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                  <text>Be wary
of sports
ticket scams

Sunny,
High of 79,
Low of 51

Meigs
avenges
Lady Eagles

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 159, Volume 70

Wednesday, October 5, 2016 s 50¢

Bill Clinton revisits Ohio Valley
Former President campaigns for wife on two-day bus tour

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Former President Bill Clinton speaks on behalf of his wife, Democratic nominee
for President Hillary Clinton, during a campaign event Tuesday in Athens.

ATHENS — Former President Bill Clinton began his
“Stronger Together” bus tour
through Ohio in Athens on
Tuesday morning, campaigning on behalf of his wife, Democratic Presidential nominee
Hillary Clinton.
Bill Clinton reportedly spent
Monday night at the OU Inn in
Athens before Tuesday’s campaign event. For the former

president, it was a return trip
to southeastern Ohio.
Clinton previously spoke
at OU during his presidential
campaign “back in the dark
ages, before most of you could
vote and many of you were
born.” Clinton also spoke in
Athens in 2008 as part of his
wife’s primary campaign.
“This has been a crazy election and I am not well suited
for it — because I’m a happy
grandfather,” Clinton said.
He went on to say that it

was easy to remember he was
supposed to remind people of
the voter registration deadline
of Oct. 11 as it is also his 41st
wedding anniversary. He also
reminded people that early voting in Ohio begins Oct. 12.
Much of Clinton’s approximately 50-minute speech
focused on Hillary’s opponent,
while also outlining some of
Hillary Clinton’s policy plans
should she become president.
“Hillary’s opponent is just
See CLINTON | 3

Final call for
K-9 Argo
Gallia County canine deputy passes
Sunday after battling kidney issues
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County sheriff’s deputies bid a fond farewell Sunday over the radio to
K-9 Deputy Argo after the dog passed away that
same day after battling kidney issues.
Argo would have turned 6 years old in December and served with his partner and handler, Gallia Deputy Jerry Darst.
“It took a while to (get used to each other),”
Darst said. “He came from Pine Kennel Grove that
Steve Heater (runs). Steve said he was going to be
a hard dog (to work with). He was a bit standoffish, but once we got together, he wouldn’t let anyone else fool with him. He was handler sensitive
and protective of me. It was like he was attached
to my hip.”
Darst related one story in which he and Argo
were searching a structure to make certain it was
clear of potential suspects. Darst had made note
of a ladder leading up to an attic and told his colleague deputy he was going to climb into the attic
to make sure no one was up there. Argo climbed
up right beside him with no beckoning because
he wanted to make certain he was at Darst’s side.
Darst said no one would have believed Argo had
done that if a fellow deputy not been there to witness it. At the time, Darst said Argo had not been
See ARGO | 5

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

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Courtesy photos

Meigs Local Board Member Roger Abbott, center, was recognized by the OSBA with the Outstanding Board Member award.

Meigs Local treasurer, board member recognized
Staff Report

NELSONVILLE —
Meigs Local School
District Treasurer Roy
Johnson and Board Member Roger Abbot were
recently honored by the
Ohio School Boards Association.
Johnson and Abbott
were recognized during
the OSBA Southeast
Region Fall Conference
held Sept. 29 at Nelsonville-York Middle School.
Johnson, the treasurer/
CFO for Meigs Local
Schools, was presented
with the Outstanding
Treasurer Award.
The award is presented
annually, recognizing
the top treasurer from
nominations received
See MEIGS | 5 Meigs Local Treasurer Roy Johnson, center, was recognized as the region’s outstanding treasurer.

We are moving to a new office.
We are moving around the corner to

109 W. 2nd st. Pomeroy, OH 45769
We will be located at the

intersection of Mulberry and 2nd.

60682567

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Daily Sentinel

New royals chosen for Battle Days

DEATH NOTICES
KELLEY
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Reoma Kay Kelley,
75, of Willow Wood, passed away Tuesday, Oct.
4, 2016. A private family graveside service will be
conducted. There will be no visitation. Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in
charge of arrangements.

JOHNSON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Thomas William
Johnson, 83, of Point Pleasant, died Monday, Oct.
3, 2016. A funeral service will be 11 a.m. Saturday,
Oct. 8, 2016, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant. Burial will follow at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at
Bellefonte Memorial Gardens in Russell, Ky. Visitation will be 6-9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

MEIGS COUNTY
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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 spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.
Wednesday, Oct. 5
SYRACUSE — The
Syracuse Community
Center will hold a fundraiser at Bob Evans in
Mason from 8 a.m. to
8 p.m. Bob Evans will
donate 15 percent of
patrons’ checks if the
“Dine to make a difference” ﬂyer is presented
to the cashier upon
check out. Pick up ﬂyer
at public locations in
Syracuse. For more
information call 740-9922311 or 740-992-2365.
Thursday, Oct. 6
CHILLICOTHE —
The Southern Ohio
Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its
next board meeting at
10 a.m. in Room A of
the Ross County Service
Center, 475 Western
Avenue, Chillicothe,
Ohio, 45601. Board
meetings usually are
held the ﬁrst Thursday
of the month. For more
information, call 740775-5030, ext. 103.
CHESTER — Chester
Shade Historical Association will be holding
their monthly board
meeting at the Chester
Academy at 7 p.m.
Everyone is welcome to
attend.
Friday, Oct. 7
POMEROY — Pink
with Purpose of Meigs
County, which is a grant
sponsored by Susan G.
Komen, Columbus is
holding it’s “Friend to
Friend” program at 1
p.m. at the Meigs Cooperative Parish 260 Mulberry Ave. There will

be a brief presentation
on breast health and the
importance of breast
cancer screening. Prizes
will be given and light
refreshments served.
For more information,
contact Carolyn at 740992-5469.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Public
Employee Retiree Inc.,
Chapter 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.
Monday, Oct. 10
BEDFORD TWP. —
The regular meeting of
the Bedford Township
Trustees will be 7 p.m.
at the Bedford Township
Hall.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County TB Clinic
will be closed. No skin
tests will be given on
Friday, Oct. 7.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will be
closed in observance of
Columbus Day.
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 740-6694245 or 1-800-REDCROSS to schedule an
appointment.
SCIPIO TWP. —
Scipio Township
Trustees will hold their
monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the Harrisonville
Fire House.

Beth Sergent/Register

Jocelynn Wilson, pictured third from left, took home the Miss Battle Days title during Sunday’s Battle Days Pageant. Joining Wilson as
this year’s festival royals are, from left, Young Miss Battle Days Courtney Winter, Jr. Miss Battle Days Addyson Stein, Little Miss Battle
Days Chloe Patrick, Little Mr. Battle Days Peyton Crum.

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS
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.

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

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124 and Fellowship Drive, near
the entrance to Forked Run
State Park.

POMEROY — The Diabetes Academy program will be
held from 3-4 p.m. on Oct. 4 at
Hopewell Health Center, Pomeroy.
The program is a free class given
by a Novo Nordisk Diabetes EduTrick-or-Treat information can
RACINE — Morning Star
be submitted to TDSnews@civita- cator to help learn about managing United Methodist Church Homediabetes.
smedia.com
coming will be held Oct. 16. Lunch
RACINE — Friday, Oct. 28 from
at 12:30 p.m. Service of singing at
6-7 p.m. with the annual Hallow1:30 p.m.
een Party immediately afterward
at the ﬁrehouse.
SYRACUSE — Friday, Oct.
LONG BOTTOM — Fellow28th, from 6:00pm to 7:30 pm.
ship Church of the Nazarene
All village streets will be closed to homecoming revival, Oct. 9-12.
motor vehicle trafﬁc. Route 124
Services times are at 10:45 a.m.
will remain open.
and 6 p.m. on Oct. 9, and 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — Pastor
TUPPERS PLAINS — Thurseach evening Oct. 10-12. There
Billy Zuspan of the First Baptist
day, Oct. 27, 6-7 p.m.
will be a carry-in dinner after
Church of Middleport has begun
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
the 10:45 a.m. service and felan in-depth Bible study of The
County Council on Aging will be
lowship snacks after the evening Revelation during the Sunday
handing out treats at the former
services.
and Wednesday evening services
Middleport High School from 6-7
Evangelist Rev. Doug Downs
at 7 p.m. Everyone is invited to
p.m. on Oct. 27. There will be
from Gallipolis and Dayspring
join us at 211 S. 6th Ave., Middlegames and refreshments at the
from Parkersburg will be taking port, Ohio. If you have questions,
building from 7-9 p.m. after trick
part in the revival. The church
please call 740-992-2755 and
or treat.
is located at the corner of Route leave a message.

13 (WOWK)

Thursday, Oct. 13
CHESTER — Shade
River Lodge 453 will
hold its monthly stated
meeting on at 7:30 p.m.
All Master Masons are
invited.

