<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="278" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/278?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T01:02:40+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="2699">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/51fee026beb43239b414469ba51b1c49.pdf</src>
      <authentication>721558a5cb9995ccdbb6276f7b179b71</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="607">
                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

75°

87°

85°

A thunderstorm in spots today. A thunderstorm
or two tonight. High 92° / Low 73°

Ohio
Valley
Weather

Importance
of play in a
child’s life

Alonso
wins HR
Derby

WEATHER s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 108, Volume 73

Middleport to
place police
levy on ballot

Wednesday, July 10, 2019 s 50¢

Cheering together

By Kayla Hawthorne

Village Administer Joe
Woodall agreed to let
this person have the
fencing if they agreed to
MIDDLEPORT —
The Middleport Village take it down and clean
up the area properly.
Council approved the
Council member Brian
placement of a police
Conde said he thinks
levy on the November
the village should put
ballot during their
meeting on Monday
the fencing up for sealed
night.
bid. This would give
Council adopted a
other people who might
resolution to have the
want the fencing a
county auditor certify
chance to have it and it
the amount that the Vil- would give the village a
lage of Middleport will payment for the materiplace on the ballot this
al. The fence would still
fall. Fiscal Ofﬁcer Sue
need to be taken down
Baker said this is a new by the winner of the bid.
process for 2019. The
Council decided to ask
resolution is the ﬁrst
Dave Boyd if he wanted
step to ﬁnalize the balthe fence ﬁrst for Midlot language by Aug. 7. dleport Youth League.
Mayor Sandy IanIf Boyd says he does
narelli told council
not, then the village will
someone inquired about place the materials out
the fence at the site
for a sealed bid.
of the former batting
See LEVY | 5
cages. The mayor said

Special to the Sentinel

Meigs County signs
agreement to complete
911 requirement

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Cheerleaders from Meigs and Southern recently came together for a cheer camp as they prepare of the 2019-20 season.

Meigs, Southern hold combined cheer camp
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE — Cheerleaders from Meigs and
Southern High Schools
recently joined together
for a Cheer Camp as they
prepare for the 2019-20
season.
Cheer coaches Jody
Harrison (Southern)
and Megan Cleland
(Meigs), along with
several others worked

with the girls on sideline
cheers, crowd cheers,
ﬂoor cheers, dances and
other items during the
camp.
The cheerleaders
worked on their arm
movements, voices, jumps
and lifts. While the lifts
cannot be used at games
in most cases, they can
be used at pep rallies and
other events.
Cheerleaders from Meigs and Southern recently came together for

See CHEER | 3 a cheer camp as they prepare of the 2019-20 season.

By Sarah Hawley

provided to Jacks and
Commissioner Randy
Smith by the state,
answers 100 percent of
POMEROY — In
calls within 30 seconds
order to comply with
and 98 percent within
a mandate from the
State of Ohio, the Meigs 20 seconds of the call
coming in. This is a betCounty Commissioner
ter mark than many othhave signed an agreeers in the state, noted
ment with Athens
Jacks and Smith.
County to answer any
The commissioners
possible rollover calls
and Jacks made a trip to
which come into the
Columbus a few weeks
Meigs County 911 sysago to present testitem.
mony in support of an
As previously disalternative to the two
cussed by the Meigs
dispatcher requirement.
County CommissionFollowing the testiers and 911 Director
mony and conversations
Robbie Jacks, with the
with state ofﬁcials, local
upgrades required by
ofﬁcials worked with
the state to move to
State Senator Frank
the Enhanced 911 system, counties would be Hoagland to place an
amendment in the budrequired to have two
get bill which would
dispatchers on duty at
allow for Meigs County,
all times, or have an
and any of those in
agreement in place to
answer possible rollover similar situations, to
continue to operate
calls.
with one dispatcher as
Meigs County 911
long as they meet all
has one dispatcher on
shift at a time and,
See 911 | 5
according to statistics

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Tales and Tidbits: Pioneer Life
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY
— Pioneer life in Southeastern Ohio was harsh
and dangerous, and
lonely. Self-sufﬁciency
and learning to adapt to
a new environment were
essential if they were to
survive.
The majority of the
ﬁrst settlers came from
the east, a long distance
away at the time, and
were not well equipped
for travel or frontier life.
There were no roads,
only thick forests and
streams in the interior
of the county, and most
were unable to bring
more than a few items
with them. Necessities
were a riﬂe and an ax. A

Courtesy photo

A log cabin like what would have been built in the 1800s.

wooden box containing
one or two pots, a teakettle, pewter plates, a few
utensils and some quilts
were the typical accompaniment; the box could
later be used as a table.
Upon arriving, settlers
needed to quickly build

a lean-to for shelter until
they could complete a
cabin.
It is important to
remember that the construction of the cabin
was accomplished using
only an ax. Huge trees
were cut down, and the

logs stripped and notched
to form cabin walls and
roof supports. Thatching
made from bark was used
on the roof and logs were
split into ﬂat-faced planks
called “puncheons” to
make the cabin ﬂoor.
Usually there were only
two openings, a window
and a door. These were
carved out after the cabin
was put together, a timeconsuming process that
took patience to complete.
A quilt was typically
used as covering until a
board door could be made
and hung with leather
hinges. The common
material for window covering was greased paper,
and just as the name
See TIDBITS | 5

FOR THE RECORD

INSIDE
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
Television: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Syracuse Fire Department
On Sunday at 2:56 p.m., the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department
(SVFD) was alerted to Forest
Run Road for a search and rescue.
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce was already on the
scene and advised of the details.
While in route, SVFD also had
Racine FD with ATV and Brush
Truck and Middleport FD with
ATV and Drone alerted to respond
for assistance. After arriving on
the scene and seeing the terrain,
SVFD called for Chester FD with
ATV and Bashan FD with ATV
and Medic 5. Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
had two search K-9’s and a drone
respond along with the Ohio
Department of Wildlife. SVFD
then asked MedFilght to ﬂy over
and assist from above. SVFD was

also assisted by approximately
10-12 family, friends and neighbors of the parents. Around 3:50
p.m. he was located on the neighbors property. Medic 5 went and
checked the child, who had only a
slight sunburn and some scratches. All responding units reported
back to the command post and a
head count and accountability was
done. All units returned to quarters safely with no injuries to any
responding personnel. “We want
to thank everyone that helped
today,” said the Facebook post
from the SVFD. There were a total
of 50 responders, two K-9’s, 14
pieces of FD equip, one helicopter,
one law enforcement drone, six
Law enforcement vehicles and two
FD personnel ATVs.

Pomeroy Fire Department
Early Tuesday morning, Station 1 responded to a one vehicle
accident on State Route 7, on the
Naylors Run overpass, in Salisbury Township. Upon arrival,
crews found a heavily damaged
car; however, the operator had
left the scene of the accident.
Crews maintained a lane of trafﬁc control and were released by
Ohio State Highway Patrol shortly after their arrival. Responding
to the accident was Pomeroy
Pumper 1, Meigs County EMS,
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
the Ohio State Highway Patrol,
and Middleport Police Department.
See RECORDS | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, July 10, 2019

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items
can receive proper
attention, all information should be received
by the newspaper at
least ﬁve business days
prior to an event. All
coming events print
on a space-available
basis and in chronological order. Events
can be emailed to:
TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Saturday,
July 13
SALEM CENTER
— Star Grange #778
and Star Junior Grange
#878 will meet with
potluck at 6:30 p.m.
followed by meeting at
7:30 p.m. All members
and interested persons
are invited and urged to
attend.

Thursday,
July 18

Wednesday,
July 10

RACINE — Summer
Reading Bubble Bash,
Racine Library, 5-7
p.m. Celebrate the end
POMEROY — Didg- of the Summer Reading Program with an
eridoo Down Under,
Pomeroy Library, 2 p.m. inﬂatable water slide, a
foam machine, bubbles,
The Meigs Library’s
games, prizes, and
Summer Reading Promore.
gram continues with
this Australian music
program.
SCIPIO TWP. —
Scipio Township
Trustees regular
monthly meeting is
POMEROY — A Kids
scheduled at 7 p.m. at Summer Fun Day fundthe Harrisonville Fire
raiser will be hosted by
House with the budget BASE (Battle All-Stars
hearing meeting folElite) beginning at 11
lowing.
a.m. The event will
include outdoor games,
dunking booth, bounce
houses and much more.
The event will be held
at 398 Mechanic Street
in Pomeroy. For more
CHESTER — Chesinformation call 304ter Shade Historical
Association will be hav- 761-0638.
ing its regular monthly
board meeting at 6:30
p.m. in the Chester
Court House. Everyone
is invited to attend.
WELLSTON — The
MIDDLEPORT — A
GJMV Solid Waste
Chicken BBQ will be
Management District
held at the Middleport
Board of Directors
Fire Department. Servmeeting, 3:30 p.m. at
ing begins at 11 a.m. at
the district ofﬁce in
the BBQ pit.
Wellston.

Friday,
July 19

Thursday,
July 11

Saturday,
July 20

Monday,
July 29

Friday,
July 12
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library 11 a.m.-8
p.m., Star Wars Retro
Movie Marathon.
Episode IV-VI will be
shown back-to-back.

MIDDLEPORT —
The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m.
at the ofﬁce located at
97 North Second Avenue in Middleport.

Mayflower replica to sail
BOSTON (AP) — A replica of the Mayﬂower
will sail to Boston as part of commemorations of
the 400th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ landing in
Massachusetts.
Organizers say that the Mayﬂower II will be on
display next year at the Charlestown Navy Yard
from May 14 to May 19, and that visitors will have
an opportunity to board the ship for free.
The vessel has been undergoing an $11.2 million restoration at the Mystic Seaport Museum in
Connecticut since 2016.
The original Mayﬂower was lost to history after
returning to England following its famous 1620
voyage to the New World.
The full-scale replica ship was built in England
in the 1950s and has been berthed in Plymouth
Harbor.
Plans are to take it back to Plymouth following
the Mayﬂower Sails 2020 event.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
ANTHONY RAY STURGEON
POMEROY — On July
7, 2019, Anthony Ray
Sturgeon lost his battle
to Type One diabetes and
an undiagnosed heart
disease. He had been
struggling with controlling his sugar since January of 2019 when ﬁrst
diagnosed. Anthony was
born on Jan. 24, 1993, to
Dwight and Terri Sturgeon.
Anthony was a very
hardworking young man
and enjoyed physical
labor. He spent a lot of
his time outdoors and
with close friends. His
hobbies included golﬁng
— rain or shine — playing video games, playing
electric guitar, shooting
pool, playing basketball, and playing with
his nephew, whom he
nicknamed “chub butt.”
Anthony graduated from
Southern High School in
2011. He was employed
at Rem Ram Recovery,
though he spent the last
few months on disability
due to his medical condition. Prior to this, he
spent several years working along side his father
at Facemyer Lumber as a
lumber grader.
In addition to his parents, Anthony is survived
by older brother, Brandon Sturgeon; younger
siste,r Amber Sturgeon;
and beloved nephew,
Jayce Marcum; as well as
maternal grandparents,
Guy and Ellen Thoma;
aunts and uncles, Sheryl
(Mike) Thomas, Mary
(Tim) Spires, Kathy
(Brett) Wyatt, Paul Sturgeon, John Sturgeon,
Gloria Sturgeon; and
many cousins.
Aside from his family, close friends include
Brian Durham, Ceairra
Curran, their daughter

KELLI R. MARKINS

Sophia Durham and
Brian’s son Malakai Durham, Tyler Goble, Cody
Williams, John Holsinger, Michael Freeman
and many others. He
considered Brian Durham’s mother, Rebecca
Stewart, and step-father,
Greg Stewart, his second
family.
Anthony is preceded
in death by paternal
grandparents, William
and Deloras Sturgeon;
paternal great-grandparents, Paul and Verna
Sturgeon; maternal
great-grandparents, William and Ida Young; and
uncle, Kevin Thoma.
Anthony was a deeply
loved and respected
young man. He was
always polite and
friendly to everyone he
came in contact with
and touched the lives of
so many. Anthony was
always the life of the
party and could put a
smile on anyone’s face
with his goofy antics. He
will be greatly missed by
so many.
Funeral services will
be held on Friday, July
12, 2019, at 1 p.m. at the
Bethel Worship center
near Tuppers Plains with
Pastor Rob Barber ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
in the Sutton Cemetery.
Visitation for family and
friends will be held on
Thursday, July 11, 2019,
from 6-8 p.m. at the
Bethel Worship Center.
The family would
like to invite everyone
back to the church for
a dinner immediately
following the graveside
services.
Funeral arrangements
are under the direction
of the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.

