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                  <text>Talking
women’s
health
NEWS s 2

Today in
History

Bevo
Classic

NEWS s 3

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 187, Volume 70

FOR THE RECORD
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office

Night Shift Reports
Friday, Nov. 18
9:05 p.m. — Dispatch received a third party
call stating that there was a domestic dispute at
a residence in Reedsville on Route 124. Deputies
arrived on scene and spoke with all subjects in
the house and it was determined that while the
family was having an issue with their intoxicated
adult son, no criminal offenses had occurred. After
ensuring everyone in the house was okay and
checking with the home owner, no police assistance was needed.
9:17 p.m. — Dispatch received a call to a residence on Valley Bell Road about unknown subjects
in a dark pick-up truck pulling into a driveway
and shouting threats. Deputies responded and
took a report about the incident and patrolled the
area looking for the suspect vehicle. The suspect
vehicle was not located.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016 s 50¢

Official vote count held for Nov. 8 election
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
results are in from this
month’s general election
and after the ofﬁcial vote
count on Monday the
outcome of the election
remains unchanged at
the local level.
All levies on the ballot for the local townships and villages were
approved by the voters,
as were the countywide
levies for the Meigs
County Health Department and Carleton

School and Meigs Industries.
The lone countywide measure rejected
by voters was electric
aggregation. Alexander
Local Schools levy was
also rejected by voters in
Meigs County. The levy
also includes voters in
Athens in Vinton counties and was voted down
overall.
All of the candidates
for local ofﬁce were
unopposed.
Of the 15,148 registered voters in Meigs
County, 10,192 (67.28

percent) voted in the
Nov. 8 election.
Official results
Levies
Health Department
— For: 5,621; Against:
3,940.
Carleton School/Meigs
Industries — For: 6,136;
Against: 3,442.
Electric Aggregation
— For: 3,912; Against:
4,896.
Middleport Village
Police — For: 504;
Against: 288.
Middleport Village
Current Expenses —

For: 411; Against 359.
Middleport Village
Fire — For: 574; Against:
214.
Pomeroy Village
Cemetery — For: 379;
Against: 181.
Pomeroy Village Fire
— For: 410; Against:
150.
Pomeroy Village Current Expenses — For:
300; Against: 246.
Racine Village Current
Expenses — For: 237;
Against: 83.
Syracuse Village Fire
See ELECTION | 5

Saturday, Nov. 19
4:59 p.m. — Deputies made a trafﬁc stop on
a vehicle on New Lima Road The K-9 unit was
called to the scene for assistance. Drug paraphernalia was found. One male subject was arrested
and transported to the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
8:57 p.m. — Dispatch received a call about a
one car crash at the intersection of Titus Road and
Paulins Hill Road. Caller stated two intoxicated
males were attempting to get the car out of the
ditch. When the deputy arrived on scene the car
was still there but the suspects had left the area.
The car was towed from the scene and impounded
until a driver can be located.
Sunday, Nov. 20
5:24 a.m. — Dispatch received a call of an alarm
at a church on Route 124 in the Rutland area.
A deputy arrived and while checking the building found an open door. The ofﬁcer entered and
cleared the building. No one was found inside and
everything appeared to be in order. The door was
secured and the ofﬁcer waited in the area until the
alarm automatically reset.
4:50 p.m. — Dispatch received a call about a
trespasser riding a four-wheeler in a ﬁeld on Star
Hall Road. A deputy responded and took a report
from the complainant. Contact was made with the
suspect by the ofﬁcer and advised to stay off the
property.
5:08 p.m. — Dispatch received a call from a
female on Route 143 near Harrisonville advising
that a male subject was at her home and that he
was not allowed there. Deputies responded to the
residence and found the suspect had left prior to
their arrival. A report was taken and the suspect
was located at a residence on Kingsbury Road.
Arrested was Scott Blake, 47 years old, from Plain
City, Ohio, on a domestic violence warrant out of
the Meigs County Court for a prior incident. Blake
was incarcerated pending a court hearing
5:40 p.m. — Dispatch received a call about a
small black car poaching deer on Salem School
Lot Road. The caller was able to get the vehicle
registration before it left the area. The Meigs
County Wildlife Ofﬁcer was contacted by the dispatcher and the call was turned over to him.
6:25 p.m. — Dispatch received a residential
alarm on Johns Road in Racine. A deputy responded and checked the residence was found to be
secure and no one was around.
Monday, Nov. 21
5:18 a.m. — Dispatch received a call from Dollar General in Tuppers Plains advising that the
store had been broken into. Deputies arrived and
searched the building for any suspects. The crime
scene was processed for evidence at that time. An
undetermined amount of cash and cigarettes were
taken. The incident remains under investigation.

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

PPVFD/Courtesy

Multiple people were sickened by a case of carbon monoxide poisoning at a home in Burdette Addition on Tuesday. The Point Pleasant
Fire Department responded to assist victims and vent the home. Pictured is a profile photo of Engine 1 from the PPVFD’s Facebook page.

Locals suffer carbon monoxide poisoning
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Four people
were reportedly sickened
by carbon monoxide poisoning Tuesday morning
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Fireﬁghters with the
Point Pleasant Fire
Department and personnel with Mason County
EMS, received the call
around 8:14 a.m. and
were dispatched to a
home in Burdette Addition, in the northern end
of Point Pleasant.
Fire Chief Jeremy Bry-

ant said upon arrival,
two adults required
immediate treatment
and were transported
to Pleasant Valley Hospital by Mason County
EMS. Prior to arriving
on scene, an additional
adult and baby had
departed to receive treatment at PVH, as well,
Byrant said.
Bryant said ﬁreﬁghters
shut off the natural gas
and vented the home.
Mountaineer Gas was
also called to the scene.
Bryant said it appears
the home’s furnace had
malfunctioned.

There were no carbon
monoxide detectors in
the home, Bryant said,
adding, incidents like
the one Tuesday morning, are a reminder of
the dangers of the odorless, colorless, tasteless
gas that can kill. Bryant
said “you deﬁnitely need
monitoring equipment”
if you heat with alternative fuels. He said, also
be sure your chimney is
properly ventilated when
burning wood and get
your furnace checked
before ﬁring it up.
“Don’t take for granted
that your furnace works,

it could malfunction
in the night and in the
morning it might be too
late,” Bryant said.
Bryant said he was
told all the victims would
make a full recovery.
According to the West
Virginia Poison Center,
since cold weather has
struck the state this
week, so have carbon
monoxide poisonings.
Again, carbon monoxide
is a colorless, odorless,
tasteless gas that can
be produced when fuels
do not burn completely.
See POISONING | 5

Ariel places new opera sign
Sign meant to tie Ariel closer to its opera house heritage
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

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

GALLIPOLIS —
Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Performing Arts
Centreput a new sign
above its marquee
Monday to tie it closer
with its old opera
house heritage
The Columbus Sign
Company installed
the marquee in 2006,
said the performing
arts centre’s Executive Director Lora
Snow. Marquees were
originally not used for
opera houses but for

modern theaters.
“Since the front is
no longer 1895, we
felt the marquee was
justiﬁed,” said Snow.
“This (new) sign is
just going to be taking
us back. We don’t have
the original facade, but
we can recreate a little
of that feeling with this
sign in identifying it as
the Ariel Opera House,
as it was once known.”
Gallia County projects received roughly
$1.35 million funding
after the state passed
its capital budget bill.
Both state Rep. Ryan

Smith, R-Bidwell, and
state Sen. Bob Peterson, R-Sabina, supported the passage of the
legislation in an effort
to promote grown and
economic stimulus to
key southeast Ohio
projects focused in
community development.
The theater received
around $200,000 of
that.
“We were working
on the facade of the
building and cleaning it up,” said Snow.
See ARIEL | 5

Photo by Dean Wright

Installers hover over the Ariel Theatre
marquee Monday afternoon while they put
the finishing touches on the facility’s new
sign. The sign covers the old concrete
Freemason wording as the building had
previously belonged to a local lodge in its
history.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, November 23, 2016

PAUL HARRIS

GUSTAVA BODKINS

Hudson Cash; brother,
Dale (Jean) Harris;
brother-in-law, Howard
(Wanda) Allen; sisters-inlaw, Juanita Harris
and Dolly O’Dell;
and several nieces
and nephews.
He is preceded
in death by his
parents, brothers,
Mayford (Wilma)
Harris, James Harris, Charles (Waynita)
Harris and Dexter Bryan
(Betty) Harris Jr.; sister,
Emogene Allen.
A memorial mass will
be held on Friday, Nov.
25,2016 at 11 a.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow in the
Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Funeral arrangements
are under the direction of
the Anderson McDaniel
funeral home in Pomeroy.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

JANE FRYMYER
SHADE — Jane Marie
Frymyer, 68, of Shade,
Ohio, passed away on
Nov. 20, 2016, peacefully
at her home. She was
born on April 24, 1948,
in Mishawaka, Indiana
daughter of the late Francis E. “Bud” and Catherine E. “Katie” Biron. She
was a member of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church.
She is survived by her
husband of 47 years, Don
Frymyer; her children,
Lisa (Scott) Mount,
David (Jessie) Frymyer

and Michael Frymyer;
her grandchildren, Derek,
Ashley, Alex, Mattie and
Jake.
Private family services
are under the direction
of Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home.
In lieu of ﬂowers, donations in memory of Jane
may be made to OhioHealth Hospice, 444 West
Union Street Suite C,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

SUPPORT
The Pomeroy

RACINE — Gustava
Mae (Jane) Johnson
Bodkins, 101, formerly
of Racine, passed away at
10:34 a.m., Nov. 19, 2016,
in Ravenswood, West
Virginia. She was born
June 24, 1915, in Webster
County, West Virginia,
to the late Jacob Good
and Samantha Holcomb
Roberts.
She loved refusing to
believe — or act — her
age, spending time with
her girls, visits with her
great-great-grandbabies,
eating sweets, gardening,
singing and drawing. She
spoke fondly of her years
on the family farm and
her life in Racine with
Ralph at Johnson’s TV
Sales and Service. She
never met a stranger and
loved everybody.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her sister,
Lorena Perrine; husbands, Ralph Johnson
and Roy Bodkins; son,
Wilber Eugene Barnett;
and daughter, Carol Sue
Barnett.
She is survived by a
special sister (cousin),
Louise Groves; children,
Wendell (Helen) Barnett,
Craigsville, W.Va. and
Kyle Barnett, Sutton,

The Pomeroy Firemen’s Association
is sponsoring a fundraising program to
raise money. These funds will be used for
new equipment and to improve service
in our community.

LOVELL
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Betty Ruth Aeiker
Lovell, 92, formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed
away November 19, 2016, in Morgantown.
A celebration of Betty’s life will be held at Christ
Episcopal Church in Point Pleasant on November 25,
2016, with viewing at 11 a.m. and service at noon.
Burial will be at Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant.

