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                  <text>Celebrate
now, mow
later

Astros lead
way with 6
All-Stars

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

74°

85°

82°

A shower or thunderstorm around today.
Some clouds tonight. High 89° / Low 71°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 104, Volume 73

Tuesday, July 2, 2019 s 50¢

45 years of service

NO PAPERS ON
THURSDAY
OHIO VALLEY — Due
to Thursday’s Independence Day holiday, Ohio
Valley Publishing will not
be printing editions on
July 4th for The Daily
Sentinel, Point Pleasant
Register or Gallipolis
Daily Tribune. Publication will resume for the
Friday, July 5th editions.
Any breaking news will
be posted on the websites
www.mydailyregister.
com, www.mydailytribune.com and www.
mydailysentinel.com
for our readers. OVP
apologizes for any inconvenience to our readers
and thanks them for their
support.

Scrap tire
disposal
available

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst was
recognized following the department’s
meeting on June 20 for 45 years of
service to the Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department. Darst has been an active
member of the fire department for 45 years,
having been around the department for
several years growing up prior to officially
joining the department. Darst’s father was
also a member of the Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department, leading to the now-Chief
spending much time at the station from a
young age. “It’s something I loved to do all
my life,” said Darst. Darst was presented
with a plaque and an ax to commemorate
his years of service to the department.
Darst is pictured with department
members in attendance, from left, John
Bentz, Jesse Pullins, canine Rommel, Larry
Byer, Shannon Smith, Chris Snouffer,
Alicia Smith, Charles Uhlig, Jeff Darst, Joe
Anthony, Joe Powell, Jordan Shank, Michael
Klein, David Heighton, Clayton Taylor and
Gene Bing. In the second photo, Darst
is presented a plaque by firefighter Joe
Powell.

Staff Report

Meigs Local approves personnel matters
Retirees honored
Staff Report

ROCKSPRINGS — The
Meigs Local Board of Education approved numerous personnel matters and honored
recent retirees during recent
board meetings.
Amy Perrin was hired as
the School and Community
Engagement Coordinator at
Meigs High School.
Jonathan Sargent was hired
as the chemistry/science
teacher at Meigs High School.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Opinion: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

Rebecca Houck was hired as
an intervention specialist at
Meigs Intermediate School.
Sarah McCann was hired
as an English Language
Arts teachers at Meigs High
School.
Sam Young was hired as the
welding technology teacher
for the 2019-20 school year.
Jeff Wayland was hired as
the head varsity baseball coach
for Meigs High School for the
2020 season.
Tom Cremeans was hired
Courtesy photo
as the high school and middle
Retirees recognized at the board meeting were (pictured from left) Carrie Morris,
bus driver; Kathy Hudson, teacher; Connie Quivey, cook; Jamie Deem, teacher;

See MEIGS | 2 Patricia Bodimer, teacher.

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

Staff Report

REEDSVILLE — The Eastern
Local Board of Education approved
several supplemental contracts and
other personnel matters during the
recent regular meeting.
Hired on supplemental and pupil
activity contracts were the following:
Jeff Stethem, junior high football
coach; Mykala Sheppard, head varsity volleyball coach; McKenzie Steele,
assistant varsity volleyball coach;
Jay Reynolds, girls varsity assistant
basketball coach; Bill Francis, safety
coordinator; Chuck Robinson, head

varsity girls basketball coach; Jamie
Barrett, junior high assistant football
coach; Carly Hayes, middle school
student council advisor; Bill Salyer,
varsity golf coach; Josh Fogle, athletic director and cross country coach;
Bryan Durst, girls varsity assistant
basketball coach.
Pam Douthitt was hired as the
2019 Summer School Proctor, Sheryl
Roush as the 2019 Summer Testing
Coordinator, and Shandi Sargent as
the 2019 Summer 3rd Grade Testing
Tutor.
See BOARD | 5

MEIGS COUNTY —
The threat of a severe
mosquito season is upon
us, and eliminating
sources of standing water
on your property is one of
the most effective ways to
combat mosquitoes.
Mosquitoes can leave
eggs in many types of
open containers, including gutters, cans, jars,
bottles, cups or anything
that can hold as little as
an ounce of water. Each
improperly stored scrap
tire can also become
a breeding ground for
thousands of mosquitoes,
which can carry lifethreatening diseases such
as dengue fever, West
Nile virus, heartworms,
and various forms of
encephalitis. The following can help you protect
your family, friends and
neighbors from mosquitoes: properly dispose
of solid waste, regularly
See TIRE | 5

Ohioans
paying more
for fuel
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ohioans will
now pay more for gas
and diesel fuel under new
state tax rates.
Republican Gov. Mike
DeWine signed a transportation budget in April
to increase Ohio’s tax on
gas by 10.5 cents a gallon
and the tax on diesel fuel
by 19 cents beginning
July 1. The new rates
began Monday.
The bill was aimed at
providing money to maintain deteriorating roads
and bridges. Ohioans will
now pay a state tax rate
of 38.5 cents per gallon
on gas and 47 cents a gallon on diesel fuel.
DeWine declined to
veto other provisions of
the bill, including one
allowing for removal of
front license plates, starting July 1, 2020. The
measure also sets fees at
$200 for alternative vehicles and $100 for hybrid
vehicles.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
ARMSTRONG
GALLIPOLIS — Katherine “Kathy” Sue Roach
Armstrong, 63, of Gallipolis, passed away on Friday
June 28, 2019 at Holzer Senior Care Center.
Graveside services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Tuesday July 2, 2019 in Pine Street Cemetery with Pastor
Calvin Minnis ofﬁciating. Family and Friends may call
at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home on Tuesday
from 11 a.m. until 12:45 p.m.
LANIER
HENDERSON — Richard J. “Dick” Lanier, 90, of
Henderson, died Saturday, June 29, 2019.
A funeral service will be held at 7 p.m., Wednesday,
July 3, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Pastor Charlie Dabney ofﬁciating. Military
honors will be given by the West Virginia Army
Honor Guard. The family will receive friends two
hours prior to the funeral service, Wednesday at the
funeral home.
DENNEY
SOUTHSIDE — Sherry Lynn Denney, 59, of Southside, died on June 30, 2017.
The funeral service will be held on Tuesday, July 2,
2019 at 1 p.m. at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Burial will be in the Potts Chapel Cemetery,
Apple Grove. Friends may call on the family from 11
a.m.- 1 p.m. at the funeral home on Tuesday.

Associated Press

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

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill” is
closed due to a slip until further notice.
POMEROY — Meigs County Road 18, Kingsbury Road, west of State Route 33 will be closed for
approximately 2 months beginning Tuesday, May 28,
in order to complete a bridge replacement project.
This bridge is located just west of the intersection of
County Road 19, Peach Fork Road.

Vacation Bible School
HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grove Christian
Church Family Vacation Bible School will be held
on Saturday, July 6. From 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. will be
a puppet skit, worship, teaching, crafts, food and
prizes at the church located at 38387 Hemlock Grove
Road. From 2-4 p.m. will be swimming, games and
fellowship at Ohio Valley Christian Assembly at 39560
Rocksprings Road. The theme is Fishers of Men from
the verse Matthew 4:19.

IN BRIEF

NEW YORK (AP) —
A funeral will be held
Wednesday for a former
New York City police
detective who was a
leader in the ﬁght for the
Sept. 11 Victim Compensation Fund.
Detective Luis Alvarez
appeared with former
“Daily Show” host Jon
Stewart last month to
plead with Congress to
extend the compensation
fund.
Alvarez, who died
Saturday of colorectal
cancer, was admitted to
a hospice within days of
his testimony.
His funeral will be held
at the Immaculate Conception Church in the
Astoria neighborhood of

Queens.
Alvarez spent three
months in the World
Trade Center rubble after
the 2001 attacks.

Officers hurt,
1 person killed
ATHENS, Ga. (AP)
— Police in a northeast
Georgia college town
say one person is dead
following a shooting that
involved at least one
ofﬁcer.
The Athens-Clarke
County Police Department said in a brief
statement that an ofﬁcer was involved in a
shooting Monday at an
off-campus apartment
complex designed for
University of Georgia
students.

