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                  <text>Friendship,
health and
firewood

River Valley
defeats
Blue Angels

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

53°

64°

46°

Very windy today; locally damaging winds.
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 64° / Low 35°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 188, Volume 73

Wednesday, November 27, 2019 s 50¢

Pomeroy receives $3.7M in funding
By Kayla Hawthorne
khawthorne@aimmediamidwest.com

Kayla Hawthorne | OVP

The Village of Pomeroy will receive $3.7 million in funding for the 833 Sewer
Project from the Ohio EPA’s H2Ohio Plan. Pictured from left are Senator
Frank Hoagland, Ohio EPA Director Laurie Stevenson and Pomeroy Mayor Don
Anderson.

POMEROY — The Village
of Pomeroy was awarded $3.7
million in funding from the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for its
sewer project.
“Pomeroy will be receiving
$500,000 in H2Ohio funding
toward its project that will
extend sewer lines to approximately 80 homes on State
Route 833,” said EPA Director
Laurie Stevenson. “The balance of the $3.7 million project
is set to be funded with principal forgiveness dollars from

Ohio EPA’s State Revolving
Loan Fund Program.”
Pomeroy is the ﬁrst recipient of the H2Ohio Funds for
their infrastructure project.
The program was unveiled two
weeks ago by Ohio Gov. Mike
DeWine to ensure safe and
clean water for all Ohioans,
according to Stevenson.
“The Ohio EPA, Department
of Natural Resources, Department of Agriculture, and Ohio
Lake Erie Commission are
working to gather to implement the plan, which will focus
on some key elements that
include reducing phosphorus
in Lake Erie and elsewhere

through farming best management practices; creating new
wetlands to reduce excessive
nutrients entering lakes and
river; addressing drinking
water and waste water infrastructure, including failing
home sewage treatment systems and disadvantaged communities; and preventing lead
contamination in water at daycare’s and schools,” Stevenson
said.
The 833 Sewer Project,
which is nearing the completion of Phase 1, will allow
residents along the state route
See FUNDING | 5

‘Square
One’ shelter
in the works
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — Advocates ﬁghting against
the ever present problems of homelessness and
domestic abuse gathered together for a meeting
Monday to discuss ongoing efforts to create a new
nonproﬁt organization looking to address these
issues that would service Gallia, Meigs and Jackson counties.
See SQUARE | 5

Reported stolen
vehicle from
FFA Chapter attends National convention
Middleport found

Courtesy photo

Racine Southern FFA members recently attended the National FFA Convention. Pictured (top to bottom, left to right) are Ethan Mullen,
Caelin Seth, Austin Rose, Austin Rice, Krisitn McKay, Raeven Reedy, Rachel Jackson.

By Rachel Jackson

Staff Report

Special to the Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT — A vehicle reportedly stolen
from a residence in Middleport has been recovered
in Pickaway County, according to the Middleport
Police Department.
The vehicle, a 2003 silver Toyota Corolla, was
reported stolen on Nov. 24 from a residence on
Hysell Street.
According to a press release from the Middleport PD, on Nov. 26, Tommy “TJ” Moore, 39,
Athens, was located in Pickaway County in the
reported stolen vehicle by Ohio State Highway
Patrol.
Moore is reportedly being charged and held in
Pickaway County with receiving stolen property.
He is also being charged with grand theft by the
Middleport PD, according to the press release.
Middleport Chief Bruce Swift said his ofﬁcers
had been looking for Moore since the theft was
reported to the department.

RACINE — Local
FFA members recently
attended the National
FFA Convention held in
Indianapolis, Indiana.
Seven members of the
Racine-Southern FFA
chapter traveled to Cincinnati, Ohio, for the ﬁrst
night of their trip. While
in Cincinnati, students
learned about how a local
school turned their roof
into a thriving garden
that they use to teach
the students agriculture
and how math applies
to gardens. After that,
the members traveled to
a local high school that
had recently started up
their own suburban FFA
program and how it was
running.
The next day the students traveled to India-

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3, 5
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7-8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Members are pictured listening to the First General Session at the
National FFA Convention.

napolis, Indiana for the
ﬁrst day of National Convention. The students
were able to explore agricultural opportunities,
talk to colleges across
the nation, and learn
about the future of agriculture. Later that day
the members gathered
into the Lucas Oil Stadium for the ﬁrst ofﬁcial

gathering of the National
FFA Convention. They
listened to different presenters and got to learn
about the ofﬁcers of the
National FFA.
For the third day of
the trip, the students
went to different sessions about the different
career opportunities in
the agricultural ﬁeld and

how our interests and
talents can translate into
our future. They attended another convention
and learned about the
leading chapters across
that nation and the work
that they are doing in
their communities.
On the last day of
their trip they attended
one last convention session before making the
trip back to Meigs County Ohio. Fun activities
we got to enjoy while on
the trip was go karting,
Japanese Steakhouse,
Dave and Busters, movies and swimming.
Overall our members
had a memorable experience and were looking
forward to next year’s
convention.
Article written and submitted by
Rachel Jackson, 2019-2020 Racine
Southern FFA Historian.

Business After Hours to honor WMPO 60th
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MIDDLEPORT — The
upcoming Meigs County
Chamber Business After
Hours will celebrate
the 60th anniversary of
WMPO radio.
The event will take
place from 4-6 p.m. on
Monday, Dec. 2 at the
Middleport Village Hall,

located at 659 Pearl
Street in Middleport.
WMPO AM was founded on Aug. 28, 1959, and
WMPO FM was founded
on Aug. 27, 1973.
Below is a brief history of the station which
was written by the late
John E.M. Kerr, one of
the station founders, and
provided by WMPO.
In May 1957, a group

of Athens businessmen
met to discus starting a
radio station located in
Meigs County. Present
at the meeting included
Roger Jones, attorney;
Roy Stephenson, accountant; Frank Rauch, bakery and theater owner;
and John E.M. Kerr,
advertising manger
for WATH. The group
elected to form a corpo-

ration called Radio MidPom, Inc. and applied
for a broadcast license
with the FCC for Meigs
County.
A search immediately
followed to ﬁnd a building and tower site in
Meigs County.
The group learned
that the Bailey Family in
See WMPO | 5

�2 Wednesday, November 27, 2019

OBITUARIES/NEWS

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
DOROTHY REEVES
POMEROY — Dorothy
Reeves, 88, of Pomeroy,
passed away, on Saturday,
November 23, 2019 in the
Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
Born December 21,
1930, in Middleport,
she was the daughter of
the late Fred and Gladys
Knox Tuckerman. She
retired from Veterans
Memorial Hospital
where she worked in the
housekeeping and then
the laundry departments.
She is survived by
her son, Robert (Margie) Reeves, of Chester,
daughter, Linda (Paul
Jr.) Darnell, of Pomeroy,
grandchildren, Bryan,
Robbie, Brandi, Jeff, and

Missy, and seven greatgrandchildren. A sister,
Viola (Gene) Haning, of
Pomeroy, and numerous
nieces and nephews also
survive.
In addition to her parents, she is preceded in
death by her husband,
James Reeves, and a sister, Freda Elam.
Graveside services
will be held at 2:30 p.m.
on Saturday, November
30, 2019 in the Meigs
Memory Gardens with
Pastor Roger Watson
ofﬁciating. Interment
will follow. Friends
may call from 1-2 p.m.
on Saturday in the
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Pomeroy.

SCHWARTZ
LEON — Donna C. Schwartz, 81, of Leon, W.Va.,
died Tuesday, November 26, 2019, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio. Arrangements will be
announced Wednesday, November 27, 2019, by Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
BIAS, JR.
PROCTORVILLE — Wetzel Paul Bias, Jr., 73, of
Proctorville, Ohio, died November 24, 2019.
Funeral Service will be held 2 p.m., Friday November 29, 2019 at Union Missionary Baptist Church,
Chesapeake, Ohio with Rev. John Arnold ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller,
Ohio. Proctorville V.F.W. Post 6878 will conduct military graveside rites. Visitation will be held noon to 2
p.m., Friday, November 29, 2019 at the church.
BRYANT
LEON — Shaea Marie Bryant, 20, of Leon, W.Va.,
died November 25, 2019 in Cabell Huntington Hospital.
Service will be 11 a.m. Saturday, November 30,
2019, at Casto Funeral Home, Evans, W.Va. Burial will
follow in Baden Presbyterian Cemetery, Leon. Visitation will be from 5 - 7 p.m. on Friday at the funeral
home.
LONG
APPLE GROVE — Bonnie May Long, 81, of Apple
Grove, W.Va., died Monday, November 25, 2019.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va., Sunday December 1, 2019 at
2 p.m. Burial will follow in Potts Chapel cemetery in
Apple Grove. Friends may visit the family at the funeral home from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. prior to the service.

US criticizes China
for revealed abuses
By Matthew Lee

that China’s leaders are
responsible for gross
human rights violations
in the Xinjiang region.
WASHINGTON —
“They detail the
Secretary of State Mike
Chinese party’s brutal
Pompeo said Tuesday
detention and systematic
that a cache of leaked
repression of Uighurs and
documents proves that
members of other Muslim
Chinese authorities are
minority groups in Xinjiengaged in massive and
ang,” Pompeo told reportsystemic repression of
Muslims and other minor- ers at a State Department
news conference. “We
ities in western China,
call on the Chinese govas a number of foreign
ernment to immediately
governments expressed
serious concern about the release all those who are
arbitrarily detained and
scale of the campaign.
Pompeo said the docu- to end its draconian policies that have terrorized
ments underscored “an
overwhelming and grow- its own citizens in Xinjiang.”
ing body of evidence”

AP Diplomatic Writer

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, foreground left, and his wife Olena Zelenska hold candles as they walk to a memorial in
Independent Square (Maidan) in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. The memorial is dedicated to people who died in clashes with security
forces in 2013 during protests sparked by then President Viktor Yanukovych’s decision in November 2013 to freeze ties with the
West and tilt toward Moscow.

