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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business

Don’t
lose your
license

Southern
aims to
join GA

BUSINESS s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 171, Volume 72

Emergency
HEAP begins
Nov. 1
By Gallia Meigs CAA

OHIO VALLEY — As
the weather will be turning colder, we are looking forward to assisting
our customers with
their main heating utility and/or furnace repair.
Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency’s
Emergency Winter
Crisis HEAP Program
will begin Thursday,
Nov. 1, 2018 and will
continue through March
31, 2019.
We are still using our
IVR System, (Interactive Voice Response
System), which gives
the customers access 7
days a week/24 hours
a day for making their
appointment by phoning in. The toll free
number is 1-866-4091361. This will make it
easier for our customers and you won’t have
the wait time of being
told that all appointments are ﬁlled and
you would have to call
back next Friday. Our
system books out for 28
day, which is required
by the state, so if you
would happen to get a,
“No appointments available”, you would need
to call the next day as
the system continues
with daily appointments
after the initial set up.
Please make sure that
you listen to the complete message from the
IVR system. You will
be given a conﬁrmation
number at the end of
the message and bring
that number along with
your social security
number or client number and your gas and
electric account number
for your appointment.
However, please note,
an appointment may
not extend a scheduled
utility shut-off.
Emergency HEAP
provides assistance to
households that have
had utilities disconnected, face the threat
of disconnection, or
have 25 percent or less

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
TV listings: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

supply of bulk fuel, or
less than 10 day supply of wood or coal.
The program allows
a one-time payment
per heating season to
restore or retain home
heating. The potential
dollar amount will be
up to $175 for regulated
utilities, up to $550 for
unregulated utilities,
up to $450 for wood,
coal or pellets and up to
$750 for propane/fuel
oil, etc., and up to 8 cylinders of propane.
The income guidelines for Regular HEAP
and Emergency HEAP
are the same. However,
Regular HEAP requires
the previous 12 months
income while the past
one month income is
acceptable for Emergency HEAP. The
determination is from
date of application making it possible for some
with decreased income
during these periods
to qualify. Examples of
these types of situations
could occur from layoff, strike, retirement,
disability or death of
a spouse or household
member. Documentation verifying all household income must be
provided when applying
for assistance. Also a
copy of the applicant’s
most recent gas/electric
bill is required. It is
also required that you
provide social security
cards, for all household
members. You will also
be asked for proof of
landlord, including
address and phone number. If the grandparents
have custody of the children in the home, we
will need the custody
papers also.
The following income
levels by household
size should be used to
determine eligibility.
These income guidelines represent the 175
percent calculation
and are revised annually. Allowable annual
See HEAP | 2

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

Thursday, October 25, 2018 s 50¢

Throwback Thursday: Charter Oaks Coal Works

Courtesy of Marge Reuter

This post card photo from 1911, from the collection of Marge Reuter, shows the Charter Oak Coal Works in Pomeroy. According to the
notes on the back, the man and boy pictured on the far right of the photo are Mike Bentz and “Pa Hannahs.” The coal works operated
until around 1950 in Pomeroy.

Rio to award ‘Veteran of the Year’
Staff Report

open to the public,
with veterans eatRIO GRANDE — The ing for free and
University of Rio Grande a $10 cost for
and Rio Grande Commu- the public. Athletic Director Jeff
nity College takes pride
Lanham said this
in honoring veterans
Wagner
who have served and are award is a reﬂection of Rio’s efforts
continuing to serve our
to be a veteran-friendly
country.
As part of this endeav- campus.
“Rio is dedicated to
or, Rio created the “Jim
making sure all veterans
Marshall Veteran of the
Year Award” to recognize receive the recognition
and respect they deserve
veterans who have gone
above and beyond the call when they are visiting
of duty. This year’s award our campus. This award
will be presented to Kore- is one small way we can
give back to our veterans
an War Veteran Sergent
and thank them for their
1st Class Danny Wagner
service in the military
of Hanging Rock, Ohio.
The ceremony will begin and their continued serSaturday, Oct. 27 at 5:30 vice as leaders in their
communities,” Lanham
p.m. in the Lyne Center
said. “The recipient
with the unveiling of
does not have to be an
the Jim Marshall Award
Display, which honors all athlete or even from Rio.
Opening this award to all
recipients of the award.
Wagner will be honored veterans regardless of ties
to Rio or the four-county
at a Honor Our Veterans
area represents Rio’s
Night banquet at 6:30
p.m. The banquet will be respect for all veterans.

We are excited to
unveil the display
this year because
we want something permanent
to honor the recipients. This is something our students,
community and
veterans can take pride
in.”
Sergeant Wagner enlisted in the Army August
1948 serving in multiple
infantries and companies
during the Korean War,
also serving as a Squad
Leader during engagements. He has received
three Purple Hearts and
numerous awards for service to his country. After
four years of meritorious
service, Wagner was honorably discharged from
the Army May 1952.
Retired Sunoco Chemical Company employee
and member of the
Ironton VFW Post 8850
Frank Collins, of Ironton,
who nominated Wagner

for the award, said he
believes he deserves the
award for his spirit, dedication and endurance in
serving his country.
“I went to school and
played basketball with
Jim Marshall, and there’s
no one better to name
this award after. He was
a hero for his country
and a wonderful person.
I nominated Danny for
this award because he
has the same spirit and
dedication to his community and country that Jim
always had,” Collins said.
“I’m excited that Danny
was chosen because he
went through so much
during the war, earning
numerous awards and
three Purple Hearts and
is truly deserving of this
recognition. Our communities in the region are
deeply rooted in supporting our military and our
veterans, so it’s wonderful
See VETERAN | 2

MEET THE CANDIDATE

Jay Edwards

Taylor Sappington

Editor’s Note:
ment to comAs we approach
munity – and to
the November
one another. Jay
General Elecis a graduate of
tion, The Daily
Nelsonville-York
Sentinel will be
High School,
running articles
excelling in the
Edwards
allowing the
classroom and in
candidates in consports. He earned
tested races to introduce a scholarship to Ohio
themselves and tell the
University, where he
voters why they are run- received his Bachelor
ning for ofﬁce. Each can- of Science degree in
didate is asked, in their mathematics. Today, Jay
own words, to respond to lives in Nelsonville and
two questions — tell us
works as a Realtor. He
about yourself and why
is a member of the Farm
are you running for this Bureau, Athens Area
ofﬁce.
Chamber of Commerce,
POMEROY — Jay
Nelsonville Chamber of
Edwards (R-Nelsonville) Commerce, Nelsonville
is one of two candidates Rotary, Belpre Chamber
for State Representative of Commerce, Meigs
for the 94th District of
County Chamber of
the Ohio House.
Commerce, Marietta
Area Chamber of Commerce and the National
Tell us about yourself:
Jay Edwards was born Riﬂe Association. Jay
Edwards is not a career
and raised right here
politician. He is also an
in Southeast Ohio. He
shares our faith, our
See EDWARDS | 2
values and our commit-

weekend. I am a
Editor’s Note:
proud Buckeye
As we approach
and graduate of
the November
Nelsonville-York
General ElecHigh School and
tion, The Daily
Ohio University.
Sentinel will be
I was raised by a
running articles
Sappington
single mom and
allowing the
taught to think
candidates in contested races to introduce for myself, never give
up, and believe in somethemselves and tell the
voters why they are run- thing. My upbringing
ning for ofﬁce. Each can- through struggle, I still
didate is asked, in their remember the day the
own words, to respond to car was taken, and my
time on Nelsonville City
two questions — tell us
about yourself and why Council will serve me
are you running for this well in the State House.
I’ll work across the
ofﬁce.
POMEROY — Taylor isle on tough issues like
infrastructure spending
Sappington (D-Nelto ﬁx up our crumbling
sonville) is one of two
bridges and potholed
candidates for State
roads. But there also
Representative for the
94th District of the Ohio comes a time when you
just have to stand up and
House.
believe in something. I’ll
stand up to either party
Tell us about yourself:
when it comes to money
I am 27 years old, I
in politics. I’ll ﬁght from
ﬁx iPhones and iPads
for my small business,
See SAPPINGTON | 2
and serve tables on the

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, October 25, 2018

HEAP

the Household for the
Past (1) month
o Wages: Weekly
– Last 4 paystubs/
From page 1
Biweekly – last 2 payincome for a 1 person stubs
o Utility Allowance/
household is $21,245,
Lease
2 persons $28,805, 3
o SS/SSI/SSD – Bank
persons $36,365, 4
Statement or Current
persons $43,925, 5
Award Letter
persons $51,485, and
o PERS/VA/SERS/
6 persons $59,045,
PENSION – Copy of
7 persons $66,605,
Current Award Letter
8 persons $74,165.
o OWF/TANF/DAHouseholds with more
Print Out of the Last
than eight members
Month or Bank Stateshould add an addiment
tional $7,560 per
* Child Support,
member to the yearly
Ordered to Pay or
income.
Receive
Both Emergency
o Print Out (docuHEAP and Regular
mented proof for the
HEAP applications
last month, veriﬁcation
will be completed at
of whether receiving or
bothofﬁces; Central
Ofﬁce, Gallia County at not)
* Social Security
8010 N. SR 7, Cheshire
Cards for Everyone in
or the Meigs County
the Household
Ofﬁce at 1369 Powell
* Current HeatStreet, Middleport.
ing Bill or Statement
Appointments will
(Columbia Gas/Knox,
be made by our IVR
Propane, Fuel Oil, Coal,
System, appointment
or Wood)
times will range from
* Current Electric Bill
9 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.
and from 1 p.m. to 3:15 (AEP or Buckeye)
* If you pay out of
p.m., Monday through
pocket for HEALTH
Thursday. Friday, 9
INSURANCE, docua.m. to 10:45 a.m. We
mented proof for 3
will see the ﬁrst six
walk-in at our Cheshire months
o Aﬂac, AARP, Blue
ofﬁce and the ﬁrst two
walk-ins at our Middle- Cross Blue Shield, etc.
* Medicaid Card or
port ofﬁce Monday
Case Number (if applithrough Friday from
cable)
8-9 a.m., or as time
* Landlords Name,
allows. However, again,
Address, and Phone
we cannot assist with
Number (if renting)
the Emergency HEAP
For appointment call
application process
1-866-409-1361
until Nov. 1, 2018.
Required Documents:
* Proof of Gross
Income for Everyone in

Information submitted by
Gallia Meigs Community Action
Agency.

