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                  <text>Marcum:
healing
hands

Honoring
‘ the
team’

White
falcons
fall

EDITORIAL s 4

NEWS s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 137, Volume 71

Tuesday, August 29, 2017 s 50¢

Honoring 50 years of tradition

SR 143
to close
Sept. 8-9
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

Members of the 1967 and 2017 Meigs High School Football Teams are pictured together before Friday’s home opener.

Meigs recognizes
first football team

Southern
playground
gets grant

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS — The tradition of Meigs football (and
Meigs athletics as a whole)
began 50 years ago with the
formation of Meigs High School
after the combining of Rutland,
Middleport and Pomeroy High
Schools.
On Friday evening the current Meigs Marauders paid tribute to the ﬁrst team of Meigs
Marauders — the 1967 SEOAL
Champion Meigs Marauders.
Members of the 1967 team
and coaches were brought onto
the ﬁeld prior to the game, with
the name of each team member
read aloud. Many team members, along with their family
and friends, and family members of those who had passed
away were presented with gift
bags which included photos
and a copy of the 1967 opening
game program.
Head Coach of the Marauders
for more than 20 years, Charles
Chancey led his team onto the
ﬁeld. Chancey was presented
with a framed number 67 jersey
to represent the year of the
ﬁrst team, as well as the 1967
SEOAL trophy and championship banner by his sons Mike
and Rick Chancey, Supt. Scot
Gheen and Principal Travis
Abbott.

POMEROY — State
Route 143 near Pomeroy
will be closed Sept. 8-9
as part of an ongoing
realignment project.
The closure is taking
place at the current State
Route 7 and State Route
143 intersection. It will
be in place from 6 p.m.,
Friday, Sept. 8 through 9
p.m., Saturday, Sept. 9.
The contractor on the
project, The Shelly Company, will be building a
temporary road on which
to maintain trafﬁc while
construction of the new
State Route 143 realignment takes place.
The detour is State
Route 7 to US 33 to State
Route 681 to State Route
684 to State Route 143.
The estimated completion date for the overall
realignment project is
Oct. 20, 2017.

Staff Report

RACINE — Dr Pepper
Snapple Group (DPS)
and national non-proﬁt
KaBOOM! awarded
Southern Local School
District a $15,000 Let’s
Play Community Construction Grant that will
be used to build a playground which will serve
the students in the Southern Local School District.
The grant is part of
Let’s Play, an initiative by
DPS to provide kids and
families with the tools,
places and inspiration to
make active play a daily
priority. Unstructured,
child-directed play has
See GRANT | 3
Head Coach Charles Chancey and Assistant Coaches John Bentley and Ed Bartels are pictured with the 1967 SEOAL trophy.

With the 1967 team and 2017
team lining the ﬁeld, Coach
Chancey led the coin toss, ﬂipping a 1967 half dollar.
Coaches of the 1967 team
were Head Coach Charles
Chancey and assistant coaches
John Bentley, Fenton Taylor,
Terry Ohlinger, Don Dixon,
Dick Well, Russell Moore and

Ed Bartels.
The 1967 Marauders ﬁnished
the season with a 9-1 record,
6-0 in the SEOAL. The team’s
only loss was an 8-0 setback to
perennial power Ironton in a
non-conference game. Ironton
would join the SEOAL the next
season.
For the season, the Maraud-

ers outscored their opponents
218-50. The Marauders were
so dominant on defense that
only one team scored more than
eight points. That was longtime
SEOAL kingpin Jackson who
found themselves on the short
end of a 50-14 setback.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The
Daily Sentinel.

Board
approves
agenda
items
Staff Report

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

Meigs SWCD Fair contest
Staff Report

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District
announced the winners of its longrunning Mystery Farm and the kid’s
contests for the ﬁshing poles and
tackle box held during the 2017 Meigs
County Fair.
The daily winners of the Mystery
Farm Contest were, as follows: Monday — Don Tillis, Tuesday — Madalyn Wood, Wednesday — Tim Dillon,
Thursday — Courtney Kennedy,
Friday — Bill Spaun, Saturday — No
Winner.
Winners of the Mystery Farm contest receive $10 each. There were 74
entries throughout the week.

Courtesy photo

Kid’s Corner at the Meigs County Fair

Winners of the hay show co-sponsored by the Meigs SWCD and Meigs
County Fair Board were, in order by
class: Class 1 (75 percent or more
alfalfa) — Ed Holter (2nd); Class
2 (all grasses) — Elizabeth Harris,
See SWCD | 3

ROCKSPRINGS —
The Meigs Local Board
of Education approved
several agenda items
during its recent board
meeting.
Brittany Cundiff was
hired as a personal
assistant at Meigs Intermediate School at a rate
of $12.50 per hour, not
to exceed 29 hours per
week.
The board approved
entering into a purchased
service agreement with
Susan Eason and Jessica
Barnett for speech related
services as needed for the
2017-18 school year.
Marjorie Fetty, Jodi
See BOARD | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES

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 spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

Thursday,
Aug. 31
POMEROY — A
program will be held at
6:30 p.m. at the Chester
Bowhunter and Archery
Club, 44781 Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy, on ticks
and the importance of
protecting yourself and
your family. Timothy
McDermott, extension
educator for Hocking
County Agriculture and

Natural Resources will
conduct the program.
For more information
contact the Meigs County health Department at
740-992-6626.

p.m. All members are
urged to attend.

Monday,
Sept. 4

Friday,
Sept. 1

LETART TWP. —
The regular meeting
of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held at 5
p.m. at the Letart Township Building.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Health Dept. will
be closed in observance
of Labor Day. Normal
Business hours resume
at 8 a.m. on Sept. 5.

SALEM CENTER —
Meigs County Pomona
Grange will meet at 6:45
p.m. at the Star Grange
Hall located on County
Road 1, 3 miles North of
Salem Center. Refreshments will be served at
6:45 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m. All
crafts, art and photography will be judged.

The Wild Horse Cafe.
RUTLAND TWP. —
The Rutland Township
Trustees meeting has
been changed from Monday, Sept. 4 to Tuesday
Sept. 5 at 7:30 a.m. due
to the Labor Day holiday.

Saturday,
Sept. 9

MIDDLEPORT —
The Riverbend Arts
Council presents “The
Art of Baking; Part III”
from 1-3 p.m.; a cooking demonstration with
Rick Werner and Jessica
Wolf. The demonstration
will feature Breakfast
pastries: French Quarter
Beignets, Cinnamon
OLIVE TWP. — The
Olive Township Trustees Buns, Turnovers, Danish
and Scones. Donations
will hold their regular
accepted, refreshments
meeting at 6:30 p.m. at
served, recipes, sample
the township garage on
SALEM CENTER —
prepared dishes, rafﬂe.
Joppa Road.
Star Grange #778 and
POMEROY — Holzer Riverbend Arts Council
Star Junior Grange #878
Clinic and Holzer Medi- is located at 290 North
will meet with potluck
Second Avenue, Middlecal Center retirees will
supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 meet for lunch at noon at port, Ohio

Tuesday,
Sept. 5

Saturday,
Sept. 2

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE)
Akzo Nobel
Big Lots, Inc.
Bob Evans Farms
BorgWarner (NYSE)
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
City Holding (NASDAQ)
Collins (NYSE)

74.10
30.97
48.62
64.52
44.25
18.65
63.13
127.99

DuPont (NYSE)
US Bank (NYSE)
Gen Electric (NYSE)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
JP Morgan (NYSE)
Kroger (NYSE)
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
Norfolk So (NYSE)

OVBC (NASDAQ)
BBT (NYSE)
Peoples (NASDAQ)
Pepsico (NYSE)
Premier (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE)
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
Royal Dutch Shell

82.88
51.96
24.47
47.06
91.60
21.72
36.45
117.76

30.60
46.14
30.92
115.54
18.93
159.57
13.20
55.44

Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
Wal-Mart (NYSE)
Wendy’s (NYSE)
WesBanco (NYSE)
Worthington (NYSE)

8.62
78.03
15.00
37.30
49.92

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions Aug. 28, 2017.