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Clinton
From page 1

about the best I ever
saw at rubbing salt in
open wounds,” Clinton
said, noting that Donald
Trump didn’t pay contractors or pay his taxes.
Clinton never mentioned
the Republican nominee
by name during the
speech.
Protesters marched
around the green during the speech, with
one person in the crowd
interrupting Clinton.
The individual shouted
something toward
Clinton with regard to
Hillary Clinton having
been involved with putting people behind bars.
When a person on the
other side of the crowd
attempted to start a
“Clinton” chant to quiet
the protester, Bill Clinton stopped them both
and addressed the topic.
“Hillary didn’t vote
for the ‘94 crime bill,
even though Senator
(Bernie) Sanders did.
… She was ﬁrst person
in this campaign to say
we should change the
incarceration policy. No
one else has done that.
The facts aren’t difﬁcult
here. You ought to think
about it if you’re upset.
You’re also upset that we
have a 25-year low in the
crime rate, a 33-year low
in the murder rate and,
listen to this, a 67-year
low in the rate of people
being killed by illegal
gun violence. It’s OK to
hold people accountable
for their record, but you
need to paint the whole
picture,” Clinton said.
“I want to talk about
why you should be for
Hillary and why you
should be for yourself
and why you ought to
be optimistic about the
future,” he continued. “I
believe that we’re making a terrible mistake
spending all our time
biting each other’s head
off because I believe
America is on the verge
of being able to grow
together with a 21st century version of broadly
shared prosperity.
“’Stronger together
means do you believe the
economy grows better
if we share the prosperity. Stronger together
means do you believe
we live better if we have
an inclusive society and
we embrace our diversity instead of drive a
stake in the heart of it.
Stronger together means
we are more secure in a
world where everybody’s
borders look more like
nets than walls,” said
Clinton, explaining the
theme of the bus tour.
“We should approach the
future with bridges, not
walls.
“Do you believe we’re
better off with anger or
answers? Do you believe
we’re better off with
resentment or empowerment? Do you believe
we’re better off embracing the unity of our
common humanity or
continuing to slice and
dice the electorate and
our society?”
Clinton spoke of Hillary Clinton’s plans to
help small businesses
with loans and insurance costs, an education
plan for free or debt-free
college, and plans to
bring business back to
America.
Social equality and
helping the middle class
were central themes of
the speech, with Clinton
making reference to
Trump wanting to take
things back to the way
they were 50 years ago,
and therefore putting
some higher on a totem
pole.
“Hillary does not want
to move anybody up on
the social totem pole.
She wants to tear the

Wednesday, October 5, 2016 3

Red Dawson to be grand marshal
of Marshall homecoming parade

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Former President Bill Clinton is greeted on stage by OU freshman Bailey Williams, who introduced
him on Tuesday morning during a campaign event on the Ohio University campus.

dadgum pole down so
we can all go forward
together,” Clinton said.
“Don’t pass up this
chance. Don’t let
people pour acid down
your throat. Don’t let
people tell you your vote
doesn’t matter. Don’t let
people tell you there are
no consequences to the
election,” Clinton added.
“Do this for yourself. Do
this for your future. Taking a ﬂying leap these
next 30 days and think
about what we can do.
Instead of pouring salt in
everybody’s wounds and
acid down everybody’s
throat, think about what
we can do. Think about
what we can do to claim
a future that can include
everybody. We can all
rise again.
“Don’t stay home.
Don’t stay quiet. And
don’t spend all your time
on the cheap easy shots,
even if you’re on our side
and you’re taking them
at him. The only thing
that matters is what your
life is going to be like,”
added Clinton.
“Answers work better
than anger. Empowerment works better than
resentment. Bridges
work better than walls
and we’re stronger
together than we are cutting the living daylights
out of each other. Go
claim your future and
elect Hillary Clinton,”
concluded Clinton.
Clinton was introduced
by Bailey Williams, a
freshman at Ohio University. Williams said he
voted for Bernie Saunders in March, but is
supporting Clinton in the
November election.
“This election is too
important to sit on the
sidelines or vote for a
third party,” Williams
said. “Yeah, I can name
a billion reasons why
you should vote against
Trump, but anybody in
their sleep can do that.
Instead of voting against
Trump, I am voting for
Secretary Clinton.
“Hillary Clinton is the
only person in this race
who will look out for
middle-class families like

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) — Former Marshall
assistant football coach Red Dawson will be the grand
marshal in Marshall University’s homecoming parade
this month.
The parade will be held Oct. 13 in downtown Huntington.
Dawson was an assistant coach in 1970 when a
plane crash carrying Marshall’s football team, coaches
and supporters crashed near the Huntington airport
while returning from a game at East Carolina.
Seventy-ﬁve people died in the worst sports disaster in U.S. history. Dawson was driving on a recruiting trip and was not on the ﬂight.
In a statement released by Marshall, Dawson says
he’s excited about being the grand marshal and was
surprised when asked by university President Jerome
Gilbert.

Man wearing clown mask
chases kids with baseball bat
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP) — A Fairmont man has
been accused wearing a clown mask while chasing
children with a baseball bat.
The Times West Virginian reports Marion County
sheriff’s deputies arrested 34-year-old Gary A. Valentine on Saturday on an assault charge.

STOCKS

Former President Bill Clinton Speaks during a campaign event
Tueday morning at Ohio University.

AEP (NYSE) - 62.18
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 22.72
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)
113.41
Big Lots (NYSE) - 46.97
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 37.95
BorgWarner (NYSE) 35.05
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
- 7.01
Champion (NASDAQ) 0.00
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 49.65
Collins (NYSE) - 83.74
DuPont (NYSE) - 66.88
US Bank (NYSE) - 42.85
Gen Electric (NYSE) 29.50
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
- 50.52
JP Morgan (NYSE) 66.60
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.00
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 70.35
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 95.79

OVBC (NASDAQ) - 22.39
BBT (NYSE) - 38.28
Peoples (NASDAQ) 24.13
Pepsico (NYSE) - 107.10
Premier (NASDAQ) 16.83
Rockwell (NYSE) - 119.19
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
- 10.49
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.68
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
- 12.10
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 71.75
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 10.54
WesBanco (NYSE) - 32.53
Worthington (NYSE) 47.17
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions
Oct. 4, 2016, provided by
Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero
in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Candidate for State Representative
for the 94th District Sarah Grace
introduces former Gov. Ted
Strickland.

mine and make sure that
college is affordable for
everybody and that education is not just a luxury
for the rich,” Williams
said. “This is the time
to vote for the future of
America.”
Also speaking Tuesday
morning were U.S. Senate candidate and former
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, 94th District state
representative candidate
Sarah Grace, and Ohio
Together organizers
Emma Kraus and Sean
Murphy.
Following the event in
Athens, Clinton headed
to Steubenville for an
event later Tuesday afternoon. He is scheduled to
be in Youngstown and
Canton on Wednesday.

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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Daily Sentinel

FIRST AMENDMENT
TO THE CONSTITUTION
OF THE UNITED STATES:
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble; and to petition the government for redress of grievances.

THEIR VIEW

A bipartisan win
for communities,
ratepayers
Last week, the Senate passed the Water
Resources Development Act, including key provisions from my legislation to protect Ohioans’
drinking water and keep Lake Erie healthy.
At a time when so many Ohioans are rightly
frustrated with Washington dysfunction, this is bill
where both sides came together, and we were able
to deliver bipartisan wins for our state.
The legislation includes my bill to appoint a
Great Lakes Harmful Algal Bloom Coordinator
at the EPA, and to fund the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. It also contains strong provisions I
authored to help protect families from lead exposure, including creating a new federal grant to help
schools and daycares test their drinking water for
lead, and a requirement that the EPA automatically alert the public to lead contamination if the
state fails to do so.
And the bill incorporates my Clean
Water Affordability Act that will help
communities invest in revitalizing
their aging water infrastructure to
improve water quality, and prevent
the sort of damage that we’ve seen
recently in Hamilton County.
Sherrod
At the end of August, heavy rains
Brown
in Southeast Ohio caused sewer
Contributing backups that left more than 1,400
Columnist
businesses and homes ﬂooded. This
is a nightmare for the families and
business owners who are left to deal
with the damage, and it’s a nightmare for Hamilton County’s budget, which will now be hit with
some $10 million in cleanup costs.
Rather than waiting for inevitable emergencies
like this to happen and then scrambling to pay the
bill, we need to make the upfront investments in
upgrading our water infrastructure that will save
taxpayers and homeowners money in the long
term – and that’s exactly what this bill will do.
It will help communities that are struggling
to afford expensive – but vital – renovations to
outdated Combined Sewage Overﬂow systems,
or CSOs. These sewer systems carry both storm
water and sewage. Every time there are heavy
rains – like we had in late August – these systems
are overwhelmed and untreated waste and storm
water is dumped straight into our rivers, creeks,
and lakes – the same rivers, creeks and lakes that
we pull our drinking water from.
That’s why federal guidelines require local governments to renovate outdated sewer systems—
but our communities shouldn’t have to shoulder
the cost alone. These renovations can cost billions—an estimated $1.6 billion in northeast Ohio
alone, and $3 billion in Cincinnati.
This legislation will invest $1.8 billion, to be
distributed over the next ﬁve years through a
speciﬁc grant program aimed at these sewage
systems. This grant program will prioritize these
investments in communities that are already dealing with water quality issues and need the money
most. The bill will also encourage the use of costsaving green infrastructure, to keep water from
entering sewers in the ﬁrst place.
And it requires the EPA to make sure that clean
water compliance plans take into account the economic health of a community, and other ongoing
clean water investments, to ease the burden on
ratepayers.
Not only will this new investment protect local
customers from high water bills and lead to cleaner water, it will also create jobs and promote economic development. Studies indicate that every
$1 billion invested in infrastructure projects can
create more than 20,000 jobs.
It’s in everyone’s interest to ensure clean water
for our families and our businesses. 21st century
infrastructure, like sewer systems, attracts 21st
century jobs, and gives families the peace of mind
of knowing that their water is safe and their photo
albums won’t be ruined by a ﬂooded basement.
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown is a Democrat who represents Ohio in the
U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C.