TUCKER
GALLIPOLIS — Alicia Elizabeth (Jeffers) Tucker,
66, of Gallipolis, died July 8, 2019 at Arbors Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center, Gallipolis, following an
extended illness.
Alicia will be remembered in a Mass of Christian
Burial at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, Mason, W.Va.,
Thursday, July 11, 2019 at 11 a.m. with Father Penn
ofﬁciating. Prior visitation will be at Foglesong-Casto
Funeral Home, Mason, Wednesday, July 10, 2019
from 6-8 p.m. After mass, a meal will be provided at
the St. Joseph’s Hall by the ladies of the church to celebrate Alicia’s life.
MILLER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va — Chelsie Alisha Miller, 30, Point Pleasant, West Virginia, passed away in
St. Mary’s Medical Center Monday, July 8, 2019.
Graveside services will be conducted Thursday,
July 11, 2019 in the Marcum Family Cemetery, Wilkesville, Ohio at noon. There will be no visitation
per the family’s request. The McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton Chapel, is honored to serve the Miller
Family.

Water outage
planned today
in 2 townships
MEIGS COUNTY — The Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District has issued
the following advisory for portions of Chester and Sutton Townships. The water will
be shut off Wednesday, July 10 between
9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Beginning at the intersection of Eagle Ridge and Pine Grove
Road to the address of 30890 Pine Grove
Road. Pine Grove to Salser Road, to the
address of 31112 Salser Road. This will
include all of Young Road, Vinegar Street
Road, Resort Road to the address of 44826
Resort Road, Amberger Road, Yost Road,
and from Forest Run Road the intersection
of Amberger Road to Minersville Road.
Including Nease Road, Welsh Town Road,
Dutch Town Road, and Dutch Town Hill
Road. The reason for the outage is so we
can repair a leak on our main water line.
If work can not be performed on this date
due to weather, etc. the reschedule date
will be Thursday, July 11. This will affect
218 customers. Once service is restored,
you will be under a boil advisory for 48
hours unless notiﬁed otherwise. When a
boil advisory is in effect, we ask all who are
affected to boil their cooking and drinking water for three minutes before being
consumed. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

POMEROY — Kelli R.
Markins, 42, of Pomeroy,
passed away suddenly in
the Holzer Meigs Emergency Department as
a result of injuries sustained from a homicide,
on July 3, 2019. Born
Nov. 11, 1976, in Portsmouth, Ohio, she was
the daughter of Pamalia
Thompson Craft, who
survives in Pomeroy. She
was a custodian supervisor for Extras Supporting Staff in Parkersburg,
West Virginia. Kelli was
a member of the Pomeroy Eagles #2171 ladies
auxiliary. Kelli never met
a stranger and she loved
to talk and meet new
people.
In addition to her mother, Kelli is survived by her
husband, Don Profﬁtt;
a son, Drake Markins;
a daughter, Mersadies
Markins; and a grandson,
Emersen Markins. Her
siblings, Cheyenne Craft,
Aaron Craft, Uriah Craft,
Nigel Craft, and Angela
Ballew; her mother-in-law
and father-in-law, Shelia

and Ray “Buck” Profﬁtt,
of Racine; her canine
companion, Lodge; and
numerous, aunts, uncles,
cousins, nieces and nephews also survive.
Kelli is preceded in
death by her granddaughter, Emily Rose Will;
maternal grandparents,
Garnet Thompson and
Boyd Thompson; and
paternal grandparents,
Jackie and Henry “Doc”
Craft.
Funeral services will
be held on Friday, July
12, 2019, at 1 p.m. in the
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Pomeroy, with
Pastor David Brainard
ofﬁciating. Interment will
follow in the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends
may call from 5-8 p.m. on
Thursday and one hour
prior to the service on
Friday. The CremeensKing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, is honored to
serve the family.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensking.com.

RUNION
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Raymond Edward
Runion, 86, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died on Tuesday,
July 9, 2019 at home.
A graveside service and burial will be 11 a.m.,
Thursday, July 11, 2019 at Yauger Cemetery in Leon,
W.Va. with Pastor Mel Mock ofﬁciating.
Arrangements are under the direction of the Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.
LEGUE
EVANS — Vernon Lee Legue, 51, of Evans, died on
July 8, 2019 at Select Specialty Hospital, Charleston,
after a long illness.
The service will be held at 1 p.m., Thursday, July
11, 2019 in the Casto Funeral Home, Evans with
Elmer Miller ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Creston
Cemetery, Evans. Visitation will be from noon until
time of service, Thursday at the funeral home.
EASTER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Carol Lee (Sleeth)
Easter, 69, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., formerly of
Mason, W.Va. died on July 7, 2019 at home, following
an extended illness.
Per Carol’s wishes, there will be no services at this
time.
Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason, has been
entrusted with her arrangements.
MILLS
MARION — Stacy Dawn Mills, 36, passed away in
Marion, on July 4, 2019.
Friends may call Wednesday, July 10, 2019 from 6-8
p.m. at Willis Funeral Home. The funeral service will
be 11 a.m. Thursday, July 11, 2019 at Willis Funeral
Home with Dave Bussell ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
at the Centenary Cemetery.
BARNES
BIDWELL — James Harold Barnes, 76, Bidwell,
passed away at his residence Sunday, July 7, 2019.
Funeral Services will be conducted at noon Thursday,
July 11, 2019, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton, with Pastor Theron Durham ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in the Campaign Cemetery. Friends and
family may call at the funeral home one hour prior to
the funeral service on Thursday.

OHIO BRIEFS

Great Lakes
still rising

Man arrested
in body case

DETROIT (AP) — Water
levels in two of the Great
Lakes are the highest ever
recorded.
The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers said Tuesday that
Lakes Erie and Ontario last
month reached their highest
points since record-keeping
began in 1918.
Also setting a new mark
was Lake St. Clair, which is
part of the waterway linking
Lakes Huron and Erie.
Meanwhile, Lake Superior’s level set a record for the
month of June. Lakes Huron
and Michigan missed setting
a monthly record by less than
an inch.
Previous highs for June
were reached in 1986 on
Lakes Superior, St. Clair and
Erie and in 2017 on Lake
Ontario.
Hydrologist Keith Kompoltowicz of the Army
Corps says three months
of abnormally wet weather
have kept stream ﬂows into
the Great Lakes well above
average.

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP)
— Authorities in central
Ohio say they have arrested
a 24-year-old man on murder charges in the death of
a woman whose body was
found July 4 in a shallow
grave in an Ohio park.
The Delaware County sheriff’s ofﬁce says John David
Choe Bartholomew of northwest Columbus was arrested
Tuesday without incident. He
was being booked into the
jail and no other information
including whether he has an
attorney was available immediately.
The sheriff’s ofﬁce said last
week that an ofﬁcer with the
state Department of Natural
Resources discovered the
grave while on foot patrol at
Alum Creek State Park. The
ofﬁce on Friday identiﬁed the
deceased woman as 28-yearold Brittany McDowell, of
Columbus.
Authorities say she died of
gunshot wounds. The sheriff’s ofﬁce declined to discuss
possible motive.

�LOCAL/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 10, 2019 3

MEIGS BRIEFS
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.

Pie Contest
CHESTER — The
Ohio’s Best Pie Contest
&amp; Auction will be held
during the Meigs Heritage Festival on July 20,
on the Chester Commons, Chester, Ohio.
Bring your pies between
9-11 a.m., judging by
three of Meigs’ ﬁnest
pie eaters will take place
at 11:30 a.m., winners
will be announced just
before the uncut wining
pie being auctioned off
at 1 p.m. Makers of the
1st, 2nd and 3rd place
pies will receive gifts,
cash prizes and the thrill
of seeing their pie being
sold to the highest bid-

der. All pie makers are
encouraged to donate
their favorite pie to the
Festival to help feed the
hungry and raise funds
for the Chester Shade
Historical Assoc. that
maintains the Chester
Academy and Historical
Courthouse.

This bridge is located
just west of the intersection of County Road 19,
Peach Fork Road.

Vacation
Bible School
TUPPERS PLAINS
— Tuppers Plains St.
Paul UMC will be having VBS titled “Shipwrecked” July 8-11, from
6-8:30 p.m. nightly.
ANTIQUITY — Antiquity Baptist Church,
47860 State Route 124,
Racine, will host “The
Incredible Race” Vacation Bible School July
8-12 from 6-8 p.m. Supper is served at 5 p.m.
Ages 4-12.
POMEROY — The
First Southern Baptist
Church of Pomeroy will
be having a VBS July
14-17, from 6-9 p.m.
each night.

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT —
Mill Street “Middleport
Hill” is closed due to a
slip until further notice.
Tickets will be issued to
those who drive through
the closed portion of the
road.
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.

TENOGLIA &amp; SALISBURY
LAW GROUP, LLC.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Lifts, cheers and dances were among the items the cheerleaders worked on during the camp.

Cheer

one another. Approximately 12-16 cheerleaders
were in attendance each
day.
The cheers learned
will be among those featured on the sidelines of
football games this fall
when the Tornadoes and
Marauders return to their
respective football ﬁelds.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

75°

87°

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. Tue.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
1.47
1.21
25.68
23.17

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:12 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
3:03 p.m.
1:49 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Jul 16

Jul 24

New

Jul 31

First

Aug 7

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

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

Major
7:18a
8:03a
8:47a
9:32a
10:18a
11:06a
11:56a

Minor
1:06a
1:51a
2:35a
3:19a
4:05a
4:53a
5:43a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
7:42p
8:28p
9:12p
9:58p
10:44p
11:32p
----

Minor
1:30p
2:15p
3:00p
3:45p
4:31p
5:19p
6:09p

WEATHER HISTORY
Lightning struck the Picatinny Army
Arsenal in New Jersey on July 10,
1926, triggering a massive explosion
and ﬁre in an ammunition dump.
More than 12 people were killed.

FRIDAY

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
300

Portsmouth
91/73

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
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. Tue.