DEBBIE S. KAUFF
MIDDLEPORT — In
loving memory Debbie
S. Kauff, 59 of Middleport, Ohio, who passed
away Sunday, Aug. 27,
2017, after battling and
aggressive form of lung
cancer. She was born on
June 14, 1958, in Mason
County, W.Va. to the late
Woodrow and Emmeline
(Phillips) Henrdrix.
Debbie was a co-owner of Mike’s Plumbing
and Heating, a devoted
wife and mother who left
her loving touch forever
upon our hearts.
She is preceded in
death by her parents,
three sisters and two
brothers.
She leaves behind
a loving husband of
41 years, Paul “Mike”
Kauff; daughters, Karan
(Brian) Ross and Ann
(Dean) Wagner; a son,
Gary (Doriell Kimmey)
Kauff; seven grandchildren; one great-granddaughter; and several
brothers, sister, nieces,

nephews and many
friends. Debbie will be
sadly missed and forever
in our hearts.
Mike would like to
thank all of the family
and friends for all of
their help with getting
through this time. A special thanks to my sister,
Mary Tobin, my daughters, Ann Wagner and
Karan Ross; granddaughter, Katlyn Ross; and two
special nieces Beth Ann
and Susan Rannee.
Funeral services will
be held on Friday, Sept.
1, 2017, at 3 p.m. at the
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor James
Keesee ofﬁciating. Burial
will take place in the
Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Visitation for family and
friends will be held on
Thursday, Aug. 31, 2017,
from 6-8 p.m. at the
funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

HEATON
ELLENTON, Fla. — Helen L. Heaton, 87, of Ellenton Florida, died on Aug. 10, 2017.
Funeral services have been held. Arrangements
under the care of Shannon Funeral Home in Bradenton, Florida.
HARRIS
BABOURSVILLE, W.Va. — John Harris, 47, of Barboursville, passed away Saturday, August 26, 2017 at
home. Private family services will be held.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
assisting the family with arrangements.
DORNON
PROCTORVILLE — Paul Edward “Sonny” Dornon, 79, of Proctorville, Ohio passed away on Sunday, August 27, 2017 at St. Mary’s Medical Center,
Huntington, W.Va. Funeral service will be conducted
11 a.m. Wednesday, August 30, 2017 at First Baptist
Church, Proctorville with Pastor Jeff Black ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville.
Visitation will be held 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, August 29,
2017 at the church.
WHITE
MASON — Rex Harding White, 96, of Mason,
passed away Monday, August 28, 2017. There will be
no visitation. A memorial service will be announced
later by Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. A full
obituary will appear in an upcoming edition of the
Register.

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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 29, 2017 3

Hemlock Grange holds meeting Bingo highlights Senior Day
HEMLOCK GROVE — The August
meeting of Hemlock Grange was preceded by a picnic dinner.
The meeting opened at 7:30 p.m.
with Kim Romine presiding. After the
pledge to the ﬂag and a patriotic song,
Sara Cullums had prayer.
Adell White, Family Activities
Chairperson, announced the winners
of the contests. In embroidery, needle
point and plastic canvas, Rosalie
Johnson got ﬁrst place. In quilt, Sara
Cullums got ﬁrst place. These entries
were put in the fair booth.
A report on tax ID number was
given by Romine. The grange is still
waiting to hear from the state.

at the Meigs County Fair

Margaret Parker, lecturer, gave a
program on the history of the fair. The
ﬁrst fair was held in Middleport on
Oct. 22, 1851. The second one was
held at the Rocksprings Hotel in 1852.
The third was in Middleport in 1852,
with the fourth in Chester in 1854.
It was held in Racine in 1860. The
fair was postponed in 1861 and 1862,
with no fair in 1863, 1864 or 1865 due
to the war. The fairgrounds were purchased in 1868 for $1,500 consisting
of 10 acres. The grandstand was built
in 1890.
To conclude the program, members
were asked to share their experiences
at the fair.

SWCD

kids contest. This contest was held for youngsters only. Everyday a
From page 1
new game was set up at
the Conservation CorBlair Windon, Ed Holtner for kids to play and
er; Class 3 (49 percent
enter to win. Winners
or less legumes) — Ed
were as follows: MonHolter, Brian Windon,
day, Which items cannot
Blair Windon.
be recycled in Meigs
This year, there were
seven entries for the hay County? — Jace Ervin;
show. Winners received Tuesday, What Bug is
cash awards and ribbons this? — Ryan Sanders;
Wednesday, How many
from the fair board.
birds do you see at the
First-place winners will
Conservation Corner?
receive plaques from
the Meigs SWCD at the — Lydyah Barringer;
district’s annual meeting Thursday, Tree Riddle
and banquet on Oct. 3 at — Brantley Jordan;
Friday, Sink or Float
Meigs High School.
— Harvest Lechler;
The ACTT (Active
Saturday, Are you my
Conservationist Teaming Together) and Ohio Momma? — Peyton Bailey. There were 301 total
Valley Outdoors sponentries for the week.
sored the ﬁshing poles
This year the Meigs
and tackle boxes for the

Soil and Water Conservation District’s
Jim Freeman made six
bluebird houses to be
given away. The winners
were as follows: Monday — Julie Lambert;
Tuesday — Deania Harris; Wednesday — Linda
Darnell; Thursday —
Sheyane Matthews; Friday — Jennifer Larson;
Saturday — Markus
Eblin. There were 350
entries for the week.
“We want to congratulate all winners
and thank everyone
who participated in the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District
Contests at the 2017
Meigs County Fair,” said
Jenny Ridenour, education coordinator for the
Meigs SWCD.

Grant

partners with two nonproﬁt organizations,
KaBOOM! and Good
Sports, to build and
improve playgrounds in
underserved communities and provide grants
for sports equipment.
In this way, Dr Pepper
Snapple is doing our
part to help eliminate
the play deﬁcit by making active play possible
for more kids. Visit
Let’s Play at www.
LetsPlay.com to join the
conversation and learn
how to apply for the
various available grants
to make communities
more active and playful.
Installation of the new
playground is currently
scheduled to take place
on Sept. 16. For more
information on how to
volunteer to help with
the installation contact
Heather Dailey-Johnson
at Southern Local
Schools or visit the
Southern Local Playground Installation on
Facebook.

day of school!”
The student’s, families, and businesses in
From page 1
our community which
support Southern Local
School District have
proven to help kids
develop physically, emo- worked this year to
raise money to fund
tionally, socially and
intellectually, yet today’s the playground project.
kids have less time and When Southern was
awarded the KaBOOM!
fewer opportunities to
Grant, it allowed Southplay than any previous
ern to reach their goal
generation. As a result
of Let’s Play grants and of monies raised to comprojects, more than 6.5 plete this project. The
million kids will beneﬁt KaBOOM! Grant will
allow Southern Local
from new or improved
playgrounds around the School District to install
a playground structure
nation by the end of
which will support each
2020.
student reaching their
“The KaBOOM!
goal of 60 minutes of
Grant has given our
physical activity each
school the opportunity
to provide our students day.
Dr Pepper Snapple
with a playground
which will support cre- has committed more
ative play,” said Heather than $35.5 million to
Let’s Play through 2019,
Dailey-Johnson K-8th
impacting youth-serving
Physical Education
organizations across the
Teacher. “I am excited
to see our students and U.S., as well as Canada,
Mexico and the Caribtheir reactions as they
bean. Through Let’s
play on the new play
Play, Dr Pepper Snapple
structure on the ﬁrst

