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                  <text>On this
day in
history...

Partly
sunny. High
79, low 56

RedStorm
blanks
Point Park

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 152, Volume 69

Tuesday, September 22, 2015 s 50¢

Riverfest a success

The Wild Honey Bees took
the stage Thursday evening
during the annual Pomeroy
Sternwheel River Fest. Other
performances during the
three-day event included
Elvis Tribute Artists, Dwight
Icenhower, Paul Doeffinger and
Brent Patterson. Look for more
photos from this weekend’s
festivities inside!
Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Meigs SWDC
meeting Sept. 29

Trail Ride celebrates 20 years
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Staff Report

POMEROY — The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District will hold its annual meeting,
banquet and election at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 29,
at Meigs High School, with the election of two
supervisors beginning at 6 p.m.
Two will be elected to three-year terms on the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, with terms commencing January
2016. Candidates include Joe Bolin, of Rutland,
James Anthony (Tony) Carnahan, of Racine, and
Howard (Buddy) Ervin Jr., of Racine.
Meigs County Commissioners will give a State
of the County address and Rob Hamilton, ODNR
program specialist, will discuss the move of the
SWCD to the Ohio Department of Agriculture
beginning January 2016. Hamilton will also conduct the supervisor election.
The Meigs SWCD, established in 1943 is a legal
subdivision of state government that provides
natural resource management assistance to county
landowners and other units of local government.
The district is funded by the Meigs County Board

RUTLAND —The Dill Farm on Beech Grove Road
in Meigs County was ﬁlled with the sounds of dogs
barking, people laughing and horses neighing as the
20th annual St. Jude Saddle Up Trail Ride started
Sept. 19.
The ride began past the gates of the nearly 80-acre
plus farmland, and goes for 10 miles through Rutland’s hills, Isabel Dill said. She and her husband,
Michael Dill, own the property and they, along with
the other participants, begin the trail ride that is
usually no more than 2 miles away from the farm,
although in total the horses travel 10 miles, she said.
At a halfway point in the woods her husband and
others provided snacks and drinks for riders who wish
to take a break. The ride usually lasts three to four
Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel hours, she said.
After the ride was a hog roast, with two hogs from
A group of ladies hits the trail during Saturday’s 20th annual St.
Jude Saddle Up Trail Ride. People started heading out on the trail the Meigs County Fair, along with rafﬂes. This year

See SWDC | 3

Meigs approves new baseball field

as early as 11:45 a.m., with the last of the trail riders heading
through the gates between 12:15 and 12:30 p.m.

See RIDE | 5

By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Football: 6
Soccer: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 8
Comics: 9
Television: 10

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POMEROY — Meigs County Board of Education, during a special Wednesday meeting,
approved plans for a new baseball ﬁeld in a special session conducted last week.
The current ﬁeld was build in the 1970s and
board members had concluded that after 50 years
of use the ﬁeld is due for an overhaul.
RVC Architects Inc. designed the new ﬁeld
with input from school ofﬁcials and Penny Mullen from the ﬁrm presented the bids for constriction to the Board.
The architect’s estimate to build the new facility was $250,000. Final bids for the project came
from two companies: Green Lawn and Landscape
Courtesy photo

See FIELD | 5

Blueprints for the new Meigs baseball field.

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�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, September 22, 2015

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

EVA WILLAJEAN ANDERSON
RIPLEY, W.Va. — Eva
Willajean Anderson, 80,
of Ripley, W.Va., passed
away Sunday, Sept. 20,
2015, at the home of her
daughter, Nanette, following a long illness.
She was born Feb. 3,
1935, in Jackson County,
a daughter of the late
Obele and Clara Fisher
Lewis. She was a homemaker, attended the
Ripley Tabernacle Baptist
Church and was a member of Paradise Rebekah
Lodge. Eva enjoyed traveling and sewing.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
Ronald Anderson; a grandson, Ronald Parker; and a

brother, Doy Keith Lewis.
She is survived by her
daughter Nanette Dawn
Stout and her husband,
Steven, of Pomeroy; sister Louise DeWees, of
Kenna, W.Va.; and stepgrandson Samuel Stout.
Funeral service will be
11 a.m. Wednesday, Sept.
23, 2015, at Waybright
Funeral Home, Ripley,
with Pastor Lymon
Anderson ofﬁciating.
Burial will be in Anderson Cemetery, Kenna.
Friends may call from
6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home. Memories
and condolences may be
sent to the family by visiting www.waybrightfuneralhome.com.

ALDERSON
PATRIOT, Ohio — Eleanore Ellen “Ellie” Alderson, 89, formerly of Patriot, passed away at Holzer
Senior Care, Sunday, Sept. 20, 2015. Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015, at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt chapel,
Gallipolis. Burial will follow at Calvary Cemetery,
Rio Grande, Ohio. Friends may call the funeral
home Wednesday one hour prior to services.
CAPEHART
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — James A. “Jim”
Capehart, 78, of Point Pleasant, passed away Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015, at his home. Services will be
1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015, at Heights
United Methodist Church in Point Pleasant. Burial
will follow at Mound Hill Cemetery in Gallipolis,
Ohio. Visitation is 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesday at
the church.
GRUESER
LETART, W.Va. — James N. “Jim” Grueser Sr.,
59, of Letart, died Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015. Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2015, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial
will follow at Sand Hill Cemetery in Point Pleasant.

The family will receive friends two hours prior to
the funeral service Tuesday at the funeral home.
JOHNSON
THURMAN, Ohio — Wanda Jean “Sammie” Johnson, 57, of Thurman, passed away Friday, Sept. 18,
2015, at her home. Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015, at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton chapel, . Friends may call the funeral
home between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesday. Burial
will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Wellston.
KESTERSON
RACINE, Ohio — Roy H. Kesterson, 83, of
Racine, passed away Sunday, Sept. 20, 2015, at
The Arbors at Pomeroy. Arrangements will be
announced by Cremeens-King Funeral Home of
Pomeroy.
WATTERSON
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. — John William Watterson, 87, passed away Friday, Sept. 18, 2015. A
memorial service will be 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2,
2015, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home
between 6-8 p.m. Wednesday.

WILLIAM H. MORRIS III
RUTLAND — William
H. “Bill” “WhoomPa”
Morris III, 44, of Rutland,
passed away Thursday,
Sept. 17, 2015, at his residence.
He was born on July 2,
1971, to the late William
H. and Gayle (Swanson)
Morris Jr., in Toledo. He
loved to hunt and ﬁsh and
always had a kind word
for everyone he talked to.
He will be dearly missed
by all that knew him.
He is survived by his
children, Amanda Morris,
Maggie Morris and Baby
Bill Morris; two grandchildren; sisters Rofena
(Joe) Hartford, Gayle
Morris and Bob Dixon,
Barbara (Ross) Siefke,
Wanda Morris, Edmonds
(Bertha) Morris and
Matt Thomas; and several

nieces and nephews that
loved him. He also is survived by his best friends
Jon Sibole, Shayne Dixon
and Shawn.
He was preceded in
death by his parents;
sister Sherry; and two
nephews.
He is our only brother
and he is with his mother
and father in heaven. God
bless his soul.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Thursday, Sept.
24, 2015, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow in the Morris family cemetery. Visitation
will be 1-8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015, at the
funeral home.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

FOR THE RECORD
Domestic
An act of divorce without children was ﬁled by
Patsy McQuaid and Lawrence W. McQuaid IV.
Land Transfers
To view speciﬁc land transfer records, visit the
Recorders Ofﬁce at the Meigs County Courthouse
during regular hours.

