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                  <text>Folks
really like
football

Gallia
County
Fair

Crisp
hired as
SHS coach

OPINION s 4A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 30, Volume 52

Sunday, July 29, 2018 s $2

Gallia CIC meets with DC over smart corridor
By Dean Wright

deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy photo

On their way to the next meeting, (from left
to right) Gallia Assistant Engineer Beth Lozier,
Gallia Engineer Brett Boothe, Community
Improvement Corporation of Gallia County
President Josh Bodimer and CIC member
Tammy Brabahm, visit Washington DC to
discuss Gallia’s hopes to attain federal grants
for a smart corridor project.

WASHINGTON DC —
Members of the Community
Improvement Corporation
of Gallia County met in
Washington DC Thursday to
discuss hopes for placing a
smart corridor through Gallia and paving the rest of its
gravel county roads.
Gallia Engineer Brett
Boothe ﬁrst approached the
Gallia Commissioners in
mid-July and then Gallipolis
City Commissioners the next
week about a pair of federal
grant applications totaling
around $50 million in
awarded money to bring to
Gallia’s economy, if approved

by federal ofﬁcials. He,
Gallia Assistant Engineer
Beth Lozier, Community
Improvement Corporation of
Gallia County President Josh
Bodimer and CIC member
Tammy Brabahm visited
with Ohio’s sixth District
Congressman Bill Johnson,
US Senator Sherrod Brown’s
staff, US Senator Rob Portman and senior ofﬁcials
with the US Department of
Transportation to share the
importance of the projects
to Appalachia and the southeastern Ohio region.
“We had meetings all day
and didn’t really break,” said
Boothe. “We went from one
meeting to the next. Right
after our last meeting, we

drove back and were all
exhausted. In 24 hours, we
went up to DC, had all those
meetings and came straight
back. It would have been
neat to walk and tour. We
just didn’t have time. This
was all business.”
Boothe said the group ﬁrst
met with Congressman Johnson, then Senator Brown’s
Ofﬁce, senior ofﬁcials from
the USDOT and then with
Senator Portman. Boothe
said Johnson has written a
letter of support for both
projects. Johnson’s ofﬁcial
Twitter account has shared
a Gallipolis Daily Tribune
article also voicing support
for the projects. The projects
also received letters of sup-

port from Brown and Portman, said Boothe.
“This meeting with all
these people, the congressman, the senator and ofﬁcials, we want to make sure
that, number one, we’ve
turned in great applications.
We know that. Our main priority was also to reach out to
them and put those projects
in the spotlight to hopefully
gain additional inﬂuence to
have a chance at getting one
of these projects in Gallia
County, if not both,” said
Boothe.
The ofﬁcials with the US
Department of Transportation, the engineer said, were

See CIC | 7A

Attorneys
Barr, Cleland
file for judge
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — Two local attorneys have ﬁled
petitions to run for the ofﬁce of Meigs County
Court Judge which was held by the late Steve
Story.
Trenton Cleland and Michael “Mick” Barr have
both ﬁled candidacy petitions to run for the ofﬁce
in the November General Election. The deadline
to ﬁle for the ofﬁce is Aug. 7.
According to the Meigs County Board of Elections, Cleland’s petition has already been certiﬁed
by the board, meaning his name will appear on the
November ballot.
Barr’s petition will be considered by the board
for certiﬁcation at an upcoming meeting as it was
ﬁled this past week.
Both men have experience in Meigs County
Court, with Cleland having handled cases as and
assistant prosecutor and Barr having most recently served as acting judge.
Barr served as Acting Judge of the Meigs County Court beginning in January 2017, when he was
appointed by Story, and served in that position
until the passing of Judge Story on June 16, 2018,
when the assignment terminated by operation of
law.
Barr has practiced law in Pomeroy for nearly a
decade, as an associate attorney with both the law
ﬁrms of Little, Sheets &amp; Warner and its successor
Little &amp; Sheets, before becoming a partner in the
law ﬁrm of Little, Sheets &amp; Barr in January 2012,
focusing primarily on business, transactional, and
civil litigation matters. As the position of Judge of
the Meigs County Court is part-time, Barr intends
to continue his private practice if elected. Barr
resides in Racine with his wife, Danielle, his son,
Nolan, and the family dog, Penny.
Cleland served as an assistant prosecutor handling county court cases under former Prosecutor
Colleen Williams. He continued to maintain his
private practice in Pomeroy during that time and
since then.
See JUDGE | 7A

Photos courtesy of Sophie Carleton

As part of the Cutler Scholars Program, Carleton recently took part in a seven day kayaking trip in Washington.

A new learning experience
Carleton selected for
Cutler Scholars program
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

TUPPERS PLAINS — With the
start of her ﬁrst year at Ohio University a few weeks away, recent
Eastern High School graduate
Sophie Carleton has already
begun her college experience.
Carleton was selected as the
James H. and Nelly Rowley Jewell
Cutler Scholar for the Meigs and
Vinton County areas from the
Class of 2018 and recently took
Sophie Carleton was selected for the Cutler part in her ﬁrst summer experiScholars Program to represent Meigs and ence through the program.
Vinton Counties.
The Cutler Scholars Program is

one of Ohio University’s premier
scholarship programs, providing
ﬁnancial support, mentorship,
and experiential learning opportunities to students who demonstrate the potential to be changemakers and advocates for justice.
The program selects students
based on their intellectual curiosity, leadership capability, civic
engagement and character.
During the four-year scholarship program, Cutler Scholars live
together, participate in a weekly
colloquium, and take part in four
enrichment experiences, including an outdoor leadership experience, public service internship,
international experience, and
See LEARNING | 5A

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

Blues Bash begins
in Pomeroy

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com or
www.mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

The Sean Chambers Band performs
on the Big Bend Blues Bash Main
Stage on Friday evening, the opening
night of the 18th annual Big Bend
Blues Bash. Performances were
scheduled to continue Friday evening
and Saturday. Coverage of the Blues
Bash will appear in the Tuesday
edition of The Daily Sentinel and
online at mydailysentinel.com.

Erin Perkins | OVP

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, July 29, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
DAWNA JO KIESLING
LEESBURG
— Dawna Jo Kiesling, age 65, of
Leesburg, passed
away Thursday
morning, July 26,
2018 at her home
surrounded by her
loving family.
She was born Nov. 7,
1952 in Gallipolis, the
daughter of Dawn Dye
Walker of Thurman and
the late Clyde B. Walker.
Dawna Jo was a program assistant for the
SNAP-Ed Program with
The Ohio State University Extension of Highland County for twenty
years. She was a longtime
4-H advisor, a graduate of
Southwestern Local High
School (Gallia County)
and in 1974 received
her bachelor’s degree in
home economics education from The Ohio State
University.
Dawna Jo was an active
member of the First Baptist Church of Blanchester where she served as
the church pianist and
was a member of the
Highland County Community Action Board of
Directors.
In addition to her
mother, she is survived
by her husband Dr. Dean
Kiesling, two children,
Jarrod D. (Sarah) Kiesling of Huber Heights,
Lydia (Doug) Showell
of Beavercreek, son-inlaw, Sheldon Shanton of
Thurman, seven grandchildren, Shaelynn and
Rylynn Shanton, Jace,

CHESTER ALLEN PLANTS

Cody, and Trey
Kiesling and Reese
and Beckham
Showell, two sisters, Anita (Rick)
Fisher of Gallipolis, Carrie (Bob)
Louer of Avenel,
NJ and four
brothers, James (Debbie) Walker and Kevin
(Minda) Walker of Thurman, Jack (Diane) Walker
of West Alexandria and
Kent (Lisa) Walker of
Wellston.
She was preceded in
death by her father and
one daughter, Lynnette
Faye Shanton on June 23,
2017.
Services will be held
at 10 a.m., Tuesday, July
31 at the First Baptist
Church of Blanchester.
Pastor Steve Sabin will
ofﬁciate. Burial will
follow at 3:30 p.m. on
Tuesday at the Tick
Ridge Cemetery in Ray.
Visitation will be held on
Monday, July 30 from 2-4
p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at the
Fairﬁeld High School in
Leesburg.
Memorial contributions may be made to
Cru, earmarked to Carrie
Louer #0393016 and sent
to Cru, P. O. Box 628222,
Orlando, FL 328628222 or http://give.cru.
org/0393016.
The Turner &amp; Son
Funeral Home is serving
the family.
Condolences may be
sent to the family by visiting www.turnerfuneralhomes.cc

POINT PLEASANT
— Chester Allen Plants,
70, of Point Pleasant and
South Charleston, born
on March 17, 1948, in
Gallipolis, Ohio, to the
late Elizabeth (Sayre)
and Chester Leroy Plants,
passed away unexpectedly on July 25, 2018.
Chester graduated
from Point Pleasant High
School, West Virginia
State College, and West
Virginia College of
Graduate Studies with
Bachelor’s Degrees in
Mathematics and Physics
and a Master’s Degree in
Chemical Engineering.
He enjoyed his work
at Union Carbide for
more than 30 years until
retiring in 2002. He will
be greatly missed and
fondly remembered for
always putting his family
before himself. For many

years he could be found
working on various ball
ﬁelds throughout South
Charleston, coaching
young student athletes,
pitching countless hours
of batting practice, and
teaching the value of
proper “attitude and
effort.”
His later years were
ﬁlled with loving on “his
honey” and his family,
working his farm, caring
for workhorses, and working at his local church.
One son recalled that he
had the rare ability to
explain complex problems
starting with only basic
fundamentals of math and
physics, a paper and a
pencil.
He truly accepted
Jesus’ free gift of salvation and was baptized in
2010. Since then, not a
day passed that his Bible

was unopened. He once
remarked that he had
offered little fruit back
to his Saviour, his family and friends strongly
disagree.
Another son remarked,
“I had a great dad! Not
many dads can throw
batting practice, teach
you how to tackle,
explain calculus and
quote Scripture-he pretty
much did it every day
from 1970 to yesterday.”
Chester was married to his high school
sweetheart Karen Sue
(Messick) Plants for 52
wonderful years.
He is survived by
his sons, Bob Plants,
Brian Plants (Betsy),
Matt Plants (Traci), and
Mark Plants (Sarah);
his beloved sister, Mary
Tope (Tom); grandchildren, Jessica Mueller

(Matt), Rob Plants
(Lydia), Rachel Plants,
Jason Plants, Peyton
Plants, Grant Plants,
Noah Foster, Luke
Plants, Abigail Plants,
Lila Foster, Grace Plants,
Hannah Plants, and Ella
Plants; and great-grandchildren, John Mueller
and Lilly Mueller. He
was a member at Grace
Baptist Church.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family invites donations
to Grace Baptist Church.
Friends and family are
welcome to attend the
visitation on Sunday,
July 29, from 2-4 p.m. at
Grace Baptist Church,
7051 Ohio River Road,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
25550. The funeral and
graveside service will
follow. Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Little Blue Devils gearing for fall season

Courtesy photos

Here are the 2018 Summer Elks Football League campers. Seventytwo campers participated with seven coaches. Little Blue Devils
begin playing Aug. 25.

The 2018 Elks Football Cheerleaders at camp. Twenty-five
participated and will be cheering on the Little Blue Devils this fall.

BRADFORD
GUYSVILLE- Todd Evan Bradford, 55, died at the
Select Specialty Hospital in Newark, Saturday, July 14,
2018 while surrounded by family after an extended
illness.
GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR
A memorial service will be held on Aug. 11 at 10:30
a.m. at the First United Methodist Church in Athens.
Services will be ofﬁciated by Pastor Robert McDowell
(FUMC) and Pastor Karen Crawford (RUMC).
Jim Smith (long-time caretaker
POMEROY — OH Kan Coin
Arrangements have been entrusted to Whiteof Mulberry Pond) is currently at
Club will be meeting at 6:30 p.m.
Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville.
Overbrook Center in Middleport. in the upper room at the Farmers
Cards may be sent to him at 333
Bank.
Page Street, Room 110, MiddleMEIGS COUNTY — All branchport, OH 45760.
es of the Meigs County District
Hazel McKelvey will turn 96 on Public Library will be closed for a
July 31. Cards may be sent to her staff training. Normal hours will
at 55624 State Route 124, Portresume on Wednesday, Aug. 1.
land, OH 45770.
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC
Get well soon card shower,
(USPS 436-840)
Beth Sergent, 500 Viand St.,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Please
SCIPIO TWP. — A free FireTelephone: 740-446-2342
send cards to help us wish Beth a house Community Dinner will be
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
speedy recovery.
held at the Scipio Township Fire
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Virginia Owens will celebrate
Department in Harrisonville, State
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
her
80th
birthday
Aug.
1.
Cards
Route 684. Dinner will be served
Prices are subject to change at any time.
would be appreciated. Mail to
from 5-6 p.m., and will feature
905 Ramblewood Dr., Patriot OH chicken salad on a croissant, fruit
CONTACT US
45658.
salad, potato salad, beverage and
“Make Your Own Ice Cream SunCIRCULATION MANAGER
PUBLISHER
dae”.
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
GALLIPOLIS — The August
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
1, 2018 Intersystem Collaborative
MIDDLEPORT — The July
SPORTS EDITOR
EDITOR
Meeting of the Gallia County Fammeeting of the Veterans Service
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
Commission will be held at 9 a.m. ily and Children First Council has
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
been cancelled and rescheduled for
at the ofﬁce located in the side
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
August 8, 2018. This meeting will
ofﬁce
of
97
North
Second
Avenue,
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
be an Agency Information Fair at
Middleport.
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
River Valley High School from 9
SALEM TWP. — Salem Twp.
monthly meeting will be held at 6 a.m. to noon.
p.m., at the Salem Twp. Volunteer
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Fire Department building, 28844
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
State Route 124, Langsville, Ohio
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
45741.
CHESTER — The Chester
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
Shade Historical Association

Card Shower

Tuesday, July 31

Wednesday, Aug. 1

Monday, July 30

OH-70066259

Thursday, Aug. 2

300 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis Ohio, 45631

monthly board meeting at 6:30
p.m. Everyone is invited to come.

Friday, Aug. 3
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the Meigs County Public
Employee Retirees Inc. will be held
at 1 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center, 156 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. Guest speaker will be a
representative from Ohio Public
Employee Retirement System
providing updates on statewide
OPERS concerns. District 7 Representative Greg Ervin will update
members on PERI issues. All
Meigs County Public Employee
retirees are urged to attend.
MARIETTA — The Buckeye
Hills Regional Council Executive
Committee, which also serves as
the RTPO Policy Committee, will
meet at 11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike
Street, Marietta.

