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                  <text>Police, skunks
deserve
admiration

Breezy,
High of 74,
Low of 48

Southern
runs at
Bob Reall

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 154, Volume 70

Tuesday, September 27, 2016 s 50¢

Sources:
Meyer out
as Holzer
CEO
By Michael Johnson
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

The Meigs Local Alumni Association honored distinguished alumni and service award recipients before Friday’s Homecoming football game against River Valley.
Pictured, with their families, are Kathy Reed, Jackie Welker, SMSgt. Christopher Knight and Dr. Jared Sheets.

Meigs honors alumni, crowns Homecoming Queen
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS —
The crowning of a new
queen and the recognition of distinguished
alumni and the service
award recipient kicked off
the Meigs homecoming
and alumni festivities on
Friday evening.
Jade Dudding was
crowned the 2016 Meigs
Homecoming Queen during the pregame ceremony. Dudding was escorted
by Dillon Mahr and
crowned by 2015 MHS
Homecoming Queen
Madison Greene.
Following the crown-

ing of the queen, the
2016 Meigs Local
Alumni Association Distinguished Alumni and
Service Award was presented.
Kathy Reed, longtime
educator at Meigs High
School, was recognized
with the Distinguished
Service Award. Reed was
accompanied by her husband, Tom Reed, and son,
Dru Reed, both Meigs
High School graduates.
Jackie Welker, retired
Air Force SMSgt. Christopher Knight, and Dr.
Jared Sheets were presented the Distinguished

Man in
custody after
reportedly
shooting wife
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

See MEIGS | 5 Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Jade Dudding, escorted by Dillon Mahr

Barber crowned EHS Homecoming Queen

Photos by Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Katlyn Barber was crowned the 2016 Eastern High School Homecoming Queen during halftime
of Friday’s football game against South Gallia. Barber was escorted by Jordan Chadwell. The new
queen was crowned by 2015 EHS Homecoming Queen Kelsey Johnson.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
TV: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

GALLIPOLIS — Dr.
Christopher Meyer has
been terminated as chief
executive ofﬁcer by the
Holzer Health System
Board of
Directors,
the Daily
Tribune
has learned.
Meyer
was reportedly terDr. Meyer
minated
last Friday,
according to multiple
sources with knowledge
of the situation.
A statement released
by Holzer late Monday
afternoon states Meyer
was terminated “due to
differences related to
the direction of the organization and (the Holzer Board of Directors)
relieved him of his duties,
effective immediately.”
The Holzer statement
added, “Dr. Meyer’s
departure will, naturally,
require some corporate
See HOLZER | 3

Voter registration ends Oct. 11
Absentee, early
voting begins Oct. 12
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION

Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

POMEROY — The November
election is quickly approaching and
would-be voters have two weeks left
to register.
Voter registration will ofﬁcially
close as of Tuesday, Oct. 11 at 9 p.m.
in order to vote in the Nov. 8 elec-

tion. Voters who need to update their
address may do so by visiting myohiovote.com.
Absentee voting and/or early voting
begins on Oct. 12 and will continue
on a daily basis at the Meigs County
Board of Elections through Nov. 7.
The hours for early and absentee
voting are as follows: Oct. 12-14, 8
a.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct. 17-21, 8 a.m. to
5 p.m.; Oct. 24-28, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.;
Oct. 29, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Oct. 30, 1
p.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct. 31-Nov. 4, 8 a.m.
See VOTING | 5

PORTER — Police
took a Gallia County
man into custody Sunday
evening after he reportedly shot his wife during
a domestic altercation in
the Porter area.
At roughly 5 p.m. Sunday, the Gallia County
911 Center received a call
from a person asking for
a deputy to respond to
the Korner
Store on
State Route
160 so he
could take
the deputy
to the
residence
Miller
where the
caller’s
friend was having an
issue with a male individual. While driving to
the call, deputies receive
another call saying the
victim, Sarah Miller, 46,
was found unresponsive
in a ditch near the residence in question.
Gallia County Sheriff
Joe Browning said the
residence of the altercation was on Porter Road
at the Clark Chapel Road
intersection. Authorities
were reportedly contacted by the witness to the
dispute.
The search began for
Sarah Miller’s husband,
Charles Miller, 39, and,
at roughly 7:05 p.m.,
Charles’ vehicle was discovered on State Route
160 near Swango Road.
“Looks like there
See SHOOTING | 5

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2 Tuesday, September 27, 2016

MEIGS COUNTY CALENDAR OF EVENTS

BEULAH M. MARR NEIGLER
tucky, and Jason M.
Cappo, Waynesboro,
Virginia; two greatgrandchildren, Luke and
Bowen Wamsley; and
sister-in-law, Sue Marr,
Racine, Ohio.
In addition to her husband she was preceded
in death by her brothers,
Paul Marr and Wayland
Marr; sisters, Ruth Marr
Lewis and Ruby M.
Miller.
Funeral services will
be at 1 p.m., on Friday,
Sept. 30, 2016, at Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine, with Pastor
Ryan Eaton ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow at
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends my call on
Thursday from 6-8 p.m.
at the funeral home.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.
In lieu of ﬂowers
memorials may be
made in Beulah’s name
to Racine First Baptist
Church Memorial Fund
or the Ladies Auxiliary of Post #62 Racine
American Legion.

RING
BIDWELL, Ohio — Erma Lou Ring, 85, Bidwell,
passed away Monday, Sept. 26, 2016. Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2016,
at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park, Vinton,
Ohio. Visitation at the funeral home will be 5-7 p.m.
Tuesday.

YOUNG
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — James William Young,
69, of New Haven, passed away suddenly in CabellHuntington Hospital. Service will be 7 p.m. Friday,
Sept. 30, 2016, at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va. Visitation will be 5-7 p.m. Friday at the
funeral home.

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.
Tuesday, Sept. 27
POMEROY — OH-KAN Coin
Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the
upper room of Farmers Bank, East
Main Street, Pomeroy, to ﬁnalize
plans for the Oct. 2 coin show at
Quality Inn in Gallipolis. There
will be door prizes and refreshments. For more information contact Bob Graham at 740-992-6040.
LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township Trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at 8
a.m. at the township garage.

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Keith Alan Hill,
72, of Point Pleasant, died Saturday, Sept. 24,
2016. A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Thursday,
Sept. 29, 2016, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant. Burial will follow at Pisgah Cemetery
in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Visitation at the funeral
home will be two hours prior to the funeral service
Thursday.

HAGGERTY
SCOTTOWN, Ohio — James G. Haggerty, 75, of
Scottown, died Sunday, Sept. 25, 2016, at his residence. As per Jim’s wishes, there will be no calling
hours or funeral service. A memorial service will
be held in October. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.

CABLE

27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)

31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

ADVERTISE
IT PAYS!

Friday, Oct. 7
POMEROY — The Meigs County Public Employee Retiree Inc.,
Chapeter 74 will hold its regular
meeting at 1 p.m. at the Meigs
Community Center, 156 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Speakers will be
Norma Torres, President of the all
volunteer Meigs County Cancer
Initiative, and Sentinel Managing
Editor Sarah Hawley. All Meigs
County Public Employee retirees
are urged to attend.
Wednesday, Oct. 12
LANGSVILLE — American Red
Cross Blood Drive, 1-6:30 p.m.,
Star Grange Hall, 35300 Salem
School Lot Road, Langsville. Free
homemade food for all donors.
Call 740-669-4245 or 1-800-REDCROSS to schedule an appointment.

6

PM

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Nature Cat

6:30

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27
7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy EntertainmNews at 6
News
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m.
News
Fortune
2 Broke Girls Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
News 6:30
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing inBBC World Nightly
News:
Business
depth analysis of current
events.
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

6

PM

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Voice "The Blind Auditions 4" The 'blind auditions'
continue in front of the judges. (N)
The Voice "The Blind Auditions 4" The 'blind auditions'
continue in front of the judges. (N)
Dancing With the Stars: The Results (N)

This Is Us "The Big Three"
(N)
This Is Us "The Big Three"
(N)
Agents of SHIELD "Meet
the New Boss" (N)
The Contenders: 16 for '16 Frontline "The Choice 2016" Profiles of Hillary Clinton and
"Romney/Dukakis: The
Donald Trump, two polarizing presidential candidates. (N)
Technocrats" (N)
Agents of SHIELD "Meet
Dancing With the Stars: The Results (N)
the New Boss" (N)
Bull "The Woman in 8D" (N) NCIS: New Orleans
NCIS "Being Bad" (N)
"Suspicious Minds" (N)
Brooklyn 99 New Girl (N) Scream Queens "Warts and Eyewitness News at 10
(N)
All" (N)
p.m.
The Contenders: 16 for '16 Frontline "The Choice 2016" Profiles of Hillary Clinton and
"Romney/Dukakis: The
Donald Trump, two polarizing presidential candidates. (N)
Technocrats" (N)
NCIS "Being Bad" (N)
Bull "The Woman in 8D" (N) NCIS: New Orleans
"Suspicious Minds" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) BlueB. "Critical Condition"
Pre-game
24 (ROOT) Insider (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) Baseball Tonight

30 (SPIKE)

HILL

Thursday, Sept. 29
POMEROY — The Meigs
County American Cancer Society
Volunteer Leadership Council/
Survivorship Taskforce will meet
meet at noon in the banquet room
of Wild Horse Cafe. New members
welcome. Contact Courtney Midkiff at 740-992-6626 ext 1028 for
more information.

Monday, Oct. 3
CHESHIRE — The Belles
and Beaus Square Dance Club
will start beginner square dance
lessons at 7 p.m. at the Gavin
Employees Clubhouse in Cheshire.
The ﬁrst three lessons are free. If
interested For more information,
call 740-446-4213 or 304-6753275.
RUTLAND — The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30 a.m. at the Rutland Township
Garage.

TUESDAY EVENING

13 (WOWK)

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Donna R. (Gibbs)
Neece, 65, of Middleport, died Sept. 23, 2016.
Service will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2016, at
the Church of Christ in Christian Union, Hartford,
W.Va. Burial will follow in Union Cemetery, Letart,
W.Va. Visitation was 6-8 p.m. Monday at the church
in Hartford. Arrangements provided by Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.

6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at
7:30 p.m. Final plans for Chicken
BBQ and Meet the Candidates to
be held on Sunday Oct. 2 will be
made. All members and interested
persons are urged to attend.

