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                  <text>A dog’s
world
view
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

60°

65°

54°

Rather cloudy and windy today. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 68° / Low 45°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Panthers
oust Blue
Devils

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 177, Volume 72

Let the shopping begin

Deer-Gun
Hunting
opens Nov. 26
Youth weekend
held Nov. 17-18
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY —
Deer hunting is an
extremely popular
activity for sportsmen
and women statewide,
and Ohio’s white-tailed
deer continue to provide hunters across the
state with excellent
opportunities for success as they head out
into the ﬁeld. Hunting
remains the most effective management tool
for maintaining Ohio’s
healthy deer population, according to the
Ohio Department of
Natural Resources
(ODNR).
Hunters can contact
the ODNR Division
of Wildlife toll-free at
800-WILDLIFE (9453543) with questions
about hunting.
Special call center
hours for the deer-gun
seasons include: 10
a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday,
Nov. 17, for youth deer-

gun season; 12-5 p.m.,
Sunday, Nov. 25, before
the start of deer gun
season; 7 a.m.-7 p.m.,
Monday, Nov. 26, to
Friday, Nov. 30, and 10
a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday,
Dec. 1, and 12-5 p.m.
on Sunday, Dec. 2, for
deer-gun season.
Ohio’s annual youth
white-tailed deer
hunting season gives
young hunters an early
opportunity to pursue
the state’s most popular
big-game animal on
Nov. 17-18, and it is
open to hunters with
a valid youth hunting
license and a deer permit.
The deer-gun seasons
run from Monday, Nov.
26, to Sunday, Dec. 2,
and Dec. 15-16. Details
about deer hunting
rules are available in
the 2018-2019 Ohio
Hunting and Trapping
Regulations, where
licenses are sold or
at wildohio.gov. Only
either-sex permits may
be used after Sunday,
Nov. 25, unless hunting
See HUNTING | 5

Six residents facing
criminal charges
after Mason bust
Staff Report

MASON — Six Mason residents were arrested
by police early Monday morning in a single incident on William Lane.
Brenda Lee McCarty, 56, was arrested on
a felony possession with the intent to deliver
charge. According to Mason Police Chief Colton
McKinney, additional charges are pending against
McCarty.
Arrested on charges of conspiracy to commit a
felony were Shawn Roney Seyler, 25, Paul Matt
Maines, 38, Aaron Andrew Stone, 43, Larry Ray
Grimm, Jr., 44, and Sean Thomas Ruark, 34.
All six were taken to the Western Regional
Jail. They were arraigned before Magistrate Gail
Roush, who set bond at $50,000 each, with home
conﬁnement if bail is posted.
Chief McKinney said at around midnight Monday, he observed multiple males entering and exiting a residence in the 100-block of William Lane.
Due to ofﬁcers’ experience with the residence,
there was suspected drug activity, according to
McKinney.
See CHARGES | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Tuesday, November 6, 2018 s 50¢

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Hundreds of shoppers packed downtown Pomeroy on Monday for the annual Christmas Open House shopping event. The open house
is held each year on the first Monday of November to officially kick-off the Christmas shopping season. Other upcoming events for the
Pomeroy merchants include Small Business Saturday (Nov. 24) and shopping hours following the Pomeroy Christmas Parade on Nov. 25.

Thousands visit Nina, Pinta replicas
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
com

GALLIPOLIS — A
sailing museum made
of a pair of replicas of
Christopher Columbus’
ships, the Nina and
Pinta, have drawn thousands to the Gallipolis
Public Use Access waterfront dock.
The ships ﬁrst opened
for touring in the Gallipolis’ dock on Nov. 2.
“We had approximately
30 group tours scheduled, 15 plus per group,
for an estimated total of
4,000, during the Nina
and Pinta visit,” said
Gallia Convention and
Visitors Bureau Executive Director Amanda
Crouse.
“We sail further than
just rivers,” said crew
member Jeff Hicks. “The
ships were conceived
of by Captain Morgan
(Sanger and Columbus
Foundation founder). He
wanted to sail the ships
around the country and
tell the story of Colum-

Beth Sergent | OVP

The Nina and the Pinta sit docked in front of Gallipolis waterfront area with visitors lining up to see
the historic ship replicas before they set sail again after Wednesday viewing times ending at 5 p.m.

bus and that’s how it got
started. That was in the
1980s. They researched
the ships for about two
and a half years to ﬁnd
out what a caravel truly
was and the particulars
about the Nina, Pinta
and Santa Maria…They
found out they only had

enough time to build one
so they picked Columbus’
favorite ship which was
the Nina. The Nina was
the smallest of the three
in the ﬂeet…The ships
were built in Valenca,
Brazil. “
Hicks said among
the shipwrights who

constructed the ships
were Portuguese who
were reportedly eighth
generation builders. The
Nina ﬁrst set sail in 1991
while the Pinta ﬁrst set
sail in 2005 after also
being built in Valenca.
See REPLICAS | 3

FOR THE RECORD
Staff Report

Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
Night Shift
Oct. 22
Deputy Snoke checked a suspicious person call on State Route
143, Harrisonville. The person
was not located after a check of
the area.
Sgt Jones responded to McKelvey Road, Portland, to check for
a suspicious vehicle in the Portland area. A patrol of the area was
made, and no vehicle was located.
Oct. 23
Deputy Snoke arrested Matthew Ward on a warrant issued by
Meigs Common Pleas Court.
Deputies performed seven house
checks
Oct. 24
Deputy Snoke responded
toCone Road for a well-being
check.
Sgt. Jones responded to Yel-

lowbush Road, Racine for an unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
Vehicle was located and returned
to the owner.
Deputies performed three house
checks and one jail transport from
Monroe County to Meigs County
Jail.
Oct. 25
Deputies performed ﬁve house
checks and one jail transport.
Oct. 26
Dispatch received a call from
a female on State Route 684 in
Harrisonville advising she was
having trouble with her husband
and needed a Deputy. Sgt. Mohler
arrived and was met by the male
outside and he advised that he and
his wife were separated, and she
wanted him to leave. Sgt. Mohler
then spoke with the female who
advised the same thing. When
asked if anything criminal had
happened she advised no. Sgt.
Mohler informed her that he

could not make the male leave the
home, that was a civil matter, but
he would speak with him. When
asked if he would consider separating for the night the male stated
that he had already planned on
leaving. He spoke with the female
one more time and then left the
home at the same time as the deputy. No further action was taken
on this call.
Dispatch received a call advising
of an argument Callaway Road.
Deputies were dispatched and
arrived on the scene. They were
informed by the caller that his
adult son was attempting to take
his grandfather’s truck, and they
would not allow it because he does
not have a driver’s license. The
son became upset and verbally
abusive. Deputies then spoke
with the son who advised that he
had lost his cool but was over it
now and knew he was wrong and
should not have acted that way.
See RECORD | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 6, 2018