ROCKSPRINGS —
Senior citizens gathered
Thursday in the Grange
Hall Annex for fellowship
and Bingo as part of the
Senior Day activities at
the 2017 Meigs County
Fair.
At least 42 players
crowded the room, vying
for prizes and ribbing one
another in good-natured
fun when the numbers
seemed to favor one
over the other at various

points.
While everyone ﬁt
around the tables and
along the walls, it was a
bit of a tight squeeze in
some corners. Despite
the close quarters — or
perhaps because of them
— laughter abounded for
a day of fun celebrating
Meigs County’s senior
citizens.
Senior Day is an
annual event at the Meigs
County Fair, allowing for

county residents with a
Golden Buckeye Card to
gain free admission to the
fair for the day.
The Arbors at Pomeroy
sponsored the event,
which broke for lunch
before resuming for an
afternoon Bingo session.
The Meigs County Council on Aging distributed a
ticket to each player over
60, for a chance to win a
recliner that to be rafﬂed
off on Sept. 29.

availability or visit our
website at www.meigshealth.com to see a list
of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid
for adults.

T.P. Fire Dept.) Food
and drinks available. Proceeds beneﬁt the Amazing Grace Community
Church Food Pantry.

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.

Immunization RACO yard
MHS class of
clinic Tuesday sale to be held 1972 reunion
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 $15.00 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. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia vaccines are also
available. Call for eligibility determination and

RACINE — The Racine
Area Community Organization Fall Yard Sale
will be held August 29,
30, and 31, at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Hours are
Tuesday 9-6, Wednesday
9-4, and Thursday 9-2.
The money raised will be
used for scholarships for
the Southern Local Class
of 2018. Items are no longer being accepted for the
yard dale.

Indoor yard
sale to be held
TUPPERS PLAINS
– Annual Fall Indoor
Yard Sale will be held
on Friday, Sept. 8 and
Saturday, Sept. 9 at the
Amazing Grace Community Church from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. (across from

POMEROY — The
Meigs High School Class
of 1972 will hold its 45th
year reunion on Saturday, Sept. 30, at Wolfe
Mountain Entertainment
Center (the old Pomeroy
Senior High Building)
from 3-6 p.m. The deadline to sign up for this
year’s reunion is Sept. 11.
We are planning pizza for
this year’s get together
and Cliff Thomas (Skye
Productions) will DJ.
The cost is $12 per person via check or $12.65
via PayPal. The extra
$.65 covers the PayPal
transaction cost. Make
your reservations online
at www.mhsclass1972.
org or send a check via
USPS to: MHS Class of
72 Class Reunion, Paul
Darnell, 38509 State
Route 143, Pomeroy, OH
45769.

Board

mated at $26,035, with educate the public.
Board member
the Auditor of State to
Heather Hawley
conduct the audit.
From page 1
Board member Ryan asked about a timing
machine for track and
Mahr told the board
Shultz, Barbara
the possibility of getMusser, Connie Halley, that Sheriff Keith
ting someone certiﬁed
Wood would like to
Emily Hill and Debra
to help with the clock
communicate/discuss
McCall were hired as
the jail levy. He would for track meets.
intervention tutors at
Minutes of the preMeigs Primary School also like to place litvious meeting were
at a rate of $90 per day. erature and displays
in the building to help approved as presented.
Nathan Becker was
hired as the cross
country coach at
Meigs Middle School.
Michael Davis was
approved as a volunteer assistant football
Help Right Here At Home
coach. Tyler Brothers
was approved as a volMesothelioma • Lung Cancer
unteer assistant cross
country coach.
Wrongful Death
A list of substitute
personal assistants
were approved as pre200 E. 2nd�6WUHHW�3RPHUR\��2+�Ř�WHQODZ#VXGGHQOLQNPDLO�FRP
sented. Racquel Miller
was approved as a
substitute custodian
for the 2017-18 school
year.
Grants for the 201718 school year were
accepted as follows,
Richards Brothers Fruit Farm
$400,000, 21st CenJellies, Jams, cider, apple butter
er
tury Grant; $88,000,
Open Mon-Sat-8a-12p &amp; 1p-5p
Early Childhood EduSunday 12p-4p
cation.
2054 Orpheus Rd., Thurman, OH 45685
Audit fees for ﬁscal
(740) 286-4584 (Co Rd 46)
year 2017 were esti-

Christopher E. Tenoglia
60732756

Attorney at Law

740-992-6368

60733129

60720833

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Using energy to
balance mind,
body and spirit
The walls of the room where I am lying are
lined with symbols I have never seen. They
remind me of Egyptian hieroglyphics, but they
are different, more like squiggles
and zigzags.
I’m only here because I don’t
know where else to turn for help. I
don’t even know what is wrong with
me. I just know I’m not happy. A
friend recommended I see Jeanie,
who is not only a Reiki Master; but
Michele Z. a homeopathic doctor who graduated Magna Cum Laude from MidMarcum
Contributing west University. My friend told me
columnist
Jeanie is a lightworker, and uses a
form of energy healing similar to
Reiki.
It sounded harmless, but now that I’m on a bed
in her basement ofﬁce, it’s a bit spooky.
Jeanie clicks on a CD, a mix of Gregorian
chants and nature sounds which relaxes me a bit.
She tells me she’ll be working on my auric ﬁeld
that’s just above my physical body. She will stop
if I am uncomfortable. She’ll be able to sense
areas in my body where energy is stagnant.
Stagnant energy causes disease. She will channel
energy from the Divine to me and the infusion
will heal my cells.
Jeanie places my right hand on my belly and
tells me I can keep my eyes open or close them. I
choose the former.
She wedges her left hand under my sacrum and
with her right, makes loops in the air like she is
writing an invisible message. I wonder if she is
signing the same symbols that are plastered on
the walls.
I’m seriously questioning my decision to trust
this lady when she tells me that there are angels
present and that I can pray while she works on
me. I quickly take her up on that suggestion.
For several minutes her right hand hovers over
my right hand that’s still on my stomach. Slowly
the lightworker raises and lowers her hands several feet above me as if she were smoothing the
air with a rolling pin.
She repeats this several times, rolls behind me
and cups her hands around my head. I feel like I
have static in my hair and I’m dizzy, but I don’t
dare tell Jeanie. I don’t want her to stop. I want
this to work.
She continues down the left side of my body.
It must be ﬁfteen minutes into the session. My
head is spinning like it’s in a dryer. I focus on a
long shadow on the ceiling in an attempt to make
the spinning stop.
Jeanie asks if I’m okay. I’m tingling from my
earlobes to my toes and I feel like my head is
going to whirl right off of my shoulders, but I tell
her I’m ﬁne.
I close my eyes and press my head deep, trying
to anchor it into the pillow beneath it.
Suddenly I hear angry voices above me. “You
shouldn’t have come here!” I look up, but there’s
no one there. Again I hear several voices talking
over one another, “Shouldn’t have come! Told
you—shouldn’t have come.” I scan the room, but
the only person in the room besides me is Jeanie.
I succumb to the sensation of being sucked
into a black hole.
The next thing I know, Jeanie’s patting my face
with a cool cloth.
I push my elbows into the bed in an effort to
sit up, but have no strength and collapse back
onto the pillow.
Jeanie’s hand softens to my wrist that’s searching for leverage. “Easy, there. No rush.”
“I’m so weak,” I say.
Jeanie strokes my forehead. “I know, honey.”
I feel really stupid; tired and confused and
stupid. Jeanie offers her arm so I grab hold and
attempt to swing my legs off of the bed, but they
barely budge.
With her free hand, Jeanie slides my legs till
they dangle off the edge. With her assistance, I
settle into a rocking chair.
“Do you remember anything?” Jeanie asks, her
soft blue eyes practically propping me up from
across her desk.
“My head spinning and growling voices. They
didn’t want me here.”
“You were under attack from negative inﬂuences and had a seizure.”
She explained that several negative entities
were attached to my auric ﬁeld and had been
inﬂuencing my moods and behaviors.
In the ensuing days Jeanie taught me that we
each perceive the world in our own way and have
the ability to change our perception. With Jeanie’s prompting, I began identifying life-enhancing
circumstances and self-defeating ones. I began
looking at myself as self-reliant and found joy in
just being alive. I began to love myself.
I’ve been seeing Jeanie for ﬁve years now. I feel
more balanced in mind, body and spirit after my
monthly treatments with her.
Jeanie’s advice helped me to change my perception.
See ENERGY | 5

