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                  <text>No news is
okay, for a
little while

Pomeroy
Sternwheel
Regatta

Week
4 HS
Football

OPINION s 4A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 37, Volume 52

From dope
dealer to
hope dealer
A drug addict’s story
By Michelle Miller
Special to OVP

Editor’s Note: Amanda Chaﬁn’s story will
be told in two parts.
Look for the conclusion
in an upcoming edition
of the Sunday TimesSentinel.
GALLIA COUNTY
— Amanda Chaﬁn was
a drug dealer and she
was good at it. From
her time as a well-

known drug dealer
to the addiction that
nearly cost Chaﬁn her
freedom and her life,
the Gallia County, Ohio,
woman spoke candidly
about her history with
drugs, her determination to beat her addiction and her hope she
can help others do the
same in the future.
Chaﬁn had grown

Sunday, September 16, 2018 s $2

Mentoring the next generation
By Sarah Hawley

through the program
which will soon be known
as Southeast Ohio Youth
Mentoring (SEOYM).
MEIGS COUNTY
Salzman explained that
— For the past 30-plus
the name change, which
years, Big Brothers Big
Sisters has served Athens has been submitted to the
Ohio Secretary of State’s
County, expanding outward into the region over Ofﬁce, comes at a time
when the local agency,
that time. Now, a name
as well as others across
change is reﬂecting the
the state and county,
broader region served
are disassociating from
as the agency works to
the national agency as
serve those in Meigs,
new requirements were
Washington, and Vinton
being put in place. He
counties, in addition to
explained that by JanuAthens.
Executive Director Jim ary 2019, the local ofﬁce
would have been required
Salzman explained that
to bring in $200,000
the agency is working
per year and have three
with the Meigs County
full-time equivalent
Department of Job and
Family Services to serve employees, something
children in Meigs County not feasible for the local

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

program. The change will
also allow for all money
raised by and contributed
to the agency to remain
local.
The name change
could have other positive
impacts as the agency
works to serve more than
just Athens County.
“It is hard to recruit
and fundraise with Athens in the title,” said
Salzman, adding that he
hopes the new SEOYM
title will help the program
to grow in the surrounding areas.
The focus of the program will remain the
same with the name
change — “Making a
difference in the lives of
children and families in

SE Ohio.” This includes
helping children reduce
risk-taking behaviors;
supporting them in
improving educational
outcomes; ﬁnding and
supporting meaningful
relationships; and providing role models to at-risk
youths.
Since its beginning, the
program has worked to
match at-risk youth ages
5-17 with dedicated adult
mentors.
While people may be
familiar with the traditional program which
matches a “Big” with a
“Little” there is also the
site based program in the
schools.
See MENTORING | 7A

See DEALER | 5A

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Jan Davis and Jim Pullins

Delivering
the mail for a
million miles
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — Three decades of service and a
million safe mills.
The recent retirements of Jim Pullins and Jan
Davis from the Pomeroy Post Ofﬁce marked the
end of an era as the two have spent many years
delivering the mail.
Pullins and Davis were recently honored with
a retirement party which included a surprise for
both of the retirees.
Dot Norman, postmaster, presented both Davis
and Pullins with jackets and pins recognizing both
for “One Million Safe Miles” as part of their service.
Davis is a third generation mail carrier and the
See MAIL | 7A

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Classifieds: 6B
Comics: 7B

Courtesy photos

Gallia County and Gallipolis City Commissioners presented proclamations to the Gallia County Emancipation Celebration Board
proclaiming the weekend of Saturday, Sept. 22, and Sunday, Sept. 23, as the 2018 155th Emancipation Celebration Weekend in
Gallia County and Gallipolis. The Celebration will be held at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. From left to right are Gallia County
Commissioner Harold Montgomery, Emancipation Vice-Pres. Glenn Miller, Emancipation President Andy Gilmore, Gallipolis City
Commissioner Tony Gallagher. Second Row from left to right are Gallia County Commission President David Smith, Gallia County
Commission Vice-Pres. Brent Saunders, Gallia County Administrator &amp; Emancipation Treasurer Karen Sprague, Emancipation Board
member John Grubb.

Attractions coming to Emancipation Celebration
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The
Emancipation Celebration Weekend returns
this year to the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds Sept. 22-23
with West Virginia State
University President Dr.
Anthony Jenkins serving
as its keynote speaker.
Among attractions
and entertainment to

be featured at the celebration includes the
Shark Cart exhibit. The
exhibit was formed in
2015 and brings live
sharks to visitors as the
Wave Foundation at
the Newport Aquarium
travels and displays its
animal ambassadors.
This program demystiﬁes common misconceptions about sharks and

gets visitors up-close
and personal with these
creatures. In addition to
the live sharks, several
animal artifacts are used
in this presentation like
shark jaws, a can of shark
ﬁn soup, shark eggs and
more. Participants have
the opportunity to touch
animal ambassadors.
Some animals included
may be considered

endangered and require
supervision or additional
equipment while interacting with visitors.
Lawrence Greene
will bring drums
and percussion to
the Emancipation
Celebration for an
educational drum and
dance circle. Using
See CELEBRATION | 7A

Art in the Village to be held Oct. 13 in Middleport
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.

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MIDDLEPORT — The 9th annual
Art in the Village art show hosted by
the Riverbend Arts Council is scheduled for Oct. 13.
Art in the Village is a professionally judged art and photography
contest and exhibition which takes
place each fall at the Riverbend Arts
Council located on Second Avenue in
Middleport.
This year’s theme is “Appalachian
Heritage.” The event will take place
File photo from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Oct. 13.
Becky DeLong received Best of Show
There will be judged divisions for
during the 2017 Art in the Village students, adults and professionals.
hosted by the Riverbend Arts Council.
Art categories include drawing, oil,

acrylic, water colors, mixed media.
Photography include color and
black and white in the size of either
snapshots and enlargements. There
are categories for people, places and
things.
In addition, there will be a “Think
Outside the Box” competition for
group art projects.
For Think Outside the Box, the
groups will receive a “box of randomness” to form into a sculpture.
“Your masterpiece can be humorous, elegant, jaw dropping, sky
high, itsy bitsy, extremely detailed,
straight forward, etc. The only stipulations are that you use all materials,
See ART | 2A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
(KING) MORGAN
LETART, W.Va. — Stella Christine (King) Morgan,
66, of Letart, W.Va., died Sept. 14, 2018 in St. Mary’s
Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
The service will be 11 a.m., Saturday, Sept. 22,
2018 in the Fairview Bible Church, Letart, with Pastor Brian May and Donnie Dye ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in the Zerkle Cemetery, Letart. Visitation will
be 6-9 p.m., Friday, Sept. 21, 2018 in the Foglesong —
Casto Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.

OHIO BRIEFS

Killer denies 2 more deaths

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio man
sentenced to die for the kidnapping and killing of
two women has pleaded not guilty to charges of
slaying two additional women. Death row inmate
Shawn Grate was convicted in June of killing
two women in 2016 whose bodies were found
underneath piles of clothes in what was thought
to be a vacant Ashland home. The 42-year-old
Grate was squatting in the abandoned house at
the time of the killings. Grate is also suspected
of killing Candice Cunningham in June 2016 and
Rebekah Leicy, whose body was found in Ashland
County woods in 2015. The Mansﬁeld News
Journal reports that defense attorney Jeff Uhrich
on Thursday entered a not guilty plea to multiple
charges including aggravated murder and kidnapping on behalf of Grate.

Death ruled homicide
ASHTABULA, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio county
coroner has ruled the death of a woman who went
missing for several weeks a homicide.
The Ashtabula Star Beacon reports the
Ashtabula County Coroner’s Ofﬁce on Thursday
said 23-year-old Rand Hilal al Dulaimi died from
neck compression and a blunt-force head injury.
Al Dulaimi’s body was found in a wooded area
in Saybrook Township on July 24, two weeks after
police say she went missing under suspicious
circumstances. The wooded area is near the last
place she’d been seen, her estranged husband’s
home. The husband, 28-year-old Jeffrey Stanley,
was arrested days after her disappearance on a
probation violation and subsequently indicted on
federal child pornography charges.

SYLVIA ‘TINK’ J. GOODNITE
GALLIPOLIS — Sylvia
“Tink” J. Goodnite, 75,
of Gallipolis, passed away
at 5:05 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 8, 2018 in the
Wexner Medical Center
at the Ohio State University in Columbus.
Born June 20, 1943, in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she was the daughter
of the late Delton and Sylvia Gail Willis Lane.
Sylvia worked many
years at Middleton
Estates and Gallipolis
Developmental Center,
where she was passionate
in her service to those
with intellectual disabilities and mental illness.
She was a retired cook for
American Electric Power
River Operations. Her
hobbies included cooking,
baking, sewing, collecting
and restoring antiques,
making lampshades, dec-

orating, gardening, working and
spending time
outdoors, homemaking, reading,
and sitting on the
porch with those
she loved sharing
fresh air and funny stories. Her greatest joy was
spending time with her
grandchildren, children,
siblings, nieces, nephews,
extended family, and
special friends. She loved
listening to her daughters
and family sing and play
music, always insisting on
bringing out the guitars
following a family meal.
She spent her life in service to others and since
her childhood years has
been by the side of every
friend and family member
in need of comfort, care,
support, guidance, or
assistance. She enjoyed

ALLEN
COTTAGEVILLE, W.Va. —
Susanna Faye (Landers) Allen, 79,
of Cottageville, W.Va., died Sept.
14, 2018, at her home following
an extended illness.
Service will be 11 a.m., Monday, Sept. 17, 2018, in the Casto

traveling, but was
always ready to
return home to the
rolling hills of Gallia County, as she
believed her hometown to be situated
in the most beautiful part of the country.
She was steadfast in her
faith and love for Jehovah
God.
She is survived by her
four loving daughters,
Kimberly Enz of Fairﬁeld,
Stephanie Adkins of Liberty, Jenny Walker of Gallipolis, and Abby (Trevor)
Ehman of Gallipolis;
grandchildren, Adam Enz,
Jesse Enz, Aaron (Dallas)
Mollohan, Ashley Walker,
Cole Walker, Savannah
Walker, Dru Walker,
Kaden Ehman, and Konnor Ehman; great-grandchildren, Emily Mollohan,
Peightyn Williams, Jace

Funeral Home, Evans, W.Va.,
with Pastor Mark Price and Jim
Massey ofﬁciating. Entombment
will follow in the Jackson County
Memory Gardens Cemetery, Cottageville. Visitation will be from
5-8 p.m., Sunday, at the funeral
home.

KNOX SR.
GALLIPOLIS — Paul L. Knox,
Sr., 74, of Gallipolis, died on
Friday, Sept. 14, 2018 at his residence.
At his request, there will not be
any services. Willis Funeral Home
is in care of his arrangements.

OU wins Excellence in Diversity Award

ATHENS — Ohio University has received top
honors from INSIGHT
Into Diversity with the
2018 INSIGHT Into
Diversity Higher Education Excellence in Diversity (HEED) Award.
The INSIGHT Into
Diversity HEED Award,
open to all colleges and
universities across the
U.S. and Canada, measures an institution’s
level of achievement and
intensity of commitment
in regard to broadening
diversity and inclusion
on campus through initiatives, programs, and
outreach; student recruitment, retention, and
completion; and hiring
practices for faculty and
staff.
“The HEED Award
afﬁrms our commitment
to diversity and inclusion.
This does not mean that
we have solved all problems,” Vice President for

Diversity and Inclusion
Gigi Secuban said. “We
are going to continue
to work with students,
faculty, staff, alumni and
community members to
keep improving until all
students feel safe and
welcome on all of OHIO’s
campuses.”
OHIO was selected by
INSIGHT Into Diversity
magazine to receive this
award based on OHIO’s
outstanding commitment
to diversity.
“Ohio University has
long demonstrated its
commitment to embracing diversity. Embracing
diversity is something
that I knew I not only
wanted to continue but
something I wanted to
take a step further,” Ohio
University President M.
Duane Nellis said. “I am
honored that OHIO has
been recognized for the
efforts that have been
made to show our com-

mitment to diversity.”
OHIO is one of 96 institutions of higher education across the country to
receive this award. All of
them will be featured in
the November 2018 issue
of INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine.
“It’s an incredible honor
to be one of less than 100
institutions throughout
the country to receive
this award, and it continues to show that OHIO
is an exceptional institution,” Vice President for
Student Affairs Jason
Pina said.
OHIO also received
a pair of Inspiring Programs in STEM awards
from INSIGHT Into
Diversity. They went to
the following:The Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Aspiring Doctors Precollege
Program is designed to
foster an interest in medical and healthcare careers

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
File photo

Chuck Lukowski received the People’s Choice award for his
drawing at the 2017 Art in the Village.

postmarked by Oct. 1
and can be mailed to
Riverbend Arts Council,
PO Bo 27, Middleport,
From page 1A
OH 45760.
For questions regardconsider the theme
ing painting contact
(Appalachian Art),
Wendi Miller at 740work as a group and
have lots of fun creating 416-4015 or wendimillyour 3-D masterpiece,” er_teaford@yahoo.com.
according to the contest For questions regarding
photography contact
rules.
Randy Houdashelt at
To register for the
Think Outside the Box 740-992-6258 or rehoudashelt@gmail.com.
contest contact Peggy
Crane at 740-416-9272.
Entry forms must be Sarah Hawley is the managing

Art

editor of The Daily Sentinel.

“Do not regret growing older.
It’s a privilege denied to many.”
-Unknown

Road closure
announcement

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
SPRINGFIELD TWP. — Springﬁeld
determination and availability or visit
Township Trustees will be closing East
our website at www.meigs-health.com
Bethel Church Road between Kemper
Hollow Road and Bulaville Pike on Sep- to see a list of accepted commercial
tember 26 for road repairs. Road closure insurances and Medicaid for adults.
The Ohio Department of Health
will occur after the morning school bus
(ODH) does NOT recommended for
route pick up of students.
routine Hepatitis A vaccination of
POMEROY — Meigs County Road
Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the
19, Peach Fork Road, will be closed
Advisory Committee on Immunization
between C-20, Rocksprings Road, and
Practices (ACIP) does NOT recomU.S. 33 for approximately two weeks
mend routine Hepatitis A vaccination
beginning Monday, Sept. 10th. County
for Food Workers. Currently, ODH is
forces will be repairing a slip in this
strongly recommending the following
area.
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
MASON — The public is invited to
attend the 6 year anniversary celebration for vaccine availability.
of Bend Area Celebrate Recovery on
Monday, Sept. 24. The event is a chance
to learn more about CR (it’s not just for
drugs and alcohol). The event will take
place at 6:30 p.m. at the Old Mason Elementary School, 516 Adams St., Mason,
RACINE — The Southern Craft
W.Va. Live music; Live testimony; Awe- Show will be held on Oct. 20, 9 a.m. to
some fellowship; Coffee and cake.
3 p.m. Interested vendors may contact
Alan at 740-444-3309 or visit southernlocalmeigs.org and click on forms for
application.
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. MemoPOMEROY — Trinity Congregational
rial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
Church, corner of 2nd and Lynn Streets,
child(ren)’s shot records. Children must will be serving lunch during the Sternbe accompanied by a parent/legal guard- wheel Regatta on Thursday, Sept. 20,
ian. A $30.00 donation is appreciated for and Friday, Sept. 21, from 11 a.m. until
immunization administration; however, 2 p.m. Menu: Homemade chicken and
no one will be denied services because
noodles, sloppy joes, hot dogs, selection
of an inability to pay an administration
of sides and homemade desserts.

Bend Area Celebrate
Recovery 6 Years

Southern Craft
and Vendor Fair

Immunization Clinic

OH-70077230

Sternwheel luncheon

While we lost Ann Sickels too soon, we can
celebrate her 60th birthday by carrying on her
legacy. Do something nice for someone in her
honor today! We can continue making the world
a better place, one kind gesture at a time.

Kisor, Parker Kisor, and
one on the way — Aden
Walker, whose arrival she
was eagerly anticipating;
sisters, Barbara Saunders
of Gallipolis and Judy
Kaloust of Coco Beach,
FL; a host of beloved
nieces, nephews, family and dear friends too
numerous to list.
In addition to her parents, Sylvia is preceded
in death by her son, Chet
Adkins; a sister, Donna
Lane; and two brothers,
James and Jack Lane; as
well as several special
nieces and nephews.
Family will receive
friends Saturday, Sept.
22 at 2 p.m. with a service celebrating Sylvia’s
life to follow at 4 p.m. at
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home in Gallipolis. Interment will be at Reynolds
Cemetery at a later date.

among underrepresented
high school students.
Participants are exposed
to a range of healthcare
professionals, including
nurses, physicians and
physician assistants,
and engage in hands-on
activities to learn critical
thinking, collaboration
and creativity skills.
Tech Savvy OHIO in
the College of Arts and
Sciences is an annual,
day-long STEM outreach
program for middle
school girls and their
parents and teachers.
Girls learn about and
develop science programming abilities and
the soft skills necessary
to succeed in science
ﬁelds. They participate
in hands-on workshops
while their parents and
teachers attend separate sessions on college
admissions, ﬁnancial aid,
teenage brain development, and more.

