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                  <text>Today
in
history
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

69°

80°

75°

Humid today with a t-storm. A t-storm in
spots tonight. High 84° / Low 68°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Molinari
wins British
Open

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 117, Volume 72

Kenna woman
charged in alleged
vehicular death
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.
com

SOUTHSIDE — A
Jackson County, W.Va.,
woman is facing a murder charge after
a Gallipolis man
reportedly died
from injuries
sustained from a
motor vehicle.
According to
a criminal comCline
plaint by Deputy
Sheriff Jonathan
Peterson, on Thursday, July 19, Bunky S.
Cline, 54, of Kenna was
arrested for murder in
the ﬁrst degree. The
initial complaint listed
Cline’s address as Gallipolis, with the address
changed to Kenna by
the court.
The complaint stated,
“Cline did enter her
vehicle, a 2005 Chevrolet Equinox, and did
run down and kill Carl

F. Hooten (56). Cline
admitted to Deputies
that she had hit Hooton
with her vehicle, but
said it was not intentional.” Hooten was
from Gallipolis.
Sheriff Greg
Powers commented Cline
and the deceased
knew one another and the incident is believed
to have not been
a random act.
Cline was
transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital where
she consented to give
a blood sample due to
Sgt. Forrest Terry seeing and hearing alleged
signs of impairment.
Powers commented
the investigation into
her state of possible
impairment at the time
of the incident remains
ongoing.

Bailey laid to rest at Arlington

Photos courtesy of JoAnne Newsome

World War II veteran James Bailey was laid to rest on Friday at Arlington National Cemetery.

Bikers, veterans come together
to honor WWII veteran

See CHARGED | 5

Two 5K races set
for upcoming weeks
Staff Report

MEIGS COUNTY — Runners and walkers will
have two chances over the coming weeks to take
part in 5K races.
The Big Bend Blues Dash will take place on Saturday, July 28, in conjunction with the annual Big
Bend Blues Bash.
The Dash will take place at 9 a.m. with registration from 7:30-8:30 a.m. at Maple Lawn Brewery
on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy.
T-shirts will be available for the ﬁrst 75 participants to register. Participants under age 18 must
have a parent or guardian sign a waiver for participation.
This is the 3rd annual Big Bend Blues Dash at
Maple Lawn Brewery.
The proceeds of the race goes toward the funding of the River City Runners’ C2C race at the end
of August that is a charity organization for the
American Cancer Society.
In August will be the 7th annual John Gray
Memorial 5K held at Racine’s Star Mill Park. The
race is a night race, with participants encouraged
to wear glow braclets, necklaces and other bright
clothing.
According to the John Gray Memorial 5K website, every August, the community of Racine gathers at Star Mill Park in memory of John “JJ” Gray,
a member of the Southern High School Class of
2013, who passed away in August 2011.
The event kicks off in the early evening hours
with a bake sale, cornhole, and concludes with the
race which attracts over 100 people each year. All
See RACES | 5

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
TV listings: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018 s 50¢

By Lorna Hart
Special to OVP

ARLINGTON — World
War II veteran James Bailey
was laid to rest Friday in
Arlington National Cemetery
surrounded by family, old and
new friends, and escorting
veterans groups.
Baily was still in high
school when he enlisted in
the United States Navy on
June 13, 1944, and served
until his discharge on March
20, 1946. He returned home
and completed his studies,
receiving a diploma from
Meigs County Bikers Association president Patrick Chester High School, Class
Aeiker, Meigs County Honor Flight Advocate JoAnne of 1948.
Newsome, Chris Imboden, and Patsy Aeiker.

Immediately following
graduation, Bailey enlisted in
the U.S. Air Force, serving as
an instructor for Radar Fundamentals and a Communications Advisor to the Saudi
Air Force.
He worked on the guidance
system for Friendship 7, the
rocket that carried astronaut
John Glenn on the ﬁrst U.S.
orbital ﬂight, and advised the
Italian Air Force on the Jupiter missile.
Bailey served as a nuclear
missile launch crew member
for three years before retiring
in September 1966.
See BAILEY | 5

A sweet tradition in Salem Township
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

SALEM TWP. — The
Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department
held their 40th annual
ice cream social on Saturday.
Members of the ﬁre
department and their
families made 105 gallons of ice cream in 11
ﬂavors, according to
Linda Montgomery, who
was in charge of the
event.
Montgomery has
volunteered for the ice
cream social for all 40
years. She and her husband were part of the
group that formed the
Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department
about 42 years ago.
“Most of these people
… I probably wouldn’t
see them except for
this,” said Montgomery.
She emphasized the
community bond with
events such as this one.
Montgomery thanked
local families for donating food items because
that helped to keep the
cost down for a family to
come have lunch.
For the 40th year
of this event, the ﬁre

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne | Courtesy

Dozens of people attended the 40th annual Salem Township Ice Cream Social on Saturday.

department gave away an
ice cream freezer, similar
to the type they use, as a
door prize.
The Salem Township
Volunteer Fire Department also organizes dinners for election days.
The proceeds and donations from all the events
go toward maintenance
for the ﬁre department.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

Eleven flavors of ice cream, pie and much more were enjoyed by
those attending the ice cream social.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS/TV

2 Tuesday, July 24, 2018

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

Card Shower
Jim Smith (long-time
caretaker of Mulberry
Pond) is currently at
Overbrook Center in
Middleport. Cards may
be sent to him at 333
Page Street, Room 110,
Middleport, OH 45760.

Tuesday,
July 24
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Acoustic
Night at the Library.
All are invited to listen
or play along with the
group in this informal
jam session.

Thursday,
July 26
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District
Board of Supervisors
will hold their regular
monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce
is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite
D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The
Ladies of the Meigs
County Republican
Party will meet at 6
p.m. at the Carleton
School in Syracuse,
Ohio. Everyone is
welcome. Please come
and join us in discussing how we can make
money to support our
local candidates. We
will welcome any and
all input.
LEBANON TWP.
— The Lebanon Township trustees will have
their regular monthly
meeting at 6 p.m. at the
township garage. The
proposed 2019 budget
will be available for
viewing.

OBITUARIES

Friday,
July 27

COOLVILLE —
Julian Boggs, 85,
of Coolville, Ohio,
passed away Sunday, July 22, 2018,
at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
He was born Dec. 6,
1932, in Alvon, W.Va., son
of the late Frank and Ina
Waggoner Boggs. He was
an avid logger his whole
life.
Julian is survived by
two daughters, Patsy
Miller and Debra and
James Rodehaver; a son,
Donnie Boggs; nine
grandchildren, Charity,
Timothy, Amber, Rachel,
Tony, Alan, Alicia, Cole
and Gary; three greatgrandchildren, Ben,
Aiden and Gabriel; a

MIDDLEPORT —
The monthly Free Community Dinner at the
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center will be held at 5 p.m.
This month they are
serving chicken alfredo,
salad, garlic bread, and
dessert. The public is
invited to attend.

Saturday,
July 28
CHESTER — The
Meigs County Ikes will
hold its annual family
picnic at noon at the
clubhouse on Sugar
Rub Road. Bring your
favorite covered dish,
drink, table service and
family member(s). Hot
dogs and hamburgers
will be furnished by the
Club.

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6

PM

MIDDLEPORT —
The July meeting of the
Veterans Service Commission will be held at 9
a.m. at the ofﬁce located
in the side ofﬁce of 97
North Second Avenue,
Middleport.
SALEM TWP. —
Salem Twp. monthly
meeting will be held
at 6 p.m., at the Salem
Twp. Volunteer Fire
Department building,
28844 State Route
124, Langsville, Ohio
45741.

STOVER
AKRON, OHIO — Ellwood Eugene Stover, 60, of
Akron, Ohio, died July 17, 2018.
A graveside service will be held at Creston Cemetery, Leon, Friday, July 27, 2018 at 11 a.m.

POMEROY — OH
Kan Coin Club will be
meeting at 6:30 p.m. in
the upper room at the
Farmers Bank.
MEIGS COUNTY
— All branches of the
Meigs County District
Public Library will be
closed for a staff training. Normal hours will
resume on Wednesday,
Aug. 1.

6:30

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Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
(N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
(N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
(N)
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

7

PM

7:30

SHEPPARD
PROCTORVILLE — Betty Jane Sheppard, 92, of
Proctorville, passed away Monday, July 23, 2018 at
River’s Bend Health Care Center, South Point.
Funeral service will be conducted 1 p.m. Thursday,
July 26, 2018 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial
Gardens, Miller. Visitation will be held one hour prior
to the service at the funeral home.
TUESDAY, JULY 24
8

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8:30

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9:30

America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts 2" Olivia Munn sends
one act directly to the live shows. (N)
America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts 2" Olivia Munn sends
one act directly to the live shows. (N)
Middle "The Middle "Split Black-ish
Black-ish
Royal Flush" Decision"
"Black Math" "Juneteenth"
10 That Changed America No Passport Required
"10 Modern Marvels That
"Chicago" (N)
Changed America" (N)
Middle "The Middle "Split Black-ish
Black-ish
Royal Flush" Decision"
"Black Math" "Juneteenth"
SEAL Team "Getaway Day"
NCIS "Keep Your Friends
Close"
Love Connection "Aaron
Beat Shazam "Episode
Seven" (N)
and Maconnie" (N)
10 That Changed America No Passport Required
"10 Modern Marvels That
"Chicago" (N)
Changed America" (N)
NCIS "Keep Your Friends
SEAL Team "Getaway Day"
Close"

8

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8:30

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World of Dance "The
Qualifiers 8" (N)
World of Dance "The
Qualifiers 8" (N)
The Last Defense "Julius
Jones: The Fight" (SF) (N)
Frontline "UN Sex Abuse
Scandal" (N)
The Last Defense "Julius
Jones: The Fight" (SF) (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Ties
That Bind"
Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
Frontline "UN Sex Abuse
Scandal" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Ties
That Bind"