MARCUM

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60693087

WEDNESDAY EVENING
3

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CABLE

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

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Mexican
Table
"Turkey Day"
Eyewitness ABC World
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening
at 6 p.m.
News
2 Broke Girls Eyewitness
News 6:30
BBC World Nightly
News:
Business
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening
6:00 p.m.
News

6

PM

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23

6:30

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.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

6:30

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10:30

Thanksgiving A special look Saturday Night Live "Thanksgiving" A compilation of
back at the parade. (N)
memorable Thanksgiving sketches. (N)
Thanksgiving A special look Saturday Night Live "Thanksgiving" A compilation of
back at the parade. (N)
memorable Thanksgiving sketches. (N)
A Charlie Brown
Modern Fam Black-ish
Special 20/20 "The Real
Thanksgiving
"The Verdict"
Designated Survivor" (N)
Pearl Harbor Explore what Pearl Harbor: Into The first Soundbreaking "I Am My
happened to the USS
expedition to explore inside Music" (N)
Oklahoma. (N)
the USS Arizona. (N)
Special 20/20 "The Real
A Charlie Brown
Modern Fam Black-ish
Thanksgiving
"The Verdict"
Designated Survivor" (N)
Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X "Million Dollar Gamble" Code Black "1.0 Bodies"
A power struggle between castaways erupts. (N)
(N)
Lethal Weapon "There Goes Empire "Light in Darkness" Eyewitness News at 10
the Neighborhood"
Pearl Harbor Explore what Pearl Harbor: Into The first Soundbreaking "I Am My
happened to the USS
expedition to explore inside Music" (N)
Oklahoma. (N)
the USS Arizona. (N)
Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X "Million Dollar Gamble" Code Black "1.0 Bodies"
A power struggle between castaways erupts. (N)
(N)

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18 (WGN) Blue Blood "Moonlighting"
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) (4:45) Basket. (:45) Score.
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

Cops
Cops
Salem "After the Fall"
Salem
(:05) Salem
NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers (L)
Post-game In the Room DPatrick (N)
NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Charlotte Hornets (L)
NBA Basketball Min./N.O. (L)
SportsCenter NCAA Basketball Maui Invitational Third Place Game (L) Scoreboard NCAA Basketball
Little Women: Dallas
Little Women: LA "Reunion, Little Women: LA "Season Little Wed "Working With Little Women: Dallas
"Trading Spaces"
Part 1" 1/2
5 Reunion Part 2" 2/2 (N)
Family Isn't Easy" (P) (N)
"Right to Refuse" (N)
(4:10) Charlie (:45)
Mulan (1998, Animated) Eddie Murphy, BD
(:50)
Brave ('12, Ani) Kelly Macdonald. A princess goes against a
&amp; t...
Wong, Ming-Na Wen. TVG
custom in her kingdom, causing chaos and changes her destiny. TVPG
Four Brothers ('05, Act) Tyrese Gibson, Mark Wahlberg. Four
Training Day ('01, Thril) Denzel Washington. A cop's first day leads
brothers reunite to track down their adoptive mother's killer. TV14
him to believe that his mentor may not be what he seems. TVMA
The Thundermans
H.Danger "Hour of Power" The Thundermans
Reunion (N) Friends
Friends
Friends
NCIS "Loose Cannons"
NCIS "Reasonable Doubts" NCIS "Charade"
NCIS "Return to Sender"
NCIS "Homefront"
Seinfeld
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
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
The Sixties
Bones
Bones
Rush Hour ('98, Act) Jackie Chan. TVPG
Neighborhood "Usher" (N)
(4:30)
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben
Open Range ('03, West) Kevin Costner, Robert Duvall. A former gunslinger must
Affleck, Bruce Willis. TV14
take up arms once again when he's threatened by a corrupt lawman. TV14
Bush "Dead in the Water" Alaskan Bush People
Bush People "Bush Heart" Bush "Transportation" (N) Legend of Croc Gold (N)
The First 48 "Twist of Fate" Duck
Duck
Duck D./(:05) Duck
Duck
Going Si-ral Wahlburgers (:35) Duck D.
Dynasty
Dynasty
Duck D.
Dynasty
Dynasty
(N)
(N)
"Bro'd Trip"
Pool Master
Insane Pools DeepEnd
Insane Pools DeepEnd
Pools "For the Birds"
Insane Pools DeepEnd
(5:15)
Save the Last Dance (2000, Drama) Sean
Don't Be a Menace to South Central While
Don't Be a Menace to
Patrick Thomas, Kerry Washington, Julia Stiles. TV14
Drinking Your Juice in the Hood Shawn Wayans. TVMA South Central While Dri...
CSI: Miami "Legal"
CSI: Miami "Hell Night"
CSI: Miami "Speed Kills"
CSI: Miami "Crime Wave" CSI: Miami "Pirated"
Divas "Total Superstars"
E! News (N)
Divas "Orlando Strong" (N) KhloéKar (N) Kardash "No Good Deeds" KhloéKar
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
(:05) Ray
(:35) Ray
Alaska State Troopers "In Life and Death Row "Crisis Life and Death Row "No
Border Wars "Extreme
Years of Living "Collapse of
the Line of Duty"
Stage"
Appeal"
Crossings" (N)
the Oceans" (N)
NHL Top 10 NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers at Tampa Bay Lightning (L)
NHL Hockey Chi./S.J. (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (N)
NCAA Basketball University of Charleston at Villanova (L) TUF 24 "All on the Line"
Ultimate Fighter 24 (N)
American Pickers "Mad as American Pickers "The Big American Pickers "Let's Be American Pickers "Shocked American Pickers "The
a Picker"
Bet"
Frank"
and Loaded" (N)
Greatest Pick on Earth"
Beverly "Reunion Part 3"
Below Deck "Bemily"
Vanderpump Rules
H.Wives "Reunion Part 3" Housewives Atlanta
House Payne House Payne The Browns (:35) Browns (:05) To Be Announced
Buying and Selling
Buying "Lesson in Location" Property Brothers
Brothers Take New Orleans H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00) Insidious: Chapter 3 ('15, Hor)
Insidious ('10, Hor) Patrick Wilson. A family tries to prevent their
Zombieland Woody
Stefanie Scott, Lin Shaye. TV14
son from being dragged into another realm by evil spirits. TV14
Harrelson. TVMA

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(:45) Race (2016, Biography) Jason Sudeikis, Jeremy Irons, Stephan

PM

There are two types of common surgeries performed on women in the United States daily: the
cesarean section and the hysterectomy. While a
hysterectomy is safe and low-risk, it’s important
to know that it’s typically only recommended
when a woman is having speciﬁc issues. If a
woman is at risk or suffering from
an invasive cancer that may put her
life in jeopardy, a bilateral salpingooophorectomy may be necessary.
Salpingo-oophorectomy refers to
removal of the fallopian tubes as
well as the ovaries. This can also be
done at the time of a hysterectomy
if there is an indication. Recent
Dr. Fri
studies have shown that this type
Mofor-Eta
of surgery will decrease the risks of Special
ovarian cancer in women who have to OVP
risk factors. The American Cancer
Society estimates that over 22,000
women will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer
each year. And though it’s the ﬁfth in cancer
deaths among women, the risk of getting this
type of cancer is about 1 in 70. That’s why not
every woman is in need of a bilateral salpingooophorectomy.
At Pleasant Valley Hospital, we take our role
seriously as we strive to keep this community
healthy and strong. We’ll provide you with the
right facts and recommendations so you can make
an informed decision about your reproductive
health — and the decision that’s also right for
your family.
To learn more about the comprehensive Obstetric and Gynecologic care PVH offers to women of
all ages, contact us at 304-857-6503.

10:30

Westworld "Trace Decay"

Tuesday, Nov. 22
LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township
Trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting
at 6 p.m. at the Township Garage.
Wednesday, Nov. 23
POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners will meet at 11 a.m. The meeting is being
moved due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
Friday, Nov. 25
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend Arts Council,
290 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, will present Christmas on Screen directed by B.J. Kreseen at 7:30
p.m. The Big Bend Community Band under the
direction of Toney Dingess will play at 7 p.m.
Admission is $5. Popcorn, cookies and candy will
be available. Public is invited.
Monday, Nov. 28
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission will hold its November
meeting at 9 a.m. at their ofﬁce located at 97 N.
Second Ave., Middleport (Peoples Bank Building
back ofﬁce).
Tuesday, Nov. 29
POMEROY — The OH-KAN Coin Club will
meet at 6:30 p.m. in the second ﬂoor meeting
room of the Farmers Bank location on East Main
Street, Pomeroy.

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400 (HBO) government agents continue to track him

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

James. The story of Jesse Owens, greatest track and field athlete in
down, Jason Bourne searches for his identity. history. TV14
(4:40) Live
(:50)
Magnolia (1999, Drama) Jeremy Blackman, Melinda Dillon, Tom Cruise. A dying television
Free or Die producer asks his nurse to arrange a meeting with his estranged son. TVM
Hard TV14
(5:15) Bert
The Ladies Man Tim Meadows. The
Why Did I Get Married? ('07, Com/Dra) Sharon Leal,
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Janet Jackson, Tyler Perry. Three couples take a week-long
The Machine show searches for a job and love. TVMA
vacation to figure out why they got married. TV14

10

Is a hysterectomy
necessary?

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.

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The Pomeroy Firemen’s Association
wishes to thank everyone for their
donation by giving a complimentary
certiﬁcate for an 8x10 color portrait to
be taken at the station.

IRONTON — Lisa A. Castle, 52, of Ironton, passed
away Sunday, November 20, 2016 at Community Hospice Care Center in Ashland, Ky.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Friday,
November 25, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Visitation will be held from 1 to 2
p.m. Friday, November 25, 2016 at the funeral home.

MEIGS COUNTY
CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Is your parent age 60 or over and could use a little help?

Department representatives will be contacting all homes in the
Pomeroy Firemen’s Association’s coverage area including
bedford twp, over the coming weeks asking for a donation of
$20.00. Department representatives will be going door to door and
will carry identiﬁcation.

6

W.Va.; grandchildren,
Connie Summers, Ripley, W.Va., Paula (Craig)
Cottrill, Syracuse, Ohio,
Tony (Kathy) Barnett,
Craigsville, W.Va., Kay
(Chuck) Riddle, Elkins,
W.Va., Danny Barnett,
David Barnett, and
Cathy Cutcher, all of
Charleston, W.Va.; greatgrandchildren, Crystal
(Dale Gibbs) Cottrill,
Syracuse, Ohio, Rachael
(Scott) Exline, Syracuse,
Ohio, Chad Barnett,
Knoxville, Tenn., Sarah
Barnett, Beckley, W.Va.,
Karen (Matthew) Jarvis,
Coal Grove, Ohio, Timmy
Riddle, Elkins, W.Va.,
Phoebe Riddle, Elkins,
W.Va., Michele Smith,
Charleston, W.Va.; great,
great-grandchildren,
Taylor Cottrill, Hunter
Cottrill, Parker Exline,
Oliver Exline, all of Syracuse, Ohio, Lily and Ivy
Barnett, Knoxville, Tenn.,
and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held on
Saturday, Nov. 26, 2016
at Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Racine, Ohio. Calling hour begins at noon
and the funeral will begin
at 1 p.m.. Burial will follow at the Bald Knob
Cemetery.

VINTON — Carolyn Sue Cremeans Marcum, 77,
Vinton, died Monday, November 21, 2016.
Graveside services will be conducted 10 a.m., Friday, November 25, 2016 at the Pendleton-Marcum
Cemetery, Vinton.

Firemen’s Association

BROADCAST

CASTLE

60690780

RACINE — Paul E.
Harris, of Racine passed
away on Sunday, Nov. 20,
2016, at his residence.
He was born on
Feb. 5, 1937, in
Portland, Ohio,
to the late Dexter
and Helen (Profﬁtt) Harris. Mr.
Harris worked
and retired as the
Postmaster at
Racine. He was a member
of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, he enjoyed
his family, golf, his garden
and he never lost his love
for the river.
He is survived by his
wife of 51 years, Marylyn
Harris; children, Paul
(Kris) Harris, Jodie
(Tim) Smith, Matthew
(Tricia) Harris; grandchildren, Bryan (Ashley)
Harris, Bobbi (Austin)
Harris, Brynn Harris,
Sophia Harris, Simon
Harris, Samson Harris;
great grandchildren, Malakai Eric “Big Boy”, and

Daily Sentinel

Malcolm X ('92,
Doc/Dra) Angela Bassett,
Denzel Washington. TV14
The Affair Noah struggles to
navigate the challenges of
life.

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

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 23, 2016 3

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.