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Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar will only list
event information that is open to
the public.

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23

POMEROY — The public is
invited to a community dinner at New Beginnings United
Methodist Church112 E. 2nd
St. in Pomeroy, from 4:30-5:30.
The menu includes chicken
and noodles, mashed potatoes,

SATURDAY, SEPT. 26

green beans and dessert.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 25

MIDDLEPORT — The
monthly Free Community Dinner held at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family Life
Center will have doors open at
4:30 p.m. with the meal served
at 5 p.m. This month’s menu is
chicken &amp; noodles, green beans,
roll and dessert. This is open to
the public.

POMEROY — There will be an
open house to celebrate the 90th
birthday of Bill King, a WWII Veteran and member of Drew Webster
Post #39 of the American Legion
in Pomeroy. The celebration will be
held at the Pomeroy Legion Hall
from 2-4 p.m. on his birthday and it
is being hosted by his children, Debbie Finlaw, Kathy Thomas, Sherry
Houck and Kevin King. Cards are
welcome but no gifts please.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Local Briefs will only
list event information that is free and open to the
public.

next meeting will be Monday, Oct. 5.

POMEROY — Eastern High School Class of 1969
are having a reunion starting at 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Gun Club. There will be an evening meal.

MIDDLEPORT — Feeney-Bennett Post No. 128,
American Legion, Middleport, is changing its meeting
night. Previously, the meetings have been on the second and fourth Wednesday of each month. Beginning
in September, the meetings will be only on the fourth
Wednesday with dinner at 6 p.m., executive board at
7 p.m., and the regular meeting at 8 p.m. All meetings
will be held at the Post on Mill Street in Middleport.

Feeney-Bennett Post
Eastern High School reunion meeting change
Art in the Village
entry forms available

Staff Report

Our Price

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

OHIO VALLEY — Entry forms for “Art in the
Village,” scheduled for Oct.3, can be obtained at
Farmers Bank in Pomeroy. The deadline for entries
is Sept. 23.

Bable Family Benefit
SYRACUSE — A beneﬁt chicken noodle dinner
will be at 11 a.m. Oct. 4 in honor of Kaden Bable
and family at the Syracuse Community Center.
Donations are being received. Dinners are available
for carryout.

Drew Webster
meeting cancelled
POMEROY — The Drew Webster Post 39 Auxiliary meeting has been canceled for September. The

Ash Street Church
revival services
MIDDLEPORT — Revival Services at Ash Street
Church, 398 Ash Street, Middleport, with various
speakers as follows: Sept. 23: Jimmie McKnight,
Sept. 24: David Rahamut and Sept. 25: James
Wright and Sept. 26 and 27: Allen Williams. Services will begin each evening at 6:30 p.m. and on
Sunday morning at 10:30 a.m. Special music each
service with various singers.

Grace Episcopal guest
POMEROY — Father Edward Payne will be at
Grace Episcopal Church at the 11 a.m. worship services and Holy Eucharist on Sept. 27.

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�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 22, 2015 3

Scenes from the Sternwheel River Festival

Courtesy photos

AT LEFT, Ryan Pelton, the first place winner, signing autographs for attendees. He is from Columbus, Ohio. CENTER LEFT, Dwight Icenhower has not only become a four-time champion by winning EPIC but also
now being ranked #2 in The World by Elvis Presley Enterprises and Graceland. He is also a Meigs County Native. CENTER RIGHT, this is the third place winner – Ernie Hefferon – who is from Suffolk, Virginia.
AT RIGHT, Nick Mischissin hails from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the second place winner in the Elvis Tribute Artist Competition which began on Friday.

Courtesy photos

ABOVE, this was a crowd photo early Sat, and is a small testament to the gathering that was to
come for Dwight that evening. The festival recognized record attendance levels all weekend. BELOW,
1st Place: Grandma’s Chili (Lori Patterson &amp; Marguerite Eskew) 2nd Place: The Hit &amp; Run Kitchen
(Nick Barton &amp; Assistant) Best Booth: Crystal Rupe for Connolly’s Custom Designs People’s Choice:
Grandma’s Chili (Lori Patterson &amp; Marguerite Eskew)
Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

AT LEFT, Lil Miss Sternwheel Emma Kreseen and Lil Mister Sternwheel Brayden Thomas. The other
two competitors for Lil Miss were Aurora Cobb and Denny Persons. AT RIGHT, From left: Lil Miss
Sternwheel Emma Kreseen, Festival Runner Up Adriahna Patterson, senior at Meigs High School and
Festival Queen Ashley Buchanan. BELOW, the festival kicks off with what is known as the “firetruck
parade” with over 35 fire truck and rescue vehicles in attendance. Meigs County is the only county in
Ohio with 100 percent volunteer firefighters and no paid firemen or women.

AT LEFT, congratulations
to Carrie Phelps (shown
center) of Middleport,
Ohio whose Ducky #455
was the first to swim down
river into the boater’s
nets. Carrie won $500 and
helped to support future
Sternwheel Riverfests
with her duck adoption.

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

In no particular order, the boats listed within the festival program that attended the festival were the
Dresden Belle, Iva Ruby, Lida Ann, Mudsock, Faris Wheel, Kanawha M/V, Lakie Marie, Henny Cook, Port
Explorer, Rufus B, Juanita, Hobby III and C.W. King.

From Page 1

of Commissioners, and
county funds are supplemented by funding from
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. The
district is governed by
a ﬁve-member board of
supervisors, all county
residents. Board members
serve staggered three-year
terms. Current supervisors include: Bill Baer,
Racine; Joe Bolin, Rutland; Keith Bentz, Racine;
Tonja Hunter, Racine; Kim
Romine, Pomeroy.
Voting will take place
from 6-7 p.m. Residents
or landowners, ﬁrms and
corporations that own
land or occupy land in
Meigs County and are 18
years of age or older may
vote for supervisor. A
non-resident landowner,
ﬁrm or corporation must

provide an afﬁdavit of
eligibility which includes
designation of a voting
representative prior to
casting a ballot.
There are three ways
an eligible voter can cast
a ballot: at the annual
meeting, at the SWCD
ofﬁce from 8 a.m. to 2
p.m. until Sept. 29, or via
absentee ballot. Absentee
ballots can be requested

at the Meigs SWCD ofﬁce
at 113 East Memorial
Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy
OH 45769 and must be
received no later than 2
p.m. on Sept. 29.
The dinner begins at 7
p.m. For more information or to purchase tickets, which must be purchased by Sept. 23, call
the Meigs SWCD ofﬁce at
740-992-4282.