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) BlueB. "All That Glitters"
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Cleveland Indians Site: Progressive Field (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
Humanitarian Awards (N) ESPY Awards Celebrates major sports achievements.
SportsCenter (N)
NFL Live
WNBA Basketball New York Liberty at Minnesota Lynx (L) NBA: The Jump (N)
Married at First Sight
Grey's Anatomy "There's a Married at First Sight "I
Married:Love Married at
(:05) Seven Year Switch "At
Unlocked (N) First Si. (N) "Pressure or Paradise" (N) the Flip of a Switch" (N)
Fine, Fine Line"
Do... Not Know You"
(5:00)
The Parent Trap (1998, Family) Dennis Quaid, The Bold Type "Plan B" (N)
10 Things I Hate About You (1999, Comedy) Julia
Natasha Richardson, Lindsay Lohan. TVPG
Stiles, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Heath Ledger. TV14
Mom
Mom
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011,
Action) Penélope Cruz, Ian McShane, Johnny Depp. TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Double Dare SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Miz (P) (N)
Chrisley (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Star Wars: The Force Awakens ('15, Act) John Boyega, Daisy Ridley. TV14
Animal Kingdom "Libertad" Animal Kingdom "Libertad"
(5:00)
The Karate Kid (1984, Drama) Pat Morita,
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory A chocolate maker
Groundhog
Elisabeth Shue, Ralph Macchio. TVPG
distributes five golden tickets for a trip through his magical factory. TVG Day TVPG
Monster Hammerhead
Cuba Shark (N)
GuyFieriFfrenzy (N)
Laws of Jaws (N)
Air Jaws: The Hunted (N)
The First 48 "Game Over/ The First 48 "Last Shift"
The First 48 "A Fighting
The First 48 "A Murder in Born Behind Bars "Drugs Is
Long Walk Home"
Chance"
Mobile"
The Devil" (N)
River Monsters
River Monsters
River Monsters
Killer Whales: The Mega Hunt
Chicago P.D. "Assignment Chicago P.D. "Called in
Chicago P.D. "Shouldn't
Chicago P.D. "We Don't
Chicago P.D. "Disco Bob"
of the Year"
Dead"
Have Been Alone"
Work Together Anymore"
Law &amp; Order "Shadow"
Law &amp; Order "Burned"
Law &amp; Order "Ritual"
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order "Expert"
(5:00)
Enough TV14
E! News (N)
Grown Ups ('10, Com) Kevin James, Adam Sandler. TVPG
Grown Ups
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Younger (N) (:35) Teachers
The Real Bonnie and Clyde JFK: The Lost Bullet
Sea Monsters: The
Lost Cities of the Amazon Atlantis Rising "Secrets
Definitive Guide
"The Legend is Real" (N)
Decoded" (N)
NASCAR "Thompson" (N) Mecum10
Mecum10
UCI Cycling Tour de France Stage 16 Carcassonne - Bagnères-de-Luchon
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) NHRA Series NHRA Drag Racing Mile High Nationals Site: Bandimere Speedway -- Denver, Colo.
Forged in Fire "Wind and
Forged in Fire "The
Forged in Fire: Cutting
Forged in Fire "The
(:05) Counting Cars "Space
Horseman's Axe"
Deeper "The Kampilan"
Fire Wheels" (N)
Smallsword" (N)
Racer" (N)
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
Million "Circa Circus" (N)
(4:10)
8 Mile TVM
Madea's Witness Protection ('12, Com) Eugene Levy, Denise Richards, Tyler Perry. TV14 HitFloor "Bad Blood" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Flippers (N) Desert Flip Hidden P (N) H.Hunt (N)
(5:45)
Exodus: Gods and Kings ('14, Dra) Joel Edgerton, Christian Bale. Moses learns Face Off "Immortals
Futurama
Futur. "Zapp
of his Israelite heritage and determines to free his people from slavery. TV14
Interrupted" (N)
Dingbat"

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Kong: Skull Island A group of Vice News

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Justice League (2017, Action) Ben Affleck, Jason Momoa, Real Sports We profile L.A.
Gal Gadot. Batman and Wonder Woman recruit a team of Rams head coach Sean
McVay. (N)
to explore a mysterious island. TVPG
superheroes to defend the Earth from invasion. TV14
(:15)
Mr. 3000 ('04, Comedy) Angela Bassett, Michael
Weekend at Bernie's A dream
(:40)
Pirate Radio Lucy Fleming. An
Rispoli, Bernie Mac. A retired baseball player learns he is weekend for two friends gets off to a bad eccentric group of rogue DJs operate a
actually three hits short of his 3,000-hit record. TV14
start when their boss turns up dead. TVMA pirate radio station in the North Sea. TVMA
(5:30)
The Rock (1996, Action) Nicolas Cage, Ed
Baby Driver (2017, Action) Ansel Elgort, Lily James, Kevin (:55) Who Is The Affair
America?
Harris, Sean Connery. A former spy and an FBI agent must Spacey. A young man with a love of music works as a
break into Alcatraz prison to foil a deadly plot. TVMA
getaway driver for a brutal crime lord's gang. TV14
(5:30)

RACINE — Richard
Paul “Dick” Dugan, 76,
of Racine, Ohio, passed
away on July 22, 2018, at
Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
He was born Feb. 3,
1942, in Canton, Ohio,
a son of the late Joseph
Perry and Grace Beekman Dugan.
Dick was retired from
Operating Engineers
Local 18; veteran of the
United States Army;
Past President of FOE
Aerie 2171, Pomeroy,
Ohio; member of VFW
Post 9926, Mason, W.Va.;
American Legion Post
602, Racine, Ohio; 50
year member and Past
President of PomeroyRacine Masonic Lodge
164, Scottish Rite and
32degree Mason and 50
year member and Past
Patron of Racine Chapter
134 Order of Eastern
Star. Dick was an avid
golfer, devoted member
of the A 55 dirt track
race team and a faithful
supporter of his family’s
youth activities.
Dick is survived by his
wife of 51 years, Barbara
M. Dugan; daughter,
Dixie Wolfe and her
husband Jerry of Racine,
Ohio; son, Clarence
“Arnie” Dugan and his
wife Amber of Pomeroy,

Ohio; grandchildren,
Hannah (Linden),
Elisabeth “Betsy”, Grace
Wolfe and Lily, Amelia,
Cain, Jacob, and Romeo
Dugan; brother, Lloyd
(Bea) Dugan of Rutland,
Ohio; sister, Dorothy
German of Newark,
Ohio; special friend, Bob
German, Newark, Ohio;
and several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded in
death by his parents,
brothers, Lowell Bobb,
Jr., Harold, Larry, Darrell
and Robert “Bob” Dugan,
sisters, Shirley Priddy
and Sue Little.
Friends may visit, Tuesday, July 24, 2018, from
5-8 p.m. at Roush Funeral
Home, Ravenswood,
W.Va., where Lodge 164
will conduct masonic
rites.
Funeral service will
be Wednesday, July 25,
2018, at 1 p.m. at Roush
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va. with visitation from noon-1 p.m.
Burial with graveside
military rites by American Legion Post 602 will
conclude the service at
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Condolences may be
expressed to the family
at roush94@yahoo.com
or Roush Funeral Home’s
Facebook page.

PRICE
POINT PLEASANT — John William “Willie” Price,
86, of Point Pleasant, died Friday, July 20, 2018, at
STANLEY
Cornerstone Hospital in Huntington.
MINERAL WELLS — Donald Roy Stanley, 84, of
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
Mineral Wells, died July 20, 2018, in Camden Clark
in Point Pleasant, Thursday, July 26, 2018, at 1 p.m.
Hospital Parkersburg.
Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens,
Out of respect for Don’s wishes, there will be no
visitation or public burial. Pastor Ian Reid and Casto Point Pleasant. Friends may visit the family at the
funeral home, Wednesday evening, July 25, from 6-8
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, held private family
graveside services at 10 a.m. on July 23, 2018 in Inde- p.m.
pendence Cemetery, Sandyville.
BYER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Gregory Allen Byer,
LEPORT
56, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday, July 21,
HENDERSON — Reba Diane Leport, 58, of Hen2018 at home.
derson, died in Huntington.
A private funeral service will be held at the WilcoxFuneral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
en Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Pastor Joe
in Point Pleasant, Tuesday, July 24, 2018, at 2 p.m.
Burial will follow in Concord Cemetery in Henderson. Nott ofﬁciating.

Tuesday,
July 31

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Bare Feet
"Celebrating
India"
News at 6
ABC World
(N)
News (N)
10TV News CBS Evening
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Daily Mail
Eyewitness
TV
News (N)
BBC World Nightly
News:
Business
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)

brother, Mearl
Boggs; a sister,
Genevieve Sharp;
and a special
friend, Alexandria
Brandt.
In addition to
his parents, he was
preceded in death by his
wife, Nancy Boggs; a son,
Alan Boggs; a grandson,
Brayden; and ﬁve brothers, Luther, Oliver, Marvin, Lee and Stearl.
At Julian’s request,
there will be no visitation
or funeral service.
Arrangements have
been entrusted to WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, Ohio.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

WATTERSON
HENDERSON, W.Va. — JoAnn (Jarrell) Watterson,
77, of Henderson, W.Va., died Thursday, July 19, 2018
at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Wednesday, July
25, 2018 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
with Pastor Bert Flora ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
at the Watterson Family Cemetery in Apple Grove,
W.Va. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m., Tuesday at the
funeral home.

Monday,
July 30

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

RICHARD PAUL ‘DICK’ DUGAN

JULIAN BOGGS

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

Daily Sentinel

BOWLES
POINT PLEASANT — Hansford (Gene) Bowles,
93, of Point Pleasant, died Saturday, July 21, 2018 at
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in
Point Pleasant after a short illness.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Thursday, July 26,
2018 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
with Pastor Howard Blain ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasant.
The family will receive friends two hours prior to the
funeral service, Thursday at the funeral home.
SKINNER
ENO — Thomas E. Skinner, 75, of Eno died Saturday, July 21, 2018 at Overbrook Rehabilitation Center,
Middleport.
Funeral Services will be held 11 a.m.,Wednesday,
July 25, 2018, at the Trinity United Methodist
Church, State Route 160, Porter, with Rev. Dan
Lamphier ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Vinton
Memorial Park. Graveside Military Rites will be conducted by the Vinton American Legion Post 161. Family and friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, Chapel on Tuesday, July 24, 2018, 5-8
p.m.
HOOTON
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Carl Fredrick Hooton, 57, of
Gallipolis, Ohio, died July 20, 2018.
Memorial services will be held at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, Friday, July 27, 2018, at 8
p.m. Burial will be at the convenience of the family.
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home from
6-8 p.m. prior to the service.