OBITUARIES

RICHARD ‘RICK’ BABLE

GARY L. SMITH

(Lena), Mitch (Lisa),
COLUMBUS — RichLarry Ray, and Herb
ard “Rick” Bable, 52, of
Anna (Frank) Nelson and Columbus, went home to (Brandy); brother-in-law,
POMEROY — Gary
three brothers, Paul Larry be with the Lord on Nov. Howard (Helen); two
L. Smith (Gruffy) 75, of
2, 2018. Rick was born in aunts and one uncle from
Smith, Marvin (Shelia)
Pomeroy, Ohio passed
Indiana on May 7, 1966, Mason, West Virginia;
Taylor, Virgil (Cindy)
from his earthy home to
many more nieces, nephTaylor, several nieces and to James and Harriett
meet his heavenly father
ews, extended family and
Bable. He enjoyed huntnephews and a special
on November 3, 2018 at
ing, being outdoors, and friends.
Camden Clark Memorial friend, Roger Beegle. In
His family will receive
addition to his wife, he is spending time with his
Hospital, Parkersburg,
friends on Wednesday,
family. He worked at 32
preceded in death by his
West Virginia.
Nov. 7, from 5-8 p.m. at
Born February 8, 1943 mother, Ruth Taylor, and years for Germain Ford.
Cotner Funeral Home,
Rick is preceded in
an infant sister, Rachael
in Chester, Ohio, he was
7369 East Main Street,
death by his father, Jim
Smith.
the son of the late Ruth
Reynoldsburg. There will
Bable; step-father who
Funeral services will
Smith-Taylor. Gary was a
raised him, Larry Lauder- also be visiting on Thurs1961 graduate of Eastern be held at 11 a.m. on
milt; granddaughter Ella. day, Nov. 8, from noon-2
Wednesday, November
High School. He was a
p.m. at Anderson McDanHe is survived by lov7, 2018, at Anderson52 year member of the
iel Funeral Home, 590 E
McDaniel Funeral Home ing wife Ruth Bable;
Operating Engineers,
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
mother Harriett “Hedy”
in Pomeroy, Ohio with
Local 18. He retired in
with his funeral service at
Laudermilt; daughters
Pastor Joseph McCune
2000 after over 30 years
2 p.m. Graveside service
Alisha (Tyler) Bowden,
of service. Most of those ofﬁciating. Burial will
to follow at Letart Falls
Amber (Zachariah)
years were spent working follow at Chester CemPlace, and Cassidy Bable; Cemetery, Racine, Ohio.
etery. Visiting hours will
for Geupel ConstrucMessages may be sent
step-daughter Jessie
be Tuesday from 5 – 8
tion. After retirement,
(Brad) Schneider; grand- to his family by visiting
p.m. In lieu of ﬂowers,
Gary enjoyed spending
www.cotnerfuneralhome.
daughter, Emma; brothtime with his lovely wife, memorial contributions
Charlotte, of 43 years and may be made in honor of ers, Jim (Kim), Jeff, Mike com.
Gary’s memory to Meals
their two children. He
ALBERT KEITH ‘STAN’ STANSBURY
enjoyed restoring Farmall on Wheels, 112 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, OH
tractors and spending
served for 20
BALLINGER,
45769.
time on numerous outyears, primarily in
Texas — Albert
The family would like
door/garage projects. He
the hospital corps.
to extend a special thank Keith “Stan”
was a devoted husband
His service includStansbury, 81, of
and father and a friend to you to the compassioned stints in Vietate nurses and therapists Ballinger, Texas,
everyone who met him.
nam, Korea and
passed away on
of Pleasant Valley Home
He is survived by his
Okinawa. After
Nov. 4, 2018.
Health and the Camden
two daughters, Crystal
his ofﬁcial retireBorn on Dec. 1,
Clark Intensive Care
and Amy Smith. He is
1936 in Pomeroy, Meigs ment from the Armed
also survived by his sister, Unit.
Forces, Keith, Georgia
County, Ohio, he was
the only child of the late and family moved to
WHALEN
Ballinger, Texas, after
James Alden and Franhe accepted a position at
POINT PLEASANT — Ann Yvonne Whalen, 82, of ces Leona Price StansBallinger Memorial Hosbury, both also born in
Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Nov. 4, 2018.
pital. In 1981, he acceptMeigs County.
Memorial services will be held at Deal Funeral
ed a position with the
Keith is survived by
Home in Point Pleasant, Thursday, Nov. 8 at 7 p.m.
U.S. Postal Service and
his wife of 61 years,
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home on
worked in the Ballinger
Georgia Ann Swanke
Thursday from 5-7 p.m., prior to the service. A full
Post Ofﬁce for 14 years
Stansbury, and his four
obituary will be in an upcoming edition of the Point
before his ﬁnal retiresons and respective
Pleasant Register.
ment in 1995. He spent
spouses: Hunter and
Bernadette Stansbury of his later years enjoying
FISHER
Dallas, Texas; James and hunting and ﬁshing with
family and friends.
Monica Stansbury of
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Roger Lee Fisher,
Visitation will be held
Fort Worth, Texas; Rex
65, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. died Nov. 5, 2018 at his
Stansbury of San Ange- at the Lange Funeral
home.
Home in Ballinger on
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home, lo, Texas; and Shannon
Wednesday, Nov. 7,
Friday, Nov. 9 at 1 p.m., with Pastor Ted Nance ofﬁci- and Sandy Stansbury
from 6-7 p.m. Memorial
ating. Burial will follow in the Patterson-Clonch Cem- of Dallas, Texas. He is
services will be at LFH
also survived by seven
etery, Henderson, W.Va. Friends may visit the family
on Thursday, Nov. 8 at
at the funeral home from 11 a.m. -1 p.m., prior to the grandchildren and two
11 a.m. and followed by
great-grandchildren.
service.
graveside remembrance
In addition, he is surin the Rose Hill Cemvived by in-laws, Jerry
DAVIS
etery at 2:30 p.m. in
and Larry Brokaw of
Mertzon, Texas, as well Merkel, Texas.
GALLIPOLIS — Larry R. “Butch” Davis, 67, of
The family asks that
as numerous nieces and
Gallipolis, Ohio passed away on Saturday, Novemmemorials in Keith’s
nephews.
ber 3, 2018 at Holzer Medical Center.
He was a 1954 gradu- name be made to either
The funeral service will be at 1 p.m. on Thursday,
Ballinger Memorial
ate of Pomeroy High
November 8, 2018 at Willis Funeral Home with
Hospital or the Ballinger
School. Upon graduPastor Alfred Holley ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
Healthcare and Rehab
ation, he enlisted in
in Neal Cemetery. Friends may call one hour prior
Center.
the U.S. Air Force and
to the service from noon to 1 p.m. at the funeral
home.
SIEGERT

PULLINS
RACINE — Roger Pullins, 81, of Racine, died Friday, Nov. 2, 2018m at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Arrangements will be announced by the EwingSchwarzel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
COLLINS

GALLIPOLIS — Kevin Robert Siegert of Gallipolis,
formerly of Amery, Wis., died on October 31, 2018.
Memorial services for Kevin will take place on Sunday, November 11, 2018, 2 p.m. at Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, Gallipolis. Friends may call an hour
prior to the service at the funeral home on Sunday. A
celebration of Kevin’s life will be held in Wisconsin at
later date to be announced.
NEWLAND

COTTAGEVILLE — Mary Beth (Hobbs) Collins,
57, of Cottageville, died Oct. 29, 2018 at her residence in Maryland, following a brief illness.
A service was held at 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 4 at the
Casto Funeral Home, Evans, where Pastor Bradley
Goodwin ofﬁciated. Burial followed in the Fairplain
Cemetery, Ripley. Visitation was held on Sunday from
12:30 p.m. until time of service at the funeral home.

BIDWELL — Richard H. Newland, 46, Bidwell,
died Thursday, November 1, 2018 in St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, West Virginia.
Memorial services will be conducted Saturday,
November 10, 2018 in the Safe Harbor Country
Church, 31850 Red Hill Road, Langsville, Ohio with
Pastor Allen Midcap ofﬁciating. In accordance to his
wishes, cremation services are under the direction of
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis.
BURCHAM

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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Prices are subject to change at any time.

WILLOW WOOD — Bernard Justin Gus Burcham,
68, of Willow Wood, died Monday, November 5, 2018
at his home.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Thursday,
November 8, 2018 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, by Pastor Carl Black. Burial will follow at Locust Grove Cemetery, Scottown. Visitation
will be held 12 to 2 p.m. Thursday, November 8, 2018
at the funeral home.

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

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jschultz@aimmediamidwest.com

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dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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

Daily Sentinel

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

Meigs County Road 122,
Roy Jones Road, closure
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.

Family support group
offered second Friday
POMEROY — A family support group for those
who have loved ones dealing with addiction will
take place the second Friday of each month from
10 a.m. to noon at Hopewell Health Centers,
41865 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy. The group is open
to the public. For more information call Codi at
740-992-0540 ext. 110.

Christmas toys/gifts
sign ups until Nov. 16
POMEROY — Applications for toys/gifts will be
accepted at the Pomeroy Cooperative Parish (old
Pomeroy Elementary) Nov. 1-16. Applications can
be completed only Tuesday-Friday, 8 a.m. to noon.
Last day to apply is Nov. 16. You must be a Meigs
resident, fall within income guidelines, children/
teens you are applying for much be under age 19
and living in your household. Bring ID, proof of
custody/guardianship, proof of income. Be prepared to list gift ideas for shopping, clothes and
shoe sizes. Note there is a set budget amount allotted for each child/teen. There is no guarantee speciﬁc items will be purchased or speciﬁc requests
on the list will be met. Income guidelines per
family size: 1 - $12,060. 2- $16,240. 3 - $20,420.
4-$24,600. 5-$28,780. 6- $32,960. 7-$37, 140.
8-$41,320. This information released by the Meigs
Memorial/Toy Run Committee and Pomeroy
Cooperative Parish.

Veterans Day observance
and holiday dinner
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).

Meigs County
Libraries Storytime
MEIGS COUNTY — Storytime at all four locations, Sept. 10-Dec. 13. The following is the schedule: Mondays at 1 p.m., Racine Library; Tuesdays
at 1:30 p.m., Eastern Library; Wednesdays at
1 p.m., Pomeroy Library; Thursdays at 1 p.m.,
Middleport Library.

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

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Saturday, Nov. 10

is known throughout the Athens
community for his music and is
frequently featured presenting
HARRISONVILLE — Harmorning devotions on WATH.
risonville Presbyterian Church
The concert will feature traditionwelcomes Dr. J. W. Smith for a
al gospel songs and devotional
gospel concert at 7 p.m. at the
readings. There is no admission
church on State Route 143 in
Harrisonville. Dr. Smith is Profes- charge but a freewill offering will
be taken and presented to Dr.
sor of Communications at Ohio
Smith. Come join us for a time of
University and president of the
Ohio Federation of the Blind. He music and inspiration.

RACINE — Mt. Moriah Church
of God on Mile Hill Road, Racine,
will be having a white elephant
auction at 5 p.m. Come join us
and have some fun there will also
be free food.
REEDSVILLE — Reedsville
United Methodist Church will
host a soup supper from 5-7 p.m.
with karaoke from 7-9 p.m. Everyone welcome. Donations only.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 6, 2018 3

TOPS attends rally, holds meeting

Replicas
From page 1

Both ships are considered of the caravel
type. Each should took roughly three years to
build.
“The Nina has traveled all over the United
States and through the Caribbean,” said
Hicks. “She actually was even the ship featured in the movie 1492: Conquest of Paradise. In 1992, that was released by Ridley
Scott. She started her career as a movie star.”
“Everybody is a volunteer,” said Hicks of
crew members. “We come aboard the ship
because we’ve seen them and advertise for
our crew at the ship. We get crew members
from all parts of the country, the captain just
asks for a commitment of three to four weeks.
If you have the lifestyle and don’t have family
members depending on you, sometimes we
ﬁnd people will stay longer. It’s a neat adventure.”
Hicks has been part of the ships’ crew for
three years.
“Normally we do the American loop which
is anywhere from twelve to 15,000 miles and
we do that two years in a row,” said Hicks.
“The captains select the cities we go to and
we do repeat some of the larger cities like
Pittsburgh and Naples, Florida. We’ve been to
Tampa. The captains determine that before
our year starts.”
“The original crews (of the historic ships)
would sleep right on deck but we sleep below
and have some modern conveniences and a
full galley to cook meals,” said Hicks. “We
have electricity where we can charge our
items. It’s like camping on water.”
In larger bodies of water, the ships will sail.
In smaller areas, both ships do carry engines
to assist in movement.
The Columbus Foundation is dedicated to
educating visitors to the sailing of caravels
and the history behind Columbus’ voyage.
The ships will be open until 5 p.m. Wednesday before moving to their next location in
Ashland, Kentucky.
Dean Wright can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2103.

his home and he was not
there. They were advised
by a neighbor that he
may be at a friend’s home
From page 1
in the Tuppers Plains
After speaking with all area. He did not have an
parties involved the situ- address of the residence
but did give a descripation was calmed down
tion of it to the deputies.
and the son agreed to
Deputies then went to the
stay in a camper for the
Tuppers Plains area to
night. No further action
attempt to locate him. He
was taken on this call.
was not found. The day
shift ofﬁcers were advised
Oct. 27
of the situation and are
A female stopped by
expected to follow up
the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce and
expressed concerns about later with a well being
a subject living on Union check on the male when
he returns home.
Avenue possibly having
Dispatch received a call
a mental breakdown. A
from a female on McKdeputy spoke with her
elvey Road in Portland
about the encounter and
then went by and checked advising the someone was
messing around outside
on the person in question. Nothing of concern her house. When she
was noted and no further looked out, she heard
them run off. A deputy
action was taken.
was sent and patrolled
the area. No one was
Oct. 28
located.
Dispatch received a
Sgt Jones and Deputy
call from ADT advising
Snoke took a call of a
of and alarm on Darwin
Road. They had spoken to suspicious person at 229
North 3rd Street, Racine.
the home owner and he
A search was made of
advised that he was not
the area and the person
in the home and would
like it checked. A deputy wasn’t located.
Sgt Jones and Deputy
was sent to the address
and checked the property.
Everything was found to
be secure and no one was
around. No further action
was taken on this call.
Dispatch received a
call from James Alarm
advising of and alarm on
Reibel Road. A deputy
was sent to the address
and check the property.
Everything was found
to be secure. No further
action was taken on this
call.
Dispatch received a call
from a subject on Cremeans Road advising that
a car with two males in it
had pulled in to his driveway twice and he had
run them off; they were
now stuck in the mud on
the side on the road. A
deputy was sent to patrol
the area. The car was
gone when he arrived.
The deputy contacted the
caller and was advised
that someone had come
and pulled them out. No
further action was taken
on this call.