Retired Teachers
luncheon

Holiday
events

CHESTER — The Annual Christmas Open House
at the Chester Court House on Dec. 3, in Chester. The
event will include a Santa Claus display. The Eastern
Bell Choir will be playing starting at 1 p.m. There will
be refreshments served in the Chester Academy Dining Hall after the program is over. The event is free for
PORTLAND — State Route 124 in Meigs County
everyone.
will be closed from Bald Knob Stiversville Road to
POMEROY — Christmas Along the River will
Long Run for a tree trimming project through Dec. 2.
take place on Sunday. Nov. 27. The annual Christmas
The original estimated completion date was Nov. 30.
parade will take place at 2 p.m. Line up for the parade
will be at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy ball ﬁelds. All entries
are welcome. For more information call 740-591-2260.
In addition to the parade, the merchants in Pomeroy
will be hosting an open house from noon to 4 p.m. that
RACINE — A Community Lunch will be held Mon- day. Following the parade, Santa will be at Peoples
POMEROY — Meigs County 4-H Committee has
day, Nov. 28-Saturday, Dec. 3 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Bank in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT — Saturday, Dec. 3 will be the annuPlat Books for sale for $25. Funds support the 4-H
the Carmel-Sutton United Methodist Church Fellowal
Christmas Celebration in the Village of Middleport
program in the county by providing funds for supship Hall, 48540 Carmel Road, Racine. Menu includes
hosted
by the Middleport Community Association. The
plies, camp and college scholarships, learning opporhomemade soups, sandwiches, desserts and drinks.
Christmas Market will run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
tunities and more. To purchase a Plat Book, you can
Dine-in or take-out. Cost is a donation which is used
the Riverbend Arts Council building. In addition, there
stop by the Extension Ofﬁce on Monday-Thursday
for The Friendship Circle’s outreach projects.
will be free carriage rides for the public from 1:30-4
from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., mail $30 (for book, shipping &amp;
p.m. loading beside the Riverbend Arts Council buildhandling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee, 113 East
ing. The community band will perform a concert outMemorial Dr, Suite E, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit the
side of the Arts Council Building beginning at 4 p.m.
Meigs County Recorder’s Ofﬁce in the Court House.
until the parade begins at 4:30 p.m. Parade lineup takes
If you have any questions, please contact Michelle
place at 4 p.m. at Dairy Queen and along Front Street.
Stumbo, Meigs County 4-H Youth Development EduFollowing the parade, Santa and Mrs. Claus will be at
cator, at stumbo.5@osu.edu or 740-992-6696.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Departthe Arts Council Building to visit with the children.
ment will conduct an Immunization Clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $15 donation is appreciated for
ROCKSPRINGS — Meigs High School will be hold- immunization administration; however, no one will
ing Parent-Teacher Conferences on Thursday, Dec, 1, be denied services because of an inability to pay an
POMEROY — The Meigs County Extension Ofﬁce
administration fee for state-funded childhood vac2016, from 3-6 p.m. Students will be bringing home
will be holding the 9th annual Holiday Program,
cines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
a letter describing the conference scheduling proce“Spreading Christmas Cheer” on Thursday, Dec. 1.
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles);
dure along with information on the conferences. We
Make and take craft, indoor pine tree, food samplings
pneumonia ; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available. Call and door prizes. One class at 11 a.m. and the second
would like to encourage all parents and/or guardians
for eligibility determination and availability or visit
class at 6 p.m. at the Meigs County Extension Ofﬁce
to attend that we may keep you informed concerning
our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of
located at 113 E Memorial Drive, Suite E, Pomeroy.
the progress of your child. Please return the form
accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for
Preregistration is required and the cost is $25 per perattached to the letter to the school or call 740-992son. For more information call 740-992-6696.
2158 to schedule conferences.
adults.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers will meet for lunch at noon on Dec. 1 at Trinity
Congregational Church in Pomeroy. Please call 740992-3214 by Nov. 29 for a count of lunch participation. Guests are welcome. A musical program will
be presented by the Eastern High School Bell Choir.
Members are reminded to bring books or art supplies
as Christmas gifts for children.

Road Closure
modified

Community
Lunch

Plat Books
available

Immunization
Clinic

MHS Parent-Teacher
Conferences

Spreading Christmas
Cheer program

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 23, the 328th day of
2016. There are 38 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 23, 1936,
Life, the photojournalism magazine created by
Henry R. Luce (loos),
was ﬁrst published.
On this date:
In 1765, Frederick
County, Maryland,
became the ﬁrst colonial
American entity to repudiate the British Stamp
Act.
In 1804, the 14th
president of the United
States, Franklin Pierce
(puhrs), was born in
Hillsboro, New Hampshire.
In 1889, the ﬁrst jukebox made its debut in
San Francisco, at the Palais Royale Saloon. (The
coin-operated device
consisted of four listening tubes attached to an
Edison phonograph.)
In 1903, Enrico Caruso
made his American
debut at the Metropolitan Opera House in New
York, appearing in “Rigoletto.”
In 1910, Americanborn physician Hawley
Harvey Crippen was
hanged at Pentonville
Prison in London for
murdering his wife,
Cora. (Crippen’s mistress, Ethel Le Neve, was
acquitted in a separate
trial of being an accessory.)
In 1914, the sevenmonth U.S. military
occupation of Veracruz,
Mexico, ended.
In 1945, most U.S.

wartime rationing of
foods, including meat
and butter, was set to
expire by day’s end.
In 1959, the musical
“Fiorello!” starring Tom
Bosley as legendary New
York Mayor Fiorello
LaGuardia, opened on
Broadway.
In 1963, President
Lyndon B. Johnson proclaimed Nov. 25 a day
of national mourning
following the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy.
In 1971, the People’s
Republic of China was
seated in the U.N. Security Council.
In 1980, some 2,600
people were killed by
a series of earthquakes
that devastated southern
Italy.
In 1996, a commandeered Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 crashed
into the water off the
Comoros Islands, killing
125 of the 175 people on
board, including all three
hijackers.
Ten years ago: Car
bombs and mortar
rounds struck a Shiite
slum in Baghdad, killing 215 people. Former
KGB spy Alexander Litvinenko (leet-vee-NYEN’koh) died in London
from radiation poisoning
after making a deathbed
statement blaming Russian President Vladimir
Putin. Death claimed
Broadway librettist Betty
Comden at age 89; jazz
vocalist Anita O’Day at
age 87; and French actor
Philippe Noiret at age
76.
Five years ago: Yemen’s
authoritarian President
Ali Abdullah Saleh

(AH’-lee ahb-DUH’-luh
sah-LEH’) agreed to step
down amid a ﬁerce uprising to oust him after 33
years in power.
One year ago: The
White House urged its
allies to step up their
contributions to the campaign against the Islamic
State, as President
Barack Obama faced
pressure to show the
U.S.-led coalition would
intensify efforts even
without a major shift in
strategy. Blue Origin, a
private space company,
landed a rocket called
New Shepard upright
and gently enough to be
used again, a milestone
in commercial aeronautics. Cynthia Robinson,
71, a trumpeter and
vocalist who was a key
member of Sly and the
Family Stone, died in
Carmichael, California.
Today’s Birthdays:
Former Labor Secretary
William E. Brock is 86.
Actress Elmarie Wendel
is 88. Actor Franco Nero
is 75. Actress Susan
Anspach is 74. Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas is
72. Actor-comedy writer
Bruce Vilanch is 69. Sen.
Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.,
is 66. Singer Bruce
Hornsby is 62. Former
Sen. Mary Landrieu,
D-La., is 61. Actor
Maxwell Caulﬁeld is 57.
Actor John Henton is
56. TV personality Robin
Roberts (“Good Morning
America”) is 56. Rock
singer-musician Ken
Block (Sister Hazel) is
50. Rock musician Charlie Grover is 50. Actress
Salli Richardson-Whitﬁeld is 49. Actor Oded
Fehr (OH’-dehd fayr) is

46. Rapper-actor Kurupt
(Tha Dogg Pound) is 44.
Actor Page Kennedy is
40. Actress Kelly Brook
is 37. Actor Lucas Grabeel (GRAY’-beel) is 32.
TV personality Nicole
“Snooki” Polizzi is 29.
Actress-singer Miley
Cyrus is 24. Actor Austin Majors is 21.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“I’m a realist and so I think regretting is a
useless occupation. You help no one with
it. But you can’t live without illusions even
if you must fight for them, such as ‘love
conquers all.’ It isn’t true, but I would like it
to be.”
— Marlene Dietrich, German-born actress (1901-1992)

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 59.17
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 20.73
Big Lots (NYSE) - 53.02
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 44.60
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 35.81
Century Alum (NASDAQ) 10.59
City Holding (NASDAQ) 61.41
Collins (NYSE) - 88.86
DuPont (NYSE) - 70.91
US Bank (NYSE) - 49.03
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 31.18
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) -

59.75
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 78.53
Kroger (NYSE) - 33.47
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 70.83
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 103.92
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 24.25
BBT (NYSE) - 44.50
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 28.98
Pepsico (NYSE) - 102.89
Premier (NASDAQ) - 20.29
Rockwell (NYSE) - 131.71
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
- 11.35
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.76
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)

- 12.92
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 70.12
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 12.70
WesBanco (NYSE) - 39.81
Worthington (NYSE) - 62.35
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions Nov. 22,
2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.
60693068

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

An experiment in
customer service
By Barry Goldman
Contributing columnist

Two things happened at my house not long ago:
My wife turned 65, and one of our credit cards
expired. Not very interesting in themselves, perhaps, but the two events occurring together set
up what scientists call a natural experiment.
Turning 65 made Susan eligible for Medicare.
That meant, at last, we could stop paying her
Blue Cross premium. Because we pay our bills
by autopay, I had to tell Blue Cross to deduct her
portion of our premium from the monthly charge.
And because the expiring credit card is the one
we use to autopay our other “service providers,”
I had to tell the homeowners and auto insurance
companies, the cable company and the utilities to
update the card.
Everyone knows that communicating with
these institutions is crazy-making. That fact
doesn’t need further empirical support. But this
was a chance to do some social science. I just had
to clock the time it took to accomplish the two
changes and compare the results.
Here’s the punchline: Update credit card information — 34 seconds. Take Susan’s Blue Cross
premium off autopay — six weeks.
Updating the credit card information couldn’t
have been simpler. Each company has a website,
and each website has a prominent, clear menu
item called “Update Method of Payment.” I
clicked the box, entered the card number and new
expiration date, and hit “Submit.” A conﬁrming
email arrived in seconds. Seconds.
Getting Susan off our Blue Cross autopay was
a different matter. From what I gather, she is
the ﬁrst person to turn 65 in the history of Blue
Cross, and the system just has no mechanism to
deal with it.
I started by calling the customer service number on my insurance card. Everyone knows the
drill. They were experiencing unusually high call
volume, but they thoughtfully provided “music”
for me to listen to while I waited. They put
me through to their automated system where I
entered my account number and my birth date
and my passcode. A robot read me my balance
and my payment due date and talked to me about
things that had nothing to do with the purpose of
my call.
We went round and round until I was ﬁnally
able to get a human being on the phone, and then
he and I started back at the beginning. He needed
to get my name and account number and birth
date and passcode. And he needed to put me on
hold while he checked for the answer to my question. I listened to the same six bars of “music.”
When he came back, he said the form I needed
was on their website. He told me the name of the
form and where it would be. He made it sound
simple.
I went to the website and found layer after
layer of security questions and boxes to ﬁll out,
but no trace of the form. After going round and
round on the website for an hour, I got to a message that said: “If you still have questions, call
the customer service number on your insurance
card.”
By the time I went through the whole process
again and got to a human being, I was not feeling
friendly. I confess I was rude to the person on
the phone. Susan tells me not to be rude to such
people. She reminds me they are just trying to
make a living, and they are not responsible for
the malevolence of the system they work for. She
is right, of course, but the people who are responsible for the malevolence of the system are not
the ones they put on the phone.
This time, despite my rudeness, the person
on the phone was charming and friendly; I was
disarmed. She told me she understood my frustration and she promised she would personally put
the form I needed in the mail. Three days later a
hand-addressed envelope arrived and in it was …
the form to select a new pediatric dentist.
I called the broker who sold us our Medicare
plan. He was able to communicate with Blue
Cross through some secret back channel, and, in
a few days, he emailed me the form I needed. I
signed it and sent it to Blue Cross. But all is not
well.
Blue Cross keeps sending me contradictory
messages. They send me emails that say I have
payments due, and my coverage will terminate if
I don’t pay them. They direct me to their website.
The website agrees I have payments due, but says
the amount is $0.00.
I don’t have the stomach to call customer service and try to straighten this out. My plan is just
not to get sick for the next few months until I,
too, turn 65 and go on Medicare.
We’re told that voicemail systems are efﬁcient
and cost-saving, and that multiple layers of security questions and passwords are there for our
protection. What my little experiment shows is
that this is horse hockey.
When you want to give them money, the process is remarkably quick and easy. When you
want to stop giving them money, the process
becomes inﬁnitely complicated.
Barry Goldman is an arbitrator and mediator and the author of “The
Science of Settlement.” He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