Schools
asked
about
safety
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) —
Thousands of
Ohio schools have
responded to a
voluntary survey
about school safety
measures that will
be used to help
craft recommendations for state
policymakers to
consider next year.
Ohio Homeland
Security spokesman Dustyn Fox
says more than
6,500 school building and district
administrators
were notiﬁed
about the survey,
and about 4,000
responded by
Wednesday’s deadline.
They were asked
whether their
buildings have
school resource
ofﬁcers and features such as
visitor screening,
reinforced exterior
windows, panic
alarms and cardswipe systems that
limit entry.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 16, 2018 3A

Helping you
Head lice symptoms and treatments
age better
MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

“You have head lice.”
This is one of the most
dreaded statements a
parent can hear from a
health department or
school nurse. Infestation
with head lice can lead
to many missed days of
school and is one of the
most common causes of
student absenteeism. All
local school districts in
Meigs County having a
“no nit” policy.
The head louse is a
parasitic insect that can
be found on the head,
eyebrows, and eyelashes
of people. Head lice ﬂourish by feeding on human
blood several times a
day and live close to the
human scalp. Head lice
are not known to spread
disease.
Head lice is a worldwide problem. It is most
common among preschool children attending
child care, elementary
schoolchildren, and the
household members
of infested children.
Although reliable data on
how many people in the
United States get head
lice each year is not available, an estimated 6 million to 12 million infestations occur each year in
the United States among
children 3 to 11 years of
age (cdc.gov).
Contrary to popular
belief, head lice cannot
hop or ﬂy; they move
by crawling. Most of
the time, lice are spread
by direct head-to-head
contact with the hair of
an infested person. Less
commonly, it can also be
spread by contact with
clothing (such as hats,
scarves, coats) or other
personal items (such as
combs, brushes, or towels) used by an infested

times become
person. Personal
infected with bachygiene or cleanteria found on the
liness in the
person’s skin.
home or school
Treatment of
has nothing to do
head lice includes
with getting head
the use of overlice. Also, dogs,
the-counter
cats, and other
Leanne
pets do not play a Cunningham medication that
includes perrole in the spread Contributing
methrin. This
of head lice.
columnist
medication must
Head lice may
be used accordbe discovered in
three different forms: the ing to the manufacturer’s
instructions or under the
egg or “nit,” a nymph
or newly hatched insect, guidance of one’s docor an adult. The nits are tor. Nits must be pulled
by hand. Lice combs are
usually found within ¼”
not reliable to remove
of the scalp and are difﬁcult to remove because all nits, but may be used
before one starts pulling
they ﬁrmly stick to the
by hand.
strand of hair. Nymphs
The following informalook like adult lice, but
tion is from cdc.gov and
are smaller, about the
addresses why treatment
size of a knot in thread.
for head lice may someAdult lice are about the
times fail:
size of a sesame seed,
1. Misdiagnosis. The
have six legs and are
symptoms are not caused
tan to grayish-white in
by an active head lice
color. They move very
infestation.
quickly, especially when
2. Applying the treatlight is shone on them.
The life cycle of the louse ment to hair that has
been washed with
is between 30-35 days
conditioning shampoo
from egg stage to death
as an adult, but between or rinsed with hair conditioner. Conditioners
days 19-32, the female
louse may lay around six can act as a barrier that
keeps the head lice medieggs per day; thus, with
cine from adhering to
the continuous cycle, it
the hair shafts; this can
doesn’t take one long to
reduce the effectiveness
become infested.
According to the CDC, of the treatment.
3. Not following caresymptoms of head lice
fully the instructions
infestation include:
for the treatment that is
* Tickling feeling of
something moving in the used. Some examples of
this include not applyhair.
* Itching, caused by an ing a second treatment
if instructed to do so,
allergic reaction to the
or retreating too soon
bites of the head louse.
after the ﬁrst treatment
* Irritability and difﬁculty sleeping; head lice before all the nits are
hatched and the newly
are most active in the
hatched head lice can be
dark.
killed. Another reason is
* Sores on the head
retreating too late after
caused by scratching.
new eggs have already
These sores can some-

been deposited.
4. Resistance of the
head lice to the treatment used. The head lice
may have become resistant to the treatment. If
the treatment used does
not kill the head lice,
your health care provider
and pharmacist can help
you be sure the treatment
was used correctly and
may recommend a completely different product
if they think the head lice
are resistant to the ﬁrst
treatment.
5. Re-infestation. The
person was treated successfully and the lice
were eliminated, but
then the person becomes
infested again by lice
spread from another
infested person. Sometimes re-shampooing the
hair too soon (less than
2 days) after correctly
applying and removing
permethrin can reduce
or eliminate any residual
(continued) killing effect
on the lice.
If you are not sure if
a person has head lice,
the diagnosis should be
made by their health care
provider, local health
department, or other
person trained to identify
live head lice. The Meigs
County Health Department does provide head
lice screening for $20
or can bill Medicaid for
this service. We do not
stock head lice treatment
medications. We do have
educational resources
available for the public
by calling 740-992-6626.
Information is also available through the CDC at
www.cdc.gov.

Leanne Cunningham, RN, BSN,
CLC, is the Director of Nursing
at the Meigs County Health
Department.

National Falls Prevention Awareness Day
eyes and ears are
September
key to keeping
22nd is National
you on your feet.
Falls Preven5) Keep Your
tion Awareness
Home Safe:
Day. Did you
Remove tripping
know that every
hazards, increase
11 seconds, an
older adult is
Pamela K. lighting, make
stairs safe, and
seen in an emer- Matura
gency departContributing install grab bars
in key areas.
ment for a fallcolumnist
6) Talk to Your
related injury?
Family Members:
Many falls are
Enlist their support in
preventable.
taking simple steps to
Along with our
friends at the National stay safe. Falls are not
just a seniors’ issue.
Council on Aging
The Area Agency
(NCOA), we want to
share how to take con- on Aging District 7
trol of your health with (AAA7) is also a proud
partner of STEADY U
six steps to prevent a
Ohio, the state’s older
fall:
adult falls prevention
1) Find a Good Balinitiative.
ance and Exercise
Falling is not a
Program: Look to
build balance, strength normal part of aging,
and most falls can be
and ﬂexibility. Our
Agency offers the Mat- prevented. By knowing and managing your
ter of Balance falls
risk factors, you can
management program
live a full and active
to address these very
topics. Call us at 1-800- life free of the fear of
falling. You can reduce
582-7277 to learn
about our schedule and your risk of falling by
paying more attention
when we may be coming to your community. to the “Three H’s” —
your home, your health
2) Talk to Your
and your habits. For
Healthcare Provider:
Ask for an assessment more information, log
on to http://aging.ohio.
of your risk of falling.
gov/steadyu/
Share your history of
For more informarecent falls.
3) Regularly Review tion about the MatYour Medications with ter of Balance falls
prevention program
Your Doctor or Pharmacist: Make sure side or about long-term
care resources in your
effects aren’t increasing your risk of falling. community, call our
Take medications only Agency at 1-800-5827277, or e-mail info@
as prescribed.
aaa7.org.
4) Get Your Vision
and Hearing Checked
Pamela K. Matura is executive
Annually and Update
director, Area Agency on Aging
Your Eyeglasses: Your
District 7.

CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday,
Sept. 16

Tuesday,
Sept. 18

HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
Church will hold service
POMEROY — Home- at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Cofcoming “Living in the
Promise” will be held at fee Klatch at 9:45 a.m.;
Sunday School at 10
Zion Church of Christ
a.m.; worship service
from 10-11:30 a.m.
at 10:30 a.m.; Pastor
There will be a slide
Bob Hood; Bulaville
show, displays, Zion’s
Christian Church, 2337
Choir, youth activities,
Johnson Ridge Road;
special singing, minis740-446-7495 or 740ter’s message, opening
709-6107. Everyone is
of the 10th year time
welcome.
capsule and fellowship.
GALLIPOLIS — CalGALLIPOLIS — First
Light Worship Service in vary Christian Center,
11 a.m., The Sons Famthe Family Life Center,
ily will be visiting and
9am; Sunday School,
providing special music.
9:3 0am; Morning WorAll are invited to attend
ship Service, 10:45 am;
Youth “The Resistance” and worship.
ADDISON — Addison
in the FLC, 6 pm; EveFreewill Baptist Church,
ning Worship Service
6pm; First Church of the Sunday School at 10
a.m. and evening service
Nazarene, 1110 First
at 6 p.m.
Ave. with Pastor Douglas Downs.

MEIGS WELLNESS CENTER presents

Con d c to
u

A SOUN
D

wo

rkout for

d
min

GALLIPOLIS —
Christian Care Circle
Ladies meeting; 10:30
a.m. at Bob Evans, Rio
Grande; we are studying
“Women of the Old Testament”. All ladies are
welcome to attend.

Wednesday,
Sept. 19
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s Ministry, 6:45
pm; Youth “REFUEL” in
the FLC, 7pm; Prayer &amp;
Praise in the Sanctuary,
7 pm; First Church of
the Nazarene, 1110 First
Ave.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
Church will hold service
at 7 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS — Bible
Study; 6 p.m.; Pastor
Bob Hood; Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337
Johnson Ridge Road.;
(740-446-7495 or 740709-6107). Everyone is
welcome.
ADDISON — Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
business meeting and
Bible Study at 7 p.m.

Thursday,
Sept. 20
ADDISON —Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
ladies aid 6:30 p.m.

Friday,
Sept. 21
GALLIPOLIS —
Prayer Force, Harmon
Chapel, 8:45 a.m., First

e
s
i
rc

,b

y,
d
o

and

soul

Place your self in the sneakers of
an orchestra conductor as you enjoy
the greatest musical workout you’ve ever
experienced, under the guidance of maestro
David Dworkin

Wave a Wand and Get Fit

Light refreshments will be provided by Close to Home Catering Bakery &amp; Cafe.
Sponsored by Meigs Council on Aging &amp; Meigs Wellness Center

OH-70074318

Where: Wolfe Mountain Entertainment
When: Wednesday 9/19
Time: 10:00am – 11:00am
Cost: FREE

OH-70076294

Conductorcise is a one-hour aerobics-style class that blends conducting with music appreciation.

Church of the Nazarene,
1110 First Ave.

Saturday,
Sept. 22

Sunday,
Sept 23

HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Dickey Chapel
Church will hold service
at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS —
BIDWELL — Garden
of my Heart Holy Taber- Homecoming services
nacle will hold a revival with worship service at
10:30 a.m. (no Sunday
from Sept. 22-29 at 6
school); special singing
p.m. Preachers include
Zane Colley from 22-23, by Tom Kessel, Living Proor, and others;
Jeff Seitz from 24-25,
dinner is covered dish
Jerry Coburn on 26,
with the meat, rolls, and
Chuck Matthews on
beverages provided by
27, Keith DeWitt on 28
the church; Pastor Bob
and Ray DeWitt on 29.
Homecoming Sept. 30 at Hood; Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson
10 a.m. Sonshine from
Ridge Road; 740-446Jackson will be singing
7495 or 740-709-6107.
at Homecoming. DifEveryone is welcome.
ferent singers nightly,
ADDISON — Addison
Lester Hedrick, HamFreewill Baptist Church
rick Singers and Faye
will hold Sunday School
LePort. For more information, contact 740-388- at 10 a.m. and evening
service at 6 p.m.
8059 or 740-645-2371.

�Opinion
4A Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

A ‘community’ is
just a ‘place’ if the
newspaper dies
“You don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s
gone.” The old adage came to mind as I
thought about my local newspaper – the one
that’s been printing my columns for several
years. It reports on local government, sports,
arts, births, deaths, achievements, crimes,
churches and the myriad of other things that
make up our daily lives. People still clip and
deliver pictures of friends because it’s something important when your child’s picture is in
the paper.
I’ve lived mostly in small and mid-size communities with newspapers that have struggled
to survive; and I’ve appreciated
them as the nerve system of communities – the network that keeps
people in touch with what others
are doing. Today I took a look to
see what’s happening in my towns.
New Albany, Indiana – A student at the Community College
Bob
has organized a “Recovery Rally”
Morrison to “celebrate those in recovery and
Contributing remember those who lost their
columnist
battles.” The President of the
Community College System and
the state Drug Czar (yes, it’s an
ofﬁcial state level position) will participate.
Urbana, Ohio – On Sunday afternoon there
was a fund-raising bike ride on the Simon
Kenton Trail. 15 miles are paved. Proceeds
went toward completing the 32-mile trail to a
connection that will allow a 109-mile ride from
Urbana to Cincinnati.
Asheboro, North Carolina – Journalist and
author Kevin Maurer will speak at the Sunset
Theater at 7 p.m. on September 13. He is coauthor along with a Navy Seal of “No Easy
Day” an account of the killing of Osama Bin
Laden.
Each of those stories is important in its
local community but of no particular interest in the others. What will happen if too few
people show up to hear the writer, contribute
to the bike trail and support those recovering
from drug addiction? Each of the newspapers
covered other local stories, good news and
tragedies. Residents might learn about a few
of them in one way or another via social media
but only the newspaper attempts to bring so
many local stories together in one place. Those
newspapers are the only places where journalists with professional skills report local news
in a reliable and consistent way.
A few days ago, I had conversations with
two executives who don’t subscribe to a local
newspaper. They both get their news from
regional TV and a large market newspaper. I
was amazed to ﬁnd that both were completely
unaware of big local stories about possible tax
increases to fund major construction projects.
But, how would they know? Their chosen news
outlets don’t cover the places where they live.
My ﬁrst draft referred to “the communities
where they live.” I changed “communities” to
“places” because the places cease to be communities when the people who live there don’t
know about each other or about local events.
We can’t care about things and people that we
don’t know. We won’t attend invisible events.
Because my work is published, I hear complaints about newspapers and journalists. I’m
glad about that. Only the people who read the
newspaper know enough to complain when
something isn’t just right (or when they don’t
like seeing the truth in print). Don’t just complain about the newspaper. Complain to the
newspaper. I’ve been around enough journalists
to know that they can handle it and in most
cases they’ll use valid criticism as an opportunity to improve.
Most of all, what we need is for more people
to subscribe. More subscribers means the
newspaper can charge higher rates for advertising. They need both of those revenue streams.
If you’re reading free on-line please beware.
When we reach the point where everyone reads
“free” the journalism will be worth exactly
what you’re paying for it. For reference, examine the accuracy and quality of your free Facebook feed.
Six days per week my newspaper brings
information worth far more than the $14 that I
pay each month. But the greatest value is that
so many of my friends and neighbors get the
same information. We learn the same facts.
That makes us a community. Without it, we’re
just a place on a map. I want to live in a community, not a place.
It’s true too often that you don’t know what
you’ve got ’til it’s gone.
This column originally appeared in the
Urbana Daily Citizen, a publication of AIM
Media Midwest.
Bob Morrison lived in Urbana from 1982-1992 and served as
president of Mercy Memorial Hospital and as president of the
Champaign County Chamber of Commerce. He is retired from
serving as president of Randolph Hospital from 1992-2012 in
Asheboro, N.C., where he still resides.

THEIR VIEW

No news is okay, for a little while
Through reasons that
were beyond our control, we were without
telephone or Internet
service for a few days
last week. It began late
on a Friday afternoon
and while we had every
conﬁdence the issue
would be repaired, there
was a wait involved in
getting to that point
(and thank you, John
Elliott of AT&amp;T, for
your response to our call
for help).
Because the trouble
took place just as the
weekend started, we
were informed it would
be a few days before
a technician could get
to us. That much was
understood. What we
did for amusement in
the meantime was up
to us. The loss of the
phone wasn’t so bad as
the interruption spared
us from telemarketers
and the like. But unfortunately it meant friends
and family couldn’t contact us. And, since we
now get our television
reception via streaming,
that meant no TV either.
Entertainment-wise,
I reacquainted myself
with my DVD collection, while my wife Beth
played games on our
desktop device. She also
had her recently-purchased cell phone available with apps to catch
some of her favorite programming, so we made
due with what we had
available. But even with
what passed for TV,
there was no local news
to watch or hear, and
with the Internet out of
service, no coverage of
current events on AOL.

ly on the mental
We still got the
side — which is
newspaper, which
what I say and do
is always welcome
about Facebook a
in our household,
lot these days.
but the immediacy
My wife rightly
of accessing news
considers what
instantly that
she sees and
we’ve become used
Kevin
hears on 24/7
to was seriously
Kelly
news channels as
curtailed.
Beth could still Contributing history. Backing
away and thinkget news channels columnist
ing about we’ve
on her cell so she
learned from the
could keep up with
tube and other sources
the drama in Washingis, however, critical in
ton, but local news and
understanding what’s
weather didn’t exist for
a few days. And that was going on. I still appreciate an expert’s viewpoint
all right, but only for
even though it isn’t fasha little awhile. Having
ionable with some folks
been raised in a famto do so, but I prefer to
ily of news junkies and
reach my own conclumarrying into another
of similar tastes, I began sions from what I’ve
to miss my daily dose of read and heard. Someinformation. The nation- times that requires a
little sober reﬂection, to
al and international
scene didn’t concern me separate fact from fancy,
overly, but after a couple reality from speculation.
That’s tough when
of days I began to miss
hearing about what goes your senses are conon in and around the tri- stantly assaulted with
events, analysis and
county.
talking heads, so losing
Yet, doing without
that level of news cover- access to all of it even
age wasn’t too bad at the for a few hours each
day isn’t a bad thing. Or
start. Sometimes you
have to get away from it skipping it altogether,
all in order to appreciate if only for a day. And
it, and when I’ve not fol- immersing myself in
lowed my usual regimen the cinematic mysteries
of what the local stations of a past day concernor networks offer in the ing a Honolulu police
detective named Charlie
way of news, the old
interest kicks in, causing Chan, among others.
***
my watching experience
Lance and Susan
to be not only informaThornton’s proposal to
tive but absorbing. For
bring a water park and
we are inherently curiresort to property that
ous about our fellow
comprises the Morgan
man and what happens
Mount Vernon Farm and
in the world around us.
When you get too much Mansion off U.S. 35 near
information, that’s when Southside (Erin Perkins,
stepping away carries its “Big Plans, Big Busiown beneﬁts, particular- ness for Mason County,”

Sept. 11) is an encouraging sign of progress
for the area that we hope
attracts enough interested parties to become
a reality.
The idea dovetails
neatly with efforts to
make Point Pleasant
and environs a stop for
tourists and vacationers,
a goal achieved in part
with events such as this
weekend’s Mothman
Festival and the upcoming Battle Days that celebrate local history and
legend. The Yogi Bear’s
Jellystone Park Camp
and Resorts facility
proposed by the Thorntons provides another
dimension to the move
to bring people and dollars into the area and is
deserving of support.
This statement is
made without any beneﬁt to myself but a desire
to see Mason County,
where I worked for more
than a year, progress
and diversify its economy by adding to what
it now has in terms of
employment and generation of revenue. “(O)f all
of the businesses I own,
this is the most exciting
to bring great jobs to a
great community, as well
as fun,” Lance Thornton
said while making his
pitch last Monday at the
Morgan Mansion.
With a potential to
create around 400 jobs,
one can only salute the
originators’ intentions
and the faith of those
who choose to support
them.

Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated
with Ohio Valley Publishing for 21
years, resides in Vinton, Ohio.

YOUR VIEW

September Veterans
of the Month
Our veterans of the month are
Jimmy Carter, United States Navy,
and Calvin Minnis, United States
Army.
These civilians, Jimmy Carter
and Calvin Minnis, helped build
affordable home with volunteers
in their community with other volunteers that are much-needed and
much-appreciated also by teaching Sunday School and preaching
lessons from the word of God;

helping the blind and others with
transportation to and from Church
and community events which is
promoting freedom to worship God
and unity as a nation as one nation
under God.
We thank you for these nominations, when you see these gentlemen be sure to let them know you
will fall in line and do the same
for your family your nation and
especially your God. So give them,
if you get the chance, thanks and
show your appreciation. What is
most important is to give honor
and glorify God and his son Jesus

the Christ for your physical home,
your life and for Living in America.
God bless you and may God bless
America.
These men will receive a plaque
from the American people for their
service to our nation their state
and their County
And their names will be submitted for the Jim Marshall veteran of
the Year award nominated for the
month of September 2018.
Please submit your nominations
by calling 1-216-815-5511.
Nellie Ruby Taylor
Gallipolis, Ohio

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 16, 2018 5A

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDER

Card Shower

last year). Baked ham will
be provided.
PERRY TOWNSHIP
A card shower is taking
— Henry A. Saunders
place for Shirley Hamm
Family Reunion at O.O.
who is currently at The
McIntyre Park at shelter
Laurels. Cards may be
house 2, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
sent to Shirley Hamm at
The Laurels, Room 106,
70 Columbus Circle, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Helen West will be celebrating her 103rd birthday on September 17.
LETART TWP. — The
Cards may be mailed to
regular meeting of the
119 2nd Ave. Gallipolis,
Letart Township TrustOh. 45631.
ees will be held at 5 p.m.
Rex Summerﬁeld will
at the Letart Township
celebrate his 97th birthBuilding.
day on Sept. 24. Cards
CHESHIRE — Beginmay be sent to him at
ner classes for Western
38550 East Shade Road,
Square Dancing will be
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
held at Gavin Employees
Club in Cheshire from 7-9
p.m. Bring a friend and
get exercise, fun and fellowship. For information
call 740-446-4213 or 304675-3275.
GALLIA COUNTY
— The annual Pete
and Margie Parsons
family reunion will be
Sunday, September 16,
2018 at Raccoon Creek
(McIntyre) Park. Potluck
GALLIPOLIS — The
meal will be served at
Gallia County Board of
12:30 p.m. in the Bob
Developmental DisabiliWhite shelter (same as
ties will hold a regular

Monday,
Sept. 17

Sunday,
Sept. 16

Tuesday,
Sept. 18

Dealer
From page 1A

up around drugs her
entire life and began
using recreationally
at 16-years-old, when
she was introduced to
cocaine by an older boyfriend. She didn’t view
herself as an addict,
though. It would be years
before drugs would completely take over her life.
But, it was in 2001, when
she injured her back and
was prescribed an abundance of pain pills that
her life as a dealer began.
For Chaﬁn, dealing was
normal. It didn’t cross
her mind she shouldn’t
use those pills to make
extra money. It was as
ordinary to her as any
other job. The underworld of narcotics and
marijuana dealing had
always been a part of her
life. She already had a
baseline clientele and she
took pride in how she
handled her business.
“I had always known
business and how the art
of supply and demand
works,” said Chaﬁn. “I
never felt uncomfortable.
I never felt out of place.
Beyond that, it gave me
a sense of worth. It gave
me a sense of belonging as a girl that had
struggled with her worth
and belonging. I found
my worth in being a drug
dealer, which I don’t even
know looking back now
what I was thinking.”
She liked the money,
the power and she was
a natural. It was that
simple. And because
using your own product
was frowned upon in that
world “if you’re about
your money,” she only
used occasionally during
that time.

monthly board meeting
for the month of September at 4 p.m. at Gallia
County Board of Developmental Disabilities
Administrative Ofﬁces,
77 Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis, Ohio.
MIDDLEPORT — The
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7
Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War will meet at
7:07 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic Temple in
Middleport. Election of
ofﬁcers will be held.

Wednesday,
Sept. 19
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
Elections meeting will be
held at 8:30 a.m.

Thursday,
Sept. 20
MIDDLEPORT — Get
Healthy Meigs!, a collaborative group of individuals and agencies all with
the focus of improving
the well-being of Meigs
County and its residents,

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Republican Party Headquarters
opening will be held at

Monday,
Sept. 24

For more information on
the recital, contact the
School of Arts and Letters at 740-245-7124.

Thursday,
Sept. 27

MIDDLEPORT — The
Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission
will meet at 9 a.m. in
POMEROY — The
the ofﬁce located at 97
Meigs Soil &amp; Water ConN. Second Avenue in
servation District Board
Middleport.
of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly
meeting at 11:30 a.m. at
the district ofﬁce. The
ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D,
Pomeroy.
SALISBURY TWP.
— Salisbury Township
will be holding a special
meeting to discuss and
conﬁrm bids received at
5 p.m. at the township
garage.
GALLIPOLIS —BSA
RIO GRANDE — The Troop 200 Alumni
University of Rio Grande Reunion and Court of
and Rio Grande ComHonor Spaghetti dinner,
munity College School
5 p.m. Gallia Senior Cenof Arts and Letters will
ter, 1165 Ohio 160. Tickhost its annual Faculty
ets are $10 and can be
Recital at 7 p.m. in the
purchased through Terry
Berry Fine and Perform- McKinniss at 740-446ing Arts Center’s Alphus 1810. Alumni are asked
R. Christensen Theater.
to bring memories and
The performance is free
scouting memorabilia to
and open to the public.
share.

Tuesday,
Sept. 25

Saturday,
Sept. 29

(CNN)

39

(TNT)
(AMC)

40 (DISC)

OHIO BRIEFS

FREMONT, Ohio
(AP) — A former
Ohio sheriff’s detective
accused of mishandling
a homicide investigation
has received two years
in prison for tampering
with evidence.
A visiting judge
in Sandusky County
told Sean O’Connell
on Thursday she was
skeptical of O’Connell’s
apology to the family of
Heather Bogle, whose
body was found in the
trunk of a car in 2015.

Friday,
Sept. 21

8 a.m.

whole new world for her.
and then subsequently
treatment facility for
The split, according to
“I was horrible,” she
Chaﬁn, was amicable and women, where she would sold those pills.
said. “Using drugs multi“I woke up the next
be ﬁghting the battle
still is.
ple times a day. Shooting
day. I was in so much
herself.
Back in Gallia, Chaﬁn
up constantly. Things I
pain. My face was so
According to Chaﬁn,
set her sights on the
saw were just obscene.”
swollen,” said Chaﬁn.
not long after returnField of Hope project
She eventually lost
“He comes home and
ing to Gallia County,
and helping with recovcustody of her daughter
his idea to ﬁx my pain
she met a man and they
ery efforts locally. She’d
was shooting me up with to her ex-husband, which
connected over similar
known Kevin Dennis
heroin and methamphet- was a new low for her.
and his daughter, Amber childhood histories.
Through everything in
amines together.”
Eventually, she said she
Richards, in high school
“I felt so trapped. I felt her life to that point, she
fell in love with him, and
and she’d heard about
said she had always taken
like I had given up on
Field of Hope’s efforts, as things were good for a
everything I had worked care of her kids. She saw
well as Richards’ story of while. Then she started
noticing warning signs of so hard for. My dreams of no hope for the future.
addiction and recovery.
Then her boyfriend was
drug abuse. The relation- working at Hope House
“I knew I wanted to
arrested and would later
were over,” said Chaﬁn
Courtesy photo work with addicts even
ship took an ugly turn
Chafin while in active addiction. then. It had been my
be sentenced to prison.
about that ﬁrst dose
and they began to ﬁght.
It was then when she felt
of heroin and amphetDuring one of those
passion for so long after
she needed to provide
amines. Her heroin
For seven years, Chaﬁn being a drug dealer,” said ﬁghts, things turned
him with money, she
physical and she suffered use skyrocketed from
Chaﬁn.
dealt her extra narcotreentered the dealing
once or twice a week to
a cracked skull. When
Little did she know,
ics, until she married
game. Only this time she
she went to the hospital, ﬁve to six times a day;
her future at Field of
and moved away from
was dealing heroin.
her savings dwindled
she told them it was the
Hope would not start
the area to West Virquickly; her boyfriend
ginia, where her husband with counseling recover- result of a four-wheeler
Michelle Leigh Miller is an
gained more control
worked in the coal mines. ing addicts. Instead, she accident and was preindependent author and freelance
over her life. While she
would be among the ﬁrst scribed pain medicine.
While she has no proof,
writer living in Gallipolis, Ohio. You
had experimented with
According to Chaﬁn,
she admitted she thought group of addicts to go
can follow her author journey at
her boyfriend at the time drugs throughout her life, michelleleighmiller.com.
through Field of Hope’s
law enforcement might
Chaﬁn said heroin was a
Hope House, an inpatient ﬁlled her prescription
have caught onto her by
then and, had she not
moved, she would have
SUNDAY EVENING
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16
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dealing. She even went
Abbey, even Rose, who meets the Prince.
reveal their true feelings.
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Masterpiece Classic "Downton Abbey Season 4: Part
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Abbey, even Rose, who meets the Prince.
reveal their true feelings.
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She had a nice home,
(4:25) NFL Football New England Patriots at 60 Minutes
Big Brother (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los
13
(WOWK)
nice cars. Her kids were
Jacksonville Jaguars (L)
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ﬂourishing. Then the
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coal industry fell apart,
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18 (WGN) Married
In Depth
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
24 (ROOT) NCAA Football Dayton at Duquesne Site: Rooney Field -- Pittsburgh, Pa.
her husband was injured
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter
(N)
MLB
Baseball
Los
Angeles
Dodgers
at
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Louis
Cardinals
Site:
Busch Stadium (L)
and prescription narcot26 (ESPN2) (5:30) E:60
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WNBA Basketball Playoffs Washington Mystics at Seattle Storm (L)
SportsC. (N)
ics found their way back
YOU "The Last Nice Guy in
Her Worst Nightmare (2018, Thriller) Bryan Lillis, Trevor No One Would Tell (2018, Drama) Matreya Scarrwener,
27 (LIFE)
into her life. Eventually,
St. John, Claire Blackwelder. TVPG
Callan Potter, Shannen Doherty. (P) TVPG
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(4:35) Beauty (:40)
Cinderella Lily James. A mistreated young woman's life is
(:15)
The Goonies (1985, Adventure) Corey
Chaﬁn said, she and her
29 (FREE)
&amp; t...
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Feldman, Josh Brolin, Sean Astin. TV14
husband separated. He
Bar Rescue "Rickety Rockin' Bar Rescue "Ice, Mice,
Bar Rescue "Life, Liberty,
Bar Rescue "Phising for
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SVU "Girl Dishonored"
SVU "Spousal Privilege"
SVU "Intersecting Lives"
SVU "Heartfelt Passages"
returned to Gallia Coun35 (TBS) (5:30)
Real Steel (‘11, Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman. TV14
X-Men: First Class (‘11, Act) James McAvoy. TVPG
Movie
ty with their daughter.
37
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Hawaii"
A. Bourdain "Armenia"
38

Ex-detective
sentenced

will meet at 10:30 a.m.
in the 3rd ﬂoor conference room of the Meigs
County Dept. of Jobs and
Family Services. Lunch
will be provided by
Buckeye Hills Regional
Council. New members
are welcome. RSVP by
or before noon on Sept.
17 to michelle.willard@
meigs-health.com.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers will meet at
noon at Wild Horse
Cafe. The speaker will
be Southern Local Supt.
Tony Deem, discussing
the new trends in teacher
training and evaluation and in educational
methods. Members are
asked to bring in student
supplies and classroom
needs to replenish stocks
already given out. Guests
are always welcome.

42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)

The former Sandusky
County detective said in
court he was sorry if he
took the wrong approach
during the investigation.
O’Connell pleaded
guilty in late July. Facing
discipline, he resigned
in September 2016.
Judge Patricia Cosgrove said O’Connell
failed to follow important leads and relied on
information he knew
wasn’t true.
A co-worker of Bogle’s
was charged with aggravated murder in 2017
after different investigators took over case. He
faces trial next month.

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

Star Wars: The Force Awakens (‘15, Act) John Boyega, Daisy Ridley. TV14
The Last Ship "Fog Of War" The Last Ship "Fog Of War"
(:55) Fear the Walking Dead "Weak"
(:55) Fear the Walking Dead Fear the Walking Dead
(:05) Talking Lou Diamond
Phillips, Tonya Pinkins
of Egypt
"Blackjack"
"MM 54" (N)
Bush "Breaking Ground"
Bush "Head Above Water" Alaskan "Call to Duty" (N) Alaskan Bush People (N)
(:05) Alaskan Bushcraft
Ancient Aliens "The Mayan Ancient Aliens "The
Ancient Aliens "Alien
Ancient Aliens "Aliens and Ancient Aliens "Secrets of
Conspiracy"
Anunnaki Connection"
Power Plants"
Bigfoot"
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North Woods Law
Snapped "Julene Simko" (N) Dying to Belong "Byron
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murder of J. Chambers wreaks havoc on a small town.
Return"
Monk
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Kardash "The Family Feud" The Kardashians (N)
Ashlee (N)
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Reba
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Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
When Sharks Attack
When Sharks Attack
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Life Below 0 Monster Fish
"Terror Down Under"
"Mayhem in Mexico"
or Bust "Frayed Lines" (N) "High Speed Chase" (N)
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Post-race
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IndyCar Post Glory Road Glory Road Rowing
(5:00) MLS Soccer ORL/Chi (L)
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Football
American Pickers "Risks
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House Hunt. House
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(5:00)
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Iron Man (2008, Action) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges, Robert Downey Jr.. Tony
Johansson, Chris Hemsworth, Robert Downey Jr.. TV14
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(3:55) Gods

6 PM

6:30

(5:25) Father Figures (‘17,

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

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7:30

8 PM

8:30

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9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

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Small Talk" "Ready-Like"
Com) Ed Helms, Owen
Kendrick. After graduating from college, the Barden Bellas to This" (N)
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reunite and head to Europe to perform. TV14
(:10)
Knight and Day (2010, Action) Tom Cruise,
Snatched Amy Schumer. A mother and
(:35)
Couples Retreat Four couples
Cameron Diaz, A secret agent realizes he is not expected to daughter are forced to get over their
vacation on an island and belatedly learn
live through his current mission. TVPG
differences when they are kidnapped. TVMA that couples therapy is mandatory. TV14
(4:45)
(:25) Shameless "Are You
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�A long the River
6A Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta begins Thursday
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — As the
Ohio River returns to
normal levels this week,
Pomeroy is preparing to
host several sternwheelers and visitors as part
of the annual Pomeroy
Sternwheel Regatta.
The three-day event
will take place Thursday,
Sept. 20 through Saturday, Sept. 22 in downtown Pomeroy, sponsored by the Pomeroy
Eagles Aeire 2171, with
the support of the Pomeroy Fire Department,
Pomeroy Merchants
Association and the
Meigs County Historical
Society.
The event returns to
three days this year (last
year was two days),
with the ﬁrst day to
include the ever-popular ﬁre truck parade.
The parade has been
renamed the Jim Sisson
Memorial Fire Truck
Parade in memory of the
late Pomeroy Fireﬁghter
and past-President of the
Eagles.
In addition to numerous ﬁre trucks, the
parade will include
Grand Marshals George
and Nelle Wright in a
horse drawn carriage,
the Meigs Marching
Band, and others.
Following the parade
will be the opening
ceremonies at 7 p.m. on
the River Front with the
Meigs Marching Band
performing the National
Anthem, Drew Webster
American Legion Post
39 conducting the ﬂag
raising and the welcome
and prayer by Randy
Smith.
Horse drawn carriage
rides in the downtown
area will be held on
Thursday evening and
Friday afternoon.
The Carl Acuff Jr.
Show will round out
Thursday evening with
a performance from 8-11
p.m.
According to his website, “since 1992, the
Carl Acuff Jr. Variety
Show Band has become
and American institution. The 2018 tours
proves to be no exception to the rule with a
dynamite show, great
costuming, music and
comedy. The 2018 show
contains all the things
that have made Carl
and his band so popular
over the last 25 years.
We have new and old
country, gospel, comedy,
nostalgic rock n roll,
Motown, Do Wop, disco,
audience participation,
impersonations, and of
course a salute to all of
our men and women in
uniform from past, present and future that is
sure to have you on your
feet.”
On Friday, activities
are planned throughout
the day, beginning with
History walks around
Pomeroy with Gary
Coleman, sponsored by
the Meigs County Historical Society. Coleman
is a lifelong resident of
Meigs County, a published photographer who
enjoys the Ohio River
and local history.
Carriage rides will
take place throughout
the day, along with sidewalk sales at the downtown merchants and a
car show on the parking
lot.
On Friday evening

File photo

The Pomeroy Riverfront will once again be lined with sternwheels this week as the annual Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta kicks off on Thursday.

Numerous boats are expected to attend the annual festival.

The Riverside Cloggers are scheduled to perform on Saturday afternoon.