Saturday, Aug. 4
VINTON — The annual Vinton
Bean Dinner, sponsored by American Legion Post 161 and Auxiliary,
will be held in Vinton Community
Park. Parade begins at 11:30 a.m.
Beans are served from noon to 2:30
p.m. Live music, bingo, refreshments. All welcome. For more
information, contact 740-388-8319.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

From the bookshelf

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Wise and
well at work
By Ciara Martin, MPH

Special to the Times-Sentinel

Do you ever feel like
you spend more time at
your place of employment as opposed to your
actual home? For some
of us this may not be an
exaggeration. In fact,
the US Bureau of Labor
Statistics reported that
the typical American
worker averages 44
hours of work per week.
Furthermore, the International Labor Organization’s data suggest
that, Americans work
more than any other
industrialized country in
the world! Since we are
spending so much time
at our jobs, it is important to keep our health
as a focal point.
The Centers for
Disease Control and
Prevention states that,
“Worksite wellness
programs can simultaneously improve the health
of employees while also
reducing health care
costs for employers
and improving worker
productivity.” From an
employer standpoint all
of these beneﬁts seem
too good to pass up.
With this in mind, as
an employer there are
several activities and
initiatives that you can
implement.
These initiatives can
be small in size, or as
grand as your budget
will allow.
One of the easiest
items to implement,
and to ensure that your
employees are following a wellness regiment
is applying a Wellness
Policy. A Wellness Policy
documents all of the
items of wellness you
want your staff to follow or have access too.
For example, you may
want it documented that
employees are encouraged to utilize a walking path on their lunch
breaks, much like the
walking and biking path
found in Middleport
along the riverfront.
Employee wellness is
of great signiﬁcance here
at the Meigs County
Health Department.
We too have a Wellness
Policy, and Wellness
Committee, to maintain
the health and wellness
of our employees. One of
the biggest behaviors we
encourage at the Health
Department is drinking
water. To achieve this
goal, we promote the

Water First for Thirst
initiative, and even provide fresh ﬁltered water
at all of our staff meetings. Other elements
encompassed within
are Wellness Policy
are having the Health
Department as a tobacco
free campus through
the Ohio Revised Code
3794, and encouraging
daily physical activity
during employee breaks.
In addition to these
steps, we are currently
updating our Wellness
Policy for the 2018
year. With this update,
we hope to see further
improvements made to
our policy, including
the presence of healthy
vending machine for
staff.
Listed below are some
other suggestions of
activities that you can
partake in with your
staff to make a pledge
for worksite wellness:
-Display ﬁtness and
stretching posters in
ofﬁces to encourage
healthy movement
-Staff participation in
a community walk supporting a good cause,
such as cancer prevention
-Print health information on employee pay
stubs
-Create a staff healthy
cook book
-Take physical activity
breaks during long meetings
-Provide ﬁtness DVDs
that employees can borrow
-Attend and host
seminars focused around
wellness
-Have a healthy potluck at staff events
-Host a monthly
walking challenge with
employees, and the
employee with the most
steps receives a prize
-Allow employees to
ﬂex their schedules to
incorporate physical
activity
As mentioned above,
there are several steps
that you as an employer
can take to ensure the
wellness of your employees. Should you have
any questions regarding
the implementation of a
Wellness Policy please
feel free to contact me
at (740) 992-6626 or via
email: Ciara.martin@
meigs-health.com.
Ciara Martin, MPH, is the Creating
Healthy Communities Project
Director at the Meigs County
Health Department.

Sunday, July 29, 2018 3A

Most book enthusiasts will agree they love
to share the joy of reading with others, especially when it comes
to discussing the book
(or books) currently on
their nightstand. The
staff of Bossard Library
continually strives to
foster the love of reading among those in our
community. One of the
more successful ways in
which we do this is by
offering our patrons the
opportunity to join one
of our three exciting
book clubs.
Adults are encouraged to join the
Bossard Book Club,
with meetings held
monthly. Club members
are able to vote on the
twelve unique books
that the club will read
for the year, with a different book being discussed each month. If
you enjoy meeting new
people, engaging (or

Library’s Teen
just listening)
Book Club. Teens
to interesting
not only discuss
conversation,
the featured book
and perhaps
of the month,
reading a book
but also enjoy
outside of your
themed activities
comfort zone,
such as games,
we encourage
Debbie
you to attend an Saunders crafts, movies,
upcoming book Contributing snacks, and more.
Joining the Teen
club meeting.
columnist
Book Club is easy,
Using one’s
only requiring a
library card,
brief parental/guardian
book club members
permission form to be
are able to borrow the
completed.
selected book of the
New to the Library
month for his/her reading pleasure so as to be in September will be
Bossard’s Tween Book
ready for a lively discussion at the book club Club for ages 8-12. If
you are a tween who
meeting.
loves books, making
For more informanew friends, participattion on meeting times
ing in fun games and
and the selected book
titles for the year, visit activities and enjoys
specialty snacks, why
the Library for a bronot be a part of Bossard
chure or contact Lynn
history by joining the
Pauley at lpauley@
Tween Book Club? The
bossardlibrary.org or
740.446.7323, ext. 229. fun is scheduled for 11
a.m. to noon on SaturArea teens are
invited to join Bossard day, Sept. 15. Member-

ship in the Tween Book
Club simply requires
a parental/guardian
permission form to be
completed.
For more information on the Teen and/
or Tween Book Clubs,
contact the Youth
Services Department of the Library at
740.446.7323. Selected
books for both clubs
may be borrowed from
the Library, provided
one’s library card is in
good standing.
“You know you’ve
read a good book when
you turn the last page
and feel a little as if
you have lost a friend”
(author Paul Sweeney).
Make new friends while
celebrating the love of
reading by joining one
of our Bossard Book
Clubs today!

Debbie Saunders is the director
of Gallia’s Bossard Memorial
Library

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6

PM

6:30

SUNDAY, JULY 29
7

PM

7:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Little Big Shots "We're in
3 (N)
News (N)
La La Land"
WTAP News NBC Nightly Little Big Shots "We're in
at Six (N)
News (N)
La La Land"
ABC 6 News ABC World America's Funniest Home
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Videos
Masterpiece Classic "Downton Abbey Season 4: Part
One" Change is in the air for the Crawley family as they
deal with the estate.
Eyewitness ABC World America's Funniest Home
News (N)
News (N)
Videos
10TV News 60 Minutes
Weekend
News (N)
Sunday (N)
(4:00) NHRA Drag Racing
One Strange Rock
Sonoma Nationals (L)
"Awakening"
Masterpiece Classic "Downton Abbey Season 4: Part
One" Change is in the air for the Crawley family as they
deal with the estate.
13 News
Weekend
60 Minutes
Weekend (N) News (N)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts 2" Olivia Munn sends
one act directly to the live shows.
America's Got Talent "Judge Cuts 2" Olivia Munn sends
one act directly to the live shows.
Celebrity Family Feud
The $100,000 Pyramid (N)
Masterpiece Classic
"Poldark" For once, Ross
plays the game he despises.
Celebrity Family Feud

10

PM

10:30

Shades of Blue "Straight
Through the Heart" (N)
Shades of Blue "Straight
Through the Heart" (N)
To Tell the Truth (N)

Masterpiece "Endeavour: Requiem" With The Tunnel
the unexpected discovery of a body,
(N)
Endeavor questions whom to trust. (N)
The $100,000 Pyramid (N) To Tell the Truth (N)

Big Brother (N)

NCIS: New Orleans "Dead NCIS: Los Angeles
Man Calling"
"Reentry"
Family Guy Bob's
Eyewitness News at 10
Simp. "Fears Bob's
of a Clown" Burgers
Burgers
p.m. (N)
Masterpiece Classic
Masterpiece "Endeavour: Requiem" With The Tunnel
"Poldark" For once, Ross
the unexpected discovery of a body,
(N)
plays the game he despises. Endeavor questions whom to trust. (N)
Big Brother (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Dead NCIS: Los Angeles
Man Calling"
"Reentry"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
Golf Life
24 (ROOT) Polaris (N)
25 (ESPN) (5:00) MLS Soccer (L)
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) ATP Tennis
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

Blue Bloods "Backstabbers" BlueB. "Friends in Need"
BlueB. "Town Without Pity" Blue Blood "The Extra Mile"
MLR Rugby Seattle Seawolves at Glendale Raptors
In Depth
Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
Baseball Tonight
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
Basketball The Tournament Quarter-final (L)
Soccer International Champions Cup Women's Final (L)
A Father's Nightmare (2018, Drama) Kaitlyn Bernard, Joel Cheerleader Nightmare (2018, Drama) TVPG
(:05) A Night to Regret
Gretsch, Jessica Lowndes. TV14
Marguerite Moreau. TV14
(5:35)
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory ('05, Adv) (:15) Despicable ... /(:20)
Hercules ('97, Ani) Voices of James Woods, Tate Donovan.
Freddie Highmore, David Kelly, Johnny Depp. TVPG
The son of Zeus must become a true hero in order to reclaim his immortality. TVG
Bar Rescue "Boss Lady
Bar Rescue "Win, Lose or
Bar Rescue "Gettin' Jigger Bar Rescue "Operation
Bar Res. "Life, Liberty, and
Blues"
Brawl"
With It"
Puerto Rico"
the Pursuit of Fatballs" (N)
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
The LEGO Movie ('14, Ani) Chris Pratt. TVPG
Full House
Full House
SVU "Blood Brothers"
SVU "Born Psychopath"
SVU "Holden's Manifesto" SVU "A Misunderstanding" SVU "Great Expectations"
(5:00)
The Hunger Games Jennifer Lawrence. TV14
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire ('13, Dra) Jennifer Lawrence. TV14
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
The 2000s
2000s "The i Decade" (N)
The History of Comedy (N)
Avengers: Age of Ultron ('15, Act) Scarlett Johansson, Robert Downey Jr.. TV14 Claws "Crossroads" (N)
Claws "Crossroads"
(5:20) Dead
(:25) The Walking Dead
(:35) The Walking Dead
(:35) The Walking Dead "The First Day of
Preacher "Les enfants du
"The Other Side"
"Something They Need"
the Rest of Your Life"
sang" (N)
Sharkwrecked
Naked "Countdown to Naked and Afraid of Sharks" (N)
Naked and Afraid (N)
To Be Announced
Ancient Aliens "Aliens and Ancient Aliens "The
Ancient Aliens "The Power Ancient Aliens "The Crystal Ancient Aliens "Aliens and
Bigfoot"
Mystery of Puma Punku"
of Three"
Skulls"
Ancient Engineers"
(5:00) Extinct or Alive
Extinct or Alive
Vet Gone Wild (N)
Extinct or Alive (N)
I Was Prey (N)
Snapped "Susan Hendricks" Buried in the Backyard
A Wedding and a Murder Snapped "Susan Hendricks" Serial Killer With Piers
(N)
"Death in the Desert" (N)
"Overkill In Mississippi" (N)
Morgan "Lorenzo Gilyard"
Monk
Monk
Monk
Monk
Monk
Cavallari "Boss Moves"
Total Bellas
Total Bellas
Total Bellas
Very Cavallari (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Monster Fish "Giant Killer
Running Wild With Bear
Grylls "Marshawn Lynch" "Zombie Tuna"
"Rebels vs Yankees" (N)
"Man Overboard" (N)
Catfish"
Post-race
IndyCar Auto Racing Honda Indy 200 Site: Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course UCI Cycling Tour de France Stage 21 Houilles - Paris
(5:00) Soccer
Soccer Tournament of Nations (L)
MLS Soccer Orlando City vs Los Angeles (L)
American Pickers
American Pickers "Scrappy American Pickers "Beer
American Pickers "Big
(:05) American Pickers
"Plymouth Rocks"
Go Lucky"
Factor"
Money Racer"
"Texas Treasures"
Housewives Potomac
Housewives Potomac
Housewives Potomac (N)
The Real Housewives
Housewives Potomac
(5:05)
Daddy's Little Girls Gabrielle Union. TVPG
(:55)
Just Wright ('10, Com) Common, Queen Latifah. TVPG
Martin
House
House Hunt. House Hunt. House Hunt. Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Life (N)
Life (N)
Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
Hellboy II: The Golden Army ('08, Adv) Ron Perlman. Hellboy and
Predators ('10, Sci-Fi) Topher Grace, Adrien Brody. A group of elite
his team try to save the world from creatures bent on destruction. TV14
warriors are hunted by a merciless alien race through the jungle. TVMA

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Blade Runner Victoria and Abdul (2017, Biography) Olivia Williams, Ali Sharp Objects "Ripe" (N)
2049 ('17, Sci-Fi) Harrison
Fazal, Judi Dench. A lonely Queen Victoria becomes
Ford, Ryan Gosling. TV14
dearest friends with one of her servants from India. TVPG
(:20)
The Losers ('10, Act) Chris Evans, Jeffrey Dean
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword ('17, Act) Charlie
Morgan. A team of CIA black ops works undercover to
Hunnam. After pulling a sword from a stone, Arthur must
locate the man who left them for dead. TVPG
defeat a corrupt king and face his legacy. TVPG
Our Cartoon Who Is
The Affair Noah supports
Our Cartoon Who Is
The Affair Helen goes to
President
America?
Anton in a decision about his President
America?
Joshua Tree in search of
"First Family"
future.
"First Family"
meaning. (N)
(4:15)

10

PM

10:30

Succession "Pre-Nuptial"
(N)
Entrapment
('99, Cri) Catherine ZetaJones, Sean Connery. TV14
Who Is
Cartoon
America? (N) "Mueller
Probe"
(:10)

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�Opinion
4A Sunday, July 29, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Keeping coal
plants on the grid
There is growing alarm over the
loss of America’s baseload sources of
electricity. Coal and nuclear power
plants are being pushed off the grid
by a three-headed monster of heavily-subsidized renewable energy, the
legacy effects of overzealous regulaMatthew tion, and a glut of natural gas.
Since 2010, more than 600 coalKandrach
ﬁred
generating units in 43 states
Contributing
have retired or announced plans to
columnist
retire. Nearly 70 Gigawatts of coal
capacity (enough to power 50 million homes) has already been retired, and half
of the nation’s commercial nuclear ﬂeet is facing
ﬁnancial pressure.
See COAL | 5A

YOUR VIEW

With Sappington comes
change for the 94th District
When I think of the 94th Ohio House District,
I think of the people of southeast Ohio and
their needs. What will it take for permanent
positive change to take place? At this point in
time, that would be positive change at all levels
in our state elected ofﬁces. We need someone
that understands how we got to this state of
abandonment by our legislators and governor
and how to turn it around. That person is Taylor
Sappington.
Taylor Sappington is a resident of Nelsonville,
Ohio, and a graduate of Ohio University, with a
degree in political science. Taylor is serving his
third year on the Nelsonville City Council. In that
position, he has fought for greater transparency
in government, better infrastructure for that city
and a balanced city budget. For the ﬁrst time in a
decade, Nelsonville City accounts grew, and the
city initiated a major street repaving project.
Taylor is a determined worker. As a young man
raised by his single mom, he learned the need for
education and developed a desire to help others.
Taylor really listens to people and “gets it.” He
ascertains their needs and works to ﬁnd solutions.
He digs in to ﬁnd what needs to happen and how
it can be accomplished. If Taylor runs into a road
block, he ﬁnds a reroute to the solution. He does
NOT give up!
As we the citizens of the District 94 of the Ohio
House look for: leadership on issues of healthcare
and better access to it, better infrastructure,
realistic funding for Ohio schools, integrity in our
state government and equality for all the citizens
of Ohio, we need to look no further than Taylor
Sappington. He has earned my vote and I hope
yours as well. Southeast Ohio needs this change to
happen, for our betterment and the betterment of
all Ohio.
Warren A. Jeffers
The Plains, Ohio

August Veterans
of the Month
Little things make for a knowledge that can save
your life help you to live a more fruitful life and
along the way help others.
Johnny Howard Ivan Lee Hurt Jr. and Arius
Hurt, all of the United States Army, can attest to
that.
They would not let a medical discharge from
the Army or having to live mostly in a wheelchair
or having a medical setback and conditions that
would cause seeking medical convenient facilities
to live in keep them from being productive. They
understood we must work (as volunteer or work)
to pay into the entities that pay our nation’s bills
and maintain their personal households, even if it
means working with mental stress and pain and
not being in the mainstream of the regular workforce.
You can see them providing ﬂags for the American church people or facilities; raising a garden for
the families and sharing that garden with neighbors; being happy, spreading good cheer and joy
working around and with community churches.
When you see the ﬂag ﬂying that represents you
the Republic for which it stands so smile thank
God for your health and blessings of liberty and
thank Johnny Howard United States Army, Ivan
Lee Hurt Jr. United States Army, Arius Hurt the
United States Army. Thank them and let them
know you understand and care.
Yes, those who serve and protect our nation are
aware of others who do the same. You can see ofﬁcer Waldron and ofﬁcer Clary, City police ofﬁcers
and the Gallia County Sheriff and deputies busy
serving and protecting us.
Johnny Howard , Ivan Lee Hurt Jr., Arius Hurt
will receive a plaque from the American people
and their names will be submitted to the Jim Marshall Veteran of the Year award supported by the
University of Rio Grande for the month of August.
To nominate a veteran please call 216-815-5511.
Nellie Ruby Taylor
Gallipolis, Ohio

