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                  <text>Meigs county Fair 2018
The Daily Sentinel Inside tuesday August 14

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Finlaw

OH-70070351

The Boy Scouts carried the American
Flag and other ﬂags
along the parade route.

photos by Sarah Hawley

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�Tuesday, Aug. 14
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy Day
Kid’s Day
7 a.m.

Gates Open

8 a.m.

Jr. Fair Poultry Show, RL Arena

Noon

Drug Prevention Event (Round
1), Hill Stage

1 p.m.

Open Class Beef Show, followed
by Jr. Fair Beef Breeding, RL
Arena

1 p.m.

Open Class Poultry Show, Small
Arena

Noon

Ladies Day Baking Contest, Hill
Stage
Flower Show Judging, TR
Building

12:45 p.m.

Pigeon Racing, Race Track

1 p.m.

Harness Racing with Para
Mutual Betting

1 p.m.

Lady J High Stakes Karaoke

4 p.m.

Kiddie Tractor Pull, Small
Animal Arena

6 p.m.

Cloverbud Graduation, RL Arena

6 p.m.

OMTPA and Tractor Pulls, Pull
Track

6:30 p.m.

Riverside Cloggers, Hill Stage

7 p.m.

Motor Cross, Grand Stand

7 p.m.

4-H Game Night, RL Arena

4 p.m.

Kiddie Tractor Pull, Small Arena

8 p.m.

Riverside Cloggers, Hill Stage

5 p.m.

Jr. Fair Dairy Steer Show, RL
Arena

5:15 p.m.

Jr. Fair Dairy Feeder Show, RL
Arena

5:30 p.m.

Jr. Fair Beef Feeder Show, RL
Arena

6 p.m.

Jr. Fair Market Steer Show, RL
Arena

6 p.m.

Antique Tractor Pull, Pull Track

6 p.m.

Open Horse Show, Horse Show
Arena

6:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
11 p.m.

Unspoken, Grandstand

Gates Open

8 a.m.

Jr. Fair Hog Show, RL Arena

10 a.m.

Jr. Fair Horse Fun Show

1 p.m.

Clover Clues, RL Arena

2 p.m.

Lady J High Stakes Karaoke, Hill
Stage

4 p.m.

Kiddie Tractor Pull, Small Arena

5 p.m.

Corn Hole Tournament, RL
Arena

7 p.m.

Market Goat Show, Livestock
Arena

8 p.m.
11 p.m.

Opening Act for Wayland,
Grandstand

Gates Close

Friday, Aug. 17
The Simmons Insurance
Group Day
7 a.m.

Gates Open

9 a.m.

Jr. Fair Pet Show, Small Arena

11 a.m.

Kiddie Tractor Pull of
Champions, Small Arena

1 p.m.

Harness Racing with Para
Mutual Betting

1 p.m.

Jr. Fair Awards Program, RL
Arena

3 p.m.

Meigs County’s Got Talent, Hill
Stage

6 p.m.

Showman of Showman, Livestock
Arena

6 p.m.

Truck and Semi Pulls, Pull Track

8 p.m.

Amix, Hill Stage

8 p.m.

Horse Pull, Grandstand

Gates Close

7 a.m.

7 p.m.

11 p.m.

Citizen Way, Grandstand

Wednesday, Aug. 15
Harmon Services Day

11 p.m.

Gates Close

Saturday, Aug. 18
Ridenour Gas
Service Day
7 a.m.

Gates Open

8 a.m.

Roll Call for all Market Livestock
Members

10 a.m.

Livestock Sale, RL Arena

Wayland, Grandstand

Noon

Dairy Sweepstakes, RL Arena

Gates Close

Noon

ATV Pulls, Pull Track

3 p.m.

Youth Tractor Pull, Pull Track

7 p.m.

Tough Track Contest,
Grandstand

7 p.m.

Karaoke with Kip, Hill Stage

7 p.m.

“Hot’ Garden Tractor Pull, Pull
Track

Thursday, Aug. 16
Ridenour Gas
Service Day
Senior Day
OH-70070353

11 a.m.

BINGO, Grange Annex

Drug Prevention Event (Round
2), Hill Stage

2 p.m.

OH-70067860

10:30 a.m.

7 a.m.

Gates Open

8 a.m.

Jr. Fair Rabbit Show, RL Arena

9:30 p.m.
11 p.m.

Fireworks
Gates Close

Daily Schedules Subject to Change without prior notice.

�Scholarships
presented
at fair
LOCAL s 3A

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

62°

80°

78°

Mostly sunny and humid today. Mainly clear
and humid tonight. High 86° / Low 66°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Koepka
wins PGA
Championship

WEATHER s 8B

SPORTS s 1B

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 129, Volume 72

Tuesday, August 14, 2018 s 50¢

Rose, Finlaw crowned fair royalty
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS — Mattison Finlaw was crowned
the 2018 Meigs County Fair
Queen and Austin Rose the
2018 Meigs County Fair
King on Sunday evening

as part of the opening ceremony for the 155th Meigs
County Fair.
The 2018 royals were
crowned by 2017 Meigs
County Fair Queen Michaela
Holter, Livestock Prince

See ROYALTY | 2A

Photo courtesy of Kayla Hawthorne

Sydney Zirkle is pictured with her overall grand and reserve
champion dairy cows.

Zirkle
sweeps Jr.
Dairy Show
By Kayla Hawthorne
Special to the Sentinel

ROCKSPRINGS —
Sydney Zirkle swept the
Junior Fair Dairy Show
on Monday morning by
winning Overall Grand
and Reserve Champion.
Zirkle’s three-yearold Holstein cow took
Overall Grand Champion after being awarded grand champion
Holstein. The Overall
Reserve Champion
award went to Zirkle’s
aged Milking Shorthorn.
In the Junior Fair
Dairy Showmanship
competition, Allison
Barber took grand
champion and Coltin
Parker took reserve
champion.
Parker won grand
and reserve champion
Brown Swiss with his

spring heifer calf and
his summer yearling
heifer.
Zirkle won grand
and reserve champion
Holstein with her threeyear-old cow and her
senior two-year-old
cow.
Jessica Cook won
grand champion Jersey
with her aged cow. Raegan Jones was awarded
reserve champion with
her dry cow.
Zirkle won grand
champion shorthorn
with her aged cow.
Other 4-H dairy
showmen who participated in the show
Monday were Mattison
Finlaw, Olivia Yost,
Lucas Finlaw, Annie
McGrath, Caelin Seth,
Grace Butcher, and
Kaylin Butcher.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Meigs County Far King Austin Rose and Meigs County
Fair Queen Mattison Finlaw

The 2018 Meigs County Fair Royalty (from left) Livestock Prince Matthew
Jackson, Livestock Princess Raeann Schagel, King Austin Rose, Queen
Mattison Finlaw and First Runner-Up Raeven Reedy.

Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

Annual Reader’s
Choice Awards
Contest returns
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — Ohio Valley Publishing’s
annual 2018 Reader’s Choice contest has begun.
2018 Reader’s Choice Ballots are now running
in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel. All submissions
must be entered by Aug. 21. Readers may submit
more than one ballot, however no scanned or
duplicated copies will be accepted. Please check
the daily newspapers for ballots or visit your local
See AWARDS | 2A

A NEWS
Obituary: 2A
Local: 4A
B SPORTS
Comics: 5B
Classifieds: 6B-7B
Weather: 8B
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

State Rep. Jay Edwards presents a proclamation to Clinton Bailey, son of World War II veteran James Bailey.

Bailey remembered at the fair
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS —
World War II veteran
James Bailey, who was
recently laid to rest at
Arlington National Cemetery, was remembered
as part of the opening
ceremony at the 155th
Meigs County Fair on
Sunday evening.
To open the ceremony,
Brady Young sang the
National Anthem, with
VFW Post 9053 conducting the ﬂag raising. The
Flag was dedicated to
Bailey, as members of
the family and local biker
organizations looked on.
The bikers were part of
the escort which took
Bailey to Arlington.
Bailey’s son Clinton,
his wife Carissa and his
children were brought
to the stage for a special
presentation by State
Rep. Jay Edwards.

Members of the Bailey family stand on the stage for a special presentation during Sunday’s opening
ceremony of the 155th Meigs County Fair.

Edwards read information about Bailey’s
service and presented a
proclamation to the family.
Bailey was still in high
school when he enlisted
in the United States
Navy, serving until his
discharge in 1946. After

coming home and receiving his high school diploma, Bailey enlisted in the
United States Air Force,
serving as an instructor
for Radar Fundamentals
and a Communications
Advisor to the Saudi Air
Force.
He worked on the

guidance system for
Friendship 7, the rocket
that carried astronaut
John Glenn on the ﬁrst
U.S. orbital ﬂight, and
advised the Italian Air
Force on the Jupiter missile.
See BAILEY | 2A

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2A Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Trump, Omarosa trade insults, charges

DEATH NOTICES
DUVALL
BIDWELL — Michael Ervin Duvall, 29, of Bidwell,
died Friday, August 11, 2018 at 6 a.m. at his residence. Cremation services are entrusted to the Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
METCALF
GUYSVILLE — Lawrence M. Metcalf, 77 of Guysville, Ohio, died Saturday, Aug. 11, 2018, at Marietta
Memorial Hospital Belpre Campus.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., Wednesday,
Aug. 15, 2018 at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, Ohio. Burial will follow in the Asbury
Cemetery. Visitation will be held at the funeral home
Tuesday, from 6-8 p.m.

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

Tuesday,
Aug. 14
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
Health meeting will take

place at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department, which is located at
112 E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy, Ohio.

By Jill Colvin
and Catherine Lucey
Associated Press

WASHINGTON
— President Donald
Trump and former aide
Omarosa Manigault
Newman faced off Monday in a messy clash
that involved an explosive tell-all book, secret
recordings and plenty of
insults — reviving their
roles as reality show
boss and villain.
Trump accused Manigault Newman, the
former White House
liaison to black voters,
as “wacky” and “not
smart” after his former
co-star revealed her
recording of a phone

mansion, a culture that
some there feel borders
on paranoia and the
extraordinary measures
used to keep ex-employees quiet.
In an unusual admission, Trump acknowledged that the public
sparring was perhaps
beneath a person in his
position, tweeting that
he knew it was “not
presidential” to take
Evan Agostini | Invision | AP
on “a lowlife like OmaTelevision personality Omarosa Manigault attends The rosa.” But he added:
Hollywood Reporter’s annual 35 Most Powerful People in Media
“This is a modern day
event April 12 at The Pool in New York.
form of communication
and I know the Fake
on several sensitive
conversation with the
issues in Trump’s White News Media will be
president during a
working overtime to
media blitz for her new House, including a
make even Wacky Omalack of racial diversity
book.
rosa look legitimate as
among senior ofﬁcials,
Beyond their war of
words, the row touched security in the executive possible. Sorry!”