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

All veterans
deserve a place
to call home
Winter is fast approaching, meaning colder
temperatures and dangerous conditions for far too
many veterans facing homelessness in Ohio.
The progress we have made toward ending
veteran homelessness has been a great, untold
success story. Through a combination of increased
federal investments and improved
services, we have made real headway. Since 2010, homelessness
among veterans has declined 33
percent.
And yet, too many veterans
remain on the streets.
Veterans comprise about 12 percent of the national adult homeless
Sherrod
population, and, according to the
Brown
Contributing U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development nearly 50,000
Columnist
veterans were homeless during a
“point-in-time” survey conducted on
a single night in January 2014. That is 50,000 too
many.
It’s a disgrace that after serving our country
with honor, thousands of veterans are left without
a roof over their heads. It’s our responsibility to
ensure that every veteran has a place to call home
and the opportunity to succeed.
That’s why I joined my colleagues in introducing
the Veteran Housing Stability Act of 2015, which
would make meaningful improvements to services
for homeless veterans, and give more veterans
access to permanent housing opportunities.
This bill would encourage landlords to rent
to veterans, provide grants to community organizations providing care to formerly-homeless
veterans, and improve and expand a current VA
program that sells foreclosed homes to nonproﬁt
organizations serving veterans. It would expand
the deﬁnition of a “homeless veteran,” to include
veterans or family members ﬂeeing domestic
abuse or other dangerous housing conditions.
And the bill would also hold the VA accountable,
setting national performance targets and ensuring
that grant recipients are using resources to give
veterans a permanent place to live.
Even one veteran on the street means Congress
isn’t doing enough to tackle this problem. We
cannot rest until every man and woman who has
served our nation has a place to call home.
On behalf of a grateful state, I thank all Ohio
veterans and their families. It’s an honor serving
those who serve us.
Sherrod Brown (D-OH) represents Ohio in the U.S. Senate.

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
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“Thank You” letters will not be
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THEIR VIEW

Law and border in America

Colombia, Costa Rica and
How many wars can we
Bolivia have begun to object
ﬁght?
to the militaristic anti-drug
Our presidential canditactics pushed by the United
dates demand “stronger
States.
action” against both
Yet Hillary Clinton called
illegal immigration and
taxpayer money spent on
illegal drugs. But those
counter-narcotics efforts in
goals conﬂict. The War
John
Central America “money well
on Drugs makes border
Stossel
enforcement much harder. Contributing spent.”
She’s closed-minded and
America’s 44-year-long Columnist
wrong. Our Drug War creDrug War hasn’t made a
ates the carnage that drives
dent in American drug
poor Latin Americans to abandon
use or the supply of illegal drugs.
If it had some positive effect, pric- their villages and move north.
That increases resentment against
es of drugs would have increased,
but they haven’t. American author- immigrants, as expressed by Donald Trump, who said, “They’re
ities say drugs are more available
bringing drugs, they’re bringing
than ever.
crime.” Some do bring drugs, but
Drug prohibition, like alcohol
prohibition, creates fat proﬁts that most wouldn’t bring crime if they
could legally do business with us.
invite law-breaking.
Our crazy, failed policy turns
Cato’s Ted Galen Carpenter
our neighbors to the south into a
says, “Economists estimate that
about 90 percent of the retail price deadly menace.
“Coyotes,” who help impovof illicit drugs is due to this black
erished refugees escape, often
market premium.” Ninety-percent
proﬁts inspire lots of criminal risk- require even the children to
become drug mules — to smuggle
taking.
small amounts of drugs. The chil“Washington’s policy empowdren obey, since many ﬂed places
ers the most ruthless trafﬁckers
where they’d be shot at or tortured
— those willing to use violence,
by gangs. They know the drug
intimidation and exploitation of
gangs and coyotes are their only
the vulnerable to gain market
hope for reaching a better life.
share.” Continues Carpenter:
Drug proﬁts give smugglers the
“When drugs are outlawed, only
money to do what poverty-stricken
outlaws will sell drugs.”
Since the drug gangs can’t settle immigrants can’t: dig long, highdisputes in court, they settle them tech tunnels with lighting and ventilation systems. A border fence
with guns. In Latin America,
they’ve killed thousands of people. doesn’t secure the border when
immigrants — and criminals —
“Honduras has been living in an
can tunnel underneath it.
emergency,” says Honduran PresiU.S. Attorney Laura Duffy
dent Juan Hernandez. “The root
cause is that the United States and recently bragged to reporters
about “the ﬁfth super-tunnel we’ve
Colombia carried out big operaintercepted.”
tions in the ﬁght against drugs.”
Immigrations and Customs
Mexico’s former president,
Enforcement agent Derek Benner
Vicente Fox, now supports legalclaimed that the interception dealt
ization. Leaders of Guatemala,

“a stunning blow to the Mexican
cartel who built it.”
But that’s absurd. Benner admitted they’d done the same thing
two years before “in virtually the
same scenario.” They found ﬁve
of how many? Hundreds? With a
border almost 2,000 miles long,
they’re unlikely to ﬁnd them all.
Drug prohibition, by making
drug cartels rich, enables them
to build a literal underground
railroad to the north. The whole
process — dig, build, raid, destroy,
repeat — is just one more pointless activity that happens when
government tries to suppress popular activities such as drug use.
Other countries are wising
up. Argentina, Peru, Mexico and
Portugal decriminalized small
amounts of drugs. Uruguay legalized marijuana entirely, as have
Colorado and Washington state.
The Center for Investigative
Reporting says 90 percent of the
drugs seized on the U.S.-Mexico
border are some form of marijuana, meaning almost every time the
Border Patrol makes a drug bust,
it conﬁscates a drug that’s legal in
Colorado.
This is crazy.
We keep trying to do things the
hard way — spending over $1
trillion on the Drug War. If there
were a clear beneﬁt, you might say
it was worth it. Instead, it yields
death, dislocation of populations
and enrichment of murderous cartels, without reducing drug abuse.
Why do we put up with this?
Government’s attempts to prohibit what people want tend to
fail. The wars on immigration and
drugs are two more wars we won’t
win.

John Stossel is host of “Stossel” on Fox News
and author of “No, They Can’t! Why Government
Fails.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday,
September 22, the 265th
day of 2015. There are
100 days left in the
year. The Jewish Day of
Atonement, Yom Kippur,
begins at sunset.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On September 22,
1975, Sara Jane Moore
attempted to shoot
President Gerald R.
Ford outside a San Francisco hotel, but missed.
(Moore served 32 years
in prison before being
paroled on December 31,
2007.)
On this date:
In 1515, Anne of
Cleves, who became the
fourth wife of England’s
King Henry VIII, was
born in Dusseldorf.
In 1776, during the
Revolutionary War, Capt.

Nathan Hale, 21, was
hanged as a spy by the
British in New York.
In 1792, the ﬁrst
French Republic was proclaimed.
In 1862, President
Abraham Lincoln issued
the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation,
declaring all slaves in
rebel states should be free
as of January 1, 1863.
In 1911, pitcher Cy
Young, 44, gained his
511th and ﬁnal career
victory as he hurled a 1-0
shutout for the Boston
Rustlers against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Forbes
Field.
In 1927, Gene Tunney
successfully defended his
heavyweight boxing title
against Jack Dempsey in
the famous “long-count”
ﬁght in Chicago.