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shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Iran breaches uranium limit
By Jon Gambrell
and Amir Vahdat

MEIGS BRIEFS

Funeral set for
9/11 detective

Mehdi Marizad | Fars News Agency via AP, File

A part of Arak heavy water nuclear facilities is seen Jan. 15, 2011, near the central city of Arak, 150 miles southwest of the capital
Tehran, Iran. Iran acknowledged Monday it had broken the limit set on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium by the 2015 nuclear
deal, marking its first major departure from the unraveling agreement a year after the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from the accord.

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran
has broken the limit set
on its stockpile of lowenriched uranium by its
2015 nuclear deal with
world powers, international inspectors and
Tehran said Monday,
marking its ﬁrst major
departure from the
unraveling agreement a
year after the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from the
accord.
The announcement by
Iran’s Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif
and later conﬁrmation by
the U.N. nuclear watchdog puts new pressure
on European nations
trying to save the deal
amid President Donald
Trump’s maximalist campaign targeting Tehran.
Iran separately threatens
to raise its uranium
enrichment closer to
weapons-grade levels on
July 7 if Europe fails to
offer it a new deal.
It also further heightens tensions across
the wider Middle East
in the wake of Iran
recently shooting down
a U.S. military surveillance drone, mysterious
attacks on oil tankers
that America and the
Israelis blame on Tehran,
and bomb-laden drone
assaults by Yemen’s
Iranian-backed rebels targeting Saudi Arabia.
The European Union

Meigs

urged Iran to reverse
course and Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu called the
action “a signiﬁcant step
toward making a nuclear
weapon.” Iran long has
insisted its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, despite Western
fears about it.
Though Trump pulled
back from airstrikes targeting Iran after the U.S.
drone was shot down,
Washington has rushed
an aircraft carrier strike
group, nuclear-capable
B-52 bombers and
thousands of additional
troops to the region.
That’s raised fears that a
miscalculation or further
incidents could push the
two sides into an armed
conﬂict, some 40 years
after the Islamic Revolution and the takeover
of the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
Speaking to journalists
in Tehran, Zarif acknowledged Iran that broken
through the limit set by
the accord.
“We had previously
announced this and we
have said it transparently
what we are going to
do,” Zarif said. “We are
going to act according to
what we have announced
and we consider it our
right reserved in the
nuclear deal.”
The U.N. nuclear
watchdog, the International Atomic Energy
Agency, later said its
director general had

informed ofﬁcials that
it veriﬁed Monday
that Iran had broken
through the limit.
Under terms of the
nuclear deal, Iran
agreed to have less than
300 kilograms (661
pounds) of uranium
enriched to a maximum
of 3.67%. Previously,
Iran enriched as high as
20%, which is a short
technical step away
from reaching weaponsgrade levels. It also held
up to 10,000 kilograms
(22,046 pounds) of the
higher-enriched uranium.
Neither Zarif nor the
U.N. agency said how
much uranium Iran now
had on hand. Last week,
an Iranian ofﬁcial in
Vienna said that Tehran
was 2.8 kilograms away
from the limit. Iran
previously announced it
had quadrupled its production of low-enriched
uranium, which at
under 3.67% is enough
to power a nuclear reactor to create electricity,
but is far below weapons-grade levels.
However, Iran could
have chosen to mix the
low-enriched uranium
with raw uranium,
diluting it and bringing
it down under the cap.
Pushing past the limit
served as a notice to
Europe, Zarif said.
The “actions of the
Europeans have not
been enough so the
Islamic Republic will

The resignation of Dave Waters
as a cross categorical special education teacher at Meigs Primary
was accepted effective Aug. 2.
From page 1
The board accepted the resigschool golf coach for the 2019-20 nation of eighth grade science
teacher Heike Perko, effective
season.
Aug. 2.
Dan Thomas was hired as the
Maternity leave requests were
Meigs Middle School football
approved for Joey Waters and
coach for the 2019 season.
Lena Sisson.
The board approved the transSubstitute custodians for sumfer and hire of Julie Abbott for
continued services as Speech Lan- mer 2019 on an as needed basis
guage Pathologist for Meigs Local were approved as follows: Mary
Bradbury, Clarence Dugan, Carrie
for the 2019-20 school year.
Harmon, Anna Peterson, Donavin
Supplemental contracts were
Chapman, Dreama English, Emily
approved as follows: Tom CreHill, Marie Pierce, James Cunmeans, SkillsUSA lead advisor;
ningham, Rhonda Foster and
Carrie Chancey, freshman class
Timothy Lunsford.
advisor; Dan Thomas, archery
Board member Barbara Musser
coordinator; John Sharp, eighth
complimented director of operagrade class advisor;
In personnel matters, the board tions Bill Ellis and wellness/facilities manager Aaron Oliphant for
approved Denise Lemponen,
their help with the recent River
Melissa Morris and Mattie Lanham as third grade summer inter- City Players production.
In other business, the board,
vention instructors, with ShanApproved a golf scramble funnon Korn and Abby Rodriquez as
draiser for the MHS Community
substitutes.
for Kids fund.
The board accepted the resAccepted a donation from the
ignation of Shelby Leatherman,
Meigs High School teachers in
cross categorical special education teacher at Meigs Intermedi- the amount of $3,906.58 for the
MHS Community for Kids fund.
ate School, effective Aug. 2.
Approved the estimate from
The board accepted the resigPat Mullen Construction to
nation of Kerry Nourse as ﬁfth
extend the current sidewalk
grade intervention specialist
effective June 20, pending hiring at Meigs Middle School in the
amount of $10,850.
by Gallipolis City Schools.
Approved an overnight ﬁeld
The resignation of Samantha
Nance as sixth grade math teach- trip request from Denise Russo
er was accepted effective June 14. for the cosmetology class to

move ahead with its
plans as it has previously announced,” Zarif
said. “We are in the
process of doing our
ﬁrst phase of actions
both on increasing our
stockpile of enriched
uranium as well as our
heavy water reserves.”
Breaking the stockpile limit by itself
doesn’t radically change
the one year that
experts say Iran would
need to have enough
material for an atomic
bomb, if it chooses to
pursue one.
But by coupling an
increasing stockpile
with higher enrichment, it begins to close
that one-year window
and hamper any diplomatic efforts at saving
the accord.
At the time of the
2015 deal, which was
agreed to by Iran, the
United States, China,
Russia, Germany,
France and Britain,
experts believed Iran
needed anywhere from
several weeks to three
months to have enough
material for a bomb.
Zarif stressed the
country remained on
track to raise its enrichment if Europe did not
take any additional
steps toward saving the
accord.
“The next step is
about the 3.67% limitation, which we will
implement too,” he
warned.

attend the Ohio Sate Cosmetology and Barber Board for licensure in Grove City.
Approved the purchase of
general property, liability, auto,
umbrella and cyber insurance
from Wright Specialty Insurance
for the 2019-20 school year. Reed
and Baur of Pomeroy is the broker.
Approved re-entering into
a service agreement with the
Meigs County General Health
District to provide 40 hours
annually of IT services.
Approved voluntary Student
Accident Insurance from K&amp;K
Insurance Group Inc. Reed and
Baur is the broker.
Approved the exempt and
administrative salary schedule as
presented for the 2019-20 school
year.
Approved the treasurer to
advertise and obtain fuel bids for
the 2019-20 school year.
Approved participation in
Meta Solutions Cooperative
Purchasing Program for dairy
and bakery bids for the 2019-20
school year.
Approved the ﬁnancial report,
cafeteria report and bills as presented.
Final permanent appropriations for ﬁscal yer 2019 and temporary appropriations for ﬁscal
year 2020 were approved.
The next Meigs Local Board of
Education meeting is scheduled
for 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, July
10 at the central ofﬁce.

�Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 2, 2019 3

POINT
PLEASANT

Liberty
Fest

OH-70134466

JULY 4TH
SCHDULE OF EVENTS

4:30 pm
Riverside Cloggers, Hartley Square
5:30 pm
Parade, Main Street (Line up at 5 pm)
5:50 pm City Ofﬁcials Welcome, Riverfront Park Stage
6:00 pm
Entertainments- Blue Moves
7:30 pm
Entertainment- Paul Doefﬁnger
9:00 pm
Entertainment- Flatrock Revival
10:00 pm
Fireorks on the River, Riverfront Park

CELEBRATION
OF FREEDOM
DON’T MISS:

ntest for Parade
Golf Cart Decorating Co p 3 Places)
(Cash Awards for To

Bounce Houses 5-9 pm
m

Face Painting 6:30-8:30p

aying Open Late

Main Street Merchants St

s

Food &amp; Merchant Vendor

Liberty Fest Pretty Baby Contest
JULY 4 - FULLOWING PARADE - POST OFFICE STEPS

For Boys &amp; Girls
Age Groups:
0-6 months
7-12 months
13-18 months

19-23 months
2 years
3 year
4 years

red, white &amp;
blue outﬁt

$20
per child

fan fav
award

1ST, 2ND &amp; 3RD PLACE IN EACH GROUP WINS ROSETTES
Contact: Delyssa Edwards, 740-245-4427
Registration is day of event.

304-675-3400

OPEN LATE

July
4th
F
T
Liberty
Fest

Mothman

OR

Museum

(Featured in Fall Out 76)

OH-70134524

304-812-5211
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�Opinion
4 Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Celebrate
now, mow
lawn later
According to the car thermometer, it is currently 90° outside. The big thermometer on our
deck says 98°.
I’m comfortably inside in the air
conditioning; comfortably sitting
on my couch; comfortably trying to
decide when I might venture into
the heat to mow the lawn.
Some decisions are just too easy
to make.
The answer is … later.
Randy
Maybe, later his week. Maybe,
Riley
early some morning before the sun
Contributing starts scorching the grass. Maybe I’ll
columnist
mow the next time the temperature
dips below 85°.
Hopefully, this is a reprieve from all the rain. A
few weeks ago, I posted on the Facebook page for
the McDermott Village neighborhood that I wanted to apologize for not mowing my lawn because
we had a huge pond in our backyard. Not only did
I use standing-water as an excuse, but I told my
neighbors that I thought I spotted a large, white
shark circling around the yard.
I took my excuse-making to the next level by
claiming that a crusty old shark ﬁsherman, with
a toothpick in his mouth, told me, “I think you’re
gonna need a bigger mower.”
We human beings will joke about almost anything. Sometimes, we laugh at serious topics, but
there is usually some undeniable truth in those
topics that prompt, or defy, humor.
Seriously, summer can be dangerous.
We have had too much rain this year – way too
much. Now, we can hope that our rainy season is
behind us, but what is in our future. Will it be hot
and dry, hot and wet, or just hot?
The almanac is predicting a hot and dry season
out west. What that could mean for wildﬁres
throughout that region is frightening.
Last year, entire towns were consumed by raging ﬁres. Last year, Debbie and I spent a month
touring the west. Smoke and ash followed us from
Colorado to California and north into Alaska, the
Yukon and British Columbia. Thousands of acres
were burnt; 2018 was horrible for everyone out
west.
This year, the wet weather is predicted to continue throughout the southern states. A worse
than normal hurricane season might be in store
for the Gulf States and Atlantic coastal regions.
The almanac predicts that the Midwest, including Ohio, will have a mixed bag of weather. It will
be almost unpredictable for us. The New England
states can expect a fairly good summer, with
mostly normal temperatures and rain. As I said,
this is all according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac.
What does all of that mean? Absolutely nothing.
I realize that meteorology is a science, but it’s
an interesting ﬁeld of science. If a meteorologist is
right in predicting weather over 65-70 percent of
the time, they’re considered remarkably accurate.
Most ﬁelds of science strive for 100% accuracy
– not weather prediction.
In reality, with the innumerable number of
variables that combine to produce weather, it’s
remarkable that weather prediction is as good as
it is.
I’ve heard that some people opt to hang a
weather-rock outside of a window to assess the
weather. What’s a weather-rock? It’s a ﬂat rock
with a hole drilled in the center. You hang it from
a tree limb. If the weather-rock moves about
wildly, it means it’s windy outside. If it’s wet, it
means it’s raining. If it’s white… you guessed it.
It is a snowy day.
The only thing we can be sure of is that there
will be heat; some of it intense. Every summer,
somewhere in the United States there is a major
heatwave. Then, there will be a power outage.
Air conditioning is lost. Then, newscasters will
start reporting death tolls from the heatwave.
Sadly, it always happens.
Those who cannot survive the intense heat and
power outages are usually those with underlying
medical conditions and the elderly. Before the
heat and humidity rise to dangerous levels; before
our electrical grid is taxed to the point of collapse, get prepared. Have a plan.
When all else fails, ﬁll a tub with lukewarm
water, lay down in the tub and enjoy a nice book
or magazine. Water transfers heat away from the
body more than 25-times faster than air. Also,
drink plenty of water. Drink water even if you
don’t feel thirsty – stay hydrated.
We may not be able to predict this summer’s
weather with great accuracy, but… we know it’s
going to get hot. So, have a plan and get prepared.
Until I need to crawl into a tub of water to stay
cool, I’m staying in the air conditioning.
I’ll mow later.
Randy Riley is former Mayor of Wilmington, Ohio and former Clinton
County Commissioner.

THEIR VIEW

Getting rid of ‘stupid grass’
The way a landscape
is designed and installed
makes a huge difference
in how many man-hours
it takes to maintain.
I grew up working in
a family business that
specialized in industrial/
commercial landscape
maintenance, so I really
pay attention to how
landscape design affects
maintenance. Most landscape designers don’t
have this perspective.
The number-one timewaster in lawn maintenance is what I call
“stupid grass”. Stupid
grass is lawn grass in
places where it’s difﬁcult
to mow, and requires
weekly hand trimming.
I’m old enough to remember when the “Weed
Eater” ﬁrst appeared
on the landscape scene.
I thought it was the
coolest thing I’d ever
seen. I could manicure
lawn grass in rough and
hard-to-reach areas like
roadside ditches and
around utility poles, fence
posts and ﬁre hydrants
with ease. Landscapers
embraced this breakthrough invention, and

tight corners and
eventually every
dead-ends. “Trim
homeowner had
strips” of gravel
one.
or mulch can be
The downside
installed along
was that designers
walls and under
doubled down on
fences so that lawn
planting lawn grass
grass doesn’t need
in places that made Steve
trimming. Landno sense. After
Boehme
all, hand trimming Contributing scape beds can be
expanded and lawn
was now a breeze
columnist
areas reduced.
and could be done
Steep slopes can
standing up. The
be planted with groundfact remained that lawn
covers or shrubs.
mowing must be done
I’m always surprised
over 30 times each season, so even if every step how few commercial
businesses give this any
“only takes a minute”
that means a half-hour of thought. Efﬁcient and
practical landscaping
needless work each season, year after year. Many enhances any commercial property, and the
homeowners routinely
spend an hour “weed-eat- savings on landscape
maintenance go right
ing” every week, which
adds up to over 200 man- to the bottom line, but
sloppy landscape design
days in a typical adult
lifetime, the equivalent of can lock business owners
into decades of needless
an entire year’s worth of
maintenance expense.
workdays.
An attractively landAll this needless toil
scaped business property
can be easily eliminated
with good design. Obsta- attracts more customers
cles such as utility poles, and enhances the community. Look around you
hydrants, mailboxes and
and see how few busisignposts can be incornesses actually put any
porated into landscape
beds. Lawn edges can be thought into this.
After location, curb
rounded off to eliminate