THEIR VIEW

Folks really like their local football
Bryan Walters’ commentary (“Looking forward to football season,”
Sunday Times-Sentinel,
July 22) speaks to a truism about life in our section of the Ohio River
Valley. And that is, we
like our local football
and have reached the
point where we’re more
than ready for the start
of another high school
grid season.
With that reality now
less than a month away,
we will be distracted by
county fairs, last-minute
vacations and preparation for the new school
year starting the latter
part of August. But for
the fans, Friday (and
occasionally, Saturday)
night lights remain close
in mind.
Personally, I haven’t
been to a local game
in more than a decade,
not probably since taking photos of various
homecoming royalty
after their halftime coronation. Yet there was
a time, going back to
the ﬁrst half of the
1980s, when I added
local game coverage to
my newspaper duties.
My forte was straight
news, but sensing an
opportunity to make
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune’s presence known,
the role of sportswriter/
photographer afforded
me a chance to broaden
my skills as well as be
of further use to my
employer. I was in my
mid-20s with no life and
energy to burn back
then, so why not?
Starting out, I was
probably the worst
choice ever for writing
about football or any
other sport because I
wasn’t into athletics. My
high school back in New
York State didn’t have
a football team (it does
now) and I avoided contact sports at all costs;
my record shows participation in cross country,
bowling and baseball
as its sort-of equipment
manager in senior year
(for which I was truly
astonished to have even
received a letter), if
that tells you anything.
Needless to say, I didn’t
follow pro ball and only
occasionally attended an
Ohio University game in
my student days.
So I followed an old
journalism school rule
and studied up by reading how other news-

which one). Upon
papers covered
our return to
sports. Ready or
Pomeroy late that
not, with more
afternoon, Ted
enthusiasm
wanted to catch
than expertise, I
the annual Eastlaunched into a
ern-vs.-Southern
sideline and soon
game at Eastern,
found it rather
Kevin
so with nothenjoyable.
Kelly
At ﬁrst, it was
Contributing ing else to do, I
accompanied him
a little like Andy
columnist
for a fuller experiGrifﬁth’s classic
ence that ranged
1950s monofrom being a spectator
logue “What It Was,
to a school rivalry to
Was Football,” but you
coaches’ (ahem) comsoon picked up on the
plaints over what “the
jargon, the moves and
paper” said about their
the importance of yardteams’ chances of winage gained, among the
other components of the ning that week.
It was an experience
game. My focus was on
the Gallia County Local I never repeated but
Schools, which then had which made an impresfour high schools; Kyger sion on me that I never
forgot. And the lesson
Creek was the domain
I learned was local
of its alumnus Dale
Rothgeb Jr., so I handled football is one of those
indelible things folks
Hannan Trace, North
Gallia and Southwestern are enthused about, like
it or not. Go to a game
if they had home contests, more often landing when the new season
opens on Friday, Aug. 24
at North Gallia, which
netted the league cham- and see if I’m not right.
***
pionship during my time
It is with sadness that
following the Pirates.
Being there on Friday we note the passing of
nights in the fall brought Thomas E. Skinner of
Eno on July 21 at the
me into contact with a
lot of people — parents, age of 75.
Tom and his wife,
teachers, staff and fans
Debbie Bennett Skin— that helped me with
ner, both worked at the
my reporting duties,
particularly as I also cov- Tribune when I ﬁrst
arrived there 39 years
ered the Gallia County
ago, Tom in advertising
Local Board of Education and became conver- (he even had his own
ofﬁce at the time, which
sant with the issues it
I found impressive) and
faced.
Debbie in accounting
For that experience
and knowledge, the late with Margaret Lehew.
nights going back to the Both helped a knowofﬁce and struggling my nothing gentleman and
scholar (not, except for
way through another
game story, followed by the know-nothing part)
become acclimated as I
long Saturdays spent
tried to gain a foothold
working with my colin Gallia County, even
leagues on the Sunday
when I thought I’d only
T-S, became well worth
be around for a single
the effort.
summer.
I can recall the better
Tom was still at the
part of a weekend spent
Tribune when I returned
in the grid atmosphere
late in the 1984 season. as a full-time employee
a year later, while DebI had covered a local
bie had gone to work at
game, perhaps its last
Kmart.
for the year, on Friday
Because of their kindnight.
ness to a callow college
With that Saturday a
student, I always held
day off the job, I travboth of them in high
eled to Athens with
esteem. I may be late
former North Gallia
doing so, but join me
assistant coach Ted
is wishing Debbie and
Lehew and his parents,
her family the best and
Bill and Margaret, to
see the Bobcats — then peace for Tom. They are
all so deserving.
on an upward swing
***
from the late ’70s when
John Holcomb of
their only guaranteed
American Legion Post
win of the season was
161, sponsor of the
over Marshall — challenge their visitor of the annual Vinton Bean
week (I don’t remember Dinner set this year for

Saturday, Aug. 4, shared
some updated information with me on the
origins of the Vinton
event and the one at Rio
Grande that follows Aug.
11.
The information, in
the form of 2017 presentations Holcomb
made to the committee
behind Rio Grande’s
dinner and the annual
lineage banquet of the
Gallia County Genealogical Society, supports
Holcomb’s contention
that the local bean dinners began much later
than legendary histories
surrounding them have
maintained.
Thus, Vinton saw
its ﬁrst bean dinner,
or campﬁre as it was
then called, organized
by local veterans of
the Grand Army of the
Republic in the Civil
War, in 1883 and not
1868, as some have
claimed. The same
applies to Rio Grande’s
event, ﬁrst celebrated
in 1895 rather than
1870 as listed in some
narratives. Newspaper
accounts and state
archives delved into by
Holcomb supply documentation for the later
dates, while none exists
to back claims the ﬁrst
dinners were held so
soon after the war’s end
in 1865.
While the heritage of
the bean dinners remain
steeped in the conﬂict of
the Blue and Gray, they
have taken on a homecoming aspect that holds
strong today. The dinners allow for residents
and those who formerly
lived in those communities to renew acquaintance, swap stories
and family history, and
enjoy food and music in
a relaxed atmosphere.
Vinton’s dinner has been
known as a homecoming
event since 1910, when
attendance reportedly
ran into the thousands
thanks to the rail connection that served the
village starting in 1880.
So whatever your
views on when these
activities began, take
time to partake of bean
soup and enjoy an activity many volunteers help
to stage and to which
many folks look forward
every year.
Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated
with Ohio Valley Publishing for 21
years, resides in Vinton, Ohio.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 29, 2018 5A

Photos courtesy of Sophie Carleton

As part of the trip the group camped in tents which were made from tarps.

Learning

something she would want to
do again. The group of students, Carleton and 10 others,
From page 1A
spent seven days camping and
kayaking. Camping, described
Carleton, included sleeping on
career-related internship. In
addition, students receive a sig- the ground under tarps. There
were ﬁve girls in her “tent” and
niﬁcant academic scholarship
ﬁve boys in the other.
and annual stipend to support
Her ﬁrst time on the west
their enrichment experiences.
coast, Carleton said the she
Carleton said she learned of
saw eagles, seals and a pod
the program from Julie Spaun
of orc whales. As for future
and looked into how to apply.
summer experiences, Carleton
The application process for
explained that the experiences
the program included writing
are matched to the student’s
ﬁve essays, followed by an
major and what best matches
interview. She was up against
two students from Meigs High interests. Planning those trips
is part of the program throughSchool to be the Meigs and
out the year. Asked what she is
Vinton recipient for this year.
most excited about as part of
As part of the Cutler Scholars program, Carleton recently the Cutler Scholars Program,
Carleton said it is that the prospent seven days kayaking in
gram provides the opportunity
the San Juan Islands area of
for a small group of pre-made
Washington, her ﬁrst of four
friends as they will be in the
summer experiences.
dorms together and in pro“I’m glad I did it,” said
grams and classes. Students in
Carleton of the trip, although
the program live in the dorms
she admitted it would not be

Coal

We can’t lose sight
of the fact that coal
From page 4A
plants are our most
resilient sources of
The loss of so much
baseload power — and its power. Not only do
replacement with less reli- they offer on-site fuel
able and often intermitsecurity, but they
tent capacity — is cause
carry the heaviest
for deep concern. The
reliability and security of burden when energy
our electricity grid, the
demand spikes
very foundation of our
during extreme cold.
economy, is in jeopardy.
But the unchecked erosion of baseload capacity
also raises serious questions about the costs of
this change for consumers.
While wholesale electricity costs have actually
fallen in some regions of
the country over the past
few years, it appears we
are reaching a tipping
point where a further loss
of coal and nuclear capacity — and the energy
diversity it brings to the
grid — could impose a
huge ﬁnancial burden on
consumers.
A new case study
conducted by Energy
Ventures Analysis (EVA)
examined the potential
cost of early retirement
for three coal plants
operating in the PJM
market — the nation’s
largest electricity capacity region. It makes clear
how expensive more

premature retirements
could be.
The study shows that
the cost of retiring these
three at-risk plants would
be 15 times higher than
providing support to keep
them on the grid. The
cost in higher prices from
premature retirement
would exceed $2 billion
per year. Conversely, the
annual support needed to
keep these plants on the
grid would total just $130
million, with net savings
to consumers exceeding
$1.9 billion annually.
While EVA’s study
examines only three
plants in the PJM market,
there are clear warning signs about what
further coal retirements
will mean to consumers
nationwide.
Inaction to preserve
baseload power plants
could push tens of billions

One of the views experienced as part of the trip.

for the ﬁrst two years, and then
receive money toward an apartment in the ﬁnal two years.
The biography for Carleton
posted on the Ohio University Cutler Scholars web page
reads,
Carleton sees adversity as
the best form of education,
providing her with the strength
to persevere through challenging times. While she has
attended the University of Rio
Grande almost full time since
her junior year of high school,
Carleton continues to actively
contribute to her high school
through her work in student
government. Although invested
in her role as secretary of her
class, Carleton holds commu-

of dollars in additional
energy costs onto American consumers, while the
reliability of the nation’s
power grid deteriorates.
A misstep of that scale
could have profound
impacts on our economy.
For example, consider
that higher prices at the
gas pump this year have
already eaten away 40
percent of the beneﬁts
from recent tax cuts.
While it’s important we
understand the cost of
inaction on consumers,
we can’t lose sight of the
fact that coal plants are
our most resilient sources
of power. Not only do
they offer on-site fuel
security, but they carry
the heaviest burden
when energy demand
spikes during extreme
cold.
Wind and solar power
are intermittent sources
of energy, meaning they
generate power only
when conditions are
right. Nuclear power
plants, while reliable,
run full-out all the time.
They can’t ramp up additional generation when
demand spikes. Natural
gas plants are fantastic
at ramping up and down
the amount of power
they generate, except
during periods of peak
demand in the winter
— the period that is the

litmus test for resiliency.
During the bomb
cyclone winter storm
that raked the east coast
this past winter, half
of the region’s natural
gas plants couldn’t run
because heating demand
had swallowed gas supplies. Coal plants were
far and away our larg-

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nity service close to her heart.
With help from her family,
she makes “sunshine bags” for
patients going through chemotherapy. Filled with comforting
and cheerful goodies, she says
“The slightest ray of sunshine
can brighten someone’s day.”
From yellow gum, to yellow
post-it notes, to hand-sewn neck
pillows, Carleton brought some
light into Marietta Memorial
Hospital.
The Cutler Scholars Program
began in the mid-1990s as a
discussion between alumnus
Wilfred R. Konneker and
Jack G. Ellis, at that time the
University’s vice president for
development, about recruiting high-achieving students to

Ohio University. Soon after,
then-Ohio University President
Charles J. Ping joined their
discussions, which progressed
into the creation of the Cutler
Scholars Program, named for
the Rev. Manasseh Cutler, cofounder of Ohio University.
Students received the ﬁrst Cutler Scholar awards in the 199697 academic year.
Carleton, of Tuppers Plains,
is the daughter of Jason and
the late Sarah Carleton. She
also has a younger sister, Ella.
She is majoring in communication sciences to go into the
ﬁeld of speech pathology.
A portion of the information from the Ohio
University Cutler Scholars website.

est source of resiliency
when it mattered most.
As EVA’s study makes
clear, the cost of not taking action to preserve
our baseload coal power
plants is far greater
than providing them
with needed support.
The U.S. Department of
Energy should act now

to bring needed balance
to electricity markets
before consumers bear
the full brunt of a reliability and resiliency
crisis.
Matthew Kandrach is president
of CASE, Consumer Action for a
Strong Economy, a free-market
oriented consumer advocacy
organization.

�A long the River
6A Saturday, July 28, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallia Junior Fair comes Monday
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Fair
returns on Monday, July
30, with the 69th annual
Opening Day. Activities continue at the fair
grounds on Jackson Pike
through Saturday, Aug. 4.
Opening day, which
is also Gallia County
Night, will feature the
beginning of the animal
shows, as well as the ofﬁcial opening ceremony
and the royalty contests.
The ofﬁcial opening will take place at 6
p.m. at the Holzer Main
Stage. Included in the
opening ceremony will
be the presentation
of the colors by VFW
Post 4464; the National
Anthem by the South
Gallia High School Band;
invocation by Jonathan
McAnulty, minister at
Chapel Hill Church of
Christ; introduction
of dignitaries by Tim
Massie; and the welcome
address by President
Danella Newberry.
The opening ceremony
will be followed by the
Little Miss and Little
Mister contests and the
Gallia County Fair Queen
Pageant. On the pull
track Monday evening
will be Championship
Rodeo.Earlier in the day,
Monday, will be horse
and swine shows, with
Boy Scout and Girl Scout
Awards to take place as
well.
Tuesday evening on
the pull track will include
the four-wheel drive
truck pulls. Tuesday at
the fair will be Religious
and Senior Citizens
Night, featuring musical
performances by The
Jordan Family Band and
Hollyn.
According to the
group’s website, ” In
October of 2009 Josh
Jordan’s dad, Bro. Fain
Jordan, passed away
unexpectedly. It was
shortly thereafter, while
struggling with shock
and a great sense of
loss, the Lord allowed
Josh, his wife Randa,
and their three boys to
hear the single “Dealing With Gold” by the
Inspirations while driving down the road one
evening. Through this
song, the Lord brought
great comfort to their
family and touched their
hearts deeply. It quickly
became a favorite of the
entire family. After purchasing the album in its
entirety, the Jordan children – Hutch, Alex and
Grant – quickly started
singing along with each
of its tracks… (The family) began by learning
the boy’s favorite track,
“Dealing With Gold”
and from the ﬁrst time
they stood and sang it in
church, the response was
overwhelming!”
Hollyn will take the
stage July 31 at 8:30 p.m.
as well. According to
crossrhythms.co.uk, she
was born in Waverly and
grew up singing in her
church before she competed in American Idol’s
season 12. She was eliminated from the competition but was contacted
by Toby Mckeehan,
known as TobyMac, who
took note of her talent.
Holly would sign with
Gotee Records, a Christian record label. According to the website, “Hol-

Crowds gather for the Gallia Junior Fair’s entertainment.

Little Texas brings the rock and roll to the Holzer Main Stage, last year.

Hammer in hand, a young girl shows what she’s made of swinging
a hammer down on a high striker game.

