<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12335" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/12335?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-15T20:01:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43307">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/6259ddf40ab295f137f3836ba40dc7ca.pdf</src>
      <authentication>918dcbb762938bc463ba85fe869c52fe</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38728">
                  <text>Blue Devils
third at
tourney

Meigs Guide
coming
soon

SPORTS s 5

NEWS s 7

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

35°

35°

32°

4VZ[S`�JSV\K`�[VKH`�^P[O�H�Å�\YY`��(�IP[�VM�
ZUV^�[VUPNO[��High 40° / Low 23°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 8

C_ZZb[fehj��Fec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 18, Volume 75

Wednesday, January 27, 2021 s 50¢

Gallia tops 2K total COVID cases

Latest case data in Gallia, Mason and Meigs
Staff Report

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Meigs County Health Department recently conducted a drive-through
COVID-19 vaccine clinic at the Meigs County Fairgrounds for those age 80 and
older.

OHIO VALLEY — Gallia
County topped 2,000 total
COVID-19 cases on Tuesday,
with three new cases bringing the county’s total to 2,001
since its ﬁrst conﬁrmed case
was reported in March 2020.
Of those, 197 are presumed
active by the Ohio Department
of Health.
The West Virginia Department of Health and Human
Resources (DHHR) reported

11 additional cases of COVID19 in Mason County on Tuesday.
A total of ﬁve new cases
(four conﬁrmed, one probable)
were reported by the Meigs
County Health Department on
Tuesday.
Here’s a closer look at coronavirus cases across our area:
Gallia County
ODH reported a total of
2,001 cases of COVID-19
(since March) in Gallia County

as part of Tuesday’s updates.
This is an increase of three
since Monday’s update.
ODH has reported a total
of 26 deaths, 111 hospitalizations, and 1,779 presumed
recovered individuals (15 new)
as of Tuesday.
Age ranges for the 2,001
total cases reported by ODH
on Tuesday are as follows:
0-19 — 264 cases (1 hospitalization)
See COVID | 7

Rio hosts human
trafficking
awareness series
Staff Report

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande Community College is
partnering with area organizations to bring awareness and education about human trafﬁcking.
Rio in conjunction with Eyes Up Appalachia
and The Gallia County Citizens for Prevention &amp;
Recovery (CPR), will host three virtual seminars
held the last Friday of January, February, and
March.
According to a news release from Rio, “Seriously? That’s Human Trafﬁcking?” starts the series
off at 1 p.m. on Jan 29. Stephanie Rollins a 21-year
survivor of human trafﬁcking and advocate as a
peer support specialist who mentors survivors on
their road to recovery is the featured speaker.
“It is so important that institutions of higher
education are aware of what human trafﬁcking
looks like and how it can impact their students,”
Eyes Up Appalachia Founder Christi Scott Bartman said. “It is only through the involvement of
See RIO | 2

Ohio plans 1st shot for
all school employees
in February
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Some school
employees will begin receiving the ﬁrst dose of the
coronavirus vaccine this month as Ohio continues
its goal of returning all children to in-person learning by March 1, Gov. Mike DeWine announced
Tuesday.
Employees at Cincinnati city schools will be
the initial recipients this week and those at other
districts next week, though the state doesn’t have
enough doses on hand for all districts to begin
receiving vaccinations this month, the governor
said.
“Ohio’s ultimate plan is that anyone who works
in a school in Ohio will have the opportunity to
get their ﬁrst shot in the month of February,”
DeWine said.
See OHIO | 2

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 145-966)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Tuesday through Saturday.
Subscription rate is $208 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
All content © 2021 The Daily Sentinel, an edition
of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. All rights reserved.
No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any form without
permission from the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

Senate Television via AP

In this image from video, House impeachment managers arrive in the Senate chamber as they transmit the article of impeachment
alleging incitement of insurrection against former President Donald Trump, in Washington on Monday. Lead impeachment manager Rep.
Jamie Raskin, D-Md., read the article of impeachment to the senators.

GOP largely votes against trial
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Senate Republicans
voted overwhelmingly
Tuesday against moving
forward with Donald
Trump’s historic second
impeachment trial, making clear a conviction of
the former president for
“incitement of insurrection” is unlikely.
In a 55-45 procedural
vote, the Senate set
aside an objection from
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul
that would have declared
the impeachment proceedings unconstitutional. That means the trial
on Trump’s impeachment, the ﬁrst ever of a
former president, will
begin as scheduled the
week of Feb. 8. The
House impeached him

two weeks ago for inciting deadly riots in the
Capitol on Jan. 6 when
he told his supporters to
“ﬁght like hell” to overturn his election defeat.
Yet the support of 45
Republicans for declaring
the trial invalid indicates
that there are long odds
for Trump’s conviction,
which would require the
support of all Democrats
and 17 Republicans, or
two-thirds of the Senate.
While most Republicans
criticized Trump shortly
after the attack, many
of them have rushed to
defend him in the trial,
showing the former president’s enduring sway
over the GOP.
“If more than 34
Republicans vote against

the constitutionality
of the proceeding, the
whole thing’s dead on
arrival,” Paul said shortly
before the vote.” Paul
said Democrats “probably should rest their
case and present no case
at all.”
The senators took
oaths Tuesday to ensure
“impartial justice” as
jurors in the trial, proceedings that will test
Republican loyalty to the
former president for the
ﬁrst time after the deadly
siege at the U.S. Capitol.
Many Republican senators, including Paul, have
challenged the legitimacy
of the trial and questioned whether Trump’s
repeated demands to
overturn Joe Biden’s

election really constitute
“incitement of insurrection.”
So what seemed for
some Democrats like an
open-and-shut case that
played out for the world
on live television is running into a Republican
Party that feels very different. Not only are there
legal concerns, but senators are wary of crossing
the former president and
his legions of followers.
Security remains tight at
the Capitol.
On Monday, the
nine House Democrats
prosecuting the case
against Trump carried
the sole impeachment
charge of “incitement of
See GOP | 2

Commissioners hold weekly meeting
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners approved numerous items during their
regular weekly meeting.
A contract was
approved with the Monroe County Jail for the
housing of prisoners at
the jail facility. The cost
at the facility is $65 per
prisoner, per day.
The commissioners
approved the purchase/
set up of Courtview for

the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce. The matter
was tabled from the Jan.
7 meeting at which time
two options were presented for the implementation of the system. The
matter was tabled to consult with the judges and
clerk of courts to determine the best option for
the sheriff’s ofﬁce access.
Courtview is utilized by
the courts and will allow
for the deputies to access
court documents when
needed.
In other business, the

commissioners,
Authorized Clerk
Tonya Edwards to post
a public notice in the
newspaper regarding a
CHIP program hearing.
Approved sending a
letter to Ohio Speaker of
the House Cupp regarding the appointment of
a non-voting member
to serve on the Meigs
County Transportation
Improvement District’s
Board of Trustees as
required by the Ohio
Revised Code.
Approved payment of

bills in the amount of
$129,993.74 from county general and a total of
$324,688.69.
Approved a transfer of
$15,000 to the Furtherance of Justice fund for
the Meigs County Prosecutor.
Approved a partial
payment of $10,000 for
the sheriff’s ofﬁce Furtherance of Justice fund
to be used for the last
vehicle payment for the
cruisers.
See MEETING | 8

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, January 27, 2021

OBITUARIES

PATRICK MUNDELL, JR.