Thursday,
Aug. 16
CHILLICOTHE — The
Southern Ohio Council of
Governments (SOCOG)
will hold its next board
meeting at 10 a.m. at 27
West Second Street, Suite
202, Chillicothe, Ohio,
45601. Board meetings
usually are held the ﬁrst
Thursday of the month.
For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext.
103.
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Awards

VOICE
YOUR VOTE

From page 1A

newspaper ofﬁce to pick
one up or to drop off
your ballots. Ballots will
also be accepted at OVP
newspapers via mail
prior to the deadline.
Ballots are not available
online.
Dozens of categories
are available from the
medical ﬁeld, to realtors, to your favorite
restaurant. There’s a
category for “Best Veterinarian” as well as “Best
Golf Course” and even
“Best Ice Cream” and
more. This is meant to
be a fun, family activity
and all submissions are
encouraged. Also, by
submitting, you show
your support of local
businesses in the tricounty area.
All winners will be
presented an authentic
2018 Reader’s Choice
certiﬁcate for their place

2018 Reader’s Choice
Ballots are now running
in the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily
Sentinel. All submissions
must be entered by Aug.
21.

of business. All winners
will be announced Sept.
14 and recognized in an
upcoming edition of the
newspapers.
If choosing to mail ballots, send to any of the
three OVP newspapers at
the following addresses:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
C/O Reader’s Choice,
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631. Pomeroy Daily Sentinel, C/O
Reader’s Choice, 109
West Second St., Pomeroy, OH 45769. Point
Pleasant Register, C/O
Reader’s Choice, 510
Main St., Point Pleasant,
WV 25550.

Jeff Warner Agency
Nationwide Insurance

113 West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Tel 740-992-5479
Fax 740-992-6911
warnerj1@nationwide.com
OH-70068551

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Several members of the local biker organizations were in attendance on Sunday evening as the late James Bailey was recognized
at the fair.

Bailey
From page 1A

Bailey served as a
nuclear missile launch
crew member for three
years before retiring in
September 1966.
During his 18 years of
service, Bailey was the
recipient of numerous ribbons and awards including the WWII Asiatic
Paciﬁc WWII Victory
Ribbon, National Defense
Service Medal, Good
Conduct Medal with 5
loops representing his 18
years of service, American Theater Ribbon,
American Defense Ribbon, Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, Air Force
Longevity Service Award
with 2 Bronze Oak Leaf
Clusters, as well as several Missile Man badges.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Royalty
From page 1A

Cooper Schagel and
Livestock Princess
Rachel Jackson.
Finlaw, 18, is the
daughter of Matthew
and Kristina Finlaw
of Pomeroy. She is a
13-year member of the
Cowboy Boots and
Country Roots 4-H
Club. She is a graduate
of Eastern High School,
where she was a varsity cheerleader for the
Eagles. She is planning
to study Pre-Medicine
in the fall. Her hobbies
include tutoring, babysitting, and volunteering
with Ohio River Medical Mission and Big
Bend Youth League. She
is also a member of the
National Honor Society, the Farmer’s Bank
Junior Board of Directors, and a past member
of the Meigs County Jr.
Fair Board. At the fair,
she exhibits chickens
and dairy cows.
Rose, 16, is the son of
Brent Rose (Racine) and
Chasity Rose (Sardinia).
A nine-year member of
the Wooly Bully’s and
More 4-H Club and a

VFW Post 9053 conducted the flag raising ceremony with the flag dedicated to James Bailey.

two-year member of
Racine Southern FFA.
He is a student at Southern High School and is
a member of the band.
He is the President of
his 4-H Club, the FFA
Historian, and the Vice
President of the Meigs
County Jr. Fair Board.
His hobbies include
hunting, ﬁshing, kayaking, working on the
farm, and helping others. He is also a member
of the Racine Volunteer
Fire Department, Carmel-Sutton UMC, and the
Quiz Bowl team. With
4-H, he has exhibited
photography, gardening,
and ﬁrst aid projects
and exhibits beef feeders and lambs. With
FFA, he exhibits fruits,
vegetables, and canned
goods. You can also ﬁnd
him helping younger
members with their
projects and assisting
with the Kiddie Tractor
pull.
Both Finlaw and Rose
received a scholarship
from Home National
Bank which was presented by bank President Roma Sayre.
Raeven Reedy was
named the Queen First
Runner-Up.
Reedy, 16, is the

daughter of Rhonda
Rathburn of Syracuse.
She is a two-year member of Racine Southern
FFA and is the President of that chapter. She
is also a 4-H member
with the Classic 4-H’ers
4-H Club and is the
Vice President. She is
a student at Southern
High School and will
be a junior in the fall.
She is also a member
of the Tornado Marching Band. Her hobbies
including reading and
ﬂower gardening. She
is also a member of the
Meigs County Jr. Fair
Board and in the pep
band. At the fair, she
exhibits market rabbits
and works at Jr. Fair
events with the Jr. Fair
Board.
Additional queen candidates were Gabrielle
Beeler, Olivia Yost and
Katelin Ferguson.
Matthew Jackson was
named Livestock Prince
for the 2018 Meigs
County Fair.
Jackson, 11, is the
son of Tim and Becky
Jackson of Portland. He
is a four-year member
of the Wooly Bully’s and
More 4-H Club. He goes
to school at Southern
Local and will be in the

7th grade in the fall.
His hobbies include
basketball, woodworking, welding, and raising
rabbits. At the fair, he
exhibits miscellaneous
projects and livestock
projects.
Raeann Schagel was
crowned the 2018 Meigs
County Fair Livestock
Princess.
Schagel, 12, is the
daughter of Jim and
Carrie Schagel of Reedsville. She is a ﬁve-year
member of Cowboy
Boots and Country
Roots 4-H Club, where
she is the secretary. She
will be in the 7th grade
this fall and is homeschooled. Her hobbies
include reading, swimming, acting, and helping others. She is also
a member of River City
Kids Theatre Group,
Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church, and
Canine Companions for
Independence. At the
fair, she exhibits market
chickens and is taking
party planning.
Additional Livestock
Princess candidates
were Hannah Jackson
and Melinda Lawson.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 14, 2018 3A

Kicking off the fair
By Sarah Hawley

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

Meeting change announced
GALLIPOLIS — The Aug. 20 and Sept. 17,
2018 meetings of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board
of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health
Services have been cancelled. The Board will
hold a Special Meeting on Aug. 27, 2018 at 6 p.m.
The Board typically meets on the third Monday
of each month at the Board Ofﬁce (53 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis) at 6 p.m.

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS — A
parade, scholarships and
the crowning of royalty
ofﬁcially opened the
155th Meigs County Fair
on Sunday evening.
Jordan Pickens served
as the emcee for the
opening ceremony.
The parade included
Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts,
4-H clubs, 2017 Meigs
County Fair royalty, the
2018 royalty candidates
and visiting royalty from
the Gallia County Fair.
Parade winners were
Boy Scout Troop 235,
best walking unit; Rough
Riders 4-H Club, best
horse unit; Where the
Blacktop Stops 4-H Club,
best riding unit; Busy
Beavers 4-H Club, best
ﬂoat.
State Rep. Jay
Edwards presented a
proclamation to the fair
board in recognition of
the 155th Meigs County
Fair, commenting that
it is important to keep
programs such as the fair
going.
Members of the Junior

MEIGS BRIEFS

Delivery route changes
MEIGS COUNTY — Delivery routes for The
Daily Sentinel have been adjusted in an effort to
better serve our readers. Please be patient during
this transition. If you have questions or concerns
please call Carol at 740-444-4292 or Derrick at
740-446-2342 ext. 2097.

School supply giveaway

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Dan Short of Ohio Valley Bank presents the 4-H Scholarships to 2018 recipient Rachel Kesterson,
along with past recipients Laura Pullins (2017) and Ashley Buchanan (2016). Not pictured is Gage
Smith who was the 2015 recipient.

and Senior Fair Board
were recognized for their
work on the annual fair.
Dan Short, representing Ohio Valley Bank,
presented the OVB 4-H
Scholarship for 2018 to
Rachel Kesterson. The
scholarship is $750 per

year for four years. Also
recognized were 20152017 recipients Gage
Smith, Ashley Buchanan
and Laura Pullins.
The Rachel Downie
Scholarship was presented to Jessica Cook.
Hannah Evans and

Elizabeth Collins
received the 4-H Scholarships.
Rachel Kesterson also
received the Junior Fair
Scholarship.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Jr. Dairy Show highlights

RUTLAND — The Friends of Rutland will host
a Back-to-School Bash on Monday, Aug. 20 from
5-7 p.m. at Rutland Fireman’s Park. Activities
will include inﬂatables, face painting, emergency
vehicle tours, music, school supply giveaways and
refreshments.

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

Art classes for kids
MIDDLEPORT — Wendy Miller will be offering Children’s Art Classes at Riverbend Arts
Council, 290 N. 2nd, Middleport, on Monday,
August 20, from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Each class
will be $10 with all materials furnished. For more
info call Wendy at 740-416-4015.

Road closures restrictions

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne

Allison Barber (second from left) won grand champion showman. Coltin Parker (third from left) won reserve champion showman. The
2018 Meigs County Fair Queen, Mattison Finlaw (left), and the First Runner-up, Raeven Reedy are pictured with the showmen.

Jessica Cook
(left) and
Raegan Jones
(front) with
their grand
and reserve
champion
Jerseys,
respectively.
Also pictured is
Laura Pullins.

BURLINGHAM — A culvert replacement project starts on Aug. 6, on State Route 681 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place between Burlingham Road (County Road 40) and Gold Ridge
Road (Township Road 130). The road will be
closed in this area. ODOT’s detour is State Route
681 to US 50 to US 33. The estimated completion
date is August 17, 2018.
RACINE — Meigs County Road 28, Bashan
Road, will be closed between C-31, Bald KnobsStiversville Road, and T-109, Carmel Road, for
approximately 4 weeks beginning Monday, July
23. County forces will be repairing a slip in this
area.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert replacement
project begins on July 27, on State Route 681 in
Meigs County. The project is taking place between
US 33 and Markham Road (Township Road 652).
One lane will be closed in this area. Temporary
trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot width restriction will
be in place. The estimated completion date is Aug.
31, 2018.

