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                  <text>Spurrier’s
Honor
Flight

Farm
Festival
scenes

Blue
Devils
win

NEWS s 7A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 41, Volume 53

Sunday, October 13, 2019 s $2

Farm festivities in Gallia

County meets
architects;
state responds
to jail issues
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
com

Dean Wright | OVP

Workers work beneath the sorghum demonstration barn on the Bob Evans Farm during the 49th annual Bob Evans Farm Festival which began on Friday and continues
throughoutt the weekend. The event traditionally draws thousands to celebrate agriculture, food and Appalachian culture. More photos from opening day inside this
edition and online at www.mydailytribune.com.

Meigs Museum opens
New location
in Middleport
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MIDDLEPORT — The
grand opening for the new
Meigs County Historical
Society Museum located in
Middleport will be held on Oct.
22 as part of a “Business After
Hours” event with the Meigs
County Chamber and Tourism
ofﬁce.
The Historical Society has
ofﬁcially relocated from its
former location on Butternut
Avenue in Pomeroy to South
Third Avenue in Middleport.
The Middleport property,
which includes three total
buildings, was donated to the
Historical Society, with renovation work having been ongoing
for several months in preparation for the move.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

A new, expanded kid’s area is set up at the new museum.

Vicki Hanson, who serves on
the Historical Society board,
recently gave the Sentinel
a tour of the new building,
explaining some of the displays, as well as future work
which still needs to be completed on the buildings.
The larger space allows for
items which had been stored

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Classifieds: 5B
Comics: 6B

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away and not seen for decades
to be on display for public
viewing.
Among the current displays
are an area on the Skate-Away
which was located near Chester, a more than 100-year old
piano, a telephone switchboard
and many other items.
A kid’s corner is set up in

the front of the building to
allow for expanded children’s
programming at the museum,
passing along the county’s 200
year history to the next generation.
The gift shop area contains
many Meigs County speciﬁc
items, including Cat’s Meow
statues of several buildings,
including the newest ones, the
Schwegman &amp; Roedel Building (which once housed the
Book Mobile) and the Masonic
Temple.
The building is handicap
accessible and has plenty of
parking, including handicap
parking.
Genealogy research can also
be completed at the museum.
Among the work remaining
to be completed is roof work
on all of the buildings, as well
as brick work on the 1872 furniture factory building which
sits at the rear of the property.
The bricks also need to be
See MUSEUM | 7A

Poet’s
Night Out
planned
Staff report

MIDDLEPORT — Do you
have a favorite poem? Or maybe
you write your own poetry.
Local poets and poetry lovers
will have their chance to enjoy
an evening of poetry during
“Poet’s Night Out” hosted by
the Riverbend Arts Council on
Oct. 15.
The event will take place
from 7-9 p.m. on Tuesday,
Riverbend Arts Council Facebook photo
Oct. 15, at the Riverbend Arts Lily King sharing one of her favorites during “Poet’s

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia
County ofﬁcials gathered
during the Board of
Gallia County Commissioners regular Thursday
meeting to listen to representatives from DLZ,
a construction and architect consultancy ﬁrm, to
discuss ongoing plans
and a schedule for the
creation of a new county
jail.
The current Gallia Jail
has recently become a
subject of national attention for a variety of ongoing jail troubles, including three escapes since
August, the recent deaths
of two individuals and
reports that the jail has
been found in noncompliance of several state jail
standards over the past
few years.
DLZ consultants, Principal Architect Eric Ratts
and Director of Architecture Greg Galieti,
addressed commissioners, representatives from
the Gallia Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
and the Gallia Economic
Development Ofﬁce during the meeting.
“We’re in the programming phase right now
and the plan is to wrap
See COUNTY | 5A

Heath
screening
event Tuesday
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — This
October, Holzer is proud
to participate in National
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month.
Each of Holzer’s locations that provide mammograms will be giving a
free tote to each mammogram patient in October.
In addition, Holzer Center for Cancer Care will
be providing a Health
Screening Event on
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 5 p.m.
to 7 p.m. Skin Screenings, Breast Exams and
Education, Bone Density
Testing, and Blood Pressure Checks will be available during the event.
Refreshments and tours
of the facility will also be
available.
Breast cancer is the
second most common
kind of cancer in women.
About one in eight
women born today in
the United States will
be diagnosed breast
cancer at some point.
The good news is that
many women can survive
breast cancer if it’s found
and treated early. If you
are a woman age 40, talk
with your doctor about
starting your annual
screening mammograms.
It’s important to discuss
your risk for breast cancer, especially if a close
family member of yours
had breast or ovarian

Night Out” at the Riverbend Arts Council on April 23.

See POET’S | 5A She read “Macavity The Mystery Cat” by T.S. Eliot.

See HEALTH | 5A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, October 13, 2019

OBITUARIES

Sunday Times-Sentinel

LEARNING CPR

RUBY IRENE DOSS
GALLIPOLIS —
Ruby Irene Doss, 85 of
Gallipolis, passed away
on October 2, 2019
at OSU Hospital in
Columbus.
She was preceded in
death by her parents,
Wiley and Bessi Coleman; her husband of
60 years, John Doss; an
infant daughter, Connie Sue Doss and many
siblings.
She is survived by six

children, John (Gwen)
Doss, Timothy Doss,
Phillip (Amber) Doss,
all of Gallipolis, Mary
(David Jenkins) Holstein of Oak Hill, Frank
(Kelly Martin) Doss of
Gallipolis, Anna (David
Smith) Ferguson of Syracuse; 12 grandchildren
and six great grandchildren.
There will be no
services due to her
request.

FRAZIER
POMEROY — Bo Frazier, 77, of Pomeroy, died
Thursday, October 10, 2019 in the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
There will be no calling hours nor funeral services. Interment will be in the Riverview Cemetery.
The Cremeeens-King Funeral Home, Pomeroy is
entrusted with the arrangements.
SANDLIN
DUNBAR, W.Va. — George Sandlin, 72, of
Dunbar, West Virginia, died October 11, 2019, in
the Arbors at Gallipolis. Cremation services are
entrusted to the Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Gallipolis

Ex-death row inmate
from Scotland again
accused of threats
OTTAWA, Ohio (AP)
— A Scotsman who
was released after two
decades on Ohio’s death
row has again been
charged with threatening a former assistant
prosecutor.
The Lima News
reports Ken Richey
pleaded not guilty on
Thursday to retaliation
charges. A message
seeking comment was
left with his attorney.
It’s the second time
the 55-year-old Richey

has been accused of
threatening a former
judge who prosecuted
his original case in the
1980s. In 2012, Richey
was sentenced to three
years in prison for making threats.
He was on death row
until 2008 after being
convicted of setting a
ﬁre that killed a 2-yearold girl. He denied any
involvement, and a U.S.
court determined his
lawyers mishandled the
case.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — The
latest livestock report
as submitted by United
Producers, Inc., 357
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio, 740-4469696.
Date of Sale: Oct. 9
Total Headage: 203
Feeder Cattle (#1 Cattle)
Yearling Steers 600700 pounds: $122.00
- $133.00; 700-800
pounds: $119.00$128.00; Yearling Heifers 600-700 pounds:
$100.00-$117.50; 700800 pounds: $100.00
- $107.50; Steer Calves
300-400 pounds:
$120.00 - $131.00; 400500 pounds: $115.00
- $136.00; 500-600
pounds: $110.00 $131.00; Heifer Calves
300-500 pounds:
$120.00 - $129.00; 500600 pounds: $100.00$120.00; Feeder Bulls

250-400 pounds:
$120.00-$130.00;
400-600 pounds:
$110.00-$133.00; 600800 pounds: $100.00$127.00
Cows &amp; Fat Cattle
Comm &amp; Utility:
$40.00 - $59.00; Canner/Cutter: $33.00
- $40.00; Bred Cows:
$400.00 $760.00;
Choice Steers &amp; Heifers: $95.00 - $105.00;
Select Steers &amp; Heifers: $80.00 - $95.00
Bulls
By Weight: $59.00$76.00
Small Animals
Aged Goats: $95.00;
Heavy Hogs: $69.00
Announcements:
Show steer and
replacement heifer sale,
5 p.m., Oct. 26.

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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
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October is Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Awareness Month
Neonatal Abstinence
Syndrome (NAS) has
skyrocketed in Ohio
along with the epidemic
of opioid addiction. NAS
refers to cases in which
newborns are “born
addicted” (meaning they
experience drug withdrawal shortly after birth
due to drug exposure in
the womb). Nearly 2,000
newborns had been diagnosed with NAS by the
time they left Ohio hospitals in 2017. October is
Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Awareness Month.
It is a month dedicated
to the work of increasing
awareness of Neonatal
Abstinence Syndrome
and what help is out
there for those impacted
by it.
The most common
cause of NAS is a woman
taking opioids during
pregnancy. This includes
mothers who are receiving treatment for pain
or addiction and those
misusing prescription
medications.
The medications that
can cause NAS include
opioids (painkillers such
as codeine, morphine or

disability or delay
oxycodone), Bendue to those condizodiazepines (to
Melinda
tions before they
help with anxiety
Kingery
or sleep), Barbitu- Contributing qualify. This allows
for the baby and
rates (sedatives),
columnist
family to receive
Antidepressants,
supports sooner.
illicit drugs such
The Early Intervention
as cocaine or heroin, and
Methadone or buprenor- Program serves infants
and toddlers ages birth
phine (used in medication-assisted treatment). to three years old who
have a disability or delay
Treating babies with
in their development.
NAS is costly. Not only
These delays could be in
are their lives presented
the area of speech and
the challenges and diflanguage, cognitive develﬁculties of NAS itself,
opment, motor skills,
but it is expensive monetarily. The care of babies social-emotional, or selfborn with NAS costs six help skills. This program
times more than the care provides services and
supports to children and
of those born without.
their families.
This is due to many facEarly Intervention
tors, including longer
services include a develhospital stays, higher
opmental evaluation and
monitoring costs, medifamily coaching which
cations and health probtakes place in the home
lems that continue after
or other natural commubeing discharge.
nity setting with a DevelIn July 2019, an Ohio
opmental Specialist. This
Department of Developprogram operates with
mental Disabilities rule
the understanding that
change made NAS and
the child’s family is their
high blood lead level
best teacher. The Develautomatic qualiﬁers for
opmental Specialist helps
Early Intervention serthe family learn ways
vices. Now, infants and
toddlers do not necessar- to support their child’s
ily have to show signs of development.

Referrals in Ohio can
be made by calling 1-800755-GROW (4769) or
online at https://ohioearlyintervention.org. This
referral site will take the
family’s information and
can refer a child for services to either the Early
Intervention program or
the Help Me Grow Home
Visiting program. Referrals can come from the
family, physician, other
involved agencies.
The Gallia County
Board of Developmental
Disabilities can also be
contacted for assistance
at 740-446-6902. In Gallia
County, Tina Ragland,
LSW, and Britt Higginbotham serve as Developmental Specialists ready
to assist those attempting
to navigate the challenges
of a child dealing with
Neonatal Abstinence
Syndrome. Amy Thompson, Service Coordinator at the Gallia County
Board of DD, can also be
reached at 740-444-7628.
Melinda Kingery of the Gallia
DD Board, wrote this on behalf
of the Gallia County Citizens for
Prevention and Recovery.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Sunday, Oct. 13
SCIPIO TWP. — The Scipio
Volunteer Fire Department in
Harrisonville will hold a open
house at 1 p.m. Dinner will be
served. The new ﬁre truck will be
on display and tours of the station will be given.
POMEROY — The Carleton
Church, located on Kingsbury
Road, will celebrate Homecoming. Sunday School is held at 9:30
a.m. with church at 10:45 a.m.
Lunch will be held at noon and
the afternoon service will be at
1:30 p.m. Everyone welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — Silver Memorial Free Will Baptist Church,
Long View Quartet singing, 10
a.m.

Monday, Oct. 14
GALLIPOLIS — The DAV will
meet at the post home on Liberty
Road, 6 p.m., all members are
urged to attend. The AMVETS
will meet following the DAV
meeting at 7 p.m. Again all members are urged to attend.
GALLIPOLIS — Bossard
Memorial Library will be open
regular business hours and
encourages visitors to SPACE: A
Journey to Our Future.
MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs
Library locations will be in observance of Columbus Day.
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.
POMEROY — Meigs County
Health Dept. will be closed in
observance of Columbus Day.
Normal business hours resume at
8 a.m. on Oct. 15.

6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m. For
more information, email iamaburns@yahoo.com or call 740441-7251.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Board of Developmental
Disabilities will hold a regular
monthly board meeting for the
month of October on Tuesday,
October 15, 2019 at 4 p.m. at
the Administrative Ofﬁces, 77
Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
45631.

Thursday, Oct. 17
POMEROY — Pumpkin Painting, 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. All materials are supplied.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Retired Teachers chapter
of the ORTA will meet at noon at
the Meigs Senior Center. Guests
are welcome. Call in lunch reservations to 740-992-3214 by Oct.
15. A representative from the
senior center will discuss the new
Blakeslee Center presently under
ﬁnal renovation in Middleport.

Friday, Oct. 18

LONG BOTTOM — The
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
NSDAR will meet at 1 p.m. We
are traveling to the site of the
George Washington plaque in
Long Bottom, Ohio. We will be
celebrating the refurbishing of
the site by Eagle Scout applicant
James Wilcoxen. During the celebration we will rededicate the
site. Members are asked to bring
a chair, snack and drink.
GALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME Retirees, Gallia and Jackson
Counties, Sub-chapter 102,will
hold their next meeting on Friday
October 18 at 2 p.m. at the Gallia
CountySenior Resource Center,
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend
1165 State Route 160, in GallipoArts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
lis. The sub-chapter is seekingMiddleport, will present “Poet’s
new members in the two-county
Night Out” from 7-9 p.m. Read
area. AFSCME (Ohio Council 8,
your favorite poem or read your
own original poem. If you prefer, OCSEA, and OAPSE),OPERS
and SERS public employee
dress up as your favorite poet
retirees and their spouses are
or poetic character. Enjoy light
invited to attend thenext meetrefreshments. Free and open to
ing. Non-AFSCME members, who
the public.
retired from the city, county, state
RACINE — Grazing Manageorschool district, are also welment and Pollution Abatement
Workshop at the Lee Farm (Keith come to attend. We also encour&amp; Becky Bentz), Racine. No cost age public employeeswho plan to
retire in the near future to attend.
to attend. Call 740-992-4282 to
Issues that are important to retirregister by Oct. 9. Dinner and
eesare discussed each month. The
refreshments provided.
GALLIPOLIS — GAHS Alumni group usually meets on the third
Friday of each month.For more
Association basket bingo funinformation, interested retirees
draiser to support future assomay call: 740-245-0093.
ciation efforts. Held at GAMS,

Tuesday, Oct. 15

$1M bond in
highway death

construction zone outside
Cleveland and killing one
highway worker and seriously injuring another has
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — been ordered held on a $1
A woman accused of driv- million bond.
Thirty-one-year-old
ing through an interstate

Sunday, Oct. 20
RACINE — Morning Star United Methodist Church Homecoming. Lunch at 12:30 p.m., service
of singing at 1:30 p.m. Community welcome.