CONTACT SEN. SHERROD BROWN
Constituents may call (888) 896-6446
(toll-free in Ohio) or (202) 224-2315 at
his Washington, D.C. office. He can also
be reached electronically at www.brown.
senate.gov/contact. Facebook: www.
facebook.com/sherrod; and Twitter @
SenSherrodBrown.

THEIR VIEW

Be wary of sporting event ticket scams
Ohioans are among
the most loyal and
enthusiastic sports fans
anywhere.
That’s why, when their
local or favorite teams
compete and succeed,
Ohioans who want to
attend their games must
be cautious to avoid
being victimized by
ticket scams.
It’s no surprise that
high-proﬁle events like
bowl games or playoffs also generate the
most ticket scams. For
example, last year, when
the Ohio State Buckeyes faced Alabama in
the 2015 Sugar Bowl,
a Franklin County consumer answered a Craigslist ad for six tickets to
the Sugar Bowl for $800.
The seller claimed to be
a service member and
showed the consumer
a military ID. The consumer made the effort to
conﬁrm that the ID was
legitimate before sending the seller money, but
the “seller” had stolen
the military member’s
ID and used it as part of
the ticket scam.

Another scammer who are sold out or in high
demand, but these offers
claimed to be a military
may be scams.
service member
Check with the
with Sugar Bowl
promoter or venue
tickets to sell victo determine how
timized a Fayette
and when tickets
County consumer.
are being sold.
After multiple text
Be very cautious
messages were
when dealing with
exchanged, the
Mike
individual thirdseller provided
DeWine
party sellers who
a picture of the
tickets, a copy of a Contributing are not associated
with the organizamilitary ID, and a columnist
tions involved in
photo of himself.
the event.
The consumer sent
Be wary of excuses for
$400 but never received
selling tickets at a low
the tickets.
price. Some ticket scamMarquee events like
mers falsely claim to be
the Cleveland Cavaliers’
in the military or travelrise to the top of the
ing due to a death in
NBA and the upcoming
the family to justify why
playoff appearances of
they’re selling tickets at
the Cleveland Indians
a good price. Chances
are made-to-order
are the tickets don’t
opportunities for ticket
exist.
scammers. Here are
Don’t trust sellers who
some tips to help Ohio
say you must pay by
consumers keep from
wire transfer or prepaid
getting ripped off:Be
money card. These are
skeptical of offers that
preferred payment methare too good to be true.
ods for scam artists,
Sellers on Craigslist or
because once the money
other online marketis sent, it’s nearly imposplaces may offer tickets
sible to recover.
at face value (or below)
Consider using a
for sporting events that

credit card to make the
purchase. If a problem
arises, federal regulations may limit your
liability. Also, your credit card company may
have a buyer protection
program. Other payment
methods might not have
these kinds of protections.
My ofﬁce’s Economic
Crimes Unit, a division
of the Consumer Protection Section, has pursued several ticket scam
cases, including one that
led to the incarceration
of a Coshocton husband
and wife who took more
than $200,000 from hundreds of victims throughout the U.S. and Canada
by falsely advertising
tickets on Craigslist.
The key word to avoid
being the victim of a
ticket scam is vigilance.
If you see an ad for
sporting event tickets
that seems suspicious or
detect a potential scam,
contact the Ohio Attorney General’s Ofﬁce at
800-282-0515 or visit
www.OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY …
Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 5, the 279th day of
2016. There are 87 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Oct. 5, 1986, in
an incident that helped
expose the Iran-Contra
affair, a plane secretly
ferrying supplies to
Nicaraguan Contra rebels was shot down over
southern Nicaragua by
Sandinista forces. One
of the plane’s occupants,
Eugene Hasenfus, parachuted to safety while
three other men were
killed. Hasenfus was
captured, tried and convicted in Nicaragua, but
then was pardoned and
allowed to return to the
United States.
On this date:
In 1829, the 21st
president of the United
States, Chester Alan
Arthur, was born in
North Fairﬁeld, Vermont.
In 1931, Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon
completed the ﬁrst nonstop ﬂight across the
Paciﬁc Ocean, arriving
in Washington state

some 41 hours after
leaving Japan.
In 1941, former
Supreme Court Justice
Louis D. Brandeis, the
ﬁrst Jewish member
of the nation’s highest
court, died in Washington at age 84.
In 1947, President
Harry S. Truman delivered the ﬁrst televised
White House address as
he spoke on the world
food crisis.
In 1953, Earl Warren
was sworn in as the
14th chief justice of the
United States, succeeding Fred M. Vinson.
In 1969, the British
TV comedy program
“Monty Python’s Flying
Circus” made its debut
on BBC 1.
In 1970, British trade
commissioner James
Richard Cross was kidnapped in Canada by
militant Quebec separatists; he was released the
following December.
In 1974, the Irish
Republican Army
bombed two pubs in
Guildford, Surrey, England, resulting in ﬁve
deaths and dozens of
injuries. (Four men who
became known as the

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“My friends are my ‘estate.’ Forgive me then
the avarice to hoard them.”
— Emily Dickinson, American poet (18301886)
Guildford Four were
convicted of the bombings, but were ultimately
vindicated.)
In 1984, the space
shuttle Challenger blasted off from the Kennedy
Space Center on an
8-day mission; the crew
included Kathryn D. Sullivan, who became the
ﬁrst American woman
to walk in space, and
Marc Garneau, the ﬁrst
Canadian astronaut.
In 1988, Democrat
Lloyd Bentsen lambasted Republican Dan
Quayle during their
vice-presidential debate,
telling Quayle, “Senator, you’re no Jack Kennedy.”
In 1990, a jury in
Cincinnati acquitted
an art gallery and its
director of obscenity
charges stemming from
an exhibit of sexually
graphic photographs by
the late Robert Mapplethorpe.

In 1999, two packed
commuter trains collided near London’s Paddington Station, killing
31 people.
Ten years ago: The
House ethics committee
opened an investigation into the unfolding
congressional page sex
scandal that resulted
in the resignation of
U.S. Rep. Mark Foley,
R-Fla. (The panel later
issued a report that was
critical of Republican
lawmakers and aides,
but which also found
that no rules had been
broken.) Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice
visited Baghdad, where
she warned Iraqi leaders
they had limited time to
settle their differences.
NATO took over eastern
Afghanistan from U.S.led forces, assuming
control of 12,000 American troops and extending its military role to
the entire country.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Argo

not want to leave the
spot until he convinced
his handler otherwise.
Between the pair, they
From page 1
seized around $35,000 in
trained to climb ladders
cash at various drug and
and the decision was
trafﬁc stops, not includmade by the dog.
ing ﬁrearms or drugs
Darst told another
they discovered. Argo
story in which Argo was
was available to assist vilsitting inside the cruiser
lage police departments
with Darst and a man
as well as the Ohio State
had come up to pat Darst
Highway Patrol when
on the shoulder. Argo
necessary. He had assistroughed up the interior
ed with police operations
of the vehicle in protest,
outside of Gallia County,
thinking the man was
as well.
going to hurt Darst.
Argo started to work
“He wasn’t very
with
Darst when he was
sociable,” Darst said. “He
roughly
2½ years old.
was kind of a street dog
Argo
retired
in early
and he was all about busiApril
due
to
continuing
ness.”
health problems.
The deputy said even
“It’s been pretty rough
when another dog was
(with
the loss of Argo)
present as Argo was
and
you
try to be tough,”
attempting to scent out a
Darst
said.
“I just feel like
target, he was more ﬁxa
part
of
me
died. You
ated on getting the job
spend
two
years
going
done than worrying about
to
work
with
somebody
another dog barking at
every day, it’s hard. There
him. The deputy noted
the extreme loyalty of his was a care from him you
partner and, despite some couldn’t beat.
“There was just this
of his rougher aspects,
loyalty and a bond with
their bond was unbreakhim. I loved that dog and
able. Darst said Argo
he loved me. He served
could even be protective
the community well and
of money collected after
I like to think he made a
a bust.
“If he thought someone difference. I’m just glad
was going to hurt me, that I can give him a little
respect and honor.”
wasn’t going to happen,”
Argo joins Jeck, another
Darst said. “He was hellbent on being by my side. recently passed deputy
K-9, with honors from the
When we were together
on patrol, I never worried Gallia Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
Deputies held a ﬁnal
because I knew he was
call for Argo on Sunday.
there for me.”
“Gallia County to all
Darst said Argo had a
way about him when he
listening personnel. This
knew a person was hiding is a ﬁnal call for K-9 Argo
in a structure. He would
of the Gallia County Sher-

Cops: Woman fatally shot in
suspected murder-suicide
CLEVELAND (AP) — Police say a woman has
been fatally shot inside a Cleveland fast-food restaurant and the man suspected of killing her has died
of an apparently self-inﬂicted gunshot wound.
Authorities say the suspected murder-suicide
occurred around 8 a.m. Tuesday at a Burger King
on Cleveland’s west side. Police say the man’s body
was found inside a bathroom at the restaurant.
WJW-TV is reporting the woman may have been
a restaurant employee.
Neither the man nor the woman has been identiﬁed. Both died at the scene.
Cleveland police declined to provide additional
details about the shootings.