Record

TUPPERS PLAINS —
TOPS OH#2013 Tuppers
Plains met at the St.
Paul United Methodist
Church. Nola Easterling
and Mary Bush were both
recently awarded weekly
best losers.
Leader Pat Snedden
called the meeting to
order with The TOPS
(Take off Pounds Sensibly), KOPS (Keep off
Pounds Sensibly) Pledges
and the Pledge to the
American Flag being
said. Applause was given
to the KOPS for their
weight loss maintenance.
Cindy Hyde led the group
in singing TOPS songs,
“Deck the Halls” and
“Pumpkin Wonderland”.
A total of 14 members
answered when weight
recorder, Roberta Henderson gave the roll call.
Mary Beth Morrison gave
the Secretary’s report
and Mary Bush gave the
Treasurer’s report.
The “Card Game” prize
for most points went to
Mary Bush. The “Marble
Game” continues as there
has not been a winner. A
new competition began
Oct. 29 and ends Dec. 10.
The game is named the
“Pin Game”. The main
rule for the new game
is that members must
lose weight or stay the
same at weekly weigh in.
Each who does so will be
awarded a bead for their

pin. At the end of the
contest those who have
6 beads (one for each
week) will be eligible to
win a month’s free dues.
KOPS, Cindy Hyde and
Pat Snedden performed
a song/reading entitled
“TOPS and KOPS”.
Food Chart winners
for September were
Mary Bush, Glenda Hunt
and Cindy Hyde. Those
awarded for keeping an
exercise chart for Sept
were Mary Bush, Glenda
Hunt, Mary Rankin,
Cindy Hyde and Pat
Snedden.
In old business, members were reminded that
the chapter’s TOPS Area
Captain, Bob Silver will
be visiting the Chapter
on Oct. 29.
Dec. 10 will be the
group’s Christmas party.
Each member wanting to
participate may bring a
$10 gift exchange and 6$1 gifts. The $1 gifts will
be used for prizes.
Dec. 3 will be the
group’s Chinese auction.
Four members attended the TOPS Southeast
Fall Rally recently
held in Worthington,
Ohio. Several members
received various awards
in the TOPS Southeast
Region. Roberta Henderson, weight recorder
received the “Perfect
Resume” award. Perfect
attendance awards for

Courtesy photo

Pictured are rally attendees Pat Snedden, Mary Bush, Roberta
Henderson and Cindy Hyde.

July, August and September were presented
to Glenda Hunt, Mary
Bush, Roberta Henderson, Mary Morrison
and Pat Snedden. KOPS
attending the rally were
Cindy Hyde, Roberta
Henderson and Pat Snedden. Mary Bush received
recognition for having no
weight gain in the past
3 months and for having
lost 10 pounds or more
in the same time frame.
Cindy Hyde and Roberta
Henderson received
recognition for being at
or below goal for the 3
month period of time.
Mary Bush won second
place for her wall hanging and Mary Beth Mor-

rison won for the rally’s
program cover. Roberta
Henderson was named
Chapter Angel.
Connie Rankin led
the chapter in the “Tops
Enthusiasm” song.
Members dismissed by
joining hands and reciting the “Helping Hand
Circle” poem.
TOPS information can
be obtained from the
TOPS website at TOPS.
org or by calling Leader,
Pat Snedden at 740-5419696. Weekly meetings
take place on Mondays
at 6 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains United Methodist Church, 42216 State
Route 7, in Tuppers
Plains, Ohio.

Oct. 23
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce transported two
male inmates, and ﬁve
female inmates, from
various jails, to court
and returned them to jail
Day Shift
or prison.
Oct. 22
A deputy responded
Meigs County Sheriff’s
to Peterson Hollow in
Ofﬁce responded to an
reference to a wellness
address in Syracuse in
check. The deputy conreference to a male inditacted the female, and
vidual making threats
everything was alright.
of suicide. Upon arrival,
No further action was
Deputy Leggett spoke
Oct. 30
taken.
with the individual and
Sgt. Jones responded
Deputies collected 52
ultimately transported the
to the area of US 33 and
Morning Star for a report male to the Holzer Emer- pounds of discarded pregency Room in Gallipolis scription medicine from
of a dummy in the roadthe drop box, located at
way. For the third year in for a voluntary psychothe Meigs County Shera row someone has made logical evaluation.
iff’s Ofﬁce, and placed it
Several inmates were
a life like dummy and
into the evidence room
transported from local
laid it in the roadway on
to be destroyed.
jails and out of county
Halloween. Several calls
were taken about this and jails for court appeara couple accidents almost ances
Oct. 24
A deputy responded to
occurred. The dummy
Deputy Leggett
Lighthouse Road in refer- responded to Fourth
was relocated to the Village of Racine. Where he ence to an argument over Street in Racine in refera civil issue. The deputy
now resides with Oscar
ence to an unresponsive
arrived on scene and
the Grouch in a local
female. Upon arrival the
found no one home. No
dumpster.
female was found to be
further action taken
Deputy Snoke and Sgt
unresponsive and later
Deputies served ﬁve
Jones responded to Yost
conﬁrmed deceased
court papers.
Road for a vehicle in a
inside the residence.
Deputies registered two After Deputy Leggett’s
ditch. On their arrival,
sex offenders.
the driver had already
initial assessment of the
ﬂed the scene. The
scene emergency medical

personnel was advised to
respond. The deceased
was then transported
by request of the Meigs
County Coroner’s Ofﬁce
to the Montgomery
County Coroner for an
autopsy.
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce transported two
male inmates from jail to
court and back again.
Deputy Leggett was
dispatched to Bigley
Ridge Road due to
reports of someone burning tires. Deputy Leggett
patrolled Bigley Ridge
but was unable to locate
any ﬁre.
Sgt. Patterson responded to a residence in
Pageville about a male
subject indicating suicidal
thoughts. Sgt. Patterson
contacted the male and
later transported him to
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce where he met
with a counselor from
Hopewell.

Snoke took a report of a
Domestic Complaint on
Peterson Hollow Road.
Caller advised her husband was beating her
up, held her down on
the couch and choked
her. The suspect ﬂed the
scene before their arrival.
The female left the residence for the night and
charges are pending on
the suspect.

vehicle was towed from
the scene and a search of
the area was made for the
driver. This incident is
still under investigation.

Oct. 25
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce transported one
male inmate from Pickaway County Correctional
to court.

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
� Partner

OH-70084599

Oct. 29
Dispatch received a call
complaining of the mental
status of a male on Union
Avenue. Deputies went to

at Little, Sheets &amp; Barr, LLP

PAID FOR BY THE CAMPAIGN TO ELECT MICHAEL L. BARR

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

How dogs
perceive
the world
“Dog training afﬁrms that his natural instincts
and skills can be encouraged and developed.”
Unknown
In my early years as a dog trainer,
I realized most folks I encountered
considered their canine companion to be more than “just” another
friend. Let’s face it. How many
friends do you make excuses for
when they to poop on the carpet,
shred your curtains, pee on your pilJohn P.
lows, chew your shoes, jump up on
Smith
you with muddy feet, or run away
Contributing
just because you left the gate ajar?
columnist
But for your dog, your beloved pet,
anything is excusable and pardonable. Why is that? Simple. It’s because there are
several aspects, senses, or instincts of dogs that
make them a perfect companion, therefore forgiveness is justiﬁable. Consider this:
The pack instinct. They crave leadership, companionship, and family.
They are social. Whether it’s just you or a large
family, they can be perfectly content.
The territorial instinct. Yes, this can be problematic. It’s why they chase cars, the mailman,
all delivery men, squirrels, rabbits, other dogs…
and it’s why there’s a dirt path worn along the
front fence. But, in their minds, they are protecting your property and your life. It’s a pretty good
trade-off if you ask me.
They have an uncanny knack of adjusting to our
needs, wants, desires, and wishes; no matter how
quirky or peculiar we might be.
There is a breed of dog that will ﬁt into every
lifestyle, whether you hunt or ﬁsh. Whether you
live in the country or a city apartment. Whether
you travel or are solitary. Whether you desire
a companion, protection, alarm, or guard dog.
Whether you are a car salesman or a car thief.
They come in every shape, size, and color…
except plaid.
You can ﬁnd one that’ll ﬁt your disposition,
whether you are content, gloomy, cranky, crabby,
outgoing, sullen, cheerful, controlling, submissive,
or ecstatic about life.
At the close of my last column, I mentioned that
the precursor to training a dog is to understand
basic differences between them and us. Here they
are:
SIGHT: Not too many years past it was believed
that dogs’ sight was limited to black, white and
shades of grey. Research today indicates that they
also see shades of yellows, blues, and violets,
although much more limited than you and I. It
is interesting that dogs recognize movement at
a much greater distance than humans, yet the
human eye maintains focus at a much greater distance than dogs. On occasions, I have noticed my
dog’s blank stare into ﬁelds where deer roamed.
It was only with concentrated effort that I could
distinguish the movement that he so easily recognized. Therefore, it would be to your advantage
when training your dog to consider using hand
signals. Believe it or not, some dogs are easier
trained with hand signals than verbal commands.
TOUCH: Most important during the socialization period. Once grown, however, they may
or may not respond to petting, caressing, or
fondling. Many obedience dogs, however, will
work extremely hard for simple pat on the head.
Research indicates that dogs respond to physical
pain to the same extent as humans.
HEARING: Voice inﬂection and single words
enhance his understanding of what we want of
him. The words we use and how they are pronounced can encourage, discourage, excite, or
demoralize. They hear sounds of a much higher
pitch than humans and they hear faint sounds
that we cannot detect. We’ve all experienced our
dogs’ barking a welcome or warning of a coming
automobile well before the sound of that engine
reaches our ears.
SMELL: This is where the world of dogs and
the world of humans separate. Imagine a bloodhound on the heels of a killer. He may be following
shoe traces left on plants and dirt, or skin rafts
(dead cells) lying about or ﬂoating in the air (we
shed 30,000 to 40,000 skin rafts every hour.) It
may be raining or snowing, and the track may be
days old. Maybe hundreds of people and other animals have contaminated the original traces. Yet,
the dog persists, never tiring, never quitting, until
he ﬁnds the culprit. He has an uncanny ability to
smell or sense chemical changes all around…in the
air, on the ground, and on your body. He does not
know that death approaches, but he does sense the
chemical changes your body gives off whenever
you have a signiﬁcant mental, emotional, or physical change.
TASTE: Dogs have about 1,700 taste buds as
opposed to your 9,000. Mostly they are around the
See DOGS | 5