Friday, Sept 30
TUPPERS PLAINS – Annual
Fall Indoor Yard Sale at the
AmazingGrace Community
Church from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
(across from T.P. Fire Dept.).Food
and drinks available. Proceeds
Wednesday, Sept. 28
beneﬁt the Amazing Grace ComMIDDLEPORT — The Vetermunity Church FoodPantry. (The
an’s Service Commission will meet sale continues Saturday)
at 9 a.m. in the third ﬂoor conference room of the Department of
Saturday, Oct. 1
Job and Family Services, 175 Race
TUPPERS PLAINS – Annual
St., Middleport.
Fall Indoor Yard Sale at the AmazPOMEROY — A community
ing Grace Community Church
dinner will be held at New Beginfrom 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (across
nings United Methodist Church,
from T.P. Fire Dept.) Food and
Pomeroy, from 4:30 -6 p.m. The
drinks available. Proceeds beneﬁt
menu for the dinner will be Italian the Amazing Grace Community
night with pasta dishes, salads and Church Food Pantry.
dessert. The public is invited.
SALEM CENTER — Star
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
Grange #778 and Star Junior
County Master Gardeners will
Grange #878 will meet in regular
hold the fall plant exchange at
session with potluck supper at

12 (WVPB)

NEECE

Dave Diles Park in Middleport,
beginning at 10:30 a.m. Kevin
Fletcher from the Meigs County
Extension Services will speak at
11 a.m. For the plant exchange
bring perennials that need to be
transplanted, house plants that
need to go indoors, seeds to share
or other gardening items.

PREMIUM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

Cops
Cops
Get Smart ('08, Com) Anne Hathaway, Steve Carell. TV14
Get Smart
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
Pre-game
Hockey World Cup Final Game 1 Site: Air Canada Centre (L)
SportsCenter
MLB Baseball (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
Grey's Anatomy "Going,
Grey's Anatomy
Dance Moms: Chat "Return Dance Moms "Mommy Meltdown" (N)
Dance Moms
Going, Gone"
"Remember the Time"
of the Minis" (N)
The Middle
Pitch Perfect ('12, Com) Anna Kendrick. A freshman joins her
10 Things I Hate About You (1999, Comedy) Julia
university's all-girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TV14
Stiles, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Heath Ledger. TV14
Ink Master "The Game
Ink Master "Ruffled
Ink Master "Put on Your
Ink Master "Sparks Fly"
Ink Master "Sticky
Begins"
Feathers"
Armor"
Situation"
H.Danger
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Nicky
GShakers
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
SVU "Downloaded Child"
SVU "Beast's Obsession"
WWE Smackdown!
Chrisley (N) Chrisley
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "The Greater Good" Castle "XY"
Castle "XX"
Castle "PhDead"
(4:00)
John Carter
Pearl Harbor (2001, War) Kate Beckinsale, Josh Hartnett, Ben Affleck. The Japanese Halt and Catch Fire "The
Threshold" (N)
('12, Act) Taylor Kitsch. TV14 attack on Pearl Harbor unfolds while two friends battle for the same woman. TVMA
Taking Fire "Hero Flight"
Deadliest Catch "Sacrifice" DunCove "Pacific Fury" (N) Deadliest "Lost at Sea" (N) Taking Fire (N)
The First 48 "Murder in
Married at First Sight "To Married at
(:45) Married at First Sight "Naked Truth" Born This Way "Oh Baby!"
Pleasant Grove"
Have and to Hold"
First Sight
Nick and Sonia reveal a big secret. (N)
(N)
River Monsters
RiverMon "African Horrors" River Monsters
Great Barrier Reef
Strut "A Model Life"
Bad Girls
(:45) Bad
Bad Girls Club "#shabully" Strut "The Time is Now" (N) Bad Girls Club "#shabully"
Club
Girls Club
(N)
LawOrder "Working Mom" Law &amp; Order "D-Girl" 1/3 Law &amp; Order "Turnaround" Law&amp;Order "Showtime" 3/3 Law &amp; Order "Mad Dog"
(5:30) Kardash Kardashians E! News (N)
Rob and Chyna
Rob and Chyna
Rob and Chyna
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Russia and the West "Putin Finding Anastasia
Facing "Putin"
Facing Schwarzenegger (N) Generation X "The Geek
Takes Control"
Shall Inherit the Earth"
NASCAR America (L)
Adventure Spartan Race
Adventure Racing Spartan Race
Adventure Spartan Race
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
Boxing Premier Champions (L)
NFL Films (N) MLB Best (N)
Count. "Pimp Counting
Count. "The Counting
Counting
Counting
Forged in Fire "Hunga
(:05) Forged in Fire
My Bus"
Cars
Full Monte" Cars
Cars
Cars (N)
Munga" (N)
"Champions Edition" (N)
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
Below Deck
(4:55)
Friday Ice Cube. TV14
First Sunday ('08, Com) Katt Williams, Ice Cube. TVPG
One Shot "The Finale" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Orphan ('09, Hor) Peter
National Treasure: Book of Secrets A historian must prove his
Aftermath "RVL 6768" (P)
Sarsgaard, Vera Farmiga. TVMA
great-grandfather wasn't involved in the Lincoln assassination. TV14
(N)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Brooklyn (2015, Drama) Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Steve Jobs (2015, Biography) Kate Winslet, Seth Rogen,
Saoirse Ronan. A young Irish woman must choose between Michael Fassbender. Co-founder and Apple CEO Steve
her new life in the U.S. and her old life at home. TV14
Jobs's story is told. TVMA
Unbreakable Bruce Willis. A man
(:50)
Live Free or Die Hard (2007, Action) Justin Long, Timothy
learns he may be invincible after surviving a Olyphant, Bruce Willis. John McClane takes on a group of terrorists who
horrible train accident unscathed. TV14
are hacking into government files. TV14
(5:30) Forsaken ('15, West)
Why Did I Get Married? ('07, Com/Dra) Sharon Leal, Inside the NFL "2016 Week
Donald Sutherland, Kiefer
Janet Jackson, Tyler Perry. Three couples take a week-long 3" (N)
Sutherland. TVMA
vacation to figure out why they got married. TV14

10

PM

10:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel (N)
Hostage (2005,
Action) Kevin Pollak, Jimmy
Bennett, Bruce Willis. TVMA
Florida State Florida State
Ball
Ball

60680856

OBITUARIES

RACINE — Beulah
M. Marr Neigler, 91, of
Racine, Ohio, passed
away at 2:45 a.m. on
Monday, Sept. 26, 2016,
in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Born June 15, 1925,
in Sycamore, Illinois,
she was the daughter
of the late John Warner
and Forrest Eden Marr.
Beulah married George
J. Neigler on July 25,
1944, in Gallipolis, Ohio,
and he preceded her in
death on Aug. 22, 2001.
She was a homemaker,
a graduate of Racine
High School, member
of Racine First Baptist
Church and past member of the Post # 602
Racine American Legion
Auxiliary.
She is survived by
her son, David (Tina)
Neigler of Racine, Ohio;
daughters, June M.
(Phillip) Miller of Patriot, Ohio and Shirlee J.
Cappo, of Waynesboro,
Virginia; four grandchildren, Sarah (Matt)
Wamsley, Gallipolis,
Ohio, Dr. William (Bill)
Miller, Gallipolis, Ohio,
Dr. Virginia (Ginny)
Miller, Lexington, Ken-

Daily Sentinel

�NEWS

Tuesday, September 27, 2016 3

Retired Teachers
Scholarship

family would freak out, right? We’d love for you to
share that recipe and a few words about how it came
to be a tradition in your household. Your submission
will be considered for publication in a future edition
of Salt magazine. Send us an email at editor@thesaltmagazine.com (subject line “cookies”) by Sept. 28. Be
sure to include your name, address and phone number. Send more than one recipe if you’d like.

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

Flu Shot
Clinic
SYRACUSE/RACINE — A ﬂu shot clinic will be
held on Saturday, Oct. 1 at the Home National Bank
locations in Syracuse and Racine. The clinic in Racine
will take place from 8 a.m. to noon, with the Syracuse
clinic running from 9 a.m. to noon. For children at 6
months to 18 years, Medicaid and most commercial
insurances are accepted. A $15 administration fee
is appreciated, but not required, for those children
without health insurance coverage. For adults 9 and
older, Medicare, some Medicaid Managed Care plans
and most commercial insurance will be accepted. The
Ohio Department of Health is providing some free
doses for adults who are uninsured with a $15 administration fee appreciated, but not required. Please call
740-992-6626 to check healthcare coverage eligibility.

Meet the
Candidates

POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers
Association is looking for candidates for a scholarship
to be given in early December. Applicants must be a
college junior or senior education major whose home
residence is Meigs County. A GPA of 2.5 or higher is
also a requirement. Questions or applications can be
obtained by calling Becky at 740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740-444-5498.

Church
Homecoming
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian
Church Homecoming and 150th anniversary will take
place on Oct. 2 with a program by Joseph McCall. A
potluck dinner will be served at noon, with a program
at 2 p.m. Morning services will take place with Sunday School at 9:15 a.m. and preaching at 10 a.m.

Wanted: Your
holiday cookie recipes

SALEM CENTER — Star Grange will hold a Meet
the Candidates and Chicken BBQ on Sunday, Oct. 2
Bet you have a favorite recipe for holiday cookies,
at the Grange Hall located on Meigs County Road 1,
a
recipe
that has served you well over the years, the
three miles north of Salem Center. Serving will be
cookies
that
are a must at every holiday get-together.
from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. and meet the candidates will
You
know
the
ones. If you didn’t make them, your
be held at 1 p.m. The public is invited to attend.