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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 24, 2018 3

Firefighters respond to structure fire

Mason VFD photo

A structure fire in New Haven took approximately two hours to extinguish with no reported
injuries of the firefighters on scene.

Also on scene were Mason Counattack was used from the yard to
knock down the bulk of the ﬁre and ty EMS and the Mason County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
then was ﬁnished from the inside.
Mason Ladies Auxiliary provided
Approximately 6,000 gallons of
cold drinks.
water were used.

ODNR’s Natural Resources Park invites
visitors to make state fair memories
Ohio State Fair
will be held July
25-Aug. 5
COLUMBUS, OH –
The Ohio Department
of Natural Resources
(ODNR) is continuing
the tradition of bringing
the great outdoors to the
Ohio State Fair. A fairgoer favorite since 1957,
the Natural Resources
Park will offer free interactive exhibits and displays that allow visitors a
glimpse into the outdoor
recreational opportunities
right here in Ohio. Located in the southeast corner
of the state fairgrounds,
the park will be open to
all fairgoers attending the
Ohio State Fair, which
runs July 25-Aug 5. Free
activities are available
for people to enjoy in the
park from 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
daily.
“The Natural Resources
Park provides people with
a chance to experience
and participate in outdoor recreational activities through hands-on
and interactive exhibits,”
ODNR Director James
Zehringer said. “The
Ohio State Fair gives us
an ideal opportunity to
share everything we do
here at ODNR and allows
visitors to participate in
some great activities that
can be found across the
state.”
A new Touch-a-Truck
exhibit will make its
debut this year at the
Ohio State Fair. This
kid-friendly exhibit will
contain different types of
vehicles that are used by

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

Road Closures and
restrictions in Meigs County

Staff Report

NEW HAVEN — Local units
respond to aid New Haven Volunteer Fire Department during structure ﬁre on Monday.
According to Mason County Volunteer Fire Department’s Facebook
page, units were dispatched to
Dewhurst Road to aid New Haven
Volunteer Fire Department for a
structure ﬁre on Monday afternoon. Mason County Volunteer
Fire Departments Engine-51 and
Engine-53, with eight members,
responded to the call.
Units on scene worked to assist
with ﬁre and water supply. Additional help was requested from
Point Pleasant Fire Department,
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department, and Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department.
Units on scene worked approximately for two hours, with no injuries to the ﬁreﬁghters.
The report stated the scene was
a strong workload due to heavy
ﬁre conditions. A transitional

MEIGS BRIEFS

ODNR. Visitors can jump
aboard a boat provided
by the ODNR Division of
Parks and Watercraft or
admire a bulldozer used
by the ODNR Division of
Forestry.
This year, K-9s for
Conservation will be making an appearance at the
Natural Resources Park.
Trained patrol K-9s will
be there for meet and
greet along with their
handlers. A K-9 and their
handler will also be doing
demonstrations throughout the week at the
ODNR Amphitheater.
This year, the Camping
Village will offer guests
a peaceful stroll through
the Natural Resources
Park by being transformed into a camping
trail. This trail will showcase some of the overnight options available at
Ohio’s state parks. Make
sure to stop and experience “riding” a jet ski on
the personal watercraft
simulator stationed along
the trail. The camping
trail will encourage fairgoers to dive into Ohio’s
outdoors and experience
the trails around the
state.
For its second year,
the Wild Ohio Shooting
Range houses archery
and air gun ranges. People of all ages and skill
levels can learn about safe
shooting techniques while
in a safe and educational
environment. This building can accommodate up
to 10 shooters at the air
gun range and ﬁve shooters at the archery range.
Youth under the age
of 14 visiting the Natural Resources Park can
become experts at the

I’M TESS
SIMON,
MD.

youth ﬁshing pond.
Returning for its second
year, the Fish Ohio Building will be the next stop
for all guests. The building houses refrigerated
storage to temporarily
hold ﬁsh that youth have
caught until they are
ready to be picked up and
taken home. Staff will
also be giving ﬁsh ﬁlleting and cooking demonstrations.
Back by popular demand, the
7,000-square-foot pond
at the Natural Resources
Park will give guests a
chance to try their hand
at kayaking. Guests will
be ﬁtted with a life jacket
before receiving a demonstration on how to safely
kayak.
One of the favorite
exhibits for people visiting the park is talking
with Smokey Bear, an
animatronic bear who
talks to visitors about
preventing wildﬁres with
his moving arms, hands
and mouth. Smokey Bear
will greet children by
name from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. daily. A 71-foot-tall
ﬁre tower, originally
built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1934
in Pike County, is also
located directly behind
Smokey to reinforce the
icon’s ﬁre prevention
message.
The ODNR Natural
Resources Park will once
again offer free outdoor
entertainment in the
ODNR Amphitheater,
which seats 600 people.
Visitors can sit back and
relax in a shaded area and
enjoy the show. Retriever
dogs, lumberjacks, naturalists and more can all

be found performing on
the amphitheater stage.
A detailed list of acts is
located on ODNR’s state
fair website.
The Natural Resources
Park offers a multitude
of educational opportunities. Stroll through
the Geological Walkway
to learn about Ohio’s
ancient natural materials, and an audio tour is
available online for guests
who are interested in
learning more. Guests
are also encouraged to
enjoy the tallgrass prairie,
where more than 85 species of prairie plants can
be found.
There are also educational opportunities for
guests looking to learn
more about wildlife. Visit
the Butterﬂy House to
be transported into a
magical world of vibrant
colors, while gazing up at
butterﬂies and learning
about a butterﬂy’s life
cycle. Stop by Ruthven’s
Aviary to learn about
some of Ohio’s native
bird species, as well as
how to create wildlifefriendly backyards. For
a more hands-on experience, visit the Scenic
Rivers touch pool. The
shallow pool will contain
many of Ohio’s native
macroinvertebrates species, plus a few crayﬁsh
and small stream ﬁsh.
The Scenic Rivers program monitors these
creatures to help gauge
stream health.
The ODNR information
booth will offer natural
resources literature, and
the gift shop will showcase a wide array of souvenirs, clothing and toys
available for purchase.

RACINE — Meigs County Road 28, Bashan
Road, will be closed between C-31, Bald KnobsStiversville Road, and T-109, Carmel Road, for
approximately 4 weeks beginning Monday, July
23. County forces will be repairing a slip in this
area.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert replacement
project begins on July 27, on State Route 681 in
Meigs County. The project is taking place between
US 33 and Markham Road (Township Road 652).
One lane will be closed in this area. Temporary
trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot width restriction will
be in place. The estimated completion date is Aug.
31, 2018.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert replacement
project begins on July 30 on State Route 681 in
Meigs County. The project is taking place between
Fredrick Road (Township Road 618) and Haning
Ridge Road(Township Road 233). The road will
be closed in this area. ODOT’s detour is SR 681 to
US 50 to US 33. The estimated completion date is
Aug. 10, 2018.

Immunization Clinic
set for Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization
Clinic on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.,
at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring child(ren)’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $30.00
donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no one will be denied services
because of an inability to pay an administration
fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please
bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. Shingles and pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our website at
www.meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted
commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.
The Ohio Department of Health (ODH) does
NOT recommended for routine Hepatitis A vaccination of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis
A vaccination for Food Workers. Currently, ODH
is strongly recommending the following groups
to get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who have sex
with men, persons who inject drugs and person
who use illegal non-injection drugs. These are the
highest risk groups for transmission of Hepatitis
A. Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine availability.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Vacation Bible School
RUTLAND — The Rutland FreeWill Baptist
Church will hold Vacation Bible School July 23-27,
6-8:30 p.m. each night. The closing program and
party will be July 27. Perfect attendance names
will be drawn with one boy and one girl in each
class winning a bicycle. The theme is Rolling
River Rampage. Each day will include music,
skits, crafts, snacks and devotions. Pastor Ed
Barney invites everyone to come as we teach your
children about Jesus and His way of life.
MIDDLEPORT — The First Baptist Church of
Middleport, 211 S. 6th Ave., Middleport, will hold
our Vacation Bible School from July 23-26 from
6-8 p.m. The theme for the week will be Splash
Canyon focusing on God’s Promise on Life’s Wild
Ride. Classes will be held for children who just
ﬁnished Kindergarten through 5th Grade. You may
bring your younger child if you stay with him/
her. There will be a different lesson from the Bible
taught each evening and, besides the lessons, the
children will sing, do crafts, enjoy games, and
receive snacks. Registration slips will need to be
ﬁlled out before VBS begins on Monday. Please
bring your child to be registered on Monday
beginning at 5:45 p.m. Pastor Billy Zuspan is our
pastor. Penny Fisher and Lori Zuspan, both teachers in the public school systems, are in charge of
our VBS.

Caring is my passion.
As a wife and a mother of two, I understand what it means to
live the busy lifestyle of today’s family. As an internal medicine
physician, I understand your health often takes a back seat to a
busy schedule when you are juggling the demands of a busy family. I also understand making appointments in a timely manner
is important to you, and that’s why it’s top priority for me.
Tess Simon, MD, is an internal medicine physician. She is skilled
in the management of chronic medical problems such as heart
disease, stroke and hypertension, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, asthma, COPD and diabetes.

NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS
SAME DAY APPOINTMENTS
TESS SIMON, MD // INTERNAL MEDICINE

OH-70057263

304.857.6538
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
PRIMARY CARE

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Daily Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

Today is Tuesday, July 24, the 205th day of
2018. There are 160 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On July 24, 1959, during a visit to Moscow, Vice
President Richard Nixon engaged in his famous
“Kitchen Debate” with Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev.