Ukraine focuses on uprooting corruption
KYIV, Ukraine (AP)
— Ukraine President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy
rode into ofﬁce this
year on a pledge to
tackle the corruption
that was rife under his
two most recent predecessors. Analysts and
activists have given him
strong marks so far,
which is why the recent
descriptions in Washington of Ukraine as a
graft-ridden country are
especially stinging for
ofﬁcials in Kyiv.
In the ﬁrst months
of his administration,
Zelenskiy has managed
to win quick passage of
anti-corruption legislation to identify illegal
wealth held by ofﬁcials,
calling for up to 10
years in prison for those
who cannot satisfactorily explain income of
more than $250,000.
In addition, a special
anti-corruption court
that the West had for
years urged be established ﬁnally began
working in September.
That same month, Zelenskiy announced the
creation of a hotline for
whistleblowers to report
wrongdoing.
Vadim Karasev, head
of a Kyiv-based independent think tank, said
remarks by President
Donald Trump and his
defenders that Ukraine
remains mired in corruption have belittled
Zelenskiy’s actions.
“Trump sees it as
expedient to brand
Ukraine as the most
corrupt country, preferring not to notice Kyiv’s
efforts to combat that,”
said Karasev, chief of
the Center of Global
Strategies.
Ukraine has taken
center stage in U.S.
political life after an
impeachment inquiry of
Trump was triggered by
a July 25 telephone call
in which he pushed Zelenskiy to investigate his
political rival Joe Biden
and Biden’s son, Hunter,
who was on the board

of a Ukrainian energy
company.
Trump has argued
that in holding up
nearly $400 million in
military aid to Ukraine,
he was seeking to root
out corruption. But
Congress had already
approved the aid and
there has been no evidence of any wrongdoing on the part of the
Bidens.
Analysts say the
41-year-old Zelenskiy
still faces massive
challenges to try to
end decades of graft,
cronyism and disregard
for the rule of law that
helped bring down
Ukraine’s two previous
leaders.
Before his election, he
was a sitcom star whose
only political experience
consisted of portraying
a high school teacher
who is propelled to
the presidency after a
recording of his tirade
against graft goes viral.
Now he is battling it
in real life.
“Zelenskiy has completed the formation
of a vertical structure
to combat corruption,”
said Daria Kaleniuk, a
prominent activist who
heads a Ukrainian group
called the Anti-Corruption Action Center.
“The anti-corruption
court, the prosecutors
and the anti-corruption
bureau have broad
powers and freedom of
action.”
Trump’s critics,
backed by a wealth of
testimony on Capitol
Hill, contend the president wasn’t genuinely
concerned about corruption and was just
trying to damage Biden
politically. They argue,
too, that his maneuvering actually undermined
efforts to attack graft in
the Eastern European
country.
In 2014, Ukraine’s
Russia-friendly president, Viktor Yanukovych, was driven from
power in an uprising

fueled by anger over
corruption, and his
administration was
accused of looting billions of dollars from the
state.
Graft continued to
run amok under his successor, Petro Poroshenko, a billionaire known
as “the Chocolate King”
because he made the
bulk of his fortune in
the candy business.
Taras Chmut, a
leading independent
military analyst, said
corruption has been
particularly rampant
in the military even as
Ukraine has remained
locked in conﬂict with
Russia-backed separatists in the east. The
ﬁghting erupted in 2014
after Russia’s annexation of Crimea.
Chmut cited a scandal
in 2015 over the procurement of rucksacks
at inﬂated prices for
Interior Ministry forces
ﬁghting the separatist
rebels. The gear was
purchased from a company controlled by the
son of Ukraine’s interior
minister, but the case
was closed, and the
minister has kept his
job to this day.
A military embezzlement scheme allegedly
involving top Poroshenko associates and a factory controlled by the
president badly dented
his popularity just
before the election and
contributed to his bruising loss to Zelenskiy.
Despite Zelenskiy’s
latest efforts, corruption
continues to plague the
country, with businesses paying bribes to win
government contracts
or settle tax disputes,
doctors seeking underthe-table payments
before performing
surgery and students
having to pay their way
into free higher education.
“There is no independent judiciary, bribes
are everywhere, top
ofﬁcials dodge punish-

ment with payoffs,”
said Anton Fursenko, a
42-year-old businessman
who was among those
who rallied on Kyiv’s
main square last week,
demanding stronger
action against corruption.
A department chief
in Zelenskiy’s ofﬁce
was arrested recently
on charges of accepting a $150,000 bribe to
get someone appointed
to a top position in
Ukraine’s state gas company.
Prosecutors also
opened a probe of 11
lawmakers from Zelenskiy’s party accused of
taking bribes of $30,000
each to support legislation that would beneﬁt
companies of another
member of parliament.
Zelenskiy insisted last
week that his government and his Servant
of the People Party will
get rid of anyone suspected of graft.
“We always said that
we are ready to clean
our ranks,” he said.
There are fears, however, that billionaire
tycoon Ihor Kolomoisky,
whose assets include a
TV station that broadcast Zelenskiy’s sitcom,
could use his connections to the president
to try to reclaim control
of the nation’s biggest
lender, PrivatBank,
which was taken from
him and placed in state
hands in 2016.
Zelenskiy has sought
to distance himself from
the tycoon, and government ofﬁcials have
vowed that PrivatBank
will remain under state
control.
Despite that, Kolomoisky has continued
working behind the
scenes to expand his
clout, said Kaleniuk, the
anti-corruption activist.
She alleged the tycoon
has been able to recruit
several dozen legislators
to support his agenda
and put pressure on Zelenskiy.

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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MEIGS BRIEFS
p.m. at the Belleville Locks and Dam. A tree lighting
will take place at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 2.
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical Association Open House from 12-3 p.m. on Saturday, Dec.
7. Eastern Bell Choir will preform at 1 p.m., followed by light refreshments.
RACINE — The Racine Christmas Parade and
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Christmas
Parade will take place at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. Christmas in the Park will be held at 7 p.m. on Sat30, beginning in the area of the former Dairy Queen urday, Dec. 7 with the parade beginning at Southern
and ending at The Blakeslee Center on South Third High School and ending at Star Mill Park.
Avenue, where there will be hot chocolate and visits
with Santa and the Grinch. For more information
visit the Middleport Business Association on Facebook.
The Meigs County Humane Society will be proPOMEROY — The Pomeroy Christmas Parade
viding straw for animal bedding during the months
will take place at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 1, with line of November, December, January, and February.
up at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy baseball ﬁelds. MerVouchers may be picked up at the Humane Society
chants will have special shopping hours in conjuncThrift Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport,
tion with the parade.
Ohio, for a fee of $2 per bail. Vouchers are to be
REEDSVILLE — The Reedsville Christmas
redeemed at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For
Parade will take place at 2 p.m., with lineup at 1:30 more information call 992-6064.
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

Christmas parades, events

Straw available for animals

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 27, 2019 3

Wintry storm delivers US travel woes before Thanksgiving
By Colleen Slevin
and David Koenig
Associated Press

DENVER — Heavy
snow and wind shut
down highways Tuesday
in Colorado and Wyoming, prompted school
closures in Nebraska and
forced more than 1,000
travelers to sleep overnight in Denver’s airport
after hundreds of ﬂights
were canceled just as the
intense Thanksgiving
week travel period went
into high gear.
That storm headed
next to South Dakota,
Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin
and another storm in the
Paciﬁc Ocean was closing
in on California, Oregon
and Nevada — making
for a double whammy of
early wintry weather.
And in northern
California and southern
Oregon, residents were
bracing for the late Tuesday afternoon arrival of a
“bomb cyclone” weather
phenomenon that could
create waves of up to 35
feet (11 meters), wind
gusts of up to 75 mph
(120 kph) and heavy
snow in mountainous
areas.
At Denver International
Airport, about 10 inches
(25.4 centimeters) of
snow mixed with winds
that limited visibility
prompted the cancellation of about 30 percent
of the airport’s average
daily 1,600 ﬂights. Operations began returning to
normal in the afternoon
as the storm moved east
after dumping up to nearly 3 feet (0.9 meters) of
snow in parts of northern
Colorado.
Southwest Airlines canceled about 200 ﬂights

in Denver and airline
spokesman Brad Hawkins
said it would take “a couple of days” to accommodate stranded passengers
on other ﬂights because
there are few during the
pre-Thanksgiving travel
crush. That makes it hard
for airlines to rebook
passengers whose ﬂights
have been canceled.
About 1,100 people
spent the night at the
airport, including many
cadets from the Air Force
Academy near Colorado Springs who either
missed ﬂights or wanted
to get to the airport
before road conditions
deteriorated, said airport
spokeswoman Alex Renteria.
Among them was cadet
Sadie Luhman, whose
trip to the airport took
three hours — twice the
normal driving time. She
got to the airport at 1
a.m., 10 hours before her
scheduled ﬂight to Chicago for Thanksgiving.
“I just wanted to beat
the storm. We kind of left
in the middle of it so it
kind of didn’t work, but
we got here,” she told
KCNC-TV.
Airport workers handed
out blankets, diapers,
baby formula, toothbrushes and toothpaste to the
airline passengers who
camped out for the night
on ﬂoors and in chairs.
The snow forced the
closures of long stretches
of Interstates 70 and 76
on plains east and north
of Denver. Parts of Interstate 80 in Wyoming were
buried under snow drifts
of up to 4 feet (121 centimeters), ofﬁcials said.
Many government ofﬁces in the Denver area and
in Cheyenne, Wyoming
closed along with colleges

Jeff Chiu | AP

Passengers wait to pass through security gates at San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco on Tuesday. Northern California
and southern Oregon residents are bracing for a ‘bomb cyclone’ that’s expected at one of the busiest travel times of the year.

and schools not already
on holiday break. In
Nebraska, several school
districts canceled classes
Wednesday and the
southwestern city of Sidney had received about 8
inches (20 centimeters)
of snow.
Blizzard and wintry weather warnings
extended into the Great
Lakes states with the
storm expected to bring
high winds and snow to
Michigan, Minnesota and
Wisconsin later Tuesday
and a chance of snow
over the weekend for
parts of New England,
said Alex Lamers, a
National Weather Service
meteorologist.
“That could be a coastto-coast storm,” he said.
The storm is expected
to dump snow on the
airport in Minneapolis,
where Delta Air Lines

in the major carrier,
but most is expected to
fall overnight when few
ﬂights are scheduled.
Delta prepared by ﬁlling de-icing tanks, calling
in extra ﬂight dispatchers
and operations employees, and having some of
its 20 in-house meteorologists focus on the
Minneapolis forecast.
“The timing is very
helpful,” said Erik Snell,
a Delta senior vice
president who oversees
operations. “It gives the
airport time to clear
the runways, although
we’ll have to watch the
residual snowfall in the
morning.”
The storm system
could mean disappointment for fans of the
larger-than-life balloons
ﬂown at Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in
New York.