From page 1

restructuring which will
be unfolding in the days
and weeks to come.”
Dr. Michael Canady is
reportedly taking over
as interim CEO, according to sources. Canady’s
LinkedIn page currently
states he is chief medical ofﬁcer, a position he
obtained Jan. 1, 2015,
when Meyer was elevated to CEO.
Meyer was named
hospital CEO and chairman of the Board of
Governors on Jan. 1,
2015. He replaced Dr.
T. Wayne Munro, who
retired Dec. 31, 2014.
“The health care
atmosphere is an everchanging environment.
I look forward to the
future and am pleased
to be a part of Holzer’s
journey,” Meyer told
the Daily Tribune for a
story published Jan. 1,
2015.
Meyer oversaw the
implementation of
several programs and
initiatives, including
quicker emergency
room service; low-dose
CT scans to detect
early signs of lung cancer; and a physician
training program, in
which students at Ohio
University’s Heritage
College of Osteopathic
Medicine and West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine train in
the medical ﬁeld with
existing Holzer staff.
Meyers’ administration also faced some
tough situations during
his 21 months on the
job, most notably in
October 2015, when
Holzer announced a
reduction of about 100
jobs system-wide at its
locations throughout
southern Ohio and West
Virginia. Holzer ofﬁcials, at the time, cited
the Patient Protection
and the Affordable Care
Act as a driving force
that “resulted in dramatic change in healthcare service delivery
models.” They noted
that inpatient volumes
are shrinking while outpatient services are on
the rise.
Prior to taking over
as CEO, Meyer served
as chief medical ofﬁcer of Holzer, where
ofﬁcials said he was
instrumental in aligning the hospital system
and physician practices
“into a highly-functioning and cohesive
entity.”
Meyer began his
career with Holzer

in 2001 and has also
served as medical site
director of both Holzer’s Athens and Jackson
facilities.
During his tenure
with Holzer Health
System, he is credited
with the development
of a 70,000-square
foot, full-service, multispecialty health care
facility serving Athens;
establishment of the
Holzer Graduate Medical Education and Residency programs; and
expansion of needed
health care services
throughout the medically underserved southern
Ohio region.
A graduate of Des
Moines University College of Medicine in Des
Moines, Iowa, Meyer

completed his residency at Michigan State
University Statewide
Campus System. He
completed a gastroenterology fellowship at
Yale University School
of Medicine in New
Haven, Conn. He is
board certiﬁed by the
American Osteopathic
Board of Internal Medicine and holds a Masters in Public Administration from the University of Michigan.
According to
Canady’s proﬁle on
LinkedIn, he has also
served as medical director of surgical services
(August 2012-December 2014), chairman of
Holzer’s Department
of Surgery (September
1996-December 2007,

staff surgeon at Naval
Hospital Camp Lejeune,
N.C. (July 1991-June
1995), and surgical resident at Good Samaritan
Hospital in Cincinnati
(July 1985-June 1991).
Canady’s LinkedIn
proﬁle also states he
earned his Bachelor of
Science in Mathematics
and Molecular Biology
in 1981 from Vanderbilt
University; a Doctor
of Medicine (M.D.) in
1985 from Wake Forest
University School of
Medicine; and a Master
of Business Administration in 2001 from Ohio
University.
Reach Michael Johnson at
740-446-2342, ext. 2102, or on
Twitter @OhioEditorMike.

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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60673825

Holzer

STOCKS

60670322

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.

60676480

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Respect for
men, women
in blue
Emotion and writing is such a volatile mixture.
Succumb fully to emotion and writing becomes
ranting; squelch all emotion and writing
becomes a barren desert devoid of life. But deadlines are what they are, and do not bend to give
a writer time to balance himself. And thus it is,
with a prayer for God himself to balance me that
I again put pen to paper.
Ofﬁcer Tim Brackeen was a great guy. A
friend. No, not someone I had the privilege of
talking to regularly, but a friend nonetheless.
We used to go to the same church until I started
Cornerstone. He was also a great ofﬁcer. I had
the opportunity to see him at his job many times
through the years, and I never saw him without seeing a smile on his face while he joyfully
served his community under all circumstances.
It was just a couple of years ago,
I guess, that I saw him on the road,
doing his job. It was a cold night
and a driving rain, and yet he was
out there, smiling, soaking wet,
helping others, doing a job few others would be willing to do.
He is gone now. He had his life
Bo
taken while on duty. Most of AmerWagner
ica knows about this; it has been on
Contributing the national news, on Facebook, on
Columnist
Twitter, everywhere.
I woke up this morning, as I
write this and as I scrolled Twitter,
I quickly came across a video of three ofﬁcers
at a gas station in Arizona. A man intentionally
slammed his car into them, trying to murder
them. It was unprovoked; they were targeted
because of a color: blue.
This keeps on happening. The ﬁve Dallas
ofﬁcers killed by a sniper. Three in Louisiana
gunned down. A detention ofﬁcer stabbed to
death in Holman Correctional Facility in Alabama.
It has to stop.
Ezekiel Chapter 22 repeatedly speaks of the
violence and bloodshed, crime and corruption
in the land. Then verse 30 says, “And I sought
for a man among them, that should make up the
hedge, and stand in the gap before me for the
land …”
This is exactly what ofﬁcers do. White men
and women, black men and women, men and
women of every other race and skin color, put all
of that on the back burner as they take on one
color for all: blue. They stand in the gap between
rapists and the women they stalk for their evil
purposes.
They stand in the gap between pedophiles
and the children they hunger for in their twisted
desires. They stand in the gap between homeowners and those who would kick their doors
down and steal everything they have worked
so hard for. They stand in the gap between the
store owner trying to make a living, and the
punk who would put a gun to his head and snuff
out his life for a few dollars from the till.
What do ofﬁcers do? They stand in the gap
between pushers and those who would snare
our children and wreck precious lives with their
poison. They stand in the gap between the reckless driver and the person who does not see him
coming. They stand in the gap between gangs
and the communities they terrorize. They stand
in the gap … just ﬁll in the blank. I could go on
forever and never exhaust the list. What they
ultimately do, just as in Ezekiel 22, is stand
between us and God’s judgment. They stem the
tide of evil, and therefore help stay the hand of a
holy God.
Back the blue. Teach your children to respect
them. Be an online warrior for them; whenever
anyone posts hate for them on social media or
the comments to a news story, answer on their
behalf. If you hear of someone targeting them,
warn them. That one simple act may allow ofﬁcers to take off the uniform in safety that night
before they kiss their children goodnight.
Do right. If you refrain from crime, you will
ﬁnd out they can be some of the most pleasant
people around. If you do wrong and they come
for you, plead your case in court with a lawyer,
not on the streets with a gun or car or knife.
Get to know them. Pray for them by name.
Pastors of all races and creeds and political afﬁliations, teach your people how to respond to any
grievances peacefully. You wield the power of the
pulpit; use it. They stand in the gap for you, do
so for them.
One last word, this time to those who regard
police as “the enemy.” Martin Luther King Jr.
said, “Love is the only force capable of transforming an enemy into a friend.” Have you tried
that?
Love them, genuinely. Back the blue.
Bo Wagner is pastor of the Cornerstone Baptist Church of
Mooresboro, N.C., a widely traveled evangelist, and the author of
several books. Dr. Wagner can be contacted by email at 2knowhim@
cbc-web.org.

THEIR VIEW

Police and skunks deserve admiration
You reach into a bag of
apples often enough and
you eventually will pull
out a rotting one. People
are no different.
People with decaying values are peppered
throughout all of society.
They inﬁltrate not only
prisons, but black-tie
restaurants and suburbs.
They prey on the weak,
provoke the most docilenatured individuals to
become vigilantes and
promote fear to creep
across our consciousness, usually via media
modes.
I’m not sure how to
make the world a safer
place, but I am sure that
living in constant fear
can’t foster peace. I still
talk to strangers in line
at the grocery store or
occasionally roll my car
window down and ask
a random pedestrian
for directions. I believe
there’s an inherent goodness that permeates
most people — even if
it’s been ground into
dormancy and sprouted
horns of malevolence.
I also believe law

and bombs explode
enforcement ofﬁcials
near those dear badgearen’t immune to the
covered hearts,
fungus of greed
ofﬁcers must
and brutality that
scamper to safety
seems to be grow— they must run
ing among the
and hunker to surmasses, but just
vive. Often police
because an ofﬁcer
are forced to shoot
here and there is
infected with the
Michele Z. the perpetrators of
violence and then
invisible enemy
Marcum
accusations ﬂy that
within doesn’t
Contributing
the real reason for
mean they all are
columnist
the shooting was
or that society
discrimination,
would be safer
without men and women black vs. white or rich
vs. poor.
in uniform.
I hope in the upcomPeople are ultimately
ing days ofﬁcers develop
safer with laws in place
and ofﬁcers who enforce their true black and
white nature — that of
them, even if all people
a skunk, the most feared
don’t agree with all the
animal in the forest, yet
laws.
no blood does he draw.
Offense and defense
The skunk is revered
are the two methods of
simply because of his
protection. Police in the
reputation for using
past have been playing
his arsenal wisely, only
offense — running after
shooting when an unmiscriminals and chasing
takably ominous threat
the latest lead to ensure
presents itself. The
justice is served. Lately
skunk must be prudent
that role was switched
in its defense, it must
and those who swore to
use due diligence for it
protect and serve their
knows only a limited
neighbors are having to
amount of spray is availprotect themselves.
able and it takes weeks
When shots ring out

to produce more.
The black furry creature with the notorious
white stripe knows the
best defense isn’t an
offense of destruction;
rather, it’s a fearless
attitude in the face of
danger and a reputation
that promotes peace in
unstable environments.
God bless those walking the thin blue line.
Whether strutting or tiptoeing along it, they are,
for the most part, the
Penicillin for a society
that’s fallen ill from selfdestructiveness. They
are not the Black Plague.
Only the ofﬁcers
who’ve become as corrupt as the hostile villains they lock up should
ﬁnd a vocation with less
responsibility for public
safety and leave the
true peace-keepers who
are ripe with bravery
beneath their protective
skins, no matter what
color that may be.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks on
AIR radio.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY …
Today is Tuesday,
Sept. 27, the 271st day of
2016. There are 95 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Sept. 27, 1964,
the government publicly
released the report of
the Warren Commission,
which concluded that
Lee Harvey Oswald had
acted alone in assassinating President John F.
Kennedy.
On this date:
In 1540, Pope Paul
III issued a papal bull
establishing the Society
of Jesus, or Jesuits, as a
religious order.
In 1779, John Adams
was named by Congress
to negotiate the Revolutionary War’s peace
terms with Britain.
In 1854, the ﬁrst great
disaster involving an
Atlantic Ocean passenger
vessel occurred when the
steamship SS Arctic sank
off Newfoundland; of the
more than 400 people on
board, only 86 survived.
In 1928, the United