Ohio elections chief: Over
957,000 ask for absentee ballots
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The number of Ohioans who have asked for an absentee ballot ahead of
the November presidential election is closing in on
1 million.
Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted says
more than 957,000 absentee ballot applications
were received as of Friday. That’s 35,000 more than
at this point in the 2012 election.
Almost 15,000 of the requests for an absentee
ballot are from military and overseas voters.
Residents in the swing state can vote absentee by
mail or in person without having to give a reason.
Military and overseas voters can already cast ballots for the Nov. 8 election. Early voting for other
Ohioans begins on Oct. 12.

Ohio inmate’s sentence
lengthened for anthrax hoax
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio inmate
accused of sending a judge a suspicious letter and
powder in an anthrax hoax and instructing a second inmate to do the same has pleaded guilty and
had three years added to his sentence.

From page 1

throughout the region’s
18 counties, which
includes 84 school districts.
According to information provided by Meigs

Local Supterintendent
Scot Gheen, during the
recent transition period
of the superintendent
position which began in
January, Johnson took on
many added duties above
his regular responsibilities.
“Roy is one of the
greatest additions to our

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

56°

72°

67°

Mostly sunny and nice today. Clear tonight.
High 79° / Low 51°

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.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
Trace
0.33
37.94
33.47

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:28 a.m.
7:04 p.m.
11:32 a.m.
10:03 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Oct 9

Full

Oct 16

Last

Oct 22

New

Oct 30

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

Major
Today 3:14a
Thu. 4:04a
Fri.
4:55a
Sat.
5:45a
Sun. 6:35a
Mon. 7:24a
Tue. 8:11a

Minor
9:25a
10:16a
11:07a
11:58a
12:22a
1:11a
1:58a

Major
3:36p
4:28p
5:19p
6:10p
7:00p
7:49p
8:37p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
80/51
Very High

Minor
9:48p
10:39p
11:31p
---12:48p
1:37p
2:24p

WEATHER HISTORY
Philadelphia experienced the last of
a series of 25 consecutive dry days
on Oct. 5, 1968. Chronic drought also
plagued the mid-Atlantic states from
1961 to 1965.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.67
16.31
21.58
13.06
12.93
25.17
13.10
25.67
34.48
13.05
15.20
33.90
13.90

Portsmouth
80/52

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.07
+0.16
+0.19
+0.29
-0.18
-0.02
none
-0.34
-0.21
-0.04
-1.30
-0.50
-2.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

SUNDAY

tricts and community.
Abbott, who is serving his 22nd year on the
board, was nominated by
fellow board members
from Meigs Local.
Abbott has been elected to the board six times,
having served three years
as president and seven
years as vice president.

MONDAY

63°
41°

65°
47°

Mostly cloudy and not
as warm

Cool with sunshine
and patchy clouds

More sun than clouds

Marietta
78/51

Murray City
78/50
Belpre
79/49

Athens
78/49

St. Marys
78/51

Parkersburg
79/50

Coolville
78/50

Elizabeth
79/52

Spencer
77/52

Buffalo
78/51
Milton
79/52

St. Albans
80/53

Huntington
81/53

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
62/49
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
70/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
76/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Dean Wright can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2103.

TUESDAY

67°
46°
Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
81/52

Ashland
81/52
Grayson
80/53

Argo and Darst’s parting
code numbers as they
signed off every shift on
the radio. Thirty-seven
stands for off-duty and
43 means a deputy has
returned home.
“We were fortunate to
have our time with him,”
said Gallia Sheriff Joe
Browning. “He actually
was responsible for quite
a few drug seizures and
criminal apprehensions.
Argo was a good dog.”

69°
47°

Wilkesville
79/49
POMEROY
Jackson
78/50
79/50
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
78/51
79/51
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
78/56
GALLIPOLIS
79/51
79/51
78/52

South Shore Greenup
80/52
79/51

46

Logan
78/50

McArthur
78/50

Very High

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 4597

Comfortable with
plenty of sunshine

Adelphi
79/50
Chillicothe
79/51

tion and community
business leader.
Abbott was recognized
with the Outstanding
School Board Member
award. The award is presented to school board
members in the region
for their outstanding
service to their boards
of education, school dis-

SATURDAY

80°
58°

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

Waverly
79/50

Pollen: 4

Low

MOON PHASES

Pleasant with plenty
of sun

0

Primary: cladosporium

Thu.
7:29 a.m.
7:03 p.m.
12:25 p.m.
10:44 p.m.

FRIDAY

79°
53°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

80°
54°
72°
49°
93° in 1941
29° in 1974

THURSDAY

iff’s Ofﬁce as he reports
to his ﬁnal duty station,”
crackled a voice on the
radio. “K-9 Argo passed
away today, Sunday, Oct.
2, 2016, after two years of
service. He carries with
him our gratitude and
appreciation for his sacriﬁce to protect and serve
Gallia County, his handler
Deputy Darst and the
community. K-9 Argo is
three-seven-four-three for
the ﬁnal time. God bless
and rest in peace.”
Thirty-seven and 43 are

achievement and educational excellence.
Nominations are made
in nine “outstanding”
categories: student
program, male student,
female student, faculty member, volunteer,
administrator, treasurer,
classiﬁed staff member,
new program or innova-

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

school district in many
years,” stated Meigs
Local Board of Education
member Larry Tucker in
nominating Johnson for
the honor.
The region recognition
program was established
in 1993 as a way to help
local school districts
showcase outstanding

Courtesy photo

Gallia County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Jerry Darst stands with his
partner, Argo. The Gallia County K-9 deputy passed away Sunday
after two years of service with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office.
Argo would have been 6 years old in December. Argo was a fullytrained patrol dog skilled in suspect apprehension, narcotics
detection, tracking and more. Darst has said he knew when he and
the dog were together he never had to worry because Argo would
be there for him.

Clendenin
79/52
Charleston
80/51

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

Montreal
70/52

Winnipeg
54/38
Billings
49/34

Minneapolis
69/51

Toronto
72/54
Chicago
77/62
Detroit
77/62

Denver
68/37

New York
69/55
Washington
70/57

Kansas City
79/65

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
75/48/s
51/34/s
81/60/pc
68/57/pc
69/51/pc
49/34/c
62/42/pc
63/49/s
80/51/s
76/58/pc
59/34/pc
77/62/pc
80/58/s
78/59/s
78/56/s
92/73/pc
68/37/pc
79/62/pc
77/62/pc
84/72/c
90/72/pc
81/62/s
79/65/pc
82/59/s
90/67/pc
76/56/s
85/62/s
87/79/t
69/51/r
88/58/s
90/74/s
69/55/pc
88/69/pc
89/77/t
71/54/pc
89/65/s
74/51/s
65/43/s
73/60/pc
71/54/c
82/70/pc
58/39/sh
70/53/s
62/49/sh
70/57/pc

Hi/Lo/W
74/46/s
51/34/s
80/66/s
72/59/pc
72/55/s
51/37/c
63/43/pc
69/51/s
80/52/s
77/61/pc
49/29/r
80/65/t
81/56/s
80/57/s
79/55/s
90/69/pc
52/35/r
79/49/t
79/60/s
86/74/pc
92/67/pc
84/58/s
79/48/t
81/58/s
91/64/s
86/58/s
85/58/s
86/78/r
67/45/r
86/56/s
88/74/s
74/56/s
87/55/t
86/77/t
75/55/s
89/65/s
75/53/s
70/48/s
75/63/pc
73/57/pc
88/67/pc
61/41/pc
72/53/s
62/51/c
74/55/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
81/60

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
84/58
Chihuahua
89/54

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

96° in Edinburg, TX
7° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
111° in Mecca, Saudi Arabia
Low -16° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
90/72
Monterrey
92/69

Miami
87/79

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

60647073

NEWS FROM AROUND
THE BUCKEYE STATE

Meigs

Wednesday, October 5, 2016 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

'/.8/=.+CM��-&gt;9,/&lt;� M� �� �s�

Don’t tell
Meyer
OSU is a
surprise
Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS – When
Urban Meyer said he was
not surprised by the success of so many young
players at Ohio State this
season at his weekly press
conference on Monday, it
was nothing new.
Meyer has a long history of avoiding the word
“surprised” when asked to
evaluate the success of a
player, a unit on his team,
an opponent or an entire
league.
For example…
— On Sept. 16, he said
he was not surprised by
the success of the Big
Ten’s football teams in
their early part of their
schedules.
— On Nov. 28, 2015, he
said he was not surprised
by Jim Harbaugh’s success in his ﬁrst season at
Michigan.
— On July 18, 2015, he
said he was not surprised
by Braxton Miller’s decision to stay at Ohio State
instead of doing a graduate transfer.
— On Jan. 6, 2015, he
responded to question
about whether he was surprised by players like Darron Lee, Eli Apple, Joey
Bosa and Ezekiel Elliott
playing well in their ﬁrst
year as starters by saying
he was not.
— On Aug. 15, 2013,
he said he was not surprised by the success his
former assistant coach
Charlie Strong was having
See OSU | 7

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE
Wednesday, October 5
Volleyball
River Valley at South
Gallia, 7:15
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 7 p.m.
Golf
Point Pleasant at WV
State Meet, 9 a.m.
Gallia Academy, Meigs
at D-2 District at Crown
Hill, 9 a.m.
Cross Country
Meigs, South Gallia,
Southern at Alexander,
4:30
College Volleyball
Mount Vernon Nazarene University at Rio
Grande, 6 p.m.
Thursday, October 6
Volleyball
Eastern at Southern,
7:15
Wahama at South Gallia, 7:15
Hannan at Ohio Valley
Christian, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley Christian
at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at River
Valley, 7:15
Portsmouth at Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 7 p.m.
Soccer
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian
at Teays Valley Christian,
4:30
College Soccer
Rio Grande men at
Ohio Christian University, 4 p.m.
Rio Grande women at
Ohio Christian University, 2 p.m.