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.38 -0.19
Marietta
34 18.51 -1.45
Parkersburg
36 23.65 +0.37
Belleville
35 12.88 +0.29
Racine
41 12.90 -0.16
Point Pleasant
40 25.72 +0.19
Gallipolis
50 12.47 +0.27
Huntington
50 28.02 +0.38
Ashland
52 35.29 +0.39
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.61 +0.27
Portsmouth
50 25.00 -0.10
Maysville
50 35.00 +0.50
Meldahl Dam
51 24.90 +1.40
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

SUNDAY

90°
69°
Mostly sunny

89°
69°

Periods of clouds and Clouds and sun with a
sunshine
t-storm possible

Marietta
90/71

Murray City
89/71
Belpre
91/72

Athens
89/72

94°
72°
Overcast

Today

St. Marys
90/72

Parkersburg
91/72

Coolville
90/72

Elizabeth
91/72

Spencer
90/71

Buffalo
91/73
Milton
92/73

St. Albans
92/73

Huntington
91/73

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
73/61
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
72/58
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
82/64
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
91/73

Ashland
91/73
Grayson
91/73

MONDAY

91°
68°

Wilkesville
90/72
POMEROY
Jackson
90/73
90/72
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
91/73
91/73
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
91/74
GALLIPOLIS
92/73
92/73
91/73

South Shore Greenup
90/73
90/72

57

Logan
89/71

McArthur
89/71

Lucasville
91/73

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
89/72

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 2073

SATURDAY

87°
66°

Adelphi
89/72

Waverly
90/72

Pollen: 19

Low

MOON PHASES

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

Partly sunny, a heavy Delightful with clouds
t-storm; humid
and sun

3

Primary: ascospores, unk.
Thu.
6:13 a.m.
8:55 p.m.
4:09 p.m.
2:21 a.m.

THURSDAY

85°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

www.taslg.com

EXTENDED FORECAST

A thunderstorm in spots today. A thunderstorm
or two tonight. High 92° / Low 73°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

200 East Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

88°
68°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

90°
69°
86°
65°
100° in 1988
52° in 1963

1-833-522-6237 OR 1-740-992-6368

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

IF YOU OR A LOVED ONE HAS BEEN
DIAGNOSED WITH OR DIED FROM LUNG CANCER
CONTACT US FOR A FREE CONSULTATION!

OH-70135526

“This is a good experience to work together,”
said Cleland. “They have
From page 1
learned a lot and are making connections.”
The camp was also
In addition to learning
a time to talk with the
the new cheers in preparation for the season, the cheerleaders about other
camp allowed for the girls aspects of high school
life, including social
from both schools to get
to know one another and media usage. The days all
began with ice breakers,
learn to work together
to help better each cheer allowing for the cheerleaders to get to know
program.

Clendenin
92/72
Charleston
91/73

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
75/56
Montreal
88/66

Billings
88/63

Toronto
84/71
Detroit
89/72

Minneapolis
77/62

Chicago
91/67

Denver
86/62

New York
89/74

Washington
90/72

Kansas City
89/65

Chihuahua
93/67

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
95/67/s 93/65/pc
69/57/pc 66/58/pc
88/74/c
88/74/t
86/72/s 84/75/s
91/68/s
88/73/t
88/63/pc 91/63/pc
93/64/pc 95/63/pc
85/72/s 87/73/pc
91/73/t
86/69/t
88/72/pc
89/75/t
79/56/s 89/60/pc
91/67/t 79/64/pc
92/74/pc 87/64/s
89/76/t
86/69/t
91/74/t
87/66/t
99/78/s 95/76/pc
86/62/s 93/64/pc
85/65/s 83/64/s
89/72/pc 85/64/pc
90/78/pc 89/76/s
96/77/s
94/79/t
87/72/pc 84/64/pc
89/65/s 85/65/s
106/83/s 108/85/pc
95/76/pc
93/70/t
82/64/pc 84/64/pc
94/77/pc 89/67/pc
90/78/t
89/80/t
77/62/c 81/67/s
94/76/pc
91/69/t
92/78/t
92/80/t
89/74/s
85/73/t
96/70/s 91/64/s
90/76/t
92/76/t
91/71/s
88/74/t
111/88/s 113/89/pc
88/72/t
83/66/t
81/62/s 78/63/pc
89/73/pc
89/74/t
90/71/s
90/75/t
93/72/t 84/65/s
98/71/s 99/71/pc
72/58/pc 73/56/s
73/61/sh 77/60/pc
90/72/s
88/75/t

EXTREMES TUESDAY

Atlanta
88/74

El Paso
104/75

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

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

104° in Wink, TX
24° in Truckee, CA

Global
High
119° in Ibri, Oman
Low 18° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
96/77
Monterrey
104/77

Miami
90/78

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The importance
of play in a
child’s life
If you are someone who enjoys listening to people with more knowledge and expertise than you
possess in ﬁelds that interest you, you may want
to investigate the TED Talks website.
TED Talks hosts thousands of free
online lectures from experts on just
about any topic imaginable, and it
has become famous for its informative and inspirational messages.
While I have enjoyed TED Talks
on a variety of topics, because of
Tom
my career as an educator, I am most
Dunn
interested in those that focus on eduContributing cation in general, with a particular
columnist
emphasis on what we have learned
about child development.
Recently, I ran across a presentation titled “The
Decline of Play,” given by Dr. Peter Gray, who was
a research professor for 30 years in the psychology department at Boston College. Though now
retired from teaching, he continues to conduct and
publish research, much of it focusing on the importance of free play in a child’s development.
Dr. Gray’s lecture should be required viewing
not only for educators, but for parents and grandparents as well, because he explains how society’s
movement away from unstructured play towards
a more structured environment where adults are
controlling virtually every aspect of a child’s life,
both in school and out, has negatively impacted
our children.
Those of us who grew up 50 years ago or more
ago, as Dr. Gray did, have certainly witnessed an
incredible transformation in the growing up experience between when we were children and today.
I often laugh with people my age when we recount
how we would leave the house early on a summer
morning, hook up with friends, and enjoy unstructured play all day long with nary an adult in sight.
For many of us, the only real rule we had was to
“be home before the street lights come on.”
At some point during the last 50 years, someone
determined that true learning doesn’t occur unless
it is adult-driven. Therefore, instead of entire
neighborhoods of kids congregating on a local ball
diamond in their street clothes, randomly selecting their own teams and playing pick-up games
with a single baseball and a couple of bats that
someone brought from home while umpiring their
own games without adult supervision, kids today
play (and practice) on sponsored teams with beautiful new uniforms with parent coaches and paid
umpires telling the kids every move they should
make.
Because, after all, adults always know best, right?
Actually, no.
Dr. Gray contends, as do many other experts
on child development, that the formalization of
everything child-related has robbed our youth of
the important social lessons they learn in unstructured play; skills such as developing physical skills
and remaining ﬁt, solving problems on their own,
learning how to cooperate when in close vicinity
with others, taking risks, and experiencing fear
without losing their heads, to name just a few.
His research has shown that the development
of those skills is every bit as important to a child’s
future happiness and success, if not more so, than
the academic skills that are constantly emphasized
with today’s youth, beginning at a younger and
younger age.
Dr. Gray shares many profound views during his
presentation, but one of his most sobering comments he made was, “I don’t want to romanticize
the 1950s. There’s a lot of ways in which we’re a
much better world today than we were then. But,
we are a much worse world for kids.”
To support his contention, Dr. Gray provides
rather startling data showing a correlation
between the decline of free play and an increase in
all sorts of mental disorders in children, particularly with depression and anxiety, and even with
an increase in child suicide rates.
In fact, he suggests longitudinal data shows
that, “Children are more depressed today than
they were during the Great Depression and more
anxious today than during the Cold War.” And,
he believes it is a direct result of the environment
adults have created for them.
How sad is that?
At any rate, Dr. Gray provides a very unique perspective on the importance of free play in a child’s
life. I encourage you to set aside sixteen minutes
and watch what he has to say.
It will be time well spent.
Tom Dunn is the former superintendent of the Miami County
Educational Service Center.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The people I distrust most are those who
want to improve our lives but have only
one course of action in mind.”
— Frank Herbert,
American author (1920-1986)

THEIR VIEW

Flipping through a lifetime of clips
Gary reads the fun(This column
nies.” That’s eerie
brought to you by
because …)
scissors.)
Not much later
Here’s somein life Mom says
thing we should
I learn to read
do more: Thank
by reading comic
you for reading our
strips. We had at
newspaper.
Gary
least two newsWe also appreci- Presley
ate you reading
Contributing papers delivered
to our suburban
our stories on your columnist
Detroit home (I
phone (the most
think it was three,
likely digital place
but I was young and my
you’ll see this), desktop
memory is hazy), and
computer or tablet, but
one of them was a gold
the heart belongs to inkmine of Peanuts, B.C. Lil’
stained ﬁngers.
My heart does, anyway. Abner and other soon-tobe classics. A little more
I spend as much time as
education every day, four
the next modern American staring at my phone, panels at a time.
Flip the page: I don’t
but I’ve had a connection
remember why, but they
to newspapers almost
since the day I was born. photograph a bunch of us
kids (brother Dave and
One of the perks of
I included) piled into an
being the ﬁrst baby of
the year was your picture old ﬁre truck. Snip.
Flip more pages: We’ve
in the local newspaper.
moved, I’m in high school
I was presented with a
and The Lima News
$25 U.S. Savings Bond
publishes my letter to the
for that, or so a photo
editor, something about
tells me. Big money for
someone whose primary bikes and cars and garbage along the road. My
achievement up to that
band director sees the letpoint was just showing
ter and says something to
up.
Snip. It becomes a clip- me about it during band
rehearsal – directly to me.
ping in a photo album.
(Sidebar: I can’t ﬁnd that I don’t remember what
he said, but I learned that
clipping, but did ﬁnd
people read your stuff and
the followup story from
they have opinions about
a year later, headlined
it. Snip.
“Gary Presley Ends
Flip the page: After a
Reign As Falls Baby Of
shaky start in engineering
The Year.” I had a reign.
at The Ohio State UniverThe story includes the
sity, I see the writing on
sentence “If we didn’t
the wall (in truth it was
know better, we’d think

An old friend opens an envelope, snaps a pic of the clipped
columns with his phone and texts it to me: “You’ve got a 94-yearold fan in Lima.”

of those papers, The
Lima News. She snips
the columns to send to
her son, Dave, who’s a
pastor in Colorado. He’s
also my best friend from
high school. Mrs. Heil (I
gotta call her Mrs. Heil)
was a school librarian,
and has good taste in
literature.
Dave opens an envelope, snaps a pic of some
clipped columns with his
phone and texts it to me:
“You’ve got a 94-year-old
fan in Lima.”
How cool is that? She’s
got a fan who’s typing
right now. Thanks for
reading, Mrs. Heil. Say hi
to Dave for me!

the writing in my journals) and decide to major
in journalism. Snipping
begins in earnest.
Flip the page: I get my
ﬁrst reporter/photographer job out of college at
a small 5,000 circulation
newspaper in northern
Indiana that pretends
it’s both Democrat and
Republican so it can rake
in the legal ads. Mom and
Dad get a subscription
and ﬁll paper grocery
bags with clippings of my
stories. SNIP.
Flip many pages: After
years working behind
the scenes editing and
doing newspaper layouts,
I again start writing
regularly. Our AIM Media
Midwest newspapers
print my columns from
time to time.
Natalie Heil reads one

Gary Presley is still playing
with newspapers as pagination
director for AIM Media Midwest.
You can reach him at gpresley@
aimmediamidwest.com.

talks aimed at ending
the Korean War began at
Kaesong.
In 1973, the Bahamas
became fully independent
after three centuries of
British colonial rule. John
Paul Getty III, the teenage grandson of the oil
tycoon, was abducted in
Rome by kidnappers who
cut off his ear when his
family was slow to meet
their ransom demands;
Getty was released in
December 1973 for nearly
$3 million.
In 1979, conductor
Arthur Fiedler, who had
led the Boston Pops
orchestra for a half-century, died in Brookline,
Mass., at age 84.
In 1985, the Greenpeace protest ship
Rainbow Warrior was
sunk with explosives in

Auckland, New Zealand,
by French intelligence
agents; one activist was
killed. Bowing to pressure from irate customers,
the Coca-Cola Co. said
it would resume selling
old-formula Coke, while
continuing to sell New
Coke.
In 1999, the United
States women’s soccer
team won the World Cup,
beating China 5-4 on
penalty kicks after 120
minutes of scoreless play
at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.
In 2002, The House
approved, 310-113, a
measure to allow airline
pilots to carry guns in the
cockpit to defend their
planes against terrorists
(President George W.
Bush later signed the
measure into law).