States said it was recognizing the Nationalist
Chinese government.
In 1939, Warsaw,
Poland, surrendered
after weeks of resistance
to invading forces from
Nazi Germany and the
Soviet Union during
World War II.
In 1941, the United
States launched the ﬁrst
14 rapidly built “Liberty”
military cargo vessels.
In 1956, Olympic track
and ﬁeld gold medalist
and Hall of Fame golfer
Babe Didrikson Zaharias
died in Galveston, Texas,
at age 45.
In 1962, “Silent
Spring,” Rachel Carson’s
study on the effects of
pesticides on the environment, was published
in book form by Houghton Mifﬂin.
In 1979, Congress gave
its ﬁnal approval to forming the U.S. Department
of Education.
In 1989, Columbia
Pictures Entertainment
Inc. agreed to a $3.4 billion cash buyout by Sony
Corp.
In 1991, President

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“God loved the birds and invented trees.
Man loved the birds and invented cages.”
— Jacques Deval, French writer, director and
actor (1895-1972).
George H.W. Bush
announced in a nationally broadcast address
that he was eliminating
all U.S. battleﬁeld nuclear weapons, and called
on the Soviet Union to
match the gesture. The
Senate Judiciary Committee deadlocked, 7-7,
on the nomination of
Clarence Thomas to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
In 2001, an armed
man went on a shooting rampage in the local
parliament of Zug, Switzerland, killing 14 people
before taking his own
life. President George W.
Bush asked the nation’s
governors to post
National Guard troops
at airports as a ﬁrst step
toward federal control of
airline security.
Ten years ago: President George W. Bush
hosted a peacemaking

dinner at the White
House for the bickering leaders of Pakistan
and Afghanistan, Gen.
Pervez Musharraf and
Hamid Karzai. Republicans announced they
would hold their 2008
presidential convention
in the Twin Cities of
Minneapolis-St. Paul. A
gunman took six girls
hostage at a high school
in Bailey, Colorado; he
molested some of them
and killed one girl before
committing suicide.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Kathleen Nolan
is 83. Actor Wilford
Brimley is 82. Actor
Claude Jarman Jr. is 82.
Author Barbara Howar
is 82. World Golf Hall of
Famer Kathy Whitworth
is 77. Singer-musician
Randy Bachman (Bachman-Turner Overdrive)
is 73.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 27, 2016 5

Not all homeless to be exempt
from SNAP work requirements

Meigs
From page 1

Voting
From page 1

to 7 p.m.; Nov. 5, 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m.; Nov. 7, 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.; with the last
day to vote being Monday, Nov. 7, from 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
Any registered voter in
the county may request
and vote an absentee bal-

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Ofﬁcials say
homelessness alone isn’t automatically an exemption
from work or training requirements for food stamp
beneﬁts recipients.
State Department of Health and Human Resources
spokeswoman Allison Adler tells The Charleston
Gazette-Mail (http://bit.ly/2cFGw1d) that regulations for the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program don’t allow for blanket exemptions
based on homelessness.

Shooting

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

MLAA award recipients (from left) Kathy Reed, Jackie Welker, SMSgt. Christopher Knight and Dr. Jared
Sheets

Pomeroy.
Saturday’s events
included live music on
Court Street and the
alumni parade through
downtown.
This is the 10th year for
the MLAA Reunion on
the River.
Editor’s note: Complete
biographies of the award
receipients are available
in a Sept. 18 article in the
Sunday Times-Sentinel
or online at mydailysentinel.com.
Reach Sarah Hawley at 740-9922155 ext. 2555 or on Twitter @
SarahHawleyNews

2015 Meigs Homecoming Queen Madison Greene crowns 2016
Meigs Homecoming Queen Jade Dudding.

lot (or provisional ballot
beginning Oct. 12) in
person during these business hours. Registered
voters may also call the
Meigs County Board of
Elections at 740-992-2697
to request an absentee
application to have an
absentee ballot by mail.
“There seems to be
a lot of confusion as to
when the absentee ballots
are counted. Contrary

to popular belief, these
ballots are actually processed prior to Election
Day according to Ohio
Law. The ballots are
scanned prior to Election
Day (this process can
begin 10 days before the
election), but not tabulated. This means that
the totals are NOT available until election night.
Absentee voters are a
part of the “unofﬁcial

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

50°

2 PM

67°

62°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

84°
63°
75°
52°
94° in 1933
37° in 1899

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

Trace
0.34
2.43
36.43
32.79

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:21 a.m.
7:17 p.m.
4:00 a.m.
5:40 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Sep 30

First

Oct 9

Full

Last

Oct 16 Oct 22

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
9:35a
10:17a
10:59a
11:41a
12:03a
12:48a
1:35a

Minor
3:23a
4:06a
4:48a
5:30a
6:14a
6:59a
7:46a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
9:59p
10:40p
11:21p
---12:25p
1:10p
1:57p

Minor
3:47p
4:29p
5:10p
5:52p
6:35p
7:21p
8:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 27, 1936, a 60-hour storm
brought Denver early, heavy snowfall
of 21.30 inches. This storm caused
$7 million damage to trees and
shrubs in the Denver area alone.

63°
53°

Partly sunny, a
shower in the p.m.

A morning shower,
then showers

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

VeryHigh

AIR QUALITY
500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.49 -0.59
Marietta
34 16.03 -0.10
Parkersburg
36 21.47 -0.07
Belleville
35 12.88 -0.07
Racine
41 13.13 +0.04
Point Pleasant
40 25.04 -0.01
Gallipolis
50 13.12 -0.24
Huntington
50 25.92 +0.08
Ashland
52 34.84 +0.20
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.38 +0.23
Portsmouth
50 14.90 -0.50
Maysville
50 34.00 -0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 13.50 -0.30
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

SATURDAY

66°
54°
Mostly cloudy and
cool with showers

MONDAY

73°
52°

74°
53°

Mostly cloudy with a
passing shower

A couple of showers
possible

Times of clouds and
sun

Marietta
74/46
Belpre
74/45

Athens
72/44

St. Marys
74/49

Parkersburg
75/47

Coolville
73/45

Elizabeth
74/49

Spencer
73/49

Buffalo
73/45
Milton
75/50

Clendenin
75/51

St. Albans
75/51

Huntington
76/49

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
68/51
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
81/56
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
95/67
T-storm s
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
77/58
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
W arm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
75/48

Ashland
75/47
Grayson
75/52

provide identiﬁcation or
if the voter’s right to vote
is challenged are just a
few more reasons that
a provisional ballot is
required.
The Board of Elections
Ofﬁce is now located at
113 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
The ofﬁce is closed
on Monday, Oct. 10 in
observance of Columbus
Day.

68°
50°

Wilkesville
73/45
POMEROY
Jackson
73/45
73/45
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
74/46
74/47
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
70/48
GALLIPOLIS
74/48
74/44
73/47

South Shore Greenup
75/50
73/45

73
300

Portsmouth
74/46

FRIDAY

Murray City
71/44

McArthur
72/45

Lucasville
74/45

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100150200

Chillicothe
73/46

VeryHigh

Primary: elm, ragweed, other
Mold: 3211

Logan
71/44

Adelphi
72/45

Waverly
72/45

Pollen: 10

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

THURSDAY

71°
49°

1

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
7:22 a.m.
7:15 p.m.
4:59 a.m.
6:14 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

Breezy today with plenty of sunshine. Increasing
cloudiness tonight. High 74° / Low 48°

counted until after Election Day, but are included
in the ofﬁcial canvas if
certiﬁed as valid. Voting a provisional ballot
means that the voter has
moved within the county
and changed their voting
precinct or has moved
from another county in
the State of Ohio. If the
voter has requested an
absentee ballot, has no
identiﬁcation, refuses to

count” on election night.
Valid absentee ballots
that are received after the
close of polls on Election
Day (postmarked by Nov.
7, 2016) through the
tenth day after the election are included in the
ofﬁcial canvas,” stated
a news release from the
Meigs County Board of
Elections.
Provisional ballots are
the ballots that do not get

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Morgan Township.
Browning said ofﬁcers
took Charles Miller into
custody around 8 p.m.
From page 1
Sunday. He is currently
was a domestic (situabeing held in the Gallia
tion),” Browning said. “A
County Jail pending recfemale victim was shot.
ommendations from the
The report was she was
involved in a dispute with Gallia County Prosecuher husband. His vehicle tor’s Ofﬁce. Browning
was spotted on the road- said Charles Miller will
way. Deputies attempted be cited for trafﬁc charges
to stop him. He immedi- related to the pursuit.
Agencies on scene for
ately ﬂed. Deputies and
the
investigation included
(Ohio State Highway
Gallia
County EMS, GalPatrol) troopers pursued
lia
County
Prosecutor’s
him. He ended up crashOfﬁce,
Ohio
State Highing. He was taken into
way
Patrol,
Ohio
Bureau
custody after that. He had
of
Criminal
Investigation,
just minor injuries as a
result of the crash. We’re Springﬁeld Township Fire
Department and Gallia
investigating now.”
County Coroner’s Ofﬁce.
Ofﬁcers pursued
Browning said he
Miller until he was found
extends his “heartfelt
crashed on Old Hallow
condolences to the famiRoad near Reese Road
lies involved.”
in Addison Township.
Charges may be ﬁled
According to Browning,
as
early as Tuesday in the
the pursuit spanned over
case,
according to Gallia
Greenﬁeld and Addison
townships and may have County Prosecutor Jeff
Adkins.
potentially dipped into

Charleston
76/47

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
58/39

Billings
83/52

Montreal
69/48
Minneapolis
58/48
Chicago
66/50

Denver
83/48

Kansas City
76/51

Detroit
68/51

Toronto
68/54
New York
74/58

Washington
72/60

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
78/54/pc
50/33/s
85/62/t
67/60/r
72/54/r
83/52/s
85/56/s
71/58/r
76/47/s
83/63/t
78/44/s
66/50/pc
73/52/s
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71/50/s
82/58/pc
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72/48/s
68/51/pc
85/72/pc
85/67/c
71/50/s
76/51/s
89/69/pc
82/58/s
95/67/pc
76/57/s
87/74/t
58/48/r
78/54/s
89/75/pc
74/58/r
81/54/s
89/73/t
74/56/r
92/72/c
70/47/s
69/52/r
80/66/t
68/60/t
78/56/s
77/54/s
81/56/s
68/51/pc
72/60/r

