary widely
depending on their insurance plan. In some cases,
that could mean coming
up with several thousand
dollars to pay for what
the insurer didn’t cover.
And there’s no guarantee that every case will be
covered.
Here’s what you need to

What was approved?
The Food and Drug
Administration said it
granted approval to a
drug from Biogen based
on clinical research
results that seemed “reasonably likely” to beneﬁt
Alzheimer’s patients.
It’s the only drug that
U.S. regulators have said
can likely treat the underlying disease, rather than
just manage symptoms.
The new drug, which
Biogen developed with
Japan’s Eisai Co., did not
reverse mental decline. It
slowed it in one study.
The FDA’s decision
came despite the conclusion of its advisory committee that there wasn’t
enough evidence that the
drug slowed the brain-

deem medically necessary.
That may not mean
every case, though. If the
treatment is proposed for
a patient with advanced
Alzheimer’s, and research
shows the drug isn’t effective in that population,
then the insurer may not
pay for it.
“That happens all the
time with drugs,” said
Robert Laszewski, a
health care consultant
and former insurance
executive. “Just because
the FDA says its safe
doesn’t mean it’s appropriate for everybody.”

mum, which is a plan’s
limit for how much a
patient pays in a year for
in-network care before
insurance picks up the
rest of the bill.
Some patients who
are already receiving a
lot of care may not wind
up with a huge added
expense from the drug
before they hit that limit.
Patients who have a
supplemental plan for
their Medicare coverage
also may wind up with
few out-of-pocket costs
for the drug.
Patients with Medicare
Advantage coverage,
which is run by private
insurers, or individual
What will patients pay?
That’s impossible to say health insurance could
pay several thousand
broadly.
dollars before they hit
It can depend on the
their plan’s annual limit,
person’s coverage and
their out-of-pocket maxi- depending on the plan.

Summer
From page 1

Saturday, Jun 19
Todd Berry and Band
from 6-8 p.m.;
Laurie Mae Hoover
from 8-9 p.m.;
Next Level from 9-11
p.m.
The event is organized
by Chairperson Brenda
Roush, with musical
lineup assistance by Patterson.
Kids events will take
place on Saturday after
the Farmers Market
winds down with the
inﬂatables, treasure
hunt, chalk drawing
contest, scavenger
hunt, face painting and
more to begin at 2 p.m.
Rockin’ Reggie will be
on hand with games and
dance contests for the
kids and others wanting
to take part.
The kids who attend
will have a chance to
win a prize through a
drawing.
Tickets will be handed
out Saturday to those
who attend and have to
be present to win. Drawing will begin at 5 p.m.
for the kids.
There will also be a
drawing for a gas grill

Connor Christian from Gallia County was a recent contestant on
NBC’s “The Voice.”

Kickin’ Summer Bash | Courtesy photos

Next Level

and a Weber charcoal
grill. Tickets for these
drawings will be for
adults. You must be
present to win. Drawing
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
“This is the ﬁrst festival in two years so I
hope people come out
and enjoy the festival. It
promises fun and entertainment on the river,”
said Roush.
© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

70°

77°

76°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

86°
68°
81°
60°
100° in 1933
41° in 1977

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.01
0.85
1.17
19.02
19.25

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
5:26 a.m.
8:27 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Jun 10 Jun 17 Jun 24

Last

Jul 1

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

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

Major
11:25a
12:13p
12:39a
1:33a
2:29a
3:26a
4:21a

Minor
5:13a
6:01a
6:52a
7:46a
8:42a
9:38a
10:34a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
11:49p
12:38p
1:04p
1:59p
2:55p
3:51p
4:46p

Minor
5:37p
6:25p
7:17p
8:12p
9:08p
10:04p
10:58p

WEATHER HISTORY
The storm that spawned one of
Cleveland’s rare killer tornadoes on
June 8, 1953, moved on to cause
New England’s worst tornado disaster
ever on June 9. The storm struck
Worcester, Mass., and took 90 lives.

81°
64°

Cloudy and humid
with a t-storm or two

Cloudy and humid
with a stray t-storm

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
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. Tue.

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

Level
12.47
15.91
21.53
12.89
13.02
25.59
13.12
24.97
33.84
12.31
15.80
33.80
14.50

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.63
-0.18
-0.38
-0.23
-0.02
+0.39
+0.23
-0.94
-0.51
-0.40
-2.10
-0.50
-1.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021

SUNDAY

85°
61°
An a.m. shower;
clouds and sun,
humid

90°
64°

86°
60°

Mostly cloudy, a stray
t-storm; humid

Clouds and sun; hot;
t-storms at night

A couple of t-storms
in the afternoon

Marietta
80/66
Belpre
81/66

Athens
80/66

Today

St. Marys
81/66

Parkersburg
78/66

Coolville
81/66

Elizabeth
82/67

Spencer
79/67

Buffalo
80/67
Milton
82/69
Huntington
80/69

St. Albans
82/68

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
65/48
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
65/54
20s
10s
0s
Los Angeles
-0s
77/60
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Clendenin
81/67
Charleston
80/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
81/59
Montreal
84/58

Billings
88/59

Minneapolis
94/76

Chicago
85/67

Denver
90/62

Toronto
85/65
Detroit
85/69

New York
89/72
Washington
88/73

Kansas City
90/71

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
92/63/s 95/64/pc
58/50/c 60/49/c
88/72/t
86/70/t
80/69/t
74/64/t
90/72/t
85/68/t
88/59/c
86/47/t
77/47/pc 65/51/sh
88/66/t 74/57/pc
80/67/t
80/66/t
89/72/t
87/70/t
86/58/s 84/47/s
85/67/t
82/67/t
76/70/t
80/70/t
82/67/t
81/67/t
78/68/t
78/69/t
93/76/pc 93/76/pc
90/62/s 94/53/s
89/70/pc 92/71/pc
85/69/t
82/68/t
86/76/s 87/74/pc
93/77/pc 93/75/pc
79/70/t
80/69/t
90/71/pc
92/74/t
95/69/s 89/69/s
86/73/t
85/73/t
77/60/s 78/61/s
81/73/t
84/71/t
89/78/s 88/78/s
94/76/pc 95/76/pc
80/71/t
81/69/t
88/77/t 90/75/pc
89/72/t 82/62/pc
91/73/pc 92/73/pc
91/72/s 93/73/s
90/73/t
84/64/t
102/77/s 102/74/pc
80/67/t
81/67/t
83/58/t 75/51/pc
88/71/t
86/70/t
90/70/t
85/71/t
86/74/t
88/74/t
93/64/s 71/49/s
65/54/pc 68/54/s
65/48/pc 66/50/pc
88/73/t
85/71/t