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

(However, the Senate
rejected it.)
In 1925, jury selection
took place in Dayton,
Tennessee, in the trial of
John T. Scopes, charged
Today’s Highlight in History: with violating the law by
teaching Darwin’s Theory
On July 10, 1991,
Boris N. Yeltsin took the of Evolution. (Scopes
was convicted and ﬁned,
oath of ofﬁce as the ﬁrst
but the verdict was overelected president of the
turned on a technicality.)
Russian republic. PresiIn 1929, American
dent George H.W. Bush
lifted economic sanctions paper currency was
reduced in size as the
against South Africa.
government began
issuing bills that were
On this date:
approximately 25 percent
In 1509, theologian
John Calvin, a key ﬁgure smaller.
In 1940, during World
of the Protestant RefWar II, the Battle of
ormation, was born in
Britain began as the LuftNoyon, Picardy, France.
waffe started attacking
In 1919, President
Woodrow Wilson person- southern England. (The
Royal Air Force was ultially delivered the Treaty
of Versailles to the Senate mately victorious.)
In 1951, armistice
and urged its ratiﬁcation.
Today is Wednesday,
July 10, the 191st day of
2019. There are 174 days
left in the year.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Court: Trump blocking Twitter
critics unconstitutional
By Larry Neumeister
Associated Press

NEW YORK — President
Donald Trump lost a major
Twitter ﬁght Tuesday when
a federal appeals court said
that his daily musings and
pronouncements were overwhelmingly ofﬁcial in nature
and that he violated the First
Amendment whenever he
blocked a critic to silence a
viewpoint.
The effect of the 2nd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals
decision is likely to reverberate throughout politics
after the Manhattan court
warned that any elected
ofﬁcial using a social media
account “for all manner of
ofﬁcial purposes” and then
excluding critics violates
free speech.
“The government is not
permitted to ‘amplify’ favored
speech by banning or burdening viewpoints with which it
disagrees,” the appeals court
said.
Because it involved Trump,
the ruling is getting more
attention than a January deci-

911
From page 1

other requirements set
for the upgraded system
and have a plan in place
to answer any possible
rollover calls.
That is where the
agreement with Athens
County comes in.

Records
From page 1

Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office
Day Shift
May 27
Deputies responded
to a report of a death
on Lasher Road. Upon
arrival EMS personnel
were already on scene.
Upon speaking with
residence at the scene
deputies were informed
that a male subject
was found deceased at
approximately 9:30 a.m.
The Meigs County Coroner was contacted, and
the scene was examined.
After an initial investigation the cause of death
was determined to be
an overdose, however
the case remains under
investigation.
Deputies were dispatched to Minersville
for what was reported as
a domestic dispute. However, on arrival deputies
spoke with involved parties and the report was
unfounded. No further
action.
Deputies responded to
a request for a well-being
check at a residence on
Gold Ridge Road. Upon
checking the residence,
it appeared to be empty.
Deputies later located
the subject in a hospital
in Columbus.
Deputies responded to
a domestic dispute at a
residence on State Route
143 near Carpenter.
Upon arrival the male
subject had already left
the residence. According
to witnesses at the scene,
there had not been any
physical violence, but the
male subject had caused
them to believe he would
cause physical harm to
them. Domestic charges
have been ﬁeld.
Deputies responded to
Brown’s trailer court in
Minersville after receiving a complaint of people
yelling and possibly
gunshots. When deputies arrived, they spoke
with several witnesses
none of which had heard
any gunshots but said
there had been a verbal
argument. One party to

sion by the 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals that found
a Virginia politician violated
the First Amendment rights
of one of her constituents by
blocking him from a Facebook page.
Still, the appeals court in
New York acknowledged, not
every social media account
operated by a public ofﬁcial
is a government account, and
First Amendment violations
must be considered on a
case-by-case basis.
“The irony in all of this is
that we write at a time in the
history of this nation when
the conduct of our government and its ofﬁcials is
subject to wide-open, robust
debate,” Circuit Judge Barrington D. Parker wrote on
behalf of a three-judge panel.
The debate generates a
“level of passion and intensity the likes of which have
rarely been seen,” the court’s
decision read.
“This debate, as uncomfortable and as unpleasant
as it frequently may be, is
nonetheless a good thing,”
the 2nd Circuit added.

With the agreement,
should the dispatcher
for Meigs County 911
already be on a call and/
or unable to answer in
a certain length of time,
the call would rollover to
Athens County 911 to be
answered. The call would
then be transferred back
to Meigs County 911
when the dispatcher
is available or Athens

the argument was found
walking along State
Route 124 and was later
transported to a place
in Mason. No further
action.
May 28
Deputies transported
two male inmates from
Noble Correctional to
court and back to Noble
Correctional.
Deputies responded to
Story’s Run Road after
receiving a complaint
of a female busting out
windows in a residence.
Upon arrival, deputies
spoke with Jessica Gilmore, who was arrested
on outstanding warrants
from Meigs County.
May 29
Deputies, with assistance from Middleport
Police, responded to
a residence on Lasher
Road due to a report of
an assault. On arrival,
ofﬁcers spoke with the
alleged victim, who
advised that Michael
Peirce had allegedly
struck her in the face following a verbal dispute.
Ofﬁcers then searched
the area for Peirce but
were unable to locate
him. Charges have been
ﬁled on Peirce for assault
through the Meigs County Court.
Deputies responded to
Mile Hill Road in Racine
for a report of a runaway
juvenile. After taking
information from the
mother, deputies went to
a residence on Tornado
Road and located the
juvenile. Deputies then
transported the juvenile
to the mother’s residence.
No further action.
Deputies took a report
of a stolen motorcycle
that occurred late last
summer, or early fall.
The subject lives out of
town and couldn’t make it
down to ﬁle until now. A
suspect has been identiﬁed in the theft.
May 30
Deputies were dispatched to a residence on
State Route 833 due to
an unknown complaint
involving a juvenile. On
arrival, deputies spoke
with the mother and the

Levy

Tidbits

From page 1

In the council member updates,
- Susan Page announced the upcoming Food Truck Thursday on July 18
at Dave Diles Park from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Food trucks at the event will be
OMG! Rotisserie, Smoke’m If You
Got ‘em BBQ, and Nixtamalized.
Brent Patterson will be the entertainment.
- Sharon Older asked Baker to copy
past meeting minutes for people to
review before the meeting.
- Carolyn French asked if the stop
light timing could be changed on Walnut and North Second. Many agreed
the light stays red for too long, which
is causing trafﬁc to be backed up.
- Brian Conde said the sidewalk
on the front lawn of the old school
is being replaced with Middleport
bricks. Conde also said he will be
speaking with the police department
about cars not stopping at the fourway stop on Main Street and Seventh
Avenue or at North Fourth Avenue
and Race Street.
The next Middleport Village Council meeting will be held Monday, July
22, at 7 p.m. at the Village Hall on
Pearl Street.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance writer for The Daily
Sentinel.

County’s dispatcher
could take the needed
information for the call.
It is expected that
those calls needed to
be handled by Athens
County will be limited.
Should the county
not complete the
upgrade and meet the
new requirements, they
would lose the approximately $90,000 in fund-

Wednesday, July 10, 2019 5

ing from the state annually which comes from
cell phone fees.
The two person on
duty requirement was
the ﬁnal step in the
upgrade. The county has
already purchased the
necessary equipment
from the upgrade to take
place.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

juvenile. The juvenile
had broken some items
in the house, and when
deputies attempted to
speak with the juvenile
she ran into the roadway
with oncoming trafﬁc.
Deputies were then
forced to subdue the
juvenile and transport
her to the Holzer ER for
psychological evaluation.
Deputies were dispatched to the Holzer ER
due to a man reportedly
intoxicated in the waiting room. On arrival,
deputies spoke with the
subject. This report was
unfounded. No further
action.
Deputies were dispatched to Bashan Road
for a private property
crash. There were no
injuries and the vehicle
was recovered. No further action.
June 3
Deputies responded
to a fatal crash on Tornado Road near Yellow
Bush. Two passengers
were taken by MedFlight
and the driver was pronounced dead on the
scene. Investigation is
being conducted by OSP.
Deputies responded to
Rocksprings Road. Caller
stated that a male had
been pounding on the
door and wouldn’t leave.
Deputies spoke with
the man, who stated he
had broken up with his
girlfriend and was wanting to get back together.
Deputies spoke with her
and she sated she didn’t
want to see him or talk to
him. He was advised to
leave and peacefully left
the scene.
Deputies took a report
of a stolen vehicle from a
residence on State Route
143. The stolen vehicle is
a 1994 Ford F250, single
cab two-wheel drive. The
truck is tan with a green
and white tailgate. Anyone with any information
on his incident is asked to
call 740-992-3371.
June 4
Deputies responded to
suspicious person call on
3rd Street in Syracuse.
Upon investigation, Deputies discovered a female
who stated that she had

stopped at the residence
to see if her boyfriend
was home and had been
at the residence for some
time because she had
noticed some things out
of place. The homeowner
of the residence arrived
and advised it was okay
for her to be there.
Deputies responded
to Sheets Road, Dexter,
where a female called
asking for assistance.
When deputies arrived,
the female asked deputies to take her and
her child to the sheriff’s ofﬁce because she
was ready to leave her
husband but had no
transportation. Deputies transported her and
the child to the sheriff’s
ofﬁce until her family
could arrive.
June 5
Deputies responded to
a call of cows in the roadway near Eastern Local
School. No cows found.
Deputies responded to
Hemlock Grove Church
on a report of two abandoned trucks located in
the parking lot across
from the church. Deputies tracked down the
owner who conﬁrmed he
had permission to park
them there temporarily
until a wrecker arrived to
pick them up.
Deputies responded to
Pine Tree Drive on a call
of a suspicious person.
The juvenile in the house
stated someone had been
in the driveway and got
in one of the cars at the
residence. It was later
discovered to be a family
friend dropping an item
off.
June 20
Inmate Sonya Stifﬂer
was picked up by STAR
for incarceration. Later
that day she was returned
because she was kicked
out of the program. Stifﬂer is currently being
held by the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce pending a
hearing for sentencing.
Ofﬁcers took a report
on Sheets Road for
criminal mischief. Victim
reported that his UTV
had the windshield and
side view mirror had been
busted.