In 1938, the musical
comedy revue “Hellzapoppin’,” starring Ole
(OH’-lee) Olsen and Chic
Johnson, began a threeyear run on Broadway.
In 1949, the Soviet
Union exploded its ﬁrst
atomic bomb.
Today’s Birthdays:
Baseball Hall of Fame
manager Tommy Lasorda is 88. Former NBA
Commissioner David
Stern is 73. Actor Paul
Le Mat is 70. Musician King Sunny Ade
is 69. Capt. Mark Phillips is 67. Rock singer
David Coverdale (Deep
Purple, Whitesnake) is
64. Actress Shari Belafonte is 61. Singer Debby
Boone is 59. Country
singer June Forester
(The Forester Sisters) is
59. Singer Nick Cave is

58. Rock singer Johnette
Napolitano is 58. Actress
Lynn Herring is 58. Classical crossover singer
Andrea Bocelli is 57.
Singer-musician Joan Jett
is 57. Actor Scott Baio
is 55. Actress Catherine
Oxenberg is 54. Actress
Bonnie Hunt is 54. Actor
Rob Stone is 53. Musician Matt Sharp is 46.
Rock musician Dave Hernandez is 45. Rhythmand-blues singer Big
Rube (Society of Soul)
is 44. Actress Mireille
Enos is 40. Actress Daniella Alonso is 37. Actor
Michael Graziadei is 36.
Actress Ashley Drane
(Eckstein) is 34. Actress
Katie Lowes is 33. Rock
musician Will Farquarson
(Bastille) is 32. Actor
Tom Felton is 28. Actress
Juliette Goglia is 20.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 22, 2015 5

1 in 4 college women report
unwanted sexual contact
By Julie Carr Smyth

150,000 participated in
the online questionnaire.
Researchers said results
COLUMBUS — Nearly
could be biased slightly
a quarter of undergraduate
upwards because students
women surveyed at more
who ignored the survey
than two dozen universimay have been less likely to
ties say they experienced
report victimization.
unwanted sexual contact
The results were generally
sometime during college,
in line with past surveys on
according to a report
sexual assault and misconreleased Monday.
duct on college campuses —
The results of the Associa- and conﬁrmed that alcohol
tion of American Universiand drugs are important risk
ties Campus Climate Survey factors.
come at a time of height“How many surveys will
ened scrutiny of the nation’s it take before we act with
colleges and universities
the urgency these crimes
and what they are doing to
demand?” said Sen. Kirsten
combat sexual assault. Just
Gillibrand, D-New York,
last week, Vice President
who is pushing for passage
Joe Biden visited Ohio State of a bill that would address
University and highlighted
how sexual assault cases are
several new initiatives,
handled on campus and the
including mandatory sexual resources available to help
violence awareness training students.
for the school’s freshmen
Researchers cautioned
beginning next year.
against generalizations from
The survey was sent this the data, partly because
spring to nearly 780,000
experiences of different
students at the association’s students and at different
member colleges, plus one
schools could vary widely.
additional university. About It was not a representative

Associated Press

Courtesy photo

Pictured in the front row, from left, are Beau Morris, Paige Dill, Kaylee Phillips, Kaylee Pierce. Second
row: Suzanne Tatum from St Jude, Cobee, Justin, Skyler Dill Becky and Holly McGrath. Back Row:
Kennith Turley, Dennis Moore, Kathy See, Mike and Isabel Dill, Darlene Hoschar, Debbie Lewis, Martha
McDainal, Patricia Vaughan and Israel Phillips.

From Page 1

the event also hosted
a guest speaker, Susie
Tatum, a philanthropic
advisor for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital
who drove from Indianapolis to speak to participants about St. Jude.
Tatum also presented the
Dills an award for the
ride’s 20th anniversary.
Awards were also given
to those who raised the
most money for the ride.

Field
From Page 1

offered a bid of $249,440 and Patrick
Mullen Construction at $237,216.
The lower bid from Mullen Construction was accepted and a motion was
made and approved to award the bid.
The board advised Mullen that the
money was available for the project to
begin.
The new ﬁeld will include a new concession area, handicapped accessible
dugouts and enhanced seating capacity.
According to Meigs School Superintendent Rusty Bookman, Meigs baseball

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

54°

72°

68°

Partly sunny and pleasant today. Clear tonight.
High 79° / Low 56°

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.

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

0.00
3.44
2.00
38.24
32.25

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:16 a.m.
7:26 p.m.
3:33 p.m.
1:01 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Sep 27

Oct 4

New

Oct 12 Oct 20

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

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

Major
7:14a
8:04a
8:54a
9:44a
10:34a
11:26a
12:21p

Minor
1:00a
1:50a
2:40a
3:29a
4:20a
5:12a
6:07a

Chillicothe
78/51

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
79/52

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 1170
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
79/54

Major
7:41p
8:32p
9:22p
10:12p
11:02p
11:54p
----

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
1:27p
2:18p
3:08p
3:58p
4:48p
5:40p
6:35p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 22, 1890, a severe hailstorm
hit Strawberry, Ariz. Five days later,
hail still lay in drifts 12 to 18 inches
deep.

BBT (NYSE) —35.74
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.26
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.71
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.64
Rockwell (NYSE) — 104.01
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 16.02
Royal Dutch Shell — 49.42
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 26.00
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 63.72
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.05
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.50
Worthington (NYSE) — 23.41
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Sept. 21, 2015, 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.

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.52 -0.15
Marietta
34 15.69 +0.26
Parkersburg
36 21.39 +0.60
Belleville
35 13.05 +0.60
Racine
41 12.96 -0.31
Point Pleasant
40 25.12 -0.05
Gallipolis
50 13.23 +0.07
Huntington
50 26.09 +0.56
Ashland
52 34.79 +0.61
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.59 +0.65
Portsmouth
50 15.80 +0.10
Maysville
50 34.30 -0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 13.70 +0.50
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Logan
77/49

Ashland
78/54
Grayson
78/53

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

78°
60°

SUNDAY

78°
55°

Sun through high
clouds

Partly sunny and
beautiful

75°
59°
Mostly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
77/52

Murray City
77/50
Belpre
77/54

Athens
77/51

St. Marys
78/54

Parkersburg
77/54

Coolville
77/54

Elizabeth
77/56

Spencer
77/54

Buffalo
78/56

Ironton
78/55

MONDAY

74°
47°

Variable cloudiness

Wilkesville
77/52
POMEROY
Jackson
77/56
78/52
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
78/57
78/54
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/51
GALLIPOLIS
79/56
79/56
78/56

South Shore Greenup
78/55
77/53

38
300

Sunny to partly cloudy
and warm

McArthur
77/50

Waverly
78/50

Pollen: 19
Low

82°
57°

Adelphi
78/49

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

0 50 100 150 200

First

Mostly sunny and
pleasant

1

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

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

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
7:17 a.m.
7:25 p.m.
4:20 p.m.
2:00 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

81°
54°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

AEP (NYSE) — 55.60
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.09
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 105.72
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.50
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 45.86
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.61
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 5.46
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.29
Collins (NYSE) —83.28
DuPont (NYSE) — 48.25
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.52
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.10
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.82
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 61.45
Kroger (NYSE) — 36.66
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 92.21
Norfolk So (NYSE) —79.57
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.32

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

LOCAL STOCKS

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

72°
53°
77°
54°
96° in 1940
36° in 1962

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

has had more opportunities in the past
six years to host competitions, and
good facilities are needed to accommodate any hosting events in the future.
“We have a desire to expand opportunities and instill a sense of pride for our
kids, ” Bookman said. “Athletic projects
like this will allow us to host more competitions.”
Construction is scheduled to begin
immediately for the 2016 baseball season.
The next regular meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education will
take place at 7 p.m. Sept. 22 at the
Meigs Local School District Ofﬁce.

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

just a few of the people
that make this ride such
a big success. Thank you
and God bless to everyone that helped out in any
way.”
According to their
website, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital,
in Memphis, Tenn., was
founded by Danny Thomas. The hospital ﬁrst
opened Feb. 4, 1962. All
money donated from the
ride will go toward cancer
research.