appeal is the largest
single factor in property
value. Homeowners and
businesses alike beneﬁt from professionallydesigned landscapes in
many ways. This doesn’t
require a huge expense
in most cases, just some
quality design and installation. Over time, the
initial investment in efﬁcient low-maintenance
landscaping pays off.
Thoughtless landscaping
costs real money, year
after year, like a leaky
faucet.
Look around your
property and see if you
can ﬁnd any “stupid
grass”. Once you learn to
spot it, you’ll start seeing
it everywhere. So much
of it, in fact, that you’ll
start to wonder why so
many people spend so
much time and effort on
it.
Steve Boehme is a landscape
designer/installer specializing
in landscape “makeovers”. “Let’s
Grow” is published weekly; column
archives are on the “Garden Advice”
page at www.goodseedfarm.com.
For more information is available
at www.goodseedfarm.com or call
GoodSeed Farm Landscapes at
(937) 587-7021.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Illinois, as white mobs
attacked black residents;
Today is Tuesday, July nearly 50 people, mostly
2, the 183rd day of 2019. blacks, are believed to
There are 182 days left in have died in the violence.
In 1937, aviator Amelia
the year.
Earhart and navigator
Today’s Highlight in History Fred Noonan disappeared
On July 2, 1964, Presi- over the Paciﬁc Ocean
while attempting to make
dent Lyndon B. Johnson
signed into law a sweep- the ﬁrst round-the-world
ing civil rights bill passed ﬂight along the equator.
In 1961, author Ernest
by Congress.
Hemingway shot himself
to death at his home in
On this date
Ketchum, Idaho.
In 1776, the ContiIn 1976, the U.S.
nental Congress passed
Supreme Court, in Gregg
a resolution saying that
v. Georgia, ruled 7-2
“these United Colonies
are, and of right ought to the death penalty was
be, free and independent not inherently cruel or
unusual.
States.”
In 1977, RussianIn 1881, President
American author VladiJames A. Garﬁeld was
mir Nabokov, 78, died in
shot by Charles J. GuiMontreux, Switzerland.
teau at the Washington
In 1982, Larry Walters
railroad station; Garﬁeld
of San Pedro, Califordied the following Sepnia, used a lawn chair
tember. (Guiteau was
equipped with 45 heliumhanged in June 1882.)
ﬁlled weather balloons
In 1892, the Populist
Party (also known as the to rise to an altitude of
16,000 feet; he landed
People’s Party) opened
eight miles away in Long
its ﬁrst national convention in Omaha, Nebraska. Beach.
In 1987, 18 Mexican
In 1917, rioting
erupted in East St. Louis, immigrants were found
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The best way to find out if you can trust
somebody is to trust them.”
— Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)

dead inside a locked boxcar near Sierra Blanca,
Texas, in what authorities
called a botched smuggling attempt; a 19th man
survived.
In 1996, electricity
and phone service was
knocked out for millions
of customers from Canada to the Southwest on
a record-hot day. Seven
years after they shotgunned their parents to
death in the family’s Beverly Hills mansion, Lyle
and Erik Menendez were
sentenced to life in prison
without parole.
In 1997, Academy
Award-winning actor
James Stewart died in
Beverly Hills, California,
at age 89.
Ten years ago: Thousands of U.S. Marines
poured into Talibancontrolled villages in
southern Afghanistan in

the ﬁrst major operation
under President Barack
Obama’s strategy to stabilize the country. North
Korea test-ﬁred two
short-range missiles. The
35-nation International
Atomic Energy Agency
chose Yukiya Amano of
Japan as its next head.
Federal marshals took
possession of disgraced
ﬁnancier Bernard
Madoff’s $7 million Manhattan penthouse, forcing
Madoff’s wife, Ruth, to
move elsewhere.
Five years ago: Palestinians accused Israeli
extremists of abducting and killing an Arab
teenager and burning his
body, sparking hours of
clashes in east Jerusalem
and drawing charges that
the youth was murdered
to avenge the killings of
three kidnapped Israeli
teens.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tire
From page 1

empty water from
containers, and properly dispose of scrap
tires.
The Meigs County
Health Department
is offering free scrap
tire disposal at the
Meigs County Health
Department. Any
Meigs County resident may bring up to
10 tires per load to
the health department, located at 112
East Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy, Monday
through Friday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Please
check in at the front
desk of the health
department with a
valid identiﬁcation
(to ensure you are a
Meigs County resident) prior to unloading.
Tractor tires will
also be accepted
during disposal
with a $10 fee being
imposed per tractor
tire.
The tire disposal
is only for residents,
commercial operations are not allowed,
and no tires with rims
will be accepted.
Participants must
be able to unload and
stack their own tires
during disposal.
For more information contact the
Meigs County Health
Department at 740992-6626.

Tuesday, July 2, 2019 5

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
real-life creatures.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Commissioners’ weekly
meeting will be held at noon.
The meeting has been moved
from the regular time due to the
holiday.

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@aimmediamidwest.com.

Thursday, July 4
MEIGS COUNTY — All
branches of the Meigs County
District Public Library will be
closed in observance of Independence Day.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department will
be closed in observance of Independence Day. Normal business
hours will resume on Friday, July
5.

Wednesday, July 3
POMEROY — Nancy the
Turtle Lady, Pomeroy Library,
Two programs: 11 a.m. and 2
p.m. Learn about reptiles and
amphibians with Nancy and her

Board

2021.
Approved a 2 year
negotiated contract
between ELEA (Eastern
From page 1
Local Education Association) and the Eastern
William James was
hired on a one-year con- Local Board of Education effective as of Sept.
tract as a high school
1, 2019 through Aug. 31,
English teacher for the
2021.
2019-20 school year,
Approved a memberpending proper certiﬁcaship with Coalition of
tion.
In other business, the Rural and Appalachian
Schools (CORAS), effecboard,
tive July 1, 2019 through
Approved the renewing membership through June 30, 2020 for the
2019-20 school year in
Buckeye Association of
the amount of $325.
School Administrators
Approved a member(BASA) for the 2019-20
ship with SchoolPointe,
school year.
Inc., effective July 1,
Approved a 2 year
2019 through June
negotiated contract
30, 2020 for the 2019between OAPSE Local
20 school year in the
#448 and the Eastern
amount of $4,152.
Local Board of EducaApproved the sertion effective as of Sept.
1, 2019 through Aug. 31, vice agreement to

FREE PENSION ASSISTANCE!
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Receive pension help from the Mid-America
Pension Rights Project at no charge. Current and
former Ohio residents who have questions regarding
SHQVLRQ�RU�RWKHU�UHWLUHPHQW�EHQH¿WV�FDQ�FDOO�
1-866-735-7737 between 8:30 and 4:30
Monday – Friday to make a free telephone
appointment with an attorney. The Project is
funded by the U.S. Agency on Aging.

Friday, July 5

mer Reading Program continues
with this Australian music program.

RACINE — Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet at
6:45 p.m. at the Racine Grange
Hall. Refreshments will be
served at 6:45 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m.

Thursday, July 11

Monday, July 8
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.

Wednesday, July 10

CHESTER — Chester
Shade Historical Association will be having its regular
monthly board meeting at
6:30 p.m. in the Chester Court
House. Everyone is invited to
attend.

Friday, July 12

POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Star
Wars Retro Movie Marathon.
POMEROY — Didgeridoo
Episode IV-VI will be shown
Down Under, Pomeroy Library,
2 p.m. The Meigs Library’s Sum- back-to-back.

provide core services
between META Solutions and Eastern Local
Schools for the 2019-20
school year at a rate
of $13,768.50. Core
services shall include
ﬁscal support for state
software, SIS support,
EMIS support, content
ﬁltering and purchasing
co-op membership.
Approved the insurance proposal from
SORSA, Schools of Ohio
Risk Sharing Authority,
for property, liability
and ﬂeet coverage for
the period of July 1,
2019 through July 1,
2020 in the amount of
$49,452.
Approved change
order three from Baer
Contracting, LLC in the
amount of $16,822.50.
Change order covers the

cost of spoil removal
from old outhouse and
cistern, additional stone
and sand, expansion of
concrete parking area,
requested door changes,
and additional water and
sewer line tie in.
Approved Open
Enrollment students for
the 2019-20 school year.
Approved an administrative salary schedule for ﬁscal year 20
through ﬁscal year 21.
Equivalent beneﬁts as
deﬁned in the ELEA
Contract to be granted
to administrative staff.
Approved an administrative exempt employee
salary schedule for ﬁscal
year 20 through ﬁscal
year 21. Equivalent beneﬁts as deﬁned in the
OAPSE Contract to be
granted to administra-

tive exempt employees
Approved an amendment to the Treasurer/
CFO contract effective
August 1, 2019.
Approved advertising for quotes for tires,
tubes, petroleum products, diesel fuel, and
fuel oil for the 2019-20
school year.
Approved ﬁnal permanent appropriations for
ﬁscal year 2019 and temporary appropriations
for ﬁscal year 2020.
Approved the minutes
of the previous meeting,
ﬁnancial reports, and
transfers and advances
from the general fund, as
presented.
The next board meeting will be held at 6:30
p.m., Thursday, Aug. 8,
in the elementary library
conference room.