THEIR VIEW

The joy of giving thanks
By Jay Ambrose
Contributing columnist

America’s a mess.
Great gobs of people
don’t trust those most in
charge, and those most in
charge do not trust great
gobs of people. We have
a much-feared presidentelect and a much-cursed,
defeated opponent. It’s not
just the population deeply
divided over politics; many
families are, too, and there
are not a few other issues.
Let’s mention, for
instance, education, taxes,
welfare, regulations, bigotry from all sides and the
economy. Too many news
outlets are seen as biased.
Families are evermore
fatherless. Racial tensions
are the highest in decades.
Crime has been rising
again. Scofﬁng secularism
seems increasingly to be
displacing any sense of
sanctity.
What’s more, the world
is ripping itself apart, terrorism keeps baring its
barbarian fangs and war
keeps destroying lives.
So isn’t it time to be
thankful, and not least of
all, for Thanksgiving?
Yes, it is, because for
everything wrong, not
only are there possible
solutions, but hundreds of

things that are right. And
here is what comes from
reﬂecting on what’s right,
for being grateful, for saying thanks, thanks, thanks.
Higher spirits. Greater
happiness. Even joy. More
hope. More energy to ﬁx
what needs ﬁxing.
For wise instruction
on this, look to Abraham
Lincoln, who proclaimed
Thanksgiving a national
holiday in 1863 during
a merciless, bloody Civil
War he referred to as being
“of unequaled magnitude
and severity.” Lives had
been lost “in the camp,
the siege and the battleﬁeld” and wealth had been
diverted from “peaceful
industry,” he said. But
there was more to think
about.
There were “the blessings of fruitful ﬁelds and
healthful skies.” The necessities of defense had not
“arrested the plow, the
shuttle, or the ship; the ax
has enlarged the borders
of our settlements, and
the mines … have yielded
even more abundantly than
before.” Population was
still increasing. Order and
harmony existed everyplace “except in the theater
of military conﬂict.”
And the country, conscious of “augmented

strength and vigor” can
expect these assets to continue “with a large increase
in freedom,” he wrote.
He spoke of acknowledging God as the sources of
these gifts. He said the
people should ask God to
care for the suffering, for
an end to the war, for “a
healing of wounds,” and a
return of “tranquility and
union.”
The best did not come
in a minute, but mostly it
came, and industrialism
took off, bringing tough
issues but wonders, too.
Slavery was ended.
What Americans today
need to remember is that
we are still a great nation
— “the last, best hope for
mankind,” as Lincoln put
it. Our system of constitutionally guaranteed rights,
checks and balances,
rule of law, and elections
affords safeguards against
possibilities now causing
so much worry.
People are also out
there working on all of our
problems, and meanwhile,
we have material advantages once undreamed of.
On racial issues, we shall
overcome, as we have in
the past.
Owing to globalization
and free markets, it might
be added, the world is ever

better off. As the writer
Matt Ridley has pointed
out, measures taken in
2005 showed that the average person on this earth
was “earning nearly three
times as much money (corrected for inﬂation), ate
one-third more calories of
food, buried one-third as
many of her children and
could expect to live onethird longer” than just half
a century earlier
And yes, we still have
the glory of sunsets. My
breath is taken away
almost daily. We indeed
have an abundance of
beauty and we have our
friends. We have our dear,
dear families, and what
is greater than getting
together with each other
on Thanksgiving?
Yes, it’s true that an ABC
News survey shows more
than a third of Americans
are worrying about arguments between brothers,
sisters, mom, dad and
others because of different
views about a recent ﬁstﬁght of an election.
Here is a thought.
Focus on love, a human
capacity for which we
should also be grateful.
Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist
for Tribune News Service. Readers
may email him at speaktojay@aol.
com.

THEIR VIEW

Free speech being squelched in North Dakota
By Margaret Huang
Contributing columnist

Out on the high plains
of North Dakota, a historic gathering is taking
place. Thousands have
come from hundreds of
indigenous tribal nations
in opposition to a pipeline
they are concerned will
endanger the water of the
Missouri River — their
primary water supply —
and ruin ancestral land.
Also gathering are law
enforcement ofﬁcers from
the county, state and federal levels, who are patrolling the encampments surrounding the construction
site. They have a job, too:
to keep the peace.
In a perfect scenario,
these two goals would not
be at odds with each other.
The indigenous community and its allies would
assemble and be heard,
and the police would protect their right to do so.
Unfortunately, what
we are seeing unfolding
on the prairie is similar
to what we at Amnesty
International saw on the
streets of Baltimore and
Ferguson, Mo. Rather than
having their rights protected, peaceful protesters
are being confronted and
treated as if they are vio-

lent criminals.
There is a difference
between law enforcement
reasonably protecting the
public and confronting a
group of people, including
children, while outﬁtted
in gear that would be
more appropriate on a
battleﬁeld. Our observers
saw lines of heavily armed
ofﬁcers and massive,
military-grade vehicles
when they traveled to the
area. We have sent several letters to authorities
expressing concern about
the policing practices
there, most recently when
police sprayed a chemical
irritant at close range at
people standing in water
while attempting to cross
a creek near the construction site.
Contrast this approach
to what our teams saw
at the presidential conventions this summer.
While both Cleveland and
Philadelphia deployed a
massive amount of law
enforcement, the authorities largely managed to
exercise restraint without
the kind of ﬁrepower
we are seeing in North
Dakota. Arrests at the
conventions, when they
did occur, were done in
an orderly fashion, sometimes with ofﬁcers even

helping people over a
fence before methodically
and calmly arresting them.
While we noted that there
were isolated incidents of
force used, the response
in North Dakota — which
over the weekend expanded to include the spraying of ﬁre hoses, despite
below-freezing temperatures — seems disproportionate by contrast.
Some may wish to
believe that everyone in
the United States enjoys
the same right to free
speech, regardless of
their background. If only
that were true. Sadly, the
response to the people of
the Standing Rock Sioux,
like those in Ferguson and
Baltimore, shows otherwise.
The tendency to silence
the voices of communities
of color, including indigenous people, has long and
shameful roots. Treating
protesters as if they were
enemies in combat unnecessarily escalates tensions
and has a chilling effect
on free expression. This is
exactly the opposite of an
effective police response,
and one that we have seen
used all too often against
those whose viewpoints
have been historically marginalized.

Police should do their
best to empower people to
peacefully exercise their
right to free speech. In any
large gathering, there is
always the chance that a
small minority will seek to
escalate a peaceful assembly into a violent confrontation. But it should not
be assumed at the outset
that a particular group as
a whole will resort to violence. Nor should tactics
like tear gas and sound
cannons — which have
been used in North Dakota
— be used to impede the
rights of peaceful expression. Not only do these
tactics endanger more
people than they protect,
they are discriminatory
when used to silence an
entire community.
Peaceful dissent is not a
criminal act. Everyone in
the United States should
have the full enjoyment
of their rights. No exceptions. All communities
have a right to be heard.
We reject the idea that any
voice should be stiﬂed.
Margaret Huang is the executive
director of Amnesty International
USA, the American branch of
the international human rights
organization. Readers may write
her at Amnesty International USA,
5 Penn Plaza, 16th Floor, New York,
NY 10001.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 23, 2016 5

MEIGS COUNTY
CHURCH CALENDAR

Wahama student gets a ‘kick’ out of art

Coolville Community Choir
HEMLOCK GROVE — The Coolville Community
Choir, under the direction of Martha Sue Matheny,
will present Christmas! We Remember, Rejoice, Worship at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 7 at Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.

By Mindy Kearns

Live Nativity
RACINE — Carmel-Sutton United Methodist
Church will hold its annual Live Nativity from 6-8
p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 10 at the Leanna Beegle
Farm, East of Racine, Ohio, on Tornado Road. Light
refreshments available. The event is free to the public. Signs will be posted for directions.

“There were old wires
hanging out and gaps
in the brick. There
were things that just
needed to be ﬁxed and
protected. We decided
while (workers) were
up there, why not have
the sign? This will never
be a masonic building
again. This building was
purchased and given to
us by Mrs. Ann Carson
Dater as a permanent
home for The Ohio Valley Symphony.”
Snow said the building was not originally
constructed to be a
masonic lodge either
and ongoing projects
continue to reclaim the

WEATHER

27°

2 PM

44°

41°

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.

(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
0.68
2.50
40.89
38.45

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:21 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
2:40 a.m.
2:53 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Nov 29

First

Dec 7

Full

Last

Dec 13 Dec 20

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

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

Major
7:02a
7:40a
8:18a
8:56a
9:35a
10:17a
11:01a

Minor
12:51a
1:30a
2:07a
2:45a
3:24a
4:05a
4:50a

1

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: In what month are thunderstorms
least likely in the U.S.?

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:20 a.m.
5:10 p.m.
1:44 a.m.
2:23 p.m.

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

Major
7:24p
8:02p
8:39p
9:17p
9:57p
10:39p
11:25p

Minor
1:13p
1:51p
2:29p
3:06p
3:46p
4:28p
5:13p

WEATHER HISTORY
Nov. 23, 1979, was very warm in the
East for so late in the season. Norfolk,
Va., reached 70 degrees; Providence,
R.I., topped out at 80 degrees.
Raleigh, N.C., had a high temperature
of 77 degrees.

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

57°
47°

55°
37°

47°
29°

Mainly cloudy with a
shower in places

Clouds and sun, a
shower in the p.m.

Chilly with times of
sun and clouds

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

Logan
43/36

Adelphi
43/37

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

FRIDAY

or at your hunting cabin,
the West Virginia Poison
Center offers these tips:
Have gas appliances
checked annually by a
professional. Keep all
chimneys and ﬂues free
of debris. Avoid the
use of kerosene heaters
indoors or in enclosed
areas such as tents.
Carefully follow the

Chillicothe
45/39

Lucasville
48/42
Portsmouth
51/43

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Nitrogen Oxides
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

Belpre
48/38

Athens
45/36

St. Marys
48/38

Parkersburg
47/37

Coolville
47/37

Elizabeth
49/40

Spencer
50/40

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.36 -0.02
Marietta
34 16.37 +0.12
Parkersburg
36 21.59 +0.18
Belleville
35 13.05 +0.13
Racine
41 13.48 -0.25
Point Pleasant
40 25.15 -0.02
Gallipolis
50 13.25 +0.04
Huntington
50 26.01 +0.42
Ashland
52 34.82 +0.54
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.28 +0.41
Portsmouth
50 14.80 -0.50
Maysville
50 33.70 -0.40
Meldahl Dam
51 14.70 -0.30
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Buffalo
52/42
Milton
54/43

Clendenin
55/40

St. Albans
55/43

Huntington
53/44

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
51/44
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
61/46
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
69/50
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
67/40
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

59°
41°

Cloudy with a chance
of rain

Marietta
47/38

Murray City
45/36

Ironton
54/45

Ashland
54/45
Grayson
56/45

TUESDAY

54°
44°

Mostly sunny

Wilkesville
47/37
POMEROY
Jackson
47/38
48/38
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
48/40
49/40
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
43/40
GALLIPOLIS
49/40
50/41
49/41

South Shore Greenup
54/45
50/42

24

Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

Cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
45/36

Waverly
45/39

manufacturer’s safety
and placement instructions for generator use.
Use battery-operated (or
battery-backup) carbon
monoxide alarms. Be
sure to test the batteries
regularly.

MONDAY

53°
38°

A: December.