dell and sister, Margaret
THURMAN — PatMickey.
rick Mundell, Jr., 81,
Funeral service will
Thurman, Ohio passed
be held 11 a.m., Friday,
Johnson of Crown away Monday, January
PATRIOT —
January 29, 2021 at the
25, 2021 at Abbyshire
City, Ohio, Fern
Clarence Wilson
McCoy-Moore Funeral
Place, Bidwell, Ohio.
Mooney of Gal“Bill” Waugh, 86,
Home, Vinton Chapel.
He was born in Bidwell,
lipolis, Karen
of Patriot, Ohio,
February 23, 1939 to the Burial will follow in Pine
(Dean) Brownell
formerly of WarHill Cemetery, Bidwell.
late Patrick and Frances
of Gallipolis,
ren, Ohio, passed
Family and friends may
Anderson Mundell, Sr.
Connie (Billy)
away on Monday,
Johnson of Crown He retired from GDC fol- call at the funeral home
January 25, 2021
on Thursday from 5 to 7
lowing twenty-ﬁve years
City, and Merrill Richat Arbors of Gallipolis,
p.m.
employment. He was a
ard (Della) Waugh of
Ohio.
Online condolences can
Crown City; and several member of Union Baptist
Born on April 25,
Church, Blackfork, Ohio. be sent to www.mccoynieces and nephews.
1934 in Gallia County,
moore.com
Those left behind to
In addition to his parOhio, Bill was the son of
McCoy-Moore Funeral
cherish his memory are
the late Amel “Cooney” ents and wife, Bill was
Home is honored to serve
his wife, Mary Darnell,
and Lyla Beaver Waugh. preceded in death by a
the Mundell Family.
Thurman, his children:
granddaughter, Kristen
In 1974, Bill married
PLEASE NOTE: To
Swigle and siblings, Inez Jeff Mundell, Raford,
Mary Lou Phillips
respect the safety of the
North Carolina, Steve
McGuire, Mary Lou
Waugh, who preceded
family and in accordance
him in death on June 26, Curry, John Lee Waugh, Mundell, and Ernest
William Eugene Waugh, Mundell, both of Bidwell, with CDC regulations
2017. Bill was a retired
seven grandchildren, two and current COVID-19
telephone lineman and a Amel Waugh, and Harpandemic protocol, face
great-grandchildren and
lan Bub Waugh.
car enthusiast.
coverings are required,
The funeral service for several nieces, nephews
Bill is survived by
and social distancing is
Bill will be held at 6 p.m. and extended family
two daughters, Dreama
requested at the gravemembers.
(Keith) Marcum of Vin- on Friday, January 29,
side. We respectfully ask
In addition to his
2021 at Willis Funeral
ton, Ohio and Bonita
that visitors not linger
parents Patrick was preHome with Pastor Eric
(Kenneth) Fleming of
Biars ofﬁciating. Friends ceded in death by his wife after the services. We and
Point Pleasant, West
the family thank you for
may call prior to the ser- Ernestine Borden MunVirginia; sons, Terry
this consideration.
vice from 4:30-6 p.m. at dell, brother, John MunWaugh of Point Pleasthe funeral home. Those
ant, Timothy (Joan)
DOROTHY L. GERMAN
Waugh of Patriot, Roger in attendance are asked
to follow the CDC guideWaugh of Patriot, and
Racine, Ohio; and many
NEWARK — Dorothy
lines of social distancing
Chris (Crystal) Waugh
nieces and nephews.
L. German, 77, of Newof Patriot; step children, and are required to folDorothy was preceded
ark,
Ohio,
passed
away
low
the
Ohio
mandate
Debbie Pugh of Jackson,
Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021, at by her parents; daughter,
of wearing face masks.
Tennessee, George R.
Lynch, Jr. of Bristolville, Burial will be in Champi- Licking Memorial Hospi- Lisa Lenore German;
brothers, Junior Lowell
tal, ER, Newark, Ohio.
Ohio and Mark A. Lynch on Township Cemetery
Bobb, Robert Leonard
She was born Oct. 28,
in Warren.
of Bristolville; twelve
Dugan, Harold Eugene
1943, at Canton, Ohio,
Please visit www.wilgrandchildren; several
Dugan, Lloyd Edward
to the late Joseph Perry
lisfuneralhome.com to
great grandchildren;
Dugan, Larry Joseph
siblings, Beatrice “Bea” send e-mail condolences. and Grace Lenore BeekDugan, Darrell Lee
man Dugan. Dorothy
Dugan, and Richard Paul
retired as classroom aid
Dugan; sisters, Sandra
for Multiple Handicap
HARVEY PRICE
Sue Little and Shirley
Class from The Citadel,
was a member of Brushy Alice Priddy.
of Patriot, Ohio,
APPLE
Services are Saturday,
Mackenzie (Jacob) Fork United Methodist
GROVE, W.Va. —
Jan. 30, 2021, at 12 p.m.
Church, Newark, Ohio.
Bing of Bidwell,
Harvey Price, 76,
at Birchﬁeld Funeral
Dorothy is survived
Ohio, Makayla
of Apple Grove,
Home Rutland, Ohio with
by
her
three
sons,
Bob
Price
of
Gallipolis,
W.Va., passed
Minister Eric Miller ofﬁAbbie Price of Gal- (Mary) German, Tim
away Monday,
ciating. Burial to follow at
lipolis and Zander (Diane) German and
January 25, 2021,
Miles Cemetery, Rutland,
Dan (Tricia) German all
Price of Gallipoat home surOhio. Family to receive
of Newark Ohio; seven
lis. He is also survived
rounded by his family.
friends from 11 a.m. until
grandchildren; eight
by a brother, Marlie
He was born Septemtime of services Saturday.
great grandchildren; her
ber 27, 1944, in Hogsett, (Phyllis) Price of Apple
Due to COVID-19, we
children’s father, Bob
Grove; one sister, Mary
W.Va., a son of the late
ask that everyone wear
German;
three
sisters-in“Sis”
(Jim)
Edmonds
of
John and Cora F. (PersApple Grove; and special law, Bea Dugan, Rutland, a mask to attend. Online
inger) Price.
condolences at birchﬁeldIn addition to his par- friends, Steve and Linda Ohio, Barb Dugan and
funeralhome.com.
Shirley Johnson both of
ents, he was preceded in Critchﬁeld.
A graveside service
death by sisters, Dorothy
BEATRICE LOUISE STOVER
Watson, Betty Simpkins and burial will be 11
a.m. Friday, January 29,
and Sharon Price; and
Stroop of Oak Hill,
GALLIPOLIS
brothers, Charles “Leo”, 2021, at the Addisonniece, Cynthia
— Beatrice Louise
Reynolds Cemetery in
Worthy “Gene”, John
Asher of Piqua,
Stover, age 90 of
Addison, with Pastor
“Willie”, Kenny, and
sister-in-law, Linda
Gallipolis, who
Rick Barcus ofﬁciatDoug Price.
Lear of Bidwell,
was affectionately
Harvey was a member ing. Military graveside
great nieces and
known as “Aunt
honors will be given by
of the Addison Freewill
nephew which
Bea” by everyone,
Baptist Church in Addi- the West Virginia Army
Bea and Freddie
Honor Guard. Social dis- passed away on
son, Ohio. He was a
helped raise, Cecelia Case
graduate of Point Pleas- tancing will be observed Wednesday afternoon
of Wellston, Dakota Case
January 20, 2021 at her
ant High School Class of and face masks are
of Wellston and Joushua
home. Born October 13,
1963, served his country required.
Case of Vermont. Also
1930 in Gallia County,
In lieu of ﬂowers,
in the United States
surviving are brother and
she was the daughter of
memorial contributions
Army and was a retired
business owner of Price may be made in memory the late Ogal Wilson and sister in laws, Charles
Brothers Garage in Point of Harvey to the Addison Hazel Irene Wells Lear. In (Mary) Stover of Bidwell,
Barbara (Douglas) LangFreewill Baptist Church, addition to her parents,
Pleasant.
Bea was preceded by her horne of Gallipolis and
210 Addison Pike, GalHe is survived by his
husband, James Fredrick Ralph Lee Stover of Gallipolis, OH 45631.
wife of 52 years, Gail
“Freddie” Stover, brother, lipolis along with numerArrangements are
June (Allen) Price of
ous great great nieces and
Thomas Wilson “Tom”
under the direction of
Apple Grove; son and
daughter-in-law, Harvey Wilcoxen Funeral Home Lear, sister, Rose Holley, nephews and her many
loving caregivers.
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. and a niece, Carla Case.
Kevin and Tiffany Price
Funeral services were
Bea retired from the
Condolences may be
of Gallipolis, Ohio;
Gallipolis Developmental 1 p.m., Tuesday January
expressed to the family
daughter and son-in26, 2021 at the WaughCenter after many years
and memories may be
law, Jackie and Steve
shared by visiting www. of service. She and Fred- Halley-Wood Funeral
Hornsby of Thurman,
die were members of the Home with Pastor Gene
wilcoxenfuneralhome.
Ohio; grandchildren,
Harmon ofﬁciating.
Grande Square, (square
com
Levi (Megan) Hornsby
dance club), and the Gold Burial followed at Ohio
Wing Riders Association, Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends called at the
Chapter C2. They also
funeral home on Tuesday,
enjoyed camping.
one hour prior to serShe is survived by a
NIBERT
vices.
sister, Virginia Stroop of
An online guest regisCircleville, nephews, CarlPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Jaretta Ann Nibert,
age 85 of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died peacefully at her ton (Charlene) Stroop of try is available at waughCircleville, Michael (Joy) halley-wood.com
home on Monday January 25, 2021, surrounded by
her family.
Services for Jaretta will be private and a full obit
will follow. Crow Hussell Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangements.
CLARENCE WILSON ‘BILL’ WAUGH

Rio

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
All content © 2021 Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel
edition. All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be
reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except as
permitted by U.S. copyright law.

REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

From page 1

this next generation of leaders in these efforts that we
hope to make a lasting impact.”
Shannon Dalton, co-organizer and Community
Programming Coordinator for Gallia Jackson Meigs
ADAMH Board added, “We hope to inspire students,
staff, and faculty to respond, take action and impact
their community. Rio has ‘caring family’ value on campus; I think it is possible to extend that value of care
across our region and statewide in response to human
trafﬁcking.”
The event is hosted via Zoom and will stream on
Rio’s Facebook (URioGrande).
Information provided by the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College.

Ohio Valley Publishing

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

Gallia vaccine registration
The Gallia County Health Department is scheduling COVID-19 vaccine appointments for residents in the following age groups and categories:
80 years and older, 75-plus and those with severe
congenital conditions, 70-plus, 65-plus. To schedule an appointment, call 740-441-2018, 740-4412950, or 740-441-2951. The health department
stresses a scheduled appointment is required to
receive the vaccine.

Financial report available
SUTTON TWP. — Sutton Township, in accordance with ORC Section 117.38, has just completed the ﬁlling of the annual ﬁnancial report with
the Auditor of State’s Ofﬁce and the report is now
available for inspection at the ofﬁce of the Fiscal
Ofﬁcer, 405 Main Street, Racine, Ohio 45771
by appointment by calling (740) 949-1550. The
report will also be available at the monthly meeting of Sutton Township Trustees to be held on
Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021 at 6 p.m. at Racine Village
Hall, Council Chambers.

