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                  <text>More
from
Meigs Fair

Fields
OSU
starter

LOCAL s 4, 5

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

73°

83°

82°

Humid today and tonight with a shower or
thunderstorm. High 90° / Low 72°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 132, Volume 73

Wednesday, August 21, 2019 s 50¢

Junior
Fair
awards
received
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy

Showman of Showmen winner Caelin Seth is pictured with 2019 royalty, 2018 winner Jaycie Jordan and representatives from the Ohio Valley Bank.

Seth wins Showman of Showmen
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

ROCKSPRINGS —
Dairy Steer Showmanship Champion Caelin
Seth was named the
Showman of Showmen on
Friday night at the Meigs
County Fair.
Seth won the Grand
Champion Showmanship
award at the dairy steer
show Tuesday night.
Although Seth was representing the dairy steers,
she also won Grand
Champion Showman for
the dairy breeding earlier
in the week as well as
Reserve Champion Showman for dairy feeders.
In the Showman of
Showmen competition,
the best showman from

ROCKSPRINGS —
Members of 4-H, FFA,
and Girl Scouts were
honored at the Junior Fair
Awards Program on Friday afternoon.
The 4-H awards were
as follows,
Lakin Ridenour was
nominated for the Rising
Star Fashion Award for
members between the
ages of 8 and 11.
The 4-H camp counselors for 2019 were
Gabrielle Beeler, McKenzie Long, Arielle Beeler,
Cooper Schagel, Kylie
Gheen, and Quentin
Sheets.
Raeann Schagel
and Trevor Morrissey
received the Secretary’s
Books awards in the
junior and senior categories, respectively.
The Busy Beavers 4-H
Club sponsored awards
for graduating seniors
for 2019. Those seniors
See AWARDS | 4

2 petitions
not valid for
November
election
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

See SHOWMAN | 5 Showman of Showmen participants tried their hands at showing many different animals during the competition.

Woman struck by train in New Haven
Her injuries are not considered life-threatening
By Mindy Kearns
Special to the Register

NEW HAVEN — A woman
who apparently stumbled onto
the path of an oncoming train
in New Haven Tuesday morn-

ing escaped serious injury,
according to police reports.
New Haven Police Chief
Dave Hardwick said a woman
in her mid-40’s, whose name
is not being released, was
walking in the area behind the

INSIDE
Obituary: 2
Sports: 6
Television: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9
Weather: 10

New Haven Library, when she
stumbled onto the railroad
tracks. The incident happened
around 10 a.m.
The train, Hardwick said,
was traveling approximately
15 miles per hour when it
struck her. The victim was
taken to a local hospital,
where she was being treated

for non-life-threatening injuries.
The incident is still under
investigation, and the chief
said drugs or alcohol might
have been involved.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing, email her at
mindykearns1@hotmail.com.

Girl Scout judging results
Staff Report

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ROCKSPRINGS — Local Girl
Scout judging results for the Meigs
County Fair were as follows,
Sammy Eblin Troop 1004 — Life
skills, misc. sewing, blue; Art drawing, blue; Outdoor project, Grand
Champion; Art pencil, blue; Art pen,
blue.
Erin McKibben Troop 1004 —
Customs and traditions, historical
sites, blue; Customs and traditions,
heritage, blue; Communications photography, blue; Science and beyond,
clothing declutter, Grand Champion;
Girl Scout program, experience,
blue; Arts, decorated clothing, Grand
Champion; Art needlepoint, Reserve
Champion; Science and beyond, Sci-

ence experiments, Grand Champion.
Taylor Nelson Troop 10046 — Science and beyond, fairy garden, blue.
Josslyn Tucker Troop 10046 — Science and beyond, fairy garden, Grand
Champion.
MacKenzie Smith, Troop 10046
— Life skills, no-sew blanket, Grand
Champion.
Mindy Taylor, Troop 10046 — Science and beyond, Grand Champion.
Mariah Langdon, Troop 10046
— Arts, decorated clothing, Grand
Champion.
Kailey Aldridge, Troop 1006 — Life
skills, no sew pillow, Honorable Mention.
See SCOUT | 5

MEIGS COUNTY —
Two petitions which were
ﬁled for the November
ballot were declared not
valid by the Meigs County Board of Elections.
The petitions ﬁled by
Ricardo Bolin for Rutland
Village Council and Delmas K. Good for Salem
Township Trustee were
not valid due to a lack of
valid signatures, according
to the board of elections.
The remainder of the
petitions ﬁled, 69 in total,
were valid, meaning the
candidate will appear on
the November ballot.
Candidates and issues
for the November election
are as follows, according
to a list provided by the
Meigs County Board of
Elections:
MAYOR (1 to be
elected each village)
MIDDLEPORT —
Sandy Iannarelli, Fred L.
Hoffman and Joshua M.
Ashley;
POMEROY — Don M.
Anderson;
RUTLAND — Michael
Biggs, Tyler M. Eblin, and
Jack W. Peterson;
SYRACUSE — Eric
Cunningham;
RACINE — Julian
Scott Hill;
VILLAGE COUNCIL (2 to be
elected each village, plus 4
UTE in Rutland)
MIDDLEPORT —
James Buskirk, Douglas
See ELECTION | 5

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2 Wednesday, August 21, 2019

DEATH NOTICES
MARTIN
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Edith Jane O’Neal
Martin, 83, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died on Friday, Aug. 16, 2019, following an extended illness.
A private memorial for immediate family will
be held on Friday, Aug. 23, 2019 at Deal Funeral
Home with the Rev. Chip Bennett ofﬁciating.
Burial will be in Blue Ridge Memorial Gardens,
Prosperity, W.Va., alongside her loving husband.
GRAHAM
PATRIOT — Jacqueline Rosealee Grubb Graham, 86, of Patriot, Ohio, died August 15, 2019.
Calling hours will be held at Waugh Halley
Wood Funeral Home from 5 to 8 p.m. on Friday,
August 23, 2019. The funeral will be held at the
same location on Saturday, August 24, 2019, at
11 a.m. Burial will be in the Centenary Cemetery
immediately following the service. A dinner will
be served at Northup Baptist Church for family
and friends immediately following the burial. Pastor Jim Chapman will ofﬁciate.
CASEY
THURMAN — Clara Katherine Casey, 98, of
Thurman, Ohio, died Tuesday, August 20, 2019 at
Holzer Senior Care surrounded by her family.
The funeral service for Katherine will be held at
1 p.m. on Saturday, August 24, 2019 at Thurman
United Methodist Church with Pastor James Bennett ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call prior to the funeral from noon -1
p.m. at the church. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
FISHER
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Helen Louise Fisher,
92, of Southside, W.Va., died Tuesday, August 20,
2019, at Arbors of Gallipolis in Gallipolis.
A private family graveside service and burial
will be Thursday, August 22, 2019, at Viers Chapel Cemetery in Southside, with Rev. Bert Flora
ofﬁciating. Public visitation will be from 11 a.m.
until noon Thursday, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
MILLER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Barbara Lynn
Miller, age 89 of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday August 19, 2019 at her home in Point Pleasant.
There will be a graveside service on Thursday,
August 22, 2019 at 11 a.m. Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home is assisting the family.

Open Class Beef
Show results
ROCKSPRINGS —
Results of the open
class beef show at the
Meigs County Fair were
as follows:
Division 400, Any
other breed
Class 1, Spring Heifer: Olivia Wood, ﬁrst
place;
Class 2, Junior Heifer
Calf: Olivia Wood, ﬁrst
place;
Division 403, Chianina
Class 6, Spring
Yearling Heifer: Olivia
Wood, ﬁrst place;
Division 404, Hereford
Class 23, Cow Class:
Elam Family Farm, ﬁrst
place;
Division 406, Maine
Anjou
Class 1, Spring Heifer
Calf: Calaway Farms,
ﬁrst place; Elam Family
Farm, second place;
Class 2, Junior Heifer
Calf: Cade Newland,
ﬁrst place; Justin Rob-

ertson, second place;
Class 5, Summer
Heifer Calf: Justin Robertson, ﬁrst place;
Class 408, Crossbreed
Class 1, Spring Heifer
Calf: Calaway Farms,
ﬁrst place; R&amp;C Farms,
second place; Racing
&amp; Raising Roush Family, third place; Blake
Smith, fourth place;
Class 2, Junior Heifer
Calf: Sarah Oldaker,
ﬁrst place; Paige Smith,
second place; Sarah
Oldaker, third place;
Class 6, Spring Yearling Heifer: Mackenzie
Newell, ﬁrst place; Racing &amp; Raising Roush
Family, second place;
Class 7, Junior Yearling Heifer: Collins
Show Cattle, ﬁrst place;
Mackenzie Newell, second place;
Division 409, Shorthorn
Class 6, Spring Yearling Heifer: Cade Newland, ﬁrst place.