THOUGHT
On this date:
In 1862, Martin Van
FOR TODAY
Buren, the eighth presi“Everything has two
dent of the United States,
sides — the outside
and the ﬁrst to have been
that is ridiculous,
born a U.S. citizen, died
and the inside that is
at age 79 in Kinderhook,
solemn.”
New York, the town where
— Olive Schreiner,
he was born in 1782.
South African
In 1866, Tennessee
author and feminist
became the ﬁrst state
(1855-1920).
to be readmitted to the
Union after the Civil War.
In 1915, the SS Eastland, a passenger ship carrying more than 2,500 people, rolled onto its side
while docked at the Clark Street Bridge on the
Chicago River; an estimated 844 people died in
the disaster.
In 1937, the state of Alabama dropped charges
against four of the nine young black men accused
of raping two white women in the “Scottsboro
Case.”
In 1969, the Apollo 11 astronauts — two of
whom had been the ﬁrst men to set foot on the
moon — splashed down safely in the Paciﬁc.
In 1974, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously
ruled that President Richard Nixon had to turn
over subpoenaed White House tape recordings to
the Watergate special prosecutor.
In 1983, a two-run homer by George Brett of the
Kansas City Royals was disallowed after New York
Yankees manager Billy Martin pointed out there
was too much pine tar on Brett’s bat. However,
American League president Lee MacPhail reinstated the home run. (The game was completed
Aug. 18, 1983 with the Royals beating the Yankees, 5-4.)
In 1987, Hulda Crooks, a 91-year-old mountaineer from California, became the oldest woman to
conquer Mount Fuji, Japan’s highest peak.
In 1998, a gunman burst into the U.S. Capitol,
killing two police ofﬁcers before being shot and
captured. (The shooter, Russell Eugene Weston
Jr., is being held in a federal mental facility.)
In 2002, nine coal miners became trapped in a
ﬂooded tunnel of the Quecreek Mine in western
Pennsylvania; the story ended happily 77 hours
later with the rescue of all nine.
In 2005, Lance Armstrong won his seventh
consecutive Tour de France. (Those wins were
stripped away after Armstrong’s 2013 confession
to using steroids and other banned performanceenhancing drugs and methods.)
Ten years ago:
Ford Motor Co. posted the worst quarterly
performance in its history, losing $8.67 billion.
Cheered by an enormous crowd in Berlin, Democratic presidential contender Barack Obama summoned Europeans and Americans together to
“defeat terror and dry up the well of extremism
that supports it” as surely as they had conquered
communism a generation ago. Zvonko Busic,
who’d served 32 years in a U.S. prison for hijacking a TWA jetliner and planting a bomb that killed
a policeman, was paroled and returned home to
Croatia.
Five years ago:
The House narrowly rejected, 217-205, a challenge to the National Security Agency’s secret
collection of hundreds of millions of Americans’
phone records.

THEIR VIEW

Crossing gaps through the years
A potent personality
— plus tact, talent, and
tenacity — took Mary
Hosbrook from the farm
to a career as an artist
and entrepreneur. Her
life linked the 1860s to
the 1960s, a century of
expanding civil rights
and women asserting
their place in society.
Mary Hosbrook, my
great-aunt, was a pioneer
in this post-Civil War
period.
Educated at an art
institute, one of Mary’s
oil paintings made its
way to the Corcoran Art
Gallery in Washington,
D.C., and she helped
carve the pipe organ panels in Cincinnati’s Music
Hall. But a single train
trip provided a platform
for Mary’s embrace of
life, new experiences,
and social change.
Mary boarded the train
in rural Ohio, bound
for a new job as an art
instructor in Virginia.
The sun was already setting, the year was 1895,
and no one tells her
story better than Mary
Hosbrook herself. Come
along for the ride.
“The moon was so
lovely that I looked
out the window until
11 o’clock. Then we
changed trains at a
little two-for-a-cent station — Paris was the
name, who’d a thought
it — where the railroad

drivers. I climbed
agent was so excesinto one with six
sively polite that
men and the drivI feared he was
er so I could sit in
going to carry me
the front seat.
bodily in to make
“I never expectme sit down. I got
ed that the horses
acquainted with
could get us over
two girls from Iowa James
the mountain, but
who were going to Burns
Cumberland Gap
Contributing they did by stopping to rest every
to teach in a miscolumnist
100 yards on the
sion school, and
way up. I’m glad
we had a jolly time.
the tunnel wasn’t ﬁxed,
“There was a blind
for the experience was
musician on the train
great. The rocks rose
who gave us quite a
straight up on one side,
concert. He sang a song
about a woman’s tongue, straight down on the
and, as we had been hav- other, and a little jump
to one side of the road
ing quite a gay time, I
think one old fat man had would have made pressed
beef of me.
called for it on purpose.
“On the summit we
We cheered the musician,
were in three states at
and let the fat man pay
once — Kentucky, Virginhim which he did.”
This scene of songfest ia, and Tennessee, and I
was in a fourth, a state
took place as the train
of bliss. Six men behind
wound its way through
me, one at my side, and
the nighttime darkness
the loveliest mountain
of Kentucky, arriving
scenery all around. As
at Cumberland Gap at
far as the eye could see
sunrise. For Mary, the
rose one mountain after
fun was just beginning.
The train tunnel had col- another. Some of them
were above the clouds,
lapsed.
“When we got to Cum- and some below, but a
berland Gap, they told us blue haze hovered around
the tops of all of them.
we would have to cross
“The road was rocky,
the mountain in a wagon.
solid sandstone in some
The tunnel through it
caves in continually, and places but with beautiful ﬂowers growing out
they were repairing it.
of the stones and ferns
We got out at ﬁve in the
morning and into spring that would have set one
wild had there not been
wagons with black covso many other things to
ers. The horses were
take your attention ﬁrst.”
bony and so were the

Mary Hosbrook obviously had an artist’s
eye for natural beauty
and an appreciation of
ﬂowers that could take
root in rocks. And the
wagon ride proved that
Mary Hosbrook took
a back seat to no one.
She embodied America’s
spunk and spirit.
Mary Hosbrook got
married in 1901 and
partnered with her husband in the book business in Kansas City. He
did the ofﬁce work, and
she called on customers,
plying the muddy streets
of early Kansas City in a
horse-and-buggy to place
libraries with the works
of Spencer, Wordsworth,
and Shakespeare in the
stately homes of the
city’s elite.
My wife and I visited
Aunt Mary shortly after
her 98th birthday in
1964. She said that the
candles on her birthday
cake were “a blaze of
glory,” thrusting her
hand out to illustrate
the magniﬁcence of the
moment.
She was magniﬁcent
— and now a millionaire
herself.
Mary Hosbrook Kincaid lived to age 101 and
left her estate to local
charities.
James F. Burns is a retired
professor at the University of
Florida. He was born in Cincinnati
and grew up near Coney Island.

THEIR VIEW

Don’t let thieves ruin your vacation this year

By AAA East Central

them to set up credit
card accounts in another
As millions of vacation- person’s name. The proliferation of mobile devices
ers are relaxing at the
has provided criminals
beach, visiting theme
with easy means to access
parks, setting sail on
cruises or exploring exot- personal data and steal
thousands of dollars using
ic destinations this sumother people’s identities.
mer, AAA East Central
“AAA offers three
is reminding travelers to
take some simple precau- levels of identity theft
tions and prevent ID theft protection: ProtectMyID
Essential (free to AAA
on vacation.
“This is a busy time of members), ProtectMyID
year for travel as families Deluxe and ProtectMyID
Platinum (our highest
have anxiously waited
out those winter months level of coverage). A great
source of protection for
to enjoy their vacations
together,” said Jim Lehm- consumers as ID theft
crime continues to grow,”
an, President, AAA East
Central. “Having piece of Lehman said.
Additionally, AAA
mind while soaking up
some sun will make their advises the following prevacation that much more cautions for travelers:
Stop your mail while
enjoyable.”
you’re on vacation. Mail
Thieves can steal
account numbers or other theft continues to be a
common way for thieves
personal data, enabling

to access personal data.
Just call the U.S. Postal
Service at (800) 275-8777
or visit http://holdmail.
usps.com/holdmail.
Protect portable electronics with passwords.
While you’re out and
about on a trip, there are
more chances for criminals to take advantage
of a couple of minutes
of inattention on your
part. Thieves need just a
couple of minutes with a
device to extract personal
information, so set up
your devices to automatically lock and require a
password or passcode to
reopen. Experian, a leading information services
company and the Auto
Club’s partner in offering
the ProtectMyID beneﬁt, recommends using
a seven-digit passcode
instead of the typical four

digits for smartphones
and tablets.
Be cautious with
navigation apps. Don’t
store your home address
in these apps – if your
device is stolen and
unlocked while on vacation or at any time, it’s an
easy way for a criminal
to access it. Instead, use
a nearby public location
as your “home address”
on the app, allowing you
to navigate home without
risking your security.
Take care on public
WiFi. You’ll likely be
using more public WiFi
spots than usual when
you’re on vacation. Avoid
conducting ﬁnancial
transactions of any type
on public WiFi, because
thieves can monitor them
with “sniffers” and grab
credit card numbers,
account numbers and

other personal information. If possible, use
public WiFi networks
that require a password
to join. And if your signal strength allows, use
your phone’s cellular data
service instead of public
WiFi.
Be prepared to erase
your device remotely. If
someone does steal your
device, you’ll want to
remove everything that
enables them to assume
your identity. Make sure
you regularly back up
your device online with
a service like iCloud,
Google Drive or Microsoft OneDrive, so that
you won’t lose anything
and it can be restored on
a replacement device. As
soon as you know your
device has been stolen,
you should follow the procedures from the manu-

facturer to remotely wipe
vital data.
ProtectMyID, part of
Experian, is a leading fullservice provider of identity theft detection, protection and fraud resolution.
It offers comprehensive
identity theft protection
products supported by
experienced identity theft
resolution professionals who deliver personal
attention that customers
can rely on. For more
information, visit AAA.
com/CreditMonitoring.
AAA East Central is
a not-for-proﬁt association with 80 local ofﬁces
in Kentucky, New York,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and
West Virginia serving 2.7
million members. Past
news releases are available at news.eastcentral.
aaa.com. Follow us on
Twitter and Facebook.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 24, 2018 5

Charged

the area of Chief Cornstalk Pond in Southside in
reference to a pedestrian
being struck by a motor
From page 1
vehicle. Upon arrival, they
found Hooton deceased
“On observing the
from what appeared to be
scene, it is obvious that
Cline’s actions were more injuries sustained from a
motor vehicle.
severe than just hitting
Cline was booked into
Hooton and injuring him,”
the Western Regional Jail,
the complaint states.
without bond, at 4 a.m. on
“Hooton appears to have
Friday, July 20, according
been run over, then possibly run over again by the to jail records.
Mason County Sheriff’s
vehicle. The track marks
from the vehicle cross over Ofﬁce and Mason County
and over in the area where EMS responded to the
Hooton’s body was found. scene.
Cline had also knocked
out two fence posts as she Sarah Hawley, managing editor of
The Daily Sentinel, contributed to
traveled through the camp- this article.
ing area showing that she
was probably chasing Hoo- Erin Perkins is a staff writer for Ohio
Valley Publishing, reach her at (304)
ton with the vehicle.”
675-1333, extension 1992.
Deputies responded to

Courtesy of JoAnne Newsome

Members of Bailey’s family were accompanied by Meigs County Bikers, Revalatorz, Los Cuervos, Justice Riders and Red Knights
and members of Pomeroy American Legion Drew Webster Post 39, Middleport Sweeney Bennett Post 128, Tuppers Plains VFW
Post 9053, Racine American Legion Post 602, Meigs County DAV Chapter 53, and Meigs County Honor Flight Advocate JoAnne
Newsome for the ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery.