Veteran

Coach Art Lanham
said he hopes this
award will continue to
honor the legacy MarFrom page 1
shall left at Rio.
“Jim’s dedication to
to see that Rio has
get back in the game
created this award to
honor those who have after his injury was
unbelievable,” Art
served to keep our
Lanham said. “His
country safe.”
demeanor and perseThe committee
verance even earned
to select the winner
him respect from the
chose Wagner due
opposing teams. This
to his similar values
is only one of the many
and equal dedication
reasons we decided to
to both country and
name this award for
community as Jim
him. We want him to
Marshall. Marshall
always be remembered
was a valued member
at the University of
of the Rio Grande
Men’s Basketball Team Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community
where his character,
attitude, performance, College.”
Another way Rio
and leadership served
continues to honor
to inspire his teamveterans in the area
mates. He left Rio to
is to offer them free
serve his country in
the US Military during admission to all athletic events at Rio’s camthe Vietnam War as
1st Sergeant, Kilo-Bat- pus during the 2018-19
tery—4th Battalion— year. For more infor13th Marines. He was mation on the banquet,
injured in combat and or how to nominate a
veteran for 2019, conawarded the Purple
tact RedStorm AthletHeart. He joined the
ics at 740-245-7293.
684th Army National
Guard in 1974. Former
Submitted by the University of
Rio Athletic Director
Rio Grande.
and Men’s Basketball

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

LARRY R. HUBBARD

OBITUARIES
ALFRED SCARBERRY JR.
THURMAN — Alfred
A. Scarberry Jr., 90, of
Thurman, passed away, at
5:30 a.m. on Wednesday,
October 24, 2018, in the
Holzer Medical Center.
Born December 8,
1927, in Middleport, he
was the son of the Late
Alfred A. and Margaret
Mae Gay Scarberry. He
was a former instructor
at the University of Rio
Grande, a former principal at Middleport High
School, a guidance director at Tipp City Schools,
and he was a principle
for the Gallia County
Local Schools retiring
from Addaville Elementary, and he also was a
former board member for
the Gallia County Guiding Hand. He also was
a farmer and a member
of the Gallipolis Eastern
Start Chapter # 283, and
a member of the Simpson
United Methodist Church
in Rio Grande. He served
in the U.S. Army and was
a WWII and the Korean
Conﬂict Veteran.
Alfred married Emelyn
W. Scarberry on February
12, 1955 in Liberty, Indiana, and she preceded
him in death on May 15,
2018.
He is survived by his
four children, Peggy
(Dave) Thomas, of
Westerville,, Bruce
(Tami) Scarberry, of
Thurman, Jennifer
(Doug) Evans, of Gallipolis, and Amy Thornton,
of Charleston, W.Va.,
13 grandchildren, Erik
(Joly) Fields, Madison,
Miss., John (Holly)
Fields, Fort Collins, CL.,
Natalie (Marc) Herd-

Daily Sentinel

man, Lancaster, Andy
(Tricia) Thomas, Upper
Arlington, Sara Thomas,
Powell, Samantha (Brent)
Smith, Middleport,
Shayne (Christina)
Scarberry, Grove City,
Jeremy (Jessyca) Barnett,
Pomeroy, Angie (Leslie
Klein) George, Pomeroy,
Heather Johnson, Vinton,
Karen (Josh) Skidmore,
Thurman, Jacob (Sarah)
Stump, St. Augustine,
Fl., and Bobby (Angela)
Shamblin, Chicago,
Il. Twenty-one greatgrandchildren, and two
great-great grandchildren,
and numerous nieces and
nephews also survive.
In addition to his parents and wife, Alfred is
preceded in death by his
brothers, William Richard
Scarberry and Henry
“Hank” Scarberry, and
a sister, Sarah Marcella
Scarberry Stockman.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, October 27, 2018 at
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home in Gallipolis, with
Rev. Bob Powell ofﬁciating. Interment will follow in the Middleport
Riverview Cemetery
with full Military Honors
provided by the Gallia
County Funeral Detail
Team. Friends may call
two hours prior to the
service at the funeral
home. In lieu of ﬂowers
memorials may be made
in Alfred’s memory to
the University of Rio
Grande, PO Box 5000
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
The Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, Gallipolis
is entrusted with the
arrangements.

DAVIS
LETART — Phillip Daniel Davis, 59, of Letart,
West Virginia, died on Oct. 22, 2018
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, Oct.
31, 2018, at 11 a.m. with Pastors Scott Fields and
Hollis Walters ofﬁciating at Anderson Funeral Home
in New Haven. Visiting hours will be held on Tuesday
from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
BAISDEN
THURMAN — Curtis R. Baisden, 67, of Thurman,
died Sunday, October 21, 2018, in Mechanicsburg.
Visitation for Curtis R. Baisden will be on Saturday, October 27, 2018 from 5-7 p.m. at Willis Funeral
Home. In accordance with his wishes, there will not
be any service.

Edwards
From page 1

appointed member of the Meigs
and Athens County Transportation
Improvement District.
He’s one of us.
We can trust Jay Edwards to
stand up for us as our State Representative. Our region has a proud
heritage, proud people, and a work
ethic second to none. But for too
long, Southeast Ohio has been left
behind. Today, too many people
are forced to drive long distances
or leave Southeast Ohio altogether
just to earn a decent paycheck.
Our local schools need fair funding
and more local control so teachers
can teach and students can learn.
And we need more funding for job
training, including our vocational
schools and the skilled trades. We
need strong, new leaders like Jay
Edwards to give our region the

RACINE — Larry R.
Hubbard, 84, Racine,
passed away at 10:49
p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 23,
2018, in the OhioHealth
O’Bleness Hospital,
Athens. Born Dec. 22,
1933, in Syracuse, Ohio,
he was the son of the late
Carl and Adrian Whitlock Hubbard. Larry was
retired Ironworker from
Union Local #787 in Parkersburg, West Virginia.
Survived by his wife,
Edie Rose Hubbard,
whom he married on June
15, 1980, in Racine and
his ﬁve children, Jerry
(Kathy) Hubbard, of
Pomeroy, Angie Hubbard,
of Racine, Robin Hubbard, of Racine, Ricky
Hubbard, of Peebles,
Ohio and Rosemary
(Mark) Pierce, of Racine.
Eleven grandchildren also
survive, Cassie Hubbard,
Jeremy Hubbard, Abby
Hubbard, Timothy Hubbard, Ryan Cozart, Casey

Hubbard, Oliva Hubbard,
Brandon Pierce, Philip
Pierce, Jordan Pierce and
Titus Pierce and 11 greatgrandchildren, Caleb,
Mallory, Tyler, Jeremiah,
Blaycen, Embriella, Ally,
Kody, Bradley, Baylee
and Reise, and a brother,
James (Sheila) Hubbard,
of Lancaster, Ohio.
In addition to his parents he was preceded in
death by a great-grandson, Kyran Cozart, brothers, Ronnie Hubbard,
Roger Hubbard and Bill
Whitlock and sisters,
Nancy Patterson and Bonnie Ransom.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m., Friday, Oct. 26,
2018, in the CremeensKing Funeral Home,
Racine. Ofﬁciating will be
Rev. Jim Marshall. Interment will be in the Carmel Cemetery. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m.,
Thursday at the funeral
home.

ISAAC J. ‘JUNIE’ WILT
COLUMBUS — Isaac
J. “Junie” Wilt, age 85,
passed away at home Saturday October 13, 2018,
surrounded by his family.
Junie is predeceased
parents, Isaac (Lydia)
Wilt Sr.; siblings, Dell,
Richard, Kenny, Chester,
Kathryn, Eileen, Marcella.
Survived by children,
Christopher (Ruth),
Patrick (Greg), Gregory
(Walter), Michael (Valerie); grandchildren and
great-grandchildren;
brother, Jackie (Janie)
Wilt and sister, Julia

Hysell, as well as many
loving nieces, nephews
and friends.
He was a generous
kind friend to all he
met, his life was well
lived. He was blessed
with wonderful Hospice
care, especially “Junie’s
angels”: Peg, Lucy, Sheila
and Barb.
Donations can be made
to Mt. Carmel Hospice,
1144 Dublin Road,
Columbus OH 43215.
Please visit our online
guest book at www.NewcomerColumbus.com to
share memories.

DONOHOE
EVANS — Colonel William Frederick Donohoe,
85, of Evans, died Oct. 24, at his home, following an
extended illness.
The service will be 1 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 27 at the
Casto Funeral Home, Evans, with W.Va. State Police
Chaplain Jimmy Mitchell and Pastor Allen Stewart
ofﬁciating. Burial with full military honors will follow
in the Elk Hills Memorial Park Cemetery, Big Chimney. Visitation will be from 4-8 p.m., Friday at the
funeral home. Visitation will also be one hour prior to
service time on Saturday at the funeral home.
ALTIER
CORNING — Brenda Altier, 54, of Corning passed
away Tuesday October 23, 2018 at the James Cancer
Hospital Columbus.
The J.E. Humphrey Funeral Home of Shawnee is
entrusted with arrangements.

is someone supposed to ﬁght effectively for us in Columbus, if they
do not have a relationship with the
people in this area? This is what
Why are you running for this office:
ultimately led to me running for
Growing up in Nelsonville, my
family showed me what hard work this seat. I have not been in ofﬁce
and giving back to the community two years yet, but I feel that the
is all about. I love where I am from mindset is shifting. People that
would not ever bother to call their
and feel that people in Columbus
state elected ofﬁcials prior, now
forget about us too much. I ran
know me on a ﬁrst name basis. We
for this ofﬁce because I wanted to
sit and talk about the issues they
ﬁght to give our people a voice in
the Statehouse. We are never going are having. Typically, they deal
with healthcare, the opioid crises,
to be Columbus, Cleveland, or
Cincinnati, and I am ﬁne with that. schools, roads, etc. Without this
relationship, I would have no direcHowever, we deserve the same
tion of what I should be working
opportunities.
When I was exploring the idea to on. Sometimes, people in our area
struggle asking for help. We are a
run for this seat, I ventured down
generation of hard-working folks
to Meigs County often to meet
with elected ofﬁcials, business lead- that would rather ask for a hand up
rather than a hand out. However,
ers, and different organizations. It
it has been my privilege to serve
saddened me to realize, although
as State Representative for the
the person had been in ofﬁce for
great people of Meigs County. I
8 years, many folks did not know
will continue to ﬁght every day for
who their State Representative
was. I realized a big problem. How Southeast Ohio.

voice it deserves and to get the job
done.