Monday, Oct. 21
GALLIPOLIS — The American
Legion Lafayette Post #27, the
Ladies Auxiliary and the Sons of
the American Legion Squardron
#27 Executive Board will meet
at the post home on McCormick
Road, 5 p.m., all Executive Board
members are urged to attend. The
American Legion Layette Post
#27 will meet at 6 p.m. following
the joint E-Board meeting. All
members are urged to attend.

Tuesday, Oct. 22
POMEROY — Acoustic Night
at the Pomeroy Library, 6 p.m.
All skill levels and listeners are
welcome. Bring an instrument
and play along!

Thursday, Oct. 24
GALLIPOLIS — City Trick-orTreat, 5:30-6:30 p.m.

Monday, Oct. 28
POMEROY — Book Club “Rabbit Cake” by Anne Hartnett will
be discussed. Pomeroy Library at
6 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 31
ADDISON — Addison Freewill
Baptist Church Trunk-or-Treat,
5:30-7 p.m.
GALLIA COUNTY — Trickor-treat will be conducted on
Thursday, October 31, 2019 in
the county, 5:30-6:30 p.m.

Tuesday, Nov. 5
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Clinic
and Holzer Medical Center retirees will meet for lunch at noon at
Courtside Restaurant.

Thursday, Nov. 7
GALLIPOLIS — River Cities
Military Family Support Group
bingo fundraiser. Supports Gallia,
Meigs and Mason County veterans, deployed or stateside. Held
at VFW, 134 Third Avenue. Doors
open at 5 p.m. and bingo begins
at 6 p.m. For more information,
email iamaburns@yahoo.com or
call 740-441-7251.

Sabra Tolliver, of Lakewood, pleaded not guilty
Friday in Berea Municipal
Court. She’s charged
with aggravated vehicular
homicide, aggravated
vehicular assault and driv-

ing under the inﬂuence.
Authorities say Tolliver
killed 61-year-old Rafael
Solis on Interstate 71 in
Brook Park late Wednesday and injured Brandon
Hruska.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 13, 2019 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month

Jim Marshall ‘Veteran
of the Year’ award dinner

Designated on Oct.
25, 1988, by President
Ronald Reagan, October
is Pregnancy and Infant
Loss Awareness Month.
In addition to the monthly declaration, each Oct.
15, people come together
to recognize Pregnancy
and Infant Loss Awareness Day by holding
remembrance ceremonies
and candle-lighting vigils
in honor of those who
have lost a baby from,
but not limited to miscarriage, stillbirth, SIDS or
the death of a newborn.
Dealing with the loss
of a baby through miscarriage or during infancy is
never easy, and tragically,
nearly one million pregnancies in the U.S. (one
out of every four) end
in the death of the baby.
Family members may not
know what to say. Parents
may not know how to
feel. The loss will remain
with families and parents
forever. There is certainly
no instruction booklet on
how to deal with the loss

Death (SIDS)
of a child. Each
occurs in Meigs
person may grieve
County, the
and ﬁnd healing
Meigs County
at a varying rate,
Health Departbut no matter
ment Director of
what, it is imporNursing is notitant to know to
ﬁed. She then
allow yourself as Leanne
much time as nec- Cunningham reaches out to
the bereaved paressary to recover Contributing
ents and family
from the grieving columnist
to offer support
process.
and resources,
Support groups
including a home visit if
may prove invaluable
desired. Additionally, the
in the healing process.
Talking with people who MCHD conducts an annual Child Fatality Review
have gone through a
Board (CFRB) meeting
similar experience can
to discuss any deaths in
be comforting. While it
infants and children birth
may be challenging for
those who’ve never dealt through age 18. This
with such a loss to under- meeting consists of mandated members: Meigs
stand the emotional and
County Coroner, Famphysical impact a loss
ily Practice Physician or
like this can cause, it is
Pediatrician, Meigs Counimportant for individuty Health Commissionerals and communities to
come together to support Chair, MCHD Administrator-CFR Coordinator,
and meet the needs of
the bereaved parents and Public Health Ofﬁcial,
family members and work Director of Meigs County
Children’s Services or
to prevent the causes of
designee, Director of Galthese problems.
When a Sudden Infant lia-Jackson-Meigs Board

of Alcohol Addiction and
Mental Health Services
or designee, Meigs County Sheriff or designee
and the Meigs County
Prosecutor. The purpose
is to try to determine if
there are any underlying
factors in the cause of
death so that focused education can be provided to
the public to reduce the
chance that this may happen again to any family.
If you would like more
information on Pregnancy
and Infant Loss, some
additional resources
can be found through
the Baby 1st Network
of Ohio at http://www.
baby1stnetwork.org/losssupport and at https://
www.mombaby.org/wpcontent/uploads/2016/09/
perinatal-loss-resourcesfor-families-1.pdf or you
may contact Leanne
Cunningham, Director of
Nursing at 740-992-6626.

single-engine plane had
trouble as it was returning to the Dayton-Wright
Brothers Airport. The
pilot then aimed to land
in a cornﬁeld but worried about avoiding
some power lines, so she
switched plans to try for
the roadway.
The Federal Aviation
Administration is investigating what happened.

Man guilty of
killing teens

Leanne Cunningham is the Director
of Nursing at the Meigs County
Health Department.

OHIO BRIEFS

Plane collides
with car

two six-year-old-girls.
Raymond Walters is
facing 22 charges including murder.
An attorney entered
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)
not guilty pleas for Wal— A plane crash turned
ters at an arraignment on
into a trafﬁc crash when
Thursday.
a small aircraft having
Authorities say Walters
engine trouble made an
was driving at nearly 100
emergency landing on an
mph in a stolen police
Ohio roadway and rearcruiser through downended a car near an intertown Dayton on Aug. 26
section. The two pilots
when he ran a red light
aboard the plane and the
and hit a car and a minidriver in the BMW they
van ﬁlled with children.
hit weren’t seriously hurt
Two girls in the van
in the Thursday afterwere killed and nine othnoon crash. It happened a
ers were injured.
couple miles from an airDAYTON, Ohio (AP)
A message seekport just south of Dayton. — A $1 million bond has
State Highway Patrol
been set for an Ohio man ing comment was left
Sgt. Jeff Kramer says the charged in a deadly police Thursday for his public
defender.
1979 Piper ﬁxed-wing,
cruiser crash that killed

$1M bond in
fatal crash

CLEVELAND (AP) —
An Ohio man has been
convicted of killing his
girlfriend’s two teenage
children and now faces
the possibility of being
sentenced to death.
Cleveland.com reports
a jury in Cleveland on
Friday convicted 30-yearold Matthew Nicholson
of aggravated murder
charges in the slayings
of 19-year-old Giselle
Lopez and 17-year-old
Manuel Lopez Jr. at their
family’s Garﬁeld Heights
home in September
2018.

RIO GRANDE — The Jim Marshall Veteran
of the Year Award Committee would like to
invite all veterans in the area and their guests to
attend this year’s Fourth Annual Jim Marshall
Veteran of the Year Award dinner and banquet.
The honored veteran and recipient of the
2019 award is Jerry Ghearing of Jackson County, Ohio. Date of the event is Saturday, Oct. 26
and it begins at 6:30 p.m. Cost is free for veterans and $10 for guests.
Menu is a spaghetti dinner. The event will
be held on the campus of the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande Community College in
the Davis University Center Marketplace (cafeteria).
Those interested in attending should RSVP to
Delyssa Edwards at 740-245-7431 by Oct. 20.

Flu vaccine notice
The Meigs County Health Department has
received 50 high dose ﬂu vaccine for those aged
65 and up. It was previously announced that
there was a delay in receiving the high dose vaccines. As a reminder, the CDC recommends all
to get their ﬂu vaccine by the end of October.

Coin exhibition
POMEROY — OH-Kan Coin Club will be having their Coin Exhibition on Nov. 1 from 9 a.m.3 p.m. in the Farmers Bank Community Room,
640 E. Main St., Pomeroy. There will be local
coin, currency, postcards, and photos. Meigs
County tokens from Pomeroy National &amp; Citizens from the 1800’s will be on display. Come
by and see a part of Meigs County history (not
for sale). Free evaluations will be offered if you
have old coins. There will also be an actual Lazy
Duce on display.

Plat books available
POMEROY — The start of hunting season
is a great time to get a Plat Book. The Meigs
County 4-H Committee has Plat Books for sale
for $25.
The books were printed in fall of 2018.
Funds support the 4-H program in the county
by providing for supplies, camp and college
scholarships, learning opportunities and more.
To purchase a Plat Book, you can stop by the
Extension Ofﬁce at 113 East Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy on Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m.-4
p.m. You could also mail $30 (for book, shipping
&amp; handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee,
113 East Memorial Drive, Suite E, Pomeroy,
OH 45769 or visit the Meigs County Recorder’s
Ofﬁce in the Court House to obtain a copy.
Please contact us at 740-992-6696 if you have
any questions.

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�Opinion
4A Sunday, October 13, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Progress treating
addiction, but
there’s more to do
For far too long, prescription pain medication,
heroin, and fentanyl have broken families apart
and devastated communities in Ohio.
In 2017, our opioid overdose death rate was
almost three times the national average, with
nearly a dozen Ohioans dying from these dangerous drugs every day surpassing car crashes as our
state’s number one killer.
Since 2017, we’ve started to turn the tide
against opioids. Last year, after a decade of
increased overdose deaths every
year, we’ve led the country with a 22
percent decrease in overdose deaths.
This is good news, and federal
laws I have worked on like the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery
Act (CARA) and the 21st Century
CURES Act have helped by providSen. Rob ing state and local government and
Portman nonproﬁt groups in Ohio with supContributing port for proven prevention, recovery,
and treatment programs to help
columnist
addicted individuals heal. Grants
have also been available for naloxone, the miracle drug that saves lives by reversing
the effects of an opioid overdose.
Nearly $4 billion in additional assistance nationwide has been matched by additional support
from states and local governments and countless
selﬂess volunteers and charities. Thanks to our
local law enforcement, there’s less heroin and
fewer prescription pills on our streets. What’s
more, ﬁrst responders are using innovative new
approaches to ensure individuals whose overdoses
are reversed by naloxone go into treatment.
I saw this ﬁrsthand when I recently participated
in a ride-along with the Columbus Fire Department’s RREACT team. RREACT is using an
$800,000 CARA grant on an intervention program
with a rapid response team made up of EMS ofﬁcials, law enforcement, and social workers.
The team not only reverses overdoses, but also
provides comprehensive post-overdose care by
getting addicts into treatment. These sorts of
breakthrough programs are making a difference,
but there is still a long way to go. That’s why I was
pleased that the Department of Health and Human
Services recently announced that Ohio would
receive more than $55 million in additional State
Opioid Response (SOR) Grant funding to help
sustain these efforts. Ohio led the country in the
decline of overdose deaths last year – nationwide
overdose deaths are lower too, for ﬁrst time since
1990. Still, there are still far too many individuals losing their lives to the scourge of addiction.
In fact, the threat of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid
50 times more powerful than heroin, seems to be
increasing. In August, six individuals in the Cleveland area fatally overdosed on fentanyl in a single
day, and last month, 10 people in Columbus died
of fentanyl-related overdoses within 26 hours.
These losses are tragic, and highlight the need
for the U.S. Postal Service to fully implement my
STOP Act, which helps keep dangerous drugs
like fentanyl from entering our communities from
other countries via our own mail system.
In addition, we’re continually hearing that, while
we’ve made progress on the opioid epidemic,
other drugs are becoming more common.
Recently, I visited Seneca and Huron counties and met with the boards of the local Mental
Health and Addiction Services to learn how the
addiction epidemic is affecting their communities.
While they’ve been able to use federal funds to
help lower rates of opioid abuse, they’ve also seen
an increase in the use of other drugs, particularly
meth and cocaine, sometimes laced with fentanyl.
This matches what I’m hearing from law
enforcement all across Ohio. In Portsmouth,
$35,000 worth of meth was recently seized in
an apartment. Authorities in Whitehall outside
Columbus found nearly 30 pounds of cocaine in
a drug bust in September, and nearly two dozen
individuals were arrested recently for trafﬁcking
meth and heroin in Ohio and West Virginia.
These communities are looking for help. Since
we know this surge of cheap and powerful meth
and cocaine is coming across the southern border,
one thing the federal government can do is tighten
border security to reduce the supply and increase
the cost. But we also need to broaden our successful efforts on prevention and getting addicts into
treatment and recovery.
That’s why one of my top priorities this fall is
passing legislation that will ensure we can tackle
drug addiction in all its forms.
My Combating Meth and Cocaine Act will
allow current federal opioid grant funds to also be
used for programs focused on treating meth and
cocaine addiction. The bill also reauthorizes the
federal SOR Grant program for ﬁve years, providing $500 million annually. These simple changes
provide needed certainty and ﬂexibility as we
combat addiction. We’re beginning to turn the tide
on the worst drug epidemic ever. Moving forward,
let’s keep doing what’s worked on opioids and
respond aggressively to the new threats from meth
and cocaine.
Rob Portman (R-Ohio) represents the state in the U.S. Senate.