Straw available
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Humane
Society will be providing straw for pet bedding
during the months of November, December, January, and February. Vouchers may be picked up at
the Humane Society Thrift Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport, for a fee of $2. Vouchers
are to be redeemed at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For more information call 740-992-6064.

Ohio
From page 1

DeWine also said
the current 10 p.m.
to 5 a.m. curfew will
be shortened to 11
p.m. to 5 a.m. starting
Thursday as long as the
number of people hospitalized with COVID-19
continues to fall below
3,500. The curfew could
be eliminated if, over
the next few weeks,
hospitalization numbers fall below 2,500
over seven days. About
2,900 people were hospitalized with the coronavirus Tuesday.
The good news about
the curfew doesn’t
mean Ohioans should
let down their guard,
the governor said.
“We must keep practicing safety protocols.
Our case numbers are
improving because of
what you are doing —
and what you’re not
doing,” DeWine said
at his twice-weekly
brieﬁng streamed live.
“More people are wearing masks. Please continue wearing masks.”
The curfew prohibits people from being
outside their homes
during those hours with
multiple exceptions
including work, grocery shopping, medical
appointments and other
necessary trips.
Ohio began offering
vaccinations this week
to people 75 and older,
to those with a developmental or intellectual
disability, and to people
with congenital conditions such as cerebral
palsy, spina biﬁda, and
severe congenital heart
disease.
More doses are
becoming available as
Ohio ﬁnishes with the
ﬁrst phase of vaccinations, which included
frontline medical
responders, and staff
and residents of the
state’s nursing homes.
Ohio will also have an
additional 77,000 doses
available the next two
weeks because so many
nursing home employees declined a shot, the
governor said.
Ohioans 70 and older
can receive shots beginning next week and
those 65 and older the
following week, after
which Ohio will pause
lowering the age groups
because the over 65
group is so large, DeWine said.

Also Tuesday, the
push and pull between
the Republican governor and fellow GOP
lawmakers over DeWine’s anti-coronavirus
efforts continued as
lawmakers proposed a
committee to provide
more legislative oversight of state public
health orders.
The measure would
also allow the General
Assembly to rescind
executive actions issued
by governors, according
to the proposal from
Republican Sens. Rob
McColley and Terry
Johnson.
The announcement
is the latest in a series
of legislative action
against DeWine by
members of his own
party as the governor
attempts to stop the
spread of the virus
through curfews and
enforced safety precautions.
In December, DeWine vetoed a Senate
bill curtailing the Ohio
Department of Health’s
authority to order quarantine and isolation as
a means of containing
the spread of infectious
diseases. The bill would
have extended statewide quarantine orders
to people who are not ill
or haven’t been directly
exposed to an infectious
disease, like COVID-19.
The Senate adjourned
for the legislative session last month without
overriding DeWine’s
veto, with then Senate
President Larry Obhof
saying the issues in the
bill will remain up for
discussion and negotiation with the governor
this year.
The seven-day rolling average of daily
new coronavirus
cases in Ohio did not
increase over the past
two weeks, going from
8,219 new cases per
day on Jan. 11 to 5,370
new cases per day on
Jan. 25, according to an
Associated Press analysis of data provided by
The COVID Tracking
Project. The seven-day
rolling average of daily
deaths in Ohio did not
increase over the past
two weeks, going from
80 deaths per day on
Jan. 11 to 70 deaths per
day on Jan. 25.
The state Health
Department says more
than 620,000 Ohioans,
or just over 5% of the
Ohio’s population, have
received at least the initial dose of the vaccine.

�Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, January 27, 2021 3

GALLIPOLIS AND MASON
OFFICES OFFERING

COVID-19 TESTING
WITH VISIT

If you’re not feeling well and are worried you may
have COVID-19, Damia Hayman, FNP-BC in Gallipolis and Brandon DeWees, FNP-C in Mason and their
staff can help you get tested and provide medical
management of your symptoms. Damia and Brandon
will make sure you get the care you need.
�6$0(�'$&lt;�$332,170(176
�&amp;29,'�����³X��VWUHS�WHVWLQJ
�GLDJQRVH�DQG�WUHDW�DFXWH�DQG�FKURQLF�FRQGLWLRQV
�PDQDJH�SDWLHQWV¬�RYHUDOO�FDUH
�PLQRU�RI²FH�SURFHGXUHV
�RUGHU��SHUIRUP�DQG�LQWHUSUHW�GLDJQRVWLF�WHVWV
�SUHVFULEH�PHGLFDWLRQV�DQG�RWKHU�WUHDWPHQWV
�UHIHUUDOV�WR�VSHFLDOLVWV�

GET TESTED. GET RESULTS. GET TREATMENT.
Call to schedule an appointment TODAY!

OH-70220768

740.925.9035 - Gallipolis
304.773.5179 - Mason
Monday through Friday | 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
995 Jackson Pike, Suite 102 | Gallipolis, Ohio
2007 Second Street | Mason, WV

�COMICS

4 Wednesday, January 27, 2021

BLONDIE

Ohio Valley Publishing

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

CRANKSHAFT

By Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

� � �
�
�
�
�
�
�
� �
�
�
� �
�
�
�
�
�
�
� � � �

By Hilary Price

�'LIILFXOW\�/HYHO
Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

����

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

see what’s brewing on the

job market.
EURZVH�MREV��SRVW�\RXU�UHVXPH��JHW�DGYLFH

jobmatchohio.com

�����&amp;RQFHSWLV�3X]]OHV��'LVW��E\�.LQJ�)HDWXUHV�6\QGLFDWH��,QF�

%\�'DYH�*UHHQ

�Sports
Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, January 27, 2021 5

Lady Tomcats edge Eastern, 43-40
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The Lady Tomcats escaped unscathed.
The Eastern girls basketball team was tied
with Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
leading Trimble headed
into the fourth quarter of
Monday’s bout in Meigs
County, but the Lady
Tomcats hit 5-of-9 ﬁeld
goals in the ﬁnale and

held on for the 43-40 victory.
The Lady Eagles (3-13,
2-7 TVC Hocking) —
who fell to Trimble (13-3,
10-0) 62-40 on Dec. 14 in
Glouster — were ahead
12-6 a quarter into Monday’s game, with EHS hitting 5-of-9 ﬁeld goals in
the opening stanza.
Eastern made 5-of-8
ﬁeld goals in the second
period, and headed into
half with a 24-18 advantage.

The Lady Tomcats
came out of halftime with
a 13-to-7 run, tying the
game at 31 with eight
minutes to play. Trimble
capped off the 43-40 win
by outscoring the hosts
12-to-9 in the ﬁnale, holding EHS to just 2-of-10
shooting from the ﬁeld.
For the game, Eastern was 15-of-37 (40.5
percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 2-of-6 (33.3
percent) from three-point
range, while the guests

made 18-of-43 (41.9 percent) ﬁeld goal attempts,
including 4-of-13 (30.8
percent) three-point tries.
EHS sank 8-of-13 (61.5
percent) foul shots, while
Trimble was 3-for-4 (75
percent) at the line. The
Lady Eagles committed
26 turnovers, seven more
than THS.
Erica Durst paced
Eastern with 17 points,
combining ﬁve ﬁeld
goals with a 7-for-10
performance from the

free throw line. Jennifer
Parker was responsible
for both EHS three-pointers and ﬁnished with
12 points, while Sydney
Reynolds came up with
seven points. Kennadi
Rockhold and Whitney
Durst rounded out the
EHS total with two
points each.
Briana Orsborne led
Trimble with 18 points,
half of which came from
beyond the arc. Laikyn
Imler was next with eight

points, followed by Emily
Calentine with seven, and
Emily Young with four.
Emma Beha, Riley Campbell and Sophia Ives each
contributed two points to
the winning total.
Eastern returns to
action at Meigs on
Wednesday.
© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

RedStorm
women wallop
UC-Clermont
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