Photo from the artist website

Carl Acuff Jr. is set to perform on Thursday evening.

will be music with DJ
Kip Grueser, including
a dance-off contest, and
live music by local rockers Blitzkrieg.
Saturday begins early
with a golf scramble at
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, the Chili Cookoff on the Pomeroy parking lot and the Pirates
and Princesses 5K Run
in Pomeroy.
Activities continue
with the Poker Walk
downtown, cornhole
tournament and kayak
races.
The Riverside Cloggers will kick-off the
evening of performances
followed by live music.
The band Four on the
Floor will wrap up the
event with a performance from 8-11:30 p.m.
Pomeroy
Sternwheel Regatta
Schedule of Events
Thursday, Sept. 20
4-11:30 p.m. — Food
vendors open
6-11 p.m. — Beer tent
and t-shirt sales
6 p.m. — Jim Sisson
Memorial Fire Truck
Parade
7 p.m. — Opening
Ceremonies at the Riverfront
7-9 p.m. — Horse
drawn carriage rides
8-11 p.m. — Carl
Acuff Jr. Show
Friday, Sept. 21
All day — Downtown
merchants sidewalk
sales
10 a.m.-1 p.m. —
Historic walks through
Pomeroy

10 a.m.-11:30 p.m. —
Food vendors open
11 a.m.-6 p.m. —
Horse drawn carriage
rides
Noon-6 p.m. — Car
Show on the parking lot
5-7:30 p.m. — DJ Kip
Grueser and a Dance-off
contest
5-9 p.m. — Split the
pot
8-11 p.m. — Music by
Blitzkrieg
9 p.m. — Basket winner announced
Saturday, Sept. 22
8 a.m.-4 p.m. —
Eagles Golf Scramble at
Riverside Golf Course
9 a.m. — Pirates and
Princesses 5K Run
9-11 a.m. — Breakfast
the Pomeroy Eagles
9 a.m.-1 p.m. — Chili
Cook-off on the parking
lot
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. —
Poker Walk in downtown Pomeroy
Noon-4 p.m. — Cornhole tournament on the
parking lot
2 p.m. — Silent auction at Maple Lawn
Brewery
2 p.m. — Kayak races
5-6 p.m. — Riverside
Cloggers at the parking
lot gazebo
6-7 p.m. — Captain
and First Mate Dinner
on the river front
6-8 p.m. — Live music
on the river front
8 p.m. — Basket winner announced
8-11:30 p.m. — Music
by Four on the Floor
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Boats will be docked along the riverfront for the three day festival which includes music, food and
other activities for visitors.

Pomeroy Sternwheel Regatta Grand Marshals Nelle and George Wright are pictured with Eagles
President John Lehew.

Blitzkrieg,
shown here
at the 2017
Party in the
Park, will
perform
on Friday
evening
of the
Pomeroy
Sternwheel
Regatta.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OHIO BRIEFS

Celebration

Sausage links
recalled

From page 1A

Mail

XENIA, Ohio (AP) —
The Agriculture Department says Bob Evans
Farms is recalling nearly
47,000 pounds of pork
sausage links because it
might contain pieces of
plastic. The items have
establishment number
“EST 6785” and were
sold in Indiana, Illinois,
Maryland, Michigan,
Missouri, New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Virginia and Wisconsin.
The Food and Safety
Inspection Service says
there are no conﬁrmed
reports of any injuries.

Courtesy photos

Medical Mutual of Ohio makes $1,000 donation for 2018 Gallia
County Emancipation Celebration. Pictured left to right are
Medical Mutual of Oho Representative Jeff Fleming, Emancipation
Treasurer Karen Sprague and Emancipation Vice President Glenn
Miller.

The 12-ounce trays
are labeled Bob Evans
Maple Pork Sausage
Links, Brown Sugar
and Honey, Fresh from
Meijer Maple Flavored
Sausage Links or Giant
Eagle Maple Pork Breakfast Sausage Links Caramel Color Added. All
have a lot code of 8213.
The sausage should be
thrown out or returned
to place of purchase.

property line has been
charged with aggravated
murder and murder.
Forty-nine-year-old
Christopher Krauzer
was indicted Wednesday in the Sept. 5 fatal
shooting of Gordon Capshaw, who owned a rental property next door to
Krauzer in Toledo.
Toledo police say the
shooting occurred during an argument over
the property line while
Krauzer installed a privacy fence. Police say
the two men had previously argued about the
fence and other matters.
Police say Krauzer
was holding a riﬂe when
ofﬁcers arrived but eventually surrendered.

Man charged
in fatal fight
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
— An Ohio man who
authorities say shot and
killed a 75-year-old man
during a dispute over a

Mentoring

Jim’s Farm Equipment makes donation for 2018 Gallia County
Emancipation Celebration. Pictured left to right are Emancipation
Committee member Jim Oiler, Jim’s Farm Equipment Owner Jim
Fraley &amp; Emancipation Vice President Glenn Miller.

Ohio Valley Bank makes donation for 2018 Gallia County
Emancipation Celebration to sponsor the Newport Aquarium
Wave on Wheels Shark Cart Program. Pictured left to right are
Emancipation Committee member Brenda Jackson, Ohio Valley
Bank Representative Jeff Smith and Emancipation Committee
member Beverly Jackson.

in the western trio, and
eventually he built a repertoire of songs from the
19th century, both before
and during the Civil War
period of 1861 to 1865.
His interest in the history
of the war led to learning about the composers,
and the events that led to
many of the songs of the
period being written and
composed. As his knowledge grew, he developed a
presentation that explains
both why the tunes were
written, and what was
going on in the war at
the time. The songs are
presented in a somewhat
chronological order, and
Steve tells the story of
each song, and keeps
listeners informed of the
progress of the war at the
same time.
Re-enactors will play
the part of the Fifth Regiment of the U.S. Colored
Troops during the celebration The regiment
was formed as the 127th
Ohio Volunteer Infantry
at Camp Delaware, Ohio.
It was re-designated the
Fifth Regiment, United
States Colored Troops,
and moved to Norfolk,
Virginia, in November
1863, immediately after
three months of organization. It served at Norfolk
and Portsmouth in the
Department of Virginia
and North Carolina until
January 1864, during
which time the unit
participated in Briga-

She served as a rural mail
carrier for the ofﬁce.
Pullins was known
From page 1A
around town, making his
ﬁrst woman to retire from daily walk to deliver the
the Pomeroy Post Ofﬁce, mail to businesses, the
courthouse and many
according to Norman.

dier General Edward A.
Wild’s expedition to
South Mills and Camden
Court House, North
Carolina, from December
5 to December 24 and in
action at Sandy Swamp,
North Carolina, on
December 8.
The Fifth was then
moved to Yorktown,
Virginia where it became
part of the XVIII Corps
and was involved in
several expeditions: Wistar’s Expedition against
Richmond from February
6 to February 8, 1864,
an expedition to New
Kent Court House in
aid of Brigadier General
Hugh Judson Kilpatrick’s
cavalry from March 1 to
March 4 (including action
at New Kent Court House
on March 2), an expedition into King and Queen
County from March 9 to
March 12, and an expedition into Mathews and
Middlesex Counties from
March 17 to March 21.
The Fifth participated in
the capture of City Point,
Virginia, on May 4, 1864
and while in the city the
regiment served fatigue
duty, built Fort Converse
on the Appomattox
River, defended an attack
against Fort Converse on
May 20, and took part in
Brigadier General Benjamin F. Butler’s operations
on the south side of the
James River and against
Petersburg and Richmond.

homes. After the retirement celebration at the
post ofﬁce, Pullins made
that familiar walk around
town visiting with many
he delivered the mail to
each day.

ence on children.
“Volunteers come in
all shapes and sizes,”
said Salzman.
Mentors are asked for
a one year commitment,
which provides for consistency for the children
served. While the commitment begins at an
hour a week, many of
the relationships formed
carry on long after the
child has aged out of
the program.
In addition to the
one-on-one time, there
are group events and
activities which are
planned to bring groups
of Bigs and Littles
together. Some of the
recent events have been
pool parties, bowling,
rollerskating and an end
of summer bash.
Those interested in
becoming involved in
the program may call
740-797-0037 or email
Jim at jim.salzman@
bbbsathens.org.

at those location in the
future.
One of the focuses of
Salzman has been the
From page 1A
expansion of services
beyond Athens County,
Currently, Salzman
which is where the
stated there is a site
Meigs County DJFS
based program which
involves Vinton County partnership comes in.
Salzman credited
High School and Central
Elementary School with DJFS Director Chris
the high school students Shank with the willingness to work together
serving as mentors to
the elementary students. and provide support
for the program in the
There are two obstacles to the school based county.
There are currently
programs which Salzman stated is something four children registered
in Meigs County for the
they are working to
program, with only one
overcome. First, there
is the need for someone of those having been
to oversee the programs matched to a “Big.”
“We need good role
(Salzman is the lone
models who can give
full-time employee of
kids an hour a week,”
the program with one
said Salzman of the
part-time person in
need for volunteers to
Washington County).
take part in the proSecondly, the distance
between the schools can gram.
The requirements to
be an issue. He noted
be a “Big” are simple
the distance issue may
— have a clean backnot be a concern with
places such as Southern ground, reliable transor Eastern should there portation and a desire
to be a positive inﬂube interest in programs

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

LARGE STONE JAR AUCTION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2018@ 10:00 A.M
LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER, RT. 62N, 786
ADAMSVILLE RD., MASON, WV 25260.
SELLING THE COMPLETE COLLECTION OF
STONE JARS OF JOHN BARSS.
1. Graham &amp; Stone Jackson CH WV.
2. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
3. 3 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg, WV.
4. 3 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg, WV.
5. 6 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg, WV.
6. 8 Gal Donaghho Co. Parkersburg, WV.
7. 8 Gal Donaghho Co. Parkersburg, WV
Hairline Crack.
8. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
9. 2 Gal Donaghho Co. Parkersburg WV.
10. Aldermal &amp; Scott Belpre Oh.
11. 6 Gal Jas. Hamilton &amp; Co
Greensboro PA.
12. 3 Gal A Conrad New Geneva PA
Small Hairline.
13. 3 Gal Donaghho Co Parkersburg WV.
14. 3 Gal Donaghho Co. Parkersburg
WV.
15. #6 Gal.
16. 4 Gal Zipper AP Donaghho
Parkersburg WV.
17. 3 Gal Donaghho Co. Parkersburg
WV.
18. Dan Mercer Parkersburg WV Bean
Bake (Signed).
19. Dan Mercer Parkersburg WV Bean
Baked.
20. Dan Mercer.
21. 1 Gal Reed Robb &amp; Breiding Drugest
Wheeling WV.
22. 2 Gal Laughlin Bros., Main St
Wheeling WV.
23. 3 Gal Schaefer &amp; Driehorst Co Winer
&amp; Liquors 1428 Main St Wheeling
WV.
24. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV Jug.
25. Richey &amp; Hamilton Palatine WV.
26. Jas Benjamin Stoneware Depot
Cincinnati OH Jug.
27. AP Donaghho PArkersburg WV Jug.
28. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro
PA Jug.
29. 2 Gal AP Donaghhp Parkersburg
WV Jug.
30. Strockhoff Bros Dealers in Groceries
Bourbon &amp; Whiskies Gallipolis OH
(Cracked).
31. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
32. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
33. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
34. Jas Hamilton &amp; Co Manufactures
Greensboro PA Hairline
35. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
36. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
37. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV
38. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
39. Chicken Waterer.
40. Chicken Waterer.
41. Chicken Waterer.
42. Small Chicken Waterer 1993
Redwing.
43. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV
Top Hat.
44. Top Hat Not Marked.
45. Lg. Stone Jug.
46. AP Donaghho Top Hat Parkersburg
WV.

47. Top Hat Not Marked.
48. 2 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
49. 2 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
50. 2 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
51. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
52. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV
Top Hat.
53. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
54. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
55. Top Hat Not Marked.
56. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
57. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
58. Jar Not Marked.
59. William &amp; Reppert Greensboro Pa.
60. William &amp; Reppert Greensboro PA.
61. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
62. William &amp; Reppert Greensboro PA
63. TF Reppert Manufacturer
Greensboro PA.
64. TF Reppert Greensboro PA.
65. TF Reppert Greensboro PA.
66. Brinker Bros Dealers in General
Merchandise Letart WV.
67. Wilkinson &amp; Fleming Shinnston WV.
68. Jame M Poling Dealers in Dry
Goods &amp; General Merchandise
Jackson CH WV.
69. No 1 Donaghho.
70. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
71. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
72. EB Taylor Richmond VA.
73. Jas Hamilton &amp; Co Greensboro PA.
74. Jas Hamilton &amp; Co Greensboro PA.
75. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
76. EJ Miller &amp; Son Dealers in China
and Glassware Alexandria VA
77. Richey &amp; Hamilton Palatine WV.
78. Jas Hamilton Greensboro PA.
79. Redwing 30 Gal Jar Hairline Crack.
80. Redwing 40 Gal Jar.
81. 20 Gal Jar.
82. Diamond Stoneware Co Crooksville.
83. Jas Hamilton &amp; Co Manufacturers
Greensboro PA.
84. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
85. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
86. 3 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
87. 3 Gal AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
88. Zipper 2 Ga; AP Donaghho
Parkersburg WV.
89. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
90. James Hamilton &amp; Co Greensboro
Pa.
91. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV
Zipper 2 Gal.
92. 6 Gal Bee Sting.
93. 2 Gal Jane Lew.
94. Stove Pipe Jar.
95. JB Busch Liquors Parkersburg WV
Jug Handle Missing.
96. Choice on Cuspidors.
97. Choice on Cuspidors.
98. Choice on Cuspidors.
99. Decorated Blue Jar.
100. 2 Gal English Jug Marked.
101. White Jug Hayner Dayton OH.
102. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.

103. Redwing Water Cooler 5 Gal.
104. TF Reppert Greensboro PA.
105. 1 Gal Decorated Jar Donaghho.
106. Hamilton &amp; Jones Greensboro PA.
107. Crown 3 Gal Blue &amp; White Churns.
108. Crown 3 Gal Blue &amp; White Churns.
109. Crown 3 Gal Blue &amp; White Churns.
110. 1 1/2 Chicken Waterer, Must See!
111. Blue Stripey.
112. Jar.
113. Jar Choice.
114. Jar Choice.
115. Buttermilk Feeder &amp; Poultry.
116. Salt Feeder.
117. Stripey.
118. Stripey
119. Stripey.
120. Stripey.
121. Stripey.
122. Chicken Feeder WR &amp; Co Pat. April
7, 1885.
123. Chicken Feeder.
124. Stripey.
125. Stripey.
126. Stripey.
127. Stripey.
128. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
129. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
130. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
131. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
132. 5 Gal New Brighton PA Jug.
133. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
134. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
135. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
136. Chicken Waterer.
137. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
138. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
139. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
140. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
141. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
142. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
143. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
144. Donaghho Co Parkersburg WV.
145. Chicken Waterer.
146. Chicken Waterer.
147. Bowl.
148. 2 Gal Jug.
149. Western Stoneware Jug.
150. 3 Gal Jug.
151. 2 Gal Crown Churn.
152. JB Busch Liquors Parkersburg WV
Handle Broke.
153. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
154. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
155. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
156. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
157. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
158. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
159. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
160. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
161. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.
162. AP Donaghho Parkersburg WV.

TERMS: Cash or check w/
valid picture ID &amp; bank letter
of credit for larger items if not
known to owner or auction co.
FOOD AVAILABLE

OH-70077711

drums from around
the world, shakers and
body percussions, he
and visitors will make
music. He has 25 years of
experience with children.
Greene plays West
African drums for classes
at Factory Street Studio
in Athens, where he has
a ﬁscal sponsorship,
and for Ugata a Pan
African group, focused on
education entertainment
and the environment.
This is a class for
covering African History,
the Islamic golden Age
in Africa and the cultural
roots of Africa before the
slave trade.
Beginning 1999, Gerald
Payn began as an Abraham Lincoln presenter,
having around 75 engagements a year recently, and
has visited every place
Lincoln lived during his
lifetime plus a number of
Civil War Battle sites and
other related places. Payn
was inspired to present
Lincoln by Jim Getty, of
Gettysburg, Penn. He is
a life member of National
Association of Lincoln
Presenters and is a “full
height” Lincoln presenter
at 6’4”. He performs in
costume and presents in
ﬁrst person. He speaks
on a large variety of topics such as the life of
Lincoln, Lincoln’s last
days, highlights of the
Civil War, Lincoln and his
interactions with religion,
law, politics, leadership
and more. Payn attempts
to emphasize the human
side of Lincoln. Payn’s
wife, Marilyn Payn, often
accompanies him in period dress and can present
Mary Todd Lincoln.
Michael Crutcher
is a devout scholar of
Frederick Douglass and
believes his calling is to
share Douglass’ principle
of freedom, equality, religion and self-esteem. He
will present as Frederick
Douglass during the celebration. A retiree from
the United States Army,
and former assistant
professor at University
of Kentucky’s Lexington
Community College,
Crutcher began his acting
career with Images Modeling and Acting Agency
in Lexington, Kentucky.
Since then, he has been in
several television commercials and training videos.
He was a stand-in actor in
the movie Seabiscuit and
can be seen in the movie
Dreamer, with actors
Dakota Fanning and Kurt
Russell. Crutcher’s current role was inspired
after research revealed his
great-great grandfather,
Daniel Gilchrist, was a
member of the 13th United States Colored Troops
Heavy Artillery out of
Camp Nelson, Kentucky.
He also discovered that
Daniel’s father was from
Virginia, where Douglass’
lineage was traced to
before his family moved
to Maryland where Daniel’s mother was from.
Steve Ball is a musician and historian from
Columbus. Steve started
both playing the guitar
and studying the American Civil War at the age of
12. Over the years, Steve
developed an interest in
older styles of American
music, and has performed
in Folk groups, Bluegrass
and Country bands,
Square dance bands,
and even a Western trio.
His interest in Civil War
music was generated by
tunes he learned while

Sunday, September 16, 2018 7A

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com

�NEWS

8A Sunday, September 16, 2018

Rio hosts annual ‘Employee and Family Picnic’

Elks donate to UMC food pantry

Courtesy photo

Recognizing Suicide Prevention Month

WEATHER

68°

74°

72°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

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.