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

100° in Presidio, TX
25° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global

Houston
93/77

Monterrey
96/70

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

EXTREMES TUESDAY
Atlanta
88/72

El Paso
101/74

Chihuahua
100/72

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
82/70

Ashland
81/70
Grayson
81/69

MONDAY

87°
62°

Wilkesville
81/66
POMEROY
Jackson
82/66
81/67
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/67
82/67
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
76/69
GALLIPOLIS
82/67
81/68
82/67

South Shore Greenup
81/70
80/69

41

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

Portsmouth
80/70

SATURDAY

Murray City
80/66

McArthur
79/65

Lucasville
80/69

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
78/68

Very High

Primary: hickory/other
Mold: 3090

Logan
79/67

Adelphi
78/68

Waverly
79/69

Pollen: 62

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

FRIDAY

82°
67°

3

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
6:04 a.m.
9:25 p.m.

THURSDAY

A thunderstorm or two today. A stray
thunderstorm tonight. High 82° / Low 67°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

Todd Berry

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Brent Patterson

High
Low
Miami
89/78

119° in Nokkundi, Pakistan
16° in La Quiaca, Argentina

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

�CLASSIFIEDS

4 Wednesday, June 9, 2021

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

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

LEGALS

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

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

AUTOS
Legals

Autos For Sale

2020 financial statements for
Gallia Metropolitan Housing
Authority are available to view
now until July 6, 2021, Hours
to view are from 8 AM to
4:30PM, Monday thru Friday.
They can be found at 381
Buck Ridge Road Apt. 14
(Office), Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
Please ask for Andrew Kott,
Executive Director.
6/4/21,6/5/21,6/8/21,6/9/21,
6/10/21,6/11/21,6/12/21

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, June 11, 2021
at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
VIN: 1FMJK2A53AEA81306
2010 Ford Expedition
VIN: 1GNKVJED9BJ345432
2011 Chevy Traverse
6/9/21,6/10/21,6/11/21

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Ohio Valley Publishing

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

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

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received by the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School District (the "District"), as provided in this
notice for the Green Building Playground, Sidewalks and
Lighting renovation project. Contract documents, which include
additional details of the Project, are on file and available from
Jim Collins, Facilities Manager, collinsj@buckeyehills.net.
Bids shall be enclosed in a sealed envelope addressed to
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School District, ATTN:
Stephanie Rife, Treasurer, 351 Buckeye Hills Road, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674 and plainly marked on the outside
"BUCKEYE HILLS CAREER CENTER WHS CULINARY LAB
PROJECT BID." Bids will be received until 11:00 a.m., local
time, on June 21, 2021.
Questions regarding plans and specifications should be
addressed in writing to JCKL Architects, Attn: Eric Karhoff, at
eric@marsharchitects.com.
All bids must include a Bid Guaranty, as described in the
Instructions to Bidders. No bidder may withdraw its bid within
60 days after the opening; the District reserves the right to
waive irregularities, reject any or all bids, and conduct necessary investigations to determine bidder responsibility.
6/9/21

7KH 6\PPHV 9DOOH\ /RFDO 6FKRRO 'LVWULFW
KDV WKH IROORZLQJ YDFDQFLHV IRU WKH ��������� VFKRRO \HDU�
Applicants must hold or be able to obtain Ohio Department of
Education licensure or credentials for these classroom positions, as well as the appropriate Federal and State Background
Checks.

Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate

6\PPHV 9DOOH\ /6' LV DQ HTXDO RSSRUWXQLW\ HPSOR\HU�

Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
The annual un-audited 2020
GAAP financial report for
Gallia County has been
completed.
The report is available for
inspection at the Gallia
County Auditor's Office at the
Gallia County Courthouse,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
6/4/21,6/9/21

(2 ea.) +LJK 6FKRRO 6FLHQFH WHDFKHUV (Grades 9-12)
(1 ea.) ,QWHUYHQWLRQ 6SHFLDOLVW (Elementary School)
This position is for a multi-categorical unit
Candidates are asked to submit a letter of interest, an application or resume, copy of relevant certification or proof that
credentials can be obtained.
A job description with duties and qualifications is attached to
this posting, or may be requested by contacting the SVLSD
Board office at 740-643-2451. Salary and benefits will be paid
according to the Board/SVEA bargaining agreement.
If interested, please contact Greg Bowman, Superintendent,
14778 State Route 141, Willow Wood, Ohio, 45696 or
greg.bowman@sv.k12.oh.us. Applications will be taken until
these positions are filled.