BATAVIA, Ohio — The University of Rio
Grande outscored the University of CincinnatiClermont in all four quarters and cruised to a 10377 victory over the Cougars, Saturday afternoon,
in women’s basketball action at the Cougar Dome.
The RedStorm completed a season sweep of
their hosts, upping their record to 10-7 in the process.
UC-Clermont dropped to 2-3 with the loss.
Rio Grande jumped to a 27-14 lead after one
period and extended its lead to as many as 17
points in the second stanza before settling on a
50-35 advantage at the intermission.
UC-Clermont did manage to close the gap to
10 points after a three-pointer by Ashley Moore
made it 52-42 with 7:54 left in the third quarter,
but the RedStorm blew things open by blitzing the
Cougars with 17 consecutive points over the next
three minutes and taking a 69-42 lead following
a layup by sophomore Hailey Jordan (Columbus,
OH) with 4:46 remaining in the period.
Rio’s lead twice reached 28 points later in the
quarter, including 73-45 after an offensive rebound
and putback by freshman Caitlyn Brisker (Oak
Hill, OH) with 3:39 left, but Clermont made
things a bit more interesting with a 21-6 run over
the next ﬁve minutes to draw within 79-66 after
another three-pointer by Moore with 8:39 remaining in the game.
However, Clermont would get no closer.
The RedStorm responded with a 10-2 scoring
spurt -culminating with a layup by sophomore
Regan Willingham (Ashville, OH) with 4:59 left
to play — to regain a 21-point cushion and the
Cougars got no closer than 19 points the rest of
the way.
Willingham led a quartet of double-digit scorers
for Rio Grande with 20 points, while Jordan added
16 points and sophomore Lexi Woods (Waverly,
OH) ﬁnished with 13 points and a game-high 12
rebounds.
Brisker contributed 10 points to the winning
effort, while senior Chyna Chambers (Columbus,
OH) had a game-high 10 assists and a team-high
four steals. Junior Avery Harper (Seaman, OH)
blocked a game-high three shots.
Rio Grande ﬁnished 42-for-83 from the ﬂoor overall (50.6%), while enjoying a 50-29 edge in rebounding and tallying 28 assists on its 42 ﬁeld goals.
Those ﬁgures helped to offset a 14-for-22 showing at the free throw line (63.6%) and 22 turnovers.
UC-Clermont hurt its own cause with 25 turnovers. The Cougars shot 41 percent overall (23for-56) and went 26-for-33 at the free throw line
(78.8%).
Moore led all scorers with 31 points in a losing cause, while also collecting a game-high ﬁve
steals.
See REDSTORM | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Jan. 27
Boys Basketball
Southern at Federal
Hocking, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Meigs, 7:30
South Gallia at
Chesapeake, 7:15
Gallia Academy at
Huntington, 7 p.m.
Wrestling
Athens at Gallia Academy,
6 p.m.
Thursday, Jan. 28
Girls Basketball
Nelsonville-York at Meigs,

7:30
Belpre at Southern, 6 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia,
7:30
Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 7:30
River Valley at Athens,
7:30
Friday, Jan. 29
Boys Basketball
Portsmouth at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
Federal Hocking at South
Gallia, 7:30
Trimble at Southern, 7:30
Meigs at Athens, 7:30

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Brayden Easton locks in a hold on a Marietta opponent during a 182-pound match held on Jan. 6 in Centenary,
Ohio.

Blue Devils 3rd at WCH tourney
Easton, Schwall win weight class titles for GAHS
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WASHINGTON
COURT HOUSE, Ohio
— A solid showing by
the Blue Devils.
The Gallia Academy
wrestling team collected
two individual championships, 10 top-5 efforts
and placed third out of
14 teams on Saturday
afternoon at the 2021
Washington Court House
Bracket Tournament
held at Washington High
School in Fayette County.
The Blue Devils had
just 11 grapplers competing in the 14 individual
weight classes, and only
one of those near-dozen
wrestlers didn’t record
a top-5 placing in their
respective divisions.

with a score of 235, while
Indian Valley placed in
between the Red Devils
with identical 3-1 marks and GAHS with 168
In fact, GAHS colpoints.
that also included three
lectively posted a 21-15
St. Clairsville came
overall record and ended pinfall wins apiece.
away with a tournamentSteven Davis was
the day with 11 pinfall
best ﬁve divisional chamfourth at 182 pounds
wins. The Blue and
pions, with Gallia AcadWhite also had ﬁve grap- with a 2-2 record that
emy and IVHS landing
included a pinfall win.
plers ﬁnish in the top-3
in their respective weight Todd Elliott (120), Dako- two weight class champions apiece. Fairmont,
ta McCoy (138), Cole
classes.
Waynesville, Bethel-Tate,
Hines (152) and Gabe
Garytt Schwall (132)
Adena and West CarrollRaynor (220) all ended
and Brayden Easton
ton also had one grappler
(195) both went unbeat- up ﬁfth in their respecclaim a divisional title as
tive divisions.
en while winning their
McCoy and Hines each well.
respective divisions.
Visit baumspage.com
went 2-2 overall, with
Easton posted three
for complete results of
McCoy recording a pair
pinfall wins in as many
the Washington Court
of pinfall wins. Raynor
matches, while Schwall
had a single pinfall to go and Elliott were both 1-2 House Bracket Tournament held Saturday at
and recorded a pinfall
along with a 2-0 mark.
Washington High School.
win each. Dakota SidHunter Shamblin was
© 2021 Ohio Valley
ers went winless in two
the 170-pound runnerPublishing, all rights
matches at 285 pounds.
up following a 2-1 day
reserved.
The Blue Devils ﬁnthat included two pinfall
wins. Nate Yongue (106) ished the day with a team
Bryan Walters can be reached at
score of 159 points. St.
and Hudson Shamblin
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
Clairsville won the meet
(160) both placed third

Lady Spartans roll past Meigs, 59-32
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

ALBANY, Ohio — It just got
tougher as the night progressed.
The Meigs girls basketball team
kept things competitive in the ﬁrst
half of each half, but host Alexander collectively made a 36-15 surge
in the second and fourth quarters
on Monday night to secure a 59-32
victory in a Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division matchup at ‘The
Alley’ in Athens County.
The visiting Lady Marauders
(5-7, 4-5 TVC Ohio) got four ﬁrst
quarter points from Jerrica Smith
and trailed just 12-7 through eight
minutes of play, but the Lady Spartans (14-2, 9-1) countered with 10
points from Jadyn Mace as part of
a 21-11 second quarter surge that
resulted in a 33-18 intermission

advantage.
Delana Wright poured in six
points for MHS in the third stanza,
but the Red and Black ultimately
won the quarter by a slim 11-10
margin while increasing their cushion out to 44-28 entering the ﬁnale.
The Maroon and Gold managed
only two baskets down the stretch
and Karsyn Raines poured in six
points as AHS closed regulation
with a 15-4 run to wrap up the
17-point outcome.
Meigs made 13 total ﬁeld goals
— including two 3-pointers — and
also went 4-of-5 at the free throw
line for 80 percent.
Wright led the guests with eight
points, followed by Andrea Mahr
and Mallory Hawley with seven
markers each. Smith was next with
six points, while Rylee Lisle and
Maggie Musser completed the

scoring with two points apiece.
Alexander netted 23 total ﬁeld
goals — including four trifectas —
and also sank 9-of-11 charity tosses
for 81 percent.
Mace paced AHS with a gamehigh 15 points, followed by Marlee
Grinstead with 14 points and Raines
with eight markers. Kara Meeks and
Erin Scurlock respectively added
seven and six points as well.
Brooke Casto was next with ﬁve
points, while Chloe Payne completed the winning mark with four
points.
Meigs returns to action Wednesday when it hosts Eastern at
approximately 7 p.m.
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing,
all rights reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

�CLASSIFIEDS

6 Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Ohio Valley Publishing

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete
public notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Approved Permission for Open Burning OAC Chapter 3745-19
Ohio Valley Electric Corp
5758 SR 7 N, Cheshire, OH 45620
ID #: 20-16
Date of Action: 01/21/2021
This final action not preceded by proposed action and is
appealable to ERAC.
Approval of Open Burning Permission for Fire Training
1/27/21

LEGALS
Legals

Hungry for a new opportunity?

OH-70211928

General Mills, located in Wellston,
Ohio is hiring Production Operators for
their 2nd and 3rd shift teams. Pay rates
start out between $16.70 and $18.30
per hour, with excellent beneﬁts.
Apply online today at
http://careers.generalmills.com
General Mills – Making Food
the World Loves and Needs.

3DUW WLPH JHQHUDO IDUP
ZRUNHU FDOO ������������
AUTOS

CASE NO.: 20-CV-80

Jenny M. Evans (#0089201)
Attorney for Plaintiff
463 Second Avenue, P.O. Box 1231
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph: (740) 446-4344 / F: (740) 446-1738
jmevanslaw@gmail.com
12/23/20,12/30/20,1/6/21,1/13/21,1/20/21,1/27/21

6KHULIIV 6DOH RI 5HDO (VWDWH
5HYLVHG &amp;RGH� 6HF �������
6WDWH RI 2KLR� *DOOLD &amp;RXQW\
&amp;DVH 1R� ��&amp;9��

TAX EASE OHIO II, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
LARRY L. GILMORE, et al.
Defendants.