89°
68°
80°
57°
100° in 1939
36° in 1964

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
5.27
1.39
43.33
31.64

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:11 a.m.
7:35 p.m.
2:17 p.m.
none

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Sep 16 Sep 24

Last

Oct 2

New

Oct 8

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

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

Major
5:53a
6:42a
7:28a
8:13a
8:56a
9:38a
10:19a

Minor
12:05p
12:30a
1:16a
2:01a
2:44a
3:26a
4:08a

Major
6:17p
7:06p
7:53p
8:37p
9:20p
10:01p
10:42p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Minor
---12:54p
1:41p
2:25p
3:08p
3:50p
4:30p

WEATHER HISTORY
A low temperature of 27 degrees
on Sept. 16, 1964, at Concord, N.H.,
ended the shortest growing season of
any summer last century. Temperatures had stayed above freezing for
only 100 days.

Rain from Tropical
Rainstorm Florence

Warmer; a morning
shower in places

Humid with times of
sun and clouds

Mostly sunny, warm
and humid

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Adelphi
78/68

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
79/68

300

Portsmouth
77/69

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.30 -0.20
Marietta
34 22.03 -2.80
Parkersburg
36 24.55 -7.06
Belleville
35 12.03 -1.68
Racine
41 12.69 -2.46
Point Pleasant
40 28.38 -9.93
Gallipolis
50 15.90 -6.19
Huntington
50 40.43 -2.51
Ashland
52 44.79 -1.82
Lloyd Greenup 54 17.05 -1.09
Portsmouth
50 40.90 -3.30
Maysville
50 42.60 -0.60
Meldahl Dam
51 43.30 +0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Belpre
79/69

Athens
79/68

St. Marys
80/70

Parkersburg
80/66

Coolville
78/68

Elizabeth
79/70

Spencer
78/70

Buffalo
77/70

Ironton
76/69

Milton
77/70

St. Albans
78/70

Huntington
75/68

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
64/51
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
69/54
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
85/62
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mostly sunny and
humid

Clendenin
79/70
Charleston
77/68

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
71/43

Billings
76/48

Montreal
81/64

Minneapolis
88/69
Chicago
86/67

Denver
92/63

Toronto
81/65
Detroit
84/67

New York
79/67
Washington
78/72

Kansas City
86/66

A couple of showers
possible

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
91/62/s
58/52/sh
84/68/pc
77/70/c
78/69/c
76/48/s
76/46/s
80/66/s
77/68/sh
77/70/r
88/58/pc
86/67/s
78/69/pc
84/69/pc
81/69/pc
90/74/pc
92/63/s
86/68/s
84/67/s
86/75/pc
92/75/t
83/69/s
86/66/s
101/77/s
90/72/pc
85/62/s
80/71/pc
91/77/t
88/69/s
82/71/sh
95/77/s
79/67/s
85/69/pc
92/74/t
81/67/pc
105/83/s
81/67/pc
78/61/s
78/71/r
82/72/sh
90/71/s
87/57/s
69/54/pc
64/51/r
78/72/c

Hi/Lo/W
91/64/s
58/50/pc
90/70/pc
81/74/c
80/70/r
70/45/pc
78/48/s
81/68/pc
77/68/r
87/71/c
85/53/pc
87/69/s
75/66/sh
77/69/sh
75/67/r
92/74/pc
91/61/pc
89/70/s
79/67/pc
86/75/sh
92/76/pc
83/67/pc
88/69/s
100/76/s
92/72/s
84/62/s
80/69/pc
90/77/pc
83/60/t
85/69/pc
94/78/t
78/72/c
88/71/s
91/74/c
82/71/r
106/83/s
77/67/r
78/64/pc
83/71/t
83/73/r
90/72/s
86/59/s
66/54/pc
66/49/pc
81/73/r

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
84/68
FLORENCE

El Paso
91/68

Chihuahua
84/63

77°
54°

NATIONAL CITIES

Wilkesville
77/68
POMEROY
Jackson
78/69
77/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
78/70
77/69
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
79/69
GALLIPOLIS
78/69
78/70
77/69

Ashland
76/70
Grayson
75/69

SATURDAY

85°
65°

Marietta
81/69

Murray City
78/68

McArthur
78/68

South Shore Greenup
77/70
75/68

76

Logan
78/68

be hired by the health
department and will work
to expand the reach of
adult diabetes navigation
services in the region.
The community health
worker training is expected to begin later this year.
Diabetes and its complications are among the
biggest health problems
facing the United States,
and the problem is especially severe in Appalachian Ohio. An eightcounty Diabetes Needs
Assessment conducted
in 2016 by the Diabetes
Institute at the Heritage
College and the Ohio University Voinovich School
of Leadership and Public
Affairs found that while
the disease affected 9.4
percent of the U.S. population and 11 percent of
Ohioans, 19.9 percent of
adults in the region were
affected by it.

FRIDAY

87°
66°

Lucasville
78/70
Very High

THURSDAY

84°
64°

Very High

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 2930

WEDNESDAY

83°
65°

Waverly
78/69

Pollen: 12

Low

MOON PHASES
First

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

TUESDAY

77°
68°

3

Primary: cladosporium

Mon.
7:12 a.m.
7:34 p.m.
3:10 p.m.
12:20 a.m.

MONDAY

Fog in the morning; otherwise, high clouds
today. A little rain tonight. High 78° / Low 69°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

program for children with
type 1 or type 2 diabetes; peer mentoring for
these children using Ohio
University students as
mentors; and free mental
health services and transportation assistance for
both children and adults.
There are no income
requirements. The
navigation program connects participants and
their families with area
resources that can help
them with issues such as
food insecurity, blood glucose monitoring, exercise
options and mental health
impacts of diabetes.
In collaboration with
the Athens City-County
Health Department, the
college will also offer
free job training to area
residents who wish to
become certiﬁed community health workers.
One of the trainees will

OHIO VALLEY —
Ohio University’s Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine has long
offered a wide range of
services to people with
diabetes in southeast
Ohio counties including Meigs County. Now
the college is expanding
those services even more,
with an added emphasis
on helping children with
the disease.
A three-year, $600,000
grant from the Health
Resources &amp; Services
Administration of the
U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services will fund diabetes
navigation services, and
also some new programs,
for residents of Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Morgan,
Perry, Vinton and Washington counties. New
services will include a
child diabetes navigation

Courtesy photo

2 PM

employees who work hard
for Rio every day and
their dedication to our
students,” Nourse said.
“This is a chance to take
a break from our normal
work day responsibilities
and celebrate the work we
do for Rio with our colleagues and family.”
Events at the picnic
included door prize drawings donated by local
businesses. Nourse said
he is also grateful for the
area businesses who support Rio and to his fellow
planning committee members, Amanda Ehman,
Brandon Bias, Michelle
Kennedy, Taylor Noel,
Jenny Henchey and Lori
Taylor for making the picnic a success.
Information provided
by The University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande
Community College.

Heritage College expands local diabetes programs

Gallia Commissioners and the Gallia Prosecutor’s Office recognized September as Suicide
Prevention Awareness Month. From left to right are Gallia Counselor Amy Sission, Gallia
Commissioner Harold Montgomery, Gallia Prosecutor Jason Holdren, Gallia Commissioner Brent
Saunders, Gallia Commissioner David Smith, Gallia Victim’s Advocates Regina Brown and Christy
Perkins, and Gallia Citizens for Prevention and Recovery Chair Thom Mollohan.

8 AM

side of the ofﬁce,” Clark
said. “Our employees
go above and beyond to
further Rio’s success. I
can’t thank them enough
for all that they do for
our students and for one
another.”
A tradition at the picnic is to recognize Rio’s
new employees and those
marking milestone years
of service at the institution. Director of Human
Resources Chris Nourse
said the 23 employees
earning milestone years
ranged between 5 to 40
years, totaling nearly
400 years combined, and
Rio welcomed 16 new
full-time employees hired
within the last year. He
said the annual picnic
began as a way to thank
all employees for their
service to Rio.
“We are grateful to our

RIO GRANDE — The
University of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Community College faculty and
staff spend long hours to
providing students with
high quality education.
To give these employees
a chance to relax, Rio
hosted its annual Employee and Family Picnic.
The event coincides with
Founders’ Day, which
celebrates Rio’s heritage
and all of the employees,
students and alumni who
are part of the institution’s history. Interim
President Dr. Catherine
Clark said she enjoyed
the opportunity to enjoy
time away from the ofﬁce
with employees and their
families.
“This picnic is a wonderful event that gives us
the opportunity to enjoy
one other’s company out-

The food pantry at Grace United Methodist Church began in 2002 when the church youth pushed
grocery carts up and down a section of Second Avenue asking for food donations. Thanks to
continued food collections and donations from our community, the food pantry has grown to be
able to serve over 100 families monthly. The Grace UMC food pantry is open from 10 a.m. to noon
every Monday and Tuesday. Fred Bryant, Secretary, Gallipolis Elks, presented a $500 check to
Pastor Ray Kane to help support the food pantry. The donation from the Gallipolis Elks was made
possible by a grant from the Elks National Foundation.

TODAY

Sunday Times-Sentinel

High
Low

110° in Thermal, CA
16° in Wisdom, MT

Global
Houston
92/75
Monterrey
86/71

Miami
91/77

High
119° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -10° in Summit Station, Greenland
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

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�S ports

Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM�#/:&gt;/7,/&lt;�� M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

Buckeyes defeat Raiders, 54-28
By Scott Jones

touchdown run with 5:00
remaining until the intermission propelled the visitors to a 20-7 advantage.
BIDWELL, Ohio — A
RVHS cut the deﬁcit to
tough start to conference
20-13, when Jordan Burns
play for the Raiders.
connected with Jared Reese
The River Valley football
team put together a spirited on a 5-yard touchdown pass
with 42 seconds remaining
performance in the ﬁrst
quarter, but visiting Tri Val- in the half.
The Buckeyes posted
ley Conference Ohio Divitheir fourth touchdown of
sion foe Nelsonville-York
simply had too much offen- the contest when Wilburn
scored on a 45-yard pass
sive prowess to overcome,
from Mikey Seel to extend
as the Buckeyes rolled to
the lead to 27-13, with only
a 54-28 victory on Friday
20 second remaining until
night in Gallia County.
the break.
The Raiders (0-4, 0-1
Nelsonville-York added
TVC Ohio) trailed 14-7
Scott Jones|OVP Sports entering the second quarter, three additional touchdowns
in the third quarter — while
RVHS junior Brandon Call (11) attempts to evade a tackle during the Raiders 54-28 setback but NYHS (1-3, 1-0) junior
to Nelsonville-York on Friday night in Bidwell, Ohio.
the Silver and Black were
Keegan Wilburn’s 14-yard
sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

held scoreless — to widen
the margin to 47-13 entering the ﬁnale.
The Raiders narrowed
the lead to 47-20 with 11:36
remaining in the fourth, as
Burns connected with Brandon Call on 47-yard touchdown pass. NYHS, however.
pushed the advantage to
54-20 just 1:10 later, as
Wilburn provided a 67-yard
touchdown run.
RVHS added its ﬁnal
points of the game, with 8
seconds remaining, when
Reese scored on a 47-yard
run and a successful twopoint conversion on a catch
from Burns to close out the

See BUCKEYES | 2B

Marauders win
at Vinton County,
27-21 overtime
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

McARATHUR, Ohio — There’s nothing wrong
with a little extra football.
The Meigs football team needed overtime, but
earned its ﬁrst win of the season on Friday night
at Vinton County, as the Marauders pulled out a
27-21 Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division victory.
The Marauders (1-3, 1-0 TVC Ohio) scored on
the opening drive of the game, with freshman
Coulter Cleland ﬁnding classmate Ty Bartrum for
a 15-yard scoring pass. David Robson added the
extra point, giving the Marauders a 7-0 lead with
7:06 left in the ﬁrst quarter.
The Vikings (1-3, 0-1) tied the game with a
Logan Baker four-yard scoring run and an Eli
Downs point-after kick with 3:38 left in the ﬁrst
quarter.
VCHS took a 14-7 lead 1:12 into the second
quarter, as Jacob Wells found paydirt from two
yards out.
Meigs pulled within one, as Landon Acree
scored on a 13-yard run with 8:00 left in the ﬁrst
half.
Meigs regained the lead 3:59 later as Cleland
scrambled for a 16-yard touchdown. The Marauders went up 21-14 as Abe Lundy punched in on the
two-point conversion.
Vinton County tied the game with 58 seconds
left in the half, when Wells scored on another twoyard run.
Neither offense could break through in the second half, and the teams headed to overtime tied
at 21.
See MARAUDERS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday, Sept. 17
Boys Golf
TVC Ohio at Athens, 4:30
Gallia Academy at Warren, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Big Bend, 4 p.m.
Girls Golf
Gallia Academy at Warren, 4 p.m.
Volleyball
Eastern at Wahama, 7 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 7 p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 7 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 6:30
Point Pleasant at Cross Lanes Christian, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Grace Christian, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Grace Christian, 5:30

Tuesday, Sept. 18
Boys Golf
Southern, Wahama, Ravenswood at Riverside,
4:30
Volleyball
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 6:30
Southern at Wahama, 7 p.m.
Vinton County at River Valley, 7 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 7 p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Cross Lanes Christian,
6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 5 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 5:30
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 5:30
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville, 7 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Southern senior Logan Drummer (11) breaks away from the pack, during a first half run in the Tornadoes’ victory on Friday in Racine,
Ohio.

Tornadoes maul Miller, 58-13
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio —
Score early, score often.
The Southern football
team found the end zone
seven times in the ﬁrst
half of Friday’s Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division matchup at Roger
Lee Adams Memorial
Field in Meigs County,
and the Tornadoes
cruised to a 58-13 victory
over visiting Miller.
After a 62-yard Brody
Dutton kickoff return to
open the game, Southern
(4-0, 1-0 TVC Hocking)
needed just two plays
to break the scoreless
tie, with Logan Drummer tossing an 18-yard
touchdown pass to Trey
McNickle. Drummer
made the point-after kick,
giving the host a 7-0 lead
just 34 seconds into the
game.
The Falcons (1-3, 1-2)
earned a ﬁrst down via
a fake punt on their ﬁrst
drive of the game, but
three plays later, Miller
was forced to punt for
real.
The Tornadoes went
three-and-out on their
next possession, but
Chase Bailey intercepted
a Miller pass on the third
play of the ensuing Falcon
drive.
On the third play of
Southern’s third drive,
McNickle broke a 30-yard
run for a touchdown, giving the Tornadoes a 13-0
lead with 5:10 left in the
ﬁrst quarter.
Miller fumbled the
ball back to the hosts
on their ﬁrst play from

SHS corner back Chase Bailey (3) intercepts a Miller pass, during
the first half of the Tornadoes’ victory on Friday in Racine, Ohio.

scrimmage, and Southern
took advantage two plays
later, as Drummer connected with McNickle for
a 42-yard scoring pass.
McNickle ran in the twopoint conversion, making
Southern’s lead 21-0 with
4:41 left in the ﬁrst.
MHS senior Rusty
Greenich returned the
ensuing kickoff 85 yards
for a touchdown, and
Lucas Dishon made the
point-after kick, cutting
Southern’s lead to 21-7.
The Falcon defense
forced a three-and-out
and Miller’s offense took
over at its own 32 with
3:35 left in the ﬁrst quarter. The guests covered
68 yards in nine plays,
with Colby Bartley ﬁnding Blayton Cox for an
18-yard scoring pass,
trimming the Tornado
lead to 21-13 with 11:14

left in the ﬁrst half.
On the third play of
Southern’s next drive,
Drummer found Dutton
down the right sideline
for a 74-yard scoring
pass. Drummer’s extrapoint kick was successful,
giving the Tornadoes a
28-13 advantage with
10:01 left in the half.
Dutton intercepted an
MHS pass on the fourth
play of the ensuing Falcon
drive, giving the Tornadoes the ball at their own
41. Sandwiched around a
short run, Southern had a
pair of passes go for over
20 yards, and then Drummer found McNickle for a
14-yard touchdown pass
to give SHS a 34-13 lead
with 7:24 remaining in
the half.
Miller went threeand-out on the its next
possession, and after a

30-yard punt return, the
Tornadoes needed four
plays to get to the end
zone. Drummer found
Gage Shuler from 10
yards out for the scoring
pass that, with McNickle’s two-point conversion
run, gave the Purple and
Gold a 42-13 lead at the
3:59 mark of the second
quarter.
Southern’s defense
came up with a second
straight three-and-out,
but this time the punt
went out of bounds, pinning the Tornadoes back
to their own 26 with just
under three minutes left
in the half.
The SHS offense quickly covered the 74 yards in
seven plays, with Drummer tossing a four-yard
touchdown to Weston
Thorla at the 1:27 mark
of the quarter. Miller
gained a ﬁrst down before
heading into halftime
behind 48-13.
Both offense went
three-and-out to start the
second half, and the Falcons came up empty on a
fourth down try on their
second drive.
On the third play of
Southern’s second drive
of the second half, Drummer busted through the
Falcon defense for a
43-yard touchdown run.
Drummer’s extra-point
kick gave Southern 55-13
lead with 27 seconds left
in the third quarter.
Gage Shuler intercepted a Falcons pass on
the ﬁrst play of the fourth
quarter, but Southern
fumbled the ball back to
See TORNADOES | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, September 16, 2018

