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                  <text>‘Sugar
Boogers’
and ‘Babes’

Local
golf
action

Quilts
help flood
victims

EDITORIAL s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

ALONG THE
RIVER s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 32, Volume 50

‘Outstanding
4-H’ers’ travel
to Capitol

Sunday, August 14, 2016 s $2

Honoring an unsung war hero

By Michael Hart
For the Daily Sentinel

POMEROY — 4-H members from all 50 states
gathered in the nation’s Capitol this summer for a
week-long youth leadership workshop.
Meigs County sent delegates Laura Pullins and
Gage Smith, as well as educator Michelle Stumbo,
to the Citizenship Washington Focus.
Meigs 4-H presents two “Outstanding 4-H’er”
awards annually during the Meigs County Fair.
“Awards are chosen by coworkers in other states
based on their achievement record,” Stumbo said.
The honored members
are eligible for
“I got to see our
the
CWF
held at the
nation’s Capitol
National 4-H Center
through the eyes of
the following summer.
teens who had not
Pullins and Smith
lost all faith in those were selected in 2015
and attended the prowho work these
gram last month.
halls. I got to spend
“The National 4-H
my week helping to
Center in Chevy
ensure that the next Chase, Md., is similar
generation is ready to to a college campus
lead, and I think many and is home to several
4-H leadership proof them will be ready grams throughout the
before we know it.”
year,” said Stumbo.
— Michelle Stumbo, Stumbo heads the
Educator organization in Meigs
as the Extension coordinator.
Ohio State University Extension operates all 4-H in Ohio, and counts
more than 285,000 members.
July 4th saw 4-H members from across the
nation arrive in the Capitol for the seven-day conference.
The Citizenship Washington Focus is designed
to build leadership and citizenship skills in youth
while they form friendships with others from
around the country.
The multiple days of workshops and networking
try to build relationships between future community leaders — and present ones.
The Meigs delegation met with 10 Ohio legislators, including Congressman Bill Johnson of the
Ohio 6th Congressional District.
They followed up with a visit to the Commission of Agriculture, a government body with a
self-explanatory title.
After they returned home, Pullins spoke
See CAPITOL | 5A

Courtesy photo

Pictured, from left, are Michelle Stumbo, Gage Smith and
Laura Pullins.

Michael Johnson | Times-Sentinel

Keith Whaley, a Meigs County native who now lives in Lancaster, looks at the grave marker of his great-great-great grandfather who lived
to be 89 years, 11 months and 19 days and was a veteran of the American Revolutionary War and the War of 1812.

Meigs County native and ancestor fought in American Revolution, War of 1812
By Michael Johnson
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Keith Whaley
always noticed something as being
out of place whenever he used
to visit the grave of his ancestor,
James Whaley, in Pomeroy’s Beech
Grove Cemetery.
Keith, a Meigs County native

who now lives in Lancaster, said
other war veterans buried in the
cemetery were decorated with special markers provided by veterans’
service groups, but there was nothing of the kind for his great-greatgreat-grandfather, a veteran of both
the American Revolutionary War
and the War of 1812.
“My wife and I come up here

and put ﬂowers on his grave and
noticed there wasn’t any kind of a
marker like the other buried veterans have here,” Keith said. “When
that’s not recognized, that history
slowly fades away over time.”
It fades much like the two markers on James Whaley’s gravesite.
See HERO | 7A

Johnson earns ‘Hero of Main Street’ award
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — U.S.
Congressman Bill Johnson received the Ohio
Council of Retail Merchant’s “Hero of Main
Street” award Friday for
his support of Ohio retail
merchants and small business.
Tom Tope, proprietor
of Acquisitions Fine Jewelry, presented the award
to Johnson in the Second
Avenue business’ storefront.
“The award means an
awful lot to me,” Johnson
said. “I believe in small
business and I believe in
the retail community. I
believe that small businesses , like the one Tom

Dean Wright | Daily Tribune

Acquisitions Fine Jewelry Proprietor Tom Top stands next to U.S.
Congressman Bill Johnson, Director of Governmental Affairs and
Public Relations with the Ohio Council of Retail Merchant’s Lora
Miller and Ohio state Rep. Ryan Smith. Johnson received the Ohio
Council of Retail Merchant’s Hero on Main Street award.

has here, that’s where
60 percent of the jobs
in America come from.
Without small businesses
like this, America doesn’t

work. I’m going to always
remain a champion of
Main Street.”
“The National Retail
Federation has an annual

award that they put out
for members of Congress
who are supportive of
legislation and policies
that are pro-business and
pro-retail,” said Lora
Miller, director of governmental affairs and public
relations. “We greatly
appreciate the congressman’s support in his
common sense and probusiness visions when he
is working on legislation
at the federal level. He
understands what it’s like
to run a business and we
need more of that in Congress. He has great vision
and it’s too bad there isn’t
more of him.”
Miller praised Johnson’s and state Rep.
See JOHNSON | 8A

K-9 Korps outfits city police dog unit with vest

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Calendar: 3A
Editorial: 6A
Weather: 8A

Staff Report

B SPORTS
Sports: 1B-5B
Classifieds: 7B-8B
C ALONG THE RIVER
Livestock Report: 2C
Comics: 3C
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com
and visit us on facebook
to share your thoughts.

GALLIPOLIS — The
K-9 Korps 4-H club once
again outﬁtted another
Gallia County police dog
unit Thursday with a
bulletproof vest in its mission to provide protection
to police ofﬁcer’s best
friends.
According to group
advisor Brea Elliot, with
community assistance
and the help of other 4-H
clubs, the “Korps” raised
the $800 and purchased
a vest for Gallipolis
police ofﬁcer Lt. Matt
Champlin’s canine companion, Kris. The vest

was purchased from the
Ohio Chapter of Vesting
America’s Police K-9s,
run by Candace Jacks, of
Dayton.
“I am very appreciative of the K9 Corp 4H
club for purchasing a
new ballistic vest for K9
Kris,” Champlin said.
“The K9 program is one
in which our department
relies on to provide both
crime detection and
prevention, along with
public relations to our
citizens. Oftentimes, K9
Kris assists our ofﬁcers
in high-risk situations
where his health is

“To see a group of our county’s youth take it
upon themselves to raise money in an effort
to protect our police canines speaks volumes
to their character and the relationships that
we are building with our young citizens.”
— Lt. Matt Champlin,
Gallipolis Police Department

compromised. With the
addition of this piece
of equipment, we have
added a level of safety to
protect our four-legged
partner. To see a group of
our county’s youth take
it upon themselves to
raise money in an effort

to protect our police
canines speaks volumes
to their character and the
relationships that we are
building with our young
citizens.”
The Ohio chapter is
See VEST | 8A

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2A Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
C. MARVIN HUFFORD
GALLIPOLIS
— C. Marvin
Hufford, 80, of
Gallipolis, passed
away Thursday,
Aug. 11, 2016,
at the Emogene
Dolen Hospice
House, Huntington,
W.Va.
He was born April 22,
1936, in Cheshire, son of
the late Paul and Vesta
Jane Siders Hufford.
Marvin was married to Mary Ann St.
Clair on June 4, 1961,
in Cheshire, and she
survives him. He was a
retired elementary principal and teacher from Clay
Elementary. He received
his Bachelor of Science
in Education from Ohio
University and a master’s degree from West

Virginia University.
He was a member of
Gallia County and
Ohio Retired Teachers and the Debbie
Drive Chapel.
Surviving are his
wife, Mary Ann
Hufford, of Gallipolis; a
son, Harold Hufford, of
Rio Grande; a grandson,
Nickolas Hufford, of
Bidwell, and a brother-inlaw, Gene (Sue) St. Clair,
of Newark.
Services will be 2 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 15, 2016,
with Pastor Alfred Holley ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may
call Willis Funeral Home
between 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
Please visit www.
willisfuneralhome.com to
send e-mail condolences.

CRAGE WILLIAM ‘PORKY’ BROWN
RACINE — Crage William “Porky” Brown, 46,
of Racine, passed away on
Friday, August 5, 2016.
He was born on September 12, 1969 to Michael
and the late Patricia
(Harris) Brown. Crage
enjoyed the Cleveland
Browns, the Ohio State
Buckeyes and spending
time with his family and
friends.
He is survived by
his children, Trisha
(Andrew) Blankenship
and Justin Brown; granddaughters, McKenzie
Brown, Clara Blankenship, Andrea Blankenship; sister, Michelle
White; brother, Christopher (Barbara) Brown;
nieces, Ashley Brown,

Danielle Brown, Tedra
Sayre; nephews, Alex
Sayre, Collin White and
several Aunts uncles and
cousins. Crage also leaves
behind his special pet,
Coco.
He is preceded in
death by his mother; son,
Michael Brown; brotherin-law, Harry White;
grandparents, George
brown, Freida Van Tassel,
Bill Harris and Phyllis
Harris Baker.
Cremation services are
incomplete and will be
announced at the convenience of the family.
Arrangements are
under the direction of
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.

MICHAEL ‘MIKE’ BERNARD BRAUN
POMEROY —
Michael “Mike”
Bernard Braun, 59
of Pomeroy, passed
away unexpectedly on Tuesday,
August 9, 2016.
He was born June
15, 1957 in Canton, to
the late Kenneth K. and
Jeanne (Krinke) Braun.
Growing up he attended
the St. Paul Lutheran
Church and he graduated
Meigs High School in
1975. Mike loved God,
his family and his friends.
He approached each day
as a blessing. He was
an avid gardener and
an outdoors man who
loved grilling, hunting,
ﬁshing and football, GO
BUCKS!!! He was a wonderful father, son, husband, brother, and most
coveted title, grandfather.

His absence has
left an unﬁllable
void to those who
loved him.
He is survived
by and sorely
missed by his
daughter, Cassie
(Braun) Fowler; grandson, Logan Kreis Fowler
and signiﬁcant other,
Delta Braun (Prater); sister, Kenda (Rick) Ault of
Vero Beach, Fla., and several nieces and nephews.
He is preceded in death
by his parents and grandson Garret Kreis Fowler.
A memorial service will
be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, August 15, 2016 at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
An online registry is
available at www.
andersonmcdaniel.com.

CRUIZ GARRYSON SPENCER
HURRICANE, W.Va.
— Cruiz Garryson
Spencer, son of Charles
Garry “Chuck” and
Andrea Cremeans
Spencer of Hurricane,
W.Va., formerly of Gallia
County, was stillborn on
August 11, 2016.
In addition to his
parents, Cruiz is survived
by his loving older
brother Gabriel Cremeans
of Hurricane, brothers,
Coalton Spencer of
Gallipolis, and Charles
and Devan Spencer.
Grandparents,
Charles E. and Regina
Johnson Cremeans of
Hurricane, Lois Knotts
of Point Pleasant; great
grandmother Beatrice
Johnson of Crown City,
aunts and uncles Paula
(Brett) Jones of Point
Pleasant, Matt (Erin)

Cremeans of Hurricane,
and Joshua (Savannah)
Cremeans of Hurricane,
ﬁve ﬁrst cousins survive
along with several great
aunts and uncles.
Cruiz was preceded
in death by great
grandfather Robert L.
“Bob” Johnson, great
grandparents Wallace
and Evelyn Albright,
step grandfather Ronald
E. Knotts, Jr., a great
aunt Mary Ann Johnson
Sommer and an infant
cousin Lavina Michelle
Shaffer.
Graveside services
will be 2 p.m., Tuesday,
August 16, 2016 at
Ridgelawn Cemetery
with Pastor Garland
Montgomery ofﬁciating.
Please visit www.
willisfuneralhome.com to
send e-mail condolences.

DEATH NOTICES
HOWARD
MAINEVILLE, Ohio — Lona Gold (Layne)
Howard, 89, of Maineville, formerly of New Haven,
W.Va., passed away Aug. 11, 2016, in Riverside
Hospital, Columbus, Ohio. Graveside service will be
1 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 14, 2016, at Sunrise Cemetery,
Letart, W.Va. Arrangements provided by Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.
JOHNSON
SNELLVILLE, Ga. — James “Jim” Johnson, 76, of
Snellville, and formerly of Mason, W.Va., died Aug.
2, 2016. Graveside services were Monday, Aug. 8,
2016, at the Georgia National Cemetery in Canton,
Ga.
GALLOWAY
PROCTORVILLE — Gloria Lee Galloway, 72, of
Proctorville, passed away Saturday, August 13, 2016
at Heartland of Riverview, South Point.
Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m.,
Tuesday, August 16, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome
Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be held 6 p.m.
to 8 p.m. Monday, August 15, 2016 at the funeral
home.

LYNCH
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Adalee Mae Lynch,
78, of Point Pleasant, passed away Friday, Aug. 12,
2016, at her home.
Funeral service will be on Monday, August 15, 2016
at the Deal Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Board
Baptist /Church Cemetery, Letart, W.Va. Friends
may call at the funeral home from noon to 2 p.m. on
Monday.
WALL
SCOTTOWN — Sheila Renee Wall, 48, of
Scottown, passed away Friday, August 12, 2016 at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.
WAUGH
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Margaret Waugh, 92, of
Huntington, W.Va., passed away Tuesday, August 9,
2016 at Madison Park, Huntington.
A graveside service will be held 11 a.m. Monday,
August 15, 2016 at Black Chinn Family Cemetery,
Lavalette, W.Va. Burial will follow. Visitation will be
held 10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., Monday, August 15, 2016
at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville.

Authorities identify
bicyclist killed in
Ohio hit-skip crash
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Authorities have
identiﬁed a bicyclist who
died on a city street in
Ohio after he was hit by
a motorist who police say
ﬂed the scene.
The Columbus Dispatch reports that police

say the man killed
Wednesday was 69-yearold William Greulich, of
the Columbus suburb of
Whitehall. They say he
was hit as he was hauling
a bag of groceries home
from a food pantry at a
Columbus church.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US

AP photo

U.S. District Judge Michael Barrett in Cincinnati blocked an Ohio law Friday aimed at diverting more than $1.4 million in public money
from Planned Parenthood, saying the group stood to suffer “irreparable injury” and granting a permanent injunction in a lawsuit filed
by Planned Parenthood of Greater Ohio and Planned Parenthood Southwest Ohio Region.

PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

Judge blocks law to defund Planned Parenthood

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

By Ann Sanner

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A federal
judge blocked a state law aimed
at diverting public money from
Planned Parenthood, saying in a
Friday ruling that the group stood
to suffer “irreparable injury.”
The Ohio law targets the more
than $1.4 million in funding that
Planned Parenthood gets through

the state’s health department. That
money, mostly from the federal
government, supports certain education and prevention programs.
The law would bar such funds from
going to entities that perform or
promote abortions.
The restrictions, which had
been slated to take effect in May,
were signed by Republican Gov.
John Kasich during his failed
presidential bid.

The state’s Republican attorney
general will appeal the ruling, his
spokesman said.
Planned Parenthood of Greater
Ohio and Planned Parenthood
Southwest Ohio Region had sued
the state, saying the law violated
their constitutional rights by denying them the funds “in retaliation
for” providing abortions. Their
lawsuit names the state’s health
director as a defendant.