Families fly by as they spend a Thursday fair night on rides.

lyn’s debut single ‘Alone’
was written by Hollyn,
McKeehan, producer
Bryan Fowler and Toby’s
son, rapper TRU…”
On Wednesday, the
beef breeding show will
begin the day, with the
sheep showmanship and
market lamb shows later
in the day in the show
arena. The horse costume contest and cowboy
polo will take place in
the horse area.
Shenandoah will take
the main stage Aug. 1
at 8:30 p.m. According
to the group’s Facebook
page, “When country
music lovers talk about
the greatest groups in
the genre, Shenandoah is
always at the forefront of
any discussion. Fueled by
Marty Raybon’s distinctive vocals and the band’s
skilled musicianship,
Shenandoah became well
known for delivering
such hits as ‘Two Dozen
Roses,’ ‘Church on Cumberland Road’ and ‘Next
to You, Next to Me’ as
well as such achingly
beautiful classics as ‘I
Want to be Loved Like
That’ and the Grammy
winning ‘Somewhere in
the Vicinity of the Heart’

duet with Alison Krauss.
Today that legacy
continues as original
members Raybon and
Mike McGuire reunite
to launch a new chapter
in Shenandoah’s storied
career.”
Thursday at the Gallia
County Fair will include
the steer show, dairy
show, and the feeder calf
and dairy feeder show in
the show arena.
The Kiwanis Youth
Program will take place
at 12:30 p.m. at the
Holzer Main Stage. The
program will include
games of balloon bursting, bubble gum blowing,
watermelon eating and
many more. A demonstration by the Gallia
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
K-9 Unit will take place
following the games.
Later in the day will be
Cloverbud Graduation at
the Gray Pavilion and the
Horse Fun Show in the
Horse Arena.
Natalie Grant takes
the Holzer Main Stage
Aug. 2 at 8:30 p.m., Her
website says “seven-time
Grammy nominated Natalie Grant is known for
her powerful and soaring
vocals, heart-gripping

A few children spend some time swinging by during the fair.

lyrics and passionate
performances, and has
remained one of the topselling Christian &amp; Gospel artists since her 2005
breakout RIAA Gold certiﬁed album, ‘Awaken.’
She has since gone on
to have over 3 million in
career sales. The Gospel
Music Association has
named her Female Vocalist of the Year ﬁve times
and she has had multiple
number 1’s on the Billboard singles and albums
charts, including her
most recent record titled,
‘Be One.’”
Friday will begin the
annual market livestock
sales with the market
hog sale at 9 a.m.
Also on Friday will be
the Pretty Baby Contest
at 10 a.m. on the Holzer Main Stage. Holzer
Health Systems will be
presenting the small animal awards and the activity building awards at the
Gray Pavilion.
The OSTPA Sanctioned Tractor Pull will
take place on the pulling
track, while The Sheppard Brothers Bluegrass
Band will perform on the

Holzer Main Stage.
Out of West Virginia,
Parkersburg’s The Sheppard Brothers will headline the fair Aug. 3 at 7
p.m. According to the
group’s website, “The
Sheppard Brothers is a
bluegrass band based
out of the Parkersburg,
West Virginia area.
Although the band has
been together 36 years, it
has undergone very few
member changes. The
three brothers, Terry,
Mike, and Butch Sheppard have the rich, tight
vocals associated with a
family band. Their connection as a group is
very evident, whether
they are singing the standards or delivering tasteful renditions of acapella
gospel songs. Although
mostly noted as a traditional bluegrass group,
the Sheppard Brothers
deliver performances
which all can enjoy.”
On Saturday, sales
will include market
lamb, market steer,
market goat, and market
tobacco. Ricochet will
close out as the fair’s last
musical entertainment,

playing Aug. 4 at 8:30
p.m. The band’s website
says, “In 1996, the members of country super
group Ricochet watched
their debut single, ‘What
Do I Know,’ rise to the
top ﬁve, earning the
band the honor of the
highest charting debut
single of the year. The
follow up single release,
‘Daddy’s Money,’ became
an immediate across the
board hit, rising to #1
on the Radio &amp; Records
Country Singles Chart,
the Gavin Country Singles Chart and the Billboard Country Singles
Chart (where it stayed
#1 for two consecutive
weeks). The band’s distinctive musical style
and intricate harmonies
earned them the recognition as one of the most
popular vocal groups in
country music, a mantle
they still wear today.”
The always popular
demolition derby will
take place on the pulling track on Saturday
evening with categories
for power wheels, lawn
mowers, mini cars, mild
weld and smash-it.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Judge
From page 1A

Cleland graduated
from Southern High
School in 1994 and from
Ohio Northern University Pettit College of
Law in 2002. According

to information provided
to The Daily Sentinel at
the time Cleland joined
the prosecutor’s ofﬁce
in 2016. After graduating from law school, he
moved to Lakeland, Fla.,
and became an assistant
state attorney for the
10th Judicial Circuit. He
then went into private

practice for the law ﬁrm
of Peterson Pa., overseeing two law ofﬁces.
Cleland returned
to the area in 2007
and opened Trenton
J. Cleland Law Ofﬁce
in Pomeroy. Through
his practice, Cleland
handles divorces, dissolution, personal injury,

Sunday, July 29, 2018 7A

real estate matters,
estates, wills, and nursing home planning.
In addition to the
county court positions,
Meigs County voters
will also be voting on
the Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge
position in November,
with Linda Warner

CIC

as the lone candidate
for that position after
defeating Christopher
Tenoglia in May. The
juvenile and probate
court judge seat held by
Scott Powell is not up
for election this year.

From page 1A

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

School Supply
Giveaway

County engineer
announcements

6 p.m. on night of contest.

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
HARRISONVILLE — HarGallia County Engineer, Brett
child(ren)’s shot records. Chilrisonville Presbyterian Church,
A. Boothe, announces that Mill
dren must be accompanied by a
State Route 143, Harrisonville,
Creek Road will be closed at the
RACINE — Meigs County
parent/legal guardian. A $30.00
Ohio, will hold its 10th annual
2.3 mile marker between WareRoad 28, Bashan Road, will
donation is appreciated for
school supply giveaway, Sathime Road and McCully Road
be closed between C-31, Bald
immunization administration;
urday, Aug. 11, from 11 a.m.-1
beginning 7 a.m., Monday, July
Knobs-Stiversville Road, and
p.m., featuring free school sup30, until Thursday August 2,
T-109, Carmel Road, for approxi- however, no one will be denied
plies (backpacks, pens, pencils,
weather permitting for culvert
mately 4 weeks beginning Mon- services because of an inability
to pay an administration fee for
crayons, paper, etc.), free food,
replacement. Local trafﬁc will
day, July 23. County forces will
state-funded childhood vaccines.
games, face painting, some
need to use other county roads
be repairing a slip in this area.
clothing, and $25 shoe coupons
as a detour.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert Please bring medical cards
and/or commercial insurance
(redeemable at Shoe Show,
replacement project begins on
cards, if applicable. Shingles
Mason, W.Va. for school shoes or
July 27, on State Route 681 in
and pneumonia vaccines are
boots only). Coupons are limited
Meigs County. The project is
and will be given out on a ﬁrsttaking place between US 33 and also available. Call for eligibility
come, ﬁrst-served basis.
Markham Road (Township Road determination and availability
or visit our website at www.
652). One lane will be closed
The Gallipolis Lions Club
meigs-health.com to see a list of
in this area. Temporary trafﬁc
will sponsor the Little Miss
accepted commercial insurances
signals and an 11 foot width
and Mister Gallia Contest at
and Medicaid for adults.
restriction will be in place. The
the Gallia Junior Fair with the
The Ohio Department of
estimated completion date is
contest being held July 30 at
Health (ODH) does NOT recAug. 31, 2018.
6:30 p.m. Contestants must be
GALLIPOLIS — The 2018
ommended for routine Hepatitis
MEIGS COUNTY — A culsix or seven years-old, a resident
Hot Summer Nights concert
A vaccination of Healthcare
vert replacement project begins
of Gallia, and pre-registered
series continues. This weekly
Workers. Additionally, the
on July 30 on State Route 681
with the Lions Club. There is
concert series will continue
Advisory Committee on Immuin Meigs County. The project is
every Thursday night, through- no charge to enter. Entry forms
nization Practices (ACIP)
taking place between Fredrick
out June, July and August, with can be picked up at Ohio ValRoad (Township Road 618) and does NOT recommend routine
ley Bank in Gallipolis Walmart,
local musicians appearing as
Hepatitis A vaccination for Food
live entertainment. Gates open Peoples Bank on Third Avenue, Haning Ridge Road(Township
Workers. Currently, ODH is
U.S. Bank in Silver Bridge Plaza, Road 233). The road will be
at the French Art Colony at 6
strongly recommending the folclosed in this area. ODOT’s
or Gallia (4-H) OSU Extenp.m., with food available for a
sion Ofﬁce at 111 Jackson Pike. detour is SR 681 to US 50 to US lowing groups to get the Hepatidonation, along with legal bevtis A vaccine: men who have sex
33. The estimated completion
erages for purchase. Music will Entry forms to be ﬁlled out and
with men, persons who inject
date is Aug. 10, 2018.
begin at 6:30 p.m. Admission is returned at locations or mailed
drugs and person who use ille$5 per person for non-members, to Gallipolis Lions Club, PO Box
gal non-injection drugs. These
436, Gallipolis, OH 45631 or
and French Art Colony memare the highest risk groups for
emailed to gallipolislionsclub@
bers attend free, as a member
transmission of Hepatitis A.
beneﬁt. For additional informa- gmail.com. Forms must be
Call 740-992-6626 for vaccine
received by July 25. All entrants
tion call the FAC at 740-446availability.
should report to back of stage at
3834.
POMEROY — The Meigs

Road Closures
and Restrictions

2018 Little Miss
and Mister Gallia

Hot Summer
Nights Thursday

Immunization
Clinic

CHURCH CALENDAR

Vacation
Bible School

Bob Hood; Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson Ridge
Rd.; 740-446-7495 or 740-7096107. Everyone is welcome

Jim Essick at 740-416-2064 for
more information.

POMEROY — VBS at Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road,
will be held July 30-Aug. 3 from
6:30-8:30 p.m. each evening. The
theme is Camp Moose on the
Loose, with study about Peter,
crafts, handouts, drawings, food
and games.
MIDDLEPORT — Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant Street,
Middleport, will host Game On
VBS from July 30-Aug. 3, 6:15-9
p.m. each night. Games, fun and
more.
RACINE — All Aboard for
Jesus Vacation Bible School will
be held July 31-Aug , 6:30-8 p.m.
nightly at Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church. Registration
from 6-6:30 p.m. each night.
VBS will focus on the life of
Christ, children will learn about
his birth, ways he helped people,
his death and resurrection.
There will be scripture readings,
games, crafts, music, life lessons,
snacks, and more. Fellowship
hall will feature one of Meigs
County’s largest wooden train
layouts. No cost for anyone to
attend, children are encouraged
to bring supplies for Carmel
Sutton’s Blessing Box ministry.
Open to ages 4 to 12, contact

Sunday, July 29
MIDDLEPORT — The Cornwell Twins will present their
music ministry during the 10:30
morning worship service at
Heath United Methodist Church
located at 339 S. 3rd. Ave. in
Middleport. All are invited to a
potluck luncheon downstairs following the service.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
Dickey Chapel Church will hold
service at 6 p.m.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill Baptist Church, Sunday
School 10 a.m., evening service
6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — First Light
Worship Service in the Family Life Center, 9am; Sunday
School, 9:3 0am; Morning Worship Service, 10:45 am; Youth
“The Resistance” in the FLC, 6
pm; Evening Worship Service
6pm; First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave. with Pastor
Douglas Downs.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch
at 9:45 AM; Sunday School at
10:00; AM worship service at
10:30 with a red, white, and
blue hot dog bash following
the service with special singing by Bobby Gordon; Pastor

ily Life Center, 9am; Sunday
School, 9:3 0am; Morning Worship Service, 10:45 am; Youth
“The Resistance” in the FLC, 6
pm; Evening Worship Service
6pm; First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave. with Pastor
Douglas Downs.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch
Ministry, 6:45 pm; Youth “REFUat 9:45 AM; Sunday School at
EL” in the FLC, 7pm; Prayer &amp;
10:00; AM worship service at
Praise in the Sanctuary, 7 pm;
10:30; Deacons/trustees meeting
First Church of the Nazarene,
following the AM worship ser1110 First Ave.
vice; Pastor Bob Hood; Bulaville
GALLIPOLIS — Bible
Study; 6 PM; Pastor Bob Hood; Christian Church, 2337 Johnson
Bulaville Christian Church, 2337 Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495 or 740709-6107. Everyone is welcome
Johnson Ridge Rd.; (740-446HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
7495 or 740-709-6107). EveryDickey Chapel Church will hold
one is welcome
service at 6 p.m.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
Dickey Chapel Church will hold
service at 7 p.m.

Wednesday, Aug. 1

Wednesday, Aug. 8

Friday, Aug. 3

GALLIPOLIS — Bible Study;
6:00 PM; Pastor Bob Hood;
VINTON — Holy Ghost Camp Bulaville Christian Church, 2337
Revival, Gospel singers and evan- Johnson Ridge Rd.; (740-4467495 or 740-709-6107). Everygelist preachers. For camping
arrangements call 740-979-7293 one is welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP —
or 740-645-1229. Aug. 3-19.
Bean dinner Aug. 11 from noon Dickey Chapel Church will hold
until 6 p.m.672 Dodrill Road, 1.5 service at 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s
miles north of Vinton.
Ministry, 6:45 pm; Youth “REFUEL” in the FLC, 7pm; Prayer &amp;
Praise in the Sanctuary, 7 pm;
First Church of the Nazarene,
GALLIPOLIS — First Light
1110 First Ave.
Worship Service in the Fam-

Sunday, Aug. 5

Dean Wright can be reached
at 740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

HURRY

July 9, 2018 thru
OFFER VALID August 26,2018

WITH

BANKS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
POWERFUL SAVINGS

part of senior staff
who received the
Gallia grant applications. Boothe was
conﬁdent with his
conversations that he
felt Washington ofﬁcials felt both projects had good “cost
beneﬁt analysis” and
would be a boon to
the region’s development.
“We came out of
all those meetings
feeling good,” said
the engineer. “Now,
we’re just crossing
our ﬁngers hoping
for good results. It
would have a dramatic impact on southeast Ohio to have
these approved.”
While aiming
to pave over 100
miles of gravel and
dirt county roads
is certainly one of
Boothe’s main goals
as Gallia County
Engineer, the creation of a potential
smart corridor in
Gallia County could
place it in a position
to serve as a leader
in testing smart
driving technology in Appalachia.
US 35 serves as a
major gateway of
commerce, connecting Ohio to
West Virginia and
provides access to
several states on the
east coast. Boothe’s
grant proposals,
however, are competing among 800 other
BUILD program
applications nationwide. Previously
titled the TIGER
program, since its
inception, Boothe
said no BUILD program grants have
been approved in 32
counties in the Appalachian area throughout Ohio. Grant
funding for programs
had previously been
awarded in Hamilton, Pickaway, Summit, Portage and
Cuyahoga Counties.
“We want to make
sure Appalachia
doesn’t get left
behind and to do that
we’re also putting
up around a $2 million match for (each
of) these grants so
Washington knows
how serious we are,”
said Boothe. “That’s
a lot of money for
our area, but it’s
worth it if we can
bring tens of millions
of dollars home.”
Boothe thanked
CIC for making the
trip to Washington
DC possible as well
as his staff for their
work and project
supporters for their
enthusiasm.
For more information, visit www.galliabuildgrants.com.

GENERAC
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�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, July 29, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Jarvis family
celebrates 66 years
Week 6

Week 5

Week 7

Courtesy photo

Week 8

Middleport yard of the week
Week 6 — Mary
and Roscoe Wise
Mary and Roscoe
Wise are life long residents of Middleport and
reside at 522 South
Third Ave. Their yard
is an absolute wonderland of different species
Week 5 — Phyllis Baker
of ﬂowers. FIlled with
Phyllis lives at 727
petunias, day lilies,
Broadway and has a
zinnias, crepe myrtle,
“Bee-utiful” botanical
scarlet bee balm, sagar
garden for a yard. Both
ﬂowers, stargazer lily,
front and back yards
and mixed with a grape
are decorated with sevarbor and apple trees.
eral varieties of ﬂowers
Roscoe said soon his
including hibiscus, hostas, perennial geraniums, family will have occuday lilies, summer phlox, pied that house for 100
years, in fact he was
and the list goes on.
born there. He does
Phyllis says it’s a lot of
work but its medicine or a lot of the watering
a kind of therapy for her. and mowing and Mary

works very hard on the
plants and it shows.