Meigs senior Morgan Lodwick (11) attempts a spike past Lady Eagles Morgain Little and Allison Barber, during the Lady Marauders’ 3-1 win, on Monday at EHS.

Meigs avenges Lady Eagles, 3-1
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
Revenge can either taste sweet
or bitter, depending on which
side you’re on.
The Meigs volleyball team
— which dropped a 3-1 decision to Eastern on August 25,
in Rocksprings — avenged
that setback on Monday night,
defeating the Lady Eagles by a
3-1 count at ‘The Nest’.
Meigs (7-10) jumped out to a
ﬁve-point lead, early in the ﬁrst
game, but Eastern (9-7) fought
back and took its ﬁrst lead at
12-11. The Lady Eagles led
by as much as ﬁve, at 18-13,
but MHS rallied back to take
the advantage at 21-20. EHS
tied the game at 23, but surrendered the next two points,
giving Meigs a 25-23 win and a
1-0 lead in the match.
The Lady Marauders claimed
the ﬁrst point of the second
game, but EHS scored the next
four points to take the advantage. Meigs tied the at nine
and again at 11, but the Lady
Marauders never regained the
lead. Eastern won the second
game by 25-19 clip, evening
the match at one game apiece.
The Maroon and Gold
claimed a four-point lead, early

in the third game, but Eastern
battled back to take the lead
at 9-8. Meigs immediately
regained the edge at 10-9, but
Eastern was back in control
at 16-13. However, the Lady
Marauders answered with a 6-0
run to take the lead back. EHS
never recovered, falling by a
25-20 count and giving MHS a
2-1 advantage in the match.
The Lady Marauders scored
the ﬁrst 10 points of the fourth
game and never trailed en
route to the 25-20 win, which
capped off the 3-1 match victory.
“I’m ecstatic, this was a
big win for us with only six
matches left in the season,”
Meigs head coach Lori Carter
said. “Coming here to Eastern,
when they beat us so badly
early in the season, it just
shows how much growth we
have had. We were able to stay
consistent, not make as many
errors, and just play smart volleyball.”
Meigs had dropped three
consecutive decisions before
Monday.
The Lady Eagles — who had
won back-to-back matches and
four of their last ﬁve, headed
into Monday — had a total of
60 errors in the setback.
“They need to focus, that’s

Photos by Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern senior Katlyn Barber (2) and junior Mackenzie Brooks (11) team-up for
a block, during the Lady Eagles’ 3-1 loss to Meigs, on Monday in Tuppers Plains.

ridiculous,” EHS head coach
Katie Williams said. “I wasn’t
expecting that, I thought we
were going to come in and roll
right off of our momentum.

Even in taking a loss to Waterford, we went to ﬁve (games)
and played hard. I thought we
See MEIGS | 7

Belpre sweeps Lady Falcons
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Southern’s Amanda Cole (4) connects for a spike
over South Gallia’s Rachal Colburn (6) during
Monday night’s Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division volleyball match at Southern High School.

RACINE, Ohio — Truth be told, it’s an
estimated hour bus ride for the South Gallia Lady Rebels to Southern High School.
That said, it took the Southern Lady
Tornadoes only 45 minutes to send South
Gallia back down the road.
In dominating fashion, in a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division volleyball
match on Monday night, host Southern
swept the Lady Rebels 25-14, 25-7 and
25-4.
Senior-laden Southern simply rolled the
young Lady Rebels from start to ﬁnish,
never trailing at any point in any of the
three games.
In each instance, the Tornadoes tallied
the ﬁrst three points in each set, as their
slimmest margin once the Rebels registered a point was 3-1 in each of the ﬁnal
two frames.
With the win, Southern keeps pace with
TVC-Hocking leader Waterford, which
is undefeated in the division — and has

handed the Lady Tornadoes their only
league loss.
Southern stands at 11-1 and in secondplace in the league, part of an impressive
15-2 mark overall.
Monday’s match was also the Purple
and Gold’s ﬁfth consecutive victory.
The loss left the Lady Rebels at 2-13,
and 2-10 in the TVC-Hocking.
South Gallia has also dropped four of its
past ﬁve matches in straight games.
In the opening set, Southern scored
the ﬁrst ﬁve points before South Gallia
gained two straight — getting as close as
it would get the rest of the game.
The Tornadoes tacked on points in
bunches, scoring four straight to make
it 9-2, six straight to make it 15-3, and
another ﬁve in a row to make it 20-5.
The Tornadoes’ largest lead was 23-8
following a Kamryn Smith kill, but the
Rebels reeled off six consecutive counters
of their own.
However, another Smith kill combined
See BELPRE | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 5, 2016 7

Belpre

hosts halted the spree.
South Gallia got its
ﬁnal point on a net violaFrom page 6
tion immediately following, but Southern closed
out the match with the
with an attack error
ended the game at 25-14. ﬁnal ﬁve points —punctuated by a Faith Teaford
In similar fashion in
kill.
game two, the TornaSmith led in kills with
does opened with the
six and Teaford followed
ﬁrst three points, then
extended the lead to 18-6 with four, as Teaford
also added a pair of solo
— before scoring the
ﬁnal seven points for the blocks.
Smith was also 15-of25-7 ﬁnal.
In fact, the Rebels’ only 18 passing, as she landpoints in the period were ed 18 serves along with
16 by Marissa Johnson.
two kills by Erin Evans
Marlee Maynard manand one by Rachal Colaged 62 sets.
burn —combined with
The Rebels returned
a pair of attack errors, a
home, and returned to
service error and ﬁnally
TVC-Hocking Division
a hitting error.
action, on Tuesday night
In the ﬁnal game,
against Trimble.
Southern once again
South Gallia will host
opened with three in
Gallia County rival River
a row, then led 6-2 as
Valley on Wednesday
South Gallia gained
night, while the Tornapoints on another Coldoes took to the road on
burn kill and attack
Tuesday night at TVCmiscue.
From there, the Torna- Hocking foe Federal
Hocking.
does amassed the next
14 points, as only a lift
Paul Boggs can be reached at
violation against the
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

OSU
From page 6

as Louisville’s head
coach.
“I don’t like the word
‘surprise.’ That’s disrespectful, realizing that
we have talented guys,”
Meyer said on Monday.
Ohio State, with 16
ﬁrst-time starters, is the
youngest FBS team in
the country.
But that mostly inexperienced team is 4-0
overall and 1-0 in the
Big Ten and ranks third
nationally in scoring
(57.0), fourth in total
offense (576.3) and third
in total defense (237.8).
While the ﬁrst takeaway from OSU’s 58-0
win over Rutgers last
week in its Big Ten opener was that the Scarlet
Knights were completely
overmatched, the Buckeyes did produce a dominating performance.
And the depth of talent Ohio State showed in
that game went beyond
the 16 ﬁrst-year starters.
Players like Terry
McLaurin, Parris Campbell, Johnnie Dixon and
Binjimen Victor scored
touchdowns, or in Victor’s case, looked good in
their ﬁrst game action.
Meyer held Victor up
as an example of how
much a young player can
improve.
“If you said three
weeks ago he was going
to play, he had a hard
time lining up, didn’t go
hard, and kind of quit
in the middle of plays.
Now, all of a sudden, he’s
a guy. He’s going to be a
hell of a player here,” he
said.
“The young players,
you really enjoy coaching
them. I think it’s great.
I’m excited to get out for
another day of practice,”
Meyer said. “Once, as
they say, the game slows
down, you start to see
some terriﬁc players
develop.”
Ohio State’s next
test on-the-ﬁeld will be
against Indiana at 3:30
p.m. Saturday at Ohio
Stadium.
The Hoosiers (3-1, 1-0
Big Ten) are coming off
a 24-21 overtime win
over Michigan State last
Saturday night.
No surprise, Ohio
State’s players say
they’re not surprised
by how well Indiana
appears to be playing.