IN BRIEF

WWII bombs removed
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — More than 2,000
people were evacuated Monday while Polish navy
experts removed three World War II bombs from
the Baltic Sea bed at the vacation resort of Kolobrzeg.
The spokesman for the local navy unit, Jacek
Kwiatkowski, said the bombs were hoisted out of
the sea and onto a special truck and were taken to
a test range for a controlled detonation.
Each bomb weighed about 660 pounds and their
impact radius was estimated at 1.2 miles. Two
other metal objects found at the site turned out to
be parts of an old anchor and some scrap metal.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR
Sydney Zirkle
is pictured
with her grand
and reserve
champion
Holsteins.

Saturday, Aug. 25
LONG BOTTOM — Mount Olive Community
Church, 51305 Mount Olive Road, Long Bottom
will host a hymn sing at 6 p.m. Everyone welcome,
bring your song to sing. Pastor Don Bush.

�LOCAL

4A Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

155th Meigs County Fair Opening Ceremony and Parade

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The 2017 and 2018 Meigs County Fair Royalty are pictured after Sunday’s opening ceremony. Pictured (from left) are 2017 Fair Queen
Michaela Holter, 2017 Livestock Princess Rachel Jackson, 2017 Livestock Prince Cooper Schagel, 2018 Livestock Prince Matthew
The 2018 Meigs County Fair Queen Mattison Finlaw is crowned by Jackson, 2018 Livestock Princess Raeann Schagel, 2018 King Austin Rose, 2018 Queen Mattison Finlaw, and 2018 Queen First Runner-Up
the 2017 Queen Michaela Holter.
Raeven Reedy.

2017 Livestock royalty Rachel Jackson and Cooper Schagel throw
candy to parade watchers.
King Austin Rose is pictured with 2017 Queen Michaela Holter.

The Junior Fair Board members were recognized during the opening ceremony.

Livestock royalty candidates Matthew Jackson and Hannah
Jackson throw candy to parade watchers.

2017 Livestock Princess Rachel Jackson crowns 2018 Livestock
Princess Raeann Schagel.

Gallia County Fair royalty took part in the
Junior Fair Parade.

Boy Scouts carry the American Flag along the parade route.

Roma Sayre of Home National Bank presents a scholarship check
to Queen Mattison Finlaw and King Austin Rose.

The Country Pioneers 4-H Club rides in the parade.

Meigs County Girl Scouts were among the parade participants.

�Numerous 4-H clubs, Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts were
among those taking part in the Junior Fair Parade.

2018 Livestock Prince Matthew Jackson shakes
hands with 2017 Livestock Prince Cooper Schagel.

Emcee Jordan Pickens talks with 2017 Meigs County Fair
Royalty (from left) Livestock Prince Cooper Schagel, Livestock
Princess Rachel Jackson and Queen Michaela Holter.

Members of the Cowboys Boots and Country Roots 4-H Club take
part in the Junior Fair Parade.

King candidate Austin Rose rides in the Junior Fair Parade on Sunday
evening. Rose was crowned the 2018 Meigs County Fair King

Queen candidate Gabrielle Beeler waves to
the crowd during the parade.

Gallia County Fair Royalty in attendance on Sunday evening are
pictured with the 2018 Meigs County Fair Royalty.

The Busy Beavers 4-H club celebrated their 45th year, bringing back past advisers
to take part in the celebration.

OH-70070358

The 2017 Little Mister Meigs County Cade
Newland took part in the Junior Fair Parade.
Newland has represented the fair at numerous
parades and events over the past year.

Queen candidate Mattison Finlaw
waves to the crowd. Finlaw was
crowned 2018 Meigs County Fair
Queen during the opening ceremony."

Members of the Rough Riders 4-H Club take part in the Junior Fair Parade
on Sunday evening.
Photos by Sarah Hawley

�OH-70065677

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

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Browns ‘sticking’ with plan to start Taylor

Adam Hunger | AP

Cleveland Browns quarterback Tyrod Taylor (5) throws a pass during the first
half of a preseason NFL football game against the New York Giants, Thursday,
Aug. 9, 2018, in East Rutherford, N.J.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — He’s
still Baker the backup.
Despite rookie Baker Mayﬁeld’s stellar performance in
his NFL preseason debut, the
Cleveland Browns are not moving the No. 1 overall pick into
the starting lineup ahead of
Tyrod Taylor.
“National hype,” quarterbacks coach Ken Zampese
said, downplaying the outside
push to elevate Mayﬁeld after
one game. “We have our plan,
we’re sticking to it and when it
changes we’ll all know.”
Mayﬁeld won over some
doubters on Thursday night in
a 20-10 win over the New York
Giants. The Heisman Trophy
winner from Oklahoma threw
two touchdown passes to tight
end David Njoku and showed

pocket poise and awareness
while completing 11 of 20
passes for 212 yards.
The reviews on Mayﬁeld
were exceptional, leading
to cries that he should jump
Taylor, who went 5 for 5 for
99 yards and posted a perfect
158.3 rating during his two
series.
Following Sunday’s practice,
Browns coach Hue Jackson
began shaking his head the
moment a reporter began framing a question about the QB
situation.
“Nothing’s changed. Tyrod
Taylor is our starter,” Jackson
said. “Baker Mayﬁeld is a
young, talented player. We have
a bright, bright future here
with that young man.”
Zampese was pleased with

everything he saw from Mayﬁeld, but he cautioned against
making too much of his ﬁrst
taste of pro football.
“He’s had 22 preseason NFL
snaps,” Zampese said. “He
has a long way to go and we’re
encouraged with where he’s at
right now.”
The feeling is the same about
Taylor, who was acquired from
Buffalo during the offseason.
The 29-year-old has been everything the Browns could have
hoped as a leader and mentor
to Mayﬁeld.
“He’s our guy, and that’s what
he is,” Zampese said, “and
to keep bringing it up is the
only reason why anybody put
a cloud in anybody’s head. So
See BROWNS | 2B

Blue Angels
place 2nd
at VC meet
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

JACKSON, Ohio — The third time wasn’t the
charm this time.
After back-to-back championships at Logan
and at Waterford, the Gallia Academy girls golf
team found itself in the runner-up spot on Friday
as Logan posted a 14-stroke victory over a seventeam ﬁeld at Franklin Valley Golf Course.
The Blue Angels had a trio of top-ﬁve performances, but that wasn’t enough to offset a low
fourth score en route to a 209.
The victorious Lady Chieftains — behind a
medalist effort of 38 by Lexis Fickel — claimed
the team championship with a 195.
Westfall (224) edged South Point (225) for third
place, while Warren rounded out the top ﬁve positions with a 226. Host Vinton County (274) and
Wellston (298) completed the seven-team race.
Bailey Meadows led GAHS with a third-place
effort of 47, with Bailey Meadows placing fourth
overall with a 48. Hunter Copley joined two other
competitors in a three-way tie for ﬁfth with a 50.
Carley Johnson, Avery Minton and Lilly Rees
all posted identical rounds of 64, with any one of
those counting as the ﬁnal score in the team tally.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Blue Devils
take 4th at
invitational
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

McDERMOTT, Ohio — Just more proof that
every stroke counts.
The Gallia Academy golf team claimed fourth
at the Portsmouth Invitational on Thursday at the
par-72 Elks County Club in Scioto County, with
the Blue Devils ﬁnishing a single stroke ahead of
ﬁfth place Piketon.
West Union won the 18-team event with a score
of 324 in the play ﬁve, count four format. Fairland
was eight strokes back in second place, while Manchester came in third with a 343. The Blue Devil
total of 356, not only edged Piketon by one, but
was also just nine ahead of Wheelersburg.
Portsmouth West was seventh with a 367, followed by Waverly (370), Pike Eastern (377), Coal
Grove (385), Chesapeake (387), West Union ‘B’
(396), Portsmouth (410), North Adams (428)
and Zane Trace (450). Ironton, Clay and Western
failed to post team scores.
Reece Thomas led Gallia Academy with a
13-over par round of 85. Wyatt Sipple was next
with an 87, followed by Cooper Davis and Hobie
Graham with matching 92s. Elijah Blazer turned
in the Blue Devils’ potential tie-breaking score, a
116.
Conner Heffner was the match medalist, ﬁring a
75 for Wheelersburg.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Charlie Riedel | AP

Brooks Koepka lifts the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championship golf tournament at Bellerive Country Club, Sunday,
Aug. 12, 2018, in St. Louis.

Koepka wins PGA championship
ST. LOUIS (AP) —
The roars were unlike
anything Brooks Koepka
had ever heard, and he
knew exactly what they
meant.
They got louder for
each birdie by Tiger
Woods that moved him
closer to the lead Sunday
in the PGA Championship, and Koepka could
hear a ripple effect of
noise. First, real time.
Seconds later, another
burst from patrons watching on TV in chalets.
Then, distant cheers
from every corner of Bellerive when the score was
posted.
“We knew what was
going on,” he said. “It’s
pretty obvious when
Tiger makes a birdie.
Everybody on the golf
course cheers for him.”
Koepka knew exactly
what to do.
Amid relentless pandemonium, Koepka ran
off three straight birdies
to end the front nine and
seize control. When he
was tied with Adam Scott
through 14 holes, with
Woods one shot behind,
he delivered back-to-back
birdies.
The last one was a laser
of a 4-iron from 248 yards
that settled 6 feet away,
sending him to a dream
ﬁnish of a year that began
with the 28-year-old
Floridian wondering if a
wrist injury that kept him
out four months would
ever allow him to compete again.

“That will probably go
down as probably one of
the best shots I’ve ever
hit under pressure,” he
said.
He closed with a
4-under 66 for a two-shot
victory over Woods and
took his place among
the elite in golf. Koepka
became the ﬁfth player
to win the U.S. Open and
PGA Championship in
the same year, joining
Woods, Jack Nicklaus,
Ben Hogan and Gene
Sarazen.
It will be impossible to
overlook him now, not
with the Wanamaker Trophy to go with his backto-back U.S. Open titles.
Koepka won two of the
three majors he played
this year, and three of
his last six. Not since
Woods won four in a row
through the 2001 Masters
has anyone won majors at
such an alarming rate.
And yet it still felt —
and certainly sounded
— as though he played
second billing to Woods.
The crowd was enormous, louder than anything in golf this side of
Augusta National or a
Ryder Cup, and Woods
looked closer than ever
to capping his comeback
from four back surgeries
with another major.
Even with two bogeys,
Woods shot 64 for his
lowest ﬁnal round in a
major. He ﬁnished at 266,
beating by three shots his
best 72-hole score in a
major.