Debbie Lewis, of Mason,
W.Va., received ﬁrst
place, with a donation of
$3,300, Jerry Smathers,
of Athens, received second place with a donation
of $1,515 and Jim Davis,
of Syracuse, received
third place with a donation of $1,140.
As of Monday, Isabel
reported at least $20,574
raised for St. Jude during
the trail ride. She said
there are two more weeks
to gather and count more
donations.
“It’s a really awesome
thing,” she said. “This is

Milton
79/54
Huntington
78/54

Clendenin
77/52

St. Albans
79/55

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Winnipeg
100s
62/46
Seattle
66/47
90s
80s
Billings
77/52
70s
60s
Minneapolis
50s
74/60
40s
30s
Chicago
77/55
20s
10s
Denver
San Francisco
83/54
0s
69/56
Kansas City
-0s
85/66
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
84/69
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
84/67
Flurries
Houston
Ice
Chihuahua
92/68
Cold Front
88/66
Warm Front
Monterrey
91/68
Stationary Front

Charleston
78/56

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

Montreal
72/50
Toronto
72/51
New York
74/60

Detroit
75/51

GOALS

Washington
76/60

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

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
73/59/t
50/34/s
81/65/c
73/62/c
74/54/c
77/52/s
84/55/s
69/54/c
78/56/pc
76/61/c
78/52/pc
77/55/s
79/53/s
74/51/pc
78/53/pc
94/73/pc
83/54/pc
84/66/pc
75/51/s
88/78/pc
92/68/s
79/54/s
85/66/pc
94/72/c
89/60/s
84/69/c
82/57/s
87/75/pc
74/60/pc
84/57/s
87/72/s
74/60/c
88/66/pc
87/72/s
76/59/c
88/74/t
75/52/pc
68/46/pc
78/62/c
78/61/c
83/61/s
86/61/c
69/56/pc
66/47/pc
76/60/c

Hi/Lo/W
81/59/t
48/33/s
82/64/pc
75/63/s
80/54/s
82/52/pc
83/54/s
73/57/s
81/53/s
81/60/pc
79/52/pc
77/56/s
80/54/s
76/53/s
79/54/s
92/68/s
84/52/pc
85/62/t
77/53/s
88/77/sh
91/68/s
81/55/s
84/66/pc
96/77/s
90/63/s
85/68/pc
83/58/s
88/76/pc
75/62/t
85/59/s
87/73/pc
80/62/s
87/62/s
86/72/t
80/60/s
94/76/pc
79/53/s
76/53/s
79/62/pc
80/60/s
84/61/s
85/60/pc
72/56/s
67/51/pc
81/59/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
81/65

High
Low

96° in Laredo, TX
23° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
High
115° in Yenbo, Saudi Arabia
Low -4° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
87/75

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Ride

sample of all the nation’s colleges and universities.
Some students attended
schools that have recently
grappled with reports of sexual assaults or misconduct,
including the University of
Virginia, the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and
Ohio State.
University of Virginia
President Teresa A. Sullivan
has said that a widely discredited and later retracted
Rolling Stone magazine
story about a gang-rape at
a fraternity house harmed
efforts to ﬁght sexual violence and tarred the school’s
reputation. Hazing that
included excessive underage
drinking and sexualized conduct — though none of it
aimed at females — prompted the University of Wisconsin-Madison to terminate a
fraternity chapter earlier this
year. And Ohio State ﬁred
its marching band director
last year after an internal
investigation turned up a
“sexualized culture” of rituals and traditions inside the
celebrated organization.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 22, 2015 s Page 6

Bengals fend off Chargers, 24-19
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
Bengals weren’t about to let it
happen again.
Andy Dalton threw three
touchdown passes — each
to a different receiver — and
Giovani Bernard ran for 123
yards on Sunday, leading Cincinnati to a 24-19 win over
the San Diego Chargers that
had some subtext.
The Bengals (2-0) lost to
the Chargers (1-1) in a ﬁrstround playoff game two years
ago at Paul Brown Stadium,
part of their run of no postseason victories since 1990.
The Bengals have lost in the
playoffs each of the last four
years, but that one still stings
because it was the only one
that came at home.
“It was already proDarron Cummings | AP grammed in our mind: Never
Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Marvin Jones reacts after scoring a touchdown in the forget,” cornerback Dre Kirkfirst half of an NFL football game against the San Diego Chargers, Sunday in Cincinnati. patrick said. “They came in

and they shocked us.”
The two Bengals who made
huge mistakes in that game
led them to the win in the
rematch.
Dalton had three secondhalf turnovers during the
playoff defeat. He was on
target Sunday, completing 16
of 26 for 214 yards. He threw
to nine different receivers, a
sign of the Bengals’ depth of
playmakers.
“It’s our offense,” Dalton
said. “There’s different things
we can do. We have a good
mix of everything.”
Bernard had a game-turning
fumble during the playoff loss.
On Sunday, he took over as the
primary running back after Jeremy Hill fumbled twice.
“Once you have that conﬁdence, everything else
just kind of falls in place,”
Bernard said. “Andy is doing

a good job conducting us
around.”
Philip Rivers made some
history for the Chargers, but
couldn’t get them a win.
He completed his ﬁrst two
passes on Sunday before
missing one, leaving him with
a streak of 22 consecutive
completions over two games.
It’s two shy of Donovan
McNabb’s NFL record and
tied for third in league history.
He also surpassed Dan
Fouts for career touchdown
passes by a Charger.
“It’s humbling to think
about,” said Rivers, whose
ﬁnal pass was picked off at
midﬁeld by Vinny Rey with 53
seconds left. “It’s not as sweet
right now because we lost the
game. Once I’ve had a chance
to take a deep breath and look
back, I’ll be thankful.”

Lady Eagles
outlast
Meigs in five
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — A little
tougher the second time around.
After defeating Meigs in four games
the ﬁrst go around, the Eastern volleyball team had to go the extra mile at
home Saturday during a 25-14, 22-25,
17-25 , 26-24, 15-11 decision over the
Lady Marauders during a non-conference
matchup at the Eagle’s Nest in Meigs
County.
The Lady Eagles (7-5) found themselves in a 2-1 match deﬁcit and barely
survived Game 4 after claiming a minimal two-point victory, but the hosts ultimately held on to win the decisive ﬁfth
game by four points.
The Lady Marauders (3-11) were led
in scoring by Jordan Roush with 13 service points, followed by Devyn Oliver
with eight points and Kassidy Betzing
with six points. Devin Humphreys was
next with ﬁve points, while Morgan
Lodwick chipped in two points in the
setback.
Alliyah Pullins led the MHS net attack
with 13 kills, followed by Oliver with 10
kills and Betzing with seven kills and a
team-best three blocks.
Oliver dished out a team-best 19
assists and Betzing added a team-high
ﬁve digs, followed by Oliver with four
digs.
No Eastern statistics were available at
press time.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2101.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

URG courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Willian Paulino tries to spin past Point Park’s Marius Seager during the first half of Saturday night’s game at Evan E. Davis Field. Paulino
scored his team-best seventh goal of the year in the RedStorm’s 4-0 win over the Pioneers.