“I wasn’t really surprised (by Indiana
beating MSU),” OSU
linebacker Chris Worley
said. “In college football,
anybody can get beat
any Saturday. That’s how
it goes down.” Notes:
BIG TEN AWARD:
Freshman running back
Mike Weber was named
Big Ten Freshman of the
Week after rushing for
144 yards in OSU’s 58-0
win over Rutgers last
Saturday.
TEAM AWARDS:
Meyer named Ohio
State’s entire defense as
the Players of the Game
on that side of the ball
and said Barrett and
Weber were the Offensive Players of the Game.
PRAISE FOR
BAUGH: Meyer said
tight end Marcus Baugh
“played his best game as
an Ohio State Buckeye”
against Rutgers.
The sophomore tight
end caught only one pass
in that game but it was
a 16-yard touchdown
catch.
INJURY UPDATE:
Linebacker Dante
Booker, who has not
played since suffering
a sprained MCL in the
opener against Bowling
Green, is “probable” this
week, Meyer said.
K.J. Hill (high ankle
sprain) is “getting close”
and Demetrius Knox
(broken foot) is out for
several weeks.
STATS CLARIFICATION: According to
Ohio State’s record book,
J.T. Barrett broke Bob
Hoying’s record of 57
touchdown passes in his
career last Saturday.
In reality, Terrelle
Pryor also threw 57 TD
passes in his career.
But he is nowhere to
be found in the record
book.
After Pryor and four
other Buckeyes were discovered trading memorabilia for tattoos, Ohio
State vacated its wins
from the 2010 season in
July 2011. It also deleted
any 2010 stats or accomplishments for the ﬁve
players involved after
they were suspended.
But it did not vacate
all statistics from that
season.
The ﬁve players were:
running back Dan Herron, receiver DeVier
Posey, offensive lineman
Mike Adams, linebacker
Solomon Thomas and
Pryor.

ADVERTISE!

Courtesy photos

The Southern Tornadoes took to the links for the final time this season on Monday —and finished ninth out of 10 teams in the Division
III district golf tournament at the Portsmouth Elks Country Club.

Tornadoes take 9th in district golf
By Paul Boggs

three players all posted
scores in the 90s — as
junior Jonah Hoback
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio and sophomore Jensen
— The Southern Torna- Anderson each ﬁred a
does took to the links for pair of 92s.
Hoback had a 43 on
the ﬁnal time this seathe front nine holes and
son on Monday —and
a 49 for the back, while
ﬁnished ninth out of 10
teams in the Division III Anderson amounted a
district golf tournament pair of 46s.
Sophomore Jarrett
at the Portsmouth Elks
Hupp had a 48 on the
Country Club.
front and a 46 on the
Southern, having
back for an 18-hole total
advanced to the disof 94.
trict meet following its
The top four scores
fourth-place ﬁnish in
the sectional meet, shot counted towards the
team total, as sophoa team total of 385 —
more Ryan Acree added
ahead of only Huntingthe fourth counting card
ton (391) by six single
with a 107.
strokes of the 10 clubs
Senior Tanner Thorla,
competing.
in his ﬁnal match on
Unfortunately for the
Monday, was the nonTornadoes, only the
counting score with a
top two teams — and
110.
top two individuals not
Individually, Chesaon a qualifying squad
peake senior Derek
— advance to the state
The 2016 Southern High School golf team seniors are, from left,
Lemley landed a smooth Ashley Acree, Tanner Thorla and Eli Hunter.
meet.
76 to capture medalist
Those were a pair of
Lynchburg-Clay’s Eric
up honors with West
Adams County clubs — honors —and punched
Mclaughlin mustered an
Union’s Elijah McCarty
his ticket to his second
West Union at 330 and
86.
with a 79.
straight state meet.
North Adams at 342.
The Tornadoes of
All of the other 57
Lemley turned in a
Adena (359) edged
2016 say goodbye to
individual scores were
39 on the front side,
Waterford (361) for
three seniors —Thorla,
81 or higher, including
followed by a 37 on the
third, while SoutheastEli Hunter and Ashley
the two lone individual
ern (370) clipped Chesa- back.
players from Peebles and Acree.
The other individual
peake (375), Coal Grove
Lynchburg-Clay.
qualiﬁer was Broc Jor(378) and Manchester
Peebles’ Bostin Ribdan of Western, who
(381) for ﬁfth.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740shared medalist runner- inson shot an 82, while
The Tornadoes’ top
446-2342, ext. 2106
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Players say farewell to Arnold Palmer
packed with golf’s biggest names from around
the world.
Charlie Mechem, the
former LPGA commissioner who became one
of Palmer’s most trusted
advisers, referred to
them as the “elite battalion” of Arnie’s Army.
Palmer died Sept.
25 in Pittsburgh as he
was preparing for heart
surgery. He was 87. His
private funeral for family
members was Thursday.
“We were looking
down at the air strip and
the fog just suddenly
lifted,” Ernie Els said
Tuesday after landing
in one of several private
jets that descended on
Arnold Palmer Regional
Airport. “This is a

beautiful day. We’ve all
met different people in
life. He was a man who
didn’t change. It didn’t
matter if you cut the
grass or you were a president. He was the same
with everybody.”
Palmer’s co-pilot, Pete
Luster, ﬂew his plane
around Saint Vincent
College for nearly an
hour before the service,
tipping the left wing as
he zoomed by.
Mechem set a happy
tone by pointing to a
large photograph of
Palmer with a grin that
made everyone feel so
important. He asked
the crowd to remember
the Palmer who hitched
up his pants and gave a
thumbs-up.

“There’s an old saying that there are no
irreplaceable people,”
Mechem said, his voice
cracking toward the
end of the ceremony.
“Whoever made that
line didn’t know Arnold
Palmer. There will never
be another.”
Palmer won 62 times
on the PGA Tour, including seven major championships.
The service was
another reminder that
Palmer was not the
greatest golfer who ever
lived, or even the best
from his generation. He
just had the greatest
inﬂuence through television, through marketing
and mostly through eye
contact.

point and one ace in the
win.
Katlyn Barber led
Eastern with 10 service
From page 6
points and one ace, while
Morgan Baer added
were carrying a lot of
momentum, but I guess I nine points and one ace.
Allison Barber ﬁnished
was wrong.”
with seven points and
Meigs’ service attack
was led by Devyn Oliver three aces, while Abby
Litchﬁeld and Mackenwith 15 points and ﬁve
zie Brooks both had six
aces, followed by Maddie Fields with 13 points points, including three
aces and one ace respecand two aces. Kassidy
Betzing posted 11 points tively. Kelsey Casto
marked ﬁve service
and one ace, Maddie
points in the setback,
Hendricks added seven
Morgain Little added
points and three aces,
three points, while Abbie
Alliyah Pullins chipped
Hawley had one point to
in with six points and
round out the EHS sertwo aces, while Jordan
Roush ﬁnished with one vice attack.

Pullins led MHS at
the net with 14 kills,
followed by Betzing
with 11. Oliver had nine
kills and a team-best 11
assists in the win, Paige
Denney added one kill,
while Fields contributed
eight assists. Pullins also
led the MHS defensive
effort with six digs.
Katlyn Barber also
paced the Lady Eagles at
the net with 13 kills and
one block. Brooks posted
12 kills for the Green,
White and Gold, Allison
Barber added 11 kills and
a team-best two blocks,
while Little added nine
kills and one block. Baer
and Casto each had one

kill in the match, with
Baer marking a matchhigh 42 assists. EHS
junior libero Elayna Bissell led the EHS defense
with 14 digs, followed by
Allison Barber with 12.
Meigs visits Nelsonville-York on Tuesday
and then the Lady
Marauders will return
home for a match with
league-leading Athens,
on Thursday.
After meeting Belpre
on Tuesday, EHS will
return to action on
Thursday, when Southern visits ‘The Nest’.

LATROBE, Pa. (AP)
— With a large tear
forming in his left eye,
Jack Nicklaus asked
everyone from the
elite to the everyman
to remember the time
Arnold Palmer touched
their lives during an
emotional farewell to the
King on Tuesday.
“I hurt like you hurt,”
Nicklaus said. “You
don’t lose a friend of 60
years and don’t feel an
enormous loss.”
The service at Saint
Vincent College in
Palmer’s hometown was
ﬁlled with just as much
laughter and warmth
from stories of the most
signiﬁcant player in the
modern game. The basilica at the college was

Meigs

Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, October 5, 2016

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Professional Services

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Forestry, 345 Allen Avenue,
Chillicothe, OH, 45601 offers
for sale an estimated 112,953
board feet International ¼”
rule of hardwood sawtimber,
994 tons of hardwood pulpwood, and 1,161 tons of softwood pulpwood on 38 acres in
compartments A-4/7 of Shade
River State Forest, Olive
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. The bid opening shall be
October 27, 2016 at
3:00 pm in Chillicothe. For
further information and timber
inspection, contact the
Hocking State Forest office;
19275 SR 374; Rockbridge,
OH 43149; (740) 385-4402
OR ODNR Division of
Forestry, Southern District
headquarters; 345 Allen Ave.;
Chillicothe, OH 45601;
(740) 774-1596 ext. 111
10/4/16 &amp; 10/5/16
Lost &amp; Found

OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH

Lost Yorkie on Jericho road in
Point Pleasant $500 reward
304-675-7397
Notices
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.