At this major, it wasn’t
enough.
“I played hard,” Woods
said. “I made a bit of
a run. It looks like I’m
going to come up a little
short.”
Koepka was responsible
for that.
After wasting one
chance to put it away
by missing consecutive
birdie chances from 7
feet, Koepka kept attacking ﬂags and ran in birdie
putts of 10 feet on No. 15
and 7 feet on No. 16 to
end the drama. He tapped
in for par on the ﬁnal hole
to set the PGA Championship scoring record at
264. It also tied the major
championship record
that Henrik Stenson set
at Royal Troon two years
ago in the British Open.
He also joined Jordan
Spieth, Woods, Nicklaus
and Tom Watson as the
only players with three
majors before turning 30
since World War II.
“Three majors at 28
— it’s a cool feeling,”
said Koepka, who ﬁve
years ago was toiling in
Europe’s minor leagues.
Scott hung around by
making big putts, just like
he hoped, and was tied
for the lead until Koepka’s
birdies. Scott missed a
6-foot birdie putt on the
par-5 17th that would
have pulled him to within
one shot — right after
Koepka missed from the
same range — and then
made bogey on the 18th
for a 67 to ﬁnish alone in

third.
The only knock on
Koepka is that he doesn’t
win enough elsewhere
— the Phoenix Open on
the PGA Tour, the Turkish Airlines Open on the
European Tour, and two
victories at the Dunlop
Phoenix on the Japan
Golf Tour.
“He’s won three majors
now, so he’s deﬁnitely
winning the right ones,”
Scott said. “If I was him, I
wouldn’t change much at
the moment. I’d just keep
doing what he’s doing
because he’s showing
up at the right moments
in the biggest events.
There’s something inside
his brain that makes him
believe that that’s what
he’s destined to do.”
The St. Louis fans waited 17 years to see Woods
— he last was at Bellerive
when the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks canceled a
World Golf Championship
— and he delivered a performance that took golf
back in time.
Thomas Bjorn might
have seen it coming. Earlier in the week, as he was
cleaning out his locker
after withdrawing with
an injury, he thought back
to Woods getting into
contention at Carnoustie
last month at the British
Open. “He recognized
who that guy was that
day,” Bjorn said.
Woods was relentless,
pumping ﬁsts, raising
See KOEPKA | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Young receivers
impress in first
game with Steelers
LATROBE, Pa. (AP)
— Damoun Patterson
knows a strong performance in his ﬁrst preseason game won’t be
enough to guarantee his
future with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The rookie wide
receiver feels he must
continually prove himself to the coaching
staff and his teammates
— and he’s not the only
young receiver who
faces that challenge
during training camp.
“I came in as a tryout
guy, so I never knew
what to expect,” Patterson said. “I think
it’s all about attacking
the game and staying
hungry.”
James Washington,
the Steelers’ secondround pick, has also
been forced to prove
his worth. Washington,
who won the Biletnikoff Award as college
football’s top receiver
in 2017, is currently
listed last on the Steelers’ depth chart and
has regularly worked
with the second-team
offense.
“I’ll never ask people
to be patient,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin
said. “I’ll ask them to
work while they wait
and he’s doing that. The
opportunity is going to
come, I’d imagine.”
Patterson wasn’t sure
if he would receive an
NFL opportunity in
the spring, but the former Youngstown State
standout overcame long
odds to land in camp
with the Steelers.
Patterson was invited
to attend the Steelers’
three-day rookie minicamp on a tryout basis

in May. There, Patterson impressed coaches
enough to become one
of just two of the 55
invited players to leave
with a contract.
“(Tomlin) always says
he doesn’t care how
you got here, just come
and be willing to make
plays,” quarterback
Josh Dobbs said. “If you
do that, we have a spot
for you. He’s done that,
and hopefully he can
continue to do that.”
Dobbs and Patterson connected for a
29-yard touchdown in
Thursday’s preseason
win over the Philadelphia Eagles. Patterson
celebrated the score
with a ﬂawless standing
backﬂip.
“I’ve been doing (a
backﬂip) since I was
younger,” Patterson
said. “That’s my specialty.”
Patterson said most
of his teammates
weren’t aware that he
could land a standing
backﬂip. Acrobatic feats
aside, he led all receivers with six catches
for 77 yards and a
touchdown against the
Eagles.
Dobbs isn’t surprised
by Patterson’s success.
He said the two connected on the same
touchdown play while
running the two-minute
offense during spring
workouts.
“He’s been doing that
all camp, so I have a lot
of trust in him,” Dobbs
said. “He consistently
runs by guys, he’s quick
in and out of his breaks,
he makes contested
catches, and that’s what
we were able to take to
the ﬁeld.”

Daily Sentinel

Harvick wins at Michigan
BROOKLYN, Mich.
(AP) — Kevin Harvick
capped off his father-son
weekend by dominating a race and putting
6-year-old son Keelan
in the passenger seat
to hold the ﬂapping,
checkered ﬂag out of the
window.
“That was deﬁnitely
way up there on the
bucket list,” Harvick
said.
Harvick broke a tie
atop NASCAR’s Big 3
by easily winning at
Michigan International
Speedway for his Cuphigh seventh victory of
the season.
His No. 4 Ford ﬁnished 3-plus seconds
ahead of Brad Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford on
Sunday in the Consumers Energy 400.
Points leader Kyle
Busch ﬁnished third in
his No. 18 Toyota —
more than 4 seconds
behind Harvick.
“I was front of him
for about 5 laps,” Busch
joked.
Busch has won six
races this year and Martin Truex Jr. has ﬁnished
in ﬁrst four times. The

rest of the ﬁeld has combined to win just six of
23 races.
Truex Jr., the third
driver in NASCAR’s
Big 3 with Harvick and
Busch, was 14th in the
40-car ﬁeld in his No. 78
Toyota.
Keselowski said he
couldn’t be more aggressive late in the 200-lap
race because Harvick
was simply so far ahead.
Austin Dillon, in the
No. 3 Chevrolet, was
fourth followed by Ryan
Blaney’s No. 12 Ford.
Denny Hamlin led the
ﬁeld to the green ﬂag
for the second straight
week, but his No. 11
Toyota could not stay
ahead. He ended up
eighth at MIS after ﬁnishing 13th in last week’s
race at Watkins Glen.
Who’s hot
Harvick won each of
three stages and led 108
laps, more than four
times more than anyone
else on the 2-mile oval.
His seven victories have
helped Ford earn 10 Cup
victories, matching its
total from last year and
pulling within one of

Close Kez
Keselowski, who is
from suburban Detroit,
is still desperately
seeking his ﬁrst win in
Michigan. The Penske
Racing driver ﬁnished
second in a Cup race for
the second time at MIS,
where he also has a trio
of third-place ﬁnishes in
Rough day
Truex was running with 19 career starts.
“The last three weeks
the leaders during the
we’ve had some big
second stage before running out of gas and going struggles,” Keselowski
into the pits, which were said. “It’s nice to be able
closed. He also was penal- to have a mostly clean
ized for an uncontrollable race and get the ﬁnish
we deserve.
tire and pushed to the
“We want to break
back of the 40-car ﬁeld.
through and win (here).
Soon after a restart
We’re not where we need
early in the race, rookie
to be.”
William Byron’s No. 24
Chevrolet got loose and
made side-by-side contact Up next
with Truex to bring out
The series heads to
another caution ﬂag.
Bristol, Tennessee, for
“Anything that could
the Bass Pro Shops NRA
have went wrong did,”
Night Race.
Truex said. “We got
“We’re three weeks
wrecked by a rookie mis- away from the playoffs,”
take underneath us, and
Harvick said. “You don’t
then ran out of gas. We
want to shut it off.”

Browns

the Browns — and what
he means to Mayﬁeld.
“Tyrod sets the bar for
consistency,” Zampese
said. “There’s no doubt
about it. There’s no man
I can think of more consistent than him — when
he gets here, how he is
when he’s here, taking
care of his body, study
habits, leading the team
on the ﬁeld. The bar is
set very high. It’s fantastic.”
During his interview session, Zampese
bristled at the idea that
Taylor was just holding
the spot until Mayﬁeld is
ready.
“I’m not going to
talk about keeping the
seat warm,” Zampese
snapped. “I think he’s
going to be very successful for us this year, which
is the only year that matters. And I like where
he’s at, I like where

he’s going, I love his
leadership, the way he’s
aggressively going about
being the leader of this
team, completing balls
and moving us down the
ﬁeld.”
Zampese said it took
him “about a minute” to
like Taylor when they
met. He said the quarterback’s preparedness and
attention to detail have
been extraordinary. As
far as Zampese is concerned, the seven-year
veteran is just scratching
the surface of his potential.
“It’s the tip of the
iceberg for Tyrod,”
Zampese said. “He’s an
untapped player in the
league. He’s done some
really nice things so far
in the league and I think
it’s only going to get better.”
NOTES: Jackson said
he punished rookie WR

Antonio Callaway by
making him play as much
as possible Thursday.
Callaway was cited last
week for marijuana possession and driving with
a suspended license.
He played 54 snaps.
“Either you sit him or
make him play,” Jackson
said. “I thought it was
better to make him play,
make him play as long
as he could. There were
a couple times he kept
waving to come out. We
said, ‘No, stay in there.’”
Callaway is dealing with
a rib issue and didn’t ﬁnish Sunday’s practice. …
Jackson said he and his
assistants are aligned on
when to rest injury-prone
players. On the ﬁrst episode of “Hard Knocks,”
Jackson and offensive
coordinator Todd Haley
seemed to be at odds
over keeping players
out.