Rio Grande RedStorm blanks Point Park
By Evan Jones

Tuesday, September 22
Volleyball
Eastern at Southern, 7:15
Wahama at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Wellston at River Valley, 7:15
Athens at Meigs, 7:15
Point Pleasant/Roane County at
Ravenswood, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 6:45
Boys Soccer
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 6:30
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Cross Country
Meigs/Southern at Federal Hocking, 4:45
Point Pleasant at Mid-Ohio Valley
Challenge, 3 p.m.
Golf
Eastern/Waterford at South Gallia, 4
p.m.
Wahama/Belpre at Southern, 4 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan, 4 p.m.
Meigs Girls at Gallia Academy Girls,
3 p.m.
Wednesday, September 23
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 6:45

Rio Grande outshot Point
Park, which defeated the
RedStorm in regular season
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
play last year, 14-3 in the
— The University of Rio
ﬁrst half, putting pressure
Grande opened Kentucky
on the Pioneers’ defense
Intercollegiate Athletic
and not allowing their
Conference play Saturday
guests to establish an offennight with a 4-0 win over
sive rhythm.
rival Point Park University
de Melo, a native of Sao
at Evan E. Davis Field.
Paulo, Brazil, started the
Rio Grande, ranked No.
scoring at the 29:21 mark
5 in the NAIA preseason
of the ﬁrst half when he
coaches’ poll, improved to
pushed a shot past PPU
8-0 overall and 1-0 in the
goalkeeper Zak Borzovoy,
KIAC.
who failed to corral a save
Point Park, which
of junior Jeremy de Hoog’s
received votes in the same
(Rotterdam, The Netherpreseason poll, dropped
lands) shot seconds earlier.
to 4-3-1 overall and 0-1 in
Unlike Wednesday night’s
league play.
win over Bryan (Tenn.)
Junior Heitor de Melo
College, the intensity of the
gave the RedStorm a ﬁrst
RedStorm did not drop off
half lead with his second
in the second half, with Rio
goal of the year, while
juniors Willian Paulino and outshooting the Pioneers,
Alex Haddad and freshman 22-4, after the intermission.
At the 64:33 mark,
Ben Mendoza tallied second
Paulino (Sao Paulo, Brahalf markers in the victory.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

zil) kicked in a goal off a
blocked shot by senior Luiz
Filho (Sao Paulo, Brazil) to
make it 2-0. It was his teamhigh seventh goal on the
season.
Later on in the half, Mendoza (Chichester, England)
entered the match for the
ﬁrst time and soon scored
off a great pass from Haddad (Gallipolis, Ohio) at the
78:57 mark. The goal was
the second of Mendoza’s
collegiate career and the
assist was Haddad’s ﬁrst of
the year.
Rio’s fourth and ﬁnal
goal came when sophomore
Spencer Reinford (McAlisterville, PA) assisted Haddad on his ﬁrst goal of the
season at the 86:25 mark in
the match.
The match was a gritty,
physical affair throughout
with 43 combined common
fouls - 25 against the Red-

Storm and 18 against Point
Park - whistled.
There was also eight cautions handed out, including
two yellow cards against
Point Park’s Cristian Mika,
which resulted in his ejection and forced the Pioneers
to play the ﬁnal 41:37 of the
contest one man down.
Freshman Ben Martinez (Montpellier, France)
recorded three saves in his
fourth shutout effort of the
year.
Borzovoy had a seasonhigh 14 saves in a losing
cause for PPU.
Rio Grande will return to
action on Wednesday, taking to the road for the just
the second time this year
with a trip to Mount Vernon
Nazarene. Kickoff is set for
4 p.m.
Evan Jones is a correspondent with
the University of Rio Grande sports
information department.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Belpre blasts
White Falcons

Tuesday, September 22, 2015 7

Lady Lancers sweep River Valley
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

By Gary Clark

For Ohio Valley Publishing

BELPRE Ohio — The 2015 Wahama football team
continued its downhill plunge in allowing host Belpre to
deliver a 44-6 Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
setback to the Bend Area team on Friday Night.
The loss was the third in a row for Coach Dave
Barr’s crew as Wahama falls to 1-3 overall and 0-3
inside league action. The Golden Eagles interrupted a
ﬁve-game WHS winning streak over the Washington
County, Ohio team with its ﬁrst grid victory over the
Red and White since the 1979 season. Belpre won for
the second time this year and improved to 2-2 overall
and 2-1 in conference play.
Once again the Falcons inability to control the line of
scrimmage and their failure to make defensive stops when
the opportunity arose proved to be the difference in the
contest. WHS managed only 147 yards of total offense on
an ineffective ground attack that produced a meager 86
yards in 34 carries. The Bend Area team didn’t have much
more luck with its passing attack in while completing 3-of5 passes for 61 yards and a touchdown.
The lone score for Wahama came in the second quarter when the White Falcons cut a 14-0 deﬁcit in half
with Ricky Kearns hauling in a 64-yard scoring strike
from Falcon quarterback, Philip Hoffman. That, however, was as close as the Bend Area team got as Belpre
reeled off 30 unanswered points for the triumph.
Deijon Bedgood paced the Golden Eagle attack with
three touchdowns on runs of 11 and 53 yards and a TD
reception of 32 yards. Matthew Colvin added another
score with a 37-yard run for the games ﬁrst points, with
Tojzae Reams and Ryan Simoniette both reaching the
end zone on runs of 59 and one yards. Bailey Sprauge
booted a 22-yard ﬁeld goal and connected on 5-of-6
point after kicks to complete the Belpre scoring attack.
A bright spot for the Falcon offense was the running
of sophomore, Dalton Kearns who may have established himself as a capable asset to the locals leading
ground gainer, Colton Arrington. Kearns ﬁnished the
evening with 37 yards in eight carries. Arrington collected 38 tough yards in 14 tries. Hoffman completed
3-of-5 passes for 61 yards and a touchdown with two of
his offerings being picked off. Ricky Kearns caught the
64-yard touchdown pass with Travis Kearns hauling in
one aerial for zero net yards and Nolan Pierce one for
minus-3 yards.
Belpre was led on the ground by Reams with 111
yards in 11 attempts followed by Bedgood with 97
yards in ﬁve attempts and Colvin with 68 yards in 10
carries. The Golden Eagles signal caller, Tavian Miller,
connected on 3-of-9 passes for 59 yards and a score.
Bedgood caught one pass for 32 yards and a touchdown
with Josh Moore grabbing one for 20 yards and Colvin
one for seven yards.
One correction in the loss to Southern last week
was Colton Arrington was misidentiﬁed as catching
the touchdown pass for Wahama when it was actually
Ricky Kearns who caught the lone touchdown pass for
Wahama.
Wahama, following its current two-game road swing
will return home next Friday for a homecoming conference encounter with winless Federal Hocking. Belpre
travels to Southern for an important league affair with
the Tornadoes.
Gary Clark a sports correspondent for Ohio Valley Publishing.

STEWART, Ohio — The River Valley volleyball team
dropped its third consecutive match Saturday afternoon,
as non-conference host Federal Hocking completed the
season sweep of the Lady Raiders.
The Lady Raiders (3-9) — who dropped a straightgame match to FHHS on August 31 — battled back from
an early from an early 5-0 deﬁcit in the opening game of
Saturday’s tilt to take a 15-13 lead. The Lady Lancers rallied back to take a 22-21 lead and never relinquished it,
claiming the game by a 25-22 count.
River Valley led 3-0 in the second game, but Federal
Hocking took a lead at 4-3 and never looked back, cruising to a 25-17 victory. The Lady Lancers never trailed in
the third game, taking the ﬁnale by a 25-19 count.
The Lady Raiders were led by senior Alex Truance
with seven service points, followed by Emily Adkins
and Courtney Smith with ﬁve each. Ashley Gilmore and
Jacey Walter each had three points in the setback, while
Jessi Steele ﬁnished with one. Truance and Walter each
marked an ace for the Silver and Black.
At the net RVHS was led by Truance with eight kills
and ﬁve blocks, followed by Walter with two kills and
two blocks. Smith ﬁnished with one kill and two blocks,
while Adkins and Steele both came up with one kill and
one block. Smith posted a team-high ﬁve assists, while
Angel Toler led the RVHS defense with three digs.
The Lady Raiders will return to action on Tuesday,
when Wellston visits Bidwell for a Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division showdown. River Valley will be looking
for its second conference win of the season.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Alex Truance spikes the ball over the net during
the Lady Raiders loss to Southern in Bidwell on August 26.