THEIR VIEW

Voting is best with plenty of spoilers
It’s rare these days to
watch a movie or TV
show that hasn’t been
ruined by spoilers. It
seems like it takes more
work to not know about
something than it does to
know.
Take “Get Out,” a horror movie by Jordan Peele
released in 2017. I didn’t
watch it until a few weeks
ago, and although some
plot basics have been
unavoidable if you follow
popular culture – black/
white/interracial couple/
bad things happen – I
was pleasantly surprised
by how in the dark I was
about some of the main
surprises.
I don’t like horror movies, but I liked this. And
it was better because
it wasn’t completely
spoiled.
There’s also the Amazon legal drama “Goliath.” Its popped up in my
list of shows for years,
but I wasn’t interested. I
knew nothing about it.
For some reason I
ﬁnally clicked on it and
started watching – Billy

maintained, who
Bob Thornton is
set aside money
great, and I found
for parks and who
out it’s written by
manage the emerDavid Kelly, whose
gency services
got a long career
folks who are there
writing good TV.
when you need
I watched it, comthem.
pletely unspoiled
Gary
It may not be as
and totally enterPresley
interesting as all
tained.
Contributing
the talking heads
Voting isn’t like columnist
on TV with the latTV. Voting should
est in our national
be nothing but
soap opera, but the local
spoilers – you should
stuff matters.
know exactly what (and
There’s an election on
who) you’re voting for
Tuesday, Nov. 5. It’s a
when you cast your balrelatively small one.
lot.
What’s on your ballot?
But you probably won’t.
There are a couple of
Most people know less
ways to ﬁnd out. One way
about the local things
is to contact your county
they vote for than state
board of elections and
and national candidates
request a sample ballot.
and issues.
Why is that? Everyone Many Ohio counties have
knows and has an opinion sample ballots online. Do
a search for your county
about the big stuff. But
name plus “board of elecit’s local elected ofﬁcials
tions” and you should
that pass resolutions
ﬁnd it.
about your fences and
Another way is to go to
ban books. It’s local bond
https://www.vote411.org/.
issues that raise your
It’s a website run by the
taxes for decades.
League of Women Voters,
It’s also local elected
a long-time, trusted gathofﬁcials who keep your
erer of unbiased informaroads and schools well-

tion about voting. Put in
your address and it shows
you what’s on the ballot,
along with information
that’s been gathered about
candidates and issues.
If you haven’t been
paying attention to local
issues and elections, this
is a good year to start.
There’s not much on the
ballot, and you’ve still got
a few weeks to do some
homework before you
vote on Nov. 5. Think of
it as some training for
next year, when the ballot
will be stuffed with candidates.
Listen, learn, vote. And
please vote in the races
that matter most, those
closest to home.
Gary Presley is pagination director
for AIM Media Midwest, publisher of
this newspaper. You can reach him
at gpresley@aimmediamidwest.
com. Opinions expressed here are
solely those of the writer and not
necessarily those of the newspaper.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

in New York).
In 1962, “Who’s Afraid
Today is Sunday, Oct.
13, the 286th day of 2019. of Virginia Woolf?”, by
Edward Albee, opened on
There are 79 days left in
Broadway.
the year.
In 1972, a Uruguayan
Today’s Highlight in History: chartered ﬂight carrying
45 people crashed in the
On Oct. 13, 1775, the
Andes; survivors resorted
United States Navy had
to feeding off the remains
its origins as the Continental Congress ordered of some of the dead in
order to stay alive until
the construction of a
they were rescued more
naval ﬂeet.
than two months later.
In 1974, longtime teleOn this date:
vision host Ed Sullivan
In 1792, the cornerdied in New York City at
stone of the executive
age 73.
mansion, later known as
In 1981, voters in
the White House, was
laid by President George Egypt participated in a
Washington during a cer- referendum to elect Vice
President Hosni Mubarak
emony in the District of
(HAHS’-nee moo-BAH’Columbia.
rahk) the new president,
In 1845, Texas voters
one week after the assasratiﬁed a state constitusination of Anwar Sadat.
tion.
In 1999, the Senate
In 1943, Italy declared
war on Germany, its one- rejected the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban
time Axis partner.
Treaty, with 48 senators
In 1944, during World
voting in favor and 51
War II, American troops
against, far short of the
entered Aachen (AH’67 needed for ratiﬁcation.
kehn), Germany.
In 2003, The U.N. SecuIn 1960, John F. Kenrity Council approved a
nedy and Richard Nixon
resolution expanding the
held the third televised
NATO-led peacekeeping
debate of their presidential campaign (Nixon was force in Afghanistan.
In 2010, rescuers in
in Los Angeles, Kennedy

Tirole (zhahn tee-ROHL’)

Thought for Today: “A was announced as the
hero is a man who is winner of the Nobel Prize
in economics for showing
afraid to run away.”
— English proverb. how to encourage better

Chile using a missile-like
escape capsule pulled 33
men one by one to fresh
air and freedom 69 days
after they were trapped
in a collapsed mine a halfmile underground.
Ten years ago: The
United Nations Security
Council voted unanimously to extend the U.N.
peacekeeping mission in
Haiti for a year. Singer
Al Martino, who’d played
crooner Johnny Fontane
in “The Godfather” and
“The Godfather: Part III,”
died in Springﬁeld, Pennsylvania, six days after
turning 82.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama
huddled with some of his
senior national security
aides and with top administration health ofﬁcials
for the latest assessment
on the government’s
response to Ebola in the
aftermath of a Dallas
nurse’s contracting the
disease. Frenchman Jean

products and competitive prices in industries
dominated by a few companies.
One year ago: President
Donald Trump welcomed
American pastor Andrew
Brunson to the Oval
Ofﬁce, celebrating his
release from nearly two
years of conﬁnement
in Turkey. Crews with
dogs went door-to-door
in the ruins of Mexico
Beach, Florida, looking
for additional victims or
survivors of Hurricane
Michael. A Turkish
newspaper reported that
Turkish ofﬁcials had an
audio recording of the
killing of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi (jah-MAHL’
khahr-SHOHK’-jee) inside
the Saudi Consulate in
Istanbul.
Today’s Birthdays: Gospel singer Shirley Caesar
is 82. Actress Melinda
Dillon is 80. Singermusician Paul Simon is
78. Actress Pamela Tifﬁn
is 77. Musician Robert
Lamm (Chicago) is 75.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

County
From page 1A

that up quickly and get
into schematic design,”
said Galieti.
Consultants provided
a timeline to those at
the meeting. Between
September and mid
October, site surveys are
anticipated to be held.
Between October and
November, geotechnical
services and reports will
be conducted. Between
October and December,
architects and the county
aim to move through the
schematic design phase.
In January of next year,
the county intends to
hold construction management-at-risk reviews
while also estimating
construction costs and
budget needs. The Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction will
also be contacted for
review concerns. Between
February of next year
and March, DLZ aims to
move through the design
development phase.
More construction management-at-risk review
will be held along with
construction estimates
and Ohio Department
of Rehabilitation and
Correction review discussions in April 2020. The
county hopes to identify
potential bid packages at
this time as well. From
May to July of 2020, the
county seeks to move
through the construction
document phase and in
August the same year, the
county plans to complete
its construction estimates
along with any permitting needs. Jail builders
hope to break ground in
September 2020 and have
a new jail occupied in
December 2021 through
January 2022.
Overall space intended
to be utilized among
varying areas of the new
jail could possibly total
around 36,000 square
feet split up among a two
to three level building.
The potential building
footprint, intended to
be placed somewhere
in the area of the Gallia Courthouse parking
lot area along Second
Avenue, is estimated to
be around 20,000 square
feet currently, according
to discussion at the meet-

It should be noted that
for some jail operations,
all of the standards may
not apply. Those that are
considered N/A, would
neither add nor detract
from the overall score.
In order to obtain a
passing score and to be
considered compliant, a
jail must be found to be
compliant with 100% of
the Essential standards
and at least 90% of the
Important standards,”
read an email from
ODRC Deputy Communication Chief Sara French.
”For all standards
Dean Wright | OVP
County officials meet with DLZ, a construction and consulting architecture firm, about ongoing plans found to be in noncompliance during an
for a new county jail.
inspection, the jails are
required to complete corReports also indicated
a lack of a closed circuit
ing. Plans could change
rection plans of action.
the jail did not have the
television systems and
for the size of the jail,
The ODRC/BAD (Ohio
noted that some inmates proper facilities to sepadepending on what commissioners and the sheriff were sleeping on the ﬂoor rate violent from nonvio- Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
lent offenders.
on damaged mattresses.
deem appropriate.
Bureau of Adult DetenIn 2017, the jail was
Jail inspections revealed
The programming
tion) doesn’t directly
found to be in noncomthe area was not “sprinportion of DLZ’s plan
have the ability to close a
klered” for ﬁre protection. pliance of 63 standards.
accounts for the type of
jail. However, the DirecIn 2016, it was found to
“At the time of inspecspaces and needs for a
tor of the ODRC can ﬁle
be in noncompliance of
tion, several areas of the
new Gallia Jail. Current
an action in the Court of
86 standards. In 2015,
facility showed signs of
jail programming plans
Common Pleas for the
the jail was found to be
disrepair including, but
for 134 beds with 112
county in which the jail is
in noncompliance of 71
not limited to lavatory’s
for general population
located to enjoin complithat did not provide both standards.
inmates.
ance with the standards.
The Ohio Department
hot or cold water, low
“What we do is start
The ODRC/BAD is curof Rehabilitation and
overlaying different spac- lighting and inoperable
rently working with the
Correction responded to
light ﬁxtures in inmate
es and space adjacency
Gallia County Sheriff’s
a series of questions in
accessible areas, numerand start developing the
an email when contacted Ofﬁce in identifying any
ous plumbing ﬁxtures
two levels of the overall
issues of non-compliance
by the Gallipolis Daily
building (and) the square that were not functionwith the standards as a
Tribune.
ing correctly and/or
footages to see what a
“In total, there are 181 result of the incident,”
completely inoperable,
building layout is,” said
she continued.
security screen on a win- Standards for Full SerRatts. “The schematic
“Historically, the jail
dow in disrepair, holes at vice Jails, composed of
design phase is concepwill remain non-compli54 ‘Essential’ standards
the base of security wall
tual. You’re going to see
ant and the Bureau of
and 127 ‘Important’
(bulkheads) due to rust/
drawings but not every
Adult Detention will act
corrosion, showers found standards. Each year,
drawing will have every
as a resource in bringing
single note or dimension to be unsanitary, ventila- all Full-Service Jails are
inspected using all of the the jail up to standard,”
tion ducts covered with
on it. Our next step is
said French in another
54 Essential standards
debris, security features
really to look at space
email.
of the jail not operational. and roughly one-half of
adjacency to make sure
The state has not ﬁled
The jail was in an overall the ‘Important’ standards.
rooms are next to each
an action in the Gallia
other for certain reasons unhygienic condition and It breaks down to about
Court of Common Pleas
117 standards one year
the physical plant was in
then to check that the
a state of disrepair,” said and 118 standards the fol- to “enjoin compliance
36,000 feet is what it
with standards,” accordlowing year. This means
the inspection report.
needs to be…From that,
ing to French.
that in a two-year cycle,
“At the time of inspecwe start looking at (jail
Gallia commissionall full service jails are
tion, Jail Administration
plans) in three dimeners previously reported
inspected on all of the
sions and the massing of provided this inspector
that roughly a little over
with a Health Inspection Essential standards two
the building and what it
50 percent of the Galreport dated 8-1-2018 that times and all the Imporlooks like from the extelia general fund went to
noted violation(s) on the tant standards one time.
rior.”
report. A plan of action
The Gallia Jail was
had not been submitted
found by Ohio State Jail
by jail administration
Inspector Scott Filicky
regarding the health
during the December
2018 inspection of the jail inspection violation(s).
Jail and County Ofﬁcials
to be in noncompliance
of 77 standards. Many of should take immediate
those standards could not notice to this report
be met “due to the layout and take immediate
action to remedy these
and age of the jail.” Othviolation(s). Additionally,
ers referenced a lack of
the jails policy and prodocumentation for practices, policies or needing cedures for this standard
had not been uploaded,”
to update policies. One
report passage referenced the report continued.

Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342.

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Thursday, October 17, 2019 at 5:00 p.m.
2606 Jefferson Blvd., Point Pleasant, WV
(Former Residence of Francis and Emily Earl)

2019 Fall
Three Day Public Sale
Thursday, October 24th through
Saturday, October 26th
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM

Gifts for the Holidays

Health
From page 1A

cancer. Your doctor can
help you decide when
and how often to get
mammograms.
For more information or for additional
information on cancer
awareness or services,
visit www.holzer.org or
call 1-855-4-HOLZER.
For more information on
Tuesday’s event, call 740446-3572.
Information submitted
by Holzer Health System.

law enforcement needs,
including court ﬁnances,
in 2018. It is now anticipated to be around 57
percent by the end of
the year. Commissioners
have long issued concern
with cuts in state funding
to local government as
well as increased ﬁnancial burden due to the
opioid crisis.
Of inmate numbers,
the county housed 83
prisoners outside its
borders in 2016. In 2019,
that number was estimated at 400. In a press
conference at the end
of September where the
Gallia Sheriff addressed
jail troubles, he said that
the jail at times may hold
35 to 50 individuals,
depending on the day.
State inspection records
currently recommend the
jail be suited to 11 individuals.
“My goal in running
for ofﬁce was to change
the sheriff’s ofﬁce,”
said Gallia Sheriff Matt
Champlin on Oct. 3 to
the Tribune. “I know
from my history in law
enforcement that part
of the problem with the
sheriff’s ofﬁce was the
underlying problems of
the jail. I didn’t know as
much then about the jail
as I do now. Whenever I
took ofﬁce, I knew that
we needed a remedy and
began conversations for a
new jail.”
Champlin reported
that there was an altercation in the jail Wednesday involving several
inmates. Minor injuries
were reported and jail
personnel requested
medical professionals
“out of an abundance
of caution.” All parties
refused treatment. Based
on investigation, the
sheriff says charges are
being reviewed by the
Gallia Prosecutor.

Absolute Real Estate

Poet’s
Riverbend Arts Council,
located at 290 North
Second Avenue in
Middleport.
Attendees are invited to
read their favorite poem,
share their own original
poetry and even dress
the part, coming as their
favorite poet, poetic character or a ﬁgure from a
poet’s time and place.
Light refreshments
will be served during the
event.
Admission to the event
is free, but donations will
be accepted.
For more information
contact Karen at 740-6194370.

Sunday, October 13, 2019 5A

Candles, Candle Accessories, Bakeware,
Glassware, Plasticware &amp; Decorative Items

250 Eastern Ave. Leesburg, Ohio 45135
Use South Entrance accessed from Church Street/
Eastern Avenue (follow the signs)
Accepting Credit Cards, Cash and Checks
OH-70148717

Home in great residential area featuring
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, hardwood floors, full
unfinished basement, detached garage,
sitting on lot measuring approx. 75’ x 130’.