peeling a hickory pole and
cutting knife splits on the
end to make the broom.
Pioneer men needed to
From page 1
know how to farm, hunt,
trap, use a riﬂe, and be a
suggests, it was any
skilled carpenter. Somepaper that was on hand
covered with grease, typi- times they would be out
all-day hunting game and
cally bear fat.
Bricks were made from tending their traps. Wood
needed to be split and
creek bank clay mixed
carried into the house
with dried grass. After
and ﬁelds plowed using
drying in the sun, these
crude instruments.
hardened bricks were
Their diet was simple,
placed against the cabin
consisting primarily of
wall to form a chimney
what was available. Veniwith a broad opening,
son, turkey, geese, squirsometimes referred to
rel and rabbit were plentias a “cat and clay”. This
ful. Greens were harvestallowed for a ﬁre to be
ed in the spring, berries
built inside the cabin,
later in the summer. Corn
providing heat for cooking, light, and warmth for was the preferred crop
because it could be easily
its occupants.
dried.
To survive in the wilAs the number of setderness, both men and
tlers increased, more
women needed a wide
variety of skills and inno- resources became available. Roads were carved
vative thinking.
out, making travel less
Women raised and
difﬁcult. Mills were built
cared for the children,
to grind ﬂour and plain
cooked, and did much
logs for building. Liveof the heavy farm work.
stock such as sheep, pigs,
They carried water from
and cattle were brought
the spring or stream to
to the area, and enough
the cabin for cooking
and kept the ﬁre burning land had been cleared to
produce grains in abunin the hearth. Creative
dance.
pioneer women learned
By the mid-1800s
to supply their own
the area was no longer
household goods using
what was available. Once referred to as a wilderness; the frontier had
there was enough land
cleared for their gardens, moved further west and
Ohio had become a state.
gourds were grown and
It is easy to forget just
dried to use as pails and
how wild and untamed
dippers. Wood ash was
the land in Southeast
sifted and used to make
soap and animal fat could Ohio was at the end of the
18th century, and difﬁcult
be molded into candles.
Animal skins were tanned for us today to image life
on the frontier.
into leather and made
into clothing. Brooms
Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
were made by cutting and The Daily Sentinel.

Two inmates were
transported to Hopewell
for doctor/dentist
appointments.
Inmate Charles Roush
was transported to CRC
for incarceration.

separated. Contact was
made with the female and
she was advised to stop
calling.
Ofﬁcers attempted
to conduct a well-being
check on Molehan Road
and did not make contact.
Ofﬁcers patrolled the
June 21
Dexter area in reference
Ofﬁcers assisted a
motorist with a lockout at to a complaint received
about a dirt bike driving
Marathon.
recklessly. Ofﬁcers were
Ofﬁcers took a report
unable to locate.
of sexual assault. Case
was turned over to CPS
and the investigator for
June 28
investigation.
Ofﬁcers were disAn inmate was
patched to State Route
arraigned in juvenile
248 to check on a male
court.
in a vehicle. Vehicle was
Ofﬁcers patrolled the
gone prior to our arrival.
Village of Syracuse per
Two papers were
request of the Chief of
served.
Syracuse, who received
One inmate was
a report of shots being
transported to a doctor
ﬁred. Nothing found.
appointment.
Ofﬁcers assisted AEP
with a disconnect on Post June 29
Ofﬁce Road in Long BotOfﬁcers responded to
tom. Issue was resolved
High &amp; Dry storage in
while on scene.
reference to a storage
Inmate Chandler Blan- unit being opened and no
kenship was arraigned in one around. Everything
County Court.
appeared okay and ofﬁOfﬁcers took a report
cers secured the unit.
of a phone scam.
One inmate was evaluated by Hopewell Health.
Ofﬁcers attempted four
June 22
papers and served three
Michelle Jones was
of those four papers.
arrested on a warrant.
Ofﬁcers responded to
Ofﬁcers located a male
Shelly Gravel in Portland
subject on McCumber
for an alarm drop. Area
Road who was intoxicatwas checked and everyed. He was transported
thing was secure.
back to the Sheriff’s
Ofﬁcers spent around
Ofﬁce for an eight hour
hold and issued a citation. three hours looking for
a female making suicidal
Ofﬁcers took a report
threats. Once she was
of a stolen truck, 2007
located she was transportDodge Diesel maroon in
ed to the Holzer ER for a
color, out of Racine.
mental health evaluation.
Ofﬁcers attempted to
Ofﬁcers responded
serve a writ of possession
to Elm Street in Racine
on Brownell Avenue. No
to a verbal dispute over
one was present at the
property. The matter was
time and the order was
resolved.
posted to the door.
Ofﬁcers took a report
private property crash
June 23
report on State Route
Ofﬁcers responded
833.
to North 2nd Avenue
Eight papers were
in Middleport per the
request of MPD to assist served.
EMS with making entry
into a residence for a dif- June 30
ﬁculty in breathing.
Josh Partlow, 31, of
Ofﬁcers took a report
Rutland was arrested
on Laurel Cliff of an
for domestic violence.
attempted break in.
He was transported to
Ofﬁcers spoke with
Washington County Jail
a male about harassing
for incarceration while he
text/phone calls that
awaits his arraignment.
he is receiving from his
Three papers were
wife, with whom he is
served.

�S ports
6 Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Santana savoring storybook All-Star season

Tony Dejak | AP

Cleveland Indians’ Carlos Santana speaks at a news conference Monday in Cleveland.
Santana is a first-time All-Star at 33, another special moment for the Indians first
baseman, who is having a storybook season after returning to Cleveland after a year in
Philadelphia. The 90th All-Star Game will be played on Tuesday in Cleveland.

CLEVELAND (AP) —
Looking Cleveland summer
chic, Carlos Santana strutted into the convention
center’s massive ballroom
fashionably late.
The ﬁrst baseman’s
delayed entrance came long
after Mike Trout, Francisco
Lindor, J.D. Martinez and
all the other American
League players went to their
assigned media interview
platforms.
Wearing stylish, dark sunglasses indoors, the Indians
slugger had the relaxed
appearance of a seasoned,
multi-time All-Star.
Don’t be fooled.
He’s one of 36 All-Star
rookies in this year’s event.
Santana’s selection as a

starter is the latest chapter
in his storybook homecoming to Cleveland, where he
played eight seasons before
signing as a free agent in
2017 with Philadelphia.
But a trade in December
returned him to the Indians,
who can’t imagine where
they’d be this season without him.
“He has carried us since
Day One,” said Lindor, the
Indians’ ﬂashy, four-time
All-Star shortstop. “We are
playing the game the right
way and he’s a big part of
our success.”
The 33-year-old Santana
is one of the more experienced players at this year’s
event, which is giving fans
a look at some of the game’s

next wave of young stars.
There are 19 players that
are 25 or younger, and this
collection of kids has range
with sluggers, slingers and
speedsters.
On the AL roster, there’s
White Sox right-hander
Lucas Giolito, whose name
conjures images of an Italian soccer player but whose
fastball has overwhelmed
hitters all season. Or menacing Seattle slugger Daniel
Vogelbach, who steps into
the batter’s box intent on
inﬂicting harm on the ball.
The NL also has its share
of newbies, including New
York’s Jeff McNeil, who perfected his swing playing
See SANTANA | 7

Gauff thinking
about next year’s
Wimbledon
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — A day after
her memorable Wimbledon ended, Coco Gauff
already was thinking about coming back.
“Obviously, there’s always room for improvement,” Gauff said in an interview with The Associated Press at the All England Club on Tuesday.
“I’m going to go and practice and improve some
things,” the 15-year-old Floridian added, raising
her eyebrows and smiling her infectious smile, “so
that next time, I can win the tournament.”
Well, then.
Gauff made quite an impression over the past
two weeks at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament, accumulating a series of milestones — and
a legion of fans around the globe.
“To say the least, a star has been born,” All
England Club chief executive Richard Lewis
said. “It’s good for the sport. It’s good for the
event.”
First, Gauff became the youngest player to
qualify at Wimbledon in the professional era. Then
she made her main-draw debut at any major tournament with a victory over ﬁve-time Wimbledon
champion Venus Williams, who is 39. And then
she became the youngest player to reach Week 2 at
the All England Club since 1991.
What stands out the most to her from it all?
“The most important point for me is just the
match point after beating Venus. That was a
moment that I will never forget,” Gauff said.
“Watching the video, it seemed like it all happened
quickly. But during it, I felt like I was on the court
for like 20 minutes, when I dropped the racket and
everything.”
She was ranked 313th when Wimbledon began
and, by getting to the fourth round before losing
to former No. 1 Simona Halep on Monday, is projected to jump into the top 150 next week. Gauff’s
upcoming tennis schedule is a bit up in the air at
the moment, in part because she didn’t expect to
still be in England — and in part because of the
tour’s restrictions on how many events someone
her age can enter.
See GAUFF | 7

Kirsty Wigglesworth | AP

United States’ Cori “Coco” Gauff returns the ball to Romania’s
Simona Halep in a women’s singles match during day seven of
the Wimbledon Tennis Championships on Monday in London.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, July 10
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs. Athens at Athens HS, 6 p.m.
Friday, July 12
Legion Baseball
Post 39 vs. Ceredo-Kenova at Point Pleasant HS
(DH), 6 p.m.
Saturday, July 13
Post 39 vs. Utica at Meigs HS (DH), 11 a.m.

Tony Dejak | AP

Pete Alonso, of the New York Mets, reacts during the Major League Baseball Home Run Derby on Monday in Cleveland. The MLB baseball
All-Star Game will be played Tuesday.

Mets’ Alonso wins HR Derby
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Pete Alonso took one
ﬁnal swing and ﬂipped
his bat high in the air.
Another walk-off.
Money ball.
As the crowd roared,
the New York Mets
rookie headed toward
the mound and tightly
squeezed his cousin and
pitcher Derek Morgan,
who had helped him win
the All-Star Home Run
Derby and $1 million.
Alonso outlasted a
worn-down fellow rookie
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in
the ﬁnal round Monday
night to take home a
prize that nearly doubled
his 2019 salary.
With just seconds to
spare, Alonso connected
for a homer to left-center
to edge Guerrero 23-22
after the Blue Jays’ powerhouse put on a historic
display by hitting 91
homers before he ran
out of gas following an
epic semiﬁnal matchup
against Dodgers outﬁelder Joc Pederson.
“There’s so many guys
that just put on a show,
like Joc, he was amazing, Vladdy, they did
such a good job,” Alonso
said. “Everybody put on
a show. To me it didn’t
really seem like the jitters were there, because
everyone was awesome.
I mean everyone was
showing their stuff.”
After his last homer
cleared the wall, Alonso
was swarmed by the NL
All-Stars who along with
a crowd of 36,119 fans
were treated to a power
display unlike any in the
event’s history.