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Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
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Sappington
From page 1

day one to put new rules on the
dangerous levels of corruption and
cash buying our politicians and I’ll
take on the lobbyists so that you
can ﬁnally be heard in the State
House.
I’m asking for your vote, not just
for this campaign, but to send a
message to the powers that be that
have ignored us so long in Columbus.
Why are you running for this office:
I took a look at the State House
politics over the last several years
and couldn’t believe my eyes. End-

less off days, a legislature that
shut down for over two months
this spring, no major overhauls
or bills passed, and yet a building
full of politicians taking taxpayer
salaries and campaign money the
entire time. That bothered me.
As someone raised to believe in
results, I am running for State
Representative to be a strong voice
for our area and for actually getting
something done. Infrastructure
spending is at an all time low in the
state and you can easily recognize
this just by walking or driving anywhere in Ohio, especially here in
SE Ohio.
Knocking doors in Middleport,
Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland, and
many other places gave us many
great experiences. But we kept

walking away from your doors with
the words of folks who are sick and
tired of the money and corruption
in politics. That’s one reason I am
refusing to accept corporate PAC
contributions. I don’t take any lobbyist money. They have enough
power and I think it is time for
regular folks to have a voice that
understands and listens to their
needs. I’ll ﬁght for new rules on
lobbying and money in politics on
the ﬁrst day as your State Representative and I won’t look back
until we get it done.
These are just some of the reasons I am proud and excited to be
running to represent you in the
State House. We’ve been ignored
for long enough. It’s time to wake
Columbus up.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Who won the lottery?
Why some states allow winners secrecy

ful they could keep their
name conﬁdential.”
In Texas, legislators
last year changed the law
Millions or Powerball
now he becomes a loser
By Rebecca Santana
to allow winners of jackprizes.
because his name is out
and Jeffrey Collins
The Associated Press
pots $1 million or more
Some states have had
there?” said South Caroto remain anonymous.
this policy since their
lina Education Lottery
Arizona has a slightly
programs started, and
SIMPSONVILLE, S.C. Chief Operating Ofﬁcer
modiﬁed approach. Arigenerally they apply the
Tony Cooper in explain— Like the location of
zona legislator John Kavaanonymity rule not just
ing the board’s policy of
Jimmy Hoffa’s body, the
allowing winners to claim to the Mega Millions but nagh tried in 2013 to get
secret formula for Cocaa law passed letting winother games as well.
prizes anonymously.
Cola and whether there
ners remain anonymous
Georgia is one of the
If someone thinks it’s
are aliens in outer space,
but it wasn’t until 2015
most recent states to let
the identity of the winner best for their safety or
that a compromise passed
jackpot winners pass on
of the second-biggest lot- sanity to not be named
that allows winners 90
tery in American history publicly, Cooper says the letting their names be
days before their name is
agency would respect that publicized. State Senate
may remain hidden forsubject to a public records
Minority Leader Steve
ever — because of where decision. And they have
request. He pushed for
Henson, a Democrat
in the past. Cooper said
the person bought the
the changes after a resifrom Stone Mountain,
the agency successfully
ticket.
proposed the change and dent in his town won a
fought off a Freedom of
South Carolina is one
it was signed into law this jackpot.
Information Act request
of a handful of states
“I remember saying to
year. Anyone who wins
for identifying informathat play Mega Millions
myself ‘That’s fantastic
tion of winners including a jackpot of $250,000
and allow winners to
but I’d be worried about
or more can opt to be
the winner of a nearly
be anonymous. Lottery
anonymous. Henson said my children being kidjackpots are often synony- $400 million Powerball
napped or people hitting
he took the step after a
mous with dazed winners jackpot in Lexington
constituent — who hadn’t me up for loans,’” he
County in September
holding an oversized
said. “It’s just gossipy,
won anything but was
2013.
check, but ofﬁcials and
unnecessary knowledge
preparing for the future
Delaware, Georgia,
lawmakers say anonymfor the public to have. It’s
Kansas, Maryland, North — worried he’d have to
ity can protect winners
nobody’s business.”
Dakota, Ohio, South Car- move or disappear if he
from being targeted by
Proponents of publicizwon the lottery. So far 74
olina and Texas all allow
criminals and unscrupuing the winners’ names
people in the state have
lous people coming out of anonymity to Mega Milgenerally say it mainthe woodwork asking for lions winners. In Arizona, won $250,000 or more
tains the integrity of the
and all have requested
people who win more
money.
than $600 can keep their anonymity, Henson said. games and it’s a matter
“Everything we do we
of government transpar“I have not met one
names secret for 90 days
try to create a winner,
ency. When Texas made
after claiming prizes, but person who didn’t think
whether it is education,
after that names are pub- it was a good idea. Espe- its change last year, the
whether it is a retailer,
Freedom of Information
cially with those large
lic record. In Michigan,
whether it is a player.
winnings on the table,” he Foundation of Texas
Why do you want a player winners are anonymous
opposed it.
said. “They were grateunless they win Mega
who is a winner and

Thursday, October 25, 2018 3

Be the first to
know: Online
COLA notices
By Marcus Geiger
Special to OVP

We are constantly
expanding our online
services to give you
freedom and control
when doing business
with us. Our new
online cost-of-living
adjustment (COLA)
notices are another
example of our commitment in this area. Soon,
you’ll be the ﬁrst to
know your new beneﬁt
amount!
Later this year, we
will post the Social
Security COLA notices
online for retirement,
survivors, and disability beneﬁciaries with
a my Social Security
account. The COLA
announcement usually
occurs in October, but
ﬁnal beneﬁt amounts
won’t be calculated and
available until December, when we send
COLA notices that contain the beneﬁt amount
for the next calendar
year.
These COLA notices
will now be available to
view and save via the
Message Center inside
my Social Security.
The Message Center
is a secure, convenient
portal where you can
receive sensitive communications we don’t
send through email or
text.
This year, you will
still receive your COLA
notice by mail. In the
future, you will be able
to choose whether you
receive your notice
online instead of on

paper.
Online notices will
not be available to
representative payees,
individuals with foreign
mailing addresses, or
those who pay higher
Medicare premiums
due to their income.
We plan to expand the
availability of COLA
notices to additional
online customers in the
future.
Remember, our services are always free of
charge. No government
agency or reputable
company will solicit
your personal information by email or
request advanced fees
for services in the form
of wire transfers or gift
cards. Avoid falling
victim to fraudulent
internet “phishing”
schemes by not revealing personal information, selecting malicious links, or opening
malicious attachments.
You can learn more
about the ways we protect your investment,
personal information,
and my Social Security account at https://
www.ssa.gov/myaccount/security.html.
Be the ﬁrst to know.
Sign up for or log in
to your personal my
Social Security account
today at https://www.
ssa.gov/myaccount and
choose email or text
under “Message Center
Preferences” to receive
your COLA notice
online!
Marcus Geiger is Social Security
District Manager in Gallipolis,
Ohio.

Doug Crawford
to receive Red
Vest Award
Photos courtesy of Farmers Bank

Representatives from the Point Pleasant River Museum and Learning Center are pictured with the Paw Patrol characters during the
recent event at Farmers Bank in Point Pleasant.

Giving back to the community
POINT PLEASANT — More than 650
people attended the
recent Paw Patrol event
and open house at the
Point Pleasant branch of
Farmers Bank.
“It was a great morning,” said Marketing
Manager Dru Reed
of the event, which
brought people from
north of Lancaster and
south of Putnam County
in West Virginia.
While the event was
free, donations collected
will be going to the
Point Pleasant River
Museum and Learning
Center as they work to
rebuild from a ﬁre earlier this summer.
Over $500 was raised
during the open house,
with a special promotion running through
November in order to
raise more money for

the organizations. Farmers Bank will be making
a $50 donation to the
River Museum for every
new account opened
with Farmers Bank in
October and November.
Donations will be
matched up to $2,000 by
the bank.
“Everyone was excited
to give back to something that is near and
dear to the community,”
said Reed of supporting the River Museum.
“To create a fun event
for the kids who adore
these characters was
great.”
Reed noted that the
event would not have
been a success without
the assistance of local
police ofﬁcers, neighbors, community members and French City
Daycare, where the bank Farmers Bank President Paul Reed is pictured with the Paw Patrol
obtained the costumes. characters.

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
Kroger Co(NYSE)
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
American Electric Power(NYSE)

$16.77
$97.56
$41.14
$37.74
$112.96
$33.34
$27.95
$46.06
$68.56
$75.56

Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
$34.67
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
$8.99
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$26.55
Apple(NASDAQ)
$215.09
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
$45.86
Post Holdings
$90.61
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE)
$30.55
McDonald’s(NYSE)
$177.35
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions on
Oct. 24.

POINT PLEASANT
— Fruth Pharmacy
will present Doug
Crawford with the
Red Vest Award on
Thursday, Oct. 25 at
the 28th annual Fruth
Pharmacy Galaxy
Awards for employees.
Fruth’s Red Vest
Award is for a Fruth
employee that has been
instrumental in saving
someone’s life.
It was an ordinary
work day for Cathy
Patterson and Doug
Crawford. Crawford is
a ﬂoating pharmacist
for Fruth Pharmacy
(ﬁlls in at other Fruth
pharmacies for the
regular pharmacist
who may be off on sick
leave or vacation) and
Patterson is a Pharmacy Clerk at Fruth
Pharmacy in Ripley.
Crawford had recently
returned to work after
welcoming his ﬁrst
child, a son, and was
scheduled at Fruth
Pharmacy in Ripley on
the morning of Sept. 6.
Patterson had not
been feeling well all
morning. Crawford
had suggested she go
home. Patterson did
not want to leave and
chose to continue to
work. She began to
complain of chest pain
and then her left arm
hurting. Crawford
recognized the possible symptoms of a
heart attack. He got
some baby aspirin and
asked Cathy take it.
She did. They tried to
call an ambulance, but

Cathy did not want to
go in an ambulance;
she wanted her family. Store personnel
contacted Patterson’s
family and they arrived
quickly and got her to
the hospital. Patterson
was in the stages of a
heart attack and had
to have bypass surgery.
She is currently in
recovery but plans to
come back to work as
soon as she is released
for duty.
“There wasn’t anything outstanding I
did,” Crawford began,
“it was a whole team
effort at that store. The
store manager facilitated her care and other
employees helped get
her family there. It was
a team effort,” he concluded.
Patterson spoke
to Teresa Stapleton,
Human Resources
Manager at Fruth
Pharmacy, after the
incident. She was
thankful for everyone’s
help at her Fruth Pharmacy and anxious to
get back to work, but
knows she needs time
to recover. Patterson
has been employed by
Fruth Pharmacy for 20
years.
Fruth Pharmacy is a
family owned company.
Currently, Fruth Pharmacy has 30 locations
in West Virginia, Ohio,
and Kentucky. Fruth
Pharmacy celebrates
66 years in business
this November.
Submitted by Fruth Pharmacy.