House Judiciary Committee sets Dec. 4 hearing
By Mary Clare Jalonick
and Lisa Mascaro

Judiciary hearing and
make a request to quesAssociated Press
tion witnesses, according to Democratic rules
approved by the House
WASHINGTON —
last month. The commitThe House Judiciary
Committee is set to take tee released a letter from
Nadler to the president,
over the impeachment
saying that he hopes
probe of President DonTrump will participate,
ald Trump next week,
scheduling a Dec. 4 hear- “consistent with the rules
of decorum and with
ing on the question of
“high crimes and misde- the solemn nature of the
work before us.”
meanors” set out in the
It’s unlikely that the
Constitution.
president himself will
The opening hearing
will feature legal experts attend, as Trump is
scheduled to be overseas
who will examine the
on Dec. 4 to participate
constitutional grounds
in a summit with NATO
as the Judiciary panel
decides whether to write allies outside London —
a split screen showing
articles of impeachment
leadership that Trump’s
against Trump — and
allies may ﬁnd favorable.
if so what those articles
The Judiciary panel gave
will be.
Democrats are aiming the White House until
for a ﬁnal House vote by the evening of Dec. 1 to
Christmas, which would decide whether Trump or
his lawyers would attend.
set the stage for a likely
If Democrats stay on
Senate trial in January.
schedule, the hearing
Judiciary Chairman
could come as the comJerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.,
mittee introduces articles
said Tuesday that his
of impeachment and then
panel’s hearing will
holds a vote, a process
“explore the framework
that could take several
put in place to respond
days. If the committee
to serious allegations
approves articles by the
of impeachable misconend of the second week
duct.”
Meanwhile, the House of December, the House
could hold an impeachIntelligence Committee
ment vote the third week
will be submitting the
of the month just before
report on its probe into
leaving for the holidays.
Trump’s dealings with
The charges are
Ukraine.
Intelligence Chairman expected to mostly focus
Adam Schiff has said his on Ukraine. Democrats
committee will ﬁnish that are considering an overall “abuse of power” artireport “soon after Concle against Trump, which
gress returns from the
could be broken into
Thanksgiving recess.”
categories such as bribThe panel held two
ery or extortion. That
weeks of impeachment
article would center on
hearings this month
the Democrats’ assertion,
examining Trump’s
based on witness testirequests for Ukraine to
investigate Democrats as mony, that Trump used
his ofﬁce to pressure
the U.S. withheld miliUkraine into politically
tary aid to the country.
Trump and his lawyers motivated investigations.
Democrats are also
are invited to attend the

expected to include an
article on obstruction of
Congress that outlines
Trump’s instructions to
ofﬁcials in his administration to defy subpoenas
for documents or testimony.
Though several government ofﬁcials called by
Democrats cooperated
with the committee,
several key witnesses
— including acting
White House Chief of
Staff Mick Mulvaney,
Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and
former National Security
Adviser John Bolton
— refused, following
Trump’s orders.
Lastly, Democrats
could include an obstruction of justice article
based on special counsel
Robert Mueller’s report
released earlier this year.
Mueller said he could
not exonerate Trump on
that point, essentially
leaving the matter up to
Congress.
When and if the
House approves articles
of impeachment, the
Republican-controlled
Senate would be expected to hold a trial in early
2020. Unless political
dynamics change drastically, Trump would have
the backing of majority Republicans in that
chamber and be acquitted.
It’s still unclear how
long a trial might last,
what it would look like
and who might be called
as witnesses.
While the matter
remains in the House,
Schiff said in a letter to
his colleagues on Monday that his committee
“will continue with our
investigative work” and
could still hold depositions or hearings. But

Schiff said it will not
prolong a ﬁght to obtain
documents or testimony
in court.
“The president has
accepted or enlisted foreign nations to interfere
in our upcoming elections, including the next
one,” Schiff said in the
letter. “This is an urgent
matter that cannot wait
if we are to protect the
nation’s security and
the integrity of our elections.”
Though the investigative hearings are over,
Democrats are continuing to release new information. On Tuesday, the
House Budget Committee said that the White
House Budget Ofﬁce
had given investigators
documentation that the
ﬁrst ofﬁcial hold on military aid to Ukraine was
signed on the evening of
July 25, just hours after
Trump asked Ukrainian
President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy to investigate
Democrats, including former Vice President Joe
Biden and his family, on
a phone call.
Revelations about that
phone call triggered the
impeachment inquiry in
September as the White
House released a rough
transcript of the conversation.
The House Budget
Committee said a career
budget ofﬁcial signed
the July 25 letter, which
delayed the Ukraine aid
through Aug. 5, but that
subsequent “apportionment” letters were signed
by a political appointee,
Michael Duffey, who
retained responsibility
for the account through
the Sept. 30 end of the
2019 budget year.
Duffey deﬁed a House
impeachment probe subpoena to testify.

Organizers were preparing for the possibility
that of grounding the
iconic balloon characters
because of 40-50 mph
(64-81 kph) gusts in the
forecast. Rules put in
place after several people
were injured by a balloon
years ago require lower
altitudes or full removal
if sustained winds exceed
23 mph (37 kph) and
gusts exceed 34 mph (54
kph). The decision will
be made on parade day.
The second storm
developing in the Paciﬁc
Ocean was expected to
slam the West Coast of
the U.S. on Tuesday evening, bringing snow to
the mountains of California and Nevada and wind
and rain along the coasts
of California and Oregon.
Forecasters warned of
“difﬁcult to impossible
travel conditions” across

much of northern Arizona later this week as that
storm dumps about 2 feet
(61 centimeters) of snow.
The approaching storm
accelerated the annual
winter closure of the
highway leading to the
North Rim of the Grand
Canyon by ﬁve days.
This month, AAA predicted that the number of
travelers over a ﬁve-day
stretch Thanksgiving
holiday travel period
starting Wednesday will
be the second-highest
ever, behind only 2005.
For those ﬂying, airlines expect trafﬁc to be
up about 4% from this
time last year. Airlines
added about 850 ﬂights
and 108,000 seats per
day on average to handle
the increase over last
year’s crowds, according
to the trade group Airlines for America.

Lawyer: McGahn
ruling doesn’t extend
to Bolton, deputy
WASHINGTON (AP) — John Bolton’s attorney
suggested Tuesday that a court order directing former White House counsel Don McGahn to appear
before Congress has no bearing on whether his
client and another ex-national security ofﬁcial he
represents will testify.
The statement from attorney Charles Cooper
aimed to blunt public speculation that the judge’s
order in the McGahn case could inﬂuence the
actions of his own clients or halt a lawsuit from
one of them challenging a subpoena in the House
impeachment inquiry.
Cooper’s comments followed a judge’s ruling
in a separate case Monday requiring McGahn to
comply with a subpoena related to special counsel
Robert Mueller’s investigation. The judge, Ketanji
Brown Jackson, wrote that not even the Republican president’s closest aides who receive subpoenas from Congress can “ignore or defy congressional compulsory process, by order of the President
or otherwise.”
The House Judiciary Committee sought to
speak with McGahn, a star witness in Mueller’s
obstruction of justice investigation, months before
the current impeachment inquiry centered on the
president’s interactions with Ukraine. But the outcome nonetheless could lead to renewed efforts by
House Democrats to compel testimony from other
high-ranking ofﬁcials in the impeachment probe,
making it harder for those ofﬁcials to argue that
they are immune from congressional questioning.
Cooper said Tuesday that former deputy national security adviser Charles Kupperman would continue to pursue his lawsuit in Washington’s federal
court.
That lawsuit asks a judge to decide whether
he must comply with a congressional subpoena
in the House impeachment inquiry or abide by
White House instructions that he not appear. The
order for McGahn does not affect Kupperman’s
case since Kupperman’s advice to the president
exclusively concerns sensitive matters of national
security, Cooper said.

SUPPORT

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP

VOL. FIRE DEPT.
The Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Dept. is sponsoring a fund raising
program to raise money. These funds will be used to improve service
to our community.
Department representatives will be contacting all homes in the area over
the coming weeks asking for a donation of $20. Department representatives
will be going door to door and will carry identification or an ID badge.
The Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Dept. wishes to THANK everyone for
their donation by giving a complimentary certificate for a 8x10 color portrait
to be taken at the station.
OH-70161515

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Friendship,
health and
firewood

Thanksgiving, that most America-deﬁning of
holidays, is just around the corner.
I can hardly wait.
Not merely for the traditional
pleasures of the bounteous table, but
because I’m sincerely grateful to still
be around to share and enjoy another
Thanksgiving celebration with family
and friends.
Life is a gift—ﬂeeting, fragile, precious. Neither time nor health comes
Jim
with a guarantee. Being thankful
McGuire
for one’s blessings was an attitude
Contributing taught throughout my growing up.
columnist
In church and at school, come
Thanksgiving time, we often sang
“We Gather Together”—that lovely
old hymn, of Dutch origins, from the late-1500s.
Grade schools presented plays and pageants
with makeshift Pilgrims and Indians doing their
best to peaceably reenact that ﬁrst Thanksgiving
feast. Our admittedly inauthentic meal was heavy
on the carbs, with various cookies, cupcakes, plus
candy corn and miniature pumpkin leftovers from
Halloween. All quaffed down with syrupy-sweet
orange Kool-Aid. The only turkey served was the
gobbler motif on ﬂimsy paper plates.
But the message was still clear: count your
blessings— share, don’t take things for granted,
and be grateful for all you have.
During recent weeks, I’ve been sawing logs and
splitting the rounds into stove-length ﬁrewood.
We heat entirely with wood. Because of a lung
infection which culminated with hospitalization in
March, I’d been unable to work much afterwards
throughout the summer.
Now—thankfully!—I’m good, able to buck
wood, feeling stronger and better than I have in
several years! Talk about a real blessing!
When the heating season began and we started
ﬁring up the woodstove during cooler evenings,
my ﬁrewood supply was on a cut-and-carry basis.
I was only mildly concerned.
Then winter came early! Near desperation set
in. I spent every spare moment working up the
few leftover logs I had from last season—trying
to push our ﬁrewood to a more comfortable—and
safer— reserve.
When temperatures drop into the single digits,
a prudent man can’t rest easy with just a week’s
cushion of ﬁrewood on the pile. What if you get
sick again and can’t stay even marginally ahead?
Worse, I was running out of saw logs. Finding a
new supply this late in the year would be a problem.
So I was doubly worried.
Recently a tree-trimmer friend called. “I have a
big load of logs,” he said. “Mostly ash, seasoned
on the stump, ready to burn. You want ‘em?”
Twenty minutes later they slid off his truck’s
dump bed into the yard—a pile that when sawn
and split would yield maybe two cords of dandy
ﬁrewood. Work I could manage.
“What do I owe you,” I asked.
“Nothing,” my friend said as he climbed back
into his truck.
I shook my head and began to protest. He
leaned out the window opening and grinned.
“Hey, I’ll bring you another load in a couple of
weeks. Happy Thanksgiving!”
“Happy Thanksgiving,” I replied, feeling my
eyes moisten.
“Bless you…bless you!” I managed to choke
out as he gave a wave and pulled away. I hope he
heard.
What’s Thanksgiving really all about? Not food
or football… or ﬁrewood. But about sharing and
caring and being grateful.
Thanksgiving is about spreading love around.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Reach this writer at naturalwanders@gmail.com. This column shared
through the AIM Media Midwest group of newspapers.