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�Sports
6 Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lashley leads wire-to-wire in Detroit for PGA Tour win
DETROIT (AP) — Nate
Lashley walked toward the
18th green at Detroit Golf Club
on the verge of winning his ﬁrst
PGA Tour title, thinking about
the plane crash that killed his
parents and girlfriend.
“It was surreal,” Lashley said
Sunday after completing an
unlikely wire-to-wire victory in
the Rocket Mortgage Classic.
“I didn’t know what to think.
There was a lot going through
my mind.”
Lashley closed with a
2-under 70 to ﬁnish at 25-under
263 and win by six shots, the
margin he took into the day.
His parents and girlfriend
were killed in a plane crash 15
years ago. He dabbled in real
estate after graduating from the
University of Arizona, brieﬂy
quit playing professional golf

Rory Sabbatini (68) and Wes
Roach (68) were another stroke
back.
The 36-year-old Lashley,
the 353rd ranked player in the
world, slipped into PGA Tour’s
ﬁrst event in Detroit as an
alternate Wednesday.
“It’s a great story — last man
in the ﬁeld,” he said. “I was
happy to get in the ﬁeld. And
to win it, it’s a dream come
true.”
The Nebraskan took full
advantage of the opportunity,
shooting a career-low 63 in the
Carlos Osorio | AP
Nate Lashley drives on the second tee during the second round of the Rocket ﬁrst round to take a lead he
refused to lose. Lashley stayed
Mortgage Classic golf tournament Friday in Detroit.
atop the leaderboard with a 67
on Friday and gave himself a
several years ago and resumed golf when I was little,” said
cushion with another 9-under
Lashley, who began playing
playing in the PGA Tour’s
63 Saturday.
when he was 8.
minor leagues.
On the brink of breaking
Monday qualiﬁer Doc Red“Without my parents, I
man shot a 67 to ﬁnish second. through during his second
wouldn’t have started playing

PGA Tour season, his sister,
girlfriend, buddies and family
friends ﬂew to Detroit to join
him.
Brooke Lashley, who lives
near her younger brother in
Arizona, was in awe of as fans
followed and cheered for her little brother as they stood along
the ropes from tee to green.
“I’m sure a lot of these people
didn’t know him a couple days
ago,” she said, standing near
the No. 8 green. “He’s doing
all he can to focus, but this is
so incredible. It’s foreign to
him because he’s never had
this much attention. He’s never
played in front of a gallery like
this with TV cameras all over
the place.”
His parents, Rod and Char
See LASHLEY | 7

Lillard gets supermax
deal, and NBA
spending spree begins
By Tim Reynolds
Associated Press

Damian Lillard wasn’t a top-ﬁve pick. Tobias
Harris wasn’t a lottery pick. Khris Middleton
wasn’t even a ﬁrst-rounder.
Their bank balances won’t know the difference
soon.
Free agency opened Sunday with nearly $3
billion in deals getting struck in the opening
hours — including Kyrie Irving ofﬁcially picking
Brooklyn, as has been expected, but without any
word from Kawhi Leonard about his future plans
to either stay with NBA champion Toronto or
move elsewhere.
Lillard agreed to a $196 million, four-year
extension with Portland that will kick in for the
2021-22 season. Harris is staying in Philadelphia
for $180 million over the next ﬁve years and
Middleton gave Milwaukee a bit of a discount in
agreeing to a $178 million, ﬁve-year deal — $12
million shy of what he could have commanded.
Even injuries couldn’t derail the spending.
Kevin Durant announced that he’s leaving
Golden State and joining Brooklyn on a max deal
— which would be worth $164 million over four
years, even though he’ll miss next season with
an Achilles injury and could have gotten $221
million for ﬁve years from the Warriors. And Kristaps Porzingis, who hasn’t appeared in an NBA
game since Feb. 6, 2018 because of a knee injury,
will sign a $158 million, ﬁve-year contract to stay
with Dallas.
All deals were conﬁrmed to The Associated
Press by people with knowledge of the agreements, all speaking on condition of anonymity
because the NBA moratorium prevents new contracts from being signed until noon Eastern time
on Saturday.
“From the trade to the Sixers in February,
through the regular season and playoffs and now
on to free agency, this contract is a culmination
of so much in my life and basketball career,” Harris wrote in an essay published on ESPN.com.
“It’s also a new beginning.”
There were a lot of new beginnings Sunday.
Jimmy Butler agreed to a four-year, $142 million deal that will send him to Miami. Butler — a
close friend of retired Miami guard Dwyane
Wade — made clear to the Heat that he wanted
to be in Miami, and over the next three hours
the basic framework of a trade was worked out.
Miami is sending Josh Richardson to Philadelphia and was still working on a package to Dallas
to make the Butler move happen. Goran Dragic
was considered at one time for inclusion in that
trade, though by night’s end he was still with
Miami and the Mavs and Heat were still working
through options.
At least 10 players agreed to contracts that will
be worth $100 million or more. Lillard, Harris,
Middleton, Durant, Porzingis, Butler, Kemba
Walker ($141 million, four-year deal with Boston), Irving, Al Horford ($109 million, four years
from Philadelphia) and Nikola Vucevic ($100 million, four years with Orlando) were the big early
winners, with more likely to come.
Point guards did particularly well, and will
likely keep doing well.
Lillard, Irving and Walker guaranteed themselves nearly a half-billion dollars. Terry Rozier
left Boston for Charlotte — essentially the swap
See NBA | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, July 3
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs Huntington at
Meigs HS, 5 p.m.

Saturday, July 6
Legion Baseball
Post 39 at Nitro (DH),
noon

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

An upper deck view of the city skyline from Progressive Field on July 13, 2014. Progressive Field will host the 2019 MLB All-Star Classic
next week in Cleveland, Ohio.

Astros lead way with 6 All-Stars
NEW YORK (AP) —
Last time the Houston
Astros went to Cleveland,
they made a boozy, bubbly mess in the visiting
locker room.
Now they’re invading
the home clubhouse, too.
Justin Verlander, Gerrit Cole and four of
their Astros teammates
will lead the American
League squad at the AllStar Game in Cleveland
on July 9. Major League
Baseball unveiled full rosters for the midsummer
showcase Sunday, and
Houston topped all big
league clubs with six players. No other AL team
has more than three.
“Impressive,” Verlander
said. “I mean, I think we
could have a lot more.”
Alex Bregman, George
Springer and Michael
Brantley will be in the
starting lineup, and Verlander, Cole and Ryan
Pressly are on the pitching staff. It will be the
ﬁrst trip to Cleveland for
those Astros since Game
3 of last year’s AL Division Series, when Houston won 11-3 to complete
a sweep.
The Dodgers, Brewers
and Rockies lead the NL
with four players each.
The Los Angeles contingent includes Cody Bellinger, Clayton Kershaw,
Hyun-Jin Ryu and Walker
Buehler — plenty of
familiar faces for manager
Dave Roberts.
Milwaukee will be
represented by Christian
Yelich, Mike Moustakas, Yasmani Grandal
and Josh Hader. It’s
the second appearance