Blue Devils
win 2 golf duals
By Scott Jones

out the top-four scores
for GAHS.
William Hendrickson’s 51 and Elijah
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Baird’s 53 capped off
— Two stellar perforthe Blue Devils team
mances.
score, with Hunter
The Gallia Academy
golf team earned a 169 Cook posting a 53
non-counting effort for
to 172 victory over
GAHS.
defending Ohio Valley
On Thursday verConference champion
Fairland on Thursday at sus Fairland, Thomas
agains earned medalist
Cliffside Golf Course.
honors again postThe win comes on
ing a 38, followed by
the heels of a 173 to
209 triumph over South Graham with a 40 and
Point on Wednesday at Davis with a 43. Sipple
Sugarwood Golf Course rounded out the GAHS
top-four with a 48.
in Lavalette, W.Va.
Elijah Baird had a 50
In the play six, count
and William Hendrickfour format, Reece
Thomas led the way for son’s 56 rounded out
the Blue Devils’s team
the Blue Devils versus
score versus the DragSouth Point with a
ons.
38 claiming medalist
Gallia Academy
honors. Cooper Davis
returns to the links on
followed with a 44,
while Wyatt Sipple was Monday at Warren.
next with a 45. Hobie
Scott Jones can be reached at
Graham’s 46 founded

sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

empty on a pair of pass
attempts. MHS earned
a 20-to-12 advantage in
ﬁrst downs, but lost the
From page 1B
turnover battle by a 2-1
count.
Meigs was penalized 11
The Vikings had the
times for 104 yards, while
ﬁrst crack at scoring in
VCHS was sent back six
the extra session, but
times for 65.
the Marauder defense
Cleland was 16-of-36
stopped the hosts on a
passing for 249 yards and
fourth-and-short.
one touchdown, while
The Marauders were
also facing a fourth down carrying the ball nine
times for 14 yards and
in overtime, but Lundy
got more than just a ﬁrst another score. Ty Bartrum completed his only
down, he scored on an
11-yard run to give Meigs pass attempt for 20 yards,
while totalling 57 yards
the 27-21 victory.
and a touchdown on ﬁve
In the victory, Meigs’
receptions and one carry.
offense chalked up 269
Acree had 100 total
yards through the air
yards and a touchdown,
and 112 on the ground
for a total of 381. Vinton combining two reception and one carry. Zach
County had 241 rushBartrum earned 69 yards
ing yards and came up

Marauders

Sunday Times-Sentinel

on 15 carries and three
receptions, while Cole
Adams had a 65 total
yards on four receptions
and two carries.
Wesley Smith had three
receptions for 48 yards,
while Lundy carried the
ball ﬁve times, earning 25
yards and a touchdown.
Robson carried the ball
once for three yards in
the win.
On defense, Lundy
came up with the
Marauders only takeaway,
recovering a fumble. Zach
Bartrum had a team-high
14 tackles, followed by Ty
Bartrum with 13.
Elijah Williams led the
hosts with 65 yards on
six carries, followed by
Baker with 58 yards and
a touchdown on 17 totes.
Wells had 46 yards and

two scores on 15 carries,
Cade Sibner added 41
yards on 14 tries, Lincoln
Hayes had 25 yards on
six carries, while Will
Arthur had one six-yard
run.
Meigs has now
defeated the Vikings in
back-to-back seasons, but
still trails 18-17 in the
all-time series. This is the
ﬁrst Marauder victory in
McArthur since 2014.
The Marauders return
to Rocksprings for their
next contest, as they host
River Valley. The Raiders
are still in search of their
ﬁrst win of the year, after
dropping their leagueopener to NelsonvilleYork on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

740-446-2342, ext 2106.

Buckeyes
From page 1B

26-point setback.
Layne Fitch led the
Raiders with 68 rushing yards, while Reese
followed with 63 yards.
Burns completed 6-of13 passing for 100
yards, including two
touchdowns.
Four different River
Valley players caught
at least one pass in

the setback, with Call
leading the way with
two grabs for 55 yards.
Dylan Lemley also
had two catches for
24 yards, while Colton
Gilmore and Reese each
added one reception for
13 yards and 8 yards,
respectively.
Next up for the Silver and Black, a road
date with TVC Ohio
Division foe Meigs on
Friday.
Scott Jones can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext 2106.

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Tornadoes
From page 1B

the guests after two
plays.
Southern stopped
Miller on fourth down
and, after gaining 39
yards in eight plays,
Drummer split the
uprights on a 42-yard
ﬁeld goal.
Following the 58-13
victory, ﬁrst-year Tornadoes head coach
Cassady Willford was
pleased with his team
on both sides of the
ball.
“Our defense is
playing lights out and
our offense is playing strong,” Willford
said. “On defense, I
give all the praise to
Coach Olexa, Coach
Dailey, Coach Circle,
Coach Stevens, all of
our assistant coaches,
everything they do for
us defensively is great.
When your’re getting
the ball back after threeand-out, three-and-out,
three-and-out, it’s awesome. On special teams,
give it up to Logan
Drummer for that
42-yard ﬁeld goal, we’ll
have to check the record
books.
“4-0 is feeling great,
it’s getting these kids
to believe that they can
achieve anything and
everything they put
their minds to. We have
a really mentally strong
team here, we’re just
going to keep grinding
and getting better each
week.”
Southern picked up
a 17-to-10 edge in ﬁrst
downs, and a 439-to203 advantage in total
offense, including 177to-92 on the ground.
The Tornadoes won the
turnover battle by a 5-1
tally. Both teams committed a pair of penalties, SHS for 20 yards
and MHS for 19.
Drummer was 13-of20 passing for 252 yards
and six touchdown,
while leading the team
in rushing with 82

yards and a touchdown
on nine carries. Trey
McNickle combined
three receptions and
four carries to total
133 yards and four
touchdowns. Reece
Reuter had 50 total
yards on three carries
and a reception, Thorla
picked up 33 yards and
a touchdown on three
receptions and one
carry, while Shuler had
30 yards and a touchdown on three carries
and three receptions.
Austin Baker caught
three passes for 32
yards, Dutton had two
grabs for 80 yards and a
touchdown, while Jonah
Diddle carried the ball
twice for a total of three
yards.
Thorla and Diddle
each recovered a fumble
on defense.
For Miller, Bartley
was 10-of-21 passing for
111 yards and a touchdown, while rushing
ﬁve times for six yards.
Cox had 90 yards and a
touchdown, combining
six receptions and eight
carries, while Devon
Crabtree had 75 total
yards on 15 carries and
three catches.
The Tornadoes head
to Washington County
next, as they visit Belpre.
“Belpre is a run-ﬁrst
team, they like to load
the box and run down
your throat,” Willford
said. “They have a great
coach there, he won a
state championship in
West Virginia, so you
have to give him credit
where credit is due.
Our guys have been getting better every week,
and our schedule is set
up for our guys to get
better every week. It’s
gonna be a knock-down,
drag-out ﬁght and I
think our boys will be
ready.”
The Golden Eagles
are coming off back-toback wins, including a
41-22 win at Wahama
on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Point Pleasant senior Josh Wamsley (2) runs the ball past a handful of Herbert Hoover defenders during a Week 4 football contest at
OVB Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Big Blacks blast Huskies, 53-21
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Maybe there’s a
reason that the Cardinal
Conference doesn’t want
to bring them back.
The Point Pleasant
football team improved
to 7-1 against its former
league foes on Friday
night following a resounding 53-21 Homecoming
victory over visiting Herbert Hoover in a Week 4
non-conference contest at
Ohio Valley Bank Track
and Field.
The host Big Blacks
(4-0) scored the initial
32 points of regulation
and amassed 327 yards of
total offense in the ﬁrst
half en route to building a
sizable 39-7 intermission
advantage.
Both the Red and Black
and the Huskies (1-3)
traded touchdowns over
the course of the second
half, with Point Pleasant
twice building leads of as
much as 39 points. The
Red and Blue added the
ﬁnal score with just under
10 minutes remaining
to slow down a running
clock, but the guests
ultimately ran out of time
on any kind of comeback
attempt.
The Big Blacks — who
won the Cardinal Conference title outright in 2011
— had to leave the Class
AA-based league in the
fall of 2012 due to being
bumped up to Class AAA.
Point Pleasant has
since won 7-of-8 outings
against Cardinal Conference opponents, with the
lone loss coming to thendefending Class AA state
champion Mingo Central
(36-34) on a Hail Mary
pass in Week 1 of the
2017 campaign.
PPHS — an original
member of the Cardinal
Conference when it was
founded — has also re-

applied and been denied
access twice since returning to Class AA back in
2016.
It was the sixth straight
home victory for Point
Pleasant, as well as the
program’s seventh consecutive regular season win.
Point has also secured
a triumph in its last six
Homecoming contests.
On a night in which
the hosts produced 336
of their 448 total yards
on the ground and had
three different players
score a pair of rushing
touchdowns, PPHS coach
David Darst noted that
his troops once again put
together an offensive display of ﬁrepower.
More importantly, the
12th-year mentor was
also pleased with how
his team is progressing
headed into another big
matchup seven days from
now.
“We thought the kids
seemed a little distracted
before the start of the
game, being Homecoming and all, but they really
woke up and came out
ready to play,” Darst said.
“Our offense was really
clicking once again and
I thought our defense
played well for the most
part, although we did
seem to lose some intensity as the lead continued
to grow.
“That’s a good offensive
team over there, but I’m
really proud of our kids
for the way they got after
tonight. It’s time for us
to get ready for that next
challenge … and Pikeville
will be a challenge for
us.”
Point Pleasant averaged
12.9 yards per carry on
the ground, with seven
different backs producing double-digit yardage
by night’s end. The Big
Blacks also surrendered a
season-high 213 rushing
yards on 46 carries, an

average of only 4.6 yards
per tote.
The hosts — who
outgained HHHS by a
substantial 254-79 margin
in the ﬁrst half — built
a quick 19-0 advantage
after 12 minutes of play.
Nick Parsons barreled
his way in from ﬁve yards
out with 6:04 left in the
opening canto for a 6-0
lead, then Brady Adkins
added touchdown runs of
six and 57 yards in a 2:32
span to end the quarter.
Josh Wamsley then
hauled in a 35-yard pass
from Cason Payne at the
7:58 mark of the second
for a 25-point cushion,
then Parsons added a
17-yard scamper with
5:19 left before halftime
for a 32-0 edge.
The Huskies ﬁnally
cracked the scoring column with 3:09 remaining
in the ﬁrst half as Ben
Kee rumbled 15 yards to
paydirt for a 32-7 contest.
The guests, however,
were never closer the rest
of the way.
Payne completed the
ﬁrst half scoring on a
three-yard scamper with
1:37 left, giving the hosts
a 39-7 lead at the break.
Point Pleasant was
plus-1 in turnover differential and also held a 13-5
edge in ﬁrst downs at the
intermission.
The Huskies tried to
get sneaky with the second half kickoff, trying
an onside squibber that
technically didn’t cover
10 yards.
Christian Holland, however, quickly gathered the
onside kick and returned
it 47 yards to paydirt for a
46-7 advantage just eight
seconds into the third
period.
Kee tacked on a sevenyard run with 4:18 left
to close the gap down to
46-14, but Payne added
the ﬁnal Point Pleasant
score on a 21-yard scam-

per at the 2:01 mark for a
53-14 advantage.
Rhett White scored on
a one-yard run with 9:56
left in regulation to wrap
up the 32-point outcome.
The Big Blacks claimed
a 21-12 advantage in
ﬁrst downs, but did ﬁnish the night minus-1 in
turnover differential. The
hosts were ﬂagged three
times for 25 yards, while
Herbert Hoover was
penalized six times for 32
yards.
Payne led Point Pleasant with 118 rushing
yards on nine carries and
also went 7-of-9 passing
for 112 yards and one
score.
Adkins was next with
90 yards on six attempts,
followed by Parsons with
34 yards on ﬁve totes
and Hunter Bush with 34
yards on one carry.
Wamsley led the Point
wideouts with three
catches for 70 yards, with
Aiden Sang adding two
grabs for 26 yards. Oliver
Skeie was also 5-of-7 on
PAT kicks in the triumph.
Wamsley recorded an
interception at the 3:25
mark of the ﬁrst quarter.
Nick Leport and Wyatt
Stanley also had a quarterback sack apiece for
the hosts.
Kee paced Herbert
Hoover with 198 rushing
yards on 20 carries, with
Dylan Kennedy following
with 13 yards on six tries.
Rhett White was 5-of16 passing for 50 yards
and threw an interception. Kee also led the
wideouts with two catches for 24 yards.
Point Pleasant completes a three-game home
stand on Friday when it
hosts Pikeville (KY) in a
Week 5 matchup at OVB
Field. Kickoff is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 16, 2018 3B

Eagles fall at Waterford, 36-6
By Alex Hawley

defending league champion Waterford (3-1,
2-0) scoreless until the
ﬁrst quarter clock read
WATERFORD, Ohio
zero, when Braden Bell— In less than 11 minutes, the Wildcat offense ville found paydirt on
proved how dangerous it a four-yard run. Peyten
Stephens ran in the twocan be.
The Waterford football point conversion to give
the hosts an 8-0 edge.
found the end zone ﬁve
Bellville found the end
times in a span of 10:41
on Friday night in Wash- zone again with 7:38 left
in the half, this time from
ington County, leading
the Wildcats to a 36-6 vic- ﬁve yards out. The WHS
tory over Tri-Valley Con- two-point conversion
ference Hocking Division attempt was stuffed, leaving the Waterford advanguest Eastern.
tage at 13-0.
The Eagles (0-4, 0-2
Just 1:36 after his ﬁveTVC Hocking) held

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

yard touchdown run,
Bellville added another
four-yard score, and this
time Stephens ran in the
two-point conversion, giving Waterford a 22-0 lead.
Bellville added one
more touchdown, hauling in a 20-yard scoring
pass from Stephens with
4:53 left in the half. Zane
Heiss ran in the two-point
conversion to give the
hosts a 30-0 advantage.
The Wildcats put six
more points on the board
with 1:19 left in the ﬁrst
half, as Stephens found
George Pantelidis for a

45-yard touchdown pass.
Eastern ﬁnally broke up
the shut out in the fourth
quarter, when Isaiah Fish
caught a 15-yard scoring pass from Conner
Ridenour. The point-after
kick was blocked and
Waterford sealed the deal
on the 36-6 victory.
Waterford earned a
229-to-98 advantage in
total offense, including
115-to-31 on the ground.
WHS had a 13-to-10
edge in ﬁrst downs, and
punted one less time than
EHS. Both teams lost a
fumble, and committed

six penalties, Eastern losing 50 yards and Waterford losing 45.
Blake Newland led the
Eagles on the ground
with 20 yards on seven
attempts. Ridenour was
5-of-15 for 45 yards and
a touchdown, with Fish
hauling in one pass for 15
yards and a score.
Bellville ﬁnished with
96 yards and four touchdowns, combining 14
carries and one reception.
Stephens was 7-of-10
passing for 114 yards,
while carrying the ball six
times for 11 yards. Pan-

telidis had two catches
for 65 yards and a touchdown to lead the WHS
receiving unit.
Waterford has now
won 18 consecutive TVC
Hocking contests. The
Wildcats also extended
their win-streak over the
Eagles to four games.
Next, the Eagles return
to East Shade River Stadium for their homecoming game against South
Gallia. The Rebels are 1-3
following a 32-0 setback
to Trimble on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Lady Vikings turn back Meigs volleyball
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

McARTHUR, Ohio — As
far as getting swept goes, the
Lady Marauders can’t feel
too bad about this one.
The Meigs volleyball team
suffered a straight games
setback at the hands of
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division host Vinton County
on Thursday evening, with
just 16 points separating the
teams in the match.

Meigs (3-8, 0-5 TVC Ohio)
took its ﬁrst lead of the night
at 11-10 in the ﬁrst game, but
the Lady Vikings scored the
next three points and never
trailed again on their way to
a 25-18 win.
The second game featured
eight lead changes, the last
of which came when VCHS
took a 23-22 advantage.
Meigs tied the game at 23,
but surrendered the next two
points and fell by a 25-23
count.

Vinton County took the
lead at 3-2 in the third game
and never trailed again on
the way to the match-clinching 25-18 victory.
In the setback, Meigs had a
serve percentage of 94.9 with
six aces, while recording a
44.6 side-out percentage and
a 5.3 hitting percentage.
Mallory Hawley led Meigs
with nine service points,
including three aces. Baylee
Tracy had six points for the
guests, Madison Fields added

ﬁve points and an ace, while
Maci Hood ﬁnished with
three points and two aces.
Marissa Noble and Breanna
Zirkle rounded out the MHS
service attack with two
points and one point respectively.
At the net, Meigs was led
by Noble and Hawley with
six kills apiece, with Noble
picking up a solo block.
Hood had ﬁve kills and one
solo block, Hannah Durst
added a pair of kills, while

Fields had one kill and a
team-best 13 assists. Zirkle
recorded 20 of the team’s
93 digs to lead the MHS
defense.
The Lady Marauders will
get another crack at Vinton
County on Oct. 9 at MHS.
The Maroon and Gold
have a break from TVC Ohio
action next, as they visit Gallia Academy on Tuesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

Gallia Academy
volleyball burns
Lady Dragons
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Eastern junior Caterina Miecchi (18) spikes the ball between Lady Rebels Christine Griffith (25) and Amaya Howell (2), during the Lady
Eagles triumph on Thursday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Lady Eagles soar past South Gallia
By Alex Hawley

win to move ahead 2-0 in
the match.
South Gallia claimed its
ﬁrst and only lead of the
TUPPERS PLAINS,
night at 1-0 in the third
Ohio — No ring rust
game, but Eastern took
here.
The Eastern volleyball the advantage at 2-1 and
never relinquished it on
team played its ﬁrst
match in a week and just the way to a 25-11 matchclinching victory.
its second of the month
As a team the Lady
on Thursday at ‘The
Nest’, but that didn’t stop Eagles had a serve percentage of 89.2, with 17
the Lady Eagles from
aces, while South Gallia
picking up a straight
had a trio of aces and a
games victory over Triserve percentage of 88.4.
Valley Conference Hocking Division guest South Eastern earned a side-out
percentage of 65.1, while
Gallia.
the Lady Rebels ﬁnished
Eastern (5-1, 4-0 TVC
with a 36.5 side-out parHocking) never trailed
entage.
in the opening game,
Kelsey Casto led the
but South Gallia (4-6,
Lady Eagle service with
2-3) stayed within ﬁve
points the entire time and 20 points, including ﬁve
aces. Jenna Chadwell had
ultimately fell by a 25-21
eight points and a pair of
count.
aces, Caterina Miecchi
The Lady Eagles led
wire-to-wire in the second added six points and four
aces, while Allison Barber
game, taking the 25-11

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

recorded ﬁve points and
one ace.
Sydney Sanders had
four points and three aces
in the triumph, while
Haley Burton and Kylie
Gheen both earned two
points and an ace.
SGHS was led by
Rachal Colburn with four
points, including one
ace. Isabella Cochran
and Makayla Waugh both
had three points, with
Cochran earning a pair
of aces. Christine Grifﬁth
had two points in the setback, while Amaya Howell and Faith Poling had a
point apiece.
Miecchi led the hosts
at the net with eight kills
and one block. Allison
Barber posted six kills in
the triumph, while Layna
Catlett had four kills and
two blocks. Olivia Barber
ﬁnished with two kills
and one block, Gheen

added a pair of kills,
while Chadwell ended
with one kill.
Chadwell and Burton
tied for a team-best with
14 assists apiece, while
Sanders had a nine of the
team’s 27 digs.
Colburn led South Gallia at the net with four
kills and a block. Waugh,
Poling and Grifﬁth each
ﬁnished with one kill for
the guests. Colburn led
the Lady Rebel passing,
while Amaya Howell
was the team’s lead ballhandler.
These teams will meet
again on Oct. 4 in Mercerville.
South Gallia will be
back at home on Monday
against Federal Hocking. The Lady Eagles are
scheduled to visit Wahama on Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

CENTENARY, Ohio
— And then there was
one.
The Gallia Academy
volleyball team is now
alone at the top of the
Ohio Valley Conference standings, as the
Blue Angels defeated
Fairland in straight
games to give the
Lady Dragons their
ﬁrst league loss.
Gallia Academy
(8-0, 7-0 OVC) led initially in the ﬁrst game,
but Fairland (8-6, 6-1)
took its ﬁrst lead at
4-3. GAHS scored ﬁve
of the next six points
and led the rest of the
way to the 25-15 victory.
The Blue Angels
led wire-to-wire and
had a perfect side-out
percentage in the second game, ultimately
winning it by a 25-6
count.
After a trio of lead
changes early in the
third game, Gallia
Academy took the
lead for good at 14-13
and cruised to the
match-clinching 25-17
triumph.
GAHS — which
celebrated a milestone, with junior Peri
Martin earning her
1,000th career assist
in the win — has now
won 36 straight league
matches and 25 consecutive OVC matches
at home. The victory
is Gallia Academy’s
14th in a row in the
regular season overall, which includes a
string of 10 straight
sweeps.
Gallia Academy
extended another
impressive streak on
Thursday, as it was
the program’s 24th
straight victory over
Fairland, dating back
to 2003.