Hi/Lo/W
81/56/pc
53/38/pc
82/61/s
73/65/c
74/61/r
75/51/s
87/61/s
64/57/c
77/52/pc
81/59/pc
74/45/s
62/55/sh
68/48/pc
68/52/sh
68/47/sh
87/61/s
82/50/s
67/50/s
65/54/sh
85/74/sh
88/63/s
64/49/pc
69/48/s
83/67/t
88/58/s
87/65/pc
73/53/pc
88/76/pc
64/48/pc
80/50/pc
88/74/pc
74/62/c
85/52/s
89/74/pc
76/64/c
93/75/c
71/52/sh
63/49/c
79/63/t
72/61/t
69/54/pc
80/57/pc
72/55/pc
68/49/pc
74/64/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
Atlanta
85/62

High
Low

Global

Houston
85/67
Chihuahua
68/55
Monterrey
75/65

105° in Santa Ana, CA
16° in Walden, CO

Miami
87/74

High
107° in Wyndham, Australia
Low -19° 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

Alumni Awards.
Welker is a graduate of
the MHS Class of 1985.
He is the owner of Court
Street Grill in Pomeroy
and founding member of
the Pomeroy Blues and
Jazz Society. Welker was
accompanied on Friday
evening by his wife, Jessica, and son, Jaycie.
Knight is a 1993 graduate of Meigs High School.
Knight enlisted in the Air
Force in 1995 as a ground
radio maintenance technician. He spent 21 years in
the military, including 13
years overseas supporting
the global war on terrorism with assignments in
Japan, Guam and South
Korea.
Sheets was valedictorian of the Meigs High
School Class of 1989. He
is currently the medical
director for Holzer Health
System-Athens and has
served the last ﬁve years
on the health system’s
Board of Governors. In
addition, Sheets is a clinical assistant professor in
the Ohio University Heritage College of Medicine
and for the last four years
has served as a director
for Farmers Bank. He was
accompanied on Friday by
his wife and two children.
Reunion on the River
events continued on
Saturday in downtown

�Sports
Point Pleasant Register

$?/=.+CM�#/:&gt;/7,/&lt;� �M� �� �s�

Southern runs at Bob Reall
By Bryan Walters

Junior Conner Wolfe
earned the overall runnerup spot in the D-3 boys race
LANCASTER, Ohio —
after posting a second place
No team scores, but the
time of 17:09.6. Only Ausexperience was still worth
tin Hallabrin of Mount Gilit.
ead was faster as the senior
The Southern cross
posted a winning mark of
country team had six run16:55.1.
ners compete Saturday in
SHS senior Lucas Hunter
the Division III races at the
also
ﬁnished 39th out of
2016 Bob Reall Invitational
50
runners
with a time of
held at Lancaster High
21:02.7.
School in Fairﬁeld County.
Fairﬁeld won the D-3
The Tornadoes had two
boys
event with a team
competitors in the 50-man
tally
of
28 points. Mount
boys race, while the Lady
Gilead
was
second out of
Tornadoes had four entrants
six
teams
with
33 points,
Alex Hawley/OVP Sports in the 59-competitor girls
with
Fairﬁeld
Christian
Southern freshman Sydney Roush runs toward the event. Both groups had at
finish line, during the Skyline Bowling Invitational, on least one runner ﬁnish in
(96), Worthington ChrisSeptember 6, in Centenary.
tian (103), Piketon (133)
the top-25 of each contest.
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

and Nelsonville-York (163)
rounding out the ﬁnal
standings.
Freshman Baylee Hack
of Mount Gilead won the
D-3 girls race with a time of
20:05.8. Zane Trace senior
Ivy Beam was the overall
runner-up with a mark of
20:50.8.
Freshman Sydney Roush
paced the Lady Tornadoes
with a 25th place effort of
24:26.5, followed by sophomore Mallory Johnson with
a mark of 25:42.7 for 33rd
place.
Freshman Baylee Wolfe
was 37th overall with a time
of 26:46.5 and sophomore
Madison Lisle was 39th

with a mark of 27:05.4.
Mount Gilead won the
D-3 girls event with a team
tally of 30 points. Fairﬁeld
Christian was second out of
nine teams with 61 points,
with Zane Trace (82), Fairﬁeld (96) and CardingtonLincoln (126) rounding out
the top ﬁve positions.
Nelsonville-York (170),
Belpre (172), Piketon (190)
and Grove City Christian
(219) rounded out the six
through nine spots.
Complete results of the
2016 Bob Reall CC Invitational are available on the
web at baumspage.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.

White Falcons
soar past Federal
Hocking, 20-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

STEWART, Ohio — The White Falcons took
some time to take out some frustration.
The Wahama football team had suffered three
consecutive losses headed into Friday night’s
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division clash at
Federal Hocking, and the White Falcons rolled to
373 yards of total offense and a 20-0 victory over
the Lancers.
Wahama (2-3, 1-3 TVC Hocking) scored its ﬁrst
and only ﬁrst half touchdown with 7:20 remaining
in the opening period, when senior Wyatt Edwards
found paydirt with a six-yard run. The point-after
kick failed, but the White Falcons led 6-0 at the
half.
Edwards scored again with 7:10 left in the third

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Marshall’s Tony Pittman (23) fights off a Louisville defender to score a 13-yard touchdown, during the second half of the Herd’s 59-28
loss, on Saturday at Joan C. Edwards Stadium.

See FALCONS | 7

No. 3 Cards soar past Herd, 59-28

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

By Paul Boggs

the Louisville quarterback accounted for seven
of his team’s touchdowns
HUNTINGTON, W.
— ﬁve passing and two
Va. — The Thundering
rushing.
Herd defense did its best
In addition, Jackson
to bottle up Louisville’s
completed 24-of-44 passLamar Jackson.
es for 417 yards, while
But a genie-like Jackrushing for 62 yards on a
son, keeping plays alive
dozen attempts.
with both his arm and
As a team, the Red and
his feet, ﬁgured his way
White went off on the
out of all of Marshall’s
Herd for 690 total yards,
containment methods—
as Marshall (1-2) manand took another giant
aged just 207 — includstep towards winning this ing 148 on the ground.
year’s Heisman Trophy.
Louisville also doubled
In amassing more stag- up the Thundering Herd
gering and record-setting in ﬁrst downs (33-16).
statistics on Saturday
Marshall also lost two
night, Jackson led thirdstraight games for the
ranked Louisville to a
ﬁrst time in three years
59-28 dispatching of
— and had its four-game
host Marshall in front of
win streak against Louis40,592 fans at Joan C.
ville snapped.
Edwards Stadium.
Louisville (4-0) led just
In front of the second7-0 just 19 minutes in,
but Jackson jump-started
largest crowd in the history of Edwards Stadium, the Cardinals for 28 sec-

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Tuesday, September 27
Volleyball
Eastern at South Gallia, 7:15
Miller at Southern, 7:15
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 7:15
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 7 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 7:15
Point Pleasant at Winﬁeld, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Ironton St. Joseph, 6 p.m.
Golf
Meigs at Jaycee sectional, 9 a.m.
Gallia Academy, River Valley at Elks sectional,
9 a.m.
Soccer
Winﬁeld at Point Pleasant boys, 7 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Athens, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Belpre, 6 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Point Park University
Wednesday, September 28
Cross Country
Gallia Academy, Southern, River Valley at
Meigs, 4:30
Golf
South Gallia, Southern, Eastern at Jaycee sectional, 9 a.m.

ond-quarter points, completing 16-of-29 passes
for 284 ﬁrst-half yards.
He also rushed nine
times in the opening half
for 37 yards, as Louisville
outgained the Herd by
303 yards (377-74) —
including 93-59 on the
ground.
Marshall head coach
Doc Holliday had nothing
but praise for Jackson’s
play.
“No, it did not surprise
me. I mean just watch
the ﬁlm, he (Jackson) did
the same thing to Florida
State and Syracuse,” said
Holliday. “He can throw
it, and he can run it, and
we just felt like we tried
to keep him from getting going and I thought
we accomplished that at
times. He is a tremendous player; anyone will
have a hard time trying
to limit him or trying to

Anderson www.andersonmcdaniel.com Meigs
Memory
McDaniel ������������������

Funeral Homes

949-2300

60681513

PLAYER
Southern Dylan Smith
Junior 7
Running Back/Defensive
Back rushed for
72 yards on
15 carries and 1 TD.

Gardens

OF THE

shut him down. He makes
enough plays against
everybody, if they can
keep him healthy they
are going to be tough to
beat.”
The Cardinals’
onslaught continued in
the second half.
Louisville scored
17 more third-quarter
points to make it 52-7,
as Jackson rushed nine
more yards for another
score — and threw for
a 51-yarder, sandwiched
around a 39-yard ﬁeld
goal with ﬁve minutes
remaining.
The Thundering Herd
did score twice within a
span of 15 seconds at the
outset of the fourth quarter, trimming the deﬁcit
to 52-21, but Jackson led
the Cardinals on a gameclinching 15-play, 78-yard
See CARDS | 7

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7440
spaces available
60681513

WEEK

Eastern Jett Facemyer
Senior 2

Quarterback/Defensive back
13 for 18 in passing 283 yards
and 4 touchdowns, 23 carries
for 155 yards rushing and
2 touchdowns and
1 two point conversion.