THEIR VIEW

Aging is no picnic in the park
Reading columns,
articles, and books about
how aging is glorious is
rather irritating. Let’s get
real Lucille.
Wrinkles, crinkles,
and saggy skin. Yes, it’s
natural aging—but why
celebrate it? Let’s get honest Abe. Plastic surgery is
expensive.
Senior citizens rock!
Yes, but they do it in
rocking chairs on the
front porch.
What’s so nostalgic
about leaky bladders,
chronic constipation, and
acid indigestion? And
old lady bladders are
known to squirt when we
laugh, cough, or sneeze.
Argh! The gut gives out,
so say farewell to spicy
foods. And stool softeners are popular products
with the elderly crowd.
Let’s get real Phil.
Cataracts, skin tags,
and weird-shaped moles
appear. Ugh! And hair
starts to grow inside the
ears of old men.
Dentures, hearing-aids,
and canes aren’t exactly
party favors at retirement parties.
“You know that aging
will likely cause you to
develop wrinkles and
gray hair. But do you
know how the aging
process will affect your

pile.com/humor/
teeth, heart and
Senior-Humorsexuality? Find out
and-Wisdom.
what kind of changIs your ancient
es you can expect
funny bone laughin your body as
ing?
you continue aging
Top signs you’re
— and what you
too old to trick
can do to promote Melissa
or treat: You get
good health at any Martin
age.” That’s what
Contributing winded from
knocking on the
the Mayo Clinic
columnist
door. You have to
website says, but
have another kid
I’m suspicious. Did
a young whipper-snapper chew the candy for you.
You ask for high ﬁber
write it?
“Every so often I read candy only. When someone drops a candy bar in
a book about age, and
your bag, you lose your
whoever’s writing it
balance and fall over.
says it’s great to be old.
When the door opens
It’s great to be wise and
you yell, “Trick or…..”
sage and mellow: it’s
and can’t remember the
great to be at the point
rest. By the end of the
where you understand
just what matters in life. night, you have a bag full
I can’t stand people who of restraining orders. You
say things like this,” sur- have to carefully choose
a costume that won’t
mised Nora Ephron.
What’s so funny about dislodge your hairpiece.
You’re the only Power
aging? Humor does lift
the spirit and is pleasant Ranger in the neighborhood with a walker. You
for the soul.
keep having to go home
Top party games for
to go to the bathroom.
people over 60: Musical
(T.P. Crawford Att.)
Recliners, Spin the BotOldsters are wise, but
tle of Mylanta, Hide and
Go Pee, Doc-Doc Goose, youngsters don’t listen
Red Rover-Red Rover-the and learn. Oldsters have
fascinating stories about
Nurse Says Bend Over,
history and life.
Kick the Bucket, 20
Well, aging does have
Questions Shouted into
a few bright spots, I
your Good Ear, Pin the
Toupee on the Bald Guy, guess.
Letting your ﬂab hangSag-You’re It. www.letter-

out on a beach where
nobody knows you is
surreal. And senior discounts are deserved—
aging is hard work.
And you can expect
your adult kids to scoop
dog poop, mow the yard,
and rake the leaves.
Alright!
As grandparents we
can buy ear-blasting
toys, 1000-piece puzzles,
and ﬁnger paints for the
grandkids. Shazam!
An older woman can
attend get-togethers
with high school friends
because they’re as old
and wrinkled as she is.
Hmmm. Wine, chocolate, and sharing funny
stories.
And old ladies can
wear yoga pants anywhere without being
judged. Yea! Saran-wrapthin yoga pants. Or not.
Remember sweatpants?
Hides bulges better.
I know! Let’s have an
“Old Lady in Yoga Pants
Parade” in Portsmouth.
We’ll start a world-wide
trend. And make aging
fun.
Maybe aging is way
cooler than I thought!
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author,
columnist, educator, and therapist
www.melissamartinchildrensauthor.
com. Contact her at
melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Nov.
6, the 310th day of 2018.
There are 55 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Nov. 6, 1860,
former Illinois congressman Abraham Lincoln
of the Republican Party
was elected President of
the United States as he
defeated John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas.
On this date
In 1861, Confederate President Jefferson
Davis was elected to a
six-year term of ofﬁce.
In 1893, composer
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
died in St. Petersburg,
Russia, at age 53.
In 1906, Republican
Charles Evans Hughes
was elected governor
of New York, defeating newspaper publisher William Randolph
Hearst.
In 1956, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
won re-election, defeat-

ing Democrat Adlai E.
Stevenson.
In 1962, Democrat
Edward M. Kennedy was
elected Senator from
Massachusetts.
In 1977, 39 people
were killed when the
Kelly Barnes Dam in
Georgia burst, sending
a wall of water through
Toccoa Falls College.
In 1984, President
Ronald Reagan won reelection by a landslide
over former Vice President Walter Mondale,
the Democratic challenger.
In 1986, former Navy
radioman John A. Walker Jr., the admitted head
of a family spy ring, was
sentenced in Baltimore
to life imprisonment.
(Walker died in prison
in 2014 at age 77.)
In 1990, about oneﬁfth of the Universal
Studios backlot in
southern California was
destroyed in an arson
ﬁre.
In 1995, funeral services were held in Jeru-

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Quotation is a serviceable substitute for
wit.”
— Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)

salem for assassinated
Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin.
In 1997, former President George H.W. Bush
opened his presidential
library at Texas A&amp;M
University; among the
guests of honor was
President Clinton, the
man who’d sent him into
retirement.
In 2001, billionaire
Republican Michael
Bloomberg won New
York City’s mayoral race,
defeating Democrat
Mark Green.
Ten years ago: President-elect Barack Obama
spoke by phone with
nine world leaders and
met privately at the FBI
ofﬁce in Chicago with
U.S. intelligence ofﬁcials,
preparing to become commander in chief.

Five years ago: Health
and Human Services
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, testifying before the
Senate Finance Committee on the nation’s
health care law, was
blistered by Republicans
who bluntly challenged
her honesty, pushed
for her resignation and
demanded unsuccessfully
that she concede President Barack Obama had
deliberately misled the
public about his signature
domestic program. At
the Country Music Association Awards, Miranda
Lambert won her fourth
straight female vocalist of
the year award while her
husband, Blake Shelton,
won album of the year
and male vocalist — a
category he also won for
the fourth year in a row.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Charges

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

From page 1

Chief McKinney,
Mason Patrolmen T.
Doss and A. Toler,
along with Mason
County Sheriff’s Deputies J. Peterson and M.
McCormick executed a
“knock and talk” at the
residence, according to
the chief. After gaining
consent from McCarty,
the ofﬁcers entered to
ﬁnd six adults and two
juveniles.
Following a search

Tuesday, Nov. 6
POMEROY — The Meigs County Courthouse
will close at noon.

Wednesday, Nov. 7
HARRISONVILLE — Everyone is welcome
to attend the free Firehouse Community Dinner
at the Scipio Township Fire Department in Harrisonville, State Route 684. Dinner will be served
from 5-6 p.m., and will feature baked ham, sweet
potatoes, buttered peas, rolls and butter, chocolate
fudge cake and beverages.

BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township
trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.

Friday, Nov. 30
MIDDLEPORT — Meigs County Veterans
Services’ November meeting will be held at 9 a.m.
This meeting will be the last meeting of the year
and the last meeting emergency grant applications can be turned in for the year. Please have all
applications with all required information turned
in prior to Nov. 30.

Dogs

vices of a professional
trainer.
Knowing and understanding how a dog
From page 4
perceives the world
through his sense of
tip of his tongue. But,
sight, touch, sound,
he will also eat trash,
small and taste, withantifreeze, or other
toxic foods that may be out question will make
poisonous. If you have you a better owner,
handler, and trainer.
an outside dog, and
Thanks for reading,
you have cranky neighbors, or have concerns John
regarding intruders,
John Preston Smith is the
you might consider
author of nine novels, all
poison-prooﬁng your
are listed at jprestonsmith.
dog. However, study
com. Direct questions or
the process thoroughly comments to facebook.com/
johnprestonsmith. Proceeds
before proceeding,
support Hoops Family Children’s
better still, enlist serHospital in Huntington, W.Va.

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

65°

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.