“This was surreal,”
Alonso said.
Alonso is the second
rookie to win outright,
following Yankees star
Aaron Judge in 2017.
He’s also the ﬁrst Mets
player to win the derby
since Darryl Strawberry
shared the title with
Wally Joyner in 1986.
Alonso, making the
major league minimum
of $555,000 this season,
has hit 30 home runs.
The ﬁrst baseman will
showcase his swing again
in Tuesday night’s AllStar Game as baseball
continues this season of
the longball.
And he’ll also give 10%
of his prize money to
charity — 5% each to the
Wounded Warrior Project and to the Tunnel to
Towers Foundation.
“I’ve been living a
fantasy,” Alonso said.
“And I just want to use
my platform as almost
kind of just reach out
to people and just make
people aware of these
causes. And I hope that
other people could ﬁnd
the kindness in their
hearts.”
One of the only bright
spots this season for the
struggling Mets, Alonso
gave New York’s NL fans
something to brag about
while the Yankees chase
another title.
He showed some dramatic ﬂair with two nailbiting wins to reach the
ﬁnal against Guerrero.
He nipped Cleveland’s
Carlos Santana 14-13
in the ﬁrst round and
Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna
Jr. 20-19 in the second to

set up a showdown with
the 20-year-old Guerrero, whose Hall of Fame
father won the event in
2007.
With one of baseball’s
most fearsome swings,
Guerrero ﬁgured to be
a force but there was no
way of predicting he’d hit
91 homers — 74 more
than his dad’s entire total
12 years ago.
Following the event,
Guerrero slowly walked
to his chair in the clubhouse and sat down.
“I was kind of scared
he was going to beat me
because he was hitting
second,” Guerrero said
through a translator. “It
was back-and-forth and
back-and forth. It was
really tiring.”
His hands blistered,
Guerrero more than
equaled his season’s salary of $468,468. He got
$500,000 for ﬁnishing
second, plus a $100,000
bonus for hitting the longest homer.
“I gave all I had. I’m
proud I hit 91 home
runs,” he said.
Guerrero defeated
Pederson in a semiﬁnal
that required three extra
swing(ings) and will go
down in derby lore.
They were tied 29-all
after their four-minute
round and then again following a 60-second session. Guerrero and Pederson then each homered
once when given three
swings, forcing another
best-of-three round.
Guerrero hit two,
screaming at his second shot, which barely
cleared the 19-foot high

wall in left. Pederson
couldn’t match up, hitting a grounder on his
ﬁnal cut before both players shared an exhausted
embrace near home plate
as the fellow All-Stars
stood and applauded like
regular fans.
The last Home Run
Derby in Cleveland
was also won by a New
Yorker — Yankees ﬁrst
baseman Tino Martinez, who took the 1997
crown over a ﬁeld which
included Hall of Famers
Ken Griffey Jr. and Jim
Thome, who didn’t clear
the walls once.
Santana fared better
than Thome, hitting
13 dingers in the ﬁrst
round. But Alonso rallied
with two homers in the
ﬁnal 15 seconds to hit 14
as the Cleveland crowd
sneered.
“I didn’t think I’d ever
be booed at a Home Run
Derby, to be honest with
you,” Alonso said. “But
I guess that’s the hometown home cooking.”
The derby lost its top
seed on Sunday as Christian Yelich, the reigning
NL MVP and current
home-run leader, withdrew from the contest
citing a nagging back
issue. Yelich didn’t want
to risk injury and his
decision was certainly
welcomed news to the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Yelich, who is still playing in Tuesday’s game,
was replaced by Oakland’s Matt Chapman,
who had the misfortune
of being paired against
the hard-swinging Guerrero in the ﬁrst round.

�SPORTS/TELEVISION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 10, 2019 7

US women’s team boldly embraces off-field activist role
NEW YORK (AP) —
Setting itself apart from
other great American
sports teams, the U.S.
women’s soccer team is
embracing a front-line
role in social justice
causes even as it savors a
fourth world championship.
The players are now
world leaders in the push
for gender equity in the
workplace, having sued
the U.S. Soccer Federation for equal pay and
treatment vis-a-vis the
men’s national team. With
a lesbian coach and several lesbian players, including World Cup MVP
Megan Rapinoe, they’re a

proud symbol of LGBTQ
inclusion. And they have
stood ﬁrmly behind Rapinoe after she said she’d
refuse to visit the White
House if invited by President Donald Trump.
Far from being daunted
by these off-the-ﬁeld
roles, the players seem to
relish them.
“I feel like this team
is in the midst of changing the world around us
as we live, and it’s just
an incredible feeling,”
Rapinoe said after the
team’s 2-0 victory over
the Netherlands in Sunday’s title match in Lyon,
France. The team won
all seven of its matches,

Daly out of British,
can use cart on PGA
Tour in Kentucky

Santana

corner and took it all in,”
said Verlander, who will
start for the AL in Tuesday night’s game. “Felt
From page 6
like I didn’t belong.”
Santana doesn’t share
Wifﬂe ball with his
that sentiment.
brother and now leads
He earned his All-Star
the majors with a .349
trip, and the cleanup
average. And don’t
spot in manager Alex
forget Atlanta’s Ronald
Cora’s starting lineup, by
Acuna Jr., the 21-yearold dynamo with a Rook- being Cleveland’s most
ie of The Year trophy on consistent player in the
season’s ﬁrst half. Santaa mantle that could one
na’s batting .297 with 19
day include an MVP —
homers, 52 RBIs and he’s
or two.
played better defensively
There are more, and
than anyone could have
it’s possible one of the
imagined for a former
members of this year’s
catcher, who was moved
ﬁrst-timers’ club makes
to third and then over to
a signature play to help
his team win. And while ﬁrst.
For Indians manager
Santana and the other
Terry Francona, watchAll-Star trainees are
doing all they can not to ing Santana’s season
show any nerves, players unfold has been beyond
who have walked in their satisfying.
“I need a good adjeccleats know better.
tive: immensely,” FranWhen he made his
cona said. “We were
ﬁrst All-Star trip in
sitting in the dugout
2007, Houston’s Justin
yesterday and before the
Verlander was nothing
game and I think he was
like the intimidating,
in a thoughtful mood,
Cy Young winner he is
and he goes, ‘I love it
today.
here’ and it kind of hit
Back then, he was
me. I said, ‘We love havscared.
ing you here.’ And then I
“In San Francisco, I
told him, ‘I want a favor.
stepped into the locker
I want to get a picture
room with the guys I
with you tomorrow at
grew up with watching:
the ballpark.’ We got one
Jeter, Big Papi, A-Rod,
when we were on that
Ichiro, all these guys,
tour of Japan and sentiand I kind of sat in my

By Doug Ferguson

diagnosed as diabetic.
That led him to request a
cart for the PGA ChampiJohn Daly is free to ride onship at Bethpage Black
a cart during the week of under the Americans with
Disabilities Act, which
the British Open — just
the PGA of America
not at Royal Portrush.
approved after Daly subDaly’s manager said
mitted the required mediTuesday he is likely to
cal information.
play the Barbasol ChamThe R&amp;A rejected his
pionship next week in
request for a cart over the
Kentucky, and the twoweekend, saying it felt
time major champion
with osteoarthritis in his walking was an integral
part of the tournament.
right knee already has
been granted a cart to use “We must also ensure, as
far as possible, the chalin the PGA Tour event.
Andy Pazder, the chief lenge is the same for all
players in the ﬁeld,” it
tournaments and comsaid.
petition ofﬁcer for the
Pulling out of the BritPGA Tour, said Daly late
last year was approved to ish Open, however, might
also be linked to a social
use a cart through 2019
media post from Daly on
at PGA Tour events and
Sunday.
PGA Tour Champions
In a Twitter note that
events that require walkhe described as “My life
ing.
chapter 84k,” Daly says
Daly, who has not
he was on vacation in
played a regular PGA
England last week when
Tour event since The
he was bitten by a spider
Greenbrier last summer,
also is contemplating the without realizing it. He
Barracuda Championship was taken to an emergency room on Friday —
in Reno, Nevada, the folapparently at Uniontown
lowing week.
Hospital in Pennsylvania
The R&amp;A announced
— and taken straight
Tuesday that Daly had
withdrawn from the Brit- into surgery to remove
ish Open “due to a medi- a major infection in his
abdominal area. He says
cal condition.”
he also was treated for
The nature of that
early sepsis from a brown
condition — be it his
arthritic knee or a spider recluse.
His post included
bite — was not entirely
hashtags that say he was
clear.
in some serious pain, glad
Daly has been dealing
with arthritis in his knee, to be alive and the photos
were too graphic.
and he says he also was

The Associated Press

mph, a speed surpassed
only by two women in the
entire tournament. She
From page 6
also said about her forehand: “I don’t have a lot
of conﬁdence on that side
What is certain is that
and I think a lot of players
Gauff knows she can get
know that.”
better.
There’s work to be done
And that she very much
away from the court, too:
wants to.
Gauff is about two weeks
“Maybe a year ago,
when I lost, I kind of felt away from ﬁnishing her
freshman year of high
sorry for myself. And
now I don’t feel sorry for school, via the Internetbased Florida Virtual
myself. I just feel like: If
School. Her favorite subyou lose, that means you
ject: language arts. Her
can always improve,”
least: math.
Gauff said. “I mean, I’m
Maybe that can wait
never going to be perfect,
until she gets home,
because you’re always
going to lose matches. It’s whenever that is.
“I don’t even know
impossible to win all of
them. Even the more you what today is,” Gauff
said with a giggle.
lose, the more you need
“These past two weeks, I
to improve, I guess.”
didn’t know what day it
After a pause, she
was. All I knew is, ‘Oh,
added with a chuckle:
“And even Roger Federer, I play tomorrow.’ My
mind has just been someeven though he’s one of
where else. I already had
the greatest of all time,
he still loses matches. So respect for the people
who win (Grand Slam
that means he still can
titles). But now, like,
improve.”
experiencing one and
That approach has
served Gauff well already. being to the second
She was the U.S. Open week, I have way more
respect, because I can
junior runner-up at age
see how difﬁcult it is to
13, the French Open
be able to stay focused
junior champion at 14.
for two weeks. It’s just a
On Tuesday, she menlot. It’s a lot. But I can
tioned that she wants to
tweak her serve — which, see myself doing better
as it stands, reached 119 in the future.”

mentally it meant a lot.
“He has grown so
much and it’s not just
with me, it’s with everybody. But we are pretty
close and I trust him a
lot, and he’s earned that.
He’s grown up right in
front of our eyes, and
when that happens, it
feels good.”
Santana’s charmed
season has extended off
the ﬁeld. He recently
became a U.S. citizen,
and even the moment he
learned he was an AllStar seemed stolen from
a Hollywood script.
The Indians were ﬂying to Baltimore when
TVs on their plane suddenly went blank just
as the AL starters were
about to be announced.
When catcher Roberto
Perez ﬁnally got an
internet connection, he
passed along the news to
Santana, who began crying while his teammates
cheered.
“I was so happy for
him,” Lindor said. “He
has worked so hard year
after year — signing
somewhere else, getting
traded here and making
his ﬁrst All-Star Game
here in Cleveland — his
home. This is his home
and it’s special.”
Santana intends to
savor every second of his

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)