ATHENS
594-7000

GALLIPOLIS
446-7000

JACKSON
286-7000

60661141

West Virginia contractors come out
against Tomblin’s Hobet mine plan
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Citing dwindling state coffers, West Virginia contractors have publicly rebuked
a large redevelopment plan that Gov.
Earl Ray Tomblin unveiled in his State
of the State address earlier this year.
The West Virginia Contractor’s
Association said in a statement that it
could not support spending $99.8 million to build a 2.6-mile highway to the
reclaimed Hobet surface coal mine in
Boone County when so much money

is needed just to maintain the existing highway system, The Charleston
Gazette-Mail reported (http://bit.
ly/2blzkGg).
Mike Clowser, the group’s executive director, says the State Road
Fund, which is used to repair roads
and bridges throughout the state, has
already been hurt from declining revenue. The fund’s revenue fell nearly
7 percent over the past ﬁscal year to
$691.5 million.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 14, 2016 3A

GALLIA-MEIGS BRIEFS

Recipes wanted for
Salt magazine
Do you have a favorite recipe you
like to make in the fall, perhaps your
go-to chili or your famous apple pie? We
would love for you to share that recipe
and a few words about it for possible
publication in the next Salt magazine.
All entries will be put into a drawing
to win a $25 grocery card. Email Lora
Abernathy, Salt editor, at labernathy@
civitasmedia.com by Monday, Aug. 15.
Be sure to include your name, address
and phone number. If you have a photo
of your dish that you would like to
share, be sure and send that, too.

Ohio AFSCME
retirees to meet
GALLIPOLIS - AFSCME
retirees,Gallia and Jackson counties,
subchapter 102, will meet at 2 p.m.
Aug. 19 at the Gallia County Senior
Resource Center, 1165 State Route 160,
Gallipolis. The subchapter is seeking
new members in the two-county area.
AFSCME (Ohio Council 8, OCSEA,
and OAPSE), OPERS and SERS public
employee retirees and their spouses are
invited to attend the next meeting. NonAFSCME members, who retired from
the city, county, state or school district,
are also welcome to attend. We also
encourage public employees who plan
to retire in the near future to attend.
Issues that are important to retirees

are discussed each month. The group
usually meets the third Friday of each
month. For more information, interested retirees may call 740-245-0093 or
740-245-5255.

ADAMHS board
changes meeting times
GALLIPOLIS — The Aug. 15 and
Sept. 19 meetings of the Gallia-JacksonMeigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services have
been cancelled. The board will have a
special meeting at 6 p.m. Aug. 29. The
board typically meets on the third Monday of each month at the Board Ofﬁce
(53 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis).

Carleton School
Pre-school screenings
SYRACUSE — Carleton School will
be conducting preschool screenings for
children ages 3 and 4 on Aug. 25. Call
Carleton School at 740-992-6681 to
schedule an appointment.

Victims Assistance
staff out of office
POMEROY — Meigs County Victim
Assistance staff will be out of the ofﬁce
Aug. 14-17 attending the national Organization of Victim Assistance Conference in Atlanta, GA.

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

Sunday,
Aug. 14
PATRIOT — The 98th
Myers family reunion at
Fox Fairview Church will
have a potluck meal at 1
p.m. Special gospel music
by The Shaffers.
RACINE — Christian
and Mary Hart family
reunion at Racine American Legion Hall. Pot luck
dinner at 1 p.m. Games
and door prizes. Bring
pictures and memories to
share.
GALLIPOLIS —
Thomas Do It Center
in Gallipolis will have
a pet adoption event in
conjunction with the
Gallia County Canine
Shelter between 11 a.m
and 2 p.m. Dogs adopted
that day will get a free
rabies vaccination from
Riverbend Animal Clinic.
Donate a bag of dog or
cat food and get a 20 percent off coupon for any
one, in-stock regularly
priced item.Also, people
can get an engraved pet
tag while you wait for
only $5.

be closing Vanco Road
from Fairﬁeld Church
Road to Pleasant Hill
Road between 7 a.m. and
6 p.m. for culvert replacement. Residents are asked
to use other roads as a
detour.
GALLIPOLIS — The
American Legion Lafayette Post 27, the Ladies
Auxiliary &amp; the Sons
of American Legion
Squdron 27 E-Board
members will have a
joint E-Board meeting at
5 p.m. at the post home
on McCormick Road. All
E-Board members are
urged to attend.
GALLIPOLIS — The
American Legion Lafayette Post 27 will meet at
6 p.m. at the legion home
on McCormick Road.

Tuesday,
Aug. 16

GALLIPOLIS — Taylor Excavating Services
will be closing Possum
Trot Road from Addison
Pike to Blazer Road
between 7 a.m. and 6
p.m. for culvert replacement. Residents are
asked to use other roads
as a detour.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct
an Immunization Clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy.
GALLIPOLIS — Stroke
Survivors’ Support Group
meeting, 12:30-1:30 p.m.,
Gallia Senior Resource
Center, 1165 State Route
160, Gallipolis. Lunch
served at noon.
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Board of
Developmental Disabilities will meet at 4 p.m. at
the administrative ofﬁces
located at 77 Mill Creek
Road, Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS — The
GALLIPOLIS — Taylor American Legion Ladies
Auxiliary will meet at 6
Excavating Services will

Monday,
Aug. 15

p.m. at the post home on
McCormick Road.

Thursday,
Aug. 18
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Board of
Commissioners will meet
at 9 a.m. in the county
commission ofﬁce on the
ﬁrst ﬂoor of the Gallia
County Courthouse.
GALLIPOLIS — Blood
drive, 12:30-6 p.m., St.
Peter’s Episcopal Church
Fellowship Hall, 541
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Bring ID or donor card.
Call 1-800-RED CROSS
or visit redcrossblood.
org and enter: StPetes to
schedule an appointment.
GALLIPOLIS —
AMVETS Post 23 and
Disabled American Veterans Chapter 141 will have
a “Meet the Candidates”
night from 6-9 p.m., at the
post home, 108 Liberty
Ave., Gallipolis. Public is
invited to attend.

Friday,
Aug. 19
POMEROY — The
Pomery High School
Class of 1959 will be having their regular Third
Friday lunch at Fox Pizza
at noon.

Saturday,
Aug. 20
GALLIPOLIS — Free
legal clinic, 9 a.m. to
noon, Bossard Memorial
Library. Attorneys will
be on hand to answer
legal questions in all
areas except bankruptcy,
workers comp, disability
and unemployment. No
appointment necessary;
ﬁrst come, ﬁrst serve
basis. Bring evidence or
paperwork that applies to
your questions. Call 740446-4344 or 740-578-6269
for questions or more
information.

For the best local news coverage,
visit MyDailyTribune.com

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and Twitter

I would like
to thank
Jeff Adkins,
Gallia County
Prosecuting Attorney,
For Buying
My Pig at the 2016
Gallia Co. Jr. Fair

Koren Truance
Raccoon Valley 4-H Club

60673419

Lilly Rees

60673745

Follow us

I would like to thank
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Cabell Huntington
Hospital &amp; Joan C.
Edwards School of
Medicine for purchasing
my 2016 Market Steer and
supporting county youth.

60673369

�LOCAL

4A Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MU receives $2.4M grant to study nutrition
Staff Report

small intestine,”
region.
will look at the
“I’m very excited
regulation of gluHUNTINGTON, W.Va. that our team of
tamine absorption
researchers, led by
— Dr. Uma Sundaram,
in the intestine in
Dr. Sundaram, has
vice dean for research
relation to inﬂamand graduate education at received this very
matory bowel
important grant,”
the Marshall University
disease in hopes of
said Dr. Joseph
Joan C. Edwards School
Sundaram
developing better
of Medicine, has received I. Shapiro, dean
nutritional theraof the School of
a ﬁve-year $2.39 million
Medicine. “It is an impor- pies.
grant from the National
The condition predistant boost to our existing
Institutes of Health to
research operation in that poses sufferers to a highstudy gastrointestinal
er rate of colon cancer.
it provides new extraabsorption of amino
According to the West
mural funding, which is
acids, speciﬁcally glutamission critical as we face Virginia Department
mine, and its effects on
declining state support.” of Health and Human
inﬂammatory bowel disResources, colon cancer
The project, “Regulaease, which is particularly
tion of amino acid absorp- is West Virginia’s second
prevalent in West Virleading cause of cancerginia and the Appalachian tion in the mammalian

supported by this grant
includes:Dr. Subha
Arthur, assistant professor.
Dr. Balasubramanian
Palaniappan, post-doctoral fellow.
Dr. Soudamani Singh,
post-doctoral fellow.
Molly R. Butts, doctoral
graduate student.
Marshall University
President Jerry Gilbert
said the grant is an
indication of the university’s growth in the
area of externally funded
research.
“Building a robust
research platform is

essential to our university’s growth and development,” Gilbert said.
“The school of medicine
and its leadership are to
be commended for their
hard work and dedication in fostering an
environment conducive
to garnering funding for
substantial academic
research.”
The RO1 grant is the
original and historically
oldest grant mechanism
used by the NIH and is
considered the most prestigious. This RO1 is the
largest grant of its kind to
date for the university.

GALLIA-MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

STOCKS
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 21.75
BBT (NYSE) - 37.01
Peoples (NASDAQ) 23.07
Pepsico (NYSE) - 108.59
Premier (NASDAQ) 17.73
Rockwell (NYSE) - 117.64
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
- 10.58
Royal Dutch Shell - 49.84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 17.59
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 73.89
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 9.98
WesBanco (NYSE) 31.26
Worthington (NYSE) 41.82
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions
Aug 12, 2016, provided
by Edward Jones ﬁnancial
advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Sunday, Aug. 14
GALLIPOLIS — Glory Road
will be singing and Mark Dunlap will be preaching at 4 p.m.
at Promiseland Church on Clay
Chapel Road.
GALLIPOLIS — Promiseland Church on Clay Chapel
Road has “Youth” at 4 p.m.
every Sunday during the church
service. “Youth” ends in time
for the children to hear the
preaching.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light”
Worship Service in the Family Life Center, 9 a.m.; Sunday
School, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship, “Family Faith Summer Parable” series, 10:45 a.m.; Evening
Worship, “Revealing Revelation”
series, 6 p.m.; Youth Service/
Family Life Center, 6 p.m.; First
Church of the Nazarene, 1110
First Ave. with Pastor Douglas
Downs.
ADDISON — Sunday School,
10 a.m., evening service at 6
p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist

Church, with Pastor Rick Barcus.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee
Klatch at 9:45 a.m.; Sunday
School at 10 a.m.; Morning
worship service at 10:30 a.m.;
Pastor Bob Hood, Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337 Johnson
Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495 or 740709-6107.

Tuesday, Aug. 16
GALLIPOLIS — Promiseland
Church on Clay Chapel Road
will be having a youth program,
Camp Courageous, for children
ages 3 to teen, at 7 p.m. every
Tuesday. There will be food,
Bible lessons, games and more.

the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.
ADDISON — Business meeting and Bible study, 7 p.m. Addison Freewill Baptist Church.
GALLIPOLIS — Bible Study;
6 p.m.; “A Better Country:
Preparing for Heaven” by Dan
Schaeffer; special viewing of
part of “The War Room”; Pastor
Bob Hood, Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson Ridge
Rd.; (740-446-7495 or 740-7096107).

Friday, Aug. 19
GALLIPOLIS — Gospel in
the Park, 7 p.m., Gallipolis City
Park. Singing by Victory River,
Singing Shafers, New Freedom,
Rick and Jenny Towe, The Connors and Scott Fraser.

Wednesday,
Aug. 17

Saturday, Aug. 20

GALLIPOLIS — Children’s
Ministry, 6:45 p.m.; Youth
“Impact 127,” 7 p.m.; Prayer &amp;
Praise, 7 p.m.; First Church of

WILKESVILLE — Noodle
supper, 4-5:30 p.m., Wilkesville
United Methodist Church.
Everyone welcome.

Questions about
your Farm Insurance?

REED &amp; BAUR
INSURANCE
AGENCY
820 East Main St., Pomeroy
740-992-3600
www.reedbaur.com

“SERVING YOUR
COMMUNITY SINCE 1903”
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HOME
AUTO
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60673807

AEP (NYSE) - 67.55
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 21.03
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)
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Big Lots (NYSE) - 55.26
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 36.95
BorgWarner (NYSE) 33.81
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 6.78
Champion (NASDAQ) 30.50
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 48.35
Collins (NYSE) - 84.48
DuPont (NYSE) - 67.66
US Bank (NYSE) - 42.73
Gen Electric (NYSE) 31.24
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
- 53.72
JP Morgan (NYSE) 65.32
Kroger (NYSE) - 32.58
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 73.66
Norfolk So (NYSE) 88.36

related deaths.
“This project will tackle
a very signiﬁcant health
issue in West Virginia,”
said Sundaram, who is
the principal investigator
of the grant. “Our work
will focus on immunebased nutritional treatment for IBD. It will also
have a potential application for preventing the
growth of colon cancers,
which are more malignant
and common in IBD, a
condition that impacts
our state and Appalachia.”
The team of investigators in Sundaram’s lab

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 14, 2016 5A

Academic booster club impacts many students
Staff Report

year-end awards to students. Awards are given
to all students grades 1
through 5 who were on
the honor roll during the
school year with all A’s
or A’s/B’s. This single
project provides awards
to almost 350 students
annually.
ABC also sponsors
the Math Key, which
is awarded yearly to a
graduating senior, and
the Girl’s Scholastic Athlete Award, given to one

to provide enrichment
opportunities for all the
students within the district. Booster ofﬁcials
said contributions of any
size are welcomed and
appreciated, and all contributions are tax deductible.
For more information

female athlete at each of
the three athletic banquets held each year.
Funding for all the
Academic Booster Club
projects is done through
the donations of local
businesses and individuals. The group’s main
fundraising project is
the “Fifty for the Future”
campaign. Letters are
sent asking for a $50
donation from individuals
or $100 from businesses.
These donations are used

about the Academic
Boosters or any of its programs, contact them at
P.O. Box 324, Gallipolis,
OH 45631, like their facebook page or contact an
ofﬁcer: President Paula
Williams-Wray, Vice President Bridgit Harris or
Treasurer Lori Young.

60673879

raised funds and granted
requests enabling extra
GALLIPOLIS — Since projects, materials and
opportunities for stuorganizing in 1986, the
dents in the Gallipolis
Gallipolis City Schools
City School District.
Academic Booster Club
Last year alone, this
has provided full or partial funding for education- funding directly impacted more than 550 stual projects that enhance
dents. Almost 99 percent
the school curriculum.
of the group’s annual
In cooperation with
the teachers, administra- budget is spent directly
on student programs.
tors and the Gallipolis
One of the most
City Schools Board of
worthwhile endeavors
Education, the Acahas been funding for the
demic Booster Club has

Meigs
delegation
tours the
Capitol.
Courtesy photo

From page 1A

positively about “the
friendships I built with
teens from across Ohio”
and Smith felt the visit
“prepared me for my
future.”
The program is

thematically oriented
around civic responsibility and leadership, and
some of the workshops
involved speciﬁc plans
for delegates’ hometowns.
Stated goals for participants were to “learn
essential civic leadership
skills and leave with
the tools that will allow

them to bring about real
change in their communities.”
Stumbo highly praised
the experience and was
emphatic about the positive effects.
“I got to see our
nation’s Capitol through
the eyes of teens who
had not lost all faith in
those who work these

halls,” she said. “I got to
spend my week helping to
ensure that the next generation is ready to lead,
and I think many of them
will be ready before we
know it.”
The 2016 Outstanding
4-H’ers will be announced
Friday during the Junior
Fair Awards ceremony at
the Meigs County Fair.