Woods cut the four-shot
deﬁcit to two.
Dialed in on the back
nine, he dropped an
From page 1B
approach into 4 feet on
No. 12, got within one
the putter in his left
hand, making birdies and shot with a 10-foot birdie
charging toward a ﬁnish on the par-3 13th and,
that caused pure pande- after a bad drive led to
bogey, he answered with
monium among one of
another approach that
the largest and noisiest
hit a foot from the hole.
crowds at a major.
That was as good as
Without hitting a fairit got.
way on the front nine,

Facing the most important drive of the day on
the par-5 17th, Woods
sent it sailing to the
right and it embedded in
a hazard along the banks
of a creek. He did well
to advance it, but had to
save par from a bunker.
Behind him, Koepka
holed his two birdie
putts.
Woods and Koepka
played nine holes of a
practice round Wednesday, and the 14-time
major champion knew
what he was up against.
“It’s tough to beat
when the guy hits it
340 down the middle,”
Woods said. “What he
did at Shinnecock, just
bombing it, and then
he’s doing the same
thing here. … And when
a guy’s doing that and
hitting it straight, and
as good a putter as he is,
it’s tough to beat.”
Koepka never imagined a year like this.
He missed four months
at the start of the year
when a partially torn
tendon in his left wrist,
causing him to sit out
the Masters. He outlasted good friend Dustin
Johnson at Shinnecock
Hills to become the ﬁrst
back-to-back U.S. Open
champion in 29 years.
And now this.
The only downer is
having to wait eight
months for the Masters.

From page 1B

let’s get on with him
being the guy and let’s
get on to playing and
winning and doing what
we’re supposed to do
and what we’re here for.”
Zampese, who previously worked as Cincinnati’s quarterbacks
coach and offensive
coordinator, gushed
when describing what
Taylor has brought to

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SMART ALTERNATIVES
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Toyota’s total.
Who’s not
Jimmie Johnson has
not ﬁnished better than
10th in his last nine races
and sits 14th in the standings. The seven-time Cup
champion was running in
the top 15 late in the race
when a loose wheel led to
an unscheduled pit stop
and a 28th-place ﬁnish a
week after he was 30th at
Watkins Glen.

could’ve won the second
stage. We just didn’t have
enough gas. The car was
fast. We just couldn’t
catch a break all day.”

Tuesday- August 21st 6-7pm at the
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Koepka

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740-992-9784

AUG. 26-27 Overnight at the Greenbrier Resort,
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Handling, Breakfast and dinner main dining room,
hotel tour, casino with $20 comp play, afternoon tea,
optional bunker tours.
OCT. 16-20 Nashville (Two Nights including one
at Opryland Hotel with Grand Ole Opry Performance)
and Memphis (two nights visit Elvis home and
complex and time on Beale St.)
NOV. 29
La Comedia Dinner Theatre - Matinée
Luncheon with production of ‘White Christmas’ and
shopping at the outlets following. $95 per person
Call Mary Fowler at TRAVELTIME TOURS
for prices and details

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P.O. BOX 441
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. 25550

OH-70068295

OH-70070506

TRAVELTIME TOURS TOUR SCHEDULE

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 14, 2018 3B

Woods electrifies in 2nd-place finish at PGA
ST. LOUIS (AP) —
The ball rested on the
edge of the cup, its logo
peeking into the hole for
what felt like forever.
Back in the day, that
ball dropped for Tiger
Woods.
On Sunday, it wouldn’t
budge.
Yes, Woods ﬁnished
second by two strokes
to Brooks Koepka at the
PGA Championship to
extend his drought without a major for at least
eight more months. But
after the scrambling, clubslamming, ﬁst-pumping,
electrifying show he
put on over a round of
6-under 64 — his best
closing round at a major
— who can argue that
golf isn’t more fun when
Tiger’s in the mix?
“There’s nothing like
it,” said Gary Woodland,
who was in the twosome with the world’s
best-known player. “The
energy in that place was
unbelievable.”
Even after the excruci-

ating miss on No. 11 —
one that looked a lot like
his teetering, toppling
chip on No. 16 at the
Masters in 2005, except
that one went in —
Woods would not quit.
Shortly after 5 p.m.,
he had a 20-foot putt
on the 16th green that
would’ve tied him with
Koepka, who was two
holes behind but may as
well have been playing on
another course compared
to the frenzy in front of
him.
That putt slid just past.
And Woods’ last chance
to apply real pressure
vanished when he pushed
his tee shot on the par-5
17th right of the creek
running along the right
side of the hole. Woods
slammed the head of his
driver to the ground, then
swung it violently in frustration. He scrambled to
make par, but by the time
he reached the 18th fairway, he was three back of
Koepka, who birdied 15
and 16 behind him.

Brynn Anderson | AP

Tiger Woods walks to the eighth tee during the final round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at Bellerive Country Club, Sunday, Aug. 12, 2018, in St. Louis.

On No. 18, Woods
offered one ﬁnal ﬂourish.
He drained his longest
putt of the tournament, a
19-footer putt for birdie,
and pumped his ﬁst to
celebrate.
Back in the day, that
ﬁst pump on the 18th

Grandma frowns on DE’s potty mouth
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
— Browns defensive
end Carl Nassib needs
to work on more than
his pass rushing skills in
training camp.
His grandma wants
him to clean up his language.
Nassib became a
breakout star of the
ﬁrst episode this season of HBO’s “Hard
Knocks” series, which is
documenting Cleveland’s
training camp this summer. In last week’s premiere, Nassib, who has
earned a reputation for
being outspoken during
his three seasons with
the Browns, delivered a

profanity-laced speech on
ﬁnancial advice to his fellow defensive linemen.
During a few scenes
shot inside the team’s
meeting rooms, Nassib
stood in front of a white
board after writing down
a math equation he said
can help his teammates
save money. Nassib
emphasized his points by
sprinkling in profanity
not ﬁt for family viewing.
On Sunday, Nassib said
some of the feedback
from his appearance has
been alarming.
“I’m a little embarrassed about my swearing,” Nassib said sheepishly. “I didn’t know I

swear that much. My
grandmother was upset
with me.”
Nassib said he was
prompted to help his
teammates with their
ﬁnances because he
didn’t want to see others
take advantage of them.
“This offseason, I
did a lot of research
about ﬁnances and stuff
like that because I did
not study that in college,” said Nassib, who
was a biology major at
Penn State. “I felt like
I wanted to share that
with my teammates and
the younger guys and
help them out because it
helped me out a lot.”

“ I have
enjoyed
being able
to practice
modern
surgery
techniques
while living
in a rural
community.”

green would’ve been to
celebrate a win.
On this day, he was celebrating the grind — and
the fact that he simply
would not go away.
“I played hard,” he
said after ﬁnishing the
tournament at 14-under

266. “A bit of a struggle
with my game today, but
I hung in there.”
In many ways, this
felt like old times for the
42-year-old — he of the
multiple back surgeries
who couldn’t swing a
club 11 months ago, but

has now contended on
the back nine in consecutive majors, only to come
up short, more agonizingly so this time than at
Carnoustie three weeks
ago.
Did he worry that a
day like this might not
ever come again?
“Oh, God ,I didn’t even
know if I was going to
play golf again, so yeah,”
he said.
That Woods was still in
contention after his ﬁrst
nine holes Sunday was a
testament to the sort of
resilience he can show,
not only over the long
haul, but over the upsand-downs of a pressurepacked round.
He had a two-way miss
going with his long clubs
on the driving range,
then came out to the
course and missed all
seven fairways on the
front nine. And yet, he
scrambled. And needed
a grand total of 10 putts
over nine holes to make
the turn at 3-under 32.

US Ryder Cup team unchanged
after wild PGA Championship
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jim Furyk will
have to decide whether Tiger Woods
is worthy of making his Ryder Cup
team.
One of his vice captains sure
thinks so.
After making a Sunday charge
at the PGA Championship that
came up just short of a victory —
one that would have locked up his
spot — Woods said he wants to do
much more than just help Furyk
call the shots as an assistant when
the Americans head to France next
month to defend the cup.
Woods wants to be hitting some

shots, too.
“I do want to be on the team as a
player. I’m going to be there either
way,” said Woods, whose ﬁnal-round
64 on Sunday left him two shots
back of Brooks Koepka at raucous
Bellerive Country Club.
“Our captain has some decisions
to make after the ﬁrst (FedEx Cup)
playoff events, and we’ll sit down
and give him our input and what
we think and who should be on the
team, and who can contribute to
the team,” Woods said, “and hopefully my name will be part of that
process.”

Best
of
Luck
to all 2018 fair participants

David Blevins, MD, FACS
General Surgery

Dr. Blevins joined Holzer in 1998. He completed his Bachelors Degree
at Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio, and he completed medical
school at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. He completed
his surgical residency at Mount Carmel Health in Columbus, Ohio, and
is board certified by the American Board of Surgery.
Dr. Blevins specializes in hernia repairs, appendectomy and advanced
minimally invasive procedures. He is seeing patients at Holzer locations
in Athens, Gallipolis, and Jackson.

Dr. Blevins is active in his local church and enjoys hobby farming,
hunting, golfing, and fishing, and is a fan of the Cincinnati Reds,
Columbus Blue Jackets, and the Tottenham Hotspur FC.

Portable Toilet Rental &amp;
Septic Tank Cleaning
OH-70069219

OH-70070519

“I grew up in Gallipolis since my father was an administrator for Holzer
Clinic for over 30 years. As a youth, I received my medical care and
had surgery at Holzer. During high school and college, I worked at
Holzer throughout the summers,” Dr. Blevins stated.

��

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877-696-8741

�4B Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

2018
READER’S CHOICE
BEST OF THE BEST TRI-COUNTY
VOTES MUST BE SUBMITTED BY AUGUST 21TH.
ALL WINNERS ANNOUNCED ON SEPTEMBER 14TH.
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47. Best Ice Cream:
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in Gallia County:
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, August 14, 2018 5B

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

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HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

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By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
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Daily Sentinel

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Daily Sentinel

Can Browning repeat Mayfield’s path?