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.

$$$$$$$$$

Daily Sentinel

Wanted
WANTED: Someone to sit with
elderly lady in her home in
Bidwell,OH the
pay is 10.00 a hour
Call Kevin (740) 645-9602
Miscellaneous
Santa's Sewing &amp; Mending
302 Rock Lick Rd off Rt 218
2 miles north Mercerville.
cell # 740-645-1260

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

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

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
Older 8 room house with 4 lots,
on the Ohio River at 22842
Bucktown Rd, Letart, Ohio.
Electric, Water, Air Conditioner, Furnace, Septic System.
Sold as is, asking $51,000. For
more info call 740-416-7039
Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
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

Immaculate 2 BR apt.
Appliances, W/D hook-ups,
water/trash paid. 10 minutes
from town. $425/mo
614-595-7773 or
740-645-5953
Recently Renovated Clean
2 Bdr. Conveniently located
Reference and Deposit,
No Pets, No Smoking
304-675-5162

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**New Starting Wages**
**$2,000.00 Sign-on Bonus**
**New Experience Scale**

Arbors at Pomeroy
36759 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(740) 992-6606
WWW�ARBORSATPOMEROY�COM s EOE

60683137

Miscellaneous

Rentals
2 bdrm mobile home
on farm. $500.00 mo.
includes water,
new paint, carpet
540-729-1331
For rent 2 bedroom mobile
home furnished 10 minutes
from Point Pleasant
500 a month 500 deposit and
refrences 304-593-3707
Miscellaneous
Small Black Bear fully
mounted on all 4-legs $850.00.
also, Remington model 11-48,
410 GA. looks new #795.00.
Ironton, Oh 740-533-3870
RVs/Campers
07 Keystone Everest 33' 5th
Wheel, 2 BR, 1.5 BA, 3 Slide,
3 Bunk, New Sleeper Sofa, Excellent Condition- Must see to
appreciate. $18,500 OBO
(304)675-7111
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
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

NEW WAGE RATE
Overbrook Center, a privately owned 100 bed Skilled Nursing
Facility at 333 Page St., Middleport, OH, currently has opportunities available for F/T RNҋs &amp; LPNҋs to join our outstanding team
of professional caregivers. We appreciate our employees!
Come and experience the Overbrook Difference! Applications
available on site Mon.-Fri. 8:30AM-5:00PM or contact Susie
Drehel, Staff Development Coord. At 740-992-6472. EOE &amp; a
participant of the Drug-Free Workplace Program.

Help Wanted General

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&amp;YQFSJFODF�3FRVJSFE
t�4BMBSZ�%FQFOEFOU�
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RN &amp; LPN

Help Wanted General

60583312

Small Engine Mechanic:
F/T Position w/benefits

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.

LEGALS

Help Wanted General

TO ALL PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE
ESTATE OF NELLIE BELLE
CORNELL, DECEASED,
LATE OF PORTLAND
ROUTE 1, PORTLAND, OH.
MEIGS COUNTY
CASE NO. 20161104.
An application has been filed
asking to relieve the estate
from administration, saying
that the assets do not exceed
the statutory limits. A hearing
on the application will be held
October 17th, 2016
at 11:00 a.m. Persons
knowing any reason why the
application should not be
granted should appear and
inform the Court. The Court is
located at 100 E. Second St.
Rm 203, Pomeroy, OH 45769
9/28/16,10/5/16,10/12/16

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

Auctions

ESTATE AUCTION

Sat. Oct. 8, 2016 @10:00AM

Located at 620 4th St., New Haven, WV
Selling the Estate of the Late Lovelln Lehew

REAL ESTATE OFFERED AT 12:00 NOON
OPEN HOUSE BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Beautiful Brick 3 BR Home with Garage, Full Basement, Large Front Porch, All Electric, Central
Air, Being Lot No. 9 and the Easterly 26 Feet of Lot No. 10 of Shawers Sub-Division of said Town
of New Haven, WV. Plot Book No.2, Page 40 and DB 212 pg. 67-68.
FURNITURE: Waltham Grandfather Clock, 4 pc BR Suite, Nice 2 pc LR Suite with Incliners, Large
Big Man’s Recliner, Round Oak Table and four Pressed Back Chairs, Johnson Carper BR Suite,
Walnut DR Suite, Cedar Chest, 3 pc Wicker Set, Two Marble Top Fern Stands, Oak Glider Rocker,
Park Bench, Swing, Co-op Chest Freezer, 7 pc Wood Divet Set, Plus More
MISC: Kirby Sweeper, Glassware, Lining &amp; Lawn Tools, Sterling S &amp; P, Cookware, Swiss Family
Robison Books, Costume Jewelry, Silver Bridge 45 Records, Plus Much More!
AUTO 2005 Dodge Neon SXT 4-door, 64,307 miles; 2000 Dodge Stratus SE 4-door, 135, 000 miles
TERMS ON REAL ESTATE: 10% Down Non-Refundable Day of Auction. balance 30
days or Delivery of Deed Sold. By Confirmation of Final Bid by Owner, Potential
Buyer’s Responsible for Any Inspections. Being sold As-Is with No Guarantee.
Open House Sun., Oct. 2, 2016 2-4 or by Appointment.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

FOOD.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR #1955
1-304-593-5118 or 1-304-773-5447
Marvin Goett, Executor

www.AuctionZip.com for Pictures and Complete Listing.

60683107

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, October 5, 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 Hilary Price

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5 2 4
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7 1 6 3 9 8 2
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2
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7
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10/05

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

10/05

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8
1
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9
2

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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

By Dave Green

�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Reds’ rebuilding priority: Fix bullpen
CINCINNATI (AP) —
During the ﬁfth inning
of the Reds’ ﬁnal game,
their new general manager held an impromptu
session with reporters at
the back of the press box.
Dick Williams listed the
items on their must-do
list.
The bullpen was at the
top.
Reds relievers were
historically bad in 2016,
the overriding factor in
another lost season. As if
anyone needed a reminder, the bullpen blew a lead
with two outs and none
on in the ninth inning
Sunday as the Chicago
Cubs rallied for a ﬁtting
7-4 win in front of thousands of blue-clad fans.
“We won’t be playing
the high end of the free
agent market, but I could
see us spending some
money on the bullpen,”

said Williams, who takes
over for the retiring Walt
Jocketty in the offseason.
After two years of trading their top players and
rebuilding, the Reds can
see some pieces coming
together in the everyday
lineup and the rotation.
They suffered through a
horriﬁc ﬁrst half, going
32-57 before the All-Star
break with ﬁve starters
spending time on the disabled list.
Once the rotation stabilized and some of the
young players settled in,
they became competitive,
going 36-37 the rest of
the way.
“I think we’re headed
in the right direction,”
said Joey Votto, who batted .408 after the All-Star
break. “We need to add
talent. In my experience,
this is a fun city when we
play good ball and frus-

trating when we’re not.”
The Reds lost 98 games
in 2015 and 94 this year,
the ﬁrst time they’ve
had back-to-back 90-loss
seasons since 1933-34.
Attendance plummeted
from 2.4 million last
season — when Cincinnati hosted the All-Star
Game — to 1,894,085,
the second-lowest in the
league behind Miami.
Cincinnati answered its
biggest offseason question by giving manager
Bryan Price a one-year
contract extension
through 2017.
“I know the managerial position is polarizing
one,” Price said. “I think
people are going to want
to see our team show
real signiﬁcant signs of
improvement. I think the
second half is the ﬁrst
stage of that improvement with our club, and

I’m happy to be here.”
Some takeaways from
the Reds’ season:
YOUNGSTERS
EMERGE: Inﬁelder Jose
Peraza was the most
impressive in a group of
young players who got
their ﬁrst chance in the
majors during the season.
Peraza was among the
NL’s top rookies with a
.324 average, three homers, 25 RBIs and 21 stolen bases. Adam Duvall
led the team with 33
homers and 103 RBIs.
MESORACO’S LATEST COMEBACK: Catcher Devin Mesoraco had a
signiﬁcant operation for
the second year in a row.
A hip problem wiped out
most of his 2015 season,
and shoulder surgery
made him sit out most
of this year. The Reds
expect him back in full
health for spring training,

Jackson leads field; Watson, Ward chasing
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

After one month there
is only one question
when it comes to the
Heisman Trophy: Can
anybody catch Louisville
quarterback Lamar Jackson in the race to college
football’s most prestigious player of the year
award?
With enough games
in the books and a clear
picture of the ﬁeld
emerging, the AP begins
its Heisman Watch with
Jackson holding a commanding lead.
The AP polled seven
of its sports writers who
regularly cover college
football. None are ofﬁcial
Heisman voters because
AP prohibits its reporters
from voting for awards.
Each submitted a top
three and points were
handed out in the same
manner that they are for
the actual Heisman vote.
Three for a ﬁrst-place,
two for second, one for
third.
The Heisman Trophy
will be awarded Dec. 10.
Here are AP’s projections
going into Week 6:
1. Lamar Jackson, QB,
Louisville (21 points)
So far: The sophomore
is the only player in the
country who ranks in

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

University of Louisville sophomore Lamar Jackson rolls out of the
pocket, during the Cardinals’ victory at Marshall, on September 24.