Bailey

Longtime Bailey family friend
Thomas Kibble said, “It was an
honor and I feel very privileged
to get to be here and watch all of
From page 1
this, and make sure Clinton was
okay.”
During his 18 years of serAs previously reported in The
vice, Bailey was the recipient of
Daily Sentinel, members of Bainumerous ribbons and awards
ley’s family planned to leave the
including the WWII Asiatic
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home
Paciﬁc WWII Victory Ribbon,
National Defense Service Medal, accompanied by Meigs County
Bikers, Revalatorz, Los Cuervos,
Good Conduct Medal with 5
Justice Riders and Red Knights
loops representing his 18 years
and members of Pomeroy Ameriof service, American Theater
can Legion Drew Webster Post
Ribbon, American Defense Ribbon, Air Force Outstanding Unit 39, Middleport Sweeney Bennett
Award, Air Force Longevity Ser- Post 128, Tuppers Plains VFW
Post 9053, Racine American
vice Award with 2 Bronze Oak
Legion Post 602, Meigs County
Leaf Clusters, as well as several
DAV Chapter 53, and Meigs
Missile Man badges.
Following the military ceremo- County Honor Flight Advocate
JoAnne Newsome who would
ny, his son Clinton Bailey said,
travel with the group by car.
“I’m so glad we did this because
According to Newsome, the
my dad would be so proud of
journey went off “without a
seeing everyone that came to
hitch.”
support and honor him and his
“There were no problems,
family.”
most people showed courtsey
He went on to say a special
and respect during our travels.
thank you to everyone who
The Bikers were well organized
accompanied his family on the
trip from Chester, Ohio to Arling- and along with the West Virginia
State Police, led us safely to our
ton, Virginia.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

69°

80°

75°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

1.86
5.09
3.34
30.36
25.30

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:23 a.m.
8:47 p.m.
6:29 p.m.
3:43 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Jul 27

Aug 4

New

First

Aug 11 Aug 18

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

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

Major
9:45a
10:29a
11:14a
12:00p
12:24a
1:13a
2:03a

Minor
3:33a
4:17a
5:02a
5:48a
6:36a
7:25a
8:14a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
10:09p
10:53p
11:38p
---12:48p
1:36p
2:25p

Minor
3:57p
4:41p
5:26p
6:12p
6:59p
7:48p
8:36p

WEATHER HISTORY
Between July 22 and 24, 1788, a
hurricane struck North Carolina and
moved inland through Virginia. The
storm was still potent when later
observed by George Washington.

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
300

Portsmouth
82/67

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.79 +0.02
Marietta
34 16.34 +0.24
Parkersburg
36 21.88 +0.28
Belleville
35 13.20 +0.50
Racine
41 13.29 +0.19
Point Pleasant
40 25.47 +0.51
Gallipolis
50 13.33 +0.31
Huntington
50 25.52 +0.38
Ashland
52 34.18 +0.30
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.87 +0.28
Portsmouth
50 16.70 +1.20
Maysville
50 34.30 +0.40
Meldahl Dam
51 15.50 +1.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Memorial 5K will take
place on Friday, Aug. 10 at
Star Mill Park in Racine,
Ohio. Registration for the
From page 1
race is $20, and includes a
t-shirt.
competitors are encourRace-night registration
aged to wear bright clothwill take place from 7-8:30
ing, glow bracelets, and
p.m. with the race to begin
glow necklaces as they
race through the streets of at 9 p.m. A bake sale will
Racine under the guidance also begin at 7 p.m.
Additional information
of streetlights.
on the John Gray MemoAll money raised
through the event goes to rial 5K can be found at
www.johngraymemorial5k.
the John Gray Memorial
com.
Scholarship Fund, which
Additional information
annually gives out scholarabout the Big Bend Blues
ships to members of the
graduating class at South- Dash at Maple Lawn Brewery can be found at www.
ern High School.
rivercityrunners1.com.
The 2018 John Gray

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

83°
61°
Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm in spots

83°
66°

Nice with times of
clouds and sun

A couple of showers
possible

Marietta
83/67

Murray City
81/66
Belpre
84/67

Athens
82/67

80°
65°
Cloudy, a
thunderstorm
possible; humid

Today

St. Marys
84/67

Parkersburg
82/66

Coolville
83/67

Elizabeth
84/68

Spencer
83/68

Buffalo
83/68
Milton
84/68

Clendenin
85/68

St. Albans
84/68

Huntington
81/68

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
88/62
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
72/57
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
96/72
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
83/68

Ashland
83/68
Grayson
82/68

SUNDAY

82°
61°

Wilkesville
82/66
POMEROY
Jackson
83/68
82/66
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
84/68
83/67
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
82/67
GALLIPOLIS
84/68
84/68
83/68

South Shore Greenup
83/68
81/66

52

Logan
81/66

McArthur
81/66

Lucasville
82/67

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
81/67

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 2117

Partial sunshine

Adelphi
81/66

Waverly
81/67

Pollen: 2

Low

MOON PHASES
Full

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

Races

87°
66°

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

3

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:23 a.m.
8:46 p.m.
7:19 p.m.
4:28 a.m.

THURSDAY

83°
66°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

80°
67°
86°
66°
102° in 1934
48° in 1947

WEDNESDAY

Humid today with a thunderstorm. A t-storm in
spots this evening. High 84° / Low 68°

File photo

Runners make their way down Second Street as part of the Big Bend
Blues Dash.

Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

destination.”
The accompanying group
was made up of 50 Bikers, most
of who carried riders and 20
vehicles. With the Bikers leading
the way, the West Virginia State
Police escorted the group across
the entire state.
The Bikers comments were, “It
was a wonderful, amazing, ride,
we would do it in a heartbeat for
another veteran.”
As part of the Honor Flight
group, Newsome escorts veterans
on ﬂights to war memorials in
Washington, D.C., and she said
she was honored to be a part of
this group as well.
“I totally enjoyed the fast and
furious ride up. I was proud to
be Jim Bailey’s guardian on his
honor ﬂight; he and Jack Lewis
were my ﬁrst honor ﬂight veterans. I began working with Honor
Flights in 2013 and I’ve loved it
ever since. It was a privilege to
be part of this ride.”
All participants agreed it was
worth the journey.

Charleston
82/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
74/53

Montreal
87/73

Billings
89/61

Toronto
82/68

Minneapolis
84/66
Chicago
86/67

Denver
91/65

New York
82/74

Detroit
84/67

Kansas City
90/63

Washington
81/73

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
94/69/c 96/70/pc
Anchorage
68/58/sh 66/57/sh
Atlanta
85/69/t
88/70/t
Atlantic City
80/74/sh
78/72/t
Baltimore
80/72/t
81/68/t
Billings
89/61/s 78/56/pc
Boise
101/68/s 100/65/s
Boston
83/71/pc 81/70/pc
Charleston, WV
82/67/c
80/65/t
Charlotte
85/70/t
86/70/t
Cheyenne
85/60/pc
78/56/t
Chicago
86/67/s
87/68/s
Cincinnati
82/67/pc
84/66/c
Cleveland
83/69/t 82/67/sh
Columbus
82/68/t
85/66/t
Dallas
98/74/pc 101/77/pc
Denver
91/65/pc
85/60/t
Des Moines
85/62/s 82/63/pc
Detroit
84/67/pc 85/64/pc
Honolulu
89/76/pc
88/77/c
Houston
97/77/t
99/77/s
Indianapolis
84/67/pc 85/66/pc
Kansas City
90/63/s 89/66/pc
Las Vegas
110/89/s 112/90/s
Little Rock
91/69/s
93/69/s
Los Angeles
96/72/s
98/72/s
Louisville
86/68/pc 89/67/pc
Miami
91/80/t 91/80/pc
Minneapolis
84/66/s
78/58/t
Nashville
87/69/pc 89/69/pc
New Orleans
93/79/s 94/79/pc
New York City
82/74/sh
79/72/t
Oklahoma City
91/69/s 94/72/pc
Orlando
86/73/t
88/73/t
Philadelphia
85/74/t
80/73/t
Phoenix
116/91/pc 116/90/pc
Pittsburgh
81/67/c
80/60/t
Portland, ME
77/66/pc 76/67/pc
Raleigh
81/71/t
84/71/t
Richmond
79/72/t
82/70/t
St. Louis
90/67/s
90/69/s
Salt Lake City
98/74/s 94/71/pc
San Francisco
72/57/pc 71/57/pc
Seattle
88/62/s
91/63/s
Washington, DC
81/73/t
83/72/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

Atlanta
85/69

El Paso
102/78

117° in Thermal, CA
32° in Stanley, ID

Global

Chihuahua
100/71

High
Low

Houston
97/77
Monterrey
104/73

Miami
91/80

120° in Ouargla, Algeria
8° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

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�S ports

6 Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Daily Sentinel

ISU players help storm-ravaged city

Kelsey Kremer | The Des Moines Register via AP

Clean up continues outside homes in Marshalltown, Iowa, on Saturday, two days after
a devastating tornado blew through the city. The tornado here was among a flurry of
unexpected twisters that swept through central Iowa on Thursday.