Case No. 20CV000086
U.S. Bank Trust National Association as Trustee of American
Homeowner Preservation Trust Series AHP Servicing, Plaintiff
vs.
Steven D. Hammond aka Steven Hammond, Defendant

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Court of Common Pleas
Gallia County, Ohio

MOTOR ROUTE

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction on the following described
real estate, situate if the State of Ohio, County of Gallia and in
the City/Township of Patriot to wit:

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
The Gallia County Commissioners will have a public hearing on
Thursday, June 17, 2021 at 9:45 am for the purpose of discussing the 2021 Coordinated Transportation Plan. The hearing will
be held in the Commissioner's Office on the first floor of the
Gallia County Courthouse. All interested parties are encouraged to attend. The draft plan is available upon request.
Gallia County Commissioners
6/9/21
38%/,&amp; 127,&amp;(
Buckeye Hills Regional Council is requesting proposals from
agencies to provide supportive and nutrition services to persons
60 years of age and older or are under 60 years of age who
have a disability and reside within the counties of Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington. Funding sources are Older American's Act Title-III B, Title
III-C1, Title III-C2, and Block Grant.
Services eligible for Title III-B/Block Grant funding are: Adult
Day, Homemaker, Personal Care, Grocery Shopping and Delivery, Telephoning and Transportation Services. Services eligible
for Title III-C1 and Title III-C2/Block Grant funding are Congregate and Home Delivered Meals, Nutrition Education Service
and Nutrition Health Screening Service.
The PY 2022-23 proposal packets will be available on June 14,
2021 by close of business on the Buckeye Hills Regional
Council website: www.buckeyehills.org. Proposal packets
and instructions will be available in electronic format only.
6/9/21
HOME NATIONAL BANK WILL BE HAVING A
VEHICLE AUCTION ON JUNE 12.2021.
THE SALE WILL BE AT 1O:OO A.M. IN THE BANK,S PARKING LOT LOCATED AT 502 ELM STREETRACINE,OHIO.
THE FOLLOWING VEHICLES WILL BE AUCTIONED OFF:
2OOO MERCEDES BENZ WDBJFOG2YA961499
2007 FORD Fl50 1FTPW14V17FB20423
2O1O FORD FOCUS 1FHP3HN8W295885
2OO8 CHEVY HHR 3GNDA13D585516465
2OO9 GMC ACADIA 1GKER13D00J167386
2OO7 DODGE RAM 1D7HU18227J610060
2OO8 CHRYSLER 3OO 2C3KA53G8H165067

To see the full legal description visit the Gallia County
Recorder's Office at 18 Locust Street, Room 1265, Gallipolis,
OH 45631.
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1909 Dry Ridge Road, Patriot, OH
45658
PPN#: 01000118303 &amp; 01000118301
Auction will take place at on the outside steps of the Gallia
County Sheriff`s Office, 18 Locust Street, Gallipolis, OH 45631
on Friday, July 9, 2021, at 10:00 AM. If the property remains
unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for sale at auction
again on Friday, July 30. 2021, same time and place.

Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
�
�
�
�
�

Be your own boss
5 Day Delivery
Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable
vehicle &amp; provide proof of insurance
� Must provide your own substitute

Said Premises Appraised at $ 12,500.00
Appraisals based on Exterior view of buildings only. The
Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have access to the inside of
said property.
Required Deposit: $ 5,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Property cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Required deposit in cash or
certified funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or
certified check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor
is purchaser, no deposit is required.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
PLEASE EMAIL
DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call
740-446-2342 ext: 2097
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631

TERMS OF 2nd SALE: Property to be sold without regard to
minimum bid requirement-s, subject to payment of taxes and
court costs; deposit and payment requirements same as the
first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of the sale
are insufficient to cover.
Sandhu Law Group, LLC
Attorney for Plaintiff
Address: 1213 Prospect Avenue, Suite 300,
Cleveland, OH 44115
Phone: 216-373-1001

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

Matt Champlin, Sheriff
Gallia County, Ohio
6/09/2021, 6/16/2021 &amp; 6/23/2021

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune has
a part-time position for a

Check out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV
online!

MAIL CLERK/DOCK WORKER
apply at 825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh
For an application or call
Derrick Morrison at 740-446-2342 ext. 2097

OH-70240097

OH-70240095

ALL VEHICLES ARE SOLD "AS IS-WHERE IS" WITH NO
IMPLIED OR EXPRESSEDWARRANTIES. HOME NATIONAL
BANK RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY AND
ALLBIDS AND TO PULL ANY COLLATERAL PRIOR TO
SALE.CALL SHEILA AT (740) 949-2210 FOR MORE
INFORMATION.
6/9/21,6/10/21,6/11/21

CALL TODAY!

�COMICS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, June 9, 2021 5

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

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

BABY BLUES

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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CRANKSHAFT

By Tom Batiuk &amp; Dan Davis

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

Today’s answer

ZITS

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

By Hilary Price

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

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6 Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Ohio Valley Publishing

Lady Falcons fend off Ravenswood, 10-1
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

HARTFORD, W.Va. — The
Lady Falcons certainly blasted
their way through the sectional.
The top-seeded Wahama softball
team capped off its Class A Region
IV, Section 2 championship with
a 10-1 mercy rule victory over
Ravenswood on Monday in Mason
County, with senior Emma Gibbs
hitting the club’s sixth home run of
the postseason to end the game in
the bottom of the the ﬁfth inning.
The Lady Falcons (22-0) — who
have now played seven games
since last trailing — took the with
one out in the second inning on
Monday, with an RBI single from
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports Deborah Miller. With two outs in
Members of the Wahama softball team pose for a photo after winning the Class A Region IV, Section 2 championship the frame, Mikie Lieving hit a tworun triple, followed by RBI singles
on Monday in Hartford, W.Va.

from Gibbs and Lauren Noble,
making Wahama’s lead 5-0.
Ravenswood got a run back with
Blake Thompson scoring on a
double-steal in the top of the third.
However, the Lady Falcons went
up 7-1 with a two run single from
Lieving with two outs in the bottom of the inning.
After a scoreless fourth, Bailee
Bumgarner walked and Mikie
Lieving doubled, setting the table
for Gibbs’ three-run home run to
seal the 10-1 victory.
Lieving earned the pitching victory with one strikeout in a complete game. Reaygan Tribett took
the pitching loss for the guests,
striking out one in 2.2 frames.
Leading Wahama at the plate,
Lieving was 4-for-4 with a triple,

See FEND | 7

Indians
outlast Point
Pleasant, 1-0
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