GREAT “FIXER-UPPER” – RENOVATE
AND LIVE IN IT OR USE AS INCOMEPRODUCING PROPERTY – DON’T
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CONDUCTED BY:
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R. F. Stein (WV #1510),
Licensed &amp; Bonded

OH-70153269

�A long the River
6A Sunday, October 13, 2019�

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Visiting youth get horse rides during Bob Evans Farm Festival.

Merchants share their honey with farm festival visitors.

Photos by Dean Wright | OVP

A calf takes a nap during the middle of the farm festival.

Scenes from Bob Evans Farm Festival

It’s time for some goat treats.

Tasting food is a farm festival tradition.

Musical acts at the farm festival draw crowds.

The Eyes of Freedom exhibit displays life-sized art of veterans.

Chainsaw artists demonstrate their skills.

Veteran uniforms from various eras of American history are displayed.

Bean dinners are a Bob Evans Farm Festival tradition, cooked over A boy investigates bee activity.
an open fire.

Area Masons stir apple butter over an open flame.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

NEWS

Sunday, October 13, 2019 7A

Spurrier takes part in Honor Flight
A Pomeroy native
and Air Force veteran
recently took part in the
Honor Flight to Washington D.C.
Senior Master SGT.
Clarence (Bud) Spurrier
graduated from Pomeroy
High School in 1950. He
retired from the U.S. Air
Force in 1973 after 21
years.
He was selected to ﬂy
to Washington D.C. with
a honor ﬂight in October.
Sgt. Spurrier served at
Danang Vietnam. He
now lives in Anchorage,
Alaska. He was married to Doris Y. Dill,who
Courtesy photo
passed away in 2014, for Senior Master SGT. Clarence (Bud) Spurrier is Senior Master SGT. Clarence (Bud) Spurrier
after finishing basic training in 1951.
65 years.
pictured in Vietnam.

Ohio ban on Down syndrome abortions on hold
By Kantele Franko
and Julie Carr Smyth

cally outlawed abortions
in cases where there
Associated Press
was a positive test result
or prenatal diagnosis
indicating Down synCOLUMBUS, Ohio
drome. Under that law,
— A federal appeals
court on Friday upheld a physicians convicted of
judge’s decision to put on performing an abortion
hold an Ohio law prohib- under such circumstances could be charged with
iting doctors from performing abortions based a fourth-degree felony,
stripped of their medical
on a fetal diagnosis of
license and held liable for
Down syndrome.
legal damages.
The 2-1 ruling from a
The pregnant woman
panel the 6th U.S. Cirfaced no criminal liability
cuit Court of Appeals in
under the law, but it still
Cincinnati said the law
signed in 2017 by former fell into a category of
restriction that abortionRepublican Gov. John
rights groups label “reaKasich is likely unconson bans” because they
stitutional but didn’t
attempt to get into the
make such a declaration
mind of the pregnant
outright.
woman as she is deciding
The Ohio Attorney
General’s Ofﬁce said the whether to continue or
end a pregnancy.
state will seek reconsidThe American Civil
eration by the full 6th
Liberties Union sued
Circuit.
the Ohio Department of
The ruling is a disapHealth, the state medical
pointment for abortion
opponents, who had pro- board and county prosmoted the law as an anti- ecutors over the law on
discrimination measure. behalf of Planned Parenthood and several aborThe Ohio law speciﬁ-

tion providers.
“We hope today’s
decision sends a clear
message to anti-abortion
politicians about our
reproductive rights,” Jessie Hill, the attorney who
argued the matter for the
abortion providers, said
in a statement.
A federal judge placed
the state law on temporary hold last year,
saying federal law is
clear that states can’t
limit a woman’s right to
terminate a pregnancy
before viability. The state
appealed, leading to Friday’s decision.
Ohio Right to Life, the
state’s oldest and largest
anti-abortion group, said
it was saddened by the
ruling.
It “serves to show the
moral contradictions and
outright discrimination
imposed by abortion
jurisprudence that sorely
need to be settled,”
Stephanie Ranade Krider, the group’s vice president, said in a statement.

The group had promoted the law as a
protection to “lethal
discrimination” against
children with a rare and,
the group argued, widely
misunderstood condition.
Down syndrome is a
genetic abnormality that
causes developmental
delays and medical conditions such as heart
defects and respiratory
and hearing problems.
According to the
National Down Syndrome Society, about one
in every 700 babies in
the United States — or
about 6,000 a year — is
born with the condition,
which results from a
chromosomal irregularity.
The rarity of the condition has prompted
abortion rights groups
to paint the Down syndrome bans as part of
a thinly veiled effort to
continue chipping away
at a woman’s right to an
abortion.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Displays in the museum include many historical items
including a window from the Meigs Theatre and a pair of
sculptures from the Class of 1918.

Museum
From page 1A

sealed on the main
museum building and
the windows replaced.
The historical
society has received
donations to assist
with the projects, as
has applied for several
grants. Additionally
they are seeking a 0.5-

mill levy this fall, the
ﬁrst for the museum.
Regular hours at the
museum are Wednesday-Friday from 1-5
p.m. and Saturday
from noon-4 p.m.
Chamber Business
After Hours will take
place from 4-7 p.m.
on Oct. 22 at the
museum.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Craft show
RACINE — Southern Tornado Craft Show will
be held at Southern Elementary School on Saturday, Oct. 19, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Meeting change
POMEROY — All future meetings of DAV #53,
beginning with the meeting at 7 p.m. on Oct.
14, will be held at Farmers Bank, 640 East Main
Street in Pomeroy.

ATTENTION EMPLOYERS &amp; BUSINESS LEADERS
Ohio Launches TechCred to Help Employees Earn Technology Skills
Lt. Governor Jon Husted today announced the launch of TechCred, a program
that connects businesses with the talent they need and gives employees the
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preparing them for a job in today’s advanced, technology-infused economy.
Through TechCred͕� ďƵƐŝŶĞƐƐĞƐ� ĐĂŶ� ŝĚĞŶƟ�ĨǇ� ƚŚĞ� ƐƉĞĐŝĮ�Đ� ƋƵĂůŝĮ�ĐĂƟ�ŽŶƐ�
they need and employees they want to up-skill toward a more advanced
ƉŽƐŝƟ�ŽŶ͘� /Ŷ� ƉĂƌƚŶĞƌƐŚŝƉ� ǁŝƚŚ� Ă� ƚƌĂŝŶŝŶŐ� ƉƌŽǀŝĚĞƌ� Έd,�� �t�Z�� t/EE/E'�
�h�&lt;�z�� ,/&gt;&gt;^� ��Z��Z� ��Ed�ZΉ, the employer can apply online at
TechCred.Ohio.Gov. The state will reimburse up to $2,000 of training upon
ĐŽŵƉůĞƟ�ŽŶ�ŽĨ�Ă�ĐƌĞĚĞŶƟ�Ăů͘

OH-70150741

dŚĞ�ŽŶůŝŶĞ�ĂƉƉůŝĐĂƟ�ŽŶ�ƉĞƌŝŽĚ�ŽƉĞŶƐ�KĐƚŽďĞƌ�ϭ͕�ϮϬϭϵ͘�TechCred�ŝƐ�Ă�ĐŽŵƉĞƟ�Ɵ�ǀĞ͕�
merit-based program.

/&amp;�zKh��Z��/Ed�Z�^d��͕�W&gt;��^���KEd��d�:�D/��E�^,͕�
^hW�Z/Ed�E��Ed�Ν��h�&lt;�z��,/&gt;&gt;^���Z��Z���Ed�Z�&amp;KZ��^^/^d�E��
nashj@buckeyehills.net, 740-245-5334

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, October 13, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Writers Guild hosts guests
The Point Pleasant
Writers Guild had not
one, but three guest
speakers at its last meeting, Melecio P. Simon, Jr.,
also known as Dr. Mel,
Mea Enrico of California,
author of “Under His
Wings,” and Lora Lynn
Snow, executive director
and founder of the Ohio
Valley Symphony Orchestra. Three speakers, two
hours, and treats to eat
while listening.
First on the agenda,
Patrecia Gray, leader of
the Point Pleasant Writers Guild, opened with
prayer. She and April
Pyles then introduced Dr.
Simon, who introduced
Mea and Roy Enrico, parents of Dr. Mel’s daughter-in-law, Dr. Agnes
Simon.
Mea related some of
her life story and faith
journey found in her
book “Under His Wings.”
As a young woman in
the Philippines, she had
wanted to be a journalist,
but she chose, instead,
to be a nurse as a means
of getting to America.
Her dream of marrying
a doctor came true when
she met and married Dr.
Roy Enrico, who has had
more than his share of
adventures. Her memoirs
also include the miracle of

how their daughter’s life
was spared by the divine
intervention of God.
“Under His Wings” will
be available on Amazon.
com in the near future. In
the meantime, Mea will
keep the Guild updated
on its progress and availability.
Dr. Simon also introduced Snow, who coordinated one of his book
signing engagements at
the Ariel Opera House,
located at 426 Second
Avenue in Gallipolis,
Ohio. A local, professional oboist, Snow shared
how she had dreamed of
forming an orchestra in
the local area, but she
ﬁrst had to ﬁnd a facility
where the orchestra could
perform. When she was
shown the abandoned
Ariel Opera House, built
in 1895, she felt right
away it was the place
she was looking for even
though it had no heat and
no chairs. When the Ohio
Valley Symphony Orchestra performed their ﬁrst
concert on April 1, 1989,
chairs had to be borrowed
from a local funeral home.
But that was then.
Over the years, with
the help of the community, Snow’s dream of a
restored, not renovate,
but restored, opera house

has become a reality. In
2005 philanthropist, Ann
Carson Dater, purchased
the Ariel Opera House
complex and presented it
to The Ohio Valley Symphony as its permanent
home. The Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing
Arts Centre, Home of the
Ohio Valley Symphony,
is open for business.
September’s concert is
past, but ﬁve more are
scheduled: Oct. 26, Nov.
9, Dec. 7, March 21 and
April 25. For ticket information, call the box ofﬁce
at 740-446-2787 or go
online at ohiovalleysymphony.org.
Dr. Simon drew the
guests’ attention to a
display of pictures taken
from his years of directing “Operation We Care,”
a project made possible
by his afﬁliations with the
rotarians and the fulﬁllment of a boyhood pledge
to give back to his community. For over 30 years,
his team of surgeons, doctors, nurses, and healthcare givers has provided
much needed medical,
surgical, and dental services to the people of his
native land. In addition,
he has donated surgical
equipment and hospital
supplies, and seen to
the construction of sev-

eral deep-water wells to
curtail gastrointestinal
diseases.
Dr. Simon’s book “Two
Rivers, A World Apart”
describes his early years
living by the Pigalo
River in the Philippines,
where he dreamed of
becoming a doctor, and
his adult years, most of
which have been spent
living and working by the
Ohio River in the United
States. Simon’s desire to
be a doctor has its roots
in the memory of his
younger sister who suffered and died from an illness during WWII. Even
though he was only seven
years old, Simon daily
walked to the hospital
for his sister’s medicine.
One day the hospital was
ﬁred upon by war planes,
and he narrowly escaped
being killed while ﬂeeing
the building.
As a young man, Dr.
Simon studied medicine
at the University of Santo
Tomas in Manila and
completed his residency
in Chicago. In 1966, he
was hired as chief of the
Department of Urology
at Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis. Dr. Simon also
worked at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant. At the age of 58, he
joined the United States

Courtesy

Patrecia Gray, far right, leader of the Point Pleasant Writers Guild,
is pictured with Dr. and Mrs. Mel Simon. Dr. Mel was one of three
guest speakers at a recent meeting.

Air Force with the rank of
Colonel. In recent years,
he has taken up writing,
which he believes is free
expression of the mind.
Preferring fact over ﬁction, he chose to write
about his life. Thus, “Two
Rivers, A World Apart”
was born. Currently, he is
working on a sequel. Copies of his book may be
purchased from Amazon.
com.
Those who were in
attendance for the meeting were Dr. Mel and
Lydia Simon, Dr. Roy and

Mea Enrico, Lora Snow,
Bob Watterson, Joe Ingerick, Letha Jones, Ilse
Burris, Feryle Lawrence,
Patrecia Gray, Marilyn
Clarke, Carol Newberry,
Kris Moore, April Pyles,
David King, Ann McCoy
and Marchella Shepherd.
The Point Pleasant
Writers Guild meets
every ﬁrst and third
Wednesday of the month
from 1-3 p.m. at the
Mason County Library.
All writers are welcome.
Submitted by April
Pyles.

Judge will halt lawsuits against Purdue Pharma, its owners
By Geoff Mulvihill

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

37°

59°

57°

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.

Precipitation

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
2.78
0.97
37.25
34.00

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:35 a.m.
6:54 p.m.
7:14 p.m.
7:09 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

New

Oct 13 Oct 21 Oct 27

First

Nov 4

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

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
11:48a
12:09a
12:54a
1:42a
2:34a
3:29a
4:27a

Minor
5:38a
6:20a
7:05a
7:54a
8:46a
9:42a
10:40a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

Major
---12:30p
1:16p
2:05p
2:59p
3:55p
4:54p

Minor
5:59p
6:41p
7:27p
8:17p
9:11p
10:08p
11:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 13, the Great Hurricane of
1846 moved from Cuba northward
through Georgia and the Carolinas to
Pennsylvania and caused great damage all along its path.

AIR QUALITY
500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.31 +0.18
Marietta
34 15.73 -0.07
Parkersburg
36 21.36 -0.17
Belleville
35 12.75 -0.19
Racine
41 12.79 -0.02
Point Pleasant
40 24.91 -0.49
Gallipolis
50 12.92 -0.62
Huntington
50 25.77 -0.26
Ashland
52 34.55 -0.15
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.76 -0.46
Portsmouth
50 15.70 -0.10
Maysville
50 34.30 +0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 14.50 +0.40
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

58°
39°
Sun and areas of low
clouds and cooler

76°
52°

Plenty of sunshine

Marietta
68/39
Belpre
68/40

Athens
67/37

St. Marys
69/40

Parkersburg
69/41

Coolville
67/39

Elizabeth
69/40

Spencer
69/39

Buffalo
69/40
Milton
70/40

Clendenin
73/40

St. Albans
71/41

Huntington
70/40

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
59/45
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
68/50
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
77/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

68°
46°

Cool with sun and
some clouds

Murray City
66/37

Ironton
70/41

Ashland
70/41
Grayson
69/41

FRIDAY

59°
37°

Wilkesville
67/37
POMEROY
Jackson
68/39
68/38
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
68/40
68/39
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
67/41
GALLIPOLIS
68/40
69/40
68/40

South Shore Greenup
70/41
68/39

15
300

Portsmouth
69/40

THURSDAY

That deal came at a
price. The company
agreed it would put $200
million into a fund in
the next six months to
pay for emergency relief
of a crisis that has been
linked to the deaths
of more than 400,000
people in the U.S. since
2000.