THEIR VIEW

Best of Memphis in Wilmington
Smoke was billowing
from the small shed that
sat near the south end
of Washington Avenue.
I strongly considered
calling the ﬁre department. Then I caught the
sweet smell of barbecue
and thought to myself,
“Oh, my. Someone has
something cooking and it
smells mighty good.”
Just a few days earlier I
had noticed that the small
block-building at the end
of our street had a new
tenant. The small, neatly
printed sign attached to
the little concrete-block
building announced that
Beaugard’s Southern BarB-Que had moved into
town.
After a few more days
I stopped in for my ﬁrst
taste. I was greeted by
a small, wiry black man
named Troy. His most
striking feature was his
smile. That smile lit up
his entire face.
His eyes were crinkled
from a lifetime of spreading joy. As he welcomed
me into his little restaurant, hospitality ﬂowed
from him.
His wife, Bobbie, was
busy stirring up something in a large metal
bowl. I later found out
it was called “sandwich
slaw.” It’s not cole slaw.
Cole slaw is chopped
up cabbage, mixed with
vinegar, spices and a little
mayonnaise. Cole slaw
is good to have at a picnic, but it’s not made for
sandwiches.
Bobbie was whipping
up a special slaw that was
perfectly blended and
mixed to sit atop a homemade, Memphis-style,
pork barbecue sandwich.
That all happened
nearly 20 years ago. Long
before coming to Wilmington, Troy Beaugard
perfected his skills of preparing barbecue at a little
place called the Dixie

restaurant in June
Pig in Arkansas.
2000.
Early in his career,
Over the years,
Troy learned that
I’ve learned that
the most importhere are three distant ingredient in
tinct styles of barany of the food he
becue. One style is
prepared was TLC
from Kansas City
(tender loving
Randy
and one originated
care).
Riley
To this day, Beau- Contributing in the Carolinas.
Troy grew up in
gard’s Southern
columnist
Arkansas with the
Bar-B-Que serves
Memphis style of
up all-things-barbebarbecue.
cued with an extra-large
That’s what he brought
dose of TLC and a great
us. Some folks get hooked
big natural smile. Today,
on one particular style of
that extra-big smile
barbecue; others just love
belongs to Troy’s son,
them all.
Marty.
Kansas City barbecue
As Troy was working
can be made of beef, pork
to get the restaurant up
or lamb. It’s slow-cooked
and running, Marty was
ﬁnishing his career in the over wood and served
U.S. Air Force. Frequent- with a thick tomato-based
sauce. The thick, spiced
ly, Marty and his wife
tomato sauce is an inteDiane came to Wilminggral part of barbecue in
ton to give his mom and
the Kansas City area.
dad some extra help. In
Carolina barbecue
doing so, Marty learned
usually starts with a dry
the craft of barbecuing
rub of spices. The meat
from the master — his
is later mopped with a
dad.
Luckily for this commu- vinegar-based sauce. It’s
nity, Marty was bitten by slow cooked over oak
or hickory hardwoods.
the barbecue bug. After
The meat of the North
22 ½ years in the Air
Force, Marty retired with Carolina barbecue is usuthe rank of senior master ally from the entire hog.
sergeant. He brought his The meat is then pulled,
shredded or chopped and
entire family to Wilmall the cuts of the pig are
ington where they have
been welcomed with open mixed together. The spicy
sauce is usually thin and
arms.
based on vinegar.
Since then, Troy and
However, in South
Bobbie have retired to
Carolina, they use a sauce
Georgia and Marty and
called “Carolina Gold.”
Diane are running the
That particular sauce gets
restaurant.
its unique color from addAs their reputation
grew, they outgrew their ing mustard and brown
original little block build- sugar to the mixture.
The Beaugard family
ing. Marty moved the
specializes in the Memrestaurant to a nice new
place on the south side of phis style of barbecue.
town. Other than that, he Every Memphis stylebarbecue starts with
admits to changing very
hand-selected meat and
little.
dry ingredients that are
For the most part,
Beaugard’s Memphis style vigorously rubbed into
the meat. Their “rub” is
barbecue is the same
a homemade mixture of
excellent ﬂavor and consistency that Troy gave us spices, salts, peppers and
a few secret Beaugard
when he ﬁrst opened his

ingredients. These are
briskly massaged into the
meat.
Later in the process, a
special homemade sauce
is mopped onto the meat
as it cooks. Everything is
homemade by the Beaugards.
One of the advantages
of Memphis style is that
it can be used with ribs,
brisket or chicken. The
pork is also great for making “pig salad.”
My favorite is the pork
sandwich. The meat is
barbecued, chopped and
placed on a fresh bun.
Sauce is then added (hot,
medium or mild). It’s
ﬁnished off with a nice
helping of sandwich slaw
from Bobbie’s own recipe.
Many years ago, I
walked into Beaugard’s
for my lunchtime sandwich. Troy smiled and
asked, “How are you doin’
today?”
I answered, “Troy, life
is good. God loves me.
I’m not exactly sure why,
but I know He does.”
Troy’s smile got even
bigger. He said, “You
know, every morning,
I get out of bed and
immediately drop to my
knees. I pray. I praise
God and then start doing
push-ups. The good
Lord always gives me
the strength to keep on
going. I love it!”
Not only have all the
family recipes been
passed from father to
son, but that special
Beaugard spirit and
Troy’s joy of living and
giving back to the community have also been
inherited by Marty.
I think I just love all
things “Beaugard” —
including their barbecue.
Randy Riley is former Mayor of
Wilmington, Ohio and former
Clinton County Commissioner.
This column shared through the
AIM Media Midwest group of
newspapers.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Author Gail Sheehy is 82. Footwear designer
Manolo Blahnik is 77. Academy Award-winning
director Kathryn Bigelow is 68. TV host Bill Nye
(“Bill Nye, the Science Guy”) is 64. Actor William
Fichtner (FIHK’-nuhr) is 63. Caroline Kennedy
is 62. Academy Award-winning screenwriter Callie Khouri is 62. Rock musician Charlie Burchill
(Simple Minds) is 60. Actor Michael Rispoli is 59.
Jazz composer/big band leader Maria Schneider
is 59. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty is
59. Rock musician Charlie Benante (Anthrax) is
57. Rock musician Mike Bordin (Faith No More)
is 57. Actor Fisher Stevens is 56. Actress Robin
Givens is 55. Actor Michael Vartan is 51. Actress
Elizabeth Marvel is 50. Rapper Skoob (DAS EFX)
is 49. Actor Kirk Acevedo is 48. Rapper Twista is
47. Actor Jaleel White is 43. Actor Arjay Smith is
36. Actress Alison Pill is 34.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 27, the 331st day of
2019. There are 34 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Nov. 27, 1978, San
Francisco Mayor George
Moscone (mah-SKOH’nee) and City Supervisor Harvey Milk, a
gay-rights activist, were
shot to death inside City
Hall by former supervi-

sor Dan White. (White
served ﬁve years for
manslaughter; he committed suicide in Oct.
1985.)
On this date
In 1901, the U.S. Army
War College was established in Washington,
D.C.
In 1924, Macy’s ﬁrst
Thanksgiving Day parade
— billed as a “Christmas
Parade” — took place in
New York.

In 1942, during World
War II, the Vichy French
navy scuttled its ships
and submarines in Toulon
(too-LOHN’) to keep
them out of the hands of
German troops.
In 1945, General
George C. Marshall was
named special U.S. envoy
to China by President
Harry S. Truman to try
to end hostilities between
the Nationalists and the
Communists.
In 1962, the ﬁrst Boe-

ing 727 was rolled out
at the company’s Renton
Plant.
In 1970, Pope Paul VI,
visiting the Philippines,
was slightly wounded at
the Manila airport by a
dagger-wielding Bolivian
painter disguised as a
priest.
In 1973, the Senate
voted 92-3 to conﬁrm
Gerald R. Ford as vice
president, succeeding
Spiro T. Agnew, who’d
resigned.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 27, 2019 5

Square
From page 1

Courtesy photo

The former WMPO station on Bradbury Road.

to increase power to
5,000 watts making it
one of the strongest
stations in the area.
From page 1
The years proBradbury was thinking gressed well and in
of closing their restau- 1974 WMPO was
granted permission
rant. Radio Mid-Pom
for an FM station to
elected to purchase
Bailey’s Drive Inn and broadcast on 92.1 with
lease adjacent acreage 3,000 watts. A new
for the tower. On Aug. wing was added to
28, 1959, WMPO 1390 the station building.
Ground was leased
started broadcasting
from Robert Burdett
with a staff of ﬁve
people. An open house for the new tower.
Through the period
was held with both
and expansion, two
Pomeroy and Middleof the stockholders
port mayors giving
passed away and the
welcome speeches.
stock was purchased
In 1964, WMPO was
by Jack Kerr and Frank
granted permission

Rauch. After 30 years
of successful operation, the two remaining stockholders elected to sell the stations.
E.T. Broadcasting of
Dayton purchased
WMPO in 1989. Ten
years later, the station
was sold to Positive
Radio Group of Blacksburg, Virginia, the
present owners.
Currently, WMPO
1390 AM and 103.7
FM simulcast with
WTHQ. The format is
“Top 100 Hits”, which
is a list of songs that
have peaked at number
one on the Billboard
Hot 100 and the maga-

zine’s national singles
chart which preceded
it. During football,
basketball and baseball
season, you can hear
games for Southern,
Eastern, Meigs and
Wahama on 13.7 FM.
K92.1 plays 70s, 80s,
and 90s music.
The station was
housed the Bailey’s
Drive-Inn building on
Bradbury Road until
2016 when the ofﬁces
moved to Point Pleasant. The transmitter
and towers are still
located in Middleport.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

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

Wednesday,
Nov. 27
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners will meet
at 11 a.m. for their
regular weekly meeting. The meeting has
been changed due to the
Thanksgiving holiday.

be served following the
performance. For more
information, contact
Paula Welker at 740-9927291.