Gauff

ate more revenue and
garner higher TV ratings
but get paid less simply
because they are women,”
said Molly Levinson,
spokeswoman for the
players in their lawsuit.
“It is time for the federation to correct this once
and for all.”
Debra Katz, a Washington attorney who specializes in sexual harassment
cases, said the U.S. team
had earned global support for the causes it is
embracing.
“Their message is,
‘You’re not going to
divide us. We’re united
for nondiscriminatory
treatment for all of us.’”

risked their careers in
the past by taking political stances. Some teams
in the NBA and WNBA
wore warm-up outﬁts a
few years ago protesting
police brutality and supporting the Black Lives
Matter movement.
But it’s difﬁcult to think
of another high-proﬁle
U.S. team sticking its
neck out, in the run-up
to its most important
Francisco Seco | AP competition, the way the
United States’ Megan Rapinoe (15) and teammates celebrate after
women’s soccer team
Rapinoe scored during the Women’s World Cup final soccer match
between U.S. and The Netherlands on Sunday at the Stade de Lyon did by suing the USSF
in March. The two sides
in Decines, outside Lyon, France.
have agreed to mediate
the lawsuit now that the
scoring 26 goals, allow— notably Muhammad
World Cup is over.
ing just three.
Ali, more recently Colin
“These athletes generIndividual athletes
Kaepernick — have

11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
(N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch

WEDNESDAY, JULY 10
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
(N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
(N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
News (N)
(N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
America
Report (N)
events. (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

6 PM

6:30

ﬁrst All-Star experience,
which began Monday
night in the Home Run
Derby.
With the hometown
crowd cheering every
swing, he connected for
13 homers in the ﬁrst
round. He was edged
by New York Mets ﬁrst
baseman Pete Alonso,
who had to rally in the
ﬁnal seconds to get 14
with Cleveland fans rooting hard against him.
Earlier, Santana
handled wave upon wave
of questions, answering in his native Spanish and English, which
he has worked hard to
improve. When pressed
about what went wrong
in Philadelphia, Santana
turned on a negative
inquiry almost as quickly
as he jumps on a hanging
slider.
“I had hard season
and I learned a lot,” he
said. “This year, I’m feeling more comfortable
and I’m happy to come
back to my sweet home.
I’ve tried to enjoy every
game, every moment.”
When his interview
ended, Santana pulled
down the large hanging panel that showed
he was an All-Star for a
souvenir.
Only then did he look
like a rookie.

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Ellen's Game of Games
The InBetween "Another
Songland "will.i.am"
Broken Morning" (N)
"Life as We Know or Go It"
Ellen's Game of Games
Songland "will.i.am"
The InBetween "Another
"Life as We Know or Go It"
Broken Morning" (N)
ESPY Awards Celebrates major sports achievements, relives unforgettable moments. (N)
Nova "Back to the Moon" American Experience "Chasing the Moon" The thrilling
New moon discoveries fuel era of the space race, from its earliest days to the 1969
excitement for a return. (N) moon landing. (N)
ESPY Awards Celebrates major sports achievements, relives unforgettable moments. (N)
Love Island (N)

Big Brother (N)

MasterChef "Joe Takes a
Risk" (N)
Nova "Back to the Moon"
New moon discoveries fuel
excitement for a return. (N)
Love Island (N)

First Responders Live
Eyewitness News at 10 (N)
"Episode 104" (N)
American Experience "Chasing the Moon" The thrilling
era of the space race, from its earliest days to the 1969
moon landing. (N)
Big Brother (N)
S.W.A.T. "Encore"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

S.W.A.T. "Encore"

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) JAG "The Guardian"
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pirates Ball
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter Special (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

JAG "Code Blue"
JAG
JAG "Rendez-vous"
JAG "Ghost Ship"
H.S. Baseball WVSSAC Tournament
The Dan Patrick Show (N)
ESPY Red Carpet (L)
Poker World Series (L)
Highly? (N) NBA Basketball Summer League Cle./N.O. (L)
NBA Basketball Summer League (L)
Married/ First Sight "Don't Married at First Sight
Married at
Married at First Sight "Paradise Lost?" (N) Marrying Millions "Can't
Kiss on First Wedding Night" "Stranger Love in Paradise" First Si. (N)
Buy My Love" (P) (N)
Mulan (1998, Animated) Eddie Murphy, BD Wong, Grown-ish
Monsters, Inc. (2001, Animated) Voices of Billy
Grown-ish
Ming-Na Wen. TVG
(N)
Crystal, Mary Gibbs, John Goodman. TVG
(4:30)
Red (‘10, Act)
Red 2 (2013, Action) Helen Mirren, John Malkovich, Bruce Willis. A team of retired Yellowstone "The Reek of
Bruce Willis. TV14
C.I.A operatives reunite to track down a missing nuclear device. TVPG
Desperation" (N)
Loud House Loud House SpongeBob Dare (N)
The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water TVG
Friends
Friends
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Recall" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Uncle" SVU "Catfishing Teacher"
SVU "Townhouse Incident" Modern Fam Modern Fam
FamilyGuy
Family Guy Bob'sBurgers Bob'sBurgers The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
Shooter (‘07, Act) Mark Wahlberg. TVMA
Contraband (‘12, Act) Giovanni Ribisi, Mark Wahlberg. TV14
Shooter
(5:30)
Road House (1989, Action) Sam Elliott, Ben
Colombiana (‘11, Act) Zoe Saldana. A young woman becomes an
War
Gazzara, Patrick Swayze. TVMA
assassin to find the mobster that killed her parents in Bogotá. TV14
Dogs TV14
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Exp. Unknown "Trail of Indiana Jones" (N)
Storage
Storage W. Wahlburgers "Be a Good
Wahlburgers "Next-gen
Wahlburgers "Wahl'king
The Employables "Cursing
Wars
"Padian: P.I." Sport"
Wahlbergs"
Down Memory Lane?"
With Confidence" (N)
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
North Woods Law "Crimes and Moose-demeanors" (N)
North Woods Law
NCIS "Past, Present and
NCIS "Under the Radar"
NCIS "Anonymous Was a
NCIS "Once a Crook"
NCIS "Oil and Water"
Future"
Woman"
Law &amp; Order
LawOrder "Animal Instinct" Law &amp; Order "Jurisdiction" Law &amp; Order "Virus"
Law &amp; Order "Securitate"
Botched
E! News (N)
The Notebook (‘04, Rom) Rachel McAdams, Gena Rowlands, Ryan Gosling. TV14
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Younger (N) (:35) Queens
Apollo: Back to the Moon Apollo: Back to the Moon Hubble Explore some of
Mission Pluto and Beyond Mission to Saturn: Inside
"Impossible Challenge"
"Ultimate Mission"
Hubble’s latest observations. (N)
the Rings (N)
IMSA Auto Racing (N)
Motocross Highlights (N)
UCI Cycling Tour de France Stage 5 Saint-Dié-des-Vosges - Colmar
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Beyond the Wheel
MLB Baseball All-Star Game National League vs. American League Site: Progressive Field
Chuck Norris' Epic Guide Battle of the 80s Supercars With David Hasselhoff David (:05) Strong.Man "Stronger
Live PD Presents: Top 10
Police Vehicles
to Military Vehicles
tries to prove that KITT lives up to the legend. (N)
Than a Russian" (N)
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
Southern Charm
Southern Charm (N)
South-CharmNewOrlean
(:05)
Lean on Me (‘89, Dra) Robert Guillaume, Morgan Freeman. TVPG
Juice (‘92, Act) Queen Latifah, Omar Epps. TVMA
Property Brothers
Property "Wishful Building" Property Brothers
Property Brothers: F (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:30)
Resident Evil: Retribution (‘12,
Twister (‘96, Act) Bill Paxton, Helen Hunt. A team of storm chasers Krypton "A Better
Act) Sienna Guillory, Milla Jovovich. TV14 trail tornadoes in hopes of creating an advanced warning system. TVPG
Yesterday" (N)

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(:55) Thoroughbreds A teenaged girl plots

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Vice News
ILU, Now Die This doc raises (:20)
Wild Hogs (‘07, Com) William H. Macy, John
with her uncaring friend to murder her strict Tonight (N) questions about tech and
Travolta. Men try to put their troubles behind them as they
and harsh stepfather. TV14
mental health. Pt. 2 of 2 (N) set out on a road trip on their Harleys. TV14
Frantic (‘88, Dra) Harrison Ford, Betty Buckley. An
127 Hours A mountain climber
(:35)
Daylight An ex-emergency chief
American doctor finds it impossible to find help when his resorts to desperate measures after
must help people escape from a tunnel
wife disappears in Paris. TVMA
becoming trapped under a boulder. TVMA collapse in New Jersey. TV14
(5:15) Nightcrawler (‘14,
(:15)
Basic (‘03, Act) Samuel L. Jackson, Giovanni
The Loudest Voice "2001"
Gone in 60 Seconds
Thril) Bill Paxton, Jake
Ribisi, John Travolta. Two military agents investigate the
Roger begins pushing the
(‘00, Act) Angelina Jolie,
Gyllenhaal. TVMA
disappearance of a sergeant during training. TVMA
news with an agenda.
Nicolas Cage. TVPG

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, July 10, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

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

%\�'DYH�*UHHQ

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

�
� �

�
�

By Hilary Price

� �
�
�
� � �
�
�
�
�
� � � � �
�
�
� �

�'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO
By Bil and Jeff Keane

����

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�����&amp;RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

����

� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
�'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO

Hank Ketcham’s

�����&amp;RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�

� �

see what’s brewing on the

job market.
EURZVH�MREV��SRVW�\RXU�UHVXPH��JHW�DGYLFH

jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

WNBA
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
Washington
9 4 .692 —
Connecticut
9 5 .643 ½
Chicago
7 7 .500 2½
New York
7 8 .467 3
Indiana
6 9 .400 4
Atlanta
3 10 .231 6
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
Las Vegas
9 5 .643 —
Minnesota
8 6 .571 1
Los Angeles
7 7 .500 2
Phoenix
6 6 .500 2
Seattle
8 8 .500 2
Dallas
5 9 .357 4
___
Tuesday’s Games
Dallas 74, Los Angeles 62
Wednesday’s Games
Connecticut at Atlanta, 11 a.m.
Phoenix at Washington, 11:30 a.m.
Las Vegas at Indiana, 12 p.m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 9 p.m.

MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Philadelphia
10 5 5 35 37 26
D.C. United
8 5 7 31 25 21
Montreal
9 9 3 30 26 34
Atlanta
9 7 3 30 27 23
New York City FC
7 1 8 29 30 19
New York
8 7 4 28 33 27

Toronto FC
6 8 5 23 30 33
New England
6 8 5 23 22 36
Chicago
5 8 7 22 31 29
Orlando City
6 9 3 21 25 25
Columbus
5 13 2 17 17 30
Cincinnati
4 13 2 14 18 44
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Los Angeles FC
13 2 4 43 50 16
LA Galaxy
11 7 1 34 26 22
Seattle
9 5 5 32 29 25
Minnesota United
9 7 3 30 36 29
FC Dallas
8 7 5 29 29 25
San Jose
8 7 4 28 30 30
Houston
8 7 3 27 28 25
Real Salt Lake
8 9 2 26 25 29
Sporting Kansas City 5 7 7 22 29 34
Portland
6 8 2 20 25 28
Vancouver
4 8 8 20 22 31
Colorado
5 10 4 19 29 38
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Sunday, July 7
New York at Atlanta, 2 p.m.
Orlando City at Philadelphia, 4:30
Portland at New York City FC, 6:30 p.m.