60673825

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�E ditorial
6A Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Prevent spiritual
‘Sugar Boogers’
and ‘Babes’
Pastoring in the modern era has a great many
conveniences that were not available to God’s
men in bygone days.
I can only imagine (provided he did not play
Pokémon Go) how much the great apostle Paul
could have accomplished if he had lived in the
era of cell phones. I realize that they are a bit of
a two-edged sword, but I truly love the pastoral
beneﬁts of the cell phone era.
I regularly send a mass text to
every member of my church who
has a cell phone. I can reach the
entire church body in a matter of
seconds. I also use the phone to
text individual, personal messages,
bits of encouragement to those who
are in need or bits of instruction to
Bo
those who have questions.
Wagner
Contributing
My church members are just as
columnist
active in this as I am. However, I
have found that, as great of a tool
as the cell phone and the text is, it
can also provide for some incredibly entertaining
moments.
Some time back, one of the great men in our
church sent me a text. It was encouraging, something that he had gotten out of his personal
“My church members devotions that mornare just as active in
ing that he wanted to
this as I am. However, share with me.
Like many of our
I have found that,
folks, he was using
as great of a tool
talk to text.
as the cell phone
Now, the problem
and the text is, it
with talk to text is
that you do not usualcan also provide
ly really see what you
for some incredibly
have written before
entertaining
you send it. Commoments.”
pound that with the
fact that our mouth
often works faster
than our brain, and
you have the potential for hilarity. And thus it
was that on that day I received a wonderful text
that ended with the words, “Love you, babe!”
I knew immediately what had happened. Halfway through the text he had forgotten that he
was about to send it to me, and had gotten the
idea that he was sending it to his wife. That,
though, did not stop me from enjoying the mischievous nature I was born with. I suppose that
is why my return text to him was, “Well, thanks a
bunch, Sugar Booger, I love you, too!”
It was only a few seconds later that he called,
apologizing profusely and conﬁrming my suspicions. He had indeed forgotten that he was about
to send that text to me instead of his wife.
For my part, I was laughing hysterically.
The entire episode was a very clear case of a
mixed message. Part of the content was intended
for me, part of the content was intended for
someone else.
As you study your Bible, is very helpful to be
aware that the same thing is true there. It is a
bit unwise to say things like, “every promise of
Scripture is for you.” The truth of the matter is,
not every promise of Scripture is for you, nor is
every promise of Scripture for me. 2 Timothy
2:15 says, “Study to shew thyself approved unto
God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed,
rightly dividing the word of truth.”
The Bible must be rightly divided in order to
be rightly understood. There are some promises
and covenants that apply only to the Jewish
people themselves. There are some that apply
only to the church. There are some portions of
the Old Testament law that were completely
fulﬁlled in Christ and are not binding on anyone
today. There are prophecies of the future that
deal solely with the Jewish people, and there are
prophecies of the future that deal solely with the
church.
There are promises that are unconditional,
things that God will do for us no matter what we
do.
There are also conditional promises, things
that God will do for us based on our obedience to
his commands.
Scripture is too precious and too powerful to
be handled lightly. Give yourself to the study of
it.
The brethren in Berea were described as “more
noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they
received the word with all readiness of mind,
and searched the scriptures daily, whether those
things were so.” Even in the face of the preaching
of the great apostle Paul, these noble believers
understood that it was their responsibility to go
to the written word of God and ﬁnd out if his
words lined up with it.
Being a daily, consistent student of the word
is noble. And it might just prevent us from any
spiritual “Sugar Boogers and Babes.”
Bo Wagner is pastor of the Cornerstone Baptist Church of
Mooresboro, N.C., a widely traveled evangelist, and the author of
several books. Dr. Wagner can be contacted by email at 2knowhim@
cbc-web.org.

THEIR VIEW

Be prepared with Social Security
Your summer job has
ended, so there’s no better time than now to start
planning for retirement.
You can easily be ahead of
the game and secure your
future with a few simple
steps. As a millennial,
you are in the best position for planning, investing, and saving for your
retirement, growing that
nest egg as large as it can
be. The sooner you start,
the more money you will
have.
There are two easy
ways to prepare for retirement at a young age:
Start a my Social
Security account. Having a personal and secure
account is easy, but better
yet, it empowers you. You
can access the services
you need in the convenience of your own home

you will have later.
without traveling
myRA is designed
to a local ofﬁce
Marcus
for people who
and waiting in a
Geiger
long line. To view Contributing don’t have a retirement savings plan
your social security columnist
through their
statement, go to
employer, or are
www.socialseculimited from other savrity.gov/myaccount.
ings options. Check it
As you can see, many
out at www.myra.gov. If
of our resources are
your employer provides
available online and my
Social Security is one of a retirement savings
the best places to access plan, such as a 401(k),
learn more about that
vital information about
plan’s potential matching
your retirement. We are
contributions or other
constantly adding new
beneﬁts.
features to make your
Did you know that a
experience with us faster
20-year-old worker has a
and more convenient.
1-in-4 chance of becoming
You can even replace
disabled before reaching
a lost or stolen Social
full retirement age? Social
Security card in certain
Security will be there for
states.
You should also start a you if you become dismyRA account. It’s never abled and cannot work.
Accessing your online
too early, and the more
account can also help you
you save now, the more

determine your estimated
future disability beneﬁts.
To learn more about disability and to apply, go to
www.socialsecurity.gov/
disabilityssi/apply.html.
Remember, that summer job might be behind
you, but you have a bright
future ahead. Social
Security is there, helping you every step of the
way, securing today and
tomorrow.
Marcus Geiger is Social Security
district manager in Gallipolis, Ohio.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY …
Today is Sunday, Aug.
14, the 227th day of 2016.
There are 139 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Aug. 14, 1941,
President Franklin D.
Roosevelt and British
Prime Minister Winston
Churchill issued the
Atlantic Charter, a joint
declaration that expressed
hopes for “a better future
for the world.”

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The aims of life are the best defense against death.”
— Primo Levi, Italian chemist and writer (1919-1987).

In 1956, German dramatist Bertolt Brecht died
in East Berlin at age 58.
In 1969, British troops
went to Northern Ireland
to intervene in sectarian violence between
Protestants and Roman
Catholics.
In 1973, U.S. bombing
of Cambodia came to a
On this date:
halt.
In 1848, the Oregon
In 1980, workers went
Territory was created.
on strike at the Lenin
In 1935, President
Shipyard in Gdansk,
Franklin D. Roosevelt
signed the Social Security Poland, in a job action
that resulted in creation
Act into law.
In 1936, Rainey Bethea of the Solidarity labor
movement. Actress-model
became the last man to
Dorothy Stratten, 20,
be publicly executed in
was shot to death by her
the United States as he
estranged husband and
was hanged in Owensmanager, Paul Snider,
boro, Kentucky, for rapwho then killed himself.
ing 70-year-old Lischia
In 1996, the Republican
Edwards.
national convention in
In 1945, President
San Diego nominated
Harry S. Truman
Bob Dole for president
announced that Imperial
and Jack Kemp for vice
Japan had surrendered
president.
unconditionally, ending
World War II.
In 1947, Pakistan
Ten years ago:
became independent of
Israel halted its offenBritish rule.
sive against Hezbollah
In 1951, newspaper
guerrillas as a U.N.publisher William Ranimposed cease-ﬁre went
dolph Hearst, 88, died in into effect after a month
Beverly Hills, California. of warfare that had killed

more than 900 people.
Cuban state television
aired the ﬁrst photos
of Fidel Castro since he
stepped down as president to recover from surgery, showing the bedridden Cuban leader talking
with his brother Raul as
well as Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Actor
Bruno Kirby died in Los
Angeles at age 57.

U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry celebrated
the day, but also made
an extraordinary, nationally broadcast call for
democratic change on the
island.

Today’s Birthdays:
Broadway lyricist
Lee Adams (“Bye Bye
Birdie”) is 92. Pulitzer
Prize-winning author
Russell Baker is 91.
Singer Buddy Greco is
90. College Football Hall
of Famer John Brodie is
81. Singer Dash Crofts
is 78. Rock singer David
Crosby is 75. Country
singer Connie Smith
Five years ago:
Syria used gunboats for is 75. Comedian-actor
the ﬁrst time to crush the Steve Martin is 71. Actor
Antonio Fargas is 70.
uprising against Bashar
Assad’s regime, hammer- Singer-musician Larry
Graham is 70. Actress
ing parts of the MediterSusan Saint James is 70.
ranean coastal city of
Actor David Schramm
Latakia after thousands
marched there to demand is 70. Author Danielle
Steel is 69. Rock singerthe president’s ouster.
musician Terry Adams
Keegan Bradley won the
PGA Championship after (NRBQ) is 66. “Far Side”
staging an amazing come- cartoonist Gary Larson is
back to force a three-hole 66. Actor Carl Lumbly is
65. Olympic gold medal
playoff and beat Jason
Dufner at Atlanta Athletic swimmer Debbie Meyer
is 64. Actress Jackee
Club.
Harry is 60. Actress Marcia Gay Harden is 57.
One year ago:
Basketball Hall of Famer
The Stars and Stripes
Earvin “Magic” Johnrose over the newly
reopened U.S. Embassy in son is 57. Singer Sarah
Cuba after a half century Brightman is 56. Actress
of often-hostile relations; Susan Olsen is 55.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 14, 2016 7A

NEWS FROM
AROUND THE
BUCKEYE
STATE

Hero
From page 1A

The main headstone,
which can only be read by
applying “sidewalk chalk”
over the inscription, says:
“JAMES WHALEY, A
Soldier of the Revolution,
died Dec. 4, 1840. Aged
89 years, 11 months, 19
days.” A second marker
indicates that James Whaley was a captain in the
2nd Pennsylvania Militia
during the War of 1812.
But thanks to the members of American Legion
Post 39 and the Meigs
County Veterans Service,
James Whaley’s service
so many years ago will
now be recognized every
day with the appropriate
veterans markers. The
groups will also adorn the
gravesite with American
ﬂags for all of the veterans’ service observance
days.
“Keith contacted me
one day and wanted to
know if the Legion could
provide markers for the
grave,” said Wally Hatﬁeld, adjutant for Post
39. “We arranged that
with the Meigs Veterans
Service ofﬁce. They were
provided within a week
and here we are, honoring
this great man.”
Keith Whaley, who
grew up in Meigs County’s Bedford Township
and attended the former
Pomeroy High School,
said he’s always been
aware of his great-greatgreat-grandfather’s service in the American Revolutionary War and War
of 1812. A self-described
history and genealogy
buff, Keith Whaley said
he “enjoys looking up
things” and when his family came across a book
about the family’s history,

1 dead after
van hit by
truck

Michael Johnson | Times-Sentinel

Wallace Hatfield, adjutant for American Legion Post 39 in Pomeroy, applies chalk on the grave marker for American Revolutionary War
veteran James Whaley in order to better read the inscription.

the search was on for the
grave’s location.
“We’re not sure where
(James Whaley) was born,
but it was on or about
Dec. 10, 1750,” Keith said.
“He enlisted in the Continental Army in 1776. He
later married for the ﬁrst
time in 1808 at age 58 and
had 10 children.”
According to Keith,
another ancestor, the Rev.
Samuel Whaley penned
a book in 1901 about the
Whaley family history.
Keith’s father borrowed
the book from another
Whaley descendent of
David Charles Whaley,
a well-known Pomeroy
dentist in his day. After
looking up information
provided in the book,
the family realized that
James Whaley was buried

“somewhere” in Beech
Grove Cemetery.
“We were looking for
it one day … and kind
of stumbled up it here
because there was no
record of where he was
actually buried,” Keith
said. “There was no map
that I was aware of.”
According to Keith,
James Whaley was
involved in three battles
during the Revolutionary
War: Battle of Brandywine Creek in Delaware,
Battle of Germantown,
Pa., and Battle of White
Marsh (also known as
Battle of Edge Hill), also
in Pennsylvania. He was
later discharged at Fort
Pitt, Pa., which is now
present-day Pittsburgh,
on Dec. 4, 1777.
He enlisted, accord-

ing to Keith, and served
under Commander Col.
William Crawford of the
13th Virginia and fought
for Maj. Gen. Nathanael
Greene’s “wing,” as it was
called in those days.
“He didn’t ﬁnish his
enlistment, for whatever reason, but he was
involved in those battles,”
Keith Whaley said. “In
the War of 1812, he volunteered again and was
part of the force that was
commanded by William
Henry Harrison (the
eventual ninth president
of the U.S.).”
The rest, as they say, is
history.
“We have a lot of family buried in the area and
elsewhere,” Keith said,
who also noted that some
of those ancestors have

a solid record of military
service, having fought in
the Civil War and World
War I, among others.
“Growing up, Memorial
Day was all about seeing
veterans’ graves decorated
with ﬂags. That’s how I
remember it,” Keith said.
“Thanks to Post 39 and
the Meigs County Veterans Service, my greatgreat-great-grandfather’s
service will be remembered and recognized
along with all the others.”
“It’s been a wonderful experience and quite
an honor, a privilege to
honor this man,” Hatﬁeld
said. “I’m glad to be a
part of it.”
Reach Michael Johnson at 740-4462342, ext. 2102, or on Twitter @
OhioEditorMike.

NAPOLEON, Ohio
(AP) — Authorities
say a woman has been
killed and ﬁve people
critically injured after
a van carrying members of an Ohio girls’
high school water polo
team was struck by a
semitrailer in northwest Ohio.
The Henry County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce says
the van failed to yield
at an intersection Friday and was struck in
the side.
The sheriff’s ofﬁce
says 19-year-old van
passenger Courtney
Fisher died at the
scene. The injured
include the van’s driver, 45-year-old Vicki
Fisher; 17-year-old
Betsey Fisher; 14-yearold Melanie Fisher;
15-year-old Samantha
Fink; and 14-year-old
Sydney Zullich.
Some of the passengers were members
of a water polo team
from Worthington Kilbourne High School
in suburban Columbus
headed to a tournament in Napoleon.

Man found
guilty in crash
that killed 2
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) — A man
See BRIEFS | 8A

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O’DELL TRUE VALUE
LUMBER

60673218

Weber Sale Ends 8/31/16.

60670488

CLEARANCE
See Store for LOWEST PRICING!

�WEATHER

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Briefs

to-person spread is rare.
The state says both children got the
virus while at the Clark County Fair
in late July.
The cases come at the height of
county fair season in Ohio.
State agriculture and health ofﬁcials
are stressing the importance of handwashing to fairgoers who come into
contact with swine.
Ohio’s agriculture department plans
to hold a conference call Monday with
fair boards to emphasize such precautions.