Wednesday,
Dec. 4
MIDDLEPORT —
The Meigs County
Veterans Service Commissioner will hold its
ﬁnal meeting of 2019
at 9 a.m. in their ofﬁce
located at 97 North Second Ave. in Middleport.
All ﬁnal applications
must be submitted at
that time. There is no
November meeting.

Friday,
Dec. 6

RACINE — Deer
hunters and community
luncheon held from 11
a.m. - 2 p.m., Friday,
Carmel-Sutton UM
Church. Soups, sandwiches, desserts, drinks.
Donations only. Takeout
available.
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY — The
— All Meigs Library
Meigs County Public
locations will be closed
in observance of Thanks- Employee Retirees Inc.,
Chapter 74 will hold
giving Day.
their regular meeting
at noon at the Pomeroy
Community Center, 260
Mulberry Ave. A Potluck
luncheon will begin at
POMEROY — Meigs noon in the Center main
auditorium and will be
County government
followed by a brief busiofﬁces, including the
ness meeting which will
Meigs County Courtinclude installation of
house will be closed
new ofﬁcers. District
for the Thanksgiving
7 Rep. Greg Ervin will
holiday. Normal hours
will resume on Monday, provide updates of
statewide issues that
Dec. 2.
POMEROY — Meigs may effect PERI members. All Meigs Public
County Health DepartEmployee Retirees are
ment will be closed.
urged to bring a covered
Normal business hours
resume at 8 a.m. on Dec. dish and join the group.
2.

Thursday,
Nov. 28

Nov. 28
and 29

Saturday,
Dec. 7
POMEROY — Local
Author Event, 1 p.m. at
Pomeroy Library. Jordan
and Calee Pickens will
present their new book,
“Historic Tales of Meigs
County Ohio”.
MIDDLEPORT —
Fish fry will be held at
the Middleport Fire
Department with serving beginning at 11 a.m.
CHESTER — Chester
Shade Historical Association Open House from
12-3 p.m. Eastern Bell
Choir will preform at 1
p.m., followed by light
refreshments.
NEW HAVEN — The
New Haven Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary
will host a Christmas
craft show from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the New
Haven Fire Station.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Farmers’ Market will host an
indoor Christmas Market from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at the Mulberry Community Center.

From page 1

to connect to the public
sewer system.
“It’s going to add to
our customer base, so
that generates revenue
that will help us maintain
our systems, add to our
systems, repair our systems, etc.,” said Pomeroy
Mayor Don Anderson.
Anderson said the village is dependent upon
grants to complete large

Tuesday,
Dec. 10
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at the Pomeroy
Library, 6 p.m. All skill
levels and listeners are
welcome. Bring an instrument and play along.

Thursday,
Dec. 12
POMEROY — Family Craft Night, 6 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Library.
Gingerbread Houses,
all supplies will be provided.

Sunday,
Dec. 1

Public Meeting

HEMLOCK GROVE
— The Coolville Community Choir, under the
direction of Martha S.
Matheny, will perform
its favorite Christmas
song selections from
its past 40 years of performances at 7 p.m. at
Hemlock Grove Christian Church, which is
located at 38387 Hemlock Grove Rd. in Pomeroy. Refreshments will

The Middleport Planning &amp;
Zoning Commission will meet
on December 12, 2019 at
1pm to discuss a variance in
Middleport's fence ordinance.
The resident at 440 Grant Street
is asking for a 6' chain-link
fence in his front yard.

OH-70159065

Funding

Photo courtesy of Square One

Square One logo.

projects, such as the 833
Sewer Project.
“The ﬁnancial situation
in so many small communities is really critical
and very serious. Our
revenues go down and
our expenses go up. We’re
ﬁghting to maintain our
infrastructure systems,”
Anderson said. “Here’s
a project where we’re
not repairing something,
we’re building something
new, which is really nice.”
Ohio Senator Frank
Hoagland was also in
attendance at the funding

we think we can’t have
enough of in the area,” said
Durst.
Individuals attending the
meeting said they were not
looking to compete with
any area organizations providing services to the disenfranchised but that Square
One would steadily focus on
what services it could provide best as it learned from
efforts.
Square One is currently
reviewing funding resources
and housing agreements
with area property owners
as it continues to reach
out to potentially partner
with similarly focused community agencies. Square
One founders say they are
seeking to potentially staff
a residential facility with
appropriately trained individuals 24 hours a day.
Individuals interested in
gathering further information or assisting Square
One’s efforts can contact
740-441-5809, email squareonegjm@gmail.com or contact the organization via its
Facebook page.

announcement. Hoagland
said it is important to
focus on creating infrastructure for the future
generations.
“Improving this vital
infrastructure is a key element to see the future of
success so our kids and
our grand-kids can continue living in not only
a free country and a free
state, but a clean, free
country and a clean, free
state,” Hoagland said.
Kayla Hawthorne is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach her at
(304) 675-1333, extension 1992.

Thursday,
November 28

Friday,
November 29

(Thanksgiving Day)

(Day after Thanksgiving)

» All Holzer Urgent Care
and Pharmacy locations
are CLOSED.

» All Urgent Care and
Pharmacy locations are

» The clinics located at
Fruth Pharmacy in Gallipolis
and Wellston are CLOSED.

» The clinics located at
Fruth Pharmacy in
Gallipolis and Wellston are

» The Clinic at Walmart
operated by Holzer in
Athens is CLOSED.

OPEN 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

OPEN 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
» The Clinic at Walmart
operated by Holzer
located in Athens is

OPEN 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The Emergency Department at
our locations in Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, and Jackson are

OPEN 24 hours a day,
7 days a week.

OH-70159104

WMPO

According to Square
One Executive Director
Ashley Durst, she and
colleagues are looking to
create a new shelter in
the area that would serve
the needs of the area’s
homeless and abused
by partnering with other
civic-minded organizations.
Ideally, once the nonproﬁt
has obtained its 501(c)(3)
tax status, Square One will
provide a residential facility
to area women and families
struggling with trauma and
homelessness. On predetermined days of the month,
the organization would also
seek to connect homeless
men with area services and
sheltering resources.
“We’re thinking of doing
something we might call
Case Management Mondays,” said Durst. “It would
be open to anybody that
might need some help, men
as well.”
Durst said a primary
focus of Square One would
be to tackle the homeless issue in a “traumainformed” fashion while
seeking to help families
heal. This could include
cooking classes, life coaching, connecting clients with
healthcare providers, social
services, behavioral health
professionals and more.
“This is the kind of thing

�Sports
6 Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm men topple Siena Heights
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Gunner Short scored a career-high 25 points to lead the RedStorm
in a 77-63 win over Siena Heights (Mich.) University on Saturday at the Newt
Oliver Arena.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Just
hours after a not-so-hot showing in a loss to Ohio Valley
University, the University of
Rio Grande men’s basketball
team responded with, arguably,
its most solid performance of
the season.
The RedStorm spotted Siena
Heights (Mich.) University an
early six-point before roaring
back to post a 77-63 win over
the Saints in the ﬁnal round of
the Domino’s Classic, Saturday
afternoon, at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grande improved to 5-3
with the win.
Siena Heights, which was

among the schools receiving
votes in the most recent NAIA
Division II Coaches’ Top 25
poll, slipped to 3-5 with the
loss.
Rio Grande, which shot just
30 percent from the ﬁeld in
a 17-point loss to previouslywinless Ohio Valley University
on Friday night, trailed 24-22
after a bucket by Siena Heights’
DeMarco Dickerson with 6:17
left in the ﬁrst half, but the
RedStorm closed the half on
a 13-6 run to take a ﬁve-point
halftime advantage.
Rio kept things rolling after
the break, scoring 11 of the
ﬁrst 13 points in the second
half to take a 14-point cushion,
46-32, after a layup by sophomore Gunner Short (Catletts-

burg, KY) with 15:55 left to
play.
The RedStorm maintained a
double-digit lead the rest of the
way - outside of a three-pointer
by SHU’s Keith Jordan, Jr.
pulling the Saints within nine,
57-48, with 8:46 left to play and twice pushed the lead to
as many as 16 points inside the
ﬁnal 4-1/2 minutes.
Short led Rio Grande - which
shot 57 percent in the second
half and just over 48 percent
for the game - with a game-high
25 points and ﬁve assists, while
junior Kyle Lamotte (Mason,
OH) had 18 points and senior
Hadith Tiggs (Mayﬁeld
Heights, OH) netted 13 points.
See REDSTORM | 10

Lady Tornadoes
rally past Wellston
at home, 46-36
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WELLSTON, Ohio — Starting things off on the
right foot.
The Southern girls basketball team ended a
24-game losing skid while handing ﬁrst-year head
coach Ron Quillen his ﬁrst varsity win Monday
night with a 46-36 decision over host Wellston in a
non-conference matchup in Jackson County.
The Lady Tornadoes (1-0) trailed after each
of the ﬁrst two quarters of play, but the guests
made a pivotal 11-3 third quarter run that turned
a 2-point halftime deﬁcit into a comfortable 34-28
cushion entering the ﬁnale.
SHS canned 6-of-8 free throw attempts as part of
a 12-8 run down the stretch that wrapped up the
program’s ﬁrst victory since a 54-51 home decision
over Symmes Valley back on Feb. 10, 2018.
The Lady Golden Rockets hit ﬁve of the six
trifectas in the contest, but the hosts managed
only three ﬁeld goals in the second half. WHS led
14-10 after eight minutes and was ahead 25-23 at
halftime.
Southern, on the other hand, made eight of their
17 ﬁeld goals after halftime and won the second
half by a 23-11 margin.
Baylee Wolfe led SHS with a double-double
effort of 17 points and 14 rebounds, followed
by Jordan Hardwick with 12 points and eight
rebounds. Phoenix Cleland was next with nine
points and 10 rebounds, while Shelby Cleland and
Ella Cooper completed the winning tally with four
points each.
The guests were 11-of-20 at the free throw line
for 55 percent and also committed 15 turnovers in
the triumph.
Clemons paced Wellston with 13 points, including a trio of trifectas. Bouska was next with a
dozen points. The Lady Rockets were 7-of-9 at the
charity stripe for 78 percent.
Southern returns to action Wednesday night
when it hosts Meigs in a non-conference matchup
at 6 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Lady Buckeyes slip
past Eastern in
season opener
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio — They kept it close, but
just couldn’t come back.
The Eastern girls basketball team dropped its
season-opener to non-league host Nelsonville-York
See BUCKEYES | 8

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Nov. 27
Girls Basketball
Meigs at Southern, 6 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 29
Boys Basketball
Athens at Gallia Academy,
7 p.m.
Eastern at River Valley, 7

p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 30
Girls Basketball
River Valley at South
Gallia, 6 p.m.
College Football
FIU at Marshall, noon

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

RVHS sophomore Lauren Twyman lines up a shot from in front of the Lady Raider bench, during River Valley’s 56-32 victory on Monday
in Bidwell, Ohio.