SISSONVILLE, W.Va. — In a game full a limited
opportunities, the top-seeded Indians caught the
big break.
A 2-out RBI single by Tristin Portz in the bottom of the ﬁfth provided all of the offense that
Sissonville needed on Monday night during a 1-0
decision over visiting Point Pleasant in the ﬁrst
championship game of the Class AA Region IV,
Section 1 tournament.
The second-seeded Big Blacks (19-8) entered
the contest as the winner’s bracket champion,
meaning that SHS would have to win Monday
night to force a winner-take-all rematch on Tuesday … and that’s exactly what happened in an otherwise epic pitcher’s duel.
PPHS was just two batters into the game when
Hunter Lilly produced a 1-out single, but the next
at-bat resulted in an inning-ending double play.
The Big Blacks didn’t have another baserunner
until Lilly produced another single with one away
in the fourth, then Kyelar Morrow to put runners
at ﬁrst and second after drawing a walk — but
consecutive outs followed to end the threat.
Point Pleasant again put runners on ﬁrst and
second after a 2-out Evan Roach single in the ﬁfth
moved Riley Oliver into scoring position. The following batter ﬂied out to end the inning, and the
guests didn’t have another baserunner the rest of
the way.
Sissonville, on the other hand, had 11 consecutive hitters sat down in order before Hunter Montgomery came up with a 2-out single in the bottom
of the fourth before ultimately being left at second
base.
However, SHS found some good fortunes in the
ﬁfth as Colten Carpenter led things off by being
hit by a pitch, then moved over to third on a single
by Brayden Perdue.
Perdue was caught stealing for the ﬁrst out and
a groundout followed for the second, but Portz
— the 9-hole hitter — ﬂared a single into shallow
left that allowed Carpenter to come home for a 1-0
advantage.
SHS also left runners stranded at second and
third with one away in the home half of the sixth.
The Indians — who host Point again at 6 p.m.
Tuesday night in the championship ﬁnale —
See INDIANS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, June 9
Track and Field
WVSSAC Class A meet, 7 p.m.
Thursday, June 10
Track and Field
WVSSAC Class A meet, 11 a.m.
WVSSAC Class AA meet, 7 p.m.
Legion Baseball
Beverly-Lowell Post 389-750 vs. Meigs Post 39
at Meigs HS, 6 p.m.
Friday, June 11
Track and Field
WVSSAC Class AA meet, 11 a.m.
Sunday, June 13
Legion Baseball
Glouster Post 414 vs. Meigs Post 39 at Meigs
HS (DH), 1 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Wahama sophomore Ryker Humphreys runs in the 110m hurdles at a May 25 quad meet in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Wahama, Hannan to
partake in Class A meet
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CHARLESTON,
W.Va. — It would otherwise be a baker’s dozen
for Wahama, but Hannan wanted in on the
fun after a dozen years
of missing out.
Mason County will be
well-represented at the
Class A Track and Field
Championships this
week as both Wahama
and Hannan have combined to send 14 athletes to Laidley Field on
the campus of the University of Charleston.
Wahama has nine
boys competing in eight
events and another
four girls participating
in four events over the
2-day stretch, while the
Lady Cats have a single
representative in one
event this week at the
single-A level.
HHS freshman
Miranda Smith will
actually start things
off for Mason County
on Wednesday as part
of the 400-meter dash
event. Smith — who
is the ﬁrst Wildcat to
compete at state since
Travis Bowman back in
2009 — owns the slowest regional qualifying
time in the ﬁeld of 16 at

1:15.99.
WHS senior Josh
Frye also competes on
Wednesday night in the
boys 400m dash event.
Frye — the Region
IV runner-up with a
mark of 55.68 seconds
— comes in with the
14th fastest time from
regional qualifying.
The times posted in
those Wednesday night
races count toward the
ﬁnal standings in the
event.
Wahama completely
has the day to itself
on Thursday, which
includes both the boys
and the girls best
chances to score top-6
ﬁnishes headed into the
meet.
Abbie Lieving enters
the high jump ﬁnal at
11 a.m. in a 3-way tie
for third place with a
qualifying height of 4
feet, 10 inches. Rowen
Gerlach comes into the
discus ﬁnal at 11 a.m.
with the fourth-best
qualifying throw of 121
feet, 9 inches.
Lieving and Gerlach
also compete at 1:30
p.m. in the long jump
and shot put ﬁnals,
respectively. Lieving
comes in with the ﬁfthbest distance of 15 feet,
10.75 inches. Gerlach

enters the shot put with
the sixth-best effort of
42 feet, 3 inches.
The remaining Wahama participants will
have some work to do if
they hope to have a shot
at podium ﬁnishes as
each athlete left comes
in with qualifying marks
in the bottom half of
their events.
Josiah Lloyd
(4:59.56) enters the
boys 1600m ﬁnal with
the 11th fastest time,
while Ryker Humphreys
owns the 14th-best
qualifying time of 19.37
seconds in the 110m
hurdles.
The White Falcons
also have three relay
teams competing in
the boys meet, with
the 4x110m shuttle
hurdles relay team owning the best position
of 11th with a mark of
1:11.70. The shuttle
hurdles quartet consists
of Humphreys, Lloyd,
Rocky Kearns and Joshua Roque.
The 4x400m relay
team of Lloyd, Humphreys, Frye and Jackson Young come in with
the 14th fastest time of
4:02.06. The foursome
of Kearns, Young, William Johnson and Owen
Richardson are also

15th headed into the
4x800m relay ﬁnal with
a time of 10:00.41.
Lacey Neal will compete in the girls 100m
dash and owns the 13th
fastest time of 13.73
seconds. Neal, Lieving, Olivia Brooks and
Michaela Hieronymous
are also 14th overall
headed into the 4x100m
relay event.
The Lady Falcons
have scored at least
one-half of a point in
each of the last two
state meets held, while
the White Falcons had
a 7-year scoring streak
come to an end at the
2019 tournament.
Smith will become the
ﬁrst Lady Cat to compete at the state track
meet since the turn of
the millennium.
The Class A track and
ﬁeld championships
begin just after 7 p.m.
Wednesday night with
the running of the 400m
dash and 3200m run
events, then the remainder of the tournament
will be held on Thursday starting at 11 a.m.
© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, June 9, 2021 7