Meigs Lane Cullums
Junior 35
Lane Cullums Junior 35,
Running back,
29 carries with 141 yards
and 2 touchdowns.
60681502

60681505

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 27, 2016 7

Hargraves maintains
Riverside Seniors lead

Meigs takes 5th at ZT Invite

Staff Report

By Paul Boggs

and J.J. Hemsley.
There was a two-way tie
MASON, W.Va. —
for second place between
Charlie Hargraves of New the quartet of Roger
Haven owns an 11-point
Putney, Mitch Mace, Ed
lead headed into the ﬁnal Coon and Carl Stone, as
week of play at the 2016
well as the foursome of
Riverside Senior Men’s
Dewey Smith, Jeff HubGolf League, which is
bard, Randall Thornhill
being held every Tuesday and Larry Burns. Both
at Riverside Golf Club in
foursomes combined to
Mason County.
ﬁre identical rounds of
Hargraves has a total
12-under par 58.
of 302 points through 26
The closest-to-the-pin
weeks of play, leading
winners
were Doug Henrunner-up Dewey Smith of
drixson
on
the ninth hole
Bidwell with 291 points.
and
Mitch
Mace
on the
Carl Stone is in third
14th
hole.
place with 280 points.
The current top-10
A total of 69 players
standings are as foltook part in Tuesday’s
lows: Charlie Hargraves
round, making 18 points
(302.0); Dewey Smith
available between 15
teams of four players and (291.0); Carl Stone
a trio of teams consisting (280.0); Bill Yoho
(252.0); Jack Fox (247.5);
of three players.
Mitch Mace (246.0); John
The low score of the
Williams (243.0); Jimmy
day was a 15-under par
Gress (227.0); and Kenny
55, ﬁred by the quartet
Pridemore and Dale Millof Siebert Belcher, Tom
er (226.0).
McNeely, Bobby Watson

Cards
From page 6

scoring drive — consuming 11 seconds shy of
exactly seven minutes.
Brandon Radcliff, who
rushed for a game-high
131 yards on 19 carries,
capped the march with a
10-yard run with six-anda-half minutes remaining.
The Cardinals had
scored on all three of
their opening possessions
in their ﬁrst three games,
but the Herd forced three
incomplete passes —
before sacking Jackson
for an 8-yard loss.
But Louisville, after
forcing the Thundering
Herd into its ﬁrst threeand-out series, needed
only three plays and 55
seconds to strike “Quick”
— and stake a 7-0 advantage.
With 11 minutes
remaining in the opening
quarter, Jackson found a
wide open James Quick
deep down the sideline
for a 71-yard touchdown
strike.
Blanton Creque kicked
the extra point, the ﬁrst
of his perfect 8-of-8 on
the night, to make it 7-0
only four minutes and
three seconds in.
Marshall then again
went three-and-out, but
the Cardinals couldn’t
convert a 12-play and
ﬁve-minute drive, as
Creque couldn’t connect
on a 43-yard ﬁeld goal at
the 4:26 mark.
The Herd then forced a
Jackson interception, as
Terry Richardson picked
him off at the Marshall
5-yard-line when a deep
ball went short —with
Richardson racing over to
step in front.
Marshall, with a minute
remaining in the ﬁrst
quarter, ﬁnally picked
up its ﬁrst ﬁrst down on
a 14-yard run by Hyleck
Foster.
But the Herd had to
punt for the fourth time,
and this time, the Cardinals caught a break on
the return attempt.
Marshall’s Kendall
Gant was penalized for
targeting on the return —
much to the dismay of an
incensed Holliday and the
Thundering Herd faithful
inside the stadium.
The call proved pivotal,
though, as the Cardinals crafted a nine-play,
49-yard drive in only
three minutes and 37
seconds.
Jackson ﬁnished off
the drive with an 8-yard
touchdown toss to tight
end Cole Hikutini —
making it 14-0 with the
Creque extra point.
The Herd ﬁnally moved
across midﬁeld midway

through the second
quarter, but was forced
to punt for the ﬁfth time
—this time from the Louisville 35.
Once again, Jackson
drove the Cardinals for at
least nine plays and three
minutes and 34 seconds
—and once again Hikutini had the receiving TD.
Louisville marched
88 yards in 10 plays, as
Jackson completed a pair
of passes to convert 3rd
down, including 3rdand-11 to Quick at the
Cardinals’ 25.
Hikutini had the touchdown reception — a
30-yarder from Jackson
down the center of the
ﬁeld at the ﬁve-minute
mark.
Marshall true freshman quarterback Garet
Morrell — playing for
the injured Chase Litton — was strip-sacked
and fumbled on the next
series, as Stacy Thomas
recovered for the Cardinals at the MU 8.
Two plays later, Jackson
rushed for his ﬁrst touchdown — a 4-yard sprint
to the left-front corner
of the end zone to cap a
34-second scoring drive
at the 3:14 mark.
Going ﬁve plays and
75 yards this time, Jackson completed a pair of
passes to Jamari Staples
for 52 yards — all the
way down to the Marshall
8 again.
From there, Jackson
ﬁred his fourth touchdown pass — to Reggie
Bonnafon with only two
seconds remaining in the
half for a 35-7 edge.
The Herd did keep
ﬁghting, ﬁnally getting
on the scoreboard with
36 seconds to play in the
second quarter.
After Marshall recovered a fumbled Louisville
punt return at the 14-yard
line, Morrell increased his
ﬁrst-half passing yardage
to 15 — with a 16-yard
scoring strike to Ryan
Yurachek.
Marshall made it 52-21
early in the fourth quarter, scoring on a 12-yard
pass from Morrell to
Keion Davis — and also
on a Ty Tyler 26-yard
fumble recovery return.
The Thundering Herd
also had the ﬁnal score
of the night — a 13-yard
run by Tony Pittman with
2:41 to play.
Morrell completed 9-of21 passes for 59 yards
with one interception,
as the Herd rushed for
43 times with only a 3.4
yards per carry average.
The Thundering Herd
hits the road for the ﬁrst
time next Saturday night
— at Pittsburgh at 7:30
p.m.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

team championship with
a 326, which was one
stroke better than fellow
CHILLICOTHE,
MVL rival New LexingOhio — The Meigs High ton.
School golf team was one
Next was Fairﬁeld
of 13 clubs competing in Union at 335, followed
Saturday’s Zane Trace
by host Zane Trace at
Invitational tournament
343 before the Maraud— which was held at the
ers.
Jaycees Golf Course in
All four of the MaraudChillicothe.
er
counting scores broke
The Marauders’ team
100
for the 18-hole tourtotal of 360 was good
nament
— paced by Levi
enough to ﬁnish ﬁfth,
Chapman’s even 80.
as the majority of the
The other three Meigs
schools in attendance
were members of the Sci- counting cards were
Wyatt Nicholson with an
oto Valley Conference,
the Mid-State League or 89, Chase Whitlatch with
a 92 and Bryce Swatzel
the Muskingum Valley
with a 99.
League.
Sheridan won the
The other two

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Marauder members were
Bobby Musser with a
110 and Dawson Justice
with a 112.
There was a four-way
tie for medalist honors
— as each of the top four
teams was represented
by one player apiece.
Each shot 78 — and
included Brian Chaney of
Zane Trace, Costa Coconis of Sheridan, Brayden
Metzger of New Lexington and Brent Gulling of
Fairﬁeld Union.
Rounding out the sixth
thru 13th-place team
scores were Southeastern (326), Teays Valley
(371), Logan Elm (379),
Westfall (386), Circlev-

ille (395), Huntington
(401), Vinton County
(422) and Belpre (451).
The only schools
which did not ﬁeld six
golfers were Westfall
and Circleville with ﬁve
apiece — and Belpre
with only the minimum
four for a team score.
Paint Valley had a
single player — Blake
Winters with an 86.
The Marauders
return to the Jaycees
Golf Course, and open
postseason play today
(Tuesday, Sept. 27), in
the Division II sectional
tournament.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Rio Grande men’s basketball releases schedule
By Randy Payton

honor.
The pre-game ceremonies will begin at 6:30
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
p.m. and include all area
— An early season road veterans in attendance,
trip to the West Coast,
as well as special presenthe return of one of the
tation by Brian Nimmo,
nation’s top events for
the director of the HunNAIA Division II protington (WV) VA Medigrams and an exhibition cal Center. An exhibit of
contest against a neighmemorabilia from local
boring NCAA Division
veterans will also be on
I opponent highlight
display.
the University of Rio
The following afterGrande’s 2016-17 men’s
noon, the RedStorm will
basketball schedule
head north to Athens,
released Thursday by
Ohio for a meeting with
head coach Ken French.
the NCAA Division I
The RedStorm will
Bobcats. Tipoff is set for
also play a 13-game
2 p.m. at the Convocahome slate which once
tion Center.
again features the annual
The game will mark
Bevo Francis Tournathe sixth all-time meetment, as well as a pair
ing between the two
of familiar events – the
schools and the ﬁrst
Newt Oliver Coaches
since the 2000-01 camClassic and the Champi- paign. Ohio has won
ons of Character Classic. each of the previous ﬁve
“Our schedule is going meetings.
to be a great test for a
The regular season
young team,” French
slate begins on Tuesday,
said. “We’re talented,
Nov. 8 with a trip to
but we’re very young
Taylor (IN) University
and inexperienced. The
for a 7 p.m. tipoff before
early part of the schedule the RedStorm ﬂy to Caliwill deﬁnitely challenge
fornia to face Shepherd
us prior to conference
University on the 11th
play. We’ve got an exhiand NAIA DI Vanguard
bition game at Ohio
University on the 12th.
University, three games
Both games in the Goldagainst schools from the en State will tipoff at 10
Crossroads League - all
p.m. EST.
on the road - and a trip
A visit to Huntington
to California where we’ll (IN) University on the
be playing an NAIA DI
return trip from Califorschool. And that doesn’t nia comes on Nov. 15, at
even take into account
7 p.m., and sets the stage
the DII Showcase, the
for the 34th Annual Bevo
Bevo, the Newt and the
Francis Invitational TourChampions of Character nament and a matchup
Classic.”
with Miami UniversityThe schedule begins
Hamilton on Nov. 18
on the weekend of
at 8 p.m. The tournaNovember 4-5 with a
ment concludes on the
pair of exhibition con19th at 5 p.m. against
tests.
either Shawnee State
Rio Grande will host
University or Kent State
Wright State University- University-Tuscarawas.
Lake at the Newt Oliver
For the second consecArena on Nov. 4, at 7:30 utive year, Rio Grande
p.m., for “Honor Our
will also serve as the
Veterans Night”. Jim
host school for the NAIA
Marshall, who was part
DII Showcase, which
of the Rio Grande men’s is being dubbed “The
Show”, on Thanksgiving
basketball program in
weekend at Meadowview
the 1960’s, will be preConference Resort &amp;
sented with the newlyConvention Center in
created Veteran of the
Year Award named in his Kingsport, Tenn. The

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Falcons

ma held a 20-to-6 advantage in ﬁrst downs and a
373-to-121 advantage in
total offense, including
From page 6
a 315-to-99 edge on the
period, this time from
ground. Federal Hocking
one yard out. WHS
committed 10 penalties
junior Colton Arrington for 70 yards, while WHS
ran in the two-point con- was ﬂagged nine times
version to give the Red
for 45 yards. The White
and White a 14-0 edge.
Falcons committed the
WHS added a little
game’s lone turnover,
insurance with 3:23 left fumbling the ball away
in regulation, as sophoonce.
more Brady Bumgarner
Edwards ﬁnished with
punched into the end119 yards and two touchzone with a one-yard
downs to lead Wahama’s
run. The two-point
ground attack, while also
attempt failed, but the
catching one pass for 13
White Falcons claimed
yards. Arrington rushed
the 20-0 victory and
16 times for 87 yards
their eighth straight win and caught one pass for
over the Lancers (0-5,
19 yards, while Bumgar0-4).
ner added 65 yards and
For the game, Wahaone TD on eight carries.