the top 20 in both yards
rushing (137 per game)
and passing (325). He
leads the nation in touchdowns scored with 14
and has accounted for 28
TDs running and passing.
Next: Jackson has this
week off before heading
into a ﬁve-week stretch
of schedule that looks
favorable to say the least
— Duke, North Carolina
State, at Virginia, at Boston College and Wake
Forest. Good luck catching Jackson.
2. Deshaun Watson,
QB, Clemson (7)
So far: The preseason
favorite got off to a bit off

a slow start, but in games
at Auburn and against
Louisville he showed
off that clutchness that
Heisman voters like. The
numbers deﬁnitely have
some room to grow. He
ranks 61st in the country
in passer efﬁciency rating
(138.99), with 14 touchdown passes and seven
interceptions. He has
only run for 211 yards,
with no touchdowns.
Next: at Boston College, Friday night.
3. Greg Ward Jr., QB,
Houston (6)
So far: The senior
has done more damage
as a passer this season,
throwing for 331 yards

per game and completing 70.7 percent of his
throws. When the Cougars have needed him
to make big plays with
his legs he has come
through with ﬁve touchdowns.
Next: at Navy.
4. J.T. Barrett, QB,
Ohio State (4)
So far: The Buckeyes’
junior has only faced one
big opponent, but played
great at Oklahoma. He
is ﬁfth in the nation in
passer rating (183.13)
and has accounted for
17 touchdowns.
Next: Indiana.
5. Christian McCaffrey, RB, Stanford (2)
So far: The junior was
rolling along until the
Cardinal were manhandled last week by Washington and he was held
to 49 yards rushing, plus
30 receiving. He ranks
13th in the nation in
rushing at 121.25 yards
per game, but he’s No.
1 in all-purpose yards at
214.5. Last year’s runnerup needs to pick up the
pace to get back to New
York.
Next: vs. Washington
State
Others receiving votes:
Patrick Mahomes, QB,
Texas Tech (1); Mitch
Trubisky, QB North
Carolina (1).

Browns doomed during 0-4 start
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns
rookie quarterback Cody Kessler
emerged from a workout wearing
a long-sleeved, gray T-shirt that
showed one of the team’s slogans
on the back.
It said: “2016 Cleveland
Browns Turnaround.”
Yeah, a slow, difﬁcult and painful one.
At 0-4, the Browns are the
NFL’s only winless team and the
losing streak to start the season
is being heightened by an alarming eruption of major injuries,
costly turnovers, blown leads,
missed opportunities and just
some rotten luck.
“It’s like nothing can go right,”
wide receiver Terrelle Pryor said
Monday.
Browns ﬁrst-year coach Hue
Jackson entered the season knowing it would be tough balancing
the growth of one of the league’s
youngest teams — Cleveland has
16 rookies on its roster — with
success on the scoreboard and
standings.
“I didn’t think it would be this
difﬁcult,” the cheery Jackson
said, cracking a smile.
“It’s tough, but I’m seeing a lot
of young guys improve. We’re just
not seeing what I want to see,
and what the team wants to see,
on the other side of the ledger.”

Cleveland’s rough start under
Jackson continued on Sunday
with a 31-20 loss to the Washington Redskins, who took advantage of two fumbles — one on a
quick whistle — and an interception thrown by Kessler to put
away the Browns.
The loss included another
signiﬁcant injury as starting
center Austin Reiter tore his left
anterior cruciate ligament in his
ﬁrst pro start and is done for the
season.
Reiter is the eighth starter to
get hurt and continues a constant
shufﬂing of Cleveland’s offensive
line.
Reiter was starting because
John Greco had moved back to
right guard after Jackson benched
Alvin Bailey for one game following his arrest last week on suspicion of operating a vehicle while
impaired.
Greco had taken over at center
after starter Cam Erving sustained a bruised lung in the season opener.
So in four games, the Browns
have had three quarterbacks and
three centers, a troubling scenario for any team to handle never
mind one as inexperienced as the
Browns.
With Erving expected to miss
at least a few more weeks, Greco

anticipates returning to center
and Bailey will be back in the
lineup after Jackson said his punishment is over.
“I don’t hold grudges,” Jackson
said.
Maybe, but it would be understandable if Jackson had some
lingering resentment toward Sunday’s ofﬁcials after the Browns
lost a fumble they recovered.
With Cleveland trailing 24-20
in the fourth quarter, Browns running back Duke Johnson lost the
ball after a 5-yard carry.
As line judge Sara Thomas
looked in the pile to see who had
the ball, Johnson emerged and
held it over his head.
Washington was awarded possession and while the Redskins
didn’t score on their subsequent
drive, the turnover — one of
three straight by Cleveland —
prevented the Browns from scoring and chewed some time off the
clock.
Jackson said Thomas told him
the play couldn’t be reviewed,
just another bad break for the
Browns, who can’t seem to catch
a good one.
“I know people want me to
jump on the ofﬁcials right there
and run on the ﬁeld and go
bananas and all that, but what is
that going to do?” Jackson said.

but his injury history is
troubling.
BAILEY’S EXTENDED
REHAB: Homer Bailey
had several setbacks during his recovering from
Tommy John surgery, limiting him to six starts and
23 innings. The Reds are
hoping he’s fully healthy
next season. Bailey, who
has thrown a pair of nohitters, is owed $63 million over the next three
years. Anthony DeSclafani went 9-5 with a 3.28
ERA in 20 starts, solidifying his spot. Brandon
Finnegan and Dan Straily
earned consideration for
next year’s rotation.
HORRIFIC NUMBERS: The Reds went
into the season with no
proven closer and it cost
them. That blown save in
the ﬁnal game left Cincinnati only 28 of 53 in save
chances. The bullpen

gave up a major league
record 103 homers and
led the league in walks.
Overall, the Reds allowed
258 homers, shattering
the previous major league
mark.
PHILLIPS’ EXTENDED STAY: The second
baseman blocked a trade
to the Nationals, which
would have opened up
more time for a young
player. He batted .291
in 141 games with 11
homers, 64 RBIs and 14
errors, his highest total in
10 years. He’ll make $14
million in the ﬁnal year of
his contract, very pricey
for a team with the Reds’
budget. They’re still interested in trading him, if
he’ll acquiesce.
“We’ll talk to him
again this year,” Williams
said. “I think one area of
depth for us is our middle
inﬁeld.”

Indians back
in the October
spotlight
CLEVELAND (AP) — For months, they’ve been
ignored, overlooked and mostly dismissed.
The Cleveland Indians weren’t supposed to be
playing in October and yet here they are: AL Central champions with a chance to end a World Series
drought approaching its 68th anniversary.
While many baseball fans remain ﬁxated on
the Chicago Cubs, those lovable losers trying to
rewrite baseball history, the Indians have quietly
overcome injuries to put themselves in position to
bring another championship to Cleveland, a city
still giddy after LeBron James and the Cavaliers
won an NBA title this summer.
“We don’t mind if we have to play the underdog,”
said second baseman Jason Kipnis. “We don’t mind
if we have to take people by surprise. We know
what kind of team we’ve got here and the kind
of organization we have here — and we’re pretty
happy with what’s going on.”
The Indians have deﬁned resiliency this season.
They played all but 11 games without star outﬁelder Michael Brantley and didn’t have starting
catcher Yan Gomes for most of the year. Cleveland
lost starters Carlos Carrasco and Danny Salazar
down the stretch to injuries and won’t have them in
the postseason. But the Indians cleared the obstacles thrown at them, motivated by the guidance of
manager Terry Francona.
With unexpected contributions from players like
Jose Ramirez and Mike Napoli, the continued rise
of star shortstop Francisco Lindor and a lights-out
bullpen, they grabbed the division lead in June,
reeled off a 14-game winning streak and never
looked back, dominating rival Detroit and dethroning the defending champion Kansas City Royals,
who ﬁnished 13½ games behind Cleveland.
It didn’t go according to plan, but when does it
ever? And as they prepare to take on the Boston
Red Sox in the best-of-ﬁve division series starting
Thursday, the Indians, who have craved the spotlight for years, are again being given little chance
to advance.
Kipnis and his teammates have grown accustomed to a lack of respect nationally.
“It’s Cleveland,” he said. “It’s a smaller market
and people tend to forget that.”
“It’s OK if we’re not the favorite. We’ve been
proving people wrong all year,” he said. “We have
plenty of people who believe in us.”
Francona leads the Indians ﬂock of faithful.
From the outset of training camp, Francona, who
guided the Red Sox to their ﬁrst World Series title
in 86 years in 2004 and then added another three
years later, has instilled conﬁdence in his players.
By using his entire 25-man roster — and then
some — he’s developed a group that values depth
and understands it takes everyone doing their
share.
That was apparent when the Indians ripped off
14 wins in a row from June 17 to July 2. There was
a different hero every game, and the stretch climaxed with a 19-inning victory in Toronto.
Francona pulled out all the stops in that 2-1
win, even using Game 1 starter Trevor Bauer in
relief for ﬁve shutout innings. The victory sapped
the Indians, but the more-than-two-week winning
streak also bonded them.
“Winning breeds conﬁdence,” Kipnis said. “That
kind of laid the foundation for the season and the
team that we are today. It needs to be all hands on
deck for us to win and we’ll be good if we do that.”
The streak began as the Cavs were rallying from
a 3-1 deﬁcit in the ﬁnals to beat Golden State and
give Cleveland its ﬁrst major sports championship
since 1964.
On June 17, hours before the Cavs would win
Game 7 on the road, fans in Progressive Field alternated chants of “Let’s Go Indians” with “Let’s Go
Cavs” during Cleveland’s 3-2 win in 10 innings over
the Chicago White Sox.

�</text>
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