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa
(AP) — The Iowa State
football team showed up in
storm-ravaged Marshalltown
to help residents clean up
two days after a destructive
tornado swept through the
city.
The entire Cyclones
roster traveled from Ames
to Marshalltown, making
quick work out of a number
of tasks on Saturday before
catching a breather at a local
schoolyard, The Marshalltown Times-Republican
reported.
Players did everything
from clearing tree limbs and
debris, raking yards, moving
remnants of houses, rooftops
and garages, and removing
furniture from damaged

homes and businesses.
“I don’t have words for
it, you know what I mean?”
said redshirt freshman offensive lineman Colin Newell.
“You just put yourself in that
position for a second and
you’re like, ‘wow.’
“We had some guys come
up here (Friday) and help
out, and they said we’ve got
to get more guys up here
and do what we can to help
out. We’ve got a lot of people
with us, so we can bring a
lot of manpower with us and
get out here and help these
people out.”
One of the group’s ﬁrst
undertakings of the day was
to help a family move its
car out of the driveway and
a truck out from under a

garage that fallenon it.
A tearful owner offered
hugs to any Cyclone football
player who crossed her path
— and some pledged their
fandom to Iowa State, even
if only for a day.
“Just doing it for the community makes it all worth
it, too, just helping out Iowa
and Marshalltown get back
to where they were at,” said
redshirt freshman offensive
lineman Alex Kleinow.
Both Newell and Kleinow
have dealt indirectly with
ﬂood damage to their own
hometowns, but that was
nothing compared with what
Marshalltown experienced
during the tornado.
“This is really eye-opening,” Kleinow said.

Harvick wins at New
Hampshire with
bump-and-run pass
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) — Kevin Harvick warned
he was charging for the lead with taps on Kyle
Busch’s rear bumper over the waning laps. Harvick had failed to methodically work his way
around the race leader with a clean pass, so he set
aim with his Ford on Busch for the knockout shot.
Harvick nudged the right side of the Toyota and
jostled Busch out of his groove and three lanes up
the track. He zipped to the front with a textbook
bump-and-run that led to a beer-soaked celebration
and left Busch fuming — the move of the race in
another stellar showcase for the leader of the Big
Three.
Harvick outdueled Busch over the ﬁnal 10 laps
to win a thrilling battle of two of NASCAR’s dominant drivers Sunday at New Hampshire Motor
Speedway.
“I felt like it was my best opportunity to do what
I had to do to win,” Harvick said. “I didn’t want to
wreck him. But I didn’t want to waste a bunch of
time behind him.”
Busch, the temperamental 2015 series champion, had a different view.
“I think he could have made the move work
cleaner than that,” Busch said.
Busch said he expected for Harvick to keep trying for the decisive pass until there were about
two or three laps left.
“I ﬁgured that’s exactly what he was thinking,”
Harvick said, smiling. “I knew I needed to take the
opportunity as soon as I could get it. We needed
to do it when he wasn’t expecting it.”
Harvick crew chief Rodney Childers had exhorted Harvick over the radio to do what he needed to
do to snag that checkered ﬂag.
“He was in the lane that I needed to be in and as
you get to the end,” Harvick said, “you’ve got to
be aggressive.”
Harvick raced to his sixth victory of the season
for Stewart-Haas Racing and ﬁnished in the top
two in some order with Busch for the fourth time
this year.
Harvick, Busch and Martin Truex Jr. — NASCAR’s Big Three — have won a combined 15
times in the 20 Cup races. Busch has ﬁve wins and
Truex, who was fourth Sunday, has four.
There was nearly an outlier in a race delayed
more than three hours by rain.
Aric Almirola, who replaced retired Danica
Patrick this season in the No. 10 Ford, threatened
to crash the party and win his second career Cup
race. He led for more than 40 laps late until he
was derailed by a poor pit stop and then spun his
tires on a restart that likely cost him his ﬁrst win
since July 2014.
“You think I’d be happy,” he said.
Not in this race.
But it was a banner weekend for SHR: Kurt
Busch won the pole and ﬁnished eighth; and Harvick and Almirola placed in the top ﬁve.
Almirola, though, was the latest also-ran to realize drivers have to be ﬂawless to catch either of
the Big Three.
Harvick, who won his 43rd career race, made
the perfect pass in New Hampshire.
Harvick reeled off three straight victories at
Atlanta, Las Vegas and Phoenix and went backto-back in May at Dover and Kansas. It had been
seven races since he reached victory lane.
He found the way again in the No. 4 Ford to celebrate again for Stewart-Haas Racing. His six wins
are a career-best, topping the ﬁve he reached in
his 2014 championship season and 2006.
One and done
New Hampshire hosted its only Cup weekend of
See NASCAR | 10

Peter Morrison | AP

Francesco Molinari of Italy on the 18th hole after the final round for the 147th British Open Golf Championships on Sunday in Carnoustie,
Scotland.

Molinari wins British Open title
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland (AP) — Francesco
Molinari didn’t get the
loudest cheers for the
best golf at British Open.
He was overlooked
for so much of Sunday
playing alongside Tiger
Woods, who caused
pure pandemonium at
Carnoustie by taking the
lead in the ﬁnal round of
a major for the ﬁrst time
in nine years.
Molinari settled for the
best cheer of them all.
The last one.
Amid so much chaos
— seven players atop the
leaderboard, six of them
still tied on the back
nine — Molinari played a
steady hand by going the
entire weekend without a
bogey and ﬁnishing with
a 5-foot birdie putt that
secured his place in history as Italy’s ﬁrst major
champion.
“Clearly, in my group,
the attention wasn’t
really on me, let’s put it
that way,” Molinari said,
the gleaming claret jug in
front of him. “If someone
was expecting a charge,
they probably weren’t
expecting it from me.
But it’s been the same
the whole of my career.”
His charge was a
2-under 69 in the strongest wind of the week,
the only player from the
last four groups to break
par.
Woods lost the lead
with one bad swing that
would have been even
farther left of the 11th
green had it not crashed
into the fans, leading
to double bogey. He fol-

lowed that with a bogey
and never caught up. He
had to settle for a 71.
Jordan Spieth, tied for
the lead in his bid to go
back-to-back in the British Open, failed to make
a single birdie and shot
76, his highest score Sunday in a major.
Kevin Chappell made
two double bogeys, the
last one on No. 17 that
derailed his hopes. Kevin
Kisner made his double
bogey early. Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose each
made a run with eagles
on the par-5 14th hole,
McIlroy with a 50-foot
putt , Rose with a second
shot that bounced off the
base of the pin. They ran
out of holes.
Xander Schauffele, the
last hope to keep alive
the American streak of
ﬁve straight majors, was
one shot behind until he
sent a long iron to the
right of the 17th and
failed to make a 15-foot
putt for par.
Molinari clinched it
with a driver that skirted
the edge of a pot bunker,
leaving him a lob wedge
from 112 yards to 5 feet.
He poured it in, raised
his right ﬁst and shook it
lightly before slamming
it for emphasis.
Then, he waited in the
trailer to see if anyone
could catch him. At one
point, he went over to
the practice green, but
not to prepare for a playoff.
“I probably would have
felt sick watching on
TV,” he said.
Molinari ﬁnished at

8-under 276, the lowest
score in eight Opens at
Carnoustie, the course
where Jean Van de Velde
threw away the British Open with a triple
bogey on the last hole
in 1999, where Padraig
Harrington twice hit
into Barry Burn on the
last hole to make double
bogey and still won.
“Just disbelief, to be
honest,” the 35-year-old
said. “To go the weekend
bogey-free, it’s unthinkable. Playing with Tiger
was another challenge.
But I felt really good
this morning. I felt I was
ready for the challenge.”
Woods had every reason to believe he would
cap a most improbable
comeback from four back
surgeries.
His red shirt blazing
against the yellow grass
of a dry Scottish summer,
Woods hit driver into the
wind on the par-4 fourth
to set up birdie. Into the
wind on the par-5 sixth,
three deep bunkers to the
right and out-of-bounds
to the left, he got to the
front of the green with a
driver and a 3-wood for
another birdie.
And just like the
Woods of old, the players
he was chasing started to
collapse.
Spieth gambled with
a shot to clear the burn
on No. 6 and went into
a gorse bush, making
double bogey. Schauffele
chopped up the next hole
for double bogey.
Woods had the lead.
And then he lost it
with two bad holes. Still

in range, he couldn’t get
close enough for a birdie
when it mattered. It was
the ﬁrst time since the
2007 U.S. Open that he
trailed going into the ﬁnal
round of a major, had the
lead and didn’t win.
His anger over his mistakes was tempered by
perspective, comparing it
to Serena Williams losing
in the ﬁnals at Wimbledon.
“The beginning of the
year, if they’d have said,
‘You’re playing The Open
Championship,’ I would
have said I’d be very
lucky to do that. Serena
and I are good friends.
I’m sure she’ll probably
call me and talk to me
about it because you’ve
got to put things in perspective. … I know that
it’s going to sting for a
little bit here, but given
where I was to where I’m
at now, blessed.”
It might sting even
worse for Spieth. One
day after a bogey-free
round of 65 to share the
lead, he had a birdie-free
round at the worst time.
His best chance was at
the 14th, where he threeputted for par from about
40 feet.
“When you put yourself in position enough
times, it goes your way
sometimes, it doesn’t go
your way sometimes,”
Spieth said, who goes
to the PGA Championship in three weeks for
a chance at the career
Grand Slam.
The victory adds to
Molinari’s best stretch of
golf.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Tuesday, July 24, 2018 7