�Opinion
4 Thursday, October 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Don’t lose
your driver’s
license
Where my driver’s license disappeared to, I
have no idea. Not just my driver’s license, but
my insurance card disappeared, as well! I have
always kept the two cards together
in the same little place made for
them in my billfold. I have been
known to take them out of my
billfold, and carry them in a secure
pocket. I do this on the rare occasion that I don’t want to bother to
carry my purse with me. So, when I
Kay
opened my billfold and they weren’t
Conklin
there, I assumed I had not put them
Contributing
back where they belonged. Therecolumnist
fore, the hunt was on to look in
every pocket of anything I’ve ever
worn this past hot summer. It is very tiring to
keep looking and looking, and knowing they had
to be here somewhere, but never ﬁnding them.
My only guess is that when I took them out of
my pocket to put back in my billfold, I must have
absent-mindedly put them down somewhere, and
I have no idea where they ended up.
So, after about a week, I began the process to
get new ones. This is the year I had to renew my
driver’s license anyway, so it wasn’t a bad time to
have this happen.
Since it was just a matter of one phone call, I
called my health insurance company, told them my
problem, and they sent a new card immediately.
Now came the more complicated situation. I had
to ﬁgure out what I had to take with me to the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles to get a new license. So,
I gathered up every bit of identiﬁcation I could
ﬁnd that I thought would be necessary. Without
my driver’s license, I thought I would have to have
another form of photo ID. Not ﬁnding any other,
I packed a copy of Wednesday’s Gazette that had
my picture in it, with my name underneath. Since
I had an old sheet of photo copies of almost everything I carry, I took that piece of paper, as well. I
even found my original birth certiﬁcate and marriage license to take along.
So, with the big manila envelope full of identiﬁcation in hand, as well as my money, I went to
the BMV ofﬁce. The ﬁrst thing I found out was
that I didn’t need my copy of the Gazette. A photo
ID was not necessary. I thought everything was
going well until I was told that I could not use the
copy of my original Social Security card. It had
to be the original. However, I could get a regular
driver’s license without the original Social Security card, just not the kind I will need to ﬂy on a
plane anywhere. Well, since I ﬂy to Florida each
year, to see our daughter, I would have to have
the new compliant drivers license, which does not
go into affect until 2020. Not knowing where on
earth my original Social Security card might be,
I went ahead and said I would take the regular
one. I was surprised when I was handed a piece
of paper with my new picture on it. This is what
I would be using until the new license arrives in
the regular mail in a week or so. In the picture
of me on the piece of paper, I looked more like a
ghost than what I usually thought I looked like. I
casually asked where to get another original Social
Security card, and was told to go to the Social
Security Ofﬁce. At that moment, I wasn’t sure
where the ofﬁce was, but decided it would come
to me eventually.
So, as I write this, I am in the process of ﬁnding
time to go to the Social Security Ofﬁce in Marion
and get an original card. However at this point,
I am wondering what kind of ID I will have to
have to get another original Social Security card.
Maybe my piece of paper with my looking like a
ghost on it, will be of some help. I should not have
been so organized as to have already put all of the
various pieces of ID back in their proper places.
I should have been smart and just left everything
in the big manila envelope. I understand that the
Social Security Ofﬁce sits behind a ﬁeld of corn
that has not yet been harvested, so I hope to be
able to ﬁnd it. Then with my original card, I will
go back to the BMV for the new compliant drivers
license. I am assuming I will have to pay full price
to get another one, but I will cross that bridge
when I get to it. You might wonder why I am putting myself through all of this rigmarole when I
tell you that I don’t drive anymore. Oh, but I do
ﬂy.
Kay E. Conklin is a retired Delaware County recorder who served four
terms. She graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University with a degree in
sociology and anthropology.

THEIR VIEW

Who’s your doppelganger?
There is a legend from
ancient German folklore,
about people who have a
“spirit-double.”
This double or identical-being is never a
blood relative. In their
legend, it might not even
be a ﬂesh and blood
being. It could be a spirit
being. The Germans
called this being a doppelganger.
Doppelganger can
roughly be interpreted
as a ghostly double.
Originally, it was said
that a doppelganger was
the spiritual opposite or
negative of their human
counterpart.
Over time, doppelganger has lost the
meaning of something
that is evil or devilish and simply refers
to someone who looks
almost exactly like someone else.
There is a belief that
everyone has a doppelganger. I’ve met mine.
Just at the edge of
Marysville is the Ohio
Reformatory for Women.
In Union County, the
reformatory is usually referred to as the
“Farm.”
When I worked at
Memorial Hospital of
Union County in the
mid-1970s, women from
the Farm were routinely
transported to the hospital for medical care.
With approximately
2,000 inmates, it was not
unusual to have women
from the Farm being
transported to and from
the hospital nearly every
day. They were always
accompanied by corrections ofﬁcers.
As the assistant director of respiratory care, I
always worked the evening shift. One evening,
while eating dinner with
some co-workers, one of
the nursing assistants

the hospital when
asked me when I
I was challenged
started working at
about transporting
the Farm.
women from the
“What?” I asked.
Farm into the hosShe told me that
pital. She undershe had worked a
stood completely
few hours on the
and told me that
day shift and that Randy
I didn’t look a
she saw me bring Riley
in one of the girls- Contributing little like her boycolumnist
friend… I looked
from-the-farm.
exactly like him.
She said she even
They were planspoke to me.
“I’m sorry,” I told her. ning on having a date
“That couldn’t have been that evening and she
promised that she would
me. This is the only
bring him over and introplace I work.” I could
duce him to us. I was a
tell by the look on her
face that she didn’t quite little nervous and a little
excited about meeting
believe me.
A few weeks later, the my double.
Later than evening, I
same thing happened.
The circumstances were was at the far end of our
new mobile home seta little different, but
again I was told by a hos- ting up bunk beds in the
pital co-worker that they boys’ room. I thought I
saw me in a guard’s uni- heard a faint knock at
the door.
form escorting inmates
Tess yelled to me,
to the hospital.
It was starting to get a “We have company.”
I climbed out from
little weird.
beneath the bunk beds
Around that same
and started to walk
time, our young family
down the hallway. That’s
had the opportunity to
move out of an old apart- when thing really got
ment building and buy a weird.
It was like walking
nice, large mobile home
toward a full-length mirin a new mobile-home
ror.
park. The day we were
At the same time, we
moving in and getting
extended our right hands
everything set-up, one
to each other. Again, it
of our new neighbors
was like walking toward
stepped outside her
home and asked me what a mirror.
He may have been
the heck I was doing.
slightly taller than me.
“Ahh… moving in.” I
His hair was the same
answered. She seemed
wavy, ruddy-brown color.
to be a little upset and
His facial features were
started to berate me for
just like mine. (I would
what I was doing, when
like to say he was striksuddenly her entire
ingly handsome, but I’ll
expression changed.
“Oh, my gosh!” she said. refrain from that joke.)
That was the only time
“I am so sorry. You look
we ever met. As I recall,
exactly like my boyhe and his girlfriend
friend.”
broke up. She moved
“Does he work at the
Farm?” I asked her. “Yes. away and he must have
gotten a new job. I never
He does.” She said.
heard from my doppel“Well, that explains a
ganger after that, but I’ve
lot,” I said. Then I told
often thought of him.
her about the times at

Over time,
doppelganger has
lost the meaning of
something that is evil
or devilish and simply
refers to someone
who looks almost
exactly like someone
else.
If that handsome
young man had been
seen robbing a bank,
I could have been
arrested. If he had been
seen committing murder, I could have been
arrested.
Without a solid alibi,
I could have gone to
jail for a crime that was
committed by my doppelganger. That’s scary.
Eyewitness testimony is
not absolute proof.
If I’m ever on a jury
and a conviction depends
only on the credibility of
an eyewitness account, I
will be skeptical.
According to research
performed by the Innocence Project, eyewitness misidentiﬁcation of
a suspect played a role in
more than 70 percent of
the convictions that were
later overturned through
DNA evidence.
Eyewitness testimony
will always be one of the
important tools used by
law enforcement to make
a case against a criminal, but prosecutors and
juries must always be
careful.
There will always be a
few doppelgangers out
there making life difﬁcult
for those who are pursuing justice.
I hope my doppelganger continues to behave
himself.
Randy Riley is Ohio public official
and Aim Media Midwest guest
columnist.

ELECTION LETTERS POLICY
The deadline for The Daily Sentinel
to receive election-related Letters to the
Editor pertaining to issues or candidates in the Nov. 6 general election is 4
p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 30.
Election-related Letters to the Editor
must be 250 words or less and are sub-

ject to editing by the Sentinel. Letters
must maintain a degree of civility and
good taste, and any that are potentially
libelous will not be published.
Election-related letters are limited
to one per household. Letters from
candidates or their families will not be

published. Due to space restrictions, we
will try, but cannot guarantee, that all
letters will be published in the print version of the Sentinel.
Letters should be emailed to The
Daily Sentinel at tdsnews@aimmediamidwest.com and include the writer’s

name, community of residence, and a
daytime phone number to verify authorship (and to answer any questions we
may have). Signed letters may also be
dropped off at The Daily Sentinel at 109
West Second Street, Pomeroy, during
normal business hours.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 25, 2018 5