MIDDLEPORT —
Each week throughout
the summer property
owners in the village of
Middleport are recognized for the care they
take of their yards.

Courtesy photo

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jarvis, of Cheshire, celebrated their 66th wedding
anniversary on June 14. They were married on June 14, 1952 in
Gallipolis. They have two children, Ronnie (Suzi) Jarvis, of Cheshire,
and the late Debbie Coup. Grandchildren are Debra (Josh) King of
Polk City, Fla., and Jason (Andrea) Jarvis, of Lancaster. Greatgrandchildren are Emma, Ethan and Aubrey King of Polk City, Fla.,
and Holden and Hudson Jarvis of Lancaster. Roy is a retired truck
driver and Clarice is a homemaker.

Concertmaster suspended
CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Orchestra
has suspended its longtime concertmaster following
the publication of two accounts detailing sexual misconduct allegations against him.
The Plain Dealer reports the orchestra said Friday
that William Preucil, concertmaster since 1995, had
been suspended until “further notice.”
The Washington Post in a story Thursday about
sexual misconduct in the classical music world reported a member of the New World Symphony in Miami,
where Preucil taught, says he invited her to his hotel
room for cigars and “aggressively” kissed her, opened
buttons and pushed her onto a bed.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

63°

79°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.13
5.41
3.96
30.68
25.92

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:27 a.m.
8:43 p.m.
9:58 p.m.
7:58 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

First

Full

Aug 4 Aug 11 Aug 18 Aug 26

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

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

Major
1:13a
2:03a
2:52a
3:41a
4:29a
5:17a
6:05a

Minor
7:25a
8:14a
9:03a
9:52a
10:40a
11:28a
12:17p

Major
1:36p
2:25p
3:14p
4:02p
4:51p
5:40p
6:29p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Minor
7:48p
8:36p
9:25p
10:13p
11:02p
11:51p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
July 29 is known for rain in Waynesburg, Pa. By 1990, it had reportedly
rained on this date in 92 of the previous 113 years; however, no rain fell
from 1987 through 1990.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

87°
69°

Variably cloudy with a
thunderstorm

Cloudy and humid
with a thunderstorm

Mostly cloudy and
humid with a t-storm

Humid with sun
through high clouds

Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm possible

Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm possible

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

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.34
16.25
21.99
13.11
12.98
25.22
13.35
25.66
34.28
13.08
16.80
34.50
15.10

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.48
-0.17
+0.10
-0.06
+0.27
none
+0.26
-0.17
-0.12
-0.12
+0.80
+0.30
+0.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Logan
81/61

Adelphi
81/62
Chillicothe
81/64

NATIONAL CITIES

Portsmouth
84/65

Marietta
81/62

Murray City
81/62
Belpre
82/63

Athens
81/63

McArthur
81/62

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

SATURDAY

87°
65°

Parkersburg
82/61

Coolville
82/63

Milton
85/65

St. Albans
85/65

Huntington
83/64

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
91/63
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
68/55
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
87/68
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Elizabeth
83/63

Spencer
83/64

Buffalo
84/64

Ironton
84/65

Ashland
84/65
Grayson
84/65

Today

St. Marys
82/62

Wilkesville
82/63
POMEROY
Jackson
84/64
83/63
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
84/64
84/64
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
79/64
GALLIPOLIS
85/64
84/65
84/64

South Shore Greenup
84/64
83/64

38

FRIDAY

85°
63°

Lucasville
83/64
Very High

THURSDAY

82°
65°

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed causes
Mold: 2588

WEDNESDAY

82°
68°

Waverly
82/63

Pollen: 2

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

TUESDAY

Wayne County Sheriff’s Capt.
Doug Hunter says the woman,
wearing jeans, a T-shirt and ﬂipﬂops, appeared to be high on
drugs because she showed no
fear on the tower. Hunter says
she jumped from beam to beam
during her descent. Her name
and age hasn’t been released.

84°
67°

1

Primary: cladosporium

Mon.
6:28 a.m.
8:42 p.m.
10:29 p.m.
8:55 a.m.

MONDAY

77°

HEALTH TODAY
83°
65°
86°
66°
103° in 1936
47° in 1962

EXTENDED FORECAST

Clouds and sun today. Rather cloudy tonight
with spotty showers. High 85° / Low 64°

Statistics for Friday

her way down has been arrested.
The Wooster Daily Record
reports a passer-by spotted the
woman at the top of the tower
in Wayne Township around 6:30
p.m. Thursday and called 911.
She ﬁnally descended on her own
around 9:15 p.m. as hundreds of
onlookers watched from below.

WOOSTER, Ohio (AP) —
Authorities say a woman who
climbed to the top of a 285-foothigh cell tower and then taunted
police and safety personnel on

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Tower climber
arrested

Week 7 — Milford
and Polly Hysell
Milford and Polly’s
house at 751 Brownell
Ave. was built in 1860
and they have resided
there for the past 39
years. The ﬁrst owners
were the Brownell family for which the street
is named. Their yard is
very well groomed with
ornamental grass, potted petunias, impatiens,
a Japanese Maple, and
various other plantings.
Milford stated that both
he and Polly share the
yard work and it is “Beeutiful.”

Week 8 — Jesse and
Veronica Rivers
Veronica and Jesse
Rivers reside at 320
South Second Ave. and
share the yard work
with some advice from
Veronica’s mother on
what species are the
heartiest to plant. This
newlywed couple has
turned this small front
yard into an inviting
colorful arrangement of
ﬂowers. With well laid
retaining blocks and
mulch framing a wide
variety of plants including purple veronica,
peony, petunias, dragons
breath, marigolds, zinnias, and snap dragons.
It is “Bee-utiful.”

Clendenin
84/65
Charleston
82/64

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
81/58

Billings
78/54

Minneapolis
82/65

Detroit
82/64

Chicago
80/65

Denver
78/55

Montreal
79/63

Toronto
78/59

New York
83/68
Washington
86/72

Kansas City
76/63

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
91/72

High
Low

El Paso
100/76
Chihuahua
97/70

Mon.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
94/69/s 91/64/s
Anchorage
69/56/c 66/55/pc
Atlanta
91/72/pc
91/72/t
Atlantic City
82/68/s 81/70/c
Baltimore
85/66/pc
83/70/t
Billings
78/54/s 86/58/s
Boise
98/66/s 102/73/pc
Boston
85/68/s 84/70/pc
Charleston, WV 82/64/pc
82/67/t
Charlotte
88/70/pc
87/69/t
Cheyenne
69/48/t 70/47/s
Chicago
80/65/pc 78/66/pc
Cincinnati
80/64/c
79/65/t
Cleveland
80/62/pc
78/65/t
Columbus
81/65/pc
80/67/t
Dallas
103/80/pc
89/71/t
Denver
78/55/t 75/53/s
Des Moines
78/61/t 78/61/pc
Detroit
82/64/pc 82/63/pc
Honolulu
88/78/c 89/78/sh
Houston
97/76/pc 97/79/c
Indianapolis
77/63/sh
77/64/t
Kansas City
76/63/r 78/61/c
Las Vegas
109/87/s 106/89/pc
Little Rock
89/68/pc
82/66/t
Los Angeles
87/68/pc 87/68/pc
Louisville
85/66/c
83/68/t
Miami
83/77/pc
88/77/t
Minneapolis
82/65/pc 83/64/s
Nashville
90/72/pc 89/71/pc
New Orleans
93/77/pc
91/77/t
New York City
83/68/s 84/70/c
Oklahoma City
93/68/t
78/63/t
Orlando
89/74/t
87/73/t
Philadelphia
86/68/s
87/71/r
Phoenix
104/89/c 108/91/c
Pittsburgh
79/60/pc
78/63/t
Portland, ME
81/60/pc 81/63/s
Raleigh
87/71/c
83/72/t
Richmond
85/70/c
83/71/t
St. Louis
75/66/r
78/65/t
Salt Lake City
94/67/s 94/68/s
San Francisco
68/55/pc 68/54/pc
Seattle
91/63/s 91/61/s
Washington, DC 86/72/pc
85/74/t

127° in Death Valley, CA
35° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
127° in Death Valley, USA
Low -1° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
97/76
Monterrey
99/73

Miami
83/77

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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Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 29, 2018 s Section B

Crisp hired as Lady Tornadoes basketball coach
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — A
familiar face to lead the
Lady Tornadoes.
At a recent meeting,
the Southern Local
School District Board of
Education unanimously
approved the hire of Alan
Crisp as the varsity girls
basketball coach.
“I’ve always had that
itch to get back in it, and
the opportunity never
arose until now,” Crisp
said. “I want to thank the
board and Mr. Deem for
the opportunity to coach
basketball again.”
Crisp — who will enter
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports
his
eighth consecutive
Alan Crisp talks to his infield during a Division IV district softball game on May 18, 2017, in Minford,
season as Lady TornaOhio.

does softball coach in the
spring of 2019 — last
coached the SHS varsity
girls basketball team in
the 2009-10 season, completing a four-year stint.
In his current tenure
as SHS softball skipper,
Crisp has led the Purple
and Gold to a 118-85
record, with six sectional
titles. Still, more than the
on ﬁeld success, Crisp
noted that the connections made with players as
a primary point of pride.
“I just like being around
the kids and the camaraderie that you develop
with them,” Crisp said. “I
think I’ve done that with
softball a lot, developing
positive relationships
so that they’ll not only

look at me as a coach,
but they’ll call me for
job recommendations or
whatever they may need.
I think that’s a big part of
coaching, it’s not just X’s
and O’s, but the relationships that you build with
the players.
“One thing I’m excited
about is that it’s a different group than I’ve had. A
lot of them will play softball, but then a lot of them
won’t, so it’ll be a different group of kids than I’ve
dealt with in the past.”
In addition to the basketball players that Crisp
has coached in softball, he
also coached some of his
juniors in junior high volleyball.
See CRISP | 2B

Bengals’ Lewis
on 16th try for
playoff win
CINCINNATI (AP) — Marvin Lewis showed
up for his ﬁrst news conference as the Bengals
head coach in 2003 wearing his Baltimore Ravens
Super Bowl ring.
Every time he waved his right hand, the 200
diamonds gleamed yellow and white in the bright
television lights.
It was more than an eye-catching fashion statement. Lewis was setting the bar high for himself
and his team.
“It’s for a reason,” Lewis said. “What I’m going
to hammer home to our guys is that we’re not that
far away.”
Fifteen years later, postseason success is even
farther away for the Bengals, who haven’t won a
playoff game since the 1990 season.
Yet Lewis is still in Cincinnati, getting another
chance — his 16th and counting — to deliver on
the optimism he ﬂashed that January day so long
ago. He has the second-longest current tenure in
the NFL, trailing only New England’s Bill Belichick, who has won ﬁve Super Bowls.
It’s highly unusual for a coach to stay with any
team so long, something that Lewis fully appreciates.
“I think a lot of people talk about it quite a bit,”
Lewis said. “I know coaches do. I think everybody
aspires to do that.”
In the quick-to-change NFL, it’s shocking for
a coach to stay with a team so long with so little
success. The Bengals have reached the playoffs
seven times in Lewis’ 15 seasons, losing every
time. They made the playoffs ﬁve straight seasons
from 2011-15 and lost in the ﬁrst round each time,
setting an NFL record with their ﬁve straight
quick exits.
Lewis’ 0-7 coaching mark in the playoffs is the
worst for any coach in NFL history. Yet, he got
a two-year contract extension at the end of last
season from owner Mike Brown, who is averse
to change and thinks Lewis has done a good job
despite the results. The Bengals are coming off
back-to-back losing seasons.
“We remember the ﬁve previous seasons we got
to the playoffs,” Brown said. “I don’t think there’s
convincing evidence we can’t get the job done
around here. I think it’s to the contrary. And we’ll
see how it turns out.
“I put my bet down and I’m going to ride on it,
and people can judge when it’s run its course.”
As another losing season wound down last year,
Lewis was uncertain about whether he’d return.
The Bengals beat the Lions and the Ravens to ﬁnish the season at 7-9, and Brown was convinced to
stick with him for two more years.
“They were high-level teams giving it their best
effort, and we beat both of them,” said Brown of
two teams that ﬁnished 9-7 and missed the playoffs. The Lions ﬁred Jim Caldwell after the season.
The Bengals ﬁnished last in the league on
offense — a franchise ﬁrst — and the defense
slipped to 30th in the league against the run, its
worst ranking since 1998. Brown thinks the team
came close to having a successful season, and he
held his index ﬁnger and thumb a half-inch apart
to make his point.
“Sometimes we fell short by about that far,” he
said. “Nobody wants to remember that, either. We
know that we have to do better — believe, me, we
know it. But I think we’re in the situation where
we can rebound best, rebound quickest with Marvin.”
Eifert out:
Tight end Tyler Eifert was among a group of
See LEWIS | 2B

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

A view of downtown Cleveland from the northeast corner of First Energy Stadium, home of the Cleveland Browns. After going 1-31 over
the last two seasons, the Browns are optimistic about that the 2018 campaign will be different.