for Hader, who came
under ﬁre when racist
and homophobic tweets
resurfaced on his account
during last year’s game.
Hader apologized for the
tweets, which he sent as a
teenager.
Braves teammates Ronald Acuña Jr. and Mike
Soroka are set to be this
year’s youngest players
at 21. Atlanta said it’s
the ﬁrst time two players
under 22 from the same
team made the All-Star
team.
The NL team includes
just three hitters in their
30s: Moustakas and Grandal are 30, and Charlie
Blackmon will turn 33 on
Monday. Depending on
who serves as DH, the
NL could have the youngest starting lineup in AllStar Game history.
“I think it’s just the
beginning here,” said
Braves manager Brian
Snitker, himself a freshman All-Star on Roberts’
staff. “As I’ve said, I
think this is going to be a
yearly occurrence because
these kids are going to be
around for a long time.”
The Yankees have the
AL’s best record but boast
just three All-Stars: Gary
Sánchez, DJ LeMahieu
and Aroldis Chapman.
Gleyber Torres and Luke
Voit were also contenders, while Aaron Judge
— injured for much of
the season — narrowly
missed out on a spot via
fan balloting.
“To me, I thought
we were going to have
around six or seven AllStars from this team,”
Chapman said through a

translator in London.
Fans of the reigning
champion Red Sox won’t
be pleased that shortstop
Xander Bogaerts and
third baseman Rafael
Devers were left out.
Bogaerts has accrued 3.7
wins above replacement,
per Fangraphs — trailing
only the Angels’ Mike
Trout among AL players
— and Devers entered
Sunday batting .324.
Red Sox ace Chris Sale
was also omitted despite
ranking second in the
league in strikeouts. Boston’s only representatives
as of now are Mookie
Betts and J.D. Martinez.
Padres sluggers Hunter
Renfroe and Franmil
Reyes entered Sunday
among the major league
leaders with 24 homers
each, but neither made
the cut. Nor did Cubs
ﬁrst baseman Anthony
Rizzo, Phillies ﬁrst
baseman Rhys Hoskins,
Twins outﬁelder Max
Kepler or Yankees DH
Edwin Encarnación.
On the pitching side,
Cubs left-hander Cole
Hamels, Rangers righthander Lance Lynn and
Twins righty Jose Berrios also had strong credentials.
Verlander earned his
eighth All-Star nod, tied
with Kershaw and Trout
for most among this
year’s participants.
The host Indians had
three players selected:
Carlos Santana, Francisco Lindor and Brad
Hand. Santana, a
33-year-old ﬁrst-time AllStar, will also swing in
the Home Run Derby.

Six of the eight derby
participants are known
— Acuña, Santana,
Toronto’s Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Milwaukee’s
Christian Yelich, the New
York Mets’ Pete Alonso
and Pittsburgh’s Josh
Bell. Guerrero will be
20 years, 114 days old
for the July 8 showcase,
making him the youngest ever in the derby —
116 days younger than
Ken Griffey Jr. in 1990.
The full ﬁeld will be
announced Wednesday.
Rangers slugger Joey
Gallo said Sunday he has
not been asked to be in
the derby, though he will
be on the AL All-Star
squad.
The rosters feature
31 ﬁrst-time selections,
including Anthony Rendon, who said he may
not attend to rest some
nagging injuries instead.
Since the start of 2015,
the Nationals third baseman is ﬁfth in baseball in
WAR at 20.4.
“It’s good to be recognized,” he said.
Rendon’s former teammate, Phillies slugger
Bryce Harper, hasn’t
been invited. Harper set
pro sports jersey sale
records after signing a
$330 million, 13-year
deal with Philadelphia
this spring, but subpar
slugging this season will
likely end his streak of
All-Star appearances at
four.
Padres third baseman Manny Machado,
another big offseason
free agent acquisition,
was also left off the NL
team.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Bowman gets 1st
Cup Series win at
Chicagoland

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the
2019 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League is winding down.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Wednesday, June
12, at Riverside Golf Club in Mason. Age groups
for both young ladies and young men are 10-andunder, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournament, course and date
of play is as follows: Tuesday, July 9, at Meigs
County Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $12 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play each week. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at
9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at 740-256-6160,
Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing
304-675-6135 if you can contribute or have questions concerning the tour.

JOLIET, Ill. (AP) — Alex Bowman is part of the
club now. That means no more cracks about coming
up empty.
He’s a winner once again.
Bowman held off Kyle Larson for his ﬁrst career
NASCAR Cup Series victory, leading a terriﬁc performance for Hendrick Motorsports at Chicagoland
Speedway on Sunday.
Bowman had one of the fastest cars during practice, and the strength of his No. 88 Axalta Chevrolet showed after the race was delayed by a storm.
He had just six top-ﬁve ﬁnishes in 133 starts on
NASCAR’s top series before his banner day on the
bumpy 1.5-mile oval.
The 26-year-old Bowman, who won on the Xﬁnity
Series in 2017, took second at Talladega, Dover and
Kansas this year, and he was sick of hearing about
the hole on his resume. He said even Chad Knaus,
William Byron’s crew chief, had said something to
him.
Those days are over.

Kiwanis Juniors Golf
Tournament
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf Course
will be hosting the 11th annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside Golf Tournament for junior golfers on
Thursday, July 18, starting at 10 a.m. Registration
will be from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play tournament
open to golfers ages 10-or-under to 18 years old.
The participants will be divided into four divisions, 10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-and-under, and
$30 for players 13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and
individual awards will be presented to the topthree places in each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectators to follow kids for $15 apiece, so that they
may follow the tournament and eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse
at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
740-645-4381. Please leave player’s name, age as
of July 18, 2019 and the school the individual is
currently attending.

NBA

He was a guy that missed
a whole season, and he
had a good, healthy year
and played his best basFrom page 6
ketball in the playoffs.”
In other key deals Sunfor Walker — on what
day:
will be a $58 million,
— Indiana is set to
three-year deal that will
acquire 2017 rookie of the
be completed via trade.
year Malcolm Brogdon
Ricky Rubio also cashed
from Milwaukee and sign
in, getting $51 million
the shooting guard to
for three years from the
a four-year, $85 million
Phoenix Suns.
deal.
Meanwhile, the Leon— Harrison Barnes, as
ard watch continued with
expected, is remaining in
no hints from his camp.
Sacramento on what will
The NBA Finals MVP
and now two-time cham- be a four-year, $85 million
contract.
pion will meet with the
— The Pacers lost forRaptors in the coming
days, Toronto coach Nick ward Bojan Bogdanovic
to the Utah Jazz, which
Nurse said.
Nurse didn’t say where agreed to pay the forward
$73.1 million over the
the Raptors will be seenext four years.
ing Leonard, but said
— New York, with
the NBA champs believe
Knicks fans hoping for a
they “have a really good
shot at Durant, is signing
chance” to keep him.
Julius Randle to a $63
“I think he had a tremillion deal.
mendous year,” Nurse
— Former NBA MVP
said at an event in JefDerrick Rose will sign
ferson, Iowa, near his
hometown. “I think it’s a a two-year, $15 million
great place. You guys can contract with the Detroit
Pistons.
see our fans and owner— San Antonio kept
ship is great. Our front
ofﬁce leadership is great, Rudy Gay on a two-year,
his teammates. You know, $32 million deal, and
added veteran forward
everything went well for
him to re-sign. And prob- DeMarre Carroll on a
two-year, $12 million
ably mostly, on top of
that, would be his health. deal.