AS THE OLD OHIO FLOWS…

MEIGS BRIEFS

Heading west for Gold

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

National Wear
Purple Day

By Jordan Pickens

men, Burroughs and Barnes
by name, for the purpose of
prospecting on the Yuba river.
There were no towns and no
In 1849, “California Fever”
laws, but among themselves.
hit southeastern Ohio. SevThey agreed that each miner
eral people in Meigs County
was to have thirty feet on the
headed west to leave behind
river as his claim.
a depression and a cholera
After staking out four claims
epidemic plaguing the nation,
near Downieville, Barnes and
grabbed their picks, shovels,
Burroughs went farther up the
and sifters, and searched for
mountains prospecting, leaving
gold. The California Gold
the others to guard the claims.
Rush brought around 300,000
people from the rest of the
Courtesy of Jordan Pickens The miners began to swarm in,
and it was useless to try to hold
United States; this populaA stamp depicts a scene from the California Gold Rush
the claims. “The upper two
tion increase gave California
we thought were good,” said
Joseph Dickson captain. Cattle about the size of a goose egg
enough people to apply for
Judge Wilson, “but the lower
and was valued at $1285. On
were brought that never had
statehood, as in the comproSeptember 20th, 1849, the ﬁrst two we sold to a party of Georseen a yoke, and a week was
mise of 1850, and the huge
gians for $1000, and shortly
of the Buckeye Rovers reached
spent in breaking them. The
inﬂux of gold added into the
party drove one hundred miles Sacramento, then consisting of afterwards I saw them take out
money supply reinvigorated
only one wooden structure and between $40,000 and $50,000
to St. Joseph, where, if they
the American economy and
worth of gold dust. My share
used for a post ofﬁce. The tent
brought the United States out had waited to cross the ferry
in the upper claim sold in a
in their turn, they would have population was about 5000,
of its depression.
few weeks later for $2300.” It
which increased as by magic,
been delayed six weeks, so
The following is an excerpt
so that in less than one year it was a common occurrence for
from “The Buckeye Rovers,” an great was the rush westward.
was estimated at 80,000 souls. a miner to be worth $1000 one
article in the Cincinnati Enquir- Luckily, some of them were
day and be as much in debt
When they reached the golden
old river men, and who coner by Arthur B. Harding.
the next day from losses in
The Buckeye Rovers crossed structed a rude craft, that car- land, labor was worth $16 a
gambling. There was not much
the continent to the California ried them over the river in four day, but dropped to $10 the
stealing in the mining region,
next season. Provisions of all
gold ﬁelds in 1849. There were days. They proceeded up the
for among the miners, if a perkinds were brought from the
Platte river by Fort Kearney
twenty-two men in the party,
son was caught stealing anySacramento Valley on mules
and Fort Laramie, and to the
from Athens and Meigs counthing to the amount of $1 or
and sold at enormous prices.
north of the Great Salt Lake,
ties exclusively. From Athens
more the penalty was a severe
Everything sold by the pound,
county: Elza Armstrong, W. S. eighty miles. Cholera infested
Stedman, Hugh Dickson, Den- the plains at this time, and for at $1, except butter, which was whipping or death.
The ﬁrst of the Rovers that
$4.
nis Drake, Elijah Terrill, Solo- more than a thousand miles
died was Dr. Joseph Dickson,
Once they paid $8 for a
west of Fort Kearney, if there
mon Townsend, James Shepwho was accidentally shot by
pound of soda to make slaphad been no trail, they could
herd, William Logan, W. T.
dropping his revolver while
jacks. Letters from the East
Wilson, Joseph Dickson, M.D., easily have kept their course
by the new made graves. They cost 40 cents postage, and were prospecting on the American
R. P. Barnes, John Banks,
River. Mr. Stedman spent
usually a year in reaching
had many thrilling experiGeorge Reeves, Asa Condee,
ences and narrow escapes from their destination. A man at the eleven years in California.
M. D., H. L. Graham. From
diggings was employed as mail Judge Wilson served four years
the Indians. At the sink of the
Meigs county: Seth Paine, L.
in the Civil War, and he says,
carrier. He took a list of the
D. Stevens, J. C. Rathburn, M. Humboldt River the Indians
names of the miners and went “The hardships endured were
stole all of their cattle. Then
D., Joshua Gardner, Charles
triﬂing in comparison with the
to San Francisco, the nearest
the company disbanded, and
Giles, John S. Giles. Fifteen
overland trip to California in
post ofﬁce, 200 miles distant.
each one had to get to SacraAthenians and seven Meigs
1849.” A few of the men who
On reaching the ofﬁce, he had
mento the best way he could.
countians.
went out with this expedition
to hunt the letters that were
Judge Wilson fell in with an
The party left Albany
Illinois party going to Oregon, wanted from a large pile on the returned home with ﬁnancial
April 9th, 1849, and, going
gains, but the majority was not
and he was the ﬁrst white man ﬂoor. They paid the mail carto Middleport, Meigs County,
so fortunate.
rier $2 for each letter carried
at Downieville, on the Yuba
embarked on a steamboat
or received. In the winter of ‘49
and, further on, by boats until river, where he subsequently
As the old Ohio ﬂows….
Condee and Wilson formed a
took up the largest nugget
reaching Lexington, Mo. Here
Jordan Pickens is a local historian and
educator.
partnership with two Illinois
any of them secured. It was
they organized, choosing Dr.

MEIGS COUNTY — October 25 is National Wear Purple
Day for National Domestic
Violence Awareness Month.
On this day the Meigs County
Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce and Victim’s Assistance Ofﬁce asks all
community members to wear
their purple to show support
to survivors, victims and those
who will experience domestic
violence in the future. Domestic violence is everyone’s
business because there is no
excuse for abuse. Domestic
violence can affect any gender,
age, religion, etc. Everyone is
affected by domestic violence
whether it be that you are a
survivor, a family member or
friend is a survivor, or you
know someone who is a survivor of domestic violence. Send
in pictures of you wearing
purple and showing your support to jstanley@meigscountyprosecutor.com.

Special to the Sentinel

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

32°

48°

48°

Mostly sunny and cool today. Cloudy and
seasonably cool tonight. High 55° / Low 40°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

57°
37°
66°
43°
84° in 1991
24° in 1964
(in inches)

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

0.00
1.82
2.12
50.29
35.15

Today
7:48 a.m.
6:37 p.m.
7:39 p.m.
8:33 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Fri.
7:49 a.m.
6:35 p.m.
8:18 p.m.
9:39 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

Oct 31

New

Nov 7

First

Full

Nov 15 Nov 23

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
12:15a
1:08a
2:05a
3:07a
4:10a
5:14a
6:15a

Minor
6:28a
7:21a
8:19a
9:21a
10:25a
11:28a
12:29p

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

0

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What are anniversary winds?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
12:40p
1:34p
2:33p
3:35p
4:40p
5:43p
6:44p

Minor
6:53p
7:47p
8:47p
9:50p
10:54p
11:58p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 25, 1959, Yuma recorded its
latest 100-degree-Fahrenheit reading
ever. Even in Yuma, the heat usually
eases in fall. From June 4 through
Sept. 20, the normal high is over 100.

SATURDAY

Cool with periods
of rain

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

Level
13.09
16.94
21.83
12.91
12.99
24.72
16.83
26.19
34.67
12.54
18.10
34.20
17.40

Lucasville
53/41
Portsmouth
55/41

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

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

Waverly
52/40

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.07
+0.14
-0.23
-0.11
+0.24
-0.09
none
none
+0.03
-0.21
-0.60
+0.20
+0.30

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

56°
38°

57°
41°

Sunny intervals with a
shower possible

Mostly cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
53/37

Murray City
52/37
Belpre
54/38

St. Marys
54/37

Parkersburg
54/39

Coolville
53/38

Elizabeth
55/38

Spencer
55/39

Buffalo
56/40

Ironton
55/42

Milton
56/40

St. Albans
57/40

Huntington
56/41

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
58/54
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
69/52
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
83/61
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

POMEROY — American
Legion Drew Webster Post
39 will host a Veterans Day
observance and holiday dinner
on Nov. 12 to celebrate 100
years of the American Legion.
.A ceremony will be held at 11
a.m. on the Pomeroy Parking
Lot with a holiday dinner to
follow at 1 p.m. at Post 39 (the
old Sailsbury School).

A couple of morning
showers

Wilkesville
53/38
POMEROY
Jackson
54/39
54/39
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
55/40
55/39
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
52/41
GALLIPOLIS
55/40
56/40
55/40

Ashland
55/42
Grayson
55/41

Veterans Day
observance

54°
40°

Cloudy, showers
around in the p.m.

Athens
52/37

McArthur
53/37

South Shore Greenup
55/42
54/40

33

Logan
52/37

SYRACUSE — Meigs County Road 122, Roy Jones Road,
will be closed from Monday,
Oct. 29, to Thursday, Nov. 8.
County forces will be repairing
a slip between Snowball Hill
Road and the Syracuse Corporation Limit.

MONDAY

54°
45°

Cloudy and cool with
a shower

Adelphi
53/38
Chillicothe
53/39

SUNDAY

51°
43°

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

0

A: Winds such as the monsoons that
occur annually

Precipitation

FRIDAY

51°
44°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Road Closure
in Meigs County

Clendenin
57/39
Charleston
56/41

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
48/39
Montreal
40/30

Billings
63/43
Minneapolis
52/43

Detroit
52/39

Toronto
47/36
New York
52/40

Chicago
53/43

Denver
67/42

Washington
58/44

Kansas City
52/42

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
65/45/s
45/40/r
61/50/r
56/43/s
55/40/s
63/43/pc
66/49/pc
51/33/s
56/41/s
59/43/pc
61/39/pc
53/43/pc
54/40/s
52/39/pc
54/39/s
64/52/c
67/42/pc
54/40/c
52/39/s
87/76/sh
70/53/pc
53/41/pc
52/42/c
84/60/s
56/48/r
83/61/s
58/46/pc
86/76/sh
52/43/sh
59/49/sh
80/63/t
52/40/s
58/45/c
84/72/t
54/40/s
88/63/s
50/37/pc
48/27/pc
56/42/pc
57/39/s
56/45/c
64/43/pc
69/52/s
58/54/r
58/44/s

Hi/Lo/W
67/45/s
48/40/c
59/51/r
57/51/r
54/46/r
66/48/pc
71/49/pc
51/42/pc
51/45/r
53/44/r
63/44/pc
52/42/c
51/41/r
54/41/c
54/42/r
73/55/s
68/45/pc
54/40/c
54/41/c
87/76/pc
74/55/s
50/39/r
59/42/pc
84/61/s
63/47/pc
86/63/s
53/44/r
88/75/pc
52/41/sh
57/45/r
71/60/c
53/45/pc
70/49/s
86/66/t
56/46/r
89/64/s
52/41/r
47/32/s
54/47/r
54/50/r
54/42/r
68/48/s
71/55/pc
60/44/sh
54/50/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
61/50

El Paso
73/55

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

High
Low

Global

Houston
70/53
Chihuahua
75/52
Monterrey
73/60

93° in Thermal, CA
8° in Bodie State Park, CA

High
111° in Matam, Senegal
Low -44° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
86/76

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

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Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

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OH-70030880

OH-70003248

Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
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�S ports
6 Thursday, October 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Southern aims to join GA
By Bryan Walters

The Blue Devils (8-1)
enter Week 10 having
already locked up a home
game in the Division IV,
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
When it comes to the Ohio Region 15 bracket, and —
win or lose with visiting
high school playoffs and
South Point this Friday
Ohio Valley Publishing
area football teams, the sce- — the Blue and White
narios are relatively simple. will ﬁnish no higher than
second and no lower than
Meigs, River Valley,
third in the ﬁnal eight-team
South Gallia and Eastern
bracket.
will all be making their
The Tornadoes (6-3), on
ﬁnal gridiron appearance
the
other hand, deﬁnitely
of
the
2018
campaign
this
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
have
to win at Eastern on
weekend,
but
Southern
still
Southern senior running back Trey McNickle (5) follows
Saturday night to keep
blockers during a first half run in a Week 9 TVC Hocking has a shot to join Gallia
football contest against Trimble at Roger Lee Adams Academy in the opening
any chances alive, but the
Memorial Field in Racine, Ohio.
Purple and Gold also have
round of the postseason.
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

to do a little scoreboard
watching in the Division
VII, Region 27 bracket on
Friday night.
If Caldwell (5-4) —
which currently sits eighth
in the region — loses
at Shenandoah (4-5) on
Friday, then SHS will be
in control of its own fate
headed into Saturday’s
game.
If Caldwell ends up
defeating Shenandoah,
then the Tornadoes are
more than likely going to
be eliminated from playoff
contention before Satur-

day’s kickoff at East Shade
River Stadium.
South Gallia (3-6) hosts
River Valley (0-9) on
Saturday night in the ﬁrstever head-to-head gridiron
contest between the two
programs. Meigs (3-6) also
travels to Alexander on Friday to wrap up TVC Ohio
play.
Outside of the OVP
area, there are several
other games of importance
in regards to the 2018
OHSAA playoff picture.