Daily Sentinel

Sweet treats on display at fair
By Lorna Hart

Special to the Sentinel

ROCKSPRINGS — Several baking entries were
on display during the
156th Meigs County Fair.
Department XII Baking
Division 212: Bread,
Class 1, Whole Wheat
Bread — 1st Peggy
Crane Rutland, Ohio,
Class 2, White Bread —
1st Karen L Lodwick,
Syracuse, Ohio, 2nd
Teresa A. Wilson, Racine,
Ohio, 3rd Peggy Crane
Rutland, Ohio; Class 3,
Banana Nut Bread — 1st
Abbie Marcinko, Pomeroy, Ohio, 2nd Teresa
A Wilson, 3rd Darlene
Hayes, Pomeroy, Ohio;
Class 4, Zucchini Bread
— 1st Donna Jenkins,
2nd Debbie Chevalier,
3rd Stephanie A Lewis
Clifton, W.Va.; Class 5,
Biscuits — 1st Karen L
Lodwick; Class 6, Yeast
Rolls — 1st Donna Jenkins, 2nd Peggy Crane;
Class 7, Monkey Bread
— 1st Vanessa Folmer,
Middleport, Ohio; Class
8, Cinnamon Rolls — 1st
Karen L Lodwick, 2nd
Donna Jenkins, 3rd Peggy
Crane; Class 9 - Angel
Food, 1st Mary D King,
Pomeroy, Ohio 2nd David
King Pomeroy, Ohio;
Division 213: Cakes,
Class 10, Sheet Cake
(Name Variety) — 1st
Mary D King; Class
11, Layer Cake (Name
Variety) — 1st Mary D
King, 2nd Darlene Hayes,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 3rd David
King; Class 12, Other
Cake (Name Variety) —
1st Roberta Lewis Mason
W.Va., 2nd Amanda Faulk,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Division 214: Cookies,
Class 13, Oatmeal — 1st
Vanessa Folmer, 2nd Vanessa Folmer, 3rd Abbie;
Class 14, Plain Sugar

Photos by Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Game On! Pictured are Hannah Crane with her aunt Vanessa Folmer. For the second year in a row
Hannah has taken second place in the Brownie Baking competition behind her Aunt Vanessa. Hannah
has vowed to beat her aunt next year, and in the spirit of friendly competition, her aunt accepted the
challenge, saying, ”See you next year!”

— 1st Donna Jenkins,
2nd Abbie Marcinko, 3rd
Stephanie A Lewis; Class
15, Chocolate Chip — 1st
Peggy Crane, 2nd Debbie Chevalier, 3rd Donna
Jenkins; Class 16, Peanut
Butter — 1st Vanessa
Folmer, 2nd Stephanie A
Lewis, 3rd Peggy Crane;
Class 17, Other Cookies — 1st Darlene Hayes,
2nd Peggy Crane, 3rd
Tamara S. Hupp, Racine,
Ohio; Class 18, Brownies
— 1st Vanessa Folmer,
2nd Hannah Crane, 3rd
Donna Jenkins.
Division 215: Pies,
Class 19, Apple — 1st
Roberta Lewis, 2nd Stephanie A. Lewis, 3rd Donna
Jenkins; Class 21, Pecan
— 1st Teresa A. Wilson,
2nd Roberta Lewis; Class
22, Peach — Roberta
Lewis, 2nd Stephanie A.
Lewis, 3rd, Debbie Chevalier; Class 23, Berry —
1st Tamara S. Hupp, 3rd
Stephanie A. Lewis.
Division 216: Candy,
Class 25, Fudge Choco-

Baked goods were on display in the Rutland Bottle Gas Domestic
Arts Building.

late — 1st Darlene Hayes,
2nd Sharon L. Hall
Racine, Ohio; Class 26,
Fudge, Peanut Butter —
1st Maxine Dyer Bidwell,
Ohio, 2nd Opal Dyer
Bidwell, Ohio, 3rd,Tamara
S. Hupp; Class 27, Fudge,
White — 1st Sharon L
Hall Racine, Ohio, 2nd
Teresa A. Wilson; Class
30, Candy, Name Variety
— 1st Teresa A Wilson.
Division 217: Mufﬁn
Contest, Class 31, Sour

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.

loped potatoes, salad, and dessert. Everyone is welcome.

Thursday, Aug. 22

RACINE — The 100th annual
Rose Family Reunion will be
held at 1 p.m. at the Carmel Sutton United Methodist Church in
Racine. Following the reunion will
be a celebration for Mary Rose’s
90th Birthday.

POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
&amp; Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m.at the district ofﬁce.
The ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.

Saturday, Aug. 24
CHESTER Twp. — Meigs County Ikes Club, monthly meeting at
the clubhouse on Sugar Run Road
at 7 p.m., no meal this month.

Sunday, Aug. 25

Monday, Aug. 26

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at
the ofﬁce located at 97 North Second Avenue, Suite 2, in MiddleMIDDLEPORT — The Free
Community Dinner at the Middle- port.
POMEROY — Regular meetport Church of Christ Family Life
Center will be held at 5 p.m. This ing of the Meigs County Library
month they are serving shredded Board, 3:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
BBQ chicken sandwiches, scal-

Friday, Aug. 23

Cream Blueberry Mufﬁns
— 1st Abbie Marcinko,
2nd Sharon L. Hall,
Racine, Ohio, 3rd Rhonda
L Dailey Racine, Ohio.
Division 219: Honey,
Class 1, Honey, Extracted
Honey — 1st J. R.
Markham, Pomeroy,
Ohio; Class 2, Honey,
Extracted Honey, Amber
to Dark — 1st Deborah
Mohler Pomeroy, Ohio.
Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

Open Class
Poultry
Show
ROCKSPRINGS — Results
of the Open Class Poultry
Show were as follows:
American
Class 1, Pen of one pullet
and one cocker: Mattison Finlaw, ﬁrst place;
Class 2, Pen of one hen and
one cock: Nita Yost, ﬁrst place;
English
Class 1, Pen of one pullet
and one cocker: Alyssa Webb,
ﬁrst place;
Any other standard breed
Class 2, Pen of one hen and
one cock: Nita Youst, ﬁrst
place;
Bantam
Class 2, Pen of one hen and
one cock: Mattison Finlaw, ﬁrst
place.

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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
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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.

MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event infor- them. You can ﬁnd this event on Facebook - “Bible
Day Camp 2019”. Questions can be left on the
mation that is open to the public and will be printed
church’s voicemail at 740-992-2755 and your call will
on a space-available basis.
be returned.

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.

Vacation Bible School
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport First Baptist
Church, 211 S. Sixth Ave., will be holding a one day
Vacation Bible School on Saturday, Aug. 24, from 1 to
4:45 p.m. The theme will be “Fishers of Men” using
scripture from Matthew 4:19. Registration begins at
1 p.m. and must be done by an adult. There will be
a Bible lesson, music, games, snacks, with pizza to
follow. Children from K thru 5th Grade are welcome.
Younger children are welcome if an adult stays with

Back-To-School
Immunization Clinics
POMEROY — In an effort to get children ready
for the school year, the Meigs County Health
Department will be hosting a walk-in, extended
hours shot clinic on Tuesday, Aug. 27 from 8 a.m.
to noon and 1-6 p.m. Please bring the child’s shot
records and insurance card. Vaccines are also available to children who have no insurance or whose
insurance does not cover vaccines. A $30 administration fee is appreciated, but not required.
Walk-in immunization services are also offered
Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to noon and
1-4 p.m. Please call 740-992-6626 if you have any
questions.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Canning entries at the Fair
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

ROCKSPRINGS —
Agriculture has always
been a large part of
county fairs, and Meigs
County is no different.
The Fair was established
by the Meigs Agricultural society in 1851,
and since that time
canners have competed
for top awards for their
pleasingly presented
vegetables and fruits.
Department - XII Canning
Division 201, Preserves: Class 1, Preserves, Name Variety
— 1st Doris Grueser
Racine, Ohio 2nd Opal
Dyer Bidwell, Ohio 3rd
Kimberly L Romine
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Division 202, Jams:
Class 2, Raspberry
— 1st Maxine Dyer
Bidwell, Ohio; Class
3, Strawberry — 1st
Donna Jenkins Rutland,
Ohio, 2nd Maxine Dyer
Bidwell, Ohio, 3rd Kim
Fitzgerald, Long Bottom, Ohio; Class 4,
Blackberry — 1st Erin
R Bradford, Racine,
Ohio, 2nd Maxine Dyer
Bidwell, Ohio, Opal
Dyer, Bidwell, Ohio;
Class 5, Other Jam —
1st Maxine Dyer, 2nd
Opal Dyer Bidwell,
Ohio.
Division 203, Jellies:
Class 6, Apple — 1st
Opal Dyer, 2nd Maxine
Dyer, Class 7, Blackberry — 1st Kimberly L
Romine, Pomeroy, Ohio,
2nd Opal Dyer, 3rd Maxine Dyer; Class 8, Grape
— 1st Teresa A Wilson
Racine, Ohio 2nd Maxine Dyer, 3rd Opal Dyer;
Class 9, Other Jellies
(Name Variety) — 1st
Kimberly L Romine

Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Canning entries were on display in the Rutland Bottle Gas
Domestic Arts Building.

Pomeroy, Ohio.
Division 204, Spreads:
Class 10, Apple Butter
— 1st Donna Jenkins,
2nd Darlene Hayes,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 3rd Erin
R Bradford.
Division 205, Pickled:
Class 12, Dill Pickles
— 1st Erin R Bradford,
2nd Bill Grueser Racine,
Ohio, 3rd Lisa Short,
Pomeroy, Ohio; Class
13, Bread &amp; Butter Pickles — 1st Kimberly L
Romine, 2nd Opal Dyer,
3rd Lisa Short; Class 14,
Sweet — 1st Darlene
Hayes, 2nd Kimberly
L. Romine, 3rd Erin
R. Bradford; Class 15,
Zucchini Pickles — 1st
Donna Jenkins; Class
16, 14 Day Pickles —
1st David King, 2nd
Mary D King; Class 17,
Sauerkraut — 1st Bill
Grueser, 2nd Amanda
Faulk; Class 18, Beets —
1st Doris Grueser, 2nd
Kimberly L. Romine, 3rd
Opal Dyer.
Division 206, Relishes: Class 19, End
of Garden — 2nd Bill
Grueser; Class 20, Sweet
Pepper — 1st Kimberly
L Romine 2nd Maxine
Rose; Class 22, Cucumber Relish — 1st Bill
Grueser 2nd Mary D