Devils 5th, Angels 8th at Aaron Reed Invite
By Alex Hawley

16th place ﬁnisher Kyle
Greenlee (18:17.7) and
18th place ﬁnisher Caleb
LONDONDERRY,
Greenlee (18:23.6).
Ohio — The Unioto
Rounding out the GAHS
girls and Fairﬁeld boys
team score was 54th
cross country teams both place Devon Barnes
earned ﬁrst place at the
(19:53.3) and 58th place
Aaron Reed Invitational
Cade Mason (20:10.0).
on Saturday, hosted
Recording times as the
potential tie breakers for
by Southeastern High
GAHS were 78th place
School.
Kobe Cochran (20:54.3)
The Lions posted a
and 88th place Tanner
team total of 34 to win
Allen (21:21.4).
the boys competition,
The Lady Shermans
followed by Unioto (87)
ﬁnished
with a winning
and Fairland (118). Galteam
total
of 36, while
lia Academy had a team
second
place
Waverly
total of 158, which placed
(113)
edged
out
Zane
the Blue Devils ﬁfth
Trace
with
a
tie
breaker.
among the 22 teams that
posted a score. Waverly
junior Hunter Hoover
paced the ﬁeld of 198
with a time of 17:25.3.
Kaleb Crisenberry was
14th overall and led the
Blue Devils with a time
of 18:12.7, followed by

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

The Blue Angels total
of 199 was good enough
for eight place of the 17
teams that scored. Unioto’s Haley Wright paced
the 144 runners with a
time of 19:44.3, nearly a
full minute ahead of the
ﬁeld.
Gallia Academy was led
by fourth place ﬁnisher
Mesa Polcyn (20:48.6)
and seventh place ﬁnisher
Mary Watts (21:00.5).
GAHS sophomore Cassidy Starnes (26:25.2)
claimed 64th, Abby
Cremeans (27:01.5)
was 71st, while Sabrina
Manygoats (28:05.5) took
83rd. Recording times as

elambert@civitasmedia.com

BYESVILLE, Ohio — A good day for
the Lady Eagles.
The Eastern girls cross country team
claimed ﬁrst place at the Colt Carnival
Invitational on Saturday at Meadowbrook
High School in Guernsey County.
The Lady Eagles posted a team total of
29 points — with three runners ﬁnishing
in the top-10 — 59 points ahead of runnerup Warren. Caldwell ﬁnished third with
101 points. Eastern’s Jessica Cook led the
pack of 99 after posting a time of 19:52.02.
Ally Durst (20:33.24) placed fourth,
followed by Laura Pullins (21:01.00) in

ﬁfth place. Taylor Parker (21:38.63) placed
11th for the Green and Gold, while Kaitlyn
Hawk (21:51.61) ﬁnished in 12th place.
Brittany Long (23:09.45) and Rhiannon
Morris (24:18.52) also placed 24th and
39th, respectively, for Eastern.
Canton McKinley won the boys event
with a team total 58 points, followed by
Warren with 91 points and Bellaire with
134 points. Warren’s Brent Ash paced the
ﬁeld with a time of 16:12.49.
Complete results of the Colt Carnival
Invitational can be found on the web at
www.baumspage.com
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2106

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Lady Eagles win CC Carnival
By Donald Lambert

the potential tie breakers for Gallia Academy
were 104th place Caitlyn
Caldwell (29:24.9) and
116th place Hayley Petrie
(31:30.2).

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�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Home Improvements

Help Wanted General

Land (Acreage)

Porter’s
Pumpkin Patch

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Licensed Practical Nurse for
work in a 114 bed Long Term
Care Facility. Salary is commensurate with experience. To
apply go to
www.personel.com. Lakin Hospital is an EEO/AA Employer.

20 acres (Bidwell Area) Electric Accessible, County water
within 2000ft. - Road Frontage
- $65,500 OBO. May consider
lesser tracks Call 740-6066118

th

st

Open Sept. 16 – Oct 31

Sunday – Friday 2pm – dark
Saturdays 12pm – dark
3 acre Corn maze,
pumpkins, fodder, Indian
corn, and gourds.
Great for kids and groups
welcome

740-416-8844

60609417

Can call in advance

Professional Services

Help Wanted General

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

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

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

Arbors At Pomeroy is
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STNAs/CNAs
Full Benefits Available
Must apply in person
740.992.6606

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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

Help Wanted
Gas Station Attendant
experience preferred
send resume to: PO Box 278
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

VACANCY: H.S. CAREERTECHNICAL PUBLIC SAFETY
INSTRUCTOR. Associate
Degree in Criminal Justice or
Criminal/Forensic Science.
OPOTA Peace Officer certified. Prefer Detective/Investigation experience. CONTACT:
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD
(740) 245-5334, Ext. 256. EEO
Twin Rivers Tower 200 2nd St.
Pt. Pleasant WV, 25550. 304675-6679. An Apartment complex is hiring for a part time
maintenance position. Please
call for more information.
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

Apartments/Townhouses

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Letart , 2012 Doublewide on 1
Acre, 3 Brm, 2 Bath, Amazing
Huge Kitchen w/ appliances,
Fireplace. Home Looks New.
$74,900. 304-940-0223

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

Looking for a female room
mate, kids okay, to take care of
house, hardly any bills, a nice
country setting. 740-853-1230

Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

Rentals

Lg 3 bdrm, 2 bath apt. 2000 sq
ft. $750 per month.
Water and Gas Included. Over
Hutton's Car Wash.
Phone 304-372-6094
Newly remodeled unfurnished
apartment. Range &amp; Refrig.
provided. Water &amp; Garbage
paid. Deposit required. Call
740-709-0072
One Bedroom Apartment, furnished, very clean. No Pets.
Non-smoker. 304-675-1386
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

Completely Furnished
2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport overlooking
Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$550.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953
Help Wanted General

Direct Supervision Employee
Direct supervision employees to oversee male youth in a staff
secure residential environment. Must pass physical training
requirement, background check and drug screen. High school
diploma required. Pay based on experience. Apply in person at:
The Children's Center of Ohio, LLC., 55 Allison Road, Patriot,
OH 45658.

Handyman/Maintenance
Position requires experience with general handyman skills,
painting and general carpentry. Position requires strong work
ethic and attention to detail. Must be self-motivated and able to
work alone. Must pass background check, drug test and high
school diploma or equivalent. Pay based on experience. Apply in
person at: The Children's Center of Ohio, LLC., 55 Allison Road,
Patriot, OH 45658.

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blueprints. The incumbent also ensures the effectiveness of
waste disposal, snow removal and pest control, and general
preventive maintenance programs, as well as grounds
maintenance. Must be a high school graduate, with at least 2-3
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participant of the Drug Free Work Place Program. Please email
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LEGALS

Defendants.

Personals

Tree Service

Cottage Apartment, Pt. Pleasant $400. Call Nancy at 6754024 or 675-0799, Homestead
Realty Broker.

Miscellaneous

Sylvia Wilson (deceased), et al.