(in inches)

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

0.07
0.26
0.56
51.49
36.40

Today
7:01 a.m.
5:23 p.m.
5:40 a.m.
5:14 p.m.

Wed.
7:02 a.m.
5:22 p.m.
6:45 a.m.
5:48 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Nov 7

First

Full

Last

Nov 15 Nov 23 Nov 29

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

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

Major
10:04a
10:50a
11:12a
12:04p
1:03a
1:59a
2:55a

Minor
3:51a
4:38a
5:28a
6:21a
7:16a
8:12a
9:07a

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is the record high temperature
for the U.S. in November?

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

1

Major
10:28p
11:15p
---12:33p
1:29p
2:24p
3:19p

Minor
4:16p
5:03p
5:53p
6:46p
7:41p
8:37p
9:32p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 6, 1953, a coastal storm
brought 3 inches of snow to Richmond, Va., and up to 18 inches to
Philadelphia. Wind gusts reached 98
mph at Block Island, R.I.

A: 105 F in Croftonville, Calif.; Nov.
12, 1909

Precipitation

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.

AIR QUALITY

canine teeth from which
all soft tissue has been
removed;hHides and
capes without any part of
the head or lymph nodes
attached; or ﬁnished
taxidermy mounts.
Ohio ranks ﬁfth nationally in resident hunters
and eleventh in the
number of jobs associated with hunting-related
industries. Hunting has
a more than $853 million
economic impact in Ohio
through the sale of equipment, fuel, food, lodging
and more, according
to the National Shooting Sports Foundation’s
Hunting in America: An
Economic Force for Conservation publication.
The ODNR Division
of Wildlife remains
committed to properly
managing Ohio’s deer
populations. The goal
of Ohio’s Deer Management Program is to
provide a deer population that maximizes recreational opportunities,
while minimizing conﬂicts with landowners
and motorists.
ODNR ensures a balance between wise use
and protection of our
natural resources for
the beneﬁt of all. Visit
the ODNR website at
ohiodnr.gov.

EXTENDED FORECAST
WEDNESDAY

Mostly sunny

THURSDAY

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

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

Level
12.85
21.40
24.63
12.95
13.04
26.39
N.A.
30.61
36.79
13.09
29.70
36.70
29.80

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.19
-1.16
-0.64
-0.14
-0.07
-0.53
N.A.
+0.82
+0.70
+0.45
+1.00
+0.70
+3.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Logan
61/40

Adelphi
61/40

Waverly
61/42
Lucasville
63/44
Portsmouth
65/44

SATURDAY

48°
31°
Showers around in
the morning; cloudy

49°
33°

Chilly with more
A couple of afternoon
clouds than sunshine
showers possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
65/42
Belpre
66/43

Athens
64/42

St. Marys
66/43

Parkersburg
66/41

Coolville
65/43

Elizabeth
67/43

Spencer
67/44

Buffalo
68/44

Ironton
67/44

Milton
68/45

St. Albans
68/45

Huntington
67/42

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
54/43
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
70/49
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
75/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

49°
30°

Cold with partial
sunshine

Wilkesville
64/42
POMEROY
Jackson
67/44
64/42
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
68/44
66/44
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
58/41
GALLIPOLIS
68/45
68/45
67/45

Ashland
67/44
Grayson
67/45

SUNDAY

42°
29°

Murray City
62/41

McArthur
62/41

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

51°
38°

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

Chillicothe
61/41

FRIDAY

Cold with times of
clouds and sun

South Shore Greenup
67/44
64/43

33

Maines

muzzleloader season.
Both locations will be
open and staffed from 10
a.m. to 8 p.m. during the
deer-gun and deer muzzleloader seasons. Sugarcreek Village Hall, 410
S. Broadway St., Sugarcreek, 44681 .Walnut
Creek Township Garage,
2490 Township Road
414, Dundee, 44624.
New carcass rules
apply to Ohioans who
plan to travel out-of-state
to hunt any species susceptible to CWD. This
includes white-tailed
deer, black-tailed deer,
mule deer, elk, caribou
and moose. No person
is permitted to possess
high-risk carcass parts of
CWD-susceptible species
from anywhere outside
of Ohio, except when
the carcass is in the following condition or the
carcass consists only of
the following parts: meat
that is cut and securely
and completely wrapped
either commercially or
privately with no part
of the spinal column or
head attached; quarters
or other portions of
meat with no part of
the spinal column or
head attached; antlers
attached to a skull cap
from which all soft tissue
has been removed; upper

2

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

Ruark

reporting violations to
the division’s Turn-In-aPoacher (TIP) hotline by
calling 800-POACHER
From page 1
(762-2437). The TIP
program allows individuin an ODNR Division of
als to anonymously call
Wildlife authorized contoll-free to report wildlife
trolled hunt.
violations. Tipsters may
A new regulation for
be eligible to receive a
the 2018-2019 hunting
cash award.
season limits hunters to
Hunters are reminded
harvesting one antlerless
that portions of Holmes
white-tailed deer from
and Tuscarawas counpublic land per license
ties have been declared
year. In addition, antlera Disease Surveillance
less deer may not be
taken from public hunting Area (DSA) as part of
areas from Monday, Dec. Ohio’s ongoing efforts
3, 2018, through Sunday, to monitor chronic wastFeb. 3, 2019. Authorized ing disease (CWD). A
DSA was established in
ODNR Division of WildSalt Creek, Paint, Berlin,
life controlled hunts and
Walnut Creek and Clark
controlled hunts occurtownships in Holmes
ring at speciﬁc Ohio
County, as well as Wayne
State Parks properties
and Sugar Creek townare exempt from this
ships in Tuscarawas
regulation.
County. Speciﬁc regulaDeer bag limits are
tions apply to those
determined by county,
hunting for deer within
and a hunter cannot
the DSA; hunters should
exceed a county bag
limit. The statewide bag visit wildohio.gov for
limit is six deer. Hunters more information.
Hunters harvesting
may harvest only one
buck in Ohio, regardless deer within the DSA are
of method of take or loca- required to bring their
deer to a carcass inspection. Hunting hours for
tion station for disease
all deer seasons are 30
minutes before sunrise to testing. Two locations
30 minutes after sunset. have been designated as
carcass inspection staOhioans are encourtions for the deer-gun
aged to help enforce
seasons and the deer
state wildlife laws by

54°

HEALTH TODAY

Stone

in the residence were
removed from the home
and turned over to Child
Protective Services,
and that they were not
involved in the alleged
illegal activity. McKinney
also expressed his appreciation to the Mason
County Sheriff’s Department for their help.

Rather cloudy and windy today. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 68° / Low 45°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

64°
50°
61°
40°
85° in 1948
14° in 1991

Seyler

biggest bust in the history of the Mason Police
Department, as far as
the number arrested at
one time,” McKinney
said. “The Mason Police
Department and surrounding agencies will
continue to help keep the
citizens of Mason safe.”
He stated the juveniles

57°
33°
60°

McCarty

of the residence, police
reportedly found over 60
grams of crystal methamphetamine, separated
into individual bags, a
.410 riﬂe, .22 revolver,
several sets of scales, and
$824 cash. The drugs
had a street value of
approximately $6,000.
“We believe this is the

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Grimm

Hunting

Monday, Nov. 12

TODAY

Tuesday, November 6, 2018 5

Clendenin
68/41
Charleston
68/42

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

W nnipeg
34/19
Billings
32/19

Minneapolis
41/28

Chicago
50/33
Denver
51/24

Montreal
53/45

Toronto
57/40
Detroit
54/38

Kansas City
54/30

New York
65/52
Washington
70/49

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

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
66/40/s
30/25/pc
74/52/t
67/54/r
69/46/t
32/19/c
51/30/pc
61/52/r
68/42/r
76/48/t
43/21/s
50/33/c
60/41/pc
60/40/c
59/41/pc
78/60/s
51/24/s
48/28/pc
54/38/sh
85/70/s
85/71/t
54/39/pc
54/30/r
77/52/s
69/50/s
75/56/pc
64/46/pc
86/75/pc
41/28/c
68/45/pc
83/72/t
65/52/r
70/42/s
86/65/pc
68/50/r
83/60/s
63/40/r
51/46/r
75/49/t
75/47/t
60/40/pc
49/31/pc
70/49/s
54/43/pc
70/49/t

Hi/Lo/W
64/40/s
34/27/sn
71/54/sh
64/48/s
63/41/s
29/16/sf
49/25/s
62/46/s
58/35/s
73/51/pc
38/19/sh
43/26/pc
56/30/s
50/35/pc
54/30/pc
67/49/c
46/22/sf
41/23/s
48/32/pc
85/72/pc
84/67/t
51/28/s
47/28/pc
75/50/s
63/42/s
74/56/pc
59/35/s
86/74/sh
36/21/c
58/38/sh
81/68/t
62/46/s
57/37/c
86/66/pc
62/44/s
83/60/s
52/29/pc
58/40/s
71/50/pc
71/49/s
52/32/s
49/27/s
71/50/s
52/37/s
65/45/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
74/52

High
Low

92° in Edinburg, TX
11° in Burns, OR

Global

El Paso
78/53
Chihuahua
84/49

Houston
85/71
Monterrey
89/63

High 110° in Thargomindah, Australia
Low -48° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
86/75

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

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

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
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
promise to make you feel right at home.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Turnovers cost Herd at USM, 26-24
By Bryan Walters

yards coming in as the Black
and Gold allowed just 31 yards
on 22 carries. The hosts also
held MU to zero rushing yards
HATTIESBURG, Miss. —
in the ﬁrst half on 11 totes.
This one slipped away.
Still, the Herd managed to
Marshall committed four
take their only lead of the game
turnovers that resulted in 17
points and produced a season- late in the second quarter as
Brenden Knox recovered a fumlow in rushing yards Saturday
during a 26-24 setback to host ble and returned it eight yards,
Southern Mississippi in a Con- making it a 10-3 Marshall lead
with 5:04 left in the half.
ference USA contest at M.M.
The Golden Eagles followed
Roberts Stadium.
with another fumble on their
The Thundering Herd (5-3,
next possession, but the guests
3-2 CUSA) suffered their ﬁrst
road setback of the season, but returned the favor two plays
later with an interception that
the Green and White had as
much to do with ﬁnal outcome gave Southern Miss the ball at
the MU 46.
as their storied counterparts.
Five plays later, Quez WatThe Golden Eagles (4-4, 3-2)
kins hauled in a 4-yard pass
stymied a Marshall ground
attack that was averaging 148.5 from Tate Whatley to knot