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

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VILLAGE OF POMEROY S.R. 833 SANITARY
SEWER EXTENSION
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION TO BID
Sealed Bids will be received for furnishing all labor, materials
and equipment necessary to complete a project known as
Village of Pomeroy S.R. 833 Sanitary Sewer Extension at
the Village of Pomeroy Office (the "OWNER"), 660 E. Main
Street, Suite A, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 11:00 A.M. local
time on August 15, 2018, and at said time and place, publicly
opened and read aloud. Bids may be mailed or delivered in advance to the Village of Pomeroy at the above address.
The project consists of 5,995 feet of 8" and 6" PVC sewer, 11
manholes, and a lift station upgrade. Alternatives will also be
evaluated.
A copy of the Bid Documents containing the Bid Requirements
and Contract Documents (including all bid sheets, plans, specifications, and any addenda) can be obtained from IBI Group,
5085 Tile Plant Road, New Lexington, OH 43764 with a
non-refundable payment of $100 each. Checks should be
made payable to IBI Group. This legal ad will be available for
viewing at Builders Exchange and Dodge Data &amp; Analytics.
Each Bidder is required to furnish with its submission of the
fully completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in accordance
with Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form (Bid Guarantee and Contract and Performance Bond as provided in Section 153.57.1 of the Ohio Revised Code), must be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in the State of Ohio to provide said surety. Those
Bidders that elect to submit bid guaranty in the form of a certified check, cashier's check, or letter of credit pursuant to Chapter 1305 of the Ohio Revised Code and in accordance with Section 153.54 (C) of the Ohio Revised Code. Any such letter of
credit shall be revocable only at the option of the beneficiary
OWNER. The amount of the certified check, cashier's check,
or letter of credit shall be equal to ten (10) percent of the Bid
and the Successful Bidder will be required to submit a bond in
the form provided in 153.57 of the Ohio Revised Code in conjunction with the execution of the Contract.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the Bidding Documents and all persons interested
therein. Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences
on projects of similar size and complexity. The OWNER intends that this Project be completed no later than the time period as set forth in Article 4 of the Standard Form of Agreement
between OWNER and CONTRACTOR on the Basis of a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for
employment are not discriminated against because of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.

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

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

All CONTRACTORS and subcontractors involved with the project shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, materials,
services and labor in the implementation of their project. DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 143.011 OF THE (OHIO) REVISED CODE APPLY
TO THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF
THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

Additionally, CONTRACTOR compliance with the equal employment opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code
Chapter 123, the Governor's Executive Order of 1972, and
Governor's Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing Davis-Bacon wage
rates on Public Improvements in Meigs County as determined
by the U.S. Department of labor, Federal Wage and Hour Division.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom
HUD Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Wednesday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

Apartments/Townhouses
Gallia Manor Apartments,
138 Buhl Morton Rd.
Gallipolis, is now accepting
applications for waiting list for
1 Bedroom, HUD-Subsidized
apartment for elderly and
handicapped 740-446-4652

Houses For Rent
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Equal Housing Opportunity

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out our
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for
bargains!

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District is accepting applications for
the next two weeks with intentions of
ɪMMJOH�POF�³FME�NBJOUFOBODF�QPTJUJPO
within the next month.
The position is considered a distribution
maintenance position, but because of
the advanced changes in our systems
technology, computer knowledge and or
other trades will be given preference in
the applicant selection process. No prior
water system knowledge is required as
we will train to levels needed. You may
pick up an application at 39561 Bar
30 Road, which is three miles south of
Tuppers Plains just off State Route 7 or
print one off of our website www.tpcwd.org
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the 2018 County Resurfacing Project Parts 1, 2, &amp; 3 will be received by the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at The Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E.
Second Street, Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 11:10
A.M., August 2, 2018, and then at 11:10 A.M. at said office
opened and read aloud.
Resurfacing and striping of C35, C20, C20A, C345, and portions of C3 and C25. The engineer’s estimate for this project is
$1,390,437.60

DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.
Bid documents may be secured at the office of The Meigs
County Engineer, 34110 Fairgrounds Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769; Phone Number 740-992-2911 for a $10.00
non-refundable fee.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in the full
amount of the bid with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid
Meigs County Commissioners or by certified check, cashier’s
check, or irrevocable letter of credit upon a solvent bank in the
amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in the favor of
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners. Bid bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
Bidders must be prequalified. Prequalification shall be in accordance with 102.01 of the 2016 Ohio Department of Transportation Construction and Material Specifications.

OH-70047967

The ENGINEER's estimate for this project is $1,000,000
The Village of Pomeroy reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities. The Village of Pomeroy reserves the
right to reject any or all bids or to increase or decrease or omit
any item or times and/or award the bid to the lowest and best
bidder.
7/24/18,7/31/18,8/7/18

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Apartments/Townhouses

OH-70064830

Daily Sentinel

Bids shall be sealed and marked as Bid for: 2018 County Resurfacing Project - Parts 1, 2, &amp; 3 and mailed or delivered to:

CALL TODAY!

Meigs County Commissioners
The Meigs County Courthouse
100 E. Second Street, Suite 301
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
7/17/18, 7/24/18

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Swimmer
Ryan Lochte
suspended
until July 2019
for use of IV
FORT LAUDERDALE,
Fla. (AP) — Ryan Lochte
posted a photo for the
world to see, and the
U.S. Anti-Doping Agency
noticed.
It got him suspended —
again.
The longtime U.S. swimming star has been banned
from competition until July
2019, which means the
12-time Olympic medalist
cannot compete as planned
in the national championships that start this week in
California. Lochte will also
be ineligible for other top
meets, including the Pan
Paciﬁc Championships later
this year and next year’s
world championships.
He did not take a banned
substance. But he got
an intravenous injection
of vitamins in May — a
method typically banned
under anti-doping rules.
The 14-month ban, retroactive to May 24 and
announced Monday by
USADA, is his second in
less than two years following his 10-month suspension for his behavior during
a drunken incident that
created widespread scorn
at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro
Olympics.
“A rule is a rule and I
accept that there is a technical violation,” Lochte
said. “I am hopeful that
other athletes learn from
my mistake.”

Daily Sentinel

Brailsford blames French cycling culture for abuse
CARCASSONNE, France
(AP) — Team Sky principal
Dave Brailsford blames the
French cycling culture for fans
abusing his Tour de France
leaders Geraint Thomas and
Chris Froome.
Spectators have been
taunting four-time champion
Froome since he was cleared
of doping just before the race
started, while Thomas has
been whistled and booed at for
being Froome’s teammate.
Sky has been the dominant
team at the Tour since Bradley
Wiggins became the ﬁrst rider
to win the three-week race in
2012. With six stages left of
this race which ends in Paris
on Sunday, Team Sky is in an
excellent position to achieve a
1-2 and to secure a sixth win
in seven years. Thomas, chasing his ﬁrst Tour win, leads
Froome by 1 minute, 39 seconds overall.
At a news conference during the race’s second rest day
on Monday, Brailsford took
umbrage at the treatment
inﬂicted on his riders, who
have been verbally abused
and spat at over the past two
weeks.
“I don’t think it’s going
to stop,” he said. “I’m not
too optimistic on that front.
We accept it and we have to
make a decision about how to
behave. We’re trying to remain
digniﬁed, we’re trying not to
react, and we’re trying not to
get distracted by it.”
Brailford’s lack of diplomacy is likely to add fuel to
the ﬁre as the race enters the
Pyrenees, where fans generally show up in large numbers
along twisting and narrow
roads, often getting over-

Christophe Ena | AP

Team Sky with Britain’s Geraint Thomas, wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, and Britain’s Chris Froome, to his right,
sets the pace for the pack during the fifteenth stage of the Tour de France cycling race Sunday in France.

excited in a booze-fueled atmosphere.
Froome raced all season
under the cloud of a potential
ban after a urine sample during his victory at the Spanish
Vuelta in September showed
a concentration of the asthma
drug salbutamol that was twice
the permitted level. The International Cycling Union ruled
just before the Tour that his
sample results did not constitute a breach to the anti-doping
rules.
The Tour threatened to bar
Froome until that ruling, which
still upset French fans.

Brailfsord said he has witnessed this type of angry reaction only in France.
“We raced in Italy and Chris’
case was open when we were
at the Tour of Italy and the Italians were fantastic, to be fair
to them,” Brailsford said. “The
Spanish, fantastic. It just seems
to be a French thing. Like a
French cultural thing. I’m not
sure they’d have liked their
football players being spat at in
Russia (at the World Cup). I’m
sure there would have been a
word or two about that.”
Brailsford added the fans’
lack of respect could eventually

will be three different signup
dates at the recreation ﬁelds
in front of the career center by
PPJSHS. The remaining two
signups will run from 6-8 p.m.
on Tuesday, July 24, and on
Monday, July 30.
For more information, please
visit www.masoncountysoccerleague.com on the web.

This year’s inductees will be
honored at Memorial Field on
Friday, Oct. 12, and there will
also be a banquet at GAHS on
Oct. 13. They will join the 16
prior classes and 124 current
members.
Please call Tom Meadows,
President, at 740-645-4880
with any questions.

GAHS Athletic
Hall of Fame

Gallia Academy
reserve seats

lead foreign teams to stay away
from the Tour de France.
“The Tour is promoted as
the world’s greatest annual
international sporting event
and if that’s what you want to
host and if you want the best
riders in the world to come to
your country to take part, then
maybe treat them with a little
more respect,” he said.
“If you don’t want them to
come then maybe race only
with French teams, that might
work. But if you want them to
come then treat them with the
same respect that you’d want
for your team.”

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

MASON, W.Va. — The
Southern football team is hosting a four-person golf scramble
on Sunday, Aug. 5, at Riverside
Golf Club. Registration begins
at 7:30 a.m. and the scramble
will start at 8:30 a.m.
Cost is $60 per individual or
$240 per team. Please make
checks payable to Southern
Athletic Boosters.
There will be a skins game
and 50-50 rafﬂe, as well as
closest to the pin and long
drive competitions. Mulligans
and red tee shots will also be
available to purchase.
Food and beverages will
be provided at the event, and

club house credit will go to the
top-3 teams.
To register a team, please
contact SHS head coach Cassady Willford via email at cassady.willford53@gmail.com or
on the phone at 740-416-8470.