From page 7A

accused of causing a crash that killed
two pedestrians when he recklessly
drove his pickup truck into a school
bus that hit the man and woman in
central Ohio has been found guilty of
all charges.
A jury in Columbus found 63-yearold Terrance Trent guilty on Friday
on two counts of aggravated vehicular
homicide in the deaths of 21-year-old
Stephanie Fibelkorn and 58-year-old
William Lewis. He also was found
guilty on two counts of vehicular
assault for injuries to his passenger
and the bus driver.
Trent’s attorney didn’t immediately
return a call for comment Friday.
Trent testiﬁed he panicked because
his girlfriend was hitting him as he
drove. He said he didn’t remember
speeding through red lights or weaving through trafﬁc before slamming
into the bus in 2014.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — The
mother of a 2-year-old boy who was
found dead in a bedroom where the
thermostat was set so high that the
temperature reached 100-plus degrees
has been sentenced to two years in
prison.
A Toledo judge sentenced 31-yearold Megan Giltz on Thursday. Giltz
pleaded no contest in May to endangering children and obstructing
ofﬁcial business in the Oct. 6 death of
her son, Robert.
The Blade in Toledo reports that an
autopsy concluded the toddler likely
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ofﬁcials say two children became ill with died from heart problems, although
dehydration from a hot environment
a new version of the ﬂu virus after
being in contact with infected pigs at was cited as a signiﬁcant condition.
Authorities say Giltz was charged
a west-central Ohio county fair.
with obstruction for initially lying to
Ohio’s health and agriculture
departments said Friday neither child police about how long her son had
was hospitalized. The ﬂu is known as been in the room and how much nourishment he’d had.
a variant of H3N2, which normally
Giltz’ attorney, Peter Rost, declined
circulates in swine. Its symptoms are
similar to seasonal ﬂu viruses. Person- to comment Friday.

Ohio officials: 2
children get flu from
swine at county fair

Courtesy photo

Lt. Matt Champlin, of the Gallipolis Police Department, outfits his dog, Kriz, with the newly gifted
bulletproof vest funded by community efforts and the 4-H group, the K-9 Korps.

Vest
From page 1A

just one organization
under the umbrella company Vesting America’s
Police K-9s. The VAPKK9s
has a partnership with
TREAD Armament and
Weaponry of Washington,
Utah. Typically, a vest of
the quality purchased by
the 4-H club costs around
$1,500, but through partnerships the group was
able to purchase the vest
for nearly half that.
The vest Kris received
is constructed by Bullet
Blocker of Boston. The
vest is the lightest on
the market and weighs
around 2.5 pounds. It is
ﬂame resistant and has
13 layers of Kevlar. By
comparison, other vests
can reach around $1,500
and weigh four to six
pounds. These vests have

The group has previously purchased vests
for other police dogs in the county and is
intending to purchase its third vest this
week.

been reported to stop a
four-inch stabbing blade,
a .44 Magnum, 9mm and
.45 slugs. Supposedly, the
vest can protect against
hollow-point ammunition.
The group has previously purchased vests
for other police dogs in
the county and is intending to purchase its third
vest this week. Elliot
extended thanks to Gene
and Peggy Wood, Jason
and Tracy Winters, Alexis
Wothe, Vince and Joyce
Hill, Xtreme Dreams 4-H
club, For His Glory 4-H
club, Sundance Kids 4-H
club, Aftershock 4H club
and Twilight 4-H club.
K-9 Korps members

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

76°

84°

78°

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)

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

0.09
0.75
1.51
33.57
28.13

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:42 a.m.
8:24 p.m.
5:34 p.m.
2:59 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Aug 18 Aug 24

New

Sep 1

First

Sep 9

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

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

Major
9:02a
9:47a
10:35a
11:25a
12:17p
12:45a
1:41a

Minor
2:49a
3:34a
4:22a
5:11a
6:03a
6:58a
7:55a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
9:27p
10:14p
11:01p
11:51p
---1:11p
2:08p

Minor
3:14p
4:00p
4:48p
5:38p
6:30p
7:24p
8:21p

WEATHER HISTORY
Rain on Aug. 14, 1979, left 1,800 Las
Vegas residents without electricity
and made getting around the ﬂooded
city streets dicey. It is a gamble to
expect much rain in Las Vegas, Nev.,
during August.

For the best local news coverage, visit MyDailyTribune.com

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
85/69

Moderate

High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
12.60
16.21
21.11
12.84
13.07
25.48
13.39
24.87
33.67
12.37
15.10
34.10
13.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.05
+0.58
+0.26
+0.17
-0.48
+0.21
+0.30
+0.36
+0.32
+0.34
+0.50
+0.50
+0.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

85°
71°

Humid with rain and a Mostly cloudy and
thunderstorm
humid with a t-storm

Mainly cloudy with a
t-storm in spots

Chance for a couple
of showers

An afternoon
thunderstorm in spots

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
81/67

Marietta
83/69

Murray City
82/68
Belpre
84/70

Athens
83/69

110s
Seattle
100s
83/59
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
70/55
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
91/68
Rain

Elizabeth
86/71

Spencer
86/69

Buffalo
87/70
Milton
88/71

St. Albans
88/71

Huntington
87/71

NATIONAL FORECAST

Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

St. Marys
84/70

Parkersburg
83/70

Coolville
84/70

Ironton
88/71

Ashland
88/71
Grayson
88/70

SATURDAY

85°
66°

Wilkesville
84/69
POMEROY
Jackson
85/69
84/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
86/71
86/70
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
80/69
GALLIPOLIS
86/70
87/71
86/70

South Shore Greenup
88/69
84/68

42
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
86/70

FRIDAY

85°
67°

McArthur
82/69

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed causes
Mold: 1832

THURSDAY

81°
68°

Adelphi
81/67
Chillicothe
82/67

WEDNESDAY

88°
69°

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

Waverly
83/67

Pollen: 3

Low

MOON PHASES

Ryan Smith’s support of initiatives like the state tax holiday that
occurred Aug. 5-7.
The Ohio Council of Retail Merchant’s has partnered with the support of the National Retail Federation in handing out such awards in
the past.

TUESDAY

Mostly cloudy, some
rain and a t-storm

5

Primary: basidiospores
Mon.
6:42 a.m.
8:23 p.m.
6:23 p.m.
3:51 a.m.

MONDAY

Founded in 1922, the Ohio Council of Retail Merchants is the state’s
oldest and largest advocate for the
retail industry, representing more
than 5,000 retailers across the state.
Ohio’s retail industry accounts for
18 percent of Ohio’s Gross Domestic
Product ($26.5 billion annually)
and directly or indirectly employs
1.5 million people, 1 in 4 Ohio jobs,
more than any other industry.

From page 1A

EXTENDED FORECAST

A shower and thunderstorm around today. Heavy rain
and a thunderstorm late tonight. High 86° / Low 70°

Statistics for Friday

93°
75°
86°
65°
100° in 1944
48° in 1930

Johnson

88°
71°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

consist of Jerilyn Darst,
Christopher Menzel,
Darius Pishvazadeh,
Gage Smith, David Spiers
and Abigail Stover. Group
advisors are Jerry Darst,
Brea Elliot, Jonathan
Elliot and Beth Menzel.
The group is continually receiving donations
and support from the
public. They can be contacted at www.facebook.
com/penniesforprotection, K9Korps4Hclub@
gmail.com or by calling
740-645-3055. The club
has a GoFundMe page
under the “Pennies for
Protection” name and an
account with Ohio Valley
Bank for donations.

8 PM

Mom of Ohio 2-yearold found dead in hot
room sentenced

Clendenin
88/71
Charleston
86/71

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
79/60

Billings
90/59

Montreal
79/62
Toronto
84/66

Minneapolis
81/64
Chicago
83/67

Denver
91/58

Detroit
85/68

New York
96/77
Washington
98/79

Kansas City
85/64

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
86/61/t
65/56/c
91/73/pc
91/78/t
98/75/t
90/59/pc
99/64/pc
96/73/t
86/71/t
94/74/s
86/55/s
83/67/pc
80/70/t
83/69/pc
80/69/t
92/73/t
91/58/s
84/65/s
85/68/pc
86/76/pc
86/75/t
79/68/t
85/64/s
110/86/s
79/72/t
91/68/s
84/72/t
90/79/pc
81/64/pc
89/73/t
87/77/t
96/77/pc
88/66/pc
90/76/t
98/79/pc
106/85/s
80/68/t
88/66/c
96/76/s
95/76/pc
82/69/c
99/73/s
70/55/pc
83/59/s
98/79/t

Hi/Lo/W
90/61/s
67/55/c
89/73/t
88/76/t
92/73/t
89/59/pc
97/63/s
84/70/pc
89/72/t
95/74/pc
87/56/pc
82/67/pc
79/71/r
82/70/pc
81/70/r
88/72/t
93/59/s
84/63/pc
82/68/pc
87/76/pc
87/74/r
78/70/r
84/61/pc
110/85/s
79/71/r
93/66/pc
83/74/r
90/78/pc
84/68/s
88/74/t
88/77/r
91/75/pc
87/61/pc
91/75/t
93/77/t
108/83/s
82/68/pc
82/62/pc
95/75/pc
93/75/t
77/68/r
98/70/s
72/54/pc
82/59/s
94/77/t

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
91/73

High
Low

El Paso
89/65

Chihuahua
72/59

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

116° in Death Valley, CA
30° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
122° in Mitribah, Kuwait
Low -22° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
86/75
Monterrey
95/73

Miami
90/79

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

60647073

8A Sunday, August 14, 2016

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

WVU
tries to
fill many
holes on
defense

Bengals
fall to
Vikings
SPORTS s 3B
Sunday, August 14, 2016 s Section B

Eagles 2nd at Lakeside

By John Ruby
Associated Press

Big 12 teams have
feasted often on West
Virginia’s defense since
the Mountaineers entered
the league in 2012, and
this season could spell
another long one for a
unit that must ﬁnd nine
new starters.
In a pivotal year for
embattled coach Dana
Holgorsen, the Mountaineers return plenty of
playmakers on offense,
leaving it up to defensive
coordinator Tony Gibson
to keep that side of the
ball from becoming the
team’s weak spot.
The challenge got a lot
tougher when junior safety Dravon Askew-Henry,
the lone returnee among
the top six tacklers, was
lost for the season with
an injury to his left knee
sustained during practice
Wednesday. Askew-Henry
had started all 26 career
games.
“This is a tremendous
loss for our football
team,” Holgorsen said
in a statement Friday.
“Without a doubt Dravon
was one of our leaders on
and off the ﬁeld.”
All three linebackers and four of the ﬁve
starters in the secondary
are gone. Senior Nana
Kyeremeh is the most
experienced returning
cornerback with one
career start.
The good news is the
backups from a year
ago were part of a 3-3-5
formation that came up
with some stops after
the Mountaineers got
knocked around in their
ﬁrst three seasons in the
Big 12. Despite allowing
an average of 45 points
over a four-game conference losing streak, West
Virginia allowed the fewest touchdowns (33) and
had the most interceptions (23) among Big 12
See WVU | 2B

Photos by Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Southern’s Eli Hunter tees off on the first hole during the annual Vinton County Viking Tee-off Invitational.

4 OVP teams take part in Waterford Invite
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Southern’s Ashley Acree, who
competed as an individual and
shot a 104.
For the boys — along with
Meigs — Warren and Marietta
split their teams into an “A”
and “B”, while Wheeling Park,
Coshocton and Gallia Academy
played single clubs and made
up the nine-team big schools.
Along with Eastern and
Southern, host Waterford and
neighboring Fort Frye joined
Williamstown (W. Va.), Alexander, Belpre and Zanesville
Rosecrans as the eight small
squads.
The girls division consisted
of Eastern, Meigs and Gallia
Academy — along with Waterford, Tri-Valley, Warren and
Vinton County.
Waterford won the smallschool and ladies’ divisions,
while Warren’s “A” team took
home the big-school division.
The Eagles’ 368 trailed
Waterford (335) by exactly
33 strokes, but Eastern edged
Fort Frye (371) by three on the

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE

BEVERLY, Ohio — Four
Ohio Valley Publishing area
golf teams invaded the Waterford area on Wednesday, and
competed on a scorching day
as part of the annual Waterford
Invitational at Lakeside Golf
Club.
Of the four schools — Eastern, Southern, Meigs and Gallia Academy — the Eastern
Eagles ended up as runner-up
in the eight-team small-school
division, ﬁring a team total of
368.
While Southern also competed — and ﬁnished fourth
— in the small-school division,
Gallia Academy and Meigs
made up the nine-team bigschool division, with the Meigs
Marauders actually ﬁelding
two teams on Wednesday.
There was also a ladies division, in which Eastern ﬁnished
third out of seven representatives — and Gallia Academy
and Meigs competed in.
Also on the girls side was

Monday, August 15
Golf
Southern, Waterford at
Wahama, 4:30
Trimble, Miller at Eastern, 4:30

Meigs wins 1st TVC-Ohio golf match

See EAGLES | 2B

Gallia Academy’s Jeremy Brumfield tees off on the first hole during the annual
Vinton County Viking Tee-off Invitational.

By Paul Boggs

Tuesday, August 16
Golf
Miller, Belpre at South
Gallia, 4:30
TVC-Ohio at Alexander, 4:30
Wednesday, August 17
Golf
Eastern, Belpre at
Waterford, 4:30
Gallia Academy girls at
Westfall, 1:30
Thursday, August 18
Golf
GAHS, RVHS, SGHS at
Cliffside, 4 p.m.
Wahama, Waterford at
Trimble, Miller, 4:30
Waterford at Gallia
Academy girls, 10 a.m.

One of those three scores belonged
to Meigs junior Levi Chapman, who
posted a four-over-par 40 to earn
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Meigs match medalist honors.
Athens (5-1) amassed a secondHigh School golf team simply beat
place ﬁnish with a 203, followed
the heat, and dominated the ﬁeld,
closely by Alexander (4-2) with a
during the 2016 Tri-Valley Confer209.
ence Ohio Division’s opening match
Vinton County (3-3), the two-time
on Thursday.
defending division champion and
Battling tee-off temperatures near
100 degrees, the Marauders managed which shared the league championship with Meigs two years ago, was
to ﬁre a team total of 183 — and
fourth with a 216.
capture the ﬁrst match of seven by
The Marauders also won the
exactly 20 strokes at a steamy Cliffleague title outright in 2012 and
side Golf Club in Gallipolis.
River Valley, with only two players 2013.
Wellston (2-4) was ﬁfth with a 226,
this season, was the host school for
followed by Nelsonville-York (1-5)
the event.
with a 265 and River Valley (0-6)
Meigs was the only team under
200, as all of the other squads ﬁelded with no team score.
Athens and Vinton County each
at least four players — which is the
had two players in the 40s, while
necessary number to post a team
Alexander’s Taylor Boggs (46) was
score.
Three Marauders posted scores in the lone Spartan to do just that.
the 40s — the only team to do so as
See MEIGS | 2B
they begin league play at 6-0.

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

River Valley’s Aaron Burke chips to the 18th green during
Thursday’s Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division golf match at
Cliffside Golf Club in Gallipolis.