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall head coach Doc Holliday disputes a call during a Sept. 8 football game
against Eastern Kentucky at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

things up at 10-all with 48 seconds remaining until halftime.
Marshall’s ﬁrst offensive
snap on the ensuing drive
turned disastrous as Darian
Yancey scooped up a fumble
and returned it 17 yards to the
house — giving USM a 17-10
edge with 33 seconds left.
The Herd managed to tie
things back up with their second possession of the third
period, marching 66 yards
in four plays to accomplish
the feat. Anthony Anderson
plunged in from two yards out
at the 8:36 mark for a 17-all
contest.
The hosts punted on their
ensuing drive, but got the ball

See HERD | 7

Buckeyes
fend off
Nebraska
By Jim Naveau

jnaveau@limanews.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The biggest story in Ohio
State’s 36-31 win over Nebraska on Saturday was
the return of the Buckeyes’ running game.
The biggest question after the game, though,
was if the Buckeyes are back to where they expected to be with this win or if they still have a long
way to go.
J.K. Dobbins rushed for 163 yards and three
touchdowns and Mike Weber had 91 yards when
OSU achieved some much-needed balance on
offense after rushing for fewer than 100 yards in
its last two games, a 49-20 loss at Purdue and a
30-14 win over Minnesota.
“It was great to get back to our old ways. We
knew what we could do. Today showed we’ve still
got it,” Dobbins said. “We got back to old Buckeye
football – just run at them and show them we’re
strong.”
Weber said, “We had a real good emphasis on
running the ball all week in practice. Coaches told
us to try to run guys over. I think it’s ﬁxed. I never
thought it was broken.”
No. 10 Ohio State (8-1, 5-1 Big Ten) could talk
about running over people and imposing its will
all day but there was nothing easy about its win
over Nebraska (2-7, 1-5 Big Ten).
Nebraska led 21-16 at halftime and OSU didn’t
take the lead for good until Dobbins got the second of his three touchdowns on a 3-yard run to put
the Buckeyes up 23-21 with 5:39 left in the third
quarter.
After jumping out to a 16-7 lead late in the ﬁrst
quarter, Ohio State went 26 minutes without scoring between Dobbins’ ﬁrst TD and his second.
And even after seeming to put the game away
when Dobbins scored his third touchdown on a
42-yard run for a 36-24 lead with 4:52 to play, the
Buckeyes watched the Cornhuskers use less than
two minutes to cut the lead to ﬁve points with
2:57 left on the clock.
“I think we pounded the ball in there pretty
good,” OSU coach Urban Meyer said about the
reappearance of the running game. “We worked ad
nauseam at that. The amount of time we spent on
that was over the top.”
But even Meyer seemed undecided about whether Ohio State righted the ship with Saturday’s win.
Asked if the Buckeyes are close to where he
wants them to be, he said, “I don’t think we’re
close.”
But then he reversed course and said, “I do,
I think we’re close. We better be when you see
what’s coming up next week (a game at Michigan
State). But I liked the effort today.
“The biggest thing was to get that darned bad
taste out of your mouth from a couple weeks ago
(the loss at Purdue) and go win the game,” he
said.
Quarterback Dwayne Haskins, who had been
See BUCKEYES | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Nov. 7
College Football
Ohio at Miami (OH), 7
p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 10

Football
(9) Mingo Central at (8)
Point Pleasant, 1:30
College Football
Charlotte at Marshall,
2:30

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy sophomore Coen Duncan (61) breaks through the Licking Valley line and pressures quarterback Chase Whisner (1),
during the Blue Devils 36-12 setback on Saturday in Jackson, Ohio.

Panthers oust Gallia Academy, 36-12
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

JACKSON, Ohio — It
wasn’t quite the ending the Blue Devils had
hoped for, but the experience will never be forgotten.
In its ﬁrst playoff game
in six years, second-seeded Gallia Academy trailed
by three points at halftime, but seventh-seeded
Licking Valley scored 21
unanswered points after
the break to take a 36-12
victory in the Division IV,
Region 15 quarterﬁnal on
Saturday at Jackson High
School’s Alumni Stadium.
Gallia Academy (9-2)
— champions of the
Ohio Valley Conference,
making the program’s
11th playoff appearence
— picked up a pair of
ﬁrst downs on the game’s
opening drive, but a pair
of penalties followed by a
sack halted the Blue Devils and forced a punt.
Licking Valley (8-3)
— making its second straight playoff
appearence and 18th
overall — broke the
scoreless tie on its ﬁrst
drive, covering 76 yards
in 10 plays, with quarterback Chase Whisner scoring on a ﬁve-yard run.
Connor McLaughlin ran
in the two-point conversion to make the Panther
lead 8-0 with 5:47 left in
the ﬁrst.
The Blue Devils
responded with an
11-play, 63-yard drive,
which senior Jacob
Campbell capped off with
a one-yard touchdown
run. The GAHS two-point
conversion pass failed,

down from Whisner.
Gallia Academy’s ensuing drive featured a pair
of four down conversions,
and reached the LVHS 13,
before junior Noah Hopkins intercepted a pass to
restore possession for the
Panthers.
Licking Valley made
the most of the turnover,
with McLaughlin breaking a 62-yard touchdown
run with 6:36 left.
GAHS fumbled the ball
away in LVHS territory
on its ﬁnal offensive possession, with Hayden Hile
recovering for the guests.
Licking Valley ran out the
clock with six consecutive carries and a kneel
down, sealing the 36-12
Gallia Academy junior Cade Roberts (34) runs after a catch, during
victory.
the first half of the Blue Devils’ postseason game on Saturday in
Following the ﬁrst setJackson, Ohio.
back since Week 3, GAHS
head coach Alex Penrod
left in the half.
leaving the hosts with a
acknowledged that this
Licking Valley made it
8-6 deﬁcit.
wasn’t just another seaas far as the GAHS sixThe Panthers’ next
son, but something that
drive took the game into yard line on the ensuing
brought the community
drive, where an inadthe second quarter and
together.
LVHS found paydirt with vertent whistle erased
“This team, not only
a Blue Devil fumble
10:14 left in the half,
recovery. Two plays later, did we do something
as Whisner ﬁnished an
special as far as stats and
Campbell intercepted
11-play, 66-yard drive
records, but more impora Panther pass, but the
with an eight-yard run.
tant is what they did for
clock expired before the
Joshua Rhymer hit his
GAHS offense could take this Blue Devil commuﬁrst four four straight
nity,” Penrod said. “This
extra point kicks, making the ﬁeld.
Out of the half, Licking community was along
the LVHS lead 15-6.
for the ride every step of
Valley marched 63 yards
After a punt by each
in 13 plays and 6:47, with the way. Home or away,
side — Licking Valley’s
we new we could expect
McLaughlin scoring on
only one of the game —
the best fans and the best
a 10-yard run to give the
the Blue Devil offense
guests a 22-12 advantage. crowd around. Tonight
took over at its own 13.
they did that and above,
GAHS made it to the
On the third play of the
they gave us everything
Panther side of the ﬁeld
possession, Campbell
we needed.”
before losing possesbroke a 74-yard touchThe 36 points allowed
sion on downs at the 44.
down run with a leadblock from senior quarter- LVHS needed eight plays by GAHS was the most of
the season, and this Blue
to cover the distance,
back Justin McClelland.
Devils squad ﬁnishes as
and increased its lead to
Gallia Academy’s extrahighest scoring team in
29-12 with 10:56 left in
point kick was blocked
the game, as McLaughlin
and the Blue and White
See PANTHERS | 7
caught a six-yard touchtrailed 15-12 with 3:01

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Harvick earns shot at NASCAR Cup title

NFL

New England
Miami
N.Y. Jets
Buffalo

W
7
5
3
2

L
2
4
6
7

T
0
0
0
0

Houston
Tennessee
Jacksonville
Indianapolis

W
6
3
3
3

L
3
4
5
5

T
0
0
0
0

Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Baltimore
Cleveland

W
5
5
4
2

L
2
3
5
6

T
1
0
0
1

Kansas City
L.A. Chargers
Denver
Oakland

W
8
6
3
1

L
1
2
6
7

T
0
0
0
0

Washington
Philadelphia
Dallas
N.Y. Giants

W
5
4
3
1

L
3
4
4
7

T
0
0
0
0

New Orleans
Carolina
Atlanta
Tampa Bay

W
7
6
4
3

L
1
2
4
5

T
0
0
0
0

Chicago
Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit

W
5
5
3
3

L
3
3
4
5

T
0
1
1
0

L.A. Rams
Seattle
Arizona
San Francisco

W
8
4
2
2

L
1
4
6
7

T
0
0
0
0

All Times EST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.778 270 202 5-0-0 2-2-0
.556 187 225 4-1-0 1-3-0
.333 198 213 2-2-0 1-4-0
.222 96 241 1-3-0 1-4-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.667 216 184 3-1-0 3-2-0
.429 106 127 2-1-0 1-3-0
.375 134 170 2-3-0 1-2-0
.375 231 213 1-2-0 2-3-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.688 227 188 2-2-0 3-0-1
.625 221 237 3-1-0 2-2-0
.444 213 160 2-2-0 2-3-0
.278 190 247 2-2-1 0-4-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.889 327 226 4-0-0 4-1-0
.750 220 180 3-1-0 3-1-0
.333 205 213 2-3-0 1-3-0
.125 141 252 1-3-0 0-4-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.625 160 172 3-2-0 2-1-0
.500 178 156 2-2-0 2-2-0
.429 140 123 3-0-0 0-4-0
.125 150 205 0-4-0 1-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.875 279 218 3-1-0 4-0-0
.750 220 180 5-0-0 1-2-0
.500 228 226 3-2-0 1-2-0
.375 229 275 2-1-0 1-4-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.625 235 153 3-1-0 2-2-0
.611 221 204 3-2-0
2-1-1
.438 192 204 3-0-1 0-4-0
.375 180 210 2-2-0 1-3-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.889 299 200 4-0-0 4-1-0
.500 188 156 1-2-0 3-2-0
.250 110 199 1-4-0 1-2-0
.222 207 239 2-2-0 0-5-0