See FOOTBALL | 7

WVU looks
to bounce
back vs Bears
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — No. 13 West
Virginia is well aware that Baylor quarterback
Charlie Brewer is a pain to contain.
Brewer almost pulled off a miracle comeback
as a freshman against the Mountaineers (5-1, 3-1
Big 12), who are hoping for anything but a repeat
when they host the Bears (4-3, 2-2) on Thursday
night.
Last year Brewer replaced Zach Smith at the
start of the fourth quarter against West Virginia
with Baylor down 38-13. He rushed for 48 yards
and threw two touchdown passes. But with 17
seconds left, Brewer was sacked on a two-point
conversion attempt and the Mountaineers escaped
with a 38-36 win .
“Brewer creates so many different things for
them,” said West Virginia defensive coordinator
Tony Gibson. “If you’re covering guys downﬁeld,
he’s going to take off on you. He will keep plays
alive, and we have to be careful that we’re not
coming off guys too early, because he can still
throw it. He’s dangerous.”
Brewer also came up a bit short two weeks ago
when he drove Baylor to the Texas 17 with the
ﬁnal seconds ticking down. He rushed his ﬁnal
three passes under intense pressure and the sixthranked Longhorns held on to win 23-17.
But he’s been on the winning end of last-minute
drives, too, taking the Bears the length of the ﬁeld
before getting a 29-yard ﬁeld goal with eight seconds left to beat Kansas State 37-34 on Oct. 6.
West Virginia is still smarting from its failure
to corral Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy and
running back David Montgomery two weeks ago.
Gibson said he counted 31 missed tackles in the
30-14 loss .
Iowa State ran the ball 47 times and averaged
5.2 yards per attempt to keep West Virginia’s
potent offense on the sidelines. Baylor coach Matt
Rhule isn’t sure if the Bears can match that.
“In my old life, I would have lined up and tried
to run the ball every play,” he said. “That’s just not
See WVU | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Oct. 25
College Football
Ball State at Ohio, 7 p.m.
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at
Wahama, 6 p.m.
Rio Grande Athletics
Women’s soccer at
Asbury, 4:30
Men’s soccer at Asbury,
7 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 26
Football
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m.
Parkersburg Catholic at
Hannan, 7 p.m.
Spring Valley at Point
Pleasant, 7:30
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30
Wahama at Trimble, 7:30
Rio Grande Athletics
Volleyball vs. IU-East, 7
p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 27

Football

Southern at Eastern, 7
p.m.
River Valley at South
Gallia, 7:30

Volleyball
EHS-PEHS winner vs.
Clay-Fed Hock winner
at Jackson HS, 3 p.m.
GA-SHS winner vs.
Unioto-FUHS winner at
SEHS, 4 p.m.
Cross Country
OHSAA Regionals at
Pickerington North, 11
a.m.
WVSSAC Championships
at Cabell Midland, 4:30
Rio Grande Athletics
Bowling at AHC Tourney,
8 a.m.
Volleyball vs. Ohio
Christian, noon
Men’s soccer at Midway,
12:30
Women’s soccer at
Midway, 2:30

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Wyatt Nicholson watches a tee shot on the 12th hole during an Aug. 20 TVC Ohio golf match at Franklin Valley Golf Course
in Jackson, Ohio.

12 named all-district in golf
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

The Ohio Valley Publishing area had a dozen
people chosen to the
Southeast Ohio District
Golf Coaches Association
teams, as voted on by
the coaches within the
district.
Gallia Academy and
Meigs each produced
outright girls championships in their respective
leagues, which ultimately
led to those two schools
leading the way with
six and three selections,
respectively.
Eastern and Southern
shared the TVC Hocking
boys crown and landed
a single pick apiece, as
did the River Valley girls
squad.
The Blue Angels had
the most representation
after landing ﬁve people
on the Division II girls
all-district list, which
included Mark Allen as
the coach of the year.
Senior Hunter Copley
was a ﬁrst team choice,
while senior Molly Fitzwater and junior Bailey
Meadows were second
team selections. Sophomore Lilly Rees was also
named honorable mention for the OVC and
district champions.
Meigs sophomore Caitlin Cotterill and River
Valley senior Chloe Gee
were honorable mention
selections in Division II
as well.
Hannah Shrout of Fairland was the D-2 district
player of the year.

Fairland; Conner Heffner,
Waverly; William Sturgill,
Portsmouth.
Coach of the Year: Dan
Drummond, Unioto.
SECOND TEAM
Cord Ebert, Logan Elm;
Wyatt Nicholson, Meigs;
Reece Bellville, Fairland;
Trevor Newkirk, McClain;
Whit Byrd, Alexander;
Brayton Felger, Westfall.
HONORABLE MENTION
Braydon Easterling,
Ironton; Matthew Walker,
Westfall; Cooper Davis,
Gallia Academy; Blake
Rangegar, Fairﬁeld
Union; Evan Huffman,
Logan Elm; Trey Gweng,
New Lexington; Levi
Gerber, Unioto; Bobby
Musser, Meigs; Noah
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports Nobles, Vinton County;
GAHS senior Hunter Copley tees off on the 15th hole at OSU Golf Andrew Vogt, Alexander;
Club’s Gray Course during the first round of the OHSAA Girls Cole Robertson, Waverly;
Division II State Championships on Oct. 12 in Columbus, Ohio.
Brady Woodbridge, Zane
Trace; Trenton Newkirk,
as honorable mention in
The Blue Devils were
McClain; Jay Styers, CirD-3.
represented by sophocleville.
Brian Carney of
more Cooper Davis as
Crooksville was the coach Division III Boys
a honorable mention
choice in Division II boys. of the year in the district, FIRST TEAM
while Eli Montgomery
Senior Wyatt Nicholson
Eli Montgomery,
of Western was the D-3
of Meigs was a second
Western; Hunter Dutiel,
player of the year.
team selection, while
Miller; Brock Jordan,
Nicholson, Harbour,
junior teammate Bobby
Western; Brock White,
Fitzwater and Gee were
Musser was named honCrooksville; Logan Hayrepeat selections to the
orable mention in D-2.
slip, Manchester; Wesley
all-district squads from a Jenkins, Waterford.
Dan Drummond and
year ago.
Ty Schobelock, both of
Coach of the Year:
Unioto, were respectively
Brian Carney, Crookschosen as the coach and
ville.
2018 SEODGCA
player of the year in Divi- all-district golf teams
sion II.
Division II Boys
SECOND TEAM
Eastern senior Ryan
FIRST TEAM
Owen Carney, CrooksHarbour was a second
Ty Schobelock, Unioto; ville; Carson Hall, North
team selection in Division Jacob Calvin, Unioto;
Adams; Ryan Harbour,
III, while Southern senior Shayne DeWitt, Fairﬁeld
See ALL-DISTRICT | 7
Jarrett Hupp was chosen Union; Clayton Thomas,

�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 25, 2018 7

Ohio hosts Ball State in Blackout Game Hit on Browns QB

Mayfield expected
to draw fine

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

The Ohio football team begin mid-week MACtion with its annual Blackout Game on Thursday at Peden Stadium. The Bobcats bring a 4-3
record and host 3-5 Ball State. Ohio will be showcasing their all-black uniforms nationally, with the game being broadcast on CBS Sports
Network and kickoff scheduled for 7:02 p.m.

All-District
From page 6

Eastern; Jacob Hoover, Pike Eastern; Dalton McDonald, Manchester; Dakota Pell, West Union.
HONORABLE MENTION
Blake White, Crooksville; Ryland
Donley, Fairﬁeld; Jarrett Hupp,
Southern; Eric Dotson, Belpre;
Zach Harless, Whiteoak; Andrew
Cochenour, Pike Eastern; Luke
Hayslip, Manchester; Brooks
Soprano, Waterford; Jacob Pell,
West Union.

Division II Girls
FIRST TEAM
Hannah Shrout, Fairland; Ashley
Offenberger, Waterford; Maddi
Shoults, Westfall; Hunter Copley,
Gallia Academy; Lindsey Daniel,
West Union; Katy Pertuset, Portsmouth.
Coach of the Year: Mark Allen,
Gallia Academy.
SECOND TEAM
Molly Fitzwater, Gallia Academy; Hannah Jankauskas, Warren;
Rachel Shuler, Fairﬁeld; Bailey
Meadows, Gallia Academy; Brooklyn Tolle, North Adams; Erika
Matain, McClain.