THEIR VIEW

Kids and smartphones: Be proactive
The following editorial
appeared in the Chicago
Tribune on Saturday,
Aug. 26:
Parents of preteens
know the dismay that
comes with this image:
kids ﬂopped on the
couch for stretches of
time, silent and mesmerized by smartphones.
Maybe it’s Snapchat,
maybe its Facebook or
Instagram — but they
scroll and scroll, oblivious to an outside world
that beckons with all
things tangible and
sunny: a pool, a baseball
diamond, a bike ride.
The things that lure
kids into their own
walled-off worlds have
evolved over the years:
Pac-Man in the ’80s, Nintendo in the ’90s. Today,
it’s a smartphone that at
times can seem like the
Paciﬁc Ocean between
you and your children.
Recently, a backlash
against the trend has
burgeoned in the form of
Wait Until 8th, a movement that encourages
parents to hold off on

giving their children
smartphones until the
eighth grade, when their
kids are usually 13 or 14.
Led by a former Chicago resident who now
lives in Austin, Texas,
the group launched this
spring and now has more
than 2,000 parents as
members, the Tribune’s
Kate Thayer reports.
At least 100 families
in Illinois have joined.
There’s nothing binding
in being a member. Parents simply take a pledge
to “wait until eighth,”
adhering to the group’s
belief that elementary
school is too soon for
kids to start tapping
and scrolling on smartphones.
There’s a need for
children who haven’t
reached their teen years
to have phones for communication and safety
reasons, but the group
stresses that major cellular service carriers
offer basic packages
for calls and texts —
without data plans.
“Smartphones are dis-

from reach at bedtime
are sensible ground
rules. There are also
apps that allow parents to control when
their kids can use their
phones and what apps
are accessible, Thayer
writes. Setting boundaries is part of a parent’s
job description, and
that’s especially important when it comes to a
kid’s smartphone use.
It’s up to each parent to decide when to
buy a smartphone for
their child, and how to
monitor the device’s
usage. Every kid, and
every family dynamic,
is different. “There’s no
research evidence that
getting a phone at too
young of an age is bad
or good,” Yalda Uhls,
author of “Media Moms
&amp; Digital Dads: A FactNot-Fear Approach to
Parenting in the Digital
Age,” told Thayer. What
matters is being engaged
enough in your kids’ use
of the phone to know if,
when — and how — it
becomes a problem.

tracting, dangerous and
detrimental for children,
yet are widespread in
elementary and middle
school because of unrealistic social pressure
and expectations to have
one,” the group’s website
declares.
OK, we feel your pain,
Wait Until 8th. But we
think there’s a better way
to look at this. Kids still
bond in playgrounds,
school hallways and
backyards, but smartphones have changed
the way we socialize,
and that doesn’t just
go for grown-ups. Kids
now connect digitally,
through texts, FaceTime,
social media, the list
goes on. It’s a reality parents can’t ignore.
But it’s also a reality
parents don’t have to
accept unconditionally.
Being a parent means
being proactive about
everything, and that
includes being attentive
stewards of their kids’
use of smartphones.
Keeping them off the
dinner table and away

TODAY IN HISTORY
ay-lee-ZAY’) in Paris
as the French capital
continued to celebrate
its liberation from the
Nazis.
In 1952, the comToday’s Highlight in History:
position 4’33” (“Four
On August 29, 1967,
Minutes, Thirty-three
the series ﬁnale of “The
Fugitive,” starring David Seconds”) by avantgarde composer John
Janssen as a doctor
Cage premiered in
on the run after being
Woodstock, New York,
wrongly convicted of
murdering his wife, aired as David Tudor sat down
at a piano, and, for four
on ABC-TV, drawing
minutes and 33 seconds,
an estimated 78 million
played … nothing.
viewers.
In 1957, the Senate
gave ﬁnal congressioOn this date:
In 1533, the last Incan nal approval to a Civil
King of Peru, Atahualpa Rights Act after South
Carolina Sen. Strom
(ah-tuh-WAHL’-puh),
Thurmond (then a Demwas executed on orders
ocrat) ended a ﬁlibuster
of Spanish conqueror
that had lasted 24 hours.
Francisco Pizarro.
In 1958, pop superstar
In 1877, the second
president of The Church Michael Jackson was
of Jesus Christ of Latter- born in Gary, Indiana.
In 1965, Gemini 5,
Day Saints, Brigham
Young, died in Salt Lake carrying astronauts Gordon Cooper and Charles
City, Utah, at age 76.
“Pete” Conrad, splashed
In 1910, Korean
down in the Atlantic
Emperor Sunjong abdicated as the Japan-Korea after 8 days in space.
In 1972, swimmer
Annexation Treaty went
Mark Spitz of the United
into effect.
States won the third of
In 1944, 15,000
his seven gold medals at
American troops of
the Munich Olympics,
the 28th Infantry Diviﬁnishing ﬁrst in the 200sion marched down the
Champs Elysees (shahms meter freestyle.
Today is Tuesday, Aug.
29, the 241st day of 2017.
There are 124 days left in
the year.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Don’t be ‘consistent,’ but be simply true.”
— Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
American author (1809-1894)

In 1987, Academy
Award-winning actor Lee
Marvin died in Tucson,
Arizona, at age 63.
In 1996, the Democratic National Convention
in Chicago nominated Al
Gore for a second term
as vice president. Earlier
in the day, President Bill
Clinton’s chief political
strategist, Dick Morris,
resigned amid a scandal
over his relationship
with a prostitute.
In 2005, Hurricane
Katrina hit the Gulf
Coast near Buras, Louisiana, bringing ﬂoods that
devastated New Orleans.
More than 1,800 people
in the region died.
Ten years ago: Fellow
Republicans called on
Idaho Sen. Larry Craig
to resign and party leaders pushed him from
senior committee posts
as fallout continued over
his arrest at a Minneapolis airport restroom
and guilty plea to disor-

derly conduct. Prayers,
protests and a lingering
disgust with the government’s response to Hurricane Katrina marked the
disaster’s second anniversary in New Orleans.
Taliban militants in
Afghanistan released 12
South Korean captives,
part of a deal with Seoul
to free all 19 hostages.
Richard Jewell, the former security guard who
was wrongly linked to
the 1996 Olympic bombing, was found dead in
his west Georgia home;
he was 44.
Five years ago: Seizing
the Republican National
Convention spotlight
in Tampa, Florida, vice
presidential candidate
Paul Ryan promised Mitt
Romney would “not duck
the tough issues” if he
were to win the White
House and that their
party would move forcefully to solve the nation’s
economic woes.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 29, 2017 5

Honoring 50 years of tradition

Supt. Scot Gheen and Principal Travis Abbott are pictured with the
1967 SEOAL Championship trophy.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

State Rep. Jay Edwards is pictured with 1967 Head Coach Charles Chancey and Assistant Coach John Bentley as he presents a
commendation from the Ohio House of Representatives.