Precipitation

THURSDAY

Occasional rain and drizzle today and tonight.
High 49° / Low 40°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

46°
22°
54°
35°
79° in 1931
8° in 1964

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Camryn Tyree, a sophomore
student at Wahama High School,
drew the cover artwork that graced
the programs of the West Virginia
SSAC State High School Soccer
Tournament earlier this month.

John P. O’Donnell (D):
3,497.
Justice of the Supreme
Regional and State-wide
Court (Jan. 2 term) —
Races
Pat DeWine (R): 4,832;
(Meigs County numCynthia Rice (D): 2,544.
bers only)
Fourth District Court
State Senator, 30th District — Lou Gentile (D): of Appeals — Valarie K.
Gerlach (D): 2,687; Mat3,225; Frank Hoagland
thew W. McFarland (R):
(R): 6,121.
3,751.
State Representative,
President — Hillary
94th District — Jay
Clinton (D): 2,260; RichEdwards (R): 7,122;
ard Duncan: 63; Gary
Sarah Grace (D): 2,464.
Johnson: 280: Jill Stein
State Board of Educa(G): 66; Donald J. Trump
tion, 8th District —
(R): 7,309.
Vickie D. Briercheck:
U.S. Senator — Tom
456; Craig Brown: 1,213;
Nancy P. Hollister: 1,818; Connors: 134; Joseph R.
DeMare (G): 128; Rob
Debbie Phillips: 3,771;
Portman (R): 6,415; Scott
Kathleen Purdy: 404.
Rupert: 147; Ted StrickChief Justice of the
land (D): 2,756.
Supreme Court — MauU.S. Representative,
reen O’Connor: 6,113.
Justice of the Supreme 6th District — Bill Johnson (R): 7,029; Michael
Court (Jan. 1 term) —
L. Lorentz (D): 2,424.
Pat Fischer (R): 3,340;

dizziness, headaches,
confusion, or weakness,
immediately seek fresh
air and call the West
From page 1
Virginia Poison Center at
Obviously, carbon
1-800-222-1222. If anyone
monoxide can sicken or
is unconscious or having
kill those exposed to high convulsions (seizures),
concentrations.
call 911.
If anyone living in the
To prevent carbon
home (including pets)
monoxide poisoning,
whether you are at home
experiences sleepiness,

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

For: 265; Against: 123.
Salisbury Twp. Fire —
For: 471; Against: 310.
Alexander Local
Schools (Meigs County
numbers only) — For:
234; Against: 335.
Candidates
Commissioner (Jan. 2
term) — Randy Smith:
6,641.
Commissioner (Jan. 3
term) — Michael Bartrum: 6,509.
Prosecuting Attorney
— James K. Stanley:
7,088.
Clerk of Courts —
Sammi Sisson Mugrage:
7,028.
Sheriff — Keith O.
Wood: 8,283.
Recorder — Kay Hill:
7,326.
Treasurer — Peggy
Yost: 7,877.
Engineer — Eugene

Poisoning

Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

8 AM

Triplett: 7,347.

(1-mill) — For: 271;
Against: 124.
Syracuse Village Fire
(.5-mill) — For: 258;
Against: 122.
Chester Twp. Roads —
For: 812; Against: 382.
Lebanon Twp. Roads
— For: 198; Against: 158.
Letart Twp. Cemetery
— For: 237; Against: 107.
Olive Twp. Cemetery
— For: 497; Against: 220.
Orange Twp. Fire —
For: 339; Against: 181.
Rutland Twp. Roads —
For: 611; Against: 338.
Rutland Twp. Cemetery
— For: 633; Against: 305.
Salem Twp. Fire — For:
293; Against: 105.
Salem Twp. Roads —

Ariel’s performing arts
history.
“The original Ariel
Opera House was
established in 1895,”
said Snow. “This facade
(front of the theater)
was put on when they
made renovations in
1930. They changed
the whole look of the
building. Anyone driving
downtown would not
think this was a building
from the 1890s.”
Snow said the next
few projects coming to
the Ariel would be to get
some audio visual equipment along with screens
and some carpeting up
along staircases to help
with some of the acoustics of the building.

TODAY

Election
From page 1

Ongoing Events
MIDDLEPORT — Pastor Billy Zuspan of the First
Baptist Church of Middleport has begun an in-depth
Bible study of The Revelation during the Sunday
and Wednesday evening services at 7 p.m. at 211 S.
6th Ave., Middleport, Ohio. If you have questions,
please call 740-992-2755 and leave a message.

From page 1

Tyree has been recognized
for her artwork. She won
a background contest for
the production of “Alice in
Wonderland” at the French
Art Colony in Gallipolis.
Tyree has also won a
state award for a cyber bullying entry, and several ribbons at the Mason County
Fair. Another recent award
was at the Riverbend Arts
Council’s “Art in the Village,” where Tyree won
second place in the drawing
category with her work,
“Mandala Inspired.”

Charleston
54/41

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
35/27
Montreal
34/24

Billings
45/30

Minneapolis
38/29

Detroit
41/35

Toronto
36/32
New York
47/38

Chicago
46/34

Denver
52/30

Washington
53/40

Kansas City
50/32

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

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
56/35/s
26/18/s
68/54/pc
51/37/s
52/35/s
45/30/pc
47/31/r
45/32/s
54/41/pc
62/44/pc
46/28/pc
46/34/r
48/42/r
44/37/r
44/36/r
68/44/s
52/30/s
47/31/c
41/35/sn
81/72/sh
73/48/r
46/41/r
50/32/c
67/42/s
66/41/s
69/50/s
54/48/r
81/70/pc
38/29/sn
63/50/sh
79/60/c
47/38/s
61/36/s
78/59/pc
49/39/s
73/50/s
44/35/r
44/25/s
59/41/pc
52/37/s
58/40/sh
51/30/pc
61/46/pc
51/44/sh
53/40/s

Hi/Lo/W
56/31/pc
24/18/s
72/51/pc
54/46/r
55/38/pc
44/29/pc
49/37/pc
40/37/c
60/44/c
67/45/s
44/24/sn
43/32/c
55/40/c
51/41/c
53/39/r
72/47/s
49/27/s
48/32/c
49/37/c
81/73/sh
75/51/s
52/36/c
55/32/pc
63/40/s
63/41/s
74/49/s
59/41/c
81/71/pc
39/27/c
63/43/pc
77/56/s
50/44/r
69/35/s
81/60/pc
54/44/c
75/51/s
52/40/c
40/30/c
66/46/sh
57/40/pc
54/39/pc
49/29/pc
60/49/pc
51/45/r
56/45/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
68/54

High
Low

88° in Edinburg, TX
3° in Cotton, MN

Global
Chihuahua
70/42

Houston
73/48
Monterrey
80/57

Miami
81/70

High
Low

108° in Marble Bar, Australia
-52° in Tompo, Russia

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

60647073

Visitor Sunday — A Day of Thanksgiving
MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street Church in Middleport invites the public for a special day of thanksgiving on Sunday, Dec. 4. The church will be thanking
God for all that he has enabled them to do in the
past year. The day of thanksgiving and celebration
will include Sunday school at 9:30 a.m., worship service at 10:30 a.m., thanksgiving dinner at 5 p.m. and
gospel sing at 6 p.m.

Ariel

given out at the event.
Tyree, daughter of Charlie and Mindy Tyree, is
MASON — When thou- an art student under the
sands gathered for the West leadership of teacher Susan
Virginia SSAC State High
Parrish. She plays soccer as
School Soccer Tournaa mid-ﬁelder for the Ohio
ment earlier this month in
Valley Christian School
Beckley, it was a Wahama
Defenders.
student at the center of
The student’s winning
attention, even though the entry features a close-up
school has no team.
view of a goal net, with
Camryn Tyree, a sophosoccer cleats atop a ball.
more at the Bend Area
Her name, as well as school
school, submitted the win- and art teacher’s name, also
ning art entry for the cover graces the cover.
of the programs that were
This isn’t the ﬁrst time

Special to the Sentinel

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 23, 2016 s 6

OSU-Michigan
rivalry needs
no hype
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio
– Maybe the really big
rivalries don’t require
a lot of motivational
tools.
At least that’s the
way it appeared at
Ohio State on Monday
with Michigan coming
into Ohio Stadium on
Saturday.
Last week when
OSU played Michigan
State, a mixed martial
arts ﬁght played continuously on the large
video board hanging
high above the Buckeyes’ indoor practice
ﬁeld at the Woody
Hayes Athletic Center.
Monday, the only
thing on the video
screen was a large stationary block O.
That does not mean
that Saturday’s game
between No. 2 Ohio
State and No. 3 Michigan does not consume
the Buckeyes players
and coaches. It just
means the rivalry
needs no embellishments.
After 112 games
between the two
teams, including the
last 99 years in a row
and 77 Big Ten championships between
them, no reminders of
the importance of this
game are necessary for
Ohio State or Michigan.

Especially not this
year, where Michigan
(10-1, 7-1 Big Ten)
can reach the Big Ten
championship with a
win over Ohio State
and the Buckeyes (101, 7-1 Big Ten) could
get there through a
combination of beating Michigan and
Penn State falling in
an upset to Michigan
State.
Ohio State also
would make a strong
case to be invited to
the four-team College
Football Playoff without playing in the Big
Ten title game if wins
Saturday.
It doesn’t take long
the week of an Ohio
State-Michigan game
to hear someone call it
“the greatest rivalry in
all of sports.”
OSU offensive lineman Billy Price was
one of the ﬁrst to use
that description at
player interviews on
Monday.
“I guess we’re biased
because we’re in it,”
Price said. “If you’re
not from Ohio, you
don’t really understand
the signiﬁcance of it.”
With 52 players from
outside Ohio on OSU’s
roster, the appreciation
for the rivalry sometimes has to be learned
or absorbed.
“We educate them

By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

URG courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Alexis Payne shoots over Ohio
Valley University’s Haley Ackerman during the
second half of Saturday’s women’s division
championship game in the Bevo Francis
Invitational Tournament at the Newt Oliver
Arena. Payne had 15 points in the RedStorm’s
84-56 victory over the Fighting Scots.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande raced
to an 18-point ﬁrst quarter lead
and cruised to an 84-56 win
over Ohio Valley University in
the women’s division championship game of the 34th Annual
Bevo Francis Invitational Tournament, Saturday afternoon, at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
Twelve different players
scored - including three in double ﬁgures - for the RedStorm,
who improved to 4-2 with the
win.
Ohio Valley, a member of
the NCAA Division II Great
Midwest Athletic Conference,
dropped to 2-3 with the loss.
The Fighting Scots trailed
just 10-6 after a jumper in the
lane by Cydney Franklin with
5:42 left in the opening stanza,
but Rio scored 15 of the ﬁnal
16 points in the period and the

game was never really close
from that point on.
The RedStorm led by as many
as 21 points before settling on
a 19-point lead, 42-23, at the
intermission and the cushion
reached as many as 24 points,
56-32, after a pair of free throws
by sophomore Jasmine Smith
(Canal Winchester, OH) with
4:48 remaining in the third
quarter.
OVU responded with a 12-2
run of its own and pulled to
within 58-44 after Jazzmyn Simmons hit one of two free throws
with 1:21 left in the period, but
the Fighting Scots got no closer
the rest of the way.
Rio pushed the lead back to
17 points by the end of the quarter and closed the game on a
14-2 run to earn its largest lead
of the contest in the game’s ﬁnal
margin.
Junior Alexis Payne led the

See RIO | 10

See RIVALRY | 10

Buckeyes
overpower
WCU, 66-38
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — JaQuan Lyle
scored 17 and Jae’Sean
Tate added 14 and 11
rebounds as Ohio State
routed Western Carolina 66-38 in another
tuneup game on Monday night.
Kam Williams added
13 points and Trevor
Thompson had 10 for
Ohio State, which is
4-0 to start the season
but has gotten away
with some sloppy play
over lesser opponents.
The Buckeyes shot
just 41.8 percent from
the ﬂoor Monday, but
outrebounded Western
Carolina 44-33.
“On the defensive
end, we played very
good. We got stops,”
Lyle said. “But on the
offensive ends we just
(weren’t) there mentally.”
The Buckeyes trailed
4-2 early before opening up the game with
a 9-0 run and cruising
from there. Western
Carolina (1-4) shot just
27.5 percent from the
ﬂoor and committed 20
turnovers.
“I thought defensively
we were as sound as
we’ve been in a long
time,” Ohio State coach
Thad Matta said. “On
the ﬂip side, we had
possessions where

Rio women win Bevo title

we’re not thinking the
game, we’re not making
the easy play, we’re not
making the easy read.
We’ve got to get better
at that.”
Haboubacar Mutombo led the Southern
Conference team with
11 points, and Marc
Gosselin had nine
points and 14 rebounds.
The Buckeyes dominated inside, scoring
36 points in the paint,
compared with just 10
for Western Carolina.
“We’re going to keep
building, keep winning,
keep moving in the
right direction,” Williams said.
Ohio State led 32-18
at the half on 5-for-8
shooting from the ﬂoor
by Tate and eight steals
by the Buckeyes. Lyle
was 4 for 4 from the
foul line in the half.
“For us to have a
chance in this ballgame
we needed to shoot
the ball with a little
consistency,” Western
Carolina coach Larry
Hunter said. “We had
11 turnovers in the ﬁrst
half, and that hurt us a
little bit. We can’t give
away possessions. Ohio
State is too talented
to do that. You’re not
going to win too many
ballgames shooting 27
percent.”