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.

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

2 Bedroom house for rent
Gallipolis city limits $600mo.
740-853-1101- NO PETS

Happy Family Banquet

John Doe(s), Name(s) Unknown, the Unknown heirs,
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unknown spouses and creditors; the unknown executor,
administrator, or personal representative of Sylvia Wilson;
and, the unknown spouse of Sylvia Wilson, whose last
known address is Unknown, Unknown, All States, will take
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Company, as Trustee for Ameriquest Mortgage Securities
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�����5O�ÀOHG�LWV�&amp;RPSODLQW�LQ�WKH�&amp;RXUW�RI�&amp;RPPRQ�3OHDV��
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and demand for relief in, the Complaint is to foreclose the
lien of Plaintiff’s mortgage recorded upon the real estate
described below and in which Plaintiff alleges that the
foregoing defendant has or claims to have an interest:
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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
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Want To Buy

Houses For Rent

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Notices

Miscellaneous

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

60583312

Call

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

Modern 4 Bdrm 3 full Bath
Lg Ktchn w/ Appliances
Fireplace. Grdn tub in mstr.
A/C. Close to hospital
all elec. 1000.00 mo 1000.00
sec dep call 740-446-3481

Houses For Sale
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Tuesday, September 22, 2015 9

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Thank You

Raiders place 1st, 2nd

to ALL those who helped make the
11th Annual Cruisin’ Car Show Successful!

Providing Scholarships
for Graduating Seniors

Hosted By: FoodFair

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Barnett Ford
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Douglas Hunter MD

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Daily Sentinel

Paul’s Truck Accessories
Martin Senour Paints
Weaving Stitches
Clark’s Jewelry

Thank you to all of the volunteers who helped brave the rain. Kip &amp; Steph of K&amp;D
DJ Service. Tim, Jacob, Zach, Dutch, and Bob from Hill’s and Blake, Crenson,
Eli, Dylan, Jordan, Clayton, Tyler, Kody &amp; Kris from Southern, who helped
park cars. Lori from Hill’s Automotive &amp; Tiffany from Home National Bank for
helping register. Young volunteers Kristin &amp; Emira for selling 50/50 &amp; raffle
tickets and our 4 volunteer judges Mike, Dave, Jeff, &amp; Gary.

By Donald Lambert

25th and Caleb McKnight (21:26.45)
placed 28th for River Valley.
Liberty Union paced the ﬁeld in the
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The River
girls race with 21 points — with six racValley boys and girls cross country
ers ﬁnishing in the top-10 — 38 points
teams took ﬁrst and second place in
ahead of the Lady Raiders. Manchester
their respective events during the 2015 ﬁnished in third with 73 points. Jenny
Patty Forgey Invitational at the Univer- Seas from Peebles paced the ﬁeld of 51
sity of Rio Grande on Saturday in Gallia with a time of 19:24.83.
County.
River Valley was led by a fourth place
The Raiders paced the ﬁeld with a
ﬁnish from Kenzie Baker (22:03.98).
team score of 45 points — with two
Leva Katkauskaite (25:11.56) placed
runners ﬁnishing in the top-10 — fol13th, while Leanne Hively (25:18.90)
lowed by Logan Elm with 50 points and ﬁnished 16th. Julia Nutter (25:31.39)
Liberty Union with 61 points. Liberty
ﬁnished 18th, followed by Josie Jones
Union’s Wyatt Gardner paced the ﬁeld
(27:15.09) placed 22nd for the Silver
of 64 with a team of 16:53.98.
and Black. Hannah Nutter (28:11.82)
The Silver and Black were led by a
and Natosha Rankin (34:06.34) ﬁnished
fourth place ﬁnish from Jacob Kemper
in 26th and 41st respectively.
(17:46.78). Nathaniel Abbott (18:58.70)
Complete results of the Rio Grande
placed 10th, while Chance Gillman
Patty Forgey Invitational can be found
(19:17.04) ﬁnished in 11th. Garrett
on the web at www.baumspage.com
Young (20:06.65) placed 17th, followed
by George Rickett (20:19.06) in 19th
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2106
place. Ben Moody (20:58.22) ﬁnished

elambert@civitasmedia.com

Rio women 1st, men 2nd
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande opened the season with a ﬁrst place ﬁnish in the women’s college
division, while the RedStorm men placed second
at the 45th Annual Rio
Grande/Patty Forgey
Cross Country Invitational, Saturday afternoon,
at the University of Rio
Grande.
Freshman Lucy Williams (Athens, OH) led
the winning effort for the
Rio women, taking ﬁrst
place individually by completing the 5K course in
19:27. The RedStorm also
had sophomore Keri Lawrence (Reedsville, OH)
and freshman Maggie
Dellinger (Washington
Court House, OH) ﬁnish
10th and 11th, respectively, with times of 20:55
and 20:56.
Rio Grande ﬁnished
with 45 points on the

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freshman Mike Norris
(Dayton, OH) was ninth
after crossing the ﬁnish
line in 28:33.
The University of
Charleston took team
honors with 31 points,
while the RedStorm took
second with 58 points.
Asbury University (92
points) edged out Ohio
Valley University (94
pts.) for third place.
Junior Dallas Guy
(Buffalo, OH), last year’s
defending champion,
was slowed by injury and
ﬁnished 25th in a time
of 30:05, while freshman
Dustin Edens rounded
out Rio’s top ﬁve runners
with a ﬁnish of 32:52.
The remainder of the
RedStorm’s representatives included freshman
Brody Ferris (New
Philadelphia, OH), who
was 40th in a time of
33:25; senior Tim Warner
(Pomeroy, OH), who was
49th after crossing in
36:13; and senior Andrew
Lawrence (Gallipolis,
OH), who was 52nd in a
time of 37:37.
The event attracted 23
schools and more than
325 runners.
Rio Grande will return
to action at the All-Ohio
Championship on October 2 at Cedarville.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Limitless "Pilot" (P) (N)
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On Two Fronts: Latinos &amp;
Vietnam A war's burden laid
on working-class youth. (N)
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Elementary "Bella"
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Element "Terra Pericolosa"
18 (WGN) BlueB. "Critical Condition" Elementary
Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Colorado Rockies Site: Coors Field (L)
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27 (LIFE)

day, while Ohio Valley
University (52 pts.) and
Asbury University (64
pts.) rounded out the top
three team totals.
Rounding out the day
for the RedStorm was
sophomore Rachel Ball
(Chillicothe, OH), who
was 15th with a time of
21:39; sophomore Emili
Sannes (Carlisle, OH),
who placed 18th with
a time of 22:12; sophomore Aubrey Dunfee
(Baltimore, OH), who
was 21st with a ﬁnish of
22:37; junior Katie Glover
(Ashville, OH), who was
29th with a time of 23:15;
junior Alex Ellis (Ona,
WV), who placed 41st
in a time of 26:17 and
junior Melissa McConoha
(Duncan Falls, OH), who
was 45th after ﬁnishing
in 28:24.
On the men’s side,
junior Blake Freed
(Uhrichsville, OH) led
the RedStorm’s effort
with a ﬁrst place ﬁnish
individually, completing
the 8K course in a time
of 27:34 - seven seconds
in front of runner-up
Kevin Charette from the
University of Charleston
(W.Va.).
In addition to Freed,
Rio had two other runners ﬁnish in the top 10
- senior Matt Engstrom
(Dover, OH) was ﬁfth
in a time of 28:12, while

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