Charles Chancey, the long-time coach of the Meigs football team Coach Mike Bartrum stands with members of the 1967 team during
the coin toss on Friday evening.
flips a 1967 half dollar for Friday evening’s coin toss.

Energy
From page 4

Would her advice alone have made
such a profound impact on my life
without the energy treatments? Per-

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

64°

75°

71°

A shower or thunderstorm today. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 79° / Low 62°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

1.03
2.98
3.41
32.62
29.92

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:55 a.m.
8:03 p.m.
2:36 p.m.
12:18 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Aug 29

Full

Sep 6

Last

New

Sep 13 Sep 20

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

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

Major
6:23a
7:08a
7:52a
8:36a
9:19a
10:03a
10:48a

Minor
12:11a
12:56a
1:40a
2:23a
3:07a
3:51a
4:35a

Major
6:46p
7:31p
8:16p
9:00p
9:44p
10:28p
11:12p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
12:35p
1:20p
2:04p
2:48p
3:31p
4:15p
5:00p

WEATHER HISTORY
Record cold invaded New England
on Aug. 29, 1965. Temperatures
dropped to the mid-20s in Vermont.
Over 2.0 inches of snow topped Mt.
Washington, N.H.

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
79/62

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. 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
12.75
15.82
21.52
12.95
13.01
24.93
13.22
26.02
34.77
13.53
15.30
34.10
12.90

Portsmouth
79/63

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.02
-0.13
-0.04
+0.08
-0.01
+0.11
+0.36
+0.62
+0.61
+0.69
+0.50
+0.50
-0.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

SATURDAY

75°
56°

85°
63°

Pleasant with clouds
and sun

Clouds and sun, a
shower in the p.m.

Murray City
76/59
Belpre
79/60

Athens
77/60

82°
64°
Cloudy, chance for
rain

83°
65°
A shower possible;
fog in the morning

Today

St. Marys
79/60

Parkersburg
78/59

Coolville
78/60

Elizabeth
79/60

Spencer
79/61

Buffalo
79/62
Milton
80/62

St. Albans
80/62

Huntington
79/62

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
84/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/58
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
102/75
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
81/63

Ashland
81/63
Grayson
80/63

SUNDAY

Marietta
78/60

Wilkesville
78/60
POMEROY
Jackson
79/61
78/61
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
79/61
79/61
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/63
GALLIPOLIS
79/62
80/61
79/62

South Shore Greenup
80/63
78/62

62

Logan
76/59

McArthur
76/60

Very High

Primary: ragweed/grass/other
Mold: 952

Humid with partial
sunshine

Adelphi
76/60
Chillicothe
76/61

FRIDAY

81°
57°

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

Waverly
77/61

Pollen: 45

Low

MOON PHASES

Partly sunny and
humid

1

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:56 a.m.
8:02 p.m.
3:28 p.m.
12:56 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

81°
64°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

74°
65°
85°
63°
103° in 1948
49° in 1986

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

with a heart who helped me to mend
and substantial happened on Jeanie’s
table the day I had that seizure—some- mine.
thing that can’t be calibrated with a
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County,
gadget of any sort—something I can’t
author of “Rain No Evil” and host of Life Speaks on AIR
explain adequately; yet, something so
radio. Access more at soundcloud.comlifespeaks. She
profound that the very nature of who
will be appearing in Point Pleasant at the Mothman
I am believes that I was indeed healed Festival on Saturday, Sept. 26 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
by the hands of a lightworker, a healer the Mason Jar.

haps the life-coaching component of
Jeanie’s services would have helped,
but I doubt I’d have made such a
remarkable transformation. It would
have been impossible to live an authentic and joyous life under the inﬂuence
of dark forces.
All I know is that something real

Clendenin
81/61
Charleston
79/61

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
81/49
Montreal
76/54

Billings
92/62

Minneapolis
79/62
Chicago
77/61

Denver
92/60

Toronto
73/57
Detroit
73/60

New York
70/61
Washington
71/65

Kansas City
78/59

IRMA
Atlanta
86/70
El Paso
88/65

HARVEY

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
87/64/t
88/62/t
60/52/r 60/50/c
86/70/pc 77/69/sh
72/64/r 77/67/pc
69/60/r 79/63/pc
92/62/pc 94/67/s
101/70/s 95/63/pc
67/59/pc
69/58/r
79/61/c 81/62/pc
77/63/c 84/69/pc
87/55/pc 86/56/pc
77/61/sh 80/63/pc
77/62/t 80/63/pc
76/60/t 79/62/pc
76/62/t 81/62/pc
86/71/pc 85/70/c
92/60/s 91/60/pc
80/60/pc 84/61/s
73/60/r 79/61/pc
88/75/pc 88/75/s
77/73/r
79/71/r
79/62/t 82/64/pc
78/59/s 82/60/s
108/84/s 107/85/pc
84/69/c 78/70/c
102/75/s 100/75/s
82/67/t 83/67/pc
93/79/pc 91/80/sh
79/62/s
81/57/t
85/69/pc 84/69/c
83/75/r
85/76/r
70/61/c 77/66/pc
83/60/s 84/63/s
88/74/t
93/75/t
70/62/r 80/65/pc
109/86/s 109/86/s
74/58/c 78/61/pc
70/53/pc 71/52/c
73/62/r 84/69/pc
71/63/r 79/65/pc
81/64/pc 84/67/pc
98/70/s
94/71/t
71/58/s 71/56/s
84/58/s 75/58/pc
71/65/r 79/67/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

112° in Thermal, CA
32° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global

Houston
77/73

Chihuahua
83/55
Monterrey
94/66

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 118° in Hafr Al-Batin, Saudi Arabia
Low -9° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
93/79

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

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Current Meigs Coach Mike Bartrum shakes hands with members of
the 1967 Meigs football team.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

�s�$?/=.+CM��?1?=&gt;� �M� ���

Red Devils down White Falcons
By Paul Boggs

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

+?6��911=�n��&amp; �#:9&lt;&gt;=

Wahama’s Christian Thomas (34) carries the ball as quarterback Bryton
Grate (3) gives him a block during the White Falcons’ football game against
Ravenswood on Friday night at Wahama High School’s Bachtel Stadium.