River Valley turns back Blue Angels
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — A
happy home-opener.
The River Valley girls
basketball team claimed
a 56-32 victory over
non-conference guest
Gallia Academy, in the
Lady Raiders ﬁrst home
game of the season
on Monday in Gallia
County.
River Valley (2-0)
never trailed in the contest, ﬁghting through a
tie at 2-2 before charging
out to a 13-7 lead by the
end of the ﬁrst quarter.
Gallia Academy (0-1)
began the second period
with a 7-to-6 run, but
the Lady Raiders scored
12 of the next 18 points
and went into halftime
with a 31-19 edge.
A 12-to-7 third quarter
run gave the Silver and
Black a 43-26 advantage
headed into the ﬁnale.
RVHS extended its
lead to a game-high 26
points in the ﬁnal quarter, and settled for the
56-32 win.
Following the victory,
third-year River Valley
head coach Stephen
Roderick talked about
moving to 2-0 and doing
so against the Blue
Angels, who had won
ﬁve straight in the headto-head series.
“I know the girls are
happy, this was a big one
for us with the county
rival,” Roderick said.
“Coach (Jordan) Deel
does a good job, they
have some nice players
over there, and I thought
that we got after it a

Blue Angels turnover
troubles.
“It starts with turnovers, turnovers, turnovers, that’s something
we talked about right
afterwards,” Deel said.
“You have to take care of
the basketball, each possession you give it up is
a lack of opportunity for
us, and they capitalized
on it tonight.
“Hat’s off to River
Valley, they showed up,
they were a lot better
and we knew they were
going to be better than
they were last year.
Coach Roderick is doing
a great job of having
them get up and down
the court, and having
them ﬁnish around the
rim. We didn’t rebound
well, they did, they hit
shots, we didn’t, and we
GAHS senior Alex Barnes (4) tries a two-pointer in between Lady turned the ball over, and
Raiders Sierra Somerville (left) and Hannah Jacks (2), during the they didn’t, that’s the big
Lady Raiders’ 24-point victory on Monday in Bidwell, Ohio.
difference in tonight’s
game.”
For the contest, RVHS
little bit more than they than others, it’s always
did. I felt like we wanted easy to get up for a rival. shot 22-of-59 (37.3
it a little bit more. These We’ve been on the other percent) from the ﬁeld,
side of that plenty, so it including 3-of-17 (17.6
girls are ready for a big
percent) from threefeels good, it feels real
season, and it started
point range. Meanwhile,
good.”
tonight.
GAHS was 10-of-41
River Valley won the
“We have some girls
(24.4 percent) from the
rebounding battle by a
who are really playing
ﬁeld, including 0-of-4
38-to-25 count, includhard, accepting their
roles, and I’m just really, ing 13-to-5 on the offen- from deep. The Lady
sive end. The Silver and Raiders were 9-of-14
really proud of them.
(64.3 percent) from the
Black ﬁnished with 19
It was a little muddy
free throw line, where
steals, 15 assists, three
there for a while, but
the Blue Angels shot
they came together, and blocked shots and 18
12-of-19 (63.2 percent).
turnovers in the win,
I don’t think we’ve ever
Hannah Jacks led the
while the Blue Angels
had the support from
victors in four categoour team that we do this ended with 11 steals,
ries, scoring 17 points,
year. The girls have real- ﬁve assists, one block
grabbing nine rebounds,
and 27 turnovers.
ly bought into a team
coming up with seven
After the contest,
attitude, and it’s maksecond-year Gallia Acad- steals, and blocking two
ing a difference in how
emy head coach Jordan
we play. There will be
Deel acknowledged the
nights that are tougher
See RIVER | 8

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 27, 2019 7

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 19 CV 046, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, VS. JILL L. DRUMMER AKA JILL L. JOHNSON AKA JILL L. KALLAM AKA
JILL NEASE-DRUMMER, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, December 13, 2019, at 10:00
a.m., the following described real estate, to wit:

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

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

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

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

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

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

THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF SUTTON, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE, VOLUME 88, PAGE
903 AND VOLUME 199, PAGE 689, OFFICIAL RECORDS.
AUDITOR’S PARCEL NOS.: 18-00897.001 and 18-00897.002
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 31190 Roy Jones Road, Racine, OH
45771
Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.
Sold subject to accrued 2019 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

LEGALS

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Adoption

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
CASE NO 20195019
NOTICE OF HEARING TO
PATIENCE JOHNSON,
UNKNOWN ADDRESS,
LAST KNOW ADDRESS
109 PLEASEBT RIDGE RD.,
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
ON THE 25TH DAY OF
SEPTEMBER, LARISSA
KOON FILED A PETITION
TO ADOPT CULLEN
MICHAEL LENVILLE
MCDANIEL, DOB 02/22/17.
THIS MATTER IS SET FOR
HEARING JANUARY 6TH,
2020 AT 10:00 AM AT
THE PROBATE COURT
LOCATED AT 100 EAST
SECOND ST, RM 203
POMEROY, OH. IF YOU
WOULD LIKE TO CONSENT
TO THE ADOPTION
PLEASE CONTACT
TRENTON J. CLELAND,
ATTONEY FOR
PETITIONERS AT
740-992-7101
11/20/19,11/27/19,12/4/19,
12/11/19,12/18/19,12/26/19
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices
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AUCTIONS
Auto Auction
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, November 29,
2019 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
9,1� �*&amp;(.��7��=������
2002 Chevy Silverado

Apartments/Townhouses
Ellm View Apts.
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/DQGORUG SD\V :DWHU�
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Equal Housing Opportunity
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General

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

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

REPORTER
WANTED:
Self-motivated, investigative
reporter with a nose for
news &amp; a curiosity to know
more about...everything!

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

The Daily Times is looking
for an investigative reporter
to dig out meaningful
stories about the area.
Excellent journalism &amp;
writing skills are essential,
as well as basic
photography skills.
A technology leader providing
written news &amp; video to our
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well as tell us what makes
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OPERATE YOUR OWN
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PER MONTH!

Inquires will be confidential.
Email your materials to:
KFRPHU#DLPPHGLDPLGZHVW�FRP
����������������������������������������������������

OH-70152802

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CALL TODAY!

Said premises appraised at $325,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
No employees of the Sheriff’s Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered for sale again on Friday, January 10, 2020, at the same
time and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court
that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier’s check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.
All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
11/20/19, 11/27/19, 12/4/19
SHERIFF'S SALE
United States of America, acting through the Rural Housing
Service, United States Department of Agriculture vs. Christopher G. Stewart, et al. Meigs County Common Pleas
&amp;DVH 1R����&amp;9�����
In pursuance of an order issued from Common Pleas Court,
within and for the County of Meigs,State of Ohio, and to me
directed, I will offer for sale at Public Auction, on the Courthouse steps on Friday, December 13, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. of
said day. If the property does not sell on this date than a second provisional sale is set for Friday, January 10, 2020 with no
minimum bid as to the following Real Estate, to-wit:
PARCEL ONE:
The following described premises, situated in the Township of
Sutton, County of Meigs and State of Ohio: Being in 100 Acre
Lot 302, in Town 2, Range 13 and beginning at the northeast
corner of the barnyard on the road from Minersville to Straight
Hollow about 30 feet northeastfrom the old shaft; thence north
4½ degrees east 42 feet; thence north 24 ½ degrees west 97
feet; thence south 62 degrees west 100 feet; thence south 22
½ degrees east 118 feet; thence north 72degrees east 84 feet
to the place of beginning, save and excepting the coal and
other minerals therein and the right to mine the same without
encumbrance to the surface, and all ways and rights of way
along any mineral seam, reserved by V.B. Horton, his heirs and
assigns, agreeable to a deed executed by him to August C.
Steel on the 11th day of November, 1873, and recorded in Volume 42, Pages 340-341 of the Records of Deeds of Meigs
County, Ohio.Also the following real estate situate in the Township of Sutton, County of Meigs and State of Ohio, being in
Town 2, Range 13, Section 1, and 100 Acre Lot 129. Heckard’s
Survey in Minersville, and described as follows: Being a parcel
off the north end of said Lot 129, being 75feet wide and the entire length of said Lot 129, excepting the coal and the right to
mine the same.And being the same real estate deeded by Susan Zahl’s heirs to Elsie and Eugene Forbes by deed recorded
in Volume 130, Page 258 of the Records of Deeds of Meigs
County, Ohio, and thereafter conveyed by Elsie Forbes and Eugene Forbes, husband and wife, to Orville B. Sayre and June A.
Sayre by deed dated December 15, 1947, and recorded in
Book 160, at page 212 of said Deed Records.Reference
Deeds: Official Record Book 276, Page 576; Official Records
Book 125, Page 55; and Volume 266, Page 343, Meigs County
Deed Records.
PARCEL TWO:

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Gallipolis Daily Tribune

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

The following real estate, situated in Lot NO. 129, Heckerd’s
Survey, and in 100 Acre Lot No.302, Sutton Township, Meigs
County, Ohio, bounded and described as follows: Beginning
South 22° 30’ East 75 feet and North 72° East 117.84 feet from
the Northwest corner of Lot No. 129, Heckerd’s Survey, said
Northwest corner being South 22° 30’ East 118 feet from the
Northwest corner of Vernal Blackwood Lot in his West line;
thence South 54° 10’ East 160 feet to the center of the present
road; thence North 23° 45’ West 129.7 feet along the center of
said road; thence South 72° West 82 feet to the place of beginning, containing .12 acres. Except all legal rights-of-way.
Parcel # 1800103000, 1800104000, 1800105000 Located at
31945 CR 403 Minersville, Racine, OH 45771 &amp; O West Side
CR 403 Minersville Hill Road, Racine, OH 45771.
Current Owners: Christopher G. Stewart
Said property has been appraised at $35,000 and cannot sell
for less than two-thirds of appraisement.
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Terms of Sale: Ten Percent (10%) day of sale, balance within
30 days. All third party purchasers shall make sale deposits as
follows: Less than or equal to $10,000 + Deposit of $2,000
Greater than $10,000 but less than $200,000 + Deposit of
$5,000 Greater than $200,000 + Deposit of $10,000 Payment
shall be made in the form of a certified/cashier’s check (cash
and personal checks are not accepted). No deposit is required
by the bank. All properties are as is and not be entered until
the deed is in the purchaser’s possession.