Defendants, Larry L. Gilmore, Amanda M. Gilmore, and the
Gallia County Treasurer, are hereby notified that they have
been named Defendants in the above entitled action wherein
the Plaintiff is requesting the Court that it be granted the following relief:
A. In Rem Judgment in favor of Plaintiff as to the following:
B. On all Tax Certificates and accrued interest as stated in
paragraph 8 of the Complaint filed herein;
C. Costs and attorney's fees in accordance with RC §5721.30
through §5721.43, or otherwise;
D. Judgment be rendered in favor of the Plaintiff and/or Gallia
County Treasurer for any delinquent taxes, assessments,
penalties, interest and charges on the parcel not covered by
the above-mentioned Tax Certificates which accrues prior to
the entry of Confirmation of Sale;
E. The Tax Certificates be deemed a valid first statutory lien on
the Property pursuant to ORC §5721.10 and §5721.35, and
otherwise, for the amount owing, together with Plaintiff's advances for demolition and other costs, the amount owing on
subsequent tax certificates acquired by Plaintiff concerning the
Property, taxes, assessments, and other charges, costs and
attorney's fees;
F. Such lien(s) be foreclosed, that the Court make findings in
accordance with ORC §5721.39 (A) and (B), and that unless
the amount found due, including Plaintiff's attorney's fees and
costs relating directly or indirectly to the Tax Certificates, be
tendered to the Plaintiff prior to the filing of an Entry of Confirmation of Sale in this matter, the equity of redemption of all
Defendants be foreclosed;
G. All Defendants in this action be required to answer as to any
claim they may have in or to the Property or be forever barred
from any such claim;
H. An order be issued to the Sheriff to sell the Property, as
provided by ORC §5721.19 and §5721.37 or otherwise according to any applicable procedures provided in ORC §323.65 to
§323.79; or in the alternative, if the County Auditor or Fiscal
Officer determines that the true value of the Property is less
than the redemption price on the Tax Certificates, a decree
transferring and vesting fee simple title to Plaintiff free and clear
of all liens, pursuant to ORC §5721.37 (F), and that the right of
redemption of any part hereto be forever barred;
I. The Property be ordered advertised and sold by the Sheriff
according to law;
J. The Plaintiff be paid from the proceeds of the sale, the
amount due it and in accordance with ORC §5721.37 (F) and
§5721.39 (D);
K. The costs of this action, including the cost of the Preliminary
Judicial Report and the Final Judicial Report, as provided in
ORC §5721.37 and 5721.39 be taxed as costs and paid from
the proceeds of such sale;
L. The fees and costs of the private attorney representing the
Plaintiff in this action, as provided in ORC §5721.37 and
5721.39 be taxed as costs and paid from the proceeds of such
sale;
M. Upon the fulfillment of all conditions for forfeiture of the
Property as provided in ORC §5721.40, the Court issue an order forfeiting the Property to the Plaintiff, and directing the
County Auditor, Treasurer, and/or Fiscal Officer, to remove and
cancel all property tax and other liability imposed upon the Parcel prior to the date of recording the deed as specified in ORC
§5721.40; and
N. That the Court grant such additional relief as Plaintiff may be
entitled to at law and/or in equity.
The within case has been filed in the Common Pleas Court,
Gallia County, Ohio, located in the Gallia County Courthouse,
18 Locust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 in the case number
shown above.
Defendants, Larry L. Gilmore and Amanda M. Gilmore, must
file a response in the above captioned case within twenty-eight
(28) days after the last publication hereof. If said Defendants
fail to file such response, judgment by default may or will be
granted for the relief demanded.

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

LEGAL
Public notice: The financial
statement of the O. O.
McIntyre Park District for the
year ending December 31,
2020, has been filed with the
Auditor of the State, as of
January 20, 2021. The reports are available for public
inspection at the office of O.
O. McIntyre Park District, 18
Locust Street, County Courthouse, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
between the hours of 9:00 &amp;
3:00 Monday through Friday.
Please call 740-446-4612 Ext.
1254.
1/27/21

Harrison Township, Gallia County while be accept sealed
envelope bid until 2-8-21 at 7:00pm for the following items.
The Harrison Township Board of Trustees have the right to
refuse any and all bids. Bids can be mailed to 1270 Little
Bullskin Rd, Patriot, OH 45658 or dropped off. If any questions
please call 740-794-1020:
Pyro-Lance
Model L-1000
25 HP Briggs &amp; Stratton gas engine
150’ Hose reel with electric rewind
2.5 Gallon abrasive tank
Wireless remote control system
Ultra-high pressure pump Less than an hour of run time Great
Shape Like New
Hale 1000gpm fire pump
Out of blown up fire truck
PTO Driven
Sold As Is
1991 Freightliner FLD-120
Detroit 600 series engine 1776 miles
Allison automatic transmission Good Tires
Ready for Pain Former military truck
Sold As Is
1992 Spartan/4 Guy Fire Truck
Wrecked Not available to be put back in fire service
1500 GPM Hale Pump Detroit 60 series
engine still runs great Allison automatic transmission 24389
miles 2890 hours All stainless body &amp; cab
1/20/21,1/27/21,2/3/21

Autos For Sale

Check out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV
online!

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, January 29,
2021 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
9,1� �)0&amp;8��=��.'�����
2008 Ford Escape
1/27/21,1/28/21,1/29/21

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
TAX EASE OHIO LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
ELSIE B. CRAIGO, et al.
Defendants.
CASE NO.: 19 CV 108
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
Defendants, Elsie B. Craigo and any unknown spouse, next
of kin, heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of Elsie B.
Craigo, are hereby notified that they have been named Defendants in the above entitled action wherein the Plaintiff is requesting the Court that it be granted the following relief:
A. On all Tax Certificates and accrued interest as stated in paragraph 8 of the amended complaint filed herein;
B. Costs and attorney's fees in accordance with RC §5721.30
through §5721.43, or otherwise;
C. Judgment be rendered in favor of the Plaintiff and/or Gallia
County Treasurer for any delinquent taxes, assessments, penalties, interest and charges on the parcel not covered by the
above-mentioned Tax Certificates which accrues prior to the
entry of Confirmation of Sale;
D. The Tax Certificates be deemed a valid first statutory lien on
the Property pursuant to ORC §5721.10 and §5721.35, and otherwise, for the amount owing, together with Plaintiff's advances
for demolition and other costs, the amount owing on subsequent tax certificates acquired by Plaintiff concerning the Property, taxes, assessments, and other charges, costs and
attorney's fees;
E. Such lien(s) be foreclosed, that the Court make findings in
accordance with ORC §5721.39 (A) and (B), and that unless
the amount found due, including Plaintiff's attorney's fees and
costs relating directly or indirectly to the Tax Certificates, be
tendered to the Plaintiff prior to the filing of an Entry of Confirmation of Sale in this matter, the equity of redemption of all
Defendants be foreclosed;
F. All Defendants in this action be required to answer as to any
claim they may have in or to the Property or be forever barred
from any such claim;
G. An order be issued to the Sheriff to sell the Property, as provided by ORC §5721.19 and §5721.37 or otherwise according
to any applicable procedures provided in ORC §323.65 to
§323.79; or in the alternative, if the County Auditor or Fiscal Officer determines that the true value of the Property is less than
the redemption price on the Tax Certificates, a decree transferring and vesting fee simple title to Plaintiff free and clear of all
liens, pursuant to ORC §5721.37 (F), and that the right of redemption of any part hereto be forever barred;
H. The Property be ordered advertised and sold by the Sheriff
according to law;
I. The Plaintiff be paid from the proceeds of the sale, the
amount due it and in accordance with ORC §5721.37 (F) and
§5721.39 (D);
J. The costs of this action, including the cost of the Preliminary
Judicial Report and the Final Judicial Report, as provided in
ORC §5721.37 and 5721.39 be taxed as costs and paid from
the proceeds of such sale;
K. The fees and costs of the private attorney representing the
Plaintiff in this action, as provided in ORC §5721.37 and
5721.39 be taxed as costs and paid from the proceeds of such
sale;
L. Upon the fulfillment of all conditions for forfeiture of the Property as provided in ORC §5721.40, the Court issue an order forfeiting the Property to the Plaintiff, and directing the County Auditor, Treasurer, and/or Fiscal Officer, to remove and cancel all
property tax and other liability imposed upon the Parcel prior to
the date of recording the deed as specified in ORC §5721.40;
and
M. That the Court grant such additional relief as Plaintiff may
be entitled to at law and/or in equity.
The within case has been filed in the Common Pleas Court,
Gallia County, Ohio, located in the Gallia County Courthouse,
18 Locust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 in the case number
shown above.
Defendants, Elsie B. Craigo and any unknown spouse, next of
kin, heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of Elsie B.
Craigo, must file a response in the above captioned case within
twenty-eight (28) days after the last publication hereof. If said
Defendants fail to file such response, judgment by default may
or will be granted for the relief demanded.
Jenny M. Evans (#0089201)
Attorney for Plaintiff
463 Second Avenue, P.O. Box 1231
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph: (740) 446-4344 / F: (740) 446-1738
jmevanslaw@gmail.com
1/6/21,1/13/21,1/20/21,1/27/21,2/3/21,2/10/21