two-day event features
teams from the River
States Conference, the
Appalachian Athletic
Conference, the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic
Conference and The Sun
Conference.
The RedStorm will
face Blueﬁeld (Va.) College on the 26th at 5 p.m.
and Union (Ky.) College
on the 27th at 5 p.m.
River States Conference play begins on the
ﬁrst weekend in December with a trip to Pittsburgh, Pa. for meetings
with Point Park University (Dec. 2, 7:30 p.m.)
and Carlow University
(Dec. 3, 3 p.m.).
The annual Newt
Oliver Coaches Classic, which celebrates
the school’s legendary
former coach and Rio
Grande alums who are
actively involved in
coaching, is scheduled
for Dec. 10, with Rio
entertaining Wilberforce
University for a 4 p.m.
tipoff.
A trio of high school
games are also on the
Classic docket with
Bethel-Tate (OH) facing
Gallia Academy (OH) at
2 p.m., Oak Hill (OH)
battling Meigs (OH) at
6 p.m. and Canal Winchester (OH) squaring
off with Wellston (OH)
in the 7:45 p.m. nightcap.
Conference tilts at
Indiana University East
(Dec. 13, 8 p.m.) and
with Ohio Christian at
home (Dec. 17, 4 p.m.)
come before the annual
Champions of Character
Classic, a special 12:15
p.m. matinee game for
local elementary school
students on Dec. 20
against Ohio UniversityLancaster.
The RedStorm will
close out the 2016 portion of their schedule on
Dec. 30, with a 2 p.m.
tipoff at Mount Vernon
Nazarene University.
January begins with
three of the team’s ﬁrst
four games in the new
year at home - vs. Bres-

cia University (Jan. 6, 5
p.m.), Indiana University Southeast (Jan. 7, 4
p.m.) and West Virginia
University Tech (Jan. 14,
4 p.m.). All are against
conference foes, with a
non-conference contest
at Wilberforce also in the
mix on Jan. 10 at 7:30
p.m.
The month concludes
with ﬁve of six outings
- nearly all conference
tilts - on the road. Trips
to Alice Lloyd College
and Midway University
on the 17th and 20th,
respectively, precede a
visit to Rio by Asbury
University on the 24th
at 8 p.m., with visits
to Indiana University
Kokomo and Cincinnati
Christian University following on the 26th and
28th, respectively.
Game times at Alice
Lloyd and Midway are
8 p.m. each night, with
tipoff at IU Kokomo set
for 7 p.m. The contest at
Cincinnati Christian will
begin at 3 p.m.
The only non-conference game during the
stretch comes on Jan.
31 with a trip to nearby
Portsmouth for an 8 p.m.
tip against rival Shawnee
State.
The February slate
begins with a road trip
to WVU-Tech (Feb. 4, 3
p.m.), before the regular
season ends with three
of the ﬁnal four contests
at home.
Indiana East comes
to Rio Grande for an 8
p.m. game on the 7th
and, after making a short
trip north to Circleville,
Ohio on the 11th for
the ﬁnal regular season
road game against Ohio
Christian (3 p.m.), the
RedStorm will close out
the regular season by
hosting Point Park on
the 17th (8 p.m.) and
Carlow on the 18th (4
p.m.).
The RSC Tournament,
which will be played at
the site of the higher
seeded team, is slated
for Feb. 22, Feb. 25 and
Feb. 28.

WHS junior quarterback Bryton Grate —
who rushed four times
for a total of 36 yards
— was 8-of-13 passing
for 58 yards, in the win.
Johnnie Board hauled in
four passes for 42 yards,
Colton Hendrick caught
one two-yard pass, while
Ronin Madill rushed
twice for a total of eight
yards.
Madill led the Wahama
defense with six solo
tackles, including one for
a loss.
Gavin Conkle led the
Lancers on the ground
with 87 yards on 10
attempts, while also
catching one ﬁve-yard
pass. Walker Church
posted 23 yards on eight
carries, Peyton Gates

had one rush for seven
yards, while completing
3-of-5 passes for nine
yards.
Dillon Wilfong completed 3-of-10 pass
attempts for 13 yards,
while rushing eight
times for a net of minus18 yards. Bryce Gates
caught three passes for
11 yards, while Trevor
Bell hauled in two passes
for six yards in the loss.
Wahama will look to
keep things going as it
visits 3-2 Trimble, on
Friday.
The Lancers have
now lost 16 consecutive
games and will visit 5-0
Southern next.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Lost &amp; Found

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

Want To Buy

Help Wanted General

Found at Robert C. Byrd Locks
&amp; Dam Young Male Beagle
Dog. Call to identify: (304) 6333219 or (304) 576-4151

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-688-9416
or 740-988-6130

2 bdrm mobile home
on farm. $500.00 mo.
includes water,
new paint, carpet
540-729-1331

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

Notices

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

FOR LEASE
One bedroom apt. Water and
Trash included. No pets. No
smoking. $450.00 Security
deposit. Rent $400 per
mo.Call 740-441-7875 or
740-446-4425.

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.

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

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
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave
Gallipolis, Oh
Taking applications for a
mailroom driver.
Part-Time positions,
night driving,
must have valid driver's
license and a good driving
record required.
No phone calls please.
Applications may be picked
up in the front office
Monday-Friday 8 am - 5pm

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Recently Renovated Clean
2 Bdr. Conveniently located
Reference and Deposit,
No Pets, No Smoking
304-675-5162
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
2 bedrooms. Water and
trash paid. Non-smoking /
no pets. In city limits;
walking distance to stores
and restaurants.
Rents starting at
$450/ mo.!
HUD friendly!
Well maintained!
Great neighbors!
No application fees!
Call (740) 578-4177
Extension #1

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

Help Wanted General

Santa's Sewing &amp; Mending
302 Rock Lick Rd off Rt 218
2 miles north Mercerville.
cell # 740-645-1260

WANTED: PART-TIME WORKERS needed willing to work with
a behaviorally and physically challenging individual In Middleport. Must be willing to work within approved guidelines and behavior supports plans. Training provided. Pay commensurate
with job duties. Hours:
1) 32 hrs: 8a-8p S/S; Mon
2) 24 hrs: 12-8a Tu/W/Th
High school degree/GED, valid driver's license and three years
good driving experience required. Send resume to: Buckeye
Community Services, P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45540; or
email; bevecserv@yahoo.com. Deadline for applicants: 10/3/16.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

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)

Help Wanted General

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Commercial

60583312

FOR LEASE
Office or Commercial space.
First floor approx. 1600 sq. ft.
One bathroom, carpeted, storage area, street parking. $650
per mo. negotiable. Security
deposit required. Excellent
Condition. Call 740-441-7875
or 740-446-4425

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has a
full-time opening for a RN
for our Emergency Room. WV license, BCLS and ACLS
preferred. ER experience preferred.
Apply to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550,
or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply online at www.pvalley.org.

60681416

LEGALS

SHERIFF'S SALE OF FORFEITED REAL ESTATE
Help Wanted General

Ohio Valley Publishing
is looking for a general assignment reporter to help us cover
it all for our newsrooms encompassing communities along the
Ohio River in Gallia and Meigs counties in Ohio, and Mason
County, W.Va. Excellent opportunity to immediately join a
dynamic print and digital industry company that focuses on
hyper-local news and sports.
Candidates should be self-motivated and have excellent writing,
editing and organizational skills. Must have dependable transportation and willingness to work evenings and weekends when
necessary. Great benefits available. Salary negotiable.
Email resume, cover letter and three writing samples to Editor
Michael Johnson at michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com.
No phone calls, please.

Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center has openings for full-time

Certiﬁed Nursing Assistants
and a per diem Registered Nurse.
WV license. Must be able to work 12 hour shifts.
Apply to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550,
or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply online at www.pvalley.org.

Ohio Revised Code Section 2329.26
General Code Section 11681
In The Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio
State of Ohio, Plaintiff
-vsChad Diddle, Defendant
Case No. 14 CR 169
Whereas, judgment has been rendered against certain parcels
of real property for a criminal conviction in the above case resulting in forfeiture of real property.
Being Real Estate located at 303 Fifth Street, Racine, OH 45771
and bearing Auditor's Parcel ID#:. 1900342000. For a more
particular description see Volume 268 Page 66 of the Official
Records of the Meigs County Recorder located at the Meigs
County Recorder's Office.
Now, therefore, Public Notice is hereby given that I, Keith O.
Wood, Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio, will sell such real property.
AS IS, as one parcel, at public auction, for CASH to the highest
bidder plus current taxes, interest, penalties and Court costs
apportioned against the parcel between the hours of 10:00 a.m.
and 10:05 a.m. at the front steps of the Meigs County Court
House, 100 East Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, on
Friday, the 7th day of October, 2016.