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Blue Devils 4th at Portsmouth Invite
By Alex Hawley

GAHS was led by junior Taae
Hamid with a seven-over-par
McDERMOTT, Ohio — The
79, while GAHS senior Miles
Gallia Academy golf team ﬁnished Cornwell fired an 84 on the
fourth out of 15 teams in Thursday.
day morning’s Portsmouth Invi-

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

tational, played at the par-72 Elks
Country Club, in Scioto County.
Piketon took the team championship with a score of 312 for 18
holes in the play ﬁve, count four
format. Red Streaks’ low-man
Casey Moore ﬁred a one-over-par
73 to take medalist honors for the
tournament.
West Union ﬁred a team total
of 318 to take second place, while
Jackson was third with a 335 and
Gallia Academy was fourth with

a 338. Next was Adena (341), followed by Waverly (343), Logan
Elm (351), Zane Trace (355),
Coal Grove (356), Chesapeake
(369), Portsmouth West (383),
Ironton (395), Clay (403), Huntington (412) and Western (453).
Both Portsmouth and Rock Hill
had golfers on the course, but
didn’t have enough to register a

Eagles
From page 1B

Cadets’ home course.
Southern shot a 395
for the second time in
an invitational — as the
Tornadoes opened the
season with the same
team score at the Vinton
County meet.
Williamstown was next
with a 413, followed by
Alexander and Belpre at
426 and 428 respectively
— and ﬁnally Rosecrans
with a 451.
Each team ﬁelded ﬁve
players, with the top four
scores counting towards
the team total.
For Eastern, Kaleb
Honaker had an 80, followed by an 88 from
Ryan Harbour and an 89
from John Little.
Both John Harris and
Primo Averion shot a
111.
Jonah Hoback had a 93
to pace Southern, as Eli
Hunter had a 99, Jarrett
Hupp a 101 and Tanner
Thorla a 102.
Rounding out the Tornado team was Jensen
Anderson with a 105.
For the big schools,
Warren “A” edged Marietta “A” by 20 strokes
— 301 to 321 — while
Wheeling Park (327),
Coshocton (329) and
Gallia Academy (330)
ﬁnished a crowded third
thru ﬁfth.
Meigs’ “A” squad posted a 351, while Marietta
“B” shot a 412 and Warren “B” a 436.
Meigs’ “B” team rounded out the big-school
scores with a 455.
For Gallia Academy,
Taae Hamid was the only
Blue Devil under 80 with
a 79, as Josh Davis shot
an 80, Jeremy Brumﬁeld
an 82 and Kaden Thomas
an 89.
Miles Cornwell carded
a 90 for the ﬁfth Blue
Devil score.
The Marauder “A”
team was paced by Levi
Chapman and Chase
Whitlatch, as Chapman
mustered a 78 with Whitlatch ﬁring a 79.
Wyatt Nicholson
notched an 85 and Bryce
Swatzel shot a 109 for
the other two Meigs
scores.
Bobby Musser’s 111
round rounded out the
Maroon and Gold.
The counting cards
for Meigs “B” included
Brody Reynolds with a
108, Theo McElroy with
a 110, Caleb Stanley with
a 113 and Brody Della-

team score.
GAHS was led by junior Taae
Hamid with a seven-over-par 79,
while GAHS senior Miles Cornwell ﬁred an 84 on the day. Kaden
Thomas, a junior, was next for
the Blue and White with an 86,
while senior Jeremy Brumﬁeld
rounded out the team total with
an 89. Gallia Academy’s potential
tie-breaking score was a 94, ﬁred
by senior Josh Davis.
The Blue Devils’ next scheduled
golf match is home at Cliffside,
where River Valley and South
Gallia will take on the Blue and
White.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Meigs senior Chase Whitlatch sinks his putt on the 16th hole during Thursday’s Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division golf match at
Cliffside Golf Club in Gallipolis.

Meigs

with a 59.
Athens’ Drew Zorn led the
Bulldogs with a 44, while Preston
From page 1B
Hayes had a 49.
Athens’ Owen Campetelli shot a
52, while Ryan Shehan shot a 58.
Besides Chapman’s 40, Chase
Besides Boggs’ 46, AlexanWhitlatch followed with a 44 for
der’s Austin McClain and Casey
Meigs — while Wyatt Nicholson
McDonald managed a pair of 54s
added a 46.
Brody Reynolds, the Marauders’ — with Whit Byrd adding a 55.
Vinton County’s Cameron
sixth man on Thursday, was the
Hamon was the medalist runnerfourth counting card with a 53.
up with a 42, followed closely by
Bryce Swatzel with a 55 and
Theo McElroy with a 61 rounded Noah Waddell with a 44.
The Vikings’ Jacob Brotherton
out the Marauder scores.
River Valley senior Grant Gilm- shot a 62, while Adam Clary and
Zane Walker wound up with a
ore shot a 68, while sophomore
teammate Aaron Burke chipped in pair of 68s.

WVU
From page 1B

teams in 2015.
“Last year there was a
lot of optimism because
of what we had coming

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back defensively,” Holgorsen said. “This year
there is not quite as much
optimism but we have
equally as much coming
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kind of made us mad
offensively last year and it
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Wellston’s four counting cards
were all in the 50s — Josh Lung
with a 54, Hunter Cardwell with
a 56, Timothy Stanley with a 57
and Austin Wilkett with a 59.
Nelsonville-York only ﬁelded
four players, including a 62 from
Casey Davis, a 65 from Ben
Johnson and a 66 from Tanner
Smith.
The second TVC-Ohio match
will take place on Tuesday, as
Alexander is the host at the Ohio
University Golf Course in Athens.
Tee time is set for 4:30 p.m.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2106

this year. I think there is
a little bit of a chip on our
shoulder and we are anxious to put in the work to
get us to game day.”
West Virginia has
shored up the secondary
with four junior college
transfers along with Iowa
graduate transfer Maurice
Fleming and Miami transfer Antonio Crawford,
both at cornerback.
One defender looking
for a breakout season is
third-year starting lineman Noble Nwachukwu,
who recorded team highs
in sacks (8.5) and tackles
for loss (13).
“When he gets one on
one with anybody in the
country I think he is good
enough to beat them,”
Gibson said.
On offense, quarterback
Skyler Howard will have
a veteran line and wide

receivers to try to feed
off the momentum of
last year’s Cactus Bowl,
when he threw for a bowlrecord 532 yards and ﬁve
touchdowns in a 43-42
win over Arizona State.
Other things to know
as West Virginia battles
for respectability in the
Big 12:
RUN IF YOU CAN:
Gone is Big 12 rushing
leader Wendell Smallwood, leaving most of the
running responsibilities
to senior Rushel Shell,
who will look to reach
1,000 yards for the ﬁrst
time since transferring
from Pittsburgh after
his freshman season.
Holgorsen will also have
to lean on freshman Kennedy McKoy and junior
college transfer Justin
Crawford.
NEW BLOOD: The

Mountaineers made
wholesale changes
among their coaching
staff. The newcomers are former Texas
assistant Joe Wickline
as offensive coordinator; wide receivers
coach Tyron Carrier,
an offensive graduate
assistant at Baylor last
year; ex-Miami Dolphins
assistant Blue Adams at
cornerbacks; and former
Arizona assistant Matt
Caponi with the safeties.
Former standout wide
receiver Stedman Bailey
is joining the team as a
student assistant coach.
KEY GAMES: Among
West Virginia’s seven
home games are dates
with perennial league
contenders TCU on Oct.
22, Oklahoma on Nov.
19 and Baylor on Dec. 3.
The season could hinge,

valle with a 124.
Brayden Ervin also
played for the Marauders, and shot a 127.
For the girls, Waterford
won with a team total
of 346, followed by TriValley with a 374.
Eastern was third with
a 425, followed by Gallia Academy — which
competed as a full girls
squad for the ﬁrst time
in school history in an
18-hole event — with a
439.
Warren (443) ﬁnished
ﬁfth by 40 strokes over
Meigs (483) — and by
80 shots over Vinton
County (523).
The Eagles’ Kylee Toliver was the only Eastern
player under 100, ﬁring
a 98.
Kate Edwards with a
103, Sara Bunce with a
107 and Ashley Toliver
with a 117 were the
other counting scores —
as Kate Hawk had a 123.
The Blue Angels’ ﬁve
scores were Kimberly
Edelmann with an even
100, Molly Fitzwater
with a 106, Carley Johnson with a 112, Sydney
Crothers with a 121 and
Breanna Justice with a
123.
The Lady Marauders’
four scores were Shalynn
Mitchell with a 114,
Lydia Edwards with a
118, Sarah Curl with a
124 and Caroline Roush
with a 127.
Five girls — including
three from Waterford
— made up the ladies’
all-tournament team, as
Kenzie Dietz shot an 82,
Ashley Offenberger an 85
and Brianna Hart an 88.
Dorothy Romanek
managed an 84, while
Tri-Valley’s Alisha Jenkins was the ﬁfth-lowest
girls score with a 90.
The boys all-tournament team consisted
of 10 men — as Jordan
Welch of Waterford and
Nick Ward of Warren
were co-medalists with
a 72.
In fact, Warren placed
four players on the alltournament team — as
Kyler Dennis shot a 74,
Max Hapney a 77 and
Josh Jankauskas a 78.
Jacob Nickell with a
73 and Ryan Payne with
a 77 made the unit from
Wheeling Park, while
Wes Jenkins of Waterford
made the list with a 78.
Jacob George of
Coshocton and Caleb
Scharff of Marietta each
ﬁred a 75.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

though, on an Oct. 29
visit to Oklahoma State.
PREDICTION: The
Mountaineers aren’t
expected to challenge
for the Big 12 title but
might have to make some
noise in order to save
the job of Holgorsen,
who is 36-28 in ﬁve seasons. WVU could ride a
solid start over the ﬁrst
ﬁve games and hope to
become bowl eligible
for a ﬁfth time under
Holgorsen. A 7-5 ﬁnish
sounds about right.
SEASON OPENER:
Missouri, Sept. 3, in
Morgantown. The Tigers
beat the Mountaineers
34-31 the last time the
teams met in the 1998
Insight.com Bowl. The
Mountaineers have lost
ﬁve straight against
Southeastern Conference
opponents.

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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Waterford golfers top
Wahama at Lakeside

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Girls basketball golf
scramble planned

Coach, Kent Wolfe, school phone 740949-4222 ext. 1212 or by home phone
740-444-9334.

MASON, W.Va. — A golf scramble
to beneﬁt Southern High School’s girls
basketball program and athletic boosters is scheduled for Saturday, Aug.
27, at Riverside Golf Club in Mason
County.
Entry is $60 per player and cash
prizes will be awarded to the top three
teams.
Additionally, skill prizes will be on
every hole.
Food and beverages will be available
throughout the day.
Tee time is 9 a.m.
For more information contact Southern Tornadoes Girls Basketball Head

Sunday, August 14, 2016 3B

PPJSHS Meet the
Teams Night
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Point
Pleasant Junior-Senior High School will
be holding a Meet the Teams night at
approximately 7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 16,
at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field in
Mason County.
The event is free and open to the
public, and all levels of fall sports at
PPJSHS will be introduced at the event.
Meet the Teams night will also follow
the open house being held at the campus for new students in those buildings.

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

BEVERLY, Ohio — Those guys
were good.
Host Waterford — a traditional
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division powerhouse — had little
trouble with the Wahama golf team
Thursday following a 54-storke
victory at Lakeside Golf Course in
Washington County.
The Wildcats had all six of their
golfers ﬁre rounds of 53 or better,
including all four of the sub-50 scores
recorded on the day. The visiting
White Falcons, conversely, managed
only round lower than 53.
Waterford’s Jordan Welch won medalist honors by ﬁring a four-over par

round of 38, followed by Wes Jenkins
and Travis Pottmeyer with respective
efforts of 42 and 47.
Matt Seemon completed the winning
tally with a 49, while the Wildcat duo
of Evan Seevers and Jared Miller also
had respective rounds of 51 and 53.
Anthony Ortiz paced Wahama with
a 51, followed by Carl Sayre with a 58
and Jace Heckeman with a 59. Gage
Smith and Ethan Herdman both had
efforts of 62, while Walker Stanhope
also carded a 69 for the guests.
Wahama returns to action Monday
when it welcomes both Waterford and
Southern to Riverside Golf Course for
TVC Hocking match at 4 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2101.

Hargraves still in charge
of Riverside seniors

Frank Victores | AP

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton (14) throws in the first half of a preseason game against
the Minnesota Vikings on Friday in Cincinnati. The Vikings won 17-16. Dalton, playing in his first game
after recovering from a thumb injury in December, completed his first four passes for 32 yards.

Vikings beat Bengals 17-16

CINCINNATI (AP) —
Andy Dalton was sharp
in his return, leading
the Cincinnati Bengals
into ﬁeld-goal range on
his only drive during the
Minnesota Vikings’ 17-16
preseason victory Friday
night.
Dalton’s season ended
at Paul Brown Stadium
last Dec. 13 when he
broke the thumb on his
passing hand while making a tackle during an
interception return.
On Friday night, he
completed his ﬁrst four
passes for 32 yards. He
threw too high for A.J.
Green on a third-down
play, and Mike Nugent
was wide right on a
48-yard ﬁeld-goal attempt
that ended the drive and
Dalton’s day.
“I thought it went
smooth,” Dalton said. “I
thought it was crisp and
sharp. I wish we would
have scored.”
The teams held joint
practices in Cincinnati
the past two days, with
the Vikings’ defense getting pressure on Dalton.
He had plenty of time to
complete quick throws
in his limited stint on
Friday.
Cincinnati’s starting
defense was in for only
one series that lasted
three plays. Tackle Geno
Atkins chased Teddy
Bridgewater out of the
pocket on one play, and
then sacked him on the
next. Those were the
Vikings’ only plays in the
opening quarter.
Facing the secondteam defense on the next
series, Bridgewater threw
a 49-yard touchdown
pass to Charles Johnson

that completed a 96-yard
drive. Bridgewater played
two series and was 6 of 7
for 92 yards.
A LONG WAY FOR NOTHING
AJ McCarron led the
Bengals on a 22-play,
89-yard drive the second
time Cincinnati got the
ball. The drive lasted 12
minutes, 24 seconds and
ended with the Bengals
coming up short on
fourth-and-1 at the 3.

started in place of the
injured Terence Newman
and had a solid showing.
He broke up a long pass
to Boyd, and quickly tackled receiver Cody Core
after a catch, preventing
a ﬁrst down, one of his
four tackles in the game.
“I feel a lot more comfortable going into my second
season,” Waynes said.
Bengals: With their
top two tight ends hurt
— Tyler Eifert and Tyler
Kroft — their reserves
were reduced to blocking
roles.

JUST ENOUGH
Minnesota’s Blair
Walsh kicked a 51-yard
ﬁeld goal on the ﬁnal play INJURY UPDATE
of the ﬁrst half, the ball
Vikings: RB Adrian
landing on the crossbar
Peterson was among
and bouncing through.
those held out. He suffered a hamstring pull
while working out before
ROOKIE WATCH
the start of training
Vikings: First-round
pick Laquon Treadwell, a camp.
Bengals: RB Jeremy
receiver from Mississippi,
Hill hurt his left hand in
had a team-high four
the ﬁrst quarter, had it
catches for 41 yards.
examined and stayed on
Bengals: Tyler Boyd
the sideline but didn’t
made a nice, over-thereturn.
shoulder catch for a
40-yard gain that set up
a touchdown, the only
QUOTABLE
catch by the second-round
Vikings: Treadwell, on
pick. “Nothing really too his ﬁrst NFL game: “It
special about it,” Boyd
felt great to be out there.
said. “Just a basic route
It was actually a lot of
that we’ve been running
fun.”
a lot in practice.” …
Bengals: DE Carlos
Undrafted Alex Erickson Dunlap, on the starting
returned a punt 80 yards defense’s limited time
for a touchdown with
on the ﬁeld: “It was just
2:45 left.
three plays, but that’s
all we wanted to play
because we knew the
POSITION BATTLES
(starters) probably were
Vikings: CB Trae
going to get only one posWaynes, Minnesota’s
ﬁrst-round pick last year, session.”