OH-70160719

.HLWK 2� :RRG� 6KHULII RI 0HLJV &amp;RXQW\� 2KLR

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

Stephen D. Miles, Attorney
Vincent A. Lewis, Attorney
18 West Monument Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45402
937-461-1900
11/20/19, 11/27/19 and 12/4/19

�8 Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Buckeyes

third and went into the
ﬁnale down 29-26.
The Lady Eagles
trimmed their deﬁcit
From page 6
back to one point, at
32-31 and 36-35, but
on Monday in Athens
couldn’t regain the edge
County, with the Lady
and fell by a 40-35 ﬁnal
Buckeyes taking a 40-35
tally.
victory after never leadEastern shot 15-of-38
ing by more than ﬁve.
(39.4 percent) from the
The Lady Eagles (0-1)
ﬁeld, including 2-of-8
was behind by an 11-9
margin eight minutes into (25 percent) from threeplay, and Nelsonville-York point range, while NYHS
(1-0) never trailed in any made 15-of-51 (29.4 percent) ﬁeld goal attempts,
of the ﬁnal three quarincluding 2-of-13 (15.3
ters.
percent) from beyond the
The Lady Buckeyes
arc. EHS made 3-of-10
outscored EHS 13-to-11
in the second period and (30 percent) free throws,
went into halftime with a while the Lady Buckeyes
were 8-of-19 (42.1 per24-20 edge.
cent) from the charity
Eastern fought back
stripe.
to within one point, at
The Green and White
27-26, but surrendered
won the rebounding batthe ﬁnal bucket of the

SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS
tle by a 34-to-31 clip, but
committed 24 turnovers,
nine more than Nelsonville-York. The guests
combined for ﬁve assists,
ﬁve steals and two rejections, while the Orange
and Brown claimed 15
steals, eight assists and
three blocked shots.
Olivia Barber led the
Lady Eagles with 10
points and nine rebounds.
Jaymie Basham had eight
points for Eastern, Ashton Guthrie and Erica
Durst added six apiece,
while Sydney Reynolds
scored three points and
dished out a team-best
two assists. Whitney
Durst rounded out the
EHS total with two
points, while Barber and
Kennadi Rockhold led the
Lady Eagle defense with

Daily Sentinel

two steals apiece.
Mackenzie Hurd led
Nelsonville-York with
16 points, followed by
Joscelyn Heller with 12.
Ashleigh Cantrell ended
with ﬁve points, Haley
Hurd added four points,
while Cayleigh Dupler
scored two. Grace Sinnott marked one point,
and team-bests of 14
rebounds and three
assists in the win. Mackenzie Hurd had a gamehigh seven steals, while
Alivia Speelman blocked
a pair of shots.
Next, Eastern will be
on its home ﬂoor for the
ﬁrst time this season,
hosting Trimble on Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

River
From page 6

shots. Sierra Somerville scored 14
points in the win, Payton Crabtree
added nine points and a game-best
four assists, while Kasey Birchﬁeld
posted seven points. Lauren Twyman
and Savannah Reese scored three points
apiece for River Valley, while Kaylee
Tucker scored two and Kaylee Gillman
scored one.
Maddy Petro paced the guests with 23
points and nine rebounds, to go with ﬁve
steals and a rejection. Alex Barnes scored
eight points for Gallia Academy, while
Preslee Reed added one marker.
These teams are schedule to meet again
on Jan. 20 at GAHS.
Next, River Valley visits South Gallia on
Saturday, and Gallia Academy welcomes
Ironton on Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Classifieds
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate

Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate

The State of Ohio, Meigs County
CASE NUMBER 19CV023

The State of Ohio, Meigs County
CASE NUMBER 19CV009

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. successor by merger to Wells Fargo
Bank Minnesota, N.A. as Trustee for Structured Asset Securities Corporation Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2002-AL1
Plaintiff
-vsKenneth R. Searles aka Kenneth Ray Searles
Defendants

Embrace Home Loans, Inc.
Plaintiff
-vsShirley Lantz
Defendants

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction the following described real
estate, situate in the County of Meigs and state of Ohio, and in
the Village of Rutland to-wit:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 58 Depot Street, Rutland, OH 45772
PPN#: 1200326000
Auction will take place in the basement of the Meigs County
Courthouse on December 13, 2019, at 10:00 a.m. If the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for
sale at auction again on January 10, 2020 at the same time and
place.
Said Premises Appraised at $33,000.00
The Sheriff’s Office nor any affiliates have access to the inside
of said property.
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Property cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Required deposit in cash or
certified funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or
certified check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor
is purchaser, no deposit is required.
TERMS OF 2ND SALE: Property to be sold without regard to
minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and
court costs; deposit and payment requirements same as the
first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of the sale
are insufficient to cover.
REIMER LAW CO.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Keith O. Wood, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction the following described real
estate, situate in the County of Meigs and state of Ohio, and in
the Village of Pomeroy to-wit:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 320 Condor Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769
PPN#: 1601115000, #1601116000, and #1601117000
Auction will take place in the basement of the Meigs County
Courthouse on Friday, December 13, 2019, at 10:00 a.m. If the
property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered
for sale at auction again on Friday, January 10, 2020 at the
same time and place.
Said Premises Appraised at $75,000.00
The Sheriff’s Office nor any affiliates have access to the inside
of said property.
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Property cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Required deposit in cash or
certified funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or
certified check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor
is purchaser, no deposit is required.
TERMS OF 2ND SALE: Property to be sold without regard to
minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and
court costs; deposit and payment requirements same as the
first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of the sale
are insufficient to cover.

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Ohio Revised Code Section 2329.26
General Code Section 11681
In the Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio
Peggy Yost, Meigs County Treasurer, Plaintiff
-VSDennis Persons, etal, Defendants
Case No. 18 DL 001
Whereas, judgment has been rendered against certain parcels
of real property for taxes, assessments, penalties, costs and
charges as follows:
Being Real Estate described in a deed from Ronald Hart and
Betty Hart to Dennis A. Persons and Pamela V. Persons, dated
March 6, 2002, recorded March 7, 2002, and recorded in
Volume 143, Page 237, Meigs County Official Records of the
Official Record located at the Meigs County Recorder's Office.
Now, therefore, Public Notice is hereby given that I, Keith O.
Wood, Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio, will sell such real property, in separate parcels or as one parcel, at public auction, for
CASH to the highest bidder for an amount sufficient to satisfy
the total judgment $7,797.68 plus current taxes, interest, penalties, and court costs apportioned against each parcel between
the hours of 10:00AM and 10:05AM at the Meigs County Courthouse steps, at 100 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, on
Friday, December 13, 20 19. If any parcel does not receive a
sufficient bid, it shall be offered for sale, under the sale terms
and conditions of the first sale at the same time of day and at
the same place, on the 10th day of January, 2020 for an
amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment against parcel.
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR AND NO WARRANTY IS MADE REGARDING THE TITLE OR DESCRIPTION OF THE PREMISES. PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ALL SUCH
REAL PROPERTY TO BE SOLD AT AUCTION MAYBE SUBJECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LIEN THAT MAY NOT BE EXTINGUISHED BY THE SALE. PURCHASERS OF ANY SUCH
REAL PROPERTY ARE URGED TO HAVE A TITLE SEARCH
CONDUCTED WHICH INCLUDES THE FEDERAL TAX LEIN
INDEX THAT IS KEPT BY THE COUNTY RECORDER TO DETERMINE IF THERE ARE ANY LIENS AND IF NOTICE OF A
FEDERAL TAX LEIN HAS BEEN FILED WITH RESPECT TO
ANY SUCH PROPERTY.

REIMER LAW CO.
Attorneys for Plaintiff

TERMS OF SALE: 10% of sale price by Certified Check by
2:00PM on day of sale. Balance due within 10 days of contact
from the Sheriff s Office.

Keith O. Wood, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio

KEITH O. WOOD, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
11/20/19, 11/27/19, 12/4/19

11/20/19, 11/27/19, 12/4/19

PAT STORY, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
11/20/19, 11/27/19, 12/4/19

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 18 CV 032, HOME NATIONAL
BANK, PLAINTIFF, VS. PEGGY CUMMINS AKA PEGGY S.
CUMMINS DBA DOWN TO EARTH FARMS, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 19 CV 034, FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, VS. STANLEY D.
GIBBS AKA STANLEY DONALD GIBBS AKA STANLEY D.
GIBBS, JR., ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, December 13, 2019, at 10:00
a.m., the following described real estate, to wit:

In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, December 13, 2019, at 10:00
a.m., the following described real estate, to wit:

THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF LETART, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE, VOLUME 316,
PAGE 537, DEED RECORDS.

THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF RUTLAND, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE, VOLUME 100,
PAGE 875, OFFICIAL RECORDS.

AUDITOR’S PARCEL NO.: 08-00308.000

AUDITOR’S PARCEL NO.: 11-00316.001

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 24079 (aka 24709) Hill Road, Racine,
OH 45771

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 34773 Sidehill Rd., Rutland, OH
45775

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.