URG courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Joao Paulo Antonio and St. Thomas’ Breno Ertty battle for a loose ball during Saturday’s NAIA Men’s Soccer National
Championship Opening Round game at Evan E. Davis Field. Antonio had an assist in the RedStorm’s 5-1 win over the Bobcats.

Second-seeded Rio Grande bounces Bobcats
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Harry Reilly registered the ﬁrst hat trick of
his collegiate career and
assisted on another goal,
leading the University of
Rio Grande to a 5-1 win
over St. Thomas (Fla.)
University in the opening
round of the NAIA Men’s
Soccer National Championship, Saturday afternoon, at cold, windswept
Evan E. Davis Field.
Pau Delgado Rodriguez added a pair of

assists in the win for
the second-seeded RedStorm, who improved to
19-1-1 overall while earning a second round date
with No. 15 seed Corban
(Ore.) - a 1-0 winner over
Menlo (Calif.) in another
of Saturday’s opening
round matchups - on
Tuesday, Nov. 29, at 11
a.m., at the Seacrest Soccer Complex in Delray
Beach, Fla.
St. Thomas, which was
making the school’s second all-time NAIA tourney appearance, ﬁnished
9-7-2 with the loss.

Reilly, a sophomore
from Coventry, England,
scored each of the RedStorm’s ﬁnal three goals
- one in the ﬁrst half and
two after the break - to
secure the win.
Reilly took a pass from
Rodriguez - a senior
from Barcelona, Spain,
and ﬁred a shot which
deﬂected off of a St.
Thomas defender and
Bobcat goal keeper Connor Christie and into the
net for a 3-1 Rio Grande
lead with 9:00 left in the
ﬁrst half.
Reilly, who had four

goals for the entire season entering Saturday’s
game, scored again at
59:38 off a nifty crossing pass from junior
Joao Paulo Antonio
(Sao Paulo, Brazil) and
found the net again just
over two minutes from
the top of the 18 yard
box - thanks to an assist
by Rodriguez - to set the
ﬁnal score.
Rio Grande, the
defending NAIA national
champion, scored twice
in a span of just 2:07 to
See BOBCATS | 10

Jimmie Johnson, greatest of all? He is in the mix
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) —
The congratulatory messages
started rolling in long before Jimmie Johnson had ﬁnished his
obligatory championship photos.
Larry Bird. Mia Hamm. Michael
Phelps. Mario Andretti. Drew
Brees. The Chicago Cubs.
The list of dignitaries — and
the friends and neighbors who
toilet-papered his North Carolina
home overnight — shows just how
signiﬁcant this latest milestone is
for Johnson.
Greatest of all time? Maybe. He
certainly deserves to be in the conversation.

Johnson joined Richard Petty
and Dale Earnhardt as the only
drivers in NASCAR to win seven
titles with a race-winning run
Sunday at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. His record-tying championship came in a bizarre year for
Johnson and his Hendrick Motorsports team, and on a day that did
not belong to the iconic No. 48
Chevrolet until the ﬁnal lap of the
race.
Hendrick Motorsports was not
good this year, and never found
the speed to match Joe Gibbs Racing and its ﬂeet of Toyotas. Johnson, for most of the season, was

never even mentioned as a title
contender.
The organization buckled down,
improved its cars and got Johnson
in position to race for his seventh
title.
Then he did the rest.
When Carl Edwards wrecked
Sunday night to essentially lose
the championship, Johnson
charged through the melee and
found himself suddenly leading
the two remaining title contenders. On a night when he’d started
last — his team was found to have
See GREATEST | 10

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 23, 2016 7

Big plays, disputed calls, lasers highlight return to Mexico
MEXICO CITY (AP) —
Derek Carr made more big
plays for Oakland, questionable calls by the ofﬁcials
peeved the Texans and an
unexpected laser show from
the stands took both teams off
guard.
The NFL’s second regular
season game in Mexico City
featured a little bit of everything.
Carr threw two of his three
touchdown passes in the
fourth quarter and the Raiders
capitalized on two disputed
spots that thwarted a potential
scoring drive for Houston to
beat the Texans 27-20 on Monday night.
“It wasn’t maybe one of our
cleaner games in terms of
execution but we showed tremendous grit,” coach Jack Del

Rio said. “We got an opportunity late in the game to seize
control and we did.”
The Raiders (8-2) got a
little help as well on the way
to their ﬁrst four-game winning streak since their last
playoff season in 2002. The
most notable breaks came
midway through the fourth
quarter when the Texans (6-4)
were driving for a potential
go-ahead score after Oakland
had tied the game on Carr’s
75-yard pass to Jamize Olawale .
On a third-and-2 from the
Oakland 16, Lamar Miller ran
wide and appeared to get the
ﬁrst down before being tackled
by Malcolm Smith. But the
ofﬁcials spotted it short of the
marker and coach Bill O’Brien
opted not to challenge.

O’Brien then went for it on
fourth-and-inches instead of
kicking the go-ahead ﬁeld goal.
Akeem Hunt ran up the middle
and the Texans thought he got
the ﬁrst down, only to have it
marked about an inch short .
O’Brien challenged this time
but with no clear angle, the
play was not overturned.
“I felt like we needed a
touchdown there and obviously we did,” O’Brien said. “And
so we went for it. Thought we
had it, looked like it was clear
that we had it, so I challenged
it and they said we didn’t have
it. They said the call on the
ﬁeld stands, so I don’t know.”
Five plays later, Carr connected on a 35-yard touchdown pass to Amari Cooper
that gave the Raiders (8-2) a
27-20 lead and sent them to

their fourth straight win.
The most memorable image
of the NFL’s ﬁrst game in
Mexico City since 2005 might
have been the green laser that
frequently shined in Houston
quarterback Brock Osweiler’s
direction as a potential distraction used more commonly in
soccer games here.
“I never want to say one
thing’s a difference maker,
but certainly having a laser
zoomed in your eyeball deﬁnitely affects how you play a
game,” Osweiler said.
Here are some other things
to take away from the Raiders
win:
CARR’S NIGHT: Carr
turned a lackluster night into
a special one with his big
fourth quarter. He ﬁnished 21
of 31 for 295 yards with three

touchdowns and one interception. Just like he did in comeback wins over New Orleans,
Baltimore and Tampa Bay, he
was at his best in the fourth
quarter.
“Having that trigger man
who can make those kinds
of plays is everything,” Del
Rio said. “He did a great job
tonight staying poised. To
me that’s one of the keys, the
poise he’s playing with is kind
of unﬂappable.”
FAVORITE TARGET:
There’s something about
facing Osweiler that brings
out the best in Mack. After
sacking Osweiler ﬁve times
last year in Denver, Mack
brought him down again on
the ﬁnal play of the ﬁrst half.
That gives Mack sacks in ﬁve
straight games.

Steelers not so hot Bengals lose Bernard; Green could return in weeks
Green was in the
(AP)
on Thursday games —CINCINNATI
Bengals running back trainer’s room during
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Steelers don’t think coach Mike Tomlin needs to
explain himself whenever his gut tells him to
bail on convention.
If Tomlin wants to go for it — whether it be
a 2-point conversion, an iffy fourth down or a
touchdown instead of a chip shot field goal, a
choice he made three times at the end of the
first half in Sunday’s 24-9 victory over Cleveland — that’s totally fine by the Steelers. Last
they checked, getting into the end zone is what
they’re paid to do.
“It was awesome, man,” center Maurkice
Pouncey said. “I love it. Get some points,
man.”
Something the Steelers did — eventually —
during an eyebrow-raising sequence that began
with the ball at the Cleveland 3 and 5 seconds
left in the second quarter. Leading 6-0, a Chris
Boswell field goal would have made it a twoscore game. Even though Pittsburgh was scheduled to receive the second-half kickoff, Tomlin
kept Ben Roethlisberger and the offense on the
field.
Two incompletions, two Cleveland penalties,
a churning 1-yard touchdown run by Le’Veon
Bell and a 2-point toss to David Johnson later,
Pittsburgh led 14-0. It was halfway to ending a
four-game losing streak.
Just like Tomlin drew it up, right?
“We need to score points,” Pouncey said.
“(Kicking field goals) never wins. You get a
whole bunch of field goals, we been in that situation before.”
Tomlin insisted there was no ulterior motive
for repeatedly trying to get six, and eventually
eight, though the timing was auspicious. The
Steelers went 0 for 4 in 2-point conversions in
a narrow 35-30 loss to Dallas the week before.
“The message is that we wanted to score,
because scoring produces wins,” Tomlin said
on Monday. “And we’re always generally
aggressive in that area of the field.”
Pittsburgh (5-5) could afford to gamble more
than usual against the woeful Browns (0-11)
while winning on the road for just the second
time this season. A more difficult test awaits
on Thanksgiving night in Indianapolis. Drumming the NFL’s worst team a short two-hour
bus ride from home is one thing. Trying to
rein in Andrew Luck and have enough fresh
bodies to do it barely 96 hours later is another.
The key is trying to maximize every second of
down time in between.
“Honestly I don’t like the Thursday games,”
Pouncey said. “Short preparation, the body
gets short rest, and as a lineman, we go out
there 71 plays (against Cleveland). Every play I
touched somebody, trust and believe that.”
The Steelers haven’t exactly thrived on short
rest recently. They’ve dropped four straight
on Thursdays, including a Thanksgiving night
loss in Baltimore in 2013 that included Tomlin
nearly colliding with Ravens returner Jacoby
Jones during a long runback.
Pittsburgh went through its usual Monday
routine, which includes a series of sprints on
the practice field. There will be minimal contact on Tuesday and Wednesday before hopping the plane to Indianapolis. The Steelers
hope the sense of urgency and the adrenaline it
brings will overcome any lingering aches.
“We’re playing to stay alive,” offensive guard
Ramon Foster said. “Us coming up short on a
Thursday? There’s no excuse.”
The time to get it going is now. It’s why
Tomlin wasn’t particularly surprised when he
headed to the team cafeteria for a cup of coffee
early Monday and heard music coming from
the training room. He popped his head inside
and found linebacker James Harrison going
through a series of Instragram-worthy workouts just hours removed from becoming the
franchise’s all-time sack leader .
“On a short week, he’s in there doing what he
does,” Tomlin said. “There’s a lot to learn from
a guy who approaches his business in the manner he does. And I know our guys recognize
that.”
A little bit of familiarity with the Colts
should help. Pittsburgh has thumped Indianapolis each of the last two seasons by a combined
score of 96-44, though Luck did not play in last
year’s 45-10 whipping due to injury.