Christopher E. Tenoglia

13-under par 57, which was shot by
exactly three teams.
They included the quartet of Fred
Pyles, Larry Davis, Bill Yoho and
Haskel Jones; the threesome of Mick
Winebrenner, John Bumgarner and
Don Waldie; and the group of Bobby
Walker, Harry Grifﬁn and Jack Fox.
The closest-to-the-pin winners
were Bobby Walker on the ninth
hole and Don Waldie on No. 14.
The current top-10 standings
are as follows: Charlie Hargraves
(232.0); Dewey Smith (218.0);
John Williams (190.5); Carl Stone
(185.0); Mitch Mace (181.5); Bill
Yoho (178.5); Ed Coon (177.5);
Dale Miller (176.5); Albert Durst
(174.5); Jack Fox (168.0).

For the best local sports coverage, visit
MyDailyTribune.com

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Mark Thompson
60670322

Andy Dalton
sharp in first
preseason game

MASON, W.Va. — Charlie Hargraves of New Haven still has a
14-point lead in the 2016 Riverside
Senior Men’s Golf League — being
held every Tuesday at Riverside
Golf Club in Mason County.
Through 20 weeks of play, Hargraves has a total of 232 points,
leading runner-up Dewey Smith of
Bidwell with 218 points.
John Williams of Leon has 190.5
points to hold down third-place
with seven weeks remaining in the
season.
A total of 65 players took part
in Tuesday’s round, making up 14
teams of four players and three
three-man teams.
The low score of the day was a

(740) 612-9093
TTY: 711
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�NEWS/SPORTS

4B Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Check out the Conservation Corner at the Meigs County Fair
Next week marks the
annual Meigs County
Fair, which has been
going on almost every
year since 1851, or for
more than 160 years.
Of course there is no
way to take in an entire
county fair during a
single week; to totally
grasp it takes a lifetime
– for instance hanging
out at the track means
you miss the action in
the livestock, or on the
midway. There is just
too much going on. For
a lot of kids the fair is
the culmination of a
year’s worth of 4H projects, and the following
week they head back to
school. So for them the
fair marks the end of
summer as well.
On the other hand,
you do have all week

particularly the
to check out the
Monarch butterﬂy.
Conservation CorThe Ohio Diviner, located in the
sion of Wildlife
Grange building.
will have its popuThe Conservalar fresh-water ﬁsh
tion Corner (not
display featuring
really a corner, it
ﬁsh that are compretty much takes
In the
mon to Ohio and
up one entire end
Open
the Ohio River,
of the building)
Jim
and new this year
is a partnership
Freeman
is a reptile display.
between differOf course there
ent wildlife and
will be games and activinatural resources agenties for the youngsters,
cies including the Ohio
and the hay show and
Department of Natural
Mystery Farm contests
Resources, the Meigs
sponsored by the Meigs
Soil and Water ConserSWCD will be there as
vation District, USDANatural Resources Con- well.
The main focus this
servation Service and
year at the Conservaothers.
The Conservation Cor- tion Corner will be the
importance of pollinaner is now in its fourth
tors, particularly the
year, and this year the
Monarch butterﬂy. By
main focus will be on
some estimations the
protecting pollinators,

Monarch population has
declined 90 percent over
the past 20 years.
Local SWCDs, state
and federal natural
resources agencies, and
the Ohio Department
of Transportation are
taking part in the Ohio
Pollinator Habitat Initiative with the mission of
improving and creating
pollinator habitat in the
state of Ohio, as well as
raise awareness for all
Ohioans regarding the
importance of pollinators.
The OPHI includes
such diverse partners as
Ohio State University,
the Ohio Department of
Agriculture, American
Electric Power, and
sportsman’s groups like
Pheasants Forever and
Quail Forever.

You can help by participating in the annual
Milkweed Pod Collection between Sept. 1 and
Oct. 30, and bringing
your milkweed pods to
your local SWCD. All
milkweed pods collected
during this time will be
processed by OPHI partners and all of the seed
collected will be used to
establish new plantings
and create additional
habitat for the Monarch
Butterﬂy throughout
Ohio.
To collect the seed
pods from a milkweed
plant it is best to pick
them when the seed
inside is brown. Do not
collect pods when seeds
are white or cream colored. If the center seam
of the pod pops with
gentle pressure, they can

be picked.
It is best to collect
pods into paper bags or
paper grocery sacks.
Avoid using plastic bags because they
attract moisture. Store
seeds in a cool, dry area
until you can deliver to
the closest pod collection area.
Harvesting pods from
milkweed plants does
not have any effect on
the population of milkweed in established
areas.
Anyhow, I hope to
see you at the fair! And
don’t forget to share
your funnel cake.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife
specialist for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District. He
can be contacted weekdays at
740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

Turning 65 and

WMU latest team picked to
challenge NIU in MAC West

have questions

DETROIT (AP) —
For six straight seasons,
Northern Illinois has
played in the MidAmerican Conference
championship game. The
Huskies haven’t always
won, but they’ve always
made it there, no matter
how strong a challenge
they’ve faced from others
in their division.
This year it’s Western
Michigan that looks ready
to provide the sternest
test. The Broncos were
overwhelming favorites
to win the conference in
the preseason media poll,
although WMU coach P.J.
Fleck was quick to steer
attention back toward
Northern Illinois.
“We have a team in
the West that’s won six
straight championships
and they don’t get picked.
You got to be kidding
me. They’ve won six
straight,” Fleck said. “I
don’t understand that.”
Western Michigan went
8-5 last season and returns
quarterback Zach Terrell
and receiver Corey Davis.
WMU lost only two conference games in 2015 —
against Northern Illinois
and Bowling Green, the
two teams who played for
the MAC title.
NIU has won the conference three times during its streak of six titlegame appearances. Bowling Green beat the Huskies for the championship
last season and in 2013.
In fact, Bowling Green is
working on its own streak
of three trips to the title
game in Detroit.
Western Michigan
hasn’t played in the MAC

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championship game
since 2000 and hasn’t
won the conference since
1988. Fleck has been
WMU’s coach for three
seasons, and the Broncos
improved quickly after
going 1-11 in 2013.
THE FAVORITES
East: Bowling Green
ﬁnished two points ahead
of Ohio in the preseason
poll, and the teams play
at Ohio on Oct. 8. Bowling Green must replace
star quarterback Matt
Johnson, and its schedule
also includes road games
against Northern Illinois
and Toledo.
West: The key game in
this division could come
the same day as in the
East. Western Michigan
hosts Northern Illinois
on Oct. 8. The Huskies
reached the title game
last year despite an injury
to quarterback Drew
Hare. Toledo and Central
Michigan round out a
foursome that actually ﬁnished tied for the division
title last season.
CMU plays WMU, NIU
and Toledo in October,
meaning the league race
could take several turns
before Halloween.
TOP PLAYERS
Shawun Lurry, DB,
Northern Illinois. Thirdteam All-American had
nine interceptions a season ago.
Corey Davis, WR,
Western Michigan.
Caught 90 passes for
1,436 yards and 12 touchdowns last season.
Kareem Hunt, RB,
Toledo. Rushed for 973

yards in only nine games
in 2015 after running
for 1,631 the previous
season.
Cooper Rush, QB, Central Michigan. Completed
66 percent of his passes
last year for 3,848 yards
with 25 touchdowns and
11 interceptions.
Austin Valdez, LB,
Bowling Green. Had 144
tackles and two interceptions in 2015.
Joel Bouagnon, RB,
Northern Illinois. Rushed
for 1,285 yards and 18
touchdowns last season.
NEW FACES
Jason Candle, Toledo.
Took over as coach of the
Rockets after Matt Campbell went to Iowa State.
Toledo was favored to
unseat Northern Illinois
in the West last year but
couldn’t do it.
Mike Jinks, Bowling
Green. The former Texas
Tech assistant is now the
coach of the defending
MAC champions.
Mike Neu, Ball State.
The Cardinals are trying
to bounce back from a 3-9
season, and they hired
one of their former players as coach.
PREDICTION
East: Ohio takes advantage of a more favorable
schedule than Bowling
Green and returns to the
MAC title game for the
ﬁrst time since 2011.
West: Western Michigan ends Northern
Illinois’ run in the division and wins the league
championship, cementing
Fleck’s status as a young
coach on the rise.

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 14, 2016 5B

Meyer has big holes to fill as Buckeyes begin 2016 campaign
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ohio State
coach Urban Meyer has
reason to feel a little
unsettled as his team
begins preparations for
the 2016 season. He has
to ﬁnd replacements for
his best offensive player,
his best defensive player
and other key parts of a
squad that ﬁnished 12-1
last year and ranked No.
4 in the nation.
Ezekiel Elliot, one of
the best running backs
in Buckeyes history,
departed early for the
NFL, as did defensive
end Joey Bosa. Both were
stalwarts in the 2014
national championship
run and right on through
last season. Just six starters from last year will be
in camp this fall.
The good news: Quarterback J.T. Barrett enters
a season as the undisputed starter for the ﬁrst
time after taking over
for Cardale Jones at midseason last year. In 2014,
Barrett led the Buckeyes
to an 11-1 record before
breaking his ankle in the
Michigan game and giving way to Jones, who led
the team to the national
title.
“I anticipate he will be
as good a quarterback
as we’ve had,” Meyer
said. “It’s his show and
he knows it, and he’s prepared.”
Middle linebacker Raekwon McMillan, a second-team All-American
who was one of the Big
Ten’s top tacklers, will
anchor a defense with a
ton of potential — including Bosa’s little brother,
Nick, an incoming freshman defensive lineman.

KEY GAMES
Sept. 17
at Oklahoma

“I anticipate he will be as good a quarterback
as we’ve had. It’s his show and he knows it,
and he’s prepared.”
— Urban Meyer,
Ohio State football coach

Oct. 15
at Wisconsin
Nov. 19
at Michigan State

11-1 ﬁnish seems likely,
with potential stumbles

at Wisconsin or perhaps
against Michigan.

Nov. 26
vs. Michigan
gone. The four players
expected to step up as
top pass-catchers —
Noah Brown, Corey
Smith, Dontre Wilson
and Samuel — were
recovering from injuries
and didn’t participate in
Don Speck | The Lima News spring practice, opening
OSU cheerleaders bring the team on to the field for the start of the the door for youngsters
OSU vs Western Michigan game at Ohio Stadium on the campus of
like Terry McLaurin,
The Ohio State University September 26,2015.
Parris Campbell and
Torrance Gibson, all of
as the season arrives:
Freshmen and other
whom had their shining
inexperienced players
moments in the spring
will see extensive playing THE GROUND GAME
game. Meyer needs one
time on both sides of the
of them to emerge as the
With Elliott now in
ball and must perform
guy who can consistently
camp with the Dallas
for the Buckeyes to have
get open and catch the
Cowboys, Ohio State
success. A true freshman enters fall practice withdeep ball.
might even start on the
out an established runoffensive line, an exceed- ning back. The team’s
SEASON OPENER
ingly rare occurrence at
most experienced back,
Sept. 3 vs. Bowling
Ohio State.
ﬁfth-year senior Bri’onte
Green: The Buckeyes may
But that doesn’t neces- Dunn, was dismissed last have to work up a sweat
sarily mean it will be a
month for violating an
dispatching the Falcons,
rebuilding year for the
unspeciﬁed team rule.
one of the Mid-American
Buckeyes. For Meyer,
That leaves redshirt fresh- Conference’s better
a master recruiter, it’s
man Mike Weber and true teams. It’s the ﬁrst of two
always a matter of waitfreshman Antonio Wiltuneup games Ohio State
ing for the next crop of
liams, both highly regard- will play at home before
All-Americans to come
ed prep players Meyer
traveling to Oklahoma
of age and take over the
has raved about. Weber
for an early-season showteam.
likely will be the starter,
down.
“We have a lot of
and look for H-back Curmomentum here at Ohio
tis Samuel to get a share
PREDICTION
State right now,” he said. of the touches, too.
Despite losing a lot of
“We can’t lose it just
experienced players, the
because we lost some
Buckeyes have the talent
ABOUT THOSE RECEIVERS
great players.”
Ohio State’s three best to remain among college
Some things to watch
football’s elite teams. An
receivers from 2015 are

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�6B Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

2016
READER’S CHOICE
BEST OF THE BEST TRI-COUNTY
VOTES MUST BE SUBMITTED BY AUGUST 15TH.
ALL WINNERS ANNOUNCED ON SEPTEMBER 2ND.
Check the newspapers for ballots on August 5th- August 14th.

*No scanned copies will be accepted*
Mail or Drop off ballots to:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
C/O Readers' Choice
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
C/O Readers' Choice
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Point Pleasant Register
C/O Readers' Choice
200 Main St.
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES IN THE TRI-COUNTY!!
1. Best Furniture Store:
2. Best Grocery Store:

36. Best Home Care:
37. Best Nursing Home/Rehab:

3. Best Hardware Store:
4. Best Jewelry Store:

38. Best Insurance Agency

5. Best New Truck Dealer:

in Gallia County:

6. Best New Car Dealer:
7. Best Used Truck/Car Dealer:

in Meigs County:

8. Best Pharmacy:

in Mason County:

9. Best Shoe Store:
10. Best Tire Store:
11. Best Thrift/Consignment Shop:
12. Best Garden Center:

39. Best Manufactured Home Dealer:
40. Best Tanning Salon:
41. Best Auto Repair/Collision Repair:

13. Best Place for Home Décor:
14. Best Motorcycle/ATV Center:

42. Best Towing Service:

15. Best Swimming Pool/Spa Provider:

43. Best Nail Salon:

16. Best Tattoo Parlor:
17. Best Catering:
18. Best Florist:
19. Best Accountant:
20. Best Dentist:
21. Best Lawyer:
22. Best Medical Doctor:

44. Best Place to Work:
45. Best Chiropractic Ofﬁce:
46. Best Home Medical Equipment:
47. Best Chinese Restaurant:
48. Best Mexican Restaurant:

23. Best Pediatric Doctor:
24. Best Medical Clinic:

49. Best Restaurant Overall:

25. Best Child Care Provider:

50. Best Wings:

26. Best Photographer:
27. Best Plumber:
28. Best Realtor
in Gallia County:
in Meigs County:
in Mason County:
29. Best Veterinarian:

51. Best Burger:
52. Best Pizza:
53. Best Steak:
54. Best Ice Cream:
55. Best Auctioneer:

30. Best Pet Groomer:
31. Best Funeral Home
in Gallia County:

56. Best Bank
57. Best Hospital

in Meigs County:
in Mason County:
32. Best Gas/Propane Service:
33. Best Golf Course:
34. Best Hair Salon:

58. Best Occupational/Physical Therapy
59. Best Message Therapy
60. Readers Choice, ﬁll in category and business.

35. Best Health/Fitness Center:

Best:

No photo copies, Please Print legibly

Name:
Address:
Email:
Are you a current subscriber:

YES

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60672038

�CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

LEGALS

Notices
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.
Miscellaneous
SALE Carpet $ 5.95 sq/yd &amp;
up, also new shipment nylons
great deals
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Apartments/Townhouses
Nice 1 BR unfurnished
apartment. Refrig. &amp; new
range provided. Water,
sewage &amp; garbage paid.
Deposit required.
Call 740-709-0072

For Sale By Owner
For Sale
RV- 2001 Winnebago
Adventure 37G 37 ft long
Ford Triton F10 gas motor
only 36,000 plus miles clean
well taken care of $25,500
or best offer
740-441-7540 or
740-441-7273
Local Stone Carving
Business For Sale
By Owner
call 740-446-8056

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
The Meigs County Board of Developmental Disabilities
is currently looking for a part time Early Intervention
Developmental Specialist to work with children birth – 2 with
developmental delays. Applicants must have social work,
education, nursing or related degree and be eligible for
developmental specialist certification. Deadline to apply is
August 24, 2016. Please send resume to: Carleton School,
P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

Houses For Rent
2 Homes for rent
Call Wiseman Real Estate
@ 740-446-3644
NO PETS.
For Rent or Sale
3 bedroom 3 bath house
$850.00 a month deposit
same. no pets
unless authorized.
740-441-7540 or
740-441-7273

Wanted

Houses For Sale
House For Sale
Great location Centenary
3 bedroom 11/2 bath, large
family room, garage plus
carport $105,000. Seller pay
closing cost no down payment
if qualify 446-9966
Land (Acreage)
35 Acres on Redmond Ridge.
Building site, electric, phone,
$45,000. Financing with $4500
down &amp; $533/mth for 10 yrs.
Call for maps,
(740)989-0260.
Gallia Co. 5 acres on Fairview
or Davis Rds. $13,900 or 21
acres on Sheperd Ln.
$31,000. Meigs Co.
Reedsville 12 acres
$19,900 – more
@ www.brunerland.com
or call 740-441-1492,
we finance!