mid-30s, but he had to
end his year after 17
events because of a knee
injury. He tied for eighth
From page 6
in February in the Puerto
Rico Open — played
Lashley, and girlfriend
opposite the World Golf
Leslie Hofmeister, all of
Championships-Mexico
Scottsbluff, Nebraska,
Championship — for his
were missing for three
only top-10 ﬁnish previdays before their bodies
ously on the tour. He
and the wreckage were
started the tournament
found near the 13,780No. 132 in the FedEx
foot Gannett Peak in
Cup standings.
Wyoming after watching
Lashley would’ve had
him play in a tournament
for the University of Ari- to collapse and one of the
contenders would’ve had
zona in 2004.
“It rocked our commu- to have a sensational pernity,” recalled Helen Rein- formance to put the ﬁnal
result in doubt.
hardt, a family friend.
Neither happened.
Reinhardt and her
He made a slow-rolling,
husband, Jim, boarded a
charter plane in Nebraska downhill putt from 15
feet to birdie the ﬁrst
that stopped in Minnesota to pick up Lashley’s hole. At No. 3, he started
conﬁdently walking
girlfriend, Ashlie Reed,
and arrived in the Motor toward the cup before his
10-foot birdie putt went
City on Sunday.
in to put him at 25 under.
“It’s great to be here
“The birdies on 1 and 3
to watch his dream come
really calmed me down,”
true after watching him
play in the Dakotas Tour Lashley said.
Lashley had two
and work his way up to
here,” said Jeff Peck, one bogeys on the front nine
of about a dozen of Lash- — one more than he had
the previous three rounds
ley’s friends at Detroit
— and coasted to victory
Golf Club.
When Lashley was ﬂip- on the back with two
birdies and no bogeys.
ping houses, he thought
Family and friends
his playing career was
stood near the edge of
over.
Lashley gave the game the green as he closed
out the round.
another shot, playing
Lashley’s girlfriend
on the PGA Tour Latinoamérica circuit in 2015 and sister, choking back
tears, went onto the
and moved up to what
green to give him a hug.
is now called the Korn
“I’m just real emoFerry Tour two years
tional,” he said later. “I’m
later.
He made his PGA Tour just thankful I got in the
tournament.”
debut last season in his

grades 1-6. The cost of the camp is $40 per individual or $60 for a pair from the same family.
All campers will be taught fundamentals of
basketball and will have a chance to participate
in daily competitions of free throws, 3-on-3 and
‘H-O-R-S-E’.
Each camper receives a t-shirt and prizes will
be given in different age groups to competition
winners. You can register the first day of camp.
For more information, contact Coach Caldwell
at 740-444-1205.

GAHS youth
football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
football staff will be conducting a youth football
camp for boys entering grades 1-8. The camp
will be held from July 22-23 from 6-8 p.m. each
day at Memorial Field. Camp participants will be
instructed by both staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $30 per student and
$20 apiece for two-or-more students. For questions or to register, please contact Coach Jared
McClelland at 740-645-5783.

RedStorm women’s
basketball camp

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of
Rio Grande’s 2019 Women’s Basketball Camp is
scheduled for July 7-10 at the Lyne Center on the
URG campus.
The overnight instructional camp is open to
girls in grades 4-12. Cost is $295 per camper,
which includes lodging, meals, a certiﬁcate of participation and a t-shirt.
Campers will also receive 24-hour supervision
from coaches and counselors; lecture/discussion
groups and ﬁlm sessions; daily instruction on
shooting, ball-handling, post play and defense;
and use of the school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a camp store featuring
drinks, snacks, pizza and Rio Grande apparel for
sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s basketball head
coach David Smalley, who ranks among the top
10 coaches on the active wins list with more than
500, will be the camp director.
Online registration is available through the
women’s basketball link on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern High School
forms are available in the lobby of the Lyne Cenbasketball program will be hosting the 13th
annual Hustlin’ Tornadoes Basketball Camp from ter during regular business hours.
Registration forms should be mailed to David
9 a.m. until noon on Monday, July 8, through
Smalley, Rio Grande Women’s Basketball Camp,
Thursday, July 11, at the high school gymnaP.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks
sium.
should be made payable to Women’s Basketball
The camp will be under the direction of SHS
varsity boys coach Jeff Caldwell and members of Camp.
For more information, contact Smalley at
the coaching staff, as well as returning varsity
740-245-7491 or at 1-800-282-7201, or by e-mail
basketball players.
The camp is open to all boys and girls entering dsmalley@rio.edu

Hustlin’ Tornadoes
basketball camp

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�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Daily Sentinel

PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 19-CV-036
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY BUT SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF NRZ
PASS-THROUGH TRUST XII
-VSUNKNOWN HEIRS, ASSIGNS, LEGATEES AND DEVISEES
OF CHARLES ESTEP AKA CHARLES DAVID ESTEP, DECEASED, ET AL. DEFENDANTS.

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

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

LEGALS

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

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

4XRWHV IRU 6XSSOLHV

YARD SALE

Legals
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AUCTIONS

Auto Auction
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, July 05, 2019
at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
VIN:1GKFK66U33J157896
2003 GMC Denali
VIN:5GAEV13758J151171
2008 BUICK ENCLAVE
7/2/19,7/3/19,7/5/19

Garage/Yard Sale
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HUGE MOVING SALE
July 3rd-4th-5th-6th
629 Hall Davis Rd.
Thurman, Oh
antiques, 1941 oak
mantle/mirror organ,
newspapers,coffin top
sewing machine, oak wall
clock,rocking chairs,
piano/bench, bedroom &amp;
dining room furniture,curio
cabinet, sofa, loveseat,
both dual recliners,fenton,
Elvis, tools stamp &amp; coin
collections. Too many
items to list. Also
2007 Dodge Charger RT

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Apartments/Townhouses
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the County Paving Project, C22 &amp;
C28AGD – ROUND 33 will be received by the Meigs County
Commissioners at their office at The Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E. Second Street, Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 11:10 A.M., July 11, 2019, and then at 11:10 A.M.
at said office opened and read aloud.
Resurfacing and striping of CR 22 Laurel Cliff RD and a
portion of CR 28 Apple Grove Dorcas RD. The engineer’s estimate for this project is $212,688.00
DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.

Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Charles
Estep aka Charles David Estep, Deceased, whose last known
address is: Unknown, and who cannot be served, will take
notice that on May 29, 2019, Plaintiff filed a Complaint for Foreclosure and other Equitable Relief in the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio, Case No. 19-CV-036,
against Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of
Charles Estep aka Charles David Estep, Deceased, and
others as Defendants, alleging that Charles Estep aka
Charles David Estep, Deceased, and Charlene Estep aka
Charlene Mignon Estep are in default for all payments from
September 25, 2018; that on October 25, 1999, Charles Estep
aka Charles David Estep, Deceased, and Charlene Estep aka
Charlene Mignon Estep, executed and delivered a certain Mortgage Deed in which said Defendants agreed, among other
things, to pay the Note and to comply with all of the terms of
the Mortgage Deed hereinafter described, which Mortgage
Deed was filed in the Recorder's Office of Meigs County, Ohio
on November 12, 1999, recorded in Volume 97, Page 825 of
the county recorder’s records and assigned to Plaintiff on
March 21, 2019, and recorded on March 26, 2019, in Volume
388, Page 3478 of the Meigs County Records, that, further, the
balance due on the Note is $52,341.40 with interest at the rate
of 10.3210% per annum from September 25, 2018; that to
secure the payment of the Note, executed and delivered a
certain Mortgage Deed to and thereby conveying, in fee simple,
the following described premises:
Situated in the State of Ohio, in the County of Meigs, and in the
Village of Syracuse:
Commonly known as: 2460 Oak Alley, Syracuse, OH 45779
and further alleging that the aforesaid Mortgage is a valid and
subsisting first and best lien upon said premises after the lien of
the Treasurer; that the Note is in default, whereby the conditions set forth in the Note and Mortgage have been broken, that
the Mortgage has become absolute and that Plaintiff is entitled,
therefore, to have the Mortgage foreclosed, the premises sold,
and the proceeds applied in payment of Plaintiff's claims; that
the Defendants, Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Charles Estep aka Charles David Estep, Deceased,
among others, may have or claim to have some interest in or
lien upon said premises; that all of the Defendants are required
to set forth any claim, lien or interest in or upon the premises
that he, she, or it may have or claim to have or be forever
barred therefrom; that Plaintiff's Mortgage be declared to be a
valid and subsisting first and best lien upon said premises after
the lien of the Treasurer, if any, that its Mortgage be foreclosed;
that all liens be marshaled; that the equity of redemption of all
Defendants be forever cut off, barred, and foreclosed; that upon
the sale of said premises the proceeds be paid to Plaintiff to
satisfy the amount of its existing lien and the interest, together
with its disbursements, advancements, and costs herein expended; and for such other and further relief to which is may be
entitled in equity or at law.
Defendants are further notified that they are required to answer
the Complaint on or before August 6, 2019, which includes
twenty-eight (28) days from the last publishing, or judgment
may be rendered as prayed for therein.
Submitted by: Mark M. Schonhut (0093698), Sandhu Law
Group, LLC, 1213 Prospect Avenue, Suite 300, Cleveland, OH
44115, 216-373-1001, Attorney for Plaintiff
6/25/19, 7/2/19, 7/9/19