Wahama edges Red Devils, 3-2
By Alex Hawley

“That’s the beauty of baseball, as long as you have an
out left there’s still life, and
these guys didn’t quit,” Coach
MASON, W.Va. — Down one
Zuspan said. “It was a wellwith one out remaining, right
played game, and if you’re a
time and place for the White
baseball fan, you had to love
Falcons.
watching this game tonight.
Wahama sophomore Logan
Ravenswood’s a great team,
Roach doubled down the the
well-coached, Coach Swain
right ﬁeld line, freshman Sawdoes such a wonderful job with
yer VanMatre drew a walk, and
that program.
then sophomore Aaron Henry
“Aaron Henry pitched a gem,
delivered a double to the lefthe’s a warrior on the mound,
center ﬁeld gap, plating bother
someone we have so much
runners and giving the White
conﬁdence in, and then he
Falcons a 3-2 victory in the
comes up with a big hit at the
Class A Region IV, Section 2
end. Logan Roach, our leadoff
championship game on Monhitter, hits one down the right
day at Claﬂin Stadium.
ﬁeld line and sets it all up, he’s
Wahama (11-11) broke the
got great speed, gets himself
scoreless tie in the bottom of
to third base, and then there
the fourth inning, with Ethan
we go. I’m so proud of these
Gray doubling before three
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
straight two-out walks.
Members of the Wahama baseball team pose for a photo after winning the Class A Region IV, Section 2 championship on boys, they’ve done a great job.
We move on to the region, and
Ravenswood (7-18) tied the
Monday in Mason, W.Va.
we’re not sure who we’ll play
game at one in the next frame,
yet, but we’re going to come
Smith, Andrew Hunt, and
two Wahama batters and took
ry’s two-run walk-off double
however, with Logan Alfred
ready.”
Anthony Anglin each singled
the pitching loss for the Red
came on the ﬁrst pitch of his
scoring on a Benjamin Queen
Wahama ﬁnishes the year 3-1
once for the guests, with Smith
Devils.
at bat.
sac-ﬂy. Another sac-ﬂy from
against the Red Devils, with
Henry, Roach and Gray each and Alfred scoring runs, and
Bryce Zuspan was the winQueen brought Justin Smith
wins of 9-4 and 11-10 after a
Queen claiming both RBIs.
had a double for the White
home in the top of the seventh, ning pitcher of record in .1
Following the victory, White 7-2 setback in the ﬁrst meeting
Falcons, while Zuspan and Trey
innings of relief for Wahama,
giving RHS a 2-1 lead.
of the year.
Ohlinger added a single apiece. Falcons head coach Billy Zusstriking out the only batter he
The Red and White were
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishpan talked about being down
Henry had two RBIs, Zuspan
down to their ﬁnal strike twice faced. Henry pitched the ﬁrst
ing, all rights reserved.
to the ﬁnal out, and pulling
picked up one, while Roach,
6.2 innings, striking out four
in the last inning, with Roach
out the sectional championship Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446Gray and VanMatre scored a
batters.
and VanMatre both falling
2342, ext. 2100.
victory.
Beau Bennett faced the ﬁnal run apiece.
behind 0-2 in their at-bats. Hen-

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

L O C A L R E S U LT S
SOFTBALL
Wahama 10, Ravenswood 1
RHS
001 00
—
1-4-3
WHS
052 03
— 10-10-0
WP: Mikie Lieving (5IP, R, 4H, K, 2BB)
LP: Reaygan Tribett (2.2IP, 7R, 7H, K,
2BB)
Ravenswood (15-16): Emily Wratchford 1-1, Blake Thompson 1-2 (RS), Emily Curtis 1-2, Hattie Kennedy 1-3.
Wahama (22-0): Lieving 4-4 (2RS,
4RBI), Emma Gibbs 3-3 (2RS, 4RBI),
Emma Knapp 1-3 (2RS), Deborah Miller
1-3 (RBI), Lauren Noble 1-3 (RBI).
2B: Lieving, Gibbs.
3B: Lieving.
HR: Gibbs.
BASEBALL
Wahama 3, Ravenswood 2
RHS
000 010 1 — 2-3-0
WHS
000 100 2 — 3-5-0
WP: Bryce Zuspan (.1IP, K)
LP: Beau Bennett (0IP, R, BB, H)
Ravenswood (7-18): Justin Smith 1-1
(RS) Andrew Hunt 1-2, Anthony Anglin
1-3.
Wahama (11-11): Bryce Zuspan 1-2
(RBI), Ethan Gray 1-3 (RS), Trey Ohlinger 1-3, Logan Roach 1-4 (RS), Aaron
Henry 1-4 (2RBI).
2B: Gray, Roach, Henry.
Sissonville 1, Point Pleasant 0
PPHS
000 000 0 — 0-3-0
SHS
000 010 x — 1-6-0
WP: Collin Cottrell (7IP, 7K, BB)

Fend
From page 6

a double, two runs
scored and four runs
batted in, while Gibbs
was 3-for-3 with a home
run, a double, two runs
scored and four RBIs.
Emma Knapp singled
once and scored twice
in the win, while Miller
and Noble both singled
once and drove in a run.
Thompson, Emily
Curtis, Hattie Kennedy
and Emily Wratchford
had a single apiece for
the Red Devilettes, with
Thompson scoring their
lone run.
Following the sectional championship, Lady
Falcons head coach
Chris Noble admitted
his team has bigger
goals this postseason.
“It’s real satisfying,
but that’s not what
we’re after,” said Coach
Noble. “We’re after the