Football

alive, plus losses by Licking Valley (6-3) and Philo
(6-3) to assure a spot in
the postseason.
From page 6
The Panthers, conversely, need a win, plus
Athens (8-1) — curlosses by Martins Ferry
rently seventh in (D-3)
(6-3), Oak Hill (7-2) and
Region 11 — travels to
Gahanna Columbus AcadNelsonville-York (4-5)
emy (5-4) to make the
on Friday night for what
postseason.
ends up being the TVC
The Oaks, however, can
Ohio championship game.
lock up a Region 19 berth
The Bulldogs have
with a win over visiting
already clinched a share
Green this weekend. The
of the crown, but the
Bobcats (8-1) currently
Buckeyes — currently
sit ﬁfth in Region 27 and
12th in (D-6) Region 23
— are the only team that are also looking to wrap
up a postseason appearcan split the league title
ance with a victory.
with AHS.
Two teams in desperBelpre (6-3) — curate need of a win for any
rently 10th in Region 23
— needs a win at playoff- playoff possibilities will
bound Waterford (7-2) on happen Friday in Ohio’s
First Capital as ChilliFriday to keep any postcothe (7-2) welcomes
season hopes alive.
Jackson (6-3) for the
Ironton (6-3) — curFrontier Athletic Conferrently ﬁfth in (D-5)
Region 19— can lock up ence ﬁnale.
The Cavaliers are cura postseason berth with
rently eighth in the (D-2)
a win at Portsmouth on
Region 8 bracket, while
Friday. The host Trojans
the Ironmen (6-3) sit
(6-3) are currently 10th
ninth in the Region 11
in (D-5) Region 20 and
breakdown.
need a victory to stay
The southeast poralive in the playoff chase.
tion of Ohio has already
Fairland (5-4) — cursecured several playoff
rently seventh in Region
berths, with Hillsboro
15 — needs a win at
Chesapeake (5-4) — cur- (Region 11), Waverly
(Region 16), Wheelersrently ninth in Region
burg (Region 20) Paint
19 — on Friday to stay

Charlie and the QB factory
Brewer attended the
same high school in
From page 6
Austin, Texas, as 2017
Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayﬁeld of
really who we are. We’re
Oklahoma. Brewer comes
a little more spread and
from a family of quartertempo. I owe it to our
backs. His grandfather,
players to let them go
play the way we play best. father and uncle played at
Texas, and older brother
But it’d be great if we
Michael Brewer played at
could keep them off the
Texas Tech and Virginia
ﬁeld.”
Tech.
Here’s some other
things to know when the
Mountaineers and Bears
In law ‘eers
meet:
Baylor running backs
coach Jeff Nixon was a
running back at West
Second-half blues
West Virginia’s offense Virginia in 1993 and
1994 before transferhas been terrible after
ring to Penn State,
halftime in three of its
where Rhule also played
four Big 12 contests,
linebacker. Rhule said
getting shut out at Iowa
State and Texas Tech and he grew up a fan of the
Backyard Brawl between
failing to score over the
West Virginia and Pittsﬁnal 22 minutes against
burgh.
Kansas State.

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

Valley and Adena (Region
23), and Trimble (Region
27) joining the likes of
Gallia Academy and
Waterford.
Unioto (6-3), Southeastern (6-3) and Portsmouth West (6-3) also
control their own destinies this weekend, with
respective wins locking
up playoff berths.
The Shermans (Region
15) travel to Piketon to
face the 1-8 Redstreaks.
The Panthers (Region
23) host 4-5 Westfall.

The Siders (Region 20)
entertain visiting Wheelersburg (8-1).
The ofﬁcial pairings for
the 2018 OHSAA football
playoffs will be released
on Sunday, Oct. 28.
Divisions I, II, III and
VI will start the postseason on Friday, Nov. 2.
Division IV, V and VII
contests will begin on
Saturday, Nov. 3.
All Week 11 playoff
games kickoff at 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

THURSDAY EVENING
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3 (N)
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at Six (N)
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at 6pm (N)
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7 PM

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Superstore The Good
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Grey's Anatomy "Everyday Station 19 "Lost and
With Murder "It Was the
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Found" (N)
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Song of the Mountains
Theater of the Mind
Backfired VW's top
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executives lied and cheated
The Band J4"
for domination.
Grey's Anatomy "Everyday Station 19 "Lost and
With Murder "It Was the
Angel" (N)
Found" (N)
Worst Day of My Life" (N)
Murphy
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A Place to Call Home "I Do, The Jewel in the Crown
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I Do"
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8 PM

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18 (WGN) BlueB. "Reagan vs. Reagan"
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WVU

HONORABLE MENTION
Natalie Shope, Zane Trace; Allison Baughman, Crooksville; Peyton
Scott, Lynchburg-Clay; Madalynn
Roby, Belpre; Alexis Tompkins,
Fairﬁeld; Bryn Karnes, McClain;
Emily Lott, Unioto; Lynne Dale,
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Chloe Gee, River Valley; Addi
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Madison Fulton, West Union; Alicia Dickinson, Waterford; Isabella
Lambert, Vinton County.

CLEVELAND (AP) — Baker Mayﬁeld’s head
snapped back violently from a nasty hit that
seemed illegal and unnecessary.
The ofﬁcials on the ﬁeld didn’t think so. The
NFL feels otherwise.
Tampa Bay safety Jordan Whitehead is expected
to be ﬁned for his helmet-to-helmet hit on Mayﬁeld during Sunday’s game, a person familiar with
league discipline told the Associated Press.
Whitehead struck Mayﬁeld in the fourth quarter
of the Buccaneers’ 26-23 overtime win as Mayﬁeld was starting to slide at the end of a 35-yard
scramble. Whitehead should have been ﬂagged
for unnecessary roughness or unsportsmanlike
conduct, said the person who spoke Wednesday on
condition of anonymity because the league has not
commented on calls from last week’s games.
Fines are typically announced on Saturday.
Mayﬁeld said there’s no satisfaction in learning
Whitehead will likely be punished.
“After the fact, it doesn’t really matter,” he said
Wednesday as the Browns began preparing for
Sunday’s game in Pittsburgh. “That’s just one of
those things that in the moment you’ve got to be
able to call that.”
After the play, Mayﬁeld popped to his feet and
jawed at Whitehead, saying later he wanted to
“let the guy know he’s gonna have to hit me a lot
harder than that if he wants to affect me.”
The play was initially ﬂagged, but ofﬁcials conferred and decided not to penalize Whitehead.
First-year referee Shawn Hochuli then added
confusion by announcing to the crowd: “The quarterback is still a runner and therefore is allowed to
be hit in the head. He had not yet begun his slide.
There is therefore no foul.”
The league implemented a “helmet” rule that
prohibits players from lowering their heads to
deliver a blow, and there has been a greater
emphasis placed on protecting quarterbacks.
In the heat of the moment, Mayﬁeld said he was
unaware of Hochuli’s puzzling explanation.
“I didn’t hear it at the time because I was so
fuming mad, but to hear the ref say he’s allowed to
be hit in the head, I thought that’s why they put in
the rule,” he said. “But we’ll see.”
Mayﬁeld was asked how he feels about Hochuli’s
ruling now.
“No words,” he said. “Honestly. No words.”
On Monday, Browns coach Hue Jackson the
non-call was “disappointing.”
Mayﬁeld feels the NFL might consider adopting
the college “targeting” rule in which players are
subject to ejection and suspensions if called for
using their helmets to deliver a blow.
“I deﬁnitely know it affected our team,” said
Mayﬁeld, who played at Oklahoma. “When anytime you have guys that are ﬂying around trying to
impose their will on an offense and a hit like that
can take them out of not only that second half but
then the ﬁrst half of the next game, that can affect
a lot of guys.”
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25

31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
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58
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(WE)
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62 (NGEO)
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PREMIUM

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
Press Conf. PittScript (N) Pirates (N)
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NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Calgary Flames (L)
Football C. NCAA Football Georgia Tech at Virginia Tech Site: Lane Stadium -- Blacksburg, Va. (L)
SportsC. (N)
NCAA Football Toledo at Western Michigan Site: Waldo Stadium -- Kalamazoo, Mich. (L) Poker World Series
Grey's Anatomy "Get Off
Grey's Anatomy "Go Big or Harry and Meghan: A Royal Romance (‘18, Doc) Parisa (:05) William &amp; Kate Nico
Fitz-Henley, Steve Coulter, Murray Fraser. TV14
Evers-Swindell. TVPG
on the Pain"
Go Home"
Hotel Transylvania (2012, Animated) Kevin James,
The Haunted Mansion (2003, Fantasy) Jennifer Tilly, Decorating Disney:
Andy Samberg, Adam Sandler. TVPG
Terence Stamp, Eddie Murphy. TVPG
Halloween Magic
Heathers
Mom
Mom
Friends
Friends
Beetlejuice (1988, Comedy) Geena Davis, Alec
(:50)
Baldwin, Michael Keaton. TV14
"Pilot" (N)
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Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House iCarly
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Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted TVG
NCIS "Something Blue"
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The Situation Room
OutFront
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Halloween (1978, Horror) Jamie Lee Curtis, P.J. Trick'r Treat (2008, Adult) Dylan Baker, Brian Cox, Anna
Thirteen Ghosts (‘01,
Soles, Donald Pleasence. TV14
Paquin. TVMA
Hor) Tony Shalhoub. TVMA
Alaska "Fear and Floating" Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska/Frontier (N)
To Be Announced
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The First 48 "Mr. New
The First 48 "The Girl Next The First 48 "Unspeakable" A man is gunned down inside Nightwatch Nation "We
Orleans/ No Shelter"
Door"
an apartment. (N)
Are Nightwatch Nation" (N)
Northwest Law
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The Crocodile Hunter (N)
Northwest Law
Northwest Law (N)
Chicago P.D. "Stepping
Chicago P.D. "Wrong Side Chicago P.D. "Chin Check" Chicago P.D. "Now Is
Chicago P.D. "Thirty
Stone"
of the Bars"
Always Temporary"
Balloons"
Law&amp;Order: CI "Yesterday" Growing Up Hip Hop
Hip Hop "Ex and the City" Hip Hop "Wild 'n Out" (N) Growing Up "Wild 'n Out"
Kardash "Let's Play Ball!" E! News (N)
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(:35) MASH
(:10) Ray
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Amazing Hotels "Marina
San Diego
America's
Life Below Zero "Feast or Life Below Zero "Day After Life Below Zero "Strength
Bay Sands, Singapore"
(N)
Wild Spaces Famine"
Tomorrow" (N)
in Numbers"
Wrestling
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NCAA Football Baylor at West Virginia Site: Mountaineer Field -- Morgantown, W. Va. (L)
FB Extra
Pawn Stars Pawn "Payne Mountain Men "The Rising Mountain Men "Double
Mountain Men: Outdoors (:05) The Return of Shelby
"The Gauntlet" (N)
in the Putt" Storm"
Jeopardy"
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Shahs "Clash the Persians" Shahs of Sunset
Shahs "The Prenup Hiccup" Shahs of Sunset (N)
Welcome to Waverly (N)
House Payne House Payne
White Chicks (2004, Comedy) Marlon Wayans, Jaime King, Shawn Wayans. TV14
(:55) Baggage Claim TVPG
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipATL (N) FlipATL (N) H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00) The Vatican Tapes
Wrong Turn (2003, Horror) Eliza Dushku, Emmanuelle
The Cabin in the Woods (2012, Horror) Chris
Olivia Dudley. TV14
Chriqui, Desmond Harrington. TVMA
Hemsworth, Anna Hutchinson, Kristen Connolly. TV14