MLB

Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore

W
85
74
60
53
35

Cleveland
Minnesota
Detroit
Chicago
Kansas City

W
66
54
49
42
35

Houston
Oakland
Seattle
Los Angeles
Texas

W
73
70
69
59
52

Atlanta
Philadelphia
Washington
New York
Miami

W
65
65
60
49
48

Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
68
67
63
61
52

Arizona
Los Angeles
Colorado
San Francisco
San Diego

W
65
64
63
59
48

All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
35 .708
—
—
43 .632 9½
—
58 .508 24
10
64 .453 30½
16½
84 .294 49½ 35½
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
51 .564
—
—
63 .462 12
15½
69
.415 17½
21
75 .359 24 27½
82 .299 31 34½
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
46
.613
—
—
48 .593 2½
—
50 .580
4
1½
60 .496 14
11½
68 .433 21½
19
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
51 .560
—
—
52 .556
½
—
58 .508
6
5½
66 .426 15½
15
72 .400 19
18½
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
49
.581
—
—
54 .554
3
—
55 .534 5½
2½
58
.513
8
5
66
.441 16½
13½
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
54 .546
—
—
55 .538
1
2
55 .534 1½
2½
60 .496
6
7
72 .400 17½
18½

Tuesday, August 14, 2018 7B

L10
9-1
6-4
5-5
5-5
2-8

Str
W-4
W-2
L-1
W-1
L-5

Home
42-15
41-17
34-24
29-32
20-39

Away
43-20
33-26
26-34
24-32
15-45

L10
7-3
5-5
3-7
5-5
1-9

Str Home
W-2 37-23
L-1 33-24
W-1 31-28
L-2 22-38
L-3 16-42

Away
29-28
21-39
18-41
20-37
19-40

L10
5-5
8-2
6-4
5-5
5-5

Str
L-4
W-2
W-4
L-2
L-2

Home
32-28
33-23
36-24
33-30
25-36

Away
41-18
37-25
33-26
26-30
27-32

L10
6-4
6-4
5-5
5-5
2-8

Str Home
W-2 31-24
L-1 38-18
L-1 30-28
W-1 24-37
L-2 28-35

Away
34-27
27-34
30-30
25-29
20-37

L10
6-4
4-6
8-2
5-5
4-6

Str
W-1
L-1
W-5
L-1
L-1

Home
37-22
36-24
29-26
33-29
28-32

Away
31-27
31-30
34-29
28-29
24-34

L10
5-5
4-6
5-5
4-6
6-4

Str Home
W-1 32-29
L-3 31-28
W-3 31-27
W-1 34-26
W-1 22-37

Away
33-25
33-27
32-28
25-34
26-35

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Boston 4, Baltimore 1
N.Y. Yankees 7, Texas 2
Toronto 2, Tampa Bay 1
Detroit 4, Minnesota 2
Cleveland 9, Chicago White Sox 7
Seattle 4, Houston 3, 10 innings
St. Louis 8, Kansas City 2
Oakland 8, L.A. Angels 7
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Arizona at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Toronto at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Boston (Johnson 3-3) at Philadelphia
(Pivetta 7-9), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Vargas 2-8) at Baltimore
(Cashner 3-10), 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (TBD) at N.Y. Yankees (Happ
12-6), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Giolito 7-9) at Detroit
(Hardy 4-4), 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Kluber 14-6) at Cincinnati
(Romano 7-9), 7:10 p.m.
Arizona (Corbin 9-4) at Texas (Gallardo
7-1), 8:05 p.m.
Colorado (Marquez 9-9) at Houston (Verlander 11-7), 8:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Taillon 9-8) at Minnesota
(Odorizzi 4-7), 8:10 p.m.
Toronto (Borucki 2-2) at Kansas City
(Fillmyer 1-1), 8:15 p.m.
Seattle (Paxton 10-5) at Oakland (Fiers
7-6), 10:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Barria 7-7) at San Diego
(Kennedy 0-1), 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 3:35 p.m.
Boston at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Colorado at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Toronto at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
L.A. Angels at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Arizona 9, Cincinnati 2
N.Y. Mets 4, Miami 3
Atlanta 8, Milwaukee 7
St. Louis 8, Kansas City 2
Colorado 4, L.A. Dodgers 3
San Diego 9, Philadelphia 3
San Francisco 4, Pittsburgh 3
Chicago Cubs 4, Washington 3
Monday’s Games
Atlanta 9, Miami 1, 1st game
N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m., 2nd game
Arizona at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Washington at St. Louis, 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Milwaukee (Chacin 11-4) at Chicago Cubs
(Quintana 10-8), 2:20 p.m.
Boston (Johnson 3-3) at Philadelphia
(Pivetta 7-9), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Vargas 2-8) at Baltimore
(Cashner 3-10), 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Kluber 14-6) at Cincinnati
(Romano 7-9), 7:10 p.m.
Miami (Richards 3-7) at Atlanta (Sanchez
6-3), 7:35 p.m.
Arizona (Corbin 9-4) at Texas (Gallardo
7-1), 8:05 p.m.
Colorado (Marquez 9-9) at Houston (Verlander 11-7), 8:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Taillon 9-8) at Minnesota
(Odorizzi 4-7), 8:10 p.m.
Washington (Gonzalez 7-8) at St. Louis
(Gant 4-4), 8:15 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Barria 7-7) at San Diego
(Kennedy 0-1), 10:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Suarez 4-8) at L.A. Dodgers (Wood 7-6), 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Pittsburgh at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Boston at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m.
Colorado at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Washington at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
L.A. Angels at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS

MLS

Monday’s Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Extended
their Triple-A affiliation with Salt Lake
(PCL) for two years through the 2022
season.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES — Recalled RHP
Touki Toussaint from Gwinnett (IL).
American Association
GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS —
Traded OF Reggie Wilson to Rockland
(Can-Am) for a player to be named.
KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Traded
LHP Francisco Gracesqui to FargoMoorhead for a player to be named.
Atlantic League
LONG ISLAND DUCKS — Activated
RHP Matt Larkins. Placed LHP Hector
Silvestre on the inactive list.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
HOUSTON ROCKETS — Signed F
Carmelo Anthony to a one-year contract.
SACRAMENTO KINGS — Named Ty
Ellis coach of Stockton (NBAGL).
Women’s National Basketball
Association
MINNESOTA LYNX — G Lindsay
Whalen announced she will retire at the
end of the season.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS — Signed LB
Gerald Hodges to a one-year contract.
Waived-injured LB Jeremy Cash.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Placed G
Nick Easton on injured reserve. Signed G
Kaleb Johnson.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed
WR Dan Williams III. Placed WR Robert
Davis on injured reserve.

All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Atlanta United FC
14 4 6 48 50 28
New York
15 6 2 47 45 23
New York City FC
14 5 5 47 48 31
Columbus
11 7 6 39 31 29
Philadelphia
9 11 3 30 32 39
Montreal
9 13 3 30 31 41
New England
7 8 8 29 38 38
Orlando City
7 15 2 23 37 57
Toronto FC
6 12 5 23 39 44
Chicago
6 14 5 23 35 49
D.C. United
5 9 6 21 33 38
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
FC Dallas
12 5 6 42 37 30
Sporting Kansas City 11 6 6 39 42 30
Portland
10 4 7 37 34 27
LA Galaxy
10 8 6 36 46 40
Los Angeles FC
10 7 6 36 45 39
Real Salt Lake
10 9 5 35 34 41
Vancouver
9 9 6 33 38 47
Seattle
9 9 5 32 26 26
Minnesota United
9 13 2 29 38 48
Houston
7 10 6 27 39 34
Colorado
6 12 5 23 29 38
San Jose
3 13 7 16 33 43
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point
for tie.
Saturday, August 11
Columbus 1, Houston 0
Philadelphia 3, New England 2
New York 1, Chicago 0
Colorado 2, San Jose 1
Montreal 1, Real Salt Lake 1, tie
Minnesota United 2, LA Galaxy 2, tie
Sporting Kansas City 2, Los Angeles FC 0
Vancouver 2, Portland 1
Sunday, August 12
New York City FC 3, Toronto FC 2
D.C. United 3, Orlando City 2
Seattle 2, FC Dallas 1

By Joe Reedy
Associated Press

Washington’s Jake
Browning is hoping to
repeat what Baker Mayﬁeld did last year.
Mayﬁeld was a Heisman Trophy longshot
in the preseason, but
ended up winning the
award while leading
Oklahoma to the College Football Playoff for
the second time in three
years.
Browning was sixth
in the Heisman voting two years ago after
leading the Huskies
to the Pac-12 title and
the playoff, where
they lost to Alabama
in the semiﬁnals. His
productivity declined
last year though as his
touchdowns fell from 43
to 19.
Washington was 10-3
last season, but is the
preseason favorite to
win the Pac 12. Browning and the Huskies
will also have an early
opportunity to make a
favorable impression

to rest of the nation as
they face Auburn in the
opener in Atlanta on
Sept. 1.
Browning — who has
thrown for over 9,000
yards and 78 touchdowns the past three
seasons — is facing high
expectations, but none
might be bigger than
what coach Chris Peterson expects out of the
senior.
“Jake plays really good
football and has made
some spectacular plays
in his career,” Peterson
said. “We’re looking for
him to do that at the
most difﬁcult position in
football at a really high,
elite level play after play
after play.”
A look at other Heisman longshots looking
to improve their odds:

might be the top pick.
The 6-foot-3, 290-pound
defensive lineman faces
huge odds to win, but
with 38 1/2 tackles for
loss the last two seasons and the possibility
that coach Major Applewhite could use him on
some offensive plays,
he could at least get to
New York as one of the
ﬁnalists.

McKENZIE MILTON, QB,
Central Florida
Milton was eighth in
the voting last year after
he led the Knights to an
improbable 13-0 record
and a victory over Alabama in the Peach Bowl.
He was second in the
nation in passing efﬁciency (179.3) and yards
per attempt (10.22), ﬁnishing behind Mayﬁeld.
UCF though has a new
coach in Josh Heupel
ED OLIVER, DT, Houston
after Scott Frost left for
The junior might
Nebraska. Also hamperhave set the record
ing Milton’s bid is a lack
for being the earliest
of weekly exposure. The
to announce that he is
entering the NFL Draft. Knights ﬁrst national
appearance won’t be
But there is good reauntil Sept. 15 against
son for that as Oliver

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
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WSAZ News
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In the
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6 PM

6:30

North Carolina.
DREW LOCK, QB, Missouri
Lock set an Southeastern Conference
record last season with
44 touchdown passes.
Three SEC quarterbacks
have won the award
since 2007, but the
senior is going to need
to produce wins for a
Tigers squad that lost
ﬁve of its ﬁrst six last
season before ﬁnishing
7-6.
CAM AKERS, RB,
Florida State
New coach Willie
Taggart says that the
theme of his offense is
“lethal simplicity.” That
is also an apt description
of Akers. The sophomore had four 100-yard
games last season along
with setting Florida
State’s freshman rushing
record with 1,025 yards.
Akers will be counted on
early to be a focal point
of Taggart’s offense,
starting with the Sept. 3
opener against Virginia
Tech.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 14