Indians
From page 6

outhit the guests by a
6-3 overall margin and
stranded six of the 10
runners left in base.
Neither squad committed an error in the contest as well.
Collin Cottrell struck
out seven and walked
one in seven innings of
scoreless work for the
win. Joel Beattie surrendered a walk and fanned

LP: Joel Beattie (6IP, 6K, BB)
Point Pleasant (19-8): Hunter Lilly
2-3, Evan Roach 1-2.
Sissonville (20-5): Hunter Montgomery 2-3, Isaiah Ramsey 1-3, Collin
Cottrell 1-3, Brayden Perdue 1-3, Tristin
Portz 1-2 (RBI), Colten Carpenter (RS).
2B: Montgomery.
TRACK AND FIELD
WVSSAC Class A Championships
Wednesday, June 9
7:10: Miranda Smith (H) 400m dash.
7:20: Joshua Frye (W) 400m dash.
Thursday, June 10
11 a.m.: Abbie Lieving (W) high jump,
Rowen Gerlack (W) discus.
11:55 a.m.: Ryker Humphreys (W)
110m hurdles.
12:05: Lacey Neal (W) 100m dash.
12:50: Josiah Lloyd (W) 1600m run.
1:30: Abbie Lieving (W) long jump,
Rowen Gerlack (W) shot put.
2:30: Wahama boys 4x800m relay.
2:50: Boys 110m hurdles finals.
3:00: Girls 100m dash finals.
3:55: Wahama girls 4x100m relay.
5:05: Wahama boys 4x110m shuttle
hurdles.
5:30: Wahama boys 4x400m relay.
*7:20: Jonathan Griffin (PP) 400m
dash.
* — denotes Class AA event after
Class A meet is completed at Laidley
Field. All times listed are p.m., unless
otherwise noted.

next couple steps.”
This marks the Lady
Falcons’ fourth win over
the Red Devilettes, with
wins of 9-0 and 6-0 in
the regular season, as
well as a 9-4 postseason
victory. Coach Noble
acknowledged the
added difﬁculty in playing such a familiar foe,
but noted the teams’
errorless defense got
them through it.
“The more you
play a team, the more
chances you’re giving
them to have a good
game against you,” said
Coach Noble. “They
had a good hitting game
tonight, but we played
good defense.”
In their 22-game winstreak, the Lady Falcons
have outscored opponents 195-to-21.
© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

six in over six frames in
the tough-luck loss.
Lilly led PPHS with
two hits and Roach
also had a safety in the
setback.
Montgomery paced
the hosts with two
hits, with Cottrell, Perdue, Portz, and Isaiah
Ramsey also adding a
hit each.
© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

RIO GRANDE ROUNDUP
RedStorm well-represented on RSC
scholar baseball, softball teams
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande is wellrepresented on the 2021 River
States Conference Baseball &amp; Softball Scholar-Athlete Teams.
The conference honored 112
baseball and 94 softball studentathletes, including 10 members of
the RedStorm baseball team and
11 members of the Rio softball
team.
Baseball honorees included graduate seniors Zach Kendall (Troy,
OH) and Jon Erhard (Newark,
OH); seniors Kent Reeser (Miamisburg, OH), Eli Daniels (Minford,
OH) and Trey Meade (Seaman,
OH); sophomore Andrew Mershon
(Patriot, OH); and freshmen Trey
Carter (Wheelersburg, OH), Josh
Faro (Gallipolis, OH), Deric King
(Springﬁeld, OH) and Trenton
Overturf (West Frankfort, IL).
Members of the RedStorm
softball team who were recognized included seniors Morgan
Santos (Dayton, OH), Clara
Janofa (Salem, OH), Kayla Slutz
(Navarre, OH) and Raelynn Hastings (Commercial Point, OH);
juniors Shelby Schmitt (Fairﬁeld,
OH), Taylor Webb (Willow Wood,
OH), Zoe Doll (Minford, OH) and
Lexi Hart (Johnstown, OH); sophomores Emily Crossen (Ashland,
OH), Chase Arndt (Clyde, OH)
and Cierra Roberts (Bidwell, OH).
To be named, student-athletes
must have a 3.25 grade-point average or higher, have at least two
semesters of attendance prior to
the current term, participate in an
RSC sport and be nominated by
their institution.
Asbury (Ky.) University led RSC
baseball with 16 team members
named, while Carlow (Pa.) University led RSC softball with 14
selections.
The NAIA sponsors a similar
award program of the NAIADaktronics Scholar-Athlete, which
is awarded to juniors and seniors
with a 3.50 GPA or higher.
Half-dozen Rio Grande golfers
named RSC scholar-athletes
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande has
placed three student-athletes on

both the 2020-21 River States
Conference Men’s &amp; Women’s Golf
Scholar-Athlete Teams.
The list of honorees announced
by league ofﬁcials recognizes 35
men’s and 26 women’s studentathletes.
The RedStorm was represented
on the men’s list by junior Colton
Blakeman (Piketon, OH) and sophomores Jensen Anderson (Racine,
OH) and Ethan Mercer (Jackson,
OH).
Rio’s honorees on the women’s
squad included the junior trio of
Abby Eichmiller (Vincent, OH),
Hunter Rockhold (Clinton, OH)
and Madison Duskey (Beverly,
OH).
To be named, student-athletes
must have a 3.25 grade-point average or higher, have at least two
semesters of attendance prior to
the current term, participate in an
RSC sport and be nominated by
their institution.
Midway (Ky.) University led
RSC men’s golf with seven members named, while Midway and
Brescia (Ky.) University tied for
the women’s lead with ﬁve selections each.
The NAIA sponsors a similar
award program of the NAIADaktronics Scholar-Athlete, which
is awarded to juniors and seniors
with a 3.50 GPA or higher.
Ten from Rio named RSC
track &amp; field scholars
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — The
River States Conference Men’s &amp;
Women’s Outdoor Track &amp; Field
Scholar-Athlete Teams honor 42
men’s and 63 women’s studentathletes for 2021.
The University of Rio Grande
produced six of the men’s honorees
and four of those on the women’s
list.
Representing the RedStorm men
were Austin Setty (Fairﬁeld, OH),
Eric Weber (Bidwell, OH), Finn
Tomlin (Georgetown, OH), Josiah
Edwards (South Webster, OH),
Travis Hunt (New Paris, OH) and
Tristan Janey (Crown City, OH).
All are freshman.
The women’s honorees included
junior Chase Davis (Huntington,
WV) and the sophomore trio of
Kat Root (Old Fort, OH), Saman-