6 PM

400 (HBO)

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6:30

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9:30

10 PM

10:30

Game Night A murder mystery Vice News
My Dinner with Hervé This film explores
(:45) Road to Jacobs vs.
Deuce "The
party attended by a group of friends turns Tonight (N) the bond between actor Hervé Villechaize Derevyanchenko A preview Feminism
Part"
into a real kidnapping. TVMA
and journalist Danny Tate. TVMA
of the October 2018.
(5:40)
Logan (‘17, Action) Patrick Stewart, Dafne
Repo Men (2010, Sci-Fi) Forest Whitaker, Liev
(:55)
Disclosure (‘94,
Keen, Hugh Jackman. Logan and Professor X are brought Schreiber, Jude Law. In a future where artificial organs can Dra) Michael Douglas, Demi
out of retirement when a young mutant is hunted. TVMA be bought on credit, they can also be repossessed. TVMA Moore. TV14
(5:00)
A River Runs (:15) TheCirc. (:45) Shameless "Down Like (:45) The Tribes of Palos Verdes (‘17, Drama) Cody Fern, Kidding
Through It (‘92, Dra) Brad "Senatorial the Titanic"
Jennifer Garner, Maika Monroe. After her parents split up, "Kintsugi"
Combat"
Pitt, Craig Sheffer. TVPG
a girl turns to surfing to help deal with her emotions.
(5:50)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, October 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Restocked Kansas nabs No. 1 spot in AP preseason poll
history, all under Self.
The Jayhawks topped the
ballot for 37 of 65 voters,
nearly double that of No.
2 Kentucky.
“Obviously we lost a
lot off last year’s team
with Devonte’, Svi
(Mykhailiuk) and Malik
(Newman), so I’m a
little surprised that the
writers put us there this
preseason,” Self said in a
statement to the AP. “It’s
deﬁnitely a spot we welcome and certainly know
the goal is to be playing
to that ranking by when it
counts the most.
“With the young players, we know it’s going

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

two times the Jayhawks
started at No. 1 didn’t
end well. The 2004-05
squad lost to Bucknell
in the ﬁrst round of the
NCAA Tournament. And
the 2009-10 team that
held the top spot for 15 of
19 weeks overall and won
33 games lost to Northern Iowa in the second
round.
The ranking comes
as the program ﬁnds
itself entangled in the
federal corruption case
tied to payments used to
steer recruits to certain
schools. Testimony during the recent ﬁrst trials
included references to

Self and sophomore forward Silvio De Sousa ,
though Self isn’t charged
with wrongdoing and it’s
unclear if De Sousa’s status will be affected.
Clear choices
Voters established a
clear top tier: Kansas,
Kentucky, No. 3 Gonzaga
and No. 4 Duke. Those
four teams appeared in
some combination at the
top of nearly half the ballots (32 of 65).
John Calipari’s latest
group of touted recruits
helped the Wildcats earn
19 ﬁrst-place votes to
open as a top-5 team for

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

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234
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the eighth straight season.
Gonzaga’s ranking is
the program’s highest
in a preseason AP poll,
though the Zags have
reached No. 1 during the
regular season before. As
for Duke, the Blue Devils
had started No. 1 in each
of the past two preseason
AP polls.
The points gap between
the Jayhawks and the
Blue Devils (129 points)
at fourth was slimmer
than between Duke and
fellow Atlantic Coast
Conference program
Virginia (166 points) at
No. 5.

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at 1:00 pm.

to take some time before
we’re anywhere close to
where we’re going to be,
but I do like this team
and I think we have a
chance to be very good.”
The Jayhawks return
veteran starters in junior
7-footer Udoka Azubuike
and senior Lagerald Vick
from a team that reached
its ﬁrst Final Four since
2012. They’re also adding transfer help from
Memphis twins Dedric
and K.J. Lawson as well
as California’s Charlie
Moore — all double-digit
scorers on their previous
teams.
And yet, the previous

OH-70081521

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)
— Kansas coach Bill
Self sees big holes when
he looks at his roster
after losing three starters, including Associated Press All-American
Devonte’ Graham.
The voters in the AP
Top 25 poll see something different: a roster
restocked so well that
Jayhawks will start the
season as the nation’s top
team.
Kansas checked in at
No. 1 in the preseason
poll released Monday,
earning the top spot to
start a season for the
third time in program

CALL TODAY!

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, October 25, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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By Hilary Price

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, October 25, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Baseball’s best: long nights, strikeouts &amp; pitching changes
BOSTON (AP) —
Games averaged 3 hours,
35½ minutes during the
playoffs, up 6 minutes
from the 2017 postseason
and more than a half-hour
longer than this year’s
regular season.
Strikeouts have topped
hits in seven of eight
postseason matchups.
Starting pitchers usually don’t ﬁnish the ﬁfth
inning and use of relievers is up markedly in an
era when “bullpenning”
has become a verb.
Have the changes
brought about by analytics made baseball less
appealing to casual fans?
“There’s certainly

Los Angeles Dodgers
manager Dave Roberts
said ahead of Tuesday
night’s World Series
opener against Boston.
“I know our series there
was a lot of strikeouts,
but there was the strategy part of it — I think
that that’s very exciting
for a baseball purist that
loves to see what managers think and how you
can kind of match up
against the opposition.”
Boston’s 8-4 win in
Elise Amendola | AP
Boston Red Sox’s pitcher Rick Porcello, center, warms up during Game 1 took 3:52, ended
Monday’s batting practice for the opening game of the World at 12:03 a.m. and includSeries in Boston. The Red Sox are facing the Dodgers in the Series ed 10 relief pitchers and
for the first time since Babe Ruth played for Boston.
six pinch hitters. The
something to be said for double plays, defense,
teams combined for 24
that, because ball in play, that’s always exciting,”
strikeouts and 19 hits.
Postseason games
through the League
Championship Series
averaged a record 18.8
strikeouts, according to
304-675-1666 | pvalley.org
the Elias Sports Bureau,
up from 18.4 last year
and 18.0 in 2016. There
were 526 whiffs and 416
hits in the ﬁrst 28 postseason games, including
161 strikeouts and 110
hits in the Dodgers’ win
over Milwaukee in the
NL Championship Series.

Boston’s Division
Series victory over the
New York Yankees was
the only one with more
hits than strikeouts: 67
to 60.
While viewers hope
for action, managers and
many players are caught
up in the tactical chess
match between dugouts
prepped by front ofﬁce
analytics teams.
“It’s more interesting.
It is,” Boston manager
Alex Cora said. “There’s
so much information
now that you can actually
exploit weaknesses on
the team, not only rely
on the starters or your
usual setup guy or your
closer. Somebody the last
few years ﬁgured out that
there’s a lot of off days in
the playoffs, that you can
actually use your starters
as relievers or you can
go with your relievers for
multiple innings, and it’s
fun. It’s fun as a baseball
fan.”
Computer analysis
helps teams arrange
defensive shifts that take
away hits and concludes
starting pitchers’ effec-

tiveness often drops the
third time through the
batting order. Innovative use of relief pitchers
by Cubs manager Joe
Maddon and Cleveland’s
Terry Francona during
the 2016 postseason
caught the attention of
the rest of the industry.
“I don’t think there’s
any doubt about it.
They started bringing
(Aroldis) Chapman and
(Andrew) Miller in for
two, three innings at
time. Now every team
that has a dominant
reliever or two dominant
relievers, their design,”
Red Sox pitcher Rick
Porcello said. “Find ways
to get those guys in the
game in the highestleverage situations,
because those are your
best arms.”
Starting pitchers averaged 5 1/3 innings and
83 pitches in the 2016
postseason, according
to Sports Info Solutions.
That dropped to 4.7
innings and 80 pitches
last year, and 4.5 innings
and 73 pitches this year
going into the Series.

Minimally Invasive Surgical Services
at Pleasant Valley Hospital
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Arizona Coyotes’ Kevin Connauton, right, checks Columbus Blue Jackets’ Anthony Duclair during the
second period Tuesday in Columbus, Ohio. The Coyotes won 4-1.

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Hat trick lifts Coyotes over Blue Jackets

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OH-70081538

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Christian Fischer
celebrated his ﬁrst career
hat trick, and Arizona
Coyotes teammate Derek
Stepan will get a free dinner.
Stepan set up the
21-year-old Fischer on
goals in all three periods
Tuesday night as Arizona
rallied to beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 4-1. Stepan’s huge role wasn’t lost
on Fischer, who picked
up his ﬁrst hat trick in
his 94th NHL game. He’d

never ever had a two-goal
game before.
“I think I owe Derek a
nice dinner and bottle of
wine or something,” he
said.
“It’s the ﬁrst time we
played together this year
and a guy like that, he’s
really smart. He knows
the ins and outs of this
game,” Fischer said. “I
know if I get open and
create space for him,
he’s either going to take
a shot or pass the puck,
whatever is the right

Elect

Michael “Mick”

BARR

Meigs County Court Judge
EXPERIENCED � HARDWORKING � FAIR
� Appointed

and served as Acting Judge of the
Meigs County Court, January 2017-June 2018

OH-70084599

� Partner

at Little, Sheets &amp; Barr, LLP

PAID FOR BY THE CAMPAIGN TO ELECT MICHAEL L. BARR

play.”
Darcy Kuemper, subbing for ill starter Antti
Raanta, stopped 35 shots
to get his ﬁrst win in two
starts this season, and
Dylan Strome also scored
to help the Coyotes beat
the Blue Jackets for the
ﬁrst time in seven tries
dating back to February
2015. Arizona has won
two of its last three overall.
Pierre Luc-Dubois
scored and Sergei
Bobrovsky had 22 saves
in what was mostly a
lackluster game for the
Blue Jackets, even though
they had 10 more shots
on goal.
Dubois got credit for
a goal 31 seconds into
the game when he shot
wide, then skated in
to knock the puck out
from behind the net.
It ricocheted off Clayton Keller’s skate and
trickled in as Kuemper
leaned the other way.
It was one of the few
mistakes the Arizona
goalie made.
“It was just an unfortunate bounce, a terrible
start for us, but what can
you do?” Kuemper said.
“You just have to stick
with it.”
Fischer tied it 7:08 in
with a one-timer . Strome
made it 2-1 later in the
ﬁrst when he tipped in
a shot from just outside
the blue paint on a power
play.
“We didn’t like our
ﬁrst (period),” Arizona
coach Rick Tocchet said.
“We’re up 2-1, but we
didn’t like our ﬁrst —
which is a good sign
— then we grabbed the
game back.”

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