Browns start fresh

Try to forget miserable 0-16 season
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Myles Garrett’s rookie
season with the Browns
was historic — and horriﬁc.
The 0-16 nightmare
left him scarred, but
determined.
“It drives me a little
bit, because I’ll never let
something like that happen again,” the defensive
end vowed Thursday
as the Browns opened
training camp with an
infusion of talent and
optimism following their
forgettable 2017 season.
“No matter how long I’m
here, there will never be
a season like that.”
Cleveland fans could
never handle another
one.
But in the months
since last season ended,
coach Hue Jackson
jumped into Lake Erie
to cleanse himself of the
losing and new general
manager John Dorsey
retooled the Browns’
roster.
He acquired proven
players such as quarterback Tyrod Taylor and
Pro Bowl wide receiver
Jarvis Landry in trades,
signed free agent linebacker Mychal Kendricks
and drafted rookie QB
Baker Mayﬁeld, the top
overall pick who may
eventually lead Cleveland’s bruised franchise

back to prominence.
With HBO’s “Hard
Knocks” chronicling
their every move over
the next few weeks, the
Browns are pushing the
reset button.
“It is not the same
team,” said Jackson,
who held onto his job
despite a 1-31 record
the past two seasons.
“John and his team did a
tremendous job of adding key pieces to our
football team. This is a
competitive football team
throughout.”
Unlike so many previous seasons, the quarterback job appears to be
locked up. On Wednesday, Jackson made it
clear that Taylor, who led
Buffalo to the playoffs
last season, is the starter
and that Mayﬁeld is “not
ready to walk out there
right now and play.”
“Tyrod Taylor is the
starter,” Jackson said,
getting an agreeing nod
from Dorsey. “I don’t
envision any situation
where all of a sudden
he is getting a bunch of
ﬁrst-team reps — unless,
God forbid, something
happens.”
Something always
seems to happen to the
Browns, so Jackson
wrapped his knuckles
on the wooden podium
while discussing Taylor

to ward off any bad luck.
The 27-year-old Taylor
quickly won over teammates and coaches this
spring with his team-ﬁrst
attitude and work ethic.
Beyond his usual duties,
part of Taylor’s role is to
help the Browns forget
2017 — not just turn the
page, but throw out the
book.
“Let them know that
it is a new year,” he said.
“Even if you were a part
of it last year, it is a fresh
start now. Learn from
last year. No matter how
good or how bad the
season was, this season
is a totally new year and
be excited about the
opportunity we have in
front of us to go out and
win games, change the
culture and change the
perception of this team.”
Mayﬁeld’s ﬁrst NFL
camp will test his football knowledge and
patience. The Browns
are in it for the long haul
with the Heisman Trophy winner, who to this
point has accepted the
team’s decision to have
him sit behind Taylor.
However, that doesn’t
mean Mayﬁeld is satisﬁed being a No. 2 quarterback.
“I would never get
my mind right to be a
backup,” he said before
the Browns held their

ﬁrst practice open to
the public. “That’s the
second that I would be
complacent. That’s the
second that I would stop
working. You’ve always
got to keep working like
you’re going to work to
be the best and that’s the
same thing Tyrod has
done his whole life.
“It doesn’t matter the
position you’re in. If
you’re not going to work
hard, then you’re not
doing it right.”
While the Browns
want Mayﬁeld to wait,
fans may be a little more
impatient to see him.
It wasn’t long into
practice that chants of
“Ba-ker, May-ﬁeld” ﬁlled
the warm air on the
green, manicured ﬁelds
behind the team’s headquarters.
Mayﬁeld’s accustomed
to the spotlight — the
star attraction. But for
now he’s content with
a supporting role, and
doesn’t object to Jackson’s plan to give Taylor
the majority of snaps
with Cleveland’s starters.
“No, absolutely not,”
Mayﬁeld said. “They’re
doing everything they
think is right and I
believe in that and I
believe in them, so when
it comes down to the
stuff that they’re saying, that’s not going to
change my work ethic
See BROWNS | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, July 29, 2018

Crisp
From page 1B

Crisp — who will be
the fourth head coach
in six seasons for the
Purple and Gold — is
also looking to add a
measure of stability to
the Lady Tornado bas-

Browns
From page 1B

and if it does, then something’s wrong.”
Unlike Garrett, Mayﬁeld’s 2017 couldn’t have
gone much better.
Once a walk-on, he
climbed to college football’s summit, carrying
the Sooners to national
title contention.
And although he’s not

ketball program.
“We need some stability and I’m not going
anywhere, I’m probably
be here until I retire,”
said Crisp. “I feel like the
program needs some stability and needs someone
that’s going to be here
and go through the growing pains. We’re going
to have growing pains

leading the Browns, Mayﬁeld can help point them
in the right direction.
“When you talk about
a new season, the record
from the past year goes
out the window,” he said.
“It doesn’t matter if you
win the Super Bowl or
you go 0-16, you start
fresh and you haven’t
done anything for this
season. So we’re working
to be the best team in the
country and that’s our
mindset.”

Lewis

Not yet ready:
Receiver Devonte
Boyd, cornerback Davontae Harris, H-back Ryan
From page 1B
Hewitt, guard Christian
Westerman and safety
players who worked out
Tyrice Beverette also are
on a side ﬁeld Thursday
while the rest of the team being held out of practice
as they recover from injupracticed. Eifert was
ries. In addition, the Benlimited to two games
gals put offensive tackle
last season because of a
Javarius Leamon on the
recurring back problem
that required surgery. He list of players who didn’t
signed a one-year conreport for camp, and they
tract for 2018 and missed signed receiver Jared
minicamp. Eifert declined Murphy.
to comment as he left the
ﬁeld. Linebacker Vontaze First injury:
Burﬁct also worked out
Guard Rod Taylor
on the side ﬁeld. He’ll
injured his right knee
miss the ﬁrst four games during practice and was
of the season on a sustaken off the ﬁeld on a
pension for violating the
cart. Taylor is a seventhNFL’s policy on perforround pick from Missismance-enhancers.
sippi.

before it gets better.”
Crisp is replacing
David Kight, who
coached the Lady Tornadoes to a 7-17 record
in one season. Just ﬁve
players can return from
last season’s squad, however, as six of the team’s
11 players were lost to
graduation.
“We lost a lot of

Sunday Times-Sentinel

seniors last year, and we
going to be really young,
so it was good time for
a new coach to come
in,” said Crisp. “We
don’t have any seniors
right now that I know
of, at least there were
no juniors that played
last year. It’s a good
time to get everybody
to jell together and start

rebuilding.
“We got a late start
on open gyms, I think
we only got like 3-or-4
open gyms in, and it was
mostly freshmen and
sophomores. I’m hoping
to get the young ones to
buy in to what we do and
help turn things around.”
Prior to last season
Southern had four

straight winning campaigns, with the program’s only sectional title
in the last decade coming
in 2016.
Crisp and the Lady
Tornadoes will begin the
2018-19 season on the
road, as they’re slated to
visit Meigs on Nov. 26.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Mamone records
ace at Riverside

Meigs football
training camp

MASON, W.Va. — Mark
Mamone, of St. Albans, recorded
his ﬁrst career hole in one on July
20 at Riverside Golf Club. The
ace was recorded on the 144-yard
12th hole using a six iron, with
Mike Proctor, Mike Mamone,
Fred Dillon and Travis Roush witnessing the feat.

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The
Meigs football training camp will
begin on Monday, July 30. High
school training camp will run
from 5:30 p.m. until 9 p.m. The
middle school training camp will
be from 6 p.m. until 7:30 p.m.

Southern football
golf scramble

MCSL youth
soccer signups

kids in grades K-6 at the church’s
Outreach Center. The three-night
camp will run from Monday, July
30, through Wednesday Aug. 1,
between 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Southern boys basketball coach
Jeff Caldwell will be directing the
camp.

Gallia Academy
football reserve seats

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve
seats for the 2018 Gallia Academy High School football season
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
will go on sale starting on Tues— The Mason County Soccer
day, Aug. 7, for the Gallia AcadLeague is currently accepting
MASON, W.Va. — The Southemy Athletic Super Boosters.
resgistrations for the 2018 youth
ern football team is hosting a
Parents of varsity and junior
soccer league.
four-person golf scramble on
Online registration is now open varsity football players, GalSunday, Aug. 5, at Riverside Golf
lia Academy Marching Band
Club. Registration begins at 7:30 until August 1, and the registramembers, and varsity and junior
tion link can be found on the
a.m. and the scramble will start
varsity cheerleaders will be able
league website at www.masonat 8:30 a.m.
to purchase reserve seats on
countysoccerleague.com
Cost is $60 per individual or
To register in person, there will Wednesday, Aug. 8.
$240 per team. Please make
Reserve seats for the general
be three different signup dates at
checks payable to Southern Athpublic will be available on Thursthe recreation ﬁelds in front of
letic Boosters.
There will be a skins game and the career center by PPJSHS. The day, Aug. 9.
The price is $35 per ticket.
remaining signup will run from
50-50 rafﬂe, as well as closest to
Tickets may be purchased in
6-8 p.m. on Monday, July 30.
the pin and long drive competithe Athletic Director’s ofﬁce at
For more information, please
tions. Mulligans and red tee shots
Gallia Academy High School
will also be available to purchase. visit www.masoncountysoccerbetween the hours of 8 a.m. and
league.com on the web.
Food and beverages will be
3 p.m.
provided at the event, and club
Gallia Academy Athletic Super
house credit will go to the top-3
Boosters will be limited to 10
teams.
tickets purchased on the ﬁrst day
To register a team, please
of sales.
contact SHS head coach Cassady
After the ﬁrst day, there will be
Willford via email at cassady.
RACINE, Ohio — The Racine
no limit on the number of tickets
willford53@gmail.com or on the First Baptist Church will be conphone at 740-416-8470.
ducting a free basketball camp for which may be purchased.

Racine FBC
Basketball Camp

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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 29, 2018 3B

Jones, Thome headline Hall of Fame class
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.
(AP) — Larry Wayne
Jones Jr. was a throwback, a guy who played
for only one major league
club and always stayed
focused on a single goal
— trying to get better
every day.
Pressure was an afterthought for the man
dubbed Chipper, except
perhaps in 1990 at the
beginning of his career
with the Atlanta Braves
organization.
“Maybe my ﬁrst year
in rookie ball there was
some pressure. Obviously,
I didn’t perform,” said
Jones, who batted just
.229 with one homer and
18 RBIs in 140 at-bats in
the Gulf Coast League
while dealing with a hand
injury. “There was some
pushback for the Braves
taking me.”
Any doubts about the
switch-hitting overall No.
1 pick of the 1990 draft
from the Bolles School
in Jacksonville, Florida,
quickly faded. In Class
A ball the next season,
Jones batted .326, hit 15
homers, drove in 98 runs
and stole 40 bases. Four
years later he was a regular in the Atlanta lineup
at age 23 and relishing
the journey.
“For me, it was just
having fun and playing
the game,” said Jones,
whose nickname surfaced
at a young age after family members called him
a chip off the old block
because he looked so
much like his dad. “I
never saw a pay stub during my time in the big
leagues. I didn’t care what
I was making. As long as
I walked in the clubhouse
and I saw my name in the
three hole playing third
for the Atlanta Braves,
that’s all that really mattered.
“I just kept my head
down and tried to do
whatever I could to help
us win and let the numbers take care of themselves.”
Those numbers — .303
career batting average,
549 doubles, 468 home
runs, 1,623 RBIs —
earned Jones baseball’s
highest honor, election to
the Hall of Fame on the
ﬁrst try. He’ll be inducted
Sunday with Jim Thome,
Vladimir Guerrero, Trevor Hoffman, and former
Detroit Tigers teammates
Jack Morris and Alan
Trammell. Thome also
is a ﬁrst-ballot selection,
while Morris and Trammell were picked by a
veterans committee last
December.
Jones, only the second
overall No. 1 draft pick
to reach the Hall (Ken
Griffey Jr. is the other),
couldn’t have arrived
at a better time for the

Trent Roush wins
2018 Riverside
Amateur
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. —
Trent Roush, a former
Glenville State College
golfer and a current
Point Pleasant resident, has captured the
title in the 2018 Riverside Amateur Championship, held on July 21
and 22.
Roush set a tournament record with a
two day total of 134,
recording a four-under
par 66 on the ﬁrst
day, and following it
up with a two-under
par 68 to clinch the
championship. Roush’s
six-under par total is
one stroke better than
the previous Riverside
Amateur record.
Runner-up in the
championship ﬂight,
eight shots back of
Roush, Adam Krawsc-

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

A view of the Jim Thome statue that stands inside the centerfield gate at Progressive Field in
Cleveland, Ohio. Thome will be one of six people inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame Cooperstown
this weekend.

Braves, who were perennial cellar-dwellers in the
NL West. He became
a force on most of the
Atlanta teams that did a
quick about-face and won
14 straight division titles
— and a World Series in
his rookie season (1995).
Also part of those
Atlanta teams were
pitchers Greg Maddux,
Tom Glavine, and John
Smoltz, manager Bobby
Cox, and general manager
John Schuerholz. All ﬁve
were elected to the Hall
of Fame in the past four
years, and now Jones will
join them.
“Somebody had to
score some runs for that
pitching staff,” Jones said
with a chuckle. “It’s nice
the day has ﬁnally come.”
Thome hit 612 home
runs, eighth all-time, and
had an MLB record 13
walk-off homers , mostly
for the Cleveland Indians.
When he toured the Hall
of Fame in late February
to prepare for induction
day, Thome got misty
when he walked into the
Plaque Gallery where his
bronze likeness will hang
after Sunday’s ceremony.
Expect more of the
same when he stares out
at the big crowd during
his speech.
“It’s been an absolute
dream,” Thome said. “I
try to keep that (life)
pretty simple, but it’s
been very special to enjoy
this with the ones you
really care about and the
people that are … happy
for you. That means so
much.
“To go there and now
call that home is just
incredible.”
Hoffman, chosen in his
third year on the ballot,
played the bulk of his
career with the San Diego
Padres before ﬁnishing with the Milwaukee
Brewers. After failing
to impress the front
ofﬁce in three years as a

shortstop, he switched to
the bullpen and became
a star. Using a stultifying changeup, Hoffman
recorded 601 saves over
18 seasons, second alltime to former Yankees
star Mariano Rivera’s
652.
Guerrero was elected
on his second try, receiving 92.9 percent of the
vote. The nine-time AllStar outﬁelder batted
.318 with 449 homers
and 1,496 RBIs and was a
notorious bad-ball hitter ,
a skill he learned as a kid
growing up in the Dominican Republic playing a
game similar to cricket.
Although he played half
his career with the Montreal Expos, Guerrero will
be the ﬁrst player to enter
the Hall wearing the
cap of the Los Angeles
Angels, the team where
he enjoyed his greatest
success. He helped lead
the Angels to the postseason ﬁve times in six
seasons, reaching career
highs for runs (124), hits
(206), and RBIs (126) in
2004 when he won AL
MVP honors.
“I was happy to be in a
situation where the team
was playing for something,” Guerrero said
through translator Jose
Mota. “That inspired me
and the rest of the team.”
Among those accompanying Guerrero on
Sunday will be his son,
Vladimir Jr., considered
the top prospect in the
minor leagues. Guerrero
will deliver most of his
speech in Spanish with
Mota translating before a
crowd expected to number around 50,000.
“I want it to come out
as naturally as possible,”
Guerrero said. “I’m going
to keep it as simple as
possible. I’m not nervous,
but you never know.”
Morris pitched 18
seasons for the Tigers,
Twins, Blue Jays and Indi-

ans, and played on four
World Series champions.
In the 1980s, he led all
pitchers with 2,444.2
innings pitched and 162
wins and topped all AL
pitchers in strikeouts
with 1,629.
The crowning achievement of Morris’ career
was his 1-0 completegame victory in Game 7
of the 1991 World Series
while pitching for his
hometown Twins against
the 24-year-old Smoltz
and the Braves. Minnesota manager Tom Kelly
wanted to take him out
after nine innings and the
36-year-old Morris convinced him not to.
“That was Jack Morris,” Trammell said. “That
just tells you what’s inside
of him. He wasn’t going
to give up anything.”
That Morris had to
wait so long to be picked
for the Hall promises to
make his speech memorable.
“I’ve had a long time to
think about writing one,”
he said. “I wanted this to
be an impactful speech. I
wanted it to be something
that had meaning. When I
started actually putting it
into words, it was not as
easy as I thought it was
going to be.
“If I was going to do it
justice, I’d probably have
to write a 1,500-page
book, but we don’t have
time for all of that.”
Trammell played shortstop for 20 seasons — all
for the Tigers — and
earned six All-Star Game
selections, four Gold
Glove Awards and three
Silver Slugger Awards.
His .977 ﬁelding percentage ranks sixth among
shortstops with at least
2,000 games played.
“It’s overwhelming,
to be honest with you,”
said Trammell, now 60.
“To say that you’re part
of that group, it’s hard to
comprehend.”