tha Miller (Greensprings, OH) and
Sierra Cress (Greenville, OH).
To be named, student-athletes
must have a 3.25 grade-point average or higher, have at least two
semesters of attendance prior to
the current term, participate in an
RSC sport and be nominated by
their institution.
Midway (Ky.) University had a
league-high eight men’s outdoor
members named and Brescia (Ky.)
University led RSC women’s outdoor list with 12 honorees.
The NAIA sponsors a similar
award program of the NAIADaktronics Scholar-Athlete, which
is awarded to juniors and seniors
with a 3.50 GPA or higher.
RSC soccer scholar-athletes
include eight from Rio Grande
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — The
River States Conference Men’s &amp;
Women’s Soccer Scholar-Athlete
Teams recognize 87 men’s and 115
women’s student-athletes for the
2020-21 school year.
The University of Rio Grande
had ﬁve honorees on the men’s side
and three on the women’s team.
On the men’s team, Rio was represented by seniors Connor Paine
(Cornwell, England) and Silas
Machado (Sao Paulo, Brazil), junior
Cristobal Encina (Santiago, Chile),
and the sophomore duo Rodrigo
Basso (Santiago, Chile) and Sebastian Borquez (Santiago, Chile).
The RedStorm’s women’s honorees included senior Chase Davis
(Huntington, WV) and sophomores Rachelle Wolford (Marysville, OH) and Trinity Hassey
(Westerville, OH).
To be named, student-athletes
must have a 3.25 grade-point average or higher, have at least two
semesters of attendance prior to
the current term, participate in an
RSC sport and be nominated by
their institution.
Midway (Ky.) University led
men’s soccer list with 14 team
members, while Brescia (Ky.)
University led the women’s soccer
team with 15 members named.
The NAIA sponsors a similar
award program of the NAIADaktronics Scholar-Athlete, which
is awarded to juniors and seniors
with a 3.50 GPA or higher.

Thibodeau picked as NBA’s coach of the year
NEW YORK (AP) — Tom
Thibodeau got the New York Knicks
back to the playoffs, guiding the
team to its second-best record in 20
years.
And in the eyes of the voters, that
coaching job was the best in the
NBA.
Thibodeau was revealed Monday
as the NBA’s Coach of the Year for
2020-21, as determined by a global
panel of 100 sportswriters and
broadcasters who cover the league.
The Knicks went 41-31 this season,
then fell to Atlanta in ﬁve games in

the ﬁrst round of the playoffs.
It was the closest balloting since
this version of voting was introduced 19 years ago. Thibodeau got
43 ﬁrst-place votes and ﬁnished
with 351 total points, while Phoenix’s Monty Williams actually got
more ﬁrst-place votes — he got 45
— but ﬁnished with 340 points.
“Anytime you get an award
like this, I’m obviously honored,”
Thibodeau said on the telecast
announcing the results. “But it’s
more a reﬂection of our group and
our organization.”

It was Thibodeau’s second time
winning the award; he also got it in
2011, his ﬁrst season with the Chicago Bulls. And another ﬁrst-year
turnaround in New York merited
him the trophy for a second time.
Utah’s Quin Snyder was third
and got 10 of the remaining 12
ﬁrst-place votes. Philadelphia’s
Doc Rivers was fourth, getting
the other two ﬁrst-place votes.
Atlanta’s Nate McMillan was ﬁfth,
Brooklyn’s Steve Nash was sixth
and Denver’s Michael Malone was
seventh.

�NEWS

8 Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Record

lance arrived on scene
and treated the head
injury, however the victim
refused to be transported
From page 1
to the ER. Johnathan
Salser was arrested for
to an earlier shooting.
assault and transported
Ofﬁcers pulled over
to the Middleport Jail.
Matthew Eblin in front
6:19 p.m. — An
of Speedway. At 2 a.m.,
unknown male contacted
Eblin was in custody
the Middleport Police
after a felony stop was
Department, stating
executed. Eblin was
that he had a fawn that
arrested and charged
wandered up onto his
through the Middleport
porch. After contacting
Police Department for
possession of a controlled ODNR, they stated to put
the fawn back into the
substance, the improper
woods, and the mother
handling of a ﬁrearm.
would come back for it.
having weapons while
under disability, and pos- A few hours later, one of
the ofﬁcers came across
session of drug abuse
the fawn standing in the
instruments. The Meigs
middle of Middleport
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
arrived on scene to assist Hill. The fawn was then
and have charges on Eblin taken back to the Middleport Police Department,
pending, that were ﬁled
through the Meigs Coun- where he was placed into
ty Court.The vehicle was the interview room, and
ODNR was contacted
towed from the scene.
again. ODNR came and
retrieved the fawn and
May 22
transported him to a
1:50 a.m. — Ofﬁcers
rehabilitation center for
were dispatched to the
wildlife.
red brick apartments
for a ﬁght between two
males. One of the males
May 23
was bleeding from the
3:54 a.m. — A homehead. The Pomeroy Police less male subject arrived
Department and the
at the police department
Meigs County Sheriff’s
and began to strike the
Ofﬁce were dispatched
glass door numerous
to assist. The ambutimes with his foot. After

being approached by an
ofﬁcer. he threatened to
strike the ofﬁcer with his
skateboard. At this point
the of ofﬁcer drew their
taser, while another ofﬁcer tackled the subject to
the ground and subdued
the subject. The taser
was not deployed. On
his person was allegedly
a baggy of methamphetamines, and a small vial
containing methamphetamines. Charges were
ﬁled on the subject for
possession of drugs,
disorderly conduct, drug
paraphernalia, and illegal
conveyance.
10:30 p.m. — Ofﬁcers
conducted a trafﬁc stop
at the entrance of the
cemetery. Inside the
vehicle were three males,
in which two of the males
had warrants for their
arrest. Drugs and paraphernalia were allegedly
located inside the vehicle.
Subjects were arrested on
the warrants and transported to the Middleport
Jail.
May 24
1:40 a.m. — Breaking and entering in
progress was reported at
234 South 3rd Avenue.
Suspect Robert Klein
was apprehended and