Partial sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
67/37

Lucasville
68/39

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
67/39

Very High

Primary: ragweed and other
Mold: 2768

Logan
66/37

Adelphi
67/38

Waverly
66/38

Pollen: 3

Low

MOON PHASES

Partly sunny

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

WEDNESDAY

73°
51°

Mostly sunny

0

Primary: cladosporium
Mon.
7:36 a.m.
6:52 p.m.
7:41 p.m.
8:07 a.m.

TUESDAY

Mostly sunny today. Clear tonight. High 68° /
Low 40°

Statistics for Friday

81°
54°
70°
46°
90° in 1949
24° in 1906

MONDAY

71°
41°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

The question of allowing suits to continue is
not settled, but it got a
boost Friday.
Just before the hearing, a committee of
unsecured creditors that
includes opioid crisis
victims said it would
support pausing the lawsuits.

tainty about the deal.
Twenty-ﬁve state governments asked the judge
to let suits against Sackler family members move
ahead. But the judge said
that would wipe out the
company’s assets.
“A trial here will simply be an autopsy,” Drain
said.

work out what would be
needed to keep the litigation on hold so negotiations can continue.
Purdue ﬁled for bankruptcy last month as part
of a tentative settlement.
But half the states and
hundreds of local governments have refused to
sign on, leading to uncer-

members of the wealthy
Sackler family that owns
the company.
In a hearing Friday,
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
— A judge is pushing for U.S. Bankruptcy Judge
a settlement of more than Roberts Drain contemplated stopping the suits
2,600 lawsuits facing
OxyContin maker Purdue for six months before
ending up with a shorter
Pharma with a decision
Friday to pause litigation injunction until Nov. 6 to
against the company and allow the parties time to

Associated Press

Charleston
72/41

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
36/28
Montreal
59/41

Billings
57/39
Minneapolis
43/32

Toronto
61/44
Chicago
51/34

Denver
70/37

Kansas City
63/37

Detroit
61/41

New York
67/57
Washington
70/54

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
72/46/s
42/30/pc
72/57/t
68/61/r
70/51/c
57/39/pc
65/37/pc
68/52/pc
72/41/s
77/55/r
61/33/s
51/34/pc
67/44/s
66/44/pc
68/43/s
75/58/s
70/37/pc
54/31/pc
61/41/pc
87/75/pc
76/64/pc
64/38/s
63/37/s
81/57/pc
70/46/pc
77/56/s
69/46/s
87/74/pc
43/32/sn
71/42/s
81/70/pc
67/57/pc
74/49/s
88/65/s
70/54/c
91/66/s
64/44/s
64/47/pc
75/59/t
70/57/r
68/42/s
68/42/pc
68/50/s
59/45/c
70/54/pc

Hi/Lo/W
74/47/s
42/30/c
79/65/s
73/53/pc
77/47/s
56/31/pc
62/38/s
67/48/c
73/42/s
81/56/pc
67/26/s
55/39/s
68/44/s
58/38/pc
62/39/pc
80/68/sh
73/31/s
60/46/s
52/38/pc
86/76/pc
83/72/t
63/41/s
69/55/s
81/58/s
74/59/pc
73/57/s
72/48/s
87/73/sh
48/38/c
74/52/s
85/72/t
71/51/pc
79/63/pc
89/66/pc
74/49/s
90/66/s
60/37/s
62/43/pc
79/50/pc
79/49/s
69/50/s
67/42/s
66/51/s
60/44/pc
78/50/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
72/57

High
Low

El Paso
83/60
Chihuahua
73/60

100° in McAllen, TX
-10° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
117° in Rafha, Saudi Arabia
Low -33° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
76/64
Monterrey
81/66

Miami
87/74

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

OH-70107875

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

�S ports

Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM��-&gt;9,/&lt;�� M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

Red Devils slip past Southern, 42-35
By Alex Hawley

Southern answered quickly,
tying the game at seven with a
six-yard touchdown pass from
Gage Shuler to Will Wickline.
RACINE, Ohio — HomeA 70-yard touchdown run by
coming celebration halted.
Chase Hood gave the guests
The Southern football
a 14-7 lead, which was cut to
team headed into the fourth
14-13 after a 46-yard touchquarter of its Homecoming
down run by Trey McNickle.
game with a one-point lead,
Still in the ﬁrst quarter,
but non-conference guest
McNickle found the end zone
Ravenswood found the end
zone in the ﬁnale and escaped on a ﬁve-yard run, with the
Tornadoes converting the
Roger Lee Adams Memorial
Field with a 42-35 victory on two-point try for a 21-14 lead.
The Red Devils responded
Friday.
with the ﬁrst score of the secThe Red Devils (3-3) —
ond quarter, tying the game at
who fell to the Tornadoes
(5-2) in the ﬁrst-ever meeting 21 with a six-yard touchdown
run by Hood.
between the teams last seaSarah Hawley|OVP Sports son — led 7-0 with a 30-yard
Next, the guests regained as
SHS sophomore Will Wickline runs for the first Tornado touchdown, early in the first Jacob Anthony touchdown
Jaycob Creel carried the ball
quarter of Southern’s 42-35 loss to Ravenswood on Friday in Racine, Ohio.
40 yards for the touchdown.
run early in the ﬁrst quarter.
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Southern tied it up at 28
headed into the half, however,
with McNickle scoring his
third touchdown on an eightyard run.
Ravenswood was back in
front after an 18-yard touchdown run by Anthony at the
start of the third quarter, but
the point-after kick failed,
leaving RHS with a 34-28
lead.
McNickle’s fourth touchdown run of the game came
later in the third, with the
SHS senior tailback scoring
on a 11-yard run. The Purple
and Gold made the point-after
kick and took a 35-34 lead
into the ﬁnale.
See DEVILS | 2B

Rebels fall
at Belpre,
42-12
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

BELPRE, Ohio — Things went well for the
Rebels for 16 minutes. Then the other 32 minutes
followed.
Host Belpre scored 14 points in each of the ﬁnal
three quarters and ultimately cruised to a 42-12
victory over the South Gallia football team Friday
night in a Week 7 Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division football contest in Washington County.
The visiting Rebels (1-6, 1-5 TVC Hocking)
took the opening lead of the game as Kyle Northup rumbled in from 24 yards out, making it a 6-0
contest with 4:56 left in the ﬁrst period.
The score remained that way until the 7:39 mark
of the second canto as Logan Adams scored on
an 8-yard run. Tyce Church converted the ﬁrst of
six successful PAT kicks and gave the Orange and
Black a permanent lead at 7-6.
Walker Feick hauled in a 63-yard scoring pass
from Connor Baker with 1:55 left in the half,
allowing BHS to take a 14-6 advantage into the
break.
The Golden Eagles (5-2, 4-1) started piling on
to their lead early in the third canto as Adams
picked off a pass and returned it 27 yards for a
21-7 lead with 7:25 left.
Adams tacked on a 12-yard run with 29 seconds
remaining while giving the hosts a sizable 28-6
cushion headed into the ﬁnale.
Northup answered with a 70-yard run to the
house at the 10:20 mark of the fourth, which
trimmed the deﬁcit down to 28-12. The Red and
Gold were never closer.
Adams produced his fourth score of the game
with a 34-yard scamper at the 7:58 mark, then
Cody Daugherty added a 1-yard run with 1:26 left
in regulation to wrap up the 30-point outcome.
Belpre claimed a 12-6 advantage in ﬁrst downs
and outgained the guests by a 334-246 margin
See REBELS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday, Oct. 14
Volleyball
(10) Meigs at (7) Athens, 6 p.m.
(9) River Valley at (8) Warren, 6 p.m.
Soccer
(10) Portsmouth West at (7) Gallia Academy
boys, 5 p.m.

Tuesday, Oct. 15
Volleyball
Ohio Valley Christian at Point Pleasant, 5:30
Calhoun County at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Soccer
(7) Gallia Academy girls at (2) Warren, 5 p.m.
Lincoln County at Point Pleasant girls, 7 p.m.
Point Pleasant boys at Capital, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Oct. 16
Volleyball
Athens-MHS winner at (2) Gallia Academy, 6
p.m.
Warren-RVHS winner at (1) Vinton County, 6
p.m.

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

GAHS sophomore Donevyn Woodson (24) carries the ball off tackle, during the Blue Devils’ 44-20 victory over Coal Grove on Friday in
Gallipolis, Ohio.

Blue Devils battle past Coal Grove, 44-20
By Alex Hawley

two plays later, with
Reece York recovering for
the guests at the CGHS
40.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Four straight carries
— When you’re wearing
down, they’re just getting got the Hornets to the
end zone, with Austin
warmed up.
Stormes delivering the
The Gallia Academy
football team trailed Ohio scoring blow from 16
yards out. Cory Borders
Valley Conference guest
ran in the two-point conCoal Grove 14-7 after 16
minutes of play on Friday version on a quarterback
at Memorial Field, but the keeper, making the Coal
Grove lead 14-7 with 8:31
Blue Devils scored ﬁve
straight touchdowns and to go in the half.
A 44-yard run by
cruised to a 44-20 victory
over the visiting Hornets. Donevyn Woodson on
the next play from scrimThe Blue Devils (7-0,
mage put the ball in
4-0 OVC) — undefeated
Hornet territory, and four
through seven games for
plays later, Beasy broke
the ﬁrst time since the
unbeaten season of 1986 a 26-yard touchdown run
to tie the game at 14 with
— were only able to run
three plays offensive plays 6:53 left in the stanza.
The Blue Devils took
in the ﬁrst quarter, with
their ﬁrst lead just nine
the Hornets (2-5, 1-3)
using 17 run plays to con- seconds later, as Noah
Vanco tossed a 48-yard
trol possession.
touchdown pass to CamOn the second play of
the of the second quarter, eron Webb on the ﬁrst
play after the hosts recovCoal Grove broke the
ered another onside kick.
scoreless tie, as Austin
The Gallia Academy lead
Stapleton found the end
went to 22-14, as Vanco
zone on a six-yard run.
tossed the two-point
The point-after kick was
conversion pass to Briar
missed, however, leavWilliams.
ing the guests with a 6-0
A punt by each team
lead 47 seconds into the
took the game to halfsecond.
time, and then GAHS
GAHS committed
back-to-back penalties to began adding on to its
lead on the other side of
start its ﬁrst drive of the
second quarter, but junior the break. Gallia Academy missed a ﬁeld goal
Michael Beasy broke a
on the ﬁrst drive of the
65-yard touchdown run
second half, but the Blue
on the very next play.
and White defense forced
Andrew Toler made his
a three-and out to get the
ﬁrst of four point-after
ball back at their own 30.
kicks, giving the hosts a
The Blue Devils cov7-6 lead with 10:51 left in
ered the 70 yards in nine
the ﬁrst half.
plays, with Beasy ﬁnding
Next, the Blue and
the end zone for the third
White recovered an
time at the 3:53 mark of
onside kick, but wound
up fumbling the ball away the third, completing the

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

possession with a sevenyard run.
Trailing 29-14, Coal
Grove took the rest of the
time off the third quarter
clock and then turned the
ball over on downs on the
ﬁrst play of the ﬁnale.
After a 17-yard pass
from Vanco to Cade
Roberts on the ﬁrst play
of the Blue Devil possession, Vanco completed a
tipped pass to Williams,
who then ran 38 yards
for the touchdown. Beasy
punched in the two-point
conversion and gave the
hosts a 37-14 lead with
11:24 left in regulation.
After a nine-play Hornet drive resulting in a
punt, the Blue Devils
took over with 61 yards
to paydirt and 6:54 left in
the contest. Beasy picked
up 34 yards on a trio of
carries and then Vanco
tossed a 27-yard touchdown to Woodson, giving
the hosts a 44-14 lead
with 5:20 to play.
Coal Grove ended its
scoring drought with 2:15
left in the game, as Malachai Wheeler completed
an 80-yard drive with an
11-yard touchdown run.
The Hornets couldn’t
execute the onside kick
attempt, and the Blue
Devils sealed the 44-20
win in victory formation.
GAHS has now won 14
consecutive regular season games and 13 straight
OVC bouts, as well as
winning 10 decisions in
a row at Memorial Field.
Following the triumph,
third-year Gallia Academy
head coach Alex Penrod
discussed the Blue Devils’
game plan for the Hornets.