Corvettes Wanted: 1953-1972
Any condition, Competitive buyer

King 3rd Maxine Rose
Racine, Ohio;
Division 207, Sauces/
Catsup: Class 25, Catsup, Tomato — 1st Bill
Grueser 2nd Teresa A
Wilson 3rd Kimberly
L Romine; Class 26,
Chili Sauce — 1st
Kimberly L Romine
2nd Grueser; Class 27,
Spaghetti Sauce — 1st
Kimberly L Romine, 2nd
Teresa A Wilson, 3rd
Bill Grueser; Class 28,
Barbecue Sauce — 1st
Teresa A Wilson, 2nd
Maxine Rose; Class 29,
Pizza Sauce — Teresa A
Wilson; Class 30, Taco
Sauce — 1st Teresa A
Wilson; Class 31, Salsa
— 1st Bill Grueser, 2nd
Erin R Bradford, 3rd
Teresa A Wilson.
Division 208, Juices:
Class 32, Tomato Juice
— 1st Teresa A Wilson,
2nd Maxine Dyer, 3rd
Maxine; Class 33, Grape
Juice — 1st Teresa A.
Wilson, 2nd Mary D
King, 3rd David King;
Class 35, V-8 Juice —
1st Bill Grueser.
Division 209, Canned
Fruit: Class 36, Applesauce — 1st Maxine
Dyer, 2nd Teresa A. Wilson, 3rd Mary D. King;
Class 37, Apples Pie

— 1st Lisa Short; Class
38, Blackberries — 1st
Doris Grueser, 2nd Opal
Dyer, 3rd Maxine Dyer;
Class 39, Peaches — 1st
Kimberly L Romine 2nd,
Opal Dyer 3rd Maxine
Dyer; Class 40, Pears —
1st Opal Dyer 2nd Maxine Dyer, 3rd Kimberly
L Romine; Class 41 -,
Cherries — 1st Opal
Dyer 2nd Maxine Dyer;
Class 42, Blueberries
— 1st Opal Dyer 2nd
Maxine Dyer;
Division 210, Canned
Vegetables: Class 43,
Beets — 1st Doris
Grueser, 2nd Maxine
Dyer, 3rd Opal Dyer;
Class 44, Beans, Lima
— 1st Maxine Dyer, 2nd
Opal Dyer; Class 45,
Beans, Kidney — 1st
David King, 2nd Mary
King; Class 46, Beans,
Snap — 1st Doris Grueser, 2nd Mary King, 3rd
Teresa A. Wilson; Class
47, Beans, Shell — 1st
Kimberly L, Romine;
Class 51, Corn — 1st
Teresa A. Wilson, 2nd
Maxine Dyer, 3rd Opal
Dyer; Class 53, Sweet
Potatoes — 1st Kim
Fitzgerald; Class 54,
Potatoes — 1st Bill
Grueser; Class 55,
Tomatoes — 1st Bill
Grueser, 2nd Teresa
A, Wilson; Class 56,
Tomatoes, Green — 1st
Teresa A. Wilson, 2nd
Maxine Dyer, 3rd Opal
Dyer; Class 57, Soup
(Name Variety) — 1st
Maxine Dyer; Class 58,
Hot Pepper Rings — 1st
Kimberly L. Romine, 1st
Teresa A. Wilson, 3rd
Maxine Rose.
Division 211, Canned
Meat: Class 61, Deer
— 1st Kim Fitzgerald,
Long Bottom, Ohio.
Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

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Wednesday, August 21, 2019 3

Cloggers perform
on Hill Stage

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Riverside Cloggers performed on the Hill Stage on Thursday
evening at the 2019 Meigs County Fair. The group which is based in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia, includes participants of all ages. The
group performed several numbers for the crowd.

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�LOCAL

4 Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lakin Ridenour, nominee for
Rising Star Fashion Award,
Cloverbud members of Busy Beavers 4-H club who participated is pictured with Fair Queen Ohio State Fair Clock Trophy Camp counselors (left to right) were Gabrielle Beeler, McKenzie
in the Cloverbot Challenge in Columbus are pictured with Fair Gabrielle Beeler.
Cooper Schagel
Long, Kylie Gheen, Arielle Beeler, Cooper Schagel.
Royalty.
Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy

Outstanding Project Interview awards were presented to (left Skill-a-thon Top 10 percent award recipients
to right) Jacob Spencer, Trenton Morrissey, Kendall Schagel,
Queen Gabrielle Beeler, Paige Blackwood, Austin Rose, Kole Gheen,
Zachery King, Kenzie Arms.

Showmanship award recipients were Queen Gabrielle Beeler,
Caelin Seth, Hannah Erwin, Jessica Parker, Matt Werry, Rachel
Jackson, Michael Kesterson, Annie McGrath, McKenzie Long.

State Fair Attendees

Extra Effort Members

State Fair Outstanding of the day were Jacob Spencer, Jeremiah
Mohler, Queen Gabrielle Beeler, Kendall Schagel; (back) Ellie
Howell, Cooper Schagel.

Ohio State Teen Leadership
Council, Gabrielle Beeler

Rio Grande Scholarship recipient Caelin Seth is pictured with
Pauline Atkins Outstanding Volunteer Award recipient Tate Werry Queen Gabrielle Beeler and University of Rio Grande Meigs Branch
representatives Michelle Kennedy and Tom Sutton.
Outstanding 4-H Members – and members of his 4-H club
Cooper Schagel and Gabrielle
Beeler

Jr. Fair Board Members are pictured with Advisor Jenna Meeks.

Awards
From page 1

were recognized on Friday. They include Sydney
Zirkle, Layne Caldwell,
Morgan Haynes, Peyton Anderson, Jacynda
Glover, Jackie Dailey,
Rhiannon Morris, Jessica
Rees, Jessica Parker, Allison Barber, Tiffany Tripp,
Harley McDonald, Becca
Pullins, Ciera Older, Caroline Roush, and Lydia
Edwards.
Jr. Fair Booth winners for the large booths
(from ﬁrst place to
third) are Meigs Creek
4-H club, Cowboy Boots
and Country Roots, and
Rocksprings Raiders.
The small booth placings
are Where the Blacktop
Stops, Rough Riders, and
Klassy Klovers.
4-H Clubs of Distinction include Busy Beavers
4-H Club, Meigs Count
Better Livestock Club,
Cowboy Boots and
Country Roots, Kountry
Kids 4-H Club, Fur and
Feathers 4-H Club, Dream
Catchers 4-H Club, Rough
Riders 4-H Club, and
Meigs Creek 4-H Club.
Clubs which received
the Community Service
Awards are Country Pioneers, Kountry Kids 4-H
Club, and Cowboy Boots
and Country Roots.
Woodworking awards
were given by members
of the Carpenter’s Local
Union #650 Pomeroy and
are based on the results
of 4-H project judging.
For Measuring Up – Unit
1: Hannah Jackson,
Grand Champion; Kenzie
Arms, Reserve Champion; Hunter Clary, Honorable Mention. Making the

Cut – Unit 2: Jeremiah
Mohler, Grand Champion; Christian Howell,
Reserve Champion.
Woodworking Master:
Matthew Jackson, Grand
Champion.
Outstanding Project
Interviews, which normally have one winner
per judge, were given to
Kole Gheen for Clothing
Embellishments, Trenton
Morrissey for Sports
Nutrition Ready Set Go,
Kendall Schagel for Science Fun with Physics,
Zachery King for Beekeeping, Kenzie Arms for
Measuring Up, Austin
Rose for Fishing for the
Intermediate, Jacob Spencer for Photography, and
Paige Blackwood for First
Aid in Action.
The countywide top 10
percent winners for livestock skill-a-thon were:
-Beef: McKayla Nelson
(beginner); Olivia Wood
(intermediate); McKenzie
Long (senior)
-Poultry: Alexia Cremeans (beginner); David
Hall (intermediate);
Blake Cremeans and
Kastle Hall (senior)
-Dairy: Wyatt Teaford
(beginner); Olivia Yost
(senior)
-Goat: Jeremiah Mohler
(beginner); Woody Will
(intermediate); Kristin
McKay (senior)
-Swine: Peyton Richmond (beginner)
-Horse: Kenzie Arms
(beginner)
-Lambs: McKenzy Burnem, Hunter Parry, Isaac
Burnem, Garrett Parry
(beginner); Jasina Will
(senior)
-Rabbit: Kendall Schagel (beginner); Hunter
Clary and Matthew
Jackson (intermediate);
Rachel Jackson and Jack-

Teen Leaders Jacob Spencer, Arielle Beeler, Gabrielle Beeler, Outstanding Jr. Fair Board members Rachel Jackson and Kristin
McKay are pictured with Advisor Jenna Meeks.
Rachel Jackson, Cooper Schagel, Raeann Scagel

ie Dailey (senior)
-Turkey: Bryant Mohler
(beginner); Jensen Litchﬁeld (intermediate); Austin Rice (senior)
Ohio State Fair 4-H
judging attendees were
Lakin Ridenour (Loungewear), Kole Gheen
(Designed by Me); Ellie
Howard (Cake Decorating), Trenton Morrissey
(Welding, Family History
Treasure Hunt and Sports
Nutrition Ready Set Go),
Zoey Schartiger (Take a
Break for Breakfast), Kendall Schagel (Everyday
Food and Fitness; Science
Fun with Physics), Austin
Rose (First Aid in Action;
Fishing for the Intermediate), Rachel Jackson
(Your First Home Away
from Home), Gabby
Beeler (Finding Your
Voice), Joseph Hill (Geology), Hunter Clary (Ohio
Birds), Ashlyn Bradford
(Why Trees Matter); Cooper Schagel (Photography
Master), Jacob Spencer
(Mastering Photography
Level 3), Kristin McKay
(On the Cutting Edge);
Kenzie Arms (Measuring
Up), Jeremiah Mohler
(Making the Cut Junior),
Christian Howell (Making the Cut Senior).
Of those State Fair
attendees, ﬁve of them
won Outstanding of the
Day. Those included
Jacob Spencer (Mastering Photography), Cooper Schagel (Photography
Master), Kendall Schagel (Science Fun with
Physics; Everyday Food
and Fitness), Jeremiah
Mohler (Measuring Up),
Ellie Howell (Cake Decorating).
Cooper Schagel won
the Clock Trophy for
his Photography Master
project.