Daily Sentinel

charged. Upon Klein’s
person, two hypodermic
needles were allegedly
located. Klein reportedly
admitted to attempting
to gain entry. Klein was
charged with criminal
trespass, possession of
drug abuse instruments,
and disorderly conduct.
May 25
1 p.m. — A vehicle
was reported stolen from
the CPS parking lot. The
vehicle, a black Cadillac, was recovered by
the Middleport Police
Department, and the
Pomeroy Police Department at 11:20 p.m. on
the Flood Road, half a
mile east from the tower.
Ridgetop was contacted
to tow the vehicle, to
return it to the owner.
May 26
3:50 a.m. — The
Middleport Police
Department assisted the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce in the parking
lot of Auto Zone. Two
males were found sleeping in the vehicle and
drugs were located in the
vehicle. This matter was
investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.

tic violence call occurred
on Rutland Street with a
male and female. While
ofﬁcers were en route
to Rutland Street, they
encountered the male
subject involved in the
domestic, driving a
maroon Escalade. In an
attempt to stop the suspect, the suspect ﬂed up
Mill Street, and Middleport Hill with speeds topping 60-plus MPH. The
vehicle ﬂed up the Flood
Road over the gravel road
and over the hill towards
the bridge. The Escalade
ran off the road and
through the ditch, with
the male ﬂeeing on foot.
Ofﬁcers allegedly located
shell casings inside the
vehicle. The vehicle was
towed. The Ohio State
Highway Patrol sent out
their aviation unit to pursue the suspect; OHSP
was unable to locate the
suspect in the wooded
area. A Meigs County
Deputy apprehended
the suspect at 2:13 a.m.
along State Route 7. The
suspect was arrested
and charged for ﬂeeing
and domestic violence
and transported to the
Middleport Jail.

May 27
8:32 p.m. — A domes-

May 29
4:36 p.m. — Pome-

roy Police Department
stopped a Ford Ranger in
the village of Middleport,
being driven by a 14 year
old male, accompanied
by an 18 year old male,
who let him drive the
vehicle.
5:34 p.m. — An
unresponsive male, 29
years of age, allegedly
overdosed and was not
breathing; CPR was performed. Ofﬁcers arrived
on scene to ﬁnd that
Narcan had been administered by the subject’s
sister. Male was transported to Holzer ER.
9:06 p.m. — Ofﬁcers
arrived at the Brownell
Apartments to serve a
warrant. Ofﬁcers made
contact with a female,
Mikayla Coon, who was
charged with obstruction
of ofﬁcial business for
allegedly lying to ofﬁcers about her boyfriend
being inside the apartment. Matthew Taylor
was arrested on an active
failure to appear warrant. Colton Chesser was
arrested and charged for
possession of marijuana
and drug abuse instruments, with county court
charges pending.
Information provided
by the Middleport Police
Department.

River

Stocks wobble as investors seek direction amid recovery

From page 1

By Damian J. Troise
and Alex Veiga

ﬁnancial support, they
also provide volunteers
and in-kind services. It’s
a great example of everyone working together for
a good cause.
Sweeps will be going
on in other areas of the
county and in neighboring counties in Ohio and
West Virginia. People
wanting to volunteer for
this event can call 1-800359-3977 for local coordinators in their area.
Information provided
by the Meigs SWCD.

driving the Russell 2000 index
0.9% higher.
AP Business Writers
A variety of companies that
rely on direct consumer spendStocks swayed between small ing made solid gains. Domino’s
Pizza rose 1.5% and Gap gained
gains and losses in afternoon
trading on Wall Street Tuesday 3.2%. Industrial stocks also
while investors continue search- ticked higher. Energy companies rose along with the price of
ing for direction as the economy recovers from its pandemic crude oil.
Those gains were kept in
slump.
check by falling health care and
The S&amp;P 500 rose 0.1% as
of 2:38 p.m. Eastern. The Dow communication stocks. Banks
recovered from an earlier slide
Jones Industrial Average rose
but remained weighed down as
4 points, or less than 0.1%, to
bond yields, which they rely on
34,634 and the Nasdaq rose
to charge more lucrative inter0.3%. Smaller company stocks
est rates on loans, slipped. The
outgained the broader market
yield on the 10-year Treasury
for the second day in a row,

fell to 1.53% from 1.57% late
Monday.
The stock of Fastly, an internet cloud services provider, was
9.2% higher after the company
said it had addressed an internal problem that caused dozens
of websites around the globe to
go down brieﬂy, including the
home page of Britain’s government and The New York Times.
“We’re kind of stuck in the
summer lull,” said Megan Horneman, director of portfolio
strategy at Verdence Capital
Advisors. “Week by week we’re
going to go through periods
where people are waiting
for the latest economic data

report.”
Investors have been navigating a choppy market as they
digest information on how
the economy is recovering.
The World Bank upgraded its
outlook for global growth this
year, predicting that COVID19 vaccinations and massive
government stimulus in rich
countries will power the fastest
worldwide expansion in nearly
ﬁve decades. The 189-country
anti-poverty agency forecasts
that the world economy will
grow 5.6% this year, up from
the 4.1% it forecast in January.
The global economy last year
shrank 3.5%.

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