MASON, W. Va. — Jayden
Rhodes got the Ravenswood
Red Devils running…and eventually rolling.
Taking advantage of the
smaller Wahama White Falcons, Rhodes racked up 158
yards and a hat trick of touchdowns on 21 carries — and the
visiting Red Devils defeated
the White Falcons 27-12 in the
2017 football season opener
on Friday night inside Bachtel
Stadium in Mason.
Ravenswood dominated the
second half by outscoring the
White Falcons 20-6 — with
Wahama’s touchdown by Brady
Bumgarner coming with only

12 seconds remaining.
Rhodes, a six-foot, one-inch
204-pound senior, ran right
at Wahama — with the Red
Devils doing their job along the
offensive line.
All three of his touchdowns
came in a span of 18 minutes
and ﬁve seconds in the second
half, and went for 41, 17 and
28 yards.
Ravenswood, which rushed
for 177 yards on 40 attempts
—and part of 219 total yards
—amassed 161 of those on 25
totes in the second half, compared to only 16 yards on 15
tries in the ﬁrst.
Wahama, on the other hand,
struggled offensively — punting four times including a pair
of three-and-out possessions in

the second half.
The White Falcons fumbled
ﬁve times and lost two of them,
including at the Red Devil
12-yard line with just 4:10 to
play prior to halftime.
The other occurred right at
midﬁeld — and after Ravenswood went up 14-6 almost
midway through the third
quarter.
The loss snapped Wahama’s
two-game winning streak
against the Jackson Countians.
“I thought our kids played
pretty well and hard as long
as they could tonight. I was
really concerned in watching
ﬁlm and scouting Ravenswood
that they would do what they
See DEVILS | 7

Southern
stomps Titans
in opener, 41-6
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio — After having to
wait an extra day to start the season, it’s safe
to say that the Tornadoes were excited to get
things going.
The Southern football team scored 41 points
less than 20 minutes into its 2017 opener, on
Saturday in Scioto County, as the Tornadoes
cruised to a 41-6 victory over non-conference
host Notre Dame.
In the first 12 minutes of play, the Tornadoes (1-0) forced two turnovers and scored
four rushing touchdowns, two apiece by
seniors Riley Roush and Dylan Smith.
Roush added two more rushing touchdowns
by the 5:31 mark of the of the second quarter,
giving the guests a 41-0 lead. During the first
18:29, Southern held the Titans (0-1) to just
30 yards of offense.
With a continually running clock in the second half, Notre Dame’s Ben Mader ran for a
touchdown in the third quarter, for the only
second-half points in of Southern’s 41-6 victory.
With only two passes thrown in the game —
an incompletion by each team — the Purple
and Gold claimed a 316-to-127 in rushing
yards.
Roush led the Tornadoes with 195 yards and
four touchdowns, on 10 carries. Smith carried
the ball six times for a total of 33 yards and
two scores, while Weston Thorla added 36
yards on four carries in the win.
Mader ran 10 times for 61 yards and one
score, while Logan Emnett covered 57 yards
on eight carries in the setback.
Southern has now defeated Notre Dame
in six consecutive meetings. This is the fifth
straight year that the Purple and Gold will
take a 1-0 record into Week 2.
The Tornadoes will have their home opener
on Friday, as they welcome Frontier. The Cougars dropped a 51-6 decision to Shenandoah,
on Friday in New Matamoras.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Aug. 29
Volleyball
Pike Christian at
OVCS, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at Gallia
Academy, 6:30 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander,
7 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at
River Valley, 7 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at
Gallia Academy, 7
p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at
Lincoln County, 6
p.m.
Boys Golf
Cabell-Midland at
Gallia Academy, 4
p.m.
Wahama, Belpre,
Eastern, Southern

at South Gallia, 4:30
p.m.
Spring Valley at
Point Pleasant, 4:30
p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 30
Boys Golf
TVC-Ohio match at
Forest Hills, 4:30 p.m.
Wahama, Eastern,
Southern, Federal
Hocking at Belpre,
4:30 pm.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at
Nitro, 5:30 p.m.
Volleyball
Wahama at Hannan,
6 p.m.
Meigs at Federal
Hocking, 7 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at
Southern, 7 p.m.

29&gt;9=�,C� +?6��911=�n��&amp; �#:9&lt;&gt;=

Southern’s Larry Dunn, Eastern’s Owen Arix (left) and Eastern’s Colton Reynolds (right) compete in the boys high school race as part of
Saturday’s annual Wellston Cross Country Invitational at Wellston High School.

Meigs County CC teams compete at Wellston
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

WELLSTON, Ohio —
Getting a good look at
the start —and even the
ﬁnish.
Five cross country
teams from the Ohio Valley Publishing area, all
of which are members of
the Tri-Valley Conference,
competed on Saturday
morning in the annual
Wellston Golden Rocket
Invitational —held on the
campus of Wellston High
School.
The River Valley Raiders, Eastern Eagles,
Meigs Marauders, Southern Tornadoes and South
Gallia Rebels all got an
early run on the Wellston
cross country course —
for that is the site of this
season’s TVC championship meet.
Leading the way were
the River Valley boys
and Eastern girls, which
placed third and fourth
respectively in the team
standings.
For the girls, the Lady
Eagles amounted 102
points for fourth —
trailing only champion
Athens (39), runner-up
Teays Valley (54) and
third-place Vinton County
(88).
River Valley ﬁnished
sixth with 185 points,
trailing Warren by 55
points (130) for ﬁfth.
Meigs (259) and Southern (272) were ninth and
10th respectively, as Jackson (217) was seventh
and North Adams (258)
eighth.
Rounding out the team
scores were Huntington
(283), Portsmouth Clay

(293), Symmes Valley
(408) and Southeastern
(416).
The Lady Eagles
enjoyed taking two top-10
spots, along with three in
the top 23, six in the top
42, and all seven of their
counting scores in the
top half of the 143-runner
ﬁeld.
Eastern senior Jessica
Cook, who qualiﬁed individually for the Division
III state meet last season,
ﬁnished ﬁfth overall with
a time of 20 minutes and
57 seconds.
The Eagles’ Ally Durst
took 10th in 21:21, while
Rhiannon Morris was
23rd in 22:32.
Kaitlyn Hawk (38th in
23:46), Whitney Durst
(39th in 23:51) and Lexa
Hayes (42nd in 24:16)
were within 30 seconds of
each other, while Hannah
Hill had Eastern’s ﬁnal
counting score in 67thplace in 25:54.
River Valley was paced
by senior Kenzie Baker,
who crossed 14th overall
in 21 minutes and 40
seconds.
Hannah Culpepper, a
freshman, placed 35th
in 23:38 — as Akari
Michimukai, a foreignexchange student from
Japan, made it across the
line in 53rd in 24:54.
The remaining Lady
Raider scorers included
Josie Jones (56th in
25:11), Julia Nutter (80th
in 27:46), Lexi Stout
(104th in 30:36) and
Connie Stewart (105th in
30:53).
For Meigs, Taylor
Swartz (55th in 25:06)
and Caitlyn Rest (57th in
25:14) were ﬁrst across,

Meigs’ Taylor Swartz and Southern’s Madison Lisle compete in the
girls high school race as part of Saturday’s annual Wellston Cross
Country Invitational at Wellston High School.

followed by Madison Cremeans (68th in 25:56),
Carmen Doherty (78th in
27:35), Ariann Sizemore
(91st in 28:34), Kacie
Ballard (93rd in 28:41)
and Katilyn Brinker
(113th in 31:30).
Southern sophomore
Sydney Roush paced the
Lady Tornadoes, crossing
in 22 minutes and 28 seconds to place 22nd.
Four other Tornadoes
competed —Mallory
Johnson (58th in 25:15),
Madison Lisle (87th in
28:16), Kathryn Matson
(99nd in 29:36) and
Addie Matson (118th in
32:15) — while South
Gallia did not have any
runners take part.
Athens senior Rebekah
Shoup captured the individual championship,
completing the 5K course

in 20 minutes and two
seconds.
For the boys, River Valley and Meigs ﬁelded full
squads —with the Raiders placing third with 99
points, and trailing only
champion Teays Valley
(41) and runner-up Athens (67).
The Marauders placed
10th with 270 points, as
there were also 14 total
boys clubs which scored.
Eastern, Southern and
South Gallia sported two
runners apiece.
River Valley senior
Nathaniel Abbott, a Division II regional meet
qualiﬁer from a year ago,
led the Raiders by ﬁnishing ﬁfth in 17 minutes
and 31 seconds.
The Raiders had four
See MEIGS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