Pridemore leads
Riverside seniors
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. —
Kenny Pridemore, of
Point Pleasant, is in the
lead of the 2018 Senior
Men’s Golf League at
Riverside Golf Club.
Pridemore has a season total of 188 points,
ﬁve full points ahead
of current runner-up
Bobby Watson.
A total of 62 golfers
were on hand Tuesday,
and they were divided
into 14 four-man teams,
and a pair of trios.
The low score of the
day was a 12-under par
58, ﬁred by the team
of Watson, Fred Pyles,
Ralph Six and Carl
Stone.
Two shots back, there
was a tie for second

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ten more
former students have
sued Ohio State University over alleged
sexual misconduct by
a now-dead team doctor, accusing school
ofﬁcials of facilitating
abuse by ignoring complaints and requiring
some athletes to get
physicals from him to
maintain their sports
participation and scholarships.
The case ﬁled Thursday is the third federal
lawsuit brought by men
alleging sexual abuse
by Dr. Richard Strauss,
who worked at Ohio
State from 1978 until
he retired in 1998.
“Beginning his very
ﬁrst year of employment at OSU — and
spanning his entire
two-decade tenure
— Dr. Strauss preyed
on male students, fondling, groping, sexually
assaulting, and harassing them. He did so
with OSU’s knowledge

season in Pittsburgh.
“I don’t know what’s
going on with his agents
and how this whole thing
works, so I’m not sure
what’s going to happen,”
Roethlisberger said.
Nobody’s sure when
Bell will show up either.
Until then, former Pitt
star running back James
Conner, rookie ﬁfthround pick Jaylen Samuels and veterans Stevan
Ridley and Fitzgerald
Toussaint will carry the
load.
“Le’Veon is one of the
best, if not the best in
the business,” Roethlisberger said. “We miss
him as a teammate, but I
look at it as an awesome
opportunity for the other
guys.”
Roethlisberger, whose
contract expires in the
spring of 2020, is excited
about the offensive line
in front of him and the

Steelers’ skill players at
running back and wide
receiver, led by Bell and
four-time All-Pro Antonio
Brown.
“I really like where
this team is at,” Roethlisberger said. “If I didn’t
have a good feeling about
this team, it probably
wouldn’t be as exciting,
but I am excited about
this group.”
He led the team to a
13-3 regular season last
season, which included
a second straight AFC
North title and third in
four years. But the Steelers were upset by Jacksonville at home during
the divisional round in
the playoffs.
Steelers coach Mike
Tomlin said it’s reasonable to expect another
big season from Roethlisberger after his renewed
offseason conditioning
focus.

and support,” the lawsuit said, adding that
many of the students
didn’t speak up then
because they were
embarrassed or unsure
whether it was abuse.
The lawsuit accuses
the university of having “a culture of institutional indifference”
about students’ safety
and rights and failing to appropriately
address Strauss’ behavior in violation of federal Title IX law, which
bars sex discrimination
in education.
An independent
investigation is ongoing at Ohio State,
which says it’s committed to learning the
truth.
The allegations that
people at Ohio State
didn’t respond appropriately at the time
“are troubling and are
a critical focus of the
current investigation,”
university spokesman
Benjamin Johnson
said.

2018 GREENE COUNTY FAIR
July 29th – August 4th
120 Fairgrounds Rd.
Xenia, Ohio
937-372-8621
OH-70063799

“The knees, the ankles,
being lighter … those
are all positives when it
comes to this age, playing
football and a sport where
you’re pounding on your
knees and you’ve had a
couple knee surgeries.”
It could be his last
chance to win a championship with two-time AllPro running back Le’Veon
Bell.
Bell is away from the
team after he and the
Steelers failed to reach an
agreement on a contract
extension earlier this
month, meaning he will
play under the $14.5 million franchise tag for the
second straight year.
Bell skipped training
camp last year and signed
his franchise tender less
than a week before the
start of the season. He
is expected to follow the
same plan and then play
what could be his ﬁnal

place between the team
of Pridemore, Jay Rees,
Tom Fisher and Phil
Burgess, and the quartet of Dewey Smith,
Albert Durst, Cliff Rice
and Dale Miller.
The closest to the
pin winners were Gene
Thomas on the ninth
hole and Miller on No.
14.
The current top-10
standings are as follows: Kenny Pridemore
(188.0), Bobby Watson
(183.0), Charlie Hargraves (176.5), Carl
Stone (164.0), Dewey
Smith (162.5), Albert
Durst (158.5), Fred
Pyles (146.0), Paul
Maynard (137.5), Ed
Coon (137.0), and Bob
Humphreys (135.5).

10 more ex-students
sue Ohio State over
sex abuse by doctor

Leaner Roethlisberger seeks another title for Steelers
LATROBE, Pa. (AP)
— A new offseason
workout plan has rejuvenated Pittsburgh Steelers’
quarterback Ben Roethlisberger.
The 36-year-old indicated that he’s in the
best shape of his career
Thursday following the
team’s ﬁrst training camp
practice at St. Vincent
College.
A leaner, trimmer
Roethlisberger hopes the
additional offseason work
can play a part in helping
the Steelers to another
championship.
“Anything you can do
to lighten the load on
your knees and ankles,
I think is important,”
said Roethlisberger, who
worked with a personal
trainer and nutritionist
to cut sugar and carbohydrates from his diet to
get him ready for his 15th
season.

zyn ﬁred identical oneover par rounds for a
two-day total of 142.
David Reed II and Cole
Moore tied for third
group with matching
143s, while Jeremy Vallet and Mike Haynes
shared ﬁfth with both
players shooting 144.
The ﬁrst ﬂight was
won by David Reed
and John Southworth,
both of whom shot 148.
Jarrett Hupp and Les
Ferguson each carded
160 to win the second
ﬂight, with the third
ﬂight titles going to
Jonathan Dillon with
a 156 gross and Gary
Roush with a 138 net.
A total of 40 golfers competed in the
championship division,
while 36 more competed in the ﬂighted
divisions.

LANCO with special guest Jordan Davis JULY 31st

*Food *Entertainment *Rides
*Exhibits *Harness Racing
www.greenecountyfairgrounds.com

�COMICS

4B Sunday, July 29, 2018

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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see what’s brewing on the

job market.
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jobmatchohio.com

�CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

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

Auto Auction

Medical/Health
OH-70064061

AUCTIONS

Ohio Valley Bank
will take bids
on the following:
2017 Chevrolet Cruze LT
Color: Blue

Mileage: 25,126

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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Taking Applications For
LPN's &amp; Nursing Assistants
Apply Within or On
Indeed.com
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164

Sunday, July 29, 2018 5B

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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NOW HIRING!
HYDROBLASTI NG LABORERS
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BUILD A JOB INTO A CAREER
WITH VADAKIN,INC.
Call: 740-373-7518
Select option #2
or to apply online visit:
www.vadakininc.com

The Athens-Meigs ESC is seeking two individuals
to ﬁll positions as Career Pathways Specialists

Automatic / Diesel / VIN #243344

This item is available at the Ohio Valley Bank
Jackson Hilltop Branch, Jackson, OH. Sold to the
highest bidder “as-is, where-is” without expressed
or implied warranty &amp; may be seen by calling the
Managed Assets Department at 1-888-441-1038.
OVB reserves the right to accept / reject any and all
bids, and withdraw items from sale prior to sale.
Terms of sale: CASH OR CASHIER’S CHECK.

OHIO VALLEY BANK

1-888-441-1038

®

Land (Acreage)
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NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Meigs Local Board of Education wishes to receive bids for
the following: Bread/Bakery, Milk/Dairy, and Fuel/Oil products
for the 2018-19 school year. All bids shall be received in, and
bid specifications may be obtained from, TREASURER'S
OFFICE, 41765 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, OH 45769, on or
before 11:00 A.M., Thursday, August 2, 2017.
The Meigs Local Board of Education reserves the right to reject
any and all bids, and the submitting of any bid shall impose no
liability or obligation upon the said Board. All envelopes must
be CLEARLY MARKED according to the type of bid.
Roy W. Johnson. Treasurer/CFO
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION
41765 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, OH 45769
PH(740) 992-5650
7/15/18, 7/22/18, 7/29/18
IN THE JUVENILE COURT OF CLAIBORNE
COUNTY, TENNESSEE
STATE OF TENNESSEE
DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN'S SERVICES
Petitioner,
vs.
NO.2017-JV-2116
Tricia Lamb, Mother
AKA Patricia Lamb
Timothy Lamb, Legal Father
Arrnindo Pintos, Alleged Biological Father
Respondent.
IN THE MATTER OF:
Faithlynn Lamb
DOB: 5/20/2012
A CHILD UNDER EIGHTEEN (18) YEARS OF AGE
ORDER for PUBLICATION
It appearing to the Court from the sworn allegations of the Termination of Parental Rights and the Affidavit of Diligent Search
that the whereabouts of the Respondent is unknown and cannot be ascertained with reasonable diligence, it is, therefore,
ORDERED that Respondent Timothy Lamb be served by
publication of the following notice for four (4) consecutive
weeks in the The Daily Sentinel, a newspaper of general circulation published in Middleport, Ohio, and that a summons, notice of hearing and copy of the petition be mailed to Timothy
Lamb at his last known address of 60 1/2 Third Street, Middleport, OH 45760 along with this Notice of Publication noting the
hearing date of matter herein.
It is further ORDERED that if the Respondent not enter an appearance or otherwise answer the petition, further personal
service or service by further publication shall be dispensed with
and service of any future notices, motions, orders or other legal
documents in this matter may be made upon Respondent by filing the same with the Clerk of the Juvenile Court of Claiborne
County, Tennessee.
NOTICE
TIMOTHY LAMB
The State of Tennessee, Department of Children's Services,
has filed a Petition seeking to terminate your parental rights regarding these children. It appears that ordinary process of law
cannot be served upon you because your whereabouts are unknown. You are, therefore, ordered to respond by filing an Answer to the Petition filed against you. A copy of the Petition may
be obtained at the office of the Juvenile Court Clerk in Claiborne County, Tennessee at 415 Straight Creek Road, New
Tazewell, Tennessee 37825. Your Court date is September 7,
2018 at 9:00 a.m. You must appear that day at the Claiborne
County Justice Center at the aforementioned address where
this matter is being specially heard or otherwise enter an appearance in this matter. This notice will be published for four
consecutive week. The last date of publication will be August
5, 2018. Your Answer must be filed within thirty (30) days thereafter. If no Answer is filed, a Default Judgment will be taken
against you without further notice to you.
Tennessee Department of Children's Services
305 Home Avenue
Maryville, TN 37801
7/15/18, 7/22/18, 7/29/18, 8/5/18

Harrison Township's Volunteer Fire Department is accepting
sealed bids on the sale of a Water Truck. 1985 Ford 8000
diesel. 3208 Cat turbo Diesel, blown up. 52472 miles, 4056
Engine Hours. 5 speed, 2 speed rear - end. Good Tires.
Stainless Fire truck body. 1250 gallon tank. PTO capabilities
Bids will be accepted til 8 August at the Harrison Township
1270 Little Bullskin Rd, Patriot, Ohio 45631 and be opened at
the 13 August meeting starting at 7:00pm. Please mark the
envelope as Bid.
Township trustees have the right to accept or deny any bid. For
more information, contact Chief Phillips at 740-794-1020.
Toni Ford
Fiscal Officer
Harrison Township
7/29/18,8/3/18

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.

OH-70064830

REAL ESTATE

Bidding will close on
July 27, 2018 at 5:00 pm.

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
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the City
Manager, City of Gallipolis, 333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 until Noon on August 21, 2018 and will be opened and
read immediately thereafter for the:
Bandstand Renovation
Engineer's Opinion of Probable Cost: $50,000.00
Completion Date - 60 days from Notice to Proceed
This project consists of the renovation and painting of the
Bandstand located in the City Park.
Bids must be in accordance with specifications and on forms
available for review at the Gallipolis City Manager's Office at
333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 and can be obtained
at the office of the Gallipolis City Manager, 333 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal, a Bid Guaranty and Contract Bond in accordance with Section 153.54 of
the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form,
shall be issued by a Surety Company or corporation licensed
in the State of Ohio to provide said surety.
Each Proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties submitting the proposal and all persons interested therein.
Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on
projects of similar size and complexity.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project
will, to the extent practicable, use Ohio Products, materials,
services, and labor in the implementation of their project.
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 wage rates on Public
Improvements in Gallia County, Ohio as determined by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, Wage and Hour
Division.
City of Gallipolis reserves the right to waive irregularities and to
reject any or all bids.
BY ORDER OF
Eugene Greene, City Manager
City of Gallipolis, Ohio
7/29/18,8/5/18,8/12/18

The positions will require individuals who possess
outstanding self-motivation and communication
skills and is a collaborative team member. Desired
candidates will be individuals with the ability to
interact and connect businesses and prospective
employers from ages 14 – adult.
Interested individuals can obtain additional
information by visiting the following link from the
Athens-Meigs ESC website:
http://www.athensmeigs.com/Employment/266

These are grant funded positions that will begin as
soon as possible and have a deﬁnitive ending date
based upon the terms of the grant.

OH-70066885

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
(Sale of Old Football Stadium and Grounds)
The Meigs Local School District, by and thorough the duly
elected members of the Board of Education, and with approval
of the Board Treasurer, has recently reviewed the real property
holdings of the local school district and has found, in keeping
with the requirements of Ohio Revised Code Sections 3313.41
and Ohio Revised Code Section 3313.411, that the Board does
own a certain parcel of Real Property that is unfit and obsolete
for the original purpose for which it was acquired, that the same
is no longer needed for any known purpose and that the same
should be sold, the same being generally described as a 12.86
acre parcel of land as situated in Salisbury Township, Village of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs and State of Ohio, being more commonly known as the former “Football Stadium for Meigs High
School.” Based upon the same the Board did resolve to sell
said property, at public sale, as is required, being more particularly described as follows, to wit:OLD FOOTBALL STADIUM
REAL PROPERTY DESCRIPTION 12.86 Acre Parcel Situated
in Salisbury Township, in the Village of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, State of Ohio, part of Lot 82, Fraction 10, town 2 North,
Range 13 West of the Ohio Company’s Purchase and being
described as follows: beginning at an iron pin found at the
northwest corner of said Lot 82; Thence N 87 deg. 12’ 31” E, a
distance of 350.90’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 33 deg. 18’ 07”
W, a distance of 25.39’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 28 deg. 21’
59” E, a distance of 51.50’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 13 deg.
44’ 51” W, a distance of 37.08’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 60
deg. 53’ 09” E, a distance of 320.50’ to an iron pin set; Thence
N 39 deg. 36’ 51” E, a distance of 100.00’ to an iron pin set;
Thence N 51 deg. 30’ 15” W, a distance of 71.74’ to an iron pin
set; Thence N 39 deg. 54 27” E, a distance of 4.50’ to an iron
pin set; Thence N 63 deg. 41’ 45” W, a distance of 21.29’ to an
iron pin set; Thence N 51 deg. 30’ 15” E, a distance of 207.74’
to an iron pin set; Thence N 87 deg. 12’ 31” E, a distance of
275.00’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 00 deg. 14’ 51” W, a distance of 51.71’ to an iron pin set; Thence N 78 deg. 12’ 47” E, a
distance of 330.25’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 07 deg. 50’ 42”
E, a distance of 485.35’ to an iron pin found; Thence S 14 deg.
48’ 23” E, a distance of 100.00’ to an iron pin set; Thence S 02
deg. 00’ 04” W, a distance of 49.41’ to an iron pin set; Thence
S 61 deg. 59’ 51” W, a distance of 45.00’ to an iron pin set;
Thence S 81 deg. 41’ 43” W, a distance of 84.95’ to an iron pin
found; Thence S 78 deg. 43’ 46” W, a distance of 112.39’ to a
railroad spike found; Thence N 55 deg. 14’ 25” W, a distance of
89.89’ to a point; Thence N 32 deg. 37’ 38” W, a distance of
99.18’ to an iron pin found; Thence S 64 deg. 15’ 16” W, a distance of 140.19’ to an iron pin found;
Thence S 64 deg. 13’ 41” W, a distance of 159.48’ to an iron
pin found; Thence S 396 deg. 42’ 30” W, a distance of 63.53’ to
an iron pin found; Thence S 59 deg. 27’ 54” W, a distance of
133.21’ to an iron pin found; Thence N 26 deg. 00’ 21” W, a distance of 826.27’ to the POINT OF BEGINNING, passing a chiseled notch found in face of cliff at 153.00’ for reference, said
described tract containing 12.86 Acres, more or less, excepting
all legal utility easements and rights of way.
Reference Deeds:
All 10.30 acres from Volume 144, page 482
All 0.50 acres from Volume 136, page 379, Parcel 1
All 2.06 acres from Volume 162, page 500, Parcel 1
Bearings are assumed and are for angle measurement only.
MEIGS COUNTY AUDITORS PARCEL No.1602500000
The above description is based on a survey in January
2013 by E &amp; E Borderline Surveying, Robert R. Eason, Ohio
P.S. No. 7033.
The Board of Education further states that this property will be
sold at auction to the highest bidder at a public sale to be held
on the 1st day of August, 2018, at 10:00a.m., to be held at Bob
Roberts Field (Old Stadium) near ticket booth. The minimum
opening bid shall be not less that One Hundred forty thousand
dollars ($140,000.) and, if an opening bid is made, all bids
thereafter shall increase in increments of not less than
$1,000.00, per bid, until sold. The successful bidder shall provide a bank guarantee letter or cashier’s check for not less than
10% of the purchase price on the day of the sale, with the balance due within 30 days of the sale. If sold, the Board of
Education does further state that the property herein described
shall be conveyed by “quit claim deed” to the successful bidder,
in “as is and where is” condition, with no warranties, either or
express or implied, and that this property is not being conveyed
for any specific purpose or use and that no certification is made
as to the suitability of the same as to any particular use.Further,
the members of this Board expressly reserve the right to accept
or reject any and all bids, for any reason or no reason at all. All
sales shall be final.
RYAN MAHR, PRESIDENT
BOARD OF EDUCATION
ROY JOHNSON, TREASURER
BOARD OF EDUCATION
CHRISTOPHER E. TENOGLIA
ATTORNEY FOR THE BOARD
7/1/18, 7/8/18, 7/15/18, 7/22/18, 7/29/18