Help Wanted General

60681530

In Print. Online. In Touch.
Help Wanted General

Portsmouth Daily Times is looking for sports reporters who can
bolster coverage in the communities we cover for print, the web,
Facebook and Twitter. The Portsmouth Daily Times is a daily,
publishing Monday through Saturday while The Community
Common publishes on Sunday. We need hard workers, multitaskers, those with a love for local sports reporting, a flair for
writing and a commitment to making our publications the best
they can be in print and online. These are entry level positions
but reporters with experience are encouraged to apply. Sports
Reporters are not required to have a personal digital camera but
having one is a plus. What we are looking for:
 Accuracy and clarity in writing
 Ability to work independently and as part of a team
 Ability to meet deadlines and effectively manage time
 Ability to think outside the box
 Available for evening/weekend shifts
To apply, send your resume/cover letter with at least five references who can speak directly to your talent, writing samples that
show your local writing chops and photography skills and a letter telling us why you are the person for the job. Send to Chris
Slone at cslone@civitasmedia.com

Miscellaneous

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

NEWSPAPER.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Professional Services

PASS
TIME IN
LINE.
READ
THE

ALL SHERIFF'S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR AND NO WARRANTY IS MADE REGARDING THE TITLE OR DESCRIPTION OF THE PREMISES.
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ALL SUCH REAL
PROPERTY TO BE SOLD AT AUCTION MAY BE SUBJECT
TO A FEDERAL TAX LIEN THAT MAY NOT BE EXTINGUISHED BY THE SALE. PURCHASERS OF ANY SUCH
REAL PROPERTY ARE URGED TO HAVE A TITLE SEARCH
CONDUCTED WHICH INCLUDES FEDERAL TAX LIEN INDEX
IS KEPT BY THE COUNTY RECORDER TO DETERMINE IF
THERE ARE ANY LIENS AND IF NOTICE OF A FEDERAL TAX
LIEN HAS BEEN FILED WITH RESPECT TO ANY SUCH
PROPERTY. TERMS OF SALE: Cannot be sold for less than
the minimum bid of $3090.00,10% of sale price by Certified
Check by 2:00 p.m. on Day of Sale. Balance due within 10 days
of contact from Sheriffs Office.
KEITH O. WOOD, SHERIFF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
By: Cheyenne Davis, Deputy Meigs County, Ohio
COLLEEN S. WILLIAMS
Prosecuting Attorney of Meigs County, Ohio
9/20/16, 9/27/16, 10/04/16

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, September 27, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Dave Green

9 5
1
5 6
4
7
5
4
1
3
2
4
7
9
8 6
4 9
3

By Hilary Price

2
6

4
7

9/27

Difficulty Level

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

9/27

7
4
3
9
5
1
6
8
2

3
2
9
8
4
7
1
6
5

4
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1
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6
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3
9
8

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6
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3
9

9
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4
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2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

7 3

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, September 27, 2016

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Arnett lands Riverside’s
8th ace of season

Daily Sentinel

Lady Defenders stay unbeaten
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MASON, W.Va. — Gary Arnett of Lancaster
recorded the eighth hole-in-one of the 2016 season at Riverside Golf Course on Saturday, Sept.
24. Arnett netted his ﬁrst career ace on the 141yard fourth hole by using a 7-iron. The shot was
witnessed by Jon Masey and Lewis Hage, both of
Lancaster.

GAHS Basketball
31 Bingo
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
boys basketball program will be sponsoring a 31
Bingo on Friday, Nov. 4, at Gallia Academy Middle School at 340 Fourth Avenue. Doors will open
at 5 p.m. and the games will begin at 6 p.m..
Tickets are $20 for 20 games. Tickets will be on
sale at the door for special games. A drawing will
be held for all pre-sale tickets. Door prizes will
also be drawn.
Tickets can be purchased from any 9-12 grade
basketball player or coach. All proceeds beneﬁt
GAHS Boys basketball program.
For more information, contact GAHS coach
Gary Harrison at 740-645-5816 or Brett Bostic at
740-339-2683.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Ohio downs Gardner-Webb
37-21 with big 1st half
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) — Quinton Maxwell threw
two touchdown passes, Greg Windham added
another and Ohio used a 30-point ﬁrst half to beat
Gardner-Webb 37-21 on Saturday.
Maxwell was 11 of 14 for 167 yards passing,
including a 17-yard scoring strike to Sebastian
Smith and a 13-yarder to Kyle Belack. Windham
threw for 143 yards, opening the scoring with a
17-yard TD pass to Smith, who had six catches for
108 yards.
The Bobcats (2-2) scored on their ﬁrst four possessions, outgained the Bulldogs 341-118 total
yards in the ﬁrst half and led 30-7 at halftime.
Papi White scored on a 14-yard run, Kent Berger
sacked Bulldogs quarterback Tyrell Maxwell for
a safety, and Bo Hardy scored on a 1-yard run for
Ohio.
Khalil Lewis scored on a 31-yard run for the
Bulldogs (1-3). Tyrell Maxwell scored on a 3-yard
run and hit Willie Jackson IV on a 28-yard scoring
pass.

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GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— Who says 13 is an
unlucky number?
The Ohio Valley Christian volleyball team
remained unbeaten this
season following a 25-9,
18-25, 26-24, 25-20 victory over visiting Teays
Valley Christian on Friday
night during a non-conference match in the Old
French City.
The Lady Defenders
(13-0) are still unblemished through a baker’s
dozen worth of contests,
but the hosts once again
had to dig a little deeper
to remain that way.
With the match tied at
one game apiece, OVCS
found itself in a pair of
sizable holes at 9-3 and
19-12 during Game 3.
The Blue and Gold, however, rallied for a dozen
of the next 17 points —
which tied the game at
24-all.
After being down 24-22
in that third game, the
Lady Defenders countered with the ﬁnal four
points to secure a 2-1
match lead with the minimal two-point triumph.
With momentum
clearly on its side from
there, Ohio Valley Christian led wire-to-wire in
the fourth and ﬁnal game
to wrap up the 3-1 match
decision while remaining
unbeaten.
The Lady Lions jumped

Bryan Walters/OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian junior Cori Hutchison (26) hits a spike attempt over the net during Game 3 of
Friday night’s non-conference volleyball contest against Teays Valley Christian in Gallipolis, Ohio.

out to an early 5-1 edge
in Game 1, but the hosts
answered with a 6-1 run
to lead 7-6 and never
looked back. Rachel Sargent had 13 consecutive
service points while guiding OVCS to a 16-point
win in the opener.
TVCS trailed 1-0 in
Game 2, but reeled off
eight straight points and
led by as many as 11
points (20-9) before tying
the match with a sevenpoint win.
Sargent led the Lady
Defender service attack

with 19 points, followed
by Katie Westfall with 10
points and Marcie Kessinger with nine points.
Westfall also chipped in a
team-high six aces.
Cori Hutchison was
next with eight points,
while Katie Bradley and
Emily Childers respectively added seven and
three points for the victors.
Bradley led the net
attack with 14 kills, followed by Sargent with
eight kills and Childers
with six kills. Sargent

and Hutchison also added
team-bests of six blocks
each.
Caroline Moses paced
TVCS with 14 service
points, followed by Holli
Bragg with nine points
and Mckenzie Myers with
six points. Holly Edwards
was next with ﬁve points,
while Emily Hatﬁeld and
Adora Campbell also
chipped in four points
each.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

RedStorm women’s basketball releases slate
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
– Holiday trips to the
hills of Tennessee and
the island of Puerto Rico
headline the University
of Rio Grande’s 2016-17
women’s basketball schedule released Thursday by
head coach David Smalley.
The RedStorm will
again host the annual
Bevo Francis Tournament on the weekend
of November 18-19 as
part of its 14-game home
schedule, which also
includes a visit from
former Mid-South Conference rival University of
Pikeville - now coached
by former Rio assistant
coach Brandon Bias.
Rio Grande, which
opens its season against
Mount Vernon Nazarene
on Nov. 2 in a 6 p.m.
tipoff at the Newt Oliver
Arena, closes out the
month by participating in
the women’s division of
the NAIA DII Showcase
on Thanksgiving weekend
at the Meadowview Conference Resort &amp; Conven-

tion Center in Kingsport,
Tenn.
The RedStorm will
face Milligan (Tenn.) on
Saturday, Nov. 26, at 1
p.m. and will meet Union
(Ky.) College on Sunday,
Nov. 27, at 3 p.m. to close
out the two-day, six-team
event, which is featuring
a women’s division for the
ﬁrst time this season.
Prior to its trip to
Tennessee, Rio will host
Kent State UniversityTuscarawas in the ﬁrst
round of the 34th Annual
Bevo Francis Invitational
Tournament on Nov. 18 at
6 p.m. and will face either
Ohio Valley University or
Salem (W.Va.) International University in round
two on Nov. 19 at 3 p.m.
The team is also taking part in the Puerto
Rico Clasico just prior to
Christmas - Dec. 20 and
21 - in San Juan, Puerto
Rico. Siena Heights
(Mich.) University will
provide the opposition on
the 20th at 10 a.m., while
the opponent for the
contest on the following
day - likely to be a local
university - has not been
ofﬁcially announced.

Following the season
opener with Mount
Vernon Nazarene, the
RedStorm will visit rival
Shawnee State on Nov. 5
(6 p.m.) and Wilberforce
University on Nov. 8
(5:30 p.m.) before returning home for the meeting
with Pikeville - an NAIA
Division I national semiﬁnalist last year - on the
15th at 7 p.m.
The Bevo Francis Tournament and the NAIA DII
Showcase round out the
remainder of the November schedule.
December opens with a
River States Conference
road swing to Pittsburgh,
Pa. to face Point Park
University on the 2nd
at 5:30 p.m. and Carlow
University the following
day at 1 p.m.
Wilberforce makes a
return visit to Rio on
Dec. 9 at 6 p.m., before
the RedStorm returns to
conference play with a
game at Indiana University-East on the 13th at 6
p.m. and at home versus
Ohio Christian University
on the 17th at 2 p.m. in
advance of their preChristmas trip to Puerto

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Rico.
January begins with a
four-game homestand vs. Salem International
(Jan. 4, 6 p.m.), Brescia
University (Jan. 6, 3
p.m.), Indiana University
Southeast (Jan. 7, 2 p.m.)
and West Virginia University Tech (Jan. 14, 2 p.m.)
- the latter three of which
are against RSC foes.
The month concludes
with four of ﬁve outings
- all conference tilts - on
the road. Trips to Alice
Lloyd College and Midway University on the
17th and 20th, respectively, precede a visit to Rio
by Asbury University on
the 24th at 6 p.m., with
visits to Indiana University Kokomo and Cincinnati Christian University
following on the 26th and
28th, respectively.
Game times at Alice
Lloyd and Midway are
6 p.m. each night, with
tipoff at IU Kokomo set
for 5 p.m. The contest at
Cincinnati Christian will
begin at 1 p.m.
The February docket
begins with a pair of road
trips to West Virginia,
before the regular season
slate ends with three of
the ﬁnal four contests at
home.
The RedStorm head to
Salem International on
the 1st for a 5:30 p.m.
tipoff and play at WVU
Tech on the 4th at 1
p.m. before Indiana East
comes to Rio Grande for
a 6 p.m. game on the 7th.
After making a short
trip north to Circleville,
Ohio on the 11th for
the ﬁnal regular season
road game against Ohio
Christian (1 p.m.), Rio
will close out the regular
season by hosting Point
Park on the 17th (6 p.m.)
and Carlow on the 18th
(2 p.m.).
The RSC Tournament,
which will be played at
the site of the higher
seeded team, is slated for
Feb. 22, Feb. 25 and Feb.
28.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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