MLB
National League
East Division
W L
Washington
78 51
Miami
66 63
Atlanta
57 71
New York
57 73
Philadelphia
48 81
Central Division
W L
Chicago
69 60
Milwaukee
68 63
St. Louis
65 65
Pittsburgh
63 68
Cincinnati
55 76
West Division
W L
Los Angeles
91 38
Arizona
73 58
Colorado
71 59
San Diego
57 73
San Francisco
52 80
___
Sunday’s Games
Miami 6, San Diego 2
Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 2

Pct GB
.605 —
.512 12
.445 20½
.438 21½
.372 30
Pct GB
.535 —
.519 2
.500 4½
.481
7
.420 15
Pct GB
.705 —
.557 19
.546 20½
.438 34½
.394 40½

Colorado 3, Atlanta 0
N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 5, 1st game
Philadelphia 6, Chicago Cubs 3
Tampa Bay 3, St. Louis 2, 10 innings
Arizona 11, San Francisco 0
Milwaukee 3, L.A. Dodgers 2
Washington 5, N.Y. Mets 4, 2nd game
American League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Boston
73 57 .562 —
New York
70 59 .543 2½
Baltimore
65 65 .500 8
Tampa Bay
65 67 .492 9
Toronto
61 69 .469 12
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Cleveland
73 56 .566 —
Minnesota
67 63 .515 6½
Kansas City
64 65 .496 9
Detroit
56 73 .434 17
Chicago
52 77 .403 21
West Division
W L Pct GB
Houston
79 51 .608 —
Seattle
66 65 .504 13½

Meigs

Meigs junior Cole Betzing paced the Marauders,
placing 16th in 18:27.
The other Marauder
From page 6
scorers were Brad Logan
scorers inside the top 35, (70th in 20:47), Landon
Davis (79th in 21:04),
and all seven within the
Colton Heater (105th
top 60.
George Rickett (20th in in 22:21), Tucker Smith
18:39) and Rory Twyman (114th in 22:56), Joseph
Cotterill (120th in 23:19)
(22nd in 18:44) crossed
and Christian Jones
within ﬁve seconds of
(130th in 24:04).
each other, followed
Eastern’s only runners
shortly thereafter by Aus—Owen Arix and Colton
tin Livingston (34th in
Reynolds —ﬁnished back19:19), Kyle Coen (41st
to-back in 10th and 11th
in 19:37), Caleb McKnight (54th in 20:12) and in 18:04, while Southern’s
senior tandem —Conner
Cole Franklin (59th in
Wolfe (18:54) and Larry
20:16).

Devils
From page 6

did in the second half,”
said ﬁfth-year Wahama
head coach Dave Barr.
“They lined up with a
heavy offensive set and
they are considerably bigger than we are. We knew
that would be a problem
for us if they got us tired.
We’re still pretty light
defensively. They came
right at us.”
In the second half, the
Red Devils did, as Rhodes
rushed for 126 yards on
13 carries in the ﬁnal 24
minutes.
In fact, Ravenswood
quarterback Stephen
Dawson only attempted
two passes in that span
—neither of which were
part of the ﬁrst two
touchdown marches.
Wahama opened the
third quarter by going
three-and-out, and Ravenswood dialed up a ﬁveplay, 52-yard drive that
featured Rhodes covering
the ﬁnal 41 yards on
an isolation play up the
middle.
Ryan Cunningham,
who kicked three extra
points, made his second
PAT try at the 8:39 mark
to make it 14-6.
Following the White
Falcons’ fumble on a
counter call, the Red
Devils drove again —
this time running seven
plays and 47 yards, with
Rhodes running in for the
ﬁnal 17 at the 3:22 point.
Cunningham kicked
his third extra point, as
Rhodes reached the end
zone for the ﬁnal time
over 13 minutes later and
from 28 yards away.
“We were in the situation we thought we need-

ed to be in. We scored
right before halftime,
and for years we have
deferred (on coin toss)
here and tried to have the
ball to open the second
half. I felt pretty good
if we could get a drive
going then we would be
in good position. But we
struggled offensively in
the second half, and once
they got rolling with that
running game, it’s like
being in quicksand,” said
Barr. “We couldn’t quite
get the ﬁeld tipped over
to our advantage either.”
The White Falcons ran
just a dozen plays in the
entire third quarter, and
rushed for only 30 yards
on 17 carries in the entire
second half.
Part of the problem
was Wahama’s inability to
hang on to the football, as
they fumbled four times
in the ﬁnal two periods.
“It’s tough trying to get
things rolling when you
mishandle the ball. We’ve
worked hard to be better
at that, and we will work
hard again this week to
improve on that part our
game,” said Barr.
Trailing 7-0 at the 5:14
mark of the second stanza, Wahama recovered
Ravenswood’s only turnover at the Red Devil 22.
But the White Falcons,
on a fumbled snap, gave
the ball right back at the
12.
Wahama, however, got
its much-needed score
right before halftime —
when it drove 40 yards in
seven plays.
Bryton Grate, the
senior quarterback,
connected with Coltyn
Hendrick for a 21-yard
touchdown strike with
1:24 to go.
Grate completed half
of his 16 passes for 134

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Los Angeles
Texas
Oakland

66 65 .504 13½
64 66 .492 15
58 72 .446 21

___
Sunday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 10, Seattle 1
Minnesota 7, Toronto 2
Cleveland 12, Kansas City 0
Baltimore 2, Boston 1
Chicago White Sox 7, Detroit 1
Tampa Bay 3, St. Louis 2, 10 innings
Houston 7, L.A. Angels 5
Oakland 8, Texas 3
MLB Calendar
Sept. 1 — Active rosters expand to
40 players.
November TBA — Deadline for teams
to make qualifying offers to their eligible
former players who became free agents,
fifth day after World Series.
November TBA — Deadline for free
agents to accept qualifying offers, 15th
day after World Series.
Dec. 10-14 — Winter meetings, Lake
Buena Vista, Fla.

Dunn (18:58) — crossed
back-to-back in 26th and
27th.
The Rebels’ only individuals were freshmen
Garrett Frazee (40th in
19:36) and Grifﬁn Davis
(141st in 24:50).
There were 181 runners in the boys high
school race, which was
swept by the Athens duo
of Peter Buckley (1st in
16:37) and Tony Tonkovich (2nd in 16:46).
A complete list of
results can be found on
www.baumspage.com.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

yards, as the White Falcons ﬁnished with 117
yards (37 carries) on
the ground — including
Christian Thomas with
39 yards on 14 carries.
Grate added eight rushing attempts for 36 yards,
as Colton Arrington
made four receptions for
87 yards.
Both clubs ran off 53
plays from scrimmage, as
Ravenswood overcame 10
penalties for 75 yards.
Two of those were false
starts on its opening
drive, as Luke Jackson
returned the opening
kickoff 47 yards for the
Red Devils to the Wahama 23.
Rhodes rushed for 13
and Dawson slipped a
pass to him for another
12, setting up Jake
Greene going over from
two yards out just six
minutes into the contest.
From there, and
before the Red Devils’
turnover, the two teams
traded punts prior to an
exchange of turnovers on
downs.
Barr praised his squad’s
ﬁght, and said the outcome “is what it is”, but
one which can be learned
from.
Wahama will host
Waterford on Friday for
the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division opener,
as the Wildcats —the
defending division champions — clawed past
Miller 35-25 in week one.
“It’s a loss, but there
are a lot of things I can
take out of this game
with our team and build
on,” he said. “I’m looking
forward to playing again
here next week with
Waterford coming in.”
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Tuesday, August 29, 2017 7