“We knew what Coal
Grove wanted to do
offensively,” Penrod said.
“They wanted slow the
game down, they wanted
to hold on to the football
and let that clock run. We
got some crucial stops
when we needed to, and
we knew coming in that
when we got an opportunity to score, we were
just going to try get the
football back. We came
up with two big onside
kicks there, Andrew Toler
has just been outstanding, to say the least, in
everything that he does.
Unfortunately we kind
of blew that ﬁrst opportunity away, but we took
advantage of that second
one and were able to put
some points on the board.
“There in that second
half, our defensive guys
continually wore on their
offense a little bit. Credit
to our coaching staff for
making adjustments,
and credit to our kids
for understanding those
adjustments and making
some plays, they really
just stepped up there in
the second half.”
Coach Penrod also
acknowledged the Blue
Devils’ 7-0 start, but
noted that they won’t celebrate long with a Week 8
trip to Rock Hill looming.
“It’s deﬁnitely surreal,
it’s deﬁnitely special,
and just like every Friday
night, we’re going to
enjoy it tonight, but we
know we still have bigger
goals,” Penrod said. “We
have another opponent
next week that is going to
do the same things that
See GROVE | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, October 13, 2019

Devils
From page 1B

The lone score of the
fourth quarter came with
Creel punching in from
three yards out. The Red
Devils made the twopoint conversion to cap
off the 42-35 victory.
The Red Devils earned
a 25-to-18 advantage in
ﬁrst downs, but lost the
turnover battle by a 2-to1 count. Ravenswood
gained all-479 of its yards
on the ground, while
Southern ran for 219 of
its 280 total yards. SHS
was penalized ﬁve times
for a total of 34 yards,
while RHS was sent back
once for ﬁve yards.
McNickle — who
caught two passes for 11
yards — led the hosts
with 122 yards and
four touchdowns on 22
carries. Shuler — who
completed 6-of-14 passes
for 61 yards and a touchdown — gained 97 yards
on 14 rushing attempts.
Chase Bailey caught
two passes for 21 yards
in the setback, Cole
Steele had one 23-yard
reception, while Wickline
had a six-yard touchdown
catch.
Hood paced the guests
with 191 yards and two
touchdowns on 21 carries. Anthony added
160 yards and two more
touchdowns on 17 carries, while Creel — who
was 0-for-2 passing —
ran 10 times for 56 yards
and two touchdowns.
Rounding out the
Red Devil tally, Wayne
Stephens had 26 yards
on three carries, Isaiah
Casto had 24 yards on
four totes, while Sam
Strum picked up 22 yards
on two tries.
Southern will be back
at home in Week 8, as 5-2
Waterford is set to invade
Racine.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bulldogs bite Meigs, 60-24

Rebels

By Dave Harris

three for 64, Peyton Gail three
for 20, Brayden Markins two for
28 and Reece Wallace two for 14.
Moore carried 14 times for 174
yards and Stalder added 11 tries
for 158.
For Meigs Cleland was 14
of 24 in the air for 244 yards,
Lundy caught ﬁve for 114,
Hoover two for 56, Noah
Metzger three for 27, and Wes
Metzger added two for 40.
Metzger led Meigs with 51 yards
in 10 tries, Robert Dixon added
42 in ﬁve carries.
The Marauders (1-6, 0-4)
travel to Hocking County for a
non-conference encounter with
Logan.

in total yards, including a
142-59 edge through the
air. Both teams committed one turnover apiece
and each program was
ﬂagged nine times. SGHS
was penalized 84 yards,
while the hosts had 64
yards marched off against
them. Northup led the
Rebels with 166 rushing
yards on 27 carries, followed by Justin Butler
with 11 yards on six rushes. Northup completed
both of his two passes for
54 yards, while Tristan
Saber went 1-of-6 passing
for 5 yards to go along
with an interception.
Ashton Janey led South
Gallia with one catch
for 49 yards. Brayden
Hammond and Saber
also caught a pass apiece
for ﬁve and four yards,
respectively.
Adams ﬁnished the
night with 104 rushing
yards on 11 carries. Baker
completed 6-of-11 passes
for 142 yards, while Feick
caught all six passes for
142 yards. South Gallia — which has now
dropped four straight
decisions — returns to
action Friday when it
hosts Wahama in a Senior
Night contest at 7:30 p.m.

Dave Harris is a sports correspondent for the
Ohio Valley Publishing.

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

From page 1B

For Ohio Valley Publishing

THE PLAINS, Ohio — Athens
quarterback Joey Moore racked
up 544 total yards in leading the
Bulldogs to a 60-24 win over the
Meigs Marauders Friday at Athens High School.
Moore threw for 150 yards and
two scores, and added 174 yards
in 14 carries on the ground.
Corbin Stalder chipped in with
158 yards on the ground for the
Bulldogs.
Athens received the opening
kickoff and it took the Bulldogs
fast paced offense just four plays
to score. Stalder took it in from
32 yards out at the 11:04 mark
of the period. Athens who was
7 of 8 in two point conversions
made it 8-0 on a Moore run. The
Bulldogs increased the lead to
16-0 when Moore scored from
19 yards out at the 2:50 mark of
the ﬁrst period. The Bulldogs
increased the lead to 30-0 on a
second period 43 yard pass from
Moore to Braedan Halbert, and a
two yard run by Stalder.
On the ﬁrst play after Stalder’s
run, Coulter Cleland hit Abe
Lundy with a screen pass. Lundy
slipped a tackler in the backﬁeld
and went 64 yards for the score
to pull the Marauders to with in
30-6. Moore made it 36-6 at the
half on a 48 yard dash with4:56
left before intermission.
Meigs scored to begin the
second half as Cleland found
Hoover from 36 yards out to

Grove
From page 1B

we just saw tonight.
We’ll try to prepare to
stop the run again, let
our offense score, and
try to get as many possessions as we can.”
The Hornets claimed
an 18-to-16 edge in ﬁrst
downs, and the Blue
Devils committed the

Dave Harris|OVP Sports

Meigs junior Abe Lundy, right, tries to elude an Athens defender during Friday night’s
TVC Ohio football contest in The Plains, Ohio.

make it a 36-12 game. That score
was set up by a 26 yard pass
from Cleland to Lundy. But the
host came right back and made
it 44-12 at the end of three when
Peyton Gail scored from 11 yards
out with 6:34 left.
The Marauders pulled to
within 44-18 early in the fourth
period when Cleland hit Hoover
again this time from 20 yards
out. But Landon Wheatley threw
a 57 yard pass to Levi Neal, and
one play later Whitley picked off
a Meigs pass and went 47 yards
for the score to make it 60-18.
The Marauders closed out the
scoring on the games ﬁnal play
when Robert Dixon scored from
two yards out.
Moore was 11 of 18 in the air
for 150 yards, Halbert caught

game’s only turnover.
GAHS ran for 290 of
their 460 total yards,
while Coal Grove picked
up 297 of their 320 total
yards on the ground.
The hosts were penalized ﬁve times for 40
yards, while CGHS was
sent back once for ﬁve
yards.
Beasy led all ball carriers with 214 yards and
three touchdowns on
18 carries. Vanco completed 8-of-11 passes

for 170 yards and three
touchdowns, ﬁnding six
different Blue Devils
through the air.
Woodson had a gamebest three receptions for
63 yards and one touchdown, to go with 47
yards on a pair of carries. James Armstrong
had 32 yards on eight
carries, while losing
two yards on his lone
reception. Webb had
one 48-yard touchdown
catch, Williams added

one grab for 38 yards
and a touchdown, Roberts caught one pass for
17 yards, while Ben Cox
came up with a six-yard
reception.
For Coal Grove,
Stormes had 160 yards
and a touchdown on 16
carries, to go with one
grab for seven. Stapleton picked up 111 yards
and a touchdown on 23
carries, while Wheeler
had 21 yards and a
score on two totes, to

go with a 16 yard reception. Clay Ferguson ran
once for four yards,
while Borders — who
was 2-for-4 passing for
23 yards — gained one
yard over nine carries.
Gallia Academy has
now defeated Coal
Grove in back-to-back
seasons, and is now
10-10 in all-time meetings with the Hornets.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

k
c
a
B
PHOTO
CONTEST
to
l
WINNERS
o
o
h
Sc

OH-70151812

1st Place

2nd Place

Jon Parrack II 304-675-4132

3rd Place

4th Place

Ty Somerville 304-675-4030

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 13, 2019 3B

Rio Grande Eagles blank RedStorm women
By Randy Payton

said advantage. Cincinnati Christian University
scored midway through
the ﬁrst half and late in
the second period for a
2-0 win over Rio Grande,
Thursday night, in
River States Conference
women’s soccer action at
Northern Kentucky University.
The Eagles stopped a

For Ohio Valley Publishing

HIGHLAND
HEIGHTS, Ky. — For a
fourth consecutive outing, the University of Rio
Grande enjoyed an advantage in shots.
For a third straight
time, the RedStorm
failed to capitalize on

ﬁve-game winless streak,
improving to 4-7-1 overall
and 1-2-1 in league play
with the victory.
Rio slipped to 1-11
overall and 1-3 inside the
RSC as a result of the
loss.
The RedStorm ﬁnished
with a 21-16 edge in
shots overall and a commanding 15-6 cushion in

shots on goal, but failed
to score for the second
straight outing and the
seventh time this season.
CCU scored what
proved to be the only
goal it would need with
23:56 remaining in the
ﬁrst half when Jodi
Litzler gathered in an
errant goal kick and ﬁred
a shot which ricocheted

Lady Marauders outlast River Valley
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS,
Ohio — The slimmest of
margins. The biggest of
victories.
Visiting River Valley
overcame a 2-0 match
deﬁcit and forced a
decisive Game 5, but the
Meigs volleyball team
ultimately snapped a
6-match losing streak
while celebrating Senior
Night in style Thursday
with a 25-20, 25-21,
13-25, 21-25, 16-14 decision in a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division
ﬁnale for both programs
at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
The Lady Raiders
(8-14, 2-10 TVC Ohio)
led 1-0 in the opening
game, then didn’t lead
again until claiming a
wire-to-wire victory in
Game 3 to close the
match deﬁcit down
to 2-1. The host Lady
Marauders (4-17, 3-9)
managed an 8-6 lead in
Game 4, but the Silver
and Black countered
with a 16-4 surge while
building their largest
lead of the set at 22-12.
MHS managed to cut
the deﬁcit down to three
at 24-21, but the guests
broke serve and tied the
match at 2-all.
There were eight ties
and ﬁve lead changes in
the decisive ﬁfth game,
and neither squad led by
more than three points
at any time in the ﬁnale.
River Valley took its
last of two leads at 9-7,
but Meigs rallied with

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Meigs seniors Bre Zirkle, second from left, and Maci Hood, right,
celebrate with teammates after clinching the final point of Game
5 Thursday night during a TVC Ohio volleyball contest against
River Valley at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium in Rocksprings,
Ohio.

a 7-2 surge and held a
14-11 edge in the race
to 15. RVHS, however,
answered with three
consecutive points and
knotted things up at 14.
The Maroon and Gold
broke serve for a permanent lead, then scored
the ﬁnal point on a Maci
Hood serve to complete
the 3-2 match triumph.
Meigs salvaged a season split with the Lady
Raiders after dropping a
3-2 decision in Bidwell
back on Sept. 5.
Mallory Hawley led
the MHS service attack
with 15 points, followed by Hood with
11 points and Jewels
Conley with 10 points.
Baylee Tracy was next
with eight points, while
Bre Zirkle and Hannah
Durst closed things out
with six and two points,
respectively.
Hawley provided a
team-high 10 kills, while
Durst added two kills.
Hood had two kills as

well, with Conley and
Kylee Mitch also providing a kill apiece.
Conley led the hosts
with six blocks, while
Durst and Hawley each
had two blocks. Zirkle
dished out a team-best
13 assists.
Alex Wood and Lora
Kinney led River Valley
with 12 service points
apiece, followed by
Jaden Bradley with 10
points. Mikenzi Pope
and Breanna Dodrill
were next with eight
points each, with Madison Hall also chipping in
ﬁve points.
Pope led the guests
with a game-high 18
kills, followed by Hannah Jacks with eight
kills and a team-best
four blocks. Taylor Huck
was next with six kills
and a block, while Kasey
Birchﬁeld and Javan
Gardner added a block
apiece to go along with
four kills and three kills,
respectively. Bradley also

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recorded one kill in the
setback. Kinney dished
out a team-high 18
assists, while Wood provided 10 assists as well.
Meigs honored seniors
Bre Zirkle and Maci
Hood before the match
for their contributions
to the program over
the last four years.
The Maroon and Gold
also recognized RVHS
seniors Breanna Dodrill,
Lora Kinney, Kasey
Birchﬁeld, Alex Wood
and Courtnie Provens
during their festivities.
Both the Lady
Marauders and the Lady
Raiders open tournament play Monday in
a pair of Division II
sectional quarterﬁnals
at 6 p.m. Ninth seeded
River Valley travels to
eighth seeded Warren,
while 10th seeded Meigs
heads to seventh seeded
Athens.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13
7 PM

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6 PM

River Valley junior Hannah
Jacks (22) hits a spike attempt
during Game 2 of Thursday
night’s TVC Ohio volleyball
contest against Meigs at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium in
Rocksprings, Ohio.

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NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Winnipeg Jets Site: Bell MTS Place (L) Post-game
In the Room Poker Night
SportsCenter (N)
SportsC. (N) The Greatest Poker World Series
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
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F1 Auto Racing Japanese Grand Prix
The Madam of Purity Falls (2019, Drama) Kristanna
Killer Contractor (2019) Zac Titus, Mark Lawson, Alyshia (:05) The College
Loken, Trevor Stines, Olivia d'Abo. TV14
Ochse. TV14
Admissions Scandal TV14
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Monsters, Inc. (‘01, Ani)
Moana (‘16, Ani) Auli'i Cravalho. A young navigator and the
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Voices of Billy Crystal, John Goodman. TVG demigod Maui work together to save her home and people. TVPG
Com) Bette Midler. TVPG
(:05)
Godzilla (‘14, Action) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Bryan Cranston, Elizabeth Olsen.
Godzilla (2014, Action) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Bryan
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Afraid of the Dark?
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Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Dare" Law&amp;O: SVU "Revenge"
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CNN Newsroom
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(5:45)
Jack Reacher: Never Go Back TVPG
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Safe House
(5:45)
Halloween: Resurrection (‘02,
(:45) The Walking Dead "Lines We Cross" The Walking Dead "We Are (:05) Talking Dead (N)
the End of the World" (N)
Hor) Brad Loree, Jamie Lee Curtis. TVMA
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Alaska/Frontier (N)
River Of No Return
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(5:00)
Hacksaw Ridge (2016, Biography) Sam
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Worthington, Luke Bracey, Andrew Garfield. TVMA
account of the career of Chris Kyle, the most lethal sniper in U.S. military history. TVMA
Star Law "Back Road Bait" Lone Star Law
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Star Law "Saving the Herd"
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King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
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Mecum Auto Auctions: Muscle Cars &amp; More "Las Vegas" (N)
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American Pickers "Catch- American Pickers "Bubba American Pickers "Picker's American Pickers "Double (:05) American Pickers "Pick
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(:35) Martin (:10) Martin (:45) Martin
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Beach Hunters (N)
Caribbean Life (N)
Hawaii Hunters (N)
(5:30)
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban Harry learns
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire Harry becomes a competitor
that a murderer has escaped Azkaban prison and is after him. TVPG
in a tournament between three wizarding schools. TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(:10) Our Boys "Chapter 10: (:15)

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

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10:30

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off the hand of Rio freshman keeper Jayla Brown
(Chillicothe, OH) and
into the net.
That scant lead held
up until an unassisted
marker by Maren Hance
set the ﬁnal score with
3:48 left to play. Brown
ﬁnished with four saves
in the loss the RedStorm.
Kacy Zimmerman

stopped 14 shots in goal
for the Eagles.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Monday when
it travels to Owensboro,
Ky. for a meeting with
Brescia University.
Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.
EST.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Cliffside
wins 2019
River Cup
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — The
Cliffside Golf Course has
captured the 2019 River
Cup Championship, held
on the ﬁrst weekend of
October at Riverside
Golf Club in Mason
County.
The guests claimed a
21-to-15 victory in the
36 matches played.
The Saturday morning
session, which featured
eight best ball matches,
was won by Cliffside by
a 5-3 count. The guests
got wins by the duos of
Rob Bradley and Mike
Canady, Mike Haynes
and Dustin Caudill, Ed
Caudill and Chuck Marshall, and Rob Canady
and Gabe Bevan, while
the hosts had wins from
the teams of Justin
Arnold and Carl King,
Jeremy Tucker and Sterling Shields, and Gary
Richards and Tim Burnette.
On Saturday afternoon, there were six
scramble matches,
resulting in two wins
by each side, as well as
two ties. The teams of
Mike Chapman and Tom
Moore, and Rob Bradley
and Dustin Caudill were
victorious for Cliffside,
while the duos of Trent
Roush and Corey Miller,

Sterling Shields and
John Ridenour won for
Riverside.
The Sunday morning
alternate shot matches
also resulted in a 3-3 tie,
with the teams of Mike
Chapman and Mike
Canady, Rob Canady and
Boeing Smith, and Mike
Hayes and Tyler Daniels
winning for the guests,
and the squads of Trent
Roush and Carl King,
Justin Arnold and Jeremy Tucker, and David
Reed II and Corey Miller
taking victories for the
home side.
The guests pulled
away on Sunday afternoon, winning nine of
the 16 singles matches,
with Riverside winning
ﬁve and the other-2
resulting in ties. Winning singles matches
for Cliffside were
Chuck Marshall, Rusty
Saunders, Dustin Caudill, Tom Moore, Mike
Canady, Boeing Smith,
Tyler Daniels, Rob
Canady and Nick Saunders. Single match winners for Riverside were
Curtis Roush, Tim Burnette, Sterling Shields,
Jason King and Justin
Arnold.
The event returns to
Cliffside for the 2020
match.