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses

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)

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-688-9416
or 740-988-6130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apt For Rent Furnished
1BR, upstairs, util pd,
ac, wash/dryer available,
no smoking, no pets
$450.00 per mo,
$450.00 deposit,
258 State St.
call 446-3667

Help Wanted General
Bridgeport Equipment and Tool
is looking for a qualified lawn
and garden repair technician.
Must be trained in small
engine repair. Must be
qualified and able to drive
service truck and do repair on
the road. Please stop in at 668
Pinecrest Drive Bidwell, OH
45614 for an application.

Help Wanted General

Middleport Area
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments,
also 2 room efficiency
no pets. Deposit and
Reference required
740-992-0165

LEGALS
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE, OHIO
LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the Mayor,
2581 Third Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779, until 6:00 P.M. local
time on Monday, August 29, 2016, for furnishing all labor,
materials and equipment necessary to complete the project
known as “Syracuse Telemetry Project” and at said time and
place, proposals shall be publicly opened and read aloud.
Contract documents, bid sheets, specifications, and other
pertinent information can be obtained at the office of the Fiscal
Officer, 2581 Third Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779, between
8 AM and 4 PM on week days beginning August 17, 2016.
Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal a Bid
Guaranty and Contract Bond in accordance with Section 153.54
of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form,
shall be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in
the State of Ohio to provide said surety.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the proposal and all persons interested therein. Each
bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of
similar size and complexity. The owner intends and requires that
this project be completed no later than February 15, 2017.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project will
to the extent practicable use Ohio products, materials, services,
and labor in the implementation of their project. Additionally,
contractor compliance with the equal employment opportunity
requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter 123 is
required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates on Public
Improvements in Meigs County and the Village of Syracuse,
Ohio as determined by the Ohio Department of Commerce,
Bureau of Wage and Hour Administration, 614.644.2239.
The Village of Syracuse reserves the right to waive irregularities
and to reject any and all bids.
Eric D. Cunningham
Mayor, Village of Syracuse
8/14/16,8/21/16,8/28/16

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Excavating

Reese Excavating

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THE

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60671274

PUBLIC NOTICE:
A public hearing has been
scheduled on September 29,
2016 beginning at 10:00 am
at the Gallia County
Courthouse commissionerҋs
office to review and solicit
public comment on the Gallia
County Department of Job and
Family Services (GCDJFS)
Title XX County Profile to be
provided from October 1, 2016
to September 30, 2017 in
Gallia County by GCDJFS.
8/11/16,8/12/16,8/14/16

Commercial
For rent 1900sq/ft office/retail
Ideal location 317 St.Rt. 7
north Kanaga Oh 45631
740-645-0559

Sunday, August 14, 2016 7B

In Print. Online. In Touch.

Help Wanted General

Ohio Valley Home Health, Inc.

HIRING Home Health Aides
Competitive wages and excellent benefits

TEMPORARY EXHIBITION ASSISTANT
Bossard Memorial Library seeks applicants for the position of
Temporary Exhibition Assistant, average 26 hours per week for
approx. 14 weeks; minimum wage; includes daytime, weekend,
and evening shifts. High school diploma or equivalent required;
must pass background check. Job description and application
available at Library or online at www.bossardlibrary.org.
Application must be mailed and postmarked
by August 26, 2016 to:
Bossard Library
c/o: Debbie Saunders, Library Director
7 Spruce Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Auctions

LARGE PUBLIC AUCTION

Selling the contents of the longtime home of Mrs. JUDY
GRAFFIUS &amp; the late J. HERBERT GRAFFIUS. Mr. Grafﬁus was a
retired Ohio U. Emeritus Professor of Botany &amp; Biology, Judy was an Assistant Professor of
Botany and later retired as Chief Administrator of the Clinical Departments at the Ohio U.
College of Osteopathic Medicine. The Grafﬁus Home of 45 years is completely full, several
generations of antiques &amp; collectables are within. Very brief listing follows.
4 Short St, THE PLAINS, OH
Between Athens &amp; Nelsonville exit U.S. Rt 33 onto S.R. 682-South (The Plains Business
Dist.) at ﬁrst road, turn onto Sunset Dr, go 1/10 of a mile, right turn onto Circle Dr, go
another 1/10 of a mile turn left onto Short St and auction. Easy to ﬁnd.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 2016 @ 10:00AM
23 CAMERAS - Professional to Antique…Nikon, Canon, Fujiﬁlm &amp; Minolta digital
cameras, Fujica, Contraz, Argus, Exakta &amp; Vivitar 35mm cameras, old Kodak, Brownie
&amp; Polaroid cameras. Good Selection of CAMERA LENSES &amp; Accessories: 7-Nikon,
Canon &amp; Minolta zoom lenses, other lenses &amp; accessories, more.…Lots of COINS:
Several silver proof commemoratives, U.S. proof sets, collector coin sets, others, 1886
&amp; 1888 Morgan dollars, over 110 silver half’s, 280 silver quarters, 120 silver dimes, lots
of Wheaties, paper notes, lots more…Huge POSTAGE STAMP…Numerous Small
ANTIQUES….600 POSTCARDS: 1910 Outcalt Halloween, railroad/train real photos, photo
wheel Presidential card, much more….Lots of Old PAPER Items….MILITARY Items….
Large Quantity GLASS &amp; CHINA…Good Selection of Modern FURNITURE…..Fishing Gear.
Selection of AMMUNITION…ENTOMOLOGY &amp; LEPIDOPTERY: Pinned/mounted insects &amp;
butterﬂies…OPTICS: 46” telescope, 2-lab microscopes…Hand &amp; GARDEN TOOLS!
Terms: Cash or good check auction day. Positive Id. 2-Auction Rings!

AUCTIONEERS: OTTIE OPPERMAN &amp; CHRIS COLLINS

Ottie: 740-385-7195. See website pictures &amp; ﬂyer:
www.opperman-auctions.com or Auction Zip #12726

60673353

Help Wanted General

Qualifications:
t�45/" �$))" �$/" �1$"
t�&amp;YDFMMFOU�%PDVNFOUBUJPO�4LJMMT
t�&amp;YDFMMFOU�5JNF�.BOBHFNFOU�4LJMMT
t�"CMF�UP�XPSL�JOEFQFOEFOUMZ�
t�%FQFOEBCMF�5SBOTQPSUBUJPO�

Production Manager

Athens Office:740-249-4236 2097
East State Street Athens,
Ohio Gallipolis
Office: 740-441-1393
1480 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, Ohio
Email resume: aburgett@ovhh.org
Applications available at www.ovhh.org

www.ovhh.org

60672072

Job Description
The primary role of this position is to oversee production
operations at the Gallipolis, Ohio plant of the Daily Tribune as a
working manager. This plant produces six daily newspapers, five
weekly newspapers, four total market coverage products and
various other supplements to support those newspapers. All of
these are inter-company publications.
Candidates will oversee efforts of a press and mailroom crew,
manage our vehicle fleet, coach and train our production teams.
As part of that coaching/training role candidates should expect
to be a working “hands on” leader. Our manager will have
overall responsibility for promoting safety following company and
OSHA guidelines. Our manager is also responsible for proper
scheduling of production work and high quality of each product
from prepress, press, mailroom and distribution. This requires
our manager to have a working knowledge of our equipment and
best practices to produce quality in an effective manner.
The position reports directly to our local publisher, is part of the
local management team and has two direct reports from
press and mailroom operations. In addition, the manager
communicates regularly with corporate production personnel
and publishers at “sister” newspapers.
Requirements
Candidates should have 5+ years experience in newspaper
management, preferably in production or operations.
Experience in web offset printing is required. Mechanical ability,
goal-setting and planning experience should be shown as well.
The position requires a candidate to have above average verbal
and written skills, be well organized with good math and computer skills (competent knowledge of Excel and Microsoft Word).
Our next manager may be someone ready to move up and run
their own production facility. If thatҋs you we invite you to contact us to discuss the opportunity. If you know someone who
would be a good fit for this position we encourage you to tell
them about our opportunity.
Interested individuals should send a cover letter and resume to
Bruce Sample, Civitas Media, 4500 Lyons Road, Miamisburg,
Ohio 45342 or via email bsample@civitasmedia.com.
No phone calls please. The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is an equal
opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of
race, religion, color, sex, age, national origin or disability.

�8B Sunday, August 14, 2016

CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

60673591

�A long the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, August 14, 2016 s Section C

Make your
stitches count
Women along the river quilt to aid
West Virginia flood victims
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY —
What happens when a
quilt becomes more than
a quilt, when it becomes
not only a cover to keep
the body warm, but the
heart as well?
Can a quilt transform
into a recognition of
what has been lost and
an effort to help those
affected regain a sense
of stability?
A group of women
recently showed that a
quilt can do just that.
Those living along the
Ohio River know too
well the effects of ﬂooding. Entire communities can be swept away,
residents left without
homes, the contents
ruined or lost by the
rushing water.
Following devastating
ﬂoods in West Virginia
in late June, many folks
in the surrounding area
responded with generosity, providing essentials
such as food, water and
clothing.
When temperatures
reached record highs
this month, it was difﬁcult to think ahead and
imagine a cold night and
the need for a blanket.
Winter is far away, but
not to the caring minds
of one group of women.

QUILT
CHALLENGE
Reedsville resident
Debbie Duvall is
challenging anyone
who sews to “set a
number goal of quilts,
pillowcases or blankets,
and send them to the
flood victims of West
Virginia.”

Photos courtesy of Debbie Duvall

Pictured, from left, are Robin Putman, Sarah Brubaker, Paula Wood, Mildred Leek, Debbie Duvall, Diana Gribble, Jim Hawthorne, Debbie
Elder, Dixie Hawthorne, Crystal Figiel and Debbie Chevalier.

Debbie Duvall found
herself called to help.
Through her friend
Paula Wood, Duvall
learned about the work
of Wood’s cousin Jim
Hawthorne and his wife,
Dixie.
Wood had seen ﬁrsthand their dedication
to ﬂood victims as the
Hawthornes made 10
trips to deliver supplies
to residents of Clendenin, W.Va.
Duvall and several of
her friends, including
Wood, are accomplished
quilters, so the idea
of making quilts for
children in Clendenin
seemed natural.
“I started thinking,
‘These kids are going
to be cold this winter,’”
Duvall said. “I decided
to ask our group if they
would be interested in a
project to make quilts.”
Members of Duvall’s
quilting circle are from

ranged in sizes from crib
to young adult. They
assembled in a variety of
colors and styles — from
rubber duckies, Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles,
The Walking Dead, Frozen and super heroes.
Some are made of ﬂeece,
others were “tied and
knotted,” a technique
used to bind layers of
fabric together. All are
made with love.
Duvall issued “a challenge to all quilt guilds
or people who just love
Ohio seamstresses Debbie Chevalier, and Chester and Debbie Elder were among the group that met to sew,” saying: “I know
it’s hard to think about
in July to begin the quilt project.
blankets when the temperatures are in the 90s,
but in a few months
plies, we got together in
End Fabrics in MiddleMeigs and Washington
port, the Fabric Shop in my basement (her sewing quilts will be desperately
counties in Ohio, and
needed. At the present
room) one Saturday and
Pomeroy, and the NelParkersburg, W.Va. All
time, a lot of these famisonville Quilt Company. made the quilt tops.”
wholeheartedly agree it
lies have nothing. Make
Over a period of
“Many people and the
was a worthwhile endeavthree weeks, the women your stitches count.”
fabric stores were so
or and set to stitching.
Donations of cash and generous with their dona- worked sewing and
Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992tions,” Duvall said. “After binding until 42 lay
fabric were collected
2155, Ext. 2551
from friends, family, Mill we had the necessary sup- completed. The quilts

Talking economic development
Rep. Jenkins visits
county on Friday
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. —
U.S. Congressman Evan Jenkins
(R) made a trip to Mason County,
W.Va., on Friday, starting his day
at the ICL-IP Plant in Gallipolis
Ferry and ending it at the Mason
County Fair’s livestock sale.
Jenkins toured the ICL-IP
plant along with Mason County
Economic Development Director
John Musgrave.
Jenkins said his visit included
discussing the needs of those in
the chemical and polymer industries. The congressman sits
on the House Appropriations
Committee, which determines
funding levels for federal departments and agencies. Jenkins
explained he hears funding
requests from multiple agencies
while in Washington and by
understanding the needs of his
constituents in the 3rd Congressional District, it makes him
better prepared to connect those
constituents with those resources in Washington.
“The county’s got a vision and
we’re trying to make that connection and garner resources,”
Jenkins said.
The congressman said at times
he feels like a “middleman” when
it comes to connecting those in
the local community who have an
idea and vision for a project, with
ﬁnding funding support.
Jenkins described Mason
County as being one of the most
viable counties in the state when
it comes to being ripe for economic development with river,

Kasey Madden | Marshall University

A new bison statue, shown here still packed in protective shipping
covering, is being installed on Marshall University’s Huntington
campus. University officials say installation and landscaping
should be completed early next week.