7 PM

7:30

Wheel
Jeopardy!
"Hawaii"
Wheel
Jeopardy!
"Hawaii"
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(N)
News (N)
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
"Hawaii"
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
(5:30) Arthur Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inBusiness
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

America's Got Talent "Live Quarter Finals 1" Twelve
Making It "Party Time!" (N)
performers take the stage for America's vote. (N)
America's Got Talent "Live Quarter Finals 1" Twelve
Making It "Party Time!" (N)
performers take the stage for America's vote. (N)
Bachelor in Paradise Becca Kufrin talks to a bachelor from Castaways "Man Down"
her season. Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
(N)
No Passport Requ "D.C." Frontline "Our Man in Tehran" More surprising
Chef Marcus Samuelsson
encounters inside the closed society with Thomas Erdbrink.
dines, dances and dishes. (N) Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
Bachelor in Paradise Becca Kufrin talks to a bachelor from Castaways "Man Down"
her season. Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
(N)
NCIS "One Man's Trash"
Bull "Keep Your Friends
NCIS: New Orleans
Close"
"Welcome to the Jungle"
Love Connection
Beat Shazam "Episode
Eyewitness News at 10
Eleven" (N)
"Johnathan and Amber" (N) p.m. (N)
No Passport Requ "D.C." Frontline "Our Man in Tehran" More surprising
Chef Marcus Samuelsson
encounters inside the closed society with Thomas Erdbrink.
dines, dances and dishes. (N) Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
NCIS "One Man's Trash"
Bull "Keep Your Friends
NCIS: New Orleans
Close"
"Welcome to the Jungle"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Exiles"
24 (ROOT) Inside Pirates Baseball
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Carter (N)
Pirates Ball Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Minnesota Twins Site: Target Field (L)
SportsCenter Special "Fantasy Football Draft" Fantasy football experts draft their league. (L)
Softball Little League World Series Semifinal 1 (L)
SportsCenter Softball Little League World Series (L)
Grey's Anatomy "Crazy
Married at First Sight
Married:Love Married at
Married at First Sight "I
(:05) Seven Year Switch
Love"
"Troube in Paradise"
Unlocked (N) First Si. (N) Want an Equal Partner" (N) "Close Encounters" (N)
+++ The Notebook (2004, Romance) Rachel McAdams, Gena Rowlands, Ryan Gosling. A ++ Monster-in-Law (2005, Comedy) Jane Fonda, Michael
man tells the story of a woman who is torn between her fiancé and her first love. TV14
Vartan, Jennifer Lopez. TVPG
(:25) Mom "Crazy Eyes and a Friends
(:35) Friends (:10) Friends (:50) Friends (:25) Friends "The One in
+++ Unstoppable (‘11, Act)
Wet Brad Pitt"
Barbados" 2/2
Denzel Washington. TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends
Friends
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Miz (N)
Chrisley (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Wrecked
Drop the Mic
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Movie
++ Ant-Man (‘15, Act) Michael Douglas, Evangeline Lilly, Paul Rudd. TV14 Animal "Homecoming" (N) Animal "Homecoming"
(3:00) ++++ Casino (‘95, Cri) +++ Goodfellas (1990, Crime Story) Joe Pesci, Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta. A tough New
(:05) ++++ The Shawshank
Robert De Niro. TVMA
York mobster becomes a target of the government and the mafia. TVM
Redemption TV14
Deadliest Catch
Catch "Turf Wars" (N)
Catch "Trial by Captain" (N) Deadliest Catch (N)
(:05) HardKill "Bush Pilot"
The First 48 "Knock Knock" The First 48 "Moonie/ Dark The First 48 "The Other
The First 48 "Dangerous
The First 48 "Old Wounds"
Impulse"
Wife"
Company"
Woods Law "Uncuffed 2" Extinct or Alive
Extinct or Alive "The Zanzibar Leopard"
Weird and Freaky "Inked"
Chicago P.D. "300,000
Chicago P.D. "A Shot Heard Chicago P.D. "Don't Bury
Chicago P.D. "Don't Read Chicago P.D. "You Wish"
Likes"
Round the World"
This Case"
the News"
Law &amp; Order "Collision"
Law&amp;Order "Mother's Milk" Law &amp; Order "Panic" 1/2
Law &amp; Order "Entitled" 2/2 Law&amp;Order "Fools for Love"
Botched
E! News (N)
++ The Wedding Planner (‘01, Rom) Jennifer Lopez. TVPG
27 Dresses
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Younger (N) (:35) Teachers
The Next Mega Tsunami
The Two Million Year Old Stonehenge Decoded
Easter Island Grim clues are Architects of the Ancient
Boy
found on Easter Island. (N) World (N)
GloryRd. (N) Glory Road Mecum10
Mecum10
Octane (N) Caf./ Octane Glory Road Glory Road Mecum10
Mecum10
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) 100,000 Cameras
UFC Main Event (N)
Knockout (N) UFC Unleashed (N)
Forged in Fire "The Zande Forged in Fire "Jumonji
Forged in Fire: Cutting
(:35)
Forged Fire "The Sawback (:05)
Spear"
Yari"
Deeper "The Kilij"
Hunting Sword" (N)
Counting (N) Counting (N)
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
Million Dollar List (N)
(4:30) Tyler Perry's Temptation: Confess... ++ Madea's Family Reunion (‘06, Com) Maya Angelou, Tyler Perry. TVPG HitFloor "Hot Streak" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Flippers (N) Desert Flip H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00) Megalodon (‘18, Hor) Toxic Shark (2017, Sci-Fi) Quinn Bozza, Bryce Durfee,
Santa Jaws (2018, Sci-Fi) Courtney Lauren Cummings,
Michael Madsen. TV14
Kabby Borders. TV14
Haviland Stillwell, Reid Miller. TVPG

6 PM
(4:05) War

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Real Time With Bill Maher Vice News
Tonight (N)

Justice League (2017, Action) Ben Affleck, Jason Momoa, Hard Knocks '18
for the
Gal Gadot. Batman and Wonder Woman recruit a team of
Planet of ...
superheroes to defend the Earth from invasion. TV14
(4:25) ++ Bad (:25) ++ The Pink Panther An ambitious
++ Addicted to Love Jilted lovers work
(:45) Swimming With Sharks An assistant
Company
chief assigns the worst inspector around to together to seek revenge on their exsnaps and seeks revenge against his boss, a
TV14
solve a missing diamond case. TVPG
partners, but fall for each other. TVMA
Hollywood movie producer. TVMA
All I See Is You (2016, Drama) Jason Clarke, Yvonne
+++ The Punisher (2004, Action) John Travolta, Rebecca
(:05) Who Is (:35) The
Strahovski, Blake Lively. A marriage is threatened when a Romijn, Thomas Jane. A special agent becomes a vigilante America?
Affair
wife regains her sight and starts seeing the truth. TVMA
after a ruthless assassin murders his family. TVMA

Classifieds
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held on
behalf of the Ohio Housing Finance Agency on Thursday,
August 30, 2018 at 10:00 a.m., at 57 East Main Street, Room
401, Columbus, Ohio 43215. This hearing is for the purpose
of considering the approval of the issuance in one or more
series of municipal bonds (the "Bonds") in an aggregate
principal amount of approximately $3,600,000, by the Ohio
Housing Finance Agency, pursuant to Article VIII, Section
16 of the Ohio Constitution and Chapter 175 of the Ohio
Revised Code. If the Bonds are approved, the proceeds
will be loaned to Pomeroy Colonial Park Limited Partnership,
an Ohio limited partnership or its successors or assigns
(the "Borrower") for the purposes of acquiring, rehabilitating
and equipping a 48-unit multifamily residential rental facility
for individuals and families of low and moderate income
located at 300 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (the
"Project"):
The initial owner, operator or manager of the Project is
expected to be the Borrower. THE BONDS SHALL NOT
REPRESENT OR CONSTITUTE A DEBT OR PLEDGE OF
FAITH AND CREDIT OR ANY TAXING POWER OF THE
OHIO HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY, THE STATE OF OHIO
OR ANY POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OF THE STATE OF
OHIO.
Interested persons are invited to attend this public hearing and
will be given an opportunity to express their views concerning
the proposed issuance of the Bonds and the financing of the
Project. Anyone desiring to make written comments can give
them to the Ohio Housing Finance Agency, 57 East Main
Street, Columbus, Ohio, 43215, Attn: Timothy Glasser,
Hearing Officer. This notice is given pursuant to Section
147(f) of the Internal Revenue Code and Section 175.07,
Ohio Revised Code.
OHIO HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
8/14/18

�NEWS/WEATHER

8B Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Halep wins in Montreal
MONTREAL (AP) —
Top-ranked Simona Halep
outlasted third-ranked
Sloane Stephens 7-6 (6),
3-6, 6-4 on Sunday to win
her second Rogers Cup
title.
The 26-year-old Romanian star also won the
hard-court event that
rotates between Toronto
and Montreal in 2016 in
Montreal.
In a rematch of Halep’s
French Open ﬁnal victory,
she overcame Stephens
in the match that had 15
service breaks. Halep has
won her last six meetings with the 25-year-old
American. Stephens,
preparing for her U.S.
Open title defense, is 0-8
against No. 1-ranked players.
“I couldn’t believe that
it’s over,” Halep said. “I
was really tired. I feel like
these tournaments, at this
level, you have to have
one day off between the
matches. It’s really tough.
It’s brutal. This week it
was really tough.”
Halep won her third
title of the year and 18th
overall.