Sold subject to accrued 2019 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.

Sold subject to accrued 2019 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

Said premises appraised at $90,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

Said premises appraised at $70,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

No employees of the Sheriff’s Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s possession.

No employees of the Sheriff’s Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s possession.

If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered for sale again on Friday, January 10, 2020, at the same
time and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court
that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered for sale again on Friday, January 10, 2020, at the same
time and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court
that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier’s check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.

TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier’s check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.

All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654

All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654

KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff

KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff

Attorney: Michael L. Barr, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689

Attorney: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689

ALL SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
11/20/19, 11/27/19, 12/4/19

ALL SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
11/20/19, 11/27/19, 12/4/19

See Simon.
See Simon ride his bike.
See Simon leave his bike in
the driveway.
See Simon’s
dad drive over the bike.
See Simon cry.
Simon’s
mom is so smart.
She looks
through the classiﬁeds.
Now Simon has a new bike.
See Simon smile.
See Simon
ride his new bike.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, November 27, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Wednesday, November 27, 2019

IOC angered by
Russian gov’t in
denial over doping

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm
From page 6

Freshman Cole Landis
(Pickerington, OH) had
a team-best six rebounds
for the RedStorm.
Jordan, Jr. had 22
points and three blocked
shots for Siena Heights,
while Dickerson
added 20 points, eight
rebounds and three
assists.
Kevin Rice had 12
points of his own in the
loss for the Saints, who
went 23-for-41 (56.1%)
from two-point range
and just 1-for-15 (6.7%)
from beyond the threepoint arc.
Rio Grande returns
to action next Saturday
against Reinhardt (Ga.)
as part of the NAIA
Division II Showcase in
Kingsport, Tenn.

MOSCOW (AP) — Condemning Russian
state authorities on Tuesday, the International
Olympic Committee says their latest cheating
attempt in a years-long doping scandal is an
insult to the sports world.
“The IOC will support the toughest sanctions
against all those responsible for this manipulation,” the Olympic body said in a statement.
On Monday, a World Anti-Doping Agency
expert panel conﬁrmed a database from the
discredited Moscow laboratory that Russian
ofﬁcials were required to hand over in January
was tainted with fake evidence, including to
incriminate whistleblower Grigory Rodchenkov,
the former lab director. Results of positive doping tests were removed.
The panel recommended Russian athletes should
compete as neutrals at next year’s Tokyo Olympics
and other major events for the next four years,
including the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
When the WADA executive committee meets
on Dec. 9 in Paris, it will also consider the panel’s request for Russia to be banned from hosting sports events such as world championships
through 2023, and blocked from bidding for the
2032 Olympics.

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Omar Walcott (white uniform) battles Huntington’s Mario McLennon (23) and Gabe
Greenfield (blue shirt) for control of the ball on a corner kick in the second half of Saturday’s 1-0 win
over the Foresters in the opening round of the NAIA Men’s Soccer National Championship at Evan E.
Davis Field. With the win, the RedStorm advance to the tourney’s second round on Monday, Dec. 2,
in Irvine, Calif.

Rio advances to NAIA 2nd Round

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

By Randy Payton

ing votes in the same
coaches’ poll, ﬁnished
15-5-3 with the loss.
Scoring opportunities were few and far
between for either team
in Saturday’s physical
contest, which featured
a combined 29 common
fouls - 15 on the Foresters and 14 on Rio - in
addition to six yellow
card cautions and two
red disqualiﬁcations.
The RedStorm enjoyed
a 15-3 edge in shots overall and a 5-0 advantage in
shots on goal, while also
having six of the game’s
eight corner kick opportunities.
The game’s lone goal
came with 7:19 remaining in the ﬁrst half when
McLauchlan - a junior
from Aroch, Scotland
- gathered in the deﬂection of a corner kick
by freshman Sebastian
Borquez (Santiago,
Chile) and booted a onetimer into the upper left
hand corner of the goal.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio California, here we come.
Ewan McLauchlan’s
ﬁrst half goal proved
to be the only score
needed in the University
of Rio Grande’s 1-0 win
over Huntington (Ind.)
University, Saturday
afternoon, in the opening
round of the NAIA Men’s
Soccer Championship
presented by Select Soccer at a chilly and rainy
Evan E. Davis Field.
Rio Grande, ranked
No. 10 in the most
recent NAIA Coaches’
Top 25, improved to
16-3-1 with the victory and advances to the
tourney’s second round
where it will face the
University of Northwestern Ohio on Monday,
Dec. 2, at 2 p.m. EST, at
OC Great Park Stadium
in Irvine, Calif.
Huntington, which was
among the teams receiv-

All items are made
in the USA on site
Selling bisque, paint and
supplies. We paint your
items or you paint them.
CUSTOM ORDERS WELCOME

OH-70158508

304-675-8642
11162 Ripley Road, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
esturgeon13@yahoo.com
Hours &amp; days of business: Tuesday - Saturday 9:00 am - 4:00 pm

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

53°

64°

46°

Very windy today; locally damaging winds.
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 64° / Low 35°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

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.

61°
32°
52°
34°
75° in 1908
13° in 1903
(in inches)

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

0.00
1.29
2.97
41.78
38.81

Today
7:23 a.m.
5:08 p.m.
8:19 a.m.
6:14 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:25 a.m.
5:08 p.m.
9:23 a.m.
7:04 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Dec 4

Full

Last

New

Dec 11 Dec 18 Dec 25

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

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

Major
11:16a
12:15p
1:20a
2:21a
3:18a
4:12a
5:01a

Minor
5:34a
6:33a
7:34a
8:34a
9:31a
10:24a
11:12a

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

2

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: In what cities is an NFL game most
likely to be played in a snowstorm?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
---12:47p
1:48p
2:47p
3:43p
4:36p
5:23p

Minor
6:02p
7:01p
8:01p
9:00p
9:56p
10:47p
11:34p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 27, 1898, the famous “Portland” storm formed off Cape Cod,
causing the loss of 200 lives. Many
others were lost to the raging sea in
50 small vessels. Boston received
more than a foot of snow.

FRIDAY

Cooler with partial
sunshine

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

Level
12.42
16.63
21.85
13.00
12.62
25.15
13.07
26.23
34.76
12.93
17.90
34.30
17.60

Lucasville
62/34
Portsmouth
62/33

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

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

Waverly
61/33

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.59
-0.29
-0.04
+0.03
-0.52
+0.26
+0.04
+0.11
+0.08
+0.17
-0.20
-0.10
+0.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

44°
27°

Rather cloudy and
chilly

Marietta
63/34

Murray City
60/33
Belpre
64/34

Athens
62/34

St. Marys
64/34

Parkersburg
63/33

Coolville
63/34

Elizabeth
64/34

Spencer
64/33

Buffalo
64/34

Ironton
63/35

Milton
65/35

St. Albans
67/35

Huntington
64/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
45/30
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
San Francisco
30s
54/41
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
59/49
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

43°
28°

Mostly cloudy

Wilkesville
62/33
POMEROY
Jackson
64/35
62/33
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
64/35
64/34
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
56/32
GALLIPOLIS
64/35
64/34
64/35

Ashland
63/35
Grayson
63/34

MONDAY

52°
32°

Periods of rain

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
61/32

South Shore Greenup
63/34
61/33

56

Logan
60/32

SUNDAY

50°
42°

Mostly cloudy and
chilly

Adelphi
60/32
Chillicothe
60/33

SATURDAY

46°
36°

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

0

A: Buffalo, Denver, Cleveland, Green
Bay

Precipitation

THURSDAY

43°
31°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Rio Grande had two
other chances in the second half to put the win
on ice, but sophomore
Nicolas Cam Orellana
(Santiago, Chile) had a
shot deﬂect off the post
with 16:46 left to play
and Huntington keeper
Gabe Greenﬁeld made a
dazzling stop of a shot
by Cam Orellana with
5:30 remaining in the
contest.
Senior keeper Richard
Dearle (Castle Donington, England) did not
record a save in a clean
sheet effort for Rio.
Greenﬁeld recorded
four saves in a losing
cause for Huntington.
He and teammate Mario
McLennon were issued
red card disqualiﬁcations
as time expired.
The win was Rio’s 11th
in 12 all-time opening
round appearances.

Clendenin
65/31
Charleston
66/34

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
24/13

Billings
31/20

Montreal
41/31

Minneapolis
31/17

Chicago
47/28

Denver
26/13

Detroit
54/33

Toronto
48/35
New York
56/45
Washington
63/45

Kansas City
44/27

Monterrey
75/54

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
41/35/sh
34/30/sn
63/45/pc
53/36/s
52/35/pc
29/17/sn
40/20/sf
49/32/r
44/31/c
62/39/pc
34/21/c
39/34/c
43/33/c
40/33/pc
42/31/pc
53/47/sh
34/25/pc
35/29/sn
40/31/pc
84/72/pc
73/67/c
41/33/c
39/33/sh
50/37/r
48/38/r
55/45/r
45/37/pc
84/65/s
29/25/c
51/38/pc
69/54/pc
51/33/pc
45/38/r
80/57/pc
51/33/s
66/49/r
41/31/c
43/29/sn
59/39/s
55/36/s
41/35/r
40/27/sn
52/41/pc
43/28/s
52/37/s

EXTREMES TUESDAY
High
Low

86° in Corpus Christi, TX
-11° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global

Houston
67/54

Chihuahua
59/53

Today
Hi/Lo/W
42/29/sn
34/31/sn
72/44/r
60/45/sh
61/43/sh
31/20/c
45/25/sn
54/42/sh
66/34/sh
67/41/r
21/14/c
47/28/c
56/31/sh
58/35/r
59/33/r
57/42/c
26/13/c
36/24/pc
54/33/r
84/73/sh
67/54/pc
50/30/c
44/27/pc
53/39/r
56/38/pc
59/49/r
58/34/c
85/68/pc
31/17/sn
59/33/pc
75/55/t
56/45/sh
50/34/pc
80/59/s
58/43/sh
69/55/pc
58/33/r
46/36/sh
68/46/c
65/43/pc
49/31/pc
38/29/sn
54/41/t
45/30/pc
63/45/sh

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
72/44
El Paso
48/41

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

High
Low
Miami
85/68

113° in Vioolsdrif, South Africa
-64° in Verkhoyansk, Russia

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

OH-70107872

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Middleport

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