For the match, Gallia Academy ﬁnished
with 16 aces and a
serve percentage of
89. The Blue Angels
had 31 digs, recorded
a side-out percentage of 65, and had a
hitting percentage of
16.1
Hunter Copley led
the GAHS service
attack with 16, including four aces. Taylor
Burnette had 14
points and three aces
in the win, while Martin, Ashton Webb and
Alex Barnes each had
ﬁve points, with ﬁve
aces by Webb and two
by Barnes. Maddie
Wright rounded out
Gallia Academy’s service with four points
and a pair of aces.
Webb led the hosts
at the net with 13
kills, followed by
Barnes with 11 kills
and a block. Maddy
Petro contributed
three kills and three
blocks to the winning
cause, Wright chipped
in with three kills,
Martin came up with
two kills and a block,
while Aubrey Unroe
added one kill.
Barnes and Burnette led the Blue
Angel defense with 10
digs apiece. Martin
recorded 31 assists in
the win and now has a
career total of 1,008.
Kelsie Warnock led
the Lady Dragons
with ﬁve points, followed by Taylor Webb
with four. Allie Marshall ended with three
points, while Jenna
Stone added two.
These teams are
scheduled to meet
again in the season
ﬁnale at FHS on Oct.
11.
Gallia Academy
returns to action on
Monday at Jackson.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

3 Blue Angels earn All-OVC honors
By Bryan Walters

Due to a lack of a teams, no
league champion was crowned
— but the girls did play for a halfdozen all-league spots individually.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — At least
The Blue and White came away
the Blue Angels shared.
Gallia Academy came away with with three of those top six posihalf of the all-league honors on Fri- tions, with senior Hunter Copley
day during the ﬁrst-ever Ohio Val- leading the host school with a 91.
Copley tied with Emilee Carey
ley Conference girls golf championof South Point for third place, but
ship held at Cliffside Golf Course
ended up fourth overall due to a
in the Old French City.
tiebreaker. Junior Bailey Meadows
The Blue Angels had enough
participants to compete as a team, and senior Molly Fitzwater also
came away with All-OVC accolades
which was more than most of the
as the duo placed ﬁfth and sixth
rest of the league could say.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy photo

Pictured are the first six female golfers to earn All-Ohio Valley
Conference honors in golf. Standing, from left, are Molly Fitzwater,
Bailey Meadows and Hunter Copley from Gallia Academy, Emilee
Carey of South Point, Katy Pertuset of Portsmouth, and Hanna
Shrout of Fairland.

overall with rounds of 93 and 94,
respectively. Hanna Shrout of Fairland claimed medalist honors with
a 3-over par round of 75, while
Katy Pertuset of Portsmouth was
the overall runner-up with an 85.
The Blue Angels had already set
school records this fall with a team
tally of 370 at the 18-hole Waterford Invitational and a ﬁnal score
of 181 over nine holes on the back
nine at the same event.

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

Tornadoes Blue Angels down Piketon, 7-1
edge Meigs
in golf dual
By Scott Jones

sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.
com

POMEROY, Ohio —
It wasn’t necessarily
David and Goliath, but
the smaller school did
come away with the
win.
In a battle of defending Tri-Valley Conference divisional
champions from a year
ago, visiting Southern
edged out Meigs by
two strokes to claim
local bragging rights
on Thursday in a nonconference golf dual at
Meigs Golf Course.
The Tornadoes
posted three of the
top ﬁve individual
scores in the head-tohead friendly, which
included a two-shot
advantage headed into
each squad’s fourth
scorer. Both programs
had a 49 to wrap up
their respective tallies,
allowing the Purple
and Gold to secure the
narrow triumph.
SHS posted a win-

ning tally of 173, led
by a runner-up effort
of 40 from Jensen
Anderson. Jarrett
Hupp and Joey Weaver
had identical rounds of
42, while Landon Hill
completed the scoring
with a 49.
Ryan Acree and
Tanner Lisle also had
respective rounds of
50 and 54 for the Tornadoes.
The Marauders
ended the event with
a team score of 175,
with Wyatt Nicholson
leading the way with
a medalist effort of
5-over par 39.
Bobby Musser was
next for MHS with a
42, whil Brody Reynolds and Cole Arnott
completed the scoring
with respective efforts
of 45 and 49.
Austin Mahr and
Dawson Justice also
ﬁred scores of 50 and
53 for the Maroon and
Gold.
Bryan Walters can be reached
at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

CENTENARY, Ohio —
Seventh heaven for the
Blue Angels.
The Gallia Academy
girls soccer team netted
a total seven goals en
route to earning their
seventh victory of the
season, defeating visiting Piketon by a score of
7-1 on Thursday night at
Lester Field.
GAHS (7-1) netted its
ﬁrst goal at the 38:56
mark, as Preslee Reed
propelled the Blue and
White to a 1-0 advantage. Reed added her
second goal of the match
14:44 later to extend the
lead to 2-0.
Krysten Sanders
scored in the 30th and
35th minute of the
match to further widen
the margin as the Blue
Angels closed out the
ﬁrst half with a 4-0 lead.
Following the intermission, Reed completed a hat trick when she
scored at the 32:02 mark
of the second period to
push the deﬁcit to 5-0.
Koren Truance added
Gallia Academy’s sixth

Scott Jones|OVP Sports

GAHS goalkeeper Alexis Nickels makes a save during the Blue Angels 7-1 victory over Piketon on
Thursday in Centenary, Ohio.

goal on a penalty kick
with 13:22 remaining in
the match.
Piketon cut the deﬁcit
to 6-1, in the 70th minute when Ally Crother’s
shot found the back of
the net.
Reed tacked on her
fourth goal of the contest with 0:30 remaining

in the game, as the Blue
Angels closed out the
7-1 victory.
Gallia Academy
outshot the Lady Redstreaks by a sizable 29-7
margin and also claimed
a 4-0 advantage in corner kicks.
GAHS goalkeeper
Alexis Nickels made four

saves while earning a
clean sheet win in net,
while Cameryn Alexander stopped six shots in
goal for Piketon.
The Blue Angels
return to action on Tuesday in an OVC contest
against Fairland.
Scott Jones can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext 2106.

Blue Devils blank Trojans, 9-0
By Scott Jones
sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

Pridemore
continues to lead
Riverside seniors
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. —
Kenny Pridemore, of
Point Pleasant, still
leads the 2018 Senior
Men’s Golf League at
Riverside Golf Club.
With just two weeks
left in the regular
season, Pridemore
has a season total
of 267 points, a full
eight points ahead of
Charlie Hargraves in
second.
A total of 58 players
were on hand Tuesday,
making 13 four-man
teams and two trio.
There was a tie for
the low score of the
day, with the team of
Pridemore, Jeff Circle
and Rex Young, and
the team of Hargraves,
Gene Thomas, Dave
Biggs and Carl Stone
both ﬁring a 10-under
par 60.
One shot back,

there was also a tie for
third, between the trio
of Willis Korb, Cliff
Rice and Dale Dargent, and the quartet
of Jimmy Gress, Phil
Burgess, Jim Lawrence and Jim Blake.
The closest to the
pin winners were Hargraves on the ninth
hole and Cecil Gillette
Jr. on No. 14.
The current top10 standings are
as follows: Kenny
Pridemore (267.0),
Charlie Hargraves
(259), Bobby Watson
(229.0), Carl Stone
(226.5), Albert Durst
(214.5), Dewey Smith
(212.5), Paul Maynard
(203.0), Ed Coon
(194.5), Fred Pyles
(191.5), and Bob
Humphreys, John Williams and Dave Biggs
(184.5).

CENTENARY, Ohio — More
than a little lop-sided.
The Gallia Academy boys soccer
team earned a 9-0 shutout win on
Thursday night as visiting Portsmouth was held to four shots in an
Ohio Valley Conference contest at
Lester Field.
GAHS (4-1, 3-1 OVC) scored
four goals in the ﬁrst half, as Pedro
Herrera provided the Blue and
White’s initial goal in the eighth
minute.
Justin Day pushed the lead to
2-0, in the 22nd minute, and Dalton Vanco tacked on Gallia Academy’s third goal in the 26th minute
of the contest.
Emmanuel Valdez extended the
advantage to 4-0 with 9:55 remaining in the half.
Following the intermission,
Brody Wilt’s scored at the 33:45
mark of the period to push the deﬁcit to 5-0.
Valadez added his second goal of
the match with 20:32 remaining to
widen the margin to 6-0.
Tristan Polsley scored with 17:54

Scott Jones|OVP Sports

GAHS freshman Seth Nelson races toward the ball during the Blue Devils 9-0 victory over
Portsmouth on Thursday in Centenary, Ohio.

left to staked the hosts to a 7-0
lead.
Wilt completed a hat trick providing Gallia Academy’s ﬁnal two
goals when he scored in the 57th
and 71st minute of the match to
close out the 9-0 win.
The Blue Devils outshot the Trojans by a sizable 36-4 margin and
also claimed a 14-1 advantage in

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

The Meigs girls
golf team picked up a
56-stroke win in a headto-head match against

POMEROY, Ohio — A
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corner kicks.
The victory serves as a season
sweep for GAHS, having earned a
10-0 win over the Trojans on Aug.
22.
GAHS returns to the pitch on
Tuesday to host Fairland in an
OVC match.

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River Valley, on Thursday at the Meigs Golf
Course. In the play six,
count four format, the
Lady Marauders totalled
a 185, while River Valley
carded a 241.
MHS sophomore Kylee
Robinson paced the ﬁeld
with an 8-over par round
of 42. Lydia Edwards
was next for the Lady
Marauders with a 44,
two strokes ahead of
Shalynn Mitchell. Olivia
Haggy’s 53 rounded out
the team score, with

Caitlin Cotterill’s 57
and Shelbe Cochran’s 59
serving as potential tiebreaking rounds.
Chloe Gee led the
Lady Raiders with a 55.
Aislynn Bostic was next
with a 61, followed by
Sophia Gee with a 62
and Erika Justice with
a 63.
Hina Horimoto carded
a 79 for the Silver and
Black, but did not count
toward the team total.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bears hold off Rio
men for ALC Invite title
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

PRESTONSBURG, Ky.
— After losing one tournament to the University
of Rio Grande two days
earlier, the University of
Pikeville needed some
dramatics from its ﬁnal
golfer - on his ﬁnal hole to avoid the same fate on
Tuesday.
The Bears blew a nineshot lead over the RedStorm entering the ﬁnal
round of the Alice Lloyd
Fall Invitational, but Trey
Isenberg’s eagle on No.
18 allowed his team to
edge Rio by one shot
at the Stone Crest Golf
Club.
Rio Grande had erased
the nine-shot deﬁcit
and actually held a oneshot lead as Isenberg
approached the par-4
18th. He drove the green

on his tee shot and then
found the cup on his
second attempt to allow
the Bears to leapfrog the
RedStorm for the win.
“Even to have lost, that
was fun,” said Rio head
coach Keith Wilson. “We
did a nice job coming
from nine back, but their
guy got it done in the
end.”
Freshman Levi Chapman (Pomeroy, OH) and
Patrick England (Peebles,
OH) ﬁnished as part of
a three-way tie for ﬁfth
with a 36-hole total of
151. Chapman had a
6-over par 78 for the day,
while England carded a
2-over 74.
Junior Logan Sheets
(Bidwell, OH) and sophomore Jarod Lemaster
(Jackson, OH) tied for
eighth with a 10-over par
154. Sheets ﬁred a 74 on
Tuesday, while Lemaster

Chiefs face Steelers
in 2nd road challenge
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— A talented and
mobile young quarterback tasked with taking
over a playoff team
from a veteran.
Yeah, Pittsburgh
Steelers star Ben Roethlisberger may know a
little something about
that.
Still, the two-time
Super Bowl winner’s
eyes get a little wide
when talking about
Kansas City’s Patrick
Mahomes.
Asked about his
initial impressions of
Mahomes — whom
Roethlisberger and the
Steelers (0-0-1) will get
a close look at when
Kansas City (1-0) visits
Pittsburgh on Sunday
— and the 36-year-old
sounds impressed and a
little wistful at the same
time.
“An amazing talent,”
Roethlisberger said.
“He’s got a big arm.”
And big expectations
too. Throwing for four
touchdowns in your
ﬁrst season opener
— as Mahomes did
while lighting up the
Chargers on the road in
Week 1 — has a way of
doing that.
Now all he has to do
for an encore is try to
help Kansas City win in
Pittsburgh for the ﬁrst
time since 1986, nearly
a full decade before the
22-year-old was born.
No pressure or anything, though Mahomes
isn’t exactly concerned
about carrying the
weight of his team’s
largely forgettable history against the Steelers.
“It’s a brand new sea-

equaled his round of 77
from one day earlier.
Rio’s biggest day came
from freshman Colten
Blakeman (Piketon, OH),
who bettered his opening
round score of 89 by 14
shots.
The RedStorm ﬁnished
with a team total of 607,
while Pikeville ﬁnished
at 606. Host Alice Lloyd
was third at 626.
UPike’s Roger Maynard took top individual
honors with 2-under par
total of 142. ALC’s Aaron
Minor was the runner-up
six shots back.
The RedStorm returns
to action next Monday
in WVU-Tech’s Golden
Bear Classic at the Glade
Springs Resort in Daniels,
W.Va.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Shawnee State sweeps
RedStorm volleyball
tie twice in set one, but
never gained the lead.
Rio also sliced the early
deﬁcit in set two to 7-6,
PORTSMOUTH,
but the Bears reeled off
Ohio — Host Shawnee
State University got off to four straight winners to
quick starts in each of the rebuild a ﬁve-point lead
ﬁrst two sets and ﬁnished and the RedStorm got no
set three strong to post a closer than three points
the rest of the way.
sweep of the University
Rio carved a 17-8
of Rio Grande, Thursday
deﬁcit in set three down
night, in non-conference
women’s volleyball action to 18-13, but Shawnee
scored seven of the ﬁnal
at the Frank and Janis
eight points to win going
Waller Gymnasium.
away and seal the match
The Bears earned
victory.
the straight sets win by
Carson Roney led a
scores of 25-18, 25-21
balanced attack for the
and 25-14 to improve to
Bears along the net with
8-7 overall and complete
nine kills and eight blocks
a season sweep of their
(one solo, seven assists),
rivals.
while Emily Cooper and
Rio Grande slipped to
Elaina Davenport had 14
3-9 with the loss.
Shawnee State jumped and 13 kills, respectively.
Davenport also had a
to 7-2 leads in each of
match-best three service
the ﬁrst two stanzas and
aces.
never looked back.
Macie Rhoads and
The RedStorm did pull
Madison Knipp added 14
within one point of a