Paul Chiasson | The Canadian Press via AP

Simona Halep, of Romania, hugs the trophy after defeating Sloane
Stephens, of the United States, in the final of the Rogers Cup
women’s tennis tournament Sunday in Montreal.

points. However, there
were just as many pulling for Stephens in a
match of two players who
don’t overpower with
their serve but hammer
groundstrokes down the
lines.
“I thought I played
well, I thought she played
well,” Stephens said.
“Obviously, in a ﬁnal, you
hope for matches like that
— super competitive,
high energy. There’s nothing more than you could
hope for in a ﬁnal. It’s
obviously upsetting that
I didn’t win, but I think

“Both matches were
crazy good,” Halep said
about the French and
Rogers ﬁnals. “She makes
me play better and better
every time we meet each
other. That’s a great thing
for me. I feel like she
improved in her mental
(side) also. She doesn’t
give up that much now.
Of course, she’s a strong
player. I think she’s a
complex player. She has
everything.”
A large Romanian contingent waving their red
and yellow ﬂags chanted
Halep’s name between

Bonds has his No. 25
retired by Giants
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) — Likely for the
last time and almost
11 years after playing
his ﬁnal game, Barry
Bonds ran out to his
old spot in his No. 25
Giants jersey.
“I wanted to be in left
ﬁeld one more time,”
Bonds said Saturday
night. “And I thought it
was appropriate. That’s
what I wanted to do.”
“I was going to put
the whole uniform on,
but just didn’t have
time because it ran a little bit longer. I wanted
to throw on everything
and stand in left ﬁeld
one more time. That’s
where everyone saw
me and that’s where I
thought they should see
me last,” he said.
Bonds had his number retired by the
Giants during a long
ceremony before San
Francisco played his
other team, the Pittsburgh Pirates — also
11 years to the month
from when he broke
Hank Aaron’s home
run record in his 22nd
and ﬁnal major league
season.
Still beloved and
cheered in the Bay Area
he cherishes as home,
Bonds ﬁnished his
career under the cloud
of steroids allegations
that made him a villain
most everywhere else.
“I am overwhelmed
with emotions as the
reality of this day sets
in,” Bonds said. “This
may come as a surprise
to a lot of people but
as a child I didn’t even
want to play baseball.
I wanted to play all
sports — basketball,
football, ride my bike,
all the things that kids
do. But once my mom
signed me up … I got

I got better than the last
ﬁnal we played. Yeah, it’s
disappointing, but I think
this will help me moving
forward, getting ready to
go into (Cincinnati) and
the U.S. Open.”
A back-and-forth opening set saw Halep jump
to a 4-1 lead before
Stephens found the
range with her forehand
and broke service three
times to take a 6-5 lead.
The American then
wasted two set points
as Halep forced a tiebreaker.
Stephens went up
on two Halep double
faults, but the Romanian
stormed back to take the
set. It was the ﬁrst set
Stephens lost all week.
Stephens added three
more breaks to take the
second set, but lost her
serve to open the third.
She broke back for
2-2, but then suffered a
letdown as Halep broke
service twice more to
take the lead. Stephens
fought off three match
points for one last service break before Halep
closed it out.

Nadal drops out of Cincinnati, scuttling reunion
MASON, Ohio (AP) —
Rafael Nadal dropped out
of the Western &amp; Southern Open on Sunday
night, scuttling a reunion
of the “Big Four.”
Nadal withdrew a few
hours after he won his
ﬁfth title of the year in
Toronto, beating Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-2, 7-6 (4).
Instead of playing more
grueling matches in Cincinnati, he’ll take a week
to get some rest and get

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

62°

78°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

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.

83°
62°
86°
65°
99° in 1999
48° in 1930

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.15
1.64
33.94
28.15

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:41 a.m.
8:25 p.m.
10:18 a.m.
10:47 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Aug 18 Aug 26

Last

Sep 2

New

Sep 9

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

Major
Today 2:54a
Wed. 3:51a
Thu. 4:45a
Fri.
5:36a
Sat.
6:24a
Sun. 7:10a
Mon. 7:55a

Minor
9:07a
10:03a
10:57a
11:48a
12:12a
12:58a
1:43a

Major
3:19p
4:16p
5:09p
6:00p
6:48p
7:34p
8:19p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Minor
9:32p
10:28p
11:21p
---12:36p
1:22p
2:07p

WEATHER HISTORY
Rain on Aug. 14, 1979, left 1,800 Las
Vegas residents without electricity
and made getting around the ﬂooded
city streets dicey. It is a gamble to
expect much rain in Las Vegas, Nev.,
during August.

Humid with times of
sun and clouds

Clouds and sun,
humid; a p.m. t-storm

Cloudy and humid
with a thunderstorm

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

Level
12.78
16.04
21.53
12.76
12.81
25.35
13.31
25.81
34.42
12.89
15.90
34.20
15.80

Portsmouth
86/66

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.48
-0.14
-0.40
-0.63
+0.18
-0.15
+0.04
-0.07
-0.11
-0.14
-1.30
-0.60
-1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Ashland
86/65
Grayson
85/66

SUNDAY

84°
64°

86°
69°

Mostly cloudy with a Mostly cloudy, chance
shower or t-storm
for rain; humid

Clouds and intervals
of sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES
Murray City
84/64
Belpre
84/64

Today

St. Marys
84/64

Parkersburg
83/63

Coolville
84/63

Wilkesville
84/64
POMEROY
Jackson
85/64
85/64
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
85/64
86/65
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
85/68
GALLIPOLIS
86/66
85/64
85/64

Elizabeth
85/64

Spencer
83/63

Buffalo
85/65

Ironton
86/65

MONDAY

84°
65°

Marietta
84/64

Athens
83/64

McArthur
84/64

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

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

Chillicothe
85/66

South Shore Greenup
86/65
85/65

62

Logan
84/63

Adelphi
85/63

Lucasville
86/66

Very High

SATURDAY

85°
67°

Very High

Primary: ragweed, grass/other
Mold: 2967

FRIDAY

89°
72°

Waverly
85/66

Pollen: 18

Low

MOON PHASES
First

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

THURSDAY

87°
68°

0

Primary: basidiospores, unk.

Wed.
6:42 a.m.
8:23 p.m.
11:25 a.m.
11:19 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

Mostly sunny and humid today. Mainly clear and
humid tonight. High 86° / Low 66°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

80°

be his fourth tournament
in his comeback. He
reached the quarterﬁnals
at Washington two weeks
ago, his best result.
Murray will play Lucas
Pouille in the opening
round on Monday afternoon. Bulgaria’s Grigor
Dimitrov is the defending champion. He didn’t
drop a set and lost his
serve only once while
getting his ﬁrst Masters
title.

year. With Nadal’s withdrawal, Federer becomes
the top player in the
men’s bracket in Cincinnati.
Of the three left, Murray has the most to gain
in Cincinnati.
Murray missed 11
months following hip
surgery and tried to
return for Wimbledon,
but withdrew when he
wasn’t satisﬁed with his
workouts. Cincinnati will

ready for the U.S. Open.
“No other reason than
personally taking care of
my body and trying to
keep as healthy as I feel
now,” Nadal said in a
statement.
And so the “Big Four”
reunion will have to wait
for at least a few more
weeks. Nadal, Roger
Federer, Novak Djokovic
and Andy Murray haven’t
played in the same tournament in more than a

my ﬁrst taste of what
would be my lifelong
passion.”
Now called AT&amp;T
Park, Bonds knows
what he meant to this
place.
“I think the park
thing is more to me
than the number thing,
because I built this
park. That’s all,” Bonds
said. “When I walk in
this ballpark, I know
whose house it is.”
Surrounded by former teammates and
managers, Hall of
Famers and his family,
Bonds had no words as
he mentally prepared
for his number retirement ceremony.
“Shhhh,” the slugger
said smiling, then a few
minutes later repeated
three times, “I have to
focus.”
Bonds became the
10th Giants player
in franchise history
to have his number
retired. He ﬁnished
with 762 career home
runs.
“I knew it was coming at one point. No
one’s wearing it,” he
said. “… What they did
is fantastic and how
they did it was ﬁrst
class.”
In July 2015, Bonds
said he had a huge
“weight lifted” when
federal prosecutors
dropped what was
left of their criminal
case against him after
a nearly decade-long
steroids prosecution.
Bonds needs to be
on 75 percent of Hall
of Fame ballots to be
enshrined in Cooperstown. He was on 56.4
percent of Hall ballots
this year, up from 53.8
percent last year. He
had just 36.2 percent in
his initial appearance.

Milton
86/64
Huntington
86/65

St. Albans
85/64

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
91/63
90s
Winnipeg
80s
67/47
70s
Billings
79/58
60s
Minneapolis
84/62
50s
40s
30s
20s
Kansas City
Denver
10s
79/68
San Francisco
83/59
0s
67/57
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
85/67
Rain
Showers
Snow
El Paso
96/74
Flurries
Houston
Ice
94/76
Cold Front
Chihuahua
85/65
Warm Front
Monterrey
97/70
Stationary Front

Clendenin
84/64
Charleston
84/64

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

Montreal
81/69
Toronto
86/66
New York
83/70
Detroit
Chicago 89/68
90/72
Washington
87/72

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
92/66/pc 92/66/pc
Anchorage
60/52/sh 60/51/sh
Atlanta
91/72/pc 91/73/pc
Atlantic City
85/72/pc 88/74/pc
Baltimore
84/68/pc 90/70/pc
Billings
79/58/s 90/60/s
Boise
96/66/pc 96/68/s
Boston
81/69/t 86/71/pc
Charleston, WV 84/64/pc 87/68/pc
Charlotte
91/67/s 92/69/pc
Cheyenne
77/54/s 85/54/pc
Chicago
90/72/s
81/71/t
Cincinnati
86/68/s 81/70/c
Cleveland
86/67/pc 87/69/pc
Columbus
84/66/pc 84/68/pc
Dallas
89/75/pc 94/76/s
Denver
83/59/s 90/59/pc
Des Moines
85/68/t
82/67/t
Detroit
89/68/s 87/70/pc
Honolulu
88/75/pc 90/77/pc
Houston
94/76/pc
92/76/t
Indianapolis
87/69/s
82/69/t
Kansas City
79/68/r
84/67/t
Las Vegas
104/81/s 103/83/s
Little Rock
86/73/pc
88/72/t
Los Angeles
85/67/pc 88/66/pc
Louisville
90/73/s 87/74/c
Miami
90/77/t
91/79/t
Minneapolis
84/62/t 80/64/pc
Nashville
91/71/pc 94/75/pc
New Orleans
93/78/pc 91/76/pc
New York City
83/70/t 90/74/pc
Oklahoma City
83/68/r
87/69/t
Orlando
90/73/t
91/72/t
Philadelphia
84/70/t 91/74/pc
Phoenix
105/83/pc 100/80/pc
Pittsburgh
78/64/sh 84/67/pc
Portland, ME
76/67/sh 85/67/pc
Raleigh
89/66/s 92/69/pc
Richmond
88/67/pc 91/69/pc
St. Louis
83/71/t
81/70/t
Salt Lake City
93/70/s 91/69/s
San Francisco
67/57/pc 67/55/pc
Seattle
91/63/s 91/58/s
Washington, DC
87/72/t 92/74/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
91/72

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

106° in Needles, CA
32° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
High
119° in Omidiyeh, Iran
Low -1° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
90/77

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

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OH-70030880

OH-70003248

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