Showmanship Awards
were given to recognize
the members who won
Grand Champion Showman throughout the
week. Those members
were Matt Werry (breeding lambs); Sydney Zirkle
(non-market goats);
Michael Kesterson
(lambs); Mattison Finlaw (chickens); Hannah
Erwin (turkeys); MacKenzie Newell (beef over
700 pounds); McKenzie
Long (beef under 700
pounds); Jacob Jordan
(hogs); Rachel Jackson
(rabbits); Caelin Seth
(dairy breeding); Jessica
Parker (goats); Caelin
Seth (dairy steers); Annie
McGrath (dairy feeders).
Gabrielle Beeler was
recognized as a Ohio
State Teen Leadership
Council Regional Representative.
Extra Effort 4-H
members include Luke
Enright, Shawna Joseph,
Justin Pierce, Lincoln
Thomas, Jeremiah
Mohler, Hunter Clary,
Peyton Richmond, Gabriel Folmer, Caelin Seth,
Olivia Yost, Kyra Zuspan,
Coltin Parker, Paige
Smith, Kenzie Arms,
Caroline Roush, Aubrey
Brown, Lakin Ridenour,
Jessica Parker, Elizabeth
Collins, Nevada Johnson,
Paige Blackwood, Matthew Jackson, Rachel
Jackson, Kendall Schagel,
Maylee Barringer, Blake
Cremeans, Nathaniel Minshall, Shelbe
Cochran, Lydia Edwards,
Jasina Will, Rebecca Pullins, Trenton Morrissey,
MacKenzie Newell, Olivia
Harris.
County Achievement
Award winners are as follows,
Beef: Elizabeth Collins,

Jessica Parker (alternate)
Citizenship/community
service: Cooper Schagel,
Rachel Jackson (alternate)
Clothing and Textiles:
Allison Barber, Addie
McDaniel (alternate)
Dairy: Jessica Cook,
Allison Barber (alternate)
Food and Nutrition:
Allison Barber, Cooper
Schagel (alternate)
Goats: Jessica Parker
Health and Safety: Jessica Cook
Leadership: Rachel
Jackson, Cooper Schagel
(alternate)
National 4-H Dairy
Conference: Jessica Cook
and Coltin Parker
Ohio Township Award:
Gabrielle Beeler, Jessica
Parker (alternate)
Personal Development:
Cooper Schagel, Rachel
Jackson (alternate)
Photography: Cooper
Schagel
Poultry: Cooper Schagel
Rabbits: Rachel Jackson, Jacob Spencer (alternate)
Sheep: Coltin Parker
State Jr. Fair Board:
Gabrielle Beeler
Swine: Coltin Parker
The Outstanding 4-H
members who were
nominated to attend the
Citizenship Washington
Focus trip are Gabrielle
Beeler and Cooper Schagel.
4-H advisor Edward
“Tate” Werry received the
Pauline Atkins Outstanding Volunteer Award.
The Leland Parker
Family Scholarship is a
$500 award that goes to
a graduating 4-H senior.
This year, with extra
funds, the family was able
to give two scholarships
each in the amount of

$500. Caroline Roush and
Allison Barber are the
2019 recipients.
Caroline Roush and
Colton Hamm each
received a $500 scholarship from the Junior Fair
Board.
Kristin McKay and
Rachel Jackson were
named as the Junior Fair
Board Outstanding Members for 2019.
Kristin McKay was
named the Southern
Racine Outstanding
Exhibitor Award for
2019.
Caelin Seth received
a $500 scholarship from
The University of Rio
Grande.
Sponsors of 4-H awards
are Dr. Douglas Hunter,
Hunter Family Practice,
Home National Bank,
The Vaughan Agency,
Margie Lawson DDS,
Busy Beavers 4-H Club,
GJMV Solid Waste, Carpenter Local Union #650
Pomeroy, Ridenour Gas
Service, Racine Optometric Clinic, Reed &amp;
Bauer Insurance Agency,
3R Industries, Birchﬁeld
Funeral Home, Fox’s
Pizza Den, Parker Corporation, PDK Construction, Michael R Swiger,
Forked Run Sportsman
Club, Little Sheets &amp;
Barr Law Ofﬁce, Simmons Musser &amp;Warner
Insurance Agency, Calico
Coal Company, Hill’s
Classic Cars, Dettwiller
Lumber, Athens-Meigs
County Farm Bureau,
Farmer’s Bank, Montgomery Trailer Sales,
Quality Print Shop,
Charles Blakeslee Family,
The Appliance Man, D.V.
Weber, Norris Northup
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 21, 2019 5

Election

Elections;
Member of the governing Board of
Education, one at large seat — Must
ﬁle in Athens County;
From page 1
Member of the Governing Board
of Educational Service Center, one
Dixon, Ben Reed and Susan Page;
seat Alexander — Must ﬁle in Athens
POMEROY — Maureen HenCounty;
nessy;
Member of the Governing Board
RUTLAND — Clifford J. Kennedy, Stephanie Biggs, Duane Weber of Educational Service Center, one
seat Eastern — Must ﬁle in Athens
(UTE), Stephen Jenkins (UTE);
County;
SYRACUSE — Maria Schaefer;
Member of the Governing Board
RACINE — Mony Wood, Frederof Educational Service Center, one
ick Nero III, Chad David Hubbard;
SYRACUSE BOARD OF PUBLIC seat Meigs — Must ﬁle in Athens
AFFAIRS (1 to be elected) — None; County.
TRUSTEES &amp; FISCAL OFFICERS: (1 trustee
and 1 fiscal officer to be elected)
BEDFORD — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Kathy
J. Romine; Trustee: John Walter
Dean, Shawn Hawley;
CHESTER — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: None;
Trustee: Jeromee Calaway, Philip Raymond Werry, Shaun Seth;
COLUMBIA — Fiscal Ofﬁcer:
Cheri McMollum and Mary Wingo;
Trustee: Rexie Cheadle;
LEBANON — Fiscal Ofﬁcer:
Brenda S. Johnson; Trustee: Matthew
S. Evans, Dale C. Teaford IV, Tyler J.
Johnson;
LETART — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Jenny
Manuel, Nathan W. Roush; Trustee:
Zachary B. Manuel, Justin Hill;
OLIVE — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Kaleen
Hayman, Kelly A. Epling; Trustee:
Randy Boston;
ORANGE — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Deborah J. Watson; Trustee: Ernest Holbert Calaway, Stephen Aaron White;
RUTLAND — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Opal
Dyer; Trustee: Joe Bolin;
SALEM — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Carol A.
Taylor; Trustee: Rebecca L. Johnston;
SALISBURY — Fiscal Ofﬁcer:
James William Durst; Trustee: John
Hood;
SCIPIO — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Tina Cotterill; Trustee: Randy Butcher, Todd
Byrd, Jayson Tillis;
SUTTON — Fiscal Ofﬁcer: Jo Ann
Crisp, Bill Amberger; Trustee: Chuck
Mugrage, Marty L. Morarity;
SCHOOL BOARD
EASTERN (3 seats, plus one unexpired term to be elected) — Jessica
Staley (UTE), Floyd D. Ridenour,
Brandon Buckley, Adam Will.
MEIGS (3 seats) — Tony B. Hawk,
Todd Snowden, Roger Abbott, Barbara Anderson Musser;
SOUTHERN (2 seats) — Gary D.
Evans, Ashli Peterman;
ALEXANDER (2 seats) — Must
ﬁle with Athens County Board of

Showman of Showmen participants tried their hands at showing many different animals during the
competition.

Showman

TAX LEVIES —
COUNTY WIDE
MEIGS COUNTY PIONEER AND
HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Operating
expenses and maintenance – additional 0.5 mill;
MEIGS COUNTY 911 SERVICES:
Operating expenses — additional 1
mill;
MEIGS COUNTY: In partnership
with the humane society for the
expansion of the K9 center to include
felines — additional 1 mill.
TAX LEVIES —
TOWNSHIP and VILLAGE
ORANGE TWP.: Road maintenance
– additional 2 mill;
COLUMBIA TWP.: Operating and
maintaining equipment and buildings
for the ﬁre department — additional
0.5 mill;
SCIPIO TWP.: Maintaining and
operating cemeteries — replacement
0.5 mill;
RACINE VILLAGE: Fire protection
— replacement 0.7 mill;
RACINE VILLAGE: Fire protection
— additional 1 mill;
RUTLAND VILLAGE: General
operating expenses — additional 2
mill;
LETART TWP.: Operating and
maintaining and services ﬁre levy —
additional 1 mill;
CHESTER TWP.: Current expenses
— replacement 1 mill;
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE: Current
expenses — additional 2 mill;
POMEROY VILLAGE: Current
expenses — additional 3 mill;
OLIVE TWP.: Fire protection —
renewal 1.5 mill;
LEBANON TWP.: Fire protection
— additional 1 mill;
SALEM TWP.: Cemetery maintenance — 0.5 mill.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily
Sentinel.