Giovani Bernard has a
torn anterior cruciate
ligament, but star receiver A.J. Green might be
able to return from a
hamstring injury this
season, coach Marvin
Lewis said on Monday.
Scans on Bernard’s left
knee conﬁrmed the ACL
tear, suffered on the ﬁnal
drive on Sunday. He’ll
have surgery soon, costing Cincinnati its most
versatile running back.
Green also will be out
when the Bengals play at
Baltimore (5-5) on Sunday with what amounts
to their last chance to
get back into the AFC
North race. Green hurt
his right hamstring on
the Bengals’ ﬁrst pass of
the game.
Lewis said scans
on Green’s hamstring
detected a strain — not
as severe as initially
feared — and there’s
a possibility he could
return at some point.
The Bengals (3-6-1)
are a long shot for the
playoffs after a 16-12
loss to Buffalo at Paul
Brown Stadium.
“It’s just a matter of
how quickly he recovers
through it,” Lewis said.

the open locker room
period on Monday. At
one point, he poked his
head out the door and,
with a big smile, yelled
to a teammate and then
went back inside.
Bernard caught three
straight passes on the
ﬁnal drive that ended
with an incompletion in
the end zone. He stayed
in the game for a couple
of plays after getting his
knee twisted and then
took himself out. He
went for a medical scan
that detected the torn
ligament.
“I thought he was just
tired and we were getting him out for a play,”
running back Rex Burkhead said. “Then when
I found out afterward, I
was like, ‘What?’ It was
shocking news to me
and I’m sure a lot of the
guys. He was walking
around like it wasn’t that
bad.”
The two injuries are
a signiﬁcant blow to a
team that has been one
of the healthiest in the
league. Green is among
the NFL’s leaders with
66 catches for 964 yards.
Bernard is second on
the team with 39 catches

Frank Victores | AP

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver A.J. Green (18) is helped off the
field after an apparent injury in the first half Sunday against the
Buffalo Bills in Cincinnati.

for 336 yards. Bernard
also has rushed for 337
yards, second to Jeremy
Hill’s 623 yards.
“Words can’t really put
it how I feel,” Hill said
on Monday, standing
next to Bernard’s locker.
“Guys have to step in
there and not miss a
beat. Obviously it’s easy
to say that with guys
like A.J. and Gio going
down, but that’s what we
have to do if we want to
accomplish the things
we want to accomplish.”
The Bengals selfdestructed against the
Bills. Mike Nugent
missed both of his extrapoint attempts, hitting
the right upright. The
Bengals considered look-

ing at another kicker,
but decided to stick with
Nugent and help him
work out his problems.
In the past three games,
Nugent has missed three
extra points and a ﬁeld
goal.
“I’ve given it a lot of
thought,” Lewis said.
“We’re going to move
forward with Mike.”
Lewis noted there was
a downside to bringing
in an unfamiliar kicker at
this point in the season.
Nugent is in his seventh
season with the Bengals.
“I’m way more comfortable with helping
Mike get corrected
through this,” Lewis
said. “This is where
we’re going to be today.”

Browns trying to stay united amidst turmoil
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Hue Jackson has run out
of pep talks. At this point,
there’s only so much he
can do to stop this dismal season from an even
deeper descent.
The Browns’ record is
one thing.
Jackson can’t lose his
locker room, too.
As his team recovered
from a 24-9 pasting from
Pittsburgh, a loss that
dropped Cleveland to 0-11
in 2016 and below .500
overall for the ﬁrst time
in 66 years, the Browns
coach said it’s vital over
the next ﬁve games for his
frustrated players to keep
ﬁghting — together.
“I understand how
people feel about us right
now,” Jackson said Monday.
“This team is going to
continue to work hard.
We are going to continue
to stick together because
we know that is the only
way success will come.
We have to continue to
have each other’s backs.”
The Browns are hoping
to avoid dubious history.
Three NFL teams previously went 0-11 before
winning a game — the
1975 Chargers, 1984 Bills,
2000 Chargers — while
seven had even worse
starts.
It can’t get much worse
for the Browns than
Sunday, when the Steelers overpowered them,
recording eight sacks,
taking rookie quarterback

Cody Kessler out with a
concussion — his second
head injury in 28 days —
and dominating both lines
from the outset.
Kessler will miss Sunday’s game against the
surging New York Giants
(7-3) and it’s possible the
third-round pick is done
for the season.
Josh McCown, who
was sacked four times
and absorbed a few more
crushing hits when he
came in for Kessler in the
fourth quarter, will make
his third start this season.
The 37-year-old
McCown has endured difﬁcult seasons before, but
those haven’t softened the
impact this one is having.
“It is a tough, tough
time for us,” he said.
“Especially for guys who
have been in the league
for a little while and in
our locker room, it is frustrating.
“But at the end of the
day, we are going to
continue to reload, come
back to work and ﬁght
hard to make it right and
get it going. We owe it to
the rest of the guys in the
locker room, the coaches,
the people in the organization and the city to get
this thing turned around.”
Some of the frustration
is beginning to boil over.
Following Cleveland’s
21st loss in 22 games,
Browns wide receiver
Terrelle Pryor, one of the
lone bright spots in an
otherwise depressing sea-

son, vented his feeling by
calling out some offensive
teammates for not doing
a better job of protecting
the Browns quarterbacks.
Pryor didn’t name
names, but there was no
hiding his anger. And
unlike Pro Bowl tackle
Joe Thomas, he didn’t
lay blame on Cleveland’s
front ofﬁce for gutting the
club’s roster during the
offseason to build for the
future.
Pryor spoke from his
heart, which seems fractured.
“They can’t keep getting hit like that, and if I
want to voice my opinion,
I’m going to voice my
opinion now, because it’s
going on too much,” he
said. “I don’t care if you’ve
got to hold these dudes.
Hold them and take the
damn penalty and stop
getting our quarterbacks
hit. I hate that.”
While Jackson appreciated Pryor’s passion, he
didn’t like his message.
“That is not Terrelle’s
job,” Jackson said. “I
know he is frustrated and
we all are. No doubt, we
need to protect our quarterback, but that is not for
him to say.
“Let’s focus on ourselves and support each
other. That is what good
teams do, and that is what
we are going to work to
become.”
Jackson spoke with
Pryor, who caught ﬁve
passes for 97 yards,

another performance that
will only help his bargaining power in getting a
contract extension from
the Browns.
“Sometimes, like most
people, after the game
and after the heat of the
moment, you are a little
frustrated and maybe you
say some things that you
wish you hadn’t,” Jackson
said.
“I understand it is coming from a good place. I
know that no one wants
to see our quarterback
getting hit, but I think
everybody has to let me
be the judge of that.”
As for Jackson, it
appears he hasn’t lost the
conﬁdence of his players,
who remain supportive
despite a season testing
everyone’s patience and
stomachs.
“We stand 100 percent
behind him,” linebacker
Christian Kirksey said.
Jackson is weathering
the storm the only way
he knows — head on. He
wasn’t prepared to lose
on this scale, but he’s
determined to not let the
losing slow him down.
“I know what I signed
up for,” he said. “I truly
believe I am just the man
for the job. That has not
shown, and I respect that
and I understand how our
fans and all feel, but I am
not running from this. I
am going to run through
it. We are going to ﬁx
this. That is what I came
here to do.”

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Notices

Help Wanted General

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.

Do you enjoy working
with people and want to
be in management?
If so then this
position is for you!
The Woda Group
is looking for a Full-time
Apartment Manager in Bidwell
&amp; Thurman Ohio.
For more details, please go
online to our website at
www.wodagroup.com
and apply!

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

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
Help Wanted For
HVAC Company
Hiring an experienced
installer. Also, helper with
some knowledge helpful if
interested call 740-441-1236.
if no answer leave
a message
Miscellaneous
Everything left from summer
yard sale make a offer
everything must go contact
740-446-4807
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Apartments/Townhouses

Diesel Mechanic Needed,
salary is negotiable, benefit
package available.
Experience is recommended
but not required.
Send your resume to:
Blind Box 101
825 3rd ave.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
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

For Sale By Owner
For Sale By Owner
2 rental properties
at the same location
1 house- 1 Apartment
call 740-709-9697
House For Sale
1075 2nd Ave
nice one level
740-441-9531 or
740-441-5238

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
Do you enjoy fixing
things and working
with your hands?
If so then this opportunity will
be great for you!
The Woda Group
is looking for experienced
Part-Time Maintenance
Technicians for our Bidwell,
OH location. If interested
please go online to our
website at
www.wodagroup.com
and apply!
60583312

Help Wanted General

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
Nice 1 BR unfurnished
apartment. Refrig. &amp; range
provided. Water, sewage &amp;
garbage paid.
Deposit required.
Call 740-709-0072
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2 bedroom apartments
$550/$600 and deposit
located in Bidwell some
utilities paid call 740-446-4175
2 HOMES FOR RENT:
3BR, 1 bath house,
recently remodeled.
No pets. $800/mo
2BR, 1 bath home
w/garage $500/mo.
Call 740-446-3644
for application.
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Land (Acreage)

Money To Lend

Daily Sentinel

Want To Buy

Land For Rent
Hunting rights on 75 acres
on wooded property
located at Wray Road
in Green Township
$2000.00 year
call 740-709-9697

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

60692541

If interested, please go online to our website at
www.wodagroup.com and apply!
Help Wanted General

Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center has openings
for Certiﬁed Nursing Assistants.
Must have WV license. Must be able to
work 12 hour shifts.
Apply at Human Resources,
Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Drive,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to (304) 675-6975 or
apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/D/F/V

60692793

QUALIFICATIONS: Valid Driverҋs License Must pass extensive
background checks and a drug test Traffic Safety, Law
Enforcement, or Teaching background is preferred
Complete an on-line application at:
www.aaa.com/apply
Or for more information call 502-779-3623.

Notices

Notice of Dissolution to Creditors
and Claimants against Corporation
(pursuant to ORC 1701.87)
Notice of Dissolution of North East Fuel, Inc.
North East Fuel, Inc., an Ohio corporation (the "corporation")
has dissolved. You must present to North East Fuel, Inc. any
claim against the corporation, including any claim by a creditor
or any claim that is conditional, unmatured, or contingent upon
the occurrence or nonoccurrence of future events, pursuant to
the following:
1. All claims shall be presented in writing and shall identify the
claimant and contain sufficient information to reasonably inform
the corporation of the substance of the claim.
2. The mailing address to which the person must send the
claims is: 70 East 55th Street, 15th Floor New York, NY 10022
3. The deadline by which the corporation must receive the
claim is sixty (60) days after the date this notice is given (the
"Deadline").
4. The claim will be barred if the corporation does not receive
the claim by the deadline.
The corporation may make distributions to other creditors or
claimants, including distributions to shareholders of the
corporation, without further notice to the claimant.

SHERIFFҋS SALE, CASE NO. 16 CV 044, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, VS. DEL L. OGDIN
AND LINDA C. OGDIN, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

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

By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, Keith O. Wood, the Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio,
will expose to sell at public auction on the front steps of the
Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 9, 2016, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands
and tenements:

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

SHERIFFҋS SALE, CASE NO. 16 CV 039, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, VS. MARK E. SMITH
AKA MARK SMITH, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, Keith O. Wood, the Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio,
will expose to sell at public auction on the front steps of the
Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy, Meigs County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 9, 2016, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands
and tenements:

Lots Numbered 16, 17, 18 and 19 in the McDole and Torrence
Addition to the Village of Reedsville in said County of Meigs.

If so, then this opportunity will be great
for you! The Woda Group is looking for
experienced maintenance technicians for our
Colonial Park, Pomeroy, Ohio location.

AAA East Central has an immediate need for a part-time Driver
Education Instructor who will teach behind the wheel driver
training and conduct classroom training to new drivers in the
Gallipolis area. Must be able to work late afternoon, evenings,
and weekends.
COMPENSATION: $10.90 to $12.50/hour
(based on experience)

LEGALS

Apartments/Townhouses

Situated in the Village of Reedsville, Township of Olive, County
of Meigs and State of Ohio, and more fully described as follows:

Do you enjoy fixing things
and working with your hands?