CLASSIFIEDS

Bruner Land Company, Inc.
vs.
Charles E. Turner, et. al.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above titled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction to be held on the second floor
meeting room of the Courthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio, on the 5th
day of February 2021 at 10:00 a.m. the following described real
estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF HARRISON, COUNTY OF GALLIA AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION ON
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
GALLIA COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
PARCEL #: 01300100201
PROPERTY ADDRESS: V/L ROCK LICK ROAD, CROWN
CITY, OH 45623
Said premises appraised at $21,500.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. No employees of the
Sheriff's Office or any of its affiliates have access to the inside
of said property. The purchaser shall be responsible for costs,
allowances, and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover. If the property is not sold at the above sale date,
it will be offered for sale again on February 19, 2021 at the
same time and location above.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash, money order, certified check or
cashier's check. If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000
deposit $2,000; greater than $10,000 but less than or equal to
$200,000 deposit $5,000; greater than $200,000 deposit is
$10,000. Deposits due at the time of sale and made payable to
the Sheriff. Balance due within 30 days of confirmation of sale.
0� '� &amp;KDPSOLQ
*DOOLD &amp;RXQW\ 6KHULII
Attorney: Bryan C. Conaway, Knowlton Bennett &amp; Conaway
1/13/21, 1/20/21, 1/27/21
NOTICE OF PRIVATE SELLING OFFICER SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT OF FORECLOSURE OF LIENS FOR
DELINQUENT LAND TAXES, PURSUANT TO SECTION
5721.39 OF THE OHIO REVISED CODE
In the Common Pleas Court of Gallia County, Ohio.
Whereas, judgment has been rendered against certain parcels
of real property for taxes, assessments, charges, penalties,
interest, and costs as follows:
The Common Pleas Court Case No.; the case caption; the
street address (for guidance only); the permanent parcel
number; minimum acceptable bid; auction end date and second
auction end date for each parcel, as defined by the Statutes of
Ohio are set forth below as follows:
19CV000137; TAX EASE OHIO, LLC WITH U.S. BANK AS
CUSTODIAN V. LINDSEY WISEMAN, ET AL; 8 ALLEN DR.,
GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631, GALLIPOLIS TWP; 00705700600;
MINIMUM ACCEPTABLE BID $14620.83 (PLUS 10%
BUYER'S PREMIUM); AUCTION END DATE: February 18,
2021; SECOND AUCTION END DATE: March 18, 2021
20CV000009; TAX EASE OHIO, LLC WITH U.S. BANK AS
CUSTODIAN V. UNKNOWN ADMINISTRATOR, EXECUTOR
OR FIDUCIARY, UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, UNKNOWN SPOUSES, DEVISEES, LEGATEES, CREDITORSA
AND BENEFICIARIES OF ESTATE OF DAVID A. MULLINS
SR., ET AL; 1181 WHITE OAK RD., GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631,
MORGAN TWP; 019-001-005-02; MINIMUM ACCEPTABLE
BID $19,845.77 (PLUS 10% BUYER'S PREMIUM); AUCTION
END DATE: February 18, 2021; SECOND AUCTION END
DATE: March 18, 2021
NOTE: All parcels will be auctioned online at
www.OhioForeclosures.com. All auctions will begin at least
seven (7) days prior to the auction end date. If any parcel does
not receive a sufficient bid, it shall be offered for sale, under
the same terms, on the same website, with the second auction
beginning at least seven (7) days prior to the end date of the
second auction. A ten percent (10%) Buyer's Premium will be
added to the high bid to determine the sale price. Full legal
description of parcels, and other sale details, are available at
www.OhioForeclosures.com.
TERMS OF SALE: Purchaser shall be required to pay a buyer's
premium, in an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the high
bid price, which shall be added to the high bid and included in
the full purchase price. Deposit of 10%, with a minimum
deposit of $1,000.00, shall be wire transferred to Standard Title
Co. no later than 2:00 pm EST the day following auction end.
Balance of the FULL purchase price shall be wire transferred
to Standard Title Co. no later than thirty (30) days following the
confirmation of sale. Failure to pay deposit, buyer premium or
balance of purchase price timely will result in private selling
officer moving the court for a contempt citation against purchaser. The purchaser shall be responsible for those costs,
allowances, and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT PARCELS TO BE
SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION MAY BE SUBJECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LIEN THAT MAY NOT BE EXTINGUISHED BY
THE SALE.
NOTE: Prospective bidders are responsible for knowing what
they are bidding on prior to the time of sale by first having
reviewed the records of the City wherein the parcel is located,
and the records of the County, and further, by personally viewing the parcel at its location.
NOTE: Per Section 5721.38 of the Ohio Revised Code, an
owner of a parcel may redeem his property by payment in full of
all taxes and costs until the sale of such parcel is confirmed by
the Court.
This advertisement is prepared and published pursuant to the
provisions of Section 5721.37 and 5721.39 of the Ohio Revised
Code.
1/27/21,2/3/21,2/10/21

�SPORTS/NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, January 27, 2021 7

Tornadoes turn
back Beallsville
at home, 57-33

2021 Meigs Guide coming soon

By Alex Hawley

By Sarah Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — They put the win away a quarter
early.
The Southern boys basketball team turned a
10-point halftime lead into a 26-point advantage by
the start of the fourth quarter on Saturday in Meigs
County, as the Tornadoes breezed to a 57-33 victory
over non-conference guest Beallsville.
Southern (2-9) was ahead 13-9 a quarter into play,
and outscored the Blue Devils 15-to-9 in the second
for a 28-18 lead at the break.
Beallsville was held to just a pair of ﬁeld goals in
the third quarter, as the Tornadoes went on a 21-to-5
run and led 49-23 with eight minutes to play.
The guests outscored SHS 10-to-8 in the fourth
quarter and fell 57-33.
For the game, Southern made 25 ﬁeld goals, three
of which came from beyond the arc. Meanwhile,
Beallsville hit 14 ﬁeld goals, featuring a quartet of triples. At the foul line, SHS was 4-of-12 (33.3 percent),
while the Blue Devils made 1-of-2 (50 percent).
Isaac McCarty led the hosts with 16 points, 11 of
which came in the third quarter. Lincoln Rose and
Aiden Hill scored 12 points apiece in the win, while
Cruz Brinager recorded 10. Cade Anderson was next
with four points, followed by Tanner Lisle with two
and Arrow Drummer with one.
Adam Baker paced Beallsville with 18 points, 10 of
which came in the fourth. Deyton Hughes was next
with six points, followed by Kyon Falkenstein with
four, Garrett Perkins with three and Tryson English
with two.
After hosting Waterford on Tuesday, the Purple and
Gold will visit Federal Hocking on Wednesday.
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights reserved.

MEIGS COUNTY
— Each year The Daily
Sentinel and the Meigs
County Chamber and
Tourism publish the
Ofﬁcial Guide to Meigs
County, with this year’s
theme of “Experience
Meigs County.”
Local businesses, organizations and individuals
are invited to be part of
the guide through advertising opportunities.
The 2021 Ofﬁcial
Guide to Meigs County
will feature articles
on community events,
places to visit, a feature
on the Meigs County
Farmers’ Market and
much more.
This will be a guide
for residents of the
area and non-residents
alike, detailing many of

King 1st Black
female assistant
position coach
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(AP) — Washington promoted Jennifer King to
assistant running backs
coach Tuesday, making
her the ﬁrst Black female
assistant position coach
in the NFL.
She is the second
woman in league history
to be an assistant position coach after Tampa
Bay’s assistant defensive
line coach Lori Locust.
King spent the 2020
season as a full-year
coaching intern under
Ron Rivera and worked
with running backs coach
Randy Jordan.
Rivera said King came
to Washington eager for
the opportunity and is
deserving of the promotion.
“The sky is truly the
limit for her,” Rivera
said. “She got the chance
to experience not only
the in-season work that
goes into being a fulltime coach in this league
but also the countless
hours that are spent preparing in the offseason,
as well.
“She demonstrated
all of the qualities that
are needed to work full
time on my staff. She is a
hard worker, a great communicator and a quality
person. Coach King is
always eager to learn and
has shown tremendous
growth since starting
here last season.”
King previously

interned for Rivera with
the Carolina Panthers
and has also been an
assistant at Dartmouth
College and for the Arizona Hotshots of the
Alliance of American
Football.
“I am very pleased to
have coach King back
to assist me full time
in the running backs
room,” Jordan said. “She
was extremely helpful
last year in seeing the
game from a different
perspective, and she was
a tremendous communicator in our room. I look
forward to continuing to
collaborate as we move
forward in our program
and as she moves forward
in her coaching career.”
Washington’s playoff
game against the nowSuper Bowl-bound Buccaneers was the ﬁrst NFL
playoff game to have a
female coach on each
sideline. Tampa Bay had
two: Locust and assistant
strength and conditioning
coach Maral Javadifar,
and coach Bruce Arians
called women in coaching
“the wave of the future.”
“This game, it’s a tremendous game,” Rivera
said. “It should be open
to everybody in terms
of opportunities to play,
opportunities to coach
or opportunities to lead
the organization. I think
that’s an important message that the league is
putting out there.”

RedStorm
From page 5

Victoria Brooks ﬁnished with 13 points, a team-best
six rebounds, a game-high ﬁve steals and two blocked
shots for UC-C, while Kristi Duncan netted 12 points.
Rio Grande was scheduled to host Grace Christian
(Mich.) University on Monday afternoon, but late Saturday night the game was cancelled by the Tigers.
Rio’s next contest now comes on Tuesday evening
at Campbellsville University-Harrodsburg. Tipoff is
set for 5 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of Rio
Grande.