TENNIS
Wimbledon Results
LONDON (AP) — Results Tuesday from
Wimbledon at The All England Lawn Tennis
&amp; Croquet Club (seedings in parentheses):
Women’s Singles
Quarterfinal
Serena Williams (11), United States, def.
Alison Riske, United States, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3.
Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic, def.
Johanna Konta (19), Britain, 7-6 (5), 6-1.

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

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

REAL ESTATE

House For Sale
2311B Monroe Ave
Pt Pleasant, WV
304-593-6683
Apartments/Townhouses
� %HGURRP DSDUW
1R 6PRNLQJ� 1R 3HWV
������������
� %HGURRP DSW
� PL IURP +RO]HU
��������� PRQWK
SOXV GHSRVLW
������������
25 ������������

�� IW GLDPHWHU DERYH JURXQG
VZLPPLQJ SRRO � \HDU ROG�
&amp;RPSOHWH ZLWK DOO DFFHVVRULHV�
%HVW RIIHU ������������

Pets
5DUH )�%% /DEUDGRRGOH
SXSSLHV�� PDOH � IHPDOH
�ZNV ROG�������������

NASCAR
NASCAR Monster Energy Cup
Points Leaders
Through July 7
1. Joey Logano, 700
2. Kyle Busch, 682
3. Kevin Harvick, 625
4. Brad Keselowski, 613
5. Martin Truex Jr., 597
6. Denny Hamlin, 588
7. Chase Elliott, 585
8. Kurt Busch, 564
9. Alex Bowman, 534
10. Aric Almirola, 512
11. Ryan Blaney, 508
12. William Byron, 498
13. Jimmie Johnson, 474
14. Kyle Larson, 473
15. Clint Bowyer, 444
16. Ryan Newman, 443
17. Daniel Suarez, 440
18. Erik Jones, 430
19. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 398
20. Paul Menard, 390

TRANSACTIONS
Tuesday’s Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Added RHP
Aaron Brooks to the 25-man roster.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Sent C Welington Castillo to Birmingham (SL) for a

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

YARD SALE

Yard Sale 7/12 &amp; 7/13-9a-3p
2415 Mt Vernon Ave, Pt Pl Wv
kids clothes/Toys,house items
adult clothes, &amp; more
YARD SALE: Fri 7/12
2625 Lincoln Ave-Pt Pleasant
8a-1p-baby clothes, reg
clothes, misc.

for your buck...
ADVER TISE!

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?
�
�
�
�
�

Be your own boss
5 Day Delivery
Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable
vehicle &amp; provide proof of insurance
� Must provide your own substitute

Now
Hiring
Leaders

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679

Are you an enthusiastic go-getter? Do you thrive on new challenges?
Do you have a knack for communicating and building strong client relationships?
Are you motivated by the potential of an unlimited income and premium beneﬁts package?
If you answered yes to all of these questions, you are the type of candidate we want to meet.
We are currently seeking sales representatives to develop new business and manage existing
accounts. We give you all the tools you need to succeed, including a base salary, no-cap
commission plan and paid training. All you need is the drive to reach your full potential.

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis , Oh 45631
740-446-2342

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

Ready to Take on Your Next Challenge?
Apply with Résumé to Matt Rodgers,
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

CLASSIFIEDS

OH-70129402

OH-70131038

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

LOS ANGELES LAKERS — Signed G Avery Bradley.
WASHINGTON WIZARDS — Signed G
Ish Smith.
FOOTBALL
Canadian Football League
EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Released DL
Darius Jackson.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Acquired
F Alex Nylander from Buffalo for D Henri
Jokiharju.
COLORADO AVALANCHE — Agreed to
terms with coach Jared Bednar on a twoyear contract extension.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — re-signed
F Danick Martel to a one-year, two-way
contract.
American Hockey League
MILWAUKEE ADMIRALS — Signed C
Hunter Garlent, D Arvin Atwal and G Ken
Appleby to one-year contracts.
ECHL
IDAHO STEELHEADS — Agreed to terms
with D Keegan Kanzig on a one-year contract.
READING ROYALS — Re-signed F Corey
Mackin to a one-year contract.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
ATLANTA UNITED — Signed D George
Campell.
COLUMBUS CREW — Named Dante
Washington director of team strategic
partnerships and business development.
COLLEGE
CLAYTON STATE — Named Hank Kim
athletics development officer in addition
to his duties as men’s golf coach.

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

B
A
N
G

��)DPLO\ 6DOH -XO\ ��WK���WK
�DP�" ��� 0DJQROLD 'U�
EHKLQG 'RPLQR V 3L]]D
WR PXFK WR OLVW UDLQ RU VKLQH

rehab assignment.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Sent RHP
Keynan Middleton to Inland Empire (Cal)
for a rehab assignment.
MINNESOTA TWINS — Signed SS Alec
Craig to a minor league contract.
NEW YORK YANKEES — Signed LHP Dan
Jennings to a minor league contract.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Sent LHP
Sean Manaea to Stockton (Cal) for rehab
assignment.
TAMPA BAY RAYS — Sent 3B Matt Duffy,
RHP Diego Castillo and LHP Anthony Banda to the GCL Rays for rehab assignments.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS — Sent RHP Allen Webster to Tennessee (SL) for a rehab assignment.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned 2B
Kevin Kramer to Indianapolis (IL). Signed
OF Deion Walker to a minor league contract and assigned him the th GCL Pirates.
SAN DIEGO PADRES — Sent OF Travis
Jankowski to Lake Elsinore (Cal) for a rehab assignment.
American Association
GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS —
Signed RHP Chris Pennell.
KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Traded OF
Forrestt Allday to Lincoln for RHP Evan
Korson, the reversionary rights to RHP
Michael Blazek and a player to be named.
LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Released INF
John Sansone.
SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Released
INF Nyles Nygaard.
TEXAS AIRHOGS — Signed RHP Cody
White.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association

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

Get the most

Garage/Yard Sale

Pools &amp; Spas

ANIMALS

Czech Republic and Nicole Melichar (7),
United States, 2-6, 6-2, 9-7.

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

MERCHANDISE

For Sale By Owner

Elina Svitolina (8), Ukraine, def. Karolina
Muchova, Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-4.
Simona Halep (7), Romania, def. Shuai
Zhang, China, 7-6 (4), 6-1.
Men’s Doubles
Third Round
Henri Kontinen, Finland and John Peers
(8), Australia, def. Rajeev Ram, United
States and Joe Salisbury (12), Britain, 7-6
(2), 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 13-12 (2).
Quarterfinal
Nicolas Mahut, France and Edouard
Roger-Vasselin (11), France, def. Lukasz
Kubot, Poland and Marcelo Melo (1), Brazil, 7-6 (3), 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-3.
Ivan Dodig, Croatia and Filip Polasek,
Slovakia, def. Wesley Koolhof, Netherlands
and Marcus Daniell, New Zealand, 6-2, 7-6
(1), 6-3.
Robert Farah, Colombia and Juan Sebastian Cabal (2), Colombia, def. Horia
Tecau, Romania and Jean-Julien Rojer (5),
Netherlands, 6-4, 3-6, 6-7 (8), 6-4, 11-9.
Women’s Doubles
Third Round
Kristina Mladenovic, France and Timea
Babos (1), Hungary, def. Alize Cornet,
France and Petra Martic, Croatia, , walkover.
Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic and
Su-Wei Hsieh (3), Chinese Taipei, def. Monica Niculescu, Romania and Irina-Camelia
Begu (15), Romania, 6-3, 6-4.
Elise Mertens, Belgium and Aryna Sabalenka (6), Belarus, def. Latisha Chan,
Chinese Taipei and Hao-Ching Chan (9),
Chinese Taipei, 7-5, 6-3.
Quarterfinal
Kristina Mladenovic, France and Timea
Babos (1), Hungary, def. Kveta Peschke,

Wednesday, July 10, 2019 9

CALL TODAY!

�10 Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Good health begins
with great primary care.
Primary care physicians and nurse practitioners at Pleasant
Valley Hospital are here to help people of all ages manage
acute and chronic illnesses. With a full spectrum of medical services, our goal is to keep you and your family well.
From preventive care and routine checkups to diagnosing and delivering the most advanced treatment options
available, our primary care providers are here to help
you make the healthcare decisions that are right for you
and your family...

... because good health begins with
great primary care.
H. Edward Ayers Jr., MD

Internal, Pediatric &amp; Adolescent
Medicine
2520 Valley Drive, Suite 118
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

:K\�LV�LW�LPSRUWDQW�WR�KDYH�
D�3ULPDU\�&amp;DUH�3URYLGHU"

304.675.6015

A PARTNER IN YOUR CARE
Agnes A. Enrico-Simon, MD

Someone who knows your healthcare
goals and history

Family Medicine &amp; Pediatrics
2520 Valley Drive, Suite 214
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304.675.6090

HEALTHCARE CAPTAIN
Someone who coordinates your care
in one location

Randall Hawkins, MD

ILLNESS PREVENTION

2520 Valley Drive, Suite 212
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Someone who provides regular screenings
and catches diseases early

Internal Medicine

304.675.7700

FEWER EMERGENCY TRIPS
Wes Lieving, DO
Internal Medicine

Someone who keeps you healthy by offering
treatment options based on your history

2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260

304.773.5179

COMFORT &amp; FAMILIARITY
Someone who you feel comfortable asking
questions and sharing private information

Robert Tayengco, MD
Internal Medicine

2416 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304.675.4200

Tess Simon, MD

Internal Medicine

2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304.857.6538

Brandon DeWees, FNP-C

3ULPDU\�&amp;DUH�3URYLGHUV� DOVR�NQRZQ�DV�
3&amp;3V �DUH�FRQVLGHUHG�WKH�EDFNERQH�RI�
the healthcare system. They are the paWLHQW¬V�PDLQ�KHDOWKFDUH�SURYLGHU�LQ�QRQ�
emergency situations, and are trained to
treat common conditions, and to direct
WKHLU�SDWLHQWV�WR�VSHFLDOLVWV��LI�QHHGHG��
6LQFH�3&amp;3V�JHQHUDOO\�FDUH�IRU�SDWLHQWV�
RYHU�D�ORQJ�SHULRG�RI�WLPH��WKH\�XVXDOO\�
KDYH�H[WHQVLYH�NQRZOHGJH�RI�D�SDWLHQW¬V�
RYHUDOO�SK\VLFDO�DQG�PHQWDO�KHDOWK��

Family Nurse Practitioner
2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260

OH-70130700

304.773.5179

Pleasant Valley Hospital is a partner of
Cabell Huntington Hospital and the Marshall
University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine.

3OHDVDQW�9DOOH\�+RVSLWDO��������������������ZZZ�SYDOOH\�RUJ

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="29">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="328">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="4411">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="608">
              <text>July 10, 2019</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="457">
      <name>barnes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="786">
      <name>easter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="788">
      <name>legue</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="784">
      <name>markins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="785">
      <name>mills</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="761">
      <name>runion</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="787">
      <name>sturgeon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="359">
      <name>tucker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