Blue Angels breeze
past Rock Hill
By Alex Hawley

centage. Maddy Petro
had a match-best eight
aces to lead the Blue
Angel service.
PEDRO, Ohio — A
Maddie Wright was
perfect way to end the
next with three aces,
regular season.
followed by MaKenna
The Gallia Academy
volleyball team ﬁnished Caldwell with two, as
its third straight perfect well as Bailey Barnette
and Peri Martin with
season in Ohio Valley
one each.
Conference play on
At the net, Petro and
Thursday night in LawAlex Barnes tied for a
rence County, sweepteam-high with 10 kills
ing host Rock Hill in
apiece, with Petro pickstraight games.
Gallia Academy (20-2, ing up a trio of blocks,
and Barnes recording
14-0 OVC) — winning
every single OVC set for a team-best seven digs.
Wright ended with eight
a second straight season — breezed to a 25-8 kills and three blocks in
the win, Barnette added
victory in Thursday’s
ﬁve kills, while Abby
opener.
Hammons had two kills
The Blue Angels
and three blocks. Martin
— ranked 18th in the
and Callie Wilson had
latest OHSVCA Divia kill apiece for GAHS,
sion II Poll — rolled
with Martin also recordto a 25-4 victory in the
ing four blocks and 29
second, making their
90th straight set won in assists.
The Blue and White
league play.
— now with their ﬁfthGAHS capped off its
57th consecutive league straight 20-win season
— return to action at
victory and its 30th
straight OVC sweep with home on Wednesday in
the Division II sectional
a 25-8 win in the third.
semiﬁnal, against the
For the match, Gallia
winner of Monday’s
Academy had an 81.0
side-out percentage and quarterﬁnal match
a 94.6 serve percentage, between Meigs and Athwhile RHHS ended with ens.
a 21.4 side-out percentage and a 90.5 serve per- Alex Hawley can be reached at

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, October 13, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lady Tornadoes sweep Eastern
By Alex Hawley

their third straight win
— gave the lead back to
the guests at 19-18. EHS
tied it up at 19, 23 and
TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — One ﬁnal chance 24, but failed to regain
to add momentum head- the edge, as Southern
won the ﬁrst by a 26-24
ing into the postseason.
tally.
The Southern and
Eastern took its ﬁrst
Eastern volleyball teams
met each squad’s regular lead of Game 2 at 3-2
and eventually stretched
season ﬁnale on Thursthe edge to as many as
day at ‘The Nest’, with
four points, at 14-10. The
the visiting Lady Tornadoes picking up a straight Lady Tornadoes claimed
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports
SHS junior Jordan Hardwick (10) spikes the ball past the block of
the next seven points,
games victory for their
EHS tied it up at 17, and EHS junior Kylie Gheen, during the Lady Tornadoes’ 3-0 victory on
third straight win.
Thursday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
then the guests capped
Southern (15-6, 13-3
the winning cause, JorSouthern’s service
TVC Hocking) — which off the 25-19 win with an
attack was led by Sydney dan Hardwick chipped in
8-to-2 run.
won its Sept. 5 meeting
with four points and an
Adams with 15 points.
The Purple and Gold
with Eastern (12-10, 9-7)
ace, while Kassie Barton
Next were Baylee Wolfe
by a 3-1 count — jumped led wire-to-wire in the
and Kayla Evans added
and Phoenix Cleland
third game, pushing the
out to a 6-3 lead to start
with seven points apiece, two points apiece.
the night, but gave up the margin as high as seven
Sydney Sanders led
including a trio of aces by
and settling for a 25-20
next six markers.
the Lady Eagles with
Wolfe. Cassidy Roderus
win to cap off the 3-0
The Lady Eagles —
contributed ﬁve points to nine points and three
sweep.
who were also vying for

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Wildcats
rally past
Wahama,
28-22
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. —
A tale of two halves.
Visiting Waterford
spoiled Homecoming festivities for
the Wahama football
team after scoring 20
of the ﬁnal 28 points
in regulation Friday
night en route to a
28-22 decision in a
Week 7 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking
Division contest at
Bachtel Stadium in
Mason County.
The White Falcons
(2-5, 2-4 TVC Hocking) built a 14-8
halftime lead, but the
Wildcats (5-2, 4-1)
rallied with consecutive scores before
Abram Pauley added
a touchdown run and
a 2-point conversion
— tying the game at
22-all in the fourth
quarter.
The Green and
White, however,
tacked on the gamewinner late and eventually held on for the
6-point triumph.
Trevor Hunt added
a touchdown run
and a 2-point conversion run in the ﬁrst
half, while Pauley
completed an 82-yard
touchdown pass to
Hunter Board that
allowed the Red and
White to take a 14-8
edge into the break.
Hunt ﬁnished the
game with 62 rushing yards on 17 carries, while Pauley
added 19 yards on
17 attempts. Brayden
Davenport also
rushed four times
for 11 yards in the
setback.
Pauley completed
4-of-10 passes for 114
yards and Davenport
connected on 6-of-11
passes for 48 yards.
Hunt led Wahama
with three catches for
26 yards and Pauley
hauled in three passes for 24 yards. Davenport also caught a
pair of passes for 26
yards.
Nick Brewer also
ran for six yards on
two totes and hauled
in one pass for four
yards.
No other information was available on
the game as of press
time.
Wahama returns to
action Friday when it
travels to South Gallia for a TVC Hocking matchup at 7:30
p.m.

aces. Kylie Gheen was
next with seven points
and two aces, followed
by Brielle Newland with
six points and one ace.
Haley Burton and Olivia
Barber posted three
points apiece, with an
ace by Burton, while
Jenna Chadwell came up
with two points for the
hosts.
Leading the Lady Tornadoes at the net, Wolfe
earned 13 kills and four
blocks. Hardwick had
10 kills and two blocks
for the victors, Roderus
came up with seven kills,
while Evans ﬁnished
with three kills. Cleland
claimed two kills and
one block for SHS, while
Adams had a match-best
25 assists.
Barber led the EHS

net attack with six kills.
Gheen had ﬁve kills and
one block in the setback,
Chadwell and Megan
Maxon added four kills
apiece, while Layna
Catlett claimed a pair of
blocks. Newland picked
up one kill and a teambest 14 assists for EHS,
while Sanders led the
team’s defense with 15 of
the squad’s 41 digs.
The postseason awaits
both teams next, with
Southern hosting the
winner of Symmes Valley
and Ironton St. Joseph
in a Division IV sectional
ﬁnal on Thursday, and
the Lady Eagles visiting
Zane Trace in a D-3 sectional ﬁnal on Saturday.

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Cadets march past Point Pleasant, 49-21 Rio men

outlast
CCU

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Eventually,
the turnover bug took a
big bite out of the Big
Blacks.
The Point Pleasant
football team committed four fourth quarter
turnovers that led to
28 straight points and
allowed visiting Linsly
to cruise to a 49-21 victory on Friday night in a
Week 7 non-conference
matchup at Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field in
Mason County.
The Big Blacks (1-3)
appeared poised for a
Homecoming upset as
the hosts built a 14-0
lead 19 seconds into
the second period while
never trailing in the ﬁrst
half.
The Cadets (7-0),
however, needed only
two plays and 50 seconds to cover 58 yards
while trimming that
deﬁcit in half at 14-7
— where the score
remained headed into
the break.
The Orange and Black
rallied to tie things early
in the third stanza, then
took a permanent lead
with 25 seconds left
in the frame as a Marc
Kaufmann 4-yard run
made it a 21-14 contest
entering the ﬁnale.
The Red and Black
followed with turnovers on their next four
offensive possessions,
all of which resulted in
Cadet touchdown drives
within a 6-minute window. When the smoke
cleared, Linsly was
holding a substantial
49-14 advantage with
5:54 left in regulation.
The Big Blacks put
together one last offensive strike as Tyler
Hinzman scored on a
1-yard run with 28 seconds left, completing
the 28-point outcome.
It wasn’t as much a
tale of two halves as
it was the difference
turnovers can make,
especially in looking at
the ﬁnal numbers of the
game.
Point Pleasant
claimed an 18-12 advantage in ﬁrst downs and
outgained the guests
by a 368-246 overall
margin in total yards
of offense, which also
included a resounding
316-131 edge in rushing
yards.
In the ﬁrst half, the
Big Blacks held a 210-95
advantage in total yards
and an 11-4 cushion in
ﬁrst downs — and neither squad committed a
turnover.
The game plan was to
use up clock by grinding
out yards on the ground,

By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Jovone Johnson fends off a Linsly defender during a first half run Friday
night at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

and that plan worked
to near perfection for
the better part of three
quarters of play.
However, facing a
pivotal fourth-and-1 at
the Linsly 41 — the Big
Blacks were unable to
pick up the yard necessary to move the chains.
The Cadets took over
on downs with 2:30 left
in a 14-all contest …
and everything started
going wrong for Point
Pleasant from there.
PPHS coach David
Darst admitted afterwards that his troops
executed the game plan
to near perfection for
the well over a half, but
the venerable mentor
also noted that Linsly
ultimately made the big
plays down the stretch
that won this contest.
In the end, though,
Darst was pleased with
the overall effort —
something that will
again be needed next
week when Point hosts
Ohio-based Louisville
(4-3).
“I’m proud of the way
our kids came out and
prepared for the ball
game this week. The
kids worked hard at
the game plan and they
came out and executed
that game plan pretty
well early on. We wanted to slow things down
and control the pace,
and we did that in the
ﬁrst half,” Darst said.
“The fourth down and
one that we didn’t convert in the third quarter
was huge because it
was 14-all at the time.
We convert that play,
momentum is probably
back in our favor at
that point. We followed
with our turnovers from
there, and boom … we
were done.
“We have to put this
one behind us because
we have another good
football team coming in
here next week. We’ll
just have to keep preparing like we have been

and keep battling to be
a better football team
next Friday.”
The Big Blacks took
the opening kickoff and
marched 76 yards in
14 plays, with Brady
Adkins capping the
drive with a 1-yard
touchdown run. Elicia
Wood tacked on the ﬁrst
of her three successful
PAT kicks for a 7-0 edge
with 5:44 left in the ﬁrst
quarter.
Linsly marched the
ball down to the Point
21 before losing possession on downs, then the
hosts answered with a
3-play, 79-yard scoring
drive that ended with a
Jovone Johnson 67-yard
scamper around the left
side for a 14-point cushion with 11:41 remaining in the ﬁrst half.
The Cadets answered
with a 2-play, 58-yard
scoring drive that ended
with a 29-yard scoring
pass from Hunter Kelley
to Kobe Hill, making
it a 14-7 contest at the
10:51 mark of the second period.
Both teams traded
punts the rest of the
half, allowing Point
Pleasant to enter the
break with a 7-point
advantage.
Linsly opened the second half with a 5-play,
63-yard scoring drive
that was capped with a
35-yard TD pass from
Kelley to Trevin Tush
for a 14-all contest with
9:54 remaining in the
third.
Both teams traded a
punt apiece, then the
Big Blacks came up
short on their fourthand-1 chance inside Linsly territory — giving
the guests possession at
their own 41 with 2:30
left in the stanza.
The Orange and
Black covered 59 yards
in seven plays, with
Kaufmann capping
things with a 4-yard run
— giving Linsly its ﬁrst
lead of the game with

25 seconds left in the
third.
Florian Hirsch sacked
PPHS quarterback
Hunter Bush in the end
zone on the ﬁrst play
of the fourth quarter,
but the ball came loose
before Bush went down
to the ground. Chance
Knight picked up the
fumble in the end zone
and gave the guests a
28-14 edge nine seconds
into the ﬁnale.
On its ensuing drive,
Point had its second
play from scrimmage
result in an interception as Luca DiLorenzo
picked off a pass and
returned it down to the
PPHS 3.
Tush needed only one
carry to cover the distance as his 3-yard run
extended the lead out to
35-14 with 11:05 left in
regulation.
The Big Blacks committed another fumble
four plays into their
next possession, which
gave Linsly the ball at
the Point 27. Five plays
later, Kaufmann scored
on an 8-yard scamper
that ballooned the lead
out to 42-14 with 7:05
remaining.
The ﬁnal Point
Pleasant fumble was
picked up by Kelley and
returned 45 yards to the
house, giving the guests
a 49-14 advantage with
5:54 left in the game.
Johnson led the PPHS
ground attack with 129
yards on nine carries,
followed by Adkins with
71 yards on 20 attempts.
Bush completed 6-of8 passes for 115 yards.
Nick Parsons led the
wideouts with four
grabs for 43 yards.
Kelley paced Linsly
with 62 rushing yards
on 10 attempts and also
completed 7-of-13 passes for 115 yards. Hill led
the wideouts with four
catches for 56 yards.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