Bid documents may be secured at the office of The Meigs
County Engineer, 34110 Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769; Phone Number 740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the full
amount of the bid with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioner or by certified check, cashiers
check, or irrevocable letter of credit upon a solvent bank in the
amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in the favor of
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioner. Bid bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
Bidders must be prequalified. Prequalification shall be in accordance with 102.01 of the 2019 Ohio Department of Transportation Construction and Material Specifications.
Bids shall be sealed and marked as Bid for: County Paving
Project, C22 &amp; C28AGD – Round 33 and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite 301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
6/25/19, 7/2/19

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 2, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Dave Green

By Hilary Price

7
5
8

2

7 2

5

1
3

6

5

4

3

7

8

9
8

2

8 1

5

7

Difficulty Level

4

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

7/02

6
1
2
3
8
9
4
7
5

9
4
8
1
7
5
2
3
6

7
3
5
2
6
4
8
9
1

5
6
9
8
4
3
1
2
7

1
8
4
9
2
7
6
5
3

2
7
3
5
1
6
9
8
4

2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

8
5
7
6
9
1
3
4
2

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

6

7/02

3
2
1
4
5
8
7
6
9

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

3

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

2

4
9
6
7
3
2
5
1
8

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

8

2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

4

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Bieber, Indians turn tables
on Orioles with 2-0 shutout

195 Upper
River Road,
Gallipolis
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That’s what we did today, and we got
one win.”
It was a suitable encore to his previous start against the Orioles, when
Bieber struck out 15 on May 19 in his
ﬁrst career shutout.
“Obviously, we have a real hard time
with him. He’s really impressive,” Orioles manager Brandon Hyde said. “Just
faced a really good pitcher today who
kind of carved us up.”
Brad Hand gave up two singles and
a two-out walk to load the bases in
the ninth before striking out Anthony
Santander for his 23rd save.
Oscar Mercado hit two doubles and
scored twice on singles by Santana,
who has reached base in 24 straight
games and 42 of the past 43. Cleveland’s leader in home runs (18) and
RBIs (50), Santana was announced
Sunday as a participant in the Home
Run Derby on July 8.

BALTIMORE (AP) — Coming off
successive lopsided defeats to the lowly
Baltimore Orioles, the Cleveland Indians turned to Shane Bieber to pull the
team out of its inexplicable collapse.
Bieber did his part, restoring the
pecking order between the two teams
with a brilliant pitching effort that
provided Cleveland with a 2-0 victory
Sunday.
Following identical 13-0 losses to
the team with the worst record in the
majors, the Indians turned it around
behind Bieber (7-3). The left-hander
gave up three hits and struck out 11
over eight sparkling innings. He did
not issue a walk, retired 12 straight at
one point and permitted only one runner past ﬁrst base.
“Obviously it’s a long season, so
we’re not trying to stress too much
about two games,” Bieber said. “We’re
just looking at what’s in front of us.

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TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

74°

82°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

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.

87°
65°
86°
65°
102° in 1941
50° in 1988

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.08
0.00
0.12
24.21
22.08

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:07 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
5:54 a.m.
9:04 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jul 2

First

Jul 9

Full

Jul 16

Last

Jul 24

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

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

Major
11:56a
12:26a
1:31a
2:37a
3:42a
4:43a
5:39a

Minor
5:41a
6:42a
7:46a
8:52a
9:56a
10:56a
11:52a

Major
---12:23p
2:02p
3:06p
4:10p
5:09p
6:04p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

Minor
6:11p
7:13p
8:17p
9:21p
10:23p
11:22p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
Violent thunderstorms developed at
the northern rim of a hot air mass on
July 2, 1980, dumping hail the size
of hens’ eggs on Louisville, Ky., and
causing wind damage from Missouri
through Illinois.

Periods of sun with a
t-storm; humid

Periods of sun, a
thunderstorm; humid

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

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

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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. Mon.

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

Level
12.45
18.91
22.67
12.80
13.04
25.14
12.23
26.69
34.60
12.56
22.10
34.60
22.80

Portsmouth
88/72

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.09
+0.38
-0.09
+0.32
+0.25
+0.23
-0.09
-0.78
-0.38
-0.07
-1.90
-0.20
-2.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

85°
69°

Mostly cloudy and
humid

Marietta
88/70

Murray City
88/70
Belpre
88/70

Athens
87/70

St. Marys
89/70

Parkersburg
88/71

Coolville
88/70

Elizabeth
89/70

Spencer
88/70

Buffalo
88/71

Ironton
88/71

Milton
89/71

Clendenin
89/70

St. Albans
89/71

Huntington
87/72

NATIONAL FORECAST
Seattle
110s
65/58
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
70/55
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
81/63
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

88°
66°

Mostly cloudy with
t-storms possible

Wilkesville
87/70
POMEROY
Jackson
88/70
88/71
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
89/71
89/71
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
89/73
GALLIPOLIS
89/71
89/71
88/71

Ashland
87/71
Grayson
87/72

SUNDAY

88°
70°
Clouds and sun with
t-storms possible

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
87/70

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

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

Chillicothe
89/71

South Shore Greenup
87/71
87/70

50

Logan
87/70

Adelphi
88/71

Lucasville
89/71

High

SATURDAY

89°
71°

Very High

Primary: other, grasses
Mold: 2704

FRIDAY

86°
71°

Waverly
87/70

Pollen: 19

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

THURSDAY

89°
70°

4

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:08 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
6:55 a.m.
10:01 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

A shower or thunderstorm around today. Some
clouds tonight. High 89° / Low 71°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

85°

Responsible Attorney: Adam R. Salisbury,
licensed in Ohio and West Virginia

Charleston
87/70

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
78/55

Billings
79/58

Montreal
86/64
Toronto
80/66

Minneapolis
86/67

Chicago
90/70

Denver
85/59

Detroit
90/73

New York
89/73
Washington
94/76

Kansas City
89/72

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
92/65/pc
73/59/pc
93/75/s
88/76/s
96/74/pc
79/58/t
85/58/pc
86/71/pc
87/70/pc
96/73/s
81/53/t
90/70/t
89/73/t
90/73/pc
90/74/pc
92/72/pc
85/59/t
89/72/t
90/73/t
87/74/pc
90/73/t
90/74/t
89/72/pc
104/79/s
89/73/t
81/63/pc
91/74/t
94/80/t
86/67/pc
92/74/pc
92/76/t
89/73/c
91/71/pc
94/78/t
92/74/t
108/84/s
90/70/pc
84/63/c
96/70/s
98/74/pc
90/75/t
94/69/s
70/55/pc
65/58/sh
94/76/pc

Hi/Lo/W
93/65/pc
76/60/s
92/76/s
88/74/t
94/74/t
72/56/t
81/55/pc
82/69/s
87/70/t
99/73/t
83/52/t
84/70/t
87/73/t
84/69/t
88/72/t
91/73/t
90/60/t
87/73/t
87/69/t
87/75/pc
85/74/t
87/72/t
89/71/t
101/77/s
90/74/t
77/62/pc
89/74/t
92/80/pc
87/70/pc
91/73/pc
92/76/t
89/74/t
90/72/t
94/77/t
93/75/t
107/81/s
87/68/t
83/63/s
99/72/t
97/73/t
89/75/t
90/67/s
70/56/pc
72/57/pc
94/75/t

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
100/75
Chihuahua
94/69

High
Low

Atlanta
93/75

108° in Thermal, CA
30° in Truckee, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
90/73
Monterrey
94/72

Miami
94/80

119° in Tabas, Iran
6° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

OH-70107872

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