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

6B Sunday, July 29, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bengals gamble on Eifert’s health
CINCINNATI (AP) —
While Andy Dalton was
throwing deep passes to
A.J. Green and the rest of
the Bengals receivers on
Friday, Tyler Eifert was
on a side ﬁeld running
sprints in shorts and a
cut-off shirt.
He ran one sprint, then
another. Next were some
agility drills. The tight
end did everything except
catch one of Dalton’s
spirals.
The Bengals’ most oftinjured player hopes that
part comes soon.
The Bengals have
gambled that Eifert can
stay healthy for a full
season and get the NFL’s
worst offense moving
again. He played only
two games last season

before hurting his back
again, prompting another
medical procedure. Eifert
was a free agent after the
season, and the Bengals
decided to keep him with
an incentive-laden, oneyear deal .
Cincinnati’s offense
ﬁnished last in the league
in yards. A healthy Eifert
could help change that.
“I can’t predict the
future on that one, but
I can testify to the fact
that he made a difference
when he was up and running for us,” director of
player personnel Duke
Tobin said. “We know
what he can do if he can
get back to that level.”
Eifert is one of Dalton’s favorite targets. He
caught 13 touchdown

just being smart about
it.”
The Bengals are trying
to keep him healthy and
get him in shape for the
opener at Indianapolis on
Sept. 9. He said there’s
been no discussion about
how much he might play
in the preseason.
“I deﬁnitely need to get
back out there, get some
plays full-speed,” Eifert
said. “It’s been a while.”
Eifert hurt his back
during the second game
last season, a 13-9 loss to
Houston. Backups Tyler
Kroft and C.J. Uzomah
combined for 52 catches
and eight touchdowns
during the season.
Eifert’s greatest asset
is his ability to make
catches in tight cover-

passes in 2015, the most
by a tight end in Bengals
history. That was the last
time the Bengals made
the playoffs. A concussion, a dislocated elbow,
a torn ankle ligament and
two back injuries have
limited him to 24 games
over the last four years.
Although the Bengals
have encouraging reports
on Eifert’s back, they’ve
decided to go slow with
him at the start of camp.
He hasn’t been cleared to
practice even though he
feels he’s ready, forcing
him to work out on a side
ﬁeld the ﬁrst two days.
“When I came back, I
thought I’d go right into
practice,” Eifert said.
“Everyone knows all the
surgeries I’ve had. We’re

John Minchillo | AP

Cincinnati Bengals tight end Tyler Eifert attends practice Friday in
Cincinnati. The Bengals have gambled that the often-injured Eifert
can stay healthy for a full season and get the NFL’s worst offense
moving again.

age, the main reason he
became Dalton’s favorite
target near the goal line.
The tight end has made
one change in the offseason, dropping at least 10
pounds for quickness.
“I feel a lot better,” he
said. “Everyone is always
saying you’re got to block
and hang in there in the

trenches, you’ve got to
put on weight, but that’s
(wrong).”
On the side:
Linebacker Vontaze
Burﬁct also worked out
on the side Friday for the
second straight day. He
hasn’t been cleared to
practice.

Classifieds
OH-70062000

Best Deal New &amp; Used

Amy Carter

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Product Specialist

Valuable REAL ESTATE AUCTION

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MARK PORTER FORD
Fax: 740-286-5728
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PRIME Commercia ~ Re ident al ~ Development
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN UNDER ORC-3313.41; THAT
EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT will have a Public Auction on Saturday, September 1, 2018 starting at 10:00 a.m.
The location of the auction will be at the Eastern High School
Campus. The property and contents heretofore stored and sold
with the undersigned owned by Eastern Local School District.
All items being auctioned will be itemized and listed on the district website at a later time. For additional information, contact
the district office at 740-667-6079.
7/29/18

NEW CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
All three publications Gallipolis Daily-Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register and Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
(includes weekend) $5.00 for each additional line.

5 day run - Print and Online

Total Cost $37.45
OH-70051356

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Total Cost $43.45
Please call Patti Wamsley at 740-446-2342 ext 2093
to help with your advertising.

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$30,200

4x4, 5.3, Leather, Heated
^ĞĂƚƐ͕�Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

$28,900

2018 Chevy Colorado LT ϮϬϭϲ��ƵŝĐŬ��ŶĐůĂǀĞ

$28,900

V6, Crew Cab, 4x,4
17,000miles

$28,400

AWD, Leather,
^ƵŶ�ZŽŽĨ͕�Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

ϮϬϭϱ�'D�

ϮϬϭϳ�:ĞĞƉ�'ƌĂŶĚ��ŚĞƌŽŬĞĞ�
Larado
4x4

2017 Chevy Impala Premier

X Cab, SLE, 4x4,
ϳϭ͕�Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

$26,900

$24,900

$27,900

V-6, Leather

$23,700

Kī
Le GM �
as
e

$27,800

Crew Cab, 4x4. Diesel,
20,000 miles

ϮϬϭϳ��ŚƌǇƐůĞƌ�WĂĐŝĮ�Ă 2015 Chevy Traverse LT ϮϬϭϱ��ŚƌǇƐůĞƌ�dŽǁŶ��ŽƵŶtry 2015 Buick Lacrosse ϮϬϭϲ��ŽĚŐĞ�:ŽƵƌŶĞǇ
Heated Seats, 20” wheels,
ϭ�KǁŶĞƌ͕�&gt;Žǁ�DŝůĞƐ

Heated Seats, Leather,
DVD, Remote Start

$19,900

$19,400

$17,500

ϮϬϭϳ�,ǇƵŶĚĂŝ�^ĂŶƚĂ�&amp;� ϮϬϭϲ��ŽĚŐĞ�'ƌĂŶĚ��ĂƌĂǀĂŶ

ϮϬϭϲ��ƵŝĐŬ��ŶĐŽƌĞ

ϮϬϭϱ��ƋƵŝŶŽǆ

2017 Chevy Cruze

&gt;d͕�Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

&gt;d͕�Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

$15,500

$14,600

dŽƵƌŝŶŐ�&gt;

$22,800

Sport,
AWD

$17,400

$19,900

SXT, Power Seats
Choose From 3

$16,500

�ŽŶǀĞŶŝĞŶĐĞ͕
Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

$16,500

Leather,
^ƵŶ�ZŽŽĨ

SXT, V-6,
AWD

2016 Toyota Corolla S 2015 Toyota Camry SE ϮϬϭϳ�,ǇƵŶĚĂŝ�^ŽŶĂƚĂ�^� 2016 Chevy Cruze LT 2012 Chevy Traverse LT

$14,400

2014 Acura TL
AWD,
ϭ�KǁŶĞƌ

$12,500

$13,900

$13,900

&gt;ŝŵŝƚĞĚ͕�Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ

�t�͕�ϭ�KǁŶĞƌ

$12,900

$12,900

2015 Chevy Cruze LT ϮϬϭϱ�,ǇƵŶĚĂŝ��ůĂŶƚƌĂ ϮϬϭϭ��ƵŝĐŬ�&gt;ƵĐĞƌŶĞ��y&gt; ϮϬϬϳ�DĞƌĐƵƌǇ�DŽƵŶƚĂŝŶĞĞƌ�WƌĞŵŝĞƌ
sͲϴ�&gt;ĞĂƚŚĞƌͬEĂǀŝŐĂƟ�ŽŶͬ�s�ͬ
Kī��'D�&gt;ĞĂƐĞ
Loaded

$10,900

$8,500

$7,900

�t�ͬEĞǁ�dŝƌĞƐͬ^ƵŶ�ƌŽŽĨ

$8,900 $7,900

H-70066245

2009 Chevy Colbalt

$2,900
OH-70066245

*Some images are stock images

�8B Sunday, July 29, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

WE MAKE CAR DREAMS COME TRUE!
$18,489

2017 Buick Encore,
Preferred FWD,
17,109 mi,
#A18A24A

$37,899

2018 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box, 4WD LT
Z71, All Star Edition, 2,558 mi,
#A18944A

$15,899

2005 Chevrolet Silverado
2500HD, 4WD, Crew Cab,
Standard Box, LT, 95,619 mi,
#A18756A

2007 Chevrolet Silverado 1500
Classic, 4WD, Crew Cab,
Short Box, LT1, 174,456 mi,
#A18811B

2009 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Extended Cab, Standard Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 142,557 mi,
#A18170A

$15,290

2012 Chevrolet Tahoe,
4WD, 1500 LS,
104,307,
#F18410A

49.

95

2009 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box, 4-Wheel
Drive LT, 121,145 mi,
#A18A26A

$18,799

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 110,650 mi,
#A18828B

$25,844

$32,778

$11,692

2014 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Standard Box 4-Wheel
Drive LT w/1LT, 63,536 mi,
#A18B10A

2014 Chevrolet Silverado
1500, Double Cab, Standard
Box 4-Wheel Drive LTZ w/2LZ,
41,193 mi, F18565B

$14,999

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
1LT,
19,800 mi,
#A18361A

ACDELCO
DEXOS1 FULL
SYNTHETIC.

More than 6 quarts of oil extra.

*Tire balancing, tax, and more than 6 quarts of oil extra.
Excludes diesel engines. See dealer for eligible vehicles and
details. Offer ends 12/31/18

2015 Chevrolet Equinox,
AWD 1LT,
118,596 mi,
#A18215A

$15,377

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
1LT,
18,600 mi,
#P2644

8-QUART OIL CHANGE,
4-TIRE ROTATION,
AND MULTI-POINT
INSPECTION**

$

59.

95

ACDELCO
DEXOS1 FULL
SYNTHETIC.

More than 8 quarts of oil extra.

**Tire balancing, tax, and more than 8 quarts of oil extra.
Excludes diesel engines and medium-duty trucks. See dealer
for eligible vehicles and details. Offer ends 12/31/18

2011 Chevrolet Equinox,
FWD, 4dr,
LTZ, 74,755 mi,
#A18541C

$40,000

2012 Chevrolet Silverado
2500HD, Crew Cab, Standard
Box, 4-Wheel Drive LT,
27,648 mi, #F18586A

$35,599

2014 Chevrolet SS,
4dr Sdn,
8,122 mi,
#A18660A

2013 Chevrolet Tahoe,
4WD, 1500 LT,
79,511 mi,
#A18A00A

$17,995

2015 Chevrolet Impala,
2LT,
49,590 mi,
#P2648

$16,900

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
2LTZ,
39,182 mi,
#A18806A

$12,990

2010 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Regular Cab, Long Box, 4-Wheel
Drive Work Truck, 132,699 mi,
#R1450A

2012 Chevrolet Equinox,
FWD, 2LT,
73,356 mi,
#A18796A

$27,875

2008 Chevrolet Tahoe,
4WD, 4 dr, 1500 LTZ,
170,809 mi,
#A18781B

$10,499

2011 Chevrolet Traverse,
FWD LT w/1LT,
115,769 mi,
#F18266A

2013 Chevrolet Equinox,
FWD 1LT,
82,467 mi,
#A18378A

$12,947

2008 Chevrolet Silverado
2500HD, 4WD, Extended Cab,
Standard Box Work Truck,
119,179 mi, #A18239B

$12,994

2013 Chevrolet Equinox,
AWDLS,
92,000 mi,
#A18899A

2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
4WD, Extended Cab,
Standard Box, Z71, 154,042 mi,
#A18A09A

$12,891

$10,154

2012 Chevrolet Traverse,
FWD LS,
96,838,
#A18345A

$9,498

1975 Chevrolet Corvette,
41,920 mi,
#A18986A

$16,999

$11,628

6-QUART OIL CHANGE,
4-TIRE ROTATION,
AND MULTI-POINT
INSPECTION*

$

2008 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
4WD, Extended Cab, Standard
Box, LT w/1LT, 100,776 mi,
#1B1436A

$13,788

2009 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 134,571 mi,
#A18189A

$12,495

$14,988

$11,299

$14,899

2015 Chevrolet Malibu,
1LTZ,
46,775 mi,
#A18530B

2016 GMC Acadia,
AWD, SLT-1,
26,345 mi,
#A18788A

$9,998

$24,298

2014 Chevrolet Silverado
1500, Crew Cab, Standard Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT w/1LT,
88,174 mi, #A18928A

2008 Chevrolet Colorado,
4WD, Crew Cab, LT w/1LT,
144,507 mi,
#A18B00A

$17,399

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Extended Cab, Standard Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 120,477,
#A18931A

$29,481

$12,299

$11,054

$15,290

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 157,799 mi,
#A18962A

2014 Chevrolet Cruze,
Sedan, 1LT auto,
32,908 mi,
#A18785A

$9,997

$15,899

2009 Chevrolet Impala,
LT 1LT,
106,881 mi,
#A18733A

$11,990

$9,899

2015 Chevrolet Impala Limited,
LT,
84,719 mi,
#A18947A

$30,776

2015 Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
Crew Cab, Short Box,
4-Wheel Drive LT, 45,870 mi,
#A18982A

$15,899

2005 Chevrolet Silverado
2500HD, 4WD, Crew Cab,
Standard Box LT, 95,619 mi,
#A18756A

BRAKE PADS INSTALLED
ACDELCO ADVANTAGE

99.

$

95

PER AXLE ON
MOST ACDELCO
ADVANTAGE
BRAKE PADS
INSTALLED*

Includes rotor inspection. 12-month/unlimitedmiles parts and labor limited warranty. ** Select
ACDelco Advantage Rotors Installed (per axle)
can be added for an additional $184.95 or less***
on trucks, mid-size SUVs, and full-size SUVs.
*Turning or replacing rotors, all other services, and tax extra.
Excludes medium-duty trucks, high-performance pads, and other
select vehicles. See dealer for eligible vehicles and details. **To
the original retail purchaser. Parts and labor included on Dealer
installed parts. See dealer for full limited warranty details. ***Tax
extra. Excludes Advantage Coated rotors. Visit mycertifiedservice.
com/rotors for model pricing. Offer ends 12/31/18

42411 Charles Chancey Dr. Pomeroy,
��� � �� �(740) 444-4135
Although every reasonable effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained on this site, absolute
accuracy cannot be guaranteed. This site, and all information and materials appearing on it, are presented to the user “as
is” without warranty of any kind, either express or implied. All vehicles are subject to prior sale. Price does not include
applicable tax, title, license, processing and/or documentation fees, and destination charges. Vehicles shown at different
locations are not currently in our inventory (Not in Stock) but can be made available to you at our location within a
reasonable date from the time of your request, not to exceed one week.
OH-70066009

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