AFC
5-1-0
4-3-0
2-4-0
1-5-0

NFC
2-1-0
1-1-0
1-2-0
1-2-0

Div
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-2-0
0-1-0

AFC
5-2-0
2-4-0
2-3-0
2-4-0

NFC
1-1-0
1-0-0
1-2-0
1-1-0

Div
2-1-0
2-0-0
0-2-0
0-1-0

AFC
3-2-1
3-2-0
4-3-0
2-4-1

NFC
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-2-0
0-2-0

Div
3-1-1
1-1-0
1-3-0
1-1-1

AFC
7-1-0
4-1-0
1-5-0
1-4-0

NFC
1-0-0
2-1-0
2-1-0
0-3-0

Div
3-0-0
1-1-0
1-2-0
0-2-0

NFC
5-2-0
2-3-0
2-3-0
0-6-0

AFC
0-1-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
1-1-0

Div
2-0-0
1-0-0
1-1-0
0-3-0

NFC
5-1-0
4-2-0
4-2-0
2-3-0

AFC
2-0-0
2-0-0
0-2-0
1-2-0

Div
1-1-0
1-1-0
2-1-0
1-2-0

NFC
3-1-0
4-2-1
2-3-1
1-4-0

AFC
2-2-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
2-1-0

Div
0-1-0
1-0-1
1-1-1
1-1-0

NFC
5-1-0
3-2-0
2-5-0
1-5-0

AFC
3-0-0
1-2-0
0-1-0
1-2-0

Div
3-0-0
1-1-0
2-2-0
0-3-0

Thursday’s Games
San Francisco 34, Oakland 3
Sunday’s Games
Minnesota 24, Detroit 9
Miami 13, N.Y. Jets 6
Atlanta 38, Washington 14
Kansas City 37, Cleveland 21
Pittsburgh 23, Baltimore 16
Chicago 41, Buffalo 9

Carolina 42, Tampa Bay 28
Houston 19, Denver 17
L.A. Chargers 25, Seattle 17
New Orleans 45, L.A. Rams 35
New England 31, Green Bay 17
Open: Indianapolis, Arizona, N.Y. Giants,
Jacksonville, Philadelphia, Cincinnati
Monday’s Games
Tennessee at Dallas, 8:15 p.m.

Herd

with Southern Miss
claiming a better average (36.6 yards) than
Marshall (32.4) on those
boots. The Black and
Gold also won the time
of possession battle by
having the ball for 38:13
of the 60-minute affair.
The Herd was penalized seven times for 79
yards, while the hosts
were ﬂagged 10 times for
90 yards.
Keion Davis led the
MU ground attack with
22 yards on six carries,
followed by Anderson
with 18 yards on nine
attempts.
Green completed 12-of25 passes for 169 yards
to go along with one
touchdown and one interception. Alex Thomson
was also 5-of-13 passing
for 49 yards and a pick.
Marcel Williams led
the guests with seven
catches for 139 yards.
Obi Obialo was next with
four grabs for 32 yards.
Nazeeh Johnson led
the MU defense with
nine tackles, with Chase
Hancock and Ryan Bee
each contributing seven
stops. Hancock and
Omari Cobb also recorded a sack apiece in the
setback.
Knox and Chris Jackson also recovered fumbles for Marshall’s only
takeaways.
USM — which produced only 88 rushing
yards on 45 attempts —
was led on the ground by
Whatley with 40 yards
on 25 tries. Whatley was
also 16-of-25 passing for
134 yards and a scoring
pass.
Watkins led the Golden
Eagles with 79 receiving
yards on ﬁve catches.
Ky’el Hemby led the
hosts with ﬁve tackles
and also had an interception, as did Ty Williams.
Darian Yancey and
Racheem Boothe each
recovered a fumble, while
Jeremy Sangster, Sherrod
Ruff and Jacques Turner
had a sack apiece in the
triumph.
Southern Miss now
owns an 8-6 overall
advantage in the headto-head series with
Marshall in CUSA play.
After losing ﬁve in a row,
the Golden Eagles have
also won three straight
against the Herd.
Marshall returns to
Joan C. Edwards Stadium on Saturday when
it hosts Charlotte in a
Conference USA contest
at 2:30 p.m.

From page 6

back following an interception that gave USM
the ball at the Marshall
nine.
The Golden Eagles
mustered only three
yards on four plays, but
ultimately secured a
permanent lead of 20-17
with a 23-yard ﬁeld goal
by Parker Shaunﬁeld
with 2:58 left in the
third.
Marshall was forced to
punt the ball away on its
next drive, which ended
up moving the game into
the ﬁnal period.
The hosts strung
together a 13-play,
94-yard drive that ended
with 1-yard Whatley run,
making it a 26-17 contest
with 7:13 left in regulation.
The Herd started their
ensuing drive at the 37,
then covered 42 yards in
seven plays. The eighth
play, however, proved
to be bittersweet as a
17-yard pass completion
to Tyre Brady — his only
catch of the day — ended
in a fumble.
The Golden Eagles
recovered at their own
four and took over on
downs with 4:19 left.
That drive eventually led
to a punt that gave Marshall the ball back at the
USM 46 with just over
three minutes showing.
MU needed 10 plays
to cover the distance as
Isaiah Green capped the
drive with a 15-yard pass
to Artis Henry, making
it a 2-point contest with
1:11 remaining.
The Herd came up
empty on their onside
kick attempt, giving the
hosts the ball at midﬁeld.
The Golden Eagles took
two knees to run out the
clock and wrap up the
victory.
The Green and White
claimed a 15-13 edge
in ﬁrst downs and outgained the hosts by a
249-222 overall margin in
total yards of offense, but
also ﬁnished minus-2 in
turnover differential and
minus-10 in points off of
those six total giveaways.
Shaunﬁeld gave Southern Miss an early 3-0
lead with a 45-yard ﬁeld
goal at the 7:25 mark of
the opening canto. MU
ended the ﬁrst quarter
by tying things up on a
24-yarder from Justin
Rohrwasser as time
expired.
Both teams punted the
ball ﬁve times apiece,

Tuesday, November 6, 2018 7

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

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Kevin Harvick
gave the checkered ﬂag to a young fan he brought
onto the track to take a selﬁe — one with the winning driver and car that will have a shot at another
NASCAR Cup championship.
Harvick rocketed past polesitter Ryan Blaney in
overtime Sunday, after the third restart in the ﬁnal

35 laps, to win the Texas fall race for the second
year in a row and take one of the four championshipcontending spots for the season ﬁnale in two weeks.
“We don’t come here to count our ﬁngers and toes
to try to ﬁgure out how we’re going to make it. We
want to earn it,” said Harvick, who led 177 of 337
laps.

Panthers

LVHS converted all-3
of its fourth down tries,
including one in the
second half. GAHS was
From page 6
3-of-7 on third down and
2-of-5 on fourth down in
program history.
For the game, Penrod the game.
The Panthers earned
noted that Licking Vala 520-to-277 advantage
ley’s power run game
after halftime, as well as in total offense, including 386-to-170 on the
the Blue Devils’ missed
ground. GAHS earned
opportunities, gave the
150 of its 170 rushing
Panthers the ultimate
yards before the half,
edge.
with LVHS earning 259
“In the ﬁrst half they
rushing yards in the secdid a lot of spreading
us out and throwing the ond half. Both teams had
a pass intercepted, with
football,” Penrod said.
the Blue Devils also los“We kind of had some
ing a fumble.
bumps and bruises and
GAHS punted twice in
had to switch some guys
in-and-out. We had those the game and was penalized seven times for
two-way guys, and in
23 yards, while LVHS
playoff games like this,
picked up six ﬂags for
it takes its toll. Against
55 yards. The Panther
a big, physical running
attack that they showed defense claimed all-5 of
the game’s sacks, totalin the second half, we
ling 21 yards.
just couldn’t get stops.
Jacob Campbell
Offensively we had a
couple miscues as far as led Gallia Academy’s
offense with 113 yards
ball handling and those
things not only hurt you and two touchdowns,
on the football ﬁeld, but combining nine carries
for 105 yards in the ﬁrst
also emotionally.”
For the game, the Pan- half with one catch for
thers claimed a 25-to-14 eight yards in the secadvantage in ﬁrst downs. ond.
McClelland was 13-ofLicking Valley was
18 passing for 107 yards
10-of-14 on third down
with an interception,
conversions, including
8-of-9 in the second half. while gaining a net of

two yards on 11 carries.
James Armstrong
had 60 total yards ﬁve
receptions for 44 yards
and a pair of carries for
16 yards, while Lane
Pullins ﬁnished with
47 yards on eight totes.
Cory Call hauled in ﬁve
passes for 37 yards,
while Cade Roberts and
Michael Beasy each
caught a nine-yard pass.
McLaughlin posted
267 total yards and a
trio of touchdowns to
lead the victors, earning 250 yards on 24
carries and 17 yards on
a pair of receptions. Of
McLaughlin’s game-best
250 rushing yards, 214
came in the second half.
Whisner was 12-of-18
passing for 134 yards
and and a touchdown,
while rushing 19 times
for 104 yards and two
scores. Carson Conley
led the LVHS receiving
unit with six receptions
for 65 yards, while Will
Schneider had a gamebest two sacks to lead
the Panther defense.
This marks the
ﬁnal game in the prep
careers of GAHS seniors
Jacob Campbell, Justin
McClelland, Cory Call,
Trentin Waller, Lane
Pullins, Cole Davis,

Carter Campbell, Colton
Russell, Logan Rose and
Christian Mayse.
Penrod talked about
the perseverance of the
seniors, who lost 20
of their ﬁrst 23 varsity
contests, but won 13 of
their ﬁnal 18.
“I’m so proud of these
seniors,” Penrod said.
“From 1-9, to 1-9, to
5-5, they just kept chipping away and they
led the way to where
we’re at now. Tonight
hurts, but it’s nothing
about tonight, it’s what
we’ve done to get to this
point.”
Penrod also noted that
the underclassmen have
been shown the way to
return to the postseason.
“These guys know
what it takes,” Penrod
said. “These seniors
showed what our four
pillars are about, and
what it takes to get to
this point in the season.
That challenge is on.”
Licking Valley advances to the Region 15
semiﬁnal against thirdseeded Indian Valley on
Saturday at a location to
be determined.