From page 1

beef), Jessica Cook
(dairy breeding), Annie
McGrath (dairy feeders),
Jessica Parker (goats),
Shelbe Cochran (horses),
Michael Kesterson

(lambs), Mattisoon Finlaw (chickens), Rachel
Jackson (rabbits), and
Hannah Erwin (turkeys).

pion.
Lillian Roush, Troop
10046 — Life skills, no
sew, white; Outdoors,
From page 1
Gardening, blue; Science
and beyond, woodwork,
Courtlynn Krauetter,
Troop 1006 — Life skills, Grand Champion; Culinary, decorated cupcakes,
no sew blanket, HonorGrand Champion.
able Mention.
Hannah Damewood,
Gracie Banks, Troop
Troop 1004 — Culinary
10046 — Culinary cake,
decorated cupcakes,
blue; Arts, decorated
Grand Champion; Comclothing, Grand Chammunications scrapbook,
pion; Life skills, misc.
Grand Champion; Cussewing, blue.
toms and traditions,
Gracie Barton, Troop
1006 — Communications service project, Grand
scrapbook, white; Science Champion.
Claire Howard, Troop
and beyond, recycle pig,
1350 — Life skills, dog
blue.
jacket, blue; Culinary
Haylee Stout, Troop
decorated cake, blue;
1006 — Life skills,
Culinary rock candy, blue;
animal care, Reserve
Champion, judges choice; Communications multi
media, Grand Champion;
Outdoors, outdoor projArts, paper craft book
ect, Reserve Champion;
fold, Grand Champion;
Communications, scrapArts stained glass, Grand
book, Grand Champion;
Champion; Girl Scout
Arts, 3D, Grand Champrogram, Grand Champion; Culinary, cake,
Grand Champion; Science pion.
Sidney Workman,
and beyond, recycle,
Troop 1350 — Art string
bead bracelets, Grand
Champion; Customs and art, Grand Champion;
Culinary cheesecake,
traditions, holiday craft,
Grand Champion; ComGrand Champion; Girl
munications photography,
scouts, traditions, blue,
Grand Champion; Outjudges choice.
doors Bird house, Grand
Layla Nibert, Troop
Champion, judges choice.
1006 — Girl scout proFaith Roush, Troop
gram, traditions, white.
Paitin Langdon, Troop 1350 — Customs and
10046 — Arts Decorated traditions, tin punch
ornaments recycle, Grand
clothing, Grand Cham-

Champion; Science and
beyond, recycle chair,
Grand Champion, judges
choice; Outdoors, fairy
garden, red; Girl scout
program compass, blue;
Communications photography, Grand Champion;
Life skills, no sew knot
blanket, red; Culinary
cake, blue, Reserve
Champion; Culinary pretzels, blue, Reserve Champion; Art, latch rug, blue,
Grand Champion.
Troop results:
Troop 10046 — Arts,
misc craft, Grand champion; Girl scout program,
Promise and law, blue;
Customs and traditions,
service projects, blue.
Troop 1004 — Girl
scout program, thinking
day, blue; Art, 3D paint,
Reserve Champion; Girl
scout program, swaps,
blue; Outdoors, animal
prints, Grand Champion;
Customs and traditions,
service project, Grand
Champion; Art, collage,
blue; Art, misc craft,
owls, Grand Champion.
Troop 1006 — Customs and traditions,
service project, red; Outdoors, outdoor project,
Grand Champion; Art,
misc crafts, Grand Champion; Girl Scout program,
thinking day, blue; Girl
Scout program, celebrations, Grand Champion.

Scout

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Wilton Triggs, MD,
Plastic Surgeon,
has joined our team
of highly skilled
professionals at
our Gallipolis location!

Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

Dr. Triggs specializes in General Plastic Surgery, including but
not limited to:
Breast Reconstruction
Head and Neck Oncology
and Reconstruction

Body Contouring following
major weight loss
Aesthetic Surgery

Elective Hand Surgery
Wilton Triggs, MD, Plastic Surgery, received his Doctor of Medicine at
Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee, and completed his
residency in Plastic Surgery at the University of South Florida College
of Medicine in Tampa, Florida. Dr. Triggs is accepting new patients at
Holzer Gallipolis located at 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio.

OH-70142310

each species competes
with horses, hogs, feeder
calves, dairy cows, sheep,
goats, rabbits, chickens,
and turkeys.
Other showman,
named with the species
they represented, in the
competition on Friday
night included McKenzie
Long (under 700 pound
beef), Mackenzie Newell (over 700 pounds

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6 Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Fields named OSU’s starting QB
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ohio State coach
Ryan Day on Monday
made ofﬁcial what most
people ﬁgured was a foregone conclusion: Georgia
transfer Justin Fields
will be the starting quarterback when the No. 5
Buckeyes open the season
Aug. 31 against Florida
Atlantic.
Day had lured the talented sophomore in January to succeed Dwayne
Haskins Jr., and Fields
practiced with the startPaul Vernon | AP file
Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields runs through a drill during an ers from the moment he
arrived. His main compeNCAA college football practice March 6 in Columbus, Ohio.

tition this preseason was
Gunnar Hoak, a graduate
transfer from Kentucky
who got to campus this
summer and is still memorizing the playbook.
Still, Day was measured
in his praise of Fields,
who was one of the highest-rated prep prospects
in the nation in 2018 but
couldn’t wrest the starting job away from Jake
Fromm at Georgia last
season before deciding to
transfer.
“All that means is
that Justin will be taking the ﬁrst snap on (in

the opener), and where
it goes from there, who
knows,” Day said. “All the
guys had good camps, but
Justin kind of separated
himself the last week.”
Fields showed some
chops but was not spectacular in the spring
game, and Day said it
took him a few weeks of
preseason camp to ﬁnd
his feet.
“I think just now he’s
starting to scratch the
surface,” Day said. “I still
don’t think he’s where he
needs to be.”
Fields said he has

worked hard to get better on the ﬁeld and has
been trying to be more
vocal and become a more
forceful leader, an area
where Haskins initially
struggled last season.
“I feel like I’m improved
a lot overall, just every
part of my game,” Fields
said. “I feel way more
comfortable than in the
spring, and I think all
my teammates see that.
Coach Day deﬁnitely
sees it. I just feel more
comfortable with the
See FIELDS | 7

Lady Rebels
win opener over
Symmes Valley
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio — The Lady Rebels
nearly stumbled out out the gates, but made a
miraculous comeback.
The South Gallia volleyball team trailed nonconference guest Symmes Valley 2-0 in Monday’s
season-opening match in Gallia County, but the
host Lady Rebels shook off the rust and fought
back to win 3-2.
SGHS (1-0) jumped out to a 10-4 lead in the
opener, but the guests battled back and tied the
game at 21. Symmes Valley led for the ﬁrst time at
24-23, and then scored the next point to win Set 1
25-23.
After a pair of early lead changes in the second
game, the Lady Vikings opened up a 13-7 margin.
South Gallia made it back to within one, at 15-14,
but SVHS ended the game with a 10-to-3 run,
moving ahead 2-0 in the match with a 25-17 victory.
South Gallia led at the start of the third set,
but SVHS was in front at 5-3. An 8-to-2 run by
the hosts, was answered by four straight points
from the guests, and the teams were tied at 11.
After three more lead changes, Symmes Valley was
ahead 20-19. The Lady Vikings only scored once
more, however, as SGHS rallied back for the 25-21
victory.
The hosts led wire-to-wire in the fourth, stretching the margin to as many as 12 points on the way
to the 25-14 match-tying win.
The Lady Vikings led 3-1 in the ﬁnale, but
SGHS tied the game at four. The guests brieﬂy
reestablished their lead, at 5-4, but South Gallia
scored nine of the next 10 points and held on for
the match-clinching 15-11 victory.
Kiley Stapleton led the Lady Rebels with 16 service points, followed by Ellen Weaver and Christine Grifﬁth with 11 apiece. Isabella Cochran contributed eight points to the winning cause, Amaya
Howell added seven, Katie Bowling came up with
four, while Alyssa Cremeens chipped in with two.
This marks the ﬁrst win for SGHS ﬁrst-year
head coach Charles Maxam.
The Lady Rebels will go for the season sweep of
Symmes Valley when these teams meet on Sept. 4
in Lawrence County.
Next for SGHS, a trip to South Point on
Wednesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Aug. 21
Volleyball
River Valley at Rock Hill, 7:15
South Gallia at South Point, 7:15
Golf
Meigs, River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 4 p.m.
Point home match, 4:30
Gallia Academy boys at South Point, 4 p.m.
South Gallia, Southern at Trimble, 4:30
Thursday, Aug. 22
Volleyball
Eastern at Meigs, 7:15
Gallia Academy at Coal Grove, 6:45
Southern at River Valley, 7:15
Soccer
Gallia Academy boys at Athens, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy girls at Athens, 5 p.m.
Golf
Logan, Jackson at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
South Gallia, Southern at Eastern, 4:30

David J. Phillip | AP file

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney celebrates in the final seconds of the NCAA college football playoff championship game against
Alabama on Jan. 7 in Santa Clara, Calif. For the first time, the defending national champion Tigers are No. 1 in The Associated Press
preseason Top 25 presented by Regions Bank.

Clemson tops AP preseason Top 25
By Ralph D. Russo
The Associated Press

Cross off another
milestone for Clemson,
college football’s newest
superpower.
For the ﬁrst time, the
defending national champion Tigers are No. 1 in
The Associated Press preseason Top 25 presented
by Regions Bank. The
Tigers won the program’s
second national title in
three seasons behind
freshman quarterback
Trevor Lawrence in January. Clemson now can
claim equal standing with
Alabama at the top of the
sport.
The Crimson Tide,
coming off a 44-16 loss
to Clemson in the College Football Playoff
championship, is No. 2.
Clemson received 52 ﬁrstplace votes and Alabama
received the other 10
from the media. Clemson snaps a record-tying
string of three straight
years in which Alabama
was preseason No. 1.
Georgia, Alabama’s
Southeastern Conference
rival, is No. 3, followed
by No. 4 Oklahoma and
No. 5 Ohio State.
Clemson’s rise under
coach Dabo Swinney has
been uncommon in college football. The school
won the national championship in 1981, but mostly it had resided on a tier
well below the traditional
national powers. Clemson
football was usually good
and sometimes excellent,
but never this.
Last season’s championship made Clemson
just the 12th school with