HIGHLAND
HEIGHTS, Ky. — It
wasn’t pretty but, given
their personnel limitations, the University of
Rio Grande men’s soccer
team was willing to take
a win in whatever fashion
they could get it.
Nicolas Cam Orellana
scored on a header with
16:46 left to play, giving
the RedStorm a 1-0 win
over Cincinnati Christian
University, Thursday
night, in River States
Conference action at
Northern Kentucky University. The RedStorm,
ranked 10th in the latest NAIA coaches poll,
improved to 11-2 overall
and 5-0 in the RSC with
the victory. The Eagles
evened their overall
record at 6-6 and slipped
to 1-2 in conference
play with the loss. Rio
Grande played without
the services of three regulars - freshmen Sebastian
Borquez (Santiago, Chile)
and Diego Montenegro
(Santiago, Chile), as well
as sophomore Cristobal
Encina (Santiago, Chile).
Borquez and Encina were
serving suspensions for
red card disqualiﬁcations
in last Saturday’s doubleovertime loss to Maine
Fort Kent, while Montenegro suffered a shoulder
injury in the same game.
The RedStorm doubled
up CCU in overall shots,
13-6, but scoring opportunities were few and
far between. Rio had
just four shots on goal
compared to three for the
Eagles. The game’s lone
marker came with just
under 17 minutes remaining when Cam Orellana - a sophomore from
Santiago, Chile - headed
in a crossing pass from
the left wing by junior
Samuel Pedersen (Aldershot, England). Senior
net-minder Richard Dearle (Castle Donington,
England) stopped three
shots in a shutout effort
for the RedStorm. Keanan
Ainge recorded a pair of
saves in a losing cause
for Cincinnati Christian.
Rio Grande returns to
action next Thursday
when it travels to No. 21
West Virginia UniversityTech for a battle of RSC
unbeatens.
Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.
at the YMCA/Paul Cline
Soccer Complex in Beckley, W.Va.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 13, 2019 5B
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(304)966-1084.
brunerland.com

MERCHANDISE
Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollarsilver/gold coins, any
10k/14k/18k gold jewerly,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop 151
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446-2842

Amy Carter

Best Deal New &amp; Used
OH-70149531

MARK PORTER FORD

Product Specialist

Home of the Car Fairy

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amycarter@markporterauto.com

INVITATION TO BIDDERS

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FREE ESTIMATES
24 Hours

(740) 446-0870
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

The Village of Middleport is accepting sealed bids beginning
10/14/19 for SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL in 2020. Deliver bids to
the water office at 659 Pearl St. Middleport, OH 45760 by
4:00PM on 10/28/19 and opened thereafter. The contract to be
awarded by the Council at the regular meeting on 10/28/19 at
7:00PM. Bid specifications are available at the water office or
contact Joe Woodall at 740-992-5571 with your information for
an electronic copy. The Village of Middleport reserves the right
to reject or refuse any and/or all bids.
10/13/19, 10/16/19

Auction Alert!

OH-70152323

ROGERS BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Village of Middleport
Solid Waste Disposal Bid Specifications

Household of the Late Neil &amp; Adelaide Sanders
Saturday October 19th 10:00 AM
Gallipolis AMVETS
107 Liberty Ave., Gallipolis, OH

Don’t miss this great Saturday Auction! This Auction is comprised of the
household of the late Neil &amp; Adelaide Sanders of Gallipolis, OH. There is a
great selection of Antiques, Furniture, Household, &amp; more!

GENERAL PURPOSE
The Village of Middleport provides solid waste collection services for its residential and commercial customers located
within the Village limits. The average quantity collected is approximately 130 tons of solid waste per month. The Village of
Middleport does not operate a landfill or solid waste transfer facility and plans to enter into a contract for services with a private firm.
REQUIREMENTS
A. The firm selected to provide solid waste transfer and landfill
disposal services must agree to accept and dispose in a lawful
manner solid waste generated and collected by the Village of
Middleport.
B. The delivery site:
a. The Village of Middleport's solid waste disposal shall be
within a 50-mile radius from the Village limits; in addition, the
distance to the site will be considered as part of the bid evaluation.
b. Must have a current operating permit from the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
c. Shall be open to receive solid waste material between the
hours of 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM Monday thru Friday.
e. Shall be able to accept at a minimum, 15 ton of solid waste
per day.
d. Shall be capable of receiving solid waste during inclement
weather conditions.
C. The selected firm shall weigh all solid waste material delivered by the Village of Middleport and provide the hauler with an
appropriate weight receipt indicating date, time and weight. In
addition the firm selected shall maintain delivery records so as
to provide a monthly invoice detailing the quantity of solid waste
delivered in the month including date, time, and weight of each
delivery by the Village of Middleport.

Stay tuned to www.auctionzip.com,
www.estatesale.com, &amp; Facebook for
continual updates! Call or email Josh
with any questions 740-645-6665 or
bodimer@wisemanrealestate.com.

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?

The selected firm shall provide with the bid and thereafter annually to the Village of Middleport a written assurance letter that
the firm has sufficient landfill capacity to accommodate the expected solid waste volume delivered by the Village of Middleport for a period of one (1) year.
SOLID WASTE &amp; DISPOSAL SERVICE - RESPONSIBILITIES
of SOLID WASTE
A. The selected firm shall be solely responsible for all solid
waste transfer and disposal activity conducted under the service contract issued under this specification, including the techniques sequences, procedures, means and coordination of all
work. The selected firm shall provide all labor, material(s) and
equipment to provide solid waste transfer and disposal services
to the Village of Middleport.
B. The selected firm shall supervise and direct the work in a
professional manner and provide all daily and continuous attention necessary for such proper supervision and direction.
C. The selected firm shall comply with all laws, ordinances,
rules, regulations and orders of all public authorities relating to
the operation of solid waste transfer and disposal facilities. If
any terms of the specification are at variance with any such
law, ordinances, rules, regulation or order, the Village of Middleport shall be notified promptly on discover of such variance.

Drawings and Specifications prepared by:
BDT Architects and Interior Designers (BDTAID, Inc.)
26 E. Park Dr., Suite 101
Athens, Ohio 45701
Telephone: 740.592.2420 Telefax: 740.592.3824
The project is a Phase II renovations including vestibule,
restrooms, janitor room, offices and sprinkler supply piping
and pump under one general contract, see summary of work
for full description.
Project estimate is $ 293,334.00.
A pre-construction meeting will be held at the site, 11821 State
Route 160; Vinton, Ohio 45686 on Thursday, October 3, 2019,
at 12:00 pm local time.
Bidders may obtain complete sets of the Bidding Documents
from the Architect for a non-refundable charge of $40.00 per
set. An electronic set of the Bidding Documents can be
emailed to bidders at no charge.
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The Daily Times publishes six days a week,
Monday-Saturday. The Community Common is our Sunday
publication. In addition to our print products the newspaper
has a robust website, www.portsmouth-dailytimes.com, and
social media presence. We serve Portsmouth, Ohio and surrounding communities with a combined circulation of over
35,000 readership, 120,000 monthly viewership and over
15,000 social media presence.

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

Have a solid understanding of the fundamentals of local
news.
Strive to be the leading information source in our communities.
Understand the value of social media and use it as much as
an engagement tool as a promotional tool.
Constantly search for new ways to tell stories and present
news, both online and in print.
Demonstrate integrity and dedication through a comprehensive approach to balanced and credible journalism.
Be a constant, contributing reporter.
Write 2-3 editorials each week on local or state issues that
impact Scioto County.

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

RECORDING KEEPING AND PAYMENT REMITTANCES
SERVICES

Sealed Bids will be received for one contract for all material,
labor and services as described in the Drawings and Specifications. Bids will be opened publicly and read on the bid date,
at 12:01:00 pm local time. All bids must be accompanied by a
bid guaranty as noted in the project specifications.

Our editor will be an individual who understands how to connect content to our readers by providing depth and context to
the news we deliver. The successful candidate will be someone who can mentor a staff and develop an open dialogue
with readers and community leaders.

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

D. All firms responding shall submit to the Village of Middleport
a copy of all state permits issued for or authorizing solid waste
transfer and disposal operations.

Field of Hope
Gym Renovation Phase II
11821 State Route 160
Vinton, Ohio 45686

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

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ASSURANCE of LANDFILL CAPACITY

Sealed Bids will be received by the Field of Hope Community
Campus, Inc, at 11821 State Route 160; Vinton, Ohio 45686
until Monday, October 21, all bids to be received at or before 12:00 p.m. local time, for the following project:

In addition, our editor is part of the management team of the
newspaper and is a part of the face of our newspaper in the
communities we serve.
Additionally, s/he will:

If you value local journalism, love nothing better than helping
journalists grow in their craft, believe newspapers – both
online and print – remain the foundation of an informed community, and are looking for a great community in which to
live, we want to hear from you.
Email us your resume, five working links to some of your latest and best reporting (editorials, too, if you have them), and
a cover letter explaining why you’re the best person for this
job. Please send those documents to Hope R. Comer,
hcomer@aimmediamidwest.com

FIND IT IN THE

CLASSIFIEDS

A. The Village of Middleport must be billed on a monthly basis
by the contractor for the actual tonnage of solid waste delivered
by the Village of Middleport to the solid waste transfer station.

C. Invoices will be due and payable within thirty (30) days of receipt of a properly completed invoice. PRICING of SOLID
WASTE Indicates the price per ton in dollars and cents to be
charged for solid waste transfer and disposal services. Bid
prices must include all cost related to the receipt, transfer, and
disposal of solid waste delivered by the Village of Middleport to
the solid waste transfer station, including all landfill charges and
all applicable local and state governmental fees. Your pricing of
solid waste, should be per ton for one year from
January 1, 2020 thru December 31, 2020.
Village Administrator
Joe Woodall
10/13/19, 10/16/19

OH-70152802

B. Weight slips must accompany invoices from a certified scale
documenting the actual net weight of the solid waste delivered
to the solid waste transfer station, the date of delivery and the
vehicle number used by the Village of Middleport.

CALL TODAY!

Shop the classifieds and
grab a great deal on a
great deal of items!

�COMICS

6B Sunday, October 13, 2019

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-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

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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see what’s brewing on the

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jobmatchohio.com

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, October 13, 2019 7B

PREVENTION WEEK
OCTOBER 6-12
Fire extinguisher know-how
Fire extinguishers are an important safety component in any home or
building. They can mean the difference between a devastating fire or
a minor incident. Although a fire extinguisher in the hands of a
trained adult can be a life- and property-saving tool, many people
are not properly skilled in the use of fire extinguishers.
A large portion of the public has not received training on fire
extinguisher use and when to use them. Sometimes the use of the
wrong extinguisher can exacerbate a fire, as there are different fire
extinguishers for different types of fires. Learning when and where to
use an extinguisher can be a matter of life and death.
Type of Extinguisher
Not all fires are alike, and fires started from different materials require the use of
different extinguishing agents to safely and quickly put the fire out. There are five
different types of extinguishers, and generally each will feature a symbol to show the
applicable fire on which they can be used.
Class A: These are used on ordinary substances, like cloth, wood, paper, and plastics.
Class B: These extinguishers are used on ﬁres that feature ﬂammable liquids, such as
oil-based paints or gasoline.
Class C: These extinguishers are used on electrical equipment, such as tools or
appliances that are plugged in.
Class D: Commonly found in specific factories, these extinguishers are used on
flammable metals.

Class�K:�Combustible�cooking�materials,�like�animal�oils�and�fats,�can�be�extinguished�with�this�agent.�
They�are�commonly�found�in�commercial�kitchens,�but�are�now�infiltrating�residential�markets�as�well.�
Multipurpose:�Some�extinguishers�combine�different�agents�so�they�are�applicable�for�a�range�of�fires.
When�to�Use�a�Fire�Extinguisher
Small�fires�may�be�smothered�with�an�extinguisher.�If�the�fire�has�spread�or�is�already�large�in�size,�
it’s�likely�only�a�trained�firefighter�can�handle�the�blaze.�Only�use�a�fire�extinguisher�in�these�
circumstances.
1. The fire is small and contained.
2. You have already called the fire department.
3. There is little chance of being consumed by toxic smoke.
4. You can escape safely if necessary.
5. The fire is not between you and the escape route.
6. You are physically able to carry its weight and exert the
necessary pressure to operate it.
Fire�extinguishers�should�be�routinely�inspected�and�
maintained�to�ensure�they�will�be�effective.�Some�need�to�
be�shaken�to�keep�the�dry�chemicals�from�settling.�Others�
need�to�have�the�pressure�at�the�correct�level.�An�extinguisher�
may�need�to�be�recharged�or�replaced�if�it�is�damaged.
Individuals�can�talk�with�firefighters�about�possible�training�courses�
in�the�use�of�fire�extinguishers.�This�will�help�a�person�know�the�correct�
way�to�handle�and�activate�an�extinguisher�should�it�need�to�be�used.

ADDICTION HOLDING YOU DOWN?

Rise up, starting now.

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OH-70153319
OH-70153264

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POINT TREATMENT CENTER of POINT PLEASANT
809 Willow Lane | Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
Mark W. Nolan, MD

Joseph B. Justice, DO

Vivien R. Newbold, MD

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�8B Sunday, October 13, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

It’s no secret that breast cancer is one of the leading causes of cancerrelated deaths for women in the United States. Here is the good news;
it’s also one of the most treatable forms of cancer.
Why is it so important to start screening for breast cancer?

Mammograms use a low-dose of radiation to take x-ray

Plain and simple, mammograms save lives. Although

images of the breast to detect cancer, often even in the

breast cancer risk is generally very low in women under

early stages before women experience symptoms. The

40, the risk that a woman might develop breast cancer

earlier breast cancer is detected the better, because this

in 1 year increases with age. 1 out of 8 women in the

is when it is most treatable. Early detection may prevent

US will develop breast cancer in her lifetime. The risk

the need for extensive treatment for advanced cancers or

of death from breast cancer can be lessened if breast

may decrease the need for a mastectomy.

cancer is detected early with a screening mammogram.

“Get your annual mammogram.
It is the best thing you can do to
fight breast cancer which is very
treatable when detected early.”

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Obstetrician &amp; Gynecologist at Pleasant Valley Hospital

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Pay attention to your breasts. Any abnormal bumps

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Review with your provider any risk factors for

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breast cancer development and when it would be

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appropriate to star t screening with mammography.

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is just that, temporar y. The scariest thing about a

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should be brought to your provider’s attention.

mammogram is not having one.

$100 Mammograms during the month of October
for those who are not covered by insurance.
Price includes screening, reading &amp; free tee shirt.

OH-70151787

Schedule your annual mammogram today at
Pleasant Valley Hospital’s Comprehensive
Breast Health Center by calling 304.675.6257.

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