For Ohio Valley Publishing

and 10 digs, respectively,
in the win for Shawnee
State.
Freshman Ashley Taylor (Chillicothe, OH)
had six kills to pace Rio
Grande, which ﬁnished
with just a .027 attack
percentage for the match.
Sophomore Macy Roell
(Farmersville, OH) led
the RedStorm with 14
assists and 11 digs, while
freshman Jesse Youse
(Pettisville, OH) had four
block assists and two service aces.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Tuesday night
when West Virginia University-Tech visits in the
River States Conference
opener for both squads.
First serve is set for 7
p.m. at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Saints’ Drew Brees braces
for improving Browns
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
— Drew Brees is in his
13th year playing for the
Saints — and it’s been
about that long since
he’s beaten the Cleveland
Browns.
Brees’ ﬁrst game with
New Orleans was a victory at Cleveland in 2006.
The Browns have won
the past two meetings in
2010 and 2014.
“Man, they’ve been
tough games against
these guys,” Brees
recalled this week as he
prepared for his latest
clash with Cleveland on
Sunday.
While the Saints (0-1)
made the playoffs last
season, they’ve opened
the season with an upset
loss at home to Tampa
Bay. Cleveland (0-0-1)
comes in with a marginally better record after its
opener against Pittsburgh
ﬁnished in a tie.
And Brees doesn’t want
to hear about how the
Browns haven’t won a
game since 2016 — not
after watching Cleveland’s
defense produce six
Steelers turnovers last
weekend.
“You hate the fact they
haven’t had a win for a
while, because you look at

their side of the ball and
you’re like, ‘Man, that is
a really good defense that
did a lot of good things,’”
Brees said.
“Forget their record.
Forget last time they had
a win. … Whatever they
throw at us, we have to
have a plan for, we have
to be ready for — do all
the things that equate to
winning football.”
If Cleveland were to
end a long winless streak
in the Superdome on
Sunday, it wouldn’t be the
ﬁrst time.
When the current
incarnation of the Browns
joined the NFL as an
expansion team in 1999,
they arrived in New
Orleans winless through
seven games and wound
up celebrating their ﬁrst
victory after Tim Couch’s
56-yard heave as time
expired found Kevin Johnson in the end zone. The
lasting image for Saints
fans was deﬂated thencoach Mike Ditka lying
face-down on the turf.
For the Saints to avoid
falling on their collective
faces against Cleveland
again, New Orleans’
defense likely will have to
improve on the more than
500 yards it allowed to

the Bucs in Week 1.
For new Browns QB
Tyrod Taylor, the opportunity to play the Saints
represents a shot at
redemption. He struggled
against the Saints last
year while playing for
Buffalo. He passed for
only 56 yards without
a touchdown and was
intercepted before being
removed from that game
and benched the following week.
“Of course, I remember
that game,” Taylor said.
“It didn’t go as planned.
So, deﬁnitely looking
forward to competing
against that group again.”
Some other story lines
surrounding the BrownsSaints matchup:
Better brees
Brees is now 39 and
in his 18th season, but
showing little sign of
slowing down. He passed
for 439 yards and three
touchdowns last week.
And while the Saints lost,
the offense looked good
scoring 40 points.
Brees “continues to
play at a really high level,”
Browns coach Hue Jackson said. “Obviously, they
have very talented players
around him.”

son,” he said. “We’ve
got a lot of guys that
are hungry and want to
get better every single
week and this will be a
great challenge in the
early season to kind of
get us going.”
Pittsburgh has won
seven of the past eight
meetings, including a
19-13 victory at Arrowhead Stadium last October that put a pin in
Kansas City’s 5-0 start
while simultaneously
igniting an eight-game
winning streak that
carried the Steelers to
a second straight AFC
North title.
Pittsburgh entered
that game needing a
boost after getting
throttled at home by
Jacksonville. The Steelers could use another
one after an ugly 21-all
tie in Cleveland last
week in which they
turned it over six times
and blew a 14-point
fourth-quarter lead.
Playing well against
Kansas City has rarely
been an issue for the
Steelers. Neither have
home openers. Pittsburgh is 15-2 in season
debuts at Heinz Field
since moving from
Three Rivers Stadium
in 2001 and Roethlisberger — who spent
part of the week dealing with an achy right
elbow — tends to ﬁnd
another gear when in
Pittsburgh’s home black
jerseys. He’s averaging
nearly three touchdown
passes per game at
Heinz Field since the
start of 2014.
Some things to look
for as the Chiefs try to

end a six-game losing
streak in the Steel City
while the Steelers try to
avoid their worst start
since they dropped
their ﬁrst four games in
2013, the last time they
missed the playoffs.
King of the hill
Kansas City wide
receiver/punt returner
Tyreek Hill piled up
269 total yards in Los
Angeles, including a
53-yard catch-and-run
touchdown and 91-yard
punt return for a score
that ended in similar
fashion: with Hill ﬂashing the “peace” sign as
he traipsed into the end
zone.
Steelers linebacker
T.J. Watt says older
brother Derek — a fullback for the Chargers
— offered a brief scouting report on Hill, who
has 13 touchdowns of
50 yards or more in 32
games.
“He said 10 (Hill) is
fast,” Watt said. “I said
‘I already knew that.’”
So does everyone
else. Pittsburgh gave
up plenty of big plays
last season, allowing 13 passes of more
than 40 yards, tied for
third-highest in the
league. The revamped
secondary played well
in Cleveland, but that
was in the rain against
an offense that doesn’t
feature a player such as
Hill.
“He’s a human video
game,” Pittsburgh
linebacker Bud Dupree
said. “We got to make
sure he doesn’t make a
lot of explosive plays
that he always makes.”

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Show Case; Cash Register; McCaskey Cash Drawer; Fancy
Oak Dresser; Oak Hi-Boy; Oak Step-Back Cabinet; Early Jelly
Cabinet; Work Tables; GE Deli Cooler; Marquette Refrigerator;
Charter Oak Coal Stove; Lg. Trunks; Lowry Piano; Fancy 9 Pc.
Depression DR Suite; 4 Pc. Cherry French Pro BR Suite; 2 Nice
Mohair LR Suites; Plus More.

GLASSWARE
Cranberry &amp; Clear; Hull Art Basket; Two Lg Vases; Press Cut;
Sets of China; List goes on.

HOUSEHOLD
5 Pc. Dinette; Maytag Wringer Washer; Like New Lift Chair; Pots
&amp; Pans; plus much more.

TERMS: Cash or check w/valid
picture ID &amp; bank letter of credit
for larger items if not known to
owner or auction co.
FOOD AVAILABLE

OH-70077898

By Randy Payton

Sunday, September 16, 2018 5B

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

6B Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
hole, using a nine iron.
The shot was witnessed by Gary
Michael, Tony Meaige and Mike Holley.

MASON, W.Va. — David Michael,
of Crown City, Ohio, has recorded
the ninth hole in one of the season
at Riverside Golf Club on Saturday,
Sept. 8.
Micheal made the ace — the ﬁrst
of his career — on the 155-yard 14th

Roush wins Riverside
Club Championship
MASON, W.Va. — Trent Roush
earned his sixth career Riverside

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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Notices
"The 2016 and 2017 Financial
Audit Report for Perry Township is now complete and
available for viewing at the
Fiscal Officer's home or at the
regular monthly meeting that
is held on the second Monday
of each month."
9/14/18,9/16/18
EMPLOYMENT

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REAL ESTATE
Land (Acreage)
30 Acres in Mason County
near Ashton/Glenwood.
Great for building or
hunting. Electric, easy
access, mostly wooded,
$39,000. Owner Financing
with $3900 down &amp; $337/mth
for 20 years. Other options
also available.
Call for maps,
(740)989-0260.
Brunerland.com
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and Jason King were in a three-way
tie for third at even-par.
The net winner of the championship ﬂight was Jason King at 8-under,
followed by John Ridenour at 7-under
and Tucker at 6-under.
The ﬁrst ﬂight champions were
Jeff Fowler with a gross of 162, and
Harry Queen with a net of 134.
A total of 32 golfers competed in
this year’s event.

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

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

Amy Carter

Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

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

OH-70004516

www.markporterauto.com

Product Specialist
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amycarter@markporterauto.com

HUGE
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, September 22nd, 9:00 am
���&amp;*(!�����&amp;���1��&amp;&amp;#,!##�����

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Help Wanted General
RN’S NEEEDED
HOME HEALTH, FLEXIBLE
SCHEDULE HEALTH, LIFE
INS AND MORE, 2/3 WEEKS
PAID VACATIONS
COMPANY CAR, COMPANY
WILL TRAIN. TOP PAY
AND SIGN ON BONUS!
EMAIL:
HEALTHCEO@AOL.COM

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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DIRECTIONS:� �(&amp;$� �* �%)�� *�"�� �*�� �� ��)*� � $!#�)�� *&amp;-�(�)�
�&amp;&amp;#,!##���*+(%�&amp;%��&amp;*(!�����&amp;�����&amp;+%*/��&amp;��� ����&amp;��''(&amp;.!$�*�� � �
$!#�)�*&amp;��(!,��&amp;%�* ��#��*��-�*� ��&amp;(�)!�%)���� ��"�&amp;+(�-���)!*���&amp;(�' &amp;*&amp;)��
---�) �$(&amp;�"��+�*!&amp;%)��&amp;$� � � �+�� *&amp;� *(�,�#!%�� !%� ��� %��(#/� �+##�*!$���
&amp;-%�()��(���&amp;-%)!0!%���%��)�##!%��* �!(�#!��*!$���&amp;##��*!&amp;%)�

MOTOR ROUTE

GUNS, VEHICLES,
TRACTORS, FARM &amp; OTHER EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Life size Trigger 10 cent coin
operated mechanical horse-Roy Rogers Double R Ranch
from 1950s-still works in ex. Cond. (sold w/owner’s consent),
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
and lots, lots more.

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

OH-70077738

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Golf Club Championship over the
Labor Day weekend.
The 36-hole stroke-play event,
which began in 1973, featured two
division, based on GHIN handicap
allowance.
Roush ﬁred a 4-under par 66 on the
opening day, and followed it up with
an even-par 70, to take the championship by three strokes over Ryan
Norris. David Reed II, Jeremy Tucker

OH-70067715

Riverside has
9th ace of season

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

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679
OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

Houses For Rent

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

Mobile Home For Rent
3 Bedroom 2 Bath Newly
Re-Modeled SR 160 Porter
Area $600 - $600 deposit
740-645-3592

�&amp;(����&amp;$'#�*��#!)*!%����' &amp;*&amp;)���&amp;�*&amp;�&amp;+(�-���)!*��
) �$(&amp;�"��+�*!&amp;%)��&amp;$�&amp;(���##��&amp;(���#!)*!%��*&amp;����$�!#���
OWNERS: Dorothy and William Bell
SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd &amp; Michael Boyd
WEB: shamrock-auctions.com
Email: shamrockauction@aol.com
PH: 740-591-5607

REAL ESTATE &amp; PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, September 29, 9:00 a.m.
120 N. Mill Street, Wilkesville, OH
REAL ESTATE – SELLS
AT 11:30 AM-SOLD w/
owner’s consent: Single family home built in
1950 with 1644 sq. ft.,
6-rooms, enclosed front
entry porch, open staircase, living room, dining
area with open remodeled kitchen, 3-bedrooms
(2-upstairs),
2-bathrooms, den and ofﬁce
rooms, heated with new
Geo Thermal Water Furnace, large deck on side,
on 2-large lots w/3-outbuildings.
REAL ESTATE TERMS: A 10% Buyer’s Premium will be added to the ﬁnal high
bid and will be paid as a Non-Refundable deposit due day of sale in the form of
cash, cashier’s check or Personal Check guaranteed by a bank letter of credit in
hand day of sale with the balance paid at closing within 30 days. Buyer may take
possession at closing. Real Estate sells AS IS with no ﬁnancing or inspection
contingencies. Disclaimer: Information contained herein is believed to be correct
to the best of Auctioneer/Agent knowledge but is subject to inspection and veriﬁcation by all parties relying on it. Viewing by appointment: 740-591-5613
DIRECTIONS: From US-50/32W in Athens towards Jackson (19 miles from Jackson), go approximately 15 miles, past Albany, exit south onto Rt. 689, go 3 miles to
Wilkesville, past restaurant, turn left onto Mill Street, auction is on the right, watch
for signs. Check our web site for photos: www.shamrock-auctions.com

AUTOS

PERSONAL PROPERTY: TRACTORS, VEHICLES, TOOLS &amp;
MISCELLANEOUS ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS

Autos For Sale

TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds
available. 4% buyer’s premium on all sales; 4% waived for cash or check payment. All sales are ﬁnal. Food will be available.

CALL TODAY!

OH-70077749

OH-70047967

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OWNER: Catherine Bowles SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan, Ohio Real Estate Auctions
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd &amp; Michael Boyd
WEB: shamrock-auctions.com Email: shamrockauction@aol.com PH: 740-591-5607

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, September 16, 2018 7B

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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see what’s brewing on the

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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS

8B Sunday, September 16, 2018

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Dalton throws 4 TDs, Bengals beat Ravens 34-23
CINCINNATI (AP) — Andy
Dalton kept the Ravens out of
the playoffs last year by throwing a long touchdown pass. He
sent them to another loss on
Thursday night by throwing
four more, getting the best of a
defense that has bedeviled him
for much of his career.
Dalton threw four touchdown
passes in the ﬁrst half — three
to A.J. Green — and the Cincinnati Bengals held on for a
34-23 victory over Baltimore
that made them the early leaders in the AFC North.
Dalton knocked the Ravens
(1-1) out of postseason contention last season by throwing
a 49-yard touchdown pass to
Tyler Boyd in the closing seconds of the ﬁnal game in Baltimore. On Thursday, he carved
up a defense that has more
often gotten the upper hand in
their rivalry, leading Cincinnati
(2-0) to an early 21-point lead .
“We came out hot,” Dalton
said. “That’s exactly how we
wanted to start the game.
That’s a big one — puts us 2-0
to start the year and gives us a
leg up in the division.”
Heading into the game, Dalton had thrown more interceptions (17) than touchdowns

The Ravens switched up
their coverage on Green but
couldn’t stop him in the opening half.
“We did all that and he still
made some great plays,” coach
John Harbaugh said.
Dalton’s 14-yard touchdown
throw to Boyd made it 28-7 late
in the ﬁrst half.
Joe Flacco was sharp in an
opening 47-3 win over the
Bills, but couldn’t do anything
against Cincinnati until the
Bengals led by three touchdowns. Flacco threw a pair of
touchdown passes , including
a 21-yarder to John Brown that
cut it to 28-23 with 9:35 left.
“You better bounce back
quick on a Thursday night and
we didn’t do it quick enough
tonight,” Flacco said.
Flacco fumbled with 2:42 to
go — Shawn Williams stripped
Frank Victores | AP
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton (14) celebrates with fans after defeating the Baltimore Ravens 34-23 on the ball from behind — setting
Thursday. With a new offensive coordinator and an overhauled offensive line, the Bengals have begun 2018 at 2-0, good up a ﬁeld goal by Randy Bullock that closed it out. Flacco
for first place in the AFC North.
ﬁnished 32 of 55 for 376 yards
with two touchdowns, two
near him during the Bengals’
Green set the tone with
(15) against the Ravens, includinterceptions and four sacks.
touchdown catches of 4, 28 and early surge. Green ﬁnished
ing a four-interception game
“We were coming in waves
with ﬁve catches for 69 yards.
7 yards on consecutive posat Paul Brown Stadium last
all night,” rookie defensive end
“It just happened to fall that
sessions, a career high . Upset
season. Dalton ﬁnished 24 of
Sam Hubbard said. “Whoever
way,” Green said. “We were
42 for 265 yards, throwing four that he fumbled twice during
was fresh was going out and
clicking on all cylinders. We
touchdown passes for the ﬁfth a 34-23 win at Indianapolis on
making plays.”
were in a groove.”
Sunday, he caught everything
time in his career.

Hurricane stokes talk of extending college football season
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

With an eye toward
player safety and scheduling ﬂexibility, the
NCAA last year considered ways to lengthen
the college football season so every team would
have 14 weeks to play 12
games every year.
It didn’t come to pass.
The topic popped up

again this week as Hurricane Florence prompted
the cancellation, postponement or relocation
of more than a dozen
games, just two weeks
after two other games
were called off because
of lightning in the Midwest.
A longer season with
more open dates would
increase the chances
of rescheduling games

impacted by weather.
But issues that kept
coaches from supporting
a permanent 14-week
season — mainly, having
to start preseason camp
in July — are still a factor and unpredictable
weather is not likely a
big enough headache to
change things.
“Every year this is
going to happen a couple
times,” said Jon Nese, a

meteorologist for Penn
State and a former storm
analyst for The Weather
Channel. “It doesn’t leap
off the page to me as
something that is a primary discussion item.”
This season, for the
ﬁrst time, each Football
Bowl Subdivision conference will play a conference championship game
on the ﬁrst Saturday in
December.

table,” said Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby,
the former chairman of
the oversight committee.
“In the end, the 14-week
season with the two byes
just wasn’t going to work
from a practical standpoint so we moved away
from it.”
The problem: There
was no good way to compress preseason practice
into August.

With that in mind, the
NCAA oversight committee in 2017 did a deep
dive on what it would
take to allow teams to
have two open dates
every season.
“Aspirationally, what
we wanted to do was
build in some recovery
time for the players during the course of the
season and try and do it
in a way that was equi-

All vehicles rebuilt on site, over 100 years of combined experience. Selling the best used vehicles since 1989.

LUNSFORD’S
SARDIS AUTO

2571 Sardis Rd, Oak Hill, OH 45656�&amp; 740-682-7232
Nothing like getting all your automotive needs taken care of in one stop! Quality, honest service you can rely on.

SUMMER HOT DEALS
SOLD

SOLD

2014 Kia Sedona

2012 Ford F-150

2013 Chevy Malibu LT

2003 Mercury Marquis

2016 Kia Soul

64k

4x4 Super Cab 85k miles

17k miles

73k

20k miles

BELOW
WHOLESALE

2017 Jeep Patriot Sport

2015 Chevy Malibu LT

2013 Chevy Silverado

2012 Honda SE

4x4 6k

Loaded 39k miles

Crew Cab 4x4 116k

46K Miles

SOLD
2013 Chevy Cruze

2009 Kia Sorento

2013 Dodge Charger

2010 Dodge Ram

62k miles

4x4 100k miles

V-6 Extra Clean 64k miles

4x4 Hemi 107k miles

COMING SOON

OH-70077351

2016 Ford F150 4x4 5.0 V8 &amp; 2017 Kia Soul 13K miles
2015 Honda Accord EX 25k miles
Stop by and see them before they are finished!
We always have photos of our cars &amp; trucks before repairs!

Appointments for weekend and later hours are available!
Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-5:30pm

�</text>
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