Start up: Browns rookie QB
Kizer named team’s starter
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Cleveland’s roll call
of starting quarterbacks since 1999 has a
new entry.
Introducing No. 27,
rookie DeShone Kizer.
The Steelers are waiting for you.
Kizer will start the
Browns’ season opener
on Sept. 11 against
Pittsburgh after showing coach Hue Jackson
what he wanted to see
during an exhibition
start on Saturday night
at Tampa Bay.
“DeShone is our
starting quarterback,”
Jackson said Sunday
during a conference
call, ﬁnally ending
months of speculation,
twists and turns. “He
has earned the right to
play through his preparation. He has established a work ethic that
I think has earned the
respect of his teammates.
“I think it will forward him the ability to
run the offense as we
move forward, which

hopefully will lead to
success.”
Hopefully, is right.
Kizer joins a long
list of Browns starting
quarterbacks, 27 to be
exact, who have started
for the club since its
expansion rebirth in
‘99. The second-round
pick will be the ﬁrst
rookie to start the
opener since Brandon
Weeden in 2012, and
he’ll be the ﬁfth different opening-week starter in ﬁve seasons, following Weeden, Brian
Hoyer, Josh McCown
and Robert Grifﬁn III.
After Kizer came
off the bench in Cleveland’s ﬁrst two preseason games, Jackson
gave him the start
against the Buccaneers.
Kizer played the entire
ﬁrst half, completing
just 6 of 18 passes for
93 yards and an interception.
His statistics weren’t
great, but the former
Notre Dame starter
showed Jackson enough
to keep him head of

Brock Osweiler and
Cody Kessler on the
depth chart.
“It has been good
to watch his development throughout the
offseason,” Jackson
said. “Obviously, he is
a young quarterback
and he still has a lot to
learn. He is going to
learn a lot and gain a
lot of experience, and
the only way you get
that is by playing. We
are all excited about
that.”
The Browns have
been cycling thorough
quarterbacks at an
alarming rate, and their
inability to ﬁnd the
right one has resulted
in years of ineptitude.
Cleveland started
Grifﬁn, Kessler and
Josh McCown on the
way to a 1-15 ﬁnish last
season.
Jackson expects
Kizer to take his lumps,
and he made it clear
he’s willing to stick
with the 21-year-old
through the inevitable
highs and lows.

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Bengals LB Burfict suspended 5 games for egregious hit
CINCINNATI (AP)
— Linebacker Vontaze
Burﬁct missed the ﬁrst
three games last season
because of his hit to
Antonio Brown’s head in
the playoffs. He’ll miss
the ﬁrst ﬁve this season
thanks to another rattling hit, this time during
a preseason game.
The NFL has suspended the Cincinnati
Bengals’ defensive leader
for leveling a Chiefs running back in violation of
its player safety rules,
the latest in Burﬁct’s
history of egregious hits

that have drawn ﬁnes
and suspensions.
Burﬁct hit running
back Anthony Sherman
in the chest this month
during a pass play in
which he was not the
intended receiver, knocking him to the ground.
The NFL has been cracking down on such hits as
part of its emphasis on
player safety.
Burﬁct was suspended
for his hit to Antonio
Brown’s head on an
incomplete pass during a ﬁrst-round playoff
game in the 2015 season.

The resulting personal
foul moved the Steelers
into ﬁeld goal range in
the closing seconds for
an 18-16 victory at Paul
Brown Stadium.
The Bengals were off
on Monday after returning from a preseason
game in Washington.
They released a statement defending Burﬁct
in the face of his latest
punishment.
“The ﬁlm shows that
the hit was legal, that
Vontaze engaged his
opponent from the front,
and that contact was

Notices

Wanted

Houses For Rent

NOTICE OF
LIEN SALE

Peoples Federal Credit Union
Fulltime teller position
Excellent benefits available
Bring resume to:
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Phone 304-675-4441
EOE:M/D/F/V

Farmhouse 3-BR w/acreage,
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NO SMOKING, References
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Help Wanted General

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

60732998

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Interested applicants
for filling the vacancy of
Senate District 4
must submit a resume to
Drew at drew@wvgop.org,
or by fax at 304-768-6083
by 5pm on Tuesday, August
29th, 2017. Interviews will be
conducted on Thursday,
August 31st, 2017 at 3101
State Route 34 in Winfield,
WV. Must be a legally
qualified Republican
to fill the vacancy.
For questions,
please call 304-768-0493.

Wanted
Help Wanted all Positions
needing cooks, waitresses,
and housekeeping.
Please apply in person
no phone calls.
Full time and Part time
availabilities.
Quality Inn
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Crew Leaders
(Janitorial and
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and Van Drivers needed
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Meigs Industries, 1310
Carleton Street
P.O. Box 307,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
Apartments/Townhouses
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
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Sect. 8 Vouchers Accepted
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For Info call: 304-674-0023
Rentals
3BR, upstairs Apt, in Pt Pl, w/
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“unnecessary roughness”
against a player who isn’t
involved in a play. Sherman was coming out of
the backﬁeld but had his
back to the quarterback
and wasn’t the intended
receiver when Burﬁct
leveled him — the pass
went down the ﬁeld.
Burﬁct could have easily avoided the hit, which
knocked Sherman to the
ground. The running
back was slow to get up
but stayed in the game.
The Bengals will open
the season with Burﬁct
and cornerback Adam

“Pacman” Jones suspended. The league suspended Jones one game
for his latest arrest and
misdemeanor conviction
in the offseason.
Burﬁct and Jones were
behind one of the greatest meltdowns in playoff
history. Burﬁct’s hit on
Brown moved the Steelers into ﬁeld goal range,
and Jones bumped an
ofﬁcial during the ensuing on-ﬁeld disagreement, drawing another
penalty that turned it
into a 26-yard kick with
14 seconds left.

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Automotive

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Home of the Car Fairy

60728379

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The sale will be held
at 336 N. 2nd Avenue,
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September 9th, 2017
@ 10am
#37-Jenny Jasielumaddress unknown
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Ohio

shoulder-to-chest,” the
statement said.
A player doesn’t have
to draw a penalty to be
ﬁned or suspended by
the league, which has
cracked down on dangerous hits as part of its
effort to protect defenseless players. NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy
pointed out in an email
to The Associated Press
that the league’s rulebook bans “unnecessary
contact” against players
who aren’t in position to
defend themselves.
Also, the rules prohibit

Amy Carter
Product Specialist

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Fax: 740-286-5728
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XXX�NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN

Help Wanted General
WANTED: Buckeye Community Services is opening a new
home In the Bidwell Area and needs full-time and part-time
workers to assist an individual with developmental disabilities.
Evening, weekend and overnight shifts available. High school
degree/GEO, valid driver's license and three years good driving
experience required. $10.25/hr after training. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box 604, Jackson; OH
45640; or email: beyecserv@bcs77.org.
Deadline for applicants: 8/30/17. Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Advertise Your Garage Sale
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Gallipolis Daily Tribune
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mydailytribune.com
mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com
740-446-2342
304-675-1333
740-992-2155
60652848

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, August 29, 2017 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

"Y $AVE 'REEN

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�10 Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Daily Sentinel

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308 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH 45769

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60732647

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