Advertising
deadline
approaching

COVID
From page 1

20-29 — 330 cases (6
hospitalizations)
30-39 — 271 cases (3
hospitalizations)
40-49 — 297 cases (1
new case, 5 hospitalizations)
50-59 — 291 cases
(10 hospitalizations, 1
death)
60-69 — 242 cases (2
new cases, 23 hospitalizations, 3 deaths)
70-79 — 172 cases
(30 hospitalizations, 9
deaths)
80-plus — 134 cases
(33 hospitalizations, 13
deaths)
Gallia County is currently “Orange” on the
Ohio Public Health
Advisory System map
after meeting two of
the seven indicators on
Thursday.
Meigs County
The Meigs County
Health Department
reported four additional conﬁrmed cases and
one probable case of
COVID-19 on Tuesday.
There are 89 active
cases, and 1,152 total
cases (1,077 conﬁrmed, 75 probable)
since April, according
to the update. There
have been a total of 23
deaths, 1,040 recovered
cases (11 new), and 58
hospitalizations since
April.
Age ranges for the

GOP
From page 1

insurrection” across
the Capitol in a solemn
and ceremonial march
along the same halls the
rioters ransacked three
weeks ago.
The lead House
prosecutor, Rep. Jamie
Raskin of Maryland,
stood before the Senate
to describe the violent
events of Jan. 6 — ﬁve
people died — and read
the House resolution
charging “high crimes
and misdemeanors.”
Republicans came to
Trump’s legal defense.
Sen. John Cornyn,
R-Texas, asked if Congress starts holding
impeachment trials of
former ofﬁcials, what’s
next: “Could we go
back and try President
Obama?”
Besides, he suggested,
Trump has already been
held to account. “One

File photo

Boats spend a summer day on the Ohio River.

the unique places and
hidden gems of Meigs
County, while highlighting things to do and
events which make
Meigs County home.
Any business or
organization which is
interested in being part
of the guide may contact
The Daily Sentinel by
emailing Brenda Davis at

bdavis@aimmediamidwest.com to secure their
space.
The deadline to advertise in this year’s ofﬁcial
guide is Friday, Jan. 29.
Anyone interested in
becoming a Chamber
member for 2021 may
also contact the Chamber by emailing Executive Director Shelly

1,152 Meigs County
cases, as of Tuesday,
are as follows:
0-9 — 43 cases
10-19 — 108 cases
20-29 — 172 cases (1
new, 1 hospitalization)
30-39 — 153 cases (1
new, 3 hospitalizations)
40-49 — 168 cases (
3 hospitalizations)
50-59 — 169 cases (3
hospitalizations)
60-69 — 158 cases
(3 new, 16 hospitalizations, 3 deaths)
70-79 — 116 cases
(18 hospitalizations, 8
deaths)
80-89 — 45 cases
(8 hospitalizations, 9
deaths)
90-99 — 19 cases
(5 hospitalizations, 3
deaths)
100-109 — 1 case (1
hospitalization)
To date, the Meigs
County Health Department has vaccinated
437 individuals.
For more data and
information on the
cases in Meigs County
visit https://www.
meigs-health.com/
covid-19/ .
Meigs County
remained “Red” on the
Ohio Public Health
Advisory System after
meeting two of the
seven indicators on
Thursday.

morning, 11 more than
Monday. Of those,
1,459 are conﬁrmed
cases and 40 are probable cases. DHHR has
reported 28 deaths in
Mason County.
According to DHHR,
the age ranges for the
1,499 COVID-19 cases
DHHR is reporting in
Mason County are as
follows:
0-9 — 31 cases (plus
1 probable case, 1 new
conﬁrmed case)
10-19 — 124 cases
(plus 3 probable case, 1
new conﬁrmed case)
20-29 — 259 cases
(plus 7 probable cases)
30-39 — 209 cases
(plus 10 probable case
(1 new), 2 new conﬁrmed cases)
40-49 — 212 cases
(plus 8 probable cases,
5 new conﬁrmed cases)
50-59 — 226 cases
(plus 2 probable cases,
3 deaths)
60-69 — 197 cases
(plus 5 probable case,
4 deaths, 2 new conﬁrmed cases)
70+ — 201 cases
(plus 4 probable cases
(1 new), 21 deaths)
On Tuesday, Mason
County was “orange” on
the West Virginia County Alert System map.
Mason County’s latest
infection rate was 42.02
on Tuesday with a 6.26
percent positivity rate.
Surrounding counties
are orange.

Combs at director@
meigsohio.com.
Don’t miss your opportunity to be part of this
annual guide, as space is
limited.
© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

ment of Health reported
a 24-hour change of
4,262 new cases on
Tuesday (21-day average
of 6,567). There were
88 new deaths (21-day
average of 77), 295 new
hospitalizations (21-day
average of 268) and 40
new ICU admissions
(21-day average of 28)
reported in the previous
24 hours, according to
Tuesday’s update.
West Virginia
As of the 10 a.m.
update on Tuesday,
DHHR is reporting a
total of 116,978 cases
with 1,928 deaths. There
was an increase of 1,139
cases from Monday
and 29 new deaths.
DHHR reports a total of
1,857,255 lab test have
been completed, with a
5.59 cumulative percent
positivity rate. The daily
positivity rate in the
state was 7.02 percent.
There are 24,175 currently active cases in the
state.
DHHR reported on
Monday that 169,227
ﬁrst doses of the COVID19 vaccine have been
administered to residents of West Virginia.
So far, 43,648 people
have been fully vaccinated.
Kayla (Hawthorne)
Dunham and Sarah
Hawley contributed to
this story.

Mason County
DHHR reported
1,499 total cases (since
March) for Mason
County in the 10 a.m.
update on Tuesday

Ohio
The Ohio Depart-

© 2021 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

way in our system you
get punished is losing an
election.”
For Democrats the
tone, tenor and length
of the trial so early in
Biden’s presidency poses
its own challenge, forcing them to strike a
balance between their
vow to hold Trump
accountable and their
eagerness to deliver on
the new administration’s
priorities following
their sweep of control of
the House, Senate and
White House.
Chief Justice John
Roberts is not presiding at the trial, as he
did during Trump’s ﬁrst
impeachment, potentially affecting the gravitas of the proceedings.
The shift is said to be in
keeping with protocol
because Trump is no
longer in ofﬁce.
Instead, Sen. Patrick
Leahy, D- Vt., who
serves in the largely ceremonial role of Senate
president pro tempore,

was sworn in on Tuesday.
Leaders in both parties agreed to a short
delay in the proceedings,
which serves their political and practical interests, even as National
Guard troops remain
at the Capitol because
of security threats to
lawmakers ahead of the
trial.
The start date gives
Trump’s new legal team
time to prepare its case,
while also providing
more than a month’s
distance from the passions of the bloody riot.
For the Democratic-led
Senate, the intervening
weeks provide prime
time to conﬁrm some
of Biden’s key Cabinet
nominees.
As Republicans
said the trial is not
legitimate, Democrats
rejected that argument,
pointing to an 1876
impeachment of a secretary of war who had
already resigned and to

opinions by many legal
scholars.
Democrats also say
that a reckoning of the
ﬁrst invasion of the
Capitol since the War
of 1812, perpetrated by
rioters egged on by a
president as Electoral
College votes were being
tallied, is necessary.
Senate Majority
Leader Chuck Schumer
said failing to conduct
the trial would amount
to a “get-out-jail-free
card” for others accused
of wrongdoing on their
way out the door. He
said there’s only one
question “senators of
both parties will have to
answer before God and
their own conscience: Is
former President Trump
guilty of inciting an
insurrection against the
United States?”
A few GOP senators
have agreed with Democrats, though not close
to the number that will
be needed to convict
Trump.

�NEWS/WEATHER

8 Wednesday, January 27, 2021

GALLIA,
MEIGS BRIEF

TODAY IN HISTORY
In 1945, during World War
II, Soviet troops liberated the
Today is Wednesday, Jan. 27, Nazi concentration camps Auschwitz and Birkenau in Poland.
the 27th day of 2021. There
In 1967, astronauts Virgil
are 338 days left in the year.
I. “Gus” Grissom, Edward H.
White and Roger B. Chaffee
Today’s Highlight in History
On Jan. 27, 1756, composer died in a ﬂash ﬁre during a test
aboard their Apollo spacecraft.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
In 1972, “Queen of Gospel”
was born in Salzburg, Austria.
Mahalia Jackson, 60, died in
Evergreen Park, Ill.
On this date
In 1973, the Vietnam peace
In 1880, Thomas Edison
accords were signed in Paris.
received a patent for his elecIn 1981, President Ronald
tric incandescent lamp.
Reagan and his wife, Nancy,
In 1901, opera composer
Giuseppe Verdi died in Milan, greeted the 52 former American hostages released by Iran
Italy, at age 87.
at the White House.
In 1944, during World War
In 1984, singer Michael
II, the Soviet Union announced
the complete end of the deadly Jackson suffered serious burns
to his scalp when pyrotechnics
German siege of Leningrad,
which had lasted for more than set his hair on ﬁre during the
ﬁlming of a Pepsi-Cola TV
two years.
The Associated Press

Meigs vaccine
registration
The Meigs County
Health Department is
compiling a list of Meigs
County residents who wish
to receive the COVID-19
vaccine. The following age
groups and categories are
currently being accepted:
80 years and older, 75-plus
and those with severe congenital conditions, 70-plus,
65-plus. To be placed on
the list for an appointment,
call 740-444-4540. Individuals are asked to utilize this
number and do not call the
Health Department’s main
line to be placed on the
waiting list. Your call will
be returned to acknowledge
receipt within 24-48 hours
during normal business
hours (Monday-Friday from
8 a.m.-4 p.m.). Appointments will be made based
on the availability of vaccine and in compliance
with guidance issued by the
state of Ohio.

Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel and
Gallipolis Daily Tribune appreciate 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 or
GDTnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Monday, Feb. 1

From page 1

POMEROY – The Meigs County Cancer Initiative, Inc. (MCCI) will meet at
noon via a conference call in response to
COVID 19. New members are welcome.
To dial in by phone: +1.202.602.1295;
Conference ID: 108-618-157 # For more
information, contact Courtney Midkiff at
740.992.6626 ext. 1028.
GALLIPOLIS — The American Legion
Lafayette Post #27 will meet 6 p.m., post
home on McCormick Road, all members
are urged to attend.
LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the Letart Township Trustees will
be held at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township
Building. The Annual Financial Report
will be available for inspection at the
Letart Township Building State Route
124, Racine, Ohio at the Feb. 1, 2021
meeting. Letart Township Trustee meet-

Appointed Commissioner
Shannon Miller to serve as
the Chief Elected Ofﬁcial for
Meigs County on the Area
14 Workforce Development
Board.
Approved a disconnect
and reconnect policy for the
Meigs County Water and
Sewer District.
Regular weekly meetings
of the Meigs County Commissioners are held at 11
a.m. on Thursday at the
Meigs County Courthouse.
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights reserved.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of
The Daily Sentinel.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

35°

35°

32°

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.

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
0.88
Month to date/normal
2.13/2.47
Year to date/normal
2.13/2.47

Snowfall

(in inches)

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.

3

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.6/5.6
Season to date/normal
9.6/10.2

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: What percentage of sunlight is
reﬂected by snow cover?
Thu.
7:38 a.m.
5:45 p.m.
5:41 p.m.
7:49 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

Full

Jan 28

Feb 4

New

First

Feb 11 Feb 19

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
10:19a
11:12a
12:07p
12:37a
1:33a
2:29a
3:23a

Minor
4:06a
4:59a
5:54a
6:49a
7:45a
8:41a
9:36a

Major
10:47p
11:40p
---1:02p
1:58p
2:53p
3:48p

Minor
4:33p
5:26p
6:20p
7:15p
8:10p
9:05p
10:00p

WEATHER HISTORY
A ﬁve-day blizzard began Jan. 27,
1966, around Oswego, N.Y. Accumulation reached 102 inches with 50
inches falling on Jan. 31 alone.

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

Friday, Feb. 5

MARIETTA — The District 18 Ohio
Public Works Fiscal Year 2022 (Round
35) Executive Committee will be held
by remote video conference at 10 a.m.
The purpose of this meeting is to
review and approve the Fiscal Year 2022
(Round 35) State Capital Improvement
Program (SCIP) and the Local Transportation Improvement (LTIP) slate of
projects. The public is invited to attend
the meeting via Facebook Live. Visit
the Buckeye Hills Regional Council
Facebook page to watch the livestream:
http://www.facebook.com/BuckeyeHills/
live. The meeting agenda will be posted
to buckeyehills.org prior to the meeting. Public comments may be submitted
until Feb. 1 by emailing mhyer@buckeyehills.org. Questions regarding this
program should be directed to Michelle
Hyer, Development Specialist III/District 18 Liaison, via email at mhyer@

MARIETTA — Buckeye Hills
Regional Council Executive Committee
will hold its regular meeting by remote
videoconference at 10:30 a.m. Citizens
are encouraged to attend the meeting
via Facebook Live. Visit the Buckeye
Hills Regional Council Facebook page
to watch the livestream: www.facebook.
com/BuckeyeHills. The meeting agenda
will be posted to buckeyehills.org. Public comment may be submitted until
February 3rd by emailing info@buckeyehills.org.

FRIDAY

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

Chillicothe
34/20

Mostly sunny

Logan
35/20

Lucasville
38/22

Monday, Feb. 8
PERRY TWP. — The Perry Township
Board of Trustees regularly scheduled
meetings are on the second Monday of
each month with the next meeting at 7
p.m., Feb. 8 at the townhouse.

SUNDAY

41°
33°

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. Tue.

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
12.48
16.37
21.57
12.96
13.05
25.32
12.98
25.57
34.27
12.53
19.10
34.10
16.60

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.05
+0.46
+0.08
+0.11
-0.16
+0.24
-0.24
-0.20
-0.28
-0.26
+3.50
+0.40
+1.10

Ashland
41/23
Grayson
41/22

TUESDAY

36°
27°

Periods of rain

41°
28°

Cloudy, snow showers
possible; colder

Mostly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
38/23

Murray City
35/21
Belpre
38/24

St. Marys
38/24

Parkersburg
35/24

Coolville
37/23

Wilkesville
38/22
POMEROY
Jackson
39/23
38/21
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
39/24
39/22
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
34/18
GALLIPOLIS
40/23
39/24
40/23

South Shore Greenup
41/22
37/19

50

MONDAY

49°
33°

Increasing cloudiness

Athens
37/22

McArthur
36/21

Waverly
36/21

SATURDAY

33°
20°

Adelphi
35/20

Portsmouth
38/20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021

OH-70219587

Wednesday, Feb. 3

Elizabeth
39/24

Spencer
39/24

A: 75 to 95 percent

Today
7:39 a.m.
5:44 p.m.
4:36 p.m.
7:03 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

GALLIPOLIS — Sons of the American
Legion Squadron #27 will meet 6 p.m.,
post home on McCormick Road, all members urged to attend.

Increasing amounts of
sunshine

0

Thursday, Feb. 4

GALLIPOLIS — VFW Post #4464 will
meet 6 p.m., post home on Third Ave., all
members are urged to attend.

THURSDAY

Mostly cloudy today with a ﬂurry. A bit of snow
tonight. High 40° / Low 23°

HEALTH TODAY

(in inches)

revolt, they vowed to continue
until their U.S.-backed government fell. Homeland Security
Secretary Janet Napolitano
announced that color-coded
terror alerts would be phased
out by late April 2011.
Five years ago: The Ferguson, Missouri, Police Department agreed to overhaul its
policies, training and practices
as part of a sweeping deal with
the Justice Department following the 2014 fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael
Brown. As he honored four
people for risking their lives to
protect Jews, President Barack
Obama warned during a visit
to the Israeli Embassy in Washington that anti-Semitism was
on the rise; he said an attack
on any faith was an attack on
all faiths.

buckeyehills.org or via phone at 740376-1025.

Tuesday, Feb. 2

31°
17°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

Precipitation

ing will be the ﬁrst and third Mondays of
each month with exceptions in January
and June.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
55°/37°
43°/25°
74° in 1967
-2° in 1948

commercial at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.
In 1998, ﬁrst lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton, on NBC’s
“Today” show, charged the
sexual misconduct allegations against her husband,
President Bill Clinton, were
the work of a “vast right-wing
conspiracy.”
In 2006, Western Union
delivered its last telegram.
In 2010, Apple CEO Steve
Jobs unveiled the iPad tablet
computer during a presentation in San Francisco. J.D.
Salinger, the reclusive author
of “The Catcher in the Rye,”
died in Cornish, New Hampshire, at age 91.
Ten years ago: Tens of thousands of Yemenis demanded
their president step down; taking inspiration from Tunisians’

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Meeting

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

Daily Sentinel

Buffalo
40/24

Ironton
41/22

Milton
40/22
Huntington
37/22

St. Albans
41/25

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
45/37
90s
80s
Billings
35/22
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
56/52
10s
Denver
0s
42/24
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
61/52
T-storms
Rain
El Paso
Showers
52/33
Snow
Flurries
Chihuahua
Ice
56/38
Cold Front
Warm Front
Monterrey
70/39
Stationary Front

Clendenin
39/22
Charleston
37/25

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

Winnipeg
-9/-17

Montreal
27/16

Minneapolis
12/0

Toronto
27/11
Detroit
27/12

Chicago
27/7

New York
39/30
Washington
46/32

Kansas City
29/17

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

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
41/24/s
11/9/s
58/33/r
49/32/pc
44/30/pc
35/22/pc
45/38/sn
37/31/sn
37/25/r
55/36/r
35/20/s
27/7/sn
33/19/pc
29/20/c
33/19/c
51/30/s
42/24/s
21/0/sn
27/12/c
81/72/pc
67/41/pc
31/19/sn
29/17/c
51/40/c
48/28/r
61/52/c
36/23/pc
85/68/s
12/0/s
44/26/sn
69/43/r
39/30/sf
39/22/pc
81/55/pc
43/30/c
61/44/s
31/22/c
37/27/sf
52/34/r
49/31/pc
31/17/sn
40/32/c
56/52/r
45/37/pc
46/32/pc

Hi/Lo/W
48/30/pc
22/17/sn
48/29/s
38/20/pc
37/21/pc
41/28/c
47/37/c
36/12/sn
31/16/pc
48/25/s
48/27/pc
23/9/pc
31/18/pc
24/18/pc
28/16/c
52/37/pc
54/31/pc
25/14/pc
24/14/pc
82/71/pc
61/41/pc
30/17/s
40/30/pc
56/44/pc
45/29/pc
64/52/r
35/23/pc
75/61/pc
19/11/pc
41/25/pc
57/43/pc
34/18/pc
48/34/pc
64/45/s
36/20/pc
67/47/pc
25/17/pc
35/11/pc
44/25/pc
41/22/pc
34/27/s
47/34/c
57/46/r
45/35/sn
39/25/pc

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
58/33

High
Low

86° in Immokalee, FL
-31° in Crosby, ND

Global

Houston
67/41

High
Low
Miami
85/68

111° in Birdsville, Australia
-70° in Ekyuchchyu, Russia

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

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="914">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34346">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38730">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38729">
              <text>January 27, 2021</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="312">
      <name>dugan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="432">
      <name>german</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1172">
      <name>lear</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="655">
      <name>mundell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="642">
      <name>nibert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="404">
      <name>stover</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="62">
      <name>waugh</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