Help Wanted General

For more particular description of said lots, see plat of said
Addition on record at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Subject to all leases, easements, rights of way, conditions and
restrictions of record.
Reference Deed: Volume 147, Page 275, Meigs County Official
Records.
Auditorҋs Parcel Nos.: 09-01238.000, 09-01239.000,
09-01240.000 and 09-01241.000.

Situated in the State of Ohio, County of Meigs and in the
Township of Salem.
Beginning at the Northeast corner of the real estate described in
Volume 321, Page 135, Meigs County Deed Records, said
corner being marked by an iron pin found; thence South 00
degrees 00' 00" West, 320.63 feet to an iron pin set and passing
an iron pin found at 224.00 feet; thence South 50 degrees 16'
37" West, 219.82 feet to an iron pin set; thence North 08
degrees 20' 00" West, 331.12 feet to a point in the center of
State Route 325 and passing an iron pin set at 306.12 feet;
thence following said centerline North 55 degrees 33' 28" East
122.53 feet to a point; thence continuing along said centerline
North 51 degrees 55' 25" East, 147.38 feet to a point; thence
leaving said centerline South 00 degrees 00' 00" West, 26.70
feet to the place of beginning containing 1.565 acre, more or
less.
The above description was prepared from an actual survey by
Philip M. Roberts, Ohio Professional Surveyor, #6196.
Excepting all that certain vein of coal locally and variously known
as Number 4, 4A, Clarion or Limestone Coal underlying the
above described real estate, along with all rights and privileges
granted in deed recorded in Deed Volume 211, Page 33, of the
Meigs County Deed Records.
Subject to all leases, easements, rights of way, conditions and
restrictions of record.
Reference Deed: Volume 38, Page 749, Meigs County Official
Records.

Subject to the United States of Americaҋs right of redemption
under 28USC Section 2410(C).

Auditorҋs Parcel No.: 13-00701.001

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 38650 Second Street, Reedsville, OH
45772.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 30848 State Route 325, Langsville, OH
45741.

CURRENT OWNER: Mark E. Smith.

CURRENT OWNERS: Del L. Ogdin and Linda C. Ogdin.

REAL ESTATE APPRAISED AT: $47,500.00. The real estate
cannot be sold for less than 2/3rds the appraised value. The
appraisal does not include an interior examination of any
structures, if any, on the real estate.

REAL ESTATE APPRAISED AT: $75,000.00. The real estate
cannot be sold for less than 2/3rds the appraised value. The
appraisal does not include an interior examination of any
structures, if any, on the real estate.

TERMS OF SALE: 10% (certified/cashierҋs check only) down on
day of sale, balance (certified/cashierҋs check only) due on confirmation of sale. ORC 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff. Subject
to accrued real estate taxes.

TERMS OF SALE: 10% (certified/cashierҋs check only) down on
day of sale, balance (certified/cashierҋs check only) due on
confirmation of sale. ORC 2327.02(C) requires successful
bidders to pay recording fees and associated costs to the
Sheriff. Subject to accrued real estate taxes.

ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

ALL SHERIFFҋS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy,
OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689

ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, 211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy,
OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689

11/16/16, 11/23/16, 11/30/16

11/16/16, 11/23/16, 11/30/16

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Wednesday, November 23, 2016 9

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11/23

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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, November 23, 2016

manipulated the body
of his car after it had
passed inspection — and
clearly wasn’t as good as
the other three contenders, he had somehow
lucked into the lead.
He still had to earn
the win, though, and
did it with the restart of
his life to hold off Kyle
Busch and Joey Logano.
He led one lap and it was
the one that mattered.
“He is probably the
most underrated champion in this sport,” said his
crew chief, Chad Knaus.
“He is a fantastic, fantastic individual, an amazing race car driver. Most
people in the situation
we were in just in would
crumble. He didn’t even
waver. He knew what he
needed to do. He knew
what the demands were
on him at that point in
time, and he made it
happen.
“We’ve got a great
team. We’ve got a great
owner. We’ve got a great
everything at Hendrick
Motorsports. But the
fact of the matter is the
real spark in this whole
thing is Jimmie.”
A fatigue perhaps set
in when Johnson reeled
off ﬁve consecutive
titles. Fans didn’t seem
to appreciate his dominance, certainly not the
way they revered Petty
or Earnhardt.
Almost each Johnson
championship was met
with a collective yawn,
when they should have
been celebrated for their
unique achievement.
Johnson, at 41, is the
youngest driver to win
seven. Petty was 42
when he did it in 1979,
while Earnhardt was 43
in 1994. He also collected his seven titles in a
10-year span. Earnhardt

SSU outlasts Rio men for Bevo Francis title
By Randy Payton

with 59 seconds remaining - but
failed to get over the hump.
The RedStorm trailed 66-64
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Shawwhen they turned the ball over
nee State University forged a
with 12.2 seconds left and Shaw10-point second half lead and then nee’s Tamal Watkins went 4-for-4
held on down the stretch to post
at the free throw line in the closa 70-64 win over the University of ing moments to set the ﬁnal score.
Rio Grande in the men’s division
Jacob Daniels scored 19 points
championship game of the 34th
to lead the Bears, while Watkins
Annual Bevo Francis Invitational
and Carter added 15 and 12
Tournament, Saturday evening, at points, respectively.
the Newt Oliver Arena.
Watkins added three assists,
The Bears improved to 5-3 with Carter had four steals and J.
the victory.
Murrell snared a team-high six
Rio Grande slipped to 2-4 with
rebounds in the victory.
the loss.
Cruse led Rio with 13 points,
In a see-saw affair which feawhile freshmen Greg Wallace
tured seven ties and 10 lead
(Montego Bay, Jamaica) and Kaichanges, Shawnee State scored
leb Sheets (Pomeroy, OH) had 11
11 of the ﬁrst 15 points in the
and 10 points, respectively.
second half to take a 47-37 lead
Senior Devon Price (Pickeringfollowing a pair of Jayllen Carter
ton, OH) added six assists and
free throws with 12:14 left in the
three steals in the loss for the
game.
RedStorm.
The RedStorm refused to go
Rio Grande returns to action
URG courtesy photo
next Saturday when it faces BlueRio Grande’s Greg Wallace collides with away quietly, though.
Rio twice shaved the deﬁcit to
ﬁeld (Va.) College as part of the
Shawnee State’s Tamal Watkins on his
drive to the basket during the first half of just one - 59-58 after a bucket by
NAIA DII Showcase in Kingsport,
Saturday’s men’s division championship junior Kenny Council (JacksonTenn.
game in the 34th Annual Bevo Francis ville, FL) with 5:15 left and 65-64
Invitational Tournament. Wallace scored following a three-pointer by senior Randy Payton is the Sports Information
11 points in the RedStorm’s 70-64 loss to
Director at the University of Rio Grande.
Corey Cruse (Fort Mitchell, KY)
the Bears.
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Rivalry

the game.”
Quarterback J.T. Barrett said his ﬁrst exposure to an Ohio StateMichigan game was an
eye-opener.
“My ﬁrst year I was
redshirting and I went to
the game there (in 2013)
and there was a brawl
with my classmate Dontre Wilson in it. I come
from Texas and there it’s
Oklahoma and Texas.
But this is one unlike any
other,” Barrett said.
OSU coach Urban
Meyer said he got the
chance to discuss the
Ohio State-Michigan
rivalry with former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler, who died in
2006, but never had the

opportunity to do that
with Ohio State’s Woody
Hayes, who died in 1987.
“I had great conversations with Coach Schembechler,” Meyer said.
“Woody Hayes, unfortunately, I never had those
great conversations. I met
him a few times. I wish I
would have been able to
sit down and talk to him
about it.
“There’s a mutual
respect (between Ohio
State and Michigan) and
I learned it from those
two – two of the greatest
coaches of all time,” he
said.

16:55, with Reilly earning
an assist.
St. Thomas sliced the
deﬁcit in half with 17:04
From page 6
left before the intermisin a span of just 2:07 to
sion thanks to a defensive
take an early 2-0 lead.
miscue by the RedStorm.
Junior Jorge Guinovart
On a Bobcat throw-in
(Barcelona, Spain) scored from the right corner, the
on the rebound of his own ball deﬂected off of a Rio
blocked shot at the 14:48 defender and past sophomark and senior Lucas
more net-minder Ben
Talaveira-Beﬁ (Sao Paulo, Martinez (Montpellier,
Brazil) found the net on a France) to make it 2-1.
As things turned out,
breakaway to the goal at

that was as close as STU
would get to a goal.
Rio ﬁnished with a 19-4
edge in shots, including
a 10-0 advantage in shots
on frame.
The RedStorm also
enjoyed a 12-2 cushion in
corner kick opportunities.
St. Thomas had both of
its corner kicks inside the
game’s ﬁrst four minutes.

Rio

Valley, while Anee’ Braswell added 12 points.
Rio Grande will return
to action next Saturday,
taking on 24th-ranked
Milligan (Tenn.) as part
of the NAIA Division II
Showcase in Kingsport,
Tenn.

push-ups, sit-ups, curls,
whatever. It’s always on
our mind,” Elﬂein said.
Defensive end Tyquan
From page 6
Lewis is from North Caron the big history
olina, where basketball
moments of the rivalry,”
rivalries rule.
said offensive lineman
“I grew in North CaroPat Elﬂein, who grew
lina, so I knew North
up in suburban ColumCarolina-Duke basketball.
bus in Pickerington and
I thought that was a huge
always dreamed of playrivalry. But us versus
ing at Ohio State. “We
them (Ohio State against
deﬁnitely have to educate Michigan), is just another
the guys that aren’t from level,” Lewis said.
Ohio and don’t know
“Growing up in North
about it.
Carolina, you either pick
“We use it as motivaDuke or Carolina. When
tion. During the off-seayou get here, you see
son we have a countdown things like the Mirror
until we play that game.
Lake jump, the gold pants
So, if it’s 230 days until
and things like that. Once
we play that game, we’ll
you get here, you develop
do 230 reps of a workout, a whole new respect for

Bobcats

From page 6

RedStorm with a gamehigh 15 points and two
blocked shots, while
sophomore Jaida Carter
(New Philadelphia, OH)
and Smith ﬁnished with
11 and 10 points, respectively.

Freshman Kamryn
Conaway (Lucasville,
OH) had a game-best
10 rebounds in the winning effort, while fellow
frosh Sydney Holden
(Wheelersburg, OH) had
ﬁve assists and freshman
Megan Duduit (Minford,
OH) had ﬁve steals.
Jalyn Gilbert had 13
points and three steals in
a losing cause for Ohio

Reach Jim Naveau at The Lima
News at 567-242-0414 or on Twitter
at @Lima_Naveau.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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From page 6

needed 14 years to do it,
while Petty did it in 15
seasons.
Johnson’s 80 career
victories rank seventh all
time, one spot ahead of
Earnhardt.
“I think the ﬁve in a
row was pretty phenomenal, and I think winning
seven and tying seven is
pretty special,” said team
owner Rick Hendrick.
“It’s special to see him
tie those guys. I think it’s
good for the sport, and
I think it draws a lot of
attention to our sport.
We had Gatorade, had
a lot of guys like Peyton
Manning telling him
how neat it was, and Serena Williams. I think it’s
going to be a big shot in
the arm for not only Jimmie but our sport.”
Johnson will likely
add to his totals. With
retirement still a ways
off, he has a chance to
win eight titles, and as
he drank a beer and ate
a slice of cold pizza in
a champagne-soaked
ﬁresuit, he was already
being asked about the
possibility of eight.
“I don’t know what the
chances are, but let’s go,”
he said. “I’m so excited
to put that in front of
myself and the team has
a hurdle to get over and
an accomplishment to
achieve. I had a lot of
fun racing for the sixth.
This one and the calm
nature and the way we
went about business and
got it done only gives me
more conﬁdence for the
future.
“I honestly feel like
I’m playing with house
money. I never aspired
to be famous. I never
aspired to be a champion. I just wanted to race.
I think it makes us really
dangerous, and I look
forward to the challenge
of trying to get number
eight.”

60691988

Greatest

Daily Sentinel

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY

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