at least three AP titles
since the poll started in
1936.
Clemson’s latest accomplishment is not much of
an accomplishment at all
to Swinney.
“It just doesn’t matter,”
he said Monday after
practice about being
preseason No. 1. “Unless
they bring us a trophy.”
The Tigers enter 2019
with a 15-game winning
streak and eight straight
double-digit victory seasons. Since 2015, when
they lost the national
championship game to
Alabama, the Tigers are
55-4.
Nick Saban’s Alabama
dynasty, with ﬁve national titles in a 10-year span,
has ﬁnally met its match.
The Tide is also 55-4 in
the last four seasons.
Clemson and Alabama
have split the last four
national championships,
played in the last four
playoffs and are poised to
make it ﬁve straight. This
will be the third time
since 2016 the Tigers and
Tide have started the season Nos. 1 and 2 in the
Top 25. Beginning with
2015, when Alabama and
Clemson occupied the
top two spots in the last
four AP polls of the season, the Tide and Tigers
have been Nos. 1 and 2 in
some order 22 times.
Last year’s Clemson
team was highlighted by
a defensive line that had
three starters selected in
the ﬁrst round of the NFL
draft, and a fourth taken
in round four.
The Tigers have some
rebuilding to do on that
side of the ball, but

recent history suggests
reinforcements are ready.
This year Lawrence and
the offense will be the
headliners. The ﬁrst
freshman quarterback in
more than three decades
to lead a team to a
national championship,
Lawrence will be joined
by star receivers Tee Higgins (12 touchdowns)
and Justyn Ross (nine
touchdowns) and gamebreaking running back
Travis Etienne (8.1 yards
per carry).
Alabama returns quarterback Tua Tagovailoa,
the Heisman Trophy
runner-up, and an array
of weapons, too. As a
new season starts, college football fans best
be prepared for Tide vs.
Tigers V.
The Top 25 is sponsored by Regions Bank
this season, the ﬁrst time
the poll has ever had a
presenting sponsor.
Poll points
We’re No. 1!
Clemson is the 23rd
team to be preseason No.
1 and the ﬁrst ﬁrst-timer
since Georgia in 2008.
The Tigers will try to
become the 12th team
to start No. 1 and ﬁnish
No. 1 since the preseason
poll started in 1950. The
last to do it was Alabama
in 2017. Only two teams
have gone wire-to-wire
as No. 1: Florida State
in 1999 and Southern
California in 2004. Alabama has now been No.
2 to start the season nine
times, matching Oklahoma for the most in AP
poll history. Just as many
teams (11) have started

No. 2 and won the title as
No. 1.
Consistent Buckeyes
Ohio State is ranked
in the preseason for the
31st consecutive season
(1989-2019), the third
best all-time streak
behind only Penn State
(34 years, 1968-2002)
and Nebraska (33 years,
1970-2002). The Buckeyes have been ranked in
66 of 70 preseason polls,
most of any school. The
Buckeyes were unranked
in 1966-67, 1979 and
1988.
Tough draw
No. 12 Texas A&amp;M and
South Carolina will each
play the preseason top
three. Only three times
previously has a team had
the entire preseason top
three on its schedule:
— In 1968, Northwestern faced Purdue, USC
and Notre Dame and
went 0-3.
— In 1972, Minnesota
faced Nebraska, Colorado
and Ohio State and went
0-3.
— In 1975, Missouri
faced Oklahoma, Alabama and Michigan and
went 1-2, beating No.
2 Alabama to open the
season.
Been a while
— No. 14 Utah has
been a regular in the
rankings for most of the
last ﬁve seasons, but
the Utes have not been
ranked in the preseason
since 2011 when they
started No. 19. That was
the season after coach
See CLEMSON | 7

�SPORTS/TELEVISION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 21, 2019 7

Browns hoping erratic kickers straighten out
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns
coach Freddie Kitchens isn’t quite
ready to give his kickers the boot.
Despite erratic performances —
wide right, wide left, short, off the
uprights — in training camp and
exhibitions by incumbent Greg
Joseph and rookie Austin Seibert,
Kitchens said the team has no
immediate plans to sign another
kicker.
That could change, though.
“We are not trying to bring in a
new kicker right now,” Kitchens
said following Monday’s practice.
“We have two guys right here that
can kick the ball a long way. We
need them to get their act right.
We are not looking to replace them
right now. We are looking to getting these guys better and continuing to get better.
“The process of evaluation and
the process of judging them has
not concluded yet. When it concludes, then we will make that
decision.”
But with every miss, time is
becoming an issue for the Browns,
who endured kicking problems
early last season and played in
eight games decided by four points
or fewer.
Since the beginning of camp,
both Joseph and Seibert have
struggled with accuracy and consistency.
On Monday, Joseph went 4 of
6 (he missed from 53, 56 yards)
during ﬁeld-goal drills and made
a 44-yarder to cap a two-minute
drive by the Browns’ ﬁrst-team
offense.
Seibert was also 4 of 6 during
the kicking session, but pushed a
40-yarder left in the two-minute
drill.
The ﬁfth-round draft pick from
Oklahoma has been especially
sketchy, leading to questions about
whether his struggles are more
mental than physical.

Jeff Haynes | AP file

thinking, ‘Maybe we will make it.’
I want to know that we are going
to make it,” he said. “(Former
Alabama Coach) Coach (Gene)
Stallings used to tell me all the
time when I step up into the pocket
and I throw the ball, he wants to
be able to close his eyes and know
that it is made and that it is completed.
“That is what I want. I want to
be able to send them out there,
turn around and go talk to the
offense and hear about the score.”
The Browns play their third preseason game on Friday at Tampa
Bay, and Kitchens was asked if this
could be a do-or-die week for his
kickers.
“Hopefully they’ve been treating
it like that,” Kitchens said. “Everybody’s ﬁghting for a job right now.”
Kitchens is pretty clear on what
he needs from Joseph and Seibert
going forward.
“I want the ball to go through
and not outside those yellow
poles,” he said.

Fields

Drake felt the 5-foot-10,
183-pound former Toledo
star could help ﬁll the
void. Drake highlighted
Johnson’s route-running
and also called the rookie
one of the most natural
pass catchers he’s seen,
high praise from a coach
who also mentored Cardinals star Larry Fitzgerald
and longtime NFL receiver Brandon Marshall
among others.
“We got close,” Johnson said. “Once I met him
at my pro day, we clicked
and I just felt like that
was my guy. He still is my
guy to this day.”
Johnson ﬂashed his talent during his preseason
debut last week against
Kansas City, ending with
three receptions for 46
yards and a touchdown.
The rookie caught an
earlier fourth-quarter
touchdown, but the play
was called back because
of offensive pass interference, which was upheld
following a video review.

“I was supposed to
have two (touchdowns),
but I can only control
what I can control,”
Johnson said. “They were
saying I pushed off at the
top of the route. Clearly, I
didn’t, but I just play football and they make the
call. It was still a great
game.”

playbook and more
comfortable in the
pocket.”
The magnificent seven
The seven captains
voted on by their teammates include two from
last year: linebacker Tuf
Borland and safety Jordan Fuller.
First-time captains
are receivers K.J. Hill
and C.J. Saunders, running back J.K. Dobbins,
and defensive linemen
Chase Young and Jonathan Cooper.
“I never really visualized (becoming a
captain) like I did other
things,” acknowledged
Young, a junior who
with a big season could
be a ﬁrst-round NFL
draft pick next spring .
“But when I got more
into the program and
more into what being a
Buckeye was, I wanted
to be part of that group

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

MASON, W.Va. — It
only takes one.
Visiting Winﬁeld
claimed a one-stroke
victory over a ﬁve-team
ﬁeld on Monday during
a non-conference golf
match hosted by Point
Pleasant at Riverside
Golf Course.
The Generals ﬁred a
four-man tally of 204,
which was just enough
to get past the runnerup Black Knights (205).
Miller was third overall
with a 229, while Buffalo
(243) and River Valley
(253) rounded out the
team scoring.
Chase Milbee of WHS
also claimed medalist
honors with a 1-over
par round of 36. Hunter

Dutiel of Miller was the
overall runner-up with a
43.
Brennen Sang paced
PPHS with a 44, followed
by Joe Milhoan with a
51 and Alex Hill with a
53. Kaden McCutcheon
completed the Point team
tally with a 57, while
Weston Higginbotham
also added a 69.
Dalton Mershon led the
Raiders with a 59, with
Joel Horner and Alex
Euton following with
respective efforts of 62
and 65. Jordan Lambert
completed the team score
with a 66, while Scott
Yost also shot a 70.
Chase Venes and Zack
Garrison both led Buffalo
with matching rounds of
57.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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7

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Still looking for backup RB
One of the biggest
challenges of the preseason for Day is trying
to line up a tailback to
spell Dobbins , who is
expected to shoulder
most of the load if he
stays healthy.
Demario McCall,
who was expected to be
an H-back, is the most
likely candidate, Day
said Monday. Master
Teague was a frontrunner, but he just got
back on the ﬁeld after
an injury. Behind them
are a couple of promising true freshmen.
“Demario has had a
good camp,” Day said.
“I think there’s a chance
you see them all play.
(But) Demario has a leg
up.”

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

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9:30

10

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10:30

America's Got Talent "Live Songland "Old Dominion/
Game Night "Brooklyn Nine
Results 2" (N)
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Neyo Game Night" (N)
America's Got Talent "Live Songland "Old Dominion/
Game Night "Brooklyn Nine
Results 2" (N)
Jeep" (N)
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The
Schooled "Be Modern Fam SingleParent Celebrity Family Feud
Goldbergs
Like Mike"
"The Wild" "Pilot"
Life From Above "Moving Planet"
Food: What the Heck Dr. Mark Hyman
Cameras in space tell stories of life on our provides an effective solution to what we
planet from a brand new perspective. (N)
should all be eating.
The
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Goldbergs
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Nature "A Squirrel's Guide to Success" A Life From Above "Moving Planet"
guide to the squirrel’s success along with an Cameras in space tell stories of life on our
orphan red squirrel called Billy.
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Big Brother (N)
SEAL Team "Payback"
S.W.A.T. "Invisible"

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18 (WGN) In the Heat of the Night
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Generals edge
Point at Riverside

Steelers quarterback
Mason Rudolph didn’t
believe Johnson pushed
off either.
“They robbed him of
that ﬁrst (touchdown),”
Rudolph said. “That was
rough. He should’ve had
two, but it was good to
see him ﬁnish on a high
note with a touchdown.”