Buckeyes

by Weber, and having to
play without cornerback
Jeffrey Okudah (groin
injury), safety Isaiah
Pryor (shoulder injury)
and safety Jordan Fuller
(ejected for targeting in
the ﬁrst half).
Fuller’s ejection
meant sophomore safety
Brendon White got the
most playing time in his
career and he responded
with 13 tackles, which
tied Malik Harrison for

the team high.
“I’m very upset with
the turnovers,” Meyer
said. “That would have
been a different game.”
“We’re nowhere close
to where we need to be
(on defense). But they
improved,” he said.
The question remains,
though, if Ohio State can
improve enough to play
for a Big Ten championship and maybe something beyond.

From page 6

asked to carry the
offense recently, was
not at the top of his
game. The sophomore
QB threw for 252 yards
and two touchdowns but
threw an interception
and lost a fumble when
he was sacked. And
receiver K.J. Hill lost a

fumble after a catch.
“The passing game
wasn’t as sharp today,”
Meyer said.
OSU’s defense avoided
its season-long problem
with giving up big plays
for most of the day. But
its barely outgained the
Cornhuskers, 481 yards
to 450 yards.
Meyer defended his
beleaguered defense by
pointing to three lost
fumbles, two of them

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8 Tuesday, November 6, 2018

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PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 18-CV-072
CITIBANK, N.A., NOT IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, BUT
SOLELY AS TRUSTEE OF NRZ PASS-THROUGH TRUST VI
-VS- EUGENE F. ANSPACH, ET AL. DEFENDANTS.
Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Judy
Anspach, Deceased, whose last known address is: Unknown,
and who cannot be served, will take notice that on October 2,
2018, Plaintiff filed a Complaint for Money, Foreclosure and
other Equitable Relief in the Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio, Case No. 18-CV-072 against Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Judy
Anspach, Deceased and others as Defendants, alleging that,
Eugene F. Anspach and Judy Anspach, Deceased, are in default for all payments from April 3, 2017; that on November 24,
2000, Eugene F. Anspach and Judy Anspach, Deceased, executed and delivered a certain Mortgage Deed in which said Defendants agreed, among other things, to pay the Note and to
comply with all of the terms of the Mortgage Deed hereinafter
described, which Mortgage Deed was filed in the Recorder's Office of Meigs County, Ohio on November 28, 2000, recorded in
Volume 116, Page 239 and assigned to the Plaintiff on December 1, 2017, and recorded December 11, 2017 in Volume
384, Page 957 of the Meigs County records, that, further, the
balance due on the Note is $24,980.16 with interest at the rate
of 9.9970% per annum from April 3, 2017 and a deferred balance of $515.91; that to secure the payment of the Note, executed and delivered a certain Mortgage Deed to and thereby
conveying, in fee simple, the following described premises:
Situated in the State of Ohio, in the County of Meigs, and in the
Village of Middleport:
Commonly known as: 28801 State Route 7, Middleport, OH
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and further alleging that the aforesaid Mortgage is a valid and
subsisting first and best lien upon said premises after the lien of
the Treasurer; that the Note is in default, whereby the conditions set forth in the Note and Mortgage have been broken, that
the Mortgage has become absolute and that Plaintiff is entitled,
therefore, to have the Mortgage foreclosed, the premises sold,
and the proceeds applied in payment of Plaintiff's claims; that
the Defendants,Unknown Heirs, Assigns, Legatees and Devisees of Judy Anspach, Deceased, among others, may have or
claim to have some interest in or lien upon said premises; that
all of the Defendants are required to set forth any claim, lien or
interest in or upon the premises that he, she, or it may have or
claim to have or be forever barred therefrom; that Plaintiff's
Mortgage be declared to be a valid and subsisting first and best
lien upon said premises after the lien of the Treasurer, if any,
that its Mortgage be foreclosed; that all liens be marshaled; that
the equity of redemption of all Defendants be forever cut off,
barred, and foreclosed; that upon the sale of said premises the
proceeds be paid to Plaintiff to satisfy the amount of its existing
lien and the interest, together with its disbursements, advancements, and costs herein expended; and for such other and further relief to which is may be entitled in equity or at law.
Defendants are further notified that they are required to answer
the Complaint on or before December 11, 2018 which includes
twenty-eight (28) days from the last publishing, or judgment
may be rendered as prayed for therein.
Submitted by: Andrew M. Tomko, Sandhu Law Group, LLC,
1213 Prospect Avenue, Suite 300, Cleveland, OH 44115,
216-373-1001, Attorney for Plaintiff
10/30/18, 11/6/18, 11/13/18 TDS

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IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
THE OHIO V ALLEY BANK COMPANY
Plaintiff,
vs.
WILLARD R. LAUDERMILT JR., et at
Defendants.
JUDGE: I. CARSON CROW
CASE NO. 18 CV 058
NOTICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION
To: WILLARD R. LAUDERMILT JR.; Whose address is
unknown:
Plaintiff, The Ohio Valley Bank Company, has brought this
action naming you as a Defendant, in the above-named Court,
by filing their Complaint To Marshall Liens on July 31,
2018.
The object of Plaintiffs Complaint is to foreclose on certain real
property in Meigs County; being more particularly described as
733 Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760, as more particularly
set forth in the Complaint.
You are required to answer the Publication within twenty-eight
(28) days, after the last publication of this Notice, which will be
published once per week, for three (3) consecutive weeks, and
the last publication will be made on November 13, 2018 In the
case of your failure to answer, or respond, as permitted by the
Ohio Civil Rules within the time stated, a judgment by default
will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the
Complaint.
/s/Samantha Mugrave
Samantha Mugrave
Meigs County, Ohio Clerk of Courts
Court of Common Pleas
100 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
10/31/18,11/6/18,11/13/18-tds

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 6, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm ousted in RSC quarterfinals
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- The University of Rio
Grande women’s soccer
team fought hard to earn
a post-season berth and
home ﬁeld advantage in
the quarterﬁnal round of
the River States Conference Championship.
But the gritty determination and energetic

play which fueled the
RedStorm’s success was
noticeably absent in Saturday night’s tourney tilt
with Indiana University
East.
The ﬁfth-seeded Red
Wolves avenged a regular
season loss and earned
their ﬁrst post-season
win in program history
with a convincing 3-0
win over Rio Grande
at chilly Evan E. Davis

Field.
IU East improved to
11-4-3 with the win and
advances to Wednesday’s
semiﬁnal round for a
showdown with topseeded Point Park.
The RedStorm, who
were the tourney’s No. 4
seed, ﬁnished their season at 7-9-2.
IU East enjoyed a
whopping 32-11 advantage in shots overall 18-3

in the ﬁrst half - and a
13-1 edge in shots on
goal.
The Red Wolves also
had a 6-2 cushion in corner kick chances.
Olivia Malott gave the
visitors the only goal
they would need, scoring
an unassisted marker just
over 21 minutes into the
contest.
Dejhanna O’Bryant
pushed East’s lead to 2-0

at the intermission, bulling her way through the
Rio defense for another
unassisted score with
just 1:23 left before the
break.
Londyn Feasel set the
ﬁnal score by blistering a
shot off the back of a Rio
defender and over the
head of RedStorm senior
net-minder Andrea Vera
(Quito, Ecuador) with
28:48 remaining in the

contest.
Vera - one of eight
players donning the Rio
uniform for the ﬁnal
time - ﬁnished with nine
saves.
Amanda Nicholson
had one save for IU East,
which lost to the RedStorm, 1-0, in their regular season meeting.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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OH-70077353

Bobcats claw past Rio
in exhibition, 93-58

Rural Life Today provides farming and agriculture news and information
in print and online for everyone in our rural communities.

ATHENS, Ohio —
Teyvion Kirk scored
14 of his team-high 20
points in the opening
half, as NCAA Division
I Ohio University bolted
to a 28-point halftime
lead en route to a 93-58
exhibition win over
the University of Rio
Grande, Saturday afternoon, in front of 5,618
fans at the Convocation
Center.
The contest served as
the ﬁnal tuneup before
both schools’ regular
season opener.
Kirk, who also had a
game-high four steals,
was one of ﬁve players
in double ﬁgures for the
host Bobcats.
Jason Carter and Ben
Vander Plas ﬁnished
with 18 and 14 points,

respectively, in the winning effort, while Doug
Taylor and Antonio
Cowart netted 10 points
each.
Taylor also had
a game-high seven
rebounds.
The Bobcats shot 65.6
percent in the opening
half, building a 52-24
advantage at the intermission.
Rio Grande refused to
go away quietly, though,
using a 10-0 run that
was culminated by a
jumper from freshman
Joshua Anthony (Newnan, GA) to pull the RedStorm within 15 points,
61-46, with 12:44 left in
the game.
However, Ohio quelled
the Rio rally - and put the
win on ice - by reeling off
a 19-6 run over the next
seven minutes to open up
a 28-point cushion.

The Bobcats’ largest
lead of the day came with
the game’s ﬁnal margin of
victory.
Junior Cameron Schreiter (Mason, OH) had
18 points to pace Rio in a
losing cause, while senior
Earl Russell (Warrington,
England) added 14 points
and a team-high six
rebounds.
The RedStorm shot 50
percent (12-for-24) from
the ﬂoor in the second
half and ﬁnished the
game 22-for-54 (40.7%).
Ohio ﬁnished 37-for-62
(59.7%) from the ﬂoor
and did the bulk of its
damage close to the bucket, outscoring Rio 62-28
in the paint.
Rio Grande ofﬁcially
opens its season on Tuesday night, traveling to
Mount Vernon Nazarene
University for a 7 p.m.
tipoff.

MESOTHELIOMA? LUNG CANCER?
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