MCSL youth
soccer signups
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— The Mason County Soccer
League is currently accepting
resgistrations for the 2018
youth soccer league.
Online registration is now
open until August 1, and the
registration link can be found
on the league website at www.
masoncountysoccerleague.com
To register in person, there

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
GAHS Hall of Fame committee
is currently accepting applications for the class of 2018.
Applications can be found on
the Gallipolis City Schools’
website and the ﬁling deadline
is July 25.

varsity football players, Gallia
Academy Marching Band members, and varsity and junior
varsity cheerleaders will be able
to purchase reserve seats on
Wednesday, Aug. 8.
Reserve seats for the general public will be available on
Thursday, Aug. 9.
The price is $35 per ticket.
Tickets may be purchased in
the Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at
Gallia Academy High School
between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Super Boosters will be limited
Reserve seats for the 2018
to 10 tickets purchased on the
Gallia Academy High School
ﬁrst day of sales.
football season will go on sale
After the ﬁrst day, there
starting on Tuesday, Aug. 7, for
will be no limit on the number
the Gallia Academy Athletic
of tickets which may be purSuper Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior chased.

Classifieds

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Southern football
golf scramble

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
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740-446-2342

Point Pleasant Register
mydailyregister.com
304-675-1333

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
mydailysentinel.com
740-992-2155

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, July 24, 2018 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

10 Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Almirola proving an able replacement for Patrick at SHR
LOUDON, N.H. (AP)
— Danica Patrick starred
in Super Bowl commercials that turned her into
a mainstream celebrity.
Aric Almirola has earned
ringing endorsements
from his peers for his
driving ability.
Patrick often mixed in
workouts and cooking
with her race weekend
obligations. Almirola
plays “Hungry Hungry
Hippos” with his kids.
But the widest gap
between the two is not
in personality but in how
they handled the No. 10
car at Stewart-Haas Racing.
The 34-year-old Almirola has already achieved
more in one season (one
top ﬁve ﬁnish, nine top
10s) driving the car
as the retired Patrick’s

replacement than she did
in ﬁve winless seasons
(no top ﬁves, seven top
10s) at SHR. And he is
inching closer to victory
lane.
Almirola positioned
himself late to win Sunday at New Hampshire
Motor Speedway until he
was derailed by a poor
pit stop and then spun
his tires on a restart
that likely cost him his
ﬁrst Cup Series victory
since July 2014. He also
wasn’t helped when SHR
teammate Clint Bowyer
stayed out with damage
and hit the wall, bringing
out the caution ﬂag and
wiping out Almirola’s
lead.
“Everybody keeps
telling me, ‘You’ve got
to lose some before you
win some.’ So we’ve lost

some,” Almirola said.
“Time to stop it. Time to
go to victory lane. We’re
capable. We have a race
team capable of doing
it.”
Almirola and primary
sponsor Smithﬁeld Foods
made the jump to SHR
after one victory and
200-plus starts at Richard
Petty Motorsports. Team
owner Tony Stewart had
known Almirola for more
than a decade and was
ready to give him the
chance to complete in
elite equipment.
“I feel like it’s fair to
say that I’ve had not
good enough equipment
as an excuse,” Almirola
said. “Well, now I have
this opportunity here (at
SHR) and equipment is
not an excuse. We have
the best of everything. We

have everything we need
to go out and compete for
wins. It’s up to me and
my team.”
Almirola made an
instant impact in his ﬁrst
start at the Daytona 500.
He was running ﬁrst
with one lap left but was
turned and sent spinning
by winner Austin Dillon.
Almirola faded to 11th
and admitted to sleepless nights over how he
should have stood tall
at the “Great American
Race.”
Almirola’s lone Cup victory, at Daytona in July
2014, comes with the
asterisk: It was shortened
by rain. He also earned an
Xﬁnity Series win for a
race he didn’t even ﬁnish
when he was forced out
the car in the middle of a
race he was dominating.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tony Sparano
dies at 56
EAGAN, Minn. (AP)
— Minnesota Vikings
offensive line coach Tony
Sparano died Sunday at
the age of 56, the team
said.
The team announced
Sparano’s death in a
statement that did not
provide a cause. Sparano
had been the Vikings’
offensive line coach since
2016.
“Tony was a passionate and driven individual
who cared deeply about
his family, and especially
enjoyed spending time
with his grandchildren,”
Vikings owners Mark and
Zygi Wilf said in the statement. “Tony’s presence
within the Vikings orga-

AP file

The Minnesota Vikings say Tony Sparano died Sunday at the age
of 56. The team did not give a cause of death. He had been the
Vikings’ offensive line coach since 2016. Sparano began his NFL
coaching career in 1999 and had stints as a head coach with the
Miami Dolphins and Oakland Raiders.

nization will be deeply
missed.”
Sparano began his NFL
coaching career in 1999
and had stints as a head
coach with the Miami

Dolphins and Oakland
Raiders.
He was the Dolphins’
head coach from 2008-11
and went 29-32. He went
11-5 and won the AFC

East in his ﬁrst season
with Miami.
Sparano also spent time
with the Browns, Redskins, Jaguars, Cowboys
and 49ers.
Sparano played at the
University of New Haven
where he was a four-year
letterman. He was hired
as New Haven’s head
coach in 1994 and held
that position for ﬁve seasons.
Sparano is survived
by his wife, two sons, a
daughter and four grandchildren.
The Vikings open training camp on July 28.

Nowitzki signs
for 21st season
DALLAS (AP) — Dirk
Nowitzki is ofﬁcially
signed for a record 21st
season with the Dallas
Mavericks.
The Mavericks
announced Monday that
they had re-signed the
13-time All-Star. That
was their plan when they
declined a team option
on Nowitzki’s contract at
the start of free agency
to create more room
under the salary cap
before signing DeAndre
Jordan.
Nowitzki, a former
NBA MVP who turned
40 last month, is set to
become the ﬁrst player in
NBA history to play 21
consecutive seasons for
the same franchise. The
7-foot German is one of
six players overall, and
the only international
player, with more than
30,000 career points.
His $5 million contract
is the same amount he
would have been guaranteed for 2018-19 for
the second season of a
two-year deal signed last
summer.

Denny Hamlin closed
out the win and Almirola
refused to accept the victory.
Without rain or replacement, Almirola knows
he’s on the cusp of a complete game victory.
“We’re going to win,”
he said. “We’re running
too good. We’re too competitive not to win. It’s
just a matter of when.
When are we going to
win?”
Almirola led 70 laps at
Chicagoland and led 42
and ﬁnished third behind
Kevin Harvick and Kyle
Busch at New Hampshire.
Going into this weekend’s
race at Pocono, he is 11th
in the points standings
and seems a lock to make
the playoffs with six races
left before the 16-driver
ﬁeld is set.

With each run up front,
the decision to join Harvick, Bowyer and Kurt
Busch at SHR has proved
every week to be the best
one of his career.
“It makes me sleep
better at night,” he said.
“I think had my career
ended at the end of last
year and I never got
another opportunity, for
the rest of my life I would
go to sleep at night and
wonder how good I was
as a race car driver.”
The good times are rolling at SHR: Kurt Busch
won the pole and ﬁnished
eighth; and Harvick and
Almirola placed in the top
three.
“It’s great to have that
10 car being a valuable
tool to the other three
cars at Stewart-Haas,”
Harvick said.

Haley, Turner among
intriguing new
offensive coordinators
NEW YORK (AP) — Head coaching changes
get the most attention, and new guys normally
decide who their coordinators will be.
For 2018, most offensive coordinator alterations
came from incumbent coaches.
Some former coordinators moved up: Matt Nagy
from Kansas City to Chicago, Pat Shurmur from
Minnesota to the New York Giants. Some OCs
were canned: Pittsburgh’s Todd Haley, who landed
in Cleveland; Mike Shula, going from the Panthers
to the Giants. Others are returning to familiar
ground: Joe Philbin in Green Bay, Greg Olson in
Oakland.
Many simply got promoted.
Here are six intriguing new offensive coordinators:
Todd Haley, Cleveland — A former head coach
with the Chiefs who spent the past six seasons in
a love/hate relationship with Ben Roethlisberger
in Pittsburgh, Haley faces a whole new set of challenges with the Browns.
Sure, he and Roethlisberger often quarreled, but
they also won lots of games with a potent, dynamic attack. If you have a short memory, let us ﬁll
you in: Cleveland has won a single game, in total,
over the past two seasons. Its offense has ranged
from anemic to putrid.
So Haley steps in with the charge of grooming
(or pushing rapidly) the ﬁrst overall draft pick,
Baker Mayﬁeld, as the starting quarterback. The
head man in Cleveland, Hue Jackson, also has a
background on offense and some ideas of his own
on how to move the ball. Of course, Jackson also
has that 1-31 record.
“That is what appealed to me — the challenge
and the people I was going to be working alongside of,” Haley said when hired.
Best of luck, Todd.
Norv Turner, Carolina — One of the most successful OCs in NFL history — not so much as a
head coach, with a 114-122-1 record — Turner
tries to re-establish Cam Newton as an elite
passer. Newton remains a dangerous runner and
creator, but he’s never developed the fundamentals
to be a true pocket passer, and as he gets later
into his career, the 2015 league MVP needs those
basics in his repertoire.
Turner has been an effective QB whisperer
for decades, going back to helping Troy Aikman
become a Hall of Famer. Turner has a strong relationship with Panthers coach Ron Rivera, and will
get lots of leeway in running the offense, particularly in resurrecting the deep passing game.
“I think Cam gets that Norv is here to help,”
Rivera said.

Nascar

OH-70064239

From page 6

the season because track
owner Speedway Motorsports Inc. transferred
the fall playoff race to Las
Vegas Motor Speedway.
New Hampshire ran its
ﬁrst Cup race in 1993 and
got a second date in 1997.
The track will ﬁll the
open date in September
with the NASCAR Modiﬁed Tour. New Hampshire also plans to hold a
country music festival in
2019.
Track general manager
Dave McGrath said there
was a modest ticket
bump from Sunday’s race
compared to last July. He
did not reveal attendance
numbers.
“There’s no signiﬁcant
drop year over year.

Mary Schwalm | AP

Kevin Harvick celebrates in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR
Cup Series auto race Sunday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
in Loudon, N.H.

We’re holding our own,”
McGrath said. “I wish
that everybody that was
here in September was
here in July but I think
that’s going to take a few
years for that to truly take
hold. The good news is,
that level, steady (crowd)
is a big win in my book.

That clearly shows we’re
keeping those that we
had and it’s our job now
to ﬁnd that next group to
come and be part of the
weekend.”
The series heads to
Pocono Raceway where
Kyle Busch is the defending race winner.

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