2016 season. That is
also the longest run
of unranked teams the
Huskers have had since
the late ’50s.
Conference call
Big Ten — 7
SEC — 6
Pac 12 — 5
Big 12 — 3
ACC — 2
American — 1
Independent — 1
Ranked vs. Ranked
The ﬁrst week of
the season with a full
schedule of games is
lacking marquee matchups.
No. 16 Auburn faces
No. 11 Oregon at the
home of the Dallas
Cowboys in Arlington,
Texas. It’s the only
Week 1 game with two
ranked teams. The ﬁrst
regular-season Top 25
will be released Sept.
3, the Tuesday after
Labor Day. The rest of
the regular-season rankings will be released on
Sundays.

of people who can lead
a team.”
By most accounts,
Young is the loudest
and most demonstrative
among the seven.
Saunders is a former
walk-on who plays mostly on special teams.

From page 6

Johnson dedicates rookie year to late coach
PITTSBURGH (AP) —
Pittsburgh Steelers wide
receiver Diontae Johnson
is dedicating his rookie
season to Darryl Drake.
Drake died a week ago
and Johnson honored
the Steelers’ former wide
receivers coach with his
ﬁrst NFL touchdown
reception in Pittsburgh’s
second preseason game,
a home victory Saturday
against Kansas City.
“That touchdown was
for Coach Drake,” Johnson said. “Every touchdown I score this year is
going to be for him.”
Drake lobbied for the
Steelers to draft Johnson
in the third round this
past spring. The Steelers
had a need at receiver
following the high-proﬁle
departure of Antonio
Brown, who left the team
before a key Week 17
home game and spent
the offseason lashing out
until the organization
traded the four-time AllPro to Oakland.

From page 6

Kyle Whittingham’s
team went unbeaten.
In 2014, ‘15, and ‘16,
the Utes ﬁnished the
season ranked after
starting unranked.
— No. 21 Iowa State
is making its second
appearance in the
preseason poll. The
Cyclones were No. 20
in 1978.
— No. 22 Syracuse
is in the preseason Top
25 for the ﬁrst time
since 1998 when the
Orange were No. 17.
— No. 24 Nebraska
has not been ranked
in the preseason since
2014, the program’s
longest drought since
1955-59. The ranking
also ends a string of 32
straight polls in which
Nebraska has not been
ranked, dating back
to the ﬁnal one of the

Cleveland Browns kicker Austin Seibert (2) watches his kick against the Indianapolis
Colts during an NFL preseason football game Aug. 17 in Indianapolis. Browns coach
Freddie Kitchens says there are no immediate plans to sign another kicker despite erratic
performances by incumbent Greg Joseph and rookie Austin Seibert during training camp
and exhibitions.

“He has to get it ﬁgured out,”
Kitchens said. “If I make him
nervous, I plan on being at the
games.”
Joseph, who missed four of 29
extra-point attempts last season,
botched one in the preseason opener against Washington and was off
the mark on a 53-yard ﬁeld-goal
attempt Saturday at Indianapolis.
Seibert missed a 52-yarder
against the Colts and hasn’t looked
truly comfortable from the moment
he arrived in May.
Both kickers have plenty of leg
strength, that’s not the issue. They
just haven’t been precise with their
aim, and that can be scary for a
team such as the Browns who have
playoff aspirations.
Kitchens needs one or both of
them to be conﬁdent, which in
turn will allow him to put them
in the game without a moment’s
hesitation.
“When we send the ﬁeld goal
team out there, I do not want to
send the ﬁeld goal team out there

Clemson

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�COMICS

8 Wednesday, August 21, 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

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By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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By Vic Lee

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by Dave Green

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 21, 2019 9

Antonio Brown practices with Raiders in certified helmet
AP Pro Football Writer

ALAMEDA, Calif. —
Star receiver Antonio
Brown practiced in a
certiﬁed helmet with
the Oakland Raiders on
Tuesday, two days after
being given an ultimatum
by general manager Mike
Mayock to be “all in or all
out.”
“He’s all in, ready to
go,” coach Jon Gruden
said. “That’s my understanding. Really happy to
have him out here. He’s a
great player.”
Brown didn’t attend
practice Sunday as he
worked to ﬁnd a helmet

he was comfortable using
and that met safety standards set by the NFL
and NFLPA. He lost a
grievance last week in
which he sought to be
allowed to use the Schutt
Air Advantage helmet he
has worn throughout his
career. But the helmet
was too old to be certiﬁed
as safe.
He had hoped to ﬁnd
a newer version of his
preferred helmet that
could be approved but the
one he submitted failed a
safety test conducted by
the league and union.
He ﬁled a second grievance Monday seeking a
one-year grace period,

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

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

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General
+DQG\ 0DQ QHHGHG IRU KRPH
PDLQWHQDQFH�
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OHDYH PHVVDJH
ANNOUNCEMENTS

AUCTIONS

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Apartments/Townhouses
Ellm View Apts.
&amp;DOO IRU DPHQLWLHV�
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Equal Housing Opportunity
EMPLOYMENT
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Auto Auction
SERVICES
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, August 23,
2019 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
9,1� �'�*3��5��%������
2007 Dodge Caravan SXT
9,1� �*�-)����:�������
1998 Chevy Cavalier
9,1� �/1+0��7��5������
2007 Lincoln MKZ
9,1� �*7(.��7��(������
2003 GMC Sierra
9,1� �-�)7��:��'������
2008 Jeep Patriot
9,1� �)0)8�����/%�����
2005 Ford Expedition

hard and running good
routes.”
Brown didn’t take part
in a full practice during
the Raiders’ entire training camp stay in Napa,
which wrapped up Monday, missing time because
of frost bite on his feet
suffered in a cryotherapy
accident in France and
then over the helmet
issue.
That led to Mayock sayJeff Chiu | AP
ing
Sunday that the RaidOakland Raiders’ Antonio Brown carries his helmet as he walks off
ers
had
supported Brown
the field after practice in Alameda, Calif., on Tuesday. Brown finally
found a helmet he was comfortable using and that met safety but had “exhausted all
standards set by the NFL and NFLPA.
avenues of relief.”
Gruden said the drama
surrounding Brown hasn’t
great retention of what
gram. ... Just good to
impacted the team’s prepwe’re doing. He didn’t
have him back. He’s in
great shape. He’s running aration for the season.
miss the offseason pro-

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

Miscellaneous
7RQV RI ORRVH GLUW �IUHH�
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������������

according to a person
familiar with the situation
who spoke on condition
of anonymity because it
wasn’t made public. But
he is back practicing with
the team while that gets
resolved.
Brown was not wearing a helmet during the
open portion of practice
and spent some of the
time during stretch in the
nearby weight room. But
he walked off the ﬁeld
after practice holding a
new helmet and Gruden
said he’s running well
after also missing time
with frostbitten feet.
“He’s really good,”
Gruden said. “He’s shown

Professional Services

0RELOH 3RZHU
:DVKLQJ
7UHH 6HUYLFH
/DZQ /DQGVFDSH
������������
3UHIHUUHG 3DLQWHUV
5HVLGHQWLDO
&amp;RPPHUFLDO
������������
5(&lt;12/'6
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������������

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

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

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
FARMERS BANK AND SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF,
VS. JAMES CRAIG COTTRILL, ET AL., DEFENDANTS,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
CASE NO. 19 CV 033.
To: The Unknown Heirs, Next of Kin, Spouses, Devisees,
Legatees, Administrators, Executors, Successors and
Assigns, if any, of Sharon S. Cottrill, Deceased, and the
Unknown Spouses of any Individual Listed Herein; names
and addresses unknown.
To: Occupants, Unknown Tenants or Trespassers, if any, at
the residence at 2634 Third St., Syracuse, Ohio 45779,
names unknown
You are hereby notified that you have been named Defendants
in the action entitled Farmers Bank and Savings Company,
Plaintiff, vs. James Craig Cottrill, et al., et al., Defendants.
This action has been assigned Case No. 19 CV 033, and is
pending in the Court of Common Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio.
The object of the Complaint demands judgment against the Defendants, for purposes of foreclosing on security, in the sum of
$23,231.60, from May 2, 2019, with interest thereon at the rate
of $4.64 per day (7.95% per annum), until fully paid, plus any
costs advanced or fees accrued, in order to foreclose upon a
mortgage upon real estate located at 2634 Third St., Syracuse,
OH 45779 (Auditor’s Parcel Nos.: 20-00744.000 and
20-00104.000, which is more fully described in deed recorded
in Volume 174, Page 673, Meigs County Official Records, and
costs of this action, that the Plaintiff’s mortgage be adjudged
the first and best lien upon the residential real property, except
for real estate taxes; that all of the Defendants be required to
set up their respective claims to the real property, if any, or be
forever barred therefrom; that the equity of redemption of all
Defendants be foreclosed; that the liens on the real property be
marshalled; that the real property be sold and that the proceeds
of such sale be applied first in payment of the judgment of the
Plaintiff; that the purchaser at such foreclosure sale be awarded
a writ of possession and all other persons in possession of the
real property be evicted; that a receiver be appointed to take
charge of the real property and collect rents therefrom; and that
the Plaintiff be given such other relief as the Court deems appropriate.

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?
�
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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

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

You are required to answer the Complaint within twenty-eight
(28) days after the last publication of this Notice, which will be
published once each week for three (3) successive weeks. The
last publication will be made on the 4th day of September,
2019, and the twenty-eight (28) days for answer will commence
on that date. In the case of your failure to answer or otherwise
respond as requested by the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure,
judgment by default will be rendered against you and for the relief demanded in the Complaint.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE,
SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP, P.O. Box 686, Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone: (740) 992-6689

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

8/21/19, 8/28/19, 9/4/19

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

OH-70129402

By Josh Dubow

CALL TODAY!

�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Gordon back with Pats while on injury list
FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
(AP) — Oft-suspended
wide receiver Josh Gordon returned to the New
England Patriots’ practice
ﬁeld on Monday without
pads and without saying
when he might be able to
play again.
Gordon was seen
stretching on the ﬁeld
during the portion of the
team’s workout that was
open to the media. In the
locker room before practice, he declined a request
for an interview.
“I don’t have time
today,” he said. “I’ll be
around, though.”
The Patriots placed
Gordon on the non-football injury list on Sunday,
two days after the NFL
reinstated him from an
indeﬁnite suspension that
cost him the ﬁnal three
games of the 2018 regular
season and the team’s
Super Bowl run. Commissioner Roger Goodell said
Gordon could participate
in team meetings, conditioning and individual
workouts while working
himself back into shape.
A 2012 second-round
draft pick by the Cleveland Browns, Gordon
was suspended for the
ﬁrst two games of the

career.”
The Browns traded
him to New England in
September, pairing him
with Tom Brady and a
locker room that was
supposed to be more disciplined than the one he
left behind in Cleveland.
He had 40 receptions
for 720 yards and three
touchdowns before he
said on Dec. 20 that he
was stepping away from
football to concentrate on
his mental health.
A few hours later, the
NFL announced that

2013 season for violating
the league’s substance
abuse policy but still
caught 87 passes for nine
touchdowns and a leagueleading 1,646 yards and
was named to the All-Pro
team.
He was suspended
again in 2015 and missed
two whole seasons.
In interviews, he has
acknowledged using
Xanax, cocaine, marijuana and other narcotics,
and he said in 2017 he
smoked pot before “probably every game of my

he had been suspended
indeﬁnitely. That ended
on Friday, the league said,
and “subject to appropriate progress on clinical
care and other arrangements, he will be permitted to participate in
team activities, including
practice.”
“We are all rooting for
Josh to succeed, both
personally and professionally,” Goodell said in
the statement. “Everyone
shares in that hope and
will continue to support him to every extent
possible. But as Josh
acknowledged, ultimately
his success is up to him.”
Gordon did not play
in Saturday’s exhibition
game against the Tennessee Titans and will not be
allowed to play in Thursday night’s game against
the Carolina Panthers
because he hasn’t had
enough time to practice
with the team, the league
said.
Patriots coach Bill
Belichick declined to
comment on Gordon’s
status on Monday. Teammates said they were glad
to have him back.

OH-70140764

8 AM

2 PM

73°

83°

82°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.49
2.50
30.80
29.01

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Aug 23 Aug 30

First

Sep 5

Full

Sep 14

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

Major
Today 4:33a
Thu. 5:20a
Fri.
6:07a
Sat.
6:56a
Sun. 7:46a
Mon. 8:38a
Tue. 9:32a

Minor
10:44a
11:31a
12:19p
12:43a
1:32a
2:24a
3:17a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
4:55p
5:42p
6:31p
7:22p
8:14p
9:08p
10:03p

Minor
11:05p
11:54p
---1:09p
2:00p
2:53p
3:47p

WEATHER HISTORY
By Aug. 21, 1888, a massive
lightning-induced ﬁre that consumed
six billion board feet of lumber in the
northern Rockies was ﬁnally contained. By then, the ﬁre had claimed
851 lives.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Periods of sun, a
t-storm; not as warm

Pleasant with partial
sunshine

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

0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Chillicothe
87/69

Level
13.36
16.19
21.50
13.02
13.16
25.28
13.51
25.91
34.73
13.23
16.00
34.10
13.90

Portsmouth
88/71

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.51
+0.27
+0.15
+0.30
-0.05
+0.19
+0.51
+0.15
+0.20
+0.18
+0.80
+0.20
+0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Mostly cloudy

87°
69°

Partly sunny with a
t-storm possible

Partly sunny with a
t-storm possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
87/69

Athens
86/68

Today

St. Marys
87/69

Parkersburg
88/67

Coolville
86/69

Elizabeth
88/70

Spencer
88/69

Buffalo
89/72

Ironton
88/71

Milton
88/71

St. Albans
89/71

Huntington
88/71

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
69/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
79/60
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
87/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

85°
65°

Marietta
87/69

Wilkesville
87/69
POMEROY
Jackson
88/71
88/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/71
89/71
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
87/69
GALLIPOLIS
90/72
89/72
89/72

Ashland
87/70
Grayson
87/71

MONDAY

84°
63°

Murray City
86/68

McArthur
87/68

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

Logan
86/68

Adelphi
87/69

South Shore Greenup
87/71
87/70

62

SUNDAY

Mostly cloudy and
humid with a t-storm

Lucasville
89/72
Very High

SATURDAY

81°
63°

Very High

Primary: NA - technical issue
Mold: 0

WASHINGTON (AP) — What started as an
innocuous conversation during a public event has
evolved into a golf partnership between NBA star
Stephen Curry and Howard University.
The two-time NBA MVP announced Monday
that he is helping Howard re-establish a golf program. Curry is providing a donation that will allow
one of the country’s most prominent historically
black universities to launch Division I women’s
and men’s teams for the 2020-21 academic year.
The 31-year-old Curry, who has won three NBA
championships with the Golden State Warriors,
has long been known as a passionate golfer. But
the idea of partnering with Howard didn’t start
until January, when Curry went to the campus for
a screening of the documentary “Emanuel.”
After watching the ﬁlm — which chronicles
the 2015 shooting of nine black worshippers
at a church in South Carolina — Curry was
approached by Howard student Otis Ferguson.
The senior explained to Curry how he had been
unsuccessfully trying to start up an ofﬁcial university golf team. Howard previously ﬁelded a Division II golf team but that was discontinued.
The exact amount of Curry’s donation has not
been disclosed, but the university announced it
would be a six-year partnership. Sports apparel
company Under Armour, which sponsors Curry
and is based in nearby Baltimore, will provide the
uniforms and golf club manufacturer Callaway will
supply the equipment.

78°
59°

Waverly
87/71

Pollen: 0

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

FRIDAY

NBA’s Curry helps Howard
U. start Division I golf team

85°
63°

4

Primary: NA - technical issue

Today
Thu.
6:47 a.m. 6:48 a.m.
8:16 p.m. 8:14 p.m.
11:35 p.m.
none
12:19 p.m. 1:18 p.m.

THURSDAY

Humid today and tonight with a shower or
thunderstorm. High 90° / Low 72°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
92°
71°
86°
64°
100° in 1983
48° in 1953

BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) — Dale Earnhardt Jr.
says his family is “truly blessed” that no one was
seriously injured when his plane crash-landed last
week in Tennessee.
The retired NASCAR driver, now a television
analyst, issued a statement Monday praising the
“quick response of my pilots, local law enforcement, emergency personnel and hospital staff.” He
thanked people for their support and prayers.
Investigators say the plane carrying Earnhardt
and his family bounced multiple times during
a crash-landing Thursday in Elizabethton and
veered off the runway before ending up on a highway. The National Transportation Safety Board is
investigating the cause.
Earnhardt was with wife Amy, 15-month-old
daughter Isla, two pilots and the family dog. He
was to have been part of NBC’s broadcast team for
Saturday night’s Cup Series race at Bristol Motor
Speedway.
Earnhardt says he and his wife appreciate the
privacy extended to them as they process what
happened.

Elise Amendola | AP

TODAY

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Earnhardt ‘truly blessed’ no
one seriously hurt in crash

New England Patriots wide receivers Josh Gordon, middle, Jakobi Meyers (16) and Cameron Meredith
(1) warm up at NFL football practice Monday in Foxborough, Mass.

$500 FOR SAFE RETURN

WEATHER

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Clendenin
90/69
Charleston
89/69

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
68/42

Billings
92/62

Montreal
82/65
Minneapolis
78/57
Chicago
82/63

Denver
83/59

Toronto
82/56

Detroit
87/61

New York
87/75
Washington
91/77

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
91/63/t 93/65/pc
66/50/pc 68/53/pc
92/75/pc
91/73/t
87/77/pc
88/70/t
93/73/t 93/69/c
92/62/s 88/58/pc
97/63/s 85/56/pc
85/72/t 91/66/pc
89/69/t 84/63/c
89/72/pc
91/72/t
77/55/t 82/54/pc
82/63/pc 77/63/pc
87/67/t
82/66/t
85/63/t 73/56/pc
88/66/t 79/60/pc
99/78/s 98/77/s
83/59/t 88/62/pc
74/58/r 78/56/pc
87/61/t 77/59/pc
91/77/s 91/77/pc
94/76/t 93/77/s
87/66/t 78/64/pc
86/65/t
78/66/t
109/82/s 107/80/s
96/73/pc
91/72/t
87/65/pc 85/64/pc
92/72/t 86/70/c
91/76/pc 90/75/pc
78/57/s 75/54/s
92/74/pc
89/73/t
88/77/pc 90/77/pc
87/75/t 89/68/pc
98/72/pc 94/70/pc
90/74/pc
90/74/t
92/75/t
92/69/t
114/83/s 108/84/pc
84/63/t 76/56/c
81/67/r 86/60/pc
87/73/pc
92/73/t
89/74/pc
94/72/t
89/72/t
82/67/t
99/72/s 94/67/pc
79/60/pc 79/56/pc
69/58/r 75/57/pc
91/77/t 93/72/pc

EXTREMES TUESDAY

Kansas City
86/65

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
92/75

El Paso
98/74

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

High
Low

107° in Thermal, CA
30° in Stanley, ID

Global
Chihuahua
94/67

High
121° in Failaka Island, Kuwait
Low -26° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
94/76
Monterrey
98/72

Miami
91/76

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

OH-70107872

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