Courtesy

U.S. Congressman Evan Jenkins (R-W.Va.) tours the ICL-IP Plant in Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va., on Friday.

grow and retain jobs.
“The county’s got a vision
Musgrave said it was a beneﬁt that Jenkins was on the
and we’re trying to make
that connection and garner House Appropriations Committee, particularly at a time when
resources.”
Mason County is waiting on any
— Evan Jenkins,
announcement of new industry
Congressman 3rd District and jobs.
“We need a shot in the arm,”
Musgrave said.
rail, ﬂat land, the completion of
Musgrave added there are ecoU.S. 35 now under way and reliable energy sources. He acknowl- nomic development plans in the
works for the county on a small
edged the desirable sites in
to large scale. Some of these projMason County for development,
but said his view wasn’t necessar- ects include additional jobs being
added at PTI, Specialty Steel
ily about one site over another,
going in at the old West Virginia
it was about partnering with the
county commission and economic Cold Drawn facility, the success
of Appalachian Railcar in Point
development authority to “help
their vision come to fruition” and Pleasant and development along
Jackson Avenue — more on this
“go to bat” for those projects in
local economic growth in upcomMason County.
Jenkins summed up the purpose ing editions of the Point Pleasant
Register.
of his visit Friday as supporting
Also meeting with Jenkins on
the efforts of the local economic
development ofﬁce, to meet with Friday was Mason County Commission President Tracy Doolittle.
Musgrave and the other job creators in the county and, ﬁnally,
to serve as as “conduit” to access Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@civitasmedia.
com or on Twitter @BSergentWrites.
funding and support needed to

Bison statue to greet
returning students
Idea came from
student now
deployed overseas
Staff Report

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— Students returning
to Marshall University’s
Huntington campus for
the fall semester will be
greeted by a new statue
of one of the university’s
symbols, the American
bison.
According to Brandi
Jacobs-Jones, senior vice
president for operations/
chief of staff, the idea for
the bison statue initially
came from students during an April meeting
with President Jerome A.
“Jerry” Gilbert.
“At a meet-and-greet
President Gilbert did
with residence hall
students this spring, a
student named Daniel

Parlock said he would like
to see more statues of our
mascot around campus,”
said Jacobs-Jones. “The
other students at the
meeting were in agreement and it just took off
from there.”
A graduate of Cabell
Midland High School,
Parlock is in the U.S. military and is now deployed
oversees. The history
major will return to Marshall in January 2017 to
continue his studies and
will work as a resident
advisor for the university’s Department of Housing and Residence Life.
Jacobs-Jones said the
six-foot tall, 375-pound
statue is made of recycled
cast aluminum. Placed on
the green space between
Jenkins Hall and the tennis courts, the ﬁgure is
symbolically positioned
facing northwest toward
See STATUE | 2C

�ALONG THE RIVER

2C Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Be healthy at the county fair this week
with unwashed hands
or on unclean surfaces.
Anytime you think that
you may have a foodborne
illness, you should report
it to your local public
health department even
if you have already recovered. Often, calls from
concerned citizens are
how outbreaks are ﬁrst
detected.
Here are a few more
tips to keep you and your
family enjoying your time
at the fair.
Sometimes even the
healthiest of animals
carry germs that can
make you sick. Children
shouldn’t be allowed to
put their hands or objects
(such as paciﬁers) in
their mouths after interacting with the animals
and before washing up.
Simply washing hands
and anything else that

Choice Heifers, $100-$108.
Cows
Well-muscled/fleshed, $74$91; Medium/Lean, $64-$73;
Thin/Light, $25-$62; Bulls,
$94.50-$102.50.

Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers,
$125-$200, Heifers, $108$157.50; 425-525 pounds,
Back to Farm
Steers, $120-$180, Heifers,
Baby Calves, $100-$250;
$100-$150; 550-625 pounds, Goats, $35-$160.
Steers, $110-$162.50, Heifers,
Upcoming specials
$105-$150; 650-725 pounds,
load of 750 hfrs 146.75.
Steers, $100-$150, Heifers,
load of 500 hol strs 120.
$100-$135; 750-850 pounds,
Gates in stock for sale.
Steers, $100-$146.75, Heifers,
$90-$130.
Direct sales or free on-farm
visits. Contact Ryan (304)
Fed Cattle
514-1858, or visit the website
Choice steers, $112-$118;
at www.uproducers.com.

Belville reunion
conducted in Gallia
For the Times-Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS — The
annual Belville reunion
was Aug. 6 at Golden
Corral in Gallipolis.
The event was planned
by Gail Belville, of Gallipolis.
Brenda Belville, of San
Antonio, was recognized
for traveling the greatest distance. Kirsten
Campbell was recognized
for being the youngest
attendee. Shenie Burnett
was recognized for being
the oldest attendee.

The group enjoyed
lunch and fellowship.
Those attending were:
Gail Belville, Terri, Dave
and Colton Walters, and
Ramona Lewis, all of Gallipolis; Shenie Burnett, of
Patriot; Roger and Carol
Belville, of Bidwell; Steven, Amber and Kirsten
Campbell, of Vinton;
Dave, Amy, Emily and
Elizabeth Belville, of Athens; Jeremy Belville, of
Lewis Center; and Brenda
Belville, of San Antonio.
The group plans to
meet again Aug. 5, 2017.

fall semester.
“The Marshall family has so much school
spirit and excitement has
From page 1C
been growing this week
since the statue was set
Old Main, a university
in place. We think stulandmark.
Employees of Marshall’s dents, alumni and other
members of the university
Physical Plant are landscaping around the statue community are really
going to enjoy having
with the goal of having
another place on campus
the project ﬁnished by
to visit and even use as a
early next week, just in
backdrop for photos.”
time for the start of the

Statue

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As you may already
know, mosquitoes are
most active during the
early evening, which
might be the time you
are heading to the fair.
Recent concerns over the
mosquito-borne virus,
Zika, has many questioning how to prevent
mosquitoes. The best way
to prevent bites is to use
a repellent with DEET
and follow the instructions on the container.
Another option is to simply cover up by wearing
lightweight, dark-colored,
long-sleeved shirts in the
evenings.
Remember your sunscreen and a hat with
a brim so you don’t get
sunburned standing in
line for the rides, and
drink plenty of water.
When you are out in the
heat, your body needs to

sweat to prevent itself
from overheating. And
to sweat, your body
needs water. If you do
not take enough water in
and dehydrate yourself,
there’s a good chance
that you can become ill.
Not drinking enough
water puts you at risk
for a heat stroke or heat
exhaustion. Both of these
can cause you to feel
weak and may even cause
you to faint.
We hope you follow
these simple safety tips
and come see us at the
Meigs County Health
Department Fair Booth
for more information on
becoming healthy and
staying healthy. Be safe
and enjoy.
Steve Swatzel is a registered
sanitarian for the Meigs County
Health Department.

ADDAVILLE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL HOMEROOM LIST 2016-17

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United
Producers Inc., livestock
report of sales from Aug. 3,
2016.

and water when
falls on the ground
they’re done petcan prevent illting the animals or
nesses. Be aware
use alcohol-based
that animals at the
hand sanitizers if
fair can still bite,
hand-washing isn’t
kick or scratch,
an option.
so approach them
A type of ﬂu
with caution.
Steve
has been known
Always ask our
Swatzel
Contributing to be associated
exhibitors before
columnist
with pigs at some
approaching or
county fairs. It’s
petting the animal,
called the H3N2,
and never approach
or H1N1, ﬂu virus and it
them from behind.
can sometimes pass on
According to the Cento humans. The animal’s
ters of Disease Control,
the most common germs handlers share the biggest
risk of getting the illness,
people can pick up from
but it’s another reason
animals are salmonella
to wash your hands thorand E-coli. These germs
oughly, especially after
or bacteria are found in
you stroll through the pig
the intestines of humans
and animals. Let’s just say barn. If you have health
factors that put you at
there’s a lot of potential
“exposure” to these bacte- risk for serious ﬂu comria at a county fair. Again, plications, or you’re pregmake sure everyone wash- nant, you should avoid
the pig barn.
es their hands with soap

61 Vine Street
Gallipolis, OH
740-446-1276
M-F 7-6
Sat 8-5
Sun 10-4

C. Green KA — Barber,
Keigan; Coughenour,
Ella; Cremeans, Braylen;
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Asher; Hall, Emmalee;
Hansen, Kaydence; Jividen,
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Masters, Virgil “Josh”;
McGee, Ryder; Mount,
Zoey; Newell, Maddison;
Rees, Constance; Roush,
Bejamin; Rucker, Hunter;
Sanders, Kaleb.
Wooten KB — Angel,
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Kamrynn; Berry, Cole;
Gruber, Hailey; Kingery,
Lucas; Leonard, Ethan;
Marcum, Baiden;
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Joy; Rumley, Carter; Rupe,
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Summers, Michaela;
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Elliott KC — Beaver,
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Coppick, Emmalynn;
Elkins, Madison; Elliott,
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Jackson, Emma; Logan,
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Vidia; Richards, Levi;
Smith, Jackson; Wolford,
Mason.
Carpenter 1A —
Bolyard,Jacob; Buckley,
Maurissa; Burks, Mary;
Clagg, Caden; Clay, Ryder;
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Jackson, Dylan; Mooney,
Dustin “Dusty”; Mullins,
Caleb; Patterson, Boston;
Peck, William “Garrett”;
Ritchie, Thomas “Max”;
Schartiger, Jessy; Spaun,
Lillian.
Lambert 1B — Bates,
Logan; Blankenship,
Leah; Cox, Dalton; Green,
Kylar; Haynes, Maxwell;
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Gage; Hood, Ian; Hopson,
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Mitchem, Kylee; Owens,
Luke; Parcell, Logan;
Smith, Adara; Tucker,
Amber; Weber, Teagan.
Roush 1C — Beaver,
Rylee; Bennett, Chloe;
Dobbins, Emilee; Dust,
Samuel; Hamilton, Pearce;
Hash, Conner; Hurt, Ciara;
Johnson, Carter; Jones,
Dixie; Mooney, Alexa;
Rippey, Gabriella; Roush,
Rialee; Vance, Marcus;
White, Logan; Williams,
Jamarcus “Quentin.”
Lanier 2A — Detty,
Matison “Matty”; Doss,
Breanna; Elliott, Braiden;
Elliott, Hunter; Gibson,
Evangeline; Marr, Jessie;
Mullins, Toby; Parsons,
Colby; Peck, Rylan; Queen,
Isabella; Ramsburg, Lola;
Rose, Zain; Russell, Jordin;
Shadle, Caden; Stewart,
Brody; Stidham, Olivia;
White, David; White,
Kenyon; Williams, Skylar.
Crum 2B — Bass,
Jaylynn; Berry, Carter;
Bevins, Jackson;
Coughenour, Kaelynne;
Cremeans, Breonnia;
Darst, Paislee; Jackson,
David; Jagers, Aaden;
Jenkins, Gracyn; Lincoln,
Aaden; McCombs, Daphne;
Richards, Jacklynn;
Roberts, Addison; Rucker,
Josie; Smith, Gabriel
“Gabe”; Stewart, Hunter;
Tucker, Caden; Vance,
Markayla.
J. Green 2C — Coppick,
Elizabeth “Izzy”; Edwards,
Kyleigh; Facemire,
Jackson; Harrison,
Sabrina; Kuhn, Raistlin;
Louden, Blake; Masters,
Maddison; Meaige, Hunter;
Mooney, Adison; Morrison,
Hennessey; Neville,
Cannon; Rife, Kailyn; Rose,
Zeth; Shepherd, Makayla;
Smith, Jansyn; Smith,
Marlee; Spires, Brilah;
Wamsley, Hailee; White,
Tyler.
Mitchem 3A — Booth,

Jones, Madison; Jones,
Sheldon; Lovejoy, Madison;
McPherson, Wyatt; Neville,
Kolben; Pope, Hannah;
Riffle, Haley; Simms,
Jaymon; Spaun, Gage;
Stewart, Roger “Gage”;
Thompson, Ellie; White,
Morgan.
Misner 4C — Allen, Kian;
Baker, Haley; Cox, Dakota;
Halfhill, Liliana “Gracie”;
Haner, Peytan; Hash,
Kimber; Henry, Caleb;
Johnson, Lynzie; Lambert,
Tony; Lawson, Hailie;
Martin, Daren; Metheney,
Brayden; Mooney, Hunter;
Mullins, Elizabeth; Polcyn,
Lilee; Wagers, Brayden.
Hollanbaugh 5A —
Baird, Matthew; Bapst,
Zachery; Barcus,
Nicholas; Day, Trenton;
Dodrill, Andrew; Hamilton,
Mallory; Helms, Baylee;
Jones, Dalton; Lambert,
Alexis; Markin, Janelle;
Roberts, Ethan; Sanders,
Troy; Schartiger, Nancy;
Sturgeon, John; Summers,
Owen; Vance, Madison;
VanMeter, Seath.
Norman 5B — Adams,
Bo; Baird, Haylei; Barnette,
Kaylee; Day, Trey;
Gibson, Curtis; Hancock,
Linea; Hash, Emma;
Litchfield, Cory; Morgan,
Riley; Phillips, Lilyann;
Riggs, Michael; Roush,
Alexander; Rupe, Jacob;
Staten, Isaiah; Swick,
Ryan; Swords, Savannah;
Tracewell, Bailey; Truance,
Emily “Grace”.
Howard 5C — Beaver,
Kyndall; Bradley, Colton;
Browning, Mason; Cadle,
Rebecca; DeLancey,
Gregory “Jake”; Green,
Ava; Hash, Cody; Leonard,
Clayton; Litchfield, Chloe;
Mathie, Taylor; Petrie,
Lane; Pourbaix, Shaelyn;
Rose, Zoie; Santos, Luke;
Spaun, Riley; Stumbo,
Kaylee; Swisher, Braden;
Young, Braden.

For the best local news coverage, visit MyDailyTribune.com
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Coleman 3B —
Ashworth, Damion; Conkle,
Matthew; Currence,
Kenneth Michael”;
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Erica; Powell, Landen;
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Mark; Sharp, Brandon;
Sims, Skylynn; Somerville,
Emma; Ward, Athena;
Williams, Makenna.
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Chad; Booth, Brandon;
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“Zach”; Clark, Mariah;
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Jonathan; Jividen, Ethan;
Jones, Ronald Paul; Lear,
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Stephens 4B — Blank,
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“Ethan”; Jenkins, Reid;

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The Meigs County
Fair is ﬁnally here and
the Meigs County Health
Department wants all
who attend to be safe and
informed on preventing
illnesses.
For most people, one
of the top activities at
the fair is enjoying the
many tasty treats and
unique food items. The
fair organizers and the
health department try to
ensure all food vendors
follow good food safety
practices, but the best
way for you to prevent
a foodborne illness is to
wash your hands before
eating and drinking.
Many foodborne illnesses are caused by
consuming foods or beverages contaminated with
germs. These germs most
often come from consuming or preparing food

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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�4C Sunday, August 14, 2016

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    <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>
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      <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="6353">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6352">
              <text>August 14, 2016</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2348">
      <name>braun</name>
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      <name>brown</name>
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      <name>galloway</name>
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    <tag tagId="499">
      <name>howard</name>
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    <tag tagId="2346">
      <name>hufford</name>
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    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
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    <tag tagId="380">
      <name>lynch</name>
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    <tag tagId="208">
      <name>spencer</name>
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    <tag tagId="306">
      <name>wall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="62">
      <name>waugh</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
